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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-07-26 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• • .. • Gir.l .Friend Belu8e8 New~rt Lie Te•t· In B~g~s Mystery HarJlor •nrowning9 • FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1968 . VOL. 61, NO. 17'> I $RCTIONS, ,,_ !"AGES '. Pole Showdow,.n * * * Mrs. Tucker Hearillg Set August 8 Nixon Hold.s Firm Bail for accused carving-knife killer Mrs. Irene M. TUcker, 1642 Minorca Drive, Costa Mesa was denied without i)reju4ice when she appeared before For 1st Ballot Win Judge William C. Christensea in By United Pun InteroeUonal ijarbor District Judici'B.l Court tOday. Richerd M. Nixon st.ill baa sufficient He also set preliminary hearing for convention delegate strength -on Aug. 8 at 9:~ a.m. at which time the paper -to c~~. the · Republican 37-year-old Wife of Coata Mesa City presidential nomination on the first CouncilJ:n~ George Tucker is ex·' ballot, according to a United ~s ~to 'enlet·a not guilty 'plea to one Intematiooal sl.l(vey .today. COU!Jt .of .muqter. , , . WiUt the aelectklo lees ' than two . Mrs. Tucker'l!i case' -delayed while . weeks away,,~ lrPI tf,bulated 691 . pco- Jud:ge Christlosen cleate(f hil calen-bable votes for Nixon on the first dar of a number of tcaffit: matters -ballot. A total Qf 667 is needed to waa called shortly bt:fore 11 a.m., but ·,., nomtnate. · . dis!lsllon «l'!'l"I llle.J1148e •. Dewl1.. Of Nixon's total.183 voles are com-Olitri<;t Attorney, ]f.1 Moa,tey and Paul mltted tp_N,a candidacy on at leut the AilltlltlDt 'Jrl, delenM attorney, couJCI first ~allO! and 508 are 1tan1n1 toward ing . Ronald Reagan had 157 total, 86 committed and 71 leaning. Harold Stassen bad' 1 committed vote. There were .s:till 44 uncorpmilted votes and 155 tied up in favorite son candidaciet. conunit\ed delegates. The greatest praportionete galn In the period accrued to Reagan, who picked up delegates in Utah -the last of the 9lati GOP conventions -and in some other places. soFTEN'IN'G .REPORTED not be heard in t.he audience.· jl. i ·• Alter 10 IDiDutet of· clllcl111Jon. In His nearest rival, Nelson · A , 1Jh1Cb "Judgel auutemen imiled and 1 Rockeleller, bad 285 votes Jn.the tJp.J RoakefelWr partisans claim· Nixon i... 1ieen loolna delegate voteo ·-tbe last ol ~e state eooventionl in ear· ly July. The UPI tabulation shows a slight jocr .... In Nina 1U'ength dur- ing th1I period; ther» were acllttered ~ •• bu1 th~_-,.,. aonwwhat JTtOie than offset ~ ~ ch4n11 ol 1om1 premusly iu>cGmmltted delegws to the leantne·toward·Nlllon col1'DUI, , Roctefeller .iao bae fained llrength s\jg_htly. sl.oce . ttie ~e cOli~ritions, , largecy. tiy ~ttnotlng P!"'v!OO•ly .un· . UPr observers across the = ... ported a •oftolllni Ill N..,_'a .• ballot >trengtt,, '11191 1&14' ~"¥. m111eqce-slgnl!JCllK' · numbefl o f ~ates would be willing to. abaodoo hie: cause with IOIDe readines1 - matnly "to move to the R&agan CAmP'. ·In tba Democratic r.ace, tba taloulo- tioa &•••Hubert H, llllmphrey l,alftllo V-/ lndudJng 41? <.'Olllmitled ;llld ' ~\lo luning. Eupne J. McCarthy bad 4f71n, wit.11 3" committed and 73% le~og. A totral. of 1.125 .art need· ed to nominate in the Democratic coo· test. UNSIGHTLY? --Bat.tie target oi Fountain Valley leaders is Edison -Company's power lines. Complex seen here is on Warner .Avenue, west of Magnolia street. Valley Takes on Edi.son '. J ' . ~ To Get Rid of Power Poles By .JAMES McNABB Jr. Of rlle ~Hr 'llfl Steff 1 Utility pol e s are anathema lo Fountain Valley -and the fledgling city's lcadefs are doing more then shaking their fists at tttem. • It's an all-out battle, with the Edison Co. in admitted cooperatioa, btu not moving fast enough to sati&fy Foun· taJn Valley's aesthetic drive. EdisOli ·utility poles violate Valley undergrounding ~s. Mayor Robert SchwerdUeger told the DAILY PILOT that the city wes determined to p r e s e r v e its predominantly wireress skyline. Schwerdtfeger eomptimented the uUUty, .the nation's f<M;U1h largest and fastest growing, for its cooperation with developers in undergrounding new housing trac-U. He a ssailed ttie company's contlnuing erection of poles along the major arteries. . "We are not MtUsfied. '1 5 a.id . Schw~rdUeger. "We:re not getting cooperation from Edilon." · · al the poss.ibility of the -city "going in · to the power biaslness itstU." Ile &aid that there "l~ ·grOWin_g popular support for a Fountain Valley Power Co. whicli through eminent do· main could condemn the poles. Edison District Manager R·alph Killer, of course, sees· the un- dergroundlng problem in • different light. "We're doing everytrung we possibly can; our gray poles now WI Up are a major beautification br~ougb. They blend in with bhe sky," said Kiser. Kiser ,ch~J~ tbat it woukl be fiscal folly for tile company to uqderground arterial and, transmission Une1S. "The cost WOuld be lstronomical, anywhere from dooble to 16-times the 964 a lot cost of undergrounding residential power," be said. chuckled onee, the defendant's at-siitveY, l!k> commttted :and 156.·lean· tarney report~ the neW. In .a. whisper -"-;_ ' · as Mrs. Tuclcfr sat In the jury box. >< >< * * * Mrs.· Tucker, wearlng a tidy pink sweater; maintained a pale stony ex- pression as she heard that she must remain in custody. Mrs. Tucker is charged with the June· 28 stabbing death of her next· door neighbor, Mrs. H-1 r r i et t Westphal, 68, of 1646 Minorca Drive. (See SLAYING, P11e !) Nixon Caravan Departs Cameo .'.Slwres Retreat Missing Boater's Friend Ref uses Police Lie Test The girl friend of a young man reported drowned in NewpOrt Harbor has declined to take a lie detector test on questions dealing with the accident, · Newport Beacf1 police said today. As a result. Oet. Sgt. Ken Thompson said an investigation into the disap- pearance of Robert James Spencer, 20, or Long Beach, is at a stalemate. Spencer dropped out of &ight the Sunday afternoon of June 30 alter he and a female companion rented a 14· foot dinghy to go sailing in Newport Harbor. . .. The girl friend, Identified only aii Ingrid Taylor of Los Angeles, told police she turned from the bow of the small bGat and saw Spencer fall backward into the water. He gasped for breath, then sank out of sight, she reported. Because the. body has never been rKovered, police said it was possible the milslng man "may be more alive than dead." Thompson said an lnv,estigation has found t h a t Spencer was Jnvolved in child support payments with his estranged wife, and was also nearing draft age. A caravan of 1( cars pulled out ol Corona del Mar's exclusive Cameo Shores area last night, taking away "good neighbor" Richard Nixon for the political wars. It ended presidential candidate Nixon's one-week respite from pre· convention campaigning. He had spent the time at the home of Judge and Mn. Thunnond Clarke, 4633 Brighton Rd ., except for a brief trip to Los Angeles where he taped a TV interview with Joey Bishop earlier Thursday. The Jarmer Republican Vice Presi· dent Oew Lo Washington . During his stay, in . the Corona del Mar com· munity, Nixon remained in seclusion, except /of the presence of. a host o( secret service agents. His family wa1 not with him. He and hit entourage left a1 quietly as they came. His .temporary nelgbbors said there was "no commotion et all" from til4' Utne he arrived, unannounced, until the, time he left, also unanoounced. Newport police were not even ad· . vised of the tJnie of the Nixon caravan's det>arture. , Police said there were no incidents ol any kind during tbe Nixon vis1t. "He was a g~ nelgttbor," one Cameo Shores· resident smiled. "We would welcome him back, any time." Nixon already has plans to 'teturn to California. He ·tentatively plans to stay Goats? at the nearby M.issiOn Bay resort com· plex in San Diego for 10 day11 following the Republican National Convention. lJcrbert Klein, NixOO•s campaign manager, said Wednesday the plan is contingent on the former vtce presi- dent ~inning the . GOP pr!sidenUa1 nomination at the convention in Miami Beach. ' ,Hotelman Willi-am Evens s a J d Thursday about 170 rooms in two hotels on Mission Bay are reserved for Nixon ; his vice presidential nominee, staff members and newsmen starting Aug. 10. R. E . llaldeman , Nixoh's chief of staff, said fue candidate planned to fly tq Washi~gton •. D.C .. today for a State Department briefing on foreign af· fairs. · * * * Edward Kennedy Ref uses Veep Consideration BOSTON CAP) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D·Mass.), took himself out of any cooslderation for t b e · Democratic vice pns.idenUal nomlna-. tion today with a statement taying "for me, this year, itil impoaslble." 1 He ocolfed et _.,,. arggnents · that It is !ioondilly Impractical bl put higher voltage lines und<rgroood. "We are fighting tradition at much . .as economics," be llllid. Naval, Academy Mascots . . . Found Mysteriously Dead Kennedy, last survivor of four Ken· nedy sons, said in a 1tatement that lils ' decision "ii linll, firm aod ,not lllll>Jeet to turtber coDJlderatiorl . .,' Kennedy . said 1>o Is .....,ov!ng ·bimJeu !tom ...,. slderatlon beau1t of ! a m t I y respGM!btlitles re9111Uog !tom lhe ' aS.111tna1lon of hll -r. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy CD·N.Y.), lut nionth. A .-ont cauronna Publlc 'Ulpities Oommi11ktn ruling _,.i Edinl.:muat provjde an annual allotment baled on a municlpallty'1 ~tlon for the cmwnion of ov~irouncl ,lines Jo. undergr<>un!I, B u·t 9dl,..1dU'Jer -.tl·-ll>i·ectual -would be nominal. •1we•re u&ing up three years ot 117.0llO 1 year to get just 12 poles outaide dt1 ball from Brool.llunt Slr<et to Ward undttJlr'Olllld." '!'he Fountain v.Jiq mayor hinted • ' ' ' ANNAJ'oLJS, Md. (AP) -'l'llt .'U.S. • Naval Acade}ny revtaled todly th•t tho two goata which Hl'Wll • aports mascots, lncludlna one ,lm""'1ed !rOilJ lrt.lar!d, .. have 11teo fouftd dNd" under m71itor!oUacirCWMlmcOf. • A spoil""'""' for the N~ v 1 l . Acodemy Ath!ellc A11oci1ti°"' l&ld Bill Xvi 111<1 Kina Puck, tht 'Irish, beer-drinking goat, we,.. found dead Tburada7. Auttlp1lcs on -both anim1l1 were bela.I Ptrfonntd _b_y veterinarians at tho Onlveroity of Maryland . · The goata, symbol ol lhe acodemy since ~904, ar, .houled. at . a nearby dairy r...,. Heavy aecw1ty prf(Cau· tioili are laken, tncllldlng · Marine Corpo (llOl'ds. durln( Ille !ootball seuoa, but no utra aec\U'ity i1 pro- vided at thl• Ume of the year. Kina Puck, who hod a p<nchallt !or beer. ftl iuaented to tbt academy in 10 el1bante ceremony last --ytar by ' ,r, tht ctl11 of 1911, wlUctr waa having lt1 . 40tli teunlon. Accordlhc to legend, • herd of Wild ' goata n • 1 r the town of Killor"1n In 1 Ireland once aJertell !ht 'lcnmlJl!OPle • In Ume to Dee a 'mauraudlntl bind , lrom Cromwell'• army. Each ye'1r, to · commQtor1te ' this event, t h e . reskkntl of KUJorSUn a-own a &oat •• kin& of ttielr Puck Falr:LUt yeir, lhe · cl111 of 1927 J)lll'chlaed the 1"11 and • P<"Oseoteci Khlg Puck In 111< acodtmy. : The, ,Mauachu1etta aenatcr, In a lqllr1>1fllf"l'll lta-•n~ oiild l>o WtU I~ °'If., ~er. OD u~ •nd ' domfttjc ' pollcle1 our pltl7 must punue ti It 11 to bl lllCCeullil Ill tbe comln& tltcUon." ·He -he ll'l'l'OCIMod !be con· lldenoe of Democnta who bave pro· ~ l*'1 for ."" national amt ond . "under nonn1l clrcu.n'l.Nnce1 IUdt • . ponlblltlJ 'l"!"ld bl a hll!I horoor 11111 a cballenp to lurlller pUblic .ervtce." George Wallace, a third party can· didate, had 15 Democratic votes, 13 coonitted and 2 l~aning. There were 558 UllC1>l1Ul\IU.d votes ~ 325 f'Olll• mitted to favorite aoos, Twelve votes , remain conunltted , t~ the . Ja!e Seo. l\obert F, KeMedy·,. aolli •U,iher 12 • are committed to President~JohM4;111 •. bpth on the buU of prim81'J"renlta. ~ Other .developments: . .McC!lrlhy -The Minlle&olo - told newsmen in Bo~too Thur~y that he does not have "any plans to accept the vice pretldency" if he faila to win the top spot oli tba "ticket. He ill<> •oid · he had made no 'plans 11>o;rt his own 1 pbsslble vicel preiidential running .• ni.ate. "I think .it'• a Uttle bit ea.tty." . he said. , · ·· · PERCY BACKS ROCKY Rockefeller. .-1 Sen., Charle& . II. Percy lR-111.l: gave the Now, \'oili • governor hla·endorsemeDt; uyinc "~ . is the only pre_sidential c~~ate w}\o .. has se~ forth a d~Ued. prqir@.111~ to end the war." The Nixon cemp sakt the endorsement· may hive ibeen the result of "the lUre of the vice presidency." Rockefellef Mid In a Wa:Mlington add.res!! that hfl1"'woUld (See POL!TICS; Po1e·lt • ' ' . ' I (Au& ' Wea&Mr · Patchy early motDln1 ibg and low cloudJ clearing by thia aft· ernoon to become moatly sunny. Coutal temperatures will range fr9m '.89 to"75. Today'i_ water : temperatW'e is et dell'ffs. INSWE TODAY Countv ma,. 1mttnctd in brueol ·Florida cot• whfrt glri noUtd to tree. PCtQt I . -" = , ~ .. -. ~ .... _:. ;;;;:;" ..... t '"'* • ~ 14 --" ... ..._.. 11 ~1 .. 1: --I ----. ., ........ ,. ....... : ...... .. =--~· a-·,\··."' ~ .. ~' •' -. -.. ........ !.'! ,__ •• •1 I I' .•• --' •· ! 1 DAll.V mor FrldoJ, Jy)y 26, 1961 If YOU WERE LITERALLY MINDl!D AND VDU SAW THIS SIGN IN MINNEAPOLIS, WOULD YOU ••• Threat Eases For Walkout At Douglas LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The threa t of a olrllra In Ille · aer_. lnduolry eased today after the International Association ol. Machinists and the McDoonell-Douglas Corp. r e a c h e d ag:rement of a three year contract. A short time earlier, IAM's partner in the negotiatiom.s, tile United Auto Worker&, announced an aereement with tllo bli maker of plann and apace equipment on a contract cover- ing 3,400 emp1oyes In C8nada. Negotiatiooa between McDonnell· Douglas and the UAW on a contract for American aerotpace workers repreaented by the union ltill are unreoolved. (Thi• .-ac1 affects the firm'o pant HIDltlngtoo Beach In· stallat!on.) However sources close to the negotiators were hopeful that the Canadian setUement might set a guideline for an agreement covering aeroaapce workers in the U.S. p,....p ... J POLITICS ••. bocin lalkl wllll Red Olin• ii he ls e1ectod Pr-BalllJl(lrey -In a Washinf!lon speech, the vice president saJd that one of "our problems" in regard to the Vietnam war ta that "too few J>!!aple in Amcicl hl.ve been ~ulred to make a n 'I aacriftce ... He Wd domestically the nation WM due for cba.llge, and ''U>e rest will be whether or not we can make the change. peacefully and orderly." Nixon -'Ibe fonner v i c e prelident'1 temporary headquarters at Newport Beadl, armounced he planned to sutwn.lt four papers next week to the platform committee of tbe Republican Natknal Convention. They will deal willl Vletnom, the economy, law and order and urban pr001<m1. Rea1u -In a UPI interview, the Colllornta governor eold H Is dllflcult to plcturo ,hlmeelf in the Whilo Hou,., but ti the Republicans nominate him foe Pre&.i.dent, he is ready to assume the role. He 1ald he "wouJd not soil· cit" the pre1ldency. Switch Knife Ban? WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Ninety HQUM members joined Thundey in sponsoring a bill to ban the manufac· ture and disb'ibuti.on of switchblade knives. A spokesman for the group, Rep. Lester Wolf! (D·N. Y.). dew-lbed lhe WN.pons as "murderous instruments •.. crude, brutal tool! of violence." DAILY PILOT ,...,.,...... c....w ... H"'""'9• IMc• L.p .. IMcll w...... ... ......... k>y CAUFOINIA ORANGE COAST PUBLISHING COMP.lNY Rob•rt H. W1•~ ffftl°"'I •nd ,.llllllll'>t'I' J.cl1 R. C11,J1y Vk• ,.,_...,.. tllid G-.1 MINltl' Th•111•1 K•1Yil .... Th111'111 A. M11rphi.,. /MMell'lf E4iW P1 ul Nlt1111 AMnlt1,.. Dl!'K!Gr ~ -..~ -Wftl .. ., ,,,..., """"'" a-11: m' Wal .. ltM "°"'lfnrf L ...... ~:212FtftttA­~ liMdt: lOf Jiii Sir.t ... FOLLOW • INSTRUCTIONS AS SOMEONE DID? United Stand Against Russ Asked of Czech Chiefs PRAGUE (AP) -Czechoslovak leaders, awaiting decisive talks with the Soviet Oommunill party Politburo, were· urged by peece:m1ter1 of this comtey' 1 llhenllutlon drive today to "defend unitedly the road <11 which we nave started and which we will not lea ve alive." The appeal came amid mounting concern over rumors that t h e leadenhip was split on how to react to Soviet pressure at the showdown meeting likely to begin next week. The rumors were fed by the decision Thursday of the poli<ymaklng party presidium t.o remove U . Gen. Vaclav Prohlik, .a chief target of Soviet a~ tacks, from a key position in the party Central Committee. Uaually reUable &ources &aid they understood the decision in Prchlik'& case had not the unanimous backing of the 11-member presidium. Li b e r a 1 Communist intellectuals voiced al&rm over this indication of yielding to pressure from abroad at a time when ~ular support f« the Ctecboslovak party clUef Alexander Dubcek, had reached a new peak. Edlton of Leitarnl IJsty, a writers' week1y and influential mouthpiece ot tile liberal elite, prepared an extra with an open letter calling on party leaders to negotiate and explain, "but unitedly defend the road on which we have started and which we will not leave alive ." "You are wriUng for us a fatefuJ page Jn the hi story of Czechoslovakia," the open Jetter said. "\Vrite it with care, but above all with daring. ''To lose this unique chance would be our disaster and your shame. We believe ln you." The appeal's theme , printed in heavy type, was : "Socialism, alliaDce, sovereignty, freedom.'' Some 300,CXXI copies were to hit the streets late today or Saturday and various newspapen_ announced they would reprint the letter. Phone Cable Cut; 2,000 Firms Hit Prace, the daily of the 5.3-mllllon· strong Trade Union FedeN.tion, urged readers to sien the letter-'1 I.Rd· 'thus make a "contributioo at this historic hour." 1-n a defiant editorial, the army newspaper 0 b r a n d a Lidu, said Czechoslovakia will oot c o m m i t "moral suicide" by yielding to demands to abandon its new course. Official 1ources dented rumors of a spUt vote in the presidium or even defeat of the liberals over the ap· proach to the Soviet party. Inform.ants who are familiar with the v:iews of Dubcek and his top lieuteoaflts said no ballot had been taken at Thursday's session and there wa.s "no reason for worry." Some IOUl'Ces said the rumen: may have been spread by die-h.vds in an attempt to sow distrust among the population. Terrorists Hit Saigon Again, Bomb Newspaper SAIGON (AP) -Tem>rists struck in Saigon today for the second time in a week and blew up the city's largest Chinese newspaper. Police said four young Viet Coog, two of them gir1', Jet off a SO.pound plas.Uc bomb in the press room of A Cha u Van Quoc, tile Allan Dally News , an anti-Communist paper which sup- port.I the Saigon government. No casualties were N!ported. The terroristtl , all armed with pistols, walked into the newspaper of· fice just alter 1 p.m. and ordered everyone out. One glrl terrorist pulled out the tx· plosive charge concealed in a bag, planted it in the presm:iom and Oed with her companlom. Five minutes later an explosion rocked the three·story building, beavl· I/I damaging I~ Employes of the paper &aid the ter· rorl.sts were Vietnamese Of Chinese origin . Tbe 1/mt is located in Oiolon, the Chinese section of Saigon where A private contractor's trenching 300,CXX> V'8nun•e ow ate live. machine severed a bwied telephone A few blocks away another Chinese cable in the Newport Beach·Cotona paper, the Kien Quoc, was blown up del Mar area at 8:30 a.m. today, in. June 6. Three persOlls were killed in teITupting 5e?'Vice to 200:> Costa Mesa· that exploskirl. and IS o1hers injured. Newport Beach homes and businesses. The KJen Quoc a\os supported the The accident occurred at 4300 Ford South Vietnamese government. Rolid in Corona del Mar. Cable rpllc· Last October, terrori.tl &hOt and l"I <Tew1 of Paclflc Telephone were killed tM manogtnc editor of A Olau dllpatd>ed lmmedlatecy aod porUal aftor be had wr1*D Mveral tdl1oriall ratorattoo of service wu made al criliclzlnc Viet c..,. -1neuoo1. 10:30 a.m. Full RrVico ,.., .. peeled Aller -kl ol comparallve quiet, to be resl«ed by ntgbtlall. Viet COii( lerr'oriom brol<o out apln In Pre!lxeo affected were 614 and 833. Satgoa li>d in two P'Ovlnclal capltall Some oervlcu at the Fashion Island to tho "°"'1 and oouth i.ot ..,.ltlod. lhopplnc conter wero Interrupted. Twelvo Vietnom-...,. killed and 91 '. ·Harbor • May Go 1District Breakup\ ion County Ballot Voters or °""111 CCWll)' ma1 be --to ~1 .. Ibo Orang• Cowll1 }larhor Dlslrlcl at a opec:lal election. Thwarted in pr"evious attempts to kill olf tho dlltrlct, Ibo o. ..... Ooullly League ol CiUes moved Thursday toward such a special election. dlltrlct -"-'"" by Ibo -... but follod lo# oat"' commltlloe. 'lbe !loud ol SUpli'VllOf1, alter appoinllDC a committee of county ltaff members to &tudy the matter, voted last month to matn lllt -The league board took noUce of two other county problemt 'Ibursdey. ~ will be Dl!lnad lo otuctt and nporl oa tlJt UM ol --Ile counl1 -al found to build COWi• iY fire 1llllons .. ning ~ ~ Ind a Grind Jury recoiiil· mendat!On tl!ot 1oce1 ,...,..,..,eat COO• trols be placed on private mobile ~ ray unit!. The league's executive board ap- pro..S a m_.. nlerrille Iha optCilJ ..u queltloo to the LociJ Agency Form1.tto11 Oowr1'Son as • matter of f<lrmallty. Tho Issue coul4 10 oa • ballol llGIDetim• noxt l!pl'lng: · Hundreds ]am Hearing ; Leacue President Deaii E. Shull Jr,. mayor ol. Le Hllbra, 11 to name I coma· -to draft a 1tatemenl roof· firmlni the ciUes' desire tO abolish the district and consoUdate harbors, beaches and park.s under a single, unified coonty . department. On Huntington Freeway~ The otatem.nl wt1l be pre&eDled for apProy.I to·tbe 25 dl1 eounclli In tilt county. '!be anUclpaied appr1>Val hf the COWldls would then he prMented to lht LAFC by the league r._n. ting the dUes. The LAFC recommendatton ti>on goes to the 1Upervl10r1. The ie.cue ez. ecutive board Thur5day said a apetial election should be called so the people, Who formed the district in 19341 could decide its future. The league has carried~ Olli a delem>lned -acatnat the .u.trict as now constituted. It wants the district abol,ished as a separate taxing agency and at one time had a vote favoring tbe move by representativet of JC of the 25 county cities. A bill by Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R·Fullerton) to abolish the By WILLIAM REED or "" n.11r """ Jtett Nearly a full house was on hand this monlln1 to hear Iba -Inc public -btar1nc on li>catton ef·U. Ollun H,.... Ullltoa Beach ll'no'n1. • Hundredo of oll1 olfldals lrom Well orange Cooney,. fow lrom O\ltalde Iha eo<mly and residents affecled by Ille frttway jammed tho audl10rtum of H11111tniton Be~b 1111!1. Scllool to tall tbe olate l!IPway (»rnml11i'"' bow lbe1 1111 abt!at locaUoa or Ille IUblre --route. The hearing· began with a presen- tation by' the IUghway Department engineers. 'Ibey outlined the three main .itemate routes throu}h West Orange County, including the Orange (Eastern) Line which bas been recom· mended for adoption by s t a t e Engineer John A. Legarra. 'lbe line ls .stuhl>ornly ~ by thousands of residents of several (\it.ies in West orange County who llve on or near the the route. Freeway enaineer1 pointed out 11 the meetin1 befan that the favored Kill Fll'• ebo-'-L -rs, Orange (Eutern) Line ls 7.4 miles .1111.Je J.cmg, bu a coo1trucUon COit estimate of '46.2 milliOG, rllbl of Way COii ol Maddo:x Urges :ui:n!: ~P~~ l~ ~ units. ATLANTA (UPI) -Leoler Maddox, The Red (Centi11) Llne favored by outspoken gov~ of Georgie , has the homeowners and moat ct. the in· urged police to s<op pampering volved cities lo 6.6 mllas long, with a criminals and shoot to kill constructJon COit of '53 million, right Rulf1ed over the outbreak of of way coat of '30 million and a total violence in which 10 penons died In coll of 183 million, but dllplace1 only Cleveland, Maddox said every police 777 famllle1. car should be equipped with a The Green·Red (Western) Line ts machinegun 10 officers can protect the sbortut at S.4 miles, ha.1 a COD• through the heart of the city's developed indusb'ial district. Backing or the Red (Central) Line came lrOm 1pok•1qieo resrueoQni 1!CUP1 in Gardoii Grow, Hllllllnflon Beach, Fqunlafa -V a111J. So..nl bamltWDlf' groupl 1rom all OVll' &be county stated oppodUon to the Orange <ES-.) Llne. · Homeownert from We1tmbltter, ~ver, ui:1ec1 T"" or ~e Oruge The -· ts to make a dociltOD OD wbicb ol Ille olullJ' JiDel wilt become the adopted route fer tha freeway which Is not due for con· strucUon f o r another 10 years. That announcement la likely within about.60 days. Union Sends Special Group to Pittsburgh Pl'ITSBURGH (AP) - A UDiled steelworkers committee thet can ratify a contract or call a ltrite has been summoned to Pittaburlb on Mon. day -just two days before 388,(X)) men wilt be free lo watt oul of ilie mills. ' '. The union ls llOl IUlnl wblch II u- pected. PreokleDI I. VI. Abel would ia'y only that tbe 8QG.mu. croup, .called t:he bulc steel todustry confmnco, wW hear a report on tbe ne1oUaUaaa. p,....p ... J SLAYING ••• tllernsetv .. and citizens. strucllon coot o1 $49.& million, rl&hl of Cauao of their dtspute bu not yot - "We've gol to quit pacllying and way cool of $S1 mlllloo and a tolal coll cletermlned. • pampering criminals and munterers," of !13.J million and dlsplaceo l,a73 The defendont 11111 -lier oat Maddox n.id. "We're kl.Wog police of. family units. A1non1 four men in~ d11D1ant1• and ficers." Representatiwc of varioua eroupa in a pretty let!n...age L Mrs. TUcter'_s He said when police are dealing with Westmlnlter stated DJIPOlltiOJI to tlM chin re1ted·oo her and she avoided sntpen: 'and fl.rebomberS, <ificers Red (Oenll'al) line and favor fer tbe looting at the judge, ~.~-' _,. 'flil'lbal!> to haj~! aJllj U ll>ey recommended Or-(Eastern) Llal, her defe1111 atlomey u the7 coafliiiia don't halt, kill them." polntln1· out thol tho Red Lino IOll on ber Immediate fate. · --,.-......~--~------- 15% OFF ON ALL HENREDON SCHOONBECK UPHOLSTERY Choose fro111 many styles of s~fes end chairs. Special prices on many chairs start et only $199. You cen spe.ciel order now. Great sitting in this loo,. pillow. beck chair. Great price tool Fluld lfnts, marvelous comfort, on• is good, two ere better. On cast· en for ea1y mobility. LAST WEEK OF OUR STORE-WIDE SALE, WHICH INCLUDES SOME OF OUR FINE LINES OF DREXEL FURNITURE. IXCLUSIVI DIALlltS FOR: HINltlDON-DREXEL -HIRITAOI 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGIR TERMS AVAILABLE ON Al'l'ROYID CltlDIT NllWPORT BEACH 1727 W-Uff Dr. 642-2050 OP111 AllAT 'TIL t INTDIOU P,._._, lntwrlw LAGUNA llACH Deelp;1n MS North CMllt Hwy. Avail•~·· All>-NSID OPlll NIOAT 'TIL' _, ..... _ .. ___ .... 4946151 Servtco in ..... ua1f1oJliUe11ucb u !"ounded 1n the homb1nCo of four ) . ..:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~~~~!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~ medical centers wao rell«ed Im· tlloata'I, -only a block from Ille DO· m•lll¥ bf rcoutin& tilt calla. 11 ... 1 poUct beldq-1 In Saipl. l • l • --- • • ·--~--~~~-. .......... ~~-~ • .--~ ........... , ...... , ............ , ........ ~c~a .. as,.,.t1s ... :.""'4 ~ ..., ,. , --·-- • •• Dunti·ngton Bea eh . . Yoar Bome•Wll VOL:. 61~ NO. l 79, 5 S~ONS,1 ~'1'A6ES • UNSIGHTLY? -Batlle target of Fountain Valley leaders is Edison ·Company's power lines. Complex seen here is on Warn.er Avenue, west of Magnolia Street. Valley Takes on Edison To Get Rid of Powe 'Poles By .JAMES McNABB Jr. Of tlN DalfJ l'llut Staff Utility p o I e s are anathema to Fountain Valley -and the fledgling 1 city's leaders are doing more· than I shakin• lbelr fists at them.· , •<tT I " J.• · 1,,, It'• an illl-<>ut batUe, widl.lllt.}:illoon Co. In adin.ittacl ~Um, bbl r>Ot movina: fast enoudi to Htilfy Foun· taln Valley's aesthetic drive. r I· .. Edison utility polo' Viola!< Valley underground.in& ordinances. Mayor Robert SchWenlUeger fold the DAILY PILOT that the city was determined to p r e s e r v e its predominantly wirtiets skyline. Schwerdtfeger complimented the utility, the nation's fourth largest and futest growing, for its cooperation wittl developers in uodergrouoding new housing tracts. He assailed tne cOmpany's continWng erectioo of poles along tbe major arteries. "We are not satisfied.'' s a id Schwerdtfeger. "We're not getting cooperation from Edison." He scoffed at company arguments that it is fin'8ncially impractical to put higher voltage lines underground. ''\Ve are fighting tradition .as much as economics," he .a.id. A recent California Public Utilities Commission rulini: says Ediaoo must provide an annual allotm~ based on a municipality's population for the converskln Qf overground lines to underground. B u t Schwerdtfeger ~rts that the actual benefits ·would be nominal. "We're using up three years of $17,000 a year to get just 12 poles outside city hall from Brooktlurst Street to Ward undefground." · 'J'b• Founlaln Valley mayor hinted at the poclibiuty of tbe dty "going in- to the power busine11 itself." • He said that tbera wu growing pOpular support for a Fountain Valley Power Co. which thrc>'fgh. eminent do- maill"' could condemn the poles. Edison District Manager Ralph KlHt, or . course, ·sees the un· dergroohding pn>l>iem in a diff.....,t light. . "We're doing everything we possibly (See EDISON, Pase %) 2 Ro.hhers Given • Prison Sentence UNDERGROUND I M P 0 S S- I B L E -Edison executives clain\ that it is technologically impossible to underground high voltage wires, because of heat loss. Drowaed Man's Deatli Ruled As Accidental The death of ·a Pico Rivera man, found floating face down by Hun- tington Beach lifeguards in the surf off Bol.sa Chica State Beach Thursday, has been ruled accidental drowning by the Orange County coroner. coroners reported no indication of foul p1ay, and said Steven Rodriguez, 18, Pico Rivera, had been dead since 2 p.m. Tuesday. Police said Rodriguez was reported rniising at 4 p.m. Tuesday by friend-s . J-le was la.st seen near the H•mtiagton Beach pier. His bo(ty was found by four early· morning surfers. Two lifeguards pull- ed Rodriguez's body ashore. Rodriguez's body was taken to Smith Mortuary in Huntington Beach aml' transfei'red to the Pico Rivera Funeral Home. Dally Pai'er .. FRID~ Y, JULY 2i; l 9~ JEN CENTS Freeway Hearing Packed Hundreds of City Officials Jam ,Meeting By WILLIAM REED ot ._ o.ia.. Pllut lllff Nearly a full house was on baod this morning to hear t.he opening public hearing on location of the future Hun- tington Beach Freeway. Hunokeds ot city otficiala from Well Orange County, a few from outaide the county and residents affected by the freeway jammed the audltorJum of Huntington Beach High School to tell Strong fight For Library Bonds Vowed Library offici:als indicated Thursday nitbt that they ·intend a vigorous fight to convince Huntingtxm Beach voters to approve 1 $3.16 million boo(f issue J>roposal in November. Board Cbairman Dave Wickertb.am, presiding over a meeting of the board of directors of the Friends of the Library pointed out t!lat 11lere bu been some preliminary th.ought cm tbe upcomina: campaign aDd that when the City Cowl<:il olllciolly plaees the bon· ding [ll'O[JOSIUon cm the ballot the library people Will~ campaio.ilnl· "We plan a vi'gorous campaign to obtain the vitally needed central city library," Wickersham said. "A new librery is desperately netcled and we intend to show tbe voters just bow desperate the siµi&tion really is." ~-.•:-·••tlal ~-sll:tr..e ~ )iaMr J.-.W, AUh\iBt 1Jbfar!an Dr. 1'» 5tevom, -.i inemberi Wiebr"""'1> md<Mn., Llan ilotteaateln, .... ultreeton Mn: Henry Kauldlan, William Reed and Leoolrd Shane. ' Wickersham a.aid he enviaioned a smcl• organization pushing the library and parks bond "'"'"-'· The porks group is proposing a boo· ding . program ot about '6 million to ·finance •cq_uisition. and development of a total of about 42 parks. i;We may have to obtain pro- !euional help to put lhil hood ~I acrou if we cen ratse tile money. If not, we will fight the battle· ourselves. ''At any rate, the community needs parks and this library. We mllli't have them If it isn't now it will be later • • when the eo1ts go up even more, \Vk:kersham said. Librarian Johmon is suggesting a bond issue to provide $216,<XX> for buy\ng an 184cre library site at Golden W e s I -and Talbert Avenue. • Constroclion and furnistUng cost is estimated at $2,441,954 and books at '500,000. The library greup has' scheduled a breakfast meeting fOr Aug. 8, the morning after the council is to call of· ricially for a bond election for the parks and library. "In tile me ant i m e . Hid Wickersham, "Those wtlo want to help us obtain for our children these needed pants and the library should call Johnson at 536-9327." LBJ's Housing Plan Approved by Senate WASHINGTON (UPI) J President Johnson's multibilllon dollar housing pr.ogram -biggest in history -wa-s within: one legi.llative step of final con· gressional pr.usage today following ap- proval by the SeDA'te. 11le three-year, '5.3 billion meuure was passed by the Senate and sent to the House Thursday. It was not cer· tain how soon the Hoose would take up i.he bill, but faltly quick action was ex- pected. It contains a unique plan to let low and moderate income people ·buy their own homes under • federal in· terest payment subsidy. the state Highway Commission how they ,feel about location or the future nortb·south route. The hearing began with a presen· tation . by the ~ghway Department engineers. They ouWned the three main ·alternate routes throulb West Qrange County, including the Orange (Eaatem) Line which has been recom- mended for adoption by 1 t a t e Engineer John A. Legarra. The line is stubbornly oppooed by Countfl Restover thousands of residents or several cities in West OraDge County' wbo Uve on or near the the route. Freeway engineers pointed out as the meeting began that the ravored Orange (Eastern) Llne ls 7.4 miles tong, bas a conStruction colt esUmate or '46.2 million, right or way cost of $38.1 million .and a total cost or '84.3 million and displaces 1,458 family units. . The Red (Central) Line favored by Nixon Caravan Leaves A caravan of 14 cars pulled out ol Corona del Mar's exclusive Oameo Shores area last night, taking away "good neighbor" R-Nixon for the political wars. It ended · insideoUal cllldidate Nixon'• one-week rell)ite from pre- conventfon oampaignlna:. , He bad ll[lOnt llll tlm• at the home of .Judge and Mn. Thurmond Clarke, 4633 Brighton Rd ., ucept !or ·• brief trip to Los Anceles wbore ·be taped a TV interview with Joey'Bisbop earlier Thurlday. The lormer Republican Vice Pre&i- * * PolJ.',Priill~'·" " Nixon· Can Win On 1st Balwt By Ualted Pnu Jateraallonai Rlcba<d M. Nixon llUI ha.a a~nt convention delegate stn.irth ._ on paper, -to capture the Republic&~ pre&ideatial nomination on 1 the tlr1t ballot, accordinr to a Uott.ed PreH International. slU'Vey today. With the select.Im less than' two weeks away, UPI tabulated 891 pro- bable v<>tes for Nixon on the llrst b&Hot. A total of 667 Is needed to nominate. Of Nixon's total, 183 votes are com· ntltted to his candidacy on at lea.st the first ballot and 508 are le"1lillg toward it. His nearest rival, Nelson A • Rockefeller, had 285 vote& in the UPl survey, 130 committed and 155 lean· Ing. Ronald Re&gan had 157 total. 116 commitrted and 71 leaning. Harold Stassen had 1 committed vote. There were still 44 uncommitted votes and 155 tied up in favorite son candidacies, Rockefeller partisans cl~m Nixon has been losing delegate votes since the last of the state conventions in ear- ly July. The UPI tabulation shows a slight increa~ in Nixon strength d~· ing this period; there were 1cattertd loese1, but these were somewhat more than offset by the change of some previously uncmunitted delegates to the leaning-toward-Nixon column. Rockefeller also has gained strength slightly since the state conventions, largely by attrllCiini prevlouaiy un- committed delegates. The greatest proPOrtionate gain in the period accrued to Reagan, who picked up deleg~es in Utah -tbe laat of the ttate GOP conventions -and in some other places. UPI oble.rvers across ·the countrv rep<rted a softening in Nixon's second- baUot strength. They said there was evidence slgnWcant numbers o I delegate& would be wjlling to abandon hit cause with some readiness - mainly to move to the Reagan camp. (See POLITICS, P11e %) Coast dent flew to Washington. During his stay, in the ~na del Mar com· munity, Nixon nmained in seclusion, ' .. except for the presence of a host of secret service agents. His fanuly was not with him. He and hiB entourage leit as quietly a, they came. His temporary neigb~s s~ there was "no commotion at all" from tbe time he an1ved, unannouiced, until t.be time he·teft, also unanoounced. Newport police were not even ad- vised o( t.1te time of ·the Nixon caravan'1 ,departure, , Police said there wm !DO incidents Q( ... llind dllrin& ·11t, lj-Yllit.. 'r& wati a IQOd. •--." one C-Sllon1 e:amlled. "W• wOdldjW•l-.. blt* .•••. \IDll." Nixon aJready has p ans to return to C..Wornla. He ten~veiy pl&Df to atay at \be ·nffl'by M~on Bay fesort com- plex· in San Diego foi' 10 dayt following llhe: Republican NatioM.I c'onvention. Herbert Klei~. N1'01i's campalcn · manager, SI.id Wednesday the plan ls contingent on the former vice presl· dent winniDC the GOP presldentlal nominatioo at the convention in Miami Beach. Hotelman William Evans s al d lbu'tday about 170 rooms in two hotels on Mi11Jon Bay are reaened tor Nixon, hls vice presidential nominee, stall members and newsmen starting Aug. 10. R. E. Haldeman, Nixon's chief of staff, said the candidate planned to fly to Washington. D.C .• today !or a State Departm~nt brie!ina: on foreign af· fairs. Czech Leaders Asked to Unite Against. Russia PRAGUE (AP) -Czethoslovak leaders. awaiting de<:isive talks with the Soviet Coounuolst party Politburo, w•e urged by peacemakers of ttlis counUy's liberalization drive today to "defend unitedly the road on which we have sW1ed and which we will not leave alive." The appeal came amid mounting concern over r umors that t h e leadership was split on hoW to react to Soviet pressure at the shoWdown meeting likely to begln next week. The rumors were fed by the decision Thursday of the policymaking -party presidium to remove U . Gen. Vaclav Prchllk. a chief target of Soviet at· tacks, from a key po6ition In the party Central Committee . Usually reliable sources said ·they undentood the decision in Prchlik'• cue had not tbe unanlmoua backina of the lJ-member presJdJum. the homeowners and . most of the Ju. volved cltlel is e.e mile1 fbat'. with • constxucllon cost of $53 mllllon, right· of way cost or $.10 m11Uons&od a total cost of $83 miWon1 but displaces oaJt m families. The Green-Rod· (Weit.») Line II the shortest at e.f mile1, bis a con. struction cost of $49.$' mlllioo, right ot. way cost of $.12 million and a total colt of $82.1 million and displaces 1,013 (See FREEWAY. Pase %) Sen. Kennedy Renounces Veep'Pians BOSTON (AP) -sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D·M<Us .), took himself out or any consideration for t b e DemocraUc vice pneidential nomina· tion today with a mtemeDt "'Yin& "Coe me , this year, it is impoeaible." Kennedy, last a~vor of four Ken· nedy sons, 18.id.in • ltalement tbat h1I decision "la final. firm and oot Mlbjecl to further ' consideNUoa." .Kennedy said he is removing lWmtelf from con- sideration because of f a m i l y respomibilities re&ulting ~ Ult assasslnation of his -~r,. S.. l\Obert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.), lul month ... ·,·· ·· The Mas.&achusett1 MDI tor, ·in a' four-paragraph statement, ms be will spealt out, however, orl • ....._ and domestic policies. our .party •muat pll1'Ut if it ii to be SUCCeuful in the comm, etecuon." • He~iaihlt;: .. -"'" -_., . ti---~ him 1or 11>1 nalloDal ucbl imd 1'uDder normal ctn:mn1tance1 iudl a poiilblfity would be a higb -ud o challenge to r-.. pUblic -.... Jail O.rdered For .Nude .Man In Coed's Room zA man 'Y}lo was .found naked in a UCI girl sili:lent's room by the girl'• parents was sentenced Thursday to three months in the Orange County jail a11d placed on three years pro· bation. Jotwi. Edward Breach, 22, of Anaheim, was found guilty of a felony assatilt on Mr. and Mrs. Tolbert Ti!· r,.,y of 'IN!I E. 17th st., Huntlniton Beach. . ' The ~ge a~t him wa1 lodged when lhe parOl!ll unexpe~ visited their ~ughter Ma.fey, JW, 18, in a UCI dormitory room June 11. There they found Breach in the nude. lie argued with them and a fight follow~ In which he assaulted the parents Ti!!arly, 611 and his wile, Gertrude, 52. called sheriU's deputies and they arrested Breach. Miss Tlflany returned later while deputies were 1Ull there and was ar .. rested for mainta1nlng a, .place for the use of mart)uam. She ha1 pleaded guilty and will be -ed nexl Th.ursday. Oru•e c:: .... Weat•er Patchy early mornln& fog and low clouds clearing by this aft· ernoon to become mostiy auMy. ((oastal temperatures will range from et to 75. Today's water temperature is 69 deCl"ffSi Two 17-:v.ear.ald robbers were denied a return tllp to the CalifOrnla Youth Authority and sentenced to state prison Thursday by Superior Judge lloward 0. Cameron. Frank A. 0 '11.L,.., of 18211 Pammy Lane, Huntingtoo Beach, and Fred L. Cameron, Anaheim , were sent Jo. prllon wbell Judge Cameron denied • dtfenae motion to have tM youths returned to the CY A. School Aides Get Raises L l b e r a 1 Communist ll'Mllectuals voiced alarm over this indication o( yleldinc to pressure from abroad •t • Umo when JlO')ular au(lll(lrt !or the Czechooloval< porty chMil Alexalldtr. Dul1cek. had rMChed • 11<1" peak. Edlton ol IAttaml Liltt •• .,,1-· weekly rmd lnflulllllli, moutllplece of die liberal elito, prepared *" utra with ,.,. open 1eUier colllnf on party leodert to nefO!llto •"'1 uplaln, "but unl'*11J dtfellil the rood m w)llcb we bave •tarted aDd wllicb '" will not leave alive." INSmE TODAY Couniv mm. 1ntcnced m b111tol Florida coae whare ¢Tl naU<d to tr«. IWa I . The polr, with Johnlly L. G~ory, II, ol Santa Ana, "'"" partlcipantl in the boldup of a liquor &tore ln Orange tut March 30. Gregory was 11ntenced lut week for another oUense. Judge camel1)n pointed out that th e two were escapetis from the CY A at Norwalk whm Ibey rommltted the Oranie holdup. Thi tlrst decree robbtry sentence callt 'for Dlt Jen tba.n five years in •14!e ,prison. ), New contral:ta with raisH -. 1po proved roe the three top Huntinfton Beach Union IDlb School dl1trlct of. !iciala, whidl wtU a1aure them a total of aim oat '70.000 In -·• year. Dr. Max Forney, d!Jlrict aupenn· tendent, wtp ma!<• '25,tlOO a yoar. Aulstant superintendent o I tn- IU'uctlonal' Mnices, ·Scott Flanig1n, wlU .-Ive '22,400, and Dr. Ethan Fullmer, -DI ._uitendenl for blllineSI, wlU get !ill,100. feet July 1, 19811. The auperintel!denta are in the final year now al. current four-y<w ---F omey said renewal of contracts baa to be approved at leaat aix moatha lb• oflJclala' salaries are based on muttiples: of maximum wages for a dlllrlct teacller. The 1uperlntend .. t receiva two Umet the top teacblr'a 1alary. Flann11an'1 1111\rl' la 1.75 times. tho top wap, and Dr. Fullmer maket 1.7 times that amount. ! prior to uplraUon. • The raises In the otflciala, new,.,lout· ; ytar coatracta come becau11 Of a're· , cont 1.ncr-ill leacllerl' Ular1n. Tito lhret new coatracll 10 lllto el· , Tho 1-.lnle-l!M betn in· cilltfe ot tho d41rict ab: , 1eara1 l"laMI.. jllinod the dlllr1ct aflor World War 11, aDd Dr, Fullmtt bu held bil Jftl"'I job 0.. )'tin. I ' · "You ano wrlllni for us a ial•lui° pa1e ·tn tb.e h la to r;y o f, \:&ecbollo .. tta, .. u.; open .letter aaid .. '.'wrw. it .,.it[) Cite, brll· abov• all wtlb derillf. . . • "To lote tb11 unique chance wouk!u be ,...,. di-tat obd )'olir· -· 'II'• belioft lD ,.u ... .~f ·' ... -=-.1•ut '. --........ -- • • .. I .... ' • • l • ... rrld11, July 26, lM : • Harbor District Breakup M-0Donnell •• Cqu~ty . BB.not Walkout Fear Eases on May .Go- <# I • ti go oii a ballot -time nat lllriq. tO the LAFC by tho lucue repre1t•· Leacue Prealdenl Dean E . .lihoil Jr., · f1nt1 Ille cllle1.- m~or ol La Habra, ii to name a·eom· The' LAFC ·recommenda.Uon then mtlloo lo dNll a •lo-....,. · I firming the clUes' desire to aboUah the goes to the supervisors. The eague ~x· .LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Tiie threal ol a strike in the aerospace induatry eued t~y arter the InteroaUonal AssodaUon of Machinlsts and the 1lfcDollnoll·DouO,al CGrp. reached ll!'~f:Dt ol a three fear conb'act. diatrict . and consolidate harbors, ecuUve ~ Thur~y said a special bNcl)ol and porlu under a ainlle. elecUon should be called so th• people. unHIOd counlY deparlmenL . -lonDed tile dlatrlct 1n 1934, ooW4 Tiie 1tate111011t wtll be -tod for <!oddo Ill !°""" a~ to u:..:i=r...-ID Ille ~ le••~ i.. carrlod .., a C<lllllly. ·Tiie _.ovol by "~ --· · . tilt councils would lllen be pr.,.nted detennlned attack a1a1nst tho d!J1rict A •h<lrt llm. earlier, lAM'1 pllrlner in the negotiations, the United Auto Workers, announced an agreement with the big maker Of planes and space equipment on a contract cover- ing 3,400 employe1 in Canada. Huntington City, Council A.$ks Talbert Dissolution Prctiema between homeqwner1 in ,..._I\ Hunlil>&IA>n Beacb -tbe Talbert Wafer Dlllrlct 10 to tile Loeal Al'oDC;)' Fonnoilon Comm!Mlon at 2 p.m. Aq. H. he Cily Council ii aakinc the com· mission to dissolve the tiny irrigation water di.strict and end more than a year cf controveny over whether bome °"""" ~d 1ubsldlu Ir· rig1tlon water for fanner11. Uthe district should be dinolved the homeowners woold remain liable for repayent ol. boncll IOld 7ean ato 'to install piping and build a reservoir. City officials have offered to furnish water to tbe diatrict's dozen or ao customers. Dlltrtct ofilcllll, however, say that it will take nearly all of the a&Hil of the diatrlct to furntah the farmer customers and the meters and hooWpl needed to use the city water l!1Jllllly for irripllon. '?be probiem• have ((llDI to public attention Hveral time• over the put Terrorists Hit Saigon Again, Bomb Newspaper SAIGON (AP) -Tem>rll(s slluck ID Salp today lw tilt oecond time in a -11111 blow up Ille clty'1 largest QW ! 'I aewwpllp8C. Police -four Joung Viet Coog, · -ol diem &lrll. tit df a to-pound plllllc bomb ID tilt _. room o1 A Chau Va Quoe, Ila Mu Dally News, .. &llll-ColMI---111!> po1111 tile Sa1-............. No __ _.,_tad. 'l'be 1&1«ilfl, all armed with pi.mill. walbd lalo the ... _.... ol· fice just after 1 p.m. and ordered everyone out. One girl terrorlat pulled out the U · plosive cbarl• coacealocl ID a bag, planted it in the presrroom and fled with her ccmpaPiON. Five mlil\ltel later an ei:p\ollon rocked the tbree·riory building. heavi· ly damaliDI It. EDl!'loyeo ol tha paper 1akl the ler· roriltl were Vietnamese of Chinese orliln· The Jlant ta located In <l>oloo, the Qdnese aect1on of SaJgon where 300,000 Vletnameoo O>inese live . A few blocks away aoother Chinese paper, the Kten Quoc, was blown up June 6. Three persoot were killed ln thal explosloo, arid I~ others injured. The Kien Quoc alos aupported the South VietnameH government. Last Octol>er' terrorists -and killed tile managlnc editor of A a.au alter he had W?i1WI HV&ral edltoriala crltlcldng Viet Ocmc lftlainaU.ou. ye.r alter a few bomecr.wnert livinc in the -dlacovered Ille taapayer1 were supporthi1 the diltrlct Operation at a time when water rates to the users did not cover tbe cost of water. 'J'1ro of the homeownen ran for elec· tiOn to the board in the first election held since the board was formed in 1952. They failed in their bid despite outvoting the incumbents on the basis of number of voters. Voting in the water district is on the basis of aueued valuation of MDd and the lumen wt1h large boldlng1 euily outpolled the bomeaWneri .. In addition, tt Was discovered that hundreds of residents who pay the district tax rate were unable to vote for those who spend the tax income; and set the tax rate becau• tbey u. buying their homes oa leeae-purcbue contracts. ,...._ p ... J FREEWAY .•• family units. RepreaeataU'Vel of various groups in Westminater stated oppoaiUon to Q\e Red (Central) line and favor far the recommended Otange CEaatern) Line. pointing out that the Red Line go., thnucti tilt bNrt of th• city'• deve!Dped illdultrial diatrlct. _, al t.be Red (Central) Line came from spokesmen repruenUng groups in Garden Grove, Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley. several homeowner groups from all over the county otated oppot!Umi to the oranae (Eulmt) Line. Hm1eawner1 trom Weatmlnlter, 00-, urged adopllon of the oru1e Une. 'Ibe com.ml.salon lJ to make a decilion on whlcb of tilt study Une1 will bocomt tilt adopted route for t.be freeway which h; not due for con· 1trucUon f o r another 10 years. That annoimcement ii Ultely within about <IO days. Canyon Wreck Ki11s Woman ANAHEIM Mrs. ROie Bridgeman, 49, of Norwalk, was killed late Thurlday when a ca:: 1D which she wu riding failed to negotiate a curve on Santa Ana c..yon highway and plunged over an embankment. Investigating offiCi!rs said the victim was thrown from the vehicle and crushed by it. Driver Ncbll'd lleyes, IOI! 'aw of the victim, and four other pusengers were hospitalized. a now constituted. lt want.I the diltrlct aboll.&hed u a separate taxing •&ency and at 4H Um• had a vote lawrinl Ibo inov<i bJ repreoeotalive& ol ti Of the :1$ CODD\J cille&. A bill by A1semblymB11 John V. Brigg& (R,FulJerton) to al>ollJh th• diatrlot -IUl>Poited by tilt le&gue but failed lo get out ol committee. The Board of SUperviJOl'I, after appointing a committee of county ttaff members to ltl.ldJ tbe matter, voted Wt month lo -the cllllrlot. . . Negotiations between McDonnell- Douglaa and the UAW on a contract tor American aerospa"ee workers repruented by the union ltll1 are unresolved. (Thls contract affects the firm's giant Huntington Beach ID· stallation.) ' . ·, . Huntington Beach Aaaemblyman Robert Blllk•, (ril!bl), buddies with other =~an aaaemblymen, Frank Murphy and· Cborles Comad, ' durtne on Tlluraday of a propOaal to place gun "'glstraUon le&- WaUon before the voters In the November eleclWD. Burke ii a mem- ber of the Assembly Election and Reapportionment Committee Cl'!' m>lly studying the propoul , · The leagueiboord took nollce of IWo other counfy ~ Thuroday. Committee• wtll be ......... to study and report oa the uae of money from t.be coimty -al found to blJl)d eoun· 1Y fire otatlolls · Mnlnl url>anlzed areas and a Grand Jury recom· mendatkln that local government con· troll be p-OD prl .. te mollilt X· ray uni.ta. However sources close to the negotlatcrs were hopeful that the C&nadian settlement might aet a guideline for an agreement covering aerosapce workers in the U.S. Battleship, Crew Of 1,600 Head Valley Schools Teaching First Graders Economics ....... p ... J POLITICS .. . Finl..,_. ID Fountain Valley are loaming bow to eount tholr _, and alao -to spend It wtaely. Fountain Valley 1cbool dlatrict be· F T .:. B h . gan lhil ezper1m.,,1a1 project lo -. or LUng eac eco1111micJ to aiJ:. and ....... ,..... ... 1c1s In the Democratic race, the tabula-last yeir. About 180 students toot part tion aave Hubert H. Humphrey 1,0781% LONG BEACH (UPI) -The migllly in the beglDnlng, and the prot(rBID is vot.e1, including 419 committed and battleship USS New Jersey carried being eruarged to accommodate 270 659in leaning. Eupne J. McCarthy children this comin g school term. had 4171h , with 344 comm itted and her 6,100 man crew toward a weekend Last year, the students learned what 731h leaning. A total of 1,125 are need· of relaxation in her home port of Long a consumer and • producer are, then ed to nominate in the Democratic con-Beach today, after several days of fir. practiced being them. test. ing drills off the Southern ca.utornia They decided to establish a bakery, Ge<r1e Wallace, a tblrd p9fty can• made their own goods and then sold didate, bad 15 Pemocratic votes, 13 coast. them at an open hou.se in May. committed and 2 leantnc. 'n.en were The New Jersey Is scheduled to dock In one of ~ir el.rller i-ojecU, they 558 uncommitted votes and 325 com· ~t 8 p.m. at Long Beach Naval Station. chose to mab w&ltebuketa and sold mltted to favwlte aon1. Twelve. votes She leaves Monday on another brief them to classmates. ·remain committed to the late Sen. "At first, some of the kids felt they Robert F. Kennedy, and another 12 outing , before returnlng to Long Beach would sell the baskets to other chil· are cornmMlted. to Prelidtnt JOhnaon, Aug. 2 for flnal refittine at a 11blpyard. dren on· a donatltn basia," said both oa Ille bull of primary ~. After that, the vessel wlll head for Michael Brick. asslotant '1ui>erinten· Other devetopmenla : , the waters ctf Vietnam. tendent for penonnol. M~ -Tiie Ml--F "-k th N "Then they became aware they told nenmen in Bosten 'lburlday that er more l.IWIU a wee e ew were being cl\arged for their supplies Some o1 u. qaeetioM dlaa;ll••' m the coune wen: -11 e\'WY(llle a comumer? It....,. one a~? •· -Can )'Vii "'"'k faater U you• 1ilt toob? • : -Wiil ben1u 1-1DODeJ to mY-! -Do all working ~ poy tan&? Brick said research tn 1962 shOftd that economists felt studeots need to learn theories ol product!Vlly -ly ID IChool. "!l's part ol living," ho aald. The prlljecl, one ol the few ol its kind , said Brick, i! supported with a Tille Ill Elementary and Secondary Educati~n Act ~ant of $90,406-for three years. Foontain Valley; Ceiltra- Ua and Fuller1nn icbool districts ve •plJtting the granl in a ~Uve study. 1 l'rota P .. e J EDISON ••• he does not have "any plans to accept Jersey's l&-incb guns have been poun-and learned they bed to charge a fee the vice pretldency'" 1f ht fails to win ding San Clemente Island, a waterless at least equtvaient to whit it coat them can ; our gray poles oow going up are the top rpot on the ticket. He also said wuteland 75 miles southwest of Long to make the wutebaaketll." a major beautilioation breaklbrough. h h d d Ian b t h. The coorse -• of the 1odal stud They blend ID with Ille ...... , .. said e a ma e no p s a ou ts own Be~. Tbe Island's sole tunction la to . • ~ • · · , · ·-1 possible vice presidential . running 1es program, brought 1n ·tbeoriel of Kiser. ' male. "I think It's a lia!o b~ early," , serve •• a target for Navy gunnery productloo, diltribuUan.lild -...mump. Kiser charged thet ii would be fiscal be nJd. practice_~ tion In terms the~dlllaren·toUJd 111lder· folly for the company to under&I'9dnd Der stad:I Brick said arterial and transmission .lines. ·41']1,e Rocke!< -Sen. Charles H,,_ ', '!!JO . -ld'1 ooly operatjng bot· ...: -~ ..... ·"~led ~-~-. · -· ~ Percy (R·lli.), gave the ·Ntw Yor)(-.:a.....11&--tbe New Jeney was taken out 4'-~U:._ aw..,,;:::_.__ -tract" and~ cost would be ash;:ynomical, &fiY re hil ~--~ he -·•• um -...-, -. from double to lll·'limea the ·'84 IDt govomor ~ ~·..., ::J:IDK " o! mothballl tast -for me ID tho had clMlroom ~en. illclqd!nl the cost of underl!J'OIJCldini resldptial ~~~:;n}~':d~~~~~mw~~Vl __ etna--:-mjiiistruiiiiiig~~-e •. iiiiiiiiii;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iFloun;;;taln;;~V~aUey;;;;;m;QOr;;;;·;;;;;;liijjjjji9;Po'fl"!<;;;;';";h;•;""e.ld.~;;;;;;;;;::::-;-end the war." Body of Infant Found in Drain The badly dacompoaed body of an infant wa. fomd Thursday 1n Anaheim by three young boys playing In • dorm control channel. Coroner's deputies said the infant had been abandOlled geven to ten days ago. The body wn hklden in a W1e vault wllich comects with the 1torm <rain at Dale Street DNr Broadway, police 11id. Anabalm pollce lilted the -.. bm>ictdt Comltr'I deputie1 today -• coaductlna mlc:rooc:opic telll on June 1111 .... to aeterm1ne ff Ille illfant haCI ever been .U.ve. 15% OFF ON ALL HENREDON SCHOONBECK UPHOLSTERY Aller weeks ol comparaUn qw.t, Viet eon, terr'orism bn>lle out •Kain ID SaijlOll and in two provincial capitals to the "°"'1 and south lll>t week .. d. Twelve Vietnamese were ldUed and 91 wounded in the bombings of four tbeaten, one only a block from the na· Uonal police headquarter1 1n Saigon. Mesa Councilman's Wife ChooH · from many .tyles of sofas and chairs. Special price1 on many chairs start at only $199. You can special order now. DAllY PllO I Denied Bail in Slaying llwd"..s•• ...._ Wtw• Cit.ANOE COAST PUBLllHINIJ COM,AHV ll:oh•rt N. w,,d PtaldMI •1'111 Pvbll~ J•e~ 11 . Curlrt Vice Pt•idllirll lllld GfNrll ...... IWltn' Th••• k,,,.u -"''"''' A. Mirrplr.111• IMM•lfltl Editor Al._,,. W. ltht Wllll•11t It••' .,.,,_,,,. t1111111rtt1on 1-.t'l lldltw City £fllw " ............. o... Jot .... ltr••• Mclllot AM_, P.O. In NO 11641 --......, a.di; n w.. ...... """'-"' C:.• ,..., -Wtlllt ..., "'"' ~ llldtl m '""'' A"""" Ball for .accused carving-knife killer Mn. Irene M. Tucker, 1642 Minorca Drive, Costa Mesa was denied without prejudice when she appeared before Judge WilUam C. Christensen in Harbor District Judicial Court toda7. He allo set preliminary hearing for Aug. 8 1t 9:30 a.m. at wblch Ume the 37.year-old wlfe of Costa Meaa City Councilman George Tucker i1 u· pected to enter a not SUilty pll:a to one count ot murder. Mra. Tucker's case -delayed whUt Judre Chrtlft1111m1 cleared hit caltn· dar of a number' of traffic matter1 - was called 1horUy befOH 11 a.m., but dlscu11lon amon1 the judge, Deputy · Dillrict Altonio7 Jay Mooley and l>aul Augustine Jr .. delonae attorney, could not be heard in the audience. Altar 10 rnlnu!OI of di1C1111ioo, In w!lich Judie a.r1-..n 1miled and ~·~,..:=:....,...:: obuckltd once, the dtfendant'1 at. ~ =.:S--~ ........ :.U: tmMJ !'IPOl'ttcl tht nnw in• Wb1lper =: u Mt1. 'l'ucbr lat In th• jury box. Qi11!:2j,.S~"':I = Mil. Tucker. ••arln• I tidy pint - - -... • --· maintained • poll llloo1 ... T • ! r m•J MMlll prtllloa u 1h1 heard thet lhe muat , ,,_j -ra M .... 1.. nmaln In c•ltody. a S ' M I I I .... JI Mn:. Tucker 11 chlr1ed with the -· - - --· Juoe • otabblnl death of her nnt• ===·• -:, •'S'',t; ::•= door nelchbor, Mra. H 1rrI1t1 ..,.,,_.....__,.,, • w-...1. • ol lMI Mlnorca Drive. • •i:~llM Cawe of their dispute hu not yet bemt =.:a:........ ".'\1f,l!Qa -..m1111c1. ==-= Tho daf-bod -Der Ill '-------------' J among four men 1n jail dllqar .. 1 _. ' a pretty teen..11e girl. Mrs. Tucker'• chin rested cm her lilt and the avoided look.Ina: at the judge, protecutor and her defense attorney u they conferred on her immediate fate. Golf Tourney Signup Monday Regtatratton deadline for the Hun· tlngtoo Beech Olamber ol Commer« celebrity ,.U tournament 11 Monday, chamber olllclala lllllOUDCod Wday. The toumeme.nt 11 •t Meadowlark Golf Courte Wednelday with tee-of! time 10 a.m. A dinner will follow the da y of golfing. Tickets at $7 .50 for tht tournament and fl.IO !or the dinner dance are avallable et et,._ tb1 chamber office or the cowitry club. Gallery passes are fl. · .Grand marsba11 are Barry Lauttr and Hal llaJtor and coordinltor ii KfnlJ-Some ol tho celtlllllln Wllo baYa oc· cli*d lqvltatiou to form tHIDI with loCal IO!len art Jaci< and Elaina !Al ..... -11.-. llu Rolled, Pbll CroebJ, HartJ ·Babl>itt. Tom 'l'lllly. Rod c-. llud camar • o-p Olandlor, 0.. Corter, Bud · 81111. lllllp Yount; EOdlt Finlt..,., a..toe IADI, Ed Nortm and mllll)' -·ire Holl,-ml~. Greet 1ittin9 in this looH pillow. back cllair. Great price tool Fluid lines, marvelous comfort, on• is good, two are better. On cast. ers for eesy mobility. LAST WEEK OF OUR STORE-WIDE SALE, WHICH INCLUDES SOME OF OUR FINE LINES OF DREXEL FURNITURE. EXCLUSIVI DEALERS POR: HENREDON-DREXEL-HIRITAOI 90 DAYS NO:INTIRIST-LONGIR TIRMS .AVAILABLE ON APl'llOVID CR.IDIT 7.1.M -NIWPOllT llACH 1711 Wllfcllll 111>. M2·~ Ofllllt .. , ... ' 'TtL ' • INTDIOU LAGUNA 11.ACH 345 North c-Hwy. ''9f111lenel lnterter DtoltnoPI .AY1l111'1..-AID-HllD -PlllAT'Tll.t _, ...... _.,.._ _ .... , .. , ~6151 l r '· In ,. .. '! :? d to in . ts • "I >r .. .. •• •• l. d 11 d • •• it d I • • • • • • 0 • • • ' IL a 0 a 0 0 I . . • • • • • . • . . ' . • --. _ DAILY PILOT Lagu:Da • Bea eh Today~• U,elag ' EDITION N.Y. Stoeka • . . vot:. 61, NO. '179, 5 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES • . ' t:AGUNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA . FRJOAY;;JULY 26, '1968 TEN CENTS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. Makeup of Planning A 25-member committee to feed in· fonnatlon into Laguna's general plan study will apparently jell Aug. 7 despite apparent differences of opinio~ on whether member s must be Laguna Beach residents . Councilman Ri chard G o I d L e r g Wednesday asked associate city plan- ner Al Autry how he felt about ap. potnfment of perso~ not living in Laguna but "quite ective in business in Laguna Beach.'' Mesa Death Suspect Denied Bail Bail for accused carving-knile killer 1'-1rs. Irene M. Tucker. 1642 Minorca Drive. Costa Mesa was denied without 11rejudice when she appeared before Judge \Villiam. C. Christensen in Harbor District Judicial Court today. He also set prellminary hearing for Aug. 8 at 9:30 a.m. at which time the 37.year-old wife oC Costa Mesa City Councilman George Tucker is ex· pected to enter a not guilty plea to one count of murder. Auiry said Ille plannlng area b not confined to the corporate limits of Laguna Beach. He &aid planners wiU try a n d establish as much commu· nicatlon as possible with ot.beT plan· ning entitles such as the Irvine Ranch. Mayor Glenn Ve<kler said he felt the city staff was probably bet t..e r qualified to lll'ork with planners of the Moulton ranch and Irvine Ranch than a citizen's committee would be. "I don't think necessarily we 1ihould Lag11nagrins go ouWde our boundaries.'' said Ved· der. He said Lag'lma Beach residents have contacts with persons in ad· joining communities and could gather information from them. Vedder said he was disturbed at misconceptions held by i-ome <1.S to the role O{ the committee being formed. He saJd some persons thought it was a . planning committee. Vedder stressed that lhe 2S-member group is to function entirely as an in· By Phil lnteriandl Mrs. Tucker's case -delayed while Judge Christensen cleared his calen· dar of a number of traffic matters - was called shortly before 11 a.m., but l_liscussion among the judge, Deputy District Attorney Jay Mosley and Paul Augustine Jr., defense attorney, could not be heard in tM audience: "Gue11 Who's Coming To Dinner •• .'' After 10 minutes of discussion, in which Judge Christensen milled nid chuckled once, the defendant's at· torney reported the news in • whisper as Mrs. Tucker sat in the jury_ box. Mrs. Tucker, wearing a tidy pink ~weater, maintained a pale stony ex· pression as she heard that she must remain Jn custody. High S"Chnol Renovation Bids Due on Tuesday Mrs. Tucker is charged with the June 28 stabbing death oC her next· door neighbor, Mrs. Harr I et t Westphal, 68, of 1646 Minorca Drive. Cause of tfleir dispute has not yet been determined. Battleship, Crew Of 1,600 Head For Long Beach LONG BEACH (UPI) -The mighty battleship USS New Jersey canied her 6,100 man crew toward a weekend l"lf n:!laxation in her home port of Long Beach today, after several days ol fir· There may be a new look for the old &dlool grouncb when Laguna Beach lligh School students tn!k back to classes in September. If bids are acceptable to school trustees Tuesday night, work will begin immediately on school renova- tion, according to a school district of· ficial. Included in the renovation plans are: painting of the science buildings inside and outside and repairing or the Hatf ul of Pills Leads to Arrest ing drills of.f the Southern California A batful of pil ls and powder lead to a CQ8St. Laguna Beach drug arrest early thi s The New Jersey is scheduled to dock morning. at 6 p.m. at Long Beach Naval Station. Police Lt John Zelko said Samuel She leaves Monday on another brief Robert Gibson , 36 or 1195 Victory \Valk outing, before returning to Long Beach was booked on suspicion of posiessing Aug. 2 for filial refitting at a shipyard. dangerous drugs. After that, the vessel will head for Zelko said Gibson was arrested after the waters oU Vietnam. police stopped the car in which he was For more than a week the New riding at 1:30 a.m. in-.the fiOO block of J!rsey's 1&-inch guns have been poun· Broadway. ding San Clemente Island, a waterless Zelko said a search by Sgt . Dave wuteland 75 mUes southwest of Long Brown turned up five orange pills and Beach. The island's sole function Is to whJte powder in Gibson's hat band and serve as a target for Navy gwµiery 10 pills and a "needle holder" in bis practice. packet. The world's only operating bat· The officer said Gibson, identified as tleship, the New Jen;ey was taken out a furniture mover, would be arraigned o~ mothballs last winter for use in the today in municipal court. He said a Vietnam struggle. companion of Gibson was not held. door Jrames; re. roofing of the girls' gymnasium; painting of the outside oC the auditorium and main classroom buildings and the inside of the auditorium and the renovating Of Uto library building including heating, ligbting carpeting and painting inside. By the lime the school painting is completed, the school will be adorned with 10 different colors, none oC l'l"hich are pink. The whole project ts expected to cost ;.bout '48,475. The board is also asking for bids for an architect to supervise the in· stallation of three portable classrooms to take the place of the bungalows on the North Campus (Old Thurston). 2 Prcsruued LoMl In Navy Jet Crash MONTEREY, caµ1. (UPI ) -The Navy today reieased the names of two men presumed lost in tbe Pacific oil Ule California coast when their jet tanker crashed into the sea. u . Cmdr, Darrell H. Brooks, 29, Virginia Beach, Va ., and Naval Jet Machirrist Mate 1 C. Floyd H. Wood , 43, Oak Harbor, Wash., were aboard a Navy KA3B tanker when it disap· peared from radar screeM Wednesday night. Artists From Here, There 21 Festival Exhibitors From Otlier Lands How does oae ex:plaill the wide array of art wcrks at ttWJ: FMUvel of Arts? Well , one argument cooJd be tbat 21 extibltors at ttu year'1 Feetival are n1ti'Ves of 1aodt other than the Ua.lted States. Of ooune, all exlllbltxn !love to live within "• bop end • skip" of tbelr -: Festival ru1.. require tllet. Bat, originally, ottlbttors wen1 living in lands as geogra{llUcally separated es Canada, Gttmany end lndMI . 'r'1e ex1<:t breakdown goes like this : Of tht foreign countr1es repraented, fi ve exhibitors are trom Camda;. tour fro111 the British Isles, including Inland; and two rrom ~rmany, IJung,ary and Y-lavia. Others ln· eluded ere Estoala, India, Indonesia, ?, Iran, Norway and Swedan. A.a for nat:ve-born Americans, Calllornla heads the lllit 'lrifl1 IO ~· hibitors, in OOIDl>lO.Y with otller Wester a er 1, Sou th erner11 MJdwesternera, ~New E n g I a n d Y&lllrees, IOd nm two "espetrlMes" from that other IUDlhiDe " Nte, Fklride. -With the wide arr1y of. el.hibltor1' backgrounds, one can understand tile wide assortment of works on sale thl1 yoar, as In the past. lncluded art such colorful piece~ as p a I o t i n i 1 • sculptures, wood carvings, etchlnp, ceramics, ileD\I of jewelry, and other pleuant surprises, all with that "bomela.nd" touch. At 1-t o.. artl•t bu sold to England's Princess Margaret and Lord Soowckn, while others have a· ecuted IUCf\ impressive commbrions as paintl'ag murals: at the famous Hearst CuUe and "'l'!'IYlnr art work t:o tho Ford Motor ~ for ltl Nw York World'• Fair dlaplay. More !hon one •mil>itor bi1 polled the add te•t of a<ceplanoo by aeBJng l<I •U<h knowledgeable art authwttits •• vm. cent Price. The curitot Fest!¥tll has atr .. dy aet new records for grwnds attendanct, and so many visltor'I art seen leaving wi th purohues under their armt that Laguna '1 conunuin& reputtUon a! 1n Art Coloay IMIDI as ll!C\IH u ever; -nN)'be even mon so. Group Sparks Debate fonnatlon Cathering body. He said each councilman will furnish five names and said he has made no sug. gestion to other councilmen about whom they should choose. Vedder said he wanted people on the committee able to communicate. l·le mentioned the probability of selection one member Crom the "socio-religious field." The mayor said he . also wanted young people represented on the _in• formaUon in·put groqp. He menUOrled D o u r Sdunlu, P'"•ldent of the high school student body and son of former planning commission chairman James Scluntl2. Councilman Charlton Boyd asked Autry about a tle·in on lhe 18-month planning process with the scbool board. Autry said a meeting had been held with the &ehool board and aaid school officials are giving exceptional cooperation. I Boyd Hid, "that --boon'! r eached 11be point of a joint general plane" Autry saJd, "Not at th11 point." Boyd raJsed the que1Uoo of im· plementlng the plan after t h e study port.ion is completed. Clty Manager James D. \Yheaton said the planning consultant will work wltll the C<iW1Cil In 1he Jmplementatton stage. He said the consultant doe• not want to be connected with a ptammc (See CITIZENS, P ... I) Teddy-Won't Run Senator. Cites Family Responsibilities BOSTON (AP ) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D·Mass.), took himseU out of any comideration for t h e Democratic vice presidential nomina· tlon today with a statement !aying "for me. this year . it is Impossible." Kennedy, last survivor of four Ken- nedy sons. said in a statement that his declsiGn "is final, firm and not subject to further consideration." Kennedy said he Is removing bimseU Crom con· sideration because oC f a m t I y responslbltities resulting from. the assassination of his brother, Sen, Robert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.), last month. The Massachusetts senator. in a four -paragraph statement. said he -y.·ill speak out, however, on "foreign and domestic policies our party must pursue if it is to be SUCi!essful in the coming electi<>n." He 118.id he appreciated the con· fidence of Democrats who have pr1r Nixon Caravan Departs · Cameo Shores Retreat A Clf Hilll .~! !t, C!1!;< J"'"¢ out of Corona dei Mar's exclusWe Cameo Shores are• last night, taking away "good -..lpbor" Riobard Nlxoo for the pctitkal wars. It ended presidential candidate Nixon's one-week respite from pre· convention campaigning. . lie had spent the time at the home of Judge and Mrs. Thurmond Clarke. 4633 Brighton Rd., except for a brief trip to Los Angeles where he· taped a TV interview with Joey Bi$hop earlier Thursday. The former Republican Vice Presi· * * * UPI Poll Finds Nixon Can Win On First Ballot c(ent Dew to Washln(ton. Dl!rinl his stay, in the Corona del Mu com· munity, Nixoa rematned in aecluion, except for the presence of 1 host of secret service agents. . His family was not with him. Hp and his entourage left as quietly as they came. His temporary neighbors said there was "no commotion at all" from the time he arrived, unannounced, until the lime he left, also unannounced. Newport police were not even ad· vi~ed of the time of the Nixon <:'aravan's departure. Police said there were no incldents o! any kind during the Nixon visit. "He was a good neighbor," one Cameo Shores resildent smiled. "We would welcome him back, any time." Nixon already has plans to return to Califordla. He tentatively plans to stay at the nearby Mission Bay resort com· plex in San Diego for 10 dayl!i following the Republican National Convention. Herbert Klein, Nixon's campaign By U1lted Pre11 lnternaUonal. Richard M. Nixon still has sufficient manager, said Wednesday the plan is convention delegate strength -on contingent on the former vice presi· paper -to capture the Republi~an dent winning the GOP presidential presiden~al nomination on the first nomination at the co nvention in Miami ballot, according to a United Pre'"--Ile " -ac ... International survey today. J telman \YiUiam Evans s a Id \Yith the sel ec tion less than two Thurs ay abOut 170 rooms In two weeks away, UPI tabulated 691 pro· bable votes ror Nixon on the first hotels on Mission Bay are reserved for ballot. A total or 667 is needed to Nixon, his vice presidential nominee, nominate. stall members and newsmen starting or Nlxon's total, 183 votes are com· Aug. IO. mitted to his: candidacy on at least. the R. E. Haldeman, Nixon's chief of first ballot and 508 are leaning toward staff, said the candidate planned tony itffis nearest rival, Nelson A • to Washington , D.C., today for a State Rockefeller, had 285 voles in the UPI Department briefing on foreign al· survey, 1:.1 committed and 155 lean· fairs . ing. Ronald Reagan had 157 total, 86 committed and 71 leaning. ltarold Stassen had 1 committed vote. There were still 44 uncommitted votes and 15S titd up in favorite son candidacies. Rockefeller partisans claim Nixon has been losing delegate votes sinCf! tha last of the stale conventions in ear· ly July. The UPI tabulation shows a slight Increase in Nixon strength dur· ing this period: there were scattered losses , but these were somewhat more than offset by the change of ~ome previously uncommitted delegates to the leaning-toward-Nixon column. Rockefeller also haa piDed 1~ogth slightly since th• rtat.o conventions, largely by a!Vactlni P'!vlously un· commJtted deleaates. · The gre1test prdporti-. gain in tbe peripd accrued to Reaian, who picked up delegalel In Utah -Ibo tall C!f the S14t. <;OP .convenUOOI -and in tome other places. 1 UPI oblervfr1 1crMs the country ,.,,..,ied a softening tn Nixon' a second· ballot ttrength. They aald there was evidence significant numbers o l deJegatea would be wtlllng to abandon his cause wlth some readiness - malnly to move to the Reagan camp. (Stt POLl'l'ICS, Pap l) School Ann11als Due Out Monday The cry is out: Remember the Y earboolts. The 11167-68 edition of the Laguna Beach lllgh School yearbook, the NautUus, will be distributed Monday, July 29, from the bungalows on the NOl1lt Campus (Old Thurston) from 7 to 9 p.m. Th6 annuals are autvtne late due to a lack Of a lllfftcl<nt number of •tud-bolng .. the y-boolt Nlf, ..i tho f<Ulure to meet ducBlnes doe to tile 1111.U amount ., -.,. ... <OrdJni to Rob Kzmnu, CUD• llllaolana-Of publiuu .... To celebrate tile' ·dell very Of the boo1cs. • Pll'l1 will be hold at tlie Hllh School oaf-la patio from 8 to 12 that same evening felturtnr retrutntaU andrt<:Ord<,· .Thooe olud<nt> -are WIClble to olck up their YW1>ooU Monday even· Ing OISI let their -from II "' 12 a.m. Tuuday through Jl'riday at room 91 on tlle NarUI Campus, ?\ - • posed blm for II• national ticket ucl "under normal circumstances sudt a poOsibillty woold be a high honor and a challenge to further public service." Kennedy added, "My reasons are purely personal. They arise from the <:"hange in my personal situation and responsibilities as a result of the events of last month. I know ttl8t the memben al tile Democrati< Party \\1111 understand these reasons without further elabore.tion. Lagunan Faces Assault Charge After Shooting An argumeat about a necktie ancf a gunshot that shattered the none-too- quiet early morning In Laguna Beach were to. be followed today by a felony an"algnment on charges of ••ault with a deadly weapon. Police Sgt. Vic Sagan said Robert E. Cardinal, 20 of 12.89 S. Coast Highway would be anaigned in municipal court today on the felony charge. Sagan saJd Cardinal drew a .25 caliber automatic after an argwnent with Kelly Boyd, 866 Bol!:a Way; Michael May, 2345 S. Coast Highway; and Donald Crevier, 871 Park Ave. The detective said Boyd struck cardinal and slezed lbe gun whicb _.Aischarged. Si.gan said the argument began at the Hotel Laguna and ~d the gun wa• fired on the street near Forest A venue and S. Coast Highway. The detective, 'l/l\o was still in· terviewlng witnesses, said the argu. ment in some way involved Czevier'1 necktie. La st Escapee From Jail Held It took five months but Orange County sheriff's deputies Thursday picked up the last of 11 men who escaped the county jail last Feb. 20. Thomas P . Case, 19, of 2525 Elden St., Costa Mesa, was captured by Orange County deputies in a Van Nuy1 parking lot. He was located through a tip received through the lberiff'1 of· ficti. Deputlel said "he bad been out of town for a while but came baclr: and made some contacts." ~ or .... Weatlter Patchy early morning fog and low clouds: clearing by this aft· ernoon to become m01tJ.y sunny. Coastal temperatures will range from 69 to ~. Today's water temperature is 69 deerees. msmE TODA.'li County ma:1J renttnetd in bnitol Florido ewe 1Dll<Tt glrl nalltd lo Irr<. Pao• I . l:i. 1; ,__ ..... ~1~~.. 2: --. ,...._. ft.II •lrt C• I -" --" ... '--"" II -. ...... ,. ... 1•11 .,. ........... ' --. --. --. .......... 1 .. 1. -... .............. ·-. --~ -. ~-..... • • 1 p .,:: ""' . -. -'I ••••n• •• ........ . -. --. \ ··-"' Put This One With·-That One • • • Telephone technician Bruce Newbery works to splice together the lines of telephone cable cut when a contractor's trenching machine severed the und· erground line in Newport Beach area. Service to approximately 2,000 Cost.a Mesa and Newport Beach homes and businesses was interrupted by th e acci~ dent• Pacific Telephone spokesmen said that full service should be restored by night time. El Toro Officer Named Trustee By San Joaquin Lt. Phillip Bradlield, assistant public works dJnct.or at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, has been named trustee of san Joaquin School District. He W8' selected from six applicants at a special board meeting Wednesday to repplace Dr. John Gossom, Naval dentist transferred from El Tiro to the Naval Academy at Annapoli.6, Md. Hil term will run until June 30, 1971. Two other trustees live in El Toro, one m East Irvine and one in Mission Viejo. Lt. Bradfield, a 2(}..year veteran, and hia wife have three daughters, 15, 16 and 17, all atbending Mission Viejo lUgh School. He has been involved in the school PTA. On his application. he said he believes he can assist the board in ex- panding construction planning and in general supervtsie>n of t h e ad- rninistratloo or the school district. Laguna Beach Thief May Become Cutup The truer may twn into quite a cutup. Laguna Beach housewife Leia Jane Adams, 570 Pinecrest Drive. told police 'lbun;day that a $125 power saw had been stolen from the garage of her borne. OhlLV PllOI ....... --OltANOI COMT PUILllHIHO COM,AHV Robert N. W••" Preldent 1111t P'ubllJhlll' J•c~ II. Cttrl.., 'Vitt Flmlde!ll ,,., 0.-•I Mfl'll"r The"''' .:,,,11 .... Thoflllt A. Mur,hl~• Mll'IHll'lt Editor J.lth •'41 P. Ntll Ptul N11tt 1t LI..,,. ~ #.ltvlrtlll"' Clf'f' IClllOt Dt~llr .._ __ JJt f1tt1t A., .. M1tli&f .Ydr111; P.O. In 661 t1&12 ..--Coif• Mt11: m Wist,.,. SfPftf HIWPO" &elldl: nn WHI .. !bf. 8o<lltvtrf Kuntll'!ll'-' It.ch; lOf Jlh , .... , Frot11 Page J POLITICS ..• In the Democratic race, tbe tabula· tion gave Hubert H. Humphrey l ,0781At votes, including 419 committed and 6591h leaning. Eugene J. McCarthy had 4171h , with 344. committed and 73lh leaning, A total of 1,125 are need· ed to nomin11te in the DerDocratic con- test. George Wallace, a third party can· didate, had 15 DemocraUc votes, 13 committed and 2 leaning. There were 558 'Ullcommltted votes and 325 com- mitted to favorite sons. Twelve votes remain committed to the late Sen. Robert F . XeMedy, and another 12 are committed to President J ohnson, both on the bast. of primary result!. Other development!: McCarthy -The Mimletota senator told newsmen in Boston Thursday that he does not have "any plans to accept the vice presidency" if he fails to win the top spot on the ticket. He also sald he had made no plans about his own possible vice pre!ildentlal running mate .. "I think it's a little bit early," he satd. Pancake Feed Set by Firemen When you've been as busy as the fire1nen in U1e Laguna area have been this past week, you'd be hungry, too. The South Laguna Volunteer Fire Department will be holding ils annual Pancake Breakfast this Sunday morn· ing, June 28, from 7 to 11. Included in the food fest are pan- cakes, sausage, orange juice, and cof- fee or milk. The breakfast will be htld at the South Laguna station, at the corner of Virginia. Way mid 2nd Street. Dona- tions or $1.25 for adults and 75 cents for the children will be used for departmental expenditures. This once...a-year event is put on so the department can better serve the community. Tickets are avallable from any South Laguna fireman or at the SouUt IA.gum. Hardware. Cyclists Blamed For Fatal Fall TORRANCE (UPI) -A JJ.year-old girl died Thursday of injuries suffered when sht: was thrown from a horse that bolted after being harassed by motorcycle riders. Colleen Edith Steadhan, of Wllm- Jngtoo, was injured Sunday·on a bridle path near Baker Street .and Golden Avenue in Long Beach. She was rushed to Wilmington Com· rnunity Hospital and later transferred to Harbor General Hospital where she died . Officers said motorcyclists deliberately drove their machines within five feet of Miss Steadban's horse, and also harassed other riders on the path. Spiritual Medium Due to P erform No telling what may happen at the first public demonstration or med.lumship in Laguna Beach, 8 o'clock tonight at tne Woman's Club, 826 Sl Atm.11 Drive. Brenda Orembaw, billed a.a an in· ~erna.tioo.ally known spiritual medium, will prMent her exhibition under the •ponsorshlp of Ille SpirlturJ R.,.arch Associate<. According to group coctuiirman, Si Slavin, this will be the first of a geries of monthly public meetings featuring spiritual medlums, psychics and speakers. The Friday meeting is open to the pubUc with no char&e. Fro• P .. e J CITIZENS . • • operation that is "golng to fail." Autry said the planning committee will meet With the planning eonsultant after the committee is formed. The study Is being conducted by the In· ternationally respected. firm . Daniel, Mann, Johnson &: Mendenhall with federal funds financing a portion of the study. Got Their Goats Navy Checks. Deat h of 2 Mascots ANNAPOLIS, Md . (AP) -The U.S. Naval Academy revealed today that tht two toats which 1erved as sports maacoll, tncludln1 ooe imported from Inland, hav1 bten fou.nd dead under myltlrioua clrcw:Dstances. A 1poke1mu for the N a v a t Aclldemy Alhllllc Asaoclatioa aald BW XVI ond Kin( Puck, Ibo lrllh, beer-drinklDI 1oat1 were found dead Thurada,Y. Autopsleg on both anlma11 w e re beln& performed by veterln.arians 1t the Uwvtrlit1 of Maryland. The eoau. 1ymbol or tbt academy since llil<Mi, &re houaed at a nearby dairy farm. Heavy 1ecurltJ precau· tions a.re: taken, includinkMarine Corpe guards, durln& the footba11 seuon, but no extra security Js pro- vided at thJa Ume of the year. King Puck, who bad a penchant for beer, wu pr11ented to tbt academy tn aa tlal>ar1t. ceremony wt yur by tbt elul ol 1927, wblcb WU bayinl Ill 40tb reunion. According to leg'llCI, a berd ol wild goatl n e 1 r the town of klllor&lln tn lre1aocl once tltrled lbt townapeoplo in time to flff a mauraudln1 band from Cromwell's ll1111· Eich year, to commemorate thi1 event, t h e re1ldent1 of Jtiltorclln crown a &oat 11 lclll& ol their Pucl< Fair. !.alt year, Ibo clau of 1127 purcha•ld tho l)Olt and prestntell King Puck to lbe academy. Cubans • Ill Celehra.tion ... 600,000 Reqill Fidel Ctutro Ta~ve.~, I IANTA CLARA, CUba CAP) -Mor. 8-toa,000 Cubans are expected to crowd into thla gaily decorated capital of Laa Villas Province today to join Prime Minister Fidel Castro in ttlebrating the lfith anniversary of bis revolutionary movement. A carnival complete with street dan- cing, Ah'o-CUban mul('c and plenty of beer and rum aet the toao· for ·tho celebradon. The dty about 240 mile• -ol Havana wu festooned with flags and thousands of banners bearing the ~mber 26. A 10-atory pQrtrait of sJaJ.n euerrilla leadet; Che G u e v a r a decorated the front of the Santa Clara I.Jbre Hotel on the clty's ma.Jn plaza. A speech by the boarded Cuban leader is the lrlgb point of tte Missing Boater's Friend Refuses Police Lie Test The girl friend of a young man reported drowned in Newport Harbor has declined to take a lie detector test on questions dealing with the accident, Newport Beach police said today. As a result, Det. Sgt. Ken Thompson said an investigation into the disap- pearance of Robert James Spencer, 20, of Long Beach, is at a stalemate. Spencer dropped out of sight the Sunday afternoon of June 30 after he and a female companion rented a 14- foot dinghy to go sailing in Newport Harbor. The girl friend, identified only as Ingrid Taylor of Los Angeles , told police she turned from the bow of the small boat and saw Spencer fall backward Into the water. He gasped for breath, then sank out of sight, she reported. Because the body has never been recovered, police said it was possible the missing man "may be more alive than dead." Thompson said an investigation hu found t h a t Spencer was involved Jn child support · payment! with his estranged wife, and was also nearing draft age. Navy Appointments WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ President Johnso.q ha~. nominated Rear Adm . Elmo R. Zumwalt Jr. to be chief Of .the naval advisory groop Of tile U. S. Military Assistance Command in Viet- nam, with promotion to vice admiral. festivities. CMtro b expected to Juue .a rallying cry for more work and a 5tronger dedication to communism. lie also . is expected to toucb on ~echoslovakia's current feud wlth the Soviet Unio,11 and the uproar in Bolivia caused by the publication in Cuba of the diary taken from Guevara, who wu kWed by Bolivian soldiers in that country lut October. The C'ub.a pres.s has been running a !full account of the Czecboelovak-Soviet rift in the past few days, possibly because Castro and the Russians also .are at odds over the course eo:m· munlsm should take toward. .. J'tlvolu· tionary movements in La.ti.JI America. But Castro, unlike the Czechoslovaks, has no Soviet armed force! anywhere near hi$ frontiers. Special North Korean, North Viet· namese and Viet Cong delegations were invited to join Castro on the &peaker'a platform. More than.' 189 foreign newsmen were g J ~en peT'mi.ssion to cover the event. " The mass rally celebrates the an- niversary of Castro's debut 1a ~~. when he led an attack against Q ~ barrack.I in the dty ol 5antlai0. · 'nte attack failed IDd Caltro Wt• jailed for two Y611'1 by Preolt!ont Fulgeocio Batista. Batista .freed him, and Castro organized the invation which ended in the overthrow of ' the Ba&ta regime in Januvy 1959. - It was at Santa Clara that re'6el forces led by Guevara defeated ·the army decisively and forced Batista to o ... ',, United Stand Against Russ Asked of Czech Chiefs PRAGUE (AP) -C;r;eclloslovak leaders, awaiting decisive talks with the Soviet Communist party Politburo, were urged by peacemakers or this cowitry's liberalization drive today to "defend unitedly the road on which we have started and which we will not leave alive," The appeal came amid mounting concern over rumorg that t h e 1eadel'11hip was split on how to react to Soviet pressure at _the showdown meeting likely to begin next week. The rumors were fed by the decision ·Thursday ol the policymaking party presidium to remove U. Gen. Vaclav Prehlik, a chief target of Soviet at· tacks, from a key position in the party Centtal Committee. Usually reliable sources said they understood the decision in Prchlik's case had not the unanimous backing of the 11-member presidium. Libera l Communist intellectuals voiced alarm over this indication of yielding to pressure from abroad at a time when popular support for the Czechoslovak party chief Alexander Dubcek, had reaclled a new peak. Edit.ors ot'.'Leitaml Listy, a writers' week.Jy and influential mouthpiece of the liberal elite, prepared an extra with an open letter calling on party leaders to negotiate and explain, "but unitedly defend Ute road on which we have started and which we will not leave alive." "You are Writing for us a fateful page in the hist o ry of Czechoslovakia," the open letter said. "\Vrite it with care, but above all with daring. "To Jose this wtique chance would be our disaster and your shame. We believe in you." · 12 More Lectures Slated by Guild Twelve lecture! remain to be given by the Laguna Q-aft Guild for persons interested in arts and. crafts. The Craft Guild ls pre<enting •lee· ture a day, through August 15, on Mon· days through 'Th.UI'6days, et 2 p.m. No admission is being charged, accwding to Jack Taylor, guild master. The Craft Guild is spc>nS<lfing the lectures as a community project, be !aid. The lectures, to be held in ' the Moulton Room ol the Art Gallery, at the corner of North Coast Hlghway and Cliff Drive, will be open for discUiSSion at the conclusion of Ole talk. T~ics for the coming week include: Mooday, July 29 -"Weaving -.~e Old and the New" by Helen Younc: Tuesday -"Graphics, tbe New Art'' by Bryon Sutton; Wednesday, - "Sculpblre With Wire" by Alan Thampson; end Thursday - 11Caveman to Sportsman" by Wil Dissler. 15% OFF ON ALL HENREDON SCHOONBECK UPHOLSTERY Choose from many style s of sofas an d cha irs . Spec ial pricu on many chairs sta rt at only $199. Yo u can sp&ci al order now. • . .. Gre at 1ittin9 in this loose back ch1 ir, Great pr ice tool pillow· Fluid lines, marvelous comfort, one is 9ood , two e re better. On cari· ·e rs fo r easy mobility . LAST WEET< OF OUR STORE-WIDE SALE, WHICH INCLUDES SOME OF OUR FINE LINES OF DREXEL FURNITURE. EXCLUSI VI DEALIRS l'OR: HINRIDON -DRIXIL -HI RITAOI 90 DAYS ND INTI REST -LONOIR T.I RMS AVAILAILI ON APPROVI D CRIDIT NlWPORT l l ACH 1727 Weatd11f Dr.; 642°2050 OfllN NIDAY 'nL t INTlllOIS LAGUNA l lACH S4.I Nol1h '-Hwy, OPlll.PlllAY in. t ...... , • .._ .... _..._C.....,Mto1JU /. 494-6SS1 \ I' " ; • " ' . 1· i ' I , ' . 1i I I I • 6 Hearings ·Scheduled On Airport Orqe Coonfy'• airport luture 11 out ill tile -and ready for public analysis. Sil< ......,. devoted to public com· meta and eJPert d:ilcus&ioa on the Vfilliam L. Pereira report on the coun .. <!''• air need• and pr<Olem1 will be beld in Santa Ana late next month. AU penom Derested in com· mentinc oo the five,prilf)Oled airport a!tlos can do so Aug. 26 through 30. A complete ll8t of times and pleces for.. discussion on sectiOD& of the -Piao ol Air Tranoportaiion for Orenge Couray, Phase One, has been released by the Airport Commission. The schedule: Mooday, Aug. 26, 1,30 p . m . ' Dilcunion · oo five proposed general ovial.ioo (private flying) airport sites. 3 :30 p.m. Hearing on meboporl slteti. (0.-a.nge County Airport a recom- mended tar this .W.~). Both sessions will be ill Room 120, Orange County Health Department', 645 N. ROS6 St., Santa Ana. UNSIGHTLY? -Bat1le target of Fountain Valley leaders is Edison Company's power lines. Complex seen here is on Warner Avenue, west of Magnolia Street. Tueo<loy, Aug. 'ZI, 7 p.m. AUt>ort commis&ion meeting to be devoted en· ti.rely to tbe present Orqe County Aif1>ort, Discussed will be restrictiOll6 to be applied in cooperation with the air carriers and immediate im· provemeMs required at the airport. Meetlng will be in tile Oraoge County Planning Commission Hearing Room, 400 w. 6111 St., santa Ana. Valley Takes on Edison To Get Rid of Power Poles Wedne6d~, Aug. 28, 1:30 p.m, Hear· ing on three proposed regional airport sites; El TOl'o Merine Air Station, Marine Corps Air Facility, Santa Ana; and Los Alamitos Naval Air Stat.ion. SeS6ioo Wl be in Room 120, Orange County Heelth Department. Friday, Aug. 30, 1:30 p.rn, Hearing oo propo6ed regional aiJi>ort side San J oaquin Hills. 3:30 p.m. Regional airport site at Bolsa Chica state Beach. Semons in Board o f Supervisors meeting room, 51~ N. Sycamore St., Santa Ana. Body of Inf ant Found in Drain The badly decomposed body of an infant was found Thursday in Anaheim by three young boyli playint, in a storm control channel. Coroner's deputies said the infant had been abatidoned seven to ten days ago. ' The body was bidden in a large vault which connects with the storm drain at Dale Street near Broadway, police said. Anaheim police listed the death as hotiiicide. Coroner's deputies today were conducting microscopic tests on lung tissues to determine if the infant had ever been alive . • HAVE ONE OF THE HULA HONEYS PIN YOU WITH A By JAMES McNABB J r. Of WM Dtiltr P'OH Sttff Utility p o I e s are anathema to Foontain Valley -and the fledgling city's leaders are doing m~ than shaking their fists at them. It's an all-out battle, with the Edison Co. in admitted cooperation, btu not moving fast enough to satisfy Foun- tain Valley's aesthetic drive. Edison utility poles violate Valley undergrounding ordinances. Mayor Robert SchwerdUeger told the DAILY PILOT that the city was determined to p r e s e r v e its predominantly wireless skyline. Schwerdtfeger complimented the utility, the nation's fourth largest and fastest growing, for its cooperation with developers in undergrOUllding new hooslllg tract.s. He assailed the oom.pany's continuing erection of poles ak>ng the major arteries. "We are not seUstied," said Sch"M!rdtfeger. "We're not getting cooperation from Edison." He scoffed at companf arguments Ulat it is financially impractical tD put higher voltage lines underground. "We are fighting tradition as muOO as economics," he said. A recent California Public Utilities Commission ruling says Edison must provide an annual allotment based on a municipality's population for the convection Of overground lines to underground. But Sdrwerdtieger asserts that tile actual benefits would be nominal. "We're using up three years ol MEET ME AT RION FREE ORCHID HARDWARE SATURDAY WHEN YOU VISIT ALOHA DAYS SIDEWALK SALE 117,000 a year oo get jt>;t 12 poles outside city hall from Brookburst St.reet to Ward undergr<Xmd." The Fountain Valley mayor hinted at the possi.bility of the city "going in· to the power business itseU." He said that there was growing popular support for a Fountain Valley Power Co. which through eminent do· main could condemn the poles. Edison District Manager Ralph Kiser, of course, sees ttie un- dergroundlng problem in a different light. "We're doing everything we possibly can; our gray poles now going up are a major beautification breakthrough. They blend in with the sky," said Kiser. Kiser char.ged that it would be fiscal folly for the company tD underground arterial and transmission lines. "The cost would be astronomical, anywhere from double to IS.times the 164 a lot cOS't of undergrouod:ing residentiaJ powe:-," he said. Switch Knife Ban? WASHINGTON (UPI) -Ninety House members joined Thursday in sponsoring a bill to ban the manufac- ture and distribution of switchblade knives. A spoke.sman for the group, Rep. Lester Wolff (D·N. Y.), described the weapons as "murderous instruments . . . crude, brutal tools of violence." SATURDAY WESTCLIFF PLAZA ".Alo~a :lJa'/4 " • HICKORY FARMS AN ENCHANTING PLACE TO VISIT FRIDAY OR SATURDAY DURING •• , ''_A/o/ia ::Daiµ " SIDIWA .. K.SAU WESTCUFF PUZA 17th & IRVINE NEWPORT IEACH SIDEWALK SALE EXOTIC ISLE OF INTIMATE APPAREL Uta ~ :_ "-4/ofa ::bagJ " ...,/ ---- !\ . ' SIDEWALK SALE . WESTCLIFF PLAZA TONITE AND SATURDAY • Friday, J11ty 26, 1968 ' Harbor V ot~ Sought . -· Cities League Wants to End District Vot•l'I ol Ol'Onge County lll4Y be uked to diuolve the Orange COunty Harber Dlatrict at a special •lection. 'lbwwted in previous attempta to 1!111 oft the datrlct, !be Or-County League ol Cities moved 'lburodly Iowan! such a apeciol election. 1he ~cue's executive board ap.· ~ved a.,· measure referrirlg the ~ V'Ole questioo -to !be Local Aglency P'onnation Comrniesion aa a matter of formality, The issue could go on a ballot sometime next spring. League President Dean E. Shull Jr., mayor-of La~H~ra, is to name a com- mittee to arait a statement reaf. flrmina: the citi~a· desire to abolish the dia1r1Ct and consolidate barbors, -.S llld poris UDder a IAl>gle, unHled «>unly deportment The atatement will be prete1'ted' for appro\'OI to the 25 city CoW>cils In !ht county. The antlc!peted awrovll by the coUncila would then be prMented to the ·LAFC by the leaiue represeu· ting Ille cities. 1be LAFC recommendation then goes io 1a1e·8QPervisor1. The league ez- ecutive. board Thursday said a special elecUoa should be ca.lied so the people, --1i>t datrid ill 19.14, could decide Ila luture. The league has carried on a determined .attack against the district as DOW constituted. It wanf.g the district abolished as a separate taxing agency and at one time had a vote favocing the move by representatives ol 24 ol tht 211 county ctuu. A bill by AIHmblyman Jn V. Brtus (R·Fullenon) to -.0 Ibo d!Jtrlct ... ~ by tho lolCUe but failed to g•t ool ol committee. 'Ille Board of Supervlaon, -awomu.. a committee of county ttaff member• to study the matter, voted Jeat month to retain the district. The league board took noUce of two other county problemt Thurlday .. Committees will be named to study and report oo tbe use ol money fraD the county general found to build COUD• ty fire slatioos oervlng --areas and a Grand Juey recom- mendation that local governmeot con- trols be placed on private motJila X· ray units. Terrorists 'Hit Saigon Again, Bomb Ne wspaper Mystery Shrouds Release Of 3 Captured Airmen . SAIGON (AP) -Terrorists siruck in Saigon today far the second time in a week.and blew up the city's largest Chin<6e hewspaper, Police said four young Viet Cong, two oi them girls, set off a 60-pound ptutlc bomb in the prffs room of A Chau Van Quoc, the Asian Daily News, an anti.Communist paper which 1up- ports the Saigon government. No casualties were reported. TM terTorist&, all &r>med with pistols, walked into the newspaper of. fice just after 1 p.m. and ordered everyone out. One girl terrorist pulled out the ex- plosive charge concealed in a bag, planted it in the pressroom and fied with her companions. Five minutes later an explosion rocked the three-story building, heavi· Jy damaging it. Employes of. the paper said the ter· rorists were Vietnamese of Chinese origin. The plant is located in Cbolon, the Chinese section of Saigon where 300 ooo Vietnamese Chinese live. ' . A few blocks away another Chinese paper, the Kien Quoc, was blown up June 6. Three penoos were killed in that explosion, and 15 other• injured. The Kien Quoc alo8 supported the South Vietnamese government. Last October, te:rrorist.8 shot and killed the managing editor of A Chau af.ter he had written several editorials criticizing Viet Cong MfP&6Sinations. After ·weeks of comparative quiet, Viet Cong terrorism broke out again in Saigon and in two provincial capitals to the north and south last weekend. Twelve Vietnamese were killed and 91 wounded in the bombings of four theaters, one only a block from tbe na- tiooal police headquarters in Saigon . VIENTIANE, Laoo (AP) -Three American airmen released from cap- tivity eight days ago in Hanoi failed to arrive here as expeeU!d Friday nigh~. The pilots-Maj. James F . Low, 43, of Sausalito, Calif., a Korean .War ace shot down by a missile Dec. 16, 1967; Maj. Fred Neale Thompsoo, 32, or TO)'lors, S. C., captured last March 20; and Capt. Joe Victor Carpenter, YT, of Victorville, Calif., captured list Feb, Walkout Threat For Aerospace Company Eases LOS ANGELES (UPI) -'The thrui Of a strike in the aerospace industry eased today art.er the International Association of Machinists and the McDonnell-Douglas Corp. r e a c h e d agrement of a three year contracl A short time earlier, IAM's partner In the negotiations, the United Auto Workers, announced an agreement with the big maker of. planes and apace equipment on a contract cover· Jng 3,400 employea in Canada. Negotiations betweeD McDonnell- Douglas and the UAW on a contract for American aerospace workers represented by the union still are unr.esolved. (This contract affects the firm's giant Huntington Beach in- stallation.) However sources close to the negotiators were hopeful that the Canadian settlement might set a guideline for an agreement covering aerosapce workers in the U.S. 15 -had been expected al>Oord 'th• weekly Internatiooai Cclatrol Com· mission flight from the North Viet- namese capital. ' It WU the oecond time the fliln bod been expected Oil the ICC fllpj, Ibo ody scheduled air Rrvice llnldng North VI-and oulalde - that does not pass tbrou&h Comm nn'st Chlna. A French couple who tnweled oo tbe plalle Friday night aaid !boy bod - the pilots aod the --American peace group at t h 1 Metropole Hotel in Hmol.. "They are living Vf/Jl'Y well," the Frenchman said. 'The North Vietnameoe -llocllr to Laos, Le Van HJen, also arrived. aboard the ICC plane for his first 'vialt to Laos in nearly three year1. Quu · tioned as he got into hiJ Germe. limousine, he told newsmen tbt pilotl would "soon join their faml1iet1." Theo be drove away. U. S. Embassy official!, incltxl:lng Ambassador William A. Sullivan, waited al the airport aod said they bad no idea of the whereabouts of the pi.lots. Hanoi announced July 18 the ttne had been relea&ed from captivity lllld broadcast ltllltementl purpcJJ tinr to have been made by them expr111ina gratitude. But they did not emerge the next day, as ezpected., and later reports said they were being taken on a tour of North Vietopn. . The American antiwar group to whom they were released was made up Of Stewart MeacbAm o t Philadelphia, peace secretary of the American Friends S e r v l c e Com• mittee; Anne Scheer of Berkeley, Oallf., wife of Ramparts magazine editor Robert Scheer; and Vernon Grizzard, an ...tidl'&ft orgalliltr from Cambridge, Maas. Qafferia THE LAND OF GLAMOROUS AND ROMANTIC FASHIONS We6lc~// Pla za TO SAVE YOU $279.00 AND A TRIP TO HAWAII WE HAVE BROUGHT HAWAII TO WESTCLIFF PLAZA , , • TONITE & SATURDAY- TO SAVE YOU EVEN MORE THE LAND OF EXQUISITE AND DISTINCTIVE S.HOPS VISIT BOTH IN ONE STOP DURING THE ANNUAL Aloha :1Ja'J6 SIDEWALK SALE TQNITE AND SATURDAY PADDLE OVER TO WESTCLIFF SHOES DURING THE BI G ALOHA DAYS SIDEWALK SALE AT WESTCLIFF PLA ZA JONITE AND SATURDAY WE HAVE 1)5 DRASTICALLY REDUCED PRICES ON SUMMER '/..RTICLES <JG FOR THE 'PJ1J)) ~"ALOHA DAYS" Jb SIDEWALK SALE SAILING FOR ••• JtDJn tnhl .A/oka :lJa'j' SIDEWALi SALE SATURDAY WESTCUFF PUZA 17th a l•VINI • • DAILY PILOT ~ -............ tWfl The picnic ended on a aoilr note !or grondrna. Mn. Ida Kathtrino Knutton, 87-year-old grandmother, w11 arrelted by FBI agenll an charges of robbing a San Francilco bank as she returned from a picnic with relatives. Ag~nt• said the woman was identified from pic- tures taken by a concealed camera in the bank. She allegedly robbed the Market-Geary Street Branch of the Bank of America of $749 on July 17. •• Fridlj, July 26, 1961 Stop_ F ortas \ ·Move Gains New Power. /W ASlllNGTON (AP) -Sen. Robert P.. Griffin 1ay1 the drive he leads to block confirmation of Abe Fortas as chief justice bu gained new 1trength at a n1ult of jult-concluded Senate Judiciary Committ.ee bearings. But Sen. Albert Gore, [).TeM., said 'Iburlday he is confident "a aubltan- • tial. majority or senators will vote to confirm" Fortas. The Judiciary O>mmittee Completed •~sol Fortas' nomination to bead the SUpreme Court earlier in the day but was not expecte<l to act on it before September because ol. the up- roming recess for political con· ventiom. Newspaper Blackout Continues WASHINGTON (U'l'I) -No.-,.. lions lo end tile tirll ._ blackout bert la -20 ,...,.. coo- -~ under ...... rill ... oi federal meclillorl. Soun:es .-1o !ha· t.alkJ a.id they wen "not optimi••':· a qulci< oettlemetll -.Id be ..-iod. The 1trike i.. lhut down all tbrot ol. the city'• dally ....,_,.., -... w~ Dal\Y News, tile l!)vanJni Star and tile Wosblnglol! Post. 1t began at s p.m. wec1nesc1a7 ..fl... members ol Stereotypm Unfon LOm1 Ii ~ oU tile Jd> 17 boun lliat their OODlract expind. otll<r unlcm bave reiw:ed to CJ"Cl6I the ltereofnlr1' picket lines. NO PROGRESS '4We are pickioc up 1trength am011g both ~ Republican and Democratic senators," Griffin said in an interview. The Michigan Republican said chances for blocking the conlirmation have bien incre•ed ''by questions that have been ral1ed" at the hearings. Griffin refetted specifically to Fortas' testimony that he had participated while ., aSIOdate justice in White House conterences on Viet- nam and ttJ.e Detroit riOU. TRAGIC AFTERMATH -Rubble-strewn sidewalks in Cleveland hamper firemen in their door-to-door search of gutted slorN for po11ible bodies and still smoldering fires. Ten persons lo.st their lives in this riot-tom area and continued firebombing Thursday night brought back the National Guard. Lo&& from fires and looting b81 been estimated· at more than $1.5 million. umon nea:otiator1 met wt t b represent.atlves cf the . W'lllNncton Publi!hers Anodation Jnto the e•l1 houri Of today but DO pcogrtlU 1N1 reported, James Holden, Of tho Ftdtnl Mediation and Conciliation Service, refused to mate any predtcti.t>DI regarding tile atril<o. Others c-lo the negotiations said .a k>ng strib - the first .cityw~ ~. atrike lin· ce 1949 -wu possible. But Griffin could not saj bow much new strengtb he had gained. Froio Erie to Seattle Tho seliator, wb<) bas threatened t~ tuibulter Fort ·as' c(lnllrmation, cireulated a pet!Uon origin~ llgned by-Ii GOP -!On -ilng Prod· da:at JoitmGD's nominatiobe. oC Fm1.u • dUol-.juotice· ond; Homer. Tb<nher- ry u an ~ ju1Uce, Fire-00.mbing, Looting Sparks Raci.al Vi.olence 0 . Roy Olalk, owner Of tile weekly tabloid, tile Wtlllhlnglon E_...r, eaid lalo ~Y hi• -r ....id ·-puillill*C cllily toOoy 11 ...... tlem<ot -readied. I t • • ' • MaMrUht Mahesh Yogi .comes to Squaw Valley m:rt month to teach· 600 tO .100!foUotoen in what mfoht be hi& last visit to the United Stak1. The session w~h. bf?gina Aug. 4 .at· Olym- pic Village Hotel · wiU last until Aug. 31. The· "uru ltft seclusion nine 11eart ago to teach for 10 11ear.1. He U schedu~ to f'tturn to seehuion in the Himclyan mo1'ntains of India aft- ,,. th.ii lalt Wit. • · They 'contend the apj>ointments "1ould be made by the new pre<ident iJI. ,January a,nd some have aocuaed JoJmlon ·of \'Cl"QDYism••·tcr nomlnating two friends for the court. Gore, who sat by Fortas' side during committee bearina:• as an exi--esslo~ of support, said the Senate agreed with Fortas on a 1965 wting rights decltion and should not now use that decision against him. * * * Partisan Strain Against Fortas, Claims Clark "lt was .just like· a jungle up there,'" said PoliCe Capt. Kenneth UjOYlch after 'raiclln~ a Pennsyl· vani1 hillside moonshine operation. The captain ·1a1d the hill, located in a suburb of Pittsburgh, rose .from 1treet-level at nearly a l!Oilegree WASHINGTON CAP) -Aity. Gen. angle. The raiders aot to the still ~~~~f1":~, ~y1' Po 1 lt i c •I b b'""" cl af a •-tio ...--·-P ~. ~ '°""' cqes.-op-'I gr~ -..... ll!DP~ , ve.e~ D· ~ ·position to dvil rlgbCI ad~1 .. and pillllpi .tbeins~yel U.P· 'J'h.e I tile motiveo biiliind·ip1111·af U.... Mio am 11 ao macc .. stble 11 woulif oj,pcoe tile DO!llWitlop o1 Abo Fortaa have been cheaper to buy· a bottle ~ dlief justice. · every day," Ujevich said. · Clark, m"an Jntuview, alto SIM Uui· · • slaying of 10 persons Tuesday ln 8 Into the haU of Records in the Los Angelt1 Civic Center, at lunchtim.t, marched a 11oitng man we aring onl11 two magarim cover.1 depicting children of Bia· fra. The picket ezplafntd, as ht was being h.aultd away to ;ad, that he was calling attention to ~ the "starving people who mu.st havt help." • Fran Herron, 18, will be starting off her marriage next month in high style ..• with a $50,000 gold bar as a "dO'Wry." Fran held the winning ticket in the Calgary Ex- hibition and Stampede's Pot 'O Gold drawin' aod the presentation of the 90-pound bar was made to her. Fran's fiance, Bill Hiebert, bought six $1 tickets and pu t Fran's name on three of them. The gold bar will be traded in for the money and the $50.000 will be held in trust for Fran until she is 21. Cleveland Negro neighborhood was HQie random act ol a handful ol v~ry extreme and violent-prone mUitGts, '' and not part of a nationwide con- !pir.acy to cause racial unrest. In discussing PreddfJflt JohMoo'll nomination ot Fortis to move up on the Supreme Court from ~soci.ate justice to succeed retiring Chief Justice Earl W.arren , Clark said that "quite clearly tnere is dominaot in UlC!I opposition a highly partisan strain tt>at's unf<>rtun:ate. J don't believe a political affiliati<>n should enter int<> the qualificati<>n for nomination." He .added that "those \\-00 oppose securing equal righta and civil ri&hts are opposing the nominatioo. 1 woold suggest tile basis for opposition , in truth, is their oppo9iti<>n to tlhe very great advances thltt have been made Jn civil rights under law." Clark also defended the Justice Department's stand in writing a con· troversial memorandum to the Senate Judiciary Commi ttee praisinog Fortas. The department was criticized by op· pooents of the nom-ina lion of trying to pro.pagandize the committee by ttie mem-o. By THE AS80CIATED PRESS · Sp<iradic ract81 vfoleiice ·.,.upted Thursday night ID .four """"" ranging from Brie, Pa.,. to Seattle, Wai:h., with Cleveland .and Chicago ac:lin •Q>e ma- jor tlrgels. · Reversing bis pOllcy of ti-ying to let .b4ick community, leaders control the situati9n,.. Cleveland Mayor C a 'i: 1 Stokes reinstated ·a· dualt-to-dawn. curfew ln Cleveland'• Negi'o 1lUm1. It was enforced by. National Gu•dsmea and white polie<. There were 30 arrests -.two for looting, one for arson and 27 far curfew violation. Several small fires broke out on the Eut Side where 10 persons, including ·three policemen, were killed in shootings Tuelday. Meanwhile, merchants and police differed en protection supplied in the troubled area. · LOOTING ALLOWED One merchant charged that his store was looted while two Negro policemen watched. But some· Negro policemen. claim that merchants, after removiog valuable ilomf, . .ilowed, ~to loot ~:e~~s » ~ey ~~ in~ While the East Side wu under curfew, other-d:i.1turbance1 brote out in. Oleveland'1 ijarvard·Let 1ectiozi ~ five miles to, the aouthe.ut. , A cleanine: store was fireboznbed and a clothing store was looted u a group of about 200 Negroes gathered. Police quickly dllperaed tho c:rowrl. In Qticago, a North S 1 d t iupermarket, which bas been the scene of previOUJ incidents, again was vandalized, and store windows were smashed In suburban Maywood aft.er police used tear gas lo break up 1 demonstration at the village ball. State Exposition Going in the Red SACl\AMENTO !AP) -Tha new $34 million Cali!ornia State Exposition and Fair ii losing money -witb dailJ attendance figures av~raeing 19,000 less than what official1 say they 'll need to break even . An average of 6,173 persons a day have visited the 1,040-acre $.itt since Gov. Reagan opened the fac ility's gates July I. Heavy Rains Hit Santa Fe . ' U.S. Dren ched from Delawa re to Oklahoma Panll:andle c.iifond• 11.S. S••-rs ltttl'I, wtllcfrl' recwitlY Ilea ltlltn '" IOfftfll'il Ir: 1'1'1tll ...... ftl l1'lt COll""n't Titv...Ur boldl;:I f1f ... WWII 1'°""1"' 11'1 IM!lt "'· N.M., ..... - Ho .,,.!or 1111 ...... --,...,,,... '" ""' ,,..... Mtlllal f1":1111, bllf ,, ..... '6 HflGlt _.. _,.. """"" "" Sttitt ,,. ai..., .• ,.n •• Mt -... '" fht Mitt o1 ...... tftw 4 I~ " 1"1tnl•ll 111 '"' ~ ..... '*""· 'ftr!NlllY • .., .,.,...,. .... """ ... d•I' tl'ld -.. "111:1.d."lttrflt"""1'1 lh•OWl>ou! 111f d i\' •l~tllell ff!W d•"'-,, "-ndl (II lllll19tJ.. lttlfl ff>ll 111 t~ 1. J!llleillt1"7 l'Ol'll ll"tt"'i"" ,.,. 0ti.1ill't I! ..,, Oliltl"°""' ,..,. ..... 11111 '"to fllll ... li IClt"O, MorT •flltr1 , .. 1..qi ,_, .. Plll't•, s.o... ...... ,,..,,,.. ......... v... tflf _,,, Ill lll(fl ftll 911 Wl<ll!tl, 1(..,,, '!Wllll!11 1 1\~ 9W\lll .,,.. ..,., ...... Tllrtt~~ ................. ""'"""A.......,..,......--. Albuetler.._,t An<lllrlff Allt1tlt .. _ .... ,~ IUsm1rck II Dist ·~ ... Ch let• c 1nc111n1tl Cl-lelld .... _ ......... """'' EuN!lt.1 ForT Worlll ·-"'"'" , ...... HOUSIOll 1':111111 Cl,... Lt1 ¥"11 LM A"9tln Mt1ml kKtl Mllw1ulct>e Ml""""°'ls ,., .. °'1Mll9 _ ... ........ ..,_ .......... "'-11~141 -· . ... _ = ·-·-"· LOUlll s.rr.... -~· ~ "" s:h '"'"~ $9(11• lartlefl ...... , ... _ -· ... ..... , ... Mltll lw ,,.._ • •2 .1t " .. .. " " • " .. " .. .. ... n .. " " ,. s .. " " .. " " .. " ~ ,, " .. " .. .. • " " " n •M " " .. .. n ,, .. .. .. " n .. .. • .. • .. .. " • n .. • .. ~ " " .. " d .. " " • ... " : .. .. " " • " n ·• " ·= " , . .. " " ,, ..,, ·" ... " ... ,q •• •• • The diJturbaDce i1I Maywood, an Jn. tegrated. city 15 miles west of Chicago's downtoVr'll section, followed a meeting of tbe local branch ·of the National Association fir the Advance. trtent of. Colored People. .. PDlic~ said about 300 Negro Y,ouths marched to the ·village ball where the village board was meeting. After Police used tear gas to dilperse them, the youths moved to the downtown 1ectioo ·Where they· 1muhed windows; overturned > park benches and blU'led objects at puoing Yehiclel, slightly in· jurinJ ten persons. Twenty five persons were arrelted and • curfew wu quickly i.mpoted, A resident of the area said the disturbance cm Chicago's North Side began after a group of yoWlg Negroes liltened to a talk described as in- flammatocy. vasioo, but the youtha harassed a fire department station and pelted passing vehicles Vt'ith rocks and bottles. A warehouse .m the Erie, Pa., Negro area was firebombed and police and firemen were pelted with rocks and bottles when they responded to the alarm. Police said a Negro militant, Bennie Wall, was arrested. after he threatened to sboot a police captain. They said Wall, who was .found to be unarmed, was charged with inciting to riot and released Uoder '500 bond. TEAR GAS USED Police ln SeatUe'1 predominantly Negro central area ased tear gu to break up a group Of dllordet1y perllOllll after a truck wu &et on fire. MORE INVOLVED Thete aourcff --. II more tn- wlvocl i1I tho dilpute tbu •lralibl money matters. The publishers .....,letlon bu of· fettd the union i. $.12.+weet wage in· creme over a tbree-yeer period. boosting Ste~' pey lo ,187 a week. The publidler1 aaid toe uni.OD was demand:ing a '40 increase. The two biggest !Mue• at tha bargainiiig toable an basic -ml pensions but the .ttuatton, the .sources said, ,.., beyond juot tile -qu..UOO.. UNION PACESETTER Tiie lllUon, oooonliac fJo -· regards illell a Ibo pooHettar far all of tile craft ~ et tile peper1 whil• the pu1'1ahers view it as the last of the craft uni-Oils to be dealt with in tile current bargaining series. NEWSMAN BEATEN A newzpaper photographer was beaten, and about 100 youths lnvaded a supennarlret. the front ot wllich was still ·boatded .. the result of an eai;llor~. SbollJl&·armed pollca , , . l!J!.ln' The driver told police a group of about 20 youUi.1 approached hit vehicle and toned firebombs. He •aid be wa1 threatened with robbery, but was able to escape and make bis way to a fire station. A group ol ycuths tl1en gathered ICl'OSI the ltretl from a hillh school ll!d·...,. broken up by police firi1ll tear c·_ .,.,.. , ; , Booauoe tile -a1reod7 mvo settled ~th the other craft unions f~ basic wage boosts ol '32 a week, the pub-rs !ear tba7 """14 risk unresl I with those lllli0111 lf they brolce that w.a111t P"!l"m ·!'1111. 80Ceded to the higher_., tbt lleHoQpan. • ,... ....., Clean With the Un~tables • 11,.aty-buyl , __ ·--• Newporll, -port ~-c;i,eyw~~ • Evtrythl"g goes to wlrwt up a great MIUnQ ,.art •Act now whlll th«e'• a good mod1l 8"d toSOr .-.CUOI\ . FOR YEAR·END CLEARANCE BAROAINS ON- TBE .CABS OF THE DAI sarrA SIB THE UNBEATAmn • I• .. .. .. ·Atlas· Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. • 1. I ,i I . I I \ I \ • • ---·----------···-·-·-•~w-••-•-=-=-z-.1-'"";'""+""'a; UO-UOUOUO,. ___ .,..,.& ... •£ .. IZ:O_,i,..$1'411S"L,.i£~1!~.1!"!9!b-,J~.'.)":!"IE~! ~.!!l!~~.:'!:'!!!•!;-::. :::·~ •• :;."':".. ~:':::;, :'.:.:;:""'.;,:-;:,:-C*O-:.~_::;:;;'..,;: .• ::-. ~.,;-,-:--• •• • r rt •• ''•·I 111 ,,, ~1 1 .-'} •• ,;1~·•,1 •'''•'••1•~··· .......... ,, •••• -~ Touch of the Exotic Sue Austin, one of seven hula Honeys at Weslcll11 Plaza Friday and .Sa-y who will be pinning free orchids on adults, gets intO the 1wmg of thing~ '!Jth a lei for Dick Vernon president of the Westcllff Plaza Merchants Asaooation. The plaza bas been cOnverted for the annual sidewalk sale summer clearance on today and Saturday, into a tropical paradise with the addition of tikis, grass huU, live orchids and volcanos. • California Legislature in Action Crossword Pume Ytstetcby's !'unit Sclvtd: ' .. 9 Th1t mom!flt 10 l'a$lJ coating materia l 11 W0tld's fair 12 Man 's nam• ll Declare unlrut 18 Mttal rtctplatl~ 24 Lake In AftiCI ZS Dttnl- 26 llanch• 27 llll•t Mf-9'fng tis• 11 Plant of ..... Anemone: 2t Young the, 31 Charge U: Rel ating to p•rt of Eurgpe 3J Mls5 Garson JS Utlllzln1. tht Slillt S heat 1/26/68 Y7 AntlclpatorJ i terror I 40 Ttnnfs '"'" feature 42 In favor 45 Secretary's accessory 48 Trtncherme1t SO Criticized 53 British Island S4 r/}31:1'-ss Catofolll 56 Chtrllil · 57 Pitt! I stron gly · 59 hnpreulOlt 60 Gave evidence •1aln1t: S anm •l In an addltlonal m1nn1r •? Legal document 65 Unit of ., .. Another 'Flnt' Negro to Gavel GOP toOrtkr MlAMl BEACH (Al') - Abe Lincoln, 1l>t Republlcan pre-who frted 1l>t Slaves, likely never drMm· eel Ibo dlby would come - • Negro would saw! tbo Republ i can Natioml ~loorder. Seo. Edward Wi lliam Broke, 411, will be Ille lint 'Negro enr io oww •!em·' porory -d a GOP .,....-. -··· political Ill• l:M -a l11l<toollm ol ''filsts." l&'•k'tzs8* I 11 Ct Id him ila _...y -ol ID 196'1-Ille lir8I N<l1'0 In tl:e c:f!ice.Fouryearalaler,ill 88 pm'Ce!lt whltt: voter• -him lo -• tho lint Negro -&lnoo .-udlon. 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BIGGER llwl moll other color portables! Y"'1'11 ll:rDI to iU brillian~ natural plctum. Modd 6000, with tclucoping dipole antenna, ii the pufect extra act. Mo¥t jt from room- to-room on CODYCJUent, optional oa.ti; aloo ldool l<IC tol>l:il Uld .w-. ********************** * * 2·-·R ... ....., ..... -...,_.,.....,..,.. •• ,, ,_,, , ........ * , I Ul • • ·YoUI' .. ..,_.Gadd Sell Pkture Tube Wen.ntr• w.lld fllt~ PICTURE TUBE If deftcttv. metwiel or wortcmlinahlp mUM .. IUN lft "°""91 UM. Wblt * ~,._by the·-Me-... , ........ _,,__ * Gu•n1 "TEE "' • ., .... -., .. ,.....,. .._.. '°' , ........ -1o1:«,.. * * """" quired to replKe tube (cwry.ln awvlce Oft model toQO _, ... f\lnlflhtd wtthout ehlirat for first ~ . * ********************** JUST RELEASED-SPICIAL . • • I I • I • I • FACTORY PRICE ON MANY MODILS BRIN6 TO WARREN MAGNAVOX RECEIVE A GllT FROM A SELECTION OF 20 BEAUTIFUL GIFT ITEMS, NO OBU&/.TION 171.t llWPOIT KYD., COSTA MW I -~-- J f DAILV ,ILOT LEGAL .NOTICE ·-c•ttTll'tc.t.T• CW IUllM•SI. l'IC'T"IOUI f'UltM MAMI ""' ~'*' • ..,,..,., certify .,.., ~ .,. ii:OndUdlllll • c:om-l'Cltl end l~trtal R .. I E•tfte 0.velaJ>IMftl """'"' h C.P•"""r'\ 11 3471 VII Lido, ~ lkldl, C1Hlol'nl1, 11..aer tt,. fk> tltloul firm --Ill COAST INOUSTIUAL ,.ltOP'EltTll!I l'!ld ...., Mid flnn h - --f1I .... foltowll'lll ,..,_ whole -lft 1\111 llftd pltaol of rMldlnte er. ..... Iowa. to-wt!: WILLIAM C. Mlll:AMI, lt4t Vhl1 Ceud1I, NI_. Buell, C.llloml11 ;;;::.E NOlL Jll:., 4S1'5 Orrlll9f0rl Rd., .. ,,..,, C..llton\111 ~$)41!1Uif1.AN A. SMITll, IM l!lhln ~ ~ '-Cfl. C.lllwnla. D.t.d J-!11 IHI. wrrnam c. Ml,...,... -,. ... Moll. Jr • . SMf'1'IMI ... Smlfh ITATI! OF CALIFOltNIA. COUNTV ~ LOS ANGEL!S. -. On ,,_ n. ,,.., t.fottl -. , No*'I' PllC>lk 111 111111 tor MIO C-tl> Mii Jt1'9, ...-11¥ -red Wlllllom C. MlrerM, P ... Ntoll. Jr. 11'1d IM"""n A. Smlttl _,.... '° -,., ... "'-...,._. wtloH PIOtO* .,.. Mlt!Krfi.d lo "" w1tllt11 11'!- ll'rilrMl'lf. el'llll ad;"""""' • 1M '"'-f """' u'°"9d "" -· .W'htiu my IMnd •1111 -·· (Ollfll'ICIAl SEAll St"'\111 A. Gtwn"""9 Not•r'f f'ubllo-C.Htorn .. Pr1nc1N1 <Hl'!ct Jn Lot A_ ... C-h' :-ttt.:.,_.. l'U::."~~ .f'ublllllN' Or•Nt Colllt D•!t\I Piiat, JI>' h' 2' •rid Autllll 2. ,, 11. IHI Ut7• LEGAL NOTICE SUPntOll C'OUltT Of' TM• STATI 0 11' CAllf'O•IOA PO• TMI COUNTY Of' OU,..I N•. A·SSU<I llfOTICI OP SALi 011' ll lAL Pit~ 'Pl•TY AT f'lllYATI SALL In llMr' Mlolftr ol fl'le Elhn di All:NOLD !. W1LIUNSON, •bo t-., M ARNOLD w:;o~~':'~s ~~y GIVEN tlltl',... und.r1lll!lld, •1 E~tClllTht of Ille U1! Wiii •nd TW""""I of ARNOLD E . WILl(INSON (•Ito k-•1 All:NOLO. WILICINSOIO deceeNCI. Wiii .. u •I .,..tv118 yle 1'o fl'le II~ and '*' bl6dw Uf>On IM ""9lt •rid condllklnl llitrel1111tNr D'ttflllolllld •nd IUblKI to Q>llflm111!1on ""' tald SUperlw Court, on Autusl tit!, lHL '' Ille llouf of i.... o'cbdl A.M, or tl'lere1ft"" wlllll11 !Ill llme 1liow.d 11'1' Llw. •I 1M offlea ol Fr...iclln 1nd Fr1nkHt1, Alljlrnfn, lt7 Ent 111'11 Slrlet. Costll M09, C•Ufflnll1, 111 rl9ht, lltle, lnlltf_,t •nd nt•t. ol ulcl Arnold E. Wlltl111or1,' ~tee!, at ftll tlrM ol 1111 Niii, and •l\ d•l'il, trtle •nd lntfl"ftl llNll Mid nt.,., J'wtl I C<lUlrwl by -ltlofl of llW (II' ~, .. , 9llltr lflln or lfl llddllloii .,. ltl•I o1 ukl Arnold E. wu11:1,_ at fM ""'' ol 1111 .. It!, It! '"" to 1111 rMI -"""' In IM COUtlfY flf Or•,.., ..... ot C.tlfOf'ftl•, dftcrlbed 11 followl: P1rctl l : TM &oulhwtltltl'IY 132 feet flf Loi 23'1 N.-1 Htllhh 11 Plr Mlop 1111...af record"" rn hok ,, ,._ n ot MIKt lllneovs .tMPI. >.cot'Cll o1 Or1- 0:lun1'r', C11ffomll. "·~· 2: lllttn1llldtr' ,,,,_, '" fllt Hortlle11ter1Y If• feet trl Loi 2" NeWPOrt i't1l1hh M Plf IMP fhltfwol l'KOl'ded In kl* (, "'"' 13 Of Mltalla-.tM111, recor• of Or-Coun~. C•lltornll. llDS or offtr1 ... lnv!lld tor Mld -Plttr llld rn111t bl In wrttr111 11111 wrn tie rec.1"9d 11 !Ill offkft Cll Fr1n-ltn •1111 Fr11'11ltlt1, Atfomeyt h:ll' Mid Exl(l.ltrlx, Of' 1111r bl 111111 wllfl lllit crm of u1ct Svpirlor Court or dellvtrtd ~ lllit Mid 2•ecutrll Pfl'IOfllll'I' •I '"" !!,,,.. •ltw 1111 .fl..,!. PUbllcallotl flf lhl1 flOllo. •nd bllor'I <Tll_I,,. Hid HOit. Saler 11111 wilt bl mMle -lfll follow-1119 lfl"ms: C11h. D1tld Jul'I' is, , .... M"llEL ElllllECART£ E•ec11trlK ol lllf L.111 Wiii And Tnta.._t of ARNOLD E. WILIC1N$0N Alla -nown 11 ARNOLD WILKINSON Oect•Jld P11bll11'1ed Ora111t COlsl 01l1Y P lkll, Ju. ~ 2', 21 Ind A11a111I ~. 1961 IJO:M,t LEGAL NOTICE • --• .. -.. -. . . . . . ' .... ... .. • • ·- Frldq, Juty 26, 1968 Yot1r Monev'• Wort la =)-a-a.cl: ·A· --Man y Now. Saved OVER THE COUNTER ~~?JJ~. ~.t'J' · ,::_:1i :,..awy~" fAP'I • .,.._,. ... l ~. ~'-'"1."'it\ ... , ~ __ ,a NASO Ll1tlnt1 lor Thu ...... y, July 25, IHI -'" -· ll: "" II" ' ., I • ' • FriUJ, Jilll' 26, 1968 Friday's Closing • .I DAllY I'll.OT ll .. - RRST, FAST , -.. n.,.. ........... i...+ ....... _, -• ..t. It'• ..,., alweyt .. DAILY PILDl'. . ' , I ' I I /. ' ' • J, ' . --........... . . . . . ~ ·-. -. 12 4.IN~.a. l J.a.Wi' \ : ~-~ ---. . -. --·-"~ .. ~ .. ~.::::-:-:-:-:::::-=-:::-:==:::======::::====:===::======:::~~ .... ~ .. ~:~-~ '·"" _ .... \-........... _.,,. ... ~ --~ ......... ..._" •1•a::a---~ .... -- ~he newest Buick/Opel dealer 1n town has an old fashioned way of doing business. He fal~ks your language* The whole idea behind talking your language is as .old as good business. You see, we think you deserve to have a little bit of a fuss made over you. Especially when you're buying a Buick. Or Opel. This is why you can expect friendly treatment when you come in. Also quality service when you need it. And most important, great deals on any car you buy from us. This is what talking your language i$ all about. On Skylarks, GS's, LeSabres, Wildcats, Electras, Rivieras, and Opels. One look will tell you how much more car you get for your money. One talk with a salesman will prove how little more you pay to get it. Come in soon and watch us talk your language. We think you 'll like it. 234 E. 17TH STREET BUICK-OPEL COSTA MESA 548-7765 • ... ' , I ) 'I I JEAN COX, 4'4--. ....,, ""' .. ,... ... , ... ,. CULINARY CREATIVITY -Karel d~e Smit, born in Holland and once ~ resident of. Indonesia, is ,an expert on Indonesian food, which he said is characterized by hot spices and condiments. The versatile Lagunan has served as a maitre d ' at such places as the Fountain Bleu, Miami Beach. '. Man In the l<itrhen l ~~~~~~~~~~- Cooking Another Art Since there is nothin& ordinary about artist Karel de Smit, it stands to reason there is nothing common about his cooking . "I used to believe art only existed in its strictest sense," said the artist, whose sculptures are being exhibited at the Festival of Arts and Sawdust Festival. 0 Now I find the greatest art is the art of living. If we are fully aware and live things to their utmost, our lives will be full creative forms." His philosophy of life is carried into the kitchen, and a cook. he claimed, is as creative as a sculptor. Born in Holland, and a resident of Indonesia for two years when he worked as an interpreter for a United Nations agency, de Smit is well known for his Indonesian dinner parties in which he serves about 50 of his friends no less than 36 courses during a dinner which lasts into wee small hours. Indonesian food , he said, is characterized by hot spi~es and condi· ments. Two of the ingredients used in the recipe he shared with the DAILY PILOT may onJy be found in Holland American Market, Bell!1ower. They are Laos, which may be eliminated and Trassie, which may be substituted with a small can of shrimp, although de Smit warned the dish may lose a bit of its character without these ingredients. NASSI GORENG !JAVANESE FRIED RICE) 1 pound, 2 ounces rice lfi pound beef, pork or lamb cut into small dices 4 tablespoons chopped onions 1h tablespoon finely chopped garlic or garlic powder pinch Kerri Djawa (Javanese curry) or regular curry pinch Laos 2 tablespoons Samba! Oelek (ground red peppers) Small piece Trassie salt to tast e Fry the onions and spices in peanut oil for 5 minutes and then fry for a few minutes more with the previously fried meat. Add rice and fry all ingredients· Qulte well, stirring constantly. Gar~sh plate.s with cucurh~er slices, radishes, tomatoes, sweet and sour gherkins and pickles and a fned egg or strips of omelette and decorate with parsley. Kroepoek, small wafers of tapioca flour. and spices, go well with this dish, said de Smit. It also may be served with mango chutney, shredded coconut and other tropical condiments. / WORTH WEIGHT IN GOLD -Mrs. H. P. Willats, past president of South Coast Community Hospital and a hostess at the annual awards coffee serves (left to right) top hospital volunteers, the Mmes. Efforts Seen in Dollars, Hours Thomas Fletcher 1 Perry La Pierre and Harold Ek- man. The event took place in the Rancho San Juan estate of Mr. and Mrs. Jose Rosan. Hospital Supporters Take Bows U the 132 South Coast· Community Hospital Auxiliary members who gave a total of 39, 715 hours of service to the hospital this year had been paid a minimum wage, they would have earned exac·Uy $65,529.75. An impressive figure, especially since in ad· dition to working in the hospital, the~e women are industrious throughout the year earrung money for its growth and operation. To honor the volunteers, awards were given during an annual social hour and coffee staged by the auxiliary in the Rancho San Juan estate of Mr. and Mrs. Jose Rosan. Those on hand to applaud the women included Victor Andrews, hospital president; Dr. Gordon Hod.gel, chief of the medical stafi; Stanley Volga, hospital administrator and Stanle.v Oppegard, ad· ministrative-resident. Other board directors also were welcomed and introduced by Mrs. Gertrude Carroll, auxiliary president. Mrs. George Wolf, volunteer chairman, presented awards which consisted of blue ribbons with gold stars attached to an American Hospital ;\ssociation pin. According to Mrs. Wolf, each pin with a blue ribbon on which one gold star was attached represented 100 hours of service given by the aux· iliary member. When five small stars have been awarded, representing 500 hours, a large· gold star r~places them. After one thousand hours have been amassed. a p;old bar, engraved with 1000, is attached to the ribbon. The procedure is repeated annually to adjust service hours as recorded and the hospital board of director:s presents the awards in recognition of the many hours and financial support the auxiliary con· tributes. John Weld , vice president and board presi- dent, assisted Mrs. Wolf in making the presen- tations. Heading the list was Mrs. Thomu Swanson, hospital assistant treasurer, who has worked a total of 14,248 hours during the 10 years the auxiliary bas been organized. Mrs . Harry Sowden, gift shop chairman, was second with 7,134 hours, and Mrs. Thomas J. Fletcher, press and public relations chairman, followed her with 5, 154 hours. Others heading the list included Mrs. Perry La Pierre, whose hours totaled 5,043, and Mrs. Harold Ekman with 4,863 hours. Mrs. Jack M. Lyons, vice president, has worked 4,316 hours dur- ing her eight years with the auxiliary. The other top winners had been members for 10 years. Other outstanding hours · were gathered by Mrs . Tandy Coleman, Mrs. Violet Adams, Mrs. Iva Marsh and Mrs. Ray Marsh Fox: each having given more than 3000 hours. Nine volunteers gave more than 2000 hours, 22 had over 1000 each and 91 fell under the 1000 bracket. During the gathering, Mrs. Mont E . McMillen, program chairman, introduced and thanked com- mittee members who made arrangements for the annual event. Mrs. William Imhoff, chairman of table ar· rangements, was assisted by Mrs. Oscar Hoffman, while Mrs. Alfred Kress was in charge of flower decorations . Refreshments, consisting of a variety of fruit sticks and ]>astries, were the responsibility of Miss Frances Christeson and her committee. Presiding over the refreshment table were the Mmes. Harry Willets, Sarri Garst, Victor Andrews and Donald Teetor. Floor hostesses were under the guidance of Mrs. Geor~e Wolf, and Candy Strtpers were appointed by thetr coordinator, Mrs. Leland Peart. Mrs. Fletcher handled publicity and Mrs. Fox chaired registrations with her committee while passing out the auxiliary's year book. A Note to the 'Wise': Open Your Eyes to Proper Nutrition DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several week• ago I attended a discussion group on malnutrition in the U.S.A. I left !be place dep<essed and delel'mln· eel I<> do 10methlng I« the ctiHd· vantaged chlldren in this country. When I arrived home there was a note from the ICbool nune saying our youngest boy llhould be taken to a physician for 1 checkup and put on a nourllhln& diet. The note said he iJ seven poo.... undenrelg!lt, bu too many dental cll\'WH, wu abtent from lcllool an u:cesslve number of days, and he needs to eat le• junk and more wholesome food. 1 w.as furious and assumed the nurse must have a grudge agal.nlt our son or 1he 1Vould. not have written such an in· sultlna: note. After all, 1Ve are an upper ANN LANDERS middle-claS! family, not slum dweller1 . I took the boy to the doctor the following day and learned our boy was in appalling physical condition - anemic, underwelght, the works. The doctor lect\ll'ed me about mothers who allow their children to develop poor eating habits. He pc:>inted out tttat many children from we 11 ·to · do families are in the same boat and sent me home with literature on nutrition and the balanced diet. Please print this letter, Ann , and alert motbe:r1 eveJ'YWbere to the danger ol letting their chlldren eat on- ly what they want to. lt w11 a shock to discover that our 1m was in the 1ame pathetic physical cood!.Uoo u the Iktle boys wtro live In sbackl In MIMIKlpPI. -EXECUTIVE'S WIFE DEAR WIFE: Here'• •• •ee• leUtr I<> -eve..,..llere. ~.did 1-chDdrn eat yealerdayT Aad wut 61 tbey eat tM11? A weH te dte wt.ii t1 1ufffdeat aed to tlte f"llm, • aBUta word1 are a1ele11. Take Inventory. DEAR ANN LANDERS : My wile has a mania for giving away, throwing out or "misplacing" other people's property. Mainly, mine. I have beg· ged, pleaded and &$ked ber in as nice a way as I know how, to please keep her bands off my things. She doesn't 1eem to bear me. Maggie insist.I on "straightening" m1 desk and "neaten- ing" thinga. The nest thing I tnow, valuable PIPlll are mi.aslnl. When 1 reach for a back ls.1ue of a newspaper ot mquine which I 1et ulde for referenct, she tells me She burned It two-mOOtlls ago. Last rapt I .. arched hieh and low for '1'Y becltoom allppen. Wbtu I uked Mag. p ll ahe had 1een them; lilt Mid they • were worn to Weds and she couldn't look at them anymore so she threw them out. I realize they were ra~ shabby, A.rm, but it took me m. montha to get them really comfortable and I was pretty upset aJ>out It. I ad· nUt I'm a bit cl a boarder but shouldn't a wife respect her husband's rights in the house? -MIN- NEAPOLIS CQT, DEAR MINN.1 -a pack rat maniel a INlafl!r ... ter; tlilere'1 _.. to be -Ille. Y• eu't eve lier bot 1•• cu ~.1-•1 po1t1a1 yo111' papen ... aa,..._ •••1 - oat II llrtit. -lleaven tou Oii t111B11 ........ 1M1,ara thollerlDI ap a reom. IS..~ wemu report tbell' loulloada' .... arellnlluarU.) At 10< !lie "'4room 1Hppen, !lull wu 1 rottea trick. A1t Mante llpw 1be'd like It if yn threw away lier ... be1t-ap 1lrdle. I'll bet 1be'D .... dentud your feelln11 a lot bedu alter THAT qaetUOI. : Too many couplet IO f r o m matrimony to acrimony. Don't le~ your marriage !lop before II slilt 91arf<d. Send !or Ann ~ booklet, "Marriage -Wbat to Kl' peel." Send your requoat to Itta Landers in care of thil oew.-.c enclosing IO ctJlll to coin and a loM.:41 stamped, sell·addreU<d envelope, • • Ann Landero will be Siad to btlp Y.,. witll your J>rOblemo. Send tbem lo W: In care ol, the DAILY PILO'I'., tDCIOt• iog a sell·addresaed, stamped - velope. • " " ' . ,::" ... • .. :1 .... : '' ••• •• ' ~ , I • • -----:.;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;::;:============ ,, DAILY "LDT Blue Ribbon Luncheon Something Special for Someone Special !1 the appropriate theme selected by the Presbyterian Church of the Covenant when recognition of the v a 1 u e of every member ii underlined durtn'-a luncheon tn the COila Mesa h o m e of Mrs. Dudley A. Platt. The event will !eke place from 11:30 a .m. to 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, Aue. 7. Preaentlnr a apecW b 1 u e ribbon to the Rev. Warren G. Studer is Mra. Platt (right), while Mra. Jack Elliott walta to make her presen- tation. Harbor Council Movie. Guide !Edltw'1 Nati: Tilll movie 111lde 11 .,,..,,,Itel bl' rht fHm1 cemmlttwe ef H1rbor Council PTA, Mrw. llobtrt Sorenotn 11 prnlfflll Incl Mn. Hirt $"""""' II commltfelf d'Mllrmari. It II lnltndecl 11 1 rtltrMCll In ~rmlnl"' aulttbi. flllN fv c.rlt111 -,,._., t nd Wiii IPPffr Wfflllr. Your YltWt ,,. 1oltcl!Wd. MllU ttwn hi "'°"I• G11lde, "'' cf 1"9 DAILY PILOT.) FAMILY BAMBI -Disney cartoon feature. DON'T RAISE THE BRIDGE, LOWER THE RIVER -Big time wtieeler-dealer schemes to win back wife who wants divorce. BLACKBEARD'S GHOST - Disney adventure o f famous pirate. THE HAPPIEST MlLLIONAIRE -Disney musical comedy about ec- ~ntrJc mlllionafre. THE JUNGLE BOOK - Disney version of Kipl- ing's tale of East Indian boy. THE ONE AND ONLY, GE- NUINE, 0 RIG IN AL FAMILY BAND -Disney musical of American pol- itics of 18801. PRIVATE NAVY OF SGT. O'FA.l\RELL -Good- natured. fPOOf on a lonely isle in the Paclfi'c dw1n1 World Wu II. SHAKIEST GUN IN THE WEST -Dentist Heka fortune iD Wild West ol !880I. SNOW WHITE AND . THE SEVEN DWARFS -Re- release of cartoon feature. THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE -Musical spoof of 1920s. WHERE ANGELS G 0 , TROUBLE FOLLOWS - Mother Superior and pro- gressive nun have dif- ferences on cross-country bus trip. YOURS, Jv.INE AND OURS -Warm, lively domestic comedy of a widowed naval officer with 10 children and -a Navy widow with eight children who marry. TEENS AND ADULTS COUNTDOWN -Story of Couple Exchange Vows In Fountain Valley Bouquets of whit.e stock, gladioli and plnk camott""' banked l!!e altar ol the Fint Methodist Olurch of Foun- tam Valley !or the wedding of Marcia Clari< and Roberl C. Me.pes. Officiating ckJrin« tilt dou- ble ring ceremony wu tl:te Rev. Lewia CuITie. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. Janea Clark, . · Fountain Valley, was given in mamage by her father. · Her A-line gown w a 1 fashioned of peau de aoie . designed with a lace bodice and sleeves inset with seed • pearls and a small train. • Ha ld.ing her veil of bridal il· lusion "WaS a crown ol pearll and sequins, and llht carried a bouquet of white roisebud~. Doooa Clark IKl<nded her sister and WOf'e a mint green A-lin e gown of peau de soie featuring short bell sleeves with a flowered lace inaet and 1he curled a : bouquet of pink ceroations. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mapes of Chula Vista, was ,attended by Jon Gilm<re, belt m111 , and utilen were Donald Hud1on and Roland Clark. MRS. R. C. MAPES Hawaiian Honeymoon La Quinta High School, We1tmln1t!r and 0 r a n I e Coast College, which her husband also attended. Following a. wedding trip 00 Hawaii the couple are making their home i n Garden Grove, how rwce t.o moon affect. an utronaut, h111 family and frlendl. CUSTER OF THE WEST - EntertalnJn1 and beautl!ully pl!olographed ver•lon of famous general's tale. THE FLIM-FLAM MAN - Comedy of chicanery. PLANET OF THE APES - science fi c tion, melodrama, WILL PENNY -Itinerant cowboy is brought into contact with a home, family and love. MATURE TEENS AND ADULTS BLUE -Texas doctor and .his daughter 18Ve the life of a bloodthirsty weeterner who wu raised by a MexJcan banc:Ut. THE FAMILY WAY-l,ack of privacy at home and community's ihtere11t in their affairs threaten tfle marriage of a young Engli9h couple. GUESS WHO'S COMING TO DINNER -Moving story of parents' reaction to racially mixed marriage. HOMBRE -White man raised by Apa.che1 finds it dlllicult to adjust to white man's world ol etstern Arizona fn lSllOl!I. NO WAY TO TREAT A LADY -Psycl!opath, In various disguises becomes a murder-at·lar1e of mid· dle-aged women. ODD COUPLE -Uproar- ious comedy in which two ill-matched, ex-manieds decide to room together. ADULTS C A R P E TBAGGERS Harold Robbin's novel of a young executive. CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS -Youth's at· tempts to achieve manhood are p<>r'trayed with earthy frankne1s and humor. En1lisb subtitles. THE FOX -Relati'ootbip between two women living on an isolated farm is sh&ttered with the arrival of an attractive man. THE NAMEOF THE GAME IS KILL! -Morbid story of a psychotic household. NEVADA SMml -Violent western. SEBASTIAN -M a s t er cryptographer for British Foreign Office tries to solve his own personal problems fn this fut-mov- ing comedy. The bride ii • sraduate of NOTICE · Think cA~shoe • StALE -. . - ' < 1113 N. MAIN ST. SANTA' ANA IS CLOSED Service USI OUll NIW IHO, AT 74 ,AIHION ISLAND Nl!Wl'OllT C!NTlll ALlW~ALlY AT AHTMONn c.,.n• Ml Mar Horoscope Capricorn: Philosophy Needs Strenghtening SATURDAY JULY 27 By SYDNEY OMARR "'!be wise man contro111 hla deltlny. • : A1trolo1y polntl the way." ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19): Excellent time for· get. tine toretller wttll club member1, co-workers. You could 1hlne at at1y con- vention. Key to really suc· cn11ful day ill aen1e of blkl&Dc6. Don't overdo - 1vold extremes. TAURUS (April 29-May 20): You are encourq:ed in creaUve pursuita. Your capabJlities come to fore!roat. Be an inn<>v«or. Strive for greater com.tort and beauty where home ap- pUuces are concerned. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): stre1s is on relationtbip of lMlillg value. Av~id auporfidllity. Dig for facls, obtain ~Hd information. Ignore Individual who a,d. vooates lllmsy excuses. Get to heart of matters. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Fine for social visits, short journeys. Key is to change routine and relax. Be a pod llltener -1ome of your relaUve11 may have compulaion to confide and confe111. LFJl (July 23-AUll. 22): Gypsies Fiddle PtmdUJ.um •win&I toward ftMnc1al C'H -money ii on your mind. There t1 way to increue income poten.. t!al. MIU OIXltne, prepare format, expand area Of coo.· tacu. Get rid ol petty, fearful noliOOI . ... Scholastic Tune VIRGO (Auf. 23-Sept. 22): Lunar cycle high; means' circumstancec turn In your ftavor. You are able to make riCbt move1 at right time. La&una Beach Bu11nea1 and Profe1tlonal Women'• Club memberl and rue11t.11 wtll unleuh the ayp1le11 in their 1oull tomorrow nliht. The occulon J 1 a 1 ch o larlhtp fund·raJ1ln1 party In the South Ligon& home of Mrt. Charle• Petty, who LI well know for the gyp1y patio plJ!lie1 the &tarted to teach her grand· children about the culture of these nornadl. Instead ol boree drawn wagon1 , member1, bw:bandl and gue1tl will &r· rive for ffftlvitle1 at 7 p.m. in car1va111 of automobUe11, and .. 1ar1e Italian wine crock will introduce the hap- hour Per11oaallty ti emphaaaed. PY · Dreaaed in bright a:arb, What you do, 11ay hits the amulets, bangles, rings and mark. bracelets, party-goers will LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.22): gather around a pit t.o watch Trying to hide or cover up you n I chicken, flavored could be mistake. ln11tead, with tangy herbs and garlic, reveal naw1 u well a• 1lowly baked and a111ttll. You may find that but>ecued. proving you 1re human iJ Madame Zoro is bringing the ireatest utet. Try it. ber cry1lll ball and a roving -SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. fldler will accompany the 21): Encourage toclal 'le· 1Initn1 and dancing. t:l.vity _ give of yourseU. The pe.rty is planned to Make effort to please. Some ralJe money toward the miy appear ael.fish in· 1cbolar1hlp fund. ~ach year different. Don't comPound the club recogmzes and error. Set your own pace. reward.1 a deserving Laguna Provide beautiful exa·mple. Beach High School s_tudent SAGl'ITARIUS (N 22_ with a gl!t to help finance . ov. her higher education. Dec. 21). Accent oo fuUill- ment of ambitlone. This Which Came First, come1 about through con- centration ~n specific pro- blem. Mey have much to do ~th communication, 1hort journey or relative. Name or Initials? By JOY STILLEY NEW YORK (AP)-- There's an art to namina: organizations today. The fir11t letters of the word1 in the name have to spell a word themselves. A n d , what's more, that word has to have a meaning relevant to the ·member1hJp'1 ac:. tivities. ·for anyone who needed a job, these days would have been called AW AKE -Ar· range Work and K e e p Employment. Now there's HOPE - Health Opportunity for Peo- ple Everywhere; KEEP - Kindergarben Educational Enrichment Program; and REACH -Raising Educa. tional Aspiration1 of C u 1 turally Handicapped. And there's Sl'ART -Short Term Adolescent Retraining -but they're fudging a lit- tle on that one. CAPRICORN (Dee. 22- Jian. 19): Sit back and review, obeerve. Time to strengthen bamc phllo11ophy. Find out why you are here and where you are going. Fine for catching up oo cor- respondence. Read a n d write. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 18): Money or investment proposition c o u 1 d be spotlighted. Co-operation re- quired between you and mate, partner. Combine forces -no day th go it alone. Promote meaningful alliance. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accent on public ·rela- tions -reacliorui to your talents, efforts. Be true to yourself; don't water down your beliefs. Stick to prin· ciples; stand tall. Then you help insure success. c-............ MRS. J. L. NUOINT Recite• Yews Newlywed J.L. Nugents Select Home in Texas Church of St. Michael and All Antlela, O<nna del Mar wu the 11ettina: for the dou· ble ring nuplial rltee lilliciDg Kathryn Je&n Mato11 of Cor- ona del Mar and Jeffrey Lorina Nu1ent ot Upper Nyack, N. Y. Parents of the bridal COU· ple ere ~fl. Florence Brown M'&ton 0( E!Unore, G. Burnett Me'°" ol Trum- bull, Oonn. and Mr. and Mro. John M. N111ent o1 Up- per Nyack. Offt-w .. 1lte Rev. Georr• F. Regu. ~ lo the alter by her i.ther, thl bridrl wore a noor lenltb empire cown of pique and a bee tier catllednl veil, 'Ibo bride dlllfned ond mode her tllHllll>!e. WbllJe <laloies, prdonlu and baby'• breoth bmed lier bouquoL A-line pale yellow pique IOWDI trlmtned with lace and bouquet1 of multicolored bloHoms were aelected for her maid of honor, Ml11 Nancy MclAndo ol. Glendllle, end hEr J>rideamQ:h:, M r s • Robert Smiley ol L o s Angele6 ond Mr•. Geolfrey Teall ol Canoga Park, the brtde'a liltera. George R: Muon III, ttie bride's brother, served as best man while t h e bridesmaids' husbands were u9her1. · Anne-Marie Teall, the bride'• niece wore a yellow and white frock for lier. role as nower girl, rand · Charles :J!AiwGrd Teall 6erv· ed as rlng bearer. A reception for 70 guest.'! followed in the Corona deJ H t D t Mar home af Mr. and Mrs. OS ess UY William McDowell, Circulating the eueet book The official designation for the11e worda made of word11 is ''iacronym," and the whole country has gone acronym happy. From agen· cies on the international level such as AID -Agency for International Develop- ment -throua:h the national VISTA -Volunteers in Service to America -the idea hu filtered down to state, city and even 1ehool groups. This build-a-word a:ame has fairly lenient rules. Minor words don't count if the word created doesn't need them, as in PUSH - Projects Unlimited for Self. Help. But they are allowable when their initial letter helpa: form the word, 11 in CORE-Congress of Racial Miss Laurel Spencer, was Miu Cathy Andress of IF TODAY IS YOUR daughter of W. Lee c.oron-. del Mar end B I R T B D A Y you are Spencer or Corona del as&istinf with serving was In the days of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal, 1core1 of alphabetlcel agencies were created, but the name1 were picked flr11t and shortened later to ln- titlall that didn't apell a thing. Thus the National Labor Relations Board became NLRB, rather difficult to pronounce bad a n y b o d y thought to try. The Works Progress Administration, known a1 WPA, which undertook to 1uppJy work Luau Set For Social Equality. It's hard W figure out which came first, the name or the acronym. When a refreaher training course wa1 started for registered nurses who have been out of the profession for years, was the name RECAP pick- ed 1nd then the designation Re-Entering the Corps of Acting Professionals thought up to go with it? When a university set up a v o 1 u n teer organization whose members spend their spare time teaching UD· derprivileged children, d i d they call it Community and UnJversity Services i n Education by chance and fncinated with medic a I Mar, bas been award· Miss Mar&ant Fish, also of techniques because y 0 u ed the silver wings of Cor<llla del Mar. have sincere desire to help an American Airlines The newlywe& are honey. people. You now h ave 91.ewardess and now is mooning en route to Sen An· chance to build on solid assigned flight duty out tonio where the bridegroom b8!Se. An individual ~ho of Boston. She is an Js stationed with ttie U. S. teaches you Should be alumna of Newport Anny. trusted. Harbor High School and The bride is a araduate ol received her certificate Glendale Hij'b School end GENER AL TEN-attended UCI where 8be was DENCIES C I gh in dental assistin~ at · : ye e hi for an at majoc. Her husband, VIRGO, LIBRA. Spec I al Orange Coast Co ege. a graduate ol Nyack High word to PISCES: complete The new airlines host· School, attended Norwich agreement which promotes ess was 8 finalist in the University in Vermont and successful partnenhJp. Miss Ne~rt Beach Rockland Community Col· To !Ind out wllo'1 luck~ for \'OU In contest in 963. lege tn Suffeni, N. Y. ITIOM'I' •rid lovt, order Svcrntv Om1rr'1 1-----------""'-----'-----booklet "Secrtt Hlntl lot M111 Ind Womtfl." Send blrltldefi Ind lO Clflll hi Om1rr A1fTolot' S.Cr11t, lhe DAILY PILOT, Bo• n-. Grind c ... 1r1t St•· !Ion, N-Y0tk, H.Y. 10011. Silver Sands then dl1cover with glee that The fll'st and th tr d A buffet ol. exotic and the first letters spelled • th U H all di h Tuesdays at 8 p .m . u en o atw an s es CAUSE? Or was 1't the other d d tl 1 members of Silver Sands an ecora one carry ng way 1round 1 286 N out the illland theme will iet , ative Daughters of the a luau mood for members of Anyhow, I've thought up Golden West gather for Delta Beta Epsilon, Beta both the name and the meeting1. Lake p ark Sigma Phi, their husbands acronym for the new group Clubhouse, H u n t i n e t 0 n and guests. I 'm going to form. I plan to Beach, ii the setting for the The summer social will be a charter member of first sesson while Mrs. Jack tak Ia SLOTH-Society for Lazy Or Wilson, 548-1479, will furnish e P ee at 7:30 p.m. Tired Housewives. Wanna location information t be Saturd'ay, Aug. 3, in the oin, Jadles? th1rd meeting. Huntington Beach home of l ~~=~=======~~~~!i=:===~ Mrs. Rf chard Sherrod. • ( Planning .the party a n d preparing the buffet are members of the social com· mittee, Mr1. She!'rod, Mrs. Ken Sutton and M r s . Richard Freudenthal. hotyle .,.., old ................ reuM IMk. SELECTIONS FIT FOR A KING - Charles ff. Barr Jewelers '.Afo/ia ::ba~ ' SIDEWALK SALE WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th & IRVINE 1 onlte & Saturday Dll'ITB lmT PAii --INTENSE EXCITEMENT AGHDSTTDWI COMIAUVEI + lit AllllSSllN II.II& Ghoct Ton. ad'missioo Sl .00 for ldults 2S1 for crhUdRA undar 12. AnlNll pwn for; pmom for Mt JUI' $,,00, Sumrm:r houri 10:00 AM·Jl100 PM-10:00 PM SlmdlJS. . . ---------""'-----------~------------------- • y a . f r • r ' " b • • ! • l v j • v • • ' • • ' a r j ·. ' 1 • < f I ' f l , I • • • • I : 1 . Flight of Snowbirds .. SundaytoAttractlOO By ALMON LOC&ABEY o.itr ioo ..... .._ • .,., .. Water traffic will come to a virtual halt in Newport Sunday when the 33rd Flight of the Snowbirds gets under way at 1:40 p.m. Nearly 100 Snowbirds a.re expected to turn out (or the small boat 1ailln1 classic. , The !tart will be just east of the Balboa Pavilion. The course will take the fleet of 12-foot catboats to a mark in the north Lido Channel, back around the eastern tip of Lido Isle to •nother mark up the South Lido Channel, thence past the starting line to a mark just west of the Harbor Department a n d back to the starting point for the finish . ., ,, .. · •• With fair breezes the boats should get over the five mile course in under two hours. '· Kelpie Set for t:laarter The black·hulled Kelpie, one of the best .kno~n schooners on the West Coast has been recommis· sioned and is available for charter, according to her owner, George Minney. Minney and his family , have been operating the Kelpie in private and f?r hire charter since sh·e came to the West Coast 1n 1960. The schooner is berthed in front of the new waterfront restaurant, the Ancient Mariner, at 2607 W. Coast Highw.ay. Persons interested in char· tering the vessel may contact Minney by telephon· ing Newport Beach 543-4192 or 543-5039 . Transatlantic Race Captured by Indigo m u e n d e trans-Atlantic yachting race . Harbor officials have ask- ed that all boat traffic leav. ing or arriving in Ne~rt Harbor while the race is in progress stay to the sides of the channel so as not to in- terfere with the racers. Sanderling Winner of Tidelands Sanderling, a Newpe>rt·M sloop co-skippered by Mor· rie Kirk and Bob Poole of Voyagers Yactit Club won the VYC H u ntington Tidelands"race Sunday . The race was for sailing yachts handicapped under the Paeific Handicap and Midget Ocean R a c i n g measurement rules. Winner in MORF was steve Seal of Udo Isle Yacht Club in the Cal-2-24 Baby. Final Rest.lits : PHRF -(I) Sanderling, Ktrk & Poole, VYC; (2) Vagabond L a d y , Len Schomell, BYC; (3) Vela , Hayden & Bibb. VYC; (4) Psyche, D. W. Wardell, VYC: (4) Tomahawk, John Arons. SSSC. MORF -Ill &by, Steve , Seal, LIYC. T RAV·EMUENDE, Germany CAP) -The American D-Class yacht Indigo, skippered by S. K. Weigman of Cleveland Heights, Ohio. was the ap· parent over-all winner today of the B er m u d a· Trave- The Indigo was the 19th of 33.e•tr••ts t• ••••h l><>" i• nm· ghy Race the last two days. But, on the basis of time baodkap it Al\ti-litter Campaign Launched r~r.·~ed ti!• best speed Series Set Indigo's actual time for the 3,500-mile regatta was Voyagers Yacht Club of 20 days, 23 hours, two Newport Beach has schedul- minutes and 45 seconds. Her ed Dinghy Match Race handicap brought the time Series Aug. 2-3 featuring doWll to 16 days, 12 hours, 14 boats under 31 feet racing minutes and 36 secqndl. over Olympic type courses s . A. "Huey" Long, who in the ocean off Newport briefly co ns i dered Harbor. withdrawing from the race, VVC will select eight brought his 73-foot ketch On·. ya.c~t clubs from those sub· dine III into port first m1thng a completed pro- The California M a r i n e Thursday. posal form recent~y ~ent. out Parks and Harbors Associa· The German-built yacht. bl". the clu~. Eliminations tion, Southern Division, has putting up the rastest time will be held 1f necessar.y. launched a vigorous cam· of 33 entries, won the cup A perpetual trophy ~tll. be paign to discourage the lit· donated by West German awarded to the !"'1nn1ng ter of waterways near the Chancellor Kurt Georg Kies· ya~ht club . .and the fir~t two coast line and on inland inger skippers and the winning waters. 11~ Sou.th African ketch crew will receiv! take-home Chairman of the com-Stormvogel which led most trophies, ace<irding to John mittee pushing the cam· of the way ~cross the Allan-"Bud" Costell, VYC com- paign is Doug Bombard, tic, arrived here i·ust behind modore . director of the Catalina Camp and Cove Agency. Ondine III with Dutchman Others on the e<immittee Cornelius Bruynzeel at the are P.aul Hilltr, Ra Ir helm. The Kialoa II, skip- Reupsch. .James Q u in n. pered by J ohn B. Kilroy of Harrison Daigh, Edwin F . Los Angeles, w.as third. McDowell. Race offi cials, through a Lido 14 Races Set "The problem of litter on mix-up, had a n n o u n c e d our waterways is one that Wednesday that Long had N a tional championship concerns the entire state aske<l to withdraw and Jatrr regatta for the Lldo-14 Class and nation," said Bombard. that he had retracted and will be held Monday through "and if we, the boaters, do decided to remain in the Friday of nexl week at Hun- not take immediate action it 11ace. Alter his arrival. Long tington Lake near Fresno. will t.ake away a lot of the told newsmen thall "we were Reghitration has been joy of boating." thinking about withdrawing scheduled for Monday morn· Bombard pointed out that tlbemce•.~~e we were so short on ing with practice races Mon - almost any Sunday or Mon-day afternoon and Tuesday day morning kelp beds and Long said he planned to morning. shorelines from Catalina to enter ttle Ondine in the Championship races will the mainland are heavily lit· Sydney-Hobart, Hong Kong-get under way Tuesday tered with paper plates, Manila and Los Angeles-afternoon with Fresno Fleet cups and other trash. Honolulu regattas before No. • as the host organlza- "They seem to be building returning to New York. The tio n. better Htter these days with yacht will be shipped to Syd-Defending champion Is styrofoam cups and plates ney after its ovemaul in Harry Wood of Alamitos coated with plastic th at . :;B;;r;;;em:;;;;en;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;B;;;a;;y;;Y;;ac;;;;h;;t ;;C;;;lu:;b;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ never dissolves or sinks in11 the water. There are also c more disposable bottJes and p cans, and it seems the way pr go boating these days is ball carry ever y thtng lnte posable," said Bombard. Wi t~e educational program week igned to eliminate the bable~lem will include ant-lil- ballot posters pointing out the nomln · tllll pern Utter on Of Nf:•aterways, a litter-bag mltled f1'1n on which. la pdpted first ba) 111 .... 1 wonlini o1 the · ter law: ''Tbrowlat 1t. I 'aclnt trooh. relilll. His • bottle ..,,. prba1e Rockefe~ilh in or 'near the survey' ll. 'oi lbt ' 1taie II mg. Ronal<i1e by lmprl""""eul comml~. nontha or a fine of Stuaen ~h ." There ~w forbids depo!iting vote! a~ .. or in ltlte waters candldaci~extend three mile• h Roct!:.~ .and 150 feet above .. iii'hiidl lino -ue<pt ,..r.l\\'!" ncoplaclH . ' ALOHA DAYS SIDEWALK SALE PRETIY PARTY ojµ-SUPPLIES ·~ PAPER UNLIMITED WESTCUFF PL..UA 17th & IRVINE FRIDAY Ir SATURDAY * Frida,, July 26, 1968 DAJLV Pilat' Jt .. -~ - NOW SHOWING IHl-WAYlc9'1DRIVE-INI ; ~ PROGRAM STARTS AT 1:15 PM with "THE oD.D COUPLE" /'= LMEWOOD Jaek Lemmon and r Matthau are The .~ Odd Couple:/ PANAV1SION° TECHNICOLOR" A PARAMOUNT PICTURE PLUS I ROD LEE GEORGE STEIGER • REMICK • SEGAL NO WAY TO TAFAI A LADY TECHNCOlDR' I PAA»!OONT PICIU!£ BUENA PARK • •• ONLY MINliTtS AWAYI I : --.·----,. ANAH£1M • SANTA MIA . -- I •• • • I • .. . . . ... ... . . ... ..... -.......... . • . DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE ' -... ·-'. . 'Flotsam and Jetsam' \ • Fetcll the image polish, please. • That's approxtmatoly what Laguna Beach Chamber ol Commerce directors hope to add to lihe still unbol· ;need hippie equal.ion being fa ctored in the art colony . A l'Ommittee has been set up for refurbishing the image of Laguna Beach by "reappraisal of the flotsam and jetsam that has landed on our shores." Part of the image polishing, believed necessary be- cause Of publicity about the resort community's affllc· tion. is omission or tlhe term hippie. . .. ' . ••• It's out. Flotsam and jetsam was the code term at a chamber meeting this week . The point of the program apparently is to provide sometlb.ing ~ a hard, united -but legal -front against hipp;e transgressions. This would be handled in ways varying from eviction for misrepresentation in obtaining rentals to advice to citizens on their rights in making a citizen's arrest (in a misdemeanor not observed by po- lice). The results sought, it· would seem, are to de-em- phasize tlhe presence of the unshorn nomads, to make them unwelcome and to spike any thoughts the world migllt hold that Laguna is soft on hippies. The cha1nber activity, which also involves the board of realtors and hotel·motel association, is added emphasis to city council action last week. The council took an official bard line (by 4·1 vote} against hippies during an emotion-charged meeting with standing room only. Councilmen by resolution agreed to explore all legel Dictionary ls No Bastion of Good Usage ·1t is interesting -to me, at least - tliat most of the letters I receive about my columns on the use of words refer me to some dictionary or other I! evidence that I am "wrong" in my definitions and distinctions. But a dictionary is no more a guide to good usage thall a telephone direc- tory is a gulde to good addresses. The Yellow Pages can tell you v.rhere to sbop, but not which shop is better than any other. MOST DICTIONARIES (especially in America) follow the current or c0n- temporary speech ; if most people say "disinterested" when they mean "uninterested," the dictionary will list "disinterested" as a secondary form of "uninterested," even though they are quite opposite words in their original meanings. A dictionary, on the v.rhole, is a scoreboard. not an umpire. It follows the "election returns" on the usage of words, and when enough people con· fuse "masterly" and "masterful", m ::ist dictionaries will give up the fight against the distinction and list them as IY!lODYms-though, again, t h e i r original meanings were quite dif· ferent. IT IS OF NO USE to cite a dic- tionary for anything but the most ob· vious and elementary spellings and de'finitions: it is a reflection of public taste and tendencies. not a bastion of g®d or proper usage. ND'W, says the modernist and libertarian in 1anguage, how can you call any usage "good" or "proper" when the language is continually changing, and when it is the living Dear Gloomy Gu s: Why has the Crown Valley Park· way left turn signal at C o a st Highway been broken and not repaired for two weeks? J .T.F. Thlt """"' "'TMC!s ~ ,,_. 1111 MCHWrlPy llloM ti 1tM MW_,..f, SMIOll v111r Ht _.... i. OIMm' 011 .. ~ltr .-u ... speech of people that determines what is "right" or "wrong," and not the dead laws of strict grammarians? WELL, WE OLD FOGIES answer, it seems to us that good usage should be able to meet three b a s i c re- quirements: accuracy, clarity, and di stinctiveness. As Mark Twain put it long ago: "The difference between the right word and tlhe almost-right word is the~difference betweenlightni.ng and the lightDing-bug.'' I don't care, for instance, whether anyone saye "who" or "whom" in a sentence. There is no logical or mean· ingful reason for "whom" in English, as there Is in the Latin accusative. And grammarians who wag their fingers at "who" as an object merely weaken their own case for good usage -as do the .antiquated prigs who sWl object to a preposition we end a sentence with. BUT THERE ARE hundreds of otlher cases in which usage does make a difference, in accUl'ACy, in clarity, and in distinctivenestJ. Most important of all, the more different words we have for things that .are similar, the more precisely are we able to explain and illuminate our ideas. Good usage leaves nothing to chance, to hope, or to fancy -it says what should be said in the only way that cannot be misconstrued. A Tonic for DeGaulle WASHlNGTON-Franc:e has licked some of the problems which beset her atomic energy program and appears ready to be co m e a fuU, thermonuclear. member o( th e International nuclear club. That is the preUminary assessment, by U.S. experts. of the first nuclear we.apons tests in the current French series. -Such appraisals are based primarily ..Q .analysis of the radioactive debris b1o1m into the atmosphere by the fiJ*er of a nuclear explosion. U.S, ex- pertl routinely sample and assess titre• residues, as do the nuclear ~ts of other nations. ~\It this Instance. preliminary in· dtC.tions are that U-235 was used In thfs year's French testing program. U· J3S la I highly refined uranium isotope UMd in making hydro gen ( onuclear} weapons. lt was not found the debris of French tests in -' 11187. .nm: CB however, Wtl"f' to ba buildinf highly complex W:WU. for producUon of u . -fa the new test program F. to U.8. uper\I that a French plant ll DO• in operaUon. 1 °"" f u-m •llO tndJcatts that ,,.,.._ wID aoon be able to join the Ullllal stllel, Ruula and Communist Qma, .in acblev1nl a thermonuclear, ....,b,ructioa. ba l'rencb tell Hriel which began Jily 7 on Munuoo Atoll '°"u:'~" of r-, la upectmcl to cooliDue the ¥ • .: ... .. -£4 = a I summer. All indications now are that the series may well include a thermonuclear test, as w i d e 1 y predicted in France. SUCH A TEST would be .a tonic for Gen. Charles de Gaulle, his scientists and his fellow countrymen. All of them were embarrassed when Communist China, supposedly backward in science and technology , beat France to the thermonuclear punch. Chinese weapons experts are still perfecting missile systems lo deliver their nuclear warheads. De Gaulle, with his Mirage bomber force. will now to able to boast that France has achieved a modern thermonuclear striking force to support its in· dependent posture in Europe. By R1>bert S. Allen and John A. Goldsmith Quotes Gordon C. LuC4!, state 1 t. c . , 8u1lne1s, TransporlaUon -"T1'e most important and valid criteria the hJghway commission will use in selec· ting the (L.A. Ce.ntury freeway) route will bf: itl value and etrect on ~ple." avenues to further dlscou.r1ge the hippies' presence in the community. Just what the upshot ol the new look In communJ\y posture toward hippies wilJ bring i.s yet to be seen. But, there is a factor there that wasn 't there before, larger community involvement in legally making the bearded and beaded set unwelcome in the art colony. Laguna has its guard up. Hippies take note. The welcome mat is definitely not out. Voters Sho wed Foresight Measures that will authorize financing of public works to keep pace with accelerating growth of com- munities in the Moulton-Niguel Water Dis trict passed ha ndily at Tuesday's special election. It 'ls encoura·ging that property owners -only prop- erty owners were eligible ~o vote -had the foresight to asswne the $26 million burden. Tbe funds will prepare for the long-term expansion of Laguna Niguel, Mission Viejo and Capistrano High· lands and for the industrial and residential development of North American Rockwell property . The water district takes in about 25,000 acres a nd a little over 10,000 residents. The population is growing now at the rate of about 500 per month. The rate will doubtless accelerate as much of the development action swings toward the southern half of Orange County. Voters were wise to prepare for the predicted growth. Wa ter district officials also handled their pub- lic rela tions progra m well in getting the message across. L "W l-!£RE 'S THAT r§J!I# LID°?" -. . Do You Want to C011tbat Dehumani.:ation? Awakening Man's Intrinsic Nature By GEORGE R. HOFF, Ph.D. The setting may be a mountain retreat where a groue of people are spending 24. to 36 hours together - without sleep -in a marathon group seminar. Or the action may be taking place in a plush office suite in which busy and harried executives are taking a few hours out of lheir schedules to become more sensitive to themselves and othets. In a secluded location, another group may be trying to explore and in· t.erpret their priority of values by tak- ing o£f their clothes and thus re.v~eajing part.!i of themselveg -literally and figuratively -which are usually kepi private. Does baring the body help to refresh the soul? SOMEWHERE ELSE, a group Clf married couples has come to~r.ther for a weekend of honest self-examination and probing into their marriages as relationships instead of institu~ions. They want to redefine their meaning of love. Uninhibited dancing in the Zorba the Greek fashion . coupled with exercises to facilitate body awarenes3, may characterize the behavior of yet another group. Here. the purpose is to wake up sleepy feelings and learn how to relate more spontaneously lo each other. If these activities appear "way out" when compared to c on v e n t i o n a 1 psychological and psychiatric prac· Uces, it's because they are! New fron- tiers of human interaction are being explored today because radical treat· ment is needed in order to combat the most insidious and subtle malady oJ our time -DEHUMANIZATION. IN OUR OBJECTIVELY impersonal society. it is becoming mor e and more difficult to break through the barrier of anonymity and develop .close inter· personal relationships. We live in a highly technical world; one which places high value on behavior shaping. Education has teaching machines. Communication meaia de pend upon conscious a n d subliminal persuasion. Business and indu-stry rely heavily upon system analysis and computer· based decisions. Even religion has ''Dial-A-Prayer.'' No wonder a syndrome o f psychological problem.i seen1s to be developing. Emotional states including apathy, depre ss ion. an11my, helplessness, malaise. and loneliness -all of which have some charac· teristics of the schizoid personality - are beginning to represent the mood of our times .. SUCH AN OBSERVATION re~iJy doesn't require elaborate scientific in· vestigation. All you have to do is loOk around you and notice ~he increasingly large number of persons who exhibit symptoms of coldness, defen siveness, aloofness, emotional det3chment. and fearfulness. Perhaps an honest look in the mirror will reflect an automaton whose behavior has been shaped and reshaped, to the point where not only are its responses predictable, they're controllable. There must be an antidote to dehumanization. Modern theorists and practitiooers are searching for cures for this illness and ways to prevent its recurrence. They want to help man wake up, get off Dr. Frankenstein's table, unplug himself from the com- puter, and find his own meaning without the benefit of somebody else's program. IT IS BECOMING increasingly clear, as more: of these "avant garde" techniques are explored, that man is, after all, an intentional being whose hum anness Is definable in human, in· stead of mechanical, terms. But it's not enough to help man find out who he is. It's also necessary to provide him with an opportunity to awaken or reawaken his intrinsic nature. The question now remaining is. "Are we willing to give up the comfort and security of having 'Big Brother' tell us what to do, and r isk getting in touch with our inner resources?" What do we have to lose? • Says 'Bad Guy' Giving Driver Tests To the Editor: It seems tha( there is a "good guy" and a "bad guy" who accompany drive.rs for tests on driver's licenses in Costa Mesa. My reason for writing Ls that my 16- year-old son just went in for his driv· ing test and in trying to parallel park, he brushed agahl6t a stanchion and the instructor proceeded to shout at him a nd failed him rignt then without a se· co nd try. Now In checking with others his age, some passed even though they made the same mistake, or others had to do no parking at all. ln order not to get the same instructor again, my son transferred hi s records to another of- fi ce and passed without any difficulty. AT A RECENT baseball game, I mentioned this 1::xperience to three other mothers ar:d two of them had bten failed by tnis same "bad guy." (lne, a driver of more th.an 20 years, said that he int imida1eJ her. I would a,, Geor 9 e -- Dear George : You've had a lot to say about computers taking over the world. One more adverse comment and I 'll qujt reading your paper - this is the most ridiculous thJng I ever heard. We don 't even want the world. I'm happy just as I am. l l'm an electronic in· te-grator and calculator.) PLUGGED IN Dear Plugged In : Your probl@m indicates you should see a marriage counselor. (\Veil. one les5 computer -it should blow up trying to figure out that answer.) Dear George: Could you tell me who iovt1nted C·Rations? ' I SGT. JAY Otar Sgt. Jay: lt wouldn't do you •ny good - they keep him 1urrounded by security guards nlght and day. (Send your problems to George and atop worryin1 needlessly. Let him five you cause to wor- ry.) 6 * a Ldlt rs ITOf!'I rctdtrs ire "lalme. Notmlli'Y wrli.f'I WI/kl convtv ltlflr me1~ tn lOll words CH' le11, Troe tloM to condtnse lt"trs to Ill ll>I U or elJmlnllt libel 11 rHervW. All i.tt1rs m1111 Include 1lon1lllf'I tnd m111l119 eddr•U· bYI n1mn will be wlltl"-ld on r~vnl. say this is a rather a high average arid 1 think others \\'ho have had this ex· perience shouln let the i!epartJnent know aboul it. Why should a person in authority be allowed to p I a y God a n d do it so ungraciously. He certainty 1 eave s much to be desired in his attitude on duty. I think the Department of Motor Vehicles should investigate this situa- tion in Costa Mesa now. MARILYNN MARTI N 'llnfalrlg Treate d' To Ole Editor: My brother and I appreciate The DAILY PILOT's coverage regarding a permit from the city of Costa Mesa to open our banquet room. We believe that we have been treated very un- fairly because there is really no need for the three extra parking spaces as required by the city. tn fact, we have more parking spaces than are needed at the present time. In the process of applying for the permit we experienced many dlf· ficulties from the planning depart- ment. s uch as : J. THEY MADE US wait many weeks to obtain our remodeling permit. This permit was issued to us only after I had a meeting with v!'rlous department personnel. 2. They also requested my landlord to wrlte a leaae that would not allow food to be served in the banquet room. 3. They required us to pay a f35 fM, which was returned to us In cub aftw we made lnqutrles 1bout it. 4. It did not come &s a JUl"Pl'iJe to us when they recommended to the planning commllsloners to refuse OlD' perm1t for the banquet room. S. We asked tbe city to .allow us to open the banquet room after 6 t:; when thtre I.a no 1hortaft of par . space. But this request, too , was denied. WE WOULD LIKE to ask, what benefit would it be to the city to have our banquet room closed? We would like to express our ap· preciation and gratitude to our customers and friends for their sup- port. especially to those who made a special trip to sign our petition. We enjoy the opportunity to serve this wonderful community and we are trying to do our best whenever the op- portunity permits. KAM FOY YEE Mei's Family Restaurant War nnd P eace To the Editor: The emotional letter of V a n McKinzie about war (Mailbox. July 19) was nice to read but so unreal. This idea about war being senseless is fine rhetoric but unsubstantiated by modern history. With the help of Germany. V.I. Lenin won con trol of Russia for the Communist Party. Russia as one of the victorious of World War II an- nexed vast regions of Eastern Europe. MAO TSE-TUNG gained control over all of China as the result of win- ning a war. A few years ago China walked into Tibet •nd is still tMre. Ho Chi Minh was victorious over the French. Fide) Castro was a winner. Eve!! Israel has gained much by the victory in the Six Day War. Consider the wars that the U.S. has won. Of course. we did not gain much but if we had lost to Germany or J apan I would not be writing this letter. HARRY B. McDONALD , JR . Rtod<t ' lllclClnm tDrOk of 1111 ronill/ of pcae< and U.. illl<mllr of IDOr. l'laf Deaeer•~i.. To the Editor: Rave you noti~ the b1dly d.lttorted imaC• of our American flaa _painted on Ille 'll'lndo1lr ol the South Coat Rep. «tory Thtator on Nowpan Blvd. in to.ta M ... ? Third step theater, z -~ ..... betv.·een 18th and Center? Our Am erican Oag is desecrated by a sort of "hangman's noose ," of all things! Frankly. I was appalled when I stood there looking at it! I wonder what kind of thinking and people would would put on a play. call· ed "America Hurrah" which would call for such a display of advertising? Yes. I just do wonder? I also wonder if the patriotic American citizens of our community have noticed th i s desec rated version of our flag. and have made any serious inquiry into this new play, and the theater which is sponsoring such a play and advertising display? On top of this ugliness. it is Illegal, is it not. to disfi gure the image of our fl ag? Haven't we had enough of our beautiful flag be in g desecrated? Hayen't we had enough of such play! which would call for such desecration? I think we have! BARBARA W. ADAMS Legal opinion is that flag desecra· ' tion under the California Military and/ Veterans Code applies only to abust} of on actual flag . Federal law appl:. ing to flag representation if not 1< t ff e ct. Accordingly, compla~ ... against the theater have been d{ ped. See Thuriday news atory ftirthP.r details. --W Friday, July 26, Ille- The editoricl page o/ th< Pilot 1e1kt to inform ant.. ulctc ttadlrr bJI pr1stnti nt1DIJ)(lpft'• optniom 0>1 """tarv on tapics of, • cmd llgnlfiamc•. br Piii '"""" for u.. urnr o~r midm' opfnlo!il pre.a:mt:.ing CM divct 1. point. of lnfonntd oa end rpokesmtn an top dor. Robert N. Weed, Pu -l • I ·Newport Barbor -----DAI LY Pl LOT l'~Y'• Cl••'•• 11--. EDITION N.Y. Steeb , VOl. 61, NO. '179, 5 SECTIONS, 60 ~AGES NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNtA FRI DAY, JUl.:Y 26, 1968 JEN CENTS . . Put This One With That -Otte • • • ' . ' Telephone technician Bruce Newbery works to splice together the lines of telephone cable cut when a contractor's trenching machine severe<\ the und- ergronud line in Ford Road area. S~ice to approximately 2,000 Costa Mesa and Newport BeaCb homes and businesses was interrupted by the acci- dent. Pacific Telephone spokesmen said that full service should be restored by night time. Nixon Caravan Rolls Away Ca 1neo S1ipres Leave-T aki1ig Quiet as His Stay A caravan of 14 cars pulled out of Corona del Mar's exclusive Cameo Shores area last night, laking away "good neighbor" Riobard Nixon for the politi-cal wars. It ended the presidential candidate's one-week respite from pre-convention campaigning. He had spent the time at U1e home of Judge and Mrs. Thurmond Clarke. 46.13 Brighton Rd ., except for a brief trip to Los Angeles where he taped a TV interview with Joey Bishop earlier l'hursday. The former Republican Vice Presi- dent flew to Washington. During h.is stay, in the Corona del Mar com- munity, Nixon remained in seclusion, except for the pi'esence of a host of secret service agents. llis fa1nily was not with him. He and his entourage left as quietly as they came. His temporary neighbors said thefe * * UPI Poll Finds Nixon Can Win On First Ballot By United l're·11 lnLernatlon~l . was "no commotion at all" from Ule time he arrived, unannounced, until the time he left. also unannounced. Newport police were not even ad- \lised •of the time of the Nixon caravi.'s departure. Police said there were no incidents of any kihd during the Nixon visit. • •·11e was a good neighbor," one Cameo Shores resident smiled. "We would welcome him back, any time." Nixon already has plans to return to California. He tentatively plans to stay at the nearby Mission Bay resort com- plex in San Diego for 10 days following (S.. NIXON, Page Z) Bail Denied, Hearing Set For Mesa Sla ying Suspect By ARTHUR VINSEL Of '"" oau, P'lltl 51•ft Bail for accused carving knife slayer Mrs. Irene M. Tucker was again denied -without prejudice. in the judee's words -when her preliminary hearing date was set to· day in Harbor District Judicial Court. Judge William C. Ch ri s len s en ordered Mrs. Tucker, of 1&42 Minorca Drive. to be brought before him Aug . 8 at 9:30 a.m., at which time she is ex- pected to plead not guilty. The 37-year-old wife of City Coun- cilman George A. Tucker is charged with one count of murder as the result of a June 28 backyard altercation '1.'hich led to the death <>f Mrs. ~Jarriett \Vestphal '. 68, of 1646 Minorca Drive, .Judge Christensen today delayed ac- tion on the Tucker case while clearing his calendar of a number or traffic matters whic~ brought a standing r0:0m-only crowd into the courtroom. Mrs. Tucker -wearing the now- customary pink sweater she wore when arrested a month ago - sat im- passively during most of th e traUic cases, occasionally rubbing her cheeks or forehead pensively. She appeared rather out of place, seated among other defendants which included £our men in Orange County Jail dungarees and a pretty, teenaged girl in hippie-type blouse and pants. "Now Mr. Moseley," said Judge Christensen shortly before 11 a.m., ''about the Tucker matter," and Depu- ty District Attorney Jay Moseley and defense attorney Paul Augustine Jr., conferred at the bench. Nothing could be heard o( their 1(). (See TUCICER, Pac• !) : , Teddy Won't Run Senator Says 'It's Impossible ' BOSTON (AP) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D·Mass.), took himself out of any consideration for t be Democratic vice presidential nomina- tion today with a statement saying "for me, th1$ year, it is impossible." Kennedy, last survivor of four Ken· nedy sons, said in Jl statement that his decision "is final, firm and not subject to further consideration." KeMedy said he ls removing him.sell froin con- sideration because of f a m i I y Did Missing Man Drown Or 'Split?' The girl friend of a young man reported drowned in Newport JJarbor has declined to take a lie detector test on questions dealing with the accident, Newpcrt Beach .police said today. As a result, Det. Sgt. Ken 'l'bompson said an investigation into the disap- pearance of Robert J ames Spencer, 20, of Long Beach, is at a stalemate. Spencer dropped out of sight the Sunday afternoon of June· so after he and a female companion rented a 14· foot dinghy to go sailing in Newport Harbor. The girl friend, identified only as Ingrid Taylor of Los Angeles, , told police she turhed from the. bow of the smaij boat and saw . Spencer fall baCl:Ward Into the water. He gasped !or br11tb, then sank out of sight, she reported. Because the body has never been recovered, police said it was possible the missing man "may be more alive than dead." Thompson said an investigation has found t h ,a t Spencer was involved· in child support payments with his estranged wile, and was also nearing draft age. El Toro Officer Named Trustee By San Joaquin Lt. Phillip Bradfield, assistant public works director at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, has been named trustee or San Joaquin School District. He was selected from s1x applicants at a special board meeting Wednesday to repplace Dr. John Go6som, Naval dentist tranSferred from El Tiro to the Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md. His term will run until June 30, 1971, Two other trustees live in El Toro, one in East Irvine and one in Mission Viejo. Lt. Bradfield, a 20-year veteran, •nd his wife have three daughters, 15, 16 and 17 , all attending Mission Viejo High School. He has been involved in the sctiool PTA. On his application, he said he believes he can assist the board in ex- panding construction planning and ilJ general supervision of the ad· ministration of the school district. S tack Ma r kets NEW YORK (AP) -0 I Is gave strong leadership to a mixed stock market thi!l afternoon. Tr ad I n g slackened 'from Thursday's p a,c e. (QuotaUons, Pages 10.11). responsibllitles resultJng from the assassination of his brother, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (0-N.Y.), last month. The Massachusetts senator, in a four-paragraph statement, said he will speak out, however, on "foreign and domestic policies our party must pursue if it is to be successful in the coming election." He said he appreciated the con· fidence of Democrats who have pro· posed him for the national Uckel and "under normal clrtumstances such a possibility would be a high 'hOOor and a challenge ~ furtber public sie:rvice." Kennedy added, "My reasons are pUrtly personal. They arJse from the change in my pelsonal situation and responsibilities as a result of the events of last month. I know that the members of the Democratic party will understand these reasons vli.tbout further elaboration. Newport Toni orrow Macnab Named ) NB G·oals Chief By JEROME F. COLLINS Of 1M DMlr P'lltt l!Mt 1-'ormer Newport Harbor Chamber ol Commerce president John Macnab to. day was named general chairman of Newport Tomorrow. Mayor Doreen Marshall made the appointment. Newport Tomorrow is the new title Naked Man Gets Jail Sentence On Assault Rap 1.A man who was found naked in a UCI girl student's room by the girl's parents wps sentenced Thursday to three months in the Orange County ja:il ood placed on three years pro· batlon. John Edward Breach, 22, of Anaheim, was found guilty of a felony assault on Mr. and Mr!l. Tolbert Tit· !any of 2607 E . 17th st., Huntington Beach. The charge against him was lodged when the parents unexpectedly visited their daughter Marcy Jane, 18, in a UCJ dormitory room June 11. There they found Breach in the nude. He argued with them and a fight followed in which he assaulted the parents. TUfany, 69 and his wife, Gertrude, 52, called sheriff's deputies and they arrested Breach. Miss Tiffany returned later while deputies were still there and was ar· rested for maintaining a place for the use o! marij'Uana. She has pleaded guilty and will be sentenced next Thursday. Last Esca pee From J ail Held It took five monU1s but Orange County sheriff's depuUes Thursday pick"ed up the last of 11 men who escaped the county jail last Feb. 20. Thomas P. Case, 19, of 2525 Elden St., Costa Mesa, was captured by Orange County deputies in a Van Nuys parking Jot. He was located through a tip received through the sheriff's of- fice, Deputies said "he had been out of town for a while but came back and made some contacts." Last Thursday, the tenth escapee still at large was captured in Chicago, P a u 1 G. Diaz, 24, of 1843 Woodl8nd Road, Laguna Beach, was arrested for a narcotics violation, the same charge he was being beld on 1n the county jail. the city's "Goals and Objectives" pro- jed. As general chairman, Macnab, a 56-. year-old native of Scotland, will bead development of a long-range, far.- reaching do-it-yourself master plan for the community, Some 60 ctUzens are expected to participate directly and thousands of others through ques· Uonnaires to be mailed out by the city. Realtor M<icnab's principal funcUon will be to serve as chairman or the Newport Tomorrow steering com. mittee. This committee comprises chairmen of seven subcommittees, each ~Ith Its own area of study, and two city officials. The municJpaJ offJclals are City Councilman Robert Shelton and Plan· ning Commission Chairman David Curtis. They were selected this week by their fellow tsoard members Mayor Marshall today° n"arned these cltizens · to the other posts on the N~wport Tomorrow steering com. rn1ttee : -Resfdentlal Goal•: Milan Dostal, attorney an,d president of the Mariners Community Association, ......COmmerclal Goals: D o r o t h y Hardcastle. Jong-time Corona del Mar business leader. -Barbor Goals: Donald C. Simpson. rorm~r city engineer, now Jn private practict. -IaduatrfaJ Goal•: William D Clark, iDduatrial realtor. ' -Towa1eape Goals (beautification recreation): Peter Vogel dev1Joptf :i.nd president of the NewPort Shores Community Association. ' -Publ_Jc Facllity G•als (gowrnment Installations): David Tingler, at .. torney. . -.-Transportallon G o a I a ·: Pan Gill~land, past president of the Balboa· Peninsula Point Association. . Each of these men·. as a slih- complittee chair.man, will work with several other citizens ' ln determining what Newport should do to prepare for an ~nt~clpated tripling of the oom." mun1ty s population. The ~i~y Council will appoint tl\e other citizen members of Newport Tomorrow on August 12 acCording· to May~r Marshall. Bf that time, the st.eenng committee should have met and developed a time schedule for completion of, the entire program. Oraaie Weather Richard M. Nixon sti11 bas s.uff1c1ent convention delegate strength -on paper -to capture the -~epubll~n presidential. nomination on the first ballot, according to a United Press International survey today. With the selection less than two weeks away, UPI tabulated 691 pro- bable votes for Nixou on the first ballot. A fotal or 667 is needed to nominate. Mesa Frets About 'Oil Town' Threat Patchy early morn.Jng fog and Jow clouds clearing by this aft· ernoon to become moe:Uy sunny. Coastal temptratures wtll range from 69 to 75. Today's water temperature ls 69 degrees. Of Nixon's total. 183 votes are com· mitted to his candidacy on at lea.et the first ballot and 508 are leaning toward It. His nearest rival, Nelson A . Rockefeller, had 285 votes in the UP l survey, lXI commiUed and 155 lean· ing, Ronald Reagan had 157 total, 86 couunllit.d and 11 1 .. 111ng. Harold S~ blld 1 commltted vote. There were still 44 uncommitted votes and 155 tied up in favorite son candidacle1. • Rockefeller partisans claim Nixon ha.s been losing dele-gate votes aince (S.. POLITICS, Par• I) , A major oil production company ls making preparations for drilling lnto a .smaU northside parcel or County land surrounded by the city or Costa Me1a, which forblds 1uch operation&. Just what stand to take and how to go about it is the .quesUon up for con- sideration when the City Council and Planning Cornnil81ion gather for an occasiobal fifth·Mooday skull session next week. · · Officials of the Occidenta l Petroleum Corp .• of 'Los Angeles, have been sending out feelcra prior to an exploratory punch lnto the Orange County crwit in Costa M e s a ' s .. northeast corner. "I'm sorry, but we have no com~ ment," commented Carl Blumay, of the oil lirm's publication department when contacted by the DAILY PILOT Thursday. City officials however, hav~ defi~ite· 1y been sounded out by Occidental ex· ecutivts concerning the drnllng of a Sample well or test ho1e In the smaU finger of county territory, Costa Mrsa Itself has had an ordinance prohibiting oil well drilling for some 14 years and there ls Httle doubt the law wilt remain on the books as a safe1uard a&ainst blight. The L-shaped parcel 1n question - bounded by Bear Street, Paulartno Avenue, Platte Drive and the San D~go Freeway -however, belongs to the county. A well could be drilled, provided proper paperwork Is lu.ued and all modern-<tay sUpulaUona ,on • oU . pro- ductJon, regulating safety,, no,lse and other factors are m~t in advance. No permit has" been sought by Oc· cldental Petroleum Corp.. however, and Clarence 1.. Moore, special services supervisor tor the · Or,ange County Building and Saltly .DePart. men~ said Tburiday be bu not 'beard ( of the proposal. . The posalblllty of county oWclals allowing the well to be drilled raises another intere1Ung point, because it Is only 1 matter of' time untU Costa Mesa annei:es the land. "OU-r does nothJng for a town but louse It up," commented·Coa:ta }tfesa Maydr Alvin L. Pil!l<loy, wllo-w .. on the .City Cc>uncil,14 ~Jr• ~o when th• present anU-drlWnc t.w was put into effect. , "Of cour.ae, l'm just speaking for rn.yself,",he aald, "1 don't know U my fellow councilmen wU1 Uva dlffitent views." · INSm E TODA. Y County man.· 1rnttnctd irf bn<tal Florida ..,. ,.htl'e girl nailtd to trtt. Pogi I. =::: ,,.;: -... .,.. __ .. ,, -. -·-·-o; -.. --.. "', -.r . ~·..... . -. --,. ............ ,,. ......... .. , .. . --~ ' ' ~ • . • " . • • . ·-• • • I 2 DAll.Y Pll.OT Old Lifeguards to Show Youngsters Up A ~of older men will.,.. rift II Plor Ill I a.m. ~ Sobm!oy. • Oertlol bottle•, rboum&!iom tablela ond other aidl to P"Pon for 1tlla 1iC16 llll>llal Walrul Swim. 'lbe men repreHllt the 1t1pervl1ory NII Of tile Newport Beach Lifeguard ~ rangln1 In ronlt from Otllf !Ob.Reed to lifeguard -· At the crack of • cua and aching bones, I.be 1enlor lllel\Mll'd penomel will dab Into the -and 1wlm atOUDd tho plor. The -of tile event, •ceardln& to llMd, la to "&bow 111 )'Ollllllr ftllowl 11111 thtlr bo111t rtlU - how to'":~ -.llllJ woukln't tbll." "FruJdJ," RMd aald w1llt • otn. "thil ts the one chance In the year for lht young$r men to lampoon u1." He added as i111 afterthought, "At leut, openly." lloed bepn tile W11nls Swim In 19!0 as a yearly morale booster for his 1taff. As with any yearly aUalr, cer· ta1n incident& which bave occurred duriD.& put races have become tradi- ' liOllOl 11 Cbh .. ' ,,... -""1111 tllo 11111 -= 1111.,.., and -lblCboNI -'t:5::-l.e:B·ii:E,?; ''Tiie !Int to nn1sh," npJalMd the chief carefully, ''ls generally pentllzed 20,000 pol.at.I f o r not watchint to 1 • e that 'his fellow 1wlrnmer1 finished safely. "Any man getting hit with a mackerel g e t 1 ·•bout 10,000 polDta 1D hi• favor." TIMI portlclputl, appearing In In· Su111111er Business Boo1ning ' City Pot 1d Feeds, Shelters Furry Guests B1 BRUCE BENION Of "" ...., ..... """ Wltllln 1 moderll -brlck bu!!dln& ln Coronl de! Mir, oome 50 JUlltl 1 month ore fed aod obeltered, tern· porarilJ on relief. Thia 11 the clty pound, a caqae of no uncertain aa.xlety tlO every pet owner wbon animal bu wandered astray. Buslne11 at the pound booms especially In the summertime, one reason belne that cats have lcittens In the spring, who often wind up homeless a few months later. The exact number of cats, rats and other furry creatures in Newport Beach are tmknown becaµse they aren't required to be licensed. But clerkl at City Hall can say for cert&ln that there an more than 3,000 do,11!'.s in town . Tags issued this year so far come to 3,574. Only a few of those are replacements for lost Ucenaes . The pound 11 located within a veterinary hospital. Jt· ts operated on contract with the city by Dr. Albert E. Stockton, Jr. He's run the pound for the past 21 years. The vet sbuna publicity for himself. He tells interviewers that "any story about the city pound should deal right wlth the pound ltaeU." JU location ts 38S8 E. C o a s t HIJthway. , Inside the cool brick building one notices a faint, hospital· like smell of cleanllnesa. As you work through a maze of doors toward the kennels (called "run&") a cborul of yelps, m.ow1 and sound1 of acratcbln& flet starts up. "All right, now," saya Bennie Clln· ey, the vet assistant for the past 1even year•. The qientele immediately aet- Ues down. Under the city'• rules, anlmall WIU be hfld at the pound for 72 houri. If unclaimed, they are elther put out tor adoption, or put to steep. That's not the way It alway• works out. Dogs and cats can count on room and board for a good deal more than three days. Tburaday afternoon, for ezample, -pioches ...... ,...-in, hlpp!ly around the outside "runs" like old hands. They had arrived 10 days earlier. The vet bas been trying to find them homes . For $6, which covers a rabies shot and dog tag, anyone can pick up one of the dogs for bis own. Clincy finishes hosing down the outside Hruns" and opens the gates for the two tong-timers. The mutts patter oU to some pla~ inside without being shown the way, apparently to be fed . Pound capacity is SO dogs and cats, but it ls seldom operating full bore. The vet likes keeping extra cages on hand in case of emergency boarding needs. Newport Beach has three humane officers, working out of the police department. They are senior man Ray Johnson, and Wayne Dumhoff and Ed Motley. United Stand Against Russ Asked of Czech Chiefs SNIFF -City pound assistant, Bennie Clincy, puts pooch into an outside kennel at Newport Beach. city pound. U tile dog ls not claimed within 72 hours, lnw states he must be destroy· ed. PRAGUE (AP) -Czechoslovak leader•, awa!Ung decisive talk.J with Ill• Soviet Commuo!st party Politburo, were ur&ed by peacemakers of this OOUJG'y'1 liberallzaUon drive today to ''defend un1teclly the road on which we have started and which we will not leave allve .11 • 'The appeal came am.id mounting coocem · over rumor• that t h e lNdfnhl.p wu split on how to react to Soviet pressure at the &howdown meeting likely to begin next w .. k. '11le rwnors were fed by the deds.ion 'l'bunday of the policymaking party presklium to remove Lt. Gen. Vaclav Prdllilt, 1 chief target of Soviet at- llcka, from a key pocltion In tile party Central Comt!Uttec. Usually reliable sources said they 1IDdentood the declsioo in Prchlik's cue had not Ule unanimous backing of the 11-member presidium. L I b e r a l Communist UKellectuals voiced alarm over this indication o! daring. "To lose this unique chance would be our dilaster and your shame. we believe in you." yielding to iressure from abroad at a Ume when popular :support for the Czecllo:sklvak party chief Alexander DAILY PILOT --Col-ORAHG( COAST PUll1St41NG COMPAlt't 1'obt1I N. W11d "rn idenl llld Pllblhhfor' J,,Jt R. C11,f1v Vitt Prn!Oml •IMI Genfrt l Mtl'lll.,,.,. lh•"''' l<•••il ·-·a Tho"''' A. Mwrphin• MlnM lnt Edlfor J1ro1111 F. Collini r111I Ni1111t N_.t flNc:~ Adff,ll•lne CUY Edirot' DlrKlor --0-2211 W11f 1111,•• lowl1v1r.I M11tli119 "'44r.u: P.O. l•x 1175 t2,,l --C.• "'-1 »O W..t ... 1""'9 """"9 a..tll: m ,_, "-... ~,.. lltdl: _,...,. Stftlt Dubcek, had reached a new peak. Edltors of Leitami Liaty, a writers' weekly and influentlal mouthpiece of tile liberal elite, prepared an extra with an open letter calling on party leaders to negotiate and explain, "but unitedly defend the road on which we have started and whlch we will not leave alive." ''You are writin& for us a fate!ul page in the history of Czechoslovakia," the open letter 1aJd. "Write it with caie, but above all with Lagunan Faces Assault Charge After Shooting An argument about a necktie and a gunshot that shattered the none·too- qu!et early morning In Laguna .Buch were to be followed today by a felony arraignment on charges of a11ault with a deadly weapan. Police Sgt. Vic Sagan said Robert E. Cardinal , 20 of 1289 S. Coast Highway would be arraigned in municipal court today on the felony charge. Sagan said Cardinal drew a .25 caliber automatic after an argument with Kelly Boyd, 866 Bolsa Way ; Michael May, 2345 S. Coast Highway; and Donald Crevier, 871 Part Ave. The detective said Boyd atruck Cardinal and siezed the gun which discharged. Sagan said the argument began at the Hot.el Laguna and a.aid the gun was fired on the street near Forest A venue and S. Coast Highway. The detec::Uve, who was 1till in. terviewing witnesses, said the argu- ment in some way involved Crevier'& necktie. Fro111 Page l TUCKER •.. minute discussion, but Auguatlne rested his folded arms over the bench casually and Judge Christensen smiled once and chuckled. Augustine -confident of an ac- quittal in prior interviews -did not seem surprised when J u d g e Chriltensen declined to set ball 10 the lmprill()ned defendant may return home to her family . He oalled Mrs. Tucker to the side of the jurybox where she heard the evi- dent decision, pale and stony-faced. ASKING QUESTION Once she cocbd he!' head slightly and gestw'ed, obviooaly asking a question. . Judge ChriStensen will again coo· alder' setting ball -when Mrs. Tucker retuml one .....i. fn>m next 'fllunday, but the District Attorney's office will ~Y oppose It again. 'nle prosecution has continually ~ pooed setting ball for Mrs. Tucker, citing a section of the California Penal Code barring bail for capital cases in which guilt is said to be evident to a large degree. A judge can, however, make a ball declalon after evidence ln the case is placed before him. Mrs. Tucker appeared in Orange County Superior Court on Mondey, at which time two court-appointed psy· chiabists' reports said that the ts sme and capable of aiding in her own defense . Psychiatric reports of this nature ~ not considered evidence, but may weigh tie-avlly in making a decision on whether it would be advisable to set ball. Got Their Goats Navy Checks Death of 2 Mmcots ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -The U.S. Naval Academy revealed today that the two goats which served u sports mucot.s, including one imported from Ireland, have been found dead under mysterious clrcum1tances. A sPQkesIMn fer the N a v a I Academy Athletic Alsoclatioo said Bill XVI and Kine Puck, tile Ir!ah, beer~tnkina: aoat. were found dtad Thursday. Autopsies 011 b o t b animall w e r e bolng per!-by vet.rinarllno at the Uruver slty or Maryland. The goaa, symbol or Ule academy alnce 19041 are housed at a nearby d4!ty farm . Heavy lecuri~ prtcau· tions are taken, lncludlcS Marine Corps guards, during the football season, but no extra security is pro- vided at this time of the year. King Puck, who bad a penchant for beer, was presented to the academy in an elaborate ceremony lut year by the class of 1927, which was having its 40th reunion. According to l<gend, 1 herd ol wild goats n e a r the town of JWlorello tn lrelond 011« alerted tile townspeople in time to Oee 1 m1uraudln1 band from O'omwell't army, Each year, to commemcrate this event, t h e ns!dentl of K!llorgUn crown a 1oat 11 klnJ of Ulefr Puck Fair. Lall y<ar, tile c1 ... of 1m purclllled t11t root IJld pre-.d ltlni Puct to tile ocademy. dk't ?Qf lDlplrld costumes, must I--llricl r1lllt wbllo Ill .-.. --. ' "fw .... pie, no climbing up onto ... .... •nd~uinl witll tbt '¢ I , a r s . ''Then, too, you caanot take any ad- junct.a for PfOpulsloa ruch as outboard motot1 Uod to your persoo. "' "You cannot hang onto anyone else's flotation sear, but you con !Ming onto your own," Reta said. Kees>lni ICOra will be • cllotlalUJJil· eel p111al of loCll dtlaena Whom Read pralled wltb !bt bock of bll band: r ..... r ... 1 POLITICS ••• Ill• wt 11 tile llote -·-In .... ly July. The UPI taliulltloa ollowo 1 ollgbt lncrnM In Nixon olrullh dur· ing thil perlodi there were acattlrtd lOtJet, but tbe1e were IOmewhat more than offset by the change ot aome prevloUtly uncommitted delegates to tbe leaning·toward·Nlxon column. Rockefeller allo bu gained IU<nitll slightly since the rt.ate conventi.0111, largely by attracting previously un'· committed delegates. Tho greatest proporttonete gain In the period accrued to Reagan, who picked up deleg-In Utah -tile last of the Ill.le GOP conventiO!lt -and ill t0me other places. UPI observers acroas the country reported a softening In Nlxon'o oecond· ballot strength. They taid there wu evidence aigolf1caM numbers o f delegates would be willing to abandon h.la cauae with some readiness - mainly to move to the Reagan camp. In the Democratic race, the tabula· tioo gave Hubert H. Hwnpbrey l,0781h: votes, lnclud:i.Dg 419 committed and 65812 leaning, Eugene J. McCarthy had 417%1, wJth 3M committed and 7312 leaning. A tofAII of 1,125 are need· ed. to nomi:oate in tbe Democratic con-test. NIXON ••• From Page 1 tlbe Republlean National Convention. Herbert KleJn, Nixoo.'s campaign man.v.ger 1 said Wednesday the plan is contingent on the former vlce presi· dent winning the GOP presidential nomination at the convention in MiamJ Beach. Hotelman Wllliam Evans s a 1 d 'Iburad:ay about 170 room.a in two hotels on Mission Bay are reserved for Nixon, his vice presidential nominee, staff members and newsmen starting Aug. 10. R. E. Haldeman, Nix.on~s chief of staff. said the candidate planned to Oy to Wuhlngton , D.C., today foc a State Department briefing on foreign af- fairs. "I am ezpectina: the u 1 u a I crooUd' '15 frGID all &JM ~11 It .... -to bold 1111 -Soturday 1-•M Of favor1ble weather conditions aet down br tbe chJef aa necessary prerequlaltes. Generally, Reed agrees to stage the annual &wtm only when the oceao tem· :::ur; ·r:.:. ba!• reached iu "It has to be 65 decrM& or better for a WMk prior to thit 1111D& booouH tbil 11 I IJ)ICtacle of dlplty," he uld. Tbe poat few cloys tllo water temper· aturo bu been peakln1 at c!oM to 71 ·-· l Jud ... wlll -Dldr • lll&llJ, ;et. torney: ~ Mclan!o, city COWi• dlman; ,.... Murph!n<, DA IL Y PILOT Managing Editor: Dave Tingler, attorney, a.net Pete Siracusa, former life 1uard · and DOW' re1taurateur. . Jud&• lut year somehow managed ~~ plac• to a fellow from He hid -1 bytlander on the belCh, juol wa~. Mesa Firm Gets Contract For ModernCdM LibrarJ. • .j C..-del Illar llbray UHrl will Jet an -ly Cbrlatmu preHnt tbll year - a roomier, more modern llbrory,_ lwlce u largo u Ibo preoenl .... 'Ibis was u1urtd today with the Battleship, Crew Of 1,600 Head For Long Beach LONG BEACH (UPI) -Tbe mig!>ty battleship USS New Jenoy carr!;.,, her e,100 man crew toward a weekend of relaxation In her home port of Long Beach today, aft.er several days of ti.r- ing drll!a off tile Soutllero California coast. The New Jersey Is scheduled to dock at 6 p.m. at Long Beach Naval Station. She leaves ~on.day on another brief outing, before returning to Long Beach Aug. 2 for final refitting at a shipyard. After that, the vessel will head for the waters off Vietnam. For more than a week the New Jersey's 16-tncb guns have been poun· ding San Clemente Island, a waterless wasteland 75 miles southwelt of Long Beach. The island's sole funcUon is to serve as a target for Navy gunnery practice. The world's only opttating bat· tleshlp, the New JeTSey was taken out o! mothballs last winter for UH in the Vietnam struggle. 450 Acres Burned SAN JOSE ()JP!) -About t50 acres or brush iand was blackened Thursday Jn the Santa Teresa County Park behind the Santa Teresa Golf Course. IWll'd of a 131,175 ~ .;. •• tract to 1 Colla Men firm, <lentos! Broe. Newport Beach dty COWldlmen autb<ned ·tile poet on Ult recom- maDdaUC)ll ol Public W«b Direct.. Joooph T. Devlin, who tald Gentoet ox· ~ to complete tile UJIODl!on lob 'at leut a moath bef«e Otr1stma1~ •• Tbe pr .... t buUdlng at CJ Marlpld Ave!Kle hu long beeo COllJ!dered In- adequate. So ill me will be llmost doubled. ' Lllrory board chairman John Hopwood said tbe otruduro will bo In· creaaed from 2,100 lqtllln feet of floor opace to 3,870. Tbe modiftcatlon11 Hopwood noted, will include: Additimal book space, a new wbrk room, combinaUon librarian's offlCe and study, new rest rooma, new carpeting, !andlc:aplng and a freeh coat of paint In addltlon to tile $35,175 G<nto.l contract, tile city a!ao plant to 1pind about onolher •1&,000 for fUrnit!Bnga, carpeting, landscaping materla!a and architectural fees. . • The project was desJ(llled by Corona del Mar architect Wllliam P. ll"lcker. He received '4,000. Geotosi was lowest ol eight bidders for the construction work. the b!gbe:st bid totaled "'1,990. Bus~ess Fees Deadline Near Newport Beach busineannen hne less than a week to avoid a big penalty boost In bualnesa liceDH 1 .. 1, Fred Vice, city license supervl.aor, warned today. • : He said renewal fees for 198MO afe now due, with Wedneadl,y, July 31, the deadline before a 25 percent late penalty is charged. 15% OFF ON ALL HENREDON ,. • SCHOONBECK UPHOLSTERY Choose from many styles of sofas and chairs. Special prices on many chairs start at only $199. You can special order now. Greet sitting in this loose pillow- beck chair. Great price tool Fluid lines, marvelous comfort ont is good, two are better. On 'c111. ers for easy mobility. LAST WEEK OF OUR STORE-WIDE SALE, WHICH INCLUDES SOME OF OUR FINE LINES OF DREXEL FURNITURE • NIWPORT llACH 1727 W-1111 Or. '42·2050 °"" llllDAT 'nL ' , LAIUNA llACH MS Nortll C-Hwy, ,,__,,_ Delil1nen Avolltbl.-.AIO-HSIO °"" ..... , 'Tll ' ,._ T• Ptw Melt _, °'911 C....., •11'1 ' 41'4 QSI I ' ' ' ' I -·----..,... ____ ~,~--="'-:--. ;-~ --;-=oo..:::oc-::""',,-,,"'"*~''""*~""°· 'l'tt!'".!'~!VL"°!!> ..... UlllS!li .... 11!1. ••C .. •Zi£!15. •£••1114 ••llll!••C"!.•&• .. -... ..,;;,..:!'. *4""'"'"1!'! !\'. -'"·---~~~---~'.""--:-:-.•..,--;-::;::;:';";~:::; • • BEA ANDERSON, Editor P"Ain, Jlflr .. INI Mt-CM .... U Fall . Looms On Horizon Summer is in full swing for members of the Balboa Yacht Club ~ho are planning their annual luau for Aug. 10. But fall already is on the horizon for women members who will be thinking ahead at the monthly luncheon, Aug. 8 where a back·t<>-school fashion show will be staged. The 12:30 luncheon will be preceeded by 11 :30 a.m. cocktails in the clubhouse dining room. Mrs. Duane Reed is luncheon 'chairman while Mrs. Ralph Deaver, wife of the commodore, assisted by Mrs. David Smiley and Mrs. Don Franklin, wives of the staff, will be welcoming members and guests. Models will be Kim Linderman, Lisa Eddy, Mike Sheppardson, Laurie Starr, Dana Williamson, Bill Jenness, Amber and Brad Cottle and Heidi Hall. Teen models will be Miss Stephanie Cutler, Miss Nancy Beach, Miss Leslie Reed and Miss Cheri Wilson. Mrs. Edward Lethan will be accompanist while Mrs. Leonard South, fashion coordinator, describes clothes from Bay Department Store, Balboa , and Youngland, Harbor Shopping Center, Costa Mesa. With an idea of fall fashions tucked safely away in their minds the Balboa Yacht Club members will get back into a summer mood with the luau, starting with cocktails, puu puu and mai tais, served in fresh pine-- apples at 6:30 p.m. Mrs . George Leitch and her committee will transform the clubhouse into an island paradise with surruner breezes blowing through coconut palms. A polynesian buffet will be served beginning at 8 p.m. Entertainment will feature Laina's Polynesian Dances and a special fire knife dancer. Guests will dance to the .Blue Gardenias. according to Dr. and Mrs. Royal Tucker, entertainment cha·irmen, assisted by Mr. and Mrs . Edward Lethan·. Members and guests will be greeted by ·commodore and Mrs : Deaver, Vice Commodore and Mrs. Smiley and Rear Commodore and Mrs. Frank· tin. YAc+tT CLUB .NETS LUAU -Casting about. for a Polynesian evening at the Balboa Yacht Club ar~ three members, Mrs. Jay Linderman, Mrs. Thomas Kellogg and Mrs. Bob Williamson (left to right). The Aug. 10 event wtll take place in the clubhouse, which will be converted into an island paradise complete with palm trees and festive entertainment. Dancing and dining will be the major attractions. SCHOOL BELLS BECKDN -Fall is right around the corner for students and busy mothers who are beginning to think ahead to school wardrobes. Modeling appropriate dresses in the Balboa Yacht Club fashion show , scheduled for the monthly women 's luncheon Aug . 8 are {left to right) Dana Williamson, Leslie Reed and Lori. Starr. Polynesian Plans Score With Tennis Buffs Members of the Newport Beach Tennis Cli.Jb are getting their appetites in shape for the luau sched· uled for Saturday, July 27 from 5 p.m. to 2 a.m. Lomi salmon, teriaki chicken, rumaki, clams, crab, lobster, shrimp, fruit of every desc ription including coconut soaked in rum, and marinated pineapple are all on the menu. Entertainment will be provided by the Taina Tahitians and the music of Joe Smith and the Blue Gardenias while a barbecued. pif cooks in a pit. Fresh orchid leis will be flown in from Hawaii for the occasion , which will find (left to· right) Mrs . Jerry Strom. Duke Roberson, Mrs. Rob- erson, George Taber and Mrs. Taber among the en· thusiastic guests. A Note to the 'Wise': Open Your Eyes to Proper Nutrition DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several weeks ago I attended a discussion group on malnutrition in the U.S.A. I left tbe place depressed and determin· ed to do 1omething for the disad· vantaged. children in Utis country. When I arrived home there wu a note from the ICbool nune saying our youngest boy tbould be taken to a physician !or a checkup and put on a nouriahlng diet. Tbe note said he is seven poundl underweight, has too many deMaJ..CJIYitlet, was absent from ICbool • exceuive number of days, and be needl to eat less junk and more wholesome food. I was furious and asswned the nurse must have a grudge against our soo or she would 'not have written such an in· Suttin& note. After all, we are an upper ANN LANDERS ~ middle~lass famUy, not slum dwellers. I took the boy to the doctor the following day and learned our boy was in appalling physical condition - anemic, underweight, the works . The doctor Jectured me ab out mothers who allow the.ir children to devel op poor eating habits. He pointed out that many children from w e 11 · t o · d (t families are in the same h'litt and SE nt me home with literat ure on nutriti on and the balanced diet . Please print this letter, Ann, and alert mothers everywhere to the danger of letting Uleir children eat on· Jy what th ey want to. It was a shock to discover that our son wu in the same pathetic ptiysical condition as the little boys who Uve in shacks in Mississippi. -EXECUTIVE'S WlFE DEAR WIFE: Here'1 an open leu.tr to motber1 eve.rywbert.. What did 1•ar children e1t ye1ttrd1y? And wll8t did lh(y eal today? A word tt tlte wise t1 sttfflctent and to tile foollth, a mlWo words are u1eles1. Take inventory. DEAR ANN LANDERS : My wife has a mania for giving away. throwing out or "misplacing" other people's pr operty . Mainly, mine. I have beg· ged, pleaded and asked her in as nice a way as t know how . to please keep her hands off my til ings. She doe sn't seem to hear me . Maggie insists on "strai ghtenJng" my desk and "neaten· Ing" things , The ne,xt thing I know , valuable papers are missing, When I reach for a back 'issue or a newspaper or magazine which I set aside for reference , she tells me she burned it two months ago, Last nlght I searched high and low for my bedroom slipper•. Wbt!n I asked Mag. ale if she had 1een them, sfle said they were worn to shreds and she couldn 't look at them anymore so she threw them out. I realize they were rather shabby , Ann, but it took me six months to get U1em rellllly comfortable and I was pretty upset about it. I ad· mlt I'm a bit of a hoarder but shouldn't a wile respect ber husbaod 's ri ghts ln the house? MIN· NEAPOLIS CQT. DEAR MJNN.: When a pack rat marries 1 beaver-outer, there'• bound to be trouble. You can't cure her but you cu protect yoanelf by putting your p1per1 •Dd m1gu:lne1 away - ea& of tlt:M. Mott Havera tots 011 O.lnc1 bec•ue ~Y an d•ttertni up •'room. (Some wtmen repert their llu1bandl1 de11 are Ure bianl1.) A1 for tlwl bedroom 1Upper11 that •, was a rotten trlct. A1.k Maule :).,. she'd like It if you threw away lier old beat.up tlrdle. 1'll bet ahe'll • j.. deratand your fetllnt1 1 lot Mt&et alter mAT que1don, ;! •• •• Too many touplet 10 ft.• m matrimony to acrimony. Don"(1Iet your marriage flop before it :itts started. Send for Ann Lanslfr•' booklet, "Y.arriage -What to-'iEx:4 pect." Send your i'equest to 'lnn Landers in care of this ~ enclosing 50 cents in coin ~ ..... • stamped, self·addreased env~: Ann Landers wW be glad lo hill".10ll with your problems. Send them 9'-hd in care of the DAn. Y PILCYI', tlCl1of ing a sell·add.ressed, 1tam·ped:•e11 velope.-!" • i • • .) ~ • • ~-~--......,-_.,.__. --···~~ ' • ...... ,.. __ ,,........._ .. _....:;;:;:;:;========= ---.------- • DAILY PILOT • Blue Ribbon Luncheon -Something Special for Someone Special is Ute appropriate Iheme selected by _ _ the Preebyterian Church of the Covenant wh en recognition of the v a I u e of • , every member ii underlined during a luncheon in the Costa Mesa b o m e of Mn. Dudley A. Plaff. The event will lake place from 11 :30 a:m. to 1:30 p.m. --: · Wednesday, Aug. 7. P resenting a special b I u e ribbon to the Rev. Warren G. · ·· Studer ii Mn. Plaff (righ t)_, while Mrs. Jack Elliott wails to make her presen· . 1Btloa. . . ., .. ·- Harbor Council Movie Guide lhllor'1 Noh: Tiii• """',. 9Vldll •• ..,_rW br lllt """' c:ommltfM or H1rbor COllMJI PTA. Mrt.. !tot.I ~ 11 -lde!lt fnd Mrs. Hf rt '-""' II c:ommlttllt Wlm111n. It II 1"19ndtd " • referMKe In .s.t.rml"'"' 9Ull•llle flln11 for e1rtfln '" ''°"'" •l'KI wlll IPPPr wetkly. Ywr VlfWI f l'I Aollcll•d. Mfll tt1trn fe MIWI• GI.II~, Ul'I of 1"9 OAILY PILOT.) FAMILY BAMBI -Disney cartoon. feature. DON 'T RA I SE THE BRIDGE, LOWER THE RIVER -Big ti m e wtleeler~ealer schemes to win back wife who wants divorce. BLACKBEARD'S GHOST - Disney adveature o f famous pirate. THE HAPPIEST MILLIONAmE -Dispey Couple Exchange Vows In Fountain Valley Think SALE 1113 N. MAIN ST . SANTA ANA IS CLOSED S.rvic:e ,,,,. ' ' USE OUll NEW SHOP AT 74 FASHION IS LAND NEWPORT CENTER ALL wC>rKJ~ALLY AT ANTHONrs Coron• del Mi r Horoscope Capricorn: Philosophy Needs Strenghtening SATU RDAY JULY 27 87 SYDNEY OMARR "'nle wise man corKrola his destiny. . . Aatrdlogy points the way." ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19): ExceKent time for get. ting together with club membes-1, co-workers. You col.lld lh.ine at any e<>n· vention . Key to really sue· cessful day is 6eose of bolance. Doll'! OY<rdo - avoid extremet. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You are encourated in creaUve pursulta. Your capabJlities come to forefront. Be an innovetor. Strive for greater comfort and beauty where home ap- pliances are concerned. GEMlNJ (May 21..June 7.0): Stress ia on relationship of. lasting value. Avoid superiiciality. Dig for facts, obtain solid information. Ignore individual who ad· vocates flimsy excuses. Get to heart of matters. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Fine for social vi sAts, short journeys. Key i& to change routine and relax. Be a good listener -some of your relatives may have compulsion to confide and confess. LEO (July ·23-Aug. 22): Gypsies Fiddl~ Scholastic Tune Pendulum swings toward financial area -money is on your mJnd. There is way to increase income poten· ~ tiat M&ke outline, prepare format, expand area of COD· tacts. Get rid of petty, fearful notions. vmGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): ~ • • Lunar ~ycle high; means' circumstances turn in your favor. You are able to make Laguna Beach Buslne11 and Professional Women's Club memben aoo gueets will unleash the gypsies ln their soull tomorrow night. The occasion i s a s ch o larship fund-raising party in the South Lagun,t home of. Mn. Charles Petty, who is well know for the gypsy patio parties she started to teach her grand- children about the culture of these nom ads. Instead of hol'ft drawn wagon&, members, husbands and guests will ar- rive for fe9tivities at 7 p.m. in caravans cf automobiles, and a large Italian wine crock will introduce the hap- right moves at right time . py hour. 'Personality is emphasized. Dres1ed in bright garb, What you do, say hits the amulets, bangles, rings and mark. bracelet&, party-goers will LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.22): gather around a pit to watch Trying to hide or cover up young chicken, flavored could be mistake. Inste ad. with tangy herbs and garlic. reveal flaws as well as s Io w I y baked a nd assel!i . You may find that barbecued. proving you are human is Madame Zoro is bringing the greatest asset. Try it. her crystal ball and a roving -SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. ~die! will acco~pany the 21): Encourage social ~c· smg1ng and dancmg. tivity -give of yourseU. ~e party is planned to Make effort to please. Some raise m~ney toward the may appear selfish, in· scholarsrup fund. ~ach year different. Don't compound the club recog_mzes and-error. Set your own pace. rew.-ds l;l deservrng Laguna Provide beautiful example. Beach High School student with a gift to help finance SAGl'r~ARIUS (Nov. ~- her higher education. Dec. 21 ). Accei:t: on fulfil.!· ment of amb1t1ons. Thi s Which Came First, comes about through con· centration on specific pro· blem. May have much to do with communication, short journey or relative. Name or l••tyS. y.vr old sh... .. the M W ...uncl look . Initials? CAPRICORN !Dec. 22- J-an . 19): Sit back and review, observe. Time to sh"engthen bas.ic philosophy. Find out wtiy you are here and where you are going. Fine for catching up on cor· respondence. Read a n d write . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Money oc investment proposition c o u 1 d be spotlighted. Co-operation re· quired between you and mate. putntr. Combine forces -no day to go it alone. Promote meaningful alliance. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accent on public 'rele· tions -reactions to your talents, efforts. Be true to yourse-1!; don't water down your beliefs. Stick to prin· ciples; stand tall. Then you help insure success. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIR TH D A Y you are fascinated with m e d i c a J techniques because y o u have sincere desire to help people. You now h a v e chance ta b11ild on solid b-e. An individual who teaches you should b e trusted. GENERAL TEN- DENCIES: Cycle high for VIRGO, LIBRA. Spec i a I word ta PISCES: complete agreement which promotes successful partnership. To find WI who'1 llldty for 'fllll In mollt'f ll'KI love, order Svd ... r Om'"'' bookie! "Set;t1l Hl"ll lor Mftn And Women." Selld blrlhd1te 111d 50 '~nb lo Om1rr Adrololtv Secr1h. 1111 OA !LY PILOT, llox :n~. Gr11\d Cffllrl l Sii· tlOll, Mtw York, M.Y. IOCU, SELECTIONS FIT FOR A KING Charles H. Barr Jewelers '.Aloha ::Da~ 1 SIDEWALK SALE WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th & IRVINE Tonite & Satu rday ' ----MRS . J . L. NUGENT Recites Vowa Newlywed J.L. Nugents Select Home in Texas Church of St. Michael and All Angels, Corona del Mar was the setting fur the dou- ble ring nuptial rites linking Kathryn Jean Masoo er Cor- ona del Mar and Jeffrey Loring Nugent ol. Upper Nyack, N. Y. Parents of the bridal cou· pie are Mrs. F Io re n c e Brown Mas<ln Of Elsinore, G. Burnett Meson of Trum· bull , Coon. and Mr. MJd Hostess Duty Mi.ss Laurel Spencer, daughter of W. Lee Spencer of Corona del Mar, has been award- ed the silver wings of an American Airlines stewardess and now is assigned flight duty out of Boston. She is an alumna of Newport Harbor High School and received her certificate in dental assisting at Orange Coast College. The new airlines host- ess was a finalist in the Miss Newport Beach contest in 1963. Mrs. John M. Nugent of Up- per Nyack. Officiant Wa6 the Rev. George F. Regas. EScorted to the altar by her father, the bride wore a flD!X° length empire gown of pique and a three tier cathedral veil. The bride designed &nd made her ensemble. WhiAie daiaes, gardenias and baby's breath formed her bouquet. A·line pale yellow pique gowns trimmed with lace and bo u quets of multicolored blouorns were selecbed for her maid of honor , Miss Nancy McLarnin Of Glendale, and her bridesmaids, M r s • Robert Smiley of L o s Angeles .and Mrs. Geoffrey Teall of Canoga Park, the bride's sisters. George B. Mason Ill, the bride's brother, served as best man while t h e bridesmaids' husbands were ushers. Anne-Marie Teall, the bride's niece wore a yellow and wtiite frock for her role as flower girl, .and Charles Edward Teall serv· ed as ring bearer. A reception for 70 guests rouowed in the Corona del Mar home of Mr. end Mrs. Willia m McDowell . CirculaUng the guest book was Miss Cathy Andress of Corona del Mar a n d -Msisting witb serving was Miss Margaret Fish, aJso of Corona del Mar. The newlywed6 are honey- mooning en route to San An· tonio where the bridegroom is stationed with the U, S. Army. The bride U a graduate ol. Glenda.le High Sdlool and attended UCI where she was an art major. Her husband, a graduate ol. Nyack Hjgh School, attended Norwich University in Vermont and Rockland Community Col- lege in Suffern, N. Y. DllTT'S BCUY FARI INTENSE EXCITEMENT A IHDSTTDWI COME AUVEI + NI A•IS.lllH llAME Ghorit Ton admission Sl.00 tot adultt 25, for ch.llW uocttr 12. Anniial pwa: for 2 persona for one )'Uf $$.00. 51.lmlT'Cr boun ]0:00 AM· 1 t:OO PM-10:00 'PM Sund1.ys. •• .• .. ·-· • Flight of Snowbirds Sundayto·Attract 100 · By ALMON LOCltABEY ~llr ,. • .., ....... •••" Water traffic will come to a virtuol bait In Newport Sunday when tlte !3rd Flllht of the Snowbirds a:eta under Kelpie Set for Charter way at 1:40 p.m. Nearly 100 Snowbirds are expected to tW11 out for the small boat aallin& classic. The start will be just east ot the Balboa Pavilion. The course will take the fleet cf 12-foot catboats to a mark in the north Lido Channel, back around the eastern tip of Udo Isle to another mart up the South Lido ChaMel, thence past the starting line to a mark just west of the Harbor Department a n d back to the starting point for the finish. With fair breezes the boats sh'Juld get over the five mile course in under two hours. Harbor officials have ask. ed that all boat traffic leav- ing or arriving in Newport Harbor while the race is in progress stay tcr the sides of the channel so as not to in- terfere with the racers. Sanderling Winner of Tidelands Sanderling, a Newport-30 sloop co-skippered by Mor- rie Kirk and Bob Poole of Voyagen Yacht Club won the VYC Huntington Tidelands MCe Sunday. The black-hulled Kelpie, one of the best kno~n schooners on the West Coast has been recommis- sioned and is available for charter, according to her owner, George Minney. ~n.ey ~ his family .have been operating the Kelp1e m pn vate and f?r hire ·charter since she came to the West Coast 1n 1960. The schooner is berthed in front of the new :: : waterfront restaurant, the Ancient Mariner, at ~. 2607 W. Coast Highway. Persons interested in cha r- tering the vessel may contact Minney by telephon· ing Newport Beach 548-4192 or 548-5039. The race wa1 for sailing yaclb handicapped under the Pacific Handicap and Midget Ocean R a c i n g mea-surement rules. Winner in MORF was St.eve Seal of Udo Isle Yacht Club in the Cal-2·24 Baby. Transatl.antic Race Captured by Indigo T BAVEMUENDE. Germany (AP) -The American D-Class yacht Indigo, skippered by S. K. Weigman of-Cleveland Helehts, Ofuo, was the ap- parent over-all winner today of the Be rm u d 8'-Trave· Anti-litter Campaign Launched mu end e trans·AUantic yachting r.ace. The Indigo w.as the 19th of 33 entrants to reach port in the last two days. But, on the basis of time handicap it registered the best 1peed thus far. Indigo's actual time for the 3,500-mile regatta was 20 days, 23 hours, two minutes and 45 seconds. Her handicap brought the time down to 16 days, 12 hours, 14 minutes and 36 seconds. S. A. "Huey" Long, who briefly considered withdrawing from the r.ace, brought his 73-foot ketch On· the Cali!ornia M a r i n e dine III into port first Parks and Harbors Associa-Thursday· The German-built yacht, tion, Southern Division, has putting up the fastest time launched a vigorous cam· Paign to discourage the lit· of 33 entries, won the cup th donated by West German ter of waterways near e Chancellor Kurt Georg Kies-coast line and on inland inger. waters. Chairman of the com-The South African ketch mittee pushing the cam-Stormvogel, which led most paign is Doug Bombard, o! the way across the Atlan- Oa li tic, arrived here just behind director of the ta na Ondine 111 with Dutchman Camp and Cove Agency. Cornelius Sruynzeel at the Others on the committee are Paul Hiller, R 8 l r helm. The Kialoa ti, skip· Reupsch, James Q u inn, pered by John B. Kilroy of Harrison Daigh, Edwin F . Los Angeles, was third. McDowell. Race officials, through a Final Results: PHRF -(1) Sanderling, Kirk & Poole, VYC; (2) Vag<lbood La d y , I.en Scbomell, BYC; (3) Vela, Hayden & Bibb, VYC ; (4) Psydle, D. W. Wardell, VYC ; (4) Tomahawk, Jotm Arens, SSSC. llr.ORF -(1) Baby, Steve s .. 1, LIYC. Dinghy Race Series Set Voyagers Yacht Club of Newport Beach has schedu1· ed Dinghy Match Race Series Aug. 2-3 featuring boats under 20 feet racing over Olympic type courses in the ocean off Newport Harbor. VYC will select eight yacht clubs from those sub- mitting a completed pro· posal form recenUy sent out by the club. Eliminations will be held if necessary. A perpetual trophy will be awarded to the winning yacht club, and the first two skippers and the winning crew will receive take-home trophies, acoording to John "Bud" Costell. VYC cam- modore. Lido 14 Races Set "The problem o! litter on mix-up, had a n n o u n c e d our wraterways is one that Wednesday tflat Long had National championship concerns the entire state asked to withdiaW and later regatta for the Lido-14 Class b d that he had retracted and will be held Monday through and nation," said Born ar ' dec•'ded •· rema>'n •'n the F 'd f t k t H "and if we. the boaters, do w r1 ay o nex wee a un· not take immediate action it race. After his arrival, Long tington Lake near Fresno. told newsmen tttat "we were Registration has been ~~ 0~~~=~· a lot of the thinking about withdrawing sc heduled for Monday morn. because' we were 10 short an ing with practice race1 Mon. Bombard painted ou.t that time." day afternoon and Tuesday almost any Sunday or Mon · day morning kelp beds and Long said he planned lo morning. shorelines from Catalina to enter the Ondine in the Championship races will the mainland are heavily lit· Sydney-Hobart. Hong Kong-get under way Tuesday tered with paper plates. Manila and Los Angeles· afternoon with Fresno Fleet cups and other trash. Honolulu regattas before No. 4 as the host organlza- ''They seem to be building returning to New York. The tion. better litter these days with yacht will be shipped to Syd· Defending champion Is styrofoern CUPfi and plates ney a/tel' its ovem&ul in Harry Wood of Alamitos coated with plastic Utat . -;;B;;re;;;m:;;;en;;;.;;:;;;;;;::::;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;::::;:;;B;;;a::;y;;;Y;:a::;c;;;h::;t ;;C;;;l u::;b;;;. ;;;;::::;:;;;;:;; never dissolves or sinks in 11 the w&ter. There are also more dispos.a.ble bottles and cans. and it seems the way to 10 boating these days is to carry everything disposable,'' said Bombard. The eduoatlonat program designed to eliminate the problem will Include ant·lil· ter pooten pointing Ollt the laws tbat piern litter on the waterways, a litter-bag program on which it printed the general wording of the anti·lltler law: "~ or placinl tr.h, refute, paper. bottle, cans, prbage m-rubbish in or near the w«ers o{ lbe state , 11 punlablbl• by tmprtlonment for six monthl or a' ft.De of t5llO or both.·• The law lo!i>idl depositing litter on « in state watm which ext~nd three miles oUshore and 150 feet above the biCli tide lino -Hcepl ~h~~ .... ~ receptiicles ALOHA DAYS SIDEWALK SALE PRETIY LYNESIAN PARTY SUPPLI ES PAPEI UNLIMITED WISTCUllF PLAZA 17th & IRV INE FR IDAY & SATURDAY DAILY '1LOT' tJI ·~ ---- NOW SHOWING I Hl·WAY3c9.1DRIVE~IN ), PROGRAM STARTS AT 8t 15 PM with "THE ODD COUPLE" "-~~~~~~~~~~------------------..... ~~[ * * ..,, ... --. . -,,. ... ' . IJKEWOOO "Uproariously ~!'Z!: .7 .l t:i "Wise, witty and 1;;· foreverybody!~1· ;:t: -· MflCrilt,_T..,_ . ' 1:" .Jack ~f Lemmon .. '1 and 11 er Matthau are Tbe • Odd Couple: PANAVISION" TECHNICOLOR" A PARAMOUNT PICTURE PLUS ROD LEE GEORGE STEIGER • REMICK • SEGAL NO WAY TO TREAT A LADY BUEHA PARK .. ,.1111aY D 39 ~ WESTMINSTER 5 • :i:: ~ = ... ' ••• ONLY MINUTIS AWAYI I . ·- ·' ----.-- ANAHEIM smlMll i ' • .. • • D~RY PILOT ·EDITORIAL 1PAGE ,,. .. County Unfair to City \ '• .. • '· There are no Orange County lifeguards. There are only city lifeguards and privaU! lifeguards. Whal about the county beaches beyond cily limits! Who guards them? The city departments do -unless private guards are employed, as at private beaches. But even t'hen the cities, by 1gree1nent with the cou,nty, pro'lide back-up service. Newport Beach's Marine Safety Department, for example, responds to calls down to and including El Morro Beach, several miles south of Corona de! Mar. ·" • .. Newport doesn't undertake this responsibility free ol charge. lt is paid, on a contraotual basis, by county government. ... Accordingly, last year the city received $19,000 for guarding waters in county territory, It was foair compen· sation, in the opinion of municipal authorities. No one complained . This year crowds at county beaches are er.peeled to increase by 12 percent. The· estimate is based on careful projections by expert.S. County authorities, at budget time, were presented with these figures. Obviously, some adjuslment in the reimbursement to Newport was in order., And the adjustment came: the city's money was slashed. This year, Newport will get about $18,000. It was the result, the city was told, of a "hoYd·the- line" budget order issued to all county departments by Chief Administrative Of,ficer Robert Thomas. That's just fine -tor the county. But it's bad news for the city and its taxpayers. The fact that reimbursement was trimmed, instead Dictionary Is No Bastion of . <;ood Usage __ ...,.. __ ..., ___ , It is interesting -to me, at least - that most of tbe letters I receive about my columns on the use of words refer me to some dictionary or other as evidence that I am "wrong" in my definitions and distinctions. But a dictiionary is no more a guide to good us.age than a telephone direc· tory is a guide to good addresses. The Yellow Pages can tell you wilere to shop, but not which shop is better Ulan •ny other. MOST DICTIONARIES (especially in America) follow the current of con· temporary speech; if most people say "disinterested" when they mean '<'uninterested," the dictionary will list "disinterested" as a secondary form of "uninterested," even though they are quite opposite words in their original meanings. A dictionary, on the whole , is a scoreboard. not an umpire. It follows the "election returns" on the usage of words. and when enough people C'On· fuse "masterly " and ''masterful", most dictionaries will give up the fight against the distinction and list them as rynooyms--though, again, t h e i r origi_nal meanings were quite dil· ferent. IT IS OF NO USE to cite a die· tionary for anything but the most ob· vious and elementary spellings and definitions ; it is a reflection of public taste and tendencies, not a bastion of good or proper usage. Now, says the modernist and libertarian in language, how can yo u call any usage "good" or ''proper" when the language ls continually changing, and when it is the living Dear Gloomy Gu s: Jn an effort to build good char- acter and health, I'm glad to see that the boys' club presented ashtrays to the Harbor Area Boys' Club All Star baseball teams. M.D. -TI!lt IMtt,i,._ -ti ~ ¥tllWI •• ft1Kt1Mrily fhtM tof tfM ---· l..wl , ,..,, "' _.,. 19 OIM!tl' ••t. O.lho 't•t. speech of people that determines what is "right'' or "wrong." and not the dead laws of strict grammarians? WELL, WE OLD FOGIES answer, it seems to us that good usage should be able to meet three b a s i c re· quirements: accuracy, clarity, and distinctiveness. As Mark Twain put it long ago: ''The difference between the right word and the almost-right word is the ctifference between lightning and the lightning-bug." I don 't care, for instance, whether anyone says "who" or "whom" in a sentence. There is no logical or mean· ingfu l reason for "whom" in English, as there is in the Latin accusative. And grammarians who wag their fingers at "who " as an object merely weaken their own case for good usage -as do the antiquated prigs who still object to a preposition we end a sentence with. - BUT THERE ARE hundreds of other cases in which usagi! doe1 make a difference, in accuracy, in clarity, and in distinctiveness. Most important of all, the more different words we have fur things that are similar, the more precisely are we able to explain and illuminate our ideas. Good usage leaves nothing to chance, to hope, or to fancy -it says what should be said in the only way bhat cannot be mjsconstrued. A Tonic for DeGaulle WASHINGTON-France has licked some of the problems which beset her atomic energy program and appears ready to be c om e a full . thermonuclear, member of t he International nuclear club. That is the preliminary assessment, by U.S. experts. of the first nuclear weapons tests in the current French series. Such appraisals are based primarily on an alysis of the radioactive debris blown into the atmosphere by the power of a nuclear explosion, U.S. ex- pert! routinely sample and assess these residues. as do the nuclear scientists of other nations . Jn this instance. preliminary in- dlc1tlons are that U-235 was used in thb year's French testing program. u. 2S5 Ir a highly refined uranium isotope uled in making hydrogen (thermonuclear) weapons. 1t was not found 1n the debris or French tesU in -and 1167, THE FRENCH however, were Down to be bullcUng highly complex aif;fullon f1cllitfer for production or u. •· Ill 111e In the new test program ~ to U.S. experts that a French ~plant 11 now In opeTation. , U. ·ot U-235 also Indicates that i\:AnCe will to0n be able to Join the Ullft,ed Statet. Ruula and Communist Oltlna. Jn acblevln1 a thermonuclear, .. b • .-&n. '1111 Frwh loot mie•, which began ..JldY 7 oa Mururoa Aton aoutheast of 1)obltl, II upec:ted to conliaue into tbe •• AJl en..Coldsmith summer. All indications now are that the series may well include a thermonuclear test. as w I de I y precticted in France. SUCH A TEST would be a tonic for Gen. Charles de Gaulle, his scientists and his fellow countrymen. All of them were embarrassed when Communist China, supposedly backward in science and technology, beat France to the thermonuclear punch. Chinese weapons experts are still perfecting missile systems to deliver their nuclear warheads. De Gaulle with his Mirage bomber force. wlli now to able to boast that France has achieved a modern thermonuclear striking force to support il-s in· dependent posture In Europe. By Robt.rt S. Allen and Joba A. Gold1mllb Quotes Corda.I C. Luce, •t•te • e e • , Business. Tran11J)flrta1Jon -"The most important and valid criteria the highway commisaion will use in selec· ting the (L. A. Century freeway) route wUI be Jts value and effect on people." of incre:uied, in llhe face of the risina: beach attendance in no way will affect that attendance. Beach crowds aren't .. holding the line." And neither, of course, Is the city budget. Newport lifeguards have no choice but to contlnu.e serving the growing needs of swimmers and boaters along the coun. ty's beaches. No call for help will go unanswered. So municipal lifeguard expenses, as a consequence, will continue to climb -as the county's share ol these expenses decline. That is inequitable. Newport taxpayers have a heavy enough burden without having to take on more than their lair share of county expenses. 'Thy Sea Is So Great ' • • • The urge to conquer the relentless sea alone should be tempered by the experiences of such exper· ienced sailors as Miss Peggy Slater a nd Arthur Piver- not to mention a ssorted skippers in the single-handed trans-Atlantic race. But it probably won't be. Like Mount Everest to the mountain climbers. so long as the sea is there, there Will always be those who want to try their hand ~t con· quering it alone. Some of them will make it it their luck holds. Others will learn by bitter experience the truth of the not so facetious yachtsman's prayer: "Oh. God, Thy sea is so great and my boat is so &mall." . MJ!l.U ct::.,,_,,. N "W I-IE RE 'S THAT @_II# LID C' '' . ' . Do You Want to Combat Dehumani%ation? Awakening Man's Intrinsic Nature By GEORGE R, ROFF, Pb,O, The setting may be a mountain retreat where a group of people are spending 24 to 36 hours together - without sleep -in a marathon group seminar. Or the action may be taking place in a plush office suite in which busy and ha_rried executives are taking a few hours out of their schedules to become more sensitive to themselves and others. In a secluded location, another group may be trying to explore and in· terpret their priority of values by tak· ing off their clothes and thus revealing parts of themselves -literally and figuratively -which are usually kepi private. Does baring the body help to refresh the soul? SOl't1EWHERE ELSE, a group cit married couples has come tog-ether for a weekend of honest sell-examinatio n and probing into their marriages as relationships instead of institutions. They want to redefine their meaning of love. Uninhibited dancing in the Zorba the Greek fashion, coupled with exercises to fa cilitate body awareneS$, may characterize the behavior of yet another group. Here. the purp0se is to wake up sleepy feelings and learn how to relate more spontaneously lo each other. If these activities appear "way out" when compared to con v en t i o n a I psychological and psychiatric prac· ticcs, it's because they are! New fron· tiers of human in teraction are being explored today because ractica\ treat· ment is needed in order to combat the most insidious and subtle malady or our time -DEHUMANIZATION. IN OUR OBJECTIVELY impersonal society, it is becoming more and more difficult to break through the barrier of anonymity and develop close inter. personal relationships. We live in a highly technical world: one which places high value on behavior shaping. Education has teaching machines. Communication meala depend upon conscious an d subliminal persuasi on. Business and industry rely heavlly upon system analysis and computer· based decisioas. Even religion has "Dial-A-Prayer." ( No wonder a syndrotne of psychological problems seems to be developing. Emotional s!ate~ including apathy. d ep r ession , an11my, helplessness, malaise, and loneliness -all of which have some charac- teristics of the schizoid personality - are beginning to represent the mood of our limes. SUCH AN OBSERVATION really doesn't require elaborate scientific in· vestigation. All you have to do is look around you and notice ~he increasingly large number of persons who exhibit sy mptom11 of coldness, defensiveness, aloofness, emotional det3chmen1. and fearfulness. Perhaps an honest look in the mirror will reflect an automaton whose behavior has been shaped and reshaped, to the point where not only are its responses predictable, they're controllable. There must be an antidote to dehumarlizatiC>n . Modern theoriats and practitioners are searching for cures for this illness and ways to prevent its recurrence. They want to help man wake up, get off Dr. Frankenstein's table. unplug himseU from the com- puter, and find his own meaning without the benefit ol somebody else's program. IT IS BECOMJNG increasing!~ clear, as more of these "avant garde" techniques are explored, that man is, after all. an intentional being whose humanness is definable in human, in- stead of mechanical, terms. But it's not enough to help man find out who he is . It's also necessary to provide him with an opporturuty to awaken or reawaken his intrinsic nature. The question now remaining is. "Are we willing to givt: up the comfort and security of having 'Big Brother' tell us what to do , and risk getting in touch with our inner resources?" What do we have to lose? Say~ 'Bad Guy' Giving Driver Tests To the Editor: It seems that there is a "good guy" and a "bad guy'' who accompany drivers for tests on driver's licenses in Costa Mesa. My reason for writing is that my 16· yea'r·old son just went in for his driv· ing test and in trying to parallel park. he brushed against a stanchion and the instructor proceeded to shout at him and failed him rignt then without a se· cond try. Now in checking with others his age, some passed even though they made the same mistake, or others had lo do no parking at all. Jn order not to get the same instructor again, my son transferred his records to another of- fice and passed without any difficulty. AT A RECENT baseball game. 1 mentioned this t:xperience to three other mothers and two t.".'. them l:lad been failed by this same "bad. guy,·• line , a driver ol more lha'll 20 ye<irs, said that he intimjda•e.l her. 1 would ,---B11 Geor11e ---, Dear George: You 've had a lot to say about computers taking over the world. One more adverse comment and I'll quit reading your paper - this is the most ridiculous thing I ever heard. We don't even want the world . I'm happy just as I am. (I'm an electronic in· tegrator and calculator.) PLUGGED IN Dear Plugged Jn : Your problem indicates you l!hould see a marriage counselor. (Well, one less computer -it sbould blow up trying to figu.re oot that answer.) Dear George: Could you tell me who invented C·Rations~ SGT, JAY Dear Sgt Jay: It wouldn"t do you any Rood - they keep him surrounded by security guards night and day. (Send your problems to George and stop worrying needlessly. Let him give. you c111se to wor• ry,) • Letters from readers are welcome. Normall11 writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense Letters to lit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· ters must include signature and mail· ing address, but names will be with-- held on Tequest. say this is a ratiler a hi gh averag.e and J think other~ "'ho have had Uus ex· perience shou1o let the deparhnent k1:ow about it. Why should a person in authority be allowed to play God and do it so ungraciously. He certainly I eaves much to be desired in his attitude on duty. I think the Department of Motor Vehicles should investigate this situa- tion in Costa Mesa now. MARILYNN MARTIN War and P e a re To the Edl1?r : The emoti~nal letter ot V a n McKinzie about war (Mailbox, July 19) was nice to read but so unreal. This idea about war being senseless is fine rhetoric but unsubstantiated by modern history. With the help or Germany, V.I. Lenin1 won control of Russia for the Communist Party. Russia as one of the victorious of World War II an- ne xed vast regions of Eastern Europe . MAO TSE-TUNG gained control over all of China as the result of win- ning a war. A few years ago China walked into Tibet and is still there. Ho Chi Minh was victorious over the French. Fidel Castro was a winner. Even Israel has gained much by the victory in the Six Day War. Consider the wars that the U.S. has won. Of course, we did not gain much but if we had lost to Germany or Japan I would not be writing this letter. HARRY B. McDONALD , JR. Reader · \fcKinzie wrote of the sanity of peaciE and the insanity of WOT. Editor A Report on Some New Books John LeCarre (''The Spy Who Came Jn From the Cold") is on Coward· McCann's October publication list with ' A Small Town in Germany." This o"P,ens with a major detection from the Bf.itish embassy in Bonn and focuses on the right wi ng political movement in Germany. "The New Nazis of Germany," by Wellington Long, chief correspondeot in Bonn for United Press, traces the development of the NPO, its organiza. tion and internal disputes, the growth of other extremist political parties and the. caree.rs or the leader:: of the radical right from the collapse of 1945 to the affluence of 1968. ChUton books will Issue this in August. INTERESTING IDEA: Lippincotl aumounces that "The S P I e a d l d Pauper," by Allen. Andrews, Is "the story of Moreton Frewen, Wlnl:ton Clttrchill's outrageoualy unsuccentul uncle who IOlt mJllloDI of other people's money In high style." Daniel Panger, a San Francisco race relations expert, ls represented o:i the Fawcett Gold Mtdll paperback list this month with "Ol l>'ropbet Nat,"' 1 story or the historic and tragic slM revolt that wa& the subject of Willl•m Styroo's recent novel. "Th• • • ...,.....,_.,.,., -.. ..,.,,'1"1"~-.... 'rhe ~kmg,,' ' » Confessions of Nat Turner." Currently on leave from the Fair Employment Practice Commission, Panger is a resident fellow at the Esalen Institute in Big S1;r. Most unpromising title of the fall seasoo announ«d to date: "God in the White House: The Faiths of American Presidents," a survey by Edmund Fuller and David G~en (Crown). IN "THE PATCH COMMISSION,'' which Dutton will publish in the Fall, Freduick Crews offer• a fu:nay book -a mock dh1logue btitwetn fictitious people 1bout real iseues: peace, war, pumllslvo parenU, disloyal children, l}'lteltUI, analyses, old-Ume pediatric.a New Left !reedom and r~•u.ion. A ~asor of EngUsh, Umylf'llty of om.la It Berkeley, Cr8wr fa the author of "Thi Pooh Perplex.'' a pe.rod.y of llter1r7 criticism, a literary 1urprla1 of 1983. Soda! criUc Vance Packard ("The Bidden Persuaders") h11 tackled a lwmld1ble 1ubject iD 1 new book due from McKay August 26 -"The sexual Wilderness: The Conte mp or1 r y Upheaval in Ma I e . Fe m a le Rela· tionships. In commenting on re· search, Packard announced he read a stack of material ''35 feet high," and talked to and interviewed hundreds of people in 12 countries. WILLIAM HOGAN -----Friday, July 26, lll68 Th< •ditorlal page of Iii< D<lilv Pilot reek.I to inform and rnm.. ulcte re~rr b11 prern.tino thir MtDtpape!'r11 opinionl and com- me:ntory on topic. of fntcre1t and significcnc1, bv prooidlng • fonml far Ill< '"""ulon Of our l'<Od<n' OJ)inio!ll, and bv prestnffng tM diwne tri1w- pointa of informed ob1irvtr1 and tp01ce1m111 on topics of the <1ov, Rebert N. Weed, Publither I I ----. ... ....... Costa Mesa Today's Closbag EDITION YOC. 6l', NO. ) 79, 5 SECTIONS, lo PAGES FRIDAY, :JULY ,2&, 191.1 :rEN CENTS • • I 1rm ee s esa e Site on County Land Surrounded by City DAILY PILOT.lleff .,.,_ Paci.fie Telephone Co. repairman Bruce Newbery has his hands fill · ed with wires as he ponders what .should be spliced to what. Cable at 4300 Ford Road in Corona del Mar was slashed by a private con~ tractor's trenching machine early today, cutting off service for some 2;400 homes and businesses. Mesa Firm Gets Contract For Modern CdM Library Corona de! Mar library users will get an early Christmas present this ~·ear - a roomier, more modern library, twice as large as the present one. This was assured today with the award of a $35,175 construction con· tract to a Costa Mesa firm, Gentosi Bros. Newport Beach city councilmen aulhorzed the pact on the recom· mendation of PubUc Works Direttor Joseph T. Devlin, who said Gentosi ex- ~t.s to complet.e the expansion job ·al least a monUl before Christmas." Last Escapee From Jail Held It took rive monU1s but Orange County sheriff'3 deputies Thursd.ay picked up the last of 11 men who escaped the county jail last Feb. 20. The present building at 420 Marigold A venue has Jong been consi dered in· adequate. So Jts size Will be almost' doubled. Library board chairman J o h n Hopwood said the structure "'ill be in- creased from 2,100 square feet of floor space to 3,870. The modifications. II opwood noted will include: ' Additiooal book space, a new work room, combination librarian's office and study, new rest rooms, new carpeting, landscaping and a fresh coat o! painL In addition to the $35,175 Gentosl contract, the city also plans to spend about another $16,000 for furnishings, carpeting, landscaping materials and architectural fees. The project was designed by Corona del Mar architect William P . Ficker. He received S4,000. Gelntosi was lowest of eight bidders ror the construction work . The highest bid totaled '43,119Q, A major oil production company ls: n1aking preparations for drilllng into a small northside parcel of county land surrounded by the city of Costa Mesa, which forbids s'uch operations. Just what stand to take and how to go about it Js the question up for con- sideration when the City Council and Planning Commission gather for an occasional fifth-Monday skull session next week. Ofticials of .the Occidental Petroleum Corp., of Los Angeles, have been sending out feelers prior to an exploratory punch into the Orange County crust in Costa M t s a ' s northeast corner. "I'm &OfTY, but we have no com- ment," commented Carl Blumay, of the oil firm's publication department when contacted by the DAILY PILOT Thursday. City officials however, have definite· Jy been sounded out by Occidental ex- ecutives concerning the drilling or a sample well or test hole in the small finger of county territory. Costa Mesa itself has had an Sen. Kennedy Renounces Veep Plans BOSTON (AP) -Sen. Edward 11-f. Kennedy (D·Mass.), took himself out of any conskl.eration for t h e Deinocratic vice presidential nomina- ~ tlon today with a statement saying "for me, this year, it is impossible." ; Kenne~y, la5t -urvivor of four Ken- nedy sons, said in a statement that hii ' decision .. is final, fir1n and not subject to furtiler consideration." KeMedy said he ii removing hitn8elf from con· sideration because o! fa m J I y resp0nsibilities resulting from ttie asitusination of his brother, Sen . . Robert F. Kennedy ID·N.Y.). last month, The Massachusetts senator, in a four·paragraph statement, said he will tipeak out, however, on "foreign and domestic policies our party must pursue it it is to be successful in the coming election." He said he appreciated the con· !idence or Democrats who have pro· posed him for ttie national ticket and "under normal circumstances wch a possibility would be a high honor and a challenge to fwt.ber public servic~." Kennedy added, "Afy reasons are pul'tly personal. They arise from the change l1'I my personal situation and responsibilities as a result of the events of last month. I know ttiat the members of the Democratic Party will understand these reasons without rurther elaboration . "J have informed the Democratic ca ndidates for the presidency and the chairman or the convention that I will not be able to accept the vice presidential nomination il offered and that my decision is final, firm and not subject to further consideration." The Massachusetts senator has been al his Hyannis Port hOme since 12.::t Monday conferring with his family and close advisers. The statement was issued through his Boston office. A spokesman said there would be no further comment on iL FBl's 60 Today WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal Bureau of Investigation, born almost out of desperation and mired in Its early years in political problems, is 60 years old today. But the bureau planned no celebra- tion. For the FBI's 16.000 employes ll wa.s just another work day. Who Got Na'7'y~s ordinance prohibiting oil well drilling for some 14 years and there i.s little doubt the law will remain on the books as a safeguard against blight. The L-shaped parcel in question - bounded by Bear Street, Paularino Avenue, Platte Drive and the San Diego Freeway -however, belongs to the county. A well could be drilled, provided proper paperwork is issued and all modern-day stipulations on oil pro· duction, regulating safety, noise and other factors are met in advance. No permit has been sought by Qc. cidental Petroleum Corp., however, and Clarence L. Moore, special services supervisor for the Orange County Building and Safety Depart- ment, said Thursday he has not heard or the. proposal. The possibility o! county officials allow ing the well to be drilled raises another interesting point. because it is only a matter of time until Costa Mesa annexes the land. "Oil does nothing for a town but Jo use it up," commented Costa Mesa 1'fayor Alvin L. Pinkley, who was on the City Council 14 years ago when the present anti·drilling law was put into effect. ''Of course, I'm just speaking for myself,'' he said, ''I don't know if my fellow councilmen will have dilferent views." "But the four lousiest towns in So uthern California are oil towns." he noted. declinine to idenUfy the cities. Occidental Petroleum Corp. has been leasing property in the area for about one year and Pinkley said Thursday that two officials who con· tacted him said they have $'75,000 in· vested now. Should the way be paved for actual development ol an oil production operation, wells could perhaps be slant-drilled under Costa f\.fesa and oil pumoed desp.ile present city Iawi:::. "That. would be a legal ouestion." i:::aid Cit y ~1anager Arthur R • l\.fcKenzie when asked whether Costa ~1esa would have any recourse to such action under the law. Mayor Pinkley suggested the city could seek help from the county in any possible oil deal, either to prevent it or ensure a minimum of resultant trou- ble. Orange County allows oil drilling ln any location :r:oned 0, for oil pro- duction_, and in aome other regions. ex- cept for the area one mile inland from Upper Newport Bay to the San Diego County line. Newport Beach has some oil pro. duction datin~ baclc to days before councilmen there barred any new petroleum development and the clty gets a percentage of all production in· come. Exact location of the proposed Costa Mesa teat well is pncertafn, but pro-- bably lies near the Bear Street School, in a large, empty field adjacent to a newer housing development. South Coast Plaza shopping center lies right across the San Diego Freeway. The City Council and Planning Com· mission have several other topics up for discussion at the 7:30 p.m. meeting Monday in council chambers, but no official action will be taken on anything. No Bail for Mrs. Tucker Cou1icilman' s Wife to Enter Plea Aug. 8 By ARmUR VINSEL Of 1M De•J l"llet Stefl Bail for accused carving knife slayer :frfrs. Irene M. Tucker was again denied -without prejudice, in the j~ge'1 wordJ -when her ~Umlnary heating da~ was set to- dly to Har~r District Judicial Court. · Judge William C. Ch r i s tense n ordered Mrs. Tucker, of 1642 Miqorca Drive, to be brought before him A.ug. 8 at 9:30 a.m., at which time ahe is ex- pected to plead not guilty. The 31-year.old wife of City P,lul· cilman Geor ge A. Tucker is charged with one count of murder as the result of a June 28 backyard altercation which led to the death of Mrs. Harriett Westphal. 68, of 1646 Mlnorca Drive. Judie Chriaten11en today delayed ac· Uon on the Tucker case while clt~ing ~ his calendar of a number of &'roe matters whtch brought 1 1tand1ng room.only crowd into the courtrootn. Mrs. Tucker -wearing the now· cu1tomary pink sweater she ·wore when arrested a monlb ago -sat im· passively during most of the traffic Lost Boy's Girl Friend Refuses to Take Lie Test The girl friend of a young man reported drowned in Newport Harbor has declined to take a lie detector test on questions dealing with the accident, Newport Beach police said today. As a result, De.t. Sgt. Ken Thompson said an investigation into the disap· pearance of Robert James Spencer, 20, of LonJ Be,ach, is at a stalemate. Spencer drop~ out of sight the Sunday afternoon of June 3Q alter he and a female companion rented a 14- ,Coot dinghy to go sailing in Newport l-Jarbor. The girl friend, identified only ~~ ln,ITT"id Taylor of Los Angeles, told police she turned from the bow of the small boat and saw Spencer fall backward into the water. He gasped for breath, then sank out of sight, she reported. Seat Belt Clinic Slated Saturday Costa Mesa, Jaycees Saturday will sponsor a full-day seat belt clinic al •1arbor Shopping Center. /;,. Seat belts will be sold for $6 and in· stalled free be~inning at 8:30 a.m. The fifth clinic sponsored by the organization came about as a result of the numerous requests, according to Jo~red Schuler, a member of the Jaycees. Goats? Betause the body has never been recovered, rolice said it was possible the miuin$1: man "may be more alive than dead." Thompson said an investigation has found t h a t Spencer was inVolved in child support payments with his estranged wife. and was also nearing draft ·age. · Mesa Chamber Backs Airport Ground Service The Costa Mesa Chamber of Com- merce Aviation Cori1mittee voted unanimously Thursday to support the application of Airport Service Com- pany seeking to provide ground transportation to the Orange County AirporL The line, which provides bus transportation from suburban areas to airports. has an application before the California Publle Utilities Commission requesting permission to e x: tend ground service to the Orange Coast area. Should the application be granted, lhe bus line would run 28 passenger vehiclell from Long Beach and LM Angeles International airports to Orange County airport round trip with ~tops at Seal Beach. HW1tlngton Beach. Newport Beach, and Los A Jami tot. ·cases, occasionally rubbing her cbeet11 or forehead pensively. She appeared rather out of place, seated among other defendantt which included folll' roen in Orange County Jal! dungirtts aild'a pretty, teena&ed girl in hippie-type blollle and pants. "Now Mr. Mo1eley ," saJd Judge Christensen shortly before 11 11.m., "about the Tucker matter," and Depu. ty District Attorney Jay Mo!eley and deferuie attorney Paul Augu!tine ~r., conferred at the bench. Nottling could be heard of their 10- minute discussion. but Auguatine rested his folded arms over the bench casually and Judge Christensen smiled once and chuckled. Augustine -confident of an IC· quittal in 'prior interviews -did not seem surprised when J u d g e Christensen declined to set bail so tbe imprisoned defendant may return home to her family. He called Mrs. Tucker to the side of the jurybox where she heard the evi· dent decision, pale and stony-faced. . ASKING QUESTION Once she cocked her head slightly and gestured, obviously askin& a questiori. Judge Christensen wW again con~ sider setting ball when Mrs. Tucker returns one week from next Thursday, but the District Attorney's office will probably oppoae 11. again. The prosecution has continually op. posed setting ball fat" Mrs. Tucker citing a settion of the California Penai Code barring bail for capitaJ cases in which guilt Is said to be evident to a large degree. A judge can, however, make a bail decision after evidence in the case is placed before him. ~1rs. Tucker appeared in Orange County Superior Court on Monday, at which time two court-appointed psy· chiatristS' reports ' s'aid that she ii (See TUCKER, Pace %) Coan We•t•er Patchy early morning fog and low clouds clearing by thl.s aft- ernoon to become mostly suMy. • Coastal temperatures will r&nge from 69 to 75. Today's water temperature Is 69 degrffS. INSIDE TODA 'l' Thomas P. Case, 19, of 2525 Elden ~t.. Costa Mesa, was capl.ured by Orange COUnty deputies In a Van Nuys parking lot. He wall located through a Up reteived through the sheriff's ol· flee. Deputies said "he had been out oC town for a while but came back and made 10me contacta." · Lut 'lbunday, the tenth escapee still at lar&e wu captured. in Chicago. P a u I G. Diaz, 24, of 1843 Woodland Roed, Laguna Beach, was arrested for a IW"COtiC1 violation, the same charge he was being held on in the county jail. Naval Academy Mascots Found Myster~usly Dead The motion to give the company lhft support of the Costa Mesa group wu made by Gordon Martin, eecond vice president of the Costa Mesa Chamber of CortJmerce. It wu p1ued withou.t opposlUon. Cou1tt11 ma~ 1nccnctd ft. bndol Flarlda """ toMrt girl Niltd to tree. Page I. st-le llf•rket• NEW YORK (AP) -0 11 s gave st.ron1 leadership to a mixed stock market thJ.s afternoon. Tr a d i n C 1lacke.ned from 'lbunday'1 pace. CQuolllUon1, P.,.. ~u). ' . ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -Tho U.S. Naval Academy revealed today that the two goata which served aa sport.a ma.scot!, including one imported from Ireland, have betn found dead under mysterious circumstances. A spokesman for the N a v a t Academy Athletic Association s&ld BUI XVI and King Puck. tho trlah, beer4rlnkin1 ccuat, were found dead Thursd~. Autopsies on b o th animo.la w e r e • • bolnl performed by veterlnarlana at the Unlver1lty of Maryland. The goats, symbol of the ac1dem1 since 190f, are housed at a nearby dairy farm. Heavy security precau- tions are taken, lncludJng Marlnci Corps guards, durina the football &ea.son, but no extra securlty .ll pro- vided at this Ume Of the year. King Puct, who had a penchant for beer. wa1 prelf!nted to the academy ln an elaborate ceremony lut year by • the clal1 of 1927, wblch wu bavine lt!I 40tb reunion. According lo legend, a herd of wild goata · n e a r the town of Klllor&Ua in Ireland once alerted the townapeopte In time to nee a ma~audlng band from 0-omwell'a army. Each year, to com.memorate this event, t h e resident.a OC KUJorgUn crown a &oat as king ol. their Puck Fair. Wt year, the class of 1927 purcba1ed the goat and prtseoted Kin& Puck to the acadt.my. 450 Acres Burned SAN JOSE (UPI) -About~ acre.s or brush land wu blackened Thunday In the Sonia Tere,. County Park behind the Santo Tema Goll cour ... It took three hours for 100 mee from the San J... Flra lleparlment "Ith trucks ml bulldoom to control the blaze. \ " , .... ,_ .. ,_ ' . ....,... ,_ . ~ '"" '" c.... • ~ t~ --..... ,, ... ~ tJ -I ........ ,.. "''' --. --. ...... '-"' . --.. .... ,... ,,.,, .... , .. ,. ..... ....... ,, ii-. .. _ .. . -. --.. ..... "".... . -. -" ............. u --I .... I a 4 --I l .t OAR. y PILOT 'Old' Guards To Show Up Youngsters A llar<l1 bind or oMer men will ar· rive at Newpmt Pier at 9 a.m. aharp Saturday with G<lfllol b o t 11 e 1 , rbeumlliam tablela end otber aldl to _.... for tbe el&hlll annu.\I Walnul -· 'l1>e mu npruoot Ille -nllory -of Ibo Nowport llMcll Wtauard Deporlmoe~ ranclng In rant lrom Cblel Bob llMd to llleguard lieutenants. At the crack of a gun and aching bones. the senior uteguard personnel will duh into the water and swim around the pier. Tile purpose of the event, according to Reed, is to "abow the younger fellows that their bosses atill know bow to awtm, althougb oftentimes Ibey woukin't believe this." • "Frankly,'' Reed said with a grin, "Ulia is the one chance ln the year for the younger men tQ .lampoon us ." He added as an afterthought, "At least, openly.'' Reed beg• tbe Walrua Swim In l9etl u a yurl,J morale booster for bis staff. As with any yearly affair, cer· lain incidents which hive occurred during put race• have become tradi· tlonal at tbla point This Jncludea having the staff stand atop the pler and throw macherel onto their bosses SJ>lasblng around below. And that lead& to Reed's point system for decldlng the wj.rmer of the race. "'The first to finisb," explained the chief carefully, "la generally peoallud 25,000 points f o r .not watching to s e e that his fellow swimmers flnJsbed safely. "Any man getting hit with a mackerel g e t s about 10,000 point.a in his favor .'' The portlclponts, appearing In In· dlvidually inspired costumes, must follow some strict rules while the swim is under way. "For example, no climbing up onto the pier and arguing with the (i!•hennen is allowed. "'Mlen, too, you caonot take any ad- juncts for propulJlon such u outboard motors tied to your person.'" "You cannot hang onto anyone else's flotation gear, but you cac hang onto your own," Reed said. Keeping score will be a distinguis~ ed panel of local citbens whom Reed praised wltb tba baei: of his band: "I am upecting the u au a 1 crookedneu from all tbe judges." It ,,.. declded to hold tba swim Saturday because of r a v o r a b 1 e weMher coadltlon1 set down by the chief a, necessary prerequisites. Generally, Reed agrees to staae the aDnual 1wim only when the ocean tem· peraturt ap)>Oa'< lo bave r .. cbed Its peak for the season. "It has to be 65 degre1i1 or better for a week prior to thlJ tiling because this is a 1pectacle of dignity," he said. The put few days the water temper- ature baa been peaking at close to 71 degrees. Judgea will Include Dick Higby, at. torney; Don Mclnnis, city coun· cl Iman; Tom Murphine, D A I L Y PILOT Managing Editor; Dave Tingler, attorney, and Pete Siracusa, former lifeguard and now restaurateur. Judges last year somehow managed to award third place to a fellow from Minnesota. He had been a bystander on the beach, ju1t watching. Union Sends Special Group to Pittsburgh PmSBURGI! (AP) -A United Steelworkers committee that can raUfy a contraet or call a strike has been summoned to Pittsburgh on Mon· day -just two days be!ore 388,000 men will be free to walk out of the mills. · DAILY PILOT OltAHO!! COAST PUIL1SK1NO COMl"AN'( aol>ert N. w ••• Pl'ftkftnl "" lt11bU"'8' Jer.k R, Cwrl•v Vkit PrbldMI elld Gfl'lwtl Mfllllff' ' Th••• Ket"il .... Tite1111t A. MMrphi111 Miii .. ,,,. ,.,"°" Pe11l Ni11e11 '4Wrtlllllt Dlr9clor C... u ... Office JJO Wt1t lty Street M1lnftf A•clro1u P.O. lea II'° t2•2• --,,,..,,,.. hletlt tttl W.t lollllot ~1twf\I UtU11t Dttettt m "-' ,...._ H\lllllMftift ~; • Jltl '""' - ' G11n I.aw Huddle Nixon Strength Holds· Delegat,es Total 24 More Than Needed 117 VDfted Pma latorulloaal Richard M. Nixon stlll has •ulllclent convention delegate 1trengtb -on paper -to capture the Republican presidential nomination on the fir st ballot, according to a United Press (n.ternational survey today. With the selecUon less tban two weeks away, UPI tabulated 691 pro- bable votes for Nixou an the lirst ballot. A total ol 667 ii needed to nominate. or Nixon's total, 18! votes are com- mitted to hla candidacy on at least the first ballot and 508 are leening toward it. than offset bf the challge of aom e previously unccmmitted dele11tas to the lean!ng·loward·Nixon column. Rockefeller al.lo baa gained atrtn&tb sUghUy alnce the state conventions, largely by at:trac:tln1 previously un· committed delegates. Tbe greatest proPor1ionate Caln In the period accrued to Reagan, who picked up delegates In Utah -tbe last or the state GOP coaventions -and la some otbet pllcel. Robert F. lanedy, aod anotber 12 are committed to President Johnson, botb oo tbe buls of primary results. Other developminla: . MCCartlly -The Mlmlesota senator told newsmen ln Boston 'Thursday that he doea not have "any plans to accept th< vice pr .. ldtocy" ii be fllll to win the top spot on the tleht. He also llld he had made no plau about his -possible vice presideolial runnln& mate. "I think it's a little bit eN"J,y,11 he said. ·Rockefeller -Sen. Charlll • ·u. HunUnglon Beach Assemblyman Robert Burke, (right), huddles with other Republican assemblymen, f"rank Murphy and Charles Conrad, during discussion Thursday of a proposal to place l(Un registration leg- islation before the voters in the November election. Burke is a mem· ber ol the Assembly Election and Reapportionment Committee cur· renlly studying lhe proposal. ltis nearest rival, Nelson A . Rocke!eller, had 285 votes in the UPI survey , 130 commiUed and 155 lean· ing. Ronald Reagan had 157 total, 86 committed and 71 leaning. Harold St.assen had 1 committed vote. There were still 44 uncommitted votes and lf)S tied up in favorite son candidacies, UPI oble?vers acrou the country reported a softening: in Nlxoo'1 second· ballot atrenitb. They aaid there was evidence a1gnlficant numbers o f delegates would be willing to abandon his cause wi!h some readiness - mainly to move to the Reagan camp. . lo the Democratic race, tbe Labula· tion gave Hubert II. Humphrey 1,078 Ya votes, including 419 commJtted and 6591> leaning. Eugene J, McC&l'tby had '171>, wltb iK4 committed &Del 731> leanln&. A ll>lal ot l,llS are need· ed to nominate in the Democratic con· toot Percy (R-llL). gave the New Yor k governor h.is endorsement, saying "he is the only presidential candidate who baa set rort.ti a detailed proO"am to end the war." Humphrey. -In a Wublngton speech tba vice pre&ldeol Nld that ooe ot 1•our probleml" In rtlard 1o tbt Vietnam war 18 that "too few _.In America have been ~ lo make any sacriflce.11 He aald domeaUcallJ the nation was due for ~. end ''the rest wW be wbetber or not we can make tbe chant .. peocefully &Del orderly." United Stand Against Russ Rockefeller Partisans claim Nixon hu been losing delegate votes since the last ol the state coaventiOll! in ear- ly July. The uPI·tabulatlon shows a glight increase in NU:on 11flengtb dur· in·g this period; there were scattered losses, but these were somewhat more George Wallace, a third party can· dldale, bad I~ DtmocraUc volos, 13 committed and 2 leaning. 'Ibere were M8 uncommitted votes and 325 com· mltted to favorite 1001. Twelve votes remain committed to tba late Seu. Nb:oa -'Ibe farmer ' t c 1 pre&ident'1 temporary boadquartan at Newport Beach, -be t>Wmed to submit four _.. nut week 1o tile platform commlltee of tlie l\epubllcan N admal Cooventlon. 'Ibey will deal wilh Vietnam, tba economy, law &Del order &Del urt>an problems. ' Asked of Czech Chiefs * * * * * * PRAGUE (AP) -Czechoslovak leaders, awaiUng decisive talks with the Soviet Communist party Politburo, v.-ere urged by peacemakers of this country's liberalization drive today to "ch:!end unitedly the road on whlch we have started and which we will not leave alive." The appeal came amid mounting concern over rumors that t h e leadership was split on how to react to Soviet pressure at the showdown meeting likely to begin next week .. The rumors were !ed by the decision Thursday o£ the policymaking party presidiwn to remove U. Gen. Vaclav Prchlik, a chief target of Soviet at· tacks, from a key position in the party Central Committee. Usually reliable sources said they UDdentood the decision in Prchlik'& case had not the unanimous backing of the ll·member presidium. L 1 b e r a l Communist intellectuals voiced alarm over this indication of daring. "To lose th1a unique chance would be our dis.aster and your shame. We believe in you." · yle41iDg to iressure from abroad at • time when popular suppOrt for the Cucbotlovak party chlif Alexander Front Page I TUCK.ER .•• sane and capable of aiding In her own defense. Psychiatric reporU of this nature are n-0t considered evidence, but may weigh heavily in making a decision on whethtr it would be advisable to set bail. The defendant is the only one who really knows what happened between hen;ea and Mn. Westphal on June 28 and her deffllse will be strongly based on a ~U-derense poinl Mrs. Westphal staggered out Crom between her home mi the Tucker res· i<leoce, blood gushing lrom he!' side, shortly aft« neighbors beard screams and dogs barking. The victim collapsed and died aft« gasping out a statement to Donald V. Schenck, of 1645 Minorca Drive, who was dabbing hopelessly at her wound with a atack of clean diaper!. Crime lab technicians v.rere subse- quently unable to identify the exact weapon used against Mrs. Westphal, so that physical evidence and the J>SY· chiatric observations will be key points ln UM!: case. Cost.a Mesa detectives have made detailed investigations into the back- ground of Mrs. Tucker and Mrs. West- phal to determine what may have caused the fatal confrontation. Jail Ordered For Nude Man In Coed's Room 1A man who wa11 found naked 1n a UCI girl student's room by the girl's parents was sentenced Thuraday to three months in the Orange County Jail. a11d placed on three year1 pro-bation. J ohn Edward Breach, 22, o I Ana.helm, was found gullty of a felony aqault on Mr. 1nd Mrs. Tolbert Tit· fany o! 2607 E. 17th St., HunUneton Bt.ach. The charee against him was lodged when the parent& unexpectedl,y visited their daughter Marcy Jane, 18, in a UCI dormitory room June 11. There they found Breach In the nude. He argued with them and a fta1tt followed in which he assaulted the parent1. Tiffiny, n and his wife, Gertrude, 52, called sheriff's deputie1 and they CTerted Breach. MJas Tiffany returned later while deputies were sWl there and was ar- .n1t.td for mlllntalnlng a place for the 'UN Df mari.)uaJ"lll . She h11 pleaded rullty &Del ~ill be 1entenctd next 1'hurlday. Dubcek, had reached a new peak. EdJtors of Leitarni Lisly, a writers' weekly and influential mouthpiece of the liberal elite, prepared an extra with an open letter calling on party leaders to negotiate and explain, Hbut unitedly defend the road on which we have started and which we will not leave alive." "You are writing for us a fateful pag e in the history of Czechoslovakia," the open letter said. 600,000 Cubans Celebrate 15th Year of Castro Nixon Ends One-Week · Respite in Harbor Area El Toro Officer A caravan of H cara pulled out ot caravan's departure. Named Trustee Corona del Mar's exclusive Ceneo Police aald there were no incidenta SOOres area last night, taking awey of ••• kind during tile Nixon vlsil. By San Joaqwn' "good oelgbbor" Rld>ord Nixoo for ~ the political wars. "He wu a good nel'1bor1" one It eoded the presldenttal candidate's Cameo Shores resident amlled. "We Lt. Pbilllp Bradfield, uabtant one-week respite from pre<onventlon would welcome him back. any time," pubUc works directW' at El Toro campaigning. Nixon already bu plans to return to Marine Corpa Alr StaUon, has been lie had spent the time at the home CaWorola. He tentatively plans to 1tay named trustet of Saa Joaquin Scbool of Judge and Mrs. Thurmond Clarke at the nearby Mission Bay resort com· District. 4633 Brighton Rd., except for a brtei plex ln San Diego for 10 days following He was selected from six applicanta trip to Lo5 Angele! ~re he taped a tbe Republican Natlooal Convt!ntlon. at a special board meeting Wednesday TV interview with Joey Bishop earlier Herbert Klein, NU:on'! campaign to repplaoe Dr. John Gossom.1..!'i•val Thursday. nianager, aaJd Wednesday the plan is dentist transferred from El ·1U1t: to The former Republican Vice Pres!-contingent on the fomH!:%' vice preai-the Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md. dent flew to Washington. During his dent winninl the GOP presidential His term will nm until June 30, 1971. stay, in the Corona del Mar com· nomination at the coovenUon in Miami Two other trustees live in El Toro, munity, Nixon rtmained in seclusiou, Beam. one in Eut Irv1ae and one ln Mlaaion SANTA CLARA, CUba (AP) -More except for the presence of a host of Hotelman William Evana s al d Viejo. than 600,000 Cubans are expected. to secret service 1gent1. Thursday about 170 rooms in two Lt. Bradfield, 1 20-year veteran, and d · to thi .:1 d led ·w His family was not with him . hotels on MJssion Bay are reserved for his wife have three daug1lters, 15, 19 crow u:i 5 gouy e<:ora capt lie and his entourage left as quietly Nixon, bis Vice presidential nominee, and 17, all attending Mlasion Viejo of Las Villas Province today to join as ttiey c.ame. · sf.IU members and newameo starting High School. He hu been involved 1D Prime Minister Fidel Castro in His temporary neighbors said there Aug. 10, the school PTA. ~lebraUng the 15th anniversary of his was "no commotion at all" from the R. E. Haldeman, Nixon's chief of On bis application, he said he revolutionary movement. time he anived, unannounced, until staff, aaid the candiaate planned to fiy bellevea; he can aullt the board in tX• A carnival complete with street dan· the time he left, also umnnounced. to Wa.shingtoa, D.C., today for a State pandlng cOllllnlcdQl\.planning and in N""""'ort Police were not even ad· n-.....+-ent briefhu• on fore1~· al· •eoeral su ...... ~.t.... of the ad Cine' A~cu~-m .. ~·c and plenty of ~ ·· r ~ wu -. ... • t"" ,,...uvu " • ''"" •Ha.u WM vised of the time of the Nixon faks. ministration oi the school district. beer~ rwn set the tone tor the 1-----------------------------.:..:....:..:....:..:....:..:...:.:...:..:....:..:.....=..=.:..:..._ celebration. The city about 240 milts east of Havana was festooned with flags and thousands of banners bearing the number :16. A 10-!ltory portrait of slain guerrilla leader Che G u e v a r a decorated the front of tbe Santa Clara Libre Hotel on the city's main plaza. A speech by the bearded Cuban leader is the high point of the festivities. Castro ls expect.ed to issue a rallying cry for more work and a stronger dedication to communism. He · also is expected to touch on Czechoslovakia's current feud with the Soviet Union and the uproar in Bolivia cauaed by the publication in Cuba of the dfary taken from Guevara, who was killed by Bolivian soldiers in that country last October. The CUbao pre!S has been runnin«: I full ICCOunt of the Czechoslovak-Soviet rift in the past few days, possibly because Ca11tro and the Russians also are at odds over the course com· munism should take toward revolu· tlonary movements in Latin America. But Ca5tro, unlike the Czechoslovaks, has no Soviet armed forces anywhere near tis frontiers . Special North Korean, North Viet• namese and Viet Cong delegations were invited to join Castro on the speaker's platform. More than 50 foreign newsmen were g l v en permission to cover the event. The m361 rally celebrates the an· niversary of Castro's debut in 1953, when he led an attack against an army barracks in the city of Santiago. The attack failed and Castro was jailed for two years by Presldtlnt Fulgencio Batista. Batista treed him , and Castro organized the invasion wtllch ended in the overthrow of the Batista regime in Januuy 1959. It was at Santa Clara that rebel forces led by Guevara defeated the army decisi'vely and forced Batista to flee . Mesa Burglaries Net $500, Tools Bw-glars loo~ R Costa Mesa home of more than $500 ln fund• from a Cirnurkl at.and, earmatked for we by the Glrla Club of the Harbor Area, pollco said today. Mra. Sherry L. Stopbtnl, of :ml Albatross Drive, told lnvestt1ators 1ht dl8covored only fllO left In a bidden p•per bal which contained the money. Police 11ld there was no sign of forced enlry. Jo another burglary reporttd Thurs. day, Gerald L. Walton, of SlllO Cork Lant, lost a toolbox and tool• worth m to 1omeone who slipped ln~ bis: open ,.a1e. .. 15% OFF ON ALL HENREDON SCHOnNBECK UPHOLSTERY ChooH from m•ny slylu of aofes and chairs . Specie pricea on many chairs start at only $199. You can apecial order now. Greet aitting in this 10011 pillow. back chair. Great price too! Fluid linea, marvelous comfort one ia good, two ere better. On 'cast· era for easy mobility. LAST WEEK OF OUR ~TORE-WIDE SALE, WHICH INCLUDES SOME OF OUR FllllE LINES OF DREXEL FURNITURE. NIWl'O•T llACH 1727 WMtclllf Dr., '42·2050 OPIM RllA T 'TIL t LAGUNA llACH W North Cout Hwy. ,,..,,, . ..,., .• ,.., °"'""" Avan1~l......,ID-NSID OPIN PllllAT 'TIL f ..... ,. ,,_ ..... "' .... c...., ..... ,,,, L • II l -·~·---:-~----~~~~-~-~~------................ . . ·- Flight of Snowmrds SundaytQAttract 100 By ALMON LOcnllEY DotllrPi ............. Water traffic "1l1 come to· • •lrtual halt In Newport Sunday wben the 33rd Flight of the Snowbirds sets under Kelpie Set for Charter The black·hulled Kelpie, one of the best known schooners on the West Coast has been recommis· sioned and ii available for charter, according to .. her owner, George Minney. Minney and his family have been operating the Kelpie in private and f?r hire charter since she came to the West Coast in 1960. The schooner is berthed in front of the new watedront restaurant, the Ancient Mariner, at 2607 W. CoaSt Highway. Persons interested in char· tering the. vessel. may contact Minney by telephon· ing Newport Beat:b "548-4192 or 548-5039. .. _, .. ~ /; Traiisiitlantic Race ,• 'Captured by Indigo T RAVEM UENDE, Germany (AP) -The American D.Clas1 yacht Indi&o, lkippered by S. K. Weigman of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, was the ap· parent over·all winner today of the Be rm ud a ·Trave- Anti-litter Campaign Launched mu en.de tran1-Atlantie yachting 1111ce. The Indigo was the 19th of 33 entrants to reach port in the last two days. But, on the basis of time hlnd.icap it registered the best speed thus far. Indigo's actual time for the 3,500-mile regatta was 20 days, 23 hours, two minutes and 45 seconds. Her handicap brought the time down to 18 days, 12 hours, 14 minutes and 35 1econdis. S. A. "Huey" IA>ng, who briefly considered withdrawing from the race, brougl>t m. 73.foot keU:h On· The California M a r i n e dine 111 into port first Parks and Harbors Assocla-Thursday' lion, Southern Division, has The Germano.built yacht, . putting up the fa-stest time launched 8 vigorous cam· of 33 entries, won the cup paign to discourage the lit-ter of waterways near the donated by West German coast line and 00 inland Chancellor Kurt Georg Kies-inger. w~an of the com-'Ihe South African ketch mittee pushing tbe oam· Stormvogel, which led most · I n...... Bombard of the way across the AUan. ~ 1 o1-J. Oalalin~ tic, arrived here jullt behind Camp and 0crve A&ency. Ondine III with Dutchman Others 00 ttie committee Corneliu& Bruynzeel at the are Pilul Hiller, Ra l r hehn. The Ki.aloa II, skip· Reupsch, James Q u t n n, pered by John B. Kilroy of HarrllOn Daigh, Edwin F . Loo Angeles, -third. McDowell. Race official!:, through a way· at 1:t0 p.m. Nearly 100 Snowbirds are e%J>«ted to tun out for the small boat aaiUnl classic. The •tart will be jull ..... of the Balboll Pavlllon. The courH will take the Oeet of 12-foot catboeits to a mark in the north Lido Channel, bact around the eastern tip of Lido lilt to another mark !!.!' Iha -Lido Channel, wence put the starting line to a mark just west of the Harbor Department a n d back' to the starting point for the finish. With fair breezes the ~ats should get over the five mile course In wtCler two hours. Harbor officials have ask- ed that au boat tr.affic leav- ing or arriving in Newport Harbor while the r ace is in progress stay to the sides of the channel so as not to in- terfere with the racers. Sanderling Winner of Tidelands Sanderling, a Newport-30 sloop cwkippered by Mor- rie Kirk IDd Bob Poolo Of VoyaruC Yacht Club wan the VYC Huntinfton Tidelanck race Sunday. 'Ibe race wi1 for Nillnl yac!Ss handical'l'ed under the Pacific Handicap llld Midget Ocean R a c i n g measurement rules. Wimer in MORF Wll Steve Seal of Ii.do Isle Yacht CM> in tho . Ool·Z-24 11«>1. Fii>al lleaul"5 : PHllF - (1) Sand•Tlinc, Kirk & Poole, VYC: (2) Vagobood Lady, Len Scbomell, BYC; (3) Vela, Hayden I< Bibb. VYC; (4) Psyche, D. W. Wardell, VYC ; (4) Tomahawk, John Anno, SSllC. MORF -(I) Baby, Steve Seal, LIYC. Dinghy Race Series Set Voyagers Yacht Club o.f Newport Beach baa schedul- ed Dinihy MaU:h Race Serles Aug. 2-3 featuring boats under 20 feet racing over Olympic type colU'1es in the ocean off Newport Harbor. VYC will select eight yacht clubs from tho11 1ub- mittlng a completed pro- poeal form recently sent out by the club. EUmln1tion1 ·will be held if nece1sary. A perpetual trophy will be awarded t.o the winnin& yacht club, and the first two skippers and the winnlnl crew will receive take-home trophies, acciirding to John "Bud" Co1tell, VYC com-modore. Lido 14 Races Set "The problem of litter on mix-up, had a n no u n c e d our 'Wllterways is one that Wednesday that Lon& bad National championship ·concerns t'be entire st.ate asked to withdraw and later regatta for the Lido-14 Class and nation," s&.id Bombard, that be had retracted and will~ held Monday throuth "and if ••· •-•-· d decided to remain in the F'riday of next week at Hun· we, 1.11111: ~n. o not take immediate action it riace. After his arrival, Long tington Lake near Fretno. f th told newsmen tblt "we were Reg1stration has b 1 en -;;;1 ~~=~· • lot 0 e thinking about withdrawing scheduled for Monday morn. Bombard pointed out that because we were so short on ing with practice races Mon- almort any Sunday or Mon· time." day afternoon and Tuesday day morning kelp beds and Long said he planned to morning. shorelines from Catalina to enter the Ondine in the Championship races will the mainland are heavily lit· Sydney-Hobart, Hong Kong-get under way Tuesday t«ed with paper pi.tea, Manila and Los Angeles-afternoon with Fre1no Fleet C\IPI md other trash. Honolulu . regattas before No. 4 a1 the host organiza. "Th •-be buildin retuming to New York. The tion. ey seem w g yacht ~ .. be shipped •-Syd-D f din h · I belle tiu-the .1.. 'th ww w e en g c amp1on 1 r ""'• se ..... ys wt ney aftl!t' its overbau1 in Harr~ Wood of A11mlto1 atycofoam cupri and plate• coated with plastic that.-:B;rem;;;;;e:;n;:;. ;;:;;;::;;;;;;:;::;;:;;;B;:;a;:y ~•;;ch;:t;::C~lu;;b:;. ;::;;;;:;;:;:::;I never dissolves or sink.I inJ1 the water. There are also more disposable bottles and cans, and it seems the way to go boating these days is to carry everything di.lpouble," said Bomberd. The edUO.Uonal program dtlllned to ollmtnat. tile prolllem will include ant-lit· .... (>Olla"I poillltnl out lbe laws that .,-vem litter on the w.tetway1, a litta'-bag program on which is printed the ceneral warding of the anti.-lttter U : HTbrowfnr « ploclng -11. nfu•, Pll*'' bottle\ t9ftl' ....... « -b ID ar aelf tho -. " Iba mi. ii """'-by lm!>r-1or llx-. or a SD1 cl '50C> « both ••• ALOHA DAYS SIDEWALK SALE PR EID LYNESIAN PARTY SUPPLIES PAPER UNLIMITED WESTCUFF PLAZA 17th & 'IRVINE FRIDAY & SATURDAY The law forbidt depotiltng litter Oil « in llatl ....... which utend three ml.Jes oHl.bore and 150 f..t above the htch Ilda line -except whore proper recepW:IH oreawillal>le. \........,,...,....._..._..._..._,........,_,_.._..._....._,........,11 I * ___ , . Frldo, ~~ 26, 1!1111 NOW SHOWING !H1-wAi39"'Di1vE~1NI PROGRAM STARTS AT 8:15 PM with "THE ODD COUPLE''' , ' "Uproariously '!_•!1z!: "Wise, witty~· for everybody!" --Crill. N9CTMIJ- Jad· Lemmon and er Matthau are The Odd Couple: PANAVISION" TECHNICOLOR" A PARAMOUNT PICTURE PLUS ROD LEE ·· GEORGE STEIGER • REMICK • SEGAL . NO WAY TO TAFAI A LADY T£0-NCCllDR• BUENA PARl WESTMlllSTEI z i -.. • -- ---• ~ • ' -... " . ·-. ---~~--··-.. --...... _,,,._ DAD.y PROT EDITORIAL P AGE .. - • Actio.n at the Airport? \ •• For almost exacUy two years now Costa Mesa has been waiting and wondering about 238 acres ol land that cou1a be the biggest single industrial development ln Harbor ¥ea history. .,.. The acreage lies along the west side of the Orange County ai~l•>rt adjoining other industrial property at· "'8dy within the city limits. The undeveloped land is owned by McDonnell Douglas Corp. -a giant of giants in the nation's aerospace industry. While there are hopeful hints that McDonnell Douglas bas some devel- opment plans nearing the announcement stage, not a thing has happened to .the property since it was 5old by the Irvine Company in 1966. ••• The watching and waiting game has been dillicuU for Costa Mesa as well as other neighboring commun- ities. Full development of the land could mean this area · . • would be absorbing a new job-making installation em· ploying up to 10,0lll persons . • ~ J, . . But the development program bas been a stop-and- sta.rt affair from the beginning. Originally, .McDonnell Aircraft Corp. purchased the land, intending to make immediate use of one section for its subsidiary, Hycon Manufacturing Corp . But then McDoMell Aircraft mqged with .Douglas Aircraft -creating an even more impressive firm in an even broader field, but doing nothing to help solidify plans 1or the 238 acres in Orange County. To the con· trary, the complexities of the merger put the program onto the back burner for an indefinite period. • Now there a)l.'e indications that McDonnell Douglas ls working actiVely on some type of plan for this gold· plated piece of industrial property. The blg question is this. What city, if any, will ben~ fit from the property tax dollars of a massive aerospace installation? • Both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach have angled J;>ictionary ls . No Bastion of Good Usage It-is interesting -to me, at least~ ,tbat most of the letters I receive about my columns on the uae of words refer me-to some dictionary or other as evidence th•t I am "wrong" in my definitions and disttnctiom. ... But a dictionary ii no more a guide to good usage than a telephone direc- tory is a guide to good addresses. 1be Yellow Pages can tell you where to lhoP, but not which shop is better than a_ily other. WOST DICTIONARIES (especially. ln America) follow the current of.con- temporary speech; if most peopJe say 0 dlsinterested" \\tlen they mean "i.minterested." tbe dictionary will list "disinterested" as a sec<>ndary form of "uninterested," even though they are quite oppoSite words in their original meanings. A dictiooary. on the v.ilole, is a se<>reboard, not an umpire. It follows the "election returns" on the U6age of words, and when enough people con- fuse ''masterly" and "masterful", most dictionaries will give up the fight 41ainst the distinction and list them as l)'Donyma-though, again, t h e i r Original meanings were quite dil- ferent. JT IS OF NO USE to cite a dic- tionary for anything but the most ob· vious and elementary spellings and definitions; it is a reflection of public taste and tendencies. not a bastion of 10Qd or proper usage. Now. says the modernist and libertarian in language, h<>w can yo u call any usage "good " or "proper" when the language is ('(lntinuaUy changing, and when it is the living Dear Gloomy Gus: In an effort to build 1ood char· acter and health, I'm glad to 1ee that the boya' club presented ashtrays to the Harbor Area Boys' Club AU • Star bueb1U teams. M.D. Tf!K INtvN f9nKTI ........... ......,_ •I -...'llY tll9M .,., "" -11••1r. s... ,,_ "" ..-.,. .. OlllMlr .... De11Y ,1191, speech of people that determines .what is "right" or "wrong," and not the dead laws of strict grammarians? WELL, WE OLD FOGIES answer, it seems to us that good usage should be · able · to meet three ·b 1 a i c re- quirements: accuracy, clarity, &nd distinctiveness. As Mark Twain put it lorig ago: ''The difference between the right word and tlhe almost·rigtit word is the difference between lightning and the lightning-bug." I don't care, for instance, whether anyone says "who" or "whom" in a sentence. There is DO logical or mean- ingful reason !or "whom" in English, as there is in the Latin accusative. And grammarians who wag their fingers at "who" as an object merely weaken their own case for good usage -as do the antiquated prigs who still object to a preposition we end a sentence with. BUT THERE ARE hundreds of other cases in which usage dot1 make a difference, in accW'aC)', in clarity, and in distinctiveness. Most important of all, die more different words we have for things that are similar, the more precisely are we able to explaID and illuminate our Ideas. Good usage leaves nothing to chance, to hope, or to fancy -it says what should be said in the only ~y that cannot be misconstrued. A Tonic for DeGaulle WASltlNGTON-France has licked some of the problems which beset her atomic energy program and appears ready to be co m e a full , thermonuclear. member of the International nuclear club. Tha:t is the preliminary assessment, by U.S. experts. of the first nuclear weapons tests in the current French 5eries. Such appraisals are ba sed primarily oa analysi1 of the radioactive debris blown into the atmosphere by the power of a nuclear explosion. U.S. eJ:- ptttl routinely sample and assess these residues, as do the nuclear scientists or other nations. In this instance, preliminary in· dicationa are that U-235 was used in th1a year't French testing program. U- 235 b: 1 highly refined uranium isotope used in making h y d r o g e n (thermonuclear) weapons. It wa~ not found in the debris of French tests in 11111 and 11167. ... 11IE FREN~owever. were lmown to be bulletin} highly complex Mallon lacllJtiff for production of U-a .its uae 1n the new test program IO U.S. experts that a French n plant it now In operation. of U-235 also indicates that will aoon be able to Join the Qltld st.tel, Rualia and Communist la aeblevln& 1 thermonuclear, b_, ructlOn. l'lmcll Iott "'1'101 which beg•n JlllJ-f • -•w Atoll IOCliMHt ol ~ fl upocled to continue Into lb• _g •• ( • . ' . summer. All i.ndications now are that the series may well include a thermonuclear test, as w id e 1 y predicted in France. SUCH A TEST wou ld be a tonic for Gen. Charles de Gaulle, his scientists and his fellow countrymen. AU of them were embarrassed when Communist China, supposedly backward Jn science and technology, beat France to the thermonuclear punch. Chinese weapons expert! are still perfecting missile systems to deliver their nuclear warheads. De Gaulle. with his Mirage bomber force, will now to able to boast that France bas achieved a modern thermonuclear striking force to support itl (n. dependent posture in Europe. By Robert S. AUea and Joha A. ~Jd.lmJUI Quotes Gordon C. Lu ct, it.ate 1 e c . , 8u1fne11. Transportation -"The most important a.nd vaUd criteria the highway commlsslon will use in selec- ting the (L. A. Century freeway) route will be its value and effttt on people." for future anneuUon ol the land and Santa' Ana has indicated it Ls interested ln the property, which is al- ready In the Sllnta Ana School Dlslrict. The Costa Mesa County Water District has an- nounced plan1 to provide top-level water service to the 238 acres. The dl&t.rict is not a part of the city govern- ment, but works very closely with the Costa Mesa City Council and city staff, so It could be preswned that the water service might help convince McDonnell Douglas that Costa Mesa ts the type of neighbor that would be good to live with. The problem is )ndeed a big one. 1£ McDonnell Douglas develops the'land to its full potenUaJ, this a~ea will enjoy -and, to some extent, suffer -a staggenng load. lf, on the other hand, development plan~ continue to be delayed, shifted and foggy, the commuruty cannot properly plan its necessary role. Let us hope that McDonnell Dougla1 is nearing a decision on this vital piece of Orange County real estate. Impressive Bethel Towers After reams and reams of advance publicity and scores of photographs, Costa Mesa's Bet.hel Towers building Was put into service with very littl~ fanfare. The towering 18-story building is now being occupied by its residents, retired people who are enjoying ~he magnificent vista as well as very reasonable housing rates, It is an impressive structure and, despite some of the problems attendant to its development, we welcome this handsome b uilding -Orange County's tallest struc- ture -to the skyline of Costa Mesa. ' • c "WHERE 'S THAT t§J.'I# LI D?" -. . Do Yott Want to Combat Dehumani:ation? Awake~ing Man's Intrinsic Nature By GEORGE R. HOFF, Ph.D. The setting may be a mountain retreat where a group of people are spending 24 to S6 hours together - without sl,ep -in a marathon group seminar. Or the action may be taking place in a plush office suite in which busy and barrled executives are taking a few hours out of Uteir schedules to become more sensitive to themselves and others. In a s~luded locatioa , another group may be trying to explore and in· .terpret their priority of values by tak· ing off their clothes and thus revealing parn of themselves -literally and figuratively -which are usually kept private. Does baring the body help to refresh the soul? SOMEWHERE ELSE, a group (I/ married couples has come together fo r a weekend ol honest self~xamination and probing into their marriages as relationships instead of institutions. They want to redefine their meaning of love. Uninhibited dancing in the Zorba &he Greak fuhion, coupled with exerciti;es io facilitate body awareness, may cti'aiacterlze the behavior of yet another group. Here, the pW'pOse is to wake up sleepy feelings and learn how to relate more spontaneously lo each other. U these activities appear "way out" when compared toe onven ti o na I psychological and psychiatric prac- tices, it's because they are! New fron- tiers of human interaction are being explored today because radical treat· ment is needed in order to combat the most. insidious and s.ubtle malady of oUr time -DERUMANIZATfON. 1N OUR OBJECTIVELY impersonal society, it is becomil)g more and more difficult to break tttrough the barrier of anonymity and develop close inter- personal relationships. We live in a highly technical world; one which places high value on behavior shaping. Educatiori has teaching machines. Communication meala depend upon conscious a n d subliminal persuasion. Business and industry rely heavily upon system analysis and computer· based decisions. Even religion has ''Dial-A-Prayer.'' No wonder a syndrome o f psychological problem3 seems to be developing. Emotional states including apathy, depression, an(lmy, helplessness, malaise, and loneliness -all en which have some charac· teristics of the schizoid personality - are beginning to represent the mood ol our times. SUCH AN OBSERVATION really doean't require elaborate scientific in· vestlgatioo. All you have tO do is 1ook around you and notice the increasingly large number of persons who exhibit symptom1 of coldness. defensiveness, aloofuess, emotional detachment, and fearfulness. Perhaps an honest look in the mirror will reflect an automaton whose behavior has been shaped and reshaped, to the point where not only are its respons~ pre:l.ictable, they're controllable. · There must be an antidote to dehumanization. Modern theorists and practitioners are searching for cures for this illness and ways to prevent itJ recurrence. They want to help man wake up, get off Dr . Frankenstein's table, unplug himself fTom the com- puter, and find his own meaning without the benefit of somebody else's program. IT IS BECOrtUNG increasingly clear. as more of these "avant garde" techniques are explored, that man is, after all, an in tentional being whose humanness is definable in human, in· stead or mechanical, terms. But it's not enough to help man find out who he .is. It's also necessary to provide him with an opportunity to awaken or reawaken his intrinsic nature. The question now remaining is, "Are we willing to give up the cGmfort and security of having ;Bi g Brother' tell us wh at to do. and risk getting in touch wit h our inner resources?" What do we have to lose? Says 'Bad Guy' Giving Driver Tests To the Editor : It seems that there is a "good guy" and 1 "bad guy " who accompany drivers for tests on driver's licenses in Costa Mesa. My reason fOr writing is that my 1~ ye;;c~ld son just went in for his driv- ing test ana in trying to parallel park, he brushed against a stanc;hion and the instructor pr OCffded to shout at him and failed him rignt then without a se· cond try. Now in checking with others his age. some passed i;ven though they m.ade the same mistake, or others had to do no park1ng at all In order not to get the same instructor again, my sor1 transferred his records to another ol· fict and passed without any difficulty . AT A RECENT baseball game, l mentioned this ~xperience to three other mothers and two of them had been failed by this same "bad guy.'' (lne, a driver of more tha'fl 2tl years. said that be intimida•e1l her. 1 would B11 George---, Dear George: You've had a lot to say about computers taking over the world. One more adverse comment and I'll quit reading your paper - this is the most ridiculous thing I ever heard. We don't even want the world. I'm happy just as J am. (I'm an electronic in· tegrator and calculator.) PLUGGED IN Dear Plugged In : Your problem indicates you should see a marriage counselor. IWell. ooe lesa computer -it should blow up trying to figure out that answer.) Dear George: Could you teU me who invented C.Ration1? SGT. JAY Dear Sgt. Joy : It wouldn•t do you any good - they keep him SUITOUnded by security guards night and day. (Send your problems to George and •top worryin1 oeedlesscy. Let him &iv• yOU cause to wor- ry.} • Letten fn:>m ... ..,.,. 1r. w.ic.m.. Morm1lly wrlr.r. :IJIOUld COIW'W ,,_I, mn-In XII word' or ltsa. Ttw r~l'lt tv ~M letten Iv llt .I.Pa« or 1llm!n1te 11bet I• reoervld. All lett.n; mlltl lncll.lcN •~n•l~r. 1r>d mill!.,. ICldl"fl5, llvl n11nn wlll bl wltl'llletd on re<illf'lt. say th.is is a rather a high average and 1 think others who have had this ex- perience shoulci let the. department kr.ow about it. Why should a person in authority be allowed to play God and do it so ungraciously. He certainly I eaves much to be desired in his attitude on duty. I think the Department of Motor Vehicles should investigate this situa· ti on in Costa Mesa now. MARILYNN MARTIN 'llnfalt·ly Treatell' To the Editor: My brother and l appreciate The DAILY PILOT's coverage regarding 1 permit from the city of Costa Mesa lo open our banquet room. We believe that we have been treated very un - fairly because there is really DO need for the three extra parking spaces as required by the city. In fact. we have more parking spaces than are needed at the present Ume. In the process of applying for the permit we experienced many dif· flculties from the planning depart· ment. such as : I. THF.V !\,ADE US wait many week~ to obtain our remodeling permit. This permit was issued to u1 only after I had a meeting with various department personnel. 2. They also requested my land.lord to write a lease that would not allow food to be served in tbe banquet room. -3. They required us to pay 1 ~ lee, which was returned to ua in cash after we made Inquiries about it. 4. It did not come u a surprtM to us when they recommended to the planning commisslonen to r e.fuse our permit for the banquet room. 5. We asked the city to allow u1 to open the banquet room after 5 p.m. when there i1 no short.age of parking space. But lhis request, too , was denied. WE WOULD LIKE to ask, what benefit would it be to the city to have our banquet room closed? We would like to express our ap· preciation and gratitude to our customers and friends for their sup· port, especiaJ.ly to those who made a special trip to sign our petition. We enjoy the opportunity to serve this wonderful community and we are trying to do our best whenever the op· portunity permits. KAM FOY YEE Mei's Family Restaurant War and P eare To the Editor: The emotional letter of V a n McKlnzie about war (Mailbox, July 19) was nice to read but so unreal. This idea about war being senseless is fine rhetoric but unsubstantiated by modern history. With the help of Germany. V .I. LenJn won control of Russia for tbe Communist Party. Russia as one of the victorious of World War II an- nexed vast regions of Eastern Europe. MAO TSE-TUNG gained control over all of China as the result of wiri- ning a war. A few years ago China w,alked into Tibet and is still there. Ho Chi Minh was victorious over the French. Fidel Castro wa1 1 winner. Even Js11ael has gained much by the victory in the Six Day War. Consider the wars that the U.S. has won ... Of course, we d.id not gain much but lf we had lost to Germany or Japan r would not be writing thll letter. HARRY B. McDONALD , JR. Rtader · WcKin.rlt wrote of the' 1Gnit~ of ptace and the iruanfty of tDOr. Editor ,,, ...... ...,,. ..... To the Editor: Have you noticed the badl)' d!storted lma1e of our American flag painted on the -ol the South Coast Rep. ortoey Theot.. on ~ Blvd. in Cotta Mesa? Thlrd 1tep theater, bet\.\'een 18th and Center? Our American nag is desecrated by a sort of "hangman's noose," oi all things! Frankly. I was appalled when I stood there looking at it! I wonder what kind of thinking and people would would put on a play, call- ed "America Hurrah" which would call for such a display of advertising? Yes, t just do wonder? I also wonder if the patriotic American citizens of our community have noticed th i s desecrated version of our flag, and have made any serious inquiry in to this new play, and the theater whi ch is sponsoring such a play and advertising display ? On top of this ugliness. it is illegal, is it not, to disfigure the image of our flag ? Haven't we had enough of our beautiful flag being desecrated? Haven't we had enough of such play~ which would call for such desecration'! t think we have! BARBARA W. ADAMS Legal. opinion is t.hot flag desecra· tion under the California Military and Veterans Code applies anly to abuse oJ an octuaL flag . Federal law applir ing to flag rtpresentation is not in effect. Accordingly, complaints against the theater have been drop- ped. Set: Thursday news story for further details. Editor -----Friday, July 26, 1968 The: tditorlol page of the Doil11 Pilot sttlca to inform and stim- ulate reader1 by pre1enting ihia newspaper's opiniom and com- m.t:ntaf"ll on topic1 of interest and fignificanct, by providing o forum for the ezprt&rion of our rtcd6r1' opinions, and bt1 prt.senting the diverse view- point! of infornud observers and .spokt .mten on topie1 of tM dow. Robert N. Weed, PubUsher l i.. ___ :.....c:...-----------=~--===, ______________ _... ___ ~ ___ ,. ....... ~-~ . ---·--.. -----·------ I - ' ) I ; ' $ .. E§A§S 1-&~J G 0 2 0 EMO& I A l i BY WILLIAM REED Space Center Eyed for .Beach Schools Reeds · ••• In the Wind City leaders, or at least the city's Mid • Beach Development Com- n\ittee, are really asking for trou .. ble ind likely will gel more than a just share in the next few months. They are threatening to do something. For-months and years the populace has asked for action, but if ·the usual trends hold true, granting the request will stir up the proverbial hornet's nest. The committee is considering a huge redevelopment project north of the First Street along Coast Highway. It involves taking some land from private owners, pos~ibly clearing the blight of the years and returning the land for private development. * Not envisioned at this time is the use of federal urban 1'enewal, but rather the means available to the local citizens to solve their own problems. · In making the proposed project work it will be necessary to move Pacific Coast Highway inland at least one block to provide a large parcel of land between the highway and the bluff along the waterfront. It will be charged that the whole project is some· sort of a plot to make the Huntington Beach Co., or its partly owned $Ubsidary the Huntington Pacific Corp., richer. * The redevelopment project would involve selling to the HuntinJ?ton Pacific Corp some $4 or $5 million worth of land in addition to the 50 feet of Coast Highway which would re,vert to the company if the hhi:hway is abandoned. At $5 million the program could har~y be called a giveaway. Actually the plan calls not for a sale as such, but an exchange of land so that the city could end up with the beach which is now privately owned. This is the goal for which the city lacks cash now. Almost everyone a1?rees that the beach should be public, but no one knows where the cash is corning from. , * ~ It may be possible to clear the bli~ht and return land to pro. ductivity and to secure for the public the sands once feared doom .. ed. to private use only. Ao Outer Spece lmtructiooal Center has been propoled for construction at the Thomas A. Ediuo High Sdlool in southeMt HuMlngton Bea~h. ;rruateee ot the Huntington Belch Assessment Level Below State's ' Orange County's average assess· ment level is 23.2 percent of market value, compared to the statewide averap ol 24.7 percent. the state's property ta.x adminlltraUve agency disclosed this wetk: f • The announcement of preliminary percentages and the goal of"25 percent of market value for all l<ically taxable property by 1971 are part of a 1966 .usessme:ot reform legislation. Fin.11 percentages of market value will be Issued Allg. 23 after assessors discUss their preliminary ratios with the boar~. 'Jbe county aveN.ges are a basic fa'ctor in $420 million in school equalimltion aid '8Dd,, in assessment ap· peals before local boards of equaliza. ti on. Union High School Diltrlcl Tuoldoy nlgbl approved an investlgalioo ot 1lle polOibility by the, adni.intstr.Uoo. The action wu taken unenimoualy .Mier only one objection. Board Preal· dent John BenUey questioned placing •the prol"'sed planetarium at . the Edlson site, .ooUng lt1"t It Is al the aoutnern extreme of /the district llDd lt!e possibility that resldenta of Westminster, in the nortber11 utreme, might objecL District Supt. Dr. Max F..-y llld the transportation in the district was adequate to offset .my location dif· ficulties. As envisioned by the adminJstration, the facility would be for use of high school , and elementary 1 c h o o I students, senior citizens, space technl.· cialls and all interested in utronomy. He told the trustees it is likely that the facility could be cOnstructed without the need for public funda. The school at Magnolia Street . • n d· . Hamilton Avenue is now under con· stnictions. 1 The proposed "space sd}.ool" would be a planetarium where students could visually investigate laws of physics and mathematics M well a· 1 astronomy. Temple Negev Rites Planned for Tonight Curb Side Painters Temple Negev will hold Sabbath 1ervicts tonight at 8 in the Colonial Terrace Room at the Peek family building on Bolaa Ave., Westminster. Services will be conducted by Rabbi Gershon Fisher. Meeting at the corner of Springdale and Edinger streets in Hunting- ton Beach, students from a summer art class given at Marina High School get out of the class room fot painting inspiration. In the fore- ground, Mark Green, 14, and Ann Ralsten, 14, both of Huntington .. .. • Beach paint in water colors. HAVE ONE OF THE HULA HONEYS PIN YOU W!TH A FREE ORCHID WHEN .YOU v1srr .ALOHA ,DAYS SIDEWALK .SALE SATURDAY WESTCLIFF PLAZA , H'CKORY FARMS AN ENCHANTING PLACE TO v1s1i: FRIDAY OR SATURDAY ' DURING , , • "_Afolia .:J)a'J4 " SIDEWALK SALE • ' WESTCUFF l'LU.A 17tli & IRVINE NEWl'ORT BEACH MEET I 1ME AT 1RION SATURDAY ''.Afo/ia ::ba'J6 " SIDEW AU< SALE 1 EXOTIC ISLE OF INTIMATE Al'l'ARE'- Uta~ • -''_Afo4a . :lJa'J4 " -- SIDEWALK SALE ' WISTCLIFP PLAZA TONITE AND SATURDAY • Frldlt, .i.11 26, 1968 DAil Y PD.GT . . STE!' RIGHT UP -Enterprising entrepreneurs, from loft, Christy Clouse 9, Cindy Clouse, 11, and Monica Hatt.lg, 11 all of· HUntington Beach have so far this summer produced profits of $1 from their Kool-Ald ,stanll. Open sporadically ,the stand serves fruit-flavored beverage in front of Monica's hOUH at 1741 Main st., Huntingloo Beach. ' New Policy Fixed On Selecting School Builders Policies governtni the selection of specialists who will be involved in the construction of tuture Ocean View 1cbool district facilities are going into effect this wetk. Tbe district'• new superintendent, Dr. Clarenei! Hall, told district trustees Momiay night a policy governing the selection of these specialista bas been needed "lo build in the kind of controls needed by the district to be sure we are selecting people who are competent." Under the new policy procedures, the district's admin.lltratlve staff will make a Ult of WOrk to be done, name those persons who can do the job and examine their "qualifications and .Pr.o· feuiobal ezperience," Dr. Hall NJd 1n a repdrt to trustees. After staff personnel evaluated quotation• from the a p p r a I 1 e r • , geologists surveyors, f o u n d a t l o n engineers; escrow and title Officers and testing labOratorles, or any other agency tile dlstrl~ must deal , witil, their recominendations M'e reviewed by the supermt&ndent. Dr. Hall would then pass his recom· mend.ation on to the board members for approval. THE LAND OF GLAMOROUS AND ROMANTIC FASHIONS 'We6lc~// Plaza THE LAND OF EXQUISITE AND DISTINCTIVE SHOPS VISIT BOTH IN ONE STOP DURING THE ANNUAL _Afoha ::ba'J6 SIDEWALK SALE TONITE AND SATURDAY PADDLE OVER TO WESTCLIFF SHOES DURING THE BIG Kids Keep Kool Trio Sets Up Beverage Stand By SANDI MAJOR Of 1M Delly ,1191 Iliff If their present rate of net gain con· tlnues, two sisters in a trio of Hun..- tington Beach entrepreneurs can look forward to having a horse about 75 years from 00\V. The girls, Cristy and Cindy Clouse, have gone into business with Monica H<att.ig to make money to buy a horse. ("It's ~kay with my daddy," they say.) For Monica's part: "Just say I want money to spend." So far this summer, the trio has cleared about $1, which was split three way.!1 of course. They say they are stashing.their profits away in banks. With the small capital Investment of several packets of Kool-Aid they have opened a frult·flabored beverage stand under a shade tree on the curb i.n front of Monica's house, at 1741 Main, just east of Huntingtoo Beach High School. They sell, at various times, orange, grape, cherry, strawberry and raspberry Kool-Aid. Their stand - when it's open -is set up forr b11Siness until about 3:30 p.m. or until the no- tion to close strikes them. "Most of our customers ere t.ffn .. agers, going to the beach," says Cris .. ty, 9, youngest of the th r e e businesswomen. She will be a fifth grader at Agnes Smith School and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Darrel Clouse, 709 12th St. Their biggest day this summer, the first year they have merged their separate Kool-Aid stands together', brought a total of 55 cents to tbe cof .. fers, says Mon.lea, 11, daughter ol th• Bill Hattigs. She and Cindy, also U. will both be seventh graders 1t Etbal Dwyer Intermediate school this llllL Cindy admits business hasn't been loo good . As the days get progressively hotter. the girls can look forward to a bettu_ business. And overheated passing motorists, who will find a parking lane in front of the stand, can locate the girls sitting· at the curb, an umbrella propped up over them, with their advertisement, "KOOi-Aid," tied to the shade tree. Remaining eviderice that America is still the land of opportunity, TO SAVE YOU $279.00 AND A TRIP TO HAWAII WE HAVE BROUGHT HAWAII TO WESTCLIFF PLAZA •• , TONITE & SATURDAY- TO SAVE YOU EVEN MORE WE HAVE ~ DRASTICALLY REDUCED PRICES ON SUMMER ;A.RTICLES <6 FOR THE ~1,/))) 'ijl$"ALOHA DAYS" J& SIDEWALK SALE SAILING FOR ••• ALOHA DAYS SIDEWALK JtGJn tnhl _Aloia :J.)a'J6 SIDEWALK SALE AT WESTCLIFF PLAZA TONITE AND SATURDAY SALE SATURDAY wmcUPP ll'LUA 17th & l!lVIN.1 a l • ... .... .. .. .. .. . r .~ ............. ""'" Tho picnic ended on a aour note for grandma. Mrs. Id• Kotherlno Knuhon, 87-yoar-old granclmotbtr, was arrested by FBI agent.I on cbar&es of robbing a San Francisco bank u Ibo returned from a picnic with ..-iattves. AJ•Dts said the woman was Identified from pic- tures taken by a concealed camera In tho bank. She allegedly robbed tho Market.Geary Street Branch of the Bank of America of fl49 on July 17. • Mohcrllhi l!wlh ' Yogi comes · to Sqtl<IVI -VoU<i/ nnt month to uath 600 to 700 followeTs in what might be hil last.vi!it to the United Stpte1. The at:srion which begins Aug. 4 at Olym. pie Vil/aot Hout .Dill !Git ""tfl Aug. SI. Tht: guru Uft aeclurion nine yearr 4fl"' C01 teoc11 · for 10 . vcars. He ii rcheduUd to .return to 1ecLwio11 .in tlw!' Hirrza(ya?i.moUntaiN of Ind~ at.t- er this last vi$it~ • . ' • . . Stop Fortas ; Move Gains New Power. WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Robwt P. Griffin aay1 the drive be ltadl to block conllrmllion of Abo Fortu u cru.1 juatlca bu pined new 1tron111> as a resull of jua-cluded Senile J udiciary Commllteo hearln11. But sen. Al>ert Gen, J>..Tean., iUd. 'lburtday be ii confident 0 a 1ubttan- tial majority of Mll.l!m-1 will vote to confirm" Fortu. Tile Judiciary Committee completad hearings ol Fortu' nomination to bead· the Supremo Court earli.-In tho day but was not expected to act OD it before September because of the up- coming recess for poUUcal C>lll· ventlons. "We are plckin1 up 1trencth amcm& both Republican OJld Democrattc .enatcws," Griffin aa1d in an interview. • Tbo Mlehilan Republle• Mid chan~ . for blocJdnC the confirmation have been lncre•ed "by que1tlon1 that have been raised" at the bearings. I TRAGIC Al'Tl!RMATH -Rubbl&-strewn sidewalks in Cleveland hamper firemen In their dooNo-door search of gutted 1U>rot for possible bodies and still amoldering llru. Tea penom lolt their lives in .this riot-tOm fU~ ~ continued firebombing Thursday rugbt broU&ht back the National Guard. Loss from fires and looting bas been estimated at more !ban ,1.5 million. ' ' Grlf1ln refotted IJ>OCll!cally "' Fo<ta.s' teaUmony lhat he h a d 1>111>doated while • ulOdate juatlce In ~ H..,.. conle<tuce1 on Vlot-"":a~=~'::~ 00w much Fro111 Erie •1· Sea_ttle now atrellitb be bad gained. Tbe .... 1or. w!Jo has tbroat.ned to llllbmter Fort••' c~. F' l.-b' T --• Spar' R--!-1 v·-le ,circulaled • ·petlllon originally a1spac1 .ueuum ing, .LIUflttnu ucuu w nee Ii)' 19 GOP l<DalO<I O\'l?"lling Pt'esl-. ' . • . -. e· . e -~ . d"1t Joha~o•>'• nOmlDatiQlli of 'Fortu Bi '111Ei A¥0ci.t.TED PREM -~-"-'---'m Ka all ln-v·"'-but~-youths baru~ fire .. cblef j1istlce and Hainer ThontJor. _ . . . . · ·---' ......, --• . ry 88 an asaoclate justice; • · Spoj-adi_I! rodaJ Viol-·erupted t>ocr~. dty 15 .milN , al ~ "'""°n and pelted pawn( -•··• th · bn ~ Thursday idil>! Jn four ....., ran"'-~ j]ilcaco • Jlowlilown,oectl<m, lollo!red-. vehlcllo will! rocks and bottles. .1.uey con"'"'U\l e appom enl.3 &U•e a m.....a..• _ol 1be local br ' of. Ufe A Wel'ebOUll"W. the Erl P N 5hould be made by the new president from.Erie,.Pa.,. to Seattle, Wuh., with ~M;dett.oa. fat tbe!Mvmce----·wu a-•S::.bod ande, poa.ll,cee!:! . 'J•··-d om "'• -... --'sed Gleveland··and Cllina•o ao1n the ... I -... .....--.YVIU ...u 1P. --~ an s e nosve ---..v • -,.-.,..,.J.. -.. meat of. Colored o-..1e 11-en were il':lted with --'--and Johnloaof"c:rllayism"./irnomlnatlng l•• -•.,. .-. . ._ .. ·-• · · ~ ~-·~ · two-frimds for tho eaurt. Reversing his·policy of trying lo let . Pallco aald about :m NeV• youtho ~• w-y ~ponded to tho Gore, who sat by Fortas' side during black. CO"!D'unily.Jeadors C"'1irol ~ =-..::.:-villal~:ore tbo ~. nkl a .Negro militant, Bennie commit~ hearings as ~ expression situation, Cle:relfn(l Jr{~ .c :&:rJ. 11_..._e:--..a .......... ,vu to ' g.-!'!:!! Wall, w. • arr1>1ted after he threatened ~ rt •• ., the •-·te d Stokes reinstated a duak-kHiawn po.-~ -.Pl lolllllW•, '""" -w suppo • --agree url in Cl land' N 1 " ·th• yoathl ·m-to:a:clowntown U> -a police captain. Tiley 11id with Fortas on a 1965 voting rights c ew · eve J IO'O 1 ums .. ..,. HCUon where they unut windows. Wall, who wa1 found to be unarmed, decisiOn and should not now use lb.at was. e1'orced b1 N~onal GUM'dlm~ ertumed rk beDCbM AM b led wu charged with inciting to riot and decision again.It him. and white police. . ov par r:;;:: ur I -~ und -bo•' There were 30 arrests .-two for obJIC'tl at Plllinl vebidel, 1Ugbtzy Jn.. re e--.. er """"" :uu. --tf --tf --tf looting; cmo for arson and Tl foe. lurtnc ten pmObl. /i TEAR GAS USED curfew viplation. Sevwal 1mall fires· TwenCy f1Ve persons wtte arre1ted partisan Strain -· out ••. the Eut Side -· JO and. curfew ...... qulcl<:./b' lmpond. ' persons, including three polleemeo, A resident of the a aakl-the ware killed in l!heolinli' Tue<day; ' dilturl>onee on Chicago' North Side Against F ortas, MeanwWe, merchants and police· beflll -• group "'Y<!lllll Nocroo• dillered <11 protection 1upplied In Ille liltenod to • talk du«lbed as In· troubled area. -1Wnm1tory. 'I Claims Clark LOO!'ING ALLOWED NEWSMAN BEATEN Police in Seatt1e•1 pred<lminantly Neiro central area used tear gu to bnak up I group of disorderly per1om after a truck wu set on fire. "It ·was l••t Jlll:e· a j1D1gje up there,'' 1ald Police Capt Kenneth Ujovldi after tlllding a Pennsyl- vania hilllide mooD1hine operation. Tho ·captain &aid the bill, located in _ a 1ubUr!> 9f Pittsburgh, rose from street level at nearly a 90-<legree WASHINGTON (AP) -Ally. Gen. angle. The raider& 1ot U> the still Ramsey Clark 9ays P o 111 I c a I One merchanl chjlrfed lhal his store A newspaper pbototi~ was was loote<I while two Negro j>ollcemen' beaten, and -100 yOljthl Invaded watched. But some Negro' policemen-a supermarket, the ~t of wtllch Tllo driver told police a group of about 20 youths -•ached his vehicle and toned ftnbombl. He sakl be was threatened with robbery , but wu able to escape aiJd mate hb: way to a fire station. A group of youths !hen gathered -tile street 1run· a higll-sdlool and wore brobll up by police llrin( tearc•. l .. by bbin I of getation partisanship and, ., some caoea, oP· gra g c umps ve " position · 'to 'civil rJghta advances are and pulling themselves ~P· "~-tile molive.s beltind maJI)' ol·thoeo w!Jo area la so lnaccoulble 1t would ~-tile ~ Fort.is have been cheaper U> buy a bottle is cl1iet juatice. claim that, merchants, after 'z:emovin& was ltill bolrded as the ferult ci an valhable ~nu. alJOwed.cano: .to loot earlier dllturbance. _ lholr, atore1 ao they ·could" cOiled tn, · Sbo!CUD.armed pollca ~ tho In-surance . . .. \fblle. th_e East. Side ~ ~· , •·~~ •-· -• i - N ewSf'!lJH3r·r Blackout Continues WASHJNGTON (UPI) -Negolj&- .U.U to ond the 'llrat aaw- blackout hero.lo almost 20 yoara COO.' -loday '-_..w .... oC I-DMdiators. Sources clOte to tho talb ~ they were "not q>lim1*"· • Qllid< Mtuement -1<1 be .-:tiad. 'Iba •trike ... -clown all tllrot oC ~~cWJ1 new..,en -·1tbe W . -Daily Newa, the Evtnint star -the Woahiljgloa Poot. It befan at 5 p.m. Wedlle..ia,. 101Mn mernben of ~ Umon Local 19 walked oil 1ho jol> 17 houri after their contract oq>lrod. OChet unloei have rolued lo """'° tbl ateroo\)'pon' pid<et lines. NO PllQGRESS Un1c>n_._~otlator1 met w Ith npre5e'DRIUve1 Of the "W..tqton Pltbliollers Anocl;lifon lalo the e•ly hours Of to<lay but-.0 prop-en - reported. . James Holden, of tht Fed<nl Me<llation and· Coocillatlon Serrice, refused lo mHO ObY predicttonS ,._...rotni tile llrlte. Otllers c-'lc! tho negotlattoos a.al~ a loaf •trike - the lint citywide .._ strike llin- ce 1949 -was possib ... 0 . Roy Oialk, owner of tile weekly tabloid. tile WOll1Jngtoo p;....-..r, said lalA! 'lblrtda:Y· his poper ....Ud Siar! publiitllne ,claily IGda7 If llO oet- Uemeat wac reactied. MORE INVOLVED . These sources said there ii more' w.- volved In the dhpute than stralebt money matter1. The publishen ....elation hM of· fered the unlon a '32-a·week wage in· crease over a three-year period, boo&tlng ster.olypen' pay U> $187 • week. The publiSflen said the mi.on was demanding a ffO incre:ue. The two biggest l>lue• at tllt bargainil>g table are basic ..,... ...i pensions but the situation, the IOUl'cel said, goes beyond just 1l!e ••••u>mld questions. · ' UNION PACESEl'l'ER The union; accarcKng m eourc:.s, regards it.<elf .,, Ille paceoetler lw all ct. the craft uidorla et tbe papen while the pubibhers view it uh last Of the crdt uiliooi -to be dealt willl In ~ current bargaining 1erito. s ...... tile -alreody -· ,.ttled with tbe -craft Ulllom lo< basic ""le booct. cl. $32 a week, the publishers fear tlley .would risk unrest wi1ih th~ u_nions: If tlley -thal loaB• patterit • ..,.s, -... "' tho _ _bigl\er dei ..... ., .... 1ter<olypen. •· . .. every day," Ujevich said.. Clark, in an ir*rriew, allo Riel Vie • slaying of 10 persona Tuellday In a .Into th.e hall of Records in the Los Angel1s Civic Center, at lunchtime, maTched a "oung .man wearing only two magazine coverr depicting children of Bia- fTJL TM picket explaint"d, aa M WGS being hauled away to jail, that ht toCll calling attention to the "starving people who must haw htlp." Cl...i8fld Noo-o neig!>boibood was ''the ro.ndom act of a liandlul of. v~· extreme and vtorent-prone mlMtants, ' and not part ol 8 nationwide COD• spi?lacy to cause racial unrest. curfew, otlier dist--. -· out In <hveland' I ilonrard·W . Hctloa '!)out flVO-miJel lo.the.IOU-- A cle.,U.c. ~· wu 1freb0inbod' and a clothing store wu looted as a group of about 200 Negroe1 gatllered. I I '. ---•~RX!lill ~ W .. .. I • Fran Herron, 18, will be starting off her marriage next month in high st,yle .... with a $50,000 gold bar es a 0 dowry." Fran held the winning .ti~k~t in the Calgary Ex- hibition and Stampede's Pot '0 Gold drawing and the presentation of the 00-pPund b&r was made to her. Fran's fiance, Bill Hiebert, bought six $1 tickets and put Fran's name ·on· three of t.h em. The gold bar will be traded in for the money anC! the $50,000 will be held in trust fop Fran until she is 21. In discussing President Jdwon':i: nomination ol. Fortaa to move up on the Supreme Court from associate justice to suceeed retiring a.tef Justice Earl W18JTen, Ctar'c said that "quite clearly ttiere is dominant in the opposition a highly partisan ·1train that's un!ortunate. I don't believe a Political affiliation ahould enter into the qualification for nomination." He added that "those who opsme securing equal right. and civil rights ar.e opposing the nomination. I would suggest tlhe basis for opposition , in truth, is their opposition to the very great advances th&t have been made in civil rights under Jaw." Clark also defended the Justice Department's stand in writing a con- troversial memorandum to the Senate Judiciary Committee praising Fortas. The department was criticized by op- ponents ol ttle nominatlion ol. trying to propagandize the committee by the mem<>. Police qukkly dispened the crowd. In Oiicago. a North S l d • supermarket, which hM been the ecene of prevloua incidents., a,am_ was vMldalzed, and store w1Ddow1 ·were smashed in .tuburbi.n 'Ma}'WOOd after po~ used te_. g&1 to break Up a delDOlll!rallon at Ille Vlllap baD. State Exposition Going in the Red SACRAMENTO (AP) -The new $34 million California State Exposition and Fair is losing money -with daily attendance figures aver8gfug · 19,000 less than what officials 1ay they'll need to break even. Ari avettge of '6,173 persom ·a day have Yiaited the l,()0.acre site since Gov. R~agan opened the facility's g'ate1 July 1' . . Heavy Rains Hit Santa Fe U.S. Drenclied fro111 Dela:ivare to Oklahoma Panharnlle \ v.s. s .. ....,, •11... ""'ldo tlttf'll"' l11s l1!1eft In ~" IOI v•rleul ....... llf "-UUl\'ltY, Thurlda• IOIJc.hed off fl'lt .-st 1..,..11111 In Sln!1 F1, N.M.., IOI 2' .,..,._ Na mo.lot ln!Uo"lll _,, ,_...., In IM "-Mt •lco !lloflM, but II INtl '° ---· IYl<QH191111 .....,. tlll ~nit Ft lltl"" ~ lls be'*t 111 "-llH" d ...... l<fttf t 1NM1 d r1w1111nnftlNN""'"'- MtnMll'I' drt ~ -nllM t.. ...,,,.._-1.,...~ ~ "" l'lfY .. i.M,.. tllllr di"'"' ., "'*"""-... ftllln.. lt1ln "'II fll l lMt I llftlontrY ftoftt 1"9!dllft91 '""" Dt ... .,. .. tlll Oll;l91!Gm1 ,M'llltM .. .,.. ...... """'"' 'ldttio. ~ tti.11 ... ,~_ ...... ,lfftt, $.0., •rid ~.,. ~ "'-'•·· •1111 11e•rl'I' •11 1~11 1t11 en 1<11n1. "'"" wllhln 1 1f1t·l'lollt -ltll endl"' .. ,l'I' -·· '"'" '-1 (iOWt ..,. .......... ,,.v.,..., '" """""' lftfll f't., •, .. .,..,..., l l-rdt ••• ..... (~ICll•O (!llC:i!lflefl Cle,..it~d --Dts Mol- Dttl'ell lh.1....t<1 l'lr't Wwtlt ..... M ... _ ·-· ._ ... ICl115H ~ll'Y l•• v"'' Loa Al!ll'l!IH Mlt ml -.Kh Mllw1u4!"" Ml-1P011'1 H~ 0i1e-._ , .. Oe~l•nd • ...... ,_It __ ..,,,_ -· . ·-. ·-..... ... ... _ =-.. _ .. _ "" \:.lllll,.Cltr ... _ ..... _ lltlll .. l'M& ..... -~­,._,, W11hl ........ ""' LM l'NI. • 61 .16 H .. - .. n .. ,. • .. T< .. .. .. " n .. n " .. ,. " M .. " " .. .. " " " " n .. .. " .. .. " .. .. ·" .. " .. '" .. .. .. .. " n M .. " " " n .. .. .. M • .. M ~ .. " .. .. •• " .. ... n " .. " .. .. .. ... • .. • .. ,. ,.v . " .. " .. '" • .. " .. A!. ~-.. • ,.~ ' '" H . .. '-" ...., l , I I Clean up with - the Unbeatables . • Great yelr-end buys from thOM unbeeta.,,_ OUY1 • ~rtl, "lri'poft. ~. 'ChrYISir_-. ......... ~ • Everything goes to wind up a great MU!ng yMr.I . . • Act now while there's a gOOd model """'~ eellction -· ' I . . _ .-A Has C · ysler·Plymouth , In c. -2929 H•rti1r...alvd., •Cllta M-. Calif. 1714> 546-1914 ' ';I -. .. ' . ~-,~=~~ -~~ _____,. ____, _J _, -'-1-..J ---~ --.1~--· ---------~---------------~·------ .. c . .. , • • I , ! . " l • '· be c'" L "' .,. "' ... >11 "'~ ... ra' th ... ,.,. ... :el :e, •• lq lni :bl DI· In· od, • ... ht nd •• .... • •• ... .. si at ,. -• ' • ' ' J • I • 'I ..._ RCA ·coLOR TV .. , ·Get Your New RCA Color TV , .Now, Before Friday, July 26, 1968 Life for Life' 2 ·Get Reven· I . • . I I . I I m~: ~Js'..?~J!: (UPI) -Ofllcla'IJy" ~venge which way trying tO et out is not part ot tbe·GI ieredo. and We were goil •v~ Don't tell'tllat te:i'o,lplnt Coy ·which. way ofter em,' and BuddY '8arto1C l!arloa 1ild. Here on south· Vietnam's Coy drove one northern cout a Nor.th, Vie t· personnel carrier r nam army. mine -a 1,000 a Communbt tren pound bomb ~ in de~ two North Vi ese napalm -blew up. a .tant, jliniped up only fl , eet In · kllllng five of· their friends ~nt-of us. rtteY s to · in the Ametican divialon. run.down'the trenc and . "Every rivet on that tank . one · of Ua:e in reters wu blown out. The engine bepn, chJsmg thCt, . We was tossed 250 yards," said . fin•llY cut the:;i do~ "rtb a Coy, 19, of Oklahoma City. macbla.e gun, , \ Coy and Barton, also 19, of The Gls uaed a\thelr ' Menomonie, Wis., agreed ,hand ~nade1. The killed they wanted revenge. Tbeir 70 Communists. Not ougb' moment came Tuesday. for Coy and Barton. 'I( They went on an armored ' "1:'"~~ what they dJ~ ~ur cavalry patrol. here where a buddies we haven t eve11 band of North Vietnam begun, to settle the ore army engineers used mines yet. It s been frustratin for in killing 40 men of their the last few months d squadron the past month. when they blew that ank Eighteen miles, southwest apart ~e began to won~r of Da Nang, a North Viet. w~~re 1t wo~ld all en~ . Th• tastleton • Model GJ..702 295 1q. la. rtctlnauitr pkturt1 GIANT SCREEN COLOR CONSOLE WITH .4UTOMAT~C FINE TUNING! NO MONEY DOWN I -Fam!ry Trained 5erYlce TechnlClaM . L-1 _3 _YE_AR_S T_()_' PA_Y·____.1 · -~ Antenna lnsiallatlo11 PAY 'AS LITILE AS 5l0 PER MONTH STAR TV 275 EAST 17th ST., COST A MESA 642-9742 . The Convention Staris- Enjoy The Convention Excitement In All Its Color namese engineer opened No.~ we re rooting f r fire with a recoilless rifle. ~m~o~re::_:. :_•~ai~d~C~•2'._Y·:.__...J.b==='========================================:::;:: That was his mis4lke. --$AW • SERVICE . 1815 Newport Ave. His shot wounded three American s. the only casualties of the day. His shot gave away the Com· munists' position. In correct military fashion, C 1 p t . George Kacior of Seattle, Wash., commander of "A" troop, told what his men did : "Reinforcements were quickly called in and even· tuaUy we had seven tanks 1 ' COSTA MESA 20 TIAlS OF SIRYICE PHONE 548-7788 and 18 armored carriers in a line facing the enemy." Barton put it another way: "Boy, when we all opened up What a beautiful sight that was." Th ey bad caught about 100 North Viet· namese, the Communists I ·who had been mining the tanks. DAVIS-BROWN BRINGS YOU LOWEST PRICE EVER! RCA VICTOR COLOR TV FIRST IN C9LoR TV Thi M[AOIJMR' ,..1.,"5 14' ...... to.z .-..111. Jk:ll>fl It'• poflblt! w~"" 1m thin u !kl Aod t111 ONLY 111W RCA sus* l ri&M tti·Ut• Color TutJI dllliYlfl ·-wllll 11!1 ...,,. ..... llla ,... $29n95 no prilll °" -.,. "' KA _...., Y - ... _fa Color, DELUXE CONSOLE AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING tAFTJ Whttl )IGCl'r1 first ln Color TV, 1!1&r1's to! lo be I ,_._ like A1tomll ic fiM T•liN tMt tock• in the Jlicturt si1nal. And new 'acA.fil6' irtth 38% fHtlhl• tlltfiliatrts ltlis )'Ill'. You 1tt ltlese-1nd --!CA-. © D \ \ I S R f\ ('l \\' N "L.•VISION •AflflLIANCl!S -411 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 01lly 9.9 -S11urd1y 9-6 (Cloood . Sund1y) IS1le1) 646-1614 -(S.,..lctl 541-3437 Factory Authori1td Service • - J " . ' GIANT SCREEN COLOR CONSOLE WITH AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING! Big 23-inch, 295 sq. in. rectangular picture plus brilliant color that fine-tunes itself • New Vista 25,QOO.volt Color. Chassis with · Automatic Channel Equalizer • RCA Automatic Purifier • Contemporary Console in Natural Walnut finish • America's first choice for value, performance! -f&i\l!Jlslt ' lnccb' lV:-lftf wC1Y It ls yru. best' boy ncN. RCA spent $130,000,000 to -lop, per- fect and launch color TV. No other manu- facturer one,. ao much bred-1,,..,he blood experience. RCA lnlroduced Integrated circuitry lo give color TV edded dependability. RCA iniroductd lht flm ltmlly-tln color 'portable-the 14' dlag. tube model. RCA was first to bring Integ rated circuitry to automatic flna--tunlng for color TV. RCA pioneered the color tube that became the standard of the Industry.And one l~k will tell you why-It deltver1 the. moet * vlYid, natural colore found outside of na-ture ltlelt •. And It 11 IO reliable, we back n with 1 new.2~ar warr1ntyl The Ctstleton • Model GJ-702 295 sq. in. l'ldaftl\lllr picture IO MHEY .. , llllllf Ttllrlmb_.. • tWIE '•LIEI' I . 1 Tht Cirry-ettl • Modtf EL-410 I 102 eq. In. _. LOI ·POITW Win llqtt Yltl! 14" ...... lO:Z.., 1 .. pkbn. .... ""' tllmi• :;::~ $299 95* -· I ( The C.ndld1tt • Modtl EL-442 1m aq. In. plcturt Tht S.nfotd • Modtl L-610 295 IQ. In. pkture Mn F111llj-Sln COLOR PORTABLE. COLOR COllSOU Valle Wlll111r 5-ftt 1r de., IIO sq. ltJ. color! • Soli4 Stale Gllflt ICNft, klnlt· pm. l\llf' tor 1 COMOlrt will ~~:,~:.-:·.= $359·95* ':'::;::;.= $459 95* VHF.utfFllltln• •Pop. VHFTllntr, .. Soltdltlle 11, ....i11. utlFTvner •Modern Clbintt. J ·~IUl.lltld fllall pl'IM ~1.W. "919r. II& i I j Elli IJI*· flCA ....-i.. to the 0!1g1NI l'fllll purch-lhlt wt Will nd!•l'IO•· through th• ACA dlt .. lbUICll'~ .. t ... ~ IZIU011, th• color p1etln tube Ill th!• TV If •• ""d It to haft b"11 dltftetlv1, undtr normtl UM In lht U.S.A.. •lthln two YM" of lh• pun:ti.11 dat•. ACA rtbullt .-. ,, __ , tvbH will bt u1,d, tnd ll)•r •111 bt ~ tor IN ....,1Nd J'OftlOl'I of thl two.,.•• l*'fod. s.mc.. ltbor lfld ... ~ cMrte• ••• WJ .. .,..,.. ,.. 11111t1ng "-c-.. blyOfld _. connl, •• ..,. pw. ~·· f'WPOlllfbllfly • . ..,,, ........................ ...... TM Pam1ro • Model OJ·719S 295 sq. In. rect.f'llUlar pldure DllUJE CDllSOU. Allll&ltlt Flil Taflr 11aW -n• Tlllill) ollcmolclllJ -fHf ~=r~ $529* Utt f'ktln Me • Dr> •• ,,. ,,.., •• tllliwt. •• I .. .. ~ . . .... f DAILY '1LOT ·Postal Cutback 8egins ._ WASHINGTON (AP) - Tiie Pott Olllce Department lluncbes tbt tint lD a setiel of manpowv C·ll t ba c k 1 saturday, ·abOrtenlng the houn of window service and reducing the 1nunber of street comec pickups. 1be depwhnent, which &Gnounced the cutbacb two weeks ago, said tbey wert being made to conform with the manpower reductloo• dictated in Pre1ldent Johnson's income tu in· Cl'ft'le bill. . Before it would aaree to a 10 percent 1urtu, Consrtss ord~ed the Prtsidt~t to reduce federal 1pendln( by '6 billion. To coolorm, all government •ltneiel' must cut back to their June 1966 penonntl levels. 'nte first reduettons Jn postal service will shorten weekend window service at fir•t md HCODd class post of,ftces to a maximum Of two hours. Collection of mail ·-- -dopollt "'-will Ill -.. -dQd1tJee Rm...., la Ille - of --la--' Aus. ,_,,_ ..... poll -11111 be elDlod. ... -of -lliopl, tllo Paot Olllol Dti*i-1 ....... ~-. • . . ... . . . . - ·~1. J,,, 26. 1966 Uf'I T ......... Aerobatic Astronauts Eighteen stories above New York's Broadway, ~nny Fox, 76, and hl1 lovely daughter, Betty, per· form their 'aerobatics' act on a plaUorm attached to I.be edit al a wooden boerd. Tiit pWlk .11 bald Jn ~ by • pl\• "' .....n.;.. Tiit ... will appear ahonly In I.be 'nlrlll Clr'Clll at Ill•' llladlum. f.alifotnia Has Lost ' =~:::-= Most Meii 'in Vietnam tla1 dl»""1 lf CoD&rM• ... ' ' ~ -aot ' .-mpt Pi>llll WA8HINOTOll ~(AP) draltad or allotod -., emp1o,.. -... -iitlD· New "Rlmpoldrt lllwoll the llklonlll ,.w lar • power.. . . ..! • Conn•Mlee1 la both tbt,.. .and MuUclnillttc ·' hive loll ol .0102 PIJ'CIDt. ' H-lllil Seute bave IP' ~the ~e<t l!Ol'Ctn· Ma111chu11tlos / 1•-, up ere:.::.:·=~· tace OI. ren llilled ID 'I.mo 1111 l<iJlid lrOlllJll esU~ Momn w.-.~ ol -perllll the HrVlee 11,111 put illo' uni!onn ..,._ lhll ;:.l 1'1111 wllll~ alDOI A-stariid lnl 11>1 period , or ·oo¥ JI.ft' bav. so·-"""'9 lie ·'11111' filliiliW la tbt Vil4nlm wor. coo~ -tbt .~ cut-lnlW amnbm alaoe , ID llleot, !hi lllUHI •ua· baeb. C-..&a IWI bM Iott the 1111 that ""' Hampelllro " mHt mm. 21•:?.2.accordln and Hawaii 11te up tnore lo Ille -com ·· tbaD 10 dead, ~ Algi M count compllld O!ll1 Thur•· MuN'cllusolll moro lhu ers ay dly by Ibo Dtpertmeot ol Din~. dUd, per 1,000 llllll DefeDlt. , tlken ia.to 1ervice durinl tbl R lea 8 'Ibis -.t. baNd oo ao Vtetoom 1'ar period. e 8e Auoclalld Pieo1 lallulaU..,,-, New York, llCOnd· most com11 lrolii oCllclll combel PoPUloal state b e ~ I n d Of Hi. -1.led dlltli lollll lls\ed tOr -c~. lollowl In the . J ~CA -u _. witll pun.•mblr COS0(,01'7 _with , • -• clrlft.llllru Uil lllDl\ld· , l}.311/W ... dead. ··~ II ALGIElll (ot\P) -EJP1 "'1lililiiatl---Jap,.1 · UUM 0wllll 1,4M. " ol tb1 :a l1r-hlld In lltl, an4 MIJ IO, 1111. . -.,... AP t.bulaUon oa the Alflm llDOI .Ibo l!Ut<"'•I ''11lo AP COU11l 1bowa NIW lloclm ac-, lo ~ ol on ltr..U a11i1D1r ma, be Harnplhlre bu 1ullerod II pordODllo los111 OIMOI bl nUnUI 127 dlfl-Ibo dud ·!ram bostlla llCllon ID Callld ptlCIH bocaUll OI IOU?<ll said 1oda7, the -.ll'om-llDOllJ ID -varyinl fillllllrl, 1b1y uid lour womli1, -7,IG men dt.itff But It oft.rs a rouf)I two of them hoet..111 OD the or who enllJted or, more ba-rometer. of "°"lch state El Al jetliner -and .four. precilely, .013 percent of the has exp• r 1enC·t4 the children would be put on a .. atate'1 m.tllpow-er con· heaviest Vietnam ca1ualtles plane !or Rome. Ala;erian trib!Jtlon. in relaUon to the avallable1 & o v e rnment spoke1men Hawaii bad 127 dead from and willlnJ, military aae refused to confirm or deny amonc an esUmated 12,393 group. . . the report. The government has in- formed the Italian Embassy that all the captive• a.rt ln good health, lnciudin& the copilot who was hit on the head when three armed Arabs hljocktd the Boeing 7'17 jet between Rome and Tel Aviv Tutldly and diverted it to Al.Iler&. Foreign Aid Bill Cut $25 Million WASHINGTON (AP) - Under heav y batterl ni by both Hause and Senate, the autboriz&Uon for President Jobnsori'a foreign ald pro. cram will be the lowest in 21 year t of overseas uslstaDce. The latest 11a1bes were made Thursday by the Senate Forel&n Relationi Committee whlch trimmed f25 million out of the military aid section, putuoe It at Pll mlllloo. • • Live Orchid Display COU~YOP PAUL BRECHT OIClll ,CO. ' ' ON oua MAU 17th & lllVINI ,RIDAY & SATURDAY DUlllNo THi ''.Afo~a 2>a'l6 " StDEWALK SALE the ~; .. original {. light Scotch ."aw51! 1 , 4 • • • . , I ...J..; -,_ V•less 1fuJai toa A Pueblo Crew ill Be Punished MOICOW (UPI) -A bllh Putlllo wW be puollhed and • ''Thill ~lean Imp. Ille Pueblo crew, and 11 they Nortll -mWtary ol· nt-rolMMd u n l e s s erlalllll should be clearly do not suanntee there will flclal aald today'tht crew of WMblnltlDD ~10&11e1 "for awart that if they do not be no repe.tltion of such Ibo caplurtcl Amllrloan 1hlp , tllllr crlm11.' apoT e !or the c:rlm11 of, c:rlm: we:~Ul.never rel urn tbo C!'OW." Col. 1.o N111t• 7.oong, mlll!M7 allache ill Moscow, told a news con• ference. Bomb Blasts Mexican Tourist Office ii Spealdn1 al Ibo North Korean Embassy, Zo al10 •a\d, "U tho· or1onlalr1 ot 1uch crtm11 will not assume re1ponalbWey !or the Ille ol the crew, wt will have no alternative io making the crew pay for their crimes.'" CJllCAGO (UPI) -The ._.i bomb ID two we1k1 blutld -tho door " th• M • 11 can cowmmtnt'• downtown tourist offlct MT· ly loclay -th• 12th an· niVtrlll'Y cl Fidel Callro'1 landlnl lo bello tho Cuban revolutloa. Lyilll In the 1hattered &lu• d the entryway, police found a note data "2& De Julio," the 1lo1an o I C a s t r o • s revolutionary movement. Mlaclled to the two-page, handwritten note were two 1mall ltlcll:m reading, in Span.Jib, "Unte Pode r Cubano." The first two 11 n e s translated r o u g h l y as ''lnternaUODal Democrauc Comm&Ddos, Bulletin No. 2. . Ao-,ur ct liavtrJ !or °"~-i. ... " PollOI -oalJ -·a..""" ...... ..,. k Wll ... 'lmMll' ., -.. n;f fprlber ' d11lr•1 . \"', · .. -•••med to .. ...... , .. .,_. ~ .... ••oflllllt fl I" Valuel M.._.I Polillftl , ..... .... c.- com .. wtth rn.$777 tablt cover. Drop leaf type. Wll1 •eat JO. lll'OWld 1111 country. The MicbJtan Avtnut office was bombed pr1viOU1ly oo a Sun· day morn1a1. July l 4 . Nobody WU llljlU'ed at eltlllr bllll. William Sebo a teletype operator for tfntted Press lnmnt.Uonal, Mid · he was wal.kina: by the olfice when 1he bomb exp,loded. "II nearly hit me, ' Sibo said. ' I 11It ~"' atuff all over the place .' Sabo said he dtd not &ff ODI 1n t.ha a.rtL Tb•Pul.Y 14 •1PIOlio0 bad blown out two 1•11 doora , about thrtl IHI apart, I Into the olftco. The doors ad not been rep~. "Toda '• bomb -tpp.trtntJy alto ade .of black powder taped or thrown to lywood door aet up Iller the ltrst exploolon . SlDCI April' 22, m""l' IUCh exploolom have occurred lo otper ciUff. Pollet thtori&e tbty are tilt work of anti· ~ C1lhao groups lllfl'Y at Mexico tor boldlng the 1918 Olympics with ·Cube parUclpatln&, and at 26 non· Communi1t countries who trade witb Cuba. * * * Grove Pr * * * * * ss Hit by Bomb NEW YORK <UPI) - A ' f Ernesto Che Guevara, the bomb was hurled early to-lain Cuban revolutionary. day through a window of The article and the date of Grove Press, controversial ! he bombing -the an· P11bi11b¥ cl underground , DIYWlllY ct 1111 btllaD!ng JntCl"P" and t r o t l c ol CUtro'1 nvolutlOD iii -· II dam&Cld ·Ibo CUba, lid to lplCUIMlon Ibo oll!CI, but Ibero -. no In· aploaloo -Ille work ol i.-. .. ' -.caotro a-. police GrON ,,.. llUl>llsbes' -... -=-· =' lawlilir' a Nib 11~11 1D New 141rIroa1 . 1'cft, •·AO:: cqo, Lis ,,,. AllUl ldl ........... -. -~ tllo · mlti 1111 A polloo ....... said ..... o( Ibo -llldllll-. bolo la • curtain on the second floor otftces or Grove P~, a "handgrenade type" mJuile m·ay· have been,flred from· a grO!Wlde launcher. The Office of Grove in the live -y brick blllld1o« lo G,...wtch Village waa 1IDed wlth erotic novels the firm •peclalheo In publlablog. 'nlrM Windowt wert blalted out.· Damage. was wldelpread, but not Ml'IOlll . The office& were closed at tht time. Thu. was no elaboraUon on tbt coklDIJ.'1 threata. The U.S. intelligence ship Pueblo wit.Ii .t crew 'of U of· ftcera and men wu 1elnd. Jan. 22 by North Korean potrol bOlll and taken Into the port or Wonaan. All diplomaUc efforts to release the ship and men Kids Like to 'Ask Andv' Think SALE Think ····r=t• -· ALL 54 DIPARTMINTS CLEARANCE SALE ., H'9RRY WHILE LIMIDD STOCKS LAST! •••• •13.79 .... 152.•1 f ll•lk .... 4-U.. Acr.yllc . Men's •2.98 Ladles Callfe:11la .... , •.• Short Sleeve .lailiaica I Ceramics 1 H-...... , Sport Shirts Shorts ............... ·--acrylic fUl, Olearuc. pl1c· J'a1hl0fled to nt Choo" n-om & c plaid n~•l lln· s933 od. eo.... of s211 ..,. tlottv wtlh $237 vaae.!I, flgurinee, ing, dark green atyle1 A print. 111.tUc wattt, 1n a nd no ... elt1 poplin cover " fabric• from oolor• tbS"t shapes. with hood. which to aboo... . -· I ••·•1 v.1 .. 1 ... .. f2.ff ,, .......... , ..... ~ • ., :r.. 10. ...... 1 p ...... Psstli 1el 10 PHcll1 aavo .. , ~·· Bacl<· 37c t.o-sehool 1 . al! 7 ..... C.1111 ..... ... ,. CNw •••• ....... , ..... . _b, ............. s1n liedco. Mod8m dMlp. f•.ff-M IMlo w ............ . l'Uoh w a I n u t ftn19b. $'f'1 UM wt.th or ..SU.out pillows, ........ -.. .... ,. .......... eomrortabto p. t •• , S2't .-.. ID l&•ortt 1 -. .... 1 .. -10 .... 114'' DI ' llMI • .,. Ru~d. all· putpo.99 39 rope at a limittd Ume C . otter! llcW ....... 1111 Decez •ler Plece1 cute wood·llk• plastic 66C animal flrurtneL Your ........ ••• oo y..... au..: Twtlter • • n.. ....,,.,,.. ......... S298 of th• popular &dult l'wtltl:t rame. .......... ...... Co bit• 9 · ~:rt•:= '6." ... '-'• ... ·--. Hudoote, left proof T"10n c oat Of '"' s199 heavy .tML f2A• ..... ,. .... •.••.. \ ..... ... .... ..., • "'I"":! """ S 147 lftl clearallc1. CbOICI of oolOl'L j We•••~~...., Dell , ...... ~ ..... • ........ m lbton .. 4 s100 If.JI .. &t a 10* Tbrlft7 priool ...... ..,,. llyl• ..... '9lbta ........... .: ·"·-.. · s31a er Jackett b o y 1 1l&es. Colon . '''· .... . T ........... Cleck Elepnt •• , ... fOT .., S7" room in your houae. . s:a.•1 v.i-1 Deluxe Gell OleYe eom,,.... ... -.. ,.. 5144 r ol!inf or dri'ltD.r. ' ..... 2:29 .. ., ... ........... .................. s1•• popular e 11 e. Q1fle chromt plated. ............. lltltlc , .... A.ll·pu se pl a1tlc 4tc ta.pa. end. label ev- "'1th"lil • • .... 7-Gali.. ... lnclu e rut.er and tub-$J99 l.ng. omphte 11et for 1.18 De111aler ..w .... Pl ..... e w all decora· 99c wttll MW' INb-. -.. 6tc u~. Buy 2 pair O lpect&ct.ilar •tl· 2 , aac A &ave 70c. R $1.49 AY••••• .. ... .. Tri •len ll'h oz. r1a11e• in ftc lloney gold or avocado rreen. Boxed Set ot 12. f:t.•1 v.1 .. 1 ....... 7 Pl.. ..... _, .... Include11 80 oz. pltchW s244 nd 8lx 18 OL tumblen. and 11.x 180L twnblcL f:t.•1 .. 11 ........ w...... c.p.11 Fash.l.onable fitted e&• s298 prt1 tn brtfbt l!umm• oolon. •••••'• ....... . .... ... 1 .. , .... ,, °"""" -,....,. s247 with ... .,. ,.. ..... fo~W. aleep-• ... Ne•••• H_,. ............... Head mo•• 1 when 66C coilal u. put tilt fl.•I v.i.1...,...,. ............. Ma.kee bubble rum 111 66C Ju.et • minute& Com· p11tee wttb nwre .. fl.GO .... el e1r ............... :;-e~~~3 ... s1 " .. ... ... 69t ....... , .~ $1 .Y ..... ..,,.. ... Gloves . N•tloflaTiy fa. 2Jc moua B.J'. Qood.. rich quallf.7. . Tolletrlea ..... ,... ltAe t.=L~:·.t·=. 6.7- • I! '-------''.-..------------~---~~=--___..!. ~ .. ~ __..__,, ... .J'_. ..:io _.~ ~ _J-.-.. -· -------~~~-~· ~---~---------··-'----------------\ QUEENlli ' 1y Phn 1nttr1c.nc11 Wed or Else ... Judge Orders Speedy Rite SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A Ceder-al judge leveled a legal shotgun at Richard· M. Lamborne Thursday, order· ing him to get married "with all deliberate speed" -Ol' else. U.S. Dist. J ude;e William T. Sweigert made a quick mmiage one of the con- ditions of Lamborne's two. year probation after the 24· year-old man pleaded guilty to stealing a former girlfriend's jewelry. While the judge pondered his 1entence, Lamborne said he intended to wed his cur· rent flrlCrl&Dd -tour ~. pre..,..t -In l!epltlllbar, Whoo frtlllds "could come from the Ea.st for the wtdding." The cou- ple lives at Caimel Valley near Monterey. "You'd better get marrjed now and hold the celebration later," said Sweigert, who made marriage "with all deliberate speed" one of the conditions o ( probation. Other• were retaining his job with a fumiture moving firm, not using marijuana or other drugs, and staying away from dope users. Who Killed Gun Bills? Issue Triggers Dispute SACRAMENTO (AP) - A proposed November ballot test on gun regi.strati<J.n '~ before the f u 11 Assembly today amid bitter partisan dispute over who killed firearms c o n t t o I legi&lallon l!lis yeor. Rtpu:blicans muat take full blame if the ballot pro- posal fails to pa11 the Ass~ly. Speaker J t 1H M. Unruh, (0-lng!ewood), .. id. Sbould u.t 110pflen, he promised to carry tne gun control issue "to every pl-ace a Democrat is running against a Republican . this year" and try to defeat the Republican. Unruh Nllied all but ooe of his Democrats present Thursday evening to win pa1sage, 40-33, of amendments rewriting an obscure Senate bill to put the gun issue to a vote of the people in the gell(!ral elec- ti·on Nov. 5. Solidly united, Republicans battled t he ballot proposal a.s an ab· dication of 1 e gi s la ti v e responsibillty. Republican Assemblyman Pete Wilson of San Diego challenged Unruh to bring th~ gun cont.NI bill itself to a vote now rather than 1eek guidance from the people. But the speaker acknowledged to reporters he WMQ't 8ble to keep .U 42 Democrats united because Several from rW"al areas beUevedo they could not vote for tougher gun controll Jn thiS electioo year. rortJ-ooe votes ore needed for llnal passage. I\ ' Plants and Flowers FOR THI llG PIUDAY & SATURDAY ''_A/o~a ;})a'l6 " SIDEWALK SALE ·· .. WISTCUllP PLAZA' · · PlllNllHll IY ' . . . GUIN HAVIN tiARDEN CENTiR COSTA MESA --~--------------- Will Reagan Sig•? Legislature Okays Open Primaries . SACRAMENTO CAP) - Lef!lll UOO wlllt to Gov. lleapa'• 4 .. k todt)' to put on the preo-.U primary . bollol -l'l<l..,i.od na-Uonally .. a candldato - whether ht'a dtc1artd CID· dldlC)'. « not. I ......... -.. ___. ....................... _ .... .,. .... "'!"" • Police Plot Newton's Defense? I See by Today's Wan! Ads ~LY Pll.GT 7 Jo int. Trial Set on Murder Counts ' .. LOS ANGl!:LES '<AP> -I !or tile aettillg of a trial innoc<nl. They have been bold witllout boil liDce tlMlr arr•n wt May 1. Paul Sanu•I Perveltr and d a t e. The action c a m e Kriltina Ciunwtll . mJ1 1 t '11bursday .nor J u d 1 e atand utal toptber on Jtme1 D. T-dMlled charges Ibey ,m u r 4 e r t d def-motf4111 to _,. their nll!W tor· tile Jn. =~ and for -·'" surance. Perveler, 31, a t<>nner Los .. ~y ~ twdertd,to ~ Anfl•I•• poµccn•n, • nd pear Jn Superior OOurt Aug. Mrs. ~wen, 27, pleaded Both art cborpd wllb murder. Puveler abo - a charge Of attemptal murder. Judge Ta at• dllml11ed a cbarao of .,..m thflt •..Wt Pervolor. iiiii~jiiiiiiiiiiiiii 01 MAIL OID£R . GNLY .... 0.:-:T• .,7,·E 17th Si. COSTA MESA DISCOUNT COLOR FILM PROCESSING LOWIR PRICU TllAN ANY .. LM CLUlf WI DO OUR OWN KODACOLOR PROCUSINll ANY 1Z IXPOSUU KODACOLOR 2'° DMLOHD AND PllNTID JV11JV2 ................. . ANY ZO IXPOSUH INSTAMATIC 349 DMLOPID AND Pl!NTID JV11JV1 ................... . :~iA':C!~~. a: .. n~~~· ...... , .......................... 4•0 . I MM .AND IUPH t ' 129 KODACHROMI ............ RICO. 2.10 ................. - 35 MM ao IXPOSURI I It KODACNROMI ot lllTACHROME .... •tt· 2.10 35 MM 36 IXPOSURI 22' KODACHIOMI or lllTACHROMI .... Rtt• J.40 (Add 5 .,,. Tax and 15c Po1tag1 For Mall ) DAVE'S CAMERA EXCHANGE SPECIALIZIN6 IN ONE DAY COLOR SERVICE 474 E. 17th., COSTA MESA Ph •. 646-2136 NIGHT •nd DAY SERVICE 9:30 A.M. TO 91~ P.M......Sl.Tl.\RDAY 10 A.M. TO• l'.M. . . WE'LL. ~ADOCGE DISAPPEAR IN I O'VOUFt QARASEI -•• 11 • t ' BEACH CITY , DODGE 16555 IEACH ILYD. <HWY. 39) HUNTINGTON BEACH 847°9631 • HARBOR DODGE 2150 HARIOR .LYO. COSTA MESA 54'~ \ . ~ ' f l f I • r t .. . . . 8 DAILY PILOT F""1, July U, 1968 Counti.an Sente,nced Orange Newspaper·~·~· iiiiiHAiiiiivE~A·iiiiiPUN~~~~~~ PILLID In Nailing of Girl Ends Publication vAcAT10N The Orange Newt:: Born 1887. Died 1968. '11t'I Llld thing." STAllT AT • From Wlre StrvlHI TITUSVILLE, 1'1a -An Orange County man Thurs- day was sentenced to one year in prisoo for taking part in nailing a teen-age girl to a tree ln tbe ritual punishment O{ a motorcycle club. A Titusville court gave one-year terms to J oe "Super Squirrel" Sorsby Jr., Cypress, In west Orange County, and to Frank "Fat Frank" Link Jr. of Houston. The man who admitted driving the nails through her hands. James "'Spider" Ow~ ings of Port Arthur, Tei., For The Record Meetings · IATUIDAY Chrhtl1n 11111~·1 Cornl!ltltM, 8tlbol a1y Clllb. HtWPOtf 8 .. ch, 7:JG 1.m. Fire Calls ...... ..., t :D •.m. trw,....,, tl«lr1C. 11-.. "°'' ltarflrlthl 4:" 1.m. FrllllY, ti-HN, 1a.D l1 ... f'-"lfl V1"'1 tO:JI t.m. Thundty, •-· lroak· hunt 1nd El~ .......... •Md! ID:..0 1.m. Thurldly, tll'\IClt.lrl 11 ... 1U7S l!lffth Blvd. u,n 1.m.. 11,. Jnv11111e11on. 1•m Hf'l"l!wff _ . 12~·i;;;.,:.~~ 11,., Yo1111Gwn tnd 11:• ... m .. 11K1r1<11 tint, •1111111111 i nd -. IJ:JI 1.m., "*'lcal 1icl, Jl11 fl'lrien l :ll """" .. trllll flrw. Main ,,,... -~·-''" p.m., .....-C.I 1141. 1tlll Wlf'CI SI. J::ll P-"' .. 1n• fin, 9Cllu 11'1 Shtolr 7:02 '"""' fr\dey, nKUt. .,.. Hell ·---10:11 •.m. Ttwndty, TV flrc, ..W fllelhill R0141 --11:1111 "·'"-n.rtdly, ..... 1llrm. Ht--' lfllll Wlllon l!::D "·"'·• 11,. im.11MfM1,. "" 'rl .. lows'-DrJ-.. l :ts 11.m •• f1l11 1Llrm, '"""'"" •1111 f lllltrlon 11 .......... Pilot Visitor• '°F'~-wr:~=.,.:i 'tR: :~ r:. 1.tst' tWtt0= ~ riJ"' ... r.:,.,&,~' cr.111lcrr: sobbed when he wu sen· tenced to four years in · prison. Tbe victim, Christine Deese, did not cry when she was administered t h e punishment because, she told the court, "U I was to scream or holler o r anything, he was going to bash my face in wi.th 1 ham- mer." One d e re n s e att.omey, Richard Hanes, spoke up for the four when Court Of Record Judge Cecil Rosier asked for &n expl.amtion oi what had happened. He said the haod·naillng began as "a har.ing sort of 111ing for the -benefit el Donald Graves." "Gt"aves thought t b 11 9 on Coast On Campus Afloat Nine ,atu~nts from ~e Orange Coast area hive been OCCO!*d for the loll ---the World Cam PlU Alloot.Q,apuloDI Cologe. · The -will loin lflO other college _ _. ,,_ throughol& the United State. 1n New York Oct. 9 and will board 111e·s.s. RYl!d•m Oct. 10 to begin tile llo.day otudy V(!:y,.ge to J>9rts in South America, A ·1 r 1 c 1 and Europe. The young voya1er1 from Costa Mela are SUZ\111!1 Huaband, Kennetll Lima and · CJ:iarles Sweet; from. Newport B e a c h Marilyn Greeg; R o n a J d Sharp and Scott Acevedo; and from HulEl!gton Beacli Douglao · Deon, Karen Gill and RoDlld Dohmeyer. Sludenla carry a regular seIMSter'1 UDttl on the 1hfp- --drawing from a llb!fai arts curriculum paralled to that ottered on most land-baaed campuses. capo Rail Station To Oose BEAT SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO B 'NOTICES . -The Oalilomia Public AGUIRRE Utilities Commission has M .. ·tl•I lo. ,t..1111rrt. Ate '" Df 7171 granted the , Santa F e G1rlltld, Hunllntlcn fleadt. Otr. ti railroad. th 'I •-llf1tto, J111.,. ,,_ svrvlwd by wlft, au or1 Y w discon- Ju1n1: 11• iont. Ptttr, Ale~, J11!lo, tinue its agency service Rt1Ph, O.vld ind "'-rHJtL: 111 d1111t.-here b t d ed ten, Aurott Roatte1, Sttllt Ftllff, • U Of er t h e E••1>er Jurado. Linda M•~..-. Rosie railroad to make scheduled R1ml1111 tnd Vert f111,1mel1ltr. Rowrv, ri ..... 5 for pick-Up • n d !°"Ith!, Frldt,, 1 P.M., 5.mltlll CM-"'""!' Ht lle<111lem M.ln, 111vr.s...,., 1 A.M~ discharge of passengers. ss srmot1 a. JUOe c1111oi1c Cl!u•dl. At present, only south· ln!Hmenl, H~y ~Kher Cemetery, °'"'""· oirectecl' by s ... 1111s Mortu.rv. bound trains stop t o GRAHA1t1 discharge pas sen g er 1 . c.-e. w. Gr1h1m. u~1 ,_,.,. Li ne, Northbound Ir": ... nick up GerOen Gr°". Survlwcl bv Pl"'111, ~ ;r• Mr. 11111 Mrs. c11rt<1e1 Griol'!•mi 1>rot1>-b u t do not d i s c h 1 r g e 1rs, Btrtnim C., L1wrtroct C. t rod J1mn H. Gr1h1m1 1l1ttr, Lvnd• Gr•-passengers. r.1••11 1r11'd1>1ffnt1, Mr. Ind Mrs. The COJnmisSion &aid the Jahn LOQ1 n. St•v1ce1, Mond1v. 1 P.M., only differe"'e 1.n the handl· ""~ F1m11v co1onr11 F11ner11 Home. '"'" YELLE ing of carJoad freight when Am111<11 "· v111e. :m 1,.., st.. Hun!· the agency is discontinued ln1ton 8ffch. SurvlYR by d1ugh!tr, will be that req•-ts for H•"" G1d<ll11 1J1rer, Ml111 Browni >n><> n1K01, Mrs. J ul!u1 £. G_., Rowrv. service will have to be made sund1y, 7:JG P.M. Re11U1..ro Ml». at Val~•· or Oce·~de, A Mond1y, f A.M., b«tt 11 SS Simon .. ~...... ......, J u d • c1tholk ctiurd'I, HuM1n11r°" toll-free telephone number Beldl. Dlff(ltd bv Pftk F1m11v c~ c.. lonlt l Fulll!rtl Horne. 'vr such calls JS tO be made PEASE available. S1e~n T. Pe1u . n 1s1 Edwiirds s1.. The r''lr d I Wn!mln1ler. $urvlY"" by plrtn!<. Mr. ..., 08 may C OSe ~"" Mra. 51!•-er w. Pe•"' 1111er. the. agency upan 10 days Tl!!n! PNw: 1r1nou1ren!I • .l.rlflur 1nO notice tO the COmm\'Ss\'On L!Klllt Pe11e, J"'' H1ncoc-'"" 8eul11'! Gr~~-Sfrwlcn wll! be Mid and the public. In L09an, U!tl't. Loctl 1rr1n9tme<1'1 ---;-;,;;70:;:.==o-- bv PHii F1mlll" ColO!tll l FUMfl l LEGAL NOTICE Home. SANDIDGE ----.,...,....:..,..:..;;;:,:=... __ Jollft 51nd!~. 1717 Ml<ltria, L-SUPllUOR COUlllT Ofl T"I G.,,..., C.111. Servkn "1111!,,., WtJI· IT.I.Tl OP t.lLlflOIUllA cliff Olt111tl Mortvllry, ~. fle>a T"I COUNTY Ofl OltANel -===========::. " ......... ,. 1• lllOTICI Ctfl Hl.1.11111119 Ofl PITITIOM BALTZ MORTUARIES Col'Olll del l\lar OR J-9450 Costa Ttteu Ml 8-!U-t BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadwa y, Costa. titesa . LI 8-3433 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e l\lortuary Cbapel IMI Pacific View Drive Newpotl Beadi, Calllornil Mf.r7• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL n/NERAL ROME 7811 Be1u Ave . . w-•r ~%5 SMITll'S MORTUARY fflllalll SL -....m.:e- WEllTCLD"I" MOll111Allf , f/!I B. 1'/111 SL, Ooola -.. 1•1 ' I n:miumt.a MEllOlllAL PAii& ~·Oewww....,. O..pelo 1•-.w-•• llJ,1,. e •NII flOll P•o•.a.te 0, WILL AlllD ,OR Lt:nl!llS Tl!STAMllllTARY Elltte of ,tourn.., A. T1y)or, l>Kened. NOTICE 15 HEAEev GIVEN TMI Vlrelnl• Fti':IM 1111 fl!M htrel11 1 11eo !itfotl 10< l'robtte OI Wiii tnd for h tu· 1nct or Lt ttfrl Te1!1m.11t1rv to !ht P• llllortfr, rtfttetKt I& whlCll 11 rntOt lcf furtller 11rtlcultn. 1nd 1'1111 !ht tlflll 1nd PllCt OI l'lffrl ... !ht l l!nt ll1t bftn sf! tor Aue. t, I .... 11 t:JG 1.rn .• I" !ht courtroom Oii 0-rttnent No, 1 OI nld court, 11 1111 N. erwc1w1y, In fht City of llnlt -'111, C11llorttl1. Dt i1!'Cf July 25, 1 .... W. E. lT JOHN Countv Cltrll Wt,...., Slk.,1 '"'" 1113 S.C..lt>r .......... hi M. Mtl11 It. 111111 ...._ C111f .. ft1tl fltl, (7141 ...,..fl.., .l."""-1 ... .....,...., l'ubllf/led °"-C-1 Ot11Y PllOI, J1,1ly ,., 27 11111 ~ t. "'' l»MI Think SALE Think Jt41n tnhA """"'/'' 11111 ........ ,. were trying' to scare hlm and did.D't think they were going t!)roulb with the naU· lng.'' Hanes 1ald. "Theo Rlslngor (Owings) went ahead and nailed Miss Deese to the tree because she did not tell them to stop." Miss . DeeH, 19, was in court when the sentences ·Wallace At Anaheim After 8J years of con- tiWoua pubUcation under · four diffeNnt publishers, the Orange New1 will aus- " pend p u bl l c a tJon Wf:d· nesday, present publisher R. C. Holles, president of Freedom Newspapers, Inc ., announced. The more recent history ot the Or. News began wJth 1he purCMse of the paper in the ,.;ly 1900 's by publishen W. 0. Hart and Justus 1Q'aemer. "In ~-early yeero, this paper ...,-very substantial a n d inlluem.tial Hart 1 n d Craemri were the best kn<rwn J!il!lilhers in Orange County/ Dunlap said. PLAYBOY HAIR STYLIST$ THEN JOIN THE FUN DURING THE ALOHA DAYS SIDEWALK SALE WESTCLIFF PLAZA FRIDAY AND SATURDAY • ., wue handed down. In a ANAHEIM -F o r m e r depoliti.on filed before the Alabama Gov. George trial Ml.11 Oeeae said under _ .. Wallace will address a $25-a· oath 'that lbe had been a plate fund-nlising dinner at pro1tltute and -was beui• the A n a he l m convention puniabed by ber "old man,n enl<r Aug. 4. The Newa, which had been pubUshlng daily f o r 51 years, dropped to weelt:Jy publlcat:iul a year ago. The paper had moved its prin- 1ing operaUons to the plant of another Hoilea paper, '111.e La Bru Star, also in an economy move. "The physical building ot the News has been a landmark on the southwest corner ot the orange Square for most ol thole years," said Sky Dunlap, Orange County newspaper historian. FoJkiiiing the death Of Hart d(ling Workl War II as he ··'1 nying to his. 100'1 ·funer~ Ille Hart family cootlnuOd publicotion • the Craemirs left to ntlDl&t tile ~ they owned In San Ref~~-W8' IOI~ to the'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ :i~wfP!:'li! :~ For Top Sports Coverage owtnp, for not keeping a A 1 p o k e 1 m a n for $10 date be had UTIDCed for W a 11 a c e ' s A in erican her. She N!d lo the 1wom Independent Party said the statement she did n o t speecb w..ould. be a "major scream or cry or realst. policy end ilsue address." eventura e Oxnard---.....__ LOS ANGELES INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT (bl wwwy haw iust The only fast way .21.!l of Southern California starts at LA International Airport. And the fastest way into LA International-from almost anywhere in Southern Californ ia -is Golden West Airlines . You save time. An extra hour or so to work , to play, or just stay in bed . Make your reservation at a nearby local airport. We'll put you aboard a new, 19·passenger, twin-engine prop jet specifically designed for air commuting. Then, in minutes, you're qui~kly, quietly and comfort· ably on your way, over the traffic and smog, right into LA Inter- national. Regularly scheduled service is available right now from Brackett Field and ·-- • to V Pinkley as a pirt ol h& Coachella v a 111 Y Look to The Daily Pilot p Co. ./ • •• IS • Santa Ana ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT p: • San Bernardino Palm Sprincs PALOMAR AIRPORT •Oceanside • San Diego en acl1 a hows sleep.) Palomar, Redlands, and Orange County Airports. Other routes will be in service soon . Give us a try. Find out that the easiest way to get to the airport is in an airplane. RESERVATIONS & INFORMATION Los Angeles ••.•••. (213) 646·3980 Palomar •••••••••. (714) 729·5933 Pomona .••••••••• (714) 593·2584 Redlands •.••••••. (714) 794-1131 San Bernardino .•... (714) 889·9965 Santa Ana ......... (714) 540-7010 For informat ion on other routes, call (213) 776·5470. • -,--- bother 'Flrllt' Negro to Gavel GOP to ·Order lll1/i.MI BEACH (Al') - Abe LlncolD, tbe RopubUcan in-wqo frtad tbt &laves, 'likely never drelm· ed Ille day would • ..,.. -• Neer• would .... 1 the Republ.lcan · Natloolll Coavealioolo-r. sen. Edward w 1111 • m Broke, 48, will be tho flrlt Nerro ovor lo...,. M !em· porary -ol a GOP convention. Br-·· political Hit bu been a .uccttaloa' o f A daft -ID4 llitDd to· Goo. Nthon A. Rocbltller, Broollo olandl In tbe front -ol Ult .GOP-wlaf. Ulllti.e ..... N t Ir o membm of Coftcrol• - aucll M ouoled lltp. Adam ~Powell -Brooke has tiw1y1 ~ 1111 race .. lncldenlal lo hlo olllce. Htlaa--bap- pm1 to be a Nten>. . Some more militant Necr-1 have called him an "Uocle Tom" but bl feell .. -,ridoJ,.MJ 26, 1968 -DM.V -f *********************** • • FOR The NEW MOD EU ARE HEH! SAW PHOflE "6-"81 FOi IRYla PHONE 673-5477 "th'lta." Mau~·elected hlnl ... _,,.y ...,..a1 In 19G -tile tint Netr'> In the otllce. Four year1 lllor, ltl 118 pescent -.... ---to--· tile lint Negro -- ~ ~~ IJly Where Service Makes It A Better I~! ~"li:'.rJ 1714 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA ..:-.,..~~daome ********************** -· 11a .. cenle<td on the war In ' Ambulance Inspection 0.-dered V~. He has ewllcbed ~-from elem to bawl< and bocl: to dove. "" odo!lled • ...«yled -Of rovlne pHCO &Ill· -durini 1111 !Int -In tbe Senatt , lnvellnl lo -..... lries dooplto bGli>e' ·-crlllclam that lie ~to be in Wotlllnlton ""'"""' tlte ""'"' SACRAMENT(! -/i.11 E.W.: ""1'lll>Ollnc qalnst prlvawJy owned ambuliu<:ea --....__ In California mlllt be ~~~of lllspected at Jeost ' twice • ... --T _ .. ,. of the Esotic year, in Jun. and -r. Edward M. K .. - ........ December Ullder • -noel;<. -boo -ltd sue Au sun, -one -oi' seven hula -Honeys at Westcliff Plua-Frfday and .salwilily-. ··e n fii"rceriieii\ -,,,..;;;i!Ure, ~-:'·•~=-al ol-~e: who will be pinning free orchids on adults, gets into the swmg of things with according to H. VI. SUDiwn, acene. a lei for Dick Vernon president of the Westcliff Plaza Merchants Association. ~ione~ol Callfamia m. cceer ii fer from The plaza bas been cOnverted for ~e annual side~alk sale ~ummer .c~earance "J.l.6Mway Pa · ever. ShouJd be wat It. be on today and Saturday, into a tropical paradise with the addition .of .tiki1, grus '!be new procedure, wlllch und..-Jy .coUd bavo a huts live orchids and volcanos. · won! Into effect lut mnlh, ml,jor ..-: •poet In a • affects approximaWJy 800 Repul>ll<u 4dminlllraUon ambulaDce• operalinc undor -« eome.d19' ~. tile autbcdzed. em er 1•Dc1 vice prwldeati81 nOmlna· California Legislature in Action ~.:""~~~ l:'":..!7.,.t1oo;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.1 anooal inspectloftl Wt r I 11 m•de mandatory, Crossword Puzzle At~O!S l S. African 1.-iguage 5 Power 10 Fer111enltd drink 14 Un lt of area IS The God: Islam 16 Pin ort wh ich Whttl rtvOIVtl 17 lllserly .~rson: 2 watds l'f En!, unit of ength 20 Household utensil Zl Room 22 Th"e1ter award 23 Serves as a means 25 Po1t10 contractlptt 2• lf1chfne p•rt 'O Grain 31 Pl11e1d opposite on• another 34 Another , ... 36 lfounh:ln system 38 Rocky pe1k 3'1 Cities of En;hw1dl On tat lo 41 e;e1the 43 Footblll ''"" 44 Rial t1lltl contt1c:t ................ ..,.,. .. • " 46 Eattn aw1y 47 Be1t . 4'1 Plumbing Item 51 Unusual person: • Infor mal 52 Anc ient Roman god 53 Title of respect 55 Thick nondescript mass ,, Mountain Pass 58 Spread by · rumor 63 U.S. Inventor . 64 Member~~~ lll:obln HllOll·S band 66 Along the ltnglh of 67 Unit of volume . 68 Noun ending 69 Persom el: Abbr. 70 Trl11111ed 71 That hn becon oll DOWN 1 Sensitive tnuc:h t Pain 3.s. .... kltl extent. 4 Vault· 5 0"tttcOIH 6 Sort 7 P'ltase anetes~ 9 rh>I· moment 10 P1sty coatinf mater ial 11 Wattd's fair 12 Man's name 13 Qeclart untrue 18 Metal receplacl• 24 Lake In Africa 25 Otml -26 Blan,hed -27 Without IR)'-thlng tls1 28 Plant of gen us Ane111one 2'1 Young chap 31 Charge 32 Relating to part of EutoP! 33 11 lss Garson 35 UUliZlnJ! the SUA I ht at 7/26/68 37 Anticipatory ; terror I 40 Ten11!1 · cour~ . feature 42 In favor 45 Stcretary'I acctssory 48 Trenchtrnf'en 50 Crlt,lclztd 53 British Island 54 ~1.'3·"- ~ g;:1.1~- S1 Pant slt0fl91Y 59 lmprtsslOft 60 Gave evld!nce '!1Jn5l: S ang 61 In an addltlonal "'""' 62 Legal doOUlllll'lt 65 U111t of atll " ' • / -· --lnspeoted sioll'ltnlt11I of "* Orr.c:ttr fll "Pvllllc o·'• ....._ to •·a1W1-oi -· H"ltll "111erdl•n or OilfWtl'V._ llf • u.y !'-'..,. ia ..... MR: mt1111llV Nttrdtd ~ Jiii • ..... narmit 111111111111 s• 11.,, !Jl.lrtlMf', R-IM r•• -• 01::e_ -ltr.'IMI '"" --c.antornia Highway Patrol .oltdt!ft ._1rlou1 *"'-91 ..... ltw pereonnel check I & f I t y clef1nlnt Wtlo I"' _. tlfflCWt ... ..-.W..-t -~ ovtu,... tM1r "°"""'' •1'11111 otuti.11 sa ......_~.,:o.uen , emergency e&N 1171. Sfwlrll, 11.U. "-llL first afd I q U 1 p ID. I D t, l"IJltl -Inc,_.. tt. """'ber d ambulance tecordl aD d Mr ,11011 tor kn Fl'llntlKo, S.n l"1bllt 1nd Sul-hl't wtlO IMJ' bf llc-nMI peraonneJ. ~Ofdl. bV ... Stiff to.rd d l"llot ~ -==========:;; mlukMMr11 sa tna. MOK:Ont. O....n r Fr.nc:!-. . w .... -. -"-'""" ..__ "' "' BRIGHT ~~1}i"11C:. ~~"1~ 111• DAILY PILOT fileht .. H•wftlortlll .., .<-;. newt ""''I' IJt~ ......... Pl~ 1':,lres In -'lic.nt ,.._JdlW.' ..... YMf !r.ol!Mte , :,:on .tra. n,.t ~~:J · ,, _.., Mitt•• tlalfy ,_. 1111.,. tit. tl'IWll '"'. ,,.. ..,. tltl1111 ,,. -pllclttOfll ,,. 1~ Motcene. ~ ...: Atk!W. flotlUI ,... for ..irce Mio ltvt In trM wlMl"I tflW -1!:1 Al 1'11, Mllltf, D·llefktlfV. 1111~ Nllllllutltll -lllCI'-frOll'I H 1111 .., the mlnlriwm ""'"...,.. of ai,Mtvl'M ,.._urrft on '*'"'"'t1on' .._.. tot un- dloH!ft tor .-..Mmbl'V or II_.. Stfwl .. I SB W. Miiis, [)..S.11 D~ TH• llfllAT• Think SALE Think THIS umE PIG WINT TO CM<UR'llll In ,__.., Ao: 1 •n• ... ,t111'1111'Y -• ..,,... •ltdlen - cedurn to ""' on "11Ml'Y WUot -of tl1 Mft-llY ncoll'llMd ~llllllllilml sa us, At.ulit. It...... -.... "" nellflb:lrtlood councils lo adYIH ~--t -cl" on ~ l"Ol«tf. ""4/lm .,_ ... lo contmxt OI' r.tlUlld ... 11-.d ,.,.,...... ,._,.,. llousl"I .....,,. " ~ICIPmtftt "roltct1 -1:1 1ltnlllunfl'V ndval 1111mller tf IVdl MARKET BASKET FOR. LUAU SUPPLIES '"'" '" ·~· " ,,,, -''.Ato/ia :J)a'/6 " ·~ -11:..:lnllfl• -""" minor fTefflc ~ " "lllfl'Ktl9nl," b9n1 lury lrl1t1, 1•11 IMt.Mft 111d t ~!i'~:~~~r:nc:-r.:: ~~ SIDEWALK ..... T.....wt -Atlowl Loa ......... C-..., volt on lncn11tnw -~ .... Ml! .a b'I -l\ttf Oftt to tlMllCe rat1Jd ff~ ~1on1 AB 101, u~ !M.11 >-SALE Oii -,rovldH flllil! of UP '8 ..... Ind PIYIM'nl for CIPl\I .. dl9M1" fOr .,.,._ Who l11twntlont Ill' or -"""'1Y •llowi olt to flow Into •kfll w1ttri1 Al 1167, H..,", ··~Inell. lttltl'Nll -M9Msl II crlmt fOr 11rwn to rlft'ltll\ wttf'lout """I"'°" on r1Urotd 11rOHl'fY If ll'tltnCt -.old lllnftl' ufe -••lion of lr1ln1 prov!Oh ••tmPllon fol' ltw!u1 oltkltll'ltl 111 ltbot dllll'Uftl Al 110\, Blcldlt, R·IUYtrSlde. ~,. " ' WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17'11 I l•YINI TONITI & SATURDAY STEREO SlaNS.TION! l •• • Tiie Oolttµhif••i allot _.l-.. •.• , •• , ~,.21, ...... . .. ,., RADIO" KOCM 103.1 FM From. Fashion l!!Jland. Newport Beach SEEIT BEST! Enjoy either of these magnificent BIG SCREEN tfUtl!et CONSOLES Cw1 ;1 _, ------·--'" ·Now,oa ca on amaaiftowt MqD&'tOX with 1lrilllanl Color 226 oq. In. Ills a... ...... Piela:OI plua all the /a.rtU,g ~!bat only Ma,oavox briala,,;... Eoduaho ClitomaloM adda depth Ol!d .,4i1w•ioa; Qllic:t-On Jell pk:tma flu& Jl!He.ia Jmt -= telnooplq dipoto .•• • Come f:a. todaJ-Mlectfrcm OTDr 4$,w_.,ColorTV-ia a wido wrloty olalhentic!lno Cumilure ot,lm. Caltnlal IWOdtf6304 ********************** 1~·coLORPORTABLE lilt.sot Ptrlormanca and rallablllty-117 Ill· in. ""-ill 15 oq, in.-BIGGBR than molt Olber c:olor portabletl You'll thrill to its britlian~ natural p!Ctum. Model 8lilO, widt te!01COplng dipolo ant.mia, ii the petfcr.t extra ICL Mow it from room-- to.room on. con.vcmicnt, optional cari; aloo ldoal for talllOI and ..... _ ********************** * ............. v .. u.. .. ....,.y .. ..,.:Aa,,.._ ......... * * 2·YEAR • •• )'OYr M._naYOXGoldSMI PlctunTubeW1f1'&ntyi1Yllkl tor.~ *PICTURE TUBE :~=!;::"!~..!:=~1:,.-.=::.,~ * GllADAU'l'rr In any MW MMce at•' )'OU"Yt moved tol In-home ~ ,._ * * Uftl\NU .... qvlrod lo --(cony.In -.., fllOdtl 6000....., .0 ---..·~-. * ********************** JUST RELEASED -SPECIAL FACTORY PRICE ON MANY MODELS ................................ ___ •..•..............•.• ~ • """w,.... . . ~ . i I I ' I i CLIP THIS COUPON i : BRING TO WARREN MAGNAVOX : : RECEIVE A GIFT FROM : : A SELECTION OF 20 BEAUTIFUL Z ! GIFT ITEMS, NO OBLIGATION I ~ 171'" llWPOIT JlVD., COs_Jl MESA I ............... ~··············~---------·-.--~····~ .............. )/.. ..... ~ ........... : !'r t \ I I .. ' .J• . ~n. 'JlQT LEGAL NOTICE suN•IOfl COUll:1' ... TM• l'TAt• 6' CALl..0.IUA '°" TMI COl.INT't' o ........... OM ......,. •tMll, SUMM<*I .._.NIC\.IN 0 -HAU.. ""l11fftt Vt. D()HM4 Iii:, HA.lL. ~Ill ,IOf'LI .. lMI SJATI .. CAllflOIUHA .. ,.. .......... ..._ -· Yw -_... di~ to fli. • -1,_ ""'''""'"'"'~ ...... -i.111t ti 91t ....... Nl'l*i •l•'"tlfl wlttl 11\s c:ltl't .............. ", .... <"OVrt \fl ttle ..... -"'""' Htloll ......... _..., - Ill Mlcl (Olll'f wlthlll llN 4fn ...... ""' tM""Wla: "" -., """ --. " ........ •111\1'1 ...... ,..,,,,., COlll\f'ft .... •ltfllfl TMUtTY •n If Ml'Vtld ·~· "'°"' -,,.,..,., ..... flH tMil """"" """' M fllll I -"""" ~W tllolod!fltl, Wlcl ti.lllltlt Wltl llb ,~_. .... Mlf - ,, ... de!nu. O.IMl'lleof 1'i .... -tlllftl ff •rltlft9 .,_ c:orotrtd, 0t wlll .... 'I' fo ttM c:eu" lor •llV Cllt>tr relllrl' ....,,.""'" In thor -"111•!"'· YW MeY .... tlle l4Ylft 91' ... •ti.,....., -..., .... 11w -'" •"" """ -tlllllf • fllh -Sidi ,._., ......... W ---."611 tM fl-IMll ....... Ith -.. Ill• • """"' ............ _......,. Dtt.cll Julw 14. 19'1. (SUI.I W. I. IT ~OHH, C11111 ew W•lt« I!. e urt• 0-t'I' Cltrt. CM•ISTOf'Hll HALL "" w-.elff Dr. s.ii. ,.. ~ .--. C.llf. nwt T~: {114) ... ,_.J'U ~ .... , ..... ,IH ll!'\itli ...... er.,.. '6111 0.11¥ Pllol. Ju- lw ?' llr.d .W,U.I 2. t , Ii. IH41 1"'"61 U:GAL NOTICE ·-CIJtTll"tCATI 0' •UllHESS. ''CT"IOUS .. lllM MAM~ ni. """°"'''-'*' clo htrftlw cert!tV "'91 "-Y •re ainOudllW 1 Commercl1l i nd l,.._trl1I RMI Etl•" ~la9mfn1 llittlMM " c~ ... ~ at :Mn VII Lim. JI._.. ... di, C1Ulomt•. undef" tM lie.· ""°""firm Ml'M el COAST IMOUSTll:l4L PflO.-ERTIES t/111 !NI stld firm Is_,... DOJllll "' ""' kllloWt"' pe.._,._ wholt MIMI 111 fl.Ill -tll<:ft fll ~ tre •i fOlto-, lo-wit: -WILLIAM C. MlltAMS. lt~t Vl1t1 C1\ldlll, MtwPOl'I 8Hch, C..lltoml1: •• P'•GE NOLL JR .. ms Orrlnllkln Rd., • ·c-.. ctel /Mr, C1lltor"l•1 SHERMAN A, SMITH, UGI £11111'1 Pllc1. N~ hotdl. (a11f'llmll, 011'td J..-!I, lNI. WUll•"' C. MlrttM ,..,.. Noll, Jr. $hlf'mafl A. SIPll'" STATE OF CALIFOIUUA, COUNTY OI" LOii ANGELES, a . Oii JUM JI, lNI, btfonl """· 1 Natl,., Pi*lk r" 11111 for uld CDUlllY •lid st1i.. Hn!>nill'I' •-ntd Wll111m c , Mlr1mt. .,._ Nol~ Jr, ind Slllrm1n A. Smllfl ":..... fi:o ~ fi:o be ..... ""°'"' """""' -•l"I 1Ubs(rlbtd fi:o tM Wlfl'll" I,,_ s'"""'1!1f, Md adlllDW...,.... 1111 me thll •fl'IW ll!KVttd tht Ml'M. Wltfttu mr "-NI •NI -·· '(Of'FICIAL SEAL) ' S."""'I A.. GrMtlburt1 Kot1rr .. llbHc<iltlon'lll Pl"lnc1.,.1 Of'flce 111 Loi AnHln COl/llt'I' ·5. A. G,.....,. ·-ltl~ .... V1lltr •Hf • ......... Cl ........ Publtlol'led Or•-CM1f 0111Y Piiot, J• II' 2f Mid ........... , I, '· 16, ,,.. 12'7-41 LEGAL NOTICE • Y~r Molaefl'.s Wo.rt11 . Many Now Saved • ' • -~ --... .. . -. . --...._ . ...._ . ~ , OVER _T.HE COUNTER ·A· NASD Cl1tlns1 fw Tllvrod•y, July 25, IHI ~I :, ...... , ... ll:. -a- S.Lagunan • f / - • 1 ... .. Thursday's Closing Stock Exchange List New York .. ' I I 1 , • • / • l• l'u.luy, J wy ~"' 1\IW ' • The newest Buick/Opel dealer in town has an old fashioned way of doing bus,iness. . ! ' He -talks your language. The whole idea behind talking your language is as .old as good business. You see, we think you deserve to have a little bit of a fuss made over you. Especially when you're buying a Buick. Or Opel. This is why you can expect friendly treatment when you come in . Also quality service . when you need it And most important, great deals on any car you buy from us. This is what talking your language is1 all about. On Skylarks, GS's, LeSabres, Wildcats, Electras, Rivieras, and Opels. One look will tell you how much more car you get for your money. One talk with a salesman will prove how little more you pay to get it. Come in soon and watch us talk your language. We think you'll like it • ' BUICK-OPEL 234 E. 17TH STREET COST A MESA 548-7765 • -• , •• ' JOOEAN HASTINGS, 642-4121 ,.,., "'"' M. ".. ... ,_ 11 Tea Tempts New Wives Wives of the outstanding young men in the community who are about to become members of the Huntington Beach Junior Chamber of Commerce will be honored guests at the first membership tea to be sponsored by the Mrs. Jaycees. Hosting the tea, which will take place next Sunday between 2 and 4 p.m. will be the president, Mrs. Michael Brooks. Assisting with plans are the Mmes. Peter Holden membership chainnan, Joe Basso, Mel Cooper, Jack Hall and Jim ieithing. Also welcoming guests will be the general membership aud the present board pf directors. New officers of the Mrs. Jaycees include the Mmes. :Jack Brandt, vice president; Dave Atkinson, secretary; Jim LeBlanc, treasurer; Jack Tatham, director; Zeithing1 junior council and Hall senior counccil. ' ' The Mrs. Jaycees is the auxiliary to the Junior Chamber of Commerce and the young women devote many hours to assisting their husbands with various projects. The Jaycees, who have assumed the responsibility of coordin- ating and running ~e annual Fourth of JuJy Parade. currently are organizing a 12-month community survey and have between 15 and 20 projects planned for the coming year. , , . • • • ' SWINGING INTO ACTION -Members of the Mrs. Jaycees, auxiliary of .the Huntington Beach Junior Chamber of Commerce, are anticipating a busy year, so new members who will be assisting with the many projects will be welcomed at a tea next Sunday. Getting into the swing of things are (left . to right) Mrs. Joe Basso, Mrs. Mel Cooper and Mrs. Peter Holden with an assist from Mrs. Jim Ztith- ing and Mrs. Jack Hall. In addition to assisting their husbands by running the fireworks stand each July, the Mrs. Jaycees also sponsor the city's annual Easter egg hunt which takes place in six locations each spring. The group recently raised $250 to be donated to the Recreation Department for playground equipment at Murdy Park. Surf Sounds Nature Lures By JODEAN HASTINGS Of 1111: Dell~ P'llof Iliff WANDERING OVER the John Muir trail next week will be Dick Gillum of Fountain Valley, who has been planning the 210-mile jaunt for the past year-and-a-half. Barbara who can't get excited over "fill that walki~g " has been helping Dick pack for the hike and reports that s~e's even . be~n weighing bandaids before putting them m his pack! . The Gillums are just back from a cam~1ng vacation on the beach, and Barbara claims she 's still peeling. THREE BEAUTIFUL salmon were cap- tured. by Arnold Podsade of Hun~ng~on Beach while he and Vera were vacationing and enjoying the beauty of Vancouver, BC, Seattle and Portland. ALSO "GONE FISHING" are Jake and Helen Stewart, who are trying their luck fishing for salmon on the Columbia River. The Stewarts planned to. meet friends and en- joy a · restful vacation. WINNERS ALL were members of ·Lois LeBard's outgoing board when the past presi- dent of the Assistance League eptertained. at a bridge luncheon in their honor. . . Prizes were awarded Dora Wilkin, Sally Farquhar and Lorene Penhall , but everyone had a wonderful time. Guests included Ila Dabney, Doris Ferguson, Alice Freeman, Diane Hair, Dori Hoyt, Lea Hood, Joan Warner, Maria Wyatt and Helen Valentine. Summer Lively Juniors Fill August Days A new sponsor has been announced by the South Coast Junior Woman's Club of Foun- tain Valley. The La Mirada Ebell Club, also members of Los Cerritos District, CFWC, will host a swimming party in honor of the Junior club Wednesday, Aug. 7, for the first interclub function. Mrs. Bond Thompson, president of the Fountain Valley organization, will attend a board meeting of the new sponsoring group Tuesday, July 30. In other activities scheduled by the group1 a benefit steak fry in the home of Mr. ana Mrs. James West will take place at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 17. The informal affair, to which the public is invited, will serve as a major fund-railinl project for the club's many philanthropies. Reservations may be made .bY. ca.lllDg ·Mn. West, 962-2643, by Monday, Aug. 12. · Mrs. Robert Marten, Los Cerritos District's safety chairman, has been attending a con- rerence of women's highway safety leaders in Sacramento during the past week. KATHLEEN EDDY, whose future includes commercial art, received the annual YLI scholarship awarded by the Holy Eucharist Institute, Westminster. Kathleen is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Eddy and the oldest of eight children. Her hobby, in ad- dition to art, is surfing. 'Good Old Days' Revived at Barbecue The meeting was patterned after the n&o tional conference takinf place in Washington D.C. last fall. Principa speakers at the con- clave, which attracted women from all areas interested in promoting highway safety, m: clu~ed Mrs. William Kidd, chairman of the National Conference of Women Highway Safety Leaders; James Burpa, t be governor's coordinator for traffic safety, and J . Arthur R.ud e, director of the California Traffic Safety Foundation. KIDNAPPEO MEMBERS of the South Coast Junior Women's Club enjoyed breakfast -even at 6:30 a.m , -in the home of the group's vice president and. mem- bership chairman. Mrs. Robert Marten. Old-fashioned fun at old-fashioned prices is being promised when members of the Huntington Valley Young Republican's Club sponsors a membership barbecue Saturday, Aug. 3. Noting the effects of in- flation are (left to right) Mrs. Thomas Williamson and Mrs. Kyle Baer, but a dime still i~ a bargain price for the beer and hot dogs which will be served. The public is invited to attend the barbecue takiQg place at 8 p.m. in the home of Mr. and Mrs . George Stokes. Officers and members of the board wiJI be on hand to explain the many activities of the group. The South Coast Junior Woman's Club was formed in 1966 and became affiliated with the Los Cerritos District in 1967. In the two years it has been established. the group bu donated approximately '1500 to philanthropy. A Note to the 'Wise': Open Your Eyes to Proper Nutrition DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several week1 ago I attended a discuslion group on malnutrition in the U.S.A. J left the plece Ciepressed and detel'min- ed to do something for the disad- vantag«J children in this country. When I 81Tlved home Ulere was a note from the school nurse saying our youngest boy should be taken to .a physician tor a checkup and put on a nOlrisbing diet. The note said he Is seven poundl undmveigltt, bas too many dental cRties, was absent from lcllool an exceNive number of days, .and he needt to eat less junk and more wholesome food . I was furious and·assumed the nurse mu/iit have a grudge aga.i.nst our son or she ~uld not have written such an in · su1UAC note. Aft« all, we irre an upper ANN LANDERS ~ mlddle~lass family, not slum dwellers. I took the boy to the doctor the following day and learned our boy was in appalling physical condition - anemJc, underweight. the works. The doctor lectured me about mothers who allow their children to develop poor eating habits. He pain ed oul that many children from w e l l-to -do families are in the 1aml' b:n~: a,,:t sent me home With literature on nutrition and the balanced diet . ! Please print this leltlr1 Ann , all,~ alert mothe:rs everywhere to the danger of }etting their children eat on- ly what they want to.~It was a shock to discover that our aon was ln the same pa thetic physical condiUon as the UtUe boys who live ln 1h1ola in·MisstssipPl. -EXECUTIVE'S WIFE OF.AR \VIFE : Here's 1n open letk:r lC'I mq '.bers everywhere. What did yoar chlldrtn ea t yesterday! And what did l h~y eat todn y? A word to the_wl1e•l1 111fflctent altd to the foollth , a mlUlo• word1 are usele11. Take inventory. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My wife bas·a mama for giving away, throwing out or "misplacing" other peop~'s property. M&inly, mine. I have beg- ged, pleaded aod asked her in as nice a way as l know how, to please keep her hands off my things. She d<>e$n't seem to hear me. Maggie insists on "straightening" my des'k and "neaten· lng" lhlngs-. The next thing I know, Valuable papers are m11$ing. YI.hen. 1 reach for a ba:ck issue of a newspaper · or maaazioe wtUcb I set aside for reference. she tell• me she burned It two months aeo. Last nilht 1 searched high and low for my bedroom sltppers, When I asked Mag· ,1. if she had •etn lllern, me .... tlley were worn to shreds and she couldn't look at them anymore so she threw them out. l realize they were rather stiabby. Ann, but it took me six months to get them really comfortable and I was pretty upset about it. I ad - mit I'm a bit of a hoarder but shouldn 't a wife respect her husband's rights ln the house ? -MIN· NEAPOLIS CQT. DEAR MINN.: Wllen 1 poet rat marrle1 a heaver-outer, Lbere'1 bound to be trouble. Voa c1a't cure lter but you ca• protect youself by patdng yoar papers aid m1satae1 1w11 - out of r:f&bl MOit beavers ttu tat tbtng, bteau1e tbey are' clutterla1 up 1 room. {Some women report their hu1bl'tf1' dea1 are ftrt blurd1.) At • tbe bedroom 1Upper1. dial -----·----------------- "'' a roUea trick. Ad Map llDw she'd Uke it U yoa u.rtw IWIJ Mr tM btat-up 1lrdle. l1U be& •'D ~ der1&1.od yo11r feelin11 a 111 Mttlr after nlAT qae1tift. Too m&ny couplet Co Ir o m m&trlmony to acrimony, Don't ... your marriage IJop b<lore It 1'41 started. Send for Ann !Mldetl' booklet, "Marrlop -W1IM to Elt• pect." Send your requelt to Aliil Lander1 in care of th.ii DfWll 11.• encloaln1 ilO cent. In coin llld 1 1aof. stamped, seU-addreued envelopa. t. Ann Landers will be ,..d lo blip ,.a with yoor prol>lemc. Send tllem I! .,_ in le ol lht DAILY PUPI', HoJot. Ing self-addre11ed, •-pod • vel • \ I l I 1. ------··--------------· ~ --------------------------------=---- • -·. - 0 J;f. DAILY PILOT fridly, Ju~ 21>, 1968 ~ :· Blue Ribbon Luncheon -· &;,,ething Special for Someone Special is the appropriate theme selected by ' the Presbyterian Church of the Covenant when recognition of the v a I u e of .• _ fl'lery member ia underlined during a luncheon in the Costa Mesa home of . : Mn. Dudley A. PfaJf. The event will take place from 11 :30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. ~"7."-."Wednesday, Aug. 7. Presenting a special b I u e ribbon to the Rev. Warren G. · · "· · Studer I• Mrs. PfaJf {right), while Mrs. Jack Elliott waits to make her presen· · bltion. · .... rm m ww1!'!ii!!iJl!!ii tm.wwwm . " . . · ... ... ... ' Harbor ·council Movie Guide IEdlllOr'I Noh: Tl111 movlt ...,~ 11 ....... ...., b'I' JIM lllmt eo!nll'llttte Of ...... Col,il'Kll PTA. W.. Robert • · -~ 11 Pf'flllkftt Incl Ml'I. Hirt .. '. 'SweMrt ti canmltt.e cNolrm1n. It 11 -~ u I rfterffl(.I In dttermlnl"9 adt.bll flll!lt for cert1111 '" ''°"'" • -lllld ·wm _, wNlc.I,. Your vlriwl an 10UC:ll9d. Miiii lhtm lo Movll ,. • (kllclli, e.rt of ttw OAILY PILOT.I FAMILY , ···BAMBI -Disney cartoon feature . -. ·-DON'T RAISE THE -· . '!!RIDGE, WWER THE ~IVER -Big time _ ,wheeler-dealer schemes to win back wife who wants divorce. 8LACKBEARD'S GHOST- Disney adventure o f famout pirate. THE HAPPIEST -MILLIONAIRE -Disney musical comedy about ec- centric millionaire. TllE JUNGLE SOOK - -Disney versioo of Kipl- ing's tale of East Indian bay. THE ONE AND ONLY , GE- NUINE. ORIGINAL F AMll. Y BAND -Disney mw;ical ol American pol- itics ol 1880s . PRIVATE NAVY OF SGT. O'F MRELL -Good- natured spoof on a lonely isle in the Pacific during World War 11. SHAKIEST GUN IN THE WEST -Dentist seekli fortune in Wild West of 1880s. SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN OW ARFS -Re- relea.se of cartoon feature . THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE -Musical spoof of 1920s. WHERE ANGELS G 0 , TROUBLE FOLLOWS - Mother Superior and pro- gressive nun have dif- ferences on cross-country bus trip. YOURS. V.INE AND OURS -Warm, lively domestic comedy of a widowed naval officer with 10 children and a Navy widow with eight children who marry. TEENS AND ADULTS COUNTDOWN -Story of Couple Exchange Vows In Fountain Valley llooquou o1 while 11ock. 'llladloli and pink cametioos banked the altar ol the Fint -Church ol FOl!ll· -Valley for the wedding Of Maraa Clark and Robert .c. Mopes. Officiatinc dtO!c the dou· ~ ring ceremony was the , Rev. Lewia Currie. . . The bride, daughter of Mr. . and Mrs. W. Junes Clark, : : Fountain Valley, was given in merrl.age by her father. Her A-line gown w a s ·.. ·fashioned of peau de soie desl&ned with a. lace bodice · and tieeves inset with seed pe1ril and a small train. Hoklinc ber veil of brid.al il- lusion W8li 1 crown ol. pearls . and aequi.nl. and sbe cacried • bouquet of white rosebud~. '·' MRS. R. C. MAPES Hawaiian Honeymoon Doma Clack attended her lii:ster and wore a mint grMn A-line gown of peau de .... fNlurin( short bell -«teeY• with a flowered lace La Quinta High School. . lailt and ahe carried a Westminster and Or a TI g e -bouquet of pink carnations. Coast College, which her • • 'l'be bridegroom, &on of husband also attended. ·Mr. and Mrs . C h a r I e s Following a wedding trip • M.apu, °'-Chula Vista, was to Hawaii the c<>upkl are , · atteoded b,-Jon Gilmore, making their home i n . ~ mllft, Md ushers were G d G -· Clark. how race to moon affects an astronaut, his family and friends . CUSTER OF THE WEST - E n t er t a in in g and beautifully photographed version of famous general's tale. THE FLIM·FLAM MAN - Comedy of chicanery. PLANET OF THE APES - science fiction· melodrama. WILL PENNY -Itinerant cowboy is brought into contact with a home, family and love. MATURE TEENS AND _ ADULTS BLUE -Texas doctor and his daughter save the life of a bloodthirsty weJterner who was raised by a Mexican bandit. THE FAMILY WAY-Lack of privacy at home and community's interest in their affairs threaten the marriage of a young English couple. GUESS WHO'S COMING TO DINNER -Moving sk>ry of parents' reaction to racially mixed marriage. HOMBRE -White m.an raised by Apaches finds it difficult to adjust to white man's world of eastern Arizona in 18806. NO WAY TO TREAT A LADY -Psycilopath, In various disguises becomes a murder-at-large of mid- dle-aged women. ODD COUPJ.E -Uproar· ious comedy in which two ill-matched, ex·marrieds decide to room together. ADULTS CARP E TllAGGERS Harold Robbin's novel of a. young executive. CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS -Youth's at- tempU to achieve tnanhood are portrayed with earthy frankness and humor. English subtitles. THE FOX -, Relationship between two women living on an isolated farm is shattered with the arrival of an attractive man. THE NAMEOF THE GAME TS KILL ! -Morbid story of a psychotic household. NEVADA SMITH -Violent on•estern. SEBASTIAN -Ma s ter cryptogr.apher for British Foreign Office tries to solve his own personal problems in this fast-mov- irig comedy. ' :_ .l>Ona.Id Hudson and Roland ii;i.,.E::'.on::~r=ove. The bride •• gradulU of N 0 T I c E .rhinic ~~Shoe Service . " SALE 1113 N. MAIN ST. . ,, • .-. SANTA ANA lS CLOSED USE OUR NEW SHOP AT 74 PASHlON ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER AUW~ALLY AT ANTHONrs Coron• del Mir Horoscope Capricorn: Philosophy Needs Strenghtening · SATURDAY JULY 27 By SYDNEY OMARR "The Wise mu controls his destiny. , , A1trolo11 points the way-'' ARIES (March 21·April 19): ExceUent lime for get. ting togettier wit.h club members, co-wOrkers. You could shine at any con- vention. Key t.o really auc- cessful day ii sense of balance. Don't overdo - avoid extremes. TAURUS (April :llJ.May 20): You are encour&ged in criativt pur1uitl. -y o u r c1Pabilltle1 come to forefront. Be an lnnovetor. Strive for greater comfort and beauty wbere home ap: pllancet are concemed. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): stress is on relationship Of lastina: value. Avoid superfici1I1ty. Dig for facts, obtain solid information. Ignore individual who ad- vocates rumsy excUHa. Get to beart of mattf'rs. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Fine for social visits, short journeys. Key is to change routine and relax. Be a good ~ener -some o( your relatives may have compulsion to confide and confess. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Gypsies Fiddle Scholastic Tune Pendulum swings toward financial area -money is on your mind. There is way to increase income poten- tiat Make outline, prepare format, expand area of con- tacts. Get rid ol petty, fearful notions. VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22): LUnar cycle high; means' circumstances turn in your A f.a.vor. You are able to make , ~· right moves at rigbt time. " • " Laguna Beach Business and Professional Wemen's Club members anc guests will unleash the gypsies in their souls tomorrow night. The occasion i s a s ch o larship fund-raising party in the South Laguna home of Mrs. Charles Petty, who is well know for the gypsy patio parrties ahe started to teach her grand· children about the cultlD'e of these nomads. Instead of hol6e drawn wa go n s, members, husbands and guests will ar- rive for festivities at 7 p.m. in caravans of automobiles, and a large Italian wine crock will introduce the hap- py hour. Personality is emphasized. Dressed in bright garb, What you do, say hits the amulets, bangles, rioga and mark. bracelets, party-goer3 will LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.22): gather around a pit to watch Trying to hide or cover up y o u n g chicken, flavored could be mistake. Instead. with tangy herbs and garlic, reveal flaws as well as slowly baked and assets. You may find that barbecued. proving you are human is Madame Zoro is bringing the greatest asset. Try it. ~er cryst;aI ball and a roving • SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. f1_dler will acco!Dpany the 21): Encourage social 'Jc- s1nging and d~1ng. ti.vity -give of yourself. Ttie party l.S planned to Make effort to please. Some raue m~ney toward the may appear selfish, in· scholarship fund. ~ach year different. Don't compound the club recog!llzes and error. Set your own pace. rewan:ts ~deserving Laguna Provide beautiful example. Beach High School student with a gift to help finance SAGl~ARIUS (Nov. ~· her higher education. Dec. 21). Acce~t. on fulfil_}-ment of ambitions. This MRS. J, L. NUGENT Recites Vows • ' Newlywed J.L. Nugents Select Home 1n Texas Church of St. Michael and All Angels, Corona del Mar was the setting for the dou- ble ring nuptial rites linking Kathryn Jean Mason of Cor- ona del Mar and Jeffrey Loring Nugent of Upper Nyack, N. Y. Mrs. John M. Nugent of Up· per Nyack. Officiant was the Rev. George F. Regas . Which Came First, comes about through con- centration on specific pro- blem. May have much to do with communication, short journey or relative. Parents of the br\dal cou- ple are Mrs. Florence Brown Mason of Elsinore, G. Burnett Mason of Trum- bull, Oonn. and Mr. and Escorted to the altar by her father, tile bride wore a fll>O!: length empire gown of pique and a three tier cathedral veil, The bride designed and made her ensemble. White daisies, gard.enias and baby's breath formed her bouquet. A-line pale yellow pique gowns trimmed with lace and bouquets o f multicolored blossoms were selected f-or her maid of honer , M iss Nan c y McLarnin of Glendale, and her bride$maids, M r s . Ro~rt Smiley ·of L 0 s Angeles BQ'ld Mrs. Geoffrey Teall of Canoga Park. the bride's sisters. Name or By JOY STILLEY NEW YORK (AP) There's an art to naming organizations today. The first letters of the words in the name have to spell a word themselves. A n d , what's .more. that word has to have a meanlng relevant to the membership's ac· ti vi ties. The official designation for these words made of words is "acronym," and the whole countr-Y has eone acronym happy. From agen- cies on the international level such as AID -Agency for International De velop- ment -through the national VISTA -Volunteers in Service to America -the Idea has filtered down to state, city and even school groups. In the days of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal, scores of alphabetical agencies were created, but the names were picked first and shortened latA!r to in- titials that didn't spell a thing. Thus the National Labor R~lations Board became NLRB, rather difficult to pronounce had a n y b o d y thought to try. The Works Progrees Administration, known as WPA , which undertook to supply work Luau Set For Social Initials? for anyone who needed a job, these days would have been called AWAKE -Ar- range Work and K e e p Employment. Now there's HOPE - Health Opportunity for Peo- ple Everywhere; KEEP - Kindergarten Educational Enrichment Program; and REACH -Raising Educa- tional A s pirations of Cu I turally Handicapped. And there's START -Short Term Adolescent Retraining -but they're fudging a lit- tle on that one. This build-a-word game has fairly lenient rules. Minor words don't count if the word created doesn't need them, as in PUSH - Projects Unlimited for Self- Help. But they are allowable when their initial Jetter helps form the word, as in CORE-Congress of Racial Equality. It's hard to figure out which came first, the name or the acronym. When a refresher training course was started for registered nurses who have been out of the profession for years, was the name RECAP pick- ed and then the designation Re-Entering the Corps of Acting Profession a Is thought up to go with it? When a university set up a v o I u n t e er organization whose members spend their spare time teaching un- derpriviJeged children, d i d they call it Community and CAPRICORN !Dec. 22- Jan. 19): Sit back and review, observe. Time to strengthen basic philosophy. Finrl out why you are here and where you are going. - Fine for catching up on cor- respondence. Read a n d write. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Money or investment proposition could be spotlighted. Co-operation re- quired between you and mate, partner. Combine forces -no day to go it alone. Promote meaningful alliance. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accent on public ·rela- tions -reactions to your talents. efforts. Be true to yourself; don't water down your beliefs. Stick to prin- ciples; stand tall. Then you help insure success. ' <>6(; 1 Hostess Duty George B. Muon III. the -bride's brother, served as best man while t h e bridesmaids' husbands were ushers. Anne-Marie Teall, the bride's niece wore a yellow and white frock for her role as flower girl, and Charles Edw.ard Teall serv· ed as ring bearer. A reception for 70 guests followed in the Corona del Mar home of Mr. and Mrs. William McDowell . Circulating the guest book Miss Laurel Spencer, was Miss Cathy A·ndress of IF TODAY IS YOUR daughter of W. Lee Corona del Mar a nd BIRT ff DA y you are Spencer of Corona de! a.ssisting witti serving was fascinated with med ic a I Mar. has been award-Mi ss Mar.garet Fish, also of techniques because y 0 u ed the silver wings of Corona de! Mar. have sincere desire to help an American Airlines The newlywed6 are honey- people. You now h ave stewardess and now is mooning en route to San Afl· chance to build on solid assigned flight duty out ton.io where the bridegroom bt1Se. An individual who of Boston. She is an is stationed with the U. S. teaches you should be alumna of Newport Army. trusted. Harbor High School and The bride is a graduate of received her certificate Glendale High Sctiool and G E N E RA L T 'E N-attended UCI where she was DENCIES: Cycle high fo r in dental assisting a t an art major. Her husband, VIRGO, LIBRA . S p e c i a 1 Orange Coast College. a graduate of Nyack High word to PISCES: complete The new airlines host· School. attended Norwich agreement which promotes ess was a finalist in the Univer sity in Vermont and successful partnership. Miss Newport Beach Rockland Community Col· contest in 1963. lege ·n Sufi N y · To l!rld out who's lucky for '°" In l ern, . . rnonf!Y lrld Ion. or~r ~Ydnt~ O.l\L . s 1-------------=-----'----book~I "SKrtl Hlnll !or MM •nO Womtn." ~ blrthd•lt •nd 50 ctnll lo Om1rr Astroloily S«rtls, !h! OAtLV PILOT, 8o• 32411, Grind Ctntrll Sia· "°"· Nrw Vort. N.Y. 11111\7. University Services in Silver Sa nd s Education by chance and then· discover with glee that The first and t h i r d A buffet o( exotic and the first letters spelled th t. H .. d' h Tuesdays at 8 p . m . au en 1c awauan is es CAUSE'. Or was 1·1 the other d d members of Silver Sands an ecorations carrying way around'? out the island theme will set 286, Native Daughters of the a luau mood for members of Anyhow, I've thought up Golden West gather for Delta Beta Epsilon. Beta both the name and the meetings. Lake p a r k Sigma Phi, their husbEinds acronym for the new group Clubhouse, H u n tin g t 0 n and guests. I'm going to form. I plan to Beach, is the setting for the The summer social will be a charter member of first sesson while Mrs. Jack take place at 7:30 p.m. S~OTH-Society _ for Lazy Or Wilson, 543-1479. will furnish Saturday, Aug. 3 in the 'f1:ed Hou~ew1ve1. Wanna location information the Huntington Beach h ome 0( ;'~oi~n~, ~la~di~e~s~·~~~~~~!:!i:lhi::'::rd::!!m::e~e=ti=n!g.~~~= Mrs. Richard ,Sherrod. ~ Planning the party a n d preparing the buffet are members of the social com- mittee. Mrs. Sherrod, Mrs. Ken Sutton and M r s . Ri chard Freudenthat le1tyle your old th ... N th• n•w ...unfj loek. SELECTIONS FIT FOR A KING Charles H. Barr Jewelers '.Aloha :JJa114 ' SIDEWALK SALE WESTCLIFF PLAZA I 7th & IRVJNE T onite & Saturday KRll'l'l"S BCRRl rARI """""""' INTENSE EXCITEM01T AGHOITTOWI COMEAUVEI + Ml AlllS.lllN CLIME Ghost Town lldmiuioa $1.00 for adulis 1Sf f« children Wldtt 12. Ant1u.tl pwcs for. 2 penom: for one )'nr SS.C>O. Summer boun 10:00 AM · l 1:00 PM-10:00 PM Sund•f'· ?'- 11 ~ ,,------------------------------~---------------~----~----------. ., ,_ •, .- -· '• " F rld.iy, July 26, 1968 DAILY Pf~Of JS -. Hawaiian Honeymoon iii -!!:'•: • LEGAL llOTICB. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE •All. P.-ri IUl'Slltol; ~-· • MOTM:• TO CIUMTO&$ ClaTIPICATI: Of' IUllNIU. aAll m fTA1'e OP CAU • IUPllllH COURT °" TMI •1CTn10W KAMI llWllllOll CCH.lllf °" Tiii TMI couinv °' . T T O Tiie ~ .... ctr1tfot Ille II ¥TAT8 °' CA.U~NIA l'04l '" ._ .,._ " ~ • I A • • CAL.1'°4lMIA POtt ~ • ~ ,, ,.,, Ufntott.. THI COUltTT °' ou•• ' MOTlCI °" .......... m.w-... THI co:TY..:,.oUMI ..._.. INctl. C..lifrenll,I, """' ... .... ....., l'llO&ATS °' WIU. A;.l'D .... ,..,.. l!•tftt tt LOUIS c lAMI O.C..Md rkf!tlow ~ -ot Tiii Mllll fltOTICI Of' Hhll!He • PllTITIOM POI Tlltl TUTAMIWTAlY "' • i MOTIC:W: II H11ti!aY oivlN .. "'-IAOATl!LLE •1111 .... , .... tlnn i. PllOUTI °" WIU. AMO l'Oll LIT· ...... .. llOL.\.11 .~.. • .. U'llllll9n el tM •bWI Mmed ~I CllllWCIMd If h fltlltwlM Mnet1. ...._. ft•I 0" AOMllflSTUTtofil WtTN 1-U It. I, MYIRS. • M'llt •II ...,. l'lt¥1 ... Cltlt!l1 -'"'' "" -Ill NII _, •** " r.idwa .. •• THI WILL ANlllXID NOTICI IS H~··v ., . .,,..,, <;ouple Wed ·in Oregon MRS. GERALD J. LELAND Cothollc Woddl1111 MAUREEN SHEA HANRAHAN Future Bride In Los Angeles Betrothal Announced Mr. and Mrs. J . Howard Hanrahan of Los Angeles have revealed the engagement of their daughter, Maureen Shea Hanrahan to Roy J arnes Somers II , son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Somers of Balboa. Miss H anr ahan is the granddaughter of Mrs. Jerome J. Hanrahan of Los Angeles and the late Mr. Hanra han and Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert J. Shea of Los Angeles. The benedict-elect is the grandson of Mrs. Ross Weston of Newport Beach and the late Mr. Benjamin P. Weston and the late Mrs. Marvin Somers and the late Mr. Roy James Somers of. San Francisco. - Miss Hanrahan is an alumna of Marl- borough School and was a student at the Uni4 versity of California, Berkeley and UCLA. She w ·as presented at Las Madrinas in 1966. Her fiance, a member o f the Bachelors of Los Angeles, is an alumnus of Webb School and lhe University ol Southern Cali- fornia. No date bas been set for their wedding. Patrons Meet Cost.a Mesa Women's Club will have a p;;tron'$ meeting 1hu'sdjly, Aug. t at JO a .m . ln ~ Costa Me• home cl Mrs. John W. Hanek. NllDC)' auistemen o f Newport s-ti and G<rald J. Le!And of Tustin spoke tbeil-wedding vows in St. Mary'a Oe.tboUc Churcb, in Eugene, Ore. prior to leav-1111 for: a honeymoon in Hawaii. The d1ugllter Of Mr. Olld Mrs. <lw'les J. Chrltitensen ol. Mldford., Ore. and the s on of Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd J. Lel8Dd of Swanton, Ohio ex· changed rings during the noon ceremonies. Wblle gladioli and yellow dallies edorned the church when her father 1ave the bride in marriage. au.itlll;y loco wao dniped over fitted taffeta for her town. while the tulle veil wu caught to a headpiece Of Ntin pe!3is and pearls. She carried a caacede of white roses. Her maid of honor was her lilter, Mi56 Kathleen <llrlltemen, while anotner 1iater, Mi11 Mary Ann Oristensen was bridesmaid along witn W.:rs.. Gerald Genich and Mrs. James Seven. The .attendBDU w e r e gowned in floor length lime green ud matcbi!lg tulle veils with bows. Yellow dailies fOrmed their bou· quets. The bridegroom asked ~ Huguenard of Ft. Weyne, Ind. to stand as best man. Jeff Pence, James Nunan and Robert Clegg, all of. Newport Beach, ushered the guests to their seats. Organist was Mrs. Elinor Matthews. Miss Marcia Kenny, Mrs-. Erwin Goden , Mis& Mary Dutton, Mrs. R o b e r t Mcwilliams and M r s • Michael Barrett a ssist.ed at the reception in t b e Laurelwood Country Club. GuNLs corning from out ot town were Mrs. Agnes Gallagher of Canoga Park; Mr. Md Mn. John Kenny and M'vcia Kenny, 'uncle, aunt and cousin from Great F.alh, Mont., and Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Gaden of Valle· jo. The couple will reside in Tustin upon their return from· Hawaii. The new Mrs. Leland is employed by the Garden Grove School District as a teacher. ~ received her degree from Southern Oregon College, after having attended the Univers.ity of Oregon. Her husband is a graduate Of 1he University of Toledo, Ohio. He became a member of Alpha Phi Gamma, the honorary journalism fraternity, and Alpha Kappa Psi, • businees fraternity. Anthonys Married 25 Years MIG ~I U9 N41!11r" t. Hit "*" 'Ollcowl: hltl9 If ,ltANK JtQM.t.N 'lAUS, AH,NA M'l'lltS Ml fli.d .. ~ wltll JIM -rY VOUCMn. Ill .... ot1!U HlLlN HUTCHINIOH. n1 ,. ... ''·· DKMlllM. '°' .. ,.,. ti WtU Mil tor ., Ill 1tM Ci.ti of tM ~ W.fltlllll court ., Me..-f l,.c:tl. C•lflonllll, H:::~\1! IS HllltllV GIVIN TIW l.fH•l"I T•lt!Mlttel'\I' tit lfle • '° llf._I "-"• Wltll ltM _;..., Oet.11~:, ~;,,:'-Mtltiol'I :.,M.,=~ ~ ~~ ':"'..! ='l:.!'n.'°~"tllt-=-~JiK.11 ~r 19 T-~~~f" i:'~~ pttt. ti C•lltornl•, °''"'" C-l'f: iNU111C11 of ~• of Adml11i11r1-.. el llNrltl9 trat Mmf l\M ..... J.:-fW OEUICMIJIAN .,. 141.on llvd 100 On Jwlr n. I .... ti.fore ""' • Hcll•rv Wlll\-...... 11kMfXlld, r~ to wt.id! ""'"'' '· , ... , ,, t :• ··~ ... "" LOl'll ~ 1~ ~ 9Mdl c,1iior,.11 '"~ 111 1Nf flDr Mid s11i., --nw 11 IMdol for f\lrtMr Nrt1cu11n. 1110 flltl cou~ or O...rtmlnt" Mt.~ Mid t09ll2. wllldl II Hi. 1111c1 of Ou.1-flf _..,.. Htltn K~td'lln-.._, .. -:: =Mid Ii.ct" PINrlftll ""Ul'N '*""· 11 .IOI N, l•Mdw1w. lri "T"'P .. Ille uncl9nl91'1H !fl 111 mtttllr. Hrttl.,lnt lo M tM Mf1llfl wllOft flt-b • Ml fllr ~t f, I ... , ti t:30 t.afl!lo AN, C1llfornla. • •"' to ....... ..,. ,,,, Miii Otc'°"" wlllllfl •Ill f\11:.cflMcl to ..... wllll111 11111,,,_,1 Ind ;·~·· Ill ""' CIOl.lrtro.11 ., C..rtmtM No, C.IH: Jun-, .. ,,.. .... ll'\Ofltlll 11tw ..... flnl ~b11t1ilon ., 1111• •di,_....,. "" IX.CUIM ""' -· Cltv -:,1a,.murt, II '81 N, et111c1W1y, Ill ,,.. . w. I!, ST JOHN. • Mtln (Oi"FICIAl. SEAL! 1111 A111o C1M'°"'l1. C-tv Cllrt. D1t9ci July' II IMt Omlall v. Ull 01t.1; July , ... 1Nt .VIMN•OCll, U.NC• a •UHN 1.1,,4. Frln<ll ind Nollt'Y Publk-C11lfor11la W. I:. ST JOHN, 11!1 W. """ ttfMt, Htrbltt Mow!\111 Pr11'1CIN1 OfflCll Ill VO•Oll.IN C~:fJ~r11. ~":':i,f'::::- C•EXKUIOl'I °' lilt wm ol °''~~ I! I NAltltll a' CALLllTia A-.., ..... ..........., LUCAS AN:'olt'KLi3\l': cllcldelll ::rdl 21. i':n .. ,.. •vi ••01101 IUl.INSIU ll'vbll.ntd °''"" eo.d EMiiy , • ..,, J\1- AtNn!IYI .t Law, ll'\lbll.ntd Otllllll CONI Oeltv Piiot, Jutv :.."i:. IY lt, 20. ff. !Mt 1UMI Uf 141n. llftv 1t, 1J, 2' Ind A.11911&! '' lMI '1 .... LAI ·-~~ ,..., LEGAL NOTICE •-,,... , .. .._ .... ,. itw., LEG .. NOTICE T•h 11111 ~' l.11111 9-11. c • .....,... -lU.I ""'""" ...... 111... ..... 114 JULIA STALNAKER T1h 11111 QI.Mel ll'ublltllld Or•lltl c.'t n.1• ll'I NOTICI TO Cll:IDITORI A~..,.0r~·~"':l"o.11v Pilot,~ MOTKI o" T1lUSTll'I IAL• IY ''· 20,,.. ,,.. • ~~ SUll'llttO• COUll:T o" TM• c-..•mlMr Bride • ,, __ • 1 1.0. ,.._ ••111 STAT• o" CAL11'01tN1A ·~ -?"'' · •.., ''"' llllKI ,, t, Ml IU14 Ofl WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1'-1MI. It THI COIJNTT 0, OJUIMf n :oe A.M .. Thi Tl Cotwltloll col LEGAL .NO'nCE Ml. .....,.. Military Wedding Plans Told LEGAL NOTICE C.llforl\M), 1 c°""""1tlcltl. tonNrtv, Id E1t1te • THELMA THOMA.$. 0.-1----,---,~-------·l~z.'-i ~S~~N~= i~:.! = MOTIC• Otr TltUITll'S U.Llf NOTICE IS HEllE8Y GIYlfl ti I'll ClltTl,ICATlf Ofl 8UllMllS, nd ' 1 to Oetd o1 T"'1•1 dlttd On .... ..... credllor1 llf IM •llollt l\elMlll ,-....i ,,cT1T1ous MAM• r,_:":fi', 1"'· ElltCut.c1 •Y: 1.EoNA .......... Tu'.J~c~'re11~'1e~•·~i; 1111~ 111""°"'11<1¥1,. c1.,,.. E,.. The t.ondlr1!1nld dlD ctrflty 1111'1 -NEUFEU> STAFFOltO, t m1rrltd NOCAE8 INC J u d .., riPol w dlc .... I l rl ,_lrwd •.-• , COflCluctllll 1 buslfll'U ti llJI? a..cfl -11 w11o llCQl.llrtd 11111 It LEONA Tniilel ~...... '..,f u I llhd Wllll tM -=-rv ~ " Cll 81Yd .• H1111fl111!efl llffcfl, Ctllfoml•. ul'!Otf" NEUFiLo. Ill 11111Nrrltd wmn•fl· •NI Trvst ... N~~,nr,;; to ~ .. .!!'. =Ille de~ of Ille lilolltl lflllt~. ot the nct1n11111 !Inn 1111M o1 TODO di ~ JtlllllrY n. 1HI, 11 INlr. No. l<ll I( • • •xecu "~ 11r1Hftt tlltm, wlrrr the;."111i!!hwry MEXICO 1tld fflal 111d rtnn 11 COfT\P<IMd l3ll0 lfl bQo11; Mft, "" 7'17., et Ottlcltl JA:~Eti·-JAHCEIC ltld ELIZAllETH A. 'IOlldltr1o to tM ulldtnltllld n fie omc.. llf lilt hlllOwl"' Pl,_, w11011 ,.,.,,.... 111 Recoflls Ill 11141 ottl~ o1 t111 COllll"IY 1141 Ind WH'f, •lllt r9COl'ckid of l'ltr AlfllrMYI COHEN, OSTElt • fuH 1nd plttft of rMJ.Hnc. ,,.. 11 Recontlr ol Ortlllltl CounlY C11t1orn11, Nownl-lllr IS. 1-.. .. l111tr. No. ION.I, In MILLAllD, 4-M W•I T111t11 St~, Slfttl followl; WILi. SELi. AT ll'U81.IC AiJCTION TO 6.D3. Hit 17, of Otllcltl"lttcorda In A111, Callfol'tl/t, 9'1'01, wttldl 11 tt.. PIK• JOAN DOllSEY, "'1 Slrh" Dr1n, HIGHEST 8\DDEll FOil CASH fpeylbll ~:t,!_,ot._ ~-~~11"' RICOrder of;!, Ill.Ill-of flll undel'tl1Md 111 I ll """' HU11ll11tlofl Buell, CtlllOl'nJI. I ti of Ilk 11! llwtul ~ of 1111 """fl'~' .... lhV<nl1, WILL SELL I Pffltl.U"'9 to lhl Hllll ot .. kl .... OAl/10 N. OORSEY, Jttt S1rlw 1 """ lilftl Ill tM lobb¥ of tM W11t AT •VII.IC AUCTION TO HIGHEST d'frlt, wlll'll11 11J1 l'l'Ofttlli af'ltr JM flnl Oriv1. Hu11tlnt1kln lffcl'I, c1ntom11. Y"1:ri s loll lfllr•llOI of Tllll 1111vr.nct llDOl!R !<Oii CASH <.,.Y•bll 11 time or 11ubnc111o11 of n.r1 llOtfcl. Dtlld JulV II, 1HI. ,.,ldl,: loCtlM on ltlfl nortllwnl COl't'ltf 11111 In t.'llflll "*-Y ot 1111 United Sl11t1l Oattd Ju.., 11, Ifft JOAN OOR5E.Y ofu Eltl'illl ind Mlln Stl'Mh Se"'• A.111, 1t 1'02 Etlf 17th SlrMI, Senti A.Ill, Oorl1 L.tnt DAVID H. OOllSEY C llfotnli, ill r!•hl, tl!M irwJ' 1nl1rttl eo"" C1Ufoml;' 111 rllhl, 11111-tnd lnltrHI CDl'I-Admlnl1lrtlrl11 of 1ttt l1tlte Still of Cllltor11l1, Dr111t1 Cou11tv: 1 Id to •!Id now Mid bY It undl!' uld WYld fli ind flOW hl'lcl b'f lt•undtr "ld of•~• •bovt IMl"llllt cftadtnt Mr 0 On JulV It. lHI. btforl me. 1 Nol•ry ~of Tl'l1tl Ill ff>1 prOl'llrtv 1ltu1ted 111 0-.cl ot Tl'Ull 111 tM '""""" 1!Tu11td 111 COHIN, OSTIR & MILU.110, . and Mrs. harl~s ,ubllt In Ind for llld Sltlt. Mrsont!IV Id COUnty llld Stilt de•erltlld 11: ""' Courrty of Dr1nt1. '''"'of C1Hfllf'lll1, ... Wnt Tlllltl '""'·. • Stain k J Sant •-trtd JOAN DOllSE.Y Ind DAVIO H. M Loi 4 of Block No. 37 of NIWJ'Ol'i clflCrlbtd 11; SIMI A .. , C1lftrlll1 n111 a er .,, a Ana DORSEY k!IOWll fl) mt to bt ... PlnOl'I• I di '" ..... cltv of NtwPOrt 8tlcl'I. l.of 24, Tr1d .u6$, II 11er mH Tth 010 M>M41 Hei ..... ts announce the wllOll tllmH .,. 1ub.crltlld fl) Ille wl!llln 0r" ~ (OIJAtv. Ctl\lornl1 ... ptr m•• 'ICOrdtd In Book U3, N•t• IJ Ind 14 of A~ ..... A~Mm1trt1r 6" l111tnlmlll1 Ind 1dnowltdlltd lhlY ex· n:'rded Ill look '· ..... 1' of MIKlllllllOUI M•PS· RKOrds ., Ort"" u llsl!ed °''"'' COi•! o.1rv.,rltf ..... engagement Of t b e i r KVtto:t 1111 11mt. MtK'flllntaU• MtPJ, 111 "" offlt• of ""' eountv. c1Mtorn11. "' "· H •nd A111u11 ,, t. IHI • lUMt !OFFICIAi. S&:Al.I COi.in"' RKOl'der ol 11lcl CO'JftlY, Selcl Hit-Wiii Ill l!llde, llllt wlltloul LEGAL NOTICE dan..+.•-Julia Le ·1 g h Clfm11ll V lilt cow111111 or w1rr111tv. 1xpr~ or lmplled,,1 ___ -"::::::"";;,;.:::::::;;.., __ U6uw;;i' NoltrY ll'Vbllc.C1lltor1111 Said wle will be rr\ldt, but without r!t1nllnt1 !lilt. _..,.loll, or ~I 11'417lt , . Stainaker to DeVaul w. ,.,lllClNI Otl!c. Ill (OV'tM!'ll or w1rr1111Y, IXPl"fU tr lmPlltd. cumbr•no:... ta PIW Ille l'lmllfllM prr... C•llTl,ICATI OP: eusiMua. B "'-J J Mr and Or•"9• COUnlY 111 tltll _..u:ton or -c!119I """ llf lll'f lloft Haired by 11ld ll'ICTITIOUI M -r'"'l>""" r ., SOil UI • MY Cotl\mluloft EllPll"fll rNliw.:. l'O 'INW 111t reml1nlllt ,...1,.. Owd crf Tru1!, ~I: 13,221.ll, Wllll I,.. '""' Ul'ldtriltnld dots AMI Mrs. D. W. Bridges, also of M1rcl'I 11, 1tn c;:1 •um~ the nol't w;vrtd bY wtd ttrnt fl'Ofl'I O't¢1mblr 1s, 1H7. ••In 111d condllct\11t 1 bulJneu .i 'l':t""'"N"' II S . ts .. ublli.llld Or11111 COi•! Otl.., Piiot, Ju-~Md of Tr\111. to-Wit: .. ,GOD.DO. Wlltl I,.. not1 provklld, ld¥111CM. If t nY under Ille 8outn1n:I', CDlll MtH, CiHfoholli-= anta Ana Hetgh • If It, H 1nd Avtuif 1, f, 1HI 124Ut. t.r.st trom Fitiruary 21, 1'61, 11 111 111d ttnn1 of llkl Deed of TtU1t, fees. dlll9ff 1111 tlctt1!11111 rtrm 11ame of (I~ 11iRGE1t -brj•-• b • 1967 not• PNlllldtd, ld\'lllCll• II 1n1, und'fl' tM •rwJ UHnlfl of Ille TrvslM tnd. of !lie PANTRY -UJ KING •UllGll!!lt Ind tlMf ....... e ln:'""\.0+ e lS a LEGAL NOTICE tt of Mid O'fld °' Tr111t, ""' d141rtt1 tr111ts d'Nltd bY llkl Otld of Trust. Mid llnn 11 ~ " tfll fipllfWrt graduate of Corona del Mar .~ ...-.. " ""! .. T..,.rv1"" .. ~.:' "" Ti:: :":.i:i~ :~: ::::,, = ~-....,..... 1111n1 111 tun Mt ,._ ':; u•~ •~ I ~ · t tn1111 Ulltld w M"' ... • • • -,..........,.. •• u hlllowl· ~ .l.U6ll .;J0..."1100 ouu isa recen .....,. TIMI bliwftcltn' undll'" 11141 Detod ""' obllNl1-MtVnd tll1r1llY. JAY STOWELL. si .. ClfftlnP ... , ""'aduate of a beauty col· c•1tT1,1CATI o' 1u11NUS. TMf by,.._"• ~di or cltf1u1t IJ1 ~ ulClltllll tond dlllll'fr1od to t111 Rlwnlcll. Cillfomlt • b' 'ICTITIOUS NAMI It'll 'oblltltloM t«IJl'llll th Ir• b Y • llndlrtltMd I wrn"'" Dttllntlon of Dt!M JulY 11 1Ni Iege. Her fiance, al:: a 1967 "" llndtnl•Md • c.rtrtv 1111'1 ... htrttofOI'• nte\ltld ""' c1e11.,.rld to ": Dl'lwtt •nd ~..,. s.1t. 11111 wn""' j,.,. sfow.n ~ .. ad t f Co d I M concllldlllt • WlllltA II 1210 tldenl ntd I wrllt'fn 0Klar1t1an nolk'I of bn1dl •NI of •ltct\Gn ,., -Sltll"' Ctlltornll Or ceufity1" . gr ua e o rona e ar LDllClolldlm', coat• ,,,...., een1ornt1. ~.un'•nd Dtmlrrd tor 5111, 1nd .,..,.1tt.n 1111 lffllltl'Sl1MC1 to .. 11 Mid -rtY to °" Jur. 11 1Mi .,,;.,~ 1111 , ·Nofl,.., High School is serving iD u,., 1111 ttetltloul rt rm n11TM of notic. of brndl 1nc1 of •IKllon to uu11 Mlld'f 11111 obll .. tt-. •nd ltMfllftW, on Pl.lb/le In •"' tor' 14 Slit. ' 1.., ~ US ,;_ F sOAll:IHG u.1.1!"1 ind t111t Nld nrm 11 1111 undtr"iiP!lld to Mil 111d .,,,,..m l'O APrll 2, 1H41, the un111n11Md calllllll Mid ._,Id Jl't s-.~~ io~rsc;:bl .,.~ . , ~ Ol"Ce 85 a (OITl(llOtllll ot 111t tollowl"' ...,_, whol4I lllld'f Mid tblltllloM• trrd ftllrNfter, on no!ICll vf brtldl lrwJ of el'fctlon IO be tM --Wflpw -II "'411crlblll to plumbing specialist sta-lllll'llS Ill fUH Ind IOll<ls of ..... ~ ,,.., ~11 u ...... ""' unc1enltntd tlllMI u: r..-Otd In book IMP. -'°" °' Mlcl ""' Wllt\111 11111rv..-1 •ncl ICMowlldMI • , ' 1• lllllowl: II of bf"ttdl incl of 111ctlon to Olflcltl ll:KOn:11. 111 n:tocutecl tM Mmt tioned at Laredo Air Force 1108EllT J . MULi.Eii, 1210 L~ ;':cot~ Ill bcOll. asn •..... "" Pl 11111 DatM: JulY u , 1HI, I SERVICE (OFl'ICIAI. SEAl.) • Base Texas dtfrf, co•t• """"' c1111. OHlci•I RICOf'd•. A.A.A. INSUllANC JOHPh E. Divl• Tb ' eddin', ilJ tak JANIE I.. MULi.ER, 12111 LmdonOtr-Dile: JulY 16, 1H41COll,OllATION (tor":~ N~AEI, INC,! NOllrY Pllbll<:-ClllfONlll e w g w e rY. eo.11 ""'"· CIUI. THE Tl rlV •• .. 1'\11 ~-.. ,.rlMINI Offtct Ill Pia-Sept 2t ; the ch•~! o.tecl: July 11, IHI (of c.to111Dl'lllll, 1/c. tormt 111 c111ri.n1 om. '"'"'"' '."' Ori"" cou11,., ""~ • n -iov llotwrt J M 1111' Tltle 1r11ur111C• ,,.,. Sll'S UtO' Mv Ccmml11lon b:P1fl9 · at the Marine Air Facility jn Jinll L 'Mu1'i1r Tru1t com111nv Publ\illtd Or•nt• Col•! Dally Piiot, Ju-Junt 21. lt70 .'. · Santa ·-ft STA.Tl! OP: CAl.IFOllNIA, •• 11\d Trwttt,·v ,.,. It, 2' 11111 AUl\111 2. 1"' lt!MI Publllllld Oru1ve CNll C.ltv PHet, Jurv n;iu., ORANGI! COUNTY; 8'f ROD MAX 12, lt, ,, 1ncl,A1.1tust 2, lHI •· 11tMI on July' 11, lMI. bofore rnt. I NollrY Au!ll01'11td 51911tllir• LEGAL NOTICE LE .tUNI: UAVI:. Tells Date September Selected For Rites ,.ubtlc 111 ind for 11111 Stitt. 111r"'1111IY 27tl~twl ,.,...1 COii'!-GAL NOTICS ., ~':'.:~~,_Jn:-::.llrlllt~J=~~ 1);:::!'11!';:' =~lot. N-:~~:,•c;: NOTICI TO cqMTaACTOllS ;::: · •• wi.e l\ll'llB .,.. tublcrlbllll ta ""' w1!11111 C1l1fOl'llll Jul't' 19. 21 tncl lnMI S.11td l ldl wnl be n;c::i"::'cr ~I= ClfRTllllCAT• 0" CORFOltATft»H ... 1mlr\lmlnl Ind Kknowllcltllcl f ht y 1"' OCEf~ :·~ SC~~~ D nn w1rntr Tll:.ANIACTION 0,. IUllN•11 UNO•• ••"""" t111 """"' G n NOTICE Adm n 1 1 ..__1111..d, c.111or1111 u,.. l'ICTITIOUI MA.Ml 1on1c111 s.111 LE au Aftllut, H111111"'1,..·-1.-,· m 11 wllldl THE UNDE.RSIGNED COllPORATION JCMotPh E 0.\111 tll A11tU1t 5, • ·"" · '' don l'ltrttiv ttr1-.. ,_, 'I ' Notto Pi.obi!¢. C1Uhlml1 U.LI OI' ltlAL time """" w111 Ill PUbllclY -Md 1rwJ I "' I c....wctr .... Pr\no:.11111 ottl<e tfl ,:::~i-r,0'AT PlllVAT• SALi fffd hlr TIM O-llllon ~ir:u~i::i"'~'::ti ~t':°M~,1~1ll:om~ = .:;1•:~ Ori"" C1111111Y Mt. JO, P 111n 2, J, S t nd 7, Sit. CIH tlllolll firm n11r11 of RAY WU.ION'S ,,,,., c:omm111lon 'EICP!tel suP••IOll COUll:.T OP: THI won:. locl1e<I' c Ill' 1'n SOUTH COAST 'Lt.IA Ml!Nrs~· &TORE JU!'ll JI, 191'0 STAT• 01' CALIP:ORHIA ,OR Ol•lrld AdmLnl•lr•llOfl '" .. ~ Incl "''' Hid flnn .. ~ of .... PublilMcl Of•""' Cont 0.llY .. Llot, COUNTY OP I.OS ANOll.IS W1m1r A'l'fll\lt, H11n11nl-hlllowlno torl'Ort llon ~ I Ju"' 11. 19. tt Ind A1.11111t 2. 1N41 11...... ..!::: II t>trtlW .1 ...... 11111 Oii Of' 11ttf '" 1ccOl"clt 11CI wtlh I .......... ~~ ttLK't of bullnn.s 11 •• • foliow.· ~ "'1MIN -· ... 1111 ullcltnkll!ld Gr.Ct SPKltlttllon• "''"'" ......... JUYMONO E . LEGAL NOTICE Auou1t 15, 1 • lrl• di 1111 wm ot VllW ~I Dhtrkl ind 1trY Addend• 1101 Jtmbor NTE.Rll'llll~I, IMC., ---'-----------IMttlCl't. ~!R;is, dlcllMd· wl11 Mii •i lllertlo luuecl Pl"lor to tM -lrw llf 1111 Cttrforlllt, 11 ROid, H'"'°'1 auch,. HOTICI O' SAL• OI' ltlAI.. ::v~l:·.!111 IQ :n l'lkl":'i!-.;' t:'~~ ·~t...NI Al/AIU.II.a ,,,,. 1 n cl Ju:T~::s lb !\Incl IPll1 2Jlfl dl'I' fl rROPlltTY' AT .. , .. V11~1 SAL dlr, sublKI !'Olar cou'~ill ff>1 rkll'll, ttfll, SPKJ!lu!lanl lf'I 1¥tllabll ti 1111 offl« !COltPOllATI!" SEAL) ' MO. so. 1 en1111tc1 SllPI• TM cl ed'flll 11 1111 of ""' s1111 Aid eu11c11"' Coorot1 ... 1or. llAYM .._ SUll'lll:.IOlt COURT 01' THlf 1n1trtit tlld 11l1t. ~ II oftc!M right II· Ocut1 VllW School O!ttrlel, 1tn Wimer 10HO •NTElt,.,,;ISIJ, STATI 01' CALl,OltNIA 1'011 llml of Mr de•lll I • bY •·· A~ltnut HunttMlan 8Hd'I, c.1110r1111. NC. • • THI COUNTY 0, LOS AHGll.ES Ill •nd l1111!r1:SI ""' t•l•!e "'"" td """" .... VAll.INO WAOE In •cmrd•nct RAYMONO wtuo,,. Nollet II htrlbf t lftll !111t IMI or lfttr llDll °' llW DI' Ollltrwlll. ICCIUlr p I ._ of 5KtlDll 1770 ., f1M Prttldlnl . Allllfll l5, lMI. 1111 llndlrtltntd Grice 111111 or In .ocilllan lo 11111 al 1111 cltOt-~1:,,. llllc::v 1 Still of Ctl!lornlt tM STATE OF CALIFORNIA) , • ' M1cl(11, t• EaKVlrhl of tt.. Wiii of dent 1t !111 llmt of her clfflfl, Ill ~~ii: orilrld hll' IKtrft!ntd .... minimum ci~N~j OF OllAN!il! I .... MAE F, EDWAltOS, c11c11Hd, Wiii Ml~1:! lhlt c1rt1r11 rHI ~ :f"1~lltol'tlll, wiltl 1ppllttbll Ill !tit work 19 bl ISoJll btior. ,,:'1 J~ H~y ot p~:· .\.D, IHI, prl¥111 1111 lo ""' hlehlll Ind bill eountv vf Or•-· • to Dt II hlllowl : H id eou...hr 11111 It'\' ..... Ind tor =~i1i:b~'!.~or~~~:r:1:~ deKl'ri.,'1 .!'rt:!.'°:l't.ot ,, of Tr•d"'H!i E.=l(ATION :':"tt!.,,y~'!!' :r.'.91oN~';. = t ltftil tnd ttl•ll of the dlClcltllf If tM 1.. Lii 1111 Cltv of Fulllrton• Coun H & W JUc hour rn""'"t of !Pit QlrJlollr9flwi fllll 1?m1 ot ~ d11th tnd 111 of 1111 rlgllt, fl· Ortf.iit, Stitt of C1Hhlrnl1. II Pl~7m•,; Ptnilon -:_·:nc :hour ::~td !tit w:lhln lnitl'lllnlllt ~·blllllf tie 1nd lnt.r11t tM 11!1\'f h11, by OP«•• 1"t(Orded 111 8oOk :M, '''1 1111 Vtctl!IMI _ 251: Pl• hour ldvlld 1'(:r-tl on llllr1Fn, •1111' HkllOWl- 11Clll of llw or otMrw!M, l(Qlllrtd ott>tr Mltn11•MOlll MloP•• Jn 1111 afll<;: °'ivi"' FDl'lmtt1: Npt ltll "''" * .,., hour curl!d Ille'!: llNll lllCll COfHl'!llon Ill:• 1111n or 111 ldclltlon to l!ltl of 1'111 cllc:ldenl C01.1ntv 11:.ecorcltr" of1 ?i!.i Coun-rlbld more thin tM tiourlY w1t1 rite of the fOF,,ICIAI. se-ALJ 11 n.. tlm1 of 1111' d'flfh. lfl ind to fflal nDr1Ml'l'I' of 1111 o "' c11111t1cellon 0111r wllldl ... 1\11 Jicautl! .I '. cerl•ln r11I Pl"Olllrtv IOc.lttd Ill 1111 Cou,,. lint' le l'I' !Hdtrll!IP N t 111 · S.nbani IV of Or1ntt, Stitt of C1llfoml1, clt1trll1• 1'9111111111 11 I '°1: ::' :.-S~~1 e!it Libor'tr, Gl·ntr•I or COlll!nrdlon. • S.f7 P~1~7 .. i~~.·-ltcl 11 hlOows: llnt of 11lcl lot. Sou .., o ..... Pickll!I of COllC,.,. ......... 3.f7 o OI " • Loi 10 of Tr1ct NI. 1211 1n 1111 CllV of 1!0 oo fttl from tM Norlll•••l•r cor; Optritor• of Pneum1t1c & l!llclrlc Mr'"" COl.llltv eu.n1 tt1rk. counJY of or1nt1•· s11tt of ,,.,·of 1110 1o11 llllllCI SoUlh llO' ?;'OJ:. Tool•, vitiril!nti Ml<llfnn. & 11m111r A~ucfr"~:n'°" lf.ltllfm C1111ornl1, as ..... mlP recorded In look Wiii 2ff.77 !I'll p1r1lllt wl l!'llclllnlttl IOOll Mt 11111r1!1,.,. JCHN Vlll:TUI ' • , 31, P,IDt ll of MIKe111ntaUI Mtp1, Ill NorlllerlY llnt of 111d lot fl) 1 .mnt Oii CllH!lftd Mr.In ..... " ........ A.11 Altln!ty 1111 allltt of lllt Countv Rtcordtr of ""' wnter.., lint of 111d lot, Sou~ Concr•te saw Mtn, 1xctudlnt1 Trtdor U1' Wnkllf Dr "' • 11\d Countv1 f" lS' 1'" E11I 1Jl).D0 fftl from I cl Ty.. ... ....... .. ......... •.11 ""-•-11 'C.,11~111 Subltcf to' current l1xtt. CO'l'f!lltlll, Nor1hWfth!rl¥ corner of '' At.11hill ll1ktr & 1,_r .......... •.11 Pubtlll'ltcl Or~ 1 condition•, r••lrlc!IOM. rntNalloM. Ioli SI.lb ltd to: cur r •"I t1xn, Aslilllll Sho'ltltr .................. •.01 .., 1f, M •rwJ .._111n:1~°',S'1~11Y PllDI, Ju.. rights, r11htl" of w•\I• tnd 'fl~etnenl's of ( 0 ¥en 1 n t 1 , cafldlll_, retlrldl°"" cancr1tt Cur1r '"'""'i-Memtlr~nt ' ' · lfft.41. rKOnt. t'Her¥tllont. rfgl'ltt, rlthh of WI¥, irtll " Form Olllr .. ............. . •.16 LEGAL NOTICE l ld1 or offen 111 111vlled 1oi' tht ,,. HUrr•tnlll of rtcOn:I'. Li¥1ntl of 111 llDll-mtl!llllc 111..e. I,.. • ptrf'f tnd must lie In wrlllfl9 ind mtY bl l ld• or aflen 1r1 1n¥11ed tor ""' "'°' clucll11t Stwtr lllPf, Drain Pipe " "' dtll'ftl'"ed hi 1M E•KUtrlX or To !hi offltl PtrlV Ind mutt be In wr!tt"9 tnd mlY bl UndergrtHlnd Tl .. , . . . . . , ... , • 21 MOTl(I INVIT! ... llOI of l>lr 11torneys, llLUM8ERG Ind ZOM· ffll¥trld to tM Exwitrhr or to tht offlal MtkJng & Ciulkllll of 111 llDll-mtlltlllc HottCI 11 lllr'rirf t1¥tn Kiii .... hlnl' of MICI(, tOl SK\lrltv 8klt., 110 Pine Aw., of tier altorMYI• 81.UMllERG •nd ZOM-ttl .. Jolnh ............ •.16 Tnn."'" of 1#11 Or1nt1 Colt.I Jr C.lllM l.-llHcll. CtUt., or m1Y Dt lllllcl lft Ille MICK, fCQ keurllY 81dt .. llD Pint "'"'" Wtlthmtn .. . .. .. • . .. .. , ....... 3.31 0!1trld of DrtllH COll!!ty, C11J'°"111, Wiii ofl1CI ol ""' citric "' tllt IUHrlOr COUrl '--8etdl. c..111 .. or mtY bl Hiid In "" WlnOOW ClttMr ............... ". *·" •Kll¥t -ltd bldl ..... to 2:00 ~ -11 tnY tlrTll tfter 1111 nnt Pllbllttllon o1 offltt of 1111 clerk of Ille Superior Courl TNm•ltn d1¥, A119115t J, lHI. 1t 1111 di.ti Pl Se 9 ed 11111 noHc1 1rwJ blfor• 1111 m1klt1t ot 1111 11 111" 111111 iffflr thl fin! pUbllcallDll ol H 1. w _ lk Ptr holtl' 0-rlmtnt ot 11Jd ldloot dlrtr IPcti: ans for a pt. w • 111t. "'1' llOTICI 1rwJ befol• ""' 1Mkl11t of 1111 P-IDl'I -* ..... hour 11 11111 F11rv1" Road, eo.11 Miit, ding have been announced T1nn1 i nd COl'dltklfll of ""' c1.t1 In 111e. v1c111o11 & HalhJtY Fund -lJC "r c111to,.,r1. it ""'Jcl'I tltrtt: 11111 blcl9 wm bl • 11w1u1 rnonev of tM u111 111<1 Stile• of Terms 11111 condltlOlll of 1111; c1111 tn r.our pUbllclv -.n1tc1 1rwJ rHCI tor: en Prr"11.,. Celebrating ttieir 25th an-by June Davis and Randy Amer1u 10 Ptrctnt of !hi 1mount bid to 1awiu1 montY of 1111 u11ntd St11ts of Forern111 · wrwn • eon1r1ctor -lor• °' Oolcltn Wnt Co111111 llCl!oPI PIPll' ru··-•••y ~morrow wi·th a W Se.be t both of H •ccom,..nY the ofl'tr 1nc1 !hi Dtllnce Ill Amerlce IO'!lr of TIM 1mount blcl IP It-on hit· Plfr<>!I, on 1 lob t lte, t or "T"9 llr1tldlnt1 lrm." 11111 Ill ~liitl,,. of ~=-.. w · l r , un-bl 111!d upon a>n11rmallC111 of Hie tw thl c-anw n.. ottt<' 1rwJ IM bll111C1 lo be more T11mlltn -••ti"' ..i11lpm111t On111e Coa1t Collet• Kl'loof ·~ "TIM quiet family dinner and an tington Beach. SuPll'lor Cour1. T1xtt. r111h, -r•llnti 1111c1 UPOn con11rm1tlo11 of 111e tw !hi ullder 1111 1ur1.ci1dlon of t n 1 ll•mttlt". . •nd ma!nltf\lnct 1xpensn. 1nc1 premlum1 SuPtrlDI' court. T1~11. rent1, -r•l!nt Tt~mit.rt. tJ:C1UCll"' ,1nY .,.u!HM11I All bldl '" l'O bl tn 1tc0rfeinet Wlfll evenifl.g a( tJ\e theater will The couple Will be mar· on ln1urt11CI l tCIPlttllt to flll Purdlllll tnd lfltlnler+alltl •xpenlfl, I/Ill. prfrnlumt ltst tlltn 1h1 lonl Ind mtln\f ... Mt COndlllont, t111tructlon1 Ind 5PleJftallofl• be Mr nd Mr D 'd J · d · th F' st ~..: ... .: •1'1111 bl 11ror1ted •• ol Ille dalt of (Orio on 1nturtnt;1 1cct11llb!1 IP llM purcll11tr equf""'nt, 1111 Contr11;ior •Mii Whldl tr1,_onllll 1nd mllY Ill llClll"id • a s . 8Vl • r1e in e I! '-''""'"'an 11rm111o11 of 1111. Tiii 1x1mlna11on of n. ,11111 bl prorited 11 of 1111 c11t1"' con-""''"''' -T11m1ttr 11 • worklne 111 1111 otllu of lilt ll'ure11111111 """'., Anthony of Costa Mesa. Churc h . 111, rKol'cl!"' of conv111nce. •!Id •llY lltte llm1•llon of ult. The 1~1mln1t1C111 of t~ For1m1n 1nc1 hi s11111 rectrv1 251: Ptr u !d ldlool dl1trld. _ ln111r1nt;1 POiley 11'1111 bl 11 tM t•llftfll• ol ti. reeorclln• of con¥1v1m:1. tlld 1nY 11111 hour mort t111n "" l'llonnt claulllu. E1dl blddtr mu11 1ubrnll with 1111' llld 1 The couple were married The bride-elect, daughter th• 1111•t~11flr or 11urc111 .. r1. 1...-urince POil« '"'" bl 11 ""' •• ,...,.. a1 tlon O'llr w111t11 111 11 For1rn1n. t iil'ller'1 meek, urt1nec1 dlffll, or 111c1-July 27 1943 in Uf ca N y f Mr d Mr K 'th L TIM •rDPlrf'I ll1re!11 dHCrltlld II -""' pUrcl'l1Mr or purthtttrt. Drl'l'fr of Oum• Truck of ltu 111111: cltr'J bond midi PIYlbll to ,,,. Cl•cltr of • I • • • 0 . an S. el . manly rthtrrecl to 11 11•2 Cr111 A¥tnllf, Tiii ttr-rlY lllr•ln ot11tr!btd I• com-4 yin:t• w111r 1tv1I , ...••......•• ,,511) Ille Orin" Coe1t Ju11tor CPll-'D!•ITlct when he was serving with Davis was graduated from e ue111 Park, c1111om11. TM vndertlo!'lld monlV rt1'errtd to •• 3-111 Nor1h H1rbor A y1nt1 but 1eu '"'" 1 y1rlh w11er 8otn:l or Tru•tfll In '" trnDUnt 'not ._ --Air For---• s•-wi'th . ' rntr¥11 tt>t rlthl le rtltcl 1nY •nd 111 81'1cl Fullerloll, C1lltornl1. Tiii u~ llvtl ....•••.. , ••..... , .•.•.•.. •.Sl lhtn five 11en:1nt (5'1.I ., Ille 141n1 'lltcl 11 Lln= ..... 4uu 1n;; Huntington Beach H i g h bld1. 0e .. if!'lld reMr¥11 tilt r1ehl lo r•ltd 1nv 1 ¥t rd1 bui 1e11 !lltn n r1n:t1 w11er 1 •u1r1nle• 11111 1111 blcldtr will~ '"'° the WAVES. School and will a t t e n d 01tec1 : Ju.., ,,, 1N41. 1n<1 111 bid•. 11¥11 ............................ •.511 "" "'-..er con1r1tt 11 1111 """ 11 , Gr1c1 MICl(ey Otl'fd· JulV 22, 1'61, 17 v1rdl but llH 111111 If y1rcll Wiier IWtrclecl to lllm. 111 1111 IYtrll ofA•1JUr1 to Five-year residents of Orange Coast Oollege m the 1i1 E1K111r1x Gr•c• MldCw 1ev11 ....••..• -·········· ......... 111111'"to1uc11 con1 ... c1, Th•,......,. of Cosba Mesa, they are the fall ot 1t1e wtn •• E~ecutrt• of TM will 16 r1nb 11111 in. 1111n u ¥1t'cll w111r 111t c11tc11 will bl torttnld or 111 1111 caw • ot 1111 1boft.fllmllll clteedfnt, of ""'•bovl-n•mtd l!Kldtnt 1n11 ........... ...... • ..... ,, .. of .• bond, tM full wm "'*"' 1"'h 111 parent.a .Of M a r g a r e t . Her f1'an-son of Mr and 11.UMI••• .... ZOMMICIC ILUMllllO ""' lOMMICIC 2J ¥1rdl Of' mort. water ~, hltllle fl)m!lltd IO H id xhool dlrtrkt~ • '"""• • All-•• fw l•Kvlr1JI AMrlll'fl fir txeelllrlx unit or tombt111llD11 of ¥llhlcll1I. J.:M No bidder '""' Wl!Mrtw 1'111 lllf tor • Thomilla. Janet, Joyce and Mrs. William W. Seibert m """"' &vllft• fl> Slcvr!IY 1111111111 or1"'' of Trudi 1. ... 1 P1Ylold Pt•lod of r-ort11.11 .... {UI 11111 , lt!tr "" Gail Aftttlony • ..z ' 111 IOJM ..__ 11• ,1111 A-c1111clf¥· 111te "' tQr ""'°""'"' llltnd ~ · also lS a graduate UI Hun· ~ IH<ll. c 1lfolnlt•,.. i.-lllCll. c11KM111 ~ L111 llMn :. 1on1 ................. 4.50 Tiit ao.n1 .t Trui1Ms ....;,.,..,.. IN Presently teaching French tington Beach High and cur· •m.oc ~ ' 111111 ta 10 tons .................. •.53 pr1¥11ett of r1ltd1111 •nv 111c1 •U 111c11 or at Huntington Beach High rently is attending OCC. .., ";t";,"':nd°'.:U"::1f"t"';~•1"' '1';"2'i: ..,Pu.b•:~nd ':~":1 't'1~D11~ 111~79,~ :i:::::: ~;: ::::::::::::::::: !:: ::m:1T~': 111':i.¥ ~r:"1~~111.:.,., 1~ School, Anthony has resum· 20 lanl OI' "'°"' ............. ~... NORMAN E. WATSON • LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Orl¥tr !If TrtMlt-MI• Tr..U.-,..,., :I Stcty .. lo.rel llf Tr\11,_ '• ed. an int.erupted career. w•r'*' .... ... ... .. . ...... •.1• Dllttrl: "'"'· s. 1 ... 2 11.m. • • Previously he was an M Makers ITATI op CALll'o•MiA or1 .... r of Tr11111t·MI• Trv<:k -i Y•rdl J j'1111lfllltd °''"" co.11 1>11"' 'Prtot. ' t C Jli Radi erry Dl,AltTMlfNT 01' GllfMSRAL llltVICll or mort .... , ............... .. .... Uy It, U, 1H41 • •blUI engineer a o ns o 0,,1c1 0 , ..,.CHITSCTU•• ANCI c;:CNt1T11utTlff loolrnln ' .................. · 4·" LEG'" NOTlcE · Co. and has been active jn TOPS Merry Makers m eet 1110T1c1 To C::Of11Ttu.CT0111 w11tr or T•llk·TYH Trv<:k Orlwr -1U.1 SEALED ll'ROll'OSAL5 will 111 l'l«llftd b'I' lllt otflc.1 of Artlllle<"lurt 1nd (on. l'nd!tr 'JOO llllllol\1 ... · 4.5' 1----:-::::::-,,,:,.,-,,:_::. __ _ community affairs and a lay every Thurs day of the 11r111:11on 111 lleom 91m. 107 Soulh 8fOlclw•Y. LP• Anpelft, C•llhl,.,11 t00121 irn111 w11tr or T1n1t·TYPt Trvcll: o r1wr -1.••AL NOTic1 lead-for the Mesa Verde month m' Perry School Hun-2:00 11.m .. WldntSdlY. A.1191111 1 ,,.., 11 Whkfl 111111 lhe)I' w111 tit 1111bl1c1v --2• 1•1·.., o11100 1•1. ·••••· .... •·" """'o•T-MlfU. u111111'1lro ' "' , ' UICI reld In llPOm 1101 ti H ie! ldcll'"'9. tor ll'AINTING -WARD E.Nl/lllON· Wtltr °" T1nlt·T'°" Trvck Driver~ SCHOOL OllTltlCT • • 1 United Methodist Church. tington Beach, at 7 p .m . MENTAi. IMPAOVl!MEMTI, ,HASE I, OEll'ARTMl!NT OF MENTAL HVGll!"NE, ••I. Ind flftr ........ •.to Miila ''"'"'"' ... i!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~IFAllll/IEW STATE HOS .. ITAL, COSTA MEU.. OllANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. Forte Litt Drlvtr ·+··· ......... 5.ltS NOTICE IS Hl!"llEIY Gii/EM ""' .... {W.0. AEOS tm(j, If! ICCDl'dlnct wllh tM pl1M tnd tPIKllktllonl !her.,.,.. 1nd Trl'dl: Df'ltMr Ind lrtmlll • •• ••• •.1.1 8oenl Of l!"CllK.ltlon of .... Ntwllll"l>Mlll 1uctl lcldendl tt>tr1ta 11 l!'llW bt litUf!d prior to bid _.,l"f dlll\ True-R1Ptlnn1n · • • • ·····• ,.,. J."65 Unit/eel Sd\ool Olttrkl of Ottl'ltt Ovntv Tiii bldd'I"' ttltntlon If ~1t1Clflc1llY dl11(1itcl 11 1 -prp~lllon In "" 'ra-•I Trutk Rn>•lrm.n Hellltr ·• • , ··• 4,1l$ C1ntor11r1, wlll r.ttl¥t -1111 lillll \IP .; by which 1111 bidder 01rlll+.1 nltllw llt tt>t ob1tlnl11t ot wlHllcllli!r 11uol1Tlont A·,r1mt or SW'tdllll Crtnt Ortver J.lh 2:30 P.M. on tM tl'ICI d•w of A•l!lto' IHI,. SWAYING PALMS, ISLAND MUSIC WDNDllFUL WESTCLIFF Pl.All ''_Afo/ia :J)a'lj " SIDEWALK SALE TANTLIZINO IUYI SATURDAY AT HUMPTY DUMPTY ClflLDHNS SlfOP ~- !llrwih 81d DtDO•ttorlts. Or1¥tr o1 E.uctlcl-T\I" S.ntdlr Tnxk; •I tlM otllet of 111c1 khoel "DB!rlCI TM1 P!'Ultel co~I-rt11ilnl!np ol cert1l11 lntttlor P011itfll of S w11cl build< Liii tllln 2J Yl rcl• w1h!r 11¥11 IP¥tr 21 locllld tt 1157 Pllctntll AllW9\ll Coif; 11111• ...... 1k1llon of ICOltllktl P!lll'fr wrtt<lntl IO eerltln ttlllnti 1re11 In Dnl VII$ w1t.r 11¥11, llM Dump Trudi MIH, e.111on111, ,, Whlell "'"' ~ ... w1n:l bU!klln1, 1nd r.Hlnllnt of 1zltrfor rntt1I w11t<w1y Cll'IOllltl. <ltHll,J .•.••... ,. ··•··•··· · ···· '·4'5 Wiii bit llllblltlY -0 trwJ l'ttO •· Bk11 win 11t enl'f•l•ltlld on • lumP •um 11111 irnu prlQI 1111!1 11 111 '°""' In W!ncl'I Truck. Drlnr: 11\o\c: -"""'~ Mullt-Mldl• and Studtnl .,...,\....., item• 1 lhrtH!tll • In tM Pro-I Form. dlti-1 wlll11 -r1ll111 _, wl11Ch, Snt.m Tiit 1111/lnttlltt ttl fllr1!1 111 t11t lortOOI"' Slit. Artlll!Kl'I Hllm1tt 1'11 111-•I· or llmlllr i.HClll lll~J. All ibl1b 1r. Ill Ill li'I IC~ wt"' malt only, tllcl •ft tlvt11 t• 1 btllS r-or comHrlion of bld1. Tiie Olllc:.t ot Ar£111o II 111111 Ill f!'llndllory -tM C-COflClltlonl, IM!rucllolll tnd Sllefl'Ctll0"9 ll<'lurt llld COfltlNdlon ... , Ill)!, IXllll"""IY ,,, bV lll'IDlktllon, Ml"ft lhll ""' tr1c11W to wMr!I "" OllllrK'I I• IWttclllll Wllldl tr• now on flit Ill "S:t:l(P ~ Ille Kt\ltl •mount pt WOrll; will eorr."""" tMrtw/!11, but renr'Vlt lllt rlthl to In-11111 llPDll '"" 1Ubcofllr1cfor lll'ldll' him, le Pul'dlllll!I Afftll Pl Ml4 Dt"'ld c,..,,. tr Otc,...M t11t ..,_nHIY .. 1111Y bt dHmM tclYllliM. b'I' 1111 Slltt Aldi!• ,IY nol ltt1 """ 11'11 llkl '""!ltd rt191 1"1 ,laCllftfll ·-· c-. ,.,,.,._; 11('!. lo 1H WOrllmtll ~1o¥t41 by llltm Ill 1111 Ctllfotn/1, SMc:l•lutloM 11111 Rtft~ Or1wll1w mllY Ill ..... ti ""' 8ulldtrt' ll!Cl'llllM 1XKVllon of .... C9111rlcl " lllt °"""" lfldl Md6tr l'l\WI tubrnll Wllfl hll llld • Otlkts, ll'ICI '"' Otf1c:' ., AKhflKM'I •ncl COl'l'lll'Wllon, 11• "N" Slf'lll, SKr•· Kt .. lld "''· NlltfKIOi'Y dllclt etttllltd ..., • _.... rMnlO lllcl 1111 Slulh 8'otdwl,, I.Pl Anlt~ Incl !hi.ill Pllftl •1141 -111c1t10111. PRaOUAl.l~ICATIDNI No bid wtM Ill bit tllnll Of' • ~ bind _.._.._ .. '-lllir wl!ll forms of .... _... Incl •1110tr'1 lond. ,,.,.,. .. OOltlntd bV '""uni-t«tPIM from I Olfl!rKfllr ""' .... "" fl) ""' """' fll Ille N_..~ Ull~ 1111 ll'4fl"I 1n writing .,. In Plf"IDll fl'lft'I tM Offfcll ti Atd'llttt!Wt •llcl C-lrUdltn 11tt11 NctnMcl 111 Kc.nllftCI wllh Ille ,,.... ldlolll 'D11tr1d Ill 1111 •mount Ml .,_ "' *'"""''° t5eOJ or Lii ... ,.,... MU. ....._ ,,,, tfll c.ntrldor'• I.~ Ad "' ....... "-~ (,..1 "' "" """ Miit ... IMl:lflttlllllll incl Atft,_ Ortwlr!ts mllY bt GtlltlMd wtfhDllt dllrll Mii ll't lo '""'°"1 I ,_I form llM nol 111111 I tl.llf'lftltl .... , lflt lolcMtr WIN ....... 1 .... Ill)! kl bl f"ttUrned. llWtd -lflCll,, tor ""' ..,,_ " .... "" 111"-.d Cll'ltnCt " "" ..... • lt H• bid wlM bl: con11*f' .. llftlfl.I It .. mlClt ..... •llndlN .,-opt11tl lwlll fUnto mtm111 I M ""' "'"' -11(1. Ho llld will ..... nM41 111111. "' ltll _. of ta!Ln .. llhed by lfll Otllal t1' Ardllttciul'I .,...-C-tn,ot!WI Incl h mtClt In I CC8Ntnel IM _.. .. llnlnl 1t II ""°' lfl I tftl9r 11111-l\lcfl C911!rtcl1 1111 ..,..... '" with the "tnJlrVOltllt le •lcldtl"'. Eld! blOdtr _, bt tit""'* MW ltM ,.... ""°""I fllorm /unllllllcl ., lfll OtMft 1111 dlKll wflf lloe tDrftltM • ., 111 u. t(.1 -IHllcl W11t11 r-lfld, VllW lei-I Olllrld 8ncl --.rllld ., blrld. 1111 1'1111 -""'"' wtll )I n,. OINrtmlnl el 0--.11 Str¥1EH "'WWI h r'9trf lw l'llKI lllY or 111 .... I lkNtn ecw.I, C..ltr'• CMdl 9' lor+ttfM .. N lf kJlopl Olttrtcf o1 Or1-1"'11 l'O w11ft .... llltorm.11"' 111 1111' bl4I f'ICllftd Ctrttllllll Ct>tek ,,.,.... HYlblt to t1M c..vn1Y. • Tl'lt 0.PlrllMflf of Gftltt"ll ~ .... IKlf'l•lntd ,... """'' ltl'C'l'l llltll Sdlo6I Oltl!'l(f, rn Ille ....... " ti 11111 ,.... No blddiel' ,...., wt!llclr1w Ml ............. rate of Wiii• tor ttr11ttlt tlfnt. tllm'lllnt, Slturdlys, lundtn. •nd lltlltlln. ol h .,-.i ll'·ltll Int lhl. Ptr'9ll ol fllrt'Yofl¥9 !GI .. n t111r .. llldllcllnt """"""r 11•Yfl'ltftl1 t11r lltlllfl Incl wtll-. ¥1ttl\oi'I, -1111. ft The Ol1tr1C1 ,_,.... 1111 l1tht to r114id Cllt. HI tw 1111 _.,. ~ 1lml11r 1111~. to Ill l1buMllllll lltr'Ntltr fOI' Ille _.,. Ill WlllCl'I lfll ..wt! It -Pl' Ill NOi, ,,.. .. wlfft otllY 1111.,.. Tiie "'"' fll EMllllll or tlli ,.__. • Ill ...._ Helldt )'S IMft t. 1111111 dtllllld M tUdl 111 tllt <ellft:tlft lllrtllt1l"'9 lftt rllY Ill .... tt*lflt 9' Ir! trlY bN r. Miii Uflllllll SCh9ll Dlltrlct ,.......-.. l"'"l'Nfll 1111Pttclblt II IM llbor cll•llf1ttllOll(•I -~ Pn tilt -11(1. otl...... ri.tll llo ,..ltd 111Y ot Ill .......... 1111i O•NlllAI. PlllVNLllMI MOUllLT WA .. IATll ... 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C.t 1~ I~ ----------------------·---·---------------~-------~--'-' I --------·. ------,-.. -··L:O ......... ~,--..... ~--~~.,.-...... ..,.------.... --------...,~--~--..... ~-~---------··-·-·-----·----------- .• • ,;.Jf DAILY PILOT FridQ, July 26, 1%8 ., );-eking Reds vs • Dodgers •• Ill Series? . NEW YORK (AP) -lma&lne, ll 1ou cu. a b11eball series between l!MI Tolcyo GYoala and the Peking l!edl wtllt tho Los All&eles Dod1ers "'1lln1 In tho winp to take Oii the -· A pipe Seam? A fantaayf Not at all. B a s e b &' 11 c:am. missioner William D. Eckert 1aid ~ to his very close friend, Toru Shorlki. president of the Yomiuri GlMtta. perennial Japanese baseball ~ampiooa. "My aim i. to ••e thal baoeball coea &loba!, that it'• played ~y ev~y country in the world," Eckltt addod. "Qo\)' !all nigM I WH tellin& Tod -... (advi"" to the lat< ~I· deDt John Kfll'lnedy) that it'1 my aim to see baseball taken behind I.he Bamboo Curtain Into Communist China. "With supersonic travel in the of· fing, I see baseball going to every corner of the world, including Com· • munl1t countries. It would do much to solve world terulo111." Shorikl, pr<1minent T o t y o publlal\er and sporUmorl, J)lid a eoW1esy call on tbt com.mlllioner. who was Japan's gut.It on a viJit of the Loi Angeles Dodger& two years ago. They t a I k e d endluslastically a~ut their favorite subject. "Attendance i.s higher Jn Japan than it wa'S a year ago," Shorlki said. "'SU.ball ttW !a ttie most popular ~ in Jap111. Soccer is comlnr ~· Wre1UJna 11 Coint down. GG1t .1a 1t11m11ieed1." T1M Japanese baseball executive WU uked if tbt hltter1 IQ h.il COUD• try w e t. experiencina: the s a m e problem• u they 1r1 now in the Ullited States, with shutout fames t'he rule. "HJtting is up .and pitching . is down,'' Shoriki explained. "We have 1everaJ .300 blttus. The best hitter Cardinal Ace Wins 11th S traight, Ties Club Record Gibson -Two Runs in 92 " .• '.sT. LOUIS (AP) -The best way to ,Jtct ~ to ezplain lltat Bob Gibson ol ~ st. Louia OrdinoJs WOii blJ 11th 'afral&bt game. · Then you I" on to note that Gibson :!lltdiecl bis eillhth shutout in hill last 10 victories. On top of that, ht bu allow-itd just two runs in 92 innings. That ·has dehydrated his earned run iverage to less than one rlUl a game. And Ill d ttiOH heroics helped him .1it the can:linal club record of 11 stra.i&ht vict<rie1 set in 1944 by Ted \_\'iijts1 and the career record oC 33 !!ihutouta set by William Doak. It also gave the Cardinals a 5--0 vie· tay over tht Philadelphia Phillie!!i Thursday night, giving them a sweep of the four-game series, .nd extended the Phillies' Josing string to seven games. All GibM>n cares about is that he won the game. ''It helps to win when you don't give up a run," the Cardinal right-hander allowed. It also helps when you have a good fa.tball. "Yeah, I had a good fastball \ tooight," Gibson agrees, "and when you have a good pitch you throw it more. I did throw it Cthe fastball) put them a few times, but I wun't trying to. "I was trying to hit a corner in1tead o fthrowing it p a s t them dovm the middle. You do that when you 're young, and then you learn very quickly you can't do it." Typical of Gibson'fi fine control, only one: Philly readied bue on a walk . "Once you get to the point where you have control," Gibson em- NORTH HANDOFF -Quarterback Mike Kloos of Danville hands off to his fullback, Sam Gara mendi of San Andreas in a North play during 17th annual Shrine North-South gam e at Colisewn Thursday night. Kloos suffered a dislocated shoulder l\vo plays after this one and the South went on to w\n . 14-10. In Shrine Clash Baldwin's Open Attack Nets South 14-10 Win By EARL GUSTKEY 01 t11ti OtllY .. ii.1 Slllf Chalk one up for wide open football . Santa Ana High coach Tom Baldwin lried it in the Shrine game at the; Coliseum Thursday night and his Soutti team responded with a 14·10 decision before 39 .507. · ltfoNents after the final gun . th e e!· ferve&'cent Bald\11in acknowled ged that tht 17th renewal of the Shriner's classic was a crowd-pleasing affair, but added : "We really should've ham· mered 'em." Baldwin confessed he was mystified by the North's hum-drum offense. "Tbey just kept runnin' off tia<:kle at us all night. We tried to play it a s wide ope.a. as we could." Baldwin's juggernaut was ignited by a spectacular quarterback from Santa Ba.rbva High School. Grady Hurst. "This kid has got it. He's had this whole football team right there." he said, pointing to his palm. The hard-core football fan delights in going throu~ old Shrine game pro- grams, plucking out rrames like Dick Bass, Nick Eddy. Ronnie Knox and the rest. Baldwin was asked to name some £rom tltis year's club who might have similarly ramiliar names years from · now. "You have to like Jelf Siemon of Bakersfield," he said, pointing to the 6-2. 215-pound end. "This Jcjd is an NFL prospect -he's got it all." Another he named was C 11 f f Culbreath Of San Bernardino. a 2.15- pound tackle. In addition lo the technical aspects of the game. Baldwin thought his team had the edge in emotion, too. Singer Singing Hard Luck Tune CHICAGO (AP) -Bill Singer can't be con sidered a "hard luck" pilcher. Although he's near the top in Na- tiooal League strikeouts with 146 in 134 innings, he just hasn 't pitched well in the last few games. In his last two st.arts. Singer. 6-10. has yielded seven earned runs in 11 in· Dodg..,. Slate J11lv U DodOttltlCl>ittltO ll :JJ •.m. Kl'I (6«11 J111v 11 DodlH!rll!Chlc190 11 ~101.m. Kl'I fHOI July lt Dodg~r1 ti CMttlO 01 10:15 1.m. ICl'I 4~01 J~ll' tt l><>og1r1 tr Hov•lcn 5:25 11.m. Kl'I (...0) J11!y 30 Dodper11t HOl/1!00 4:il p.m. Kl'I (...Ol nings. But his trouble may all be men- tal. In his first six games this ye a r , Singer went 46 innings .and allowed on- ly 10 earned runs. He struck out 44 batters and walked only 12. But his teammates got him only 10 runs and his record W'35 1-4. The experlence may have disturbed him. Since then he has a record of 5~ including five complete games. one oC them a JO.inning affair. 1-Ie was scheduled to take the mound today at \Vrigley Field in Chicago. Op- posing hJm was the Cubs' BUI Hands, 10.5. Innings phaaized, "you keep it. YOu might have one or two wild games, but I don't think it leaves you." Edwards marveled .about Gibson's work. "His fastball w.a.s live, live,'1 Edwards exclaimed. Edwards added th-1 Gibson js hard to catch -in an euy 1ortof way. "He's tough because he throws so hard, not because he's wild.'' Edwards explained. "He b&J good control which makes i~ .. But bia fastball sails inside or outsJde depending on bow be holds the ball." Minnesota Golf Play Is I\.notted ST. PAUL. Minn. (AP) -While Lee's Fleas fretted over the putting woes of their new hero, U. S. Open champion Lee Trevino, fi ve of prG golf's virtual unknowns swept into the openlng-round lead Thursday in the SI00.000 Minnesota Golf Classic. Locked in ~e tie for first heading in· lo today's second round were Pete Brown of Pomona. Calif.. J . C. Snead of Hot Sprini!S. Va., Jim Colbert of Overland Park. Kan., Harry Toscano of New Castle. Pa., and Bob Stanton of Sydney, Australi8. who now Uves in New Orleans. All had five.under-par 66s Gver the 6.702-yard Keller golf course. First- pl!1ce money is worth sro.ooo. None of the l~aders is ranked in the top 80 money winners this year on the PGA tour. and only Brown has ever won a PGA tour. and only Brown has ever won a PGA tournament -the WACO Turner at Ardmore. Okla .. in 1"'4. Trevil\o. who claimed hP "didn't make one putt." soared to a three·over 74 to fall eight strokes behind the leaders. He needed a big recovery to- day to keep from being cut as the field "'as to be trimmed to the low 70 pros plus ties. "I just came up here to see all my friends." Trevino auipped after his mediocre round. "I don 't need the money." Trevino and Tom Weiskopf are the nnl;.-golfers among the PGA's 14 leadine money winners this year who show~ up for the Classic. Wei skoof still was very much in con- ll'!ntion . He was tied for second with Dave Eichelberger and Monte Sanders with 67s -one stroke behind the leaders. Seven more were locked for ninth at 68. while another 18 were tied at 6!t Fifth of the field of 156 ~olfers bet. tered the venerable old Keller course's par of 71 and another 26 matched it - a pattern which has become normal in recent times. However, Weiskopf and Trevino defended the course. "The fa irways a~ in perfect shape and the greens hid raJ well ." Weiskopf said. "The fairways ire narrow wh ich outs a premium on accuracy. and tht tl'aps are rough, which is the way it .should be." Pugilist Conaer 11 Sadaharu Oh, ti.At baseman of the Gianta. He is hitUn& .341. "I remember him well," Ect,rt said. "la one game I aaw, be hit a home run for · the Emperor, who was atteodilg his flr1t buebell game." The commissioner aaid he was happy that it had been hi1 privilege to sign an agre,l!lr'Qent promising to seed an American team to Japan for 1 series of exhlbitiom every two years . Another team is scheduled to 10 ln October of thlB year. "It lmprove1 th• underst.lndlnc ol. our two countrle1," Eckert u..ld. Sboriki was uked who was th& most popular bueball personality to visit Japan. "Babe Ruth was very popular -1 remember I saw him when I was quite yOU11g, '' the Glarita' president said. "But Lefty O'Doul -the ,_.. loved him." U,.I Ttlwhtll CAPTAIN ZERO -Bob Gibson of the St. Louis Cardinals toss~ his 11th straight victory Thursday night. He's permitted just two runs in the last 92 innings and his ERA is less than one run a game. Wright to Pitch AL's Mystery Team, • Chicago, Visits Big A One of the mystery teams of the ma· jor league baseball season, the Chicago Wh ite Sox! visit Anaheim Stadium tonight for the start of a three-game stopover in Orange Coun· ty. The Wh ite Sox made a bold run at the pennant last year and were in the race until the final \veek. Today you Angel Slate JUIY !' A~9'11 vs Cl>k•IO 7:SS 11,m, KMPC (1101 JulY 71 Anffl5 ¥50.klto 7:SS p.m. ICMPC (1101 Ju1v 11 AlllH!l• YI Chlt•llO l!;SJ p.m. ICMPC \11GJ Jul, 2' ........ 11 YI Mlnr>eKlll 1:.U 11.m. KMPC 11101 Julv ll Anteli 11 01~. C21 5:5.S p,m , ICMPC 0101 find them in ninth place, 14 games under .500 and 18 1h games off the pace. The Chicago front o[fice fired the n1anager. Eddie Stanky, last week lo see if that wi>uld help. But the new boss. Al Lopez, is resting in a Chicago hospital after an appendectomy. The Angels hope to get tracked again after their recent flirtation with the elusive .500 mark. They're 47.50 and in the sixth spot. Their road trip ended on a downbeat in Minneapolis Wednesday night when the Tw ins and Dean Chance prev;tiled. 12-1. Cali fornia's Clyde \Vright. 7 · 2. makes ltis final start of the year for the Angels this season. He'll face Joe Horlen of tlle White Sox, 7-8. Aurelio Rodriguez is a compact third baseman who hates to get on base the easy way, That's why he has been swinging the bat lately, avoiding walks and gettbl& hits. Rodriguez was batting well beloW .200 as the month d. July started. Since then. the S·foot-11 Angel infielder has batted over .400 with 24 hits in 58 at bats. The An gels were idle Thursday, Oh their way back from a road trip of eight games. The Angels went 5·3 and Rodriguez went 15 for 31 including four doobles and five runs batted in . His batting average is .276 today, which leads the club. And that's quit& a mark in the year of the pitcher. Montreal Down For the Count? The 5-11 , 175-pound dynamo pro· pe21ed his comrades 72 yards in 10 ~ early in UM! first quarter tor the game's first score and from there the Soutbemers were never headed. Blll'lt. wbo W3'5 recruited by ArizON s&1e, bu made .a sizable impression OD Beldwin. New Life, Pink Slip and 375 Pounds MONTREAL (AP ) -Reacting to reports that a Buffalo. N. Y ., group is ready to step in should Montreal not be able to participate in the expanded National League. sponsors of this city's newly acquired b a s e b a 11 franchise said Thursday night it still is loo early to count Montreal out. Doubts that Montreal will be fielding a team in 1969 were ~first raised Wednesday when a second member o( the original seven.man syndicate backlng lht. new ~baU entry withdrew b.is investment. • • l • • IJ .. · .... IJ ICOll IY IWA.ITlltS ·--- ........ lfl'll"I'! ............................. ' ti .......... ,....,._., ,...... •••••••• " ,,. ., Do J4' .,. ..... ftll!lll'llrll ................ JO • .. _.. ,. ••••• ,. ................ ... " , •• 14 .... ,..,. ....... • .............. Jill 11' ,.,_. ,... ....,..._ m. .. .. . . .. . .. o ,. ri 1'"""'4_., ..... •• .............. M .1 W.J ........... ,.,.,,.....,...... .............. .. '1 ,,. lJ K.O:• ,...,,-.y,,-. ............ I· 22 J. U., ,_.=,.,_ ,_.,t_. .. .... ...... ,. u ,.. a lfl'w;: flilt ........................ l-.. I By The Associated Prest RoSs 1-.. ichtner's fortunes are looking up and Ron Kramer's have taken a turn for the worse. Sam McDowell 111.epped on a scale to have his fortune to.Id and it didn't cost him a penny only a protesslonal foot.ball contr.icl. Fichtner. 29. dropped several days ago by Lhe Cleveland Browns after a racial incident, signed Thursday with the New Orleans Saints. The I>Mroit Llons aave the 33.year· aid Kramer. t.n ll-year light end. his unCODditional release. And the MJami Dolphins decided to let McDowell go after .the rookie from Southwest Missouri weighed in at 375 pounds. .a mere 80 more than the amount at wh.ich his c on tr a c t stipulated he should report. Fichtner. an eight·Y ear sat-etyman. WI$ the second veteran to join the Saint& recently. Dave Park&, an end who played out his option with San F'rancitco. signed with the National Football League club last week. The Browns pl&eed Fichtner. who is white, 1od JOOn Wooten, a Negro guard, on waivers after a dispute whleh arose when the Browns' Negro players were nol lnvited to participate in a golf tournament which Fichtner arranged. Wooten. a nine-year veteran. has not disclosed his plans. Kramer, OM of the league's premier perfo.-mtrt during eirht seasons with Green B•y and three with Detroit. was hampered but injuries last year. But his career record shows 229 receptions tor 3,272 y1rd5. "I may make 1 few calls to some other clubs,'' he said. "But then again I may decide to call it quits and hang them up.'' Coach Joe Schmidt said he planned to carry two light c.nds -J im Gib· bons. 31 , a long·time Lion , and rookie Charlie Sanders, the team's No. 3 draft cho·ice. Althou&h McDowell, a 6-foot-7 of· fen1tve tackle. was told to report at 29S or lffs, l h e Dolphins: muat have had tbt.ir doubts. The team's brochure lists him at 335 pounda. • He was Monlreal financier J. Louis Levesque. and his pullout came only a day after another backer. Marc Bourgie. a wealthy funeral director, withdrew his sponsorship. Buffalo, one oC the unsuccessful bid• ders for a franchise when Montreal Ind San Diego were added to the f!:Xa PJnded 12-team league last May 27, rtsponded lo these developmenta by putting ln a new bid ln the event that Montreal i..Dterests default. For Summer Cage Play Huntington Beach Nets Repeat Title · By ROGER CARLSON 01 t11e DM1Y PllM It_,, Huntington Beach routinely put down Marina Thursday night by a 70- 55 count to close the books on another championship in Huntington Beach ·Summer Basketball circles at the win· ner's gym. The victory D)&r%ed the 11th in a row fOr coach Elmer Combt: forces - .....,,.~ L ff PA 1~111m 1 ' 711 .. 1 !li!!i ·.:,, ! ~·~ m ' If: m 1(1 • 111 11 l 7" the same mark attained last year in romping to the title. · Garden Grove finished out witb a 10- 1 record in second place lifter demolishing Westminster, 69-45, at Marina Hip. The Grovers sped to a 32--18 lead at the half IDd never looked l>ack. Other actiCtD at Marina c&DM in the Billie Jean Handed Loss OAKLAND (AP) -.Mrs. Billie Jean Kini ol Lons Beach, Calif., looked forward to a 10-day rest today after being upset by Rosemary casals of $an Francisco. ., Mi11 CUals downed Mr1. Kini 10-8, u, 8-0 Thursday night before 5,2.67 in the Coliseum Arena for the women's tingles title in a pro tournament Jpoosored by the National Tennis (,.ague . Fred Stolle Of Aultralia downed Pancho Gonzalez of Los Angelei 7..S, ~ 3, and Miss Casals and Stolle defeated Gonzalez and Francoise Durr of France in doublec 7-5, 6-3. · "!didn't play particularly well but I iuess either of us d i d," said M i 1 1 Casals. "There wa1 no way I shOuJd have won," said Mrs. King. • Mrs. King had trouble witb her backhand and looked tired as Mis1 Casals crushed her in the fulaJ. ae:t, givi ng up only 10 points. The first set lasted more than an hour and the match lasted nearly two hcw·s. Miss Gasals has now won four times ln nine matches with Mrs. King. Stolle had a tougher time with the veteran Gonzales but gained the upper hand when he broke Gonzalea:' 1erve in the 12th game of. the firat set u Gonzales double faulted at aet point. Stolle broke Gonzales' serve again in the fourth game of the second aet. The pro arou.p has tournament dates next in New York and then Fort Worth, Tex. Estancia Advance Requires No Effort Estancia High School made it into the consolation finals at UC Irvine in the Costa Mesa Rweation TOurna- ment Thtttsday night without lifting a finger. Saddleback High, the Eagles' op- ponent, failed to show and forfeited the right to the consolation finals because of a rash of injuries and vaca- tio ns depleting the Saddleback ranks. Estancia wiU battle Buena Park on Monday at 7:15 for the third place ti.· Ue. Foothill, meanY.iille, received the same kind or treatment fr o m Fu llerton via the forfeit route and moves into the champiomhip ftnalJ against Troy at 8:30-Monday ni&ht. form ol Fountain Valley rlpplns C01ta Me1a, M-41 , and BOlsa Grande 1arntr· ins its firat win of the eampaJp With a 6l.f7 overtime win over winle11 La Qulnta. '!be two tied at the and ol resuJatlon time at lll·lll. Newport -opened matters at Hllllllncton Baacb willl an easy 13-57 . victory over Rancho Alllili!OI llld Corolla de! Mar finished the night with a narrow '1'1·7f verdict over Villa Park. Huntington's victory over Marina came rather matter-of-factly with the hosts running up a il>i>olnt margin In the tint ball and then tradin1 baskets with the Vik es· the rest' of the way. Marina cut the margin to nine ill th!' fourth period with 2:30 to 10 on a buket by Dick Ivie. However, Mike Contreras (27) put an end to ·th.It with a couple of fre e thfoowa and tbe Winnen continued on .. _ .... _ other 1cor.lng gum fer the cham· plom weu Brad Nid!ols (15) and Roy Mlller (10). Marina'• Rick Mosier (20) received help from Ivie (12) and Kipp Baird (12). Newport Harbor's.sixth win was led by Paul Holmes and Dave Eccles with 18 apiece in the scoring department. A second half spree by the winners did In Rancho an.r trailing by a 33.30 tally at the hall. Mark Allecrezza was the top scorer far Fountain Valley in the Barons' .seventh victory. He tallied 19. The win ahoved Fountain Valley into a tie for third place with Westminster and Cor- ona del Mar ••. all With 7-4 records. Carena del Mar was led by Steve Leech (22) and Chris Thompson (18) with Dean WJese (15) helping out. Corona's third quarter splurge did the trick when the Se.a Kings outscored Villa Park by a 19-13 count to pull from behind. * * * Cerellll fill ~r ._.. ~ ""'"'" 20 10 If 1&-77 VIiii ,.,,._ 23 lf 13 lt-7• C .... WI :1" Vlllt Ptrt< (70 Ltech 'f 6 '1 ~ llu&Hll i ? "f it Thom_,. 1 ' J It YwlMr I ' • Wlffe l 7 l lj Pe"SIK 4 l 10 Flnlrf .f ' ! 1 D•vtor> 4 I " ~r af 2 f5~ • ,, ~ ~:l:=.~ jlll t1111 11 22 U n Ttttl1 2• J 11 * * * ._. .., °''"'" l'ount1111 V1Uty 11 n 21 1~ c;:.,. Mtw 10 10 11 f-...41 ...,. ... Y•l•ft Wl.. ·-1,, .. Oltlt. I o Alltlrtul l ' I lt H1tdl 1 ., n "-I , :;.~ l 11 Makl lO ' Tol91s 23 20 1 '6 * * * * * * * 11111 1'-'S 1 15 IS 72--69 Wutml~tttr l•SI * * .. ti,.. .. ' l G 1li I 0 J 2 2 0 ' ' , ' ! • • • • 2 c 2 ' J 2 1 I 1711 111 lJ Book of Hoyle Mexicans Defeat CdM, 8-7 By RON EVANS °' .. D91tf'-1'1•' ..... Allred Salen, lhe Yugoslavian hlrocl by the llepubllc of Mox!· co. is a man who obviously take.s thin&• into bis own banda when things aren't going accordina: to hoyle. Wilh Corona del Mar In a 4-3 load at lhe end of the first hlllf of its exhibition water polo match Thursday with the Mexican Jfi. 'lonal team, BaJen took over officiating duties in the second ball. • Suddenly it was a different game. The visitors stormed back with lour goals 'in the third quarter and went on to an ~7 victory over coach Ed Newland'• CdM forces. , A crowd of i!OO fans wltnis1ed the come-from-behind victory • for Mexico. Said New!Olld of the officiatlns:· I.be 11C011d half: "It wasn't unfair ••• Ju1t a dlfferen! type • • • 1tyle. Our kid• had a had time adJmtlng to it 1n the third per1 ." The COrotta squad made It cl .. • with 1:05 to fO when Ferdie Massimino hit his third loa.I of tho evening with a penalty shot to draw within one of the. winners. Thal, however was as close as the Yanks could make it. Other scores for Corona del Mar were Pat McClellan with three and Mike Martin connected on one. --_. --------·-_I_ Frldly, Julr26o 1968 ore: The bullfight season is in full swing at the Down- town Bullring in Tijuana. The top matadors from Spain and Mexico are featured. in Sunday afternoon corridas. Tijuana is ranked seventh in the world among major bullfight cities. Leadership Lacking Mann Ahead After 1 L~p Danger Flag Goes Up In County NBC Hassle TORONTO !AP) -Carol Mann , played under unusual strain but finish · ed 8:5 the first-round leader 1'iursdAY in the '20,000 Supertest Women's o?en Golf Championship. The danger nag is up in the Orange County's National Baseball Congress league with managers firing charges and couot.er-chara:es at each other in the current squabble over an "all Star" baseball game with the Angel Rookies at the Big A Sunday. Seems the biggest problem is the lack of a president to preside over the .......... ...,,,'lol".'""""' CARLSON ROGER --···rft••••••VJo league. League meetings com e to pass and apparently its dog-eat-dog with no . one to lay down the law. As it 1tands, Westminster and Costa Mesa, along with perhaps the Santa Ana Angels, are balking at se nding any of their players to compete in the All·Star encounter under Bob Chavar- ria of the league-leading Fountain Valley Cardinals. Big fly in the ointment is ttie distribution of players from each team. Westminster &: Co: says an equal number of players from each team 1bould go while Chavarria plans the uae ol. several Fountain Valley Rlil1er1 (including the entire infield and the starting p i t c b e r ) sup· plemented by a few from the r.est oC the league. If the coaches ot. the NBC 1oop don't get ~gether soon, patch up the dllf· erences and name a circuit com· m.iasioner to act with an iron hand, thin11 will get worse Instead of better. * * * U pitching ii the name of. the game, give Connell Chevrolet's entry in the upcoming Connie Mack D i s t r i c t Tournament at Blair Field in Long Beacb a better than even chance to walk oil with top honors and on to COmpton for the state finals. Coach Bob Wlgmore has three top hurlen in the likes or Joe LePage, Wayne Schrader and Bill Frey. Connell draws a bye in the opening round of the tourney, waiting until Auguat 3 before taking on Mel Bums' Mustangs. Two quick wins and It's OD to Com· pt.on. second pi.ce among the six-tum tourney also mates it to the state finall. * * A quick top five out of the Hun - tington Beach Summer Basketball league: Mike Contreras and Roy Miller from Huntington at the forward spats. Al Carl.Ion ol. Garden Grove at the post. Sttve Leech of Corona del Mar and Rick Mositr Qf Marina M tJie ...-. A pretty nifty team to be sure, but it ce rtainly leaves a lot of gems off of it. Such as Jeff Powers of Westminster, Paul Holmes and Lee Haven of Newport, Stan Russell or Villa Park, Chris Thompson of Corona del Mar and the balance of the Garden Grove juggernaut among others. * * * Familiar names to Orange Coast area sports enthusiasts popped up all over the place in a recent listing of results for the Marina Recreation Wrestling team. Amo ng the placers in the midJ:(et di vision was J ohn Kennedy. He is the son of Marina's wrestl ing coach, Jack Kenned y. Anot her in the midget divis ion is Matt Hott. son of Don Holt, for~er junior college wrestling champion while at El Camino. And another is a lad named Scott Timberlake in the 100 lb. division. Ring a bell? How about George Timberlake. the ex-USC f-0otball one-m an gang. He won all-American honors at Lon g Beach City College as a center in 1951 and then went on to USC as a lineback- er and guard for the Trojans in '52 and "5.1. Timberlake has another son in Bob. a junior division wrestler in the 105 lb. clas1. "The pressUre was really on bceause I felt I won the tournament last Sunday the wrong way and I had to prove SOQ"lethlng," the S-foot-3 blonde said after carding .a four-under- . par 89 for a two-stroke INCi. · Miss Mann, of Towson, Md., was declared the winner of the Cioci~ati Open last weekend after Marilynn Smith, ttie· actual winner , was assess- ed a two-stroke penalty for slow play. Marlene Stewart Streit of Toronto, veteran Canadian amateur, tied for second place with Pam Barnett of Charlotte, N.C., and Sandra Spuiich, of Indianapolis, Ind ., at two-under 71 . Only two other goUers , Patty Bet& of Minneapolis and Clifford Ann Creed of Alexandria . Va., man·aged to break par over ttie 6,448-yard Bayview Gou and Country Club course. The 54--hole tournament ends Satur- day . Miss Mann praised the course and the officiating. · · "That idea of· having separate marshals on every hole ii su91r. '" She said the greens were fast under the sizzling heat, but that most of the par-5 holes were reachable in two "even for the short hitters." Asked what she considered m.i&ht win the tournament, she said: "I'll take two more 70s and call it q:uits ." The four-under round was the 1e· cond straight for the defen$1ini clia~· pion, bothered during the Jaa:t year with a recurring back ailment. Baseball Standings • AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE w L Pel. GB Detroit 61 '.fl .622 Baltimore 54 41 .568 511 Cleveland 55 44 .556 811 Boston 49 45 .521 IO Oakland 48 49 .49$ 1211 CaWornla 47 !It .485 1311 Minnesota 47 lO .485 1311 New York 44 49 .473 1411 Chicago 40 54 .426 19 Washington 34 60 .362 ~ ,,..,.,...,. ........ o.1..e11 4. WHl'IT•IOll l C.\o'J 1n111nn, r11111 Onl'I' lllM ICl'l.,tt.l ... TM.w'1.- New YO<t. 1sto1111rt1,rt 12-71 1t CleYllft (Mc-OOw•ll lNI, 11'9M Dtfreil IWll-1-ll tt l 111M'tort (H11'!1lll 11' "· """' Cl'llCffO (Horlerl 741 .t C1!1foml1 (Wrlfllt ui, ,.M ....... llllJ-iri W) ti WllP!l,,...,. lhrtl lllll .. ,,, lllt'll M..._;• tlCMI 7-41 •I o.kland fl(,.._ U ), ••M w L Pct. GB St. Louis 65 34 .657 • Atlanta 52 48 .531" 1211 Cincinnati 48 45 .M6 14 San Franci1co 49 59 .500 1511 Chicago 49 lO .495 16 Philadelphia 48 49 .484 17 Pittsburgh 45 51 .4811 1811 New York 47 54 .465 19 Lot Aa1ele1 44 " .'9 IO\I ffoUiton 43 :J6 .<UI 22 Orangt Co.'1 Oldtlt & Most R.ttptett:d Ltncoln-Mercurv Dealer Johnson & Son ---# 1 ... ,,., ' . 900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT llACH 642-4911 ' 5-45-1271 DAILY I'll.at: Jf -'Memories'~-, Too Vivid For Cagers 7 Rich' HardrSov•'• 116-fool de-• lion mot with two -. remalJlinC bit th• rim and bounced hllh . . . . But It foll harmleuly off the rim Ill!! Jab1co Pwnp limped olf with• dramatic 87-88 victory over JohnlOll • Son in a Cotta Meaa RecreatioD buketball encounter at Orance eoUt co'nege Thunday nl&ht. lt WM an act resembling the futi, of Teddy Palmer of. Riverside City Collei,e two years' ago in the playOff titani9 involving Riyerside and Oranae <lout Collese ·w11en Palmer beat 0CC In the final second with a SUoot lhOC For members of Jabsco Pump, Bart Canido, Bruce Chapman, c r a 1 ·c Falconer and Butch Rollins . . . .ii former members of that OCC jug- gernaut. it had to bring badt memories. High scorer for Jabsco )YU Chap- Dl-'ll with 30, with help from Canido (19) and Fa!C<lll<I" (18). Woody's Wharf, meanwhile, con- tinued. unbeaten in loop hoe:twUes with a hanHoupt 71-64 victory over UC Irvine. And. Orco-7 ket>I -one -behind the 1eaeue-lea<1ers w1111 a 11N2 decision. over Golden·West Collea:e.·.: Woody's wu led by John Valle17 (24) and Bob BedeD (23) while Jrvtn. used .a batanced acoring offense with Jim Helm leading the way with 13 tallies. Tom Read led the Orco-7 entry with 'rt c:ount.n on 11 field 1oals llld live srati1 shots. Jim Hatcbttt foll""'9d with 23. * * * * * * 11 ~~ " "-"' CV.,; , . I" t J 2• • • ll l I I I .... ,. MIDGET RACERS VIE AT SPEEDWAY Orange County Speedway bolts tho National Midget ~ng Assn. lpeedJ: three.quarter midgets this Saturda¥ evening at 8:15. The array of outstanding driV81'1 completing on the El Toro quarter. mile clay oval wttl include I>uaDe Carter Jr. of Huntington ·Beacb, !Id Pe-acock of Gardtn Grove, Jim Fawcett of Long Beach, J i'm Klemov:icb of Downey, Dann 1 Caruthers of Anal!Cm llld Damiy McKni&bt of Glendora. · The PoPUlar T.Q!s powond by Crosley and Triumph englnn will nm an eight r.aice proeram topped by a IJ , lap main event. The speedway is located on Va.Jencla Frontage Road betwftn Lacuna ca.: nyon and El Toro roads oil the Santa Ana Freeway in El Toro. COUGAR #1 CAT SllIN "IHI CAT Not 1lric1 ih H,.OMiftfo 1er1tdtl11t ht- frH•cHoA •• Ctr .t ffNt Y11r fl! ltlf hes "'"' l!.111\ tt.1 1p,.rt1111lty kt tho liuylnt public to .. 11ct IXACTLY WHAT IT .,Am AT N.ACTICAL PllCI .... CLAW THI PllCI DOWN, ON THI CAT Of TOUI CHOICI. ' W1 fN.,. f;" CIJ .ti~ ,194 iT• t •II wl~ c.ii+INI"" fffh,fy w•tr•11ty. An4 nr ••If st.c.\: .t ltW1 .. n1 t i•• 1 .,,ry klll• f111cl., +Ii• ~ «•I• .,., ~,,....,..,.. .... ... .... ., fHI NUMm ONI U.T. -·-· ~-~--..... _ --_____ ..._____ ------~----------·-----......;---~---------------. - ·' ' j • JI DAii. V 'ILOT Start Your COfUt A'rea Golf Notes Engines by o~ou/gate ln many sports, the action ln front or the ipectatora la so simple to comprehend that the best thing an ano.ouncer c~n ,do is shut up . In auto racing the public addreu man ear& b11 i>•Y· -: To begin with, a lot of what goes on can't be clearlY seen. Bl~ing Tops Junior G~lfers Jdul Bltt11111 oJ Hunthlrton Buch tired • 1parldln1 114 In oP<l'inl action 1t Colla Mesa Golf and Country Club's Junior gol/ tourno· ment. ·Blttlng le tied lor first In the tourney with Bruce Titut of Aloadra Part for medalist honors and a 1pot in· the motch pley -field whlch windl up •today. Othel'I In 1!>• -running are Da~ Stolba of ·Glendora, Aly Trompos of Sllrdull Country Club 1n San Dtlgo and P!JU McGleno Jr. of Rancho Part, all with 651. At t6 ii Bob Henderson of Rio Hondo followed by Mike Reebl of Mesa Verde, Jim P.rter of 'Red llil1 CC IJld Bob Pates of La Mirada, all with 871. Over 100 members of the meo•1 gol/ club parikipated 1n the anooal string tourney seturday. Jack V.ala.sek recorded a gross ee for a string score ol. C to toke bonon wlt.b Al Bennett (115), Joe 'lbwle, Jack Jackaon and P a t Kalama at 66, Lyle Groham, Denni. Schmlli, Ted Berner, Joe Ficovic, Norm Potekln and Bob Steach at 87. At 18 was Earl Mitchel followed by Tom De Forest, Bob Leonard, Dick Geer, Joe Costello, Gene Van Dart and Al McOoskey at 68 and RoWn M-.,y, George Dernbacb and Dick Jaeger at 70. and if it is visible it can't be understood by everyone. Mr. Promoter, that's when the tr•ck announcer makes or breaks your show. .. ...................................... ..,.., .. . 1 know a guy who makes maybe~ shows a year. It's his busy season now, and he works five races a week There may be better track annoUJICers doing fivt auto races this wnk somewhere in the U. S. A., but there's nobody like SaiMly Reed. - Del Mar Jet Car f'or111er Ph..-111-Entries At Lions He was a telephone Uneman with an inferiority complex a quarter century ago. He served his apprenticeship u a railroad dispatcher , making the rounds of the rporUng houses in Las Vegas to drag out enough men to crew ttle trains. Dui'-•••••••••••-•••••••••• tng the war he floated around the world on oil tanken -the kind of s hins they didn't need. to paint bullseye• on to attract A turOO-jet dragster will see action at Llons drag &trip in Long Beach Satur- day night -the first since 1966. submarines. Somehow Sandy tot Into mldJf!t racl•S· Jle wat a driver, then a car owner and that's bow be happeaed to cbone ~at tougbtst &nd 1eaat rewardial or the •Pokea arll, auto ratt anno11 ... r.lnc. Tbe year w•• lt4t. Sandy Reed teU. It dtl• way: "We were 1t a midget nee at 8¥ Y1klro near tltt Mex· lean border. in the 1taad1 thtrt were tllree farmers ud a Dea bitten dog. ''The whole race was a Ile. t d on'i think 1 saw a car from the starting flag to the finish . ,The dust wu so thick you could walk on it. The only thing Qiere'was to drink was green Mex- ican beer. They had to use all the water on the track. I've had stomach trouble ever since. "There were three of u1 who broke ln qualifying and couldn't run. Bud Easley. Bllly Krause and 1. We went up in the stands to watch. . "The announ cer was so bad we started to needle him. He must have known it. because In the middle of the show he ijuit. He challenged us to come up and do better, and we were fust ttrunk enough to take him up." · · Easley, who has dropped ·out of racing. Krause. later a t.op sports car driver, and R eed took the mike. They ex- mained the race and joked with the fans well enou~h that the prmoter invited them back for the next race. He did ask, if{}wever, that they clean up their m a terial. ~ Eventua lly, the other two lost interest, but Sandy nevtr left the mike. Sound familiar? :-. Most or the larynx set b a\le a bard ffme lcttlnr co "' the 1.aJk button. One fellow Sandy worked with wfts 1uch a (reat £altnt he called race1 for It ytan afttr he b a d to1t tbe ability CO 1tt out of tbe hoath. "J wbltptred the pn1ltlon1 la his ear and told him where ih.e le ad c a r was, and be'd boom 'em out Ute thev were on tl)e la1t la p at Jn1tlanapoll•." Santlv nmP.mben. "P .. 'd sel\d e~l'ls down your back, and I was the only one who knew he ,ou1.fn'l rind the track." ,_ .. Sandy teamed with arother ann()uncer to do a classic reaction of tht LeMans 24 Hour race over a Los Angeles •adio station. hlr Mtw'MY, ,,., fp, '* CMr ...i ,.,, "'"' ,,_, I , .M. Diiiy Dlinl.....,.,., ......... It•~ , ••• ,. uc•. ;, turlone1. ' YM• alcll 1IMI UP, ClllMIM 'rl(I: lo)$, Puna G,jll. OIKlllltO lllllt (A ,111149) 0.. S-(A L Dl11l = ~~2~:':!.111t1 I I' 9ond CO ff1IU 5ornnte Wl l"I IW .._rrlO lWll All (M V11M1111ll) ltrMI" (.ou"lff (It llllKO) o..fWOlld Duk• CW 111111'1 Pe11t !t_Olld !M Y111et) .._ Joi IW Mlhomel'I Finl PrD!Ml!lr 1111: Ywkl '" x112 "~ "' '" "' '" "' '" "' "' "' SICOMO llACI. m fur--. , ,,..r *'-c.1bna. ClllrnlM •rlc9 11,500. l"llrw IUSO. 111:1111 11 Out IA PIMdlo) (.lml"ll' CW Mimi.tr) L...., Bolklue rs Tr .... 1n11 Food Mall (W ~MYI J1roo (D Pitre•) Ln'i l 1lc:01>v C" L 0111) Ornon HorM (It lll•ncol HIKllllr tJ "rterbvrnJ ObYI CW 81lltYI Mr. P11nct111I (It Yor11) Ml' c.~ CM V11tfl1vel1) P.ier'1 Ptnce IW H1rrlt) "' "' "' "' '" ~111 '" '" "' ,,. "' "' Niii °"""' 1£ Medln1) &llll 8ov 10 Pltrcei GM INV !W H1rm1tr) '" '" '" ll•HTM ltAC•. 6 turlon91. I ye1r OIOI. Thi Oceamldt H1ndlctp. PurH llJ,000 tddf.d. G,..1 wrta SH,75.S. Ta winner 1t,m, IKWld ».000. tTll•d 12.500, lourfll IZllOO. "' "' ,. G000 Duke CM Y1ntt) Tlle Dou11h IE Medlnt) Glory ~lltlul11! ID Vtll t-I) Fll'll Miit CJ l.tmbtrO El 8tf Cit Yorlt, 8tfltt IW loltrttdcl Am..-ktn Titer (W H1rm1tr) Htrrv Cdlen (W MtlloMI~ I P19ll (W HtlTltl C.ntertlurv llOld fL Gllll•tnl ....,_ Comn TroubW IA Pllllldl) llroed $hldOW1 CD P1trcitl flYlntl Ltr11 IM V1llNVtlll '~ "' "' "' '" "' ,. "' 'n ,. NINTH llACE. 1\.11 mllel Oii ti/rt, S re•r olds •1111 UP. AtloW111Cft. Purw A .... Den •ob JaM CD H1lll ,.,.,. TM Gr,.1911 fW H1rt1$) $vl1t'I Swln1Jtr (M YIMl) Pwvllfto IW M9~orns1') U"Plrt11~1 IW H1rm111) l oll TM Orvmt (M v1i.ru111111 Ten Fool Hl1h (0 PIHCI) P110 Rotile1 !E Medlnt) Dt..I (A Pl"t'dtl Tooetll!r At•I" (J LtmMrl! '" '" '" "' "' '" " '" 'n ,,. Christened "Green M a m - ba" by owner-driver Doug R 06e of Milwaukee, the 3,380-pound jet car uses an engine from a F7U CuUass Navy fighter plane for power: a J46 Westinghouse turbo-jet. Once Rose lights the afterburner, he receive! a sustained 4 G's of ac· ~¥ration throughout t h e one-quartet'-mUe drag. The J46's 8,000 pounds of thrust is equivalent to 10,000 horsepower. Most startiing feature of the jet car is the loud "boom" and tCJO.foot tong ue of flame signifying the itfterburn er has been lit. The effect is one of seein g a gigantic blowtor.ch on wheels bellowing down the strip. THllll:O llACI. SV. turlontl. 2 ye,1r Old mtldln colll t nd ttldl11111. P Uflt ~~Au1~ CJ Tn11111a> 116 IOIO(OilA .... S .. RO-llO&nl ...................... -...... , ..... hO!l'!0•-- "1rlllnt Fl1ld U M Y1MI) 116 Del Mar Race Results WllllllM U..m CD Htlll 11' RllllM Knl1hl (I A Plt!edl) 116 NOl'll-Jr (L Gltll•tn) 116 For1l1n Tr111t tD P'lerc11 ·116 Proud E11t1 {E ,,.,..,Intl 111 Suo Mtr1t !W H1r11Ck) 116 Mty-111 !A V1ltnltult1 116 Sit¥ t l1$1 I J Trvlltlol 11' ... -.... ~~VIit~~ ............. ,,, ............................. . Fomtr (2 W H1rr!1l 115 ·- H1lovll0111 11 J l 1mbttl) 11' Alll llltlllie. Tr111>-0-L11 II M Y111t1 ) Kobuk Klnll 11 W Htrrll) Clrcull II J L1mbtrl l Yo-Ltuen (J Arltrt>urn) Mr Pro C1 A Pint.cit ) L1rrY't Pollc:y (2 J Trvllllol "' '" '" "' "' "' l'OUlll:TH aA(I. I 1111 mlleo. J ye1r ol01. Cl1lml1111 P•l<e U,000-17,JOC, Purse tl1GD. a.-n E""' I" PIM!d t) 8r1ntl illO'fl l CD H1llJ FrHWllue 10 Pierce) HltllN (It Cenlcoi.1 El Lobo (W H1rm1tl) 8etU lr1Yo (S T~Yl!\O) '" '" ·~ l10J "' "' DEL MAit ltl!SULTS THUltSOAY, J\,/LY U, 1W CLIAR AND l'AST lflltST lACI -' tur1Dno1. 3 ve1r cld1. ci..1m11111. Punt n ,IOCI. Pim l-+Oll tW H1rrlll '·'° ,,OC 1.70 Tio Ctrl!IDI (A Plnedl) 11.60 '·'° H•r-Ane.i tJ Trullllal 11,0C TIMF. -1.11 VS. ALSO RAH -King Of T~ Wind, Cl8UY Kid, Prl~ Wlc•. """"'~'"" Llrtlr Monie, Ell•" 8e1si, 811/e le~!htr. F•sl Arrvw, OIHl'I Alibi. SCRATCHED -Soolc'• Jelle. SUn Nole. JICOHD ltACI! -' lu•lone• ) Yttt Oki lllU••· Cltlm!n1. Purst 17.9'00. K!m'1 C..m IHtrm1t1l 79 . .0 H.IO 7.IO P!t Alt MOC!e IA Plnf'l!t) 5.fll l.20 ALSO RAM -Sl>Hlh' J1n , 111111 Count, Kldder'1 Ltrc, Esloclo, Mtllaw M!1t, ICtYlltt MIH. MO SCIUTCHES. StJITH RACI -51'1 !ur ...... 1. 2 v .. r old mt lcltn lllllH. Ctlll•td1. Pul'H S],JOO. LOvt! Yau So (0 Plerctl •.20 3 . .0 l.20 Vtllomtlnlst IW H1rttc~) 7.00 1.60 llurn1' TliM !J Selltfl) 5.IO ·TIME -1.05 315. ALSO RAH -Ea91r Httrl. fltltt!t, Rlti..I Ntll'tt, Ky Jtn, $f,_tsf AP-peal, Till Cloek, April Grice, Vl•lo, Treplly O\lttn. SCRATCHED -Tt<l•'f Geiture, S11111r Htrvnl, Stf\lt Ft Gtl. All Tiit 5tmt, 8ttt!I..., KtlY, W1r Kntl. Alamitos Racing ·Results Thurt*f, J"'1' M. IHI C1'Nr I l'11t "llST AAC•. :l50 y1rd1. Miiden ! '191r olch. Ct1llftlflt. PurM 11100, T11 w!Mtr 1935, tlConcl !30, ll\l•d S21), fourfll 1121, 111111 U1 (l1lrnl1111 Prkt -· Mi.cse.lt'I Oit'9t (CroNIY) J;60 2.MI t .40 Altl>I l<1 CA.clllrl 1.60 3.10 Grind (Ille (COlllM) 1.211 Tlm.--11 t/O. A"a llt1n-Miit Ctllfr ltr, '""''' JI! "''· 011/Nr\ll:I JMotd, (hult'1 ... .-1, Oluclef•1 Wikktt, Cln:umn1v11 .. ''" kntd'ltd-t.1'1 MlllllY ltr, Or• Joe. Jim $Witt, Wiid tll•t 11COMD ltACE. o10C1 y1rfl.. , YUr oldl tM1 UP !ft Gttclt I Plu1, """" ""'-8uu1t..r ISml!lll lt1wnlde TOiiy (Pl .. 1 Eni~u Mtf\ IForllll TL.n.-21 l/10. 6.00 ..... '·10 7.ICI 7.40 16 . .0 Abo R1n-lr011 Cy", F1rll!I, Mr. Nl1ht Wt1dl, Qvldii M'1 8-lt, Gaur- mtl, Ulllkrtllldv, Cllyrw1 Hnro. Scr1K!M!d -T°" fr1t1i., (.lpl•1"'1 Can Do, Goler 1'1mt, """-' lll:O'f1I, DAILY DOUIL .. -4 • hlll&tlllllll Q11'" I 4-luutblr. Ptl~ 112.11. TMllO ltACE. l$O y1rd1. Mtlden 2 Yffr olds bred J" C1lll. P11r1e 11700. Ch1ro1 Forthree (LIPh.lml Prlnceq Mt rron ($mllhl Den PutblO IAd•lr) Tl,,..._11 '/10. 4.20 3.20 2.60 4.60 J.10 ··~ AllO R1n-Grltdl, Be sun tEtoi., Subei.t. MtCklY'I Trllllb~, TOf'l'ltdo 8rffre. SU.l~MI-Glrl, Giii 1vev, Wtlltl Llfltr. 1'01,/lTH lltACI. 150 ~1"111. 1 w1r aids tnd llP tn Grtdt A Mlnu1. PUrH 11700. 8tn.tllt1 !CrOllb'fl t.IO 4,60 l.20 H-Allll 5tlt fMllwdel •. IO 4,00 1'1'lt POllroon (Wrlthl) t.IO Tlme--11 •110. Also lltJ\-Ptllto's ChfrrY, Kbsl~ fnft, Steel Clltrtt. llrv. en.immll, Moon 81rl1y, Mr. J•ne, Miu Kith' c.~. Str1ltl!ed -Rewl C1/lllY, T-lltt, llted E1ele e.r, Jutnll• NI~. Fll'TH ltACE. $11 v1rd1. 2 ~Ir "ldi. Atlow1nces. PurM" J2100. CNroer T-!Brlnkley) 29.IKI 13.00 7.60 JrU D Jet !Slape) 10.60 5.60 MldWtY Otndv !P1ltlol 3.0C Tlme--lt •110. .\Ito R1n -HydeUt'I Clllc. Miii Vendl 81r. 81rred Tap, Tn.ily Amigo, A!1milD1 1<1v. Sc,.lch.e.S-SwHt Cll1rlo!. Sl)CTH RACE . -Ytnll. J Y!tr '"Ids. cr11m1no. PurM" 12000. Gomer Jonto (Wlti""I •.60 J.IG 2,IO M<lnlerev GYPIY (Smllll) 7.00 1.llO Lei'• Dr111 (Tyre) 7.20 Time-JO t/10. Also R1n-01nd1"1 H'tll•O. Fellt\ty, ~Ven SlrlWI, N<1IOC1ul, Hf Ho NtnO. Scr11cne6--J1t..!I 8ull1 E.,.., Nlner'1 ""'· ~l!VENTH ltACIE. 400 Ytrds. 3 Ytlr olcb tntl \IP In Grtde AA Minus. Puri.t ttlOO. Clte9 Go CDrewrl 17.60 t .1CI 1.IG 1.IO J.IO '-Y Fred'I Bonni. (Adtlr) ICIPIV'I CtbooM !Llplltm) Time--10 t/lD, Scr1tched--Pll11rlm Ba,., Rot" Ru,.. ner, Rcw11 Tipper, Olllckertt. EICiHTH ltACI . lloO y1nl1. 1 Ytlr olds tn<I llP In Gr1de A.A Pkll. Tl>t Pttm SPrlnvt. Pul'H S2JOO. Mirto: II Now !l111k1) 5.60 3.IKI 2.IKI H1vr A Go (Llpll1m1 J.IO 3.20 Go Min No (Ar1llt) 5.IO Tlme--11 )/10. 5cr1!ched-5tlrro Jot Oft, Arcllc Aff1!r, Trvlv'1 Bes!. NINTlt ltACE. IOO YtrOS. J ye1r Los Alamitos LOI ALAMITO• llffltl•S POlll: l'llOAY CLIAlt AND l'AST. l'llST POST 1;4$ •.M. Entries Hltlllllll E11le ID Morrbl Ht•tlnt CO Ctrdl!Ul Swttti. l1r Miu Ill a111U) PrlttY 1.Ull CT Llish1ml '" '" m "' l'lllST lACI, lSO Ytl'Clt. M9klln t 'tffr "~· PutM 11100. Moollll Miu CL Wrltllt) .,, MIMTM u c•. Mt .... ,,,.. 'YNr 01111 OIJ)lftlltt ID C.lrdl!U) 110 11111 ua. AUOWl llCft. •vr:M 11IOO. Tlrw Tllunderblrd (lit 8•nb) 111 Of! Go 00 Cit. l1nktl II' fOtmdon B1r (0 T~tl) 117 Clllc; 1\-1 (W Sll111l 111 Slr1w Gldld IJ l~ll11dl 117 8-e't Llf9t (D Morrltl 11& Fifi 1t.ock1t fD Morrill no 8Mltnv..n CR Adllrl 111 lrltll SH 111 R19't RIQuottl (T Llllhlml llJ 0-Turn CJ ltlllY) 111 •MMtll fJ Wlilonl 111 Akln9 C.me J-IJ Clfll'tl'} 111 Glklfn Pu.bin (A Ar1IJ.1) 11• Senor CIWlowrl (It Adllrl 110 8uflftn W1rrlor IL Wrltllll 116 "'""' ""'"" , --"='=":..::."°o'c"...::"c'c""':.:::c' ____ .::"' S...•rNwll fJ or .... •rl uot MoMllllM l1r (P Cn»bvl 120 llt-ll\INll CJ WthOn) 117 T'llrff'I McCue ID TY,.) 117 ••COMO llACI. lSO ylf'(la. 1 Yttr olds and 1191 I" 1rfde .\ lft11'1111 brtid In Cllllornl1. Punot 11100. Mlrllllt T-CW SllPtl Ollmli At Tiii 1111 (5 forth) 5u:ldln Glrnllll !T Llpll1ml P1rller IYI IJ K111!1) Tr$plt Bl~ (P CrOlll'I') T-1111 (A Artluol SIOP The Mu1lc 10 Ty.-.J Short llolerv CR Adoollr} 01rtev"1 Cll!dc Net1r1 c-11111 Alll .,IMtllllt Qu..i Moon IJ M9llUOH) 116 Htl Trldl (0 Morrll) 117 Trvt VtndY (II llrlnkle¥l 120 Gen!•'• lteCIUesl fW Slrtuul 116 TMlltO ltA(E. 350 y1rd1. 1 ntr Okll, Cltlmlnt. l'Util S\900. CltlmlN prlc:t ll50C. Gold Timi Ch1ree CH Cr"5b'f) P11111m Slt'P tW Sltpe) PrMperou1 Girl (H Page) '~ '~ m Mr. Mlf\~ tR Fl11111rotl Klpty•1 Ftncv !R Bt1>k1) Riot Mlk1r IW Slrtu11J St""" Surftt (J K1nl1) Im-St1ri.1 {J Wll..,,,J 8111'1 llttc1llffl fN P11t\0J ClaYll' 8tbr Lll (P CrMbYI Alli •••lblt "' "' '~ "' "' '" "' $coc. 0 Trouble IN Ptftlol UO Aptcllt Ptuvm (0 Morris) .120 w-.·1 lloct<" ~a erlnklt1) 111 •OURTH RACI. lSO w1rdi. 3 Ytlr olo:l1 tllll Ull In trlde A ptvs. Pur~ llfOCI. Four Stand ........ WN<X "" G•m• Hom• Op•ns T o.,it•I CHICAGO WHITE SOX Ptfletft flt Adtlrl Lfw o .. r IA Ar1!11l Wtr 811•e Cit Fl1uerotl Ptlchtl Dtntlv fW Slr11111) Dtbul ID Morrl1l ~l: Toni+•, Tomorrow I p.m. i:~ Sunday D•y Gam• I p.m. "' Htrtttown CO Ty.-.) kll Oeclr (l Ciiltlnsl Ttrlttdltr~ CJ Mll1ud1l Miu Clleciue Deck (T LlpNml ROl!lt Quid: (H CrOlbl>l DlcktY DIC! CW SttPl!l Vtn Blf 8tll Cit Ad1lrl Willow Gold IT L!Phtm) Bir Tandi (0 Morris) "' "' "' "' "' l'IFTM lltACI , 150 v•rds. ) Yt•r old1 1fld UP In or1!k AA m!nu1. P11rse S2100. Gold ll'lllot {8 !irlf\klt1l UO llotn R~nn1r (R ll1nk1I 11$ 01mn Tool!n' (D Tvtt) 116 Rlchler'1 Tonio fH C...sb'fl 117 MoMllY (R Adtlr) 11S Plltrlm 8tfl (T Llpll1ml 116 Cuslom Cull• Ctllamon F111ut~l 111 Mr. Ptl Jo ID Ctrdo111) 115 Allan!• Jet 11• Do Mitt Dew 115 AIU Ell•ll•lt Miu ear Cfllc-IJ W!1""1l PH!er Bob !J Drtwrl Miss Liiiie Deck !T LJphtml Glrttfr 1'CP !ill A.dll•I Sl>CTH ltACIE. IOO w1rd1. l ye1r okh •"'1 UP !n •rtdt AA PlU'I. PllrH snoo. Ll11lltnl119 Ride<' Ill Adil•) 1'11 Oonh 8t Good !S Forth) 116 Allmlrtl Reel tll 8rl"kln'I no Lt llH'I tllodctl CO Ty~) 111 TIM! Churl (0 Morrltl 116 OKk Jtck CJ Dreyer) 115 C1Umecu1te Cll B1nk1I 111 SIEVIHTH ltt.CIE. l50 Ytrdi. 3 \'Hf olds tnd up In ortdt MA mln\IS. P11r11 tlCl!Ell Allllboloa ._ _ .......... M MtllUal ~ • Wllkll't MdokClill .... ~~ ...... Or-Cluabl. llWl.Oll!Oi: ,... l'lollb,.-.....o& Every weelr MMCO Hth .... -tll1n 10,DOO lrlnsrnl•lion probMfnt. • You 1et frt• towin,, • ,,.. ~· """· Deb's lier NOM CO C1rdo11) Double ROie !Z Colllnol lmt Jonfl Girl CL Wrl11hll Poot 8•r tJ o .. ver) lOI chtck, ftsl, 1ffic;llf'lt 111rvlc~ 111 limtt in jv1t -cl.,-. A(ld with 111 AAMCO, your transml11lon e... M 119 p.rOt~ed by OYlr 500 AAMCO C.. j;~ t..-s cont to c:OllSI. 11• Ef.111)' minute ind 1 ....,, ..... 111 -proyee ••• ''Roy Storey (now a San Francisco newsmi:in) and 1 sent a 1711y to France to call evtrv hour with a fresh reDOrt. R oy ,tarted the show, an d J Was the m an on the Mulsanne ~2i"ht. That gave me an excuse to duck out. llll"TH ltACI. I lllrlono1. l yetr olds inti uo. Clt lmlnt prlct 15,000. Purse Tr.. Wen! CJ' Ltmbtrll 5.20 T!ME -1.10 '1J. SEVEHTH ltACI -' furlOtlfll. 3 oldl tntl llP !n Gr•~ A Pl111. PurM" Yttr aldt. Allaw1nce1. Pu•.e t,.l,50(l, 11900. Slrlw Dllll CH Crosby) Power Bey (J K1"l1l Cocky l(.ld IT Llph1ml Mtrk T. 81r1 IA Binks) Chip Chtr•• !D Mcrrl1l R°"" Mtntce (II Adt!r! "' 122 YMCI•.,_,.,_,. "1 had to do a show that night in Gardena. So R oy w ould tiwitch to the Mulsanne Strai~ht. and there would bt a lot of staUc, and he would apologize. 'We are havinl? technical ·dif· ficulties bringing in a report from Mulsanne. but we hope to bav'e it cleared up soon.' and he would go on with the show. ~'After the race at Ascot I oame back to the station and n ,IOO. • hlt"d M911tr (M YIMl) NtlMU R111tr (It CtmPtl ) SI 51nlutn1M IA Plntdtl 1'1111r Spnd1 (J Amrbvrnl E<1ulpptd (W MlllOl'MY) Knl'fhl Prowlfr JW H1rm1t1) Old 81d911r lit Yorll ) E'A!'Y Ch1nct CA L 0111) '" "' '" '" "' "' "' ~112 llXTH ltACI. ' f'urlontt. l yelr the 'technical d ifficulties' cleared right up." o1c11. c111m1 ... Pl'I<• uua. Pu..., 111100. Dl1rnond Slloft IA Herrtrt ) 111 'Th L d ft t ' Blue T1r1tr tit Y1111ne1 117 e G fl epor er Wtrrlor 8all CJ Arltrt>urn) 117 Oorfff\'I Kini tW Mt-1'14Y) 117 On the LeMans crew w as an actor whose name has slip-Tretd TM Turt cw H1rr1u 114 ALSO RAH -Hon1v'1 Urcllln, Flight E<1fc, Grl!Y' Stt1m, TrulY LO'ltlv, Lt Grind C~tl. G1ter1nawn, Hindu Ch1rmcr, Porlrt ll. Who's Kin. SCllATCHEO -Meola~ Cover. Fla A~n Flttl. OAILY DOI.Ill.I -1·1'1rlY 14111 t. 2•Klm't Q.lm, ••I' IUf.tt, THllO ltACE -' lurlonot. 3 Yftr ak11. Cl1lmlnt. Purse 11.700. Kocllt-Kid CJ Stllerll 10.IO (.IG 1.611 Solld Ed<llt (A Plnedt) l.MI 2.IO Ou11ovou fR Yov1111l 5.40 TIME -1.11 ALSO RA.N -Goldtnlll, Ntl!vt Skit, Ph1ro1nne. Mllltr Rl~tbout. d . Molnlnt Tr.. 811111 CJ Ltmti.rll 111 pe into limbo. He did beautiful accent interviews. first as a w1..,.... "'"°' CM v111t1J 111 P'ou1tTH 1tAC1 _ 5v. 111r1on111. , Ce<:l1r Court CH1•l•CkJ 7.60 3.IO •.O ClndY'1 RtQuetl (Ad1lr) 61.20 17.20 '·'° A·llo R1m1 fW Hn,,!s) 5.00 5.80 B1r,.,,d's Bl1cu11 {BtnksJ 5.'20 2.l!IO A·Cupld Danced ( W True C1n Fly CColllnsl J.IO M1ho•ney) 5.00 5.10 Tlme--20 9/10. TIME -1.ot 2/S. Scrllched -Htnolcwn, ••II Dtck, ALSO RAN -Madron. OUt 8uddy, Mis. C~<Ne 0eCA. Bow W•Kll. SPtnlsh All•c-. Sl~r 5Yslem, Stick In -Tht Miid, N1clmlt"to. SCRATCHED -Ro~al Scamp, Grey EIGHTH ltACE. l50 y1rd1. 2 ~8' 01C11. Allawtncn. TM LO!O. P1,1r11 '8000. llrotd AH .. , (B BrlnkltY) IU K1wt1h 81r (R Adair) 120 Tl/ff Bou !W Strtuul 170 (rlckfl. A -J. Jorda"·l•tlnt'CI e"!ry. Ploy Golf With The Stan ltlJTH ltACI! -About 7•h lorlOnlls °" lllrt. J ~Hr olo:ll tnd LIP. Allowtnce1. .. ~ "·"'· I Oluy 8tbt {A PIM!dtl •.to 3.:IO 2.kl ROold Miker 2nd !D Pletct J 1.00 3.:IO Out Of l'ot\11 CM Ytnel) 1.IO TIME -1.311 1/5. CELEBRITY GOLF CLASSIC ......_, .. ,_ .. AAllCOf French driver, then as a German team manager, but his G11tn1 G, w. 10 H.i•> 1u veer clck. c111m1n11. Purie n .100. }llost sensationa l part was the role hf!! portrayed as the lady ~~1~1~·~EfAM:!=1 \\~ :~·~~111 1~11~1°1)> 2 s· 20 ~:::: t: ALSO lltAN -81111119 Siik. TUI M«·' row, T111ttt1, Jonsle Biii". NO SCRATCHES. reporter from Gref!!Ce. WIMll fMt ttll ,,,.,,., •• , 114 DH·Wlldl Mt Ann C.\r1trbvrn) l.IO Prln<ee L1mbi. ID P'lerttl 14 DH·Cenlti" 8tlcOl>Y (J LtmbtM) l.CO From the ridiculous to the sublime. Sandy Reed h as savRHTM •Ac•. Abaul 7"" fllrklnl• !t"sO R.~HOi:... Doi.Ible G•ln. ••oktr'i ,.::t1~,·~~ ~~~1:;~,,::' 1~~;.~I Sponsored by Huntington Beach Chamber or Commerce. W ed n es d av. July 31st, Meadowlark Country Club. A Is o Dinne r Dance and entt-rtainmenl. Ticket informa- tion from Chamber, ?.l!!adowlark or the Hunting ton Center. 1745 New,.,.. •· 646-llU G•rden Grove 91orked races everywhere from a baseball diamond in Ven-on rvn. 3 yHr olds. ,1,1rn1119 Prlc• BU¥, Ge1111111 Even. n,600. i tu C l'f t th I d . 't tel t f th D t 500 tlS000.111$00 T .... E J .. , l" NO SCRATCHES. C1e11r Clrl (A Plnedt) J.IO l.111 ?.to ra. al .. o e c ose c1rcu1 ec::1s o e ay ona • · · · 1-· · un' DH -oeadllut '" 1111rd. ''""1v IE Kun1t1kel 11.60 1.00 < es c If'! announcer at ivers1 e lnternat1on Raceway, c°"~ Kid cw Mlh•mtvl 117 Lord BYT"" CE Me<:1ln1I J.20 " . ' h. f R 'd · al 81v111 l'vna. JOur1.t t.l,IOO, b . . d lfll'TN ltACE -One mllt. 3 ~ttr TIME-1.:U 2/5 . • ut he still works Figure 8 races every Sun ay. o.1111otk (M v111n1u111> 11• old1. c111m1no. Pu"e i1,4.00. ALSO A:AN _ ou11, Dud•, Tvrn to ll1J11tl Otstrl IA PIMC!t ) lU 5111n 11.Clt ((1m1111) :U.20 10.IO 5.:70 Petet, SWNI Wlllll, Soltnciot• Double _ .Whe n Hollywood discover e d racing a nd began turning out Sov Siuct CA L 011•1 ",",,' R1nov•ll011-IJ s.e11tril 4,20 1.60 c1rt11n, T1m1•l1h, LJttlt Red M•"· Al~lllll IJ L1mberl) Kint Jo1<1uln (F Gtnt) 3.<IO 5CRATCHEO -Son Of Ark, Vtlmo, pottJoUers like "Redline 7000,'' "Ftreball 5(1Q" and "Thunder HIH Sl!n• cw H1rr111 1u TIME -1,37 . JIS. Ch~rry cord111. • ~lley," the man In the towe r who kept lnterruptlnC the lo\lf:c-------':.C..-----''-------------------- 1ce nt1 wtlh lnhiT'matlon a bout what tbe cars were dolDC on the track was Sandy Re~. He's learned a Jot in !t seasons. If Y•u want to be a race ,announcer. here's what Reed 1ay1 you •ave to do : "Let the ptople knOW f!!\lllrytb1Jlg that's COIDC OD f-ega rr•~s• of bow knowlediceable you think they art. Your basic jo b It to sell the product. Durtnc quallfylni, build ex· tllement by polnUnc out duels between the driven. ~sptclaJJy In 11nrlnc car raclnC, build up the young 1tar1, .because when Ibey reach the top tbf:y'll lt1ve you and co to USAC, a nd you have to ktep the raa1 interested. "Watch everything all the time. If you are describing the action in Turn 2 and somebody flips in Turn 4, switch right away and say what happened. JJ the race is dull. make it ex- citing. Move back in the pack and find another race, say between third and fourth. "ln the booth you have to be a narrator, comedian, psychologist and everybody's lover . I advise nobody to get in this work unless he just likes to exercise his jaws." ~~· SPECTATOR GALLERY PASSES ..... "·'" FREE! WITH t.1.0C PURCHASE FROM HUNTINGTON CE NTER STORES, 8Et.CH AT EDINGER, HUNTINGTON BEACH PHONE lt7·1S3.l It's that lime of the year again. '541 Gtr*tl Ottvt ., ..... '"' ......_ S•nta An• liiiitMil E\lery remaining '68 Ford is now close-out priced. Take your pick or Falcon, Torino, Fairlane Mustang, Big Ford, T-Binl or lnlck. Everything ' goes! You'll never drive a better bargain on a better idea Ford than right now. See vour Ford Dealer. SEE YOUR NEARBY SOUTHERN CALIFgfNIA FORD DEALER NOW ·------·-· -· -·---- Flight of Snowbirds -Sul)daytoAttract 100 By ALMON LOCKABEY 0.1"' ~llM ......... Water traffic will come to a virtual b~t In Newport Sunday wbfa the 33rd FU1ht of the Snowbirds 1ets under Kelpie Set for Char,ter The black-hulled Kelpie, ()ne of the best kno~n schooners on the West Coast has been recomm1s- sioned and is· avail8ble for charter, according to her owner, G'eorge Minney, Minney and his family have. been operating . the Kelpie in private and f~r hire charter since she came to the West .Coast in 1960. The schooner is berthed in front of the new waterfront restaurant, the Ancient Mariner, at 2607 W. Coast Highway. Persons interested in char- tering the vessel µiay contact Minney by telephon- ing Newport Beach 543-4192 or 548-5039. Transatlantic Race Captured by Indigo T RAVEMUENDE, Germany (AP) -The American D·Class ·yacht Indigo, skippered by S. K. Weigman of CI eve I and Heights, Ohio. was the ap- parent over-all winner today of the Be rm uda·Trave· Anti-litter Campaign Launched m u e n de · traris·Atlantic yachting race. The Indigo was the 19th of 33 entrants to reach port in the last two days. But, on the basis of time handicap it registered the best speed thus far. '-Indigo's actual time for the 3.500-mile regatta was 20 days, 23 hours. two minutes and 45 seconds. Her handicap brought the time down to 16 days, 12 hours. 14 minutes and 36 seconds. S. A. "Hue y" Long , who briefly co nsidered withdrawing from the race, brought his 73-foot ketch On· The California M a r in e dine III into port first Parks and Harbors Associa-Thursday. h The German-built yacht. tion, Southern Division, as putting Up the fastest time launched a vigorous cam- paign to discourage the lit· of 33 entries, won the cup th donated by West German ter of waterways near e Chancellor Kurt Georg Kie s· coast line and on inland waters. inger. Chairman of the com· The South African ketch · h Stormvogel. which led most mittee pushing t e c~m· of the way across the Allan· paign is Doug Bombard, director of the Catalina tic, arrived here just behind Ondine Ill with Dutchman Camp and Cove Agency. Others on the committee Cornelius Bruyiizeel at the are P.aut Hiller, Ra Ir helm. The Kialoa It. skip· Reupsch, James Q u inn. pered by John B. Kilroy of Harrison Daigh, Edwin F. Los Angeles, was third. McDowell. Race officials, through a way at 1:40 p.m. Nearly 100 Snowbirds are expected to turn out for the small boat ~ilinC classic. The start will be just east of the Balboa Pavilion. The course will take the fleet of 12-!oot catboats to a mark in the north Lido Channel, back around the eastern tip of Lido Isle 1o another mark up the So\lth Lido Channel, thence past the starting line to a mark just west of the Harbor Department a n d back to the starting point for the finish. With fair breezes the boats should get over the five mile course in under two hours. Harbor of~cials have ask· ed that all boat traffic leav. ing or arriving in Newport Harbor while the race is in progress stay to the sides of the channel so as cot to in. terfere with the racers. Sanderllng Winner of Tidelands Sanderling, a Newport-3Cl sloop co-.sk.ippered by Mor· rie Kirk and Bob Poole of Voyagel'5 YaCht Club won the VYC Huntington Tidelands race Sunday. 1'be race was for sailini yactQ handicapped under the Pacific Handicap and Midget Ocean R a c i n g measurement rules. Winner in MORF was steve Seal of Lido Isle Yacht Club in the C·a1·2·24 Baby. Ffual Results : PHRF -(1) Sanderling, Kirk & Poole, VYC; (2) Vagabond Lady, Len Schorn.ell. BYC ; (3) Vela , Hayden & Bibb, VYC; (4) Psyche, D. W. Wardell, VYC; (4) Tomahawk, John Arens, SS.SC. M:ORF -(1) Baby, Steve Seal, LIYC. Dinghy Race Series Set Voyagers Yacht Club of Newport Beach has schedul· ed Dinghy Match Race Series Aug. 2-3 featuring boats under 20 feet racing over Olympic type courses in the ocean off Newport Harbor. VYC will select eight yacht clubs from those sub· mitting · a completed pro· posal form recently sent out by the club. Eliminations will be held if necessary. A perpetual trophy will be awarded to the winning yacht club. and the first two skippers and the winning crew will receive take·home trophies, according to John "Bud" Costell , VYC com. mod.ore. : Lido 14 Races Set "The problem of litter on mix-up. had a n n o u n c e d · lh t Wednesday that Long had Na tional championship our waterways is one a asked to w1'thdraw and lat·:-r tta r lh L'd 14 Cl concerns the entire st.ate that he had retracted an-d rega or e I o-ass b d will be held Monday through and nation," said Born ar ' decided to remain in the Friday of next week at Hun· "and if we , the boaters, do not take immediate actioa it race. After his arrival, Long tington Lake near Fresno. told newsmen that "we were Registration has been will take away a lot of the thinking abo~l withdrawing scheduled for Monday morn· joy of boating." because we were so short on ing with practice races Mon· Bombard pointed ou.t that time." day afternoon and Tuesday almost any Sunday or Mon-day morning kelp beds and Long said he planned to morning. shorelines from Catalina to enter die Ondine in the Championship races will the mainland are heavily lit· Sydney.H<Jbart. Hong Kong. get under way Tuesday tered with paper plates. Manila and Los Angeles-alternoon with Fresno Fleet cups and other trash. Honolulu regattas before No. 4 as the host organlza- "They seem to be building returning to Neff York. The lion. better litter these days with yacht will be shipped to Syd· Defending champion ts ney afW its overiiaul in Harry Wood of Alamitos styrofoam cups and plates Bremen. Bay Yacht Club. coated with plastic that ;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;_I never dissolves or sinks in 11 the water. There are also more disposable bottles and cans, and it seems the way to go boating these days is to carry everything disposable," said Bombard. The educational program designed to eliminate the problem will include ant·lit· ter posters pointing out the ' laws that govern litter on the waterways, a litter.bag program on which is printed the general wording of the anti-litter law: "Throwing or placing trash, refuse. paper, bottle, cans, garbage or rubbiah ·in or .ntar tbe Wiilers of the state is punilbable by impritonment (or 1lr: months or a 6ne of '5<>0 or both." The law forbldo depositing litter oa or in state watua which extend thrte miles offshore and 150 feet above ALOHA DAYS ~:. SIDEWALK ~!~ ~ _/" LYNESIAN PARTY SUPPLIES PAPER UNLIMITED ~'~ _ tldo UM -except .... r:_µ::_~ ~ptacles .... -· WESTCUFF !'LAZA 17th & IRVINE FRIDAY & SATbRDAY , ---------------·------------~ -------- * ----·-~----------___ .. _______ --~ -·--·---·· -~ --------I , ' • ,rlNy, July 26, 1968 DAILY PILOT JI • NOW S.HOWING IH1-WAY39'oi1vE-IN ) PROGRAM STARTS AT 8:15 PM with "THE ODD COUPLE" LAKEWOOD " "Uprout~us11 .~!1Z!: "Wise, wfttJ·and for everybody!" -Jadllfl-.IUCT..,_ . Jaek Lemmon and er· Matthau are ,, The • Odd Couple: PANAVISION"TECHNICOLOR" A PARAMOUNT PICTURE PLUS ROD LEE GEORGE STEIGER • REMICK • SEGAL NO WAY TO TREAT A LADY · BUENA PARK •••. ONLY MINUTll AWAYI • -------------·---------- ' • ANAHEIM SANTA AU • . : . , • '* . - ' I ,. ~-·~--• • -' ' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE For a New ·City Image ~1 In planning for the future of the old, blighted do~n-. town area of Huntington Beach, the community'• fam- ed pler sbould play a key role In setting the tone for aeveloprpe.nt of. all downtown. -. Major dedslons for the future of the pler are being made now. A1ready the f\iid·Beach. Development ,Com- mittee Is at work and bas decided lhal the pier ·lhould be developed to its j'higbest uses'' for recreation and commerce. It Is a decision wbicb sbould be backed strongly by the City Council and by all connected with developinc •·new downtown imafe. · Planner Ted Adsl reminded lhe conurilltee last week that Huntington Beacb is In lhe recrution ""'i- ness. And so It is, not only for lhe fisbermen· who try their luck daily from the pier, or for lhe <e•ldents Who occasionally stroll lhe 1,800 feel I<> the ·pier's end,' but for lhe millions of l<>urists lhe city could attract with proper sbop1, restaurants and atmosphere on the pier. Attracting lhe tourists lo the city and persuading them to walk out to the pier requires a conscious effort ' in pier development. .. The whole pier must set a first class impression, unique and inviting. It can be done in a manner quite profitable I<> lhe city if there is full support' for' the pro- gram. Two overall approaches are possible : -Construction.by the city of at Jeast shells of new buildings on the pier. They couJd be facilities'for busi- nesses which would complete them to city specl.fica- tions. This would involve a Jarger investment by the taxpayers, but perhaps.a larger return too. -Or private enterprise could be invited in and asked lo develop a project profitable lo both the private company and lhe city. fully &uided by lhe city, lhal dream could be much more than city leaders now hope Jor. Success in developing the pier could lead to further investment by both private and rublic interests Jn the downtown area. Blight will no be swept away by dream.a alone. It will take investment by public a nd private agencies. From that investment could come the new Hunting· ton Beach image based on recreation of which the city leaders speak so fondly. Court's Heavy Caseload West Orange County Municipal Court is to be as- signed two' addiUOnaJ judges on a permanent basis in September, bringing the total to five permanent judges and one temporary judge. In July, 1969, the court is to be assigned an addi· tional permanent judge and unless it receives continued assignment of an additional temporary member, will remain at six judges. The cdurts in Westminster have been operating with five judges since soon after moving from Huntington Beach, where thr.ee sat on the bench. . The move to Westminster included an enlargement of the district and a vast increase in the numbe r of cases. Temporary judges have helped lighten the load, but it continues to increase faster than the population and the population number is soaring. For Uie remainder of this year the additional judges will help greatly to insure the fullest and fairest con· aideration fo.r every case. \ The form of such a development is unknown at pres- ent and might remain so until someone begins to dream of making a profit on Ibo Huntington Beacb pier. Care- After that, there's serious question whether the as- signed jurists can handle tnelr caseload. More judges •till will be in order. H "Wl4ERE'S THAT &.'_I# LID~" Dictionary ls No Bastion of Good Usage lt is interesting -to me, at least - that most of the letter& I recelve about my COlumDI on the Ulfl of words refer me to some dictionary or other as evidence that I am ''Wron1" in my definitions and·diltiDc:tia:ll. But a dictioDU')' ii no more a euide to good u--1 lelepilcM direc- tOry ls • JVlde lo good oddresse1. The Yellow Pages can tell you "Where to sbop, but not wtrich lhop ls better than any other. MOST DICTIONARIES (especially in ,America) follow the cunent of con. temporary speech: if most people say "disinterested" when they mean ''uninterested." the dictionary will list "disinterested1' • a secondary fonn of "uninterested," even though they are quite opposite words in their original meanmgs. A dictionary, on the wbOle, is a scoreboard, not an mnpire. It follows the "eleotlon returns" on the usage of words. and when enough people con· fuse ''masterly" and "masterful", most dictionaries will live up~ fight agalnst the distinction and list them as "1yaoaym1-though, again, t h e i r original meanings were quite dif· ferent . n IS OF NO USE to cite a die· tionary for anything but the most ob· vious and elementary spellings ~d definitions: .it is a reflection of public taste and tendencies, not a bastion of good or proper usage. Now, says the modernist and libertarian in language, hOW c.an you call acy usage "good" or "proper" when t'he languqe is continually changing, and when it is the ~ving I. n· ear Gloomy Gus: Shouldn't the barren street-side wlnl 1urroundin1 lioW1lng tracts be ~orered with lvy, for some· thing besides a sterile front to pedestrians and motorists? I.A.S. ""' ......... '""'"' -"'"" .. _.. .... et ........ , ....... ......................... D9llJ , ..... speech ol people that determines vm.it· ii ''right" or "wrong," and not the dead laws of strict gram.marl.ins? WELL, WE OLD FOGIES a.n1wer, it seems to us that good usaa:e should be able to meet thrff b a s i c re·· quirements: accuracy, clarity, and distinctiveness. As Mark Twain put It long ago: "The difference between the right word and tne almost-fight word is the dilference between Jiahtning and the lightning-bug." I don't Care, for tnstaoce, whether anyone says "who" or uwnom " in a sentence. There is nd loglCal or mean· ingful reason for "whom" in English, as there is in the Latin accusative. And grammarians who wag their fingers at "who" as an object merely weaken their own case for Jood W1age -as do ttle antiquated prigs who still object to a preposiOOn we end a sentence with. BUT· THERE ARE hundreds ol otlhtr caaes tn whicb 'US8gt doe1 n\alce a difference, In accura<:y, in clarity, ' and .in distinctiveness. Most important of all, the more different ·words We have for~ things that .re simllar, the more precisely. aqe we able to explain and illuminate our ideas. Good usage leaves nothing to ctJGce,, to hope, or to fancy -it say1 what should be said in !tie onlf w.ay ttiat Camot be misconstrued. · A Tonic for DeGaulle WASHINGTON-France has licked son:ie of the' problems which beset her atomic energy program and appears ready to become a full, thermonuclear, member of the lntern1tlonal nuclear club. That is the preliminary assessment, by U.S. ezperts. or the first nuclear weapons test& in the current French eeries. Sucb appr•i•all are baaed primarily oa analysis of the radioactive debris blown into the atmosphere by the powtr of a nuclear exploalon. U.S. e1:· putt routinely sample and assess these. residues, as do the nuele.ar ldenlllts of other nations. In Udl lnatanct:, preliminary ln· dkatioftl 1tt th1t U·235 wu used in dlll year's French tesUng program. U· 2S5ii-1 hl&bly refined uranium Isotope med la making h y drogen (tbtnnonucle.ar) w@apons . It was not iotmd ta the debris of French tesU: in -and 111'1. • 'IHE rRENCR however. Wtre lrnowrl lo be bulldlng highly complex dllllDm facllltlea for p<Oductlon ol U-m. ltl UM in the new test program === to U.S. e.rperts lhal 1 French UllaD _plent Is now in operation. "Ult ol U-2!> also lndlta1's Ut1t Fr•nce will soon bt 1ble to join the Uilttld.statn, Ru.ula and Communist Qlina, ID echlevlnt a thermonuctear, 11.-mb,..ctlon. JUI, ' on Mururoe Ai<>ll IOU II of • 111e 1'mldl left Hrlel. whic~11n TalilU, 11 expected to contlnue lhe summer. All Indications now are that _ the series may well Include a thermonuclear test, as w l d e 1 y predicted in France. SUCH A TEST would be a tonic for Gen. Charles de Gaulle, his scientist.. and his fellow cou.ntrymen. All of them were embarrassed when tommunlst China, supposedly backwird tn science and technology, beat France to the thermtinuclear punch. Chinese weapons elJ)flrtl are still perffC't:lng milsile 1y1tem.1 to deliver their nuclear warheads. Ot Gaulle, with bis Mirage bombtr force, will now to able to boast that France has achitvtd a modem thermonuclear striking rorce to s:upPort its In· dependent Po•hn in Europe. BJ Robert S. Alle1 aad Joha A. Geldsmltllli Quotes Gordow C. tun. sttte 1 e e .• Ba1raes1, Tr111por1adoa ":. ''The m~1t Important and vllld trlte.ri• the highway commlssJon wJU u.se~1tlec-­ Un1 Ute (!.. A. Century free,. ) route wltl be its value and effect on pie." Do You Want to Combat Dehuttiani%ation? Awake~ing Man's Intrinsic Nature BJ GEORGE R. HOFF, Ph.D. The &elting may be a mountain retreat where a group or people are spending 24 to 36 hours together - without" sleep -in a marathon group seminar. Or tht action may be taking place in a plush office suite in which busy and harried executives are taking a few hours out or their schedules to become more sensitilr'e to themselves and others. lo a secluded locatioa, another group may be tr¥ing to explore and in- terpret their priority of values by tak- ing off their clothes and thus revealing parts ol themselves -literally and figuratively -which are usually ke pi private. Does baring the body help to refresh the soul? SOMEWHERE ELSE, a group of married couples has come together for a weekend of honest self-examination and probing into their marriages a s relationships instead of instituti on ~. They want to redefine their meanin g of love. Uninhibited dancing in the ~rba tbc Greek fashion. coupled with exercises to facilitate body awareness, may characterize the behavior of yet another grou p. ltere. the purpose is to wake up slee py feelings and learn how t.o relate more spontaneously to each other. If these activities appear ''way out'' when compared to c o n v en t i o n a I psychological an d psychiatric prac· tices, it's because they are! New fron- tiers of human interaction are being explored today because radical treat· ment is needed in order to combat the mos t insidious and subtle malady 01 our time -DEJ-IUMANJZATiON. JN OUR OBJECTIVELY impersonal society, it is becoming more and more difficult to break through the barrier of anonymity and develop close inter- personal relatie>nships. We live -in a highly technical world ; one which places high value on behavior shaping. Education has teaching machines. Communication me<iia Clcpend upon conscious a n d subliminal persuasion. Business and industry rely heav ily upon system analysis and computer- based decisions. Even religion has ''Dial· A-Prayer.'' No wonder a syndrome o t psychological problems seem s to be de veloping. Emotional stales including apathy. d e pr ess i o n , anomy, helplessness. malaise, and loneliness -al l of which have some charac- teristi cs of the schizoid personality - are beginning to represe~t the mood of our times. SUCH AN OBSERVATION really doesn't require elaborate !.Cienli!ic in· vesligation. Ali you have to.do is look around you and noti ce the increasin gly large number of persons who exhibit symptoms of coklness, defensivene ss, aloofness, emoti ona l det:iclunenl. and fearfulness. Perhan<; an honest look in the mirror will reflect an automaton whose behavior has been shaped and reshaped, to the point where not only are its responses predict.able, they're controllilble. There must be an antidote to dehumanization. Modern theorists and practitioners are searching for cures for this illness and ways to prevent its recurrence. They want to help man wake up . get oU Dr. Frankensteib's table, unplug himself from the com· puter; and find his own meaning without the benefit of somebody else's program, IT .JS BECOMING increasingly clear, as more of these "avant garde" techniques are explored, that man is, after all, an intentional being whose humanness is definable in human, in· stead or mechanical. terms. But it's not enough to help man find out who he is . It's also necessary to provide him with an opportunity to awaken ot reawaken his intrinsic nature. The question now remaining is. "Are we willing to give up the comfort and security of havin8 'Big Brother' tell us what to do. and risk getting in touch with our inner resources?" What do we have to lose? Says 'Bad Guy' Giving Driver Tests ro the Editor: lt seems that there i& a "good guy'" arid a 1'bad 'guy" who accompany driver! for tests on driver's licenses in Costa ·Mesa. My reason for writing is "that my 16- yem--old son just went in for his driv · ing test and in trying to parallel park. he brushed against a stanchion and th+- lnstructor proceeded to shout at him and failed him 'rignl then without a st cond try .-· Now in ctiecking with others his agl, some passed even though they made the same lni&take, or others had lo do no par1dng a:t all. In order not to get the same instructor again, my son trartsterred his records to another ot- ' fice and passed without any difficulty. At: A RECENT baseball game, I mentioned this ~xperience to three op,er mothers and two of them had been {aile~ by th is same "bad guy.'' One , a driver of more thA'!i 20 ye 1:1 rs. said that he intimida•e.I her. J would B11 O-r1e -- ,Dear George: You've had a lot to say about computers ta.king over the world. One mOfe adverse cOmment and I'll quit reading your paper - t.hl.s is the most ridiculous thing I ever heard. We don't even want the world. I'm happy just as I •Ill· (I'm an electronic in· . tesr1tor ind calculator.) PLUGGED IN Otar Plug1ea In : Your problem indicates you should aee a marriage counselor. (Well, one less computer -It should blow up tryi ng to figure out that answer.) Dear George.: Could you teU me who Invented CR.ations! SGT. JAY Otar sat Jay : It wouldn't do you any good - I.bey ketp him suriounded by sec:u~ty guards night and ~ay. · (Send your proble.ms to George and stop ~OrT)'lng needl!ssly. Let him &Ive yw CllUM tG wort ry.) fl ' Letters from readers are weicome. Normally writers should convey their tnessages in 300 words or less. Tile right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate Libel is reserved. AH Let· ters mus t include signature and mail· ing addrt ss, but Mmes will be with.- litld on request. say this Is a 1·ati1er a hi gh average afld l think others \\'ho have had U1i.s ex- perience shoula let the d.eparhuent know ab0u1 It. Why should a person in a uthority be allowed to pl ay God and do it so ungraciously. He certainly I eaves much to be desired in his attitude on duty. I think the Department of Motor Vehicles should investigate this .situa- tion In Cos ta Mesa now. MARI LYNN MARTIN War and Peace To the Editor: The emotional letter of V an McKinzie about war (Mailbox. July 19) was nice to rtad but so unreal. This idea about war being senseless Is fine rhetoric but unsubstantiated by modern history. With the help or Germany, V.I. Lenin won control of Russ ia for the Communist Party. Russia as one of the victorious of World War It an. nex.ed vast r egions or Eastern Europe. l\1AO TSE·TUNG gained control over all of China as the result of win- ning a War. A few years ago China walked into Tibet and is still there. Ho Chi Minh was victorious over the French. Fidel Castro was a winner. Even Israel has gained much by the victory in the Six Day War. Con s_ider the wars that the U.S. has won. Of course. we did not gain much but if we had lost to Cri!rm any or Japan I would not be writing this letter. HARRY B. McDONALD , JR. Reade1 • \fcKinzie wrote of the sanity of peace and the insanity of wa,. Editor A Report on Some New Books John LeCarre (·'The Spy Who Came ln From the Cold") ·is on Coward- McCann's October publication list with · A Small Town in Germany." This opens with a major defection from the British embassy in Bonn and focuses on the right wing political movement in Germany. "The New Nazis ol Germany." by Wellington Long, chief correspondent in Bonn for United Press. traces the development of the NPD . its or ganiza. tlon and internaJ disputes, the gro\l,ith of other extremist political parties and the careers of the leader:: of the rad ical right rrom the collapse of 194S to the affluence or 1968. Chilton booki; will Issue thlll in August. .,. ' T..e liookm:an "' ~ II ·~ -J ~ __ ..._ .... _ ...... Confessions of Nat Turner." Currently on leave from the Fair Employment Practice Commission. Panger Is a resident fellow at the Esalen Institute in Big Sl1r . Most unpromising title of the fall season announced to date: ''GOd in the White House : The Faiths of American Presidents," a survey by Edmund F'uller and David Green (Crown). IN "TIIE PATCH COMMISSION,'' which Dutton will publish ln lbe Fall. INTERESTING JUEA: Lippincott Frederick Crews offen a funny book announces that "The S p l e n d i d -a mock dialogue between fictitious Pauper," by Allen Andrews, is "the people about real lsilues : peact, war. story of Moreton Frewen. Winston penniSDlve parent.I, dJsloyal chlldrtn, Churchill '• outrageously ut1successfu1 sy1tems, analyse•, old·Ume pediatrics uncle who lost millions of other New Left lrffdom nd repres&fon. A people's money ln high style.u profellOI' of English, University of Daniel Panaer, a San Francisco Callfonda at Berkeley, Crews ls the race relations expert, Is represented author of "The Pooh Perple:r;/' a o"I the Fawcett Gold Medal paperback parody ol llter.ary criticism , a literary Ust this month with "01 Prophet •urprlse of 1963. N•t." 1 rtMy of Ute hlst4ric and tragic Soclal <rttlc V-• Pacl<ml (''The sln.e revolt that was the subject of :IHJ~n Persuldvs") hu tackled a WlllJam Styron'• receat novel, ''The ~d1ble subject in a .D8W lloak" due from McKay August 26 -"The Sexual Wilderness: The Contempora r y Upheaval in M a I e -Fe m a I e Rela· tionships. Jn commenting on re· search. Packard announced he read a stack of material "35 feet high," and talked to and Interviewed hundreds of people in 12 countries. WILLIAM HOGAN -----Friday, July 26, 1968 The <dilorial pogc of the llally Pilot 11eb to fn/onn and .sUm. ulate: rt~ bv presenting thla 1WD.spaper'I ophrions m&d com. ...,.14rv °" IOpla o/ mteral and rign!Jbrnce, bp prooidlft9 a fonmo for ~ uprtufOR of our nadns1 opinion.s, ond f11 pt't&niting the divcr11 17itto- pointa Of in/011'11ed ob1tTOtr.s and rpoke,,... on topi<J o/ tM day • Robert N. Weed, PubU.IJA. ........ -------------------------------~-----------~-~ --~-----~---~ ~ ~-~------·~---·-- AT RAY VINES HUGE SAYINGS DURING THIS CLEAN UP OF '68 MODELS YOU CAN SAVE HUNDREDS ON NEW PL YMOUTHS,,CHRYSLERS & IMPERIALS Jho 2-door _ lmperiol Crown Coupe -in- cluding full leother, power bucket soots with head rest. 440 engine, factory air, power door loch, full vinyl roof, ond the lmperiol speciol luxury pockoge, ollowing deolers to seH ot this new low price. Stock #_4865. SPECIAL FACTORY PURCHASE -. 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The 1944 movie is tho &tory of a lltUe old lady's genteel method of collect· Ing genUemen. TELEVISION VIEWS Fans Rooting For 'Star Trek' By TERRENCE .O'FLAHERTY . I am unhappy to report that Dr. McCoy~ the 21st Century medical officer of the spaceship "Enterprise" whose standards of medlcine are the pride. of the lnter- falaxy medical association -bad a stomach ache when met him. To "Star Trek" fans, this is like learning your swimming instructor has just drowned . Actor Deforest Kelley, a Baptist minister's son who plays the role in the NBC space opera, was fairly cheer- ful. Other than moaning occasionally and grabbing his mid-section, 1 would never have known he had just been t.O Mexico. '._,..,.,' His cheerfulness is due in part to the renewal of the series for a third season. "Our spaceship is on a :five- year cruise and it would be unsettling to think that we had been canceled before then and left dangling up ;.i..,u:.:;:;..: .. there in the sky," observed Kelley. The series bas bad a nerve-wracking two years dur- ing which it has never been renewed for longer than 18 segments at a time. Early this year the cast discovered it wasn't included in the new season's schedule. P~ tests from fans poured in to NBC at the rate of 50,000 to 100,000 a month. One was a telegram from Arizona that said: "You have canceled Star Trek. Go to hell. Offen- sive letter follows." * + * NBC bas never been tiunous for allowing viewer mail -offensive or otherwis! ~P ~uence its renew· als. Just ask anyone who remembers "Matinee Thea· ter" or 0 lt's a Man 's World," two excellent shows that were canceled in spite of an avalanche of protest~ 0 At one time we even broke the studio fan mall record held by 'The Monkees,' " said Kelley. "The net· work has a policy of answering all such letters and when it gets as high as 1 million it runs into money." Maybe 'NBC renewed "Siar Trek" as an economy •measure. Anyway, it is now scheduled to continue its sp~ce mission at 10 p.m. Friday nights in September while "'The Monkees" will be banging their tambour· ines elsewhere. + * * . During the first fwo seasons of "Star Trek" it was hinted there was some com~tive confilct among the three officers on the bridge of the "Enterprise." That's ...:::i ~hat happens when Navymen go on long cruises -par- --1.1• '.• ticularly when they're actors. "I think if tlie three of .us -Shatner, Nimoy and I -had been laid end-to-end that firsl year the audience wouldn't have been able to dlstingillsh any of us but the network publicists didn't even know there w'as a doctor aboard. I had to fight for a place to park at tho studio,'' &aid Kelley. 11The second year I was in a co- starring position but no one wanted to bellevo It. ThlJ year things are much better." r---...;.----~;;;3 At least one viewer could recognize Kelley how· ever. He received a Jong distance phone call ozie day at the studio from a fan who refused to undergo an emergency operation without first checking with Dr. McCoy. "'If surgeons ever start asking my advice, then we're really in trouble," said Kelley. I DO, SUT YOLI Nevrlt use-MY IDEAS ... -rrs SETTER FOR. MY E!Ci<O II' t OOH'T Tl!LL 'IOI.I IC*AS 'IOI.I CON'T u51 ... '· Early this year !me 01Jc1a1;*;,f NASA called upon the producer of "Star Trek" regarding one sequence which closely parall eled some ultra secret work being done by the government. Maybe our space experimentation ought to be con- ducted at Paramount Studios. If Jul.S Verne had been working for the French government Instead of writing books, General de Gaulle would be on the moon by now. Dennis tlae Menaee • • • • • • ' LISTlll, IGI>, WIU. Y/4 QUIT LICl(JN' Nl'SIMT AtYIN'U" '· ' • ;:::;;:::::::~:~·;.i.;:;;~~~::::::;:::;J;::;:;:;:;;;~:;;-;;;;:;;::;.;;;.;,~~!;,;,,; .. ~~:::::;::;::;:;;::;;::;:::::::::::::;::;:i:!':i::::::;::;:;;;:;;::::;:;;;;::;;;;;;:;;:o;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;ii<Oii:iii;;;;oo;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;,..,;:;;~;o;;;;o;;;.,;n;~jii?ii"!" ....... ~~~~~ liii •........ .,J •... + ... -.-........ -..... -. ~. ---_.__ _. ______ ..._ ____ -· ---·-··· ,,._._ ·----_ .... ,_ , ________ .... uAIL l rn.Df z3 BE THE DAILY · PILOT'S 'GUEST TONl 1 GHU HOUSIS POil SALi HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSi S FOR SALE SEE FREE .• HOUSES FOil SALi HOUS ES FOil SALi HOUS ES f Oll SAL ii 1000 Gonorol 1000 -••I 1000-ril l• B/B PENINSULA SHORES New Ba.lboa OPEN HOUSE Sat & Sun 1·5 pm ,..=!::~~ .. HUGE LOTS (3) oui.tandfrc view of the Bade a.,. a bedroom• '""' 60' X 200' mUil room, s~ bat.hi, oY· ..Oceanfront Community THREE NEW ' & 5 Bedroom two • lllory -• single family Homes and three Duplens wit11 a Deluxe owner's 3 Bedroom & "Den Home upstairs, and a 3 Bedroom 2 Bath Rental down. Now ready for occupancy. Ocean and/or Bay Views, Family rooms, Wet Ban, radiant heat, in&ulated, carpeted, wall· ed. landscaped, self<leaning ovens. Formica kitchen cabinets, Powder rooms, Etc. Etc. Come see for yourself: GOLD MEDALLION HOMES OPEN $AT. & SUN. 1·5 "F" Street and Balboa Blvd. on sKluded Balboa Peninsula Priced from $79 ,600 lo $1 ot,600 For further information call: 'COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 2200 E. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH . Kl 9-33Sl 675-2000 A separate parent's sitting room in the large master bedrooms suite PLUS 3 delightful cbild!'en'a bedrooms! A sparkling heated An· tbony pool completely fe nced in attractive wrought-iron -for youngster's safety! An exquisite garden & sheltered sunny patio just the right &ize! A walled entrance for pri- vacy! Powder room! Terrazza entry! Family room! Beamed ceilings! This is an unusually appealing custom built home, meticulously maintain,ed in a beautiful Newport Beach res- idential area and NOT ·leased land. Rare for only $56,950! 605 WNtcllff Dr., Newport BHch -642-5200 • &sttw Ivan Wells' Exciting 2-Story Model Home 'Ibere'• a view from ~ room rA thia bee.utiful 4 BR 3 bath home in Dover Q)()r- M . 2-Story beam cellinga It 2-story fireplace ln living 2910 CUFF DRIVE A friendly SyCGXft ot ltlte. J:y al.ie greets you at the door ol tbla 2 bedroom plus Den. or Famlly Room and formal dining room home. Now ooly J39,500. 673-9'.m Eves: 548-4810 BEAUTIFUL UDO ISLE HOME Spacious living room A: Fam- ily Room lll1TOl.md lovely landsca~ Patio. Large COl'- ner lot. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal dining room pl.us ad- AT THE LIDO THEATER Check the classified section of today'• DAILY PILOT to see if your name is published. lt can appear anywhere in the Classified. pages. Just clip your name out of the classified pages and lllle it to the LIDO THEATRE in Newport Besch and aay you 1aw it in the DAILY PILOT. (You'll need identification .) OFFER GOOD THROUGH JULY 30, 1961 ONLY er «OJ ,qum:e feet. Beau-Ne1r Ocffn (FM Slmple) tlful1y dean.led. !'or -.le· For awlmmlnl pool, tennl1 court, furnished « ~. b.dminton & baskttblll, fruit and can foe appointment $115,oo> ~.Call for veget1bl1 91rden, etc., etc, appointment. Completely welted PLUS BAYFRONT TRADE M foot beytront lot wlth pi.tr and al.Ip privileges, Own« will tr9dfi for set ~or Beverly Hills Home. NEW 3 BEDROOM· 3 BATHS WESTCLIFF Quality tamib' home. 4 bd-& ditional room for off"" "' HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE Den. Shown by appt. only. I "'--'--'-"---------------------- :~",:;, ~'::.tlic "':':.~:.': 4 BEDROOM • 2 BATHS Formal dlnins room. Large Finn Prioe: $99,'l'j(). 673-9200 Eves: 548-6966 JUST LISTED Batboa Penninsula Point Unusually designed 2 bed· room, 2 bath home. Large Living room, 11eparate dining room. Attractive secluded patio. Shown by app't only. $37,500. 673-9'200 Eves: 548-6966 Bay & Beach Realty, Inc. 2005 W. Balboa Blvd., NB G.neral I 000 Gonerol IOOOGonerol BARBOR VIEW HllJ.S CORONA DEL MAR Lusk Homes ••. Quality, Value, Bt1uly, Comfort ln the Southland's most desirable and fascinating area. A su· perb school system and University of California'a IrviM Cam· pU6 just moments away from Harbor View Hills. Sensibly priced from Dfrlctlcoa• MacArthur Blvd. !!om $34, 900 lo $48, 900 PllCiflc Cout Hwy. or Newport ""1· Tum on Su Joaquin Hilh Rd., 1hea follow li&m to model artL 1000 pool size lot. 3 car aarage, Luxury Buccol•·lullt Homtt Immediate pncw!kln. from $34,550 to $36,275 - 1'9.500. From $5,350 down. VA & FHA torrno. john macnab REALTY roMPANY 881 DOVER DR. NEWPORT BEACH 1714) 642-8235 Brookhunt 1t Hamilton, Huntington ldch (1st 1lgn1I North of Co11t Hlghw1y) Sherwood Estates by.the Sea I 1!!!!!!!!~~1!!!!!!"""~!!!!!! ITolophono: 968-3036 TREES TREES 11,0,00 to 1,00 dolly) -----VA or FHA cul-d~sac lot -'th '"''"..i drl•oawy to ov-Double. Double CAREFREE LIVING ,.--·-·Ex-a-eprtgH •l in-l 3 BEDRM-$19,925 flilnmw lntr'Y lilW to Mp-tor can • 1 ott alley fw Join the "Forpt" .t • for- ..... tivblc room with ti.re-wccbbJp, Big ! + flUnlly 1et about home~ pac., Jdtc:bm ~ built-in home with 2 baths, ftnplact Is yardworkl 2 pullman nnp le: own. m.bwuber, & bup cov@!"!d patio. 1..oye. bath.I. All built-in• kitchen, .-.,.w..,-•••--••• unple cupboard llP8(."e, 2 Jy yard with lpl'inklers lz dishwasher, refriaeralm', LuxuriOWI oceen view home WSK. HOME s be.th&. 3 BRs with extra block wall. Nee.r Newport washer & dryer. Outstud· In exclusive Cameo Short• large closets, IJ*Cious mas· Heights • f26,SOO. Submit ing patio. All the IUXl.D'iff at 3 big bedrooms ter BR. Near the beach. your terms • owner leev-your finger tipal M2.al each with its own bath ~5• drapei, landscap. Ing. CALL 540-1151 <open TARBELL !eparate family & dining rm1 I 'iiiiiiii!!!!i!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij' ......... ':':=' ...... a 1 ing included. Pre!lellt loan ~ves) Herita&e Real Estate 16111 Beach . Blvd., HI swimmable swimming pool 1 • may be usumed • $139 per · finished garage with storage ~;;. B /I month + $37 month for rn...ro to "" CHINA COYE """'· "$74,500 OLLEGE 546-5880 A quM, ..ctud<d .,.. ..;th V.1llage Real Estate Contact J im Cobb REA• .u an almost private beach. Eves. 673-1864 .,, I From this like-new' 3 bed· 546-SlOJ 962-4471 LOOK WHAT $29,500 will buy!! Big 85x130 corner wilh HEATW POOL, ""'20 RtnnpJB Rocm (or Guest Houte}, plUJ pretty 3 BR, 2 CHOICE llWPORT 4 BEDROOMS Adjoining Baycrest area, cu\. de-'.sac street, family room, large lot, ~ered patio. Va· cant & ret'!GOerl in prict. $36,9'0. 1'Dliii. COATS ~WA~CE REALTORS -.546.4141- (0pen E-lnpl 5 BEDROOM -POOL room.' both home,... ..... REPOSSESSION •vi.wot "1.1."' "°"" '''" t«ting or leaving the Har-lmmacufate former model home -9 rooms, 3 baths. Heated & filtered pool with board & ]adder, & get this - only 10% down with 90% loan at 6.6% interest _ .. "repeat, 6.6% interest" $35,000. GoH Coune Lot 158 foot frontage on the rourse overlooking lush greens and fairways, numerous lakes & tile Club House. Surrounded by luxurious homes. One-ol-o-kind at $25,000. bor. Abo yoo step right out to the 'Beach. $$,000. 6~:ll00 Eves: 548.s868 YOUR CHOICE =.i"': ..::-.. 1:; ~ •• of 2 Spanllih Haciende.1 in Living room, all carpeted Irvine Terrace • one with 3 &rd draped; on• foundation, Bedrooms, Fonnal Dlning with ahake • shingle roof, Room and Family Room • • hardwood ftoors, oversized the other bas 4 bedrooms 24x20 garage, just 5 min pllll!I ell the ext:ru. The 3 lrom Neo.vport )·Tarbor in bedroom home ii 179,500, beautiful <XlLl..lEGE PARK. 1500 Adams at H1rbor, Cotl 1 Mesi while tbe 4 Bedroom ii (AU furnWWws •vallabJe (adjacent to Cinema theater) 1· $89,500. Both blw JOl"PO'JS too, we'n IDoVlng to Eu- !!!l!il!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!"" I Marine Views. Plea.e COO» n:ipe). Oimer. SotS.5000 to 1019 ~ r.,,_ .. ,. SALES •ssoc 5Bodrm-FamllyRml unio,yorSundoy·lto•PM. ~ IATES Submit "0" Downl We'll be happy to ahow botti S5/JS split. Management opportunity. Double your Prettiae location• Mesa.Del hamel. Income. Cal.I for appt. Mar, Rich wood paneling A: 615-JCX» Eves: 573-«6f. HOME 6(2..fOOO bookcases over fireph1.ce lay & Beach PLACE )'Ollr' want ad ~ Open Houses THIS WEEKEND IHp tklt MHy 41rectery wlttl yo1 tlih •a1ll1•I • .,.. .. kne hu"tlRt. A.II tH ICKC1tlo111 lhtM ......, .,. ddcrtbff I" ''""' ••II by lldwertla .. t ..... wMN la teMy't DAILY PILOT WANT AH......._ •Wit .,.. ....................... -..4 " lht ..ck wer .. thH1 I• ttih c.i1---' ""'-'· HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bedroom & Family o• Don) 151 8 Dolphin Terrace (Irvine Terr.) CdM 642-6472, Eves: 673-3468 (Sat 1-5) (3 Bedroom) 1606 W. Oceanfront, Newport Besch (714) 688-8363 (Sat & Sun 1·8) 400 Pirate Road, (Newport Heights) NB 646-3079 ·(Open Daily 10.5) 657 Be.ach, Costa Mesa realty 2414 Vista Oft Oro N...,,....,,_. PLEASE Let lJll lbow you this view 2 bdrm. """' ... 2 ....... Low<st -in die 81-$21,000 6#ll33 Evl"I: 644-2626 room ; separate dining areaj~~~~~"'!'""!!!~ + famllyroomwilhparqud FOR YOU VU FHA hardwood noon. Elegant Buyers. 2,:m SQ. IT., 5 large carpeting, draperies, wall bedrooms, 16 X 32 POOL, pa.per, landscping. It bes 2%. large baths, 640 eq. ft. been one of the mO«t e.dmir· of famil,y room. all btlilt-in ed Ivan Well's model home. kitc:ben, double garage. Now you CM buy A: move What A BUY for only $26,500 DA YIDSOll Really OPEN SAT/SUN 30U JOHNSON, CM Lovely ~ 4 BR + 1•mllY + formal dining room. Electric built-IM, fireplace, thakt roof. $31.950 Rltr. T/50 Harbor SB, CJ\.-f withindirectilghtin1·areal RHlty Inc. M--· lookin .... ~ .... ''Show Place'' living room. 2'107 !:. Coast High'. way CdM .--~ .,.. 1 -t..1.1'\,ll,y Spanish motiff prevails thnl· ~-----··--.!.=PILOT==dl=Nlll=<d~M:.;".;·'678~ out. Enclosed stairway • 2 baths. Quality carpeting, drapes. Built • in kitchen. Electric garage opener,~ ly tenific! Sf6..lr.KI Coldwell, Banker Tarbell 2955 Hubor OFFERS: 642-9730 Eves: 548-0720 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (3 B" & Family or Den) 279 Hanover Dr. (Cofiego Park) CM - 540.0418 (Open Dally) 2455 Bamboo (Eastblu!!) NB 644·0411 (Sat & Sun 2-5) 435 Santa Ana Ave. (Np!. Hgts.) NB in before ICbool starts. MOVE IN TODAY. OCEAN FRONT '~!I $81.,,,. :.: Roy J. Ward Co. Channing Value , • .,.,...,., O!flce1 Vacant estate sale. Channina: 1842 Santiago Dr. 646-1560 FAIRVIEW ROAD OJST A MUA OFFICE 2790 Harbor Blvd. 5'fi..9491 Open 'ill 9 PM 546-5460 Eves. 546-5142 ~~!'!"!!"'!!!~~~~ A real 2 BR Gem! Near H•r-TRULY TERR-IFI CI-bor entra.nce. .ta Ft. lot. $18,5001 $56,000. Atti'ac.ive stone planters, col· Balbne. Rf!.al Estate Co. odul bougenvilla climbing 700 E. Balboa IDvd., Balboa up an appealing trellis . 673-4.14 ruatic born• .uTOUnded by mature trees. 3 bedrooms and den or k:rmal dinin1 room ln • J)Vic·like eettina. $21,000. COMMERCIAL Open Sat/Sun 1·5 657 Beach, Ox;:ta Mesa 50xl40' 8Cl'Oll from new Safe-3 BR l'A baths. $19,90 way store funder construe-Rltrs. 6t2·9730 Eves. 548-0120 most Impressive extttior. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Entry hall leads to this \\•ell plan· ned family home. Wall to wal carpeting. Custom drap- es. Spotess condition. Only 2 yrs. new . 842-6691 VIEW l!\sPiU'Na ····~ tlon) Duplex on property • KEHND\Y will help C8.ITy or can be UI OCEAN from dining room & lovely R"arden kitchen. 4 large bedrooms & 21rii beths. Delta Real Ettate 64&-4414 2;29 Harbor Blvd., C.M. used tor commercial '"'·l===-----Call now for full particulara:. CHARGE your wanted oow. TARBELL 16 11 1 llffch Blvd. PRICE CUT Dolphin Terrace Spatlesl l M'm, plus den- 21,i tia.tha--mlnhnum main· ten«ftC'e. Ovenla aan1e p!UI coYlftd boat court, $44,500. CURT DOSH, Realtor $45,000 ~w·~~ 3 Duplexes ( $57,500 The Prlcn Ari Right On cholce li.ix165' Eastside DRIVE BY: * Zl19 Se.ota loL Oil~ ·near Catho- Ana Aw. 3 BR 1:. frplc lie Chutch &-19th St. Excd· $19,800 GI or FHA or · · * A I t tal ~ C ll Scame item. 2126 11'.urin St. "' ren . reoo.... a now Nice dupkx oa "' acn. fOC' appomtment to atoe. 518-3209 l'nA 0N.np Aw., QI WEEK END SPICIAL 642-1771 Anytime SEE Zill v-. O>llop ~T~H!!)!OM!'l'!'.&!!)!.S~K!!)!U!'l!N.~A!!!!!!! """'· r.ko _.FHA loon, 2213 PACIFIC ~....:: ';.":~.poyo .n COSTA MESA BEAUTIFUL DUPLEX. Neu "'"' __ _ llil8 ......... dub. Thi• You .re the winner of •-tod>e ::..:.::.~ ~'28.soo, LIDO THEATRE S-E~..,.-CM THOROUGHLY --· ' ' MODERN MILLIE Neer churcbel, S BR. 1~ &th $21.500 Jutt clip this •d and taikt Gforge WIW.mllOl'I, Rltr. It to !he Udo 11'1talre In R73-4350 OPEN EVES. N~ &1eh wilh ldmtl• nc•tkln. Otftt rood through SOCK lT TO 'El\l l July 30th. --------· SPECTACULAR VIEW-OCEAN and BAY Chann 1f /e,e/ -Aparlm1nld On W•terfront Ne1r Newport H1rbor lntrance 2525 Oc11n llwl., Coron1 del Ma r, C1Uf. AMPLE GUEST PARKING and BOAT SUPS Why Not Enjoy The "Condominium" Way of Ufe THE ADVANTAGES WILL SURPRIS! YOU You can purcltase and got fee title -or leuo If you prefer. ALL 1pta. have WATERFRONT VIEW. All hue two bedrooms and two baths. -WlTH LARGE PATIO. YOU ARE INVITED TO INSPECT OUR FURNISHED M!)DIL Buy $59 ,500 ond Up -Lease $445 Monthly & Up I'll-673·1788 for further ln~on Rockledge By the Sea · Eight Mediterranean Villas, steps to pri- vate sandy cove midl!t cmggy rocks and splashing waves. Rare beauty, hard to !in(\ ........ ' " ...... ' ' . . '375,000 Chorlotte Long Drostic Reduction Owner transferred & must sell fine ex- ec utive home. 4 lrg bdrms + formal din tm, pa neled fam rm w/fireplace, brlofst rm. Not leasehold ..... $67,000 Mrs. Harvey laycrnt Beauty • Pool Lovely custom 4 bdrm, formal dining rm. Planted atrium. Hi beams. U>ts of glass. Lge back yd, covered patio with cpl Price reduced .......... $61 ,500 Mrs. Marton Bayshores Exclusives First time offered -two compl remod- eled 3 & 4 bdrm w /very low leases. Bit· in kit. Double patios. Xlnt locations. .. ' ' ' ........ ' $47,500 & $46,500 Joe Clarkson Cameo Beauty with View Canyon and ocean view from this fine property -3 bdrm, 2 bath with 6% loan may be assumed -private beach . ........ " ......... '' ... $41 ,000 Walter Haase Corona del Mar Channing traditional home on 45' lot. 2 Bdrms + 2 room slee~ing lofl. Hobby roo~. Sep . ~n r~ .. ~~ .. ~ _1~ t:~\o Mir!. Roulston . OFFICE OPEN SATURDAYS COLDWELL, BANKER Ir CO. 2200 I. COAST HIGHWAY NIWPOllT IEACH Kl f -3351 642-3766, 548-8905 (Sat & Sun) 980 Presidio Dr., Costa Mes! 545-5487 (Open Daily) 1206 Pembroke Lane, Newport Beach 642-4251 . (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1927 Leward Lane, (BaY<reot) NB 646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2519 Vassar, Costa Meoa 546-8222 *275 Brentwood, Costa Mesa (Sun 1-5) 646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1·5) *4545 Tremont (Cameo Shores) CdM 642-1 485 (Sun 1·5) 1606 Antigua Way, Dover Shores (714) 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) (4 Bedroom) **333 Morning star Lane, Dover Shore1 (714) 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) *1336 Galaxy Drive, Dovoc Shores (714) 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) (4 Bedroom & Family o r Don) 1501 Eton Plae<, (Westclif!) NB 646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 384 Meadow Lane, (Back Bay) NB 646-3255 (Sund ay 1·5) 1642 Santiago Drive (Dover Shores) NB 648-1550 (Open Daily 10-5:30) 1617 Tradewinds, Newport 544-5347, 838-0181 (Dally 1·5) 2821 Setting Sun (H•rbor View Hills) 675-5930 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 1019 Dolphin Terrace, !nine Terrace 675-3000 Eves: 548-6629 (Sat 1-5) ' (5 BeClroom) ' 2907 Cassia St (EM!bluff) NB 644-1162, 675-4320 (Sit & Sun) CONDOMINIUM FOR SALE (2 Bedroom) **15948 Mariner Dr. (Hunt. Marina) HD 213:.592-5863 (Sat&. Sun 11·7) 4 • P'LEXES (l Bedroom) 1040 El Camino, Oolta M .. 542-2926 (Sat&. Sun 12-5) *** PMl l .... ., .. t ** ...... .... *'"' I I • I l \ • I I &AYR till! Read DAILY PILOT c FridQ, ... ~ 26, 1'1611 HOUSIS FOR SALi 1000 -·I SHARP SHARP you could get a good clean 1aip 4 BR home with 2 f\dl baths for $28,500. Happy &Y1 ue here 1galn! See thi.B fine tutefullY deconted home with almost new w/w carpeting I: bUilt-inl •l 8 low price to ~II now. 2CM3 WESTCLIIT DRIVE . - HOUSIS FOtt SALi THE rJFAL E.'.JTP.."!"ER~; L A I' \l I • \\ 1111 1 ..... I \H\ \II\\ ~mt Open Eves. . ' s s I F I E D The ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace for Automobiles LOOK TODAY I~ 1,.,111 '' l!m Baks-, CM. &. YOU NEED RESULTS So wh.Y not llat with u1'!' T. ff. McArdle Broker 222 W. Wilson, CM 642-6817 3 UNITS 2 BRs each, good income. Excellent Investment $27,500 Wo ll&-McC•rdlo Rltrs. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 548-7729 Eves &M-0684 "NEWPOK T BEACH" 4 + 3 Baths, $33, 700 Ranch modern -bit-Ina. Beautiful area -HURRY! "OCEAN VtEW • 125.900" Huge 2 Bdnns, 2 ba, 50xl2T Fireplact>. l 'elow market! 1-IOME i;u-4090 SWI M • FISH~"'.°"a"'oA"'T--. Almo&t new 3 BR, 2 BA, chanrn!I fmt home. Repo. Only S39.500. CAYWOOO REAL TY 630i W, Coast Hwy, N. B. 548-1290 Mm MR. A-1 For The This Page · REACHES 68i972 HOMES EACH WEEK THE ~EAL ESTATERS • j l • ~ ~ • • r • • • ' BEST Hlt\•S! Q=-mE HUB of activity lot te.rvlce bwiMsRt . . • the Oasaified Ads. Di.al su-· "!I to oUer your turiee NOW. Dial 642$18 for R~tn..TS STA R GA'ZEK1<~ a.AT'-PO i::-. 1Y"'1 ,,._.. 61W.t. ,,,,_ ,, ..... 62Y-........ ..... .,r_ ·-:MY• :;~ ·-lit-' i=t. .. ._ ,,_ .,_ •• """ """ .,_ """"' ..YN 10Modllf '°v-70W_. ,,,_. .fl~I 71 ;..,.,,. 12-A2s,,.ti. nYN ,_ .,_ n ,.,_, .. _ .. ,_.. ,....._ ,, .. A5for, ,,,._ ....... ... w ..... 76T• 17Y-A1 ~ofo;;liQl!oll 77Wll ... A80ld . .71~ ,,_ A9Shdil 7' .,,_, !IOT• '°" ill\';. SI l.eeh II T• S2 ,.,.... 12,.......,., =~..:.. SJUU U ~ !>' Giiod u SlwM ,, ... "..,.... ~IC.->OC.. !16 ., ... Adtilrlf 71 0# 51 ,.... It~ ,.,...... sa.-....w •= I:,.., "" " ~ IO, f ¢, '°h1,J ~Gool @u-()N.-1 ~ ... Vacant, rl!ady to movl! in, LtweJy J BR ramily home. New ~ting, 1% beths. ~yard. Martin R.E. 54"6332 •• HOUSES FOR SAL I "5, DEN, 4 BAntS" Ubrary, 6 yrs new 3 Car. bit-in. .... $49.$0 HOME 643-4090 HOUSIS FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi Dutch r.lean 3 BR 2 bath, carpets, drapes, ma,niticent J1ndacaplna. FHA-VA ll!nna. KATELLA REALTY 841~1 ,....,.. NEWPORT WfST 2 STORY USE THIS HANDY POSTAGE PA ID HOUSES FOR SALE 7682 EDlNGER 842-4455 or S.10.5140 LASTING SECURITY , $23,5001 ' Contentment tor the present. . Very·hosP.itable home -~e•l 1' for enti!!rt&µtlng • 10 bright & cheerful. 3 bedrooms, ra m-1 ily room the scene of happy : mem.orits. EUiclency all ' built-in kitchen. Most ror'I· • venital. Alluring fiuplace i lends addC<i charm to grae+ , lous living room. Forced alr • heal. Many_ added . deluxe I tee.tures. 312-6691 , TARBELL, 16111 Beach BJ 1 ...:.:=-=~~~~~~~1• FIX'R UP , for only $250 total down for yOu Vets. Thia 4 bedroom, • family home has evl!!rythin~. ! Large efficient all el~ic i kHchen, cozy wood bummg I fireplace off large covered I patio. 2 baths ancl 2 car gar" l age. NEAR THE BEACH! ! COSTA M&SA OFFICE mCJ Harbor Blvd. 1 545-9491 Open 'tiJ 9 PM ' BELOW MA RKET 3 BR Jll.4 be.th. $14,850. Dec-~ Irle built·ln range & oven, i garbage disposal, washer. , dryer, carpets & drapes. 60 x 100 fl!!flced lot, double gar· ; age, landscaping. $149 month includes taxes. V.111age Real Estate Cor Brookhurst & Garfield 962-'14TI 54H103 • POOL 15x35 e Price $23, 750 • Hardwood floors e W /w carpets • Covered cabana • Wet bar • Excel cond thruoot e Temis GI or FHA Never again will you find a home like this at this price, Paul Jones R11lty 847-1266 Eves. 84.2·5844 e BY OWNER e f BR, 2 Ba. $23,500 or best offer. 494-9232 Q WANT AD ORDER BLANK 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES PAY MENT EN CLOS ED D SEND BILL 0 rui,n,• ,.,, •..•.•••• c1 ...... M1i1111i"' ............................... .. Cl•11ificatio11 • , • , • , , •••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N•111• , , , , , • • •. •, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Add..... • ••••• I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• City • ·• '' •••••••• •••••• •••••• ·•. 111i... . .. •· .......... •• ·• ·• • •. CUT HID-PASTI ON YOUI INYILON TO FIGUll COST Put only •n• wo1d ht a1 ch 1p•c;• •bev•. l11duda Y•llt •ddren or pho11• 11u111b•r, Tht c•d of your 1cl ;, •t th• •11cl of th• Ii"' o" wh lck t+i. ) l•d w•rd of your tel h writ. t•"· Aclcl $J.OO •rlr• if yo.a tl•1ir• v11 of DAILY PILOT lor ••r .. ict with 111•il td r•· pli•1. ----... ..--.... ... -................. ···=···- IUSINESS REPLY MAIL An.I er-,....rt ... U, c...t. .._, C.Ahonil• Ora nge Coast DAILY PILOT P.O. lox 15'0 C:-. Me•, Calif. 92626 Cloooiflotl o.,t. -. ,_ ·-. . ) .. :.:~=ld~•11.J~u~·~26~,il968;i:i-----;i[fll'f)a;i0Ar~IL'--'VP~IL~OT'----" l., _________________ _. __________ 'l.HOUSIS POI SALi . HOUSES FOR SALi . RENTALS -•c,.tAU I --------H-Unfurnlshod H-Unhlmlthod Aph. Purnlshod Don't Just Sit There! Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers? ' See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD 1. Stove 2. Guft1r· 3. Baby Crib 4, Eloctrlc Saw 5. C•mer1 6. W•lhtr 7. Outbo•rd Motor I. Sterto Set 9. Couch 10. Cl1rlnet 11. Refrigar•tor 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewing M1chlnt 14. Surfboard 15. Machi no Tools 16. Dl1hw•1htr 17. Puppy 11. C•bln Crui1tr 19. Golf c .... 20. B1remettr 21. Stamp Colloctlon 22. Dinitto Sot 23. Play Pon 24. Bowling Ball 25. Wator Skis 26. Pl'Hltr 27. Sultc1tt 21. Clock Will Sell fast! 29. Bicycle 30. Typewriter 31 . Bor Stool1 32. Encyclopodla 33. V•cuum Cle•ntr 34. Troplc1f fish 35. Hot Rod Equlpm't 36. Fiio Cabinet 37. Golf Clubs 31. Sterling Sliver 39. Vldori1n Mirror 40. Bedroom Sot 41. Slide Pro)octor 42. L-. Mower 43. Pool Tabla 44. Tires 45.' Pl•no 46. Fur Co•t 47. Dr1pe1 41. Linens 49. Hors• 50. Airplane 51. Organ " S2. lxorcycle 53. Raro llMb 54. Ski B- 55. High Chair 56. Coins 57. lltctrlc Tr•ln SI. Kiiton 59. Claulc Auto 60. Cofloo Tabla 61. Motorcycle 62. Accordion 63. Skis 64. TV Sat 65. Wortcbonch 66. Diamond Wiich 67. Go-Kart 61. Ironer 69. Camping Trailor 70. Antique Fumfture 71 . Tape Rocordor 72. S1llboat 73. Sports C•t 7 4, M1ttrMt, ·Box Spas 75. Inboard Spoodbo1t 76. Shotgun n. Saddle 71. Dart Gome 79. ~unchlftf 1'9 80. Baby Carrl..- 11. Drum• 12. Rlflo 13. 0Mk 14. SCUBA Goar 111tse or any otlier extra tlilngs arounCI tlie liouse may be tumecl Into cash wlttl a DAl&:Y. P.ILOT WANT-AD so • • • DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 CYOUR CREDIT IS GOOD) DAILY PILOT WANT ADS WILL WORK FOR YOU! Get In Oil The Action Today! HIHltl~ a..ch 1400 $an Juan Huntlnttori Beach 3400 COUNTRY CWI cop111rane 1.120 Coota -a 1100 t.,una a..ch 47 VIEW • $23,500 CHARMING 3 BR , BA MarYln Grotlcruohl '= ~"i= DELUXE N"1b end~ home, J1rfvlac., w 1 I l • d 1932 WALLACE WE HAVE SOME •-W Ar, pvt entr, ~bl ... SMAU. CIJS'roM HOME rud, double ,.,...., $71,000 COSTA MESA ""*· ....,. '"'· 1 bl with Knotty pine ~teriot', 8eChM Retlty, &-.2158 lhoppb\g. «K-9812 bM.med celllnp and Nee RENTALS Yoo are the wiMtt ol AUGWI' Renll.I : Dtlwce CS: bcick tirepl&ce, tor tt.-H F I h-..1 2 ttcket1 to the CEANFRONT apt wtdl pool ~ winter eveninp. J...arse OUMI urn 1 -494-TZlli atttt 6 pm Boy-'°""' 00 to...., Rantals to Sboro 200.5 LIOO THEATRE s ----~ -· ~~m u~ roam lot 2 more unlU.. 60 x oor t.FX:E otudettl• !lffd 1-2 THOROUGHL y M2-4'LIS or 540-51<0 Aph. Unlvrnl- JSO ft..Z Lot. Oouble~. roommates for Mll'llmer to MODERN MILLIE 2 BR Duplex, carpet1 , Oetteral SOOD EnJo.Yaolto:itr11PvWwfl'oom •harelrr4Br.houltinNpt tlre.pe.1, bit-Ina. $115 mo.li~liliiiiiiP. channlne Uving rocm &nd ,,S7~0~mo=·~.......,.~--~--1 Ju.st ellp thla ad and take !1 ... n .. ~!chael Dr., H8. 213: JI VEN DOME d.inmc &rM. Mount&tn Catlin w ANl'ED ritl owr n to It to tht Udo Theatre \n ...,,.........,.. a~ *1r tM low Pl'b Pre Penn Apt. C..U aft@!' Newport Be•ch with l~d. ~'"""'------~195 ot SZ3,SOO. Good Tum.a avail-s -~• ''Tl 2 BDRM, fenced, pn,~-.; • N~" :.,.,. v•......., flcation . Offer &ood throu&)I Near ~ Point.. M:I. D 1f75f Make rtRrYllL>OTII vn """·Quick"-"""'· ==""-;;==== Jui, 30th. 8eoch Bt'd ..,,,__ Newly· Rodecorahld Newport BHch 2200 YJU,Y lel!W. Avail now. s 2~ BR, lqe fam rm., Close t o Shopping, Pa rk ATI'R.ACI'tVE waterfront 4 BR, 2 BA with feftL'ed yd l downtown H. B .• $140. C&ll Boys Club &. Girls Club Br. home, boat doclt, winter CJocse lo Khools, lhoppine, SJ&.1189 e Spaclou• 3 Br's, 2 Ba le~. 400 38tb St .. NB l2l3) parks. 30U J1ardiac Way. e Swim Pool, Put/ereert. Z43 WESTa..lFF DRIVE ow 7..mrr 2:13: S31-lW7. ()pe:n oo. Fountain V1lley 3410 • Frpl, lndiv/lndry fac'l• st6-1Tll Open Ewo. wknds 5 BEDROOM 1Z BR, eonvll'tden, 2 r-tiol, vm""""Y;:..,a.EAN==,-,--=--=~ 2 STORY 4 bdr, den, 2 bithl, 1845 Anaheim =--~ FAMILY RM• 1U BBQ, blodl to ()(ftft. .,,_ S B' R'' blt-lns, encl. patio. $190. l:C •. M •. !l!!!!!!!!llJ!!!llJ!~·-$285 year~ i..e. &42-l97'1' e~ts. u.i-.pn, firepla~. 962 ]'! Truly. fin• 1amt1y 1tom<. """" .. tlo. 0utstwfoa.1==""'==· =====I RENT Rich wood pandlns A book· Coron• del l'Mr 2250 Mu\th-to mooth or lease. L Be h 3705 I cue9 over firepl•ot with .:::.:::=..;:::...:::::..._;= $215 ~ mooth. Vieant. 19un• IC 3 Room• Fum tuN indirect lightifls: in living El.EXlANT, mod. 2 Br., F .A. tBn::iker, 54&-1141 54~2490 MONARCH BAY ARE A $25 Month room. Spanl!h motiH pr• heat, diehwubtt, frpl, Lee ATl'RACTIVE 2 itory 4 BR LOVELY OCEAN VIEW. 3 FUIL OPnON' TO BUY · val.ls thruout. Encloled stair-patio, bf.r, Nr. GCeUI. $205 3 BA, IOtt water, 'renced BR I: den, 2 BA, cpta, Drpl, No depo1lt o.a.c. ' way, 2 baths. Exquilite m.r-Mo. 673-ll'.M: '13-8617 yard, nr all ~ !Aue, trpl. 9001. $300 mo. H.F.R.C. petinc I: dr•pet. Built • in ::::::=. ____ .,:2~~ $"'1$5252. Mo. ~1285 or CID) •dulls 4~~1243 betw 16-S pm fumltu ... Rent1l1 . kitchen. EleetrlC rua1• B1lboli ·-517 W. 19th, C.M. 548--,. door opentt. MMY fnhnl L1gun1 Niguel 3707 Ui68 w. Lncln, Anhm Tl4-2800 found in flir hlat-r IJliced PENN. 81.ytnnt EncutiYe MODERN 2 bdrm, lnsul•ted, I :--:'.:=::-".':'-'=--:--I;;:=:~=:=;::=:=:=:~ bomei. Hl-6691 type home. 5 Br. 4 ba, caiptting, drapes, stove, 3 BDRMS 2"' Ba, drapes. Cost MM.I 5100 TARBELL. l61.ll Bettb Bl. Pier/ftoat. Comp 1 et• I y pr. •dultl. No eJm,_ab, Fenced yud. No pet1. f i~a~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil equip. Avail Sept l • 642-4996 LEASE $715. ~5H7, (213) I 1 J LOVING care needed. 5 BR, Reaonablt rats ~ 391--3482 after 6 HARBOR pain~ :.. fix up. OYer 25,IXXI bl ATI'R. 2 BR., carp., drapet;; p.m. e perlOll&. 673-2039 · t •--~ ft, Fireplace, C!Ot'Mr lot. convenient y -=· $160 Mo. Priced below mkt. $24.!50. PENINSULA~ 1h blk. to No pets, no children. Dupl1x11 Unfurn. 3975 GREENS fi46...4.184 . ocean or tJ&,; ! BR., 2% M. Olli after 6 PM "2·268!t s,-rklfng E'slde CM Ava.ii. Sept, 10. YtU'l.y ~ NOW V.&Cll'n' 2 -•~ I V I'· 1410 -~ ~os BR, new carpets, ,_ .. BAOlELOR • UNFURN. 11,F_ou-"'-n-ta_n __ a_~_Y,___ ,~:,:·;;mo;;·;.•;;,•~;;;:.,,=== I 5 br 3 ba. $285/mo ,,_ __ .-..,,. F--·• --~ " 641;-9683 ;,:;.$"51mo"'."::i.:~ from $100 5 BDRM Estate. Reduced to Btlbot l1l1nd 2355 sell by Owner, $31,llOO, Open ;;c;;=.:..c::.:.:;:;;;;_-'= July 20th I< 2llt. 1S860 Sa.Ii t• WINTER -Lrr cM.rmiJw 2 Barbara 10 am-4 pm or by B.R ••. No .Cudlntt:, $160 inc Appt. cn4) 893-3577 util. 4 BR deluxe $%1(1. II~======== I Hingu RE 333-2036, 673-!M02 Westminster SMALL 2 BR Ilse on prlv fm-Adult.II • no pet!:, Pb o o t Incl. udl. · ttd Jot $100. 447 Hamilton 642-2171 or 673-87€6 1 • 2 Ir 3 BDRM. 546-5630 FURN. • tJNFURN, KtNT ALS Heated Poola~ Qilld Care FOR L!ue; •· Brt, 2 Ba., Apts. Furnished Otnter, Adj. to Sboppina- fam. rm. home; bltnt, carp., c~ -4100 No pets allowed draJIEll. $225 Month. M5-0863 -1• • 2700 Petenon Wl.'f, •t ffar. 3 LG e,, New .,_, dri>s. $25 Wk, Up bor • ~~ 11-SHARE my home-• mature Redecor thru-«!t. Bltns Lr _._11, woman only. •t DO upeme. yrd. $180. 646-4922, 494-5270 : =~~ ~ _.,, GI RESALE ------- =C.U==-=="'=S='pm'=== 3 BR 1 % b•th.1, cpf3/drpl e Maid SeMce • TV avail. Excellent, pe.rk • like sur. Anyooe may all\lfrie tl!i• GI fncti ylf'd, patio $175/mo e NfW Caf• 6 Bu rounding• f!X' ~ti requir- 5%. '%loan, pi1yahl.e $1CB mo. Summer Rentals 2910 ~2813 eves & wttkenda 2376 Newport mvd. 5'8-9755 Ing PMC• 6 quiet. 3 Bedroom on a bis eomer • I •--• il NPr Bch 1 BR .i--... 4 1 A-•~~ 2 br, w/w Discri.mlnAtive Tenant.I lot. Room or uuat tl'll • '~ · Newport Be.ch 3200 ''""'"-•'••.c. API'S. J>llridn&'. Splirkllng new pl.int bl.k to Ocean, .$60 per wk. cpta drpli, bl~·in itove, l , 2 A: 3 BDJ.W. . job intide Ir o.itside, plUI July, Avail Aug. 6t2--lm AVAILABLE NOW refr:lg, walk to 1tort1 . POOL. NOcmu>REN ..,. w•ll to woll corpot" l.oggla at Victoria Bch. 1 2 Bedroom 2 hoth '124SO. 549-JOO OI' 64&-5961 MARTINIQUE Vacant and immediate pot-BR hotae, •leep1 4, $100 per CUpeta, drape1, blt-iru. M8r2260 Maple Apt E GARDEN' 'Am, - -ot mly "8,960. wk or monthly nte. 64.2-1212 9""" month on leue · LAI\GE Cl 2 hr 2 b FM ..... .... ..,...., . ean . . •. 18th & Sant• An•, C.M. STEW ART REAL TY 2 8 R DR M & Den. 173-""3 Eve" 548~966 m"'ic l'l>ol. Util ptUd $145. Call Mn. Hend.-Mfl.5M2 530-7TJO Watertrorit, dock. $ 15 o Bay I< Beach Realty, Inc, ~Y mature adults DHd ap. lrn San AriB A ll3 c M Week. 2n25 W, Balboa Blvd., NB ply. No pets, 2ll5 Placentia l""~~ta~-~· '!'p!ot"!'~· '!'·..,·1 S•nta An• Hgh. 1630 5 Br 3 ba, Jge livinf rm A: ta. mnn, lge ia.nd.!lcaped yd/ patio. $36,900 1632 Pet'llUI, 549-1632 L11un1 h1ch 1705 Shore Propfortie1 YEARLY Ieue 2 Br. util rm, Ave CM 548-24-07, ~ AVAIL, AUG. 15th 673-9009 or 675-t747 eves lenced pallo, wa.ah room, QUIET, 1 BR. duplex: water 2 BR. w/carport; disp., wa- 2-STOR.Y rarden hour. 2 crptt, drps, gar. Open Sat&: paid. $85, 548-1511 After 5 A: ter pd. 2 Lxations: BR. 2 Ba. $250 week, 1um-Sun at li(I) Oubhouae Ave. wknde ' 256&.A Orange ...... ,, $100 mer. Np t9ch. {West ol Udo DELX 2 BR cpt &: dqJI, sar. 219f.D Placenti• ...... $100 6'13-5300 6.fl-3645 .,::;lhop&::;°"=I ~~~~~~ No-child. $135 &-$150. AllO ca.JI Betwf!e'I 2 & 5 3 BR. HooM, .2 Ba., 2 aep. $2.1S LEASE, 3 BR, 2% BA, unl . :p_75 Orange. 5'9187 e 6J&.4l20 e p.rqe1; avail maittl fl. many extru, cuttom, Neu NEW 2 Br $157.so ettns, STEVENS 'VILLA Aut". $850. 1037 W, Bab>& _,_,_•lY""-thtrw~-· .. _...., __ 19___ patio ,_., Adults oriy, No NEW • LUXURIOUS Blv., NB 5f&.'J(l72 BUY Llk1 rent: $425 mo l peta.100 2bt St. CM l A: 2 BDRM, API'S. 1 A: 2 Br. Furn Apt.. % BR. S Bil, pil!!' A: float. • From $130 Month bllc to O(.'ffft. 1209 W. 2 Balboa Cbve1 67>4.Ul ~· ::-.... ~ 8Pt~~·~: Carpet., dni.pea, all built· Balbol. Blvd. Balboa, $15 3240 $95 2633 Oraf1il'. Ave · ln!, Adult• only. No ptit•. wk-$150wk. 494-5189 B•ck B•y · e · 384 Avocado, CM Mgr. Apt. 8 PRIVATE Cbttage, 2 blks, 31.ARGEBr, 2bacul..._-.c ~~:; =" ~:.~ 2 T:ffi• frTJk. ~bt, drpm, from bftch; Goldenrod St., NB crptJI, drpl. Reis req. peu. 646-2!162 blllris, prt patio, po o I , CdM; 1\Jll. 5. $125 Wuk, $275 548-3al2, .w.. 548-6613 .:.N;;7=, 00c; 'U~P::;A:,.' .. =""'l"'•"'•="·· f Adults, no pets. $1 ' 5 $500 Month. 613-7099 Mrs. Marvin ~ .... ..., -an. 546-5163 EMERAW BAY • OCEAN BALBOA 11. Attr. 1 BR apt. $l3S • $1.G. Pool l.SP:..::.ACI=ous'--l-b,-, -bl-t--in-bar'- SIDE HWY ~ A d•moroot C.J~, 61; •vall . .July, A~. E•tf Bluff 3242 l7T E. 22nd St. 642-3&45 .tove, refrlg, walk to ltOre'I. home wtth .,.p!flomt -Sept. l'l>-15Cll: ..,.2316 N-part Beach 4200 Sl<M.SO. '4&-T311Sl549-3KI, • ~-• ·•--~-Uy BEAUTIFUL view, spaclo1.11 .....,,. M .... Apt 8 ~.\Al. v-•· -· 2 BR l'Um, on SEASHORE Lmk 4 'BR 2~ bath horn.,, ===..,;;.=;.:_-_;,.; 1--cc_=....:.....:..;,.:_ __ _ demrated, 4 bedrm.t, tonnal Dr, NB. $115 wk. ~17(0 walnut panelled fimily room BEAUTIFUL waterfront apt. 1 BR. Apt w/w crpts, drp:. dmin& rm, party nn with (633-4163 Atttt 5 PM> with wall system l 2 BR., patio, boat dock. Ose to lhpping cent.tr. Mi 00', Rcllxted IE 1p9;doul 1 Bedroom tu-•·•-• 1 f'••pl•~. ,.. __ er 1 o t, Winter leue. 3403 Finley Stove&: re!r!g. $90 mo. rear --'en with love(t' trees 1uu.<1n1 •P • .. .....,,.. • •-" 1 Bl k t .. h W kl landM:·--1 w.ilh llunny potlo • 6"75-4039 1829 Pomona Ave, QI • $149,500. JLLUSTRATll> oc 0 IC • ee y ~ BR.00-IURE UPON RIE· $85. Newport Bch &tl--0316 l fenced yard. Carpets, 1 BR.: ocean view; pool. AVA.Il.. NOW 2 BR., new Q~. . LAGUNA BHch, alpt. Ii: drapes Ir built-In kitchen. Leue $130, Avail. Au1. bl; cpts., drapes, bltns. Adult.I, wolk to bMch. XJnt loct.tion LelH or !rue/option to 548-2035 6#--0637 eve no pe1. U25. 548-6769 MON:ARQi BAY • ON THE ·MALL • Unob!Jtructed oc.n vWwl tnm • lwaiciul I bedrm. • batb home, epen reaipmwible f1mily. Avail $150 Week. l.e..tl663 811. $350. 644-&7 OCEANFRON"I'. Attrae. 2 Br. l BR, 2 be, blt-1n1, cpt.I drpt, RENTALS furn. Apt. WmteJ" or yr!)-. 181 H Del Mar, fl.4.5. H.._ Unfurnlthecl Coron• del M•r iuo Avail 9115• 6f6..5832 M&-rl78 after e PM ~ ..,.oq:a. lill*bll General J000 t BR. I S.., ruwe. mril• dedc. Jftwt. bada d\d:I I ~;;.;;;;.:;;_ ___ ...;.;;.;,;,I ~. Adultl, no p.ta. pr!-• ........ EASl'lllDE OOSl"A MESA. !'60. '24 ,,.._ 6'15-5211 TURNER ASSOCIATIS LEASE<rl.EASECPI'IC><. 2 BR. 1 BA fll2 No. Coast Blvd. BHotifully deecl'ated 1m· Avall&bl,e now I..gtJna Bffch <n4) 494-llTf mlll'UIMe ! bdrm. home with • Mt>-1740 e LAGUNA BEACH large llflmmlr,.-pool. Euy "LG~&=,,.,,,-,,..,...,-, ,..,,,.,.,. ... -.~d"°"-,..-··· W T pl upkff'P yvd. $250 P Ir -..... 1455 Terrace ay, em e month CaH Jean Vllll Deer rm. AVll.il 3/15, NQ ~· Hfilll. 3 BR, 2 BA, dinette, &rd~, Jean Sm 1th, $225/mo 11. 673-7507 la.ra;e Jivln1 rm ., frpk, beam· 0 •• 11 .,,,,,,, .....,.., .,...,... .. BR •-eel ce.lllnp thru~. Dtt.],;-::::;,;":,:·,.:-.::..:•"-"~~~=• IAi1.n..... ., carp., u.1·ape1, Jtitrihrn w/blt·tn rue-• lS YOUR AD IN a...ASSI· bltns, trpl.; 1>11tio; gar. $200 dibiruher lure l'Omft' Jot FIEDf Somtolltl will be Y ey · No pet.I. 6'15-4$2 155' front. l.Andte•P«I: loold?W far It Dial "2-5171 DlAL clr'ect 6C66'1W, cNrrt lbrubl. Ocean ViN. Priced for quick, efftdmt rnult9.-your lld, then lit back and ria:ht. P .O. Box 914, t...run1 CHARGE ITI &b!!n to h phone rlncl Bffch, Owner. cH;;;u;.;.nt;;clftfoial<lc."";:.:::..;oa.;:.:a;.;c;.;.h_4400.;,,;,;;,;cl2t>d l1. l ·BR. Newly -d•cor&ttd . Carptottd. e NEW e UJXUJUOUS e c.rq., $115 mo. 5'0-Gl98 RESORT LIVING PROFESSIONAL otticti with 4 NATIVE GARDENS llvtng ""°""" ll<lilmo. 6 POOl.SSAUNAS-JACUZZI 646-7582 54Ulll HUNTINGTON °f-:':'i11~~0= GARDENS No .... 54&-0m Tennis • Entertairun61t 2 ~ Br. 1~ bath..· BOLSA-CHICA & HEIL A,oil, Auc-t5tb. 540-<li10 ADULTS 847-1414 -part Beach I FURN Duplex 1 Br. ~pr. 1 ~~~0 "'•ch. n45 mo EASTBLUFF. FOR LEASI -1 nos OLD HOUSE General 3000Goneral 3000Goneral 3000 It a m.tely 2 1tory with S Br'•, wood inneled ...n1 A old miaion brick floon a: a twn ol the ce11tury Nth. Orcbud tree• A: (Uftt houM. $32,fil. MlMion Rlcy, 985 S. Cat Hwy. 49f..0731 MAGNIFICENT OCEAN VIEW LOT $5,950 • 1mall, but level S1SO down, b1l S53 mo, Latua• Bch. Cn4) f97.mo NEW 4 B.R· 2 Ba flm rm, View ot Oolitt MUlt aell • I• :in. $32,500 LOS PAORIS ltL TY S Glt'nM)"l'e Slrttt Lquna Beoch ......,, BY OWNER. 3 Br, 2 Bl, fPI, ocem view, $29,800. 83.Wll'J or ......_ s...c-1710 SMcflcOUI OCIAN VIEW HOMI 6'4 % INTIRIST NEW J IR.• J IATH Quality -"l!.50 llANCHO <MAltGAouTA 4n..aou s~~lA-l&"B!fs· · . ' , .f<>1N • Blmplc 8CN!ftblerl Wonll'll.alc fOl'C ClltocTcla 1 .... , ... -"lho ,....""' __ ...,...._, '. four aaambl.f ... No ' low to fomt four .rmpi. worde. l lTOPHAS I '.11111'. I f'MYHlll r I I " I .................. _ SCllAM·LITS ANSWD IN CLASSIFICATION 7000 I New PrMll .. Town Home. Gold Modlllon oll.i.ctril Uvina I: pt1•1t9 patio , ~ • 2 btdroorn + don • I bocl-room wtth 2 • ~ batbt • 'lour own la.ra• 2-cu pn.p. Automadc door opmer aV&!l. • Dlahwuber, dr1pn, _.,. • landry ladlltlff. Rtf:rlpraton,avaJWMt..1 • Y"" ,,.,_i kif fD pool. • ft«it llartins •t f250 mo It •· MS AMICO WAY NEWPORT BEACR 'IOWNl!OUSE NQt Ri'f<ria I er. c. tan tl'lf!t" a 1e ... S2U5 mo. MMOlT l'l"S.---. Bia- .... -... ..., ... tllo DAJLY PD.01' 0 · • .w..e -NOW! I ' I ' .1 • ' . I .. DAILY 'ILOT alATlll Apia. U..funillhW --· -=' Nta ... I -5200 '-Property 6000 Bua. Opportunlll• QOOllus. OpportvNtloo 00,0 S BR. 2 BL dQpla: ~ FOR Sale by owner in c.o.ta ._, all ellc. Jd1da. Incl. M-. 12 ... u!lful !Um. 2 "' SALES ti onn, d I 1 b •a• be r ; aptJ. prdtu with pool. ...U0. I Bllc:. to OCN11, ~ blk $18XI I mo. I n c om t . No .., ba)r; M pet&. 1.195 P«I' vacancy. Adult., no pell. ...... ,. ~ ..... YtVly...... wo.ooo. --m.mt . C..-•l Mor 5250 .. -~~.:;·~ ON TEN ACRES 1 a 2 mt. Furn • Unrum from Sl!iO mo. Frplcs I PrV Patioo I Poo1L T ...... Co<> tnt'l Bkfd. • bole Putt/ G-. ... S.. Lano, OIM 644-"'11 <MacArthur nr, Coast Hwy) ------2 BR. epu, ,,,....,. m11 Maraunite. 1 BR, cptJ, dtapn. '13J Muzuerite. m.2902 .9v11.,... l•nt1I 6060 *PRESTIGE STORE* in prime Jocation. 2500 Sq, ft. Air C!Ond. See at 1801 Newport Blvd., Coilta Mesa or Call Mr. Ward .. ,,..... Sl'OR.AGE Garage. 20' x 25' x 10' hiah· Avai11ble aoon. $45 mo. ph. S c hwo rer m.'654 BALBOA ISLAND for leue . Store or oUice 1pace IO 900 sq. ft. 67~2065 IMMAC office 460 sq. ft. Top Joe, Balboa Ialand. Sl!iO mo. 642-9555, 673-'lOO'l 1968- Your year of independence? We're looking tor a man who likes to do thJngs his own way. A man who believes in himself. This man has probably had some successful sales or business experi- ence, an·d now he's ready to put this ex- perience to work to carve out his future. ANNOUN.CIMINTS _, NOTICIS ""'' 6401 BROWN Allil'aur bWC~ la phone booth next to AlhertlOft'• milt. 19th I: HartJ, Rn. 66-7890 PART-lrilb aettor found in vie. Santa Ana. Ave. and Mtu. Dr, Flea eollar and leather mllu. M,2.-Ul& Perton1l1 6405 Sinai•? Wldo-.1? Divorced? INTRAMATICS A 11t>r1ou1 aclentlftc: ae.l.ectlm 1ervlce offerlnff the most In compt't!henatve p-ofeuionai computerized matching. For a perlMll, private interview without obU&:aUon: KI 7-6644, Suite 617 Union Bank Sq., Orange, Cal tOttlct!t thruoot S. Call RSH N' CHIPS SlllVICI DlllKTOllY Carpenhrl"I. 6S90 .. CARPENTRY MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Too Small. Cabinet tn aar- agu I o t b·e r cabinets. 545-8115 Eve1, 646--:tm Da)'I J{, o. Aodtnell'l, e NO JOB TOO-""'SMALL=..-:-~. !Us!dmtial • lndl»lrial Qlm- mercial .. Repair • nmodeL Rea.son11.ble. Uc, bonded, tn- aie~2-1918 e '962-sm. • Cement, Concrete - * * * * * ~· Wint? WMddyo Chi? SPICIAL CLASSIFICATION POR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spoclal 111!0 s 11--s 11.,..-s IMKkl # 62 B&lboa Oniel 3 BR waterfront with pier. Wlll consider anythlna in value for difference above $1i,tm loM. u 8-7T71 IOIS a IMPlOVMfNT H•IP WantM, Mll1 nG0 SELL FAMOUS KNAPP SHOES * YOW' mm bus1neM tull • put·tltne * Uben.I on the spot C!CD- mlulonl * No depmtt or tnvewn.t * Free bonul ' lnalnnct .... • Free actual aample1 COm'ACI' WALLY ER\'m Knaw Broa. ~ wa. Corp. 6401 E. Flotilll. Strfft Eut Loa Angeles, CalU. !IOO'Zl ITT JABSCO M1terill Handler J-1;;1;;;65.;-;,2;;BR.""°Conma==-=H"igb..,-. -11 Offlc• Rent1I 6070 landL Patio, lndry. AdultL LAGUNA BEACH 6T3-tl.32 E'Ye•Mekends Air Conditioned 2 BR ttar •pt $150. Matutt ON FORES'.a.' AVENUE adult• only, No Ill· Water Desk apaces available tn pd. 61T Jumine newest cUice building al If you'.re that type of person, we'll pay you an attractive training salary and pre- pare you for a lifetime career With New England .Mutual We Insurance Comp;o.- ny. Your income prospects will run well into five figures. And your future will depend on you. Please feel free to write or ca11: , ROLLA R. HAYS JR. C.L.U. Included with S1 admission, u our Thun. spttial~ Serv- ed from 7 'ti! 9 PM. Wed., Thun., Fri., Sat. DANCERS CORNER Child C1re 6610 • Income units on 21st St. ---------in C01ta Meaa. Trade for SPECIAL Summer program. bouae or tru1t deeds. lfto 1438'rii Main. at Edinger SI. Ages 2~ to 6. 8 a.m. to 5:30 come $40:2.50. Owner, S1nt1 Ana 542·9306 p.m. $18 week. CI a T I • * 549-<Xl33 * MonleJOni Sch°"', 1525 N. NEED MOTORCYCLE Santa Ana, C.M. 646--3706. Have 1964 Simca, rebuilt LIC. child care for 1 or 2: ena:ine, new ti.res, $450 or LAKE Tahoe View Lot N• vada side, paved $12,SCG clear. Exchange for sorne- bod)'1 headache! Units,• TD'1, or ! Bk:r. 675-5726 Pttlier a.me experience tn nwndactwinr flclllty. Operate1 fork lift, drivel company truck. Goo d beMfttl and WO~ COO- dltloo" lolboa ,,, .... S355 prime k>cation in downtown Laguna Beach. Air condi-- timed, carpeted, be'autiful paneled partitioning. T w o New England Life ull W. 8th St. Santa Ana 542-5623, Ext. 321 WANTED: Writer, artist or Y<11l. 35-50, to share ha· cienda, Rourita Beach with ex-Actreas/ Artillt Call: 548-9755 Paularino, Bear St. area. ? ••••. , ..• , ........ 49"-r.114 2 BR furn condo. on Bcb nr. Vtnice, Italy in exdia- lve reaort an:a. Trade tor local area 3 or 4 Br. home or we. lot or boat 646-1277 Equal opportunity r.1t1ploy 1415 Delo W1y, Cost• Mesa Phonoo 54S.8251 ·(714) WATERFRONT dlx. 2 BR. &pl wfboat tie-Up privll. Yrly. leu, $225 mo. AduJU only, no pebl er children 61l"""7. entrance.: Frontage °"'.l!!!'!'!~"-"'~~!!!!!!!!!!!!f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Forest Ave., rear lead.I t~I' FLY TO CATALINA DAILY FLIGHTS FROM ORANGE COUN'IY AIR- PORT. Catalina • Vegas Bal. lunches, • n I ck 1 19 Ac Ol'&D&e grove, 1~ mi 541r7809 to new L«na Unda &.pttal adj, to resld. development. N'pt Shores 3 Br 2 Ba bouae' I ·---------1 Club w/pools; walk to heh. $25,00J Val; want 11.k:e home in Anaheim, Fullerton, Bue- na Park. Owner ~1676, Munclpal ,,.-, loU. $50 REAL ESTATE per ~tb tor 1pace. Desk and chain available for $5. General laeun• leech 5705 Buslneu boura answerin&: -------6-200-1-~--------1 aervlce available f/1r $10. Acretge l. BR 2 Ba. I.re llv rm AU utilities paid except --~------ ACTIVf ASSOCJA TE IMMEDIATE INCOME Airlin~s. •, st&6612 NWPT Bch Tenrjs Cub F U LL, Family charier MEMBERSHIP $600. Incl trans fee. 213: 697·1670 Contractor• 6620 $11,000 per acre. Trade for Don't Bungle this Job income or 1 • Rltr · 542-6487 The money you're spending 3 BR 2 tile bathl, large ii Your own. Ftte nt. 15 llv rm, din nn, dolled in yrs. Xlnt service. New con-patio. Value $25,600. struction. Addn's. Remodel. WANT nice trail!r. w/frpl. all eleo bit-ins, telephone. 4 41 Acres i .. bw..i..,, 1111 W • n d t. DAILY P!Wl' 0 4'l-9M3 222 FOREST A vrnuE LAGUNA BEACH Looking: for experienced bu. W'" · ineM mm with imagination, ~ a&erifice N'pt Beach Tom Camey Bldr. MK! W. Leon Vibert, Rltr. 5.f:8.<li88 C.O.st Hwy., NB 64Ull.6, JJ ft cabin c:naher, rom- l<EW o.lux "'' 2 BR, 2 BA, --COSTA MESA N . .l.quna. l Wk to ocan i Air-Conditioned Prime M·l property, 31li' X good perSonality, to join ag-Tenn.iii C ub memberlbip for $800 (now 1elli.n1 for $1080) . gres.sive marketing team Call 6t'l-l!i66 673-2473 · letely rebuilt eigfne. Com. Licensed Cootractor pltte Including halt tank etc park. I..teue. 494-«11111 ~ OHie.et A Desk Space &30'. Corner location. CAI.J.. lentafs Wented 5990 with central secretarial, ur-· MR. BLACK ~1151 {open ox and tel~booe answerin&: evea) Heritage Real Estate. .* URGENT * ..me., up to 2.000 .,, tt. 1.59 ACRFS, Banlow, Calif. with real ability. Located 1.,.====-=== Orange County. Man we ae-Al.L"OHOLICS Ano11)'1DOUI lect must have $15,000 cash Harbor ArH. Phone 673-1724 to invest which tntitles him P.O. Box 1223 Ol8ta Mea Residential -Commercial Will trade for car or bigger Maint &. Repairs. Free Eat boat. Ask for Andy. Home 67l-2129 646-2938 or work 563218 Additio!lll * Remodelina: Dll.UXE 3 BR 3 be fum YOUNG Lady with m.uJtJpl:e The Mutual Bldg. Hwy. 86 frontage. r.50 down lclerosil and well he:t.ved 2863 E. C.OUt Hwy, CdM $40 mo. $4,800 full price. "Gftman S b e p h •rd com-Call t AM to 5 PM 615-4070 (114) 962-4166 aft 6 pm. pt.nion nem. an unfumilhed N •--h ................... oraport-ewpolf ...... c Mount ... D ... rt 6210 ment witb 1m~ cr:encl-' Executive oftices 432 to !iffi l--------- o• .. "'1d. aa HID-... It. each. -""'' o!lk•. A TIENTION Beach locatloc ~. Thrivinc businKI •re a, DEVELOPERS &. to a:ood salary. benefits + ahare of profit. etc., which Should return considerabl)' more than entire invnt- ment first yee.r. No sellin&, •re oo barrier. We tratn. Write giving all particulan about ~se:tf. Please give phone number. Sales Manar-"'-hie -....... .., Pvklnl. UtillU" .. id. INVESTORS on tiuct Income. Phebe Dlvlalon of Hlghway1 * 80 LEVEL ACRES * BOX M-163 ~2225 213: &»3514 W~daya Ideally located in high-dry The Daily Pilot .... BlJSINE.'m Womm. Dll!ds l SECRETARIAL desert (no smog problem1, l~=""'"""~';'i""'c=~ Br unfurn APt. CM , SERVICE wonderful dry-air!) Leve I SPARE TIME Newport. a.ma de1 Jlar, Modem ottlcea, carpets, 1lr land, pump & well on prop-INCOME Hunt Bcb er I..acuna. To cou:Utimlng, parkinc. From uty, Just 18 mllem Ea1t of Approx. 6 houn: weeldy SlOO mo. Gar er cupx1 $1115 per month, Orange Coun· Barstow (where great ex· {Days or Eves) collecting nttea&rJ. ~ alter I tyBan1r: Bldg. 230 E. lTth St., pension has already begun!) money and restodd.ni new pm.. a.ta Mesa. MZ-141fi 90 man -made Lakes in &: wUque coin cbpenaers in \VANT wifurn apt, app$1tll, FOR RENT •l'f!ll! Ideal for re1ort your fUlea. La.auoaara.SepttoMQcr Approx. .CSOSq, Ft. carpeted development, alfalfa NATIONAL June. TMC:ber, wtft>, a baby A m.pe., air-cmd. growing, fish raising, etc. due. Small ran.re t t MAlUNER'S BLDG. . .• opportunities boundless. -"·"-W.... Mr L. A. 1515 Thl8 Is a rare ottering. af. av......_, : • Weltdltf Dr., N.B, f~'-Petenob, c/o ~ ~ <lmtaef"Mn. Jtainio 542-«lll "'"'."'' the investor • ere1t l\1-'·-r -a-.... ,,_, future! Per.ma) drrum. ....__ ......_ -~ OFTICE Pim wa rebou1 nan~ force: thla Mle; otb- l\lARRlm Gradmtit .tadmt. l"OtJml fitted With ~. er, 1maller parcels avail- writinc ~ nnll "'*1 tabl-. . ..._ for mfg. rep, able below market value. or .ublet fir A ... QulilL or dWributot cperations. can owner: &47.a;tO Evei/ $150 Rd'• 613-lilT 1T38 Amheim St, CM, W@kends. ""' BISCUIT AND NATIONAL Uk CANDY BARS. Sl7JO to S4990 cash required (Balled UI part ~ full time) For persona) in- teiview: aeud name, addreu and phone number to: Fred H. Gerwick, Lie. on Goll Course, pool, w1t-•Le1rn Self Hypno1i1• 673-6(Ml * 549-2170 erfalls, hobby shop $15,500. 5«-9'll'4 e•e class 833-1174 eq. Want Units or?. Dania Announcemenh '4l0 Dr1perie1 6630 Rlty C.O., 642«'i60. * ZAFFINO'S * OCEANFRONT Duplex C·l Lifette He1lth Studio 2S% elf _ All fabrics Zoned Newport ~each. Will Hospitality is Our Mollo lB22lh N wport CM 6f2..6866 exchange for urnts or clear FR.EE STEAM WITH e ' boat $15,IXXI equil;y, 5ff.89.tl SWEDISH MASSA.GE Eleetrlcal 664() after 5 p.m. Open wkd;v1 10 am· 11 pm I ::::=:::;:~~:-:-....:=:::1;1i0otuf,o1ditaa=-. iiWllmmiiiDil·O,gtoot;;;;~.,,,<ro;; ... Sundays 10 am· 8 pm ELECTRICIAN, LlCf!?lsed & $900 Mo., $35,IXXI equity. 519 E. Broadway bonded. Small jobs, Submit 2nd TD's or • 1 Long Beach (213) 437·1069 mainten. Ir repairs. 5"8-5203 Agent 646-2629 Political Advertisement * Recall Rea911n * s~ the petition before July 29. Call Carol Rabirlson, 546-4478 Cotta Mesa. Equipm•nt Rentals 6650 Evea. Call: 713: 434-5!M :=======:::= WANT f.12 UNITS; Have "Wei.I seasoned S.20 M 2nd Floors 6665 m ·s for dn pymt. Prind· CARP~ • Lie, Contractor pals only. P. 0 , Box 19'l. all price;a • tree eslimatea Huntington Bead!. Funeral1 6412 546-4478 evenings Trade '62 Chi!Y. % ton pldc-:;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;::,;;;;;;;; up xlnt. cond. for sport car • Floor1 6665 conv. of same value. Ap- WESTMINSTER LINOLEUM. carpet, tii.. .._ "'°" n.00>, ,.,.",. a11 .. MEMORIAL PARK mod'1, ,.,..... M..,, rom. < P.M. Mortuary & Cemetery nants. Frtt est. 83f.1677, * Complete funer1l1 541.8654 from $245 Cemetery lot1 Gardening 66IO SERVICE DIRECTORY from $130 ANTHONY'S * * 4 Income units on 21st 6t. ln O:>lta Mesa. Trade for hou8e or trust deeds. In- come $40'2.50. ONner. ·* 56<183.1 * 'rnADE S400 '68 Mini.cle sauna beth, portable, like new, FOR rompanble val- ue large refrigentar with fre@zer. 642-2514 TRADE part of $45,IXXI Equity in 7 units, West· cliff area, for larxe expando mobil home or ? ? • 642-2514 • LGE. ourved 2 pc, sect· ional, white linen·type nau- p. Xlnt cond, Cost lffi(). Want 7-11' davenport, pref gold or noi.J. tones. 642·2514 Will exdwige ccm'l pro~ erty on Campus Dr., NB for com 'l or industrial in Riven:ide. Boyd RU;y, 3629 E . Cs! Hwy, CdM 6'1&0930 Palm Sprtnp 2 BR 1 bath + 2 studio apts. Top cond. $21,500 eq, FOR home or income Orange County, Bia fi.l&.3928 evea. 494-~ What do you think Of 01D' "TRADER'S PARADISE" Drop UI a card. OassUled Dept, P.O. Box 18'75, Daily Pilot, Npt Bcb, Calli. * * * SERVICt DIRECTORY MAruREQ>t<..-tn-.... _ 1======== winter or )'11.J. I bdrm&. No LAW-~ oU· R. E. Wanted 6240 TRANS-WESTERN DISTRIBUI'lNG CO. 590 N. AZUSA AVE. lncludea EndoWD1erit Cart Garden Service Everythinc .In one beautiful 6960 HouHCle1nln9 6735 Sewlnp 1----~---c!ti.ldttn er pets. Cor<nl dtl ic.. BN.uty er wta: Nim. CASH Mar arM. cmlJ. m..4898 Executivt> .Wtea. $175 mo. for equ1~ Jn local l'l!L r ..... --Rmtalneededfor l«i E. lBtbSt. 0.ta Mesa. irop .. Send detana to place meana leu cost. 646-1948 No trattlc problems. LANDSCAPING 14801 Beach, Weltmlnst.er LAWNS REMODELED CLEANING • inside-out. Paintini, rug cleaning wall wuhina;. Free eet. M6-6103 Altor1tlons--612·584S Neat, accurate, 20 yrs. exp. CAREER OPPORTUNITY I loin todays fastest growinf proteulon·Mutual Fund sa1a No experience necessary. We train • tun or part tim1 Mutual Fund Advlsora, Inc. Npt B. 1603 WestcUff 64Um S.A. 1212 N. Broadway ' 547-8331 • Molders • lusembler1 • Carpenters Some boating experience necessary. Interviews be-- tween 9 & 10: 30 a.m. ONLY No phone calls. Apply W1yf1rer Y1cht Corp. 1682 Placentia Costa Mes SKIPPER-married, to participate in growing aan. ing cruise business In Tahltl. Must be highly experienced with 6()..70' &ailing ve~. Excellent public relationa i willing to live in Tahiti for at least 2 yrs. Salary & ex- penses &: profit sharing. For appt. call Ted Cook, Islandt in the Sun, So. Pacific Tour&. 213: 433-9911 da)'I· WCTRONIU TECH Vendtlle background 1n el~ tronic prototype for instru- ments, toys, etc. Opportunity for Advanc1""nt Marine Research. Inc. Huntlngton Beach ....... ....... _.. 64.2-3074 Propertiel, l°' Via Ithaca, ston.p: in o:i.t&l W. N'pt Beach. '-==p=1,...=='~="'=•=m.G<=~=-I STORES FOR LEAS! BUSINESS d _COVINA, CALlF. 91722 SERVICE Fluff & Fold LAUNDROMAT bt. 12 yr1 at 788 w. 19th C.OSta Meaa, netting flXIO, Long lease, suit couple. Ownen retirinc. LI 8-5640, 7 AM 6 P.M. 531.1725 893-2421 Exp horticulturist. Reaa. monthly GarWnlna Ironing TILE, Ceramic 6974 DO YOU KNOW nns MANT 1 · Beach A: Slater Hnta Bch. an Mlmorl1I Parb 6421 6755 Jap1ne1e G.rdener KEPHART'S CuMDm lronlna: ---------~married man,~ * Veme, the Tile Man * cciltor.e. Strong tle'mperanoe Cult. work. Install A: ft'l)ain. Roo'"" foto Rent 5995 llli<l .,, tt . .aio .,. tt. C213l FINANCIAL ROOM wtt!l prmt•-.... """2397 llua. Opportunlllft 6300 ln-tmont Oppor. 6310 &: patio. 5 min. to bead!. EXEC. omce IUfte, 320 5· 642-4964 ft, Glebdale Fed Bldg, oiM. NUTVILLE, U.S.A. 11 DOW U.S. Government Le. I e d 2 DEmR.ABLE Plota In Exper., canplete ~ bu moved lo 130 E 17, SUite Harbor Rnt M e m or l a 1 M"rvice. Fttoe estimatet T CM ~ ,.0 ~• e .,,.,, ......,, , . v.-=• Mon-Sat Park. Wilt sacrifice, ~. 1 ;;;..;-~·~~~~~~~·~ff=1--;:;;;;;;gs;:00p;;-;;;:;--&l2-E35 call 8: 30 AM to 5 I SnmENTS working their lronlng n .oo per hr. No job too small. Plaster cmvictione:, enjoys rneetfl8 patch. Lee.ding show er and h elp ing other1, repair. 847-1957/846-.()206 er;pecillly church people, Now 9Uettllfully employei Reuooable. 6'7S-544i accer>tinc application• for Bldgs. Need p 1 rt n en , QUIET brn, Oil Pk. Male, tranehiRS in Oranp Coun· Return 10%. (714) 6l2-2.19S PM way thru coJ.lege, Allen 0 ====64=6-60==5=4===. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT bot !ac'" 1im;1"' '"""'· no amoker. Refs. $ 4 O • PROFESSIONAL office with ty. Locaticm are waJttng in 546-3461 evs • wlmdl. living quartus. $16.i/mo, Anaheim, Laguna B c b , Room f« Rart. 64&-7582 548-1118 Balboa Island l other areas. R .. I E1t1fe Loen1 6340 For llltY MEDICAL Slrite, l ,IXXI 1q. ft. f].4,950 cash req. Fully BAKERY A OOFFEE SHOP * 642-769"1 *. Attr., air-eond.: good ioc. ll!CUl'ed tn~t 1 ho u Id for .ale. Fully equipped. ruR."'lJSHED roam, Cmta Reu. rent. 548-6761 ret\rn 1st yr, Olli for •ppt Owner wants to retitt. Xlnt Mesa (on Santa label) tl5 r4-TI'ORNEY'Soffl~•: lSOO 00.-2113 or write to 1617 prollta. Beach b:ation, tac> wk or $50 mo, Call 54&-4192 aq. ft; attr., &ir-<UKI., good Westclilf Dr., Suite 210 I •""="""=•an,,.,,,61,."•161=5==- QUTE:I' ... ...,,, With or o'"';;,,· -..==-~·~51&-6'161~~-=l-N2...ponuilliBijj .. i)icbi!i.Oic~.iA. ,,...jS_ ANNOUNCEMENTS wttbou\ ldid.. 155: S1ll Per .-2 LAUNDROMATS ind NOTICES mo. «wkly. 54&-6986 lndu1trl1I Rental 6090 60 Washers, 77 drye;n;; Frig· l ;;:;;,;::~~~~~==:I ;;;;;;:-;;-;;;-;;;;,;;:;;;-;;;;;:I idai.re. Leu than 1 yr. old. Found (FrM Adi) 6400 Guest Homes 5991 4200 SQ. Ft 1n modem ain-Gross $3100 per mo., increa. crete building M-2 iooe $300 lng noo per month. Spend 6 FOUND: Male Doberman, Legal Notices 6450 I WILL not be responsible for any debll ~ than my own. Aileen A. Bolesworth SERVICE D"ECTORY Appllonce R"f>ll" Ports 6510 HANDY Man-SpcelaUze tn all kind of repain. Electronics, electrical, plumbin1, etc. S<l<-2444 Auto Rep1ln 6530 PRIVATE Room for am· bulatory lady, Good food. Nice surround!Jlp. 548-4153 REAL ESTATE _mo=·=(="='=' =-=====' 1 10 8 hrL per w~k. Self op-Wibon &:: Harbor Blvd. &Uft. -Loh 6100 eratlng. P r ice $70,IXXI. Look.!tobel8mos.old.l276 --··--------Terms. Shopping center to-Maple St. Apt. C., Co.ta Garaa:e 1talll fOlt' rent. · n....-Mee.a. Call betw@n 8 a.m. I Hoiat1, air romPttUOr I: 2 LOTS Oii Santiago, NB catkSUI, v1..,1ge. ""'' 1"""' ~-,. 6790 Jnb Wanted, Min 7000 · A->"'u• romp. J1nltori1I lawn care. 646-4203 JAPANESE GARDENER BRIGHTER SIDE Jan Ser Maint & cleanup, Reliable. Crpt cleaning, 11rs. wndows Reas monthly rat, 1 . Indust'I, Resid'l. 548-0.3.4 82'7-5248 alt 6 pm SCRAM-LETS ANSWER·S L1ndoc1pln9 6110 MOWING, Edging, vacalawn. ht:hol -Rllymt -Cllttn - Gen'I cleanup. Haulq. WEEDING, hauling, land-Ptrist -CHASERS Odd Jobs. * 548-6955 1eaplng; 11. construct.: re1i-One dn.* to another: "l'~ e JAPANESE GARDENING able worlr. fift F.«timatet cut my drinking in baU. I've Service Cleanup, Landsc1p-call 8"1·2069 Before l PM cut out CHASERS." ing. 531-7034 aft 7p.m CORRAL'S L n d 1 c p I A Japanese Gardenina Rototllling Serv. Free est. Professional Maintenance (Have own e q u Ip men t 646..fi553 962-4764 1====== Poporh•nalna 6150 Job W1ntod, Lady 7020 I.ADY With nursing exp. will care f<r lady or gent in Yolll' home. Light housework OK. Belt ot relettnee1 trom local res. 548-4.534 General R Nattreu Rltr 642-1485 11 a .m. •ccesaorlea. 8'2-«l20 cub, tnms or tnlde. Fee · • · I========== I JAPANESE GARDENER. PAINTING And Paperlna;. u ~mple. 646-8565 DYNAMIC G-·••. -~·.,, LADIES Wrist watdl. Vk:ini· •-'--lttl-6S50 li 1vwui 11U1iu Dti ... 1• ••• EXPER, tt ·able ma.Int you call me we both benefit ~alnting Cut & Edge Lawn Maintenance. lJcenaed ~. 545-8570 a.ft 4 PM PRACTICAL NURSE want! 8 hr:!! day care, • 642-1200 • P on1E ~-a ~1 Ma• Widen wanted ! ! Build ry Alpha Beta M&rbt •I 1--~-~-----R 1 .....,. ........ "'--'-· ~,. ~~· ~ 1 f'----'-• Adams • Magnolia, HB BABYSIT horn ..i.... eas. mo ra es. 0~1.;1. ~ulive buy not expena:jve Income Property 6000 BILL ILATZER 4645 GARHAM DR. COSTA MESA Ocean view lot. Ftt permanen ,.llUJl.:I,.. IUCCeu 962-8474 m.Y e, ~ G&l'dening complete aervkt Try me and .stt. 541-3157 simple. Owner 675-4750 w/retirrment in 5 yra or , .,..,.,-==->==c-==::: ~ip. fenced yard, cloee to 30 I' b Domwtlc Help 7035 les.s. In~&tigate &: aMJ.yui 1 SMALL grey b""'1l curie)' scohol Vic d No , H.B. Are• yr1. exp. Re 14 Ir, PAINTING Interior/Exterior. I ------'----'- 50Xll6 tot with producing oll without oblig1.tkln, S8turdiy haired female dog. Brown ckl&e lo Edw&rdl .l Edlnaer. dependable, &12-4389 Free E1Um1tes! LIVE INS well. Royalty PQ.YR $50 per -July 27, 10 A~! or 2 Pl\.i studded collar. no tags. 248 Reaeoriable 8!H-MS2 RELIABLE: Reu. Oriental * 6424669 * ~ * Employer pays fl:';fs You are the winner of 2 tickets to the mon. By owner 5ll-O'ai9 ONLY. Disneyland P.ionte Vista CM. 54~2367 care. Cleanup. odd Jobs. INTERJOR A: EXTERIOR George Byland Agmcy OIILD Cart, my O>rona dt>I . 106 BE. 16th, S.A. 547-0395 Citrus Groves 6175 Con!~ room No. 12 ffimo; small black puppy, Mu home: childttn 3 yn l Vincent. 642--0326 Painting. Free estimate. LIDO THEATRE -THOROUGHLY ;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;~~! UNIQUE FRANCHISE vie. Irvine Terrttce; call &: over. Hour, day, wMkly General S.rvlct11 6612 Uc. A: Ina. CHUO< 541-6314 lbineae live-ins. Oleerful Id·-• ~ ,_, p ... ..l.. P!rmanent. Experienced. For men .ti: women with mgt '!'lnuy, <11.-ao<t ratea. 613-1737 DAYS 1----------1 * aperh ... ,. ... , * FarEutAal!DC)' 642-870.1 COUNTRY PROP• abUlty. No e.xp: we tn.In. KEY cha.in w/S k e Y s , RELIABLE baby.tttina IZlY PROFES.5. Window, wall& &: Expert MOD!RN MILLIE Jn a beeutitul !rotit·free roll-OUered by International lnitiala LOB. Vic Hamilton home any boon. M&--2478, fir. cleaning; bu 1in111, 548-1"4, eW1. 7100 Ing foothill WKt of So. West Yardage F11.lr. Sl5 ,IXXI tO A: Hrbr. CM. 5"5-5922 AM for Nancy Pratt resld., &. ~truction. . • SdtwarU Wall Qlverinp •A .~114~n_cl_ ... ~Ml--n----I Juat clip thla: ad and take ru,·ve;rsllde. 16 .54 Acre1, 10 :·IXXlln tnvst opena retllil MALE Pekingese vie. Harbor CHILD Care, my borne. By O;<stal_ Window Ceanmg & lnstal. "Paper Bum" ARGUS Jt to th• Udo 1bere.tre in c.&phanted ~!.,•vel orang,· ••Co J •uoclrn OwWllh this tam· I: Hamilton CM. Vrry day or week. Vic 16th .Ir l ~::" .. ~Eoo•=ti=m="='='==S<"'.8-87;';;;::nl ~(~ .. iptt~~--~~)~84~~7·llli9~;,,,~ WORK NEAR HOME N-Belch -••• '"-ti· es t c remau ... er undevc · OUI • en1, ~7 N 1 CM.,, ·-· Im----h to II 200 ..,........... "''I.I> l\lCIJ ......i ""·' loveable. !>e-7148 ewpor • '"~ Mauling 6730 P-1nttn1, exte:rtor, Interior ....., • ..-m.... •• · tleadoa, Ofter rood throua:h 0~· r aul price ~.CXKI. For MUm.ER Sbop for leut. LI Jn 11 .....__ ~ Fac!Of)' tme/exp •• to $2.85 Jurlhe;r . lonn1t' I ' TURTLE. Vicinity of Irvine BABYSrrrING ID)' home, e 1. yrs °"' ~a= ~•· Ju.ly 30th. call Gl'!'n~ Thnm=., ~:le co,~ete •/hoist, $150 mo. and Ctbrtllo Call Shard Eastaide loc. C.M.; lunches; CLEAN Lots, g&ragea, etc. ~. ACOUltlcal cell. TlmMM!nek n.ch ••• ···•• S3.00 NEWPORT BEACH """'' ""'' Century Bl Garden · ~ Da.ll &C.2-6%12 Tree removal, dump, skip, e eeper. No op ,, $2.=5 TRAVILODGE Eckhoff & Auoc:., Inc. GmYt, !>3f,.6920,' Eve s and klentify. S48-9832 I=="=· =='='===="I backhot, (il\, grade. 962.8145 ~umbfnt 6190 r.-.-..i .. daa $11,600 1818 \\'. Oispman Ave. 56-7111 FOUND July l2 M month l rf t.. Me ./ HAULING Trash pickup ....,..~ -ooo Orange, Calif., IA:uUTOmic;0;= __ :;;-,_===-old male &biped kitten, c~ eonry, etc. . * 24 HOURIDtVICE * l98S Gn111 ·••••••••• .-o•, Ml·:as2\, Evff.\11knds 538-6177 '""~ lllftCt fOf' leue . ,. •• -6560 Trimming. Anytblng • M do h-M-Sll.-In I I I WeaJ'IOC collar. ~lwg ---------11 •'I. ~-w-~ "5--P • .....,..., ,.tr, rwnodel, 1161 en.a•••••••• '"""'j!!!~~~~~~~~I auo cmier, compete ., ......,.V"' ........ 41;w 1S111 G,_ ........ $125,000 w/ho!&t. $125 mo. 13072 SWEATER A T...U. nck.t BRICK. Conc,.t .. Corp.n!ry El« -.r cl ... m, C. R. G.,.t ~815 AUMge 6200 Cf'fltury Bl. Guden Grow. Mta Hilb Oiurta. 546-3086 CU1tom Cabloets, Small Jobi Interior Decoretlng 6737 Guaranteed * WS.1407 See us at once! ARGUS IMPLOYMENT CONSULTANT AG.DK'Y J>U Wfltditt, NB 5'8-7796 lat E. l'fttl st., S.A. 547-6336 WALK TO llACH OWNER MUST SELL! .......,.,, Ev" S<s-7331 Loot 64011 =0 =K= . .....,=="'= 1 ·=""="""=== e Ruldenco. Comm1 e P==.. "IJc'.'.'· ..::;; l2 Unftl, Newport 8Ncb. All s acrn in aubdivima New· NEW concnJ1ion 1 t em · --------e.;;;..; _B_u_ll_de!.;...;""-----6-5_70_ e Painting. inl. Ii: ~· remodel, ttptt, roottr IU\'. Heir Wanted, Men 7'200 l ·BR., turn.; pod; C J'Nn brrr)I, Calli. U ml. ~ast of Unltm.UC(I opportunity, in· 1.0n Vk s.nta Ana Ave i e Custom Draptty 531-7566 '""'· Grom Sll.271; leun. Barstow ''Land of l.Akes" tematiOnal mrtlt poteritlaJ. Mt1a Dr. Blk wlbrown REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS • CWJtom C.rpetina l==;;=======-1 M.chanic No mrtal ,....,...,., Pih .,.. • ,0 ..........ie Jal<" m Im). Lock of """' -.. -· Dadwnmd. AN to CABl!<ETS. A1f1 Ibo Job. e Wall Covertnp -... ff60 T.. ..,., OilJ oo. -._ $175.000. a,... Mudl cle•-IO' '""· 642"""5 ..,.Umo. f>eddl. ""'3111 23 rn ...... S4&41J.I e Colo< Coon!Inatloo -..... -tdJli' <ondi!lom. R. Na.._, Rltr. 60-Hll ln& on. i....t lond, wal" CARPET 4 upl>lbt"1 cJon. GOLD charm b.....i.t, 4 FREE &mMATE esl':WING -ALTEltATJONS ltAY VINES l>!UJXE 3 BR C-PLEXES uncliergnamd. can owner inc equipment. High profit. chadm'i b •• d 1 • Ml--C.blMtmlldftl 6SIO Ucel!M!d 1: lnllUJ"«I Profenlonal I: Fut Ou-,osler Pl:)'mouth '* Ol. Priced to movt MT.fl&fO aft I wlcdan. an)'-low COf1 lnmlne111. $'25 com-timental nlue. Reward. CUSTOM Jdt, cab In et 1 , MODERN Reetonabl:e. 646-&U6 an Willow '50.000. 5G-llll .... ttma....ic..,.,. • .W.b'IM. P•"· 6'ULl7 613-0083 bthmi. pailmw, """""' DECOllATORS ALTERATIONS. Ra-N. Lq S.clo J BDRM Tripla Jinta Bdl 5 A. JunJpn' Hilla nr ~ Coala M'na He&IUI Ou!>. LOST -Hi.ii. <nst tnid, '°Pl 8". 'Mft reu. 847~ 5J6.S5U p1Lw cm bet1ifr *--· EXPERIENCED Fum!tlll'I C.... lac. Good omd. ed .l.aJle ~ $950 A. Own· equlpmtnt A: 11una tl.l'e't rtrip mt w/dev flM DAD..Y PILOT WANT ADI mE QtnOCER YOU CAu.. can far appt. ..,.._ ddfvm-y wareho1.1141• tm.ri. Ql,11). Oner' 1CT-2SC:l •·~ fTS..9-44 1« u.le. 713: 4l1·'7R mllat. Rft'ard, a-3541 !JRING JtDtn..T!l THE QlllO{ER YOO Sr::I.L SOCK IT TO 'D.fl 0\11!r7l. Call 642~ .t> .'t ~------'---x . • Could exist on $600.4700 while griting started. Ca.U 1'1r. Elkin. 541-5231 SERVICE MECHANIC for mnall foreign aervlce l l1l!pRir aaraae. Should have pneral knowle da:• of popular Imports. S a I a r 1 l:/ot comm open. Perm poe:itkn with advancemmt auuttd. Send t'9Ume ~ '100'l WHtmJnster Aw., Wm. Or cell 897-4285, 9-6 JANITOR Office Md factory janitorial And plant labor, night lhltt Experlenced. Phone Pers:>n· oel.: Mr. Horsley, 847·1531 CAMBRO MFG. CO. 7601 Oa.y Street Huntington 8Mch Siies, over 18 Sa1ea promotion Jobs ••ail. l..u&e inl'I. (.'(1'1). $10,000 1st year. 1.fanaremerit opportu- nities. Ca.II IO am -2 pfn 539-118.l Upholsteren top Wl.gH • lfeedy @mpl. MDiA UPltotSITRY 2350 Newport Blvd., C.M. 548.<'181 BOYS WANTED for . outside •ales in atterncon ad evening fQr newap11.,_;, Pleaae call 893-5375. JANITOR Experlence n~ • . ...,,........, 6M Te'lninal w._., a.ta MNa, Ollit. DtllYOry I Stock RI 1Cboo1 atudmt. YINJ11 put tlm•. See Bob ft! E. 17th SI., C.M. E.'<PDUENcm GonMNr Alli ttme. Npt Seac:h uw. """' ba.. .........-. can 536-u:n atte:r 6 pm. COOit-MENU -GO!y, • ·-Doll ........ SERVICE Stltiori attendant Must ~ lubet, brakt1 A ~· Rd'tr. 64&-8412 JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT !!"IP~~~· Mon 7200Help Won~od. ~--~ IEC Interstate has immediafe re· quirements for the followin9 Production /Lab Openin9s: • Electronic Technicians • Mech1nic1I Receiving Inspector A • F1bric11ion Inspector B • Precision Machinist (2nd olllft) • Gen: Machinist A (2nd 1hlft) • Burrer-hand & power • Structures Assembly Mechanics (shut rnet•O • Gardner Denver Wire Wrap M1~hlne Operator A & B (2nd 1Mftl • Gardner Denver Wire Wrap Mach. Maintenance Mechanic • Maintenance Mechanic • Mfg. Dispatcher /Expediter IEC is a dynamic and progressive com· pany with well balanced. efforts in bock-log , new programs, plus planned diversification. Exceptional emplo yee benefits are provided. Employment office will be open Saturday, July 27th, 8-11 a.m. APPLY AT 708 E. VERMONT, ANAHEIM INTERSTATE ELECTRONICS CORPORATION A SUBSIDIARY OF "Auto!""'tic" Sprinkler Corp. of Americ• An Equal Opportunity Employer JUl:$S • t:MPLOTMtN I Holp Wantod, Mon 7200 GARDENER OCEAN VIEW • SCHOOL DISTRICT Salary $473 to $576 Perform general grounds maintenance work, repair a n d maintain gardening tools and equipment. l year eXJ)Crience gardening or ground maintenance, 8th grade eduCatior'I, U.S. Clli· zcn. Apply in person 9 to 5, Per90nnel Commission Qif. ice 7972 Warner St., lfwit- ingtoo Beach before 4 p.m. August 5th. COOK Experienced brea.kl1st & lunch. Must be fast. Excf'l- lent money and opportUll- ity. Apply in person only. Surf & Sirloin 5930 Pac. Cot. Hwy. Newport 8e1ch BUSDRIVERS Part Ti,.,. Operate bu& in !he trans- portation of &chool children on daily run and aMlgned , 11i>e<:ial trlpg. Pay ~ual : $2.66 • $3.29 per hour. Con· lact Personnel' Office, 536- 9331. Huntington Beach Un- 1 ion High School District. Cliy Shop Tr1inee Ueavy work. Pennanent position. Starting wage $2. •per hour, Apply Industrial Clay Products 18765 Ftberglau Rd. Huntington Beach, Calif. BOAT MECHANIC E.<tperienccd with diesel aod other mlrine insla.lla- tlon~. JenHn Mlrln1 Corp. 235 Ficher, Coata Mesa FRY COOK Experienced AppJ,y •t THE RIGGER No. 16 Fashion l11land Ntwport Center N.B. JOBS & EMPLOYMEN I Help W•nted, Men 7200 e 2 Chopper Oper•tors Exper ienced v11i!h glass- craft choppers. e 3 Fiberglass Rollers Experienced e 2 Bonders Experiencrd e Gelcoat Touchup APPLY Columbia Yacht Corp. Z75 !\lcCormick A~·e. Costa :<.Tcsa, CaliJ. SALES REPRESTh'TATIVES Leading independen t apccia1Jsts dealing In over 100 mutuaJ fUl'ld.11, expanding in 0r!lllge County. Th.is i1 an opportunity to enter dit,.'Ttlfied professional selling, lull or purl lime Jnv!'stmcnt t'Xp not necessary, we train. 547-6621. h·lut util I'" u n d Investol'!'I Inc. 2100 N. J'\1ain, Santa Ana HELM'S BAKERY lnlervlt>i~in!; I o r ROUTE SALESMEN. Earn while you train. Company paid bcnc· nrs. 5 d<1y wk. Call h('lwe<>n S.8 am "xrry>t Thurs. &: Sun. 831·114£1. 26082 Gf'tty Drive, Laguna Niguel. Agenclu . Women 7300 ARGUS WORK NEAR HOME Admin Secy ........ to $6."il R~tlonist ••.•••••• ,, •• $-100 Sales Secy •••••••••• to s&iO Gal Friday .. • • • .. • • . • • $ IOO ARGUS EMPLOYMENT CONSULTANT AGl-...'VCY 2041 Wetitclilf. NB r.-1g. 779G 1624 E. 17th SI ., S.A. ':>-17~ WORK ••• 1t YOUR conv1ni1nc1 The "Temporary Division" O! die Newport Pcf'Mlnal Agt!f'tcy otters plea38Jlt, IQP pa.yin& jobs (fee pe.k!. by the cmpl~r. oI c."OW'liC) for the qUlillf.i4!d ~Wlan who likes to work jus1 now and then. NEWPORT Personnel Agency 133 Dover Dr .. N.B. rnxx CLEl!K $450 pu __ ii.64ii2ii.Jiiiii70iiiiiiii& mootb ,. otort. s o.y .... k. Will train. No uptrh!!Jce ,,._.,,, Write quunc.. l.lotw, welaht • btlaflt to P.O. Box 143. Costa Mtta, C.lllomlo. 9:111!1 ~ Tl!E QtnCKER YOU 'ELL TI!}; QtnC!q:ll YOO CAU., •;"I See Bett1 Btu~ at mi66 Gxec AafN:'I for Career Gir11 410 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. By 1tppolnl. 646-3'39 Frld1r, J11ly 2b, 1%8 I DAILY PILOT 27 . '• Joes 1. EMPLOYMENT-j JOBS 1. EMPLOYMENT Jois 1. EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted H.1p W1nted 'I Women 7400 Help Winttd Women 7400 Electronic ~C lssembleu A ' B ht & 2nd olllft R1qulr11 1xperlenc.• In rick h1rn1uln9 1nd cht11l1 wiring. Other electronlc • ., 11mbl1r openings tv1i11ble for those who h•v• experience In /,rlnted circuit boors. Employrn.nt office will be open Saturd1y, July 27th, 8-11 1.m. Apply 708 E. Vermont Anaheim Interstate Electronics CORPORATION A subsidi•ry of 1'Autom1tic" Sprinkler Corp. of Americ1 Women 7400 ' WANTED · e Com-r Syot1m Oper1ton e MTST Oporaton Full or part limo posltiont Must be experienced. 546-4670 I ~~ Cocktail Waitress Ov« Z1 Apply in person 9-5 p.m. REUBEN E. U:E 151 E. Coast Highw1y Newport BHch • BOOKKEEPER I TYPIST IEC Steno Secretary R1qulr" typing on IBM electric, 60 wpm ind ablllty to take dlc- tatton at ao to 90 wpm. Call or apply Personnel Dept. 772.2111 701 E. Vermont Anlheim INTERSTATE ELECOOllCS CORPORATION A 1ublldlory of "Autom1tlc" Sprinkler Corp. of Amtric1 An equal opportunlly employer -EXPERIENCED- e Comm1rci1l Teller l::.'<ccllcn1 opportunity! APPLY 1N PERSON MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE POR SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADI Furniture . IOOOFurn ftur1 8000 Furniture Audlon 8025 Furniture Audlon 8025 Decor fl tor . Receive1 c1ncell1tlon of $22,000.00 Sparni•h ind Mldlterran .. n furniture All Hew Tep 9ffilfty Ir-' N .... A hceNtw't .,..._ He• h Ch D....., ltema l.lS follow&: Corgeoua 8 ft. cwtom quilted sofa with separate J005e pUlowa wlth heavy oak trim decor and matchlng chair, 3 matchlng oak occasional tables, (2) 58" tall decorator Uun11g, hanging chain swag lamps in wrought lron, an 8-plece king site master bedroom aulte ln pecan paneled Mediterranean atyle with top <1uallty 15 yr. warranty king aize mattresa: &: box springs, Spanish decor dining aet, etc. Wkle "'"""'' ... ,.,_i., $1121.00 ~:~~~~.1'.1~.1 ........................ $698.00 Ttrm1 Awt ll•bl-Ntwcomt r1 ft C•llforni• CttOit Appro~tO lmmoOi•tt l'f r /I /]Furniture 1844 Newport Boulevard, Coata Mesa (only) Every night 'til 9 -Wed., Sit. & Sun, 'til 6 I~!!!!!!-m ·-~ Spanish I Meditt • Showroom Samples 8' Wood carved arm divan, lg. man's chairi beaut fabrics. 5 Pc hexagon dark oak din, set, \V /black or avocado framed chairs; 5 Pc BR set, 9-dr l!Ir. & Mrs. dresser, lg mirror, 2 commodes, decO!"ative headboard in Spanish oak or avocado design. ------- Southom C11Ii.rnl1'1 Lor..,t Modem w:::::""AU.CTAiONS Open Dally 9 am to 9 pm for Jnapectlon convenience --*---·-· * * •-•--*-* * Alw1ys 300-400-500 lots .of · tor, quiUty new & uMd brand name furnlah ng to chOOM from * Complete houseful -living room sets -dining room sets -bedroom set1 - mattrffs sets -limps -tables -decor•· tlve plec" -dishe1, etc., etc. Coming In dally -repoaMssions -1st•t1t -umptes -con1l9nments -houaehold - d amaged freight -van & storage lots - trad•lna & bankruptcy. More thin 2oo.JOO refriger1tors, 'Wishers, dryers, fr1e1ers, ironers. atovts, Maple Color Combo TV's Buy on1 pi1c1 or • complet1 housef ul AUCTION SCHmuu: WED 7 pm I SAT I SUN 7 pm 1:30 pm Open 9 to 9 for Inspection r 1nancln9 Av111. 1 block AO W. of Buch K Hwy 39 Commiulon G1lleries 7 722 Garden Grove Blvd., Garden Grove 531-1212 Y•• Ce11 Al_.,. l1y M.,. kr Leu. .t A~tlee • An l"lual opportunity f'mploycr r or ron1p1.nr r trainlns: Bu~· in1"'S.~' s('hool or two y~s ·experience. 40 houri. Start $3T.i good opportunity. 1st National Bank Items Sold Individually VALUE $895 -FULL PRICE $429.95 or terms 11 low as $3.00 week No Down . Use Our Store Charge No Fancy Front, but - Qu ality Values Inside. I r"A"n"h";q .:u.:;••,_ ___ 8:.1;.:lc:O.::A::;n::;tl::c: au•::•:_ __ ...;1:.1: ;1 Q : CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH POLICE STBIO /CLERI! S-186 Co $591 per rno. Excf'l!ent benefit progt·an1. [nterestin;;. challenging po- sition in UlC hub ol busy police department. \\'orking hours 8 lo 5 weekdays. Rc- qui.l'cS 100 w;p.m. dictation , SO 1v.p.m. typing and 3 years steno and general office experience. 1-·or fur· thcr det•ils conlact Personnel Office CITY HALL 3300 Newport Blvd. Newport Beach 673.2110 l.\J:<.IEOIATELY SALES SECRETARY Sh1rp creative idea girl able to originate own letters, 11t up and administer direct mail solicitation of distributors. Merchan· dising, 1dverti1ing, journalism education or e xperience. 51lary open. 646-9641 GARY-SILVERMAN 2018 LEEWARD LN. NEWPORT BEACH You arc Ille winni •r uf 2 tickets lo 1hr LIDO THEATRE Sho"·in;: THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE Jui;! r·!ip this ad and take it fl) lhe Lido Theatre in l'\rwpo1'l Beach with idcnli- fieation . Oftrr good !hrnugh .July :;0111. bPronTuN1rr To;.;~;-szro lo $300 a month and morr part rime with chnncr for advancrmrnt. Call 812-0743 h. si:-e if you can qualify. Aller .1::;(1 · STAiTI.-Your own busincl!S as Public Sll•no. \\'ill furn. o/. fice free for 2 mos. and Jo;Orur ae<'!~. Call ~1 r. lfic:kman, 67;>.379:: ORAPi-:nv \Vo r k r o o n1 lablcrs -J'.)O\\'Cr mrich. oprraior.s. Reach Drapery. 900 \\'. 17th St., C.J\.1. 510-6161 \VOMEN T clepbonc in· tervlf'wer• to \VOrk from home for fine~Calif. Dept. Store. C:dl 84.:.MO'l behv 10-2 DRAPERY workroom machine oprrator. C"..ood pay and w or ki n g conditions. Halls or Hwillnglon. 536-9377 646-9641 of Orange County 16SO Ad1m1 Costa Mesa Approved Furniture· 2159 Harbor, CM Dolly 9-9, 10.5 Sunday e 548-9660 Anfiquej -Anliljue6 I SPECIAL ANTIQUE AUCTION I Assistant Mar. f Spedol Cell'll911•1111 Engli1h i11rlin9 1ilvtr, 1ign1d Sttub1n v•1t i.-1i9n•d "D•wn" 1111, 200 pc1 ef fin1 olo::l •rt 91•11. Oit 91•11, C1rniv1I gl•n l 1tc. Cht nd1lit"' & THf•ny typt 1lt1d11, olO b1drm 11h. Gr•11d pi•no. rolltop 9t1k1, Gr1nOf,th1r cock1, ro11nd 01~ ttblt 1. h•ll trt11, tom• mod11, rocker., ol d coin1, 1!1 intd 91111 l t ic. for National Apparell cha.in An oqua1 opportunily employer JOBS I. EMPLOYMEN I G1r1g1 Silllle 1022 Exp in womcrfs & chldnl's ---------•schools.Instruction 7600 merchandiSE'. Xlnt opportun· LOTS Of ;:;oodit>~ 1ron1 an- ity & lx>nf'fils. Apply Let11f'r F.."XPERIENCEO PIANO L E s 5 o NS, ex-liqu~s lo motol' sc:oolrr. Shops Fashion Island, Npl pcrienced tcacllei· l\[ !\[ Everything mu.~t go. 403 &h. COMMERCIAL degree. llfy borne, Costa Kings Drivr, fief! on Dover * Do11't Miu Tiiis Auctlo11 * COUNTYWIDE AUCTION CONVALESCENT AIDE !ELLER ll1t>sa. a.i~Jt from Coast H11-y, left at Cl ill "" . Dr., lr rt at Kini:~ Rd . 1hen r or pnva1e home. l'Ull or UNITED CALIFORNIA SCHOOL Children'a vacation par! llmr. Any a_!;c. BANK rates. Chilcoat lO-Lesson dC7\\•n .to King~ Drive) NB 10102 I-ell llvlll., St.Pelt II blk. Ne . .t K9tell•I SUNDAY, JULY 28th-11 A.M. l11,,.ctl011 hhnley 9ftentee11 1 PM HOUSEKEEPER Typing School. r..18-2859· 173 !o'ri/Sal/Sun lt-8 A1ctl•-G111 A lln 714; 147·6741 "~ve inN01· out. Full or parl 30._29 Harbor Blvd. Del Mai', C.1\J. IRVINE TERRACB me. o fet~ . Costa Mell Pupil of Segovia GARAGE SALE Sewing Machinn 8120 Television 1205 H0l\f01AKERS 5"2033 Teaches clM!:ical gUita r f'umitul't', af"Pliances, oth<-r 1638 E. 17th, SA 547~ ._. Peter Thompson 54g..2652 housthold items &-v.·hat w\11 NEW Dresirmakf't' Elec &cw· USED COLOR. TV EXECUTIVE ,,. you have'? 1319 Bonnie i""' machine. Never used. "·"ly ""''a•1--' o .. ices o f 1 MERCHANDISE FDR "" ...... "' ".,._..,,. ,.,_ , An e<jua opporlun11y DoOne 10 AM • 5 P1\'I. Sat slill in ori"inat car ton. * $188.00 * n1cn1......,rsh1p vacation plan employer SALE AND TRADE "' n£<eds enthusiastic, respcrui-July 27, Sun July 28. Value $217 inc Service HENDERSON'S ble secretary, Divttaitied, --~--~=~--I Fur niture 80QP 67~7ll2 Policy, !\loving , l\-1ust SeU l8i7 JL1rhor Blvd., C.M. interestini;-. challengin:; TRIMMING & GARAGE Sale; lHtrfboard 10' Sacrifice Sl-25. ~9174 548-0155 \\'ork. E..x~l~nt office skills INSPECTION l\IAPLE l\\'n beds, chest, Jncobs $50; ceramic BBQ; MODER.~ r.-tagnavox comb. required, 642-9gj_J for ap. Plastic1 parls. Pel'ln<lllCnt vanity, l'nd table, 4 lamps. dune buggy parts; wattr Musical Inst. 8125 stereo. blk. & wht. 25 .. polnlment. position. Excellent WOl'k· Umbrella lablt>, 4 ch<1irs, 3 sklis, appliances; 'G5 Cad. 11CTeen. $75. Good buy. -SAL.•E=s=L~A=Dy--ing condltlons and all upholstered chairs. 1 Jan:e cpe. DeVille, '65 Opel station ELECTRIC gttitar, coil COl'd 962-"JOTG Iringe benclils. do\\11 rouch, 2 tall v.•hite wagon, cheap. \Vekiing-cut-$45: ampHfier S"..:i. Both A·l Experienced in fine ready to \1·ea.r anti sportswear. Full Umr. Appl,\' \''ill ' '-• "· condition 5-16-43l.i TV Con~nl•, 21" ·-rn. Good train uul must"" over lan1ps, 2 \:1l·e table cloths,'.! limo done, eht'ap-your place """"'""'". ,;;:=.,==:,=-,,;:: Condlti;. M<!. '""' 18, \•oith good f'Yf' sight. china cabinelS. All Xlnt or mine. 6U.fi97--I EXCEl.SIOR Accordian, like • ..., CALIFORNIA cond! 673-.S.J.16 IA.,-N°'T°'I°'Q"'U"°ES"'~&~lt~l,-,,-1-00~15. new, tull ke!yboa rd : with 673-495.! GENE'S :!JOO Hn1·bor Bl\·d. Injection Molding PR n:iugh chrs S?.i for both. f'il'C rstr & btankf'I. halr case. Sacrifice $;i0. 548-&102 2l" ZENmi console TV 200 Bl'iggs A\'l'. d Remote control. Excellent Uphol.s. br. chr $10. 2 rod ryer. Lg. braided rug. LP p· & 0 8130 Costa Mesa f>-16-4,IGO iron rm dividf'r (scm type) records. r.rosaic tile. air 1.;;;;";;n;;o;;';;;;;;;;';;g;;on;;';;;;;;;;;;-;.1-"'="dc.;.:.rion:...$50:.;-:;·..:""::-:.-::"::62:.__I An ""'ual opportwiit,y b troll Curt · Good. • -~... S25 & $10. Ba Y a <'r comp. 81115· ies Hi·Fi & Stereo 1210 -=~"'~m"'pl.:.'';..'~'~--1 $3.50, bassinette $..l Iii chr Junk. 1''ri &: Sat 9-5. 1771 PIANOS & Costa J\Iesa "'WAITRE=s~s - EXP£'1'icnccd in Jrall811 focwi . Apply in person 445 N. Newport Blvd. i\'pv,•po11 Beach Blind Stitch Opers. $3.50. &W--012~ Whlt!ier, C!\1 ORGANS S~. mach. garment mfgr. PR. naugh cllrs $7:i for Ooth. GARAG E Sa.le -t:lothing CIU art 2 p.m. 6"6-4929 1580 A'lonto\•la N.B. G-i2-266£i Uphols. br. chr SIO. 2 fm e 11 51. i>ilveiware, an· Hot Summer Speci1ls Expert Medical Typist wrought iron rm divider liques, Ladica & i\tan's Beach Music WAITRESS Experienced, over 21. Sl.80 per hour. Graveyard Shilt. Cont11ct Appi'Oximatcly 4 hrs day in (scm type I S2S & $10. Baby li'afch , Antiq~ ma J: i c Center our office after hours or in stroller $3.!'JO, basSinelle $3, lant<'rn and tools. 30'li your home. Must have daUy Hi chr $3.50. 64--1--0124 Fernheath [.an(', C, !\1 . l740-1 Beach Blvd . "46..ffi28 1 lunlin1{1on Beach pick up. Office near J.loag. ROUND oak table s:iO. Auri-" 3 blocks So. of \Varner Fhoae ~5073 que Boston Rocker S2:l. Fan-ONE 10" Power Graft radial Phone 8~7~?.t.i SITTER -OOusekeepe!'. 2 cy iron single bed · $.!:i. arn1 saw with stand com-ORGAN SPECIALS chiklren ol leachers. Live tn 897-!W29 plere $149 + mis. fumilUtt. Silvertonc oi·gan Sll9.9:i Mr. Zimmer 675-4004 DENTAL-ASS-ISTANT or out. 549-1762 IJ-.-,~o~,-,~ .. -,~.ha~;,-. -m-.. -,-.-"-'f'll l&ll Indus St .. SA (1 block PQl"lable chord on::-an Ch South of Palisades Rd off ai.r side. Cc1·tifif:.'d or Ex-J b-., 7500 naugahydc; xlnt ('ondition. Santa Ana Ave.) Saturday wilh stand & br.nch $39.9':i pcncnt:ccl. Begin lmmed, O _,.,en, Wom. $125. 962~1 llammond chord organ alter 1 P~I Salary OpC'n. Confidential. 2 BLUE Velvet chairs ~ ot-like new Sl49.9-:> Reply in O\\'n hand \vriting MOLDING toman. Reg size l\.1aple bed Decorative Bl-FOL{) interior Lov.'l'C'Y lloliday -v.·alnut lo Box P-1&.I Daily Pilot. 1..1_cht'no Oporitora (near ne\\'.) 546--8879 doors (4 panels) each panel fin ish $39!1.$ m. 17,i " x 6' 6\~". Quality Hammond M·J S729.!6 \VI D 0\V E R w i 11 he s Plastic, :"1ccllon. Perma-GREY Formi"a fop tablf', 2 h "'.I ... ardwood. antique v.·hitc Used \Vurl\17.<'r C0'1soJc mod. permanl'.'nt live-in babysit-nent posilion. Excellent leaves, 6 cl1aira. Xlnl cnod. .,1·Jth gold lriin; a 11 4500, z pedals SUB"i.!J:i ~~~/li!c hou.~ekeepl'r. 7:45 y,·ork conditions. Over· Call al! 6 Fri, 540-1188 hardware, ~ 9 9.:? 15 2 or New Wurliti.er mod. 4300, 'I Iii 4:4j ~Ion thru Fri. 5 lime an::l all fringe bene-DANISH couch & chair. coco 837~91 Early American !rent rctui11, monrh old i;-id. S25 "'ttk. fil~. ?-.lust be expcr!enc-,.,,.1,., $30. • ...... -~ Tniil"r ) "0 -ft "P\I _, N' II ._., ' "'"'-"'" "' GARAGt SALE -Dinrm carrys nt'\v warranty :::::.__-"""'1 a :> •'U. ·o phone ca s after Port. Ci\1 &12-28'11 OROER-TAKER_S_ J P.i\1. chairs. commodrs, cabinet~ &Ive $300. CALIFORNIA CASH for furn & appHaricr~. & tables. Lamps k New \Vurlit1.er orgun, nt)()r ;\lHlUl'C \\'<>>>>"•< -g"· .,,, t'"ll -, I 1·-~ u I • l Mold" W<:' sell ~ood used furn. 1772 dcc.'l'.>rator bric a brae. All moc . 1avr UJl t'l ~,~,. pa rt limr . Days or f'Veningl'i. "!•cl 0 i:t ing Npl Bl.(.";\! 61:!-iOl.i Cht ap. ~18 \\'alnut St. NB PIANO SPECIALS Plt'aS<1 11t \\Ork from our off-:too Briggs Avr. . . (N Sbo ) Used spinet piano S2Ki. icr. Salary SJ.6.; hr Call Losla l\lesa 5·164160 t"ORMJCA top d1rung tab\' J ' ewpoct reit Used \Vurlitzcr spinet SJS:j, Kl 7-l.~3 bcfOl'l" 5 p.1n: An equal opportUllily lf"'&f, pecan !inish.r.~6 f'hrs. A I' 8100 Used \Vurlitzcr l'iPinet S·'8.'i. ST''NO Ch 1 . ~1nployer Xlnt cond. $6j. 646-aoJ!l'l pp 1ances .-~1 . al eng 1n g 0 ----~-----!;:;;;;::~=~'.'.'.:=~~ PCll'lt1nity in Bdvf'rt1,1••• IOlO WHOLESALE 'fo Deale!'&, ""' Office Furniture 1· · agency. Must be accurate Apt ownr1 & pub 1c, refrig-1.vpi~r. J d.liy \\-rrk. n.e • Walter rralors guar S15 +cross lop Lansdale Co.. 2ffi Main, From S25. Sq top $50. Dble dr. $65. Balboa 67t)..l"!l0 • Cockl1il W1itr1s1 Airomotiv• Co. Frost free X top $85. Obie dr -GIRL FRIDAY-371 Used mctaJ & -·ood dciskt, r·rost Free $100. Also wash· •'1ostes1 500 used chairs, over 50 lilcs, crs/drycra/fre!ezcrs/rangea. N<'C'd !t>harp girl 10 handlr. miac. aafe11 & firt 1llea. We will never be under110ld. various du!ics in a t girl APPl.Y lN Pf..'JtSON 1830 So. Anahtoim Blvd. A-OK \V11rchouse, 7722 Gar- oUict'. A1ust be good typist 10-12 NOON Anaheim, Cali!, 112-8450 den Grove Blvd. 1 Bick \V. of pleaaing telephone vu1ce: B Some bkkpg &kills. S48-25-il . alongside S.A. Freeway O -;;-'•"'-':::h:::ll,-G';.,._G'-. '-''-""''"c·--,, ! Special Sale ! • \VE oUer our grealcst stock of new &: u~ piaoos &: organa · at Special Sum· mer Snle prices! • WHATEVER YoU are look- ing for • we hav~ It & at a price you wtu pay. WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO 1801 Newport, C!\.f 642-8484 STEREO 1968 aolid slate, console model. Like new. Balance .$'19.35 or small paymenls. Credit Dept. 535-7289 Cameras & Equip. 8300 NEVER u.scd S325 ·Kodak J\.16 Camera & 1\18' projector, both for S150. 646-5133 Spor ting Goods 1500 SU RFBOARD 9'Jj" Jacob~. J mahog strlngt"ra, mahog tail block, simi-speed Skag. Xlnt cond. SM--19.54 SURFBOARD, RuMCU 9'7" Speed Shape\, like new. * 6T;>-2730 * SURFBOARD 10' Used twice Like ncv.•, S50. 642-4283 alt 5:30 SURFBORD.Hawaii 6' 1 0'' bc11utiful d!'i:'p red, $49. Mu.11l sell. 67J..41l'.!8 SURF' board, R11Mell 10' ex- cellent condition. SS O. 673-..1482 Yardman Surfboard Good condition SSO • 5-.19-0'1!15 • SURFBOARD, Hawaii ?-1odel A 9'6". Excellent condilion $00. 6T.'r;;&Cl llOBTE SURFBOARD 9 rt" XLNT COND. $50. 194.9309 * SURl"BOARD, Cu atom made good condition $50. Call 642~ KARAM'S KatelJa DLX. auto f!lec. range, usNI J THE Versailles Is now taldna: a pplicaliona for wa!trease& 8022-.summer1 only: Sep. rotiss./oven: fully rov. by Sears con-tract, ss:; 67~2119 WASHERS $29.!15; dryers S35: Fret>zers $75; Relrlg .. c.'Qpp(!rtone !'. Avoc.: Guar. Decorator's Delight Slodarl 5' Grand $699. SURFBOARD, little used '67 ~0-1095 fllll & part time. E:xpcr, on1Y. 501 30th Street G1r1ge Sale ApPly in person Newport Beech GARAGE sale: car carrier, 1617 Wf'lteliU Dr., NB aquariums, maze hot'S{', WAITRESS WANTED THE . famous Ben BroMi's paintings, misc. Thurs. thru Over .21. experienced. opening appro~ 1 m o . Sat. 6262 Bellinger Dr. HB We did the inside . you do Grl'ek Eliminator, atepdown the outside. 10' $115. ~29 Mayer Baby • \\'t did the in---------- aide & outsld!', ebony. $849. Miscellaneous l600 l\tany other Grand specials! ORIENTAL art ohjects: prs. WALLJCHS.MANNTNG'S Fu dogs, vases, lamps, 1Ptc. 9&-7211 after I pm. located at Lagims lkaeh 812-36:29 EXPEn Donot makt>r. Apply 19202-A Beach Blvd H.e. C.C. Now interviewing ror l~"RA~G~"s.-~~·"s-"'°t•"- Dolly 0 Donut l 9 14 8 NU cooka waiten wAitrell.SCs GA E ale F'ri-un " RSES aid, experienced bus ,.,'AYI k;t h. en help. A · ~1 Cypress S.A. He ights. NEAR new rlf'\: Sil:naturc Oryrr ~1Usl sell no n(), .$70 * 962-3914 MUSIC CITY 646-40().I Bet. 5-6 Pl\.f So. Const Pla1.a • S.-10-2165 1---------Jlansen s11rfboe.rd 9' 1" Hammond & Leslie s10. * Brookhurst 1-ltg. B ch . prclerrrd. Apply in person ~ • c 1 P-!Off S.\\'. t.'Ot'ller u f lOam-lpm Laguna Beach Nu r s 1 n g ply 1n pel'!<ln on y, f.lr. Pal' de ) AI.Dworkin;: molhcr 5 da wk. flome Phont 494-8075 Moss, 2 pm • 5 pm daily, __ ,,. __ •_· ----~ 9.5, 2 chldm, lite housework. IDLE 1-1 k Do"-· 31106 S. C'oait If\\')', South 3157 Ken-y, C.M. Sat~ Sun rs ma c .....--1! Be Laguna Seda, patio chairs, Mlac °"'" trana. Mature woman. A F'ullerelte $2 hr guar. \Ve . . . hou!lehold itema bttby tum. ~1Th9 Aft j pm. train. Jm ritrs. Dre e 1 BROILER Man; d1shwaiher; book 1 '546-~l ' • SEAMSTRESS. dry .:lean-54Q..1932 parking auendant: 2 bus 1• too 11' Ing experlenoed. Permanent BABYSM"J'ER \ girls over 21. Apply In pM'-Neighborhood Garage Sale Call ~l-9550 be.fore noon h It. 11 E h I son 2-5. Fri It. Sat. ck>thlng. house- OU!lekct'plng. Uve In • 'Mir Pirate's Inn hold Ucll\ll, ti&hing equip., COUNTER \Va.ilrtu lor boat. pr!Vate rm l 1V. Laauna 440 Ht>liotrope, CdM misc. 2£J Virginia Pl, C~1 over 71. &,1ust be &harp-will Ni1tlK'l. 499-3844 APT. MGR. BICYCLES. F u r n I t t1 re train. 642--3951 (7-9 pm) \\'TG le Wli:let at y I l 1 t , F'or 54 unlu tn northern mitcel. 17082 Rottrdan H.B. e PERMANENT live. in •alarltd.Uc. preferred. Orange county. se nd 842-6596 housekeeper, c:>lderly cple. Mallie'• Wla 4 Btauty rewmc 10 Randllfl Mt'Car-GARAGE Sale extra 18 bra~ Older per.on pref. GU-6661 Salcwi, &t6-3M:l8 die. 2790 Harbor Blvd.. ed rug. Variety of lttmL DI LIVE In Bebysftter, 1 cbild, COCKTAJL W~ &P' Cetta. Mea Vla l\ttn!one, NB 67l-Oll88 light ~· Jlun-ply in Ptl'IOI\.. M-. Lon RE.Al. &STATE Shouldn't ~ ee.ch.' SE-2':16 1703 Sui>c-r1ot. c.M. you be seiurw ·the hottest Gar.,. Sale Sit a.s NEED Babysi\ter n1 home REx: X ra )' lech-female. area I lluntinglm Bl'nt!i! 192 Flower St .. Costa Mt<sa night.. Own tram, Oranp A: RMllolog'lat otnl"CI. OrM&t. call for appt, Villaa:e R. i:. 1 Dlal &42-5678 Of.I Msr. CM~ • Sallry opt'n. 547-14.1.1 416~471 , 5*-1103 ' F"Nr Dnlly PUot \Vant AdJ. -. GOOD rn• rangr., griddle. high broiler, cklck. Oean; 150. 673-6643 F'RIGmAJRE Cold Pantry ref rigerator croos-boltom freezer: green. $50, 543-m Antique w!iite and gold Call 673-6287 C!Ve,. ll:mrnond M-3 with til'llsht'd Off'.whlte drapes, full ack, plus $49;i Leslie, 40 if'{lglh 20, wkJe· good watt *aker. 8o!h for $109:5. Conditkin Sola. m.3594 f"uUy guarantttd. Terms. Gould Music Comp1ny GORDY 9' Surfboard. Good 20is N. A-fain S.A. S47.oost condition, $30. • • 67l-2'119 • Antiq~~· 8110 NOW HERE -the new lNTERCOM. AM & FM Supenoundlng T-200 NEW, STILL lN BOX $1S. ANTIQUE DICh"ER DA VS Hammond Spin!t orru 540-0106 FEW 1ltm prices on van load -the finest ft)V ~""'-""~~--~~ d New England antiquea. SCHMfOT-PJUUJPS CO. EMERALD dinner ting, l , Come dicker. Columbian 1907 N. Main e '°"b cnrat $150. ~after t. : Oub, Orange. L•. Newport Stnta AN NEW ~ bt'own fftl Mlr : Fr..,..,, al t. Olloman. ro ~!!\"~'!!"~~...,...,I fall Paid 1111, -ISO. I -% mlle E. ta. 2800. CroM R. WURUTZER Studio pit.no $46-.334.1 , R. tn.cka to lat bldg. on ldt $300. good condition, PhOrle Tl-lE SUN NEVER SETS on ! at Mt:Phtnon. Th1I Sat, ~ aft 5 Ous10ed'1 action power. ; I Sun, Mon ,, July 27, 2$, 29. KilMBALL atudio piano Pl:>r an ad lo aeU arouo4 Hour1 liMi. unU1ual! $135 the clock. dial 64246'7S. 1 -OIARl1E m • m-~ • Ol.AR.G!: m ii' ' ' ' \ ' DAILY PILOT rrld.lf, JwlJ 26, 196S C SEfORMlt D IALI AND TUDI IALI AND TRADE_ Mleetltiia11ut l600 MJto1ll1ftMU1 '600 HARBOR BLVD· DltlVl·IN THEATIR IUYI SIU! TRADE! SWAP MEET STARTS AUGUST 17 10 A.M. TO 4 P.M. SAT. I SUN. MIN Ntl IHI IMTIU PAMILY .01 IWOIMAnON 111·1tn Ami 7 P.N. Mlrl•lil I . lhoot•om 400 WISTMIN'STlll NEWPORT IEACH You are thl wlllner oJ 2 ticketa to th• FOAM RUBBER, cut to aiu. Upb IUPPlifl, 1 ab I' 1 c I , nauphyde. Fact. outltl. Low pre. A·l Foam Fabric ~ Up!W""' SullOIY Co., 3U E. 5th St., S.A. m..ll.Sl LIDO THIATRE -THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE Just clip thla ad and take it to the Lido The&tre in Newport Beach with identi- fication. SWIMMING POOL 11 Ft Pool. FDtv, Surface Sldmmer, Namtename Kit. F'llEE Gl'Olll>d Pad. '14f.H SECAllD POOL 323 S. Main, 0ranp 113>-1992 -Aue 17 531·1Zll aft 7 KNITTED FABRICS Mlle. W•ni.d 1610 C AiiiiiiiiiijiiiiS ~H Paid for: ./ Fumitutt I Appliances ./ Antiques ./ Tools ./ CDlor tv·a I Stereos One It.em or Complete l{ouaetul C:all 547.f748 or 82'7-8271 --------- • NlfRCHANDISE FOR SALi AND TRADE FREE TO YOU rEMALE mix Gmu. Sbep • Duberman, blk " tan. Xlnt. watchdoi: good with women & cb.Udren. Appf'OI(, 2 yn, oJd·, Housebro ken 540-1875 1129 DARL J NC Lona: halt p/penlan kitttn1. I wka. 3 -1'~emales .ll ma1t11. J labrkn. To pod home o nly, 545-Tm 7/71 PETS •ncl LIVESTOCK c.i. 1120 2 FEMALE Himalayan kit· tena. Age 10 moe. Pure bred, no piper•. $3S each. o;z..mo Re,pa:tered Burmese kittens 7 weeks $50 and $75, 642-5107 1825 • 0 TRANSPORTATION TltANSPOltTATION • -JC --Q Q Q 4$ 4 4 0 Qi 4 £4 Q _. S !.-' -" ..,... -~-r""'W"· r --· - TltANSPOltTATION TRANSPOltTATION TRANll'OltTATIOH '62 KARMAN Ghia C.on- vtrtlble New enc & BeautUul cond. S995. nes 6(1.4291 - IO u; "' n- "" '" 0- ;: n • in ly \ ,,_ & • p • 13 -~ ·- L : • • • 1 ' l I I I I I I I I I I I I , , , .,...11 ........ --· ---~ -... Frld•J, J11/y 26, 1968 ,_.. ... ·-9600 '"'ported Au ... JaaCEDIS llNZ 9600 l lmpoo:hd •-1 HOO fllAliiSl'OltTATION DAil Y PU.OT U HOQ. 1.,,.,hd A-9600 rRANSl'OltTATION lll'porltd Au... 9600 lmporltd Au ... i--TO_Y_OT_A __ J!!1"'!!"'"~"!!!.,.!.:.-~!.-9600!!!!1 --Tll-U_MP_H-~ VOLVO TRANSPOttTATIOR 1"5 Mor...io.. loftl 130 SL CP. RDSI'R. Automa- -de tranamluion, 11 o w e r " lteering, AM/FM radio. The MG 1--------1'ftEE W VEGAS VACATION WITH A '63 MG M!DCF.T !tr -,m ELMORE SPORT CAR WORLD Ph. SM.3322 15300 Be1ch IDvd ., W1tmn1tr '68 MG GET OUR LEADERSHIP SA VIN GS BEFORE YOU BUY!!! ..Pu Ltmi6 • IMPORTS M5 : 1967 MG MIDGIT BritiJh raclng Kfttn with black Ulterior. Wire wbeela. This eu mutt be aeea A drlven, Dlr. Ph &12-&a OPEL '65 OPEL SLltlcm \Vacoo; red. runs aood: 30 MPG, Xlnt trans. $350. ~· PORSCHE PORSCllE BAO< !\ACK Chrome. Mint! • &.w.-1552 • 1964 PORSQIE "C" Coupe. Xlnt oond. ALL EXTRAS. New tlree, '3250, 4~ SUNBEAM 1.F-1 aar,uis U'1llltm ORANGE COUNTY'S ''II t" llttle"l:alor has over 30 Toyote'• in 1todc for lmmadlato dellwryl t.arse1t Stotk. in History • All Colon • All Equip e f'1nancln& A vallable NOW SHOWING THE All NEW HARD TO GET TllUMPH FREE lAS VEGAS VAC\TION WITH A TR4A MANY TO CHOOSE FROM · 1~. '&t, '65. '66. '6'1 ,...., $1499 ELMORE Sl'OltT C.lR WORLD Pb. 894-3322 15300 Ba.eh mvd., \Vstmn.str FREE LAS VEGAS 'VACATION wrm A '63 TR4 SHARP. $1499 ELMORE 'II sP(ITIJIE, aood cond. $9115 Or bett otter ~3 Atttt4PM VOLVO )!""REE LAS VEGAS VACATlON Wmt A '64 VOLVO 12'2 S, 2 door aedan. Con- t.'OW'H tODdition in ut!c white with contrastin& red interior. Dtptndable, r.U- bUl!y & ""'11Y· One of the &er autol. 1'hll wetk end only $139S ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA SPORT CAR Ph • ...__ lmporltdAulw CF:?·~~ V~v.2.m. VOLXSW WE .PAY SA V!NCS BEFORE FREE LAS AS " YOU BUY't" 1881 vt<;:n:i,= ~°' ·TOP DOLLAR --taJU ~TI:.i:A=. ~~ FOR ilfORrs ::-::,,:~~~: USED CARS terior. Radio and all txtru. 1968 Harbor, C.M. 646-930.1 Just as nice and u fl'tlh a1 (QllllEI I omom can be. Save a croup ot MUI. VOLXSWAGEN IJIOl1.,, Only 'IT !'AS'T'BAO( VW. Lite blue, IUlly "Jlllp. 11100. -.. -,1995 ELMORE ·-MOTORS 1186 vw Sol.._ 16,000 mllea. TOYOTA Radkl A: bffter. $1500 ftlm. 833--0'l85 Ph. 894-3320 15000 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr '81 Vo!klw1g<o Zonlth Blue '66 VW DELUXI Blk •leyl interior. $1625 LOADD>! 261000 mllH on ---· Ooota.._ "6-UOS WE PAY ,.; CASH tor llled can a ...,. ""' call U1 tor free tltlmatL dllcrlmlDatlq....,,., wW ap- preci.l,_te tbll. TNly • beau. tlfUl •uto. Dir. Pb 642·!MOO MERC-BENZ '67-230-SL ~ We # TUR 272. Ivory w/blk int. Auto, pwr brks, atrc.' AM/Ffl.1. short wave. 17,000 ml. lnunac. in It out s,;.500, 549-0410 daya cmly. DIRECT from Germany 1964 ~ 230 SL convertible, p/1 p/b, side facinl rear aeat, radio, mint conditJon, all service proven. Call col.I. ~ 19116 1.111rbor, C.?rJ. &16-9303 FREE lAS VEGAS VACATION WITH A '63 ALPINE HT WORLD 15300 Beach mvd., Wstmnstr Toyoll lind Cruiser !5'11) a.:-~""""'" * '68 VOLVO * ~=-.---.--.· ==-EXECUTIVI C.lllS Call aft S iprn. 646-l906 ~ometer. Belonged to lJKE NEW, 'Ill dettn llnd, little 'ole lchool teadwr in be\ft int, rad, pop • out San C1emente. Tllce n'15 wndws. $1195. 5e>-6'3!I cash dels, dlt, or trade. '65 VW like new. New tires. P)'mts S36.86. CaJI after U, GROTH CHEYROlfl "Alk!orSala- llZll -BJ.. Huntington Reub KI~ any time. '58 MERCEDES Bent 1911 SL Pr! Prty. $1'50 Firm 675-Z'r.12 300 SE Sedan 1963. Sunroof, auto all extras! Sac. xlnt amd.545-3JIO 1960 GRAY Mercedes 190. Good conditloo, $850 962-<K36 SH.lRP $1299 .ELMORE ' SPORT CAR' WORLD Pb. 894-3322 ts:m Beach Blvd., wrunnatr Jlalion Wagon '66 TrlumO: ~1111ro MODEL 144 Conv1rtlbl1-Spcl. $2894 Excellent condition. Take old· er trade, or $185 call1, dlr, Herb Frledlendtr L'tl\tEDIATE DELIVERY make pymnts $39.86. Will fl. 13'71) Bea.ch Blvd. (Hwy 39) nance private part;y. 4!M-m3 2 blks So. G.C. F\vy. or 639-361'1 893-7566 53'1~ COME IN NOWI 1966 TR 4A '66 VOLVO 4 -· private 33,000 mUea. Call (TI4) 49+9713 or 6J9..3617. 630-2320 !'>! -1963 vw '68 VW Zenith Blue/blk in· Radio, heatrr. Immaculate teriof, Radio $185(1 or best 1m1de and out. A..00, custom "1a. 615.-3612 paint!!! Dlr. Pb 642-9tai =-=,,__,,_--,,-----,---,,---,,--1 1986 V.W. Fastback. Radio, '6:.1 VW bus, Corvair t'lll·, inmrool, A·l condttbtl new Urea, aood oond. m s. $11KlO. 968-18'8. Woodland Pl., Santa AM Will Buy Your Volbwqen er Porecbe I: pay tap doUara. Paid lor or not. Call Ralpb r aft 5:30 Roadster. Powder blue fiii- tab. All acceuorie& including both convertible and hard top! lmmaculatl!. Dir. Ph. 6U·9400 TOYOTA Roadster, white with black owned, beautiful condltlcm. interior, wire wheels. over-Must ae.ll. Automatic, whlt!t drive, 13,301 actual mile•! walls, radio, 3ll3 E. 17th St. FOi' all pracUcal purposea, CM 548-1696 900 Soulh Coast 11wy. th1a Car la brand new. Dl.J\ --,;;6.i°'v"o1:;:,-:-,,o-;J;;;2';-;S;-;2;--,d;:r-. -'64 VW, perfec t cond, man' 545-&45 aft 6 67'-1190 ~A~ur=o=-s-WANTED WUl llQ' cub ·for tmported a l.ltol. Up to $500. Try UL ELMORE ' -· '68 MERCEDES-Benz 220$ 26,000 ori&' mi. Lthr int. SU· per cond. S2800 548-5459 aJt 6 '68 TOYOTA Lllguna Beach 49t·T':J03 Ph 642-9-1<6 XI.NT OOND. many extras. See to ap- preciate. >l&-5055 Autos Wentecl 9700 9611 Garden Grove Blvd. '58 MCA COUPE. Lookl and runs like new, Classic, hard MG to find model. Oeanest in i-,.-----~--I town. $ll97. 6'1 ·Mae -GT -Blue, wire ~ FRIEDLANDER wbeela, Michlin _ x tires. 9625 Garden Grove Bl.vd. !WI, ""°· 616->ITI or-l967 MGB GT GG-0879 Coupe. Tartan Red w /black '58 MGA. Xlnt cond, i:ilide I: leather. Bucket seat, AMI wt. $475. FM radio, wire wheels, etc., * 842.2'n3 etc. AblOJutel)i perfect. Dlr. Ph &t2·94ffi 1960 MG Wire wh~ts, new tiret, disc brakes. All good '67 MGB GT ccmd. Best offer. 962--0813 Low mileage, one owner lo- cal car. This week's special * '58 MGA * 1'2699. 548-5989 after S l!ERB FRIEDLANDER White elepbanta'!' Di~-line 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. Usad Cara GET OUR LEADERSHIP SAVINGS BEFORE YOU BUY!!? ..Pul~ • IMPORTS 1966 Harbor, C.M. MG-9JJ3 TOYOTA l!EADQUARTERS ELMORE 15300 Beach Blvd ., Wstmnstr Phone 894-3322 WOW! Jlave you seen thf' new '68 TOYOTA LAND CRUISER 4 DR. STATION WGN. 1 tor Immediate DeliVttY Bill MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beech Blvd. HB. F.uy to Readl at G&rflekl & Bet.ch 141.asss DAILY PIU1J' DIME·A· LINES. You cu u• tMm for just pennjea • day. Dial ..,_,,.,, DOUBLE CHECKED U.SED CAR CENTER '67 IUIC,K Skyl•rk Gr•n Sp•rt C..P•· R1tlio, be•t•r •ufom•lic, pow•r 1f11rin9, ftC· tory t ir. '61 CONTINENTAL "4 lioor h1rdtop. Full power equ ipment plu1 f•clory •ir conclitionin9, '65 RIVIERA Full pow1r 1q11lpm1nt pl11t f1 ctory •Ir conditiortinf . A real ba111ty. '66 CHEVROLET El C1r11lno. R1dlo, h1el1r, 1ulom1lic, ,.w•r 1f11rin9, 327 VI •~tino. '66 FORD Co11ntry totl•11 -4 Dr. w•t•"· R1dio, h11ttr, e11lo1111tlc, lfOW•r 1t11ri119, f•t· tory •ir, '66 FORD 61l11i1 500 "4 Door H.T, R1dio, h11f. 1r1 1ulo1T11 tic tr•n1mi11ion, • P!l'WI' Jf11 rin9. '68 MERCURY Monlcl1ir H.T. coup1, R1dlD, h11t1r, 1utom1lic, pow1r 1l•1rin9, f1 clory •ir. SJ298 '67 COUGAR R1dio, h11t1r, •ulom1tie tr•n1ml11i1n, power "••ri119, f1clory 1ir, lentleu roof. '67 OPEL k1cl1fl1 co11p1. "4 tpo1d fr1n.,niuion, h•al1r. Nici 11111• c1•. '65 GMC Yi Ion lon9 wh11I b111 plc\up truck. R1dlo, h11t1r, 1utomalic, pow1r ll11r· ln9, pow1r br1k11. ' BUICK -2100 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 548.,7767 546-Sno after 6 pm. e 1960 TRJA . $695 1966 VW SUN ROOF \VILL trade 20' inbrd with WllJ. Trade 20' lnbrd with Ex~Uent condition '62 VOLVO 544 Sport f'XC'ellent cond. $1350. completely reblt eng 6t otht>r completely reblt q I-othtt Private Owner. 499-295'1 $65(). ti6-5014 &tier 6. 536-3101 or 673-5M2 equip. Value, $1 ,00). 548--1131 equip. Value, $1,00I). 568--1131 I'=========-'-=========::.!..=========: New Cer1 9800Now Cora tlOONow Cora 9100 New Cers 940QNew Cers JULY 26-27 ON APPROVID CREDIT ~95 C~D~R DELIVERS 2 DAYS ONLY '61 OLDS CUTLASS WAGON V-1, •ul•1111flc, r•tlie, he1t1r, ll'OWff •IHri111, pow1r ~·•••· f1clory 1ir corul., w.w fi,11, tl11t1tl tlin. M11y oth1rs. St1c• No. 191. ~~ .~.~. ~!.2ha~~~r :::~ '374850 p•wlt brtl••· f1etory 1ir coHltl111l11,, whit•w11I wall tir11, li11tecl 911••· M111y 1tlrltrt. Stock No. 610. DOWN ANY NIW '68 !INCLUDE TAX & LIC. l '68 OLDS Delta CUit. Hol. Cpe. V.1, eulom1tlc, ralilo, haalor, powar •tilerlltlJ. ,1war br1•a1, 'ow1r wlrttlow1, factory air cort· dili1nh19, whit1w1tl 11111. ti11t1tl 911•1• M111y, m1ny oth1r1. Stock No. "404. '68 OLDS F-15 Sport Coupe Aul•mellc, l.11t1r, pow•r ll••rln,, wh itew•ll lir11, ti11tff tlan. Stoel N•. 119, 9800 '61 OLDS T•ooodo Holclay Cpe. v.1. a11to111•tlc, ·ra41•, Jt11t1r, pow1r 1tt1rl119, f1cl•ry air 1ondltl•11lil9, 1111114 tlaH. M•rty etlr.1tt. St•ck No, 117. 54511'' '68 OLDS F-85 Sport Coupe v.1, 111to111atic. ,.Jro, h1et1r,;•w1t ll••ri119, f1clory 1lr condltionlnj, tl11!• 9l1u. Meny otl.ar1. Stock No. I'll . 5310868 '64 OLDS CUTLASS s1074 v .1, •ulo .. RIH, P.S. Z·Dr. H.T. l ucka t •••h· A1te., ll:IH, ,,S., feet. 1lr co11J. 4·Dt. Stock N•. IJJ.I. N•. 6J9·A. 63 VW DILUXI '67 OLDS DEL TA CUSTOM 52824 S674 ll:IH, fwll pwr., f1ct. •Ir, 2-Dr. Hdlp. l111dau Aulo., t1dio, h11lar. Stock No. l26-A. top. Sloe\ No. P· 1115. '62 V.lllANT SIGNIT '6S OLDS JETSTAR H s1224 s449 Auto., RIH, pwr. 1lr. -4-Door. Stoel No. 141·~ •·Cyl., •ulo., tlitk thlfl, RIH, buc••t soth. 2·Dr. H.T. Steck H•. 190-A. OTHER DIA.URS ADVERTISE IT • • • •lllJllJllllt, ~f AIU /Y!Wllt JAT/5T/ID 11/n"IL 1011 :4U"' Ulf IVERSITY ' 2850 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA NEW 546 5550 USED 546-5553 l I • _30 DAILY Pl<OT Frfdl1, ~~ 26, 1'168 j CONNELL CHEVROLET'S USED ~ CIR CENTER · SPECIALS . '66 CHEVROLET '66 CORVAIR '64 PONTIAC Grand Prix. VB, auto matic, pow1efi steer· ing, elec. windows, R&H. Danube blue w/white vinyl roof. (NQX710l ·'66 5):AKE '67 EL CAMINO 4i Door. VS, automatic, power 1teerlng, factory air oond., radio, heater, sliver blue. (SLU394l. Coupe. Automatic t.rall5miasion. radio, Chevrole\· I ton 12 ~ with hydraulic lift gate. VB engine, speed transmbi-Custom. V8, automaUe, powtt 1teerln&:, radio and heater, ermine wh1te, (V'2925) beater, Aztec Bronze. (RGV497J . 1ion. (855657). ' ~395 $1195 52295 '65 ·CHEVROLET '63 CHEVROLET '66 MERCEDES 200 '62 CADILL-AC '65 GMC :P.fu.libu super sport conv@l'Uble. VS. f\utomatlc. pmvl!r steering, radio, heater, tahitlan turq. with "'hlle vinyl bucket % Ton Pickup. 6 cylinder, stick shift. Sedan DeVille. Fru.::t4rf' air condiUoning, automatic, full powf.J", radio and heater. Suburban carryall. 6 cylinder engine, e>:U·a clean. CP85983,_ • 8 fl Fleetalde. (G41143) 5'8U. IN11695 Sff 5 4 Door sedan. Automatic, power &leer- ing, air cond., R&~, Shadow gr~y w/red leather interior. (SZV238) CESR5051 . 51195 ' • '64 CHEVROLET •¥ '68 CHEVELLE '66 MUSTANG 52495 '6'i"Oi:'DsMoifLE '65 CHEVROLET Hardlop coupe. VS, automatic, power steering, radio .. heater, white "-·ith red interior, (VCU160) 'iS ton pickup. 8' Jo'leetslde, v8, auto-F-85 4 door sedan. V-8, automatic, radio, healer, power steering and finished in :ritalibu. Automatic, radio, heater, pow- er steering. CVU.t;89I) Cnevy ll Nova wagon. Automatic, radio, heater. ermine ""'hile "'Ith beige 1nteror. CNQHJOI). matic, radio, heater, cust. cab. (R284.17) $1595 ' $2895 51795 Turquoise. Sharp. (SBT715) ' ~795 51595 -------~-----~· '64 MONZA '67 PLYMOUTH '62 CHEVROLET '67 CAMARO '65 CHEVROLET Corvair coupe. 4 speed, radio, heater and and other extras. Finished in Ermine white "·ith red interior. !VEJ170) Fury m 4 Dr. VS, automatic, power Chevy II Station Wago n. 3 scat. auto- matic transmission, radio, heater, ermine \vhite. (0JK512J 327 VS, automatic, radio, heater, power l\.'fonza coupe. Fa c t or y air conditioning. Automatic, radio, heater, l'rmine white with blue vinyl bucket seals. No. fll582 steering, factory air cond., radio, hcatrr, steering. (Ul..SIB5l ,,5 Fo~• "$2395 5795 . 52495 51295 '65 MERCURY '63 GRAND PRIX '64 CHEVROLET '67 EL CAMINO '64 BUICK Montclair hardtop coupe. VS, automatic, power ateering, radio, heater, low mile- age, ermine white "'1th blue interior. Automatic, power ateering, factory air I> Ton Pickup. VB, custom cab, pan rear windows, factory air, R & H, F1eet side bed, chrome front & rear burhpers. (N35603i Custom, VB, a utomatic, power atttring, factoy air, tonneau cover, R&H, butter-Skylark 4 Door. Automatic, power steer- ing, radio, heater, gold with saddle interior. CWXF135J . " ( cond., R&:H, Sierra Rold with saddle nut yellow w/black vinyl interior. bucket seats. (NLf.1963). $1295 (RVMG85)$1795 TllANSPORTATION 1 l<ANSt'ORT ATION 1 f(ArilSf'ORT ATION lmperted AuTot 9600 lmportO!I Autos 9600 Imported A-9600 .:,-...;,,....,."""~ IT'S HAPPENING! AT CHICK IVERSON Espeeielly when we give them the Volkswagen I b-point Safety a nd Per· for"manee inspection. Th at's why we can 9uar1ntee I 00 ·1. the repair or replacement of all major mechanic•I p•r+s•. But not every used VW gets this inspection. Only VWs sold by •uthori:r:•d dealers. Like us. • Engine • Transmission • Re•r axle • Front axle assemblies • Brake system • Electrical sy1tem '66 VW '66 YW '65 VW Stden. Fully equip'd F•1tbeck, Fully equlp'd Sedan, Fully equiF'd + l"Gdlo, + r1dio. + AM/FM radio. 51599 $1799 $1499 '63 Porsche C.u,., 4 Spttilll, radio. '1199 ~Men. Fully 1111ulp'd + radio. '63 vw '61 GHIA C....,,.le. R*4. Folly IHlitlp'd + ..... '999 '65 YW '64 vw Squereblick, "'ulp'lll + rad.._ Fully leden, Or•• n. Fully 9e1uh1'd + rffle. '1799 $1299 '62 YW '60 GHIA Sedan, Pully 9e1ulp'd c.,,.. 11 ... ''"' eq1lp'tl + radio. + ,.Pe. 51099 5899 VW CAMPERS '65 • '66 • '67 MUST SEE TO ArPHCIAn 549.0303 673-1190 1970 Hartlor llYd., Costa Meta (Q74474). MUST SEE 52795 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Autos W1n_ted 9700 WE BUY ANY CLEAN LATE MODEL SPORTS CARS. Top OolJar To You Golden West AUTO CENTER Inc 1984 Ne"i>ort Blvd. Costa r.1!'Sa &12·&!60 Used Cert 9900 NEED A CAR? CAN'T BE FINANCED! •Bankrupt? e Repogsesslan? •Bad Credit! • Divorced? e !\1ilitary eNew in Atta? P.take Payday P•ymenQ McCARTHY MOTORS 1420 So. f\tJJn & Edinger (2 blocks N. of Sean) Santa An• Ph 542-3507 CHEVROLET ' ' 2821, 1HARBOR BLV,D. COS1A MESA ~:546-1203 ~~ 546~ 1200 TRANSPORTATION , TRANSPORTATION UHd Cers 99()(: Used Cart -Used C1r1 '9oo Used Cari CHEVROLET FREE l..AS .\1EGAS VACATION WITH A 1-Just sell! '66 Buick Special 1967 CHEV. CAMARO R/S -------·I EDITH WISE I BUICK 113 W. COAST HWY. 1------'-- NEWPORT BEACH You ere the ll>'inner of l tickets lo the LIDO THEATRE Showing THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE ~;~~~~.-~~~~a~~;~; Coupe. The t•allye sport. Bur· gandy wilb white trim. Black leaving for Europe. Private landau t(,p, 4 spd .• wide CV· party. Offer. 6%-2676 I =~=~~~=--1 a\s, plus all rallyc extras. "68 BUICK GT 400, Big en,q. Pasiti\·ely showroom fresh. 10,C:OO mi. $33.lO or best of. This \1•eckcnd only Air cond. Al\1/FJl,f radio $2295 10,000 mi. $3350 " b"' of-EIMORE fer. 6Tfr.'Zlll! Just clip this ad and takel=========-1 it to the Lido 'Theatre in CADILLAC L'>ICYTOP.S Newport Beach with identi-TOYOTA fication. Oller good through 1--,6=7-C_A_D_l_L_L_A_C__ Ph. 89-1-3320 July 30th. Coupe de Ville 1.).100 Beach Blvd., \Vstn1n str BUICK Turqoise exterior, black vinyl "6.) li\lPAl.A Mrdtop, has 1---------1 top v.i th turq. interior. Full everything. Nr perfecl cond. po11·er, factory air, new car Car lots ask $1995, I'll take wan·anty. 11.000 "Wes. $159i 499-23-19 $4695 '65 li\IPAl.A super . .port p.~. ALLEN pb. 3Z7 cu in. Buckets. con- Ol.dsn1obi1C.Cadillac sale. V8 Auto $1550. 546-7!Kl6 1150 So. Coast }fwy ::i1 CHEVY Wagon 283. V .S 4 Lagw\8 Beach *. 494-1084: bbl. Good paint, body, tires '65 C'OUPE DE VILLE Full $300. 548-2938 • > CHEVROLET :. .• FREE LAS VEGAS .. VACATION wrrn A w 1960 CHEV. IMPALA .,:pl Cpe. Dark metallic bluewtth :11l original intel-ior, :p~. sir.. auto, etc. lmmacul-!· Only $695 EIMORE 11.IOTORS TOYOTA Ph. 894-3320 lj.100 Bcdch Blvd., Wstmnstr FREE LAS VEGAS VACATION WTrn A "&t CHEV U. CA.i\IINO l\lALr lBU. The most sought after 1node1 going. Sparltling ado- IJe beige with ivory buckel seals. Auto, P. Str. All kinds of extras. Georgecus & sho:ia'- room fresh. Thill weekend only .. $1695 EIMORE power, fa~tory ~ir, low mil, '&I CHEVELLI'.: .,83 4 pd leather mt, \'lnyl t op. • • 6 ·· :\10TORS ORIGIN"AL O\VNER. moo. l'~cc! . t-ond. $13.iO l J 9 · · , ' NOW HERE! 837-7411 eves. 213-7'13-0079 V1rgin111 Pl, C:\1646-l5l'i TOYOTA Ph. 8!»-3320 days "66 CHEV Caprice Sac.Tificc 1:~j00 Bl'ach Blvd., \Vi;t:rnnitr '67 CADILLAC--$2:l50. 6.1 r.lus!ani;. $I.WO. '66 ss 396 Olcvelle; 4 &i8 S.dan de Ville &16-8959• J IS-;,38'2 !rack stereo ta~;. reil Dark blue exterior, blck vinyl ·59 Impala, reblt cng. clean! $1950. ~7990 tap \vlth blue interior. Full runs good. $200 JIO"''er, factory air, new caz· 536-9988 53 CHEV sedan delivftJ. Rwis good, $200. -i: COROLLAS ORONA • CROWN • LAND CRUISER warranty. 19;-,.; CHEVROLEI :>1:i·9'177 $4695 Station \Vagon * V-8 ALLEN Cull 7l4:839--03ll 196:> CHEVROLET Staticn Oldsn1obile<:adilliic wagon $1150. \Vill take trade 1965 CHEVY VAN Dir. 54~7751 1150 So. Coast Hwy Alr rood. * fi15.:ll4B ::.-==~~=--'-La.gUna Be1ch * 49-1-1084 67 CHEVY JI, 327, .f 1pd, CADILLAC Sedl DeVillc :;g CHEV wgn. Auto, PS, PB, Hurst gauge11, bucket ae:ats. l960 Full pov.'er ~ air. $500 Sharp. Milke offer. 842-7853 Make offer. 548--0919 • Large Selection in Stock and Ready for Immediate Delivery DEAN LEWIS "LEADERSHIP SAVINGS" MEANS A BETTER BUY FOR YOU WHIM TOU IU T TOUI NIW TOYOTA . 48 MONTHS TO PAY 0. Appl ..... ~ IANI TllM$ 11111..::".:..:;""';:;·''-""'"'5')."'S290;;=..:,.,.-................ ... '67 ELDORADO 2 Dr. Hardtop Gold exterior, brown vinyl top, saddle leather inlcricr. Full power, factory air. New car warranty. ,~ $5995 ALLEN Oldsn1obile-Oldi1111c 1150 So. Coast Hwy You get more car per dollar with ~ !!!!TA $2046 +Ta & Lke- Laguna Beach i 494-IQS.\ TM pt• let_. ef '62 CAD 4 dr sedan all .wryttihit wftll . • tM e1cltt11t •• power , leather ml. ONE ,.,. .. c.r.111 :, O\VNER. $$0 67l--6932 , '67 EL Dor#Jo Perfect' hie .... • Eco11omy of 2S mile1 or mor t por t•llo11 e Lu.,,. Loaded' F 1 ' ty· 1 • lou• r•clil'li119 il wck•f t••h e W11!.10.w1U Nylo11 corpoff"t. 1 M-;,. ac ·· warran . • O 90 hp p•rform111ce from 1 I 900cc Hi-Torc:iuo '"till• e O·fo·4IO m • ..... eoff('IZ! 673-6635 in 16 S•c. pick·up e Tops 90 ""Ph e lo•t• fully lr11otl truftk '63 CAD Slll> '6l CHEV • floo"" to •••* 5 comfort1bl1 e 4.011.tl<ie floor e Fv lly 1w!f. Su.per Sport, many )llras mo fie fren11ni11io11 I opfionol J. .. $0CKI. 1>take crfer 536-172'7 1t6t COROLLA = '49 CLASSIC Cadillac, nttd SM the N.w lt6t Toyote Coroll• S 177.oii. room and garage! Best of. '""' ectUIPPt'd lncludlnt tte.ter, def.. V fer. Eves: 962-6075 tinted 9let1, WSW, vlnyl, b•ckup lght1, i, ---~-----IM•t belh, etc. f'IUI , ••• llt Jl'Nr., blk., be•UI. grey I febric inter. $3100. &42-6974 ,,._,., N1,, ..,,_.,.."' ..._.__ fT9"'RlW • • CHEVROLET '63 OfEVY H Nova Sparta C.OUpe ' • S695. Ph. 642-3!l'.W after 4:30 S.. "8 "fht M_ .. Toyet9 C.,.111 ....,..,.., • BILL ' MAXEY TOYOTA : 1 ... 1 IE.ACM ll.VD., H.L " i.., .. lteM• • hfhW .... IMcll 147.tlSs • • . ••••••••••••••••• LOOK WH IAT · ·vo.u GET FOR 2781! F.IREB .. IRD! M1n11f11:.l11r•,'1 1u991at.d r1t1iT P'Tc1 lnclud11 Ftd1r1I 111ci11 t111, 1119911_!1_d d1111, h1ndli"t 11u:I d•liv1ry d11r911, T,11uporl1llon ch1rgt1, 1!1!1 i nd 101:.11 111111, 1ptiOt11I 1quipm•nl 1ddi· lion1 I. j64 TIMPEST ~ 577 Custom 11,tion w19on. R1dio, h11t1,, 1utomot!c h 1n1mi11ion '67 i~iliiiVii'.i.i'"'' $3377 2 D~or h1,dtop. T11.rbo-hydr1· m1t1c, pow1r 1!11r1n9, pow1' '64 tl"iiA'.N'S•• hulu, whit•. ~ 677 H1rd .. p c111p1. ll.1cUo, h11!1r, 111lom1ti< i nd pow•' d11rint . ,. '65 l'QNTIAC, $2677 C 1!1lh11 t p.1111n91r 1!1tion • ' w1 9011. R1d10, h11t1r, 111!0· m1ti1:., pow1r 1t11rin9 i nd fie· '66 ~;;;;~;.~"·"'"' .$2177 Coupe. VI, 111lom1lic. pow1r 1t11ting r1dio, h11+1r whit• '65 PL~'i.!'C>t:iHmilH, y•llow. $2177 CHEVROLET Fury Ill 4 deor 6 p1111ng1r 1t1tio" w19~11. v.1, _Torq111flit., p-•r 1tur1ng, r1d10, h11t1r, _ wh~t1 w~ll tir11. 17,415 mil11. . 0 : . ·.· Uud Ciro 9900 1--------COMET CORVAIR CORVAIR Uud Ciro ~947 2 Doer h1rdt.,, Vt, h.,Or1· '66 •TO $2577 1n1ti•, power .+e~rint: r1dio1 h11!1r, 111w red hn• t1r11, I S,lt4 1t1i11., .... 9900 CORVETTE Uud Ciro jump on our competition! • Big stock, low prices & easy terms! '67 COUGAR $2777 VI, p,iwor 1te1rlng, r1dio I ho1t1r, white 1ld1 wilt tir11, '67 ·e:'HW:bffi" •2011 M•llbu 2 dr. h1rdlop. 32 7 ., V~, 0 ] 1p11d. lf1nd1rd frt~I• m1111on, r•d10, h11t1r, whet• 1id1 wi lt tir11. '67 ~!~, hudlo •• V-I, r,,; •. $3177 hydrtmttlc:, POlfl!l r rt11rint , p1w1r br1li-11, r14le, h11t•'• Rtul line tir11, fectory 1lr <1fl!!I. '66 CHEVIOLIT . '$2277 M11ib11 6 p1111ng1 r 1t1tlon w1gon. v.a, 111t1m1tic, r1dl1, '65 'cl:i>i.:Ue: ........ i.,. s3277 S.d111 o.v111 •. l'ow1r wi .... cfo,,,., power 111h, f1ctory - &ir, 1l111lut1'$1Hrg1ou1. ·'65 :~~~~! ........ ; .. ;,., $1477 r1d10 111d h11t1r. . . 9900 Imported Autos 9600 -C-0-NTI_N_E_N-TA_L_ CONTINENTAL CONTINENTAi.: 4 SPEED * 1962 COii.VAiR * '63 CORVAIR __ c_O_R._;...v..,E,_n:-E::-.-1 . ., CORVE:I"l'E 2 TOPS. '!'5 Coupe, 3 1pood SPECIALISTS '61 Comet Wagon, 1 <>--. IOO% -ble Cloe own,., runs perl<d! · 196 CORVETTE M"'I .. u. a..t 0 ff.er· FREE LAS VEGAS HIGH PERFORMANCE Auto, r/h, $350. with red buckets. Showroom ,l.ociiu say and nlnA exotic! Fut ti.ck, .UVer with black eni. &: body. Many )qru! 164 Continental VACATION WITH A · CUSTOM CARS • 540-5289 • new. ~ inta'k>r automatic tram-7?4-WO or 675-130'7 ask fat '64 Lincoln Continental .f. Dr '65 Lincoln Contlntnt1I LARGESI' SELECl'ION IN =='='='===:::I lnterffted? MARQms MOTORS mislion: bm powef and Chuck. Town Sedan. Ha• full pow· Polar white wtt1r lilver sreen ORANGE COUNTY CORY AIR Name yur own deal &: price. 900 So. Coast Hwy. FACI'ORY AIR t'ONDI· =======;I er with factory air. Immac-leather interior. Air eond. Selected Auto --------1 °"""'' °"'! En!.,.. 5«M4'1 Loguna Boacl> <S<-7503 TIONING' 9,119 actual mile. CONTINENTAL ' ul•t• tbru out with silvor ,..tall m ... Book $2995. '63 CORVAIR Monza conv. 4 '61 CORVAm Monza, R/H, '6:l CORVAIR, white, blue in· UnbeUeva:ble auto. Cir. Ph metalic finish. Now this Wholesale Book $2250. Week-Center epd, big eng. R/H. Priv. auto. trllfll!. Runs & looks ter.; xlnt cmd., RIH, 4 t-""':.....,.c..,;,==~=-1968 CONTINENTAL Am $700).00 car new can be end Special 13032~~Harooiij~' iBilvd~.!!S37!!--~!-i!!!'!$400!!.!51>-!. !mr!!!!!i!!"!!'"!!' Ma!i!k!!• oll!!u!!642-!!!25iiliii7 •pd. $475. ~1189 SOCK rr TO 'EM! prep&r!d to l'legotiate Im-bought fM $1895.00. * $2145 * • ~~:s~eo:tf~i:e~a~ JOCHNSONa&SOVN ELMORE [i~a~a[] ''t'. ..... ,, ~=~:'".:":..:: ~ ~ummer 11me "'-" °'"''"' °'"'" Lln-c;plil Delrier. N e w por t THI OLD SWllT SON• OPT COMINCi t!.ocll, a.ta M-. """"" ELMORE Mo'ORS IACK AT JOHNSON• SON'S WITH .CUI lllAUT1FUL USID CAIS Al /!. LOW, LOW PRICES I The Largest Toyota Facility Anywhere NOW AT OUR NEW LOCATION c•-• YOUI TOYOTA PIOM THI u1•m HLICTtOH ~ust Arrived 1969 "Corolla" 41/,0fo Fin1nclnt AvlllaW. ON A,PROVID Cll:I DIT TOYOTA COROllA fS300 lelclt ~. W!STMINS111t ft4.lm AMERICAN CAR TRADES WANTED '61 FOID FALCON STA. WAG. std. -.. rocllo • -·· 'H COMIT DU. STA. vtA• • ..... -. ....... -... 'H. FOID FAllU.INI 2 DI. Aote-l•H,m-. 'SI CAD. CPI. DYL -·air,"" ,.. ... rocllo. 'H FOID •AU.XII CNV. P.dM<llot.--l•H. $595 '695 '695 $695 $895 '60 LINC CONT. MAIK V 2 DHT $895 Fact ......... ,.. ........... '62 CHIV. IMP. SS CPI. , ................ trw1.,l .\H "H CHIV. NOVA. STA. WA•. P.st ....... --l•H. '62 MHC. Col. r.t SN. w ... -· .ir, Id pow•, 1•H. $995 •995 $995 '63 MHC 4 DI. M'l'Dll. 'I 095 P.st-.. --l•H. ·n OLDS CUTLASS CH. VI. $I 095 P.st ....... -·-.H.tf .. .''2 POID T-lllD CPL $I 095 -.•.w-.1..i. · ''4 PONT. -NIYILLI C!fV. '1195 '"'-·--•..i. 'U_et,1.Taq ;..·sri. CPl..$1295 "'"': •. "" , ......... .... '" CMIV. VI CMIVIUI tA 195 . ·-SN. w ... ""'· ....... ' ,...., ...... lllt;. ·, I ' . , .. I . ·john~on &·Sou · · , LINCO (N._ME!lCURY ... , · ' COS TA 'MESA 1BRANCH1 IMl.'~bof BM.. c.to -.· .. 7bso COUGAR OOUGAR -The Numbu One Cit. Not aince !ta acrttfn. in&". snatching introduction aa car ol the yev in 1967 bu there bttn the op- portunity for the burinr public to -.lect EXACTLY WHAT IT WANTS AT PRACMCAL PRICING. The factory fmailf cauibt up. NOW IT'S YOUR OP. POR'nJNITY. Visit Johnmn • Son, Oranp anmt7'· o Id e 1 t Lincoln-MerCUJ')' Coupr de&ler. <law tbe price down on the · Cat-ol your choiet. We w.n have tin 15> '1llhllJ ....too.,. all ;with tu1~Wnr·.factory warranty. Our TMt ltodr: of -·will otv. ----Wider the aad color ud equfpmeot tbol he """"11 d tho 11.-0oe Cit. 900 w. QIUI H..,., N..,.n -· ..... ,,.,.., tho .... O.b - BUKIUl' mw""Jll t! ..... 'l1lo DAii.! 1 OUllfted 81Cb. ) I • t --·~ -It t i ~ .. . z • ' . U OAJLV 1'1L~ frldll, Jub 26, 1968 .,. I =r~u=w~..n.n~,-1%0Nr<---.,t .. n=iiSfi0="'11'"TA ... T"ION=-·r1ANSl'OATATION -TRANSPOllTATION -TllANSl'ORTATION -TRANSl'OITATION -TllANSl'OITATION -TIANSl'ORT.f.TION -TIANSl'OITATION~1o -~ ,__ C.rl "°°.il.;;;o.;;.="'~;;;;.;..--..;;.>;~=;_._,;,;;;.;.,...~=~ -COME IN FOR 1 A------.. __,;,... .. ........._ _____ _ ''COMM·AND PERFORMANCE''- • ~· '!' You c•n onjoy tho oxhilor•ling perlormonco of tho 1968 C•dmoc, with tho lor911t, 1moothost VS ,,09ine •••lloblo in •ny production pe110nger car. Or, discover the many •dv1nl19os of owning • J.to-modol, provj.....ly owned,C.d~c. .'(ou'I' find one to fol •lmosl any budget. Thero'• never boon • bolter limo for you to 1top up lo C.diDoc oWMnlilp. Pion·"'!'* lo -·in ond .r.q-1 • "Commend Perlormonce." ~ ' -~ BASEMENT SALE IN OUR SUBTERRANEAN SHOWROOM THIS WEEK ONLY '63 CADILLAC The tamfms Coupe DeVille modf'l with all power aulsta including power 6 way seat, power windows, power brakes, power ateoerlng, and of course factory air conditioning. A beautiful arctic white exterior with black and white interior. Drive this one home today for only SAU $1444 PRICE '63 CADILLAC Sedan DeV\lle. 4 Door hardtop. Beautiful lime ' green exterior with leather and nylon inter- ior. Has power 6 way seat, power windows, power vent windows, power steering. power brakes, factory·alr conditioning. This is truly a beautilul luxurious automobile. · SALi $1444 PRICE '63 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. A 1hlrnmtting topa.z gold ex· tmor with leather and nylon interior. All lux- ury equipment including: power steering, pow- er windows. power seat&, tinted glass. power vent windows, white &Ide wall tires, cruise control and factory air conditioning. Thi! fine automobile.. shows the meticulous care by its preyious owners. SALi $1444 PRICE '64 CADILLAC CotioeDeVille sporting a 1llvtt exterior with the black vinyl roof. Thia showplett is ~ulp.. ped naturally with factory air conditioning and has all the luxury pcrwer features Includ- ing power vents • 1teenng • brakes • windo"'' and the AM/FM radio. Drive this one home now ! SALi $1777 PRICE '64 CADILLAC Sedan de Ville 4 door hardtop. Jet black ex- terior with harmonizing Interior. All the regu- lar Cadillac power features including 6 way power seat, power steering, power brakes, power windows and factory air conditioning. Also has AM·FM radio, Audio-St~ system, Crui&e~ntrol, tilt steering wheel and power vents. Test drive this one today! SALE $1777 PRICE '65 CADILLAC Sedan De Ville, Monterey green with white vinyl roof and nylon and leather tnterior._Iull power equipment Including power door locks, power vent "."1-ndows, tilt steering wheel. A?vl / FM radio plus much more. Don't miss this outstandlna: buy at,,, SALi $2777 Pllci . . ' '66 'CADILLAC A beautifully finished Emperor blue C&dillac with harm(inlzing interior. AU the regular cad.iliac Power features tncludinc power 6 way seat, power steering, power brakes. power windows, and of course factory air condition· ing. At thil price you can afford to at least look. Rnd,y for delivery ri1ht now. SAU $3666 PRICl '67 CADILLAC ,. Coupe DeVUle. Stunning Montetty ireen ex- terior with blac.k vinyl root and full leather interior. Full power Including power vent win- dows and nt coune factory air conditioning. Don't wait on this one because It won't Jut lei}& at this Drive Me Home This Weekend Price. • SAi.i $4777 PRICE OTll£R SPECIAL YAUJES . '66 MUSTANG H.J. COUPE e '65 FORD lTD H.J. COUPE • '64 FORD CONVERTIBLE • '60 2 DOOR COUPE DE VILLE e '65 CHEV. IMPALA H.J. CPE e .. '66 PLYM BARRACUDA • • '67 CHEV MALIBU COUPE . e ' '65 BUICK WILDCAT ' • '67· CONTINENTAL COUPE • '67 PONT..STATION -WAGON·e '64 RAMBLER STA. WAGON e ' '66 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR. • '66 BUKX H.J. SEDAN •• '66 CHRYS. NEWPORT HJ e '64 THUNDERBIRD H.J . • '6 7 FORD RANCHERO • ' '63 CHEV H. T. COUPE • . '63 OLDSMOBILE The popular F-85 mode-I 4 door. Fully ~ulp. Pl!d with automatic transrni&&ion, power 1tttr- lng, radio and heater, white side. wall tirH, tinted glua. A beautiful desert gold exterior. A Jot of c&r for very little money. Take this one home this wttlu;nd for only SALi $888 PRICE '65 RAMBLER Hardtop coupe, The ever popular Cl11ssic 770 model. Equipped with VS engine, reclining bucket seats, radio and heater. whlte 1lde wall tires. A fin~ JitUe arctic white car with all white vinyl Interior. This one won't b@ here long 10 be rure you are the lucky beyer, be here hnL ~ALI $999 PRICI '65 MUSTANG TM econom1Ca1 6 cylindet ~ engine with the 1tandard transmliilkm, ~o and Mater, wrute side wau tires. Snow white exterior with hannonlrlnc blue Interior. This will make an exce.llent s.eocond car for the busy fami ly. Don't mils this .one at the low, low price of only ~ SA(! $999 PllCI '64 OLDSMOBILE Starfire hardtop coupe. Automatic tran.!!ml.'\· sion, radio and heater, power stttrin&", powrr brakd, bucket seats, center cofl!lole. A dark blue exterior with hannonirlng interior. Truly a fine automoblle at a low price of only SALi $111· 1 PllCI '65 PLYMOUTH The Sporty Barracuda model. A beautiful lit- tle turquoise car with black bucket seat ln· terior fully ~uipped includin& VS engine, radio and beater, tinted glaas and ot course white 1lde wall tires. This will tnake a perfect car for the kid! or wife . SALi $1222 PRICI '65 PONTIAC Thf ever popular Grand Prix mod•I fully equipped with automatic tranamlulon, power steerina:, power brakes, radio and heater, bucket seats, center con10le, tachometer, white 1lde wall tires. A b@auUful ll'ffn ex- terior with matching interior. This one Is Juat waiting for a new home. . SALi $1444 PRICI '64 IMPERIAL Crown 4 door hardtop Beautiful m~esUc blue exterior with leather and tapestry interior. Fully equipPed with power steerln(, power brakes, power windows, power 6 way seat, automatic dimmer, AM/FM radio and of course factory air conditionlna:. This U the kip of the Chrysler Imperial line and ii ln U· cellent condition. SALi $1777 PllCI '65 CONTINENT AL . A stunninc Goddea rold automobile with full leather matching Interior. Hu a11 the power acceuories including power seat, power win· dows, power steering, power brakes, power antenna, power vent wlndow1, AM/FM radio, cruise control and tor summer driving in com- fort factory air conditioning. An absolutely beautiful car at a low price of SALi $2555 PRICI -------SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN------- 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY YOU R FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER SERVING THE ORA NGE COAST HARBOR AREA COUGAR '68 COUGAR Brand new. $2140. VS and bMic WrtJ equipment. No high cost ac- cesM>lie:s; Orange County'• o l d e s t Lincoln • Mercury Cougar dealership. Newport, C05la Men 642--0981 DODGE \965 DODGE Corcnet !al. Yellow w/whlte Tiny\ top, eoruole, buckel se&ll. 61~1530 l!m DODGE D&rt 6. 2 dr. $edaD A-1 OJND. *6'6-8<5' ' ii Dodger Dart, GT v..a. 4 IPd, low miles • 548-2780 • FALCON ''1 ,ALCON 4 Dlt. OILUXI AVtomatie ~. ra. ·c11o. BMuWUJ coudttian : $f9!i • MARQUIS MarGRS 'I .., So. Coal( Hwy. '~-... -. Im FALCON f dr, -*>. 9'"11 ·--R/H. Mu! 5IMUO , 2600 Harbor Blvd. 540-9100 T-llRD T-llRD FORD FORD MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE PLYMOUTH 1 PONTIAC •. .,r.emne ·59 r-<1mn.Uobtb1ue.a...i; 4 SPEED '66 MUSTANG '64 OLDSMOBILE 4 SPEED 4 SPEED "'"' "';' 57~-a ""° --SPECIALISTS ·57 FORD '•"'"' ""' • "' • Foci..,. ,;, • cu11 ... 2 dr, HT SPECIALISTS l========-"=======!IU wagon. Auto V8. Lo mi. Also )'eUow exterior with Ute blue exteior, dark blue SPECIALISTS HIGH PERFO•u •NCE lhod Con HIGH PERFORMANCE vw parts. 507 Tulti!I, NB black vil"IYI interior. vinyl. bucket 11e9ts. One: O'Nn· ~ 1.-:,;.;,;;.~;.;;.._.._-~;.;;..:...;;=;.;;..:;;..:. __ _:;.:. J.'1\GEST SELECTION IN 642-9187 52195 "· Uk• •••· HIGH PERFORMASNCE CUSTOM CARS ORANGE COUITTY ALLEN $159S CUSTOM CAR LARGEST SELECTION IN CUSTOM CARS MERCURY Otd..mobil..C.dill" ALLEN LARGEST SELECTION IN ORANGE COUNTY Selected Auto 1150 So. Coan Hwy Otd..mobU..O.dillac ORANGE COUNTY Selected AlltO C.~r ... COLONY p.,, """'" l.agoJnA ... ch ..... !... 1150 So. Coa.t Hwy Selected Auto c.~- HIW waaon bi'and new. $.WK>. LI Be ch * 4%1084 C m., l:m2 Harbor Blvd. 537-4646 from Johnlon & Son, Orange 'ST 2 + 2 mod. (390) Holly IU'lll a enter 13002 Harbor Blvd. 531-4&66 County's oldttl L I n co I n cart>. 4 llP, com pt. hand I. 66 OUl6 CUtlau Spt Cpe l:ll32 Harbor Blvd. 531--4646 '611 <X>RTINA GT Mercury Coug1r dealerM.lp. pect SS% ll0/13:30 ::li,COI ·Hydro, PIS. PlreW radi&l 6£nl 1ctual miles; oxnpeti· mi. $3,0XI or ofter, 531·1317 -> •• Hrei. Radio. Clean! Call '65 PLY. 3Sl ci, Cam. Lifter N e w p or t • O>lta Mtt1. ....,. .... _,...... ~-17041 Whit llOY CAllYER PONTIAC tion ~hatm, radial tires; 6'2--0981.· aft 5 548-0!lotS 847-<4551 · ,.,..,..._,.,. ~· • cannot be told from new. '64 OLOSMOBILE by ar. Tuatin ms Harbar Bl., a.ta N• S199!J '59 MERCURY Mon1erey, OLDSMOBILE Kl 6 ~444 '~" ~~· "~ER PS PB -• Cutlo11 Convertlble PONTIAC -n.c:.nD r n.u:.v.&..••••,nv I , alr .....,iu., new teat _...,._ 96z; G rden G coven, pwr .eats, radio , Y.UOW e•terior, black vinyl Onmp Oiaty'1w s row Blvd. w/vibra aonic, good tire•, 67 OL~S TORONADO intM'lor. bl•ck top. One: own-'(6 BONNEVD..J...E 4 door Dial• for Jlon. a KoJ'Clt ud '63 FORD Ecoooline Camper, re&l good cond\Uon! F\rst Red extenor, black vinyl top, tt Like new' hard to F\lll lwed BmtJJ. 2 mags 2 chrome rims, MW '295 lakea. 847_9930 burgundy interior. Full ))OW· ' $1495 and ·t!' air ~1:U I>lr 1·-=96l='CT0=.""2'"""'"°"'"-"°"' .... :-"'tu,,..ll1 ~gine .i trans. rood tire1, er, factory •Ir . Like nrw. ALLEN 54&--~ ' • ' ~ipped, 4 ·.-. ftoor tbut. •tick ghlft. S800 or bm tJ. '57 M ER C. ruinc into $3995 otdsmobUe<*lilla just like new, _, in frr. Ask for Henry •fter 5, ~Mer. Sacrafict! Lklmln Al.LEN 1150 So. Coast H_.; l9li PONTIAC· 4 dr. Poftr l!el'Vice. Must 1 el 1 lm- M&-5129 Trans l DlJ. Good rubber Oldsmobile-Otdillae ~·Bet.ch .,, 4M-lm4 and air • excel ccnd. • '1515· mediately ll,IXIO m t I j! 1 . 'llli Mlm'ANG 289, auto tram 646--0tl5 llS(l•So. a.st Hwy , Pbme 962..tm $2625. C&D1 ICUIMl, ~ Pwr 1trg. 29,tn) mi. Xlnt l.q\na tletch * 04-1084 MM ~ ~_,cuu...,..... '«i ~. Xlnt ccnd, Low 6:30 548-.mlR ~ emd. Rl!'d w/ blk top. $1995 METRO '62 OLDS Starfift f\z · ~ ~-u •n·c1o -~· mllMp. MUlt •C!'ifim lm-~· ~~ , --------' t • • II pwr A air. USOO. ~ _ ___. __ ,_ .-.. _,.. '61 BONNE\'lU.E Cbmr., _.., W"M~ aet. air. Real sharp, S20) '""" -· ..-....aow, braks, flrmlt ftld allpl., '60"'FORD="°"c.i=.,..""· ,..,..,=--""""-~~o, hd tp, RIH, r<f, below book. 3'0 , O.t Mu, PL YMOU'IH '15 BONNEVILLE, alt·cood. tnM., '-l """' I'll!, Factory air, rnust Mcrifice, 646-l'162 C.M. ~T an power. PERFECT. Jlll50. mutt aell. 6C2-3B26 Dir. 5'3-TISI ~======== I "' OLDs ,,,. ... -With '63 PLYMOtml Valtan\ .,... ..,_,.,. '6!GWx;•Fonl. MUSTANG •" coodJtlonllw. Dir . -. auto tnno,...,. ,.:::«S:-PONT==-. ""c"'.P'"'.,-.rr=,-,...= T·Bird ._ 1625 .. 1-Tl>l "'"" SlOO "'1ow boolc. ""1 ·-· Bue... -ta. /,. • ·~-Amerlcm -e 546-4!m e '91 MUSTANG, •Ir, ditc 'tS CI.DB CUbu ~Ht 2 dr Dd Ma, C.M. 142-6641 Exe. <md. 673.MIZ w ~ - .. ~-~, ____. delws:~. auto. powtt ~ ..._LEI AUTO PLAZA ... ANTICIPATED , .. , POID '83 FORD Fairlane, atm:\. ~em.custom I nter i or au pe.v.11-. .-. "-··a~6taWq.Ex. 61GT0,4aipd,380bp.«ltd, th tacm like 1.,.._ _______ 1 llhift, I cyl b:orJ1nit ~ $2000. 673-%110 ext M, after $18SOm-.Zi8 eaftd. Orie ownft' $900' or lo ml, lmrn.M.'Ulate, ml· ~·, ~t l'few _ l150. = dltton. $850. f73...827t 5. &ff-2355 '85 OLDS 2 Dr. Hardtop, ran btist onnt .a.:H111 an 5. ' ne1. 544-m.24 dr:I• « "'* Make JIYJIWl\t '62 FA.LCCllJ Stdan. Rr:bll .. ~ ... -MU=n~AN-G~ ... -.. -'1-.. ~.-v-. power, a.tr. MUST sn.LI L~VlNG ONnb')', '64 Sport '61 PONTIAC TtmpMC: Sll l.111.88. Wlll ttnc. private,.,.. Locate!! neor ntw Nlrull lnduatrial P a'r i on San Otego Fneway betwotn ntw Crown Valley OVllJIUI Ind MiJl\on' Viejo on lltd fill mnps. At:r11p anllable. Call "Stan AIIen" 1147-310! or 494-!0M botnm 10 AM .. ,_,dolly, or "Sim mp. loyman" at 7 Brothll'l Ral- ly every 'day,· 40f.s711 or ' 498-2071 uttlinp. 85 70IUl Gelule Ml XL Air. JVN, p I s. New tfn!a, u - 8'" dM&. -~Blue -ot·SJm.tlMJ• -' -medt cmd. $350 Al 8, 1uio, alt. Mmt 1r:.U, ••""" S1!6'J. 546-3871 ~ "S'I•-VI. air, tun -r. w,., Cet.n! New d.rt1 A ty. c.JI a.ti.er 10:30 AM to.-Jii or SJl..11161 nr bett utter.~ ........, Dial 6G561I tor RESULll RiH. 11100. 49&-2l?O ..--~ _ba...;t.;.te;..:"I_· _RIH"--"'-m_. _&_t6_81!-'1 . lr-'.'91-:-!1773-or_""'111 __ T __ ,:(j "·· I I I I I I I ' . ..... -......... ; . , ....... _ . ., . ~ ~ . -... , ~ • • • jJ .... "-............... -.................... -... ~., ....... ·-. -.... . .. ~. ---..-·---#'.-.. FrldlY, July 26, 1968 DAIL V PILOT 3:J -············~~··············••K•~··········· BRAND NEW I '68 IMPALA Cpe. $ . • IMMEDIATE DELIVERY I Full prlco plut tax & lk. Stock No. 1014 OK USED CAR SPECIALS '64 OLDS DYNAMIC Bi, air 4 door hardtop. Automatic, power steering, . factory air. OPB-193. Payments based on Vi -down incl. tax & lie. for 36 mo., O.A.C. $361! .. . . . '64 BUICK SKYLARK Coupe $38'~ •. . . ~ •• '66 FALCON 2-DOOR I SEDAN. Automatic, radio, heater. SYH-214. Pay- ments based on 113 down in~ludes tax ~ lie. for ~6 mo., O.A.C. $39°2 .. 4-DOOR I .• '63 FALCON FUTURA I. " Automatic, radio, heater. RfB-720. Payments based on Y1 down incl. tax & lie: for 36 mo., -~ ' O:A.C. 5265! .. • air '64 RAMBLER ·770, ..:· 4 DOOR. Rad io, heater, factory air. WAE-454. Payments based on V3 down including tax & i tic. for 36 mo., O.A.C. s29',! .. I ~:~~= e SPECIAL e · Ne!O AC Spark Plup New Diatrtbutor Poiola Adj. V oltap ReiJula' New Diatribta.or CoMeMer' Major Adjuot ~ Clean Batt.ry Electrical Ts'minab Clean Air Filter Cleu Smoll CoatrU Valvo Cbedr RodWor Coolant -Com~ Teo\ Cyiindtn Service Helt RH Valve · lfGUlAI ~.95 VB' s SPECIAL s.1ro• SAVEi $12.,lJ SAYll 6 cyl. llGULAI $2S.46 SPECIAL s1333• SAYll $12.lS SAYll lrl09 lfd1 AM./ Goool thru July, '61' 0 Ai< '°""· oqulpped $3.50 ..witleoel. . ' ; 0 • '68 CAPRICE Cpe. FINANCING Low mileage Executive car. Fully AVAllABlf, O.A.C. loaded with air conditioning, etc. Stock No. 0153. $ -DISCOUNT I .I I I ;I I •• I '• I .1 I I I I I I I I OPEN SUNDAY VACATION TIME SPECIALS I I I I I OVER 200 USED CARS '83 IEROURY WAG~. A~, ndlo """,..W. HI$ 710. '84 IOIZA '82 PLYIOm =·'=-==!~"-~" , ..... sass '988 '62 CORVEM ~~i.!~'l'G-!70. '1388 s1399 s7ss -•.6•5 •M•A•L•IB•U•C•O•N•J/•ER•Tl•B•L•E-·I . V-8, Powerglid1, power st•rlng. NRH-935. $3ri2 I Payments based on ~ down incl. tax & lie. for MO. I 36 mo., 0.A.C. • '63 RAMBLER 990, air I AMBASSADOR WAGON. Auto., power steering, $3139 •: radio, heater, factory AIR. IBU 211. Payments .t ·:· based on Y.. down incl. tex & lie. for 36 mo., Mfl:. o.A.c. '66 CHEVROLET WAGON .• .Powerglide, radio, heater, power sreerino. suG-ssssa ··I 721. Payments based on· y, dn, Incl, tax & lie. .. .. -. Mo I for 36 mo,, 0.A.C. · '65 FORD COU~TRY. :$9UiRE . ' 'II I 0 passenger wagon. Automatic, radio, hoater, $5488 . power steering. NFB-428. Payments based on I Y, down incl. tax & lie. for 36 mo., O.A.C. Mo •. . . I '65 CHEVY II NOYA I Wagon. Auto., rad io, heater, power steering. s3911 Stock No. Tl I SBA. Payments based on V. down M • I incl. tax & lie. for 36 mo., 0.A.C. 0• --------·· I I FAMILY CENTER FOR THAT GOOD 2ND CAR 1 ·sa FO•o w.... $288 '60 T-llRD . 1.An8 I 2 dool' A"'°""'1c:.-'IQ. _ AlltcilnMle, -·-~' ~ ....... ,.,., 1ur1r. IOKl•I. • ~I°" l'l•lw. ~.11<41f· . -;: •1 '63 DODOI $581· '62 ·,oNTtAC c, ' .. $ .. 5. 88. 1 POLAlllA • ~. v.a. 2 ooort COUPE. A"""'1Mitlc, I ~~ tdo. ti.IW. ~~n'r' '62 CHEVY If $688 '62 COMET $581 I =~~"'.'H~ ~2¥-~ ""'9 .. rldlG, ....... I '60 CHEV. Wagon $488 '63 VAUAHT $788 I ~~~: r•le, :,:s: =· 1r.r.Jif11:, . '60 IEL AIR $581 '62 IMPAVJ $788 I ...., i.Mer, GGT...,,1. ..,.. ..... Intl. ~ COUP! Autam.t~, radio ~OllM, r.crto"'-~' 1 TRUCK CENTER : 3 .! ~d~~; ~!.~side s1399 •• doors with windows, reer door with windows. U30984. ---------· •• -AJ.l CARS suencr TO PRJOll SAi£. AJLL PRJCf CARS DO NOT INCLUDE TAX & LICENSf. ADVT. PRICES GOOD 'TIL 12 P.M. SUNDAY 28TH " ' , . I ' • . ' I • I • ~..+i!i+..-41 " I .r \ I I I I I I l • ' I I -. -. . . ~; · . . . · . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . " . . --•• . .. . . ' " " " " " .. . •: .. ·. : . ' . . • ·-~ , .. •• •' :I :1 .. •• .. • . . • " -. f~ . ... .. PAY $ AS LOW AS ON DISPLAY! ... _ 21..ft. and 27-~. Models Raody for Jmmodlo,. Dollvory . • \ ) CHOOSE YOURS FROM WALK-INS, SLIDE-ONS, MOTOR-HOMES, VANS, CHASSIS MOUNTS & SPORTSMANS, ALL AT BIG, BIG SAVINGS! IMMEDIATE DELIVERYf:i OVERSTOCKED ON FRONTLINE 1981 MERCURY COMET 1963 PLYMOUTH 4-000R '"'s4""99·~· '"! s2" 9""!:: $1753 ~~ + Ta Pr•. 'r..t. & u.. 1985 CORTINA WAGON 1885 MUSTANG BARDTop '°"s·7· ·99""""· ·~ .... s2·· ·9-~~-S1J-9' ~':' + ,. ....... . " ....... & u.. 1963 OLDS 88 ... s""a·9 '"·9""· 'E's1'"'9' "!E.$2340 ~':' + '• ,,..... Jtyw. & u.. 1964 DODGE POI.ARA ... s"5·' .. 99·· .. ~ ':!:~/· s1"9 .. :::· i1· ~9 ..... i;:~ + T• ..... 'rw. & u.. 1964 MERCURY WAGON ···so99·--·--~r,4 .. ,9 .. ~::vJ2 12 ~':' . " + Tar "-· • '1 Py.it, & u.. 1985 PLYMOUTll 81!"LVEOERE 11. Aull), 111:/lf. ING0-16' FULL PRICE sngg ~.! s491::s344s '.::'.' . " + Tu '1111t. "'9t. & u. . IMO F.U.CON BANCHERO -5699· ""· ""E s2"9 ''"l-::.: s22 i;:~ + ,.. Pyw, '-'· • u.. A,LL USED CARS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALEI ALL USED CAR TERMS BASED ON 36 MONTH OAC OPEN DAILY 'TIL 10 PM . INCLUDING SUNDAY ' . • I . ' ' ' ' ... ... • "'-*•'• ,,_,. ... ,.. ~·· ···-·· . ~ , . ... -... ····· ...... ·•;•,.. ....... ~ -· .. , .... ·-·· .. . . . . . . • ~ r •• > """"-~'"'- '68 BONNEVILLE IROU•HAM COUPI Loaded with extr•• plus Cordova Top, air conditionin9, At-4.FM Stereo Radio. SAVE '1,032 ..,. .. 0 ~ '68 CATALINA 2-DR. HARDTOP low miles, full pow•r, air condition. luded with many P"tr••· SAVE •1,000 USED CAR PRICES IOOD THRO• SUDIY, .111.Y 28TH OYER SIOO •• USED CU llYEITIRY TO SB.EOT FIOI DAILY 1'11.01 with 1 /3 down - 36 montlls. IY- trad1 111 -_, mall• .,_ paynMlds ev1111e->. '68 TEMPEST LE MANS 2-Dll. HAIDTOP IDEMO. Low, low milu i'ncludin9 elr condition SAVE '643 '68 GTO LNcled wi'h Equipment lncludl119 eir conCl'itlon The 8011'1 personal cer SAVE '1,000 '82 CHM IOYA V.1, automatic, factory air eonditio•ta11 sna5 6 cylind•r, radio, J speed stick. South Pacific Blue. Stock #17163 _77 SNloant 6-n. Stack #16411. Y9llSWllEI IEPT. I TO CHOOSE FROM. '61 THRU '67-Sftfts FROM ----------77 .... , .. ~Rbi CHOOSE .FROM. -··--··-~1695 '• •VAIR OORSI 4 speed, radio, tinted 9le11, Hlth '1 ~s porfonoanca 110 h.p. Stack #164.91-~7 '13 PGlllAO IUl9 Piii V-1, auto., paww 1taori1t. poww l>raU., ....... windows, foe. olr coo4-AM-FM R•••·'1495 power ...... E.z Ey• 9t.11, •furn. whts. -·- 'OB LONGPRE ·1•s 13600. BEACH ·BLVD • • \ --------~---- DELIVERS Plus tax & licens e on your iaood cr•dit. WESTMINSTER '~ . \ •I l • • • ' -' JUST A~RIVED .__ J.::z CORTINA ""'"' ENCiLAND DOzfNS OF NEW ENGLISH FORDS NOW HERE AND READY TO ROLL! CORTINAS • SEDANS • STATION WAGONS • AUTOMATICS • GT'S, ETC. SEE THE 100-MILE-PER-HOUR FAMILY SPORTS CAR, THAT GETS 35 MILES /ER GALLON, BEFORE YOU 8~;~_ 189.00" 350 CONYERTILE No. 875 DISCOUNTED $876.71 4110'' l'ULY . .. PRICE H•rt Now-Sh~lby'1 Newftt KR-GT-500 READY l'OR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY SEE TODAY TRUCKS , • • hove wo hod so m1ny now For<ls to move out during tho model yHr-end clHnup period. Never in 47 years hove wo offorod :octuol clo~ lors .. nd-cents discounts so high. Never in 47 yoori have wo been eble to provide so many oo•y way• to finance the· new Ford of your choice. Yisit us today! BRAND NEW 1968 MUSTANG $ A variety of colors in stock •nd reedy for immediete del ivery. All f1ctory equipped with heater, side mirror, 1eat b1lts, arm rests, backup lights, bucket seats, carpets, door trim, rocker panel mouldings, All vinyl upholstery, windshield washers , and M~CH MORE. _ BRAND NEW 1968 CUSTOM $ V8 en9ine, cruis-0°mefic,' power steering, radio, healer, white side walls, body side mouldings, remote 1ide mirror, tinted gl•ss, •nd MUCH MORE. Stock number 956. 200 more big I 19·inch wheelbeso 1968" DISCOUNTED THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. . . S E OUR DISPLAY OF CAMPING V~HJG~~s ~ G.\Me~RS BRAND NEW 1968 T-BIRD HOLIDAY· GOLDINE. SCOTSMAN FOUR WINDS and EL DORADO IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $ -OR- Personally Customized Orders & 25 Interiors to Choose· From. Ne. 11027 FIOO Styleside Pick.up 131" WB. Heater, 9uages, 1250 Lb. springs. 815xl5 tires, Convenience 9roup: power steerin9, power disc brakes, power windows, power 6-way seat, tilt •way steerin9 wheel, 1lect1ire conditioner, tinted 9!111, deluxe belts, 4'27 cu. In. VS cnils.o-matic transmission, 84Sxl5 white well tires. No. '68. PLUS OTHERS! e llla'AI! IAN' FINANCING e $213675 Long Term Leasing -Camper Rentals -Pass. Car Rentals -Bank Financing SCIENCE HAS DEVELOPED ... THIS FOR YOUR HEALTH ..• THIS FOR YOUR CAIL. NOW. , • we can scientifical· ly 1n1lyz1 and check over 100 1re11 on each used car that affects its performance prior to selling it. You buy with built in confidence when you buy • Theodore Robins Used Car thet car· rl" the Diagnostic sticker. These c1r1 are guaranteed 100-; •• . -· . . .... . TWO ACRES OF USED CARS TO CHOOSE FROM! '65 BARRACUDA PL YM. S.S. •n9., V-1, 1uto. trt111., 11.&H. f PIZ 6131 20 % down or frtd1. $4" mo. 30 mo. '59 CHEVROLET HARDTOP 2 door, V-1ind1quipp•d, T1l ind lic1n1• down, $11 p•r mo. 24 mo1. lllC1271 CHEVROLET STEP VAN $895 '51 Mod1I. ll.un1 lik• new, I ton plu1 c1p•cify. Q'l89'. 25 % down or tr1d1. $15 mo. 24 mo. on 1pproY1d cr1cn.. CHEVY 2-TON CAB & CHASSIS '57 mod1I. 4 1p11d with 2 1p•1d 1111. V44576. Will help fin1nc 1, 22 WAGONS "SALE" 22 22 to choose from -'60 thru '67 y11r models. 6 to 1 O pasHllttr -IOrltl with air C0111lltlonl1MJ. PLYMOUTH -066 MERC COMMUTER - ECONO IUS"S -l'ORDS -FALCONS - FAIRLANES -COUNTRY SEDANS -CHEVY 11 WAGON -COUNTRY SfjlUIRES ExOfllple: '65 COUNTRY SEDAN WAGON VI, 1ufom1tic, lt&H, full po-r, 20 % down or tr•d• $49 p1r mo. 10 mo, No, P791li $1495 . ·so l'ORD "• TON PICKUP V-1. Tix •11d lic•n•• dow11 •r tr•dt. $I] p1r mo. 24 mos. I L1120] I '61 CADILLAC 4 DR. HARDTOP Full pow•r, •ir cond. 20% down •r tr•d• $29 p1r mo. 24 mo. (JWV97l I ::. ~~~!~~:.~t.~. 1pt. dick, P.S., 1ir $3295 cond., 11.&H .. d1cor 9rp. Sold n1w for $4014. 25 % down or tr1d•. $1J p•r mo. l6 mo. IVIP 372) 066 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR . $1195 lt1dio & H11l1r, f1,tory tquipp•d. 20 J, down or tr1d1 $4 ) ~r mo. 30 mo, ISZCl98) TRANSPORTATION • SPECIALS • Now averagin g 15 cars per week that ·can be retailed •• wholesale to th• public. Beat the deelers on these older car1, ' +SAYE+ "63 BUICK SPECIAL • $795 Fully •quipped, VS, ll.1dio I H1•f1r, P.S., 20Y. dow" or tr•d• $34 p•r '"o, 24 '"'· IUTL7 lb) '66 PONTIAC G.T.O. $2195 V-1,·pow•r, r•dio •11d h••l•r, 11 ,"00 mll•s. rsvz 380 ) 201. dow11 orfr•d•. $5, p•r mo ., )6 mo. '65 CHEV. IMPALA H.T. v.1, pow•r 1t11rln9, r•dio ind li11t1r. INOZ 101 I 201• down or tr•dt. $"5 mo ., 30 mo. "64 l'ORD CUSTOM Vt, 1utorn1tlc. 20 % down or ft1d1 $25 p1r mo. 24 mo. NOY704 '66 FORD Wagon Countiy S1d•n. V-1, full powtr. IV9ll91 ) 20 '/. down or t••d•. $S4 mo. JO mo, $595 MUSTANG SALE 20 TO CHOOSE FROM "'6" & "8" CYLINDERS. 4 SPEEDS. AUTOMATICS. SOM! WITH POWER STEERING & AIR CONDITIONING. 1965 THRU 1967 MODELS, CONYERTllLES. COUPES AND z+z FASTBACKS. EXAMPLE: '65 MUSTANG H.T. Fully •quipptd. 11.&H. 10 % dow" ,, tr•dt. $45 p1r mo, JO mo. IPCC '511 USED CAR SALE PRICES GOOD FOR 72 HOURS· ALL PAYMENTS FIGURED ON APPROVED CREDIT. SALES DEPARTMENT HOURS PARTS & SERVICE HOURS PARTS ONLY 8 A M to 9 P M MONDAY -FRIDAY e SATURDAY 8 AM to 6 P M 7 AM TO 9 PM MONDAY e 7 A M TO 6 p M TUESD A Y. FRIDAY 8 A 1.4 TO ' p M SATURDA Y CLOSED SUNDAYS _ t / 81/z acres of the most moderri Ford s11les and '1f' service facltities on the West Coast ~RIV~IDEFWYrheodore -:~fkJ' !>q Robins ADAMS /_j '». ~ F d SERVING f,C===:~5 ii J~ :::f!~t., ~~ -0 r SINCE ~lllClfW~~ i la~. «Ir ', '{ ~21 -~~~::::::~~~~"'~::::::~~~,~~:~~1~7TH·~===== ~/ ~ HIMnT MOllOlt ..,._. C9t MT IUUI n' ;/ 2060 Harbor ~ Costa Mesa ®642-0010 )- , TED GORDON, SCIEN- TIST AND AUTHOR IN THE FIELD OF SPACE RESEARCH, IS THE SUB- JECT OF D 0 R 0 T H Y . PIER'S MEET THE PEO. PLE FEATURE ON PAGE J TODAY. ORANGE C 0 A S T COL· LEGE DRAMA WORK- . SHOP IS PRESENTING THE R 0 D G E R ' S AND HAMMERSTEIN MUSI· CAL H~T, SOUTH PACI· . FIC, IN .A SPECIAL SUM- M~R PRODUCTION. A FEATURE ON PAGE 12 TELLS MORE ABOUT IT. DON WILSON CONSIDERS THE ORANGE C OA IT AREA AS THE CUISINE CAPITOL OF THE SOUTH- LAND, LISTING MANY 01' THE FINE NEW AND OLD DIN ING ESTABLISH· MENTS IN HIS OUT 'N' ABOUT COLUMN P~GES I THROUGH 11. ENTER· TAINMENT PAGES THIS WEEK, I THROUGH 15. .. '" ..... ._ ........ -------- TREES ARE FOR CLIM B·l·N G Special Events AUTO SBOW -Two hundred antique, vintage. classic, unusual, modern foreign and domestic sports cars will be on display at UCI, 7601 Irv- ine St., Irvine, Sun., July 28 from 11 a.m. te 4 p.m. Admission, Sl.50 for adults, 50c for chll· d.ren under 12. Proceeds will 10 to the Bil Brothers of Orange County counseling program. See Feature oa Page 13. REGATTA -Tbe 31st ann\ual Fliibt of the Snow· bLrdl Regatta will tab place Jul121 beginninl at 1:30 p.m. from the Balboa Pavilion, 400 Main st., Balboa. More than 150 boat.I are expected to take part in tbe event. with aailors rangint in age from I to eo. Pbooe 548-US5. BAND CONCERT -The Westmlnlter Higb School Staie band under the diredion ol Gary McJel- ton wU1 preaent a concert iD Sieler Park, '1M Plaza St., Westminster, Sun., July 28 at 2 p.m. 'lbere ls no 9Cbnlssion cbU'le. MINI RACES -Tbe Newport Beacb Parka, Be~ ee aDd Recrution deputmellt la sponsortaa JDJn11ture pi.ntwood rac:e ear competition. Y ounpters wbo bave qualtfied ill the leJDi. flna1a will race their model can Sal, Jul'J 'fl at l p.m. in the Newpcirt Community Y outb Center, Fifth and lris Sts., Coraaa del Mar. ICE CA1lNIV AL -SkatlDJ It.art from mljor a sbon will periorm iD the let rnue at Melocb'- laDd Theatre, 10 Freedmu Way, Anaheim, through Auiust lL Pe.rfGrmaDCel : Wed. 1 and I p.m.; Thura. and Fri I p.m.; Sal 3 and I p.m.; Sun. 1 and I p.m. Tk:ft11 $2.50 and $3.50 with half-price diacoUDtl for junior• at· teoding specified performances, • sale at the box otfice, Mutual Ticket Agendel and Wallicbl Music City Stores. Phone 7'1$-74e0. TEEN ACTMTIES -The Westminster Recttatioa and Parka Department iJ sponsorinC summer programs for junior higb ICbool ate studentl. Activities include: a concert iD movie form Wed., July 31 at I p.m. ill McFadden Park. tlOl McFadden A vt., Wut:minster; dancu Thurs., Aug. 1 and I, 7:30 to t :30 p..m. at John- son Intermediate School. 1305.1 Ecltrards St.. Westminster admission 50c; excursion to Di> , . . neyland Aug. IS, 3:30 to 10 p.m., k Price m- cludes transportation from Jobmon lntenned- Jate School. Registration for Disneyland ucW"- lion requested. Phone 193-4511 for further ia- formation. 1' AMIL Y FILMS -The Newport Beach Depart· ment of Parks, ~aches and Recreation is apon-aorial a series of family ftl.ma, sbowa .._, through Thun. at dusk endiDI Aquat 12. FiJm1 •• shown outdoors: Mon. at East Bluff PU'k; Toe&. at MariDen Part; Wed. at 31th Stred Part and 'lburs. at l.rviDt Put.. Newpst Bucb. Matinees are sbowa T\aet. at Newpcirt Hellbtl Elementary School ud 'nun. at IM Community Youth Center of Newport Harbor at S:30 p.m. A 25c ldmisslon cbarle ls asked. A ~ ti snoviu as available at Newport Bed ~ Pboae ln-2110. I..._._. GU ID I TO FUN Special Eventa DISNEYLAND ENTERTAINMENT -Actor-com- edian Jack Carter, linger, Jaye P. Morgan and the Harper's Bizarre will entertain on the To- morrowland Stage at Disneyland. 1313 S. Har· bor Blvd., Anaheim, July 29 through Aug. 2. at I:~ and 11 p.m. On Sult:, July 28 Merle Haggard and 'lbe Strangers will headline with Bonnie Owens and the CoDina Kids for a Coun- try-Music Jubil~ cm the Tomorrowland Stage at s. 5 and 7 p.m. Dlmeyland b open a a.m. to midnight Sun. through 'lburs., I a.m. to 1 a.m. Fri. and Sal Phone 533-MSI. LAGUNA ART FES'l1V AL -The 33rd annual La. IUD& Beach Festival ol Arts and Pageant of the Masters is beinl staged through August M at the Laguna Beach Festival Grounds, 650 La- guna Canyon Road. Tickets for Pageant of the Masters, a living creat:icll ol art works, are oa sale at the box office dally 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Prices range from $2 to '8 and include admia· lion to the Festival goundl. Single admission to the Festival grounds, where art works of all kinda will be displayed and IOld iJ 50c for adUlts: lOc for cbildreD. Hours: noon to mJd- algbt dally. Phone 4M-1145 for fUrther informa· tion. See picture feature on Page 7. , .AU CAUJl'ORNIA ART SHOW -.An iDvitational art uhibit ol approximately 1000 entriet bJ California artists will be OD diaplay DOOa to lt t.m. daily at tbe Laguna ~ Art Auoda- tioa Gallery, _, Cliff Drive. tbroqb Au<, 2S as part of the Laguna Beach Festival of Art&. Hours: DOOD lo'lO p.m. dall1. General admi11ia 25c, Art Aaodatioa memben and one cuest. free. Phone 49M5.1L CAMERA EXHIBIT -A colledioa of early cam- era dating bllct to lie la oa display at tbe Charla eo.... Mmeum, JOOl N. Main St.. Santa Ana througb Aug. 25. Hours: Tuu. tbrou&h Sal 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.: Sun. l to I p.m.; TbW'I evenings 7 to t p.m. No adblissioa cbar1e. Phone 542-.5456. a ,. llUSICAL -"South Paciflc" wm be presented bJ tbe Orange Cout Collete IUIDJDer drama work~ tbop July SI throup Aq. S ill the OCC Audi- torium, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.. Cur- tain time 1:15 p.a. 11cbta, '1, OD sale Ill tbe OCC box office and, if available, at the door. Phone 834-5651. See Feature on Page 12.. CEl.ERRJTY GOLF -A boat of SO to «I Hollywood , penonalities will take part in a golf touru- meat July 31 at the Mudowlart Counu, Club., 11712 Graham St., IJuntiqtm Beach. Ticketa far to1f competiticm, fl.SO, avallabJe at tbe Runtillgton BNcb Chamber ti Conunert.. .Pbone 9Gal for further infclnnatica Coming Up 1JIO -BOB HOFE SBOW -Bob Hope, Les Brown, .T.lDlmJ Duran .. , fMml1 'nclmu, Ann Marsnt ud GCher' iuest stan perform at tbe Anaheim a.diam, JOllO State CGllefe Bl'fd.., .Aaabeim OD Aarast 10 beginning at 1:15. Tkteu, U.50, J.UO, t5. '1~ and SlO. avallable at the Anabdm Stadium bo.x office, I a.m. to 5 p.m. seven days a w~ ar at uy brancla of United Californla .Bank. Phone as..._ See Feetw-e on Paie 1l Coming Up CIRCUS -The Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus will perform in the Arena of the Anaheim Convent.ion Center, 800 W. Kat- ella, Aug. t through 14. Performances: Tues. through Fri. 2:45 and 8 p.m.; Sat. 10:~ a.m., 2:30 and 8 p.m.; Sun. 2:30 and 8 p.m. Ticket!, S2 to $.5, discounts for children under 12 at spec- Wed performances only. Phone 635-8962 for further information. Sports DODGERS -The Los Angelts Dodgers vs the San Francisco Giants July 31, Aug. 1 at I p.m.; New York Mets Aug. 2 at 8 p.m., Aug. 3 at t p.m. and a daylight double header at 1 p.m. .In the Dodgers' Stadium, 1750 Stadium Way, Los Ange- les. Tickets available locally at Wallichs Music City store and Mutual Ticket Agencies. ANGEl.S BASEBALL -Calilorrua Angels v1 the Chicago White Soi, July 26, Z1 at 8 p.m., Jul1 71at1 p.m.; Minnesota Twins July 29 at I p.m. in the Anaheim Stadium, 2000 State College Blvd., Anaheim. Tickets available in Orange County at United Calif. Banks, Mutual ticket qencies and Walllchs Music City stores. Pbone emoo . BORSE RACING -Quarter Horse Raclng even- ings at the Los Alamitos Race Coone, •1 Katella, Los. Alamitoc. First Post time 7:45 p.m. Mon. through Sat. Phone 5Z1·2231. HORSE RACING -'lboroughbred horse raclq at Del Mar Turf Club, Del Mar, Mon. throqb SaL Nine race1 daily, first post time 2 p.m. PbcJM (714-1) 75.>lHl for further information. COVER: Seven year old David Pier of Newport Beach doesn't need to be told the beat things in life are free, a aummer afternoon and a good ol' climbin tree provide entertainment by the hour. Make you feel nostaJgic? Gulde to Fu Meet the People Garden Notet Cvrent Art Exldblta Dealper11 Notebook Piteon1 at die Feadval Oat 'N' Abolt Eatertab1meat "Soa1b Padlle" at OCC Patent or AwtomobOet USO Benell& Curt.at Lin Tlleattr Movtea ORANGE COAST muaaammam ~'Bell Pale! Pares Pare' Pase I Pase• Pip 'I Pasei'l-11 Pares 1-15 PlpU Pate 1J Pap IS PapH Pagn M-11 MAGAZINI ----~~~----~---------------------------...... ~~~r.!!!~~ .... --~ N'ewPort Engineer Is Categorizing Newport Beach resident Ted Gordon Is like trying to pick up a bit of mercury on a knife. He slides from the role of engineer to that of writer, lecturer, even sociologist before one can grasp the complex- ity of his major occupation, director of advanced launch vehicles and space stations for the McDonnell-Douglas Corporation in Huntington Beach. Though born in New York City, Ted grew up in New Orleans and was graduated from Louisiana State University in 1946. Five years later be earned his masters degree in aeronautical engineering at Georgia Insti- tute of Technology. Since that time he has been with Dougl_as in various parts "f the United States including White Sands, New Me11co, where be Sailors ag.d six to 60 .re practicing in Balboa Bay for the annual Flight of the Snowbirds this Sunday, July 21. Over 150 sailboats will IH ve from the starting line near the Balboa Pavilion at 1 :30 p.m., 1111 •_round markers pl1c.d in the channel neu lido Isle and return to the Pavilion. The annual competition is sponsor.cl by the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerc ~ Commodores Club. , ~t · •• ·1euw S«tlM-D.a IL Y I II \,T Ao, JlllY Ko 1'61 ii .. Booster For lnnovatiOh worked on the Nike-Ajax missiles and at Cape Kennedy on the Thor. In 1961, while at Cape Kennedy, Ted directed the launch of the Tbor- Able-missile on the world's first shot toward the moon. On this experience be based a book, "First lnto Outer Space." Because of the role Ted played in the launching, the following year Life magazine listed him as one of the hundred most important young men and women in this country. He also has written a book entitled "The Future,'' which predicts what present day research may lead to in the years ahead. His third book, "Ideas in Conflict." was recently condensed into an article, "Bucking the Scientific Establishment," in the April issue of Play~ boy magazine. It studies why some ideas proposed by scientists are ac- cepted, while others of equal or even greater value are not. "Innovation is extremely important to our country," Ted explains seriously. "We s h o u Id nourish it by promoting searches for inventive minds and developing systems which enhance their contributions. We should reward inventiveness rather than inhibit it." In January Ted was invited to lead a seminar in the new determin- ism at the graduate school of business at UCLA. With the members of the · class be discussed ways in which social problems and technology mesh and how the future could be forecast and changed in these areas by bring-ing certain forces to bear. He also bas given public lectures in Santa Barbara on Space and Its Effect on Men, and in San Louis Obispo on the New Determinism. Still another portion of the young engineer's time is spent as a con· sultant to the Rand corporation in Santa Monica where he seeks orderly approaches to solving multi-demensional problems for them. In his spare time Ted, who moved to Newport Beach five years ago, enjoys fishing. Over the desk in his living room he proudly displays a mar· lin which he caught. A ham radio pperator, he also builds model airplanes and radio controlled gliders which he flies near th e back bay. Ted and his wife, Ann, whom he met while attending a jazz apprecia· tion class at UCLA, have four children: Katy 13, who attends Horace En- sign Junior High ; Tom 10, and twins Michael and Lisa. 7, who attend Mar- iner Elementary School. Although Ted Gordon's mind may be a million miles into outerspace, he is an unpretentious, down to earth young man, an American leader, who also would make a very pleasant next door neighbor. -Dorothy Pie r WE DON'T WANT TO GET RICH! But Our Competitors Do! In our earnest desire to give you the finest produce for t he lowest price, we ere constantly checking our competitors. l ast week they were selling lettuce for 29c end oun wu I Ocl O ne store had the nerve to sell it et 29c per lb. We bought one and paid 7lc. So come to Newport and join the severs. CLIP THESE COUPONS AND SA YE! .... --------------, Newport PrCMluce I Newport Produc,, • Newport Produce I Quellty Quallty I PRODUCE CELERY I ''.:.f. :::....... . ORGANIC GROWN I I HEARTS I 6R&N BEANS I LEMONS I I!.~~ I I.~~ I L!~~k : I With thl• Coupon I Witt. tftlt Covpen I With thll ceu,... ______________ ..... c.,... Expire Jiiiy Jl Congratulations and thanks to these fine restauNnts for choosing Newport Produce: Howards, Art's Landing, Dillmans, The Chart House, 8 Taoo Tiosf and 176 others. Patrowl• ,._, How obovt JM calU1t n 7 .. WMN ,......, It ne 0,., Of ne H ...... NEWPORT 261' PHONE: Newport PRODUCE ...... 67].·1715 .... ar.... Ceat(I ...... , ........ ....... ,,....o., I .... On-. CNlf . ....., 3 I 1 j l ROSE PLANT-ING IN WESTMINSTER Four hundred and fifty roses donated by the Orange County Rose Society will be plant· ed, tomorrow, Saturday, August 3, at West- minster's new civic center on Westminster Avenue east of Beach Boulevard. AnyOM j.nterested in assisting with the planting roses ls asked to be at the Civic Cen· ter after 8:00 a.rn. All tools and equipment will be furnished. Rose varieties will consist primarily of Hybrid Teas and Grandi Floras. '"Dot' CM-Kem-Ca.,.: Why Is It'• the anawer to· modem gardening th• complete fertilizer PLUS TllRR-0-VIT• auppllet the lmponOnt ~ al Plante mutt have. to thrive. T•llll-0-VIT• eontolna elements that enw Into the manufactuN of vital root-forming enaymn and ot.o reduce. tranaplanting ahock. T•RR-0-VIT•'• heavy con,entratlon of Chelating Agenta pl111 Chalat.d Iron, Zl(IC and Monganeae help to preverit and cvre Chloro1i1 (yellow foliage) In- duced by high concentrationa of al~a11 In 10JI or water. T•llR-0-VITll'a 'hemkal reactions' In the aoll break dawn Ado~, Calk.he, Hardpon and Alkali soils IO they con be broken with a trawel lnateod of a tractor. TRRR-0-VIT•'e Wetter-Water prfndple 1C1V9t water .and hrtilizer by reducing runoff. Vou don't need to Pick and Sweat lore Hole" to get fertiliur down deep . ~:..~~~ In M>il where plants reoRy feed ~-- Just Spray on TERR-0· VITE Qt. $2.75 Gal. $6.75 CHA·KIM·CO FRUIT & VEGO Al DUST Really KILLS TOMATO HORNWORM and Com EARWORM ._ rr SAYS SO ""::~ IMHf ON fHJ &.All1. .. · -. Also control• other lnaect pests ond plant diaeoses ---·--- GARDIN NODS Sweet, Fragrant Cover Vines STAI JASM.INE BEHAVES WELL Perennial vines ore not•d for their f ost growth and quick cove!' up qualities. They ere useful for hidin9 unsic;htly fe nces ond walls and when grown on o properly ploced trellis will 9ive useful shade. . Although ivy in its several forms is used often it is certoinly not necessary to lim it cover to o vine thot ls 9reen only. There ore o number of very fin e flower ing vines that Clo well In this oreo. Two very large vines ore the cup-of ·gold ond the Eosterlily vine .. Both of these grow heovy woody stems with lorge leaves ond hove very la rge flowers. T.he cup-of -gold hos Jo rge yellow flowe rs, six to eight-inches in diameter, thot bloom in the sp rin g. The Eosterlily vine hos, &s the name Indicates, lorge white flowers resembling Easter lilies. This vine blooms in the summer and foil. Both con grow os high os o two story house. The corsage vine, Stephanotis flori bundo, is o good shade grow· er. The dork green leoves of this twiner moke it ottroctive, but in the 5pring when it bursts forth with its Intensely frogront clusters of woxY. white blossoms it becomes very choice. The corsage vine is often grown es o greenhouse plant but will do very well outside in this oreo as long es a rich ond well dra ined soil is supplied. Other fragrant vines include the josmines and the vanilla scented trumpet vine. In this oreo Spanish jasmine, star jasmine ond Corolino jos. mine grow very well. The lotter two ore not true jasmines but ore related. The Carolina jasmine hos yellow flowers ond the other two, white. The vaniUa trumpet vine, Distictis loctifloro, is one of those de. lightful vines thot bloom s virtuolly the year oround. The flowers ore violet-to-lavender in color ond the vonillo-like odor mokes thi~ o most Cfesiroble one to grow. In addition to the vanilla trumpet vine there ore several other good trumpet vines. They don't hove the frogronce thot this one does but they ore colorful. They ore the violet trumpet vine, cots-clow yellow trumpet vine, blood-red trumpet vine ond royol trumpet vine. Other good flowering vines ore the passion vine, snail been1 guinea gold vine, end th et old fovorite, bougoinvi11Er<1, in all its colors. -Don Horton ? Mffa .... ,.._ DAl\.T "L01 ,.,..,, Mr M. tHI CURRENT ART EXHIBITS LB FESTIVAL OF ARTS -The 33rd annual Fes• ti.val of arts display is at the Festival Grounds, &50 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beacb through August 25. ~dmission to the grounds where all types of art work are displayed and aold is 50c for adults; lOc for children. Hours: noon to midnight daily. Phone (94-1145 ror fur· ther information. ALL CAIJFORNIA SHOW -Laguna Beach Art M- 1odation Gallery, 3111 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. An invitational art exhibit of approxim· ate)y 1000 entries by California artists will be on display noon to 10 p.m. daily, throup August 25. The exhibit ii part of the Festival of Arts and may be reached from festival grounds by a tram service. General admissioa 25c, Art Association members and one guest, free. Phone (~1. SAWDUST FESTIVAL-935 Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Beach. The Artists and Gallery Own· er1 Association is displaying art in varioUJ media through August 25. Part of the pro- ceed.I from the sale of art will go to the South Cout Community Hospital fund. . SPLINTER FESTIVAL -M6 N. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Exhibits of approximately 70 dlta 1n various media will be on display through August 25. Hours: noon to midnight dally. There is no ad.minion charge. MEYER LEMON IS DWARF SHOW OFF Whether planted in open 9round or in • hand- some nclwood contalMr, Dwarf Meyer Lemon 11 a year-round show off. It Is INded with yellow lemons much of the yHr and of.. ten wlll have fragrant white blossoms at the same tf me. If It never did anything one would find lt1 luxuriant grMn follae• attractive all th• time. With 10 many things to recoml'Mnd it, It It a favorite with Callfomla gardeners. •etc11 C*KfftY et Calif. AMOClltlOll ti N41~ Ml ..... ~ OIAY "'LOT r111n, JtfrM.1M CRAWS GALLERY -1390 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. On exhibit daily 11 a.m. to I p.m. through July, a one-woman show of olll by Jo Anne Mix. CORONA DEL MAR LIBRARY -t20 Marigold. Corona del Mar. On exblblt during regular ll· brary hours through July, original maguln• covers done by l~al artists in. 1966-1968. MARINERS LIBRARY -2005 Dover Drive, New- port Beach. On exhibit during regular library hours through July, original magazine coven done by local artists from 1962 to 196.5. NEWPORT BEACH CITY RALL -3300 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. On exhibit dunng regu- lar business hours, a one-man show, James Clutter's "Retrospective Collection,'' s~psored by the N.B. Art Committee. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit during reg- ular business hours throug)> July, the weavings and tapestries of Jean Tillman of Anaheim and Marian Sanders of Costa Mesa. COSTA MESA LmRARY -566 Center St., Costa Mesa. CurrenUy on exhibit during re5uJar lib· rary hours, a collection of armed forces' antique and modern buttons plus children's buttons of Kate Greenaway characters, fairy tales •nd folk lore characters. CAMERA WORK GALLERY -183ID Newport Blvd., Co.ta Mesa. On uhlbtt during regular buslneaa houn prlDta b1 photoerapber Rut.ta Bernhard. SO. CALIF. FIRST NAT'L BANK -17122 Beach Blvd., HWltlngton Beach. On exhibit dlll'lng ref• u1ar buslneu boun oil pa.intinp by Huntingtoa Beach art league member, Janet DeHaven. CHARLES BOWERS MUSEUM -3l02 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Hours: Tues. through Sat. 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Sun. 1 to 5 p.m.; Thurs. eve- ning 7 to 9 p.m. No admission charge. Currently on exblblt a juried craftsmen and designer show by members ol the Orange County Art Assoc- iation. Maria's Artistry In Oils Visit Orange County's Most Ele9ant Art 61flery MEDITERRANEAN ART SUPPi.JU TRADITIONAL OIL PAINTINGS I INSftUCTION .......................... ODell 7 Days. w ... llOOltHUUT ~ ADAMS. H. I. AMLING'S DRAWING Eac• ltour .......... for SPECIAL Glm. ... lster -4 •••• cal wt ..... 98~ One G•llon Container Pl1nh Newport Nuraer7. 1 100 •••t eo11t hl1h w11 "•w "•r t beech. 11flf1r 1tl1 t e l e "h•11• (71 4 ) e 7 1 •1Sla SA LE $3.98 5 Gillon w.11. Ht•bllshed Pl•nfl 1/2 off On 15 Gallon T,.... and Pl1nt1 FREE To Nell customers ~·· '\ c.lffontla ..... . . .,. ..... 1/3 off On all ROiff incl S.lectecl Pottery Featuring Ortho Summer Lawn and Garden Care. ,. .. 2" 2" 1 I hi. S".,.r ,, .. Plat 2" Ii.. 2" 9..,. 4'' l1t. UI 2" SAU .... 4'' 11 .... 4" Saturday, July 25th will be ORTHO DAY AT AMLING'S An Or+ho Garden Expert wll be there to answer your lawn and garden problemL ...... c... W11'11•r l I -------------- . FORMAL OR CASUAL Genuine elm burl is combined with walnut veneers and pecan solid woods to produce a rich warm finish on the formal dining room pieces shown in top photograph. The round pedestaJ table and caned-back uphols- tered arm and side chairs add a definite note of elegance to this setting. The china cabinet has three doors and one tray drawer plus three glass shelves for displaying fine pieces. The server and the buffet give additional storage and drawer space, always a valuable asset in the dining room. Decorative brass hardware and egg and dart mouJdings on the doors and drawers further enhance the beauty of this return to elegance setting. Jnformal warmth is the theme of the dining room setting at one end of the living room in the lower photograph. Executed in pecan with elm burl blocks surrounded by deep mouJdings, the buffet against the living room wall is a perfect foil for the simple bookcase in the dining area. The caned-back chairs have convenient casters and the comfort of upholstered seats. Both photographs are of American of Martinsville furniture. ~.Or• ... ,_, , ....... .... DESIGNER'S NOTEBOOK Entrances BY J. RUSSELL TUMELSON, ORANGE COUNTY DESIGNER-DECORATOR First Impressions are important in homes and a fine entrance is often very memorable. Although the entrance to a residence seldom causes such definite reactions as to be the main selling point, it can as a first impression, put potential buyers in a favorable frame of mind and even crystalize their ~ttitudes toward a borne. A plain but roomy foyer is most likely to extend that welcome feelin·~ to guests. Several factors can give the feeling of space. Light color tones hint at what's to come careful spacing of pictures to add depth, use of 'mirrors. sometimes an entire wall, all emphasize the fee'- ing of a spacious entrance. Horizontal lines of moldings. such as dado s. and other woodwork also make a foyer appea .. larger. Above all, the lack of furniture will lenrt the feeling of space. Avoid a glorious hodge-podr of odds and ends. The grand entrance will offer more freedon · for design and furnishings because of its spacious- ness. Impressive wallpapers, tiled floors, interest- ing pieces of furniture, chandeliers, plants anrt paintings can accent thi s type of entrance mo~t beautifully. First impressions begin with the doors. De- pending upon the home, the entry door may be an unusual carved design, applied moldings with in- sert designs, a combination of glass and wood, metal and wood, Spanish nails applied to wood slab, unusual hardware or just a simple slab door pall:'ted a complementary color. What ever your ch0tce, start your first impression with style at the entrance door. NEXT WEEK ENTRANCES PART II Please address inquiries end questions by letter to: Designers Not ebook, Weekender Magazine, Post Office Box 1875, Newport Beach, California . Maptl11t S•ctien:...oAh.'.v4i'11 ' . .. Fr!Nf, .>91'1' 2<, ~----~~~~~--~----~-------------------------------------. ....... llll"l!!~ll!!l!~!!!ll!!!~E!!!!--!!!!91!!!!!1!1 .. !!' Kirk's Pigeons Can Find Way Home After Dark BIRDS WERE NEYER TOLD THEY SHOULDN'T F\LY HOME IN DARK When Don Williamson, producer of Pageant of the Masters, first had the idea of using live pigeons in the first number, "Venice Bell," he con. tacted some authorities who informed him that it would be much too ex- pensive to use them nightly for the run of the Pageant. And besides it would be impossible because pigeons wouldn't fly home at night. He then contacted a second authority and got the same reaction. But Don had heard of a young boy in Laguna Canyon who raised pigeons and he phoned him to find out if his birds would fly at night. "I don't know; let's try," said Kirk Woloshyn, age 12. He brought the pigeons to the Festival grounds during daylight and let them go. They went home. The next day he came and released the birds one hour later. He continued coming an hour later each evening gradually, getting his pigeons accustomed to the change of light. The first time he let them go when it was totally dark, they circled three times and headed home. WLlliamson immediately contacted the "experts" who said they could not possibly be going home and would most probably be found roosting in the trees until daylight. Don made another phone call, this time to Kirk, who reported that the birds were home before be could get there. "I guess no one told these pigeons they are not supposed to be flying in the dark," was Kirk's reaction. Kirk has been interested in pigeons for about two years. He owns 15 now and has lost only one, and about that he says, "It was a lazy bird, any- way, I didn't expect it ever to come home. It had feathers on its feet!" Every night be brings his birds to the Festival from hi s home about a mile and one-half away. He ts paid $3 nightly to cover bis expense of hav- ing to be driven there and back home. Hardly what could be considered "too expensive" for the authentic effect the birds create when they go into flight after the bell is struck. Kirk also appears in "Women of Fashion at Leisure," the Oriental panel which is shown on the upper stage of the Pageant. In his spare time he raises tropical fish and dabblea in photography . • Kirk Woloshyn, 12, whose pigeons are used H part of the first number, ''Venice Bell," during the Pageant of the Masters in Irvine Bowl, heel to train his birds owr a long per- iod of time to be sure they would go home in the ~ark. Abon, he is shown releasing one of his pigeons while it is still daylight. Two bell ringers strike the huge bell in the production of the ''Venice Bell" by Antonio Rizzo. As the sc-und mounts pigeons fly out from around the bell and away Into the night, reminiscent of St. Marks Square In Venice, Italy. it Is the first number and is shown on the hlll to the audience'• left. \\ ..... 1ect111 ~JL'f ~llOT ,...,, '""' 216, ,,.. . or....c...e 1 Wllfll f lf ' • - Time Talk ------ A call from Charlotte Dale, warmly witty wife of Alan Dale, Villa Nova Newport, New· port Beach, informs you that Wednesday D":"'tt, July 31, will mark the first anniversary or that popular pair's Waterfront Wonderful La Dale chats anirnatedJy about the ups, the downs ... the ins, the outs ... the good, the bad ... the humorous, tb.e grim ... the frustrating, the satisfying ... of Villa Nova Newport's initial year in business. She is especially strong in expressing Dale appre- ciation of patronage accorded VNN in that ye., ... You bang up, thinking about the fl eeting a.m. 's and p.m. 's comprising the year Charlotte Dale has brought to mind . . . as applied to the development of . the local restaurant-nightclub overall during that brief span. You think, too, of a term being heard in connection with the area . . . "tomorrow's Cuisine Capitol of the Southland." Could that really be? Book it •.• and give odds. DISCOTHQUE RED VELVET DANCING -DANCING HARD-ROCK-SOFT UNl9UE UGtmNG EFFECTS 9 P .M. NIGHTLY CLOSED MONDAY No Cover-No Mini111•111 You Must Be 21 • • DINNER SPECIAL$ NIGHTLY • DAILY BUFFET LUNCHEON • BANQUET FACILITIES AVAI LABLE -t1e.,1r ~ V8'iv "At The Entrance To &.lboa l1l1nd" 1045 IA YSIDE DRIVE NEWPORT IEACH ~75-0200 " I •• .. No-one can figure out why Vil. la9e Inn Is such a 'swinging" spotJ Drop en Jn-maybe Y• can cctm• up-with the •nswerl VILLAGE INN 129 Marine 673-4530 .. ,boa I. OUT ·'N' ABOUT: Or11ae County • TAK ING A LOOK Look at lt this way. During that one year, alone, Riviera Restaurant, South Coast Plaza, has definit~ Jy caught on. Berkshire's-In-The-Sky baa made the scene to serve arriving-departing passengers at Orange County Airport. Far West Services, Inc. has opened Reuben'~ Coco's, Mesa Verde and Wu-hen's, Newport Beach. MiUa Mexican Restaurant and La Posada, both in Costa Mesa, have joined our viva! viand vendors. Eddie Vance has brought piping-bot meat pies and icy, icy im- ported beers and ales to his Sand Pebbles, also located in CM. Coast Highway bas been graced with The Fisherman, Huntington Beach; El Poron, NOW APPEARING HERB & JOE TRIO ~ .... 1:41 N"'9tfy b e.pt S..-, e COCKTAILS e DINNER e DANCING FOi RESERVATIONS: 536-1421 21112 Ocean Avenue Huntington Be1ch, Calif. TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY FROM 9 P.M. RICK CHADBOURNE COMBO FREE CHAMPIONSHIP FIGHT FILMSI hly U ... tp.& M~I .... MellMMy Mite _!!!!!.4 TewHuHta 1000 ..... FREE RSH 'I CH• DllllER wms AIE UING SB.ECTID AT TH' DOREYMEN 2100 W. Ocean Front, Newport leach . NO PUICHASI NECESSAIY Our wey of H ying "THANKS, MA TES, for helping make our FISH 'N CHIPS HOUSE a Succe11." REGISTER NOWI FOOD TO GO OR SERVED HERE CALL IN ORDERS: 673-2200 11 A.M. .. 11 P .M. DAILY "OVERLOOKING THE NEWPORT PIER" Ancient Mariner, The Captain's Gig, Chuck's Steak House of / Hawaii, Newport Beach; Restaurant Indonesia and Tuesday's Child. Corona del Mar. Planned for near-future opening along this growing Restaurant Row ... Fisherman's Grotto, Newport Beach and Don The B~achcomber's, Corona del Mar. Alley West, Tb' Dorymen and The Sand Crab now dot the waterfront hard by New- port Beach pier; while in the posh surround· ings of Fashion Island, Newport Beach, the sparkling Bob Burns Restaurant, Coco's and Ontra Cafeteria await the dine-outer. THE ADDEDS Add to these newcomers the long estat>. Jisbed Newport.er Inn, Newport Beach; Sheraton Beach Inn, Huntington Beach ; The Arches, White Horse Inn, Karam's, Stuft- Shirt, Henry's, Chart House, Reuben E. Lee, Le St. Tropez, Woody's Wharf, Si d's Blue Beet, Sea Shanty, Crab Cooker, Surf and Sir- Join, Howard's, Bellamy's, Bayside Inn , ViJla Marina, Berkshire's-On-The-Bay, Caspian, ,./ 1 ,I ~_A~ .. Bill Art Paul McCLURE BAR DUN MANNERS DUO TRIO '--"v~ ~ ~ SUNDAY MONDAY SUNDAYS THRU THRU FRIDAY SATURDAY 5pm 8:30pm 8:30 pm ti II t i II till lOpm 1:45 om 1:45 om I 107 JAMB ORCE ROAD • NEWPORT BEACH • phone 644-1700 ,,.._rlM M<tm-OAILY PILOl .,,,..,, -... ,,.. --~~~~~·----------------~------------~--------.-.------mml!l--llm!I----~ County's lest.rut •• btertll11M11 kHe • • • By Don Wilson Swiss Chalet, Chinese Stag Casino, McGoos, Ocean Front Cafe and Port Edward, all in Newport Beach. Joining this category, too: Don Jose, Francois, Captain Jack's, Deli-Shef, Lee's Chinese Food, Sir George Stnorgasbord, Huntington Beach; Black Knight, El Pesca· dor, El Matador, Versailles, Odie's, Howard Johnson's, Coral Reef, Maitre 'De, Jolly Roger, Mr. Steak, Chez Gerard, Daniel's, Amigos, Bob's Big Boy, Coffee Tree, Harvest House, Kaplan's, lrvino's, La Cave, Mei's, Nordic Smorgasbord Bild Viking Smorgas- bord, Costa Mesa. · And don 't forget: Five Crowns, Qui et Woman, Schroeder's Steak House, Villa Swe- den, El Porron, Snack Shops, Corona del . Mar; Village Inn, La Ramada, Hale Kai, ENJOY DINING AT SCHROEDER'S STEAK HOUSE (formerly Chef's Inn) fHturing Steak. Cltkk•. LolKter, •9'd llltl House Specialty 15 oz. T-Bone Steak "BEA TIPOSSIDENTES" Maxim? MOiie? M•eu? Lounge s~nds of the JIMMY VAN TRIO Nightly lxc.,t TU"41ay Open O.lly Except Tuelday--4 p.m-Sunday 4 p.m. 3201 EAST COAST HIGHWAY -CORONA DEL MAit For ............. , ... ,., .. '75-0470 O,.• I P.M.•lt P.M. ge~~!<l RESTAURANT Twe......_ ..• COSTA MESA c..... ef ...... .,. .. lrht91 540. 3641 OtWLec ..... _ ........... CLOSU MONDAY Watch for the 'NEW Look' AT JOSEF'S "The lffch Area's Trvfy, Truly Supper Club" THURSDAY, AUGUST 1st 2121 I. COAST HIGHWAY Conina del Mar ~~ILYPILOl "'*'· htr 16. '"' 673·1 llO Jolly Roger, Balboa Island; Dillman's and Balboa Pavilion, Balboa. Put them all together and they s p e 1 l "Cuisine Capitol of the Southland" ••. to- morrow? Phooey. This area is the ••cuisine Capitol of the Southland" ... today! Entertainment Eyeing Catch Dick Webster ... Friday, Satur- d1y, ~unday·night'l. ;!l 'hb cozy lounge at Huntington Seacliff Country Club. Huntington Beach. Calling his act "Symphony In Rhythm,•• Webst.er presents truly different entertain- ment best described as a "solo showing of piano, organ, accordion, guitar. bass. celeste • and cymbal artistry." No, this performer is not an old-lime, root-ta-ta-toot "one man band.'' STILL THE BEST PRIME RIB •.. FOR -LE;;;--1 DINNH INCLUDES -SOUP 01 SALAD. s39s IAUD POTATO, HOISHADISH SAUCE. IHAD AND 1um1 Rul Cantonese food eat here or take home. STA& CHINtSE WlliO , 11 21st Pl., Newpcrt leach OR;f'fe 3 .. 9!=!!JO Open Year Round D•llY 11-11 l'rt •nd a.t. •tu I e.m. '>ON JOSE presents Th• Fabulous RecorclilMJ Artist MARIO SAID TR 10 ENCHILADA & TACO . . . . . . . . $1 .30 CHIU REWNO-ENCHILADA • . $1.45 e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Ad•ms (If M.gnolle) Huttt. lffch 962-7911 INVl:NTOR TOO Webster's musical effects are achieved through the use of modern-day electronics ••• by uWizing a "system" invented by him and a prominent electronic engineer, George Dyer. This unusual grouping of instruments is the only one of its kind in existence ... and allows Webster to play as many as four side pieces at one time. The resultant combination of sound is most pleasant to listen to, and also provides varied rhythms for 'dancing. Sea Shanty Sessions A new dimension has been added to the efforts of The Honeybees (Helen and Bass), curently holding forth weekend nights at Carl Keyes' Sea Shanty Restaurant, Newport Beach. The new added is provided through the talents of "sit.in" vocalist Jerry Lennertz • . . a most professional unprofessional, in· . deed. Caught the session of Friday night last and thoroughly e'l;oyed the work of The Continued on Page 11 ONE OF ORANGE COUNTY'S TWO GREAT RESTAURANTS • •LUNCHEON •DINNER •COCKTAILS • loll11n11 Earl Trio MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY • 17 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER UTWEEN BUFFUMS AND BROADWAY Opell: Weekd1y._Luncheon: 11-1 Dlnner1: 1:00-12:00 laturday._Luncheon: 11:00-1:00 Dbmm: 1:00.12:00 lund1y1-Dinnen: 4:00-12:00 ltESERVATIONS 644-2030 • I ~. • "4£\.c.otAi lto.411 MARK DAVIDSON' MARK IS COMING HOME TO THE VERSAILLES 1617 WESTCUFF DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH STARTING TUESDAY, AUGUST 6th Tuesday thru Saturday-9 P .M. 'til 1 :30. A.M. • LUNCHEON • 11 :00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. Daily • DINNER • MONDAY THRU SATURDAY -5:00 • 11 :00 P .M. 10:::.:- COCKTAILS e NEW POPULAR PRICED MENU .. ···-'~-. ~ . ftMEU IU!&TAUIANT Continental Cuisine Cocktails Smnng Luncheon and Dinner Monda~ through Saturdafl. Closed Sunda~s Open for Private Parties Onl~ We ere located on the Bristol StrHt 1ide be- twHn Mullen and Bluett and the May Co. HHS. ..... c........ 140-JMt J'rom the W&uUtul HW Sky Room O( the Ora.nd Hotel. overlooklnir Dl1ne11t.nd.. FIHworka bea1n at t :OO Moll 11\cht durl111r th• w nunw. JDn tert.& I 11 mnt nl1'htl7 b~ DllL NADl!lAU: opea from t :oo p.m. ......... It .... ,,.... .. " ......... At Sheraton Beach Inn A new addition to the Herb and Joe Trio, drummer Joe Shaw 'loins pianist Herb Payson and guitarist Joe Marino nightly except Sunday in the Carib. Lounge of the Sheraton Beach Inn, Huntington Beach. II inner urvltllntM Grand Manner • 571 S. MAIN, OllANGB aesuvadoal: $'42-3S9S (OC*d luaday) NOW ••• FAMILY DINNER SPECIALS! FEATURING 8-0Z. T-BONE STEAK WITH SOUP OR SALAD. BAKED POTATO, VEGETABLE, DINNER ROLL. DESSERT COFFEE $176 e FOR THE CHILDREN e BEEF PLATE .80 TURKEY PLATE .80 FISH-N-CHIPS • 75 • AS AN "ADULT' INTRODUCTORY DINNER HIGHLIGHT: .--------1 -WITH THIS COUPON -I I TWO T-BONE STEAK DINNERS I FOR THE PRICE OF ONE! L JULY 26-27 ONLY _J -------- /(EN'S 2273 HARBOR BOULEY ARD COSTA MESA 642-1312 OPIN 24 HOUU ...._ _,_ oa.L:Y ... Lef ,.,....,, ,,,., .... ... ---------. - - NOW OPEN PICCADILLY PEDDLERS FfSH and CHIPS MENU TAKE OUT ONLY FISH AND CHIPS ·················-· 2 Large Pie«>s of F1sh and French Fries. EXTRA FISH ... 40c ea. 1.00 SHRIMP AND CHIPS ................ 1.45 3 Jumbo Shrimp and French Fries, EXTRA SHRIMP ... 40c ea. SHRIMP AND Fl~l;f COMIO .. 1.45 2 Jumbo Shrimp, 1 Pieci! or Fish, French Fries FAMILY FISH PAI ................ _ 3.50 9 Pieces of Fish ~~~11~~ ~~~::~.................... 3.25 4 Pieces of Fish, 4 Jumbo Shrimp EASTERN FRIED CLAMS 112 Pillt............. . . ..... . .85 1 Pillt .. ............. .... .. .. ..... . . ... ........ 1.65 IOSTON CLAM CHOWDER l/2 Pint .................................................... _ .45 1 Pi11t ···-························· ·-············-····· .IS 1 9..., ···-············· ····-·· ············-·--··· 1.65 COLE SLAW '!2 Pint ............................... ····················-··· .25 1 Pint .............................. ············-···-····· .45 1 Quart .......... ....... ........ . .. ...... ·-·-··--···· .85 TARTAR SAUCE 1/2 Piat............................ ···-··········· .40 1 Plat .......................... . ........................ 75 COFFEE ......... 15 SOFT DRINKS ........ 20 PICCADILLY PEDDLERS Ye Olde I noli1h jf i~b anb ·Cbip~ VENDORS Cart No. S 102.f Bayside Dr. 673-4331 o,_ Doly 11 .... 9 P• frt. & Sat. 11 -u"" h•. 2-9 F IN IA YSIDE CENTER ,__tWllN Sedl11 DAILY PILOT I toda~, Jiiiy U, 19'e II OUT 'N' ABOUT Continued fn»m P•e• t Honeybees ••. and young Mr. L. "Satin Doll,, and "Try A Little Tender- ness" were Lennertz offerings (more than a little Sinatra delivery apparent) with Len- nertz then teaming_ in a Helen-duet f eaturlng ''Day By Day" and "Night And Day." Don't miss this action. Matter of fact, this action will probably be coming directly into your homes in the not-too.far-away because these two vocalists (with an eighteen piece group backing them) are already rehearsing album tunes sched· uled for early cutting and release. NOTES OF A NOMAD New management .figures at M'Goos Newport Beach ... with change of menu and Jibation list due in approximately 60 days. Already appearing Wednesday-thru-Saturday entertainment: The Ragtime Ryhthm Ras- cals Jug Band. Another added : "Great Flicks" ... a Monday-Tuesday evening out- stander re -running old Bogart movies (among many) with a comedy and serial rounding out the night's filming. Tha's all! • 1};ffa nova n ewporl 3U1 COAST Hl•HWAY NIWPOIT HACH DlllMr Servt41 'Ill l1Jt •.111. RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED 642-7110 1:00 P.M. • 2:00 A.M. Delly rlfllNO HNIGNl'S YOU'LL ENJOY OUR SUNDAY BRUNCH 11 A.M. TO 3 P.M. 380L EAsr CoAST H1G1tWAY· CoRONA Olil. MAtt. CALIFORNIA PHONli; (714) 675-1371 J!e Saini :Jropez RESTAURANT FRANCAIS French Specialty Chef ReM• lformerly wlffl Rom111off'a l 3012 Newport Blvd, Newport BHch OPEN DAILY 5:30 P.M. TIL 10:30 P.M. Closed Mond1y • 673-7183 YOU WON'T BELIEVE M'GOO'S IT'S REAU Y FUN AGAIN! Wed. thru Sat .••. the wild Ragtime Rhythm Ra&· cals Jug Band. Mon & Tuu .... Great Flicks-BOGART in "Dark Passage," with Flash Gordon serial and Roadrunner cartoon. ~ M'GOO'S. 2600 W. CCM11t Hwy., Newport TOP SllLOIN 1 39 STIAl • • • . • • • • • • • NIW YOH 1 59 CUT STIAl • .. .. • • 'h U.. 4HOUND 89c-IOUHD ITIAI •• ALL ABOVE INCLUDE BAKED POTATO OR FRENCH FRIES, ROLL I. BUTTER. DILICIOUS STIAI SANDWICH TJlY SIZZLER ...lty ltMl H ...... • • 11-y W..W NM O•ly BE SMARTER .......... _. ....... At Weill .. HAMIUl•ll ••• , 49c CHllSI •••••••••• 54c DRESS 'EM UP Af FREE GOODY BARI DILICIOUI 1 19 •ULP IHllMP • • • • • WITH FRENCH FRIES 0F,.~ ... 89c ~.:ri,: ........ , 10c ALL STEAKS SERVED ON SIZZLIN' PLATTERSI Mb .. 6'-. WM 24« Choice of Dreu in9 , •••• , •••• ~:~: ............ 79c e DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS e CHILD'S rornoN 'la PllCI • ' I • MONDAY FAMILY Nl•HT 2:00 • 9:00 P.M. $1 09 j 11111. ei.at TOP SIRLOIN STEAK '--~~~~~--~~~--~~~--~~ ~ \f.ILIR . FAMILY STEAK HOUSES HUNTINGTON IEACH I COSTA MISA HILLGREN SQUARE TOWN & COUNTaY BEHINO TEXACO STATION 11112 ..... lh4. "2·1t12 I. 17" I ..... AM M2·74tJ e FOOD TO GO e °""" c ... 11 ..... ....., i I l" - 'SOUTH PACIFIC'· OPENS AT OCC ' ·12 ...... Qelt •11•1 ., PR 0DUC1'~ 0 N H 0 N 0 RS 20· YE AR ~NNIYERSARY OF THE COLLEGE. Twelve years ago, when Orange Coast Col•ege opened its summer Costa Mesa police and fire departments had be called to clear the stage of spectators. It looks like this year will come close to being a repeat. OCC will stage "South Pacific" July 81 through August 8 as part of its year-long 20th anniversary celebration. Out of a possible 4,800 tickets, the college has already sold 2,500. Director Lucian Scott promises a gala production with a lot of extra touches in honor of the celebration. Members of the original 1956 cast will be there for the Wednesday night show and will come on stage to sing the finale with their 1968 co~terparts. The outside of the auditorium will be decorated in a South Seas motif with lighted torches, plenty of flowers and pretty girls in native costume. At the intermission eight lovely members of the OCC Airline Stewardess Club will serve a South Seas punch to the audience. Playing the role of Nellie Forbush, the Mary Martin part on Broad- way, will be Ruth Manley of Costa Mesa. Ruth, a student at OCC, has appeared in the OCC summer productions of "The Sound of Music" and "Pajama Game,,, and sings with the OCC Madrigal singers. Opposite Ruth will be James Chapman of Laguna Beach, playing Emile de Becque, the part played in the original production on Broadway by Ezio Pinza. Chapman has appeared with the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera Company and at the Laguna Festival of Arts. Chris Salaiz will be cast as Bloody Mary. It is her first major role. She is from Huntington Beach. Also from Huntington Beach is Karun Pang who will portray the lovely native girl, Lait. She played the role previously when she was a student at Marina High School. Opposite her will be Terry Danne playing Lt. Joe Cable. Terry ,a music instructor at Marina High School bas per- fonned professionally with Van Johnson and John Raitt. He lives in Hunt· ington Beach, also. Stan Thorneberry, an old favorite with local theater goers, will do the role of Luther Billis, the gregarious Seabee. Stan played the part of Lt. Cable in the original OCC production of "South Pacific." All seats are reserved and may be purchased at the OCC Auditorium box office on July '1:1 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.; July 29, 30 and 31 and August 1, 3 and 3, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.; 2 to 4 p.m., and 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. All tickets are $L In the scene pictures a b o v e, Ensign Nellie Forbush is trying to de- cide If she should marry French painter Emile de Becque. The perts are played by Ruth Manley and James Chapman. The young lovers, Lalt and Lt. Cable, In the Rodgers and Hammer- stein production wlll be portrayed by Karan Pang and Terry Denne. The song, ''Younger T h a n Sprlntflme," describes their roles. Stan Throneberry as Bulll1 and Chris Salaiz In the role of Bloody Mary, fltht It out In a scene from "South Pacific," the OCC tum. mer musical which .,_,. next Wednesday. M119 ... Mctt• DAILY PILOT p,,...,, ltlY "' '"' THE USO · NEIDI YOUR HELP Bob Hope Bob Hope will be doing what he likes to do best when be comes to Angel's Anaheim Stadium on August 10 to help the USO and he has lined up an impressive array of guest .tars to help him. Ann-Margret, Danny Thomas, Jimmy Durante, Frankie Avalon, Rosemary Clooney, Johnny Grant, Rosie Greer, Brian Sullivan, Honey Girls Ltd. and Les Brown and hia band all will be playing their hearts out to what is hoped will be a full stadium. Other big name stars will join the show as their schedule permits. Service men by the thousands pour through the Southland each year for training or to be trans-shipped to war zones. It is Hope's wish that thiJ show will provide much needed additional funds to the USO so that 1t can continue to extend a warm hand to these lonely young men who are far from home. The USO depends upon voluntary contributions to finance its services. The canteens which dispense free food and beverages to the boys are supported by the community. No USO money is spent for these services which are manned by some 2600 volunteers in Southern California. Money is needed to provide better facilities in loca- tiona the young men can reach by public transportation. The wish is to have them within walking distance of other points of in- terest to the young people and away from undesirable areas. Bob Hope is giving the proceeds of one of his television specials to this cause and aa much as $200,000 can be r~alized from the Anaheim Stadium show 1f the residents of Orange County will buy tickets to this star. studded event. Tickets are easily obtained from the Angel stadium box office, open seven days a week from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and all branches of United Oalifornia Bank. See Guide to Fun, Page 2 for prices. CAR PAGEANT BENEFITS BIG BROTHERS The Big Brothen of Orange County will receive funds for their organization when the largest display of elegant cars ever to be shown in the county goes on exhibit Sunday, July 28. Billed as "Pagean~ of the Automobiles/' more than 200 antique, vintage, classic, un- usual elegant modern, foreign and domestic sports cars and horseless carriages will be polished and sPotless for visitors t-0 the show. which is scheduled to be held on tht athletic field at UCI from 11 a.m. t-0 4 p.m. Gold, silver and bronze Grand Prix ....... Sectt.-GAILY "LOT "'*'· .I~ 1'. ,,. Medallions will be awarded in all c1asses of 1bow cars including those with some special claims to importance in automotive history. Proceeds from the Pageant will be donat· ed to Big Brothers of Orange County to help them carry on their program of providing counseling for troubled boys and their family members in homes where there are no /l!th- ers or other responsible adult males. The public is invited to attend and tickets may be purchased at the gate. Adult ticketa are $1.50; children under 12, SOc. Food and restroom facilities will be available . •o•o•o•o• o•••••• "•0110ii6• j BILLIARD PLAYERS ! : We Are Now Servhlg Beer : o WHY PAY MORI • • • o • W1tft you c• ploy • ne flHSt tables e. tlle I 0 wortcl -hMwldl Tables -for $1.25 ,.. llour • •0 -Total cost for 2. lot 4 playtn -Ew• less for 0 • 1 player oely. • O Ask Any GOOD Pro About Brunswick Tables 0 : BEER • SANDWICHES • SOFT DRINKS : • SERVED AT BIWARD TAIW • 0 0 • MINIATUltl GOLF -2 -II HOLE • O COURSES -50c for 18 HOLES 0 • GAMI ARCADE -Pinb•ll -= 0 RIFLES-BOWLING ALLEY-ETC. • • 0 = COFFll SHOP -LUNCHES -BURGERS -• O SHAK£S -POP -BEER 0 • • I HOUDA Y f AMllY SPORTS CBmR I 0 IAKD .. HAllOI avD .. COSTA MISA 0 • • 0 Yeur ON It., Femlly ~ C...._ 0 = OPIN 10 AM DAILY MMHO = •011o•o•••o•o•o•o•o•011omo• Thrill to Thoroughbred action! Only Thoroughbreds racing now in Southenl CalifomiaJ ne best and IDOlt beautJful of ncina ••• bright with color ••• charged with pulle-tbrumming thrills u tho untoppabJo thOroughbreds make that dmlJng, nerve-frw:liDJ run for your money! It~ told-mad-IZW'I holiday .. where tho turf meets tho sad" Jw a ~ apccial a1amour you•u acvcr find at eny other tnckf Come, see for yourself! Stall froni 11.20/Sal. le hollt14y1 $1.$0. POlt tlmt, 2 p.m. Tomorrow! $15,000 Oceanside 'Cap ·-----. -.. , ly EM. Sllow Stam 6:41 Sllow S..ndoy &Q ~ ALWAYS FREE PARKING ffolfl 2 '·"'· -EXCLUSIVE JULIE AS YOU LOVE HER. .. Singing, Dancing, 0 9'ighting f JULI~ Aflill>Al:WS . MAAYTYLl:A MC>C>l21E CA12C>L CttAflilflillflilt; ~AMl:S fC>X ****************** THE BIG s PORTH• · USO ~::~· ... _. L-STAR STARRING BOB HOPE AND HIS GUESTS . ·;:, '{/ . . . . JIMMY DURANTE FRANKIE AVALON e ROSEMARY CLOONEY JOHNNY GIANT e IOSIE GRIER e HONEY GIRLS, LTD. HIAN SULLIVAN & LES IROWN & His land of l et10wn f'LUS A HOST OP' OTHl!lt GltEAT STAIU Ttckot1: $10.00, $7.SO, $5.00, $J,50, $2.50. On 1alo by moil, ot Ito.office, So. Collf. Mu1ic Co., U1 S. Hill St., LA., oil Mutuol AtHclo .. u.c.1. '" Ofon90 County ond long IHch. For informotlon pltono 114·6U-2000 or 2 ll·625·112l. .. . . \ LIVE Tlll:ATER ~~ OPENING SOON "American Burrall" Three anti-establishment plays "The American Hurrah" will be presented Thurs. through Sun. July 26-Aug. 25 at the South Coast Repertory, T h ird Step Theatre, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Cur· tain time 8:30 p.m. Phone 646-1363. "Sweet Charity" Neil Simon's comedy of a girl with questionable morals but a heart of gold, "Sweet Charity," will be staged Thrus. through Sun., Aug. 8 to Sept. 2 at the Laguna Playhouse, 319 Ocean Ave., Laguna Beach. Curtain time 8:30. Phone 494-9061. STILL RUNNING "Marriage tf Figaro" The "Marriage of Figaro" ls being presented in English translation at the Community Playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim St., Long Beach threugh July 'n. Performances scheduled Fri. and Sat. beginning at 8: 15 p.m. Phone (213) 434-6435 for information. "Stop the World-I Want to Get Off" A musical satire comedy, "Stop the World -" is being presented at the San Clemente Community Theater, 202 A venida Cabrillo, San Clemente through Aug. 3. Performances Thurs. through Sat. beginning at 8:30 p.m. Phone 492-0465 for (urther information. NOW PLAYING PACIFIC'S PAULO DRIVE IN THEATRE NEWPORT FWY. AT. BAKER ----ALSO - a.tt.. ......_ e 104Wy Md»owoll e M..tc.o I.-I pl.Ajiiix PRESENTS (8 of TllE !1!!6_'i NEW IALlt\A ll:ii~kT~H:.:_E~TR f NOW -Ends S1turd1y CONTI NUOUS SHOW DAILY FROM 2:30 AND THE SEVEN DWARFS e EXTRA -M1tinee Only -WALT DISNEY'S TRUE-LIFE ADVENTURE -"BEAR COUNTRY" e 2nd Fe1ture -ALL PERFORMANCES - lff H.,._,.,.lh DMlor "8 ON THE LAM" SUN.-MON.·TUU ONLY-CONTINUOUS 2:JO SWING INTO A SAFARI Of LAUGHS! WIU'..V ~bi • VOICES IY -~~ ~-Ptlll IWlltll • LOUii ,.... ·. Pt.US WALT DISNEY SUIPRISE FIATUHlTI lELEPHONE 541-1S52 FOi INFORMATION THE BIG THREE PROGRAM WALT DISNE~ DOES IT AGAINI C"MTINtJ"I I~ r" I' Y F~C'M 2 P.M. -------·--· ---·. ___ ,., -lif "''lt I I\ 1.Y rlLOf ~. IW~fl J .. I 2', t IT SOUIH SW TIOPICAl FISH Largest Selection of Tropical F i s h & Su-eplies in the area. N .. 2 Le<•tlofta Ill W. WILSON, COSTA MHA ,.., .... lrYlew ••·> S..1't1 1n-o, ..._..... or. N =••a.di I..._. .. ,_ OMc:ll) '4MAA -------------------~~~~-- "SUPERIOR ENTERTAINMENT" ........ httarMy eMI S•.--.Z:41 COlOI ~ byDll.m. --~ ... 1'YOUNG ~RICANS• Stimttt ..... , .......... . -.. .. hctl9-0NLY1f'tLOT ,,....,, , .... ,,. c ....... ...,_, , ... Julie AMrewa "T'MrHllifv ....... Miiie" • .,...... .. la ... w .... witll Don Knott. · ...... Pricea •• ... 11.11 ledl~·--~ ,"JHI NAlllll Of TMI •AMI IS llU • . e Celer ...... _.., .... Ul·Lln .. _.., ,. Al Tiii • .,. .._., ...... &..-. ... '"TOUIS, MINI AN• OUU" e Celer e ... HeH e COLO• "JHI PllYATI NAn OP MT. O'FAIUU• -----. ........ .... • M7·ntl lllMl'tDn ... ,_c.. "COUNTDOWif" e Celat · .. ~ --,...,..~, ,.."-........... "'"'Oii c:owu-c... ... , ...... CIO&.oa "NO WAY TO TllAT A LADT" HOLLYWOOD REPORT By VERNON SCOTT U,l .......... C.11 11t1af When you hev• been Mrs. Cary Grant for two years, where do you go after the divorce? U you are the most recent Mrs. Grant, you go to work to support yourself. She Is •cfrffs Dyan Cannon, Grant's fourth wife and the mother of bis only child, Jennifer, 2. Now she must struggle to regain her own identity. "Aft•r being married to a star as promi- nent as Cary Grant, your own career is wip- ed out," Dyan said. "Your identity is forgot- ten. You are Mrs. Cary Grant and that is the end of it. "But when you're divorced you have ·to start all over agai,n to prove you are an in- dependent person." Dyan Is definitely an independent person. She is lithe, beautiful, talented and extraor- dinarily good company. S~e was known as an actress before she married Grant. Many a wife who becomes the ex-spouse of a major star drop from sight as if "Sapped by a dis- integrator x·ray mystery gun. Dyan ts not of this breed. After the marriage to Grant broke up, she headed for Broadway and a starring role in "90 Day Mistress." The show did not Jast as long as her marriage, or even 90 days. It bombed. But Dyan received good notices. "I went to New York to prove I could deliver after giving up my career," Dyan said. "It was a way to prove all over again that I'm no longer Mrs. Cary Grant. I think I accomplished that while I was back east." Unlike m.tny a Hollywood divorcee she did not fleece her ex-husband. Acquaintances are astounded that she is not economically independent for life. Quite the contrary. She lives in a small apartment with Jennifer in an unfashionable section of town below the Sunset Strip. 1'lr1 tou~, but it doesn't frighten me," she said. "I m so happy to be free again and to have my daughter with me that I have all the confidence in the world." The former Mrs. Grant is taking singint lessons and working on her role in "Any Wednesday" in which she will star this sum- mer at Cape Cod. Thereafter she will spend a month in Chicago doing "90 Day Mistress." By that time her divorce will be final. "I've been offered a movie in London, too," Dyan said. "But I haven't accepted it yet. I want to see the script first." Dy•n glvn one the feeling that she will neither drop from sight nor spend the rest of her life being identified as one of Mr. Grant's former wives. And that, certainly, is a good thing. l"!-'!!.'Uli .. ., .. ·-·-.......... ···- * * * T ....... t ., .... ............. ----.... , 11 •& ----...... I SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES I SANDY DENNIS· KEIR DUU&· ANNE HEYWOOD.:.., MIUaMAICM Aha Meley MMI la "THE FAMJLY WAY"' in Color HARIOI ot ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE. 546-3102 . -ACADEMY AWARD WINNER .. IST ICTISS r:=. ISJ lllBllllr ALSO Ill --llCftllet-• Stlntey Kramer ,,__ =l=RI:= au-•bo'• eomtna to d•nnw ICJn~ 419 s.-kl Popv'-Hit First Run lft11f91Mnt ..,... __ nm•• ---·I::::.:.-;:-;.; \ STARTS WEDNUDAY1 AUGUST 7 P.T.A. IATUIDAY MA'1MB-1ftH A.M • .................. 1M0111•A1 ..... Na .... e..-11 .. 2 , t ' t I t ' . ! .· Complete Car Care DON'T GAMBLE! Get New famous-s· make Shock Absorbers 95 for aafe car control and new car ride U.1, CARI WHEEL ALIGNMENT Service 1P9Clellstl, Ullnt ,.-. dl loft ""'""*'' will CDrl"Kt ~ ~1ter, C9mOer, toe-111, ._..,.. ldlUlt NtMrlne medllnfllft .. IAUl'9 Mf9t IMY 1'"'1"" ..,.,. tire _,, amooth rldlM. each lnoludll lnst1ll1tlon $860 Mott U.S. c.... . RADIAL TIRES - .• ~=I= $24 95 • Seconds 2os1-1s, 1.u xu Plus Fed. Excise TIX $2.36 Store Hours: WHEEL BALANCE $200 PER WHEEL WIDE OVAL .S e SECONDS e RED UNE e WHmUNE E70x14F -... -----------.. WE ARE NOW lHE DISTRIBUTOR· FOR CONTINENTAL TIRES IN THE HARBOR AREA ' The tire made for all imported and sports cars. The pro'lltn radial fat wet and dry weather. Up to: twice the mileage; ! twice the troctlOft, twice the comfort. (gntinental RaP 14 Radial Toh Your Pickl USED TIRES PHONE 646-5033 lots of non-skid tread 9 .5 each plus ltltt ind local taus 7:30 1.m. to 6:00 p.m. _______ ._.......__..._ .... Hovn: 7:30 . to' 6:00 Dilly 646-5033 MltlllM ~AILY f'f\r'" f'tM8' • MY J6., I'. ·. ' • . I ----,-----,----,--....---,---------=----,----------- ----• I I • 2 ~t .. the DAILY PILOT' ; ~ity Solwes . ·~lillJJt HaYUJOFd Rel'~ 1 City Hall Conapks .. . . A IOllillla ti lie Jnl>leml . dla a --.... at.. ............ ....... that ht rtr1al .. tW ~ ., ...... ....... -... and PoJllJ, ,_ gtowla ,_. Biii, a.,:wm •• sr-Mt1 kn• •city government facDltln _. IDllml Ml ...U .,. 11~~ .. -"ii_! .. ij-*ll hu been found by Hayward, ::n=tr~~ll~ • ....,. I. blll llDIWALK 81-t&B Mi. -1Ui¥. 27 Callfonda. an4 tbe municipal facilltiei. wll1 oce,.,J aalJ tbe .... ~ Located t0uth of Oaklud. IWAllllD JUllll!lt from 1ne1 and -•ve flaon ..---------..-. Hayward wu lncorporat .. , M,tli a. mo to .._. J00,000 ,,_ N"'lllids ti t II• MMOUS MAUI . ia ll7t and emt.ect 11nt u • "" n,. Project',.. an WWna will 111 11Mtwc1 to NA VY PEA COATS farming community a a C that a. city will aw ovtr ,mMt w I d 1 on non- later u a suburban retreat ._ nd&l 1 "1 •· · radrflel Jlllllo qeadel ue. JUI nit tile srowtfr, tlle lar .............. uptQ . • $'1499 SJSC G bulJneu and eovermnutal I) years. ... · NOW ;I ives facilities in the 01 d ,.. the teilantl move out ........,. ._ rap i 4J1 when their leMes aplre, ..... Juqdflant. .... ... wllklltletl ..... __ .... . ml TOPS-TAii TGPS 16 Degrees ..., "' llepa to tate are 1111 .. -.:•••• ....... et pl1't of Ult problem by At tlle end of • ,an, lie ' ....._ +de"*t from the devellpln& a series of new city will ~ ud •-ee Cout .. a were --ft81 fnmi the ee• ~ -t' ~ lf = ... tel ·•egrees from San tra1 ~ .... .., -Y ,,... SCMe CAUege last · Ho•••• r, the new ::,:;:,..,~ = ......_ ·1ota1• a.l l8dlltlea were HJ the. bolldl ., a. ... Graduates are Marcia c sUJl requfnd. To solve tbe prollt g Pepe and Kathleen Br8DD oi .problem, tbe city called ill a.,nrf°up, callecl tbe BARM>a; Joellyn p err Y • the Westera Qtlls DeveJap-,,.__.._ CMc C • n t • r =1 A. ~ ..... Art-and ment Carp. t ~..--with the rent lt &:.IJIC Y coDects and the rent It paJI yn C. Daviet of Corona The corporation eeme up ' for ltl own efflc:e space. del Mar; Sandra L. Van with an agreement to Comtructlon of the efty Sltotell and Abbe V. Lanier muter pla lie ....._. W began In the tan of 1lt1 f1I Costa Mesa; and Ralph s. ment of 3S -. ti a tM ad Js opeeted to be coni- Lefaver of Fountain ValleJ. !Jigh IChoGI ....., tncludlq pJeted In early t•. A new Others are Joseph R. const1't!Ctio~ of a new elvic downtown commerctar , ·11 Louil, Molinda G. Sun· center compla and ·.... W.C developed to c:om- de, Jimmy LambrinOI and plaza with MW ret.a _. ..,._t new CIVic Center Frederick Holmes of Hlin· commercial fedllth&. • ti.ngton Beach; Gary D. To fin_,. lie a1 .au. )blllcoat ·of Irvine; Richard clvic center lll'OJeet. tu.,._ L Gaguebin of Miasion Vie-bonda •ere fasuld throup a Ne1rfy _ ••..Y•• ree4t tM jo; and' Lynne G. Pendleton DODpnlt .,...... cm-DAILY NOT, ........ lllWl- ad Roy D. Woodruff of tlstln& ti lie 1 ea 41 a I ,.,_ ,_ tfle F.IMil"' °'•• lftwport Beach. Haynrd lM•' 1m-.. Tllil Cwt. PENETRATION .. ..... 11111 Ml PAll-SlllS 10U111 mAITID ue. u1• NOW SlP, .. 1WEED PAIT S1ITS ... NowS1599· $11.lt a....•~·· s•art Slew ....... .., ....... _ . ., ..... ..... '••on .. -ITOCI ' ... '° llUI Mn ......, ... IHI WAUI · MCI 10 ICltOOL WIATHD ........ • .. -NOW- $4~ &. s500 & UP "ALL AT UNIELEYAILE SAVINGS" PANT MBSIS ALL BDUCID MANY MOK SU11'181 SAYIHS -smt1• IS mJmN• SYLVIA'S -~ CHARGE ~ 10·0 s IACI Of THI MAU. JIM HMIOI aYD. COSTA MESA 146-2462 STEREO . L.P. 53.29 MONO·S 51.77 . , SA RDAY ONLY Music mid A.pPliance .SHOPPING CENTER (In TH Mal) 2300 HBIOR BLVD • • M . '"""' .... .. ... ••d ... DAIL.Tc .... _, Some Reforms,. Not Many, at C~~vention MIAMI BEAt"ll RJPQ -........... pMded and ..._. .... -....., The deieptM wtl ....,. lan9 .. ~· then will ..-. t11eJ Ml 119 a ""ell lllOl"t hip NOm, th i bl lea mDllng on the floor; wW ooa....._ m llJI ,....,. will .... -... .................... ....... .,.... ........ outlldera to,.... SU.... "'" ....... ., .... hall to wtaoop It up ..... .......... u ... .. /. nomlutlw. ,,.._ ... I I IM .......... ... ............... demonlb'atioal will be leu fewtr .....,actlom on the call"~ wlH" 11111. 17ntbetic and rece tr-* ...,._: hopefully aborter s.ne fll ...._ .... wlll ldeatificaUon1tamp1wtl ••t ••re g e nuine be bellilM 1111111 tlll,..._ .... • fnel12t11:1. A be ued to bar p.te crash· ~ far '' tb • camera ........ JrG11t tf t11e wWt tlcDt, .. Mil .a, era. man who • • .'' rtlarm flMWWee THRiii _. a. :'ad1.,s ....,, •r1a._. "'C•n• ,.. ...... _. ... _ dll'MNtLIMJ ,.. .... en'«•. - I. '1beM are a few ol the ADcl liat will be about all ape m'• 1111r-. Tll• wlllda ' ea be .. ..., ebaqel Rep..._· are Tbe GOP nform com· Dltlr•b coatP'**' ta ...... • ........._ 1l&llt - making eo they cm canduct mlttee wu in favor ol a would burt tllllr br•= wtll lftt'kl9 .............. J~ t COMMERCE . SEAT .BELT .QINIC their national OODftlldoa Umltecl amount ol dignity, ol 1he conventlaa. 'Ille · . Pald prctwlNWl ...... bar• Aug. 5-8 ·''with the heretolore a r.Uvely UD· remaiu. ; ID ....., will ,.,._,. .. Ja1gbelt degree of decorum tamutar i n g,r e die n t at .,._ tn tbe put, _..... Giii '*". • ._....,_. aD(l dj.gnity.•• political conventions. But it will be glv•,..... ...... -~ ......... 1'bat WM . .. IOal of • . aaid that lf ''stripped of ill teniew de,.._. oa ... flrc:e . •'• n111 md eon'flllltlioo r 1 form com· 1Utter," a natiOnal COD· floor, The relcnl com• •efqh~ ..-. ~ ..... mittee ..... ..., two years veotloa "could well be ln· mMtee bad w.med......., will be tanilbecl bJ a ago, aftmo former President credtblJ unlntetestbtg and tt talt to ...,.._ oa1J .a. ,,.,... firm .., MpefalJJ, ,I • I I :1NSTAU ATION FREE SATURDAY, 8-5 Dw1&ht D. EfM!Mwer com· duJL" tile floor. Repmtlrt otm• wlll Mt •. ~-Ja-pLamed al>ollt tbe cbaotil . So lie eomndttee .oaaht a plaioecl thlt IDtentewl •· nu-. II-.· pal(tldw. way 1n whicll polltiClll con-balloc9 ol atamour •d ranged under ·lllCla cam-• Gunia wUI .._ .. i. Jt venttoa1 ,,... nm. deeorum. But Ua recmi-be• ltale u lut __., am tbeilocr II 'Mt,_.. Eiaenboww said there must ........._. weal lbnulll a blgel Th e Repttijcw bJ outaiden du r 1 DI be •better ft1 to nomm.t. Pldod Gl aUritioa la wblch compnmlled ~ cuttial ill ~ hr om- a ~ml a 9'ce prell-,... of Cbt molt clrutlc hell the number of new1 dldatet. It'• been t b • dent and cleeidl ea a state· were a b a n do n e d or floc>r puses to be 'm.d.. , .~.:_Ult ,:r-to11.,.. meat of Pl"1 principles. modifled. NVMBEll a£bUdr.o I ~·!. ~-~~~~:_· ~·~·~·~~~!!!~~!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!~~ ~-ONLY nWblgest_..,.dl . Al a ...... t, 1lle srelarious tbt reducecl DllllilM!r-of delel••• ol wbca Iler• pie aUond • the tloar ... _,, will .not precaat1oua1.:ta1t · splendor •ven thOUCb there cnnen, and • -ii • nile be.... d 1lat oataide dernonetrat«I. . delegatet from h lediDa · To aee to it Ulat . ~on- of the ball rus,.. • f• vmtlon Ucketl are not Uled them OIW' and over tt 1lrtDI Thin will .... • • • • oataklen, dHfenllt ClllncQ thOUl'lmd honorary ..Utant. pillll will be .... tar ••1eantl of WIDI, •· day and ...-will fewer tbu Ja UM. 1a tlle nmoved wben pr1111ttd. a..n. Bat 111 ..... ., .. ,,., M1W lea.ill thl Mil tam ..-- FIELD'S SHOES SIDEWALK WE SPECIALS SAT., JULY 27 _ HARBOR CENTER · ONL~ 2300 HARBOit-llLYD~ Selected HEELS -,,-Selecte~ FLATS VAWES TO VAi.UiS TO $20.00 . $14.00 . •a•• 1 15• I 2 .... •1s.oo 2 PAii '10.00 HARIOR STORE ONLY HMIOI ~RE PNLY . MEN'S FLOISHEll alOES . VALUES TO 116~ . sn.ts HAllOI STOii ...., -~ e llO LAYAWAYS e :• ' 11 :: : ::· ~--...... _ c::: DRISSU ~--· _$IS.• DRESSEi ..... .-.. -··· .. ·--·---$19 •• ----SIDEWALi SPECIAL -------- SKIRTS, CAPIUI, SWIMSUITS '3°' • WHILI INIY WT ......... ' $5.00 .. '7.00 SIORTI ...... ,... $5.00 N8 '7.00 IWIMIUns ........ -...... --$7.00 IWIMIUnS .............. ,.,.. S9.00 SWIMIUITI ... ..,.., ......... -·-.. -...... _ ,12.00 IWIATml ......... ····-····-·-$1.00 ,... '7 M JACKm, INIT TOfl. ILOUIES. nc. -ALL l8UCll Windsor ......... I SS ' f .. ,, ,l 1 l • I J I ' I' i t t I ! I •• i 4-l•!pla....wt .. tfll DAILY PILOT Men in 5ervice ' Lt. Alldlolly J. T.ua. IOD Ottling r • c ~ l v . 4 • ol Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. ~ . o( ' IC ..... 1 a Tolin of 5102 Canlbrkl&•, niartae ~ IDll a U. Westminster, bu b •ta S. Cout Guard-lasDtd third awarded the U. S. Air Force assistant engineer'• ~enM 1ilver pilot wings upon in the Merchant Marine. graduation from Lare d 0 While at .tbt academy, AFB Tex. 'Ille lieutenant ..... . , h been assigned 00 remabl Ostling was on the Dean 1 a:s Laredo foe advanced List for 1:hree semeetert of training in a unit of the Air hia enrollment. OaWne was Training Command. H~ waa &ralluated from Newport commissioned at Louisianra Harbor High School Technological I n s t 1 t u t • - where he received • BS P-v t . Ke a a et II G. degree i n _!nathmeatlcs, n..puu1la. son ol Mrs. 1967. Ethel L. Tbogmartin, 154 Lt. Blake N. Lancastel', son of Mrs. Barbara Locke of 3500'l Camino Cape, Capistrano Beaeh, has been awarded the U. S. Air Force silver pilot wings upon graduation with honors at Vance AFB, Okla~ The lieutenant, who received the Air Training C o m m a n d commander's trophy and academic award, has been assigned to Perrin AFB, Tex., for flying duty with the Aerospace D e f e n s • Command. A graduate of Purdue University, h I received hls commission upon completion of the A FR 0 T C , 1967. The lieutenant's father, Blake N. Lancaster lives in Florida. Sunset Terrace, L a I u n a Beach, bu completed a photography course of th• Army Signal School, Fl Monmouth, N. J. Pvt. Thogmartin's father, Gayle Thogmartin lives in Shreveport, La. Wllllam H. Plllaby, Jr., I ~ n Of William ff. Phlnlzy Sr., of _.. Baylhore Drive, Newport Beach, and of Mrs. Katherine Arnold of Mill Valley, recently completed a U.S. Air Force ROTC fie•d training encampnient a t March AFB', Calli. A graduate of Menlo Park Hifb Sdlool, Cadet Phinhy is a member of t b t AFROTC at UCLA. 2 Geld St•r• i or ltlesan Lt: Cmdr. Francis V. Presenti, right, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Presenti of 390. W. Bay Ave., Costa Mesa, ls pres~nted two Gold Stars in lieu of his tbJrd and fourth Air Medals, by,Capt. Norman K. Mclunis, aboard the USS TiC9nderoga,_ in the Western Pacific. The commander w,_s cited . for heroic conduct while participating in air stnkes against the enemy. \ tack aircraft oarrter USS USNR,. 24, 100 of Carl .constellaUon In 1M Western Volbruck of1980 A.rbor"Ave., Pacific. ,both ol Costa MHa and They are Flremu Ap-Seaman Appren. and Jeffrey prea. Bdly B. Marray, USN, W. Field USN, 21, son of 7.0, aon o( Jack B. Murray of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. Three Orange County men 3081 Collidce Ave. and Field o(.5401 Bruce Cresent Midshipman Micha.el P. are serving aboard the at-Seaman Larry G. Volbntk, Drive, Newport Beach. ~~~~Mr.~~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Stan F. Ostling, 2 6 I 6 21 Aracena Dr., Mission Viejo, • has been graduated from ~ California M a r I t i m e Academy. HARBOR . CENTER .Aa~u Seaman Appren. Mar- faret Lee G r e e n i a, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon F . Greenia of 126 36tb St., New- port Beach, bas been assigned to the Naval Training Center, Bain- bridge, Md. for Data Processing ·school. The Wave graduated from Recruit Training Com- mand, Bainbridge. She attended Orange Coast College and graduated from Newport Beach mp School,. Mfor~· ea- l!riJll the service. · Laclie's CASU~LS · REG. s1 47 $6.99 .• Ladle's & Girl'~ SNEAKERS REG.$1 o· o· $8.99 'I LAD I E'S DRESS SHOES · REG. s1 97· $8.H L .. . .. .. . \ • 1 MEN'S ·sHOES REG. to $17.99 ss.-_s&.~9.91 .. Women 's NYLON HOSE 2 pr. 98¢ HAND BAGS Fresll ·Cut ·CARNATIONS .. i , : -• • ' ..5oc Da· . ' . . 1KIRBY'S HARDWARE-. . . MARIOll SHOPPING C~NTllt -In the Mllll 2300 H1rbor , . · ·Kl t -1300 " ' 2300 .. Hllbor llYd. IN HARBOit CI NTlll SIDEWALK .. SALE .SATURDAY, JULY 'D .COAT or TOPPER LADIES' . $4100 ·£ OFF Gowns&PJ's~:'l.68 ' · LADIES' SHIRS ' ~ 4.00 v .. '3.00 ROBQ -SPECW PURCHASE '2.28 2 For '3 .50 LADIES' PANTIESstc!::7tc2·/ 1.00 LADIES' BRAS LADI~' BLOUSES .... J.80 .... 1.lt 1.68 1.28 & T SHIRTS .... 2.tt 1.88 LADIES' I DRESSES Y& 4.88 UP $11.tl .'GIRLS . - CAPll SETS v.a. J.tt 1.61 Y.a. J.OG 1.68 DllSSIS & SHlm . DIUSIS l SHlm . v.a. 4~" 2.68 ·e USE OUR LAYAWAY e USI YOUR "'ANITA" CHAR81 CHECKING ACTION -Capt.-Robert Hennessey, USMCR; 12. right, of llll iterlin& Ave. COlta Mesa, and Capt. Patrick Hooligan, of La ~ente, discuss report while undergoing two ween of ac- tive duty at Camp Pendlefen. Hennessey ts a fire captain in Orange County. Men in ·Service . , Staff Sgt. JalDfl G . SaHden, son ol Mr. and Mrt. Raymond 0. Saunders of lao'll Hunter L a n • , Westmlnater, received the Air Force Comm4tndation Medal at Hickam AFB, Hawaii. Decorr.ted by Brt1. Gen. Rockly Trl.antafellu, the sergeant waa cited for outstanding profed ionallsm in the performance of bit duties a 1 adminlatrltlve tpeeialiat at Headquarter1, Pacific Air Forces, Hickam. WO J._ Weetl. USAF, IClll 9f Mr. aM Jiln, J ' Olaea ti .. TaDtert AM.r .. I ClllN~a Run•w•y Tr.in • Musicfl R•lll'Md Musical a.n...- I Mickey .... Phone ~White Phone Bowl-A-Strike Bowl-A~trfb Merry.o.llWINI Tinker TMk T.ik1';0.11 , PlaylUfts TAKING TRA IN ING -Lance Cpl .. R. Prevo1t, USMCR, 261 right, of ml ~er St., Costa Mesa, and Lance Cpl W. Bond Of . Lbn& Beach discu11 · next job on two weeks of active duty with Marine .Alt, Base Squadron 48 at Naval :Air station, Los Alamitos. · .... Sale 4.95 J.47 7.95 4.11 4.95 3.49 7.88 5.11 7.88 I.II 4.95 .2.u 2.98 1.11 4.H 2.'7 1.29 1.49 1.88 4.91 8.77 member oi fbe First Marine Division. 12" TRIKE ... SALE S14.88 ..... lit Dumper • WATll • Volley a.II ... 11.tl • .... SH.II IALI 99C •IAu SCJ,• • SWITCH ·'N GO .... su.• SALE 58.49 "' . ONI DAY ONLY IAIUllDA Y, JULY 27th Co•• 1artr Starts 9:JO ~ 2o0 'T§!Mlq~~· STRIPIS e SOLIDS REG. TO $1.00 Saturday' OlilJ $3.81 . . 100 SPORT COAJS PROM OUR llGULAR STOCK , REGULAR TO tlQ.00 · $15111-sir J3ro 100 ASSORTEP SHIRTS. 100 lmER· SPORT SHIRTS DON LOPll-SPORTSMAN-CAl'RI RIGULAR TO $12.00 SaturclaJ. ~ SZ.86 RIGULAR TO pO . ' . 1. Satur~ay Oilly Y PRICI • l . ,, ' 1 l I ! . ' ! f t I r I I I ' I J ~Suppl•_. te .. DAILY PILOT ee11ee r11••i• U Sale ftoo N. HAUOR ;COSTA MISA DKrOn9/Cotton ILOUSES Re9. $5 to $7 prints, IOlids, stripes 'conoN KNIT T·TOPS . SWORTS AND JAMAICAS R-9. $5 to $7 jamaica shorts it' cotton dua and no-preH Koratron femous make IAN·LON SHELLS Reg. $7.00 white, navy, _.,.stets femous makes SWIM suns Reg. $11 to $15 I and 2pc. current styles ' l I I I . . . SUMMER DRESSES Reg. $17 to $21 ~urry-this is final clt1rance s1om• • -.•Nck to ICllool special-- ALL sr!nOOL rms II D CAPllS ' · R99. It J to 11 S.-.Kh . ----------· • New ll•e tor Old· Britlfle 'l1lis 300 foot, 100-ton section of tale center 1pan ol ~San Mateo Bridie across tiM low• tDd ol San Franciao Bay ia being floeted from ti. other' four spans. Murphy Pactflc Oorp. has purchased the eil- Utt 3,300-ton bridge and baa spent $17,000 in engi- neeriol coatl alone with a 1avings to the state of IOllle '300,000. Planl are being made to put the brict&e up tor aale. · . TAPE CARTRIDGES s . 4 TiACK RetJ. $5.98 ......... '4.79 8 TRACK RetJ. $6.91 ......... ~5179 TIJUANA lltASS -MANTOVMO -Cit~ -oouat-lltOH IUTTEltFLY -GLEN CAMN•LL -OUN MAHIN -llMATU -MAllY ... .. WALKIE TALKIES .... ,. .................. Z ........ $16.95 EAR PLUGS .... 79c e LAPEL MIKES .... $1.25 B.ECTRIC TAPE 80c SAPPHIRE NEEDLES "'....,,..... ...................... 9'c DIAMOND NEEDLES,.,....,,..... ...........•. : ...... $2.95 ,...... 545.ftOO 2300 He ....... aw. C...MeM ~.· ..... -.. ....... 147.fl48 Monkey~ Do . I Better Than People Do \ Monkeys out.do humM1s as • parenti bec&111e they are lest pennlMlve wittl their young, Phyllts Jay, a UC B e r k e 1 e y anthropologist . say1, Sbe userta that more monte19 1Dan bumam grow up to be 1ucce11ful adulta. Studying mookeJ' tribes in · India, she found tDem to be very comervative IOcieUea wiUi IU rolel tel in lniancJ and not muob deviation .Uowed. lldut m~ who devi.Me in the ~t from bebavi« 8dult. si'efer are ilnmediatet1 ltruct or bl~ ten, she said. As a consequence, monke1 wane. leana much better Ulm bUQ>.aD cbiklreo to IOclaH1.e agnaioo. Dr. .Jay NW b ab 1 monkeya dewlop m.,.... by ~ IUdl IOClal maneuvert i11 tbneteaJnc, blllfhe MCI llvinl i ll gracemn, to euperiol' force. She llicl ._. .. Jun ..., tbinp kiDder ..... cbOdtta have to leanl. IEST . Tiie DAILY PILOT' ....,_ .. ,... .f ttie M.t '9etwt1, Ill, Mtul l4fn'ef ef ,...,... ........ .. '9"J ... .,.,. ............ I . . . .. ~~~!!!..._.!•!l!•!!Pll!!-~-~ 19 ... DAILY INLOT~ ~~ UC Stlldying Sa~ples .of-Ocean ~ottOm - # ~ • ' ••t--ii .. oriCla iD1 tbia ,.W. t • e apecltD1 llullt laboraterlll Oat •dee tit a IBM S _. ..... t .a ti the Olalleqer wlll pat mt. pmt of Dr. Ra aD4 ~ teaa, II fll'Dil'dlr, .. tD be II· .............. AtlaD-ud the ea I.mp l •I tlae7 will ... ...,... .... • .. • ....... tie aad hclle, llMl to al9ou:d will bl flows ti Dr. Ra ,Md the meMn es 111 ,_ ·111 W.-. ~ h .... .. _Rl_venWe __ • _,,.. __ ._ .. _ .. __ .,_ .. _Pro_1ect, __ wU1_11U1111_~•-•_k·_.,_ •• _ ..... __ ....,... ____ . , . New Pr-oject'at ·uc: . Eyes Auto Fatalities · tbl U. S. Departmen~ of 'l'nBlpertation. Tiie demomtratm, .. be wtddl IDdUltriall7 importallt miDln1 depolita uilt In tbe ocea floor. la Mdltion, if lt sbOuld dnalop tbat mineral dlpol6tl If adltanUal value d9 mat ID the ocean II~. ae f1U11t18n of oceanic so~ wtl1 a11vm• lreab siplflcoce. ae...-tf the ocean bot- • wUl ... analylled ,. 11111" mliMnl ccmteat.'h M4rdr9 tllllt segments--.aw ..,. -requires a IPfdd1 R1lt ablp ud •••• estrem•IJ s it Wkated drilllnl equip- meat. ClllnmtlJ. • 10,500-tAmt .. .,..... dDll shop - 1.()8 ANGELES -If can- Umdal ..... , acddlatl .. mmtalale. what ..... belt a.,;: aavlq the lives of ~ Ylctlmlf WoaJd belle"*'' be more ef. fedlft thin .... IDI· lMMMel? 8bould ...... of the victim'• lnjurlet and condlUoD be performecl ID the llll"11anct and tbe reaultl rlldioecl abead to the hospital? carried out dll t • • ~ofdtJ ....... agendet, wUl IDdlcate tlll importaee ot ....... ton ID luceeafld NleUI bJ emer1n~ ••6'J aervicel, blel I di&reat kinda of eqalpmalt llld pro- cedurel. Glomlr Cllllllqtt ls et .- • • .., ....... cndle. If .......... . tbe cu.-.. meetl full . These and almllar llfe--aav- lnl questleu wm • tbl 01>-- ject of a DIW •·• survey uadertaken by retearcbers In UCLA's Wtltml Manate- ment Science Imtltute. Tbe tbree-y.11' p-oject ln- .c>lYlnl demollltratlona of •arloal l'tlCUI tr,lndqau, will be bMdecl by Dr. Eugene P. Dwbln, ualatant proft•ar of )wfre• ad- minlltraUon, and funded bJ ''Once ft ...,._.bow the Yarlom MDf DI llitl of traffle ICCldeat r • 1 e • • ma• to% .a., ce-P\lilDI ........ tell Ill how lltertq ..... fletolo <aucb u tlll aamblr ti am: ln"tteet nallallle, o f" wbetber a .doeW ii II the ambalaace dm1al ,.U ac- ddeDt lloarl) will cllaqe the pletare," Dr. Da:rbln points, out. pll'fcnlaDOI nqulrementa. Mlbla1 deep .. eorin1 ~ .. ilttobella bl tb1 Galf ol llezico aest ....... To falftD tbe nquiremeata ol tbe projld, IClllle 50a bolel will have to be drilled 1D the 8oor ol tbe A~ and PacWc Oceanl' C1Ui11. Ill tbe ant eilbtlen DIGDdll. 'lbll dr1Dlq wfll taU place 1D --deptbt NDCilll frclm 5,000 to 20.• feet, WW. drill Mt ptuetratioa of up .. l,IOI feet blto the awt 61 the eertll. At periodic -...is 41111'· im;ire Silt SloNd HARBOR CENTIR 2300 Harbor Blvd.. Costa Mesa JULY 27th S.IDEWALK Rllnnant ·Sale! ' I'' , I ._ ..__ &;I . REMNANTS 50°/o OFF All -UllllE llll61HS -1 .. 5 , ... ~~ WOMIN'I . COLOllD llllALS • I Allsa. 1 1° 53.77 . WOMEN'S Fl.ATS .. LmLE HIELS .CASUALS. Si.00 WOMIWS HEELS .......... s~oo •IAI. TAILE • . r • s • . I S.....,_nt te the. DAILY PILOT Mj 21,, 1NI 'fo GR~AT At • • • VALU~SI . . I "YOUNGLAND_"· I SATURDAY, JULY 27ih,' ONLY , v .. _ __;..__ __ .... . SIDE WA l .K SA l E 9:30·6 P.M. INFANT: T-SHIRT 100 For Boys & Glrl1 Reg. $4 BOYS T-SHIRTS BOYS . PANTS 1• Pomou• M.ko 111 Penna-Pros• BOYS ' PANTS . & Up Reg. $4 3-6.x Reg. 3. 99 288 Perma-Pres1 7-16 Reg. 4.99 BOYS BOYS BOYS · · ·BERMUDAS ., BERMUDAS SPORT SHIRT!· ••• 238 No-Iron 2 Ux R.,. $4 7·16 1 & Short s·a..v .. · No-Iron Up: Plaid1 & Reg. 4 ' Solidi • Reg. $4 . . . GIRLS 3-Piece · ·GIRl.:S Nat'I. Brands GIRLS SWIMWW SWIMWEAR 3• 2·Pc. Bathint 1 • · 1 00 1, ._ 11-Sult with All Colors 100,-. c..... \ & Up Matchl"I , It Up & SI-. la Up Vil. to $3 Shift. Val. to $1 · Val. to $10 ·" GIRLS " CAPRIS GIRLS DRESSES GIRLS SHfTS 2119}::f 1 • ~~ • to$12 2· 4• . / . 188 .. ltrt .. c:.ttM l y P_.._. 288 V11.· to $7 3• INFANTS DIAPfl SETS INP:ANTS ·3·Plece 1111.sm GIRLS Stretch 111Tlf llCI 2~1 Iv~ •t $4 1 ao_ R$1. ' . YOUNGLAND ZJOI um KVD., COSTA MBA (Hamor Celter) 5'5-1441 . ~ "' ..... , ............. DRW SHIRTS Gant·Sero-Manhatt1n Val. to $9 19!1 . SllMt ....... SPORT "SHIRTS . Val. to $9 1· PANTS Not All Si~s ~al. $1 SLIPPERS Not All Si1e1 Val. to $14 IOITONIAN-TAYLOI Ill.Ml SHOES Broken llJM Vil. to $36 . ·.411 . u .. Yeur ltnkAmerlard -Meetw Cherta-er Chntr(1 c-. ~·--..... ---==-------------------...--~~~~~~~--Iii-I