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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-08-16 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa- e s '' Knife Wieldiffg. Won1an . I r Captured in Newport FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 16, )968 VOL. '11 NO. 1'1, 4 l•CTIOMI, 41 ,A.II Woman .Mari.ne • ' Nabbed • • Mesan Blasts Bars Mier C.oas(al Tour On Bo.tor Blade I Helic9p~er -Crasli taid ~-Cr6wd Threatened To ·Rotot WASHINGTON (AP) -A rotor blade which separated in flight was blamed today for the crash of a Los Angeles Airways helicopter in Comp. ton, which claimed 21 lives Wednel• day. The National Transportation Safety Board said one of the chopper's five blades separated from the central spindle, or hub, and the board's in· vestigation turned up evidence of metal fatigue in the spindle assembly. The Sikorsky S61 was carryrtng 18 passengers and a crew of Utree from Los Angeles to Disneyland ·when it fell out of the sky near a cbidren's playground in Compton. Witnesses said the ship seemed to come apart in night. No one on the ground was hurt. . The accident was the second in· volving a Los Angeles Airways hell· copter in three months. But the board said the spindle of the aircraft that crashed May 22, killing 23, was ex- amined and it had not failed. Both investigations are continuing, the Doard said, and in the meantime it is recommending that the Federal A viatlon Administration require an immed.Jate inspection of all Sikorsky 561 spindle units. In addition, the board said more frequent regular inspection of the units should be required to guard against failures and the need to establish a retirement life for the part shou1d be studied. Parts from Wednesday's crash have been forwarded to a metallur· gical laboratory for detailed exami• nation. Copter Pilot's Funeral Monday A funeral service will pcobably be held Monday for Capt. Ken Waggoner, pilot al tile llil turboprop helicopter In which 21 peraons died Wednesda1. "Ha wilt Peony and bis dad are going lo the mcrtuary tJUJ allenlooll." sald a relative, staying at tile Wag· gQfltt home at 2121 Pierce Ave., COSta Mesa. Arrangemeru will be handled by J>acitic View Mortuary, with Iii· tennent t.o follow in their memorial park on rolling hills above Corona del Mar. "\\'e didn't want It to be on Satur· clay~ said the! mourning r.l!_ative, "lh,w would be Ken's blrlhday~ j • EPS in Miniature? • Newport Beach city councilmen have approved purchase of this portable television camera !or use by police and other municipal departments. It is demonstrated by John La Terra1 Camera h~s nothing to do with $500,000 "Eleclrohic Protectio.n ~yslem (EPS) rejected by council earlier this we'ek. That called fo~ city:wide net- work of much larger cameras, monitored by police. t ' I Mesan Takes Dim View Of City Suds Dispe1'~ers . . Alcohol ts "Wrecking the eeonomlc organs of several Orange Coast cities -their internal sections -says ' a costa Mesa councilman wtto ·has been viSU2lly bar bopping and disl.i.kes what he sees. Obeap' taverns, rowdy go·&o joints and po:ol hall! which developJn older arus of the cities are causing many legitimate busine~s to dry out finan- cially, sa1s City Councilman Willi&m L. "Bill" St. Clair. Establishment .or sh0pplng centers in odtl;yhlg areas hurt the traditional downtowns f« a time, be said Thurs- day, but the downtown coocept is gnodually rcvivinll, only ,to lac. a new foe. This oOe bu bod hre!ltll and hlood<hot eyes. "They are Dow shackled with one arm behind them by the presence of so 'many loud, sOmetiints dirty and u!ually obooxlous bars, w h 1 c h dJscourage shoppers from w1:1lkioa: through the area," he sai~. St. Clair, who Utera11y grew up wlt.h Costa Mesa 8nd watched t~ dowulo'-ll m>• -where hll la . founded a barber hop -begin to wither, made pis 1'°arks !ollowi.Qg a coastal clUes tour. "Perhaps our grindfather-s had. the rigbt idea when th8y put all the bars, saloons, gambling halls and similar places -(he did net elaborate) -into one designated place," St. Clair said. ''No self-respecting woman was re- quired to go there.~hen the behavior problems of the community were con• centrated In ooe area, away from the •hopping di.strict," he added. SL Clair aid police protection was also simpler, because they :k:Dew where to look for ttouble. "mt 1ort. of t.rrangement 'kept most of. the illt.oxicated persons ln one general area, awaj from houlewivel and other• doing 'normal shopplnl duties, 10. tl)ey werl. oot ~ubjected to haras1ment,'1 he said. 'f - Thls includes panhandling, 1pittin1 on the sidewalks, o-ver .. fr I end I y remarks by men whose ardor is fueled b)' alcobol and otbet unlortunllte oc· currences witmsed In his coaslal (See MESA MRS, l'11e I) Mom Accused .of Wielding Knife Newport Beach police kicked In the door or · an oceanfront apartment Thursday nleht a*. arrested a vaca- tionlna mother of three who allegedly threatened a crowd with a knUe, then flung burning cirdboard at them from her apartment balcony. Taken into custody for mental com. mltment was a 51-year-old woman in the 2200 block of W. Ocean Front. Her daughter, 16, and two sons, 13 and Tank Gunners Kill 285 Reds In DMZ Attack SAIGON CUP!) -Front reports lo· day said U, S. tank gunners fired at point blank range into North Viet• namese fortifications as allied troops pushed a drive into the Demilitarized Zooe that reached the boundary between the two Vietnams . The U. S. command reported at least 285 North Vietnamese regulars ltilled ln the DMZ offensive and related action just south of the six· mile-wide buffer strip. It was the first allied. invasion of the zone in five weekl and touched of[ tbe bloodiest combat in two months. South Vietnamese infantrymen bore the brunt of the fighting with support from American artillery, air strikes and tank columns . One tank was knocked Ol,lt, and field reports placed South. Vietnamese losses at fOUr Jdlled and 50 wounded. Waves 0( U. S. Air Force B52 Strato!ortresses unloaded tons of blockbusters late Thursday and early today on targets in the DMZ jlt;i above the Ben llai Rive.r dividing line and just beYond the ione in the panhandle of North Vietnam proper. UPI carrespotJdeot Ray Wilkinson, reporting from a !orward command post, said the baU:J.e ina:ide the DMZ began early Thursday when South Vietnamese intellig_ence d e t e c t e d North Vietnamese infantry moving south from the zone toward Bio Linh, ' the eastern anchor ol allied frontier dderuea. South Vietnamese forces .and • ·col· Wim ol about in U, S, lanks and 12 armored personnel caniers cbued Ute intnKier1 back int.o tfle 19ne and came up against a network or North Vietnamese IortillcaUons, Wllk.lnson rePorted. The American l.allks, armed wJth 90- millimcter cannon,. flame-throwert ""and machine f\lns , lowered "eapoo1 i_o ground level and opened \IP on the ~etwork of trenches and bunkers. 11, we!e found huddled upstairs, unhanned. · Police were called to the apartment' after witnesses said the woman, a Sunland ~eaident, ~a$f' thrOWJt pieces of burning cardboird at people· from her balcony. She also reportedly advanced from the apartment toward a crowd while wielding ,a five-inch knlfe, threaten· ing, "Get·out of here or I'll kill you, I'll kill every one of you." Her children later told police their mother repeatedly asked thell\ to get her a gun. The woman was not armed when arrested. Police said they conflsi:ated a knife and booked it· into evidfftce. Tt:ie boys were left in the Care of tbelr -olde11 sister uDtil the father arrived later in the evening, police said. Woman Marine Caug~t . . After Hig'h Speed Chase-.. A woman Marine today Is charged with turning El Toro Marine air sta- tion into a high speed racing course early this morning. She was captured only after she crashed into another car on the Santa Ana 1''reeway. Before the crash, suspect RolJin Lynn Joyce, 22, of IIouton, Tex., described by sheriff's deputies as "built like a lady wrestler" had run at least threee roadblocks at speeds up to 90 miles per hour inside the base, o!· ficers charged. Deputies Who made the arrest en felony drunken driving and resisting arrest charges were alerted by military police that the · woman suspected of drunken dlrivlng 'va.s leaving· the main gate at El Toro. Clerk's Whimsy Not Funny; He's Looking for Job An·ousted county court clerk, whose attempt at hwnor on a repor.t backfired, Thursday lost hls appeal from his firing. "Dismissal for cause" was the rul· ing o! the Orange County Employe1 Appeal Board in the case of Thomas N. Trea:o. 26, a member of the county clerk's staff fer three years. , Replying lo a letter from tile attor· ney.genera!'1 oUlce In Lot Ange~s on the status of a fedtral tax suit in Or· an .. Co!mt,y, Treao an•w.red: ,.,Not a)JIRved," .and then he Jt(lded1 "A recent i:redJl chec~ reveals a i3i(I llillion delicll" The apparent reference to the na- tional debt did not please the attorney general's office. Trego was fired July 9, a week after the note writing in· cldent. He 11 a 1econd year law 1tu~ dent~ • ar..tuate of cal Stal•, Fullaon. ~- Deputies spotted a · car· on Irvine Boulevard when ·the suspect reported~ ly ran a stop sign at Sand' Canyon Avenue. The chase was on' at speeds up to 85 'miles Per hour until the woman spun .out ·on . a 'curve at \he southeaSt corner Of the air S~Uoa. · Regaining control, she re~ri.tefed the air staUori and Was pursuea at speeds up to 90 mlle(.per bow. ln<ide the base, she r• tWo roadblocks se~ up by military police, and then sped out the main gate slasbJng through another roadfllock. . ·Orange We.~ther It'll be a nice, cle8r weekend il you don't• 111iQd w~ting a while -like till midmorning when the ctlou<h roll by, bring· ing the Orange Coast a balmy day with mid·70 temperatures. I NSIDE . TODAY Even the spagketti com~• tuitlt a cultural twist aU ,te%t totek in Costa Mt!a. Read obouC .shows, Jpfciol ~'5 and the !PQQhttti dinner of Social Arta Week todo¥ in WfEKBNDER. ... tilt '' .,.,.... ,..., .. Clllfwllki ) ......... ,, tt-14 • ,....... ti.a a.,.. ' f Motl 'c.kt ll •• ,.... •11 ;c,....... . 11 ,..._.W , ,, ·=.:= ~ ::: , ... ~ ··~ . ·~.....,." ........ , \......... ... •IMflal 1•11 ... =--''" c.lls ' art 1, II HtfM(Mt 14 ~ • ·-~ ,. ...... 1 .. 1. MIM.._ ,. fltWM 1 .. 11 Mlt"flfl t ft. ' Nl""ll Oillft '' • M,tlNlt , .... ' ,, .. N .....,. *" •It c...., .• • I ' I ' ! DAii. Y Pll.OT ) ' ' f, Lives· Like. OODl:ed ·copter, ' il1 ARTllUR R. VINSEL Court for ..U..u and ·hfr ·11augh!Or, ot • _., '*' l*t while ~r famillee visited mortuaries hiiu _.. picldllg up the plects and bepn arranging funeral&. _ llhatlered bell~ ..,.. Mrs. Elsa Kaul, wiC. ol John J. lreul, 40, ol eeoll Blaodle Ave., Glrden , u well u arkl .. Mre<I Uves -Grqve, obarged the ill·f•ted Sikorsky 11-e. --of .. -wwst 811 ~ .... betni --• I Soll! btllooplor crMla . 11 lllillcw1l1 and oonluoly and Md 11i1!117 W-odaJ, ' -· -ed and dellCDoil la Ji a. F'rollctlCO fomil1 ol four ml tilt same way. , • llfomlneot Qralll~ C o d o ~ y ICllUI was returnlng ll'om • top.!1wl ....poc. u....Uvo1 -. amq !ht · -Mclloc1Dell·Dou'1a• CoJi>. m..C.C In ~ wllo died wbell Los AD&tloo ·st. LGO, Ille llm»1 beadq.....,.., ...S "'""""° l'll&ht U7 ~ do'IJn OOly two years atO roctlved lonmJ .... r-p.. planrwad end ... ---for hi• pert la. 1111 ... • liune,.r -Ibo!. '1111-., ..,. ol lbe ti'""' ...,.,. Ht wu a 1ystom1 • ..iyst at the u:perta 'lbur..tay llled a fl.25 nillllon HuntlngWn Beach plant. ...._ toll In Loi Aogeles ~r -.. One ol tho ftmllloa sohdeWlng a • • • • ' . Nixon Eying U.S. Drive By Reagan SAN DIEGO (AP) -Richard Ir.. Sixon'• strategist& would like to aee Calllonlia Gov. Ronald Reagan cam· ~go nationally for the GOP t!w~ particularly In the South and other comervatlve areas. Nixon confere today with Reagan and a group of Republican leaders who are expected to represent the GOP prei!Mential nominee In vote...ulng apearances. Nixon is expected to ask Reagan, an unsuccesaful candidate for t h e nomi'nation, to put as much time and energy aa be can Into the p.-esldential campaign. Reagan has said his greatest potential contribution would be in his own 6tate. Nixon lieutenants agree with that but have said they want him to campaign outside Call· fornia as well. Nixon planned to rejoln his wife Pat, who nas been on a Pacific Coast cam- paign swing, and bis daugtiters for a vlllt to Disneyland later In the day. -. funeral today wa.s that ol Cal>l Ken· neth L. Waggoner, ot 3131 Pierce Ave., Coe:ta Mesa, wbo would have been 34 ,..... oW Sllurdly. - Relolives ol a San Fml<lsco lamlly ol lour also will be &rl'liDilng for (nial rites after the crash which killed retired Police Capt. John P. Meehan, f6, hi& wile Helen, 63, a !Chool teacher 4aughlA!r Patricia, 32, and a ll'lnd· dltutlhter, AMe Marie Meehan, 8, all ol whom were going to Disneyland. ··"I pul them on the plane," said San Francisco Police Officer Albert Perry. "He makes the trip every year. They took the plane am helicopter because bJs wife didn't llkt long drives." Meehan r<tired jullt two weeks aao. The other aerospace executive kllled 1 D.t.U,Y PILOT 11-'f Pfltt4t Seven Arrested ,In Two-county Bookmaking Rap SPEEDING OFFICER EN ROUTE TO ACCIDENT HAS ONE HIMSELF Pollcem1n Lands Car on Traffic' Island, Knocks Down Sign A gambling fing which was alleged· 1y ouckiog ~.ooo l""fit per clay out of horse bettors in Orange and Los Angeles countie& i!I out of busine1s to· day after the arttst of seven suspects. Orange County. Dls\rict ~ttorney Cecil ljiclcs late Thursday announced the demise Of the butmeis enterprise. Hlckl aoaerted that Or•ge County lnveeltgatlle ol llle alleged boolanak· Ing _..tion led to 1111 am.ts. He claimed 1be Orange County end ol the betting wu cedered ill the cities of Santa Ana and Orange. All 1even suspects were arrested Thursday on charges of felony bookmaking. Alleged as the Orange County con· tact in the twtKounty setup is Nelda Duncan, ZT, who makes her bome at 3838 W. 105th Sl, Apt. 4, Inglewood. No other Oran&,e Comly .aJTests are antidpat.ed, Hieb' laid. Other ouspects .,.. : Emmell Allq ~ c, of 1030! Woodbridlt. North HoliJ'WoOd. Val James, 51, of 5137 Franklin St., Los Angeles. Sylvester Lake, 38, ol 11935 Kling St .. North Hollywood. George l'ilayfield, 38, of 1525 \V. Carson St., Apt. 2, Torrance. rttarleae Whately, 32, of S47 Reeves SL,~. Juanita Ta7ler, 34, of 7823 S. Dalton, Lot Allgelea. DAILY PILOT NewpeJt lffdi Ce•t• M•M H••tl ..... 1 lffcll L'9t11N a..cll W"""""'" Jeut9l1 Y.U., CAUllOlNIA OUHGI cour f'UILISHING COtoU•AffY lelNrt N. w •• d rlWWltlt Incl Plltlll"- Jeck l . Cw1l1y Vk.t PraldlMI l "CI Gtrier.i ,,._,.,,,. Th111111' K11wlf ..... n ......... ~urpli!111 Mtt\tllftl ··-••• , Nl1t•1 --....... --t..(111 a..-1 -Wttl a.y .,,.. ,.,...,_, leldl: :nn w... ..... ....,...,...,, l..NWll 8-lt: m ,.,.,.. ,,._ Hll'lllNW ..... : -.,, h'Mt ' ~hain Rea~iion • • 1'rf1 Crash Begets Crash in Newport A Newport Beach policeman speeding In a squad car with Its siren wailing to an accident involving a teen·aged pedestrian Thursday af. ternom apparently lost control of his vehicle and skidded to a. halt atop a tralllc island. Officer Dennis Gillman drove his unit through a street &ign but escaped without Jnjuzy. Both be and the car were back on duty today. 'Ibe injured pedestrian was iden· tiffed as Jamie Ponteprino, 16, ol Anaheim. She was treated and re\eas· ed at Hoag Memorial Hospital after she was hit by a car and flung 15 feet . Miss Ponteprino s u f f e r e d only bruises and cuts, according to a hospital Official. Police said Officer Gillman '''as responding to the pedestrian accident about 4:30 p.m. when he apparently lost control of his squad car at 23rd Street and Balboa Boulevard. Gillman said he veered to avoid col· lidlog with a oar pulling !rom 23rd Street onto Balboa Boulevard. The p<>lice car skidded 40 feet and wound up straddling a traffic divider. Police said the teen-aged girl wa& crossing Balboa Boulevard at 19th Street when she was &truck by a car driven by Cluis Ostler, 16, of Mon· terey Pa:rk. Miss Ponteprino was crossing the street with friends. One of them, also a teen-aged~ girl, &at sobbing un· controllably on a curb while the struck pedestrian lay on the pavement awaiting tm ambulance. FroM P .. e J MESA BARS BLASTED • • • junket. "In shut, J don't believe it possible for tbe du'wntown areas to rebuild themselves aOO:their,image, so long as we are shackled with cheap bars," St. Clair said. JUST CHEAP BARS Not all bars, ju.st cheap bars. "An -excellent re5taurant, 'vith n cocktail lowige, on the other hand, is often Of benefit to a downtown area," he said. "it provides a place for merc.tJ.ants to meet cu.stomers and Vandals 'Paint' Woman's Home In Los Alamitos Vandall virtually filled up a Los Alam11ol woman's home witb black rubber-based paint, do 1 n g an estimated $6,000 damage, poll c e reported today. The victim 1$ Norma G. Koenig of 11346 U.nda Lane, "Black paint wn squirted on every door, wall, mirror, drape and chan· delier 1n the home. They didn't even miss a closet door. It looJted 11 U ttie rubber based patnt wu &quirted from some kind of 1 tube." an Ulvertigatlng o!fictr Kid. • business associates, It attracts a dif. rerent element." Modem shopping centers angle for this ty:pe of establishment; or .at the very least, a well-kept, red carpet type of tavern, he said. SL Clair said his ipdepeni:tent, pert10Mt study leads him to believe Costa Mesa needs a type Of downtown· area zoning or city ordinance which would help phase out objectiooable bar&. lie also cited lluntington Beach, whose downtown bas hlt the skids - with its e.ight bars, which one may enter without eVf:r crossing a &treet, due to back alleys -in his remarks. DON'T BOTHEii ANYONE "We even have a law prohibiting bars in M·l industrial dJstrict.s," he noted, "and I oau't think of a better place for them. Thq ·don't bother anyone out thtrt." "\Ye've got to Id rid ·ol some old ldeu," he Aid . Alcoholic Bevaa&e COotrol bwa are good, In that tboy problbit drinking In public, or in •ehicln and otherwise regulate the cooswnpUon of ln· toJicants aimed at the nlfare ol the public, be all'ftd. "Yet w1tb au our blra 1pread all over town, It Is lmpou1ble to enforce thase law1 properly md to provide an eavironment in our downtown aree.1 and attract those who are the mainstay of ICOllOm1," ba concluded. Road Pact Given A contract fot $49,104 to widen Ne•,,..-t Boulevard and Install left tum lane1 and trattlc slgna.ti: and belldes Kou! waa C. H. Peterson, 52, of 12834 Qlapman A~.. Garden Grove, retired U. S. Afr Fort< colonel &nil aiillltalt jo 1111 vice ~nt, Minuteman division ol the Nortl! American-R<>ckwell Autouetica plant in Anaheim . The Wednesday crash -virtually identical to the worst helicopter disaster ln history on May 22 only two miles away In Par'amount '!' also took the life of Christopher Bellnn, 18, or 1401 Lucinda Lanei Santa Ana. He was the grandson of Clarence Belinn, president and owner of Los Angeles Airways, which has &uapend- ed Ill of Jq Ill dilly IOOtbland OOID· multt helleopjor flights, P<ndloi a probe Of the aCcldtnl . lovo1tl(atilrs are cootlnuing to work at 1111 t<dlous job ol delermlnln& what sent flight U7 and Ill occupanll to IP· pllmlll.Y lllltdt -..a cnmatloo only mlnutes after tueart. Experts trom the National Traruportat!oo Safety jloard I n l\tuhlogtoo n •• c., . are .coJllblng wreckace of the ·oJg helicopter, second of a neet ol lix to lall ll'om the sky. The blackened debris scattered over a 50-foot radius and beyond ln Comp- ton's Pop Leuders Park will be re· assembled on a chicken wire frame in a Federal Aviation Agency hangar at Los Angeles International Airport. '!'he two blacl<ened' lkllefo8' In !hi FAA hangar will represent 44 l:.os Angeles Airwaya paasengera who died McC~rthy Seeks • Coalition NEW YORK (AP) -Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy says hi!: follower& will fight for a Democratic party plaUorm peace plant which calls fer a coalition government In South Vietnam and 0 whlch recognizes failures of. past po11c1." I .;;; In remarks for a MadisOo Square Garden rally 'Whlch drew 20,000 cheer· ing supporters Thursday n i g ltt , McCarthy said his' proposed platform would affirm ''that there must be a new.governmeut 1J1 Saigon, open to the * * * .Humph~'ey Dubs RepublU;ans 'Nixiecrt;tts' MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Vice Presi- dent Hubert H. Humphrey saJd today tlbe fu!!>ubli<an pljltform had "empty Promises" and hf dubbed the GOP 11toe NIJJecrata:.". Humphrey, in a _speecb prepared for the United Fed,eration of Postal Workers in the dfy where he used the mayor's oUlce as a political spring. board to national promlnence, gave hll touabest talk IO far agalmt Reptmllcan pres~ n o m 1 n e e RkOard M. Nixvn. • Humphrey _.a the Repubi1<"'1s Of1liirnmg bill at .. MiiB1it Beach convention a "pla)f<>nn ol empty pro. miaes -promisel'that JOmehow seem to get loot when ~ Republican! settle down In Q>ngress,'' in Viet participation of the NLF (National !Jberation Front)." The presidential contender said his proposed plank would stress that refUsal by Saigon to accept such a new government "will result in the reduc· t!on and gradual pllase-oot o f American troops and A m e r I c a IJ assistance.'' McCarthy <>mitted the detaHs of the proposed plank from his prepared speech when he delivered it on television due to time limitations, but aides said be stood by the full tex1 . The rally was one of a nwn!:ler held around the country designed to raise $5 million for McCarthy's campaign. A spokesman said afterwards" that '2 million was realized. Earlier McCarthy released a list of Democrats and Republicans who he called "the kind of men I'd like to have in my cabinet" but said he had not made any offen of appointment to any of them. The list included Sen. J. W. Fulbright CD·Ark.), as a possible secntery of -: Republletn Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York as a possible secretary of housing aid urban affairs, aDCi John Gardner, former secretary of health, education and welfare, aa secretary of defense. Gov. Philip H. Holl of Vermont, who earlier 'nlursday endorsed McCarthy'& candidacy, was lltted. a1 a pouible secretary ol the Interior. Mceanfty.cbirged that th• Jcliolon administration "hu not b e g u n reallsUeally to seek a settlement" of the Vietnam war in tbe Paris peace talks. • . with them. "lt ta much, much too early and. there II much too mudl evidence to be examloed before we can e v e n speculate on the cause," said NTSB spokesman Brad Dunbar of the Wednesday era.ab. Wltoeues t9 the fatal plunge -one of them a boy who alaO uw the first hellcopter'1 dizzying dive May 22 - said the tail rotor apparenUy new off. A main rotor blade then broke loose, other wjtnes1e1 &aid, aod the big craft, slewing through the sky like 1 punctured balloon, fell toward the crowded suburb. Capt.. Waggoner, a veteran of eight yw1 io. U. S. MMine Corp& avlaUon and six years of LAA service, wu credited with wrestling the virtually out-of-control craft into the open playground, away from developed areas. His body was spilled partly from the tangled cockpit wreckage and one hand was still on tbe controls when rescuers reached the scene. A complete list of the 21 dead, in· eluding two Denver, Colo., executives of the Mr. Steak restaurant chain, which ba·s a Costla Mesa branch, shows them as : .. 1-Capt. Kenneth WaggOMr, 33, Cos. ta Mesa, pilot. 2--Frederick Fracker, '/I, Redondo Beach, co-pilot. ~am.., A. Black, 30, WllJnlngtoo, flight attendant. The passezigers: 4--John P. Meehan, 65, San Fran • cisco. S.-Helcn G. Meehan, 63, hia: wife, San Francisco. &-Patricia Marie Meehan, 32, their daughter, San Francisco. 7-Anne Marie Meehan, 8, their granddaughter, Lucas Valley. 8-Christopher Belinn, 16, Santa Ana. 9---Peter C. Smith, age unknown, Centerville, Ohio. 10--Walter L. Llak, 72, Box 222, Bieber, Calif. 11-Wes Eldrenkamp, 39, Denver, director of advertising and promotion for Mr. Steak, a national restlaurant chain. 12..;-L. E. Baker, 44, Denver, western area coordinator for Mr. Steak. l~Kenoeth J. Atwell, age unknown, Denver. 14--Mn. Kenneth J. Atwoll, "" unknown, same address. IS.-Earl R. Wallace, age unknown, Bellaire, Tex. IS-Joseph J. Kaul, age unknown, Garden Grove. 17-Betty A. Smith, 51, Grandview, Mo. ' 18--C. E . Peterson (male), •ee unknown, l283t Chapman A v e . , Garden Grove. 19--Gladys Pierce, age unknown, Portland, Ore. 20-Davld Callopy, 12, PorUand. 21-Dennis Callopy, 14, Portland. WAREHOUSE SALE! F£NTASTIC VALUES IN FABRl(SI I NEWPORT STORE ONL y I HUNDREDS OF YARDS OF DRAPERY AND UPHOLSTERY FABRICS 50°.k TO 70°/o OFF • CASEMENT~RINTS-SILKS-VELVETS-TAPESTRY-ETC. UNBELIEVABLY LARGE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM. DON 'T MISS AN OPPORTUNITY llKE•THIS TO REDRAPE OR REUPHOLSTER AT UNHIAID Of SAVINGS. FURNITURE VALUES!! HERITAGE ' DREXEL UP ltEG. SALi •••• SAU HOLSTEllY •1•. SALi 1 Lm"" ,..,. 209. 99" 1 CHtt.11 , ... ,. 185. 79" lhlDSI~ 4b4J 1 .... 315. 159" 1 ....... ,.... 165 99" .......... ~ . 1 s,.., T.We 135. ~~.';:'.'JI 149 .... 69°!. Pl-. J .. J, 1 ........... ,, 339 139 .. , ....,.c._. 125. 4l"•.Sl'99fh• • ,..., ..... 17127 1 C......T.W• 209. 89" J ...... Tellfn 95 .... lOdl,__1 ,,_ 1 Cntt11111 c""°' , .... 325. 145°0 ' ... ., , ..... 95. 24172 ....... ,,...,., 1 c.c...n T.W. 185. 69" ...... ,,. 1a.n 1C.m.ll T.W. 129. 391e lleffrnW .. Mlt 249. M...itT., Jo.61 JOa60 hd••lw J'""u.11 ..... 169. 124" 1 letwt Cm. 245; wan ..... _.._ 59" 39" 34•• ... 39" 99" 79" 10.. • CHtr -· ... 10.. . c .. ,, Prildt ... c .... .. 0... D 1 .. , -, ..... -1 I tt-11 follow c""' .... 119. 59'' 219. 99" 1.99" 49'' 235. 89" 135. 89'" 195. 69" 1 pt ..... 189. 6900 ,._, .... 258. 79" 1b21 ....,JMJ 1 M 149. 69" Up CW. MANY OTHER PllCES TO CHOOS! FROM ALSO A LARGE SaECTION OF BEAUTIFUL BEDSPREADS AT GR.EA Tl Y REDUCED PRICES. NEWPORT IEACH 1727 W11tcllff Dr., 642·2050 01'111 f'IDAY 'TIL f ALL SALES FINAl -NO CHARGES INTDIOllS LAGUNA llACH Pro'"'1on1I lntorlor o.s1,,,.n Anll1bl......All)....NSID 34J North Cot1t Hwy. 494.65.11 ONN •llDAT "flt. t The vandals reportedly forced a door lnto IJ\e 1plit·leveJ home to gain entry. Onc1 Inside the house, they pro- ceeded to throw palnt on the wall to w.all shag carpet.in& and to throw eggs _and toilC!t paper on the tht!n w~ paint. The mesa was discovered by Mrs. lighting at Brlltol Strett and Pall&ades ,,,_ Ton ,_ 11.. o1 ~ c-, 140.l HI Road In C.st&Mesa hu been awarded l-:~~~!!~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~!!!~~~!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~r:... KoeniJ Thur&d1y afternoon • she nlUml4 lr001 Looi -J!!., to the llrm Stdny and Mltcbei I:rc.1 Lot Allplts. I o<l .. n lB .. •• at !f . •• ig • ,. ht ID lS ly .. •d 1e le "' ,. " " •s •· lo " l· • .. ir Ir • " ~ . .. n 1t '· ' '· '· • '· I ' i ti ' ' I 1! _____ .. ·-• • • • ". --• Bea eh Y Qur Homef.own · tDITION Dally Paper VO~. 61, NO. 197, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES -FRIDAY, AUGUST ·16, 1968 TEN CENTS • Airport Ban Huntington Opposition Increasing OAll. Y l"IL.OT Stiff ,...._ By WILLIAM REED ot t11e O.ll'r P'Hlft Sl ... Anti-airport foeUng is increasing in Huntington Beach as residents of a wide belt nOl"Ul of the proposed Bolsa Chica site foc the future county regklnal airport realize that they are in the northern approach flight pat- tern. Became of the increasing Interest by the homeowner associations in the western section of the city, Airport Commissioner Roger Slates asked the county commission to change it! scheduled Aug. 30 public hearing on * * * 10 Reasons Luau's Poster Girl For Airport Opposition Ellen Evans Miss Fountain Valley, displays her "poster power11 for captive audience Stan Mansfield , Kiwanian vice pres~dent. Ciub plans Labor Day luau which will include tennis tourney, field events, Poly· nesian dinner, Tahitian dancers and a battl~ C1f rock and roll bands. llere are the JO points of opposition to a proposed airport in Huntington Beach on the Bolsa Chica site as, listed by the Prestige West Homeawners Bloody Combat Association. 1. Bolsa Chlca Is not as centrally located 8l!i some other of the proposed Allied Offensive in DMZ sites in relation to the area to be serv· ed. %. There w o u l d be an overlap service areu with existing airports : Long Beach airport is 20 11,1inutes away; Orange Couqty, 20 minutes; Los Angeles ~ternational, 45 m!nute.s. IGlls 285 N. Vietnamese 3. Bolsa Clllca would klterfel"e with Long Beach "'1d Loo Alamitos airports flight pattern&. . 4. Choice o( the Bolaa Ctiica 1tte SAIGON (UPI) -Front report. 11!-4. ~.:l!r\!!11,~P.\t;t\!f.~~~ support woul4 resullilo g~== day said u. S. lank_~~ fir ed_ at ·tram·~eall~m': air strilliiil'. •.ofJ"~~angeCoa~ ·. point blank range into No~ Viet· ~ ~ column~. One tank W.._..c~ This ia a niftUrirfoC,1!11. pirt of namese fortiiications as allied troops knock~ out, and field reports pl~ceer-fhe year. >" • , : l pushed a drive into the Demilitarized South Vietnamese losses at four killed I. Nol!!e, air · 'l)OlloUoa artd trattlc z th t rea bed the boundary and 50 wounded. cMgestion woutcf have ill effects on one a c the entire West Orange County area. between the two Vietnams. \Vaves of U. S. Air Force BS2 '1. The airport would result in a total The u. s. command reported at Stratofortresses unloaded tons o( change of area personality from least 285 North Vietnamese regulars blockbusters late ThW"Sday and early resideotlal and recreational to eom· killed in the DMZ offensive and today on targets in the DMZ jltst "mercial and industrial. · above the Ben Hai River dividing line 8. There would be possible disloca· related action just south of the six-b I and and just beyond the :r:one in the tion of at least two new sc oo s mile-wide buffer strip. It was the first panhandle of North Vietnam proper. the site of a third would have to allied invasion of the z.one in five UPI ccrrespondent Ray Wilkinson, change. weeks and touched off the bloodiest reporting from a forward command 9, Devaluation of property beyond combat in two months, post, said the b;lttle inside the DMZ the control of the property owners is began early Thursday when South an almost certain result of placing the South Vietnamese infantrymen bore · · Hunti gt B h Vietnamese intelligence d e t e c t e d airport m n on eac · Copter Pilot's Funeral Monday A fW'leral service will probably be held Monday for capt. Ken Waggoner, pilot of the big turboprop helicopter in which 21 persons died \Vednesday. "His wife Penny and his dad are going to the mortuary this afternoon,'.' said a relative, staying at t~e \Vag- goner home at 2121 Pierce Ave., Costa Mesa. Arrangements will be handled by Pacific View Mortuary, with in· terment to follow in their memorial park on rolling hills above Corona del Mar. "We didn't want it to be on Satur· day" said the mourning relaUve, "~l would be Ken's birtbday." North Vietnamese infantry moving 10. There likely would be con· south [rom the zone toward Bio Linh, siderable legal action from local pro· the eastern anchor of allied frontier perty owners against the county for defenses. damages suffered by construction and South Vietnamese forces .and ·a col· operation of a large airport here. umn of about 20 U. S. tanks and 12 armored persoMel carriers chased the intruders back Into the zone and came up against a network of North Vietnamese fortifications, Wilkinson reported. The American tanks, armed with ~ millimeter cannon, flame·throwers and machine guns, lowered weapons to ground level and opened up on the network of trenches and bunkers. "At least 100 bunkers with North .Vietnamese army trOops inside them were des'troyed ," a U. S. adviser told \Vilkinson. Reports from American headquarters in Saigon said 215 Com· munlsts died in the allied attack which roll killed 15 Communists, U. S. helicopter IUJlShips and jet fighter· bombers. Youth Attacks Boy With Knife Wesbninster police today are look· ing foc .a si.x·foot youtti who attack~ a IO-year-old boy wWi a pocket knife Wednesday afternoon in an unsuc· cessful attempt to rob him. The victim, Bmy Lee. Andrews, 62111 Klamath St., t<>ld police he was walking to the store at 5:15 p.m .. wb~ he wa~ approached near the 1n· t.ersection of Gardeti Grove Boulevard and Seneca Street by a youth ;bout 18 years.()ld, who politely asked for his money. Cox School Goes Ahead Trustees' Promise on Moiol,a Facility Appeases Foe Fountain V1ll.ley school trustees .are going ahead with the construction o! James Cox School, and with the ap. proval of a mother who has bitterly in - sisted for two years that her area needs a new school fin:L Tru!itees appeued Mn. IAis R~er of 9352 Robin Ave. with the promise that Fred Moiola School can p0ujbly be ready to ~n September 19'10 along with the Cox School "Cox will have no eUect on Mo6ol1,'' Trustee Harold BroWn assured her Thursday night. Mrs. Rufer, who &erVeS on the diatricl's pers~l commission ."-rut itJ citizen's ad\l'lsory committee b&ck- lng the Sept. 17 bond election, told trusteet-two weeks ago she th.ought it fooliJh to build "a school CC.Ox Seb<>OI) where houses iren 't even built yet." Cox School .. vi.11 be located in norttittn Fountain Vallty on the • • .;, southwest corner of Slater and Euclid Street&. Mrs. Rufer, wbo lives in the central part of the city, is backing Moiola near Ellis, BrOokhW"St and Garfield Streets. At Ute last bGard meeting, trustees ordered an updated study on the sC'hool constrilction ~'hedule. Jack Mahnken, ~ of business services. recommended that Cox School still be conttructed before Molola, llnce the dWtrict already owns tho building site. Th• Motola School site has yet 1<> be pun>based. "No plans tor MOlola School can be dratted until after the land ii •c· qulred," he said, whlch would be at least nild-summ.er 1969. lf the district'• $8 mlllloo bond elec· llon passes, coostructioo on Cox Sc!Jool. for which prellmlnary p!Ans are a!rudy prepared, cOllld belln in Janu117, be added. • "We w<Jllld gtill not own Moiola at that time, and if we wait until we own the Motola site to begin bu ilding a school, we' would lose valuable COD· muct.ion time," Mahnken went on. Trustees also learned they would have to pay a '21.000 pendty to the state lf they delay bullding on the Cox site much longer. Mahnken, in his updated schedule, alao r'commended the board tern· porartly pootpone plans for site 6, at Warner and Brook.burst Streets. to see how the region<! airport, II built in Huntington ~ach1 would affect that area. The new schedule for scbool Con• rtruc:Uon la Cox, then Molola, followed by K.uuo MHuda School, 1outh of Ille FounWn Valley City Hall ; Talbert . School~ near Yorktown, Magnolia and Garfield Streell, and S!t. 25A, DOr1b of the ........ llulbard Sdtool the Bolsa Chica location.. The conunission Is holding a series of public hearings on location of a new regional airpbh as outued in Phase I of the Orange County Master Plan of Air Transportation. • · ~ The pubUc hearing now is to be held Sept. 16 at 3:30 p.m., and the airport master plan is now available for public sale, according to Com· ,missioner Slates of HunUngton Beach. Notice to the city of a public hearing has been received by councilmen this week, shortly before the scheduled meeting on the Bolsa Chi.ca site was changed. Rules of ttle commission set up for the hearing require comments to be presented at the public hearing to be presented in writing at least five days before the hearing. About 15 minutes will be allowed for presentations by groups or the city and no debate will be permitted. Only two representaUves of any organization will be permitted to speak before the commission. Leaders of the Prestige West llomeowners AssochiUon have ex.· paneled the battle against location ol the airport on the ·n olsa properties, just east of Watner Avenue on Coast HJ.gilway, to all homeowner• who. might be in the approach patteroa to the regional airport. Joseph Halisky, president of the homeowners association, is leading the organizational · d r 1 v e to get all homeowner associations and gro.up& aligned behind the anti-airport drlve. The homeowners ar'! suggesting a letter writing camJ)algn to all of the county leaders to emJ)has.ize. a 10-pcint program or opposition. Rotor Caused Crash Board Finds Weakened Copter Blade WASHINGTON (AP) -A rotOr blade which separated in flight was blamed today for the crash of a Los Angeles Airways heHcopter in Comp- ton, which claimed 21 lives \Vednes· da}'. The National Transportation sareiy Board said one of the chopper's five blades separated from the central spindle, or hub, and the board 's in· vestlgaUon turned up evidence of metal fatigue in the spindle assembly. The Sikorsky S61 was carryring 18 passengers and a crew of three from Los Angeles to Disneyland when it fell out or the sky near a chidren's playground in Compton. Witnesses said the ship seemed to come apart in flight. No one on the ground was hurt. The accident was the second in· volving a Los Angeles Airways hell· copter in three months. But the board said the spindle o! the aircraft that crashed May 22. killing 2.1, was ex- amined and it had not failed. Both investlgatlons are cc.ntinuing, the board said, and in the meantime Crash S'hattered Lives B7 ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ttit DtUr ,lit! Slaff They were picking up the Pieces today -sbattered helicopter com· ponents as well as grief-seared lives - in tihe aftermatil of the second worst commercial helicopter crash i n history Wednesday. A san Francisco family of four and two prominent Orange C o u n t y aerospace executives were among the 21 who died ~en Los Angeles Airways Flight 417 flip-flopped down into a Compton playground and burn· ed. The widow of one of the space probe experts Thursday filed a $1.25 million damage suit in Los Angeles Superior Court for Ji.:rseU and her daughter. while other families visited mortuaries and began arranging funerals. Mrs. Elsa Kaul, wife of John J. Kaul, 40, ol 8602 Blanche Ave., Garden Grove, charged the ill-fated Sikorsky S61 helicopter was being operated negligently .and carelessly and had been manufactured and designed in the same way. Kaul was returning from a top-level McDonnell-Douglas Corp. meeting in St. Louis, the firm's headquarters, and only two years a go received formal congratulations fOr his part in the Surveyor mOOI\ 1ihot. He was a .1)'1tems analyst at the Huntington B-.c~ ptanl. . .· One of the f8m.llle s scbdeuling a funeral today 'was ttlat of Capt. Ken- neth L. Waggoner, of 3131 Pierce Ave., Costa Mesa, 'fbo would have been 34 years old Sattrday. Relatives of a San Francisco family of four also will be arranging for final rites a£ter the crash which' killed retired police Capt. John P. Meehan, 65, tw wife Helen , 63, a school teacher daughter Patricia, 32, and a grand· daughter, Anne Marie Meehan, 8, all of whom were going to Disneyland. "I put them on the plane," said San Francisco Police Officer Albert Perry. "He makes the trip every year. They ·took the plane &nd helicopter beoa~e his wile didn't like long drives.'' Meehan retired just two fteks .ago. The other .aerOspac:e executi ve killed besides Kaul was C. H. Peterson, 52, of 12834 Oh.apman Ave ., Garden Grove, retlred U. S. Air Force colonel and assistant to the vice president. Minuteman division of the North American-Rockwell Autonetics plant in Anaheim. The Wednesday crash -virtually identical to the worst helicopter disaster in b.istory on May 22 only two (See HELICOPTER, Page !) Library, Parks Chairman To Head Bond Proponents Chairmen of the recreation and parks commission and the library board will share the role as head of the new ci tizen's committee backing the two groups' bond propogal& coming before the public in November. Tom Cooper of dle recrtation and parks board and David Wickersham, representing the library, were elected by the 20 some HunUgton Beach leaders atteodlng the flrst meeting of the oomml~ Thunday night. Both boards are propasing boad election; on the Nov. 5 presldentlal electloa ballot. Recreation and parks is asldng for '8 million to acquire and construct new parks .and ttie library syJtf:m wants S3 mlllloo (or a new main library. Director of the Rectta1lon and Parka lleportmont Norm Worthy and W.alter Johnson, HllOlington Beach librarian, are e1-ottlcio chairmen. Dr. Mu Forney, superlntmldent of Uie Huntington Beach Union l!t1h School District that bas lllted a 11.2 mJWon bond propoaat tor tho """' - election, recommended keeping hls separate Crom the other two. "It would be impossible to lnchxle Jt in the same campaign package because the high sctiool district also covers Westminster and Seal Beach," Librarian Johnson &aid, explaining Fomey's position. "But he encouraged a spirit ot eooperat:lon for all the bonds,'' J ohnson added. Tbe committee member•, represen· tatives l'rom Golden West Collage and Fountain Valley, Ocean View. Hun· Ungton Beach City and HunUngton Btac:ll Union High School dlstrlcts, and th,e Urban Land lt'lsUtute, the two city boards and City Administrative Aide John Costello, set another m .. ting for AUJ. JllJ. They are to COMlder at that time whether to hire a pubUc relatJons specialist for the campel(n or to do publidty tl!emaelves. The committee will convene at 7:30 p.m. in the OC:ean View School D!Jtrlct boM'd room. Beach Boulevard Ind Warner Stred. it is recommending that the Federal Aviation Administration require an immediate inspection of all Sikorsky S61 spindle units. In addition, the board said more frequent regular inspe<:tion o! the units should be required to guard against failures and the need to establish a retirement life for the part should be studied. Parts from Wednesday's crash have been forwarded to a metallur· gical laboratory for detailed exami· nation. Fountain Valley Bond Measure To Be 'the 1~t' By SANDI MAJOR Ot 1M O.Hr l"lllf lltff School officials say tht $8 mlWori bond issue slated to go before th,e voters in the Fountain VaJley School District Sept. 17 will be the last lo the dJslrict's history. · Providing, of course, the measure wins approval and ·unless present zon· ing and building patterns change drastically 1n the years ahead. In addition, says Dr. Charles Wood· fin, associate sUperintendent for busi· ness services, passage of the measure will ~an by 1976, every yomigster in the dlatrict will be within walking . distance o{ a school. The proposed bond itsue, which re- .quires a two-thirds majority vote for passage. is designed to take can of district building needs to saturation level. PEAK ENROLLMENT Thf $8 ~illion in bonds, coupled with $17 million in State school con· struction loans, would pay for enough new schools to house a peak enroll· ment or 17,700 expected in just eight years, according to Woodfin . "This is the last bond i!sue we fort· see under prtsent zoning -and building conditions," he said. School .officlab plan to use the bond and state loans to buy eight more school sites and to build and equip 11 new schools. Under state (S.. BONDS, Page !) Orange Coast Weather It'll be a nice, clear weekend if you don 't mind waiting a while -like U1l mldmornlng when the clouds roll by, bring· ing the Orange Coast a balmy day with mid·70 temperatures. INSIDE TODAY Even the spaghetti C01nf'S witll a cultural twUt aU '11t%t week in Costo Mesa. Read about shows, special events and the 1paghetti dinner of Soci41 Artl Wetk lode~ in WEEKENDER. ...... .. ·--N C.1"'111• ' *"' ,._ "" Clt•lflM . .,, -.... Ce1111<t " ·--1•11 ,_ " ·--" ... ~-• -•••• fl~ .. ,.... ,._ " ·-IRl1111 ....... WtlftMt A ..... " ·-w.w ·-•1 ·-1•0 ........ '" C•lll • ... -'·" --" -• .. ..--" -\+II ... -• ,, .. , .. , . _, .. • :::...-:: I ..... " ..... .. • -·-" --• tlt!Nll•t .... .. . .... , ... . .. _ _, I ., ' , I I '. -------.... -· -• DAll.V PILOT Frldv, A"'"t 16, 1961 •Lo.:::::.;..;~~~~~~~-=-~~ Crowd Threatened Mom, Accused of .W.ielding Knife N.-t 9-11 pollct ~lted In Ille door lat aa oe-Dtroat 1partm1nt ~, Bl&ht .... 11m11ecl •• .., •• 80Dln1 mother of three who allegedly threatened a crowd with • knife, then fiung burnlnt' oonlboonl al tltem from her apll'lln.ol blicoG)'. -. Taken Into cl111D41 for m .. tol COlll· mltment wu, a '1·Jt.,..ld woman In the 2mO block ol W. Ocean P'toltL Hv daughter, te, and two aou, 13 and •• 11, were found huddled up1talr1, uahannod. PoUeo -.. callad lo Ute ipll'ttnonl after witnesses 1ald the woman, a Sunland rtlldent., bad ttlrown pieces of burnlnf cardboard at people from her baicoey. She alao nportedly advanood nom Ute apartment toward a crowd wtllle w!tldlnll 1 Dve·lnch knllt,_ tltrHlon• in&, 1'Gtt out of here or l'u kll1 you, t 'U kill ... ..,. OM ,ot rou. •• Her eblldrell '!atir ·told pollco thtfr mother ttpeatedly Uhcl Ultm to itt her a 1un. The woman was not armed when arrested. Polle. said tltey conllacated a knlfo and booked It into .. 1t1tnco. Tho ""1a wert loft In th• care ol lbolt . .- •l•llr until Ille lithot orrl>td J.tllr II tbe evening, police said. McCarthy Seeks New Date Set For Airport Site Hearing Viet ·Coalition • Ill NEW YOlllt (AP) -S.. S-J. Mc<:artb1 ao71 ltll followWI will fllltt for a DtmoenUc party plllform ~ ploitt "1>1dtcal!t for a coaUUon ,_ ... In Sol14h VI-and "'Wlllclt ........... i.illD'tl of pall policy!' lD remarks for a Madison Squarr Gardta rally which drew 20,000 chee~ * * * Humphrey Dubs Republicans 'Nixiecrats' MINNi>.PoLIS (AP) -Vice Pre<l- donl Hubort H. Humphrey 1ald today the Republican platform hid "empty promlle1" and he dubbed lhe GOP "thfl Nlxlecrau:.11 Humphrey, In a 1peecll preparld for the lfn1ted FederaUoa of Poatal Worlcers in the city where he used the mayor's office • a pollUcal apring- bo&rd to oaUoDll prominence, 1ave hll tough11t talk so far aga!Mt Republican pres1dential n o m 1 n t e Rlohard M. Nixon. Humphrey accused the Republicans of turning out at tlieir Miami Beach convenUon a "platform of empty pro- miaes -promise• tbat iOtnehow seem to get la1t when the Republicans 1ettle down in Congress." The Republicaru, Nid Humpirey, "prom.lse to 'attack ~ root causes or poverty' -but 90 percent o! ttie Republicans in Coogress voled ID lilll the exten.sioa of the war on poverty in 1965." The Republicans, he went on , said elderly Americana de 1 er v e in- dependence .and dignity "but t.bey voted 93 pel'cent against medJc8I'fl and 65 pen:ent ag&lnst the 1967 Social Security increaaes." The Amerkalls, 1aJd Humphrey, ''c~t OD to· ttlil Height or band year1 a.go, and tbey a.re not going to be fooled in 1968." Humphrey old, "I don't tfiink ~Y of w were pHpVed for the emu.mg tr.ans.fcrmatioo that occurred i n Miami last wee!<. "We knew there wae: a. Nixon. We knew there were some r e c e n t Republic.am: like Strom Thurmond - one ol. tile first people ever to walk out on me -but who upected them to spin off a new party, that ol the Ni.J:. teen.ta?" HumJttrey wa1 referring to the Democratic National Coovention in Philadelphia in 1948 when h i 1 argument. fOf' a atronger dvil rights plaolt helped friiter a walkoot by Southern Democrat. who launct&ed the Dlxicrat party with "nlunnond as its presidential candidiate. 1burmond, a. South Carolinian, 1'11.ter turned in bis DemocraUc label and became a ~lican. OhllV PllOT llWllatf•....., CArwwk OllA1'GI COAST rual1SHIHG COMPANY 1l.1\o1rt N. W11J p,_kllnf "Id P1*1lltlt!' J1ck l . C11,!1y \/let ..,.i.nt Ind ~et "'-"' n•m•• k11.,il .... Th•M•• A. Miwphi"' IM"'lffll Edifror At••rt W, lat•• WiJll1111 ~••4 Allttltlt Hllnll••.,,, 8*C11 Edlt.r Clf)' E4110r ,, __ _ Jot Ith Street Mttll11t A44,1111 P.O. 111. 7f0 92MI ~-"'""""' ~: tm WMI llltlM lau""'"' '"'• Mn11 llD w .. t ..., """' LtlUlll hecf'I; m f-1 A'ftfM In& oupportor• Thundly n I & h I , Mccartby 111d 1111 propooed pllllorm woold aftlrm "that there must be 1 new eovemment 1n Saiton1 open to lbs partlclpatloct ol Ille NLF (N1Uon1l Libtratlon Front)." Tht prolldeoUal COllleftdlt' Mid ills proposed plank would i;tress that refusal by Saigon to accept such a new &OvernJ'Mht "will result in tht rtduc· ttoa and cradual pbalt-out 0 f American troops and A m e r I c a n asslltance." MCCerthy omitted the details of the proposed plank from his prepared speech when he dellvered it on televili.on due to Ume limitat.ion1, but aides 1ald ha llOod by the fun tut. The ratty wu one or a num~er held around the country designed to raise ~million for Mccarthy'• c1mpaJ1n. A spokesman 1aJd afterwards that '2 million was realized, E1rlier McCarthy released a ll•t ot De-mocraM and Republicans who he called "the kind of men I'd like to havt in my cabinet" but asdd he had not made any olfer1 of appointment to any of them. The list lncluded Sen. J. W. Fulbrighi (D·Ark.), as a pouible secretary of lt&"tt ; Republican Gov. Nellon A. Rockefeller ot New York 11 a po1sibl1 oecrotary of bouoinf &nd urban affairs, anti John Gardner, former secretary of health, education and welfare, as secretary of de!e use. Gov. Philip H. Hoff of Vermont, who eCJrlier Thursday endorffd McCartby'1 candidacy, wu liattd as a pos11ble secretary of the interior. McCarthy charged that the John.son administration "has not be g u n realistically to seek • settlement" ol the Vietnam war in the Parl.I peaet: talks. From P"fle 1 HELICOPTER •• miles away Jn Paramount -also took the life of Christopher Bellnn, 16, of 1401 Lucinda Lane, Santa Ana. He was the grandson of Clarence Belinn, president and owner of Los Angeles Airways, which has suspend- ed all of it.a 118 dally 500thland com- muter helicopter tughts, pending a probe Of the accident. Investigators are continuing to work at the tedious job of detennlning what sent flight 417 and its occupants to ap- parently instant death and cremation only minutes after takeoU. Experts Crom the N 1. t J o n a 1 Transportation Safety Board t n Washington D. C., .are combing wreckage of the big helicopter, second of a fleet of &ix to fall !rom the sky. The blackened debris scattered over a SO.foot radius and beyond In Comp· ton's Pop Leuders Park will be re· assembled on a chicken wire frame Jn a Federal Aviation Agency hangar at Los Angeles International Airport. The two blackened skeletons In fht FAA har,gar will represent 44 Los Ange1es Airways passengers who died with them. "It is much , mu ch too early and there is much too muoh evidence to be examined before we can ev e n speculate on the cause," said NTSB spokesman Brad Dunbar of the \Vednesday crash. Witnesses to the fatal plunge -one of them a boy who also saw the first helicopter's dizzying dive May 22 - said the tall rotor apparenUy new ofr. A main rotor blade then broke loose. other witnesses sald, and the big craft, slewing through the &ky like a punctured balloon, fell toward the crowded suburb. A new date ha1 betn 11t for the public hearhll• on tbt natonaJ air- port 1lta1 1n the San Jot.quin Hilla and at Bolaa Chica State Beach In HunUq_gton Beach, the airport com· mll1lon announctd today. Tho hHrlnl on Ille two re1101111 &trport 11to propoll!J will be hold on Sept. 16 in the Board of. Supervisors' maln hearing room in Santa Ana. They were originally 1cheduled for Aug. 30, Tho San Joaquin HUis 1111 will be the subject of a 1:90 p.m. hearing and the Bolsa Chica site will be dis· cussed at 3:30 p.m. The commission felt that the hear- 1n11 should not be btld until 30 days after the second printing of Phase One of the Muter Plan of Air Tl'ans· portatJ.on for Orange County had been made avallable to the public. Coples are now on 1ale at the Or· ange County Planning Dept., 400 W. 8th St., Santa Ana at IS each. Coples of the phase one report are Wo avail· able for lns~on at both the plan- ning department and the alrport com- m1ss1on office ln the airport terminal bulldlng. A t r po r t Commlaslon Chairman Dennis E. Carpenter re-emphasized today that the purpose of the public hearings is not to eliminate any of the regional airport sites or to de- termine where the regional a.irport wiU be bullt. They are designed, he said , to give the general public an opportunity to express their views on the Master Plan o( Air TransportaUon. "'nl.e comml.Jaton j9 interested In hearing statements from interested people concerning any part of the phase one report and particularly the regional airport sites," Carpenter said. After the public hearings, the air· port commission will forward to the Board of Supervisors a summary of public attitudes on each or the five regional airport sites together with a general consensus on tbe contents of phase one. It is also the commission's Inten- tion to make comment& to the board regarding the development of future phues of the Master-Plan of AJr Transportation for Orange County. From P"fle 1 BONDS ... law, they must have approval of the SS million in local bonds before they can draw on the state loan fund. The district's long-range buUdlng program, Woodfin explained, calls for a school in nearly every quarter secUon, thus eliminating the need for school buses. At preSent, there are 11 schools In the district. The building program would bring the total to 22 at satura· tion . The district already owns three of the 11 sites needed-one at Slater and Euclid Streets (Cox School), one north of Bushard School and another at Brookhurst S~et and Garfield Avenue. The S8 million Fountain ValJey bond proposal will be on the· Sept. 17 ballot along with the Orange Coast Junior College District's proposed 17.25 mil· Uon bond proposal and 10.5-cent tax override conversion. Fountain Valley school officials say their bond issue would not increase taxes. It would, however, extend the length ot the present debt retirement period. New Oil Field~ Firm Interested in Seal Beach Lots Property owners in Seal Beacll's Old Towa mey be a richtr kit. Thi Conunental OU Co •• a De11Vr"81'1 corporation based in Ponca Qty, Oki•. is asking landowne.r1 of tiht city's cen- tral area to 1lgn flve·yNr leuea wltlch woold pmnlt the comJ>lny ID 1iant-<lrlll for oil. Company ofliclall art keepln1 under wrape the flJUn lite of tile llant well. aty Manager Lee Rhner dlo<looed that the dty, wltlclt owns about 20 loll, hu a!Jo been 11>1iclted by the oil con- cern. IU6ner added, 1 1 Tb 11 r (Con· Unental'1) ·-11 to Ibo dt7 ba1 -unofficial Wo WOll1d want ID iQlOW JUI! wllue tlit drill site would be located In relation ID Ibo cit)'." A city ordlnanct, odOpt6li by votar•, proltlblll &01 type of oil drilllit( wllhlll cl!J llmlU. ORADUATI VOLUNTllR -Janet Wilder, 1' of HunUftllon Buch 1how1 Mt1. Robert Taylor art work of two of her klndtrllrtlll .,, •ummer •tudents, John Foster, 5, (left) and l\obblt 'l'aylor, e, (rlghl). Mill Wilder is a June graduate of the Lamb Elem111tary School. Valley Girl, 14, Honored For Volunteer School Aid Summer can mean a lot Of ttme wttli not much to do if you 're under the minimum •orking age of 16. So Janet Wilder, 14, daughter of ~IT. and Mrs. Philip \Vilder of 10412 Sun- '- Vandals 'Paint' Woman's Home Vandals \llrtually filled up a Los Alamitos woman's home with black rubber-based paint, d o 1 n g an esUmated $6 ,000 damage, po 11 c e reported today. The \lictim is Norma G. Koenig of 11346 Unda Lane. "Black paint was squirted on every door, wall, mirror, drape and chan- delier in the home. They didn't even miss • closet door. It looked as if the r~ber based paint was squirted frOm some kind of a tube," en Investigating officer said. day Drive, HllllllntJlon Beeclt took t!tlnp inlo her own bondl. '1'111 June gr1duate fl'om Lamb SchOOl ln the FounW.tn Valley School District returned to her alma mater to become full·time babysitter, teacher alNi confidante to several dozen sum- mer school kindergart.enet'I. For her all-summer volunteer work the soon· to·be HuMlllj/!On Beach High School freshman was recently presented a charm bracelet by the school's PTO and administration, Miss Wilder who readily ad.mils to Uking school as well as horse bock riding and cooking hopes one day ID be a !Wl·Ulne teacher. Alston's Mother Dies HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) -Leoora Alston, the mother of Los Angeles Dodgers Manager Walter Alston, diM. late Thursday at McGullou.gh-Hyde Hospital ln nearby Oxford. Nixon Eying U.S. Drive i -,... .By Reagan • SAN llU:GO !AP) -Rlcllard v.. Nflton's 1lrato&U1S wool( liko 0o .... Ctlilotnia Gov. Ronald Reagan cam· polp naUOlllll1 for tho GOP Ueke~ par1l<ullr1J lo tbe Seullt Utl o4ller _..u ........ N1-COGltrt IOdlJ wltlt lleaJan 1114 a ll'OUP ol lltptlllllou leadvo who are -lid lo rtprltlelll the . GOP pntldlltllal ltOmlDtt la vo~g _...... . Nl&on 11 •~lo ult 1\ ... 111, an unncoeedlll cudltllle for t b • nomlllltloe. to p(lt 11 mllOb time and .... ., .. bt ... lnlo tho pnsidtltUal cunpalp, l\ ... lll hu 11lcl ltis -ltll potMlllal contrlbtlllon WOUid be In ltll OWll ltall. Nixon Uoutonlnts ._ with lllll bot hive said they want ltllll to compalp Olltllde cau. lorn!• •• wtll.' Tht Cltlter GOP leaders m~ with Nixon Include Govo. John A. Volpe of M•aobu11t11 Md Walter J, lllckol of Aluka; Stn. Howvd Blittt ol Ton· -: 11tp1. !loo l\um1fold of illlnoll Bill Brock Of Tollnffote ; Clark M..Oro1or of Mlnneoota and Gtor .. Buah Of THU; .... Bud WJai-, Republlc111 natloMI COin· mlllMnwt from Oklahoma. As Nixon wapcl hlJ party Wllty drrve, one or bJ1 adviltr1 -a Ntaro -talltld Thur1doy of dlJMUlhcUon, coo1nt11, tVll\ revolt by Ntll'Ofls atalnet tltl v1 .. 8oresidonUol nomln•· Uon of Merylond v, SplroT. Altt~w- A.Killingsworth · Funeral Slated In Westminster Funeral aervlces for Arthur E. KilJ. ir;gsworth a resident of th e Westminsier aretl 25 years, will be hekl 1 p.m. Saturday in the Peek FarnUy Fwierol Home Chapel. Killingsworth, 76, «. 13782 Hoover st., a crane operator for R1cbl1eld Oil Co., died Tburs<ta.y at a Westminster hM!>ltal. He is survived by his wife, Minnie, two daughters, Mrs. Freeman Bat- teisntll of Torrance and Mrs. Fred Berry of Westminster; a liater, Mrs. Marjorie Denning of Garden Grove; four grandchildren and four great· grandchildren. Burial for the Oklahoma naUve will be 1n Wesbninster Cemetery. WAREHOUSE SALE! FANTASTIC VALUES IN FABRICS! I NEWPORT STORE ONL y I HUNDREDS OF YARDS OF DRAPERY AND UPHOLSTERY FABRICS 50°/o TO 700/o OFF CASEMENTS-PRINTS-SILKS-VELVETS-TAPESTRY-ETC. UNBELIEVABLY LARGE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM. DON'T MISS AN OPPORTUNITY LIKE THIS TO REDRAPE OR REUPHOLSTER AT UNHEARD OF SAYINGS. FURNITURE VALUES!! HERITAGE DREXEL u •••• SALi . .... SAU PHOLSIBIY •••• Utl 1 &..."" T •I• 209. 99" 1 Cockrall T•ttl• 185. 79" JOxJO SIMpa"c• 4b:42 l ,, 315. 159" 1 Cocktan T111tte 165. 99" 20x1' w•. a,.,,., 1 Stap Toltl• I ....... Tobi.. 149 69°' PIClllo 26a26 JbJ6 '"°" s1..,.,1c. .... "· 1 1114. Coc'1911 T.t.I• 339. 13900 1 i.."" c.111,.... 41" ..... , .... ,.,... ,.. , • ...,. 2h27 t c.._,_ 209 89" J &.."" ,..._ lhJO P'NtHt llMf!Mttw , ,,_ 1c ..... c...,..,_325 145°0 1 Lnip Table 24a7J • A-. TrMSwy 1 CoclrtoSI T•ltle 185. 69" lkllaf'll ... 11a72 I Ceclrhttl T ott.!e 129. 39°0 1 l11Het w ...... M"* 1., J0..60 20.:60 hcl ....... J ... be.t ...... f68. 124°0 IS.... CntMi WHiie-"· Sff.MM 1 "" .... 189. 69°0 I La"" Tllltle 11tl7 hlltt 2 7a27 135. 59" 125. 39" 95 ••. 34'! . 95. 39" 249. 99" 245. 79'° 258. 79" I Ou. Chair Ta. llM I 0 cc. Cltah Prtnt ..... c:... .. ..... .. I ..... a.t. ..... -l Ou. CHlr M"' I I ..... C .. lf ... ....... . ... ·-· 1 .. n u, C>ol. MANY OTHER PIECES TO CHOOSE FROM ALSO A LARGE SELECTION OF BEAUTIFUL BEDSPREADS AT GREA Tl Y REDUCED' PRICES, , ALL SALES PINAL -NO CHARGES EXCLUSIVE DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL-HERITAGI 119. 59" 219. 99" 19911 49" 235 • 89'" 135. 89" 195. 6911 149. 6911 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGER TERMS AVAILABLE ON APPRDVID CltlDIT INTDIORS NIWPORT IEACH 1727 WHlcllff Dr., ~2-20,SO OPIM NllAT "11L t ProfMtlonal Interior Dulgn•rs Anll1ble-AID-NSID LAGUNA llACH '45 North Cotot Hwy. 4""551 MIN ralDAY "rlL f Field men for the corpor•Uoo are r~ to be caIUna on hom-••ir• w:ltb the ofter of 110 per Jot per year for five )'tats a2ain1t poulblt future royalli ... 1be PoOil of oil and gas aro beUevecl 1 . ...::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-ID be locoted oomo $00 feel btoutb the Old Town area. ,, -L --------------- I I' --~-.. ---··---~-~--r .......... -,~-... -· .. .. Laguna __ _ DAI LY Pl LOT ____ _ Bea eh Today's Closing voe. 61', NO. 197, 'I SECTIONS, ~ PAGES Watermelon~ Man! OAtL Y f'ILOT ,....,. h T-OM'llltill Watermelon makes g~d eating,~en if juice doe~ trickle down his stomach says Mike Modiano, tt.-of Laguna Beac~. Se~ Cubs held watermelon feast Thutsday at Main Beach to end sw1mm1n.g and surf- ing summer water program. Playhous,e Theft Suspect • DueBackinLagunaToday I Former Laguna ijlayers building fund chairman Fratier Smith, ac· cused of abscondinr with money that would have permitted him to travel East in style. will be brought back out West today In custody. lri company with Sgt. Vic Sagan. the 41-year-old Smith was due in Laguna SCHOOL BARBECUE ON TAP TONIGHT · Tonight the city recreation depart· ment and the high school jointly will sponsor their second barbecue. to be he1d on the Laguna Beach High School Pa'tio. To begin at 8 p.m .. the· party also \Vil! include dancing and swim.ming. The charge is 50 cents for Laguna Jl igh students and graduates Of t.he past three years. Beach ci ty jail this afternoon. •le was to be flown from New York where he was held on an FBI warrant for flight to avoid proi;ecution. The Orange County District Attor- ney's office has charged Smith with three counts of forgery. He is accused or drawing $9,475 on checks written for the Playhouse building fund. Smith. genteel New Englander with distinguished gray hair. dropped out of sight in January after more than 20 forged checks were cashed with the bank. He was arrested in New York Tues- day after being stopped for a traffic violation. · Mild Quake Recorded PASADENA (UPI) -A mild earth· quake, centered about 200 miles northeast of here, was recorded at 5:12 a.m. by the seismological laboratory at Cal Tech. ED III ON 'FRIDAY, AUGl)ST ·1~. '1968 • • I river. - oro oa :25 Citizen Planners Fired Up · Plarming consultant Abra a m KJV'UShkhov tried to build a fire WJder Laguna Beach's new Citizens' Ad- visory Committee Thursday nlght. "With your participation, th e General Plan project can have a pro· found impact on the future of the ci- ty," he said. "\Vithout it, it will be just so many words and so much paper." Mayor Glenn Vedder charged the 2.5- member citizens' committee to "get excited. become involved and stay with this." Krushkhov said his planning con- sultant firm is off and running although the project officially is only nine days old. Final clearance just recently came from the state for '33.000 ill federal -·· Fl .. ~ assistance. Krusbkhov indicated he and his planni.D._.g colleagues bi.ve not betA !tile waiting for final approv8.I. Re said they already have taµted to all city departments, the chamber or com· merce, school district, RESPONSES He said he now is looking for input from the citizens' committee, but not to inhibit their thoughts or condition their responses will stand back and let them feel their own way.. He did yield to requesU that he give them some direction on broad areas for study of community goals and ob- jectives and to outline methods of orgallization followed by c i t i z e n groups in other communities. The committee a~reed to meet Sept. 12 to organize itself. Krushkhov said at the first few sessions he hoped the committee would be uninhibited by practicalities tnd do some utopian thinking. "If you look first at Laguna Beach in its most ideal form it is going lo be good for everybody," he said. He suggested far out ide2s can perhaps be adapted by the technical advisory people of the planning firm. These include, he said, persons familiar with economics, transport.a· tion, engineering. geology, urban pro- blems and systems analysis. 'DOPESTERS' "Consider us the inside dopesters," he said. "but the ideas have to come from you ." He said one Of the first steps in the 18-month project should be t o determine community goals and ob- jectives. "You cannot do that yourselves," he advised, "because J can tell from looking at you you are not representative of the whole city." lie said the committee must syn· thesi.ze attitudes of the young, the (See CITIZENS, Page t) Sat ety Board Rules Crash Blamed On Weak Rotor • WASi1iNGTON (AP) -A rotor blade which separated in flight was blamed today for the crash of a Los Angeles Airways helicopter in Comp· ton, which claimed 21 lives Wednes- day. The National Transportation Safety Board said one of the chopper's five blades separ:tted from the central spindle, or hub, and the board's in- vestigation turned up evidence of metal fatigue in the spindle assembly. The Sikorsky S61 was carryring 18 passengers and a crew of three from Los Angeles to Disneyland when it fell out oI the sky near a chidren's playground in Compton. co~~li!!~ai~i'l~~G!: ground was hurl The accident was the second ln· volving a Los Angeles Airways heli· copter in three months. But the board said the spindle of the aircraft that crashed May 22, killing 23, was ex- amined and it had not failed. Both investigations are cc..ntinuing, the board said, and in the meantime it is recommending that the Federal Aviation Administration require an immediate inspection of all Slkorsky 561 spindle units. In addition, the board sald more frcriuent regular inspection of the units should be required lo guard against failures and the need to establish a retirement life for the part should b~ studied. farts ll'O!ll ' Wadqtsdl!Y'S .er.sh bave been fd-19 l• 'Dfetallttt· gical laboratory for detailed exami· nation. Arts Festival Direbtors Order Theater Drawings Festival of Arts direclors today ap- petir committed a step further toward a $50,CXXI plan to build a new theater, concession area and junior art gallery. They authorized PZlgeant of the Masters Producer-Director Do n \Villiamson , who Is .also an architect. to proceed with preliminary drawings this week at a cost of $750 more than the $1 ,000 retainer previously paid him. \Villiamson showed Festivt1\ bOard members schematic plans of the new facilities which would be located between lrvlne Bo.wl and th e restaurant. A new C()ncession building would slfpport a second-story theater seating 180 to 200. There also would be a new junior art gallery, a free for all room and an t!l';:arged cast patio. Williamson said the theater, reached by ramp from the restaurant and ne2'T'ly level with the restaurant ter· race, could be used for the puppet show during the summer Festival run and be made available for recitals, concerts, lectures or meetings the rest of the yt>~r. Jn other action. Festival directors: -Heard a report that the Irvine Bowl Policy Committee hf.Id rejected 4 to O a request to use the bowl for a psychedelic light show. -Received a statement of con- fidence in grounds manager Mogens Abel signed by 109 exhibiting artists with the comment by board President Edward Fernsten, "This only con- firms our opinJon." -Increased the budget for t11e cast party from $2,<XK> lo $3,500. "I f~I very strongly nothing is too good tor the cast," Director William M;;..'Ttin said. Others agreed. -lleard a report that tram income is off three percent from last summer and that grounds attendance is run· ning slightly behind last summer. -Debated whether more signs advertising the Festival and Pageant are needed around town , but couldn't reach a consensus. Laguna Employe Salaries May Up City's Tax Rate By THOMAS FORTUNE 01 HM D1llY Pl•I Stlll The Laguna Beach city tax rate in· crease of 11 cents could go another live cents higher depending upon the outcome of a study ol clty employe salaries. Pop Fete Sent Mesa Crime Soaring At any rate, city employes Including police and firemen are due to get a raise, but whether money set aside in the budget for the higher salaries will be enough won't be known unW next week, Clty Manager James Wheaton said. By PAMELA POWELL CH Ille O.llr ,, ... lfl'ft \Vhile the Newport Pop Festival may have been ~ largest musical event in the Unlted States. the crime rate in Costa Mesa for the two days also set a r.ecord. Ac<:ording to Police Chief Roger Neth, the documented rate rose 20 percent. •'J-lawever,'' he said, "the total in- crease was about 100 percent." Individual ratea showed a u t o burglaries uP 550 percent; grand theft up 500 percent; shop Uft..lng up nl per· cent; medica1 aid up 350 percent: sex offenses up 200 percent; residence burglaries up 26 percent; and petty theft up 14 percent. Although the undocumented rat.es skyroc.Jceted . total arrests increased by 69 percent. According: to Neth. the difference \vas made up by the fact that not all crime{ ras documented. (' The ~sta Mes:l )lOllct force 11~nt a total ol 1,4..13 hours over I.he Wet!kend. About 821 ol the hours. or $.'l,200 worth, is paid for by the promoters. 1lte additional 582 hours, or S2, 736 wUI have to be P'cked up by the city. In addition. the city will pay the tab on S296 worth of miscellaneous items such as food, medical aid and missina: road barricades. Police from lhe seven surrounding cities which were called in on Aug. 4 under the mutual aid pact tallied up a total bill o! approximaU.ly '10,800, Neth aald. Each city will pay It& own tab. Accordlng to C.pl Robert Moody, promottt1 0( lhe festival. Wesco Pro· ductions, took ln $.110.oo:> in ticket s.ales. "I received the figure from a pretty reliable source," the captain of the patrol d.Jvision told the Board or Direc- tors of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commuce. At that meotlng lut week. Moody related to the board members the w fltlt'nce ol evenls leading up to th resttvai aod UM police oc!lvtty durlnf the two-day pop concert. "I can go back to the 15th or July when Gary Schmidt, vice president of Wesco Productions, went before the City Council to get the permit." he said. ''At that time, he wa s told he needed to provide the poUce and .security and estimated that there would be between 10,CXXI and 12,000 people and received the permit." The captain said he spoke with the vice president the next day who told him he was contracUng security with thet Orana:et County Sheritrs OfCice. "The< wu when I told him he would need one deputy officer for every 500 people in attendaoce," Moody 1aJd. On July 30, only roor doy• berore the festival, Moody 1a1d he talked with 1 member ol the Sheri!rs Office who said they bad been contacted only the .S.y belor. ond would not take the Job. The She!ti!r's O!fJce, because ot a limited number or per1onnel, does not normally handle anything outside IU jurisdiction exccpl the Orange County F'oir. Moody said the Costa Mesa Police Department agreed to handle the event on Aug . l, when advance ticket sales had gone up to J'.>,000. "By Aug, 2. l realized how unorganiJ:ed it was. They were three young men who had never put a show like this on bcfore1 '1'hey overlooked a few Uiine~. For lnstance, they cildn't provkle for an ambulance on the grounds. We bad two both days. One or them was running all the time," be said. At 9 a.m. on S.turday, Moody held a briefing session for the otllcer1 and told them what was expected of them. "C".1r motto rturlng the brleftog was to get through the weekend, and we knew we couldn'tmake ma:is arrests.'' According lo Ao1oody the crowd was lively and hDppy Saturday. "They han- ded the police office.rt flowers and the offlcer1 handed them to someone wbo fdn't have noWt'fs." he said. "They ~nd out we w~'t 1here to harass !See POP FESTIVAL, P•I• ll It may be, in which case the 11-cent lax rate increase approved by city councilmen will hold. But, then agdn. the $57 ,000 set aside {Ot" salary hikes may be too HtUe. Wheaton said. The answer will be known when Cooperative Person™!! Services, an arm of the State Personnel Board, completes • study comparlng Lt.iguna city employe salaries to those paid by oUler olties in the county. Whea.ton said it L, the city council':; Policy to pay employes the average wage paid for like jobs within Ule W>or lllil'ket (other cities in the COUD· ty.) Ck)' emptoyes haven't had a raise In more than a year, Wheaton 1akl. "lt Is my understanding the police depart• ment is now the lowest paid ln the <.'Ounty." The last pay raise w11 April 1, 1967, at which Ume the city met the county average. Wheaton. sald he wlU l'tCOmmend ne~tlfednesday night to the city coun · cil ttiiA the tax rate be 1et at 1 .special meedac Aus. 29, N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS uns I oc s Woman Marine Arrested A woman Marine today is charged v.•ith turning El Toro Marine air st.a· tion into a high .speed racing Ct1urse eW"ly this morning. She was captur.td only after she crashed into another car on the Santa Ana 1''ree\vay. Before the crash, suspect RoLin Lynn Joyce, 22. of Jlouton, Tex., described by sheriff's deputies as "built like a lady WTestler" bad run at least threee roadblocks at speeds up to 90 miles per hour inside the base, ol· ficers charged. Deputies who made the arre.,t tn felony drunken driving and resisting arrest charges \Vere alerted by military police that the woman suspected of . drunken diriving was leaving Ute main g&te at El Toro. Deputies sWtted a· car on Irvine Boulevard wbeti the suspect reported· Jy ran a stop sign at Sand Canyon A venue. The chase was on at speeds up to 85 miles per bout, UDtU the woman spun out on a cUfri it t!it southeast corner of the air ~Ob. Regaining control, she Ji~qtered the air station and was Pursued' at speeds up to 9Q miles per hour. Inside the base. she ran two roadblocks set up by military police and then sped out the main gate slashing through another roadblock. The driver Ulen sped norCh on Trabueo Road to tile Santa Ana Freeway where she drove at spe·eds up to 115 miles per hour wtuCb led to her undoing. She lost control at the 4th Street overcrossing ran up'on tbe bank: and back down into a car driven by Patricia Ann Ribaldi, 20, of Lakewood. Miss n 1baldi was slightly injured. Miss Joyce is in Orange County Jail. Y outl1 Trapped In Restroom William Schuster locked up his .automotive shop at 1009 S. Coast Highway .about 6 p.m. Thursday. He didn't bother to check the rest rooms. About two and hall hours later, p0llce with the aid o{ locksmith Ray Pierson, freed a teen..age boy who b.ad been trapped in the building. "What took you' so long,". said the youth, who then disappeared before anyone could get his name. Stock Markeu NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market expanded it$ gain on average in moderate trading thls afternoon. (See quotations. Pages 10..11 ). Orange Coaat ...... Weather It'll be a nice, clear weekend if you don'l .mind waiting a whlle -Ulce till midmomiJlg when the clouds roll by, bring· ing the Orange Coast a balmy day with mld-70 temperatures. INSIDE TODAY Even the spaghetti comts with a c1dturcl twi.tt alt nert week in Co.ta Mcm Read about shoto1, 1ptclo.l 1venta and the rpaghe&H dinntr of Social Arts WHk today (~ WEEKENDER. ...... .. IYMt ,_., M "'-' ..... _ ,.,. Cl1..itlef .... ::: ...... .... ...... " .... ,_ " -" Dlllll ,..,Jen ' ""'"" ...... , ........ ,.,. M -. lal1'11ia-t *::t"'t "..., 1' ·--..... -.. l'IMMI 1•11 .... _ l'IN C1H1 ' Ari ...... '· 11 ·--.. -• AMI Uflfln .. ... _ , .. IJ """"'• .. ..... • .. u -• '"-• ~·-.. ~~ .. • ' ..... " • I HOM ... -. .. "'"" ' ' - I . --·- z DAILY PILOT Fridly, August 16, 1968 Direetor Aw•v Girl . Runs .Show At Laguna YMCA By Toll! GORMAN OI Wti1 D9'b' "*' ltttt "We haven't had any incidents, Rog. Of course, it's only been three days since you've been gone ." Brenda A111tla, ofllce llrl at the South <>rans• County YMCA, bad thlnp wen 1n hoDcl. She was Wking by telephone to the Y Di.rector, Roger Carter, who was with a group of boys on a caravan at Yosemite National Park. He had made his phone call to the Laguna Y office. to see if everything was still running the way it should. PACIFIES MOTHERS It was. Brenda was in charge. Beaidea answering the telephone, she keeps books. types, files, collects egg cartons. sells tee shirts, peanuts , sweatshirts, runs plnewood derbies, pacifies angry mothers ·and com- municates with teen-agers. She also advises the Tri·lli-Y gir1s' group, chaperones street dances. organizes group dinners, and answers questions. Such as : "Where do l reeister for a room for the nlght?" ('nlere are no rooms at the Y.) .,,. "Where is the weight room . (There is no weight room at the Y.) ••C h '" ''Where can I WlAe a s nwer . (There is no shower at the Y.) . Brenda looked up from her pile or work and commented, "It's not a job Laguna Grads' Grades Drop in College Studies here. It's a challenge." Of coorse, the Y cooldn't poulbly use all her energy. "On the side," she confided, "I moonlight as a mother and wife." TOO BUSY l Normal jobs don't intenst Breodl, who is 22. "I was'a waitress for three daYs, until I bliw my mind." At the Y, she's too busy to blow her mind. And . she's enjoying every minute of it. "It's alw.ays been a very relaxed of· fw:e. '111at'1 just the way the YMCA is." There are ·two others in the office with Brenda: Garter and Mrs. Jean McManu1, who ii ln charge of the teen placement center. When Brenda isn't working on the groun Is Its system of commWllcaUon, her time as an advisor for the Y's teen girl group. "When I was part ot the Tri-Hi-Y years ago, I didn't appreciate what my advisor had to go through. Now I can." What amazes her most about the always get the word through the commonly referred to as t h e grapevipe . GRAPEVINE '"I'here ii absolutely no message that has slipped by my girls. They always get the word through the grapevine. I've never seen a greater system or communication than the teens have. It's a shame adults can't communicate that well," said Brenda. The YMCA life will soon come to an end for Brenda. She will be leaving Oct. 1. Any Ji:irl wtio would like to keep books, type, rue, collect egg cartons, sell tee shirts, and pacify angry mothers is invited to drop in at the Y where she'll find a sprightly young woman who"s willing to Show her the Y life. --. ----..------------·-- • • DAILY l'ILOT Sii" """" Some Sun, Some Don't Women more at home in cool of Indoors venture out to Heiafer Point lookout to observe sun bathers on Laguna's Alain Beach, a familiar scene during sum· mer when Laguna is many things to many people. Newport Owner Reports $32,000 Yacht Missing Orange County Harbor Department patrolmen today were on the lookout for a $32,00 O motor yacht reporteti missing from its berth Thursday night. From P .. e l CITIZENS •.• elderly and every economic and social levd. This can be done by questiOM.aire, he said, or by in-depth Interviews with a sampling ol famflies. He said the consultants wilt present several alternative plllllli for Laguna's future at the end of the study period and these will reflect the goals the committee sets for-them. Nixon Eying U.S. Drive .By Reagan SAN DIEGO (AP) -Richard Ir.. Nixon's strategists would like to see C3lifornla Gov. Ronald Reagan c•m· paJgn nationally for the GOP ticket, partt.cularly in the South &Dd Olber conservative areas. Nixon coofers today with Reagan and a group of Republican leaders who are expected to represent the GOP presidential. nominee in vote·seeking apearances. Nixon is expected to ask Reagan, an unsuecessful candidate for t hoe nominatio'o.. to put as much tlme and energy as he can into the pres1dential campaign. Reagan has said his greatest potential contribution would be in his own state. Nixon lieutenants agree with that but have said they want him to campaign out.side Cali· fornia as well. The other GOP leaders meeting with Nlxoo Include GoV1 . John A. Volpe o! Maseachusett.s and Waher J . Hickel of Alaska; Sen. Howard Baker of Ten .. nessee; Reps. Don Rumsfeld of Illinols, Bill Brock of Tennessee; Clark MacGregor of Minnesota and George Bush of Te.1.u; and Bud Wllkimoo, Republiean national com· mitteeman from Oklahoma. As Nixon waged his party unity drive, one of hls advisers -a Negro -talked Thursday of db.satisfaction. coolness, evea. revolt by Negroes against the vice prestdent.1al nomina· lion of Maryland Gov. Spiro T. Agnew. Earl Dearing, prosecuting attorney in Louisvine, Ky., and a member of Nxon's campaign advfsory council on crime and law enforcement, said at a new conference followillg a meeting of the council with Nixon, he hopes Agnew will do something before elec· tion da.y "to prove to the American Negro that he is Interested in solving the vari'ous social problenu. that beset the Negroes in the ghetto." Grad,_ from Laguna Beach High School in 1967 have found that stronger C<lllpetiUon wait¢ ahH1i o.t University ot California campuses. From P .. e 1 Boat owner Bjarne E. Ul'Sin, 4341 Sandburg Way, NewpOrt Beach, said he last s.a.w his :JS.foot Grand Banks trawler, "Ursa Maj<.-", ab<M.lt 5:45 p.m. Thursday when two prospectivt:! buyers were aboard . He suggesed some possibilities, in· eluding preservation of the skyline, recapturing of public beach, main· tainiog ocean view, adcBng a third dimension to the city by high rise con· 11truct.ion, and aclUeviDg a better eeooomic balance. Mrs. Marano Rites Conducted Thal 11 the conclualon reached by a Uninnlty ol California studY, In which tile grades of 22 LBHS grads were tabulated. RellUIU tllowed that: . -ne awerage grade In the senor year of hlCh ochool lor LBHS studeuts wbo eventually went to UC schoola WJS 3.5, or ball A'• end half B's. -'lbe average grade In 1 be frelhn:Mm year in eolege for the same studentl was 2.5, baW B's and half C'a, or a drop ot a full grade. -Three of tile 22 students had a B or above average in their flrat year at a UC achool, but fOur students bad a er-I• lower t:ban • c. -UCI proved to be the roughest; grades dt<>pped !rom 3.6 (senior year in hlgb school) to 2.2 (fr<sbm111 year at UC!). ,_, LBHS ---Out of ell the student. uvm In the cllu ot 'rrl who went to UC -ln '1!11, ooly ... drCJPP<d . out. 'That studeut --of six who went toUCB<rn!ey. Physical Exams Set for Athletes All hig!I tcl>ool boy• who will be pll'ticipaUng in any sports next year at Laguna Belch lllah School .,. required to be at the boys' gym at 9 a .m. Monday for physical examlna· Uooo. Phystcab are required for tnsur- ance. They will be adminiatered free of charge. Boy1 unable to be at the high 11cb00l ~tooday must make their own at· rangemem.a for phy1lcall, a<.'COfding to school off1cia1s. DAILY PllOl __ ... _ OUJJGI c:o.ur POlllSHIMO CO/UNff R.Mtf H. W114 ~raldllftl W !"#Ith« J1,k a.. Onley 'Vice Pm ..... _, ~F MINttr Th•~•• IC11vll ..... Th1M11 A, Murp~i111 MIMllllf !fltlll" Rlt.ft1r4 P. Nill P1ul Niu•~ ~ ~ ~IMl'tlll ... CllV t:dlW Dlrtttw ---221 '-'"t A.,... M1rn., Ji.'4r1ttu P.O. fn "' t211 2 OIW-c ... .,,_i nl WW 1'-'I"'"' .......,. a..cJI; :nu w..1 ...... ..,_.,., ~ ..... l .. it" ·---- POP FESTIVAL CRIME • • • Ursin said be had told the pair he was leaving the vessel for an hour and would return to remove b i s them." Inside lbe gz<Kmds 19 lntelli(enco men were 11tationed amooa: tbe hip- pies. "They looked like hippies," Moody eaid. "About the only trouble they bad Saturday wu tbe 1£t":t of water." "Late in the afternoon we got WOI'· ried about where ell these people were going to sleep. Alfred Lutjeans, the manager of the fairgrounds, called Sacramento and received permission for them to sleep in the field west of the grounds. SO'mehow it got mixed up and they slept east of city hall. We named it Resurrection City. It looked like it," he said. The 55,CMXI people cleared out quJckly at 6:45 Saturday. Another briefing session w.as hekl Sunday at 9 a.m. and lzy 10 a.m. the crowd hod cbanled. "I noticed a contra.at 1D mood,'' Moody said. '"nlere wu complete sile~. U waa aJ:rnost eerie. '!\ere must have been 45 to 50,000 ot them at 10 a;m, and no ooe wa.5 happy." About an hour later, the captain said, group! of one or two hundred people would rUJh the fence. "That's when we told the promoters we weren't there to keep their policies. We were there to keep the pt.ace and enforce the lAw." ADDITIONAL POLICE At approximately 5 p.m., according Hotel Robbed By Masked Thief An armed robber Maring a black nylon stocking over hls face robbed the llollday Inn in Orange of several hundred dollars early this morning. The slender thief entered the main lobby ol the hotel at 3737 W. Chapman Ave. about.3 a.m. and made his way to the counter where the previous day's recei.pb were being tallied. Menacing the clerk with a large caliber revolver, the bandit forced the clerk to turn over the money, loosely estimated at "several hundred dollars" by poUce officers. PoUce saJd that the man mu.st have been familiar w1th the hotel's 1ystem of handling cash as he came at exactly the correct time and went dlrectly to the cash counting area. Boy's Run Fails; Grand£ a th er Dies A five·mile run by an ll·year-old boy alter his grandfather had collapsed on a hunting trip proved In vain Thursday wheo Carl E. Dodge, 5.!, of Los :l~" dJed ol an apperent ~eart al· Lee Smith of Redondo Be•cll ran from deep ia the Clevtland NaUonal Foreot to Orteg1 Hlghw1y one! na11ed a rlde to tht nearest ranrer 1tauon to pt help. He all4I h11 grondfother had klUed a deer,, stopped for lunch and wtre 1W1in1 back to thelr c1r when Dodge became ID. By tl'le time rang•• returned wlt.h the youth, b I 1 IJ'IDdfitlber WU dNd. I to Moody, the grounds became unruly again and the additional officers were 11ent over. "Eighty.five of them walked four abreast across Fair Drive and on- to the grounds," he said. "ft must have looked like more because im· mediately they cooled, and soon after that the agitators stopped." The pop concert, which was sehedu]. ed to end at 6 p.m ., was concluded soon after 8 p.m. "We didn't plan on the ,darkness and none of the olfieers had flashlights. Now they'll always be provided with them." Moody said. The grounds were cleared shortly after the last performance, be said. Professional agitators, he said, were responsible for taking the groups through the fence. "One man wou1d take about 100 through the fence and then Come back and get another JOO. We estimated there were about six o( them but we couldn't get to them." By noon, there were 70,000. he estimated. "The CI'()Wd was like a powder keg, it wouldn't have taken much to set it off. Then the in- teWgence units contacted us and told us they (the erowd) were going to blow the lid off between 12:30 and 1 p.m. At that time the decision was made to call in officers from the seven sur· rounding cities and the Highway Patrol and Sherifrs Department "We called in all the off duty of. ficers on Code: Charlie (the mutual aid paet) a11 the reparU got worse. Jn 1the chief's words, "it's like buying an in- surance policy before ynu run off the road," he said. At apprOx.imately 2 p.m. all persons were allowed inside the gro\inds, "'ilh or without tiekets. "That's when the professional a~itators started working on people inside the crowd." Woman, 70, Hurt In Laguna Crash A 7().year-old Emerald Bay woman's car crashed broadslde with another Thursday afternoon in Laguna Beach but she declined being admitted to the ho::; pita.I. The driver, Mrs . Grace F. Erikson, 430 Emerald. Bay, admitted to police that 15he los t C<lnSciousness in ~ crash at the corner of Cypress Drife and Aster Street. But she determined to c.,,-y on . The other drtver, Paul E . Reedy, 48, Of River11ide, was unin· jured. Maude Fulmer Rites Saturday Private servlct$ will be btld Satur· day for Maude E. Fulmer, 1 3'l·year rffldent of Laiuna Beach, who <tied Th~ at lb• qe ol 91. Silo lived ot 3S3 Locull st s.m..1 wW be held at tho Laguna Beach Fun011ll Home, to be followed lzy private lotermtnl persooal prop<rty. When he came back to the dock, at 201 E . Cbast Hlgbway, his boat was gone, Ursi.n. told investigators. He said both men, whose names were unknown tq him, had reportedly made payment for trhe boat to a yacht broker. Fire Set at School COVINA (UPI) .,.. A lire beUOved deliberately set at Covina High School Thursday night destroyed t w o hothouses. Damage was estimated at $10,000. Kdlerine Marano, interred at Calvary Cemetery in Los Angeles earlier this week, was a 38-year resi· dent of Laguna Beach and lived most recently at 432 Emerald Bay. Mrs. Marano, who WQis 86, is survlv· ed by two slslen, Mrs. Mary Cornso of Whittier .and Mrs. Francessa Colliraffi of Pomona; several nephews and nieces. However, Ursin said he hadn't yet received. any money and said no one had pennlssion to remove the y.ad:lt. WAREHOUSE SALE! FANTASTIC VALUES IN FABRICS! I NEWPORT STORE ONL y I HUNDREDS OF YARDS OF DRAPERY AND UPHOLSTERY FABRICS 500/o TO 70°/o OFF CASEMENTS-PRINTS-SILKS-VELVETS-TAPESTRY-ETC. UNBELIEVABLY LARGE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM. DON'T MISS AN OPPORTUNITY LIKE THIS TQ REDRAPE OR REUPHOLSTER AT UNHEARD Of SAYINIOS. I FURNITURE VALUES!! HERR AGE DREXEL UPHOUTEIY ···-'--•••• SALi 1111• • SAU t La,.., T.ttt. 209. 99" I Cecll~I TUlt 185. 79" 315. JOrJO Sf.,.rk:• 4lx42 1 .... I CocltNll TOJe 165. 99" I Ou. CHer 119. 20J:S6 Wll. & G•ltil I SM, Tobit 135. 59" II• Tn. "-· 26126 ' ....... ,_ 149 6900 2b26 rec.. Sht1pcrtk• •H. ... 1 Oc~ C9tolr M11t 219. 1 i....., Co111IM4• 125. 39" Dci-.11 c ..... 114.c......nT~e 339. 13900 , .. , • ...,.21127 4J" ..... 11.,.,.,. 1 ._,_ 209 89" J""" , .... 95 .... JllJO,......IMkethe • ..... OU..,_ 199" 34'!. Dol9ftt C.'1'. 1 •• , CIMilr 235. ,._ ....... ,_325 145°0 I L4111p T.W. 95. 39" ...... letl11 24172 • .,,.,, ,,...."' t CM:tNMT•I• 185. 69" 1 Occ. Clltilr 135. lk ..... 1111172 "'" 1 lwfm Weh11t 249. 99" 1 Cecttoll Table 129. 3900 20160 DecltnWtte11 1 S•lftl CIMifr 195. M•wlc T., 20.60 H ....... J ......... hc•ll 168. 12400 I..,.,_ C1.r.111 245. 79'0 , ..... " ..... W1tlt.-"· "'""• ,_ ... 189. 69 00 I LeMp t•t. 258. 79" 149. 11117 .. .. ., 2 7127 I P-.11 u, C'9~ MANY OTHER PIECES TO CHOOSE FIOM ALSO A LARGE SELECTION OF BEAUTIFUL BEDSPREADS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. ALL SALES FINAL -NO CHARGES EXCLUSIVE DEALERS FOR: H!NIEDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGER TERMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CREDIT INTERIORS SAU 159" ~9" 99" 49" 89'° 89" 69'° 69° • N!WPORT llACH 1717 W11tcllff Dr., 641-1050 OPIN fllDAY 'TIL t Proh11lo"1I Interior DNf1nera Avolloblt-AID-NSID LACUNA llACH 345 North Coo1t Hwy. 4"4-6551 ~ fllDAY 'Tll. t Mis1 P'l.tlmer is survived by three nl..,.., Mary Jane Said ol Lo1 Aftiele1, SteUe A-• of San Diego [_~~~~~!!~!~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~::-and Winl!red Delly ol M!M-.; ond one nepbtwi Harold E. Rilt, al Tew. & >. --------·-------~---.... • • -~ • r ' , • -· ---· ---._ ---' " - Families Shattered By Crash By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of "" oallr Pllfl il•H 'nley were picking up the pieces today -shattered helicopter com· ponents as well as grief-seared lives - in the aftermath of the secood worst commercial helicopter crash i n history Wednesday. A San Francisco f-amily of four and two prominent Orange C o u n t y aerospace executives were among the 21 who died wben I.As Angeles Airways Flight 417 flip-flopped down into a Compton playground and burn· ed. The widow of one of ttie space probe e.J.perts Thursday filed a $1.25 million dama·ge 5'1.lit in Los Angeles Superior Court for her sell and her daughter, while other families visited mortuaries and began arranging runerals. Mrs. Elsa Kaul, 'Wife of John J. Kaul, 40, oC 8602 Blar!che Ave., Garden Grove, charged the ill-fated Sikorsky S61 helicopter was being operated negligently .and carelessly and had been manufactured and desilted in the same way. Kaul was returning Crom a top-level McDonnell-Douglas Corp. meeting in St. Louis, the firm's headquarters, and only two years ago received formal congratulations for his part in the Surveyor moon shot. He was a S)"Stems analyst at the Huntington Beach plant. One or the families schdeuling a funeral today was that of Capt. Ken· neth L. Waggoner, of 3131 Pierce Ave .• Costa Mesa, who would have been 34 years old Saturday. t>AILY f'iLI>C 3 Etnpt11 Promises Hum·phrey Raps GOP 'Nixiecrats' MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Vice Pr<sl· dent Hubert H. Humphrey said today tlbe Republican platform had ''empty promises" .and he dubbed the GOP "the Nixiecrats." Humphrey, in a speech prepared for ttle United Federation of Postal Workers in the city where he used the mayor's oUice as a political spring· board to national prominence, gave his toughest talk so far aga.IMt Republican presidential n o m l o e e Richard M, Nixon. Humtihrey accused the Republicans of 'lurning out at their Miami Beach convention a "platform cl empty pro- mises -promises that somehow seem to get lost when the Republic-ans settle OOwn In Congress." The Republicans, said Humphrey, •'promise to 'attack the root causes of poverty' -but 90 percent of the Republicans in Congress voted to kill the extensioo of the war on JXlVerty in 1965/' The Republicans, he went on, said elderly Americans d e s e r v e in· dependence and dignity "but they voted 93 ~nt aga!Nt med!care 1114 66 percent against die 1967 SOdl1 Security increases." The Americans, said Humptrey. ucaug:bt on to this sleight of hind years ago , and they are not going to be fooled in 1968." Humphrey said, 111 don't think !DllD1 of us were prepared for the am•alnl transfclnnation that occurred la Mia.mi last week. "We knew tbere WM a Nixon. We knew there weN ~me r e c e n t Republicans like Strom Thurmond - -One of the first people ever to walk out on me -but wflo expected ~ to spin off a new party, that <>I. the Nix• iecmts?" Humphrey was referring to th• Democratic National Coovtntion in Philadelphia in 1948 when h 11 arguments for a stronger civil rigbta plank helped trigger a walkout by Sootbern Democrats wbo launched the Dixicrat party with Thurmond as ltl presidentlal candidate. 'Iburmaod, a South Carolinian, later turned in bis Democratic label and became I Republican. * * * * * * McCarthy Pledges Push For Vietnam Coalition NEW YORK (AP) -Sen. Eugene J. aides said he stood by the full text. Relatives of a San Francisco family of four aloo will be arranging for final rites after the crash which killed retired police Capt. John P. Meehan, 65, his wife Helen, 63, a school teacher daughter Patricia, 32, and a grand· daughter, Anne Marie Meehan, 8, all of whom were going to Disneyland. DEATH FROM SKY -Investigators continue their took 21 lives. Children played on swings (lower probe of Wednesday's crash in Compton of Sikor-photo) moments before helicopter crashed in park, McCarthy says his followers will fight for a ·Democratic party platform peace plank which calls for a coalition government in South Vietnam and "which recognizes failures of past policy." The rany was one of a num!>er held around the country designed. to raise $5 million for McCarthy's campaign. A spokesman said afterwards that $2 million was realized. Earlier McCart:hy released a list of Democrats and Republicans who he called "the kind of men I'd like to have in my cabinet" but sold be had not made any offers of appointment to 111y of them. "I put them on the plane," said San Francisco Police Officer Albert Perry. "He makes the trip every year. They took the plane and helicopter because his wife didn 't like long drives." Meehan retired just two weeks ago. The other aeroepaee executive killed besides Kaul was C. H. Peterson, 52, of 12834 Chapman Ave., Garden Grove , retired U. S. Air Force colonel and assistant to the vice president, Minuteman division Qf the North American·Rockw.ell Autonetics plant in Anaheim. The Wednesday crash -virtually identical to the worst helicopt~ disaster in history on May 22 only two miles away in Paramount -also took the life of Christopher Belinn, 1.8, of ·1401 Lucinda Lane, Santa Ana. · ... He was the grandson of Clarence ' Belimi, president and owner of Los , Angeles Airways, which has suspend· ed all of its 118 daily southland oom· muter helicopter flights, pending a · probe Of the accident. lnvestigators are continuing to work · at the tedious job of determining what sent flight 417 and its occupants to ap- parently instant death and cremation only minutes after takeoff. Experts from the N e t i o n a l sky turboprop helicopter, a sister ship to one shown but no one on ground was injured. above rising from pad a.t Newport_er_J_nn_._c_r;_as_h ____________________ _ Transportation Safety Board i n Washington D. C., are combing wreckage of the big helicopter , second of a fleet of six to fall from the sky. The blackened debris scattered over a 50-foot radius and beyond in Comp- ton's ' Pop Leuders Park will be re- assembled on a chicken wire frame in a:~deral Aviation Agen cy hangar at Los Angeles lnternational Airport. The two blackened skeleton:; in fht FAA bar, gar will represent 44 Los Angeles Airways passengers who died with them. ''It is much, much too early and there is much too much evidence to be examined before we can e v e n speculate on the cause," said NTSB spokesman Bl"ad Dunt-ar of the Wednesday crash. Witnesses to the fatal plunge -one of them a boy who also saw the first helicopter's dizzying dive May 22 - said the tall rotor .apparently flew off. A main rotor blade then broke loose, other witnesses said, and the big craft, slewing through the sky like a ·punctured ·balloon, fell tGward the crowded suburb. Not on Birthday Pilot's Funeral Set for Monday A funeral service will probably be held Monday for Capt Ken Waggoner, pik>t of the big turboprop helicopter in which 21 persons died Wednesday. "His wife Penny and his dad are goi ng to the mortuary thls aJtemoon," said a relative, staying at Tue Wag· goner home at 2121 Pierce Ave ., Costa Seven Arrested In Two-county Bookmaking Rap A gambling ring which was alleged· ly sucking $5,000 profit per day out of horse bettors in Orange and Los Angeles counties is out of business to- day after the arrest of seven suspects. Orange County District Attorney Cecil Hicks late Thursday announced the demise or the business enterprise. . Hicks asserted that Orange County .; investigation of the alleged booJanak- ing operation led to the arrests. He 1 claimed the Orange County end of the betting was centered in the cities of : Santa Ana and Orange .. Mesa. Arrangements will be handled by Pacific View Mortuary, with in· terment to follow in their mem<>rial park on rolling hills above Ciorona del Mar. "We didn't want it to be on Satur· day," said the mourning relative, "that would be Ken's birthday." Coming! In Person In remarks for a Madison Square Garden rally which drew 20,000 cheer· ing supporters Thursday nigh t, McCarthy said his proposed platform would affirm "that there must be a new government in Saigon, open to the participation of the NLF (National Liberation Front)." The presidential contender said hls proposed plant would stress that refusal by Saigon to accept such a new government "will result in the reduc· ti.on and gradu8l phase-out o f American troops and Amer i c a .n assistance." McCarthy omitted tbe details ol tfle propo!led plank from his prepared speech when be delivered it on television due to time limitations, but The list included Sen . J. W. Fulbright (D~Ark:.), as a possible secretary of state; Republican Gov. Neboo A. Rockefeller of New York aa a possible secretary of housing and urban affairs, an<i. John Gardner, fonner secretary of health, education and welfare, as secretary of defense. Gov. Philip H. Hoff of Vermont, who earlier Thursday endorsed McCarthy's candidacy, was listed as a posalble secretary or the interior. McCarthy charged that the Jobnlon administration "has not begun realistically to seek a 1etuement" of the Vietnam war in the PariJ peace talks. Coste Mesa Presents lht All seven suspects were aJTested I Thursday on charges of felony f bookmaking. 1 Alleged as the Orange County con- tact in the two-county setup is Nelda ~ Duncan, 27, who makes her home at 3838 W. 105th st., Apt . 4, Inglewood. ii,e~ ~ Ba·skethall Preaches Against Draf1 David )larls, former Stanford University student body president and husband ol singer Joan • Baez, •peak• against draft In Unltarian Chjll'Ch In Riverside. Crod of 15 beard prison-bound Harri• ..,. , coura&• draft rell1111nce dCowJter Draft meeUng Thursday nigbL~ 1, '· No other Orange County arrests are• anticipated, Hick! Said. Other suspects are: Emmett Allen Canard, 42, Of 103041 Woodbridge, North Hollywood. I Val James, 51, o( 5137 Franldin St., Los Angeles . Sylvester Lake, 38, of 11935 Kiln& St., North Hollywood. George Mayfield, 38, of 1525 W C3rson St., Apt. 2, Torrance. · ~larlene Wbately, 32, of 347 Reeves St.. Comptoo. Juanita Taylor, 34, of 7823 S. Dalton, Lo& An1ele1. Clerk's Whimsy Not Funny; He's Looking for Job An ousted county court clerk, whose .attempt at bumor on a report backfired, Tllursday lost hi1 appeal from his firing. "Dismisli81 for cause" Wat the rul· Ing of the Orange County Employes Appeal Board in the cue of Ttlomu N. Trego, 281 a member of tbt county clerk's ltafl rcr tlvee years. Replying to a Jelle< from the attor· ney general's.pfllce in Lot Angelel on the atatu< of st lederal tu 11111 In Qr· anfe C<Ktn,y, Trego answered-: 'Not approved," and then he added , "A recent credit check revealJ a $350 bi.Won' deficit," FREE • Laker photol • Drawing for Laker T ·shim allcl tickets to Laker CJCllMI c ·Iinic SATURDAY, AUG. 17th al In the Pnlng lol • Prefotalonal polnt.iw • Spe<lol oldll1 - e Wiich your 1~ .. r1 .. Laker• In ectlon • One ohowlnt only Sears COSTA MESA·So,uth Coast Plaza·Brist I at Sunflower ~ ' ( 4 . OAll V 'ILOT Oil the perils ol polillcal cam- paigning, Pat Nixon &ays her ;reatest worry until November is "b:e\Dg able to get my shoes on oIXte l've got them. off. The wife of . the Republican presidential nominee tnade the comment dur~ ini· a one day campaign appear- an¢e in San Francisco with her da1,1;ghter, Tricia. ' • CC1$e1J, a 578-pQund gorilla at . Como Park Zoo,. St. Paul, Minn., ·whose favorite ''apeplay" usuallv cansists of throwing a 11lbber tire, also tosses food and other items with amazing accuracy. He U being flown to Omaha, Neb., th.ii week for a roman· tice get-togethu with Bridgette and Benoit, a couple of fem<:Ue gorilla$, • Whon Mr. •nd Mrs. Keith Zurn, of SeatUe, rushed out of their house at 5 a.m., they found their neighbors; Mr. •nd Mrs. Ed B•u- er, also leaving home in a hurry. Since both couples were heeded for the same p laCe, they decided to ride together. At 5:45 a.m., Mrs. Bauer gave birth to a son, and 20 minutes later a boy and girl were born to Mrs. Zurn. • Mrs. Katherine Eberfiardt o! r tiicago said her husband, Jo h n, ! nocked her down during a quar· r':!l over which television program f"I \Vatch. The. Judge granted her ·a divorce. Tbey are bOth 80. • ·-----------· Signs of tht tim11: A DallGI used-car dtaUr ran an ad for his "Nixon Sale." It Tead: "Our cars mver rtop "'nntno.'' And fn Anaheim, police nporl<d the thtft of a Tt%GI ltccmt plate. TM pl.ate read: "Love·ln." • Christopher P. Columbus of ~lemphis, Tellll.,. is moving to lla\vaii, where he declared he will insist on being listed in the tele-- phone directory es ri'lerely C. P . Columbus. A proc~ures officer at a Defense Department supply de.. pot. Columbus is taking another government job. He claims he is tired of calls from intoxicated jok· ers. The clincher came on Colum-- bus Day when Columblll called an ai rlines to make reservations for Columbus, Ohio. Asked his name, he gave it. "I had an awful time convincing them I was serious," he said. • San Francisco Mayor Joseph L. Alioto said he doesn't understand why nobody was excited when young people cleaning up Golden Gate Park unearthed two 30-year· old sculptures. "When they d o this in Pompeii, it's a big deal!" the mayor said with a grin . • P•scal Barone, of New Orleans, didn't trust banks, but distrust proved his undoing when burglars pried opeq a ho~se safe and ma~e off with $16,000. Barone, 67, .liia1d that he kept the money in a safe because his father lost a great deal of money when the banks failed in the early 1930s . • Terry ao.hler. of Tulsa, Okla., celebrated· his 16th birthday with hia first .•• and Slst ..• solo flights. Terry, son of an oil com~ any pilot, made his solo flight at 7:05 a.m ., and continued in 51 dif~ ferent planes until 8 p.m. He spent about seven minutes in each craft .. pilots loaned him their planes . • A Catholic priest In Ontario, Caljf., ~as launched JI crusade ag&41Jt 111iniJklrted *!>rshippers. Thi RIM. Robtfto OmoMl p~ ol Our IAidy'o! Gttadal.,_ cbarch, a !IP •t.llle en'"'9ce say• All woril~iJ l2 year• or older clreoo .,, Ulrt above the knee an not ~com• bislde of church mtl are noi able to receive sacra· mmta. '' Father Omana says he pJ¥a to leave lb .. algn up Yas-long ., It t.s nH!led" despite co"lalnts from pariJllboers. FrldU, Auttnt 16, 1%8 Amm o Plant Explosion ]{ills Two· : MlNDEN, La. (AP) -Two men were killed early today when an ex- plosion ripped a bomb-loading section of tbe Louisiana Army Ammunition Plant near Minden, authorities said. , The two victims were reported dead at Physicians and Surgeons Hospital in Shreveport. One oC the men, Jesse Bush, about 50, O! Bossier City, suf· iered a fractured skull, according to hospital spokesmen. The second man w~ not im: mediately ideotified. Authorities said he ~~ered 'bucns over 90 percent of his body. ' Lt. Col. James W. Donald, com- manding officer a~ the plant, said at a late _mom.in&. news coriertnce that "secondary e~losions" w~ oc; cuning 3t the sprawling ordnance plant .and other buildings were threatened by fire and exploelons. The aree around the complex was sealed off .. He said thefe was "a .distinct possibility that other person& are unaccounted for ." A worker at the ordnllDCe plant said the bl4ilc1ing where the explosion oc- CWTed was leveied by the blast. Authoriti.et said there were 15 pen;ons in the area o( the ei;plolion at ttie. tune cl the blaot. An {tottendant at a service statio·n near 1.finden said tile blast "felt lii:e a sonic boom, only. worse. Several win· dows 'Mft broken here.". F r ench T est H-bomh ' - PAPEETE. Tahiti (UPI) -Frencti scientists today made final prepara- tions for the nation's first hydrogen bomb explosion, ol:servers said. -- • ' Heist ••• Camera ••• Action The Federal Bureau of Jnv~stigation said today bank's~'dden camera, one bandit holds gun to that three arm~ men robbed a branch of the guard ' head (left) while a second bandit points American Secunty and Trust Co., in Washington, \ gun at mployes and a third gunman climbs over D.C., of $13,600 Thursday. A.fourth man waited in the co er. an automo~ile outside. Jn we photo, made by the ~ .. Toba~~o Firms .Under Fire \ Promotwn Cqrnpaign 'Encourages' Death, Disease' • • WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Tb t sura:eon a:eneral'a task force for am t. ing and health loday accused tobacco indU!try of "encou.r death anq disease" through an x· pemive public relations campaign to discredit "evidence that smoking a health hazard." ~ The Tobacco Institute called e task force's report "a shockfngly f lempeNlle d<r.maU ... of Ill lndultey "1licb hu led Ille way in medical' researcb. to .eek answers in" the dgantte controversy. The 10.member ·task force made the cMrge in a reJ>9ft recommending new ltepe to encourage people to quit smoking and to dlseourage youngsters from taking up the habit. queltion when it established the coun .. cil for Tobecco Research-USA in 1954, long befo!'e any other public or private agency even attempted to provide anything but statistics and specula- ti'<m." . Navy's Poseidon Missile 1 It reported that the anti·smoitmg cam~ign,s werf! beVnnJ.ng to take ef- fect. lt said om! million smokers are quitting every year and one-fourth of all American men and one-fifth of all women w'ho have ever smoked have now quit. But it said the tobacco industry has Hug hes Backing Off, Won't Buy Stardust Ho te l Performs With reczsw ~~;task force believes that one of P • • 'lmounted a campaign to counter those c,\PE J<ENNEDY CUP!) -A powerful new seabased mitisle named Posetdon rode a geyser of &moke into space today to opetl a double-barrel"1 debut 1 of two multi·bomb rockets designed to penetrate Soviet defensts in the 1970'1. · . Tlhe bullet-shaped Poseidon, a c "stiper Polaris"· programmed to be carried by 31 submarines, took off ft-om a land pad at 6:30 a.m. and six triinutes later was proclaimed "a com· plete success." "All test objectives were met," said a Navy spokesman. The stubby missile, keystone of the Navy's nuclear deterrent for the next decade, shot its dummy warhead to an Atlantic Ocean target area 1.200 miles eway, proving for the first time that the two-stage rocket works . The Poseidon spurted a tongue of ocange name that turned the pred.awn grayness into a moment of d8'}'light. Three minu~ later, speeding into space high over the Atlantic, it created an optical effect that made a spec- tacular blue and white bullseye of the early mornillg sky. A sleek Minuteman 3 "ingtant ICBM" waited in an Wldergrourid silo nearby for it.s maiden launch 10 tiours later, at 4:30 p.m. It reportedly is car- 1 the reasons why cigarette con· .s.u.iflption has remained high, why rying a te6t version of the multiple cigarette brands with high tar and warhead "space bus" designed fb nicotine levels remain large sellers shower nuclear weapons on targel8 and w)1y de~th a~ ~orbiditr rates . ' associated with !tnoking continue to hundreds of. miles apart. increase is the inablli~ or unwill· · The multi-bomb payload -namql ingnegs of the cigarette industry to Multiple Independent R e • e n t r ~ fac. up to the heatth hazards or even Vehicles (MIBV) -represent l. major to admit they exist,"''°the task force development in nuclear warfare. Both said. · mlssiles will carry them and will give "The public relations and political the Un ited States a significant jumf posture of large parts oJ the industry ahead in the nuclear arms race. has been rattier to attack the evidence The 34·foot Poseidon performed the and to pretend that a health crisis fi rst stages of its initial flight with ap-associated with cigarette cmoking parent precision. which now confronts the United States About two minutes after blastoff, the does not, in fact, exist at all," it said. rocket's first stage burned out and its " ... This well financed and pro- second stage took over. fe ssionally conducted public relati-0ns The Minuteman 3 currently i~ program, when addressed to the con- scheduled to carry packages oi three sumer is encouraging death .1lld hydrogen bombs and the Poseidon up': di.seas~," it added. to 10 smaller nuclear expl-0sives. Each The Tobacco Institute w h I ch MffiV system also will carry decoys_ represents the tobacco industry said and other devices to confuse enemy the report "overlooks completeiy the defe~es. fact that the indusitry pi'oneered . ~n~e a shotgun-type weapon, eaeh organized and scientific study of the individual warhead aboerd th e Poseidon and Mimiteman 3 will havel its own electronic "brain'' and control! rockets to dive on specific targets in different trajectories to overload a defense system and increue the ef· ficiency -0f each missile. Miss Universe Pageant Creator Dies at 69 GRANA DA HILLS (AP) -Oscar Mainhardt, creator of the Miss Urtiverse beauty pageant, died in a hos pit.al Thursday, two months .after suffering a stroke. He was 69. The Philadelphia-born show m an created the Miss Universe pageant in 1952 and when the festivities moved to Mianli in 1960, he origina1e<I the Miss International beauty pageant LAS VEGAS , Nev. CAP) Billionaire Howard Hughes called off Thursday plans to buy his sixth Las Vegas botel-caslno. The F' e d er a l Government wa& considering whether the purchase would constitute a monopoly . The 62-year-old industrialist had ac- quired four hotels by last March -in his 18 months in Las Vegas. Then he announced plans to buy the Silver: Slip- per and the Stardu.st. \ State officials gave Hughes the go.- ahead. but the Justice Department an- nounced June 28 that it would &tudy "any anti-trust implications" over the Stardust purchase, In a joint statement the owners of the hotel and Hughes spokesman said, "The Stardust Hotel and Hughes ToOl Co. have terminated any existing plans for the purchase of the hotel." It was . not announced why the purchase was cancelled. Hughes also dropped plans to bay 43 percent interest in the American Broadcasting Co. last month after op· position from stockholders. He also has rllll into opposition to hi& proposal Monday to buy Air West, .a regional airline. Hugh es !pOkeflmen had said they did not plan to buy more of the 13 hotel- oasinos along the Las Vegas Strip. U the $..10.7 million purchase had gone through, Hughes would have become the largest holder of gambling interes1s in the state, surpassing William Harrah of Reno. Hughes also owns the Desert Inn, the Sands, the Castaways, the Fron· tier and the Silver Slipper, all on the Strip. He elso has bought a television sta· lion, two airports, a ranch, mining property in northern Nevada and otber land near le6 Vegas. Ray Lawyer. Asks Court Dr op Charge MEMPHIS, TeM. (UPI) -Al· torneys for James Earl Ray, accused assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., asked today that murder charges against Ray be dropped beeau&e "pervasive and widespread" publicity on the case has ruined chances for a fair trial for Ray anywhere in the United States. Arthur J . Hanes Jr. Of Birmingham, Ala., filed motions with the Shelby County clerk of court to have Ray's in· nocent plea withdrawn and the fir&t degree murder charge dropped. The motion saidtbe publicity in the case was "calculated to and i& having the effect Of creating widespread public excitement and animosity" toward Ray. It also said radio and television network programs "so canoniz.ed and so depicted the victim Of the crlme (King)" that "widespread public outrage and hatred have b e e n generated" toward Ray. The motion also asked that pro- secution witnesses be made available for questioning by defense att6meys. The third motion asked the court to drop the second charge against Ray, carrying a dangerous weapon. It said Ray was extradited from London without being cbar1ged with that crime and tbo<efore coo!d not be tried r.. It, King w.. killed b7 a slzlgle rill• bullet April t . as bO stood on Ille balcony of l.<lrraine Motel. Ray was tbe object of an i.otensive manhunt and was arrested at a London airport in early June. North Korea Renews Threat To Pueblo Crew WASHINGTON CUP!) -State Department officials said today North Korea's latest statements on the Pueblo incident cani.ed what appeared tlJ be a renewed threat to put the., crew of the captured U. S. intelligence ship on trial. While stressing that there was no-. immediate evidence the Communists actually are moving toward trying the 82 surviting crewmei}, · the officials made it plain they feel tbere is cause for concern . Their comment came alter study of a lengthy transcript or ~ purported press conference in which ~ of the erew members were interviewed by North Korean journalists this week. Besides the issue of a possible trial, wh ich the United States contends: would violate international law, the, transcript rekindled puulement here over why North Korea has refused to allow tfte Red 0"06s to vis.it the cap- tives. As reported by their captors, the crew members declared tn their in- t.erviews thM they were getting good food and proper medical attention. If this is true, skeptical U. S. of· fi cials said, Why not let the Red Cross confirm it. They suggested some of the statements attributed to the sailors might not have been voluntary. But whatever the authenticity ol the in~rviews, U. S. officials 6aid they saw nothing in the'rn that sheds light on the ultimate future of the crew, under detention since the Pueblo was seiz.ed off the North Rcreen coast ,in laite January. The North Korean journ al l 1t s reported a number ol interesting details concerning tile crew'• daily routine. Great Plains Deluged BLAST OFF -New Poseidon seabued·miulle blasts 'ofi from C.pe Kennedy lend pad early. today In successful maiden flight test. The rocket carried a dummy .. arhead 1,200 miles to an ocean target areal ~ I Medic Declares , For The •• VD County's Top Record / Health Prft(,lem By JACK CHAPl'El,L / department i. a matter of Meetinns Of "" o.n,. .. ..., 5"1j..;JI". debate 1atd Dr. Albert. · l'•IDA.;'"71 SANTA ANA ~ An "Some say that it's dQe to ~.,,:~~ 1#1'~~ k=t ~ Orange CouMy .ffealtb of. penicill1n resistance, otbet• .... ~~fi.~3\:.:m-. AmtliUll t.llon ficial Th UJ"_A'"d A y did hAAAuae of • .....-i-...... H111, as w. 11111 str..r. c.,. MIN, venereal ¥.ase is rapid.J,y -....,. .,-v .. -~ ul.t 111·,.11k MN:\".. C•ll'llllil ",'!.!:. beoomirig the c o u n t y ' s society, but to get at the ~.~~r.lt.-or c1 lfamlll 1rv1111. :-~one health problem. real reason, I would have to s.TOll:OAT "Its more common than be a seer," he said. c1ir1111111 1u1ine.-·1 '"""'""'"· mumps mNiSles or chicken Dr. •Albert said that from •••-••v Ch.lb, "'_,, '•••di· 7 ,. i ' T J 12 to 15 percent of the eases ........ cm ,1J>OX, asserted Dr. . . "~1h:"c~"'u:"'r.r~m'!!I Albert, director or the in-of venereal disease brought 1rv1M ..__, N.-n ~ fectious disease division (I( to the attention Of the ~t'I\:. 11,\"w. '" 5t,;;lc~l'ldAWOr~,::: the county health depart-department involve teen-!:"-. HuntlntltDn a-o. • 11.m. ment. agecs. Fire Calls w .. 1ml111l1r • 1:3' •·"'· 11lo'.lr14tr, N1ci;e, 13712 HooWf' Sp. u 7:0S 11.m .. l'fkll•· 1412$ Golcktl W"t 5,511 1.m. flrh11r, ~r 11 .. , I U$1'11nl 1nd H111rd l'.unt1!11 \11lln A:H 11.m. Thund1~. atru(:lu,.. fl ... , Mii l'l1ml"" 111:" p,m,, ctr flrt, Ellll A-Hd '9f!#Mtnoll1 MunHllltltlll •Nd! •U :Of p.m. ThurM111, ui.o1t blJm, llffch lloultov1rd .outh of Mil" Street 1:45 P.m., 1tr11C1urt 11 ... , f7n Ak><· 1ndrl1 Crfvt ~:H 1.m. Frld1Y, 11'ucful't flrt, lite~ loulev1rd Ind Ad1m1 1:45 1.m., atruclllr1 llrt, ml \ltl1rdo And, said Dr. Albert, ttie "They're pretty good rising tide of v e n e r e a 1 abottt reporting fur treat- disease can't be blamed en-ment. They have a good tirely on hippies. No area of sense ol. responsibility as far Orange Couilty sociefy1is ex-~ giving the names of their empt, he said. sex contacts is cooceroed. Health department figures It's tlhe older person who show 980 reported oases of gi.ves us the most trot.ible in venereal disease w e r e tNcltlDg down cases." reported during the fim six l;lr. Albert \U1!ed a I I months of 1968. The figure persons who suspect that compares witb 690 cases tJley may tiave had con~ reported during the same with an infected person• to period last year. go to their personal pbysi- 'l\he reason 'for the drastic cian or to the heaHlh depart- c.s11 Miu increase in the nwnber or ment clinic for e'°8Dlination s::u 1>.m. Thursd11, 111:1<1 1llrm, 1m cases reported by t he and t.o bring sex conbacts Dr!v~ sr'''' 1nd N-rt 11oui.~1rd along for treatment. Pilot Visitor• Holdup Man Surrender~, Avoids Pen SANTA ANA - A Hun· tington Park man ap. paremly avoided going to state prison tor tbe armed robbery of ~ We~r market laar Jm:1e....-because he turned himself in to poik<!. . Bradley Lewk. Freitas, 22, was sentenced. to sb: months in county jail on a ~ty plea of secood degree rob- bery. Freitas and a companloo, never captured, robbed .the neigt>borhood grocery at 8441 Westminster BMI. "'of $100 and !led in a car. A clel"k from the market commandeered a customer's car and chased the bandits on the freeway long enoo#l to get the lice.ruse number of the vehi~ cle, Ana!heim police later stopped the car, but it was being driven by a girl com- parrlon of the missing holdup man. He then turned himself in. Freitas was ordered to make restitution to the market for ttie money taken as a requirement under his probation. DEATH l't/OTICES KILLINGSWORTH Arthur I!:. Kllllneswwlll. lJnt H~ St., WtlTml,.ttr• SUrvl\'M IW •n.. Ml..nle; d1u1111i.,.... Mrs. Fl'9lfJlll'I 1111ter1hell1 Mrs. '•ed •tl'l"ll 11tfw, Mrs. M1rlorl1 Olnoilt>ll; four trtftd. child...., 1nd !QUI" 1rtet-11r1nddllldren. Servkn, S.!11,.y, 1 ,.M. ,... F1m-. 111 COIDl'lltl Flfner"lt Hamt. RITCHEY Rlh>h Ritchey. 310 Or1"9t, Hu"llnt- IM ae1C11. S11rvlll9d bv wife. Ptivtll•. Servlte1. Morld1r, 11 AM. DlkllY Ir«. Mortu~rr. 17'11 &etch llvd., Hunlln. ton llNCl'I, l"I'"""''' Good Sllll>fttord c-11irr. ' ~ALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mu OR 3-1411 Costa Mesa MI I-UM BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadway, Costa Men LI 1-34:13 DILDAY BROTHERS HuatlngCon Valley Mortoary 17911 Beacb Blvd. Huntington Beach 84!-7771 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PAM Cemetery e Mortuary CUpel 3511 PacUle View Drive Newport Beacll, CalUonll 144-l?M .. PEEi. FAMILY/ COLONIAL FUNJ111AL ROME/ 1111 Boba A ... weatmtuter m am sMl'l'll's MOR1'JARY ··m MIU. SI. 11 .. t!nltH Bdd LE MAI f.Avi;;sn;i.1FF MOR1'JARY w E. Ilth SI., Colla Mesa .. • .. cm r Man Given Six Months In Slaying SANTA ANA - A Santa Ana man who shot and kill· ed . an 18-year-old Long 8-:h yquth who allegedly crashed a party la6t June 1, was sentenced TbUll'sday by Superi'Or Court J u d g e Robert Gardner to serve 5ix mootbs in the Orange Coun- ty Jail. LeO!! Thompson, 3 I , eartier bad pleaded guilty 1x> a reduced charge of in· voluntary· manslaughter. At the time of his aJTesthe was charged with murder. A probatioo department report showed that 'lbompson bas no past police record including ttie total absence ol. ·even a traffic citation. pn tis basis, -.Jlldg• <;oroner 'm.lpended the usu'1 1.15. ,... p:i,.. sentence. · 'Ibompson was placed on three years'· probalioil and ordered not to own or han- dle any giln.s or other deadly weapons during thet time. GOP GI"oup Plan OK'd SANTA ANA-A plan 1xJ organize the Orange County Republican Central Com- mittee into working groups within each of the .Assembly districts bas beell. adopted by the commlttee. John A. Hop w o o d , originator of the plan, a Newport Beach attorney and administrative assistant to Assemblyman Robert Badham (R ·Newport Beach), bas been named to head the subcommittee for the 71st Assembly District. Subcominittee chairmen in the county'! other district's are Stewart Case, 69th district, A n a h e i m : Gordon Powers, 7 0 t h district, Huntington Beach and George Delahanty, 35th district, Fullerton. PWPDance On Saturday The Key Dance Saturda will usher in the late 1um· mer social season for the Orange coast P a r e n t 1 Without Partner• Organiza. tion. The dance will be held at 9 p.m. at the 'Mesa Verde Country Club, Costa Mesa, and is open to all single adults throvghout southern California~ Parenti Without Pannts is an international non-proat organization ope<! 1x> all siil.gJe parent& who are divorced, widowed, separated or unmarried. For further information call ~115. MAIOK STfJDIO PREl'l!E TONIGHT 1:10 P.M. Su1111111r'1 lett C.meily wiH1 e DORIS DAY e IRIAN kllTH LIDO He emphasized that all doctor-patient relationships are strictly confidential. Tre&1ment at tllo bealtll department cliriic klcated •t 81h ond Ross Str..u 111 San· ta Ana is free. Friday, August 16, 1968 DAil Y '1LOT 0 Override Countia:n Ge.ts .Yet;i~ fqr Rape ote Due In Tustin STANTON -One year in ·Lather was arrested ln June ttie county jail and five by Stanton poUce and chargi. years of probation wai the td with operatlng a "lex· ientence given Ronald John marijuana party rln1~· in Gn.euch on statutory rape that city. . charges involving a 13.)'1!ar-Judge Gardner went alone old girl Thursday by with a probation deparbnent TUSTIN -The Tustin Superior Court J u d a: • recommendation calling for nton High School District Robert Girdner. ' ~. local jail time rather than· ia1l4. ••'ftd.I mu'i belaav!or paitern paiota a .....,U.s picture and ta the iiJourt'• opinion he bil t.,... more severe treatmeftt.t' I ' • • Kids Like to' 'A1~ Andy' place an 87-cent ta1. The 25-year-old Santa Ana state prison although he ~verrlde m'easure on the -. ----'----------''-----":C.--'----------- v. 5 ballot The tax,, for five /tears, Cr .h,. D /h . ceo~~::i~~::r.~:~ NIGHT and DAY SERVICE as eat II passed, tax bills would rl!e 52 ce nts above tbe 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M.-SATuRDAY 10 A.M.:TO 6 P.M. Suit Filed /~~~~ ~m~~.~~ Robert Dah1berg. GARDEN GROVE _ Dahl~rg said the n~w . tax, which would provide Pare~ts of a '1;"1 kill~d in a S7. 7 million over five years, flammg crash m which two is needed to ofier programs girls and a young marine ) suggested in a report by a died have filed a 'WI'Ongful citizens' advisory com- dea!h suit in Superior Court m~~~ s u p e rt ntendent agamst the drJver of a pointed out that for the last pickup truck involved in the two years the diltrict has crash. been dipping into th e Mr. and Mrs. George L. reserves to meet co1ta and Girouard of Garden Grove, actually spending at a $1:35 asked $200,000 in damages clip tnstea4 ol. $1.3:1. Re- of Albert Rex Kinsey also of !!le!'Ves 1"11 now seriously de- Garden Grove. i plet2<1, he said. Kinsey, 48, pleaded no 't~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ contest last week to a ~ criminal charge in Superior Court of drunken driving and felony manslaughter in the deaths April 13 of Diedre Girouard, 18, Grace Ellen stock, 17, and Marine George Brewer. Kinsey is to appear Aut. 29 for sentenciDg. I\ I FAVORITES Netlentl eH lecal reede,.. • 1hlp pell1 I"•" tli• DAILY PILOT ••rrlM 1•-•f th• lftMf ,.,.lar C.!IMl\t •Mi ......... •••lltbJ. .. .,.,. " ... ,.,., Ill th• U11h4 ....... .... .... .... REGULAR SIZE ·6-PAK $1.15 PLUS TAX NEW LOW PRICE I , ·e .. , ·the comfortable beer. fllPI LOW PRICE ON DRAFT e.:PAKs.lQQ: $1.19 ~C: . ' . . ,... -........ -..... "" ·-· .... -............ . •• . • • • ...... -----------------~---------------• • .I l I ' • LEGAL NOTICE ca1tTl,,CAT• ~ •\n •••u. fltc'Y ITtOUI ~ n. ........ , ..... CIM'flf't llt .. ~ ~Wit • -"-•• ... """ CMtl """""'' U.0.-~ Ce""9n!Mi, ....., ... 1"1"*" flml -9f AMERICA.N HEAii:-AID Ct:Nl ta , ... IMt ~ tll"IJI .. ~ .. "" tolltW!llf ... ._ • .,..,,. -"' ......... 11i.c. .. rftkltnCit hti .. U....t Air Bargains It~ W.19¥ ,,..... It'll N .. ~ ~ Ht. ,... San•• AM. c;..11-torM tllll. o..... ... ....... , 14 , .... ltlef\ltd WtlWr ,_ Worth $It .. Of. C•llforlllli, Orlftff Cowl\tr: Oii AwllSf U. IHI. ...... ""' 1 Nolt,., llulllle lft •rlll ,... '6lcl 5qi., ,.,.......,., -'" ltlcNrf W-.... F~ .._ .. "" .. tis the .. ,_ ..... -ti ...-.111M .. tM IOlllJIHI ~ ... .citNWlllllMd .. tQCl/tld "" "'"" 10f'FIC1AL SEAL.I ltOI' N.lr<tm. Jr, Not1rv PubllC -C.lffOnlll M~C-1,.___,..,.. Aut"'5t M. INt By SYLVIA PORTER Amona: the solutions pro- posed for today'1 horrifying airport delays 1n key cities i.s •new rate schedule which would olftr bargains lo those traveling ln off hours. ~M"*I Of'-C.lt D•llr l'llllt, Auton! U, 11. lll ""4 Sdlanller f. ltll 141Mf LEGAL NOTICE It Is a migbty superrlclal ••cure" for the fundamental problem of soaring air traf· fie and grossly inadequate airport.a, but if it is tried it will dramatize the comment of a .fan Am official that 0 the 11ubject or air fare bargains can get as com- plicated as aa entry visa for LEGAL NOTICE D•ll'I' Piiot, ...... 1Cl-41 . CtlRTIPtCAT• Of aUSIMllSI. PICTITIOUI M4Me LEGAL NOTICE ni. ..,.,.,.,.,ltoMd don certttv Ill 11 «111-l ---,,=-,,.,""=--o:c-:-::::::::::--1 duct! .... buslllftl ., l30CI Wntmlnsl•• c••Tll'tCATe. OP •USIMISS, Av~, Wntmln1t.r, C•lllorn!•, unclU ll'ICTITIOUS NAME n.. flttltkM11 firm n.im1 ol Gfl:IFFIN'S Tht uNlersloned does cert!,., lie IJ CDll-GAllDIP<l lNG •NI !Ml Mid firm II com-cludl"'9 • bualneu II J014-8 H•~Y st., ~ of !tit Ioli-Int PlfloOft, wt_. S.nl• Ant, C1llkITTl!1, llnde<" l'he llC!Hloul ....... lft fl.Ill •rid pllU ol 1"1'114enQI b !Jrm ... m. ol SEAY MAHUFACTIJRING II lollowl: COMPANY lnil tlitl ... Id firm It -Gtf•kl 0 . Griffin, PDO Wnlmln1t1r -" ol ttt. lolklwlnt1 ".._. wlloN All'tnvc, Wffllft!llSI.,, C•tlkITTll1, l\ll'llf In lull 1nd 11loCt ol rnld.na Is 11 DlfM AU91111 7, IHI !Gllowl: GERALD D. GRIFFIN JAMEi ROl!ERT SEAY, tSJl l!IU 111111 ol C1Nfaml1, Or-COlllll'I'' Dr., Huftllneton 8e1dl, C1lllor-nl1. On A1191.11t 7, ,,.., t.flll'e ...... Noll,., Demi AU9Ull IS. IHI. Pllbllc In 11111 tor uld 511te, 11enoN1lly JAMES It SEAY 111-rld GERALD 0 . GRIFFIN known !lo Slite of C1Hlornl1, Or1111e Coulll'I': mt lo I» !tit i>e•llOft wtloff ftem-It Oft Autult u. 1'61, befo.rtl in-, 1 H6t1"" 1ubscrlbld ta th1 wlttiln ln1TrllfM'nl •nd Putlllc In ind "" uld St11l. Mtaan•li'/ •dl-ltdtllll Ill tXtcUled 1'" Umt. IPHlr.d J'-MES ft0 8ERT SEAY kllCIW!I • !OFFICIAL SEAL) ta mt to H the perJOn whOle llflmt 11 JoJepf\ E. 01v1t iubsalbld lo 1111 wlltll" IM!rllml'!lf 9tlCI Nohr'I' l"vbllc-C1lltor-nl1 ~ledied t>e •llecul9cl !tit .,.me, Prln<IHI Office I" (OFFICIAL SEAL) Or•llM Counl'I' ROSELLE C. l(NOX My Comml111on Eq1lra Ho11,., Publk.C1Hloml1 J\lne 21, 1'10 Prlnclp1I Ofl!c. In Pllbtltlltd Ott"" Co11! D1 lty 1'1161, Orlntl Counl'I A11t1>11 '· 16, n. •. 1HI 1374-61. MY ~mlHIOll Eulre1 Jui'/ 1, ltn LEGAL NOTICE P\lblllhf'd Or1not Coa1t 01Uy Pllol, ~-------------IA\lllUll 1,, :tl, 30 I nd S.pttmtltt ,, -T·llttf lHI 1'2241 iUP• .. IOR COURT OP TMI. ITATa OP CALlflO•Nl.t. POR "1'Mll COUNTY OP Olt..t.MOt LEGAL NOTICE .... •-417M P·JlQI NOTIC• OP Ml!AltlNO OP ,.T\TION ClltTIPtC•Tt OP IUSlNISS. POR P•Ol.t.Ta OP WILL. AND l'O• •1CTITIOUI NAMEI L•n•RI Tl.ITAMl!NTARY. e 1 tot of KARLEEN HITCHCOCK "1'FM undet11tllf'<I, INTERNATIONAL DeJ 1.ect ' TELEPHONE AH 0 TELEGRAPH NO~ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Tilt! CORPORATION, wlllch h11 llt 1rlncl11ll JOHN R1 HITCHCOCK ..... llled htr1ln • PllCll! ol bullllHI ,, :no P1r1l AYt-. Plllllon !or p..-1, of Wiii I nd tor IUV-Ntw Votti:. New York diltl htrtbY certl- 1/\CI' o1 Lttr•n '"''"""''"' 10 1111 pell-l'I 11111 II 11 dolno bu1hHtu undtr 1t19 nc.-fl-r. f1ferenct te wt'llCll it mlde for rlllou1 ntrMS ITT JAllSCO 11111 ITI funl'ltlr 01rtlcul1 ... , I nd ""'' ~. time I nd FLUID HANOLING •I UIS Dllt w.,,. PIKt o1 Mtrlnt Ille """' hfl bten i.tf COlllll M111, Or1~ County, C1Ulornl1. !or Al/tUll JO, IHI. i t t :» 1.m., In !ht DATED; July lt. 1'61. City or Stnl1 Ml C.ll!orn!1 INTERNATIONAL D ltd· ' lHI ' "1'ELEPHONE I • AU'fUlf L · ANO TELEGltAPH W. E. JT JOMN, CORPORATION Coulltv" Cltft; c. P'AUL DU •Ors Iv JOHN J. HAVEN 111 oewir Or1v1, Suitt I. , , • " "'y"'~"'I H-' ludl, Cllllwnll S I t .. ew or~ , ... ~ Coun,., of Ntw York! H • A,..,;,._, ,_. """"''"' On JulY 1'. lNS. tlf!«t me. 1 N-OffN Pllbtllh9d Or111.. COii! Dill'/ P'llol, Putlllc. In 1nd !or the i.t!d Sltlt INI A1111111' 10 1' lHI 1311·61. COltftl'I', HrSOMlly 1ppe1rtd JOHN J . ' ' ' P<IAVEN, known tom• 10 I» ""'Sl<:reltr'I' LEGAL NOTICE o1 INfEltNATIONAL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COltPORATION, Who ••Kiiied ltle W\lhl" IMlrvmenl er. blh•H SUP'•RIOll COURT 01' THe ot !ht Mid Cor11Gt1!1on 1nd 1dl-llWl'd STAT• 0' CALl,ORNlA •OR to "" ltlet 1111 Co....o••llon tXecull'CI ltMI THI COYHTY O' 011.t.NQE 1.1me. C.IN Nttlllllef 0-1MJ7, SUMMONS S1r1ll J. Gow FRANKLIN D. HALL, Plelnl!fl Vt.. Nole"' Publlc, '11!1 ol DONNA I<. HALL, Dtltnd111I, Ntw Yor• P'•OPL• o• TM• STATI! OF No. J1-IS2Jil5 C.ALll'Ofl:NIA ti lht llltWI fllim ... Dttf!I-Qu1lllltd 111 •111, New Yori! Countv YOll 1rt ....._ lllrectld 11:1 nk 1 wrll· CommlHlOll Explrn f'f" Plltdlng In .._,. 11:1 ltle CGmolel"I M1rct1 JO, IK'I ot ltle •tlol<t ... !Md plalnlllf With ,.,. J.t.Mtl "'· Ll!ONARO ckrk ol ltle 1lloow tntllltd (llM.lrl In IM Alftn'M¥ 1t Lt• •bDY• '"tltll'CI 1(111111 brout1lll tttln•I 'OU "'" V'"lvrl 111«1. "' w!CJ CJOUrl wl1Mt1 TEN dtY• ltltr lM EMlllt, C1U1trnl1 W,.,,lol Oii ¥0\/ OI lhll 1Vmmom., II _..I'd T1I: 11111 10-Jltl wllhln !flt 1bow ntmtd county, « within T 212>t TH111TY dtYa ti 1t..-.rfll tllf'wllffl. P\lbllJMd Or1n1t Coa1t D1llY" Pllol, You .... fltf"lllY llllllf!H ,..., 111\ltv YO\/ A.lt!IYll ''· 2l. JO ""' Stplf'mtler " • tilt 1 wrltlffl rnPOMlve ,lffdlnt. ulcl "" 1~73"411. Jll~lnllff wut 111<.1 ludomenl IC>I" 1nv mor.- .v_or 111"'''" d1m1nclld '" 1t1e com-LEGAL NOTICE , •lllnl 11 1•111119 u-conlr1C1, « wlll l------::-:=:------1 tPllly to the COYrl lot '"Y e!Mr rtlltl P'.JIM.J ..,.._lldtd In lM compltln!. C•RTl,ICAT• 0' IUUNl.SS, VIII 1111\f M.ic ttt. ldvkt If I ll lltwMt' PICTITIOUS MAME ,111 •n• ""8tttf ClllM(lfll """' lfll ,_ The undtrJlof'led 00 «rl!l'I' ! 1m COii· .... 1111 .. tlll1 •um,....,.. 11>1;!1 '"'""" d II • tlu•lMll •I 2300 Mlrllol ...... ~ bt CMl$1lllM .i1M11 1111 tlmt U1t1ll e:.1en11ird COltl MHI C11!10rnl1 under ,,.,., Jll tM1 tum-"'" fllnt I w11n.,. the 11;.111e'.ii1 11rm 111me' ol TIPfON•s T,V, .......... ll9 Hie c~llllt. AND APPLIANCE CENTEll 1NI fllel 11la • Dltlld JvlY 16. IHt.. ll•m 11 ~ ot 1111 lollew!nt NflGn, (SEAL>.,.. I . ST JON N c..._ wllGte neme 111 tull Ind •llCI of tftldtnct ' -~ It 11 tol~; 1¥ Wi tter E. lurkt RUDOLPH E T!l'TON 1:13 .. lltt Oeputy c .. .-. C 11!0 ! CM•ISTOP'Hllt HALL A:oi.t W1v, PLICf'tlllt , 1 mt, ' Jui'/ 15. 1'61 U1 W•h:IM Dr, l•llt "4 11.UOOLPH 1!. TIPTON ~~l c.::•;_PH61 !lite ol C111 ..... 1111, Or"•noe CG\lllty: · ...... °" Jvi'/ 15. ,,.., ~·• me, • Noll,., MlrlnllY "" l'lllfttlfl l'\lbllc 111 11111 tar uld 111~. aer.-uw Pulll!lllH or-· Cot1I D•ll• I'll&!, J .... 9-lrld RUOOLPH E. Tll'TOH kMWll l'r M I nd AU9ull 2, ,, 1,, I... 1:1tt"61 to in-to H t~ lletlOll -NllM II LEGAL NOTICE 1utltcrlbld lo flit W"llh\11 "'9tl"Ul'Mftl •NI lclcllllWitWtd lie IXIC\llfd 1111 Hll"ll, --------------i!OF,ICIAL SEALJ J~ E. 01w11 HOii,., P\lbMc<tllWllle Prl11Cl1>1I Olli~ I" Or1nt1 Counl'I' M' Comml.ilon Eulr-t1 JI/flt )l, 1'7Q P'IJllll\111111 Or1noe C-t1 DlllY P'!lot. Ju- IY al l !ld Avtlltl t. t, "' ,... 1*""'9 LEGAL NOTICE FAMILY FARES. A new, simplified schedule of fami· ly air fares is now being adopted by most domestic airlines. The husband pays a full first class or tourist fare; the wife get.s a 25 per· cent discount; children aged 12 through 21 get a 50 per- cent di'scount; children aged two through 11 get a 2/3 dis· count, ·and children under two ride free . The fares are effective outside peak traveling hours on Friday and Sunday. To illustrate, a family of four including children ·aged 10 and 15 could fly from New York to Miami for $196.82, vs . $260.93 if all paid the full economy fare. YOUTH FARES. M o s t afrlines today offer air travelers aged 12 through 21 a fiat 50 percent discount for travel within the U. S. You must buy an identification card for $3, travel on a standby basis and avoid peak travel hours and holidays. Some airlines are offering iMtead a one-third youth disocunl, with con- firmed reservations. D I SCOVER AMERICA FARES. Basically, you pay 25 percenl less than regular coach fare on round trips compleled within 30 days. To illustrate, the New York- Los Angeles round trip Discover America fare is fl27 .85 vs, $304.SO f o r regular coach. THE %1 • DA Y EX· CURS JON FAil~ ABROAD. This year you'll be able to travel round trip between New York and L-Ondon for $300, Monday t h r o u g h Thursday. Or, if you travel in a group or 15 or more, each of whom has bought at least $70 worth of ground servic~ as well, the New York-London round trip fare Is only S230. Then there .are a. variety <>f special fares for military servicemen travel· ing on a standby basis, for those taking a long weekend between Saturday morning and mldnlg11t Monday, Jor parents and spouses of wound~ Vietnam veterans recuperating In HJwail. The long-term trend of air fares ls downward -one of the few services for whlch this U true, and pointing the way are the "bargain" deals of today. Mesa Company NY Parley In Technicolor lnc. ol Costa Mesa will be one of tbe 150 compenle.a p&rUctpaUng in the Amtr~n Management AnoclaUGn's Ed\lcatlon and Tr.a.lnlog Expo1itfoa a n d Conlereoct at the New York Hilton tilis we-t'.!k. Interest will center on both formal educaUon and inclustr"lal tralnJng for the hard-core un~mployed, ghet· to chHdrtp and t h o 1 e displaced iy 1uwmatlon. ---. --. OVER THE COUNTER PLANT MANAGER Al Smith • -A-• • " . -C- ' I I r' '. ' . --, ....... ---. --------....,. ·----... ___,,_...,..., ~ ........ ,..,,...,...,,w.;-.~ .... -... :w-"""".,"".,"'!,..,.."',.,"""'"""""".,"""""'""'"""""'"""""111"!"''"'"'•"••9!••1!l1••!!111Pt:"li:ii"!=i!!',.~~=!!:~=:z::c==:!!ll•l!l!"llr'lll!I .. , • Friday's Closing York Stock ~:¥change List • • DAILY I'll.OT JJ ' ,, '1 I - J z DAl\.V PILOT New Law Sends British Ahorti.ons Soaring l,Om>QN (AP) -'The abortion rate in Britain has gone up fourfold since new liberalized legislation went into eUect. Almost 4,000 abortions Were reported to the Health Ministry in the fin\ eight weeks. About 2,500 were free under the natiooal health plan. There are the late s t figures available covering the la•, which has been in effect four months. Under it any pregnant woman with .an aeceptable • ' s o c i a l reason .. &uch as economic depri'vation ,to e x i 11 t 1 n g chi1dren if a new one arrives ,,_,.. .,,,.,n,. •-' ,,...,. '"""'• lllroqll ..,"'"""' I.Mt ••• nt}or1 /1dl 11111 •IMI ii • /noril• 111 11111 H111Aerw. l'i,.k, lflilf!. r9' «' .. ,_ . ._.. 16c I -can qualify for an abor- tion. One main complaint is that a woman who can't af- ford another cbld usually can't afford the 100 pounds or $240 it costs for ·an abor- tion performed for a fee in clinical conditions. These women must get one through the National Health Service whlch is clogged with patients. Since an abortion must be performed within a few weeks of contepUon, doctors say, thousands of women .have been forced to go to 50. CALlr. MOST POPULAR IP«l•cul•r .,_, 1ei1lt. brilli•nl "'•Me. •I bloomt In r.J, pink, or•n1 ... cali/ornia ,oltl. "1· 11'6'$ I 2? 1 ,.t. • ,.,, 15.95$4 ., .s ••. • EnMnct1 •nr 1e11in1. Cool .•• n/re1hi111. J Ii'" -- cheap·rate, and o I t e n unsafe, abortionists. A gynecologist at King's llospital, London, said: "We have 34 beds and four con- sultants in the gynecological department. Of 24 to 26 pa- tients a week , about a quarter are now women having abortions.,. r.{any patients call'!-e from fore.lgn countries w h o s e laws are stricter than those in Britain. One private doc· tor reported 24 German pa- tients in two days. National Health hospitals and doctors are nol com- pelled to perform abortions . Stair members may reruse to operate if they have moral or re 1 i g 1 o u s ob- jectioll6. One doctor said : "It's extremely disagreeable for me to car- ry out this procedure. But I recognize this is n o justification for not carrying it out. I'm 61. I retire in four years. I'm grateful to be going. If I were now 20, I would not specialize in gynecology.'' Some doctors complain that too liberal an in- terpretation of • ' s o c i a I reasons" is being adopted by both gynCC"ologials and patienl.i. ''There'a not a lot of evidence that getting preg- nant makes you mentally ill," one said. "Talk or men- tal health is rather mean- ingless. Whether you get an abortion or not depends en- tirely on the doctor's good will." One recommendation to ease the problem -and eliminate secret abortionists -is the establishment of specialized abortion clinics such as exist in Eastern Europe. One specialist said FIR BARK Addi b111au1y lo 11ny lanrl1<:epe. Gi11111 l cubic fool b111. ,,.,, $2.9' $1.16 ..... JUNIPER n.,1r. •~" '"'i•lf! ...• u bf!auli/ullr ·"·~' this could cul the cost to about $25. Dr. William Morris, pro- f essor or obstetrics and gynecology at St. Mary's Hospital, Manchester, wrote in the Britlsh Medical Journal: ''The time spent in the consideration of each abor- tion case detracts from the time which can be spent with other patients. A pa- tient ill with gynecologiCal trouble is now receiving a standard of attention less than is desirable." Add • 11rildrtlf lropiMl t!//tti. '"'16c Sl.49 I NDIAN LAUREL Be111.iijuJ th,,da ·~· ,;~~$4.11 Redwood ROUNDS Grl'fll far po1io1 """ rrnllu .. liiie1 I in~1' lo .21 inch • 9c in th ,........,.._.. t" Mii.MUM • P. n I You Kant Spel Gud? Neither Cud Edison ' ' ' ' LONDON (UPI) -So you kant spel too gud? Take hart. Dr. Lloyd Thompson told psychiatrists at the Interna· tiOJl'al Mental He a Ith Congress that T h o m a s Edison, Auguste Rodin , Woodrow Wilson and Albert Einstein had the same prob- lem. Thompson said he had discovered m.:my famous persons had trouble with words , a revelation which "·should provide hope and stim u lation for the multitude of dyslexic (word blind) children, their parenU and teachers." According to Thompson, E·disoo once wrote of his childhood : "My father ti'lought I was stupid, and I almost decided that I was a dunce." When he was 19, Edison wrote home: "'Dear Mother. I have growed considerably I don't look much like a boy now - .how all the folk did you receive a box ol books from Memphis. Your son Al." (Edison's middle name was Alva.) Harvey Cushing. a n eminent brain s u r g e o n , PENETRATION N11rly 1v1ryon1 r11dt tha DAILY PILOT, hom1town 111w1- p1p1r for the F1b11lo1u Or1n91 Coatt. wrote letters dwing bis medical school days that in· eluded the misspelled wordJ "priviledge, def in ate r sacrafice, p h ar sic a 1, cronacling and amatures." Cushing later said h6 knew the words but didn't realize be was spelling thenr wroog. Thompson told the con- gress that language dif· ficulty mey be caused by emotional problems that produce resistance to learn· ing to read and spell. He noted Rodin, th e sculptor, had trouble learn· ing to read and write. Spell· ing even in later life baffled him. The late President: Wilson did not learn the alphabet until he was nine and only began reading at l 1 , Thompson said. "There are letters from his relatives who thought it odd ti'lat young Woodrow was so dull and backward and expressed sorrow .for t h e parents," Thompson said. Wilson's I.Q. was in fact 125. Einstein, Thompso n pointed out, wts considered backward by teachers who told his father the boy was mentally slow, unsociable and "forever adrift in his foolish dreams." Lawrence Lowell. presi· dent of Harvard in the early 1900s , at ti'le age of 10 wrote letters with the w o r d s "sumthing, verry and salor." Crossword Puzzle (. ACROSS 47 Sailor Ytslerday's Puttfe Sorveif: ... 48 Uoontalns , l Uoslt• ol Color1do Judges t I. Can1da 'Jwie Auslen 51 R Iver or novel 10 Span ish Europe 53 Nautical '"'' shout 14 Fonn of 54 Reprimands: l5 OKygen 2 words letigth 59 Fur unit 60 Sensed 1& Sponsorship 61 Harmonize 17 Aslin in feelin11 country 18 Passage 62 Opposrle or: Comb. form for smote 63 Heraldic 811&/61 I 19 Noun suffix bearing 9 Noun or 36 In the 20 Tttt 22-nez 64 Grett adjective n!ighbof.. 23 Under ~hyslc:lan SU fix hood tension 65 idely 10 Small cup 38 Wlthert'Cf 24 Kind used gas 11 Reprnent· 39 Turkish ~ of running 6• Town on allve emb lni horse the Thames ' 12 Cut Into C2 Cafe 111 -26 Ordtr 67 Waste away s11111J pieces 43 Northwfs,t 29 Ltttcr ~ DOWN 13 Flower 45 In a stalt JO Dlsllnc:Uve 21 Regret of fusion . character 1 Heat-trealcd bitterly 4' Gu staHora 31 Get up 22 Kind of ~reduct ' Jl P.G.A. coal 111e11 48 930 Nobtf member 2Stiof-25 Undersized ~rlze winner 37 Form of l French anlmal 49 hetplikt punishment sculptor 26 lndoneslan 50 Division · JB Almost 4 Having no ISlitnd of I !>0!11 lnadequatt ability to 27 Asl.-. -" 52 -Wallac.t react count7 .(0 Fish 5 Channel to 55 lowest 41 Resp irators 28 Container f!fllale volct 43 Five: the ocean: used at 56 Plinth Comb. '°"" 2 words table 57 Valueless ' 44 Not & 'Nom out 32 Fabric: ~'"'' 1 Stln 33-Pal mas 58 awallan renlent blemish 34 ·-Blanc: 45 Kllnct · · ~oose 8 Rainier or 35 C1n. prov· 60 hargt for bl~ Robson Ince: Abbr. services ' 'Service Taken • 1n • A fifth year of community service an d self-imprOvement is being launched by Assisteens, which is an auxiliary o f hi,gh school coeds to the Assistance League of Laguna Beach. Showing the ir handiwork which benefited. Albert Sitton Home In Santa Ana last year are (left to right) Gina Reay and Ann Barr. The young women still are bus y sewing bib• 11111 blankets for the home, Th' Assistee111 g@thutd toys and ma¥>1"\Ped the Toy Secitiiil\ Ol iiif Laguna j)eacll As;istanqe League's Turn· abotlt Shop last year end Ibis season also plan a month- ly S'ale of teen oriented Items and a toy sale. Sti<\WU>g off tho la~ stxre ~· ~ C®k, will!~ !Ca!S• Healy holdi a tliiiifed fUn\r amJJial wbfcli might bl! found on sale. .: _. , ' JEAN,~ex, .4M-M66 • .,...., .....,, ... ,,,. .... • ... 11 A modeling, make-up and self-improvement course and the possibility of a fashion show at tile close of the year are being anticipated by young women in Assisteens. Mrs. Robert Mar- vin, coordinator, (left) instructs Betsey Le- Bold on make-up applicallon before !be cla" begins. A Dimeo.a-dip dinner was served by the young coeds to league members and guests last year. This year the teenagers are cooking up a bake sale at the league house. ShoWing llim ouJin.. ary skills are · flett to right) llefse11el!Old, Joan McMahon and Gina•Reay; 'Little Shaver' Obiects to 'Shear' Old-fashioned Advice DEAR ANN LANDERS: I med to think yoo were a friend of us teens but now I know you are our eriemy. I didn't mind when you put the knock on long hair {or boys, most gquare midd1e--aged people feel the 1ame way. But when yau aaid you hoped the crew cut would come back became it is clean looll:laf, I almOlt popped a blood vessel The crew cut la the mOlt repulsive looking hairstyle ever created. It makes a guy look like he ls ready for the electric chair. It ls dumb to chop off a fellow's hair and make him look bald. Ba1dne11 ~mes soon enough. Anybody who would come out in favor of the crew cut Is probably 't"arlng hdghhutton shoes '°~ usiag a lillal"Cel troo. Wb:y don't y~e, An· ANN LANDERS plain th.is to him he gets mad and "\_-saya:, "ThA REAL reason we have 1uch a lousy love Ute is because you don 't have any 11ex appeal anymore." nie? You are too old for the job. - CHICKEN DEAR CHICKEN: To eacb his own, bub. I 1Ull Uke tbe crew cal Shame on you for tryin1 to put an old lad)' out on tbe street. You 1et five r•r• acro11 lhe knuckles wUb my m1rce Iron DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hus· band is in the drug business. He has been taking just about every klnd ol pill you cao lhinl< of !or :Ill yellt. At Pills have ruined our marriage and killed my Jove for my husband. Please, Ann, tell your readers t.o rtay lint tt wu pep pllll to help him away from them. -NO CITY through the loog houri. 'lben he had to P~~~ ·NO: lndll<rtmlnate 0,. ol take tnnqulllur1 to calm hi• Jumpy ptlll ... be ellremeJ1 du1eroD1, lllld nerves. Next It wu 1Ieep1Dg pills. Now I bave repeatedlJ. warned ID1 n:aden he bu t.o take pills t.o get him moving about Wt. ID yoar Rlbud'1 case the in the morning. Since he ls In Ille pllll have appt.<•111 tak .. tbdr tall. business he can lay blJ hand! ori all Pilla often mask 1ymptom1 of emo- the pills be wants. Uoul Ulae11 and deceive a 111er hit. We have been married for 23 years. beUewln1 be 11 OK. I hope your hut· Our sex life Is terrible. MOit of the bud will 10 te a phy1ldaa add level t"n• he la impot<n~ I am sure tile wttb him beloro be 1alfen a complete pills •• to blame. Wben I tiy ta O · .. cona,... DEAR ANN LANDERS : I work for a high.powered businessman who has many peculiarities but I am willing to overlook hls oddities because I love my Job, the pay 11 excellent and I keep meeUng 10 many interesting people through this work. I would hate to le aw. The thing that bothers me most Is that my boss used to be a major In the U.S. Army and he behave• as if he's still givingt«ders to the troops . He in· 11ats that I say "Slr" when I a:peak to him. Strangely enough, after office hours he wants me to have a drink with him and he becomes overly friendly. l have no Interest In getting involved with Ule man (be'1 married ancj.µ 7ear1 my senior). ................................... ______ ........ _ .... ______________ ~--·-~-----·------------·------ ' Do rou have any advice on how I can keep my job and my seU-respect7 -STAFF SERGEANT DEAR SARGE : Say "Ye1, 1lr" from I util S. Alter S, 1ay uNo, air." Ua1wre of Joandf on dlte1? Wlt.a&'I right? What'• wron1: Sbtald you? Sboulda't 101? "8':.ncl ,., Ana Lut1er1•· booklet "D1Unf Do'• aid Doe'U," encio11Dg with yoar rtqaett 15 ct1tl la coin and a ... ,, H11-adtlre11ed. 1tampetl envelope. Ann Landen wW be gll•' It ~elp you wlOa yoar prebltm1. Send Ulem to htr In core of Ille DAILY PILOT enclooinf I self.adtfrttled, -ped eevdope • I . . . . . . Flickering Lanterns Light Luau Flowers floating in the 1wimming pool, glowing til<i torches and flickmng Japanese lanterns will set the " l'Jlood at the annual luau· for members and guests of the Huntington Harbour Beach Club. Arranging decorations for the aummer party tomorrow are . ,. .. (left to right) the Mmes. Everett Ricker, William Testa, Richard Maitland and John Virtue. Guests attired in native garb will enjoy roast pig, mahi· mahi, yams, fresh coconuts and pineapple• .and other Polynesian specialties. -. Program Explores Freezers Get a Head Start on Tomorrow will be the topic of a program de1igned to in- struct women on effective use of their freez:era. Ideas and information on how !O plm ahead and cook ahead with the help oi the freezer will be offered by Mi11 Sharon Hoke and Miss Carol Heinz, home economiri.I at tbe Edison Living Center in Huntington Beach. nae program will be given Monday, Aug. 19 :at 7 p.m.; Tuea., Aug. 20 at 10 a.m.; Wednesday. Aug. 21, 7 p.m.: Thursday, Aug. 22, 10 a.m.; Friday, Aug. 23, 10 a.m .• and Monday, Aug. 26 at 7 p.m. Each person attending ,yfil receive a booklet en· titJed "Freeze It" with in- !ormat:ion OODCernina: home !reezine. Prevent 'Prickly' Problems . . ... ·"-. _ _,.. BOOKING REUNION -Old habits never die as Mrs. Kenneth l!insvark proves as she balances books on her head as a posture aid. Min Terry Lewis (left) and Mrs~ John Grayson admire her skill, one that every .model should possess. The Mannequin's Association of Orange County hotted their 10.year reunion recently in ·the Balboa Bay Club. Feminine Garments Displayed County Models Review 10 Years at Reunion A 10 • )'Ul reunion wu: The aroup was formed in Lingerie and briaht ••at-staged by mftlberl of the March of 1957 at a nonpro!it home" lounging wear will be organi1Jation for the con· di.splayed w~ the Hun Mann..,,uln'1 Association of '"""'1 • ~, solidatioo of top models in Ungton Beach Emblem Club Orange County. Or Co .. J t •--t LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI) spollS(lrs a fashion show at a The event took place last _ __.iange ,J wnthY . 0. prt •~ls 1'h. ~st way to prevent in· M d A I" In th Monda !n the Balboa B dial prom""e elf in ere1 """ p.m. on ay, ug. •, e Y 8Y and goal.I. Once a year fection froln poison ivy, Elks Lodge. Club with cocktails at 7 and members donate the 1 r poison oak or poilo:n 1umac Area women are invited to dinner at 8:30. servicei to a dWerent chari- 1s to know what thou plants join club members and Tables were decorated ty selected by a majority of look like and to stay as far auests for ttle fashion show, in pink with abstract mum-the membert. aw"J from tbem as possi-and refreshments will be equin desipis. A humorous The association meets on ble served following the party. ?'!:view wu delivered by the The second best way, for Additional information current officers called Re· the secood Monday night thOH who know they are may be obtained by calling member When, which traced every month in Keystone 1\l.ICflptible to severe plant Mn!;. John F. Thompson, events back to tbe firlt Saving• and Loan Associa· polaoning lJ to buy a preven· S36.elil2. meeting. tion. !nProltede11totonaJ ml odfels tmtive skin spray. are VJ app y or Harbor Council Movie Guide But when it happen' _ membership by calling the when junior strays into the J k J · 11 H D MamequW'a Association of poison ivy potch, or the pie· ac I I ave Q.te· Ooang• county at 534-5171 . nlc blanket is spread right Officers are MNi. Jim IEdllor'1 Mota; Thlt IMVM 1uld9 11 pr-•td b'I' ,... fl""• h:::ii:!J H1rflor Counc:ll l"T.ft,. . Sol'-la Pl'IH!Oerit Ind WI 5-11 _.....111 .. <Nlrm.n. t 11 rntendld 11 1 l'tferenu In *'-"""".,. 11.1!11bl• fllm1 lor cffl1ln •M •rOliPI •nd wlH ,_., weellt\I', VG¥r view. •r• 1allcltttl.._ !Mii ltltm '9 MOYM Gulde, c.'I of TM 01llY Pli..t.) MATURE TEENS AND ADULTS ANZIO-War correspondent views c06Uy Invasioa of Italy by American troops with authentiC detail. BLUE -Tex .. doctnr and hll cllu&llt.r .... tn. life Of a bloodtblr1ty wetternu who wu rliaed ' by a Mexican bandit. DEVIL'S BRIGADE Lieutenant 1Colonel creates a tough guerrilla combat furce from :t company of American ' misfit.a an d crack Canadians during World War IL FIVE CARD STUD - Professionat g a rn b l ~ r sotve1 murder mystery in thf1 untraditional western. HANG 'EM HIGH Marshal hwit. vigilant .. who tried to lynch him. THE SCALPHUNTERS - Trapper and a runaway slave follow lhe trail of stolen pelts In this gory and violent film . WHERE WERE Y 0 U \VHEN TilE LIGH TS \VENT OUT? -Famous blackout of N o v e m he r 1965 serves as background for Utls frothy comedy. ADULTS THE FOX -Relationshir between two women living on an isolated !arm is shattered with the arrival of an attractive man. Figgatt Sisters Claimed As Brides in Ceremonies Two weddinp in the Htlib M. Fluatt Jr. family of Costa Mesa took place within a week. Their daughter Gwen· dolyn Figgatt became Mrs. L. David Mark during ceremonie1 ln St. Mark's MethodiJt ChtD'ch, Anaheim with the Rev. Hal Edwarda officiating. Given 1n maniage by her parenta, ahe wore a white Grecian gown and carried a whit. Bible topped with orchida and 1tephanotil. Her siater wu maid of honor. A week later 1he served u matron of honor, and her bUJband Wiii an wher for the double ring ceremony unting her lilter Constance F'IUl!t and Michael An· thony McDoMugb, son of Mr. and Mrs. Le1Ue J. McDonough of Costa Mesa. For her wedding , performed by the Rev. John P. Aahey in St. James Epilcopal Cburcll, Newport Beach, the new Mr 1 . McDonough chose an A·llne gown of ailk orguu 1Yfth alencon lace trim. A petal cap caught her illutlon veil, and she CllITied w h I t e orchids and 1tephanotls. Bridesmaids were t h e Mll ... Peggy Bryoon, Klzn. brougb Ftggatt, the bride's sister, Patsy McDonough, the brldelJ"OOm 's sister and Linda Farrb. Attmdlnl u belt man Wll C. KiJ1I Fit.ch, and wbera were Hugh M. Fig. gatt m, the bride'• brother, Le1Ue J . Mcllonougb Jr., the bridegroom'• brother IJld Jame1 Enrin. Rodney W. Figatt, another brother of the bride, wu • junior .. 11er. A double reception was llvt.11 ID Ille home of Ille iirtdao' ,.,-. -· .................. ltAn. -,, llr. llld Mro. Lalla~GaldalaJara. WU ldl llnther, Stop baa Tho bride..-"~ of Guadal.ia<• 9Cll0.i and Ornp c-t CoJ1a91. Be DOW ii I mlnlaMrlaJ oio- deGI at --Olrtlflaa c.eep. 1111 brldt -at MRS. MICHAEL A. McDONOUGH Former Constine• Flggatt Costa Meaa High School. Orange Coast College and Berkshire Christian College. = wiU enter tbe mission upon the.1r graduation -BOC. • . • McDonough, who wilt bt serving his tour of duty lf1 Vietnam. is a graduat@ of Costa rtfesa High School and OCC. the same alma maters of his bride. ~ THE GRADUATE -Comic satire of a young man who breaks out of t h e material,istic world of his elders. l!AM MERHEAD Undercover -agent Is assigned by the British to thwart a sadistic villaio's attempt to steal vital missile information. POOR COW -S or di d drama of girl '\\>bo faces a i&amy existence-in English slums. next to a poison oak tree -The annual invitational a limit of 30 couples. Aapegren, president; Mrs. Kenneth Hlnsvark, v i c e here ii what to do., advises Jack and Jill foursome After a day of golf at the president; Mrs. J 0 h n Helen Becker· University of tournament is scheduled to • lrvlne Coast Country Club G r v 1 Q n , COlTespooding Nebraska Extension health be A 8 'th " education specialist: gin Sunday, ug. l, w1 the women's group ll'Jd secretary; Miss Joy Wash tborougbly w it h auests will enjoy dinner and McFiarlane, record in g soap and water, then with dancing. secretary, .and Mrs. Gordon rubbing alcohol. Then apply Mesa Rebekah Winner< become co-boob'.[FG=r=•=Y·="=-="'='r=.====; ttie old timer's remedy of Every first and third for the following year. This crushed je~el weed {also TueSday of tile m o n t h year co~hosts are Mr. and BEST known as touch-me-not and members of Mesa Rebekah Mn;. Thomas Hud&on of n., DAILY PILOT offon 111111 snapweed ) or a new poison bodge assemble in Odd Irvine Coast Olub and Mr . .f th• IM1t fe1tur••. by i ctu1I plant lotion from a drug Fellows Hall, Costa Mesa, and Mrs. ArthW' Nil!lsoo of 1u"'•¥ •' r11d1r .. •v•il1bl1 '" s1ore 111y now1,1,1r in th1 n1tio11. · ,,~•:t~B:.!:p.:m:· ______ __:S:an::::ta:An:::;:•:C:oun:::::try~~Cl:u:b:. _ _:=============::::! For a really bad case ofl' f:.nt poisoning, see a doc- Century Club ROSEMARY'S BABY - Sordid, decadent, a n d blasphemous film about Sat.an and witchcraft. Tv.-entieth Century Club of Huntington Beacll ·gathers to at 7:30 p.m. the tltird Tues· be day in Late Park Clubhouse. SWEET NOVEMBER Dying woman goes unusual lengths to remembered. l\nne All ;·My sr.w..""""' """""" ., ... , "'"""" "'""""' ALWAYIFl•WfllJJAUTY" THRU SAT. ONLYI Horoscope Libra: Hunch REDUCED I Will Pay Off SATURDAY AUGUST 17 By SYDNEY OMARR "The wise man controls his detitiny. . .Astrology 1}()ints the way." ARIES (Mard\ 21-April 19); Strength comes from those who serve you, work with and for you. Fine for <l.ealing with relatives, put· ting opinions on record. Op· ?Osi tion tends to be W!?ak . \ct accordingly. TAURUS (April 20·May 1): Good for creative. in· eUectual pursuits. Pleasure ho wn from children. also througll oppos{te sex . Romance is in the air. Avoid ~xtravagance. Emphasize quality, simplicity. GE!\fiNI (May 21-June :!O): Avoid m i s un · derslanding with older fami- ly member. Do this through patience, ability to be good listener. A secret exists. You could discover 1 t . Embarrassment m i g h t result. Be mwture. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Pleasant surprise due as result of Jetter or telephone message. Keep li nes o f communication open . One close to you may want to make conces11ion . Provide face-saving device.' Be lenient. knowledgeable person about career opportunity. Avoid excess during any celebra. tioo tonight. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)' Hunch pays off. Your in· tuitive intellect is honed to razor sharpness. You can perceive importarit trend . Trust yourself. Heed inner voice. Accent on journey, change of philosophy. SCORPIO fOct. 23-Nov . 21): Emotional reaictions to- day are quick, s h a r p . Nothing appears to occur halfway -all the way or nothing. Know th.is and give logic a chance. Means tern· per impulsivene11s with thoughUulness. SA!l\ITARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Permit one in authority to speak his piece. Mean11 be receptive. Curb tendency to intenupt. You gain today through steady pace. You win your way if patient. Promotion is due. CAPRICORN (Dec . 22· Jan. 19): Day for ideas, planning rather than direct action. Prepare -plant the seeds. Some changes are re· quired. Key is to choose pro· per areas. Leave nothing to haphazard methods. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Love comes your way. If single . you could find this a day when much or future is settled. If married, you could rekindle spark of romance. Streu creativity. seU-expressioo. Give. PISCES (Feb. li·Marcb 20): You may be tempted to throw caution to winda, but 'RIGHT NOW' FOOT FASHIONS FOR GUYS AND GALSI • TOWNCRAFI"• GAYINOW'• CAllOL IVMI"• Our best selling girls' T-strappttr reducedl bll"ll .... T .... _.. ....... .,,,., ...... '°" llouncy ,.... ,.,... .... .., ..... 0-w.c.I w Mock. I V1 Ill 4 Reg. 6.99 Now5.88 ladias 'tugby Women's "'°"" tie' oxfords style slip.on• W«rt.(1 ""· """""' Ol'MI for c-..o1-1 clauic hi Dlotk 1114 ---fad!loft <oloo, 1h et ..,.hill.Ir-....-. ... _., Reg. 6.99 Rog. 6.99 HOWJ.88 NOW J.88 lo19aln pricocl Smart toolciftl saddle oxfords! moc-tot slip-on .,,_,'"""' ..... Men'• «011ferta"I• .._,.._,. ..... toflt. ...... ........ ,. .w..--.•Y.n. Reg. 7.99 leg. 1.99 NOW S.88 NOW 6.88 Ol•h 1h •1 In .ti ==~.~.2 wttlto,W~• ,_,._ ......... ..,.. .. ,.., ... NOWl,U ""NOW ......... lokl, brawny dru1 oxfonfs l lc h tr•ln l•oth•t ...... Iii ... ..._ .... ..... ,y.,1:z. Reg.10.99 Now8.88 ==~..-a ....."-'""' ... 7,"NOW ..... 1.a LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)' Friendly contacts to dB y could result in ultimate pro- fit You are able to throw off burden which was not right- ly your own. Greate r freedom ts on horizon. Get ready. VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22), Day for expansion. Break tendency t o w a r d con· flnement. Seek means of ex· preuion. Check w I t h there are rules, restrlctions.1,-----------------------------~ Best to adhere to regula· Uoos -then you could find opening. Move t h r o u g h know\ed1e, not pure im· pillse. COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NFNPORJ BEACH ... Caialina ;{:~!Vot a Dump ...... rt• ;',; ;: , lly ALMON LOCKABEY :1 :· :.:. '.lfi ALMON LOCKABEY o.ur,..... ... ,... '"'"" Every yachtsman who Y.\"'5 Celaliua kland during tl'i6 year 1hould take ti.me out at one time or another to have a chat with Doug Bom· bard, the aenial director ol • 0·'1.be~Catlllina C.amp & Cove ·~.r.~ which " admimsters ttie'affairs °' the island for -ttie WrJ&ley Co. ·Bcmlbard is a young, • 1 ~rpiable man who6e life is )l('..._apped ~ in the island :;;:.i~ tie tiu called home 1•.:,1~ he we& a boy. !.';~.:.\'le is amiable, that is, un· ~~ .-~~.he &l"akens some. morn-•. ,. · .tng and surveys a ooct·it· ,.. .. "'tr:lctive beach or cove lit· tered ~ pl~stlc cups, .beer cans, bottles and other · ·• •e950ried debris whieh has .: • -'&iffttd in from ofishore. ~--,,..~~.'They're making litter better these days," moans Bombard in expRtining thst there ii literally no safe ,, .'.dlSt<ince from &bore where b&atmea can dump garbage or <lebris. ;-:ilThese new plastic eon- -~ers aod'pack a g i ng • mv.terial juit do not sink. :.:·, :r1WY may_ float for days, but ~:·~~y wind up on some -. .:,-.. 'h " ·•:, \o'!"ao . • ' •l ., • ·RKCEPT A CL ES (' '' also provide pickup service for visiting yDChtsmen. "We love the yachting crowd," says Bomb a r d , "We are happy to have' them come here. But we wJ1h tbey would be more careful oi tbe litter pro- blem." ~ The WU'4 pollution doesn't bother Bombard ol\ Harbormaster Ed Scovel at Ava:Jon. The natural scour· ing and purifying action of the sea -with a heavy .usist from scavenger fish -makes dlort shrift of the small amount of sewage that is pumped from boat toilets. RUBBISH "It's the litter problem that concerna us," says Bombard. And well it might. It also should co~ern every DAILY "11.oT st•tt """'' yaC'htsman who wakes up in THREE TIME CHAMP -Earl Elms and his crew the morning to _see his Mi.ke Shear of San Diego get wet derrieres as they favorite cove being inv.aded drive toward finish to win third consecutive national by plastic cups, plates and championship in Snipe Clas,<;. Elms starts eompeti· othef' indestructible rub· tion in the 5.5 meter Olympic trials at Newport Sun- bish. day. Bombard doesn't )Jlame it --'------------------- al( on the yachtsmen. One day he looked out to.sea and saw what appeared to be a 01 • wave Of whitecaps coming . ymptc across .the w a t e r . ln-Trials vesrHgation showed it to be Rallle• fn Last Race Elins Snipe .Chanip .·Again ..-.., , ..... ., .. 1~· ' i .. ~:'·• • 1 r• 1 .. Readied ' •• •· Dav~ Ullman, 'Balboa Yacht Chib, 21-9-2,.S..1.l·Z. 11-. s. Tom Nute, San Diego, S. ""'~·14-70.J. I. Fra6cls Se a-v y, Clearwater, Fla., 14--2-18-3-7• 3-17-70.4. . 1. Buzz. Levonson, In· di an a polls, . 7·13-6-17-U. 3-70.7. I. Dave Peterson,· San Dleto, 18-7-24-1-4-4-lS-:..:14 t . E. E. ''Shor-ty'' Campbell, ABYC, 11-141~ 20-13-75 . It. Gonzalo Diaz, Miami, Fl.a., 2·11 ·7·2I·!l-15-4-77. Wells Couolation Serle11 t! Norman Ahlquist~ San Francisco. 'Z1 . 7.. . - !. Ron Fox, ABYC, 29.7. J. Bill Ki Ip a trick, Oklahoma City,'34.7. 4. Don Blodgett, KHYC, 40.7. . 5. Larry Grey, Jq:IYC, CB.l, C. Jon Joh.a.1, Ann Arbor, Mich ., 5().1. Police Work Drawllig Young WASHINGTON (UPI) - ~· ··· "I.'ime was when the : ;···yachtsman felt that if he ' ::··:'lt,ipnped his debris, two. fi ve ,. · or~ even 10 miles at sea it "• 1~d ;soon be destroyed. It ;., .... just doesn't wOrk 1;hat way ·~··..a h .y more . ..Beer . caM li terally thousands of plastic cut~· rt h • , investigation 17 Yachts to Vie • in ' N e·wport Harbor FBI Dtrectior J, Edgar Hoowr told the 82nd session of ttle FBI Nat i onal Academy Monday law en· forcement was the vanguard in the Amez-ican war ag&inlt lawlesooess. W•ning there .are stag- gering JW(>blems in com· bating crime, Hoover took note oi. the fact that "law enforcement is m a kl n g great strides toward pro- :ftssioaali.wn and· attncting an lncreaq number of young men.'' ,eunctured on ooly .one .end ,; 7WllI float for hour5. Capped ·~··'bottles will float forever. . ~--.Plastic g_arbage receptacle'S ·····ttumped1tt sea-will either go ;., Deck to Catalina. or follow :: . .Ybu. home -eventually r 1'~or ttiese re&'6ons many '.~: .• ~Qt. the yacht clubs which ... : ·oltue coves on ttie island· .. ,"J\s>w provide g a r b a g e · ·~kups so that 1t can be , : ·:,taken a.shore and disposed 1:. :~·:tn a promper mam_er. ..... ,SOme of the cove operators ' J;. .. ...,. ..... ,. - showed that the cups bore the insignia of the Catalina steamship co. The <>eean may have been white but the air waS blue W1leri. Born·· bard hustled ashore at Avalon and showed th9S6 reponisible the evidence. From tllen. on there was no more dumping of rubbish from the S. S. Avalon or other passenger bOats . Bombird's. friendly word of advice: Et-l!her send your rubbish and garbage ashore at Oatalina (by boa) or keep it.aboard until you can dispose of. it on shore at home. ··'·'Family of 'Aniateurs' To Sail to Australia ,., ~ ·~ ... -RICHMOND, Oalif. (UPll -When the Harry L. Neely · :qfe.riiily sets sail next week • ·* Australia, its f o u r · members will rely on a' cor- .. ~ f~ndence course in ·,;'navigation ror guidance. ,., , ... ,w ~lo! ;~., "'~ e eA.,.. ... ~ earn as we . ~-go along," said Nee I y '"''Wednesday as he ouUlned '""Pfaru: to cross the Pacific with his wife and two chiidren in a 32 -{o o t '!ailboat, ''Valhalla.'' The family has less than : .. :,WP ye ars' S a i 11 n g · ex- pm-ience. Their longest trip wiijl the islander r igged eraft was 60 miles down the .. !.";:'c&a!t to Half Moon Bay. :-· ·They've just finished a cor- 'f&spondence course 1 n .~u~ J'IMgation. • . .• But Neely said they were :~' committed to the trip. hav· .. " ing sold their h o m e , Ill A.JOR STUDIO PREVVE TONl~HT 1:30 P.M. Su1rur1er'1 I t ri Col'ftedy with .·• DORIS DAY •-.• e IRIAN ICEITH LI DO furniture .and car. 1'1've got nothing left but a bat. and boat,",.he said . The V~lhalla's planned route is down the coast to Santa Barbara, then to Maui in the Hawaiian Islands, Fi- ji, New Zealand and finally Australia. The children -Ben, 15, and Linda. 10 ~ plai:i to take correspondenc;:e classes en route. mailing them from one port and receiving grades at the next. Magic Bliss . The stage is set ·for the final Olympic trials of the 5.5 meter class off Newport Harbor ·s.tarting Sunday. Seventeen of the nation's top rated skippers will br ing their. boats alongside-the dock at Newport Harbor Yacht Club Saturday where !? I a borat e "o pen in g •Ceremonies" are 1cheduled. The 5.5 meter Is a small version of the 12·meter of America's Cup fame when it comes to design and racing tnacl)inet:Y· Lar gest of the Olympic classes: the 5.5 measures .out about 32 feet overall .... but li ke the 12- Meter·it ·can vary accordin~ to. the m -ath e matJcal formula so long as the final product comes out to 5.5 meters. R(!re is the list of con- tenders who will go into ac· .. ' ' ••••****************************** ROSEMARY'S BABY · IVllY IVINING AT- 9:00ancl 10:30PM I WEEKDAYS Z:44·5:15.1:00·10:15 SATURDAY 1Z:ZS.Z:SS·S:ZS-1 :00·10 :20 SUNDAY 1 Z:JO.Z :SS.5 :ZO. 7 :35-9: 50 ti on Sunday: OUTA SIGHT. Scott Allan, U.S. Naval Academy; crew, John Laun, ·Skip Allan, NHYC. SAVAGE, Al C a ss el. Vo y a g ers YC; Fred Ma cDonald, M. Johnson. COMPLEX VI , Britton Chance. New York YC, J . Lucas, P. Chance. TRUANT, Don Colwi, An- napolis, Md., A Stuebner, T. Jones. CADENZA~ Gardner Cox. New Jersey, S. Colgate, S. Walker. RAMONA . Gera l d Driscoll. San Diego, John Blair, John Rumsey. SHADOW, EM! Elms, San Diego, Tom Nute, Doug De Sousa. GOSLING , Skip Elliott, NHYC, P. Wllson, G. Dit- mar1. SUNDANCE, Ernie Fay, Houston, P . Neuhaus. Monsen, L. CHARADE, BUI Ficker, NHYC, Tim Hogan, George Twist. YANKEE II, Taylor Grant, Newport, L a n n y Coon , A. McDonald. CLOUD NINE -Gordon Lindeman, Milwaukee, H. Meyer, P. Harken. LADY LUCK, J o h n Mar1hall, Stamford, Conn., C. Ford, W. Hickel. LUV, Lowell North , San Diego, Peter Peckham, Dick Deaver. GRASS , Elliott 0 Id a k , New York, J. Murdock, rt. Kobrick. FUGITIVE·, Warren Parker. NHYC, .M. Parker, D. Parker. NEMESIS, Ted Turner, Atlanta, Ga., J. Markley, M. Shumway. FINAL GROOMING-Al Cassel'• new Bruce King· desi~ntd. 5.5 meter Savage, gets final going-over at Lido Shipyard by Joe Minney before starting com· petition in 5.5 Olympic trials. 33 Catamarans to Sail For U.S. Title at KHYC mont, Warren Ted Mostier. The JMoot Miller, and P&clflc Catamaran Is one ci the fastest mult.ihulJs for iU 1ize ever bu.UL rv.,. _. AAMCO ~ --hft 10,000 trlMl'Tl'"i..t ,,..,,..... YIN I« fr" towlflf, • ,,_._. .meek. feet, efficient M• t ic• •••t ti,_. HI Jvu -lftY. AM "wtttt MMCO, Y9'll" '""""'...._. -M '""9otMI "° .,., IOO ANl/00 e.- *11 co•lt te •-t. · E"'7 l'l'llnvte _, • 1111. ...... -~··· . • •• COSTA MESA · 1141 ....,.,. 11. """'"' Garden GroYe n41 o.,.. .,...,. ''" ...... ...._ S.nt• An• . ., m a. l'lnl 'L ............ "7401 c ·.rQ r;l -,• '\,([ ~'-··· Golfers Attention! ~1 . ' t There ii a beauwui well ! groomed, 18 Hol• Golf : ******************••············· Coune with ocean -.., : -OP!lN TO THE PUBLIC i EVERY EVENING AT ••• 8:00 and 10:00 PM AT Hl•WAY 39 DRIVE-IN THE GRADUATE AT SAii JUAN HlllS (OIJllllY CUii : ' . ~ Just Eut of :Santa Ana Freeway in San Juan : CopiJtrano. Tut Volle Rd. 0< San JUOD C1Mk I lurn<>ff. DRIVING RANGE & SNACK IAI · ' OP'EN nu DAlK · Lunch & Bar Focllltlet • • • • 11 Holtl 9 -: Green f.e. ....• , , ••••••.••• , $.1.0I Q.00 : llfftrk C.rtt • • • • . . • • • . •.• • . • ~00 .... : • tompltta llne of Goll Equtpmeut and 10 z 11 DdlL ~ ! Slllrday, Salldly ' HolltllJ hits 11 Holao· 9 Helto GNtn ,_ .......... , • , • . .. $.!.00 12.JO After I p.m. ••••.•.••••.• , • • J.00 2.00 lltctrlc '"'' ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ••• ,, 7.00 4.00 i i • • "'Mt fer a ... rv1tlon1 493-1167 er 137-.0361 _: ~ L-• by """'lntmlftl I • ! { -~. • • • . . . • • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE .. ~. . . (. . .. ~ ......... •• • A Danger to Health? Where public health and safety are concerned, caution la the proper policy. Residents of Arch Be~ch Height. have made a con- vincing case that a virtual bog of cesspools may be en. dangering the health and safety of their neighborhood. Philip D. M11f, chairman prc>Um of the property owners organization set forth these argwnents ill a letter to the City Councll: · -Home building on narrow lot. has resulted In rows of cesspools spaced about 20 feet apart. -The county determined nearly six years ago, before city anne.zation, that cesspool density bad reached saturation. -County requirements for cesspool installation were more stringent than the city's, sometimes requir- ing two or more for a single dwelling. City standards permit a single cesspool to serve three bathrooms and a kitclien garbage c!Uposal. -Older cesspools are leaking into other cesspools, Into the streets and out above ground. -Building of driveways and even foundations on top of or in close proximity to cesspools could cawe collapse. -The shale and clay earth does not have the ab- sorbability needed for high density of cesspools. Finally, there is the alarming testimony of resi- dent Robert Kellogg that when be built his home six years ago and Arch Beach Heights was still under county jurisdiction he was required to sink three holes for cesspools 97 feet deep. 1'te said builders are now allowed to punch down one hole 53 feet. ''Has the larld become more porous since we joined the city,•• be asked. That's a good question. And likely that's why the Orange County Health Depa-en! agreed lo survey the danger. Now ii ii not certain bow long the Health Depart· Why Women Outnumhe·r Men By NORMAN NIXON, M.D. Every single girl knows there are more women around than men. Last January the U.S. Census Bureau reported there were only 96.7 males for every 100 females. Today there is • surplus or at least 8 million females. Until the lMO's, however, men were in tbe majority. Paradoxically, 106 boys are born to every 100 girls. But from lnlancy to the oldest age bracket.a, the death rate for males far exceeds that for females. Nearly three boys die for every two girl.I. At 21, two young men die for every young woman. At 35, 1.400 men die for every 1,000 women; at 55, the ratio is 1,800 t.o 1,000. Why? Anthropologist Ashley Mon- tagu in a new revised edition ol his book "Tile Natural Superiority Of Women" says: "The evidence ls clear, from the constitutional standpoint, that woman is the stronger sex; the natural superiority of women is a biological fact." OBVIOUSLY, WHEN our country b at war, many young men are killed v.·hile in military service, But at any time in our large cities, seven times more men than women are victims of liomicide and three times as many men of suicide. More important, more men than women succumb to heart di sease, circulatory ailments, cancer and accidents. Also, with a higher metabolic rate, men burn out raster than women. Undoubtedly, emotions play an im- portant role in shortening the lives of many men. Outwardly, \VOmen are more emotional but they are less like· Jy to require admission to a psychiatric hospital. By crying, com· plaining, criticizing, and chatting endlessly on the telephone, they get their feelings out. On the other hand, men pretend to be stoical, im· perturbable and cool -at great cost to their peace of mind a n d physiological functioning. GENETICISTS BELIEVE th e female's XX ch r om o s o m e com· bination, as opposed to the male's XY, is partially responsible. Only males \uffer from hemophilia and other ht>reditary dl.sea,es 'which are Everyday ~bl~ transmitted solely through the female. And girl babies are less llkely t.o ln· herit many gene-tranmiitted defects which may lead to crippling and klllc ing diseasea later in life. With many more widows , divorcees and spinsters now compeUng Jor the available men after 35, the .structure of our society will continue to change. The Puritan ethic, so long the dominant moral force in the U.S., ail.ready is dead or dying. Most ministers no longer sermonize on sex· ual transgressions as the predominant sin. OBVIOUSLY, THE new sex freedom in the U.S. does not necessarily set people free. But many women without hll3bands no longer are inhibited in ex· pressing their sexual d r i v e s . Regardless of age, the old taboos are disappearing and the double standard no longer holds, even for married women. Many of them, more realistic than their mothers and grandmothers, are less apt to run to the divorce court if they learn that their husbands have been cheating. For as women grow older and the surplus of women over men continues to rise, the rivalry for a man's love may become blatant. A good man, or indeed any eligible man. iS hard to rind! A CORNELL PROFESSOR ol nutri· tion, with tongue in cheek, has sug- geri.ed a remedy, "One way to re- equalize the male-female life span is for women to drink more. worry more, smoke more, exercise less, sleep less. eat more candy, butter and ice cream,'' says the professor. But, unfortunately, there appears to be no cure for this ever-increasing dilemma. We can only empathize with Rex Harrison when he played Henry Higgins and sang plaintively, "Why can't a woman be more like a man?" Vice Presidential Choice . The office of vice.president has become too important for either the Republicans or Democrals to settle for less than nomJnees fully qualified to move up to the presidency. Eight times in U. S. hi$tory. the vice·presi· dent.ha1•btcome president. Since 1900, nlDt of 12 presidents have died in of· flee, been assassinated, been targets ot attempted assassination, or been subject to 5erious Illness. A VETERAN journalist, Roscoe Drummond, has written that "in every n&tional coaventJon 1 have covered .mo. 19'0, there hat not bttn a vice· ptt:GdeuU.al nomlnet oa tUber ticket ~ be?UN d .hiJ fitness to suc-..1 to the prealdency. He lw been plcbd to hol•DCf lbe Ucbt, to please ,_., to •ppeut others, « to unlte tho party. )lilt never primarily becauaa be WU q...utied." Ptrhapo Drlllilmond bu ·overs1•ted his ar,pment somewhlt. Tbere bave betn q u a I l I I o d vfct-prolidentlal .nom1-. ONCEJS R E I. AT I V J.i. Y IDl!I· Guest Editorial nilicant office, the vice·presidenCy a s' filled by such men as Richard Nixon, Lyndon J ohnson and liubert llum· phrey has grown in importance. More and more responsibilities have been given vlce-pre!iidents -and m o r e will be assigned as the burdens of the president, any president . grow. More and more, the Vice-prtsidency -as demonstr•ted by Nixon and Humphrey -has become an important route to presidential nominations. The American voter should be watdtlng not only b6w the two part.I.es make nominations for the top office, but also the lmportllnce the p.artie1 at· tech t.o the s e c o n d spot on the.lr Uckcta. Qualific1tions -and not such irrelevant factors as party sen\ice. geography and poUtical reward - should be the principal tngredlent lo the aelectlon. menl survey will take. Jn the meantime, property own. ers bave asked the city of Laguna Beach for a mora., torlum on building to assure the situation is not made worse. The city's answer was no moratorium until Health ~artme.ot findings are in. In eUect, the city is saying let 1 not panic, there have been no dire consequences thus far, let's chance it awhUe longer. Perhaps the residents are being alannists. After all, typhoid epidemics are not very common and cave. ins or slides are not the most likely happenings during the dry time of the year. Be that as it may, the city's answer is not exactly reassuring to the property owners. It is their healt.h and 1afety .at stake. 'Leave the Politics to Us' Laguna Beach Mayor Glenn Vedder was absolutely right when be advised city planning commissioners to be purists and leave politics to city councilmen. The system works best, be suggested, when plan- ners adhere strictly to the city building code and don't try to second guess councilmen. If there is a political policy decision to be made, councilmen can do it w)J.en they get the matter on appeal. Vedder, once a planning commission chairman, un· derstands the difference in the two jobs. Councilmen are elected by the people to be responsive to them. Planners are not elected. They are appointed to enforce and interpret a body of city regu1ations. Their job is as strictly defined as, for instance, the job of police, who are not expected to make exc~ptions to the law. So planner<, be purists. L Democratic Facilities Were Inadequate Front Runner ~" . . ls Cautious WASHINGTON -One of the stranger aspects of a strange political campaign is that the major presiden· tial candidates should be judged by the vice presideots tbey keep. This may be due to the lack of ~cision in issue6 between Richard M. Nixon and Hubert H. Humphrey. The issues, such as they are, waader olf int"o political impressionism. One sees in either candidilte what he wishe6 to see. The first major decision of a presidential candidate, picking his running mate, therefore tends to be a decisive test or the difference between the major candidates. Humphrey is about to be tested to see how much different he 11 from the ' old Humphrey and how much different he is from Nixon. The old Humphrey was a fast.talking reformer. He could have called to his side any one of a number o( like-minded liberals without the ruck of an eye. THE NEW HUMPHREY is a more cautious fellow, tempered by ez. perience, it you like, and very aware that his problem ls not 60 different from Nixon's. This is why Humphrey would 1ook toward an ex-governor of Norlti Carolina, Terry Sanford, as a compromise like Nixon's choice ot Gov . Ted Agnew of Maryland. Ruling Teddy Kennedy out ol the running hy his own choice. the Ken· nedyites in the party would be happier with Ambassador to France Sargent Shriver. But that would be like letting the mantle f'all on Mayor Lindsay in the Republican P.arty. Shriver would also bring with him all the vulnerabili· ty of the mistakes and bad publicity of the t>overty program. Humphrey now also has to consider Sen. George McGf>vern of South Dakota, a pacifistic former World War JI bomber pilot , who has projected himself as the "third force " presiden- tial candidate, bound to drain off some of Sen. Eugene· McCarthy's com· passionate suwart. McGOVERN AND Humphrey both originated in South Dakota, which seems to a great many people on either ol the populous coasts to be a rather remote birth.pliree for presidents. But perhaps sectional balance on presidential tickets is a casualty of the pluralistic society. There· is no law or precedent which says that t h e vice.presidential nominee has to come from a big state. There are two Hugheses -Gov. Richard Hugbe1 of New Jersey, and Gov. Harold H1.1ghe1 of Iowa. Richard is a Johnsooite. Harold i.s attracted by the "third force." Boen are good men in their different ways. Neither would do harm to tbe Humphrey ticket. At Miami Beach Nixon had t-0 satisfy North Carolina and other soiatiern states beJd 00 the line by Sen. Strom 'l'burmood, Sen. John Tower or .:rexes, £nd Sen. Howard Ba.leer Of Ten. necsee. In Cldcago Homphrey, ti he l1 prud~t, will have to do aomething to salvage Texas for Utt Democratic ticket. Wltllout Lyndoo John<oo, John F. Kenoed1 'll<lUld unquestionably hive lolt Teias, other southern states and tht electloo In 1880. NOR111ERN UBERAUI will 1fmply have to ad,Jult tbomselve1 to this klt.1 or give up any pretense of rel&m ....,I the 1963 eleotloo. Thi• Is no1 an ·-OD lil<ely 1" be WOii by f1amJDC deflanct " Ill• aid order. Praises .Pop Festival Crowd 1 To the Editor: Mth<Jugh . we live <>Illy a few block6 from ttie Orange County Fairgrounds, there was such a lack of noise on THAT Saturday evening we forgot the Pop Festival was in progress a n d headed for South Coast Plaza. The traffic wu dense and the roadside was filled with walking festival-goers, but the groups we saw seemed merely weary, not belligerent, nor "animals." Despite the hot weather and con· fusion of traffic, the police and the majority of tbose desiring to enjoy a musical festival kept their composure and derserve hearty commendation. Large-scale events usually attract some undesirable individuals, but such individuals do not necessarily come from any one age group. I WOULD LIKE to comment on several possible oversights by those running the festival: Insufficient drinking water facilities, soft drink and food stund.s inside the fairgrounds; haphazard provisions for those planning to stay overnight; were there enough avallable s a n i t a r y facilities? Could some of the roadside litter have been avoided by strategic placement of containers?; we saw only one overflowing container on Newport Boulevard. Before the operators of t h e Fairgrounds permit any more large- scale performances of any kind, they might first study the operation at the Riverside Raceway, where adequate facilities for overnight crowds are pro· vided dwin& tile ear races. SINCE I DOUBT whether any young people (including lt;>eal. pepple) will •' ' • • Letters from readers art welcome. Normally writers should conveL' their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reseroed. All let· ters must include signature and mail- ing address, but names toiU be with- held on request. care to attend any type ol festival in this area again after reading some of the vitriolic commenUi printed in your paper, those of my generation who don't know how to, or don't care to, build any k.ind of bridge Of Un· derstanding between generations need not worry bu t can slump back into their middle-aged complacency. SHIRLEY !SERMAN 'Comic Fable' To the Editor: Sydney Harris' comic fable tiUed "Psych Tests No Business Help" in the August 12 DAILY PILOT came as a surprise. It should be stored with other enlightened treatises such as. "Color Blind Tests No Help to Traffic Bureaus," "Weather Prediction.s Are Not Useful,'' and 1'Med.ical Ex- aminations No Help to Health." The arguments presented in those famous fables include, "We Don't have traffic lights in our metropolis (or we don't have any autos yet ;" "ltightning never strikes the same place twice," and "Bugs J can't see can't hurt me.'' EXAMPLES OF big businesses which use "Psych Tests" because they are useful range from (a) private in· dustry giants such as IBM, United Airlines, and New York Life Insurance Co., to (b) our biggest business (government) in<:luding the Depart· ment (If Defense and Civil Service at the federal level for activities such as selecti(ln, classliication and placement of personnel. and (c) by almost all eduoationoal institutions from the Ivy League to state universities. THE WGIC EXPRESSED by Mr. Harris is that 6040 or 90-10 odds or anything Jess than 100 percent perfect prediction is useless, and his in· formation is selected only from th~ negative side in each argument. Any data on possible usefulness is com· pletely omitted. His extreme bias is degradin g in the eyes of almost any person who has taken one beginning course in college psychology. Don't the editors 0£ the DAILY PILOT review these articles before printing them? EVAN PICKREL, P hD All material published in the DAILY PILOT is of couTs t Teviewed by tht editoTs befoTe publication. Edi· torial pa ge cot·um1is are not reserved solely for Teports, commentary or cartoons with which we agree. This ·newspaper'' own viewpoints are ex· pressed at the upper left cor11er of th is poge or elsewhere in space clearly marked "Editorial/' Edi tor Humphrey Seeks Harmony WASHINGTON -Vloe President Hwnphrey and his top campaign aides are using a strong plea for past-con- veDtioo party unity in their eleventh· hour courting of delegates to this month's Democratic National Coo· vention. The strategy reflects their supreme conviction ht Humphrey will win the presidential nomination. lt assumes that the Vice President's major pro. bl em , now as well as later, is party- harmooy once the convention tn <llicag(I is over. An ln!onnal wk-force of Hwnp!lrey aides and advisers has been ad- dressing its ell to this. and other, post- Chicago problems for several weeks. The Jong.range emphasis in current Humphrey strategy is demonstrated by a "unity" letter sent personally this week to each convention delegate and alternate. The letter is signed by Sen. Fred R. Harm, D-Okla .• and Wallor F. Mondale, D·Minn., the co-chairmen Dear Gloomy Gus: Why do our local drlvm delay untll 11'1 completely dark before Ibey owltcb on tbllr be1dligbts! -Dr. R.N. Allen-Gold~mitb of the Humphrey campaign drive. THE LETTER contain~ a few jabs at Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy , Hum· ptlrey's principal rival for the presidential nomination, but those comments are sub«dinated to what the authors describe as usome thoughts about the convention and about the future oC our party." The two Humphrey leaders say the purpose of the ~vention, which con~ venes August 26, is to agree on a can- didate and a platform -"a platform which reflects the conscience, the vision and the will of the delegates as representatives of the rank and file of our party, and a candidate who represents the best hope of America."' CLOSE RANKS -The letter stressts that Humphrey has pledged h.is support, ln advance of the con- vention, to the party's platform and its presidential nominee. It then adds; "It ls 1n this spirit th.at we approach the CoovenUon, and it 11 in this spirit that we irge OW" fellow Democrats to _..a. IL The llakeo fer .... nation ano too high to ~ blind dlvbion to bar compromise, er to allo.r bttternw to bar ncondll1Uoo. 11A.1 Democrats, we must cloae ran.kl once alJaiD when our Convent.Ion has ended and proceed In unity towarcl the election oJ. 1 Democratic Presl- dent." THE STRESS ON Hwnpbrey'1 ad· ..... commltm"'t to tile port,y'1 plat- form and nominee is, in Itself, a slati at McCarthy who has withheld such a pledge. The Harris-Mondale letter also jabs indirec:tly, at McCarthy, by re· jecting complaints about the methods by which the delegates were chosen. "We reject the loose charges that delegate selections were the resul ts of 'bossism' or 'machine politics,' " the letter says. "We also hope that the many divisive a.od diversionary tactics - mass demonstrations, interminable d!.allenges, parliamentary manipula· ti.oos, which have been threatened by some elements opposing the Vice Pre!Wi:lect'a candidacy will not d.im:upt our convention unduly or blur the fOC'US ot our purpose ," ttie two senators aay. By Roberl S. Allea and Joint A. OoldlliJt.11 -----Friday, Augu•t 16, 1963 TM •ditorlal ""°' o/ th• Dollv Pilot sctkr to inform and •tim. ulaU T"'4fn 0v f>Te1<nling lhlJ ..._,., opi>limll mu! COii> """tatv on lopfCI o/ lnt....I and ligftlflcanc., bv providlnQ a fonrm /or th< '""'""°" o/ our read1n.. opinfou, and b1 prt1m.Ung tM dit1f'f'1e oieMJo pointl o/ in/OJTMd obstn1ttt and IJ)Ok<,,... on toplci of th< daJI. Robert N. Weed, Pllbllshu E-~....,---· . . • l .. es 'Y n- >d 'e SS ·t- at "' nt ill I'/ :r. or ct n- :i~ 1Y n- ,y re .D 'e ?d ii· ,d or .is X· of ce T IP • ;o e- ls at or le 1y le •• •Y " pt ,. '0 \JI Ill Newport Harbor Toilay's f;J.oslng · .. EDITION voe. '6f, NO. l 97, ~ SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES NEWPO RT BEACH, CA[I FORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST l &, '196f TEN CENTS ' ' , Blade Blamed for Crash DAILY P'ILOT Stiff PINI • SPEEDING OFFICER EN ROUTE TO ACCIDENT HAS ONE HIMSELF Pollc•man Lands Car on Traffic Island, Knocks Down Sign Chain Rea~tion Crash Begets Crasli in Newport A Newport Beach p 0 1 t c em an Officer Derutis Gillman drove his speeding in ·a squad car with its siren unit through a street _sign but escaped wailing to .ent involving ~ ·without il\jury .. Both he and the car te~n-aged *'"~I f bial" "v w~--~·~ ;.,. I.er.noon ap '""' o ~ . . ...I ped tr' 'd h. t and kidded..to a _.._ The JlijW'wa:1 es 1an was 1 en· ve 1c e • · '"r'r ... "tifiad..~-J~P 1 · 16 f lrafiic islan4t -. ,. •""••-1 ~ ~~~ .., on. iwr~o, i o ~ ' · ' "" . J\113oelrn. S e -treate4 ~d releas- IKE STRICKEN, SA.ID 'ST A.BLE' WASHINGTON (UP!} -Form<r Prerident Dwight D. Eisenhower Fri· dtly suffered at1other heart attack, \VatU?r Reed General Hospital an- nounced. ft was the 77-year-old general's 1eventh heart attack -his fo urth in slightly less th.an f our months. A hospital bulletin issued at 4:05 p.m. EDT said: "General Eise nhower sustained an- other serious heart attack at 1:25 p.m. today. Prior to thi8 attack the ge1ttral was feeling well, wru tn ex· cellent spirits aJ1d had been progrts&- ing satisfactorily. "His condition at tl1is report is 1table. Tl~e doctors interpret this «pisod.e as serious, but have not yeL appra~ed its full cansequence.t." .. t. ·- ' ' .. • . 1<'1'.:I ·~ ' ~ -1 • " . •, i • " . ' t' • I i·~ • • . ' ed at Hoa·g ..Memorial Hospital after &he was hit by a car and flung 15 reet. Miss Ponteprino 1 u f f e r e d only bruises and cuts, according to a hospital official POlice ~ Officer Gillman was responding t,o the pedesbian accident about '4:30 p.m. when he apparently Jost cont.tot · OC his squad car at 23rd Street and Balboa Boulevant ·Gillman .said he veered t0 avoid. col- liding with a car pulling from 23rd Street onto Balboa Boulevard. The Police car skidded 40 feet and wound up straddling a traffic divider. Police said the teen-aged girl was crot;sif1:g Ba1boa Boulevard at 19th Street when she was struck by a car driveit by ·Chris Ostler, 16; of Mon- te.ny Park. Miss Ponteprino was crossing the &treet with friends. One or them. also a teen.:.aged tirl. sat sobbing un· controllably on a curb while the struck pedestrian ta·y on the pavement awaiting an ambulance. ""' .x . TEEM.AGED GIRL LIES ON PAVEMENT AFTER ACC IDENT Offiuir Cr•c.ked p Unit Tryint to Get to Scene J ,, •• Sal ety Board Declares Copter Rotor Weakened WASHINGTON (AP) - A rotor blade which separated in n.J.ght was blamed today for the crash of a Los Angeles Airways helicopter in Comp- ton, which claimed 21 lives Wednes· day. The National Transportation Safety Board said one of the chopper's five blades separated from the central spindle, or hub, and the board's in· vestigation turned up evidence of Tl1ief Boots Cieri{, Grabs Bank's Cash A helmeted, booted bandit dressed like a motorcyclist leaped over a Bank of America counter in Costa Mesa during the noon hour today, kicked an employe. in the stomach, grabbed a bundle or cash, leaped back across the counter and fled . Clerks at the bank branch at Harbor Boulevard and Adams A venue said the man was not armed. The dark helmet visor masked his face. At the time, the bank was filled with customers, but the robbery occurred so swiftly that most apparently were unaware of what happened. The amount of cash stolen was not immediately determined. A. bink trainee, BIU Prlce, who was ltlcket1 !fl t~~ stomach, said ~ii!?. su·Menly leaped on top of the et, yelled. '"Don't move," then jumped to the floor. The bandit, wlio never displayed a weapoo, jumped back over the counter. jerked the lid of teh box open, fled out of the Bank of America branch, 2701 A Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. to a waiting getaway car. Patrol cars. unmarked po 1 f c e vehicles converged on the scene but the bandit apparently escapcJ by tbe time they arrived. The suspected getaway car was de- scribed as a white or light colored 1960 to 1961 Dodge Dart. \Vitnesses said the vehicle sped away on Mesa Verd~ Drive which opens onto Adams Ave· nue .. 1'he bandit grabbed several bills Crom the cash box and then flung an- other cash box into the lobby, scat· tering customers. In addition to th!' crash helmet with race shield. the robber wore a plaid shirt and beige trousers and black boots . He ran out a side door and fled in the sedan. \Vitnesses said he was alone when he drove of f. lie was described as caucasian. be· tween the ages of 35 and 40, and of average build, $32,000 Yacht Reported Missing Orange County flarbor Department patrolmen today were on the lookout for a $.12,00 O motor yacht reported. missing from its berth Thursday night. Boat owner Bjarne E. Ursln, 43-4 1 Sandburg Way. Newp0rt Beach, said he last saw his 36-foot Grand Banks trawler, "Ursa Major", abOut 5:45 p.m. Thursday when two prospective buyers we.re aboard. Ursin said he had told the pair he was leaving the vessel for an hour and would return to remove h i s personal property . When be came back to h dock. at 201 E. Coast Highway, his boat was gone. Urtin told investigators. He said both men , whose names were unknown to hi m. had reportedly made payment for the boat to a yacht broker. llowever. Ursin said he hadn't yet received any money and said no one had permission to remove the yacht. metal fatigue in the spindle assembly. The Sikorsky S61 was carryring 18 passengers and a crew of three from Los Angeles to Disneyland when Jt fell out of the sky near a chldren's playground in Compton. Witnesses said the ship seemed to come apart in flight. No one on the ground was hurt. The accident was tbe second In~ volvlng a Los Angeles Airways hell· copter in three months. But the board said the spindle of the ai;craft that crashed May 22, k.illlng 23, was ex- amined and it had not failed. . Both ihvestigations are cc.ntlnuing, the board said, and in the meantime It is recommending that the Federal Aviation Administration require an immediate inspection of all Sikorsky 561 spindle units. 'ELECTRONIC PROTECTION SYSJ'liM" l.N 'MINIATURE? Demonstr'•'tor Joh'n La Tei-i'• with L...e;iorjil»N IV C•m•r•: . . . . . . '· Molehill from Mountain: I \' City Buys 1 TV Camera By J En OME F. COLLINS or tit. D•UJ l"llOI 11111 • Newport BeAch police may not be gelling a . cU.y·wide , t;e I e .v i & i o n surveillanci!· system. but they are get· ting one portable .TV. camera . City councilmell, who earlier this week · rejeCted ·the propOsed $500,000 "Electronic Protection. Sys t e. m'' (EPS), hDve agreed to the purchase o[ the small camera. plu.s TV tape equip- menl. It will cost S'l.900. "'That," says a City l,-lall wag, "is like asking for the _Pennsrtvania Railroad and gptting a Lionel.' The lightweight. hand-held camera, which is aimed liked a rine, will be delivered to the city .proba1>ly by Oct. I. •eouncilmen approved the purchase after City Manager H a r v e y L. Hurlburt told Qlem the extra money would be avai)able in the Police Department budget. Last June. When the municipal budget was adOpted, counciln1en axed the item. It was considered a dispensable item. The city needed the money for more pressing projects. Since then, however. Hurlburt ex· Sto"k Markets NEW YORK (APl -The stock market expanded its gain on average in moderate trading this afternoon. iSee quotations. Pages 10-11 ). But the number of advances of ln- dividual stocks over declines slipped to 719 to 448 after having held a margin of better than two to one in early trading. plained, Assistant Police Chief Merrill Dunc&rJ h•s quit. Be(':ause his' replace· ment isn't expected to be hired for al least a few montbs, he s.31d. the money set a'side for his1 8alilrY ·iii now available Lor .the c,amcra. CounC'fjmen unaniinOusly aireed to the purcP.ase. . , · The department, in eUect, has klst ·311 assistant police chief, but has gain· ed a piece of tel~vision equipment. As demonstrated to city officials by a representative of Reeves · Elec· tronics. Inc., of Santa Monfc~; the camera will serve as a p011ce· aid in gathering visual evid'!!nce o( law viola· tions, such as drunken dri~ing and being drunk in public. It will come with an ample supply of TV tape. Playback can be instant. Two TV &ets will be provided for that purpose. Police Chief B. Ja;mes Glavas said on occasion the camera could be used "to mr.ii ntain sw·veillance of a person in custody. to gl\le us assurance he won't harm himself." When police -aren't using the camera. it will be .available to other city departments. Properties that are the subject ol City Council and Plan· ning Commission hearings, for ex· ample, could be TV taped and the tapes run off on sell during the hear· ings. This would save much on-site in· spection. according to Assistant City Man'ager James De Chaine. "It could be used to traln personnel, also." De Ch~ine said, lie emphasized thjl It has nothing whatever to do with the controversial EPS proposal. In addition, the board said more frequent regular inspection of the · units should be required to guard against failures and the need to establish a retirement file tor tba part should be studied. Parts from Wednesday's crash have been forwarded to a metallur· gical laboratory for detailed exam.I· nation. New Dates For Airport Hearing Set ' A new date has been set for the public hearings on the regional air· port sites in the San Joaquin Hills and at Bolsa Chica State Beach in lfuntington Beach, the airport com- mission announced today. The hearing on the two regional airport site proposals wm be held on Sept. 16 in the Board of Supervisors' main hearing room in Sant.a Ana. They were originally scheduled for Aug. 30. The San J oaquin Hills slte wilt be the, subject of a 1:30 p.m. hearing and the Bolsa Chica site will be dill· cussed at 3:30 p.m . The comml.sslon felt that the hear- ings should not be held until 30 days after the second printing of Phase One or the Master Plan Of Air Trans· portation for Orange County had lletn made available to the public. Copies are now on sale at the Or· ange County P lanning. Dept., 400 W. 8th St., Sant.a Ana at· $5 each. Coples of' the phase on e report are also avaJJ • able--fbr inspection at both the plan• ning department and tbe airport com· rilission ofiice in the airpOrt terminal building. A i r p o r t Commission Chairman Dennis E. Carpenter re-emphasized today that the purpose of the public hearings is nat to elimina~ any of the regional airport sites or to de· termine where the regional ·airport will-be built. They are designed, he said. to give the general public an opportunity tn express their views on the Master P lan of Air Transportation. • "The commission is interested in hearing statem·ents from interested people concerning any part of the phase one report an4 particularly the regional airport sites," Carpenter said. · Arter the public hearings, the air· port commission will forward to the Board of Supervisors a summary of public attitudes o.n each Of the five regional airport sites togefjler "With a general consensus on the contents ol p~se one. Mild Quake Recorded PASADENA (UPI) -A mild earth- quake, centered about 200 miles northeast or here, was recorded at 5:12 a.m. by the seismological laboratory at Cal Tech. Oran1e Coat WeatJaer It'll be a nice, clear weekend if you don't mind waiting a while -like till midmorning when the clouds roll by, bring· ing the Orange Coast a balmy day with mid-70 temperatures. 'Unsheared'. INSIDE TODAY Even the .spaghetti comes with 4 cultural twiJt all mzt week in Costa Mesa. Read about shows, special evrntl and the spaghetti dfnner of Social Arts Week toda~ in WEEKENDER. Tliat's Newpor.t Police . T~b. for : Pop Festiva.l The well-lamented Newport Pop Festival may have been a ·Costa Mesa affair, but Newport Beach got . very much involved -'3,CO> worth of in~ volvement, in fact. That, Newport Potice Chief B. ,James Glava.s reported today, is what the Aug. 3i Orange C ount 7 Fairgrounds 11concert" cost the city tn additional Itw enforetment expenses. "'Ml.la 1urn," '8.fd' Clava1 ' "b direcUy attributable to the Wiux of the unsheared." 1 • . He said Nowport bacied ll1' Costa Mesa police wlth 41 '0f0etr1. ~at cost. has now been iabu)ated, to \h•.P"••Y· I~ w~1 $2',3(6,~. ai;opi;<ilng,la.tp• ch!•!. Il c~st. another 10001 lo ~II a big, Increase in arrcSt! tnat .weekend. he' said. · .' -~·1 • ' ( ".:_, ' Glavas sald arresta that weekend compared to ' the weekend before had doubled. "Etcept for juvenile ar- rest&," he added, "They quai,trupled." The chief noted that "Newriort's . . . contrltution'' to the Pop FestlvaJ w1ll1 l?e paid for. by ,tbe· citY'• ,taxp"Yers. tt Is equivalent to af?9~ one~txth of a . ctnt ~ lhe city's 11.~ tax rate. .. " L-----~~~--~---------------- f . . % OAILY PMT Friday, August l&, 1968 ' Pop Festival Sent Mesa Crime Rate Soaring .BJ PAMP.t POWW. ............. t Wbll• U.. Newport Pop Fellival may have been. tbe lar1e.st musical .-In the United States, the .,.Im• i-ate ln Colta Me1a for tbe two daYs also set a record. ACCU'ding t~ Poliu Chief Roger !t" Neth. the documented rate rose 20 ~l percent. . "However," he said, "th~ total in· crea..ae was about 100 percent." lndlvtdual r&111 1bowed. a u t o bltrllc'lt• u~ ilSO poroenl; grand !belt up 500 peraint; &bop Ultial 1IP 300 per· -I; medical aid up 350 percent; sex Offatle1 up 200 percent; relidence burglariea up 2S pertent; and petty theft up H peroeol. : ' Although the undocumented rJtes · · okyrocteted, total orr..U lncrused -by 89 percenL ' ., : 'Marines Down Leisure World Center Project By JACK 0BROBACK Of .... ~tr l"Ji.t ll•ff • Ross Cortese's Laguna Hillis Leisure World has lost a.n attempt to nibble away at the El Toro flight path ''Green Belt." Proposed was a commercial center for the intersection of El Toro Road and 11-foulton Parkway which would have included a supmermarket~ bank· and post office along with other businesses . The Marine Corps mounted full op- position to the encroachment on the agreed flight path clear zone complete with color slides and an appearance of General W. G. Thrash before county aupervisors Wednesday. The Corps opposed the commercial zone because Jt would "encourage further residential growth tn Leisure World encroaching even closer to the primary Instrument zone centerline. The shopping center was to be placed in a hazardous area where large gatherings of people could be e:r· pectod, the Corps claimed. .The "Green Bell" is 2,000 feet wide and ts !linked by two SOO.fool·wide atrlpt on each side. In the flrtt, no building is allowed . In the second, all buildinl!s must be aoundproofed . The El Toro presentation stressed the dangflf" of crashes . Tn the period of , 1953-67. 25 aircraft have crashed and ' IS ,"f)f those bave been jn or in clo~e . proximity to the 4000-foot wide strio extending from the runway threshold ' outward 3.5 miles. This 4,IJOO.!oot strip cuts thro ugh Iha LeislD'e World development. Sootllghted alao was the January 22, 1987, crash Into lAlslD'I World when tix penon1 were t11led. It wa1 aald that ""17,964 In c••lm• hive been paid with more than $300,000 still .awaiting action. 'nie Marines DOlnted out that because the terrain in the Lagul'Ja Hil\s area very nearly parallels tbP. approach irltdP. slooe enJ(le, aircraft are only 670 feet to 730 feet above ground over the development. They reported about 120 comnlalnt calls a month from LeislD'e World residents: The Marine Corps served notice Wednesday that the hearing· was the . first noUce that the Corps would re~ quest a continuance of the augmented clear zone when the 1ix·year agree· ment exnires next February. The 2.000-foot G re e n B e l t is permanent but the two 50().foot strips on e-ach side were established for a ai.x-:vear period. "When you hear the Marine Corps cue today in opposition to communtiy commercial area you will hear our ctse on the need to continue the restrictions as they now exist," a Marine Corps spokesman stated. DAILY PllOT __ .. ,_ OltAHC";I t(IAST l"USLISHING COMPANY Rob•rt N. Wt-.1 l"rtS141nl •l'MI l"ltltillil'lfl' Jtclc R. Cu1lty I/kt l"residlnl Md G...,,1 Ml11tMr Th11r1•1 K•t,il .... Tlt11r111 A. M1,.,hln1 N.911 .. lnt EOlhr JeroiM F. Ctlll"' P11I Nint11. HtwPOrt lffldl ,t,dvenfl1r11 C:ltY ldltw Olrec,_. Htwpett "9cl Offlo 2?1t W•1! Stlbo• Soultvtril M1lll11t A4drt u1 P.O. 1•11 1175 tl•61 °""'""'-Co.ff~' DI W111 11v '''"' LAIUfll a.-t11 m fl-I A-Mllllfl ...... IHcfl: MM ltrtri ~ to Noth, tilt dllltr.- wu mod& up by tilt !act that not all ctiJllt WU documtolecl. Tllo Co116 Mou police lorct lpOI a tota1 o11.U31ioun .-the 11..und. Al)out 821 of tlie hour&, or '3,200 worth. ls paid fo.( by the promoters. The addJtional 582 homs, or fl,736 will have to be picked up by the city. ln addJtlon, the city will pay the tab on -$298 W-Ortb ol. miscellaneous items such as food , medical aid and missing road barricades. Police from the seven sunounding cities which were called in on Aug. 4 under the mutual aid pact tallied up a total bill of approximately $10,805, Neth said. Each city will pay its own tab. According to· Capt. Robert Moody, promoters ~ the fesUval, Wesco Pro- ductions, took in $310,000 in ticket •alts. "1.-tvlld tht 111!111 from a prttcy rtUaW. -·" ....... a"' ol the patrol di•llloli told 1111~ ol lllnc- tors of lhe Colla MeSI a>amber ol Commerce. · At that meeting last week, Moody related to the board membera the 1e· quence of events leadJng up to th e festival and the palice activity dur,ing the two-day pop concert. ':,l can go back to the !&th ol July when Gary Schulidt, vice president o! Wesco ProducUons, went before the City Council to get the perm.Jt," he said. "At tbat ti.me, he was told he needed to provide the palice and security and estimated .that there would .be between 10,000 and 12.000 people ud received the permit." The captain said he spok'e with the DAILY PILOT'''".....,_ Star's Yacht VnkHuled The st.r couldn'I make It, but his 40 member cast (crew) finished a week-long camping trip by unloading the gear. Actor John Wayne, a member or the Orange Coast YMCA advisory boar-d, sent his yadlt Wild Goose to Little Harbor on Santa Catalina Island to pick ue a group of 40 high school boys and their Ieade,rs. who had bee n livtng 1t up for a week on the island. 1 • Council . Changes Policies Over New Harbor Permits A 90-(oot·long yacht has cau sed Newport Beach city officials to change harbor permit policies. From now on, whenever anyone seeks a permit for any unusual harbor &tructure. all bayftont p r o p e r t y owners within 300 feet will be notified before the city council acts on the permit. In the past, no one had to be notified. Councilmen on Monday will take formal 8.ction on the new policy. They asked for the change as a result of neighborhood prot.e11ta against a permit given to George Gaudin, 309 Via Lido Soud, last month. Gaudin, a Buena Park auto dealer, asked for. and received, permission to build a slip at an angle in order to make room for his 90-foot yacht. His neighbors found out about it after he got the permit. They objected to not receiving prior notification. They claimed through an attorney that the vessel was too big and would impede channel traffic. It also would endanger adjacent slips because or the tight squeeze , they said . The attorney told councilmen that a lawsuit might be in the offing. City Al- ty. Tully Seymour, however. said the council had acted in good faith and it was unlikely the city cou1d be held liable for any damage. The diacusslon ended with everyone unhappy, and councilmen "Vowing to keep affected baytront p r o p e r t y owners advised of such unusual pier permit requests in the future. Mond4' night, they will make the policy officJi.l. Four Hand Guns Stolen Fr om Home Newport Beach pollco today wett investigating the reported theft of four hand guns from the unlock"4 base. ment of Corona del Mar resident Wll· llam E. Hall, 47, of ll03 Fernleaf Ave. Hall told police the guns, two .~ caliber Colt. and two ,38 caliber Smith and Weuons, were valued at a total $MS. _.\lso taken from his basement were various stamps with a face value of $800, he said. Former OCC Queen Vies For Mrs. America Tit'le A fonner Orange Coast Collea:e homecoming queen -how the "Mr s." queen of the :state -is in Minneapolis, Mjnn . today. competing for the Mrs. America title. Terri Reich Cole, 2.8, daughter of Mrs. Barbara Crawford, of 2969 Milbro St1 Coata M't18., will compete in tlltt annual Mn. America. com· petitioo todoy through Aug. 24, alter recently becoming Mr1. California. The onetime Orana:e Coast College and Harbor lUgh muaical comedy atar Will face 50 other women In ~­ petition to choose the top homemaker and mother In the nation. Housewifely and motherly duties will be lbe basi1 for judging. Terri. -actually Mrs. John Cole, wife qi a Uncoln Dank vice president and branch manager -has a full 10 days ol wort •bead. said her mother. Mrs. Crawford said her daughter plans to build the theme of her speech around her famil y, since her great· grandmother came to the state in a covered wagon. Another chore will be prepulng a dinner for 1ix and Mrs. COi• plan1 to · uae tndltional Mexican and early Ca.Ufomla dishes for her contribution. "She's worried about how she'll find tortlllas tbtn," eommented Mrs. <hw!ord. Other tests she face s in the ntxt 10 days Jnclude safe drivtnc. inventing a pancaka recipe, gioomfng and modell· Ing, flower arrangement and how to pitch camp In the sreat outdoora. 1 ''One of the requirtmenta 11 a flvt· mlaute apeecb on California birtocy," The 1917 Newport Harbor lllJlh School araduate, wbo went on lo become Oran&• Cout C o 11 a a • homecom.lna queen and 1tar or ai:everal 1ummer muaicll productions, 11 k- compill!ed by hll' husband. ') ,.., " ' l vlcf t:"• Ille -da7 -laid bllll ............. ~ &eC:urtey with Ille Orang• COonty S eriff'1 Of!Jce, '1Thlt was when 1 tokl b1m he 'fould otod -deputy oftleer 10t' every IOO people In attendance," Moody said. . On July 30, only lour days before the Jestival, Moody said ht talked with a member of the Sheriff's Office who said they had been contacted only the day before and would not ta1oo the Job. The SherU'f's Office. because ot a limited number of personnel, does not normally handle anything outside its jurisdiction except tbe Orange County Fair. Moody said the Costa Mesa Police Department agreed to handle the event on Aug. 1, when advance ticket sales bad a:one up to 30,oo::>. "By Aug. 2, I realized how unorganized it was. They were three 10UDC mtn wbo Md never put a abew lito lh!I 00 bll'ort. Tboy ..triootlld I rew lhillg1. F« tnataDCt, they didn't provide ror an ambulance on the grounc:ls. We had two both days. One of them was running all the Ume," he soid. At 9 a.m. on Saturday, Moody held a briefing session for the officers and told them what was expected of them. "C~r moUo during the briefing was to get through the weekend, and we.knew we couldn't.make mass arrests." · According to Moody the crowd wa:a lively and happy Saturday. "They h811· ded the police officers flowers and the officers handed them to someone who didn't have flowen ," he sald. "They found out we weren't there to harass then\." Inside the grounds 19 tnt.lligence men wera 1ttt1oned among the bip- Knife-wielding Woman Captured in Newport Newport Beach police kicked in the door of an oceanfront apartment Thursday night and arrested a vaca· Uoning mother of three who allegedly Citizens' Group Backs Costa Mesa For Cou11 Site Strong endorsement of a Costa Mesa :'lite for new municipal court facilities has come today from CHART, an in- fluential Costa Mesa citizens' group. CHART members Thursday unanimously endorsed a resolution favoring a new court site on the Orange County Fairgrounds opposite the Costa Mesa Civic Center. Several sites ror the new six-court structure have been suggested in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. The Orange County Fair Board has in- dicated a willingness to sell property for the court complex and to provide adjoining parking. The CHART resolu· lion will go to FJfth District Supervisor Alton E. Allen who is con· sidered .a key person in determining ultimate site location. Newport Beach officials are pro- moting a site location near Fashion Island in Newport Center. A propOsed new civic center plan at MacArthur Boulevard and Coast Hie:hwav sub· mltted to the Newport City Council ~fonday shows • court structure in that city's civic center complex. threatened a crowd with a knife, then flung burning cardboard at them from her apartment balcony. Taken into custody for mental com· mitment was a 51·year-old woman in the 2200 block of W. Ocean Front. Her daughter, 16, and two son.s, 13 and 11, were round huddled upstairs, unharmed. , Police were called to the apartment after witnesses said the woman, a Sunland resident, had thrown pieces of burning cardboard at people from her balcony. She also reportedly advanced from the apartment toward a crowd while wielding a five-inch knife , threaten· ing. 1'Get out of here or 1'11 kill you, I'll kill every one cf you." Her children later told police their mother repeatedly asked them to get her a gun. The woman was not armed when arrested . Police said they confiscated a knife and booked it into evidence. The boys were left in the care of their older sister until the father arrived later in the evening, police said. $5,000 Ring Missing A ring loaded with diamonds and sapphires was reported missing to Newport Beach police from the Mary Clark residence. 518% Marigold Ave. PoUce were tcld the ring was en· ·crusted with 26 diamonds and 10 sap· phlres and was worth $.S,_000. pios. "They JooUd 'like hlPOI.,." MoodY 1114. "Al>Out Ille oaJy trouble they had Sat!U'doy wu Iha IAl<:t ol water." "Late In tbe afternoon We got wor- ried about w~tre all these people were going to sleep. Allred Lutjeans, the miUlager of the fairgrounds, c&lled Sacramento and received permission for them to steep.. In the field west of tbe grounds. ·Somehow it got mixed up and they sl<!pt east or city hall. Wo named it ResWTection City. It looked like it," be said. The 55,000 people cleared out qulcldy at 6:45 Saturday. Another briefing session was held Sunday at 9 a.m. and by 10 a.m. the crowd bad changed. "I noticed a contr&.t in mood ," Moody aaid. "1'1ere WI( complete silence. It waa almost eerie. There must have been 45 to 50,<XX> of them at 10 a.m. and no one was happy." About an hour later, the captain said, groups of one or two hundred people would rush the fence. "That's when we told ' the promoters we weren't there to keep their policies. We were there to keep the peace and enforce the law." At approximately 5 p.m ., according to Moody, the ground.a became unruly again and the additional officers were sent over. "Eighty-five of them walked four abreast across Fair Drive and on· to the grounds," he said. "It must have looked like mo.re because Im· mediately they cooled, and soon after that the agitators stopped." ' The pop concert, which was schedul- ed to end at 6 p.m., was concluded soon after 8 p.m. "We didn't plan on the darkness and none of the officers had flashlights. Now they'll always be provided with them," Moody said. The grounds were cleared shortly after the last performance, he said. Professional agitators, he said, were responsible for taking the groups through the fence. "One man would take about 100 through the fence and then come back and get ·another 100. We estimated there were about six ot them but we couldn't get to them.'' By noon, there were 70,000, he estimated. "The crowd was like a powder keg, it wouldn't have taken much to set it orr. Thep the in· telligence units contacted tis and told us they (the crowd) were going to blow the lid off between 12:30 and 1 p.m. At that time the decision was made to call in officers from the seven sur- rounding cities and the Highway Patrol and Sheriff's Department. "We called in all the off duty of· ficers on Code Charlie (the mutual aid pact) as the reports got worse. In the chJef's words, "It's like bu)i.ng an in- surance policy before you run off the road," he said . At approximately 2 p.m. all persons were allowed Inside the grounds, with 'Or v:ithout tickets. "That's when the professional agitators started working on people inside the crowd." WAREHOUSE SALE! FANTASTIC VALUES IN FABRICSI I NEWPORT STORE O~L y I HUNDREDS OF YARDS OF DRAPERY AND UPHOLSTERY FABRICS 50% TO 70°/o OFF CASEMENTS-PRINTS-SILKS-VELVETS-TAPESTRY-ETC. UNBELIEVABLY LARGE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM. DON'T MISS AN OPPORTUNITY LIKE TH IS TO REDRAPE OR REUPHOLSTER AT.UNHIAltD OF SAVINCH. FURNITURE VALUES!! HERITAGE DREXEL UPHOUTERY Ill. SALi •••• SALi •••; IALI 1 &.. ... , r .i.1. 209. 99" 1 CK ki.11 T•lll• 185~ 79" 315. 159" JO.JO SllJlfMfl•• 42141 l Sef• 1 C•llh!M T.W. 165. 99" 1 Oct. CWr Jh16W..&W4 ,...,, .... 135. 59" 119. 59" ,,_ 26d6 ...., ... ' ... i.,.,_, 149 6900 12114 ,_ """""" .... "· 1 0... Cll* Prlllt 219. 99" 1141.CM!nlT.W. 339. 13900 1 '"""' .. _ 125. 39" -.... ............... ,., ..... lh27 ,..._,_ 209 89" 1 L..111p T_., ... 95 .... 34" --199" 49" JbJl"-"tl........ • .._ -.... ... ,.._ ....... ,_325 14500 ' '"""'·-t hq C... 235. 89" 95. 39" -.... 14171 • ... ..... r,...,, I Cectt.ll T.W. 185. 69" 10....-135. 89" 1'9 ...... 1h71 ..... 1 C.nt.11 T.W. 129. , ...... w ..... 249. 99" M ..... 1., JCll:60 3900 I Cbr60 Dteiawflw 1 lwtnl a. 195. 69" 11 ........ hen ,_ ........ 245. 79" IMllep wt ........ 168. 12400 -M• , __ , ....... 189. 6900 t &...., ,.,. 258. 79" 149. 6t'' 111117 ...., 1 1117 f hR Up Oil• MANY OTHER PIEC ES TO CHOOSE PROM ALSO A LA RGE SELECTION OF BEAUTIFUL BEDSPREADS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. ALL SALES FINAL -NO CHARGI S EXCLUSIVE DEAL ERS POii: HINltlDON-DUXl l. -HIRITAGI 90 DAVS NO INTEREST -LONGllt TlltMS AVAIL.Ul.I ON APPROVll> CUDIT INTDIORS LAGU NA lfACH NIWPORT' l lACH 1n1 WHtclllf Dr .. 642.2050 OPIN PllDAY '1'1L t Pror..llenal lnltrler 0.1.,, ... 345 North Coo1t Hwy. 4944551 Avall1bl ....... ID-NSID OPIN PllDAT 'TIL t ti ' ., ' ... •• >lo o! >I'· •re ho ed .on ol up lie •d dy ng nd I," ?te "" at •in ed l's •• ~s. nd ng lly ire ed ... IS! m- ~r u]. ed on !fS be lly re ps tld nd JO. or he a en in- •ld to I de If· ay )f· dd he In· he ns th he og - ' ••• 6tll .BEA.A?:IDERSON,.Eclitor ,.,...,, A..r 1 .. 1,. NWM , ... 1J Cinderel.las La·sso Party Members of the Cinderella Guild of Newport Beach will he lassoing ~·unds for the Children's Hospital of Orailge County at their fifth . annual Western Barbecue Sept. 28. Lots of whoopin' ~d hollerin' will be going on •tarting at 7 p.m. in Bomner Canyon on the historic Irviite Ranch . Mrs. Ralph Berke is ways and means chairman. Mrs. Thomas Dyer is in charge of rustling up grub (barbecued steaks) while Mrs. George Cokas will arrange for thirst quenching refreshments. Mrs. Thomas Queen will see to it that a Western mood prevails through decorations while Mrs. Robert Lucas, in'ltitations chairman, will provide people to enjoy i~. Entertainment arranged by Mrs. Joseph Ryan, will include the Art Miller Square Dance Group from 10 to 11 p.m. and the Ronnie Brown orchestra from the Balboa Bay Club from 11 p.m. on. Proceeds will help support the Children's Hospital of Orange County, the only medical care center exclusively serving youth between Los Ange- les and San Diego. . CHOC is actively supported by approximately 100 in-service volun- teers who give an average of 20,000 hours a year. There are currently 13 guild& with additional ones in the formation stage in Orange County. The guilds haVe been active at the local level and in county wide projects con- tributing much to the bosptal. • . . Guild activities have helped make possible tile new third floor addi- tion which has increased the bed capacity from 62 to 104 so that 3,360 additional patients can be cared for each year. There ilso is an active and expanding out patient department numbering 27 clinics. STEP RIGHT UP -George Woodford holds up a steak for three fillies to examine (left to right) Mrs. William S. Henry, Mrs. Ralph Berke and Mrs. eiarence Davis. That's the kind of meat th·at will be served at the fifth annual Western· Barbecue spon- sored by the Cinderella Guild of Newport Beach. Proceeds from the fund-raising event will be donated to Children's Hospital of Orange County which serves youngsters from Los Angeles to San Diego, being the only facility of its kind between those two· places. Come On a.nd Get It Assistance League 'Dances' to the Rhythms of the South Seas ~fembers of the Assistance League of Newport Beach are so busy working in the Thrift Shop and redecorating the Children's Dental Health Center they can't go to Hawaii -so Hawaii is coming to them in the fonn of a luau. '!'racy Sherick offers a Tahitian dance for (left to right) the Mmes. Jesse W. Curtis, Willred A. Berls and Ray Dike. The Aug. 24 party will begin at 6: 30 p.m . in the bay· front home of Dr. and Mrs. Robelt Beauchamp. As the Costa Meoa Junior Women's C lub member~· light . the fire for their Aug. 24 barbecue, tiley "light up" an evening of fun . and· good 'food. ·Doing the work and expecting "meaty" rew ards are (left to right) ·Mr. ·and Mrs. Ron Coleman and Mr. and Mrs. Ron S tenge. The festiyities wiU take-place at 7:30 p.m. in the home of Mr. and Mrs • Howard Mitchellt ResUvationS, may he made by calling Mrs. Mitchell at 54~. The Juniors and•lheir husbands have invited proopectlv.e members and their husbands to the aummer &ala. ' 'Little Shaver' Obietts to 'Shear~ Old~fashioned Adv·ice, DEAR ANN LANDERS: I used to ·think you were a biend of us teens but now I know you are our enemy, I didn't mind when you put the knock on long hair f~ boya, most square mlddle-l(td-lt feeUl>e ume way, ilul-7ou uld YDll·~ the crew GUI •ould ...... bacll' hieilauM It 16 tleu lootbtf, I a!m_ool popped a blood vessel. The crew cut ii the moil repulsive looldng hairstyle ever created. It make s a i\tY look like he i1 ready for the electric chair. It is dumb to chop off a fellow'• hair and make him look bald. Baldness cornea: soon enough. Anybody who would come out in favor of the cre,v cut is trobab1Y ,..19ng lllgbbultx>n •hoe• and llling a ...eoI Iron. WQy don'tJ ...... An· ANN LANDERS Ille! YDll -too old f«· tho job. - CHICKEN DEAR cmctEN: To eac• ld1 ewn, bab. I ltlD Ul:e lite crew caL Sbame oa you for trytn1 to put 11 eld llldy 01t oa the 1treeL Yoa 1et five raps acro11 th buckles with my mucel iron DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hu1· band 11 in the drug bu0nes1. He has been taking Just about overy kind ol pill you cao ll>lnk ol for 20 yean. Al . . -It -pop pilll to be~ him through the 1001 h""''· Then "' had to take tnnqulllzer1 tO calni 1111 jumpy nerves. Next it wu liet:J>hll pills. Now he has to !Uo pilh to get him moving in the morning, Sin~ be 11 in the busineu be can lay bis hands on all the pills be wants. We bave been married for 23 year1. Our aex IHe · lJ terrible. Mort of the time he b Impotent I am llD'e tile pilll art to blanle. Wben I toy to u. plain this i.o him 'bti gets mad and says, "The REAL reason we have such a lousy love life is because you don't have an>' sex appeal anymore." Pills have ruined our marriage and killed my Jovo far my husband. Please, Ann, tell·1out read.en to atay aw~ from, them. ~ NO QTY PLEASE DEAR 1NO: ladlt<dmlnato ... of pllll eaa M extrtmel1 •••cerou, ud I bave repeatedly waned my readen •bo•t tbl1. lD you ltubud'1 ca1e tbe plllt bave appanatty takea their toll. Pills olte1 mast 1ymptom1 of em• Uonal Ulne11 aad dteelve a 1.er tnto bellevl•g be It OK. l hope yoar ha ... band will 10 to a ph71idaa and level wttb Mm beftre be 1111len a eomplele ,..._. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I work for a high-powered businessman wh.o has many pecullarltie1 but I am willlng to overlook hie: oddities because I love my job, the pay 11 ezcellent and I keep meeting ao many iDterutina: people through tlU worlr. I would hate to leaw. The thing thal bolber1 me mOlt b thot my hoes used to he a major in the U.S. Army and he behaves ai if he's 1UU giving orders to the troops. He in- sl1t1 that I say "Sir'' when I speak to him . Strangely enough, alter office hours he want.I me to have a drink with him and he becomes overly !rll!lldly. I have no inter..! in getting involved with th• man (be'• married and 12 Jllll ID¥ oenlor), '- Do you have any advice on how I c8rll keep my job ud my sell·respectr -STAFF SERGEANT DEAR SARGE: Say "Ye1, dr11 from I undl·I." Alter S, 1ay "No,.. dr." 11...,. 9',....Uedolet? "'8'• r!pi!' Wllaf1 _,, -,..! Shouldn't 1ouT Send for An•Luden' booklet ''Dltmc Do'•' ... n.1t1," enclo1l•1 wltli 1oar nq.e:1t S5 ce•tl t. cola attd a 10111 1t1U·add.reued. 1tamped envelope. Ann Landen will be 1111<1 to .. Ip you wttll your probl~m1. SeH &Item to her ID ea"' ol Iba DAILY PIJ.(IT e11cloela1 a sell-addteued, ...,. eav1Jope. ,\ • I Flickering Lanterns Light Luau Flowers Ooetlng in the swimming pool, glowing tikl torches and flickering Japanese lanterns '!W set the mood at the annual luau for members lftid guests of the Huntington Harbpur Beach Club. Arranging decorations for the 1umm~ party . tomorroW' are -• • ' (left to right) the Mmes. Everett Ricker, William Testa, Richard Maitl8.nd and John Virtue. Guests attired in native garb will enjoy roast pig, mahi- mahi, yams, fresh coconuts and pineapples and other Polynesian specialties. Harbor Counci .I Movie Guide (Edltlil"1 Mote; Tlll1 movie ~ulde Is rf.~~ed C~nc'/r t1f';:~ ~'." 'lt':oe~l $«-II IN'tskllnt •lld M<t. H.,I 1~ 11 mm1tdnM ctiar...,...., 11 11 lftfwldilid •I I ,,,,.r.tlCe Ill 4tlermlfll .... 1uH1bl1 fllml fer certain IN 1rOUPI ll'ld Wiil ·-•r wffll.IY YOAJr ~-I 1•e Mlklled. Mall !Mm 'f Mavle Gu!de, care ot 1'lie 01llV Piiot. MATURE TEENS AND ADULTS ANZIO-War correspondent views c~ly invasion of Italy by American troops with authentic detail. BLUE -Texas doctor and his daughter save the life of a bloodthirsty westerner who was raised by a Mex.ican bandit. DEVJL•s BR I GADE Lieutenant COionel creates a tough guerrilla combat force from ;. company <lf American misfits and crack Canadians during \Vorld War II. FIVE CARD S.TUD Professional g a m b I e r se>lves murder mystery in thiS untraditiooal western. HANG 'EM HIGH Marshal hunts vigilantes who tried to lynch him. THE SCALPHUNTERS - Trapper and a runaway slave follow lhe trail of 1tolen pelts tn this gory and violent film. WHERE WERE Y 0 U WHEN TJIB LI G H TS \VE NT OUT? -Famous blackout of November 1965 serves as background for this frothy comedy. ADULTS THE FOX -Relationshin between two ~·omen living on an isolated farm Is shattered with the a1Tival of an attractive man. Figgatt Sisters Claimed As Brides in Ceremonies TIIE GRADUATE -Comi c satire of a young man who breaks out of t h e materialistic world of hi s elders. HAMMERHEAD Undercover agent i s assigned by the British to thwart a sadistic vUlain's attempt to gteal vital miSsile information. POOR COW -Sordid drama of girl who facet a seamy existence in Engµsh slums. ROSEMARY'S BABY SOrdid, decadent, 1 n d blasphemous film about sat.an and Witchcraft. SWEET NOVEMBER Dying woman ,_ to unu1ual lengths to be remembered. Horoscope -..... - Program Exp lores Free z ers Get a Head Start on Tomorrow will be the topic of a rprogram designed to in- struct wo?Qn on effecUve use of their freezers. Ideas and lnf<lnl'lation on how to plflll ahead and cook ahead with the belp ol the freezer will be offered by Miss Sharoc Hoke and Miss Caro~ 1Hetnz, home economIN at the Edison Living Center in Huntington Beach. The program will be given Monday, Aug. 19 at 1 p.m.; Tues., Aug. 20 at 10 a.m.; Wednesday, Aug. 21, 1 p.m.; Thursday, Au.a:. 22, 10 a.m.; Fr.iday, Aug. 23, 10 a.m .. and Monday, Aug. 26 at 1 p.m. . . Each person atte:nding will recrtve a boOklet en- tiUed "Freeze It" with in· formadoo concerning home freezing. · Prevent 'Prickly' Problems .... • • • .. . . . • BOOKI NG REUNION -Old habits never die as Mrs. Ken~ et h Hinsvark proves as she balances books on her head as a posture aid. Miss Terry Lewis (left) and Mrs. John Grayson admire her skill, one that every model should possess. The Mannequin's Association of Orange County hosted their 10-year reunion recently in the B&lboa Bay Club. Feminine Garments Displayed County Models Review 10 Years at Reunion A 10 -year reunion was Tbe group was formed tn Lingerie and bright "at-staged by mesibers of th~ Aiarch ol 1951 as a nonprofit home" lounging wear will be organization for the con· d. I ed ~ the H Mannequin'• Association of 1.sp ay w • ...,., un-solidation of top models in tington Beach Emblem Club Orange County. Or Co t t •· t LINCOLN. Neb. (UPI) ~· ta 1 ange un y o pro~c sponsors a fashion show at 8 The event """""' P ce ast and ot the' · t ts ~•e "--" way to prevent in· d A 19 In th Monda l the Balboa B prom e tr 10 eres '11 ..,..,.,.. p.m. Mon ay, ug. , e Y n ay and goali. Once a year fecti.on from poison ivy, Elks Lodge . Club with cocktails at 1 and members donate their poiion oak or po!1on sumac Area women are invited to dinner at 8:30. services· to a different chui- ls to know what those plants join club members am:I Tables were decorated ty selected by a majority of look like and to 5tay a& far guests for the fashion show, in pink with abstract mann· tlhe members. aw;.'Y from ttiem as possi-and refreshments will be equin desigDs. A humorous The association meets on ble served following the party. review was delivered by the The second best way, for Additional information current officer& called Re-the second Monday night t.hOH who know they are may be obtained by calling member When, which traced every montti in Keystone sUICeptible to severe plant MNi. John F. Thompson, events back to the first ~~ng~:!s~ A~=; pol!OO'ing is to buy a preven-536-6t42. meeting. are Invited to apply for tMive· skin spray. membenhip by calling the But when It happen5 - when junior strays into the J k J · 11 Have Da·te Marniequtn's Association of poison ivy pat.cb, or the pie-ac I I ()Nnge county at 534-5111. nlc blanket is gpread right Officers are. Mrs. Jim next to 1 poison oak tree -The annual invitation~ a limit ol ~ couples. Aspegren, president: Mrs. here is what to do., advises • u-d f If t ..._ Kenneth Hlnsvark, v 1 c e Jack and Jill foursome .tUu:r a ay o go a u1e president; Mrs.. J 0 h n Helen Becker. University of tournament is scheduled to Irvine Ooast Country Club Gr y son, corresponding Nebraska Extension health begin Sunday, Aug. 18, with th • d t Mi J education specialist : e women s group an :s e c r e a· r y ; ss oy Wash th«oughly w it h gue~ will en:joy dimer and McFarlane, record J n g soap and water. then with dancing. secretary, and Mrs. Gordon Mesa Re b eka h Gray, treasurer. rubbing alcohol. Then apply Winnen; become co-hosts!.==========:::; the old timtt's remedy of Every first and third for the following year. This oru!Jhed jewel weed <also Tuesday of the m o n t h year co-bost6 are Mr. and BEST known as touch-me-not and members of Mesa Rebekah Mrs. 'nlomas Hudem of Fiie DA.ILY PILOT effett: 1e111e snapweed) or a new poison Lodge assemble in Odd Irvine Coast Club and Mr. ef the M.+ feetur••· ~ ectual plant lotion from a drug Fellows Hall, Costa Mesa, and Mrs. Arthur Nisson of 1111,...ey ef re.tuler1, •v•ll•lile In •l<n Co fny new1,1per In the 11t +ie11. · ~ _•:t~B::....:;P:·m:·~~~~~~~San:::::ta:.:;An:•;_;;:untr:;:~Y~C:lub::;,·~....::::::::::::::::::::::! For 1 really ..,.d case of plant poisoning, see a . doc- tor. Century Club Twentieth Century Club of Huntington Beach gathers at 7:30 p.m. the third Tues. day in Lake Pa rk ClubhoUJe. A All.,...,--~...., ........ : .. ,1111." .... A.!.~!'~· THRU SAT. ONLYI Two weddings ln the Hugu M. Figgatt Jr. famlly of Costa Mesa took place within a week . Their daughter Gwen- dolyn Figgatt became Mrs. L. David Mark d u r i n g ceremonies in St. Mark's Methodist Church, Anaheim with the Rev. Hial Edwards officiaUng. Libra: Hunch REDUCED I 'RIGHT NOW' FOOT FASHIONS FOR GUYS AND GALSI Given in marriage by her pareota, she wore a white Grecian gown and caYTied a whtte Bible topped with orchidg and stephanotis. Her gister wag maid of honor. A week later she served as matron of honor. and her husband was an usher for the double ring ceremony linking her sister Constance Flg&att and Michael An· thony McDonough, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie J . McDonough of Costa Mesa. For her wedding , perforIJled by the Rev. John P. Alhey in St. James Episcopal Cbun:h. Newport Beach. the new Mr s . McDonough chose an A-line gown of silk organza witll alencon lace trim. A petal cap caught her illusion veil . and she c1UT!ed w h l t e orchids and stephanotis. Bridesmaids were t h e Misses Peggy Bryson, Kim- brough Figgatt, the bride's slst.er, Patsy McDonough, tile bride~m's sister and Linda Faril1. Attendlne: a1 best man was C. King Fitch, and usher& were Hugh M. Fig- " gatt m. the bride's brother, , Leslie J . McDonough Jr., the bridegroom's brother and James Erwin. Rodney .l W. F1gptt. another brother of tbt: bride, wu 1 junior miler: A double reception was DWG ti tbe bom1 of the t lirldel' _... Alliltinf wuMn.ErwiD. • .....-. IOQ •f "'1'. and Mn. MRS. MICHAEL A. McDONOUGH Will Pay Off SATURDAY AUGUST 17 By SYDNEY OMARR "The wise man controls his de6tiny. . .Astrology i><>lnt.s the \Wly." ARIES (Marcll 21·April l9): Strength comes from those who serve you, work with and for you . Fine for dealing with relatives, put· ting opinions on record. Op· Position tends to be weak. '\ct accordingly. TAURUS (April ro·May )) : Good for creative. in· etlectual pursuit&. Pleasure hown from children. also hrough opposite s e x . lomance is in the air. A void ·xtravagance. Emphasize 1uality, simplicity. GEMi.Ni (May 21-June 'l 0 ) : A v o i d m is un- derstanding with older fami· ly member. Do this through patience, ability to be good listener. A secret existl. You could discover I t . Embarrassment m i I ht result. Be mcrture. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Pleasant surprise due as result of letter or telephone message. Keep lines o f communication operi. One close to you may • want to make conces1lon. Provide face-saving device. Be lenient LEO (July 23-Au1. 22)' -Friendly coot.act& t o d a y couJd result in ultlm1te pro- ftt. You are eble to throw off burden whtcb wu not right- ly yolD" own . Grtater knowleCi&eable person about career opportunity. Avoid excess dW'lng any ctlebra- Uon tonight. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22 )' Hunch payg off. Your In· tultive intellect is honed to razor sharpness. You can perceive importarit trend. Trust yourself. Heed Inner voice. Accent on journey, change of phJlosophy. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emotional reactions to- day are quiet, 1 b a r p • Nothing appears to occur halfway -all the way or nothing. Know this end give logic a chance. Means tern· per impulsiveness w i t h thoughtfulness. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Permit one in authority to speak hi1 piece. Means be receptive. Curb tendency to interrupt. You gain today through steady pace. You win your way if patient. Promotion is due. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- Jan. 19): Day for ideas, planning rather than direct actioo. Prepare -plant the seeds. Some changes are re- quired. Key is to choose pro- per areas. Leave nothing to haphazard methods. AQUARIUS (Jon. 21).Feb. 18): Lovt comeis your way. If slngle, you could find this a day when much of future i1 aettled. U married, )'OU could rekindla spark of romance. Stress creatl\'ity, sell-expression. Give. PISCES (Feb. !&-March ro): You may be tempted to throw caution to windl, but • TOWNCIAP'I"• OAVllOIJI'• CMCIL IWlll"• Our best •lllng girls' T·strapper reducedl lblfoei ..W. T .... -..t leek.._,, n.I .... ...,_, ..................... ... a-khold .. Wedi. ,.,, "'4. Reg. 6.99 NowS.88 ladies 'rugby Women's moc- tie' oxfords style 11lp-ons W...-'11111t,"'-hlll °'"' lar mui1-1 clouic '" ti.loe.k .,... ----l11hl001 colon, 1!~•• .,. ...... ._ ipvce. ••• ... .. .... 6.99 .... 6.99 NOWl•l8 NOWS.II Bargain priced Smart loo~ing 1addl1 oxfords! moc·toe slip-on ................ M111'1 le•f.,teliole "'---,,, --~-~ ""'""'·'°'· .... llo<k, 6'/~11. R09, 7.99 NOWS.II R09. L9t NOW6.81 Oh-It tbtt 111 eU ..... --~ ..... .....,...... 7.ftMOW, .... ............. _ .... .......... ~ .. ,.MOW,"" llold, brawny dress oxfords ll•lii 1r•I• l•all1tr i.,....i..~...-. -----•V..11 . • ... 10.99 Now8,81 ..,.._,,..~ ""l!fOW .... , ............ , ... NOW'._ ..... lAllo J1..t ot GuodalaJara, wu 1111 ~by hll brother, Slep•on Mort. The bride.,_ ,. a grldualo of Costa Mesa High School. GuiclilllloN IDp SChooI Orange Coast College and ind Onall Cout Collt'9. Berkshire ChrisUan College. He DOW ii a llltalPt:rllil ltu· Tbey wW enter tbe mission -at .....,.... QuioUa llelll upon their .grAduotlon McOonough, who wll~be gerving his tour of duty in Vietnam. ls a graduate o( Costa Mega High School and acc. the same 1lma mater& of hla bride. freedom ts on h<ltlzon. Get ready. VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22)' Day tor expansion. Break tendency to w a r d con- finement. seek means of ex· presglon. Check w \ t h there are rules, restrictions.11--------------------------------Best to adhere to regula- tions -then you COUid find opening. Move t h r o u I b knowted1e, not putt im· pul.11. HU NTI NGTON BEACH MFWPORl BEACH ' . I Fe1hle11 hi anti I Colle ... Hit bride studied 11,r BCC. · • ' • / 'I I • • w ·--·~~~-~~.-..._..~•-"<T;~w .... w.-,,.....,.......,...,,...,....,.,..,.,....,..,...,..,.,..,....,.,...,.,.....,...,..,.,....,.,.,,..,..,..,..,...,..,..,. ...... llOll .... "l!'.., ... ,..11!111'!!'111!!!1""..,.., .. ..,,..,..~ -,;.Wei-~ •t • - - -... Catalina ~Sfiot ~· D4mp . '·'\" :t· .'/..~. •;: ly ALMON LOCKAllV "' ~·· lhl ;,~ JI;. ALMON LOCKAl!l'l).' kit-,,... .......... Every. yadaman who ~li\'OMilllnolliaoddMmg tm' year '1bould ..,, ~ out atooe time or ~r to have .. chat with Dou& Bocn- bard, the t•nla! director· ol :~·Cllallna Cmnp " Cov• It. which adnJinisttrl ttle · · 1 ol. the island for --ttio Wrlgloy Co, ·Bombard: 11 a yowtf, .~!'Wllble nian :wt>o<e ljh ii ,, • .....,ppec1 up m the illand ~~~ be tiu called. bome .:•~~· he was a boy. ,., .. ~ .,,.. •.•. , e 11 amiable, tb8t is, ·Un· • ,Yk.be ewa.Jcens some mui'\· ,,, , mg and surveys a once-at· •:•·"tr.fciive bea<.'tl. or. cove lit· also provide pickup service fer visi.tina: yacbtmlen. "We love the yachting crowd,'• aar.s Bomb a rd. "We are bappy to have them come here. But we wUh tbey would . ~ more carefol ol the Htter pro-btem:•j The WU'd pollution doesn't bother Bombard or Hlrbcnnl.ster Ed Scovel at Avaioo. The mtural scour• ing and purifying action of the . sea -. with • beavt as.st.st from tcavenger !islt -makei lilort lbrift ol the nnall amount of sewage that is pumped from boat tnilots. ~ witl! Jliastic e11p1, beer RUBBISH cans, ~s and other .. "Q•ll'.Sorted debris which has "l"t's the littier problem ~,,·,'drifted in trom off.shore. that 'concerns us ," says · .. :·.~·::They'.re making Utte. Bombard. And well it might. better these <lay1," moans It also should concern every DAIL v "''LoT stai• ..... Bombard in explalni:ng that yachtsman who wakes up in THREE TIME CHAMP -Earl Elms and his crew 1here ia literally no safe the· riiorning ·to · fee his Mi~e Shear of San Dieao aet wet derrieres as they ;;~;:distance from . shore where favorite cove being invaded dnve toward finish to win third consecutive national . -boe.tmen can dump garbafe by plastiic cups, plates and c.ha~pionship in Snipe Class. Elms starts competi~ or ·debris . other indestructible rt1b· tion in the 5.5 meter Olympic trials at Newport Sun· ·-;T!\These new plastic con· bish. day. , tamers and p-a ck a g i n i! Bomberd doesn't blame it --------------------.• :·-·rftuerial just do not sink. all on the yachtSmen. One ~.~: • .l'll'e1 may' float for dayis, but . day he looked out to sea and :..'?"'finally . wil;d up .on som~·-saw what~ed to~ a 01 . • ·~: .. beac!J." _ . ·•· · wave"" wljjtecapo conun g .ympt ~ • ·"".l,}"t" acro5S the · water. ID· . ~:!~~CEPT ACLES . . vestigalion showed it to be Trials 'rld1y, 4utust. 16, 1968 DAILY '!LDT I• Ballin in Lat RAH Elms ·snipe .Champ Again ' ' Readied • • I-, f"'•":' '-"• \ . . "' r 4. Dave Ullman, Balboa Yacht CJQ~, 21·V.U.11-2- ll-'¥. -' 5. Tom Nute , San DJ1go1 S. &.9-5-6-5-14-70.1. e. Francis Se av y. Clearwater, Fla., 14-2-18-S-7· 3-17-70,f, 7. Buzz Levenson, Jn .. di an a polis, 7-13+17-U 5-70.7. 8. Dave Peterson, San Diego, 18-7-24-11+15-1• I .E. E. ''Sho r ty•• Campbell, ABYC, 11·1-4.15-5- 20-1:1-75, 11. Gonzalo Dju, Miami, Fla., 2-11·7·21·V.is.+-7'!. Wells Con1ol1tfoa Serie1t 1. Norm1n Alilquisf.-San Francisco. '¥1. 7. -: !. Ron Fox, ABYC, 29.7. 3. BiU Kilpatrick , Oklahoma City , 34. 7. · 4. Don Blod&ett, KHYC, 40.7. s. Larry Griay, KHYC, 48.1, I. Jon Johns, Ann A;rbor, Mich., so.1. : Police Work. Drawing Young WASHING TON IUPIJ - ·· .-·;•Time was when t h e literally thousands .of plastic ;:;'.:Yachtsman felt tt.at if he cups·. ;_;.: ;ug;nped his debris, two , five Fur th er · in·veslig&tion ~ •• or~ even 10 miles at &ea it showed that the cups bore :a~:>W,Oµld soon be '!es4royed, It the insignia of·tne Catalina ·•·· ... jut doesn't w<rk that way Steamship Co. The ocean !~~-ti y ll\ o r e , .Beer cans may have been . whibe but 17 Yachts to Vie • in Ne ·wport Harbor nu Directior J, Edgar Hoov.er told the 82nd session of the FBI Nationa l Academy Monday la'!, en· for c ement wa1 the vanguard 1n the American war agaiost Iawle660~ts. w~ there are §tag. gering problems in com· bating· crime·, Hoo ver took note <:A. the fact 1bat '"law enforcement is ma k-i n g: great strjdes tO'WVd pro· fo51iollabn and -fl'ting an increasiag nmnblr of m.!nctured on only one end the air was blue when Born-:: ... wni Cloat for boun;:. Capped bard tmtled ashore at ·~':..t>ottJes will float forever. Avalon and showed those .... ~.J?Iasiit: garbage ·receptacles reponsible the evidence. :'""&.lmped ilt 1ea will either go From then on ttiere was ·~-~ Mck to Catalina or follow. no more dumping of rubbish :·:-... ~u home -eventually._· · tro:m ~ S .. s. AvaJoo or ~,,. ·· F0tt these res.6ons maily ~ p<\&senger l?Oata. :::.~Rt · .the yacht clubs which Bombard's friendly word . ~ .. ··1~ coves oo the island of a,dvi~f;!: Ehr seod your .. ·~w provtde gar bag e rubbish and-garbage ashore ~. '."jttµ.ups ao that it can be at Oatalina (by OO&t) or , •. ~ ashore and disp>s~d keep it aboard unW you can -:. -bf.•in a promper mamer. dispose of it on shore at ·,;:: :"SOme of the cow operaton home. ~· .. > ..... -•!···· ;i•· .• i;. :' .. '"~amilyaf 'Amat~urs' T 0 Sail to Australia ·~~; ~ .. ~ ...... •· -ltICHMOND. Oalif. (UP!l -When the Harry L. Neely • ... ;riDilly sets sail next week '•tpt Australia, it& f ou r :. ~ meinbers will rely on a Cor· ;'.:'Je~dence ~se i.n navigation for (llldance. '.'>··::"'~'We·~ to learn as we •. ! '.~, along," said Nee 1 Y .;• ~day as he outlined . . p18.ns to croSs the Pacific wtth hi! wife and two c'61\dren In a · 32 -foot " ~ailboat, ''Valhalla." The family has less than .. ,i;fiio years' s a i Ii n g ex- perience. Their longest trip wiQI the islander r igged u: craft was 60 miles down the ""'" t •· Half M Ba ··••l'<"'as w oon y. ~~ .~ef've just finish~ a ccm-~·._.,,J'Npon<lence course In ···~~gation. .,·s, .'.,::But Neely said they wert :~1 1 ~mitted to the trip, hav- •• 1 • ing sold their h 0 m .e • MAIOR STllDIO PREVVE TONfltHT l:lO P.M, Summer'• l•1+ C1111ed., °'"th ;~ ,..,e,'Doll.IS DAY "" e 111.IAN kllTH furniture and car. "I've got oott.ing left.but a hat and boat," he saJd, The Valhalla'a planned route is down the coast to Santa Barbara, then to Maul ~ the Hawrailan Islands, Fi- ji, New Zealand and finally Australia. The children -Ben, 15", and Linda, 10 -plan to take correspondence classes en route, mailing them from one port and n!Ceiving grades at the next. ·The stage is set ior the final Olympic trials of the 5.5 meter class off Newport Harbor starting Sllnd'ay. Seventeen o[ the nation's top rated akippers will bring their boats alongside the dock at Newport Harbor Yacht Club Saturday where e I a borat e "up e n in g ceremonies'' are scheduled . The 5.5 meter is a small lion Sun.day: OUTA SIGHT, Scott AUan, U.S. Naval Academy; crew, John Laun, · Skip Allan, NHYC. SAVAGE, Al Ca sse l , Vo y agers YC ; Fred MacDonald, M. Johnson. COMPLEX VT, Britten Chance. New York YC, J. Lucas, P. Chance. TRUANT. Don Cohan, An· napolis, Md., A Stuebner, T . Jones. vers.ion of the 12-meter o( America'!' Cup fame when it CADENZA, Gardner aox, comes to design and racing New Jersey, S. Colgate, S. machinery. Largest of the Walker. Olympic classes, the 5.5 RAM 0 N A . Ger a I d mea&ures out about 32 feet Driscoll, San Diego, John overall, but like the '12-Blair, John Rumsey. Meter it can .vary according . SHADOW, Earl Elms, San ~the mathe ~a t ical Diego, Tom Nute, Doug De formula so long as the final Sousa. product comes out to 5.5 GOSLING, SkJp Elliott, meters. NHYC, P. Wilson, G. Dit· Here is the list of con-mars. tenders Who Will go into ac-SUNDANCE, Ernie Fay, Houston, P. Monsen, L. Neuhaus. l CHARADE, Bill Ficker, NHYC, Tim Hogan, George Twist. YANKEE II, Ta ylo r Grant, Newport, Lanny Coon, A. McDonald. CLOUD NINE -Gordon Lindeman, Milwaukee, H. Meyer, P. Harken. LADY LUCK, John MarshaU. Stamford, Conn., C. Ford, W. Hickel. LUV, Lowell North, San Diego, Peter Peckham, Dick Deaver. GRASS , Elliott 01 d a k, New York, J . Murdock, R. Kobrick. FUGITIVE, Warren Parker, NHYC, M. Parker, D. Parker. NEMESIS, Ted Tui'ner, Atlanta, Ga., J . Markley, M. Shumway. ' FINAL GROOMING-Al Cassel's new Bruce King- designed 5.5 meter Savage, gets final going-over at Lido Shipyard by Joe Minney befor.e startin& com- petition in 5.5 Olympic trials. 33 Catamarans to Sail For U.S. Title at KHYC mont, Warren Ted Mosher. The 19•foot Miller, and P1c i fic Catamaran is one ol tile fastest mulUhulls for its size ever built. young men." " COSTA l4ESA 1741 ....,.,. ... "'"''" Garcle.n Grove 11141 •• ,... ........ ,., ...... ...... Santa Ana , t:tf I , 'Int 11 •.•.••.••.••• M1.ftll 'JVf"~ l-r.··:· ;--''• c: .• ,~~·~1[ f Golfers Attention! -·· I Thert ls a beautifu1, well J groomed, 18 Holes Golf : ********************•************* * ****************************•**** Count with ocean breew : -OPEN TO THE PUBLIC : ·ROSEMARY'S BABY IYIU IVINING . 'AT-. 8i00'ilnd 10:30PM ' . WUKDAY5 , 2'40·l:U·1:00 • 10 :15 SATURDAY 12:2i-2:5S.S:2s.l:00.10:20 SUNDAY 12:J0·2:Sl-l:J0.7:U·9:50 EVERY EVENING AT .... 8:00 and 10:00 PM AT Hl•WAY 39 DRIVl•IN THE· GRADUATE ' ' AT ' SAii JUAN' HILLS · COUNTRY C~ . ' . Jul! J:all ol Santi Ana Frffway In flan Juan , .c1p111nno, Talt1 V1U1 Rd .... San Jllan Creolt : .turn-Off. ~ DRIVING RANGE l SNA~K IAR OPEN nLL DARK Lunch & l1r faclUtlff ·s,.c111 w~ D1y Sllllmer hits i •....i .t.. , .............. ! .. : .......•• ····11··· f'.00 '1.00 ; lltctrkl ~rtt ,•....... ....... •• • 6.00 .... i Compltll u .. "'Golt Equlpmtl>l •aild .--. : SlhlrUy, s..Ny ' Hollfty Illes i II Htl1t 9 Hot. , °'"" '-. " " " ' " " " " . $5.00 $2.JO : After J p.m •• , , •••.••.• , . • . • 3.00 2.GI .• llectrlc C11'h ,, , ,, ,. ,, ,, ,, ,, 7.00 4.00 1• ' ' P"-,., ll111rntlon1 '93·1167 er 137.0:Mi -"' ~-··"1 ,_ -------------------------------.....----------·---- •• r ' d I I -• • • . . . . • • • DAD·Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE The P olice TV Decision • Newport Beach city governmenl gave every indic:a- this weel«of reaching a new level of maturity and dig· !lily. The evidence c'\Me at the culmination of a Jong and involved communify debate over whether Newport Beaoh should be a national experiment for an "Elect- ronic Protect.ion System'' -a citywide teJevision scru- ·tiny system proposed for aid in law enforcement. The City Council killed the proposal by a 4-8 vote, . That. in .i~self was perhaPs significant, but ~aps Just as significant was the dignity with which this con- troversial issue was handled. Strong feelings were to be expected. And they were there. Opponents of the EPS ~stem saw an Orwellian threat to their privacy and individual rights, while pro-- ponents saw it as a legitimate experimental tool to help halt a rising crime rate._ Yet, despJte this emotional climate, the issue was debated fairly and democratically -even politely, and ~at's something of a rarity in the politically-charged atmosphere of Newport Beach. The p~ry proponents of the system, City Man· ager Harvey Hurlburt and Police Chief B. James Gla- vas, supported their proposal with calm logic. Those ~ho. saw ~PS as a . threat or unnecessary, responded 1n kind, without acnmony and without questioning the motives of the system's proponents. Monday night's city council meeting on EPS was le~gthy a~d involved. Nonetheless, it was conducted with an rur of openness and fairness. Those who spoke were treated as if their views were important and both sides were listened to with interest, patience and courtesy. In the end, .lhe program wa1 rejected by a 4-S vote, Why Women Outnumber Men By NORMAN NIXON, M.D. Every single girl knows there are more women around than men, Last January the U.S. Census Bureau reported there were only 96.7 males for every 100 females. Today there is a surplus of at least 3 million females, l}ntil the 1940'1, however, men were in the majority. Paradoxically, 106 boys are born to every 100 girls. But from infancy to the oldest age brackets, the qeath rate for males far exceeds that for females. Nearly three boys die for every two girls. At 21, two young men die for every young woman. At 35, 1,400 men die -for every l,000 women; at 55, tbe ratio is 1,800 to 1,000. Why! Anihropologist Ashley Mon· tagu in a new· revised edition of his book "The Natural Superiority of Women" says: "The evidence is clear, from the constitutional standpoint, that 11Voman. iS the stronger sex; the natural superiority. of women is a biological fact." OBVIOUS!,Y, WHEN oor country 11 at war, many young men are killed while in military service. But at ~ time in our large cities, seven times more men than women are victims of '1omicide and three ti.mes as many men of suicide. More important, more hlen than women succumb to heart disease, circulatory ailments. cancer and accidents. Also, with a higher metabolic rate, men burn out faster than women. Undoubtedly, emotions play an im- portant role in shortening the lives of many men. Outwardly, women B.re more emotional but they are less like- ly to require admission to a psychiatric hospital. By crying, com· plaining, criticizing, and chatting endlessly on the telephone, they get their feelings ouL On the other hand , men pretend W be stoical, im· pefturbable and cool -at great cost to their peace of mind and physiological functioning . GENETICISTS BELIEVE th e female's XX c bro mos om e com- bination, as opposed to the male's XY, is parQally responsible. Only males suffer from hemophilia and other hereditary disea5es which a r e •transmitted sblely through the female. And girl babies are less likely to in- herit many gene-transmitted defects ~hich mey lead to crippling and kill· mg dise&ies later in life. With many more widows, divorcees 1 and spinsters now competing for the available men after 35, the structure of our society will continue to change. The Puritan ethic, so long the dominant moral force in the U.S., already is dead or dying. Most ministers no longer sermonize on sex- ual tramgresslons as tt1e predominant sin. OBVIOUSLY, THE new sex freedom In the U.S. does not necessarily s-et people free .. But many women without husbands no longer are inhibiited in ex- pressing theif sexual d r i v e s , Regardless of age, the old taboos are disappearing and the double standard no longer holds, even for married W'Omen . Many of Ulem , more realistic than their mothers and grandmothers. are less apt to run to the divorce court i1 they learn that their husbands have been cheating. For as women grow older and the surplus of women over men continues to rise, the rivalry for a man's love may become blat.ant. A ·good man, or indeed any eligible man. is hard to find! A CORNELL PROFESSOR of nutri· tion, with tongue in cheek, has sug. gested a remedy. "One way to re· equalize the male.female life span is for women to drink more. worry more, smoke more, exercise less. sleep less. eat more· caOdy, butter and ice cream ." says the professor. But, unfortunately, there appears to be no cure for this ever.increasing dilemma. We can only empathize with Rex Harrison when he played Henry Higgins and sang plaintively, "Why can't a woman be more like a man?" Vice Pr es identia l Choice ~ Tbe office of vice-president has become too important for either the RepublicaDI or Democrats to settle far lest tf8D nominees fully qualified to move ~ _t.o the presidency. Eight timei iD t:J. S. hlltory, the v1ce-presi· dfnt bas become president. Since 1900, nl.ne of 12 president! have died in of· fioe, been assusinated. been targets of attempted assa..s&ication, or been ••bled to serloua rune. •. A VETERAN joumali•t, Roscoe Dnumnoad, has wrt:uen that "in every utioDa1 cooventlori I have covered llDce a!O, there ~·not been· a·vtce- prtlldeoll.tl nomlliee on-eltl>er Uckol cbolen because pl !>ii fltnwl to suc- ceed to the presidency. He bu been picl<ed to belAnce the Ucke~ to pJeue 1ome, to appease others, or to unite the party. But never primarily because hf: wa1 qpallDed. •• Perhaps DrummoM: has overitated b.11 argument 10Me1'bat. ~ have beeJI q u a l i Ii e d -vJee.prelidtnllal aomirfee1. j.;CE ,{ ~LATfVEL~ IDlll- ' " " I "'-•• . ' nificant office, the vice-presidency .as filted by sue.ti men as Richard Nixon. Lyndon Johnson and l-lubert l-lum· phrey has grown in Importance. Moro and more responslbiUUes hAve been given vice-presldenu -and m or e will be assigned as the burdens of the president, any president, grow. More and more, the vice-presidency -as demoostrated by Nixon and Humphrey -bas become an important route to prtsideatial nominations. The American voter should be watching not only bow the two parties make nominations for the top offk:e, but also the importance the parties at· tach to the s e c o n d spot on their ticket&. Qualifications -and not such irrelevant !actors as party ser vice, reography :ind political reward - sbould be the principal ingredient In Ibo ..i.ctlon. __ t ~ __ l\llJuieapoJW11'r!HM primarily because the majortty of the council did not feel the system is needed no)V in a cjcy where crime Is not that much of a problem. Significant, too, is an uneasiness ovef aaleguards. Too many people wonder· ed how they would be protected against possible mis- us~ of the ubiquitous, night-and-day scanning TV eye. One Newp0rt Beach resident, builder-developer George D. Buccola, bas proposed that the council now reverse ita:elf and, in effect, remove it.sell from respon- sibility for the EPS decision, by submitting the issue to the voters at the November election. We do not thiJlk this is a wise move at this time for two reasons : -At a time when the community and th.fl city gov-. ernment are once again evidencing a cooperative spirit and genuine ability to tackle major issues, this is no year to ove~-develop a highly-charged issue that could badly divide the community. -Any campaigning on the EPS issue would involve embarrassing positioiis for such people as Chief Glavas and City Manager Hurlburt and the individual city councilmen. Glavas and HU!lburt would be placed in the unbelievable position of seeking affirmative votes on an issue opposed by a majority of the city council they work for. There has been no public clamor for putting the issue to a city-wide vote. It hardly seems worth the risk of polarizing the community over an issue which is ndt fundamental to city progress or development. Summed up, congratulations are. in order for a dignified handling of a potentially explosive issue. It seems appropriate to let the issue rest for the time be- ing. N .· ~~ti-.I l"WE'R E TAl<l fl<1 EVE~~ f P,t(AUTION TO MAKE SURE HUBERT GETS I NOMINATE!> 11'-l A FREE AN!> Pf.ALEF UL .AIT""-0SPl\E.RE." Democra tic Front Runner ls Cautious WASHINGTON -One of the stranger aspects of a strange political campaign is' that tbe major presiden- tial candidates should be judged by the vice presidents they keep,1 This may be due to the lack Of precision in issues between Richard M. Ni:soo and Hubert H. Humphrey. ,, The issues, such as they are, wander otf into political impressionism. One sees in either candidate what he wishes to see. The first major decision of a presidential candidate, picking his running mate, therefore tends to be a decisive test or the difference between the major candidates. , Humphrey is about to be tested to see how much different he is from the old Humphrey and how much dilferent he is from Nixon. The old Humphrey was a fast-talking reformer. He could have called to bis side any one of a number of like-minded liberals Without tbe flick of an eye. THE NEW HUMPHREY is a more cautious fellow, tempered by ex- perience, if you like, and very aware that his problem is not so different from Nixon's . This is why Humphrey would look toward an ex-governor of North Carolina, Terry Sanford, as a compromise like Nixon's choice ol Gov. Ted Agnew of Maryland. Ruling Teddy Kennedy out of the running by his own choice, the Ken· nedyites in the party would be happier with Ambasssdor to France Sargent Shriver. But that would be like letting the mantle fall on Mayor Lindsay in the Republican Party. Shriver would also bring witil him all the vulnerabill· ty of the mJstakes and bad publicity of the poverty program. HumplU'ey now also has to consider Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota, a pacifistic former World War ll bomber· pilC'A, who ha6 projected himseV as the "tlhird force" presiden· ti.al candidate, bound to drain ot1 some of Sea. Eugene McCarthy's com· passiooate aupport. McGOVERN AND Humphrey both originated in South Dakota. which seems to a great many people on either of the pOpulous coasts to be a rattier remote birthplace for presi~ents. But perhaps sectional balance on presidential tickets is a casualty of ttie pluralistic society. There Js .no law or precedent which says that th e vice.presidential nominee bas to come from a big state. There are two Hugheses -Gov. Richard Hughes of N&w Jersey, and Gov. Hjr6ld Hughes of Iowa . Richard i5 a Jdliiisooite. Harold is attracted by thf! "third force." Both are good men Jn their different '10ays. Neither would do harm to tile Humphrey ticket. At Miami Beach Nixon had to satitfy North Oerolina and other soull!ern•tes held te the line by Sen. strom '.ll!unnond, Sen. John TOwer of Texas, mcl Sen. How.U Baler of Teo- ..,., ... In aucaao Humplny, U he u prudent, will ha .. to do IOl!leibing to salvage Texu for the Democratic ticket. Without Lyndon Jolm•on, John F. Kennedy would unquestionably have k>st Texas, other southern 1btes and tht election In 1960. NOR111ERN LIBERALS wJll 1lmply have to adjust tbfmselvi• to thit idea or giv~ up any ~ease ol realism about the 19118 eledim. '11l11 i. not an elodim llD1Y .. bO ...... bT flan\!01 defianOI tJt the old ot'iler. • Facilities Were lnade.quate Praises ·Pop Festival Crowd· To the Editor: Although we live only a few blocks from the Orange County Fairgrounds, there was such a lack of noise on THAT Saturday evening we forgot the Pop Festival was in progress a n d headed for South C006t Plaza. The traffic was dense and the roadside was filled with walking festival-goers, but the groun.s_)'le saw seemed merely · weary, not belligerent, nor "animals." Despite the hot weather and con- fusion of traific, the police and the majority of t.hose desiri(lg t-0 enjoy a musical festival kept their ·composure and derserve hearty commendation. Large-scale· events usually attract some-undesirable individuals, but such in1;1ividuals do not necessarily come from any one age group. I WOULD LIKE to eomment on several possible ovenights by those running the festival : Insufficient drinking water facilities, soft drink and food stands inside t h e fairgrounds; haphazard provisions for thOse planning to stay overnight; were there enough available s an it a r y facilities? Could some of the roadside litter have been avoided by str&tegic placement of containers?; we saw only one overflowing container on Newport Boulevard. Before the operators of t h e Fairgrounds permit any more large- scale perfonnances of any kind thev might first study the operation ~t the Riverside Ruceway, where adequate facilities for overnight crowds are pro· vided during the car races. SINCE l DOUBT whether any young people (indudlnC local people) will Letters from readers are welcome. Normally writers should cont.1t11 their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reseroed. All let- ters must include signature and moil- ing address, but names will be with- held on request. cart to attend .any type c:J. festival in this area again after reading some of the vitriolic comments printed in your paper, tttose of-my generation who don't know how to, or don't care to, build any kind of bridge of un- derstanding between generations need not worry but can slump back into their middle-aged complacency. SHIBLEY ISERMAN 'Comic Fable' To the Editor: Sydney Harris' comic fable titled ''Psych Tests No ·Business Help" in the August 12 DAILY PILOT came as a surprise. It should be stored with other enlightened treatises such as "Color Blind Tests No Help to Ttaffi~ Bureaus," "Weather Predictions Are Not Useful," and ''Medical Ex· an1inations No Help t-0 Health." The..,arguments presented in those famous fables include, "We don't"have traffic lights in our metropolis for we don't have anY autos yet;" "Lightning ' never strikes the same place twice," and "Bugs I can't see can't hurt me." EXAMPLES OF big businesses which use "Psych Tests" because they are useful range from (e) priWLte in· dustry giants such as IBM, l1nited Airlines, and New York Life lnsurance CO., to (b) our biggest business (government) including the Depart- ment of Defense and Civil service at thl!: federal level for activities such as selection, classification and placement o( personnel. and (c) by almost all educational institutions from the Ivy League to state universities. THE WGlC EXPRESSED by Mr. Harris is that 604-0 or 90·10 odds or anything less than 100 percent perfect prediction is useless, and his in- ·formation is selected only from the nega.Uve side in each argument. Any data on possible usefulness is com- pletely omitted. His extreme bias is degrading in the eye& of almpst any person who has taken one beginning course in college psycholog y. Don~t the editors of the DAILY PILOT review these articles before printing t.hem? EV AN PICKREL, PhD All material published in the DAILY PILOT is of course Teviewed by the editors before publication. Edi· toriaL page columns are, not reserved solely for re ports, commentary or cartootis with which we agree. This ·newspaper's own viewpoints are e.:c· pressed at the upper left corner of tliis page or else1vliere ·i1~ space cleartu marked "Editorial." Editor Humphrey Seeks Harmony WASHINGTON -Vice President Hwnp~ey and his top campaign aides are ~sing a stroog plea for post-con- vention party unity in their elevent.h- hour courting of delegates to this month's Democratle National Con- vention. The strategy reflects their supre,Jlle conviction that Humphrey will win the presidential nomination. lt assumes that the Vice President's major pro. blem, now as well as later, is party harmony once the convention in Chicago is over. An 1nfonnal task-force Of Humphrey aides and advisers has been ad- drt;ssing itseU to this. and other, PoSt· Chicago problems for sever.al weeks. 1be long-range emphasis in current Humphrey strategy is demonsb'ated by a "unity" letter sent personally this w~k to each convention delegate and alternate. The letter is signed by Sen . Fred R. Hanis, D·Okla., and Walter F. Mondale, D·Mlnn ., the co-chairmen Dear Gloomy Gus: Elected officlals have a respon- sibility to speak so the public can hear thtm . Those who ltan back st~al feet from the micro- phone arc contributing to the low attendance at the Newport Beach City Council meetings. Tell 'em to speak loto the mike. of the Humphrey campaign drive. THE LE'ITER contains a few jabs at Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, Hum- phrey's principal rival for the presidential nomination, but those comments are subordinated to what the authors describe as "some thoughts abollt the convention and about the future of our party." The two Humphrey leadtU'I ·say the purpose Of tbe convention, which con· venes August 26, is to agree on a cu• didate and a platform -"• platfotm which reflects the conscience, the vision and the will of the delegates as representatives of the rant and file of our party, and a candidate who represents the best hope of America.'' CLOSE RANKS -The letter stresses that Humphrey has pledged his support, in advance <K the coo· vent.ion, to the party's platfofm and ita presidential nominee. It then addl: "It Is ID this 1ptrlt that we ~pptGlcb the Cooventloo, and It II ID'tbis 'l(llrlt that· we tr-ft our fellow l'.>emOarata to approa<!> iL The sto,k.t'.fir °'I!: naUon are too high to allow 1'liiid dlV!sloil {o bar compromise, or tu-allow bitterness to bar reconcillatioo. "As Democrats, we must cl0te ranks ooce again when our C011ventlon has ended and proceed In unity toward the election ol a Democratk: Pretl- daot." -F.C. "" ... Imo "'*" ,....... ~ .... ~ :..:::...:.'CW"'ll:: I THE~ ON Humphrey'1 .td· ,_ _____ .:...._ ___ , \ vance cammitml!llt to tM iior1;r'• pl.II- form and nominee is, in Itself, a slap at McCarthy who has withheld such a pledge. The Harris-Mondale letter also jabs indirt:ctly, at McCarthy;-by re- jecting "complaints about the methods ,by which the delegates were chosen. 1'We reject the loose charges that delegate selections were the results of 'bossism' or 'machine politics,' " the letter says. "We also hope that the many divisive and diversionary tactics - mass demonstrations, interminable c.hallenges, parliamentary manipula- tions, 'Which have been threatened by some elements opposing the Vice President's oandidacy will not di:wupt ocr coovenUon unduly Yf blur tho focUJ "-our ptrpOSe, ' tbe twe -lay. By Robert S. ~ea and John A. GotdJlitJth -~-- F rl day, Aueust 16, 1968 2lt cdiloricl m• of the Daaf ~t lfa~ to inform and nm,. "10to «odfn bu """"ting th/a ~· oplnlom and """" fMlllar!/ on topia of inUr<rt and 1ignificance, br providing a ftrvm for ~ ezpression o/ our readtr1' opinfonl, and bu prtstntittQ &ht diuerse vlmo- pofnll of fnf....,..d obst"""' and spoke....,. °" topics of tho dau. llobert N. Wetd, Pobll1her .. . I• ..• _.,. ------~.i... ..... _..__.__~--~~--~. ------------------ • l .. ,, y 1• d ,. " I· 11 " 1t 11 y r :t l- e y I· e s e v e ) e i i- i T s J • r • Costa Mesa ·• ED ITI ON N.Y. St.eeks voe. 6f, NO. 197, 4 SECTIONS. 48 PAGES COSTA: MESA, CALIFORNIA: FRIDAY, AUGUST "t~, '1961 JEN CENTS Mesa Bars Giving Downtown Big Hangover? Alcohol ·ii wreckinr the tetinomic organs o( several Orange Coast cities ..,... their internal seetions -s.ays a Costa Mesa councilman who has been viSWllly bar bopping and dislikes what he sees. Cheap taverns. rowdy go-go joints and pool halls which develop in older areas of tile cities are causing many legitimate businesses to dry out finan· cially, says City Councilman Willi&m L, "Bill" St. Clair. Establishment of shopping centers in outlying areas hurt the traditional downtowns ror a time, he said Thurs· day, but the downtown concept is gradually revivin.g, only to !Dee a new foe. This one has bad breath -and bloodshot e;:es. "They are now shackled with one arm behind them by the pteseote of so many loud, sometimes dirty and usually obnoxious bars, w b i c h discourage lh~n from w"1k!ng through the area, • be said, St. Clair, who literally grew up with Costa Mesa and watched t h e downtown area -where his father !owtded a barber shop -begin to wither, made his remarks following a coastal cities tour. "Perhaps our grandfathers had the right idea when they put all the bars, saloons, gambling halls and similar pla(:es -(he did not elaborate) -into one designated place," St. Clair said. "No 1eU-re11peCting woman was re- quired to go there, when the behavior problems of the community were con- centrated in one area, away from the shopping~district," he added. St. Clair said police protection was also simpler, beeause they knew where to look for trouble. "This sort of arrangement kept most of the intoxicated persons in one general area, away from housewives Bandit Robs Mesa Bani{ Unarmed Man l(icks Em ploye, Flees With Cash A helmeted, booted band.it dressed li ke a motorcyclist leaped over a Bank of America counter in Costa Mesa during the noon hour today, kicked an employe in tti.e stomach, grabbed a bwxlle of cash, leaped back ocross the counter and fled. Clerks at the bank branch at Harbor Boulevard and Adams A venue said the man was not armed. The dark helmet visor masked his face. At tile time, the bank was filled wlth customers, but the robbery occurred Eisenhower Suffers 7th Heart Attack WASHINGTON (UPI) -Former President DWight D. Eiitnhowtr Fri· day suffered anothtr heart attack, \Vatter Reed Ge1leral Hospital on- ·11ounced. It Wa& the 71-year·old general's seventh htart attack -his fourth in slightly les1 titan four months. A horpital bulletin issutd at 4:05 p.m. EDT said: "General Eisenhower sustained an· othtr serious heart attack at 1 :25 p.m. today, Prior to this attack the general was feeling well, was in ex· cell.ent spirits and had betn progress- ing satisfactorily. "His condition at this report is stable. The doctors interpret this episode as serious, but have not yet npprai.~d its full cunsequences." '""~ ..... ..,,,,... ............... Q;.t. Hotel Robbed By Masked Thief An armed robber ll.<earing a black nylon stocking over his face robbed the Holiday Inn in Orange of several hundred dollars early this morning. 'The slender thief entered the main lobby of the hotel at :n~ W. Chapman Ave. about3 a.m. and made his way to the counter where the previous day's receipts were being tallied. Menacing the clerk with a large caliber revolver, the bandit forced the clerk to turn over the money, loosely estimated at "several hundred dollars" by police officers. Police said that the man must have been familiar with the hotel's system of handling cash as he came at exactly the correct time and went direcUy to the casb counting area. so swiftly that most apparently were unaware of what happened. The amount of cash stolen was not immediately determined. A bank trainee, Bill Prict, who was kicked in the stomach, said the man suddenly leaped on top of the counter .. yelled, "Don't move," then jumped to the noor. The bandit, who never displayed a weapon, jumped back over the counter, jerked the Ud of teh box open. fled out of the Bank of America branch. 2701 A Harbor Blvd .. Cost:i Mesa, to a waiting getaway car. Patrol cars, unmarked p o l i c e vehicles converged on the scene but the bandit apparently escap: l by the time they arrived. The suspected getaway car was de· scribed as a white or Ught colored 1960 to 1961 Dodge Dart. Witnesses said the vehicle sped away on Mesa Verde Drive which opens onto Adams Ave- nue.. The bandit grabbed several bills Weakened Rotor Blade Blamed in Copter Crash WASHINGTO?: (AP) - A rotor blade which separated in flight was blamect today ior the cash of a Lo s Angeles AirwaYs ~elicop'ter Jn Comp· ton, which claimed 21 lives Wednes- day. The National Transportation Safety Board said one of the chopper's five blades separated from the central spindle, or hub, and the ~·s in· vestigation turned up evidence of metal fatigue in the spindle assembly. The Sikorsky S61 was carryring 18 passengers and a crew of three from Los Angeles to Disneyland when it fell out of the sky near a chidren's playground in Compton. \Vitnesses said the ship seemed to come apart in flight. No one on the ground was hurt. The accident was the second in· volving a Los Angeles Airways heLi· copter in three months. But the board ~aid the spindle of the aircraft that crashed May 22, killing 23, was ex· amined and it had not failed. Both investigations are cc.ntinuing, the board said , and in the meantime it is recommending that the Federal Aviation Administration require an Immediate inspection of all Sikorsky S61 spindle units. In addition, the board said more frequent regular inspection or the Stork Markets NE\Y YORK (AP ) -The stock market e~anded its gain on average in moderate trading this afternoon. (See quotations, Pages 1~11). But the number~of advances of in· dividual stocks over declines slipped to 719 to 448 after having held a margin of better than two to one in early trading. units should be requlred tO gtiard against failw-es and the need to establish a reUrement li!e for the port i hould lie studied. Paris from Wednesday's crash have been forwarded to a metallur· gical laboratory fo r detailed exami· nation. Newport Shared Mesa's Festival Bill--$3,000 ' The well-lamented Newport Pop Festival may have heel\ a Costa Mesa affair, but Newport Beach got very rn<lch involved -$.'J,CKXJ worth of in· volvement, in fact. That, Newport Police Chief B. James Glavas reported today, is what the Aug. :J..4 Orange C o u n t y F'airgrounds "concert" cost the city in additional law enforcement expenses. "This s.um ." said Glavas, "is directly attributable to the inDUJ: of the unsheared." He said Newport backed up Costa Mesa police with 41 officers. That cost has now been tabulated, to the penny. It was '2,316.20, according to the chief. It cost another $600 to process a bi g Increase in arrests that weekend, he said . Glavas said arrests that weekend compared to the weekend before had doubled. "Except for juvenile ar- rests." hi! added. "They quadrupled." The chief noted that "Newp6rt'11 contritutlon" to the Pop Festival will be paid for by Ule city's taxpayers. It is equivalent to about one-s ixth of a cent on the city's $1.225 tax rate. Mesa's Social Arts Week Picnic, Play, Pinochle on Backyard lanterns made o( milk cartons, pinochle championships, and a shoop-shoop hu1a hoop contest are all part of the Costa Mesa Social Arts Week which opens Saturday with the first performance of "Brother Goose ." The week-long event sponsored by tbe Costa Mesa RecreaUon Depart· ment. it.am at 8:30 p.m. Saturday at the Community RecreaUon Center. "Brother Goose" featuring an all teenage cast. wru run both Friday and Saturday night. Ticket! may b-0 purchased at the door. Sunday'1 event. the fourth annual Old Timer·New Timer Picnic at Costa Mesa Clt1 Park will include a barbecue. entertainment. helicopter rides, game and refreshment booths. and drawings for a portable tt.levtslon. a smf board , 11tillg ra1 bicycle and a five-pound boz of candy. Entertainers and gutsts wltl)nclude Ass•J\blyman Robert Bur kt , 11 Hun· lington Beach. the Newport ltarbor Cllaptcr of the Sweet Adelines, Uie swlngJng Dollies rrom Coata Mesa and the Kitchen Band from Santa Ana. The Costa Mesa Art League. will display work1 of art and the Costa Mesa Fire Departml!nt will preseht a fire equipment demoD$traUons. The picnic event will be open from 10:3J a.m. to dusk and the barbecue, at $1.50 per person, from I2:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. Spon1or1 ll'e the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce and the Costa Mesa Art League in ~njunction with the Costa Mesa JC's and the Recrea. lion Department. the week's events conUnue Monday with the city championship baseball itame at Co rilca Park at 12:30 p.m. Participants wtll be the two champion teana from ~ 13 city parks. A lllllilY opql>ettl feed and Went show-featuring tM belt of the clfy park•' UtespiaM will highlight I'( " ' day·s activities. Dinner y,•\ll be served from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. in the Com· munity Recreation Center and the show will foUow irom 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Dinner will be 75 cents tor adulta and 00 et11t.a for children. Tuesday will be Senior Citizens Day. All senkr clUzem are invited to participate in the bridge, pinochle and canasta championships at the Community Recreation Center, fol· lowed by a poUuek chicken dinner at 5 p.m. and an old fa:ihioned commu· nJty sing. There will be no charge. A.II youngsters 14 and under can partlclpale In Mak._Jt.AJld.Tak<-lt Day Wtdnesday from 1,311p.m.to3:311 p.m. in the Community Recreation Center. Childrctl ean indulge in any or all of six different crafts lncludUlg printJng With oll Ink, sea 1hell pictures and backyard lanlerna made of milk cartons. City orrlclals and th< junior all·stars from the cash box and then nung an- other cash box into the lobby, i;cal- tering customers. In addition to the crash helmet with face shield, the r obber wore a plaid shlrt and beige trousers and black l>oots. He ran oul a side door and fled in the sedan. Witnesses said be was alone when he drove off. He was described as caucasian, be- tween the ages of 35 and 40, and ot average build, Fair Board Shrugs Off P9p [~ilv~ ;., A-w.1tmortem on tbe. Jate ·N~t Pop rftt!Val might make an auiOiis y on Frankenstein's Monster stem like high school biology, but the Orange County Fair. Board barely poked at the subject Thursday. They checked the tongue, ro11ed back the eyelids and agreed that something w~nt agonJzingly wro~g. "Would you now' like to discuss the event which has brought so much at~ tention to all of us?" asked Dr. Joseph Ribat. board president as the end of the agenda neared. Basically, director 11 asked Secretary-Manager Allred Lutjeans to compile a full, written r eport on the Aug. 3-4 music festival which brought an estimated 110,CXX> people into the flarbor Area. Costa Mesa City Councilmen will he'ar their own report next Monday ni ght, then meet with the Fair Board to compare notes after Lutjeans' com· pilation is finished late next week. "Did they say they weren't going to have another one? Costa Mesa Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley with a note or hope when contacted by the DAILY PILOT on another matter. A decision will be a long time com· ing from !.)\e Fair Board, but Mayor Pinkley and city officials hope to pop the 1969 Pop Festival bubble before it becomes another dirigible like the last one. Parking, police protection 1 n d crowd control -as well as narcotics violations and sexplay in the dust - are primary complaints by the city and some inhabitarrts. Parking, police protection an d crowd control were discussed by Fair Board directors Thursday night, with the dialogue at times quite colorfu1. "They were overstocked on talent, oversold on tickets and understaffed," (S.. FAIR, Ptlt !) Program will becomt'! rivals \Yednesday ll Te Winkle Park when they batUe for soft· ball championship honors at 7J.m. The all·star team is made up the best player1 rrom each city park. A watermelon feed will follow the game. At 8 p.m, Wednoeday I -dlll<e 1..-,al! UtOSt 13 to Ii ytan of age Will be "'"d In the Recreation center. Ad· ml.sslori Is 2.1 cenLs per peraon. A checker tournament to decide t2MI city champion will take pllce Tbun· day from 1:30 p.m . to 3:30 p.m. al tht RecreaUon C.Oler. Participants wlll cotnpete In two groups, those lO[ears or age and under, and tltoH 1 and older. 'Elle first night of a two.night aquat- les show will open Thund1y at 1:30 p.m. at tht EiWlcla Hllh School swimming pool. The pmiormen are au l!f•ruarda and swlmmtn1 lostruc- ton, hlr<d by ttte Ooota Mt11 Reena· (" (Seo MESA SOCIAL, P11e %} and olhe{• doing normal shopping duties, ao they were not subjected to harassment," be said. This Includes panhandling, spitting on the sktewalks, over ·fr i en d·l y remarks by men whose ardor Is fueled by alcohol and other unfortunate OC· cUrrences .witpsed in his coastal Junkel "Jn short, I don't believe it possible !or the downtown areas to rebuil d themselves and their image, so long as we are shackled with cheap ban~' St. Clair sttid. Not aJI bars, just cheap bars . "An excellent restauraiit, with a cocktaJI lounge, oo the other band, h1 often o( benefit to a downtown are1,'* he said, "it provides a place for merchants to meet customers ...Jnd business associates. It aottracts r dlf. ferent element." Modern shopping ce.nters· angle for (S.. ~lESA BAJIS, Poge %) """ ' ~ . ..... f]P~ .... ;· M4nia••re: New.Po'1-Beach city councilmen have approved purchase of this po·rtable television cam~ra for use by police and other municipa l , departments. Jt ·is demonstrated by JQbn La Terra . Camera has nothing t.o do. with $500,000, "Elect ronjc Pro!eetinn' System (EPS) rejected'.by•council,.earll.er'tbi1 week. ntat called for city-wide net,. work of mucbr larg~r Camer•s, monitdred ·by police. Mesa CHART Unit Backs Fairgrounds as Court Site Strong -:ndorsement of a: Costa Mesa site .for new municipal court facilities has come tOday from ,CHART. an in- fluential Costa Mesa citizens'. group. CHART members Th 11 r s ·d a y unanimously eildorsed a resot'ution favoring a new court site on the Eight Hessians Held in Beating Face Court Date Eight members of the llessians motorcycle club, charged with assau1t with intent to commit murder, Will appear in Municipal Court Monday at 9:..S .a.m. for a prellmlnary hearing. The hearing originally was sched· uled for today, but at the defend.an.ts' own request was con.Uoued over the ~. A total of 22 men originally were tal<en Into custody Lost ,...(c In C9f1· nection With the ~aln whipping and ghoollng <( Rol>erl Giatier, 311, of Zl24 Placentia Ave., an ex-prizefighter. Nine were lat.er rele1i5ed. Gittler was 1hot' in the hand when he tried to cover bis face. Members of a gang of hoodlums burst into lhe Gla:iler home lut ~edntsday .rp.abt, according 10 8-a GIUler, Uta wl!e ol the btateo man. Pollot sald Ut .. ~ob· WU ponibly I ~ rald lor a lfght lnvolvinJ Ute leader <i. Ute png and Glozler, a bit bouncer, a .week earlier. n-oclbtduled to appoor lor Ute hearinfi Monday are Fr1'1k "Wiid "Mp111e' Rum!IO, '4. of 13$ Ajbert SL , C0<ta Maa, who la charpd H Uta loader ol lh •lfllUP: Thomu M. HJlle, 20, of 2207 Canyon Drive, juat oulsldo Cocta Me_sa city'Umila : Philip Cel'.1;1co1 :Ill, of 'l'J1111:anyoa Drive : ai>d Rooen C. Hannoo, :Ill, of 1442 S. Raill SL, Santa ~ ... Abo Robert Murdock, !II, ot 1'/0ll Dal: St., Gardea rove : J1m11 Lar· '!'!"· 211, of l2ll82 oUa Avt .. Gar· cNn GNve · Rob1r1 · ' slin, 24, ot · Zil A';o.;;lo SL. Ooota M ... : .nd. WR:J.,,,,. Grilentl, )I, of Harbor t(ly. Orange cpµnty fairgroUn<!s opposite the· Costa Mesa Civic Center. . · 8everil sites' fot' thi! :neW Six-COW'( struatuTe . ha Vt · been suggested in Newport Beach' and ·Costa Mesa. The Orange County Fair Board has in· dicated a willingness to sell property for the court .complex an~ provide adjoining parking. The € T n1olu· tion will go to Fifth · s tr I c t Supervisor Alton E .. Allen who is con· sidered a key person in determininf u1timate site location. Newport Beach ~fficials are ·pr°'" moting a site locaUon near .Fashion Island, in Newport Center .. .,_ proposed new civic center Plan at MacArthur Boulevard and Coast JUdlway sub- mitted to the Newport City CouncU Monday 1how1 a courtr atructure in that city's civic eenter complex. The court building will replace facilities now being used by three judges on 18th Stteet near Costa Mesa Park. Orange .-... Wectller It'll be a nice, ·clear weekend if you don't mind wiltJng a .while -like till midmorning when the clouds roll, by, bring· ing the Orange Coast a bMmy day with mld·70 temperatures. INSIDE TODAY Even ihe 1poghetti c;m,, with a cultural twil' all m:t week fn Coatu Mesa. Rtod about •hows, tptclal tt1enU.-ond tM spagluttl di~n<T of &otlal ".tr!a w .. ~ todaN Ill WEEKENDER. '-tt.-:;= ·-~-W::ttm ·--·~·-' 11 .,..,., """" ,. 1 '9dll .... 1>14 n.at ·~ , .. ,, 11 iled: ~ 1"11 II ~ 'II ' fllMlltn ....... , .. .,..,...... 4 ·-·~ --· Wwtf ,.... +6 ,,_ flW. ''"' ~ -=---·---- '"" • " " .. • .. .. .. • ·-..,, ......,. 1.·n -. cir-,.,, ·-,.,, flllll ..... I ~. ; ~ •n I ·I ' • :. ,. I , Nixon Eying . U.S~ Drive By-Reagan SAN DIEGO (AP) -Ricllard V.. N1zoo'a 1trat11ilta wOUld Uke to M• California Gov. Ronald Reagan cam· ,, ~ naUoully lor the GOP ticket, ,iilrtlcularl1 In the SOutb and other c'001enaUv1 ll'MI. , Nll<on coaler• today with n.qan and a group ol Republican leldtrl wbo are expected to represent the GOP presidential nominee in volt· seeking -ances. . - F rid1y, Atl9ust 16, 1968 -. -. . • DAIL.,. PILOT Riff l'Mtt $49,104 Contract Work to Start On Bottleneck • A bid was awarded Thursday for a $49,11'.M.50 contract designed to speed things up .at one of Costa Mesa's most heavily t:rw.veled and frequently bottle· necked Intersections. dustrlal land.) Lelt-turn lanes will be added to north and southbound lanes o f Newport Boulevard and new 11parate. phase, higb iDtensity mercury vapor lighting sy1lA!m1 allo will be lnataned. Some widening la also due on the Brletol Street and Palisades Road ap. proaches to the boulevard, with com· pletion e~ted within three months. Ni.on 11 txpteud to ask Rtaaan. an unsucculf\al candidate for t b e oomiAIUOO. to put ae much Ume and ooero as he can Into the prealdentlal campalp. Requ lw oald his ireatHI ~ coatrlbuUon would be in b1J own ltate. Nixon lieutenant1 aaree with Iha! hut have 1ald they want him to cempalcn oulaidt Call· fornia •• well. 1 TILL IT LIKE IT WAS -Costa Mesa City Coun-along narrow streets. St. Clair ts contrtbutll!g old Stelny and Mitchel Inc ., of Loa Angeles, wlll begin work in mid- September on a three-month widening job at the intersection of Newport Boulevard and Bristol Street·Pa.li.lades Road. (Bristol Street become s Palisades Road e1st of the ln- teraecUon which carries much Oran&e County Airport-bound traffic, as well as motorists: h&adlng to the area's in· Cost of the project will be divided amona the state Division of IUgbways, City of Costa Mesa and Orange Coun:. ty's arterial hlabway flnancint pro- iram. Three other Orms submitted bid.!. The other GOP leader• meetlnc with Nixon include Govt. John A. Volpe of Masisacbusetts and Walter J. Hickel of Aluka; Sen. Howard Baker of Ten- netteei Repa. Don Rumafeld of Ill1Do1.I, Bill Brock Clf TIDDHtff; Clark lllacOre1or of Mlnotoota and Ge«P Blllh Of Teua: and Bud WllldJllGll, n.pubUcu naUoaal com· mlttaeman bom Ol<laboma. tu N~on waaad hla party unit)' drM, -.of hla advllwo -a Negro -talltad Tbur.i.y ol dlUaUolaotlon, c<J9}ntt1, even revolt by NtlfOll aglinlt tho vice preoldenllai nomina- tion of Marylllld Gov. Spiro T. Aanew. Eerl Dearin&. prolOCUUnl attorney in Lou11V111e, Ky., ahd a member of Nxon'• campalp advi'IOtY council on crime and law llllorcment, said at a newe conforenco lollow!nl a mHUn& ol lbe oolincll with Nixon, be b- AIOOW wlll do tomolhlnl before elec- tion daJ "to prove to th• American Negro that he ta In-In eolvln1 the vtrlouo eodal pro1>11m1 that belet \th• Necroea tn th• ptto." Dearin& said he I.I a Republican, but that be bat made no commitment to the N~on·A...,. ticket, and added 1 !lat the Af1Jf1W 1eltctl0a WU wor· rlrome. ....... p ... J MESA SOCIAL •• tion Deportment. Admllllon I.I IO -II ·-ror o<tlilts and Iii cell!• for cbUdren. = The. ib'oop-thoop hula hoop contest for the finalist. lrom each city park will take place Friday from ~::Kl p.m. 1 ~ro 3:30 p.m. at Costa Mesa City Park. :. The wlnrier wW go to the regional ! 'finals in Loi An&eles where he can ~ Win a $100 aavings bond, a tour of Unl--1 Studios and a trip to DI.I· -neyland A RoUnd Dance and Square DUICe Jamboree will obapl up Friday at 7:30 p.m. In lbe Recrea-Cen\OS'. 'l'horo will be demonstrations and audience partlclpeiloo dancing IDlW 10:30 p.m. Admloolon ii -· The --Ion& acuvtuas will con- clude Saturday with' the annual Costa Mesa CivH:: Playhouse Awards Ban- quet at the Costa Mesa Country Club. The 8 p.m. banquet will include dinner, d.anclng and thl announcement ol. the wiMers Of the awards for best act- ress· and actor and best supporting actress and actor for the past year. Drtu I.I lonnal and Uckoll are "' per penon. lluervaUOlll for the booquot and ln- formallon coaoornlng the week'• ... uviu .. may be made by c:ootactlng tho -UOD Deportment at 834-530.I. Road Pact Given A Contract for '49.104 to widen Newport Boulevard and 1-Jstall left turn lanes and traffic signals and 1111J1iD1 at Bri>lol S11fft and Palilades Rood In COMM-bao been awanted to the firm St.lny and Ml~bel Ill<. or DAil Y PHO! OIWfGI ('OAST PUaLISW1NC> COMPIJIY -o\.rt N. W••4 l"rtsld!MI 11111 ,utl'l1'flfr Jer.k R. C111l1y \IQ l"reidtllt Ind OtNrtl Mt ... ttr Tho11111 K11•·l1 Edllor ?Ito••• ;.. Murplil111 _ ...... ,,,1 N1t1111 MwwtWnt Dndol' ---)10 Wnt l1y Stt11t Mtffrllf Allr1111 P.O. let 1160 tJIJl ..__ NcW!lfll1 IMcti: '111 W•t .. ltliN llNltw"' LI..,,,. ti.cf!: 2ll '"-"' A->IU1111Mf\1111 ltldl: • Jtft Sl'retr • cllman Wllllarn L. St. Clair (left) tells newcomers photo display lor Sunday's Old Timer-New Timer Donna Sievers, Dori Bull and his son Mllte, how Picnic In C031a Mesa Park. It's part of city's Social Costa Mesa was tn old days when tin Uzztes rolled Aris Week. , • Woman Marine Caught After High Speed Chase ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Heights Water Hearing Delayed for One Month An all«Dly !or the propoeed Santa Ana llet&hll Water DWrtct aot a oe- c:oad me month delay 1n-a heerlng befon the Local A1eDCy Form1Uon Commloslon (LAl"C) Wedneeday. At the ome time Georae G. Logan hlnlad that the mall•r may be rt1olv - ed-belore -the 5ept. 10 h•erinl date. "We may be near & 1olut.IC111 Of this JJr<>blem," .Lolm told U>e L.\FC. looder ol the ll'OUll: Tbomu M. Hille_ The Ooeta Meoa County Water Dlltrlct bu olfwad lo buy the Santa Ana Hel&hta Watar Co. lor lllOl,000 ond COlllUmmaum ol lhlo \Ital may be What Logan wu lndlcaUn1. Tbe new d!.1111ct I.I propooed by the shareholders ol the water compuy 1n an avowed effort to fon1tall cor- dem.naUoo by the Coeta Mesa cl!Jtrlc: Rabbit Breeders Ask for More Lettuce from Fair Rabbit breeders aren't about to come to Costa. Mesa ror chicken reed . directors of the Orange Cobnty FaJr _ Board were told Thursday night. Neither are those who r a I s e chickens. "The rabbit people boycotted us becauae Wfl toot away the premiums," Sec:retary-Mu.,.,. AlfNd Luljeans told di.rectors la explanation of a 60 percent drop in bunny and chicken n:;. hibition. R11bbit and poultry fanciers, how- ever, must blame their troubles on a cattleman who ~ pcrtrayed cow-pokes on the movie screen. Cutbacks in the state financial pro- nam by Gov. Ronald Reagan this year forced many reductions in California faJr operaUons. ,. "The Pacific Coa1t Bantam Club warned in a letter a month b!fore the fair that they would boycott also." Lutjeans told the board, 11but L. just didn't know how to answer them." The bantam ptople apparently thou.ght a ribbon-only 11ward 1y1tem w1s just pn!tty small . Mailman Writes Eloquent Plea Against Big Dog SARASOTA, Fla. ( A P ) Postmaster Gordon Hlg!e1 reported t.o- day receiving this report from a Cl.I'· rler: ''I conducted tactical retoo mission ooncerning Great Dane. He is the big· gest dog I have ever seen. I talked to one of the owners' daughten abo\lt the dog and found out he bad a tende!lcy to bite people. "It Items the owners have absolute- ly no control over the dog. The 1creen porch that he is on ia not very secure. Jn fact. one of the settena hu a big rip which the dog can 10 through without any trouble. "Until now the 1111 person ht b!t WU the daughter I WU talking to. "l personally feel that the doi is ''U7 dan&erous. To whom do 1 submit the bill for my trousers?" Costa Mesa Park Hula Hoop Site Coot& MeP Park will be tranoform- ad !nlD a poor m1n'1 Bawall Jl'ridey. wban ll ,.....,_ perlorm their vvalon& ol tho hula -1um>unded by brtal>Uy colored plaltlc boop1. The 1 :X> p.m. compeUUon ts scheduled to choose a reg1onal hula hoop compftttion contestant, followtnc selection of winners trom 13 city parks recenU~ Bob , supervisor for the city Recrea a. Department contest. says the reJ!onal wliiner will U..n compelA! AUf. 11 la !ht ,.ttonal hula boop meat at Unlvtl'lal studlCt lo Hdilrfood. ~ Petitions signed by 1,652 persons backed the formation of the new district. It would cover about 1,200 acres bttween Upper Newport Bay and the Orange County Airport. Both the Costa Mesa ctistrict and the city of Newport Beach are protesting formation o! the new district. The move i1 also protested by the Irvine Company, holder of a large number of shartt in the water company. From Page 1 )'AIR ... .~aid Lutjeans, "and they c•ve jobs to friends who bad no experience witb security m6MW'fll."' Lutje.ans-1a1d he was on ttie grounds daily from 9 a .m. until wee hours of tbe lollowlol days just be!ore the le•tival, trying to help sutde the In- experienced promoters. ';It 1 hadn't been there, it never woald have com1 oU," Lutjeans said. SuggesUops he made for more ef. ficient handling of the big show were also rejei!ted. Lutjeans said, although Wesco Productions later acreeFJ: he had the right Jdea. --·~'. These included running several 1tages with staggered performances at interior fairgrounds 11ltes, which would have circulated the cniwds and led to better restroom avallabllity, leas lltterln& and leu trouble With con· cessions UH. It would have a1ao left open the 800,000 square f"t med by the Pop Festival for parklnc space, which wu at a pnmium and cauaed police to close of tone large outside lot. Lutjeans also 1a1d the Fairgrounds will realize up to $10,000 in revenue from the Pop Festival, not the Sl,000 originally quoted, and that Wesco Productions ls paying for e x t r a cleanup. Grave8ide Rites Slated Sunday For Vietnam Vet Graveside military services are 1 scheduled Sunday for Costa Mesa's Jatest Vietnam combat casualty, U.S. Mtrlne Corpe L./CpL Ltonal<I Z. Gurwitz:, who died last Sunday ot 'Wounds . The 11 a.m. ceremony wtl1 be In Hillalde Memorial Park, juot o!I La Tl- Jera Boulevard along the 5an Diego Freeway in the Culver City area of Los Angeles County, L./Cpl. Gu r w I tz died In the Philippines. 2'ti months after being wounded by 1hrapnel and small arms flrt May 30 at Quang Tri, South Viet- nam . He I~ survived by his -psrtnts, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gurwitz. or 3165 Bermuda Drive. as well as two sisters. Mr11 . Rochelle Martin, of Los Angeles and Mrs. Hinda Ruiz, of Santa Ana. Rabbi Robert Bergman. of Temple Beth Sholom. Santa Ana, wUJ officiate at services for th• 22-ytar-old Costa MH1 HIJb School graduate. Boy's Run Fails; Gl'andf ather Dies A fivt-m.1le run by al\ ll·year-o\d boy alter hla grandlolhcr h"4 collapoed on a hunUnr 111p pnvad In vain Tbunday when Carl E. Dodp, as. Of Loo ~~II died of an apparent hurt 11- Lee Smith of Redondo Beach ran from deep In tho Cleveland N1Uonal Fore•! to 0rte1a Highway and naued * rld1 to the 11..arest ran&er station to get help. Ho and hl1 grllldlather hod killed 1 deer, stopped for lunch aod we.re otart;ng back to their car when Dodi• became 1ll. 8)' the time ru1er1 returned with tho youUJ, b I I l?andf&ther WU deod. .Front P.,,e 1 BARBE8 ... this type of establishment, or at the v1ry le1st, a well·kept, red carpet type ol tavern, he l&Jd. St. Clair said his independent, personal study ~ads him to believe Costa Mesa needs a type of downtown- area zoning or city ordinance which would help phase out objectlooo.ble bars. He atso ·cited HunUngt.on Beach, whose downtown has hit the skids - with its eight bars, which one may enter without ever crossing a street, due to back alleys -in his remarks. "We even have a law prohlb!Ung bars tn M-1 industrial distrlctl," he noted, "and J can't Wilk of a better place for them. They don't bother anyone out there." "We've got to get rid of some old ideas," he said. Alcoholic Beverage Control laws are food, In thal thoy probJblt drinking In public, or In vehlcles and otherwise reeulate the consumption of In· toxlcants aimed at the welfare ot the public, he agreed. "Yet with all our bars spread all over town, it is impossible \o enlorce these laws properly a:nd to_. provide an environment in our downtown areas and attract those who are the mainstay of economy," he concluded. 85,000 Ring Missing A ring loaded with diamonds and sapphires was reported missing to Newport 8each police from the M&ry Clark mtdence, 518\) Marigold Avt. Police were told the ring was n- crwted with 2fl diamonds and 10 s phlr!s and was worth $5,000. · A woman Marine today Is charged With turnJng El Toro Mart.De air sta- tion into a high s ed racing course em-ly this morning. was captured only after she crash nto another car on the Santa Aila Fre ay. Before the crash, 1uspe Rol>ln Lynn Joyce, 22 , r.f llout Tex., described by sheriff's depu "built like a lady wresUer " ha un It least threee roadblock!; M. spfteds up to 90 miles per hour inside tbe base, of- fjcers charged. Deputies who made the arreist c n felony drunken driving and realsUn g .arrest charges were alerted by military police that the woman suspected of drunken di.riving wa s leavlng the main gate at El ·roro. Deputies spotted a car on Irvine Boulevard when the suspect reported· ly ran a atop sign at Sand Canyon Avenue. The chase was on at speeds up to 85 miles per hour until the woman spun out on a curve 1t the 1outb.east corner of the sir station. Regaining control, she re-entered the air station and was pursued at speeds up to 90 miles per hour. Inside the base, sbe ran two roadblocks set up by military police ond then sped out the main gate sla!hlng through another roadblock. The driver then sped north on Trabuco Road to the Santa Ana Freew1y where she drove 9t speeds up to 115 mUes p.t:r ho,W' Which led to her undoing. She lost control at the 4th Street overcro!slng ran up on the bank and back down into a car driven by Patricia Ann Ribald!, 20, of LakelYOOd. Miss Ribaldi was slightly injured. Miss Joyce is in .Orange County Jail. Police Looking For Boat, Guard Looking for Joh Police are looltini for a 16-foot &all boat ond ftv. pool 18ble1 todey, while a former security guard et e Costa Mesa boat ware~sing com· pany is looking for a new job. The loot, totallin& about $31500 in value, was ta.ken last weekend in two separate cases reported. Wednesday by Ervin G. Kasten, of Glaspar Co., a division of Larton Industries. Kasten told Officer Wayne Harber a 16·foot Citation boat worth '219n was taken, along with five pool tables worth $560, all while a guard was at the gate. lie said the guard has been discharged. A similar boat theft involving a craft belongjng to a Westminster man 'i\.'as reported by Glespar officials lasl week. ---....... ~=- WAREHOUSE SALE! PANTASTIC VALUES IN FABRICS! I NEWPORT STORE ONL y I HUNDREDS OF YARDS OF DRAPERY AND UPHOLSTERY FABRIC:S " \ -- 50o/o TO 70°/o OFF '· ... CASEMENTS-PRINTS-SILKS-VELVETS-TAPESTRY-ETC. UNBELIEVABLY LARGE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM. DON'T MISS AN OPPORTUNITY LIKE THIS TO REDRAPE OR REUPHOLSTER AT UNHIARD Of SAYINCiS. FURNITURE VALUESll HERITAGE DREXEL u PHOUTERY ..... SALi ..... IALI •••• IALI 315. 15900 1 WMfl T.W. 209. 99" 1 Ceckttdl T•bl• 185. 79" lblO SI..,.,..• 4k42 t , ... 119. 59" 1 CMkNU T.W. 165. 99" tOcc. 21b:l6 'ft. I hW 1 ,.., r.w. 135. 59" .... , "-9 JNl6 ..... ... 219. 99"' 1 ,. ..... ,_ 149 6900 JZ.26 ,__ Sl ..... ke '"· ... ' ..... , ••. c ...... ,, .... ' ..... C.--4• 125. 3910 -·--c... 41 ..... ,, ........ 339. 1 c.._ ,,.,. 209 lhJO ,.._., llCRteflN • 1 C-M CM .... ·-325 24171 • ICHlrtltflT9Me 185. llctr.ftll• 1 hJJ 1 Ctcltton Tell!• M-k r., 20160 129. J 1 .. kcen hce11 168. w1u ........ ....... , 189. 1•11 13900 ,..,..,..h21 99•• I LAI"'' T.lifm 34" °'" 95 .... •• ,,_ "· t .... 145°0 1 ~T_.lt 95. 39" -.....,. r ..... ,., 69" 1 Occ. ..... 3900 1 ••tt.t w ..... 20.:60 DHloNtfe# 249. 99" 1 .. 12400 1 s.t..t c--. 245. 79" , .... --6900 ~T-J 7127 258. 79'" 1 "" MANY OTHER PIECES TO CHOOSE FROM c ... ..... .... ALSO A LARGE SELECTION OF BEAUTIFUL BEDSPREADS AT GREA Tl Y REDUCED PRICES. ALL SALIS FINAL-NO CHARGES EXCLUSIVE DEALERS FOil: HINHDON-DRIXIL-HIRITAGI 199" 235. 135. 195. 149. 90 DAYS NO INTIR!ST-LONGO TEllMS AVAILAILI ON APPROVED CRIDIT IN11RIOIS LAGUNA llACH 49'' 89" 89" 69" 6,.. NIWPORT llACH 1727 W11tcllff Dr., 642-2050 OPIN •lllAf 1'1L t Pror.11lon1I 1nterlor Daelgnora AYlll1bl ........ ID-NSID 345 North Coat Hwv. 494-6551 OPbl ,lrDAY "nL t ' f r ' • .• y I. I. ' ' • I• n 0 y a a •• • .t n ft ,, ;t ~---~----·~--------~----~-------------------------.................. ------~ .. ••• ~:~ •<· Catalina 1 ~~~·~.Not a Dump -.. , .. ........ .. . . .. .. . ,, ly ALMON LOCKAllY ~,';· '."By ALMON LOCKABEY "'i.11 • Dlllr l'4ltt ...... MO• ~. • . ·.. ;:.Every yadUman who "' ' -Ylsiitl C&CaMne IlliaDd dlD'ing 1'·• • the year should tlak'8 time out at ooe time or another· to bave • cllll with Doug Bom· · · · l>Onl, ttJe pnial director ol the C-aali"'l" Camp &r.: Cove A wbicll administa-1 ttl~s ol tne ia1aDd for Ille Wrigley Oo. ' Bombard ia a youna:, - -amiable man whose lUe is wrapped up in Ille island . l'bict'! he ha6 called home since he was a boy. ~,~, . ·. He is amiable, that ii, un- : ,.,._.. (H He awakens some morn-::~ ·~ ·tQg and surveys a once-at- ;:,-:; .. jtJdive beach or cove lit· , · . .fered with plastic cupe:, beer .. ···.:.Cans, bottles an:t. other ·,;.~ 1ssorrted debris which bas drifted in from offshore. "They're making litter .~,.,Detter these days," moans • :"1.•~,l8ombard in explaiOOlg tbc:t " ·-~ere .is literally no safe $11stance from shore where boatmen can dump garbage .. Of debris. ,'."-. ·"These new plastic con· _ , Jainers and packaging inmerla! just do not sink. .. ':·~may noat for days, but flJlally wind up on some . :"belch." :_:-, · ltECEPTACLES also provide pickup service fur vi&iling y-en. "We l<We tbe yachting crowd," gays Bombard. "We are happy eo have them come here. But we wiBh they would be more carelul ol the litter pro- blem..'" 'Ibe 1"ll"d pollution doesn't botber Bom b·ard or Harbormuter Ed Scovel at AvalOa. 'lbe natural' scour· inc ond purifying actioo of the sea -wtth a heavy assist from scavenger fish -makes l5ho!'t shrift of the small amount of aew8ge -is pumped from -ll>ilels. RUBBISH "It's the litter problem that concems us," 1ay1 Bombord. And -it might. It also should concern every DAIL y Pt LOT Ueff ....... yachtsman who wakes up in THREE TIME CHAMP -Earl Elms and his crew the mcrning to see his Mike Shear of San Diesi:o get wet derrieres as they favorite cove be~. invaded drive toward finish to win third consecutive national by plastic cups, p)iltes and championship in Snipe Class. Elms starts competi- other indestructible rub-tion in the 5.5 meter Olympic trials at Newport Sun- bish. day. Bomberd doesn't blime it _....;. _________________ _ all on the yachtsmen. One day.he looked out to sea and saw wtiat appeared to be a 01 • wave o1 mteeaps coming ympl~ acr06S the w a t e r . In- vestigation showed it to be Trials F'rld•Y, A.11,u1t 16, 11N.8 DAILY PILOT J• Rallies fn Last Race Elms Snipe Champ A.gai_n . ~ • , Readied .. 1 4. Dave Ullman, l!alboa Yacht Club, 21-9-2-8.-11-2· 11~ . S. Tom Nute. San Diego, 5-- 6-9-U-5-l.._?0.1, 5. Francl.s S e-i v y , Clearwater, F11., 14-2-18..1--7· 3-17-70.t . '1. Buzz Levonsoit, ln• d I a n a polls, 7-1~17·2-3- 5-70.7. 8. Dave Peterson, San Diego, IB-7·24-1+4-15--74 t. E. E. 1 'Shorty'' Campbett, ABYC, 11·1+!5-5- 20-tS-75. 10. Gonzalo Diaz, Miarri!, Fla., 2-11-7-21-9-1~77 . Wellt Con1ol1ttoa Serle1r 1. Norman Ahlqu.ist, San Francisco. 'rl.7. !. Ron Fox, ABYC. 29.7. 3. Bill Kilpati:lck , Oklahoma City, 34.7. 4. Don Blod11$1t, KHYC, 40.7. S. Larry Gray, KHYC, 48 .1. I. Jon Johnt, Ann Arbor, Mich.1 SO.I • Police Work Drawing Young WASHINGTON (UP!) - ,: ..... , Time w.as when the . :·~;!yachtsman felt ~t if he ~. dwnped his debris, two, five ... , ~-:Or even 10 miles at sea it · ,. •··~Id soon be destroy.ed, It : ... iust doesn't work that way · ···anymore . Beer cans , ·_ '. .. -punctured on only one end ;, ..• : .Will float for houns. Capped "' bottles will float forever. literally thousands of plastic cups. F u r t h e r investiga"'ti.on showed that the cups bore the imignia Qf, ttle Catalina ~amship Co. Tne oceti.n may have been white but the air was blue when Born· bard hustled ashore at Avalon and showed t.tiose re(,l0!15ible ttle evidence. 17 Yachts to Vie • in Newport Harbor FiBI Directior J. Edgar HOO\l'er told the 82nd session of the FBI Na t i on al Academy Monday law en- forcement wa1 the vanguard in the American war against lawle6&1ess . Warning there are stag. gering problems in com· bating crime, Hoover took n;ote of the f-act that "law enforcement is m a k i n g great strides toward pro- ressionalisn and ettracting an increasing number of YOlali'. men." · '" Plastic garbage receptacles · · ·-·dumped at sea will either go ;; .:.\"''back to Catalina or follow you home -eventually. ·.:-,,'.. fQI.' the5e rea1Sons many · .. _:qf. t:he yacht clubs which ~ .: :-tease coves on the island ··.··-now provide garbage ;~~· .: .:pickups so that it can be :· .. ~.)taken ashore and disposed ··ot in a prom.per manner. ·. ·.'scime of the cove operators " '• -.. From then on there was no more dumping of rubbish from the S. S. Avalon Of' other passenger bOats. Bombard's friendly word of advice: Either send your rubbish and garbage ashore at Oatalina (by boot) or keep it aboard uotil you can dispose of it oo shore at bO?ne. :: .. ·~: .. Family of 'Amateurs' ·· ·r o Sail to Australia RICHMOND, Oalil. CUP!) -When the Harry L. Neely fiamily sets sail next week •· · • .lor Australia, its f o u r members will rely on a cor· ·respondence course I n : ihavigation for guidance. n ,,' ·"We expect to learn as we • .go along," said Ne e 1 y ... . ··· Wednesday as he outlined . : --.plans to cross the Pacific ·~ · ·with his wife and two ' .•. .Children in a 32 -fo ot sailboat, •JValhalla ." The family has less than ·two years' s a 11 i n g ex- perience. Their longest trip with the islander rigged craft was 60 miles down the •· Coast to Half Moon Bay. They've just finished a cor- -nspondence course i n navigation. ' :" .. But Neely said they were · · .. committed to the trip, hav· -=.:: ;mg sold their home, .. . ' MAJOR STUDJO ... PREl'UE TONICOHT l :JO P.M . Sttmm•r'1 lest Comedy with • DORIS DAY e IRIAN KEITH furniture and car. "I've got oothing left but a hat and boat," he said. The Valhalla's planned route is down tlle coast to Sant.a Barbara, then to Maul in the Ha"W6ii.an Islands, Fi- ji, New Zealand and finally Australia . The children -Ben, 15, and Linda, 10 -plan to take correspondence classes en route, mailing them from one port and receiving grades at the next. The stage is set for the final Olympic trials of the 5.5 meter class off Newport Harbor starting Sunday. Seventeen of the nation's top rated skippers will bring their boats alongside the dock at Newport Harbor Yacht Club Saturday where el a b or a t e "o pe n in g ceremonies" are scheduled. The 5.5 meter is a small version of the 12-meter of America's Cup fame when it comes to design and racing machinery. Largest or the Olympic classes, the 5.5 measures out about 32 feet owrall. but like the 12- Meter it can vary according to the math e matical formula so long as the final product comes out to -5.5 meters. Here is the list of con- tenders who will go into ac· • • ' . ' ' ········•************************* ..,.,m...o ·-8100 attd 10:30.PM • WllKDAYS 2:4G . 5:15. 1:00. 10:15 SATURDAY 12:25°2:51-1:25-1:00· 1 O:ZO SUNDAY 12:JO.Z:55-S:20.7:JS-t:SO , tioo Sunday: OUTA SIGHT. SaJtt Allan , U.S. Naval Academy; crew, John Laun, Skip Allan, NHYC. SAVAGE, Al Cassel, Voyager s YC : Fred MacDonald, M. Johnson. COMPLEX VI, Britton Chance, New York YC, J. Lucas, P. Chance. TRUANT, Don Cohan, An· napolis, Md ., A Stuebner, T. Jones. CADENZA, Gardner Cox, New Jersey, S. Colgate, S. Walker. RAMONA . Gerald Driscoll, San Diego, John Blair, John Rumsey. SHADOW , Earl Elms, San Diego, Tom Nute, Doug De Sousa. GOSLING, Skip ElUott, NHYC, P . Wilson, G. Dit- mars. SUNDANCE, Ernie Fay, Houston, P . Neuhaus. Monsen, L. CHARADE, Bill Ficker, NHYC, Tim Hogan, George Twist. f , . .. j GYA1NKENE 11,1 TLaylor ~· ·' ran, ewpor , anny Coon, A. McDonald. • ~ CLOUD NINE -Gordon • Lindeman, Milwaultee, H. t. 1 Meyer, P. Harken. ~ LADY LUCK, Jo hn Marshall, Stamford, Conn., C. Ford, W. Hickel. LUY, Lowell North, San Diego, Peter Peekham, Dick Deaver. GRASS , Elliott 0 Id a k, New York, J. Murdock, R. Kobrick. F U G I TI VE , Warren Parker, NHYC, M. Parker, D. Parker. NEMESIS, Ted Turner, Atlanta, Ga., J , Markley, M. Shumway. • I FINAL GROOMING-Al Cassel's new Bruce King- designed 5.5 meter Savage, gets final going-over at Lido Shipyard by Joe Minney before starting com- petition in 5.5 Olympic trials . 33 Catamarans to Sail For U.S. Title at KHYC mont, Warren Miller, and Ted Mosher. .. The 19-foot P a c i f i c Catamaran is one of the I fastest multihulls for its size ever built. IWy IMM MMCO MtW. ,._ the11 IO,OOO~slM ~ Vou pt rn. tawlflf, • ,,.. --~. tnt. efriol..t _.lea wt trmn lfi Juat -Qy. And wfth MMCO, )'OVr trl1t1inJalllort -M proNchld lly ovw !IOO MMCO CM- litl'S ~-to COii~. Every ...imq. Mii • .... ..,.. -p-... y • ..,.a;w,,... II 1 r ff•* te AAllClel COSTA MESA 1741 JMwp9rt II. '46o16U Garden Grove "'41 ....... 0-llVC, .,., ..,_ Santi Ana tH •• Jllrtl SI •.... , ....... tu.fQI OVER 6') f'.t,'.•_:.._ • ... • 11\i CA f0"' • ._. Golfers Attention! ********************************* * There is i beautiful, well groomed, 18 Holes Golf Course with ocean breez~ -OPEN TO THE PUBLI~ EVERY EVENING AT ••• 8:00 and 10:00 PM AT Hl•WAY 39 DRIVE•IN THEG UATE • AT SAii JUAN HILLS COUNTRY CLUB Just East of Santa Ana Freeway In San Juli! Capistrano. Takt Valle Rd. or San Juan Crwk tum-off. DRIVING RANGE & SNACK IAR 1 1 ' OPEN Till DARK Lunch & Bar Facilltl11 Special Week Day Summer Illes ! I HOIM t Holooi Cl'reen ''" .•• , • • • • • • • • • • • •• $3.0il) $2.00 : lltdrk Cart. •• , •..••••••• , • 6.00 4.00 : ~ompleie llne •I Golf Equipment and ,.,...riv. Saturday, Sunday & Holl•ay Illes ' ' 11 Hoitt 9 Holol' G .... n f.., · · · · · · · . · · . . .. . • . $5.00 $2.SO i :'''~ 3 p.m. • , •••••••••• , , • , 1 .00 1.00 ? ltcfrtc C1rt1 ••• , .•....•••. , 7.00 i.oo , Phent fer R1tervltlon1 493-11 61 or 137-0S~l ___ l L-1 by Afoptln"""'I' • • . ' - I • . . • . . . -. ... . ~ ..... __ ..... -- DAD,"£ PROT EDITORIAL PAGE •• Festival Post Mortem Here it ls, two weeks after the famous Newport Pop Festival in Costa Mesa, and opinion still flie s in both directions about how good or bad it was. Opinions from civic leaders in lhe DAJ LY PILOT news colwnns, along with a barrage of back-and-forth arguments in the Mailbox columns, have underscored the fact that whether or not you consider the festival was a "success, .. jt certainly was Costa Mesa 's biggest conversation maker of the year. • Now that Tiny Tim and the other performers have withdrawn to grounds more native to their skills. and now that the Costa Mesa Police Department has added up its plwses and minuses of the affair, perhaps a litUe perspective can be put on the two-day gathering. Ali letters to the editor have indicated, there was wide disparity of opinion as to what exactly went Dn inside the fairgrounds. For the most part, the young people felt they behaved pretty well considering the circwnstances (lack of water, food and inadequate sanitation facilities and sound equipment). The opinion of adults went all the way to Mayor Pinkley's declara· tion that it bordered on ·"drug-crazed anarchy." Most evaluators probably fall somewhere in be-- tween. The fact is there were so many people there - at least double and possibly triple the anticipated crowd -that things couldn't have run smoothly. The promoters of the show, three young men or· ganized as Wesco Productions, didn't know what to do with the monster they had created. They had made woefully inadequate preparation for crowd control and hadn't even thought to provide an ambulance -let alone adequate water and food -for the crowd. Apparently no one even wondered about the thou· sands of persons who would try to find some place to sleep Saturday. Consequently, literally thousands oC bodies were stxewn out Saturday night from the Or· Why Women Outnumber Men By NORMAN NIXON, M.D. Every single girl knows there are lore women around than meJt.. Last anuary the U.S. Census Bureau :·eported there were only 96. '/ males Jo r every 100 females. Today there is a surplus of at least 3 million females. Until the 1940'&, however, men were in the majority. Paradoxically, ioo boys are born to every 100 girl(. SUt from infancy to the oldest ege brackets, the death rate for males far exceed* that !or fem,ales. Nearly three bof• die for every two girlt. At 11, ~o young men die for every young woman. At 35, l,400 men die for every 1,000 women; at SS, the ratio is 1,800 to 1,000. Why? Anthropologist Ashley Mon· tagu in a new revised edition of his book "The Natural Superiority of \Vomen" says: "The evidence is clear, from the constitutioaal standpoint, that woman is the r1tronger gex; the . natural superiority ·of women ls a biological fact." OBVIOUSLY, WHEN our country is at war, many young inen are killed \\hile in military service. But at any time in our large cities, seven times more men than women are victims of 1i.omicide and three times as many men of suicide. More important, more ri1en than women succumb to heart disease. circulatory ailments, cancer and accidents. Also, with a higher metabolic rate, men burn out faster than women. Undoubtedly, emotions play an im- portant role in shortening the lives of many men. Outwardly, women are more emotional but they are less like· ly to require admission to a psychiatric hospital. By crying, com· plaining. criticizing, and chatting en dlessly on the telephone, the y get lheir feelings out. On the other hand. men pretend to be stoical, im- perturbable and cool -at great cost lo their peace of mind an d physiological functioning. GENETICISTS BELIEVE th e fe male's XX c hr o mo~ om e com· "'!nation, as opposed to the male's XY . i~ partially responsible. On1y males !fer from hemophilia and other ~reditary diseases which are Ev~ryday ,ProblelD8 transmitted solely through the female. And girl babies are less likely to in· herit many gene·transmitted defects which may lead to crippling and kill- ing diseases later in llie. With many more widows, divorcees and spinsters now competing for the available men after 35, the struchlre of our society will continue to change. The Puritan ethic, so klng the dominant moral force in the U.S., already is dead or dying. Most ministers no longer sermonize on sex- ual transgressions as the predominant sin. OBVJOUSLY, THE new sex freedom in the U.S. does not necessarily set people free. But many "WOmen without husbands no longer are inhibited in ex- pressing their sexual d r i v e s . Regardless of age, the old taboos are disappearing and the double standard no longer holds , even !or married women. Many of them, more realistic than their mothers and grandmothers, are less apt to run to the divorce court if they learn that their husbands have been cheating. For ls women grow older and the surplus of women over men continues to rise, the rivalry for a man's love may bewme blatant. A good man, or indeed any eligible man, is hard ·to find ! A CORNELL PROFESSOR of nutri· tion. with ton·gue in cheek, has sug. gested a remedy. "One way to re- equalize the male-female life span is for women to drink more, worry more, s1noke more, exercise less, sleep less. eat more candy, butter a.nd ice cream,'' says the professor. But , unfortunately, there appean to be no cure for this ever-Increasing dilemma. We can only empathize with Rex Harriso n when he played Henry Higgins and sang plaintively, "\Vhy can't a woman be more like a man?" Vice Presidential Choice The oUice of vice-president has become too important !or either the Republicans or Democrats to settle ror less than nominees full y qualified to move up to t.he presidency. Eight times in U. S. history, the vice-presi- dent bas become president. Since 1900. nine of 12 presidents have died in or- ace, been assassinated, been targets of .attempt4!d assassicaUon, or been a:ubject to .sttious illness. A VETERAN journalist, Roscoe Drummond, bu written that "in every national convention I have covered atnce JJ40, tben ba1 not been a vice· pruidential nominee on either Ucket cbolen because of his fitness lo guc- ceed to the presidency. He has been plded to balance the ticket, to ple-.se •ome, f appease other&, or to unite the party. !fut never primarily bccabse he Wlf quaUlied.'' '-, Perhaps Drummond has overstattd t.fs argument somewh11t. There haYt _ bte.n q u a J J f l e d yjce-presidential •'l"ll•Nt. ONCE,\ EL AT J V ELY lnslg· a; Guest Editorial niricant office. the vJce-presidency .'l!i filled by such men as Richard Nixon, Lyndon Johnson and Hubert Hum· plvey has grown in Jmport.ance. More ano more responsibilities have been given vice-presidents -and mo re will be assigned as the burdens or the president. any president, grow. More and more, the vice-presidency -as demonstrated by Nixon and Humphrey -has become an important route to presidential uominations. The American voter shou1d be watchinJ? not only how the two parties make nominations for the top ofrlce, but also the importance the partJes at· t.ach to the sec o n d spot on their tickets. Qualifications -and not sucb irrelevant ficlors as party service, geography 8nd political reward - 1houJd be the prtocipal Ingredient in the selecJiml. ~ ' Mlnue1poU1 TrtbUDt ange County Airport to church parking lots as the !Ir· ing throng desperately sought places to rest. Marijuana was in evidence during the Cestlval. That was hardly unanticipated by anyone who has followed pop festivals. JC police had attempted to ar- rest everyone they suspected oC pulling marijuana, the problem thus created undoubtedJy would have been uncontrollable. The entire range of conduct -training and tight discipline -oC the Costa Mesa Police Department was, in !act, highly commendable. O!ficers in control and those in the field conducted themselves with skill. The festival was expensive to Costa Mesa. The pr~ moters did not provide adequate police protection, thus forcing a tremendous manpower load onto the C o s ta Mesa Police Department and all law enforcement agen- cies from surrounding communities who responded to a mutual aid call for help Sunday afternoon. A few markets dJspensing milk, doughnuts, lunch meat and bread might have made their budget on that one week- end's sales, but the Newport Pop Festival was hardly a revenue.producer for most oC the city. A columnist tor the Los Angeles Free Press, re-- viewing the festival, wondered why Costa Mesa was selected. He called it an "up-tight community" and thought it incongruous that the staid, old Orange Coun· ty Fairgrounds would be used to stage such a produc· tion. Most of Costa Mesa wonders exactly Ute same thing. Without demeaning the Utousands oC young pe~ pie who behaved themselves at the two.day affair, one must measure what the 1968 Newport Pop Festival did and didn't do for the city of Costa Mesa and its r esidents. On that yardstick, it is hardly an affair we'd welcome again. c Democratic Front Runner ls Cautious Facilities Were Inadequate WASHINGTON -One of the stranger aspects of a strange political campaign is that the major presiden· tial candidates should be judged by the vice prj:!sidents tiley keep. This may be due to the lack Of precision in issues between Richard M. Nixon and Hubert H. Humphrey. The issues. such as they are , wander o{f into politic-al impressionism. One sees in either candidate what he wishes to see. The first major decision ol a presidential cand,idate, picking his running mate. therefore tends to be a decisive test of the difference between the major candidates. Humphrey is about to be tested to see how much different he is Crom the RieJlai!d Wilson '~&. gj -- old Humphrey and how much different he is from Nixon. The old Humphrey was a fast.talking reformer. He could have called to his side any one o! a number of like-minded liberals without the flick of an eye. THE NEW HUMPHREY is a more cautious fellow, tempered by ex· perience. if you like, and very aware th:A his problem is not so different !rom Nixon's . This is why Humphrey would look toward an ex-governor of North Carolina, Terry Sanford, as a compromise like Nixon's choice of Gov. Ted Agnew of Maryland. Ruling Teddy Kennedy out of the running by his ovm choice, the Ken· nedyites in the party would be happier with Ambassador to France Sargent Shriver. But that would be Uke Jetting the mantle fall on Mayor Lindsay in the Republican Party. Shriver would also bring with him all the vulnerabili· ty of the mistakes and bad publicity of the poverty program. Humphrey now QJ.so has to consider Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota. a pacifistic former World War II bomber pilot , who hes projected himseU as the "third force'' presiden- tial candidate. bound to drain of! some of Sen. Eugene McCarthy's com- passionate support. McGOVERN AND Huniphrey both originated in South Dskota, which seems to a great many people on either Of the populous coasl5 to be a rather reme>te bir1hplace for presidents. But perhaps sectional balance oo presidential tickets is a casualty of the pluralistic society. There is no law or precedent which says tilat the vice -presidential nominee has to come from a big state. There are two Hugheses -Gov. Richard Hughes of New Jersey, and Gov. Harold Hughes of Iowa . Richard ls a Johnsonite. Harold is attracted by thP "third force." Both are good men in ttieir dlffcreot ways. Neither would do harm to the J'iumphrey ticket. At Miami Beach Nixon had to satisfy North O.olina and other sootllem Nies hekl lo the line by Sen. Strom Thurmond 1 Sen. John Tower of Tens, tmd Stn. Howard Baker of Ten· nes!ee. In Chicago Humphrey, if he Is prudent, will have to do something to salvage Texu for the Democratic ticket. Without Lyndon Johnson, JGhn F. Kennedy would unquestionably have lost Texas , other southern 1tate1 and the election in 1960. NORTHERN LIBERALS will simply have to adjust themselves to th.is ldea or give up any preteose o{ realism about the 1968 election. ThJ.1 is not an el<ctlon likely lo bt -by Oamlng defianco of the old order. Prai;ses Pop Festival Crowd To the Editor: Although we live only a few blocks from the Orange County Fairgrounds, there was such a lack Qf noise on THAT Saturday evening we forgot the Pop Festival was in progress a n d headed for South Coast Plaza. The traffic was dense and the roadside was filled with walking festival-goers, but the groups we saw seemed merely \\.'eary, not belligerent, nor ''animals." Despite the hot weather and con- fusion of traffic. the poUce and the majority of those desiring to enjoy a musical festival kept their composure and derserve hearty commendation. Large.scale events usually attract some undesirable individuals. but such ilidividuals do not necessarily come !rom any one age group. I WOULD LIKE to c<>mment on several possible oversights by those ruruting the festival: Insufficient drinking water facilities, soft drink and food st.<lnds inside t he fairgrounds; haphazard provisions for those planning to stay overnight; were there enough available s a n i t a r y facilities? Could some of the roadside litter have been avoided by strategic placement of containers?; we saw only one overflowing container on Newport Boulevard. Before the operators of the Fairgrounds permit any more largc- scale performances of any kind, they migtlt first study the operation at the Riverside Rcx:eway, where adequate CaciliUes !or overnight crowds are pro· vided during the car races. SJNCE I DOUBT Whether any young people (Including local people) will Letters from Yeaders are welcome. Normally writeTs should conve11 tMir messages in 300 word& or lesi. The right to condense leiters to fit space or eliminate libel is reseroed. AU let- tets must include signature and moil- ing address, but names will be with- held on request. care to attend any type ci festival in this area again after reading some of the vitriolic comments printed in your paper, those of my generation who don't know how to, or don't care to, build any kind of bridge of un· derstanding between generations need not worry but can slu mp 'back into their middle-aged complacency. SHIRLEY ISERMAN 'Comic Fable' To the Editor: Sydney Harris' comic fable titled "Psych Tests No Business 1-ielp" in the August 12 DA.ILY PILOT came as a surprise. It should be stored with other enUghtened treatises such as, "Color Blind Tests No Help to Traffic Bureaus," ''Weather Predictions Are Not Useful," and "Medical Ex- aminations No Help to Health.·· The arguments preseDted in those famous fables include, "We don't have traffic lights in our metropolis for we don't have any autos ye t;" ''Lightning never strikes the same place twice," and "Bugs I can't see can't hurt me.'' EXAMPLES OF big businesses which use "Psych Tests" because they are useful range from (a) private in- dusb'y giants such as IBM, United Airlines, and New York Life Insurance Co., to (b) our biggest business (government) including the Depart· ment of Defense and Civil Service at the federal level for activities such as selection, classification and placement of persoMel, and (c) by almost all educational institutions from tbe Ivy League to state universities. THE WGIC EXPRESSED by Mr. Harris is that 6040 or 90-10 odds or anything less than 100 percent ~rf~ct prediction is useless , and his in· formation is selected only fr om the negative side in each argument. Any data on possible usefulness is com· pletely omitted. His extreme bias is degrading In the eyes of almost any person who has taken one ·beginn]ng course in college psychology. Don't the editors of the DAILY PILOT review these articles before printing them? EV AN PICKREL, PhD All material published in the DAILY PILOT is of course Yeviewed by the editors before publication. Ed i· toriol page columns are not reserved solely for reports, commentary or cartoons with which we agree. This newspaper's own viewpoints are ex- presse·d at the uppeT Left corner of this page 01 eUewhere in spaca clearly marked "Editorial." Editor Humphrey Seeks Harmony WASHINGTON -Vioe President Humphrey and his lop campaign aides are using a strong plea !or PoSt-con· vent.ion party unity in their eleventh· hour court.mg of delegates to this month's Democratic National Con· vention. The strategy reflects their s~reme conviction that Humphrey will win the presidential nomination. It assumes that the Vice President's major pro-- blem , now as well as later, is party harmony once the convention in Qricago is over. An informal task.force of Humphrey aides and advisers has been ad- dressing it.sell to thjs, and other, post· Chicago problems for several weeks. The long.range emphasis in curlent Humphrey strategy is demonstrated by a "unity" letter sent personally this week to each convention delegate and alternate. The letter is signed by Sen . Fred R. Harris, D·Okla., and Walter F. MQlldale, D-Minn ., the co-chairmen Dear Gloomy Gus: ll a Playboy nudie • clllle 1s ". , • Colta Mesa's mo.st adJDir., ed cltlzen ••. " u your reporter dtalmed in his feature article on the front page Augu.rt 10, then our problems are greeter ttian I had dreamed! Colt.a Mts1 need• help. t ast t =.=-.-711 .. ,J -..w• ...... ' ... t· j Allen..Col~smi~ of the Humphrey campaign drive. THE LE'ITER contains a few jabs at Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, Hum· phrey's principal rival for the presidential nomination, but those comments are subordinated to what the authors describe as "some thoughts about the convention and about the future ol our party!' The two Humphrey leaden sa)' the purpose Of the convention, which con· veDes August 26, is tO agree on a can· didate .and a platform -"a platform which reflects the conscience, the vi sion and the will of the delegates as represe ntatives of the rank and file of our party, and a candidate who represenU the best hope of America." CLOSE RANKS -The letter stresses that Humphrey has pledged h.i5 support, in advance d the con- vention. to the party'• plaUorm and itl presidential nominee. It then adda: • ...i."11 j, In thil oplrlt 1bat ... _..cb ~lllo Coov-on, all 1111 ., lbll lplr!t tMt we tr&e our fellow Dmwoaab to •pproach it. '11lo n.bo Jat -nation are tao hl,i. to allow bllnd ctivjslcn to bar comprom.lae, or '°ail.ow bffteme11 lo bor reooodllaUm. 11AI Democr•ll. .,,. mun e.lOM ranks DDC1 qaln Wbn our Convention has tnde<l IDd procej!CI In unlty toward the elecdon ol a Dllnoczradlt fresi· cfent.'' ' tllE STRESs ~­-commlb11tlirllllifiGl.fl .... form and nominee is, in itseU, 1 slap at McCarthy who has withheld such a pledge. The Harris-Mondale letter also jabs indirectly, at McCarthy, by re· jecting complaints about the methodJ by which the delegates were chosen. "We reject the loose charges that delegate selections were the results of 'bossism' or 'machine politics,' " the letter says. "We also hope that the many divisive and diversionary tactics - mass demonstrations, interminable challenges, parliamentary roanipula· tions, which tiave been 'threatened by some elements opposing the Vice Presiderit's candidacy will not disrupt our convenUon unduly or blur th8 focus ol our purpose," U!e two se1Jalor• say. ~obert S, Allen and John A. Qold1mltb -----~day, Augusi 16, 1968 Th< 1ditorlol pag1 of Ille Ddflf l'Uol. '""' lo Inf""" •114 -ulaU rlGdnr by prt1•ndng 11111 M&Ospaptr'• opiniom and com. ...,,lar!I on toplca of lntaral and signiff«mu, bu prollfdfng a forum for Ille «J>•«•slon of our f'tadtra' opfrtioN, and bv prtinting tht div111c vitw-pomti 0/ fft/ormcd t>bltTVttl and 'J>OM....,. on toplcs of th• dar. ~ Robert N. Wud, Publisher I - Lan d Vse Issue BY WILLIAM RE.ED. Little Leagues,: Reeds ••• In the Wind Airport Commissioner Roger Slates bas been able to obtain a delay in ublic hearings on the pro- posed Bolsa Chica site for a future regional airport. The hearing was scheduled for Aug. 30 and a lot of people in Huntington Beach were unhappy because copies of the Pereira Mas· ter Plan of Airport Sites have been unavailable. Most everyone agreed that it was ridiculous to call a public hearing before the public could obtain a copy of the report on which the hearing was being held. * The hearing is scheduled now for "not less than 30 days" after the Pereira report is published and that isn't to happen until after Sept. 3. T Westmont N ine, Greer P ark Gals T op SoftbaUers Westmont and Greer Park Girls' All Star soft:OOU teams have won rtie Hun· tington Beach recreation depe.rtment's Pony Tail amt Young Miss Leagues championships. Celeste Brogger or Westmont push· · ed her fellow fifth and sixth grade team members ahead Of Meadow View by bipling home three runs in the six·th inning. Her team won the Pony Tail championship by 7 to 5. Greer Park's Karen Roach allowed only five hits in pitching the winning game against the Recreation Center to take the Young Miss championship for seventh and eighth grade girls by a score of 22 to 5. City • Ill Presidenb ~ five HUlltinllton Be1eb Little Leagues are to p-epsre a list of rcommeodations this mouth on bow they and the city ~creation and parks commissioners ean resolve a five-year clash on use of city land for baseball competition. "There's got to be a way to solve tilts problem,'' ~ed Commissioner Jay Mastroianni at ilhe Wednesday nigbt meeting where Little League of- ficials were invited to speak. Recreation supervisor Gary Davis said the league presidents were in- vited to the m~ to tell tom· missioners how an agreement nUde with them last yeft has worked. And according to Chorles E. Don- nell, president of Robinwood Little League, not too well. He said hist league needs a "permanent-type laying field, similar to what ·ot:.her ci ·es have with their LKtle Leagues." EXPERIMENTAL PLAN The experimental agreement m.i;.de last year with Marina. High School was to let the league ptay on its field when the school didn't use it. The snags in ttle agreement, pointed There's a large group of citizens forming to oppose location of the proposed airfield in Huntington Bea~h. Rather than to oppose blindly, these persons want to know the facts. NosediTe to Death All facets of locating an airport will come under study, admittedly with the bias being against the Bolsa Chica location, but with an understanding that airports are needed and must be provided. Witnesses Tell of Copter Crash * Locating an airport may turn out to be just · like the freeway, everyone says they are needed but no one really wants them around except when driving. Well, the homeowners interested in this study are grateful to the DAILY PILOT for two pages of maps and story recently fully ex- plaining what the airport master plan ls all about. Time and again in recent meet- ings the information supplied by the DAILY PILOT has been recall- ed and put to use, all of this at a time when private citizens cannot obtain complete information from their governmental leaders. * We intend to continue telling as full and complete a story as pos- sible. 1st Copter Crash Hearing to Open LOS ANGELES (AP) - A hearing on the May 22 crash of a Los Angeles Airways Helicopter is scheduled for 11ext Wednesday. No cause has been announced for that er.ash, which claimed 23 lives. in4 eluding pilot Jack Dupies of Hun- tington Beach, in the nation's worst commercial helicopter crash. Another Los Angeles Airways copter crashed this Wednesday, killing 21. Both were 9n the Disneyland-Los Angeles run. The May 22 crash r.vas the airline's first. It operated 18 shuttle flights dai- ly in this area, but suspended all service after the latest crash. The Los Angeles Airways airli.ne began helicopter mail service in 1947 and started passenaer service in 1952. It carried 484,000 pa&sengers last year. By SANDI MAJOR Of llM O.lly Piii! Ili ff Graphic accounts of witriesses to the harrowing crash of the Los Angeles Afrways helicopter that took the lives of 18 passengers and three crewmen recreated the horror of a balmy Wednesday afternoon in a crowded Compton park. The story of the second crash in less than three months of an LA Airways craft was pieced together b y eyewitnesses for the DAILY PlLOT. Tim Iverson, a 19-year-old Compton youth spending his summer working with children in the city's recreation program at "Pop" Lueders park, over which the helicopter disintegrated, watched the disabled commuter craft crash. He had been inside the gym, located about 200 feet from the crash site, when "I heard funny noises and went to the door." SERIES OF BACKFIRES "It was a series of backfires, about two," the youth recalled, "then the helicopter just dropped, straight down, and went into flames." About 150 children had been playing in the landscaped park, he said, some m 6Ytjings and slides near the grassy plot that was charred in the aircraft's fatal fire. None of the childen was injured. William H. Weaver of 1809 San Marcos, a few blocks from the crash ite, was leaning against a neighbor's car "just looking up at the sky" when the helicopter went overhead. "Something new out from it," he said, "part of the tail, I think, and then something from the main section." He said a "whitish smoke came from the craft when it crashed." "It laid on its right side.'' gestured Roy Davis, 28, of 1540 S. Temple, Compton, who was stopped at the sig- nal light at Alondra and Long Beach Boulevard, when he heard noises overhead. "[t laid over, then <lid a 360-degree spiral and went nooe down," he went Oil. Anottier witne.56, the Rev. Quinton Lewis, said he w..as driving toward Compton when he saw the craft "l06a altitude and smoke." New A pollo Astronauts "It was like •· sooic boom when it hit," said insurance agent Harold Nelson, whose office is on Rosecrans avenue, just northeast of the park. Compton Patrolman N. C. Andrews, who had been wttlching traffic at the corner of Santa Fe Street and Rosecrans Avenue, said he heard "&mall reports, like backfire, and t:.hen a muffled explosion." He sa1d he jumped from his patrol car, looked up and saw pwhs of the helicopter's rotor "drift down and the body of it wt!Dt intQ a spiral.'' RADIOED FOR HELP He radioed for lielp and set out in his car to find where the craft was going down. He said be saw smoke in the park, and when he tried to run up to it, ttie helicopter went into flames, whioh engulfed it before he could help. Mrs. Lois Anderson of 1913 Pine St., Compton, said she heard three pop- ping sounds "like a carburetor backfiring." She siaid she saw the helicopter heading southwest, not east as it should have been en route to Aneheim. It appeared the pilot was having trouble and was trying to head back to Los Angeles, she went on. "He was defiinitely heading souttiwest." The helicopter crashed with its cockpit pointing to ttie soutflwest. Mrs. Gladys Rhodes of 1005 Poinset- tia Ave., was picking weeds in hei front yard baH a block from where the craft's tail rotor fell on the lawn at 919 Poimettia Ave. She c£rme to the scene to tell police where it was. ''It sounded like Ulunder," she said about the criaft as it went overhead. "We hear tbem go over all the time but this sounded different. "I never want to hear another one blow up like that." Moose to Sponsor Teen Dance Tonight Loyal Order of Moose, Lodge 1832, will spoosor a teen-6ge dance tonight from 8 o'clock to midnight. The dance will be held at the Mooee Lodge, 7409 Lorge Circle, Huntington Beach. \IPIT ........ The National Aer;onautics and Space Admlnlstra- Uon (NASA) has assigned these three astronauLJ- ; left, Donn F. Elsele~Walter M. Schirra Jr. and Walter Cunningham -as the pMme.c:rew for the first manned Apollo mission. ~ ' j Huddle out by Donnell, ore lilat no dug-out Is allowed, oU equipment, lncludlng fences, has to be removed after eacb game and the league competition coo- rJots wllll the schools' physical educa- tion progiam in April iaod May, Abo, he said, the high school will not allow tile grass to be removed, and a couple of times, league games were "called on account of rain" because the bigti school turned on its sprinkler system during play. Doonell suggested that aiDce Lntfe League baseball fields were the same size as regulation soft.ball fields, that the city could work with the Little Leagues on multiple use agreements of permanent facilities fOI' activities like nag football for men end boyg. LONG RANGE PLAN New commisSioner Dr. Ralph Bauer W"ged coounitsiooers and league of· ficials .to consider some ldnd ot long. r~ plan agreeable to both so ftiat b8sebell presidents wouldn't have "·to be down here regularly year alter year." e no''Xl tlhat the $xistenct ol ttie 15 es now · is "tenuous" because Ui have to make plans year after y for playing space at schools, par ... obureh 1<111. " behooves us to try to fiDd some 801 ·on," the Ocean View school -·--M~Lumi. called for m o r e msetlngs with league officials point- ing to Wednesday night's as "about the best Ching au.t'1 ever happeoed between recreatton and parks com- IniEm.onere and the Little League." The presidents of the five leagues agreed to come up with a list of long- ran.ge needs by the next com- mlssioners' meeting Sept. 11. Bolsa . Chica Air Hearing Delayed A public hearing by the Orange County Airport Commis-sion on the Bolsa CJUca site in Huntington Beach for a prop<Mled county regional alJl>Ort has been postponed to "no earlier than 30 days after the Pereira report on air transportatiOn has been publi9hed.'' That docmnent i6 not due f.or public distribution until about Sept. 3. The public hearing has been scheduled for Aug. 30 but was changed at tlhe re- quest of Commissioner Roger Slates of Huntington Beach. Coming! In Person Jerry West Mel Counts Bill Hewitt Coach Bill Boosters' ~sweet' Project Members of the Huntington Beach Oilers Boosters Club and studenta in the girls' drill team bad a usweet" idea about how to raise money for new football uniforms and a stadiwn scoreboard. They are to begin a door.to-door chocolate candy sale to raise the necessary $3,000. Drill team captains Carol Sperrazzo, (left) a Huntington Beach High senior, and Sharon Mauz, a junior, kicked off tbe drive this week, Valley Residents May Set City's Course on Parks ;1 Residenta of the City of Fountain Valley are soon to determine the fu- ture course or that city's park deVel- opment. providing that city council shares the view of parks and recrea- tion commissioners. , . Meeting at city. ilall Wednesday, commissioners recommended the councU call for an election on a $(.5 million general obligation·type bond issue for development o( eight city- 1chool parks. The bond election, lf approved by council, would be included on the Nov. 5 ballot. A general obligation bond requires a two.thirds vote of approval to pass. " A high' city hall' Miutce reported today that the Watson amendment, which also appears on the November ballot, would U passed virtually elim- inate the possibility of a parks-bond passing at a later dat.e. The Watson amendment would dras- tically reduce proper~y taxes and the amount of municipal bonded indebted· ness which Is now permitted, approx- imately 15% . of tax reven~es. ' Valley Water Show At School Tonight Young Fountain Valley swimmers will appear tonight in the city's second annual · Water Show, scheduled fOI' 8 p.m. at the Fountain Valley High School_ swimming pool • Tickets for 'tbe Paro !&nd Recrea- tion Def}artment pageant" are priced at 50 cents for adUlts and 25 cents for children. They may be purchased at tit~ gate. Cost.a Mesa Presents lhe van Breda Kolff -and- -<M ' ~ Ba·skethall Rod Hundley FREE •. Laker photos .e Drawl119 far Laker T -thlrts and tlckltl to Laker 911111e1 Clinic SATURDAY, AUG. 17th at In Ille Pnln1 tor • ProfeuJon1I pointers e Spoclol 1klll1 -Ion e W•tch your 1 .. .,r11e Ukers tn actfon· • Ono ohowlnf only Sears COSTA MESA·Sovth Coast Plaza·Brfstol at Sunflower ' ____ ... , . -·- 't ~ ~ . . • "' -p ;::><oJ'"~~ I .. ' • • -. -= • 4 • • • On the perils of political cam- pa!png, Pot Nixon 1ays her c-test worry until November is "belu able to get my shoes on once I've got them off. The wife ol. 111e Republican presidential ~ee made the comment dur· hi& .11 one day campaign appear· ance I In San FraDCIJCO with her dau,i.ter, Trlclo. • Casey, .-578-pound gorllla'al Como Park Zoo, St. Paul, Minn., whose favori~· "aptplay" 11&uaJty CO'nrists of throwing a rubbtr tir•, also tosser food <m4 other items-tolth anwzing accuracy. 0He1 is being flown to Omaha, Ntb., thi& week for a roman• tice get-togither with Bridgette and Benoit, a couple of female gorillar. • When Mr. and Mr&. Ktith Zurn, of .s~~ttle, rushed Out of their bou.se at 5 a.m., they found their neighboi's, Mr. ond Mrs. E~ B.u- er, also leaving home in a hurry .. Since both couples were headed. for the satne place, they decided . to ride together. At 5:45 a.m., Mrs. Bauer gave blrth to a son, and 20 minutes later a boy and girl were born to Mrs. Zurn. • Mrs. Katherine Eblrhordt of Chicago said her busbarid, J o h n, knocked her down duriili a quar· rel over whic,b television program to watcb. The' Judge granted her a divorce. They are both a>. • r""".., ............ . • Signs of th« times: A 'DaUai used·car dealer ran an ad for his ~ "Nixon Sale." It read: "Our car• · never stop "'nni'ng." And in Anaheim, police reported. the theft of a Te.i:as license plate. The platt read: -.Love.Jn."" • Christopher P. Columbus of f\ilempbis, Tenn., ls moving to Hawaii, where he declared he will insist on being listed in the tele- phone directory as merely C. P. Col umbus. A procedures officer at a Defense Department supply de- pot, Columbus is taking another government job. He claims he is tired of calls from intoxicated jok- ers. The clincher came on Colum· bus Day when COiumbus called an airlines to make reservations for Columbus, Ohio. Asked bis name, he gave it. "I had an awful time convincing them I was serious," he said. • San Francisco Mayor Joseph l . Alioto said he doesn't understand wbY nobody was excited when young people cleaning up Golden Gate Park unearthed two 30-year .. old sculptures. "When they do this in Pompeii, it's a big deal!" the mayor said with a grin . • Pascal Barone, ·of New Orleans, didn't trust banks, but distrusl proved his undoing when burglars pried open a house safe and made off with $16,000. Barone, 67, said that he kept the money in a safe because his father lost a great deal of money when the banks failed in the early 1930s.' · • Terry Boehler, of Tulsa, Okla., celebrated ms 16th birthday with bis first • • • and 51st • . • solo flights. Terry, son of an oil comp- any pilot, made his solo fli ght at 7:05 a.m., and continued in 51 dif· le.rent planes until 8 p.m. He spent about seven 'minutes in each craft as pilots loaned him their planes. ·• A C..thollc priest In Ontario, Calif.I 1111 launched a crusade ailillBt mJniU!rted · worshippers. 'lbe J!e~,.,~ 0......,. paNI' of Our 'of GUadaltl;e cburcbii POiied ..... :Jt' .ilit -say., Ing: "All~.Uyean_orc>1a~ with clroa· or .!ldrt' ·liboW Ille - are DOIY!""ltome Jilside· d chul'Ck and are not able to receive sacra. ment.. w Father Ornana ••Y,.• 1!e . plans<to 1-w 'the aigil up "aa loiif as It ii needed" despite complaints from parWilo!ien. I ' . Friday, August 16', 1968 Ammo Plant Explosion Kills Two M!NiEN, La. (I,!') -Two m<n were killed early today when an ex- pt061on ripped a bomb-loading section ol the Louisiana Army Ammunition Plant near Minden, authorities said. 11wt two victims were reported dead at Physicians and Surgeons Hospital in Sbreveport. One ol the men, Jesse Bush, about 50, Of Bossier City, suf· fered a fractured &kull, according to ~pit.al spokesmen. The second man was not im· mediately identified. Authorities sald be 1Uf:fered burns over 90 percent of his body. Lt. Col. James W. Donald, com· manding officer at the plant, said at a late morDna news conterence that "secoodary exploeions" were oc- cwrlng at the sprawling ordnance plant and other buildings were .threatened by fire and explosions. The area around the complex was sealed oft He said ~e w.as "a distinct possibility that other persons are unaccounted for." A Worker at the ordnance plant said the building where the explosjon ·OC· curred was leveled by the blast: ' Authorities said there , were 15 persons in the area of the explosion at tho time Iii U.. blast. An atteadan't at ·a ~i~: •lation near MiDdea said.Jbe .. blasl ''felt like a. sonic boom, only worse. Several win· dows were brokea here.'' ' . ' • French Te11t H~bomh PAPEETE, Tahi~ (UPI) -Yrench scientiStl today made final irepara· tions for the nation's first hydrogen bomb ex.plosion, observers said .. . . . • • • • . ... .. . ~.,.., _ .. - I IJeist ••• Catnera • • • Action The Federal Bureau of Inve~tigation said today that three armed men robbed a branch of the American Security and Trust Co., in Washington, O.C., of $13,600 Thursday. A fourth man waited in . an automobile outside. In this photo, made by the (bank's .hidden camera, one bandit holds gun to guard's: head (Jeft) while a &econd bandit points ~ gun at empl6yes and a third gunman climbs over • the counter. ,. I Toha~~o Fir1ns Under Fire • .Promotion Campaign 'EH.courages .Death, Disease' Wai;HINGTciN (UPI) -Th• temperate ~amJon of .;,· li>d11&1<y ·IW'ieon general's"tMk force for·amOk· which has led . i:M" way in mtdical ·ing 'lnc1. tiealth tod8y aCcused the researcfi tO' · Seek al'16wers in the · .t-•• iodUstry of "encOOi'aglng clgaret~ -y. 'death and .diseaseu• through ah rex-Tbe 10..member farce made the -pemi~ paJ:>Uc relations campaign tO charge in a report ec.ommending new disct.edit ·~mdence-that smoking Is a steps ·to encoura people to quit ,bealtb ·hazard." · , smolting ~ to , urage youngsters The Tobacco Institute called the 1rom takiDg up ' habit. tasX force's report "a stiockingly in· It r~ported tha the anti·smok.ilig campaigns were beginning to take e(- fe<:t. Jt said one million smokers are guest.ion when it established the Coun- cil for 'TObaeco Research-USA in 1954, long before any other public or private ageocy even ~ttempted to provide anything but statistics and specula· Ii .. on. • R~y Lawyer. Asks Court Drop Charge MEMPHIS. Tenn. (UPI) -At· torneys for James Earl Ray, accused assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., asked today that murder charge• against Ray be dropped because "pervasive and wide,spread'' publicity on the case has ruined chances for a lair trial for Ray aoywbere in tbe United States. Arthur J. Hanes Jr. of Birmingham, Ala .• filed motions with the Shelby County clerk of court to have Ray'1 in- nocent plea withdrawn and the first degree murder charge dropped. The motion .aid the publicity in the case was "calculated to and is having the effect Of Cl'eating widespread public excitement and animosity,. toward Ray. It also said radio and television network programs "so canonized and so depicted the victim of the crime (King)" that "widespread public outrage and hatred have b e e D generated" toward Ray . The motion also asked that pro- secution witnesses be made available for questioning by defeWle attorneys. . The third motion asked the court to drop 'the second charge against Ray. carrying a dangerous weapQn. It said Ray was extradited from London without being char,ged with that crime ·,lll)d _~<X'! !;Ollld not be tril>cl_(or it. King w., kllied by a slogie ~ .bullet AJJ<il 4 as he &lood m the balcony of Lorraine Motel Ray wu the object of an intensive manOOnt aad was arrested at a London airport in. early June. Navy's Poseidon Missile quitting everY yeal: and one-fourth of aU American men and one-fifth of all women who have ever smoked have now quit. Hughes Backing ~ North K,orea Off' won't Buy Renews Threat Stardust Hotel To Pueblo Crew Performs With Precision CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) - A powerful new . seabased. miss le named Po9eidon rode a geyser of smoke into :space ~ay to open a double-barreled debut of tWo ' multi-bomb · rockets designed ·to penetrate, Soviet defense& in tbe 1979's. • The bllllet,sbaped Pos~don, a ''su,per Polaris" proera.mqie<t to be carried by 31 submarines, took off '.from a land pad at 6:30 a.Jn.. and six mhwtes later was proclaimed "a com· plete success." "All test objectives were met," said a Navy spokesman. The stubby missile, keystone of the Navy's nuclear deterrent for the next decade, shot its dwnmy warhead to an Atlantic Ocean target area 1.200 miles ra.way, proving for the first time that the two-stage rocket works. The Poseidon spurted a tongue of arange name th.at turned the predawn gra}'DEl6s into a momect of daylight Three minutes later, speeding into space high over the Atlantic, it created an optical effect that m'ade a spec· tacular blue and white bullseye of the early mornillg sky. A sleek Minuteman 3 "instant ICBM" waited in an underground silo nearby for its maiden launch 10 hours later, at 4:30 p.m. It reportedly is car· rying a test version of the multiple warhead "space bus" designed to shower nuclear weapons on targets hundreds of miles apart1 The multi-bomb payload -named 1'1ultlple lridependent .R e . e n tr· y Vehicles (MffiV) -represent .4-.m*1° deyelopment in .nuclear we.rfa_re. B'oth Jllissiles will carry Ulem and Will give the United States a significant jump ahead in the nuclear arms race. The 34-foot Poseidon performed the first stages of its initial fli ght with ap· parent precision. About two minutes after blastoff , the rocket's first stage burned out and its second stage took over. The Minut.eman 3 cum:!ntly is scheduled to carry packa-ges of three hydrogen bombs and the Poseidon up to 10 smaller nuclear explosives. Each MIRV system also will carry decoys and other devices to confuse enemy defenses. Unlike a shotgun-type weapon, ·each individual warhead aboard th e Poseidon and Minuteman 3 Will 'have its own electronic "brain" and control rockets to dive on specific targets in different trajectories to overl~d a defense system and lncre-ase the ef· ficiency of each missile. ll'f T .. llA ''11.AST OFF -New Poseidon seabased missile blasta of! £rom ·cape 'Kennedy land pad early tod ay in-successful maiden flight test. The rocket carried a dummy w~head 11200 m iles to an ocean target area. ' 1', '· But it said the tQbacco industry has mounted a campaign to counter those trends. '"The task force )>eueves that one of the reasons wtiy cigarette con- sumption has retnained high, why cigarette brands tyith high tar and nicotine levels remain large sellers and why death arid morbidity rates associated with st'noki.ng continue to increase 1,s· the inability or umvill· ingness, of the ciga;rette industry to face u~ to the health hazards or even tiJ, adlllt' they :t" lhe task fo<ce said. "The public re tlons and political posture of large parts of the industry has been rather tcY atta<:k the evidence and to pretend that a health crisis associated with cigarette cmoking which now confronts the United States does not, in fact. exist at all," it said. " ... This well financed and prO· fessionally conduoted public relations program, when afdressed to the con- sumer, is ent"O aging death and disease," it The Tobacco Institute, w h i c h represents the to acco industry, s.iid the report "over oks completely the fact that the industry 'pioneered organized and scleDtific study of the l\liss Univ ,rse Pageant Creator Dies at 69 GRANADA HIJ!LS (AP) -Oscar Mainhardt, creator of the Miss Universe beauty ~ant, died in a hospital 1'11ursda~, two months an er suffering a stroker; He was 69. The PhiladetP'h.t&·born s h ow rn a n a-eated ~ Mi'Ss '1niverse pageant in 1952 and when the festivities moved to Miami in 1960. he originated the Miss International beauty pageant. LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) Billionaire Howard Hughes called off Thursday plans to buy his sixth Las Vegas hotel-casino. The Fed er a l Government was considering whether the purchase would con stitute a monopoly. The 62-year-old industrialist had ac- quired four hotels by la.st March -in his 18 months in Las Vegas. Then he announced plans to buy the Silver Slip· per and the Stardust. State official! 1ave Hughes the go- ahead, but the.Justice Department an· nounced June 28 that it would study "any anti-trust implications" over the Starduit purchase. In a joint statement the owners of the hotel and Hughes spokesman saii:!; "The Stardust Hotel and Hughes Tool Co. have terminated any existing plans for the purchase of the hotel." It was not ann0U11ced why the purchase was cancelled. Hughes also cir'opped plans to buy 43. peTcent interest in the American Broadcasting Co. last month after op- position from stbckholders. He also flas run into opposition to his proposal Monday to buy Air West, a regional airline. Hughes spokesmen had said they did not plan to buy more of the 13 hotel- casinoS along the Las Vegas Strip, U the $.10.7 million purchase had gooe through, Hughes would have become the largest holder of gambling interests in the. state, surpassing William Harrah of Reno. Hughes also owns the Desert" lnn, the Sands, the Castaways, the Fron· tier and the Silver Slipper, all on the Strip. He also has bought a television sta· tion , two airports, a ranch, miniJJg property in northeorn Nevada and other land near 1Au1 Vegas. WASHINGTON (UPI) -state Department officials said tod&'Y North Korea's latest statements on tbe Pueblo incident carried what appeared. to be a renewed threat to put the crew of the captured U. S. intelligence ship on trial While stressing that there was no immediate evidence the Communists actually are moving to'W'atd trying the -1 82 surviving crewmen, the officials .~ made it plain they feel there is cause: for concern . Their comment came after study of a lengthy transcript of a purported press conference in which 25 of the crew members were interviewed bJ North Korean journalists this week. Besides the issue of a possible trial, which the United States contends would violate international law, the transcript rekindled puzzlement here! over why North Korea has refused to allow the Red Cr06s to visit the cap.: tives. As reported by their captors, the: crew members declared in their in~ terviews th&t they were getting good food and proper medical attention. 1 If ttiis is true, skeptical U. S. Of· ficials said, why not let ttle Red Cross (:Qnfinn lt. They suggested some of the statements attributed to the sailors might not have been voluntary, But whatever the autJienticity of the interviews, U. S. officials tttid they' saw nothing in them that sheds light· on the ultimate "future of the crewo under detention since the Pueblo was.. seized off the North Kareen coast in ~te January. The North Korean j our n a Ii st s reported a nwnber of interesting . details concerning tbt crew's daily routine. Great Plains D~luged U.S. Dampened From Pacific No~thwest to Great Lakes lt!:ft M"' ........ , .. •;•1 1.111. U U.TUllDAY f tr.t low .............. 12:'6 '·"" 1.t Flnt hltll ............. l11J a.m. a.1 ~ Nw , ............ t :M .. "lo U s...i ...... . ....... '" •1" 'IUI\ .. . ...... Pint ..... \ •. , ........ 1:.t•A 11 ''"' ................ 11• ·-u .................... lhJI .......... Ste.-Mtfl ' .•...•.••. f :ll Ml'. u c...i.i At WNI, 111111 -"1'1'¥' wlNtl 11'111 •fl-. n to w '"·'"'· ~ ,,.,,. -~ Mid Slh!N1y, Tecl.lln 1\)tll, • "' fS. 'ns~• ,. ....... ,... ~ .,.,. I ll1'tfl flt n "' I low ., " lrt- !W M"""1'1Nrt rt• "" • to "· n. ... ,If "11"'"'"' ..., M.2 ... lrffl. I I S••••r• Rein ......... ,,. ~ ..._ #It 'Ptdflc """""-t t. "'-'-t L-.. .... , 11 I --fll CiMIW" Ill' ,...... ._ tlM ~!M. T~iw.t ftll WI 1M • -"" fr+w1fMll llldi."5 Wwt 11•-tWltlirlt 4-"' • It I W-1 ... 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" .. .. u K " .... I' G .• " ,. .. .. . " .... . .. • • ,, " .• .. " .. .. " .. .. " ., ., .. .. 11 •• .. " .. " .... " " . . .. ;: :l .... II n .91 • " . .. " .... " .. .. " n " ~ ~ . .. " " l , ., " . 1 ' ,. . ·----~ ·---····~ - • Frid~y, August 16, 1968 DAILY PILOT $ .·World Responds to Binfra -i':\iial~h 20th ANNIVERSARY ~~DOOR 9U5 t1R SALE .Plight, But F.ood Held Up LONDON (UPI) -Never bas so much, given by so .ma».y, reaebed so f e ,, despite lo much need and 10 much efiort. When the first reports and film of the effects of the Nigerian civil war on the ,pople of breakaway Biafra reached the outside world, the world responded. Report! on the condition of the 600,()()().'J>lus starving refugees in more thto 600 Biafran camps were bar· rowing. Unofficial estimates in Ju. ly said the death toll was already in the hundreds ,,f thousands and the refugees were dying at. the rate ol as m&r1y as 3,000.a day: Relief supplies of food an d medicine were m o r e urgently needed than ever. Millions of dollar! and thousands of tons of food and medical supylies were collected an~ are still being . collected, by IUCh «ganiza. tions a1 the United~ Nations Cbildn>os' Fund (UNICEF), the International Red Cross. the World COuncl1 <1 f Churches and the Roman Catholic Relief A ,C e n c i Carttas. All hit 1 snag. Partly because of the popular fears that food com- ing overland th r o u g b federal-controlled territory would be poisoned and partly because of a desire for political recognition. the BiafN.n rebel government wanted the supplies brought in by air. The federfll government of Nigeria refused to allow any such fights on the ground thaJ: the planes also might carry arms to the rebels. They insisted on the supplies trDVelling by road. As a con- cession, t h e y eventually agreed to allow the In- ternational Red Cross to suervise road shipmerQ in order to allay Biafr1n fean ol pois-g. Tbe Bialrans dug thelr be<Jo. Airlift.. ooly, the in· slated. / Some planes have rnanae- ed. to• get tllrO\lib with IUp- Plles, nipping across federal territory under cowr of Jlfgbt and landing • o n makeshift Biafran airstrips. The pro p·eUer-drive.n planes are pri'V a.tely chartered, the pilots con- gtanUy in duiger both from Nigerian air interception and from baphazard naviga- tional and landing con· ditions. Red Cross planes and others have come under attack and been forced to abandon lligbts. An International R e d Cross spokesman said in Geneva tbat be did ~ have any figures as to how much money and supplies had been collected in all for the nfl. (fD rrn-.. c=ivi=I w=ar=v"'-'ictim_•_••_h_•w lJ u \JDLJ LJ ,,-much retched them. l8J First in Color TV! ' .. _ :~~_Presents an Unbeatable Convention Platform! ~ 21 Years of Service! . -.. , __ ·--~:--- ~ 2 Year .Picture Tube Warranty!* ~ 1 Year Parts Warranty!* ~ 90 Day Service W1rrantyl* ~ No Money Down! ~ No Payment 'Iii Nov.I ~ Radio Dispatched Trucks! 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And It la so reliable, we back It .wlUra new 2-year warranty! !'law 2..year Wllt'rantyl • oornm ColorTV .. • The Clstltton • Model QJ.702 29S aq. in. rec:tan1ul•r plcturt f!CA ~ .. Ifft ta rh1 or!gtMI l'lllln puroh1..-!Mt we wlO ~clllng1, Wwgh 1111 RCA dlwtbutair-i!Mlw 11r91r.. lu li1n, Ill e color plcluf• rube Ill VIII TV If we fl11d It te h..,. 1tMr1 d1ftct1ve, lll'Ki«" '*'"91 IMI Ill «M U.S.A., w11ti111 ..,.. ,.,.,. of !he pureh-1'ate. ACJ. ,.bvlh re- rHto11111nt tube• will be UI", I nd they Wiii bt ooYlr9d for tM ~•plred PGf1lot1 of lh1 '-'1Hr p«tod. s-1ce. r.iior Im! tr111tPOfl1t1011 ch1r911, ••will 11 dim~• ,.. 9111\lflg from Cl l,illl bt)'Olld ...... tolllrof, -Ille ,ur"' cl!Mw'l ·,..POMlb.illl:y. ll1 I I -~ , . .,, ,, ......... ICtMfl, ls·3 59's 110 ... I•. •kt ... I• •O.W ~lh•.rtWMI .. ...,_.t11e-1t111pt """ .... Mollkl EL U1 Tl!Ll!VISION •APl'LIANCl!S 411 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa Dilly 9.9-$1turd1y 9-6 !CloMd Sund1y) ($1111) 646-168~S.rvlcol Sll-3437 THE VO TES ARE IN ! GET SET FOR THE MUST EXCI TI NG (OLOR SEASON yrr ·w1TH RCA COLOR TV! Tht C.rry.ettt • Model EL-410 102 sq. In. pkturt COLOR PORTABLE Wins B1d1et Vote! Bil 14• dlq., 102 sq. In. picture. New Vista Chassis "'" 21,SOO...Tb of ~~ $2 9 995* tun powtr • Color.qulcll tunlpt • Smlrt ttblntt. dl11ppear1rc undll. _. Tht Ctndidate • MOdtl !L-.442 180 1q, In. picture New FamllJ·Size COLOR POllTABLE Supertl is• cilag., 180 sq. In. color! • Solid St1te ColorSll>llz"•°"'"" $35 995 ~: VHF h1n in1 • Bullt·I ~ VHF.UHF 1nteMU • Pop- llp Ulldl1. . ) " ' Tht Sanford • Model GL.filO 295 aq. In. picture Tht Pam1ro • Modtl GJ ·719S 295 sq. In. rtctal"llular picture COLOR CONSOLE Value Wlnaer ' -onUXE CONSOLE, Auto111tlc Fine Tn1bl( Giant scr1en, lowest prict ever for 1 COllSOlt wlth New Aulom11Jc Flnt Tuni11 tltchonlctll:t JGUs WIF ~CA:!~°7r:cs~·.'t::~,';: $45995* :;# =~•::,ln:r $529* • New Super Brirht HI· VHF T1111er, MW Solid Stlt1 Liii l'ttturt Tube • Orfo UHF Tuner • Moden1 cabinet rn1tlc Sp•nlsh et11111et. ------. • ------------------------------------------------------------ -~~~-~-~ . .-----.--. . 8 DAll.Y PILOT Frid•1, Aug,,t 16, !968 'Beaatlful Relatio1as1aip' FDR's Affair Told is llYIDD 32 llights dailY ~ between orange - countv Airport and LOs Angeles International. TJl1Pa1FMILY WS ARI UNA9L& TO CAlllllY l'AIS!HQf'RI WHO ARI TRAVtLINQ WHOU.Y wmaN TNr 9TATS CW CAUl'OftHIA. \ -. --- Romania, Czechs Sign Pact I • PRAGUE (rU PI ) da sigiled the treat,y in the meetJ,ne of tbe two former ty mainly emphasized tl1e c i e c b o 1 lo v a k i a and bar o_ q u e s P 1 end or of satellites who have strug. two nations' p05itklrls of in· Romania today signed a 26-Prague's Hradcany Castle. gled for looser bOtrds to th e dependence from t l g h t year frieOOohip treety aym· In Moscow, l4e ollicial Kremlla. Soviet control alter more boll In th · · Soviet news agenc;y Tass Trade 4lOd other matters than 20 years of toeing the z g eir !L new in· devOted only 21 words to the were involved. But the trea· Moscow line. dependence uof Soviet1__:::.:.::::;:..::::....:.:......::.:.:.....:...::::.....::::..::.:..::::.:::..::::..:::..::.:.:....._::;:::.:.:......:.....~~~~~ mastery. Alexande}i Dubcek, CzechOllovak _ <fQ m munist party first ':'!r.et.ry, and Nic'olae C'f'ausescu, Romania 's p~sident &nd party <:hief, produced the f:n!aty after tWo days of t.alks given a cold shoulder l by the Soviet Union. Ceausescu and Czechoslo- vak President L\lClvik S:vobo- 59c ea. Boxell Stationery :11c<.uio1 ·-'·· 44:c plw o< IUK'I i• JXIOd coloi1, pf.ltd.I tod wh,ltt-. 51.75 Value -:ol.Qrtone .Shampoo Y•'ll ......... ........ 93c .Mok l!ial!'iP" .. -uni l>oii, nu. ..... 59e Coiffure Bonnet Miuion Beechcrah Now Open At Orange County Airport MISa10• •UCHCJlAPT PA•te•oa ... '2 .. Qt.Thennos Vacuum Boffle I s14' P:anou• Thermo• ""'"" ... Thrilty diJCOGDt prke. !Mae. quart apaotJ, ack 12 ... ti.' Outdoor ........... , ' -~·66c ~, .. ......:;_ . 'I Going Steady Sunglasses ~:;;•:,~ 2 F s" 1 awWaaa cilu O Yide f ield ol R .,Uiou. Cl:lob of . colon. lfc ... 39' Pack of 3 Spttnies f::l~ :.J:: 23c 'a i z e f« lr.Mteib of mes, .. StPUCd.. . 98• Vlnyl Shoe Caclcly 79c JI.Ide tl lt~0tdf """ ......... . ................. 12 f!lit of dlOC$ ......... ......,_ The finest in perso nal and business oircroft • Flight Instruction • Ground School • Mainten ance •Accessories •Avion ics For demonstrations ond complete infor mation -call 540-2720 '14'' Detecto Hampers Dtlu.xe style tufted and fully padJrd "~~?.~: $888 pink, -· AOld, • • '24 ' Appliance Wheels snoF2 . "" ... , .. "'"' $162 appliances. Tot•I of 40 'Wh«b I :Sturdy, •white finbh. • 'I'' Tots Dresses or Diaper Sets 51.39 Super Foalil . f...,..Wh•m-0 79 S11pet F o 1 m /.f•· C fhlnt. Blow thru thC tuM .ad JMlic ~ ... of but>-!'• -.. > ' e I• t • • 30·11ear Low Nine Pr opositions ' On Election Ballot SACRAMENTO (AP) - C~llfornia voters wW' be fac- ed Nov. 5 with the smallest number or b a 11 o t pro· positions at any general election in'!O years. Only nlne questions of public policy bave qualUled for this year's ballot, which should be a rellei to voters or 17 proposals on each general election ballot alnce 1938. A check Of olliclal votllJg record! shows that 288 pro· positions have found their way onto the general elec- tion statewide ballot from 1940 through 1966. They ranged from a high of 25 one year to a low of 11. ~·ho have faced en average And that doesn 't include a number which also have ap· peared on primary election ballots. The records show more Friday, Auou1l l4, l968 Love Triangle Blame d .3 Slain on UCLA l;ampus DAlLV PILOT 7 Reagan Signe Salee Tax Bill SACRAMENTO (AP! - With a lempclnl'J re11<lev1 LOS ANGELES ' (AP) -waited to the cllnic parJdni came out ol the buildln(. A for Loo Ancelt1, Gov, Pollet "Y oa .,tr111ged hu.. lot until bis wile end Mattice Clillber plJlol lrCllll under his bond ahohnd killed I\iJ wife wllntu, Mart Leonont, 311, ,coot. The 1'1tnl11 told police Reagll! hea llped legtsla· and her male ~panion On said J1e aaw Mercb&nt ap. be heard several &bots and tlon to prevent any clty « the UCLA c11npu.. before proach the pair, q>eak' to aaw Mrs. Merehc:nt and county from ~vylna: itl own U*lng bJa own life. them briefly and draW a .38-Mattiace fall. sales tax in Ute futUre. As three oolook'ers stoodi--;:::::;:::=::;=:0·::::=====:;::====::::::==¢=:::::;:::,j hcl'rifl.cl, autboritie• · Did , Swaine A. Merchant Jr., 42, fired alx -at bis wtle, Margaret, 41, and JafDeS R. Mettiac:e,-M, as· t:bt'y stood outside UCLA'• Fernald school, a cllnic for puplb with reading compre· hen.!!km problems. Man Held I n Stabbing Deaths of 3 than nine proposals on each "'.'.'~~~--".:";;;;;;;;.. ___ ..;,.;.~--..;,-...J November ballot in evev· "Good nig-ht, Tony. Let's just sa; we revised an olcJ · Witnesses told. p o 11 c e Merchant thtn ran .to the other aide of a stone fence nearby and shot bimseU. A few ~ earlier Mrs. Merchant and Mat. tlace had left her 7-year.old daughtor, Cathy, to be tested and enrolled at the Sunset Boulevard clinic. · H.Saltof Skegness, England likes everything about America · numbered years all the way iaa.yiDg ·to 'VW. vidi, stalemate'. oka.Y?" b,ack to 1938 -when none -------------''--------appeared. Thursday, Secretary o( State Frank M. Jordan - whose father held the same LOS ANGELES (AP)-A office before him -rele&!i· transient arrested in con-ed the unoffi~ia1 !sit of pro· nection with the fatal stab-positions for this fall's bing of three persons and ballot, and their 1order. Kidnap Cha~ge Drop Seen in Newton Trial Authorities said ,a note in Merchant's car s a I d , "PoUce, please call my brother·ln·law i t ..General Hospital In Memphis." Pollco U . Robert Madlock said Merchant apparently the wounding o( three others Prop. 1 will be the second is being hel~ without b~il stage of a three . p R r t after. ~ r r al C nm en I 1n streamlining of California's Mun1c1pal Court. · bu I k y constitution con· A preliminary hearing for sidered far out Of ' date. OAKLAND CAP> -Btac:kk~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I Panther leader H u e y Eugene Viet.er Valasco, 27, Voters approved the first was set for next Thursday. revised section in 1966. The Va~seo is charged .with one this year deals . with stabbing the victims with a education state c 1 vi l six-inch steak knife Tuesday service iocat government, night. Police said he .killed water 'anc1 public uitlities. Garland Richardson, 5 7 , The mos-t controverslal part w.hen Richardson wouldn't would allow the legislature give him a drink. by a two-thirds vote to m'Bke A half hour later, officers the job of state superin· contend ~e wounded Woods tendent of public instructiOf'I, Ya~kesch1, 27, and Pati:lcla now elective, into an ap- He1nz, 23, and then killed pointive one. Robert Jones, 22 , after an Prop. 2 seeks t.o prevent argument at their roomlna: small counties froM levying house . . large ~esr on lahd owned Valasco ~eturned to his· by anohter governmental own rooming -f ho.use !>n agency outside their bounda- Seventh Street, police ·sa1~, ries. It se:ts up a formula and W,..Q u n de d P~dro putting a maximum on the V~s~ceUos,. 50, and killed possible tax. \Villiam Laqull", 50. Prop. 3 v.·oold provide $250 10 Orphans million from·a bond issue to pay for new COD5truction at the Unlvenlty of California, state colleges ~d in some big city areas. Newton's murder trial ls in weekend rec.est with the possibility a k 1-0. nap 1 n g charge against him will be dropped after court resumes Monday. The prosecution rested Thursday after presenting 28 witnesses trying to show that Newton killed a white policeman to p r e v e n t discovery of a . gu n and marijuana in his car. Defense Attorney Charles Garry then moved that Judge Monroe FrieJman of Superior COurt. dismiss the kldnaplng c b a r a: e . Pro· secutor Lowell Jensen con- ceded there is now no basis for the kidnaping charge. The asserted h<>!tage, Del R-01s, pleaded m e m o r y failure and was excused. Hence there was n o testimony of a k1dnaplng. Friedman will rule on the Garry motion Monday. I See by Today 's Want Ads . • .... , aood buys In -for the home; G.E. Por- table Dilbwuher, Stereo's, Fl'eelen', 1 a rd eqWp. ment, etc. • nu. may be iust ~'bat :YOU're looldnc for • · • , Perfect Mounlain hide- away, 2 bedroom oo 1 '11 acr.. • You can bu¥ YoUl' fire wood now and really l&vt!! $Ji. I cord. •Surfer Specill!! Step Van Camper, stove, sink, re- ~tor. You ooWd llvt at the Ni hl tb1a ooe. e Save time 1n "House Huntlnr." Open llouae Di- rectory bu IOIDe BEAU· TIFUL homes UJted. . . . -except domestic fish and chips. DELICIOUS ABOUT IT Ht '* IMroduoed IUlhenUc Enclllh fkh and chips to America. Ht: hn aMtm lnCf z:.J. __. Pll'dld tbl Ndpe tor tht tuthlnUc blttM' thlt hel come from ¥' experience In the .... Md ddpl: p!lofi11lon whit. • raklent or th• Old Coonby, It Jrilp1rtl • n.vour thlt Clll °"" lie dtecttbld a 'Mftnty, Pbp In, t nd tlb out 1n order of authentic fish Ind cNpl. OM tlltlt and )leU"ll dltcOVW why tf'lll nourifhlnt i nd uttmy dell~ul tl'Mt hll-. GrWlt ltttll"'• IPMt nltklnl1 dish lfnce 1166. al'ltllh .W ~ Cuf't'W'f CMerlu/ly Aec.ptft/ H. SALT, esq. AUTHENTIC ENGLISH Wsfi&Cf@s COLLEGE CENTER SHOPPE HARBOR AND ADAMS 546-7984 To Be Given To Relative Prop. 4 seeks to simplify the reporting and collecting of state personal income taxes by bringing the fonns into line with federal law. PatrolmanJohnFreywa'\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:!...~ killed Oct. 28, the final day of a three-year probation for Newton , 26, who had served .,six months for a 1964 felony MADERA (AP) -More than 100 families have of- fered to adapt the 10 Morris orphans, but guardianship will go to their maternal grandpments or a paternal aunt. .. Superior Court Judge Jack Hammerberg was studying his selection between ap· plications f i l e d by the grandpraents, Mr. and Mrs. Bolls Lachawicz, or the aunt, Mrs. Gloria Graves of Concord, Cali f. The grandparents moved fr.om Fresno to Madera to help care for the children. The judge's decision is due today. 'I'he six girls and £ou r boys, ranging In age from S to 17 , won widespread sym· pathy when they appealed to be alle>wed to r c m a i n together in Madera. Their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Morris, were killed i"n a traUic ac· cident July 2 near Fresno. The father earned $480 a month. :'JS manager of a chain shoe srore and the mother earned $20 a week cooking in a convent. Prop. 5 allows t h e legislature to insure or guarantee loans to nonprofit groups for ~g or lm- J>roving hosp(tall and men- tal care facilltie!. Prop. 6 lets the legislature exclude from state taxation insurance premiums paid to companies dealing w it h retirement benefits of non- profit organizations such as schools. Prop. ·7 pennits local government to use money from the state General Fund for local purposes. Prop. 8 lets the legislature allow a couple of citil\'i in San Francisco's East Bay area to divide taxes gained from a big shopping center which is in two cities. Prop. 9 is the most con· troversial measure. It would elimill<&te by mid-1973 th e use of Jooal property taxes for educatton and weUare spending -the two main items in county government. It also would limit, .after Ju· ly 1, 1969, the use of pro· perty taxes for property• related purposes to one per• cent of the market value or . each piece 0£ property. knifing. Newton's car was balled by Frey and a gun batUe followed . Jensen, in eight daya of. testimony, evidence and argliment, contended Newton resisted arrest because he feared a search of hil car would yleld a a:un and marijuana. He said Newton knew thal such violation of probation could result in a prison term of up to 15 years. Garry said he expects to take less than eight days to present the defense case. Newton will be his chief wit- ness. Brutality Charges Hit As Untrue LOS ANGELES (AP) Clty Councilman Louil! R. Nowell says charges of police brutality and ler· rorism In Negro and Mex· ican ~ American neighbor· hoods are untrue and "in- fiammatory." Nowell's defense ol the police department followed a hearing before the coun· ell's Police, Fire and CivU Defense Committee \Vednes· day at which Negro ¥d , ~Mexican-American members of the "Crista Coalition" made the charges in six hours of testimbny. · Nowell, a member of the committee, said he has ask- ed that a transtript of the hearing be given to the police commission for study. He said Jt was his Intention to "further v.alidate my theory that the accusations are not only untrue but in· flammatory." "It is clear that the a<Kall· cd leaden of the Crl11J Co- alition were not speeklng ror the community," Lowe 11 said Thuraday. The coalltlon demanded Ulat white police forces In the minority com· munities be reduced. Two more hearings are planned. WAUMOUSI OUTUT Foniltw• .... c:.r,.t Spanish Oa1< A Wrouaht Iron Dlnlna: Set 48" table 4 chain $1'5.00 Set Re9. $245.00 HI AVY NYLON IHAO "-" in1tal1ed ovl!r foam pe.d J. J, KNICKIRIOCKU •I lllCH If'.., ~.I. • ..._.. , ......... JNCAr111wf -·- If the lm~la ·.vere any other car in its field, , iit wouldn't have: ) . Al much room inside. ~-Al Ions • body oulJicle. ~· Al wide I f,..t and IUI lrucf. 4. Hid.-A-W1y windohield wipers. j, An 1utomatic w1mins bUmr that aoundl off / if you forstt incl 1, .. ,.ywr keys in lhe <11. " I 6. Flldh·uid-dry rocker panda lo 6sht NIL 11. A li1hl monitorinl system you WI oider~ 7. Al tishte tuniiDI diameter. 12. Al low 1 price for an tulomalic lrwmloalon; 8. A Mqic.MimiHcrylic locqaer fuiioh lllot I}, Ao low a-price for 1V8a111ftrtibleor 1 4- U.,,O itubine. • doer hudlop Oil V8 ltlboe Wqoll..(Uka wt 9. Bodr by r.i..r. 11y, pullint you'6nt k..po ua 6nt. See your 10. A opeed wamins indiator yw an 1dd. Chmolerdealer ,.iclc.) • .bullfthe'lnl•11!)11tlMlld _.,.. i1Mt"""'9J11U'llwo 1dto.' I -~~~~-r~~~~~~L..--~545;""'~~::....--Jl--.Jli''--~~~-:--~~~~~~~~:---~~~~~~-:-~~~~~~1 , 1 -------------------·-·--·- r I -,J ' .. ~-~---• ------·-~-. ;j DAILY PILOT Frlda.y, August 16, 1968 .. .. . .. --•• •• •• • • Coito1 •ro1dcloth Haw11il1 prl1tsl • For dresswear, play· weer or decorating • Vivid isl and prin+S • Exotic color.s; 3611 , SAVE 1 k .. ~ .... SATURDAY ONLY! Soft, plush Dacron®bath mats in brilliant washable colors! • No-skid latex backs • Machine wash ••• dry •..,.Pile resists soil 5.99, 24x36" ••• 2.99 8.99; 27x48" •.• 4.49 2.99 LID COVER 1.49 • SAVE SO'o 1~,!30" REli. l.'9 SATURDAY ONLY! Porta•I• •i1r drytr wit• •11lc111 kill • 4-heal dryer wah .smart carrying case • 5-pc. power manicure • 250-we!I; big .hood SAVE 54 . ' 1399 REG. 17.99 SATURDAY ONLY! ·-· .. . .... loys' cotto1 kilt • placket frnt shirt • Solid cotton kn it with .contrast trim • Buttoned plocket • Short sleeves; J.7 -·- SAVE 62c 197 REG. 2.5' SATURDAY ONLY! . . . •· . ,-··. ~ ' -<'--.c-: --· St11dy cora •roo• at 11w low price! • Cord sewn 4 times · for extra strength • Loquered handle is snag-free; durable . . . }" ..... ,_ ' t• SAVE Slc as~ • \ 4· ' R191lar or llptly padded t111 . .,asl • Adju s!oble sfrops • Nylon, Lycra® spondex • For junior figures REti. TO 2.50 • Soft nylon l•~e cups SATURDAY ONLY! ·I ' " . " . . . ' T1t1•011d 11~ kit •• tYtrJl.ilt JU lttdl • Compl6te do-it-your· self kit; selection • So easy to i1stall • Instructions included 0 ~- ~·· \ /J /·"' 0 ;'"' r ~ \~·· ~' \ SAVE 7 07 29" REG. 36.95 SATURDAY ONLY! \ Mia's twlll j1a1S •. 11 said, black, lod11 • Polyester/ cotton •• never needs ironing • "Spot check" finish • T opered leg; 29-36 ' 3'! RE!i. 4.'9 SATURDAY ONLY! l.. ___ _ - Stock up on men's cotton cushion-foot crew socks! • Absorbent cotton has terry heel t o toe SAVE SOc • Pi ck wh ite or black • No-sa9 stay-up fops 3 129 • Men's si1es 101/,-13 PR . • Hur ry in and save REG. ljl.7t SATURDAY ONLY! Mar•ltlztd plastic toilet se1t·l'1 colors • Sculpfured styling that's extra.'sfrong . • No chip, lode. peel • No corners or seam~ • Ei!lsy to clean! SAVE 53 ' 499 REG. 7.tt SATURDAY ONLY! . SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY TILL-9~l1JND Y "l 1 A.M. TO 5 P.M. ·HUITl .NGTON BE.ACH s:: :ei::: ~~~!·PH NE · 714-892-6611 • • For The Record Fire Calls WeslrNM .... t ::M •.m. Thun.dev-, f'ftCW. 1'7ft Hoer.rt• ... 11 7:65 "·"'-• racw, 1•115 Celdetl Wnt $:5' •.m. 'rld1y, etr 11,., •uW"' Ind H1ard h!flltllll "'"" l :IJ •.m. Thu~y, 1!Ndv,.. fir.,"" l'ltml"" ID:46 p.in .. ur flrt, Elllt A¥er1Ut NII tll' Matnoll1 M1111t1,..i. SMdl ll:llt l'."1. TilurM1v, lllel1I bum, 8Hch lou~ard '°"'"' of ,,.,.," Str"I 7:4!1 p.m.. \ITIJt'lvno 111'.. •m Ai.•-•nd•I• Df'IV, 4 :1S e.m. l".Tlilflr, lll'\ICf\ln 11,., a..dl 8aulev1rc1 •I'd Adlm1 7:4!1 1.m .. Slrvctv~ llrt, tlSl Vtltrdo Drive (Mii ,,.,.... S::M P.m. ThurW1r. fllie Ill""· 1flh StrMI ">Cl N._, 8ou'lev1rd Pilot 1'isitor1 Holdup Man Surrenders, Avoids Pen SANTA ANA -A Hun- tington Park man iap.. parentiy avoided gioi.ng to state prison for the armed robbery of a Westminster market last June 6 becaw;e he turned bimseli in to police. Bradley Lewis Freitas.,22, wu sentenced to six months in county jail on a guilty plea of second degree rot>. bery. Freitas and a oompanioo, never captured, robbed the neighborhood grocery at 8441 Westmill5ter BM!. <Ji $100 and fled in a mr. A clel"k from the market commandeered a. customer's car and •Hd the bandits on the freeway long enough to get the licea;e number ol the vehi- cle. Anaheim police later stopped tile car, but it was being driven by a girl com- panion of the missing holdup man. He then turned bimseU in. Freitas was · ordered to mah restitution to Uie market fur the money taken as e reqWrement under his probation. DEATH NOTICES KILLINGSWORTH Artllur E, Klllk1111wortfl, U7U HOO'lff St., Wutmh•ter. lunrl'ftrll l>'f wfko, Minnie; d•"""'1'1. Mra. FrMrMn Btn.n.Mlh Mra. Fttd e.try1 tlli.r, Mn. Marl~ Otnnln111 taur 1nJld. dllltl,.... and fovr ,,...Hlnlllkl'llld,.,,. Se,..,lc:n, Stturcllr, 1 PM, P9lk Ftm- l!Y ColOllltl Fu111r1t Komt. RITCHEY R1IPl'I IU!ehl"I'. 310 Ortnvt. Huntl""' Ian 8e1ch. Sunr!vtd ti-, wUt, Ph-,1111, Stnrlctl. Mond1r, 11 AM, Dlld1-, lrw. Mor"1111ry. 17'11 811<11 llwl., HuNm. ton l~h. lnlermenf, Geed ShtPl'N"' c-1err. BALTZ MORnJARIES Corona del Mar OR I-NII Coat.I Mesa MI I-UM BELL BROADWAY MORnJARY 110 Broadway, Co1ta Mesa LI 1-3433 DILDAY BROTHERS H1111tlngton Valley Mortaary 11111 Be1ch Blvd. Jluntlllgtan Beach M!-'l'Tll PACU'IC VIEW MEMORIAL PAIUt Cemetery e MorlurY tllapel 3511 P•dlk View lime Newport Beacll, Callftnlll llf-ml PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL l"UNERAL HOME 7111 S.lu An. Westmllllltr 191 ml -~ SMml'I HOllTll.AllY m lbbo 81. HaltqloOll.,.t J.11- ;wtm:Ltn MOllTV.OY U! E-1'1111 81., Colla MIA .. .... Friday, A11gUSl 16, 1%8 DAIL V PILOT D Medic Declares Override Vote Due In Tustin Countian Gets Year . for Rape VD County's Top Health Problem • • • ' • ' ' I STANTON -One year in faU1er was arrested in June 1ald, ''This min\ behavior the county jail and five by ~'tan ton police and charg-, patt.erni paints· 8 dia&tJ.stlng years of probation was the , ed with operaUng a •:sex-picture and ift. ;tie court's sentence oiven Ronald John m•rijuaea n.11rtv rinn" i:I opinion ht baa e8.rbied more 00 ~ ,..-v -severe treatmeni~' Gneuch on statutory, rapfl that city. charges Involving a IS.ye ar-· Judge Gardner went along old girl Thursday by with a probation departmestt Superior Court J u d g e recommendation calling (or Robert Gardner. . 'local jall time rather than l<idt Like fo . . . By JACK C~J!EU. .,. .. Dfl/'f ...... ' ..... SANTA ANA An Orange Oowrty beallh ol- ficial Tbur1day said ve...,.i ~-Is rapidly becorriing the C 0 U n t y ' I number one health problem. -"It's more common than mumps, m~les , or chicken pox," .-rt.ed Dr. T. J, Albert, dire-ol tile in· fectious disease division GI the coonty health depart- ment. And, said Dr. Albert, ttie rising tide pf " e n e r e a 1 disease can't be blamed en- tirely on hippies. No &rea of Orange County society is ex- empt, he said. Health depar:bnent figures show 980 reported oases of venereal disease w e r e reported during the first six months of 1968. The figure compares with 690 cases reported during the same period last year. The reason fOr the drastic increase in the number of cases reported by t b e Man Given Six Months In Slaying SANTA ANA -A Sa!U Ana. man who shot and kill· ed an 18-year-old Long Beaclt youth who allegedly craSbed • party last June 1, ·Was seil.tenced Tbtnday by Superior Court J u d g e Robert Gardner t.o serve aix mmths in the Orange Coun- ty Jail Leon Thompson, 3 1 • earlier bad pleaded gulley 1lo a reduced charge of .in- voluntary mamlallghter. At the time of'his unst be WU charged with murder. A proba-department report showed that 'Jbompson has no past police record including the total absence of even a traffic cit:atioo. On this ha.sis, Judge Gardner 1Uspended the usual 1-15 ,.-prilon sentem:e. • 'IbomplOn Wlil Placed OD tl:fte years' probation aod ordered not to own or but· dle any guns or other deadly weapcms-during tibat time. GOP Group Plan OK'd SANTA ANA-A plan IX> organi7.e the Orange County Republican Central Com· mlttee into working groups within each of the Assembly distriots has been adopted by the committee. John A. Hopwood , originator of the plan, a Newport Beach attorney and administ!'ative assistant to Assemblyman Robert Badham (R -New port Beach) bas beer\ named to head the subcommittee for the 71st Aasem'bly District. Subcommittee chairmen in the county'! other district's are Stew.art case, 69tb district, A n a h e i m : Gordon Powers, 7 O t b district, Huntington Beach and George Delahanty, 35th district, Fullerton. PWPDance On Saturday The Key Dance Saturday will usher in the late 1um· mer social season for the Orange Coast P a r e n t 1 Without Partner• Organiza- tion. The dance will be htld at t p.m. at the Mesa Verde Country Club, Co1ta Mesa, and ls open to alt sln1le adults thro\lghout southern California, Parenti Without Parent. ii an international non-profit organi>aUon open to all single parent& who are divorced, widowed, separated or unmarried. For further information call 54U'/05. MAIOR STVDIO PREVVE TOHl•HT l:Jt P.M. ''"''"''•htt~ .... e DORIS DAY e IAIAN KtfTH Ll·Dd The 25-year-old Santa Ana state prison although he . ' . 'Ask Andy' TUSTIN -The Tustin department ii a matter of Union High School District debate Nid Dr. Albert. will place an 87-cent tax 11Some say that it'a due to override measure on the ptolcillln resistance, others Noy. 5 ballot. The tax, for five years, because of a promiscuous , t t would go Into effect J,uly f; society, but to iet at the 1969, the date>the currents.?- real reason, I VfOU1d have to Crash Death cent override ends. NIGHT ··d DAY SERVICE be a seer," he Mid. If passed. tax bills would ,.._ Dr. Albert aatd that from rise 52 cents above the 12 to 15 percent ot the cases Sm"t Filed present Sl.31 rate , ac· 9:30 A.M. TO 9130· PM. -SATURDAY 10 AM, TO 6 P.M. or venereal disease brought cording to Superintendent to the attention Of the Robert D&!"Jberg. department involve teen· GARDEN GR6VE Dahlberg said the new agers. tax, which would provide "They're pretty Io o d Parents of a girl killed in a fl,7 million over five years, abollt reporting for treat-flaming· crash in which two is needed to offer programs ment. They have a good girls abd a young marine suggested in a report by a 6ense oi responsibility as far died have filed a wrongful citizens' a d v i s o r y com- as giving the names of their mlttee. sex contacts ia concerned. death suit in Superior Court T b e s u p e r I ntendent Jt'& the older per90n who against the driver of a pointed oUt that for the last gives us the most trouble in picku~ truck involved in the two years the district has tNlcltiog down oue1." crash. been dipping into t b e Dr. Albert urged a 11 Mr.• and Mrs. George L. reserves to meet costs and persons who suspect that Girouard of GBrden Grove, actually spending at a ll~35 ~y may haw had ooptact aske~( .$2.50.000 1n damages clip instead of $1.al. Re- vnth an infected person to of Alot'rt Rex Kinsey also or serves are now seriously de-g!' to their peraonal physi---Oardep Grove. pleted, he said, CJ.an or to the health deparfl"'" Kinsey, 48, pleaded no ;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ment clinic for uamination contest last week to a and to bring sex contacts crimuial charg&t,in Superior along for treatment. Court or drunll'en driving He emphasized that all and f(\lony manslaughter in doctor-patient relationships the deaths AprH 13 of Diedre are strictly confidential. Girouaid, 18, Grace Ellen Tcutment .t the llnlth Stock, 1 'lJ.7, and M a r i n e department clintc )ocalld .at Georg~1Brewer. 81b ..-.d Roi• Streell in Su-· Kinny is to ·•ppear Aug. tia Ana ie free. 29 for sentencing. (; ! " FAVORITES N1tion•I and Ioctl r1•cl1r- ship polls pro-,o ttio DAILY 'ILOT <•rrlo1 IOfl'll of tho 11101t popul•r colun1111 11nci futuro1 •••lloblo to 1111y •-•P•PN lo t4io Uattod St•M .... .... REGULAR SIZE 6-PAK $1.15 PLUS TAX .. NEW LOW PRICE I 'Bu.-gie . • •• ' the comfortable bePr • 11 IEW LOW PRICE ON DHAR B·~TOO: ~1.19, :.c: .. .,. ........... ,.,14 ......... 1.M ._ .................... . •I . . - • \ r I • . .. ·----~~ ·• J 0 DAIL V PILOT Ft11fl1, Aug1nt 16, 1'68 LEGAL N011CE Air Bargains Worth By SYLVIA PORTER Among the solutions pro- posed for today's horrifying airport delays In key ciUes is a new r11te schedule which would offer bargains to those traveling in off hours. LEGALN011CE 110T1c 1: TG ca1:01Toas 0,. tULK TllANSPIEa NOttCE 1$ HEREIY GIVt!N Ill ttM QW!IOrl ol OAVIO 0. THOMAS, tlOI"' bulllltU ., GOLDEN ANCHOlt IEElt PARLOlll (''TtaM1-"' fltf't'lll), ..,_ buil'rleq Hdren b 2'0l Lfl•,.-"-~. N-.orf llHCll. C-1"1' el Ort-. SM .. o! C...Ufomla ,.,..., !Nol I bl/II ,...,,..... 11 about ta be mldt ta CHAltLIES T. llALMEll l"T .. llSITrW' '-"111), ......... It ls a mighty superficial "cure" for the fundamental problem of $Oaring air traf· fie and grossly inadeqf.lat.e airports, but if it ls tried it wiU dramatize the comment of a Pan Am official that "the subject of air fare bargains can get as com· pllcated as an entry visa for LEGAL NOTICE Ml-loddnss Is ~ S'll'ftt.1-------;,;;;;:;------1 KN'llOrt k.ci. c-tt ef Or..-S11i. T•21M5 ot C•Mfllf11!1 '1660. 11.1,l ll'" COUllT Of' TMI! IATI Tiie ... -mo 19 lit fl'-"'""ill Is Of' (ALll'OlllJOA 1'011 THa lac.It.cl at nt$ l,..afa""" .. Ila. .......i COUHlY 0 .. Olt.AHO• 8NOI (Ounty d or.-. $I a I• 1111 ,.., A'4of191 C.M~I f1Uoit, aftd ~ 1W-1Y II HOTICI OF HEAlllHO O• PaTITIOH dltcrlDed !11 -•I• all ltodli. .. tr..... P:Ott 'llOUTll! 0 1" WILL AHD P:Olt 11.dll~I. Mlll~I a .... "'°" wlH al ll'lal LllTn:llS TU TAM llHTAllY cerl1tn bMr blr bull-II-H lhl &t1h d LOREN E. COOKE, 0.U. .. GOLOEH ANCHOlt flEER 9All anO Id. l!x"lhcl at 2'05 t..lnirtt. .. ~. "'-" NOTICE IS HER.E8V GIYl!.N Thal eetdl, Cou11ty f/I °"'""' Sii.. el EDITH M. COOKE h11 fllld Ml'91n I C11lllwnl1 '2660. P11!tl1111 tot Pr*la of WU! and fol T1'MI e...111 traMffr win tie _..., 1-~ Of L~ T .. 11mat111,,. Ml 1111 6n or 1"'1" !tie ,_.Itri O.v d Avwat, !Ml, NtltloMf", nftref!CI Ila wtlldl 11 mecM for 1! lt:Oll a,ft'I. 11 lhe GOL.OEH AHCHOlll Nrtlwr N rtio.I ...... Mid lllal thl llrN aftd flEER IAilt, 7'0S Laf1n"-"lec:a. Piia Df _,.,.. IM -hon bHll Ml H•-rl hMI\. C-ty d Or-Sll lt "°" Slp~r " 1'61,. •I t :XI a,m .• Ill IN o1 Otltor11l1 t'HllO. -.wt,_ Of OfHrtme!ll ~ 1 d u lt .SO llr 11 b ~ "' the Tr.......,., QIUl"t, 11 •1 Nortll 8rNOWe,, Ill l!'le Cito/ llMI Trl!llf-I\&$ l,IMCI' 111 Olllef ti.II~ ol $.lfltl Al\li, OH!on'lll . MrN Dt eOdras fol' h ll!<'ft IJI YHf'S OATEO: Au!lusl 1', 1MI Liii NII. W. E. ST JOHN, Dllld: AvtUll l:L IMI. COutrtY Clerk Cl'llrlls T. ll.lllMr, MILLllCAN. MOHTOOMlllY & Tr11111erw ~P:SOfll Put!Ulllecl Orl llltl C.0.11 Diii\' Piiot, HI l"•I er.. S1'MI A-I l" lHI 141HI ........... Cll ....... ftlfl -Tai: n1-nM1• LEGAL NOTICE A,._.,, "' ,...,.._. .-----..,-,,,,,,-------·I Pllblllllecl o..... COii! f'4'm Awvsl t•. 11, U. lHI C1llY Piiot, ,.,, ..... Cl.t Tll"ICATE 01" •USINISI. l'ICTITIOUS NAME LEGAL N011CE Tht llndfrllllnecl -., cert1"1 he II COll-1--==c:::::-::::--::;-;:::;:;;;;;;;----dudlng • b\ISJ..eu II l3CIO WeslmlNltr CEllTll'ICATIE 01' &US IHIESI.. Avtf!llt, Walml11$le•. c.ntom••· u..... l"ICTITIOUS NI.Ml! the flctltiow firm M!Tll of GRlFF'IN'S TM ynMnltl'M!'CI -certltr M h (l)l'lo- G.t.RDENIHG llld Illa! w ld firm It com-dllctlllll 1 bln!MH II 301+.B H1llNIY SI., llO...:I of ltw lollawlnll per1411, ~ s,.11" AN, Ollfor11L1, l/flMr !hi lk:tlllous ......... In full lt>d Pll (t l1f retlde!Ke II llrm ria"'I o1 SEAY M.ANUF.t.CTURIHG IJ lollowl: • COMPANY Ind that Hl4 llrm 11 <Orn· Gt•lld D. Griffin, OICI W1tdmlris ler POHd "' the fl>llowlflll perMHI, wtloM All'tlnlH!, WK1mln1ler, C1lllornla. ,..,... In full -Pl•<• ol r1t11dffic1 It a1 D1ffd A119usr 7, 1'61 lollows: GERALD D. GRIFFIN JAMES R09ERT SEAY, '531 9111 Slate ol Ca111or11!1, Or1r1111 Counlv~ Dr .. Huntington eeecll. C1lltornl1. On .t.uQllSI 7, 1968, be1oro me, I Nol1rv D1lecl A119ust U. Iha. Public In and tor .. Id Stile, "'"'"'"llv JAMES R SEAY 11> ... 1rfd GERALD D. GRIFFIN knOWl'I to Sl•hl of C1lllom11, Orantt County~ rrMI to ti. the pe-rs.on whose ntmt b Oii Auourl 15, 1'61, before r119, I Nol1rv 1ubw"lbed to 11'11 Wllllfn ln.slrumenl I nd Public 111 illd IOI° 541!d Sl1!t, J>t!r..,...llY lelll"IOWlfdge(I hi:' ••KU!ed trll .. me. I PPtlrt'd JAMES ROBERT SEAY kflOWn !OFFICIAL SEAL) to "'' to be tM penOll ~ Mft'll 11 J-h E. Davl1 J.UbKr!bed to Ille wlltlln ln1trUl!llfftl 11\d Not1rv Pub!!c-C1Ntornl1 adu-lldllfd he exK\lt!'CI 11!1! .. ..,.., PriflCll'll Offin In (OFFICIAL SEALJ Orante County ROSELLE C. KNOX M, Comrn!sololl Ell11lr11 Not1rv Publlc-C1lllur11l1 June 11 , 1'71 Prlnclpal Office In l'ul:IU1hfd Orl"'8t C1111I D1ll'f Piiot, Orir111e Countv Autusl t , U. 23, )Cl, 1ffl 1314·... M, cammlnkwl Ex11!re1 JulY I. ltn LEGAL NOTICE P11bll1hfd Orange Coa1t DallY l'llot, ------oc==------1 Autuit 16. n. JO 1nd kPt.mti.r 6, T·tnGl 1961 1"2UI SUl'll!•IOlt COURT 01" THI. STATI 01" c;ALIFOR.NIA FO• THI COUNTY 01' ORANO ll LEGAL NOTICE • ..... A.aHI l'·J10JO HOTICE 01' Hl!A•IHO 01" l'l!TITION CEl.Tll"ICATE 01" •USIHllS, JIOR l'ttO•ATIE 0 1" WILL ANO 1'011 l"ICTITIOU$ NAMl!I LllTTEltS TEITAMENTA•Y. TM llnd•r•ltned INTERNATIONAL E1t1tt Of KARLE EH HITCHCOCK, TELEPHONE A i,i D TELl!GRAPtl °:~;~ii: IS HEREBY GIVEN Tlllt COltPORATION, Wflldl h•1 IPI 11rlnc:ls>ll JOHN R HITCHCOCK 1111 flltd l'lt .. lifl t 111.1<1 Of b!Js!nen 1! l20 P1rlt All'tl-. "UllOl'I ior Probltt o1 Will Ind f« llW-H-YCH'll, Htw YCH'll &toe• l'ltrelrr cerll. l fl<I ot Lel19" TUll<nenl1ry IO "" "'I. "' "''' ,, 11 0.1 ... bullnHI under !tie lie· tl-r ~ II) wlllcfl It m..te tot lillou1 "'"'" ITT JABSCO 11111 ITT fur11>1'• 1>1rtlcul.ln, 1fld lllal Ille t!mti -FLUID HA NDLING 11 14U O•lf: W1,, Pllc:e ol "-•Ina ,.... Umt h11 bef!ll HI Ctllll Me11, O••flff County, C•lllornlt. '... 1 t ·"" 1 tlMI DATED: July 1t, lf61. for A11g11St JO, • I · ·-l .m,. n INTEA:NATIONAL CU, of S.nl1 Afwl, C1llfornl1, TELEPHONE Oiied: Autu1t t. lHI, AND TELEGRAPH W. E. ST JOHN, CORPORATION t: l'AUL Dtman~I Cltrl! By JOHN J. NA VEN · SKre!ary m Dl...r Drt ... , S~ll l. Sllle d N!'W York l H-1 lnc.11. C.lifenlll counl't Of Ntw York) JI Ttl• 64+.HH '' '"' ,_ ·-"' """-' On JUIY ' ' ~•ore mt, I v-. ,,_.,.., Public. lfl I nd for lllt u lt Slllt Ind Publllhtd Or1r111e Coltf OallY Piiot, Cou!lty, per..,...lly IPIH!tred JOHN J . A1111usl '· 10, u. lHll ll'1·M. MAVEN, kllOWft to .... lo bl !tie !«ret1ry LEGAL NOTICE o1 lNTERNATtONAL Tl!LEPHDNE AHO TELEGRAPH CORPORATION, wlle t.11.i!'CU!ed lflt within ln11"1mlfftf 6n bttlllll SUl'l!RIOll COURT 01" TNIE Of IN 111cl CDtPOr1llon Ind tckoowltdlled STATlt OF CALtl"ORHIA l"Ot IO rne !hit 111t COfJIOrallon 8lltcllled lht THE COUNTY 01" OllANOIE 11m1, Ct .. NumMr 0.1"'7, JUMMONI Sarlh J. Gow F'FtANKllN D. HALL, Plalflllll Vt. Ho!arv Public, Stall flt DONNA K. H,_LL, Dl!f...,1nl. New York l'EOl'll! Of" THE STATE DI" Ho, Jl·l31Jlli CALll"ORNIA i. IM '"" ... m .. Dalen-Ou1llflttl 111 t11nl: Now Yori\ Cwnlv YoU 1rt lllrelrr directed lo Ille I wrll· CommlHIOll Ex111r11 ltn Pltldlno In rtSOOl"llt to thtl tornP .. lnl Mlrch JO, 1WI of lht tboVt Mmed Pl1lntlll will\ 11'11 JAMES M. Ll!GNARO Clerk " thtl •boYt tfllllltd court I~ "'' AtltrMV II Law '"°"" tnllllld acilon br-hl 1g1ln1l vou l1M1 v ... lvrt l lvtl. l~ 11/d court wllhln TEN dl,I 11!1• the EllCll'llf, C1Mf'fffll1 Mrvlct Ol'I You of 11111 """'""""'' II UNtd Ttl: UU) 1U-S1tl within 11\t •bow ,..med county, ..-wllflln T 1ntt t•HRTY dav1 II lt"'ed tlHwht:rt. Publllll!'d 0,_1191 C111st D1Hy Pllol, '1'1111 ••• Mrefly flO!llled lh•I unlitu 'l'OU A119111t u. 23, :lO incl S.11111fnti.r 6. IO Ille • wrllltf! .--srve p1t101no, Hid 1'61 U2J.61. 1>l1ln!lff will 11k1 lu<IO!T19nt •~r 1nv mon-1~=---o-::c=--:-:--::::::::'.;;;:C---- eY or "•mag" demtl!Ottl 1n 1111 earn-LEGAL NOTICE 11l1lnl 11 trlilnt UPM conlr1ct, or Wiii i------:--;:::;;-------' ll PlllY ID tht court lat 1ny other HU.t ,..)OlllJ dtm•Mld rn lht r;ornplflnt. Cl!RTIJllCATE 01' •UllNl!IS, y.., "''' llft !ht 1llvln If tft 111"11t'Y l"ICTlTIOUS NAME tn t n, ft'llllff c-.ciH wu~ 1111 ~ The undt.,lqnttl da cerllfV I 1m CfM'I· •l1ln1 Ir lhh wmme1tt. SIK~ l lllrMV d\Kflnf 1 buslnt•S 11 2]00 Harbor 11111ttd H conwltH Wlflll#I 1111 llmt llmlt Boullvinl Cotti Mn.., c1111tarnl1. uMer •l~IH IR 11111 111"'mo•111'or ftlllltl t Wrltml l~t l!cil!IC:..S !Ir"' 111,,... ot TIPTON'S TV, tlttllll!I M IPll H mlLlllll, .t.ND APPL1 .. NCE CENTEll. 11111 !~ti 1110 Oiled Jutv U, lffl. 11,"' It eomll<Md o1 1111 tollowlnfl """"· ISEALI Wl'IOlt name In lull Incl pllct of rtlldHIC:t W, IE. ST JOHN, Clt,k lt ti tatlow'I· llv Willer E. llurti.1 RUDOLPH E. ttPTON. 133 S.nt1 CHll.tlT~'i-"~~. c:z:.LI,. R.oH WIY, PL1c1nll1, C1lllornl1. July 15, 1961 1"1 Wntcllll Of". Sllllll Jtt RUDOLPH E. TIPlON NtwHrl ltaell. CINI. nlM Sblt Of C11Uorn11, Orange CounlY• r1i..111111: f7HJ 14'-tnJ 011 July 25, 1'61, beto<• mt. 1 Not1rv All1n11y I"« 1'1.11111111 PYbllc In and lol $1ld Stftle, 11er10n11lv Pub!llhttl 0rlnt1' C:0.11 Dtl!Y Pllol, Ju-eppearld RUDOLPH E. TIPTON ~nav"" ly '6 tl\d A1111ut! 2, f, U, lfff 12111-41 lg mt to be !!It perlOn whoso 111me rs LEGAL NOTICE tubsc:rlbld to thf w!lhln ln1lrumtnl lnll 1ellr10w!tdted n• f•ecYIHI tht .. It'll. J ,;;c::-c.:-:-::;::;::-::;::-:--::C'.'.-:::-::-C::: (OFFICIAL SEAL l PUBLIC HF.i1<.!NG5 WILL ee HELD llY Jr:>WPll E. 01vl1 THE COSTA ME.SA .. LANNING COM· Nollrv Pu~ll(·C•llfl>tnl• MISSION AT THE CITY H.ALL. n Fllr P•lnclPll Ottlce In D•lll'tl, C~t1 Mtu, CeHIOn\lt, Oii ,,__ Or1no1 CounlY cl•¥, A"'tllll ,,, IMI, 11 7;XI P.M,. or 11 M1 Comrnln l6n EulrH _,, II POllll:llt thtlrHN ... , rttltt lnfl J~nt )I, lf70 ~ fotlawlng •PC>Utlllofll: Pu~n~ Or1r111t CO.JI 011ty l'llol, Ju· 1. Y1ri....c, AnlklliM !'le. V·1H 1· IY )11"'1 A119usl 2, f, 1', 1'611 UCU.61 AlflotftMt tar L. c. Miiier •M M. H. CE Kot1, >t» e1mi strt11. N.-t •11e11. LEGAL NOTJ C1lllO"llt, !or l"ONT"llUlon Ill CG01tl1111t ·---:;;;;c;;::-;::;-;;:;;:;;;;;;---I ll1rl1ncit AoPllc1Uo11 No. V·l••r for NOTICf 0' IHT•HO•D H<'!nl»kwl to CClfl'!ruci 11 lllllhl on IECUllllTY INTl!tt•IT 13,611+ .... II. 04 llfld .,... fl Ynll per tllULK T•ANSl"llltl lt14 1a. 11.1 '"" MNT"llHlllO! II) tncroac~ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEl'I TO TH• IJ' 11'110 ,,,. r'tGUlrfd 21' rur , .... HI· CREDITORS OF l(ENTUCKY FltlED !Mell. SllCI ,,._,,, 11 -.1.c1 at lOOI' CHICKE N OF COllON.t. DEL MAit, INC, M11>le Av~. C•I• Ml .. , C11tl°""!1. •IM"rowe•, ther &orro-r, wholl b<lill'llU 111 In Rt -· .,u,.,u II "11 E11I '"'" Hlfl\WI¥. In 1. Yarl1M1 Afflltltltot NI. Y-4MI for thtl CllV o1 Coron1 clfl Mtr l""-' WllllM'I v. ktwflldl, 261 NIMtu ltoao. l11dl). Cou111Y ol Ortr•fl, SI•~ o• C•I• M11.1, C.lllwll!1, ..--mluloll C:.Hto<11l1. ott111 all vi wl>olt M inni II) e!>CrOldl l'J" ltl1'11 ....... a11 llcle ¥11"1l -•nll •O•lrHlfl, UJtd wllllln """' WlfbKl. fOI" fdOJllofl llf I ltf!>ll'f' .._,. at YHf"f lell NII '° 111 .. kflO-IO IM 11'111 ttlclrttl '" In Ill 1-. l«vrtd ... .,.., 1!'1' NOHE, 11 1boul kl l. "'"11 ..... t ~ l'lnlffl Nt. c.,•· !Of l'llkt 1 bulll lrln'''' bY 1r1ntl,. 1 EflYIY ,_l!fttft!I lllllllOI' tft NnotllY lflterHt Ill IECultrrv ,1.ST llllM, 70 OC..11 Mt"OI' "It( "" NATIONAL 9'ANK. $«\!'" P1rlY, wflOlt lffdl, Ctllfor11la. for i>en!!IH IO" I llW M lnhl eOdftu 11 )ti "ores! Avenut.-Ill (1 (ontd •-l'r trl.,,.rlly fO< 1111 Ille City Of ~II"' lllf<h, C-1' ol .....,..... Of Mill"' ,,.w anO lltld Mobfl• Ot1"'f9, Sith! ot (tllfornl1, 111 !ht l<lllow• H°""11 T,....I Tralltfll Mo!ot HOtNu 1111 det<rlbld ... r10MI trooerty ol flor• Pict....,., Truct• tnd c..._-1 (In SP«l1I rower, foowll; Order-1 w "''"'''''°" IO t~ll llMd All l!rturn Ind MU!OIMlll ol "''' Ct•· aulo!ftObOIH .,.,., bofb Ilk ... Ill lrtllf, !1ln Mll'llU k-II IC ENfUCKV w!UCll .. lflcl*llt1I 10 tM m1t11 use f/I FlllfD CHICKl;N 0' COllON.t. DEL Ille ~ JalCI • ..........,. !oU"" 11 MA.It, IMC. lo(1lfoll el 1'31 E11I Coa1f ICIJ a.twr' SI...,, C41!1 Ml'U, Hltflw1,, lfl ,,,,. (lty ol Cot-Otl /111• C.lrtorllle. Ill. (I --IN.-otl ee1dl). CwnlY 91 0r.,.. Stilt '-~ U• """"" Ille. c.1H1 !« d Ctlltorflll, 11'0 that !tie ..... .,. llllP; It'll """ Oii ~. lllf He. f'r1'""1 wm be eon"'"""'111c1 ., " ~ ~ AM/wim. C..lllw?llL l'W 11'11 tnll da, of Autllll. 11611 11 the Lttvfli ,_.,.._ 1' 19lMlll ... el•rtne ~ =~~~"'i'A:'K ~ ~~C~!~ ·= tJ"'911 Ill t (1 .. II !!'If ~I •-.. Cl"'" el Llflirll I~ CIUll"1 fll --.. w, ..... """' "" .... .,,.. "' .. A c.i ..... Ollfionllt °'''*'' Slllt If C1U1Gr1111. ,:W-• 'il'lllw'l'N,.. ,;.. 1tMM1 DA TED A119111I IJ, !Ml, -~ .......... ~wall ti $ECUilllTY ,lltSf H.ATIOHl l !flt tMc.'lt .. .. l"llMIM 0..""""I, •.ANK. ..... -" lllaF Orl'M> Cotti Ntalt, Stc"nd P•rly c,,....,,.,.,_ ly 0. C, HOUM-11, OOSTA MIJA ~NHIHO v,•,c:.rua~lt1::DM~~~r.{E N """"""'°" ' fi&Ta AUDI, Cllt lrJftlll :...=OHA DEL MAit, IN • wtlll~ ~=.,. 1,1 .ltflfl e. torn,.., •r1110t111 -......_~ "r:t C..1' ., • .,... •1"'1 .. tih••t-._ Or-c .. 11 O•ll'r Piiot, ~~ ~ ~··-- • FAMILY FARES. A new, simplified schedule of fam.i· ly air fares is no w being adopted by most domestic airlines. The husband pays a full first class or tourist fare; the wife gets a 25 per· cent discount; children aged 12 through 21 get a 50 per· cent discount; c11ildren aged two through 11 get a 2/3 dis· count, and children under two r ide fr ee. The fares are e[feclive outside peak traveling hours on Friday and Sunday. To illustrate, a family of four including children aged IO and I could fiy from New York to Miami for $196.82, v s . $250.93 if all paid the fuU economy fare. YOUTH FARES. Most afrlines today offer air travelers aged 12 through 21 a fiat 50 percent discount for travel within the U. S. You must buy an idootification card for $3, travel on a standby basis and avoid peak travel hours an d holidays. SQme airlines are offering instead a one-third youth disocunt, with con· firmed reservations. DI SCOVER AMERICA FARES. Basically, you pay 2S percent less than regular coach fare on round trips completed within 30 days. To illustrate, the New York· Los Angeles round trip Discover America fare is $227.85 vs. $304.50 f or regular coach. TllE 21 • D A \' EX· CUR°SION FA Ht; ABROAD. This year you'll be able to travel round trip between New York and London for $300. Monday t h r o u g h Thursday. Or, if you travel in a group of 15 or more, each or ~·horn has bought at least $70 wor,th of ground servi'ces as well, the New York·London round trip fare is only $230. Then there are a variety ol special fares for military servicemen travel· Jng on a standby basis, for th06e taking a long weekend between Saturday mornlng and midnight Monday, for parents and spouses of wounded Vietn.am veterans recuperating in Hawaii. The Jong .term trend of air fares is downward -one of the few services for which th is is true. and pointing the wa)' are the "bargain" deals or today. Mesa Con1p any In NY Parley Technicolor Inc. of Costa Mesa. will be one ot. the 150 com~nies parUdpaUng in lht American Management Al$0Clatlon's Education and Trainlnj Expo5ltion a n d Conferenc:t al the New \'ork J!ilton this wetk. Interest will «:nle.r on both fonnal education and industrial traln:r.g for tht hard-core unemvlo)ofd, .ghet· lo children and I h o 1 t displac<:jf" 1ulom1U011. ---.-.· -.-"' .,..i"" .. ~•1" --........ ~ ,. -A· • !11" Ntt -...1 Hltll ...... Ctul Cllt • • : • = • ' ! • ; • .; • 1 ~ ~ ~ • •• ' ~ • ' .. ~ '" •• '• ... .. .. li .~ ·,4 " ... '" • •• .. .. .. .. • '" • ·~ r: ~ • -~ .. .. •• ~ "' ' • • .. "• ,• "' • ~~ ~ '• .. ,, ,. "' ;! • • -~ '• ·~ • .. Thursday's Closing Prices -Complete New DAILY PILOT York ::11 _, _,. r I I I ' I ' , I 'I I I .. JJ DAILV PlLOT fridaJ, A119ust lb, 1968 New Law Sends .British Ah.o.rtions Soaring LONDON (f.Pl -The abortion rate in Britain has gone up fourfold since new liberalized legislation went into effect. Almost 4,000 abortions were reported to the Health Ministry in tile !int eight week&. About 2.500 were free under the natlollal health plan. There are the late s t figures available covering the law, wblch has been in e[fect four montbs . Under it any pregnant woman with an acceptable • ' s o c i a 1 reason" such as economic depri'vatioo to e .1: is.ti. n g children If a new one arrJves Al_,-1 •llr9Cli•a alld /ruh loaltlnr llU·Oltfh 11111 .. mer Mlrf •• , a11/oy1 /uJI '"" alMf ii a /a"°rila al 11'. '"''"°"•· Pi11k, 11.·hi1a1 rM or 1alnw1t ltJOOtfl1. -can qualify for an abor- tion. One main complaint is that a woman who can't af- ford another cbld usually can't afford the 100 p<>Unds or '240 it costs for an abor- tion performed !or a fee in clinical conditions .. These women must get one tbrou~b the National Health Service which is clogged with patients. Since an abOrUon ·must be performed within a few weeks of conception, .doctors say, thousands of women have been fqrced to go to .50. CA.LIT. MOST POPULA.R 'P«lacWar p-.r ..,il1' ltril/ialU malfft of bloom. 1,. rad, ,.i11Jr, or .. ,,, cali/orrtia rolll. .... $1.690.1 ., l •·'·" .... ........... , ., s '"'·" • E111Mu1ce1 any 1euln.6. Cool ••• n/re11'ln1. 3 l~r cheap-ra'te, and o f f e n Slaff members may refuse unsafe, abortionists. to ·ope.late· if they have A gyneCQl.ogist at King's moral or r e I l g i o u s 00.. ltospital, London, said : "We· have M beds and t-our coo.· Jecµpns. One doctor said : sultants in the gynecological " 1 t ' s e x tr e m e I y department. Pf 24 to 26 pa-disagreeable for me to car- tlents a week, about a ry out this procedure. But I quarter are nOW" women recognize this is. .no havi'ng abortions... justificatfon for not carrying Many patients came from it out. I'm 61. I retire in four foreign countries w ho se years. I'm· grateful to be Jaws are s1ricter t~an those going. If 1 were now 20, I in Britain. One private doc· would nOt specialize in tor reportea·24 German-pa-gyneco ogy ... - tients in two days. Some doctors complain National Healtb hospi tals ' that · too liberal an in- and doctors ' are not com-terpretation of • ' s o c i a I pelled to perform abortions. rea.s<ins" is' 'being adqpted • • by both gynecologists and paUents. '"I'here's not a Jot of evidence that getting pree·. nant makes you mentally ill~" one said. ''Ti.lk of men- tal health is rather mean- ingless. WheUter you get an abortion or not depends en· tirely on the doctor's. good will." One I~commendation to ease the P.:roblem ~ and elfmlnate secret abOrtionists -is the establishment of specialized abortion clinics such as exist 1n Eastern Europe. One specialist said FIR BARK A.tlcl, lteGuly to •nr la"'1u.a111e. CU.111 3 cubic foot ltar. rei. $% ••• $1.16 ...i •• Hollyiaood Ttoilted JUNIPER this could cut the cost to about $25. Dr. Willi.am Mbrris, pro- fessor of obst(ltrfcs and gynecology at St. Mary's Hospital, Manchester, wrote in the BriUsti, M e d 1 c a 1 Journal: "The time .spent In the consideration of each abor- tion case detracts from the time whi_ch can be $pent With other patients. A pa- tient ill with gynecological trouble is now receiving a standard of attention less than is desirable." J.dtl • strilcinr lropic"I e//ed. .... ,,c 11.49 INDIA.N LAUREL Be11ufi/1al 1hada lrftl, Redivood ROUNDS Crl!ill /or ,,.ito1 and -lkt. Si.la I inc/I 10 Z& inch. ---... l MR.MUM You Kant Spel God? Neither Cud Edison LONDON (UPI) -So you wrote letters during his ca epel too gud? medical school days that in· Take hart. eluded the misspelled words Dr. Lloyd Thompson told "priviledge, d ef in ate , psychiatrists at the Interna-sacra!ice, p ha rs i ca 1, tiooal Mental H e a I t b cronacling and amatures." Oongresg · that T h o rn a s Cushing later said be FAiison, Auguste R o din, lmew the words but dldn't Woodrow Wilson and Albert realize he was spelling them Einstein had the same prob.-wrong. lem. Thompson told the con· Thompson said be had gress that language dif~ discovered mmiy famou s ficulty rnt'Y be caused by persons had trouble with emotiooal problems that words, a revelation which produce resistance to learn- "sbould provide hope and ing to read and spell stirn u I a ti on for the He noted Rodin , the multitude of dyslexic (word sculptor, had trouble Jearn- blind) children, the i r ing to read and write. Spell· parents and teaohers." ing even in later life baffled According to Thompson him. Edison once wrote of rui . The late President Wilson childhood. · did not learn the alphabet · until be was nine and only "My father thought I was be _,, t 11 stupid, and I abnost decided gan rc-cawng a ' Thompson said. that I was a dunce." When .. There are Jetiters from he was 19, Ed.Ison wrote his relatives who thoum.t it borne: E>" odd that young 'Voodrow "Dear Mother. I have was so dull and backward growed considerably I don't and expressed sorrow for look much like a boy now -t b e parents," 'lbomp.son how all the fOlk did you said. Wilson's l .Q. was in receive a box or books from fact 125. Memphis~. Your SDn Al" Einstein, Thom p 1 on (Edi6on's' middle name was pointed out, WM considered Alva.) backward by teachers who Harvey Cushlng, an told his father the boy was eminent brain surgeon, mentally slow, unsociable ' PENETRATION Ne1rly tYtryane r1ed1 th'• DAILY PILOT, hometown n1w1- p1p1t for th1 F1bulous Or1n91 Coe1t. and "forever adrift in his foolish dreams." Lawrence Lowell, presi· dent of Harvard in the early 1900s, at the age of 10 wrote letters with the w o r d 1 "sumthing, verry a n d salor ." Crossword Puzzle (,-ACROSS , l Mosle• ,,,,... •Jane Austin novtl 10 Spanish lady 141 For11 of 11 ~ Ok)';tll .u L1ngtJa unit 16 Sponsorshl1t 17 Asian country 18 Passagt for smoke 19 Noun suffix 20 Tree 2Z-ntz 23 Undtt tension 241 kind of running horse 26 Order 29 Litter • JO Disti nctive charactu ll Get up 33 P.G.A. member 37 Fon1 of p11nlsh11 mt 38 Almost lnadequat.I 40 Fish 41 Respirators 4) Five: Comb. far11 44 Not prevalent 4S Extin ct · blnf 47 Sailor 48 Mountains of Colorado & Canada Sl River of ...... 53 Naulfcal shoul .54 Reprl111ands: 2 wordt 59 Fur 60 S1n1td jl H1nnonlt1 In feeling 62 Opposite of: Comb. fMm 63 Heraldic: bearin g 64 Grtek physlcl1n 65 Widely used gas 66 Town on th1. Thamu ' 67'11stt nay DOWN 1 He1t·lrt1led coal 2 Sta of-) Frtnch scu lptor 4 Having no ability to ru.c:t 5 Chamel lo tht ocean: 2 words 6 'llom out 7 Skin blem ish t Raini er or Robson YtsltnflY's l'm!t Sol...r:-.. 9 Neun or ad,ectlvt • SU flk 10 5111111 cup 11 Rtprtstn(.. 1tlve 12 Cut Into small pltcts 13 Flowtt 21 "7." bl trly l2 kind of lllfll 25 Undtrsittd ml•al 2• lndonnllll lsl111d 27 Asl91 ,A country 28 Conta intr used IL tab It 3Z F1b1lt 33-P1lm11 34-BIClc JS Can. pt"OV• lnct: Abbr. ' •11•1U I J• In the neighbor• hood 38 Withered 39 Turklsla 1 emblem ~ - 42 Caft au- 43 Northwest · 1 415 In a state • of fusion " 46 Gu station ''°'"' 48 1930 Nobel prize winner 419 Shttpllk• I .50 Division · 4" of S poe9 5'Z ,:_ Watlact SS Lowest ft1111l1 YOICI 56 Plloth I .57 Valueless ' ''"'' f 58 H1w11!11t ...... 60 Charge for w services 1 1is n- ds , . l • .. ,. 1'! m n- il- >Y at n- • n-u. •d )D et ly l, m It ow rd or >n :In •D !d '° as Je Us si- ly .. 1 s d - " I :I ~ODEAN HASTINGS, '42-4321 ,.....,, 4..-t "' IHI Ht , .. U League Corrects. Defects Speaking Acc·ented The ·ability to communicate has been one of the basic requirements of our society since the days when the cave man uttered his first "ugh." Providing assistance for youngsters who may have difficulty in expressing themselves clearly will be th{ city's first speech center which will open its doors in September. Sponsored by the Assistance League of Huntington Beach, the center will be open every Wednesday be- tween 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. in the chapter house at :111 Walnut Ave. · Helping youngsters correct their speech defect&· will be Mrs. Carol Piccolo, an accredited therapist who formerly was with the Anaheim School District. Appointments now are being scheduled every half~ hour, and fees will be based on the individual's ability to pay. Anyone wishing to make an appointment may call. the chapter house, 842-8548. · Serving as chairman of the committee which has · been working toward the org8nizati6n of the needed facility is Mrs. Andrew Yeiser, and assisting.have been the Mmes. Roy Battershill, Thomas Broderick, Mar- garet Kettler, Harry LeBard, 0. B. Root, Robert Sey· bert. and Miss Lea Hood. · Area parents who suspect that their child may have a difficulty with oral commµnication are urged to con- tact the center now for a September appointment. SOUNDS EXPRESSED -For some people the ability to common: .. icate~is a sil!lple, automatic response but for those with speech defects it can present a lifelong problem. A solution for children ~th J)eech defects wiD be offered when the Assistance League of Huntington Beach opens a speech center next month. Stressing the correct pronunciation of vowels for Mike Bram.et, 9, are league members (left to right) Mrs. Glen H. Dysinger and Mrs. Richard Couch. COMPARING NOTES -Views of this country from opposite ends of !.be globe are exchanged by (left to right) Marketta Mattila of Finland and her fos- ter sfster, Jan Royer of Huntington Harbour. Mark- etta, who was a foreign exchange student in 1965-00, . :1 is visiting, her foster family.this month. Jan, daugh· ter of ,Dr. and Mrs. R. Quentin Royer,.bas just re- turned from a year in Jamaica '!f'here she was a representative of the lnternational,•Cbri'stian Youth Exchange. 'Home' Viewed From Abroad By JODEAN HASTINGS Of tM O.llr Pl .. ! Ii.ff The tenseness of the racial situation and the unsettled attitude toward Vietnam were the most ·striking changes observed by, two teenagers who ha.ve returned to this country from opposite sec- tions of the globe. Testimony to the fa.ct that not all young people are foliowing the esc~pist route traveled by the hip- pies was the deep concern over this nation's image voiced by Jan Royer, 19, ·and Marketta Mattila, 20, from Finla¢. Jan, tho11ghtful and articulate daughter of Dr. and Mrs. R. Quentin Royer of Huntington Harbour, lived in Jamaica for a year as a representative of the International Christian Youth Exchange. Marketta lived with the Royers when she at- tended school as an American Field Service ex~ change student in l~. She is visiting her foster family this month to participate in the wedding of Jan's older sister and the celebration of the Boyer's 25th wedding anniversary. Seated in the family's comfortable living room -the picture window framing a view of the swim- ming pool and peaceful channel beyond -the two young women compared views of America through another window -that of foreign opinion. Anxiety over America's future because of the race riots and anger toward the whole country fol- lowing the recent assassinations was expressed in both countries. "People feel the country is upside down, afire," explained the earnest young visitor, whose native land is comprised principally of an all-white, middle class population with no great extremes in econ- omic. status. "The Kennedy's are much lo'led in Finland, and the shock of the late Senator Robert Kennedy's assassination was bad for United States' reputation. People were angry because they don't understand," she stressed. Life in the completely integrated country of Jamaica was an experience Jan wishes more Amer- icPns could have and need. The small country'1s pop- uJation is comprised of Negro, white, west Indian, Chinese and mixed races. Although skin shades range from fair to dark, there is no racial preju- dice. "ft cpened my mind and eyes and heart to a different W{lY of Jile." She lived .. with the A. W. Powell family, native Jamaicans, in their hillside home overlooking King- ston where Powell is headmaster of a coeducational school. There still is a strong class structure in the country but during her stay Jan visited homes and schools on all economic levels, Education follows the pattern set by the Eng .. lish schools and Jan attended an all-girls' high school -another contrast for the Marina High School graduate. Religion is emphasized in all the schools and the first class each morning meets for prayers and announcements. All the students wear uniforms. There is1 little social life connected with the schools and Jamaican teenagers spend more time at home. The young people tend to be more respect- ful and are not allowed as much freedom all Amer- ican teenagers. "The Jamaicans are a reserved people -much more than we are." Movies and dancing are popular pastimes, she continued. "All the people love to dance but espec- ially the West Indians -they even dance down the street instead of walking,'' she srililed. Jan learned to love bananas during her stay and was amazed at all the ways they were pre- pared. "We ate them boiled, broiled, green, mashed, in fritters, in d.esserts and 'chips,' similar to our potato chips,·· she marveled. Rice was served with every meal, even when the menu included potatoes. Akee, mentioned 1n "Jamaica Farewell," the folk song J>O:pularized bf Harry Belafonte, is a type of fruit which grows on trees and, according to Jan, resembles scrambl~ eggs. A popular island dish, it may be served (ac .. companied by "salt fish"--Canadian cod) for ell.bet breakfast or dinner. Beef doesn't compare in quality with American beef, and the most unus.ual ·dish Jan tried was cur- ried goat, highly spiced and. serv:ed with-rice. Still adjusting to the bustle of American life and living in an all-white community, Jan plans to , enter the University of . ttre "Pacific in .Stocl'ton in the fall. · · When Marketta retul'Jls fo her ' homeland, she will enroll in college in Htlsirlkf .. · · · · Alt.bough there agai!i .will. be .!be &pace' of a continent between them, the awarenes11 :of 'pri>blems being faced in this coun,try and the desire to work toward a solution wilt continue to form a common bond. 'Little Shaver' Obiects ·to 'Shear' Old-fashioned Advice DEAR ANN LANDERS : l used fo think you were a friend ol. UI teens but now I know you are our eDemy. I didn't mind when you put the knock on long hair fDr boys, most square middle-aged people feel tile ume way. BJll -Y!>ll •aid yoo boped the ttf!W cut would come back because it is clHa leollaf, I almoct popped e blood vessel The crew cut ta the m0&t repulsive looking baintyle ever created. It makes a guy look like he is ready for the electric dlalr. It 11 dumb ·tn dlop off a fellow's hair and make him look bald . Baldness comet soon eoough. Anybody who would come out in favpr of the crew cut is p-obably wVtng htgti>utton shoes al\ij using a marcel iron. Why don 't you relire, An· ANN LANDERS ril nie? You •e too old for the job. - CHICKEN DEAR CHICKEN : To e1cb bit own, bub. I 1UU lite the crew cut Shame on you for tryla1 to put ID old lady out on the 1treel You 1et five r1p1 1cro1s the knuckle1 with my marcel Iron DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hus· band 11 In the drug business. He .Va.~ been taking ju.st about every k1Mr1:11 ol pill you can think of for 20 years. ~t first · Jt wa1 pep pflls to help him through the long h°"''' Then be had to take tranqulliiers to oalm his jumpy nerves. Next it wai 1leeping piUJ. Now be has to take pi.Us• to get him moving in the morning. Since he Is In the business he can lay hl1 hands on all the pills he wants. \Ve bave been maJTied for 23 years. Our sex life is terrible. Most Qf the time he is Impotent . I am sure the pill& are to blame. When I try to ex· -~---- plain thll fo him he gets mad and says, "The REAL reason we have such a lousy· love Ufe is because you don't have any sex appeal anymore ." Pills have ruined QUr marriage and killed my love for my husband . Plea.~. Ann, tell your readers to stay away from them. -NO CITY PLEASE DEAR NO: ladlKrimlnate u1e of plU1 eaa be extremely d1agerou1, and I triave rt;>t1:atedly warned my readers about thl1. la your bu1band'1 case the pUIJ ltave appareaU, tAtea thelt toll. Pills often matt 1ymptom1 of emo- tional lllne11 and d«elve a a"er lbto bellevln1 he 11 OK. I hope yolU' hus· band wtll co to a phy1lclan and level !-With him befor' be tulfer1 a complete collapte. • DEAR ANN LANDERS : 1 work for a high-powered businessman who has many pecullarltiea but t am willing to overlook hia oddit:tes because I love my job, the pay la excellent and I keep meeting 10 many interesting people through this wort. I would bate to leave. 'nte thing that liothers me most ls that my boss used to be a major in the U.S. Army IJld he behaves as il he's still giving orders to the troops. He in· slstt that I say "S1r" 'when 1 speak to him. Strangely enoogh, alter office hours he wants me to have a drink with him and he becomes overly ftlendly . 1 have no lntereat in getung Inv~~~ !t'ilh the man (he11 married and i:t years my senJor). Do You have any advtct oq hOllJ I can keep my job and·my 1elt.rftpectT -STAFF SERGEANT DEAR SARGE: say f•ve1, llr" from 9·uattl I. After S, 111 ''No, air.~ Uawe of your1elf on date1? Wht'• rlgbl? Wbal'• 'll'l'Oa(: Sboold 70GT Sbouldil1t yo•T· Send tor Au Luden' booklet ''Ditta& Do11 aH. Doa'tl," enclostac with your reqlfHt SI CMil la cola ud a loaf, telf-Mdreaed. 1tamped envelope. Ann Landero will be &lad fo Hip you wttb your problem1. Seltd •dtera io her la care of tbe' DAILY PlLOT eneloslng I ltlf-~, stamped .. .i.Iope. • -----~ -~- ....... ----------------------------------------------------------~----~~------- • • .. Flickering Lanterns Light Luau Floweni !loatlng In 1he swimming pool, glowing lilti torch .. and flickering Japanese lanterns will set the mood at the annual luau for members and guests of the Hun11niUJn Harbour Beach Club. Arranging decoratiom for the summer party tomonow are (left to right) the Mmes. Everett Ricker, William Testa, Richard Maitland and John Virtue. Guests attired in native garb will enjoy roast pig, mahi- mahi, yams, fresh coconuts and pineapples and other Polyne11ian specialties. Harbor Council Movie Guide (Edltor'1 Mott: Tlll1 11\0'<'le tulde 11 .,_,.. or Ille 111m1 ~mltleo> 111 H1r• COvlldl ,TA. Mr1. lftobtrt a 11 .,u!Otnt 11'111 Mr1. Hll!1 .. COl'ftll'lltlM W lrmMI. JI 11 " • ,.,...'""' lft dettn'nllll .... oufl1ble fl""' for ur1111! IM ttOIJ" •M will •-•r ~IV YGYr vi..r-1 1rt fla!klttd. Mall tMn'I lo Mlwls G\llM. ~-·of !tie 0.lhr ,llcll.I MATURE TEENS AND ADULTS ANZIO--War correspondent view1 cosUy lnvaalon of Italy by American troops with authentic detail. BLUE -Te:r:u doctor and hll dou&hter save Ille life of a bloodth,lr1ty westerner who was raised by a Mexican bandit. DEVIL'S B R I GA DE Lieutenant Colonel creates a tough guerrilla combat force from :. C(lm pany of American misfiU a n d crack Oanadian1 dwing World War II. FIVE CARD STUD Professional g a m b I e r solves murder my5tery in thi's untraditional western. HANG 'EM HIGH Marshal hunts vigilantes who tried to lynch him . TiiE SCALPHUNTERS - TrapPer and a runaway slave follow the tr'ail or stolen pelts In this gory and violent film. WHERE WER E Y 0 U WHEN THE LIGHTS \VENT OUT? -Famous blackout of No ve m be r 1965 serves as background for this fr othy comedy. ADULTS THE FOX -Relationship between tw o women living on an isolated farm Is shattered with the arrival of an attractive man. Figgatt Sisters Claimed As Brides in Ceremonies THE GRADUATE -Cornie 6-atire o! a young man who break5 out of--t h e materialistic world of hi1 elders. HAMMERHEAD Undercover agent i s assigned by the British to thwart a sadi1tic villain 's attempt to steal vital missile information. POOR CO\V -Sordid drama of girl who faces a seamy ex i s te n c e in English slums. ROSEMARY'S BABY Sordid, ·deeadent, and blasphemous film ·about Satan and witchcraft. SWEET NOVEMBE R Dying woman goe& to unusual lengths to be remembered. Horoscope Program Explores Freezers Get a Head Start on Tomorrow will be the topic ol • program dealcned to in- aitruct women on effecUve use of their freezer•. ldeu and information on how !o plm ahead and cook ahead with the help of the freezer will be offered by Mill Shar<>n Hot. and Miss C1rol Heinz, home economi!U: at the Edison Living Center in Huntlngtoo Beach. The program will be given Monday, Aug. 19 at 7 p.m.; Tuel., Aug. 20 .at 10 a.m.; Wednesday, Aug. 21, 7 p.m.: Thursday, Aug. 22. 10 a.m.; Friday, Aug.. 23, 10 a.m .. and Monday, Aug. 26 at 7 p.m. Each person attending will receive a booklet en- titled "Freeze It" with in· formation concerning home freezing. Prevent 'Prickly' Problems . BOOKING REUNION -Old habits never die as Mrs. Kennet b Hinsvark proves as she balances books on her head as a posture aid. Mi_ss Terry Le'!"is (left) and Mrs. John Grayson admire her skill, one that every m~el should possess. The Mannequin's Association of Orange County hosted their 10-year reunion recently in the Balboa Bay Club. Feminine Garments Displayed County Models Review 10 Years at Reunion A 10 -year reunion wag The group was formed in Lingerie and bright "at· ed b be 1 th March of 1957 as a nonprofit h ·11 be stag y mem rs o e ome" lounging wear WI organization for the con- displayed when the Hun-Mannequin's Association of solidation of top models in tington Beach Emblem Club Orange County. Orange •County to protect LINCOLN. Neb. (UPI) -sponsors a fashion show llt 8 The event took place last and promote their interests The best way to prevent in-p.m. Monday, Aug. 19,.in the Monday .in the Balboa Bay and goals. Once a year fection from poison ivy. Elb Lodge. Club with cocktails at 7 and members donate t h e i r pohon oak or poi.aon sumac Area women are invited to dinner at 8:30. seTvices to a dillerent chari- is to know what those plants join club· memt>U1 and Tables wen! decorated el ~~ b · ·1 f '-k like '"d ,_ J.1 85 far bi h . ,_._ 'th b ·1r ct ty s e,,;wu y a ma1or1 y o ...., -· w -guests for 1he fas on 1 ow, w puIA. w1 a s a mann· ttie members. IWll/ from them as po6Si-and refreshments will be equin designs. A humorous The association meets on blr. served following the party. review was delivered by the . The second best way , for Additional information current officers called Re· the second Monday rught those who know they are may be obtained by calling member When, which traced every month in Key&t.on"e susceptible to severe plant Mrs. John F. ThompMll, events back to the fint ~:~g~~:ss~.: A;~!f; Pofson!ng ii to buy• preven-536-6lU. meeting. are invited to apply for tative skin apray. But when It bappen6 _ membership by calling the when junior strays into the J k J · 11 Have Dote Mannequin's Association of Jl01 .... Ivy patch, or the pie-ac I Orange county at 534-5171. nic blanket i1 spread right I Officers are Mrs.. Jim ne xt to a poison oak tree -The annual invitatione.1 a limit of 30 couples. Aspegren, president; Mrs. Kenneth Hinsvark, v l c e here iJ what to do., advises Jack and Jil:I foursome After a day of golf at the president; Mrs. J 0 b n Helen Becker• University of tournament is &cheduled to Irvine Coast Country Club G r y s o n , correspooding Nebraska Extension health begin Sunday, Aug. 18, with the women's group and s e c re t fl r y ; Miss Joy education specialist : McF lane, d I Wash tmrougbly with guests will enjoy dinner and ar r ec or n g --• •-the 'th dancm· g. secretary, and Mrs. Gordon soap ....... wai.cr , n wi Me1a Rebekeh Gray, treasurer. rubbing alcohol. Then apply Winnen: become co-hostsl.=========::;;; the old timer's remedy o( Every first and third for the following year. This BEST crushed jewel weed (also Tuesday of the m 0 nth year co-hosts are Mr. and known as touch"'1Jle·not and members of Mesa Rebekah MN. Thomas Hud&on of Th• DAI LY ~LOT •ff•r• ''"'' snapweedl or a i1ew poison Lodge assemble in Odd Irvine Co ast Ckzb and Mr. ef +fl. INst M1tvr11, II., 1c.tv1I plant lotion from a drug Fellows Hall, Costa Mesa, and Mr1. Arthur Ni56on of iuttr•Y ef r••cl•rJo '"'"'"'' 111 store.' e11y 111w1p1p1r ill the 11affe11, .~•:t :B~p~.m:·~~~~~~...:s..,:::~~Ana::::~C:o:WllrY:::.;~Cl:u:b~.~..!::==============-==1 For • really bad case of 1 .. fc!.,~ poisoning, see a doc- Century Club Twentieth Century Club of Huntington Beach gathers at 7:30 p.m. the third Tues- day in Lake Park Clubhouse. A ,(JI P1ioiily Sfuft 1',o......., "'"" Mooofiry'llllwo\ Mwillt ALW~}.!!!!m' THRU SAT. ONLY! Two weddings in Ille H"'" M. Fiuatt Jr. family of Com Mou took ploce wtthm a week . Tbm daugbln' Gwen· dol}"D F'>&Ptt beanie Mn. L OaTid Mart during ~rr:tDCllDel in SL Mark'1 Me1hodilt Cbureb. Anaheim with tlle Rov. IW Edwm!J officiating. Libra: Hunch REDUCED I 'RIGHT NOW' FOOT FASHIONS , FOR GUYS AND GALS! Given in maniagi by he'r parents, she wore • white Grecian gown and carried • white Bible topped wtth orchids and 1t.ephanotis. Her sister wa1 maid of honor. A week later she served as mttron of honor, and her hmband wa1 an usher for the double ring ceremony Unklng her silt.er Constance Jl'iggatt and Michael An- thony McDonough , son of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie J. McDonough of Costa Mesa. For her wedding , performed by the Rev. John P . Athey in St James Epllcopal ChlU'Ch , Newport Beach, the new M r 1 • McDonough chose an A-line gown of silk organza with alencon lace trim. A petal cap oaugbt her illualon veU , and she carried w h l t e orchldJ and stepbanotQ. Bridesmaids were t h e Misses Peggy Bryson. Kim-brough Flggatt, the bride's sister, Patsy McDonough. the bridegroom's sister and Linda Farris. Attending as best man was C. King Fitch, and ushers were Hugh M. Fig. ptt.ru, the bride's brother, tulle J. McDonough Jr., the bridegroom 's brother aod James Erwin, Rodney W. Figgatt, another brother of th• bride, was a junior uber. A double reception was given in the home or the 6ridel' parenta:. A11i.stinC .... Mrl. Erwin. ·- Mlrk, aon of Mr. and Mrs. IAsUe Mart of Guadala)1n, wu attended by hit brother, Stephen Mart. Thi brldecroom " • sradiiltt of Guadalaj1r1 Hiib School and Oringe Coast Colllfe. He now la 1 ministerial 1tu· df:nt at Berkshire Chrl1tJ1n Coller•. illl ride l!udled at '· •• MRS. MICHAEL A. McDONOUGH Former Constance Fln•tt Co1ta Mesa High School. Orange Coaat College and Berkshire Q\riatian CoUege . Tbey will enter the mission field upon tbtir graduation ~m BCC. McDonou1h. who will be serving hJs toW" of duty in Vietnam, Is 1 graduate of Costa Mesa High School and OCC, the same alma miters o;yiil bride. Will Pay Off SATURDAY AUGUST 17 By SYDNEY OMARR\ "The wise man controls his destiny. . .Astrology points the ~y." ARIES (March 21-April 19 ): Strength comes from those who serve you, work with and for you. Fine for dealing with relatives. put· ting opinions on ttcord. Op- rosltion tends to be weak. Act accordingly. TAURUS (April 20-May '111: Good for creative. Jn- tellectuaJ pursuits. Pleasure shown from children, also through opposite s e x . Romance is in the air. A void extravagance. Emphasize quality, sYnplicity. GEMINI (May 21-June 20.): Avoid ml sun· deratanding with older fami- ly member. Do this throu gh patience, ability to be good listener, A secret exists. You could discover i t . Embarrassment m l g h t ruult. Be mature. CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): Pleasant surprise due as result of letter or telephone message. Keep lines o f communicaUon open . One close to you may want lo make concession. Provide face48ving device. Be lel'lient. knowledgeable person about career opportunity. Avoid excess during any celebra. tioo tonight. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221' Hunch pays off . Your in- tuJtive intellect is honed to razor sharpness. You can perceive important trend. Trust yourseU. Heed inner voice. Accent on journey, change of philosophy. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emotional reactions to· day are quick. 1 h a r p . Nothing appears to occur hallway -all •the way or nothing. Know this and give logic a chance. Means tem· per impulsiveness w it b thoughtfulness. SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Permit one in authority to apiak his piece. Means be receptive, CUrb tendency to Interrupt'. You gain today through steady pace. You win your way if patient. P romotion Is due. CAPRICORN (Dec . 22- J an. 19 ): Day for ideas, planning rather than direct action. Pre'pare -plant the seeds. some changes are re- quired. Key is to choose pro- per areas. Leave nothing to haphazard methods. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Love comet your way. If si ngle, you could find this a day when mueh of future 11 setUed. If married, you could rekindle spark of romance. Stress creetlvity, self~xpression, Give. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 3:>l: You may be tempted. to throw caution to wlnda, but • TOWNCRAFI"• GAYMOOI'• CAROL IVANS',. Our best selling girl•' T·ltropper reduced! &!o9 ~ T-ttrop--' ,__ '°""1 llr-' -..._,. riMoeil Mbw hMI .. ""-· 0-lchoki w w..dl. 1'11 teL Reg. 6.99 NowS.88 · LcrcfiM 'rugby Women's moc- tie' oxfords style slip-ons ""'-"''• """· ......., G!wli.r.....i~ clonk 111 ~h.dc oM ........ _ _,,., -- lo•h!Oll tol011, 1i1e1 -,.i..i.. ....... .,,...... ... ...s., ••v · 6.99 •'I· 6 .99 NOW J,18 Now5.IJ • la'9<&1• prieotl Smart looking saddle oxfonlsl moc-toe slip-on co....w-. ..... M•ll'• COMlorlo•I• .._,__,. --·~ ........ ,, ........... v..11 • Reg. 7,99 •'I· 1.99 NOW J,88 Now6.88 Glrl1 1h•1 ht .it ..,...._,IM .... ....r-..~• 7."NOW ......... ................ ...,.. .. ,.., .... ........ '-"NOW" ....... lold,lmrwny d .... oxf- l ido 9f•\ll t .. lher ............... ........ v..n. •eg. I0.99 Now I.II ..,.. ......... ..... ..,.,,.. ........ ... ....... _ '-"-·-..... LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 221' Fr:iendly contacts t o d a y could result in ultimate pro- fil You are able to throw off burden which waa not right- ly your own. Greater freedom is oo horizon. Get rea<ly. VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22), Day for expansion. Break tendency t o w a r d con· flnement. Seek means of ex- pression. Check w I \ h there are rules, rest:rictiona.1,-------------------------------~ Best to adhere to reiula- tloos -then you cOUld find opening. Move t h r o u I h knowledge, not pure Im- pulse. ltlSTA MESA IH1rDer Sh1p111l11t C.11f1rl ~ HUNTINGTON BEACH N.EVlf>ORl ·BEACH IF1d.i111 l1l1PMl l --.... ·-_,,,,... ---~--------~,.....~----.-.--.-----------------------------------·---·--------------- . " ·~· :· • 1 I ~ I D ·~ () (l \ e JOB PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS '\,,, • NEWSPAPERS \ 011• Of n, lAtt•tf F•cllltiff 111 Or111,. Cev11~ 111 t WIST MllOA 11.-.;: NIWPOIT llACH • PEANUTS l· fW. lttiS!M SIOPPB>1 Sf1AKIN6 • DR. KILDARE JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS SAVI WHA'l"IOO 60T IN 'THAT 9.16; SNAKE·EVt;? -.i1ss PEACH -·~ ... --· en,t 1>1PN1T KNOW Yau HAt> A FJ~i;, M•· MUI.I.INS~ !'AG? ... ™,1NIS J!AG- l'M CARRYIN'! ... wm'.T I GOT ltt'( UJNCH IN I l ------------------- • ly Gus ;(rrlolcl ly Ferd Johnson M~DB~l!'R, ev61.YN-· J. 101.D HIM IF H"' t>lt>N1T SEL.L. HIS QUOTA Ill> Fl Re HIM. ly Tom K. Ryon GOLL! ... HE MUST NEED l.OTSA IRON IN HIS DIET) . ly Mel .~, MELL. F"rkb1y, Augu1t 16, 1968 DAILY PILOi J5 CONSERVATION -Folk singer Burl·lves ·above· stars in the motion picture tonigbt, '1Wind1 Across' the Everglades" at 10 p.m. on Channel g: Also starring in the story of one man's fight to save the Everglades, Ill'• Gypsy Rose Lee, €bristopller ' Plwnmer and Peter Falk. TELEVISION WEWS Olympics On Prime Time By ROBERT MUSEL NEW YORK (UPI) -Any presidential eandi· date who thinks ABC ought to preempt time for him Oct. 12 to Oct. 27 when the White House r ace is at its hottest will have to consider carefully whether he may lose more votes than he will gain. For there is no fury like a sports fan deprived of a chance to see the Olympic games in Mexico City live and in color for the first time. ROONE ARLEDGE brilliant head of ABC's Wide World of Sports, admits to being worried a~out the pressure of election coverage on his great plan to carry 44 hours of Olympic sport from Mex- ico City, some of it in prime time and almost all of it live. His concern is understandable -the games end only a few days short of election day. 11But I strongly doubt," he said in an interview, "th at there will be any interference with the live Olympic coverage except for something of over- whelming importance. I don 't think any politician would want to annoy some of his viewers and these are the first Summer Alympics on our continent since 1932, the first we can see live at a reason- able hour. ''NATURALLY it would have been better all~ around if the games bad been scheduled for earlier in the year. We ourselves are reluctant to preempt brand new programming so soon after the start of the season. But it's an event that must be covered. l 've seen an estimate that 400 million people around the world will be watching it by landlines and by satellites!" Arledge said the coincidence of the Olympics and the election would throw a tremendous burden on the ABC technical staff, which would have 45 cameras of its own at Mexico City and access to 75 others, the biggest camera lineup in television history." ENTERING its eighth year Wide World of Sports is doing better than ever before. It is com- pletely financed for the entire season in accordance With a firm policy which does not give the spon- sors any say in what sports are covered or how. "This gives us freedom to do things," Arledge said. AS AN EXAMPLE he cited boxing. Television was once accused of killing boxing. Then came the recent tournament of champions which Arlf<:Ige decided to back. Jimmy Ellis captured the title taken from Muhammad Ali (Cassius Clay) in a series of bouts that won back boxing's audience. And with it the sponsors returned. "Just today," Arledge said, "I'm workipg on the technical problems of covering the champion- ship fight between Ellis and the challenger and fonner champion Floyd Patterson in Stockholm on Sept. 14. We expect a tremendous television aud- ience. The fight has created great excitement in Sweden even though it's the day before the na· tional elections there. "PATTERSON is really keyed up for this one, bis whole life has been dominated. by the thought of coming back from his defeats by Sonny Liston. There's a Hamlet quality in him that strikes a responsive chord in people. You just know he's go-- ing to get knocked down and get up and fight his way back. Everybody wants to see him do well . Everybody feels sorry for him . Yet he's made and kept more money out of boxing than any fighter ever." I Dennis the Menace I : .. JI DAILY PILOT FridlJ, August lfi, 1961 .. Students Threaten ~Olympic Demon-strations: MEXICO CITY ( fJ') -ArtJr1 rtudeatl ..who thffaten demon.stratl ona at tllo Olympic Gamu .,.. tho lalut .,_cbe lot a trouble-plaaued and rumot·WHrY Muicm Olympic Com· mlttee. The atudlata an makiq loud nanble1 that their mMn demonatra· t!ao U.111 thla yev will bl the Olym- pica (Oct. 12-27) 10 they can focus world attention on their beefs with the fedtral 1overnment. Ever t1nce July 26, colleee and prepatory school &tudenta bave been prote1tin.& against certain 11pecta of the &overnment. They ltarted with charges of police bn.ltality ud then switched gradually, tbouP, with little oraanization, to other faceta. In lhret d1mon1tration1 1ince then, the proteata hive become more oriented •1ain1t the federal govern· menl , The most rtc~Dt dhturbance, on Tuesday night, eDded with a n estimated 100,<XWI persons in front of the National P.tl.act. Student orators demanded tbat ctr· lain police officials be fired and that the riot &quad be dissolved. The speakers charted that 32 students had been killed in the past Ufree weeks. However, they couldn't name any or tbenl. · Indicative of the1 oftici (!oocem it the hand.ling of the D e t r o t t • Aiiladelphia National Football League exhibition 1ame last Sunday. It was to have been played in Vrtiversity S t a d I u m • site of ceremooie5 and the track eveats of the coming Olympic Games. But it was canceled at almost the last moment. The announced reason was that !ew tickets had been iDld, Yet, it wu learned later, that at least 60,000 tickets had been s'?ld and that perhaps half we.nt. to students wbo bOped to ~tage .a d~monstra~ which woutd be ' 5f:en In the United States vla television. That would ba.\le burt the attindaoce at the Olympic Games on which Mex· Joo has 1peot millions of dollars. In the first of the marches, tnere was liUle mention of the Olympic Games, although some students, while being chased through the s1l'eets by 1oldiers, would shout out: "We're not running from the Army, we're just training for th< .Olympics." 'I'Mn someone_ . thought . up the slogao: 1968; the ylllt of U.. OIY111Pic U.S. Will Win Cup '.S3.7MiII-ion ~Swi1nC0111pie~ If It Can Defeat Spania~ds--Dell CLEVELAND (fJ') -"Thll la Ill• big one for us -U we can deleat Spain, we should' go on to take the Davis Oup from Australia," say1 Don Dell, roold• capUin of the U.S. t.am. "'Jbat'1 the way it looks on paper anywty," he added as the inter-zone matcbes with Spain opmed today on tn.-r.ot Harold T. Clark couru. Chasm Deepens Between PGA, Touring Pros By AuoclalA!d Preti The chum -..., fhe ProleHiooal Golfors AaociaUm and the toorlDC players, who have set up a rJvel organiulion, deepened today. Max Elbin, Jl'esideot of ttie 'PGA, said he would ask the special meeting of the PGA Executive Committee at Palm Be<1ch Ga,denl, Fl.I. today for permission to poll each player and "~k him whet.her be is a PGA member or a member o! the other group." "If he wanta to Join the oilier group," Elbin 1aid, "then 1 would pull bil card immediately." Sucb an .ct.ion would mun that the player would be suspended and in· eligible to compete m f u r t b • r tourname!U 1UCb u Ille JIOll.000 Pbilade1pbia Goll Clas1ic nert week at tbe Whitemarsh Country Club. Sam Galef, attorney for the rebel players who have formed a new organiu.lion called 1be International Professional G o l ! e r ,. Aaaociation. termed the threat of a poll .. coerci'on" and "dictatorlal ... Spain'• 'Manuel Saotana, :JO.year-old super -ttar, met home -town 'product, Clark'Graebner, 24, a husky pow«· houn player, in tile first 1inglef COC· tert. Juan Gisbert, 26, faced U.S. ,ce Arthur Ashe, winner of 1 • v e n tournaments thiJ year, to the aecond singles battle. Each vlcWry II w«th 00. point. It, cloubfeo match will !ID lleturday'1 6Msi.OD, with anotblr pair of lin11e1 winding uP 1he series Sunday. The wtnning team will take on the West Germany-India winner this fall. 'Ibat wmnet will play in Adelaide, Australia, Dee. 26-28 for possession ol. Ille CUp. 'lbe Americana have advanced through tbt iDlEr·zooe cballenge aeries by downlnf team1 from the Carib- bean, Melico and Eeuedor. Dell decided oo the quick-reactint Ashe, 26-year-old Army lieutenant, ear.Mir in the week but waited until just before 1'tursday'1 draw to pick Graetmer O'tler Cbarlie Pasarell. "Charii• defeated Clark for the Eastern Gf'U5 Court& Championship, but I couldn't go again.at Clark's fine record of the year," said Dell. "He and Ashe give us tremendous bounce." Graebner, recent winner of the N•· timal ai.y CourU crown, Wt month dei'eat.d. Slntmla in the third round at Wimbledon. The Mly mild ...,,.Ue WH the choice lJ!.r lpain't vet.ran captain, Jaime lctiol:I, Of Gisbert over Manutl Orantes, 19-year-ol.d southpaw, w handle tile sing! .. along wltll Sall- tana. Santana wu a cut and dried choice. He took Wimbledon in 1966 and the Nati.ona.JJ at Forest Hills in 1965. Some tennis buffs IDnk Orantes' st.rooger game is better suited for tile fast courta here. The surface is best described u Well..grooomed asphalt which makes tl!mn juat slightly •lower -coment. Angels' Laeky Charm McGlothlin's Brother Ups Record to 12-0 By EARL GUSTKEY Of "'-C.llJ ,. .... ''"' It would not be uoderstatin1 tile case to say the Angels need all ttie luck they can get these days. Jim McG\othlin revealed Tbursda;.r night that he has a good luck charm working for him -his bTother, Gib. After tbe Angel righthander dispo6- ed of Washington, 3-1. in an hour and Angel Slate AUi. " Arweltl "' W•llllntloll J:ll ,,.,,, kMPC U\0) """'· 1t """I"' l'l'!<nor• J:n •. .,,, 1tt.1Pc !"I\ Alltl. to Afl .. • VI • II,,,... 1;15 • .... l(MP( n 53 minutes -the shortest Analleim game of the seasOTI -the freckled hurler told writen it's all his brother's fault. "It's a funny thing -Gib has come down here from 1bousand Oaks about 12 times in the last couple of years and be 's never aeen me lose ye!. J guess I LAKER TRIO IN COST A MESA Jerry We.;(, Bill Hewitt and Mel Counu of the Los Angeles I.Akers will l)ve the third in a series of seven youth basketball clinics sponsored jointly by Se.ars and the LaJcers, Satur· day at the Costa Mesa Sears store, :m Brlltol Street. Dlncting thia: week'' clinic will be fopner Laker-atar, and now 1 member of tbe La.km' broadca&ting team, ROd H u n d J e y. Beginning 1t 9 a.m. Hundley and the Lake.r players will in· atruct younisters In the fundamentals of baJketball. The cllnlc will lut for one hour and at thl coacluaoo. youn111tt1 will bl prov!dtd with tree aoft dJ"inkl and oookltil. Drawinc• will bo hold for Ire• !Aker llckefl and !Ab~ T-lhlrtt. ~ r work a little harder knowing he's made that long trip -it'• 88 miles. "Gib d1dn't do me much 1oo<1 when I wu in the minors -I lost just about every time he saw me pitch." McGlothli.n has fli cked on a lamp of hope in the Angels' outlook. Thurs- day'• wu his third straight solid ptt· formance. He'1 1·10. Another who brightened things up again was the new face of \Vinston Llenas, a Santo Domingan who gives the Angels added international flavor. The 25-year-old infielder was purchas· t<l.bY the Angels Wednesday from Jm.1sco of the Mexican triple-A league. Llenas (pronounced Yaynls) Isn't the first player ever to hit a double hi& f~rst time up but he was probably the first to double after hitting five foul balls. His second-inning line drive down ~e l~t field lin~ made up for booting his fll'st chance in the field In the first Inning. . Last night was a big one in Llenas' life. He had spent spring training in 1965 witti tile Angels at Palm Springs but was cut and never asked back. He saJd Melican newspapers were speculating this season that he might be picked up in the major league ex· pa.nsion draft. "But it was just a dream to me.'' he told writers in surprisingly good English. ''When Jesus Carmona. our general manager, told me \Vednesday night they had sold me to the Angels J jw;t couldn't believe it.'' W~HINOTOlll U.lllJOltJllA tll rlllr111 1trllrM IJ""" <"f • I l o D••11me. cl ' 1 ! O .l111111~ . ..i ' o I o Ff1'-!, n • o O t ~vllt,,, .)II ' t O ft Jl•lclltt'fl, 11 l O ! 1 '·Ho.9•f. II J t I t Mtr'ftlll, l'f J I I O l•'-·"' )110 JIWGl,r1 OtOO I 11\ton, ~ 1 0 8 t MIN:"-'• IB ) I I 0 C•-1.t J Oll l ...,,.\,Jll Jii i ''"--"·" Jt10Cllj'tlt•lll 000 1 ltrl•\11t1, t 1 I o t $lltr11Pie, c l e 1 I ""''"'"'• en I O t O 1(-p Jtt , O O t H-~~,, • o I 0 t .Mf/G~!111, " l 0 I I T;.!~1,,._ 1' I t I T"•I' 2t l 6 J c.11,.,.,,19 10ll ace mo -1 "° 11111 alls , SITE OF OLYMPIC TRIALS -Long Beach's new multi-million dollar swimming and water polo fac· ility is seen from ins ide (top) and by aerial view. The handsome new complex was opened· publicly for the first time Thursday night and will be the site of Olympic diving and men's swimming trials the last two weekends of August. Belmont Oly1npic S-ivi1n Plaza Fabulous New Pool. Opens By GLENN WHITE Of ""-o.uy Plllt Sl•ll LONG B~ACI~ -Amcr1ca'1 newe st. biggest and most lavish indoor tt1m · petit.ive swimming complrx was of . ficially opened Thursday night to an appreciati ve crowd of 2.000 who po\lffd into the new $3.7 million Bel- mont Plaza Olympic pool here ror in· augural festivities. The fabulous facility at las1 ~ivc.s Sou thern California an indoor site for major national and international co m- petitions. And it could play a major role in the Los Angeles area securing the right to reprcsenl the United States in up- coming international biddini for the 1976 Olympic Games. Jronitcally, the U.S. Olympic Site Committee will be in the Southland on an official visit early next week and a tour 0£ the fabulous million gallon Bel· moot Plaza pool is on the agenda. The Installation, which faces the ocean at Termlno and Ocean Blvd., near. Belmont Shores pier, boi.st.s every modern device conceivable. tt hu a 25 yard warmup pool and a eha.Uow kiddies' wading pool outsidf' ll im medi ately adjacent to the main building. There is par k.in& for 2,000 cars and cement ramps lead to the structure to eliminate tiri ng stair climbing. Once indoors you are dau led by the adjoining swimming, diving and water polo pools. The former is regulation Olympic 50 meters while the combined (l()IO·diving end is 30 mr.te rs long. 111ere are six dlvln~ boards -10 meters, 6.5 meters. two at three meters and two at one meter of eleva. ti on. Pool officials call their costly pro· duct. "the fastest in the world ." claim· ing that wider lanes (9 feet instead or 7). wider and deeper gutters plus elimination Of currents •ll makes for swifter performafl(es. Electric timers are also installed. The diving end of the pool runs 17 feet deep and has three spacious under water windows for coaches and photographers to use. The surface is agitated by 1 .spray of water .so the divert. can easlty teU where the point of entry will be. 'I'he.y ca.n pump 18.000 gallons per minute through the eigh t giant filters • located in th e basement and there are three closed circuit television cameras throughout the buildiag so observers can see swimming. diving, polo and un cler water scenes. I-land control switches on panels under the TV set allow the viewer to easily maneuver the camera.s. It's a tremendous 1>etup, to be sure. The TV cost $26,000 -the pools , S2 tn \llion. Crowds up to 2.500 can be ac· CMlmod ated at present. 1-lowever. provisions have been made for enlarg&ment to capacity of 8-10,000 in the event tbe Olympics are someday awarded to Southern California . Belmont Plaza Olympic Poot 1s the dr<!am-come·true of W. J. "Skip" Skjblckl , senior aquatics supervisor for the city. He got the idea in gear five years aia·. Usin g money f.r om Udelands oil receipts, lfound was broken in March of 1967, First competition here wilt be a week hence with the Olympic· divine trials. Then the following week It will be the scene of me.n's swlmmin& trials fey the U.S. Olympic delegation. Mot poli ... and the lloodlale of O\Ym· plc abuse eued open. In Tuesdl:y's pandt, a number ot bannera combined thl Olympic rlnp with swastikq. Om. sign read:. "Olympic Record; Mass Killing." . Another made it quite p,Iein: "W• don't want tbe Olympics. ' Students'; when pressed individually for an · answer Is to why they are aa:alm:t tM Olympics. have bad little to ny, but oblervers !eel they Jee in the Games a a:ood chance to embarran the ltjex· ican 1ov1rmnent. Murphy,64; Sikes, 65, Lead Pack HARRISON, N.Y. (fJ') -Bob . Murphy is a cocky, confident youn& man. built along tile lines of a miniature Jack Nicklaus, who bolds a o~-stl'oke lead going into tod.ay's se· .cond round of the $250.IXX> Westchester Classic Golf Tournamenl "C.OCky?" He repeated the question after firing a blistering, eight-under· par 64 in Thursday's opening round over the sun splashed Weirtche:stef Country Club coune, • &,Ma yards, par 72 layout. "I guess you could call it that, G<>d gave me a good body, a good swing and a good mind. I think 1 can do things with tilem. If that's cocky, then J'm cocky." Veteran Dan Sikes who finished. st· .c ond in last year's inaugural of this richest of the pro tournaments, had a 65 for second place. A former Masters champion Art Wall, Jr., had a 66 and defending champion Jack NiCkd.aus 67. "Fine," said Sikes, when Murphy's M had put the veteran goller·lawyer in tiecond place in the run for the $50,000 first prize. "There's a theory on the tour," he said, "and almC>St all the players believe in it, that it's better to be just a little off the pace, not be the leader. The idea is to slay close and mt lead. All the pressure is on the leader. ';It's all psychological." Murphy, a stocky, 210-poun d redhead, agreed. "Most of the tournaments I've won·. I've come from oU the pace," he said. "But I'm not sorry to be leading." Murphy, 25, a former amateur and national collegiate champion, is in his rookie year as a pro. 250,000 Fans May Watch Cttbs Pla y CHICAGO (AP) -The Chicago Cubs may not overtake the St. Louis Cardinals. But that doesn 't seem to dampen an incredible surge of Cub fan interest v.tiich may produce the club's first milHon home .attendance in 16 seasons. This week, launched by a four-game showdown with the first-place Oards, may whirl .almost 2SO,OOO !ans through the Wrigley Field turnstiles by the time Sunday's twin bill with the Cin - cirl,nati Reds ends. It couldn't be called pennant fever, not with the Cardinals coming to town Monday with a 14-game lead over the runnerup Cubs and a month and a half of the season remaining. 'l'he best explanation could be com· ment Thursday by owner Art Allyn of the straggling Chicago White Sox. "The Cubs are playing exciting baseball end they're beating the No. l team. the St. Louis Cardinals," said Allyn. whose own team Is down 30.000 in attendance this season despite a sh o t · i n • the·box-office by eight Milwaukee ''home" games. "The Cubs an whacking th.at ball around and that creates excitement within tile crowd." The remarkable thing about the. Cub attendance bas been that Wrigley Field is the only big league field wi:~out night baseball. For Ule weekday matinees against th e Cardinals. the series averagej bet- ter than 32.000 delirious fans. some ar· riving shortly after the crack Of dawn to buy tickets. Mooday, UlC paid crowd wa1 32.733. On Tuesday. it jumped to 35,198. Wf!dnesday, ~.693 came out to watch the Cards' peerless Bob Gibson stick a pin in the Cub balloon. apparently, with a 3-1 pitching triumph. Thursday, 34 ,811 turned out to 1ee the Cards romp, 8-0. ALSTON'S MOTHER DEAD AT 76 HAMILTON, Ohio (fJ') -Lenora Alaton. the mother of Los Anieiei Dodgers f\11nager Walter Alston. died . late Thursday at McCullouah·Pyde Hospital in nearby Oxford followin1 an lllneu. Mrs. Alston. who wu 78 and resJde4 In nearby 01rrt.own where her SOD • also Uves ln tht offsea1on. was ad· mltted .to the ho1pitaJ early in Auaust. *PXBJ!Jl"..._...,P .. ...... *' '* ,_. F Ff*' F .,.. * ... P-...i ..--,,. p> SF 1¥AJIF ..... $ 4 C iP<P .i¥0Z ,¥ ,P ...,_4 _ WWW a ,S ~-fPt a Z» > woo<<• e u --·----.. ---~------ Frldiy, Auguit 16, 1968 DAILY PILOT, Jf, .Anniversa ry Show at OCIR Mesa Cage GLINN WHITI Sports ldltor Burke Vies In 9Iympic Warm Up SOUTH LAKE TAHOE (AP) - Am«ican record bolder Ed Burke, tile h3.tn·mer throwing teacher fr o m Newport Beach, heads a delegati'on of US. OJympic track team candidates w~o'Y compete here Saturday iii. their 1968 hig!) altitude .;ompetitive debut. Burke, bothered by injuries unW last week when he uncorked his .100.eesi tou of the l'NllOl'l (224-1), ia America's top hammer hope in the O&m!>ics. 'lbe meet, a little more than three weeks before the Nit of the . final Ofymplc trials at ti>e lll>OciallY COO• strUcted ute in the El Dorado National . Forest, will be lacking 1everal top namN because ol illne11, injury or ab~. But many top performers among the approximately 1,, trackmen who are in the training camp will compete. The first meet here was held late last month but at reduced distance.ii to allow athletes to· get used to the 7,347· fciot altitude, near that of the Olympic site, Mexico Ciy. Orange County tater na t I on al J\acewa,y begina ita aecOlld year o! drag roclng Saturday r<J(ht featurin& a fUJ1D3 car match race, At1aa auper· cb.arged ellm!naUon1 and an urial . show. Azusa driver Gas Ronda brings his > 1,50().horsepawer Mustang to the track to duel dlallenger Wendell Shipman ol. Long Beach and bia Barracuda. ShipmM is on the rile in· Southland drag circles. He'1 ~te11 1everal or the bettu·knov..11 machines and now baa bJa &Jgbu focused on Ronda. Tile match race la vital to both "'drivers. The quick funny cars from tile ea.at coast will soon be invading Southern California t<:e the rich Autumn drag events and both Ronda and Shipman mw;t continue to win 1f they.'.re to be Invited to the big cash meet:s. Both were second round loeers last week at ocm. Shipman aeemed to ~ ' HURRYIN ' HERRERA -Manuel Herrera of Montebello will com- pete in Saturday night's A/gas supercharged competition e t Orange County Internatinnal Raceway. Originally a 1951 Anglia, the car's ' havt the edjt -between tbe two. however. with st.a.~ of 8.17 and 184.U mph. In the A1gas aupercharged halt of the program, Mike Mitchell of Sari FranciJco rejoins the struggle Satur· day, •till in qu.est of bis first Soulh.land triumph. He'a been beaten twice at OCIR, the wt tlme by lncties. Wttb a new engine for the August 3 meet, ht set low ET .and top apeed ~cords 1n the quallfyinc heat& but was r.d·lig!\ted out ol the flnala again1t Gary Dubacl!. Other contenders for the Altu purse Saturday will be Gary Dtntblim (Bellllower), Slilp "'"'' (Temple Cf • ty), Ron BIZlo (Bellflower )and Jim K1rby (Glendora). Aerialist Skip Volk ol Newport Beach will provide aerobatic thrl1lJ with spins, rolla, loops, tall.slide& and hammerhead stalls. He takes oU at 7:30 p.m. body ls hinged at the rear to expose the machine's 1,20()..borsepower Chrysler engine. The car h as covered the quarter mile in under nine seconds at 160 mph. Hirsch Lauds Champions Roll, 95-78 Woody's Wharf -pped up tl>t Costa Mesa Rocreallon bUketbill league at Or~ge Cout College Thur .. day night wltb an easy 95-78 decidOn over Johmon & Son (Orana:e Coeat College) to oap a 14-1 record. 'Orco-7, meanwhile, sUpped into se- cond place with it1 forfeit victory over League stlnd1111 · (Flaa!) W L PP PA Woody's Wharf 14 J 1267 995 Orro-7 9 5 IMO 900 Jabsco Pump 8 6 1069 1004 Golden West 8 9 1105 10&4 Johnson &. Son 4 II 1030 11641 UC lrvine 4 11 562 617 UC Irvine while Jabsco Pump wu being "pset by Golden West, 92-M. Golden West finished tn the fourth position via iU two ltraigbt CODQU&Sta a t the end of the season. Leading:the champions in their easy win over Johnson.& Son was the balan.- ced scoring output of John Fairchild, Dave Waxman, Bob Bedell and John Vallely. ' Fairchild was tops with 21 while Waxman followed with 20 and Valleiy 19. Bedell was fourth in scoring with 18 counters. The win gained a mea.!UM of revenge as the Johnson & Soo quintet WU the only team Ible to derail the champions' express, 79-77 in the se· cond round Of. the 1eason. Golden West turned loose four ~ Point plut. scorers on Jabsco to upend the Pumpmen . Brian AmbroZich, Mark Miller and Ollie Martin eaeb collected 22 counters while Bob Bazil was lending a band With 20 in providing the upset. Bruce Chapman wu the mly con· 11lstent scorer tor Jabsco, potting 34 in a losing effort. SC-.,"··-Golden Wnt .................. 411 51 -n J•blco P'ump ................. J6 JO -M GWC lf'U J• ... !Ml f9t!M " tcftM '- ·Gerry Lindgren, perhaps the coun· try's top hope al the long distances, bmi been bavlnr trouble with a leg ten· don-aod won't know until an ex· anlination just before the meet ·whether he'll compete. Dodgers Near Oub Milestone -The Cellar Alston Head in Demand Jones' Return, Grier Decision "'"•«• MtMln l•lll H1rlllnt1'111 lo\llltrr I 6 3 H C1!1pm1n 16 I I ,.U 6 \G ' 22 Buller I S-4 I t24li:CO~ 21• 1 lOl6C1rrldo 6•4 1 IG 2 D 22 ltalll,. ' • .S I Sam Bair, a strong possibility to make the team at a middle distance, ha& been ill ad is not a sure com· petitor. tVan Nelson another top distance runner, also is ill but may run the 5;000 ar 10,000 meters. ··Jlhl Ryun, who showed last week he has recovered from mononucleosis by running the mile in 3:55.9 at Walnut, Calif., fs expected to remain in Flagstaff, Ariz., to continue working out. ~1ACIAS UPSETS JOSE MORENO LOS ANGELES (AP) -Little· i..-nown Rene Macias of Guadalajara, MexicO, scored an upset decision over Jose Moreno, the world'& fifth-ranking featherweight, in a blistering I~ rounder Thursday night at the Olym· pie Auditorium. Macias, 130. a 4-1 underdog, kept his harder-punching opponent oU target \vith a busy style. PITl'SBURGH (AP) -With a few breaks, the Los Angeles Dodgers could reach a milestone in their carttr in the National League -tltt!y could be in last place. Of course, in this year -the year of the slumping Dodgers -that wouldn't be anything unusual. The Dodgers have a record of 53-66 and are only one game out of the cellar. Tonight it's Claude Osteen,· ft..17 , going for the Dodgers a.gainst Al McBean, 9-10 as they open a weekend Dodger Slate A111 l' B!!'" t t P!ttsburell ' pm ICI' 'l"'I ·~· \1 gen 11 P!lt>burOl'I ~ p,m, KFI MO A111. I lefS ,i P!"J.burtlh 10::111 1.m. Kl'I .. Q\ series against the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Dodgers have finished loth in the National Lea&ue only once before. Few of them would remember that, though. It was in 1898 -when there were 12 teams in the circuit. They've also finished last in the league only once -in 1905. when the league had been cut to eight teams. Charges Humiliation Dissension Hits Tigers, Sparma Raps Manager BOSTON (AP) -Detrclt Tiger pitcher Joe Sparma, unhappy bf;ca~e hq was yanked out in the fourth 1nn1ng o{ the ·Cleveland game Wednesday night, is miffed at Tiger Manager Mayo Smith. "J honestly don't know if I will be able to play tor him any more." Sparma told gportswriter1 Joe Falls of the Detroit Free Press aod Pete \V:oldmeir of the Detroit News '11\urS· d•v .:i was Completely embarrassed "'"·11 MPvo came out to get me -I '-' · "''"'llh1.ted." said the unsmiling 26. · ·~-o•d ri!?ht-hander. who ordinarily i; 11'1'? of the live wires 1n the Tiger ("~-.. i"g room. f~l i th, told of Sparm1'1 feelings, '·rnnmented. "The big thing II to win 1"" !!111.me. Joe Is enough of a com· 1 "i!or to understand that. If he · .. ..,·n't. well, there ts nothing I can do ' "!It lbat." ..... ,,.ma who has a.n S.10 record with · Amer'ican league-leading Tigert, ·~1e it plain lo everyone thal be wa1 re about Smith'• stntegy Wed- n"~day night. He was partfcul•r1y irritated that the'Tlgen bad pll<h« Mlcny Lollch warming LlP from the time Spenna wllbd the IO<Ond batt.r In the -· inc laiUn1 until Lollch came on In the fo~ wfth one out and two on tn a game that was acorele11 ltP until then. LoUch went the rtst of the way and W"1l J.O. . !'U that was all the confidence Mayo h8d m! me. WhJ did he start me In the fint place?" Spanna asked. tlpr. coaches uld Smit.h's atratea wb to have Spanna 10 11 far aa be cOtlld 'fl-the lndlau bad tbro'ill In a lot of left band hlttera in the starting lineup against him. Then, Smith's plan was to bring in the lefthanded Lollcb. "All he had to do was to talk to me , tell me what was going on. tell me what he was trying to do." said Sparma. "But I go out there to pitch and ail I can see is Mickey down there throwing in the bullpen. • "Sure, we won the game 3--0." he continued. "That's the btg thing. The important thing and nobody has to tell me that. But I never have been treated like that in all my life." When Smith headed for the moond to lake Sparma out, the big right. hander lobbed bia glove into the dupt. Sparma talked briefly · with newsmen after the game but did oot let hia feelings really show through un· til Thursday at ttie Tigers headed for Boston and a series opener. "This may get me traded, but I have to 1ay what is on my mind." he said. "I did not want to say anything after the game because 1 was mad and might have said the wrong thing. "But Mayo had to treat me like a man a:nd he <Hdn't. That is the part tba.t hurts. Ht fora:ot that l have some feelln&s and some pride." S~IDI told newllJlen, "I am not 1ayln& Ml)'o la a bad manager. And l am not 1houttn1 trade me or play me. I'm not mUJn1 any demands. t thlnk th• Detroit organliatlon ls the best in baseball. A have a home here and J want to stay. But a man ha• to draw a line aomewhere, and J am drawing tt. "Mayo hun't played •DY favorites. Re has been poUent wttb my pit.chin&, ) f\4>POM • II "\ ' Cll1Pm1n J 0 T 6 AdalN 321 . Tol1b l6 M 13 ft Tot1l1 37 12 ill M By Disgruntled LA Fans Bv BILI, BURNS Of ltll 0.11'1' l'li.t "'" f<lf'll w; "-' ..... Joi>n•on 1o Son .. .. .. .. .. . .. . .. ,, ,. -rJ w-r1 Wlllri .. .. • • • .. • .. .. .. ff 46 -f'S ~ ........ & 5111 11J) W ..... IHI """" ""''" Mceertln 7 I t 22 W1x111111 t 2 I IO LOS ANGELES -In past Augusts when the Dodgers were ftoundering, the reaction of the general public always followed a similar pattern. There was much mooning and groaJling aid lamenting of the state of affairs both on lit& boulevard and In the public press. The most memorable statement ever to emerge from an angui11hed August was when a ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,. BUD TUCK ER ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,. Southland newspaper tertned the team "a civic disgrace." The suggestion, o{ course, was that heads must roll. The head most In de· mand was always that of W~ter Alston, the manager. The reaction of the Dodgers also followed a similar pattern. JJuzz!e Bav&61 was the general manager 10 those days and be would cause the pot to cease to boil by summoning Uie journalists of the area to a press con· ference. "GenUemen," Bui7Je W"OUld MlY, "Mr. Walter Alston is my manager, now &hd forever more." This traditional statement alwayi; had an immediate affect on the gentlemen of the working press. They tncoked of! tbe anvil chorus on the Dodgers and commenced to worry at leagth about the Rmis and the Lake rs. Similarly, it influenced the Dodgers and Walter Alston. Mo.re often than not, they went out the following year and won the National League pennant. lt is now August once again and the Dodgers are noondering and the general public is again In gre"at pain and running hither and yon screaming for ttie head of Waller Alston. Th is time they rn~ g1?t it. This is due to the fact the situation has been altered more than somewhat. Buzzie Bavasl is no longer around to issue hi s annual s.tatement ~garding his mooager. l''urthermore, Fresco Thompson, who now reclines In Banle11 cbatr, bat aol aeea nt to deliver uy kind of a vote or confldt.net ln ravor of Alston. Thl1, obviously, leaves Allton alone and rather overmat~bed In the con· fllct But Allton II 1 man ol lmmtn1e pride and never one to 1bando1 even a booele11 1blp. Quoth Alston the other day, "l tdtl think tbe Ont dlvi1lon 11 wtthJn 1trlk· his dJ1tance." StrikiAJ diatuce wa1 1evea full .1ame1, wblcb was bow far tbe l>od.1er1 were behind ntth·PJ•ce At1an· ta at tlle time of tl:e m1a1cer'1 1tlle'· !~·~t."11'.l.''~' -'• annoWtCement Wll OH of ire.at op m, to be 1ure, but you have to ltope eontabted I frlla Of poatlblUty. The n detl0'411 tbat much. Allton ~•rrled a lot of Dodier teams over e bamp. He bll won pennants with 1 collection of ban· jo bitten that made you swear ap and down he did It with mirrors. Alston has one thing going against him with reg0ird to his notion the DocJ.gers can finish in the first division. There ilS an ancient adage in baeeball which says the maca.ger cannot hit and pitch met catch the ball for ltis players. What Al!fton's hitters look like at the moment cannot be revealed here. This ls a family newspaper. Defensively, tile Dodgers resemble the Wadlinftoo Redskins. Tp illustrate the foregoing, Claude Olteea Is fed up. This is highly significmt because Os- teen 1s one of the moat mild-mannered hu man beings on the face of tbe earth. Young Swimmers To Vie Saturday Elroy Hirsch, assistant to the presi· dent of the LA Rams, Indicated that the belated arrtva\ of Deacon Jones la a real inspiration to the players. As for the loss of ace defensive lineman Rosey Grier, Hirsch 1aid, "Rosey was an inspirattonal guy with us but you have to face the ta.ct he w.u 38 years old." Although not belltt:ing the fa-ct Geier's loB1 would be felt, the former Ram all-pro said that, ln a way, h1I retirement was a blessing in disguise. "We would have quite a problem," Hlrsdl explained. "We've got a kid named Diron Talbert coming up, a Coon •:a2nv111e1., 12 111 Flll'll!rtv 11 1 J fl ll ... 11 I 2 0 10 H1rc1trov. 2 a I • l"tltetlllof t 3 I Ii &llerm1rhom 2 a 2 ' Wl11Mrllurn 3 a I • l'rlrtlll 4 I 2 U lnkln I 0 I 2 Hebllf J 1 2 .. H11kl'l!M 2 • I I Tlllll 11 U ll 1J Tol1l1 -0 11 11 • Oil City's Hunt Among South F1u Victims By ROGER CARLSON or 1111 O.HY 'flit tt.n 255-pounder, 6-5, ind if you keep a The grind ol. football workout& Cite· Grier, what do you do with R' kid like tinues at Marina fUgh School when this?" the South is preparing for the Dintb'.lli.r nual Nortb.SOUth AU-Star foolbill Hirsch indicated this will allow game at Orange Coast's LeBani Talbert to move right in alld develop. Stadium on Thursday. "He's a wonderful proSpect," he said. Again ooly 22 player~ showed up for As for ttie agreement reached with practice for jim Coon's South a,. Jones, Hirsch said, "Deacon came in gregatioo and Coon expressed conce:m with a lawyer in 1966 and signed a that some of the people counted on in five-year contract. He itas three years the grid classic will be unprepared The second annual South Coast to run on that contract, plus the option. because of the absences. Swlm Conference age group finals will year, which takes him to 1971. Chief culJrit bas been the ftu. Out ol. be held at UC Irvine's outdoor pool on "Deacon came in with no ad· the workouts Thursday night were Saturday. justment whatsoever -absolutely Huntington's Ray Hunt, Orange's Den· Starting time la 8:30 a.m. none! Th.ere wu no bonl\S , no promise IU Porter and Santa Ana's Steve Hill. Included in the loop are Newport of renegotiation, he came in on bis The South went through controlled Beach Tennis Club, Newport Harbor present contract." scrimmages with t.be key on the at .. Yacht Club, Newport Shores, Hun· This, Hirsch Indicated, ended the feme Thursday nJ.Ort, and Coon tington Harbour, Lido I11le Community Rama contract problems, although he related that be was 1 om e w bat Association and Emerald Bay Swim was unable to indicate the status of satUfied with the conalatency of tM Club of Laguna Beach. neeotiations witb quarterback Roman offense. Medal.I are due the first three Gabriel. Over on the North side, coach Herb finishers ln each event with ribbons "I'm not dealing with Gabriel. Hill of Loara sent hJs forces thm.llh for fourth, fifth and sixth. That's a higher management problem, another two-hour session without mil· The public is invited, free of charge. J can't deal in that kind of money." hap. _c.c:...::.:..:;::::...c:.:.__c..:....:.-'...~:::C::.:c:._~~~-.~~~.:;;:.c'--~~~~~~~- Baseball SttJ,ndings NATIONAL LEAGUE WLPclGB 78 43 .645 St. Louis Chicago San Francisco . Cincinnati Atlanta Pittsburgh Philadelphia New York Lo• Ancele1 Houston 64 57 .529 14 62 57 .521 15 59 56 .513 16 61 59 .508 161> 57 63 . 475 201> 55 63 .466 21 I> 56 66 . 459 221> 53 641 .445 :u 63 641 . 438 25 TitwMtY'• •-ltt fl. I.wit t. CllltlfO o Ptthtiv,.ii !, 91>11 fl'rtntll<:O 0 "'°"llOfl ,, PllllMtl"""ll 1 °""' ·-~llf. T....,'t IJllllH C1Mln111tl IMalDrln t•n •I Ctlk.tto CH1111h , .. , AtLtnt• flt-M l ti SI. Levll IC.rlllln 11·1l. , ... 5tll rr111e.1-11.Ml(l(I 11•1Jl 11 Pft!ia.t1p1111 II.. Jeca-l•IJ), nl9M i.. Mftle IOtl"" .. ,n II P~ IMc- BNn ... ,, ""'"'' HOUttorl !Dlerkft' ll·ltl 11 New Ytrl (llf~lt , ... ,. """' AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Detrott 76 43 .tl.19 Baltimore 69 50 .sao 7 Boston 66 55 .545 11 Cleveland 64 56 .525 131> Oakland 62 57 ·.521 14 Minnesota 56 62 .478 191> New York 54 61 .470 20 C.Ufomla S4 M .Cit 1214> Chlcoro 411 &9 .415 2111> WuhlnJ!lon 44 78 .:!78 II ~~ ......... OlltllNI 4, N .. voni J llolillll J, Oilmlo • ll1lllmor1 •I, Mln!lllOI• W C1tltlr11ll I. W1tlllnlltft I OnlV N!MJ ldlt!dultd. ,, ...... ._ Ntw Yofll (.......,_ 6-tl It Olkltfllll (NW! 1•11. flllllt W~llll 4CtitmM t-9'1 It OllllWmt I""" "'-..,,. """' ll•lllrlllr9 '""'"""" 1).ltl '' ~ CKMI ... ,. llltllf ~ (l'llfllf' ._,I II C""9!111i1 CMdl9wtlt 1>-ltJ, nltflf Otlrtff UH:U .. 2441 It lotle!I C~ N). .... Johnson & Son 900 W. COAST .HIGHWAY, NEWPORT llACH M2.cJ911 MU271 eoui.Alt .#1 CAT SlllN THI CAT N•t 1i111c lh 1ct•tmlt1t• 1.ertt1h· Int l11tro4111ctle11 11 C.t of th1 y,., i11 lt67 ht1 th•r• H t fl th• •ppot+vnity fot fh• ~uylnt pub· Uc. •••• , ••• DAcnY WHAT n WANTS AT PUCTICAl NIC· I He . CUW THI PllCI DOWM OH THI CAT OI' TOUR CHOIU ~ . 'It ht wo fl.,, (I) 11ightt; 11.H 6Tt •II wi\tt 1lfflfl••l111 (•c.\tft wt ,,1nty. And u11r .,,,, tfcc.k of IJ,I'• Wiii 9IY• •'l'•ry fcllfl1 ftll• ci1r tti .. ••••• color oitcl oquTp· 111111+ th1t ht owp•C'h cf THI MUMlll ONI CAT. ~ , r - 2 a s a ts 2 -..... Ft/I MofWMY1 AM. 11, 1 ... C1Nr ... ftlld. "'"' .... ' '""" b1UJ D4116i.-Jllnl •11111 s.teMI ·- l'laST aACI. I IU!'lonn. T-Yffr , otd ""'!deft col~ 1nd eekllllllL Ctllrn-1"9 ,.,.1q Sl,OCIO. PllrM 12.200. a1Lnbow Hue IW H1rmtl'll 116 HI-!A L 0111) 11111 OrHllfl Ho..e Ill: 11tnco) 116 Cfpt1I" Tu~ IL GllllMn) 111 FencJUO (A P!Mdtl 111 "<WCI EHie 12 W KerrlJI 116 TCP E1•t. (I M Vall'llno.lt} 11, P1bulou1 Mlldd« (2 f> Ll"°""Y) 11• Si>ll'li"' luHel fW H1r!Kll) ,,. We-s~m llov (W M1horntY) 11' Mount AKel Ill C."1Nll Ill L1rrv't Pollcv 116 AIM Ell•lblff .,_,0,, Slll'>I !M Y1.,u) llj ,• GolOell Corporll (I G L1.-1vl 11 S.Wfl 0o; ..... 11 w ....... 1.1 111 Trade S<lrw'J'or 11 M V1lenu1tlt) 1" Ejectropl11f'NI (II: C.ti.!lertll 116 U1nlbhlol (0 V1l1-rl '11 SICOHtl RA.Cf. I t11r._. 3 & 4 veer olck. M9ldells. Cl1Lmlnt Jrlc. 110,000. Purw S1AICI. Davldsan CounlY (It Yark} 111 Alw1v1 On Sunchv (W H1rm1t1) 111 ln;l'ldf (0 P!ertll 1111 Pt,lv Knlllhl CA l Olt1l ~111 •· ~lllv Control (J P1lomlno) 111 T~ Cot-bier CA Plnedt) 111 Hi1 ~y (G LltlOWIVl 111 1.Win!led W1rrlor (E Medina) 11' !·Klt111 ot P .. •1'1 (W H1r<IO 116 Wl\at'' UP (M YIMI) 11, 0-.,blln Hot! IM V11<1nruttlal 11' K"'9 Klld.re (0 Hiit! 11• AIM ElitHllll l ·Slr TlllOll CW H1rrb) 111 . •, A·T1•e A Trip {E Mtdln1l 116 Del Mar Entries SM's ._,.,.,"'91 CW Ktnil) 111 w . Noth (L 0111....,1 n• I'm A1rl9'11 J.ctl (A L Ola.I) 1114 11.111'1 It out CA Pineda) 111 P1rti: Stir IE Mfdlrlal 117 ,lfl'TH RACI, • NlioNI. J Wilt olds 1nd ..,.., Clllmlftl ll'flot U.000. PlltM tt,5CIG. Mut1l1 kn IM Y-0 11• EllOllWI COIT\lc. (A Pl .... } 111 A.1-(W o\Nhol'fttYI 122 1..t Tlll111t1 !It Yortll 117 Blldt Mood 10 Plerot) lll A·Dan Sw1nn IA L 0111) Jllot A·$olllll Kint IE Mldlnol ll<I ~ T .... lan (0 Holl) 114 -lt·Robl-tr1lnell 1111ry, SIKTH RACI!. 6 lurlMl!i. Two 'f'!lf olda. Allow1nces. Pun• c.soo. T-IY Kin CJ Limbert) 117 Llttte k rlb (W H1rtld<I 117 Wllertlor1 Art Tl*! (A Plnedll Ht Low Yw So IM V11111.I I 14 Pelll-. 10 p)erq) llt Gourmet (L GHll•1nl lit Hlk1rl (W H1rrlll 111 SEVl!NTM IU.CE. • furlontl. J YHt okh 11'1d v.. Aliaw.nca. Pvrw t4000. 1..tvtllln S!r (l Gllllnnl 114 WlntOlltr (M YIMI) 1'7 Hiii ci-(D Pl<lra) 114 J111nl1 ltolfl (A PllWdl) 114 Wolt111M (J L1mblrtl 11A "-CA C1m1>111) 114 IC.9v11rn ID Hill) 11• 3 a --· GOLFING.A LJ WITH A!Ut41.d ,_,~ STRESS DISTANCE DN LONG PUTr.i I think-that tho most common CIUH of three-putting from , say, 30 or more feet Is improp· er j-udgin& of distance, rather thin incorre<:t selection of di· rectlon. It'• usitr to stroke • Joni pull 1tral1ht than tt I• to maka it travel the proper dis· ti nee. Therefor• 1· suuest that after you determine your lin'e on lon1 putts, you for11t about direction. Stress distance. As you stand over the ball, try to sense in your hands just how the stroke will feel jf,the ball is to just reach the hole. Keep trick of how many· putts you miss short, lon11 left or right Thtn P.r•ctict to overcome your most common type of error. s $ . t • • c .,.:•~= o ,. ·• ++ -" ·-.. -..-•• ) LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE . Los Alamitos Results L•OAL NOTICI NOTICI TO (lllDrTO•I Hotl(9 It Mrtbf 9f'Y9ll 1tw1 111 ..... l'"l!RtOll COU•T Ofl TM• NMill Av011$1 t1, , ... 11o1 ~ *""" ll'f' lfATI OP CAUl'MMIA PO. lf'9 iledWlllFIH ....,,_..,,.. 9" -ti 1"41 OWMTV OP oaAJIOI 1111 0.. fiCrl'W OAMJN .enlc.lal _...., ..,_ .......,1 2··························•£1217 2J7, ~ tw ~ PAUL COMN.IU. Y t:lllM ftl LUE MINOft OIU.l(f. llf ~ U1 ,.,... .... Lone htdl It 1111 OocN,.._ ,_,... Htt,.19 "-CMllMI hi WINOIONO. NOTICE IS Hl!llf:IV ~ •• !': THUltSDAT, Ai,10. 11, I .. <Mr .. """ 11111sr uc•. w ,.,111. Ml.ldln n•r 010., Cl1lml11111. Pltne 111'0. RN>IO Mltl• 1sm11111 12.20 5.IG J.to 0.-Ota c Blnk•l •.OO l .00 SliDI'" (Llpt!Nl'l) 1.• Tl..,..._11 ... 10. AllO lh11-TOllY'1 s...dtMill, Cloul1' 81trf 1.11, Cll1'1r111A $mot, Trvd' TNCklt, FlllCY Wiiiow, P.,,.. a.r. SU1ktlecl -~ Gtll, Grind .cnk. Oonll.IWI BOl\lf1e1, Dell KMr. SICOND llACE. «Ill 'f'•!'OS. J '11:1' olds oner --In Grtllt I Plw. Purw JUtm. .. 11"Wlf'I (SIAM) f'1lt S'-tr (Ori.,....! A.-1 J-151r111111 Tlmo-11 flll. a40t 1~ ... t .00 ....... ••• Also ~. NLtM Wotdl, Chk- aro'I HI S1r, Golltr Timt, Qlldt..o.+ dHdM, Glbb'I'• Boll'f", f'rifrt Tr\ICltlt. Scr1~IMOOll, erUI ll'nlil. ~ Cl'l"l e.be, Atomk Cllef'M, hlt1 ,_, DAILY DOUllLE->-111"4! MOf1I 6 J.llnliftftlrt. Pllil UtUf. THIRD RACE. -400 ~1rd1. J .YMP old1 1nct ~ ln Grodi A Mlnu1. Pur .. Sll'OO. • [)H..CMnl Tl.... IT'l'l"I) t.to •.to •M OH-G.ll1nt Vtlor !Kin.Isl U0 4.ot 2.IO OHH-Okkly's Qlkt (stl'IWI) S.40 OHK:H1t Trkll tCotU+11) J.IO Tlmo-2' t /10. Also ~V1nd'y'1 Sh1ml'OCll, C1'11"" At Thi Ill, Nlner'1 Gold, Go ltllocll, RllotnPtO Helt• .. Wiiiow GoM. ScT1ldll6-.cool It. OH-Orldhllt for flr1t. OHK--Otodhe•I for llllrd. l"OURTH llACI. JJO y1r.a. S 'l'ftf oldl •Ml UP In G.-..de A Pkn. Pun• SI too. P1C1n ll1r IBro<*lllldl t.00 5.60 •AD Rldlllnsl R1,11n (AoblnlOl'I) 1.«I !.40 Miu MOan Print (51r1UH) J.IO Tlm-11 J/10. ... Adml,.I Rlld [KinW) lllnk lltrftll'llt ITYnl Mollvt!Ot ISlt«lf) H. r.~n Cf'tlfltort • tht .-. J..Ot Uf ut ~._., tllll 1M ...,_ t11Yi1W cl11mt 4iHll'llf tflil .t.2t t.to ~llOA 0Pfk9r 11M dlc:edtnt or1 r-irl'll tt flit IMfTI. tM U L -., ... o wltll 1111 ,......,... 'f'O'Kflo,., In 11'11 lfl'k.e • ....., , of "" c.ll!t of "" ltlo¥o l'!lflti.d otUrt. °' TitN-11 1110. AIM R1!>-¥tn ~11'1 0.l'IO'I', Ml Pis. Lid¥ LM Aociot', lfN Sll""lllt• No ~•ten... POl't of Los Arlwlft lo ~ "*"' wllll 1111 ""°"""' i.-tllCfl. CIU!wnll ~ .. 1f11 II. 111Nd II 1111 9'tlGO Plllllllh9cl Ot'IWltO c...! Dollll Pllft, flll Jiff Aftonlilr 0.oiw w.ita. 112 Wttl AllllUll 14. JS, Ii. 17, lfllll 1_.. fll'll Sh'Mt, U: ....... -. C.llfiwlllt tODlL ..nldl !a "" ~ of bull111•~ "" llOHTN RACI. a vorci.. , .,.., LEGAL NOTICE undll'll•nM 111 111 1nttlon ,..,,.IN,. i. oldl. i ncl 1111 In Grldt AAA Mlnul. 1111 1tllt. 91 Mh! lllOldlnl, wOfllr1 tix BiobCIY Chlr91r (~le) UI ')A t.a """'"" .,,.. ... ftrst Mbtkil ., 9N1 Mlrti:. It N-11 ... tl Mt JM ....n •lb. _ Mldnltlll MOlo fllllf»molll UO CIRTll'ICATli Ofl IUllMllS. O•ltd A~ t, 1"' • Tl,,.,._20 Silt. l'ICTITI0\11 NAME l!lllort 0, Owtfl. "I._•• i\llO Rift-Dick Nolll, Jtt 1tr11•. ,. .. Ulllll,,ltntd do utl'llv thl'I' .,.. 1!111Q1tot "' 1111 Wiii .. hlftd'I Quit!. anouctllll ' '*-I-11 iUGI 91tdl $1., #II 1boW nlmlld clOC9dtril No ~at.;1111. Ill""""" Bled\, ClllJll"fllt, llftllw Ille fie;. DAVID WELTI. ,. --mi-II"" -ot OEGOll.ATING 10 ._, ,tnt Stflll, NIMTN llACI "" Ylnlt. t -SERVICE 911111 .... , Mil nnn II ---"'"' ......., tit. " -f/11 Hit fllillc!IJM9 _.,_, .,,._ ""'* In IM A--. Cl ........ •11 *' ll'ld --· Al'-•"'"'· PurM "'" .,... IKB " l'Ukllnot -•• Tt l: ltll) u .. tno ... Plllff Lu (RlllllMon) tM ut 1..0 followl II Altfnlt'f fir ••IKllflf • Ml1119 Qlldl; TIO (llrolllll .... tM PAUL t. . .µcoea. 1)1J Mornlr. G*"' PublllMd °"""" CoHt 0.1~. l'llllt. lm1 '°"'*'' (Br«*!lell) UI Unto V!&tl. ColtfDrTIMI. Allol.ltt t, 16. n, a l NI ;1QoMt ',...,___,. tilt, .._. __ •1,_ H ROIEllT G. TURNER. laol O!lc:or'I' 1 Ji A •11--<W'. .. .... _ .. "" ,,.. w.,. lrvlnt, Collfonlll. LEGAL N011CE-,_, Hflll"I' MCCluA', llt Lk l'•rltfl'. 0111d Aututl J. !Ht. ~, Mo Krltdll&. PAUL L. JACOlll Dietz Tab To Coach Metro Stars • ROllEltl G. TURNER sntt f/11 C.llfw!llA, Mn 0 1-County~ P4"14 ;. CIRTllllCATI! OP •Ul.lfll.(IJ l'ICTITIOUS NI.ME °" 1+4t • .....,.. ..,., I Nat•rv Plltllk In Ind tar 11141 S11M -IOlllllV •-rlOll The "'*t1ltl'ltd don corlltl' hf.II _. PAUL J JA.COIS • k-" mt '° be clud!Fll • M l-II nm c.rni.lt. Road. -· ,.__,:.. whoH ~mt It ilfbJ(tlbld to S.nt1 Alli. C1Ufornla, undor Ille llC'fllltlu• ,.,. ,...._, .._.__, ltrm 1111m1 of LECANN ENGINEER;IHO Hit Wl""ln ln1!rlln*ll Ind ,i;11, _ _._. ANO MET 1" O L Ml!Tl!OROLOGICAL hi llHCUte<f ftlO ........ CONSULTATION FtltM. P. 0. Bait: lotn. (Ofl'ICIAL. HAL) llnl1 .AN 11'1d ltlll MJO llrm !& _.,. kttv Lou lly111 .,, rN 1er1crw1111 --wfloll 'ritmt ·1n Nofll'Y PIJbllo<1 lllomll 11111 Ind plfee CJf ... ldenee II 11 --...~ Prlnc1Pll Office In LEOPOLD CAMM. 11m. "rn111 Sin ~~.~•-• A.Did, s.n11 An.I, C11ifoml1.· nros. My .........,.......,, ,.,...,.. T1SttlloM 17141 ...,.27, JI.Mt ll,. 1'11 D.lted AwUll I, lHI STATE OF CALll'Oll,.IA l LEOPOLD CANN • • COUNTY 01" LOS A)IGELl!S l M Slot. f/I C1Hlol"nl1. Ort "" '°""""~ Coach Paul Dietz, of the ~1::=:11 7Not~': ,=:;.• 1n ~,;. ~ P11~~1eA'l:~'..J· ::'"..':'°~.::· .£1~!\~ Chapman College NCAA uld c-fY •l'ld s11te, ""°"''" ,,. ·-m LEOPOLD CANH -~ 11 . ·u PlltN ROBERT G. TURNEii, k-le "'" to be "-terwn wllosl ..... ft baseball champions, Wl "" '° w 1t1e --w11oM 1\9._ 11 .ubscrtbed to !hi w11h111 1n1tnll'MJlt w -ach the Metro League All· 1ubKrlbt!I " ftlO wllflt11 lntl--1 I nd .a.-lrdeed Ill UKUtlld ftlO ~ ..... . • 1cknawled•ed tho! ... UKVllOll the Mme. /OFl'ICIAL SEAL ., Stars lD the thtrd annual WITNESS nw lllnd Ind alllcl1t Mii. Miti.I Fltvnorrll ·r M tr League event at !Ol'flCIAL SEAL) Not1ry Pllbll-C.llforiila e 0 , C1r10I Pftlffltr P\lbUlfltd 0t1nt1 Cont N'llt' llllal, Anaheun ·Stadium. Moflry Publk.C•Rfotnlt A11111111 2 •• 1' n.. IHI -i:l37-" l'rlndMI Office In ' ' " Previously, the Chapman Loi """'" counf'f' ~ A.-W. J, Hlnct..fr1lntd entry, 1-J. J°""9n-tr1lntd tnlrv. -THtltD ltACE. ' turionvs. 3 .,..,, el.a 1,.t uP. Cl11m1M prla-U.$00. l'tlrw a.JOO. l!lOHTH ltACE. • furi-1. J Yt1r ollh 1nd Uli'. 2't'd runnlno ol 1111 811'111 Crotbv Htl'ldlClt . P\lr11 IU.000 add- ed. Oro.1 SU,JOO. To wl,.,,.r 11,IDO. Sttond, Sl,000. tlllnf u.soo. fourth n.ooo. Olnv &•ti. iW H1n11) 112 • .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:. s.-ctv Kl1'1 CA Pll'llCll) 117 or. lllO'I' E. IJ Llmbttfl 11! B1llt-'I I R ComN1l 110 AllO R1n -Miu lar111 Btr, \Nho Play s~ A LN, I'm ''"10. Pooloa Rock.ft. Fl'OllJ H1wk, Jtt 1"1111 . Sc:r•ldltd-Alr Sll'IP, Cintw Miid- en, An'*t Do. l'll'TN tu.Cl. :t.50 v1F'Q. I .,..., Didi. Clllmlnt. Pllrll SllOO. Panthers champions of the MY Commlalon IE•PI,.. • , k FM. 16. 1'6t league in '68 and 67, too P11blW!od Or•-COl•I O.lly P1lol, NOT.Cl 01' TllUITlrl ~ the first encounter by a 1-0 """'*' '· 1'" n. • 1* ll1WI o.. SIPtlmbtt ~t. '::it 11,~ A.M.. LEGAL NOTICE Mr. K1re 12 E Medine) 111 Deerwood Duke t2 A H1rnr1) 1U ~ Conllal (CO U-1rl 114 QoC'l~u l(ld IL GU1111n) 114 MoPl1h Ul!O If Gltul ,-u,, Del Mar Race Results llnilenM (0 PltrU) 12' H1lhlrClD (L J Oll,_MIU) 1• Poon• KMr1 (M V11111J llJ Ktu ln' ~ IW MlllorMY) 12! Grllttl <Tvr9l S.OI ~ 2.60 Trudllo RDIO (Ptll) J,IG 3.40 Sc:oap O' Troublt (0....,..r) 4.GO TlrM--1• 6/ID. A!&o A.en-Wiid Rtbel, Ht:lrt ~. verdict and ·finished the se-LEGAL NOTICE RAMPART 1MvESTMENT coMf!M\IV u "th • • lllltY •PPOlnllld Tnni. llllCHr· 1nd cond time around WJ a T"':I ~1W1111 ID D-s o1 Trust Ntld..AW1111 tie with the All-~'· C•llTIP:ICATW o:-:POUTIOM ,OR ~\ti~Nffl~E~J.J:::.:. ~ Area players going for the TIUJtlliCTIOfil °" •us111111 u110E11 11'1d ,_... se.otitml:ltf" 1J. 1H1.~ii 11111tr. Dt1lty IA Plned1l llA ltO'l'll All (M Vl le!llVllal H' NINTH aAC•. 1 1/1• 1111111 en fvrt. J 'l'ffr olds 1nd llP. ClllmlM prlCI $1(10l).1720a. PUBI S3,.llG. ............................ . TI!l'OI C1tll, BIWI llEilwtl, Miii Ai. mltot. 111111119 H•fl'Y. Scrolcl'ltd-alrtld TOii, A.lot Mit:tt. All-Stars against champion TH• UN~g~~~lo ~:POllATION ~ ',~ ~ ~i:'!i "'.,:' = Santa Ana are G a r y dol:I llereb'I' nrtlfY 11111 rt !& condudlFll • R_.dtr .,, 0r.,.. County, C41fforr111, n A bull'*' toaitod 1t Sult. A, FAA. Con-WILL lll!LL AT P UILIC AUCTION TO KIM 'S Hott (fl York) lU The flOln C'-(W H1rrl1) lU ltubbf.tl Min (A L Ol1Z) JC112 Cl'llQU!ll Lindi (S Tr111lno) 10t ltr"CltOI /0 Holl\ 1U AIH Ell1lb ... Tl! .• -1 ... II A Her~tll 1U 51'1111> T1ck 2nd 11 E Medlnl) 1U 1umln11 Stetl 11 W Mlhorl'9Y) 11' HOPI Joe (2 w M1horMY) 117 f'OUllTH RI.Cf. I lvrloll1". Ytlt cld1. Cla!mlM Ptl« 17,500. 11,500.. 61i.hful Bob !G L1now1yJ A P1ter'1 Penu (D Holl) ·~­-;.. '" "' . ' _.. Mlr l1110Ut (A Plnodl) 117 A·Wln ltulrr !J Limbert) l i t HY Plmle (J P1lornlnol • II~ Perll1n Rug IA L 0111) "'-11101 Fr-1ve CD Pl1rc1f 11' RPy1I Et!eem (It York) IU C1111r Clrr (L Gllll11n) llJ B1rleYCOm (W H1rrl1) 1 IO Don Edu1rdo {W Mll'lorMY) 112 Sllenf Tru1t 12 M Y11111) lU Alto l!lltlbltS ll·Cll1ndltlrr llD'I' CM V1ne1J A·C•n!IY Tao fG L•..-•Vl 1!1-C1r1I011 (M Yt ntrl A-0. Porter·lr11Md entry, 8-L. Rot•!r1lnod 1nlry. "' "' "' z ~ ·~ Los Alamitos ·, l'w S.tvral,, AYt. 11, 1,,.._tlnl ~., , .... , & ,. .... l'Jnr PMI f:U P.M. l'JltST ltACI!. :ISO v1rd1. Miiden ' n 1r okll. Cl1lmln!I. PUrM 111'00. (l1lmlM Price USOO. Golden V1llfl' (1 L Wr!thll 117 Flecht (W M1lsenb.tchJ 11 r $ec:ret Gln11er !1 C Smith) 110 -· k1we1h WeeOree11 (R Ad1lr) 117 Ct n<IY Chu Chu fW Slr1u .. J 111 Ju~ Pl'lll Flllt f2 P Croltly) 117 FL11nv Host.u {J K1n/1) 117 Leop P1rr 117 c.111c111 W1r /R Fle.ieroa) 117 --srn~ M11, IZ C01U1111 117 At-. l!ll1lbll l l'I MtndY l1r (2 c Smllt\) R1ll 0Ktt (J Aobln1ot1) Ptclflc l!lret1e (2 L Wrl11M) 81v Porker (I P Crofby) SECOND llACE. UO y1rck. okl1 Ind ut Jn Grode A Plus. -: ·11900. •°' ':M1rlett1 1"wo cw s11oa\ ~ ltr O«ktr Go IC Smllll) 4 "11ne Gr1bbef" (W S!r1ltU) ~ Oulnn Ell• , ·Mh• 0111 T1me (}II Prince•• {J !!Merri ) O!tktY Old IJ Wlllotl) Wi.nkenfl>ftd IR Ad81r) .t..m>lt Do (I J ltob!n>Orll Brffte l.CCOolnl (J ..,_.hvd1) AIM l!lll lble :,• Frankie F•H CR 61nk11 ,V.On!e~y GYl>IY (1 J !foblnlarl) THIRD ltACE. -400 y1r!ll. l old• tnd llP i.. Grodi A M1nu1. SHOO. Pt,...er live (P C•Olob'I'\ HtM'><'v And Slit (R Rln11dll Go Rhadl CC Sml1'11) Husllt Cll1r9<' IR Adil•) Shuck 'Em IA l1nkl) T11,..!ll1 CJ RoblnlClrl) Quick M V1n IA Fl111tt01\ •• ~llrlno'1 Prom!H fJ ll•ll!rr•) "' -:: ...Jl'OUltTH ltACE. «10 v1rdl. okl• l l'ICI UP In Gr1dt AA Pllrw Sl100, P111M 1!11r Tl~ iJ l!lrooklle1dl Miu P11I ~ (J BtMttl ) Ston1>v Butt !l Collln1) G11d Lid CW S!r1un) 0-. Go IC Sml1'111 Melt<! 11<or1 JR B11'*s) Liiiie Ernmy Mr. B1mll!ll (It Adllrl Sa""' Cllk !D Motrl1l '" ·~ ·~ "' ' ft" '"~ "' '" "' "' "' "' "' '" '" "' "' "' ,,., Pun1 '" "' "' "' '" "' "' "' -· MlnUI. "' "' "' '" '" '" "' ·~ "' Entries PlnH llACE. l50 Yln:!t. 2 ftlf old1, At1,,..1nc:t1. Purse $2COO. T~rottlr Bodi IP Cr111by) 120 MIJO~!ll Clltl'H (It Ad1lr) 117 MCIMY Miii 12 T Llph1rn) no Fresne Bir Girl IL Wrlth!I 117 P1num Sleo tW SllHI 120 Wlltt! Cll!do. (Z COlllMI 120 M111nolla 1!19le 10 Morrl1) 120 Trulll1 (C Smllh) 117 1...-11 AIMii (I l rh.C.ltY) 117 Swwoocl lloekel (It 5troudl 120 Alff l!M1lfllt! Cl\org.e Fortl!rft CT L~ml 111 Sll!TH lllACE. -400 y1rds. J YNr old1 Ind UP l~ Gr.els AA Mlnu1. PurM "1GO. Klptv'1 (1booM (W Slr1UH l 111 Arlell1t !J M1t1vd1l 120 H1tl'I' Road (P Crotbvl 117 Lell Go Sim (J K1nl1) IU Chill 111• '" CuPld"1 ll01n CA Arlllll 116 $.eve" Steedl !R Adilr) 115 Petler l ob ffl FltutrOIJ 117 Moon ~Ill fJ Aablnlllrl) 111 OM Of ThrN (C Srnllll) 11' SEVl!NTH ltACI!. lJO ,1rd1. l l"!l f ald1 I nd Ut In Gr1do AA Plus. Punt ""'· Tll1nl1 fJ Robln10t1l 111 L!thlnlno Ridge !R Ad1lr) llJ Hoblerllt CJ K1nll) 115 Gr11'1d Otdc (l. ColltM) lU Dr. Hink (C Smllll) 115 Glnttr TDP CJ 6eHrr1) 111 01ndy Mool1h CO Morrlll '" llOHTH llACE. lJO V.tcl .. J ftl f olcll Ind UP In Gtt!ll AAA Minus. """' l:IOOO. St~l~Y Jone 2 CJ Wll1on) 115 W1r G1l1xl1 !l. Coll!nt) 116 lm1 JanH Girl (It ll1nlr.1) 1 U W11th Ell 1:13 Cocti.v Kid IC Sml!lll 111 Deb'1 61r ~-n J 1tobln1oil 111 R1111n Men1ce CA Ad1lr) In DoUble ROW IJ Drryerl lU lhr Liiiie Deck (T LIPhltn) 11$ Hl'l't A Go (W Sltl UH\ 111 AIM EHtl"I T.,,.., L'l'dan fP Ctlllbvl 115 LllTll TllWll (I J Ro01Man) 117 NINTH RACE. J.lt Yltdl. l okl!; ind UP. All-nc:tl. P~~ Si.llN!t ROYll CO Mef'Tlll 5Plt1 DK1t IC $mllh1 Klwtlll hnllo IN P11Tlo> Alet1d1 Ii Rob!f!a0t1) F'1ll Sleoper (T LIPh1mJ Ton M1n CR Adt lr) Bunn~ ll1r Lff (J 9roddlelOl Rancho San Joaquin Goll Course Goll Special Wtekll•yt After 1 p.m. 2 Green Ffft Plus Eltttrlc Cart $10 WMk•• After 2 ,.M. 2 Grffl> F"'5 ?ua Electric Cart $12 CANTINA OPIN DAILY -.-. .... s-1"'""" 833-1253 Rene-ho Sen Joaquin Golf Cour•e 11021 ~l111•r Rd., Irvine Rench , Newport l•oc.h 4 Jefll•s So1r1th of S•nt na FT•oway l'tltST •ACI!_., f\fn-11. :J 1nd 4 YWr eld m110.n n111n. ClalmlM, Purse g ,200. LOY• N'Slufl (A Pl .... 1} 1:zo ,,10 J.60 Our Htlrftl CO H1lll 4.M) J.611 Li m B1m ICM Y1nel) I.to TIME -1.11·1 /!. ALSO RAN -SNlr, KIVI" Miu, HIPI Aho¥. P1•1Y Splrll, Pr!nc:eu KOM. HlndU Ci.armer, Ruler's Joy, G•llt Allb!, TulY•rtl!I. SCltATCHEO -With Glamour, Pit· IJ'• $llal, Trl'ffic Cloud, $ollr 01wn. SECOND ltACI! -• furlongs. Two v11r old milden l11lle1. Cllolmlnt. PurH $1.,GO. Ll1hl Ot ROid (York) 14.l'O ,,60 3MI P1lnltd V1ltty (\11lr"1Utla) :M.1111 IG.to Plbblt Mild IA Ot1Jl J.'° Tl,,..._1.12 1/J. ALSO llAH -MlleY Sc1n1Y, G1a!1'1 Glr!ry, Troly F!MI, Wln<lllOr Kl11, G1v1 Fina, Rotll+IOClt Mild, LI Ll!er1, CYPrlU TrN. SCRATCHED -Gt! $""''' WM MIH, JtnlB, Fl11hlnv ltllr. Fr1ncl~. C1moa Queen. Wiid Wef Wlrtd (A Plnllde) TIME -1.10.2/$. ••• ALSO RAN -J111l1 C1lun, SUn tll:un- Mr, P~le Wtlftltr. ltor10lullot1, His MOnrf, Ooliblln Ho.I, Cof!H Con, Jen '"""· SCll:ATCHED -AIW1Y1 Otl SUnd11, Glorlou1 Vli:tvr, Wl'l.lt'1 Up, K11-S11-81lh, or .. nd11. SIXTH llAClf -=t:fyrlono1, 3 l'•tr old1 1n11"" llll!n •nO m1rn. Clolm!no.'11. PurH SJ.000. Slc:IUOed Sl1r IA 0111) 3.to 2,IO 2.<IO SlnUCK11 (0 P lttcel 7.«I '·'° Fl¥1no Dor (W M11'1otnerl 3 . .-0 TIME -l.10. ALSO RAN -Potch 11 Up, Spffd'f' RIQNery, Fla11W llln. EllWllllll ~Id. NO SCRATCHES. SIXTH tu.Cl. DI y1n:t1. ) l"!•r Dl!IJ 1nd uP In G.WO A Plut. Pv,... 11900. Oolklrums (Slr1u .. 1 7.60 4.40 120 S.60 S.MI 11111 Gr1nd1dd'I o:ui..,1 Jlmm, M.c 81r (Fll1111t01) Tlmo-11 Sil&. '·~ Also R1n -PtrlflY Ch1r9er, fl1Y1I RIP!, f1111lt1 Quldl, Lld'I' Millhly Siio!, D'lo Lucic,, Miii Che<lllll Oedl, Goldie. Na!1. Scr1tcntd--Tlp!OP Ded<, Chk: R• ~t. Qulrul Et11. S!:Vl!HTH llACE. l50 y1rd1. 3 Yfft Oldl Ind Ull '" Grt•:ll AA Plu1. Punt Dunk 1 e berger, nuger trol T-r. 0r ..... County Al"'°"· Slnlt HIG HEST BIDDER FOlt CA.SH (6il,1blt! Palmer Bill Jenkins and A,.., CIUf«nll under !ht fldttkM 1irm 11 """ o1 wit 1n 11w1111 monev:,e1 1111 . ' • d' Mmt If WACO.U.NTANA Ind thlf I.lid Unltecr Shllft) 1t U70 1!11t 17tl'I Slfw!, Mike Balley from War s firm 11 ~ .,, Ille fotkMIM COi'-CtlJ ol Santi ""'· Stile of C.llf6nll1, on Pirates and Art Psencer eo•1t1an • ......_. Ptlnclt11 Pl•c• .,, 11w1-''°"' 11 ,..r 111tr1nc:e 1o bu11dlnt1 fod-. d ... a. I -11 •• IOllOWI: l•cenl ta l'lrk.11111 IOI) •II rltlll. tllMo Ind Myron Pines an JY ........ e SANTANA HELICOPTElt SERVICI, lnler1!$1 _,....,eel lo Ind "'1W 1111111 ~ II Reyes from Golden West. IMC .• f.A.A. can1ro1 T-r, °''"" unc11r 11111 Olod .,, Tnnt 111 1111 P.-.rtv . • Coo.mlY Al~, S1n11 Alli, C1Uloml1. 1tt1111ed In !he City f/I Cosll'' Mesi. Game time l s ap-WITNESS Ill llll'ld thll 2'1'11 dl'I' .,, Or-Couhty, Sllll ol C1111or1111.,1n tlld prox.imately 4 l?.m. im· ~~~A~~TE SEALl eounL'!. ~;-.,,s~".'!,~'=. !!:·.sl!iwn.,, mediately following the SANTANA HEL ICOPTER • Map -did In ltok t"J, Htn 31 An g e I-Senators major :~:t~cTE }.N~.ENISH !t""<>r3!,,,°! ~~~l!wn"1:~ ,_ .. league game on Sunday. Prts10.n1 .strd wit wiu bl mode, NI wi111out STATE OF CALIFORNIA ) coYenlnl or w1rr1n1Y, 111preu •r" lmpli.tl, COUNTY Of ORANGE ) u tttlrdlnt tlllt, -1111lon, II' ,,,. o.. 11111 ltlh clly f/I JulY, A.O. 1'611, cvmbrlnetf, lo l'IY ftlO r1m1fD1111 prllt" F 0 h R brio•• ""· JOl.,tl E. 011111 1 Nofarv clt1I wm o1 lftt not~ MCU,..., by Mid D Sea ls eport Put.He 1h 1.-.I tor 111d COlHllJ 1rtd Slife, Doed fll Trwt, ll>wll: R'-'7•.J2. will\ 1,.. IEVE NTH lllACE -4 lurlrl~. 3 eep rtsldlno lflere!n, duf'f cornml .. lonld 1nd 1-trtsl lrom NoYltT!bor I, 1ff7 U Ill Mid Yetr ok11. C!tlmlM, Purse Sl.400. , iwom, IN!r10l\lllY IPtelre<I tll:OBERT J. note PrOllldlcl, 1dv1nc:n, II 1n,,'\rlldtr ft10 Allbeau (L Ou10uueau) S.to l .10 1.M llENlSH k,_n ta me ta bl Ille PrMldtnl tltm1 of Slid Oftd of Tr111t, fees.-chl .. 11 C1rnero IE Medino) ll.:xr 4.0CI Donita, 12 bin, 1 hlllbu1. tuo\I, 2 'fl:llow lln lllnl, 5 dolP,!n, ' of ftlO eorJIOtllkln !NI ••1CUted JM •nd lll(pllllll of tlll Trusttt 11'1d ol Ille Po Po Mono ID Pierce) J.«I OXMAAO -IS -11r1: -400 blu. J2t y~lowl1!1, IU c1lleo 11111, 12 bonito. within lnsln.lment on bellllt .,, the cor-tn.1111 c:r11ted bv ulcl Dltd ol Tf\llt. Tl,...__1.IH •IS. roc:k fish, ll bonlla, lJ b1tr1C\IOI, IO (22Fllll Sltwl Ullflllll -'1 lntlttl! I POtttllan '""~In lllmed, i nd odt.-led.-The ben4flc.!1ry under uld Doed et ALSO llAH -Gr11'1d S<iu1re, Soanl1h h111t1u1, 1' tlM cocr. ui:, lld<.I ~~1\r'3 l~"rro~':"i J: Id'°""""' 1uc11 COfll(lrotlon .,.""'"" Tru:s1, b"f t1110n ol • brN dl or dtf1un In Anack. Dltrnond Sl!Oel. SANTA llARll.RA-76 1naler1: 'JIO ti11c~i:ass.'11s riJ.1!0. • Ille wme. In Wltneu WhltlOI, I lllYt"" obll••''-secuttcl lh1t1bv. DAILY l>OUILI -l·LtYI N'Slt,tH II "'0 SCRATCHES. rod! C1ld, 1• llng cod, 231J ct1llt;0 tMi11, SAN DIEGO (Pl. L 1 m 1 • H a M. l'llrtunlo st! my hll'ld •nd 1lll•td m' of-Mrtk>lor1 llCtt!.l!td I nd doll111req lo TIM 11 ·Ll1111 0. lt.U. 11kl Ul.M. 116 tlonllo. lllslillrmin'i l..tl'ldl"/.-N9 '"'ltrl: llclll IHI !Fii Ny ind yr1r fn thll undenltned I wrltltn 01"Clar1llon of EIGHTH •ACE -6 furlent•. l Ind ' LONG IEACH (ltlmtnl Pltrl -101 1' Ylllowtlil, 1,1'\ II c;ore, It dolpl'IJn. cortlflaote t1r1t lbovl wrllTlll. Def1ull 11'1d Otmind ft/If Slit, Ind wrtllelt TNlllD llACE -' turlon11. l Ytlr Ytlr olch. Allow111Cft. Pur11 SJ,51111. lllO~rt: 707 besl, 45 bonito. 5 h1llbul, 211 'lllow tin lun1. (OFFICIAL SEAL) natl« fll brltdl Ind f/I l ltdlan ta Clllll Glch i nd ..... Clltm1M. ~ ...... n ..ioo. 8r111e 11 ... CM 17 KVlllfn; 1 white n111. II•~· -~ Nl!W,-ORT (Art'• L11'1dlnsJ -107 JCISlllll E. 011111 IM ijndtnltned ta otH Mid t(OPtrlY '° Pell ltoad (M Y•MJ) t .<IO 5.GO J.00 YIMI ) "·00 11.IO l,IO r~=.J L=lft,1{5 -~t°:ii!.it~~· lfl9!«i: J 1lblQDtt, 2 Yt!IOw fln l\INI, 1 NOllFY P ubllc-C111fomll Nfllt"f Uld obll .. lloM, ll'ld ...... .tt.r flf+ 1111 DlddY 8111 !J IWll) J."'I ,.60 F~ll Mff1urt !A Plned~I '·'° l.60 tr fin tunt, 1 dolphin, $ b1rr1e;ude. Prlncll'll Offlc• In MIY 7, lt6&, tile under&JtnlOll atllcl I.lid Sky C01mlrv CJ L1mber1) t.<IO w111ow RQd 10 Plerc•l '·'° ::,'l:t.'fn".'•3 S::u~:t(. 1'~o r.::"1~o,,, 1: bonlla, 2» bli1( 7 h•llbu~ 1r Orinot CC111nb llOl!ct of bruch •nd .,, •IKll9'1 1o ti. Tlrne--1.10 VJ. 71ME -l .Oll·)IJ. h1libu1, 1 blue ' n tuns. (1'..;lnc KUIPln. 1 """"hffd. o • .,.,.... L ... My Commr111an l!Mtlt" recorded In booll 15'5, -"9,-ti 11ld ALSO .RAN -Ftlll!ful Sul'I', Around A.LSO RAN -Nice Mlt!1te. Shldld, S-1'!1Ullnl) _ 1'1 inalots: J r•llow -lit -ltr1' 177 bonl!O, 242 bin, 12 June 21 lflG OlllCll l R«ordl Se~. Offler, Nt.uu ltuler, Good Old Cupid O•Med, lt1pld San. fin funf, I dolPll!n, 7 \'e'llowtt l, '73 llblCof"I, G "llow fin lunt, l PIJbllt.hod OronP Coli! 01llY Piiot, 0111d: Aut111! 12, !Ml. lov. SCRATCHEO.-Moartn, cillco llffi, l:W bonllo. y1llowt1ll, I dOli:lllln, l hllllbul. Autltll 2 t 1'-n. lHI 1342-U RAMPART INVESTMENT NO $C ltATCHES. PORT HUENl!M• -7J 1n111tr1: 2 ' ' COMPANY NINTH ltACE -on~ mil• en !Yrt. J 11~:,..~~l:i?\w.;;e..,:.i :n~~~'. 1!l Ytllawltll, 651 c.llco btu, 11 b1r· LEGAL NOTICE 11 ••Id Tru1!Q l"OUllTH ltACI! -6 turlaMi. Two veer ollll. Cl1lmlM. Purw ll,XIO bonito. 2 white 111 b.111, 47 V"tlowl1ll, ''~':.:'Ml.ls t::'l~lH111.:_1~.lntllt1: :ID By P. E. Holm~ Ytlr okll. Clo/mint. PurH $1,5'.IO. Tl'll Floor ID Pl~•cel 7.00 •.GO l.'10 :D l\aUbuf, J uelktw lift !uni, I dolpl\ln. ...~,·•·. •• •·I'·-.. -•·, ,1 ...._000 2 P·*51 Vic• Pral~ J1roo (A Plnedl l •.20 ).)II J.60 Wllch'I lroti. CW Har11c•l !.GO 3.'° HUNTINGTON IEACH -1G ·~1ltn: .,.,, • ...,.. ... ...,....., --"'""' .,_, 1111 C!!ll CW H1rrl1J '·'° ,,80 Sl>OP Toi-CW M11'1orney l 3.M 4l bcnllo, 29 bass, J7 w"d llAH. "'" 1'111/bul. CEllTllllCATI! 01' IUSIHESS. Publllhrd Orint11 C:O.st o.itv Pllo!, Mr, E119ln"r (W M•l'lorn•Y) l.to TIME -1.3'·115. -6S 1noltn: 12' ban(IO, t2 bas,, &I MALISU -" 1n9ler1: 171 ClllC<I l'ICTITIOUS l"lltM NAME A 1 16 2J lO, ,,_ 141 .... 71m-J,11 J/5. ALSO RAN -lltnollll\Ofl, Kodlt~ hhatlbu1, 1 b4rr1cud1. blH, 6'I banllo,t:t. hlllb\11. S•rt~ -lS Tht undtrllt nld do hereby ClrllfY' 11111 utUS ' ' - ALSO A.AN _ VentHin $.Inds, Kid, Preeminent, Prl"cdln., Mean/119 SAN CLEMENTI! -~ lntllfl: 1ngltr1: !20 Clld, 6' bonlta. 25 Ill•' lrt condudlM I Comm,rclll I nd LEGAL NOTICE H rttord Gen, y , T!te llllJff, Hmrv Mc, The ttW. 1,IW bictTICu~. 'l& bmno. ~n twin. J wnd b1u, U"" IM. lndu11r111 Aul Est•!• OeYektPmenl ' • ' I 1r. . lb, Goldm Key, lllUtlul, J yeH-'911. SEAL IE.I.CH -ICH -letl: IMO buslntn u C:O.P1r!Mn ,, 3471 Via Lklo,i---~~~=-_,,,,,,..,-,-""'""" 0!7¥1, LM'l lelcony, Eltclrool1sm.1. SCRATCHED W1rrlor Bob , SAN Pl!OllO !Mtrft\'I 1..tndltot) -11ndb.ti1 l•bonllo.•h1llbul ll1rt11 SCRATCHED -Mr. Notti COtl>O!'ll Ror, Kl~word. Miii S.brl, U6 inol<lr1: 1J ilblcore. 2 blu• nn 4) ' bani Ibo.if -H.-t lloc:h CIRfotnl1 l,mder JM Ile· CEllTll'ICA.TI' 01" COltPORAlfOH ·----------------"-'-'-""'-''-"'"'-"-'--'-"--"--'-O~;;:;•~""';..:;~;..:;;;:;""::c'c'"'c'coc· ---11111ou1 firm...,;,. of COAST IHDUSTRIAL l"OR TltANSACTION 01" •Ullll'mU l"ll"TH ltACI! -1 lutlonfl. l Ind 4 PROPERTIES Ind lhll uld !Inn h cotn· \JNDl!R l'ICTITIOUI N,,_. ¥1•r old m1•~--·. ••-· ••.... POied of !"-tolktWlnt P1r10n1, Wl'l<>st THE UNDERSIGNED CORPOR,ATIOH FIHllM ~ {J AMe';"b!.r<"n) -··-r-·-·· •-m..M•WAoifll, "' ..... In fvU Ind Jlecn of rtskStnc:I ... dClft he~by certlf'Y tflll II I• c:ollduclln• 117.GO J0.«1 13.60 ~"' '• ~ 11 lollowl, tl»rlf: 1 Rtil Elllle lrdlrt'1 tlu1l111n loelle!I ._ JorMl'I PrlMI (Mal'lorney ) ],:IQ J.to , 1lf ' "" WILLIAM C. MIRAMS, lUt Vl1l1 II "1f Clrnpus Drive, $Ulfe 101, N- "\ Coltd1I, NHnlOrt 8e1c1t., Cllllomf1; _.i Belch, C1IHornl1 , '2660 urMlfr 1111 Anold reason for buying a brand. ~~~ Signature of quality slnce1855. ........ ,.,,,..,_, --- ' • ' Since it's never in, it's never out. Each yprar the new cars come rolling out with the latest frills. Wow. And each year 1he old Yolks_. wogen rolls out looking iust the some. Ho hum. • Bui when the year goes by, new fods soon outdote the old fads . And the hottest-looking cor lost year is just 1hot: the hollest-looking car lost year. But o VW is still iust o VW. Nol " looking up.to-dote, but not look- ing out-of.dote either. !So you'll never hove o Hos-Been on your hands when you want to sell it.I Instead of wasting time moking the VW look better, we spend our time making ii work better. And th is year there ore dozens of ways it works better. llnclvding on e that makes ii wo rk easier: the outomotic stick shift.+! In the end, the chcfice is yours: poy o big price for o year of glory. Or a smoll pric:e for a VW. NIWPOIT llACH Clik• 1"'9ttt, IN. 2116 ....,..,.,. ..... SAN JUAN CAPISTU.NO IUI ,.._, IH. HUNTIN6TOM llACH H_..wV~ 11711 .._.II~. t71 4l 671.0tOO JZllJ ••fl• ..... 11141 4n.Jt61 f7141 MJ-44JJ l PAGE NOLL JR., .UU Orrl1111tan Rd .• lkllllcM l!rrn lllmt f/I PRO"(lTIES -1 Coron1 d1I Mir, C1llloml11 WEST Olll'ISION ind 11111 u ld Urm 11 SHERMAH A, SMITH, lM E1ton comtOled o1 IFll tollowlM cor'll«11l011, ' l Pl1ee, N•-' 11e1dl. Clll!omll. Wl>llle prJnc:lPll placo of tmlneM. l• •• . Doled JUIM 21, lffl. lollowl• Wlllt1m C. Mlr1m1 GAi-EWEST NATIONAL. INC .. Pote Noll, Jr. 4100 W c ...... mon-1111 Awnw ' Slllrm1n A. Smith · ' STATE OF CALIFORNIA, f'ullertan. C•llfertrll nm. 1 COUNTY OF LOS AHGELES, n. WIT,.£SS 111 hind thl1 tlh dl'I tt On June 21, IHI. be1orr ""' 1 Nollt¥ AU91111. 1'61. Public tn tl'ld tor wkl CwnlY 1nd S!ite. (CDr"POrlle Stoll . . person1!1'1' IPIN!lrtd Wlllllm (, Mlrtmi, GATEWEST NATIONAL, INC. Pate Noll. Jr. ind snerm1n A. Smith JoseP~ C. Moro1n, J•., Prnl!llnf ' k"""'n fe me lo be the ptrtoni Whosl Fritz E. l(l1Hen, ~rtll!'.l' I i ntmn 1r1 subltrlbld lo !hi wllllln \11-STATE OF CALIFOlt,.lA, ilnlmenl, ind i dlnowltdetd lo IM lhil COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES, u . ltM'f' e•KVltd Ille wrne On 11111 t!h diy f/I Avt111t, A.D. 1HI, Wll'Ms! m' hal'ld ind ·,..11 before me Al'l'ln M. 1(11rli:Jn1n, I 'Mol•rv I (OFFICIAL SE ... L) . Publlt In Ind tor wld COolnty lilfill. 511!1, Samuel A. Greenb\Jri reilll!M lhfr~ln, duly cornmlHlanlCI •nd \ N11t1ry Publlc-Clllfornll 1worn, perton1llY llll'tlrlcl JOllPll C. Prll'tCt.llll Ollln !n Mortin, Jr. Ind Frlt1 E. Kll:llln k- l.os A"'tllt Counl'Y lo 1111 It bl !lot Prt1ldoftt 11'1d Sten!f1ry, s. A. Gl'Mftbv,. ...-C:llWIY Pl Ille conior11lon -11111 .,.. Attonolf «Ule!I the wlll!ln ln1trumt nl on bllllll of 1114 Wnl ll'lllff llYd. Ille e«par1tlot1 ll!ereln n1,,,..., I nd Alll1rMr1, C1Hlttnl1 •cllnoWltdllt!I lo .... 11111 ludl CC!'90Nllon Publllhecl Or1r•11 COili O•llv Piiot, J11-t~Wlled l'°re 111ne. , 1Y M Ind Alll~il J, t, 16. 1'611 12'7~ In WllM11 Wl\HeaJ, I h1w !Mffu.,lta LEGAL NOTICE 111 111'1' l'l.lnd """ 1ffllffd my offlc!1I 1t1l The OIY Ind '11r In thl1 Urtflf<lhl flf'll 1baYti wr!~n. (OFFICIAL SEALJ Rt<on!td It ,_II ol Flr1t Amtr. AIYln M. Kutlzmln , ' ... Tlllt 1ns. a Tru1! Co. In oflltll l llrconh i'tot1 ry Pllblk-C1tlfdrnlo :• .,, 0r ..... CwnlY, (1111. In Book "" PrlftCIPll Offlco In ~ P-14'. J\llJ' It, 1HI. LOI ....,.,tits CovnlJ NOTICI! GI' Oll"AULT AHO MY Cammlulon E~pl ..... • EL•CTION TO SILL Ave. ll, lt70 UHOlflt Oll!D 011 TltUIT ICUtll:TIMl.N & SAR,ATY NOTICE IJ HERl!llY Glll'l!H: 211 S. a-ry Drfn. 1vH1 Jitt Thllt HOME FEDEltAL SA\llNGS AMO llnrtr Mlllt. Clll. M21t LOAN ASSOCIATION OF SAN DIEGO, Art.Mn • CALIFORNIA, • COtl>O!'lllon. ll trvslte Pubnthlcl °'""'" coa11 CllllY PllDI, llllder • cited .,, trutl JUOlllluled I" Pi<IU AlltUll "· n. lll I nd Slflttmblr' ••• 111 HOME DEED a ESCROW CO. OF SAN 1HI 1l?Ut OlEGO, 1 ear--.tlan t~lfalllf bY OCCIDENTAi. LOAN COMPANY, 1 Car· llOtlllan dlled J1r>U1ry 161'11, IMJ Ind LEGAL NOTICE ~ Fetwu1ry t. 1"3, 1"111 No. '°7t. • MOTICI 01' MARSHAL'S s.\LA_ PIM .Ul, Book l.uJ f/I Orllt11I lleconts ltETAIL MER\.'.HANTS' CUD IT In lt.e Olllc:I of ftlO ltKordlr ol !ht ASSOCIATION OF LOS ANO~S, 1 CwnlJ of Dr111H, Sllte ol C.lffamll, I nd CllnlOl'1llon. Plelnl11f "'· WENTWOllTM •IWn lo llW1'9 N'llT\lfll ti 1 ,,_..15_.,.-L SCOWN 1k1 011. WliNTWORTR L. nClfl fer '22.IClt ... d1'" JlllllltY 1'-1"1. SCOWN Ind SHIRLEY L SCOWN, ~ l'IVlbN 'ltltrr Intern! ltielftll " ltle1'9ln Uni. No • .-i 010. .,. Pnwldtd, In f1vor ol HOME l"EOEltAL llY .... """.,, '" e!tlCUtlon 1Hulid,tll.t: SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION OF 2L IHI ..... ll'tt Mun1C!Nt c~ SAN DIEGO, • Ctllloml• cor-•Tlon, Anffla. Judkl•I 0!111"1(1, Coull~ '""' • llrltdl ol 1111 ablltlllcrftt fer Allltlt$. SI•,. ol Cllflornl1, - wllldl 11111 doOd I/I fruit -t i-11 mtnf tn,.rlcl II\ llYW ol II. .-urlty 11M ICOPTtoll t.1 lhll !!It follow!M Ml!flCHANTS' Ctll:ED1T AS •11"'°"h dllt ""'°"' 11M nohl wtt'f no! OF LOS ANGEL'!!$, 1 CllnlOl'fl it Nkl ..,_. di#, 1nd 11111 l'9tn1ln Cl\lt, _. lud9"*'1 c r 1I11 or e n d :.w.Oiof 11'1 ..... 111'10i!l4r Wl!NTWOllTH L. KOWN o11~911:. The ITIOllllllY ln.l1Hrn111t " iW11'1dNI WEMTWOltTH L. SCOWN •rtd s~M..Ft I nd ln"'resl IUt J-lDlh, lNI, l f!O l. SCOWH, 11 l\llftotfnen! -~ .... lcww>!"""-'IJ! ... ~ lftll•lt!Mtlls M ""''""''·Int 1 ,.., btlenee .,, tHOtt AllltlfY ffltf'Wbf dltltrllll 1111 111flrt prlnc:lit1! dw on 111d ludtmrnl an the ·NIC"OC 1lw blllnc:t .,, m.-.21 dW •nd Mv•blt, 11w1nc:e .,, 11td ucrcutlall. 1 111~ tooethtt wtfll Int•"'•' """"" '""" Ml'I' UPCWI Ill "" rltllt. IHlt Ind In~~ 11)111, INI. If fllo l"lh ol ~ IM 1111 Miii llllflnltnl debl"" In 1111 .,.,..,... '" "",.'""'-" "'.,~.~ ",." -,, ti ""11, lht CountJ" Or11'11t', lf11t f/I C 1 a1 .... I "' _,, 1 • --dttcrl'l)fd n tori-.· • r-• =•ndbY .,.!1,ia!'":~'"' dttd-:r 1r.:t' Lof ~ Trtcl ion, Mii ~ & Ind 0.1!"""""" file .................. 1+1111 ~ p,_, ~1/.-0, I nd mot'f -·~ .utl!ICe .....,.1....,... If In'!'. ~H:!nt~"-(OYOt. N.-lf~ ~ D'I' '""*' """''°" lllt llndlttlltl'lld, NOTICE 11 HElllfllY GIVEN ~ M -llnl btntfkl1r, \l!IOtr 11111 dfN d F•kllY. Au91•1I JO. IHI, 11 2cot3i'ikfl 1•111!. ""' nK:Ulld Ind ffN-ta Mid P.M. ti Iran! .. '-' HouH. •'"' ''""'"" I wrllltn dt<ler11lon ol del1uff ltlll !lrltl. C!IJ f111 CO.ff MHll~" Ind CllfnlnO for ..... •ftlll "'' ...... ~.,, 0r ...... Sl•hl ol C11lflwnle, I wll II ta Miki frllli.t ttld *'<! 91 hinl IFllll Ill IWbllc 1\l'(llfn 11 1111 ~lll!oilt f11r O«vrntl\l'I ~ obi'"""°" -Cllh kl llwfyl ,.._... et 111t Un ' ..... ....,,., 1+1111 1111 91(1trel 11'111 doof 1n ,... tltllJ, 11f)s Ind I""' lllf'lbr dicier. Ill Mnlll MC\lttO ~ 1"""""""1 ~ In "" •beo<t 1!11"'91111191¥ 11\ft Ind HYtblt, Ind .... ._,,.,, or M muct1 lllltllOf 11 J11W ... tltcttd tl'ld dott lllr"'1 elod II Cllllf 11111 -.. ,., It ""'" ulf •llKlll---" -.mbtd In 111f dtld " 11'\111 II IC(t'Wd fftle•nl •nd COits ._.,.. •• ., M IOlil te ""'"" !ht libll9llllnl -tel Di tto 11 ca.11 Miu, "llftrnl..-.. "b!:: Ju!Y "' ,... ,, I..... . lll .f7, TltACT . .ff/07, ts -Mio :!"'...:11 L GU4E.1tf.! ,__ !~ loal! I ... 111" J7.Jt II M"""ICINI COV!'t ~· " MIKtt~-..... • • NOME flEOElt.AL SAVING$ °''"" C-i., Ml • AHO LOAN AltoClATIOM JWklt!L Ol•trkl U OF SAN DIEGO ., L. H. Ottll •• • ..,,llflt ... Br: ltobrft "· Adel!nl. ~HILIP H. 1'111111111 • 1"7' AH°t, Vtn '1-nkteltl I• I UcCilll 11 t",'!; ." Mith A, WUl!tf, ... ,....;...... Cl~ll "* • •• - t,,, P~ Orllltll C11111 0.llV "1 P1*1..,,., Otl CIM . flt. A11l1t-llo"tllFY ~ltllllft't A,,.,.,,. a· • J\jly ll Wllll "-1! t, t, 14, 1-.a t•l Al/Iv.I t, II, fl.';:. I Oii .M ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-· ) ---------~-~-·=-=w=--........... -----.. ·-·-------·-·s•2•••••Z11?E•••F••F••z•F••F•-zs1··z •• 7 ES 2 5 $ • • • . • • , • • , • • ' " • N • • • • • .. ' " ,, •• ~ •• " c. ~ '· " ~ " M ;,,, ·• ... IT • "' " ~ "' ... ... ... UL .. .. ... .. ,, • I: .. .. .:: ... ~ ... .. .. •• .. •• .. .. ,. '= .. ;., ... "' , ~-----..,..._...,_......, ____________ ~_ ·-~------. - . __: 1felff1!M_~....,. ,. ~· " • Catalina ;;;::t:V~t a Dump .. "'-~ ~· ::'.'..';·. ly ALMON LOCKAllY -... (• ' ',; •... :.'.:BY · ALMON LOCKABEY .is. provide pickup ••rvice :..1 ·~""" 0111y """ ....... ••• fu' v1...1~ .... y·acbtemen, l t. Ew.ry ndltaman wbo _.....,.. visitl C<tQlirw lliand dur!Qe "We love tbt yacbting tbt year should 1ra&e time crowd,"..,., 8 om bard. -ewtetone time.m--another to • "We are ~ to have have 1· chat witll.. Ooul Bom· them come here. But .we bani. the c•nial clirO!'lor of wilh tlley woold he mare the c.talina Camp ·& Cove carelul of Ille li'*<r pc .. .•• A&!!""l' . which ,,.mu.asters hlam." . 1r..vA.tte affiairs ol the •I.and tor ~ wu'd pollution doesn't --the Wrigley ·Co, bottler B o m b a r d OI' _J19mbard lo a young, -Ed Scov•I at amiable ·man. whose life is Avalon. 'lbe natural scour~ Wi'aJlllld up in Ille island inc and purifying action ol ..... ~dJ be bae: called borne the sea -wttb a heayY !~.;u.~ he .was a boy. "5si!it from scavenger fish .~·.• ".":tfi" e is Mp.table that is un· -makes fibort. shrift of the ,.., .. , ' I I ' . ":" · he awakens some morn· ~all amount of SfJ'W'8le :: .. ::Jl!t and surveys a ooce-at· thal I< pumped fr'O)Jl '"boil ... tractive bead! or cove lit· toilets. ',;"~'ti.Nd witll plastic CUJI", beer RUBBISH cans, boWes and other · assorted debris which bu "Jl'.s ttie lifter problem Jlrtfted in trun offshore. that co~ms us," says I .:-;,:;;,;!They're making lie Bombard. And well it might, ." .~tter ttiese days," mOans lt'1.to sbouJd'eoncern ever) THREE TIME CHAMP -Earl EJms0 " 1LYan.d"OTh1·"'"s ·c-rew • Bombard~· e l:aianC tllllt · ya¢itsmaa who wakes up m Trials ttiere is li y .no gafe the morUnc: to ff:e his Mike Shear of San Dieio ~et wet derrieres as they distance . shore where favorite cove being invaded drive toward finish to win third consecutive national .. ~ l>Oatmen C8Q ump garbage by plastd.c ' cups, Plates and championship in Snipe Class. Elms starts competi· ",,,or debris. other indestructible rub· tion in the 5.5 meter Olympic trials at Newport Sun· -----.These neW plastic con· bi sh. day. .-J:ainers and pack a e Jn g Bomberd doesn't blame it _....;.. _________________ _ ~ just do not sink. all on the .yachtsmen. One . '~ m~. float for days, but day he loMed out to sea and ~:. . y wind ~.on some saw what .appeared to be a OJ • .• ,.,l19.cll." wave of whitecaps coming· ymp1a · '·· · acroes the water. Jn-· ._, ";:,'llECEPTACLES vosagation oho\\'.<d it to be .. F'rldl!y, Au9ust 16, 1'68 DAILY PILOT J• Rallie• In Lat Race Elms Snipe Champ Agaip . .· . . ••• . ,. ' Readied • ; ' '' ''-r ~ . . • ' 1 ,, • . 4. Dave UllmlD, Balboa Yacbf . Club, 21·9-U.11·2-. 11~. s. Tom Nute, San Dlyo. 11- 6-9-5-6-5-14-JO.l. 6. Francis ·sea v y 1 Clearwater, Fla., lf.2;.Ul-3-7· 3-.17-70.4. 7. Buzz Levonson . In· d l.a n a polls, 7-13-6.17-U. 5-70.7. • I . Dave Peterson,~ San Diego, 18--7-24-1-4+15-'74: I . E. E . ''Shorty'• Campbell, ABYC, 11·1.+15-~ 20-13-75. 10. 'Gonzalo Diaz, Miami, Fla., 2-11·7-21·9-15-4-77 . Well1 Cosa1olaUon Ser.lest 1. Norlnan Ahlquist, San Francisco, rt.7 . !. Ron Fox, ABYC, 29.7. 3: Bill K l lpatrtck, Oklahoma Cif.¥, 34.7. 4. Don Blodgett, KHYC, 40.7. • 5. Larry Grey, ~YC, 48.1. . I. Jon John1 , Ann Arbor Mich., so.~. ..~ ' Police Work Drawing Y oting ~ ::~ Time w.as when the literally thousands of plastic :>~:):achbman felt that if he cups. '· . : dUmped his debris, two, five F u r t b e r investigWon ·:~·;;or ·even 10 mites at sea it showed that the cups bore ... ·.would soon be destroyed. Jt the insignia of the Catalina ~ ~ .. ~ doesn't work that way Steamship Co. The oceen • • &1fl y mo r e • Beer cans may have hffn whJte but ,. : ·~"p\uletuttd on only ·one end the air was blue when Born· 17 Yachts to Vie in Ne ·wport ,Harbor WASHINGTON (UPI) - ml Director J. Ed&ar H~r told the 82nd session of ttie FBI Ne.ti Q'n a 1 Academy Monday law en· forcement was· the vanguard in the American war against lawleuoess. Warning there are ':Stai· gering problems in com· bating <rime, Hoover -took note al. the fact 1h:at "law enforcement is ma k'.i n g great strides toward ~ pro· fessionalism and attracting an lncreas.ini nwnber of YO\Slf men." • -will Coat for houns. Capped bard hustled ashore at , .bottles will float forever. Avmon and showed l'ho5e " ••f:llastic garbage receptacles rePOPSible the evidence. · ·~oofnped at sea will either go From then on there was -_: ~l';a~k to Catalina or follow no more dumping of rubbish .. you home: -evemually. from the S. S. Avalon or . i';... '"For these reosons many other passenger boats. · --of • the yacht clubs which Bcmb6rd's friendly word : · . Jel:se coves on. tbe island of advice : Eit!ber send your . .: :.~ provide garbage rubbish and garbage ashore ·~ptckups so that it can be at Catalina (by boat) or • .tilcen ashore and disp06ed keep it aboard until you can ',of. in a promper manner. dispose of it on shore at · · _ ~-~e of the eovt operators home. . ' ' -. . . -· >};f 11tmilyff 'Amateurs' To Sail· to Australia ,· .l\ICHMOND. Oalif. IUPll ..... _._When the Harry L. Neely -~family sets ·sail next week _for Australia, its lo u r ~ )i:(embers will rely on a cor· ll8lpondence course i n · :.\iivigation for guidance. •· .,,. ''We expect to learn a1 we ·~ @. along," 1aid Nee 1 y 1 Wednesday • he out.lined ~.'Qlans to cross the Pacific ~ · 'With b.i.s wife and two children in a 32-foot sailboat, "Valhalla." ·~ The family has less than two years' s a i Ii n g ex- perience. Their loneest trip ~.with the i11lander rigged ci-8ft was 60 miles down the . 1;,~sl to Half Moon Bay. ·· ~ .TJiey've just finished a COT· :;:·1rtf.:Spo~ence course l n ·aavigation . ·.: .. ,But Neely W.d they were .. ·~mmitted to the trip, bav· _"lP,g sold their home, ,· . .,_ ,.::. MAl~R STIJDIO. PHEVVE TONIGHT l:JO P.M. Su111m•r'1 ltlf C•111•4y with e DORIS DAY " ... " e 111.lAN KllTH LI DO furniture and car . "I've got nothing left but a ha1: and boat," he said. The Valhalla's planned route is down t.he coast to san-ta Barbara, then to Maui in the Hawaiian Islands, Fi- ji, New Zealand and finally Australia . The children -Ben, JS, and Linda , 10-plan to take correspondence classes eri route, maillng t:.hem from one port and receiving grades at the next. Magic Bliss Wears Away LOS ANGELES CAP) - Magician Channing Polloclc and his 32-year-o1d wife were divorced after she cleimed Pollock cut up her clothes with a pair of scissors. "It was. the last straw," Josephine PollOck to l d Superior Court J u d g e Robert H. Patton. Pollock 41 . was ordered to pay alimony for five years. The stage is set for the final Olympic trials of the 5.5 meter class off Newport Harbor starting Sunday. Seventeen of the nation's top rated skippers will bring their bo8ts alongside the dock at Newport Harbor Yacht Club Saturday where e I ab orate "ope n in g ceremonies " are scheduled. The 5.5 met.er is a small version of the 12-meter of America's Cup fame when it comes to design and racing machinery. Largest of the Olympic clas'ses, the 5.5 measures out about 32 feet overall, but like the 12- Meter it can vary according to the mathematical formula so long as the final product comes out to 5.5 meters. Here is the list of con· tenders who will go into ac· • r·ii_tt tion Sunday: OUTA SIGHT. Scott All;m, U.S. Naval Academy; crew, John L:aun, Skii> Allan, NHYC. ~ SAVAGE, Al Cassel, Voyage-rs YC: Fred MacDonald, M. Johnson. COMPLEX VI, Britten Chance, New York YC, J . Lucas , P. Chance. TRUANT, Don Cohan. An- napolis., Md., A Stuebner, T . Jones . CADENZA, Gardner Cox, New Jersey, S. Colgate, S. Walker. RAMONA . G•rald Driscoll, San Diego, John Blair, John Rumsey . .SHADOW, Earl Elm~, San Diego, Tom Nute, Doug De Sousa . GOSLING, Skip Elliott, NHYC, P. Wil11on, G. Dit· mars. SUNDANCE , Erni• Fay, Houston, P . MonJen, L. (. Neuht.-.::. \ CHARADE, Bill Ficker, NHYC, Tim Hogan, George ~­ Twist. YANKEE 11, Taylor Grant, Newport. L·• n n y Coon, A. ~ricDonald. CLOUD NINE -Gordon Lindeman, ~Ailwauiee, H. Meye.1·. P. Harken. LADY LUCK, J o h n Marshall, Stamford, Conn., C. Ford, W. Hickel. LUV, Lowell North, San Diego, Peter :eeckham, Dick Deaver . GRASS, Elliott 0 I ci a k , New York , J. Murdock, It Kobrick. FUGITIVE, Warren Parker, NHYC, M. Parker, D. Parker. NEMESIS, Ted Turner, Atlanta, Ga., J .. Markley, M. Shumway. FINAL GROOMING-Al Cassel's new Bruce King. designed 5.5 met.er Savage, gets final going-over at Lido Shipyard by Joe Minney before starting com- petition in 5.5 Olympic trials. 33 Catamarans to Sail For U.S. Title at KHYC Thirty.three of the top Pacific Catamaran skippers will tangle today at King Hart>or Yod>t Club, -Redon· do Beach , for the national dlampioothip ngatt;a. mont. Warren Ted Mosiler. The 19-foot Miller, and Pacific Catamaran is one 9f' ttie fastest multihulls for ib size rv.,. .-MMCO Mtllll• -tt.fl 10.000 t,_Mlon,,........ Yllll let ,,_ towlnf; I ftM ~ ~k. fMt. erndent ~ ti"'" Ill Ju1t -d1y, Alf/I wltll MMCO, )'IWr trw11~ -M ~ 111 "''' IOO AAMCO'CIM-... _. .. c_t. ,_,. """"" ..., .... __ -~··· COSTA MESA 1741 ....,_ ... ..W:.11WA Garden Grove tMl .. r*fl .....,. ......... ·-- S1nta Ana '2t I , Plr91 IL ............ irq.fOI SvER~0:.1·~-• • , ..,. c:. ( r • , . Two races will be sailed today, two SaW<<IO!' an<tone 1,::;==========~====:::;:;i=::; Sunday. ' ever built. Golfers Attention! Defending champion Bet> Baker ol Cabrillo Beactl Yacht Club will be after bis fourth national title. . -· The e11uple , married eight years. divided their personal property, including their ATTENTION TO DETAIL -Srott Allan, sailing for the U.S. Naval Academy, ~~~~~~~~~~__!15~1~,000~; HJdden Hills home Annapohs, Md., checks rigging on his new Britton Chance-designed 5.5 meter l>ther ~outhland P-Cat sailors Capable of taking the championship are R. Paul Allen, Pat Carricker, Joe· Ed Davis, Norman Mardi- • There II a beautiful. well I ~ they agreed to .. u. Outa Sight at Udo Shipyard, ·~· ----* , . •*******••••********************** ROSEMARY'S BABY IYmT IVINING ,,.,_ 8:00a1td 10:30PM I WUKDAYS 2:40. 5:15. 1:00 • 10:15 SATURDAY 12:21-2:5$.5:2M:00.10:20 SUNDAY 121J0.2:55·5:20·7:JS·f:SO • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' EVERY EVENING At ••• . . 8:00 and 10:00 PM AT Hl•WAY 39 DlllVE•IN THE GRADUATE * groomed, 18 Holes Golf : Course with ocean breeze• : -OPEN TO THE PUBUC : AT : • • SAii JUAll HIW COUNTRY CLUB .. 1 ' Just Ea.st ot Santa Ana Freeway in San Juan : Capistrano. Tak.• Valle Rd. or San Juan Creek : turn-oft. I : DRIVING RANGE & SNACK IAR OPEN TILL DARK lunch A lar Facllftles ~ill Week D1y Summer hies • • • • II Holet t Holla : o,...n ,... ................. p ,oo u.oo : lloctr!C C.m ......... , .. • . • 6.00 4.00 : Complete line of Goll Equipment and • .-... . ' • • ! S.lurdiy, Sndly ' Holl41y Rifts • : II Htloa Green ,... ' ' t 0 < I " O O O O ' ' O O; o $5.00 After J p.m. ........... , • , • • • • J.00 lloctrlc Carts ........... ".. 7.00 ·-· t2.JO : 2.00 : 4.00 : • ~ ,., ....... 11 ••• 493·1167 ., Qf~1 : * ''--~~~~~-''---L-.....,.~~~-"._''-m_t•_ .... _~~· I -------------------------·--------~-----~-----------------------------------;: ------·==== mnoasoeme·-mmno ass s I DAILY PROT EDITORIAL P AGE -- -Subverting the Law Repeatedly th• HunUngton Beacb City Council finds itself sanctioning violallons of its ordinances "in the best interests of the city." Planning Commissioners do the same. The case of a proposed convenience r:narket at Newland Street and Indianapolis Avenue is an example of the dilemma faced by a council not noted for its consistent upholding at the city laws. This time the landowner asked for a permit to build a market under provisions of the city zoning laws. Opposition came from residents nearby the prcr posed market. Residents were overruled on a 4-2 vote. Councilmen Jack Green aqd Jerry Matney voted against the market and Councilman Donald Shipley was absent. Councilmen in this case upheld the law despite heavy opposition from residents and voters. A few minutes later councilrilen reve'8ed them- selves on upholding the laws on. "the books and voted ~2. with Green and Matney voting no, to grant a hous-- . ing developer many exceptions to the laws without the developer having proven a hardship. Yet such proof is required by city ordinance. Councilmen admit that granting such exceptions are contrary to the city laws. Over the past few years there have been mMy in- stances of granting privilege not allowed by city ordi-- nance and, conversely, of denial of privilege allowed by the laws on the books. It's little wonder that residents are confused over the action taken by the council in granting a permit for the convenience market. Developers say they can never be sure what will happen and have cha'rged that the city is not one of laws but of personal fiat by councilmen or pl;µmers . It's a serious charge, but too often apparently true. Subdivision laws have been subverted so often in favor of a upolicy statement" of dubious l~gal value that now the council is embarrassed when the planners ask the council to uphold existing laws. Why Women Outnumber Men By NORMAN NIXON, M.D. The planners are wrlUng a new subdivision ordi- nance and have been for , the most part of two years....._ Rather than spend the energies ne'eded now for com· , pletion of a new law, ptanners are involved in a pro- gram of turning down · tb_e variances they granted wholesale only a few weeks ago. Thus, confus.ion ls supreme in Huntington Beach. No one knows how he wtll be-treated. before tb:e govern- ing body. At times private property rigbt.s are held &~cred; at other times: they are disregarded. 1 The example of the market on lndiart"apoUs shows that even when council obeys its own laws the past practice of disregarding laws leads to nothing but trouble. Inconsistency in governing leads to distrust by Lbe governed. The need is for immediate revision of the laws which need revision and enforcement of those which do not. · Landowners, developers and resident.a of Hunting- ton Beach have a right to think that the laws on the books are fair and will be enforced equally and without favor. Dedicated Volunteer s Anotber,ymding service to the West Orange County area be provided soon by the Assistance League of H ton Beach. ' More th a year of hard work by members of the 27-year-old organization will result in opening of a speech therapy clinic. The league has obtained the services of Mrs. Carol Piccolo who will staff the clinic on Wednesdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. beginning in September at the chapter house, 301 \Valnut Ave., Huntington Beach. Again the community benefits from the efforts of this dedicated group of women volunteers, givers of more than 10,000 hours yearly to fulfill the League's motto of "All for Service and Service for All." H • ' ,y.,,o..u ~1"4 .. WE'RE TAKI~ EVE~X ffl.E<AUTION TO MAKE SURE HUBERT GETS NOMINATE!> I~ A F~EE ANb PEAC.EFUL ,loffMOSPl\ERE ... , Facilities Were Inadequate DemocratiC-1 Front .Runner ls Cautious P;raises Pop Festival Crowd To the E<litor: , Although we live ooly a few blocks WASH.ING;r<>N -One of Uie · ·from the Orange County Fairgrounds, stranger a~U of a strunge political there was such' a lack of noise on ' ·~· c • action as requested by the land- owner." Every single girl knows there are inore women around than men. Last January the U.S. Census Bureau reparted there were only 96.7 males for every 100 females. Today there is a surplus of at least 3 million females. Until the 1940'1, however, men were in the majority. ,Ev~;yday Problems campaign .is that Ule major presiden· THAT Saturday~eveni.ng we fargot the , ~~ c~~?::~~sti~~;d ~.d~sb~t:; ::°:d~e~~alSo'J: ~:ofi:!. a T~~ be due to ttie ·1ack of precision in traffic •was dense and the roadside Letters from read>fs art welcome. Nornw.lly writers should conve11 their messages in 300 wo-rd.s or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel U reserved. All let- ter.! mmt incl1"U signature and mail- ing address, but names will be with- held on request. At past council meetings requests for a particular use of land have been denied the landowner. I remember particularly a request for a car wash. The group presented a handsome plan fur use of the property showing landscaping on the street side. Re- quest denied. Paradoxieally, 106 boys are born to every 100 lh"IJ. But from infancy to the' oldest age brackets, the death rate for males far exeffds that for femala. Nearly three boys die for every two girla. At 211 two young men die for every young woman. At 35, 1.400 men die for~very 1,000 women; at 55, the ratio is 1,800 to 1,000. Why? Anthropologist Ashley Mon- tagu in a new revised edition of his book "1be Natural Superiority of \Vomen" says: "Tbe evidence is clear, from ttie constitutional standpoiDt. that woman is the stronger sex; the natural superiority of women is a biologicaJ fad." OBVIOUSLY, WHEN our country is at war, many young men are killed while in military service. But at any time in our large cities, seven times more men than women are victims of ~omicide and three times as many men of suicide. More important, more men than women succumb to heart disease, circulatory ailments, cancer and accidents. Also, with a higher metabolic rate, men burn out faster than women. Undoubtedly, emotions play an im- portant role in shortening the lives of many men. Outwardly, women are more emotionaJ but they are less like- ly to require admission to a psychiatric hospital. By crying, com- plaining, criticizing, and chatting endlessly on the t.elephone, they get their feelings oul On the other hand, men pretend to be stoical, im· perturbable and cool -at great cost to their peace of mind a n d physiological functioning. GENETICISTS BELIEVE the female's XX ch r om o so m e com· bination, as opposed to the male's XY. Is partially responsible. Only males sltfier from hemophilia and other "'ereditary diseases which a re • " transmitted solely through the female. And girl babies are less likely to in· herit many gene.·transmitted defects which may lead to crippling and kill· ing diseases later in life. With many more widows , divorcees and spinsters now competing for the available men after 35, the structure of our society will continue to change. The Puritan ethic, so Jong the dominant moral force in the U.S., already is dead or dying. Most ministers no longer sermonize on sex- ual transgressions as the predominant Bill::. OBVIOUSLY, THE new sex freedom in the U.S. does not necessarily set people free. But many women without husbands no longer are inhibited in ex· pressing their sexual d r i v e s • Regardless of age, the old taboos are disappearing and the double standard no longer holds, even for married women. Many of them, more realistic than their mothers and grandmothers, are less apt to run to the divorce court if they learn that their husbands have been cheating. For as women grow older and the surplus of women over men continues to rise, the rivalry for a man's love may become blatant. A good man, or indeed any eligible man. is hard to find ! A CORNELL PROFESSOR of nutri, tion, with tongue in cheek, has sug- gested a remedy. "One way to re- equalize the rnaJe.female life span is for women to drink more, worry more, smoke more, exercise less, sleep less, eat more candy, butter and ice cream," says the professor. Bui, unfortunately, there appears to be no cure for this ever-increasing dilemma. We can only empat.hi.ze with Rex Harrison \\'hen he played Henry Higgins and sang plaintively, "Why can't a woman be more like a man?" Vice Presidential Choice The office of vice-president has become too import.ant for either the Republicans or Democrats to setUe for less than nominees fully qualified to move up to the presidency. Eight limes in U. S. history, tbe vicll!l·pl'tti· dent has become president. Since 1900. nine of 12 presldent.s have died ln of· fice, bMl:i asp&Slnated, been targets of attll!impted assassinl!tion, or been subject to terious illness. A VETERAN journalist, Ro&eot Drummond, bas writkm th.at ''I n every national ccnve.ntJ.on I l\.ave covered lince IMO, there bas not been a vtce- presidmtlal nominee oa either ticket cboae:n bee8llle of his fitness to 1uc· -to the praldeney. He hu been pkbd to balance the Ucke~ to please tmte, to appeue others, r:K to unite tho party, Bui never primarily boc&ttle he WU qualllJed." Perhaps Drummond h8J overllaled tut ar~ wnewhat. There bave been q u i, l f f h d vfce,pnJid•otW llDl1lfn .... I . ONCE A RELATIVELY lnsil' Guest Editorial nilicanl office. the vice-presidency as filled by such men as Richard Nixon. Lyndon Johnson and l-lubert Hum- phrey has grown in import.anct. More aod more responsibilities have been given vice-presidents -an<l m ore will be assigned as the burdens of thll!i president, any president. grow. More and more, the vice-presidency -Ali demonstrated by Nixon and Humphrey -has become an important route to presidential nominations. The Americall voter should be watching not only bow the two parties make nominations for the top office, but also the importaoce the ptrtles at· tach to the 1 e c o a d spot on the.tr tickets. Qualifications -and not such irrelevant factors as party service, geography and poUUcal reward - should be the principal irua:edit'nt in the selection. ~ ?o.t1nae1poU1 Tribune 4 issues between Rictiard M. Nixon and was filled with walking fe stival-goers, Hubert H. Humphrey. but the groups we saw seemed merely The issues, such as they are, warider weary, not belligerent, nor "animals." oU into political impressionism. One Despite the hot weather and con- sees in either candidate what he fusion of traffic, the police and the wish~ to see. The first ~jor decision majority ol those desiring lo enjoy a of a presidential candidate, picking his musical feslivcil kept their composure running mate, therefore tends to be a ahd derserve hearty commendation. decisive test of the difference between Large-scale events ·usually -attract the major candidates. some undesirable individuals, but such Humphrey is about to be tested to individuals do not necessarily come see how much different he is from the from any one age grotfp. • ___ ... oJd Humphrey and how much different he is from Nixon . The old Humphrey w.as a fast-talking reformer. He could have called to his side any ·one of a number of like-minded liberals without the flick Of an eye. THE NEW HUMPHREY is a more cautious fellow, tempered by ex- perience, if you like, and very aware that his problem is not so different from Nixon's. This is why Humphrey would look toward an ex-governor of North Carolina, Terry Sanford, as a compromise like Nixon's choice of Gov. Ted Agnew of Maryland, Ruling Teddy Kennedy out of the running by hls own choice, the Ken- nedyites in the party would be happier with Ambassador to France Sargent Shriver. But lib.at would be like letting the mantle fall on Mayor Lindsay in the Republican Party. Shriver would also bring with him all the vulnerabill· ty of the mistakes and bad publicity of the poverty program. Humphrey ·now &so has to consider Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota, a pacifistic former World War Il bomber pilot, who has projected himself as the "third force" presiden- tial candidate. bound to drain off some of Sen. Eugene McCarthy's com- passionate sttpport. McGOVERN AND Humphrey both originated in South D&kota, which See?r\5 to a great many people on either of Ule pOpUlous coasts to be a rattier remote birttiplace f o r presidents. But perhaps sectional balance on presidential tickets is a casualty of the pluraµstic society. Tbere is no bw or precedent which sa')'s that the vice-presidentJal nominee has to come from a big state. There are two Hugheses -Gov. Richard Hughes of New Jersey, and Gov. Harold ltughes of Iowa . ruchard is a Johnsonite. Harold Is attracted.by thil ·'third force ." Both are good men In their differenit ways. Nell.her would do harm to the Humphrey ticket. At Miami Beach Nixon bad to satisfy Nortn Carolina .and other wuthern statei held to the line by Sen. $tn)m Thurmond, Sen. John TOwer of Texas, o:fld Sen. Howard Baker of Ten· tlC!lsee. Jn Ctticago Humphrey, if he is prudent, will have to do something to salvage Texe.s for the DemocraUc ticket. Without Lyndoo Johmon, Jobn F. Kennedy would unqu<1tion1b1J have ton Tex••· other southern st.tel and th< electfoo In 1960. I WOULD LIKE to comment on sereral possible oversights by those running the festival: Insufficient drinking water facilities, soft drink aOO food st<:mds inside t h e fairgrounds : haphazard provisions for those planning to stay overnight; were tha'e enough available s an it a r y facilities? Could some of the roadside litter have been Bvoided by strategiC placement of containers?; we saw only one overflowing container on Newport Boulevard. Before the operators of t h e Fair·grouods permit any more large· scale performances of any kind, they might first study die opera.lion at the Riverside Receway, where adequate facilities for overnight crowds are pro- vided during the car races. SINCE I DOUBT whether any young people (including local people) will care to attend .any type of festival in this area again after reading some of the vitriolic comments printed in your pq>er, tll06e of my generation who don't know how to, or don't care to, build any kind of bridge Of Un· derstanding between generations need not worry but' can slump back into their middle4ged compiacency. SHffiLEY ISERMAN 'Comit! F able' . To the Edltor: Sydney Harris' com.le fable titled ''Psych Tests No Business Help" in the August 12 DAlLY PILOT came as a surptise. It should be stored with other enlightened treatises such as, "Color Blind Tests No Help to Traffic Bureaus," "Weattier Predictions Are Not Useful," and "Medical Ex- aminations No Help to Health." The arguments presented in those famous fables include, "We don't have traffic lights in our metropolis for we don't have any autos yet;" ''Lightning never strikes the same place twice," and "Bugs I can'! stt can't hurt me." EXAMPLES OF big businesses which use "Psych Tests" because they are useful range from (a) prlvatt in· dus.try giants such u IBM, United Dear Gloomy Gus: Wby do °'"' Joell drivort de1-f until it'• -le!elY dll1< hefon th•y rwltdl oo lbelr heldlltil>lll ... Or.R.N. Airlines, and New York Life Insurance Co., to (b) our biggest business (government) including the Depart· ment of Defense and Civil Service at the federaJ level for activities such as selection, classifi cation and placement of personnel. and (c) by almost all educational institutions from the Ivy League lo state universities. THE LOGIC EXPRESSED hy Mr. Harris is that 00-40 or 90-10 odds or anything less than 100 percent perfect prediction is useless, and his in· formati()n is selected only Crom the negative side in each argument. Any data on possible usefulness is com· pletely omitted. His extreme bias is degrading in the eyes of almost any person who has taken one beginning course in college psychology. Don't the editors of the DAILY PILOT review these articles before printing them? EV AN PICKREL, PhD All material published in the DAILY PILOT is of course reviewed by the editors before publication. Edi· torial page column.r are not reserved solely for TtpOrts, commentarv or cartoons with which we agree. This n~ospaper's own viewpoints are ex- pressed at the upper left corner of this page or elsewhere in .space clearly f119.rked "Editorial ." Editor Make• B er Sie r. To the Editor: . Subject: William Reed's "In the Wind" of Aug. 8: "The answer is largely that the city law pennits the How to Address Our Lawmakers U. I. llfllAtoll n-t H. ICudt" (It!, JlS I. C1tuellN II.,. ..,,.. llell!I Incl 0-... M"'""" {It), ., N. ltOllto Or~ k\'trl~ Hiiis. 011rlnt ~1'-1 •ul«ll: '9nlte ONlct e1a1 •• w1t111,,.ion, o.c. 2Dlln. U. S. ltll"lllllllTATIVll fOrl llM c-f'I °""' J ltkf'llrd T. H1nr11 llftl Di.f'rkt-01, 1 .. 1 W. Crescent Ave .. S11lfe 110. A11t ... ll!l1 J-8 , l,/'l't 1is1n Dtstrk:i-Rl. s" E. ""' '""'· twu .... Durlrttl Cont~DMI HUlont; H11W1t, 1Jt• 1-1~11 Hou9I ornce '""·' Ult, U. ••"""""' Holllt OfflCll 81dg •• W1tlllntl\lt\. O.C. 20.SlS. ITATI ll!MATDltl l'ltOM OltANOI COUN1'T >tM G. ktlmltl l:Mlfl Dllfrlc:t-lt), J1o IE'UI .th ltrttti Twtln. _,. J1m11 I. ~ IUtll Olaltlc:t-ltJ, 2.0 f:•Jt Cl\tp!NI\, """"* *11. Dllt!H ltlllllll... ....; ..... Cdrtol, s.a.. _,., c.rlf. f'MOI'. IT4T9 MllMl&.TMIM 111:0M Ofllt .. COUNTY NO RTllERN UBERALS will simply have to :adjust theJmelvet to this Idea or give up any pretenN of realism about the 1968 tltotlon. 'Itiis is not a.n el<ctioa likely to be woa by fieihllli defiance of the old order. ltllilllrt L ...... mst Dllll1d-ltl, 1M ~ or..:::1:.. e.9dl taa. c. .. 11m...1 0.... MIMI _. '"'*""'• htonr uttl" fMI al'llS C...ttn. W.W, lf'lf CM'""-"' ~ lltlllt lt,.,_.ltloft. .1tm Y. ..,... t• OhfTld-ltl, #ll Horii H9irtior ll\ld., 11.iffl ~ F111"'1M. C.1imll•1 FINID .... I& ..,...., ·~ .......... 1«111 w.HIN.. lllolltfl H. 9wtmo aw. Ofl~, 17nl INlcfl l!Yf.. H'WlllMM lhtcfl. c.wn!""" 1!.i.cttoni. n .._. l""*l"'wt•!I; Mlill'lld.., 1Jld Courttp Gei.1,__,to ..... ltlt. ,.......,. .... v-..._ ""1111'L ~ , Goilr ltflll Ol1ffkt-OI, Ult Wiit Ural""'-111tt1o 0, • Anllltlln. aiuw•aft•t '•• w '-IO. •--..,. Ttu• lll'lt VJot.Olt'"-i ~ °""'"' llli.tt" .... _,_, ... Ct""'i i.a.. mtMtr c.tftt. ,.,, Plans for building a multiple-dwell· ing unit on an odd-shaped lot next to motel were not approved. Mrs. Holt has beautiful plans for building on her property on M · Street. She has had no coopera from city hall or the planning co mission, but Nlther, has been harasse by them. ANOTIIER enterprising gentlem proposed to. build a neighborhoOd con venience market on property ne Graham and Warner; request denied. Then along c..'Omes Mr. Zinngrabe with his plans for a little convenience market, and in spite of protests .from the adjoining community, his request was approved. "Oh, yes, Mr. Zinngrabe. The laws of the city permit action as requested by tbe landowner. We are SO sorry your plans do not please the homeowners of that neighbotil:ood. Perhaps they just don't know what they really want. Or what is best for the neighborhood. Of course your re- quest is approved, Mr. Zinngrabe.'' lck -That whole City Council makes me sick to my stomach ! MRS. CLIFFORD MOEN The Huntington Beach City Coun· eil approved a plan for construction of a canvenience market at Newland Street and Indianapolis Avenue over the protests of nearby residents. See editorial above. B asic P r lnclplfl To tile Editor: Just a oote to express my ap· pceciation o! William Reed's com- ments and evaluation in his column reg&rding Ute decision of the City Council August 8 to grant the variance tor the 7·11 market. M.any of the . persons appearlng against this variance were personal friends and members of my church. Emotionally, it would have been much easier to vote to deny, rather than grant, in keeping with the princlpld'-1 believe in. I THAT PRINCIPLE was well stated fri the Reed column. The laws and ordinanees of our city, to be fair, must apply equally to 'CID)' individual U the I result is wroog, ao is the ordinance or law, and must be modified or changed. A.gain, my thanks tor an article that 1 points out the buics as well u the veneer. GEORGE C. McCRACKEN City Councilman -----~ Friday, August 16, 1968 The editorial .JXffl' of the DOil11 Pl!ot '""' to Inform and Iii"" ulak •ead<n bv pr<..,.tmg 11111 M1Dipapt1"'1 opiniom and com- """14Tt/ °" topi<s of 1- mid rionlflccm«, bv proold!1111 • tgru,. for u.. ftl>7'f•llon of our re..i.n• OJ)lnioM, and by pr11ntmo I/If di11<n• ""'°' pol•U of Informed obs.,,,.,, OM .,,.k ........ toplcJ •I th• dov. ,; Robert N. Weed, Puhupcet ~ i' ' • ~ ... i'" I t 1. ~ t' ' ' ,. r, I f . l ' ~. ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' . ' ~ ·~·-·~~~'""'=>~~"':"""!'~~i':'!'!"" ...... "'!8"'!~~~~ ·. ' " --· .. --.,_ ... ~,·--~-"·· .. ,,W' ",.,,,-4 ... , ••• " • " f •4 ' ••• , • ·~f ' j • ,-.....>JL -~ ----..··. , l ! ., 1 -I , 1• • ,• "--y 4 , ' •••• "" '~ ' "' ,. ·' ! ..,., F;1d1y, August 16, 1968 DAILY 'IJ.OT V .During This Clean·up of 1968 Models You . · Can Save Hundreds of Dollars Oil New Plymouths, Chryslers and Imperials. The luxury cer of the year with all the following luxury equipment: leather hu eket seats, 440 cu. in. engine, vinyl roof, electric windows, electric power door locks, 3 ring whitewalls, power seats, heed rests I left end right I, tinted tJless 1uto temp eir conditioning, disc hr1k11, power steering, remote control mirror deluxe wheel covers, light package, l speed wi pers, underco1tin9. s New 1968 VALIANT 1968 CHRYSLER NtWPORT NEW 1968 BARRACUD4 FASTBACK COUPE $3295 "i•lppH with 119 ''383'~. lftthte, Auto. Trans., Radio, Heater, Power 5....,1,.,, 155114 Tires. NEAR . NEW. No. C4401 -... '66 TOYOTA Automatic transmission, radio, heater, AIR CONDmONED. White wall tires. '65 MUSTANG 4 speed, radio, heater real sharp. Stk. No. 1525. '64 DODGE Sta. Wgn. Auto. trans, r~dio, heater, PS, white walls, very nice at only Stk. No. 4598A '62 CHRYSLER "300" 4 Door Hardtop. Aul<> matic transmission, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, white wall tire6. Stock No. 5849B $79 ~ '67 COUGAR V8, auto. trans., R&:H, P.S., P.B., W /W tires, very sharp maroon color. Stock. 4771A. '65 CHRYSLER New Yorker, 2 Dr H.T .. Auto. tcans, power brakes, windows, steering, radio heater, air con· ditioninR. Stk. 'Rl46 $2495 '67 COUGAR V8, automatic transmission, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, white walls, etc. Slock No. 4771A $2695 '66 Ambassador A beautiful car with automatic transmission, power sleeting, power brakes, radio, beater. Stk. ,;t4690A 51695 '64 DODGE STATION WAGON. C<>mpact, station wagon. Very nice little car. Stk. 4857. 51.095 '67 IMPERIAL Chrysler Crown Imperial. Full power including factory air. A beautiful near new car. Stk. #U!579 '66 CHRYSLER 4 Door Hard Top, automatic transmission, radio, heater, power steering, power brakes. white wall tires. Stk. 4816A '66 FORD 4 Dr. Sedan. Automatic trans- mission·, radio, heater, powe r steering, power brakes, white wall tires. St. No. 4815A ·51395 '65 MUSTANG VB, stick shift, radio, heater, while wall tires -real sharp. Stk No. !538A '64 vw Station wagon. Low miles, 4 speed, radio, heater, very nice . St. No. 4RIOA '65 CHRYSLER 300 4 Dr H.T. "300", auto. trans, radio, heater, power steering, brak.eel, fact. alr, elec. windows. Stk. # Ul519. 52095 '66 IMPERIAL 4 Door Hardtop. Full and com- plete power equipped. Includ- ing factory air. '66 vw Ridio, heater, 4 speed. miles. Stk. No. 4524A ~1395 \ j Low '65 PLYMOUTH 2 Dr. Sedan. Standud trans. mission, radio, heater, a real nice car. Stk. No. 1589A AIOVI CAfll 'LUI TAX a )..~ OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 8:30 A.M. TO 10 p .M. R Y E BIG BLUE T.AG SAU ••• NowlnProtiren CHRYSLER • PLYMOUTH • IMPERIAL 4201 WILLOW • LONG BEACH . aT THE LAKEWOOD TURNOFF FROM ORANGE COUNTY OF THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY 426-730i 543·6663 527·2341 ' 'I " l , l ' 1/B 1730 W. Coast Highway 642-6472 EVES. 673-3468 Open Houses THIS WEEKEND • r.., tills llotidy cflr.ctoty wlti yo1 tt.11 -""'"' os . yo1 t• Ito-ll1111tl11f. All tlle locotlo1t1 ll1tff Mlow _...,.., ............ ,by ........ 19.tM· wWo 111 t.My'1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. PatrNs .....,.,.. ...... t.w ................. ..... to lilt ..ck ...... .-... a. all Al•-eocll frW9J, HOUSES FOR SALE (3 Bedroom} **1606 W. Oteanfront, Newport Beach 675·1880 (Sat & Sun 1-5) .1601 Bonnie Doone, Irvine Te rr. 642-6472 (Open Sat 1-5) 19142 Stingray (South Shore) HB 962-42 19 (Sat & Sun) 2020 Aliso, Costa Mesa 646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1-5) (3 Br. & Family or Den) • 2814 Francis Lane (Mesa Del Mar) CM 545-1909 (12-6) 2006 Commodore Rd. (Baycrest) NB 646-5775 (Sat & Sun 1-5) _929 Via Lido Nord, Newport Beach 67~031 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 401 Cabrillo St (cor of Tustin) CM 646-2345 :(Sat & Sun 12-5) .281 Brentwood Pl, (Backllay) CM · 646-8811 (Sat & Sun 1·5) !831 Tradewinds Lane (Baycrest) NB 642-5200 (Sat & Sun 12-5) 441 Lenwood Dr. (Newport Hts) CM 646-1456 (Sun 1-5) *3099 Country Club Dr (Mesa Verde) CM 540.1720 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 2924 Carob, Newport Beach · 540-1720 (Sun 1-5) (4 Bedroom) 2352 Cornell Dr., (College Park) CM 546-6541 (Anytime) 140 South Bayfront, Balboo Island (714) 642·8235 (Sat & Sun) 1534 Antigua Way, Dover\shores 642-8235 \ (Open Sat) ·1000 Westwind Way, Do"f' Shores · 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 4545 Tr<!mont (Cameo Shores), CdM 642-1485 (Sun 1-5) 4627 Surrey, Cameo Highlands 673-8550 (Sat & Sun 1-51 **333 Morning Star Lane, Dover Shores 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 1723 Terrapin, Baycrest 675-2000 (Sun 1-51 (4 Br. & Family or Den) 8522 Segovia Cirtle, Huntington Beach 842-8519 (Sat & Sun 1-6) 1301 Bonnie Doone, Irvine Terrace 673-3770 (Sun 1-6) *904 Zurich Circle, Balboa Island 673·8110 (Sat & Sun 12 pm-4:30) 1842 Santiago Drive (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 (Daily 10-5:30) *15-00 Et<>n Place (Westcliff) NB 642-8200 (Sat & Sun 12-51 884 Meadow Lane (County Corridor) NB •. 846-3255 (Sat & Sun 1-51 (5 Bedroom) 2620 ~asswood (Eastblulf) NB · 642·9190 (Su n 1-51 121 Via Nice, (Lido Isle) NB -848-3255 (Sat & Sun 12-5 ) Condominium for Sale **15948 Mariner l>r (Hunt. Marina) HB 213: 592-5863 (Sat & Sun 11-7) Duplelles for Sale (2 l 3 Bodrooms) 208 • 89th St, Newport Boch '.-873-1350 *,... ** WtMftW l . . .......... w ......... College Realty 546-5880 1500 Adams at Harbor (Nev CU)ema Theater) ............. ...i""'iiiii"~E~'~''•·1'~""-'""'~""'~~~,J Steal This Baby! $27,950 Park and Beach at your feel~ l BR house plus extra lge fam rm -R-2. Room to add. Seller \\'ill carry loan! Balbo1 Bay Properties 673.7420 Eves: 673-9187 Coldwell, Banker OFFERS: BA YFRONT PIER & SUP 3. BR - 3 BA • Fam. Rm. on xtra lge fee s~mple lot w ,-oom for pool. Near jetty simple lot w/room for pool. Near jetty on pri. street. Arch design & C'\llt. bit. Joe Clarkson DOVER SHORES BA YFRONT Exquisite 4 bdrm with formal den su- perb interior decor, with toP-Of-tlle line appliances. Pier & dock·for lge. boat. Xlnt. financing ...... $139,500 Patrick Miller OCEAN & BAY VIEW Sparkling water and lights from ev- ery room. Short walk to finest swim- ming beach. 3 Bedrooms & den plus family room. You own the land ..................... !105.000 Mrs. Harvey CAMEO Sparkling Ocean View. Perfectly plan- ned, 2850 sq ft. 4 BR, 4 baths. Pr1va~e and secluded pool area ...... $74,500 Charlotte !.<mg ONCE IN A LIFETIME Bargain! outstanding 4 bdnn, 3 ba, fam rm home w/pool. Beautifully land· •caped. Price reduced $6,000 to $63, 500 for auick sale. Miss Leidy BAYCREST OPEN SUN. 1-5 1723 TERRAPIN Custom Hi beams, briJ!:ht, sunny 4 B'.' separate di n rm, cabana overlooks in- viting Pool. Atrium with indoor gar- den .... : .. . ............ , $61,500 Mrs. 11-farion \VATERFRONT HOMES w/SLIF ln private oommunity of single-family homes. Private slips for large boaL~ 3 hr., 2 ba ................ $52,9or 2 Br. & Den ................ $59,50( \VaJtre Haase IRVINE TERRACE #IV Spanish architecture. 3 brs., sunkr liv . rm .. beamed ceiling. entry court yard . Well priced . Owner ready tio sell. Mrs. Raulston ...... '' $53.95' CUL DE SAC STREET Popular Lusk Home. 4 bdrms, fam . rm., newly draped & landscaped. Wa- ter softener. Pool size lot Near schools , ........ , ........ $42,900 ~trs. Burns OFFICE OPEN SATURDAYS COLDWELL, IANKER & CO. 2200 E. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH Evenings Call SfS..28.13 E11t1!d. Cost1 Mesi Park flvt ll<droom, Ill N . -°"' ""'· ... ~V~t to library '!'; .!.Wf " hMJdlome book ~·.:ool= ~ room.Com-11!•" ·! bit.ins. Price 9WY P,S.?§q: Owners trans- l~ to ~ F rancisco. HUGE LOT 60' x 200\ near ocean. 3 bedrooms -3 baths. New IWCW')' Buccola -built home (fee simple). $34,550 • Sl,850 down to vets, $5,l50 dorwn F .H.A. 21541 Archer Cin:Je, near Brookhurst and Hamilton, Hunlington Beach. (1st signal North of Coast Highway.) SHERWOOD ESTATES br. th• S.• Te . 968-3036 Open 10:00 to 7:00 dally Ivan Weis' Newest Model --- THE~EAL ESTATERS LARGE 2 -LEVEL ~OPFER• With RUMPUS ROOM. OJ.stom carpets, b i g country style kitchen with all built-ins, dral>'._ es etc. 3 huge BRs, &har,> sharp home 2 miles to BEAO!. Oean cool ocean air. ABSO- LlJI'El.. Y NO DOWN VA or SMALL DOWN rnA. FUD price $29,500. Be first in line, call now! '* • 'B:Wd;"' '"""""N~EW~P""o""RT""-=1 loalty, Inc. BARGAIN • COATS 2407 E. Cout Highway, CdM BUY! & 3 + Den or 4 Bedroom! with WALLACE 5--ut.-lf S 3 baths. Walking distance to REAL TORS all schools and Westclif! -546-4141- Shopping area. Hardwood (Open Evenings) HOUSIS POii SALi ~ B/B OCEAN FRONT Balboa Peninsula Point New all electric home with many, many txtna. ' bed· rooms, Den, 3 bathl. Double garage plus extra parldn1. Luxury appointments throua:hout. '$9'1,500 OPEN DAILY lto5P.M. 1358 E11t Oce•n Front ALSO NEW DUPLEX WITH VIEW or Oceen and Bay. Lower unit has 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, plus Den. Upper haJI 2 bedrooms. 2 batha, powder room and Den. $19,500. Er· ceUent Tenni. , OPEN DAILY l to5P.M. 1351 h i! Balboa Blvd .. $4,000 Total Down on the ~at lamlly home in Eut Blutt 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, fam nn parkaize yard, plus immediate occupancy Reduced 1or quick Mle with easy terms A "Must See". Drive by 912 Bellla and then call me 644-1133 Bkr. Eves. 644-0505 B/B 60' On The Ilea~ •.. in secluded CHINA COVES From picture windows ~ out this lovely 3 bedroom, 3 bath home you have an un- obstructed View of all the boats entering or lee.vt.ng our lovely harbor, Fee Simple land (you own it). Price onb' S95,00J. Excellent terms. 675-:l(XX} Eves. 548-8868 Bay & Beac:h Realty, Inc. 2407 E. Coast Highway, CdM . $20,500 F11A WALK TO WESTC.1.JFF CENTER -Two B.R. Hdwd floon -alley entry for trail- ft' storage. New atudio duplex with 11,.ii bath each. Another duplex and • SPARKLING 2 em. ROOM HOUSE, 2 years new. 290 ft lot, close to shopping. Income warranta price of floors, fireplace, large dou-1-::::=======:: ble garage on big corner 101 .1•-----! :-=-i:=-=====~J Room for boat oc trailer. 0 JI. Needs Work, but our be1t Newport Hts. 3 B.R. · top ronditioa -boat or trailer storage oU alley. Asking $27,950. $61,0CKJ, TWO ON A LOT buy in thl1 fine Nl'Wport pen OUJe Beach area at only $29.500, 1831 T d • d L Corona del Mar r1 ew1n s ane BAYCRESf Coleswortby & Co. Walk to Beach & Shops, 2 BR home South of Hwy on choice 45 It lot at lot valua 642-7777 Attractive east side 2 and den or 3 bedroom. Double fll'e{llace, excellent and un- usual covered patio. PLUS 2 BEDROOM HOUSE. $280 ?ET month Income. $27 ,900. OPEN Sat. & Sun. 12-5 Do see this delightful Country l 'rench 3 BR - 2 bath home 20t3 WESI'CLIFF DRIVE on e. lg. lushly landscaped 646-7711 Open Eves. & w~OO corner lol Invit-~~: lOOI Harbor Blvd., C.M. Open Eves. INCOME DEPT. s~~s, Caling all Kids Unique & Exciting! w AI.KER I: LEE Wonde:rful famil.y home with A comiNetely lasinating cu,,. Mr. Levine 545-9t51 5 BR, 3 be.tha, 3 car garage, ~ ~tht coobemporary mo-2 DOUBLE ga.rogN with ell: in Eastbluff across from uecn W1 a mazvelous pan-tra · 3 & • Parle to play in. Come by on oramic BA y VlEWt Bou nic family room SUN ing family room! Ola.rilling wall papers, sliding glass 34ll East Coast Hwy. walls to pretty pool-sized Corona del ·Mar 615-3745 tree shaded patio & yard: l:::::=======~ ~n:: ~~"'""' hom" INCOME UNITS Ruth Pardoll, Realtor 16ffi \Vest:lifl Dr. &J~-J~.JO quet Canyon atone . walls; ~~~te: 2 hbaths, fireplace, 2620 Ba!s~ Mahogany pan llin thru · ·tns, uge covered Ceiling to Doore~, Beout! patio, b~ock fence, lovely A1'ld take ~~~~e looking SPLASH &-FROLIC - ed ceilings! Artisti~ m:: :~apm~. ~;;er leaving Mary Graham 642-9190 m this large 18 X 36 heated lcs! Secluded, WOOded patio• . e-$~ quic lllle. Ask-' FAREL WALKER and filtered POOL m choice On a large kit • NOT LE.Ai mg ' ' CAU. GLEN Realtol' location. This 3 BEDROOM ED LAND' $56,500 QUEEN 540·1151 ( 0 P en J !!!!!!!t!'!!!!!!!! ... .;;. ___ j 2 bath beauty wilh rnanteleci Ruth Pt~oll, R~altor eves) Heritage Reel Estate COOL POOL ... -BEDRM fireplace, lush carpets and !SQ; w .. tclifl 0.-. 642-S>l() 4.41 Acres $23.500 "O'' DOWN -"""""""' w;(h """· 2 baths, Built-In kitchen. ny, bright kitchen and din-e TRANSFERRED • ""1><!llw . .ir .... Covered Uig .,., •. NO DOWN VETS I '::""'"":'""',,,,;"'"';.;.I ... COSTA patio -BBQ. """'""' and """'· """$1,<00 °""" Top of ..__ Workl _...ving Aug\15t 16th, Mlllt MESA FHA. Minimum Terms. ""' aell 4 BR, 3 beth ,,1ear acbooJ. pool. Water 11>ftener. Submit I-lave you been waltiz!a'. for • & park, Low down. MS44.l• Prime M·l property, lm' X no down GJ. ~1720 fantastic Y1eoft. <i tht dty 630'. Comer location. CALL TARBELL 2955 H1rbor l.igbts? You may get din:; MR. BLACK Sf0.1151 (CIPft'l NR. H·~ -"·' ! '"" eves) Heritage Rea.I El'tate. fa u~E!Hi. 3 br, 2 ba, ,..._,c,""-1 n wu; Immaculate m. nn. ec. kilt' .. RPaut. COSTA ML...A OFFICE 4 bedroom. dining roooi SOC'K IT TO 'EM! yd, fl!l,fB>, Agt. 646-1456 2790 Harbor Blvd. borne. $42,750 SPECTACULAR VIEW--OCEAN and BAY Clannef Jee/ -Aparlmen/J On W•terfront Near Newport H1rbor Entr1nce 2525 Oce•n Blvd ., Coron• del Mir, Calif. AMPLE GUEST PARIUNG and BOAT SUPS Why Not Enjoy The "Condominium" Way of Life THI ADVANTAGES WILL SURPRISE YOU Yoo can purthue and get fee title -or lease II you prefu, ALL anta. have WATERFRONT VIEW, All have two bedrooms and two bathl. -WITH LARGE PATIO. YOU ARE INVITEO TO INSPECT OUR FURNISHID MODE L Buy $59,500 and Up -Lease $445 Moritltly & Up Phone 6 73-1781 for fm1tler lnfonnatlon ~ .. 91 VA~;~; 9 PM 1:\s;ii~G Ready for occupancy. 4 BR ••••REALTY Md Family Room. Room tor •• "anytime" Pbol and Boat. Wcstrlill. ~!arbor Blvd., C.M. is1.POOL. VIEW A CHARMER! 4 'BR, 3 Baths, Dining Room Immaculate -Early Ameri- and card Room plus 2 BR & can. 3 Bedrooms, Famil.v B th G Room, Dooble Fireplact • uest Apt. Located on Double &&rage, Work Shop'. two lots in Corona High-Boat Yard. c.au for •-lnt-lands. 'You own the land. .,...., $110,000. ~e~t tobuilsee h thia spacious JEAN SMITH, som 1 ""''· 171.soo. REALTOR JEAN SMITH, 400 E. 17th, CM Ranch Style Wllfl 16x35 Pool WondprluUy wcl.I built 3 BR 2 ba. homt with all Bi l!. Fam mi (with BBQ\ + h ug" game room + 2 patios & heated pool. You will Jov(' the feeling of country living fn the cit)'. $40,500 •}'OU owfi the lAnd. ' Roy J. Ward Co. C8aJ'erest ~l 1842 SanUa10 Or. fit&.1550 WIDOW HAS-HOUSE WANTS TRAILER HOME 8e8ut. 3 BR +; incl. patio, J Ult be., lie. Uv. nn. I din. nn. All mui;. cptd. SZ,500 W111t nice tni.Uer tn Rood ioc.11 15on. Leon Vibert, Rea ltor 548-t6&S 11n,ytfm(' White Ele"plMUltl? • Olm• • a • UM • REALTOR- 400 E. 17th St., C.M. 646-:CSS 4 BEDRM -$23,750 SUBMIT NO DOWN C .1. or k>w down to othut. Completely reftnished tn- side & out. 2 baths, Quality carpetlng. 2 patios for out- door living at itl beat. Built- Jn range Ir oven. Estate sized YllJ'd. SfO.rno TARBELL 2955 Horbor $40 ,000 Ocean View ' for only $34,750 3 BR, 2 ba, dbl gar w/iun. deck. Eas,y tlnancina. See lhis Pn"stige home todAy. Graham Realtv Nr. NB Post Ok. 6'6-fu.4 DELUX E l'E'm, PT. home. 3 BR. Fam rm., frplc. Exceplional vaJ. Ur. SJ6.000 BALROA REAi. fSJ'Al'E 700 E. Balbo11 Blvd., Balboa 673·4140 ------------------------------ T ~ ..... ~-, .. --·-. __ :__ l ""'" ..... ~ ..... .,, .... .. t' ~ 1. ., '""! ' • • • .. .. . -. . ~ ..... ~ • • . . . . .. .. . ' ~rld•y, Aut11il lb, 19&8 Ool!LY '!LOT Z:J H __ ou_5_E_s_F_o_R_5_A_L_E_ I HOUSES FOR SALE 'HOUSES f Oll SALi HOUSES P OR SALE HOUSES F OR SALi. 1G;e;•;;e;re;l::;::;:;;:::;;;';OOO;; Costa Med 1100 Newport Beach 1200 Coron• del Mir 1250 Huntlntton lkic:h l400 L h 1705 1 , 19un1 II•.! RINTALS K•"TAL Hou-f umlsllM Hov-Unfumlthed lt£NTAL5 AplL Pum l""" HOUSES FOR SALE B/B Udo Isle Values 5 bedroom. 5 bath home. mt.nY ons on 45 SL to St. lot. l,!iffl ldh .. i"ien, children'• itndhlst room, altnlctlve livine mom and dining room and den with wet b&r. .. $89,$00 also OnP. ltOl')' qoallty built. home on 9l x 87 comer lot, St. to St. to st., 3 bedrooms, 3 baths plua extra room JOt office er den. Large Jiving room, fonnal dinlna room ~LEGE REALTY Fabulout View LOT ovexlooklng I a k e 1, lrttl~ & Club House of Me11a Verde's Courite. ~· fl'ootage on fairway! Usted al $25,000. Urgentl Divorcee aJ\XloUs to movl' art>B. lla1 neat, small 3 BR 2 both, tamily room at only $23,500 in Back Bay area. RA!ed)' tor offer! Upper Back Bay Fo NEWLY DECORATED r Fussy reople A 1trlking e n t r y \YIU lc111id Supcrll 4 Bedroom home, Din· you lnlo a latae home ex-inC .room. fue.pla~. bee.utl· lcndlnK: hack into 3 levt'.ls lul pool, Vlrw. each offering room r 0 ; J ust mtucrd lo ss.1,000 mfu1y types of activlly. 5 OPEN HOUSE BR, 4 bath. extra roon11 + SAT & SUN 1.s cuslom tee lurta.. AU this 1et 4627 Surrey amongst ll'l"l!5 in a larJl'.e C1meo Hi9hl1nds HUGE LOT 60' x :JX)' nt!ar ocean, 4 bedrooms -2 baths. New hL'(UlY Bu<..'crlla • buUt borne (lee shnp!e). 136,?j{I • SJ,300 down to vets, $6,850 down F.11.A. 21~1 Archer Circle, near Brookhurst and llamilton. Huntl.naton Beach. )Cl_. $.~7,!iOO. Appl . On I y. Principals only. M8-2!M. Duplex (lat signal North ot Coa.st PAnr.lllng, built-In kitchen llli;hway.I TO Sl:.Tl'LE e1tate ; \Yestcllf!/.BflyC'rest a1·pa, 3 BR., lgr. fam. rm. Eating area ~ bar; ll'fl. din. rm. 4;e. cov. patio. Will COO· sider tndr en ema.Iler home. $59,aoo. Owner. 646-8018 -corner lot. 2 Bedroonis i, SHERWOOD ESTATES db.I , 2 bath home PLUS· 2 b y tht Sea ll<droom Apt. Tel. 961-3036 A GOOD PROPERTY~ Open 10:00 to 7:00 d ally ASSUME GI LOAN S.yshoNO 222S C"tl -UDO Cool• -4 100 PANORAMIC 0:tan View, 2 A 4 Sr. AvaU. ~pWune 50:e Sffmore Dr. WI SU-:1615 • -•BL ll"t'ATI .... -..--Ulf f ... _ •494.nn 4 BR, 2 BA, av.U Sl!'pt 10. 9 MOl leue. Priv. bftcb. ~-• 548-&232 4 BR, 3 BA., Private ccm- munil,y A beach. Sept.June $280. M:J-5211 Lido l1le 2351 -----NEWLY deoor. • BR. 3 Baths. Avail. Sept. 7th Lhru June. S350 Month. 6~3 SPAJtKLlNG OC:&AN VIEWS • From a araclcua 3 bedrm Q\laliU' home in Vlctoria 2355 lllg:hland1, lovely dinng rm, B1lbot l1l1nd larae paneled den, deluxe kitchen, 2'1i baths, view BAYFRONT 4 Br. 3 ha., deck. all on one level • dock. Winier l&e· Avail Sept $63,500. 9. Call I · 52>-1414 $110 • 2 BR. Me I.ft court. yard &: pr. 2 mot rent + cleaninf dtpotit In advance. 232 Ctcll Pl. CM N•wpori le•ch 3200 2 or 3 BR 2 B.illh home Unfum Oiflhavtn, NB. 300 yrly, i•rdener included 2 BR. near Oeean, erpm. U30 Ytarly. Jtf:u ~--128~ 46th St. MU31'9 AvaU. Sopt. '"; s.. "" """ .... Coron• d•I Mmr 4250 Chf:t Salisbury, ru1r. 6'1U900 1 Bdnn rum Apt. AvailiLble BAYSIDE VWaa:e. $17S; 2 immediately 'tilOctoberht. Bt. 2 Ba., •love, refria:. Ree,s rtnl. ~Iii ACacle Carpet1, drapes. Adults on-OR.ANGE COAST ly. No pell. Pool, alip; call PROPER'IY 67S-1054 After 4 PM 6734560 . 4 BR, 2 bli, pool, w/yard l ffiVNER'S tum. 2 BR .• apt. 3 BR. rum Douse 1\i ba. pool ma.lnttnance. $315. 369 with lg. 1undeck. A•aU. DESIRABLE, QUrET AREA Yearly. family cnly, Show Vista Baya Circle, N.B. Sept. let. lo June 15th, 1969. -With beautiful 1urf & coasl· wk ends. 675--1991 M2-3369 or 542-S614 No childru or petl. Call •nd ......., !am;Iy room, College RHlty 546-5880 all ope!\il'.I to beautifully 1500 Adams at Harbor IOZl Noltingham Rd. DOVER VILLAGE CONO'~t in \llestclill. B e a u t i f u 11 landscaped 2 BR , 2 b.9., dress. Rm, patio. 2 pools, club hOUSE', all elec bltins. Crpt11, drps, enclosed dbl gar. Best buy, bf-<1ch area. Adulli. $29,500. O w n e r , 64&-1948 ·~-~~­~--332 Margucrile, Cd.\t Owntt deaperate, wllJ accept ll views, a cha.nning heme 3 6Th-3518 with dining nn, den. 3 plus Huntington Bttch 2400 BR. 2 Bth Duplex Blt ins. ..:,.;c:=------ landscaped patio. Mi"11 con-!Near Cinema 1beatcrl sider ~hange lor i;mall ~'!'!'!'~"'!!'!""""'""""""'"' house on Iarae lot {LldoJ oc ThlMEDlATE POSSESSION· '7J..8Sa0 $2100 !or hl11 kwely 3 BR I: '";!!liiiiiJ den home. Oen beautlfull.,)o bedrma, 2 fireplaces, large '235 yrly. ,133 45th St., N.B. 1 BR, including util., da&t ill, 1er-.iice nn, 4 ptH.ges • 3 BR. washer/dryer, dw1hr, I ;:;=,..,-•"='6<>:;:,·::16117-.:•:._· ~~ priv, patio, crpts, Sll5. 5011' j panfiled with matc:hin&: bar. $49.SOO. ttnced yard. Near •IOrea. NICE 4 BR 2 bath, carpets &: Larlupur Ave. 13S-744"1 tixer-.opper. FOUR BEDROOMS. Im· FOR.E Fully carpeted. Bli&ht step saving kitchen with all the TURNER ASSOCIATES Sl75 leue. 968-3261 drapes. Nr. WeatdiU Shop-SMALL priv. b•ch· apt. $o. 682 No. Coe.at Blvd. i=•=""'=c='"='="=·=54S-090=="'=== I of hwy. Ref rig. &: hotplate. $99.~. n111.culate home with k>U: of A Year Around Home + Income modem appliances, adjoin· ing family room. Exch:sive at: Laguna. Beach tn4l 4S1·Un 1,L_1-'g'-u'-n-'o"-"B;.H;..<::h;...._.:2::.7.::.:;0S $$Yearly 613-&!04 Bay & Beach tree., shining b u i 1 t. i n 1 , R I I oversized family room on Temple H iiis Area EMERALD TERRACE Corona del Mar 32501 ='====~===1 4 BR, tam rm, 2 ba1hs, iirf'-3 BR, 2 BA, $225 mo -CA--ME_O_S_hor-,-,-3-B-R-.• -,-.. -.. ' io8.:1;..lbot='-----4,;;'4::;Q::oC);I •• ty1 nc. traffic-free street. Large 2005 \V. ,Balboa Blvd., NB covered patio &: huge lot. LISTER REAL TY lli612 Beach Bl., HB M2..(,6ll 673-9'100 Evell : 548-69Qi Existing loan a1 5~~%· $171 **** LISTING BEST BUY BAYCRESI' !ee: Quick Possesk:ln 705-705112 Narcissus Spacious 3250 sq. ft. cust., Col'ona drl Mar """' -""m !w • pool, Will -===*:;:'="~""="=*~= beautifully lndocpd. Wal,.,.• OCEANFRONT• also con!!ider leastng with :-prdeller paid. $350 t<.tonth, an optton to buy. $34.900. Summ•r Rentals 2910 Lease. 213: 347-2819; nt: Yd r~y Rent1I $60,000 HOUSE $40,000 AREA $34,500 SpUt level delight on a quiet cul-de.sac street. 2 patios m two levels, easy' to main· tain yartl with sprinklers front & rear, Special fumi· ture that fits only this house .,..-ill l'emain. Panelled famil}I room with (ireplace. So m a n y beautiful appoint· menls you must see~ Please caU: Open Sat & Sun 1.5 281 Brenlwood Pl., CM Newport ,, V ictoria 6"16°8811 (Ope n Evtnings) NOW'S THE TIME OF THE YEAR TO BUY THAT HEATED POOL 4 BEDROOMS +OEN + DINING ROOM + 2 lu.'<urious baths. master bedroom is huge with pri· vate·bath with door to stun· ning COVE'RED PATIO to romantic warm water SWIM· Mi'.NC POOL. HAPPY DAYS! Your famUy deserv- es it. Full Price 0 N l. Y $24 ,700. 768'1 EDlNGl::H &V.!4455 or 540.5140 oELuxE ouPLEx Open Dilly 3 . 6 208 • 391h St., NB Q ose to Beach, Channel, &nd Playground, $49,500 Gecrge Williamson, Rltr. 673-050 OPEN EVES. Prictd Right $20,950 e FHA VA • 3 BR + fam nn w/frplc • Cpt.s/dl"flS. stove & rclrii?:. Rltrs. 642·9730 Evrs. 548--0720 tota! or FllA t e r m s available. CAU.. 640--1151 (open eves)• Heritage Real Estate. By O w ner· Wes tdilf Close to everything, 3 Br. family room, 2 Ba, b)tis, lire-place, large eorner k1l. Completely rede(.'01"ated in· s1de & out. Com!' see !or yourself. Open ~·k ends. $28.T;iO. 646-23l5 1~1MED. occ. Al\r. 2 story. FHA appr $30,200. Con3ide1· much less. 3 BR. 2BA. 'tep- dn. liv. rm, 19x25' lam. rm, blt·in stert'O, interconi, soft waler plu. L.tr-cul-de-sac lol Nr. So. C.00.sl Pl, schls & fn!eways, 3105 Roosevelt way. Owncn. 546-3430 Mesa Del Ma r 110S COOL SEA BREEZES Peaceful garden surl'ounded by deeking, adjoined a hC"autifully carptted 3 br, 2 ha, home. Newly painted ext. wl:llking distance to all schools, i11cL DCC. Extra bonus for the family or pro- fessional man is the 2'l'x 20' recr. nn. or 11rh·, off. compl1. 11•/pool table. Org . cwner, 54;>-1909 profrss. decor. & lndscpd .. 5 OPEN HOUSE lg. BR. Xlnt cond. Rare buy SAT & SUN.J.S at $69,500. ~1,~~~ Loan NEWPORT BEACH lranferrflhle, Nol on lease REALTY land. 646-2828 Eves. 675-1642 2100 \\llNDW ARD LANE 675--0098 ~ No pets or childrm LAGUNA-Oceanfront, apec-· · · $100 & $125 mo. taculal" Villa, prlv. beach, OCEAN V~DeJuxe 2 BR, 925 E. Balboa Blvd. , huge rooms, park-Hke 1ro-2 ha, home, fplc, dining rm. unds. 2 Weeks Se:pl. $900., 4 blt·ini, patio, crpts, drp.s, YEARLY 1 BR tum., IJtll'I Weeks $1400. Also Victoria near bch. $300 mo. SEMPLE pd. $125 I $200. 921· !:. Beacb House, 3 BR, 3 BA, Real El!tate 67~2101 Balboa Btvd. fllr B. SL Sept. $1000 .Owner, 494--4653, LGE 2 Br .. 2 ba Unfurn $200 Owner tried cf driving 200 mile11 a day Ir: must lf:lJ al- most new 3 BR home. Beamed celllng1 ill living room, fireplaCI!, alal• •ntry. Large family kitchen with avocado built-ln1, dre6llinf room in master bedroom fiQ IL; l'Umpw; rm 300 iq. LovC'ly 2 BR, 2 bath homes, Carpeted & draped. $21 ,950. · "Out of this World" family hon1e • over 4000 gq ft in this lovely 4 BR, fam rm , J&e recreation rm , 3\.i baths, dbl Rftr. unobstructed View home. 4 dedts, 1ep/ dining nn &: laundry rm, custcm bit with the woman in mind . $78.900. 494-4957 or 494-5589 mo; Front l BR, 1 be. Un-Huntington 8e1ch 4400 1 & 2 Br. Furn Apts. % furn S175 mo. R. Forney e NEW • LUXURIOUS e ft: 3 CKr gar, all bit.ins. rach with big BAY VIE\\' LISTER REALTY incl. vac11un1. $39,000. Open at less than $44 ,000 per 16612 Beach Bl., HB 842.fi63J House Wt ily l -5: 443 hon1e, but they must aell lo- 1'.ull('J'ton 5'18-3188 gethcr. BA YCRESI' -Owner. 3 Br. 2 OeLency Reirl E1tate Ba., family rm.: beau!Hu\ly 2828 E. Coast llwy., CdM carp. & drared.1806 ,673-3770 l..ef'ward Lilnc. $<16,500. Open•I ""'"~"'""""'""'""'""'"'"' weekends I-5. 5 4 8 -0 8 7 5 LEASE OPTION 548-0970 $'33,500 FULL PRICE CUSTOM VIEW HOME 521 l.ARKSPUR NE\VPORT BA y CONDO Cute 2 bedroom NEW llABY? Not quite, bul new paint. new car,>eting, new drapes' mak· H this 4 BR SDAHAVEN home a f'ffi find at $22,500. Near maier ahopping & ""'°"''· Pacific Shores Realty 5J6...8894 Eves. 536-3240 Ovt rlooking . Emerald Bay blk to ocean. 1209 W. Bkr. ~ RESORT LlVINQ. &Ibo• Bl"". Balboa. 11S 4 NATIVE GARD!NS wk-SOO wk. 494-0189 Huntington leech 3400 6 POOLS-SAUN/\SJACUZZJ NPT Bch, I Br, •IP" 4, 1 blk 4 BR. 2 &., corp., drpo. HUNTINGT' ON oct"an, S85 wk. Avail Aur 24 Patio. Leaae S235 Month. ..... 15lh. 642-1272 A .. il. Sopt b t. 644-227'1 GARDENS NEWPORT-&lboa b" c b ~~~---1 4 BR. 2 Ba, b\t.ins, cpt!!, house. 3 BR % blk to bay. cir _.,. TENNIS.ENTERTAINMENT ps, coverocu patio. nss. BOLSA rHIC & in one of the lop residential arNi; in ·IAguna. Elegant no.me with tunk•n liviJ1¥ nn, raiMd hee.rth fireplaCI!, din/ rm, lam rm, 4 Bdrms, 2~ OOthl, on a quiet cul de '8C. 1 ,.:~..:::c..:.:;:.::.:.::::,-,,,=-~ VIEW~ VIEW! VJE\Vt $89 900 2 BR apt. &le~ i $125 wttk- $125 wk. 61l-8'793 Referenee&. 842-1063 """ A HllL ADULTS 847-1414 ~L;:'ll,_•:c•.;;•;...:;lle;;.•;;c<;;.h:....._3:.:7..:0;:S 1·BR. turn. apt. suit fer eple. atEDALLION 3 BR 2 BA corner location Dbl gar, pools, golf, etc call for appt. to see. ONLY S36.500. 673-4356 ORANGE COAST McCann Prope.1i•s' Iy. Winter S140 mo. 312, 33rd 1 ~~11"!~!1!'~~~!!1'!~ 11257 So. Coa!I Hwy 49'1-5997 St. N.B. 6T?'r2002 MONARCH BAY ARE A $2000 DOWN " OCEAN VIEW 1 BR. f\IJ'n . Apt. alp&. 4 Lm'ELY OCEAN VIEW~ 3 Water I: raa fum. $80. Ill Palm~., H.B. ........,,. PROPERTY BAYCREST---61>-&;0 Lovely, irnn1ac. hlnu!; 3 BR. MUST SELL w·n· b Forrnal din. rm., lge. panC'l· I 1ams urg 4 ed f.!lm. rm. Assume 51,~% BR, den, fam !°m, pool + loall. Owner &16-5?75 rental 3 BR. $200. Nr achls & heh. $68,000. By owner. NEWPORT Beach Choice 673-2877 H-3 lot & 3 Br. house. 16061.,,======== \V. Oceanfront. Open house Birlboe Peninsul1 1300 Sat l.r. Sun 1-5. $56 .000. 1-;;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~' 6T;,-1880 I' Seller pays closing coi.1s. 3 BY OW NER * Temple Hills 1 Block to beach. Weekly BR & den, 2 BA, cpts, Drps, oversized BRs, extra closets, 1455 Terrace Wey, 3 BR, 2 Bo $85. Newport Sch M2--0316 1rpl, pool. $300 mo. Also BI~ bay vh; 1 Br. upper. 1 • I 1. 'avail. 2 BR. 1% ba. $225 mo. Winter '160 Mo. ind, vttl. 74 bi!.., b t-in range & oven, elec kit wlblt·m· r•n•• & Kll:N l'AL~ 10th & adults 49&-1243 betw 10.5 pm &: Y area. 673-20U , dishwasher, w/w cpts/drps, dishwasher, Jge liv rm HouSM Unfurnished I 1-d '-1 I I -., MY '-·•ly I•~• 5 BR. 3 ba STIJDIO anartmentl .-.. ~•. g. cu e-511.c w , compete Y uplace, beamed ceilings. .....,.. ~. r'°"' •'" -fncd, cov. p<1tio, trplc, Move Lre corner lot w/1.55' front. Genetti 3000 hom• to fffPOOMible tam Elderly people only. "ab right In. Landscaped & shrnb8, Pric· only $:m mo. Owner/Alt. Oiicago St .. 536-96U ~t' n1 right! P.O. Box 914 ta. AVAIL, FOR LEASE 540-3862 ~ cuna Beach 4944726 Apt 3 BR. 2 t>., crpts, drp1, L1gun1 Beach 4~ fplc •. CdM ~ •••.... $250 mo. l'.C_on_do_m-'ln_lu;.m ____ 3_9S_0.1 Nl."W Furnished 2 BR 2~ ~1llage Real Estate M_•_••:.-V_e_r_d_• ____ 1 1_1~, Newport H•ights 1210 No Streets To Cross :'1'6-8103 is a ~~~~1f .1!,~S!ith 3 BHachelor HBouR "2• ~MC.' ~ TIIE Bluff'.1.. Avail Sept 1. 3 all elec but 1 t • Ii). ·3 ousc, 3 • ""'• M ~·.. 2 ., ... _ ......., Panoramic view o•;!'2 Br'5, wood paneled walls & CORBIN-MARTIN Br. ' Li-De"W . .....,., mo. Aliso Beach. Mature SAVE 7%-$.2.6,750 ATI'RAC. Just made for a family with old mission brick ftoors & a RN.ltors 615-1662 ·Yr. Lae .644-0675 aft 5:30 1 turn of •'-~ on y, no clilldren. M · Adajacenl 10 Mesa Verde 3 Br. 1 ba. MAKE OFFER children. This large older we century bath. SAN Clemente: 2-2 Br. f\zn. 499-3T:i5 -:;: Country Cub. 3 Bedroom. 400 Pirate Rd. 646-3079 Oceanfront house is conven· 9332 NANTUCKET DR. Orchard trees A: guelt 1 c;;;ost;;;;';;-;;;;;;;::;::;::;3;;1;00; er uofum. rolf l.'OUl'&e, pool, 21h Baths, 14 X 26 living * PLEASANT Ctif1 Haven 3 ient to schools, grocery Huntington Beach, finest lee. houee. $32,950. Miasbl Rlty manJ gd leature1. 496-2482 SMALL 1 rm. apt. Oean. P.l· CONDOMINIUM OPEtl SAT /SUN b 2-St 985 S. Cst Hwv. 4..., ,.._, ' uUl pd. App. Jumbo J!Jili, room, all built·in kitchen. Br, 2 ba + 2 Br Ocean Vu stores, li rary & recreation. ory 3 BR. family dining. -3 '""""'~' B/B ..c.cNTALS '"" N 5 """' 2 """" & DAVIDSON -. CQUl Hwy. U!. •• Patio, double garage, pool. c'=:"':=o=m=•:;:A:=•=l°'. ::014='·=500=54="-="=:';'I c•" 10"""'50'·,-· 01• -"-~cy· Really MAGNIFICENT A.VAIL 1MMEl>. Mesa Verde c· ..:.A:<ph.:.:.::..:.f;:um;;;;l::at:.:...i;.;:. __ Lived in by adults. Shown ... '"'"" .....,,... 4 BR I I" · -:<!:;N f AL~ :.!.~ by appointmc111 Sat & Sun. N•wport Shores 1220 play yard in front. adjoin· RI OCEAN VIEW LOT ' i • iVU1a; rm, Gener1I 4000 Apta. Untvrnlllwr.:: -~---ing the whole P i.cilic Ocean t.•" tr "'·.,.n 2750 Harbor 5B, CM: $&,950 -small, but level Stem ipadous tam I din.inf rm,· . :U! Rltr. 546-9Cfi2 646-3928 3 Bedroom 2 Bith _ $.58,5()(}. ,.............., Eves. MS-5142 &r.vn, baJ S55 mo. Lagun• bilt·in kitchen, beautifully HOLIDAY PLAZA Gen•r•I JtW *LACHENMYER 2 st ry 8 Wh' I CUSTOM HOME Bch. "141 4"7-1210 1""1><;"""' yard. Y...-Iy DELUXE "'8cioo• l·BR. * DRIVE By * -Good Cond. ~cw ,.,·-~ urr lie, Rea tor , .... ; S32S/mo. Incl w•"" rum. apt. 1136 + util. 2-BR. RENT "'" Ve..., ,~~"' 3 BR 2 both ··• ~ •--~500 DOWN '3 ,... .. ..., F.ULL 0 CE AN VIEW """-' ga.-..ener 91!rv .... ,,. + den $160 + utll I "ooml "umltu " 2901N Bi d with~. I r ·1 ' 61'-' ft r OPEN HOUSE 3252 Minne· Imnietliate Occupancy ewpcrt v . uuge aep&ra e am1 Y Come ,)'J<><>.J Eves. 643-«166 Htd. pool, Ampl• parkinc $25 Mo th ' sota. EXb'a large 3 BR, 2 .,., "'°.,"' CAI\"""! Newport Beach room. wet belt &: 2 fireplac· •nd see! 3 Br 2 Ba. !rplc No childmi. No -'I • n .!;; bath, fan1ily room, 2 fire-'" .-...., -r...,.,..,a 675-4630 Ev•s: 642-2253 es. Built on 2 tru-1haded $3.1,500. Ovmer. 49'-4746 EASTSIDE 3 BR ~ balh, 1965 Pomona, c .M. ';2-5358 rou. OPTION TO B~ p\a<.'t's. Fine location. $1495 3 BEDR00Mt2 baths, 2 story lots. A lot of house for cn)y ;;;ciuiio'-';=-~~:;;~~: 13 x 27' r • m 11 y room, CHATEAU La POINTE No depoalt o.a... :a down • Vacant • M-·• t~ '·~ blk to club houSt>, yearly $28,500. ABOVE &: BEYOND (the fireplace, fully ca-ted l Hp R.C d•". CALL LARR"v" o~r leasc only. S225 pr. month. Lido Isl• 1351 P•ul Jonet it.atty •_mogl 4 Br., 3 811., tam, rm draped. built-In•. iike new Beautiful l Br. fum, apt., F It• • R • I 1.rii ~ "2-2°" 54" ~1 -Lease S215 mo.-, ..,u $36,900 · Id Htd pool, ,..,___. .. off 11. um ure "';;• • !! DAVE «0 1151 1,..n eve•) "" °""'or ..,.... .. ..,,, 847-1266 Eves. 847~978 ms e &. cut. Larre yard. ....,...,.,.. 517 w lJlth C.M ......,. -5% Down. Owner 494-8364 S2'' -~'ng. Adult1, No pet>. ,_ w' • • Heritage R<al E~ato OPEN HOUSE 3 ~1...-'"""lh. CALL ~-~ 1""" -n OWNER Bayshore s 1225 SAT. SUN SPECTACULAR View, 2 sty DAVE MYHRE S«J.1151 00 POMONA AVE .• CM. i===·==·====:it: .. 3 BR 2 BA, lam, frpl, deck. (open eves) Herltap Real LIDO BAY VIEW Colt Mau 1f9P G~:! ~L.::t~te BR~ :i~ ~~~i~~ .!ea~~~?. :.:~s 904 N~~i~h 4Circle Minutes To Beach '!·~~:;0~1~: • w~e Back S.y. Modeni 4 s=~~ua~:! A~.hi-:!; HA: RIOR j ,borne. Exceptional condition to Bay Club Marini . Take over !'i%. % loan. 2 story, OCEANV BR ~/mo, 1~ -RJ-. • · ·d ' 4 Bdrm & family rm, 3 beth 3 BR 2\1 •· 1-kit .__ JEW • $54,500 · ccrner condo.; balcony' -1-r-.411:!•'11 ..- 111Sl e & out. $24.750 • as-$55,000 Bro ker-Owner Large Pool • Sll5,00J • ""'• e '""''· C•~·. Neff R«lty • 4!M-93J8 masta-Br. wile 2% batlul J sume high VA loan or i;ull-646-6904 LOUIS W . BRIGGS lit rm. nn. with frplc. panelled fam . rm. trplc.IC;;;oo•:.:t;;•.:M::.:.:";;•:_ ___ 4:_:1;::00;:: • mit on VA or FHA. CALI.. =·==="='-='====I BRASHEAR REALTY Apartments .patio: •Xc~tional r•c . GREE 11 '' RAY C\ULT e.•0.11-1 1 REALTOR~ 847-IG.11 t:vc. 5<11 -2442 $25 Wk u It! -· 1 .,.. J cpcn Irvine 1238 673•81 10 __ F_o_r _S_•_le ____ 1980 facilities pool services: • p evcst Heritage Real Estalc --'--------OPEN HOUSE priv. adtilt/tttn~. S26Ct Mo. e Studio I. Ba.ch aptl. BACHELOR • ·mmnDL BEST GI buy in town with no NR Ci\'TRY Oub 4 Br. & Elegant Private Twnh~e 3 Br.1'!!!Jl!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!l!ll!!!!!~1MEREDITll GARDENS 10061 EUROPEAN RIVIERA? A59v~ai311.66now. 64z..6906 or (2131 e Incl Utlll I. Alone .n, frolll $100 ..: den, for d·rm, \(' kit. P-1 2 ba. Comm. pool , rec.I ' D--Why' In "·"h, -th .r-•Maid •--'-~TY ov-• Jl down. 3 BR lam rm, 1~ ba. 'n' D I cl 127 rwv. ~st Valu• on Lido Jon-Day, Presti•c 11rea. 4 · ......,..., ..... guna er~ ~,:;..,;~==~-~~ --.--. ~ vdL ~ 57. lot By ow"• S<0.950. ecor. extras n · ,VVll. ,., m~-bl 1· · · Own °AVAIL IMMED M V rd • New "-•o 6 ft---dble frplc, bit-ins. Beautiful 54«,~ '" Owner 8.13-0"""' One-story, 4 BR, 3 ba, M'p BR 3 ha, fam. rm. liv. rm. ..u .. -•0 e iving m · '~a e e ...... OU' l · t •I BDIUl. ": e KENNEDY ,,....,.....,., ,,.,.. Y-Own luxurk>u11 3 BR 2 BA 4 BR lge llv 2376 Newport Blvd. ~9'J!i _,...., ·--., ~- landscap\"4-beautiful pe.tio, --'=------dini ng rm, brkfst area din rm, rumpus rm . 2500 ' g rm, z vn.i•· 6 u n. u .n.•'.,....., •-t·r .. • Sl"' · + Colle ge P •rk So th uo· s VS 1 apt. Elegant bldg on beach spacious fam/ Ing rm, NICE 1 Br. llflKI man. •"".50 HaatM -•·, ~ -"' ...-au 1 w. area. "· pr111. ·-'-"'-==---'1~1~1 5 Eastbluff 1242 u pa . tree L SCJ , t., caf1)Cled. / ..., 6 ..-...... u.111 a.m int. Kingaartl Realty 50' lot. Leads of charm R. ~· Slates Realty w unsurpassed view & bllt·in kitchen, b.autlfully Incl util. 310 Meadowlatk Ln Cnttr, Adj. to lbopphw . Ml 2-22Z2 COMPARE area prices~ 2352 OPEN HOUSE R. c. c.nEtER, Realty IW?·l5l'.l Evr~. 962_7369 pool. Unfurn $65,000, furn landscaped yard. Yearly loft 2300 blk Snta Ana Ave) No petl allow.. ~ Cornell Dr .. 4 BR, 2 BA 3416 Vla Lido 673_9300 --avail. For 8'(lpt, 499-3451 lea!!!! $325/mo. incl water Opn alt l Sun. 213 EX-6-00!li 2'JllO Pet.enon Wa,, at Jli. FOR Sale or trade; exclusive S24,450 by Owner 51.4 FlfA, SUN. 1.5 Ope n Sit & S 1 S $49.50 DOWN r<L i,.•ALS and gardener service. bor• • .,. __ ,, .......... ,..---1. Riviera section o( Pacific . un 673 3663 SM-CLEAN 1 Br. w/w crpts-, -.... ~ • ._. Palisades; 4 BR., 3 Ba .. ~rnd~:~· shopping, prof. 1301 Bonnie Doone 009 Via. Lido No~ • To qualified vel!!. 3 home!! HouHS Fu rnished . Eve•. 548~ drps. Elec bltM. Quiet area. IMS-OS'l'I 1! w/maid's qlrs. Htd., till. ~·=-~,-c,--~· -~-'-=''---1 101 FL 1f'rontage. huge petic to choosehfro~, ~II fully car-Rtnt•is to Share ,005 NElBAVLrY d1ecorated 3 BR, 2 Nr. frwy1 &: shop&. Adults - pool. Will trade up or down. 3 BR. 1% ba, large fam rm. Large Large Hom(' Richardso n-Purce ll pried Wit bu11!-1ns, close to £ 1repace, cpts. drape1, no pet.. 549-0412 Excellent. paric _like a. Price, $.1!(000. 0 w n er Screened-in patio. en a low low \calle'-hold 2443 E. Coast Hwy CdM schools. Call for inlo;rnation YOUNG Man straight, ro covered patio, lovely large I ~1 -'-'B~E~D~IUJO~.:M=-U-p_p_e_r-,· I r oundinp tor adult. nqalr- 2J3:4.i9-3l76 S24.500 * 545-4713 4 BR & lam, 3 baths, $46.500 Gfa-4031 ' LISTER REAL TY share my new 3 br 2 ba yard on quiet <:ul-de-uc. redecorated, blt-in1. Adults, inc PMC• I. quiel *Count ry Club Ham•* De l ancy Reil E1t1te I•---------l66li R.:-ach Bl., llB 8•12-663.1 bse , nr ocean, Huntington ~e;: S245· Avail Oct. 1· no peta, n 25. CaU aft. 5:30 Diacrlmillattve Tmants 2860 sq. ft. Unusual. One of a ~port Beach 1200 2828 E. Coast Hwy., Cd~1 BAYFRONT DUPLEX ABSENT EE OWNER Beach. 842-7624 betw 5 & 9 724 PM st2-4044 l , 2 Ir $ BDRM. APT,!. .. kind ... way cl life. $62.900. LUXURY 3 br. 2 bath condo, 673-3770 Enclosed patio. 2 • 3 BR. Sell litri;:e discount for cash pm EX-MODEL llome 3 BR, 2 COLLEGE or working man to POOL. NO anLDRDf 546-4407 lrpl, pool, golf, fee land.;1 ~~~~~~!!~~~1 Fir'l'.!'places, ros.ooo. lo $10,800 1st TO. Price LilALE occ College Student ,ba, ~rpetlnl, drape1, blt·ina, ahare apt. Swtm pool, pvt. MARTINIAUE' Ch\.11er transferred. $.12,500 Jriine Terrace 1245 W alker R .. lty SlS,950-p.ayment1 PITI $12"1/ wishes to share apt, with enccv, ga ent'r Wlclud«I gar. S7S. No drink. 642·1~ •,,- By Owner. 642-3.ln 3331) Via Lido 675-5200 mo. 3 BR 2 hflJtw, SJ.400 in ume. M&-4911 aft 5 PM m.; mo. Bkr !14~2424 Eve1 an. 6. GARDEN AfiTS. DUPLEX 0ce . BY oo.mer. 3·BR, 3 BA, lg. , ca.n>e'I! & dnapes. Lilrgt: lot. WOMAN 546-9480 $140 trrn.. paid. Lovely 18th 1.-Santa Ana, C.M. RANCtl STYLE per 00 :yrly :1~1.ewi..c~:;. Family rm,. S45,fm. Gd ~MlN'G 2 BR. den, 2 ~.. $90 me.lo ~~e ~~5'~~ TO COUPLE, 3 BR l'ni t>., 2 BR., blk. 'lb K·Mart. Ca.ti Mrs. Hendencm '*55a Heavy shAkl! roof, Eastside 3 on 10 me. Cross' 0 v er term&. 673-4'104 or 673-Qf19 pattoe:, $'1.500. Owner 1oing Houst Of The Month Warner. S4S-230'l gar, lg fenc'd yd . crpts, 571 Joann. 548-0787 or 536-7802 tm Santa AnJ. Apt 113. CM. 1 ,c~os::.:;t•:..:.M~e:.:'='-~--'1100 BR 2 balh. fln.,><IAC1!. buill· 56100/yr. 213: l)S-4167 ==,;;~====°=I to Europe.~ Lovely 5 BR only $27.650. drps. Wat~ pd, ChUdren It DEWXE 1 bd tna, qtliet nei gh borhood. ;';~-i'-7."",=~:::....-, I Cor0n't del Mar 12 50 Hu I' t , •·-ch 1 .. _ Owner ts ll'llnsftn'C!d 1 hri i GIRL To lharr dtluxe 2 Br. pet1 OK. Sl75 roo (lJit 1.t: Last rm. SUO. Ideal "THE GAILIS,_. nesr RChool. 13 x 27 ' ramily LARGE Mobile Home, 2 n 1ng on _ '""" 10 ~II Townhowe apt., pool. $62.50 ="'m'co-"d'°•Pcc·,::54:c>-c_236:=1:.____ for bachelor. 1993 Church St. Movlna Sept. lat: 2 s~'w; room, carpel.ti, drapes, ex· Baths, patio, c I u b house HARBOR View Hilla, Lusk * TOWNHOUSE HAF.FDAL REAL TY mo. 642--0759. CM EX-MODEL Home 3 8R., 2 l-C-;;.i;M:';. 0o54~S-;'96337=~-..-~-garage S135. Adults Cftb'. tra storai;e. F'uJI price pool, private beach. 675-1672 hit., trans., avail. lmmed. 1-* "Homes 1 M 1 ·h 1 ,. ba, carpel•. drapes, blt·in!!. 2 ROOM Apt. riicely lurn. Carp., dt'Pf, blbl .. pado. $26,0CiO . !IUbmit t~rtns. CALL BLUrr·s Spacious ~ er. 3 Yr. old 4 Br. 3 Ba., formal 4B1Br. ~1Ai bt. l.t: Pullman. 84'70 warn:r a c ~ Newport BNch 2200 fenced, gardener incl. S23S 1US Month. 132 w. WllMln 2437-G Oran.re Ave. DAVE f.fYHRE 540-ltal Ba. Spilt level $3'1,950. din. rm ., fam. r1n. Comp. ( ~~4 mOOOct ranae. FHA bal DL.X W t rtr 9 MOS. lease Sept 15-June 15 Bkr 545-2424 Eve! 546-9480 Coata Mesa. ~9577 Ca.II &twepn 2 I: I ( I ti it~" Jtet;I By owner * 644-074{} cptd. 'drpct &: lndscpd. Pkl11 ° ' ·, a e ont Condo.: 2 Na1111au Palmot 2 BR. $130 • 6J6.ruO • open eves er -..e 20X40t l'ftd. pool: eltt . .11::1ir. $2.000 cas~$10f. mo. BR.r 2 Ba.: w ; boa! alip. Compl tum. B<!au1 2 Br. 2 •MESA DEL MAR• E8tate. CHOICE Park Lrdo coodn 2 door;-buyer c11on · aAAume pymtsl~ prin tntemrt •. irul. 213: ~ eve-/wk_Dde. .BA, fireplace, bltin kit, bugt ~ BR., fam. rm.: yearly l•e. To $150. ,(alao oofurn.J 1 BR Unf. apt. -~ Br. 2 a.. pool. frpl. S3500 6'.4 \ti 10.,,, Hy 0 ~n, r ' tu. 1'1G-1316 Anah<fm prl• polio, clubhou,., pri• 12511 Mo., woter l .,n1ener 11l E. 22nd SJ. 642-.1645 SSO Dn. S27,500. 675-29.lJ 644-2259 2 YR old Shorette .. '"'"'Ion•'•! Founta in Ve lfey 1410 beach, healed pcol. Adults. paid. 54&-m29 SMAU. Bach. cottage ~lier 54&-.ml) 3 I: 4 Bdrn1s. 2 baths, llll hit· ===""""=='="""'== ••...., • No pets. $200 mo. See Sun· 4 BR 2 B bl 1 Working man over 40; SPAC. t BR. T~, inl, cal1)0ta. lencrd. E~tab-Newport "1 •1ch 1200 YouM Executive cloH tc l>Uch in new Atta· NJ~.3 BR By Owqer, I'll day 1hni Tueaday. 143 f 1 ., 1 m1'-,· earp., t-~; $65 Util. pain. 220 Palmer NewPort Upper Bay. Pl:lml. llshrd aI'ff, Bkr. ••-,i 5 9R, 2 BA. up.-1 ·BR tit' den BA blUn t ffi'O rp " a y rm.. p11t ... ; 1.\12 H!Gllt.AND Dr. 11~·,. llOME • ONLY $22,!riO &. Jam, din, Jiv rm down. 2 • 8, sot ' Cf'J>lt, ,Bayside Villaae 300 E. Coe.It Avail. 9/J, $22& Mo. leaae. '8), INQ. utll, Mnall apt Rtt. fa.ell. Chlkbe, ,... ;:,1.;.1~21 1-:VeR. fl46.!MllO '" 3 BR 1 d,,,. -c ---u~ l•m !'•'way •• ,. OK ·~ ''''' ••• ---~--------.-Mcdt'l"TI Pus. Patios • ·" •X'-·. ~-, · "I" • ,._,..._ ._..., · ~ · '"°"'°e Uf*.Air1. Single ad u 1 t . · .......,, · ll"V""V••11 ~ --._-Hinds 4 Br 2 ba, tam rm, all S b _1.. au .,..., vwur: rm .. scre~t'd patic, 11 fncd I iiw"A;;To;;-'ni-;;n~;;;:;-,-,wm:;:;'i:1o:: II ;:;:"'~~-~--· I w·_._,.,._ ·~ .. "'~°" ::l'.L FOR Sale by ~11er, 1ave::1 bltns, lrplc. S.32,500 10~ cln hnWn Y •l>fll. ... ..., PrincipAb; cnty. 962"'5033 let. S2S.fl00 w/$2200 down £.IW'n.vl•• • inter •· 1 BR. Duplex. Steve. 1m ,............,, ~ • 2 BR-Duplex. Stovt, ,...-, 3 bdr, lull cpts/drps, nice ()v.'l\er. M&-2847, 1-729-2908 MIZ?.:-...!"11.Y BEAtmFUL 4 BR, 2 BA 6~ S' loan. CaU for a""". ~pper. 3 BfrplR 3 ba, ~~ ~ Y•rd. Near stare1. STh mo. 11° CC7ITAGE Tr a I I• r dr•pes, l &ardtnblc ·mr . Y.nl' Xlnl klcatl"' near ........... ..., h ~, 1 ""' v rm, c, maivie Jn • 646·7100 • Utilitln fumllllnl -mo. Adulti. S48-2080 aft 4:30 pm. BY OWNER; Nie. 3 Br. 2 Ba o m t , by owner. New "" · 678 eove1. '-wlcnd1 only ~tbs. huae muter BR & -=~~,.--.,~~-.-~ t1ehl s/lhop&. UM Miner St. ~. Newpirt sh 0 Te I. Cameo Shores crpll I drps tm:iugnout rdreMln& rm. flttt. kit. SJ&.;, 4 BR, 2 BA. cptd, 642-o359 after 4 PM 2 BR. l':i ti.. Dri-J'CIJrfi. C.M. $43--7313, 642-0i'Zt . ~.cm. Tttna f 1eJCib1 e , Executive Hom• ft~. hit-Ins. cov. patio. Out of County 160.S B&JcanfH ' patio. Adults • freshly painted, bKlCI yard. IACHELOR APT .FURN mtns. prt pr/'pado. Adulb $ 21,950--QW NER W -3059 3 BO 3 both• Pool Hvy aha.I«-roof, $75.400. M peta, 67l-!'259 Adults, leaiie. 543-03 2G5 N-rt Blvd. C.M. U«l ~g.ow 546-4021 ..... · ' 962-25*> SALE Or tradcr 2 Br. mod. I-,==:"'"====------~ 3 Br. ii... bt. bltna, trpk. Pa· MOVE In! Near new 4 BR., $7',500 hse Yucca Vllley prictd ATl'RACTIVE •atmront .. ATTR. 3 BR, carpfttd, fTpl. h 200 IMMAC. Lp. 2 BR. 2 Mt Oo. dbl aar. fncl. GI or nlA ftpl., DtW cpts. nr. beach. 'MfE rox CO. $16,95G--OWNER $l0.500 eq $4.300 -t.9Mln •Br. home, bolt dock. whiter blt·in kltch. cov'd. patio, New~ leic 4 blt-N, cpt1n4, ~pr. 2Z1> Maple St. 646-23111 $21.000. Open weekend&: 351 61'3-~95 642-696A 3 BR, 1" bQ, bit.his, trpk, ievM. • • leue. fenc.d, dbl 1ar. 494-0434 TUR.N or Unlwn. t BR Aduill. Slt5. 5«MllloSl. 4 BR. 1 2 ea., borne: ideal for &2nd St. Owner 67>-0144 ABOVE THE BEACHES dbl ~ar. 8322 MlrL«ter Dr. C213l OW 7-6081 3 BEDROOM ~ for rent. houM. Yrb'. Util pd. 305 • All 9Cboola. By ()wt)M' $23,500 N"'EWPOR=="T""Sho<,..-.-.-.~llr-.~2 1 MIUkJn $View rrom 11'*> l<t Pa.clfic Sanda. 646-2300 L1oun1 luch 1705 8AYI1{0NT 3 Bt. 2 Ba. $180/per mondl. No peta. 34lb. N.B. Ad\lltl, no pN. Or man ofter. See 318 ba. 2 atcry. Blk 11. 'iii ro It of root: dfdr. CU!!tom ce-4 BEDROOM PA.NOR.MOC VIEW Winter, $250 mo. incl. util. 1940 Pornom. CM U) 127..00.U Etther· 6'6-1952: 0<.-eM. ctub, pool, tennis . mtnt block 2 Br. 2 t>.. By fJ.tPP)ace, bltins, 2 BA'1 ,\ cu.torn house 4 tl'tr la 10th&: Ba; arta fB-t:IU NEW 4 BR, 2 1Mdl, family OCEAN FRONT 2 bedroom, PINE Trttt: pend on cukll'-54~ 0 w n " r $00,(Q). 546-800.1. 2 CM' garqe. call 147-4245 bedrooms, 2~ bathi,• din: WINTER. Bay Beach Ji'rcnt, rm. Carptts, fireplaet. '190. firtplact, w/w Cl r Pt ' ll J . uc, 2 Br. <k-n. 0et-ora.lnr'1 Waterlront 3 BR . Nn. 62 • fiT.M95.1 • or 713: 431-.1921 room. tAmllf room, huae· 4 Bdrm • 3 bath • $300 per 962..flll. Wloetr le&H. 64,2.-M.16 dr~m-&t&4T, 168-U6J BAlboA Ccve-a. $00,000. BtautUul 3 Br. So. of BY CJ\VNER. uwmr 6% GI ekleet1. 1'rtt.Z1:r I. barbe«te1 mo. 925 w. Bf.1, OR 3--87'l1 I ·2°"B"R....;,ll~..,..--on~l-rr~1ot-.~$11=1 1 1 BR. aduUa ooly, no pets, D•UY Pl.ICC Wlrtl Adall '30.000 caah by loan. hirhway. By owntr only. loltn. Spe.IL .t)tl• .2 •trJ t Br in kilthen. OwMr, 2M9 J'or Dall)'~ Want Ada. ptr me. ISM Ana.Mlm Aw. Ytarl.Y rt111al. $100 + ulil. Always a Go-Go! 'Bal. in acreage LI ~rm ReU!'JMbl". * 673-6636 2~ bfl"den, bltn1. 842-1&19 0-..tea.u w~. ~ Dial f12.8611 CM Call &n'~ • 673-1609• • • • OL.X2BR.-,adolltl,IO petc. AtrL recfd. ..._ $150 Call ...... 642-9470. '""'"" Mir· 14111 SUptrklr. N.B. 1'llE QUICKER YOU cAii; THE QUICXER 'YOU SEU. • ' ' I, • v II ---..-...... ·-......... --~ --. -- .24 DAILY PILOT rrld«I, Auguil 16, 1968 REAi. ESTATE G•ner1J BUSINESS ind SERVICE DlltECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY • IN R£NTALS T Late TO \ Apt&. Unfurnlshtd Apt1. Unlurntahod FINANCIAL * * * " N1wport 8uch 5~ L19un1 B11ch 5705 • Classify I/I Olflco R•nlol 6070 lvs. Opportun1tl• 6300 Contractora N\J'IVDJ...E. U.S.A. la now acceptJnc app&titlona f« franct\llff In Oranae C.OW.- ty. Locatlon1 .,. •liUn& ln AnaN!lm, 1..qunl Bch., 5aJI.. t1 Ana, Or•!>ilf, Huntinrtoo Bcb. l otbtt aree.s. fl•~ Cuh rcq, Fully HCUred llJ. vrtt . .t>ould return l st )'r. Call for 1ppt. 642--m3 or write to 1611 We1tcllff Dr., Suite 210, Newport Beach, c.1. 92660 6620 Contr1ctors 6620 RENTALS H.u•• Unfvmlahed •-Nl ... I 3707 J'06 LEAS£. Referenaa. 3 BR. 2 BA, cptJ, dr1>I. tll>l. ldr7 n:n. 1.ars• ti.ck )'lrd. llOO.mo.- lilNfALS """" Unlumhhod 1.atun1 ... ch 570~ aicl>tRN .CanlM •[JI, north ..... ; inoey,; BR, I\\"'", IUl'\dedtl. car, 1 blk at'lo!>- JJinc-beach. Ver)' pluab. WiU film. 1?l5, - ttooma for flent PIUVATE fflU'linCe, Wf'1 eomJortable A Coet. Me ... M&.5150 ltlAl UfATI ~ .... ...,.,., bath. quiet. Ult" 6100 PORTAl'!NA LAC UNA eanorNTUc View Lo1s Wh!t.e Wlla' and coast· Uoe vil!Wll Oi N:yes Place l..q;una Bdcb 1n41 494-"83 JOB i IMPLOYMINT 7400 9010 UNF\JRNISHED 2 bedroom. 2 bath unit nw Hoa.a Ito. pita1. Avlil1ble Sept. l •t """· AJ..50 3 BEDROO?.!, 21,i bltb. la" pool. S250. AvaUliblc Sept UU1. Adults ooly. lay & Beach Ataltv., Inc. ~ W. Balboa Blvd .. NB 613.3663 Ever;. MU9li6 VERY IJ'g' 3 Br 2 ha duplex. l31tra, M'pta, d.rpf, pri patio. 1 blkl bay &: bch. No pell, )'Tly 1st $2CKl mo. 673-6l16 alt 6 pm. DELUXE. upper, n,es.v 3 BR 2 Ba., bltna. carp., drps. Sundeck&; ~ blk. ba)' • hP•ch. s1$ ·Mo. y,.u\y, R.l!l.r~• ttq. 54~7098 BEAUTlfUL 0 c ea n tront APL 2 Bt. fireplace, patio. mo ?i1o. )Tly. MZ-91&1 •f\ 7 p.m. NEW SOundpt'1)0f 2' BR. 2 91&, Aaoo51 fm. Caco'a. l~ Jl'Yft SW/$200, ~ DUPLEX 2 bdrm, 2 ba. Crpta I drps, bit-ins. Near ocean. Sl&O. mo. 548-8190 hst Bluff 5242 ----·-----·- 1.mD•"IM Autoo HOO Huntl•1t.n Buch IUOO l,·a"""'vuarm:s----°""'*""'---,·. I EXTRA li· 2 BR. $123. llO SL trqmeo•M. p;so Utilltitl paid. ~180'2 or • -• _cMi-0787~=~--~~= LAP.GI!: IJv, nn., 2 BR f].55 l10od c... "°° ... BCl<llJ:'l'IU.< ... """"' 'Ill -· -Loll -'llO< -2 ·'This Page REACHES 68,972 HOMES EACH WEEK nio-i\11 util paid. O ose to Dee'all 4 Ht Sehl. 636-1168 L19un1 l11ch 5701 100 CLIPP DRIVE LUXURY J'URN/UNFURN Y euty Lease. 1 A 2 Bdrm1. Yearly Lease. 1 bedroom 11tepa to Shore i Shops Oceanvitw from every Apt. from '150 mo up. leue m.a«9 M6DDtN Garden apt, north end, 2 ltory, 2 BR. 1 'it Ba, 2 1undeelu, 1u, 1 blk ahop.. ~· V~ pluah. Will tum. $225. 4!M-al82 LOVELY Whitewater view, 2 BR 2 Ba w/prage, 1 blk lo town A bfadl. Adult.I. LNse $185 mo-"4-1811 NEW!: Dime· A -line Deadline 3:00 P.M. FRIDAY e DELUXE 2 BR unfw-n apt cWle k> OCWL e 'fVR."l. ttllCl.io. f9T·l,IM R•nt.1ls WantM 5990 LAGUNA BEACH Air Conditioned GfllERAl BUILDING COllTRACTORS CUSTOM HOMES * CUSTOM DESIGNING Interior end Exierior NEED House for N!fll In eo.1a ~lesa, prtfcir Mesa Verdf'. 5<-pt lit fur lrvlDe f1 cully m""btr It family of •· Price ranae $200 to S300. 9 mOi to l )'t. Zl3: 1125-621ll or .213: GL 7--2362 SEPT l.n Bu11ine111 Wom11n need• t Br \U\fum Apt, C.M., Newpor1, Cornn• del Mar or Llgun1. To S100 mo. C11.r « carport ne«ll&l')'- 642-0l!lli after 5 p.m. ON FORES'"' A VENUE o.k .-ca avallable bl Mll.'elt off:tct building at prime k>caUon In dO\\•ntown t.auna Stach. Air condi- tioned, Cu,eted. beautiful pe.neltd pa.rUtJoninl. Two entrancec: i'ront&.I• on Forest Ave., reftt teadJ to Munclpal par\dnl loU. ~ per moolb for e:plct. Desk and ehairl available tor $5. Bu1ine11 hours answlfrlna 1el'Yice t vailable for JlO. All util!Uet paid 4!Xcept telephone. BEAUTY Salon. Price for qu.ick ult. E lea:antly dlfCOrated. Clrpetcd, pa.· nelled. Good clletntel. Nr. Bethel Towers, $8,950-Call Duane Wiclclund, Walke r 6' Lee, Ms-9491. Room Additions * Remod1lin9 Custom k;tchens & b1th1 Sandbl•oting & Sruccoing QUALITY Painting & M11onry Work. Firepl1ce1, Bor-B-Quoo, Plootor• Whoddys Wint? Wh1ddy1 Got? SPECIAL CLAS51FICATIDN FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS $p11cl1I Raft 5 llne1 -5 tlmtt ;_. 5 buckt II.ULia -.\0 to\V$l IH(i Ullt DAILY PILOT Tn the area Sinct IP49 \Ve Bid 011. Mo1,.1in17 the London. Bridge 1-Wlllll """ ,....... .. "*· ... Wiii!! ..... ~ "" ,, .... a-YOUI Jll\ON .n4/W .c1e1-. ~ llrw• If HVtrtiti. 222 FOR&ST AVENUE LA.GU!.'.'1.J. BEACH 'llM-9'1i6 J-NOTHINO 1'011 i •ll • lll•Dll Op.!LYt \VANT ] BR. houH, N'pt. BHeh In c>xctu1nge for Malibu ranch for wk. or 2 before 91:t)ool. 213: 611-2643 Days;: 213; 4.51-0331 eve. Good~:t:.!.°!~uru~lor OK BYJLDERS PHONE 6<12-5671 To Pl1ce Your Trider'• P1redl11 Acl e NEED JMA1ED1ATELY: 3 or 2 BR unfurn houat or 1p1. w/yard. H•vt children. dQc, '140 me or make offer. '"'"'"' "HOUSE SIT'' Tl'achcr with older ctilld will care for your h.om£ !or partial Of tt~ tf'nl ~ wint.tt. 673-.3912 WANT a\eefllng room, male, .u, no 1mt1ke or drink. Ncwi10rt • CM a r e a. Bud 642-1252 Roam1 for Rent 5995 SECRETARIAL SERVICE Modr:m offices, citrpet1, alt conditionini. parldne. From S83 per month. Oranae C.oun- t)I Bank Blda:. 2'l f:, 17th St .. Coata Mesa. 642-1485 Commercl1I 6085 2192 PALISADES Rd Cl lot R.tnt ~37 S250 mo • 348-5044 lndu1tri1I R1nt1I two peopt.. $2500 rtocll and 344-f V ia Oporto, Newport Beach l..AKE Takoe View Lot Na· equipment Alao h11 Ooorina _ Ttltpho"' 673-2463 vada aide, paved $12.500 plan. Phone 548-52!H clear. Exchan&e rot aome- CORON'A del Mar, E. Coe.11 l~A~N!?N~OU!l':!N~C~E~Ml!'lECiN~T;:S1""""'::'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ body1 hee.dachr! Untt1, Hwy, Beaut1 Salon • tnd NOTICES I 81by1lttlng 6550 TD's, or '! Bkr. 6'7S-5726 utsblbhed e yrt. ~. NEED MDTORCYCLE 673-7159 Lott 6401 BABYSIT. Pre-school ige. Have 1964 Slmca rebuilt CANDY J\.1y c. ?.1. home, t)y d11 or In w tirt's' M50 or \lo'eek Ms-Ei'TM en~ c, ne .. SUPPLY RDUTE CHOC poinl Siame<e Mole · , .................. <M-1~ E>0eellent Income 1Clr tew cat. Vic San Bem•rdino N N . hn we-ekb' work ldeY• or -Ave. NB. White w/brwn Brick, Masonry, etc. Ocean View • r Pl pier. e~l relllltng and colleetlng pnll. Ana to .. Cheeky''. f'lea 6560 4 u n I I 1 fum, be1t rental money lmm ooln operated col.tar. Reward! O 1 Jc •i::ea. $08.500 • take am hie d'-""'' in .....,,r uei. 548-6714 e.ft 5 64fi..lli68 BRICK, COC'lcrett. Ca.r1>4!nlry in trade. Owner 2006~1 ..,~ 3 ..,.. CU1tom Cabine-11. Small jobs Court Ave .. 613-«i27 CHandle1 N•tionally Mver· BIG, Fat Ti&;cr cat with OK Free F..lt 962-6945 SOUTH SANTA ANA tlaed 8nack1 and Cindy chopped oU tail, male. -;:=:===========._JTRADE equity nice 3 BR. .Approx. 4500 sq. ft. with d• Ban.l $1350 to 15390 cish Corona Hlahland11, Reward. -6590 for lan:e 4 or 5 BR. with -u1r~. F-p-..,,1 !•, .:,,"_o>-,:M.;.Tc,4~~,---=-C1rjMntering or without pool. Prefer luX• aiN:ond. office1. Flr ..... , "" .,. ~ •r 1 ~ proof rooms. l'KIO per n\onth. tttV~: .end name, eddnts LOST: Blk. Germ. Sh~.. CARPENTRY lluntlngt.on Beach or FoW'I· ROOM Yor rtnt. S3tl mo utll Av1U. Immediately, For in. and phone l'tlmbe-r to: female, ''Fatty": vie. of f\fINOR REPAIRS. No Job taln Valley. 847-4378 paid. H.B. ar••· &42-3J32 aft formallon ctu K. W, SmaU "f\.OUTE DEPARTM.E:NT" Westclttf. Rew. MM102 Too Smlll. Cabinet ln gar· 3 Br. &. den, wndcok. Ocean !I pm. with P .O. Box 3M6 agrs & ot h er cabinets. View ""U!na Point. $14.000 QUIET: Sep. entry, SM. Wit h Eckhoff & Aisoc., Inc. AM.helm, C1lit. t2803 Personals 6405 545-8lr.:i Eves. 646·2372 Days cq .. Trade for 60' Expan· scp. kltch. $65; per mo. or 18111 W. Cllapman Ave, YACJIT Sales Co. New sail----------Ii. 0, Anderson. able Trail~. (7l~l 496-2491 Wef'kly. 5'1.49116 Oran1:11, CaliJ. ,....po'M'er • bkra;. Exel. water * MUSICIANS * e NO JOB TOO S~fAU. • eves. LARGE 1l~lni room. Semi-541·2621, Eveio-wknds 53&-5971 loc. AU/part. Box P-175 and p!ano pl.ayer, accordian Residenlial -,Ind115trial O>m---C-i -pi"'s'"tr-1_.n_,o-A..,roc:a- pri\'ate bath in new Gold 16,000 SQ. Ft, prime bide. Dally Pilot or organ , for trio. Do start-mere.la!. Repair & remodsl. 4 ac undeveloped land. Off Medt,llkMI Home:. 646--204~ Sprinklerwir cond·llllllelle:d dardl. pop, rhythm 6 blues. Rea50nable. J.Je, bonded, in· ~a Hwy. Trade !or in· NICE. clean room f o r ol!icff. PERRON REALTY lnvt1tm1nt Oppor. 6310 l't1ale or female-For im· sured. a:imeorM·lorW.l.549-2415 rmp~ycd m11.n. $.ll .00 Colla 624-17n mediate work (n4) 689-'.!011 • 96:.!-1961 • !l62-33n • '1 U"IT >.IOTL'L, West L.A. f>4&-'7969 $9,800 will retum you CATALINA " " Meq. M-1 on Placentia 2,000 1q It. 115% In 4-5 )'Hrt. FLY TO CARPENTER & C1'rnc?C!e $125,000, gr o 1 1 eppr FINE room In comfartable: $1'5 on lea&e ~7 3-4.521 * S48--S4S6+ DAILY FLIGHTS FR0~1 v.·ork. Room addll!ons, pat· $20,000yr. EXCHAN home. LT 1-820'1. 1024 Linden (M1ryl ORANGE COUNT'l AIR.-iffl, g11.rag!"s, elc. 25 Yn. no, Nevada. Pl. Coila Miu '2'-L~OT=--San~--.--NB= R11I Eot1t1 Lo•ns 6340 PO~k-Cat1lil\I.. Vegas exp. &4.2.:1817, MS..5667. Perron Realty S on tiaao. AU'line1. • 546-Ei612 Gue•t HomH 5991 PRIVATE Room for am. bulalory lady. Good food . Nice 11Jrroundinp. MA-4753 ·- cash, term1 or trade. FN MASTER CARPENTER LOVELY Al.."Ct'liliOry & Anll· aimple:. 6-16-~ BORROW on Your Equity HAVING 1 party? Need Nt!w & rrpalrs, $4 hr iiue iihop. ;ipprox. S:SSOO Private 2nd Mona. monry m"•lc1·.,,,? l\1odern, rock, "''"' ~900 ·'t 5 PM ad r PRIME C.Orona Del Mar J,,......, "" Rtuck &. lbi:1urc1; u· I' or }~REE APPR.A!SAL & i·a:i:z. 545-0038 I -" I h t Ocean view lot. Not '"'=='""=--=== R1':PAJRS *ALTERATIONS ute muue car nr w a leasehold. Owner 67~750 PROMPl. SERVICE A.LCOHOUCS .A.nOnymous D\BINETS. Any slzc job. llavr you? 613-0598 Rep1.1table Company 1r.rvin1 H •--•-Piton "73·8724 Ml1c. Rentals 5999 Lot1 6100 ~-"'-~~~~~ -;;.;;.:.;._~~~~~ Ora nae County 18 yeui. arUUT ,..,.,a~ •" a 25 yr~. exfl('r. 548-6713 1 BR, 3 BA home, La Ha· Sattler Mortgage Co., Inc. P .O. Box 12-3 Cotta Mes ' Cement Concrete 6600 bra Hrs. Horses_ ok. Lg .16 1 ~ii CAR G1rsg1 " e • r Newport CI t y ll111J. S:.?l month Perron RJ ty Co. 642-tm STORAGE Garaa:e for rPnt. Cotta P.1rsa. Close-in, like new. fl48.3727 R-1 CORNER Lot Mx127 to alley. Sl3,f>OO net. T111tln &: Clay St. Newport Hll. Owner. 642-2006 3 NICE R-~ loLs C.M. &: Hun- tinaton Be1ch, under SI0.000 each. Low down or trade for TD's. Pl"titte Rltr. 548-0522 REAt. ESTATI G1ner1I R1nche1 Income Jtrop•rty 6000 615D NEWPORT BEACH TRAVELODOE Depre<:lat'°" $18,600 1966 Grou ..... , .... $87 ,000 1967 Gross , •• , .... $110,00'.l ]968 Grou ,,,, ..•• Stl5,000 C. R. G•nct Ml-11115 INOOM!! I. Home-Owner. Exel. lnc .. deprec/ lnvt. ( Br. 2 ba. ree. 1()..2 Br. apt .. pool 3 Yr. old Box P-175 Dally Pllot e :1 CUSTOM it unit apt blda:s. Inc. $980 mo. nr. Knott'1. CUh •II· $7500 ea, trade w/somc ca 1 b, 534-7740 eVK. HORSE RANCH 25 Acre ra.n..:h in No. Calif. with 1-' mile ot Jronta&e on main llwy, All t:lec. l ~R­ home. Thia plaoe comtt ful· ly et1ulpped to operate and .i~ id<..Wly laid out for a good horse operation. Full price 165,000. For furtbl!r lnlorma· lion p 1 e a • e call Glenn Thompson with Eckhoff & Assoc,, Inc. 18111 W. Chapman Ave. Orange, Calil. 541·2621, Eve•wknds ~m 336 E. l7lh SL, Costa Mesa ' acre avocado. $1.1,000 eqully 642:·2171 S4S-Q6ll. Nights Announctmtnt1 6410 EXPERT CEMENT \\.'ORK u~Jde for R.E .. car, boat, le wkenda 613-7165 642·ll57 Llfett• Health Studio Reasonable Pricc1. Specializ. 'rD's etc??? 496·2931 Mo T 0 , 6345 Hospltn.llty Is our l\lotto inc: in custom psliOI. Free Gre-111 Wes Trlr. 18' Elcc. rtgag•s, • • 1 FREE STEAt'f. \VlTii l!St. Call an_ytime &12-9496 brakt>.s, 2 butane gas, hPllf· SAFE 12'7o PER YEAR SWEDISH MASSAGE CE?-IENT 'Vork, all types. llli stove, ice or rice tt'!ri~. $5,2!!0 l sl TD on spectacular Open 'vkdya 10 am -Il pm No job 100 small . }'r{'f! est. Newly paintNI . Trude for Oceanview lot. Sold for Sundays 10 am· 8 pm H. STUFLfCK 548-~15 camper or P.U. 5.JS-1915 S'r;iOO Payable l~ ptr 519 E. Broadway . • CUSTOr>1 PATIOS-.-TRADE 4 BR · POOL month includini 117'.. All due Lona Beach 12131 437·7009 concrete aawirui:: &. removal BAYCREST Home, for 3 yr5 10% discount. <194-1131 McCARTHY needs your hrlp. State lie. O 842-1010 5 or 6 BR • SAl\IE AREA SJ.JOO 2nd TD bf!hlnd S48ffi Send coatribctions t.tcC. Hd-CUSTO~t PATIOS & * 646-8565 * I ~ TO bl l "' ' qtrs. Box 1Zl .GG. 892-4lll. B'--k II I -'" paya e 10 per Paid Polltical ad "-"' wa 1, A so concre!e 'jg CABIN Cruiser '.!·I' Chry. mon!h Incl. 10% all due .51 ============ 11a1ving &. l'Lmr>val. 842·1010 ~\er eng. $500 value. \\'tint yr1. Covrrs exc Oceanview Funerils 6412 BEST In concrete. \Valks, truck. car, or"OOwa on house lot. 21J'}{, diacount. 494-1 137 pool decks, floors, patios. or ? Ca 11 6-16-5-186 or l21>% "ELD 00 "''°" "' WESTMINSTER conci trui.'t deed. $4,000 cash. :-:' .... ..,,""'=C".M.7c"". "'°'='-" __ 1M~MORIAL PARK ANNOUNCEMENTS Mortuory I C1m1tery and NOTIC!S Comr,lete funer1l1 rom $245 -~~~~!!-~d!! __ ~~.~O Cemetery lot1 P'OUND, SWI. Aug. 11th on from $130 642-8514 642-5103 [~-~-----~ Licensed -Quality Npt. Hts. 3 BR, 2 ba. C\JS· Cement \\'Ork. 839·5056 tom bit .. Cti>ls, drps, gar door opener $12,00J equity Child Cira 6610 Trade for boat, Real E.~C', ALERT, mature mother will or TD. Ownpr/Bkr fi-16-748~ give guaranteed loving home DIAMOND approx 2 ct AM to 5: 30 PM week days in GuaranteM $200 value tor lovely home. Lj:e. fenc'd bk ~!erccdeli, property or ?? yd, meals, au home con-546-3389 venir-nce1 $15 wk. 536--0300 H.B. are1. * * * 2 BR fu rn condo. on 8ch nr. Venice, ltafy ln oclu. lve retnrt are•. Tnde for local ar~a 3 or • Br. home or vac. lot or boat. •l2Tf e $4.IOO TD e Trade on • or 5 BR bo\1't Newport or Coron• de! Mir 494-'15Cll DESERT Hot Sprlnp 3 bdr .. 3 bl, view lot, ac> en• to hot min. he. For Mesa or J3eacb area. Loe. phones 548-n411 « 3:"9~%5. 2 DUPLEXES val. $31,500 in Co~la Mesa. Trade for hou!ie or truJt detd1. JD. come $115. Owner. • 549-<*M * '65 Lotus Conwrtlbl•, 11900 equity. Will trade tmo '1000 car & you talc• aver 1191- mtnta o( $9.5 month. 531- 6901 before l PM 3 Aeres, Bli Island, Hawaii. \\'ill trade for down on bWld- able R·l lot, home or 1?T in • rt Sta.ch 11e1. OWNER 842~84 · 10 Ac mobile hom1 pltk in orange gmvts: eJr.oond,. clubhouse, re1, Sp. unttn. Trare for locaJ vie. IUb dlv. 111nd . 646-1676 owner. e 1960 OLDS e 4 door sedan, a.lJ pow.-r equip., new tlrea. Wlll trade for 10' gJn11 outboud It. motor. 548-7391 Small mod lraller p&ri<, rtv- er & h"'Y· fron1qe, nr. Pai· vcr, $30,000. clear. For Or- ang!.', SD county flf'GP· Prln· cipals only. 536-7017 2 Bit 2 BA 1\\'!lh.se 514 fa Broo!,hur!\t Adams SZ700 eq. Total Sl3,980 P&l $62 Tax Ins 1'111lintance $43 for home 01' ? 615·3389 Trade-Just surveyed trt:e It. clr:ir 21' auxiliary Sloop. t•or·Brach hse, dplx, 11.pt., income prop, TD, mobil homr or ~. Eves. M5-4t12 Commrrc'ill Bldg !:. eo..st H'vy, ('d~1. value $95,0CKJ Inc Sl3,980 Equlty $68,CXXI. Take m11tUl'lf 11! TD l cub 673-017l Bkr: Sl5.000 equity in Dena Pt. 3 BR 2 BA home, w/cent. glaSll encl. adrean, Bit 1n kitch, w/w cpt1, pool·tn' Newport Bch al'N. Qwner, 642-2823 * * * Bu1ln•11 Property 6050 36 x 30' RED\\'000 building tQ. l>e moved. Must sell this mo. SSOQ or best offer Lnc FV cm Ward St Ii Calle J\ladero. (213) 633-lll4 or 651-3347 6200 WANT TO START Balboa Island. silver & gold Includn Endowment C~e walding band, initials on in· Everythinc ln one beautiful me. cau & id en t 1 f y. place mearu leu cost. 642-5678; 11 to 5: 30; Aak fot No traffic problems. Nlt.'1 . ltsol Beach, Westminster CHILO care in my home. l'!!!!!J!!!!!!J""~!!'il!!'l!!!J!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!llllll!!!!!!l!l!l!I!) '"iiJNi5JiUj>:-2ji8i;o;,-P;;;l'"'~·lg725g,========~89~~~~~21 h " F?UND July 23 Blick PM-Fenced yard, hot lune es. SERVICE DiRECTORY _. ,. , .: Dlt<l:,TOM:Y Busin"' Rent•I 6060 WANTED: Business space, downtown Lngun• ror aquar- ium IMp. Sm> 49-1-4467 Office R.tnt•I 6070 Air.Conditioned Offices & Desk Spice with cenlraJ 1eerctari1l, icr- ox t,.nd telephone anawl!linr serviC'lf, up to 2,000 1(1. ft. The i\futuaJ Bid(. 7863 E. C.oa1t Jlwy, CdM Cal! ft A~! to 5 P:\i 615-4070 \IED St Anorn.-y'1 orllce; 1.000 -1500 1q. ft .• ai~d. Good loc-Low rent . .:HMi761 API' Offict>. Ground Roor. m W. 19th St, Cotla l\.1eu. Pr1va1r Unlit\• S15 mn A BEE FARM? GROW ALFALFA? \VllAT Bf'tter Place than in SilVf'.f Valley? Loc1ted in high de1erl 18 mileii e1u;t of Bantow -BO Acre1. level land, well A pump k re&et- voir . Hai been in alfalfa - alfalfa arowina in ebundanoe In Valley, hia:he1t in proll'in 11nywhere around! die, male 7 to I rrimHw old. Trivel 6435 $12.50 per wrrk. $:1. each ad-- Vic. of Wet:itminsler & 1-------dltlon11.l child. Huntington Gardening 6680 Hauling 6730 Brookhul"ll Ave., G. G. L\1AN Extt. needs ride b.Y 7 Beach. s.IB-193.1 '°'-'°"=-----~! 925-2616 Ar.t daily to ''ic. Imperial & SPECIAL Sumnu.•r progrnm. ANTHONY'S LITE HAULING A CLE4N · In I ood = Garden Serv1'c1 UP FOUN D: Yellow li~r·type Aviation, g ew , from Ages 214 to 6. 8 a.m. to 5:.J(J TREE ESTIMATE.!. imlll cat with grl!-l'ft & Balboa, Pay well. 67J...2842 p.m. $18 \Veek. CI av Is 646-1948 * ~7M9 * v.·hite fle• collar; vie. of -r.lonte.sorri Schools, 1525 N. LANDSCAPL'IG 29th St. & El Rancho Auto Tr1nsport 6445 Santa Ana, C.r.t. 64&-3106. LA\V~S RE!iolODELED Market, Npt Beech. 673-3156 W!>.'TD, ride Goldenweit 11 CH ILD care my home, Mesa Exp horticulturist. FOUND: Siamese c , t , f.dina:er JlB • Main & Verde, Hot lunches, play Reas. monthly Gardeninr fem ale. Vi c. Edinger St. 8.r. Bra.dway s.A, I 'AM l'e'I. 6. houae. near park. M0-18.'!6 GEN'L Clean-up, tree SC'rv, Puritan Cln:le, Hunt. Beach, 897--0850 rotoU\, iflding, sprlnk!er1, Call &: Identify . 897-7067 !:============ Contractors 6620 lawns, haul'i· Re a a, ~Poodle, t11.&1. Vic of Legel Notlcn 6450 -.-"'R-OO_M_A_O_O_I_T_!O_N_S_a __ 64_.__. 5-,84;:c',...,.=~c--- 22nd & Nf'wport Blvd., C.~f. L.T. Construct Cut & Edge Lawn 642-7001 AS of S/15, '68, no longp; kl h Maintenance. Licensed rMPonsible fur any othf'r Family rooms, tc en or 54°'80• 54 k FOUND Fema.le Dachshund dcllts but my own. Char.J.,a un its. Single s1ory or '.l; o-. ,.., 5-0<170 aft 4 P:-.t VicinitJ of Brookhunt & w. 1-lardcn. plans custom deslgnt:d. For J11paneae Gardenina: Ada~. HB tfi2..l010 S:E=R=v=ic~E~D=IR~E~C~T=o=R7Y" esthna ~s 8~7~n1~i;;t .. phooe Profe11&ionll r.iainlenance WHITE Kitten. flea collar, --. -------__ _c_.c.,.-o.----~nd~apin~' 646-6553 blue e)'es. vie El.stbluff. Applienc-e Rep1ir• Liet'nscd Contractor MO\VJNG, Edgtng. vacalawn. N.B. Sf.i-1518 P1rtt 6510 Relldent!!!.l ·Commercial Gcn'I cleanup. Hauling. __ .c.,.______ fl.taint A Repairs. Free &rt Odd Jobs. * 548-6955 DARK Grey fe-male klllen TOM'S washer, d~ers, etc. 6'13 2129 flound Irvine Terra c e . Serv &: repeir. S~tlih:ed · JAPANJ::SEGARDENER 675-593!\ d Is h w a• be r cleanina. Addition& * Remodellna: EXPER, ~liable maint Fred H. Gel"Nick, Lie. Reas. mo rate~. 892-3219. FOUND Bick Bay-H1rbor Hi 646-4&15 "21711 Housecle1nln1 67U * .A.PI'. CLEANING * Fast & Thoroua:h. l f\lmi1b Everything. 6U-8lst Interior Oecoretlng 6737 • Residence • Comm'I e e Painting, int. & ext. • \9all Covertn&• e Color Coordln11don FREE ESTIMATP! Licen11ed l Inaured MODERN DECORATORS 5$.9513 Ironing 6755 e IRONING · $1 Hour e Getteral 5000 General 5000 Gener•! 5000 WANT TO RAISE FISH FOR L.A. MKT? BUILD Your.sell a lake fnr v('f'y little money & you're in hu~iness! 90 Lakes in area- rnan ·made & brauiful! There fll"f' 80 acre lake1 & 40 acre lakes &111'1 !'! acre lakes, rte, etc. A water ski in~lruction lake i1 almost finished, llnd 11. Polynl'Si11.n rtttaurant wilh rampcr sites, fishing lake1, h<'en in hualneu long time. ~1UCH l\10RE dM<el· opmcnl i'Oinl on hi are., lovely homcll, school, church, tic. etc. Route 66 So. of the Vallry Is now a compl1ted Ftt't'""IY, No. of valley Is Las Vceas ~·a.y. Other &rnaller p;tr«J1 available:: <C~l""~;';rio~r~'6~95'~8-53'0~~,,.--1 :~'.'.'.'.~~~====~~ 673-60tl * 54 "'" l;O\V COST Maintenance .~ 8 b 'tf' 65zD PATIOS e Pstio Cover& l\tQ\V -EDGE -SPRAY ADORABLE Of"a"... kitlt!D. I ys1 1n9 ~ ·~· !-----~----Room Additions. Lie. rERTILIZE. 962-73-t!} Brine: hangers pl&au 548-2011 644 Seal St., Q,f EXPER. ironina: of 111 typee:, $1.25 Hour. 674 Capital. O>l- ta l\fes1 . $18-TJJO 1 Sol"a 4 Simpl1 Scrambltd Word Puzzlt for a Ch UC' kl• IO Rearrange lt.tt~ cf the four Ktornblecl wordt be- low to fom fou r al1T1ple words, .,HITDO~ I 1-' I I I I I . 'IT YT UN I _' I I I' ! 1,i'YRIS I . I'" _ _,,_.., .. , ..... , --.-1•.1• ~;. ~1~.~ :,':,,:;;: :.·~;~ •.--~~~~~-~--. weaknt--... IKAJLAC. I -" -1"".""'l,.....,l'"":"T1-.-1-1 0 ~ti~ 1!'-th~. -· ---. --I"" ....... """' ... No.. "''--1 1 "''NT NUMBERED LfTltRS IN 1 1 r ,. ,. ,. • W~S~ SQUA!f$ . _ . .-. r SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8100 Thia land Cln be purchalCd Vf!l'Y ~•~ably-c:all • talk In "''TU!r-847"6640 1ft l PM or wknri&. 21.i ACRES. Southern C11.lifomla. S.l.00 down, $3.00 rer month. $:!95.()(J full J)l"lce. L. Shl"Wfell, 326 W. 3rd St., I~ A Phone: (213) 623-51"1 Mount. I Desert 6210 PER J"ECT Mountaln h1d"°"''VIY. Wt:ekenth or rtttrtmmt, nr. San DM-go F'rwy. I vtf'W 1crtc. 2 BR. ho1n11. \dacpd. pat"-'. Owner fii:\an«. <Titl 67~ or <n41 548-2421 R. E. Wont..i 6240 WANT.Pl>: Sm.JI houw, vtl')' near C.tholk Orurctt, f« 11.1100 Cuh. 213, - OLDER houtt, Newpo rt lfeighls, $24,000 mu. No a~U; 61'">-11~ atlt!f' 5 p.m. N~ 1 GarbenatqleT Find tt W1~ • want 1dl -"'°==p='="="'=='""=· C=·=M=.===JA'ITENTION l\tother'1 in lht 642-5952 Day1-EY~Wknd.t _ e JAPANESE GARDENING Lott 6401 lfarper fl l\1arlner'' scb1 dla. C t Cl I 66lr. Service Oeaoup, Landsca~ ---------will babysit your cbldrn 1rpe HM ng ~ ing 531-70.'W aft 7 p.m. LOST: Toy Poodle, male, before or alt schl. Hot blade w/white «tl'Hk on lunchei. Refs. 642-5252 Revolutionary Hoit RELIABLE: Rea&. Oriental Dry Cle1nin9 Method care. Clean11p, odd jobl, nec:k . Goldenwest lJ'act, vie. MA'n.JRE Woman w 111 Rug!I, Drape&, Upbolatery Vincent. 642--0326 Hanover Lane .l Edwt1rds, Daby1it. tn1 home. Lra: edl 1 Hunt. Bcb. lll2-4016 fen c" d Ya?' d. Lunches. On be used Imm I le Y i\lowing-Edge.V.CUu;--atter "''ork is coniplet(!(f Light Hauling&. Clean-up CHILDS Pet male Dutch rab. &124iT9 Sale•, Service e &16-0-181 Eves e bit (h1ei;a Ve'rde attlll. B.A,:....B~Y-S~IT~~M~y---.. -~x'°lo-t 11m I,nstalh1tlon While excrpt for grey e11n, care Nourishing me 1 I 1, e ,._fii.~t<'r Ch•rv:" m11sk A trouse-rs. Rl!'Wa.rd· fn(.-ed pl1y yrd. Hr . d11y Ii e Banlo1mrrir111·d Generel Servlc" 6682 M5-7765 wit. Start Sept. 3r-968-1696 Mod•rn R.ug & Car~t BRO~'N Alll&atcr bUlfokl In BABYSrrrING. my home. -I~ Cn!nsh1w, Loi An~cles PROF£C;S. Window, w11.ll5 & 00 nr. cl~lng: bu siness, phont booth next t o vie. Adanu & ~taanolla, 213 -~1 Collect ~-~---~~-1 f'f'Sld .. & ronstruction Alberbon'1 mkt. l9Ui l Huntil'l(ton Be6.ch. ~ Me1a Cl•1ning Service Cryst1I Window Clt'aning ~"'='~b·~R~""-· ~64_2_-7_ .. ___ 1\-lont:ER of 2 will b&bytil Floora, "'indtW>'I, CBrpets, & f"ree Eatirnate& M8-87J7 Landscaping 6'10 GAYNQR·s LANDSCAPING & GARDENING SERVICE State llcen~ed COl'ltrrlr, Ri'~lclrn1lal -Commercial Yard clranup. Free est. No job loo h!i:; 893-3581 I HEAVY yarrt v.·or1t l IOil preparation. McCann l Sol * 49~9'1 * OORRAL·s lndscp I: rotoUll aerv. Free ell, haw own equipment. 962-47" P1perhan9lnt Painting 6'50 STERLING Ola.rm Braetlet. for' 1 child, eves, 5 day1 wt. VJ>hoh,tcry. F 1 ""' 1 e~. Res & e 1 DAY scr,·ice. Home 1 Somewhere bet. Brdw11y, & ~2531 comm. MS-fl apt cleaning. O"pts, walla, Lu Femme Fa1h. tale. B~A~YVIEW==,_rlool.,.-.,,-,uc="'CM'°,~. CARPEi' a-F\im. cleaning: windows, painting. 642-&20. 11/14 ~erd. 879-m.4 Xlnt d:Wd care. Low rates. tot 1 day &ervice I qua.li-Sterllna; tor~! INT. ext. AvtrlJt l BR apt. LOST rtd Ii: white model o.y or e"Ve. MS--0890 ty work, call Sterllna for labor A m•l'll 11 , • Io . airplane, Vk M~ del )tar. ?<.IY homt: Mm thru F'rt. A·l bziabtne11! &C2~ &U-'1'523. 5f8.-4S27 REWARD! ~ •rd.s, A-1 ot.re turn. No. CCII-SPRING Special! 5c a ft H_ou_l_ln-'g,_ ____ 6_7-C.30 p ~-AINT=~IN~G-lnt-,rlor-~~--.1 BLUE P&.r8.kttl. y el Io w ta MtSll.. 54&-0ml Advanced C1,rpet • Uphc:D Lite ll1ulln1t·Trimmln1ta. F~ Eltimatesl l'lttk. Vic Continental • BABYSmlNG in my home. tm. ~ll88 "ft11Hree Trash, GMR~e C\tl'nU[>I * 642-4669 * 54UT12 * Brookhur51, l{B 962"'32SS llol mcfllt. Lra fnced )'&rd. Eledricil 6640 Name ill Reuonable PAfNTING, Ext A-Int. Ext 1'f1Xlo:O Trrrl"'. TN.I•. tan. Ref&, IWG-4311 BIG JOlrN ~2-4030 house trlr. 17 Y'1 t1:11p, tree I.le. No. IH23 WeMcltff area. BABYSITMNO. ~ Me.a ELECTRICIAN, Uc«11t'd & CLEAN Lots. g11rages, t'tc. tat. ACCWBt cell. 543-6325 Reward. 646-6661 Verde home: Jncd. yd. Moti. b o q de d. Smtll jnM. Trfl rtmoval, dump, 1k1p, SOCK IT TO 'EM! thru Frlmcya. M6-lli62 rnl'inlen. Ir: rt"pau"li, !H8-32ll3 b11ckboe, fill, grade. 96'2·8745 CllAJtCE yottr want &d now. -------. ·---.. .-__..-,. ----~-~-~-~-~-~~~---~·---~~----------·-- • • -mp.-....... ~--·""""".:-------.. -•.... --.... SERVICE DIRECTORY Fr•dl,, Alli!Gl 16, 1%3 D4JLY ,JLOT 2 1--------1 • Help Wentod, M.n 7200 Help Winted SA':E AND TRADE SALE AND TIIADI JOBS lo EMPLOYMENT JOBS lo EMPLOYMENT JOBS lo EMPLOYMENT JOBS & ~LOYMINT JOIS & EMPLOYMINT JOIS & EMPLOYMEN I (MERCHANDISE FOR li\ERCHANDISI jl(5l ~ ,,1perh1 ngin9 rftlP Wanttd, M.n 7200 H•IP Want•d, M9" 7200 Women -7400 Ht: Winted 7400 Htlp Wanttd Furniture · 8000Furnltu,. IOOO P•lntlng 6850 Machinilt11 S I & _.._!_~•n Women 7400 liiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiJ!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil PAIN'l'!NG And P•puinl: • .lf s . Strike Conditions a es . * EXECUTIVE n:w1N'G . Decorator 10U call m~ Wt both btnefit U pervtsor Exj t ~ECRL'TAR'i 'lo ccmptny e JI; ft J .C. PtMll'Y Co. . Excluaive buy oot .,..,,,;ye S Serv' ce P ' < • Id • n I . Mu.I do Fuhioo llW>d Reulv11 Clncell>tion of $22,000.00 Try me and '"· 541-3157 NEEDED · 5horlhand and typing. Ae. Ntwport Bee.ch $p.lnl1h and M.dlt1rr1ne1n Furniture Platin9, Anodizing IMME DIATELY curacy and ~Ulcicncy mort? INS11UOOR Net'ds All New ,., 9M'lty "-4 ..__ INTERIOR .\ EXTERIOR & Proceulng f ln1p0rlant than ipeed. $600. PART TIME A Decor .. er'• Dfff9 He• 11 0. ....... Plintina. r... .... • TOOL & DIE MAKER Are you lhis man. .~ .. mon<h. • SAlli GIRL SALESLADIES Items as !ollows: Gorgeous 8 It. custom quilted Uc. " Ins. Oluck su.53l4 J>roiireulve aeroep;t,ce • Gt:NERAL lNSPOCl'OR lloU!>Cwl!Jeli and f\1oLhrr1 sofa with separate )OQSe pillow1 with be&vy oak HANDY man palnllna: le n1af11.1f~cturer has a re-* MAfNT!::NANCE 11 )"Oll are. Tiie Si~er -~~n.s!~~°rth:~E~, Are you these women? Can YoU spare a few hOurs trim decor and matcbin§ chair, 3 matchinc oak clean up work. No job too qulremtnt Mr a ma.n to MW!ANIC ComPlnY rwed.il Yo!J, O\I each d.ay ..oo add 10 the occasional tables, (2) 58' tall decorator lampi, amall. Call Pancho. 00-7110 k't up and mana1e a • MAINTENANCE may now be employNJ bui ?¥Pin; requirt'd. WUI du ti you a.re, tbt Sini;:er lamUy income at the u.me hanging chain sw.ag lamps in wrou~bt iron, an "P•per BuuY" &47·1659 plating, anodiiing and EL.ECI'RlOAN want to improve )'Our pres-~t:r~ylric. S3.00 per bout Company need• you. You time! Sched1.Mdt convenl-S.piece king slze master bedroom swte In pecan Mobil ttore • home calls processlni facility. Appli-* ·STOCKMAN.sI'ORE " ent po&itlon. Stllll')' plus may now be employed ml for you., mominp, •ft· paneled Mediterranean style with top quality We advise. aell · inlltaJI cant must be ex~rienc· UNE comrnlasion, company ear • FACTORY ASSEf\tBLERS but want to lrnp1-ov~ YoW' l'rnoons, r:vening:s Cl' com.bi-15 yr. warranty king size mattress It bo.z 1prinp. PAINTING Aver. r 0 0 m eel ln ti" chemistry of * TOOL CRIB ATTENDANT ~~~~:·.:::·;.~d:~ ~; AND INSPECTORS of preaent position. Silary nation• ol au. Work in • Spanish decor dining set, etc. compl. $25. ' up. Neat metal cleaning, e\eclJ"O. *METAL ASSBMBLER mo.chlneparta. plu! oommiuioni. pakl tun store under the flnl'st W.... H...t.I.,.. ,...._ s•ua.N x::~~.:~M~:~,; 9,~;::!•E. ~ ~~~~ gnnLA~y '" '"'°" p~Ml~~~o v:;~"::,nc81:."' mony ~~:~::~.:WP<• ~:i;,~~llFl~E ....... ···-·'698.00 Exterior. 17 yr:t: local refs. ,,.,,,~.o. In addition to OPERATOR Mr John Ferraro NE\" ---.. •-ct"" • I I·'--"' J.11, rtKe C11t1 le r.na..-11 .. t1•u1n,. Vl'ry n!ll.SONlble. 894-3408 ......... y • ..__. u. u•g (;()ffi• Apply in pe1·z;on. Penney. rash on "'''"u r •• ..,, AY1il•bl-N1wt.om•n ,, Co1ifer111f• Plumblrig 6890 PLUMBING 2f Hr. serv. Work g\l8l', Lie., tnsur.; remodel, repair, rooter aerv. 531-7566 * Z4 HOUR SERVICE • Plumbing repair r en1odel G\lire.ntecd • &1&1407 Marv's Plumbing Service Repair -Remodel •646-9807• Remodel., Repair, 6940 REMODEL & REPAIR Carpentry -Paint -Plasler & Conl'retr. Dick &12-1797 ~ing 6960 Alterition......642·58<45 Neat, accurate, 20 yri. exp. TILE, Cer1mic 6974 • Verne. lhe Tile f\1an * Cust. work. lnslall & repairs. No job too small. Plaster patch. Usik1ng 'how er ttpair. 847-1~7/846--0206 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Job W1ntod, Lody 7020 - JAPANESE SCHOOL GIRL Domestil" work. live in with American family, 646-0384 or 543-518:! Praclical nurse-companion, Drive. Good cook. Lite housework. 838-6681 Job W1nted Men & Wom•n 7030 EXPERIENCED APT MGR Cou ple with many yearr. ex- perience in Orange Co. wants opportuni~y lo handle your property. 613--4769 Domestic Help 7035 LIVE INS Employer pa)'6 feet George Byland Agency 106 B E. 16th, S.A. 547--0395 Qrinese live.ins. Oieerful Permanent. ExperienC'ed. Fa:r East Agency 642-8703 Help Wanted, Men 7200 Press Operators Rubber experience only. One on 2nd shift, one on 3rd shift. Apply '°' Personnel Office U.S. Divers Company 3323 w. Warner Santa Ana An equal opportunity employer FRY COOK E:.:perienced Apply at THE RIGGER No. 16 Fashion Island Newport Center N.B. MEN WANTED e CARPENTERS e f\IEOIANICS e PAINTEfiS 1\PPLY IN PERSON LIDO SHIPYARD 900 Lido Park Drive Nrwporl Beach COLLEGE Student p e r m Jl zit.ion. fuU time 1ummt'r. p/1 imr during sch! at Chevron Statlon on bcb in Laguna. No hippies or krlg hatr. Must W 18. Salary + comm w/raiscs. Gt--9003 P roduction T rainH Apply In f}('r~f11 TROY ENGRAVING Co. zm S. Pullm11n St. S..n111 An11. Calif. Elecfronfc Salesman \Vith knn\.\•ltdJt1' of p1111s and/ OJ' TV rep!l 1r. H. W. Wdght Co. 17Tl1 N"'port Blvrt, CM BELLY BOARD chemstry ove1'8U know-* PUNCH PRESS pany will open In Colla Mr. John Ferraro 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Crodit App•o·•M lmmedietely ledge a n d experlence OPERATOR JHE SINGER (0. Mer.a within lbe next few t\-1onday UU'u Friday s~uld include. the iruper-• lo~NGINE LATHE wttk1. JHE SINGER CO All 1tudcnt poiiUons filled , I ~ /] f~~:1e:"'1 an:pe~~~~l'~~ • ~~~~~~THE 11 JJ~{;n~~!~g~~nter 1An Equal ~rtunity • ~qua! opportunity rmp_'°_Y•_r ~ I Furniture for pt>rlorming the aper-OPERATOR.. • •-h Employer} 7777 Edinger -___ _ ations mentioned:. f\f•ti • lifJLLING MAC1UNE Huntington 1P9IC This U not an agency 18 Huntington Cente'r TEWR 1844 Newport loulev1rd, Costa Mesa (only) et H.t..r 11¥4. complete recu1ne of qua.I-OPERATOR Huntingt on Be1ch itications, experience and * BENCH MAO~INIST GIRL FRIDAY E.,.ry night 'til 9 -Wed., Sit. & Sun. 'tll 6 salary required lb • HEWUM ARC WELDER CAREER Box 107b0, Santa Ana : ~~~E",;~;f_E• ~ OPPORTUNITY! 3-5 year1 well rounded olficc --RECEPTIONIST--Sl\vings II: Loan exJ)('rience preferred, D'AVENPORT screw machine operators $5.00 per ho ur. Experienced r;upervisor. Machine shql experience. Srre\v machine operators • trainees. Trut·k driVC'l'S, fork lifl dr1vrrs. material handler warehousen1en, and shi11pini:; pC"rsonnel. Top rates, Com· pany benelits. NE\V manu{atturi.ng com- pany will OpM in Costa MC"sa within the next few weeks. Please send history ol past work experirnce to Box Ml73 Daily Pilot (An Equal Opportunity Employer) This is not an agency. MAC DONALD'S is looking for lull or part time workl'r. Clean, con- genial 1urroundings. Ex· cellent working cooditiofls, paid vacation & profit shar- ing. Apply I PM to 5 PM, Monday thru Friday, 16866 Beat•h Blvd.. Huntington Beach. N ... nu-.. SALESMEN No Experience Necessary. Plenty of floor time. Jlighest paid commWions. Paid holi- days and vacation. Excel- ICflt training and promotion polential. Apply in person. Ask for Mr. Roberts ATLAS Chrysler-Plymouth 2929 llarbor Blvd , C.l\f, MACHINISTS ENGINE LATJ-IE Minimum 5 years experl· ence. O>mpany benefits. ov- ertime, p;ild life & medical. Bonus plan. Apply in per- "'" TROY ENGRAVING Co. 232'1 S, Pullman Si. Santa Ana, ~ ialil. SALES CL ,~K Full & Part-Time tot Ne\.\'· po11 Cenler, Huntington C~nltt & Fashion Square, La Mabra. APPLY IN PERSON The TOBACCONIST Inc #45 Fashion Square, La liabra PRODUCTION WORKERS For CC'remic Induslr_y Day shift. Apply lnduslrial day Products lS765 Fiberglass Rd, Hun!ini!lon Beach, Ca!ir. BUSBOYS l ,ll Yt'ars or older. Days, pen limf'. Call t>cotw J & J Pi\1 536-8866 for appointmt'nl Hunti"¥ton &-aclitr Country Cluh PART Time crew manager, easy \.\'Ork, 3 or 4 hours evenings \1•orking with boys. f\!ust have car . Cnm- missinn5, For information call 893-5375 anrt ssk for Boh -;-=:::;:-;;c;;-;;::-.,--o7 MAN 9'rlm·k full timf' !n l..'· HAUi~ RENTALS. ~l11st he neal in 1ppearance. hnve neal handwriting. Wiil train rlghl man. Apply I 9 3 o Newport Blvd. CM. REAL ESTATE. Shouldn't you be selllng the hotlf'lll area I Huntington Beac~? Call for appt. VUlagl R. E. 962--4171, 546--8103 DISHWAHSER, 3 ditys -1 nhtht 11 wttk. St11rting ta)ary St '75. SPe Tt>rry at 49;; E. 17th., C.M. or call LI 8-9Jt4 SERVICE St111kln Attf'nriant Know lube, oil change. 11ome mN"h11nk'. Ca p11b1, of man1R!ns 1erv 1 t 11 ! 1 o n . ....,,,. experience. 60 \Yf>m electric OCEAN VIEW MECHANIC Join today1 fastest IU'(lWin& typowti1u. _....,,, '"'n· SCHOOL DISTRICT tla.I. Salary commensurate $418. to $50!!. RfCEPTIOHIST •••••••••••••••••• Spanish & Medlterrallean • FABRICATION STRUC-profession-Mutual Fund sal~ wlth ability. 547-0638 or Operate PABX 1Witcbboard, Bought Manufadurer's Showroom S.mpl• TURE DEVELOPMENT No experience neceasary. 644-1234 band!~ lncoming and outai> At Terrific Savings! MECHANIC \\'e train · full or part time Cosmetic Girl ma.ii, light typing <35 .w.p.-8' Wood carved arm divan, lg. man'1 chailj beaut fabrics. 5 Pc hexagon dark oak diD. set, w/black or avocado framed chairs; l5 Pc BR set. 9-dr Mr. & Mrs. dresser, lg mirror, 2 commodes, decorative headboard in Span· SARGENT- FLETCHER 9100 Flair Drive El Monte. Calir , 12 131283.7171 12131443.7171 An equl\I opportunity employf'r CAFETERIA. POSITION Full 01· part time, lunch or dinnei·. 18 or over ok. Will. lng to learn to <:ar"le roasts on the line. No experience necessary. ExceUenl oppor. tunitY to advance in chain o~aniz.ation. Hospitaliza. lion, life insur111ce inciud· ... -APPLY- ~:30 to <!::Kl Dllil.Y Ontra. Cafeteria Newport Shopping Center Pacifi5 Coast Highway UlacArthur Blvd. BUSBOYS AND l>lSHW !SHERS Apply in peN10n 9-5 p.m. REUBEN E. lfE 151 E. Coast Highway Newport Beach MECHANIC-- OCEAN VIEW SCHOOL DISTRICT $562 to $685 Automotive mainten- ance work. ScrvicC', adjust and repair school blwes and other automotive P.<IUipment. One year rremt rxperience in automotive mechanics, 8th grade edtlcation. U.S. Citizen. Apply in person 9-4, Personnl'l Commission Off. ice 7972 Warner Ave., Hunt- ington Beach, by August 23nl . MAC DONALD'S carry 001 rcs1 aurRJ1t is looking for pt'OIC'ssional JANITOR full lime .. J::xc1·llenl working conditions, paid vacation & prolit sharing. Apply I PM to 5 PM, Monday thru Fri- day, 16866 Beach Blvd., Huntinglon Bf'arh. General Woodworking Machine Woodcarving Wood Parts A11embJy Artificial Limb F•b. f\Jature. c:'XJX'rlt'llCt"d ln woodv.·oi-kinR;. Good mrdl· ;i.nical ability. OthC'rs nttd not ;i.pply. Kingsley Mfg. Co. C11U MS-6116 for arp1. IF you are an e)lper\enced li1arine gu engine man With knowledge of electricity & are capable of pmfeBBionally lnstaUing equipment on new boats call °" come by West Coast Yac:hls Inc., 33JJ \V. CM.st Hiway, N.B. 6412-ml Siles, over 18 $Airs promoOon Johs avail. Lari;ie lnl'I. corp. $10,lm 1st !',.11r. )la1n~gemf'nt opportu. nilies. Call 10 Mtn -Z pm 5.~11113. Mutu1I Fund Advisor., Inc. Npt B. 1603 Westc.lifl 642..ti42'2 S.A. 1212 N. Broadway ~7.S.Ul HOUSEMAN J·;~per1enct' preferred Americare, Inc, 214 llospital Circle \Vestmlnslcr 893-4541, E.xt 331 Equal opportunity employer • Boat A11embler1 e C1rpenters • Painters Apply in person Jensen Marine Corp. 235 ~ischer, Costa Mesa Experienced Good. company bencnts. Call f:ir appointment 5~0-50a0. ext 30. Joseph Magnin EqURI Uj)j)Ortun:ty emp]oy(>r LEGAL SECRBARY m. J.. one year experience switchboard. or general oU- icc. High school graduate, U.S. Citizen, Apply in Jl('r- 500 ~4. Pt!r90flnel Commis- !i'ion Office 7972 Warner Ave ., Huntington Beach by August 23ro . Apply in person No phone calls please y 'MARlNERS SAVINGS & LOAN .ish oak or avocado design.· · j • • ·Items Sold Individually Shop Around-before you by see US! VALUE $89S -FULL PRICE $429.95 or terms 1s low as $3.00 Wffk No Down-Use Our Store Charge Plan Expt'rienced short hand & No F ancy ·Front-BUT Quality Values Inside IBf\-1 exei;:Ulive. Start $400. Hiring all phases ot help. Call Monday 675-laJO TOP PAY~ APPROVED FURN. 2159 HARBOR, CM 1515 WMtcliff Drive N•wport &each New S+or• Openi•tcJ • ri.1anagers •cashiers Gene I t.I S 12 Years same location-same ownen HOUSEKEEPER, Irvine e Sales&: Stock Girls rl .JI e Daily 9.9, 10..S Sunday e 548-9660 To'"'"· Cornn• dcl ""· • LOCATIONS ' r..u fun• "' 11 to 3 ....................... . Excellent starting &alary Newport Bead! Qualilled to work in high JOBS & EMPLOYMENT 2 MODERN Grttn chairs. and ~·orking conditions. 4 Town a: Countt"Y, Orango d 1 -"' Ex era e a~uon atore. · $25 ea.. Coral chair $10., houM per day, any 5 days a La Habra · -• _..... b penence pr.,.e •• ~ ut not Jobs--Men, Wom. 7500 White linen love seat $75. week. References ....,,uired. Telephone BACK STREE."T ()(f I -•· ·~-. necessary. ers mmL'Ul· Old bra111 lamp $25. Larrre Own lranliportation. 673--0988 (7141 8384890 u~ -· d' --· . d .• ata ....,r... iscount ....... NEED handy man. Rehre lamp S.5. CE RO(issiere ~ Experienced Ma1ure pleasant environment. A.p. couple prl'ferred. Exchange $20. 234 Sherwood Pl, CM PBX Operator HOUSEKEEPER. Live in. ply: minor apt maint. for rent. 646-4579 Part tin1e Sat & Su:i. days. Young man in family has BUFFUM'S 67~724. 10,,;Ao.N:.,l,.:S.cHc.M_od ____ ll<I_.-..,.-.,, Apply in person impared sigbt Principal -·--· Agencies, Women 7300 Sheraton Be1ch Inn duties, cooking for him and Fashion Island AgenciM, M. W. 7550 & marble lamp no. 2 mod 21112 Ocean Ave. maintaining hi! qtrs. Must Newport Beach ----~ -···-walnut la.mpe S3 ea. Danish WORK , -• Hwitington Beach be capal>le of being second ARGUS mod walnut TV, blk' w~ite at YOUR convenience I ii7D<co,.c;;co;,-== mother. Ideal for woman Work Near The Beach S3S. Wood dre-sser $5. Drea- The '"Temporal')' Division" Bm~~~ S !:mTi! Rwi;an!:d~ wish.in&: perm. bome. Very SJQRE MANAGER Dish.man ............ $l3 sft ing tbl~ $5. 644--<ni of the Newport Perdla.I desirable quarte.l'!I. Salary Pbiirmaceutical ti'fle .• $2 hr l\1APLE bed.rm set, Zenith trans tor 2 boys, ages S & 2. •,,= bl Ag•ocY oUen: plea.sant, top open. f.1UJt have ex.cell. Chrili' opening soon in South F/C Bk~pr RE exp .. lo~ w remote 1V, o/&thfi'd 5 Yr old in 5Chool ~ day. 4 ~ h · ~~"•~{fee paid by 1he refereneea, no drinkina or Coast Plaza Reqmres fully Erierg Gal Fn . . to +.AJY c air. Make offer. 673-0529 ... -.. -· """' Day week. El Toro area. -... NT employer, of course) for the 337_7247 6mokiaa. P.O. Box 3S8 experienced women's ~pee-ARGUS EMPLOYME CASH for furn & appliances. qualified woman who likes -~==~===~-Corona dcl Mar. -ially shop manager. Oppor. CONSULTANTS AGENCY We sell aood used fum.1T12 to work just now and then. WOMAN WANTED tunity to grow with expand-~!l !3 Westcliff. N.B. 5~7796 Np! BJ. CM &tZ-7015 NEWPORT TO care for ambulatory ing fashion organiz.ation. Sal-1624 E. \7th SL, S.A. 547-6336 ='========= p I A lemale stroke patient and do R.N, 11 -7 ary based on experience + __:_ ... 83lerso~~e~ Dr.g, 1~.~~ light housework. Llve out. full er p;irt time volume. Stt Mr. Berohn, Schools-Instruction 7600 Office Equipment I011 References requested.Ca 11 AIDES 01.ris' Fasltions 9821 Chap. ----~ ~ "42-3870 540-98T7 Experience preferred man, Garden Grove. Time is r11nn;·1g out FOR Sale A.B. Dick table DENTAL ASSISTANT ' 7-3 and 11-7 ENROLL NOW modt'I 320 offset duplicator. See Betty BruCf' at mi66 f:xec Agency for Career Girla 410 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. By appoint. 646-3939 Help Wanted Women 7400 EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY! • for experie~ced Over 25. Some front desk ex-Pal'k Lldo . SECRETARY NeedC'd b Y for special bnck-to-school be-2 yrs old . Good oond, $'700. Conva!e&eent Hospital firm loc. in San Clemente · b h In Contact MiM Christ""'" perience preferred. Must 1445 Su . Muit have good typing tkill~ g:anne~ & rus up course " have more than one year ex-perior 642_2410 & abilily 10 work with Typ1n~ & Shorthand. !•"'=--======== perience in dental office. Newport Beach figuN>s. No ll h 0 r 1 h • n d C'D--educa11onal -day or n1te 494--0034 after 4:30 necess. Interesting work & Learn .at your o>A·n pa~. Household Good1 I020 EXPER. TELLERS liberal COJTl!lany benC"fits. Copywnted trachtni' techn1- Exp. Safe Deposit Clks Saleswomen For APP't. call 1-492-1153 ques. BANK OF AMERICA Fine ladies clothing. TOY & Glf'i' PARTIES POLLY ·,PRIEST 548 W, 19th St.,''Cosla Mesa TOP PAY ! Housewives, earr fron1 $500 BUSINESS COLLEGE Equal Opportunity En1ployer Apply in person to $2,000 by Dec. llt. NO 326 N. Newport Bl., N.8. N DELlVERING OR CO' For details. call today · p rt T ' o phone calls plt>ase i..- BLUE &. Green quilted 8' couch $75. AdnUral TV $45. Okeefe &. Merritt r• raqi:e w/griddle $50. 675--203.1 G1r1ge Sale 8022 a une BACK STREE'l' LE c T I 0 N s . F R E E 548-9723 Bookkeeper/Cashier 25 Fashion Island HOSTESS GIFl"S. c 5 I I SCHOOL Children's vacation QUICK Sale -Fut Barca.Ins! Apply in pe™ln Newport Beech NOW~ rates. Chilcoat 10 • Lesson Plummed teathtt pa.Im lrtt LIDO CAR WASll Girts & Gadgets 842-1593 Typing School. 548-2S59. 173 $15. 4 telephone pole bar 481 E. 17th Costa Mesa MATURE Woman for ~f-Del Mar, c .M. stools $10 each. Stove $30. CASHIER.RECEPT. " Bod $25 "' C~~R MAID -Xln opportunity if you have te~oon care for 7 yr. old; MERCHANDISE FOR-anliquod 10e:;:_r>, ,;..,Mim>' _'.,· .........,o DANCER K1llybrook Sctrl. are a SALE AND TRADE ~ Apply in persm. 2901 '8.ct'w-ale clerical ability & 546-5426 hand carved wood Jli Harbor. Sassy Lassy. poiSl' jn handling rustomer =-========='!Furniture 8000 675-3606 56-9!183 * contacts. High school grad-Jobs-Men, Wom. 75oo /;;;;;;;;;;;,;~;;,;~;;::;;:;;;1 M-O_V_IN_G_.-°""""---.,--.... -,. • C kt 'I W •t • sa uation required. __ oc a1 11 r s s LfVE. lN Housekeeper and PACIFIC FINANCE IT'S THE furn. ruga. baby flll'll. Tbur- Wu Ben's i! accepting applications !or theSE' po- sitions. Apply in person Wu Ben's 333 811y1ide Drive Newport Beach EXPERIENCED PART TIME PROOF COMMERCIAL TELLER chi!d care. Private room 2792 Harbor Blvd., C.M. SECRETARY • Clerk. hourti TALK Sat. 318 Moote.m, &lbo1. and bath. $700. mo. 51..T days 549-302! I 2 -9 p M Monda.y·F'riday, 1 673-TI02 a week. Perm. position with F.qua1 opporlunily employrr Sa1u1-d&y 9-ti PM, Thursday DRAPES. baby it.ma, bikr~ rererences. 5"0-9Z12 NEED off. OF THE parts Fish, other ttem1. JOG 2 mature ladies lo __ 0 E P«t·' •-~-1 BOOKKEEPER wanted. E.x-WOl'k 4 houri day, s day• in T ·WN.' sat' ...... _ .... -\. ... nen ('. · M '"-BOOKMOBILE Driver-Clerk. ._.., pcr1t"nce necessary. usl "" our new, modt'rn ins. ollice. ~ able lo handle respoll5ibililY. Na expcrif'ncc n~. but mus1 !lours 8:J0..5 PM, f\1onday -COME SEE WHY SAT ftOUl 9 Ali an- G oo d pa y. REVA "S have plea1an1 phone voice Jo'riday. t!q1M9,refrig,fu,!l1\yr e FASHIONS 67a-5761 and not alraid lo ta.lk to"""-, --J ROOMS odds fl enc:b, 140 t'or4. ~ ,~y CLERK • houri; 12-9 P~1. E.1~, Nwpt UQtite. OF'F'lCE Girl T.V. Store. 6 Pie. Please call toc In-f\1onday. Thursday. 1'"rid£t>-"LCYJ'S.A..stufth Trl..i.. bunk day week. PI ea s 11 n l tcrview belwt'en 9&11. Ask off. Saturday 9-6 PM OF BRAND NEW ...,. personality, honC'sl. Good for Jackie. 847--0993, 847--0990 2 YEARS C»llege minlmuni. bed .1 mattreu, dimes. oppty for ad v a n c rn I . SECRETARY No students. HUNTINGTON Furniture chain, aolt clubl. Fri . .S.I. 675-llli . BEACH PUBLIC LIBRARY . 718 Vi1 Pal~rmo. Lido. I NEED a live in 1itter & To .as1nst Manager. Good 525 Main St., H.B. 536-9327 ALL FOR ONLY n.JRN lampe Englith 1ad- hskpr. who n('cds a home; typ1ni:: & shorthand skills $299 95 die & bridle. Lots ol Mix . $120 n10 10 start. Nr bch. req. Hrs 1-5. Mon-Fri. Apply • 1807 Anticua Cir., NB F'ri- Call 64&-3258 Mon-1'~ri btwn 612 Tt!rmlnal Way, C.M. • Fry C k Sun. 8-5 ask for Mrs. Hayrs. WOMEN P/T w I c fl r . OO YOU GET ALL TH IS: F=E=Nll=E=R.~,.,,~.,-.,-.-.--~~,-"-.1 t"ULL Time 1tenographer, Fulleretle JIB. $2 hr ruar. • Busboy LIVING ftOOf.l, 9 pc. !iv. beds, pina: pone tabl•. etc. UNITED CALIFORNIA exccllent typisl , , 0 me Lyn~ Brown 5 4 0-J 9 3 2, • DishWaiher i·m. w/snfa, matching chair, 231;, Laurel Pl. N . B , BANK shorthand desirable. Write 842-769'2 3 111.blK, 2 l>f-al1I . tbl lamJ)I, 642-1719 4525 M1cArthur Blvd. Newport Beach 540-4424 An N!Ual opportunity empklyer R.N. P•rt time •venin91 Ell'ctllent &a.lary & "''Ork· ing condiliotl!. CAI.I .. MRS. DECKER F·u11 1i.-1e basi•. n.·alltied 2 •"-ow plll"'''' -.,.,.,,.,=~~~-~~~ P. O. Bo" 1536 Newport HOUSEKEEPER Live . in. "'" uu-" . CARAGE Sile, Aue. 17th. t. 8' h W to work in high grade rest· BEDROOl\f : >< pr. bedr. w/ 1 cl .., ....,_--., .... _ 3~· orking m 0 th• r. 9 year 11urant. Offers pleasant en· lg. dr,.sse1·, l1i11g mirror, ; ohung. """-"•• ro:m. e SALES-DHE1\1\I JOB e old d11ughter S.A. Area. vlronment. a:ood company li;i. chest. fuil ilze bed, 2 17309 Poplar St., Faunta.in Kcl'fJ your lmportapt job as 83Zr7327 bene!iis. Apply: dre1ser lan1p.~. 2 bed pil· V11.l!ey. 847-1034 wife A mother & l'llm a NEED Rellahle exp. hskpr B_UFF\IM'S lO\lll. • 589 PARK Dr. C.M. (rear) wkly ply check. MS-95.26. 1.2:30 -3:30 daily. Mon--Frl . KITCHEN: Formica top din· Mlsc. furniture, t'IJll, Com· 544-3854 Harbor Hilla. Own traat. Fashion Island dinette, W/table, 4 match· bo T.V. Box Spr .• matt ... MCJTliER"S Helper. no ~ Newport le1ch lni ch&ini. ='.,.11~!~only==~~~--- cook.'&· Uve-in; 2 Id!'. C:. X PERlENCED WaitttM PUROiASE ALL OR PART GARAGE 51.i. Sat 6 SUn. ohild ..... SaV + ,.., rm • for ~11 p.m. • KITCHEN FURNITURE Bods. ...hold flrni"""'" l'Ja. 842-7254 Kens Colle Shop miacell ""1.1e.ma. MT TultUI; DRUG SIO"' Cl"k· htll tlm•. lt13 flarbo' Blvd. CM , • DINING ROOM Ulj)UIDATORS l =N',,,.,,,="-Bch-:---,-~ neal. e:.:pcr. Mid·a11:cd pref. SALT::SGIRJ~ w / bkkpg ex-Starting Sep1emb<!r. lntrr· 1807 Newport Blvd., C.M. MOVING • Carpenter tools, Apply in prrson 3Ui82 S. C..t per. Part. pio.'l~i'·'v l'ull time, vif'Ws noon til l PM. M(ln· Op,.n f.:Vf'S. turn. Aug1. bAby furn. Thur- 193.1321 Jf"'Y· So. Laguna PERMANENT, UNDER 30. da.y throu2b Frld;iy , l~~~~ ............ ~ .... il Sit. lll Mc.itero, Balboa. --~W~A=ITRESSES EXPERIENCED Motel desk Visions. Lllg11na, ,197-lll'i MR, OO'S FAMll.Y Movln.ll'-ucrlflce. ~ -'~"-"-"'-~-----nautical la°"', 2 h11.teh E~perlrncrd Mly nf't"d clerk, PBX. eypist. age. 25-Dental unice Man ... r cov'd. end table:11, 1 hflt· Gan.p ~ • allo wuhtr apply. Nn p h n n e ('a\ls 40. Apply days l.Aguna Single. Ex.p. 25-45. 260f) w. "Cotll'I 11 1111,y ch oov'd, ootl. table. Like. • Orytr. Sat.. Aua. 11th. p)e145t'. Village, 31106 S. Coast Hwy . • 546·l<XM> • NewpMt Bl"n~·h nl"W. !1-16--0076 A261 Lambert Or •• H. B. DENNY'S SEWING M.chine operators, Bat Maid -01netr, top YOONG men&· woml"n Zl·35. MASSJVE Spa,nith dininr: lt"I. GAS atove, toolt, furn. 1600 S. Coast Hwy, el!'per. on dre&&H. Top pay ; ""*i"· Quttn Btt, Costa Position• open for ,,Inter table, g chain, 2 pe. hutch Silt/Sun. Aug. 17 • 13th l..Agun1 ~ch --11ead7. Appl)-ll90 W. 00. Meu. 6f&.99ll emploYml'nt, Full A part w/,;lus doon. Near new, S.U ~dio. Coata Melll L.Af\!JNATOR EX11 only, Ap. SERVfCE Sta ma.n, exp!!r. ply El PMpo 1974 Placentia Full time days, Sun. oil. Ap. Avt. Of. 54S-MOJ ply Prlater Union &rv. 2248 s-.-.-v-... -.~,~,.,,-~ .. ~,,-..,,--. etimm. ruu & prt Ume. Tom Sh11rp Union. OR 3-3320 . 2201 E. Cout Hwy , Cd~I. * .IANITOR. E"perienced. Coaat Mesa f.1 e mo r I a I H011 pital Apply 301 E. Vic- toria, CM. Ph. 642-1134 FASClNATV-.'G oppor. for CO.ta Mua. HOUSEKEEPER. 4 1 eh I tlrM. Apply The Oorymen cotl over $900. uc. for J400. GAR.AGE SALE -Misc n~at, •ccur•le rfrl with HOUSEKEEPER, live \n. c:hildm. HB area T: Xi . 5: 30, Fish il Chips. 2100 Ocean. 6'P.t-3506 rood~. houtthold ilitma. bookkttplni: exper., .~me E"p'd.. w/('hUd~ ( 3) 5 daya S«I. R,ds.14T-4«i!I front N8 btwn ~pm. CHESS l•bl~. hand made 132 C.pttal St . Q.f, typi~; radio expet ~lplul. k f 1,,,,,·c=,.,---,-,,===--,,,~ M M Ev.to .., · f;nd of · 646«41 DENTAL ASSISTANT, OTtr EXPER. d"'"' cltrk: 40 hr. mouJc Ule an wrou.&ht iron GARAGE .Un, ID o •In I · SERVICE StaUonAttMd. 6-U P.M. Experienced. Over 21 490 E. 17th St. CM STOCK CLEllK -40 houri. ~rlence pmcirrf'lt . 1510 Newport Hlvd .. CM .. BARTENDER • AprlY \n ~rton; Meu Lane•. 1703 Superior. C. M. Harhor BL, C.f\1. ASSISTANT MANAGER Colit& Mna Car Wash. fiM per1011. Apply in person 20C19 llarbor, C.M. *FRY COOK, t.'(perlenced. Nri Sun'1 or holidi,.y5. Apply hf!'-1. 1.1 AM, &12 W. 19th. C-~t. 2 SERV Sta AttendantJ/Saln. men. Full l pArt lime. Ex· iH"r. Ray Carvl'y Chctvroo, 604 S Collist H11iry., l.AguM. LIQUOR CLERK Reial!. Part tlm,. .Top ut.t')". Write Ba• M 172 0.ily PUl>t. ' ----· ·-u-Tues., Wed. S to 11. Sat. lo BABYSt'ITER ~ for 13 15, Oral lut'lt1'Y· Must take week; no eve1 or Sun. prdettal. Lowly rtft, flOI M*"' , antfqutt Sun. T to 3. Mflrtln Aviation mo okl boy. 7:30-5. Mon • and read X·ray&. ~mt ALSO. exper. dJ'UI dellvtry 60-2290 441 Al'->, Newport BdL 546-4300 Ext. 37 Fri. Call aft 6. 1 • 521-.3294 PBX Operator, anrwe:rinc I atock clerk. 540--45MI r SOFA, nau.cahyde, foam GAR AGE Sale. Good SECRF.TARY REUEF LVN U-7 I 3.11 ~")Ce. Exper. preferred. • COOK. Experie.nctd. cushfonl w•t • back, COY barv;aln&. M&tlJ mile. ltlll'NI, Lai\l.na law office: cood slh lhltta H.B. arell. Good Mtn agf. JI. OR 3--U96 Cotta Mesa Me m 0 r 1111 like new $'12!.. fiTl.-7726 31311 Montt'!'tJ, S. Lquna lz. tw 1kill1 ~Ml· "9~!)446 •lary. 147-9671bf'h~t_:n1-!i • COCKTAIL WAITRESS • llMplta.I Apply :'lt')l F.. Vic. TEAK Deik 21,· x 5', dble ISIOCNESS Fotctt ale ii TilE QUICKER YOU CAU.. MOTEL MAID Apply in pel'IOn, MeM Lanes, totla. C.M. Ph. &12-m4 pede.11ta1, 1100. Blue Skyw.-y p11lnlin1 equip. Comm1 il THE QUJOCER YOU SELL Part tilN' NB. 115-IMl 1T03S~r, C.M. aLUtGE m h1g111t,lpi:1, $00.MG-7706 priv•t... 2m Or.na~ .. CM. ---------------- • • I • ""' ............ ,.. ........... ,.. .............. """'"'ll'!ll ..... ""' ...................................................................................................................... ~.-....,..-------• ~ ~ .. ~ ... . • g• DAILV PILOT '-•.,1-<11'1DtSE: FOR SALE AND TRAO& f~. A11911sl 16, 1%8 MERCHANDlSi fOK MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADI TRANSPORTATION ....... • TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Imported Autot 9600 o ..... 5ot. 1022 ·~LE AND TRADE Misc•ll•nooua l600Mloullonocua 1600 FREE TOI _:Y~O~U~.1:a..~1s=&:Y~·~•:ht:'~:9000~ Iott· Yach• Ch1rters Trallon, Utility 9450 AUSTIN HEALEY .;.;..:;c.=;...;;.;.;...;.:... __ Pia,_ & D'11'"' 1130,1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~1 - PORT. stl"reo phono $8; bl.by 1• ORGANtC Ftrtlllzer, horse 216' Pcanon Corwnandf'r Sip. clbllw•. ho¥• clothes 3 -JO $eason Sale! HARBOR BLVD. mM ..... wood •hav..... si,. •. Llk• MWI $!l>01l yrs. \Vomen'1 dothet 11)..ll; c 0 m b 1 n • d mulch 6 O' Dt:!evtt. off tllorc h II. II d .. kn.It I w ~at fr Fall lhipmenll cl Ba.ldw1n DRIVE-IN THEATRE tert!Uz.er. M6-493l a I I c1i.1t.r, iteel bull, z,oo matemlt:y dotbe&; books • PllftOI A: Orgt.ns cm thl.' 5:30 S/lS mi. m.Usln11: ran.ac. Oflt'r, PQ~clcs; new carvtna "''t.)I. Our noor &i db<:on M' Chria Seil. SkiU, 1963, .. 1: Royal mnd. typowrit" """'"' m"'I '"" Pric<s SWAP MEET TORTOISE wU fomale. kit· TIS. A,_...'"'""· musi $8; 1'm.p1: dual mnt. f'l.IU glashed! OQeRi't lt make kl''",, """v· old, CUray,, m&.le, ICU .......... $13,700 ...._ ""'°"" 15: -" ''"""shop"'""'"'°" IUYI SELL'. TRADE! ~'.~,·, '"o1d' :::::::.."· ~·°""""'"Sloop,~ .. 5• .._ .......... -~" , -•ou.a •-m01 · .,..,........,, bow l item pulpit, lop ~ ...... ~"'1'1'_ .. ~~NU ......, buy? 8/15 cmd.lt'-''' '" ·-~_,_, -~ -, WARD'S BALDWIN S!VDIO FREE BUYER'S PASS ~ ~~ PLASTIC lkift 8 It Mat' 1801 Newport. C.M., 642-8484 TO IWAP Min AT 2 ADORABLE k I Ile n I . Columbia 50 Sloop, like -•a c HP 0.8. ,..,_ 1 • 1 1 Homelesa unlt>q I a k e n . new? •••. Make offf!I"~ -· ~ ·-0 Co' L -I HAltlOl ILVD. D Iii· N THIATlt Si $45. Stand ~ Tandem bike range I 1• ,.. .... t ame:u mother. Y.'eantd & <11' F'1ber11us ffatttt&I 3 ..,...i "° 6 It Orle"1al O.•Stop Mualc Sloro •••s oooo 10 AM lo 4 PM ••ss .COD h • b' k o "3-'° oo .,,.., '"''"" .... 146.00l coUee ~e $25. aocc Wurlitzer planol il organs. anytime 8/16 FRASER YACHTS Yainaha 196f trell bike 1700 Fischer, Ktnabc p I an o s. SAT. 01 SUN. fRE£ ADMISSION I.AT. 01 SUN. AUSTRALIAN Sb e p he r d CAl...L Chuck Avery mllM, d1rt tires, double Play~ pianos, N!bU, suar.. ,. female, 8 Weeks, pureb~. 3421 Via Oporto, N.B. aprccktt Sl6I). 54IJ...8669 Cl"lnd&. PlESINT THIS Fltll PAIS AT THIATll IOX OFflCl 9 6 2-5 3 3 2 18m Santa fi73.5252 * 49+39I6 EVES. GARAGE SALE WALLIC!ls.MANNING'S M•rl&n& F.V. MUSIC CITY PASS ADM ITS CAI AND ALL OCCUPANT$ Pllll -,--~ --- BEAllT 51,s mo tortoi11e shell 17 AMER. Ma.re gla.ss bolt $ft, 9 a.m, • 5 p.m. 3400 So.-Brislol VOID .t.FTEI DEC. Jl, 1t•I k'll W'll I $500. HD trlr $100. Oliver 35 9039 e atARTER THE FlNFST New '°' Ketch 673.-~lT e 6T'a-:l~OO MOTOR HOMES 9215 9200 Utility !railer 4 x 7. J.4::hll, '68 p.late1. 175 * 831- Trucks V500 19G.1 au;v PIU. 8' bed. Lr& WU c1m~r. Nttdt paint and a Uttle tinkering, but in Xlnl 1nech. concl. Make of· ft<r! Wkday1 53&-6848, wk ~ 962-7898 '59 LAND Rover ' w/d, model 89. new tiret: over1ir ed in back. new clutch. trans 6 rear end . En&. re- eent valve job. $900, 642-3807 1928 CHEV. f ist bed tru<Jk $200. El Aiorro Beech Trlr PK &m l N. Coe.~t Hlway, 106, Laguna 49'1-6798 pl •ii~~-~~~:::..;•:..·~·~·~~~-11=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 i en. t pay a pay nK. hp mot-"~. -·-• Olb l rnattn!lll, ay JX'n, '"""'a esa ,,...,. __ _ 499-2554 7-9 am, 7 -1 o ===~=·=~="'=~=''== bllthinette, jump a• at. 81 16 BookcaM bee.dbo&rd. Misc. NOW llERE -the neW SWIMMING POOL Misc. W1nted 8610 pm Sailbolt1 9010 J..U1 Mann St, 1 r v In e Supe.r'IOUIXJl.nl T-200 18 Ft Pool, Filter, Surface --------4 YR. Old Maltese Poodle, I"---'-'"'-----'= '50 GP..1C ~2.ton van, nt>w eng., good Un' radio, htr. Asking $250. 494--38 12x55' MA YFt.OWER 1 BR, 1.;; .. ~FORO;:;;;;;.:;,,o-:;T;',;P<\:; ;;.,.,:;;;--, <vi:i'•. (Unlveraily Pa.rk) Hammood Spinet orran Skimmer, Maintenance Kll. w A N T E D (male) neNs hom11 with SNOWBIRD # 379 front kitch.. compl. furn. R/H . 3 .peed. F1eetside. -the finest yet! FR.EE Cround Pad. childrt'n. Between 5 & 6 wiUt trailer. $325 $6.500. 548-8242, eves 536-7614 aJt 4:30 Neighborhood Saft ... SCHMIDT·PHUJ..lPS CO. $149.88 p.m. 646-3750 8116 Oceanic Yacht Sales S«netl\inc for e very o n e \VE need quality {no junk . . . e 00-5151 e 1'urn., appt baby items, UI07 N. Main o :llth SECARD POOL please) • Funrlture, color 1 BLUE Kitten with tight I ;:,07."°',--,.""";-cc--o- clotbill&, toys 1V, sp«ting l!'!!!'!'~~Sa'!""~"~An&""~"""""I l2J s. Ma.in, Orange TV's, itereos, appliance1, gray eyes. 2 black &. white WANT to ttnl Lido 14, Aua. ~ AUg 17 Ad"'· ~-•~1992 tools• o"'·• -"pm·•I. kitt.eM. f months o 1 d . 17-Sept. l. Balboa Isl .. .,.......... • • ....... .._... ROCK 'n Roll rum.ho 01·gan ~ u... ... ..,-""' ~·~ .,_,, 8117 G I H B (Near -er ''l!"'~!t!"!!"'!!!!! ... ""!!!!!!!!!!' I TOP CASH IN 30 Minute• ;1'1..-.v•" rand Canal. Call collect 1-c e, · · · ..--by Doric. Fender deluxet ,A<= CD'T ·-FREE Kitt 2 pl•·'w 4 213-378-6f1S pllnl)96S-3654962-9919 amp.,w/reverb&:footcon-'""··-' .., hro ... ,,,y S.~~· 531·1212 * 89J..ai55 ens,; <v•; 962-i!rlJ trolled vib 1 Both 3 rev ... ver, c me plat""', =='========-'mos.: to good h omes LEHMAN 10', tip top con· ra 0 · ~ never fired, wfhvy. duty FREE TO YOU 642-1323 Altemoom S0.-7786 dltim . $400. 636 Havana SAT It SUN -Dnenon old. Sold new for SUOO. nus fasl draw belt & holster A.her 6 P.M. 8115 Ave. Long Beach !Ql.4 Stfff!O I: Hi Fi, walnut, xlnt week only -S795. $110; portable Mc0Jll1,r.h S75. O>e&t Freezer $.i!S. 3 Gould Music ComJ"ny rMC>P.r's chain aaw. brand ADORABLE, fluffy, Ii.Iver WANTED, very .special home t .··~39-4°"'89°"'3,---,,.""'~ ---- Plastic den chairs S:l.~ 2()15 N. Main, ~.A. 5'17·™8! new $100. Tl'lr. hitch, 2" grey, female kittens !2), /I.:. for m!itro colli~. 8 n10 .. LEARN to Sail on Custon1 e1ch. Rood Race &et $5. D S bnl l I I b k j 1'.1 a m & , h 8 s s b o Is . male. NeNl.s 1hots, 540-fi183 built 35' Sloop. By hour or To.,, & M'••. 818' D-•":"\d a'n ish . pinet P i1no :.o , w l' ec. ra c cqu p.. &!''.~""" 8/J6 b<>t. 3 P:'ll 11/15 d "··'I T 67"921 I -""" ~.. .... NEW_ $398 rrady to lnslalJ S40. 673-1164 ~ .-... ay. \...H.l ony .,..;i -a I :i Or., H.B. (Sur1':idc Cm-* AUCTION * 2 Female 2 mo blk puppies. LOVABLE, all black 18' DAYSAILER dominluw) Special purchase, oiled wal-,_, AAA-ood nut. Full 88 note. Terms $13. U ·n ll bu !Will be •mall dogs). Vf!fy .. .ttl'n, n~ g and Trailer * $650. !l.1ISC Furn, refrlg, 1tove, per mo. you M se ot Y good with children, ~ home, 6.lJ..6718 8/16 Days 540..9291 Eves 673-0136 Sa' • S give Windy a try Aft 2 p M 8/16 dishes, lam.pa etc. . · un Gould Music Comp1ny Auction• Friday 7::.l p.m, er ·1 • PETS 1nd LIVESTOCK HOURLY RENI'Al-5 l~:">. 3902 Rivet St. NB 20t5 N. Main, S.A. 541-0i!ll w· d • A t' . B REG . female Basset Hound c ~ 1820 * Rhodes 19'• • GiliGE Sale; turn., a~ e YAMAHA e in Y 1 uc ion arn & rer. female min. Poodle, 11• Fun Zone Boet co. •Balboa pliADCes, d othlng, di5hl'9, Behind Tony•, Bldj. Mat '! . to good hornet. Both prder. SIA~E KITTENS Seal 4l' SCHOONER ; ~k e e 1 , etc. 878 01rrell, CM 646-6675 Pianos and Organs 2075% Newport, CM 646-8686 older children. Mf>..5848 8119 Point, trained, 7 week.. $20. ballast, molds eet: up, you All 1lyles ava,Uable now at Put youneU in our Place MUST find a home tor my 842-3961 tinJsh. $600. 805:~2-783ot 8100 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS COA.Sf MUSIC llnrbor Blvd D-I Theatre sm smooth hair p~py who --------16. FT TRl1\1ARAN, 24 ft ~7.183'°9~N;;""PO"""rt~B~l~•d~.7· 7C7.M7.ccl SWJlOOAMPcFsddM'"·ES.EA. T love1 everybody. Mr a , Dogs 1825 mast $800 or best offer. CaU M&m7t Martinez. 61s-4817 ~9 2 BEAlITIF'UL AKC 101,)" M&-1266 SHON ING ER Spinet piano, PERSIAN mother wiiheti Toy bred blaek poodles. SABOT NO. 3692 with Ollrs Queen Anne dl'fiiRTI, beaut. Starts Aug 17 home for Persian tabby, Shots I: worms. S75. 1· Completely refinl9hcd cond. $675. 6424977 531·1272 &ft 7 weaned and trained 52g..a1B8 $27;). &4.2-3369 -===""'==""°'===;olii"':illiiiiiw:-P°'"Ohl.;-:r\ 646-54'.13 8/17'1o===--c-=,.,.,---Hotbed -Nutty -Spiry --21" ADrttlRAL Portable T'V "°'"''"'"'"--r.1rN. Female Sch n au ze r SAB6T FOR SALE Jackal -THINK T1l1vislon 8205 23" Z('flilh Console TV G. E. 2 BEAlmFUL kltt~n1, 10 pups: AKC reg. Ears crop-$150 II could be Mkl that one·~ sle~ console combina!ion. wks, iilvttlblk striped &. ped, All Shots. 675-3251 673-ll95 brain ii only M strmg as its FINAL WEEK OF Bl'd. double bolC &prin~s & blue grey -one home pri'I. ~===-~~-~- weakest THINK. Midsummer Cl11r1nc1 mal~s. Twin chest of 546-9174 8119 SACRIFICE AKC, white, WESTINGliOUSE AU Color TI"s 1'1ust Go~ drawers. Oinelle &!'!. End WANTED gd J\m for very Poodle p~ppies. Exrellent RCA Victor, Zenith, Pack· tab I e !I , I a m p s, ct c. lovable y,g man & chu. mix hne breedmg. 546-7494 RAD ARA NGE,EL.EC TRON'IC OVEN. ~· Ex-ant Bell & Admiral, Some Reason11bly priced. 642-4134 terTll."'l'. Sm breed. QldPr BLACK Codiapoo pu.ppln SlO 646-8128 new • some rrpouessed. BEAlITIFUL Bl-fold interior chldm pref. ~1-5614. each. 2579 Willow Lane CM. ce:ll. cond. Price& Siar\ •I • • • doors 14 pt1 neli;l Pach panel DOW Manual Water Softener, "S<s.=~3156=--,.,.-,-,--,,-,,-.,.,. ~~. F~l·~i·. ~e•r·~ T $l49 17-%" x 6' 6~~" quality Norae auto wamer, as Is. AKC Min poodle pup, apricot ...., ER1'1S AVAILABLE hardwood . Ant!que I v 0 r y 548-00.'\0 8/17 male. Pick of Jitter. 8 wk!. coppertone & Avoc.; Guar. HENDERSON'S "'Ith -Id trlm. A 11 •-bl "" ~·s O!l5 "" 4 KITI'ENS, i-~-haired. 6 """'asona e. ,,....,.....,.,., e\'el. e AQUA CAT * with racing aail, trailer $195 • 4!M-7453 14' Satolllto $8.'iO. * &U-5151 RACING KITE Jell Allen * 646-0389 RENT AL 8' SABOr type sail botit. S25 a week. 548-16'.lS ~1 1877 Harbor idowntownJ CM hardwood. Re a ~on ab J e '""5 548--0155 wlul. old. 2 males, 2 females. RUSSIAN WoUbound IBov.l Portable GE dLlhwiuher' top * * ~99-2151 or 837~791 894-JO.l<I 8/19 AKC, hll! all shot1. Black Power Crulffrs of Une mod. U&ed less than COLO !JO HI.Fl & St.r.. 8210 R TV, Packard Bcll, ~ ~E 6 k Id ,. and tan 54&-3961 I Y•, 'loved don't need. n "-u I Wee 0 J!lenS. • • •• wRln111 <.'Onsole, f'('mnte. exc. ()INENS 26" cabin cruiser, firm. ~ co d 1~, 0 · 1 _, . Calico mother. Aftcr,ioon!.. l YR. Old A I ask an "'"· Low hrs, '"''' _,,·,. STEREO l9SS 6olid r;t11e n · ~.,,,. ng na.i P!llll-"'~ M·' AKC & h 1 ~ "' I . 14, 1. II~ ( s•"" 642-1.u.> Eves. 543-7786 a.iemute. s o s. A·•-·,·g 17400. n<·. 842_,.7~ SERVEL aas re rtieralor console model with Al\1/Fl\1 ings ~.J appr. ....,.,1, u, d $75 545--1930 """ °'"' dOl.lblc dr. New u n It. radio, ' spd changer. Take Ladles qua!. elothtna. likl! ' ClITE all black killens. 6 ves chit ren. · -··-____ -·---... MD-f1670 or 545-3625 OVl!r &mall paymeni. or new, SI lo $5., su. 7 • 8, v,oks. old. Sandbox trained. Horsff 8830 SpNd-Skl Both 9030 8-10 ?.!esa Verd c,.., ""''' Ms--0179 8/19 ---· -·--BEAU'I'lFUL gas rat\fe. Like $.93.20 caah. Credit Dept. · e . ....,,.........~ A T w· I ne·w! 2 oven&, broiler & 535.7230 KNITTED FABRICS 20 O UCKENS & aome rabbit BAY Mare. Xlnt cor,d, aentle rue inner roUuerie. 548-3075 hutches for clcanina up & western saddle & tack. CUST'Ot.1 BUILT Thunder. AM-FM Stereo. Blon d hauling. 543-5497 8/19 * 536·1_986 * bird Formula 23J, This l 3' RCA REFRIGERATO~ ca1~1net. Floor model. E:f-... FOR SALE BEAUTIF1JL long & .'lhor l TRANSPORTATION ~lfiberglau~·~ttombeau. Frost.free. Cros6 top. S7 • ce ent~ S.50. 646-8738 • Remnant&, Mmplei & r.tUI haired cats & kittens. Free -tY has An1erica s_ m01t f~. ~5238 -----end1 S&t. Only 8 a.m . to 2 to good home. 542_2002 8119 Bo.ts & Yachts 9000 moos racing de11gn. SA1'-GE Portalile Dish\l.·uhcr Camtraa & Equip. 8300 p.m. 929 Baker, Costa ?.lesa ESr SKI BOAT BUILT. It's ~.00 CINE SPECIAL II, Ektar 68 SOLID state sterl'<! con. WI ANTI good ho'!1_e. !or &Wei:l, JOSEPH STEPHENS rough watt>r tested and ••• •o75 ovab e. long •>tilred callca . of N. ewport """'·p-~ "'lh 8 Berkc!C'y .n....-u lens. Checked out by EK. sole. Diamond stylus, 4 1 ~ 542 -S/19 '" ~ ..... 548-1860 .. !l.1UST SEU.! 1 BR Mobile Home. C:arpeu A: drapes. Adult P!rk. MT-592, BICYCLES 9225 1 h1AN'S, 1 Ladiet 10 apted, tip top cond. Call 00-4844 after 5 P i\l ELECTRIC CARS 9250 Sl lE'LL Camper. built !or Econollne PIU or any truck. $200. !TI4J 893-2309 MTnl Bik11 9~75 MESA MINI BIKES 39.95 up Sales-. ~ • Repairs lJ67 Harbor, C.M. e ~ Motorcycl11 9300 _.. ca . spay....... -.. w, 21 Chan1p1on Sloop, !'lips '· 1·,1 ... ~ .. ,.-" by, 450 hp G.E . u cu. ft. .Delux yellow $350 with case. &JG..54n 9JX'eu. $79. Will aceept ti 0 ~ .. '"~ kl F ho ~ GERM. S~p., 'Ai Spri111cr enc!Ol!:ed head, B, dacron A-~larinc. Cruises al "5. 100 twin, wrC'k-<'nd 1Pf'CiaJ -1-,.· ro-.,,.. top freezer. YASHICA. Must soil $60 :!"111Y2. ree me trial. S I I Of! ~ ,., '" • · .... ~ ,,..,,,_, p&11iel Jema e p u fl s. sal !. er ·• · · u:;r..-.J. All ol th• o:wtns incl. s/1 • $299 S75. X1nt cond. 642-&1 ~ ,,, ....,~., 6~ ·-8 .• * .......,.,UJOJ * ~o;-;=-.,c=--,.~-,,,.......,,,.,.~ · 8/19 35' Yawl, sips . $18,0CO. radio, 4 speaker stereo & '-HERB FRIEDLANDER Gas Stove for Salt ----·--HOf.1ELITE XL? chain iaw, 3 Fluffy litUe kiUl'ns, house-~· Sloop, trailer, a.11 wheel custom trailer. Coiot Ph.~ 6J6...l!Kl0 $40. 536-tOOS Hobby Suppliea 8400 26" Hercul<'s 3 spd a irls broken & ready to go to gear ·." $1500. over SIQ,OOJ. Ownf'r saya ~ Cardm Grove Blvrl. --~~-----------bike. Craftsmt>n hand 19' ~·t'··nt 1 1 1900 NEW CO"""'rlone doub le REVEL good home. 546-0096 8116 vu~' eng. rr. · · bestoffl'rtakes &it's nearly 1967 YAMAHA .. .,... Americana lice car mo~·er &: cs!cher. Bowlina 5ffi.30lh s N B h Dutcb oven sto\'e. 546:-2531 T ~·i 14 I'-54,.7 3 K~"s 6 ,_ d t., ewpon eac nl'w. 612-4321. Ext. 2otO Days: ~o5cc set. rack, power pak. 5 .,.., , u:.. .,..,, 02 • • • c..i" w..... ol . • 675-50!H • .J c~rs, ~ C'Ofltrol!t>r. Good ELECTRIC Car, 3 wheel. llsbrkn. Very lo v 1 b I". 644-1742 Eveninas and Week-BIG BEAR SCRAMBLER cond S.'IO 5~20 546-4705 8119 THE ends. $495 · · · bar!('ry driven, good con-==c-=~~=~~-~ FA!lofOUS "JIM \\o'EBSTER" JHps 9510 1962 INTEfu'IATIONA Scoot. 4 wheel drive, travel top. New tirl'9. Excellent condition $89;).'fan 642--0297 CAMPERS 9520 SALE USED TRUCK AND CAMPER SALE We have a large selection or clean 8 to 10 foot cab-Ove1· end non cab-over models priced from $400.00. TRUCKS -TRUCKS -TRUClCS 1959 • 1966 -Camper equipped heflvy duty Fords 11.nd Chev· rolets • From $49'J. All pric· ed to 11ell NO\V~ BANK TERMS Trades Welcome OPEN ROAD Housecar The fabulous Open Road, Carmiel cha111ls mount with features found \rt m<:xicls twlee the cost of this unit. including new sp~ce mono toU C't S)'stem. ~9). OPEN ROAD ••• 830 S. HARBOR BLVD. SANTA ANA 531-4655 SURFER Specl&.1! Stt>p-\•an camper. StD\1e, sink, refrig. 12-V "''alcr ,r., lighls. SlC'<'f)S 2. $1.200. 1811~ E. 2'Jnd St., Coat.a Mestl. 548-6388 CAMPER, 1~ cabovt>r: stove, Ice box; 11lps. 4 plus. Fits a.ny truck. $650. S4S-2493 Antiques 8110 GRAND OPENING SAL E Tiffany House. 3 big d11ys, ll 10 9 pm. Signed Tiffany PJC'Ces. l'ilfany master,>iC'Ce -1 of 1 kind, T!Uany hang- ing dladcs & others. SignC'd marble musrum piece , of 1111de beau1 y, lots of glass & chin•. L.ovt'!ly c a r v e d lurnllu.re, Chc\'t>lle mlrrors. roll top desks, hl!.ll lrl.'es. ttu"lkl. etc. A tn1Ck load to choose from at openlnil s&lc dt1ion w/110 \'Olt charg!'r FREE Baby k1Uen1 10 wC'eks Committee boat for Newport I!l6S PERFORMER Glass Ski Pmne 891-3970, Pr\. Pty. Sportln9 Goods 8500 blr-in. S2.'i0. Sat. only lrom old -and 2 adult females. Harbor Yacht aub for Boat. Blue mc1al flake BRAND new Honda Trall 90; FREE VEGAS VACATION SURFBOARD 9'8" Jacob~ 10 to 5. 5~789 CallC011. 673-6792 8115 many race.a. for sale "as finish, ""'bite hack to back auto. Clutch : less than 100 \l/JTH A 9525 Dune Buggies ·---- mahog 1tringers. mahog tail IRON F~ncC"-U&Cd Oi11s1ncn-6 \\/KS Old orangl', ~rey &: is". Diesel. 720 w. Bay Ave. !~~~~I ~~:~~~rC°:~hen~~~~~ nti. COllt '°'00 ·Sell for $300. 1968 DUNE BUGGY block, simi-speed Skag. Xlnt !al ldC'al fo1· Patio or Pool whl!e female kitten. Very Balboa. Sof,750. 673-7730 \\'all tires. Tii·o six ,11.allon 64&-2124 Custom body with candy ap· cond. 8J0..1954 area. Nine 5xj ft panel& lovable. 540-2087 8117 AUGUST SPEOAL! "'"' YAMAHA 80l'c 1964 Trail pie metal flake paint. Cor· ... , .. ,,, Th -• 4 11 a gas tanks. Ski rope and $8;) 9,.,, 1700 ml d'·t 1 1,·r~ va ir pwr. w/h!,.h lilt earn -lo FT llOBIE ~ "'" · r ... ,. :ix · uycr BLACK Cock-A-Poo P"PPY· out, paint ""'-... ,, prlce ' ' .,. " " -••mo"c ~· 54'S'S5 ,..,.,.. worth ol skis. Con1plete do"ble •P-k•l SI 60 m•g whe!'IS & bloon tif'('S. SURFBOA",D " T • ifJ.JV. ~ 1 Fema\l'.', -U wks. shots. o• tho ,,,,_ f-n1. ·-· ,., " '" "'" with 100 HP M e r cu r y &48-3669 The nir.e!t one in Or. Co. Ext·ellent condition GOl.J) COINS· R.U. !l.1e1Ci£H n 616-8?1<1 8/19 NEWPORT ORY DOCKS engine. Excellent ski and Come in and compare this $30 * 6-12-00'.!2 J:Old pittes. 50 P<'SO 4$63.j()l. KITTEN, Ft>male. 6 W<'eks on the Bay at 20th famil,y boaL Sharp! Sl6Z5 OI' '67 BULTACO * 250 cc 9 FT SurCboft.n1. Nr~·er us<'rl. ~l~~~~ ~~-1~1~:~:d r::. ii~~ needs home with children. • 675-15{6 • oUtr 541).467..! alte r 7 Pill ~~1:9t.S:,,d ~~Y ~~~.rcs:.i~ one. ELMQR E orlglnal prll"e S200. St:!:i or Ciill 54~4!1 Grey & 1.1.·hitc. 540-2087 8/16 18' r.lALIBU OutrlgRcr. New, --MUST SELL! 837-8SS8 price&. '63 AUSTIN HEALEY ".](l(O" rd1lr., o~·crdrtve, win wheclt, BesuHJtil mue. $1795 ~eait Ll1Di4 • IMPORTS - 1966 Harbor, C.?t\ 6:( ~JOO '60 Austin He11;y- H3000" ' Wllh h "d 1op $1299 }lERB 1'RlEDLANDER. Ph.· 6J6.1*JO 9625 G1U'den Grove Blvd. '66 A.H. Sprit-, - Hardtop tuid so:: top. Beau. lif\Jl l 0""~·· ''I". $1699 ii.ERB fRJJ:;DLANDER Ph. -~l.800 9625 Garden Gl'O'Ye Blvd. '&1 AUsrtN l!caley conv. 3000 ?.fark Ul; xlnt cmd. In &: out. Betit offer. Call bel'Wt'en 5-6 PM. 675--UO CORTINA '68 Cortln1 GT Coupe l owner. 6.COO m.Uet $1989 JlERB FRIEDLANDER Ph. -63&1800 0025 Garden Grove Blvd. &ATSUN '67 DATSUN 4 Or. STA'I10N WAGON. Automatla Ir• n s mia5ion, radio, heater, white will tire!!. A be11.utifuI one owner Teal Blue. o:; 4-;.::-- $1795•. J ~eaitl~ • IHPGRTS 1%6 Ha.rbnr, C.M. '65 DATSUN PICKUP fact(}(')' equipment. Wh1te finish. S1299 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Be9ch Blvd. Euy to reach at Garfield and Beach 847-8555 H.B. '65 DATS.~U~N-1 STATION WAGON Radio, heeter, standard lhlJ't. $1009 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. H.B. Ea:iiy to reach at Garflekl &.nd Beach 547.9555 '67 Datfu-n:--- 4--door sedan, llke new con· d!llon. $1499 H.ER8 FRl~DLANDER Ph. -636-1800 96..?5 Garden Grove Blvd. '6S DATSUN Station ""'iliOtl, dlr, f spd. Mu.lit get auction! Very good condition inside & out. $150 cash dl'ls, or trade. Will tin ance b&Jance of $836. afttr 4. 639·3617 or 494-9773 '66 DATSUN 1600 Roadster 4 spd, dlr, Honduras ore.nae . BlaC'k plush interior. Sl.50 rAsh del~. TAKE low pymts. Af!er 1, 494.9773 or 639-3617 FIAT * NEW _flAT * AUTOMATI C ''850" -•.. s.f,, i>owN • OAC ". 546 58 pt'• mot1th * .''85.0" Stl<• l42.6S PR MO 2136 Ne..,,·port, Costa 61J..223() hr~! 'lff<'t c;1.sh . .).l!l-2-IZJ I ;;o;-;;=o-=:-c~--,-~ !l.1IXED Shepherd 8 m0&. !iberglau e1c. Mo.\ling, Musi 16' FLEETCRAFT, Q h.p. -.---'S1 OPEL C•d<'t 4 &pd. slick _j 8 u · l'd Co 1 bo '67 YAMAHA WI. Hard ly SPORT CAR Full TruckJoe.d ol RU~Sl::LL Stringer_lt'ss 10 fl m:i. Klng ol Lawn moivl'r 1''rn1al<', spay~. al\ sholll. e imm · mp· ar Johnson. all electrir 6' ttlr uaPd! Xlnt cond. r.tust sell ! WORLD hlur tint & 001\ rd rl!.Mh. 1.1.·tc11.tcher $40. l\lcLA ille 838-5~6 8/16 incl. trailer. Ab 11 o I u t e + many Xtrl!~ $500. S-lJO. 646-3ll2 aft 6:30 Spiders & Coupes 'HERB FRIEDLANDER 962S, Gorden .. Gro~~ Bl•d -. . 8120 S1wln9 Machlrtes 1~7 SINGER , comp! w/11•alnut cabinet. Divorce ection forct~ s ac rifle e ~ Au1omat!c, Zi~·Zl11:, Tooch- o-m11tic, button holes. blind hems, overcast1 without 11t· tachn1cnts. As.~um1.: Sl.87 per n10 .. or $37.99 r11sh. 526-6616 Xlnt. Cood. Stl. ~2 ...,i" ·~· .....,.,., Eld A 4 J\IO. Old male flllrl, Do:tie. Mcrifice al S2!il. 67'Xl930 alt. jl:l.,j.7275 or ~!J.l-l j\I Phone 1!9 l·ml ArrlvMt Today! ·~er ....... ~<JIU en v. o6~P~>~l':-;;:::-,;::::;::-7,;-;;;:;;-I i!cHtiRiii'C:'N'ESkibOOi '6G J-IONDA 305 dream, full 15300 &ach Blvd, \\'s!mn~tr ---,,,.6;;7~F"l"o~t---SURFilOARD 10 ft Hick. C.i\I. b I k · v er Y IO v a b I e , ;:: 1 ' 18' HURRIC AN E Ski hMI, dreq SoliJO or best offer. P51e,",','."c• .. "l~d1_.~~9o1,·''"·s,;o. 2~06A -.VACUUMS"'~oc:--546-6134 R/17 /\'t'wporl Dry Docks 675-1500 glaa$ over wood, 401 cu in l7141 893-2309 BUG~: :u~~DEJl.S l~$·11 s5·e819oo " " FREE P'rl Angora 5 rno old On lhe Bay ll 20th St. Butck. Asking S 1 8 S 0 _ --· --SlO llfl. R('JJltirs & p1u·ts. Boals hlluled botlom sc b c•~ .one '66 YAMAHA 11~icc. Jmn1ac. Complell' bu~ics, parts I: I/ERB 1' Rl!-..DLANOER SUR1''BOARD 10' U&l'd lwice R b c v rat. Alfrctionate, plny(u!. . · ru · -M>"'"f""-' XI ~ '°IO Ph C'a..nna ll'. oast acuum "'-~ P•••icd & zl•c·" All nt c:o .. ,.. ~ • Ortl' 1ocessortc~. chassis shorten· Ph .• "'"1800 Like new. $50. 642-1283 all ht>allhv R92-i182 8117 "'"• " " '""· "" ...,.,... 5:JO 3.1.1 i:; .17th, C.I, &,2.1;,oo • • other maintenance ... ena:ine .. u fl. Chris O'alt Spel'd 675-5881. in;;. 962-2273, 962-0:llH 96:5 GArden Crove 81\'d. -..,,-,.,'='""=~~~--1·;,7 CUF.V 4 dr 1.1.•11.g n<'ed.s dr. 2 KT11'1ES; 1 yt>Uow apadC'd work. bcmt. lor aale B$ is: mi;:. '67 llONDA 3Cl5 ~7-Fi1t 850 Coupe Go!! Club $tot, McGr~nr. shit s2~. Kt>nmore eu:o n1nll' & l 1in1all .Q:rty kllt<'n. READY 10 8_19, 3 .. Gl••l-n n~eds work. Highest offer Exct'I. cond. $47S. Dune Bugg,_1_11 ___ 9_5_25 , _ .. m·'•o•· 1 ... ,,•a• 4 \\"oods. 8 11'0!1!., puller. ... 839-6632 8/16 · .,. •u u lakes. 673-3(63 J.N" "' •. o,... " •. "',,.,r. $10. 606 Kings Pl. wf t2fl llP ~terr. In .ou t M&-1933 after S PM. T·Bug, glas1 pickup body for $1789 SIOO * &l&-~177 ~.IJ. 2 f.>10 Old blk. ftmale pupple, drive, inboard bait tank. tilt GLASS PAR Y3 i ki boat 1967 TRIU~fPll 650 Bon-VW. New. complc!r. Sl95. Hatn •"Rll::DW\l'IDER Mu1lc1I Inst. 8125 ELECTRIC i;cultsr, coil cord $43: amplifier $15. Both A-1 condition. 546-tJ.55 Mlscell•n.;;-8600 '57 ~1ERC Sr11. waa St.'>O IO l'l:il1 . rocker, ver)' s.mart bed u·aller. Com p. eqp'd, for w/~1crc 700 "1!:,lr.~~ard ly neville 2.oo:J m.I. Best offer caIJ 64of.0306 afler 6 P:O.f Ph .• 635·1800 --n1cltli shelvlni;s 8'itJ'it:'1" S\11 ~,,.13 8116 fishina. 8"2-1239 uM>d . hke ne-.u "';,· .......-I t45 takes. 67S-2677 eves 6~2492 !)6?') Carden Grovr Blvd, BRUNSV.'ICK POOL TABLE', ra. 2 arld mneh. 5 spd 8~ ~10. Old kittens v1r~ou1 l\1U!IT Sell • rnakt olftr, 20· Boat Milntena~;e -9033 '64 ALlSI'ATE Trill Bike Impor ted Autos 9600 '67 850 Spid;,:-- Sl75 Dcrallcr hike S30. fi.12-l:'G9 l'l'll<Jrs. Veri cute. ......,,. ,··"·-,·d-lapo1••k· 60CC Good ~111-" u" " """" ' ,. · ""'"" ""'' FREE VEGAS VACATION \vf'Cli·r I -:;').'.'e1al. Eh.,.·tric Guitar & i mp. $7;). Ptrff:ci condition. + 54!).27tl) * 51r,-!;38'2 or 646-89.'!9 FU RNITURE. appllRJ1<.•e.o;, 543.-4079 8/16 utlllt,v-fa~t, ~taworthy. belt PA.INT, Varnish, r<"pair at tOOO fl.U. $80. 548-7f00 WITH A PURCHASE $1899 BARGAIN. T oo I ma k,. r mi<.(.'f'll. hnu111•h)ld item~ 2 SERVEL Refri"'. &: sn1a.ll tank-hydrolie&-lull cover1. your dock. Elctx'rienced. ...... ,,._ b'• 11~" FRI' llLANDrR 11 If 0 ND A ..7.M =ram ..,r. \\'e illvile all ol Orange Co. i:...n.o C . ~ Pl't'ClllOfl T 00 ls ~ilh Con be 5Ct!I\ l>f't. 10 Ai\>I • ' ,,u, SIOVI! lo privale pocly. 67a-47I3 or (Zlll 691--0751 Reas. 54S-i807 Ex II dJ t'-Ph 63"-ce l'fll con 1V<1 lO come ln and &«> our large • ~-1'1W Pianos & Orgini 8130 ~·•blnet. S150 ~~'J P~I . 501 Ff.mle&f, C '°'' Aier 6 P.fl.1. fi..12-"8Ji $1/!6 1967 -13' \\/HALER, w/40 hp 6~1746 {after 51 iJlvtrrtory of complete!)' rt'-9625 Garden Crove Blvd. --·-----..--REf'RIGE:RATOR s1:1.00 UPHOLSTERING • Si91Q.2 hlAL.E. 61110 old blk. German J01lNSON. Full c:over. oars. Boit Sllp Mooring 9036 1 ---64~,~lO~N~D"°A""oo'"'"-condlt!oned apon5 car1 . Al l '68 f lat l!O Coupe \\'ANTED; Beginner Ol'gllll ACC'OnI)IA N t"i.I 00 pe, (E:UT"OP<'<in craltsmcnl Sheph('rd puppy, "6--0056 · St.293. Days 642-9i84 , Eves. MOORING, Ntwporl Bay. Nl:.W UPPER END $125. morirls to choose from. $1899 11udcn!1. FREE CLASS. ~1UST SELL. R12-:1:16Q Fnie t'll. del. p!ckuri . 215 893-2867 8-15 ~ s.;:100. lncl'a. S<1nl11n'1 22. fU1l • !>+6-M43 • rLMOR E . HERBPh'". J"~~:~O£R 6 wttks.;....Shtart Tu7 p"1d ay OISll\\'ASllER portable s:,o-~lsin, un "O<'my" ~'.i.64C5 BABY Guinea P\g. ~ m'>~ . 26.:::-. -;o"'o~u""'B~L-;;E-=,~,~.~,:-cr. ract>, 9 mo'• old. 8-17-t:.:!5 74 HARLEY o.v1dson. ru11y W:. --Aui:::11;;1).i~NO ~ · rrclL~ chair S:\8. t>lt'('--11' OUTBOARD. :JR Hr s:r.il Lona h111r, bcautHul. No Ch II r • c I er bolt. The \YAN'l'EO Bo.at alip or trailer dtNICd with loCI ot Er!ris! SPORT CAR 9&:l1 GfU'rltn Grove Blvd. In CORONA DEL MAR tnr 1.:rlddl1> S2'1. 642-9'21.1 rtr:i:;11r Ra lnbcw Air 1·' cage. 6i:l-l133 cltfln8l on the co 1 1 t ~ for 16' boet. 546-4781 WORLD '6l FIAT. Good tranaporta- 51 E.. Cout Hwy 67~930 GARDEN Teit 7 hp nd1n~ rt~-1 3<-uurn. clca.ncr. cost LOV ELY 8 wt old puppy. l::-511>='~"'=-.,--,-~~~ 642-7900 or &16-4188 '67 YAMA"H~A'"'soo=-re=-.~Good=•1 Phont' R9-i·3322 tioo car. ~6! oHer. WURLITZER ORGAN rotary law11nwl11.·rr, I i k r SliO, 11rll S.JQ:'! ·•· 1 P:irt Labrador l.i Bol«'t· U FT Fibtrgleu l»tlt. 35 HP rondltion s.100. t.S?.00 BH~h Blvd .. \\'i tmn!ltr 675-573..l PercusUon • Hl••iilan Gui-nrw, .111rt1fief' S20J, ~8-7143 Kln.DY vacuum rleantr .t. 67S-1'76 1JJ31 .Evtnrude Lark, Ult trailer, Boat·Yacht M7-7967 .6 11tJU:\!Pll TR1 _ 4 ~fl'!, =========:=! tAr • Bdl• ·Harp -Zither . • B & 0 71(" Dt-lu\t pov.·cr .iittirhmf'nts. Ta.kt 0 "'• r 4 • 6 WKS old kinena. hlk A canvas I.op, ncw paint. S895. Chan.rs 9039 ~.65~.~ll~O~ND=A~ S 90 n.clng f itm, dlr, •'ire whcel1. Netd~ 111. JAGUAR ........................ ;m harKI •aw. Ne"''~ S 5 0 . !m:oill p.aymtnts or ~7.Z(I wht. ~1570 8/191 ,_H_<=l~Po...,.m~""'-,·="=P=·=J~C_.>~!-·= IT'S SMARTER maiJ'aphone fork bract, 1<i tie body 1••nrk. Tran~ .t ----------- Nfl'W Guannlee :»~ r:i~h Cri!dit drpl KF. 5.:7289 Frff Kltttnl-or 113 lnterut in 19' TO CHARTER ml, rd cond, $100. 642-4784 mo1or xlnl conct l\iake oUl'r. FREE VEGAS VACATION Gould Mutlc Comptny BUY YOUR FIREWOOD ~lcL/\IN Trlm ~ «lii;cr $SO; Tigt>r itrlptd 8.li-72'17 O'\Jlzon runabout w/19~2 Cal 25 _ RawlOn JO_ Albfl'I 1 .... ~~--9m~ ... -----\\IJTJI A 20-~ N. Main, S.A. S47-0l81 NO\\! & SAVF.:!! CooJ>('r Khpper lawn mowt'!' SERVEL Gas rtfr\i .. good olds ena. &16-414-C uk for 3.S. Bounty 40 . Newportar Triller, Travel 9425 •6i DATSUN , •ta "'l it. i uto, 1966 JAGUAR ANTIQUE white up r I 1 II I W a CORD. !1~9687 $40: 1.trlbo'>rlrd $50; Half Mnd. Pll'k up. 675-0757 l /lfi Bill. k el c II • ~arlncr '° : GR.f.AT Lakn 18. Eltc dlr, rh. t•k• older trade or XKE Cpe. 2+2 p&ano. Se&ul JookLna Ir HOTPolNT -·•~b"" s:;o. 11'' ITIO\\'t>r 13. ~626 STORAGE, Tratlm, bolts. Schoone. rs .• n Fairllntt . :II ..__ .. ,., 2 hula-111 • $65 cuh dels. Markt low Room for 2 kid9. Thit: Is plalo. Muat He! $15 0 , pool fil!en n«'da liner Sll. FABULOUS Sale! Oot.hing '* 1 ~IALE cat· 1 femalt ci t. •tc. $7.50 per/mo. \Vork Tro.jan .. 38 Spt FIWr -nLr Ul'H•.,.•••• ,-.,. 1;,: or eltc pymt1. 494-9ii3 truely '"' fMIUy IPOl'll c•r. ~40 ... ., ... ,.,, pn~. Thrift Shop. ••10 Ms-.tia39 8116 •pAoe. 64~260'1 It 543-3261 h ._..,. wv ""' Only 14299 . ...,....~, ,jJ mt>rn11.• ot tra. trt Ntwl)' pa rited • Spot CUh lor Jmjll)1111 WURUTZER Conlole J>taoo REl...AX·A-CLZOR like neii·, N~wpor! Blvd ., CM . SOF'A Bro, need• reeoverlng. Exp. Avail. Skipper CALIFORNIA CRUISES ~lt.,"i · \\o'e pay mor. f()f an)' lmport ELMQR E Xltlt cond. lJb""' SGS ..-.11. 1•-u·~ ,_, -110•. PORTAB1 ... ....,...,_ t•"k S7l-6390 ~m lO a .m. 8117 For Mexican I Local waters, 20 yrnri in Na1.1.·port -...al of k """ ....... -.......... ....... i..c. -......... -· 22' Trav1I Trail1r ,r~~~~e1~--~~ar.,. ,m,' 0 .'. • 6'UJl3 • ~r1ttr S25. 548--4134 v./carT)'uta rue S$0, FREE lilllt: black ldttena. * 87~156 '* Ernie M inney 54M191 • ,,....,,......,. ... .,, 111: • .-SPORT CAR SOnIMAlfPf Spbs.et pl1no. JJOMEl>"tNERS commercl11.I 5'&.7718 IM-ep callina) 1n'l ~ Bili 14' BOAT-Trlr A 1967 Jlhp BLUEWATER CHARTERS Dbl bed, Bl. Tandem 1xle fO\I Hll. E L J\f 0 RE WORLD 1'r1dlt.bW.Sb'te. mlWl•r 6' ~e-r. Like nl.'w. Need a C"~inaJer 1-fEAVY dlll.Y . twif¥ 1 Ml't J..\>lnrude. Xlnl aJn. ~. 11'-40' U·Driw Skip. Avatl Bu.kk equip! to pull. F.•&> hfOTO~. 15300 Beach Blvd. PhOl'H'! 894.33:."J Cood ccmd. * 173-6196 l 12S. '9$.-2077 T1nd It with 1 WU1t ·ad1 fraJM. 147 .. 1()8'1 ~119 ~5 E, lltth St. CM. 6'2-12'9 Dty/wk. &46-!ltO'.l 24 hrs. Hit hlfeh. Sml. S?rt-1~19 "'Ntmln~tl!r, llfM...3322. ISlOO Beach Dl\'d., \\';tmn:1tr . ' • . ----------------------------·------------·· __.. ... -• Q ft '-< fi 'ab> <,Y-SS ?-,. -. --. .._,,.. .. ace -'~~~'"'~T.C.~~~;i;;;l;:o;li;:ll;.-::iic=s;;=;:~~llllC=:!llli!lll!llll!! ..... :s;::Jl<:'Jllil'lll!Sl~~ ..... """'"""""""'llOat'"'!ll~"':lli ....... ~""-..--..~--~,.--- ;r TRANSPORTATION lmporltd Autos 9600 , .T:.:RA=N,;.;Sc.Pc:.O';R-':T A-'T'-1-'0"":N::::: , .. lm;..:po:.;..rt.:.td;;..;,A;,;u.:.:t•.:.•_9;.:600;.::;: TRANSPORTATION lmporttd Autot '600 PORSCHE 1mporttc1 Aut.. HOO TRIUMPH 1meorttc1 Aut• 9600 VOLKSWAGEN -JAG-UAR FREE VF.GAS VACATION TOYOTA VOLVO WIT!l A .,---·-----1 FREE VECAS VACATION 'Sl V\V C&mptr l~ ttblt. eng. radio, new tires II ball.. luag. rtck. txhauat. $1495. '63 J•1 XKI 1 owoer, 12,000 mile1 $2989 HERB IBIEDLANDER Ph. -638-llllO 962.S Carden Gnwe Blvd. •i3 JAGUAR Mark 2, sedan. autotpwr. air, chrome wheel.I, fl,7.50. 613-6900 1961 PORSCHE TOYOTAS WITH A '67 Volvo 122 S Supor 90 TRIUMPH TR4A >-door, Uk, new. Or•flie Cbunt.Y'• larce.t ....... _ .. __ ._,.m. --.. ~.. $2"•9 Abeoluttly the sharpe11t In , __ .. _ of • w ICUlAJM! uv •ue .....,...,.. -ee=-uvn tY• are both like MW. Can K£fl.B FRIEDLANDER Or. Co. Can fin all or part NIW TOYOTAS & all or ....... Pmt 135.00 Pb .. "'"" 1""" Sport C1,.. 9'10 Pmt $39JIO per mo O.A.C. mod-'-.. i.....A.. h.11 ..-• _. -.. --------AD ~ , ~ ·~·~ per mo 0.A.C. 9625 Garden Gf'O\•e Blvd. la "'"'""' PREVIOUSLY OWNED CADILLAC SALE ELMORE O>rol.la 1tatioa "'a&on 111: ELMOR '51 r..tG-TD B ck sports Cmwn "'"°" ..,.. .. .u. E VOLKSWAGEN ""'d'"'· Top 'u no 1n1 SPORT CAR •bl•. . ........ ..... " Sll50, •'67 Cadillac •'66 Cadillac •'62 Cadillac •'68 Codlllclt WORLD BILL MAXEY SPORT CAR '66 vw -El Dorado Coupo dt Vlllt Coupo dt VIII• Std1n ... vnl' KARMANN GHIA Phone~ TOYOTA __ Y!_O,~~'""' Tht P-ulor "lu"'' Nill , .. ,, f•tt eir Fo,.11 pwr, f•ct t lr Full pwt, f•c• • 15300 Btach Blvd., WltMn4if H B .r•...-i ~~ -r • R•c• C•rt, Rodi 9620 co11d., now ct r ••rrt 11• c•ri4., ytllow w/bltck ~II pwt, fe et elr ••1114 .. flfW Ur wartt 188&1 Beacb 81Yd. · · 15300 Beach Blvd. W11tmnstr CompeUUon Grle.na:e. Lolded ty, qold w/brown .,fnyl vh1yl top, bltck ltllr t o11d., loc•I cat, ltw ty, t•llll w/Wock vt~tf 1B6ti KAR.MEN GHIA, lm. ~ Porsche Coupe mac. cond low milMP· $2099 $1850. 675-S5n HERB FRIEDLANDER Pb. • 636-UDJ MERCEDES BENZ 9625 C&nltn Crovt Blvd. PORSCHE '66. 911 Webel"I. '66 230 S 21,IDJ ml; white w I blk PIS, T/G. Beautiful It btlce tnt. AM /F~t. chrome \1.'hla. w/ dk bronze vinyl int. One $465(). 968-1589 CNIT'«. MUlt see I-drt~. '6:1 PORSCHE C ():)upe, Ume 10% down oac handles. tire. rebuilt SBR41l ~n, new ' I eneu1e. $3300. 982-7'909 or Jim Siemon• rnps. 982_1517 Warner & Main St. !======== Santa '"" ,....114 RENAULT -,58-MGA-Coupo Hard lo !ind model, in per- fect c:ond.IHon. $1099 HERB FRIEDLANDER Ph. -~1800 9625 Garden Grovi> Blvd, '67 MGB-GT Low milet•f"':', l owner car $2699 A llERB FRIEDLANDER Ph. -636·1800 '63 Caravelle Both tops. \Vhit.e finish. Low miles. $89'J BILL MAXEY TOYOTA H.B. Sale e SAVI 1600 e '61 t,', toM Y•~' Clt okt • , • k~ e Chft. DIHlp e GMC • "-·· 4 tp11d, d1!11•e c1b, H.O. 1u1pa111 ioft, 1pli t rlm1 or low p1ofil1, 70 i mp. belt., h1el•r. alt1,t1etor, dwt l hydrtll· lie br•kt1, 111 ! b1 lh , p1cld1cl cl11lt, 9111911, 1p1 r1 wh1 el, 1ulom1lic opliot11I, f1 milr p1 rl1ct. PULL PRICE '2590 Easy lO te&Cb at ,66 SPIT ... IRE and ablohuely lmm•ci.tlate. RACE Pref>U'l'd H. Prodi» kip. int. L•w ,.,u,,. mlf••· top , t old 1.t. ! Carll•ld and Bead> Can tlnance all or,.,, Pay-tlon Sprl". ""' '°' olub $5995 $4295 $1595 $6195 't 8474555 Triumph rdstr,, radio, heat· mts. as low u $22.00 per and 1lalom raclna. SCCA TOYOTA$ "· w!rt w$hl~S mo 0.A.C ltg•t $650. 54>-<930 •'68 Cad'1llac ----•'68 ,.,-~. I~ SOon Sedan•. c""""'. w.,. $1495 rnEV. 11 MtDGET. Fint • '66 Ford • '67 Olds _, :.:s,We~;;ks~0ta~U~ If ~~II LA1.J1 ELMORE line equip~9Jn F11ll E! .. ?,°',':~ air Windo~co:.~ll~•,ood Toro . s~=ci~1!!!~~:{.! ~1ost one own'1' with IOW t-Ufl. t'.Alll,Q cond .. 111w ci r ••rr•n· for ee1t1pin t 1 ""Illig or Full ,.,, fe et 1" top. w~il• ·lthr fi;I., 1 C fin all S 1'10TORS Autoa W1nttd 9700 ty, fi1t111id bro111e, to u1• 11 e Club W1y. cot1d., re .. w/b11ck vi-f11 ll pwr, feet •Ir mies. an ance or IMPORT TOYOTA b11clr vh1yl top, bt lt• 21 ,000 ml. A11t• +r1t11. nyl lop, rtd lffrlr lt1t. 1t t14,, l'l•'f.~~1rr••· ;'ooEP•l::M•:O •R,;AE~ u 1966 H8'bor. CM. 646-9JIJ3 '"-"' ,..!';'h ~Wmnn•« WE PAY '''"$7115 o,1, $1595 $3995 Jy~ $6495 FREE VEWCIATSHVAACATION ,,e~~!~kuedggyvw8,u300011derm't. TOP DOLLAR ------- MOTORS ~ --~ •'67 Cadillac •'67 Cadillac •'68 Cadillac 0'6S Cadlllec TOYOTA 1966 SPITFIRE Comp! txeept "'"•radio. FOR Coupo do Villo Coup• do VIiii Coupo dt VIII• Cou-do VII,. 3 to choose. All in perfect S9511. 833--0812 ,..-Ph: 894-3320 =-~~----Full pwr, f1cl •ir Full pwr, fe61 •It 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstrnnstr condition. Can fin all or pert V\Y engines. Steady ln atock. cot1J., nt w car werri n-Full pwr, f1ct 1ir Full pwr, fa~! 111 cot1d., '''" ;.t., w/ '68 TOYOTA Pmt El'2L.ooMwOmoROE.A.C. i: ~: ;:: : ~:: ::: USED CARS ~~yl b~:;~ b:;:,b•i,t~ ~nc1,~.~::1:,e• :ibl:;k ~"~~ne;1:h1t:·~~~i ~:::i !:~ .. i..w_ "'11.,. CETSA~cs~':iHIP SPORT CAR :':'\,,':~"~:·~,,. CONNELL CHEVROLET '''· $4995 Ith• ''$5095 ''" •U lts''· $3395 YOU BUY"! WORLD Ooan r R.&d;o ll.650. 2191 _ _ _ _ ---•'65 Cicllllac L Phone 8!14-3.122 Harbor ru ,d. Sp. 16 · Cl>lt;':.~arbor "'';!;;.1203 •'67 Cadll!ac •'67 Cadillac •'68 Cadillac Coupo di Vlllit eGJl UVi4 15300 Beach Blvd., Ws.tm.nstr 646-4374 WE PAY Coupe de Ville Sed•n de Ville I Coupe de Ville f1111 p•r. fa ct •Ir 1967 TRIUMPlf 2000 4 dr l OWN_ER "f6 v:v. Beige AS F11ll pwr, ,.,, •ir P-1111 pwr, ··~· ... Full pwr, f1cl alt toft d., nr1111h t tff, IMPORTS sedan. Private party $1950. v.•/tan Ult. R&H, Xlnl cond. ( H coni ., ntw ci r w1rr1n. 'oncl ., "'w ct r w1rr1n-cot1cl .• new cat w1rr1 n• whit• v\,..,J tep, red Good cond-6TH214 Sl.200. &12-72-U or t \'el . ty, bl111 w/bl1ck vinyl ty, blue w/bl1ck vinyl ty. lil1 blut w/wlllle lthr Int. Lew .. il11, L..· 673-703:?. t•p, bl111 int. lop, bl111 int. vi11yl lop. blut Int. c•I ci r. _ 1966 Barbo•. C.M. 646-9303 VOLVO '65 VW Detux~ Vory ...,.,. lbr ""° ,,.,. & trurn J\llt $4995 $4695 $5995 $34'5 '67 TOYOTA "'·No dwn OAC MO.!O mo. •all u. m rr.. 0-.tl. Sale e SAVE $1 ,000 e 1961'11 HoltMCon S..lf Cot1t•lne4 Clt1v,ol1t I lot1 H.O . ~h1 ui1, d111l wltetl, v.a + +. '1rf1ct fe111lly 1q11ipp1cl 11nil, 2 double b1d1. 11lf ,onl1!"1d moftOllll llc lollt l. Com· plel1 k1tch.111 I din•tl1. R1d11c•d t l,000 for tltit . 1how 1p1d t l. PULL PRICI 14995 '68 VOLVO 0"· M2-<61S GROTH CHEVROlfT '64 V\V Deluxe $59 dwn OAC Pymta only $33.50 mo. Dlt. M2-<61S ~ for Salts Manaaw l.8211 Beach Bl., Huntineton Beacb IO~ ALLEN Oldsmabllt-Cadillac I 494-1 QO A I 1150 Sa. Caast Hwy Q't- LaCJuna Beach Will Buy ·---------------------- .9'00 FOR CLEAN TRADE-INS BUICK BUICK --------'!T ELECTRA 2 dr~blldta,. '67 WILDCAT 2 dr. HT. Lan· AD extru! Low ml.leap. dau lop, buc. &eat&, power· Xlllt. cond. Mut a t 111 ~9939 6'lS--4ll67 %Zl Garden Grove Blvd. '6.1 '.\IG UOO. Completely reblt ena New pln!Wf!I. S~ tn. Vt"'!ited BEST OFF ER. 5-18-4910 S11 011r Millio11 Doll1r Dl1p1•r-.A11 M1 ~1t & Mod.Ii •64 MGB • >..1nt cond 342-2786 11,100 1967 1>1GB :\lust sell, lea111n1 county call 548-4040 PORSCHE '55 PORSCHE. Drafted,-mullt &ell. Rehl!. eng. & trana:. $600. MS--00! 7 '57 PORSCHE Good condition S1000 675-5761 PORSCHE '6.1 Super 90. ExttU. aind. Aller 7 PPl-1 call 548--«W7 '67 PORSCHE 912. 18.000 miles. Xlnt cond. Call Tom 642-69'17 or MG-50.13 l9'6 POR3CHE tru 5 '-"· Am-F'm, fas Its. cxh•u11. woo ... m.1782 '1111 PORSCHE m : df'ltl: 5'17-2630 T rides welcome-- Special bank financing Musi liquidate 200 used unilt!I TRUCKS, CAMPERS & MOTOR HOMES % Tons-House cars-Shells-4 whl drive PHtory 41rMt locetlon1 91*' todey t tot OPEN ROAD 830 HARIOR ILVD. 531-4650 And both Coronas give you: Reclining bucket seats • 90 hp, 1900cc Hl·Torque engi ne • O·to-60 In 16 sec. pick-up • Tops 90 mph • 25 miles or more per gallon • 4-on·the·floor • Fully automatic transm ission (optional) • Dozens of luxury and safety features., •• all standard. Get your hands on 1 Toyota, today,., 1! mar,uis motors 11J~!B:[fll!l 900 So. C:..11 Hl1hw1y I.I Jtpa11:•1 No.1 Automobne mtnufacbnv L.gun1 8tt<h 494-7502 !. I I I ...................... "" ....................... ~ .......................... .-~ ............................ ~ .. ~~~ .......... ~ .... ~~ ........... .-..... ~ .................... .-...... ~-..---.--------...---.-~-. ~---. ·-' -... . -Dlfl Y P'ILOT CONNELL CHEVROLET'S USED CAR CENTER SPECIALS --·-. <> ---------. Ii '66 CHEVROLET 4 Door. VS. auton\1.tic, 1>01o1.·er ll«'rin~. fa ctory air eontt, radio, ht"ater. 1ilver blue. <SLU:\941. '65 IMPALA ; 4.-door hardtop, 327 V8, auton1atic trans· mluion, radio and hf'ater, poY.'t>r litfi'r- :-trii::, factory air, landau roof, tuxedo li"" ~"$1"495 ::: ., - '64 PONTIAC •!i .,Grand Prix. VS, auton111tic, po\\'E'f st~r- :· \ in1:. (']e<:. \lind.O\\'S, R&H. Danube b!Ul' r. w / .... ·hite vinyl roof. (NQX710~ . " .. -· . --' .: ===== . .. • ' '65 DODGE !' Dart 170 Hardtop Coupe. 11,000 orginal ~.;'_ •miles.' SUl'k, radio, heater. '65 MERCURY Montclair hardtop coupe. V8, automatic, power alffriDJ, radio, heat.er, low mile· &£"e, ermine whit. with blue intl!rior. ·<RVM685J $ 1795 '66 CORVAIR Coupe. Autun1atlc lran1in1isslon. r1USJ0, heater, Azt!C Bronze. CRCV497l. 51395 '66 MALIBU Sport Coupe. V8, automlltir, radio, heat- rr, f\1arina blue w/black vinyl interior. l1'1V27621 -51695 '68 IMPALA Coup1•. Vt!. au10111a tic: li'llnsn1ission, pov.- er steerini;, radio and hl"ater, \\'hitl'wall tires. paddf'd dash, 11 .000 nules, nl"11• car v.•arrant~. \\'IE53X $2695 '66 OLDSMOBILE F·85 4 door ~roan. V-S, aulo1na1il', radio, h<"att'r, po1vcr stCl'rinJ.? and finished in Turquoise. Sharp. ($8TI15) 51795 ' '63 GRAND PRIX Automatic, power steering, factory air cond., R&lf. Sierra gold v.•ith aa.ddle · bucket aeats. (NLM963). 51295 BEST SELECTION Of EL CAMINOS IN THE AREA '67 CAMARO Hardtop coupe, SS 350. radio and heater. gauges, 4·speed transmission , new radial tires, factory warranty. VDG383, $2395 '64 IMPALA Super Sport, automatic transmission, ra· dio and heater, power steering, desert beige with bei~e interior. HCR973 . 51295 '67 EL CAMINO CUSTO}if. V8, automatic, power steering. R&H, ermine white w/black vinyl inter· ior. (V42925) $2595 . '66 -EL CAMINO CUSTOl\.f. V8, automatic, PS, fac tory air, R&H, with fiberglass locking cover, er- mine white. (T53036) $2695 '6.7 IMPALA Sporls Coupe, 327 VS, automatic trans- mission, power steering, radio and heat- er. TVS404 $2695 '65 MUSTANG Converllblc, 289 V8, automatic lrln&- mi&&ion, radio and heater, red with white loJI· SUJ.1781 51395 '62 CHEVY II Nova convertible, automatic tran.smis- sion, radio and h~ater. JFX319 $495 '66 vw - SQuarcback s la lion v.·agon, A:'Yl/F~I radio. SLV799 $1595 • '67 CAMARO 327 VS, autornatlc, radio, heater, po\.\•er steering. {ULS185) 52495 '68 NOVA 2 -door, V8, automatic transmission, f)O\.\'er steering, air conditioning, radio an• h'"''$2495 .. VTP•M ' '62 vw Sun.roof. r11d10, heater. OTVJ35 5595 ' - '65 GMC -Suburban Carryall. 6 cylindl"r ena:ine, extra clean. (P85983J. 51495 ·- '65 BUICK Deluxe sports v.'agon, 9 p&SS('r1J.!"r, auto· matic lransmissiol1, power slt'('flng, factory !Ur, radio and he11ter. NPW9ti7 $2495 -'65 CHEVROLET J\lonl8 coupe. factory air coi:iditionl~g. ~\uton1atic, radio, heater, ermine v.'hlte \l'ith blue vinyl bucket seats. No. R1582 $1295 ' '64 CHEVROLET * Ton Pi<;kup. VS, custom cab, pan rear windows, factory air, R&H, Fleet side bed, chrome front and rear bumpers. IN3560J) MUST SEE .CHE ROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA -~~~ 546-1203 c~ 546~1200 UtodC1r> 9900 rRANSPORTATION . Im · . ··:os 9600 Imported Autos 960011T1ported Autos 9600 CADILLAC 9900jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir,[ / OON'T FOUDN THC VAWE w.cu ... DRM: rn ---~ ntrn ....... Vllul ~.)QI' kiolil LIMITED DFFEHJ com1 In-• today! ~:Here are 4 of 60 Sportscars Traded in on New '68 DATSUN '4S CORTINA COT $1195 4 1...-d,vVery clean ur. Full 'rice '47 CORTINA s 1395 Awto. tnnL, 2-tlr, lo miln. Under rac. war. GEORGE ZIMMERMAN DATSUN SALES AND SE.RVICE ......., llvd. Costa Mesa \ I CADILLAC 1962 CADILLAC Coupe 0. Ville Polar white. Full power. ah· cond. Jmn1:iculate. $149S · Can finance all or part Plcy- ·1 mt'flls as low aa $22.00 prr mo 0.A.C. ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA Ph. 894-l.UI 15300 Beach Blvd ., Ws!mnstr JOIN tbe •"'1DJ'S"S 1n the DAD.. Y PILOT W AN'I ADS! ------- '60 CADILLAC CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE ,,., EL DORADO, 5.000 mL For sale by PRIVATE PA·R-Prem Iii'~. lthr, vin lop, TY. Silver gray with excel· AM/FM, like n('w. $6950. lenl black 1oP. D\gine, trans-673-6635 mis.<;ion, shocks, brakes, all ~.6'~C~AD~co=NV=.-,J~t ~b~J,-,k , in top shape. See at Lido ~tereo tape deck. new tires. Motors, 1300 Coast Highway $4000. 49-1-9:£11, Mr. \Vood aCf'Qf.is from Bay Club apt s. Call 673-4689. \VILL DIC~R ON PRIOE. ' '56 CAO Funeral coach. Good eond. Equip w/ surfboard racki;. Best offe r 642-8598 '67 EL Dorado -all extras, ""'°· Owne1' Ml-Zl6ii CHEVROLET '57 CHEV \\lag. New 283 C'll~. tirf's, e.-.:haus1. paint. Air conditioned. S500. 642-9339 '42 CHEV. Fastback 2 dr. sf'dan: e,.;cellent cood. $12:>. 536-4908 9600 Imported Autot 9600 · ... ~rted Autos 9600 D~a~aa ELMORE ·MOTORS The Larges Toyota Facility Anywhere NOW OUR NEW LOCATION CHOOSE YOU OYOTA noM THI L••~tST SELtCTION Just Arrived 1969 "Corolla" 41f.,o Fin1ncin9 Available ON APPROVlD CltlDIT TOYOTA CORONA FREE Las Vegas Vacation J Dey1 • 2 Nltlttl AT THI HoclMM Hotel •fl •11y .... , r.,,.,, ' fetf' dri•e11, Nt !"'r- cht•• 11•c:•ssary, 15300 Beach BIYd. WESTMINSnR 894-3322 AMERICAN CAR TRADES WANTED WHY CLOWN AROUND? L1f the boy• with th1 circu1 do th• funny 1lufH Come in i nd trede oH th1t worn out cir for on1 of the11. • Especi•lly when we give them the Volkswagen I b-point Safety and Per- formance insp ection. That's why we can guarantee 100 -;. the repair or replacement of all major mechanical parts*'. But not •~ery used VW 9e+1 this inspection. Only VWs sold by authorit.ed dealers. Lik e us . • Engine• Transmission• Rear axle• Front axle assemblies• Br1ke system • Electrical system '66 vw '66 vw '65 vw Sedan. fully equlp'd Fastback, Fully equip'd Seden. Fully eq11lp'll + radle. + redio, + radio. $1599 $1799 $1399 '63 Porsche '65 vw '64 vw Coupe, 4 Spffd, radio. Square~ck, fully Sed11n, G re•"· l"ully equlp'd + r11dio. equip'cl + radio, $3199 $1799 $1299 '63 vw '62 vw '60 GHIA !teclan ... fly ~ulp'll + Sff•n, Fully ~uip'd Ce11ps, llue, Fully 1111111,•4 radio. + radio, + rodlo. • . $1199 $1099 $899 '61 GHIA vw CAMPERS Co11•«tlble, l.t. F .. 11 y ..... 1,·11 + ,.;i.. '65 • '66 • '67 $999 MUST SEE TO APPRECIATI! 549-0303 1970 Harbor Blvd ., Costa 673 -1190 Mesa • ., I I ' ·' ----------------------------. --____________ ........ ____ ~_ ................................. _________________ _ • • v 99CIO UMll C.n Frltl~r. August 16, 1960 DA.IL Y PILOT .. • t90Q UMll C.n noo _u• __ c._" ___ "°°_ Uaod eor.:._ _ _:_"°°=i..:Now:· :_:c.:":_ __ .::HOO=N:.,.::..:co=":_ __ ':.:aoo=.· .:.:N..:::.ow::..:::4:":::.__·:.....:::!!5:·! CORVmE CHEVROLET CONTINENTAL CORVAIR '66 CHEVROLET '60 Llntoln Continent•! ~Malibu' Dr itatioo Mark V i dr H.T, lib:la.)I Waaon. F.ctor)' a.Ir, auto., -black With full leather l.nter- P/lteefinr, ll/H. !'trdsb!d in lot. Full power with factor)' l')ld rnetalic wUb matciajna air condition. A must ae vtnyl interior. Low mlltqe and drive car to bt rwJly one OWD« trade ln. Fu.U appreciated. 1'\lll pree 17'45. price $21fli.OO. 1st car lot on Harbor BJvtt . lJI car lot on Hubor Blvd. JOHNSON & SON JOHNSON & SON Lincoln-Mercury ~ Lincoln-Men...1.11y Colla Mei& Branch '62 MONZA Coupe. Maroon, automatic, ndio, tac.t'1", white wall tir- es. Immaculate. BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. 11.8. Easy to rt:llch at Garfield and Beech 847·8S5S ())eta MftB. Branch l!Ml I-I.arbor Blvd. St2·7Cfi0 '64 SP'lDER·Ta.n 150 hp. 19U HarbQr Blvd. 642-TIM 1008 a>NTINENTAL. M111t ~ed. ' •pd. ~~~ 4 SPEED sell -very immaculate w.w. Xlnt cond. Asking Wr.i 4 £n1 mile demonstrator CM eve•&: Sun. &i2-m6 SPECIALISTS .;,"'•""" '"' ,., continental HIGH PERFORMANCE """"'l'"'"· Call .. ,., "'' CORVmE CUSTOM CARS Gretk at Johnson and Son. I--------- LARGEST SELECTION IN Ora/lie f?>unty '1 o Ide 1 t FREE VF.GAS VACATION ORANGE COUNTY e s I a b I 1 s h e d Uncoln, WITH A "'-•-~-.1 A Mercuey, Cn""'' deal•nhlt!. 1966 CORVETTE ~rwu uto Newport -~1 642--0981 Convt. 427' Center '67 ·CONTINENTAL Sed. n. Beautiful azure blue w/wtute UlU Hattier Blvd. 531~ pwr., fact. air, YiQ,yl top. leather inL Can fill all or :::.:;.,;,;:..,===~=-'I SC,450. 642-<Cl58 1>1rt Pmt $34.00 per mo '66 CHEVltOLET O.A.C. ' 8 eyl. Ch<Yclle El Camino CONT. wh. Xlnt <ODd, 4 tLMORE Picku A P/ dr, air, Private party. n950. (bstom p. uto., 642-2'764 .......... R/H. eea"""" vilc·l========· I :lnl blue metaHc with bl.ck C bucket ... i.. A ...... "' ORVAIR ear at the low pric9 ot $1895. ,---------1st car lot on Harbor Blvd. 6J G~RIAR 22.COO ml. SPORT CAR WORLD Phono.....,,,, l5300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnltr FREE V!Xi.AS VACATION WITH A 1963 CORVETTE F.B. Cpe. Fire &ilver with rich red leatherette int. -A rt!6J bMU- t)'. can nn all or pan Pmt $28.00 iw:r mo 0.A.C. ELMORE SPORT CAR WORLD Phone""'3.'l22 15300 Bea:ch mvd., Wstmnstr COUGAR DODGE 1963 DODGE DART Silver blue Wnh beautltul con- trast.Ina interior. Automatic, allllll six. Just u ~ah u can bt. Only $99S FORD '5li Vier. T·Bird .... R/H. tinlOO &lua. C«IL kit. Lo Mi $<15. 642-J'l99 MERCURY Climb Aboard and Can fizlanet 111,or pert Pay. ments aa low u $19.00 per mo 0 .A.C. '68 MetcUt')', Statioo Wqoo. Third aeal, auto tnn1., whiteo.valli!, Per.ii. alterlng & _ .. __ ELMORE disc brakes, Factory Alt, .: doll 1ction tail gate, AM • MOTORS n.dio. Bnnd 1)e'W MonteeQ_ ; TOYOTA modeL 8"" todoY for 131\13 • or lease for $11 T ptt ~th , Pb, m.3320 with 40,(Q) miles of totally • 15300 Beach Blvd., Watmnstr he servioe 1rom Johnaon.I • '61 O>upr CXR.-7) Air and 1963 Po1&ra • ldnt cond. Scm, Orange Cbmty'1 okiert 383 eis., 2 door, all otru. ffill:iUhed L1noc1n • M.,.. well eqtziA>ed. Must sell or One owner. 114: 846-IM&t cury • Cougar deeJershlp. Jeue my demonstrator be-Costa M 900 ~ tore Aur. 22. ().ll Wayne Newport • esa. ·?"".: Squ ·-FORD w. C.Ut Hwy., Newport ire at Johneori Ir .-., ---------Beadi. 542.0981 or 56121'8 ___ Orani::e County's oldest e.-, FORD -• W>ll....., L1nc:o1n • M"""" 60 '68 OOLONY Pari< Slatloo f • Qiupr dealenhlp. Ne'l'r· Startmtt COl..lpe. Excellent Wqon. I wm now laCri1ice ~ port • o:i.t.a Mesa. 900 w. trMlportation. Radio hee.I· my 2000 mile demonstrator, - Cout Hwy., Newport Btedl. er, artom.alic, power. steer-M ~~eltlJ I ~ru u "'\ M2-008l or 545-8278 1nr Light blue )'OU .. .,... wan ' It or ~ 1968 COUGAR XR7. M"''"" . BILL MAXEY ~::;.,,.Can A ""s.. San~: ~ my demonstrator. Call Len TOYOTA O:lunty's oldest estab1ished ~ °'Broe hu, at Johnlon and Son, lBllSl Be9ch Blvd. H.B. Linoo1n Mercury CDupr p,r , ana:e CDunty'1 0 Id •• t F.uy to l'MCh II dealc.~lp, Newport • Cotta ~ ........ e 1 t ab I l I he d Lincoln Garfteld and Beach MH&. M2-0ll8l JOHNSON ~ SON ::;' .. ~t~ 7. !'~'!':: '66 CORVETTE UKE NEW. 2 tops, air con- ditioning, powerglide, power lteering, powtr brake•, n · P.1ercW')', Cougar dealership. 847-8555 1968 MERaJRY st at Ion Newport-CM-642...{1981 Wagon, brand new. Hard YOU MAKE THE SCENE Uncoln-Mercury $500/Qffer. ~2777 DODGE 1958 FORD Station wagon, top, third seat, disc brakes. good trusportation, runs power MeerJ.a&, radio and a:ood. needa pt.Int, $250. Inventory 11.Cl'i&e, $3990 at Ooot. -Bnwch COOSA '65 Tu<ix><'-od 4 19'1 Harbor Blvd. 642-7(6() speed. 180 hp, Clean A f~ll '64 CHEV. 897-605' dJo, Mater, white wall tirtl, 67 DODGE Sprt&tnan Vari. I etc., Call Geora:e Grupe al cyl Auto R/H. Extru. 545-8278 Orig. Owner 54S-.n12 att· 6 '63 CORVETTE 2 TOPS. '66 PM __. . Must Mil. Belt off• r. 1966 Monac:i). f'act:Ory air, 2 enc. A body. Many Xtru:I IP"ker radJo, 2 Doc.-, all '17'""4110 or f75..1307 u k fDr tXtru, lika new. One owner. 5*-n'3 Johnson and Son. Oranre JITll"flla 2 dr. ~.T. A/T, PIS, "'64'°""CO~R~V~A~IR~.~ll~O~HP=,~3-.,..i-. R/H. Sale Priced $995. 10% nr. shift, R&I-l Excell. down oec. cond. $325. 545-1301 1982 XL ~ Ford, Pl, County's oki~t •stal:jlahed OOcket aeata, xlnt cond., Uncoln -Mercury. too.gar lmr mlleege, prlv party. dealership. Newport -CM • • E-Z TO BUY l ;,;;-==.,-~--- JIM SLEMONS ~ .. ["~t ~· ,::~;; ST15. * 546-3876 6'tZ-0081 TOYOTA ....... 'AM"' ..... Cluck. '114: 846-9f64 '6' FORD fiOOXI.1, hi perf., '63 MERC Mttf!O" "I·· pt, 390. Pwr. ateerin, •brakes. fact air, etick tblft, extru, Lt. blue. Best olfer. 546--0820 $850. 548-4651btt1116 flT W. Waner, S.A. W0.Zl2 6S OIEV. Malibu rtatltm wagon. Must sell our 37,000 mile sweetheart. lt hi.a au tom at I c transml&sion pow@!' steerin& and other ex· tras. Will &acrifiet>. Dlr. Phone 54&-8278 or 6U-098l '63 CHllV. S.I 4ir Win. One ownl!I' • !::Keel. emid. Salt Prictd $095. WJ" b'ft OBC. • E-Z TO BUY JIM SLEMONS TOYOTA 41T w. warner, s.A. . 5682 '60 CHEVY Convert, one owner, new mulfleni, valve Job, X1nt -· $495. firm 54&-0450 63 CHEVY •ll, 2 dr, stick. & cy!, N--_,.Male• otter. 2Z7l Pomcna, apt B, CM ~l&4 1958 IMPALA 2 di-hdtp, Clean ps, pb or will tradt for clean P-up. 642-91.U * 1961 CORVAIR MONZA $4>0.00 Call 968-2268 alt. 4:15 r '60 NOMAD Wgn Riff, a uto, tr, P/S P/B, low mll , ori& owner, xJnt oond. 830-0Ml 'ST CHEV. 28.1 V-8, SUck trJnl w/ovenir:lve. Good oond. $395. 646-1543 '63 CHEV. 11 Novt. 811. Wag. Excell. cond. mo. Call &U-4850 aft 4:30 PM. '64 El Camino 327 4 speed. Good cond. * 548-3156 • '6l IMPALA Sedan, air-cond. Low mileage. 64¥974 After 4 PM 1963 CHEV ll Good coodition $495. 6Jl.<521 t.WST aeU. '66 El Camino, full power, factory air. Qlnsider trade. 5J6..4321 '51 CHEV. Sedan; ?Wit. q .. new brak~ A: Trans. Good tires. $1$. 646-5381 '61 CHEV. Dlx. Impala 4 dr. New trans, battery & tires. R.H. 549-3601 Sun. CHRYSLER '62 CHRYSLER Newport Station W a a on. Here'• a waaon that giws all the comfortt of home on a ma: journey. Equipped with P/ltleering, P/brUts, auto., R/H, '1uepae rack fol' the fUll price or $895.00. 1st car lot on Harbor Blvd. JOHNSON & SON Linooln-Mft'CUI')' o:.ta 11-te.l Btanch oo Hartior .mvd. M2-7ml COMET '6S COMET 404 Deluxe 4 dr StaUoo Wagoo. Factory air, 289 q ., auto., ·'-· 1 ....... ,. .... Here'• a 1'11111 ecanomlce.I va· cab wacon priotd way Wl- der aalDI maril:et prices at irn;.oo. 1st car lot on Marbor Blvd. JOHNSON I SON l.lncoln-Mm:ur:Y Ollta Mna Bn.nch UMl Hart:>or BIYd. 64l-1ttJO '63 COMET a c,.i s-:o °"""'· Thh 1a the budrtt -t IPOl't model ~ with ....,. '"" auto., P/1teertn&. R/H. D· t"lelkmt eondlHon thru out. i"ul1 priol 1895.00. let ov kif: on Harbor Blvd. JOHNSON & SON Uoooll>M""""' ow.--00 -llMI. 80-1000 19M COMET Callen~. lOllJ mlltqt, Pl• excellent can. dltiM. $1U5. ~6 '61 COMET, St.a.ndard lhUt, R6H. $295. ~ et ~= , 1968 4.4.2 Moll~ Coupe Factory Air Condltloitlngl v.1, t ufo'"•tlc, r1dio, "••fer, "ower ••••rin,, "'kite "''II tfrt1, vinyl top, tinted 911n, power disk br1•11. No. IOtT si~uOSOT~ $365347 & LIC. '61 OLDS 442' Holdy. Cp. v.1, •uforntfic, redio, h1•f•t·s99 o ... power 1t11ri119, ftct. eir conlll., 011t 'f'inyl top, tint•' 91111. c .. t Stock No. 522 '68 OLDS 442 Holdy. Cp. pow1r 1l11rin9, fact. •ir cond., Our vinyl lop, tinted 9l1u. Coit Over 100 More New 68's at Unbelievable Discounts! v.1, 1uto1111tic, rtdlo, h11ltr, Ow '68 OLDS F-85 Spon Cp. s99 o,.. powtr 1t11rl11g, wkit1 wi ll tlr11, C .. t tinttd 9ft11. Stock No. 550 '68 OLDS {,,5 Spon Cp. s99 o ... 6 cylinder, slic k 11.ift, r1dio, o., ........ pow t r 1t11rin9, f1clory c"' elr ctriditlenl119. Siec k No. 687 V-8, •ufom•lic. redio, h11ttr,s99 O•M Stock No. ill ) . 1--------------- '61 Olds F85 Sp. Cpe. Aule1111tlc, redlo, hetf•r, ,_,,e:99 °"' 1t11rin9, fectory air condition~· Our ln9, wkite w•ll tir11, tinted C.. wind1hi1ld. Sfoc• No. 624. '68 OLDS 442 Holdy . Cp. V-8, au lom•tic, r•dio, h1t+er,s99 Oft• pow•r 1!11rin9. ftct. 1ir cond., 0111 vinyl top, tlnt1d 9l1n. Coit Sloe• No. 61 I '68 Olda 0.lm BB 4-dr. Sd VI , 1ulom1tlc, r1dle, li11t1r,s99- pow1r •l11rf119, l'•w•r hr1lr•1, 011r wl.111 will llr11, tin ted 91111. Coit S+oc• No. 631. '68 OLDS 442 Holdy. Cp. v.1. aulomttlc, rtclio. h•••···s99-pow1r 1l•1dn9, fact. 1lr cond., Ollf tinl1d 9l•u. Turnpik1 Cr ui11r. C•1t option. Stock No 691 196B Vista Cruiser WC14on "l<florY Air Ce!ldlllel'llnt. 4 NIMnter, T~rtio M1>- drom1llc, llO¥flf' ''"•Int, "°_, brektt, dtlu.• wtl9tl tlltc, Giiiom IPOl"I wood trend 1'""ln11 Wflftl, llll+W•Y Wflttl, C«Wlnlence tr0\111, door edge 1u1rd, dll11111 r8d!e, ll"'~d 11leu, POWl!r tilt IN" window, l118MM rid<, rl'ITICl!t oulsldt mirror. Stock Ho. 673 '61 OLDS Vista Cruiser v.1, 1uto., 11.IH, p1w1r 1te1r· t PASSEN19ER WAGON s99 O- in9, powt r br1k11, power win· OIN' dow1, ftct. 1lr conJ., w-w tir11, C• tlr1t1d 1!111. <fOO cu. in. 0119. r•t· fu1I. Sloe~ No. 674 '68 OLDS Yfsto Cruls« 9 PASSENGER WAGON s99- v.1, r•dlo, "'''''· l'•w•r •'••r-°"' in9, feel. 1ir cond., W·W tir11, Cett tinted t l•u , 400 cu. in. •tit· reg. fu1I, St•c• No. 601 'H OLDS Y11ta Crul1er s99-' PASSENGER WAGON Ow V-1, t ufe,, RIH, p11wt r lf1trin9, c.t pow1t br1k1., ftcf. 1ir cend., wkift w1tl tlrtt, tlnt1d 11111. Stock No. 612 '68 OLDS Yl1ta Crulur 9 PASSEN&U WA&ON sn O-V-1. 1uto'"1tlc, .rodle, h11t1r, O• pow•r 1t•1rl119. f1ct. 1ir cond.. CNt white wtll tirt1, tinftd 9l1st. 400 cu . In 1n7int . Stec.Ir No. 691 , '68 Olds D•lt• 88 '61 OLDS Vista Crul- ltl OLDS 4;42 H~kly. Cp. -1).., HOL CPE. I LACIC VINYL TO P °"' 9 PASSING.ER WAGON s99- V.1, t ulo......... radoo, h•••···S v I I ,. ,. ' I s v.1 1ulom1tic ,,a;. h1t1••· °"' • f • , 0 · , IU 01111 IC, rt II. n•I Ir, 0 • • • • pow tr 1+.1r1nq, t el. l !t cono., or 1 · L ' llF pow1r d11ri111 fa ct 1lr cond., CMf tinted 91111. D11k ltr1lr11. 99 C.1t ._., It 1. . I 1 • ' 99 Colt whit1 wall tire• tint1cf 1l1u. . powtr I 11rin9, pow er or1s11, ' · S • N ''' wn1 • we lrt l, v111y 011', n -., . toes 0· ed 91,11, Sloe• No. ''' 400 cu. fn r19ul1r fu el on91n1. Sloe• No. 619 -. ·-EVERY-VALUE RA.TED-USED CAR LISTED BELOW GUARANTEED TO BE - KELL Y BLUE BOOK WHOLESALE OR LESS! ---'67 CHEVELLE M•libu 2.0<. H.T. '66' FORD CUSTOM 500 $1374 v.1, 1ulo., rid., htr., pwr. '''·· f1ctory air conditionin9. Stoc• No, 62f-A • , • , , • , , •••••.••• , v.1, oule., r•dio, he•l•r, pew•r 1l11rin9. Sloe• No . 515A. ,,. ••••••••••••••••••• 1963 OLDS STARFlRE $874 1964 BUICK Spocl1I 4-Dr. Sod1n $799 lt1dio, k1tl1r, pow1r, window1, full pow••• Aulom1tic, r1 dio, h••t•r; foc.tory 1lr ftcl. ,;, cond. W/w. Stli:, No. "I 121A , •••••••••• , conditionln9. Steck No. ltOA ••• •••••••••••••• • ..:;.:;;..:;;.;;;;:;.,;;;.;;;.;.;.;;.;.;;;.;.;.;.;.;;.;..;.;.~.;.;.;.;..~ 1963 RAMBLER Cl•11lc 770 4-Dr. s.cton. V-1. 1ute'"1tic. r•dio. h11f•r, p/1, full power, feet. ,;, cond., lt/t. Stt No. 652,i.. • · -• •. ·• & DUNEBUGGY, Retonditlon•d '61 VW Eng. N•• upkol1t1ry. no•tlre1 .••••. ,, •••.........•.......•••..••... $~~.i'!._~1;.,.::;~;,~·,~~;;~,~R~s~:~~~~~~t-~:~i~~~N~~G-·:.·~-i:--~:.'. ..................... ~·~$1~74. $1199 '61 BUICK Eledra 225 $349 1/.1, Iulo., r1di .. 1111+.r, ,_Ir 1lo•rln • Stoclr-No, lt•A ••••• , • , • •• • • • • • • • • • • • Of.HER DEALERS ADVERTISE IT ••• WE DO IT! "REMEMBER, WE ARE NEVER SATISFIED UNTIL YOU AllE'' 2850 HARBOR UNIVERSITY BLVD. • COSTA MESA NEW W..5550 USED 546-5553 '68 CLEAN-UP ~~~E ll'oc!khurst Dodge TRUCK SALE! UY DODGI fOl THI COMITO .. OOKHU DEALS IN BEST TRUCK THE COUNTY! GIGANTIC 11.IDUctlOMSI 10111 •ARDIN GROYI II.VD. •AR-GllOYI · ... 07 .. UO USID CAlS 1!1 .. 224 o rlM DAll.T 'Tll. '' r.w. • IATUIDAT 'Tll. 7 Al ""'9 olfwtt•• ttrni •'-ef ........ .. ....,,..,..,, ' .._,New !HI A·li FAMILY 11 ~ WAGON 58-991*1 MO. : •2997 .............. 1...-Mnt Do4fe Wiii Mitt l•wftttlY .. u~I I l ' '' I • ------------ ----COME IN FOR TREMENDOUS YEAR END SAVINGS ON A NEW O.R PREVIOUSLY OWNED CADILLAC 1968 CADILLAC . HARDTOP SEDAN Hert1 the f•bulou s h•rdtop seden fini1hed in Beroqu• Go lcl with IUxurious black pedded vinyl top end bl.eek full ¥inyl interior. Fully equipped with factory air conditionin9, AM -FM radio, power door lock1, full power and many other deluxe Cadillac extre1. I Stock No. 8 151 1 ;___--OVER 80 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SELECT FROM--- '66 CADILLAC ~oupe de Ville. Solid green fifish ~th gt('en -1ealhflr and nylon Interior. Ful. ~~1\l~c J>O\~er •-equipment plug factory air condit1on1ng, u lt- Stcering wheel, po"·er door locks, 6 "·ay seat a nd many other of the cxtru offered by Cadillac. SALE $3888 PRICE '65 BUICK :! : ·\Vildcat hardtop. Fully equipped with rad.io, ,..-:.heater, pow<'r steering, pow_er. brak.es, wh1t.e , ;::--v.'&11 Ur~ and tinted glass. F1ntsh_ed 1n. bea~ll.­~ ~ful Arctic white with full red vinyl 1nter101. '":Top condition both inside and out. SALE $1695 PRICE '66 CADILLAC Seda n dr Villr. Finished in lush Sudan ~ge ·with Sandlewood vinyl roof and Sandlewood ; -eathcr and nylon Interior. Full. cadilla.c .PD':"e~· : eQUipment includes factory air cond1t1'!n.1n,... 'power vent windows, cruise-control, twihi;:h sentinel, Ult and telescopic steering wheel a11(' other accessories. SALi $3888 PRICE '64 IMPERIAL Crown 4 don r hardtop. Leether and tapestry interior. Fully equipped with power 1leering. power brakes. pcl\\'er windows, IXl"'er 6 "'8..V seat, autom&tlc dlmmf'r, A?.1/FM radio and actory air et:inditioninl!'. SALi •$1777 PRICE '66 CADILLAC Brougham. Beautirul Topaz Gold with Sandle- wood landau root wlth leather in terior. Fu I J Cadillac po .... ·er equipment pl us factory air conditioning, powt>r vPnt windO\l'S, door locks. A~1-FM radio and t"•itight sentlncl. No finE'r a uto on the road than Cadillac's Brougham, This is a MUST SEE. - SALE $3999 PRICE '67 CADILLAC Coupe de \/ill<'. Beautiful Monterey Green fin- ish v<'ith Black vinyl roof and full leather in- terior. Full Cadillac J>OW<'r including power vent windows and of L'OUrsc, fa ctory air con- ditioning. SALE $4777 PRICE '63 CADILLAC Sedan Df'Vil!e. 4 door ha 1·d1 op. Litne grr('n \Vith leather and nylon interior. i-la., power 6 wey seat. power ""'indow!I, power vent win· dows, power steering, power brakes, factory air conditioning. SALE $1444 PRICE '65 MUSTANG Economical 6 cylindrr englf)(' with thf' sland· ard tran~mlssion, r&dio Md hraler. while sidP wall tires. Snow 'vhilC' exterior "·ith harn1oni· zing blue interior. SALE $999 PRICE OTHER SPECIAL VAWES '62 llNCOLN CONTINENTAL e '64 FORD CONVERTIBLE e '64 FORD, CONVERTIBLE e '64 PONTIAC STA. WGN. e '66 BUICK LE SABRE e '6 8 BUICK STA. WAGON e '6 7 CHEV MAllBU COUPE e '66 RAMBLER STA. WGN. e '67 MERCEDES SEDAN e '6 7 FORD RANCHERO e '64 RAMBLER STA. WAGON e '63 CHEV HARDTOP CPf e '66 BUICK H.T. SEDAN e '67 BUICK ELECTRA e • 65 THUNDERBIRD H.T. e '6 7 FORD RANCH ERO e '63 CHEV H.T. COUPE e '65 CADILLAC Sedan df' Ville. Cadillac's finest and fully power equipped for luxury driving. or course this includes factory air conditioning, po111er 'A'indo"'S, 6 "'ay power seat, tilt steering wheel, and finished in gleaming TurquoiM'! 'A•ith harmonizing leather and cloth interior. SALE $2666 PllCE '64 CADILLAC Convertible. Full Cadillac power equipment plus factory air conditioning. 1''1nlshed in white with red leather interior and bucket seats. Other extras are AM-FM radio and cruise control. This car is in quality condi- tion inside and out. SALE $1777 PRICE '65 PONTIAC Grand Prix. Automatic transmls1ion, 'pow,.r steering, power brakes, radio and heater, bur- ket sea.ts, ~nter console, tachometer, white side wall tires. SALE $1444 · PRICE 1------- '63 CADILLAC The famous Coupe de Ville modet-with all power assists including 6 way J'O'''er seat, po"·er windows, power brakes, power stt'er· ing, and of course factory air conditionlni;:. A beautiful arctic white exterior "-'ith blllelt and white interior. This one i1 f'Mdy for you to drive home today. SALE $1444 PRICE '64 CADILLAC Hardtop sedan. Beautiful Topaz Gold finish with matchini;:-gold lealh('r and nylon inter· ior. Full Cadillac po\\·er equip1ncnl plus fac- tory a..ir conditioning, power \~·indows, 6 way power seat. This one is a dream and exhibits llie care only one O"'ller can offer. SALE $1777 PRICE '62 CADILLAC Equipment includes po1ver steering, power windows, power brakes, power seat and fac- tory air conditioning. Other Cadillac,.: extras are power vent windo.,.,•s, 6 way seat and autronic eye. Beautiful Normandy Blue fin· ish with white top and "'hite full leather in- terior. • SALi $888 PRICE '65 CADILLAC F.! Dorado convertible. Fully Cadillac powrr equipped is this truly professional auto in- cluding factory air conditioning. Also has power wlndo..,,•11 and power side vents and many other of Cadillac superb extras. Finished in Topaz Gold with Sandalwood leather in· terior. SALE $2995 PRICI '63 PONTIAC Bonneville Coupe, Gold \Vith harmonizing in· t.erior (full vinyl). Automatic trammWion, llO\\·er steering, power brakes. radio and heal - er, \vhite side v.•all tires, tinted glau and niuch mor,. • SALE $999 PRICE -------SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY-9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY • " YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARBOR AREA NABERS 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa MUSTANG nrw. PRI Prty will sac $300 under blur book. '68 Mustang stk shill. fac air. Lo mi. Terms, or considt:>r trade for sm sta wagon. &16--2388 '66 r.,USTANG. PIS&: 8 , 189 V·ll : au to .. hdtp. R/H: sell $1873 or trad.e equity for trans car. 83.1--0067 eves TAKE Over pymnts 574. i\lo. 1!167 i\1uslang GT "'ith trade for iood trans car. 646--8216 MUSTANG '65 MUSTANG Spt Cpe slick six. Golden rod yellow with G.T. d«-or in· ter\01·. Absolutrly showroom fresh. 51495 Can hnanec all or pal1 Pay· mrntJ> as low llS ~22.00 per mo 0 .A.C. ELMORE MUSTANG 66 MUSTANG. Stick. Fae. 11erl"Q. Landau top. Mags. 0vC'rsized tires. 540-9193 OLDSMOBILE OLDSMOBILE 62 OLDS 98 Holiday sedan. 46,500 mi. run power. 6 way pwr !K'ats. many e~ra.1. Xln1 rood. $795. 968-4~i8 OLDSMOBILE 540-9100 PLYMOUTH PONTIAC 1964 PONTIAC G. T.O. COUPE Beautiful burgandy with white bucket sc,1ts. Air rood .• tutom;illc. $1695 Can finance all or pert Pay. n1ent~ as low as S:l'LOO pcor mo 0.A.C. ELMORE 9900 PONTIAC e '67 FIREBIRD 326 110. r/h. auto tr, fuU pwr. Onginal owner. $ 2 4 9 5. 494-379'1 RAMBLER 1965 RAMBLER ~ <Ir. 6 pa ss s1ation wagon. P<1lar ivory with contr:u1t1ng 1ntenor, air cond . A gorge· ous automritl1lr. Only 51395 ~ ~.;;:~·"I'd Autos 96001mport~ Autos 9600 . -- i\10TORS TOYOTA Ph. 894.3320 1:,300 Beach Blvd., \\'st mnstr Can hn!illce aJl or part Pay· nients &s low as $22.00 per mo 0.A C. I ------ '65 MUSTANG This outslancllng car 1.~ in 11 beautiful gold n1c1;1lk fin· i!lb with 1 blade lil<c 11('11 i11· t.erior. Late n1'llirl 28!1 l'n· I gine, auto .. P lslrrring, Ri ll. Full prier $1~,9: .. 01 , l ri car lot <'n J;;orhor Blvd I JOHNSON & SON Linroln·Men·ui·,v CMla Me111 Rnlni'h 19·11 Harbor Blvd. 6~2·700'.I 4 SPEED SPECIALISTS HIGH PERFORMANCE CUSTOM CARS LARG~ SELECTION IN ORANGE COUNTY Selected Auto Center 13()32 ll1rbor Bt"ri . 537-4646 AA ~l USTA N(i Convc!1ih\r, A·l 1•00'111il'n. or I & In a I O\\ncr. A~iume ~1inln1 C'Cll1tr11c1 al ll P11Ml.a. ~2419 ) ~MPORTED CAR SERVICE IN THE HARBOR AREA COMPLETE SERVICE & PARTS VW e TRIUMPH e PORSCHE e JAGUAR e TOYOTA • MERCEDES SPfCIAUZDIG IN ELECTRONIC JUNE ·UP AUTHORIZED MG DEALER tn1mcdiale Delivery on the fabulou g Austin America, Huge Selection NEWPORT IMPORTS LTD. 3100 W. COAST HWY. ~~ . NEWPORT BEACH rf ~ 642-9405 540.1764 1962 PONTIAC l•M1n1 Spt. c,,_. ;..1orons ELMORE 1'10TORS TOYOTA Ph. 89-1·3320 15300 B<'ach Blvd., \Vstmnstr TOYOTA T ·llR D Ph. 891.JJ:.'O Oran«t County'• Excllldvt -------,.--1 15300 Beach Bl•d., \V11tmm.1r DtaJ" for koU. • ft.orot and • '62 T·BIRO ' fl<ntl1-X!nr rond l'IQl 1967 CTO 2 dr Hardtop fully 19616 P01"nACGro-v·-1 • 674-ISM • ;:_ip~, 4 spd. ~ !Jhl~ hudtop'. powtr b r.• k ~~. <·S1"'t-"'s"'1n1".-'.,,..""'=cond'-,;l;tioo--.. ~ -.,n . e new, 11omc at~ing. Consol, s h I f I powr, m\ls! tell, pri flttr. ae~~, .. M,",''ooo" 1 1 1 1 tm. bucket wats. 389 f'nJ.:. 111; $1395. 642-6377, 673-7001 m""1&t~ , m e • . cond 0rg S'J 4~ S2575. Call 642"'943, alt~r "2;,,.,., •ft ~?wn11',r. , :·1 ·' fi<ll ;)48-8128 -.JY;JV "· ii a} Sil · · Sun. 64 GTO 4 ~ '63 GRANO PRIX . full pwr. Eltttlltnt cmdlHon $ 1.'I 0 0 air. ;'11'.Jnt 1'ond, rlltltl t1rel. 646-2998 $1250. 6'Jl..M27 or 673-673.1 VALIANT -'61 01;'11'. V11ll11nt. rk h. nf'W hath•ty, lr1tns, aood tlrct. S..'m. &t2-lal13 all 6 PM ..- Now Co,. 9IOON1w C1rt • Frld•Y. Auoust l&, 1968 tlOONow Co,. 9IOONow Cort 9100N1w Ctrs 9100Now Co,. tlOONow C. .. HOONowCo,. NOW IS POSITIVELY lHE BEST TIME TO BUY! SELECT YOUR FIREBIRD ' I I WHICH FIR·EBIRD GETS TO YOU MOST? The besic Firebird fun machine is thrifty, but oh so nifty with ft1 fun complement of '68 Firebird fHtur•s. Th• Fir•bird 350 is our sprightly family sportster thet sports a n•w 265 hp V-8. Or tell• the '68 f irebird Sprint, Go ahead teke it end se• how superbly it can provide all th• eccoutrem•nts of e European rally car. What about Firebird H. 0.7 It packs 320 hp es standard along with Quadre-jet cerburetion end 111-synchro 3.sp••d trensmission. Firebird 400 is the ultimete word in driving mechin•ry with its 400 cubes, 10.75: I compression, end 330 hors•s et 4800 rpm. &et behind the wheel of 1 Firebird7 Greet id••· But prep•r• your1•lf never f~· be 1ati1fi•d with enything l•ss . • • • AND ROY CARVER HAS 'EM All! ' $ TODAY FROM OUR LARGE STOCK DOWN ON APPRQVAL OF YOUR GOOD CREDIT EACH & EVERY ' ''CARVER-CARE-CAR'' CARRIES A 180°/o WARRANTY ON All ENGINE, REAR END AND TRANSMISSION .PARTS. :~.'~~~-? ... ~~,~CON 5127.7 r1dJo, h11t1r •• , ••• , ••• , , • , , .....•• , •• , , , , , , , , , :~.~."~'Hv~.~~~~~~ .. ~~~~~! 515 77 h11f1r, whit1 will tir•• .• , .• , . , , •.... , • , , ••• , , ... '64 PONT. TEMPEST $1477 Cu1tom 4 door Ii p11111191r 1t1tio11 w19on. v.a, Hydr1· m1tic, pow1r 1l11ri119, r1dio, h11t1r, whit1 will fir11 .. :~~' ~'~~v!.1!:.,,~,!.? .... ,,,, "'" 516 77 h11l•r, whil t wi ll tir11 , ....... , .. , . , , ..... , .... . :~~,,.~,~~~: ... ~.~ .. ~~,~~.,, '"'"~16 77 .. hift well tir11. ]l,M2 1clu1I mil11 ..... , , , ..... , :~~' ~'~~v!'H,~~'11'~~~~'1• 51977 •1dio, h11t1r, whil1 will tir11 ........•• , , , , • , , •• , ~~~:r:.~~,!~~~1:';,; .. '''.'. ~'.~.·:::~:· .... 51877 ;~:. ~;~~~~~~: ~.~~·~.'.': .''.~'.:· .... ~257.7 :~~. ~'~~.!·~.ti~~-"~~~'~1 " 52177 h11t1r, whit• will lir•l i nd f1 ct1ry 1ir co11dlflo11l119, .. ~~~ ~~~;~·~·.~~:' ... ' .. '' '' ' ... ''.' .. ' . 527.77 ;~~· ~;g~~·~;.~.:~.~~'.''.'.'.':~:'" .. 51.877 '68 PONT. LE MANS v.1, Hydr11'1'11tlc, pow1r'1t11ri119, pow1r br1k11, rtdlo, s3277 h11t1r, whit• will tlr11 111d f1ctory 1ir co11dltlo11l111, Vi11yl roof. N1w cir w1rr111+., •• , • , •• , •••••• , .A,,,, ' ''. ' " I ( r. I, J • -· • i;•, .... ~..,._ ... -.. ~· '1 ""'40\;"'\-~--,.•,...;-,w .•w w t<~---W•04-= 4 -s=-->-:•.-... -.-... --••<F l.-.., ... • .... _1,+c~--r-<,--r:-.._--.,-.-,.-..-..-,,.~~-·,..-....--• • • -... ~ 1 . to. tr1ns., power 1te1ring, vinyl roof, tinted lass, wheel covers, rJdio, heater, white 1ld• 1\11. Stock Nt. 1146. y ~' BRAND NEW 68 FAIRLANE 2 Door Hardtop 52626 41 EVERYTHING (ancl anything) GOES IN THE OFFICIAL FACTOR Y . -------- CLEARANCE OF 1968 FORDS Reid what you w1nt -BELIEVE whit you wont, but remember -the de1ler with tht most con to cl11r before th1 '69'1 1rrivo ii the de1ler who must offer the highest discounts to gel the job dont! And wt htvo one of tht l1rgttt ''8 inventories in Southern C1liforni1! CARS & DEMOS.-OV ER 40 TO CHOOSE FROM. WE ARE PROUD TO ANNOUNCE , FOR THE 2nd STRAIGHT YEAR . 8 T-BIRD '68 GALAX IE 500 $3123 17 8 SHELBY '68 CORTINA lft rtcopitl• of Jlf'Oll'tlllrt l'llnlflmlnt • , . mod1n1 11111 W servkt facllitlt1 • , • Sound merchandising pr..:tk11 ••• Hs,h CfU'lfty 1t1nd1rd1 ••. Continuing lnttmt In rtttdtrlno Superior 11rvlct to ford owrttra during yew 196J. E GUARANTEE ••• No dealer-ANYWHERE-can give you a better deal on a new '68 Ford during this "~lean Sweep" sale of all remaining models. In short, $4018 11 $2187 32 TRY US FIRST OR TRY US LAST ••• BUT TRY US BEFORE YOU BUY! USED CARS Scientifically Tested OVER 100 WAYS 1000/o GUARANTEED NOW • , , we un 1cientiflcally 1n1lyn and check OV9r 100 1r1n on 11ch used car th1t 1f. fect1 Its ptrform1nc1 prior to Hlllng It. You buy with built In confid1nc1 when you buy 1 Theodore Robina Used Car that urtlff tt.1 Di1gno1tic sticker. Th111 can corry a 100% mech· anic:.al guorantff for 30 days or 1,000 mil11 • • -, '65 BARRACUDA Plym. $-l·'tG~'- fu'mo.~ ~Mo. tr-. CPI.I: 4m r.& Mn•...... ,&. ~";JJ CHEVY 2-Ton C1b & Ch1ssis 599· 5· '!1 .....,.,.L • ..-•1111 1 """"' axl•. Y""1f... Wiii M~ fln1nt9. e TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS e '67 CAMARO CHEV. $1895 H8nlloll. Cu.tom lnt...ior. l'ulli .,.ul..,... lfYll tMI), M llown or trme. Uf -mo .. li6 "*'lthl, '64 RAMBLER lllnltop 1 _. ,,,.,,,_. .... Allio.,,..._, ,.ia end'-""' (.ltl G UT) tuct.• '""-~ .,_ or trlioM. IOt ""' mo., U mafl'lfa. '64 T·Bird Hardtop fli~· Air con<t., ~ wlndowl. -...... 1,..,, !Ml'\/ mi. 1'11'4 dD¥m • .,....,. or orr..-159 '*" "'°'· !Ill ""'""""· ..;"'-~!"""' ..... -...,1 '63 WlllYS JHp Wtgon ~5- .22 WAGONS "S~" n ~=ir=r~.:"'...::tr:'·'"'"""" ~77 . ... c '64 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON . $1195 r,,!ct:, ~"::;:·~Mitt:-=. IMfrt 1m. n ._ 22 "' chooH ''°'" -'59 th,. '67 JW 6 .. -ro -65 FORD L d H dt . . .. ingtr -some with 1lr conclltlonlng. PLYMOUTH - '66 MERC t t ' II' op ;;--$13 95 20 TO CHOOsMM.1~~9.PllDS, AUTO-COMMumt -ICONO IUS'S -FORDS -FALCONS -FAIR· = ~':0.:°C::: .:::Jr.·."'.:.="· ,_ '"'· .. _ IAHIS -COUNTRY SEDANS -CHEVY U WAGON :.. COUNTRY SQUlllS. Example: '66 FORD WAGON $1595 '63 CORVAIR MONZA ' '61 PONTIAC T tmpesl 4 dl!!_.._Avto. tr-., r.Slao W llN!w. ILW #IJ :IO'll. ._ « ..--111 -mo""'. M "*"""- '695 MATICS. SOM! WITN '°WIR STllRING & AIR CDNDITIOftfNG. 196S THllU 1967 MODUS, COHVERTIBllS, COUPES, AND 2+2 FASTIACl<S. IXAMPU, '65 MUSTANG Alt eoroOiliolllrlt, V.f. "''°· tr~,. _. l!Winl. s 1395, RGU.Ja. Xl'll. .,,... w tTQ , .., -"'°""'· 31 ..o ........ . USED CAR SALE PRICES GOOD FOR 72 HOURS. ALL PAYMENTS FIGURED ON APPROVED CREDIT. • t _ t 1 81/1 1cra1 of the most moderri Ford 111les and 'I. · Tfl 11rvice facilities on the Wast Colllt /~ ~~Theodqre -G!ROEH ~&::FWY' Robins ,q[J~ ~ . All.IMS ~" "~ F d SERVING /1===:~0 ..:::7. ~ ~~"f, ~ 0 r SINCE ~TH/~!~ 1~: -,,, ~ ,... ___ .,_" 2060 Harbor ~ Costa Mesa ®642-0010 i • ~ -------------------.... &... - ------ ------------~---~~ ------~-~-~-~-~-~-----------------' frid1y, August 16, 1961 LEON ETTINGER OF LA- GUNA BEACH SHARES SOME OF HIS THOUGHTS ON MUSIC WITH DORO. THY PIER IN HER MEET THE PEOPLE FEATURE, TODAY, ON PAGE 3. COSTA MESA WILL PRO. VIDE PLENTY OF ACTI· VITY FOR THE CHIL· OREN AS W E L L AS ADULTS DURING I TS SOCIAL ARTS WEEK. A KID'S TALENT SHOW, A PLAY FOR THE YOUNG· STERS AND A SPA· GHETTI DINNER ARE ALL PA RT OF THE WEEK WHICH STARTS TOMORROW, AUGUST 17. OUT 'N' ABOUT ~AKES IN AVALON ON SANTA CATALINA ISLAND THIS WEEK, THEN C 0 M E S BACK TO THE ORANGE COAST FOR A LOOK AT THE FOOD AND SERV· ICE IN SOME OF OUR C 0 A S TA L RESTAU· RANTS. ENTERTAIN· MENT SPOTS MAY 81 POUND ON PAGES I THROUGH 1S. WEEKENDER CAIJFORllA ART SHOW j ' i I 1 ' 1 j j ' ' • • Special Events AQUATIC SHOW -Students from Newport Recrea- tion Department aquatic classes are presentinc "South Pacific Aquatic Show.'' Fri., Aug. JS at 8 p.m. in the Newport Barbor H i I b School pool, 600 N. Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. Admission 75c for adulta. 50c for children. Phone 673-2110 Ior further information. CHILDREN'S THEATER -The Buntingum Beach Playhouse is presenting a special children'• fantasy, ''Sir Slob and the Princess," Fri. and Sat. through Aug. 24. Curtain time Fri. at 7:30 p.m., Sat. 2:90 p.m. Tickets, $1 for adults, -iOc for children under 12. Phone 847-1631. l\IOVIES -The Huntington Beach libraries are showing family films each Sat. at dusk through Aug. 24 in the Beach Bowl just east of Hunting- ton Beach pier. There is no admission charge. Featured Cilms Sat., Aug. 17 are ''Africa My Own Native Land," "Friendly New Zealand" and "Beaver Valley." TEEN DANCE -A dance for high school aged Westminster teenagers will be held Fri., Aug. 16 from 8 p.m. to midnight in the Community Services building of the Civic Cent~r, 8140 West· mjnster Ave ., Westminster. Featured band wlU be the "Sound Shop.'' Admission, $1.50, includes the price of a teen card which wru admit the holder to future dances at a discount. COMEDY SHOW -Comedian Bob Newhart, will entertain on the Melodyland st.age, 10 Freed· man Way, Anaheim Aug. 16 and 17. Also ap- pearing as a guest star will be singer Bill Med· ley, formerly with the Righteous Brothers. ' Performance FrL at 8:30 p.m .. Sat. 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. Phone 776-7460. SOCIAL ARTS WEEK -The Costa Mesa Recrea· lion Department is sponsoring Jts fourth Social Arts Week Aug. 17 through 24. Events include: a modern comedy "Brother Goose," presented by the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse teen division Aug. 16, 17 at 8:30 p.m. at recreation center 0 . C. Fairgrounds, 88 Fair 'Drive, Costa Mesa; Sun .. Aug. 18 Barbeque picnic beginning at 10 a. m. at Cost.a Mesa City Park; Mon., Aug. 19 a playground talent show and spaghetti dinner at the recreation center, co,st 50c for children, 75c for adults; Wed., Aug. 21 Pops softball game at 8 p.m. in TeWinkle Part and a teen dance at 8 p.m. at the recreation center; Thurs and FrL Aug. 22 and 23 an acquatics show at Estancia High School, 7:30 p.m., admission 50c ; Fri., Aug. 23 a square and social dance jamboree, 8:30 p.m. at the Comunity Recreation Center. For further information phone 834-5391. See feature Page 5. 1 , DISNEYLAND ENTERTAlNMENT -Bill Dana also known as ''Jose Jimenez" and singer Teresa Brewer will star on the Tomorrowland Stage at Disneyland, 1313 S. Barbor Blvd., Ana· heim Aug. 19 through 23. Showtimes are 9: 15 and 11 p.m. A country muslc jubilee Aug. ta will feature Judy Lynn Show and The Stone Country on the Tomorrowland Stage at 3. 5 and 7 p.m Oisneyland ls open 8 a.m. to mid· ·lltght Sun. through Thurs., 8 a.m. to 1 a.m. Fri. and Sat. Phorle 533-4456. f Onnr, CMU .{ WttMtft-lf' GU I DE TO FUN Special Events GYMKHANA -More than 400 entries are expec~d for the all-day Silver Spm Gymkhana Show Sun., Aug. 18 at the Rancho California Arena. rugbway 395, midway between Riverside and San Diego. Eveota will include, barrel races. pole bending and ring spearing races. No ad· mission charge. JAZZMAN -Harry James and his orchestra and singer Della Reese perform Aug. 19 at 8:30 tn the Melodyland Theater, 10 Freedman Way, Anaheim. Tickets, $2.50 to $5.50. Phone Tl&-7460. LAGUNA ART FESTIVAL -The 33rd annual La. guna Beach Festival of Arts and Pageant of the Masters is being staged through August 24 at the Laguna Beach Festival Grounds, 650 La. iuna Canyon Road. Tickets Ior Pageant of th• Masters, a living creation of art works, are on sale at the box office daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Prices range from $2 to $6 and include admis· sion to the Festival grounds. Single admiss1on to the Festival grounds, where art works of all kinds will be displayed and sold is 50c for adults; lOc for children. Hour~: r"nn to mid· night daily. Phone 4~+.145. ALL CALIFORNIA ART SHOW -An invitational art exhibit... of approximately 200 entries by California artists will be on display noon to 10 -p.m. daily at the Laguna Beach Art Associa· lion Gallery, 807 Cliff Drive, through Aug. 24 as part of the Lagtma Beach Festival of Arts. Hours: noon to 10 p.rn. daily. General admission 50c, Art Association members and one guest, frtt. Phone 494~1. See feature on Page 7. l.:oming Lip CHARACTER BOAT PARADE -The eighth an· nual Newport Harbor Character Boat Parade begins at 3:30 p.m., Sat., Aug. 24 when decor· ated boats leave from the Balboa Bay Club, 1221 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Par· ade may be viewed from shore line as it fol· lows the channel around the islands. The theme of this year's parade is "An Adventure at Sea.'" "'l. BALLET -The Laguna Ballet Company presents their third annual "Ballet Alfresco" Sat., Aug. 31 at 8:30 p.m. Programs includes "Fugitive Visions" by Prokofiev, "Moods of Ancient Rus- sia," Arensky and "The Enchanted Toy Shop,'' Joseph Bayer. Tickets, $2, '3 and $4, half price for students in the side and center sections, on sale at the Irvine Bowl box oifice. 650 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach or phone 494-7271. Things to Do BARBOR CRUlSES -Boat tours of Newport Har- bor's historical sites, famous houses, islands and points of interest leave daily from the Fun Zone dock. between Palm and Main Sts., Bal- boa, hourly 11 a.m. to 7 pm. Tickt:s for go. minute cruise, adults, $2 ; children, $.12, $1, youngsters under 5, free. A 45-mlnute cruise also Is ava.ileb1e. Phone 673-0'l40 Things to Do CATALINA TRIP -The Island Holiday boat ls inaking daily trips to Catalina Island leaving from the Balboa Pavilion, 400 Main St., Balboa at 9 a.m. and returning at 7 p.m. Roundtrip fare for adults $8.50; children, 5-12, $4.25 and youngsters under 5 free. Reservations re- quired, phone 673-5245 • Sports DODGERS -The Los Angeles Dodgers vs the San Francisco Giants Aug. 22, 23, 24 at 8 p.m., Aug. 2.5 at 1 p.m. in the Dodgers' Stadium, 1750 Stadium Way, Los Angeles. Tickets available locally at Wallichs Music City store and Mutual Ticket Agencies. ANG~ BASEBALL -California Angels vs the Washington Senators Aug. 16, 17 at 8 p.m., Aug. 18 at 1 p.m.; Baltimore Orioles Aug. 19, 20, 21 at 8 p.m. in the Anaheim Stadium, 2000 State College Blvd., Anaheim. Tickets available in Orange County at United Calir. Banks, Mutual ~cket agencies and Wallichs Music City stores. Phone 633·2000. ,,. ~!;;. HORSE RACING -Quarter Horse Racing even· ings at the Los Alamitos Race Course, 4961 Katella, Los Alamitos. First Post time 7:45 p.m. Mon. through Sat. Phone 527-2231. DORSE RACING -Thoroughbred horse racing at Del Mar Turf Club, Del Mar, Mon. through Sat. Ni:ne races daily, fir.rt post time 2 p.m. Phone (714-1) 755--1141 for further infonn ati011. COVER : The All California Art Exhibit, now in progress at the Laguna Beach Art A!-- soclation Gallery, is filled with new ideas, new media and the "now" feeling of art. It con- tinues through August 25 in conjunction With the Festival of Arts. See feature on Page 7. Gakle to Fun Meet the People Hollywood Bowl Garden Notes SodaJ Arts Week Lacuna Chamber Mudc De1lgner'1 Nottbook All Calli. Art Show Oat 'N' About Entertalnment Current Art Exhibit.I Yosemite Live Theater -Movla ORANGE COAST maamammaa August 11, 1968 Pace% Pafe S Paces Pace t Pace 5 Pa«e I Page t P•ft 7 Paiea a..u Paget a.ts Pare 1J Pafe 1J Pafet 14-15 MAGAZINE 0.-.. CNtt '#E•KENOaa .......... 1tllMllllM 'r\Mys .. - 1Kt1e. tt W.. DAILY ll'ILOT "' 1111 °'"" C•tl l' .... 111111 Ce .. ......., ... di. "" ............... 'Ci•t9 MtM ~ .... Wft .. mlMfff tlll ,_tell! ntey, c:.1"""91a. A .... t Peet OftlCa ... IOS, NrwHrt ltacll, Clll'""41 "'61. Pbont ~1 • IAcy BeU I Me91tlM 19't--.OAILT PILO FrlOt'1 A""'"I 14 1 Has Devoted To Love . Of Music Just being near Laguna Beach resident Leon Ettinger, experiencing his enthusiasm and warmth, makes one want to love music as much as he does. Ettinger, who grew up in the small town of Colfax, Washington, re. members his interest in music stemming from his freshman year at the University of California Berkeley. "I decided to try out for the glee club, but you can imagine what it was like for a freshman who came from a town half as big as the university. I was pretty sc-ared." Apparently his talent was recognized that first day because the direc· tor of the group personally volunteered to give Leon lessons and the follow· ing year introduced him to the club as the finest voice he had heard ~ince it was founded. -'After he was graduated in 1915 Leon studied law for one semester then realized his heart was really in singing. For the next seven years, with Matuiee SediM-OA.11.V PILOT F,,._y, Aftlffl 1'1 INa BOWL MAESTRO Andre Kosttlanetz will con· duct thrM concerts at the Hollywood Bowl starting with a program of music by American composers on Tuesday, August 20; an all Tsch.lkovsky p r o gr a m, Thursday night, August 22, and the International Prom· enade Saturday night Pops concert on August 24. All thr" concerts start at 8:30 p.m. Tickets available at Automobile Club of South- ern California. two years out for Marine Corp service during World War I, he studied music seriously. In 1923 he went ti) New York to continue his studies ·and worked as a reporter and advertising salesman at the Musical Digest. -"By that time I had met a young piano teacher in Los Angeles. named Miss Nouvart so at the end of the season I returned. We were mar· ried the following year," Leon recalled with a twinkle in his eye . ..a Together the young couple opened their own studio where Leon taught singing and his bride, piano. They also taught together at the West· ern School for girls and for 15 years at Ambassador College. In 1946 Leon was made director of Thorn Hall, the auditorium at Occidental, a position he held for 11 years. . Constantly involved in musical undertakings in the community Leon was manager of the Pasadena Music Festival for four years and of the American Music Theatre, an opera company which performed in English, from 1938 until its demise during World War II. For 15 years he was man· ager of the Coleman Chamber Music Association. Flipping through the pages ot his scrapbook, he refers to himself by his surname. "There's Ettinger," he says pointing to a pictQre of himself and Metropolitan Opera star J an Peerce. He turns the page and chuckles at a picture of Piatigorsky. "Tl1e Chamber music society was so angry when a quartet couldn't perform and we had to settle for him. But when they heard him . . . " Not surprisingly when he retired and moved to Laguna Beach in 1964, Leon was right back in the swing cf things. "When I heard of the Chamber Music Society, I only bop~ to attend the performances, but when they learned of my background, they asked me to be on the board." For the past four years Leon has been arranging for the artists and handling the correspondence and publicity for the society. This spring Leon retired from the Mard. "Boards should rotate in the community. Once a society is established in the community it has an inherent ability to grow and continue, but the contribution of the people involved is the important element. If a person is interested in havi ng such things in the community he should contribute his work to see that they don't die." Is Leon done with music? Far from it! He is now deeply invclved with the Lyric Opera Association o'f Orange County and is a Fellow of the National Association of Teachers of singing. He continues to teach voice at the American Legion Hall in Laguna Beach. If Leon Ettinger's life could be transformed into a melody, it would be a soft refrain, gently repeating, always a pleasure for a listener to hear. -Dorothy Pier See feature on Laguna Beach CIUJmber Music Society's new season on Page 5. A MESSAGE FROM ERNIE & SALLY CAMP •••• Here Are 5 Big Reasons We're Closed Tuesday I -We closed Aug. 6th to celebrate our 25th anniversary and we had our biggest 2 days on the 5th and 7th. 2 :-Wt enjoyed our fint "dey off" in l yHn; so much we decided to close every Tuesder,. l -It wes 'such e thrill" to s I e • p 'tll 7 e.m lefter 9ettin9 up at 2:30 for yeers) Is en other reeson. 4 -If we disappointed you, cell mt et home and I'll personally deliver to you on Tuesdeys (673-1795 Ernie Cempl. 6 -Our business is "Soo Goc::l" we must heve Tuesdey to take our money to the benlc (to meke the checks good we wrote Sunday) "You know what we meen" -Regerds, Ernie & Sally Cemp CLIP THESE COUPONS AND SAVEi r - - - - - - - - - - - - --· U.S. No. 1 I ly Popular Demand I CRISP I WHITI ROSI ICllERO I POTATOES I BANANAS I LEnUCE I I 5 L;,, t~c I u!t~ 1~ I ~m,~1t:!d. I ' with thl1 coupon I with tbl• coupon I with ttlla coupon ..J --------------COUPONS EXPIRE AUGUST 21st We eongratulete these fine rest1urenh for treding locally ..• Petronize theml Their food is febuloud FOUR WINDS, '~HU1ttf"'tot1 leodti" ALLEY WEST, "On The Oeeen," Newport leact.: THE RIVIERA "Soutta Coast Plaa:" DILLMAN'S "On The Peninsule," VILLA GI INN ''On Belbo1 laland," end I 97 others •• • HOW AIOUT YOU CALLING US? PHONI: 673-8715 ,. ''Wllere QHflty It fte 0,., Of fte HHM',,.. NEWPORT PRODUCE 261' N.wport llYd. ott .. . r ... 1 .... 1a I f . 1 I I j ----------- GARDEN NOTES Growing Plants From . Seed Is Rewardirtg Task I August is the time of year to sow seeds for pansies, stocks, snap- dragons, calendulas and other winter and spring bloor:nIDg annual~. This is also the time to plant seeds for almost all perennials. These mclude carnations delphiniums, shasta daisies and primroses. Growing plants from seed' is a rewarding experience but does require a little patience and care. Seeds may be sown directly into the ground where the pla~ts stay and bloom, or they may be sown in flats and transplanted into the garden later. Only the very easiest of seeds, such as calendulas, should be grown directly f.rom seed planted in the garden bed. Even with these, spacing will be much better if they are transplanted into ihe bed instead of allowed _to sprout at random. The planting medium in the flat or pol should be rich in organic mat· erial such as leaf mold. Organic matter in a soil acts as a buffer, soaking up moisture while at the same time tacilitating drainage. It then releases the moisture at the proper rate. Rich loa m should also be included in the mixture to help supply nu- trients. Sharp river sand or sponge rock wilJ insure perfect drainage. A mixture of one-third leaf mold, one-third loam and one-third sand is a good combinatiort. Keep fertilizer out of the seed bed. The seedlings are not in need of it until they have established a root system. After they have been up fol two or three weeks they can be fed with a very diluted liquid fertilizer. Fill the fla t or pot with the planting medium, leaving three-quarters to one inch of space at the top for watering. The soil should be moist but not wet when seeds are pl anted. Cover the seeds with a very thin layer of the planting mix and water well. Cover the seed bed with glass, burlap or newspaper to keep the bed moist but remove the covering as soon as the seeds start to germinate. A final caution: The most common error in sowing. seeds is the ten- dency to sow too thickly. Not only does this waste the seeds but if the ex- cess plants are not removed, competition will make them all of inferior quality. The farther apart the plants are in the seed bed, the longer one can walt to transplant them and the mare chance they have of recovering from the transplanting quickly. -Don Horton Pansies Add Life To Garden ii or-c.111 .• WtelltllfW RELAX AT . .. HOME TRY When one needs to escape but can't get to the beach or mountains becauH of the crowds, building a garden .tlelter 11 the next best thing. Thick plantings around an imaglnatlv1ly designed gax1bo will make your yard seem milts away from tensions. • A GARD,·EN SHELTER ,. Weekends away from town are a wond- erful tradition but th• jammed highways, mob scenes at the beaches, and camp grounds alive with tramristorized radios and t elevision sets have taken tbe awayness out of being away. So what do the di senchanted do? They mak~ their own back yards places of peace, repose and beauty. Any ev.ening then be- comes vacation time and weekends are spent pleasurably away from the noia.. Besides the traditional close-to-house· deck or patio, these away-but-at-hoi:ners of- ten build charming retreats in the garden. They appear to be distant from the house, for the principles of Japanese landscaping are often employed to change perspective and create an illusion of distance. The retreat itself may be a simple rak· ish affair of Douglas fir posts and beams supporti~g a shade roof against summer su.d with a floor deck of two-by-fours. Furniture problems may be solved by built-in benches of two-by-fours and upkeep banned by staining the wood 01' allowing it to weather. The results with proper planting and subUe lighting will be a garden retreat to enjoy. IMIUIM ~AtLY PILOT FrlQf, A4lllld 16. 1M . .. ,. . . ,, , ......... ~. \. COSTA MESA WILL HAVE The name has been changed but the spirit remains the same for Cost.a Mesa's fourth annual Social Arts Week, formerly called Cultural Arts Week. Checker champs, hula hoop enthusiasts, square dancers and spaghetti connoisseurs will be among the many participating in the events planned for August 17 through 24. On Friday and Saturday, August 16 and 17. the teen division of Ute Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse will present a comedy, "Brother Goose," at the community recreation center on the Orange County Fairgrounds. Cur· tain time 8:30 p.m., admission $1. Old·timers and new-timers ·alike are invited to a picnic and barbe- que in the Costa Mesa City Park Sunday, August 18, with games, booths and entertainment as extra attractions beginning at 10 a.m. Mondaf, August 19, youngsters will take over the action at the com- munity recreation center with a playground talent show. Later, talent of a different kind will be evidenced as the youngsters tack.le large plates of spaghetti during the family spaghetti dinner from 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, August 20, a Senior Citizens card tournament will be held in the community recreation center. Wednesday, August 21, children are invited to the center for a "make it and take it" craft day. Free material will be provided from 1:30 to 3:30 for youngsters, 6 to 12, to create their own masterpieces. Later Wednesday, masters in another field will display their talents at baseball and buffoonery in the City Pops Softball Game beginning at 8 p.m. in TeWinkle Park. Also scheduled for Wednesday, August 21 is a teen dance at the community recreation center, beginning at 8 p.m. Thqrsday, the efforts of young craftgmen are brought to light in the Cit~ground Mascot Exhibit where life size creations of each play- gro roup's favorite animal character will be on display. An aquatics sbo ls scheduled for Thursday and Friday evenings at Estancia High School, at 7:30 p.m. Admission is 50c. Friday, August 23, hula hooping Will take over Costa Mesa City Park with contests held from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Following, in the evening, square and round dance enthusiasts will have their night at the community recrea• tlon center, from 7:30to10 p.m. Closing out the week ol events, will be the Costa Mesa Civic Play. house Annual Awards Banquet at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club, Saturday, August 24. Reservations for the banquet are required. For further. information about any event scheduled during Social Arts Week, phone the Costa Mesa Recreation Department, sponsors of tht programs, ~t 834-5303. A BUSY A 1peclel event In the community recrHtlon center at tht fairgrounds will be • "'make It and take it" craft day for tht youngsters. Last yHr this young lady made a Twiggy doll at one of tht craft events and looks at plHMCI as the ought to a~ her proltct. ' LB ·chamber Music Society Membership Drive THE SMETANA QUARTER WILL PERFORM ON MARCH 16 IN LAGUNA BEACH ~ .__ N.IU Pll.OT f't1CllY, ............ FOUR CONCERTS TO BE HEARD IN FALL The Legun• Beach Chamber Music Society is launching its membership drive, for the coming fall season, starting this week. It will be the ninth season for the Soc- iety which will ofier four concerts opening with the Concentus Musicus on November 8. >1"ht JO..plece Austrian Orch~stra will present an all Bach program at 8 p.m. in the Laguna Beach High School auditorium. _ It will be proceded by a preview concert at 7:30 p.m., conducted by Dr. H. Colin Slim of UCI. In 1ucces1lvt concerts the Society will present the Borodin Quartet on February 2 1969; the Smetana Quartet, March 16, and the Alma Trio on Aprll 13. Season membtnhlp for the series, •to for the four concerts, may be obtained by writing to tbe Society at Post Office Box 885, Laguna Beach. telephone: 499-3106. A folio of the concerts with detailed lnlorma- Uon is available also. ....... c.... I WI II I •rr -----~~!1!11!111~~~~~-------------...------~ ......... ,. ARCHITECTURAL FURNITURE Nothing is quite so deligbUul , or messy, as a child emersed in crea- ti ve art work. A youngster should have a place to draw or paint, free from disturbance, and mother should £"'icw freedom from the clutter that usuaJly accompanies this occupation. The hobby center, above, is specially designed for such a purpose, providing ample work and storage space for busy youngsters, but occupy- ing little floor and room space. 1t features large shelves above, a slanted surface ideal for young artists, and a handy place below to store needed pencils, paints and brushes. Extra shelves with glass sliding doors at the bottom of the hobby center provide still more space for the conglomeration of objects a creative child will find indispensable. The set is wall-supported by extruded aluminum rails and features easy to clean surfaces and floor space unhampered by furniture legs. Below, a bedroom unit makes efficient and decorative use of limited .5pace. It offers a full array of drawers for clothing and accessory storage, bronze glass sliding panels enclosing overhead storage space for hats, shoes and small cases. Lift panels of walnut veneer provide extra storage space and white plastic laminate surfaces offer mark resistant areas for makeup, perfume and jewelry. The bedroom and hobby sets shown are Omni Plus products made by Omni Aluminum Extrusion Corporation, Charlotte, Michigan. + DESIGNER'S NOTEBOOK Which Comes First? BY J. RUSSELL TUMELSON, ORANGE COUNTY DESIGNER-DECORATOR I' •' . ' •· I I \• 4 / I l , I I . ) ' I '\ • ( Today so many people are using architect's serv· ices that the architect cannot afford the time to spec· ialize in interior design as he did many years ago. Today be often suggests that the client select a decor· ator to assist in many of the interior decisions. It is my firm belief that the interior designer should be consulted at the very outset. In many cases, I believe it is best for the client and interior designer to decide first what the interior function of the house will be and together decide which architect is best qualified to fit these needs. By following this proced- ure, the interior designer and client may formulate many ideas and interior themes to present to the architect thereby easin_g the costs in preliminary con- sultations. It is Important to consider that the interior de- signer cannot take the place of the architect and vice versa. Each possesses individual talents and should be respected for his knowledge in his field. It is ex .. pected there will be differences of opinion between client, decorator and architect, however the combined efforts of all are essential for a pleasing home. With- out this combination, the client could move into a home / only to find there is a lack of adequate wall space in the living room for that inherited breakfront, and the wall to wall windows will not accommodate the type of drapery the homeowner visualized. A qualified interior designer, due to his back- ground education, works continually solving interior and environmental problems. Alt -architect is also an expert in bis field. After having chosen a total design team , clients must have great confidence in their choices and try to abide oy the decisions of the select· ed professionals. a , --:-'::- NEXT WEEK DECORATING QUESTIONS ' --II ·' ._;.- W I Please address inquiries and quesHons by letter to: Designers Notebook, Weekender Magazine, Post Office Box 1875, Newport Beach, California. -- ' ALL CALIFORNIA LB ART ASSOCIATION STARTED THE FAMED FESTIVAL OF ARTS The fourteenth onnuol All California Art Exhibit, which is held eoch yeor in conjunction with t he Festival of Arts ond Pogeant of the Masters, is being held at the Laguna Beach Art Association Gallery at 307 Cliff Drive, Loguno Beach, through August 25. It is one of the high· lights of the 50 yeor on niversory of the Association. The Festival of Arts and Pogeont of the Ma sters hod its beg in· ning th rough the Art Association when the idea was conceived in 1932 by the lote John Hinchman. It has grown each year ond now enjoys world wide fome and is one of the best known art events. There were 814 entries in the All California Show this year with 208 accepted for the show by the jury. Prize winners were Lewis Baken of Los Angeles, $500 purchase award for his a c r y I i c pointing titled ''EOS;" Ronald Pusich of Hollywood, $350 purchase aword for his acrylic pointing, "Mory;" Joy Maddox of Anaheim, $200 purchase oword fo r his untitled sculpture, ond Winifred Smith of Newport Beoch, $50 honorable mention for on acrylic woll sculpture titled "4 Squa res In o Surface." In contrbst to the fo unding fathers' work, which wos mostly in watercolor or oils, the current exhibit hos o "new and now" feeling with the use of o greot variety of meditt , new to the field. Colorful trams transport visitors from the Festival grounds to the Association Gallery which is open to the public from noon to I 0 p.m. There is o SOc admission charge for non-members. Above: spectators enfoy the great v a r I e t y of paintings and exhibits by California artists. To- day's exhibit is "new and now'' in contrast to the early exhibits which were mostly watercolors and oils. Glenn Buttermore, 14, of Santa Monica finds much of Interest In the oil p a I n t I n g, "Khauraho Number Thirteen," by Lawrence Macaray of Anaheim. There are 208 pieces In the All Callfor .. nla Show executed In a variety of m.tla. M111t1M ~·IL 't PILOT cr.d1y, Aftlllt lfo 1''8 .. EXHIBIT j l l I ~ I Or== 7 • __________ ._. _________ ... ..-i ___________ ----------- Avalon Ambling Now that the Big White Steam~r isn't plying the waves a lot of words are being expressed In the pas't few weeks, it seems, about that piece of real estate 22 miles across the Blue Pacific. Both the DAILY PILOT and others have in- vestigated the economic climate of Catalina Island and DAILY PILOT boating editor Al Lockabey has been taking readers on a round-the-island tour of coves, inlets and sanctuaries for those who want to get away from it all. But what about downtown Avalon? And specifically, since this is a restaurant col- umn, what's ashore once you get there? Incidentally, a Jot of opin ions of Avalon's cuisine, prices and entertainment is gotten by private boaters who have raced across . the channel , anchored their boat and headed mto the colorful little city for another bottle of olives, a case of bee r or a dozen h~mhurE?er buns. Out 'n' Abouter just spent three days in- vestigating the f oo~. fa~e and fun o! the only city on Mr .. W~1gle~ s famed 1sl.e, .and herewith submits its views for those mchned to sip and /or sup while abroad. ----------------------------~ -........ ~ Pl'esents THE DORIAN MODE TRIO DANCING-DANCING HARD-ROCK-SOFT IN OUR COCKTAIL LOUNGE Sun., Tues., Wed., Thurs. 9 P .M. NIGHTLY CLOSED MONDAY No Cover-No Minimum You Must Bt 21 • • DINNER SPECIALS NIGHTLY • DAILY BUFFET LUNCHEON • BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE "At The Entnnct To 81lbo1 lsl1nd" 1045 BAYSIDE DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 675 -0200 No-one un figure out why Vil- lage Inn i1 such • '•winging" spot! Drop on in-maybe yo11 can come up with the answer! VILLAGE INN 129 Muint 673-4530 B1lbo1 I. ................ - o·UT 'N' ABOUT: Or. Take Your Choice • • Starting from the top, (it's up the hill from Av alon's main beach) try the open-to-the- puhlic Catalina Country Club restaurant. P "ant Spanish architecture. Nice inside d ~ room. Warm, colorful outside dining a Bar. Menu more or less typical Southern Californian: steak, l'>bster, chops. Well prepared, well served. Price range. like all Avalon restaurants, noticeably higher than on the mainlar~. Prego Continental HL.:.laurant right on the main drag at the beach is a fine Italian restaurant. All of the Italian favorites. Fair wine list. Folksy dinin g room. Figure about $JO plus wine for a family of three. Open evenings only. NOW APPEARING HERB & JOE TRIO Danch11}-lkttftl119 frolft 1:45 Nlglltly Except Sulltlay e COCKTAILS e DI NNER e DANCING FOR RESERVATIONS: 536-1421 AIR CONDITIONED La Posada MEXICAN .Jamily Restaurant 2200 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA _HOURS ,hon ..... 2 •274 11 1~0 1.m. -',.m. K Mart Center ~. tllru Tllu•r~ T Iott' e _, -'''· ll:M 1.m .• 1.,.111. •P • • Also Steaks and s11. HHn • lt ,.m. Pitcher Hamburgers Svn • .fl-. t ,.m. CONVENIENT PARKING OpH 5 ,.M.·10 P.M. ge~~!cl RESTAURANT ~o Lecatlona • • • COSTA MESA e.,-ef IHdolpl & ltfttel ~ 5'40 . 3641 Otller L.c..tle1 -Le9•11t heel CLOSID MONDAY Scari's Restaurant, at the other end of the boardwalk. Pleasant, somewhat d i m 1 y lighted. More or less standard steak-seafood- prime rib menu. Prices in line with rest of A val on -a little steep. Bar downstairs. But don't miss the upstairs bar. Fine view of Harbor and on a clear day you can see ••• Arno's Seafood Grottu and Restaurant. Center of downtown area. Fine family restaurant. Fast service. Somewhat more reasonable in price than others. Small bar. Flying Yachtsman offers typical Avalon (and universal Southern California ) menu of steak-lobster-prime rib. One item added, however -flaming duck. Okay se rvice. Ditto food preparation. Smack downtown. New Waikiki is town 's action spot after 10 when the kiddies are forced off the streets. Now Appearing Nitely In The VERSAILLES LOUNGE THE EXCITING NEW SOUNDS OF A NEW TR IO FOR DINNER RESERVATIONS Music and Dancing Monday through Saturday ;;.;~i/lt) '42-4140 · L/ r ... DIAL 1617 WESTCLIFF DR •• NEWPORT BEACH DON'T MISS THE "NEW LOOK" AT ·JOSEF'S ONLY SEEING IS BELIEVING! e DANCING NIGHTLY e LUNCHEON e DINNER e LA TE SUPPER 2121 E. COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR 673-1180 INJOY DINING AT SCHROEDER'S STEAK HOUSE !formerly Chef's Inn I feoturin9 Steolc, Chicken, Lobster, BB9'd Ribs HoU!f Speciality • . . 15 oz. T -BONE STE AK NOW PLAYING MARK DA YIDSON TRIO WIDNESDA Y THRU SUNDAY Open O.lly lxcept Tu.day-5 ,.m.-sunday 4 p.m. 3201 EAST COAST HIGHWAY -CORONA OIL MAR For ResencrriOM Telephone 675-0470 MHl tJM l~AILY Pll.01 r r101, Au..i I " • • Orange County's Restaurant anti Entertainment SteM Food so-so, but live entertainment in rollick· ing bar. That's just a quick rundown o( the better- known restaurants in view of the famed Casino. Like Laguna, Newport or Huntingt-00 Beach, Avalon has more than its share of taco, hamburger, malt takHut spots. Prices are high -45c taco, for instance. And iI all of the famed charm of Avalon and its flying fish and glass bottom boat and wild boars aren't included in your favorite cup of tea, if you are just a real weekend Southern Californian at heart, if you don't really care about the natives and their ways, Avalon still could be for you. There is a Ken- tucky Fried Chicken establishment. Cozy Corner Now, some items from this side of the chan- nel. A friend asked another friend recently for 11tbe most intimate spot around." No, it wasn't an assignation. He was wanting to Real Cantonese f cod eat here or take home. STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st pl., Newport Beach ORiole 3-956Q Open Year Round Dally 12·12 Fri and lat. 'lll S a.m. Try O•r StMl Pka4do Ir Stfflr lollCNTo Mon. thru Tburt. 12 Notn • It I' .M. • '"· • Ser. n """ · M~itllt 1985 HARBOR BLVD., C.M. 548-9927 Dining Dancing .--FRED CARROLL DUO --. At Our Friendly Piano Bar Coclcttlfl How 4 to 7 DaUy CLOSED SUNDAYS Lu1tclteons Mot1. tin Fri. E: ASK ABOUT OUR !ANQUE'f FACILITIES e:.~____;...;......;.~~~~~"--~~~~~-= The CASPIAN 1670 ....,.,,, NHr 17tlt St. * M'GOO'S * * PIZZA* FVN * SUDS * FVN * * DIXDLAND * FVN *PASTA* * KAZOOS ·* FVN * FLl~KS * AN'l'IP AS'l' A * FUN * IVGBAND PEANUTS * FVN * IANDWICBES SALADS* FUN* CHAMPAGNE M'GOO'S, llMt w. Coast Rwy., Newport "-rlM ledlM-OAILY l'ILOT • A11•utf U, lttf recapture some of the past romantic moods with bis wife and was seeking the perfect apot. No panoramic views of the ocean. No boats passing by ala Berkshire's or Stuft Shirt. He wanted it cozy and dark. Well, the consensus of a detailed survey j ave the title to La Cave. This very popular and appropriately nam· ed restaurant on 17th Street in Costa Mesa is perhaps deserving of other titles as well. The service is superb, the steak and lobster the same. It is small -perhaps one of the smallest dinner houses along the Orange Coast. But, of course, that's the charm the man was seeking. (It also holds the distinction of offering the world's shortest-in-distance and longest-in· J!e Saini :Jropez RESTAURANT FRANCAIS French Specialty Chef Rene' !formerly with Rom•noff's I 3012 Newport Blvd. Newport Beach OPEN DAILY 5:30 P.M. TIL 10:30 P.M. Closed Monday 673-7883 SEA SHAm RESTAURANT "On lite lay" -presenh- The Honey Bees, Helen & Bass Tlturs. • Fri. • Sat. And Special Attraction Wect.esclay Nights - Mcwio Sanchez and His Guitar! Fantastic: Seo Food Fa1ttan1tic EntertaJ111nnt SEA SHANTY. 630 Lido Park Drive Udo Pewiasula DON JOSE presents The Fabulous Recording Artist MARIO SAID TR I 0 ENCHILADA & TACO ....•••• S1 .30 CHIU RELLENO-ENCHILADA . ~ $1.45 ltfwf Wltll rlU, MN• '"1NI ... tN ..... e COCKTAILS e 9093 I . Adamt (at Magnolia) Hunt. Beach 961-7911 t time elevator ri~ this side ol the Raffle• Hotel in Singapore). For that romantic interlude with your wife, La Cave is definitely the place. Make sure it's your wife. It's so cozy, so intimate, that the couple at the next table may be your neighbors. ,,-'\. People Ask \ Readers now and then ask Out 'N' Abouter for recommendations away from the steak· and-lobster routine -some place to take the family without breaking the week's budget and still giving Mom her night out. Here are several picked at random for different reasons. If Mexican food falls in your family's tastes, several excellent choices are around. Mitla's at 547 West 19tli Street, Costa Mesa has a far-ranging menu that lets you pick an~ choose almost any combination of specialties conc~cted south of the border. Prices are reasonable. Also in Costa Mesa, and also in the Mex- ican specialty line, it's hard to beat La Continued on Page 12 ~ INN MARINE RESTAURANT Se1·ving L uncheon and Dinner from 11 :30 AM ••• enchanting atmosphere and view ... ~ ~ LIDO LOUNGE The FAST FEAST Luncheon Buffet- Monday through Friday ••• 11 iBO AM· 2:30 PM And, from 6: oo PM to closing -soft lights, i·oomy club chairs, cooktnils, con• tinuous music for dancing : Bill McClure Duo •• Art Barduhn Trto ~BISTRO A touch of Paris-opeu :f1:om 'ltOO AM- l31·eakfast, Luncheon, Dinner, Snaolat, AJnerican Bar ••• EVERY SUNDAY! HUNT BREAICFAST ........ 9180 AM·2s00 PM BlJEVOS RANCHEROS • , • , , .9130 ~{·2100 PM amJ ,. NEW I •t t b1 Nswpo11 ,, ~ SUNDAYINTHE LIDO LOUNGE THE HOST TABLE ... l iOO J>M0 8100 PM A JOUNTIFVL SUNDAY SPJlBAD MUSIC ••• DANCING ~ _NEWPORTER INN 644-1700 10'1 JAMBOREE RD., NEWPORT BEACH ... NEW REFRIGERATED AIR CONDITIONING 2273 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA OPEN 24 HRS, -C..tllTEE. SIO~ 642-1312 KEN'S SPEUAU FOR THE WHK J P.M. TO 11 P.M.-7 DAYS YOUI CHOICI BREADED •vEAL CUTLET or •FISH .nc1 CHIPS Served with Soup or Salod, Potato. V999table, DhtttW loll, Dessert 011d CoffM. • BREAKFAST SERVED 24 HRS. A DAY• • Dick Powell Trio Wednesday thru Sunday Carroll Coates Duo Monday and Tuesday 37 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER lhtw"" Buff•m• & Bro1dw1 Ample P1rkin9 R-l'Vatlona • 644-2030. RETURN ENGAGEMENT Edgar Hayes' Stardusters -FEATURING- PAT INGRAM WEEKDAYS 8:30 P.M. TO 1 :30 A.M. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9 P.M. TO 1:30 A.M. TED ROE TRIO The Ted Rot Trio with Ted at the piano, Walt Snyder on drums and Del Nash on bass, provide the music .for dancing or Jis· tening at Josef's In Co- rO!'a del Mar every ev .. nlng from 8:30. It Is all ~rt of the new look w1'ich finds this lounge r•aranged to provide a supper club atmosphere • TH' DORYMEN FISH 'N CHIPS MAS JUST DEVELOPED ''TH' DORYMENU'' A Total Experience In eotlnt ••• unequalled quality ••• seniee ••• atmosphere. "TH' DORYBURGER" • • • • ·• 55c NOWI ••• our gre•t new hamburger by-th..-sea. For non-flah .. ters. (With melted chffl•) CLAM CHOWDER • • • • • TERRIFIC! NEW ENGLAND STYL! • •• Wcswl Larve aervlnt BUY ONE DORYIURGEll • • • GET THE 2nd ONE FREE! WITH THIS AD ·"TH' SEA DOG" • • • • • NEWI ••• Grilled to perfection for "Th' Llttle Matey1H HOT APPLE TARTS • • • • • • • PLUS ••• TH' DOllYMEN STANDARD OF EXCELUNCI 35c 35c 30c F~SH 'N CHIPS ........................................ $1.00 SHRIMP & CHIPS ............ ~ .. ··················· $1.SO 2100 WEST OCEAN FRONT, NEWPORT BEACH "Acron from Newport Beach PiM"" 673-2200 Ma911dne sec1*1-0lllLY "LOl Fr1cl1y, Auwst 1', 1'61 &ED •tHlN ledtelt-OAIL Y '8LOT 10.y, """"' "· ,,.. ¥±5 AT NEWPORTER INN ( ' Biii McClure, left, with his duo, plays for the cocktail hour and beyond, Sunday through Friday, In the Lido Lounge of the Newporter Inn, Newport Beach. They play from 5 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. as • duo then loin the Art Bardun Trio until 10 p.m. at which time the trio plays on alone until 1 :45 a.m. This provides music for dancing from 5 p.m. and that's • lot of music for any one spot. Sunday• find Paul Manners filling in ·from 1:30 p.m. FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER MAGAZINE Phone 642 .. 4321 "Featuring the fined in Cuisine and Beverage,, luncheon ind Dinner, 01ily Ba nquet Rooms Dick W ebster'a Symphon11 in RhJlthm Thursda111 Friday and Saturday Evenings EXTIIMLY LUCE lloct( • hellllp 'Ill le PICKWICK fJ !!!.~!~!ti!! 540-2111 --1743 Hol'1WoM ll'id. ~ (tl3l HO"Mltl From the beauUful new Slcy Room of the Grand Hotel, over'looklng Dkneyland. Flreworu besin a.t t:OO ea.ch nlgbt c!urlng th• 1ummer. Entertainment ~&tl~l'bEAU: o~ from •:OO p.m. "Wlltrl bdtlM ni...-........... "IF MORE PEOPLE WOULD TRY SIZZLER .... lly s...l H.-• • • mm~mtmiEI ,..., ··" " .. 011 ' TOP SIRLOIN STIAIC •••••••••• NIW YOH 1 59 CUT STIAI • •• • • • • 1/2 •· CHOUND """ IOUND STIAlt • • • ALL ABOVE INCLUDE ~.:.KEO POTATO OR FRENCH FRIES, ROLL lo BUTTER. DILICIOUS STIAIC SANDWICH BE SMARTER ............ -' 11c111r,"' we1u· HAMIUl'ill , , , , 49c CHllSI •••••••••• 54c DRESS 'EM UP AT FREE GOODY IARI DIUCIOUI 1 19 6ULf SHllMP ••• , • WITH FRENCH FRIES 011 s..... lell """ COFfD ..&...L..L) 1 Oc Frnc• "* • (All ,.. ,.. -· ALL STEAKS SERVED ON SIZZLIN' PLATTERSI Mlxe4 .... S.lotl 24C Choice of Dreuing ..•..•• • • • ~:~: ............ 79c e DAILY LUNCHEON SPICIALS e MONDAY FAMILY NIGHT 2100 •t:OO P.M. $1 09. I Reo. Sl.lt TOP SIRLOIN STEAK CHILD'S PORTION.. V.a PllCI e \f-ILIA FAMILY STEAK HOUSES HUNTINGTON llACH I COSTA M!SA HILLGREN SQUARE TOWN a COUMTllY 1! .. INO TIXACO STATION 11111 ..... ...... Hl·Sf12 I. 17" • ._.. AM 642·74'2 e POOD TO &O e or:-.= 11 • ~ • ~ • • • • • • •• [luncheon weekdays Ill inner 1UVIERA ftaTAUUNT Continental Cullln• Cock ta Ila !erving Luncheon and Dinner Monday through Saturdou. servtd In th1 Grand Manner Closed Sunda111 Optn for Private Ptlf'tieS Onlu • 571 S. MAIN, OllANOB Rcservadooa: J'4i.3.S9.S (Closed Sun.,) W • are located on the Bristol Street side be- tween Mullen •nd Bluett end the M1y Co. IHI I. lft9tel Celttl ..... '40·H4t SHAMROCK ;OCKTAIL LOUNGE e CHUCI( 6-10 a.m. e ENTERTAINMENT e DANCING *GENE GALUEN 4 NECKED GUITAlt "UNIQUI!" FRI. 9·2 a.m. SAT. 9·2 a.m. Sun. 7·1 a.m. e JIM WOIUY (PIANO) . c""' • lorbafa Pat·ldng in Rear 6 pa .• 2 .ft'I. 1824 NEWPORT ILVD. e COSTA MlsA Pizza Man w~e Z)~" 642-9452 OPBI 1920 Harbor Blvd. Cotta Mesa, Caltf. 4 PM llU 12:::- OUT~' ABOUT Continued On P•s• 10 Posada de Mexico, on Harbor Boulevard n.ear Wilson and the spanking new Amigos on East 17th Street. Now, take a ten minute ride on the Sao Diego Freeway, tum off at Beach Boulevard, go one block and stop at Hors Hut. It has a wide-ranging menu with at least one item for each persnickety eater In the family. And it it pleasanUy served in crisp, clean sur- roundings . The service, incidentally, ls sharp and fast. * It would seem that not many families haven't discovered the Jolly Roger 1n Harbor Center, Costa Mesa. This ts· one restaurant that goes after family business. Kids aren't shunted around here. They're treated to special menus and all the attention their elders get. The handling of Mom, Pop and the kids is no doubt one of the reasoDJ the JR baa continued to run full houses night after night since it opened. The service ls as efficient as the gr~ting is warm, so even if you have to waif it 'won't be long. l'ah Too Small? That brings up a question : why don't more restaurants go after family busineaa? Granted, the tab ls smaller, but a table can be turned ov~r three times in a Jolly Roger type place wb.ile a dinner house couple is dawdling over a fourth cup of coffee. You can - bet that Mom and Pop aren't going to sit around dawdling over coffee with a couple or three jumpy youngsters. The answer, more or less obvious, 11 the profit in beverages at the dinner houses, we guess. . * Looking for one truly dilferent? Make It Chez Gerard's. It is more than a trifie hard to find -but well worth the visit. The menu ls Indeed continental and it is excellent from beginning to end. Prices are most reasonable ana the dining atmosphere is warm and candlelit. Wine only. Okay, now for directions. It is in Costa Mesa. North Costa Mesa. It's on St. Clair which is just off Randolph Avenue. And those two streets are south of the intersection of Baker and Bristol. And THAT intersection is just south of South Coast Plaza. Inquire locally. 'Uffa nova .newpo1·I 1111 COAST Hl ... WAT NIWPOIT llACH DtllMr ..... 11 ,, ..... RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED '42-7110 l:tt ...... 1111 ..... hlr YOU'LL ENJOY OUR SUNDAY BRUNCH 11 A.M. TO 3 P.M. IFM~ Flnt Ol11f11n Since l965 380 I Eur CoAST HloHWA 't' CoaONA DF.t MAt. CAuPORHIA PlioNR: (71'4) 675-1374 CURRENT ART EXHIBITS ·-------- LB FESTIVAL OF ARTS -The 33rd annual Fes- tival of arta display la at the Festlval Grounds, 650 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach through August 25. Admisalon to the grounds where all types of art work are displayed and aold la 50c for adults; lOc for children. Hours: noon to midnight dally. Phone 494-1145 for fur- ther information. ALL CALIFORNIA SHOW -Laguna Beach Art M· aoclatlon Gallery, ~ Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. An invitational art exhibit of approxim· ately 1000 entries by Callf ornia artists will be on display · noon to 10 p.m. daily, through August 25. The exhibit is part of the Festival of Arts and may be reached from festival grounds by a tram service. General admission 50c, Art Association members and one gues~ free. Phone ~. SAWDUST FESTJV AL -935 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. The Artists and Gallery Own· era Association is diaplaying art in various media through August 25. Part of the pro- ceeds from the aale of art will go to the South Coast Community Hospital fund. SPLINTER FESTIVAL -346 N. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Exhibits of approximately 100 arijsts in various media will be on display through August 31. Hours: noon to midnight dally. There ls no admission charge. CHALLIS GALLERY -1390 S. Coast IDghway, Laguna Beach. On emtblt dally 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. a one-man 1how of paintings of Mark Coomer and sea scapes of Bennett Bradbury. COFFEE GARDEN GALLERY -2625 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. On exhibit Mon. through Sat., 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., wate,rcolors an4 etchings of Arthur MlDer apon.sored by the New- port Harbor Service League. MUTUAL SAVINGS AND LOAN -2867 E. Coa&t Highway, Corona del Mar. On exhibit durlnl regular business hours through Aug., Hungar. tan folk art done in mixed med!a by Mand · Schonthal. JUNIOR EDELL EXHIBITS -Art work from the Junior Ebell Children's Art Workshop will be on display along with works of local artists, Ester and Jo Dendel, Lou Houston, Kay Davis, Merlyn Aronovic, Paul Ditzenberger, Dianne Norton, and Suzanne Blaggi at the Corona del Mar, Mar· inera and Newport Beach Public libraries. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK-1090 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach. On ezhlbit durinj regular busi· nesa hours through August 30, a one·man show of new oil and acrylic paintings by J a m e a Clutter. SO. CALIF. FIRST NAT'L BANK -17122 Beach Blvd .• Huntington Beach. On exhibit durln1 re1- ular bualnesa bour1 oU paintings by HunUn&ton Beach art league member, Janet DeHaven. CHARLES BOWERS MUSEUM -~ N. Main St., Santa Ana. Boun: Tues. through Sat. 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.: Sun. 1 to I p.m.; Thurs. eve- D.tng 7 to t p.m. No admluloa charge. CurrenUJ oa elhlblt. pen abtche1 by Rlch.M'd K. Broob, Jr., and bandlcrafta done by Cuna women on the San Blas Islands, Panama. l"riMYt """' ... 1"1 LOl lKI The scene •t lett Is f•mlll•r to Yosemite visitors, at the entr.nc!_ to th• Valley, El Cepi· tan towers 3,564 fMt in the air, next to it, the •------------- Bridal Veil F•lls, parti· cularly lovely In the early Spring when melted snow swells the river for the 620 foot drop. Below, a view of T.nya lake, halfway between YOMmite Valley and the peak of Tiog• Pa 1 s. •-------------------Ntarby, umpers may pitch tents amid the beautiful high Sierra scenery. Paved parking lots ere a short walk from campsites and al- though there are no show- ers or hot water f acilit· higher up, modern con- crete block restroom f ac· llities are provided. •o•o•o•o• O•O•o•o •••o•o•o• e BILLIARD PLAYERS e = ind MINIATURE GOLFERS =· I We A.re Now Servi.al( Beer I • WHY PAY MORE • • • I 0 Wltff yot1 _. play °" tM. fl•m tablts 11 ... • • wtitc1 -tr.swld& Tabl" -for $1.21 per laour O 0 -Total cost for 2, 3 or 4 playen -h• less for • YOSEMITE FAMILY PLEASER A IY • 1 player Oflly. 0 = Ask Any ~OOD Pro About Brunswick l•bles • ; BEER • SANDWICHES • SOFT DRINKS ; The variety one finds at Yosemite National Park is not all in the scenery. True, the over- powering glaciers rocks, the breathtaking waterfalls, the redwoods and streams and smog-free blue sky leave one a bit caught up in the beauty of it all. But admiring and snapshot taking is only half th~ story of what's to be done in this nationally famous park. Golfing, horseback riding on the Valley floor, mule pack trips to higher inaccessible points, hilting paths, biking trails, swimming areas and notably good fishing also will pro- vide days of entertainment for any member of the family. Campers may find camping ~rounds rang- ing from those equipped with the con- veniences o,k bot water and nearby laun- dromats to me hardier grounds in outlying districts which J rovide only the minimum facilities. Speci camp grounds for trailers are also set aside in the Yosemite Valley and outlyi!1g districts. For the less enthu,.siastic outdoorsman, hotels are available iB' the park and also a unique facility called a hou sekeeping tent, an economical compromise between tent cam- ping and a motel room. These housekeeping facilities, located at Camp Curry and ....... ---.OAlt.Y PILOT 'rHllYt AlllWI 14 1Ht Housekeeping Camp in the park, range from $6 a day for two, to $10 a day for four people. Lower rates are offered for families and those planning extended visits. Although summer is the busiest season at the park, many of the housekeeping units are still available on short notice, according to one park spokesman. The camping grounds on the Yosemite Valley floor generally are full through Labor Day, but many other delightful spots may be found in the outer areas and higher up in the mountains. Wawona~amp grounds near the South entrance to the park, has proved to be a real favorite with one Orange Coast camper, a regulai: visitor to the park. Returning there -year after year, he claims never to have found it completely filled. Another area, the Tuolumne Meadows also ls recommended but is somewhat higher up at the 8500 feet mark. From the Orange Coast, the trip to Yosemite is a litUe over 300 miles. Mostly freeway driving, it takes about six hours for a passenger car and somewhat longer for trucks or vehicles with trailers. No reserva- tions are accepted at any National Park and camping limit is 14 days. ~~~~w.AJ. • SERVED AT BIWARD TABLES • 0 MINIATUU .OLI : • 0 2 ll·HOLl COURSES -0 IOc f., It Holet • •AMI AICADI : 0 PINtALL -RIFLES - • BOWLING ALLEY -ETC. • 0 COHll~P 0 • LUNCHES -IUR&ERS -• • SHAKES -POP -tEU I : HOUDAY f AMIL Y SPORTS. CBml o • IAKEI tit HAUOI ltYD., COSTA MESA = 0 Your One st., Family A.mua!ment Center • = OPEN 10 AM DAILY . 540-01'0 0 ••0110•••0•o•o•o •0110110•0• NEW! PRODUCT STOPS SUN BURN COST: Loully •s.oo developed i.ch devices now 1vall1blel Meal SKIN CANCU It cevte4 .. y n~llY• expt11111 te the 11111, For tho .. whe ., .... e S.t ef ti-......_,. -l.He911ortl1, Co11• 1f111c1ion Worlrert, Speth fnttrlttlwft, ttc.-we have Kletotiflcolfy clnele,.cl • p ... tlc N ... , I• -4 U, ctYerf111 (.t I reo .. 11oltle cost) fot pr1toctio11 fro111 "'" ... "'' aH pMll111. It le ,...-itly INNl1 wont t.y kadl aroe liftp11tllt, 1114 lt1 • "'-"• ... ct Dwreltlt -leth • llfttllllt, • w-.Mt-wlttt..., 111141 wattr. • Wohrproef -may IM w.,.111 er 111t ef tflt weftr. • h1t1Mclwly 111tWt4 -,_feet flt~""·_.. •r ... . Thie lllW fl'Mvct C9111pi.t.jy W.di1 11111 '911• ,, ....... "-tMf11I 91111 .._ .. , -~ ~ ... ,.... eff. Th••.,. 1111 ptrtplteti.11 proltle1111 -allt H ............ Het, fitht s•111 C•ctr. fITTlNGS BY AP'POINTMEH't OHLY CALL (714) 642-5411 • ..... ~ f • ~ • 4 • • 4 • ' 4 ' • c 1 ~ I ! I I ~ ! r ~' . . ' NATIONAL GENl!RAI.. CORPORATION ..::~,.. Fiii~.!m O,.N NOON C.mlM.a ............... IOTH PICTURES IN COLOR Bullfights now at .BULLRING· BY· THE ·SEA ~ lox Office 0,.111 ~ The Luxurious New Dallt-12 ·Noo" United Artbts Sot. o.1,_11 :45 ..... 1565 w. 17" ...... HoHr "\---543-9217 'ROCKING CHAil" &.o,. s..ta U11lhnlte4 ffM P•kJ119 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER llST DlftCTOlt-MIKE NICHOLS JOSEPH E. LEVINE ....... " MIKE NICHOLS ~ ~!!_ENCE TURMA:,/ '\ .... / /~ \ J .. \ ··,, \ '\ ~THE ~ GRADUATE '< AN AVCO EMBASSY FllM INIJ.~ANCllDFT-DUmN HOFFMAN . OTHA• ms Cj\LQ~R WIWNGHAM -BU.CK HENRY J5A0L SIMON S1¥0N-GARFUNKEL ~ENCE TURMAN JJ~ NICHOLS TEOtmoR-~vwr -AVCO l-...USY "tf\Jllltl ••C'9. l Su11clcry tllrv Friday 1 :OO·l:00-5:00·7:00 9:00·11 :00 , .... 14 or..,.. CtHI Wct111nder SpKlal Mldnl9llt Show SATURDAY ONLY 12·2·4·'·1·1 0·12 ...... LIVE THEATER "Brother Goose" The teen division of the Costa Mesa Civic Play· house is staging a comedy "Brother Goose" Aug. 16, 17 at the Community Recreation Center, West Gate, Orange County Fairgrounds, Costa Mesa. "American Hurrah" · · Three anti-establishment plays "The American Hurrah" will be presented Thurs. through Sun. closing Aug. 25 at the South Coast Repertory Third Step Theatre, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, Curtain time 8:30 p.m. Phone ~-1363. "Sweet Charity" Neil Simon's comedy of a girl with questionable morals but a heart of gold, "Sweet Charity," will be staged . Thurs. through Sun., through Sept. 1 at the Laguna Playhouse, 319 Ocean Ave., Laguna Beach. Curtain time 8: 30. Phone 494·9061. "Bill Cosby Show" u Comedian Bill Cosby with special guest jazz-blues singer, 0. C. Smith, will entertain at the Melody· land Theatre, 10 Freedman Way, Anaheim August 2.0 through 25. Performances Tues. through Fn. at 8:30 p.m.; Sat. 6:30 and 9:30 p.m., Sun. 3 and 8 p.m. Phone 776-7460. 1st Run Showing NOW SHOWING Exclusive CUlll 1•11•00• "iuulG'lii -· ·'. , . HIGH · ~ f&i CGLO • .,w. ~ Inger Stevens-Ed Begley ~ SECOND BIG FEATURE SELMUR PICTURES _. "a minute to pra)T, a second to clie'r• ---WllAll-dlOI tl1e-rnesa T. ' -J: r • .:., :..:. f F1 nc N ._.\~. App . ..=;inTr: ents NEWPt1RT AND HARBOR IN COSTA M.ESA lELEPHONE 548-1552 FOR INFORMATION Blue Ribbon Winner Best 111 pleasing comedy of the ye1r HELD OVER ONE MORE WEEK SECOND COMEDY Plt.,Uh Dlta.r;W. Hope, Gt.. Lolloiarit11141 •lf!i~~NRW oF sc:r. O'Mltm!U.,, .... ..... ...... • Continuous Wed., Ttiun., Fri., Sit., Sun. -St1rt1 7 p.m. Mon., Tues.- e NOW AT BOTH CINEMAS e 2nd Hit 1t HUNTINGTON MGM~ Ari E1-cn:t1 frttmen ~ion. l))ris !!c!Y' Robert Mo~ Teny·100mas ·Patrick O't-kal .. Where Were YOU When The Lights Went Out?"" \ . 2nd Feature at CINEMA WEST ''81.U('' IMNJlhl S•clion-OAILY r1LOT Ftld11, AlllVlt t6. 1H• SOUTH SW TROPICAL FISH Largest Selection of Tropical F i s b & Supplies in the area. Now 2 Locations tll W. WILSON, COSTA MHA ' -'~ ;.,. ;-', t ~ .... 1 LLMt~Jl ,.;, i?!3 ". First Wun DMA Ml.........,.. M1tcllw111 "5 CARD STUDi' _. "'LUE" wn T-11111" 1n-o, Rtwwsi. or.-NtWMrtl11dl ••----------• (lleblllll ....... ~) ...... (lff ... imn ~--) '*"" :•tit I il4r ..,,......, ..... ~ R-mtndtcl fw M\11111 DIHI Mcllln • COL.OR "THI MINl·SIUIT wor R-m•ndff fir Adultsl V'-lfwltft • COLOR •HAMMERHEAD" ,,tw Stlltrt e COLOR "CASINO IOYALE'" o,... Western AdVenturel Dten Minta • Rollert MlkllUlll "FIYI CAID STUreeolor Teraiiq Stam11 e Jt111111 ''"'' ... Lur •Coler ----•11 ........ ... . 147·3ff1 FemllY Entertelnmentl 9ob Ho!>t e COLOR ''TH• PRIVATE NAVY 0 .. SOT, O'FARRELL" Jerry Lewis e COLOR "DON'T ltAISI! THI! IRIOOI!, LOWER THE RIVER" FOUNTAIN VALLEY .,.,-... --,.,.,---11 ............. MZ·2All R~dtd fer Aduttal Mia "'rrtw e COLOA "IOSIMARY'S IAIY" Sllowll II I: .. tn4 ll:U ·-~ fir .. Its, An111 l1ncreft • COLOR "THE GRADUATE'° SlloWll al 1:00 Ind 11:4.S MltHllllt S.llo,._O.ML Y PILOT f rl•y, AHUJI l'-IHt THE LUXURIOUS NEWIALl-.a ~~£.:.TH~EATRE Child with Parents Only! e O.,-n Nightly 6:45 e e NOW-ENDS TUES. e JULIE AS YOU LOVE HER ... Singing, Dancing. Oeligh1ingl HOLLYWOOD REPORT I By VERNON SCOTT UPI tt.llYW'Md C«~M R•r• is the soul who has not heard some- one say -usually a relative -"You're so good looking you ought to try your luck in Hollywood." or, "you ought to be in pic- tures." Usually the statement is made by a guy on the make or a salesman attempting to clinch a deal. Then, again, if an individual bears it often .enough from a variety of per- sons, he is likely to be convinced. Such a one is Lyle Waggoner, the handsome emcee of Carol Burnett's television series. At a salesman of encyclopedias ln Sl Louis for three yean, he stomped door-to- door pitching books. While he didn't always make a sale, the ladies who answered the door often sold him on the idea that be was handsome enough for the movies. "I always agreed with them," Waggon- ' er said the other day. "Then I'd ask them if they knew anyone in Hollywood. They never did.,, Waggoner, it turns out, is handsome indeed; along the lines of the young Tyrone Pow~r or Robert Taylor. His problem is tim· ing. This is the era of the unhandsome lead· ing man. "I earned enough money in St. Louis with a company I formed, selling salt to melt snow, to pack and head for Hollywood. That was in April of 1964. I arrived here cold tur· key. I didn't know a soul. So I looked in the yellow pages under movies, theaters, actors, studios. I got a little bit of information from each call. FinaUy I discovered the first thing to do was study acting. The second was to find an agent." Waggoner went to a couple of parties with acting pals from the acting school he attended, and sure enough he .found himself an agent. "I'd been a salesman for so long I decided that I'd sell mysell. I worked for two months selling in California before I signed a contract with MGM. But nothing came of it." Thereafter Waggoner stepped up Ms s1ud· ies of singing, dancing, acting, anything that might help him win a job. "Fihally I started doing some television commercials," Waggoner sighed.! "But it / took me an entire year of going out -0n inter· views before I got the first one. And com· merdals are the path of least resistance to finding an acting career. 11 Currently Waggoner bas an acting con- tract with 20th Century-Fox, but he is so busy with the Burnett show that he hasn't bad time to get with the movies. "It hasn't been easy, 11 Waggoner con-- eluded. "But I'm determined to become a movie actor." And why not. He's handsome enough, isn't be? LAGUNA Pl.A YHOUSE SUMMER THE4TRE n!~::. SWEET . CHARITY NEW YORK MUSICAL HIT August 8 lhru Sepfember 2nd l oolr t>y Neil Stmon Direc .. cf by; John Ferucca -~sic Dlr~ctot: Dotis Shield1 All SEATS RESERVED I.II TWL & SH. -JJI M. I Set. ll t Oc.tl• Awe... 4944061 ' la Oii* 0,.. 1 p.111. esc.,t Me11. NIWPOlf llACN ..... FREE PARKING O• J41JI •••••• menaces women s~ializes in erotic art ... and onl~ Vince E<tward.s as Charles Hood can take him on! ............. _,,, __ ,....,. n .................. r.m .... " .... ....., ...... .,.. ---·-· ~ HARBOR at ADAMS, COSl'A MESA, PHC?NE 546-3102 'lll I Now Daily-1st Area Run S ACADEMY ! AWARD i·CWINNER I BllT DIRECTOR-MIKE NICHOLS tB (8 • Performances • 1-3-5-7·9·11 p.m. Delly FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER MAGAZINE Phone 642-4321 Orantt Clll1 1 & WMeMtr • ' I • • ~ ... 4to:BO 4.:90 4,;100 ubllna •Int U5x14, 7.35x14 Tubel111 11117.75x15 for Ford, ~ TIRf $38 • TWO TIRES $50 0ME TIRE $33 • TWO TIRES $55 compecb Mu1tan1, Camero, Plu1 $1.18 Fed. Ex. Tu• per tire. Olt£ TIRE S3I • TWO TIRES $11 Tubel111 slzu 1.25 x 14, 8.55 x 14, US x 1~1 1.45 x 15 for Buick, Olds, Ood11, M1rcury,Chry1ler, Plym9utll, Pontl1c. Plus '2·0!. $2.40, $2.11, $2.35 F9d. Excise 1 u• per tire. rracuda, Ch1raer. Plus $1.75, •1.11 Fld. EX. Tu• per tire. GENERAL JET·AIR DS WHEEL BALANCE eAllvlnyl SPECIAL ~2 77 • Choice of colora '1 1-200 ~ _ •one-piece mat converts to PER 2-pltct set. WHEEL RADIAL TIRES WHITEWALLS s3511 Tubel1J1 l .OS1141 • Seconds us.in l .l51141t 1.55114 Plua Fed. Excise Tax $2.36 .WIDE OVALS .... e SECONDS • RED LINI e WHITELINI $21~.T. 2.20 li70X14 WE ARE NOW THE DISTRIBUTOR· FOi CONTINENTAL TIRES IN THE HARBOR AREA The tire made for all imported and sports cars. ' The proven radial lot wet and dry weather. , Up to1 twice the ll'llltaGt; twice the traction, twice the comfort . . (gntinenfal RaP 14 Radial Take Your Pick! US-ED TIRES lots of non-s~id tread PHONE '''·5033 95 each !lus state an local taxes COMPLETE .. · Don Swedlund Hoursi 7:30 to 6:00 Dally 646-5033 MHldM Stctlle-OAILY l"ILOT PtiQy, AllWSI U, 1ffl