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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-08-06 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• I Costa ·-Mesa ·council Fe·stival: Pop Anarchists? Screaming,_ DAILY PILOT TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUSt 6, :1968 10' Fa~es in (;rowd U~IT1 .......... GROWING CAST -Personalities 11starring'1 in the big Republican circus at Miami Beach are on the increase as convention nears climactic peak. Ex-President Dwight Eisenhower (upper left) talked to delegates via taped message from his suite at Walter Reed Hospi- tal Monday before suffering another heart attack today. California Gov. Ronald Reagan (upper right) enjoys hearty laugh at his Miami headquarters after announcing he is, indeed. a for-real candidate. Richard ~ixon (lower left), front-running candidate for nomination. makes point -with emphasis -that· he'll pick his running mate and former Sen. Barry Goldwater (lower tight) borrows hippies' .sign of peace for what is almost incredible pose for convention-cov- ering news photographers. Rocky, Reagan Chip At Nixon's Delegate Lead MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Rlcl>ard l\'f. Nixon's delegate strength &lipped slig!ltly today as Nelson A. Rockefeller and Ronald Reagan hq1ped from hOtel to hotel trying to lure l!Nfay his sup- porters. The latest UPI delegate count show· ed Nixon witti six fewer delegates than Atonday, but still within a dozen of vote-$ ol a first ball~ ictory for the Re-publican presidential nomination Wednesday night. \Vith 667 votes required for nomin.a· lion at the GOP convention, a UPI delegate tabul.a'tion shciwed Nl'.lOfl with 657 votes. with 277 committed aM 380 leaning. Rockefeller had 278; including 153 committed and 125 Jeeners; Reagan hod 191, including 93 c<tn· mtUed and 98 leaning; favorite sons had 180 and 'r1 remained W>commltted. Nixon, tanned and rested. remained confident of Victory. He held court throoghout the morning at the swank HUoon Plaia Hotel for all of the delegatioos to the convenUon and talk· cd with new$men of what he planned "' dO efter winning Ille nomlnalion - """ f'Vf'n flffrr winnlnJ t~ fm'~'*"f"Y, ~~--- Rockl!feller and Reagan, meanwhile, traveled from hotel t.o hotel aloog the bea¢1 front in hot, hwnid Miami Beed!. trying to -.w enough votes Crom ,Nixon to deny him an early vie· tory. RockeCe1ler's strategists insi.sted Nixon could not win on tile Clrst ballot and the New York governor saKI he felt he had a fighting chance at the nomination. Reagan also expressed oon!ideoce that Nixon would not "'in on the initial ballot. Nixon's total in the UPI tabulat.lon d.lpped with reported losses of three leaai.ng votes in Uhe Washington delegation. two in North Carolina and one in Oklahoma. Gov. Dan Evans ol Washington en- dorsed Rockefeller today and took on<i other vote with him into tbe New Yorker's column. Reagan also lured a vote away from the Washington delegation. In North Carolina, Rep. James Gardner endorsed Reagan bringing with him nine others-the California iOVNnor'• lan1<•t 2•in In M>.Y Gil• ,c,. .. rnWP.NTfnN. p ,. ..... tl 3 Drug-cr-azed -' Reagan Step.s Up Action To Gain, New Dt(legates Slates Meeting .With 10 States For 290 Votes MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Gov. Ron· ald Reagan, answering the clarion call of candidacy, today accelerated his two-Oay official campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. "As oC now I am a candidate at this convention." the CaUCornia governor told a hastily called news conference Monday. He decided not to wait until his name was put into nomination at the convention when his own delega- ti on "came out of the clear blue sky" and urged him to clarily his position. He scheduled meetings today with delegations from 10 states. whose 290 votes would bring his total to 29 dele- gations with 608 votes. He apoeared relieved to have shed the complicated fa vorite-son role he had planned to inaintain for another 48 liours. "It was getting a little diffi cult to PXpl8in why 1 would be a candidate on \Vednesday night but not before." he said. ,,.. Reagan was peeved at speculation that his surprise announcement was part of a preconceived nlan. He said the urgent appeal of the California delegation was as much a surprise to him as to anvone else. The first he.heard of it, Rerol!an sairl. was when former Sen. \Vi\liam F. Knowland told him of the plan inst before it was presented to the dele· gallon. A resolution urging Rea~an to run openly for the nomination was adopted at a closed door caucu.~ while the C',atifurnia governor was anpearin~ be· fore another delegation. Thf> decision was announced by Knowland to news· men. "The members of the California fa- vorite son d~le11ation do urge Gov. Reagan to declare his active c3ndi· dacy for the Republican presidential nomination." th.e resolution said. CAREER CORNER YOUR WAY OUT F. J, LAIN 1( your career has you in a corner "Ca- reer Corner" is your way out. The new feature, written by professional guid· ance counselor F. J. Laln. becomes a re&ular weekly fea- ture of tM DAILY P I L 0 T starting \Yednesday. * * * ·* * * Nu1nhers Game Wires Far Apart on Vote Counts Here are the tabulations of convention votes as compiled to.. day by United Press International and The Associated Press. Take your choice: MlAM! BEACH (UPI) -This is the latest UPI tabulation of the delegates at the Republican National Convention: Nixon -663, including 277 committed and 386 leaning votes. Rockefeller -276, including 151 committed and 125 leaning. Reagan -179, including 93 committed and 86 leaning votes. Favorite sons -180. Uncommitted -35. Needed to nominate -667. • MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Herc is the standing of Republican presidential nomination candidates this morning in an Associated Press tabulation of publicly committed first-baUot votes : Nixon 001; Rockefeller 252 ; Reagan 170 ; Favorite sons 195; Others 1 Lindsay; Uncommitted 114. Needed . to .nominate .667 ............ . Mesa Cou11cil Declares Newport Festival Finis Dy ARTHUR R VINSEL 01 IM 0•111 Pll91 Stiff U you missed the Newport Pop r~eslival -nominally associated with the beach town instead of its host city, to Costa· Mesa's eternal credit ac· cording to some -you missed the op- portunity of a lifelime. Mesa city councilmen, meeting \Vithin a stone's throw of the devastated festival site on the Orange County Fair ground.1.. Monday night Issued a dark prospectus for a 1969 repetition ol the weekend's gigantic affair. "As far as I'm concerned, we will not have a repeat or this thing again." declared Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, in· troducing d.lscussion of the big event which drew more than 100,000 persons to the city. ''1t Wi.-S named the Newparl Pop Festival, or jazz festival. or wha~ve.r it was." Ule mayor .tidded. "but fortunately for our good neighbor• to the aoutb, they had nothlna to do with it." "We had bot weather, an explosive situation ... professional a'1tator1 out there agitatin&.'' Mayor Pmkley COfl· tlnued, noting that he watched tbe frstlval from the police facility roof. The mayor also hinted that only -9eeo. implllcallte d!Jdplint amon1 the ~ "' 1,riwmfl!n riftlnl!' h"1'l1 Snnl111v prevented an emotional eruption of screaming, drug-crazed tnarchy at the fairgrounds. "We lived through ll by the grace of God and cool policemen," he declared. .. They were a bunch of anim·als." he added. obviously broadening his &cope of reference beyand Ertc Burdon's group or the same name. which ap· peared at the fesUval. "Our mefl took the illsulll without striking ~k. which would have sparked a riot and charges of police brutality," be added, noting that next year Costa Mesa will have legal pro- tection frofY!. another fed!val. He said motlon pictures were taken. apparently 11:h0Wing many incident• and the mood or the crowd, which wa s rour ·umes larger lhan an y pmllmloary eR\mate by poUce or pro- moters or Ule huge gathering, The mayor also praJsed cooperation by police and lawmen from seven area clUe1, plu1 the CalllonUa Highway l>atrot Uld Orange County Sheriffs Department wblcb responded to re· questJ !or help SUJlday. lie 'said wltti:ltr l'h: h01,1r1 aiter the clOM Of the music resUvat •. only two cars were left on the CaJrgraur.ds. "I P6Ct they were either ID· (. f>Op FF:S'l"TVAT,, Pflif~ t) . . * * * Ike Suffers Possible New Heart Attack WASHINGTON ( AP)-Former Pres- ident Dwight D. Eisenhower suffered chest pains indicating a possible new heart attack early today, less than 12 hours after addressing the Republican National Convention from his hospital suite. It would be the 77-year-old former presiden\fs' thit;d heart attSick this year-and his sixth in 13 years. Walter R.eed Army Hospital reported that Eisenhower. surfered chest paina at 6:15-a.m. EDT. It said preUrnipary indlcati.ons were that the attack repre. sents another myocardial infar:ction. JUs condition · was stable when the hospital announcement was made 1t 10 a.m. The hospital bulletin said also that Eisehower was then · comfottable and free of pain, ' Further bulletins will ~·issued as Indicated, the hospital said without fixing any time. ' A myocardial infarcUon, a farm of heart attack. produces an area of damage to the m:voc'\fdium or heart muscle as a result of either total or partial blockage or one of the br1nch· es of the coronary arterif>S which ordi· narilv supply o:s:ygennted blood to the heart. Orange Coat 1 Weatlatt Ir you liked yesterday's weath- er, you 'll love tomOrtow's, since ,there's riot muCh change in view ~loudy mornings and the sun peeking out about 11oon with the mercury in ttie mJd·70's. INSIDE TODAY E.ramples of tht dt 11io1(.3 ma- nettvtring /or dtltgate1 vottt a& tht Republican National Con- . vcntion art deiCTibed on Page · 13 todaw. " " M .. • " t1-I• IS.If 1•11 J • .. . • ,, DAil Y PILOT Tuesday, AUfUSl 6, 1968 • ------------- Rocky Declares Nixon .Stopped on First Ballot MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Gov. ?l•lson A. Rockefeller'o p o ll ti c a 1 managers clalmed f<>doy Rlcbard. M. ~on deflnit.ly has been sblpped ~ a llr&t ballot nomination lit tile ~!lean national convenUcio. Roclr.efelltt'a men made the predlc· lk>a Hrly thll moffting after a lengthy ...,.I ,....I'll <a IDo .aovernor'1-botel illlte. 'Ibo cooleteoce· ...,.. called IA> di!cuBs the &c:lr.efeUer ocganizatioo's ""°"'· p .. ., l !CONVENTION •• l I t 11.a\e llinoe anllOllDCinl bis formal can· clidacy Mooday. 1 'Re&f&D. also 1picked up a single delegato in Oklahoma. 1be convention itself w a& in recess until tonight at 8, but word spread quickly througb Miami Beach today toot former President Dwight D. Eiselibower had suffered another heart attack in Washington. Delegates and pre6identiaf hOpefuls alike were saddened at the news or the attack -which came only hours alter bhe 7'1-year.Old general had addressed ttle convention from Watte!' Reed Anny Hosplta!. Rockefeller's ctunprugn received a shot io ttbe arm when E~s. the con- vention keynoter, endorsed h i m . Evans had been believed leaning to ~ixon although Herbert G .. Klein, Nix- 'n's nress secretary, said the an- r ted" iouneement was "not unexpec . The Rockefeller camp was con- :eding nothing. After a strat~gy :ession that lasted intn earlf mornu:g ;ours, tap Rockefeller advisers said .'lixon was "definitely stopped" on the .irst ballot. Some or Rockefeller's supporters began to worry that Reagan nitller than Rockefeller m.lght pick up the marbles li . tbe st!>P • Nixon 1drivt! did succeed. Some New York delegates pledged to Rockefeller told newsmen they would tihrow ti:ieir . vot~s 00 Nixon and insure his nominrati'Oll if they saw any ctiance that t!be end rewlt or the Rockefeller-Reagan coalition st:at~gy might be nomination of the Callfor1.11 governor. Reagan formally anooonced himsel a candidate Monday -two da')'S ahe~d of ecbedule -in an effort to ohip ;tW8.'J delepte support b'OD1 Nixon before it w.as too late. Nixon, who did not arrive in the .con- ventiOn city ootil Monday mgtit, received his good news for the day W,hen Gov. Spiro T. Agn~w of MarylaDd withdrew u a rawr1te son eaodk!ate and endorsed Nixon. 'l'1lis decision was expected IA> put 16, poK!bly IT of Marykmd's 26 votes in Nixon's column and the balance in Rockefeller's. Gov. David Oargo or New Mexico t.Otd newsmen that "in '811 lilcelihoOd" he would come out for Nixon at a caucus of his delegation late todtay. Gov-s. James A. Rhodes of Ohio and George Romney d Micl\tgan, tfie two favorite sons with the largest blocs Of delegates, showed no sign of joining Agnew end releasing their delegates. 11-. 11-11- So Much for That 4-year Contract SACRAMENTO (AP) -On Nov. 21, i966 Ronaid Reagan said: "1 have a four:year contract with the people of California." And he pledged -"God willing" -to serve it. On Monday in Miami Beach, Fla., he r.ai.d: "As O{ this moment •.• I am a candidate before this convection" for Republican presidential nomination. With the sudden but not really aurpri!:lng statement, the Caillornia governor changed tbe 1trategy of his undeclared gearcb · tor the nation's highest office. For months Reagan bas maintained, "I am not a candidate." But sometimes he qualified the statement by saying, "I am not an announced candidate," or "I am not a decland candidate." DAILY PILOT Newpert lfftlli Co1ta Mn. H•fltlllftOll ltocll lo1111e IHC91 WnttnlMter fo•1t.l11 V•lley CAUPOINIA OllAHOE COAST t"Uat!SHING COMPJ,HY Rob11I N. W11d l"resjdent 11\d Putili~hft" J1~k R. Cv1!1y Vitt Preldeftl •NI G.,..,..11 ~Nf'r Tho19111 1C11vil ..... Thomt1 A. Murph;,... Mtt1atln1 Eanor P1ul Nlu111 Aclwrtit!,._ DlrKI« ,,_ ....... C.fl ,,,_, XIO W•I .. , Strllt .. ..,.,, aMCtlt nu w .. , atlboo ew .... ,n1 ....,,,. ia.ctt1 m ,_, """"" ~ IHCb: ""' '"''""' latest private poll or delegat ... Sen. OharJes Percy of Illlnois, a member of tale 15-man Rockefeller team, told ne\Wimen after the ~sion: '4Nixou is definitely stopped on the first ballot." Gw. Shafer of Pennsylv.ania said the sum o{ ttie meeting w.as that a llockeleller victory ;, in &iii>~ Som·e <t the governor's advisers, however. expressed con<:ern by the I nwnber-o:c votes slipping frOm Nix.On t-o Gov. Ronald Reagan of Oalifornia. 'Ibey thought the Reagan upourge migllt get 'out or hand, Meanwhlle, Nixon 1lalked confidently today o( what he planned lo do - Winning the nominatiOn. The Conner vice president sajd that the dloi.ce. of ~ va prelidieotifd can· dldate HwUJ be one I will make'' ra1ber than leaving it up to the RepUbtioan convention if he receives the the presidential nomtnatlon. At an early morning new, oon· Cerence, Nixon left no doubt that he wHl make his own selectlOa instead or submitting a list of"name1 to the con- ventiqn. kl9tead1 he $'lid, GOP leaders could submit a list or names to him. "I have not made a decifilon and will not molte it lllllil after 1lho nomiJ>ating ' procesa ls complete," Ni.xoo said. Par- ty leaders, he said, "can submit names to me." "The decision will be on-e l will make after <:oosultation. ·~ Nixon said he would e.nnouoce hit!: cborice Thurs· da:f -the morning after the ·presiden- tial nominating proce<ha<. However, a key itrateg:l:it for Rockefeller claimed that the • first ballot strength of Nixon has dwindled lo 615 vole• -~ tl!On 160. -of the number needed for ncminaUon. 'lbe figure was given by Lt. Gov. Malcolm Wllsoo whlle Nixon was mal<· ing personal claim that he had seen no sig&s ol erosion in the solid bloc ot votes which made him the heavy fawrite to win Ute GOP presidential nomin.atioo. Rocke~lle.r bimsell bad previously cfedited Nlxoh with 500 lint ballot delegates, but Wilson said a new, "bird noae" c<>Ullt taken this morning gave Nixon only 515, whi<:b would mean a slippage or 45 votes. Barge Gun Crews Blast Red Bands SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. Marine artillery mounted on anchored river barges caught three bands of Com- munists on the move at dusk Monday south or the allied base at Da Nang and killed 41 gueJTillas, American spokesmen said today. Alerted by hidden Marine "spot· ters," the 105mm and 155mm gun crews blasted the li.nes of Communists moving through the An Hoa Valley, an old Viet Coog ruaeout 20 miles south of the Leatherneck and Air Force base at Da Nang. bombed Communist staging are-a s 60 miles northwest of Saigon near Cam- bodia and hit Jong-time guerrilla redoubts in the northern provinces, the communique said. Their mission -head off the Communist offensive. Police Seeking Three Missing Santa Ana Girls WATTS 'WAR' SCENE -Body of one man killed in first of two "shootouts" with Los Angeles police in past two days lies shrouded (foreground) here on UPIT..._.. concrete apron of service station at which Monday's incident occurred. Other battle broke out this mom~ ing at Will Rogers Park in Watts area, Los Angelts. Spokesmen said they killed 25 guer· rillas of one fiO.man unit and ainother 16 from two smaH.er Communist bands nearby, Tb.ere were no Marine casualtie$; ttiey said. The An Hoa Valley is the focU point of the Commwtlst.s' buildup threaten- ing Da Nang and the co&1al 1owlmlds about 350 miles north of Saigon. 'l'1le guerrillas sprang a series of ambushes and launched a wave of shellings from the AD Hoa base l:ast week. Police are seeking a trio of teen-ag. ed Santa Ana girls who disappeared Sunday after calling for a ride home from the Newport Pop Festival, which drew more than 100,000 persons to Costa Me$a. Froan Page J FESTIVAL ..• leratlve or the owners were off on a jip somewhere," he said Councilman William L. St. Clair joined in praise of police hanldjng or he monwnental crowd, in 'vhich marj- juana and other drugs f r e e I y circulated among those elements which choose to use them. . "So many people have asked me why we let them in," St. Clair said, "but this all started with the F air Board." · .. In all fairness," noted Councilman Robert M. Wilson, "no one knew what was going to happen." "For years we've talked about the cultural events which could come to the fairgrounds if proper developmen~ took place. This happened and we survived -so now we can plan for the d:ay of legitimate attractions ," Wilson said. POLICE LAUDED He also p<alsed police in handling of the crowd and for kinowing how far to go and then stopping to avoid an in· cident which could inflame some of the visitors. Councilman George A. Tucker was careful to point out that many persons who visited the fairgroWlds were orderly, calm fan s of the popular music offer\(1 by top names in the field which were present over the weekend. "There were a lot of people in town -not all of them what we would con· sider hippies -and I don't think we should even consider that the city was 'overrun' by hippies," he said. "Let's be careful about those labels,'' he added. • Pollot Chief Roger Neth also spoke briefly, repeating prior statem&nts about the gigantic problem of policing the aowd arid pralsing the way the ta!k force or lawmen cOnducted themselves. "I'm damn proud or my men and all the rest of the offjcers out there," he said, "I'm mighty proud to be their boss." The chief plans a debriefing session for the Pop Festiva1 Wednesday, at wh ich time he and top administrative officers will begin compiling a study of what the total police work cost $36.000 TAB? Mayor Pinkley said during the City Council session Monday that cost to surrounding agencies could run as high as $30,000 in ma.tlhours and equip- ment service. Co·producers o( the Ne\vport Pop Festival. Wesco Productions and Scenic Sound Inc.. were requirtd to pay off-duty policemen recruited for security duty on the grounds, as well as private officers. Total cost of this police program soared Sunday, howtver, when ad· dilional reinforcements were required to guard againtit any outbreaks, such a1 the brief seizure of a nearby market. Cleanup crews were still on the job today. loading up tons of retuse and Utter from tbe dusty festival site and 1UZTOunding mu, while Co11t.a Mua police were hOkUns a stack ot lost Items such a1 Jackets, eyeglasses, sleeping baga and other belonglags. Only seven arrtftl were logged by officers at the C:Osta Mesa Police FacWty, although tbe number In 1ur· rounding commw9Ue1. due to ttaUir stops aod the Utt, •U far above normal, due to tbe Cettival. Hopwood YR Speaker John Hopwood, admlnli1r1tl"8 -. tan! lo Assemblyman Robert E. Bad· ham (R-Newpott Beach), ..UI be the speaker at tonl pt'• .-tlnl o( Or· ance County Young Republicans set for a p.m. In tbe Butro Room ot th• NNporW Im. . \ FourW'oundedinSecond Moving to head off another Com· munist bui:ldup, 10,000 tll'ooper6 or the lOlst Air Cavalry D!vision kicked off a new offeMive along the Oriental River 25 miles northwest of Saigon on Mon· day, spakesmen said. Cecilia Montoya, 15, her sister Theresa, 12, both of 702 Goldenwest St., and Janne Castro, 14, of 2114 s. Artesia St., telephoned Mrs. Mary Montoya about 10 p.m., to be picked up. Shooting in Los Angeles With B52 bombers blasting their targeit urea before the assault, the Americans stormed in a b o a r d helicoi:ters against light resistance. Two U.S. soldiers were killed and two wounded in the earJy going, with no significant lighting ~· Just about that time, several hun· dred fans milling about the Or:ange County Fairgrounds area w e r e dispersed by club-carrying lawmen as they corilmandeered a Tic Toe Market at Del Mar A venue and Newport Boulevard. From 'Vire Services LOS ANGELES -At least four per. sons in a crowd of more than 500 at the Watts Summer Festival in Will Rogers Park were wounded today by men firin g from moving cars. Deputy Sheriff Curtis Ratzlaff said the vjctims and their assailants were Negroes. He said there was no appar- ent link to a gunfi.e:ht Monday in which two wounded policemen shot three Negro assailants to death at a service station in the Crenshaw district about eight miles from Watts. FAMILY QUARREL Sherifrs officers said a "family quanel" apparently triggered the gun· fire in the park where Mayor Sam Yorty Monday officially opened the third annual Watts Summer Festival. Ratzlaff said several persons in the crowd fired back at the car s as they sped away but that none Of the pas. sengers was known to have been hit. He· said there was no exolanation wh y persons in the crowd were armed. The victims were identified 11s Jerry \Vat.son, 19. Bobby EnhriAm, 'rl, Jerry Darrough. 18, and Ruby Daniel. 19. Allthorities saJd other persons may have been wounded and taken from the scene by friends. Ambulances were not allowed into the area without a police ~Cort. 8 DIVISIONS ALERTED Eight police dJvlslons were briefly placed on tactical alert after today's incident at Will Rogers Park. A Jlirge semient of the crowd briefly pelted deputies with rocks and bottles. None was injured. The deputies with- drew, the barra~e stopped and the crowd dispersed shortly thereafter. A gun battle between police anO fou r Negro :vouths exploded in the Cren- shaw District when a car beinl!' tailed by a squ<1d car pulled into a gas sta- tion Monda.v. The gun battle f'ruptert at the ga~ station after the driver or the car And One Of his three passen)o!erS WflikP:d fO the front of th,. vehicle <'lf1ri lifted the hood . Of{i~rs Norman J . Roberge. 29. and Rudv Limas. 25, p11rkP-d alxlut Jfl feet behind the e11r. walk~ ovtr and l'Jsked to see the license or the driver. TWO OPEN FIRE Suddenly. two person~ In the rear i;cat opened fire on the orficers, wound- ing both of them. Limas mana ged lo empty llis revolver at the suspects as he fell to the ground . The bodies of the dead and wounded were round less than 15 feet apart when reinforcements arrived at the sctne. Two of the Negroes were killed Washington Fire Gains Intensity CHELAN, w .. h. (UPI) -Wind> up to :.> mllt1 pn-hOU:r durtne the night sent the Cooper Mountain forest fire ra41ng out ol cootrol. spreading Jt to ~.000 KTtl and mating It the worst flrt In the blstory o( the Wenatchee Na- tlooal Pcntt, the Forert Sm>lce Hid today. 1be !!rt moved Ill an east·nor1!>east dlre<tloo d-1 the ni&ht and 1pn1a<1 lnlo ntlthbor1n1 Okanogan County from Chelan County. !II°"' than 1.000 men wm batWn1 the blau whl<ll btokt out Saturdo,y Ill timberland ...,. Antaton Lah on Fourth or July C-k. outright and the third died at Central Receiving Hospital a short time later. Limas was reported in serious condi- tion today following four hours of sur- gery to Nmove bullets lodged in his legs. Roberge was i:eported in serious condition with wounds in the groin, right hand and lower chest. Both were expected to survive. WJtnesses saw a fourth suspect run- ning from the service station and more than 100 officers launched a manhunt in the vicinity. Others were stationed on rooftops and at a command post to quell possible violence. However, no incidents occurred. The offensive into the flatland of paddies and tree lines began as U.S. inteHigence stdd the immediate threat of a Communist offensive against Salgon bad eased. "The evidence is overwhelmnig, however, that there will be a massive attack sooner err later,'' they said, in· dicating it woold p<Obably occur before October. _,J'en waves of B52 StratolortreMes Mrs. Montoya told Sant.a Ana Police Detective Jim Davis the girls bad call- ed her from that loca~on, but were nowhere to be found when she arrived. Investigators have questloned a Los Alamitos teen-ager who said he left the Montoya sisters and the Castro girl about 7 p.m. t,o return home. Police -who are watching f<:e the girjs, thr()jlg)l~ut Orange Coun~ !-satd· the MotiUiya sisters took.ra bUs to the Pop Festival Sunday moriling and an older sister drove the Castro girl to the Fairgrounds. '"'I 11·1·-=:• has it! 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Dally Paper YOC. ,r, NO. ·1aa, j SECTIONS, 4o PAGES JUESDAY, AUGUST. 6, ·1w.a ,TEN, CENTS Council Puts· $9.6 Million Issues on By WIILIAM REED Of lllit Olllr Plllt lllft Resident& whc> haw: beeo: calling for more parka, better recreationAI pro- grams and a new library in Hun- tington Beach will have an opportunity Nov. 5 to show how serious they are aboot obtaining them. The City CooncU Monday night ap-Jl<Oved pladng two propositions total- ing $9.16 millioo on the general election ballot despite considerable doubt over e the wisdom m competing with the presidential candidates. Tbe bond measures will be listed separately for parks and the library and each requires a two-thirds vote to Can'Y. An increase of about $6 to $8 per year in the tu. bill for the average home woµld be required for the park measure. None is eipected for tbe library propo.ltioo. Council action in placing a $6 million is5ue for parks and a $3.16 million as issue for the library ln the ballot was unanimous with Councilman Donald D. Shipley absent. Recieation and Parks Commission Chairman Thomas Cooper told the council he was recommending the Nov. 5 date for the election because "tile bOOd climate seems faVOl'able." Commissioner Bruce Williams said he tboogbt that "the community is looking for substantial· progress in parks and recreation this year and • IX Bond Vote Called $13 Million for New School, Rooms West Orange County residents will vote in November on a $12 million bond issue to build a new school and add classrooms to the overcrowded WestmiMter High Sdlool. The bond!, if approved, would be :financed with no · increase in the tax rate, said school administrators. LITTLE MARKET NEEDED Kenneth Reynolds ~ Trustees of the lJuntington Beach Union High School District Monday n,ight approved putting the $12 million bond prop015al on the Nov. 5 presiden- tial election ballot. The board first considered a $22.9 million recommendation from its Citizens' Advisory Committee, which NO, IT ISN'T Mrs. Angel• W•lden 'Council O"liays Market Despite Strong Debate Two hours of spirited debate before the Huntington Beach City OoUDcil Monday ni~ av.ailed citizens Op· posing construction ol. a small market little except for the satisfoction ol hav· ilij:: said their piece. Councilmen grM\ed Robert Zin- ngrabe a permit to build a neighbor.hood convenience market at 1.lhe southweSt comer or Newland street .and Indianapolis Avenue on a.+ 2 vote with Counoi.lmen Jerry Matney and Jack Green opposing the move. Frank Hapkins, of 3462 Tern Circle, told the council that the residents bad been given an indication "that ti:lls land would someday be a park." Be said the salesman who sold him bis home had made the claim. Park Director Norm Worttiy aai.d the site had not been seriously 00& sidered as a park site. Charles Miller, of 8442 Reilly Drive, F oUI·th Planners Acquire Office An old office building at 220 Main Street in Huntington Beach has be- come the year-around headquarters for Ule Huntington Beach Fourth ol July Parade and Celebration. 1 It will be manned by the city's Jun· jor Chambef' of Commerce. The Jay- cees have staged the last two parades and were asked Monday to put on the 1969 show. The old building is owned by the city and has housod parade headquarters the past two years. The city will COO· tlnue to provide the building to the Jay~ at na rentaJ costs, councilmen docldcd M0!¥1a;< n!ghl • .. I· presented the council with petitions bearing signatures of 279 neighbors of the proposed market. All were ~ posed. "We were told tins land would be (See MARKET, Page Z) Huntington Pilot Drowns in Bailout Fro"?-Navy Plane A Huntington Beach aviator drowned iD the P.acific Oc&an after bailing out of his spipning U. S. N'avy twin jet A· 6A Intruder off the North Washmgt.on Coa.9t Monday. The body <M U . (jg) Patrick K. Buckie of Huntington Beach was fouDd about 8 a.m. tnday. It had washed up on a beach just south of the Quillayute Coos! Guan! StaUoo. A ground party searching the beach found Buckie's body, Buckie was a crewman on t.he jet which developed engine t r o u b I e Sllortly alter "'"'"ring the Olympic Penin.SU.la on a routine flight from Wl*lbey Island NavAl Air StatJon, where It was baised. Buckie and the pilot. U . David IV. Oable. AlliJon Park, Pa., parachuted out ot the plane before it crashed. Cable aw.am to Alexander Island off the Olympic Peninsula ~ where'be notlf'led authorities of tbe accident. Only Buckie and Cable were aboard the craft. He wu the aon of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Buckle, Jr .. 8212 Munster Drive, HunUngton Beach. would have covered the construction of two new high schools, purchase of two sites, repair o{ the Huntington Beam High School to meet Field Act requirements, addition of classrooms at Westminster High and expansion oC that district's offices. During the course of the four-hour trustees' meeting, most Of which was devoted to discussion of the bonds, the amount was whittled down to the $12 million figure. The $12 million in bond money will (See BONDS, Page Z) Trustees Okay .Tax Rate Hike For Ocean View By JAMES McNABB JR. Of 1'11• O.llY P'llll Sl•lf Ocean View School District trustees Monday night reluctantly awroved a $7,044,534 """"ting budget for the coming year, with an estimated :kent Uxrease ill the tax rate. Trustees agreed with new District Supt. Clarence Hall that Ocean View tmpayers could well afford a much higher rate. Even with the tu hike, the district will still have one or the lowest pro- perty t.ax rates amcr::ig other West 0r.,._ County elementary schi>ol systems. The school district u n h a p p 11 y estimates it will spend an average oi. $.552.95 per pupil, lower also than any of the other systems, school officials claim. FOR SALARIES Of the $7,044,534. $3,949,700 will go for teaOOers' salaries. The estimated total cost of instntction will be '4,940,460. The district is to receive fl,572,507 from property taxes, with $3,387,949 coming from the state and an ad· ditional $189.916 from federal sources. A balance of. $838,262 will be carried over in reserves from this year. Ocean View's new tax rate is estimated at $2.51, up three cents from last year. By comparison, Fountain Valley approved a $3.55 tax rate this week, up five cents from the previO'lls year. \VEST~llNSTER BUDGET Westmlnster School District is to ap- prove tta operatmg budget tonight, with an estimated ttx rate of $2 65. This is ttle same as last year, which is 10 cents lower than two years ago. Huntington Beach City Sch o o 1 District, the O!'Jly one with a rate lower than Ocean View, will consider a 13· cent hike in its tax rote tonight with approval of its budget. The increase woold bring the tax figure to 12.18. CAREER CORNER YOUR WAY OUT F. J. LAIN If your career has you in a corner "Ca- reer Corner" is your way out. The new feature , written by professional guld· ance counselor F. J. Lain, becomes a regular weekly fea- b1re of the DAILY PILOT 1Wtlng WedneidlJ'. will back a bond issue." Department Director Norm Worthy told ttte council th?.t .. we are ready to go." For a time, however, the issue was in doubL Councilman George McCracken questianed placing the measure on the general electian ballot. "It's not a good time. I'm inclined to think we are· making a mistake." Councihnan Henry Kaufman also questioned placing the measures an the Nov. 5 ballot. He said next year might be better and added that "the need is for time to form a citizens committee and give them the best odds available to aid in selling these bcm(Js." others of the council were cMfident that the people who have a.5ked for more parks, will become active in pushing passage of the bonding pro- pooals. Although somewhat reluctant all ear • • agreed on the November.., etecti~ Agreement came only alter a sharp debate ·between c:ounctJman Jade Green and Dr. Kaulman'OVV 'bow'¥ city's Capital Projects Fund Is to bO used. Dr. Kaufman had suggested holding the library and parJ<s bond proposal until a special election next year, preparing totals for additional pr°" jects. including a dv;ic center and tire (See ELECl'ION, Pa«e Z) ac Chest Pains Suffered After Speech WASHINGTON (AP)-Former Pre!!. ident Dwight D. Eisenhower suffered chest pains indicating a possible new heart attack early today, less than 12 hours after addressing the Republican National Convention from his hospital suite. It would be the 77-yeai--ald former president's third heart attack this ~ year-and his sixth in 13 years. Walter Reed Anny HoSJ>ital ieported that Eisenhower sufrered chest iiains at 6:15 a.m. EDT. It said prelim.J~ary indications were that the attack repre· sents another myocardial inlarction. His condition was stable when the • ~ ho!JPlffif announcement..,,,. ... mede ·at 1 10 a.m. The hospital btittetin said 8bo that Eisehower was . then tomlortable and free of pain. · Further bulletins will be issued as Indicated, the hospital said, without fixing any time. • A myocardial infarction, a form af be art attack, produces an area of damage to the mvocardium or heart muscle as a result of either total or partial blockage of one of the branch· es of the coronary arteries which ordi- naril:v supply oxygenated blood to the heart. Eisenhower had sulfered a slmilaT infarction-<!escribed as a major at· tack-at the horoital on June 15. The retired five·st.&r gPneral has been at Walter Reed 11ince May 14. Re had been stricken with a minor heart attack April 29 at his winter home at Palm Desert, and was takPn then to March Air Force Ba~e in California. He transferred to WAltflr Reed when he bad recovered sufficiently to make thP. trip. UP'I Tfll!llMlff GROWING CAST -Personalities "starring" in the big Republican circus at• Miami Beach are on the increase as convention nears climactic peak. Ex-President Dwight Eisenhower (upper left) talked to delegates via taped message from his suite at Waiter Reed Hospi- tal Monday before suffering another heart attack today. California Gov. Ronald Reagan (upper right) enjoys hearty laugh at his Miami headquart.,rs after announcing he is, indeed, a for-real candidate. Richard Nixon (lower left), front-running candidate for nomination, makes point -with emphasis -that he'll pick his running mate and former Sen. Barry Goldwater (lower right) borrows hippies' si~n of peace for what is almost.incredible pose for convenlion-cov- enng news photographers. Eisenhower bad appeared alert and f!t st"ood health Monday night as he addressed the Republican National Convention In Miami Bench, Fla .• bv ; telep~~Md the nation by radio and telP.Vtston. · " Rocky, Reagan Chip At Nixon's Delegate Lead MIAMI BEACH (UPI) ~ Ricl>ard M. Nixon's delegate streogth slipped slightly today as Nel.son A. Rocke!eller and Ronald Reagan hopped from hotel to hotel trying to lure away his sup- porters. The latest UPI delegate count show· ed Nixon with six fewer delegates than Monday, but still within a dozen of votes of a first ballot victory for the Republican presidential nomination V/ednelday night. With &61 votes requJred for nomin•· tion at the GOP convent.ion. o UPI d<Jeg..te labulation sMWed Nixon with 657 votes. with 277 committed and 380 JeatLlng. ft(')Ckefeller had 278, including 153 committed a.nd 12$ leaners; Reagan had 191, including 93 com- mitted and 98 leaning; favorite sons had 181) and 77 remalned uncommitted. Nixon, t.annoo and rested, remained confident "Of victory. He held court throughout the morning at the swank Hilton Plaza llotel for all of the delegations to ttie canvenUon and talk· ed with newsmen of what he planned to do after winning the nomination - and even after wlnnlng tbe presidency. Rockefeller aod Reagan, me&nwhlle, traveled from hotel l9 hotel along the bf!o.00 front in hot, humid Mlam.1 Beod\. trying to woo enoogh vote& from Nixon to deny him an euly vic- tory. Rocketeller'1 strategJsU insisted Nixon could not Win on the ftr1t be.Dot .a.nd the New York governor Aid he felt he ball a fig!!Ung chance at the nomination. Reagan also expressed confide.nee that Nb:on would not win (See CONVENTION, Pace I) His 10...minute address· to the convP.n· tion was recorded on vldeot.aoe at the hospital about 30 minutes before it was broadca.iit at 8:35 p.m .. according to the Columbia Broadcasting System, which handled the broadcast. l..ack of screening facilities kept delel!'ates at the convention from see· ine: E;isenhower a.s he spoke, but the address was carried into the nation'• homes as a part of broadcast conven- tion activities. Ora119f' w,,.,,.,,.. If You liked ye1terday'S: weath· er, you'll love tomorrow'11 sinee there's not niucq cliange Jn view -cloudy mornlnk1 and the 1un peeking out about noon With the mertury in the mid·70's. INSIDE TODA 1' EumphrS of th1 dcl'fotLS 1'114· '1.1\Lvering for deleoate1 '"'°''' at the Republican National Co1'- vention ere dttcri~d on Page 18 loda~. ~ ~-------------------~ ---------------------.,-------...,. . . . -, • Tuad11, A~t 6, 1'1611 Budget Okayed; Rihal Object·s ., -II.Ulla .... _,... .... ~of Haotinct"'1-Un1oo lllah -Diabi<t Moncier n1gbt ap. .......... lop -·· lb• poir'? .......... lit __. lb8t Mu F"""7, blp ..,. badltl, but declined to ol&botalo . ... ..,..... ' e an $11.8 mllllon operating • • fqr Uio coming )'Ml', with ... ·-~~-Id receive no ril<n than i2o,ooo, or a 25 pe.r cent dillerentlal in pay. ,.. m-.-lludell. a 1ncnUe o! ~J mlllloD ...... ,.ar, wu1•p. ~ved .by a. vote of+ to 1. The 1988-P fln.anclal aummary car· des with it a fl vt-eene. illicreue 1D. the tax rate, from fl.00 last year to fl.08 per lt(X), assessed valuation !or thfl coming year. , -ting beuu.e he thinks dllbict edrntnlftraton are geUing too mlldlmooey. Dr. Jooepj). [, lllbal, hlmseU • col· letlO -. -be tboll8lt • 1K>tal Of ~-,g the; bee adlf!inlalr.ttors is .. .,. of ..... wltl1. wllat toch<n In the · hill'}--""receiving. I don't lllh* tile rnperiatendeot ah9<Jld be Pllld two times the salary ol ' ' Last month, Dr. IUbal wu absent from the board meeting when trustees approved new four·year com:racts for Forney and his two asiistants. Under the new contlr.ds, approved one year betare current agreement& expire, F<>1!0Y will make $25,600 a ,.ar. Dr. Rlbal also aaid be disagreed with other allocations of. funds in the The district is eetimeUng an income o! 1278,500 !rom federal sourttS, 12,613,483.!rom tbe atJale and 16,416,592 from taxes. The total cool ol educating the 13,500 School to Use SeU,ement Proposed 'Multipurpose Water District Hearing Room as · Class Circle. View School's multipurpose room is soon to be a first and second· grade classroom .. Scheduled for Aug. 14 That 1f8S the verdict of Ocean View SohOol Diatrict trustees who Moo.day night unanimously rejected a mcve by upper grade Circle View parents who sought to block conversion plans. Because of overcrowding, Circle View and four other schools in the elementary district were faced with either a busing~nversioo or doub!e- session alt.ernative. David Bellot, 6.342 Antrim Circle, Huntington Beach, presented the board with a petition allegedly signed by 350 Circle View parents who prefer- red double ssssions to the multi- purpose room changeover. Academic and extra.curricular ac· tivities for all nine grade levels would be sacrificed, ii the cafetorium were COllvemd, claimed Bello!. The board however concurred with parents arguing that maximum school time was of utmost importance. Double &eSsioru; would shorten the lichool day 30 minutes or 10 days per seme!ter. Nooe Of the schools laced with overcrowding has opted for the double 1e1sl<m plan. Hopwood YR Speaker John HoPWood, administrative aasis· tant to Assembl)'lll>Il Robert E. Bad· ham (R·N«wport Beacb), will be the speaker at tonight's me.Ung Of Or· ange County Young Republicans set for 8 p.m. In the Bistro Room of the Newporttt Im. A rough draft oC a proposed set· Uement to the battle b ~ t w e e n homeowners in southeast Huntington Beach 8Ild t.he Talbert Water District was delivered to the city attorney "two minutes before Council time" Monday. City Atty. Don Bonfa told the council Monday night that he had not hod time to study ttle documents delivered by Santa Ana Attorney Rodger Howen, lawyer for the embattled water district. Delivery of the proposed settlement apparertly failed to deter the council's plan to bring the inatter befOre the Local Agency. Formation CommiM.lon (LAFC) on Aug. 14. A Jetter from Howell to the council asking agreement to a two-month con· tinuance ol the LAFC bearings was noted, but action was postponed until MoOO&y when the attorney presumably will have made a study of the proposed agreement whose terms were not disclosed. The wate.r district in the southeast section of the city serves about a dozen farmers with inigalion water. It came to public .attention when of· ficers of homeowner groups in the area discovered that homeowners were paying l510Me <lf the operational costs and for bond interest' and redemption. Two of the homeowners, Warren G. Hall, now city treastrer, .and Joseph Boyle made an unsuccessful bid for •eat. on the board of directors and discovered that voting in the district is on the basis of assessed val'UeUon of land Ollly. In addition, eeveral hundred families DAR.Y PILOT St9'f,,... BOND SUPPORTER -Councilman Jack Green Monday hotly de- fen<led. the Huntington Beach Capital Projects Fund as the source of money to r~pay bonds for a new central library. He called for the people to dec.tde on general obligation bonds but hlDted he might back a leas~purchase arrangement if the bon1ds fail. OAllY PllOY H••...,._ IM&k. c.rtfenila OltAHGe COMT PU81.15HING COM1AHY Rol>•rt N. W11d Prato.ni 9nCI P..._~ J1clc R. Cvrl.., Viet PraldlN tncl G~I ,.__r Tho"''' K11•il EClltor ncilfl•• A. M1r11hi11e Ml,.11"9 Elllfw Al~•tf W. l1t1s Willi1111 Rt1d' AMOCl.ett 1iunUngtait 8"'11 EClllW (lty Edltar " .. tl ... lffdlOffk• 309 Ith Str1et MtTffltf Aldr.u1 P.O •••• na f2MI ..__ ......... 9"dl: tt1't Wtst ... lautwtrd c.r11 Mlwr a west ...,. 11~ ..._... a.cft: 222 ftn!SI AYfllM f'rom Page 1 ELECTION ... stations and "giving them to the voters all at once." Green argued that the fund includes the tr.ash collection fee imposed "to get money for the capital im· provements including the civic center and a library." He insisted that "the people already are paying for the civic center through tbe trash fee or ,1.50. He rejected suggestions for a non· profit cor,>oratton for a library lease· back arrangement, preferring to "let the people decide on bow they waot to spend their mmey." buying homes on lease-purchase con· tracts, or with caI·Vet loans have no voice in water district affairs. Homeownera are seeking relief ttrougb the city coooeil which ha-s asked tbe LAFC to dissolve the water district and allow the city to take over water service in the area. Beach Parkjng Authority Holds 3-minute Meeting At 1:31 a.m. today tbe Huntington Beacb Puking Autt>ority convened in council cllanbers of Memorial Hall. The seven-man board coo:lucted its business wit2l dispatch and adjourned at 1:34 a.m. Between the start and finish Ulnes the authority approved a call for bids on the city's S2 millioo, 2,500 parking- space project which will extend from the municipal pier at Main street to Beach Bou!evard. The membemblp of the parking authority and the HuMington Beach City Colmcil ii Ile same. 'lbe council was in sesson from 4:ll p.m. Monday to l:Ma.m. today. That is, it was in sessiori with briel timeou1& to be the parking auihority aOO for dinner. Teevee Networks Slash Contracts For Surf Meet The surf may be up for the 1968 Uli.lled stetes Surfboard Cbam- pioo.shJps in Huntington Beach, but the television money is not. Ooomcilmen ...,.. told Monday night that a lack of lnt.rert by both CBS and NBC television networks in televising the two-day event in late September will «>St the city 12.500 this year. Acting City Administrator Brander Caoile told tile oouncil that be bed received the 1968 cont:racb from the ABC network end thet tile network is offeriog fl,500, radler than the •10,000 of past, ...... "No one else ts int.erested and they (ABC) know It," C..Ue INlid. Counc!lmen ordered the poet signed even at the reduced cost. 'lbe incUne !tom television rlgbts Iergely olfl!Ols the OO!bl IO< putting OD the surfing show. From Page 1 BONDS ... prov.i.de : -$2 million for acquisitioo ol one site, -41.5 million for Field Act im· provements, -$100,000 to add more classroom and library space al Wesbninster High School, --$265 ,000 for expansion 111 the district offices, -$7.5 million to construct and equip another high school, construction of which could begin in 1971, trustees estimated, and -455{1,000 to cover inflation. This bond program would cover the needs to the school district for the needs of the school district for the CAC recommended. Trume Dr. Joseph Rlbal urged the board to ''let the Citizens' Advisory Committee know that their long-range proposal ($22.9 million for five years) is being put into two parts." Voters may be asked to approve the rest of the $229 million in three years, he added. From Poge 1 MARKET ••• non-commercial. Now we are getting a oommerclal Christmas tree," he charged . Mrs. Angela Walden of 8461 Reilly Drtve, told the council that "we were told deflllit.ly °"' -be • park ... At this point Meyor Alvtn Coon remlndod the opponenl! that the clabn1 of real est.ate aetesmen &bould not be relied upon wl-In· '" Planning Director Kenneth ll<yl\Olds -the plan to build a 7-11 Markel \WI! In Une with the intent Of the city's neighborhood commercial ord1nence and that the law would not allow fur1her commercial development on adjacent corMrS il this plan were adopled. "The people this project II .._.i to urve do not wa.at it," CouncilmaD Mlltnfov arrt""1. ·~ upecllid lo ...U lllls lall 11 tn come to •10,2501m, according to blidl« 11.Eures. Tbli !J -about fl59.:Q. per ltudelit, Forney estimated. Of the expenditures for educational costs alone, '5,719,lM is to go for teachers' salaries. The 1"fSt goes fer .r.dmini$trators' s a l a r i e s, l'IOO·teachlng personnel's sa\aries, m ,480 for, health services, $1 ,1»2,030 for operation and main• tenaooe of facilities, $179,510 for pupil transpor1atioo and a tobll of '708.400 fot retirement, minuities, insurance, workmen's compensation and Other f.l.xed expenses. Plaque, Bust To Honor Duke In Huntington Duk-e Kaihanamoku, called the father of surfing in the United States, will be memorialized in Huntington Beach with e plaque aod bust mounted as a historical monument on the municipal pier. The Duke, who died this year in his native Hawaii, was a regular at the United States Surf b oar d Cham· pionshi.ps held each year in the city. ln addition, he surfed at local beaches many times during the past 30 years. Director of Harbors and Beaches Vince Moorhouse told the City Council Monday niglbt ht the mOII\Orial will cost &bout $1,000 and suceessfully re· quested a grant of $500 fl"llln the city. The rest of the money is to c<>me from public subscription, Moortioose told the council. It's unlikely the memorial will be up in time for the 1968 version of the championships in September, Moor· house said. ''Perhaps we can dedicate it next year," he added. Services Slated For Mrs. Taylor Services for Ella Ethel Taylor, a resident of Huntington Bee.ch for 44 )"ears, will be held at 11 a.~. Wednes- day at Smith's Mortuary. Mrs. Taylor died Sunday at her home, 7411 Stater. She was 77. She is survived by two sons, Vernon \Vallace and Giles Eugene Wallace; three daughters, Doru:ia Williams, NeJ. lie Marshall and Christie Carter, all of lluntington Beach; four grandchildren and eight great.grandchildren. Interment will follow at Westminster Memorial Park. DAILY r 1LOT l'llfM "" $allllll Mloltr Strdden Stop Mrs. Thomas Overton, wife of HUJJtington Beach First Christian Church pastor, escaped injury Monday afternoon when car wbjch she was driving made sudden stop against stop sign and tree on front lawn ol a home at Lake and Adams avenues after collision with an- other car driven by Pamela N. Taylor, 16, of Fountain Valley. Miss Lisa Breakke, 16, passenger in the Taylor auto, reportedly was tak- en to Huntington lntercommunity Hospital for observation and then released. Miss Taylor also was unhurt, according to Huntington Beach Police. From Page 1 CONVENTION .• on t!he initial ballot Nixon's total in the UPI tabulation dipped with reported losses of three leairuing votes in the Washington delegation, two in Nortt Carolina and one in Oklahoma. Gi>v. Dan Evans of Washington en- dorsed Rockefeller today and took one obher vote with him into the New Yorker's column. Reagan also lured a vote away from the Washington delegation. In North Carolina, Rep. James Gardner endorsed Reagan bringing with him nine others-the California governor's largest gain in any one state since announcing bis formal can· d.idacy Monday. Reagan als.o plcked up a single delegate in Oklahoma. The convention itsell was in recess until tonight at 8, but word spread quickly through Miami Beach today that former President Dwight D. Eisenhower had suffered another heart attack in Washington. Delegates and preC!iidential hopefuls alike wue saddened al the news of the attack -which came only hours alter the Tl-year-old general had addressed the convention from WalteT Reed Army Hospital. Rockefeller's campaign received a shot m the arm when Evians , the con- vention keynoter, endorsed h i m • Evans had been believed leaning to Nixon altboogb Herbert G. Klein, Nix- on's press secretary, said the an· nouncement was "not unexpected." The Rockefeller camp was con- ceding nothing. After a strategy session toot lasted inOO early morning hours, top Rockefeller advisers said Nixon was "definitely stopped" on tbe first ballot. Some of Rockefeller's supporters began to worry that Reagan rather than Rockefeller might pick up the marbles if the stop -Nixon drive did succeed. Some New York delegates pledged to Rockefeller told newsmen they would throw their votes to Nixon and insure his nomioo.tioo. if they saw any chance that the end result of the Rockefeller-Rea-gab coalition strategy might be nomination of the Califorina governor. Reagan formally announced himseU a candidate Monday -two days ahead ol schedule -in an effort to chip aw?.Y delegate support from Nixon befOre it was too late. ,,, I i 2l INB:' has •ti I . We lay it on the line • • • DEEP Stelun . CRl(PCT CLCRttlnC THE ULTIMATE in CARPET CLEANING Recently, Deep Steam Carpet Cle1ners introduced a new professional carpet cleaning process to this County ••• Prior to offering this remarkable service to you, our customers, we conducted our own comprehensive testing program in order to verify the claims made for the process by its develop4 ers. Not only did we find Deep Steam to be a r11volutionary d11p1rtur11 from our traditional carpet cle•n• ing method, but we found it to be absolutely 1afe for all carpet encl upholstery fabrics. Concurrent with out testing program, w11 thoroughly trained our per1onnel in the effective u•• of Oeee- Steam cleaning equipment ••• Only when we w•r• completely satisfied that Deep Steam met with our standards did we offer this uniqu• n•w service to you. A 1ucc•ssful comp4'ny's reputation i• its best aclverti•ement. W• lay it on the line by c.ordlelly inviting you to try sefety-tested Deep Steem Wall-to-Wa1 Carpet i1nd Upholstery Cleaning ••• Th• fin· est profe1sionel carpet cleening service yet d•vefoped for the industry. Prot•ct the life of your ci1rpets encl the heauty of your home hy celling today! TIME FOR NEW DRAPES? We •re drapery experts! We 1fre•• qu1lity of worltmenthip & in1taTiatiot1. free Estimates In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALL TODAY: WHEN YOU WANT THE FINUT- CALL UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 36 y••rs of collective experience between the 2 men doing your work. All work done in our plant. We pre-teit all febric1 belore cleaning. Free Estimates In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALL TODAY: FIR UTIMAT! RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS Our 2 ht Y eer of Service in Orange Counly 2950 RANDOLll'H COST A MESA PHONE 546-3432 •• .\ I J • • .. . . ' . -r ~ •' • • . . . -I J .,-,• > • • .-r .,. .... ~ ... _______ _ ... . . .. Laguna· Bea~h Today's Clos.Ing voe 61, NO. 188, 3 SECTIONS, "° PAGES ~GUNA BEACH, c ... ~IFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, '1968 TEN CENTS Drug Anarchy Brings Mesa Pop Festival Ban By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of, .... O.llr' Plllt St.ft If you missed tile Newport PoP Festival -oominally associated with the beach town instead of its hO!tcity. tli Costa Mesa's eternal credit ac- cotding to some -you missed the oP· poitunity o! a lifetime. Mes~ city councilmen, meeting within a stone's throw of the devastated festival site on the Orange County Fairgrounds, Monday night e issued a dark prospectus· for a 1969 repetition of the weekend's gigantic affa:lr. "As ·far as I'm concerned, we will not have a repeat of thls thing again," declared Mayor Alvin L. Pink.le:'. in· traducing discussion of the big event which drew more than 100,000 persons to the city. · "It wus named the Newport Pop Festival, or jazz festival, or whatever it was," the mayor added, "but as Hip Hassle fortunately for OW' gOOd neighbors to the south, they had nothing to do with it." •·we had hot weather, an explosive situation , •. professional agitators out there agitating," Mayor Pinkley Con- tinued, noting that he watched the festival from the police racillty roof. The mayor also hinted that only deep, implacable discipline among the scores or lawmen riding herd Sunday prevented an emotional eruption of • IX Due Council Weighs Pro, Con Letters A letter protesting Laguna Beach councilmen's anti·hippie resolution will be up for council consideration \Vednesday night. So will a letter calling for council ac· tion to save Laguna from a hippie takeover. A letter from the South Coast Human Rights Committee signed by _ Joe Oliver expresses concern at the July 17 "hippie resolution." "We are especially concerned that anly one councilman, Charlton Boyd, shows the nece56ary Ull(1erstanding 9' human vlaues to reject the idea or personal harassment under a n y Corm," the letter states. The letter states that businessmen are justified in their concern about a beautiful Laguna for all. lt continues: 'fHowever, it is our hope that ra- tional thought will prevail and a polarized community will not result. We must all bE; regarded. as h_uman in· diViduals wiUt rights to pursue hap- . piness. '! . , • Oliver cal.ls for a "J}le:aningrut dialogi.ie" am.on& v.iriws ilpect.S of . . The Game's the Thing All is not cartooning for Laguna's Jnterlandi twins. Here they relax before game time in Heisler Park at one of the regular tournaments of Laguna Beach Lawn Bowling Club .. Phil (standing) has work reg- ularly in Playboy Magazine and DAILY PILOT, and Frank is syn- dicated by the Los Angeles Times. Upcoming events at the club will be on Wednesday, Aug. 28 and on Sept. 4. The Laguna bowlers will host Claremont, Santa Anita and Beverly Hills. LBJ Bod ygua1·d Watching Nilon ' · MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Presi· dent Johnson's personal bodygbard and constant companion 1n Che 1964 campaign has reappeared as a Secret Service agent protecting Republican presidential contender Richard M. Ni:roo.. Rufus Youn&btood, the •cent who threw himself on top of Johnson when presideflt Kennedy was ~sSaSsinate'.d in 1963, was seen on duty in the welcom· ing crush for Nixon as he arrived for the Republican National Conv~ntio . Also among the agents was m L. Johrls, former bead of' oti ' White Hous• dttall. the community, mentioning businessmen, b1'acks and hippies. In another letter. Dorothy Tolman, manager of The Clift, 741 S. Coast ~lighway, mentions publicity given a July 20 lave-in and a statement about a story that was to have been in Lile magazine. "Could this be a prearr.anged effort to take over Lagwia?" she asked. The letter states, ."Laguna ii in great danger in my opinion." It urges coun· cilrneD to.enforce the laws ,and "save Laguna.•• .. Sleepy Hollow Drainage Work Gets Under Way \Vork is under way on the $375,000 Sleepy, Hollow-Park Avenue storm drainage project. the largest in Laguna Beach history. Present construction ls centered at the comer of Cleo Street and Cost Highway, where"' 66-inch pipe is beine: tunneled under the highway. lt will come out at Sleepy Hollow beach ... The last progress report was that 60 feet-of a total of 94 feet had been tun- neled by Friday evening. No major problems have yet been met in the sandy surface, according to Joseph Sweany, director of public works. "It's been good diggin!!:,'' he said. Upon completion of the Coast Highway tunnel. work will move towards Park Ave. Lomar Construc- tion Co .. contractors for the work. will not be able to dig beneath Glenneyre Street. due ,to the great number (If undergrounlJ pipes, including a gas main. When the time comes, Glenneyre Street will be partially blockaded and a trench cut through it. Only two of the four lanes will be in use as con· struction moves in stages across the major thoroughfare. Detours will be provided around the work. utiliz.ing Catalina Street. The work will continue up, behind the high school. and eventually end at t.he corner of \Vendt Terrace and Park Avenue. The total project wiU cost $375.407. or that price. the city will 'contribute ~.000 and the Orange County Flood Control District will con tribute Sl00.000. The balance will be f)aid by the assessment district. City officials estimate the cost~ to the owner of a 6.000 square foot lot in the district would be about $251). There are about 600 parcels in the district. The project should be completed within six months. it was estimated. ~""'"""'1M:: ... ""1; ................. CAREER CORNER YOUR WAY OUT • .., r '~ .. . , • ' ' ~ I" ' F. J. LAIN If your career has you in a corner "Ca· reer Comer" is your way out The new feature, wi;itten by professlonat guid· ance counselor F. J. Lain, becomes a regular wet:kJy fea- ture of the DAILY P I L 0 T starting Wcdneoday, • screaming, drug-crazed anarchy at the fairgrounfl5. "\Ve lived Ulrough it by the grace or Cod and cool Policemen," he declarOO. "They were a bunch of animals," he added, obviously broadening his scope of refer~nce beyond Eric Burdon's group of the sar .• e name, which ap· peared at the festivill. "Our men took the insults without sb:i.king back, which would have sparked a rl<0t and charges of police brutality," he added, notini: that next year Costa Mesa will have legal pro· tection from another festival. He said motion pictures were taken, apparently showing many incidents and the mood of the crowd, which was four times larger than an y preliminary estimate by police or pro-· mot.ers of the huge gathering. The mayor also praised cooperation ea rt STARS APPEAR FOR REPUBLICANS ' 'BIG SHOW' IN · MIAMI Ike on TV; R1a9an Hippy; Nixon Serious; Goldwater Se11 Victory Rocky, Reagan Chip At Nixon's Delegate Lead MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Rlcl>ard M. Nixon's delegate strength slipped slightly today as Nelson A. Rocke.feller and Rooald Reagan hopped from hotel to hotel trying to Jure a.way bis 5UJ>- porters. The latest UP"J delegate count show- ed Ni.X.on with six fewer delegates than Monday, but still within a dozen of votes of a first ballot victory .for the Republfcan presidential nomination Wednesday night. With 667 votes required for nomina- tion at the GOP convention, n UPI delegate tabulation showed Nixon with ~7 votes, with 277 committed and 380 leaning. RockefeUoc had 278, including 153 cominitt.ed and, 125 Jeane.rs; Reagan bad 191. including 93 com· mitted and 98 leanir.~; Javorite sons ·had 180 and Tl reinained uncommitted. Nixon: tanned and rested~ remainei:l confident of victorj·. He held court throughout the morning at the swank Hilton Plaza Hoti~I for all of the delegations to the conventlon and talk· ed with newsmen of what be planned to do 'a!ttr w1rtni-ng the nomiliation - and even alter-wlnnlng the presidency. Rocke£elle.r and Reagan, meanwhile, traveled from hotel to hotel along the beach front in bot. hwnid Miami Beach trying to woo enough votes from Nixon to deny him an early vie· tory. Rockefeller's strategists insisted Nixon could not win on the first ballot and the New York governor said he felt he had a fighting chance at the nomination. Reagan also expressed confldehce that Nixon would not win on the ini tiaJ ballot. Nixon 's total in the UP I tabulation dipped with reported losses Of three leaning votes in the Washington delegatJon, two in North Carolina .and one in Oklahoma. Gov. DM Evans of Washlngton en· doned Rockefeller today a.Gd took o,11e other vote with him · into the New Yorker's cotumn. Reagan also lured~ vote away from tbe Washington delegation. In North Carolina, Rep. James Gardner endors~ R~gan bringing wllh him nine others-the Calltomta governor't largest 'gain in .any one state since a:nnounCing his fol-mat can· (Ste CONVENTION, Pa1e %) by Police and lawrneo from seven area cities. plus the CaWornia }lighway Patrol and Orange County ShUlff's Department which responded to r~ quests for help Sunday. He said within 1 ~ hours after the close of the music festival, only two cars were left on the fairgrour:ds. ''I suspect they were either in- operative or the owners were off on a trip somewhere," he said ac Cliest Pains Suffered After Speecl1 WASHINGTON (AP)-Former Pres. ident Dwight D. Eisenhower sutfered chest pains indicating a possible new heart attack early today, less than 12 hours after addressing the Republlcan National Convention from his hospital suite. It would be the 77-year-old former preside.nt's. third heart attacki this year-:-and his sixth in 13 years. Walter Reed Army'Hospital repqrted. 'that Eisenhower aufft!retf 'Chest J>aibs •t 6,15 a.m. EDT. It sald preliminary ... ~~Cl)iloos w~r~" ~ ,t the a~ repre- aents an.other . ardial inlarction. His conditi as stable when tbe -hospital a'.ndtruncement was made at 10 a.m. The hospital bulletin said tJso that EisehoWer was then comfortable and free or pain. Further bulletins will be Issued as (See EISENHOWER, Pafe %) Trustees Adopt Budget Tonight • Laguna Beach Unified S c h o o 1 District trustees tonight are expected to adopt a record budget and a whop- ping tax hike for the current fiscal year. Scbool officials were not im- mediately available to pinpoint the tax :rate, but it appeared the tax increase will be more than 37 cents on the school tax rate. The budget figure of $2,663,678 is ex· pected to be adopred, but not without opposition from Trustee Larry Taylor. ·Taylor is questioning the distribution o! the money, especially along the lines of teachtt aids and playground supervisors. . A tax increase of 26.5 cents wiC cover higher operating expenses, in· eluding tacher salary hikes. Another 10.79-cent increa5t is being ta-eked on· to the band and interest redemption rate. The total schoo1 tax rate expected for the · 1968-69 fiscal year is $2.9784 per $100. The rate-Vi applied to assess. ed valuation of tlle district of $79.306,770, up $3.9 mi.lllon over last year. Orange Coast Weather If you liked yesterday's weath· er, you'll love tomorrow's, since there's not much change in view -cloudy mornings and the sun peeking out about noon with the mercury in the mid-70's. I NSIDE TODAY E.tomplts of the devious ma· 1\euvef'ing for delegates votes at the Republican National Con· vention are described on Page 1s 1o<1ou. t ~ ' , n ' I -----------------------------------~ -~ .. ' .. - •• •, % OAILY PILOT Reagan Drumming Up Votes NIAMI BllACll (UPI) -Gov. ll<>n· I aid fteaPll, annmtng the clarion ; : call of·oaddidacyt today · accelerated •. ! his two.day official campaign ror the ,Republican presldentlal nomination. . "A~ o( qol" I am a candidate at thi s • convention,'. the California gover nor .. • • told a...hastlly called news cq_nfereJlCe •I" Monday. He decided not to wait until ~ t. his name waa put into nominaUon at • 1 ~ the convention wtien his~, Own delega- : : ttJon .. came out Of the clear blue ak)!'" i and urged 1hlm to clarify hlS poJltion. f . . He scheduled m~etings todar with Frou1 Page 1 EISENHOWER . indicated, the hospital said, without fixing. any time. A myocardial Infarction, a form of heart attack, produces an area of damage to the n1yocai·dium Or heart muscle as a result of either total or partial blockage or one of the branch· es of the coronary arteries which ordi· narily supply oxygenated blood to the heart. Eisenhower had suffered a similar infarction-described as a major at- tack-at the hospital on June 15. The retirf!d five-star general has been ai Walter Reed sinCe May 14. He had been stricken with a minor heart attack April 29 at his winter home at Palm Desert, and was taken then to March Air Force. Base in California. He transferred to Walter Reed when he had recovered sufficiently to make the trip. Eisenhower had appeared alert and in good health Monday night as he addressed the Republican National Convention in Miami Beach, Fla., by telephone-and the nation by radio and television. delepUoftl lrom 10 1tate1, whol6 2IO votaa wollld brln1 ha total to 29 dllle- gattona With Q vote1. He appeared relieved to have -the comp)lulld favorite-son role he had plinned to malnta.iQ for apofher. 48 Qours, . . ••tt was getting a litUe djJflcult to explai.n why l would be a cagdi.dtte on Wednesday night but not before," he said. • Re.agan was peeved ·at speculation that ·his aurprise· anoounCement was part of a preconceived plan: He .said the urgen~ appeal ~f µie California d1t111Uon wu u much a aurprise to him &1 to anyone elae. · The Or1t he heai<I ol I~ lleapn uld, wu when loi'lll\I!' Sen. William F. KnOwllllll told lilm or the plan ju1t before ' tt was pre!ente4 tO ·the de le· . gatlon. · . A resohttfon urglng-Reaian· to run ope.ply for the nomination was adopted at a closed cfoor caucus while the California governor was appearing be- fore an6ther delegation. The 'decision · w&.s announce~ by J:tnowland to news- men. "The ~em,bers of the ·California la· Saddleback Enrollment Already Tops Estimate Saddleback Junior College bas established a Scholarship Co-mmission to solicit money for students. Appeals E.tre being sent out for scholarship donations in the nam~ of individuals, businesses and orgaruza- tions. It is suggested it will cost each .student at the new college $50 per quarter for books and suwlies. For students. full cost of a.two-year junior college edlication including stu- dent body fees totals about $350, ac- cording to M. Bud Weber, associate dean of students who is t h e Scholarship Commission chairman. Besides other college represen· tatiVi!s the Commission also includes seven ~ommwiity repNisentatives. Its function will be to direct the money to students in cases where the beneficiary is not named. Stipulated criteria for distributing the scholarship money mary include financial need, grade average, field of study leadership and service ac-tiviti~s. or .some combination of these. Weber notes tnat scholarship con: tributioos are tax deductible. Checks should be made out to the sc .. ddleback College Scholarship Commission and mailed to the college at 25001 La Paz Road, Mission Viejo, Calif. 92675. Additional information about the progra·m can be obtained by calling Weber at 837·9700. All this growth despite hall the area being mountainous, El Toro Marine Alr Base inhibiting hQusing develop· ment, and the Irvine Company and Mission Viejo Ranch likely to hold land in agricultural reserve, Ellerbroek predicted. Trustee LouJs Zitnik, for one, said the figures did not startle him. He noted the district covers nearly half the county but has only 10 percent of the population. "The growth pattern shows it is going to sweep down this way," he commented. "Here we wj.11 go from zero to one of the 10 biggest junlor college disbicts in the state in 20 years. We have to plan for it." Federal Housing Official to Tour City Wednesday A visit to Lagwia Beach by federal official Walter T. Slattery has been scheduled for Wednesday. James Dilley, president of the Citizens' Town Planning Association, said Slattery will arrived at 10 a.m. for a coffee gathering at the Jolly Ro~. Slattery is head of the Renewal Assistance Offioe, Department or Housing" and Urban Development. .. L,lo son delua.Uon do W'I• Gov. ili~1on IO d,.l&ro bl• active candl. dacy for the Republican presidential nomination," the resolution said. Rea11n , accompanied by the retinue of Secret Service men ass igned to hint two months ago, walked into the Oeau• ville Hotel's Napoleon Room to an· nounce his decision . "It i.s the season of PoliUcal sur- prises," he said. "Yes. as or this moment, in conformity, in keeping and in r:esJ>Qllse to the resolutions cast by the California delegation, I am a can. didate at thil convention." Mixed Zoning ' . Upheld by Commission By JEAN COX Of t~I O.llT J"Uol Steff Laguna hotel owner llarry Willats apparenUy will have to put up with mixed zoning of his property pending completion of a commercial-hotel zone and general plan study now in the city hopper. Willats' 3pplication to rezone the lower half of a block between St. Ann's and Thalia streets below South Coast 1-Iighway met unanimous defeat Mon· day night ht the planning commission meeting. 1-Ie had sought a change of .district Crom R·3 (multiple residential) zoning to C-1 (commercial) zoning. ''In our general planning program we are attempting to evaluate the general area from Laguna A venue to Pearl Street," said Associate City Planner Al Autry, "At this time, with the studies going on, to rezone one lot might have an adverse effect on the adjoining properties." "I've been frustrated so long in Laguna, ·sometimes I feel like wring- ing my hands," said the owner of Laguiia Riviera, 825 S. Coast,Jlighway, as he began his plea to planners. In order to compete with other hotel in the area, Wlliats claimed he needed to add extra parking spaces. Willats added he didn't want to sit on plans ilny longer because he needs a well evolved Plan. "I have to start slowly, I'm not a Hilton hotel l just want to know my rights and live within them." Speaking fot the prOperty owner, engineer· Bernard Syfan said Willa ts OA.ll Y f>llOT ll•ff Pbtte f::'mon Mister Lifeguard John Cunningham is asked for two penrµes from Vincent Caldwell, second from lett, after finding two pop bottles on the beach. Anxiously waiting their turns are Gary Oberholtzer (center} and Robert Lindsey. The bottle campaign was undertaken to rid beach of broken glass. Anybody (and everybody)' can receive a penny for each bottle. From Page 1 CONVENTION ... didacy ~tonday. Reag·an also pkked up a single delegate in O~lahoma. The convention itself was in recess until tonight at 8, but word spread _quickly through Miami Beach today that former President Dwight D. Eisenhower had suffered another heart attack in Washington. Delegates and presidential hopefuls alike were saddened at the news of the attack -which came only hours after .the 77-year-old general bad addressed the convention from Walter Reed Army Hospital. Rockefeller's campaign received a shot in the arm when Evans, the con- vention keynoter , endorsed him . Evans had been believed leaning to Nixon although Herbert G. Klein, Nix· on's press secretary, said tile an· nouncement was "not unexpected." began to worry that Reagan rather than Rockefeller might pick up the marbles if the stop. Nix.on drive did succeed. Some New York delegates pledged to Rockefeller told newsmen they would throw their votes to Nix.on and insure his nomiflatioo i! they saw any OOance that the end result of the Rockefeller-Reagan coalition strategy mjght be nomiootion of the Califorina governor. Reagan formally announced hJmself a candidate Monday -two days ahead of schedule -in an effort to chip away delegate support from Nixon before it w.as too late. Nixon, who did not arrive in the con· vention city until ~nday nigbt, received his good news for the day when Gov. Spiro T. Agnew of Maryland withdrew as a favorite son candldate and endorsed Nixon. This decision was expeCted to put 16, possibly 17 of Maryland's 26 votes ill Nixon's oolumn and the balance in Rockefeller's. ..A tour of downtown LV!6fla is scheduled from 10 :30 a.m. until noon. Luncheon is scheduled at the Jolly Roger. Slattery is to spend the af~ temoon with members of the Arch Beach Heights Property Owners Association. · :tt·ad• no· iminediat~ :plans tor· develop> n1ent. The Rockefell~r camp was -con- ceding nothing. After a strategy session that lasted into early morning hours,· top Rockefeller: advisers said Nixon was "definitely stopped" on the first ballot/ ~, s '"'' Some ·of Rockefeller's supporters G<>v. David Cargo of New Mexico told newsmen that "in all likelihood" he would come out for Nixon at a caucus of his delegation ia.te today. 'BYE, FRIEND -A $3,500 metal fountain has been sold by two-:;ear Festival of Arts exhibitor Ralph McConnell to Mrs. Myford JTVIne. Active in the scultpture field for only two and one half years, Mc· Connell also sold a $2,400 sculpture las1 year. DAILY PILOT i..,... ~ c.Jlfenl• Olt.t,NGE COAST PU8ll$HING COMl'AN'r' Robttl N. W11d PrrlolOl!nt •l'ld Pub!IV>CT Jttli: R. Curlty \l!ce President •"d Gerotl'"tl M-ttr 111011111 K1t vi1 """'' lho1111s A. Mu1phint ('\1~9111t EOltor Rit~t•d P'. N&ll Ptul Ni111~ L•llUN Bt&t~ Advtr111r,,. c.ur Edi!Ot 01m1or L9t11111e II.ell Olflcs 222 for11t Av1. M1ili119 Addrtu: P.O. lox''' 91651 °""' °""" C•ft M-: :BJ Wtlt 81' $1t'tt' H""" &Ndl1 2111 Wftt Mlbot llOIJIWard HUMllll!ol'I kldl: J0t J!11 Slfllt ,, ¥ Art Exhibitor's Sculptures Tap Ricl1 Fountain Ralph McConnell, a Festival of Arts exhibitor for two years, apparently has a fountain of artistic appeal. Last year, he sold one of his fo\Ultain creations to Mr. and Mfs. George Gade of Emerald Bay for $2,400. The foun- Wn was on the Festival grounds when the couple found jt. McConnell has n1ade another foun- tain, this time priced at $3,500. Als.o being exhibited at tbe grounds, until Aug. 24, the second fountain was boughl by Mrs. Mylord Irvine. McConnell has only been in the sculpture field for two and one half years. l-Ie was introduced to the field when he was taking a vocational guid- ance course at UCLA three years ago. Since then. he has opened shop at 525 Forest Ave . in Laguna Beach. ApparenUy, McConnell has found his vocation. At least two customers who have paid a tot.al ·of a.Lm06t $6,000 must think so. Fowler Recovering WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tt .. sury Secretary Henry H. Fowler is reported recovering "in Cloe style'' from removal ot his gall bladder in an operation Monday at \V.r...Uer Reed Army Medlcal Center. ------------- Dilley said the Slattery tour is open. He urged merchants and owners of downtown property to take the op- portunity to learn of grants and services available to downtown areas. Memorial Rites Fo1· Mrs. Wolf Slated Saturday Memorial services will be held for Ame P. Wolf, prominent Laguna Beach resident, at 11 a.m. Saturday at St. Mary's Episcopal Church, Laguna Be;ich. Mrs. Wolf died at Hoag Memorial Hospital SWlday after a lengttiy il- lness. She was 48. A resident of Laguna Beach since 1933, she was secretary and member of the board of the Laguna Chamber Music Society and on the advisory board of tire Civic Ballet Of Laguna Beach. Survivors include her husband, \Villiam B. \Voll of the home, 435 J·Iilledge; three sons, John, Stephen and Richard all o( the home. and a sister, EJiz()be!h Fulton of 1-Iun!ingtou Beach. Arrangements are under the di.rec· tion of Westclif[ Chapel Mortuary, Costa Mesa. Decisions Due On School Bids Recommendations will be made at tonight's Laguna Beach Unified School District meeting for acctpting bids the district called for to renovate the high school. The district asked for bids for re.modeling the high school, acquiring new furniture and scietice lab.s, and in· stallation of three portable classrooms The total cost of the renovation is expected to be approximately $48,475. Also on tonight's agenda: -Adoption of tl'I~ 1968-69 school budget; -Pennts&lon for Ray Lawson, supervisor of maintenance, operation and transportation, to be assigned a.. district car to use on the job as well as for transportaUon to and from work;. -A progress report on Thurston In· termediate School's flexible schedul· J.ng, to be preMnted by General Systems lndurtries, lnc. has it! We lay it on the line ... DEEP Steam. CRHPET CLERntnC THE ULTIMATE in CARPET Cl EANING Recently, Deep Ste1m Carpet Cleeners introduced • new profe11ionel cerp•t cleanin g process fo this County ••• Prior to <ifferlng this r•merkable service to you, our custom1r1, we conducted our own comprehensive testing progrem in order to verify the claims mede for the process by its develop· ers Not only did we find Deep Steam to be • revolutionary deperture from our tradftional carpet clean· ing. method, but we found it to be absolutely 11fe for ell cerpet and upholstery fabrics. Concurrent with our testing progrem, we thoroughly trained our personnel in the effective use of Deer» Steam cleaning equipment •.. Only when we were completely satisfied thet Deep Ste1m met with our standards did we offer this unique new service to you. A successful company's reputation is its best aclverfisem•nt. W• ley it on the line by c.orclielly 1nviting you to try sefety-t•sted Deep Steam Well-to.Wal Carpet end Upholstery Cletning ••• The fin- est professional carpet cle1ning s•rvlce y•f developed for the industry. Prof•ct the lif• of your ctrptfs encl the beauty of your hom• by celling todty! TIME FOR NEW DRAeES7 We are drtp•ry ••pert1I We stress qutlity of workmenship & installation. Free Esttmotes In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALL TODAY: WHIN TOU WANT THI FINEST- CAU. UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 36 y•art: of collective experience betw••n the 2 men doing your work. All work clone in our plant. w. pre-test all f1bric1 before cleaning. Free Estimates In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALL TODAY: FREE ESTIMA11 RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS Our 21st Yoar of Service In Orang• County 2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA PHONE 546-3432 f; • I "'-Toi ArM Call %1111"' 1·06'6 1, ) • i l . . • . ' ' •• .. .. • • ' ! I " .. Coast's Newport Beach 's own John "Duke" Wayne may not have been a delegate to the Repub- lican National Convention when he rose to the podium Monda·y, but he got one of the most rous- ing ovations or the covention to date when, in his "inspira- tional" talk he told GOP dele- gates the Republican party is the one "that gives a damn." The movi e actor often appears on Orange Coast area political platforms. So Much for Tha.t 4-yea.r Contra.ct S.'.CRAMENTO (AP) -On Nov. 21. 1966, Ronald Reagan said: "I have a four -year contract with the people of CaJilornia." And he pledged -"God willing" -to serve it. On Monday Jn Miami Beach, Fla., he said: "As of this moment ... I am a candidate before this convention" for Republican presidential nomination. With the sudden but not really surprising statement, the California governor changed the strategy of his undeclared search for the nation's highest office . For months Reagan has maintalned. •·1 am not a cand idate." But ~ometi mes he quali fied the statement by saying, "I am not an announced candidate," or "I am not a declared candidate." I • .. • . -• . . Barg.~ Gun ·crews Blast Red Bands SA.IGON (UPI) -UcS. MW. artillery mounted on aocilored river ba<IM c1.,i.t three b~ Gt Com· muniltt on th• mov• at dusk Monday IOllth Gt the llllod 1>pe'1t'D1 N1ng llld ltillod 41 1-rill11, Americ1n 1potumea said today. A1er1oc1 by blilden Marine "spot. ter1 " the 105mm and· 15$m.m gun ere~• bl~ ttie lines of. C9mmunisU moving ttlroutb the An Hoa Valley, an old Viet C..g hldeo'1t 20 mile• south of the Leatherneck •Dd Air Force bu• ~t Da Nmg. . Spokesmen said tney killtd ~ auer· rilla1 ol one 60-man unit and .enotber Delegates 'Welcomed' . Many Times By HARRY FERGUSON MIAMI BEACH (UP1 )-Mrs. YvoM• Schwieger ol. Dowa, Ia.~ is an alternate delegate to the Republican National Canvention. That's like being a ball player who does nothing but lit on the bench until somebody gets hurt. Mrs . Schwie~r was in her 1eat 20 minutes early at Monday's opening session, and she· lived to re~t it. Never in the history of hospitality has a pe rson bttn welcomed so long and by so many. From the speaker's plat- form she was welcomed by : The honorable Ray BliSs, chairman ol the GOP National Committee; the honorable Dadt! County American Le· gion Guard of Honor ; the bonocable Charles Kurfesa, speaker of the Ohio State Legislature; the honorable Judith Otten of Missouri who sane her wel· com e; the honorable J. Herbert Burke, Florida congressman; the honorable Jay Dermer, mayor of Miami Beach; the honOrable 0. D. Huff Jr., chairman of the Florida Citrws Commission; the honorable William C. Cramer, Florida eongrf:ssman; the honorable Claude R. Kirk. governor of' Florida; and the honorable Trinidad steel band. ~lts. Schwieger bore up p~tty well under the first hour and a hali of ~I· coming and then she made a sudden disoovery. All the welcomers were say· ing the same thing, namely "wel · come." Her attention began to wander and she had time to explain the duties, privileges and limitations of an alter· nate delegate. "I can go to the caucuse5," she 1aid, "but I can't vote. I have to be fOl" Rockefeller because Mn. Joe Platt of Davenport, la., the delegate that I'm an alternate for, i!L: for him . To tell you the truth I can't do much of any· thin g unless somethini happens t.o Mr,o;. Platt and heaven knows I don't wish that on her." How about recreation? "Well. I've taken a drive around the city. I go to bed pretty early. I don't drink and am not much interested in night club8 ." That last-statement explained why Mrs. Schwie~ showed up early look· ing so chipper. Many deleeates hive frav,led themselves to death by stay· ing up J;ite at niRht and movin11: from place to place trying to figure out the economic justification of making a martini with only one ounct of gin and charging SI .M for it. Here's a 11fnlmtwo11111lltr Cornmw>ilot blndl nu:rby. n.tre were. no MariDt ca.ualties. diey 1aid. 1'1e An Hoa Valley 11 the focl'l pOint ot. the Communisia• buildup threaten.- Inc DI Nani •nd the .-at lowllndl • about 350 lllllet norUJ of Saigon. The iutrrillaa IP'DI a 1erJe1 of am)>ushes and lOOncbed a wave ol. 1hellinc1 trom the An Hoa bell last week. Movtnc to bead otf another Com· muniJt buildup, 19,000 iroopen of the lOlst Air Cavalry Division kicked oft a n~W offensive along the drl'ental River 25 mil'es n0rthwe9t ot Salaon ~n Mon· day, spokesmen said With 852 bombe,l bllsting their target area before tbe assault, the Americans stonried in a b o • r d heticopten against li,rht resistance. Two U.S. soldiers were killed and two wounded in tne early foing, with no aignilicant fighting reported. The o«ensive into the flatland of p;iddies and tree lines began as U.S. intelli&ence said the immedate threat of a Communist otfen11ive aga:ln1t Saigon had eased. "The evidence is overwhelmnig, Mwever, that there will be a massive attack sooner or later." they said. in· dicating it would probably occur before October. County Airport Damage Claims Near $10 Million • Claims against jet llighU out of 0r£nge County Airport crept toward the SlO million Coal of the protester1 this week as 91 more were filed with ttie Board <A. Supervisors. The latest batch totaled S'l.851,200 bringing the amount filed in tne past few weeks to $6,278,251.6.S. A total of 276 claims has been lodged with the 1upervisors. The law firm ol Kendel and An· derson of Santa Ana through att.orney Anthony Palmieri claims a total of $8,351,200 baa been filed but th• clerks toe the Board Of Supenisors recorded the lower figure. Claims are being pushed by l~arbor Area residents toward the Sept. 1 deadline for such legal action againS't the county. They are dated from the first jet flights DUt of the aiJ1)0J1 on Sept. 1. 1967 by Bonanza Airlines. 1lOW part of Air West. Since that date Air California bas .added· jets to it! fleet of planes flying out of the airport. 'J'he law firm said the claim ,o; were filed because of "devastating efff!ct on property values of homeowners due to the increase in intolerable noise of jets flying out of the Orange County facili· ty." The firm 1aid addiiiOl!al claims would be filed 1omtti.m1 this week. "Since the fint pha1e of the muter plan of air tr&OlpOftation for Orange County was revealed by the firm Pereira and A s soc i a t es , the supuvisors have yet to make a firm statement on what plans are being formulated to move the airport or to establish noise abatement procedures for current flights," the law firm charced. S1fety Ae1ur1d for Your S1vlng1 principally by our high reoerves and conoervative operating p<ilicies, proven over 32 ymr11, plwi insurance of accounts. Newport Balboa Savings and Loan AMociation Is a member of the Federal Home Loan Bank System and the Federal Savings and Loan Inaurance Corporation. Tu Deductible :retirement plan for eelf employed and professional people (Keogh Act). RMI ertate broker11 and uleemen, fanner11, eontractmw, doctol'll, lawyel'll, business partners, all can benefit. Funds eet aside each month for retirement earn dividends and eave t.axes too. r..t Newport Balboa Savings show you how to build a tu 118.Ving ertate. Retired ... or Getting l!e1dy? Would you like a check month aft« month after month in your mail bat? 'Then Newport Balboa Sevinp' MoNTHLT SmllrrT A~ plan is for you. Start by opening a dividend.Mming savings account. Ourl!UtTl!lllndlaf 5.00% ilmiomwalyi<!ld of 6.13% whtn .... ,,.. •• ,d uay and mainfaiMd fM OM y•or, and ia lht hit,,..I in lht Mholl. . ' . . . . . .. . . .,. _,,. ... --.. --·-:• u I -• ·- Tutsd•Y. AUfltSl 6, 1%8 DAILY PILDT ,1 WATTS 'WAR' SCENE -Body of one man killed in first of two "shootouts" i n Los Angeles in past two days lies shrouded (foreground) here on V,I T.._,..flt concrete apron of service station at whi ch Monday's incident occurred. Other battle broke out lb.is morn- ing at \Viii Rogers Park in Watts area. ·Nancy Reagan: 'Well, How About That?' Four WoundedinSecond Shooting in Los Angeles From \Vire Services ML.\MI. Fla. -Several thi~gs hap· ~ned after California Gov. Ronal d Reagan announced to the convention here that he is e candid.ate for the GOP presidential nomination. These things included : Mrs. Nancy Reagan had called a news conference to announce that he r husband was not a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination. Half rui hour later, her husband calied a news conference to announce that he wa• a candidate. "Well, how about ttiat." said Mrs. Reagan when &he got the word. One of her a.ides said "We were caughl off gu&t'd . We were stunned." * SAN JOSE. Cali!. -The 1.900 unionized faculty m~mbers a t Calilorn.ia St:ate College vowed Mon· day to oppose Gov. Reagan ';in every possible way.'' John Sperling, president of the American Federation of Teachers' State1 College Council. wrote the goYWnor that his group wtl!!i pledged to join a "resistance movement" against Reagan. * LOS ANGELES -May-or Sam Yor· ty said Reagan's action was a "futile attempt" to top Conner vice president Richard Nixon. "Everybody has known he's been running for president almost before he took office as governor," the Los An_geles mayor sa:id. "I don'l t-hink tht govem<Jr con· sciously and deliberately wants to boost ttie candiOOcy of N e l s o n Rockefeller , but that will be tm effec t olhis actions," Yorty added. From \Vire Services LOS ANGELES -At least four per. sons in a crowd of more than 500 at the Watts Summer Festival in \\1ill Rogers Park were wounded today by men firin g from moving cars. Depu ty Sheriff Curtis Ratzlaff said the victims and their assailants were Negroes. He said there was no appar- ent link to a .e:unfi ~ht Monday in which two wounded pol icemen shot three Negro assailant s to death at a service station ~n the Crenshaw district about eight miles from Wa tts. FAMILY QUARREL Sheriff's officers said ;i "family ouarre l" apparently triggrred the c:un. fire in the oark where Mayor Sam Yorty r.1ondav officially opened the third annual \Valls Summer Festival. Ra tzlaff said several persons in the crowd fired back at the cars as they sped away but that non e of the p::1s- !L:engers was known to have been hit. J.le said there was no explanation wh y persons in the crbwd wer e armed. 'T'he victims we re identified as .Tr rry \Vat.son. 19. Bob.by Ephriam. Tl. ,J,,rry Darrough, 18. and Ruby Daniel. 19 . Authorities said other persons may have been wo und ~d and taken from the scene by fri end s. Ambutancrs were not allowed into the area wi thout a police~cort. , 8 OfVfSIONS ALERTED Eight police divisions were brieny olaccd on tactic11J alert after today's inci clent at Will Ro!!ers Park. A lsr.ite se!!ment of the cro wl'l hrief!y pelted deputies with rocks and bottlPs. None was injured. The deputies wifh· drew. the barrage stopped and the crowd dispersed shortly thereafter. A gun battle between police and four Negro youths exploded in the Cren· shaw Di strict when a car be inJ!: tailed by a squad car pulled into a gas sta· tion Monday. 'T'he gun battle eruptcrl at the Ji;as Fila tion aftRr the driver of the car anrl one of his three passengers walk ed to the front of the vehicle and lifted the hood . Officers Norman J . Robe rge, 29. and Rudy Limas. 25, parked about 10 place to save i Rever1ion1ry Truata ••• can provide a substantial t.ax saving for you and the entire principal rever!B to you at the end of the Trust tenn. Earnings are paid to the one you designate; i.e., to a eon or a daughter in college, an ex-wife, a retired employee, a parent. Write or come in and e:.pl.ore this with us. Tax control is an impor- tant part of good money management. Newport Balboa Savings, unlike a commercial bank, is an excel- lent a11d legal depository for Corporate Savings Accounts . Profit Sharing Funds, Withholding Tax Funds, Emergency Funds, R'eoerve Funds ABSigned to State Board of Equalization, Funds &Migned to Contractor's State License Board AIL earn healthy quarterly dividends. When our MSigned savings accounts are used in lieu of bonds, the earnings on these accounts go to you and eliminate the band c:ast. Our * % bonus certificattl in multipr.1 oj $1000, currmtly <am 6.26% per llMU"' w1"'n mainlailu!d for 3 y1ar1. feet behind the car, walked over and asked to see the license of the driver. Suddenly .... two persons in the rear seat opened fire on the officers. wound· ing both of them. Limas managed to empty his revolver at the suspect!! as: he fell to the ground. The bodies of the dead and wounded were fou nd less than 15 feet apart whe n reinforcements arrived at the scene. Two or the Negroes were killed outright and the third dled at Central Receiving Hospital a short time later. Limas wa s N?ported in serious condi4 tion today following four hours of 1ur· gery to remove bullets lodged in his legs. Roberge was reported in serious condition with wounds in the groin, right hand and lower chest.' Both were expected to survive. Witnesses saw a fourth suspect run· ning from the service station and more than 100 offici?rs launched a manhunt in the vicinity.-Oth ers were stationed on rooftops and at a command post to (J uell possible violence. However, no incidents o-ccurred . Police Seeking Three Missing Santa An.a Gir"ls Police are seeki'ng a trio of teen ·af· rd Santa Ana girls who disa'ppeared Sunday after calling for a rii:te home fro m the Newport Pop Festival, which drew more than 100,000 persons to Cos ta Mesa. Cecilia Monto}ra. 15.' her sister Theresa, 12. bot h of 10'l Goldenwest St., and J anne Castro, 14, of 2114 s . Artesia St., telephoned Mrs. Mary Montoya about 10 p.m., to be picked up. Jus t about that time, several hun- dred fans milling about the Orange Cou nty Fairgrounds area we re dispersed by club.carrying lawmen as they comm andeered a Tic Toe Market at Del Mar Avenue and Newport Bolllcvard. Newport .. ~~!~Q~ Savingses Founded In 1935 N•Olllcc-VllU.0. i.i..,o.1-. c.w.nlil-• Plionof714130 I 2166 Ellt c-t Hi"""'1, Co-1 dtl Mu, C.li!orni1 ll2625 • Phoot 8'11!-158SD Jt.omow la:SJ:W olO.. Handrecl Million DoU.ul 1 P.A. PAL1illR. a..!rmanof lhe 'Doud • Acnm 8LOMQUllT, Pnsidetlt , . I • • I 4 DAii. y l'ILIJT t~ .... .., , ... llilfO San Jose policeman ·stonley WI~ -found something other than bis gun, club or chemical mace to halt a fieeing suspect in and around a parking lot. Wilson threw bis plas- tic helmet at the man's legs, trip. ping Marcos Felan, 23, aougbt for stealing customers' beer off the bar of a local dance hall. • Louise ·Kimm.el, of Tulia,, Okla.. invit- ed to htlp out at tM GOP Conoention by the R~blictm National Commit- tee, proves rather conclvliMv that she is "nQt partial to cm11 one candidate for tht nomination. . ,,,,... Two American aailon, left ashore when the U.S. D.WOyer Mansfield left Newcasile, Australia, 15 days ago, surrendered to police and were ordered to pay their own air fare hack to California. Ronald E. Griswold, 20, and Freddie Ray RoblnlGn, 19, told police that they had prolonged a tour of tho coun· try in hopes of •eeint a kangaroo. • It don't mean G thing ff it afn't got that zing. At tea.rt that'a what wht.skey drinkers in Mcm1la finally dflcidtd. AuthoritU1 i'n- vestigatmg complaffltr fro "' stoM·sober con.iumer1 r1veoltd that con nyn had bnn palming. off weak, .....,.,d.dmoft, loc:olll/' made whi.skev In imported bot- tle1. • Patrolman Otto Dowd, of E a 1 t Hartford, Conn., captured a hank robber fleeing from the Crumecli· cut Banlt and Trust Co., by ram- ming bis cruiser Into tho getaway car. The unidentified gunman was admitted to Hartford Hospital un- der guard while Dowd, who 1uffer· ed only minor injuries, was treat· ed at the hospital and released. All the loot was recovered. • Joker is a real cat burglar. He tours the neighborhood in Walnut Creek and picks up things • . . mosUy clothing. Mrs. Paul E. Hoff- man, Joker's owner and wife of a retired Air Force major, said "I put everything he had stolen into a basket and made the rounds of the neighbors." She explained that she was able to return everything that the 14-month old male cat had &to Jen, ''with the exception of a pair of size 32 men's shorts." 2 Officers Charged in Death of .GI i rr. ENNING, GL (UPI) -The ~ ·did It would preHot UJ><1'I ltltlmo/oy Ir= -tocll)' ·-1 "phyidcal •vtdence. ol phyllcal,abuH" by two Rani~ atncer1 upon a YOWll Nesro 1arfNlll "'1o died aftar un- c1«1otn1 a tralolng marcll. The olfl<en -Lt. Robert E. t.anbam, 31, ol Howton and C.pt. Lance C. Warner, 26, ol Sanduaky, Ohio -are charged witb dereUction of duty, ... aull and batteey and mo!· treatment. Sgt. Lon E . Bak.er, 23, 1 Negro from Nubville, Tenn., was undergoing Ranger tra.1ni.ng under the two officers when he was allegedly beaten by them ror falling during a forced march under a bot sun May 19. He ~ed 1 week later, apparently of a hea1 llr•ke. Spec. 4 Robert Qibb, a medic, telWied Monday be saw Baker fall H'Vtr'll times durinl the five-mile nuin:h. Cribb said Lanliam slapped Baker after ooe fall and hit him with lliJ ll!t att.r another. Second Lt. David W. Wilt, another medic, •lid Baftr got to hi1 feet and man:bed but th• "began l'UDllinl around like a wild man." Wiit said Baker, _..nlly dazed by ~ IUD , gr*>ed for a atict on the ll'Olll>d but tumbled into a ditch. He IMd I.anhlm and Warner juq>ed into Iha ditob and hlt Baluer while be "Urubed around wild lite." The olficen then put Bater into an ambulmce, Wilt slid, and medics repoilled be might die. "U be dies throw him in a ditch," Wilt quoted Wam1r u saying. 'lbe medics to<* Baker to the post bOlpttal mlnutel lllter on <rders ft-om -RaolW olftc.r. Air Force Makes Secret Launch Of Spy·in;Sky CAPE KENNEDY. na. (AP) -In I Illa lint A<ret oatelllte l&uncbinl here · in five yun, the Air Force today rocketed a new experimeotll •PY·in· ' the-sty payload on a mi1rion that could produce a vut amount ol in- telllgenoe date -Russia, Red CJJlna, SootheHI Aal.a Ind oth ... Pof.en- tial IJooblo """'· A -g AIW·Agena rocket thun· dered away from Cape Kennedy at 7:08 a.m. EDT to pnipel the super-spy, ~cinamed "Spook BJrd" by some fJl. !idall, -n a blll>.aJll--t from -ita lmtnmMmtl could I.air:• a comprebem:We loc:t: at wide _..s of. Ille globe. Re~m!Dg a long-time preas policy. the Air Force did not inform newsmen in advance of tile launching - although many knew about it. Some offi<Ult laid the orders to cloak the latmdl in 1ecrecy originated with the J'*1t Chieh of Sto!f and the state Department. Both Ol"ganlzatims reportedly were concemed that inf«mation about the satellite would be UJ>letting to certain nations during a delicate period in in· ternational relations. However, It's hard to hide samethlng as big and as powerful as an AUas- Agena nu:nblimg oil 1 launch pad. The rocket la 11 stories tall and sounds like 100 freight trains howling in uni.son. It was quite visible and th()Usands watch· ed as it blazed across the sky. HEADON COLLISION -Wreckage is strewn along the right-of-way where two Seaboard Coast Line passenger traitu met headon Monday near Winter- haven, Fla. Of the 400 passengers aboard, 125 were reported injured but none fatally. The crash scat· tered. seven diesel engines and 14 cars along the main track. Two Trains Crash Head On 125 Injured in Florida Collision; 27 HospitiJlized WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (UPI) - Charles Edison, soc of the inventor and former &ecret.ary of the Navy, was catch.in& a nap in his com · partment when the nortbbOund Silver Meteor rammed into D southbound lilter train Monday, j1cklmtflng c~s like children'• toys. The Seaboard C o a 1 t Line streamllner1, Oil(! st.mding still and the other ,rolling along about 60 miles an hour before the engineer hit his brakea, crashed beadon. Twenty-1even persom were hospitalized and dozens of otbe.ra injured. The crmh, shortly after noon , scat· tered seven diesel engines and 14 cars along the main track. Crumpled cars criss-crossed the tracks. Twisted metal, luggage and shattered 11u1 lit- tered the area. It Wiii the second train v.-reck for EdlJon, whO like many of the 01 others aboard the tr11:Ds w11 on his Annual Phy~ial Checkup for LBJ SAN ANTONIO. Tex, (AP) -Presi· dent Johnson's visit to the hospital to- day i1 described by his personal doc· tor as "in keeping with the policy" of an IUl!lual physical dleclrup. way to the Republican N-ational Convention in Miami Beach. At lea!t f0ur persons are in serious condition at Lake Wales Hospi.tal. They are Nathan Frank, 45, engineer aboard the northbound train; John Lisk, 59, th! fireman; Richard Hemleben, 69, and William B. Rosen' bluth, 80. The southbound Meteor was stop~d just short or a sidblc: about two miles south of here 1h a quiet orange grove. The northbound tT8.in was supposed to pull onto the siding automatically. It failed to. Railroad officials had no lmmediate explanation for the rnalfUDCUon of their safety S)'Stern known 11 "cen· tralized traffic control." "It could have ~n a mechanical failure or a dispatcher error," said one railroad official. "We don't know yet." . 'lbe norttibound Miami-to-New York b'ai.n was supposed to go into the siCling to let the southbound train past, the SCL spokesman said, but it "just kept coming." In addition to the 'l1 passengen: and crewmen admitted to b o s p i t a 1 1 , another 94 were treated for cuts and bruises and released and about 70 other1 were treated at the scene fer minor injuries. 00111• at your ca/f • ..i• • .... -... - Policeman . 1 Shot Dead . I ·1n Detroit DETROIT (UPI) -A police aors--killed and -policemen and a byllondor W'\R wowided Mon- cloy nl&l>t In a houJinl projoct on Dellr'Oit'• near we.t side. Police shot and~ ,...mdod tbe sunman. a . poroloe from on DHnoU prlaon. The ahOotJnil, ID the ti..vlly Negro ·project, "In no way bu a r&clal overtone," 11kl police commiuloner J-1 Spreed, In an att<m!lt to allay the spread c:i rumors. "There W8ll DO 1niping; I empbalize DO snip- ing." . Police said 1everal , IJllall crowds gallhered in the muggy evening but !hero was no d!lficulty in maintaining order. Police ldentilied tho suspect as Henry Matthews, 31, a parolee from an DJlDo1J prison ln August, 1967, a Negro who bad served 11 years of a 199-yeer term ror m\D"der. Kllled was Sgt. Edward Wol!kl, 40, a vet«-ao d. 18 years who bad been pro- moted July 19. He -married and tbe father of two sons. Policeman Ridlard Woyalmer, 45, wbo 1ufiered. a bullet craze in the back, and Richan! Paduch, 24, who was shot in the ann, were treated and released from Detroit G e n e r a l Hospital. Scattered rock-throwing occurred in ltacme, Wisc, Monday night, but police taid the troubk WK nothing like two previous nighU wben young people broke windowe and !toned cars. A fire in an old wooden build.iJ?& across the street from the fire and police stations was put CU. quickly. In York, Pa., shots were exchanged in a ccrdoned-off area of the city where trouble has occurred for three nlgthte. Snipers fired on police patroll· i.ng the tbree·square-block area. Police lobbed three tear gas canisters into the building and the shooting stopped. 1bere were no injuries or arrests reported. Foor fireboolbo we"' repori.d dur· ing the night, at two meat markets, a police car· and a bedding fa~ on Yart's t1oullb side. Negro ycuthJ riding m cars mot out rtreetlights in the sealed<>lf section. " The Tens White House pictured the President'• admJsslon to Brooke Anny Modic al Center. u routine al1houCb it did not use tblt word in the oftidll an- nouncernent and neither did the pretidmtial doctor, Viet Adm. George G. Burkley. 23rd Anniversary Of Bomb .Observed PHONE COLLECT 213-728-7283 FREE ESTIMATE CHARGE IT! HIROSHIMA. Japan (UPI) -Japan today observed. the ~ annivern.ry ol the dropping ol Iha world's first atomic bomb with prayers rcr peace, speeches against nuclear weapons and a mesaage from Pope Paul VJ. A crowd of 40,000 per..., gathered in Hirosbima to offer a lllent prayer for the 200,000 victims of the first bomb. Eastern States Steam Heat Wave Wilts Nation From Atlantic to Rockies California TUISDAY SfOWlll low ., •••.•. , .. ,. l ~M •·"'· lA htonll 111111 , • •. l!IJ ... 111. 1.t W•OMISDAY fnt ................. )1M •·""• 1,4 ,lllnf 11 ................. 1•12'•.tn. u ~ tow ............. 1;., ... flt, J.I *-fllllfl •••..••....• f ;fl J,11\. 7.1 ' AlbtlnY ·-i-Att.111• 11s,,..r0. .... ...... 1un.1o Cllluff ._, Cle¥91..itl ...,_ ... -....... 1'•1,......., f'or't Ww lfl ·-·-· ... _ J"*-"""''"" ,_ IC-C"' L• """'" L.......,lllt -· M•"' .......... M ............ •M. l"M N .. °'1MM N .. Y..t; Clk~ Cit¥ -... _ -'"'"'.,.,,.. l".,,\M'llL ,,,,., ,.tnlt.... Ort. 111 .. i. CttY ·-It. L ..... S.11 IAll;e (ffT ... -Sall I' !'Md.a ..... T--w ...... " ff .. " ti Jll .II f2 '° ,ll ... n ~ .... to n .M . " .., .. .. " ., .12 . " " 6f .II fJ " .11 u " u o .n ,, n .01 .. " • n .. d . " a N N n " n .. " " " .• .. .,, ,t• "' " ·" . " .. " .. " N M .. " ... U N " a " .. ... M TI A .. " ... " .. a • TI • .... M 71 .It a N We'll clean your .draperies for only ... l oo 1so , PER WIDTH PER WIDTH . unlined up to 3' Ions unllnocl 3' to 5' lont 2 50 PER WIDTH unllMol 5' to 9' '°"' ' l'RICE INCLUDES TAKING DOWN AND REHANGING. 48 HOUR SERVICE • I P•nnays txcluslvo now procen cloens .n types of droperias baoulifufty, droptrits that could never be claonad bofora (ovan baouty plaals ol no extra charge). Makas tham look end IHI almost lika new. PENNEY'S CLEANING SERVICE tlraporioo • h J p1aod1 • ltlo1it1ib • doc01ot0tplllOW1 • qccent,.,... I . . TUESDAY AUGUST I • # •• . -. it l1tnpttd tit d1ftel N04~ hit! olden Ala1nd11 ltlwld7 i. l'Hlwtl 1 ""' d.W. stolt11 lroni tht U.S., bi.rt ha• kl 11116-lttk• th• mlu lon lllrt1Jelf whtlt M111141 ~,...b hll aakll. (R) m11on.,..,1cit10> Ill....... (C) (30) """" Blllll Pilot.• Camtrta follow tftt. &:DO II a (I) C••P•l11 'II! (C) 11111 ak11M Mlditl Zk(I« •11 hit (cont'd. mq. 4:30) "Tlle Re1111bll· m1117 1nd Dft1n·d•n1t1t1ui,tnb In ttll N1tlaNI Com.rt1o11,• Tonlcht'a Hit Alps. 11111t lttMty It the PlltfOfll ,,n. Ill WI .......... 1nbitlon. CBS NIM 1111 a camplltl 1:001J ..._: (C) ''WHt111 .. at b'°"lckut l1clllty h'lstalltd ill I n..t WW' (dttml} 'V-Jlld Hudloft, of 2Z VIM, hi I major MW .,. Llllrtll bcal1, Robert SQU. boto- protch. The YIM, 40 l.t lofll •1 tbJ MtlonL Tht tloohollc: IOI cf tlaht feet wldt, art 11 Mitml Beldl 1n oil tycoon Ntrlll 1 1Jrl who Corwtfltlon Hal~ r11dy for 1111r1· br1nis oul hi. bttttr oatur1 untQ Uon 1s 111 lntefnttd bfOldcut cen· his alSl:tt stem ll'll11bl1. ttr. Most Important ol ttlt YlllS tfl OJ Mtric:.M Wtll: (C) (30) "RodJ those tlllt bold !OUI control ftlOllll Mounbln PKk Trip." Allll SINIM throufh -.tllcll 111 o1 ·cas Nm f#t· rides 111 u cltin:t pKk trlln Into 111111 11 cllanntled. Ont conlral the ruutd Ca111dl111 ltocldta. room Is raponsibl1 for wlllt oc-fDllld: "'~ "ll'OWll Ind curs Oii tile floor ol HI• ~ntloll Rt.di r.otlltloll. • Elilllr Ritc0, tdl- h1IL A MCOnd dlrllCb COlflflll of tor of the LI !W1 MWIPll*. Is 111 1divltJ 1djacenl to tllt lloor, questioned 1bout N11r. llld Miii· lncludlnf th• lmlltdi11t outsldt can·Atnlrkan llliliilllCJ' bJ 1 pu11/ 1111, col'l'idM &nd lollbln. A third or lotlt newsmtn. Clwr1• Brown Is raponllble for rtmotn. ,Thi thrM modertta. lllffs ICllM mnb a thlf OCCllf m TY Mukai 0surt 1nd fonrud the lllOllf: lm.podlnt tdlYlty of the lllOlllllll to 1 Dlntnil l :30 D 1.t11 ... IM1 llrillJ a..: (C) control room. Eld! control ioom h11 (90) Polltlul comment.ry. I lull 1dffDrl1I prod11etlon elllf llCll· 0 @(]) ••11•b1ICll KltiMll nical staff. Co....U.: (C) (90) ABC'1 llaft ii a ID (I) l1p1bUt11 ftltionll 1nchortd by Howlrd It Smith. Bob c:otwe.tilrl: (C) (confd. from 4:!0) Clift ind Johll SCIU tttl the 1udl- 1n thl COl'l'tflntion hill 1 compltlt ltlct whit his transpired OI thl NBC Neoit1 broidcisl tenter ii con-floor. Otller nport.rs COVIi the struded. The tMl•r lnc1udu atu-~nb off tht floor, In the "amol•· dlos. 1 11tws tool!\, .idtot•PI fl. l1l1ed" hottl roorm. Thi fJYt •1· . . menb of udi nl1ht'1 CCl'lllrlft 111: , Cllitln, 1 •:r-posltlo11 ~ltchbotrd, q.> A hllf-hour •inrtlnt dotUmtfl· filll'I dev1lop1111 l1borltones, 1nd 1 1 ..,,. th tllt of tilt ..... (2) rum tdllinr complu. Tht N!C •·1 IHI 1 . mt _,. Hews wire iervlct connects to 20 Fallowlnr th• "inst~nt ~1Mnt117" lo !lo to k NBC perJOnntl It 1 raund·Llbll d1sct1mon bf cor· ln:rm:: of :~Pnfflctnt dtw:lo9· rt1pond1nta. (3) An "lnsldtr't Rt- a: port." 1 fiw-~six ml1111t1 "lllrd" mt'ltt1. 111 tht fitld 111 3G del!t•· d h fl ....,. I•) I tlo11 repor1ets whos1 prim111 func· . n.aws. In-t1'1 Im re""".. II· tJon Is to feed tit• wire Mrvlct. c11iv1 trench1nt commentaries by u Sim Afltl Shir. (t) (90) ~c News ruest commtntltan WH- Stiwe'& wife, JIYM Meadows, Joins Ila~ r. B~IJ Jr. 1nd Gort Yldel him tonllhl alona: with tctor-com•· (5) 'Upd1t1, an •ltbt·to-1111 minute dian Gabt DeM, 1in11r Teddy NtelJ 1111ment brlll(l111 the Ylew• up to i nd «>mtdienne Joyce Jamuon. the rnlnut1 IHI whit hts tr111111lrld O Sii O'Clodl Movie: "Hire Colftl florn tht time !ht cotNtntioll in-111m too~ to th• 1lr. tilt Ntlso11s• (comedy) '52--0zzit, fD,..... II TrMI: (C) (30) Harriet, David ind l!IQy "llson, ,1h1 iJnkllOWll Turlril)'." Rack Hudson, Bafhn l...twrMCI, Ann Dor•"-Im B1cf1111, Shlldoil m.11r. hip• ,..... Cent._. leon11d. m lllartll •• Zl:JD m Mo.Ir. {C) "TrlPGI" Cdr11111) 10-.ao D ...,._ ,..... .._ cq CfD) '56 -Burt L.-c.aster, Tony Curtis, IJ lh'ltr. CC) "Mii• If Wu" Gina lollobrlrld1, Klty Jur1dL (llamlr) '53-Ylncmt P'riot, FraM m Ill Mlsttno11 (30) LM)DJ, f'h)'tlis 1tirlri.. ED Wlltfs "n1 m Jtdi Litt! .. Mtn (C) (30) Ill Entrt So111brt1 fD ,....,.. st9rJ (C) (30) l :JO 0 fl• ''*' !Plew (C) (30) ID McH11t'1 Mtvy (Ml) ID Spldr•: "'lluckmlnst11 FuHtr ~ flf Hwnanity." Dlrid Prowltt hlkt with the x!tntill: theorist •lllf df'ltloptr rJ th• ,.,. dl!:Sic dome. Ill ft1tkln J4 (C) 7:1» 0 f Tttep (30) ID Cllllpll'I 111111\f (lO) EID Thi "'91riu11 Stlp: "On1 Nishi et ford'• Thlllrt. .. Dr. lrwln Snrdlow rwltwl ttll m1alllltktn of Uncol11 11 a traaedJ in flVI Kt&. ID "'"' - ID W. SJllfMtlY: Eridl Llins- d!M'f lead:I the ercti..t:r1 Ill a.. thOJlll'• Sympbony No. 2 111 0 .... )or, OJ, J6; "Al Quiet W bf Cola:rus; 1nd Vloll11 Collctrlo lrt D M1jor, Op, 17 bt-Bnhme with Jo. MPll Sllvll'lbllt, IOlobl IE Ten1 • 1-1111 1o:JO m ,.._ (C) (30) 1111 .1otin1. ll:tOIJ Blwla O'CM* llptrt. (C) (40) Jerry Dllnplly. B TIM lltll HMt Nns: (C) (30) Gec>l'll Skinner. IB-""'....., 130l D "'-{C) .(39) lutw W1rd. IBLM ,._ (C) al M1¥11! ~ lldt lll't T ... (d111111) '41-Yqlnl• M.,.., lnice Bennttt. 7:!01B ,_, ""' ...,, ICl ~Dl U 117) (.I) llrrtlon'1 lerlllll: (C) (60) ·11m1 Bomb." Attem.pU111 toll:JO BIDCIJTIM T~ llllw ('t) rttlll 1 Germ111·deYlloptd compound 11 """: "TIMI Wiid Hurt" (llor· tor 1 1uper bomb, the Gorlll11 hlVt rar) 'S2-.1111nltll' Jon-. Hurl! Grll· hi dt.rm 1n 1etN1ted lime bomb lith. to retth thrir pri11. (R) 0 (J!) (]) JelJ li9lllf ... (C) e MHllM s ... ~) ., ...... 11:40 B Mtwlc "A t• " n .. Topthr" (Wlll"tm) &1 -Jimq wi....-("91111) '41-Pi ul Daqla, si..rt. Rld'l1fd Wldrn1~ Slllri11 Ann Sothtl'I. Klrlri Dou1l11. Jelnnt Jorln, Andy Dwlnt, Und1 Cr11lal. Cnl IB""' .,_. CIO) n. fl!) no ·-Cllol (II) ltOO 0 -(C) ID,..-m"' ,,.. ICl 12:JO CJ..._ ..,._ II ...... .l!Oll II 1'111 111 lhn: (C) (60) llrry (myt1:11')') '54-aerban Shnwyd;. Dunphy. Georp S.11d111, Glry M11riH. II ROLLER GAMEs-LIYOI (C) mN>NI ... _, ""'" C.mo * T·l lRDS vs. NEW YORK Jonts." "C.11nav1 lniwn." '"' g lolW 11-: (C) (2: hr) U T-Blrd1 VL N.Y. Bombn m11on1 (C) 13-0> Ill) fl f:T PllJll111t: "Tllllteen At•lllll F1t~The Survhan." llO ll)LI- 4:!0 0 ll!Hll • ,,._ ' ""'' ICl (60) "Tumtboul" Id• L1191lno ru11b M DJ. Dal Sdtlllidtf, I tel• lfttilt behllld 1111 1ron Curt.1111 wtlO W£0N ESOA Y DAmME MOYl£S "PO&StUMI.~ m Adlol T1Mltrt: "hflln of Con- flict. .. 1:00 l!l IMI« (CJ ..,.. ..,. ,,.. Tew" (oomtd)') '48-l>tftnls Mot· 1111, Jeck C.t10fl, 11 C.••llJ lrllttl• .... o-ICl 1:1o a-..: .,.. sn ....- 1wa1n> '57-&otl Brady, Miii -·· 11:15 II (C) • ..,..., lu..-(wttlam) '53-Scatt llradJ, .lol11· CttWford. steffllll Hl)'Otft. ii:Hm.,.. ....-<dra1r11> ·40-.... ...,. ........... 1..-............... _ ~!OQ(C) -" .. -,, .. ., .... --" lot' (dr1m1) '55 -Y'foftM DI Clrto, Kowlrd Duff. (llon'or) '15 -l• l1it11', HIM MmNll. ......... ...,.. (4'11M) .,._,,. Cl'-(C) -..... IC! ... ... ...... 1 ... (dmM) '45 G•rtt lttft. ,...) ~ 14111111.. • JOB PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS 0111 Of The L..rt••f Fect1Jtle1 111 Of111t• Ce•11'7 -' .. A RePLll'fM!tilT POR YOU! JUST B!'.CAU!E THe Flfl5T TOWN •.,e HIT KAO HO PATrfNl'! GORDO JUDGE PARKER. PW.SE, ~ .• PONT TELL THE P"UE.'5 A&ol!T WH.t.T HAP· l"EHEP TOM16HT ! MOON MULUNS TUMBLEWEED~ WELL. WIMSLE, YOUVE DONE IT AGAIN I MISS PEACH - . . . . • • • • .#10 l OON'T "-AN 10 ....-~ IM 'TMIS TilUC'I< WMtLe. )'CU ""Ve' ~L,A ·-. - t ~l!D THAT LAST VllAA AAD·MV PAUNTS MAD• N\E. ~TA'! IN MY ROOM.~ A~ MJ1Ce,...,, ·, . . . ly Cliarfes M. SclUils ly Harold Le Don rr NMl ocaueP 10 ME. tAM! I 61a6 I mT ld6llM!P THAT 1' MAal!P MAN M>llLP N!Va ,t,11( A 6frt. R:>1t A '*-TE ! By Tom K. Ryan DAAN TTl-1 l<HEW I SHOULD HAVE USEP 'DESEASEitl .. By Al Smith YOU 9TUPID MULE, I SAID, UNDERI tTMINKITWA5 'THe WAY YOU Wl!HT Al50UT . If·~· ly Mel r'""'"· """'' 6, 1w.s POLITICAL RETORT -Al Lohman, left, and Roger Barkley with guest , stan Worth h01t. th.e "Lobman·Barkley Retort" a satirical look· at the events of the d,ay in the Republican Nation'1 Con- vention. The special, in color, will follow regular coverage on Channel 4 at approximately 9: 30 p.m. tonight through Thursday. TELEVISION VIEWS Convention 'Sluggish' By CYNTHIA LOWRY HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Television lecbniqUH may encompass the sprawling activities of a poll· tical convention, but those early Republican au. sions on Monday, mostly ceremonies and speeches, made for sluggish viewing. CBS ANO NBC covered the opening day from the first gavel. Since the delegates, millin& around the convention floor , paid little or no attention to the stream of speakers during the morning session, it was not surprising Utat television ignored them thoroughly. CBS's Walter Cronkite and NBC's Chet Hunt- ley and David Brinkley calmly controlled things from their lofty perches. Top network correspon. dents, looking like grounded astronauts with their power-packed microphones and earphones, scurried among the delegations asking leaders over and aver who they thought would be the presidential winner. IT WAS ALL pretty inconclusive since the re. sponses were either sales pitches for one or another candidate or bland expressions.of ignorance abou.t trends. As the day wore on, the story was considerably enlivened by Gov. Ronald Reagan's announcement of candidacy. And the a rival ceremonies in Miami Beach for Richard Nixon gave the networkl a chance to use helicopters to get pictures. THE NIXON DANCING GIRLS, welcoming crowds and balloons also gave CBS's Eric Sevareid a chance during his analysis to suggest his /eeling of weariness about the whole big show. "More arti- ficial than ever/' he said. During the evening sessions, with the netwo rks paying more attention to the speakers, there was more of the usual oratory, but it was sparked cqn- siderably by the telephoned address of convalescent Dwight D. Eisenhower from Walter Reed Hospital in Washington. IF TELEVISION is devoting a Jot of expensiv• time to the convention, the presidential. hopefuls and the delegates are payi ng a lot of attention to the medium. Just about everyone except Nixon was available for interviews. . Generally, the coverage by the veterans of tele- vision was smooth . Occasionally the floor reporter• had trouble with their electronic equipment. A> far as the convention entertainment was concerned, it may have been great for the hall, but it didn't exact· Jy light up the TV sets. CBS ANNOUNCED what has been rumored for so long: Starting in September 1969, it will add Merv Griffin and his talk-variety show to its week night schedule. Gril!in will start competing, with al· most the exact foNl'lat, with Johnny Carson on NBC and Joey Bishop on ABC. CBS, despite reports for several seasons that it wouJd launch a late evening show, held out because repeated surveys indicated its affiliated stations were happy showing old movies . But now, with the supply of old pictures practically exhausted, the net· work has joined the talk parade. Dennis tlae Menace ' • l I I I I ' ' • ' --.. - Jt DA!LY •nor r....ia. ~116. 1968 Employers Facing Prejudice Checks OVER THE COUNTER -A- NASD Llstint• for Mondey, Autu•t 5, 19" •n• l'rttr By SYLVIA PORTEii No matter bow etrong the Clvll !Ugllts st>nd of the Rtpublicao nominated for Pre•!-thla week in Miami (or or the Democrat nominated tht last Wen of Aucust Ill Chlcego), you, the U.S. employer covertd by the Civil Rl"ghts Act of 1964, must ana:wer these queS· Uoru right NOW: Cornm!uloo ts now 1hl!tlll1. focus from obvlout forms ol deb"berate job diJcrimioa· tlon to the more aubtle ways Ill Wbicti the lll.ljority ol U.S.e .mployer1 de.ny Negoie1 and other mtnoriu.. equal """°"""ily in hiring. on ·l be·Job ..... ............. I M uut llf l lt AaiL ..... AllbOll LN I ll'OUITIU.\LI IKkwtM Ml• 1,40 Wli t?.'~ ~!\O w.,, ... ,. lt•¥•ler1 1;~ :I'\ "" Abt• " , ... ::ii cm.,. ··~ lf y ~ 1=·:~ri.a. M If a Wlltlllr• 1""ei'1'TetU•I IAH~ 1"' ~ A~CF 1~,2·: AUM flklt\c .1.. 1~, lt~ \~ tJi l I~ ft """' ,, l!YJ ••'*•n ''"'V f,6f 1~ 1.i. n~ mE• .1111 Air C.rllt 1111. '' !4 llClltt r: ' l1 ,,. V. Cll1rter NV H' I~ UYI '°' ~14 Miii/i .)0 ,llrtlor,,. Fr1..nt 1114i U 1 Ii fr.':' At;;':Jt cm ~:r' \f~ ~rri S:r:ll-llt'..1 Clll ,.JG ~\Ii W! ~I& :*"I~ I,«! :~n;'"°"Y:'ffl( .• 11,·~ 1'r.:"' 1 •lllHll ei.c:1rot1\u ''" loft\ 1~ ~ "' H•I •• Cll .• 57\t A[oQU(1 , " O•lt'· I > " f H World !i" n·• lll'r F r$I NII Cl!y tt\\ Ar PrOI I !ti "I ~ .. • "' Clilcljl 5~ I I& "' YI "'•'*II" H•t. NY !.:IO ~· •• B A ~d p1i.1! IH fi',;;"~111 00 ID ..,,lie~ COl'I Mfr1 H1w:• f\IU U11 1,t, '"' \~ Al.llKlfl l~ Alltn k-·11· b 221' INMI• JI Jl\11 l1 Morean .,., '-• I Vi 11• 1 I& A l,,ou1t• Alll I N11lnt ' » lt\lt v..· ~-~· ... ~ 1'4 ,,. L N1i Ilk H~. 71 • A • ~ .t ,,_,. •:.1u \, M '51' ~tlff ..,. n.. l' fr' ;:,jSTIRN IANk,l Allltno C .2t ::4t~'!n1~ 1 .. M ! .MY1o t" ' .... t., 1·= ' :111~ !!.... ~ IA~~°" t=.1c:. 1.2' HI\ rWI tt .. ~.~~1.\ ~ '"f;. .. Cll\&t .!' if.. :a 'It. 111-n Or 1\1nt ,IU au ;~ "' tnk~ '(~~SF J.·!'J ~~ r ~ AllnllOll J .• ~~~~~ .. -~ I • .,.,: f-a.:. lllW .• /1 n.... It~ ~lf\~t ~h' .:• .,. rm I lfiZ ~ll:f.V: r." Do you have one or more Negro vice presidents or Negroes emp~ed tt a minimum of th.is levtl of r.esponslblllty? Do you regularly give Negro employes a chance to fill in for absent employes in more challenging j o b categories. thus giving them a form ol tra.intng leading to advancement? DO YOU actively recruit at predominantly Negro col· leges, state employment agencies and other key Negro job sources? Do you accept job ap- plicants who are koown to have participated in civil disobedience actioos? Do you make a practice of retesting Negro job ap- plicants who failed your employment tests on the first try? DO YOU regularly ad- vertise job openings in the classified sections or Negro and other minority run publications? . ll you cannot aMwer YES to most or aJJ of these ques· tioos, you well may be in· vtUng charges ot racial legal action apinst you by discrimination leading to legal action against you by the federal and state agen- cies enforcing federal and state civil rights laws. As Ule 1968 election cam- paign gets officially under way in Miami, it is abun· danUy clear that new Civil Riehts areas will be ex· plored by both t.he GOP and De m o crat.ic candidates. Tbi.s is and will be politics of th• highest priority. BUT mis exp£nded ex- ploration is sWl in the future. The question iJi are you aware of the areas already explored? Do you recognize that the Equ8l Employment OpportunJty --trainioa. p r o m o t J o n , employment teats, elc! On July 1, coverage of tbe Civil RlgbU law was ex- tended to all U.S. employers and unions with ~ or more employe5 or members - meaning ab o u t 6.000.000 workers are now covered. Here are guidelines, worked out by the R e s e arc h Institute of America, to 51J\3.ll and large employers on bow to comply with the law during this new, tougher enforcement period: plicnuts, it's no longer suf· In recruiting job ap· plicants, it's no Jonger suf· fiC'ient mtre{y to keep your doors open to Negroes. Instead, recruit actively at predomlnent.ly Negro col- leges. state employment agencies, other sources :>f Negro applicants. Don't .simply skim off the A stu- dent and degree bearing engineers. Also consider capable B students and others below the top. Tap the Urban League's "S)dlls Banks" ol qualified Negroes lookin& for jobs. IN sc'RE EN I NG or testing job applicants. make sure your tests screen in rather than screen out Negroes. Avoid making your test or educational re· quirements unnecessarily high. fo~or instance, a high school diploma should not be a "must'' for low-skilled en- try jobs. AdvmK:ed verbal sk.ills. which Negroes !re· quently lack, may not be the best measure o! an ap· plicant's ability to perform a low·skilled task. In promoting employes, you will be expected not on1y to consider qualified Negroes for promotioo but also to offer training op- portunitie~ leading out of deadend jobs and toward promotions. Also, keep Negro emp\oyes informed of special training programs available int.he community. how thriltY are you when you borrow money . • Southern California Thrift & loan specializes in personal. business and Trust Deed loans ••• Stop in today and see how we can solve your imme. diate money problems from depend· able 1unds available right now, The Thrifty way can save you money, SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA THRIFT& LOAN 170 E1st 17th St .. Coil• M1s1 .• ,,,64£.S045 6359 Wiishire l lvcl., Los A1111l1s , •• 653·1Z20 Philco Dlreetor Dr. Harold H. Hall of Santa Ana has been ap- pointed director of the newly fonned Advanc~ ed. Development Oper~ ation at Philc<rFord's Aeronutronic Division in Newport Beach. Dr. H a 11 joined Aeronu- tronic as one of its foundi!rs in 1956. Gen Tel Still Lags, Says PUC AMdllt ll'IC I m-. i ,, Mot °""''~ '"' Jiii ,m ?"N"' ttnli '"' ' ~ ' • =-~/.;j;,tl • ff" • fftt 'r'.-PJ:'1"'et11t1t ~.... ~~ ITT:Jlv N~~lf°11:,_1,Cll = ~.!lo mt A I 1:tiJ•'f ·~' M~f'''u p rJ:'"-'s l •\lo 'fil l•lil ldel .... ·"' U\\ r.·· Ul'I... Pd ·'° Ar • , '"" "' 1 ''" IE•''°''"'" I I Fir., lllCOl'PO••llOll I in. ,. 1•Wi A ~· 1.• A '!/. r Ill ,. '°' n u i.lt l/!!rellf <'t \It m Flr1I Vfllr Cp l ,!O Jt\ot lJ\11 JU'I A I VI .0 At ., t.rvl Prild f1'4 " l*~ lolbKtT~lofl TV 12 l 11¥. f,•1-r.~ NI lk I UVi I~ 1'111A11 n1i'1 :rr-Afl:rt r"'r, .. • 1·· ~\If 1\11 a 11¥11~ ~~:.:: l~ ... 1 Jllll t'l'i:rtt• J.1Mllt J • 2~\11 2!li lJ-A :r: .10 em Ar~_hr Ill 1 1 :IN :!Iv. lnlo ,,,._. 2.6f 11.t 1M 113 ~KIU~t ltnk 10 1 lf A Of_ l.IO AU:-~~·C• . 11\4 l•\11 lf Tilt~ 1"6111 H -~ 'Jll ~~ ~ I..,_ .U l•\11 15 !'loll ~r 1.CI :::::::,1: 1::4::' I ., ,f,\.'J ~ 11« r:"'~r.:"FN.J.'!' r.ur· ffit ?:"'~ Cl~ 11~1 :1 1i~ ~ ~·Pl• ~ ~K• ·~H AitK Oli 6 G .. 1 lhk 11"' Mlo ~Jdl Proch 1.IC ll llf 1 ltomo 6lc Ctl I.It lll\11 33~ Anwr• I ,,._~ilclrOlllu 21\11 ,,.... 21\\ IJOll llltw:_ll "" tl'l'o' NII Ilk I i I .V.\t1'111< .IO !It 1 M lld Pll•"" 2'\lt 15Y1 lo!U t.1111 Afll Oii Corl 1 1410 11~ l '4 URloll I~ 1.Cll •Yi " oll\11 Am Alrlin .IO 1v\::s. 11'1U11 ... 11 11111 100:• TtJll C111t1t C1rp .11 ill:\ ''* 1• Ul -..i.1 Bit SO /• 30 3\. l!.. Atll 81ket 1 Nm Cotl"'4 ... 2t " y jllet!Jl•I ,._, .10. 161') ,, 1'1'J Vtlltv HI PllOlll •. xi. 11..:. :12 Amllk No•1 ' l ekhii Vafl .. $1, 11 ff:w, 1.11'1 1' /ME '4 IJ\11 211'' 2!\11 W1tl1 FtrlM l1olk l.40 '"1 ~ Am511<1t ,6f ~1hlr1 H1Tf'OWIY 21 l '"I O:rov1 ·'° ll\.\lln IJl'o IONO$ Am C1n 2.20 11 C Storti .6f \II 20 ltYI ONilMI 1~ l ~ ACF·Wrlp Str CYHi1'1 .... ') AC1n DI I.IS a em!e•I Proctou,.., '° n 20 Jr•~qr inc JS ~ Am 1111 Rwb cwt'413 · u• 1u, .ftll\' Cem 60 l lrtchtr Corp !~ llV. 11 . r1111 Ctr1 1' 111'1 171.!o Ard .... Mlvf1lr '9 20U 11 1' 1' A CNlfl 1 :60 •on•m:• AlrUnt u~lh 110 111 jt•nKllfll c;..,. PIP* ' I~ lf:\6 IM\ Arltn'j Oii>• cw•llMl2 161 ITS 17? AmCOl\I UI lkltHot C.••11•1 .05 1l\lo ~,.L n ''"' c.,.. lnt1rn11 lt"" 21\11 20\lr ll6L OPllctl cwt.,..1'1 l2J'" !25 .-.me,,ecllt' .to IO')lll ttf ,..,., .IM ' .. ' Tr1Ye-Lodlle.2S nui 24'4 JJV. IOMnI• Alrlin.. So.t;i]f "' .-.ctYSl.tl •.• ltlODltor• FOPllll I V, ,.,,, '\It !'kt ' l:I li lJ luft11m1 CY Jl'J 11' 413'1 !JO ACry pf 4 SO lt\l ... Wil Orut1 Ii UW ilo\'I » rlnlr lftd.usl 1 If 11 It C1"10. Dtv tv4"41t1 115 111 AmC11~ 1':5 =n( .l'G ~ nv. '4 rfnlty lrtelull .IO J7 Jl\llo JJ Colell'Mlfl El'IO " 1J ,, ,11 AmO!U I .;c. 0 j 16\~ 'f1 \'I Tl![' G11 .60 U 1.W 11"" ~on1rol 01'' ewJ\Ot" llS ff Am Do.ltlV1$1 1 Ut Illies I.II 22\~ 2ttio 2211. U ti c.., 60 t \lt 10\IO t'4 rod<er< U1-I.• If 16 1' 1' A0111I pf Mi .,., POl'llll Cem I.JO J.I l6 3( Ufl 11~& M1I ... 1111 '"' i!v;. ,, WH1 F -$\lo•,. ... ... AmEtPw '1 SJ 1 If 'Ntltr s""''' tJO 2rv. tt:\6 27\t U Stnft ·'° rt2 ttv. "9d M41rt cw " 7t 1n no AmEllk• 1'» -i. c-...,.11 .ill •111 t n'"" ~l'•i ~· t•,~111 1..tl H M~ FMC Corp cvlVidl 160 lY. Am E• riio lllf'IOI' Mllll l.tO n • u II M 10\lo 11 IOVI FrV1111uf Tr cwu1' UI l•l UI AE 1;:/ pfA' •/,«" ll'IC 15i4 1!'.4 U\lo vw Id C«• 11 "'"' II Gib Fin Ctl c~t\'111' HM \Of ,,~ Am,~olll 10 10 111 llttMNt Ct 1•14 If 11111 Vicco lnuu1 t•~ ~-•'4 tiolh $UQtr t••~\113 ISi $1 A Homt i Jill I U IO. frl.t Gtl .'4 IJ\lo 1 '4 lt'h Vtt\I Cll'"I' Co 4\'• .-. •14 HOUllOn Corp SJGI " ft A Hom. pt' 2 1111ur, PorlM'1lt1 l\lo :N 31/o Vtllly Gt• .14 ni. n•;, ll Mtu11 Coit c•1 cw'looll3 51 " "SI Am Hosp 22 111k:o 1E11t_f11t1rll'tl ' IVt I~ •irtd'(tle 11Vi II 11 Ptc 0...tdt Ad l!W I.I 11 •2 ts l,mlnvu 1 ·10 i:!finenc.:..A,•,~ ''••>•> U'h 'Hiit u v rco Mio C•• ~ ~ 1\'o 1 P1u1ty P1t ,~11' 120 111 '! ArnMFdl ·~ ... u " '"" 11111 v h Cp-of Am ,....,, 33YI f:!l". MllSUll $1\1 CYl'lnn " " •• .-.Mel c '"" II= ~ill ~I ,t4 14~ ~YI ~ ~=I ~'1'~ 2.19 ~·A ~'\O. f~itrv Merl c;. ':.'°11 I~ t i i,tl Am MOfOri 1>11111 °""'"'lcl 1"-11111 1!\~ Wtllttr·JP.!Cot• llv.1··~ Ul'r 'TOllvo ~u .. e"6M11 93 ttl fl ~::N~IGH 11 !f!!. cor1 LA l .• ., 12 " Wtfl'll• E . ··-,J,4 Jli.. 12\'i 2'14 Trt"' Wql Pl 51ft 16 1' A Pno10""'13t! ;i:;:"c.o ":'M ri~ ,~:t im1~ ::"!:!N•: •. 12' ... \11o jfrzJ~ :!Yi~F~fo ~" 1: ,~ 110 All:tJlch ·.Oii """"''' E.,l111n1 1)16 ,u, Wm Ofd (llV! CO ~~ 10\11 10 Whlif11ctt1!• Al.·9' 1t5 2U 1D A,m SN1> ' .. CllllDI •ock P•odl .Ill ,, Ul'I ,, ~t ~ ""!' tnc 1.• 3111~ -""" MUlUAL l"UHOS m $1' p . «""I'°"" .d 1 N 1 t !1 Tl'ldv1tr" JV. I Ht "''""<11.lnl Mui I'~ t .f$ 10.!i •.57 Am Sme!I J tfllCt" TKll 1'16 I~ ~ tit llY Fr. Cort 1 l'h 2 Ufll"1dn 10.JJ 11. 16..ll Am Smell wl A$A Corp 10~ 11•.lo 1 .. 1< Wttj••n Pllllt 1~1,,,_ .l'I: 2"il lll\lt 31\llo V111C1trt1!11 Mui ,d t.10 t.t t.11 Am~o.\tr .10 .... =:L•• u•.• jt'A ,, .... Wt•~· ..Ctl • IJI.\ U\\ ,,.... Am$Afil' .... ,. ti Pr 13 !S:W. '1.'I 1'\/i Wiii Mii 11... lt\'i 11.... Am $111 1 LOS ANGELES -Quality 1nltrfltl 1 .60 21 21\6 1'I wt111 • !Ntrmafti ,,.... Ul'r nn .-.rn11d 11u.1s tf..u• CMdr. Print .Ill ll\i JI''" 3' W_uollle( t~ !JV. 1o:i. ..,,.. s1 ... 11 .41 Of · 'd d b 111 Filll"ICt .!O 11'4 IM U llo WTC Air Fr11t111 !SIM 11.,., IW. s N A su .. r 1.IO servtce prov1 e y ~1911 e1tctronk• u 1tv. 1NJ. vu111 I"°""' ""' 2111. 211...., pratt OW As~~"'AJ.11 General Telephone has been rv=. 111C 11* 1=. 11:1 l'~ ~'!' pl ·'° ,,~""lm ~ :~a/',·~ , . l'Hn• lllC 11 1.u 15'4o 1~ lfU ~ U1111 one .5' 11\:o n 11'/o Am TOii 1 to improving over the last year om,',~.'~,!. w.u'' . .e 1111o 1w. 1 VI sAv1NGs 1. LOAN corAN•es D & N h AmWWll• ·y. i·D ·~ ;n 33 )I~ Amer S6l Ul11t ,lJ I 11\/o 1~ ay i"g t AW,.\.,, l.U and a hall, but by no means ~"""&•rMt ln """ 1 i ••mon• S1v 1. Ln 2 n~ 1loa Am zinc ucommvn. tm: 1 J1 A ·· n lllumbl• S&l ' ' Ametek 1• h h-"' un lr•dtl••tl 1 ''"• /7 _..,,.. oull11)11 51.l l.11, 1~1 1'!• •~• Amite Inc I as reac Cl.I an accept~ble ltof*'ftlcs l•ll o101 l,.,, ') 3'1'1 11u111b1e s .. t Poruc1 .40 ~·,.. 21•1o ,.,.,, AMK C&rp level. th. Staff .[ ~. lvo" lllCl\l1lrl11 ' 11~0 1 •;, lJ lrt1 \I" DI W1'1 1 I II HIY, v 0 p -' .• -·~ AMP Inc 40 . ..,1 ilc:l..C•rt II'> y, 1~ Finl · MOlfl Fl111n. 13 lj•. lJ'.0 ice rexy J,m..eo C0.P !tctrelult \ ~ 31c~ 30"" Fl,11 • 111'1!1¥ Corp 1 IW II;, Am51td 1 .j(I California Public Utilities lfettlllle c., Ji"" 17"' 21 Flnt w111er11 Fin ' •14 • ..,,..(Ofld i.5o IKll"Ollk MtmerlM 3'\lt :Id Hl~ftt Fl~ .11 14\lo B 1'\.-1 AlldlHG 1 40 Commission reported today. ·~ ·~ .i.. 111 1~ 111Ji PKtt~s.v .. tft .:11 11 "~ •V. ,..flCllHG .f ~ I ' ~: =· .• ~· ~ ~ ~VI ~::~· c'o.~l"1n~°": r·· ~ r-l"rank R. Spratt () r ~:e~l•~20 n a service report which ,,. ·~. ''""'' ", •·· ,.. •• Attne1 Lii• i c•~ •''-' JO'L N t B h ·-·o'' "' F~ s i. Sit cY.t1.• •" o i1 llm r.tn. 1111 ·• ,.,,., ttv. 1t1'1 ewpor eac has been ap· ~ cJlei,, will be introduced into pro-F\"' ""'". c-~ 106 105 100 ""''' G•ne•1r 1.• ot lHio l2'1• 31:w, . Ard'IO 1 &e ceedings on General'• re· ~.:~, ~11'i3rtt. .20 ~~ n~ ~It? !~ ir.~''tJ'."1,,.'~t ,r'* I~ 1~ pointed vice president of "•lLl':b"s~.: I l'l11Cntt c1111111 •v. t'lll "'" Am "''' '"1 co j, •J'h /!y, 13\!o Day and Night Manulac ~~~~ ~~t ·j0 quest for •... m'tli Fl1tdler 'und i.v; 11\ls l!Mlo Aro"IUI Ins Co 1.20 l't~ YI ,, •• """1 I 00 an• O Prcdutlt ltd .41 5Vii •V. ~~ l""•llc II $11' CO<'D 14¥1 as h~ t • c . rmour 1.IO nual revenue increase, T>'bor "°"' s11r TV .,,. 7\li '"" onnev 11e s¥1~1n uta J'I• , lili 30:. ur1ng ompany, City of !~~C.p' ... j·;', 1rdion l•"" ca ru ,,,. ' ttll Ult 1111 Co u 11\io . , · I. Toczauer of the Com· 11 5erwKeJ ll'Mo 1Al 1•Yi 11-wnrern ~tile .• n ,,..,, Industry. He will ccnlinue :~~~ub 1·~ ,.., ,,t .,. ~ 9\19 ~ llubll £°"' /.JO " n ~ or• .... missicn's Los Angeles Com· -••I 11:11e1•c11 c. ~~ ,",~ 1:. ~! FF~~f~t "" ~ ~~ ~ as general sales manager o! :~:; b'\1 1:~ munr.CaU'ons S li. 'd ._ llld11&tr1P1 '' ,,." >"• ombl11-• '"' ... >•• .... ""' th C Au.dllr ,M>to ec on, sa1 '"'i:l 5•1;1 f' ... ISlll 1, ii"' °"" Gi11er•• i.n ,r .. (J H" e ompany. AudDG 1.20 that because of the upward 1o1nerm 1ttrc1 1111 1 ~ n't 'dl>CltorJ 1n1 Ct 11 ....,, 14 5 1~,,., S · · "1c1sf'11 1.10 tr d · t.H Techllokwl.,-' J "" m•tre oe1111re1 1 ra lV. praU. .}OIJled Day .and Ano '•" .«> en 1n service quality, 1111eo ,..,1ni,,,...11 , • 1 F••mt!'• Ntw world • ,..,.. '2111 '2 . . . . Au.~inw 1.+o some phases cf service, r.!f!".1111 cero 2 1 1~ 101 1o.i ~rJ.'ilf" cuMW!'1ttl'1 I ~ n ff Night 1n 1939 1n hts first Cull· ~l~l:O" 1 1.~ Such .' l·nstallat>'ons a -"' ~i:i:::, T:::tew .i 22•r"t'r' J"' Fl"' u"11wrrr._" ,_. lj ll111 Aljj time i·ob .i!ter C-Oll g F Aicu.,ef t:U UU tl!!.""' Entin Ct 6 &\II ' f nl Am 'T(iit 11111 .JO 1 111 13~ 11111 e e. rom ).!llllCll n!.IO repairs, can be considered Hi~~~~ .it 43 t v. ~~ ~~!i::11~L~"'A1•8 'l'f.., ,.,~ ~Ioli J939 to 1951 , he was a fie.Id ::11111c1~11P~f7~ good and that others have l'ooY'et c1 1 f.t~ """ 29,, !!~-•mt•ioi Coo. i.so 45\6 "'"' "'"" sales representative cover •,,"," ,c~ ·'° HOll01 Ma1ot Ca 14~'1 \"Iii ....,_11 lle'·IM i 216 :!fl !IA . . • 11 orp reached acceptable levels. 1-1ou11"' F•••1t11 l'~ )1" n~ H•...,..•r F1,, 1.20 "''"' .iv. "'"' 1ng . al various times ter-lluror•P• .20 HYllt• I :If"" ]f'llo lf~ HtrHord Fl•• 1 ll 11 \'> 31'" . . . . • AustNc~ .~ Further improvement is 1 .. 1erm•11n ~ "' ~' H,.,,. •,-, ",nu JAG JJ\fi .s.. ... s1:r,; r1tor1es in the Southwest "'•"-'••'M ··" d•• h 1nloncl COTtltiner •.11 H '.16 35 ,,,.ep t n1 Am1 20 20 . • u,~ 1, . • nee C\I, owever. to achieve ,..,lr\ll'ntnl Syst ..... ~ r 37111 _J""' lnlHC0-11 lift '"' t Y, ... South. Midwest and r·ar l,yco Ca 1,10 the b• ,; th 1"1ttnellotl1t Cht"' 1 tO 10 J!flt•ion Std lift to 311.> 39,,., ll> W t .-.vco ~IJ.20 -0 Jec .. ves e company '"'ern1ie 11ike p1 •.• ~ 10 t ncoln .NII tile .ii '3 ..,.., 1:p~ es . Avfll!l Inc 54 har; set for itseU and to J•r11~, Anwrtw ,llO • ~· ::it out111n1., ~111rn Lil• 11:w. 79'-'o 11;o H t d •-D Avnei Inc wt j~~:~orcr\1:1· .u 31 '1 m ~,,.. ~r::,°"'c.~~nr .. ·'to R~ ~ ff"" N'gh't·"surnthe w c ·1.Yr a~d Al'Oll ~d I.to saticfy its customers' ez:pec-J•,' Al• "'" , 33.., :Mlh.n Mon ... c~ Ll"' .i · ~ :u fl"' 1 s ou ern a 1 orrua 11 k 34 tations, the staff said, ~~=fl:! pf '·" ft"" ~\ Piv. ~!';1 ~~er~1'lH!~n• lli.. ffil1;i ~ headquarter~ in 1951 to ,:~.oil'{· ~61 In .a separate report, e1m111 c.., \lo• ,.,,,. 2111. H1 lonwtw '! l I beccme Califo · n; aj •~'GE 1·'o ~•ll'l•l El Pw• t.U tlo ltl'Jo It No ~!fl!• llf1 c ... I • I ! 11'0 rnia relb'on t•IGpll .. ,. .another comm i I I i on :~= )~c" .lo #~ ~.~ U""' ~:~ fr/1!1,;1"' 1::! ti,,. 'to,;, S~es manager and con-,:::.~un'i'~ engineer. S. F. Luce hi, 1ald '"'OM cw11 F• 1.Jt »v. 11 11Yi P""'1v1v1"1• Lii• 41 t. ,J •1~ tinued to direct t h e •nr~ 1 '!..,' th h 1(11>11 l rollltl"I 1•.:. I 71,l ......... W\lfl l ll ,,. ~ c !'f . ·~ I e p one company would •"..,"",~"ou,::,'.' I.• ''"' '°'' u.. ,•r.~~~~ •t Lii• .u 2 21...; tl'!t a 1 orrua sales effort until 11:~ic ~i~ earn •• 7T ' t ~·· .,. "' O 41111 cf\,._... CO<'~ 41'i< 17 411'1 ·1957 h h · 0 ··•• . percen re urn icorecorp 111~ it•.\ """' !'· P1u1 Fj,M 1.61 "'"" l.'1> ,. , w en e was appornted a'~rg' "'' On ' ·nvestment [ J tr t I Kroou •.l cv111 tu '"" •• •1\li •!eco Ce 1 s. ss\IJ JI I I • or n as a e L.A. Alrw•v• 1 , , ~11eco co .,, pf "10:. ,.1,, 20,4 genera sa es manager. {11:"'1'r bb .10 Operatl·ons this year con u or110 ca ·'' u 2• Se.bol•d cor11 7\.lo m • 0 d N'~t . "c• .11 • " LlrlOll 11\0uf! ll'h \1'4 !~'"' Sovtrtlln Life ln1 lo) '5 .. ay An Jou lS A •ryr, la •. ~ sidering the effeot of the L•wrY·• Fooa• .u ~ :in Su,.rv 11e lnJ • l'• •" 7' manu!ac1 ol t I · ,e• "~' · tavtW a. 1ow11r .• 1a 11 r1r11 ~""Trust 1..io. x.io' 411~ co,·: urer ctn ra air 1::liFds 1.12 recently enacted 10 percent tt:l':U,~tG•ou~ 1n' ~'"' ~Vt t"vl ti:-W~~Ai~ 1., •g 2~ W conditioning and heating itee:':r. ·~s federal surtax. Without the nrv, EM .. • .1.. 'H 1:1:1"" 1H uu';.!i.u 1,n1 Co Am . .0 32 Y"" n equipment as well as I:::"~~·~ .. ~ .. th •-tr ! t t l..,. Dt'\1111 loft .t.I 11111 JI' """'1 tV1f Life ''" fWt W. • felc p 1 50 iw UIA, e w as a e re urn ~"' • J..,. ,...,. !t Hi [~, ~:· 1.• ~~ ~~ 11""' restdent.ial and commercial e" ~~ .;. would have been 7.rn per-=~"V":~::'.:.· 111" lt illh v....._ .... • .... ~ ..... water he-a.terr. arr r.::,~ cent. The stall has previous-Milllf!dlroot CMm , 41 10llo!f" lr' ,:::::,'!'.c~ Jo'° ty recommended the com· M1t1111Dn S1cur111., ,, :.v. 11 1111'1drx p'r , M•rrlolt·Hol Sho!>r>el ~,~ ~~ ~~ l1flelFl11 1.tO pany be allowed an in-McLt•r. '"" ' ,, • .... ''"' B 11F 1 traslate return r a n a i n g ~r~~i::i"'~.~ri11L'.";: , 1 ,,·~i>,'1 1; Mtitual Funds I!!~, .. :r~:~ h M(u Pel .lO ~ .. ,, 'lt~F SP!i.5ll from 6.9 percent to 7.2 per· Monue~ MtrM S•• ·"' :itVI «i;·• ~· 11"i'.,.1 Morris Pl~n I '"\'I :!;\0 ,,.; B~r tY llto cent. ""°''"'°" Kl\Udten 1 )I(• m ' 11• Be''""" te•s ' th . d lh MurPhW P~c M1r ,50 11 »~' 27 ' ltrYlllum 60 n a Ir report. ano er w111on11 5.,.1,,,,,1 J•"4 »"" l•~ ..,., 11e111 s11 1:60 staff enirineer, V. Cassman, ~.·l~'!.,"~"~'"',,'° l\ 32 Jl ll:J~.r,·:: &... .. ......... 11 ... 17 11 '1 Av1. I Oec1t lllC tf.n IS J St.lKI '., lf ., p s • • a11 .. L•ut 1 said 1! General u 1 e d =~ F~e 11: \f,~ 2.f,\11 Yt; NEW vo1t1< !AP) o.i. Fd 11.0:5 11.5"! v1r P•• 1'u 'tJ P!"".'oM • "~ 1t·~ 11111 1111 1 so li•• 1· ed d NI I AC. .. J:2 l:J 22 -11\t tonowl~• -I• T•clt 11 :ZS It 00 lnw •• ,~ • u ' 71 ~Mle F• is·11 11·51 llOUil• l rt1 ucra ii epreciat:ion .in N: t::li Alrtln~ ._ ,. !;; tt11oro1. ""'F"*' by lw G• 14.11 it.Ill 1s1 Gwin s i. l fl PUtrtm 11' a 1 ·11 lotll'll 1 21 • • C I 1:w, •I.lo illl NtllON Allocl· \" 1nv lG.00 10 H ls!tl I'd ll,tl ! "\lot 121 •97 lolleCIK 2S preparing its income tax No Mt A!r nt• ll\11 llV. Jl\ji~lon o1 s1eur1ti.1 wiasnr J,t5 .. :u1v111F~ "·" 12+~11111 lltlil'tilol1eC POCI et it ld ~N&rni-tl Gfl .!Ill. 11\ls nu. 11\li •lert. Inc.. !... Thlft ':Kl 1.11 ,...., I'd 'I '11 11 Pi-.-u II Send Sh 1 r urns, wou average an .. "!''"''" nc .A 2~ uih 2._ • erlca '' wn <II •1•et 1 •1 11 ,, Je111111n 1.t•11 t+ P1111 'I' "!Jn•1~117 ·~""' 1 14.t .annual saving of as much a ':or. 0"' 1 1 w1 1w. 13 1w. ""t ~"''11111 rrtt{ 1 1'·12 u Jf K•~l'llll'll f'U11t11· Prlc• ll 1i1 ti~ '"*n i .20 -2 mill. · 1 rmeo cJ: · 1• u l•..., ~ tb1:'1''; -= :rn ~n 1\ ~ \!'·,, C111 •1 21 .. ·22." :•ovldn1 J 1 1or11W1r 1 u '" 1onmrevenue thus P1t11o11,. ... l!I • '""" • !nlttolMOCMI•• ,111 11 1,.:111 ·"C"" 'l n"''"P'ir111t1 io .,11. 1orm111F .to l h ' Ptc Auto Prod 3 J'li 3 AblrdH!I ll•'>O i.in tlll U#tll·-~\II ( 101.1111 utnlm FUfldJ llotEdos 20I owermg t e amount of tfle ~tcl!11err1c:.~ """ 11"' 11v. .-.°"r .. fd ,55 t'.3' 11t'I' 11 ..,1s~j . u• ic:1 •2110.01 J:~." 14,_n,.aos1"" c. Increase 1·t h •• request-•. •,•,,"g:'•'•'•,'•",,."-• 2.40 ~ ~ °" AHU F 1,. , 11 ,,,. Gr 1s 14 11·.,, "" JU J.u l to ~· is.ti 11 c 11ourns '"' .._,, cu l•V. U lf\11 All 111,,,... 1'2i 1 » Enerwv liU 11·<l WI ~1 !7 U 21.t'I 1 11.1114 Y. lr1nlfAlr 5'I Jn his Ser. t Pit toocor Adv I ll!ll :w .... lWo AIMI• 'j 1'10 Enl11rht t'u 1tl32 VI I lJ t•!JH ,llCom 'I t.t7 l rl111s1 2 . .:t vice repor , PK "" 011 Cori ui;;; 13 12iii Am 1111 J' l n E•ulf I'd 11·il 111, u• SJ 10 JI 11.1 ,,,n.,.$1 1.1 f.OJ lrhTM~e• 11 Toczauer pinpor'nted 11'x O[ f,• G•,•, .. • ,w,,','!! 24"'11 21'1• 2'\!t Nn Divin 11 lfl2 Eoull G1f'i 11.WIO.l• Ut 54 f,67 71! II Isl• 11,t• 1•11 !Hls!My 111 .-lom •• f'lo 1\~ ·~ """ Grtn I I 1t Ewer1I If! 11 11 It 12 1111 Fd Untwtl A 11 T#dl JU '«I t<iwY Htl' I th e C<lmpany's diViS iOnS P1rllw1tw G<lm 30 31 :JO Am I" • f fto E•r.lor :u_·n l'I .0 Knlc~D 113 I st st~' F 1111 1111 l~lynUG I ii . Pt\lllY Pe''°'"''" 2•''" 26~ :Ii ... "" Mui 10 n 11: 11 F1 •Id 11 ]j u·.w l(ftlcii; Giii 'I " 1~.o ,,, ., uiT'tU n °' 5111'~,.Co .Up wt11ch for 1967 and the first i>tlli**'-Mullikin to ·~ :JO 2t'M """ ••c U111v1H Frm llMu 11M11 11 L"'lnt1 1 "'111.1 c st 11 11' ..... o Pfl 5'I [ 1'1-Ii G•I IO '.·~-2~li 2f .. v. AMII C•I '" 10 )I Feel ~rllt II M 11 SJ l t• llKh U.St 11 °' 1n'fi' '"~ u :i :.· tt ... ~~.~rp I our months of this year P\lbco Perroleum .u ,..., 1..., 1 AUP Fa 1.11 1 11 1'111 .. 11" u.10 Ub<!rrn t n '·" SDt 1 IJ. 0 · .. ....._ 1.«1 COn'l.stenUy [ell •·tow the,:-~.!."<,•,,,"""'" ~\, ?i!V. "~ AJt Hou11111 .... -Flcl ulld H.112011 L/" nw l.U ,., sec-~1 .. 1.~~·l:1run1w1c11 V!: .,..,._ H n.>i UV. Fltfld A I.st t li 1"111 Tl'IWI :it M )1" l If Slk 'M 5 )I Ste E II t ludllllll 1 )0 , . lltrttll Int J.Uo I l'>'i F\llld I 11.05 !?:DI Flnin.c:ltl Pro ... tm ltomls StYlel Fds Ste lfl": I t~ 1t,.UN 5\l'Cl'Et 1 XI company sown service ob· 11t kll••da.on 111 ... :i:a1i1i 21 s1.:11 !" '" ov-'·'' l." c1n1d J1 ,.11t1Se1.c A 1,·,11 · 111t1c1 co • J'ective! based on an i'ndex •,~''',~.'!, ",.' 1:w. u v. 1' Sci c, ,u IOI 1"'°'" 1l'O 1.11 C1PI! 11 t• 11.,• ~1t1'" 14001 ;: &lllkl co llf S .......,.,. -•~ !.o~ 111~ ~~ =~kl I~~ I~ ij F:;c:u~111h ~.: 1:·llr M~\n \ot '1t·t !~~Vnl v.·, .. , ,'J:,·1 •=.tr:'t! that considers the number l:1'f"':.:+c:11'1' 1111s • 11 .... lond111i. '" 1.tc1 FJt 1 111 111su M•n Fnd n11 •.oo 5°"'' lnw u 11 16 1;11llff Fo•M 1 of complaints. The six·' ::::::::::::========'18•1 Fd • tl t" Fi.1 IP '·" ... M••• Gltl 1!.U ll 'I 51 Frm ' 5UloYI kib ·I l"""d SI 1S1116 li Ft.I cl 11 •0 Min Tr Ii.I! 111 Giii s '-' J 1unk ll1mo divisions a r e Laocaster, ullocl ,. " 11 11 F11 G111 I"' '·" ~~ 11 ~ n.~ !'"• 11 5110 ,,. ~ ur>1c11: ,n.511 Palm Springs, Redlands. ts~ j~ft il:.i1 ltn :::..J:,, •. ri ta M:111e;: ~·°' ~·°' 1~~"l: ~~; , ·Jll =~~~~ ~o"' . , ••r, lllC '·"" t.tl l'ou••• 1l 12,, It MeOon 11/1! U JJ Fld!K J: f e~r""'ll!t t Marina, Santa. Monica, and objective half the tame dur· ••' siw 's1 •·" l'r1111111 .. cusld11· ~Mut 'i •.OJ Scie.. :,: 11\ a""'u~v ·'°' E t Lo Be f'ftl Snr 11.01 ll.jO ~om $It; I SI 1.)1 C• 11$11' 1S Sllln ll:M 'F, ...ts • lullersSI\ Ill as ng lch. 1ng an eight-month ,sample G Fd 10.04 !0· J ,,,. IJ it It 0 Mooch' I'd It"°' U '1 1111 22 u"'21.01 N . f[' "'""I"' Fllfl<IS Tt(Ot'fi 1 E , •• Mor!Cll! ""'""" SIDC* 15 1' ., umerous service o ices period rlllglnc from !966 to ••'•" l'j··n u.111 u111 t 1.10 c'""""' n tt ,, 22 tftrt 11 · 1fw .1 F in•~• dur111• g tJ\O f;•st f th Ctim ~II; .OI 1.ll Flfftd Am II. 11 C lllCOR'i 4 1' S 2! 11.n f..,. lJ n U ,1 11 LlaG~ 10 .u our mon S jtM:• Grwl~ 1 .U lt~ FuTtd lllW 111' 1\ •S IMUr f tS 1'n uo lnGI~ 1' 1'03 tllM M "' or 1968 fell short O[ the com· ...... •nc"" 1.n • ~ 1ft,,11 1 • ·li MIF F• 1t fl., I' j•«ht•l u 'u u" 1m1111t "'I SNCltl 3M•, tnltc lt.S511 SMIFGlll I l~~ edlnol tU10'1 tmpS.Ouo pany's objeetive to pro-The report says General is !~' "',, ",•"••'"••.• !br•lltr n '' u.n Mut 5hn '°·~l :11 "'-Gt 11 ·11 20.11 c1n Ire"' •O ~'M' . ,. ,0 r.llP Ste: Mui Tru1l f·~ n !~~IS "Fd 12 tf lj 4 dn Pit j vide a level or service which meeting, or is close to !':.ci.1"0 ~·,. l.i~ ~:;: s'f I~ J:11 v1.ll ~:: )"J'C j3 ts I :is d Y,1" f,. :~J ~.r~~~" f will prompt no more than tin 1•· b" ti f 0~111: Ful Ad ' t. i ·tl N.t 1nv111 1 tt 1 '4 unao nc:" a 1t·n '"""' '° mee g, ..,. o JeC ve o 1:11' s.11 1.t1 !i.'.1.!I IM 1;\ ~ 6 "\' $tc le•: · u1111ec1 Flllllli. •• c acic11 six complaints per lOO main repairing 95 ptteent of out-G~5, ,, ',J.'1 1,i·!? H.""rriti. 1,ll .:11 l:!:t" 1J.:1l;~' F 1l.Z:1'!tl :~,~.":ii"° telephone sbltions per com .,, ft "'"°""' 1.'5 1 •S 01w14 1 H I tn '·" 1 '! .,.., c•0ti s mooth. Among them ate San ol·servlce coodltions within c~rt;'.:Udft.s.. == "• \~\l\~.U f'k~ 1·1: .:• ~;,.: f~ '!_~ :::fit '.l: Fernando, Delta ( n e a r two hours 00 bu.sines• lines l::r ll·:t lfil ~~·ro \\ ~l 1' 71 ~~ 1l ff If J1 r~IR : :6 1•1·tl :~~~"c!·'f Sacramento), Hemet, Indio. and wilhin four houri on ,.,.mf A&•\ 'il l'•l I:::: t&' 1: ri 1i:~ ~i'.t. w~i!t ,,.n 1f '!' ,,,,s:i_,su 'fO 5°,l :~~; :! Palm Sprl.nts P • t · I Th "''"' C"O ~\1 01 IM~ n•211~~ N111..,-111 11llJ'! V•r lndPI ).ti 1 .• 151 JI · · • err 1 s • res deDt1al I nes. ese ob· -"'i 1f· '10.a IM Fd ! 01 .15 N'"' e111 11.u 11: v11<1n11 ~·"t U '" .1 Ai .o Marina. Santa Monica, West . . °""' 1 · /·'1 \~ 1 1• 11" N•w ~ '' ll, u w1u$_1 "' 12.., I tt11e cw 1 Los Angeles and downtcwn }ectives, tile itaff said, are :rllj: ~ ~ ·Ja in11 F= i1l. :,1 .~ f:..":t: 11·1~ '1 .U ::r,r:u 'i'1Y .:1 tr-~.!:: Long n--h. Overall. the "hifh and therefore meeting :::.,.. "i11• 'i J 1j ll 'r""c' .. s"' 1 ·!~ I'll: "'•••31 1 " 1.u ""'" '"" .tt ,:., tt• CP .• ....:.,...: llllW lK 11'.201 ,. Inv. : ,'ii; i·n D<M•ll •111111 Wtll Fd Uif1"0I' IMlllSllCI J Commlsslcn staff Sa.id, the tkm a1sure1 11tisractory S°"'' Y •. ,11'·!: 11:1? l~.s~ 1l.11 u:u f:M~ fje:1 r.l =t:.A.,. ,] ,l ,I·I! ::: t=:': company faUed to meet jtJ perform•~ in this field ." ~;..-i;; ll~ •1l:n. -,,,.,u: G"'ri,•,'11 1.2.lt Rr:.1Yr"" 1 1t:: 11.:.t ,r&.r 1:.u ri:: :tc.1• .'.!: ...... . _. n 60 ~Ne.. "' 1.M 1 as WIU 1.ii' s. c"' """" 1" ~UTU INGS • I • .. "arc~~ ASSETS OVER ~25,000,000.00 • • -HEAOOFFJCE ..... ..\:l ~ . OT>iEll I!IRANCH Pff!CES 315£•st~Bou .... ,,.. P~.~ 1alllOI W..t Arucll• • Covin. ' Q- ' /' ,\ • • :aa-.. li\l., ........ . . . ' ·-~:--~Ir ~-~7i'••*' -.i:,.• ~t•u•,. . ..... • -I I • • . . • • New I • - York ''.Stock E~thange List -- \ I I • • J :t DAil Y PILOT QUEENIE Tlff1d.IJ, Au,.st6, 1'!68 lly Phil lnterland l 1 { ~ l j ! 1 d u · -We're. going to have to atop meeting like this. I ·think lh. O'Grady ia getting suspicious." For the Biitlis .. Divorces Record ·Men • Ill Service Pvt. Louis B. Dorfman, US Army, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lcuis Dorfman, 1614 Warwick Lane, Newport Beach, has completed a basic field artillery course at Ft. Sill, Calif. He received specialized training in the operation and maintenance of 105 mm· and 155 mm towed howitzers, .and the M-79 g r e nade launcher and 3.5-inch rocket launcher. Pfc. Toby R. Cauble, 21, son cf Mr. and Mrs. Andy D. Cauble, 125 Wave, Laguna Beach, has been assigned as a rifleman in the 9th Infan- try Division, Vietnam. Pfc. John B. Hughes, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde O. Hughf!s, 2814 Portola Drive, Costa Mesa, has been assigned tc the 1st Air Cavalry Division, Vietnam. Marine Re serves at· tending summer maneuvers include Sgt . D. T. Clements, 515 Poinsettia, Corona del Mar, and from Costa Mesa, Maj. R. L. rtfoeUer, 1781 Bahama Place; Pfc. G. F. Gray Jr., 1913 Orange, Pfc. C. W. Kirkpatrick, 2117 Elden and Pfc. K. E. Long, 438 Broadway. Others frcm N e w p c r t Beach include Capt. J. P. Casey of 336 Cataline Drive and Cpl. James B. Glaves of 851 Domingc Dr. From Fountain Valley is Lance Cpl. F. 1'1. rtfabony of 1852.5 Lime: Orcle. Huntington Beach Reserves attending the sum· mer maneuvers i n c I u d e l'tfaj. C. Ca1Ullo of 16582 Lucia Lane: Capt. P. C. Greer of 10121 Forrestal Drive: Cpl. N. A. \Vymast~r. 14911 Sa b re Lane; Pfc. 8. A. Lca1b1 16072 Sprigdale. Laguna Beach Mar i n c reserves are Capt. R. J. Nippoll of 359 Magnolia Drive; Capt J . A. Bechtol of 6 Blue Lagoon: Capt. T. W. Greta cf 464 lUgh Drive ; capt. R. T. Unnln1er Jr., 1341 GJenneyre and Capt R. M. Wlll!am1, 103ll Dyer Plact. U . Wamn 7Jllatt, son cf Mr. and Mrs. Orvell P. zwau, 1706 Pine SL, J1unt· ington Beach, has Jll'8d••ted from Locklan4 AFB. Tex. H• ls a . . " • GOP Ill ·'68: --rJenty of No. 2 Prospects MIAMI BEACH (UPI) - The list cf Repub l ican hopefuls for the v I c e presidential ncminatlon is as long as the line outs.ide a lloUywood producer's office on casting day. There are 26 G 0 P governors, and Just about every one can be considered a possibility. Some seem better prospecta t b a n others, of couise. The governors most often mentioned as vice presiden- tial possibilities include: Tom McCall, Oregon; Daniel J . Evan s, Washington : John A. Volpe , Massachusetts; Spiro T. Agnew, Maryland: George Romney, Michigan : James A. Rhodes. Ohio: Raymond P. Shafer, Pennsylvania; ABC's Lawrence Hospitalized MIAMI BEACH (UPI) \V illiam H. Law re n c e , political editor cf t h e American Broadcasting Co. and familiar figure to television audiences for the past seven years, suffered a relapse from a recent illness at Republican Convention Hall Mcnday night and was hospitalized. and Claude R. Kirk, Jr., Florida. To that last must be added the names of two who are contenden for top place on the ticket -Nel.son A. Rockefeller of New York and Ronald Reagan of California., Both say they do not want second place and Rockefeller i n s i s t s he wouldn't take it. But history and t h e surprise developments of this topsy turvy political year caution against ruling them out. OTHER NAMES Outside the field o f Republican governors the list df vice presidential possjbllities is headed by Sens. Charles A. Percy of ll· linois, Mark O. flatfield of Oregon and Edward W. Brooke of Massachusetts, and Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York City. All four are yo ung, pro· gressive, have appeal to urban areas where the elec· tion will be decided, and at times have been dovish on Vietnam, with Hat fie Id possibly the most dovish of the four. Mayor Lindsay is deficient in o n e ticket-balancing respect -geography -if the No. t spot goes to Nixon or Rockefeller, both cf SHARP If yto1,1'rt t 1h1rp fr1d1r, •t• tht DAILY PILOT'S f1mou1 Dim•·A-lil'lt c:l1nifi1d ids Sat• 11rd•v•· M1k1 ' b.tter d•tl , , , whtther yeu't• buying et 11Jli111. whom are legal residents of Negro in the U. S. Senate 1968. strategy In the race for tha number one &pol New York Stale. and could help the party get Bo th Nixon and Past history 1uggesta that no firm commitments have yet been made to anyone. and it ls altogether likely that no final decisions will be made unW the con- vention. The ·constitution says a votes In any area where the Rockefeller, and their aides presidential elector cannot GOP admittedly is weak. have encouraged wide open vote for both a president Some Republican politicians speculation about t h e i r and a vice president from say a GOP candidate must choice of a running mate, his own state. Tb~ a Nixon-carry from S to 10 percent pointedly raising s o m e Lindsay ticket, for example, more Negro votes than hopes and discouraging no by strict interpretation of normal U Jt hopes to win in one. That's a time-tested the Constitution, w o u l dt;::======':::;========================= forfeit the electoral votes of New York for the No. 2 spot. WAY OUT . Some legal experts think a way out could be found by having one or the other change his legal residence after the November el~tion and before Ute electcral col- lege votes in December. The question would then arise. hcwever, whether t h a t might be considered playing hanky-panky with the Con- stitution. Brooke has one special ad- vantage. He b: the only LBJ Undergoes Physical Check SAN ANTONIO, Te x . (UPI) -President Johnson enters Brooke Army Medical Center bday for an annual physical examinaticn. Ac· companying the President will be Mrs. Johnson, who also will undergo a physical checkup, White House p r e s s secretary George Christian, in annouilcing the Presiden~'s medical checkup, said as far as he knew Johnson's health was ''nonnat'' . ' . IF rT GOES HM-M-M-M, IT'S AN ACCUTRON The mainspring, balance wheel, and hairspring In Bulon.'1 Accutron have been replaced by a tiny tunlng fort. It doesn'ttick, lt hums. And the tuning fork's uncanny precision makes Accutron ao accurate, Bulova guarantees accuracy to within a minute a month. i..tt to rlghl: Stalnleas case and band. $15ll. Fourteen karat gold filled with caJendar, $175. Our exclusive design In 14 karlt·gokl. $475.. IANKAMEIUCARD l MASTER .CHARGE, TOO 18 FASH ION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH 644-1380 What -1;hou1d ·you . do if a telephone' acci~~~lly swallows a ditne? ---.... .. ' --:-~, J i i • I .ft • ._,,, . -· ~; You hear that particular kind of "clink" You look in the little chute. ~ It's empty. Your dime is gone. Whenever this happens we're sorry. Just dial the Operator from another phone and tell her . what happened. She'll return your second dime1 arrange a' refund1and see that the phone that kept your dime is repaired.· We're here to.help. Pacific Telephone@ pbotocrapbic o!flc:tr. =---------------------------------------------------- ! y I I . . .. ~ .... . .. . . .. ---· . . . . . . . 'Lagurians Fly T·h ' .. . ..... . . ' ... ' ' ' ~ .... t.~··-.. .. . . .. ' .. , I rough the Air '· • • • ly JUDY HURST CH ttle o.ltr ftllll 1'8" The F:tytoi·Delaney1. No, they are·not an aerial oct with the circus. The Delaneys are a family whicll takes to the air and finds adventure and excitement. Mn. F. James Del8Jley, wbo prompted the use of the nicknalpe JJin Instead of F . James, is the wife and mother of two jet-age men· who fly. Nol to be outdone by her males she also b8s taken up the modern.day sport. Sitting iD her attractive modern home in Lagwia Niguel' which lhe it painting and wall papering, Mary Lou Is a mighty big promoter of the fast-catching-on phase of flying for fun. ''It all began when we gave our son Kevin flyiil~ lesSons for lila,hlgh school graduation present. Then ,Jim and I became. interest~." she s-.ld excitedly. · . It was last June when the trio began making their second home at "small and friendly" Capistrano Airport, ·six miles from their hilltop home. Waving to their parents and brother from the dusty field along side the runway have been Tim, 14 and Joey, 7, both blonds. Petite and slender in her lemon yellow tailored slacks with a navy blue blouse to accentuate her short blonde curly hair, Mary Lou cannot re-- main calm when she talks about flying . "The thrill of lessons three or four times a week for one hour is a dream come true. There really is no danger," she stressed, "because the planes are small and can glide. The instructor, which we three share, pr&- pares us for any emergency. "We need a minimum of 40 hours for our license and have to pass a stiff FAA written exam. And, of course, our instructor tests us," Mary Lou explained. "I usually fly a Piper Cherokee 140 and I've comp,leted, by. my· self, five takeoffs arid landings and one-half hour of soloing, ' she beamed. "The most exciting time qf my life was the solo. I was only~ feet up and over the airport but to me it was heaven. Oh, the thrill of being alone up there , . . " . Red·baired Kevin , ii graduate of Servile High School in Anaheim, also has soloed. He will attend the University of Santa Clara in the fall and· bas been working during the swnmer in Newport Beach. "Kevin will be flying cross.country to Los Angeies or San Francisco soon. He soloed after 12 hours of dual instruction but it took me 18," ahe sighed. ''Jim only flies on the weekends and has not soloed yet. But· hi1 time is near." Her husband who is plant manager for Steelcase Inc. in La Mirada is well known in various sports circles. "Jim was the American shot·put champion in 1948 and went to Lo~. don that .year for the Olympics. He took second and won a silver medal,'' she said with obvious pride. UP IN THE AIR -Taking to the air for fun and not to.fight .s:narled traffic jams is Mrs. F. James Delaney of Laguna Niguel. Her husband, who prefers the name Jim, and their sor. Kevin also have set their sights high -they want a pilot's license . Slender and. still .growing is teenage Tim who would gladly: cover his sandy blond crew cut with a pilot's cap. "He watches and hears everything about flying. I'm sure he'll be the fastest to learn," Mrs. Delaney confid~ Six years ago the Delaneys moved from Michigan and became one of the pioneer families in the Laguna Niguel section overlooking the ocean. Maybe they will be the first to trailblaze with a twcrcar garage and adjoiDing hangar. -3=-- JEAN COX, 494-9466 ,......,, ""''"' .. '"' l• ..... 11 Coffees Calendared For AAUW Branch The Laguna Beach branch of the American Association of University Women is ''advertising'' for prospe<:tive members. The clubwomen are welcoming women to socialize with them during informal summer coffees from 10 a.m. to noon in members' homes. The first party, for residents of Three Arch Bay, Monarch Bay, South Laguna and Laguna Niguel, will take place tomorrow in the Sollth Laguna home of Mrs. Harry J. Kipps, 495-5314. Laguna Hills coffees begin Aug. 8 in the home of Mrs . John Rodri· guez, 837·3234, and Mrs. Lyal C. Baumgardner, 830-0238. On Aug. 29, Mrs. James C. Jacobs, 837-8167, will host the fourth coffee in the Laguna Hills area. Mrs. Rodriquez will welcome women with manor numbers 1·250 ; Mrs. Eggleston, 451-700; Mrs . Baumgardner, 701-on , and Mrs. Jacobs, 2.11-450. Women residing in Laguna Beach have their choice of two parties on Aug. 14. SbariDg hostess duties are Mrs. Elmer H. LaLanne, 494-4585 and Mrs. Paul Hance, 494-5934. Residents of Mission Viejo and El Toro are encouraged to visit the Mission Viejo home of Mrs. Gary Leach, 837·3039 for her coffee hour on Aug. 29. • Mrs. George E. Goodall , membership chairman, will answer addi· tional questions regarding the coffees or the eligibility for membership at 494-4703. WOMEN 'STIRRING UP' COFFEE SOCIALS -Member• of the Laguna Beach branch of the American Association of UDiversity Women who &re presenting informal summer coffees in their homes are "boning up" on hostessing duties. Tho Mme1. James €. Jacobs, George H. Eggleston, Lyal C. Baum1ardner llld .Jolm· R<>clriguez (left to right), all residents of Laguna Hills,..........,.. 1uesta to make reservatlona for one ol. the Aul\llt eol.feel. The Laguna branch was organized in 1967 and Mn. B. L. Parks of Laguna Beach Is leading the group . . . It's Too Late, Up to Fate Who Arrives ·on · We.dding Date DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our 20- ye1r~d son, Cy, has been going with a nice quiet girt who comes to the boll.le evenings and heJps him with his schoolwork. (Cy ii taking 1ome night school cla11ee.) We all lite Hilda because she 11 encouraging our son to make 10mething ol l:imself. Ytstmlay I noticed Hilda looked uousuallJ IMf• around the middle even though abe was wearing a rmock. I asked Cy this morning if he was aware that Hilda bad put on some weight. Be .replied matter-of-factly, "Are you Just cettlng aroUDd to notic· lng it? Hilda i11lx mootn1 pregnant." When I regained my compo6ure I asked Cy when they planned to get married. Ht 11ld, ""nle beby might 11D1 be mint. Wt'rt ,.m1 to wait and ANN LANDE. ~ see who be 1ooka lite." Ano, I could oot believe my tan. Cy then went on to 1a1 aometbin1 about a fomier l:toyfrknd ot Hilda'• -one whom ibo h<ld not quit. given up. The boy bot red htlr. U Ille b•bf la a redhad, Cy mlgbt not many ber. HUda i1 going to get larger and larger and wt have two preteen children iD the family wbg 1mow where bableo come from. Shall ... loU Cy he can't br1nC her lo the houll ony more! J Please, Ann, tell me what to do. I'm. foinl out of my mind. P .s. Hilda does not drink or·1mote. -D.C.M. DEAR o.: Wen It JOit roe• to prove tbat ..... &frll CU have fUI wfthoat 1mokiaJ tr drtaklaJ. Doa'I tell Cy ... ca•'t "1•1 8Ddl to ~ koue tDyraore. It w\att http matters aaf. (P.8. YM kHW1 of cearte1 tM hbJ'1 loob wW ......... nytlllnf. bol otay out of It. TheM two ·are ·not lnMrelfed In opinion or advice~) DEAR ANN LANDERS: l!»u r daughter Jani• 17 yem·okl ud.11 un wmtied alcll: about her. Tbit-&irl hi al· tractive, brig11t I nd popular, but she doesn't know bow to boll 'wa!Alr mucih 1 .. 1. 1>Ut togttber.a meal 'SM can't sew oo a buttOD ti' IC;r\j) a noor 10 thatJt,loob ba11WaJ deconl-Jan .wjll be 1q1ng ~l lo 1cbaqi•bi,tbe 1.U and I hate tO . ,w111tller i'ooip wW look Uke. (I have an Idea 'bec:a'I"' I !mow what h e r room at honle WoUid look like ~ I dldn!t dean 11:.1 · . Plea"' don't l<ll JM I-lo blame, Ann. lt'1 not true. l have done m7 bt1t to each Jao the thine• a l!rl lhould know but '"' hi DOt -.-. ~· today dM't tivo like tl1oy U&ed to. It'• 'DV, their own telephone, cars all over the place, tbopptn1 for clothes, hi.ft, . stereo and wild com· petition ,fer gradet 10 they can make the better college1. Pleau teU me, Ann, bow cah mothera teach their daupten lo bo homemabn when llley refuH lo.stay bome.1001 enoogh to leeni?\Do you have a woru for me? . -DEFEATED DEAi\ DE: v... Bonefeallltn. fk>l't blame •1tbe times" for 7oar rauan. tllen are h ltoar1 l• eve17 d.aJ-fir Ill.Of u . lt'1 bow we daoole lo apeld -u lltan tllat conll. U :tM'n pandUed 1oar daactater tt ...... ••el'J -el -u ..... ..... , u ... pie-. , ..... lier .. li•tr. Em7 llrl --., wtdl , "°asebohl re1-llllllU... II mdtt Ille e11ler for Iler motlier (wh .......... I breat) .... II .. Id ..... strl for mantas• -. ...._ besides Jood loob ud a la1eal lilr speadlac mo1H17. Haw will yoo know -the· r.i thing comes 11001! Aak Ana ~ .. Seod for ber booklet "Love or SU aiid How lo Tell the DU!erenct." Se!ld 31 cents in coin and a Ion&; HU:* dressed, ·&tamped envelope willl 7fA1l request . • Ann Landers will be llad'lo belp 1'll with your proble1111. Send them lo 1- ln care of tbe DAILY ~!LOT eaci.. In& • """'· ..u-odl!reued, Nalpt4.., velope. • J 4 DAIL V PILOT Tutsday, Au11u1\ 6, 1968 · Roberta Heck Becomes Bride Milsion san Antonio de Pala was tho setting foe the DUP4!a1 ..... unlthic in JDal'· rlage Roberta Heck and H. Newoll Sti<kler. The Rev. Vicior TurcbeUI IOiemniud lie double rini ceremony. The bride ii the daughter GI Mn. l\plenlary Heck GI ·Newport a.ch and Robert -G. -Hec:lt GI Sierra Madre . Par-GI . ~ bddeiroom are Dr.'and Mn. Harry E. Stickler.of Corona del Mar. Giwn in marriage by her grand!-., Ethan A. Lake ol Newport Beach, the bride was atUxed in a short white gown of embroidered alencon lace with tiers in the back. Her three tiered &boulder length illusion veil was held in place by a fabric ,bow. She carried a cascading bouquet · of pba).aenopsis orehi<k and ,Jill es of tbe valley. Mr1. Robert Kolowith, ..&ister of the bride, Ken- newick, Wash., and Miss "Jeanne StiCkler, sister of tbe bridegroom. Corona del Mar served as matron and maid of honor. Both wore idendcal gowns -of yellow "and carried cucades of :yellow daisies and ivy. Donald M. Rober.son of C..-del Mv was .. ked to be best man. David L. Roberton of Irvine and Maurice F. Staker of Esoon· dido were ushers. Mrs. D a v I d Twitchell, organist, accompanied MIH Betsy Barnett, soloist in tbe churoh d...,..atM with white g ladi9ii and cbrysa.o· themums. A reception for 200 guests took place after t h e ceremony at the Fallbrook Country Club v.ttich was decorated wilh y e 1 t o w dalaiec and white chryllaDtbemUlrul. Gue at book was circulated by Mrs. Twit.chell. Miss Leslie Di.Ion and Miss Joan Williama served cake. Special guest was t be bridegroom's grandmother, Mrs. ' S. Frederick Nichols of Beatrice, Neb. The bride ts a graduate of Newport Harbor H i g h School and the University of California, SBflta Barbara. She received her teacbinr credenti61 from · UCLA a11< is an affiliate of Delta Garn ma Sorority. Her husband, : graduate of Newport Harbo High School, is also : graduate of the university o Notre Dame. Mill Cllrutlne Kolowith, nieee ,of U»6 bride, was Jl<>wer girl w-ing a pale yellow dreu and carrying a After a wedding trip to Jaclaion Hole, Wyo. the MRS. H. NEWELL STICKLER · b .. kot of yellow daisies. newlyweds will reside in To Reside In Hemet Hemet. · -------------------- . Horoscope ' ' Sagittarius: Obey Traffic Rules WED., AUG. 7 By SYDNEY OMARR '"Ibi wile man eonUols bbl de!1tln7. • .~ogy .pointa the way." Achieve sense of balance. Change your routine. If methods are modern, you wW ave time, avoid anguiah. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): ·You could be center of attentioo. Vitality is hig'n ; many are intrigued. Now is time to Jpeak up. Move ahead; take initiative. Cycle is high, arid you are sur- rounded by air of ex· citemftl.t. PlSCES (Feb. 19-March 20): SecreU are revealed. Don 't attempt to cover facts. If diplomatic, the truth will ai'd, not injure. You may haYe to deal with delicate situation. Be frank, but temper justice with mercy. ARIES (Marcil 21-Aprll ·19): -.. laKting. ~could . We unleM o u r J ltatementl, actlonl a r e 'cryotel-cleer, eopecially in relation& with frienda, loved 1ones. Avc»d impullive ac· tiOlll. Permit logic to rule. TAURUS (Ajlril 20-May 20): Could be conflict betweeu duty &Dd d..Ue. New Slants GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Good lunar aspect. to·· day coincides with ability to put ti:tougbtl, ideas acr01s. Avoid e•ceu opeecl Ill 1111:· lni. writing and travellllg. Means double check. Battle tendency to be careless. CANCER (June 21-July 22): You may be receiving fi.Danclal a<Mce w!!icb 11 based on opeculatlon niG>er '· than hard facta. Know W.--.00 take measures to prwa.t loss. Hold down ex- pllDSes. Avoid one who ia: argumentafive. Taking It Easy Is Hard to T a'k.e 9343 SIZts 1ov...22v.. ~~ ,,,, 11T ..... i .... 11f ..... .,.. ... FLATl'ERY C 0 MES ACROSS on a graceful diagonal in this slimming dress that's accented at one side by an inverted pleat. SeW' lt now! Printed Pattern 9 3 .i: 3 : NEW Hall Sizea IOI>, 121>, 141>, 161>, 18'h, '1".l'k, 22\1. SIM 141> (buat 37) take1 3y, ,.is. M-in. SIXTY-F1VE CENTS in coins for each pattern-add 15 cents for each pattern for LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): There could be lplit; 'don't hang on to sometlµnj: wi»ch ia outmoded. Be analytical. Study ARIES me1sage . Autboritl.es are on your side. 1beno lo no need for desperate or 1mpul1lve move. VIRGO (Aug. 2.1-Sept. 22) , You get action in area that previously was quiet. Af- fects employment, associ&· tions with neidlbors . lmpor· tam project oan be com- pleted. Green light is given for unusual technique. LmRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Relationship with ARIES in· dividual today could produce sparks. M a k • intelligent conceuion, but cootinue to otaJxl up for principles. Evaluate new, ort'ginal wg- ~ons . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Find out wily of things. Probe deep for ....... s. Be thorough in approach. Haplruerd methods could oa11te lose, delay. Your 11> tuition or hunch pays off. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 211: Don't be in too much of a rt.16h, especially in. writing, traveling. Not wise to put anything on paper "11ile angry. Obey rules, particularly ln traffic. Take your time. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· J.ari. 19): Spending ori pro- perty or future security is fine. but avoid ex- travagance. You can do this by listening to voice of ex· perience. Be original, but don't rebel from truth. Think. Sewing Set By Mothers • flrtt.clast m&Lling and ipteial handlin&'; otherwise t"..tbJrd.<:lass delivery will take 'Scuffies' tor patienU: in -three weeks or more. Send the Long Beach Veterans i to Mirian Martin, The DAI-Hospital will be made by -LY PILOT, «2 Pattern members of the Alr Force Dept.. 2.32 West 18th St., Mothers Club Flight 19 al .New York, N. Y. 10011. their regular monthly meet· ,Prilll NA~ ADDRESS ing Thursday, Aug. 8, at ~~ and STYLE a p.m . : .-. ... 1,1 ·-for fall'. '"" A short meeting in the . "--· w• ilYdt Park Moblle Estates .,,.....rs tn our Fall-Winter Clubhouse wlU precede the Patt..-a <:&talof. P'ree pat-oewing. · 1 tltn coupon In Catato1. Send Later during the month '10 N":11iNSTANT SEWING ~~~~~ts planning 1 gar· Boot -•bowl 70u how to Further Information Is -Jt.tod..,, wear It tomor-avallable by caJllng Mrs. rtlft• &iar 600 plcturH. OoJ.y Melvin Roenleidt 11 893-fJ. 62!0. ~ By JOY STILLEY NEW YORK (AP) -It's nice· to get away from it all -from vacations, that Is - and get back home where you can rest. Taking it easy is hard to take. There's nothing like a planned program of rest and relaxation to tire you out. Getting there may be half the fun, but for me it's twice the work. Just lugging the luggage out is a major task, since it's .always stored on a high shelf, wedged in among neighbors it resists parting from. But coaxing it down, while no job for an amateur, l.! just the beginning. The suitcases have to be RECORDING ARTIST Dick B•ldwln ,Music Sets Lunch Tone The Big Band era will come to lite again Thurs- day, Aug. 8, at 10:30 a.m. when crooner Dick Baldwin displays his artistry before members of the Mesa Har· bor Club. The sit-down lunch'eon wili begin at 11 a.m. in the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club, preceded by 1 to<ial period at 10:30 a.m. Bald- win wlll preaent hia pro- aram following th• busiotu meeting. Tbe entertainer II f>maus 1.,. •inllnl with Clw'lla 591· vak, Cliarll• Bamd, Spike Jone11 Tommy Doney and others of the Bl& Band era. He now has his own record company, with diltrlbutor1 throughout the world. Chairman. for the program J1 Mrs. William C. Holmes. , emptied before they can be filled. They're invariably loaded w i th out-of-date clothing, childhood attempts at embroidery, one-eyed teddy bears and old loye let- ters, which have to be relocated while their home is away from home. Then there's the packlng. No matter bow many' llstJ and charts I make, so that we'll only have to take out one bag on overnight 9tops, it never works out .that way. The toothbrushes or some e>ther essentials a ! w a y s manage to do a little travel- ing on their own and end up in the case at. the bottom of the pile. We · once made an ex- tended trip· through Oanada, stopping at a different motel every night. There were ii.I people along on the jaoot, as well a1 a dozen assorted overnight oases, hat boxes, soft-sided lugg.age, hard-sid- ed luggage and shoe tote bags, plus numel'OUI con- tainers of souvenirs ac· quired along the way. To get all ttiis into the car trunk, everything had to be fitted in a pr~ise way like the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. Each morning my husband had to mastermind this half·hour exercise, as he w.as the only one who could remember just where it all had to be placed so the lid would go down. Our most recent attempt at taking our ease wasn't much more successful. Feeling tbat a re s tful weekend away from the cares of work and home was in order, We accepted a standing invitation to visit relative1 in a nearby city. Two glorious days with nothing to do! When we arrived. my sister's greeting waa follow . ed by an enthUBiastlc recital of all the things she had planned for our enjoyment. And ttie crowning touch - ahe was giving a dinner for 20 guests Saturday night. tt was hard to squeeze the whole tchedule in, but by getting a running start Saturday and going ~t a cre•t pace we managed to do most of I~ including 1bopplng for grocerlea and preparing the big meoL We reall~dn't have to leave u early as we did SUnday morning, but we n1ured 1t was better to be sleepy than run the rttk of Setting any more tired. ---------------------. --- Peering Around MR. AND MllS. Lawrence H. Lee of Newpoft Beach will bolt a dJnner party after the wedding rehearsal of tlleir son, Robert H. Lee and his fiancee, Miss Lindi. !!I..,.,,. Lee Combest. 'lbe party will teke place in the 5addlebeck Inn, Santa Ana neJ!I; 'lbmsday, and the wedding ceremony WW be performed SaWrdey I n Garden Grove Community Church. The future bride ls the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Combelt of Bell Gardens. JOINING 4.000 other bus- iness and professional wom- en at their club's national convention were Mrs. Jack W. Broback, president of the Newport Harbor Business and Professimal Women's Club and Mrs. Arnold 1'. Naegeli, southern section chairman of San Oreo Dia· trict, from Newport Beach. The 34tb National Conven- tion elected new officers un- der the theme, Unite, Share, Act. 'ONE OF !50 pages at the Republican Convention in Miami i.. Miss Ellyn Fried· 50 Years' Reminiscences man, who is getting a "ground Oooi:" view of the The golden anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Aris D. Taylor was celebrated with the candidate selection pro-help of their children, the Mmes. Wilfred D. Thorne of Sacramento; Arnold O. cedure. Compton of Huntington· Beach, and Charles D. O'Neal of Garden Grove; 11 Miss Friedman, daugh~r grandchildren, and one great-grandson. The honored couple were married in of Mr. and Mrs . Al K. Fried· Douglas, Ariz. before moving to Pomona. They now reside in Huntington man of Newport Beach and B ch f th h l b ti Ws Feliz, is responsible for .....c:....,,:.:· :::...:...• :...'c:...•_n_e_o __ •_op,_en:::._:...o:.:u:.:•.:.e..:c:...•_e_ra_o_n_. ____________ _ assisting the scores of delegates, carrying o u t specU11 . assignmentJ and helping the official business run smoothly. During the school year she attends Chapman College. Air Force Mothers Set Date LUNCHING at the Santa Barbara Biltmore recently were Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. Harwood of Newport Beach. · Mrs. Raymond Remillard of Huntington Beach will preside when the National Officers of United States Air Force Mothers' Organiza- tion meets at 10 a .m. Satur- day, Aug. 10, in th t Disneyland Hotel. · Protect.a by Fdgldalro g..y.., Natlollwlde WmTanty! 1-year Warranty for repair of any defect in the entire refrigerator plus 4-year Protec- tion Plan for repair for any defect in the refrigerating system, Backed by General Moton. Orange Coast area will be Mrs. Me l v in Roenfeldt, fin an c i a 1 a e c retary, Westminster . Plans {or a reception to bonor the new commander of .Detachment 610. U.~A.F., will be announced ano Mrs. John Clawson will ---------- report on new Flights being formed. Also attending from the Kids Like to 'Ask Andy' REFRIGERATOR with 126 lb. Size Freezer! 14.6 C•. ft. lie;.! And It's packed with Wife-Saver conveniences. e 100•;. Frost-Proof. You'll never defrost again. Frosl-Proo! system sim1lly "'·on't let frost form. And there's no freezer iipace lost to frost e H•ndy frHJer door •h•lf plus juice can holder help keep amall Items at your fingertips. e Twin Hydr•ton hold up to 23.4 qts. or fruita, bulky vegetables like cabbages. Por- celain Enamel finish resists rust. lit.a.ins. • Compaictl Just 32" wide. Get all this con-venience without rearranging your kitchen. Probably flt& tame space as your presen t refrigerator. WIFE SAVER SPECIAL! Frigidaire Built-In Dishwasher fri1ld1ire ECflJlllJ llodtl Up~pt Fre111r Storts u, io 406 lbL Fri1,Jidaire 2 Cycle Jet Action Yf'.asher • 2 w.,~ Cyde1 e Sup•• Su,91 W1ihi119 Attio"! e No h111d dn1in9 r1qui,1d! e Qul1t Op1r1tl11'1 e 15 T 1bl1 S1ttli191 IAHAM ) • 4 shelves, 3 refrigerated • 4 door shelves with removable fronts for etJS>1 cleaning • Measures Just 3f1' ..... ldoolf«-1«11**· • e Sm1ll lo1d 11itl11g help1 tut w1t1r bil11! e J1t0 1im"I' m1ch111i1111I e 011" 1~tio11 Atitet.rl 41l EAST 17th ST., COSTA MESA Dolly 9.9 -. 5aturd1y 9-6 (Cl.,.d Sunday) !Sa!HI 646-1684 ( S•rvlce I 548-3437 I • I ' Harbor EDITION VO(. ~. NO. 188, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES NEWPORT BEACH, CAl.IFORNIA JUESDAY, AUGUST 6, '19'68 e as ixt ea rt Forgit Fired On Bullet Hits Car of Ex-councilman orange County deputy sberills today sought four youths suspected of firing a bullet at the car of former Newport Beach City Councilman Al Forgit. Forgit reported the inci~nt to the sheritf's office Monday afternoon. He said he was traveling east on Pacific Coast Highway late Sunday evening and while crossing the Santa Ana River bridge, a westbound tan V-0lkswagen containing four young men passed by. ... 'Super Yacht Club' Planned With Merger By ALMON LOCKABEY .. •tint t:dlttf Persistent rumars that three l-lerbor Area yacht clubs were planning a merger witti a dloice waterfront loca- tion were confirmed in part Monday by Thomas Patrick Doug.an , com- modore of Bahia Corinthian Yadtt Club. Dougan· said two of the clubs - BCYC and Orange Coast Yacht Club have already &greed on the merger and will join forces Sept. L · The other club considering tbe move Js Voyagers Yacht Club, one of the oldest and most active "letter head" yacht clubs in Soottiern Call!ornia. Dougan said tile VYC membership v:oold vote on the proposal Wednesday night. "But whether <lT not VYC joins in the proposal, BCYC and QCYC will go aflead with plans to build a new, modern clubhouse on Bayside Drive on property now occupied b y Richardson's Y<acht Landing,'' Dougan said. Dougan added that invitation to VYC would remain open until Aug. 15. Purpose of the merger. accordiog to Dougan, is the creation of one strong club that will be a definite asset to yac-ttt.ing, to the community, and especially in the plus benefits for each individual member. Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club was formed 10 )'f'ars ago and has operated leased facilities at the Balboa Bay Club ever since. Dougan said the corporate name of the proposed new yacht club would eventually be voted on by the com~ btned memberslrip. The combined memiberShip of BCYC and OCYC would give the new club a nuclous of about 400 members. If VYC deddes to make it a triumvirate tile ini.tial membership \\'Ould be over 600. Orange Coast Yacht Club was form· ed about four years ago by a group who pulled out of Ule South Sh?re Sail· ing Club in a dispute over le~slng club facilities at the Arches ?i.1arrne. QCYC Commodore F. K. Gleason said the proposed lease at the Arches tias not worked out and that the pro· posed merger would materially benefit (Set YACHT CLUB, Pa&e !) Orange Coast Weather If you liked yesterday's weath· er, you'll love tomorrow's, since there's hot much change in view -cloudy mornings and the sun peeking out about noon with the mercury in the mid·70's. I NS IDE TODAY Examples of the devioui ma· neuvering for delegates votes at t1te Republican National Con- wntion arc described on Page 11 1od4v. •lrtflol tt "'" ... c111i.r1111 , """'"" (.l•ttllltf lt·tt Mllhlll ........ CMllCt f Ntl""al ,..... t,..n..... II Oft"" t-'Y Dttlt! Nttkn I ll"lvlt ,..,.... DI_(,, lt Sedll ,. ... t ••HMll P1.. n S-'t ""'-, .. 11 itMll Mattiftl ,.,.. tlW. " "t...-rhle!I ,....... ,. 111tffet'I AIM Llllftn 11 Wltn.t M1l""t It W"1111 N .... .. .. " .. • " ,,.,. 1J·l4 1 .. 11 • .. • .. The men, according to ttie sheriff's report, "propelled by unidentified means an unknown projectile" against the Forgit car, which. Forgit's wile. P•ggy, was driving. The windshield shattered. Forgit said he believed the "pro- jectile" was a .22 caHber bullet. Mrs. Forgit said she was convinced it was a case of random, malicious mischief. "No one could possibly have known that we would be coming across the bridge .at that hour. It was just four kids in a Volkswagen who saw a big wide target coming toward them. "Al saw one boy throw his arm out of the window and then came this big explosion.'' When the Forgits returned to their apartment above Forgit's Hardw&n! in Balboa, Mrs. Forgit noticed that the shatterea area in the window was just in front of her eye. "It could have been a real tragedy if it had been a larger bullet," she said. Along Erosion Front Tides to Roll on, But Against Rock Barrier By JEROM E F. COLLINS Of tfl9 O.llY Pllet St.If A high tide of 6.5 feet rolled into West Newport Monday night, gobbled up another foot or two of beachfront. left homes still untouched, and rolled out again. An even higher tide is expected tonight. But the city and the Army Corps of Engineers will be ready for it. Tons of rocks will line the shore along the three;bloc.k erosion area from 40th to 43ta streets. ' · A Corps contractor "'i ll place the boulders there today as a protective barrier against the hungry sea, city officials said. Newport Public Works Director Joseph T. Devlin reported. that Army engineers agreed Monday to divert to West Newport rock deliveries schedul· ed for the Dana Point harbor project. Devlin said the Corps planned to dump the rocks just seaward of. the erosion area's slim beac:ti shelf. which varies in width from seven to 25 feet. At one time it was 200 feet wide. Bulldozers will shove the rocks parallel to more than a dozen en· dangered ocean front homes. Tonight's high tide is expected to reach 6.9 feet at 8:20 p.m. The tidal surge will peak at 7 feet at about 9 p.m. Wednesday. Although Monday's high t.jde at 7:2S p:m. resulted in· further reduction of the eroded beacl) shelf, .there. was no property damage. T}\e tide v;as ac~ companied by only a moderate surf, splaSbJng weakly within~ a few !aches of front yard (ences. TI1e same surf conditions are an· ticij)ated tonight. Devlin said ~~ massive sandhaul - West Newport's third in three years - will follow the rock barrier con· struction ''in the immediate future." The sand, to be carted from the San· ta Ana River jetty area, will be spread on top of the boulders. Devlin said the rock pile will reach a maximum height of 9 feet above mean low tide. This, he noted, is two feet below the height to which the Corps intends to rebuild the (See EROSION, Pagt %) * * * * * * U11derwater Reef May Be Best Way to Save Beacl1 Dale Wollner, 29, thlnks be has a better idea on how to prevent beach erosion in West Newoprt. You just build an offshore un· derwater reef, he proposes. Specifically, he says the reef should be an underwater barrier two miles Jong, about 50 feet wide, and about 6 feet beneath the mean Jo"·er low water mark, placed some 100 yards or so offshore. The reef would have a height fiom the ocean bottom oC 20 feet. Wullner's qualifications in dreaming up the Jules Verne-like proposal are rather impressive. He's not a marine engineer, has never s t u d i e d hydraulics, and has no college degree in geology. tie's just got a good imagination, and some practical experience. "My experience in tfrtis kind of af· rair. you ask? Well, let's see. J've gone surfing in Hawaii, aod in Newport Beach. "And I shot through the Colorado River rapids once, 300 miles of them in a rubber life ran. I fell out at one point and even went through a couple or rapids in a life jacket." \Vullner is a C.OCSta Mesa resident and works as a sales and system5 analyst for a computer firm. tie is now making the rounds to various of. ficials trying 1o find out what they Utink of his idea. One engineering official wtlo's heard Wullner's spiel says: "The basic concept is workable. An underwater reef that takes the energy out of the ocean has occurred in some places in nature. for ex.ample." · The official added that actually con· structing such a reef off Newport Beach would be a responsibility of the U.S. Army Con>s of Engineers. WuUner, however, is busy bouncing his idea off anyone who will listen, trying to drum up support for it. He says M:'Jl meet \Vednesday night with members ol the West Newport Improvement Association. "If the Corps of Engineers builds more groins like the one that's already there (off 40tb Street), you're going to \\'ind up wtih about five groins a mile," he said. "It'll look like a big rac«>ry ~·barf .along the coasUine !rom here to Ano.aheim Bay. "But U you put in a barrier. you'll (See REEF', l1age %) DAILY l'ILOT S11ff """"° 'ARE YOU REAL?' -Four-year-old Eric Cederoth o! Orange glad- bands gorilla at Zoo restaurant, totally uncertain whether this is serious business or something to laugh about. Ma11 Goes Ape Gtad Student One of CdM Goril.las By BRUCE BENSON Of .tlM O.llY Plitt SleH An flUto pulled over to the side of the road in Corona Gel Mar and n girl leaned out to beckon to a gorllla. The ape' dropped his hairy paw from a wave to passersby, and ambled over to the car, where the girl thrust him a present. It was a note wrapped around a ban aria and read: "Dear llairy Ape, \Ve Love You." It 'vas signed Giselle and Sue from Pomona. and was decorated in ink with little flowers . "They give me bananas all the time," the gorilla confided Monday while on a break in a bac\u:oom of the Zoo restaurant, 2344 E. Co as t tlighway. The restaurant manager, Dick Magnuson, beamed as his gorilla coi'l· tinued the interview. It was Magriuson who thought of sticking someone in· side an ape outfit last spring to ad· vertise what was once a (tilap1dated, moribund drive.in restaurant. LIVE ELEPHANT? "I was thinking about putting a Uve elephant out front at first," Magnuson said. "But then I started asking a few questions at CitY llall and ... " City tlall wasn't enthusiastic. "So then I thought about a gorilla CAREER CORNER YOUR WAY OUT F. J. LAIN If your career has you in a corner "Ca· reer Corner" is your way out. The new feature , written by proressional guid- ance counselor F . J . Lain, becomes a regujar weekly fea · lure of the DAILY P I L 0 T starting \Vednesday. D1$TIM!I . costume. It's the best $250 I ever spent." Magnuson claims business has skyrocketed, his customers have tend· ed more toward good-spending family types, and he's gained insight into such matters as love and com· municaUons with people .. "My pfimary cOncern when I'm out there," the gorilla offered as an ex· ample, "is to get people to like me. "It's very definitely a s p Ii t personality at work when you're In the suit. I'm a gorilla, and I'm very of· fended when people tell me I'm not." WOKS LIKE ONE The gorilla continued.: "I Certainly look like a gorilla. Alter a while I also start to sm·eu W<e a gorilla. It gets up to 125 degrees in· side. ·That particular problem is handled by · a generous spraying of room deodorant on the suit. (Ordinary hum a n deodorant isn't powerful enough.) The gorilla identified himself as a graduate student at ucr, working for a master's degree in history. Beyond that. he preferred anonymity. "1'he best a~e for the truest believers," he said. "is about from 4 to 10. There are some boys , about 12 J guess, who feel a need to assert themselves and they sometimes start to attack me. "Then there are the real young kids . Sometimes they're terrorized, but mdStly they just see me as some kind of bizarre Santa Claus." TURNED OFF The gorilla said his response from motorists follows a trend. At Umes , he gets the public really to wave at him and laugh. Other times, they're kind of turned off. "I've had people even throw things at me. every now and then, includlog eggs and tomatoes. But tb.at doesn't happen often." Restaurateur Mlignuson said be has three fellows work as regular gorillas. Others plnch·h.it from time to time. He said be finds that each. of h.is regulars tends to excel in a cerl•l.n (S.. GORILLA, Pagt !) DAILY I'll.Of ~di.,. Le SAND l055 IN WEST NEWPORT COULD BE STOPPE D BY ME;SA MAN'S PROPOSED UNDERWATER REEF Ho Cl1im1 Borrlor Could Bo Built By Movl1111 M1torl1I Alon~ Flootl1111 Convoyor Bolt System J ' • Today's Closing N.Y. Stocks . - JEN CENTS tac Chest Pains Suffered ' After Speech WASHINGTON (AP)-Former Pres~ ident Dwight 0 . Eisenhower suffered chest pains indicating a possible new heart attack early today, less than 12 hours after addressing the Republican National Convention from bis hospital suite. It would be the 77·year·old former president's third heart attack this year-and his sixth In 13 years. Walter Reed Army Hospital reported ~at Eisenhower suffered chest pains ,at 6:15 a .m. EDT. It said preliminary indications were that the attack repre· senU another myocardial infarction. Eisenho,ver's son. John, arriving from Miami Beach, Fla., said the doc· tors "thought the si tuation was serious enough that I should be here." John Eisenhower made the com· ment to newsmen as he arrived at Walter Reed Army Hospital from the Republican National Convention at Miami Beach. He was accGmpanied by his daughter. Barbara, 19, but said other members of his family remained in Mlami Beach. His condition was stable when the ho spital announcement was made at 10 a .m. The hospital bulletin said also that Eisehower was then comfortable and free of pain. Further bulletins will be isslled as Indicated, the hospital said, without fixing -aqy, time. A myocardial infarction, a fonn of heart attack. produces an area of damage to the myocardium or heart muscle as a result of either total or (Stt EISENHOWER, Page !j Real Candidate Reagan Steps Up Drive for Votes MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Gov. Ron· ald Reagan. answering the clarion call of candidacy, today accelerated his two-day o[ficial campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. "As of now I am a candidate at this convenlion." the Callfomia governor told a hastily called news conference Monday. He decided not to wait until his name was put into nomination at the convention when his own delega. lion "came out of the clear blue sky" and urged him to clarify his position. He scheduled meetings today with delegations [rom 10 states, whose 290 votes would bring bis total to 29 dele· gations with bl votes. He appeared relieved to have shed the complicated favorite·son role he bad planned to maintain for another 48 hours. "It was getting a little difficult to explain why I would be a candidate on \Vednesday night but not before," he said. Rep.~an was peeved at speculation that his surprise announcement wa~ part of a preconceived plan. He said the urgent appeal of the California delegation was as much a surprise to him as to anyone else. The first he heard or it, Rea~an said, was when former Sen. \Villiam F. Knowland told him of the plan just before it was presented to the dele· gation. Arsonists Hit Stan£ ord Again STANFORD (AP) -An arsonist started another fire today on the SUln-- !ord University , campus but the automatic !prlnkler system doused the flames, authociUes said. It was the fourth unsolved case of arson on the campus since Ule first o{ the year. and only• month after Stan· ford President Wallace Sterling's of. fice was gutted. Today's early mOTning lire was In the basement of the st"udent 5ervices building. The sprinklers activated an alarm a hall.block away in the Stan· fcrd Fire Houge. 4. Nabbed at Party tt w111 a 1mashing party at 1021 \f. Bay early thi.s mornlna:. A Newport lkach pollct officer U!Ocd the butt end or his flashllght to shatter a aUd_lng glass door leadil:IQ'. to 1 &:u~pecled group oC marijuana ltl<n. Four tten·a&ers were arre.sted. I l • • ) • • • • ' - % DAil Y PllOT Tuttday, AugU:rt 6, 1968 Drug Anarchy Brings Mesa Pop Festival Ban 1J7 Aitl'llOk ll. VIN8EL ................. 11 you ml•aed, '1he Ntwpcllt Pop FesUval -nmUnoll1 auodated with the bead! town Instead of its boot dty, to COlta Mes.a11 eternal ereclit ac· . c<>r<lq 14-...,,. -you missed the op- portulill)' Of a lllelime. ~ a clarlt proopocM for a 1tll fartuoaell:l lcr our aood n~ to ~.. drui-cmed -1 ol J..ked a riol aa4 char,.. of poU.. r«*lll• cl lie w..uad'• llpqlll4 tba ~ U>t1 bod .,., )o do with tho folrgrounds. brutality," he added, nOting that nnt "i!~ far ., I'm c_,,.,/, we wui 11.;;W. llil liOt \rti!Wf7 u "1'1oatve "We 'lived Jhrou11h I) by the gr~ ol ynr Cosio Mera will have legal pro-~ '--·• 1 -t of"'·"''·.·••·'-," situ.,_ pro! I at· .... t t God and cool policemen," be declartd. tection from another festival. ·-.,., ·-~ ~ -~ .. -= a~u . . . "'' on a .. ~ ors ou declared Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, in-theri agitating," Mayor-Pinkley con-"They were a bunch of animals," he He said motion pictures were taken, troduCW.C·di9c:a1ssto11 •of ,tbe big eveat ·tintied, f::!ng lb¥. bf watched. tbe added~obviously broadening his scope apparently showing many incident! bJ,.U..ud·---.... cltlea, plua the CaUfornla Highway Patrol and Orange County Sberlll'a Department: Wb!cb responded to re· quests for help SU:llday. M-dty COllllOilmon; meeliAg wltl!ln a atone'• -or the deVasfAlo\l f0$liVal site Oil tile ()nngl County Fairground$, ~ · llCl>t . which drew more·tha:n 100,(1()() perlons • ftstlval' ttie pollce facility roof. of reference beyond Eric Burdon's and the ritood of the crowd, which was to 1he dty, The mayor ·llao hinted that only group of ttie same name, which ap--four times larger than an 1 "It was named the Newport Pop deep, Implacable discipline aroong the pe-ared at the teWval. preliminary estimate by police or pro- Festival,_.or jaz.z fel:Uval, or whatever scores of lawme11 rldtn&' j)erd ~unday "Our men took the insults witQout rooters of the huge gathering, . µ. wu.'' the m&yor ad(\ed, "bu\ prevented an emotional ~on of strilt.lna: back, which would have The mayor also praised cooperation He said wlthtn I~ ·boon alttr the close of' the music" festiVal. dnly two cars were left ·on the falrgrour.d.s. "I suspect they were either in· qperative or the owners were: oH on a trip somewhere," be said --' - h9M P.,e J . GORILLA ... 11rea. Ttre "\JCI gorilla is great with chilclroo. "Are you real?" one youngster ask· ed, not certain whether to laugh or cry. "You're real, aren't you?" replied the UCI gorilla with a frie!Xlly potnt o! his paw. "Then 1l you're real, I'm real.'' One of Magnuson's regular gorillas started out as a hippie with· aboulder· length hair. Once the boss had hired him despite hi& appearance, he go\ a crew cut. He is now a short-haired hippie - except when he's ln the gorilla suit. "That fellow la crazy about hl1 job,'' Magnuson said. "When be gets out there he says he's communicathlg love with the people. . "And what enthusiam. I'll go out to tell him something, and all be does is 1tand. there and make gorilla-like sounds .at me. Jt'1 kind of frultraUag, but then I figure, well that's what J'm paying hhn for, to be a gorilla." The third regular i3 a high school youth -wtth a talent for gymnastics. "I looked out there ooe day end there he waa halfway up a guy wire to a telephone pole. He looked great .swinging out then: but J had to ask him to mock it oil. "I didn't know how my workmen's compensation would handle elec- trocutioo." Magnuson &aid that on the first weekend with the gorilla outfit, he climbed Inside the sult himself. "After a-while," he reflected, "I found that J was really communicating with those people .u they smiled and waved and laughed. "And I could understand actors, for example, and the warmth they must get from applause." Magnuson got so much warmth, in fact, that be sweated. From P .. e · J EISENHOWER . -. partial blockage of one of the branch- es of the coronary arteries which ordi- narily supply oxygenated blood to the heart. Eil!enhower had suffered a similar lnfarctlon--described as a major at- tack-at ~e hospital on June 15. The retired five-star general has been at Walter Reed since May 14. He had been stricken with a minor heart attack April 29 at his winter home at Palm Desert, and was taken than to March Air Force Base in Callfornla. He transferred to Walter Reed when he had recovered sufllclently to make the trip. Elsenhowtr had appeared alert and in good health Monday night a1 he addressed the Republican National Convention tn Miami Beach, Fla., by telephone-and the nation by radio and televi&lon. His 10.mlnutt address to the conven. tJon was recorded on videotape at the hospital about 30 minutes before it was broadcast at 8:35 p.m., according to the Columbia Broadcasting System, which handled the broadcast. Lack of screenlnr facilities kept delegates at tbe convention from see· tng Eisenhower as he spoke, but the address was carried into the nation's homes as a part of broadcast conven- tion activities. DAllY PILOT N..,,,... 1Mu. c.tlfwlll• OAAH'I COAST PUILISl-tlNG COMl"AHY Roh•rt N. W••~ Prtsidtnl ffld l'utill~ J•ck R, Curl•y Vke Pmldfnl •rut G~•1 M1ne111r Thorn •' 1(11vlf .. ,,, lho1T1•1 A. M11rphi111 Ml>natlnt Edllar .l•r•M• F. Cot1i111 P•11I Nlt1•11 ,._., 9ffdt .... ~., .... Oly Editor Olrtttw ---2211 w ••• l1lb•• ••• 1..,,,, Maru., AU,. .. , P.O. loa 1171 tl661 --C.19 N.91: _, w .. 1 ••Y Slf'Wf u--..mi m ....._, ,."9fll.I, Mllntllllfon ...,.1. -'""" "' lnttttlf'. CMr9.i •!Id St•I• Lun ~~---::-'~ ... R1pcym11nt l oc:•I P<op•rty r •• ,, "' ,, 12• DAILY ,ILOT NawtcMt1 •r L" McCrl)' ~x-manager Too Retired City Empliiyes Ask Boost in Benefits Elghl.een retired Newport Beach municipal employes, including a former city manager, today petitioned the City Council tor an increase in 'their retirement benefit!. Heading the list of petitioners ts John J . Sailors, Newport's flr6t city manager. He was empl9yed by the ci- ty from 1949 to 1956. three other former department heads. They are J. A. Grant, ex-treasurer, of 1111 W. Bay Ave., Newport; J. Bert Webb, form~ public works -di.rector, of 432 HolmtOOd Drive, Newport; and Luis Merrell, one-time w a t e r superintendent, of 421 Holmwood. 'PllS' SHOW WHERE MONEY GOES I LEFT) AND WHERE IT COMES FROM This 11 Picture of Pln1ncl1I Situation Jn Newport-Mesa School District The petition, filed with C 1 t Y Clerk Laura Lag.los, "W"gently re- quests" the council to take steps re· quired by recent state legislation to in· crease the retirement pay of already retired g-0vernment employes. The city's retirement system, as with all California public agencies, is administered by the state's Public Employes Retirement System. In order for the benefits to be increased. an actuarial study would have to be conducted by the state to determine how much the city's contribution to the retirement system would have to be raised. Harbor School District Requires $23 Million ·It will cost mort than 123 mllllon to run the Newport·M-Unl!ted School District next achoo! year. Sllced up silver d0Uar1 show graphicalty where the money comes from and how It Is spent. Illwtra.Uons are ba.sed on recom- mended 8gun1 !vr the 1116Ml budget, to be adoplod by tho scllool boar~ following a public hearing tonight Salaries of teachers and other school per1onnel take the biggest allce, 71 cent.s, of the expense dollar. TOaether with unavoidable interest charges, loan repayment and retire· ment fund, 80 cents on the dollar ts un- touchable before trustees begin t.o trim the budget. From Pllfle 1 'EROSION ... beach With the sand.lill. Today's rock haul does away with any need for emer1tncy sandbagging, he added. Cost of the emergency eroaion con- Prom Page 1 REEF ... cause the surf to break and farther offshore, jwt like tbe reefs do in Hawaii. swell coral "You'll have a 1table beach, better surfing, and a prettier coasWne," he predicted. The material for the reef could be clay or some kind of cbem.ical grbutlng, more el&IUo than concrete. "You wouldn't even have to worry about coral pollontni," be smiled. Sumner Hears Chott Arguments Attorneys in Uie Corona del Mar murder ca.se of George Lyons sub· mltted arguments Monday before Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner on whether the accused 17-year-old murderer should stand trial as an adult. Judge Sumner continued the hearlng until 4 p.m. Wednesday. The suspect, AWOL Camp Pendleton Marine Edwin William Chott. w a s returned to Orange County Juvenile Hall where he has been lodged &ince his arrest In June. Sex Discrimination Must End Dec. 1 WASHINGTON ll/Pll -Alter Dec. 1, newspaper help-wanted ads ad· dressed exclusively to one sex or the other will be lllea:al unless the jobs being advertised can be performed on- ly by the specified sex. The Ovil Rights Act of 1964 outlaw- ed diacriminaUon on the basis o! sex, to become effective when ordered by the Equal Employment Opportunity Comm.talion. On t.tondey lbe com- mission set Dec. I u tbe effective date. Hopwood YR Speaker John ltopwood, administrative 1.1si11- tant to Assemblyman Robert E . Bad· ham CR-Newport Beach), will be the speaker at tonilhl'• meetin& of Or- ange Cowity Youns RepubUcans set to.-8 p.m. in the Blltro Room of the Newport<r loo. l. Biggest slice of the income dollar is property taxes, 62 cenU. It compares to 26 cents for the city of Costa Mesa and 31 cents for the city of Newport Beach. School district&, unlike cities, do not have fees, special taxes and fines to rely on for income. Apportioned state a1d ia 25 cents on the dollar. Federal aid is minimal, one cent. Reserves include carryover projects and were swelled by a year-end balance that was larger than ex· peeled. Trustees have said they intend to restore previous budget cuts. Money actually held in reserve tben would amOWJt to five cents on the dollar, not nine cents as shown. trol project will be financed largely by Army Corps funds . The Corps committed Itself to main· taining a stabilized beach when it con- structed tbe 2.50-foot long s-teel groin at the end Of 40th Street last winter. Another groin will probably be built. perhaps this )'ear at the end of 43rd Street, aceording to Corps gpokesmen. City officials credit the first groln with preventing any slgnl.ficant beach loss downcoast of 40th Street. From Page J YACHTCLUB ... membeJ"fi. Rkhu'd.!on's Yacht Landing is liv- ing up its lease at 1601 Bayside Drive a year prior t.o i~ expiration. The club will aper ate the marina for the Irvine Co., owners of the ptoptrty fot the next year. In the meantime, DoUgan sald, the present structure will be reconverted (or temPore.ry use by the yacht clubs until ground can be broken for the "latest In yadlt club building detl&n and cun!ort." The Irvine Co. plans a complete remodeling of ttie existing slips and provisions for small boat wat er storage. Jn addlUon to the present Richardson 's area, lhe miw yacht club will occupy an adjacent one-and·a-haU acres. The locetion places the new yacht club next door to the Balboa Yacht Club, second oldelf. property..owning club In the Harbor Area. BYC OC· cuples land leased from lrvi.ne and the Coun<y of Orange. EXPANSION PROGRAM BYC haJ been negotiating fOr the past year to acquire Irvine l&nd between its present club faclUties and Richardson's for a proposed expansion "progN.m. .Dougan said tbe new club wGUld be a m-Odern de91gn and ID<lad• a swim· mini pool, dry storage for smaU boa1s and launcbin& facilities for bOets up to 25 feet. "For some years we at BCYC have dreamed arid la.kl plans for one of the finest facilities on the Pacific Coast - or anywhere for ~1at matter," Douga n said . "We were roody when the time came to fit into ttie master plan of the Irvine Co., whJch envisions the latest and fi nest dock.s ide acoomrnodalion!i frootlna all or their properties atooa: tllo cbanneb . "We expect to have over 500 feet ol water frontage protected, ye\ eaSily accessible to the hiarbor entrance, a nd plan supple-rnent!ng the 'new docking facilities witti lull clubhouse facilities lncluding a swimming pool, a dining room, rooms for ~cbtlng and family activity. hoists for boots up to the si1.e of Cal·2Ss, .ample dry storage and ot!l'tl'Ut parldnr on the 21,1 acre pucel, ,, NJd Ooui:&a. ~~--~----~~ Newport Police Still in Dark On Boy 's State Newport Beach police to d ay reported they were still in the dark about how or why a 19-year-old youth worked himself into a catatonic state before he was taken into custody Mon- day afternoon at Ocean Boulevard and L Street. The young man was taken to Orange County Medical Center where he re· mllined this' morning under observa- tion. Det. Sgt. Ken Thompson said it v.ras unknown whether the teen-ager was suffering an adverse reaction from drugs. The youth was first seen staggering and repeatedly Calling down on the beach. A lifeguard told police that children were teasing and throwing sand at him but the youth failed to res· pond to them. Police said ·they located him in the company of other teen-agers who were apparently trying to care for him. "lbrough the years," says the peti- tion, "you have granted current employes cost of living increases, but h&va neglected to do anythlng for those of us On limited incomes who also suffer from spiraling inflation and can less afford it. "Other cities in the state have given increases t.o their retired employes for several years." In addition to Sailors, who lives at 8402 Alvarado Drive, Huntington Beach, signers af the petition include Retirement pay is computed ac. cording to a formula based on age, number of years service and max- imum salary. It varies from individual to individual. Councilmen, who will formally receive the petition Au~ust 12, could refer It to the city staff for a report and a recommendation, or could file it or could immediately request the state actuarial study. Rocky, Reagan Chip At Nixon's Delegate Lead MIAMI BEACH (llPI) -Ricl>ard M. Nixon's delegate strength slipped slightly today as Nelson A. Rockefeller and Ronald Reagan hopped from hotel to hotel trying to lure ~way his sup. porters. The latest UPI delegate e<>Wlt show· ed Nixon with six fewer delegates than Monday, but still within a dozen of votes of a first ballot victory for the Republican presidential nomination Wednesday night. With 667 votes requlred for notruna. tion at the GOP convention, o UPI delegate tabulation showed Nixon with. 657 votes, with 2n committed and 380 leaning. Rockefeller had 278, inclU.ding 153 committed and 125 leaners; Reagan bad 191, inclhding 93 com· mitted and 98 leaning: favorite sons had 180 and 27 remained uncommitted. .., 11:•-= has it! We lay it on the line ... THE ULTIMATE ;" CAR"FT C':l.EANINr-. Recently, Oeep Stearn Cerpet Clten•r1 introduced e n•w prof•11ionel c•rpet cl•ening prec111 to thi1 County ••• Prior to off•rin9 thl1 remerk:eble ••rvice to you, our cu1tomer1, wt conducted our own compteh•nslve te1tin9 program in ord•r to verify th e cl1im1 mede for t he process by Its dev•lop- trs. Not only did we find Deep Steem to b• e revollltlon•ry dtper+ure from our t r1dltionel carpet cle•n• Ing mtthod, but wt found it to bt eb1olut•ly seft for eM cerpet end upholstery febrics. Concurrent with our te1tin9 program, we thorou9h)y tr•ined our personnel in the eff•ctlve u1e of Deeo Steem cleenin9 equipment ••• Only when we were completely s1tisfied thtt Deep Stttm mtt with our 1tendtrd1 did we offer thi1 unique new 1•rvlce to you. A 1ucce11fut compeny'1 rt/iutetion i1 lt1 best adverllaement. We lev lt on the lin t bv cordielly inviting you to try 1tf~ty-te1ted eep Stetm Well-to-Wei Ctrpet end Upholstery Cleaning •• , The fin· •st profe11ionel ctrpet cleening 1trvlc1 ytt develeped for the Industry. Protect the life of your c•rpet1 end the beauty of your home by celling todeyl TIME FOR NEW DRAPES? We er• drepery ••per+sl We strt11 qu•Hty of workmen1hlp I ln1telletlo1'1. Free Esttmates In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALL TODAY: WHIN YOU WANT THE FINIST- CALL UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 16 yeett of collt cfive ••perlence betw••n the 2 men doing your work. All work don• In our pl1nt. We pre.fest all f1bric1 btfore cleenlna. Free Estimates In Your Home At Your Convenitnc., CALL TODAY: l'aR DTIMAll RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS Our 2ht YHr 0 of Strtlce in Orange County 2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA PHONE 546-3431 ' "'°"'TolA,.. c.n n.1111 '°"" --------------------------------- ---• ' P'apier Mache Work and .. Play PAINTING FOR PLEASURE -Mrs. Edward·K ... ins of Huntington Beach, who read about .tfle 'classes in this newspaper, is taking time to carefully-apply the paint on her "angel." Her work is almost done! IN THE BEGINNING·-Starch, twine, tape, paints, brushes and newspapers are the basic necessities when creating papiet mache art. All these items pluS "extras" were furnished by the Costa Mesa Recreation Department for its five-week papier rnache class. HANDS FULL -Up to her elbows in starch is Mrs . William C. Kermode Sr. of Costa Mesa who is in the final phase of doll~mak:ing. After the string hair is applied the figurine will sit and dry bef .. paint is applied. A 'STICKY' JOB -Miss Rose .Barrera oi Costa • Mesa (right) finds it·J!'lessy to work with starch • and cloth. Helping her design a figurine is Miss Nancy Schorle of Costa Mesa, papier macbe in· structor for the Recreation Department. Paper cups form the doll's base ; wadded paper is shaped .for the head, and starched cloth is-drap- ed .around. After a few days the cloth stlf(ens enough for paint to be applied. The finished doll (foreground) has been popular as a Christmas angel and children's toy .. I BEA ANDERSON, Edllor T.....,., ....... IHI ltl·CM P• 11 WH;t.T IS IT? -Qnly Mrs . George Fox of Costa Mesa knows that the balloon shaped papier macho ball with br8id trimming and carton sOon will be a clown's head. With • ll~ imaginati<?n and paint, it's possible. ti FIRST CLASS -The women enrolled in the class, . ' the first of its kind at the Recreation ·Depart.ment, NOT FOR SALE -These articles designed by the amateur artists show a professional style. Sessions included designing vases. banks, jewel- ry and figurines. Illustrating the women's ta.I- ents are an owl bank, pins. earrings, a neck- lace, a large vase of papier mache and a small- er one of tissue mache. 'LOST' IN THOUGHT -It may apl!ear that Mrs. Donald Stockman of Costa Mesa is ' playing dolls." But, in realltr. she is finishing work on her draped figure. She will be next in line to paint. enjoy working and talking with their "neiihborS." 'I'he course wasn't all work and no play. Shown in one of their busi~r moments are Mrs. Edward Ker- ins and Mrs . Backle Heath of Co.ta Mesa-(left to right). It's Too Late, Up to Fate Who Arrives ·On Wedding Date DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our 20- yeal'-old 1on1 Cy, has been going with a nice quiet girt who comes to the house evenings and helps him with his schoolwork. (Cy 11 taking some night school classes.) We all like llilda beca1111 abe is encouraging our son to make &0mething of limself. Yesterday I noticed Hilda looked unusually large around the middle even though she was wearing a smock. J asked -Cy this morning 11 be . was aware Uta! mlda had put · on some weigt\l He replied matter-of.factly, "Are you just getting around to notJc· Ing it? Hilda is six montns pregnanl" When J regained my composure I asb?d Cy when they planned to get maJTied. He said, "The baby might not be mine. We're going to wait and ANN LANDERS ·. see who he looks like." AM, I could not believe my ears . Cy then went on to·say 1omethina: about a former boyfriend Of Hllaa'1 :..... one whom she had·not quite given up. The boy b .. red. bllr. U the baby 11 a redhead; Cy mtgbt no! marry her. Hifcla 11 gqing· to get lar'ger and larger and we have two preteen children ln the family who know where babies come from. Shall we 1111 Cy be can't brina her to Ille bou1t aicy-more l Please. Ann , tell me· what to do. I'm going out or my mind.. P .S. Hilda does not drink or 1mok1. -D.C.M. DEAR D-' Well H 1ut1 IDOi to prove tbat 1ome &trl• can have fan wltboat 1moktng or drlDkln1. Don 't te.D Cy be e11n't brta1 Hilda to the bou1e urmore. It won't help mitten anr. (P.S. Yoo bow, ol eoarao, ~baby'• looU Will DOC prove 1a~11, bat •ti)' o..-of It. Tbeee two·are aot t.teres&ed in oplnlen1 or ady:lce~ DEAR ANN LANDERS : 0 u r daughter Jan is 17 years old and J am worried slck about her. Thia Clrl Js at- tractive, bright· and popular, but 1he doesn 't know how to boll wtiter much. less put together a me.i. She can't sew on 1 button or-.cruli 1 floor so that It loo~ halfway d~ent. Jin will be going away to school in the fall and I hate to think what her room will lOoi like. (I have an Idea because-I Dow what her room at home would loot' like 111 didn't clean It.) · Please don't tell me I ui to blame , Ann. It's not true . I have done my best to oich Jan th• tblng1 a Ori abould know but 1he 11 not interested. \ ChildMI today don't live like . th<y used to. It'• TV. Uleir own telephone. cars all over the place, shoppuig for clothes, hi-fi, 1teri:o and Wild com- petition for grades 10 they can make the better COiieges. Please tell me, Ann, how can mot.hen teach their daughtefs to be homemakers when they refuse to ttay home long enough to learn? Do you have a word for me? -DEFEATED DEAR. DE: Ye1. Bonefe1ther1. Don't blame "tbt times" for your fallm. Tbtre an U bom la ewery day -for all of ••· lt'1 bo" we choose lo 1pead IMte 14 lloun tut coaatt. u :roa'\le pennle&ed yoar d1u1hter to •pend ••1r1 ... ti -14 !loan dol•I 11 ·111e ple•Hd, rn did lier oo lavor. Ev•rr pl llttll!it &row op wttll ' ooullOhold ret-1bllltleo. II ..u., Ille e11ler for lter .motlter (wbe de1erve1 a break) ud ff; eqalPI Ute p l lor morrto&e wttl oomelldlf be11do1 1ooc1 1oou ud -• 111ee1 lw 1pelldln1 ...... 1. . -Hw will you know _,. Ille rHI th1nJ comes llon&l Ask Ami Landlrs. Send for her booklet "Love or kz and How to Tell the Dl/ferene<." Send 35 cenlt In coin an4 a long, oell4d- dre1M!d, stamped envelope wttb roor request. Ann Landers will be Siad to help 100l with your problenu. "S«id tl>em to her In cm ol the DAILY,PlhOT tlld ... ~~· oell-lddnuod, ttomped• .\ I '' I 1 I { I I I I ' y J4 DAl\.V '!LOT • TuHday, A•l\lll 6, 1961 Roberta Heck Becomes Bride v s .. oa Su Antonlo de Pala ~ Mtllne for Ile nuptial mMo umtlnc in mar· rial' -Heel: and H. Neirell Sllckler. 'lbe Rev. Vl-1'ud>eCti toienmlzed tllo -riDI c....,mony. 'Ille bride 11 the daupter of Kn. Rooem.:, Heel: of Nowport -and Robert G. Hect of Sierra Madn. P-of the llrldegroom aro Dr. and Mn. Harry E. Stictler ol Corona del Mar. GI-in marriage by ber .,...U-r, Ethan A. I.eke ol Newport Beach, the bride WM attired in a abort wtl1te gown of embroidered alencon lace with tiefa in tt.e b&clt. Her three tiered &bOulder length illusion veil was held in place by a fabric bow. She carried a cascading b o u q u e t of phalaeoopsll -and lilies ol. the valley. Mr1. Robert Kolowith, sister of the bride, Ken- newick, Wash., and ·Miss Jeanne Sti"ckler, sister of the bridegroom, Corona del Mar served as matron and maid of honor. Both WOl'e identical &OWDt of yellow and carried cue.des of yelow daill• and IV)'. Mila OirlstiDe Kolowlth, niece of the bride, waa no-girt 'INKiDC • pole yellow cireoe and carryil!C a baobt of yellow dalllea. Horoscope Dooold M. Rober..,.; o1 Cor<00 del Mor ,. .. Mke4 to be best mu. David L. -.. Of in1ne and Maurice F. Staker of EICOllo- dido were Ulbert. Mra. D a v i d Twitchell, organllt, aocompoll!ed Milo Belly Barnett, 1ololit in tho church decorated wltb white g la.~ lo 11 and chry,... lbemuma. A reception for 200 1111111 toot piece after th e cerem.ooy at tbe Fall:irook Oountry Club whldl .... decorated wi'th y e 11 o w dal1ie1 and white cbryanlhemuma. G u e a t book WU circulated by Mro. Twitchell. Miss Leslie Dixon and MiSI Joan Williama oerved cake. Special gueot was the bridegroom's grandmother, Mrs, S. Frederick N 1 ch OJ I of Beatrice, Neb. The bride b a gradual< of Newport Harbor H l g h School and the University of California, Santa Barbara. She received her teaching credential from UCLA tlnd is an affiliate of Delta Gam- ma Sorwity. Her husband, a graduate of Newport Harbor High Sdloo~ 11 also ' graduate of the university of Notre Dame. Alter a weddUig trip to Jacb<m Hole, Wyo. tile MRS, H. NEWELL STICKLER newlyweds will reside in To R•1id• in H•m•t Hemet. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sagittarius: Obey Traffic Rules WED., AUG. 7 Br SYDNEY OMAIUI 1-ibe wile man ocatroh his ~ ••• MlroloO pointa: tbe W'ay." AlllES (March 21-Aprll I 9 ) : Milundentandina• could arlle unlel1 o u r statemenU, actloM: a r e cryN!-clear, eopecially in relations wltb friends, loved onea. Av<*! impulsive ac· tions. Permit logic to role. TAURUS (April 20--May 20): Could be conflic t between duty IJld deoire. New Slants 9343 SIZES 10~~ ._.__. ,,,, 1ff ,..i-1ff c..'T'- FLATIERY C 0 MES ACROSS on a graceful dlaeonal In this slimming dreu that'• accented at one side by an inverted pleat. Sew it now! Printed Pattern 9 3 4 3 : NEW Hall Sl>e1 IOI>, 121>, HI>, 161>, 181>, :lnl>, 221>. Slu 141"' (bust 37) takes 311• yd1. 35-in. SIXTY ·FIVE CENTS in coins for each pattern-add 1$ cent.I for eacb pattern for flm-<ialo mailing and apeclal handling; otherwise tfllrd.class delivery will take tbret weekt or more. Send to Marian Martin. The DAI- LY PILOT, 442 Pattern Dept, 232 West 18th St., Ntw York, N. Y. lOOll. Prlllt NAME, ADDRESS wltli ZIP, SIZE and STYLE MJMBEll. Wbal'• ..... for fall! 107 WWili tn our l'aD·Wlnter -C.lalof. Jl'reo pat-llrn coupon in C&talog. Send IO ctall. Now INSTANT SEWING --"""" )'OU how to -It todoy, WNt it tomor· ""'· Over 400 pictures. Ooly ... Aehleve .en.e ol. balance. tbani• )'002' routlne. If metbodl are modern, you wil. •W time, I Vo 1 d onrullh. GEMINI (Moy 21-June Ill): Good lunar aspect to- day coinclde1 wlih ability to put thought&, iC!M1 across. Avoid excets tpeed in talk· lag, writing and traveling. Means double check. Battle tendency to be carele11. CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): You may be receiving flnlncial edvice whicll b baeed on &peculation rather than hard fact.. Know t.his---and take measures to prevent Joss. Hold down ex· penses. Avoid ooe who Js argumen.tati've. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): There could be split; don 't hang on to something which ia outmoded. Be analytical. study ARIES me11ag·e. Authorities are on your ride. There :le . no need far desperate or lmpul1lve move. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You get action in area that prevloudy was quiet. Af· feds employment, aseocia· ticns wi'th neigbbor.s. Impor· tant project oan be com· pleted. Green light ls given for umsual technique . LIBRA (Sept. :zs.oct. 22): Relatlomhip with ARIES in· dividual today could p-oduce sparks. M • k e intelligent cooceuioo, but COIXinue to -up for priDclples. Evaluate new, original tug· gesUons . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Find out .my of lhing1. Probe deep for ....wen. Be thorough in approach. Haphazard methods could cause loss, dekly, Your in- tuition or hWldl pays off. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Don't be in too much of a rl.15h, especially in writing, traveling. Not wise to put anything on paper while angry. Obey rules, particularly in traffic. Take your time. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22. Jan. 19): Spending on pro- perty or future security Is fine, but avoid ex- travagance. You can do this by listening to voice of ex· perience. Be original. but don't rebel from truth. -Think. Sewing Set By Mothers 'Scuffies' for patients In the Long Beach Veterans Hospital ~·ill be made by members or the Air Force Mothers Club Flight 19 at their regular monthly meet- ine Thursday, Aug. 8, at 8p.m. A 1hort meeting in the Hyde Park Mobile Estates Clubhollle will precede the sewing. Later during the month the club is planning a gar· age sale. Further lnformaUon Is avallable by calling Mrs. Mellvln Roen/old! al 893- 5230. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2().Feb. 18): You could be center of attention. Vitality is lUg'b; many are intrigued. Now is time to speak up. M"ov:~ ahead; tiake initiative. Cyde is high, """ you .,.. "'" rounded by air of ex- citement. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Secrets are revealed. Don't attempt to cover facts. U diplomatic, the truth will ai'd, not iQjure. You may ha•re to deal with delle11te sttualioo. Be frank. oot lemjler J1111ice with mercy. Taking It Easy Is Hard to Take By JOY STILLEY NEW YOll!t (AP) -Il'a nice to get away from it all -from vacations, that b - and get back home where you can rest. Taking it easy 11 hard to take. There's nothing like a planned program of rert and relaxatloo to tire you out. Getting thfl'e may be ball the fun, but for me It's twice the work. Just lugging the luggage out is a major task, since it's always stored on a bigb shell, wedged in among neighbors it resists parting from. But coaxing It dOW"n, while no job for an am«teur, is just the beginning, 'Ibe 1ultcase1 have to be RECORDING ARTIST Dick B•ldwin Music Sets emptied before they can be filled. They're invariably loaded wit b out.of-date clothing, chiklbood abtempts at embroidery, one-eyed teddy bears and old love let- ters, whJch have to be relocated while their home 11 away from bcxne. Then there's the packing. No matter bow many 11ltl and ch.arts I make, 10 that we'll only have to take out one bag on overnight ltops, it never works out that way. The toothbrushes or some otil.er essentials a l w a y s manage t.o do a litUe travel- ing on their own and end up in the cese at the bottom of Ile pile. We once made an ex- tended trip through Canada, •topping at • different motel ever;.y night. There were m people along on the jaunt, as well a1 a dozen .assorted overnight cases, hat boxes, soft-sided luggage, hard-sid- ed luggage and aboe tote bags, plus numerowi con· bainers of souvenir• ac· quired along the way. To get all this into the car trunk, everything had to be fitted in a precise way like the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. Eaeh morning my husband had to mastermind th.Us bal!-hour exercise, as he was the only one who could remember just where It all had ta be placed so the lid would go down . Our ID09t recent attempt .at taking our ease wasn't much m ore successrut. Feeling that a restful weekend away from the cares of work and home was Lunch Tone' . "In order. we accepted a standing Invitation to visit The Big Band era will come to life again Thurs- day, Aug . 8, at 10 :30 a .m. when crooner Dick Baldwin displays his artistry before members of the Mesa Har- bor Club. The sit-down luncheon will begin at 11 a.m . in the Costa Mesa Golf and CoWltry Club, preceded by a social period at 10::11 a.m. Bald- win will present his pro· gram following the business meeting. The entertainer b famous for singing with Charlie Spi· vak, Charlie Barnet. Splke Jooe11 Tommy Dorsey and others of the Big Band era. He now has his own record company, with distributors throughout the world. Ohalrman for the program &. Urti Willi •"' C Mnlm••. relatives In a nearby city. Two glorious days with nothing to do ! When we arrived, my sister's greeting was f'Ollow- ed b'y an enthusiastic recital of all the things she had planned for our enjoyment And the crowning touch - she was giving a dinner for :in guests Saturday night It was hard,to squeeze the whole schedule In, but by getting a running rtart Saturday and •goiJli at a gnat pace we managed to do most of i~ including sboppl.ng for groceries and preparing the big meat We really didn•t have to leave as early as we did Sunday morning, but we figured It was better to be sleepy lhRn run the risk of rettinf •DY more tired. Peering Around · MR. AND MRS. Lawrence H. Lee of Newport Beach will hott a dinner party efter tbe weddlne rehearsal -of Uleir 1on,-Robert-H. Lee and hia flancee, Mlls Unda Lee Combest. 1ba party will take ploce In tbe Saddleba<k Inn, Santa Ana nert Tburaday, and the wedding Wemony Will be performed Saturday i n Garden Grove C.Ommunity Church. The future bride ii the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Combest of Bell Gardens. JOINING 4,000 other bus- iness and professional wom· en at their club's national convention wert Mrs. Jack' W. Broback, president of the Newport Harbor Business and Profeaslonal Women's Clu b and Mrs. Arnold J!:. Naegeli, southern section chaJrman of San Oreo Dis- trict, from Newport Beach. 'fhe :Wth National Cooven· tion elected new officers un· der the theme, Unite, Share, Act. , ONE OF !SO pages at the Republican Convention in Miami ia Mils Ellyn Fried· 50 Years' Reminiscences man, who is getting a "ground floor" view of the The golden anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Aris D. Taylor was celebrated with the candidate selection pro-help of their children, the Mmes. Wilfred D. Thorne of Sacramento; Arnold 0. cedure. Compton of Huntington Beach, and Charles D. O'Neal of Garden Grove; 11 Mila Friedman, daughter grandchildren, and one great-grandson. The honored couple were married in of Mr. and Mrs. Al K. Fried· Douglas, Ariz. before moving to Pomona. They now reside in Huntington man of Newport Beach and B ch f •• · b I b " Los Feliz, is responsible for __ ea"-'-"-' _•c .. e_n __ e_•_~_•"-'0P::.•::n:...=o""u::•.:ce..:c--e"e"-'ra'-"°"-·----------~-- assillt!nf the scores of delegates, carrying o u t special assign.menu and helping the offtcial business run smoothly. During the school year she attends Chapman College. Air Force Mothers Set Date LUNCHING at the Santa Barbara Biltmore recently were Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. Harwood ol Newport Beach. Mra. Raymond Remilllfd of Huntington Beach wUI preside when the National Officers of United States Air Force Mothers' Organiza- tion meets at 10 a.m. SatUl'· day, Aug. 10, in the Dllneyllnd Hotel. l'ratactetl by Frigidaire 5 .. y ... NatlORwkl• W•rantyl 1-year Warranty tor repair of any defect ln the enUre refrigerator plus 4-year Protec· Uon Plan for repair for any detect In the l't'frlgeratin1 1yatem. Backed by General Motors. Orange Coast area will be Mrs. Me 1 vi n Roenfeldt, fi nan c la I 1 e c retary, Westminster. Plans for a reception to honor the new commander of Detachment 610, U~A.F., will be announced ano Mrs. John Clawson will ---------- report on new Flights being Kids Like to formed. A1lo aitending from the 'Ask Andy' REFRIGERATOR with 126 lb. Size Freezer! 14.6 <•. ft. llGI Aacf It's packed with Wlf ... Saver COfl'tttdentn. • 100% frMt·Proof. You'll never defrost again. FrOl!it-Proot system simply won't let fro.iit form. And there'• no freezer 'pace lost to fr01t. e HaMy frener llloor thelf plua juice can holder help keep amall ltenu at your flngertip;1. • Twin Hydr•tort hold up to 23.4 qt.I. ot fruits, bulky vegetables like cabbages. Por- celain Enamel finish miilts rust, 1tains. • Compactl Jlllf J2" wld.. Get all this con· venience without rearranging Your kitchen. Probably fits tamt apace as your Ift&ent refrigerator. WIFE SAVER SPECIAL! Dishwasher Frifldairt EcHGllJ llff•l Upri1~t Frnzir Storts Frigidaire 2 Cycle Jet Action Wadier e 2 W11h Cycl11 e Svp11 Sur9• W11hi11t Actio11! e No ll1nd rin1lnt r1qv ir1dl e Qvi•f Op1r1fi111 e II T1bl1 S1ttJ1191 , IAHAMl '' II 406 Ills. • 4 shelves, 3 refr!Qerated • 4 door shelves with removable fronts for tMY clean Ing • MemJr'IS }list '¥1' wfdt. ldNI for ltl'ltlller splCM. I • s"'.u lo1d 11tti119 h,1,, ltllt -···· bil11! e J1f·1i"'pl1 "'1ch1ni1ml e D11p 11ttio11 A9it1t11I 411 EAST 17th ST., COSTA MESA Dally 9-9-. S1tvrd1y 9-6 (Closacl Sunday} I Sales I 646-1684 I Service I 548-3437 ' ·r - Today's Closing N.Y. Stoeks VOL ir. NO. ·1ss, ) SECTIONS, 40 PAGES COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1968 TEN CENTS No More Pop Festivals for Mesa DAILY l"ILOT ll•ff P'Mi. 'Drug-crazed A·narchists' Assailed By ARmUR R. VINSEL Of 111<1 01l1Y Pllll Sllff 1! you missed the Newport Pop Festival -nominally associated with the beach town instead of its hO'St city, to Costia Mesa's eternal credit ac· cording to some -yoo missed the op- portunity of a lifetime. Mesa city councilmen, meeting \\'ithin a stone's throw or the devastated festival site on the Orange .County Fairground.!., Monday night issued a dark prospectus for a 1969 repetition or the weekend's e:igantic affair. "As far as l'm concerned, we \\'ill n<Jt have a repeat of this thing ai;::ain ," declared Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, in· troducing discussion of the big event \Vhich drew more Ulan 100,000 persons to the city. ''It v.·~s named the Newport Pop I<'cstival. or jazz festival, or \Vhatever it \vas," the mayor added, "but After GOP Address \VASIIINGTON (AP)-Formcr Pres. ident Dwight D. Eisenhov.•er suUered chest pains indicating a possible new heart attack early today, less than 12 hours after addressing the Republican National Convention from his hospital i;uite. Hi s 10-m inute address to the convP.n· tion was recorded on videotape at the hospital about 30 minutes beiore it was broadcast at 8:35 p.m., according to the Columbia Broadcasting System, which handled the broadcast. fortunately for our good neighbors to the south, they had nothing to do with it. II ''We had hot weather, an explosive s.ituation ... professional agitators out there agitating," Mayor Pinkley eon· tinucd, noting that he watched the fesllval fr om the police facili ty roof. The mayor also hinted that only deep, implacable discipline among the scores or lawmen riding herd Sunday (Sec POP FES'l'IVAL, Page%) • Lack of screening facilities kep: delegates at U1e convention from see- ing Eisenhower as he spoke, but the address was carried into the nation's homes as a part of broadcast conven- tion activities. COSTA MESA FAIRGROUNDS AFTER All THE POP FESTIVAL FANS WENT AWAY Crews Labored on Cle1nup Duties All Day Today Amid Debris ind Stench. It v.•ould be the il-year-<1\d former president's third heart attack this year-and his sixth in 13 years. IO-month Decision Council Finally Gives Okay for Gas Station An elderly Santa Ana landowne r \\·on a major victory in !tis battle to build another ser\'ice station in Cost:i Mesa l\1onday, after 10 months of studies, delays and more studies. City Council members fin~:lly voted 3 to 2 to rezone Fro;ncii; X. Sh<len's four·acre pMCel of prime industrial property at Newport Boulevard c..nd Baker Street to commercial usage. An alternate suggestion -offered by twice-unsuccessful City Council candidate Ted C. Bologh -was for the city to bu y the land ?'fld ere~t a statue of Vice Mayor Robert M. \Vil son. . Shoen, who must work out service station plans with the city now that t~e N?Zoning process is under way, said Monday he hopes to build a large restaurant on the site wiUi funds for sale of the station property. NEA RLY A YEAR Repeated delays have kept Sh~C'n from resolving the service st~tJon question for nearly one year, as his at· torney, Nathan \V. Tarr, pointed out Monday night. . "Mr. Shoen is in the autumn or his life and it seems he should b€ en UUc<l to the use of his property," said Tarr. charging th c:t a service station '_Vill have no effec t on future surrounding development. Shoen 'varl"..s the station because of its pr<Jximity to the future Newp<Jrt Freeway and says the restaurant he envisions c<Juld feed 100 men every 30 minutes, thus drawing workmen from anticipated area firms. "I told Bill Dunne (Costa :\les<> Planning Director) and men~ioncd Orange Coast Weather Jr you liked yesterda:y·s weath· er, you 'll love tomorr<Jw's, since there's not much change in view --cloudy mornings and the sun peeking out about noon -v.•ith the n1ercury in the mid-70'5. INSIDE TODAY Examples of the devious ma- neuvering for delegates votes at the Repitblican Na tional Con· vention. are dt!cribed on Page 18 today. ·~ 1t c:irn..-11111 1 CilUlllH 1 .. 1) Clmlta ' Cl'ft,_.,. 11 O..tll M91k 11 I DI~' lJ l!dl ..... 11 P1M D """•~· 11·11 1111" C1ll' n M--. tt .... '-'"""""' ,, #11\11.... II MH!lfttl 11 ,....,.,, 11 M~l•ll l'•ft• 11 Nltltflll NfW' ._. °''"'" c-tv • ''"' .. '"""'' 11 1.-c1.i ,.._. 1a.1c '-" 1J.1t s~ MMllm 1•11 TtlolvltlMI I Tilteftl"t lJ W .. IW I Wlftll N..,.. W , I i;ome restaur:nrt people," Shoen told the c:onncil as Tarr repeated U1eir questions to his hard-of-hearing clinct. "He said: 'I wouldn't let you put that • ·., in there,'" Shoen charged, not saying whether Dunne was jOki.ng with hi m. Fatigued, Shoen paused. ROAR OF LAUGJI'l'ER "No, no, U;iat's all right." said Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley· drawing a roar of laughter from the audience. Bologh then took the podiwn to com- plain that councilmen· were just playing with a valuable piece of lc:·no in the hope of saving it for less t>n· terprising development. "So some sneaky developer can come in and build small homes," he said, "I d<Jn't mean to criticize the honorable City Council or wise plan- ners, but why don't you buy it? Put up a statue o! Mr. Wilson." Finally. Meyor Pinkley found himself in the middle of a 2 to 2 Ville and cast a ballot in, favor of the rezon- ing, opening the \vay for Shoen's long. envisioned station. Nc,vport Police Still in Dark On Sick Youth Newport Beach police today reported they were still in the dark about how or why a 19-ycar-old youth worked himself into a catatonic state before he was taken into custody Mon- day afternoon at Ocean Boulevard and L Sb'eet. The young man was taken to Orange County Medical Center where he re· mained this morning under observa· ti<Jn. Del Sgt, Ken Thompson said it was unknown wbeUlcr the teen-ager was suffering an adverse reaction from drugs. ' The youth was first seen staggering and repeatedly falling down on the. beach. A lifeguard told police that children were teasing and throv.'ing sand at him but the youth failed to res- pond to them. Police 1aid they located him in the c<Jmpany of other tetn·ag@rs who were apparenUy trying to care for him. 16 Kids Injured PALMDALE (UP!l - A c hur c h school bUJ and an automoblle collided at an intersection Monday, injuring 18 persons including 16 ehUdren. AuthorlUes said most of the young· :stcrs suffered only minor cull and bruises. I 3 Major Mesa Street Jobs . Get Under ·Way Three major Costa Mesa street im- provement projects totalin,I! nearly $S95.000 are now under way. with com· pletion scheduled before the end of the year, The biggest job of the lhrce is widening and modern signal in- stallation at the Placentia Avenue in· tersections with Victoria and West 19th Slrects. Utility companies arc currently relocaling some of their lines and City Engineer George Madsen expects the job, totaling $426,135.55, to begin by mid-month. Contractors Steinv and Mitchel. Jnc .. are installing $126,i35.55 in signals and left turn pockets are to be constructed as part of the widening pro.gram. An estimated $300,000 will be spent nn land acquisition for the projects, to be financed jointly by the Orange County Arterial Highway F inancing Program and the State Gas ·rax and TrafCic Sarety Fund. Traffic flow will continue al holh in - tersections. but it will be curtailed ::ind motorists should find alternate routes. Utility relocatJon also is under wav along a .3 mile strip of Fairview Road rrnm the San Diego F'rec\vay In Sunflower A.vrnue, an $81.107.90 job. Comnlelion is due by November. Sully-Miller Contractint?: Co., is handUng the six-lane widenint?: project and the city or Santa Ana will fini sh the northward job when the Costa Mesa se.ement is done. Financing comes from the Arterial llighwoy Financing ProJ,!ram (30 per- cent) anr.1 the State Gas Tax Program t70 percent), The same construction comnany i!! also now grading for the .7 mile , $87,514 .26 deve\onm<"nt of new streets (See STREETS, P•g< 2) \Va\ter Reed Army Hospital reported 1hat Eisenhower suffered chest pains ~t 6:15 a .m. EDT. It said preliminary indications were Ulat the attack repre· sents another myocardial infarction. Eisenho\ver's S<Jn. John, arriving from Miami Beach, Fla., said the doc· tors "thought tbe situation was serious enough that I should be here." John Eisenhower made the com· menl to newsmen as he arrived at \Valter Reed Army Hospital from the Rep\l~n National Convention at J\1iaml Beach. lie was accompanied by his daughter, Barbara. 19, but said other members of his family remained in Mianli Beach. llis condition was stable when the hospital announcement was made at JO a.m . The hospital bulleUn said also that Eisehower was then comfortable and free of pain. Further bulletins will be Iss ued a!'! indicated, the hospital said, without fixing any time. A myocardial infarction. a form of heart attack. produces an area ot damage to the myocnrdium or heart muscle as a result or either total or partial blcckage or one of U1e branch· es or the coronary arteries which ordi .. narily supply oxygenated blood to the heart. Eisenhower had suffered a similar infarction-described as a major at· tack-at the hospital on June 15. The retired five-star general has been at Walter Reed since May 14. He had been stricken with a minor heart attack April 29 at liis winter h<Jme at Palm Desert, and was taken then to ~1arch Air Force Base in California. lie transferred to Walter Recd when he had recovered sufficiently to make the trip. Eisenhower had appeared alert and in good health Monday night as he addressed the Repubffi:a n National Convention in l\1iami Beach, Fla .. by telephone-and the nation by radio and television. Stock Market• NE\V YORK CAP ) -The stock market held a moderate gain !his a fternoon as trading slackened. (See quotations.pages 10-11 ) The mark.et was up from the start. Nn1nbers Ga111e Wires F a.r A pa.rt on Vote Counts 1-lcrc arc the tabula tions of convention votes as compiled tcr day by United Press JnternaUonal and The Associated Press. Take your choice : 1 MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -This Is the lalcsl UPI tabulation o! the delegates at the Republican National Convention: Nixon -663, including 277 committed and 386 leaning votes. Rockefeller -276, including 151 committed and 125 leaning. Reagan -179, including 93 committed and 86 lr3ning votes. Favorite sons -180. Uncommitted -35. Needed to nominate -667. • MIAM I BEACH IAPl -Here is the standing o! Republican presidential nomination candidates this morning in an Associated Press tabulation of publicly committed first·ballot votes: Nixon 001 ; Rockeleller 252 ; Reagan 170; Favorite soni; 195; Others I Llndsay ; Uncommitted 114. Necded ,to.nominale .867 .. UPI T.itllllei.. STARS APPEAR FOR REPUBLICANS ' 'BIG SHOW' IN MIAMI Ike on TV; Re•11n H•ppy; Nixon Serious; Goldwater Sees Victory Rocky, Reag.an Chip ' At Nixon's Delegate Lead MIAM I BEACH (UP!) -Richard M. Nixon's delegate 1treogth slipped slightly today as Nel!on A. Rockefeller •nd Roo..id Reagan hewed lrom hotel to hotel trying to lure away his sup. porters . The latest UPI delegate count mow· ed Nl:\on with 1ix fewer delegates than Monday. but still within a dozen of votes or a first ballot victory for the Republican presidential nomination Wednesday nigbt. \Vltb 667 votes rt-QUlred for nomina· lion 1t the GOP convention, a UPI deie&&le tabulation showed Nixon with 657 votes, V.1ith m committed and 380 leaning. Rockefeller had 278, including 153 committed 11nd 125 leaners: Reagan had 191, including 93 com- mitted and 98 leaning; favorite sons had 180 and 27 remained uncommitted. Reagan .al"IO pk:ked up a 1in1te delegate In Oklahoma. The convention it.self w1_,; in recess until tonight at•8. but word spread quickly throug?i Ml11ml Beach today tllat former President Dwight D. Eisenhower bad surfertd . an«he:r be.art attack in \Vashington. 0.1.gates and prestdentlal bopolulr (S.• CONVENTION, PaJe 1) ' ,, I 1 • I • % DAILY PILOT J'roa r.,e J FESTIVAL ... • • prevented an emotional eruption ol ... 1 , screa.m.lng, dru&<rued i narcby at ~ : • tbt bilr&rOWK&I. • •• P<lloo Chief lllpr Ntlll •llo •Polle ,. • briefly, repeatJQI . prior. statements • • about Ille at•anUc problem ol policing the crowd .ind pralalng tbe way the Wit r~ of lawmen conducted themselves. • • ''Wt lived lhroogh It by the grace or ., . .tl < God and cool policemen," he declared. J.ii . -•"They wm-e J. bUIK'b of an1ma1s,"' he ., ! ' added, ob"'ous1y broadening h1a scope ~ · • of ~ference ·beyond Eric B""5Dll'1 group or the same na.me1 which ap. pearod at tbe feltlval. "Our 1nen tool< the lnsulll without sbiklna b9ck. which woul4 have gparft3 a rlot and charges of police '" brutality," be added, noting Utat next ; 1 year Costa ~esa Will have legal pro- • • • tection from aoo(her f..Uval • • He said moUon ~cture1 were taken , apparently showing many incidents and the mood of the crowd, which was four times larger than a n y prellmlDary eltimate by poli~ or pro- moters of the huge gathering. The mayor also pra!Jed cooperation by police &ad lawmen from seven area citiea:, plus the California. High~ay Patrol and Orange County Sherill's Department which responded to re- quest. for help Sunday. He said within 11,1 hours after tbe clOff of the music fe&Uval. only two cars were left on the fairgrour.ds . "I suspect they were either in· operative or the owners were off on a trip somewhere," be said Councilman William L. St. Clair joined in praise of police hanlding of the m011urnentaJ crowd, in which mari- juana and other drugs f re e l y circulated amoog those elements which choose to use them. "So many people have asked me why we let them in," St. Clair said, "but tbis all started with the Fair Board." "In all fairness ," noted Councilman Robert M. Wilson, .. no one knew what was going to ha~en." "For years ~ ve talked about the cultural events which cou1d come to the fairgrounds if proper development took place. This happened and · we aurvived -so now we can plan for the day of le&ttimate attractlona," Wilson &aid. POLICE LAUDED He alJO praised polloe in handling of the crowd a.nd for knowing how far to g ... and then stopping to avoid an in- cident which could inflame 1ome of the visitors. Councllman George A. Tucker was careful to point out that m111y puaons who vilited the fairgrounds were orderly, calm fans of the popular music offered by top name1 in the field which were i:nseat over the we<kOllll. ''There were a lot of people In town -not all of them what we would con- sider hippies -and l don't think we should even consider that tbe city was 'overrun' by hippJes," be said. "Let's be care.ful about those labela," be added. Fl'Ofll Pqe I STREETS •••• south and weat of the Atlantic Research Laboratories at Sunflower Avenue and Harbor Boulevard. South Cout Drive will run four Janes wide from Harbor Boulevard west to Hyland Avenue and the latter will be the hip -and vertebr .. or Coast Drive and SunOower Avenue. Financing for thla project comes from the State Gas Tax Rogram (91 percent) and from private developers (II percent), accordin1 to the Costa Mesa Enatneerln& Department Hopwood YR Speaker John Hopwood, admlnl1traUve aasis· tant to AHemblyman Robert E. Bad. ham (R·Newport Buch), will be the speaker at tonight's meeUng of Or· ange County Yoong Republicans set for 8 p.m. in the Bistro Room of the Newport<r loo. DAILY PILOT O•ANGE COAST PUIL1lHING COMPAHY kobtrt H. We•d l'rtoktMf 11111 l'vb!W. Jtt~ R. Curl1., vl(e "'5lllm1 tfllt ~•! Me111ver Tho"''' Ke1.,..il Editor Tllo111t1 A. Murp~i~e Mt nttln1 Edllot P-ul Ni111" Adv•llll"t Dlr.elor c .... w .. OHi• llO Wt1t lty Strtt+ Mtlfi"I Addrtu: ,.0 . loll' 15110 92621 Oth« Offlus f<l...-t lktctl1 nu Wttt aall:IOt toutt"tlnl L,,_ CMd'I: 221 ,._, A...._ )4..,.,!lritlolt 9Ncll1 JOt l th l ""' ' ;; ' Tutsday, A1.19ust 6, 1968 "' ln ..... ~ttn •'"' Steft Lot" ... ~.,., ..... DAILY ,tLOt N1wte1W1 W Ln McC't' . Neigltbor1 OfJject ' City W ~n't I.love: Widow's Home area, which be eventually plana to develop with new dwellings. ' 'PIES' SHOW WHERE MONEY GOES (LIFT) AND WHERE IT COMES FROM l:hl• 11 Plcturt .of Flnenclel SI.Nation.In Newport-Mt•• School District Urban renewal 1n reverie waa: re- jected by the COsta Mesa City Council Monday when members effectively · blocked the reloc&tion of an 88-year- otd widow's borne to a neWtt neighborhood. . Th~ vote was U 11aJnst a permit to move Mrs. Ethel Struve's home at 1946 Harbor Blvd:, to 256 E. 22Dd St., thus making way for expansion of the Dean Lewis Imports spurts car agen-cy. Patter)lon also told cowicllmen he helped his father as a boy when the elder Patterson , a contractor, remodelled the retired 1 c h o o 1 teacher's Harbor Boulevard home 20 years ago. Harbor s ·chool District Requires $23 Million lt will cott more than 123 million to run the Newport-Men Unified School Dist!'lct next school year. Sliced up silver dollars show graphically where the money comes frotn and how it is spent. Illustrations are based on recom- mended figures for the 1968-69 budget, to be adopted by the school board following a public hearing tonight. Salaries of teachers and other school personnel take the biggest slice, 71 cents, of the expense dollar. Together with unavoidable intere1t charges, loan repayment and retire- ment f\lnd, 80 centa on the dollar 11 un. touchable before trustees begin to trim tlle budgel Biggest slice of the income dollar is property taxes, 62 cents. lt compares to 26 cents for the city or Costa Mesa and 31 cents for the city of Newport Beach. School dMtricta, unlike cities, do not have fees, special taxes and fine s to rely on for income. Apporl!oned state aid is 25 cents on the dollar. Federal aid is minimal, one cent. Reserves include carryover projec ts and were swelled by a year-end balance that was larger than ex· peeled. Underwater Reef May Be Best Way to Save Beach Dale Wu Un er, 29, thinks he has a better Idea on how to prevent beach erosion In West Newoprt. You just build an offshore un- derwater reef, he propoaes. Speclflcally, he says the reef should be an underwater barrier two miles long, about 50 feet wide, and about 6 feet beneath the mean lower low water mark, placed some 100 yards or &o offJbore. The reef would have a height from the ocean bottom cl 20 feet. Wullner'1 quallflcat1on1 in dreaming up UM Jules Verne-like proposal are rather impressive .. He'1 not a marine engineer, ha1 never 1 tu d I e d hydraulics, and has n'o &ille~ degree in geology. He's just got a good Imagination, and s-0me practical experience. "My experience In taUs kJnd of af. fair, yo u ask ? Well, let's see. I've gone surfing in Hawaii, and In Newport Beach. "And I shot through the Colorado River rapldl once, 300 mlle1 of them in a rubber llfe raft. I fell out at one point and even went throoib a couple of rapids in a life jaCket." Wullnu 11 a Costa Mesa resident and works as a sales and systems analyst for a computer firm . He is now making the rounds to various of- ficials trying to find out what they think of hil idea. One engineering official who's heard Wullner's spiel says : "The basic concept j.s workable . An underwater reef that takes the energy out of the ocean has occurred In some places In nature, for example." The official .added that actually con- structing such a reef off Newport Beach would be a responsibility ()f tho U.S. Army Corps -0! Engineers. Wu Un er, howeVer, ls busy: boijncing his idea off anyone who wru listen, trylng to drum up support for it. He says he'll meet Wednesda y nlght "'Ith members of the West Newi>ort Improvement Assoclatlon. "If the Corps of Engineers builds more groins like the one that's already tbere (off 40th Street), you're going to wind up wtih about five groins a mile," he said. . "It'll look like a big factory wharf along the · coastline froril here to Anahelm Bay. DAILY PILOT 'tiff"""' Old Timers and New Timers Old Timer Alvin L. Pinkley (from lert) Mayor of Costa Mesa, watches as New Timer Pamila Reed, offici al city queen, inspecls Daisy the Cow, promoting Junior Chamber of Commerce beef barbecue '\\'ith help of Jaycee member Don Bull. The Fourlh Annu al Old Timer New Timer Picnic Is scheduled Sunday, Aug. 18, in Costa Mesa Park, lt Is sponsored by lhe Chamber or Comme rce, Jaycees and Ari League, as part ol community's Cultural Arts Week. .. From Page 1 CONVENTION .• alike were saddened at the news of the attack -which came only hours after the "17·year-old general had addressed the convention from Walter Reed Army Hospital. Rockefeller's campajgn received a shot in the arm when Evans, the con- vention keynoter, endorsed h 1 m • Evans had been believed leaning to Nixon although Herbert G. Klein, Nix· on's press secretary, said the an· nouncement was "not unexpected." 'The Rockefeller camp was con- ceding nothing. After a strategy ses1kln ht lasted into early morning hours, top Rockefeller advl1en said Nixon was "definitely stopped" on the first ballot. SOme of Rockefeller's supporters began to worry that Reagan re.Uler than Rockefeller might pick up the marbles 11 the stop. Nixon drive did succeed. Some New York delegates pledged to Rockefeller told newsmen they would throw thelr votes to Nixon and insure his nomlne.tion U they saw any chance that the end result of the Rockefeller-Reagan coalition strategy might be nomination -0f the Califorina governor. Reagan formally annowiced himself a candidate Monday -tw o days ahead ot schedule -in an effort to ohip .away delegate support from Nixon before it was too late. Nixon, who did not arrive in the con- vention city until Monday night, received his good news for the da y when Gov. Spiro T. Agnew o( Maryland withdrew .as a favorite son candidate and endorsed Nixon . This decision was expected to put 16, po51fbly 17 of Maryland's 26 votes In Nixon 's column and the balance in Rockefeller ts. Gov. David Oargo of New Mexic o told newsmen that "in all likellbood" he would come out for Nixon at a caucus of hJs delegatton late today. Resldenta of the neighborhood Into which the old boarding house with seven bathrooms wa.s schedule<I to be moved protested heavily, saylni their property values would drop. Relocation of the Struve home was a stiuplation of sate of the Harbor Boulevard property to the auto agen- cy, because lta elderly occupant values It at '80,000 and wanta to con- tinue to live ln it. Among the protestors was Earl L. Patterson, of ~l Orchid St., Santa Ana, tru&t owner of property in the ''I know what It's like lo keep up one lot when you're young," said Mrs. Richard Sharp, of 363 E. 22nd St., "how is an 88-year-old woman going to keep up three Iota?" Mrs. Struve's 50 by 60 foot home was to be located on a three-lot parcel. "We don't object so much to Mrs. Struve as a nelghbor, but we want to improve the area," said another woman. The Costa Mesa Plannlnc Com. mission earller recommended move- ment of Mrs. Struve's old home to the new address, with some atipulationg. Councilmen , however, quickly and with little dlscusson voted against moving the old house to a new loca-tion. Shot Fired at Forgit's Car; Four Youths Sought Orange County deputy aherlffa today sought four youths suspected of firing a bullet at the car of former Newport Beach City Councilman Al Forglt. Forglt reported the incident to the sheriff's office Monday afternoon. He said he was traveling east on Pacific Coast Highway late Sunday evening and whil e crossing the Santa Ana River bridge, a westbound tan Volkswagen containing four young men passed by. The mel1, accord ing to the sheriff's report, "propelled by unidentified means an unknown projectile" against the Fo rgit car, which Forgit's wlfe, Peg gy, was driving. The windshield shattered. Forgit said he believed the "pro- jectile" was a .22 caliber bullet. Mrs. Forgit said she was convinced it wa s a case of random, malicious mischief. "No one could possibly haVe known that we would be coming across the bridge .at that hour. Jt was just four kids in a Volkswagen who saw a big "•ide target coming toward them. "Al saw one boy throw his arm out of the wind-0w and then came thl1 big explosion." When the Forglts returned to their apartment above Forgit's Hardware in Balboa, Mrs. Forglt noticed that the shattered area in the window was just in front of her eye. "It c-0u1d have been a real tragedy if it had been a larger bullet," she sald . Sound Equipment Stolen From Van A FullerWn youth told Costa Mesa police Monday that burglars took sound equipment worth more than $100 from his parked van Sunday dur· ing the Newport Pop Festival at Orange County Fairgrounds. Michael A. Marki, 18, said the vehi· cle was left parked all day .at Santa Ana and Del M~r avenues, during the big musical show. 'ti I . We lay it on the line • • • DEEP S-.te.-='1l=--m-· .... CR1'P£T CL£RnlnC THE ULTIMATE 1n CARPET CLEANING R•cently, Deep S+etm Ctrp1t C1••n•r• introduced • n•w profe11ion1I cerp•+ cl••ning proc•11 to thi1 County , •• Prior to offerin9 th i1 r•merktbl. servic• to you, our custom•rs, we conduct1d our own compr•hensiv• testing progrem in order to verify th• c1aim1 mede for th• proc111 by Its develop· er1. Not only did w1 find Deep St••m to be • revolutionary d•perfur1 from our tredition•I cerp•t cl1en· lftg m•thod, but w• founJ it to be eb1olut1ly 1•f• for ell cerpet end upholstery febrh:1. ConcMrr•nt with our +•sting pro9rem, we thorou9hly trained our p•rsonnel in the effective use of Deep S+••m cleening equipment ••• Only wh•n we W•r• completely seti1fied th1t Deep St1em met with our stenderds did we off•r thl1 unique new t1rvlce to you, A 1ucce11ful compeny's repufetion Is its be1t edvertisem•nt. W1 lty lt on the lin• by ·cordielly invitin9 you to try 1tf1ty-t11ted Deep Steem Wall-to.Wal Cerpet end Upholstery Cleanin9 ••• Th• fin· est prof11siontl carpet cleeni"t 11rvice y•t de¥.!oped for th• Industry. Protect th• lif• ·of yOur ctrp1t1 and the beeuty of your home by celling today! TIME FOR NEW DRAPES? We er• drapery 1ltp1rt1! W1 1tr111 qu•lity of workmen1hip & in1ttUetion. Free Estimates In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALL TODAY: WHIM YOU WANT THI FINHT- CALL UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 36 y••r• of collecfi'fe ••p•rience betweeft th• 2 men doln9 your work. All worll done in our pltn+. We pr1.f11t ell febrict before cl1enln9. Free __Estimates In Your Home At Your Convenienr CALL TODAY: FID ISTIMAn RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS Our 21st Y •tr of Service in Orengt County 2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA l'HONE 546-3432 I "-Toi Ar" C.tl zr,ltfi 7-0IH ' ·------- BY WILLIAM REED Reeds ••• In the Wind Womell of tbe Hootington Beach Chamber of commerce are doing • pretty fair job of getting a cleanup campaign going and are in fOr con- sidef"able appreclatdon from t h e gentlemen of the men's divisioo . The 1enior chamber group voted to give an award of some kind to women who give 100 hours or more to co11,1- munity service tttrough the Women s Division. While the idea was presented by Helen ·s1ewart the· men wasted no time in getting behind the movemefll. One only has to take a look downtown lo see that the piles or trash which used to be so prevalent are fewer in nuinber today . Eventually. all will be gone, if Mrs. Stewart and Darline Bauer and their committees have anything to say about it. * Even casual observers of the downtown scene cannot help but notice an occulonal hippie sitting on one of the new trash cans placed on nearly every corner. Some people thin~ that's an appropriate use of the containers. The Huntingten Beach High School BoOSler Club is raising money for a new scereboard 8't Cap Sheue Field and that's a welcome preject for anyone who has had to try to keep up with the present ooe. Contributions may be sent to the boo5ters at 19031 Milford Circle. Bud Bonwell will see that it geta to the right place. * Chamber of Commerce leaders already are planning the second White Tag Day and have set Oct. 19 as the date for the eve11l. Last year the event was deemed "extremely &UC· cessful" by the chamber, th e merchants the chamber represents. end by the American Field Service, (AFS) benefactors of the sale. White tags will be sold again for SI and Participating merchants will offe r discounts to those wearing the White Tag. It is a mutual promotion for thr AFS and the merchants. but one in which the comm unity is the real win· ner. 01' Greasy Murphy said for me not to forget that Oct. 20 to 29 is to be Oil Progress Week in Huntington Beach. He said he is cleaning up for the week and hopes all operators will do the :;ame. Registration Set For Grove Schools Students attending Garden Grove Unliied School District classes can begin early registration Aug. 26. Families new to the district who have children entering kindergarten to grade eight register Aug. 26 through Sept. 10, the first day of school. All high school students new to the district must report to their high school office by 9 a.m. Aug. 28. They begi n counseling the next day. Parents of st u dent s already in Garden Grove school who want to change their children's schedules may meet with counselors Sept. 4 and 5 from I to 4:30 p.m . Tu1sday, Augu1t 6, 1968 DAILY PILOT 1J 1,500 Lots GrouJ!!d New City :Yard ' Due for Beach HEAVE HOl-Two-man dory race may sound easy to the uninitiated but with big breakers, riptides and grueling competition from burly brother lifeguards, the race proves to be one of toughesl in the Surf Festival competition. Beach Libr ary Hopes to Join Santiago Setup Newest member cf the Santiago Llbrary System could be the Hun- tington Beach Public Llbrary if, an enabling resolution is approved Moo· day by the City Council. Beach Guards , Seals Set for Surf Festival Huntington Beach lifeguards and their guest lifeguards from other Southland beaches will join ranks with the Seals, !:.he Navy's underwater demoHtion team .for the annual Surf Festival competition. J im McKay, Doug Kirk, Paul Cohee. Others are Pb.ii Omdahl, Spike Beck, Brian Gerold, John Mattos, Doug Robertson, Jim Puffer, Rich Lockman, Douglas D'Arnall, Da ve Laskey, Nick Sherbin, John Adsit, Rich Prjce. A new city yard to house the public works equipment ol a growing liun· tington Beach will be located on the east side ol Gothard Street ·north of Slater Avenue. In addition to serving its primary purpose, the corporate yard will .sene to clear an area cf th.al city cmsidered to be legally blighted. Councilmen officially ordered con· demnation proceedings Monday night. Some 1.500 lots are involved in the 14.5--acre parcel. The lots are the "enclyclopedia Jots" given away with book sales many years ago. The lots are too small for building because most are about 25 by 50 feet. The city can use its power ol con· demnation to put together the lots into a single parcel. Most p r iv a t e developers are unable to gather all of the tiny lots because owners are scat- tered and in some cases unknown. Becal1Se ttiese tracts of "postage stamp lots" usually cannot be con- solidated the areas are considered legally bli ghted. The land has been appraised at about $18 ,000 per acre in a section where land is selling for an average of $25.000 per acre. lJeavy equipment needed because or the rapid growth Df the city has caus- ed the present city ya('d downtown to become obsolete as the central storage area for vehicles. The new yard is to have bu.ildings valued at about $250,000 to house the hPavy equipment and maintenance facilitie,s. F roggatt Talk Slated Jack D. Froggatt, vice president of Huntington Beach Co., is the guest speaker for the 8 a.m. breakfast meeting Wednesday of the Huntington Beach Board oi ReaJtors at the Sheraton-Beach Inn. Already members of the library cooperative are the Orange County PubJ..ic: Library, t.ne Yorba Llnda Library Districl and the Placentia Library Distri'ct. Convention Sidelights Inheritance Fraud Charge Jails Two More Two more men are in cuatody, bringing to seven of nine indicted who have been apprehended on charges of conspiracy to commit grand theft and grand theft in an inheritance tax plan. Charles R. Billings, 40, of 12501 Christy Lane, Los Alamitos, .sur· rendered to the court today and had Aug. 9 set as the time for arraign. ment. Bail was set at SS.cm. J . Alton Lauren, or Monee, Ill., was arrested there by authorities on an Orange County warr~nt. Other defendants from Southern California, wh o will also be arraigned Aug. 9, are Gustave Galas, of 1179 La Rosa Lane, Fountain Valley, and Lyman Garber ol Bevet\y Hills. The library system is also known a~ !he Orange County Cooperativ 1 Li brary System. Membership in a library cooperativi is reqlJired beCore the Iccal librar~· could take advantage of state anC federal funds available for library con- structioo . Library officials are plan- ning to build a $3 million central library. Teams of the off-duty guards will plough into the Huntington surf at 8 p.m. Thursday for the traditional two· man dory race, 10 man -5,000-ya.rd swim relay race, the 1.000.yard run- ning relays, musical nags, a chariot race, and a pillow fight. A special feature is the seven·man ubber raft race. The public is invited. There is no ad- nission charge. Pat Paulsen's There Too Membership in the Santiago Library System makes available to local patrons the books o{ the participating library districts. Joining the aystem was authorized first by tbe council on April l~. Librarian Walter Johnson said that the system does not interfere with local control of the library. Little League Picnic Se t a t Atla ntic P ark Members ol Ocean View Little League in Huntington Beach will hold their annual picnic: Sept. 29 at Atlantic Park. The park was selected because it is the Only one in the area large enough to accommodate the expected 2,00J picnickers, according to the League President Ren Bauer. Here's a Max Bowman, assistant harbor and beaches director, said that the "night 1Yill be as light. as day'" because or the special lighting equipm.ent including .. !our large spotlights" on the pier. Th.is year is the first the Naval Amphibious Force joins lifeguards for the festival competition. T h • participating Team 1 from San Diego will compete in all events except the 1.000·yard paddle race, which is restricted to Surf Lifesaving Associa- tion members. Competing lifeguard services in- clude : Carpenteria: Los Angeles County : Los Angeles : Santa Monica : Long Beach; Seal Beach; Newport Beach; San Clemente ; and the State. Members o( Huntington Beach's contingent include Roger Hanson. Ray Bray, Greg Arth, Paul Garnett, Chris Sprague, Hal B ajong, Win Condict, Wayne Condict, Jim Rayl, Dennis VanSandt. More are Mark Boclenbender. Mike Kadcrs. Mike Bains. Glen Smith, Keith Donaldson, Kelly D e n n i s, George Boisseau, Steve Oliver , Mark Driscoll, Walt Sawyer, Steve Wagner, Safety A11ur•d for Your S1vlng1 principally by our high rwava and COlllel'Vlltive operating policies, proven over 32 yMlll, plus insurance of aooounts. Newport Balboa Savings and Loan Allllociation is a member of the Federal Home Loan Bank System and the Federal Savings and Loan Instirance Corporation. Tax Deducllblt retirement plan for self employed and professional people ' (Keogh Act). Real estate brokers and aalesmen, farmers, contractors, doct.o111, lawyers, business partnen, all can benefit. Fands .,t aide each month for retirement earn dividends and aave t.aw too. I.et Newport Balboa Savings Miow you how to build ' ' a tu 111ving estate. · Retired ... or Getting Reidy? Would you like a check month aft.Ir month afta month in your mail 1-? Then Newport Balboa S.vlnp' MOll'l'llLT S!w.atn A<XXMft' plan is for you. Start by • .......,,_... • . t. llJ'ft"'ll a WVJUellQ-elmmg llllvuigB llCWWI Our -lf!Uo{ $.~ ll1111onnualyl.ld of 6.13% wM>.eompoundttl dtJiy O>ld llllJWalntd tor ont y<ur, and ii U.. 11ighe41 in the naliDn. From Wlre Services Every national political convention has its sidelights and touches of humor and ihe Republican National Con- Vention was no exception today. Some samples : The "Pat Paulsen for President" campaign is budding in Miami Beach with a personal appeal to delegates by the comic candid.ate. Washington state delegates caucus- ed Sunday In a room marked as Paulsen headquarters and listened to a brief speech by the straight.faced television ccmedian, who is a native son of Washington. ·•1 was glad to hear the Washington delegation is uncommitted," Paulsen told them. "I hear some of the delega- tions have been comrnjtted, and that's a shame. J ust because they're a little oddball in ttleir political thinking is no reason to have them committed." * As the convention started today, the one man who coi;\d stop it said he does net have that in mind. Gilbert CJa:rk, U.S. Weather Bureau hurricane forecaster, will order the town evacuated in event of ·a ·250-mHe blow. But the odds against this compare with those against the nomination of Harold E. Stassen. Not since 1900 has Miami experienced a hurricane in the first hail of August. * Ronald Reagan ls set up rattier com- fortably here in a $525 per day triple suite at the Deauville Hotel. Richard M. Nixon has a tutetul place reserved at the Hilton Plaza that goes for from S300 to $400 a day. Nelson Rockefeller meantime is camped out in a $60 two-room affair at the Americana. * 1'he Republican Qlnvention made Wtory today. Its first session ran right on schedule. Everytihng was punctual, fairly orderly -but it wasn't much of a drawing canl. The morning session, devoted to seeond-line speeches and convention '"housekeeping" tasks, opened at IO i:1.m. EDT and closed with a benedic- tion promptly at noon . "We have made history," GOP na- tional chairman Ray C. Bliss told the place to save Revar1ionary Tru1ta ... can provide a substantial t.u saving far you and the entire principal reverts to you at the end of the Trust t.erm. Earnings are paid to the one you designate; i.e., to a oon or a daughter in college, an ex-wife, a retired employee, a parent. Write or come in and explore this with us. Tax control is an impor- tant part of good money management. Newport Balboa Savings, unlike a commercial bank, is an excel· lent and legal depository for Corporate Savings AOOOUllta . Profit Sharing Funds, Withholding Tu Funds, Emergency Funds, Reserve Funds assigned to State Board of Equalization, Funds aosigned to Contractor's State License BoiiM ('.LL eam healthy quarterly dividends. When our aseign9d savings aCOOllllt.s are used in lieu of bonds, the earning& on the.e accounts go to you and eliminate the band cut. ·----§ Our~% bonus ctrli/lalltt in multipla of $1000, currmtly f - § cam 6.26% per annum when maintaiMd for 3 ycan. Newport .. ~~!~~~ Savings ee Founded In 1935 J1•0Jlico:8allll'YlaUdo.~-Callf....,_•Phabo'7Mt10 121es:r..ic-im.i-.c-dol1W.c.ntomta9282!•Pham611-6&0 ~ InExam ~Om Handml MDHoa Donar1 I P.A. P.&Lllll. Owinnaa ot: tbl:Bomd• AmmBLoKQUmT,Prmident • convention delegates. ''This is the first time in m y memory that we started on time and enLled on time." * rtarold E. Stassen has lost a delegate. P aul W. Walter Jr., 21 , of Shaker Heights, Ohio, said he was switching to Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes as a favorite son candidate. However. J. Robert Stassen, 40, a Minnesota delegate from South St. Paul and a nephew of the candidate, said he still intends to nominate bis uncle and that he has "several" delegatf'S .available to make the secon· ding speeOO . Robert ·Stassen said he w a 1 prepared to stick with Harold Stassen through six or seven ballets. After that he said he wouJd re.examine bl.I posi· ti on. * Because taxi charges were boosted since Republicans picked Miami Beach as their convection site delegates are being invited to pay 10 cen1s less than fares racked up by the meters. Selected comments by cab drivers fnd.icat.e th'at !Oma may have done IQ. .. ' • , 1 J c~ w .. °"" ,.,.., • ..., San Jose policeman Sl•nloy WI~ liif ro~ffietlillig olller I.ban his gun, club or chemical mace to halt a fleeing suspect In and around a parting lot. Wilson I.brew his plas- !lc behnel at the man•s ·Jegs, lriP: ping M•rcos F•l•n, 23, sought tor stealing customers' beer oil the bar of a local dance hall. • Louise.'1'immel, of Tuba. Okla., invit.- td to help out at tilt GOP Convflition by the Republican National Commit- tee, ~oUts rathl!'' concluilv&l11 that she is 'nO t partial to 01111 OM candidaU for the'nomination. • Two American sailors, left ashore when the U.S. Destroyer Mansfield left Newcastle, Australia, 15 days ago, surrendered to police and were ordered to pay their own air fare back to California. ROMld E. Griswald, 20, and Freddie Ray Robinson, 19, told police that they had prolonged a tour of the co1.1no try in hopes of seeing a kangaroo. • It don't mt"an a thing if i t ain't got that zing. At k0&t that'1 what whi.!kq drinkers In Manila fina!lJI decided. Authorities tn- vestigating complointl 1 Tom stane-sobeT cmuumtr1 reutaltd that con ~n had b.~· palming off IDfak. wotertd-dmon, locaUJI" made wilUMV in Imported bo~ t!es. . • Patrolman Otto Dow<I, of E a s t Hartlbrd, Conn., captured a bank robber fleeing from the Connecti- cut Bank and Trust Co., by ram- ming his cruiser into the getaway car. The unidentified gunman was admitted to Hartford Hospital UD· der guard while Dowd, who suffer· ed only minor injuries, was treat- ed at the hospital and released. All the loot was recovered. • Joker is a real cat burglar. He tours the neighborhood in Walnut Creek and picks up things • • • mostly clothing. Mrs. Paul E. Hoff- man, Joker's owner and Wile of a retired Air Force major, said "I put everything be had stolen into a basket and made the rounds of the neighbors." She explained that she was able to return everything that the 14-month old male cat had stolen, "with the exception of a pair of size 32 men's shorts.,. 2 Officers Charged in Death of GI FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) -Tile ft,rmy 1ald it would present expert testimony from doct<n today showing "phyaical evidence of physical abuse" by two Ranter officaa upon a young Ne-gro 1erge,ant wbo died after UD· dergolng a training march. The officers -Lt. Robert E. Lanham, 31, of Houston and Capt. Lance C. Warner, 26, of Sandusky, Ohio -are charged with deretidion of duty, assault and batle!'y and mel- treatment. Sgt. Lon E. Baker, 23, a Negro from Nubville, Tenn., was undergoing Ranger training under the two officers who:• be waa allegedly beal<n by them for falling during a forced march under a hot aun May 19. He died a week later, apparently ol a beat stroke. Spec. 4 Robert Cribb, a medic, t.<Wl..i lllooday be saw Baker fall aeveral times during the five-mile march. Cribb said LaDham slapped Baker altor ooe fall and hit him with hia fiat after another. Second Lt. David W. Wilt, another medic, tiai.d Baker got to rus feet and marched but then "began running around like a wild man." Wilt said Baker, apparently dazed by tbe sun, grabbed for a stick on the c:row>d but tumbled into a ditch. He aaid Lanham and Warner jumped into the ditch and lllt Baker while he "thrashed around wild like ." The officers then put Baker into an ambulance, Wilt said, and medi<:s ~ be might die. "U be dies throw him in a ditch,•• WUt quoted Warner as saying. The medics took Baker to the post hospital minutes later on crders trom another Ranger officer, Air Force Makes Secret Launch Of Spy·in-Sky CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -In tbe finlt secret tatellite laun<:hing here in five yean, the Air Force today rocketed a new experimental •PY·in- tbe-sky payload on .a mission that could produce a vast amount of in· teWgence data about Russi.a, Red China, Southeast Alia and oth.,. poten· tial trouble spot.. A towering Allas·Agena rocket tbun· tiered aWay from Cape Kennedy at 7;08 a.m. EDT to propel the super-spy, rueknamed "Spiook Bini" by some of· Cid.all, toward a hlgh-altitude orbit from wt.iCh it.a instruments could take a comprehensive look at wide areas o( the globe. . Reversing a long-time press poli<:y, the Air Force did not inform newamen in advance of the launchi..ng - although many knew about iL Some officials said the orden to cloak the launch in secrecy originated with the Joint Clile!s al Stall and the state Department. · Both organizations reportedly were concerned that infOCmration about the sat.ellit.e would be upgetting to certain nations during a delicate period in in· ternational relations. Howevtt, it's bard to hide something as big and as powerful as an Atla.s- Agena nunbling off a launch pad. '!be rocket is 11 stcries tall and sounds like 100 freight trains howling in uniaon. It was quite visible and thousands watcb· ed as it blazed .across tti.e sky. HEADON COLLISION -Wreckage is strewn along the right~f-way where two Seaboard Coast Line passenger trains met headon Monday near Winter- haven, Fla; Of the 400 passengers aboard, 125 were u,.,,...._.. reported injured but none fatally. The crash scat- tered seven diesel engines and 14 cars along the main track. Two Trains Crash Head On 125 Injured in Florida C olliswn; 27 Hospitalized WNfER HAVEN, Fla. (UPI) - Charles Edison, son of the inventor and former aecretary of the Navy, was catching a nap in his com· partmeot when the northbound Silver Meteor rammed into its southbound sister train Monday, jackknifing cars like children's toys. The Seaboard C o a s t Line streamliners. one st.anding still and the other rolling 8'long about 60 miles an · hour before the engineer hit his brakes, crashed headon. Twenty-seven persons W«f: hospitalized and dozens or others injoced. The crash, shortly after noon , scat· tered seven diesel engines and 14 cars along the main track. Crumpled cars criss.crossed . the tracks. Twisted metal, luggage and shattered glass lit- tered the area. It wu th~ second tre1n wreck for Edison, who like maoy· of the 400 others aboard the trains was on his Anhual Physical Checkup for LBJ SAN ANTONIO . Tux. (AP) -Presi· dent Johnson's visit to the hospital to· day is described by his personal doc· tor as "in keeping with the policy" of an annual physical checkup. way to the Republican National Convention in Miami Beach. At least four persons are ill se.-ious condition at Lake Wales Hospital. They are Nathan Frank, 45, engineer aboard the northbotmd train; John Lisk, 59, the fireman; Richard Hemleben, 69, and Wllllam B. Rosen· bluth, 80. The southbound Meteor was stopped just short or a siding about two miles south of here in a quiet orange grove. The northbound train was supposed to pull onto the siding automatically. It failed to. Railroad officials had no immediate explanation for the malfuocti.on of their safety system known as ''cen· tralized traffic. cootrol. '' ''lt could have been a Tnechanical failure or a dispatcher error." said one railroad official. "We don't know yet." The northbound Miami-to-New York train was supposed to go into the siding to let the southbound train past, the SCL spokesman said, but it "just kept coming." In addition to the 'Zl passengers and crewmen .admitted to ho spit a 1 s . another 94 were treated for cut! and bruises and released and about 70 others were treated at the s<:ene for minor injuries. Policeman Shot Dead In Detroit DETROIT (UPI) 1-A police ...-g.ad ,... kill«! and two pOl\cemen and a bystander were wounded Moo· day nljlht In a bousinS project on Deiroit's near west side. Police shot -...i-diileail wooildell the gunman, a y . . . parolee from an Illinois pr11on. The &booting, in ttie heavily Negro project, "in no way has a. ri.clal overlooe," said police commusioner JOOames Spreed, in an attempt to allay the spread ol. rumors. "Th~re was no sniping; J emphasize no mlp· ing." Police said several small crowds gathered in the muggy evening but there was no dilficulty in mainttaining crder. Police identified the suspect u Henry Matthews, 31, a parolee from an Lllioois prison in August, 1967, a Negro who had served 11 years Of a 199-yeer term for murder. • Killed was Sgt. Edward Wolski, 40, a veteran o{ 18 years who bad been pro-.... moted JuJy 19. He was married and the father Of two sons. Policeman Rktiard Woy&hner, 45, who suffered a bullet graze in the back, and Richard Paduch, 24, "tVbo was shot in the arm, were treated and '-· released from Detroit G e n e r a l Hospital. Scattered rock.throwi.ng occurred in Racine, Wis., Monday night, but police l!ilid ttlf! trooNe was nothing like two previrus nights when young people troke ~ows and stoned cars. A fire in an old wooden building acro11 the s~eet from the fire and Police statioos was put out quickly. Jn York. Pa., shots were exchanged in a <:ordoned-off area of the city where trouble bas occurred for three nights. Snipers fired on poli<:e patroll· ing tile three-square-block area. Police lobbed three tear gas canistflt's into the building and the shooting stopped. There w~ no injuries or arrests reported. Four firebombs were reporled dur· ing the night, at two meat markets, a police <:ar and a beddlng fEd.ory on York's soutti side. Negro youths riding in cars shot out streetlight• in the sealed.off seetion. The Texa1 White House pictured the President's admission to Brooke Army Medical Center as routine although it did not use tbat word in the official an- nouncement and neither did. the presidential doctor, Vice Adm . George G. Burkley. 23rd Anniversary Of Bomb Observed HIBOSllIMA, Japan (UPI) -Japan today obaened the 23rd azmivet'AJ')' of the dropping al the world's first atomic bomb with prayers for peace, speeches against nuclear weapons and a meaaage from Pope Paul VI. • lE .. PHONE COLLECT 213-728-7283 FREE ESTIMATE CHARGE IT! A crwd of 4<J,OOO peuoos gathered in Hirodtima to offer a silent prayer for the 200,000 victims of the first bomb. Eastern States Steam Heat Wave Wilts Nation From Atlantic to Rockies C:aHfornla TU•,OAT hunf io. ........ l ;M '·"'· 1.4 kond """ 1:11 •.m. '·' WIDNISOAY Finl low ........ ., .••. t ;JI •·"'· l.<1 f irs I llltll ............ ,JO:» •·"'· U ltcarlill low •••..•••.•.•. f !IM '·"'· t.I &-w Pllftl ........... t:Ol "·""· 1.t r-penit•re• Hltll u.-"'"· A,llNonY '' ff --Attlolll• ......... '° ..... ..... luff .... "-(lfldlwwtl c_,. ..... ......... .,.. ... F'1Jrtiilnl!;1 l'ort Wllrlt! ...... -· lftfl9 ... IMOlll J.cborl•lt .. ,_, 1t1nw1 C!tv Le. AllM .. • louh•ll .. -· M-1 M1tw.ukH MlflM9Nll&<SI. "•Ill ... ,.. o.i..111 New Yeo11 (lltl.._. '"" ....... .. _ -I· "'"'·~ "°"' ....... ""'· ""'1....,, CA, •••Id (lty ·-''· LllUll S.tt Leh Cltv ... _ "'" ,,.llltltCo ..... ,._ W•-w ...... .... '9 10 .DI tt .. ,41 " ff n " .. .. " 11 .5' ti 1t1 .OJ .... t2 '3 .11 .. " " ,, .11 6! u .u .. " IJ D .97 " .,, ·" .. " . " 1l 4S .. " " .. " n •• n .. " " n .d 1111 " .14 " 17 .u • n " n " n .. " " n ., .... n " " " .... " n A .. " ... " .. .... n • " 1t •• .. ,, ;1t . .. '· We'll clean your draperies for only ... 100 PER WIDTH unlined up to 3' '°"' 150 ,l'ft WIDTH ......... 3' .. 5' i..,. 2 50 PER WIDTH WlllMd 5' .. 9' I""' PRICE INCLUDES TAKING DOWN AND REHANGING. 48 HOUR SERVICE P1nn1ys exclusive new proeeu cle1n1 11 types of draperies beautifully, clr•porios thot coulcl never be cleaned before (oven be1uty pleats 11 no erlr1 chorge). Makes them look and feel 1lmost like now. PENNEY'S CLEANING SERVICE draperies• laid ..... • ltl1 1 lcie1 • clecotatorpllJ.w& • QCCMtrugs • I -.-- • . . • -. T11esd1y, AU911sl 6, 1968 DAJL Y PJLorc fi I '. ~-····· .. ' wffil THIS cou.d.i • , -~ ONfPKG.ONLY ~ I . GIANT PKG'. I~'... j : TIDE . .~. : I DETERGENT .4 9c I I U111lr 1 cou"°" ·'* fornlfy • Aduh1 Ol'!IY I ,:ooD AT DISCOUNT ' The· r-AMl·LY DISCOUNT SAYING CENTER -I COUPON GOoD ONLY AUG., THRu AUG l.J I AT YOUR FAD -SANTA ANA AND COSTA MtsA -~-No Games * No Stamps No Gimmicks I • DiSCOUNT COUPON • ~ IYe,.,fl•F Low Dluount Dellcateuen Price• IYeryfl•F low Dl•coant Pro••• Food Price• FROZEN ~ 14-Ql. B.RIDGEFORD or PlUMROSE . CACHE VALLEY• SLICED Just Ev1ryd1y Low Prices PLUS 4-Star Spte~ls FAD will cut your food bills 10% and more becau~ we have cut tht trills; no stamps ... no gimmicks ... no games. Our aim is simply higher volume 1t lower prof· its -and the difference goes right into your pock1t. Come in and get acquainted! Be prepared for big surpr!~s when you see the litllt prices everywhere you turn! OICAfll MAYE.It. 1.oz. 39• BRAUNSCHWEIGER .. , .. 1•-oz •• ~LL VAtUITll:• 25• MORTON CREAM PIES .•. XLNT DINNERS • TACO • MEXICAN e 8EEF o.r CH .. Ell[ ENCHILADA SAVE Ile FARM FRESH SLICED HAM 4'h-OZ. PKG. SAVE 20c ~ SWISS CHEESE %-L8. PKG. BIG VALUEI PRODUCE LARGE·FIRM HEAD LEnUCE ~2i29c //~~~ BELzi: GPEPPERS 19fh. cuciiiilRs 3:25' FRESH-CRISP CARROTS 1-LB. 10C CELLO BAG M 4 INCUH POMT. SFOOTBALL 68' c IVIRY'DAY' LOW PRICIS ••• ro" QUAU'O' ' R.llt OF FLAVO~ e SWEf T GRAPES "'°"""" SEEOlESS llfD e l lPE e WHOi.E WAnRIELON ' U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF IYIRYDAY LOW DISCOUNT GOURMft STIAK PRICH NEW YORI STEAi U.S.D.A. $1" CHOICE lb. U.S.D.A. $179 SPENCER snAI FllET 118NON CHOICE lb. u:s.D.A. $429 CHOICE £lb. EVERYDAY LOW DISCOUNT MUf P.RICIS OVEN TENDER U.S.D.A. CHOICE RUMP ROAST 79r, u ••• D.A. CHO•c• • TAIL• fllIHOVEO '1 a PORTERHOUSE STE/lK . . . . . . LI. u.s.D.A. CHOIC ... OOUl'!;N&T CUT ·1 .. TOP SIRLOIN STEAK . . . . . . • . LI. U .•• O.A. CHOIC• • CENTI.Iii, CUT 59r. 7-llONE STEAK .......... . •AITIEl'IN QUALITY e FAMILY "ACK 79· SLICED PORK LOIN . . . . . . .. " EAIT•fllN QUALITY ' l"ICNIC ITYL• 39· FRESH PORK ROAST ..... , . 1• .,,UfllC "0fllK • IKINLEI• e I -OZ. ,-KG. 29 Farmer John LINK SAUSAGES c at EVERDA Y LOW DISCOUNT PRICES U.S.D.A. CHOICE • OVEN TENDER Shoulder CLOD U.S.D.A. CHOICE STEAKS • Toils Removed $119 LB. -T-BONE or CLUB FIRST QUALITY• SI.ICED• l ~LB. PICGS. 5 9 BACON : ~~~MER JOHN ~ It's. smart to SHOP SANTA ANA -2120 SO. BRISTOL AT WARNER OICAI'!; MAV .. fll • 1-01. 39< SANDWICH SPREAD ...•. •-OZ. CAN • ALL •VAflll .. Tll.. 1 O• M.C.P. DRINKS . . ...••• OSCA"-MAY .. fll e I -OZ. 45< HAM SALAD .....••.... FAMILY PACK •• Y. GALLON 5n.. FOREMOST ICE CREAM . . . .,- OSCAfll MAYE"-e I-OZ. 49• SMOKEY SNAX ....... . •M1TAT10N 01!.ANGE JUICE. t .OL 35c BIRDSEYE A WAKE ....•.•. 4 STAR SPECIALS FAl'tMEfll JOHN e 1·L•. "l<G. 59· WIENERS ............. . 8ANQU .. T. •·OUNCE 1 ac MEAT PIES . . . . . . . . . . • . • • ar1 1xtr1 savings made possi· ble by spteial purchases from the menufKturers and ~sstd in to you everyday! ILU .. IEAL e 1-L8. CAl'fTON 18• MARGARINE .......... . SPflllNGFlt:LD' e 12-0Z, CAN 37• ORANGE JUICE .....••.. Pl.H .. OU ILL e 1-0l. 39' . BLUE CHEESE DIP ...... . OfllE.IDA • l·L•. "KG. 2ac FRENCH FRIES ..•.•.• -· .. ~'.'~~ LIBBY'S•.46-0Z.°CAN ,·::::~~IJ PINEAPPLE ~~ JUICE SAYE 7c 22( ' -' Mons • Joo JAR APPLE SAUCE *~ .. .. r ~ "t. • CHERRY • ORANGE I( STA~c/1 •.RAINBOW • FUDGE PRICES EFFECTIVE AUG. 7 -AUG. 13 ~~ POPSICLES WEDNESDAY through TUESDAY . sox 6 2 5 STORE HOURS: s1YE 4c DAILY: 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M . SAT. and SUN: 10 A.M. TO 7 P.M. EVERYDAY LOW DISCOUNT GROCERY PRICES BIS.CO e l 6-0Z. PKG. • WAFIU OIAM COOKJIS .. 15-0Z. PACtr:AGE 4lc ot!IRIOS CIRIAL ....... . JACI( I. llEANSTAl.tr: • 2 '/1 CAN 3&c CUT GRllN 81ANS ....... OCEAN SPRAY e 48-0 Z. lie CRANllRRY JUICI ........ . DUNC AN HINES 33c CAKI MIX!! ........... . DUNCAN HIN[S e WHITE &le ANGIL FOOD CAKI MIX , .. COUNTRY STYtE e 41-0L 79c WJUHIRI CUKI CHIPS -- GRANUV.TEO 66c Sl'llCKllS SUGAR, >lb. . . READY TO USE e PACI( OF 6 96c INFAMIL IAIY FORMULA .. SCHIUINGS e A -OZ. 39c BLACK PlrPIR ......... . 3-0Z. l'ICG. • AU FLAVORS 9c ROYAL GILATIN ........ . GlO«Y Sl'RAY • 2A -Ol. s I 89 lUG Cl.UHll ....... ' . . I 7-0UNCE 3&c ACCIHT DIOOORIZIRS •• - 15-0UNCE e VA~IETY 13c DR. ROSS OOG FOOD ...... . GIANT l'ACKAGE lie COLD POWER ........... . KING •ZE $1.32 GAIN D!TIRGlNT •. -.. IAR SOAI' 4t r28c PIRSONAL JVOllY • ... .. ' 1'-0UNCE IOc SPRINGFRLD CUANSIR .•• C.IANT SIZE lie OOWNY FAUit SOITNll .. All G~INOS .. MJ.I. COFFll, Hb ....••• 2..U. --•w $1 .;l"f J.Q. -~ $1 ,ff [~ NON FOODS DEPARTMENT I fl) DIXIE DOGW~OD ~ 4-PC. TABLE SETTING OlliE"-T DllH. cu" c ANO IAUCIEl'I, r.N CL DINNE"-l"LATE, 39 Values te $2.49 PEI'! BRASILIA CERAMICS IHADlt OF •LUI, Gfll .. lN, •fllOWN HT • BO'N BON DISH 88' • ASST'D ASH TRAYS .... R-;. S 1 .so • LOOK FOR OUR ANNUAL "SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE" COMING SOONI HOUSEHOLD ITEMS SLASHED TO 50°/o-70%' • "ARTY SERVER, reg. 3.00 ..... -$1.66 • RELISH 80Wl, ..... 6.00 ." ..... $2.97 OFF REG. • LAZY SUSAN, 3-PC .. "•· 7.00 .. $3.49 PRICES! "PORCELON" @~t CHINA MUGS 2-PC. ,.,....,_ . 1.qz. SIZE WITH PISTOL GR I~ LAZY ASST'D. DESIGNS 5 1 SUSAN AND COLORS ~$ 00 · VAL to 49~ 1 • OLIVE • MUSTARD •WHITE • AMBER REG. $4.98 •266 ~~ COLGATE "1 . ' ~I GIANT 2s.oz. MOUTHWASH REG. $1.89 88' INCL 30. OFF -and SAVE at FAD ~ COSTA MESA-2200 HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON ~ . ------·-·------------ --------------- l I • 8 DAILY PILOT Tutsday, Au911it 6, 1968 Sapplv atUI Deina ml LBJ Wins Steel War PI'ITllBUllOH (UPI) - 'Ibe Mlle economic precept of 5U(lPll and deulaod l1IQ have made Pr•Jl~6~t JOOn.toa 1he wlnnor in 1111 price wll' wllb tho steel lo· dustry. Throe Of 11>0 nMion'• top 10 stool pt<>ductro bowod to White llOute pr111ure M ... day ad said they would hold tbl price line on pro- ducts purchased br the government. Other 1\eelmakers had no immedlate comment on the action bUt bued oo put pracUOOI OOUld be ujlecUd to ~ tbt1r prices simllarq Repubite Steel Corp.. the nation'• th1rd largest steel producer which dots .about $100 mllllon business witb the gov~ent each year, started the backalide by an· nOWtciDg it would not ralse prices on st.eel used lor am- munition and barbed wlte. Armco, the seventh-rank· ed producer, said lt would bold 1he llnt on steel pipe for bombs but l.fldJcated it would 11tlck with lt1 '6 a ton locr .... ln tbeel 1teel. No. 2.-ranked Bethlehem Steel, 'lritlcb started the in- dustry p W bite House sboWdoWn last week with an l.<:l'08 ... the-board 5 percent hike. said the increases would 1t&nd, but it added, 11w1 wW bl compeUUvt," meanin& it will meet the market 5elllng price. One company holding the price line can force an in- dustry-wide price fallback, as lnland Steel did in 1962, when the impact begins showing up on order forms. The industry signed · a· thrtt•year $1 .5 b1Won waae contract with tbe United Steelworkers Union (USW) la•t TueMlay and bepn the round of price increa1111 Wedotlday. saying It need· ed th• a.dditional revenue to pay for the agreemenl. Some firms hilted price1 on a "selective" basis -ooe or several products -while Bethlehem and lnland in- creased them all ; Republic jacked up its "prlncipal'' products, and A r m c o , You.nlflown Sheet, and Tube and Jones & Laughlin boosted most prices. Prell.dent J o h n s o n de· nounc«l the Bet b leh em hike, saying a 2 percent boo1t price rile wou1d cover cost ol the contact. He ordered a 11 government agencies to deal onJy with ' steel producers holding 1he line. Britain Seeks Treaty .·. · · · She Says It To Ban Germ Warfare . In Flowers GENEVA '!Al>) ·-Britain propoced a n t: w, in· ternational convention today to outlaw germ w.arfare. The outline ol • draft treaty barmloC the manufacture and me Of bllderlolopcal weapcm was put before th« 17-mtlon diJarmameat con- lermce by British Mlnfater of State Fred l\lulley. '!be propoeed convention would a1eo iDclude a ban on the production. cf mi~lollca1 · ag111t1, but Mulloy ..id tllil mlllt lake into accoumt tilt fact thot such a&-are alao needed for~-· "1twa tbt be might bt on the production of ~_.i.ona scale wt>lc!I bed no lo· dependen t peacelul ju a ti fl catial,t' ~ '""'"'led. He added -tilt> ban would also have to cover • 'an c 1 J1arJ equipmeut" deoi-1 to fadliPlo tilt use ofbaclerlalo-Ocl.!. Tbe CODVlllUoll would in~ elude a pltd19. to.-~ any stoc:b ol IUdl bactaia or equipment. Research wwk 1n COO• nection -tilt produclioo of bacterioloeical wee.pons would also be banned. '.nte rrruc;ks Crash; Driver Killed GAZELLE, Calif. (UPI) -A violent beadon collision between two trucks Monday took the life of one driver and left the other injured north of this Siskiyou County town. Killed was Je11e Scott Jr., 34, of Sun Valley, Calif. William S. Burdon, 36, or Gold Beach, Ore.. was hospitalized with bruises and burns. MRS. BILLIE GOLDEN Billie Golden is a well known and long time midcnt o[ Costa Mc.sL As &ecretarf of the Downtown· Business· men's A~tion. she is a vital cog in promoting bu~i­ ness and industry in our lll:a. A 111other cf two children, Billie is also ·an active member of the Harbor Arca Council of Bea Sigma Phi. Billie says: "Wt' all ~"' ro i1n10/l•t>t! i11 1/ie prohft1t1s of day-to-401 livileg, tllat i1':1 IOlfU'litllLf l!llS1 tu /orgl't abo"t tht! future utUil i(:1 upon 11.J, Sysl1!1'UUic saving is for nrl! an intt'gml part of 11ry planro'ng /or th~ Juturl'. At WILS./l/RB FEDERAL SA VJNGS m7 '111!.rt egg' s:row1, taming th~ lligh~:1t rat~ in th~ insur~d 1ajety oj a F~deral Anociolion." Fu~ received by tTll 9th of the month e•rn from the 1st.,. after the 9th fl'om the d•la cf reetlpt. 5% ~ 5~% whlf'I compounded dliily and l'ield for• ye•r. Sa'4tnp lnsured to $15,000 by the Ft6er1/ S.vin&1 •nd lo.n ln1urancr Corpora-. tion. • 8oflul: Elm •n extr. '!. % en 1 36-month Certificate Account in mu ltiple• of tl.000. ' ta1 H;uJIOt Aalll1M w H#bor•Col .. Mna, Clllfomla •642-4711 HclfMOflb: .... ,...... ·- Israelis Kill 5 Arabs Pursuit in Jordan By l.\lllod P r t 11 t. &eraatloul l1h1U soldiers Chorlod sev1ral miles into Jordan to-- doy and killed five Artb COlllllWIDdot" Who bombed a cUJllc at Elo·Y•hlY ••l· uoment IOtlll> of th• Su of Gtl1lat lo loNlel, an lataeU commUJllque innounced. Tho 111'11lla hrooght bacl< Ult f!vt bOdlll 1114 two ftUlldod Anb commandos from Ult elalh 1 •• l d • Jordan, lll'llll.o ff l ct al s Uld. . • They saJd tbt wounded oocnn>andoe admitted born· bl!ll 1he Israeli clinic lo tbe Ar1v area and &bowed thtlr Iaaell captcr1 two othlt' plilce1 where 1till UDO· plodod bOmbt were rtm0v· ed. The commando b o m b damaa1d the. cllntc, but there wtrt no I1r1111 ca1ualU.., ac:cord.lnc t o lsneUMllhot!ttet. Toda)''• 1trike into Jordan waa 11bot pursuit," the Israe- li! laid. The military arm or the Arab Pale1Udlan extremist organll&Uon El F a t a h , which Claims responsibility for most commando raids inside l1rael. charged Mon· day Israeli jets dropped pr Jn gas and napalm in a ra.J on the salt area of Jordan SWtday. l• tile unttod Nations Jordan and Israel asked sanction.a a&lllllt o n e another chlf&lnl Heh other with v}OlaUon ol tbt Middle East ceuef.lrt. Jor<lan albd U. N. ••IIC· tions agaln1t llrUI fer raids: on Jordanlall tarrltory on Sunday. nie lneU. . said tbt taldl wert on Arab ruerrilla bttH. The Soviet Union took the aide of Jordan, asking the MC\l:l'lty council to "con· demn fsrael and put an end to such aggression." The 1ecurlty council last March condemned 1srael's strikes into Jordan against Arab 1nllltrators' bases and warned any more such raids could bring "further action'' by 1he U. N. That could mean diplomatic and economic sanctions or even military measures against I 1 r a e 1 under the U. N. charter. Ike's GOP Address Blasted by Russians "olleplion that the llOci.U.t (Communi!t) world has diaplayed little interest In traveling the pattiway to peace." It also repocied that Eisenhower "pretended tb&t the Vietnam war was the product o[ Communist er· pansionism rather than Amerioan aggression ." A• to Goldwater, Tass at· tacked him for "suggesting that the United States en· courage any madfestaticms of dissent in the socialist world." This was a referenCe to Czechoslovakia. _very s r IS 0 step-up COr- even w en its in t e • ow-price range. Sure, you knew Olds is a step-up cor- to everybody but your rich uncle. But we'll bet you didn't know Olds slep- ups stort down where most of tha so· called low•prlc•d cars ar• found. That's our problem. Too few peopl• know how THIS IS OlDSMOllLf'S SWINGING NEW CUTLASS S. $2632.' modest Olds prices ~ ore. Fact i1, they t 1tart at $2512 -end wt have 16 Olds mod•ls under $3000. (Thtr1 ora at least that many so-called low-prked cars prictd 2!.!! $3000.l Our point is, if you'd fik1 to step up a little from what you're driving now-, we've got on Olds for what you are willing to spend. I 14 I See your Oldsmobile _ -··-·dealer during "GO-OLDS RUSH" Days! t I t I I • ' I I -. t s n 0 .t .t e ,. D !- g I• • ;t I '· - ' - .. --.. ---- Foes of Reag8:n Chide : 'New' Candidate SACRAMEN'l'O (AP) - CllJ!ornlo Democnll had mixed rtlcllOlll Monday to Gov. Rtqan'1 announce- ment that be 11 a candidate for the Republican Domin&· tlon !or ~ .. !dent. F"ormer LL Gov. Glenn Ander1on said In Loa Ani•· 181 that as far as he knew, "Reagan hu been running ror president since the day he took th6 oath of offlce u aoveraOl' of caw:c:nia." A11emb]1 SpeUer Jwe M. Unruh, embroiled with Republican legislators over an adjournment date for the legillature. criticized R••· gan lot not helplna the leg- islature break the bnpaase. U Reagan falla to con- vince GOP leglslatot1 to re- cess until Sept. 2, "I will have to conclude that the governor Ls 'J>UI of that con· * * * * * * apjraey end be II con&ider· ably more intel'Mttd ill run· nlng ror presideat than in runnlng the covernment of California," Unruh said. Huch Burns, Senate pro tempore and acting governor while ~aaan and Lt. Gov. Robert Finch attend the Mi· am1 Beach convenUon, 1ald he was "pleaiied Gov. Rea-can, as· a fellow c.utornian end No. I olllce boldtr in thll ltate, " beln1 rtcolll1z· ed In IUd> I promlnont Wly by mtmber1 of Re1&1D'1 own perty." Bunt1 atre11ed that u a Dtmocrat hll pralle could not be construed u an en· donement. Loa Angele's · Mayor Sam Yorty 1aid he wa1 not 1ur· prised about the announce- ment and added: "I doo't think' he h11 tile esperleoce to be pre1ldeot al 'tho United Statel-h1'1 not ready.11 ••it would be my aueu.'' 111 d OemocraUc NaUonal C<mmlttoom111 EUiOlll L. Wyman, .. that Reaa:an WU begl.nnlna to lose control over the California dele1•· Uon and u a result was forced to make public what everyone has kriown since he was elected aoverncr- he wants to be prelldenl" Wyman added: 11~onJ}d Huey Newton Trial R e a I I n.'1 IDllOUDetmlnt ' Wll &muainl." Ed Koupal, chatnnan ol the drtYI to rteall~ao from Ille 1ovwoor'1 ce 1ald "there ii no ty, l•P" 1D Sacramuto any mm. "He la j111t ·a atrall!ht Uar,11 Koupal 1ald 1n nt.ir- ence to Ru.San'a often.re· pealed atatemenl that he would 10 Ito the eonveaUon 11 a ffavortte IOll ooly. Unruh Boils Over. Reagan Departure Slain Officer 'Testifies' OAKLAND (UPI) -The tape by the Jury al aeveo recorded voice of a slain WU?len and five m e n , SACRAMENTO (AP) _ Ul Se t 9 Oakland policeman w a s "Heanes came on tlle air oncy Gov. Real'ran's pursuit of the p · .. h both ho ~ady to speak again tod ay twice, the last time to· !ay, R bll id ti 1 That lS w en u.ses as the prosecution slowly "28. 9408" -the emergen-e P u can ~s en a would have to return for a built its oase against Huey cy call of an Oakland nomination was linked tOday . 1 1 P. Ne·•-, rounder al ... ll · t " •-·tr h 1 spec la s e 1 s on on """"' l,lg' po ceman m trouble and o a Ca1411 op e n militant Black Panttiers. California government" by g u b e r n a t orlal vetoes, lleeding help. Democratic As s em b 1 y assuming Burns' pr~ Newton sat impassively Prosecutor Lowell Jensen Speaker Jesse M. Unruh. clamation adjourning the !Aonday a1 a Po Ii c e izrtroduced the tape through Unruh, the state's most legislature Saturday was dUpatcher pla~ a tape or dlspetchor Clarence Lord, powerful Democrat, used legal. radio me.ssages sent by of· who was Oil duty on the the w 0 rd "oonapiracy" Unruh told newsmen the C t S ficer John F'Tty shortly radio the morning Frey more than once in describ-Republican position appear· OUT ays be!ore he was shot to deatll stopped Newton's car just ed to be •· --t Gn an Oakland street last before 5 • m Ing Reagan's action in leav-a move ...., !"'"""'"' Oct · • ing California just as the Reagan, since he left the 'Beard' OK The "}Jj. NllllCIW> militant ,.. ~_:d's explanation of ~e legislature bogged down in state at a critical time, -"'"" po.U...~ oode sequence on u1e an unpre«dented conflict knowing the situation and LOS ANGELF.s (UPI) _ charged with first degree tape was interrupted by the oec:Urlty by ordering the see.rm of all perlOM en· tering the courtroom because ot rumor.s o f threats to the defendant and to witne'sses of both Sides. He exempted only tlle jury, court staff end attorneys of record. The judge ordered that wocd ol the extra precautfon be kept lrorn ti..ie jw·y. Copter Saves Man on Cliff that could wind up in courts. realizing Burns would be in The appeu.te department of murder in the Shooting of !~h's ~Yy.reoecedss~-~~ willtb. e. Under the speaker's call, charge. Burns, as Senate the Superior Court Monday Frey,. and 8lJo with woun-uu. i·~ SANTA CRUZ (UPI) - A 53 of the 80 assemblymen president pro tern, becomes ruled unconstttutional a Los ding another o f f i c e I' , C1"0SI e x a m i o • ti o n of Coast Guard helicopter Mon. met for six and one-half governor when Reagan and Angeles 0 r d i n a n c e em-Herbert Heanes, in a gun defense attorney Clliarles day night rescued a San DAllY·Pll.OT '1 What do you tell your -child about God? Or, more important, what do you tell y0utscl! about Ood? Nothing has greater bearing on yolll' wtll-being and your child's. The confldenc:c ·you have in God's love hctes your child feel God's prcscnc:c. It helps him gam confidence in good. And it crea..tcs an atmosphere of harmony, which is so important in any home. The Bible, books, and periodicals in, our Reading Room can help you research and prove for younelf the truth about God and man. And this can bleas all the members of your family. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM 1169 Ntwport AYt,-Colft M11• 110 Qfl,,-Hwntin1to11 l1tch 6J5 Hlth Dr.-L..11,1n1 lttc:li 1115 VI• Uc:lo-N1wpor+ le•ch' 2161' E. Cot1+ Hwy,. Coront c:l1I Mtr ,hours Monday, and Unruh Lt.Gov.RobertH.Flncb-powering the police to ~~:·voice oi Frey was G~rior r~ Judge· ~and.~~~e~:Uc: called them back i n t o ~to ~t :i:.onvention -are license l b e a tr l c ~ l pro-heard a dozen times in the Monroe Friedman tightened north ol Santa Cruz, session for today. ducUoos. , ...:=~:...:=:::..:=::..::..:::,...:.:::::::..:.:.::::::..:!'.:::'.::'.,...:.:::::~:_:::::::_::::_:::::._ __ !::=================== Monday's s e s s I on pro-Reagan's departure came 'The three-judge court duced no specific action ex-during "a catastrophe in upheld a lower court cept that the lower house C a l i!ornia government," decision dmnl.s6ing charges voted to not even read the Unruh declared. He added, egainst Robert G. Barrows , official proclamation of "If tlle Republicans lock up producer of "The Beard" a Acting Gov. Hugh M. Burns and attempt to protect the controversial satil'e on adjourning both houses of governor that is an in-American sexual customs the legislature as of 5 p.m. dication the governor Js part which was raided several last saturday. of the conspiracy. I will times by police last winter. After a day or constant have to conclude that the The director and two convening, lack of action, governor is part cf that con-members ol the cast still and then c J o s e d · 'd o o r spiracy and he is con-are scheduled to stand trial meetings of both parties, the siderably more interested in Sept. 16 in municipal court Republic a n s unanimously running for president than on charges of participating voted against a Democratic-in running the government in lewd acts and using lewd sponsored bill raising of California." speech in public. workmen's compensationi-----------'---..:....-----1 benefits. They also made clear they would stand fast against Unrub's hope to pass a resolution recessing -but not adjourning -un. * * * Recall Move Chief Says Drive Alive SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Tbere was a dispute to- day whether tbe recall Reagan movement is still alive. The group• s attorney, Arthur C. Zei1 of San Fran· cisco, said Monday the drive to recall Gov. Ronald Reagan is continuing on the a ssumption the deadline for filing petitions still is from 41 to 60 days away. Sea-etary Of Stat. Frank Jordon has ruled that the final deadline was last \Vednesday. The movement turned in about 450,000 signaWres at that time. A total of 780,4J4 valid names are needed to force the issue onto the ballot. Jayne's Pink Palace Sold LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Jayne Mollllleld'o 23-room •'plnk p&lace" mansion on Sunset Boulevard was sold · for $180,00l Monday in Superior Court to an un- named ·buyer. Included in the sale of the two-story home were 264 Jtems of furniture and the wardrobe al. the late ac- tress. Also on the ~Y la a heart·•bo!>ed 1wtm!Dlllg pool. LET'S BE FRIEllDL Y Hunli1111ton Beach Vis Hor 642-6014 Costa Mesa Visitor 642-6014 So. COISI Visitor 494-0579 H1rbor Visitor 644-013' U you have new nt!&bbor• or know or anyone movtna to our area, pleu1. tell U1 so that wt m11 utend • frtendl;y welcome ud beJp them to bt<Om• acquainted In their now 1urroundlnl•· lnte"'t Is compcllnded daily and paid ln>m th. 1st tf funds art rece?Yed by the 10th. Interest Is paid 1rom date rectlved when funds remain to quarter's ind. Interest Is pald to date of withdrawal after three months whenaieeount remalns open to end cf quarter. Ac<oUnts.,., lnsllrld to $15,000 111<1 protoctsd bl' Anlhtlm'a 100" rteord of salety alnte foundln1 ii 1921. 5.00% The election is electric. It wasn't too many years ago that candidates for public office were actualll seen and heard by only a smal percentage of the voters. The electric revolution has changed all that. Television put.s the candidates right in your living room. Radio lets them talk to you even as you drive to work. F;lectric teleprinter8 and high speed presses· bring you the complete text of speeches and announcements just hours after they're released. Electronic data processing has made possible up to the minute opinion polls. In many areas, new electric votin~ machine8 are now in use. Election returns come in faster, and just as accurately as ever. . If you enjoy the national sport of campaign and election watch· ing, you'll be able to follow it all on TV for j'ust ~ennies. So little, in fact, you don t even think about it. Only electricity can do so much for so little. S' ,... Southern C1.l/forn/1 Ed/a.on I I ., I I 1 • ' --~------·------------c- • • OAll.V PILOT TuadrJ, All!lusl '-' 1968 U.S. Grant Given 2 Marines Cited To County Schools ·For Viet B ravery SANTA ANA -A lllJ,000 federaJ grant hu been atven Oran&• Couolj< School• cl- Trial Opens In Collision Deaths of 3 Tax Relief Claims Due SANTA ANA -Senior citizens may lose property tax relief if their compl.eted clalm is not in the hands of the Franchise Tax Board by Aug. 31, according t o Richard Nevim, chairman of the State Board of Equalization. To qualify for the pro· perty tax relief, an in· dividual must be 65 years of age or older as of Jan. l, 1968. a resident of California as of Jan. 1, 1968. own aDd occupy a home between July l, 1967 and June 30, 1968, paid the property taxes on the home for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1968 and have a household income of not in excess of $3,350 for the 1967 calandar year. Claim forms are available at 1010 N. Main St., Suite 721. Iniormatioo may be ob- tained by calling 547-4491. DEATH NOTICES KENDRICKS ICtnd•ld:•. Elmtr P. CIMINI urvltel tnd !n1tr....,nt 12:00 Mm Wed. Weot- rrilnller Mtmorl1! P1tti; tnd C1rritlery. TAYLOR T1ylor, Elli Etllll, n. 7411 Slt lf;r, t-lu"lln•ton l••ell. Pl•itll I WIY All9. ~. Swrvlwd bv ,_ Vernon W1111te, GllH E.,.e..., Wtllaet; dtwnrers, Dallftl WUlltmJ. Ntlll• M1n11t!I, c.torlillt Ctrltr, 1111tr, WIMI• L1w1. 4 ;r1nOchlldren t nd I tr.ti tr1ndcM~ cir~ 5.!Nktl Wed .. 11 1.m., Smllflt Cll•Pt"I. ln~r~r Wntml1111tr M+ mor1t l P1'1l. WOLF Woll, ........ l"J 4. 435 Hllled!Jt Or., LttllN kid!. $urvl-by h111Mnd, w11n1m a. wor~i ll ....... John tP•~I. s•""""'· ltld\trd, 111 ol' "'• home; -1111..-, M... Ellubefll F111ton ol' H1111llMIQn hlCll. krvkn Sit .. 11:00 t .rnJ 51. """rv'1 E11-.t Olwrdl, l..iwllf>I IMdl. WnKHll Mortv1ry, Cl..C:I ...... BAL'ra MORTUARIES 'Corou del Mar OR a-9450 :eo.1a Meaa l\111-ZUf BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY u o Broadway, Coata l'lfeu LI J.3433 PACIFIC VIEW ~IEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e l\.lort11ar1 Chapel :5lt Pacific View Drive Newpors Beacb, Callfonla -PEEK FAMILY COLONIA L FllJliERAL ROME Wes:!~:r!aa A.;i.uzs SMITH'S MORTUARY m Mala St. Ratbo"°"Bead u:..- IVESTCLIFJI' ll'OR11JARY 427 E. 17th St., Ctlla Meta ...... You earn more in Newport Beach if vou go to · Glendale There are 18 "Glendsles" in Southem California. And a savings account at any of Glendale Federal 's conven- ient offices earns a full 25%more than it does in a regular savings account at a bank. And Glendale Federal's Bonus Accounts earn even more. Safety? Your savings are protec ted by nearly $1 billion in assets , making Glendale Federal the nat ion's second largest Federal. Won't you wend your way to one of our doors soon? Glendale Federal/Newport Beach SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION• MAIN OFFICE: GLENDALE 2333 Wt Pacific Coast Highway at MacArthur Boulevard The Nation's Second largest Fed eral Savings and l oart Assoc iation where you r rnoney earns the nation's highest rate • MOTIC• TO Cl:lt:tl lTOtS LEGAL NOTICE SUl"EIUOll COURT 0 ... THR 1"·*21 STATE 01' CA Lll'OltHIA FOil CEllTll'ICATE Of' •Ul lNE IS, THI COUNTY 01' OllA.NO I "ICTITIOUI NAME H•. A4t1't The undenlt~ does cKlllY lie 11 Cl>"" EJttlt ef lltEl:fE AGNES COLE, t kt ctudll!ll 1 builMH ti 1XI We1t W1rncr IRENE A. COLE, 01ce1ied. ' Avel\ue, $.Intl Ana, C1ll!ornl1. under the MOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to tM lu;tltlDVS flnn l\ll<M cf GOLDEN WEST Credi""• ol the t bovt ntmed ~O<ler,I Ji\NITOlll SERVICE 1r>d TM! s1ld flrm iJ that 111 per9DM l'llV1"9 claims l!ltlrisl tile cornPGSed of f!>e followlM pe....,,., who .. 5.9111 dee:~! ire rRulrO'd ta Ille them, Mm• In NH ind .iac. of talde~ ll 11 wlf!I llM ~ry vouchtrs. In tr.. otflce follows: ol "" ci.1'11 ol the 1bow tnl!lled court, or Hirry G. MC.L1111hlln. 13311 Mc.Klnlt'I 19 IW'l'Jlllt !him, wllh flll necesserv Clrclll. W•dmlruter, ca111orn11 ~. to the und1r1ltned 1t L1w ot-Oi led Jul¥' n. lHt lk• cf Gi lvin ll. !(..,,.., Attorney cf Lew, Hirrv G. McL11111hl\n lU Norlfl N~ lloui.v1rd, N~ STATE OF CALIFORNIA. llesch, C11llornl1, '2MCI, Which ls ~ ORANGE COUNTY: 11lact cf buslnts1 of tlM U'llderslg~ In Ill On Jul'/' 17, ltA, befo~ mt", I Nol1rv m1tt1r1 Ptrl1lnlr111 hi Ille esl1~ ol' seld Public In 1nd tor 11ld li11!1, per,1on111, dtctdenl, within Ill• monlf\I 1tter the !Irr! 1ppeired Hirrv G. Md.1U11hlln known to 11111>11u11on of this Mflea. m1 to be the ..er.on ~ Nme 1, Cited Ju!v 11, IHI. subst;rlbH to t11e w!lflln lnitr-nf I nd L1vlnl1 K. C1rrl91n adl:,_ledQed tie necultd Ille N mtl. EllKUtrlx ol' rM WIU (Oflltll l 5e1U OI tlM 1bow n1mHI detedent Jo:JtPh E. Ctvl1 GALVIN R. K••NI! Noltrv P11btlc -C11lloml1 411 Hwfll N--' -.Vlol¥1 N Prln<:lptl Oll'I« In N.--t •Ne~. Cl llfel"ftll ~ Or1nae County T11NIWl!t1 """''Hl Mr CDmmllSlon Ex11lre1 Atttrlll'I' fw h:Klltrtx June ,,, lt11) Pub1!111ed Or1n11e Co1tf 01Ur l"llol, Ju-Publl1hed Or1111e Coest Otll'f Pllol, Ju- !v u, 23. 30 I nd Ausiint '· 1961 1110-dl Iv 23. JO Ind Awust '· ll, !Ht 1'7"68 LEGAL NOTICE ,._,...,, C•ltTll'IC:ATE OP I UllNESS, LEGAL NOTICE l"·JOl!4 C:l!ltT ll'IC:ATI! 01' I US INl!SS, PICTITIOUS NAM li l'ICTITIOUS NAME The uMltriltned 11o cerl!lv ther t rt T"-' 11nd1r11aned do urtltr rtie' 1~ con-eonductl119 1 11u11nns 11 n' M1rlne Av,,, duding 1 ....,.(Mii 11 46 Htllotr_, 8altx>t Island, Ctllkw'nl1. under the lie· Corot11 del Mir. C1Ulori'il1, 11nd!r tt>e flt-trllo</s firm n•m• Ill THE POSTICHE tlflou1 flrm ftllM "' EMPLOYEE SHOP Ind !NI Slid llrm 11 COITtPOSed "' I ENEFIT PLANS I nd tlMt "Id firm 11 !tit followl"9 PetWM. -· nernes In lwll coml'Oltcl of tt>e follow!.,. P!'IOllS• whose 1nd olaces Ill rt11de11et ••e 11 follow$: n•IMI In tult Ind •IKft"' rn.ldtftct In! GAYLE HUNTER "' t105 Touctn 11 follows: Aven11e. Fount1ln vaner. Ctlltor .. 11. Em!Mff w. lltldl1rd10t1. ,... Su..,e LINDA SAOLER ol In"'" WIY La ... L.,,., Hun11..,1on llNell, c1111 .... n11. llud'I, C1111om1~. G. F. CrtOllt WclYer!On, :1<15' TU11in Dtled J111¥' ")1, lKI sr .• NtWDOrl Inell, Ct llfonllt . GAYLE HUNTEllt Dt led ·Julv 15, 1'611. LINDA SADLER Emmdt W. Rlcll1rds0n Slale of C1llfwnl1. D•l"9t County: G. F. c ..... ue Wolv~ Dn Julv 2?, 1961, befort m1, 1 N<>larv Sii~ of C1llfamJ1, Orl l"l!ll County: Pwbllt In Incl for Slld 511tt, Pfr...,.1llv Dn J11lr 15, 1Ht, belore fM, 1 N<>IH"V 1ppe1rt<I GAYLE HUNTER. tnd LIND.I Publlc In Ind tor "Id Stitt, p!rsonlll'/' S.IDLElt known lo mt lo ~ tl'OI ""'""' ·-••eel Emmtlt W. ltltti1tdoon 11"111 G. w11<>11 MIMI 1rt subscribed lo !tie wiltlln F. Cre<11~ Wolvtrton .._n lo me to be l111trumenl ind 1cknowltd9ecl they tX• tlM Pf!"lon1 Wllose nt mes t n! lublcrlbed eculed lflt ta~. 10 Ille wllflln l111trvment Ind t dl.n-leclt-Ormlll V. Ut! td !Mr 1xecuttc1 the """'· Nctarv Publlc-C1tlfDrnl1 (OFFICIAL SEAL) Prlnclo1I Oflla In Kttlllttn G•tln Ortnee County Not1 rv Public M¥ CDmml11lcn l•olre1 Or1n•t Co .. C.1lilotnl1 Mtrcll 27, ltn MY Commlsslcn exolres Published Or1ncie Co11t D1ltr Piii!!. Ju. J11n1 14. 1'7'Q Iv ;.13, 30 lnll AutUl l 4, 11, Ifft 1114·'8 Publl!htcr Orl"9! Co1sl O~llv Piiot, Ju· IY lO Ind Autusl ,, 13, 20, IN& 131HS LEGAL NOTICE 1Alt-tt2 NOTICI! TO CltEOITOltl SUl"l!ltlOll COUllT OP THI! STAT• 0, CALll'OIUUA POil TNI! COUltTY OP OltANOI! LEGAL NOTICE I .tit lt1 NOTIC! TO Cltl!DITOltS SUl"ElttOlt COUltT 01" THI! STl.TI! O" CALIFOltNIA FOlt TNE COUNTY O" OltAllGli ,.., .... ..,.. E1l1'9 of LUCILLE MAlltY DEPEW, AKA MAltY LUCILLE DE,EW, AICA LUCILLE M. DEPEW, Dtctlseo:I. ,_, ~I NOTICE 1$ HEltEllY GIVEN to ft>!' Etl1'9 ol' Al.MA IC. llllOWN. Deeffsecl. cn!tlllo<'s ot 1!>t 1tiov. n1mtcl dtClde"t NOTICE IS HEllEllY GIVEN '° Ille 11111 1H Pf'-llt¥1n9 cla!-lttlNl l!>t Cl""tdll!:lr'I of the l baft Mmed deaden! llld d«tclenl ire tMUlrfd ta fl!I ~rn t111t 1H oe•-htvl1111 t11lma lltlnsl Ille Wltrl tht ne.;e111r¥ vouchers, In Ille otflt; Mid dKHenl In! '"\fired le flM them. ol' the cler11 ol' tht lbove enlllltd COl,lrl, "'" wlt11 tl'le nectu•rv vouc:llff1;, !n rM llffla Ill •rtstnl lhHTI. wl!ll the nec:es,1,.... cf ttie clertc of Ille 1boW! nofllled caurt, or \IOl/Clltn., 1e Ille undirslfflfd 11 "" Oftlen le JttHnl hm. wrlfl tht l"llCUSl'V crt hll AtlerM'l'I GATES. TALllOT. ¥0UCl!trs, to tM llnde.,,19Mll 1t C/O MOltlltlS a, MEllltELL. 15-41 W!blllre HAllWOOD. SOOEN .. ADKINSOM, :ms lllvd .• S\1119 lDT, L• Alllltln. Ctlllarnl• Vlt Lido, P.O. •ox 1'07, NeWJ>Grt llfltll, 1'11011, which II "'' Pita ol' llltil"'11 of C:tlllornll '1"3. Wh!d! Is rM -S.Ct ol' tht ltftderslgned lft 11! malTt•I oertllftl,,. buf,Jnes1 of fM undoer\/"""' In t 1t miltf!"' le ..,_ esltlt of u ld dK:fdenl. wllllln '" Pf'l"ttlnl.,. le fM tlltle o1' 11111 dtudtnl, "'°""'' after tht 11rs1 Pllbllutloft of ltli• w!lfllft 11• montllil lftwr tht first Pllblltt· Miia. lion cf ~It Mlkt. Cited J wlr It, 1'61. Ct!MI Julv ''· lfil Wllll1m Nt-..!ll Ha>klM ~·~,/· ;1~ wm tf Adml11l.tr1l'IH' of tht E1tt t1 ~11 • _ .... ..__.._, ol' tile 1baft Mn\ld dece<11nl tlM I bo.,. ni ..-....._.....,, OAfl!S. TAL•OT, M 0 ll ll 11 & "1""""'· Slftfl a Mid-M11111tl!LL. P. 0, ... l"J A....,_. Al l.lw NIWJWI •Nd. c1n1 ..... 11 ~ 1MI Wlhllln •tn1~ 111119 111 Tlh ,,,._ lit: Alllttls. C11l"'"'l1 M 1t Artwllfn ,.,. ••t<lllf'll TIL• OU) aawm P11lllltlltcl Or1Mt COlst D1!1y Pnr·1 J\t> A~1 .... A..,.llll1tr1i.r Iv I .. l L :JO Ind A111111d .. l$ t Uf Pultll.ntcr Ort-C011I D•I,.. Pltftl, LEGAL NOTICE Juf't 1'-23. lll 1nd A111u11 '· lHI 1111.111 LEGAL NOTICE LI TUESDAY AUGIJIT I II tll'llpttd tit lfefld. Nod Wt ordtn Al•• Mul'llJ • ncM , 11..r dwb stol•11 ''°"' tht U.S~ •ut lw .. lllHhrtlD the m1..io11 lllmMlr ..._ MIMIY .,,..b hit ankle. {R) m .... ..,,,., (Cl (Ol) lD W1tf1'kll: (C) (30) •AtpiM lufll Piiot. • Ctmw"• foUDW °"" t:GO 8 8 (IJ C1a111il11 'Hi (C) 11111 1lrtl11t Miehe! lltrlfr 11t 1111 (cont'•· from ':30) "'nit llltlUMI· 111any •!Id tftt11·d111prous tuU Ill ten N.OOMI Corwtn!Jon.'" tonlaM'• th• AlpL llltln KtMt.r 11 tht plll:fornt pm. fll All&I ........... 111ttt1o11. cas Nm "" • COfllPI t:OO a lllMI: (C) "'Writtll • .. broldcut ftclllty lrllt1"'4 ht 1 flHI: WW' (dmnt) '57-W Hudlo1, of 22 'f'lllS, In I IMioJ MW IP' llurM ltclll, hblrt $tl4., DN't- pruth. The VIM, 40 tilt kins bf thr MllonL The llcohol~ 10t el tllht ft~ wldt, lfl at MilrN a..dl 111 1111 t)cooft llltritl t atrt who ConmtloA Kt!L r11dy IOf OPfll• brinp out hll better utur• Int.II tlon u 111 lnt1111tM b~ ctn· hil .im1 mrtt troublt. ter. Mast lmPorttnt of thl Yins lift I!) AMrim w..t: (C) (30) "Roc:b lllO.se thlt hold four control ftlOfJll Mount1l1 Paci Tri9. • Ale~ Slo4ine throu1h which 111 of CBS HM cw· rN!u 111 adtln1 ,ac• tr1h1 Into 1rq1 It thtnnettd. On• control ttlt rutplf C.111dla11 llocklts. room b ruponslbl1 for Whtt OC• m llldi: .. ~ "Iran ""' curt 011 lht floor of th• tOtMntkwl Slid: Cocllltion." £11eur RllCO, tdl· h1U. A acond dlrtdl eovnp of tor of tilt lA Raa:1 llflllPllMf, II au tdivttJ adjlotnt It tllt !'loo<, 11uut1oned lbo4lt. Jtcro •d Mel· lhc1udllll th• lmlnldld eubldt u11·AtnerkA11 mllillncy .,. • ,.ne1 1ra. eorrldon and· lobbies. A third af *-1 MWllMll. Chtrltt ll'OWll II raponllbl• tor remotu. Th• thr• mod111t•. lbfft .crtlll IVlllb • ttllJ occur tEI TY Mlllkll Oaltt ·~ forwatd th• most lmportent t:lO D i..1r .. llMI a.itii., SM: (C) ac:tiYitJ al tM mornlnt to a ttntnl (90) Politi 1 tnb control h!Ofll, Each control hlOfll h11 Cl comm 11• • f\IH lditorl1I pro4udloll Ind heh· fJ (jJ) (J} llflllrllc•• ....... ' I st ff . Co ....... : (C) (90) ABC'a *" II ii U@ lep1bJk11 llllllflll inchortd bJ How•nl K. :Sflllttl. lob CGMIU.: (C) (cont'd. from •:30) Cleft ind 1ohn St.Ill till the 1udl· . I th lio 11111 ...... wic. whit h11 lr1naplrlll 111. th• n • C1011¥t11 n 1 com.., floor. othtr rtport111 eov. the NBC Nna bmeclcld etntw II C:OD· mnb off th• 11oor, In th• "smokt- 1truct1d. Th• center lnclad11 stu· filled" llotel '°°""· Thi five •&· dio .. 1 MYl'I roorn, Yidtot•PI fl· mtnb of Nth nl1ht's CO'ltl'lll 1r1: cilitla , ' •lx·posltion IWilchbGlrd, (1) A htll·hour ·~nst1nt documtr1- til111 dmlopin& l1bontoria, 11td • t•IJ"' on th• theme of tht dlJ. (2) film lditln& complu. Th• MIC rollowin& tht "lnstent doa11111nt11J"' News wire HNlc• col!lllCb to 20 la a round·bblll dllcuaioll bJ cor· k>catlons kl 111111 NBC Pfl10Mll inpondllltl. (3) An "lnsldtt'1 R• lnfon111d of li1111fla1nt dMlop· port,." i fl¥t·to..slx mlnutt "lltrd" ~~~~ :~:.·~n::·~::: nm, ln·ffptlt film report. (4) In· tloll b to lted tht ~lrt MIYict. dslve tmlchtnt commlntlrla bJ II stm Alllll SllH': (C) (90) ABC Nea 1u1st commtnbtm WH· 'Sim 's wtft, )IJnt Mudowl, )oiM li1m f, 8ucklf1 Jr. 1nd Gort Ylcl1L hirn toni&l\t •IDri& Yrith ecmr.comt· (5) '1Jpd1t1," 1n tl&flt·•hn rnlnut• ditn Gabe OtH, slna•r Tedd)' NMly M(Jlllnt brin1in1 1111 Ylww tlll lo ind colllldienne »Jc• ~n. !ht rninut1 1111 'lfflat 1111 tmllplrld O Ill O'Clock llwil: .,._ e... from 1111 time th• r.onwntioll pro. ttlt 11......, (comldy) 'SZ~. 1r1m tool! to lhl tlr. m-" ,_, (Cl ~~ H1rrltt, Dtvid 1nd Rieb Nlbon, ,1ht Unknown TufhJ." . Rock Hudson. Barb1r1 Llwrtnc:t, Ann Doran. Jim Btckus, Sh1ldon flnCn". hlpri ""' CtlfnMt Leon1rd. UI lillf1'I 1 lal 21:30 m Mowle: ('C) ..,.,.,,..... (dttma) 10:00 91-.. ,...._ ... (C) (60) '56-Burt LllltlM, Tony Curtis, IJllM: (C) ....._ If Wu" Gllll Lollobt1&1d•, Katy Juttdo. (horrot) '53-Vinaint l'rict, Franl QI llt M..,_ (30) La.'lfo7, l'llJllil Kirk. ....... .,., t m,,.. ~ -(Cl (30) Ill .... ,...,. Ill•-""1 IC) (30) •:•a ni. •rMIJ' .. tt> t30) ID MtHalt'1 ttny 130) f1i) lpldntl: "Buckmlnll.w futl11 -Prospects for HumenitJ." David Prewitt ttlkt Yrith Ult ldeatllt· thtollsf Ind dm!opw fl Ille ... dtlic dome. 111-14 (Cl 7:DO 0 f ,,.., (30) ID Cllllp!l's bllnlll (30) EID Tllt AIMf'lcari ltqr. "Ont Nilhl d ford'• Thlltr1." Dr. Irwin Swerdlow fMl'ft the 1ssmlllltlon of Lincoln II I tr11ed)' in fiYt ltb. cm , .. 1111 s..ci.: fl!.l .... 1J14hu1r. Eridl Lii,,. doff l&tda tht O«fllltra lri a .. thown'1 Symphony No. 2 M D M•· jor, Op. 36; "A.I Quid As" by Colpau; ind Y10lin Concerto kl D M1jor, Op. 77 bJ lr1h1111 with Jo. aph~ SiMnttln, IOlold. lllT ... •hr-• 1•.m m ._ tc> (30) •• .to11"!' u:aoa-......, _ «l (IO) Jerry Ounphy. B Tiii 1111 Mtur 11tn: <C> (30) Gtort• Sklnn1r. e StoN1 " 111. eatwr (30) 0 Nm: (C) (30) Buter Ward. mu.""' <CJ 111-: ............ , , ... 7:30 II trud Prlzl lbclls (C) (30) (dralnl) '48--Vlr&lnl• M"°' INCi O(J7JCI>,_,....., (t) '"""'- 160) ''Time Bomb." Atllmptiq to ll:SO D ~ Cll n. Tfrlllld 1111'1' (C) sl111I I German·dl'llloped compoUnd 8 Ml'lit: "'TM Wllil Heart" (hor• tor 1 sup« bomb, the Gorillas h1vt ror) '52-.ltMll•r Jon11, Hulll Grif· to disarm tn tcliY1ttd lilfll bomb lilh. to r•th their prize. (R) 0 @ Cil "'7 l!Mlp ... (C) fJ Millio11 $ Movie.: ~) ..,. .. hdl 11:4011 lltvle: "'A Uitlll' " 1'1rM To ...... (Wllttm) 61 -Ml'Mf WMI" (dlllftl) '4.....,IUI OoullH, stl'#lrt. ltlchtrd Wldmtt\ Slllrl Ann Sothlr11, Kirt Oo111lu. .ltlnM Jones, Altlf o.lnt, Linde CNUI. Cttln m""' ._ ("1) • @Int ·-""' (R) l~<O" -(C} e> -m"' ,,.. (Cl 12:J0 a...-"'WHAM • ...... &:oa fJ n. 1~1 •-= <Cl (IO) Hrl'Y (lllJll•IJ) •s4 ...... a11b1ra StallWJCk. Dunphy. G.:trp s.ndln. Ciry MerriH. B ROLLER GAME~lve! (C) m"'""" ,_ ""°"' c. .. Jon•," ''Clatnot• Brown," tlld * T·BIRDS vs. NEW YORK U "'"' ._ (CJ (1 ·~ LA Y.8in!1 w. ll.Y. BomblrL m""" (Cl<"> m "fT ,,,,,, ... i "'TI11ru.n ,\ftllld fat.-Tht SinVlwln .. (R) llJU- l:IO D (!l) (I). , ... I ""'' (t) 460) "Tumtboul • Ida lwPino pm .. Dr. Ell ~""· .... entilt bthlnd the IM Cl.ntlta whO DAmME MOVlfS "POSSlllld ... m Actitl ni.tn: """" °' ea. flid." 1., .... (C) ., • ..,. ,,.. TIUI'" (CIOll'lllly) '48-0ennll Mor· Pll. Jtck Canon. ac.••• ......... D-(C) 1:108 .... : """ ........ ('ll'Nttm) '57-sartl I red)', Mill -- U:llD(C) ·-•--'53-Scott lradJ', Joell CrllWford, .. _ ....... 1~10m""' .-( .... ) ... _ ----(-._ .. _ ~IOD<CJ .,._ ~ .. -l:Jte""' - -~ Ill' (drlmt) "55 -"°""' DI Clrto, (hon'or) '55 -l• 81rbr ll• How.rd Duff, • Mantll. 11"1 -I -(-) ..... -... ~ JW' ("'> 'H-lltO'lrilo.(t)-~ ~· (-....> '45 .... lllft. _,...) •• • .... Klftlri. • JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS ~ R&lACfMfHT 'FOR 'l'bJ ~ MT l!IEC.o.use;: THI: FIRST TOWN we HIT HAD t40 PATIEHrsr ' :i~:.;: = i:ac -. '#Milt 'l'Ot.I AAYI YCIUISfLF A ...... IT'S ""°9Ml.'f THf PATT""": NW1Y PEOF'L! IK ~ mwtl5 EITHI!!" ME UNAWAM OF '9"°41.A.Tltt'-· Olt otSl1'USTroL OF IT. GORDO JUDGE PARKER Pl.EASE, 5A.M .. DOMT TELL THE PA.l!:ICE!l5 A&OVT M-IA.T HAP• l'alEP TOWIGHT~ IT5 NOT M'f 9USINl!.5 lO TIU THEM,SNEILA •• t lf'S 'ttlti~ ! MOON MULLINS ' ' fl · II 'I '· • ••• TUMBLEWEEDI. ""'~·­--·-WELL. WIMSLE, YOWE DONE IT il&AIN ! MUTT AND JEFF MISS PEACH . I KlilOW I WA.5 FOOl.15H TO A.«UT l. PINNER C.Tf ~OM Ml!.WIN6A~.UT I PIPt4'T KllOW' HE ,.__,, WA.S IAAttlEP,. . --- ly Cllorles M. Sdilll By Harold Le Don: fT NMI!: octllltir:!P lO MIE, SAM! l 611155 t l'HT M6llMff THAT A. IMUIED !MM WOil.i' NE-VE« A5K A. 61"1. FO« A Ml'S! By Ferd Johnson By Tom K. Ryan DAAN ITl..1 MEW I SHOULD HAV~ USEP 'DESEASE11 ~ . ly Al Smith YOU ~PID MULE, I SAID, UNDERI ly Mel r,.,,,,,, Autu•t •. 1'61 POLITICAL RETORT -Al Lohman, left, and ' Roger Barkley with guest Stan Worth host th•·· 0 1..ohman-Barkley Retort" a satirical look 1 at t1).e • events of the day in the Republican National Coil-• vention . The. special, in color, will follow regular coverage on ChaMel 4 at. approximately 9:30 p.m. tonight through Thursday. TELEVISION VIEWS Convention 'Sluggish' By CYNTHIA LOWRY HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Television techniques may encompass the sprawling activities of a poli- tical co'nvention, but those early Republican ses- sions on Monday, mos Uy ceremonies and speeches, made for sluggish viewing. CBS AND NBC covered the opening day from the first gavel. Since the delegates, milling around the convention floor, paid little or no attention to the stream of speakers during the morning session, it was not surprising that television ignored them thoroughly. CBS's Walter Cronkite and NBC's Chet Hunt- . ley and David Brinkley calmly controlled thina;s from their lofty perches. Top network correspon- dents, looking like grounded astronauts with their power-packed microphones a nd earphones, scurried among the delegations asking leaders over and over who they thought would be the presidential winner ... IT WAS ALL pretty inconclusive since the re- sponses were either sales pitches for one or another candidate or bland expressions of ignorance about trends. As the day wore on, the story was considerably enlivened by Gov. Ronald Re8gan's aMouncement cif candidacy. And the arival ceremonies in Miami Beach for Richard Nixon gave the network• a chanceJo use helicopters to get pictures. THE NIXON DANCING GIRLS, welcoming crowds and balloons also gave CBS's "Eric Sevareid a chance duririg his analysis . to suggest his feelint of weariness about the whole big show. "More arti~ ficial than ever," he said. During the evening sessions, with the networks paying more attention to the speakers, there was more of the usual oratory, but it was sparked con- siderably by the telephoned 8ddress of convalescent Dwight D. Eisenhower from Walter Reed Hospital in Washington. , If TELEVISION is devoting a lot of expeuiv• time to the convention, the presidential hopefuls and the delegates are paying a lot of attentJon to the medium. Just about everyone except Nixon was available for interviews. Generally, the coverage b¥. the veterans of tel.~ vision was smooth. OccasionaIIY the floor reporters had trouble with their electronic equipment. As IM as the convention entertainment was concerned, it may have been great for the hall, but it didn't exact- ly light up the TV sets. CBS ANNOUNCED what has been rumored for so long : Starting in September 11169, it will add Merv Griffin and his~ talk-variety show to its week night schedule. Griffin will start competing, with al· most the exact format, with Johnny Carson on NBC and Joey Bishop on ABC. CBS, despite reports for Several seasons that it wou1d launch a late evening show , held out because repeated surveys indicated its affiliated stations were happy showing old movies. But now, with the supply of old pictures practically exhausted, the net· work has joi.."led the talk paracle. Dennis the Menace • • ' J• OAILY '1LDT Employers Facing Prejudice Checks 87 SYLVIA PORTER No matter bow sttong the Cl•ll Rilhtl lland Of th• Republiean nomitlated for Pttsident this week in Miami (or ol tbe Democrat nominated the last week of August In Cbkago), you, the U.S. employer C()Vered by the Civil JUl)lu Act of 1964, must aoswu tbe.se qu.es· Uons right NOW: Do you b~ve ooe or more Negro vice president.\ or Necroes empleyed at a minimum of UUs level ol. responsibility? Do you regularly give Negro emp1oyes a chance to nu in for absent employes in more challenging j o b categories, thus giving them a form of training leading t() advancement? DO YOU actively recruil at predominantly Negro col· Jeges, state empJ()yment age ncies and other key Negro job sources? Do you accept job ap· pl..icants who are known to have participated in civil disobedience act.ions? Do you make a practice of retesting Negro job ap- plicants who failed your employment tests on tile first try? DO '\'OU regularly ad· · vertise job openings in the classified sectioos or Negro and other minority run publications? If you cannot answer YES to most or all of these ques· tions, you well may be in- villng charges ol racial legal action against you by discrimination leading to legal action against you by the federal and sta1-e agen- cies enf()rcing federal and st~e civil rights Jaws. As !be 1968 election cam· paign gets officially under way in Miami. it is abun· dantly clear that new Civil RiJhts are.as will be ex- plored by both the GOP and O e m o cratic candidates. l'bls is and will be politics of th• highest priority. BUT mis ex:puided ex· ploration is still in the future. The question is are you aware of the areas already explored? Do y()u recognize that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is now shifting locus £rom obvious form1 of deliberate Job discrlmlna· tion to the m()re subtle way1 in wtlich the majority ()( U .S.employers deny Negores and ()ther minorities equal opportunity ln hlrlng, on ·tbe·Job h12lnfng. promotion , employment tests, etc! On July l , coverage ()(the Civil Rights law was ex· tended to all U.S. employers and unions wilb 25 or more employes or members - meaning ab o u t 6,000,IXX! workers are now covered. Here are guidelines. W()rked out by the Research Institute of ,o\.merica, to small and large employers on how to comply with the law during this new , ~oughcr enforcement period: plicnc:its. it's oo longer suf- ln recruiting job ap· plicants. it's no longer suf· ficient merely to keep your doors open to Negroes. Instead. recruit actively at pred()minently Negro col· leges, state employment agencies. other sources of Negro applicants. Don't simply skim off the A stu· dent and degree be.a.ring engineers. Also consider capable B students and others below the top. Tap the Urban League's "Skills Banks" of qual·ified Negroes looking for jobs. IN SCREENING or testing job applicants, make sure your tests screen in rather than screen out Negroes. Avoid making your test or educational re- quirements unnecessarily high. For in stance, a high school diploma should not be a "must" for low-skilled en· try jobs. Advanced verbal skills. which Negroes fre· quently lack, may not be the best measure of an ap· plicanfs ability to perform a low-skilled task. In promoting empl()yes, you will be expected not only to consider qualified Negroes for promotion but ais<l to ()ffer training ()J>- porturutie:; leading out of deadend job6 and toward promotions. Also. keep Negro employes informed of speci~I training programs ·available in the community. how thriftY are you when you borrow money • • . • Southern Calif ornia Thrift & loan specializes in personal, business and Trust Deed loans ••• Stop in today and see how we can solve your imme. diate money problems from depend- able funds avallabte right now The Thrifty way can save you money: SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA THRIFT & LOAN Philco Director Dr. Harold H. Hall ol Santa Ana has: been a~ pointed director of the newly formed Advanc· ed Development Oper- ation at Philco-Ford's Aeronutronic Division in Newport Beach. Dr. H a l l joined Aeronu- tronic as ()ne of its founders in 1956. Gen Tel Still Lags, Says PUC OVER THE COUNTER NASO Llt~"91 fw Moncloy, Autu•I !, 19'1 ... IWAl&llllM l:lt·l NW. lM CllM ~ I .... .. llla. I If .. i. CIMI taa. _,,_ -C- .!'JJ:"l ' !. llll 1lll ·~ -~ ""'' I .! n. ~ 11., t ~ :Aflft!f! "9 ' i~w 1ffs .;~ .f sli .. 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Olamlntl l.tO 2• 43"!0 OJ t:n'o + Vr of service provided by 11;!..ln..-ic,,.~;!.... u"' '1'! 1~ Yu'bc Ar Fr•ltiht ~ 1t1<1 15'.'J 111141m .JOb 14 ,,~, "'" ~ + "oi. ... sir .:io 10 uro u:io. ,.,. -l• 11111-· ...... _.-a :J :fa J v= l;:t.~ J 1t1 '° ~"1~~ ~lZ • • 11e11 How ·'° n nv. n~ 12,,. +n'I g~~-,11 J~ Y~ p,n ~ti~ General Telephone has been iv~::. lllC ~ 6'Mo tlvri~ .t 1'\.'J 17\fo l•Ys ::::.~~«~ 21 _u u~0 uh_; .... OIGior•ki .IO ' 2!~ 2~ 1J\\ + ... . . lVIJW nc " L1J 1Rli lMlo 1 l!Ool ,•,tto ,•~, ,·"o•N <o'•'"P••'lEs 11\io !ltndlJI 1.fG • ~ lJ'll J71'o + ,_. ~!Olnqhm .60 'J 1'I S7\li J7~ -1" 11nprovmg over the last year Cll'lll"lllfi W1r .40 11111 111t'J 1 v. ,,·1N lltllclh •' 3 • :o.r. "~ ~; 01ner1C1 .Mlb 1 •rn. •All '11\ -~-Oovt. Dine .U ~ lS JI* A.mtr ~ Utlh .IS IO'h 11\4 ~ ll•IFlll \.llO lff l'l'loi 40 ... :,.::i\ Olll'llJ .lOb OJ '' '6 41 +Pit and a hail, but by no means ~'\': 1 32 1~ rl ~~=• ll..L" Ln 23 , ~ ,11o NEW vortic IAPI. Mond•v'• compt.t• 11..,uF •IJ.JO 1 n '4 121\:o l'ZH'--t'A ~~ mt ~ ,, 2:,; ~it ~ + t: h hed Olin 9, cl I I I 16'Jo 41 161'1 Qlll1•bl• 5.1.L l ll "'-• 71'1 '"' NIW Yon. Stock l•Cflilno• orktl" ll•nf!F .if.JO , 11111 761'1 76.,, .... ~c;.,ri' ·.., l' 5' Ul'o .w "' as reac an acceptable Ec-J.1c: i;_e:b ·* Jt'h 1 JtV> q11l11b1t 51.l P0r11d ,,. ii\; 211" ~ S.ltt · rrc.i I~":' P11t 1il ll~ ~ ~ ...:-::? on .ihl 2s ,~ 14\.'o 10~ =,. le"el, the stall of ~e 1!~.l~,.!trln ll:W. f2v. 1? Fl"' Fin ol Wiii' H u 10\ll CMl.J Nlfll l..lw c:11 .. c-•. 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Adm.r11 If It 1~ 1""' + ·~ 1•i pfl.40 34 IO J5t'o ,.,., +11/0 01111~11 .50 )I 1~ 2~ 16 + '4 Oeedings O" Ge t' Fl h• •• h, -• ,..... ~·v. ilm Herl Lll• ... 10 II 11111 10h "l'OQUip I SI• 701t. .. Ml'I I'" Sitt I ' 75t~ 25Uo 15¥o + ""OUP1111 ,UI '"° n ...... n +J\,,, nera S fe• Fl:i~er"C'i'tif.i' • -.\(, ~ .t.m NII Int Co .)I ll\lo 12\'t 13',li Ar PrOcl .2Cb l!Jl )t•Jo JM!. :WO,, :j:'l\lo llkMnlh \,601 U '"" ~1 01 -1'4 OuJ'O<it l.SCle 3' I~ 1$.j\'o !SY.lot°" quest tor a tAL' million an-F111e11cr ~unc1 uv. ,.,.,.. 1~ "'°"•u1 '"I CQ 1.:io ~ JO!h 2' Air l,d .,,,_,s 1 11' 11• 114 _1 11oroeft 1.10 1115 ttv. ,.,,,. 29'/o + v. 0\1Pon1 •l•.50 6 1 v. 11 11.,.. 1 ~ 4 Prl)duct• '-111 ·"° ~ f~ 1= 11:.inr:.'~ ,~ s':1v~.rt111 1""°l't. 1~ 1~ ~~·1=L~1~i= ll ff~ ff~ lf"' ·1 v;, Irr~~~~ ':U ~: ~:l ~~ r: = ~ ~~0rl f.'z.50 11 ~m ~"' m: :: nUaJ revenue Increase, Tibor ~';0.,~!t~~VCo i1' tlfl ' 1111 1.ff1 Int Co 1 r l'Y, All Git .,6 12 JI" ll" lf\11 "4 1101 Edit 2.0I 13 Ut'o .. .. -\It II <.lOPt.1.10 1100 Joil'i 3' 3'1'J 1Vi I. Tociauer of the .Com-G11 Servi(~ 1 1~ """ ,,,,.. ~1-•tlltn s11t1 .IO 2l 221'1 Alt>erlo c .20 '' v. l"' J\l:i lo" Me Ct u 2•V. 'll>.1 7l'1 -"' 11 ~.t~.01 rtlO ll'h :u lll'i 11 11 . . , Lo I Gtneril llrew lrta .,. tYo N C:°"' /·50 •! *"" AlcaMlum 1 It 2JYo 2 1' 2l \l.o wrn1 Inc ' 15\'J 2S"'° 25'-' -..., OuQl.I 4"' 2 1210 llVt ll1Ao :U..., lllr mtSSIOn S S Ange es Com· Genet•! Jln11tch CP Ullo lt\o\ 11 A Flr:nc1I w.I. UIJo ~ Alll'OCD .lo. '3 15!4 14\i 11 + lr1n!fAlr .50 t1 22U, llVr 21¥. ..... Oymolnd ,Mii lS 1i>!o 11"" fl:W. .... I t . . . Gt!lle lnd111!1!e1 21\11 21'11 lt\.\o NA F 111nc111 •' ,,~ ,.... ~ Allet1 '°' '° , ¥.' j2 J2\ll -.... lltitt1SI 2.40 I SJV. J3'rlo 53\.\ •• Oyn1 "'" . .io .. 20\,'olt~ 20\/o ~ mun ca IOO'S Sectioo !atd c Ttl ,,., r " 'l '""' 1011 ombl ... u In. .• nv. ld'll ,,,,., Al!e9Lud 2.40 n Vr I'll> .!2 -1' ''lllMY•• I• \U 1• .... nv. 701 + ... E F • G'" • · , 14 16 '!n DM G1111r11 1.l2 11 n n Alle11Lud "' 3 6 ,.,., " 5' + v. I' 11Mv r,11 • Jn'o s1•1t nv. + v. -• -that because of the upward g:'~~~s l'.,c• in• .,. OU<1ior1 1n1 eo et .t.m u u h l':I 1.11eo J>w 110 11 n~~ 22 z:i"" dwY H1 • 1 " 31 3'1.11 ll"'> -Vt E•1l1Pch io it 311\l [ 10\/i +1 •H •••• .. ' 1 ' mp1,.. Genetti 1 '"" n.~ "'l'"lf'ld 1 • .0 » l6"" .. u... t "" ll~l1nUG 1... 11 ,, ... ,,,, 7''1'1 ' EIJI .t.lr i;o 212 11~ :Ill•+ ~ .. I.rend in service quality, Gl•nc01.U."fru,,:'.,n11 l 1 1 l'11mtt1 N..,. wor" JO 44'/t f,,,.. '2 .t.1 reoe~ 1.to •112 ls 3'\'\i 34~• ..., lw" Co .uo n 11 IJV. u + 0o E•H Ci11 ·F ..., Jt lll'o _ ~ h ~r 11 c 2 \IW UI 10., f•rm1 ~,~'!°wt111n i 5ol ,, •• ~,., ~~ltd Ji'.ci,, ', u 3''4 ""' l6 +1 wrie:o 1111.so n :n 21"' n + 1.11 E••15 sn to SI 2•1v. ~ -1'• some p ases ()f service, ':."'.-.. ~~ • •• !",'", " -,"',,,.u'"!.._ -, ~··· '·" 1!" •'" ?l .,~"'r,•"'.,.. 1 ''"' '°"' •I -2 11w11 Sh••• 1 u ,, 21 n•i + -• E111 urn i",. , ~ 21v. ,.,,. + '4 h • """" nd lcle~ Ttcri ,., pl ,.. :12 lf1,~, -· ..., ..... " ,... 1' .iv. n a + ~ l•nSl>o<I 1.a 1 JJ\i. JJ'Ko $.jlti -""i ICOCllk ·u lU 1'¥1 75'4 7n-,, -~ SUC . as lnStAJ.JdU00S a Hllfln< E11tlll Ca ' 6\11 ' l'+rll it..m T fl• Ina .:If lj'.I. !Polo I~ Al fr 40 0 tnO 41\ .42~ + v.1•11n1wlcto; tt1 lS'~ U'-4 15\'• + V. 1lonY1 1"111 :as, 3' J)'~ 34 + 'lj, repair be .deed Huul" "1 -..v. 6J Fil,,.., Lll~ll I'll m Jl.'J ~.·,1~~ ... 60 20 '~ I~ 161'1 -"' lldollcth 1.10 ll 2•'11 ll'Ho 21" ... •!Oro .rf 1t 33 33' J) + .... s, can COrlSI r HI Sllffr ·" ff .56 53 Fr1nl!U11 lit a ,, lfl'I 2' .. I .. r..1 I 161 ?'Ill 21~ h -U.tucYl!:r 1.10 '" 3' ... 21~ '''·~--\EDIKOllMl.2 "Sl~ .50\.\o SI good and that other• have .._., C• I .... 2'\111 ,."" F11nd Amr,. c ... 1.• 45'oli .... 4SWo ~[i ~'~ ,." .,, !fil IW. -"'11..od (I .IO , .. mi ll ll\lo +\lo EO.llllMI .... 1t 11 16"" 17 +·~ -...., Co ,.. 11"-G..,,,.. e ·"' 2 2" ffl :JN • 16\lro + '°' llllllt F Jlf.to 1 l \tt ,,,., IV. . Ecto;udO. .56 o J5 ''" 7"~ -l'o reached acceptab'-levels. HO<.ntCM ""'"" .. ,,,.. H1110Y1r Fir• LJI tiYo "'"' .S\11"' 1 to " 6.,,. "1M! -""lllldl•' r~ .u '' 1sv. i.11o lil'o + l-Eck1roo1 w1 ll ll:i1> ~ ..... + "' F th , ~ . HYJt« I :ill Jt~ ~~ Hlrtlord Flrt l JI Jl\la 31"' !Z:lb:' io40 ~1 Jllio Jl'Ko !11\ -W. lwff For1e I 11 lO'!'i 1'"-JO~ t I.lo Ecllt llro.t .IS J '6'11i d\'o "4 f'" ur er improvement 1s 1ntorm111cs ~ "° · ,. Hcmt ll)IUt1ftOf 1..io !.l\11 54'.r. 51~ · ~ '°"" ~ ..... 11u1""'' .-u JI~ ~ 1114 "EG&Ci .10 01 56 s~ » ,_ I I lid C I I • H JS 1' lS ll\Clep LH1 In& Ami 10 20 ......... K l 1.20 J ~ :U\(o -\'o lunk rt1mo 1'03 11'11 l'l'o IJ'A. ·~lo El•s Stop I 5' """' S6 needed, however, to achieve 1::.t~ ~~fem. m1 31•1< 1~,,. 1n1rt""c.o.1 1.11.. '"' ,,... 111:i """''fr 3 lli ""'rn! ,",• .!~ -~. 11unk1t 11r1.50 ua il Vt .,.,. s1 +2 EtM111ic ·°"' 11: ~ w. " th b . t• th lnrer111tilln•ICIMm1 IO tO io Jlfl•rto11 Stdlllt .IO ~ lt\~ :iw.~'til '.llO 12S •• .,., i_ turllnol 1.4'0 d1 Cl'~ lt 3' -1 EIKI .t.uoc: 17l 20\lo ltv. 4" :.:n~ e 0 1ec 1ves e C()mpany ltll.nlllt !llkt !If '·· ;.o : 1: ~er.I:,!'.'. }ilt~n·r.,. tlv. ~ 1re :;:,f:~··i r ~v."' :in-:1: + ~ =~~i'!!olol'°, ~tl .m: '~ ,~ .... +6"' ~::..1s~,11~' ~ ~t:t tt~ ~ ~ ha~ fset for itself and to 1~rr'oi":' c~~,~ .to J1'1 ™' ~'" ~~ .... c·~1~r,, ·~~ UiV: ~~'": f1111 •mB«•I t. 11 '3h ,1...., 6J"' -t .,.. evshu~v .20r u Jtl.< 2n. 29 + '"' E1P100 G 1 1:11 ••t• ,"' ,,,. i • SatiC y its customers' expec· Jurotns.en Groc: ,2! l'.IV. 3'1?~' "'°"""° lll• J ll"' 3o1 ll\lo Am C1n 1'.20 12f '6h oi6-ft '6fi V. llull.r1Sll .II I ll ml! JJ"' -14 Ellt1 Corr I l5 :It •"'.> ll:wi 'lo tati th talf .d ',t\ Air Fr111"' n n 71 NII Union Flri 2.11 11 l1"6 JI .t.C•n Pll.II s Jl it. lH• ll'.11 + v. -C-Emu illpfl.61 IJ ,,,,.. •lli ,...,.. \'o ons, e s S81 . 1(:1::~ i:::1 DI 1.6' n .... 22* 2•1'• M•/I Wljltl'ft Llh ln1 l"i 10'.~ 1°"" ~,,',"" ... IU 21:\lo ~t.\O JI'" -\t EmtEI Ir .• f ,, ............. -1\lt fo a t l I( a v. 2'11. 2ll\G! M• lonwidt 10 1tm 10 " 1 n 1.611 ro JI~ 37u, )1l'o C1! FlMnl ni U'Ao l\"' n v. + ""lmtrvA r .10 •N M '""' +I ,_ separae repor , K•m111 {~ '" 1,"' """It ~A"ltrLlh C••.l • 11 cm 11n.•me-.ut 1 11~ 11~, 1111o_·,"c11L111Ci• ·'° "'21'1t i~ 21't.-'t. ll'lfr•~, 1.'<t "n:w. 3 37....,-\'o another C 0 M ffi j S S j 0 n I(:~ ~. 'fot . 14\.'o ~\II 4l PK Ilk NII Liit 1014 11 '°"" An'ICrldl! .90 11 Ur. 100 Jf~ + 1\'o C1ll1h M .nt JO tllti .OVi 20\lt -IV. ~OJ!).ft~ 2 ~~\.lo ~ !r'° = : Ktlll!K~ J: led Ch II 72'/o Iii n11i .. IC Slcl Lift I'.~ I"' !"' ACn<Sllt 1.'41 11 '1 J0¥1 ll -V. (1,.,..Rl .U1 211 .12,~ 11 JI -I~ n;tlM 40ll .. • ,,,,_ ·m .,. +>• engineer, S. F. Lucch.i, said Ktnio4 ci,. Fd i:30 Jtll'i ,,.,.. P111t11viv1nl1 Lit• I!\~ •1 'v. it..Cry -' ~.JO LSO 1ov. '""' 10111 -1v.11mpSoua 1 • "' 290:.. :it'lo ··-I · s _,. ICI ll OllN: 1V. I f\li Prcwld-W•1ll I 32 llVr l2 Amc:y1n 1.25 '07 21'1o 2611\ 171t. + Yi dn Ir-.40 16 11 '"" tl'o + 'lo 11!:11~11 ':~il ll20 131'/00~ lN. 31': +'~ the phone company would 1ea: !(!.~.,~:.. ~ .:i~ ..,,, .. 11:'°"1111c N1r 1.111 .is n 1JV• zt\':I .t.mDl1' 1.C11 1 JI"" :itro 36"" _ 11o dll PK 1 10 •111> .ff'lo ii +1v. qu' , ·1 -•. .... ~·• 2 __ • · _...... f fG ,a «iii, Aldlmond Corp ti'.~ Ill '1"7 Am 0\11IVn1 17 llY., IHO ll'4 + ~ On Pfc lft 1 ' .U'A $1'4 S1'4 -S! nc ·-"" -~ ...--{i:. earn a 6.'n percent return ~:n::,, C0111. ·'° II\' lt'f.i ,..,_ st. P1u1 Fa.M 1.11 "'~ lO!? ,, .t.Outl ~.10. lO 13" 1314 1m + v. 11111 rt•nd • ,,~ '1 +''"' El!llllre .10 • 23~ 1:wo 23~ + '-. t t f t t 1(100 o J VIII' ? IJ #YJ •~ o<VJ ~1-c.o Co 1 54 "" SI .t.mEIPI" 1.U 12 :Jll\ia JJ\l:i 37.,.. ''° 1111ten .IO ,.• .·,~ 25,.. 2S'A> __ EEuex W 1 20 'I W/o '8 4 -~ on1nvesmen or nrastate L•w1. c · , 1 , 11emCo•.,...t :111•1, ~ l'll\4 AmEnt1 1.10 110 ::.,111 11 .... -n-. 111c11c1cs1 .... "v' 6f'.1i+1 11111c ... .a JS 31'.c. »~ Jl'4+11o Opera ti th" LJ. ·o A c•Y•u 2) 2j etbolrd Corp J'llo ,_ ' ,1r,m Exp fr>O 11 45{~ f~ ·~ :+:"J 1rbrUfl 140 12 .. ov, u + .... ~lhyl 1'11.«I ' d 41~ ft -'4 . . ons 1S year. con· L•roo~ugin3uir 1,,11111'1 1 ,.., ov•i•lgn Lii• 1,,. 61 ';!,. " •E•lnd l>IA• 1140 IOV. ao•,i, IO\'o + lh 1r1111e . a n 21"' ''"' ,..,., -\~ urolnd .lOfo • 11\f. 11¥0 H'la -.,., Sid g th ff ot r th L Food 16 J? Y'I yro ~LU' Ins t n o .-1>.4 .t.mHali! .10 61 ll\lo I aro Cl.Oh 5 120 11Vo 11'1o 111.'o + \'o Evon1P .«lb 11 l1 l\ .... l 11t + 'fo er1 n e e e () e 1wrv'1 1 • '' ,, 1111 n• Tru1t 1..0. x«i .ov. ..:i•~ • LIA-'·"' 1 ~~ 11 -v. i rt-P\1 1 JI n,, Jt\O Jt 3'.., + ~• everi~1rP 2'l u 10~ 1'\'o + '" I L1vne I. 80 ... 111 ,«I 2s:i; " .-... •• ~ .., 1.1 5tV. lll• jfl/f + \'o 1r~T& it 11'\lo 21 2! "" Exc,uo 1 :io 1' 36'"' :Mio »"• +IVo recent y enacted 10 percent ~~, ,.,G ~i"" ~.,. ~Vt ~~!~ ~~~~'.1!~ 1.... ·~ 23 ~1"" ~~ 1~a11,i.•~~ 131 jli14 :~~ ~:~ +-. c:~.1~~"~!·'f ~ ~ J~? ~r" =>~ ~:~~~~ :ti~ J~ ~~~ !;t iftt ti~ federal surtax. Without the lli'li~'i:11 ~!o .1.w Ht 111'.t'lo ,,, Uft!teu lno Co •m .IO l2 ll0~ 32 Amlnv11 110 22 20\l:i 10yo 10\to + ''.• irrGtft .«It J 11 :m"t JT + v. F•lrHlll ,is. \~ 15\'i u :w. ,.,,. _ \i t th I tr lollOl Orvo Stor1 ff 31' ~P}J :19 Unltfd Trllll Liff t'O '" t\l:i AmMFy ff 225 10\ro lt/o It!\+ .... trltrW ..... ~ ISV. UU, H'I .+ U, F1lrmonl 1 •w 22'1, 71 7l'"' ... sur ax, e n astate return 1. s s'"'i · n 11 ul [kl G111• 1..0 6l.,. .. ,,~ 6l'"' AMtt cl ·1.t0 J! .Oh °"' ~ -"" 1M JI 1• IS¥. 1s 1sn . Fftls11tt .4'0 so u~ IJ~ 11111 -'4 ·-uldha be 7(11 M1cr0cl'l1111 UV.261'>2' U lft .. 411 31'4 .. )i AmMolort Sl212\lo11Yol11'1+~1,1111COllk1 114''4'5 "+1 F1mF ln 1.lO 7t711'112J¥12'11'l +'ll .. v ve en . per-M~nl•'fll(.·MO'lllOll 11 ~1:.... l'I"" \lolklWPCJlll 1111 IV. ~ .,,.. AtnNttG•t I 2' Jt'• JN lfl'o + 'II! f~YV FINAL STOX 11 lbyl F•M!HI ltw; :JJ XIV. 31 30'.I! + v. cent. The sbaff has previous· M.,1 1.1."",....!"•:r.;:~' , ., •• , !"' r 1.20 w 37~ ~ 37 ·-··· F1r wn1 Fl" •1 ''* 20'Jlo 11¥1 t • ...... "'" Cl ... I Mlrlldl 1n I~ 15'-UV. + v. F•r•hMfl .ao • d"' 'j\li UV. Vr Jy recommended UJe cotn• Ml1111!!Clll SKurltles 27 21\'t f1 1 I M 1!11.25 ' 5' 4 JI l'ol fl"~en .«I '3 lWt 3'\l:i 37~ . ". MMr1o11-tfol $IMtpptt ;!,. ~ 2'V. tcO Cp .IO ,, 2'"'° 21\lt 2't Vo "'° l'"edlt.oe 1.IO 21 32\'t 321t. 32.., pany be allowed an in-McLqn 111c1 • .--. ... .--. ... 2Mi M al •'-""'eC, 1 J.11 s1\lt nv. JIV. -\/i FedP1c Elec 2l 13 'llVt n'll -111 tr ta! t , M1tdllnti FM Lint 1 24Vr2S\ll 2•\l:i tu F d Cet.n gfA•.50 1 U'Wo 6t\li '~ +l'A F Pie .tl 26 I ,.,,. 1'1~ 2A . a s e re Urn r .8 n g Jn g M!Ol1M CtPllll .)0 15 15\1. IS u un s COMO In• .JO J7 '4 Q <IV. -'-Ft<IP&Pld I 1 1J:W. 'HV. 2~ + \Ii from 6.9 percent tO 7.2 per· ~~.,~'~-IV1 .'4 ~~ ~ m~ ~:~F·cl~lr :=.. J ;ro w~ g~'o -t'.1~ ~=OIJ~ ·~~ 7; : ..... ~~:! fo:Z = tt cent. MOMA~~~.!I!."_,',.-, '"' ,,., 21,, 1~" Hwo 1... 22 21 -m... 11 + -. F-rro CP 1.10 11 :it'li 111~ ll'li +1~;, .,. .. _ ..... _ ~· •nllllll 1,7• 1a :16'~ 21 21 -... Flbr CP I «I II Sl S1V. " ..... I th" d t h Mu•l>l'lv Pac M1• .50 47'1i 2Jv. 11"-~ ~"h'h· 'e'Q'N~-1111.1 114•.SO rtO 12,,., 11v. 12Vi +1 Fll'l•"IM i :io , l!l'o JS :lS\11 ±" n a Ir repor . anot er NlllOllll svsiemt ti ,• ,1: ------itnlllPS 1.11 11 ll'• 12tt 21 .. -"' FIUrol 1 .ci' » 11v. 10>< JI ,_ staff engineer, V. Cassmao, .~.!~•,,•,•,Ar_c_us,.,1e1 2 !>!!MPw r.oe • u: .. n~ ,~ ·· F111 F~r11n 61 ,..,. "''• 79\lo +n. ,..,.,..., -11'h 1' l)r.r ,lr,ytS Otc1tlnc\1221S5 Stied t.•l lOttPtn"Sll 111 111 tnlSW l.n 2'Uh ff'~ .. u, Fl<-•lnt l ~ l1'SIV.5!'0 Sl'll.0.\1 said if General u s e d .,.,.f_llCI i:,1.,,,• ,'.·11 2~ 2'6•4 ....... MEW YOrtK /AP) Otlil Fd 16.0S 17.$.j V11 P1v I.It t P• Ml!! ,, "19" !1111 Sov1 I • lll 1'0 lt\lt ltV. -"' F1tc~rt I'" 1' l• -l'11't 34 ... I•• lcl'lv< .--ll\'I • lf\11 -Tl'lt tvrlowl"' -Olt Tien II 2.1 It CJO Inv llt!~ 1.1• • 1 Pf'lll1 Fcl u."1J 1''.ll uro J,60tl M •)Iii 0,,.. ~ -V. F1t Mil S1t• II l:IV. l'l :n -1•; liberalized depreciation in ~:,"1,'!!, A.,~,.·1~ J:I XI :n , i.tic.u. ::::I''"' .., §E:v·Gr 10 '' w.oe 1s1 Gwlh s 10 i.n l"li•r!m 10 u 11 •~ ul·ttto IO 1si 7' 21\lo 2' +1" Fltd'obch 1 lO .. " ~ ~H• + ,, prepc.l.ng its income tax No c";i.1"..,1/'Unlh m f,! f:\Z ~rillf'N•!~s.c~'lr~ l:~"Shr 11.~ 1~:n l~':t PF~ "•'.!. H·~: ;1:: SI 1':1\ it:{ :~~:i "1':. J ni;t n:: ii"' ~2~ ~:~~~~ i:" l~ ~ .... 1:"" ~~ ~ ~ ~ •t NMIT!"'°'st G11 .JO 11>.i 1214 l,<,~ DtllerJ. 1111:, Ill TMn I.JO l,t7 IV~ Fd 2$.42 ?S.62 Pl-r U111v1U Ft 511 .acr 1l f.•t. l·~'o IH~ .. Fllnt pi.t.'.Jf iUD '1 It'"' tl +l'' TC'l.UrD&, J WOU)d average an ~1a111rlum Inc: .4 I HV. 12\'t " 1'111 .,kn 11 ""'ldl Dre~•I 17 'J 17 61 JOhlllln 21 ,t• tit• Pl111 Inv 1l ii 1~., hlolltrn Goth 2'Cl:I U\t I• Ul.'J +Pio Fl1 E C1111t t 1C1 """ lt<olt + 1 .. ~1 • lea Co 1•¥< ?51'J ',!.'!•~ 1f'Clltllle11rnfu1 1442U,t'icevtl-FUlldi '•k•Tlt 1'U~~ih•""'S 1.211 •1 2111< "'" 21v."''"F11 G11 «1 1s 1• ,~"' lt + • .annl.llQJ. saving of as much as '"°" Mt111 .ans 1m 11 ... '°"' t11w lltllfl 1t11 11,1 11 JS ii;n cw 111 :r1 "22 ., Provt0n• 5 • hmoNll 1 60 01 .. .,.,, '!"' .,...... + ~ Fii Pow i ·~ 1o .,..., ., 11,~ _ ~ S7 2 .11. . th NllCO Corp U 1 l•V. t Cb1cl) or bol/tl'll 1lft Ciln 11 fj 12.'2 Cus 111 H 6' ai1' 1"11rtl1n 10 11 h11t8k 2.'41 If 71 1 II> 16 -1 Fl&Pwll f'6 (I 6tli 61•• '~ + _.. . ml !On In revenue. US Pab1t It ..... 15 IO tt\lt Ill jtll<l'cll Mlll'ldtl: 1111 Sol U,I II... C111 ll' IO'lt 1111 PUIN!T> Fuf'ld1 i~ICker Mot I ll'lo 11 ... ll:W. -\lo Fl1 Slotl "to 11 11\'J 17¥. 11"' I\ loweringthea t 1 .... '•c il uto Pt'lld 1 ?...,1,~1lv.'"'""" JI 3.111111ns1k1' . .,1l'1 ~u•KI •n ioo1 ~<Wlt l•.11ou.•~em11n l,1C1 N •I 11 '1 -'t.FluorCor• s•!Cl"•\'oM~-+ ... moun () 1.:ue Pi t ~ledrkotO ·1:1 ...... ! .. "rl• Fd I u ')( bets! U,2' IS •J UI Ill i 1• 1'10 _, IS.•• 11.G hemw ... JO ,, !dlo ·~ IA\ + ~ Fl¥ Tl9tr 10 •s "~ ,1~ ,,,,., -'to increase it has requested. •,,", 0•,•.•..,•~'.~~"'.•, 1.40 --A 1 Fd '·" T n m•I Gr 1s 14 1' "' us 51 22 ·14 1• t:z n~ 1J.» u 5' h11 otiio • 1l '' "'"' "'" -v. FMCc '' M l' 31..,, ,, ... ...... \( " Ul'I Alilm.r 1.1 H l'letlY U4UCI 11151 lll~1 1',5 lntom ti? ttJ ~ttebro'" 1S (\It •0"'4 ""'+'-FOlldFal 't<t ...... "" ,,, In his service report, ',!!' ~ .. -o'•• ·,~.,.· ""n »,, .. ~,.~ AllKI D •. '" 1111tt, '"• ,,t.~ 1,•, » us " 10 lJ 11 l tnvt'I 1-'' 'm hlcE11t !II ll ,, .... ,,,,0 Ith ... Fool• 1c'I .• ~ tr' n~ ~:. ::t ·~ • 11~ ., Am lul J, 3~ E•11 f F .. It 111 S. I i1 I 'l::I Vl11• 12 ti \4, 14 hlMll $IP P 11 S..'IO U\li ~llo +I F~M ?j Toczauer pinpointed six of ,", • ..';•,•, Lw.,.",',' .!? 1,~. ,. .... Am OIVI~ 11 12 1•1111 Giii 1,•,·•,, N,, 3' '"' Fd UMV•!l ,Rep T1ch 5.U ,,..., hMSl"I' •• j , t2 •1'1'1 12 ' ,. l'ool M p.,,;, I~ u"' ~ ~ -'lo """ ..,.,, ..... ~ Am Grlh a I· ver11 !n 2'l ..,.,. 1112 1111 hJ Muire I l:I 21 25\lo ?l 12 · + v, th e --mpany' d1·vi· . Pflr1lvltw Gtm )I )I 10 Am In ., I· . ~~lo• ,, 10 79"' l(nlckb 113 I 5' Scvcldtr F11r>dJ : ~ Pnll.I I ICI n JI~ )Oto 31~ ,_. FordMol 7 .. 0 1·~ ~ lll "°"' + ,,.,, . "" 5 sions,,.&UltVP•lrolllllrn 2+1,11 26\62'1 .t.mMlll 17J1111 •lrfcl 1•2S1SJ6K""c-Glh l17'1.t~ l•I 11511oth'RIP1c 12H•2• 1f't. .... ForMclC .lj ll!W .. 1'!11t71""+~ which for 1967 and the first p,111i:ior. Mulll-... ,'O 1'V. :JO 2'\lo •m P•< Un1vill Frm llMu 12.M12 M LtJ:lnlll IG6'll. Cll"I\ St 11 !"N t1k!Pc1 UP ' UV. 2~ , • ..: .... FMcl( PIT.JO 6 .,.,., ff ~ .. :....,·· PlonNI N Gu .IO 24\1> ~~ 14.V. Anch (IP t.~ 10 5t Fl!'d Grtt'I 14.0' 17.53 Lel Asch U.jt 11 l~tl l"v U U 1~ hJllP ltNW 1• :UV. ~n' 2Hlo 'i'I FCStWhl ,60b 1lJ Jl'4 ~ ...,.,. f()ur months of this year l"ubco Petroleum .11 Ullo l.M 1~ .t.1H Fd 1..:i 1 n Fkf Cj..,. U.ff 15. 10 Ljblrtv 1 1 J _. s11 " 10 a .10 111Tr111 , , • 4,.,. ..sv. 'j'"' _ "" F'ost w~ "' I u nto 3i"' ~ -.+:iti, Co"sl·stently felt below the ,'",.',.'",!!.,"'M .tO "''" 111\lt ,., A•• HO\J""kln Fkf , ur>d 2.",•,.11 bt! ~·~: : •" ,.u,, swc Iv I•" /'·,. llPl;•Full 60 u i•\• 11 1 y, + '" ~o·~,, .•,, ~!?5 «11, ,_, " ~ '/" J\6 Fund A I Jt t JI Fkf rf'ld P " "' • ~ec •wit 11" • 3l hrltCr111 11 1'0 Jt\'li lS~ :lSto + YI .-ri.... · 70 .... 1..., -·~ , . "ev•ll Inc l>Ao 1Vo F11ncl t 11OS11 01 Ffllll'lt:lill Proq11m loomt S1y1e1 Fdt. K Inv 1,1, 6.N Cit cvttl.'41 , l•'n l4ffo lf\l _ V. Fr!~~~ul 1..40 1'1 11\1 «I',., 411-fo +l':t COmpanyS()WnsetVlCeOb·A~NrdfOl'l .111 32 l2'\lo32 jlllCk 111.'2 O~nm J.1•7.t2 S~necl Jl ... l1ti 1.c.t.mll531!• C!tprltl 1 110 20 10 ~ruthC•1.ID tSJtO.\lA*'+'• J·ec1· '··ed . d llo-«1111 MIQ .IS n"" u..., 16 cl Ct q t.:GI 1ncom ''° 7.U M'PI' li"'o• it t• rl'lolcl u'ooljlll ~rom•ll 60 o "' ~ " :.:·-i-i Fu-Ind .• :lS J7.._ JI'• 11'4 -" · IVe!f uo::i On .an In ex Aoberlt Cllf'ltol .611 ~ llV. 101~ it':'lll4 i\,~ 1~ U F::t'"t~ l·: i:·n Ma~i'1n \o·. !t t ::";~•Iii \~.ij la :1 rriXsltr 2 3t1 61'.'I 60'lll II" +2 -G-that considers the number ~::~~'fn~1~!.IC n~ 1:"'1 fl'~ onot11• 1.ll 1 ff Fst l~tk 1115 12.:12 :•n ~~g \l ~1 li'·~ Sovtr tnv 15 J1 l'lJ lnGiG~,j·}f 12:J r. n:w. r. ···• G,1r,c C• l,olll 11.l .,.,, 11'4. •'4> -l'·lo of complaints. The six 1os1 Fd 1,tl ' " F .. r C•• 1t.SI . . M:~~ Ti ,661 1 ·,5 st Frm 1n E ,; , 1120 "" .,.,.. .a1o1o • +v. G•C C• 111 ,..• .!..~ 32'!\ JN I ~ l rotd St U.11 16 JJ Fiii Fd l,fO Ml r • S Glh J,fS J, !TF 11 I Id 105 .:i (1'16 Q:W. \It GAF Corp .. ,,_. 71 "''-" l't divisions are Lancaster, "'~ r,1,1111F1• c111 1.~,•u 111 :~. ~-~" 111111s1 si.10!.l 1TF llf5,l' 2111 iot 111 +J GAF 1>11.io 21 Jl'.lilll''-'I v. ~In tn •.42 1110 Fllcl LI I it 10 ~lhlr tt:oll ··~ ltlll!M!I I',.. lilts Swt J:ttl SS $4 $.j"° .+ 111 Gltm ~o 1 30 ! fl"° :tl\lo -,,,. "> Palm Springs, Redlands, '" " 1111 1t.61F°"~" 1u '·:!! M,-" ,, ,, A~.!11111•oo u.lll 11v1nv >Ob 11• o:w; 41Yt .,.,., llt Goms .n.h JCF,; lltVr :iov.-"" . . 1•11 inc •.CM tt1 F-n 11•21•-......, J l F:r.;;-1.n •J\ 11vs1 ~ • m 221t -G1ms .tl «i 11 1t n Marina, Santa Monica. and objective. half the time dur-:)t /:: 1~ M ,t·f: Fc•.:11~if11~1e1,:. 1 ,1 ~ M('! 1~·ll5 ,, 1 5,:f .... '"'~ ! 111111 E~ '1.10 is -~ ~ Ps~ :!:1 ~ G•• wooa· 1 •·~ 1~ 111:? :-'' East Leng Be.ach. ing an eight-month sample G F~ 1o:Oo11UJ ~ 132\\ 1;':' ""-'' "" 1• 15 ,, e:1 .. Hs'.01 n·~i ~~u~11,:: ~ ~Yo n" nl'o + ~ G:;~~ .~Ou 2r :..: ~ .... ;·:~ -.'4 Numerous service oHices . . ~;1~,:"'F1'f1;14 ,. ~:"" 1.39 1.1~~,1:;hF"'111t.1ljl fntodlr ,1J ·~11 g: 1tv uu i n ,. 3'10 xv.~+"' rn1n1 C•• f"I 13\\ 11 .... •J\lo-"'- penod raJ1g1ng from 1966 to Corn 5111 j " 1:;1 F11N "'" 11,1' 11., tllClll"I • 1' . !"' Im< IJ.2't ll.J1 ~: ~11u~r"; ~ll: ~~ ~ ~~ +1 It eml~:.: -~ 1: u~ Utt II"' + '"' during the first four months t9fl8 Grw111 1 .. ,, ~ l'lllMI •~., 11..u l2 •J 111111• J.ts t. 1 "" •nG111 1.3:1 1.o:i 11.,1,, 2 11 11 "~ 7t ,..,., + 1tm0n a, .,. osv. u111 ~"' --~ Of 1968 fell Short Or the COm. , l!lam I 1l t. Git! tn""I 7 .... ,!·!? MIF Fd lt# ?1.J• lTtKIN:rt lJ."3 14,ft ttvitl pf2 M , llV. IO-.., .... l'I it.. T<tn "1 jS ''' _,. •'L \lro +l~ SHC\11 ) 61 4 ~ ~ I?. ._.. MIF Gtl'I I 2l I 74 l<l'IMt •.11 10.1~ .. -1"' 0 -..,,. "" ~ -It> • ob · ti' Th t G l · !hi Fl "•210ol.Jt Glllf•I , ltf1 12 tl Mf/f $11r1 10 01 )0 •I ..,. GI 11 n 20 n fora~ 1S. ,?! 1'~• 21\i JI'-t \'I er. inc ·• 11 u1, llllo 1ni. -,,., pany s Jee ve to pro-e repor says enera is hi1t l'o "1, u.j Gr11.ra "'· · M1ii trusr 1.,, 1:,, Tt••• Fd 11.u ll IM 1ut11P11 • ... l-IU. 3' 3o11,11 "" ~ c1b11 1.)0 10. 3A'i :u Jl'l'o + ,... ·d l If ' ·· · l\tt!IFdll"to .t.1ro $c1tll111J ~tWSec1olll jll'~G•jto'Cl 'u1t1PPll ll211.,,2211o2J\li ""~Clt l.20 7 )1:.,.31 l1""-~ VJ ea eve o service which meeting, or 1s close to r1tc11• 3,,. Ji Ctl!f\5, u.n 111~ 11 111c1 1 ·u 1:1, T 111e :i• in 1111G1 sin u " 5'\'J" nO.v11 1'1 •I >no :ro1\ JI t • Ill pt th . . , . OIOlllll : Fut "' ' t.lt l '1 It ll!Vesl 1 ft ..... U~ II 11.• 11 b JI Gt If\ lt :16 llV. JI ll -V. nDJn1m 1 H 50'~ ....... ~ a.., w prom no m()re an meeting, its obJective ()( E<lull'I' ,, .. 6 n Grtto 11111 llJt n.2' , Ste s.er un11et1 l'llnd1: c~I 1.11 132 1011:i •• " -111\ •n l!:ttc J . .e ~1• ••Vi 1,.....,,.. 1 .... six complaints 100 · Fund u n115G .. 11dll os~.o· 111n ll MlllO A<em !'''" oc1111 ,,. 2•" 'H'lo ~+:w,GtnF1r1 .IO 1~ 1i'l'o 11 _...._ per main repairing 95 percent of out· 0 ..... 111 , . ., · 1-11m ilcll s" ..:11 ~ 1.20 '·ff ll'l(om 1 ·°' ''"' °"' '"' 1 '° 15 ., .. .,... "'"" -,, •11 Fo1 1.ci 11-. 11\0 11 _.,. telephone stations per cwns1 Id s.• s H•111...., 1.•J '·'~ v!d J.29 l· klllfl ·~ 10.1, o11111.t.111 1.10 11 :isv. :is l! -"' .., Ho.1 Ji• 1tt1 21t; ,.... +J'• of·service conditions with.to CorT1"*1Wllh Fd1 ; Hnwl 11.IS 1• 51 Siii I.II "ff UnFo C1" "IVl!I '••'",'.~11 ,,IO ~ .s.,,:':. ¥."'• i4"'1 ••. , '",~,' '•"'> UM -U1' -~· + .... month. Among them are San C•• Fii 11.s,n.~ Htc1" Fc1 u:n 1i.o-1-'ft ., 1111111 1.1111 uncr~. ,. •'" •. ~, " .... _,.. J.il'l'o -~ er. 111,,•, J 1"" s1 s1 _ v. tw h b · ti lfl(W'll l.'312.0JHMlllll 1'.111,.11 Stock t. It. V1!Lln t.Jtll. °' ''° Si M i""Gt~M I ,IO 1'1 J1~ l6.'t Jt +1r.. F'ernand(), Delta ( n ear o ours on us1ness nes nv1ti 10 . ., 11.M H11b• F' 11.01 Grwth 11. ''·J 1ncom ,.j, 1. 011 11111 ,..,,. • •f!o t1•6 ,,,, 111o CMl1li JtllJi 1 '' " u S.cramento). l 'emet, Indio, d ·th· 1 h Sfllck 10.n 11.11 lrr>a C• • 10.tf 1i.1o1 Na1 west t. 1 •· ' s111 s11 t JO 10 l"s ••, .. .ii.to .~' • ... •, "" lQI GlllMot .~" ,., 1'!\ ""' "'4 .:..:. \'Ii a an WJ 1n our ours on w"h •tll 1 ,. ,. 1mo Gltl 1 •s t.e NE• Mii• n.n 11.il """ f·€ 5. · SI' •• • -4' • Mot _. J n llDllo " -. + "' P l S I ts P ' wHh ( 0 1,t2 .0) Inc Ff'ld 1:1.t2 11:n N111wr11o 11 •1 M. y,,, lndPI . ' 1· PIYG I 1.$2 -~ :Ill-''"" .. c; Mel 11n.1J • ,, .. •1'4 "\'o -... a m pr n , err 1 s , residential lines. These ob-°'""'I l· " 1J 11K Fde 1.01 ·" Ntw En• 11.11 11. v1k1n1 . 1uP 1 .JDtl lit, ~ J8 + 1' ~•!'#Cell\ ,l!O 160 1t11i " "'' + " M · S ta M · W t omo c1 1 .'11 . \nOIPf'lcl 11.111t.N Ntw Hor :it.ll 1'1. w111s 1" o c n OI ,ii ,•, ~ ov. Cl"' -* l'ubvt 1..,. 1n 71,,. '™ .,. anna. an oruca , es i·ei:Uves, the staff said, are Cll'llo c111.•21 . 11c1'fr•P111 11.1•11.1iNewWkl "·"''J·••W1lhMu u ·1s1•: "t• ~:w. .. ,,. ""'-" ""PubU111 .,,, '• 1 ... 'l!.+i4t .l,()s AnaeJes and downt·own ~'I' 't"l'a!""F111111 1• 1.1 ~ u.111 .ffweu"' 11.s 1,. -1>11.10 ,.', .,..., •1 .i t"iG"" r:t••11c1 1• ,,,~ 16 "'i4ot• ' "hi h d th f U -11w 1 .12 j. 111111 snc s.ts 6.50 -•11 u ff 1 . w_,1 1no1 t. l •.t4 •• ''ii! -.,:w. st !'' l'-" Gen 1ltr 1,)1 4 ,. •"' .!II Long Beach. Overall, tlle g .an ere ore mee og -1nv .40 . ,.., coA'" 1•.u 1'.1111 ••h '·" 10.6t w111 Fc1 u,2 u. r ot•. ru11 11.,. 10 i-. ~I"' s141 pf • 1 " "' "' 1 .i. tt\em a ssures satisfactory :;: ·~~' n:ult:u'"1~:,!'1~ llttltY I ~ ri~1ft~ =~.~'!" 11~01 11:t :::~0::.r·.10 tt l!~ ~ ~~ ~."' T~~~7',1.·" ,, """ H ;:..., +'·• C()mmisslon sta!f said, the 111rv P ,! 'I· .,....,, Grwo: ~ wms ''·"'f·'' wnc1•r "~ '· ri .• 1mt A s i1'14 " J111t t' 1•1E1 ti2to 11 ; 11 ~"' 11 +'"" -~=====================~;~!Jc~o~mpany failed to meet its performance in this field " row" . . Miit 11 nn.1• '•II• u;a, .n w1111111c1 ,., 'l·" ..,wo .M i: i•r. ,." '"" · •!F .,,,,, n• :t ;;," ... ,, ... , ' cltVt ... M72.1'7l.7' SNek 11.nl:J . .O ""'"'I.IN ,,05WK"" 7 .. 5' tm11I 111,1. JO\I. ~~ I ClnMH11,;.,_ 1n Jilt lS•• rN +Mt, l 70 [as! l 7!h St., Cosh Mtsa , ••. , 646·5015 6359 Wllsh1rt BIYd,1 loJ An1t11s ••• 65l8220 5.13 "-~m~'"!, .. • Sei!IJI ... , ..., .. ........ ..,.,., 5• ........ $1,m hddJ•3• MUTU ASSETS OVER $425,000,000.DO INGS • ' OTHER B1'ANCH °"1CES w..t Areetdla -Covlt'lfl Gl•nd•I• • • ., 1111 .... JI! If .., -111 .... .......... • • • . .. 1:1111 ...... ~,.. ~If ........ • Aliy111l 1968 DAILY PD.OT JJ Monday's Closing Pric.es ~ Complete York . Stock E~change List • '· I • I! OAllV 'llOT T~. A11911st 6, 1968 QUEENIE .By Phil lnterlandf GOP • Ill ·'68: Plenty of No. 2 PrQspects j ! • J : J 0 · ~e're going to h&ve to stop meeting like th.is. l ·think Mr. O'Grady is getting suspicious." For the Births ST. JOSE"M MOS,.ITAL July :tt. IHI Mr. •nd M". Al"" J. Sd!wN!ti.. :nn Pierce AYe,, CDlta Mesa. l'Wln 1lrla JUIY 22 Mr. ind Mrs. KeYln P1rrnen"9r, 1&615 ceoar Circle, Fount•ln V1Unr, girl. Jury 2J Mr. 1nol Mr!, P1ul C, Mld'otls, 4161 S1ntet ,t..ye., Westminster, 8oy. LONG IUCH COMMUHITY HOSPITAL July :u Nr. and Mrs. Rob9r'I E. '°'""' l fJOl 1Mun1i une, Hunllnqlon llekl'I. 1lrl. Jutr 21 Mr . -M". Robert W, l rlec, 1112 Humm!ntblrd />.Ye~ fGUnll lll Vtlley, 1irl. Divorces Record f OU" ... O!ll'ICIUC;tN MOnllYI I fl« Fr'dlYI for Ktlool CIUHI of flttfll 1r• '"'I 1nc1 1boY1 or o!Mf or-N nlr1tioru of -1 ltu l th1I • P ~l'-~nltrnted 11rauClf "''' c1n Mr. ll1g1 •I ti. DAILY PILOT, Men • ID Service Pvt. Louis B. Dorlm ... US Anny. son or Mr. and Mrs. Louis Dorfman, 1614 Warwick Lane, N.?wport Beach, has completed a basic field artillery course at Ft. Sill, Calif. He received specialized training in the operation and maintenance of 105 mm and 155 mm towed howitzers, and the M-79 gr e n a de launcher and 3.5·inch rocket launcher. Pfc. Toby R. Cauble. 21 , s<>n of Mr. and Mrs. Andy D. Cauble. 125 Wave, Laguna Beach, has been assigned as a rifleman in the 9th Infan- try Division, Vietnam. Pfc. J ohn 8. Hughes, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde 0. Hughes, 2814 Portola Drive, Costa Mesa, has been assigned to the 1st Air Cavalry Division. Vietnam. . ' --- Marine R e s er v c s at- tending summer maneuvers include Sgt. D. T. Clements, 515 Poinsettia, Corona de! l\1ar, and from Costa Mesa, Maj. R. L. A1oe llcr, 1781 Bahama Place; Pfc. G. t~. Gray Jr., 1913 Orange, Pfc. C. \V. Kirkpatrick, 2117 Elden and Pfc. K. E. Lon g, 438 Broadway. Others from New po rt Beach include Capt. J. P. Casey of 336 Cataline Drive and Cpl. J ames n. Glaves of 851 Domingo Dr. From Fountain Vallt>y is Lance Cpl. F. l\f. l\ta hony of 18525 Lime Circle. 11 u n ti n gt on Beach Rcscr,•es attending the sun1- mcr maneuvers i n c J u d c '111aj. C. Castillo of 16582 Lucia Lane: Ca pt. P. C. Greer of 10121 Forrestal Driv e; Cpl. N, A. \Vymaster, 14911 Sa bre Lane; Pfc. B. A. Leath, 1607'2 Sprigdale. Laguna Beach l\1 a r i n e reserves are Capt. It. .I. Nlppoll of 359 !\1a gnolla Drive: Capt. .J. A. Hcc hl ol of 6 Blue L.agoon: Capt. T. \\'.Green of 464 11igJ. Drive; Ca pt. R. T. Llnnlnizer Jr .. 1341 Glenneyre o11nd Capt. n. l\f. Willams, 1036 Oye r Pla-:e. Lt. \Varren Zltlau, son of Mr. and Mrs. OJ·\'ell P. Zitlau, 1706 Pine St., Jlunt- fngton B e a c h . has graduated from Lackland AFB, Tex. Jl c is o:i MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -and Claude R. Kirk, Jr., The list of Rep u b 1,1 can Florida. hopefuls for the v l c e To that last must be added presidel'ltial nomination is the names of two who are as long as the Line outside a contenders for top place on ood rod • f!i the ticket -Nelson A. Jlollyw p ucer s· 0 ce i Rockefeller of New York on casting day. and Ronald Reagan of There are 26 G O P · Calliorqia. Bo.th say they do governors. an~ just about not want second place and every one can be considered Rockefeller i n s l s t s he wouldn 't take it. a possibility· Some seem But history and t h e better prospects t han surprise developments of others, of course. this topsy turvy political~ The governors most often year caution against ruling mentioned as vice presidcn-them out tial possibilities include: OTHER NAJ\IES Tom McCall. 0 r e g o n : Outside the field o f D a n i e I J · E v a n s • Republic~n governors the \Yashington: John A. Volpe, list of vice presidential Massachusetts; Spiro T. possibilities is hea,ded by Agnew, Maryland: Geor ge Sens. Charles A, Percy of 11- Romn.ey, Michigan: James linois, Mark O. Hatfield of A. Rhodes, Ohio; Raymond Oregon and Edwa rd w. P, Shafer, Pennsylvania; Brooke of Massachusetts, ABC's Lawrence Hospitalized MIAM I BEACH (UPI) - \Villia m H. L awrence , political editor of the American Broadcasting Co. and familiar f}gure to television audiences for the past seven years, suffered a relapse from a recent illness at Republican Convention Hall Monday night and was hospitalized. Mexico Student Strike Looms and Mayor J ohn V. Lindsay of New York City. All four are young, pro- gressive, have appeal to urban areas where the elec· tion will be decided, and at times have been dovish on Vietnam, with ti a t fi e Id possibly the most dovish of the four. Mayor Lindsay is deficient in o n e ticket-balancing respect -geography -if the No. 1 spot goes to Nixon or Rockefeller, both of SHARP 'If yo11'r• • 1htrp tr1dtr, u1• th1 DAILY PILOT'S ftmou1 Oim•·A-Litit cltnifl1d 1d1 Stt· 11rdty1. Mtk• 1 b1tt1r d11I ••• wh1th1r yow 'r• b11yi119 or 1•1lin9. whom are legal resident& of Negro In the U. S. Senate 1968. strategy In the race tor the New Yort State. and could help the party get Bo t h Nixon an d number one spot. The constitution says a votes in any area where the Rockefeller, and their aides Past history suggests that presidential elector cannot GOP admittedly ls weak. have encouraged wide open no firm commitments have vote for both a president Some Republican politicians speculation about t b e i r yet been made to anyone, and a vice president from say a GOP candidate mwt choice o! a running mate, and it ts altogether likely hls own state. Thus a Nixon· carry from 5 to 10 percent pointedly raising s o me that no fin al decisions wlll • Lindsay ticket, for example, more Negro \'Otes than hopes and dlsoouraging no be m ade unW the con- .by Strict interpretation of normal U it hopes to win in one. That's a time-tested venUon. the Constitution, w o u 1 dlF=============:;=::=::::::=======:!::;=====; forfeit the electoral votes of New York for the No. 2 spot. WAY OUT Some legal experts think a way out could be found by having orie or the other change his legal residence after the November ,1ection and betore the elPCtoral col- lege votes in December. The question would then arise, however, whether t h a t might be considered playing hanky-panky with the Con- stitution. Brooke has one special ad· vantage. He is the ool LBJ Undergoes Physical Check SAN ANTON IO. T ex . {UPI ) -P resident J ohnson enters Brooke Army Medical Center t.JCl.ay for an annual physical examination. Ac- companying the President will bEl Mrs. J ohnson, who also will undergo a physical checkup. White House p r e s s secretary George Christian, in ann o un ci n g the Pre s id e n t's medical checkup , said a s far as he knew J ohnson's health was ''normal." IF IT GOES HM-M-M-M, IT'S AN ACCUTRON The mainspring, balance wheel, and hairspring In BukJVa's Accutron have been replaced by a tiny tun.Ing fOlt. It doesn't tick, It hums. And the tuning fork's uncanny precision makes Accutron zo accurate, Bulova guarantees accuracy to within a minute a month. Left to right: Stainless case and band, $150. Fourteen karat gold filled with calendar, $175. Our exclusive design in 14 karat gold, $475. IANKAMERICARD l MASTER CHARGE, TOO S~VICK'S cl~_,, .... 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH 644.1380 What -should you ~_ do if a ,telephone · accidentally swallows a dime? -~-.. You hear that particular kind of "clink." You look in the little chute. It's empty.Your dime is gone. Whenever this happens we 're sorry. Just dial the Operator from another phone and tell her what happened. She'll return your second dim e, arrange a refund , and see that the phone that kept your dime is repa ired. We're here to -help. Pacific Telephone@ • photoi:raphic officer. !.....--..-----------------------------,---------------------..-- - I .... . -'· . . . , JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321 TlfllAY, """" .. 1HI M• ... 11 Provisionals· Welc omed ·Poly.nesian Party Lures Contemplating an evening of nothing but "happy talk" are members of the Assistance League of Hunt· ington Beach. All the relaxed, friendly and cordial atmosphere ag.. sociated with the South Pacific will prevail when the club sponsors a Polynesian poUuck dinner for provi .. sional members and their husbands on Friday, Aug. 30. The get-acquainted social will serve as an introduc· tion of new league members and their husbands to ac· tive members. Bidding aloha to those attending will be Mrs . James Sayer, who heads the membership committee, and as· sisting her will be Mrs. Jack Colvin, social chairman for the club. The provisional party, an annual event, will take place beginning at 6:30 p.m. in the chapter house locat .. ed at 301 Walnut Ave. Providing entertainment to add seasoning to ~e exotic Polynesian dishes prepared by the members will be Mrs. LeRoy Benson, who will sing the "Hawaiian Wedding Song," and hula lessons for the husbands also will be given. Highlight of the evening will be the initiation of new husbands into the "Resistance League" by the club's president, Mrs. Norman Warner. --;-;r-~ ~; };"• \q .. -_ _:__ --_-- • ' ' 1. :, •• •• ·c • • l ,1 • • • • . ' • Planning the party are provisionals the Mmes. Roy Battershill, John Carriveau, Wayne Flanery, Robert Hubbard, Albert McConnell, Robert. Parker, Robert Seybert, Hugh Stutsman and Ward Theisen. Others on the committee include the Mmes. J a c k Colvin, Floyd Hair, Yernop Langenbeck, Sayer, Warner and John Wyatt. 'HAPPY TALK' -The friendly atmosphere of "Aloha-land" will set the mood for the annual party welcoming provisionals in the Assistance League of Huntington Beach on Friday, Aug. 30. Anticipating the get-acquainted social are (left to right) the Mmes. Robert Parker and John C&rtjveau, provi .. sionals, and James Sayer and Jake Stewart, ac.tiv~ league members. The potluck dinner will feature traditional Polynesian dishes prepared by members. Bibles Open Children of all ages and !Wths are invited to attend two week! of vocationai Bi- ble school which is being sponsored by the Lutheran Church of the Resurrection, Huntington Beach. The ttieme for the sum· mer program will be God and His World, and classes will meet each day between 9 and 11 :30 a.m. beginning Monday, Aug. 12 and con- tinuing through F r i d a y , Aug. 23, at 9812 Hamilton Ave. A registration fee of S2 will be charged for each child, and classes will be planned for youngsters from 3 to 12 yeal"6-0ld. The morning program will include daily worship services, Bible s t o r I e s , c raf tfi, g ames and ·efreshments. Mrs. Ralph Werley is superintendent of the vaca· lion school, and assisting her will be the Mmes. Roy State, Joe stield".>fl, Robert Wall, Francis Ursini, James Mason, James Wadleigh and Dycus Tyson. Also on the staff will be the Misses KrJs Holst, Patty l~olmes and Libby Alblin· 'i ger. Ba rbecues Bla ze for Funds "Done to a turn" will be the steak• served by members of the South Coast Jun- ior Woman's Club when the group sponsors a benefit steak fry Saturday, Aug. 17. Taking orders for the dinner are·(left to right) Mrs. Carl Cleary, Mrs. James West and Mrs . .:Jon McKibben. Reservations for the affair, which will take place in Mrs. West's Fountain Valley home, may be made by calling her &t 962-7.643 by Monday, Aug . 12. CHI LDR EN INVI TED -Youngsters between the ages of 3 and 12 years-old are invited to attend two weeks of vocation Bible school which is being spon- . ~ored by the Lutheran Church of. the Resurrection. Learning Bible stories are (left to right) Christy Wall, 5; Kristan Werley, 8; Ralph Werley, 5, and Cathy Wall, 7. The theme of the summer program will be GOd and His World . Arrangement:a for t h e summer program have been made entirely by members of the congregation since the church temporarily is without a pastor. It's Too Late, Up to Fate Who Arrives DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our 211· year-old son, Cy, hu been going with a nice qui.et girl who comes to the house evenings and helps him with his IOhoolwork. (Cy is taking some night school classes.) We all like Hilda because she is encouraging our son to make something of himself. Yut.erday I noticed Hilda looked unlll!JIU88y large around the middle even though she was wearing a smock. l asked Cy ttUs morning if he wa1 aware that Hilda had put on some ~.lghl He replied matter-of.factly, "Are you just getting around to notic· ing It'! Hilda ls six mont?is pregnant." When l regained my compo111.ll'e I am.I Cy when they plaoned to get married. He said, "'Ille baby might not be mint. We're going to wait and ANN LANDERS ~ see who ht looks like ." AM, I could oot believe my ears. Cy then went on to aay aomething about • form.er boyfriend Of Hilda11 -one whom lhe had not quite given up. 1be boy bu red hair. If Uie baby ii a redhead, Cy might not marry her. Hilda ls going to get larger and larger and we have two p-eteen children in the family wtio kDoW where babies come from. Shall we t.eU Cy he can't brinf her to !hi houM &111.,....I • Please. Ann, teU me what to do. I'm going out o1 my mind. P.S. Hilda does not drink er smoke. -D.C.M. DEAR D.: WtD K jUI Co<I lo prove that IOMI ckla CAI bave fun wllhout 1mokb.c or drlllln1. Doa't WI Cy be caa1 brblc Hilda to Ille ho ... anymore. It .-111'1 ltelp maUera ••1· (P.S. Yoa know, ti eoatH, the baby's loob will ........ ....,uim,, bot Illy ou& of tt. Tbett two are not hl4ierelted in oplnlon1 or advice.} DEAR ANN LANDERS: 0 u r daughter.Jan is 17 years old .and I am wcrried sick about her. Thia girl is at· tractive, bright and popular, but she doesn't know how lA:I boil water much le1s put together a meal .. She can't 1ew on a button or &Cl'Ub a floor so that it loob halfway decent, Jan will be going away to ICbool In the fall ond I -lo think what ·her room will look like. (I have AD idea becllllt I know what he r room at home would look like U I didn't c:l<an lt.) . Please don't tell me I'.am to blame, Ann. lt1a not true. I have done my best to each Jan the tl!!np ·a girl should know' but be la not IDlerealod. . ' on Wedding Date I Cli.ldren today don't live like tney used to. It's TV, their l1Wll telephone, cars all over the place, shopping for clothea, hi·fi, stereo and Wild com- petition for grades so they can make the better colleges. Please tell me, Ann, how cM mothers teach their daughters to be homemakers when they refuse lA:I stay borne Jong enough to learn? Do you have a word for me? -DEFEATED DEAR DE: Yes. Bonefeather1. Don't blame "the tJ.mea" for your failure. There are i• houn In ever,. da7 -for all of u1. lt'a bow we choose to 1pe.ad thole 14 boan that coantl. U yoa've permitted 1oar daag:bter to spend every oH of dtote M hoan dolnf •• 1be pleutd. yoa dkl her no favor. Eve11 tlrl Po111d srow 11p wlth household respoulbWUu. It ..UH life e11ler for her modiier (wha deterYe1 a break) and ti aqalpa Illa (lr1 !or marriage wttb somellllai bellld., food loob and a laleal fllr apendln& money. • How will you know wtien th• real thing oome1 along? Aak Alll1 Laoders. Send for her booklet 4'Lov• or Sex and How lo Tell the Difference." Send 311 ceola in coin and a loo(, ..U~ dressed, starn~ envelope with your requtst. • Ann Landers will be glad to help you wllll your problems. Sood them to bu In an of the DAILY PILOT end°" lnl a loog, oelf..cldroesed, 1tampad .. velope • • -----~~---------~-----.. J4 DAILY PILOT Tuesday, Aug\lrt 6, 1968 Roberta Heck Becomes Bride Mlaslon San Antoolo de Pala wa.. tile .. umc 1or·11ie nuptial ma11 uoitbe l.n. mar· rlage Roberta Heclt and H. Newell Stickler. The Rev. Victw Turchettl oolemniud the double ring ceremony. The bdde ii the daughter of N'.I.l's. R06emary Heck of Newport II-it and Robert G. Heck ol Sierra Madre. Parents of the bridegroom are Dr. and Mn. Harry E. Stickler of Carooa del Mar. Given in marriage by her graodlather, Ethan A. I.eke ol Newport Beach, the bride was attired in a short white gown of embroidered alencon lace with Ue?\ in the back. Her three tiered shoulder length Wusion. veil was held in p1ace by a fabric bow. She carried a cascading b o u q u e t of phalaenopsls orcb.ldl and lilies of the valley. Mrs. Robert Kolowith , sister of tte bride, Ken· newick, Wash., and Miss Jeanne Stickler, sister of the bridegroom, Corona del Mar served as matron and maid of honor. Both wore identical gowns Of yellow and carried cascades of yellow daisie.c and ivy •. Miss C!ui"1lle Kolowith , niece of the bride, was flower girl .._Jng a pale Yellow dress and carry.me a basket of yellow da&.iea. Horoscope Dooald M. Roberson of C«ona del M·ar was asked to be best man. David L. Robenon of Irvine and Maurice F. Staker of Escon- dido wer~ when. · Mrs. D a v i d Twitchell, organist, accompanied Ml.as Betsy Barnett, soloist in the church decorated with wblte &ladioli and chrysan· tbemums. A reception for 200 guests -pla<e after t h e ceremony at the Fallbrook Country Club which WU decorated with y e 11 o w d ai1ie1 and white dlrysaribemums. G u e s t book was circulated by Mrs. Twitchell. Miss WsUe Dixon and MiH J oan Williams served ..ake. Special guest was the bridegroom's grandmother, Mrs. S. Frederick N i c h o 1 s of Beatrice, Neb. The bride ts a graduate of Newport Harbor H 1 g h School and the University of CaJUornia, Santa Bar.bara. She received her teaching credential from UCLA Md is an affiliate of Delta Garn· ma Sorority. Her husband, a graduate of Newport Harbor High Sdlool, is also r graduate of the university of Notre Dame. After a wedding trip t. MRS. H. NEWELL STICKLER Jackson Hole, Wyo. the . newlyweds will reside in To Reside Jn Hemet Hemet. ~~~~~~~~'--'--~~~~~~~~- Sagittarius: Obey Traffic Rules WED., AUG. 7 By SYDNEY OMARR "1be. wise man oootrob his destiny. .Mtrology polntli Ole way." ARJES (March 2l·April I 9 ) : Mi.runderatandings oould arise unless o u r statemeDts, JM::tioos a r e cryNl-clear, eepecW!y in relations with friends, loved ones. Avoid impuJdvt ac· tt0111. Permit logic t. rule. TAURUS (April 26-May 20): Could be c o nflJ c t between duty and desire. New Slants 9343 SIZES 10~22~ .i_i..J t.., 11(' ... ; ... 11(',,....,._ FLATIERY C 0 ME S ACROSS on a graceful diagonal in this &llmming dress that's accented at one side by an inverted pleat. Sew it now! Printed Pattern 9 3 4 3 : NEW Half Sizes lO'h, 121h, 14\\, Ill\\, 18\\, 20\\, 22\\. Size 141,i (bust 37) takes 31/4 :Id•· ~in. SIXTY-FIVE CENTS in coin.I for each pattern-add 15 cenlli for each pattern for flrlt..class mailing and special handling; otherwise third-das• delivery will take three weekl or more. Send to Marian MM!in, The DAI- LY PILOT, 44.'2 Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York, N. Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUJlBER. Wblit'1 new tor fall? 107 ......,. In our Fall-Winier Pau.nt C&t&Joc. Free pa~ -coupon in Calalog. Send llleala. Pin INSTANT SEWING --abon 10• bow t. ..., Jt today. wear It tomor· row. OYer 500 plctW'es. Only fL Achieve sense of balance. CbaDge yOOr routine . If methods are modern, you will Nvt time, a v o J d 8"guish. GEMINI (May 21·June 20): Good lunar aspect to· day coincides wtth ability to put thoughts, "1eas across. Avoid excess speed in talk- ing, writing and · travel.iJJg. Means double check. Battle tendency to be careless. CANCER (June 21.July 22): You may be receiving financial advice which Is based oo speculation rather tbao hard facts. Know ~ take m&a&ures to prevent loss. Hold down ex· penses. Avoid ooe who is argumentative. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)< There could he split ; don't hang on to something which is outmoded. Be analytical. Study ARlES mes.sage . Authorities are on your side. There is no need for desperate or impulsive move. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You get action in are.a that previously was quiet. Af· fects employment, associa- tims Vt'l1:b neigtlbors. Impor- tant iroject can be com-' pleted. Green light is given for uoosual. tedlnique. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Relationo!hip with ARIES in· dividual today could iroduce sparks. M a k e intelligent concession, but C"Cdinue to stand 'JP for principles. Evaluate new, original wg- ge-..om. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Find out v.1Jy of things. Probe deep for amwers. Be thorough in approa~h . Haphazard methods could cause loss, delay. Your m.. tuition or hW>Ch pays off. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Don't be in too much of a rush, especially in writing. traveling. Not wise to put anything on paper while angry. Obey rules, particularly in traffic. Take your time. CAPRICORN !Dec . 22· Jan. 19): Spending on pro· perty or future security is line. but av o id ex· travagance. Yoo can do this by listening to voice of ex· perience. Be origina1. but don't rebel from truth. Think. Sewing Set By Mothers 'Scuffies' for patients in the Long Beach Veterans Hospital will be made by members of the Air Farce Mothers Club Flight 19 a.t ~ir regular monthly meet- ing Thursday, Aug . 8, at 8 p.m. A short meeting in the Hyde Park Mobile Estates Clubhouae will precede the rewing. Wter during the month the club i. planning a gar- age sale. Further in!ormatlon ls available by calling Mrs. Melvin Roenfeldt al IJ93. 5230. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You could be center of aUentioo. Vitality is high ; mariy are intrigued. Now is time to speak up. Move ahead; take inJUative. Cyde is hlgb, and you are sur· rounded by air of ex· citement. PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20): Secret!S are revealed. Don't attempt to cover facts. If diplomatic, t.he truth will aid, not injure. You may ha Ye to deal with delicate situation. Be frank, but temper justice with mercy. Taking It Easy Is Hard to Take By JOY STILLEY NEW YORK (AP) -It's nice to get away from it all -from vacations, that is - and get back home where you can rest. · Taking it easy is hard to take. There's nothing like a planned program of rest and relaxation to tire you out. Getting there may be half the fun , but for me it's twice the work. Just luggiJ1g the luggage out is a major task, sioce it's always stored on a high shell, wedged in am.one neighbors it resists parting from. But coaxing it down, while no job for an amateur, i! just th• beginning. The suitcases have to be RECORDING ARTIST Dick Baldwin Music Sets Lunch Tone The Big Band era will come to tile again Thurs- day, Aug. 8. at 10 :30 a.m . when crooner bick Baldwin . displays his artistry before members of the Mesa Har- bor Club. The sit-down luncheon will begln at lJ a.m. in the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club, preceded by a social period at 10:30 a.m. Bald- win will present his pro- gram following the business meeting. The entertainer ls famous for singing with Charlie Spi- vak. Charlie Samet. Spike Jones, Tommy Dorsey a.nd others of the Big Band era. He now has his own record company, with dl1trtbutor1 throughout the world. Chairman for the program I• u .. ., Wil li•-r. u ... 1.,,,.c. • emptied before they can be filled. They're invariably loaded with out--0f-date clothing, childhood attempts at embroidery, one-eyed teddy bears and old love let- ters, which have to be relocated while their home is away from home. Then there's the packing. No matter bow many lists and charts I make, so that we'll only have-to take out one bag on Overnight stops, it never works out that way. The toothbrushes or some other essentials a l w a y s manage to do a little travel· ing on their own and end up in the case at the bottom of the pile. We once made a n ex- tended trip through Canada, stopping a t a different motel every night. There were six people along on the jaunt, as well at a dozen assorted overnight cases, hat boxes, soft-sided luggage, hard-sid- ed luggage and shoe tote bags, plus numerous con- tainers of souvenirs ac- quired along the way. To get all th.is into the car trunk, everything had to be fitted in a preeise way like the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. Each morning my husband had to mastermind this bail-hour exercise, as he was the only one who could remember just where it all bad to be placed so the lid would go dow n. Our most recent attempt at taking our ease wasn't much more successful. Feeling Uiat a r e s t f u 1 weekend away from the cares of work and home was in order, we accepted a standing invitation to visit relative! in a nearby city. Two glorious days with nothing to do! When we arrived, my sister's greeting was follow· ed by an enthusiastic recital oC all the things sh e had planned for our enjoyment. And the croW1\1ng touch - she was giving a dinner for 20 guests Saturday night. It was hard to squeeze the whole tchedule in, but by getting a running start Saturday and going .at a great pace we managed to do most of it, Including shopping for grocerlet and preparing the big meal. We really dJdn't have to leave as early aa we did Sonday morning, but we figured ft was better to be sleepy than run the risk of eettine anv more tired • -------- Peering Around MR. AND MRS. Lawrence H. Lee of Newport Beach will host a dinner party after the wedding rehearsal of their son, Robert H. Lee and his fiancee, Mi5s Linda Lee Combest. 'Ibe party will take place in the Saddleback Inn, Sant.a AM nert Thursday, and the wedding ceremony will be performed Saturda.y i n Garden Grove Community Church. The future bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. E . Combest of Bell Gardens. J OINING 4,00J other bus- iness and professional worn · en at their club's national coovention were Mrs. Jack W. Broback, president of the Newport Harbor Business and Professional Women's Club and Mrs. Arnold t;, Naegeli, southern section chairman of San Oreo Dis· trict, from Newport Beach. The 34th National Conven- tion elected neW officers un- der the theme, Unite, Share, Act. ONE OF 250 pages at the Republican Convention in Miami is Miss Ellyn Fried· 50 Years' Reminiscences man, .who iS getting a "ground floor" view of the 'The golden anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Aris D. Taylor was celebrated with the candidate selection pro-help of their children, the Mmes. Wilfred D. Thorne of Sacramento; Arnold 0. cedure. Compton of Huntington Beach, and Charles D. O'Neal of Garden Grove; 11 Miss Friedman, daughter grandchildren, and one great-grandson. The honored couple were married in of Mr. and Mrs. Al K. Fried-Douglas, Ariz. before moving to Pomona. They now reside in Huntington man or Newport Beach and B h f th Los Felb, is responsible for __ ea_c....;.•_•_c_en_e_o __ e_o,_pe_n_h_o_us_e_c_el_e_h_ra_ti_·o_n_. _____________ _ assisting the scores of delegates, carrying o u t special assignments and helping the official business r un smoothly. During the school year she attends Chapman College. Air Force Mothers Set Date J~UNCHING at the Santa Barbara Biltmore recently were Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. Harwood of Newport Beach. Mrs. Raymond Remillard of Huntington Beach will preside when the National Officers of United States Air Force Mothers' Organiza. tion meets at 10 a .m . Satur- day, Aug. 10, in t he Disneyland Hotel. Protected by Frltldafre ~ S·Ytar Nationwide WWNlty! 1-year Warranty for repair of any defect In the entire refrigerator plus 4-year Protec· tion Plan for t'E'pair for any defect In the refrigerating system. Backed by General Motors. Plans for a reception to Orange Coast area will be honor the new commander Mrs. M e 1 v In Roenfeldt, of Detachment 610. financia l 5ecretary, U.~A.F., will be announced _w_e_Sl_m_i_ns_te_r_. ____ _ anu Mrs. John Clawson will - report on new Flights being formed. Also attending from the Kids Like to 'Ask Andy' imii REFRIGERATOR with 126 lb. Size Freezer! 14.6 ... ~. l lG! And It'• packed wllfl Wlfo-Sav~ COtn'HitftCH. • 10091. Frost-Proof. You'll never defrost again. Frost·Proof system simply won't let frost form. And there's no freezer lipllCO lost to frost. e Handy freezer door shelf plus juice can holdt?r help keep small itt?ms at your fingertips. e Twin Hydraton hold up to 23.4 qts. of frul~. bulky Vt?Jle~bles _like cabbages. Por- celain Enamel finish resists rust. stains. e Compact! Just Jr wide. Get all this con· venience without rearranging your kitchen. Probably fits mme space as your present refrigerator. WIFE SAVER SPECIAL! Fri9idaire Built-In Dishwasher Frl11d1l11 EclHllJ llod1I U,ri1ht F111ar Stores Fri9idaire 2 Cyc:le Jet Ac:tion Washer ·e 2 W11h Cycl11 e S11p1• Surq1 W11hin9 Action! e No hind rin1il•q t1q11ir1d! e Q11l1t Op1r1tion e IS T1\iol1 Sottinti IAHAMI IP II 406 lbs. • 4 shelves, 3 refrlge~ted • 4 door shelves with removable fronts for easy cleaning . Measures just YI' wide. Ideal for 1m1Uer spac:e1. e St111ll lo1d 11ttinq h•lpi c11t w1l1r bill1! e J t1t·1implt1 m1ch1fti1 t11! e Doep 1ction Agitotorl ' 411 EAST 17th ST., COSTA MESA Da ily 9.9 -. Satur<fay 9-6 (Clo1ed Sunday) !Sales! 646-1684 ( Servic:e I 548-3437 Tucsdly, August 6, 1968 DAILY '!LOT JS 1, Dismal Angels, Minus Rodriguez, . Visit D.C. By EARL GUSTKEY Of 1fM o.llf Plllt Stttt WASHINGTON, D.C. -Chap!« three of ''The Longest Road Trip" started ber-e today foe the California Angels. And the way things have been going for tilem, their foes here for three day.-must be llckJ.ng their chops. Based OD where the cold, bli.ct type pulJ them in the staodings, the Washington Senators are th• worst team in baseball. Nor have the Angels dooe much ta ftite home about. Even a western tmion telegraph back to California turned into dismal news. Bucs Find NewBigD On Mound LOS ANGELES IAPl -To the Pit.Uburgh Pirates, the men wearing Los Angeles Dodgers uniforms on the mound must have looked an awful lot like Ooo Drysdiale. But Big D wasn't even in the ballpark. The pitchers were Jack Bill· ingharn aDd Jim Brewer and together they hur1ed six-hit ball to give the Dodgers a lO·imling, 1--0 victory Mon- day night. Billingham, a 25-year--Oid right- hander, was named as a last-minute replacement for Dry6dale, who re- mained at home due to his datlghter's illness. U the Pil'ates were pleased at the thought of not facing Dry&dale, they might have given the season's record books a glance. Billingham had faced Pittsburgh on· ly twice earlier this year. He hurled ji.:st 1 1-3 innings, didn't allow a bai:cruooer and picked up one of his t\"'O victories. He has yet to lose this y =:rr. r:rewer, 4·3, looks even better a:ainst Ille Bucs. In 6 2-3 innings of rriief spread out over four games, the Aut. 6 J!.:'v~Pi::!rg~~;taP~:. kFI l"'J Aut. 7 Oodlilt'I YJ, Ptttsburlh 7:SS p,m. KFI '-Cl :: ··year-old lefthander has struck out I'I -five of them in a row on April 22 ; · Forbes Field -and allowed but I. ~ hits. ·,he Dodger mound corps hasn't 1·~ :!\ too kind to the Pirates all year. In 13 games the ~ucs have managed I , push just Tl runs across the plate 1·hey've now been shut out three times l'Y the Dodger! -including once by Drysdale during his scoreless inning s'..reak. Monday night's loss was the third strai1ht in which Pittsburgh failed to score. It dropped the sixttl·place Pirates 181h games behini:I National League leading St. Louis. The victory enabled the Dodgers to move into an eighth·place tie with Ille New York Mets, 22 games behind the Cardinals . Pittsburgh's Steve Blass, 9-4, locked up with Billingham and Brewer before Zoilo Versalles got the game·wi.Ming hit, his fourth of the night. with two out in the loth inning. It came after farmer Pirate Bob Bailey legged out a one.out infield hit and moved to second on Bart Shirley's grounder. "Were you surprised they pitched to you?" Versalles was a.5ked. "No," said the shortstop, eightti in the batting order, who entered the game hitting .178. "I was surprised I wasn't takefl out for a pinch-hitter." Billingham hurled the first eight in· nings before being pulled in favor of a pinch-hilt«. He gave up five hits, walked two and struck out seven . "We hadn't been using Billingham much and he was beginning to lose bis confidence," Dodger Manager Walter Alston said. "But it perked him up ta get them out in the first inning and l thought he got better Ule farther he went" Brewer .allowed one more hit and 1itruck out one ln his two innings of rP!ief. 1'1ns1u10H .. , "..i LOS ANOILliS '''~"' ' 0 1 0 W•l!t, 3b • 0 1 f fl'Alr~. rt M,A111U, d • 0 e 0 G1brlet-., If St1rtell. II • 0 l 0 W.D1wls, cf Cl"',."'-· rt ' O 1 0 Hiiier, c Clef!Cltnofl, 111 • 0 I 0 F1lrty, lb ... , ... .,, .. J 0 • 0 11 .l•ll•,, Jb ""'",_.l, 111 • o o t Shlrlty, ft> • M.1¥. , 4 0 I I Verullu, u r •n, • ' I I I lnlJntMM, -l'-ld'I. llfl ... -.. lr 111 15 0 I 0 Tol1ll r...., llUI w!lrn wl""ln• n,'" ICOf"H. ' 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 ' 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 ' ' 1 0 ' ... ' 0 ' 1 1 0 ' 0 1 0 • 0 0 D 0 0 ii' 1 I I PlllJ~ur"" lll'O llDO llOO 0 -0 LOI A1>91!1" 000 000 O(I) I -I E -ShlrllY. DP -Plthtlvl"fh ), LOI -I'll"· ' ••vii 1, LOI ...... '" 5, 71 -J, M ... , V1~1lllJ. J -W, 0.wll. IP " I •II 11 SO llAU IL,t-•l ... l it t I I ~ S l llll!lllMm • i • 0 t , ll...-!WM\ 1 I 0 0 I 1 Tlmt -t ia . Altllld_. -17,UI. Aurelio Rlldrlguei Is In St. ElliabeUI Hospilal at Brlcbton. M-. alter 1uf· ferlng an appendicitis attack in b1I hotel room late Monday night. The Uttle third baseman 11 in u:· ceUent coodition according ta Dr. J. Thomu Tierney and Dr. J . M. McNelley, 1he duo who perform"'1. the operatioa. Rodriguei is slated to stay at St. Ellutbeth for one week be.fore coming back to Anaheim fOf' further convalescence. He bu been put on the disabled list for 30 days. "It's a tough treak for the kid, be was doing so well too," lamented Bill Rigney. Chuck Hinton bu been named to fill the gap created by the emeraency. RilPl•Y'• juggernaut hu dropped six of eigbt on the current exCW'aion and nobody's hevJ.na: to guess very hard why. Succinctly, lt'a the rcliel pitching. A,..el Slcte Aut. ' AnMl1 II W1tt>lnttafl l'J) 1:5' 11:,lfl,.~l(Ml"C A\19. 1 Anetlt 11 WOUlllflllOll J:OO p,rn, !Vo\n. Ulfl It's ten-Ible. There was a time -like last y~ar - when Rig would confidently h.a.iJ Ip Minervino Rojas whenever his stal'ter became shakey. Rojas alw8')'1 got them out. But 1967 took its toll on Min· nie and he's in tile pits with a sore arm. Now the manager la left to make do with relief hurlen who can't treak a window pane. It's oot that the starters have been bad -they've been downright excelleat at times, a1 a m&tter of Met. But there are times When you simp- ly must have a dependable relief pitcher and Rlgney doesn't have one. The Angel starters tOnight in D. C. Stadium will be Tom Murphy (S-4) and Jim McGlothlin (6-9), whUe Washing- ton starters are Frank Bertaina (4-9 ) and Joe Coleman (7-12). This is double-header No. 5 on the !rip, ii y<ll1 coimt Sunday's makeup of a 1u1pended game 11 a twin bill. Tbe Angela p!Ayed 66 lnntnga betw .. n lut Wednesday and Sunday. HARRELSON DEPT. -When the Angel!: flew out of Boston this morn· ing, reports were strong that Red soi: owner·Tom Yawkey was about to tear up Ken Harrelson'• 1968 contract and give him a new one with a fat raise. "The Hawk'' ha1 Bostonians eating out of his hand. He may have a better season than Carl Ya1tnemskt bad lut year. Already he has 90 RBI's. When he ttit the grand slam homer to beat the Angels Sunday Fenway Park went nuts. From Pea~h Fuzz to Oly111pi~s? Sea King Ace After AAU Gymnastics Title .... RICK FLEMING ' By RAY PLUTKO Of 1fM O.l'Y ,..., Shift NEWPORT BEACH -Although thi& ia the year for the XIX Olym- piad, it'1 just the starting point for Rick Fleming and a possible trek to the lm Olyft?.pic Games. Actually, Fleming's journey was set in motion at 10:45 p.m. Monday at lntemational Airport in Los "-le< when the peach • fuzzed )"Ollllgsl« hoarded Flight 180 - destination, Knoxville, TeM. Today, Fleming is berthed at "Olympic Village" on the campus of the University of Ttlmessee, waiting tonight's opening cen!mo- nies to the second annual AAU Jun- lOf' Olympics. For Fleming, the 15·ye&r·old IOphomore at Corona del Mar High Anyone Want To Play? Coach Jim Coon (left) receives the Orange Coast area juggernaut of football beef at the initial phase of the South All-Stars practice session Monday night at Marina High School. Those identifiable: in the front row are {left to right) Mike Corrigan of Marina (85), Charles Meyer· School, It will be just like Mexico Oily. Champions kom 14 re g Io n s across the United States will be on hand for Ole opening parade onto Tom Black Track and Stadium, having coveted their titles in track and field, .liwimming and gym- nastics. Fleming will be entered in the lat· I.er competition, having copped the Region 13 (California) title two months back in Santa Monica. As for the specifics, Fleming is entered in the all·around phase of the program -his efforts coming on a C9mbined point total from tumbling, free act, hig11 bar, long horse, side horse, rings, rope climb and parallel bars. • • j'I just found out I was going two week.Ji back," confided Fleming late ,,.. Monday. "I just love Ole idea of it all and can hardly wait to take off in the plane." Fle ming wiU be competing in the 14·15 age bracket, with his initial ef· forts coming at 9 a.rn..Wednesday and the finals Thursday. "I'm probably str<ingest in the free act and parallel bars," said Fleming, "but to win back there I 'm going to have to be strong in every event." Fleming stamped his credentials earlier this year in th• gymnastic field \l/heQ..he won a berth on the Corona del Mar varsity as a freshman and lettered a8 well. ette of Westminster (65), Tim Butler of San Clemente (87), Ramon Ricardo of Costa Mesa {26), Mike Tamiyasu of Marina {14) and Doug Casey of Corona de! Mar (67). See page 16 for story. • AFL Bills Parlay Rookie Combo Into 13-9 Win Buffalo Grid Safari Nets Lions' Hide BUFFALO, N.Y. !AP) -'"Didn't .ake long, did it?" Gary McDermott smiled M he &.aid that to Ben Greg<ry. another rookie running back for the Buffalo Billi. Both had just pla'yed a lengthy and vital role ill the Bills' 13--9 exhibition victory over ttJe Detroit Lions Mooday ni~t in the season's folll'ttl exhibition game between American and National Football League teams. What Mcermott referred to was the entry ot the two youngsters into the Bills' line.up. It happened, unplan· ned, tile second time Buffalo had the bail. Coach Joe Collier fOUlld their pre9!0Ci! necessary becaust veteran running back Keith Uncoln and Wray Carlton W'tl't b:Jjured tbe ftrst time each touched the baU. Lincoln suffered possible brokt11. ribl and Carlton in· jured • kntt. "Sure I was nervous. I was vetry Finl DowM ll:Ultll~1 Yll'lllM PAUl"ll Vtl'lla91 PllHI PllMI '"ttretollld ir,. ·~· fl:uml!I• 11111 Y1rlll -ll•ed , ... • .. "' ,.,. • ....,. .. ' • "h • " " 12·12 ' 10.-..l ' " n e r v o u s," saJd McDermott, the halfback from Tulsa who with Gregory played the rest of the game. "But after J got into the heat of battle 1 was okay. J wasn't expecting to play that much but I was prepared for it because J knew that happens 1orne· tint .. ... Gregory, a fullback from Nebraska, was equally nervous at first. "I was shook; I didn't know quite what to expect," he said. "I tbought maybe I'd play a quarter, if that much. I didn't even know Carltoo was hurt unW assistant coach Johnny Mazur told me to get ln tilere real quick." Gregocy scored tbe Bills' only touchdown on an eight-yard pass from Jack Kemp in the second quarter. McDermott added the extra point by diving over fro-m the two-yard line and also was the game's busiest ruMer, carrying 19 times for 50 yards. He also caught two passes whlle Gregory grabbed four altogether. Their effort, plus a superlative Bills' defeDH, gave tbe AFL its third vic- tory to ""' for tile NFL In tl>eir 2.1- 1ame areries . Latlt year, the first cl. the interleague contests, the AFL won on- ly three of 16, After Detroit closed the gap to 13-9 on Mel Farr's two.yard run tn the fourth quarter -Mike Mercer had !ticked two field goals for Buffalo - McDe.nnott ruined a chance for the Bills to clinch the game when he fumbled away the bail oo Ule Lion's one-yard line. "I didn't have the ball in both arms as I shou1d have," he explained. "The defensive tackle just reached up and slapped the bail out. I felt pr<tty bad. I thought to my.el!, 'a rookie move.' That's what rookies do -tumble In· side the five." 'Scarred' Maris to Retire From Game When McDermott got back to the !idelines though, Lincoln consoled him. "He JU6t told me not to WMTY ebout It ,tilat It happens to everyone and It was over," McDermott saJd. ST. t.OUIS (AP) -Roger Moris 1ays he ect burned and bad the .Cars to prove it when be left the New York Y ankee1 two years ago. When the st• outfielder announced Monday ha 11 iumg the SI. Loois Cardinals after Utls sea.son, he said he has had "probably two of the most en· joy1ble yews'' of his career. And he h11 a comfortable: future to 1how for It. In 1961, Marls hit 61 home runs In a 162·1llll• ocbedule, breakini the .164· game record of 6(l set by Bebe Ruth In t92'1. That martcod the hi(lh point of his career with tbe Yankees. Two years later, he hit only 23 home run! and drove in 53 runs. That mark· ed the beginning of tho end for Marn In New Y..-k. While 1.nnounclng hls retirement at a new1 conference, Maris indicated those last bad 'year a: with the Yankees haunted him. "lt'1 like being burned. You never get rid of the .ca.rs," Maris said. "A1 • far as die fans tn New York were con· cerne<1 when I would go back there, I jUJI did my job. I wasn't worried about their reactiOn ." Marts 1aid he was golnc to qttit alter the 1966 season. He'd been plagued by 1njanie1, the fans and had trouble with the pren. But his winter trade to tbe Cardinals In 1966 tor third basmnan Charley Smith almost forced him ti:> play another year, Marla indicated. "I didn't Uke how the trade came about,•· tht two·time A m e r 1 c a n Lea.gut Molt Valuable Player con· tes:Jed. "I told New York I w•s going to retire, and t'hey made the trade an- nouncement before l had a chance to open my mouth. And I didn't want the writ.en to jump on me by sayin1 1 retired because o( the trade. "So I dedded to play another year," Mari1 added, "and t llked It co well I decided to play another year. It's 1 pleasure playina where people llk• fOt!·" I McDermott and Gregory talked to each other, too , all through lhe game. "We encouraged each other and .told each otl'.er to take It eaisy," Gary ex· plained. 'Ibey did take it easy -but not on the Uona 1 ...... __ O.tl'llff .•. It J ,_, lvfftto 0 10 S 0 -IJ •!tlftlill -c»t""" II), 111111 '""" k-1 Mt-1~·rmell, rv11. -.,111tt -FO. Mel'Uo!' ltJI l>ttroll -FG, Y-wn!.111 fHJ, lllllttllt -,O, Mtrctr CUI. 0.trelt -, • .,. rt\, ""'' ""' fll(JM, Atllrdlltp --..11 • Hamo!Jon ii-in the Someroet Hotel, which Is where the Angela are lodged In BOiton. Red Sox fana can be the kJndett and the cruelest to the world. They treat V ai. and Harrelson like gods. And yet they boo and hiss at the mere 1it1 of two or last year's heroes. -Jim i..on,. borg and George Scott. · Pitcher Lonborg hasn't yet come around after hJs skiing accident (broken leg) last winter and poor Scott can't do anything right at flrat base. But that's the way It goes In Boston. Someday Uley'll probably even boo the Celtics. Sports Clipped Slwrt Pre111 ... Wht .. Ar /UPI FULLERTON -The Los Angeles Rams have apparently lost their top rookie prospect ta the government foe the season. Guard Mike La.hood ol. Wyomina left the National Football Le a & u e' 1 training camp Monday for six months of National Guard duty. The 248·pounder was tbe Rams' •· cond draft pick after quarterboct Gary Beban, wbo has since been trad· ed. to tfle Washington Redskins. Linebacker Bob Sanden, wtio joined the team in Ule trade that aent receiver Bucky Pope to Atlanta, will be out of action for two weeks with a knee injury. ... ... SANTA BARBARA, Calli. -Rookie Kevin Hardy finally joined b11 new teammates at the 49er1 tralni.nt camp. Hardy, the New Orleant Sain ta' top draft choice, w1 111.igned to the 4ten by Commh1loaer Pete Rozelle lt day1 ago In payment for end Dave Parks, who played out bl• option with $aa Francisco and signed wltb the Saints. Hardy, who bad worked more than two week• with the Salata, 1ald b11 delay In reporUnc Monday wa1n't a "question of belnt unhappy wttb the ffen and money wasn't a factor ... I wa1 1ettled at the New Orleans camp." ... ... ... BALTIMORE -Persons trying to reach Joe Sachs by telephone Mooday were given an added reason to believe the report he would become the new general manager of the BaJtimore Bullets in the National Basketball Association. Sachs, a 34-year-old aide to Rep. Charles Mathias. R-Md., was not at his political job during one part of the day. Asked where he cou.Jd be reached, callers were told to try a telephone number in Washington, D. C. When the number was called, the person on the other end said, "Baltimore Bullets. Can I help you?" ... ... ... NEWPORT, R. I. -Ft\le perlOnl, lncludlog: three players who rank among all·ltme greats, wm be en1hrlD- ed In the Tennis Hall o( Fame Au&. 11, Named lo the llall of Fame Monday were Jack Kramer and P•ncbo Gonzalea, former amateur and pro ktng1; three·Ume U.S. and Wtmbledom champion Maureen Connolly; the late Eleanora Seara, and Aut1on Danit&, retired New York Times tennis writer. ... ... ... LOS ANG ELES -The prosecutioo has rested its case in the Superior Court trial of Hector "Toe" Blake, former coach of the MontreaJ Cana. <liens of the National Hockey League, and Canadiens' player Claude Provost, 34. The pair is accused of assaulting hockey fan Bernard W e i s m a n , Northridge, Calif., during a game between the Canadleos and the Los Angeles Kings at the Sports Arena last Nov. 19. The final witness for the prMecutloa Monday Was Norman Southerby, Canoga Park, Calli., who said he ac- companied Weisman to Ule game. Southerby testified that be 1aw Blake strike Weisman v..ith a hockey stick but said the blow did not appear to be injurious. HA.RRlS, GRIFFITH IN NON-TITLE BOUT PHILADELPHIA IAP) -Gl'l'IY J0e Harris, young and unbeaten, meets Emlle GrifUth, experienced •nd aeven )'tar• older, In a scheduled 12· round fight tonight important to tho immediate future of both mld· dlewelght title contenders. The 22·year.old Harris Is a 1llght ravorite in his native Philadelphla over the 29-year-<1ld Griffith of New York, who has been a welterweight champion three times and mid· dlewoi,iit kine twlct. Promoter Herman Taylor expects a crowd ol bolter !!too 12,<Kll and a 1•t. In exce11 of 111111.<Kll for the bout at tl>o 17.000 seat Spectrum. He claims he has been ptom~ a 8ght for the winner with mlddl1WeJaht champion Nino BenvenutJ. I I ' l - I I • I ; l ' I • • • : ~. • • l ( '. ' I ' . • • . • ' ' ' ' • ' ! • • • • • .. --... ----------.... ---------------------------~~-:;:c~---· -.- Jt DAILY PILOT TllHl:by, AUgUsl 6, 1961 Drills Open for Orange County Clash South Stars Heed Call B1 ROGER CARLSON ot .. c.i. ,.... .... Orange Coast area foot· ball players e.re ln their se. cond day of prar:Uce at • Marina High School !or the t ScNtb All·Stars under coecil Jim Coon. Marina, Mater Del, Hun- tington Beach and Westminster each h a v e three players bopeful of claiming starting berths on the South aggregatiQn, with Corona del Mar and Costa Mma with one each. Leading the li.!it for Mater ... w.-.-w, Allt. ·1, IMI c ... , ........ ,. l"lnl .... , 2 l".M. D•llr Dlubl .......... lnl •Ml Sec• llaCWI l'IRIT RACI!. ' fur~. J ve•r 0111. Clelmlnt l'f'k'I 15,000. Purs. .,. ... "'"TN ~ (J kii.n) 1H OUllO'l'OU !J Ar1ertou,..I 1H Gl'PS-Rawr IR C.mpe1J 117 T1n'1"1 ICll'lll JD Pierce) lU Prince L•mble> (M Y•MI) lU lndle" R .... (F Gerul Xl09 Lerl•Y'• Led lA PIM<llo) 111 c;.i.,_, (S T,...,11111 11' 1.-Hld<orr Steff tM V•lennoel•) 111 ~·· """ rw ~> ," P•ffl Hail (W Marrl1) 117 Rio Nido (A L Ole•l xnA St!COND RACE. 6 turl-1. 2 YHr o1c1 rNkltn coils end 9tf41~t. Cl1lm- lnt price Sl,000. Purse S1.2CID. 81!1t1I {M V1ieflruel1) 116 AM111r !A Pllledll II' EleclrOPIHl" 11 A L D111J Xlll Y. F1b IE Medi,..) 116 Mr. Pllnclutl (W MahomtW) 11• EHefl(;t Of Time ID Pl1ru) 116 s""lli" t ulllt (W tffir'l.ctcJ 11' Pet Romeo 11• Slrlllt Fit! !J Glbbonll 116 SoD<"eclo tL Gllllll"l 1" Dari A Vee {J Plnedll X111 o.rh1Mflll summer (R Yorlll 11' TMIRD tACI!. 0... mile. I & 4 year Didi. CLl!mlnt 11rlct 15.000. Pun. 112,)QO. Vll'IC! Jr !D Htlll llJ MIHlift (,l Maftt) 110 Tr1l1 DI 111111 IJ Glbbom) llS G1ll1 Allbl IE Medlr>IJ 111 Ebeto llelu tJ Arterburn) lU KeWM Miii IA L 0!11! XIOS MCV1I !W Hermalll lU Tl!mllfttuaul LIM; CR 811nco) 11J Wiii! Gl1mour IS T111w!noJ HO Del ls All·American et.ate!'· linebacker Erle Patton, wbo ia beaded for ~otre Dame in the fall. Other Monarchs on the 25-man roster are Carl Hernandez and Jim Berg, both tackles . Marina's three candidates are led by quarterback Mike Tamiyasu. Tamiyasu will have two of his Marina ends to throw to in the likes of Mike Corrigan and Rick White. Bob Wickersham, star of Orange County's 14-7 victory over Long Beach last month Del Mar Entries l"le ALI MoOr9 (A PINd1~ ~ .,. lU Flelt'I [)e.bof1 ti T~•lno) lU Gr...-llffm (W H1rrl1J 11<1 Kim'• Gem {W H1rm1!1) 111 Just Alme !M Vel..,1U<l!l1J 11<1 SIXTH •ACE. 6 hl•lonf1. J & • .,.., old INlklem. PUl'H l2,IOO. J~'• Prince (W Ml/lor.....,.) 11• Ul'ftllf (l Gllll11n) 11• Grul Tlml"ll IJ Selll•ll 1\6 Jutll C1fun (! W H1r1•cill 11' $tudl11t 10 Hiii) 11' S.11n•1 Devll (W H1rrL1) 116 Trllt Tnt CS T!'l'llnoJ II' Cot!N Con (R llLlllCO ) 114 PnlY IC"ltltt {A L OLii) Xllll HIQ Mltllkl' (R C1mi>et) 116 SNrtlllnt Rull•FI (M V1leruutil) in SIP11IY9d1 (I A Pineda) UJ ll!YENTH JIACI!, .,,_.. fur1_, 001 lurl. J year o\d1 and \IP, Cl1lmlnt priQI MUO. PurMt l2.IOD. Te1>1r1 !G LI""""'') 11' Clftlr Cir. CA L Oler) xllJ RO'l'1I R1U tL Glltl01nl 11' Gen. llUlllTIOCIM (A V111'n~le} 1U Don EdufrOO (W M1Flor,,tJ) 11<1 aeau 8r1vo IM V11en11W11) ll• 81rll'l'Corn (A Ph1ed1) 111 Str1wtierrv Drive co H1tl) 111 Potlr Ple ($ TITllno) 109 Metrf' Rotd !D P~I 11• l!IOHTH RACI!. 1\.11 mllll 1111 fvrt. :I n1r old fltllft. !Jlh runnlM o4 h Del Mar Dlk1. PurMt I U,000 idded. Gron 11',:m. To winner $81'1!1. 1KOrld u,ooo, llllrd a,500. tourtt'I n.ooo. GAW Cridttl 1W H1rm1tr) 1U Coed CM Y1MU 11<1 MartllM 10 Pllrtll llt Windlot" H_.,. {W H1rt.tdJ 11<1 S!rtwtle•fY Clo<nr U se11 .. ,1 11• lll'llY Lor1lne CA Veten1~1el l U 811>¥" LI (A Plnedl) 1 U S.-IJ Bo.I {W MlllOl'l'llY) 11~ SllN" !D Htlll 1U in the Long Bead! Senior Bowl game, leads the Hun - tington Beach contingent of three at the halfback slot. Othen: from the Oller crew an: Ray Hunt, a tackle, and Al Pertee, a guard. Perlee's status is dOubtlul beoause of a knee injury. Westminster bas three candidates for the interior line witf:I. Rick Breeze .and Charles M~yerette at the guard spots and G r e g Hansen at center. Rounding out the l~man Orange Coast aru group ls Ramon Ricvdo, a ball'back candidate from Costa Mesa and Tim Butler of San Clemente. Buller is an end.. Steve Galvin o{ :r.1ater Del is an alternate in case Coon is forced to dip into the alternates. Gone from the original 25-man r o s t e r before practice even started was Jack Meier, the All-CIF fuUback from Santa Ana because of a slow recovery on past surgery. * * * South * * * Ros ter l:NO-Rldc While, Marl"'; Mlkr CENTER-Eric Patton. M~ lltl/ Corr~tn, -Intl Joe 511v1, lolu Grq Hansen, WnlmlNltf. Gr1110t1 Tim 8111111', "n Cllmtflll. TACICL&-Jter H w n t . Hunllrltton kld11 Doug C.sew, Cororo1 d~ Mlri Mlkt Rice, S.M1t9<>1 C1rt Htrnend1z. Maler O.h Jim '"'' Malirr Del. OUARD--lil Pt•lll, H u n l I n O Ion lletch; Rldi ,,_,., Wt1!mln1ttr1 C!\lrltl. MIJtrdl. Wnlm!ntlt'fl Gr19 Collmll\o Ort"lll . QUARTERIACIC-Rlck Didi.HI, S.... II Al\I; Roel Gr1w1, TllSl!nl Mike Tamly1W, Mlrll\I, MALl'SACIC--Marv Wh1!1klf", "nl1 Ant: $M>ot HUI, Santa Anll RIW Rlcerdo, Cooll M..,; Dennl1 Porter. Ortll9tJ Oavt llllOll'lolz. $A Vellt¥1 &ob Wlckt..V..m, Hwnllnolan 8'9dl. Campaign at End \ Connell Dumped In District Play By RON EVANS Of lt'le Ol llY 1"1111 Sltff LONG BEACH -The se· cond in a series of disasters struck Connell Chevrolet's Connie Mack baseball team Monday night and the Costa Mesa nine's season is over. Three unearned runs did In the ConneU squad, 3-1, as San Pedro turned spoiler in the District playoffs at Blair Field in Long Beach. It was the second straight loss for Donnell, losing to Mel Burns' Mustangs of Long Beach in the opener, 6- 2. ed .Orange County cham- pions. The loss ended the season with Connell sporting a 20-3 record. It was the !ow1h time ln the last rour years that Con· Who Ca••nht Who? nell had made it into the -:1 tournament, and the first This 51 lh-pound black sea bass appears bigger than the )ad who caught him. that the Wigmore-led nine Actually, Danny Crosswhite, 9, o! Inglewood, can outdo bis catch by a full 11 failed to win 8 single game. pounds on the scales. The youngS'l.er caught the remarkable haul out of Art's Connell, which ouUtlt the Landing aboard the "Bonanza" in Balboa on Sunday. He used a 20-pound mono and landed the fish in 15 minutes at Salt Creek. "Bonanza" was skipper· winners by a 6-2 margin, d G · tallied the lead run in the _e_b..:Y __ a..:ry_Be_lli_n,;og_er_. ____________________ _ • Gaucho Tourne~ hi Books Mission Viejo Men's Club reprecentative Phil Roseberry shot a 74 to cap.. ture the championship of the Gaucho Invitational Golt Tournamea.t at Mission Vie. jo Golf Cub 'over the weekend. The inaugural golf tourney sponsored by t b e Sad· dleback College Bench Club had 130 golfers vying for trophies. Jon Arnett, former use All -Amerca in foot ba 11, finished second by four strokes to Roseberry. Dan Barrile of S a n Clemente picked up the third place trophy with an 81. Laguna Niguel's Ken Bloom won the first place trophy for low net with his handicap cutting the total to 66. John Tobin ol Newporter Inn won second with a fi7 and Don Lund of San Clemente claimed third with • 66 . The longest drive trophy went to Jerry Stewart of Tustin with a 295-yard drive. Lee Williams of Huntington Beach placed the ball five feet, 10 inches from the pin in a drive that gave him the nearest to the hole trophy. Duff Walker of San Clemente won title best put- ting trophy. "The tournament w a 1 highly successful.'" com· mented Saddlebac.i: College Athletic Director George Hartman. "The participation and support was wonderful.'" Funds derived from the tournment will help support the athletic program at the new college to open this fall. Costa M esa •• l"OURTH II.A.Cl!. 6 furl-I, 3 'ftlt otdl Ind UP. Cteirnlnt l'f'\ce •,ooo. Pvne ll.Olll. GHii CR Clmi>e1l lU All .nine runs given up by Connell pitchers in the two losses were unearned in a remarkable turnabout on a team that had come alive in its own offensive game. third inning and was riding the crest of a no-hit game for the first four innings by pitcher Joe LePS.ge .. Laguna Hills Tabbed Site For Trap, Skeet Complex Bob Steach took low gross honors at the men's club sweepstakes over·tbe week· end with a 71 followed by Lyle Graham and Frank Bartosh, both with 75s: I ! . • • I • I " I I I I I I • • I I I . i Pmtv °'""" (W M,,_.,) 11( AIJ'1 B.llw !R 811/ICD! 117 8851 Dll'ICtr (A L 01•1} )llOf HIPP¥ Stl" !E Medine) 11~ J..-r'l"I $Kr1I t0 H1IU 1,1 F1lll!lul Ruler (J L1mblrt) lU AttlPleM (0 l"le!'ce! 11• l'll'TH Ill.Cl:. ' futiant1-J wear e!d '!U!ft. CLllmlN prkl 16.lSt. '"""" n.toO. TM Word (Al D!11) XlU MOllUl'I Giil CO VN-1) 11( NIPfTH UCL Ofll milt Ill! turt. I YHr oldt ind U... Clelnllnl ll(1u U11'.0-11'llO. P\lrw U,.IOO. Ll!tle Red Min !R 81a!a) 114 "-Mood (R R1rl xlt> UllCMC.ked IA l"IMdl) lot Hls>el'l:O Cl G L1.-1w) 112 Red SPiendour 10 Plen:tl 112 Makru• crern. CA L 0 111) xlM H\ld111n V1tle'I' !II Yot11;! 11• Nati.au Rule<' IW HtrrllJ 1U ONr#Olld D>lk• !0 L-1 11<1 El Mlrln II W H1rmen:) 114 Del Mar Race Re sults DEL MAI MONDAY, AUOUST L IMI CLEAR AND PAST FIRST RACI! -6 furlonllt. l .,..., olcl1. Clalml"ll price 1"00. Punt S2?00. ""'"' Menll...,. (J P1lomlnol , lJ.20 1.611 •. ,0 Fl'llne Kll'flft IS Trw\Ml JA 3 . .0 Tio C.rlltos (A Plnedll l .IO TlME -111·11~ ALSO RAN -Sun Nolt. V~1 lk1, IClnt Ot Thll Wind, ShlrP Tad< tncl, Gefew1r Min. LlwtlY Monh!. JJmtwg, SCRATCHED -Hirt A,..tl. 8rl1r Vl•I•, MurPll. SECOND IACI! -' fur'°"". J wear old m1kle<I lll~n. Clllmltl9 prlol U.DOI. Purw 12,'°8. C1...-!A 01111 10.JI !.611 3.• P1r1Y i.1rtt CW H1rm1t1J J.IO 4.00 Traffic CIDl.ld CA /MIW) •.Ill TIME -11•315. ALSO RAN -Jlulef''I MN. J11lnow, TNm11'1 Sont. F1ll!lful Prlnn.11. !1111. Tracklnf, Solar 0&_.,,, 5wl11 Dllh. NO $CRATCHE$. DA ILY DOUBLE -._,,,..,,_ 1Mmlon1 lo :J.C..."""", 1111c1 Ul.10. THIRD lACIE -6 lur1Dn111. 2 ~ur 1ldl. c111mrne. Pv!"W llJOO, M!H PltlaGH !J S..lllf"f)I.. 4,M 2.IO LI/lie Cl1rlce tL Gllllttn) IO . .O 4 611 Nell.•" P1_.. (0 Piere•) 2.te TIME -112·1/J. ALSO R.l.N -Cutri Ml'lhrrv. Jly I . Eff, Sublet, Lucb P .. k. Otl T1ci1Jt , SCt.ATCHED -<;.lew1w Q......,. Adormlt Not. POUITM II.A.Cl! -6 lut" ....... 2 Yfft old fll!ln. Cl91mlne. P-ll..SOO. Jenn-WIW (J Selllrtl l,jO ~.IO 3.e Light DI RGld (A Dt1d •.• 4.00 Mlrle C.~lln !D Y1letelltl) t.00 71ME -11J.lfl. ALSO llAN -0-Gonr, Jtnll. c-..1,11. F ......... , °""" s-i c1..,,.. >o. CllAlc &.11¥. SCllATCHEO -N1w1lo Glrl. p1il'f1t --.Act--=-;-lut"lonllo, 3 WHt oldl Ind uP lllllft 1M m•••· C\olmi,. """' U.50I. Saw .. fA 1"1 .... ) ... , ... ~--Go ~ (J Sii..,,) Prlzt tcttteri IJ A.......,..l TIME -lot-4/J, ) ... 2.111 ··~ ALSO It.AN Ch+<lu!t1 Llrldl, Tu"I~ AM 1,,.., LA Gr .... Cl'lal, Ar.......:I See. SCRATCHED -11111"11 -· SIXTM RACI! -' furlotl9s. 2 "'' old maid.,, !1"11$. Celbrldl-Purse ll,000. lie Horne E1rlY {R C111m11'1il 11 .oa 20.60 1.tt Je<:k-lak• fJ Stllef"fl 1t.40 J.IO Nlb!>lil (J Glbbon1J ).00 TIME -111·2/J. ALSO RAN -F!cldll"" TUI, Ann°1 LldJ, POOl\I Ftz. <;.t SlltoJ, E1ttr He1r1. 1111111... IC1tw, MIM Gem .. Decortlof SVe. SCRATCHED -V1llombrD11, S"'lttd L..,.,, Nouttl. W1r IClll!. JU!111, Lllll'"ll'• Turn. l~l!NTH RACI: -6 lurloMt. 3 Wft• aid flllltt. Allaw•~· Purw woo. 11:-.11i!'CI IA P1..edtl Cuion.1 CR RDMln) Fo~ Fur CS Tr~lnol TIME -111)-1/5. '·'° 5,(11) !.211 JJ.00 u . ..o 11.60 ALSO RAN -ln1urP1n&ble, DO· Flulll'd UP, F•1I M<M!, lrw;1nt1t1001. Flttl ""''' PtllfnlM Her, J....,fkr" G., ICt~S<r&tlt'I. HD SCllATCHEi. 00-Fluffld UP ""I"*' ?nd. fl .. -1111..i ,,,. pllced nm.. l:IOHT RACE -Abo\lt 1 furlaftv\ an "'11. l YN r olcl1 Incl VP. Allow1nc:t1. PwrM 15.000. ltoed Miik.tr ?nd !O Pltrc.l •IO l.00 2.olO Rll!ll~ TIMftll (W M1r1.cll) 4... J.11 Tiii /!Ao<'-(A Pl-11 J.00 TIME -l:lf·l/5. -II trK~ """· "'LSO RAM -'°""" IC.Id, Tr1dtr Ric, llUMlnll Worlh, 8•r'l'mDrt, El Sclm!l1r. NO $CAATCHES. NIMTlt •ACE -One "'llt. l Vt.tr olltl '"" •· Clllmlne. Pwrw ll.JOt. T•rnlrllft !J P1lornl"") u '° 5 . ..0 4 . .0 l•.1111 J.. •,to Dftcefllll ICll'IW (A l'l""'fl ).Ill 2.«I Gelll"' SM! lit C."""11) 6.IO TIME -ll7·1/J . ALSO RAN -MW ~ El C1 ... 1t. T°""I Ml'lk, SWNI Wiii~. Slt1w Lin. .... Oen, ltwtl R- KRATCHIED -Tui'Y"en VeU. ~ C1"91ft. Clue c-t, kll-. At Corona del Mar High "What makes me sicker than anything is that we hlt the ball better during the tourney than we had all year," commented coach Bob Wll!ID<n ol th< dispot· Albacore Reported In Up swing Albacore is on the up- swing with anglers reported bringing in two to four apiece out of Davey's Locker and its overnight toor. The water temperature continue& warm. but the albacore are trapped in pretty large 1chools averaging 18 to 30 pounds each, according to Gordon Holland of Davey's Locker. The Albacore S p e c i a 1 leave'S at 11 each night and returns the following e.Yen· ing. Locally, bonito and bar· racuda action on half day boats art running mildly between Laguna Beach and Daoo Poinl Two to four pounders the norm. Art's Landing reports good albacore action along with quite a bit of yeUowtail mixing in with the albacore. One day'1 catch was 18 of each. Barracuda are showing better promise in the last rew days, with b o n i t o holding 1heir own. Bass has picked up. LePage, however, .tired in the fifth, giving up one run via a single and a bouncer off his leg. The bouncer did the damage as a late throw to first ended up being thrown wild at third, trying to nail the lead runner. The run came home on the wild toss and the score was tied. An inning later LePage gave up three walks and it proved hi1 undoing. After officia!J labeled a LePage fastball a wild pitch and one run checked in (Mesa officials argued that it was a foul tip), \Vayoe Schrader came in from the bullpen. Schrader gave up an in- field single and the third run was over for San Pedro. Wigmore . despite the loss . has one good thing to think about during the winter and early spring. He loses only fi ve players Cror:n his squad. Those being Schrader, Bill Frey, Bob \\'ickersham. ~1ike Leppa and Bob Lin- nert. . ". C001neH DOI 000 !)....! 6 I Sen Pi!'ClrP DO 012 •-J 2 I c ...... u ,,, w111ri, c W1rblnlllM. II Mever, rt Wlc~ers.ri1m, 1~ ltl>PI, Jb LeP1~. o Snl'<ler. 111 8. llllr>ef'f," W..Ullfr1, II SI'"°"°"• cf Wl!brtc:t'll, II Sdl .. d .... , p C.'1'Pbll:lt pll lOllll .. ' ' ,. ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' • • " t. H Rll o I ' • • • . ' . • • • • • • . ' . • • • ' . . • • • ' ' ' • • • . ' ' . . ' . . ' S1• ,...,.. UI AIM!w. c Sdlcflekl. lb "'"ld<1, .. C1U9e<1I, :lb Mlr11neL rf Pwez. I l <WOll•. d IC.1rmll191, Jb R1mlrt1 II Ltllfl •• Tot1ll ... ' . ' . ' ' • • • • • • • ' ' ' • • ' ' • M "Rll . ' . ' . ' • • ' . ' . ' . ' ' • • ' . . ' Edwards P!£ks Up Cinder Honors Dennll Edwards of. Tustin rn off with the lion's share ol dcry in the Onal AU- Comers track and fi~ld meet at Cc:rona dd Mar High SCbool OD Monda1 af. -· Edwank noept to victory la a.. bitb ldl<>ol ediUon or Ille 120 bid> lrurdlel' Im low -· 1.bo -...s lb< ldOIJamf-O)'de EmerJ ol Senti Ana v.u.1 .... 1 dooble wlnoer, D.J lo U.. 220 and 10.5 la the lllt. CA>mpltle raulU: -~™-ifi-w' L Mllrrrt.,,.. LAGUNA NIGUEL -An important facet will be ad- ded to So~em. California's extensive recreation facilities when the I.egun.a Hills Winchester P u b 1 i c Shooting Center opens near here Aug. 24. nie newest trap and skeet facility in tlhe na t ion franchised by the Win- ches1er-Western Divmort of Olin Mathieson Cltemical OoJi>oratioo, ttle Laguna Three Baseball Leagues Vi ewed by Sox' Yawkey BOSTON (AP) -Red Sox owner Tom Ya\\'key says batieball eventually w i l 1 have three eight-team maj. or leagues instead of ttie two 12-team l~ues planned next year. The two-division setup ar· ranged for each league next season is "just a stopgap," Yawkey said in an interview with columnist Al Hirshberg, published Mon· day in the Boston Herald Traveler. Y.awkey de cl i n e d to estimate when the swi'tch to three lt?agues might be made. but said he is con- vinced it will b e c o m e necessary. "It takes some people a long time to see the obvious. It might be years. But it will happen," he said. ··Jt has to come. The old 154-game schedules were the best and m o s t econom.ical, and the only way }'OU oan have tJhem is with eight<lub leagues." Hawkey said a determina- tion ol bow to sylit the leagues would "take some study" but he suggested tbat "it should probably be done geograpl\ically. '' In the meantime, Yawkey s a id, baseball has •·no alternative" to the two- divisional arrangement. Hills club will offer claybird shooten seven fields, two for skeet, four for trap, and ooe for practice. A locally owned a n d operated corporation, the Laguna Hills Winchester Public Shooting Center is headed by L. D. (Larry) Coffing Jr .• president. Cof- fing also will manage the club, assisted by well-known gun writer E. L. "Mike" Keesee. Visitors over grand open- ing weekend, Aug. 24-25, may register for a brand new Winchester shotgun, their cboice of a M1400 automatic or MI200 slide ac· tlon , trap or skeet grade. The gun will be given away Sunday, Aug . 25. Also to be given away that weekend are two cases of \Vinchester . Western dove loads. Throughout grand opening week. guests also may register for a beautiful Winchester Ml01 over and un<:ler shotgun, 12 gauge, to be given away in a drawing Sept. 1. Again, Uie winner has his choice cl trap or skeet graxl.e. In the low net field, Fred Fredensburg ('77-9-68) and Ray Rinderknecht (80·12· 68) tied for the top spot. A crowd of eight tied for the runnerup spot at net 70. Those were Jim O'Shaun· ecy, Bill Lechner, Den· nis Schmitt, Chuck Roberts, Jack Frazier, Glenn Freese. Don Alfreds and Jack Vala- sek. Three ended up with blind bogey honors at 74. In the trio were Charles Edwards, Frank Olzanski and Mack Harris. BUCS, GWC MI X TONIGHT \Yard's Pirates and Golden West clash tonight at 7 in a Metro League baseball game at Shmfer Park in Orange. Ward's currently holds third place in the loop standiligs with an 8-7·2 record, wtule Golden West is holding down the fourth spot witb a 6-9·2 slate. A Gulden West victory wou ld set up a mad scramble for third place in final standings with each team. slated for two more games over the weekend. \Vard's could c fin ch third with a win tonight. Base ball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis Allan ta Chicago Cincinnati San Francisco Pittsburgh Phlladelph.ia New York Los Angeles Houston W L PcL 72 39 .649 58 53 .523 58 53 .523 55 51 .519 SS 54 .SOS 53 57 .482 51 ~7 .472 51 62 .451 50 61 .45t 47 6.1 .431 GB 14 14 14\\ 16 18\\ 19\\ 22 zz 24 AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit Baltimore Cleveland Boston Oakland New York Minnesota CalUonJa Chicago Washingiton W L Pct. 67 4L ;620 61 48 .570 60 51 .541 58 51 .532 SS 53 .500 50 SS .476 50 56 .472 50 5& .459 47 59 .443 3t 86 .371 GB 51\ 81\ 91\ 12 15\\ 16 17\\ 181.l: 26\\ BENEFITS OF LEASING THE FAMILY CAil l11ereesh19 ....... ., ... _ .. I... IMIW IMM tfte hlmlly 11« . ...,,_.."'""' Idell h: ""'-''• fM4 fw cest-c ..... -. Hll- .,. -...... toH fer Mr. ,,_..,.. M9MW1 Rl'Hlh SI. l.allls J. Clrw;1Ni111 2 ,..,......,.. •-th Mell." b•'"PI..._ ...., C•ll"f ............ Haull<in ,, Ntw Yor11. S 91111'"0,. I. Ntw Yorit i !ID IMlnl1l All•~" " Chit"" l '°'""' 1 .Ct'I~ t flO lflfll""! tl•11 ...,, wltti •Jr cndltt•lll"' -.. LM "-"" 1, P!lllburTll o no 1 .... 1,..,1 °"" 1...,.. actoeotuled. .Phllldlleflll •·T!::..~':"!: ' 01 !Mlllell TiCl'r'• .._ IMSff fw SI 21 --"tty (tlle ..._. .. lt- CMc-(Nleltf, 11-41 et Allelltlo II"""" 1·11, Mi-!1 IMll'rllt .. 111 et a.1nmor. IL-"llohl hltd J..IJ. "ltM th C•..-.... ,., ... fflJ, -'kl! ... Ntw Yort (C•t"dwell Jolll " HavJIOfl fGrv.H llos11111 !~ :Wl IOt Olic:-IC1•tw "-fl, 6-111. nlthl '!itl>I cl11ft •II Nq1l.-..d """* ""4 ..a..te-PFll!.cl1lp/ll1 (L. Jldr.Mlll lt.lll .i 1M! l'rl.,. \" Cll'Yllend ITllnt 11·1 .... Wl111...,, Ml II 0.. c!-lf>trrv f.101. nktM tr1111 tS...rme "'' ..,_ Hllltr J.2) 1, 1w1-r11..,1 hir 40 OOO "'' C U ~ CkK'IMlll iMllOIW\' '"" 11 $1, Loul• IOrllan Cltltllnll1 f~W ,... end MtGlotloUn 6-t) et _. • ft • C-.... 11-51. n..,,I Wato,.,...._ IC._ 1-11 .... l_,•lnt M l t. PlltlOu ..... t"'-.... \ et lo. A-"" ID..,.. NJ.flltf!I ,,.. .tc.). n. '"4w ..,. .,._ ........ d•ll 11 .. .., w""" 1.11. "ltM °"" .-~. 1----------------------------------I C•, "-'11t qplMI fM "••lhWl!I' ..... Orcnoe Co.'• Oldut 6 lifost Respected Ltntoln-Merciirv Dealer Johnson & Son ~# ~ r.1 f PCURY . 900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BEACH 642-0981 545-8271 "' I I ~·i(I.)[ N ......... ,... ............ '",..., .. ... ........ .....,2,....,...,.. ...... . ,..,. • •an,..., "'-"" M .W. ....... ,.._ .w-ti I S.. a..a..e ... w~ .. H ....... '-cL Ml~tll ., 141i.ft7t. ' Tut$d.t)', Auvust 6, 1%8 DAil Y PILOT 11 by Louis R. Benny Pr11ld1nt UNIVERSITY OLDS 2850 Hubor Blvd., C.M. 546-5550 An electric jack wW be on the market this fall. It works when plugged into the cigarette lighter soc· ket. Lifts the car's front or rear wheel and can be OP· erated remotely for safety. No big drain on any 12·volt battery. Cost is about $4-0.00. Probably ball of thr: 1969 model cars have side iln· pact bars inside the doors to protect passengers from side collisions. Good idea! Los Alamitos Entries ..... "-'-'· ......... ,,.._1,,. !Ny CIMr a flut. ""'.'" .._, r14' P.M. Pl•l T ~·· 3.50 rtrdt.. ~llJttl ' .,..r oldl. C .. lmlne. l"vr11 SlJOl. C .. lmlM HQ ..... l.flP Pin' (It Adalrj MIUY 81r Fly tW Slr1i;ul lltly Maa...v aov IA Ar1lu) Delacho ""' 1J w11-1 c-11•1 V1nlty 11 I' C.....WI Wiiiow Trll' t2 l Wr191!0 Tn.idr TNdr.lt (0 Motrll) l.mlklHm CW ,,.._1Mnb6dl) Truckle It-IH P•tel Goods'• Twit IC Smtih! AIM IM91• .. B.ey P11'Ur (! I' CtOlbYI Grind O.k IZ (Dlllnl) Ml Praftlo (J K81111) Golden V1U1y (I L Wtltihll '" "' >M "' '" >M "' "' " 111 "' "' •» '" '" SECOJIO ltACI!. 4 v1rd1. J '!'el• olds Ind uP I" Gtldol I Plul, Pur .. $1!00. McCCPr'I lllbe CD C1rdo.11l 111 Tl"v Lloht {W Mllsal>t:.<111 171 ClllcldiedeeOH 11 I DI...,.,. IUCk !W Str.uu) 116 True L.ole l1r !It L-1) 111 Mlc'1 Stormvleos llS 0.111 fo Y"" /R Flouel'OI) HS fl.PffU Min !R Ad1lrl 11~ ArrOOll'lt Sir IZ C0Uln1) lit l illy GVPSV (J Riiey) 111 AIM EMl~ll Gun Smat:e Doc !2 ti P111el Bunny 81r lt1 CJ 8nxj;/Jtld) Moor! 81rl1v !C S""llh) 81111 T-II H "•11<11 "' '" "' "' THlllD ltACE. lS6 v1rds. ~Iden 2 VMr oldl. Cl1lm!nt. PurM $1100. c11lmi1>11 Price ...000. Donlu1n Booillace (Z Coll!n•) Moonshine Bir (P Crc11.by) Grildl CO C1rdat1l P1uum S/11rron CJ W•hDn! Mv FltlCv l.ee Chldla W1r CD Trrt) 01ndv v11or Witch Me Tr1Y.i IT l ll>lltm) Deb'• Suo1r Al1b! Bo {II Ad1l•l •111 Ell1lflll Wond•'• Rocktl (C Srnl!hl Forw1•d 811terv (Z Coll!n•) LK'I l1r De9T~ (J K..,ll) "' '" '" "' '" "' '" '" "' '" "' •» "' l'OUllTH ••cE. llll v1rlh. l ~Hr oldl Ind UP '" Gr1de A Mlnu1. t"Uf'll 11700. SOPl!on'lor• oueen (I o C1r<l<n1)· 111 Rn'I ll:1<11.1e1t (T Llphlm) lU Trot V1ndy IC Smllhl 121 llel1mpgo MHr1 (A Ar1l11J 120 Donni JUl'll 111 ........... Gefti4l'1 ltnue1t CW 51,.., .. ) Chicana Or.nd IL Wr'9htl 51.1ck1e!1 Oetlllfll If 0 C.rdoul Sob'I Mlul ... (D TYnll "' '" '" '" l'LPTH llACI. U0 ytnh. Mt!fftl I v..1r Didi. l'llrw S ltOO, Oeea-TIH'n ID Tvrt) NttNn 0.troll UI: A.!Mlr) r.u $11 MM (D C.rdou) Tllnittle hck IP Ct_.,) S1l'1'J L..IWI IN P1lllo) lrlsl'I S.• (l Wrltl!I) MldnJtllt Stepp IJ lroollfle14J For..,.! All1I• iw Str1usa1 lonllldl l olo (Z Collln1) "' >M "' >M "' "' m '" ·~ SIXTN ltACI. l50 v1rds. J ._.., olds i nd 1111 I" GrlOt: AA Ml""'· PutlM! $2100. Robin Doblil tl ColllM) K19tv'1 Cfle.nl (J ltll..,) Mr. l.lmtll 12 I Ad1lt) "'-0 $1.111• (1 0 C1rdol1) Ap.c.Joe lt.,,-11 ROI" A:unn.r IW Str1usi) Mr. P11 Joe IW Sl-1 J1ck A Mutll" IJ Mllwd.I) Pteler l ob IC $""1111 ) Rocke! Liii .. (J WllMll'l AIM l!lltl~ll 0 111 8•1ndv (0 Tv•tl Llolltnln• Rtbet (J o Ordor1l Lotti l ull (I R Adi!•] "' "' >M "' ' " "' "' "' >M "' "' "' "' SEV!NTH Ill.Cl!. lll v1rds. 1 ve1r olGI. All-1nces. Puf'lt U10Q, Go Hombr1 (J K1nl1l Mldw1v D1ndv ID Tyre) 5.im'1 Night 0u1 (H Cr0$bl') Whe~'d Sheoo (C Sm!lh\ ~·1 Rtw1rd (Z Colllnl) Lon1son IN Pa!llaJ Brucl Coatie !T Lillh1m) T!!l!'ll S<lueeie (R A01lr) "' '" '" "' "' '" m "' l!ICHTM •ACIE. U0 Vl rd5. J tt•r olO• •nd 1111 I" Grlde MA Mlnu1. Pune t.JOOO. Lltlle To""" rw su1u11) Pawer llt\I IJ IC1nh1 Double llC11e (0 C1•llo111 W11Ch Ell (H Crolllvl Str1w Ooll Slru~v J1ow f CO TYrt") Tom LYdon (P Crosby) Coct<v KIO (C Sml!lll M1r~ II Mow (J W1l1«1) '" "' "' 111 '" "' '" '" '" HINTM JIA(I. 350 v1'111. t ve•r Oki> 1nd UP !n Gr1d1 A Plus, Puri• '1'100, ~dl•Y Dill! Cl Co!lln1J Rulffl1 CH P1tllol 0Ulllf! E1t1 ID C1nlal1\ "' "' "' "' Albacore• Y ellowtail Special Members of the "Anglers Friday Lunch eon Club'' or Ne\li·port Beach, aboard Art's Landing's "Channel Isle," show off their night's catch. An equal number of albacore and yellowtail were caui::ht -18 each. Standing with their catch (left to right )are Lois Chambers. Frank Keeler, Sam Kinsfalher, along with Ruby Fore (fifth from left). Others were unidentified. "' :c.wm•...... , ·~~iiii:::~ Los Alamitos Results THE LUXURIOUS Hard starting trouble on your car? ~k for crack· ed distributor cap or cor· roded cap terminal&. Search for a broken, pitted or burned rotor, or crack· ed and deteriorated spark· plug wires. Buddy MaCklY {D Ml)l'rl1) 116 V1ndy'1 $h1mrock (N P1tlloJ l ll Miu Cl\t<lue Dede IT Llph,m) Jlll'lll'\Y ~c 11_, Ol l'l•11t1r01) v1tley 11uu_, CJ K1n!t) 120 ~ ~· 116 ~.'.3D!5:a: NEW BAll$A THEATRE ~_:. Watch out for wrecks ahead of you. You may easily become involved. For instance if a car pass· es you that you don 't think can get back in the lane quick enough to avoid an oncoming car, slow down, or get off the road until the dan ger is past. T h i n k ahead, stay out of it! We demand that our salesmen present the car to you in the proper way, because we want you hap· py. We are never &atisfied .. , until you are with any sale of a new or used car. W h e r e ? UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE h e r e on Harbor in Costa Mesa. We strive to please, and I think that we do! "llOCKIHC CHI.Ill" l.OllS..h Automl!IC T........,..1u,. CO!llrll IOX OfflCI OPENS Sun •• frl.-12 Noon Sot. Onl~1 I :45 A.M. Sondl!IO (Z comn1) 116 Olrld -111 (J W11Jon) llJ 8oti'1 ll11tu1 (H CrOl.bvJ 11' Oto Ludlv CC Smith) C1nc1a lllY l1r (J areoldlelolJ Dld<tv Ovii T lme STARTS TOMORROW! DISNEY FUN SHOW! MltinH• Daily -DAILY - 11:• • l:>t • 4:>t · 6::it • l :>t • ll:>t l'.M. SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SHOW SATU•OAY CMLY U ·f ·4 ·•·1·11 ·Ul'.M. STARTS TOMORROW ACADEMY AWARD tJ ~!l~~~K~ICHOLS iiiE BANCROFT-DUmN HDFFMlN · UTHARUI ROSS tALDER WILLINGHAM .,., BUCK HENRY PAUL SIMON SiMb'N .... GARFUNKEL ~~ENCE TURMAN f;;1'KE NICHOLS TEDWAOR° PANAVISION' .,. ""9US• Pit fl.llll ll"*" '" "' "' M..,41.,, AUi. J, l NI Clt•r & F111 l"lllJT llACIE. lSll vard1. M1 ldt" 2 Ytlr al01. Claiming, P~r'" ll rOQ. Sonic Moon (Tvrt) ~.60 70.20 11 ID Fancr Wiiiow ISl•oel \2.20 1.10 R1!1 Ced; (Wiison) 6.IO Tim-II tflO. Scr•J!;hed -Bl11l"1 Herry, Chub'I Rt<1uest, Im• $1trlet. ~Yen 1111,s. Sl!CONb ••cl!. _, v1,.js. J ttfr ald1 I nd "" In Gr111e B Plus. Purse 115111. Ol•nl Tl~ ITvre) St~I Ch1r9e IColllnl) S!•r fYln CW1tson) Time-fl ILi!, lf.60 10,•0 '10 n .10 1.ao ••• Scra!ched -Coal U, Dust Ta Yw, D1ndy Rick, E~P<ftl Min. bAtLY OOUtlli-J.S°"k: M-& l· Clllnl Tl1r1t. P1I~ 12t7.lf. FOURTH RACE. 400 Ylrd1. J y~~r 01<11 tnd ~ In GrlOt: B Plu1. Purse 11500. eu1·1 Rock (C1•clat1l lS.«I U.IO 1.40 ll•IH l.1nd !Morrlt) l,«I S.IO D·CMt.er1>'1 HI Bir !F l11uerD1) 6.IO Tlme-11 ~/10. Scrl!(Md -Bellv'• Moon, M•C'I llCHTN l•CE. lSO Vlrdl. l W•r ~la1 Ind uP I" Gr1de AA Plu1, Thi Co111 Mesi. Pur1e 11300. OKI< Nolie ILlph1mJ IJ.IO 4.411 l.tll 61f'1 Fe.-Luci<. l IC1"iJ) 1.liO 1 . .0 Dec~ Jack (Rlln l 1 . .io Timf'-11 UIO. Alr.o R1,.._Cl1bber'$ Rocl<el. Bold 0~11.-, Dr. Him~, Pen P~f'• Oa!ldy, M!al1nd Je!, TOii EllmlnlTOr, Sanay Chit. No u:"tcl'lo1, ,,.!NTH lllCI!. ~9 yard5, J vear al01 1nd uP. Allowancts. Puroe \2100, Direct SPQt (Art lza l 5.olO •.00 J.IO Ltdl' 81 Sur. IP CrMbrl 1.60 S.liO Ll•k Gr1na \LIP111m) 5.00 Tlme-21 1110. Ali.o Ran-S1>•~l•~ Cavalier. Mlck'I Ml•~. D-M•ck1v B. S!arr, No 1cr11e1tes D--Flnlol>td 1"d, dli.ou1lltled t rld 1>l1ctd 11•1. S!ormvleg5, Anchor Bee, Md;D'('1 i 1 .. bt. D -F lnl1h..cl hi, d;s<1u1lllltd 1nd 1>l1ctd JrO, Fll"TH llACI!. 3JO Yl•ds. J Ytl• ald1 Ind ~ In Grid• A Mlnu5, Purse 11100. Olo VI" fP Croobvl 6,20 4.00 l.OD MIU Klltv Clu!f' i•ra!ll) 11.20 6.10 Ouesl Moon CMat11>d1) J.IO Tl,,,_11 4110. Scretchfl'CI -5undlgo, 1-W1lcf'I, Sol'l'>omMe OUtt", Tiit PollrOOtl. llXTH RACE. '<Kl Vl•ds. J ...... okll Ind UP '" G•ldt A Pluo. Pur~ 11900. TDP Noll<! CK1nl1) 16.00 S.IO J.IO Mllo.e.. Rocktl IA .. Jr1I J.60 2.60 Rc.:ket's K1t•v !Sl1oel J.20 Tlme-io 11!0. No Kr1tcl>es, Sl!Vl!MTH 1t•CE, JSO y1rd1. 2 ""' old1. Cll!ml1111. Pu•~ l llOI. Chu Chu l ob 1 !Str111s1l 1,00 3.60 J.20 Ao1cl'le P1uum (Wll•on) J.00 1.611 Rocket Jatu•• {Sn;ol!h ) S.IO Tlmot-11 1110. HARaOR ot ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546·3102 STARTS WEDNESDAY ACADEMY BEST DIRECTOR-MIKE NICHO~S • HOMI Of l!)(l(!tt• CHAii lOOll f 709 UST IAL!DA l lYD. \ 1./.. IALBDA PENINSULA· 571-4041 ~ Child With P1''"' Only e Op•n Ni9htly li :'4S e e ENDS TUESDAT e 5 ACADEMY AWARDS THE WILDIST" PatrSe!'~ FAVORITES N1tion1I i nd Ioctl r11d1r- 1hip pol/1 prOYI !ht OAIL Y PILOT c1rri11 1om• of tk1 '"oil popul1r columns ind f•1lur•1 1vai11bl1 in 1ny n1w,p1p1r St1t•1. in th1 Unit1d ENOS TUESDAY LUCILLE IALL HENRY FONDA C(IJM ~ Dllm UIITTI Mimi -·-- STARTS WEDNESDAY l'le11ln9s l :JO & t :)O Merl11on Sot. ' Sun. J:OO 52 BEST PICTURE AWARDS • • Deep Sea Fish Report JllWPCU U•Cll -et llrt. ••"•- II l•Mlo"' U4e lo!. -Ot, J;IHt HELO OVER -Dorisl><r)'·RobertMtii!e .. Terry-100nas·}'miO'Neal .,,. CHRRUDll HESTIIR mRHlmUn SCHELL '" _ 'COUllTERPGIDr '"' TfONCCllot .... Ends Tonight June AMI,..... "THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE" .... "THE SHAKIEST GUN IN tHE WEST" Stull Wodnetdey Eve. Show Stom. 6:45 Co11tl1111e11s Cont. Sund.., fron1 2 ·p.111. Wffnftdoy fro111 2 p.111, ~=·-··=---·~ ~ox~~.!'z~~:;.?A~:~ " ~.in Die10 Freeway at Bristol • 546·2712 ., ENOS TONIGHT WALT DISNl.'YS j • • • ..--... ...-~ ....... ----...-------------.....-,...._---:"" _ _,...... _________ , ..... ) a DAil Y I'll.OT I • Loqk at These Birdies ••• You11 See The Champions LEE PAYNE, Dilly Piiot chief photetrephlr, ptrf·tlrne author ind college lnttrudor, almt the Dally PllDt't moter-drivtn Mquenc• c1mtr1 th1t can shoot 11 many 11 thrff pictures per MCOnd. It's the latut 1dditlon to an 1nen1I of c1meru he uHcl to ahoot some 9re1t pictur .. ln 1967- lncludlng one group of five shots which 11rned him tht pr111 club11 ''Photogr1ph1r of the Y11r" award, from th• Orange County Pr111 Club. ' RICHARD KOEHLER Is th1 D•ilv Piiot staff pho- tographer known in tht tr.de 11 "Code 3 KMh- ler ... Hit 1pecl1ltl1S are crime and c1t11troph1 and ht'• ont of the best "grab shot'' men In Southern Callfornia. But hi proved his 'ltrlltfllty lut ,..., by thooting 1 layout of five plcturn of a Utt .. 9irl on 1 nt of swinging rings which won W• tilt prau dwb'1 "lest Photo Series" ..-.rd. Ht 1lto got the club'• "Bast Sports Photo" 1w1rd for 1 footblll 1ctlon 1hot. LYLE HAIGH Is the min yau 1lmost never su 1t the Delly Pilot. He'1 our d1rkroam technici1n. A former protea-af the lite, greet Wi lli1m Mo,... tenMn•and oper1tar of hi• own studio In L1gun1 Be1ch. where he specl11ind in portr1it phot• grephy end restoration copies, this Is 1 matter cr1fttm1n who knows hit buslneu. He printed the prln-w1nnlq negatives brought back by the champion photographers with whom he works. 70,890 Shots Last Year That's bow many pictures these specialists and others on the stall shot during 1967. Only 11 of those shots were prize.winners, one out of 6,371.08. But if you think that's something, consider that only about 6,000 of the remaining 70,079 even made the paper. You just '1ook at the birdie" and let these iUYI worry about the pressure ••• Enioy Prize-winning • Views of The News in The DAILY PILOT D~legates ·Pressured Devious Maneuvering at GOP Parley MIAMI BEACH CUP!) -delecai .. arrlvlna In Miami A Mtecate arrives in Mia.ml Stach a r e fantastically Beach undecided 00 his eomplicated and v a r I e d • choJce for President. Most of the approaches are 1ubUti only a few are O.Q the "Why not vote tor· Frank blunt aide. Frlend&bJp h carbon,'" a I o n a • t I m e usually the mortar Wttlch political friend 1u1gerts. cemt.'nls political d e a 11 • "You know he's retlrin& Political frlen'ds do not have from the Senate and ll lo make bargalna. Without woqJd be a ireat tribute to a saying it, they understand gr~ old mu of our par-• the poUUcal rewards or ty. being with the winner. I n nocent.aouodl.ng sue· The Nixon camp lays it geatlon? Perhfipa, but it also strictly low key. A friend may be part of the devio1.1 s goes to a top member of the J>OliUcal maneuvertna aoing New Jersey delegation and on at Ule Republican N•· lets it be known that the tional Convention. former vice president isn't For that vote of tribute to particularly ioterested in Sen. Frank Carlson, favorite whether or not Sen. Clifford son of KaMas, would fit P. Case r e m a i n a as a .neatly into the strategy of favorite son. Tbe friend acts Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller full of confidence as though to atop Richard M. Nixon. the race is over -no deals The more votes ~ere are are needed. for favorite sons the less But that New Jersey chance there is that Nixon politician somehow ls made will go over the top on the aware of what happens to a first ballot. delecation which has the The pressures on chance to be on a * * * * Convention Security Tightest in History • - Crossword Puzzle LEGAL NOTICE AC ROIS 1 Scolds Vthtmently 6 AdjtcllYt SU flX 10 King or 1sr1el 14 N.,tlcilf direction IS "Doll Hou st"' character 16' Char1ctH of sound 11 E1u;1sslve 1nthusl1srn 18 Variety qi talc 20 In favor of 21 Journey 21 lnse:ct 24 Bound 25 Bt In· formed of 26 Go back 30 Bai lle Sea peoplt 14 East 35 River lo, the Ca$ii,1n sea 37 Greek letter )8 Fore5hadow 39 Ancient 41 E. lndlan we:lght unit 42 Harlf!I roont 43 C1n. Indian 44 SttoUar 46 TV, In England 48 Ctrtaln speKh sounds 50 Danldl 11si's .... 52 Anatomy: Abbr. 53 Child's toy 56 ltaltan: Abbr. 57 Coal unit 'O Strikln9 6'2 Reproduction of a person 64 Forthwith 6;5 lmpttUOUS ardor · 6'6 Sleur de L•-: Can. tX· plorer 6'7 Perust 6'8 Slit 6'8 Woodtd COIN 1 Act furiously 2 Armadillo 3 Admitnltlon to chlld: 2 words 4 Nucntrlcal prefix 5 Post of duty 6' Interior 1 Prison: Slang 8 Textllt screw pint ' Slip 10 Oress 11 Oregon mountain 12 Name of many qutf!ls Yesterd1y'1 '""'' Solvtd: .. • LEGAL NOTICE ll Sprutt .-45 Kind of 19 Brtak tta~her of up ort the deaf 2Z Clergyman ·47'Trtdltlonal 24 Wood source story 25 At this 49 Open to point In no!lce space 51 Occurrlnt 26 Autom1tlc betwte:n: device Prellx ---..Or1c1 0" TltUSTll'S SALE Nt, 0 1111J 27 Diminish 53 Jack -: by degrets TV person• 0!1 A.1111u1t 21, lHI, ti 1:00 o'C:bek l'.M., •I me 5Glllfl enlrtnc• of lllt Or•rttt COii,.. Iv Cour!fl0uil9, In S•nl• AM, C1llforn1-. SECURITY PACIFIC NATIONAL BANK, •• dlll'f 111p0lnled l•Ulll!'e under tM dltd of ""'' "'"" Al>rll s. 1NJ. """' b'f GEORGE P, KltEIBICN tncl BAI.BARA J KRE191CH, racorO..:I on April t, 1"3, r~ boek ~ PH• m of OHtcl•I RocO«ls !n !he ofll<e of Ille Countv Rttord<l!r of Or•nlll Countv. C1Utoni11, 11'1' re1son of d-'•"" In lh• ,..v....nt OI' Pll'•lorm•n<;I cl obtl111tlon1 MCurt<I ttwereby, I Nollet 11 Oeltulr •nd Electlo<I to !.ell U"°"r Died of Trusl hlYlnt beeil recorOl'd •• prov!d<l!d IOI" bv law and mc1re lt11n ll>ree monin. ha..-1119 el1p1Pd 1lnc:t 111(/1 record1ttori. will 111! •I PVbllc •udlon to lllt hltNsl bkldff IOI' u~. PIVlbll In ltwtvl mMeV ot The United Sl1te1 of Am1rlC1 11 time of ult!, wllhoul coven1nl or w1rr1n1V IX• 1or1tS1ed OI' Jmpl!l'd IS to 11111, POIHUlon or enclln"!brltKeS. 1111 lnlerHI convtv*'ll lo and now held bv !I u{lder 11!d de.cl of tru~t, In el'l<I to 11141 P•OPl!:rtv In Or1111• Couniv, $1111 of CAlllorn!1, deKrlbed ts: 28 --bort lity 29 Certain 54 Oepartmtnl ranch of Frltlce guests 55 llalay 31 Something s1lllnt thJit glvts boat pleasurt 56 flusslM ,3z Thither · sailor 33 Classlfles 57 Account 36-· pectorls 58 Glance at 40 Roof defect admiringly ~1 On your 59 Urgtnl way! want 43 Founder of 61 See 6 Persian Across Empire 6') lnju1t " Ii Thi Norltle•Sltrlv onMl•lf ot Loi 16 of T•1ct Mo. XIII. ln 1fle tllv of Cml• Me••· It 11>0wn on I m111 lllfloeol record..:! In book H, l»'lln II Ind l?, M IKtll1neou1 Miiii.. tKOfdl Of .. Id Ora.,ge Countv S.ld s11e will bl' ••1'de to pay tli• obll;lllons s~ured bl' uld Oeff of lrusl lnc:ludll'lll 111 cosl1, lee Ind !XPlnlH o! lruiltt 1nd l!f t~• lru•I creale'd ~I' ..,Id deed of trusl: •II tum1 •Xl>lnded under ll'rt lerm1 ot "Id dH<I al !rust, not ~n rf!lltld; and 11.l7~.'5 rem1lnl1'111 "'lnclpel of tllt nQ!e .. cured by 11ld ~td of lrint, wllll lnlf'resl f""'" ""•II JJ, lHI ll In U ld nole praYldl'd. Oiled A1111ust '· lt61 SECURITY PAC IFIC NATIONAL 8ANK Formffll' SECU RITY l"IRST NATIONAL 8,1,MK 11 Trusfft 8V Lewl1 W. Mc.Mulflll As..ls!lnl Trust •••I Est1te O!'llcer 21751 l'ubllshl'd Ortnoe Cots! Dilly l'llot .t.U11U$I i . IJ, 20, 1961 lJ».41 LEGAL NOTICE - fwsd11, August 6. 1'68 D.\ILV PILOT 1• You Can S.I It, Find It, Trad• It Everyone HH Something Th at Someone Else Wants-'l'BE BIGGEST SINGLE MAJU[E'l'Pf.ACB ON 'l'BB ORANGE COAS'J'-PBONE DlllEC'J' 84.2""7& Willi a Want Ad HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOii SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOii SALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSIS FOii SALi RENTALS --•------"~'--·1 --------H-Fumlahod 10001-----------------------·· Gonerol 1000 General 1000 <ioMrol 1000 Newport a.uh 1200 Huntington ... 91 1400 Ront•I• to Share 2005 Generol 1000 Generol 1000 LUXURY LIVING -1/2 ACRE The m06t WlUSUal property in this area. Gorgeous 3 bed· room plus Den, home with custom appointments -anti- que mirrored walls, large rear glass wall looks onto huge Heated and Filtered POOL surrounded by e:ic· panse of decking. Two lovely baths. I..aJi:e kitchen and reparate servlce area with all built -in conveniences. Wrought iron staircase leads to 2nd Story 1 Bedroom and d€n -large living room and b a I h separaie apartment over 3 car garage -2,600 sq. ft. ot pure pleasure! Plus nice pool house, work shop and vacant rear area for additional building. Nestled in lovely Back Bay Location. can NO\.\'! Only $59,500. 2043 WESTCLIFF DRIVE 646-7711 Open Eves. SPLASH SPWH Summer fun in your own 16x35 custom pool. Fine 3 BR + family room home. Spacious living room, gold \V/W carpets, bee.vy shake roof. S_pUes.s condiUon, near shopping & scbool.s in Mesa del Mar. Only $29,950 -as- sume high GI loan no cost. ~-1003 Baker, C.l\f. 546-5410 Your Cake and Eat It Too Mr. Renter think of this. No maintenance. no upkeep, an easy bike ride to the beach. 3 bedroom 1 % balhs, 2 se- cluded patios, pool fun, large double car garage, only $175 for all this. No points to pay, just assume a low 5!!4 '/~ FHA loan. $3,300 down and a total price of only $22. 750. Colesworthy & Co. 642-7777 lS0-1 Harbor Blvd., C.r.t. Open Eves. FIXER UPPER NEWPORT HEIGHTS 4 Bdrm. in excellent condi- tion -1% baths, new car- pets. Inunediate possession upon buyer's credit ap- proval, $24,500 with $1,950 do\vn on FHA terms. Widow moving out of country wants offer. 646-7171 546-2313 OPEN EVES. THE~EAL ESTATERS • $37,950. and only $450 down to quali- fied Veteran. New 4 bed- room, 21Ai bath, family, din· ing, den with fireplace, drnpes. Landscaped. 646-4414 .Dtlt• Jiu! fstatt Brokers· Salesmen Earn 100% comm. Low monthly desk fee multiple ______ __;. HARBOR HIGHIANDS Can yoo use a 'I'HREE BED- ROOM PWS DD!, 21' Bath home in NEWPORT BEACH! Enjoy the many niceties usually associated with a taii:e rountr)' estate without tile tremendous u~ keep, LIVE MEDITm.AN· EAN with cok:lrful dffigner grille carpeting and Spanish hanging lamps, Bart>eeue in shade of the covered patio. Be first to see this prl'ferred value for S32,!rio; e a sy terms. $500 DrHm Cot1119e Billiards Anyone! 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, llvlng Thia liharp 3 BR home hal! room wllh romantic tire- been oompletely customized place. Bea,utiful Kitche n, lrom the expensive· c&rpet· forced air beetina, 2 car 1ar- lng, new waler heater, new age, h u C e enclosed yard, turnace & lush landscaping, s:t'Nt tor~ children. Owners to the fabulous rumpus room moving vel)· soon. Try SSOO which will easily aCC<Mno-Down, payment less than date a billiard• table. rent. /Ca... COATS ~WAL~ACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0pen Evenlnp) ASSUME $24.~00 VA 6% LOAN 7682 EDINGER 842-4455 or ~5140 Evenings Call 646-1050 3 BR, family room, dining -~J~U~S=T~F~O=R~Y~O~U~-i room. Full pri~ S21i,950. Executive Choicel Custom built 4 BR on 100 ft Jot in exclusive area offers formal dining room, attach- ed covered patio and many other luxury features. Full price $38,950. Terms, CI or FHA Buyf!rs. 2,IXXI Newport Paci.fie Shores Retllty 536-8894 or &47-8586 square feet of spacious liv· 11 ing area with 5 LARGE BEDROOMS, 16:<32 POOL, lremendous family room, 2 baths, all built-in ldtchen & low maintenance yard for a LOW, LOW S26,500. COSl'A MESA OFFICE 2790 Harbor Blvd. 545-9191 Open 'til 9 PM Harbor View Hills Corona del Mar Lusk built homes located in the Southland's most de- sirable & fascinating area. Schools & Calif. Irvine Campus just moments away. Sensibly priced from S34.000 to S48,900 LUSK HOMES Directions: MacArthur Blvd. fron1 Pacific Coast Hwy, or Newport Ff'\\'y. Tum on San Joaquin Hills Rd ., then follow signs to model area. PRICE OF PERFECTION 4 BDRM "G'' DOWN PAYMENT lsloated rear living room ov- erlooks a picturesque yard, nC'aUy manicured lawns - well gromed shrubs. 2 baths. Dream kitchen with all the 20th century built-in featur- es for your convenience &: comfort. Priced to sell at S24,950 -No down G.I. or low down FHA! 846-0604 TARBELL 5824 Edinger $500 DOWN On this 4 bedroom, 2 bath family home. C1ose to every- thing. Just introduced to the market -won't be around long~ S130 per month in- cludes principal & lntere.n. 2043 WESI'CLIFF DRIVE 646-7711 Open Eves. OUR BEST BUY! 10% Down • Oiarming 3 bed- room eastside doll house • built·ins • lovely c~ting - clean as a pin· Te1Tific val· ue at $23.000. you'll love it. 646°7171 546-2313 OPEN EVES. THE~EAL i E S TATERS ' Vl~orla 646-8811 A CHARMER! (Open Immaculate -Early Ameri- can. 3 Bedrooms, Family Evenings) Room, Double Fireplace, 1 -;:::::~======i l Double garage, Work Shop, I 1 Bolt Yard. Call for appoint· NO DOWN ment to aee thfs . spe.cklu.s custom built home. S74.500. JEAN SMITH, ~do 3 BR homo, -0. REALTOR several fruit tree's. Outstand- TO VETS for thiB cute East- ing buy for only 400 E. 17th St., C.M. 646-3255 $20,950 4 BR HOME 2 Baths, fireplace, carpets. drapes, blt·ins. All in A-1 conditiori. Close to schools & shopping. $'24 ,000. rnsmuo, Well1+McC1rdle, RltrL * 642°1771 Anytime* 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. __ _ __ ___ 548-7129 Eves. 54UT/'3 Rare Find "NEWPORT BEA.Qt" "5, DEN, 4 BATHS" Library, fi yn new 3 Car, bit-ins -$49,950 Lido 70' lot with lovely 2 story home. Sunken living room, lu.scious 11ew carpet. Sunsbine &. beautiful J;:ar· dens •..........• ,. $69,500 "OCEAN VIEW' -$25,900" Charlotte Long Hu.rt 2 Bdrms, 2 ba, 50Xl27 la.._.I.~•-_ Tlreplaee. Below _market! ~ HOME 642-4090 C & (o Deluxe lncorM Units old\ven, Banker ' . NE\VPORT BEACH. best lo-M~· :.=. ~1=11 ' cation? 10 units, 2 BR's each K• •·WI Olt s--with fireplaces, Xlnt financ· -----ing! Grosses $17,00J. Full $650 DOWN price nas.cm. Ruth' Pardall, Realtor 1600 Westclilf Dr. 642-5200 FHA/VA terms on this nee.t,l!!!!!O!!O!!O!!O!!O!!O!!O!!!!!!!' _Eastside home. Call NOW for appointment to see! P.EAl_TY COMPANY Under $25,000 low Down 3 bdnn, family room Martin Real Eat1t1 548-6332 * 642-1771 Anytime * -,T"'H"'E=--cA'""'TR=lu=M,- 50 FT. PATIO by Ivon Wells ''TAHITIAN" BEAUTY Distinctive 4 BR, 3 BA. 3 car $24 950 • No oOwn G.I. garage. 14' Beamed ceiling- or I~ down to others. 4 spac· translucent roof, t!l'Ta tile ioos bedrooms, 2· baths. The and panelled walls. _ yard is a tropical paradise-Roy J .. Ward Co., 646-1550 Elevated bamboo but, water Reil Est1te fall, fish pond· 50 ft. covered Sa let Personnel patio. All built -in luxury SMALL CROUP kitchen. See it You'll love 657 W. 19th, Costa Mesa it: 540-1720 Rltrs. 642-9730 Ev6, 548-0120 TARBELL 2955 Hubor • KENNB>Y Golf Course Lot )58 I 0. t froot•go on tho DAVIDSON Realty course overl~i:: lush 2 STORY_ $30,500 greens and f8ll'Ways, num-Beautifully decorated 3 BR crous lakes and the Club fa.rn rm din nn del .50 tU liouse. Surrounded by Jwt· . ' • Pl e · ho On I kind &: mimnd entry. unous mes. Ml ..a-Rltr. 7750 Harbor 5B, CM 8t $25,000. 546-5460 Ev 56-51A'> COi.LEGE REALTY 5t6-5880 ea. .... OELUXE Canyon-Sid~ Home wilh view of brtakini;: 1w1 on white sandy beach ln exclusive Cameo Shor~:; 3 Bedrooms + maids and spacious family rm beautilUJ ·swimming pool Priced to sell! $97,(XXI Contact Wally lhJlberg 642-4290 Berth Your Yacht PIER ' FLOAT at )'OW' own john macnab !loot ""°" Ea•y •"""U to the Big Bay from thl• Chan· nel locatloo. Lge Apt Gver VIEW •"· -room to bulkt. New View Home. 4 BR. 4 Burr 1hhite, Rtaltor baths, dining nn, break:fut 675-4ti30 rm, unobstruct~ View ::1.aa<'[ST;;;;;--;B;;U;;Y;--;BA;;;:Y;;CR;;;;;EST"'" the Bay. Priced S00,900'. Out Quick P06Sesion oI State owner must eell! Spacious 3250 sq. ft. cust., Try $79,500 "Profe6ll. decor, & lnd!Cl:d .. 5 REALTY C:OMPANY 881 DOVER DR. NEWPORT BEACH (7 14) 642-823S lg. BR. Xlnt cond. Rare buy II $69,500. 51,i St. L 0 an lranfeITable. Not on leue land. 646-2828 Eves. 2100 WINDWARD LANE BLUFFS FOR Sal . Sacrifice! $.12,:;(X). By owner 3 . e or trade; exclusive Br 2r b Opt drpts lm-Rlvtera seetlon ol Pac!Jlc · . 3 •· 5: · Palisades; 4 BR., 3 Ba., mediate possessK>n. Fran· w/maid's qtrs. Htd., lilt. ce9C8. Model. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!i!!iii!!!!!!!!!!!!l I pool. Will trade ""or down. * 644-1149 * NEWPORT HEIGllTr Price. S!M,000, 0 w n er h ;i 213,4.IO-Jl'l6 Newport Helg, 11_..!210 Near Harbor Hi Sunmmc:!ed by beautiful cus- tom built homes. On a cul- de-sac street. 3 BR 2 baths, larie living room with fire- .Place, hardwood f I 0 0 r I, built-ins, FA heat, double garage, shake roof, Wll..lk to A1L schools. Rltr. 646-3928 Eves. 642-0185 *LACHE,.MYER Wood9CI Retr.Gt Have you thought about country living in a spacious 3 bedroom home on a lure wooded lot! Relax In tltl.! e o u n ~ r y atmosphere for only S.'ll,900. Submit on VA financing. 1:\s~~'i~a .. •REALTY ~· "anytime" 2629 Harl>or Blvd., C.M. R.E. SALESMAN Opening for aurcssive sales· person. Top location, excci comm. Replies confidential. * 642-1771 Anytime * 4 BEDR/,f:-PooL 'FUN' . , $23,5001 NO DOWN PAYMENT! Vacation here· aJl year round Generous sized bedrooms, 2 pullmu be.th!. Many. 1dded luxuries tar )'OW' p~easure &: convenience. 15 x 10 pool. Price includes washer le dry- er. 540-17l0 TARBELL 2955 Horbor 200 FT. DEEP GROUNDS • $17,9501 Builder's Attentionl Very valuable land near Broadway Shopping Center & San Diego freeway • ex- tensive commercial bldJ's. ln area. 'There's a 3 bedroom home too! Great potential here · live in home now buikl units for the future! 842~91 TARBELL 16111 BHch Repo1ae11lon 5 BR, 3 baths with both din· in1 room & brttkf•sl atte&. Owner will carry tull 90 % Joan at 6.6% interest Full prlce $30,995. COLLEGE REALTY 546Q80 Costa Mesa 1100 Blue Ocean View -------$140 MCNI'H INC..UDlNG and Sea Breeses go with this TAXE.S. Excellent 5% % prestige home. 3 Br. 2 baths loan-no loan fees. Im-plus many tine features. maculate 3 BR 2 bath home. Tastefully decorated. Car. Excellent carprt, freshly sundeck also hu view. Low painted & quiet cul-de-sac Interest, no loan charges. A street. Large kitchen & bargaiJ'I at $34.750. fa,mily room. 0 w n er GRAHAM REALTY ~2414 traneferred. Priced Io r (near N .B. Post Office) quick aa1e. CALL 540-1151 • H"'"'"' R..i "' .. " Queen Size Eslale BY OWNER 3 Br. 1'19 ba. Stove, drapes .t: water Spacious l ljMinn 2 ba home, softener. Lrg. cov. patio. cpts & drps, fireplace, cov- . Wide lot. Reduced price ered patio. La;e • car garaa;e $20,500. 265 Camellia Ln /elect opener. On l~ lots. 642-0668 Bearing avocado Ines. Ask· -$21 950 OWNER ;,,g 133·""· only 10" cln. • -GRAHAM REALTY 646-24lt 3 Br. l'h ba. bltns, frpie. Pa· (Near NB Post OUice) tio, dbl gar, fncl. GI or nIAlo"-'•=,...,..-i'""""'-,-2220 Maple st. &t6-23al· Priced To Sell Nowl ===""=:=:=:;;=I' Br's 2 ba. Xlnt location, Mesa Del Mar 1105 Many other attractive tea· titres. Close to schll. Out· COOL SEA BREEZES standifl& value at $39,950. Peaceful garden aurrounded 642-5843 by deekina;:, a joined • beauti-ISA '"""v"E-7;;3,-,_-:126=750=-A~1TRA=-c. fully carpeted 3 br, 2 ba, 3 Br. 1 ba. MAKE OFFER borne. Newly painted ext, 400 Pirate Rd . &f6..3Cr19 walking d i st a n c e tG all! :::-=====,'-',C...- scnools, incl. OCC. Ex tr 6 * PLEASANT CUtt Haven 3 bonus for the family or pro-Br, 2 ba + 2 Br Ocean Vu fessional man 111 the 22'x20' income Apt. $49,500 548-7249 ~r. rm. or prlv, off. com-I , pit. w/pool table. Org. own-rvine 1238 er, 545-1909. Elegant Private Twnhae 3 Br. M 2 ha. C'Gmm. pool, rec. esa Verde 1110 Decor. extru Incl. S2'1',00J. Save -By Owner Owner: 833-0304 4 BR. 2 Ba Assume ·5~% -E FHA. Bee.utiful comer lot I -;";;';tb~l;;u~ff=;;;;;;;;;;;l;2;;42 ~.!m. 5.11-1636. 54&<801 I' OPEN HOUSE SUN 1 .5 2854 Corob COOL POOL HOME Newport Beach 1200 ' PERFECT for retirement or vacatim. Lure M G bi I e Home, 2 .bathl, patio clubbowe, pool, pr l " a t e . bet.ch. Barpin. 675-1672 ID Eutblutt, f BR, 2 bl. "SWIM ·IN THE SUN" Quick possession, $43,950 ~F AREA Delancy Re•I Estate 3 Huge Bedrooms 2 Baths 2828 E. Coast Hwy., CdM Fenced olf Pool. ~ly $31,750 673-3770 HOME 642-4090 --·----,-,,==-=~~---BLUFFS, ~ "G" PI a n: LARGE Mobile HGme, 2 Spaciou.s ' br, 3 ha., By Baths, patio, c I u b house Owner. $37 950 ~40 pool, private beach. 6~16721==='='';==::=;:;,= 1812 Highland Dr., Harbor Corona del Mar 1250 Highlands: 4 BR. 2 Ba. m.950 54<-2347; •-m-2908 VIEW OF HARBOR Owner MOYE In! Neu ne-.v ~ BR., Quaint home. Large living frpl., new ·cpts, nr. beach. room & fireplace. Reduced $28,000. Open weekends: 351 to $38,900, 6'nd St Owner675-0144 CORBIN-MARTIN ' Waterfront 3 BR, No. 62 REAL TORS 67>1662 BalbGa Covet. $60,000. Beautiful 3 Br. So. of $30,000 cuh by loan. highway. By owDer only. Bal. in acreage LI ~rm Reasonable. .. 67J.6636 FIXER-UPPER 2 BR tum. house, R·2 ione. ~RY 3 br. 2 bath ooodo, Lido Isle 1351 frp., poo~. roll. fee land. _ -------'"'- larae lot. 17th St. Shopping Owner tran!fernd. S32.SOO Big Family Size Area. Asktng $17,500 By C>Nner. 642-3371 5 Bd, fam, 5 be., din 00 50· Leon Vibert, Realtor N MOVE Jn! Mt new 4 BR., cor, 2 trplc, 3,CD'J aq. ft. 548-ffi88 anytime frpl .. new cpts. nr, beach. real charm. Boat parking NR. Harl»or Hi. 3 br, 2 ba, i:28,000, Open weekende: 351 work rm,"bjz patio, $100,<XX> 4 IEDRM • 2 BATH SHARE CM Apt W11aAy. $24,9501 Coov. location. Poo I. 6'2-2!08 NO DOWN PAYMENTI Reasonable! Most inspitln& around• • a tmorn) tropical paradise? 50 Jt. COV· 2_B_R_Fum~-w-/pool~-. -s~-~~ont-1 end. patio SWT'Otmded by $60 + Util ea. 24U 16tb ~­ lush landscapina: -casctdin& B. Apt G 494-3015 &ft 5 watertall. ti&.h pood i ador-able elevated bambJo but ClRL Over 25 to share apt., playbouse.Everyroomlsan Newport Beach. 5t&-C3l8 invitation to specious Uving! ~aft="='=P,.M,,,.,-=.,.--.-­ Ddightful family room. To WANTER Girl o/21 to tM:e see It la to want It! No down Penn. Apt. ·Call after $:30 G.1. or low down to otheri~ 61~78 ' 842-0091 TARBELL 16111 BHch COii• MelO 2100 JR. "ITALIAN VILLA" -1 -.-.-,--------"" , um. _, mo, gar POOLll $22,950 W•I« pa;d, Coae 1n.1 qu1e1 '$0' DOWN PAYMENT old<r ,,._, No petl. You won 't believe it 'lil yau 54~ aee it • moat gorgeoua rear 1-~S.;_p.~lum-.~. be~ch~-.--- yard • goU co~ ara-1111 • soo. Incl. prdener:. never needs mowing • • Realtor . 5'&-Tr.lO en pool, fountains -truly a I ==========I beauty! King aized bed-Newport Beach 2200 rooms, quality new carpet· Ing,' custom drapes. Moat convenient location. 846-06M TARBELL S824 Edinger Builders Closeout JUST ONE LEFl' 3 BR + den & family room. Brand new! No down Vets - low down FHA. Your choice of carpeting. We may oeven furni&h you with new draper- ies -or pay yoor closing BAY FR 0 NT, Beelltifulb fumiabed. 3 Br. l ba. Avail Aug· 10. Reduced 1ummer rate. Consider year'• ·leue t<> reaponslble adult at $350 mo beginning Sept 1 , ~ PENINSULA Pt.; 2 BR., kina;-size bed; dbl. gar., washer/dryer. Avail, Sept. lt4h. $165 Moolh, winter; $225 Mo. yearly. 675-4230 costs -do YoUI' landlCllM&. ATJ'RA.CTIVE waterfroot ' Immed. poueaion on credit Br. home, boat dock, winter ewroval. $25,815. lease. LISTER REAL TY 1213) OW 1-<CJl7 16612 Beach Bl., HB, 642-6633 I========= I POOL 15x35 e Price $23,750 e Hardwood floor1 e W /w carpets a C.Overed cabana • Wet bar a Excel cond tbruo.lt e Terms GI or FHA Newport Hgtt. 2210 3 BR partly fum., larse pool, lawn & pool service Avall 9- l-68. $275. 64W'Kl6 CHARMING 1 Br. tum House, Fenced yard, fireplace. $135. 642-4368 Lido 1110 2351 Never agaiJ\ wW YoU tind a home like tlUs at this price. Paul Jones Realty 4 BR., 2 Ba.; avail. 847-1266 Eves, 842-5844 after Labor Day thru Island In the Sun June. $325 MG. 615-0179 Outdoor livln& indoo'r 1n thJ.a \ =========: lovely 3 & den. Hua:e facn· Huntington Beach 2400 lly room with Pal011 Verde fireplace overlooking pn> GUEST House, man prefer., l . 1 cook1n.g facU.: util pd. Nr. essional Y la'ndcaped ""1 beach. $75 Mo. 536-7870 eVH Summer Renl•l1 2910 yard. Formal dinifts room & ~ Leoe '1 w/w throughout. many extn.s. Will sell at FHA aiipraiaal. NPT Bch 1 .BR, aleepa 4-1 LISTER REAL TY blk to 'Ocean, A,,. .. l80 per 16612 Beach Bl., HB, 6CUil33 wttk, $250 mo. 642·1Z72, Do Laguna at Victoria Bch. l WNTOWN BR house, 1le<po 4, 1100 per CUSTOM BUILT wk "monthly rate. 642-1272 3 Br. lrg fam rm with -, wk or $300 monthly n.te. ....... 642-1272 fireplace. Hd tloots. Elegant CJ'1>ls, dtp11. Walk to .schla & 1 & 2 Br. FUm Apts. ~ park. 50xl27' lot, alle)'. blk to ocean. 1209 W. BRASHEAR REAL TY Balboa Blvd. Bolhol. 115 847-8531 Eves. 968-U7B wk-$1.50wlt. 494-5189 (3) HUGE LO'I'S, near Ocean 2 BR home 1n Lactma 60' x 200' (fee aJmple). Beach, Aug & Sept. $123 wk PLUS or $385 mG. 497-1451 3 & 4 Bedrooms. Luxury 1 BR. fun!. Apt. alpt. fi BUCCOLA-BUlL T homes. 1 Block tq \le..-Cb. Wffk)y SHERWOOD ESTATES $85. N•WJ>C>n Bch "'"°311 Brookhurtt at Hamilton RENTALS Huntington Beach 968-3036 HoUHI Unfumlshed 1-...;.;;.~'-''-""""'""'"""-I General Huntington Harbour 14051 ~-------~-----1 LA;-::R::G::E~·S::°':ll<lnn"'.'""-, -,-%..:.::ba::;:th. Tri-level home. AU bull&.illa, car,,eted throuabou l Drapes. Approx 2300 aq ft living area. Landscaped & fenced. WalkinJ' dilltance to grammar It blj:h school & shoppinj:, 005e to freewa)', SZS,500. 842-2342 FORECLOSURE IMMINENT 3350 sq, ft. 4 + maids + studio + view. Near i:Jet;ch & dock, Rm for pool. BEST OFFER/TRADE Cost $8.1,«IO Sac. $67,000 Owrtt!r 847-6186 Ctsy to brkra, ,. &s SPJ.1' t~~ 2414 VP.ta Del Oro N""""" Bffch LEASING Now available Split-level View Homes ready to mow-tn ' 3 BR, 2% be.th&, UOO aq ft only 2 availab&e: Penn. Pl. home:. 3 BR . Fam. rm., Frple. A tnJe value at S56,000 Balboa Ree.I Estate Co. 700 E. Balboa IDvd., Balboa 6734140 tam. rm. Elec. kite., Beaut. 62nd St. Owner 67~144 R. c. CREER, Realty yd_ $29,950. A&t· 64&-1456 BAY VIEW Lux condo 3 br 2 3416 Via Lldo 673-9300 Out of County 1605 DIAL dire-ct 64Ui678, cbarre ba bGme, 2001 2 sty 1----';;.;.;."-_.;;:;::. S330 o.H sreenbelt S385 100% w.ter View See now -don't watt! WU! iG by week-«nd SPECTACULAR VIEW-OCEAN and BAY CJ,annef ~1111/ -~parlm"nl~ On wa .. rfront Near Newpori H•rbor Entran~ 2525 Ocean Blvd., Coron• d•I Mar, Calif. AMPLE GUEST PARKING and BOAT SUPS Why Not Enjoy The "Condominium" Way of Ufe THI AOVANTAGES WILL SURPRISE YOU You can purchase and get fee UUe -or lease if you prefer. ALL apts. have WATERFRONT VIEW. All bave two bedrooms and two baths. -WlTll LARGE PATIO. YOU ARE INVITED TO INSPECT OUR FURNISHED MODEL Buy $59 ,500 and Up -Lease $445 Monthly & Up l'hon• 6 73-1788 for further Information 644-1133 644-2626 your ad, then llt back and w/pools, a:oU etc. Vacarl\, BAYFRONT DUPLEX SALE Or trade 2 Bt. mad. liaten tG tbe phone rtn1! Sac $35,900 673-4356 Enclosed patio. 2 • 3 BR. hse Yucca Valley priced ========="-==========:.:~=========I Fireplaces, Jll."i,000. $10,500 eq. "30l. 499-Cn fl" Available Now MESA ,DIL MAii Ckneral 1000General lOOO;ieneral 1000 Welker Realty 1,,evo='=o'·======= -------------------'"'--'-'-------3336 Via Lldo ti7$.S:l00 I' L•guna IMch • I Solve a Simplt Scr4mblt d Word Puzzle for 11 Chuckle Or:'r"°1e':~bl:!r' ~ ~~ low to form four tlmi:>ft words. ICURSIC I I I r r I KC KAN r I I r I llCEj Lill I' j I At the booth or In the of- -• _ . . ~-' tic, it's surprising wkot YO!J I r. 1:-:u.,-o"'"· '"'N""'I ,=---"""1 find --. _' I I I I' I !~i;Ez~E'. ,_.,-"~""~~""w'r' .... _atE_•0 .... ·1'--l.1 ...... 1 I I I I I I Huntington ... ch 1400 BELOW MARKET 3 BR 1 %. ha. $21,900. IDt·in rana:e " oven, p.rbqe db- posal, t 11 e ldtcb., aerv. porch, trplc, upgraded w/w cpta/drps, shak~ root. Cor. & fcnctd lot. $2200 dn. V.111age ReJI [stJt e 961. !<Iii VA NO DOWN 5 l!.R. 3 bath. IAllG FHA le:rmsl . Lovely home • very dt:slrable area. HAFFDAL REAL TY 170S S BR - 3 Baths •• ~ •• ,,. '270 Owno</Bla-. 67S-ll3l 1435 Terrace Way, Temple ========='! HU11. 3 BR. 2 BA. dinette. Cotto Moso llOO la.ra:e liYinr rm., trplc, beam---------...;.; ed ceilings thru-out. FJtt. kitchen w/blt·in rqe .t: dishwasher larae comer lot 155' tront. Landscaped: shrubs. Ocean View. Prloed right. P.O. Box 914, Laauna Beach, Owner. 714: 49MT:l6 EXTRA ORDINARY SACRIFICE! N e w Homes, Views, 3 BR, 2 bl,, cu.atom, Spa.nilill styllna:, delwie appta SJ.l,500 OPDI HOUSE SUN. . Clll for loca,.. A t(tml • -LOO PADRES REALTY AVAIL IMMED. M ... Verde 4 ~R. lee livlrc rm, IJ)8ClOUS fa.m/dJnlq rm, bilt·in kitchen, betutltul}J landscaped yard. y..,,,. lcue $3415/mo, 1ncl wala' and gardener atrvt~. 673-3663 E:vea. ~ FOR Leue. 3 er., 2 BA Jamily/l&nt.l rm. Lp rm> <d yd .. llreplaoe, cpts ud drp1. Avail Sept. l, m> mo. inchldes Gardener A: watw. u . Qol. Robert B. Moore 64Mm j !J I I ' l ' . r 1"' ' •' ,. ' .. ~- . . . ' -------~-~--------------------------.-----~---.--------------··,-,.······· .. ., ,.. aa DAILY PILOT r.....,.,....., 6, JM f(cNIAU Al:!NTAL~ .... TALS RINTALS RENTALS RENTALS BUSINESS •IMI IUSINESS OIMI BUSINESS ind FINANCIAL Houtn Unfumlthed Apto. Furnished Apia. Fumiol>M Apia. Unfumlshod Apto. Unfurnished , ..:F..:.IN;;:A;;:N;;:C.::;l:;:A::L;.... __ ..:.F..:IN..:A..:N..:.C;;:IA;;:L;:_ __ _ ----1·:-'-".::------'."'.".'.''.l~:--"---~-'-~-..:.....--.......... ---·-Housn Unfurnlshed Newport &Heh 3200 Legun1 Buch 1;c.;=...;_.;;_ ___ _ 31os Gtnonl 4000 Co111 M-4100 Cosio M... 5100Cost• M•• 5100 lu1. OpportunltlOI 6300Bvs. OpportunlllOI 6300 lu1. Opportunltl016:!00 S to 4 BDRM Newport &•ch on quiet CUI de Sac. Over 2100 sq-. ft Garderu:ir Ii waler lnelud. $325 J>l"l' mo. $295 on 2 ycar lease 64&-4316. Newport s11o .. , 'no NEWPORT SHOR.ES 2 BR It Dtn on :rean leue $190 mo. 642-34.lO Coron1 dol Mor 3250 LGE 2 Br, 2 b& Untum $200 mo; Froat 2 SR. 1 ba Ul\fum $175 mo. R. Forney Bla. M0-3862 l,qun1 EMach 3705 MY LoveQo lar&e 5 BR, 3 be ~ to reapc:ID6ib\e tam on- ty, $300 mo. Owner/~- 540-3862 NORTJI ocean akle of hwy, 2 EXPERIENCED APT MGR BR.. den, bop)c1. carp, or take a111 ot yoor proptrty drapes, appUanees. View while away, Couple with ~I any extras! Gardener & many )'rl exp In Or. Co. wa.ter lncl. S385 Month, wanta opportwrlly to handle lcMt>. 494-1701 your property. Box P-168, M-ON-AR-CH-•s•A·Y-A~R"E~A· ' Dally Pilot LOVELY OCEAN vu:w. 3 """CHA~-===u"""t.a"""P"o"INTE'=,.... BR&: den. 2 BA, eptl, Drpa, Bffutitu.J 2 Br. tum. apt .. trpL pool. $300 mo. Htd pool, C&.rport~f at adult.a 496-l:ul betw lG-5 pm ptt.rldng. Adults, No peu. 2 BR V IEW HOME 1941 POMONA AVE., CM on 2 lots, fenced )'ard. <:&.r· C0tt1 Meu 4100 port, l yr leage epplles on pureha~. $17'5 mo. 497·1210 1 BR. Furn A?t. Adults, no !M'U. $60 mo. 1876 Fullerton Laguna Niguel 3707 ./ 3 BR 2 Ba, cptg, clrps, built-ins, view Of g o I f course. Pvt beach, Kids il peta OK. $300 mo. 496-.1276 CHARGE your want td now. Ave. 548-1356 $140 UTl.L, paid. Lovely 2 BR., blk. to K-Mart. sn Joann. 5'S-0787 NASSAU PA:l.MS l·BR. $13>. Pool 177 E. 22nd St. 642·36t'i CLASSIFIED INDEX Hours-Regulations-Oeaciiinss lRRORSi AdvtrtlM~ should chtcic; their •d• d•lly ind report Immediately erro ... or ml1elu11floatlon .. THE DAILY PILOT. auume1 ll•blllty ror erro,.. only to tne extent of publlahlng th• •dwrtlaement oorrectly one t ime. DIEADLINI FOR COPY ANO Kl LLI: 6 :30 P.M. th• d•Y IMfoN publleatlon, except for Weekend EdltlOfl and Mond•y sections wh111 elo1lnv tlrM 11 5:30 P.M. Friday. , YOU MUST HAVE KILL NUMBER! Wl'len kllllng •n ad beQuae of quick reeult.. IN 1ure to make a reoort:I Of Ule klll number given you by your ad taker •• verlfk)atfon of 'f'IU' oall. Every effort 11 mada t• klH or correct a new ad that ha1 been ordered, bllt·w. can~ not ou1rante1 to do IO until tha ad haa appeared In t ha paper. DIME·A·LINE Ads are tlrlctly caah In advance D)' mall or 1t any one of our offices. NO phone orderL The DAILY PILOT r111erve1 tl'l'I right to cla•lty, ed it, ceneor or refu1e any 1dv1r- t111ment,, and to ch1n11e lta rates ltld regul1tlon1 wlthout prior notioe. Adv1rtl1ert may place tl'lelr 1d1 by telephone. DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNT¥ DIAL FREE 5110-1220 Huntington Baich 540-1220 L1gun• Beach 494-9466 Phones Are Open 8:00 a.m. -5:30 p.m • 9 to Noon Salur<lay-Closed Sunday CLA&llFIED COUNTERS are located 11 fo llows: 2211 Wast ...._ lo1lewor4, N""'°" laocti. JJO West hy Smet, Costo M"•· Jot AM sm.t, H...,._ leoctl. m Fornt A.._, &..pao looch. l:Ja.s:lo bcspt, Sot. & S1111. Mall Addl'C•: Box 187&. Newport Beach, Callf. $25 Wit. Up e Studio I: Bach apt&. • Incl Ulill 6 Phofte Mlr'f. • Maid Serv5ca • 1V 1vall. e New Ct.It • Bar 237S Newport Blvd. SU..9'r.li DLX 2 BR., tum. tdell fot bachelor1. Sl40. Pool. 1993 Cburch, CM 548-9633 LARGE · BAOiELOR, clean & nicely furnished. 2885 Mendoza Dr. Apt. A. CM . STUDIO. S70 mo. Uli1lUe1 paid. Older male only. 646-6419 all 6 Newp;ort Beach 4200 Small furn apt for rent near ocean. Child OK. Owner on premises Sun. 600~ Clubhouse. N.B. 2 BR, near ocean, cflA.I, $140 yearly. Rear duplex, 12Mi 46lh St. 548-8319 Stt by appt. on ly. Winter 2 BR, adults. 9 months lease. 4212 Seashore Dr. 675-3345 OCEANF'RONT Attrac. 2 Br. turn. Apt. \Vinti'!' er yr)y. Avail 9/15, 646--5832 Coron• del Mar 4250 2 BR Near Beach. Laundry, garage. $165 inc utilities. Now Renting Bethel Towe rs 666 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa "Relirement living in California''. 270 Apartments . . . Min. 090 62; Maxi- mum income $4400 single, $5400 couples. From.$82 lo $98 monthly for current ava il. able studio apartme nts. Featuring . _ . Wall-to-wall carpeting, draperies, individual heat control, showers over tubs with safety bars, and emergency signal to both the office and ma nager's apartment. Complete Kitchen Unit including refrigera. tor, range oven with ti mer, garbage disposal, ca binets and work space. All of the 1bove f•1tures Included in rent as well as utllities (except telephone ). WRITE, PHONE OR VISIT BETHEL TOWERS For additional Jnform1tion (714) 642-9941 L. E. Halvorsen, Adminlatrator EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORSHIP SPARE TIME OR FULL TIME Become a distributor for one of the fastest !Selling & hottest house hold products on the market today, ·one that ii sweeping the co un· lry. Company arranges fo r all accounts in bUsy markets, so no experience or selling is re(Juired. Can be handled by man or woman. YOU CAN EARN TO $350 . MONTHLY SPARE TIME AND $1750 MONTHLY FULL TIME. Re quires onl y 4 hours weekly to start and a cash investme nt of $1500 to $5000. Money bac k guarantee on all merchandise. THIS IS NOT VENDING AND OUR DISTRIBUTORS ARE ALL SUCCESSFUL WHITE CROSS INDUSTRIES 2825 W. Lincoln Ave . Anaheim, C1llf. 827-9515 Call or Write ~·~';'"~'~"'~'"~"~'~'~"'"~~o=~l !!!'!!"!!'!'~"'ri~~!!J!:!!I!!!!!'!'~ 4300 AVAIL. AUG. 15th R I W _, 5-l"l!l~!i!!!!!'l~!J!!!!!!!!!!!!t!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!-:B.;;1c;lbo"--•-------l2 BR. wilh garage $1ffi. •nt1 s int-,-,-u!ftEAL ESTATE OCEANFRONT D\sp., water sxi .• gardener RESPONSIBLE F.xeeutlve G.neril CANDY llAVE; ldeal prq>erty for lciue for w~end Auc- tlor\1-boetl -trailer• - c•mJ)(rt CIC. s Actts fcoo- td, Harbor Blvd, C&IJ R. L. Pyle Co. Kl J-7019 lnve1tm1nt Oppor. 6310 U.S. Government Le as e d Blda:1. Need partners. Return 10'/9. <n41 6CZ-2393 Real EJ t1te Loans 6340 BORROW en Your Equit)' Private 2nd f.1crtg. money FREE APPRAlSAL l PROMPT SERVICE Reputable Company serving Orange County 18 years. Sattler Mortgage Co., Inc. 336 E. 17th St .. Coata Mesa 642-2171 545--0611. Night.s " wkVlds 67~7865 642-ll51 Mortg1ga, T .D.'1 6345 $5,0CKI 1st TD on spectacular OceanvJew 101, Sold for $7,950. Payable 1% per month includina;. 8%. All due 3 yrs 10% di5count r.a1ely returns approx 12% per yr. 494·ll3T $1190 2nd TD p;i.yable 1 % per mmth including 10% all du, 5 yr1. Covl'l"S excellent Oceanview lot. 20% dis- count. 494-1l37 ANNOUNCEMENTS ind NOTICES Found (Frp Ado) 6400 1567 "-1575 Orange Ave, wanla comfortable 1 Br. ----------SUPPLY ROUTE Ye•rly Rent1I Call bt'twef'n 2 & 5 Baylront Apt. 646-5755 eves. Lots 6100 (Part or Full Time) FOUND: Vic. 19th&: r.ta.ple, No peU or children e 636-4120 e Exc.e.ll@nt lncome for few C.M. white toy female p:o- $100 & $125 mo. Rooms for Rent 5995 BACK BAY vacant lot on cul-hra. weekly work <Day or die w/Royal Dutch eut 9?..S E. Balboa Blvd. Newport Bitch 5200 ----------1 de-sac. P1ana available fell' EvK) Re1:illing and col!ecl· taking to Orang& County 0 • f ( ROOM with private enlJ"ance 2-story boui;e. $17,500. ing mo""y from c.oin r......r. Animal Shelter Friday Aug . $ll5 UPPER 2 uo. urn. or I :•= ti! &; bath Cr ts dr'P'S $15 wk ~ ..,..... ~" "'Y"" unturnJ; plu,,h carp., rnvs. SEPT. 1st; eue, w'1 u · P , · ·~·A M~. R·Z, 5.5"1..,,, ated Dispensers in your 2nd. Blk ba lr_ n 6Th-1752 pd. 2 BR., cpta, drp!., beam working lady pref. 646--7089 ,rle61' school and &bopping. area. I Handl~ Nationally NOTICE! Disregard adv. ' y ocea ceil.. l:rplc. Nr. beach. ~1 ESA VERDE to share rm. $12,500. Advertised Snaok.s and Can-saying taking poodle to HOUSES FOR SALE GaHlltAL "" ,,. -"" ... Huntington Beach 4400 Adult!. 673-3882 twin beds. Kltch. 1586 W. JEAN SMITH, <ly Bars,) $1350 To $.5390 Orange Co. Shelter -call me DIMot.ITION u 3t --~~------,DELUXE Bayfront. boat slip Baker St., C.M. 546-82'29. REALTOR cash rcquired. For personal •bout white. !female toy poo-:~:~~~~At•11v1c11 ::!: F1.JRN Duplex 1 Br. & gar. 1 avail. pool 2 Br 2 ba. $25(). interview; send name, add· <l!e. Found vie, 19th & COSTA MIU M•lA D•L MA.a M•lA vt:aDI "" 1111 1ciu1 .. M•NT lllHTALt ,.,. block lo beach. n45 mo. up. Ritt. 675-2805 Guest Hamn 5998 400 E. 17th St., C.M. ~32S6 reu and phone number to: Maple. No tags. 642-4582 'C:NCINl3 llMt 536-7146 e PALMA VALLEY• TRANS.WESTERN •• # CDLL•H ,.Alli: N&Wl"CIRT aaac" NaWl"CllllT H•t9WTt IA~A cov•s NIWl"CIRT SHOJIU UYCllST UIJ , .. 11H 1111 1m , .. ,,,. MllWl"ClaT _#'IA.CM N.Wfl'Olt'T i.110MTt NlllW,.OllT IHOlllU WESTCLU',. UNIVIUITY f'A.11« IA.CK •AY IAST I LUPfl COllOtCA DIL MA• .. .__. "" "" .... .... PLOOlll u.. -========== NE\V SoWldproo{ 2 BR· 2 Ba. PRIVATE Room for a.m· . PURE White male kitten "UllN•C• 111! .. AlllS, 1:1c. u 1t -S Across fm. Coco's. 11365 bulatory lady. Good food. !Kl ac raw, rollmg la~. DISTRIBUTING C:O. with flea collar found o11 ,. U.YIH~ll DOVllll IHOID Wl!STCLtP• HAllltolll HIOMLANDS UNtvlUrTY PAii lllVINI IACK UY "" "" '"' ,,,, •,_ IASTILUP• _. • lllVINa TalllUCS COllDMA DIL MAii IALaoA f'llNIN&UU. 1•ACOJ1 IAY "" "" "" "" , .. . ., .. .-.· • ' .. ,. .• • • ·.•r , ' .. • . t.:.i I .. - ,• J .) ... •• ... I '1~ .I I 1 ... Y Ill.ANDS LIDO llL.m IALfOA 111.AMD HUHTU191'0. aU.CM HU NTINftOlll HM.IOU• FOUNTAIN \IA.USI' lu.L aUCH IUMSIT t&ACH O.AllDEM o•ova lOJIO aaAC.M LIJ(•WOOD OIUJIO• COUllT'I' OUT 0 .. COUWTT DUT D' nATW STANTCl'r .... ™ ...... MIOWAT CrTT ......... SANTA AM IMTL OUN•• TUSTIN NOllTM 1'VITlll AMAll•lM SIL Vl:llAOO CM't'Oll U.CMIMA. Htu.I U.OUNA aaACM u•u111A w1ou•1. SAM CLIMS.-Ta SM JUAM CA,.tt'ftANO CA .. ISTllAMO a&Kll DANA l"CIUIT UaLlaAD OCIANSIDI JAN Dl•M ltvWllllOI C'WllTT NOUSU TO •• MO\l'l:D CC*DOMINIUM OUP't..IX•S Pott Ul.9 .... AllTMIMTI POI 1A.U1 RENTALS HoUMt fumlthtd ,,. ,,. ,. "" .... "" .... 1•1• "" ·-"" , ... "" "" "" -1411 '"' 1'1' "" , .. , .. .... .... ... , ... '"' '"' , .. '"' "" '"' '"' "" ,,,. "" ·-... ... .... .. Ol!Nl!llAL ... llllHTALS 10 ttuJll -COITA MISS. tl .. MllSA DIL MAI JlU M•L\ \llllD• tlle COLLIOI •AllK 1111 NIW .. OllT 11.U:ll tM1 NIW"<lllT M.,.., Hll N•W .. ORT IHOllU tl1I IAYSHOll•I ~ DO\l•I SMOll•I tl21 W•STtLIP" 21:M UN IYlllSITT f'A.lll tm 11lVINll ttll IACK U.Y Ute IMT ILU,, 1':UJ lllYIN• T•tllA.CI IMS CORONA D•L MA• "51 IALIOA UM IAY ISL.ANOS 1HI LIDO llLll 2311 IALIOA !SUMO UH HUNTINGTON •IACH '"' POUHTAIM VAUllY 1(11 llAL llACH tut LONe alACM U4I OaANOll COUNTT Hll u.HTA ANA Hll WISTMINITllll 1'11 MIOWAY CfTY H I• UNTA AMA HITOHTS 1'» COASTAL 1111 LAOUNA 11.-.C:H UIS U.OUHA JlllUIL lltl IAN CL•MINTI 1n1 LUI JUAN CA•llTIANO 1111 CA•IST•AHO SaACH t1M OANA "01NT 11 .. 111\11111101 COUNTY IHI VACATION llHTALI 'lttt CONDOMINIUM tOf ou• ... x11 ""'""-•is RENTALS Housff Unfumlshtd OINl lUIL Mii COSTA MllU. 1111 M•U DllL MAii llM MIU. VlllOI 111' CCH.Ll•t .. AllK Jlll NP"<lllT le.ACM )Ml NllWl"ClllT MOTS.. Hll MPl"ClaT INCllll Uh IAYSHOlllS ms D0\1111 ,....,... ,,,, Wlll$TCL.IJI" Hlt UNIVl!llllTY .. A.. nn lll\llM I HM IAGK It.AT n ... IAIT ILUP'fl 1111 lllVINI T•aUCI Hill CORONA OIL M.All mt a.U.IOA UM IAY ISU.fllDS mt LIDO nu »II ML.aOA llUMD n1i1 Nl'Wl'OllT WSJT U,. NUNTINOTON llACM J4" MUllfTINeTOM MU.SOU• ,_ •OUNTAIN YALL.IY :Mlt llAL IUCH M.M MllOIN ellOVll :M11 LOMO lllACN Hll OlllMOI COUNTY lttl IAlllTA A.NA Mlt WllTMSlllTl'9 iii It MIDWAY Clrt kW IAWTA AU Nltotrn MJt <DMTM ... ............. -U.MU ... .,., aM' IA.N (:~ 1111 .......... ... CAl'fl'TltNllO IPClt me D.UlA l'OfllrT ,,.. ---OVl"t&XP vtll'V • ._ w11 ltENTALS Aot.. Fumllhed H .. l'uL • COSTA MIU ••u W•OI -... •• IAY HU.MDI LIOCI ISLI &ALICA. ISLAND NUNTIMeTON llUCM POUNTAIM \IA.U.•Y II.AL ll!ACM LONe llACH o•AMGI COVNTY •A.llOIN ••ov1 WISTMINST•,. MIDW ... Y CfTY SANTA AMA SANTA ANA MllOKTS TUSTIN COAST A&. LA.UNA S'IACN LAOUNA Nl•UIL SAii CL•MllNTI DANA "°INT Tllf'LlllX, •c. CONDOMINIUM ReNTALS . Apts. Unfurnished --"" "" ••• ... ... 4451 "" .... 4•1t "" '"' ... -.... .... '"' "" '"' "" <M ... ••NtlllAL loot COSTA MIS.I. llM MllllA Vl:llDll Slit Nr#l"ClllT l•ACH 1200 N~ Nlt•MTt Jilt llllllWOl'T lffOllll Im WISTCLl,P SJJI UNIV9RSm l'A•IC sm U.O:: UY tt• I.UT aL.U•fl IHI CO-OllA on. MA• Jut IA~ tltl IAY' ISL.ANDI ll5t LIOO ISLa SHI HUNTtNeTOM llACH I .. POUNTAllll VAU.V 1411 l~aOA Ill.AND JHt .. AL •IACM J•H LON• llUCH 15. OllAJf•lll COUNTY JIOI MllDIN e11ov1 Ull W•S'TMINSTlllll Ult MIDWAY CITY Ul' IMTA ANA 141' SANTA AMA HllOWTS UJI TUSTIN "40 COASTAL 1111 l.AOUNA SIA.CM 11• LA•UMA NIOUeL. rm S ..... CLIM•11Ya 1111 SAN JUAM CA•ltTa.t.NO sm DANA f'OINT JUt REAL ESTATE, General Tl:l"LIX, etc. J .. CONDOMINIUM itSt ll•NTALI WA.NTID tiff llOOMI •011 lllNT SHJ llOOM & IOAllD lff6 MOT'l'U, TlllAILlll COUllTI tff7 IUl!ST HOMl!I Jttt MISC. llll!NTALS lttt INCOM• .. llO•llllT'I' '* IUSINalS ,.llOJllllTY f tH TIU,ILl!ll JIAllKI IOSJ IUSINISS lllllNTAL •Ill OPJllCI alNTAL '61t INDUSTR IAL .. 110 .. lllTY 60lt COMM•llCIAL •OU INOUSTRIAL 11eNTAL 411tf LOTS 'l ff RANCHl!S •1st CITllUI OllOVl.I fUt AClllAGI llOI LA«I ILSINOlll •1tl •1SOllT •ROf'lllT'I' 11tJ OllANGI CO ... 110 .. l!llTT 'lOI DUT OP STAT• ... 0... 'l'OI MOUNTAIN & O!l'l!llT 'llt SUIDIYISION UNO ~Jlt ll•AL llSTATE ll•VICI tllS II.I. EXCHAN G1! f1JCI Ill. I:. WANTEO n .. BUSINESS and FINANCIAL IUSINllS 0"l"OllTUNITlll Ult IUllMllS WANTID •JU INVISTMINT 0-rtvntllu 1:11' INVaSTMlllNT WANTllD IJU MON'l!Y T() Lo.-H Ull "l lllONAL LOANS IHI J.-Wl!LllY LOAMI IUt COLLATERAL LOANS IJH llllAL ltTATI' LOANt U'I MOllT0.-4EJ. Trvst DtM• •It) MONaY WANTEO '3SI ANNOUNCEMENTS ind NOTICES POUND IP"4 Aft) .... LOS T , .. , "lllSONALI l .. t ANNOUNCIMIN'1 "411 llllTH1 6tl1 ,UNlllALS "411 "AID OltYUAlllY 1.nJ ,UMlllAL Dlll•CTORI 1114 ~LOlllSTS "11 CAllO OP TMAN•S '411 IN MIMOlllMI I011 CIMITlllT LOTS 6411 CIMaTllllT CaY .. TI "" ClllMATOlllll l•M MIMOlllAL PAllKI IOll AllCTIONS '4lt AVIATION llllVKI .. u TllA\1'1:L IUt Alll TllAMP'OflT .. TtoN -AUTO TltANS .. O•TAT tON 1441 LI OAL NOTIC•I ,.,. GIRMAN & TUTOll tNa ''" SERVICE DIRECTORY ACCOU NTINO ..Sii ANIWlllllllG SllVICI •tOJ .... ,.L1.-1<1r'!! 111 .. AlkS. P.nt ••it A"~llAJSINO 4.llt AU"HALT, OM• '11t AUTCI l•"Alll.S 4.1• AUTO. Ifft &tho T-nr. Utt UaYSITTINe UM 10.t.T MAIMTlllMMCll .SU SllK:lt. MASO..•Y, tte. ..wt IUSINlllSI ll•VKU •Mt aU1t..0•IS U1I CATllllM• "'" C.t.a1NSTMAK1"• 6Jlt CAll .. I NTlll lNO "'" CaMINT, Ct!tcr#9 H11 CHILD U.111, Llieel!• .. ,. Co,fTUCTOlll M1f c.-.. n CU .A.MrN• "" CAll .. IT U YI ... & •UAll NM INlAH•1aJ Ma :r-!. -----------· .... -~~- =~~::tN~EllVICIS ::=: Lagunl Beach 47o Irvine S185/S200. 642-0239 Nice surroundings. 548-4?53 frost-fre' area overlooking 590 N. AZUSA AVE. Windward Lane. Baycrest OllAOINCJ, CllSCING uas NE\V Furnished 2 BR 2 Ba Palma ValJey, Water, gll5, COVINA, CALIF. 91722 area. Newport Be a ch ou1s "" E Bl ff S242 REAL ESTATE & elec on ............. $1,800 -NUTV ILLE . 642 ~s OlllllN TNUMt ,1.. 11\1 elec bui l t -ins. alt u ......... ,,,.... ' U.S.A. IS now -VLJ OUN SMOP ''1• Panoramic view overlooking ----------General ac:re, w/tenns. B k r • accepting applications for WHITE Duck with re d ~!Ot::o CLUll :;: Aliso Beach. Mature adults PRESTIGE Town Homes 6000 541-5C60. franc.hit.es in Orange Coun· around eyes. On 21st and HO UllCLIANINll ''H only, no cblldren. $185. For lease, 2 br & den & 3 br ;ln;c;o;m;;;;l;;;;P;r;o;p;lrty;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l --------6-2-0-0-1 ty. Loc:alioris •re waiting in Orange. 646-3104. Ask fo INTEIUClll DIECOllATINO ,,,, .~ •75; with 2 or 21h baths. Gold Acre•g• Anaheim, Lam•*'~ Bch., San-St••c. INCOMI! TAX IH• ~;J"'".,l ,, I y y FIGHT ---=----.--::--·--lllON, oru.,_i ... 11c.. •7st I BR, r-1, OCEAN VIEW, Medallion all e ec. our own WRHENTALS ATIENTION I• Ana, Orange, Huntington 1110N11to ''" ·,. key 10 pool. 2-car gar. Renl Bch. & other areas. S14,9j(J LIGHT gr'y & white cat, :::~~!1~: !~;: ~ r~n~~~r.s!:.~61~~ pd . starts at SZlO mo. Buy this \\'ell loc ated 10,IXXl DEVELOPERS & Cash req. Fully securt>d in. ~l~.lui~~: ;,r;:;eg~:= ~~~~:!~~!a."" .. ~ :: s.;5 Amigo \\lay, Npt. Bch. sq. It. industrial bldg. in INVESTORSES vest. should return lsl yr. Harbor, Wed nite. 646--2187 JEWILllY 11•,.Alll. •toe. ti.GI RENTALS Sanla Ana. Leased to AAA * SO LEVEL ACR * Ca.JI for appl. 642-2713 er ~ · bi h -'-· LADIES \\latch found in front ~No1CA .. 1NO u1t • hed Corona del Mar 5250 & local companies. Returns Ideally locah:u m g ....... " wrile to 1617 Weistcliff or., LotKSMnN HM Apts. Unfurn11 ha ( bl of Shaw's Health food store MASONRY, •RICK u• approx. 10% on pure sc desert no smog pro ems. Suite 210, Newpo rt Bee.ch, CM _., . d . f MOVING a STOll.AOll "" Gtn•ral 5000 price of $85,!XXI. For more wonderful dry-air!) Lev e I Cal. 92660 · · c...., 10 1 en 11 Y · •AINTINO, ••.-Mn•lll• ut• -information. please call K. land, pwnp & well on pro~ ""="'"'~,....~----_'7_3-_'1208 ________ , PAINTIMO, s1.-.ass re ~V \\'HY Wock for &0meone MALE Cock-a-poo with red •ATl()S .-.. RENT .., b W. Smnll erty. Just 18 mile& Ea.s t of eL!e'? Be yoor own boss! •HOToa11A,.HY .. ....,. E kh ff & A 1 ( h t collar-Vic. Westminster Pl. •~STIO"G. • .,,, ,_. -F 1 Ot*tll c o ssoc., nc. Barstow w ere grea ex-You can have your O\vn ., • .,1174 "' • 3 Rooms urn tu re -•-d be 'I ~ •LUMllNO '"t 1818 W, Chapman Ave. pansion has ...,.ea Y gun. yardage shop in the heart of -'i=========I l"oooL• G1100M tN• '"' $25 Month ON TEN ACRES o··-g•, Calil. 90 man -made Lakes in c _, r -,.OOL se11v1cs u 11 • ...... .M. A natu,·cu or someone Lost · 6401 l'OWllll swaef'IMI 6fU FULL OPTION TO BUY I & 2 BR. Fum & Unturn 5'11·2621. Eves-\l·knds 538-5971 area! Ideal for r e I 0 r I who likes to sew and make ----------1 '"UM'" se.11v1c1 ,,,. fl'om $150 mo. Frplc1 I Pril I .,.,,_.~~ ...... ~ ...... ., de v e I o p m e n t, alfalfa e~ 000 00 · llOOP INO ffM No d'posit o.•.c. money . .,.,, . lo get m - RADIO, ••,.In. 11c.. ,,,. H.F.R.C. Pa~l-,.B/k!Pooi19 T•bol""" ·PuCoVn-NEWPORT BEACH growing, fish raising. etc. lnclude1 $8,00.!Xl inventory :;::~;t:::. &k~~~'i!:s :'t!: furniture Rentals tnt st. e 1 TRAVELOOGE ••• opportunities boWlclless. e.nd fixtures. THE REAL sen .... 11111.-ou 517 w. 00, C.M. ~8·3481 Green. Depreciation $18,600 This is e rare offering, af. mI'ATFS -~2313 SIEWINO Ifft '""" W Ln•'• •-•-11, 2800 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 1966 Gross ......... , $87,000 fording the investor a. great WOULD li"k b · SIWING MACHINll •• ,. •• Ill,,., ........ . u.u, NJ.UIU ... {MacArthur nr. Coast Hwy) you e a usmess Sll .. TIC T.-HKS, ........ llt. 'H.S EXPERIENCED APT 'lGR 1967 Gross ••••••.• $110,000 fu ture! Personal circum-of your own? You don't need TA1L0111NG ,,,. " 1968 G 11~ ooo stances force this sale; oth. T•llMITe CDMTllOL ffn or take care of your property --ross • ·' • • • • • ..... cl an ofJice to start. Begin at TILE, cwemlc ,.,. B Ibo I I d 5355 C. R. Gangi 642-1615 er, 1maller pare a avail· home, full or part time. TILi. Llll9lwlll a M•r111• f'1J while away. Couple with 1 1 1 an able below market value. 1111:• s1:11v1ca 1t• meny yrs exp in Or. Co. ~ DO\VNTQWN Laguna Beach .,,7 ~.o / Ideal for husband &. wile TILEVISION, 11ut1,., El" "" wants oppor!Wlity le handle WATERFRONT .dlx. 2 ~~· _zoned for bus .• great po-Call O'Wllel'; ~ "W"JV Eves team. Call; 545-7993. No ~~~~~~lllY !: your property. Box P-168, apt. w/boat tie-up prn'tl. ten!ial for bldrs, invstrs or =w=oc=k='="=d='·====== obligation -no information JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Daily Pilot Yrly lse. $225 mo. Adults on. lam home w:income. Pays Mount. & DeHrt 6210 over the telephone. Let's Jes WANTl!CI, MM 1tt1 ly, no pets or children for Jtseli. Prin. only. \\'hatr -----------have coffee & talk. ~~= ::_:~::. wem... 7•it Costa Mna 5100 673-0207 have you'.' 4M-8170 OWNER MUST SELL! ASSOCIATES WANTED MEN a WOMEN mt ~i!i!!iil!ii!!i!!iiiiiiiiiiiiii 400 5 acres in subdivision. New· ~Jan w/buainess exper. &: :~:l[~t ~~'" :: I!!! Huntington Beach 5 Butinus Rent1I 6060 berry, Calif. 18 ml. east of $6500 in cash to invest in hi MlllL• WANTED, M•e n11 HARBOR 2 Bedroom 2 Bath THREE room •uit• + ,..,1 Barstow. "Lando! Lakes" profit service business of AOINC llS, w-7:111 00 d !·'· · N u· W HIL• WAHTEO, W•m•~ 1111 NS Cpts, drapes, built-ins. 1 blk room and lobby, dt>sks area· man-ma e IU\etl m your own. o se mg. e JOls-Mu & •-11 JIM GR EE 10 5 pts stores, theater. etc. racks, and tables, ~""d, area. Much development g1>-train-Write A me r i r an AOINCllS, Men• Wlft'ltn Hit .,.-in Le cl land M k t PO Box 13~ SCHOOLS & INSTRUCTION 1600 1Mf\1EDJATE ()CCU. S125 pr. floor at 1736 Anaheim CM g on. v • water ar e Wa)'S, "'"· Jos '"ll& .. AltATION '"' BAOIELOR • UNFURN. mo. Cal! owner 642-2.835 or $140 underground. \VUI sacrifice! \Va.mer A11e .. Hunt. Beach TNIATillCAL-1t11 --7.=-.,.-..==---1 Call owner 847"640 alt 6 wk· 92647 for personal interview MERCHANDISE FOR from $100 :ie.J.~~ TIOI Ellis Apt D., Storage Garage days, any time weekends. FOOD TO GO SALE ANO TRADE lncl. utiL zo x 2j' x lO'h. s.is. Ask for Lee. :~:~i;u:u'11Nnu1ta :: l . 2 It 3 BDRM. Westminster 5612 ===S=ch=w='='="=·="='~=-=·==;!BUSINESS and Established 6 yee.n. Original OFFICI llOUl .. MIENT NII FURN .... UNFURN. owner. Excellent location. sT0111 1ou1 .. MINT "" H•at·" P-I•, ailld Cart! 2 BR 1 -'-~ Office Rental , 6070 FINANCIAL G-·-$4:.00 month -S71XXl CAl"li!, llESTAUll.-JrtT ttlt 1:'11 "" • erp 5, uq•S, ga.. '"""""" tA11 l!ciu1 ,.Me:NT MIS c.tnter, Adj. to Shopplna; -$115 mo. Avail Aug. 6 LAGUNA BEACH Bus. Opportunities 6300 handles. MouseHOLD GOODS '"' No pets allowed 8.19-5028 or 8J9.35<Xi Ted McArdle, Realtor :o::~T11u::L!UCT10" :Ps 2700 Peterson Way. at Har· I========== Air Conditioned RESPONSIBLE persons to 22'2 w. \Vil&Clfl. 01 642-6817 ::;~~~~;•• :~: bor &: Adams, Costa Mesa. Laguna Beach 5705 ON FORES'i' AVENUE service established NP I BEAUTY Salon. Price Jor "'"-0310 !--"---------Desk spaces available in customers ""rl·time. No in· SIWING MACNINIS IUt l !!!!!i!!~ ~ ,,., build" t ~ quick sale. E l eg a nt 1 y MUSICAL 1Nst11uM1N1 t1u --100 CLIFF DRIVE ne\ve.,, 0 1 e ing a ventories or inve!tment re. PIANOS a OllGAMS tUf ~ LUXURY FURN/UNF'URN prime location in downtown quired. Paid t r ai n i ng decorated. carpeted, pa- ••010 noe Ex""ll""' park . I"·• ,.... La~••a "·••h A'• _,,. ne\1....1. Good clientel. Nr, TI LI VlllON 12~ ..... ...... "' ... Yearly Lease. l & '1 Bdrms. .,~. °"' ,_ · .. ._.,,, .. ,,. · available. 646-9895 alter 3 l."<I 950 C I ff1·'' 8 STEREO bit roo0 din'"' f-adults r ..... uir-tioncd, carpeted, beautiful pm Bethel Towt'rs. $6, · al " ~ .... ~ "' ~-. Yearly Lease. 1 bedroom TA,.• 11•co11oe:111 n,. i~ .. peace & ..,net. paneled partitioning. Two =="=c--""'"°'"',-°""°",-, Duane Wicklund, Walker & CAMlllAI a IOUl,.MIMT &:IOI "'6 -.-11leps lo Shore & Shops CORONA 1el fl.tar E Cce.st HOllY su,.PLrES •• Di--rlm'"ntive Tenant! ,..._ f entranct>s: Frontage on • · Lee, 545-9491. "" .,_ Vl:eanview rom eve'"" Apt. Hwy "·a"IY Salon ,,.OllTINO GOODS UM I ' • 3 BD"ol A~ •J Forest Ave., ref\%" leads to ' Dt: .. • l lNOCUU.llS. SCO .. IS UH ' ""' ' r i .-.. from $150 mo up. lt'aSC t bl! hed 6 646-3.1'l.J DAll.Y PILOT WANT ADS MllCILU.NIOUS NM POOL. NO CHILDREN <l!»-2419 1'1uncipal parking lots. $50 es a s yrs. -' BRING RESULTS! Misc. wANTID 1111 MARTINl"'UE per month for 1pace. Deskr ~67;;::3-~n:;;";;,..,..,..,. ..... ,_,~..,i;iii;iiioiiiiiO..iii0iiiii MACHINERY. 11c. •1• Y t\10DERN Garden apt. north and chairs available for $5.11 ~~::::. :Ws GARDEN APTS. 4!nd, 2 story, 2 BR. 11,I Ba. 2 Business hours answering IUILOING MATlllALS ''" sundecks. gar. 1 blk shop-service availi.ble for SlO. SWAPS '"' ~1~t~& tantda Ana, ~~~42 ping-beech. Very plush. \Vill All utilities paid except PETS and LIVESTOCK s. en erson .a fum. $225. 494-998"1 telephone. "l!TS. OINEllAL 1111 1777 Santa Ana, Apt 113, C.M, LUXURIOUS . DAILY Pit.m CATS NH l 'l"l~"':!'!"''!'!"t'l~~!!'::~I v1ew apt. 3 BR. DOOi trU ., B l bit · & 222 }~OREST AVENUE 11c11s11 UH 1028 EL CAMINO DR. •. a, e ec -ins • LACUNA BEACH LIVC:STOCW 11t1 Deluxe 3 BR. Sl50. Resnnns· di~hwasher, frpl. 494-9&-13 CALIFORNIA U~ING ~ <94-9'66 NUllSfll tlt SWIMMINO '1)()U .. ATIOS AWNINCll VU:ATIONS TRANSPORTATION IOATI & Y•CHTS IAILIOATS "0Wllll CllUISC:llS '"'fED-lk• aoATJ eo.-t Tll A!Ll ltS IO•T MAINTENANCI IOAT LAUNCHING MIJllNI ICIUI ... IOAf 1LI .. , MOOlllNO IO•T llRV/C l:I I OAT lllNTALS IOAT CMAllTl:lt "llHINI IOATS IOAT MOY INO IOAT STO•AOI •O_.T,I WANTSO AlllCll.Al"T PLYINO LaSSOtlS MOA ILi MOM•S MOTOll ltOMIEI l lC'l"CLll ible adults. • DELUXE 2 BR unrum apt Air.Conditioned :::: 510-0154 t\11 6-692'.l S4SJ481 close to ocean. tt..,," SEP. 2 BR., c•~.. d-. • nJRN. 51.udio. 497-1056 Offices & Desk Spice -.. · .. ~ with ce.ntral secre!aria.l, zer- llt11 S tove: Encl. patio gar. l d t I ho ·--.. ~·· Ollld OK. No ....is. Refer. Rentals Wanted 5990 ox an e ep ne -·~~ ...... ,. -tilt "" ... 'ftll "" "" •• •• ... "" .... -.... --.,. "" '* ..,, '"' "" r • ICrY'lce, up to 2.000 sq. tt. $120 ~1076 i\UG 15th or Sept 1st Busl· The Mutual Bldg. 121 DI...."\: large apls, 3 BR 2 Di\, bit-ins, quiet area. Adul1s. S180. 2285 Fordham Dr. 5-lS-9417 nesg Woman nc«.ls I Br un-:?863 E. t.oe.st HW)', CdM furn Apt, C.r.t .. Nf'W1)0r1. Ca11 8 Ar.! to 5 Pr.t 615-4070 corona del Mar or Laguna. SECRETARIAL Tc SIOO mo. Car or carpor! SERVICE AVAIL NOW 2 BR., new nrcesaary. 642-0086 a.fter 5 ~lodem oftic~. carpetJO. t1lr cpts., drapes, bltns. Adults, l;;:p~m~··o-;==.,,--.,.~-,,-i;onditioning, parking. From no f>t'U!. S125. 54M769 0 .C.C, lnstructCT desires 1 or $65 per morilh. Orange Coun· --1,..-,B°'R'"°'U"nt":::~:----I 2 bedroom apl. for Sept. I ty Bank Bldg. 2lJ E. lTth St., ........ $80 Furn or unfurn, Quiet. bhns. Costa 1'1HA. 642-1485 Realtor 54~7720 cpst, drp&, frpl. Preltt Lg. 5l2·29th NEWPORT Beach Bch., C.O.M, or N.B. To Sm 11 .....1 ,.,~ JI" • 2 BR. 2 he. Adulta over SO Sl60. S48-8927 a 111•u '""" uulce 1n only. Sl25 n10. 263 16th Pl. ;-;-=,,,--:;,,,--.,-,cc-Gl'llphlc Arts Bldg near Im)'. ILllCtl!I( t A•S MtNI llKl l MOTCl!CfCLll MOYOISCOOTllll • '11$ 01 Stt ni&nlll!'<'r L.A .. Rtl111 pll'lyer v.·1nts Sch1\'0rer 673-2654 S60 furn1ah<.>d i-3 bedroom apt. EXECUTIVE su,. 6 momi . or townhouse. prcft'rnbly In Sl7S per mo. l4.3 E. 18th St • Surfside tn.ct of 11.e. Im· CM. &t2-.Jlf.t AUfO Sf ll VICIS I "-'llTS AUTO TOOU: I IQUI ... TllAILlll, TlllAVIL fllAILllll. Uftl"' CAM,.lllS TllUClf.I •••n DUNI IUOOlll IMJOOll11D •UTOS S .. OllT CAIS ANTIQUIS. CL.All lCI •ACI CAllS, IODS AUTO IVINTS AUTOS WANTIO NRW CAii .t,UTO LCASUle USIO GAU • ... "" "" Hlf •• ... "" -"" "" .. "" "" .... "" '"' '"' "" ... 2 DR. 1,. h11. Drpa/crpts. BllM, prl gar/patio. Adult1 $140 549--0<!3 546-tOll eve. Cl..EAN 2 Br. 1~ Ba. BUna patio, prap, No Pf!t:L 269 Osle St. 6#-16?i5 mediate ttnta.l. Co n t a c 1 Gecqe Burman n~ EXEC ba.c:hetor. 38, rds avail detll"ff 1 rm. untum. CdM or NB. 897~. txt MAKE: A MEMO tci pther 4403 Ull toys you no lanCtt netd, . . adl them for cub wtth TEACHING Cd.." couple •·111 ClllUied Ada. Dial &U-$611 CA.ro-take home &: ptlt· Aug todQI + whUe home is belna com· pleted. HY f-1109 I lndustrl1I R1nt1I 16.COJ SQ. rt. prime bldr. Sprlnkl~air cond-panellld olflct1. PERRON REALTY 6-t1-1m 4:?00 SQ. rt. in modern mt• crete bulldinJ M-2 ione $300 n-.o. flU> '34-5082: SPARE TIME WORK DISTRIBUTOR FOR THIS AREA Becom• e distributor in on• of Amaric•'• l•r9· est •nd f•stest 9rowin9 industries. This is~ new concapt in th• field cf vending. Ne axperienca required. All •ccounts •r• contrected for, and 1•t up by our comp•ny. You maraly restock locations with our N1tional Brand Products. YOU CAN EARN $800 OR MORE A MONTH BASED ON YOUR EFFORT! h~vattmant of $2,190 to $l,,b0 c•sh required s1cured by inv•ntory end aquipmant. You must h•"• • 9ood car •rid b, 1 ble to davot• •f le11t '4 to 12 houri p•r waak. If you era inter11ted, h•v1 t ha d11 ir1, driv1, daterminetion •nd w1nt to b1 successful in • 9rowin9 business of your cwn, writt us tod•y. Pl•••• anclos• ntmt, •dcha11 i nd talephcne number. WE WRCOME INVESTIGA TIOH INTER-STATE DIST. CO. 515 South S1cond W11t S•lt L•k• City, Ut•h 84 IO I \ I ' LOST Costa Mesa, \Vhile female Eskimo dog, 1 mos., very 11.ffectionate. Please call 646-1577 after 5 PUI Rowan! Turquoise & Diamonds Lge. broach, vie. Lido Noni. ~rkshires Restaurant,. Cab- anas Marinas. REWARD! 673·2245 LOST Vicinity Costa Mesa High School Friday al- ternoon, Bronze co Io r ed Stinmy type bicycle, Lie No, 16498. Reward. 54!>-2083 LOST In Vic Bluffs. Re.d mal,e Dachshund, 4 years agt". Collar &. 1 a g , REWARD! 644-1077 BROWN Alligatcr bi!Uo!d in phone booth next t o Albertson's mkt, 19th & Harb. Rew. 642-7890 PART-Irish settor found in Vic. Santa Ana Ave. and r.1esa Dr. Flea collar and leather collar. 642-48t6 LOST Vic Santa Ana Ave lr. t.1esa Dr. Blk w/bro11rn mrkings. Dachshund. Ans to Frt'ddi. 646-5309 LARGE Reward. Big white Samoyecle <log, ans·.11erg tc name Ti\SHA. 196-2456 RED Vizs!a, short itair. Ans to "Brandy". Vic. Cdr.t. Reward! 673-5016 LOST: Reward~ 2 rirlg8. Wed, (!Ve .. So. Coe.st Plaza. St'nlimenta\ value. 646-2321 Personals 6405 WlLL The person or perMns v.·ho witne~ or came upcm the scene of an accident which occurred on June 18. 10.45 pm, at Park &. Rero St.s, Lagma Beach. contact r.tr. John J. Doody, Uni11. Adj. Co., 160 S. "H" St .. Tuslin, 83&-71.TI. We are particularly interested in the person or persons who helped lht' motorc)'t!list with his bike 11 the SCf'nc. FLY TO CATALINA DAILY FLIGIITS FRO,\f ORANGE COUNn'" AIR. PORT. Catalina • Vegu Airlines. • M6-fi612 E?'-ACTRESS / artist look-'"&' for writer. a r t 11 t 1bc!ween 35-50) to share tg, hac1,nda, Rosarita Beach, 548.9T,j5 ALCOHOLlCS Anon,ymoua Harbor Area . Phon, 673-8724 P.O. Box 1223 Costa M~ Atrro INSURANCE Ht? Rrtu~? DNV fUini;:;? Ph Valda '* 83S-I l7l I WILL play pia no for your partl<'1 given at your home. For non11n11! ftor &17-27911 llOLIDAY lll~ALTH-srA MEMBERSilf P roR SALE. 675-5332 • D.l.ILY I'll.OT 21 • "' * * * '* * SERVICE 'DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY JOIS a EMPLOYMENT JOBS a !MPLOYM!NT IOIS & IMPLOYMEHt JOiS i IMl'LOYMDft 'OU & liMl'LOYMiN t • ' . Contractorl • 6620 Paperhlngl"' Hole W•nlecf. Mon noGHtle Wanted. -7200 • • H•lp Wantod; -7200 rt.lo W•~ttd, Men 1::0 . 11e1,wantod,Men?'* UCftlled Coe~ ·P•lntl ... 6l50 RuJdenUal -Commercla1 PAINl'ING And .......... U Test SALES * *· M&lnt A l\epalrs. Free Ert 100 call me we botb btntfit Royal OUTSTANDING CAREER REXAIR, INC. ' m-2129 Exdlllfve. b\O' not expemlve NOW HIRING Additiom * Rtmodelin&: TrJ me and aee. 5U..3J.st Technicians . 42 MEN !"'4 R. c......... Lie. PAINTING Interior/Exterior. Ol'l'OlTUNITY l'Olt ~•s.n10 Free Eltimate1! Industries-Sil.I' STAmR --• 642-4669 • 54&-8712 • WE NEED 0 MEN WHO Carpet Cleanlnt 6625 oana~IAboratoriff, JocatM WITH wcunn POTINTIAL AR£ NOO' AnwD or --"""""' near N~ Beach and 1WU1 WORK AND ARE Revolutionary Hoat Spray • Brush • Roller the Univefai~ oJ Califomia Has immediate IF you IN a recant coll•9• ~racluata whose ABLE TO START UOlll).. Wh•d:r• Want? Whaddya Got? Ory Cl•aning. Mtthod 'l'IW6U Tl&-3417 at Irvine, ls• rapldJy grow-futu re i1 blocked bacau1a ·of t a nature of his IATEL.Y. NO EXPERI· SPECIA CLASSIFICATION FOR Rup. Drapes, Upholstery Paperhanging ~ Palnllne, lng manufacturer ot corn· work ot the 1111 of tha or9ani1.ation ENCE NIX:ESSARY AS merclal electronic test in-requirements for NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Cm be uaed Immediately clet.n • reaa. 20 Yn. e.x. struments. Cha.llanging o~ 01 . COMPANY WILL TRAIN. Specl1I R ... alter work la corilplet.ed Loe rel. 642-1322 aft 5 p.m. portmitle• avail•ble • M•n now selling '#Jio fael1 hi1 work i1 flot Sales, Ser\iioe ... Machinisls 0000 PAY 5 lln11 -5 llm11 -S bucb and Wtallatloa INI'ERIOR • EXTERIOR IOI' w:iepUco» techniclam sufficiently ch•llenging or thet it does not of· IULU -AO MUn INCLUOl Painting. Free est. ' 1 e e kinl rn:ponsible pos!· f•r •dequate income or advancement possibi- '-'Mitt WU Mw .. tr-. a-wt1tt t:. ... .. ,,.... • Mast.er O:wie Uc. 6 Ins. Cbuck 548-5314 lions and • cbtmce to rrow lltits or rtquira1 too much travel LOTS OF OVEJmME ._VOi.ii ~ Md,lw ...._, ""-" ff ~--• Bankamericard. & other DURtHG NEXT I 1-HOTHIHO FOi IALI -flAOll Ot-ll VI Modern Rug & C1rpet Paintina", exterior, Interior with a progressive corn· 01 MONTI!S. PHONE 642-5671 To Place Your Trader'• ParldlM Ad 4335 C1'enshaw, Loi Anieles lJc, lns. 17 yn ~· Fl'ff e.t. '""'" Manuladuring a junior axecutive, school tea cher, •niinear, 213 • 296-5100 Collect 548-6325, AccoosticaJ cell. ~u1inass owner, accountant or lawyer w o ba· CAI.I.. P&RSONNEL OEPI'. NEED MOTORCYCLE LAKE Tahoe View L.<>t N •· CARPET &: Furn. cleaning; "Paper Buggy'' 847-1659 Require1 one to loot yean Mobil .tore • home calla experience ln aolkt state Personnel I.aves ha ha1 the ability to ••rn more I-lave 1964 Simca, rebuilt vada side, paved $12,500 for ~iable tervice 6 qUali-analog and digital cireuitl;' n4-ns1 engine, new tires. $450 or clear. Exchange far 1<>me-ty work, call Sterlin& for We adviae _ sell -in.lltall THEN * * with a thorough understand· lit 2nd & 3 rd shift ! .................. 49-1-7204 bodya headache! Uni ta, brightness! &42-853'.I PA!NTJNC Aver. room ing ol analog a MUST. Will l~vesti9at. thi~ opportonltT to quelify for th, SAW . ., ECONOUNE HEAVY TD's, or 1 Bkr. 675-5126 comp!. 125. • Up . Neat test and trooble shoot elec-h19ha1t racognt~•d levtl o 1allin9 to butiflllt• DlITY $1,000 eq. or TRADE 2 BR furn condo. on Bcb Carpet Cleaning 662S work. Local refs. 347-1358 tronlc test instruments NCh e GRINDER and profattion•I groupt. Our A~titud• An1ly1i1 for older car or molorcycle nr. Venice, Italy ln ~clus-SPRING Special! Sc • ft. Plastering, Rt '\alr 6P.f 0 u Dipital Voltmeten. Ed· .Sy1tem w ill cl•t•rmine your c anca1 for suc• An Agency of John Hanoodc pJ.us cash. ive resort area. Trade for Advanced CUpet • UplxD ucatlon should include sev· ca1s in our Fialcl. If you ~ualify w• will l,'Y you Life Insurance Co., .speda1. 642"826 Joca.l area 3 or 4 Br. home tery. seusa Toll fr'ff PLASTER.ING New or old. •cal y e a rs of technical MACHINISTS an attr•etiv•. sal•ry whi a you l•am t • bus!-lzlni in IJfe, health bUnlr" or vec. lot or boat. 646-UTI Patchin& interior I exterior. "ainlng .. ,..,. "" IUih n••• ~nd 911n a11parienc1 undtr supervi,ion. ance I mutual f\hh., leekl 4 Br, den, 21Ai be, sep. din-Draperln 6630 548-2315. 10 AM to 8 PM school level. Ctll.!s A or journeyman ~our income prospect• will be wall into five management trainee for itl lng ..... newly repa.intel, 4 Income unita on 21st St. OD, ID or thread experi· f igures. Phone 542-5621, Ext. l21 or write immediate exp&nsion ~ Trade for smlt hse or COfldo in Coe:ta Mesa. Trade for * ZAFTINO'S * Plumbing 6890 Coll 833-123S enoe air conditioned brl1f partiCill.rs to Box Ml67, 01ily Pilot. Fam. Tral.n1na allawanoe in Mesa Verde, 2WI Baler-house or trust deeds. In-25% di -All fabrlct OR area. Own tools. plus commlssloo, Extensiw arlc Dr. 546-0032 come $40'2.50. Ovmer. 1822'n: Newport, CM 642-6866 * 24 HOUR SERVICE * VISIT training program. Call Mr. HA VE 14' ski boat, 3S HP • 549""'33 • Plumbing, repair, mnodel, Machinists I.anon 121.l) -« Evinrude eng.; A·l shope. 6 Nice 2 BR 2 BA rented Electrlc.1 6640 Elec sewer cleaning DANA e ENGINE & Young Man 1n41 96U33J evenin.g!,. Will <rade , .. cam pine $745 mo shoUld be $800. 6.6 Guaranteed * .... ,..., HUGHES trailer in like cond. In!. P&I $313 mo tax & in1 ELECTRICIAN, Llcen.ed 6 PLUMBING " Hr. ...... lURRET LA THE An Equal ()pportuni~ 642-M27 Evenings $134 mo. $20,<n> eq for home boDded . Small """· Work Uc., Insur.; -er malnten . .l repairs. 548-5203 guu. Newport Beach For cooklnt pooltlon. '67 Cad El Dorado, full y or ? 646-3389 remodel, repaJr, rooter aerv. laboratories, Inc. MACHINISTS equipped, leather int. • 2 BR 2 BA Twnhse Brook· Floors 666S 531-7566 Fine opportunity for SAILBOATS stereo. Under factory war-hurst Adams 5%. % int $3700 Marv's Plumbing Service 2401 C1mpu1 Drive Must have min. 3 yrs. H11 urgent lnspectot n~ed for Milbolit ranty. Paid $8400. Trade for eq. + SlCOO Furn? Vac. P&I LINOLEUM, c.arpet, tile. R.e-Repair -ltemodel expcr. on 4A W&:S Tur-requirements for adv1ncement In pr~ manufacturer. Mu.t hav. TD's or what ? 673-6635 $62 Tax, ins & maint. $43 model, repair, Many rem-• 646-Slm' • Irvine, C11ff. rel Lathe. Tracer experi-ftre11iv1 comp•ny of· knowledge ol .UOO.t. • be R-1 lot, Laguna Bee.ch, Pan-for home or ? 646-3389 nants. Free ect. 839-1677, An equal opportWlily cnce preferred on engine SWISS erlng profit 1h1rfn9, capable ot asm.uning full .tn- 541-8654 ~Ing 6960 employer paid v1catlon1 and In• opect(m rwpooslbllltlea. orarnic view, 6142 sq. ft., 42 unit Hywd, older. Bread lathe. Also need eXPeri-1ur1nce progr•m. Send brief resume A: miaq $20,00J clear. Want land, & butter income. Ttd $60,oo:> Gardening 66IO Altorallon~2-514S enced man on Bullard -SCREW expect~ to Victor Morten- house, duplex, submit. eq./waterfl'Ollt hln, land or Neat, accurate, 20 yrs. e:rcp. • General Machine Days. Short run produc-Apply In po...., -rm Lankonbhn smt, 847-1266 Paul Jones Rlty. roml, property s. Calit. tlon, Owner .t213) 62l-llm {9-5) ANTHONY'S Shop H•lpor MA OU NE ' No. ffollYwood, C:aJU. 2 BR, waterlront condomin-Garden Service TILE, Ceramfc 6974 Wu Ben's FULL Cl>aro• -ium w/private slip in Hunt· Trade 5-5 acre tracts near 646-1948 • Cabinet Makar e MAllTEflANCE for publlc acct. (lfc. Erp. o~ lngton Beach trade for 3 BR Palm Springs, value $50,00J * Verne, the Tile Man * OPERATORS or larger Newport, Laguna for or on mobile hom• LANDSCAPING CUst. work. tnsta.11 I repain. Miii Man 333 Ba,....°'· J,y, Trial b&l. thru ten. park. Will assume, LAWNS REMOOELlll No job too small. Plaster CARPENTERS N.wport ""''" -· ...,..,., -. or vicinity. Zl3 585-8621 aft 6 Exp horticulturist. patch. ""''""• •bow er • Arc & Hellarc With Torno experif!flce, salet taxes. Perm. OaU: CLIFF Dr. view home, cor-536-1131 Ability to do awn setups de-51M614, 1~ PM """ Rea.1. monthly Gardening repair. 847-19571846-0206 Welder Industrial plant experl· ner; 2 BR., den, maids rm., 20 Units, 2 and 3 bedroom, JAPANESE GARDENER ence. sir able. lg. gar.; trade for trust prime location, no vacany, Maint 6 cleanup .. Rel.l•ble. Upholstery 6990 Experienced Only MACHINIST Cook deeds or income property. trade for T.D.'s or clear va-Reu moothly rate1. e LE-BlOND TAPE Openinp are on 2nd shift. Owner 673·3015 cant land. approx $70,<XXI. 827-M.48 alt 6 pm Special -Special -Special APPLY AT Respomible for setting up EXPERimCED iro.cm Security Agreement eq. principals only 642-2835 Custom upholstery, booth1 of Columbia Yacht Corp. Work in • clean, eir-con-and open.ting variety of CONTACT payable S300 or more per Trade Oourishing F1ower & Japan"• Gardener any type. Ba.rs, Rest., HOlp. 275 Mc:Cormick Ave, LATHE ditioned Bhop located near equipment for fabricating Mr. Zimmer 675-4004 mo. due 7 yrs, \Vant Filler Pottery shop CM area, $30,· Exper., complete yard Will work nites, so will not Costa Mesa, Calif. the beach. Enjoy top com· I rn a 11 precision switch upper, OlHee Shop or etc. <XXl eq, for Hawaiian prop. service. Free estimates inlerfer with yoor blMIJnea. MACHINISTS p8l\Y benetlta. cornponeritl. Small lhop, PART Tim• crew man.ca. An Giovinetti, erty or, T·D's, sloop or ? 548-1$8 ,• 54&<ml ........ ucellent wefting concU-euy work. 3 (II' c houn 673-7420. SALES 673-9187 &124400 MOWING, Edginz, vacalawn. JOBS & EMPLO,YMENT REPRESENTATIVE! "Mark Century" Con· These pos.itionll otter an ex· ....... AM .. ___ boyo. 3 Acres, big Island Hawaii Want 3 or 4 BR w/view. Gen"! cleanup. H•ulina:. Loading independent troll, new machines. cel!e11t future with a grow. M"'t ha Ye car. Com- Trade clear 3 BR College Odd Jobi. • 54"6955 Job Wanltd, Lady 7020 a~st• dealing in over ing commercial division of STACO, INC • miuions. Fer informat1cm will !rad• !or down on Huahel Aircraft: Company, call 11)3.5315 and uk tor build-able R· 1 lot Newport Park home, w I waterfall, RELIABLE: Rea.s. Oriental • Companion, drive., 100 mutual funds, expanding • JIG BORE a ~ leader In the Bob Beach area. 842-5184 cvrd patio, sprnklrs, lnd-cue. C\eanup, odd jobl. e Hsekpr, live in, drive in Orange County. Thia la an field ol electron>cs. 1139 lak•r St. spd, & lrg perfect diamond, Vincent. 642-0326 • Prac Nurse. live in opportunity to enter MACHIMISTS Coit• -SERVICE Sta Nlf:9rnan., Exp 4 Income units on 21st SI. """"' Japanese GllJ'deninl e Aides, by day or wk dlgnilied professional &ellina s.49-3041 tune up le brb. O'adtr man in Coista Mesa. Trade , ... e O:>nvel aide, home full or part time Investment Plei&e apP]y in pu900 flne. To1> wqes • comm. house or trust deeds. In· Ocean View • Nr Npt pier. Pro1euional Maintenance exp not necessary, we train. Profici~nt on DeVUeg-Chevron Station Adami I -Short or Joog tenn come $4(12.50. O\vner. 4 unita -furn, best rental -547~. Mulual Fund Jigmll ls. HUGHES Ao equl! -"· Mapolla!IB • 549-0833 • area. $58,500 · take ml h5.t cut l Edge Lawn Employes bonded 6 lnsur Investo~ Inc. 2100 N. Main, employµ ' in Ira ... Owner. 200;% Mainteriance. Licensed HOMEMAKERS, INC Sant.a .A.ua e RADIAl BUS BOY New Costa Mesa 3 BR. 2 Court Ave., 673-ffi27 5484!Klll, 5¢5-8570 aft 4 PM '47""81 500 Superior Avenue 18 yn or older. Gnwe)'lr'd ba. horne, val $25,!ro. Ex:-DEPENDABLE Wtlm&n with Newport Be•ch, C•lif. only, change '" vacant lot, Willtradeaccomodation JAPANESE GARDENER oUl.ce !lki1h 6 ahOWI'OOm u-FRY COOK DRIU PRESS LEAD COOK <XYITAGE COFFE SHOP "junker," boat or T.0 . Mtn. cabin, 2 BR, 1 '-' BA, EXPER, reliable maint per. wiahe• part time empl. An equal opportunity 562 W. 19th st, CM Owner/Builder, &16-1676 fully crptd tor Beach area Reaa. mo rates. 892-3219. a.cc:omodation, summer/ In DecOrator'• -b-19 or over Must h• experienced employer .MkF 25 yetll'I or owr Honlu1u Hawaii home with winter use or same time. LOW COST Maintenance ment. Rea9Dllable compen-Apply in persori Burgmaster-tape control-Agencln, Women 7300 income, University a re a. MOW -EDGE -SPRAY saUon. Xlnt. ref1. ... ..,,.., 3-5 p.m. Dru1y led machines. DISHWASHER S26,!ro equity. TRADE for KI 2·2493 FERTILIZE. ,...,,.. beftft 10 a.m. Snack Shop No. 1 Precision MISS me AGBICY vecant lot, home or boat. 4 houses, Wilmington F I p e JAPANESE GARDD'IDIG MEN F..-"'" -2305 E. CoHI Hwy. e PRECISION Machined NlcbU 494-8437 or 6754646 $35,500, eq $14 ,000, income Servre Cleanup, Landsclp-delivery. Must have depend· FM Ptld Trade: full slate 4x8 antique s:lXI / mo, PY m n t 1 S234. ing 531-7034 aft 7 p.m. ab!• .. reUabie . Coron• del Mar PLATER Parts Apply In !'moo °"""" thuapy Udm ID S1SO car " pool. table or genuine 6x12 \VANT land or local unit&. Write P. 0 , Box 'TM Colla 9.5 P.M. Sectttary ............ to $450 F.ng. snooker table for late Bkr. (part owner) 646-9666 General S."fce. 6612 M,.. PART OR FULL TIME Inspector c;.,, O!oJJJte --•• to "'° mod 10' camper/16' out· Mahagony book case, Trade LADY With nuntng l!XJI. will positions now avail. for sev· Minimum 5 years t Xt>erl· REll8lN E. LfE Dent olc/math 8Pf: •• to $398 PROFESS. Window, w1lla I eral ambltiow men, 2G-40. ence all round precision, R•<"•Pllonlst ........ to $315 board or dune buggy, for good lawn edger. call nr. cleaning; bu 1 I n • 1 a , care for lady or ient in yotr Flexible tin., some eves. 1elective platina. Bllt1na Clk • • • • . . . • • • to $315 646-45401536.2964 5'16-8'22 t esid., &: cooatruction. home. Light housework OK. 151 I. Coa1t Hlghw1y Oyrtal Window Cl.eanln1 ""'' or ,..,.,.,,.,.. from pert. Car nee. Prestige work Experience ln preci&lon Applicant Payt FM * * * * * * Free Estimates .....,,, 1ocal l'H. 548-4534 with above averare earn-e TOOL & CUnER machined parts and with New~rt IMch ~tary .............. $550 lngs. Oppty for Manager pos. ' muIUpie spindle automa-Secretary • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $51{) 6730 DAYWORK All Kinds, We train. For intro:!. inter-GRINDEi tics desirable. Accuatom-Orange County's Seeretary •••••••••••••• $475 ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICE DIRECTORY H•ullng Gener a l Cleaning view call Mr. Whitney. ed to working to dost L•f'VOll Girl Friday ..••••••••• , $400 T r I nsportation. Reliable and NOTICES Llte Haulin&-Trlmminp, .....,.. tolerances. Sllary open, PONTIAC DEALER Oocoo -.Wini . 121!1 Brick, Masonry, etc. Truh, Garage Clnnupa Uw--W. 541-9863 MACHINIST Capable of excellent company bene- Announcements 6410 6S60 Name It! Reume.ble DAY Worlc, $2 hour. Experl-making own set ups oo mill e PRECISION tlt•. --1«2profeulon-410 W. Coat Hwy,, N.B. BIG JOim 642.-4030 enced. Own trans. 835-489'?. 6 lathe. Short run pro-al auto Elemten. Call Betty Bruce, ~ lifette Health Studio BRICK, Concrete. Carpentry LITE HAULING .l CLEAN du c t I o n. Some rxperl· ASSIMBLERS Apply In person F.&mina• to $20,<m pr, )'!'. Hospitality Is Our Motto Custom Cabinets. Small jobs UP Domestic Help 703S emental. A p p I y Christle Excellent COOlpellSation plan. Holp Want.I FREE STEAM WITH OK Free Est 962-6945 FREE ESTIMATES. Electric Corp, 2120 Plact:'n-1300 E. Normandy Group beoefit1. Will train w-7400 SWEDISH ~GE * 546-7849 • LIVE INS tia Ave. CM Experienced "' Stator qualilled applicanta. Apply Open wkdys 10 am .. 11 pm Builders 6570 Employer pa~ feta winding, impregnating Place, Santa Ana In person to Bob L<lnapre, mLE Hn makt Dollant Be Sundays 10 am • 8 pm CLEAN Lots, garages, .etc. George Byland Aa:ency MAN To do Ml.'Chanical Ir. and · electric motor re-Jr. • Fulleretta P hr IOU'· We 519 E. Broodway PATRICK O'Omoor, builder. Tree ttmoval. dump, 1kip, 106 B E. 16th, S.A. '47-«!95 Electrlct.I. auembly. Must pa.Ir ; also for precision (1 block N. of McFadden .. Bob Longpre train. HB Mn. D r • e s U>ng Beach (213) 43'7-7009 Medallion homes. a p l I ~ backhoe, fill. if'&de. 962-8745 Chinde ll•~inl. Oieerful .... d blu. p rint1 • ~ blodt W, of Grand.) 541).1932 remodeling&: add It Jon 1 ~atks. Apply Olri&tie machined part.I a.saembly. Pontiac I HAULING Tra&b pickup Permanent. Experienced. O.ntal Office Ma-r Funerals 6412 642-.1188 Trimming. Anything • we do 64U'103 Electric Cbrp, 2120 Plaeen. Most men working tlGOO Btflcb mvd. 89'U661 Far Ea.st Aa:l!nCY Sin&le. E><p. -. Carpentering 6S90 It all. Exper work ~219:2 t1a Ave .. CM 48 hours per Wffk. MOLD PRESS ·-· WESTMINSTER Help W•nt.d, Men 7'200 SALESMEN, Exper. in &el!· CAREER FULL Thne makts fer Motor e NO JOB TOO SMALL e HOUMCIHnlng 67l5 Ing •porting goods, guis, MEMORIAL PARK Residential • Industrial Cl>m-clot:bilJI· Apply in pe?'900, lncreaHcl latn OPERATORS OPPORTUNITY! Hotel .In Lepna Btacb.. Mortuary & Cemetery mercial. Repair &: remodel AP'J'., Q.EANINC • Molders uk: for Tom, Grant'• And hallflh Join todiaya faateat lf'OWinl -Reu:>nable. l.Jc, bonded, in· Fut &: 'Iborouah. I fUm!M • A1Hmbler1 SUrplm, 1750 Newport Blvd., HSKPR. Uw tn. Wortlrlc Comf,lffe fun1r1l1 ........ Everything. 642-&.64 • C1rpenter1 C.M. e 'RI.I life & Hotplt· Small mold shop. Must be profession-Mutual Fund sale• -& 10 ;yr. old daual> rom $245 • 962-1961 • 962-&m • al lntur•nca. (lnclurll· experienced ln transfer and No experle:nct; necetsal')'" Cemetery lots Interior 09C0nitlng 6737 Some boating experience SERVICE Station saJesman, lnl •II d•ptndents) injectloo moldlnc. Must be We tnln • fUI1 or p•rt t1mt ter. SA area. 835-7327. MASTER Carpenter new and neceuary. Interview• be-from $130 exper., over 21, married. e 2 Wl'EKS 'aW An· capable of dobl&: aet upa. Mutual Fund Advisors, MA'IURE Woman to 1fn ID 1ncludes F.ndowment Care ...,,.11 .. ... ,., h OU r , e RMldenee • Comm'I • tween 9 • 10:30 a.m. ONLY $120 WK. + comm. Ow?vron 'IU•I Vacttion. Apply Inc. for l child. $150 mo. Everything ln one beautiful 536-3900 after1 S p.m. e Painting, Int. I at. No phooe calll. StaUoo, Harbor .. San Otero • lO Paw Holidays par Npt B. Jim Westdiff 60'"22 *~" place meam less coat. REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS e WAil Covertncs Apply Fwy .• Cost. Mesa. year. STACO, INC. S.A.12!2N.B-..., TEACHER N-w.,.t"" No traffic problem.a. CA8INETS. Aoy """ job. • Cl>lor Coordination Wayfarer Y.cht Corp. MAN For de!Jvery & ... e P11n1lan Plan. '47-8331 for 1 )'Ml' ck!. in m.y bome ltsOl Beach, Wettmln.tl"!' 23 yrs exper. "8"1lJ FREE rnTIMATE 1682 Placentia atallation of appltance. &: • In-Plant C.faterllL 1139 Bakt• St. -531-1125 Ucensed I Insured Costa Mea TV's, exper, preferred. Ap. m.2•21 Cement, Conc,..te 6600 MODERN Costa Mesa HOUSWEJ>Ut., 4 •chl ply In person. Dtvt.Brown S'lo 2ND & 3RD 549.3041 Busboy chlldm, HD .,.. T:!M:IO, Cemetery Lots 6418 DECORATORS Cl>., 411E.17th St., C.M. • ' .......... Reio ... ,_ EXPERT CEMENr WORK 5J6.95U Buaboy • SHIFT BONUS 2 DESIRABLE P\oa in Har-Rt.'uonable Prices. Spedaliz.. Green Keeper An equal opportunity LEGAL SEaU:rARY, bor Rest Memorial Parit. lng In custom patios. Fret Ironing 6755 Dllhwuht>n Irvine Coast COuntry cnmNIHIP NOT uqUlllD employ• • A. M. Dishwasher Mtnlmcm 1 11'· CaHt. °"" Will sacrilict, $350, 642-4535 eet. Call ai\:ytime 642-9t9li Club ~, ......... ..,.... SaJry ..,... u i.-rns call 8:30 AM to 5 PM. CEM.D'IT Work. all t:J'pN. KEPHART'S CUlltom tronlnr }'1lt time, f!Vtt 18. 1600 E. Cbe.st llW)'., N.B. OHkil I A.M. t9 I P.M. Aw!Yln ....... LIVE .. ...,,., .... for SERVICE OIR:ECiORY No job too small. Free: est. bu tnOWd to lJ:t E 17. Salte Day and nlaht lhl.ftt REAL ESTATE. Sl>ouldn'l ........ ,.... ASSISTANT 34P.M.---.a.nd ... H. STUFLI<X 548-ES T, Of. Open Mon-Sat APPLY IN Pf.'RSON )fQU be lt"liu.: the hotte~ Snack ~ o.n ........ 119-ll?.I Appll•nce Repaln CUSTOM PATIOS I FAST ---In Bob'• Big Boy area I . Htmt~on Be1c!s? A YoUnl man to IUliat m~ !1305 E. CNot wy. POWER Stwln1 MIC:b.. P1rt1 6S10 Block walls. A.l!lo concttte my born~. n.so hr. Brina IS' E. 17th St. o.n for appt. Villarto R. E. ROYAL acer in Ordtt Branch o1 c.....,. dtl Mar ()p<ro---- HANDY Ma.D-SPQlla.llze m an sawing It n.1ll<7Y'al. 842-101(1 ha.nlft'S. 64&-55n °"" .... 962--4471. 5*-3103 °"'" to °'"' -· C.0...-- kind of repaln. Eleoc tronfcs, BEST In concrete. W11.Jk1, L1ncl,.1pl"! 6110 WILL Train ciean up & di.ti tim. Exper\eDCC ln man-SAILBOATS PBX ililOfitar. wwri; eleclrica.l, plumbfna, etc. pool dttkl, floors, peUoa. machine operator. FUJI time INDUSTRIES -.,mmt unnettuary but Foreman nft!ded fOI' aailbol.t -Expet. -·-......... 642-«>14 I HEAVY ytird wortc I llOil FRY COOK at the 2.oo. Cb:IBI Hwy at mut be able to convene nwruf•ttlftl'. Must havt Min ... I(). Oil ~ . Llc•nltd -Qu•llty prepe.ratloa. MoCann 6 Son Experien<od McArthw-CdM lnttJli&entty . Hav. lt.S. fd... lhorou1h ~ cl 1111-OOCIO'AIL WAmtEBS labysltti"! 6550 r.emtnt work. 8.19-SlS ··~· Apply at CEN maintenance pr1 da.y ucatton t.nd MlC •ppiea.r. ...... , .. oop1bl> ol ...... nJP11. '1be II-'41. - CORRAL'S ~ A rotoUll THE RIGGER ac:hl req1 ~ o;»I carpe~ lat-ad ,,,_ ""''" WMIOC: '10 ~ A mfd, St..~ ..... ,,... BABYSIT my homt. Xlnt Child Ca.-6610 1trv. Free ell. have """ No. 11 Fubion Island try, plumblna, eltc work • -Salary $135 per WMk ""---mre Nourishfnf m e a I a , equ.ipmerit. ~ Newport Celter N.B. rtft. ~1511 Call our Anabflm otfioe for _ . ....,,_.., BABYSITTER A Uta -.... yrd. "'"· day • SPEOAL SUmtntr JlfOITl.m. 2040 Eest Dyer jl.,.d, llll>Oinlmeol 5»dW alter -..... ~-.1 wk ~tes. Commmcina: Sept Ag8 2'n: to 6. I a.m. to 5;30 MAN wntd to drtw trvck I .. V1ctGr -11211 chl14. IM llJIO 1111 pm. Pape•hlntlftl L..wnmover Mec.hanic I LOI. ~ &hod, N. Jlolb'-2, 968-1696 p.m. $11 Wttk. CI a 1' I I help In ltor'f, $;»5 p.m. S S.nl• Ana HSKPR. I lllieo •-A BABYSIT Your 2-6 yr old, In Mootf!80ft'l Scboola. 1525 N. '•lntlnt 6l50 -Cout °""'"' ........ -. -.Coll!. ~ Id elar11 ; mt O.tll Meu home, bJ Sonia ..... c.M. ~06. "~· Cub SER.VICE Station Attend. full {714) 5'!0-3210 PART TM lllP U-B.ti.- d.t.y or wak, 545-4734 ExJ>tn J6()ll E. Cout Hwy., NB time. Experleoctd. Over n. Dy.,. Rd. Oii-Ramp. BARJBl>Et 1'Xl'EIUmcED -Ulo MOTHER Of two will babysit Contr1cton 6620 S..1444, tvs Parklnt Att.ndtnh 400 E. 17th St CM E. !tom N...-port F'wy, llY.,_ MUil be :n ~ cl ..... "'4. s.., """ In h1.1 home, near Pomona PATIOO e PatSn Coftn l1'ff • ext. Awrqt J BR apt. Wanted 11 )lt'L or (ftlf!r. Ap-EXPER U-pholsterer I can. An F-41111 Opportunity Qt. (10 E. 17th St., CM, •> M\Jlt '*"" rd~ 117"'611 -· ocbool.548-6512 Room Addition., Uc. labor A ma1'\a S7C .5D . PlY at 1600 W, Coast HWJ'., vu Man.. Boat· backp'ound Emolo,.... t>l1 on. 5 P.MC Call 67S.0100 Tllll QUICK1la YOO CW.. Wblta--Da ... ~Wla>dJ ..,_ __ 1 Suite G. Npt. Bdl. Ll\/i4Wf')', ......,,. WbUa •1• """' DILc a till l Tllll Ql1ICllSlt YOO ... ' l I I I , I I I . ~-% ..,._, •...or r_,, ..,.,. " 1961 l·,~-"'.,'-:-.•c"'M"'P""L""o'"Y"M"'1EN=1"'"J;;oe .... s•1•1"'MP"°"L"o"'y;i:.MENT 7'ii»& I Ml'LOYMliNT I ioas & EMl'LOYMENT MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISI POR I MUCHANDISE POR jMERCHANDISE FOR --------IHol W•-SALE AND TRADE I -~ALE AN.E_!~Dl ~£.AND TRADE SALE Af'.IE_ T~E!.. Help W•nted 7400 H•.J:.::ted 7400 ::-7400 Jobo Men, w-. 7500 l'vmttu,. ~ Appll-1100 M1,..1i.-l600 FREE TO YOU TRANSPORTATION ---·--9010 ..J!°'!':;;'°';o;nc_ ___ _ ; Secretaries IAttrHtlt\I poaitlonl re- quirlna CN: to three )'HI'S olfice experience plus F akilb: on electric tfPBWrittt a D d lborl• ...... ' . ' ' ' ' Missile Sysletn Div. :;ATLANTIC . !RESEARCH ' coRPORA.nON A Div. of The Su6Pllt:hane Corp. I' 1 I »33 H•rbor Blvd. i •Coat• Mesa, Calif. ' ' . ' . ' i : ]In equal opportunity . -- :J. W. Robinson ' Has openings for Part time ; Saleswomen . : Expto:rie~ pttlerred : Excellent benefit& • APPLY PERSONNEl.. • HM Mon thru Ftt Fashion Island NewpcW't Beach An eqial opportunjty employer WAITRWES F.xpttienced only! i Apply in Pttaon ~ SURF I SIRLOIN '5930 Pac. Cst. Hwy. Newport h•ch ~TOY &t GWI' PARTIES JfxlaMves, Nn! from S500 t> $1,000 by Dec. ht. NO &ELIVERlNG OR COJ.,. '(.ECTIONS , FREE I IJOSTESS GJITS, C a 11 •Now• ~ i.. Gadrets 842-1593 ; : DEM'AL ASSISTANT ~er 25. Some front desk vi- ~ pttf!!'tl!d. Mutt ~ave morr than one year ex- peri!nee in dent&! office.. • "94-0034 after 4:30 ~ 0..,.. ---' (or public acct. ofe. Exp : only. Trial bal. lhru &en· : btger, payroll, pl,)'J'OIJ 6 I iales taxea. Pttm. Call : ' $48-9544. 1-4 PM cnly. 'QUIEi' Middle ag@d couple f@<JUire General C eaiiing , Fomlfl 2 moms. • Wttk. ' ~ l own transp. OR Assemblers Dana LaboratorWs, a J"a>- pidl.Y growlng commerci- al electrooic. kit lnstru· ml!l'lt manufactUrtr ha• aevt:ral openings !or ex- peri~ electronic •• sembler&. Requires f moothl to 3 yean recent ope~ in eleclrOnk: eom.paneot .ssembly op- entionl". Must know col- or code and hand IOlder- int:: tedlflique:s. Knowl· ftfge ot achematiCI is de- linible but not manda.· 11.Y)'. Visit DANA IJboratories, Inc. 240 1 Campua Drive Irvine, Calif. An eqWl.l opportunity employer GIRL FRIDAY An eXCeUent challenging and varied position work· ing for our Plant Man- ager and Orlef Engineer. Position will izite:relll one who ha.a mature judge- ment, bandies detail work well and enjoys telephone contact with customers. 11 yoo have Wative, en- jo:,o working with people and have rood shorthand and typina: skills, pleue call MR. H. C. ROSS fer an appointment. LANGEVIN Division of Scientific Industries, Inc. 1101 E. Carnegie Ava. Santa Ana 546-1130 An tqUU opportunley emplO)'er INSURANCE AGENCY GIRL Excellent opportunity in .larae: agency. Experience m Cl&irna and Secn!tariaJ w or k ~. Startin& aelary $350. \¥' deJlelKtinr Ori experience. PHcock Insurance, Inc. 1n41 847-3514 l'l!m Beach Blvd, Suite H Huntingtm Be'k'h e Wlitress ' 2618 • Hostess f1'A Offict in CM bu permanmt pogitiori for F IC ~ookJu1eptt wtth aceountinc education ' variety ot ex· ptnenoe. Cail 547-7{1;} DRUG Store clerk. fuD tinw, heat, experienced. Middle- lged Jftf. Apply in penofl. $1582 S, C.oast Hi&trway, So. Laguna Beadl NURSE'S AID. Experienc. desirable. Apply ill person. Laguna Beach Nur1lnr Home, 450 Glenneyre Street ' .......,, \V ..\ I T RESS, experienced, Must be over 21. i.n>ly in person Swisl Chalet ltestaurant 414 N. Newport Blvd LAUNDRY Help ex- perienced, mangle, ahJ.rt Jirl, l marker. Call 541-$50 belore noon Appty in peraon 3-6 p.m. de.ii:)' Snack Shop 2305 E. c .. ,, Hwy. Corena del Mar PROOF MACHINE OPERATOR PA YING I RECEIVING TELLER Exiierieice prefen-ed Apply in penon Sro.JRITY PACIFIC NATIONAL BANK 2280 Harbor 81\'d., C.M. EClual opportunity emplo~r SECRETARY-RECEPT. GIRL FRIDAY HUGHES Newpott leach H1a te11e r1I openlngt for MICRO WCTRONIC BOllDW Must have minimum ol six montkt rtt:mt experience. HUGHES 500 Superior Avenue Newp0rt Beach, Calif. An equal opponwUty entployl!r M&.F BfCTROMI( ASSEMBLY Wiring and d.reult board flSRmbly. Dt.v lhilt. -APPLY - Marshill Communications 2230 s. Anno St. Santa Ana, Calif. 540-2120 An equal oppc>r'ttftty ... - Would like minimum 2 yrars experience, Type 50 wpm, capable ot us- ina: dictatina: equipment challl!llginl opportunity in Sales Department. Ap- ply STACO, INC. 1139 l,aker St, Coste Meaa S49-3041 An equal opportunity emplo~r Women for part time work helping In fOod pr•p- aratlon, Experi1nc• not neces1•ry, Apply in Perton Wu Ben's 333 Bayside Dr. N-port leach Cocktail Waitress Hostess Over 21 Apply in perlOfl 9-SPM REUBEN E. LEE 151 E. Co11t Hlghw•y Newport Beach DATA PROCESSlllG ClfRK -APPLY - Marshlll Communications 2230 S. Anno St. S1nta Ana, C1Uf. 540-2120 J. C. PENNEY CO. in NEWPORT BEACH: Jiu openings tor PART TIME NURSERY HELP ln our Carden Shop Mo~. Noon and Evening tcbeduals. Outmndinr benditl PHviow; exper. preferred APPLY IN PD{SON Monday thru Friday 10 a.n1. to 9:30 p.m. J. C. PENNEY CO. NEWPORT BEACH 24 Faahion 1a1enc1 Newport Beach, c.Ji!. An equal """"""'""' miployer EXPER. WAITRESSES COCKTAIL WAITRESSES I WAITERS Now hiring tor the opening in 30 day1 ol the tamoo. Ben Brown'a fabuJou. ttstaurant l night club located at Laiun• Bee.ch Country Club I: Village, ruos s. Cout Hwy, J...aauna Beach. Pbooe tor apPt bet 2 pm & 5 pm mly. Mr. Mou * .f99.2271 * ----Unique Opportunity_ Decorator Receives Cancellation of $22:000.00 Spanish & Mediter- ranean Furniture All New lop Quality Brand Names I A Decorator's Dream Home is on Display Over $100,000 worth of Spanish & Mediterran- ean furn. to choose from. (EXAMPLE> If yoo have xlra time avail & interest~ in building a buainess w/se:cure future & Items as follows: Gor- mOl'e ineotne than you ee.m geous 8 ft custom quilt· now call Mr. Drake, Tues. · thru Fri .. 639-ll21, rm ll>t ed sofa with separate aft. 9 A.M. HAIRDnJN::o:i~ .,.__. loose pillows with heavy ~·· ••t:•. Dne tollowina;. Bllly Neo.vport oak trim decor and Salon. Xlnt opportun.ity? 673-5342 Aak for Tom matching chair, 3 match· ~~~~~--~-1 Agencin, Men-,-·-oak occasional tables. (2) ~~" , __ !~-~O 58" tan decorator lamps, ARGUS hanging chain s w a g Work Near The leach _ . lampa 1n wrought u-on, Tme Serv Sta · ·· · ·•• •• • S#I an B·piece king size mas· Tme Shakeout man ••• , S3501 Troe Oedit Cler ........ S325 ter bedroom suite in pe-' Trne A/Rec , . . • . . . . . . . . Sl50 can paneled mediter- ARGUS EMPLOYMENT ranea n style with top CONSULTANT AGE..'/CY 2043 Westclitt, N.B. 548-'rl96 quality 15 yr. warranty 16· SAILSOAT-SCUJ"d)I. wood WHO' ESA.LE To 0Hltr1. SWIMMING POOt ACED Fcrtiltztt rt~ lor eome.. Alldnc $.100. Movln& Apt ownn • pablk, ttfria· U Ft PooJ niter Surtaee lawn and ~ FrH from 1.;m:;U>1::.,:"'1::;::l!_;Call=;.c,""";,."""'=,.. "''°" sua• SIS + Croa top Sldm,... Mall>t..-._ Klt. ""-" _.,. 0-Hb S.bot l yard dolly $225 $21. Sq top $50, Obie ok. 165. FREE G;.....i Pod. wood ........ SuJ>.tbun. * ..,,_ • ,_,,,.X ... 185.Dblodt $l4'81 "6-«163 816 n..t r,.. $100. Aloo wub· SECARD, l'OOL ORGANIC FV'tll,..,., hone SpHd Sid -9030 9"/dr>'era/trttura/ranses. ,.. _ _. _ .. _ 1- We will never be undtr10id. tu S. Mala, Oranp manure • .......,.,. .... v,,..p. --16" OIRIS Qaft Sea. Skiff A-OK Wa.r-""-·se, ma,.__ "2-1993 Combined mulcb 6 ~~ ~-,~~~~~,...~~~~I 1e:rtililer. 546-4931 a 1 t runabout. Fint. co n d , de:n CroYe B!Yd, 1 Blck W. ot t 10. PADDLE Board $10 Baby 5:30 8115 Beach at G.C. Frwy. crib $7.50 2 hanging lamp1, 1WO Beautiful kitten 1 WASHERS $29.95; ~ S4. I. SJ.50 10 ral aqUarlum ailver-blk tiger female 6 $.15; Fftoettra $15; Rt:fric., SS Flat 1100/lDI s-ru ~ blue lrt'Y ma.le I wks. One eoppertone A AYOC.; GuBl'. and .up. Baby clothe•. ataclt. borne please. S4&917t 8/6 ~1095 Oieat $5 lHlr • o I ta I e FREE ~tten Ruu.ian .Blue 6' GIBSON Detrostamatic Re-traMfonner 6 chokes S~.50. mother h~en & w/com covtr $1 $00. 673-9185 14' SPEEDBOAT vt!t'I ~HP Mercul')' ' AU. acefl90riee, Good condition. S 3 S 0 • 64&--3629 alt 5 pm or Sun· fri&:. Good cood. $&(). or of· $5, $10. 545-~. 2)19 W · weaned. 1986 Fu 11 e r to n 1967 CENTURY 17' Ski Boat, 'with Trailer & cover, $3,5t0 or best dfer. 646-(1416: f.er. ~ Harvard, SA Costa Meaa 816 Sowl"t Mochl-1120 * AUCTION * ADORABLE .... ,. -She'!> u '°" wW tell .. blo ~ dog poppy, 10 wka okf. Marin• Equi_J!:..· __ 90_3_5.1 COLLECTION Aa:ent offers a. $289 Si!lger "Slanto-matic" ziazag aewina: machine for balancr due: on a.ooount d.. $84.60. $8 mo OK with ~ proved credit. Delivery, i.n- atructioa Ir ruarantet in duded ~. 9AM to 9 PM. P l J Agency 1967 SINGER Comp I w/walout coft!Ole. Servi« man leavinr ft>rcea repo. Touch-o-matic, auto zl&·z.a&, button bolea, blind hems, overcast.a. No attach needed Full price $37 .97 or ueume $.4.10 mo. Call 526--{;616 , anytime. -------Musical Inst, 112S HAGltl'IWM g •trill& elee. guitar, duel pick-up w/case ""· ELECTRIC guitar, coil COl'd $45; amplifier $25. Both A·l cmditk:m. 546-4355 EXCELSIOR Accontian, like new, full keyboard; with cue. Sacrifiet '51). 548-35IXI ELEC.' p!a;yer piano, 125 roll.a, Per(ect cood .$950. Shown by appt only 673-3240 Planot & Or91ns 1130 Season Sale! Fall 1hipments of Baldwin Pianos & Organ& on the way. Our floor l discon mode:l1 must 10. Prices slashed! Doesn't it make sense 10 shop us before: you buy? WARD'S BALDWIN SI'UDJO 1801 Newport, C.M., £42-3484 Orange Co's Largest On•Stop Music Store Wurlitzer pianos & organs. Fischer, Kanabe pianos, Player pianos, rcbl1, guar .• Grands. W Al..LlCIIS-~1ANNING'S MUSIC CITY 3400 So. Bristol Costa f\ff'sa • 510.1165 NOW HERE -the new Supersounding T-200 Hammond Spinet organ -the finest yet' SCHMIDT-PHILLIPS CO. 1907 N. Mam 0 20th Santa Ana liV• Wb>dy a b'1 Hsbrkn. 968-43(6 818 Auctiom: ~ '1:Xl p.m. FREE Puppy. Part p;>Od!e' Windy11 Auction Bern and terrier. 4 mo&. All blk. Rebind Tony'a Bl41. Mat1 9B2..-8186 8/8 20'151Ai Newport, CM 6t6-8688 LOY ABLE Kittl.'DI 2 black, 1 Put yourself in our Place blue: gray. 3 week& - Harbor Blvd 0-1 Theatre ~ _ __ _ 8~ 3700 ~i,.Fadden, S.i\. P~ i"S a n~ LIVESTOCK 8' FIBERGUSS dinA with mtr ., $125 or offer; deck wiodlau, manual, with ~" chain IJ'P5Y; 646-9550 Boat Slip Mooring 9036 BOAT slip for rent: up to 25 Ft. boat. S35 Pe:r month. (1) 529--3709 Eves. SWAP MEET '0oii,-··-· 8825 ALIAN GREYHOUND BCMllt Rental• 9031 Starta Aua 17 IT pup-'------1 531-1272 aft ·t pies. AKC reg. Olampion SHORTWAVE ham radio breed. Ideal pell. I male, 1 receiver, Hammarlund HQ !emale. $l25.00 each, includ- 180C W •A"" mg shots and papers. CaU . as -r<"" new, now on- ly $250. Chrome dinette $20. &l&.I4Sl. Retrigerator $25. End tables POODLES: Pedigree 6 wk $2 each. T.V.'1 $25 and S.'lO. old puppies w/papers . 517 E. Normandy Pl, Sant.a Toy-min & standard. Stud Ana. 513-&11.i service ava il. 296..'l Mendoza SKI BOAT Will pay tcraager w/lki boat to take my l ~ena1ers akiinJ. \ViU pay · ~ a:as + daily r11te. Also ,'\rent Udo 14, mo. of Au·~. Lido Iale. Call Mr. Robert E. Auth (213) 74~23.11 collect. -POOL TABLES -Dr. C. Ant A_. ----Boa t-Yacht New & usc:d S9i'.M!J up. Tahir • .\l~C Germ" n s:1eph('rd. Charters 9039 tennil Poker tbles ben & female "!-aycd. 2 year old. -------1 atoo1s,' indoor g~ea, etc. Good home ht con d . Dilcoont prtcea! BA.OOER 54Q.-8809 ~ea. SALES, 409 S. Main, Orange SIL.KEY Tenier male ~ps. or Call Frank: 53S-03ll. Ope:n AKC Otampiorl •tock $125. 12-8 p.m. except Wed. 61S--5261 36 SQ YARDS bela:e nylon GERMAN Shep. pups AKC bomd carpeting w/pad, Fiuhy -heahby, Guar. Stud cost $15 pet yard, aacriflce: ter. 826--0259 l.2xJ8, $175; s~ x io. S65: I========= 1830 runner 2~ x 10 ft. MO; S Horsft drawer walnut ctK!st of ---'-------- drawers $40. 642-5845 BAY Mare:. Xlnt cood, &enUe westem saddle & tack. FOAM RUBBER, cu1 to aize. * 536.1986 • Upb supplie1. fa b r I c ', TRANSPORfATIO~ naugahyde. Fact. outlet. Low pre. A·l Foam Fabric Bc;;;;;-&· Y ;chts ··--9000 & Upholstery Supply Qi., 3ll E. 5th St., S.A. 83.5-1181 Lido 14 rnggest price $750 DUAL KING SIZE BED Fiberglass sabot. IT'S SMARTER TO CHARTER Cal 25 • Rawson 30 • Alberg 35 • Bounty 40 • Newporter ketch • Marlner 40 • Scbooners -17' Fairline:r • 30' Trojan • 38' Spt Fisher • nu- merous others. CALIFORNIA CRUISIS 20 yeal":I in Newpon Ernie Minney 541-4191 Barefoot Cntise to Catalina -Aug 9, 10, 11 aboard schooner "Kelpie". Depart Fri Eve return Sun Eve. $50 per person includes everythin!l'. CALIFORNIA CRUISES 548-4191 * 548-4192 1 pieee niattress • 'I. box n~s work S150 spring1 • metal frame com-Oak orflce:r's bunks from SS BLUEWATER CHARTERS M k H....i,.· G f 27'-40' U·Drive Ski p. Avail pJele -custom made -only ar "l"'m&. reat or a D k 2 yean: old. Sacrifice: for boys room S95 ea aylw · 646-9000 24 hrs. only $175. Call 642..Q;82 Thousands of goodil's I e CHARTER Tll.E FINEST ELFCrRIC Lawn Mower 18.. f\finney·s Ship Chandlery New 40· Ketch Rotary, 80' cord. Orig. price 2537 W. Coast Hwy, NB 673-2517 e 675-2400 $80. Will sell $.'JO. min 548-4l9l ALBACORE & marl In &JS.79~ or call at Apt 22. THE charter on the "Gilda B". 2320 Florida H.B. FAMOUS "Jlf\1 WEBSTER" 673-1660 or eves, 673-9138 -•V ACUUMS-9 Committw boat for Newport 110 0 _ . H11 rbor Ya-=ht Club for t .. ',ob.;• Homei up. not:~ Ir parll. many years. For sale "as Reasonable. l:oast Vacuum · .. 1 7,0 W 8 A '66 PACEMAKER, 10'X56': 333 E 17th CM .,,1560 11 11 _ . ay ve. ' ' ' <>"U-_ Ba.Ibo.a. S-1.l;iO. 673-7730 expando !iv. rm. aet up in UPHOLSTERING • 179.50, 2 family park: no down, take pc. <European craflsmen) Newport Dry Docks 67>l505 over paymt. of $9!1.61. Dick Free ~t. del, pickuo. 215 On the Bay al (!0th St. 54~113 Aft . 12 noon Main HB .. Berny .. 5.1S.64re Bonls hr uled . bottom acruh--··-~·-. _ ' . ---b!'.'d. painted & zlnced. A!I MOTOR HOMES 9215 NEW carpeting Shag Nylon ol':!'r mEntenanct'· .. engine 1 _ _ --·-.. . 9200 tweed. 40' chaln link fence. J9'C:om.my 'm hp V-8 * DODGE * 16)1 E. 17th St., S.A. 5fl.Q'J6 ======== king size mattress & box 5 h I I I 7600 GRAND PIANOS c ~ .. nttrvct on _ springs. Spanish decor Finest selection in Oranp blue & green. Also new "''Ork. 1 , rate' posts. 64.2·l!W2. Grey Marine 45 mph. SHdin;: KIRBY vacuum cleaner &. ftJp, new cover. All in pe.rf MOTOR ff{)MES Typing. Speed ~low? dining set, etc. etc. Any County. All perfect eond. Our clcctr1c ~v.·nter1 are • Knabe • Sohmer • Stark. available during August for piece can be purchased True b.:tr:;i"lin pr'ces tod:iy! practice. 9 to 5. . d 'd D b Gould Muaic Company N•wport in iv1 ually. rop y ! ?04J N. ~1.<·1. ~A 51;-0381 School of Busineas and see our selection of USED ORGANS--, 646-0153 ! Wurlitzer 1968 model S870 SCHOOL Children'• vacation top quality Spanish and Hammond chord organ S2fi rates. Chilroat 10 • Lesson Mediterranean furni· Hammond M3 ~Leslie: $1095 Typing School. 548-2859. 1731 Conn Capnce S895 Del Mar. C.M. t u re. Fantastically Many, ~1any ~1orr: Term.~. -. -Gould Music Company PIANO lesson~ for beg1nne:ra. priced!! I m.is N. 1'-iain SA 547-0681 Adults or ctuldren. 675-5029 I after 4 pm. WURLITZER Studio piano MERCHANDISE FOR j(omplete houseful ~att ~"""· Phon• SALE AND TRADE J SOIAAS B AB y GRAND furnllu•• 1000 '152800 PIANO (W•l,ut). FINE ----'------" •• ,.,, • ' ' · • • • · CONO! ! $550 * fif;:i..5.'l03 attachments. Take: o v I! r rond. At lerut S3(XXI if on b.,. TRAVCO small payments or S57.20 boat lot. Sac'. r:>r last sale . 2 1" ft & 27 ft. Modeh cash. Credit dept . KE !>-7289 11650 firm . 67:>-13:>.i R•tdy for 1mmeditlt 011iv1ry AT IEACH CITY DODGE 16555 llffch 11 .. i11. IHwy. )ti 540-J660 HUNTINGTON II.ACM BLOND Oak table,-8 ffiel-1967 GLASSPAR AvaJOrl"16· ching chairs, Hutch $100. Runabout, 50 hp f\1erc Four bar &tools, bamboo $25. Thunderbolt. top, side eur· 1 5' orlice desk $25. 646-2041 ts.ins. cockpit cover, oth!'r THIN Boy gu furnace: 52,000 extras, $165(). Call to &ee in BTU Top discharge for ceil· water 641-1349 I ing heat. Goo ri cond. S55. --28' FAIRLINER -642-28~1 FLYING BRIDGE. V 'r y ~----... --""'I ONE I fi sliding door. L'OT11-clean & fully equ ipped. Must Mini Bikes 9275 pletc, tempered lflass s;:,o, sell, best offer. Day~ ·~ ------ 846-0281 646--4242 eves 54S-1339 10· 4" MODEL A aurl'board BRAND NeW Avon Red S80: new Cs.Jorie gu wall Crest life: raft & Se1 GuU oven $50. 642-4183 outboard motor w/accessor· 3 PIECE Sectlooal SOFA, \es. Complete $36.5. Mr. Key bt>igr. good condition. $50. 67;,....()IOO '68 CHRIS cycle SOcc. 7 H.P. 4 spd. Foot shift -a:ood cond. $210. 968-1369 MESA MINI BIKES 39.$ up Sales • Parts • Repairs 2267 Harbor, C.M. • 548-3007 WV&-In hou 1 ekeeper motherle11 home. Children, ages 5 & 1. f.orona del Mar 6'1l-3121 For expanding weekly news- ~· Good aa.lary, trirll'f h!nefit.a. Sf!nd brief resume to: Carlton J. Smith, P.O. Box 2220, Laguna Hills, Cil. PBX Operator, stock b':°"erage Office. Use Call Dtttt"tor until office: re. locates in Newport Center in fall. Some filing . Min. age 25. S375. Call 642-4080 For Appointmen t. Must Sell! MUST GULBRANSEN sp'""'· '"' ___ Like: ne.,11; Couch, matching Pi11no Pride: built, $300 or 543-1758 1 '1°'964"°'29°"0.,..·-'"-,"oc= . ..,,,~,-b-n~.-,,. =========! fully equipped. New paint. Mi1c. Want•d 1610 50 hrs on overhaul. Makl' of. !tr. 548·3973 alt 6 PM Motorcycle• 9300 i EXPERIENCED Seamstress for c re 1 t I v e ·-"""· Visions. ttf-13.35 <;ASHU:R With lite book- llttper exp. Interviews 9 am ao a pm. 1221 W. Olut H'NY. NB b:ERK, typina: ' light J>kki>il· exper. Apply 1-5 MacGrtt0r Yachts. lfi65 f'bcock. 0:>6ta Mesa qitAPERY workroom machine operator. Good pay ~ workina: conditions. HalJ "f:!I. Huntinrton. SJG-9377 'fOlJNG Girl or y o u n g :womeii Dayg: apply Arpy'11 ieolfet Shop JO'll·B H1rOOr ~vd., Colita Mtsa : Statlontf1' 111:tore need-, - : lemale ulelpt'J'IOO. f'uU • time. Apply in penon ; 1823 & !'nut Hwy, CdM. foMAN 71 ttru 40. Alea u - .pc.rimet prtlerred. Appl,y ln ~. Kirk Jewders, 2300 :H&rtiar Blvd, Costa Meaa Part Time Girl Friday Typtna:. light bookkeeping, keep otfict! spic and apan. Work in delighUul sur- roondinga of fiM turniturl' Tuesday & Thurllday S.S: JO WAITRESSES- E.xperie:nced onJy nttd apply. No Phone calla ple:ue:. DENNY'S 1600 S. Coast Hwy. Call 642.2050 1--- Laguna Beach HOSTESSES Attractive, 11ivllcioo~. N e w home:1 Irvine:. $2. per hour 30 hou~ + Pt'r w~ ' --, I , l.AJl'lJ: erm l'mplo~nt. 83.1-000J. HOU~EKEEPER, maturr. to l~ve-1n; guest homr for ac- livr elderly. Good working cond. For intrrview csll ~190 or 838-3847 lMMEDtATE openina-r n r ) M-a! &C'C!Jrate: (irl wilh t('Urr ' or l'IO~t' df'P<Lrtmenr ex~rj. e:nc. 1n banlrina:. Mr. Brown ~2111 Brldal Consultant Allrac1iv~ v.·oman, amb11ioos, good pe:r.>nality, u.v of car, over 71. Some eves. pre· fel'Ted. Average p&rl time SJ9. wttk, tulJ time St24. week. No e:icperience: nee· euary. For interview caU Mr, Whitney M4-8550 METER MAID f"OR WATER DISTRICT No IO'Xfl('r\cn('(' n~l!llllr)'. Mu!t have good penmllnsh.ip and enjoy workina: out of doora. PleaSIUll worilln~ cond1tion11. Call lcr appt. 8 a.m, • S p.m. -l!IS.946"1 or """"'· SALESLADY WArrREliSES, C.r Hopi· wiU tntln. Atlr. "'Ith bub. b~ ~rwooa tity. 1llf' Zoo C:0..11 H'4')'. at MacArthur. ExperlencM """'"• ''' M" · Silver Dept. -RECEPTIONIST-F•1hlon l1l1nd Allra<'. &irl lo work In major ~~-644-1ll0 iw,.1 mla. oo. 1)Jltna and Cafmrla Counter Girl lilhorthand ~. ~7436 Mtat MV'f cub N"~r:r ~K­ Stl'IER l OYft" 11. 1 RE.V'ONSIBLE Woman to perienct. Monday lhl"OU.lh .,... i IMAll boys. M.Y eani for 10 mo old boy• 11tr Fnday 7:30-4 p.rn. Call cha.ir, mi!IC't'llaneous cherry· best offer. 54;>-1743 --.,..,,, • U..k. 213· SACRIFICE•. WUIU.ITZER Co""''' p;..., w A N T E D HE il.ooiO after 3 PM Xlnt cond. Like new $495 ST'ORAGE, Trailers, OOats. IIlWAY ll&E'd attft. New loc * 642--0133 * etc. $7.50 pe.r/mo. Work 7401 w · B 1 WE need quality (no junk space. 642-2fi01 &. 54S-3261 ::~ ~;:er Buy, ~1: FOR S 6 9 800 !Me_!.elDvlS~UonMM-ER •. S,A. Ll2E. 01 5 ~~.~cl st~r:~i~up~iiA=: 1;~~~~d~· ~~ ~:r lools &: office tQ"Ulpment. Trailer. $1000. 642-1631 GRF.Y Formica top table, 2 ONLY All C.olor TV's Must Go! TOP CASH IN :II Minute:a leaves, 6: chain. Xlnt cnod. RCA v· .,_ 531-llU * 893-m55 S bo Call aft 6 Fri, ~1188 A . L.~ •ctor. <1.:nith, Pack-0_8 -W:Wmilio--l::!''.!:il'.:::::::••::•c._ ___ 90.10 ny p1ec• c•n ue pur· ard Bell&: Admiral. Some • e WANTED • CASH for furn le appliances. chased individually. new -&Orne ~!l!ll!ssed. Garage for itorage Private Sailing Lessons We: sell good used fum. 1772 Pri """ ~739 Your Boat or Mine $5 tp'_ Npt Bl. CM 642-7015 Terms Available ~s ;;~.'' · · · ==="~=====I Will Trach Beginners Newcomers TER~.fS AVAILABLE FREE TO YOU or Racing Tactics Gar•g• Sale 8022 -~---- GARAGE SALE Raa: rug, multi..eolored, all wool with pad, U ' by 20', excellent eonclition $75. Baby bed, springs, ma I I re 11, Bathineue. all $6. Boy'a Stingary bike: $17. T'wo ehllir1, nl"lds to v er i n g . 01hl'r itcm1, ~. 288 Bucknell Rd. C.M. LEAVING STATE: Ma.ny hoo.'W'IJold l t r m 1 • 111.rden furniturr. 2089 ll a rb o r Blvd ., CM 642-4400 SURFBOARD, fle<'. a:uita.r It: HENDERSON 'S Taught by AU-Amrrit"an to California 1817 Harbor (downtown) CM _FR_E_E_T-,-..... --.. -m-,-,.-,-,-hle Sailor & Olympic HoytefuJ * 548-0L'i5 * long haired kllten11 642-1323 1 ..,,,...64_7_-0022_-o",.,-67_3·°"81~"~~ Credit Approved Immediately We carry our own accounts rZl/J Furniture -======= altns or SG-7786 e:vez. 8/6 Near new Erickl!l 32. tuU HI-Fl &. Stereo 1210 2 CUTE KJttiei _ Fem.11le 2 race. Ltss than 1 yr. $7500. ;...;..;..;...;;;..o,:.:;;..::::._ _ _:::::.:: d Oeeanlc Yacht Sales Sl'EREO 1968 solid stair. I mos 01 · Trained to box. • 642·5151 e console model with AM/FM 549--010'1 8/8 '°"'="'·3'°7.:-C;;;;c°7.- radio, 4 spd changer. Take CH IL 0 REN Bored . SNOW bi~ No .. 32.6. New over small payments or Fuclnatlng hobby, fr c e: d.•cron 11111: Tra1l~r w/nr"' $93.20 CMh. Credit Ofp1 . pigeons. 828-4319 8/3 ~ lit Price $295. 5.1').129J FREE Fill dlr1. F.asy to get l:•==c=--~-c~,--=~----=~-=I at 2206 Cany<>f' Or .. c;r,.~111 17'. SLOOP, nyw 1tandinj: rig. Tepe lt~orde_rs_l_22_0 M~lil 540-9990 8/3 a:1ng l e:ninne. Great Day Saill. $415. 642-3192 or ORAlG Car tape. auto. &tereo ccx:KER Sp&niel . 10 monlh ~8-1487 with 11peakrrs. 1 male. Partt-«i&or. 642-18918161.,;;;;,-;SP=R"°U"°CE"'°'"'ao=,-...,~;~,. • 56-3937 • ===--=---·•==~--~---1 mast. Near MW. a 11 imp, lkis. anlf club111, olher ONLY AT items. 1521 Dorothy Lane, --·· LOVELY II wl old puppy. hardware. 1700 &12-8961 or Camer•t & Equip. 1300 Part Labrador A Boxtr. (2131 78&-1889 Npt!kb.~ pro-~lfi6 1131 -OOuru..v RENTAL.S- SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Circus -Knaok -Relic - Tubing -IN TRUNKS Af the beech or in the at- tic, it"1 SUJl>rising what )"l'.JIJ fiod JN TRUNKS. 65 HONDA 150 for u.le S350 or trade lor P.U. rJf aame value 642-3216 '65 BSA l50 CC Good end .. S400 312h 36th St., N.B. 1967 TRIUMPH 650 &:. nevi\le 2.000 ml. Best otter lakes. 67f>...2fi77 t'Yes 6f:r2492 "65 YAMAHA 250 Big Bear. XJnt. Rebuilt ~glne. S375 494-7201 -i-961""90e=c ~$24,­ ... Sl).2604 .. Traile r, Travel 9425 '67 NOMAD 16', full)' ae:\I. t'Onlaint'd: I~ ml., bt-allt. Inter .. v1:ry clean 644-lt09 %1 ' TR.A VEl.EZE. Toilet mow"· sink, rcfrig. stoYe l r;ibana.1soo. 548-1-t78 -Truck. 9500 A=11=--==-1=-10o 1 IU Newport Blvd. _l!P,_,__•_n_______ I u.TE M""•' -..,,.. 1t H1rbor Blvd. ARGUS I MM mo•ie jectof W/9CJ"ffl'I. $60. • 549-3931 * MALE Collie, llke:a p;op1;, • Rhodl's 19"1 '* Nerda 1ood hoiM F'un Zorit Boll.t Co. B.albol em Offer O\ltf '1200. •64 fi75..$4l4 ll8l ---,K"ll,..•°'sa=11,,.~ .. ~=c:.. r~ ~ ton. bi.I: brd. O\.tt Puah button. Ottm. $30. -Sportlnt Gooch l500 LARGE wtdte fema:le rtbbll. t.:i ft No. 137 w ~-,., dnvo v., .. -'---''------/ • ra · . .n.<XXI mllea. ~· 8'2-6998 an S600 • S4W1'm 546-1w lfta. Beach. !182·7544 D>uwwork. CaJI 675-2QX1 d't ~. 1:xt m L'llf· 11 ·1 lh1ft. X3. G.E. "'J>ia"""' I lteeu• HOUSEKEEPER . C.n of Brown, Wt inodel. Xlnt .1. an:•. N7..,i c:aiJ 1 's;;EA=MS"1"nrn~=~w.~1t,,..h.....,.,-, ~11 SU!U'1!0ARD 1'8'' Jtteob• S -o;:;:-;-.:::""'::'i'-=-,,--' 'iOia:ii'O-;;;;;;:;;::-c=-=-· mahoa •t:rincttt. mahoa taU BLONDE Cocker :;~~8 Lido 14 with tn,jJer A I ·~ CHEV. pick-up; new Vet blodt. almkpeed Ska&. Xlnt malt 2 yn okl &f6.. cow.r, 11 Hours tree &ailing 1:ng., pwrgld ., rt'$IOl'f!'d. Cosll Mew M '°'°""ltd1e of m a k I n 1 , Wit a,tlsf d-•I... *"848 Loruna --....... -"' .,... ¥ T dderlJ lady• It bslq>g for 2 cond. 546--1151 eYQ. adult •ome:ft. Good u.1..ary. PLACE J<l'lr wam. ad wtiere Must alHp ln. t."4-T19i j UW7 an Jeoldns -DAILY Miht~1'T ~ PILOl' dr1rlW tC"5l1'I Every nlte 'tll t Wed., s ... , Sun. '111 6 ' oond. 831).1954 R 0 ('KS A 11 k 1 n d t , 1690ftl. () 1 1171-43.11 723 E. 20th 81 ., C.M. SURFBOARD 10' u.ed twliet M&--0953 311 17' VENMJR.E Sailboat, &lps 19:)0 rono Milk truck. Riin. Lika mrw. S50. "2""'213 alt Someone will bt Jookin&' for C, ~d, extras! Only 2 mo. ~. Fair tlnot. S 23 5 S'JO ll. DW MU6'll _•ld_ . ...;s;.m __ 64_2->4-'-"98;.;..;:•hc.;:..S ---"cc':..:'-:::l<:::_ ____ . _._ __________ ------------·------------------------------------------------ • _______ ,... __ .. 1 DAILY PJlOT %.7 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATl(lN UMCI Ciro 9900 TRANSPORTATION -----~.;611~,l-~~......,.--­~1w Cars 9800New Ctro Tutosday, A119ust 6, 1968 New Cart .... I.I CHEVROLET 9600 -------1 CJttd c.,, ----Campen 9520 Imported Autos IF===~ OPEL BUCH CITY *DODGE* HAS 'EM ALLI Slide- Ons, Yens, Ch•ssis Mounts , Wille. Throughs, etc. 11111 .... ltN. IHwy, Jt) 1S4D-JllO HUNTINGTON HACH 'rt Opel, xlnt cond, U,000 rnl. $1195. Emergency Sale! 613-7188 PORSCHE 1'"0R Sale 1966 Porsche 9U. 5 tpd air cond. chrome bumpers, lugca.ge Ir akl rack. AM/FM radio. Lo ml. C&ll 646-2093 '66 PORSCHE • 912; immac, cond, Loaded! MllSt aell! 8' CAMPER Shell, 24" high, MS-9534 after 6 daily &: ha.U door factory 2nd: also wknds · Datsun Cab-Over, u la; I ,,;:-::===~==·""700°' Majorway, 2120 Placentia, '58 PORSCHE S~ter 1 Costa Meu. CC. Hardtop $1600. 54&-m34 METROO Van camper, ·sleeps 2, etove, sink, refrig. elec. water 12V lites U450 aft 6 daily &: wknds ---RENAULT l=l8l=\;=22nd=CM=.==='1'66 RENAULT R·I $795 Dune Bu99lff 9525 Sale priced today. Has 1u~ 1---~'-----matic, and immaculate: T-BUG, glua pickup body for • E-Z ro BUY vw. N•w. oomple<•. ""'· JIM SLEMONS Call 644--0300 "''" 6 PM TOYOTA MEYERS Manx 40 hp, top, curtains, e:xc running cood, 417 W. Wamer, S.A. M().2512 try 11"10. 673-2000 ,.,.._ '63 RENAULT ... $795 2 DUNE Buggies. $1495 & caravelle coupe. 1 owner. $1695. Ooe cut down chaaia. · e E-Z TO BUY 1.125. 962-2273 or 962-0038 JIM SLEMONS Imported . Autos 9600 TOYOTA 417 W. \Va mer, S.A. 54(1..2512 • Spot Cash f<r Imports , we pay more for any import 66 ~ENAUL T ... ~59~ •-~•-u of ""ar make Dauphlne. Truly sale priced. re aiw..; . .1 ~ ' e E-Z TO BUY ;' .. ''"'"'.!\':."°~LU:,~~ JIM SLEMONS MOl'ORS, 15300 S.acll IDvd. TOYOTA Wesbninater. 894-3322. AUSTIN HEALEY '63 AUSTIN HEALEY "3000" rdstr., overdrive, wire wheel1, Beautiful Blue. $1795 ~MLUDi4 417 W. Warner, S.A. 540-2512 TOYOTA '68 TOYOTA GE"I' OUR LEADER.SHIP SAVINGS BEFORE YOU BUY!?! VOLKSWAGEN --------r *"Air ConditlonedH '67 VW "BUG" . $ 1595 * "9" Ptntngorl Deluxe :I door. Near BRAND '85 OiEVROLE'I' V.S "Bel· NEW and f\llly equl1'Ped. Alt" S'I'ATlON WAGON with e U TO BUY .....,..,, ••AJR.C()NO"' and JIM SLEMONS flll1 ..., ...... St>aritlina .n TOYOTA Al•oka w!Ut. w/be&"'. tleltt red inter. A tremendout: 41T W, Warner, S.A. st().2512 value ln America's goin&"fft '61 VW.; AM/f'M ndJO~ "spa~ vehicle!" wOo<i "''" whl. Tun«! ,.. ONLY $199 5 haust. tit ear lot on tlarbor Blvd, ,.,....., Aller< PM JOHNSON & SON '66 vw ilus ... $f695 Unooln·M•re""' De.luxe with vecy few mllea I Costa Mesa Bn.nch FORD '63 FORD . . .. . . $795 Gu.hi.Xie 500 2 door hal'dtop. Radio & heater. Fioor stick big ~e. ~eater slickl and hood """'1>· e UTOBUY JIM SLEMONS . ' TOYOTA •17 W. W~mer, S.A. 54().25.12 '63 GALAXIE 500 :J dr hardtcip, excellent eond. Must see & drive to ap. predate $860. 646-=0IU or 637~ Un.m.culate lhrouabout. 1941 Harbor Blvd. Wl·'KEO e E-Z TO BUY * '65 CHEV. V.a 1 '196<=-.FORD=;:-;;sp=r1n=t °"v .. •.-;G<IOd=· JIM SLEMONS PICKUP cond. Alm°'t now t;,.,. TOYOTA POPULAR 8 IT. 11.EEf. 1100. caJI Ginny SIDE w/radio, dlx. cab, * 540-6654 * 41'7 W. Warner, S.A. 540-2512 rMl'Wtap bumper, etc. VOLVO Bought new and traded in by local yacht builder. Xlnt MERCURY cmd. thnM>tlt! Spe.rkling un-'68 COLONY Park Station '66 VOLVO 1225 $1795 m&rTed BaJbM Blue 1.iniah. Wagon. I wiU now sacrifice 2 door sedan. Auto. trans, ra· l in 10,000i my 2000 mile demonstrator. mo &: heater and Jeu than ONLY $14951 As oompletety equipped as 10,(Xl) original mllet. Abso-lit car.lot on Harbor Blvd. )'OU ~t want. Will &ell or ~oom 1" 1 b JOHNSON & SON ~:;.,.,""' & Ha!Soo San~':;..~ e ~Z TO BUY LincohrMercury O>unl)''s oldest established JIM SLEMONS Coota M•sa """"" Llnooln Mor<Ury Cougar 1941 Harl>or Blvd. 00-'l'IM dealership. Newport • Costa TOYOTA *MOST WANTED M ...... 2-0981 417 w. Warner, S.A. 54().2512 '66 CHEVEI..LE V-8 "MALI- '68 VOLVO GET OUR LEADERSHIP SAVINGS BEFORE YOU BUY!!! BU" STATION W A·G 0 N. Fact. "Affi COND.", P/G, Pwr/Steer., R/H. chrome luggage rack, w/walls, etc. Beaut. autumn gold w/like IA• l••.,: 1 new '8ddl• lnt<r. For that tUI" UUIG unforgetable vacation! ONLY $2195 )tf()RTS 1st car lot on Harbor mvd. JOHNSON & SON 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-!ml Lincoln-Mercury '63 VOLVO 122.s $1195 l941 ""'"'" IDvd. 642.7000 4 door with stick shift. TruJy Costa Mesa Branch hnmaculate thrughout. CHEV. G!'l'eflbrier '62 needs e E-Z 10 BUY repair but ru?MS. Make xlnt JIM SLEMONS '""".w•gon 1 220 · MUSTANG * "411 SPD. FLOOR SHIFT '66 MUSTANG "283" V-8 CPE. A spe.rtiling harvest cream dream car from a tine home. Plush black vinyl bucket for happiness!" ONLY $19951 1st car lot on Harbor Blvd. JOHNSON & SON Linooln·Mercury Costa Mesa Branch 1941 Harb>r mvd. 642·7({)() OLDSMOBILE Parametrics, 929 Baker, TOYOTA Coot& M,.. 1961 Clll'LASS Convortiblo 417 W. Warner, S.A. 540.2512 '65 CHEY. Impala eoov. Pwr mg &. brka. 22,ooo mi. 162 VOLVO 544 Sport Orig-owner, loo~ new . VS, still on warranty Sharp. • IMPORTS 1966 Har~r •. c~. 646-9303 .$650 494-5014 alter 6 auto. trans., r adio & heater. $1995. 673-0217 l . . P .S. $1515. call George '62 OLDS 98 Holiday Sedan. Ill.II .,,.: I Antiques, Classics 9615 G"!pe 642-0981 <r 56-8'll8 46,500 mi. Full po.-er, 6 way "11\ UUIO t ---------61 CHEV, Parkwood Sta. pwr eeats, many extra.I! DATSUN '67 DATSUN 4 Dr. STATION WAGON. Automatic t r a n s .. mission, radio, heater, white wall lire$. A bee.utiful one oYJner Teal Blue. $1795 ~MlUDi4 • IMPORTS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-93CB '66 DATSUN lfiOO rdstr, dlr, 4 apd, kept in xlnt cond. $185 cash dels or older trade. Pymnts $46.86 mo. 4!»-9"n3 '67 DA'rnUN, Dlr, ala wag, auto, rb, take older trade er $65 ca!ih dels. Make low pymts. Laguna B e a c b 494-9773 '65 DATSUN Statioo ·Wagon, dlr, 4 spd. Must get. auction! Very good con:lition inside & out. l l.50 cash dels, or trade. Will fin- ance balance of $836. after 4, 639-3317 or 494-9773 IMPORTS ·n FORD C.brnlot oou"' w..,.. RJH. P/S. V-8 Xlnt cond. IO'l. 008-4378 ORIGINAL! $780 Trailer hitch. $600. SiS-8703 1 ,63 C11I'LASS; $500 Dn. (or 546-1714 '66 MALJBU Sport coupe. consider trade) &: take over 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 Avtot Wanted 9700 Good cond. Lo Ml., original GMAC loan. 546-2499 '66 TOYOTA ... $AVE --------.., .. r. 646-81115 l , ... ,.r. F"1ly oqu;ppod ""d WE' PAY "" CHEV •• Or. 1-'4; PLYMOUTH priced to 3cll. 3 to choose pwr. ateer, R/H, Vl'r, Auto.1---------1 tmn. OL R nu:t. air. $1350. ~1214 '63 Plymouth Sta Wag. Ex. JIM E-SLEMONS TOP D LA l;""='CHEVY"'°=• ... =-Alre°"·=-uv-a:.-.1 :::'~n':,•,;;n:, ~ or autom, 4 dr., R&H. Good TOYOTA FOR cond. l350 548-S650 aft .• 417 W. We.mer, S.A. 540-2512 '64 CHEV. SS, power, air, 65 BARRACUDA. New tires, xlnt oon:t $1395 or $200 & T.O. $61 mo. 962-9776 TOYOTA HEADQUARTERS ELMORE 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr Phone 894-3322 '67 TOYOTA ... $AVE Corona. Very low miles, 1 owner, Must see and drive. Over 5 to choose from, e E-Z TO BUY JIM SLEMONS TOYOTA 417 W. Warner, S.A. 54{).2512 '67 TOYOI'A Hdtp., 4 whI. drive: Warn hubs: $2,295 USE.D CARS n•w w/w _,extra dean. a buy, 112001 847-2685 PONTIAC CONNBl OIVROl.ET i===c=o=M=ET== 1---4 -sP-E-ED--1 2121 Htrt>or Blvd. Transportation Spocl1I SPECIALISTS Costa Mesa 546-1203 'a> Comet. Automatic. Rwls HIGH PERFORMANCE WE PAY · · • and looks good. CUSTOM CARS CASH e E-~2: BUY LARGFSr SELECI10N IN JIM SLEMONS ORANGE COUNTY Selected Auto ""' """ can• ...... Just TOYOTA Center call ~ h !rte ertimate. 417 w. warner, S._.\. 54().2512 GROTH CHEVROLET 1==========113032 Hubor Blvd. 537-4646 CONTINENTAL ROY CARVER Alk tor SAies M.anaaer 182U Beach m., Huntington Btacb Kl 1>3'31 * "CONTINENTAL" PONTIAC COUNTRY .., -Bl., Coota ,. .. 1========'1 537-"82 537-<1232 JAGUAR Will Buy 196.3 ,.....wnod CONTINEN-Kl 6-4444 TAL SPORT SEDAN. ''You Oranp Cow:lty'1 Excluldft too can breath the cool AIR Dealer tor kolLI • Rorct and . '66 JAGUAR XKE 4.2; 14.000 actlla1 miles. l·Owner. Mint oond. 833-1253 Days KARMANN GHIA Your Volkswagen or Porsche CONDmONING and bask in Bently. Ir pay top dollan. PA.id for the rich leather luxury, COOi· MUSf Sacrifice b e I o w or oot. Cal.I Ralph fort and safety and feel the whoi&le book, 1 owner Triumph rdstr., radio, heat· 67:J -1190 power ot many men thru black 63 Grand Prix. Full er, wire wheels. =,.,.-:--..,.,-=...,-,=----,"I it's full powtted llP8ct age pwr, air cond, gd tires. $1395 WIU. Trade 20' inbrd with CMtrols!"BeautifulpaUnum 673-3427, 67~73.1 TRIUMPH --------'66 SPITFIRE completely reblt eng .l other grey. "For the Western me.n 67 "~PO~NT=.-G~TO""°'loed.-od..-.-°"'oo-t '64 GHIA ..... $1295 "111• LA...:1 oquip. Value, 11.o;xi. 548-lln "" tho,.,.. ,. old. ll,000 mi Call to,.. Hardtop. Radio & he1ter. Ex· """ UlllO C -ONLY $17951 ._ pn· ....... oo, dou & Used •rs ...... """ lat car lot on Harl>or Blvd. • VTr" ""3 cellen~ ~~i~n. BUY JMPORTS nite. ti13-9'l40 day NEEO A CAR? JOHNSON & SON "oo=PONT='°'s"'ta,-;w;;:....,=.•-= JIM SLEMO NS CANT BE FINANCED? Unooln·Mm:my Str • brkl. auro. 13511. Call TOYOTA 1ll66 Harbor. C.M. .....-.il ·-T •"--1mT Coots M"" Brand> 64>-1042 '66 SPITFIRE, $1595. Orig. •Bad Cnclitf • Dtvwcedt 1941 Hutlor mvd. 642.7ai0 417 W. Warner, S.A. 54().2SU _owner. l.Dw mileage, like eMWtary •New tn AtMt 1960 'J'HRU 1968 Al '66 GTO, full power, in.. 196t. KARMEN GHIA, Im-new. 4.94-8336 Make PaydQ Payment. . . d: ways • eluding factory air. Original mac. eond low mileage. McCARTHY MOTORS :~~tarwi :~ n::. private party. 644-0!57 !1850. 6'1>-5571 VOLKSWAGEN 14'0 So. Main • Ed..... ContinontalJJ at John!on • T-BIRD '59 KAR.MANN Ghia Convt. (2 blocka N. ol Sean) Son Orarw"e Cow:lt>"• oldest Sharp.$695. '66 YOLKS .... $1695 Santa ADI Ph iCU50'l establlahed Lincoln *MOST CAR * 548-9052 * Immaculate and very 1 0 w '56 CHEVY Bel·Air, V-8, h. Mel'C."llry.cougar dealership. FOR $8951 top dlr, will take f15 cash. Nt"Wport -Ccsta Mesa. mile• .• E-Z TO BUY Make pyrnts S18 mo. 494.9773 642-0981 CL A SS l C beautiful 1960 1 ~~.mm!'ll"~T.~~1 ==-======== 1 'J'HUNDER.BiRD s p •• s . JIM SLEMONS "65 RAMBLER 330 ;nr, auto. CORVETTE Sport ep.. Fact. "AIR· TOYOTA rh. pwr stteriog. Xlnt cood. COND." with full power $100 cash or trade. Pymts o1. I ·,.,-CO-R_VEITE ___ 2_TO_PS_.-.-. eqpmt. Attractive tefll blue 417 W. Warner. S.A. 54().2512 $38.86 mo LB. 639-3617 or Must eell. Belt 0 ff er . w/lmmac. 2 tone blue 'rinyl MERCEDES BENZ \nveritor'f· . tin thit gr our Join u h\ghett •"•r. BRAND NEW 1968 PLYMOUTH FURY I 2 DOOR SEDAN Stoclc No. 1022 LOW AS 829& DELIVERS P\..U9 TAX • LICENSE ON APPROVED CREDIT Stock No. 1021 Luxuriou s Brand Now 1968 Chrysler Now Yorkor 4-0oor hardtop -Absolute_ly loaded with ovory concoivablo extra -Air Conditioning, Automatic Pilot, AM/ FM Multiplex stereo radio, 3 in I Bench seat recnner, vinyl top, tilt-telescope steer .. ing wheel. full power steering, brakes , seat, windows, white sidewalls, front right head rest and many more. A truly outstandin g automobile. '65 DODGE D•rt 2 Ooor. 6 c:ylindtr 1co11omy with btla11c t of ftctory w1rr111ty. No. 6664 $1199 '65 PLYMOUTH '68 BARRACUDA 225 cu. i11. 6 c:y1111d1r, 1111 thtn 4,000 111iltt. Etr1y bird 1pecit1. No. 65Jl SAVE '68 Roadrunner '66 PONTIAC '58 FURY Ill . " 1 .. ,, ,. ;. . .. V11l1nt station w19on. Automtfi, tr1n1mi11ion, Alll. CONDITIONINS. No. 65t7 ~299 Vt, 4 1p••d, r1dio, h•tf1r. 111e.l1111t condition, lt11 thtn 10,000 mflt 1. No. 6624 ' $2595 Convtrtiblt, Vt, 1utomtfic, radio, : 1 ........ ,... ................ WSW, PACTOn All CONDmON· IN6. No. 6644 1995 68 VW runroof, b e l g e 494-9773 eng. Ir body. Many Xtru! Inter. Thia exceptional ma· w/beige int. Ski l'llCk. all . 774-4110 w 615-1307 uk for chine U maintained berMn. t--:'.~'.'"'"'."":~:-:":-:"'.:""::'::'""'-f'-~"':"'"':"':".:"::"::':'::".:""::'::'-~4 642-<llO "' " 5 • BUICK Oiuck :;:. ~ .;;.~ ~:l:~;,. '66 CHRYSLER '64 CHRYSLER ATLAS First in SERVICE '67 VOL_K_S~ .. -.-. -. -,1~595 '62 BUlCl< SKYLARK COUGAR ht..,-lot on Harbor Blvd. soo ... 1 ownor. lmm"ul"•· °"" owner. •«orney. --------1 JOHNSON & SON e &Z TO BUY 8 cyl. 50,000 ml. 6'f3..80lll, '61 COUGAR OCR-7) a Lincoln-Mercury JIM SLEMONS 9 tD S. Ask Jor Tin•. !085. ICU!<t lWh. $26SO "erU!c<. Coota M•,. Bnnd\ TOYOTA 65 RMERA, privat. puty. Jollneon l Sal <hnge 19<1 Harbor Bl"". 642-1000 All pwr inc:ludtn1 air cond. Count.y'• o&dest I: most MG 417 W. \Varner. S.A. 540-2512 $2,({)(). 968-4576 r e a ptc ted Ltncoln • '63 T·BIRD . · · · $1095 I =========I Meruo")'.COUCV dealenhip. Hardtop. Factory air condl· AIR Conditkmer for 1966 CADILLAC Newpor t-Costa Mtsa. tion1n1, full pow-er, premium '68 MG V.W. Sedan. CornpJet~ 1100. S0.:-7751 •bite wall tire& & imtnacu· CE"I' OUR LEADERSHIP 673-1.224 late throughout. ~ .. ~, M t Sell• "67 EWO, ts.ooo ml, .,.,_ DODGE • ~z ~ BUY SAVINGS BEFORE '"'''"'""'· us · ranty. $$,995 or trade f0t s:.r ·•v YOU BUY!!! °"'Owner..., v.w. Sod. -tll, W/ ' ... 1--------JIM SI.EM. ONS I a-!. Ex.It Can!· 642--0340 642-.5688 ''4 DART Station Wap Ex· LUDU "1 ... =vw;;;,,;•soo= .. =--. """·ooo;;;;-:m:::;u;::., .. ,. CAO F1ln<nl ...... Good """"' cond. Prl"" ......,, TOYOTA Radio I: beater. $1SOO film. cond. Equip .,,1 ~rdt ,_,1885=·="*'='54l5===== 833-0285 tacks. est offer Mz.&11 1 • FALCON '65 Volkswq:en Sedan Xlnt ..... 11000 CHEVROLET Call aft" 6 p.m. 642-7354 10 FALCON. """"1t ....,, '64 VW. Xlnt mf!Cbuical. •55 CHEV. Bel--Atr 2 Dr., EXTRAS!! $195 ~make of. N~ bocb work. cltan, nearJ.y DtW ur.. fer· 548-1670 everunp :" vw. -·~ "65EL:;;:.-: ... ..,,,. .. 1 ___ FO __ RD __ . __ * $900 * ped ~-. v .. , Cl FOIU> FALCON -· ..... ""-Standtrd 5"'lt. Riff. Lt '67 VW, Blue, rMtio, mso $70.. Waaon Sl7 p. 4 Dr. $300,,51).'1'99 Ski rack, lmm1c. OR.I~ Q,my. M•t Sell! '62 Fairltne OWNER. 60-3'll e -e S!?<>rt CbuP< Dial MU67I tar RESUL'IS Dill IC4l'll ts RJ:SULTS + !Mrll!O * I . '&C T·BIRD, fl.Ill power, air, $1595. 1960 OJrvaJr, good eoi:xl. aean $295. m.7482 aft5 pm. '61 T-Blrd, full powtt & air· Good cmdiUon. $750, ·-· l96i T-BIRD. Full powtr, alr -. Sl005. -"'" 6 pm tr all day wkendt. e '62 T·BIRD e Xb!it ('Ol'Jld • 67 .. 1584 • T ow11 I Cou11tty w19ot1, VI, 11110· m•tic, r1illo, h11t1r, powtr 1t11rin9 l .,,,.,,, FACTORY OUAL AIR CONO. No. 669) $3399 Ntwport. VI t n9!nt , •~to'"ttic hent- '"inion, redio end hetter, po-r tfferln9. Ne, 6&07 /.,, .o//,,/ f1H·l .. f:t t:/lf.'\'1\ We m•intein on• of the lef'9--· ••t end mo1t modernly •quiP"' · p•d servic• fecilities in the W•st. ~ . I I f I DAU.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE .... -........ r 'Mi nd if I join you boys for 'the surfing?' )l.s1f Clear Sig nal of Dang er While the attention of Californians ii focuud on the efforts ol Gov. Ronald Reagan to seek the GOP pre$i· d.ential nomination this week, altuations which promise headaches for California -and the governor -long after the. Miami Beach party ls over, continue un- re.solved. One major problem is the governor'a: ill-advised actions to transfer effective control of higher education from the Board of Regents of Ill• University of Cali- fornia and the Board of Trustees of the State College system to the govemo'r's office, via manipulation or the budgets. One long-range effect is to put California's higher education, once the envy of ute nation, deeper into the morass of politics. The clear evidence from other states is that this is the sure road to mediocrity. The governor ls putting forces into motion which be cannot stop. A second long.range effect is that political jockey- ing of the univefsity or state college budgets is plainly poor business management and poorer economics. Reagan has evidenced too little und~rstanding of one of the great university systems of the world to the prwminent position California has achieved in ad- vanced technology in all fields of endeavor -and, yes, in cultural advance. He has beeJJ accused of attacking the whole educa· tional "el.ephant" pulling a distinguished and heavy load in California for the sins of a few gna ts and wasps and fleas on that elephant's back -the tiny minority of troublemakers. It is difficult to refute this accusation, in light of the governor's record to date. His approach to higher edu· cation has been largely punitive. UC President Charles J. Hitch, looking at Reagan's ill-considered slashing of not only the Board of Regents' but the Legislature's own reduced budget, warned that "this institution is in danger of becoming just another 9tate university, losing its international and national standing, because it lacks operating funds. T wo Par ties S hare Same Dilemma Watching the GOP begin its quad- rennial feast of words, one enter- tained for a fleeting moment the n~ 'tlon that in 1968 both parties might have opened for joint discussions and then separated for remaining busi· .ness. There an two political parties. But there are not two -politically dif. ferent ways of moving le solve tbe paradox of urban growth and decay; Of human neaiect, revtaled in the p1·oblems of the rriinorities of poor. u••'.ralned and uneducated: or the pol · J·; ·s of the nation as a big nuclear i;:i.,·:er . 1'he Republican dilemma is the Dem· o~ratic party dilemma. THl~ GREAT liberal reforms of the p;:~t have all been written inle law . 'J h::y began with Woodrow Wilson's a,:;minislration. They reached a high pzak in the Roosevelt years as the vast Oepn!sston accelerated long-needed re£ormt1 : Civil rights legislation, first seriously proposed and adopted in the Democratic platform plank of 1948 through the efforts of a young candi· d3.l.e for the U.S. Senate named Hubert •1L1mp:1fey, finally were enacted in the John .. on Administration after the Con· ~Tess had refused the young, new President, Jack Kennedy. These reforms are a magnilicent achievement. No other nation has done as well. BUT HERE. AS ONE of the two parties begins to grope and grapp!e \Vith the compelling Jssues, one sees ''ery clearly that the other party and the nation both suffer from the debil· ita'. ing virus of neglect. . Chief Justi~ Earl Wan-en. himself 11 "r :::.\ime potential presidential can· <li ·r ·e of lhe Republican parly, re· c ~·· ,!v sai t1 that for a long time we had s\r~;Jt un :ler the ru g a number of problems "basic to American liJe." These constitutional, judicial re· '·rms we:re : Dear Gloomy Gus: After opening my paycheck, it might interest LBJ to learn that I am MW donating a sum equal to his new surcharge each week to anti-Vietnam war groups - the more militant and active the better. -D. G. V. l'llr. INNr. "'*" .-.NWT ¥1tWt Ml -nMrlly thoM II tlll' 111--· 5lllMI Ylllr ,.. ........ M GIMl'lly Giit. D•llf l'llet. t , The 1954 unanimous court deci· sion declaring segregation of Amer· ican mmorities uncoostitutiooal. %. THE 1962 decision whjch took note of the p-0pulation move fron1 ruraJ to urban areas and tbe conse· quent intolerable inequity of represen· talion. The decision angered rural pol!Ucans who l<>1t what they had come to accept as a vested interest. 3. l<""lorida's farqous case of 1963 was that of Gideon vs. Wainwright. A semi·illit.erate Floridian, convicted without legal aid, availed himself of the right of petition, wrote a letter to the U.S. Supreme Cow-t. It was one of hundreds of such le tters re~ived monthly. But it revealed that Gideon had not had counsel at trial. Out of this Florida case came the ruling that all defendants in criminal cases shall have the right to counsel. A later rul· ing required all citizens being arrested to be apprised o{ their rights. mESE CASES were not "new law," nor "made law." They were long-ig- nored constitutlonal rights. It was wrong for rural politicians o( narrow, limited. local views. repre- senting a few hundred voters, to have power to decide what hundreds of thousands of citizens in more popu. lated areas wanted and neOOed. Seg- regatloo and the gross discriminations permitted by it were wrong. Certainly a penniless defendant merits couns el on a criminal charge. But It is precisely these things, plu~ the civil rights legi slation and voters· rights laws enacted by the Congress. that have directly and indirectly pro- duced the George Wallace backlash. nurlnexact Language ;w near is t11e "near future"-1 ( • 1:1 ~·eek. a month, a year? 1:ow far is the "n0t-too-distant· ( ·~e" -before long . eventually, tl ·'llly, next year, within the decade? l·low fast is "In high gear" -.a n-;les an hour , or 60 miles an hour, or r 1 miles an hour? How often ii '•every 'o often" - 01:ee a day, once 1 week. once a month, twice .a year? l:IO"A-many are "not a few" -si.l or 12 or 20 or 200 or 2,500? , How small ls a "smaU minority" - 00 percent, or 10 percenl, or 2 percent? llOW SELDOM IS "seldom ever" - on::e • year, or once a month, er twice a'~t:ntury? ltow soon ii "upcomlng" -tomor· row, or nut week. or • month trom now, or .,Jtbin the year? 1 Haw well 11 "well end good" -bet· ter thin "Sood" •lone, or betttr than ·~well" aJoae. or iomewbere between th, two! ·How ""'' la "at leullh" -la It 10nga or 1hortlr tN.n "la &ood time"? How much between "fair" and 11m1ddUna'' I& "Ilk to tnlddllo('? lfow r. below la u~ average" -Juot b1n1J below, er COlllldlrobl,y .... _____ -cw dj( -... below, or deeply below? ROW FEW ARE "few and Jar between"? How overwhtlmina: are "overwhelming odds" -2 to I, or 5 to l, or 10 to 1, or 100 to l? How far is "far.flung "? llow much faster or slower ts a 11twlnkling" than a "trice" or a ''ji!· fy"? How much graver ls a "gr<1ve emergency" than 1 plain "cmergen· ey"! How beavy ia th• "weight of the evidence"? How broad .is a ''1prawlln1 bulldlnj"! HOW MUCH UNDER lo "under· prlvtleged " -sllghUy less than the national aver1ge, « bllf the national averace. or leu than that? Ho•· widely spread l$ "widtlipread" -throughout the land, or tbrougbout a stratum, or throughout 1 pwtlcular ..i.--i \ "This must not happen, and I am rure that the people of California dJ> not want it to happen. I there- fore urge my fellow citizens ta join with me in asking our governor and our Legislature not to let it happen ... The budget-slashing include a stunting of growth at our own UC, ITV10e, where new .courses and curricula must be added to permit already-enrolled students to progress to degrees in their chosen fields, and to accom~ modate large numbers of new students. And among many other items of vital im~rtance to Califonrla's orderly progress1 they lncluae injury to the development of three badly-needed medical schools, plus a school of dentistry, hospital facilities, etc .. to meet the need for more doctors, dentists and other health professionals. Cul-backs in research appropriations in othet direc- tions could harm everyone, including the elderly on fix· ed incomes who wince, understandably, over· taxes for education. For his determined efforts to reverse the trend to- ward inflated bureaucracy, Governor Reagan deserves full credit. But he has attacked the area of California education in a penny-wise, pound foolish manner. When his actions push usually reticent and some- what timid regents into the unusual step of voting to ask tfie Legislature to override lhe governor, it's a clear signal of real danger to our higher .educati9n system. Unless the electorate, through its Legislature, rec- ognizes in its collective wisdom that education is worth the cost -prudently administered -then California is in for something worse than an earthquake shock. Instead of one of the world's great universities and state college systems continuing to maximize brain· power to maintain the state's leadership in thousandS o! economic and scores of cultural directions, then we're beaded for regression into mediocrity. Somehow, Governor Reagan must be made to get the message at home -no matter what happens in Miami Beach tomorow night. Poli tical Compacts Hav e Ten140us History Humphrey-McCarthy Compromise? WASHINGTON -Compacts made under stress by aspiring pollticians have a tenuous history. A n Eisenhower-Taft agreement Of 1952 and the Nixon-Rockefeller agreement of 1960 were not notable for their long life. Both compacts soon wore thin. If Eugene McCarthy and Hubert Humphrey are able to reach agree- ment on the Vietnam war this com- pact will surely go down as the most miraculous accommodation of op- Posite views in recent political history. They could agree the war should be terminated. Who would not agree with that simplified statement? Who does not wish for peace? All Humphrey needs le do to come to complete agreement with McCarthy is to repudiate a long and ardent record justifying the lncidcnt of the war, the mean.s by which it W&I con· ducted, its goals. and how it should be setUed along with general concepts of Asian policy and doctrine with which McCarthy has had no sympathy. ALL McCARTHY NEEDS to do to come to complete agreement with Humphrey's record is to repudiate the purposes for which he entered the presidential campaign and his general doctrine Ulat we should asswne unilaterally the risk of. stopping hostilities. It is conceivable, of course. that some t e m p o r a r y accommodation could be reached a:t the cost of mutual credibility in a degree which might cause some to feel that neither man bad gained in stature. That cost might be greater th3fl either could afford, or. both could efford together .if the aim of the compact was to create the con· ditions for a Humphrey • McC.arthy p1·esldential ticket. Reporters would certainly w a t ch Vice·President Humphrey and Senator McCarthy carefully during the presidential cam· paign for the slightest Confirmation that the compact was less than sin· cere. The two candidates would have to have a carefully re h e 1 r s e d scenario, and would operate under greater difficulties than when Henry Cabot Lodge went off on his mean- dering own as Nixon'• vice-presi.den· tlal nominee in 1960. SENATOR McCARTHY ·is ewn less a second fiddle' player, having his own concepts of how issues ought le be stated to say nothing of the wry pedantry Which endears him to so m·any of his followers. What it. all really 'comes down to is this: Is Humphrey about to alter his publicly stated views sufficiently to satisfy those who support Mccarthy's anti-war stand? And if he does so will this appears to be a repudiation of the record Of the Johnson administration on the war which Humphrey bas so fulsomely tupported? The outstanding point is that Humphrey probably does not need to come to an accommodation with McCarthy in order to win the Democratic presidential nomination. lf he needs it at all. he needs it to help him win election this fall . If the Republican nominee is '.Richard M. Nixon, McCarthy will have little choice bu( to support Humphrey -unless, of course. McCarthy is a fourth party candidate. But if Nelson A. Rockefeller is the Republican nominee, McCarthy has hinted he might support Rockefeller, as, un· doubtedly, would many of McCarthy'a supporters. THIS CREATES GREAT problems for Humphrey, The scope of the pro- blem will not be seen until after the ReP'Jblicans have picked their can· didate. In the present jaded atmosphere relative to the integrity of public figures , a McCarthy-Humphrey accord would be examined for its real purpose. If that purpose were merely political advancement and did n o t reflect a sincere common agreement on the tenns of ending the war, the public might find it hard t.o accept. From the beginning some of those who have been close to McCarthy have believed that his primary purpose was to influence public policy rathet than to realize an ambition to be President. He has every right to do that. Hum· phrey has every right to find a ~om· mon ground with McCarthy. But neither can be justified in mak- ing a purely political agreement com· promising their former views merely for the p'urpose of influencing the out· come of an election. 'Please Don't Do Us Any Favors' To the Editor: Regarding your editorial of July 30 reviewing UCI 's intent to lower the ad· mission standards for some 30 or more Mexicans and Negroes for the fall quarter, please let me say th.at J know nothing ol the problems of Negroes but, speaking as an American of Mexican descent (1 detest the hyphenation "Mexican-American"), I say to the University of California, Irvine -"Thanks. but no thanks." The Mexicans · I know · don't need their st.andards lowered. We've come a long wa y and made very goad pro· gress without any spe cial favors. We never felt we had problems until the latest invasion of Mexicans from other states. FROM 'rUE "GHETTO" in which I was raised came a Congressman. at leash.one state Assemblyman, state govt'ri'ment offici ais. several priests (one is a Monsigr.or), nuns, pro· lessors, aircraft company executives. corporation executives, commercial artists, movie stars, lawyers, Superior CQurt judges, doctors, d e n t i s t s , teachers, nurses, secretaries and many law enforcement officers, as well as a large number ol very suc- cessful businessmen. Nobody lowered any admittance &toandards fOr them Bv George ---, Dear George: Art you the columnist who had t:tie plans for an old·fa9hior>ed bay ride! W.E. o .. r W.E., No, and that's. the silliest thing l e\•er heard ot ltay·ride wagons M'f! very bumpy and the old - fashloneds would slop all over. Why don't you just gtt a couple of six packs and sit around the bock )'Ord! CONFIDENTIAL TO TH E WORLD ALMANAC ' I agree tbat it's 1 fairly interesting book but, frankly, I'm not at all sure the movi will buy it. (Not eoou&b aa.) Letters from readers are welcomt". Normally write rs should convey their n~ssages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let- ters mu.st it1clude signature and mail- ing address, but nan1es will be witlv held on reqt1e.~t. and they would have been insulted had they been offered any special favors. In OW' "ghetki" we learned to be proud. loyal Americans; to be clean, to be decent, to study and work hard for everylhing we gilt and to expect nothing that we dJd not earn. It naturally followed that we would leave lhe "ghetto." We did what every other .\mericen of any other extraction does -improve our standard of living ac· cording to our best efforts. PLEASE LET'S not kid ourselves. Let's check back In 10 years and see what your young doctor twho doesn·t have the grades for admittance to UCI) is doing then, after she has been graduated. Sure, she'll go back and set up an office on Whittier Boulevard between lndiana and Lorena, but where will she be Uving? ln San Marino or Newport Beach. Yoo see. we don't like it back ln th& ghetto any mOl'e. We fetl out of place. We like it in the nice, cle.an , new neighborhoods with the nice schools and playgrounds ~nd, sil'l(e we brought ourselves up by our cr\11n hard work and ini!lativ<'. "·c don't feel that we're out of pl ace here. So. please don't do us any favors, We don't need them. SOPHIE CASAS '~flrtttle of Progress' To the Editor : We are among tihe most fortunat! people on earth to have et our doorstep such • mlraculous faciUty aa: the OrMlge County Airport. Where on th< fac. of the fl)obo could ..,. flnd such m....ious lDIChilMlo .. a-at 11c:.n<:I to carry those fortunate enough to fly, able to take them away at a moment's notice to anywhere? The critics of flying must be demented indeed to attempt the curtailment of progress and the free expression of individual enterprise. This is not to mention the criticism of commercial efforts which b r i n g payrolls and dollars into the com· munity. Many people are trying to mske an honest living at flying services, aircraft mailitenance. and support of air traffic fc:ic ilities. THE EXPANSION of this wonder of transportation should. nnt be inhibited in the slightest. All of the taxpayers should unite in etiminating b y governmental edict. bulldozers. an d federal troops, if needed, le destroy every effort to slow down the rate of. expansion of this 20th C e n t u r y "Miracle of Progress." Anyone who protests the noise. the carbon fall-out, the incipient hazards or crash and col· lision overhead, should be evicted, tax- ed out of the area. or subject to any sort of harassment that can be brought to bear by tile functionsries of the "Air Age." MY FRIENDS , HOW much is too much? Have you tried to find a moment's peace out·of doors lately? Are voo so dull as to think that you mar enjoy the sunshine and air . ot Newport.CO.Sta Mes.a without being thundered to oblivion by "progress"? If we are able to put 1 man on the moon in thia decade (for what.ever reasoo ! ) , then certainty we should be able to find means to quiet the engine, propeller, and associated noise1 at- tendant on alrcraft optt"aticnt.. There can be no excuse other than the telflsbness of the man11fac1urers and operator1 ot such abomir.itble equipme11t, aa well as public-apathy or lntimtdatioa by the immense financial copebWty of the air lroigh! and travel i!ICIUstry. WILLIAM 0. PAYNE Attf-' Proteetlo• Last July 4. we obttined a doe from !be Society for tho Prevootion ol Cruelty to Animals oa L.a.&UJIQ C&nyon Rold. On Jul,y 71 ... hod .... doc put .,. ' to sleep because t:he di-stemper had reached his nervous system. causing convulsions. He had been in the SPCA one day. A!te.r speaking with friends and more than one D:V;M in close eoa6W cities, we realized this was not an un- common occurrence for the citizens to bear the emotiooal and financial loss of a pet from the SPCA. Assu.ming the purpose of this group is to prevent cruelty to animals. we find this con· dition deplorable. WE FEEL TH IS condition can be improved if the Humane Society would take 00!.ion to protect our anima!J from this tragedy: 1. By requesting proof from the animal donor showing dates of im· munization against rabies, distemper aqd hepatitis. I am sure many Of us are unaware of. the diseases our pets may contact at a large kennel. But the SPCA is not ignorant of t!llese facts. 2. By increa6ing the period for animal return. 3. By providing isolation ror animal1 upon entering tfle SPCA kennel if they have recently received immunizations. We would like to encourage the pe~ p1e of Orange County to obtain ttieir dogs £roin private individuals until the SPCA takes action to protect animai. and ci lizens. M. W. LEE and L. S. LEE -----iiiiiliml-- Tuasday, August 6. 1968 The C'ditorial pagt of the Dailfl Pilot seek.J to inform and 1tim- ulot1 readers by prestn!ing thU nttospaper's opinions and com- ~r.arv on (Opkr of inttrt1i end ligntficcmte. br providing • fMUm far th< UJ>r<•llon of ovr rtodtn' opin.loni, and br prtsAtfno Ult diverse vifM>- points of informed obltrvfn o:nd spokf'lf'l'lf!n on topfci of tM dau· Robert N. Weed, Publisher J ! -, 111