HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-06-12 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• -----
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on
Both Parties Will Back
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If Five Million P~or. E~empted
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Three Paathers
250 Rally for Slaying
S·uspects' Defense Fund
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··-4410 1.'t .. "';:~ ·~ NiXoo, ::Ho0se : · .
·Lea&rs Reach
• Jayin.e· Boyd, 18, will represent
Westmh!st.er in the Orang_e
County Fair beauty contest ·
July. IS, Ibo opening day,o! ·the
six-day exposition in Costa
Mesa •.
'Sex Book' Case
·Of. ·w estminster . ' .
Dealer Weig hed
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Douglas Layoffs
To Affect 5,300
. d
No ..,. -. encU1 how many will I"
-...1111 MOL hole, but 5,300 McDoooell = ~Uori emp&oyes at two ... plants .... affected by c ......
....... GI the '3 blllioo llannOd Orbilal
~ .... jtd.
' Encull.., GI the giant llnn 11MOUn<td
lbe dlmlal ne\rs in St Louis, promi.mg ~'«Y effort to shift personnel ~o
oCheJ' plan( work or find jobs elsewhere tn tM ~ Odd for those who must be
lalll all.
• Tiie uprile 1nnownmtl'l\ b7 Depuf.1
Huntington
'Irustees OK
School Funds
. j. . ll<'liminarl' budgcl I o ta 11 n g
:S1Z..40ll,MS has been appro\'ed by the
:Jluntlngton Beach lllgh School Dis!Tld
iBol.rd of Trustees and will be pme:oted
Jfor final adoption August 6.
l 1be income, which was calculated from
ic:wnmt stale formulas and laws ia u-
tclultve of • beginning balance of !fl.Ml. ...... --:-
• ?!lrpopooed bui!i<l ls based "" an
:etdmated •''t!"< daily atlt.Z'ldance
: (ADA) ol 14,tllll as <Unpare:I to an
:average daily attendanc:e of l:S,400 fm the
!CUIT!tlt year. nus repregents an increase
I
' cl I~ in lbe stud<nl pGl>Ulation.
Talal apendltuns budjjeled in lbe t reneraJ fund for 19&71 are s1s.m ,&Oli as
! compartd to $10,9771$1 for the CUl"mlt • ,,..,.
Admlnlllrallon officials Jftdld lllal il ~ '""'1d late a lU nle GI ILIO lo support
lbe ezpmdllum.
f 1be --GI the .......,. lU nle rls 11.lt, lorcl•C Ille dlstri<t IO
t wt taz "'"' ... o1 •cm• um. : cnmM: ol a .CD cmt to afllel bs el a-
t "'l'.illn due to boti Wt*' b.trnilhinp and
I penonal ellodS. -
1be ilgeaie in .......... 111111oo ... .-.... -lo JO
: cents ~ dile to the wtrUtm of
: ..,. ooenidos !or ~llanallJ ban-
:~ -~ _.. : relallfll' to ead"J I e safety ard u in-• ~ 1n ......... DI welfare OW!rnle..
; A'8oc>'--.-ijljacuh•""lf M GI a
I ce#ls p•W !or the --· ud tedemplign lund, due IO an lntteue
: In Ila ..... .....,..... !nm the -,.. .... ---~ -~--,..,.. ,,. lalol lU -r.. lbe -dur· Ins lbe ...... ,.., will be "I>'
~ ll.D. but thew nte ..-
be --..w lbe octua1 -vUutim ls kDowL
h9• r..., J
·sEX BOOKS. • •
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Rats Bite Two Girls
m GH l'Oll"T. N.C. 1t:Pll -Rats
detc:ribed as .. wbarl-ty.,e" 1llacked in-
fant twins ii their bed early Wcdoe:9day,
nuatila.tinf: lM ~ foot of oot d Ute
two-mondHlkt girl. PtlvVcians It Hi,gh
Point M.....W Hospit&i soid lbe !>ables
wcu)d ftt'O\"et' l.f infecti<m could be
prnmed.
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f're• r-.e 1 ·
MOL JOBS .••
dispb:yed ~ so many ol mJ teammates.. ..
~ whilt swnDfd loc::a.I lkflom>tt! Jloo&las officials tr)• to figtn oa1 .Wt 10
do 1rilh tbt 1.'1DO pen:ms ill~ in the
no1r-«:funct MOL prvgram. ~ P1l sRi'>-
ly al .,.. ,...... Wing "1' ...,. GI
tl'Jr work slAct ~ be in Ult offin&-
Tbt Xatima.I Ammautics and Space
Adminislllllion (NASA) -_,, bl
be lbe cmly ag<!lcy dlarg<d --men into space and the military .appears
to ba\"C gladly reliDquisbed control o•tr
men in space.
r\.\SA bas ~\'tt"al projects in at least
the talking ~ which coWd ald the
financial plight ol the workers ol Mcl)or,..
001 Dou&lu if the company tioog ...uh
its financial and engineering partners can
capt~ a Wtt ol tbt projects.
Ont oi lho.se pro]tcts LS COO\-eniOll of
the S.1\78 rockel. the third stage ol the.
SalW11 V moon rocket -to a spatt sta-
tion. The S.I\'B stage is built in Hun-
tington Beach by I.he Mc.Oormell Douglas
Astronautics Corporation.
The NASA Apol)o Appllrat icns
Pro@nm ( AAPI ...wd use lbe modified
41-foot by 10-ofot rocket shell as a
workshop for .scltntists alki ~ pro-
jects ralhe.r Ulan L'lt nulita.ry a~
pliations IUSlgn<d to lJOL.
Proposals Wf:rt l"C!.i\"fd 'f'ue3day by
N . .\S.A far de\'elopmenl&l ~adies of • Sf'-
cood generation of space statJOnS Bids
camt (l1lm thrtt ron50rtiwns. made up al
from two to lour ~ ~ Orms
incl LXling Mcllaondl IJoost&.. IB),( and
Marti:Jt:Mfttia Corp.: GT' v m m a n
Amnlt Corp., . L<rlll«d Missiles and s-Corl>.. GoDenJ 1))........ Corp.
.and TRW Corp..; amd Xortb Amencan
Rocknll Corp.. and General Ell'C'.r;c
Corp.
Tn ol tbr g:roops an: to ht stltt1td for
flJT\her planning or a; lJ..-man earth
orbi;Ung SUllx.:'I wblcb cou],d ht in Optnl·
Uon m 1.m witb auac:babie modules
1lrbk:h tUlld ~the statkll's c:apaa-
ty 10 se pe"SOl'l5 ~ i•
' Altboogll the local Mcllmodl Douglas C.C.-;. lomcnling loll II( the a; I
mlltiDn C'aCdract far &ht MOL '~
~ offri&k sUI k:'dly that u..y will~ ..... r.. their !hare
" ""! -_,.... """""' up. r. the .....ume R'IJ. Ridlon! T. Han-
na ([)..lfes:;p;ejps:er) is as.tine lhl'
Cimcnss Iii 111....ilpte dlonmillatloils
ot the MOL JXtCI am nnc=eDatim
Cbt of ~ nmiOraticws is lbt
..... 'llilitr tlw placioc -In ... lw
..... --..mel:r .. the -
-the miliwT -*" Oii o<hor adhities in s:prace.
No ~ for ehbrr russtli'D""\\
• rtliwt of )ocal penormtl Ttft •
........i hr 1Y )lclloo..U Douctas GI·
ficSolo. !bey Rid --the-· ts !IHI ··m • w.1t cit ~ ... bat that ... u
-.. mil• the in;pad .. upt .. possiill< .,. bcq laHo. •
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U~I T ........
Funds 'Held'
By Treasury,
WASHINGTON IAP) -Th• Treasury
Department has blocked the U.S. flnart-
cial usetr of black militant Eldridge
Cleaver on grounds lhat be Is Uleplly In
CUb#, the State-Dcparlment said todaf .
---irress OfC.cer Robert J. McClorkey •Id
the clampdown on Cleav11r's runds was
taken under Cuban control reculaOons
issued under the Trading wilh the
Enemy Act.
. Cleaver, a leader 1n the Black Panther
organl?atlon and author o! the best-sell-
1ng book "Soul on lee," i!i wanted in
California to serve out a 13-year priSOl\
senlence for assault with Intent to kill
and assault with a deadly weapon. 11e has
been sought since he failed to 1ppear last
November following revocation of bij
parole.
The Stale Department announcement
gave officia l confirmallon to press
reports that Cleaver had fled to Havana.
"We in the State Department are
satisfied that Cleaver Is in Havana ," the
spokesman said.
W eeiting -~or Lost Fa11aily0 • , -·
fl.fcCloskey decllncd to say how much oi
Cleaver's n1oney h; frozca by the
Treasury action. U.S. olficials lo4icated
the blockeit funds would Include. among
other things, income from Cleaver's
v.·ritings.
Douglas Sage, 7, sun'ivin.g brother o( a Nebraska
family which lost three sons al sea in the collision
last v.·eek oC the ~lelbourue and E\-.ans sb.ip.5, "'·eeps
on one of the flags presented to the parents,
and ~1rs. Ernest Sage.
/\1r.
The State Department spokesman In·
(licated it is unlikely 1hat the United
States will ask Cuba for fonna.J ex-
tradition of Cleaver. Evans Captain
Not Informed
. Of l\1laneuver
SVBIC BAY, Philippin<s lL'Pll -The
-"1 GI the U.S. -..yer sli<td in
two by tbe .Australian ainnft carrier
Melbourne said today ht was nat in-
formed in ad't'aln that his ship 1'001d
dwigo -during lligbl "l'"'•tions
the nighs. of tht J UDt 3 collision.
Se\'eDty-foor Amtrican c r e-• m ' n
aboard lht U$ Frank E.. E\·an.s klst lbear
b\"eS m the Jft!d,an ~t in lbC' Swtb
Orina Sta during mane:nws by .a Wk
(ortt ol lht Swtbeasl Asa Treaty
Orpniulioo (SEA'!Q).
CmdT. Albert s. Md.cmott, ...
testifitd bdtl't' the si:l.-man )cint li.S..·
~ pane.I in\wtip11nc t ll e
mist:ap. t!at be krrw" the YrhiJJ m: 1r1S
to ....,, ell! ~ _...... al about
l :JD a..m. -er 1$ mbwMs aJ\a' tht c::d-
11-.
He sald bt had no advmc:e tzio.-ieit.?
tbr £nm ....id be desirMM ., ··p1aot
guard." To become ~ gun!. lbe
~w had to tnO"'t astmi. <i the nr-r.er.
It ns c1uriD« lhis dJaoe' GI !UDm
llW tho Mdboumo ri;liled tmllgb tbt
E>am. -., the fanrard ...,.. m lbe
~""tr to tht bouoa:I .-itbm minutes,
A-cfficialssUI.
f're• P .. e I
STABBING. • •
from 5:Jppe!' iD the mrsshaD
ln\·eslipii.'.m of the nc:W staW,,,-,:
'llill W:ival~ quesamm, o1 ai leut 6l
coo'icu. Pa.rk said today. as tht I.mite,
J.600--iM\ate pruon renaUd ~ .a
ma.ximum st:CDi:tv un '° renam m tf.
fect ~ t..;im.
Hr dtd DOl indx::ate 1l'bei.ber" tbt' ~
\i<:".ilru •ert' smgied out ~ o:r
sWr.j)l)· beca.?;se they 1fe?T ...mu and tbe
mo.st coo\·erueot men presa11 at tht mo-
mt"nt ol ~ tt\~
Tht ctllbklct wbttt ncial \~
flam! is U1 a sepante se:'ll08 of Sa
Qutnun from ~th Ra--. .-brre 5irimi
Slrtwl .aTaia ex~ fer 1 bf
amss.inatioll o( Seo.. Robef; r K~
Adams' de.alli trii:S the f!EM!:. ~
A~ :.S, 11-bea the .-.rf.ztt btllftt-:
1rhit~ and blacts 1i-as set oil ~ ~~
murder al ~e-gro fa'isoaa" kif Cooipe.
4!. di.Inn& a. IDO\ie-..
Tn da,.n tater. four while rea\'X"..S
...,. CUI op. bat tlODt <i lbem. !Criomly.
On April ZS. ~egrors Fiord 1"ul. '9.
Md Oh ~. _._. 1IFe"e-Stabbed ~
~alii tn ffi.l);:-::t"'V'
Pn..<lllr. ;Ju;.oon::es s.aid ~\ e-ral wtne:s
\I fre q~med as ~.s m tM ~eaJ
21'ld &!Ultt mor.rlf-~. b:n \hr pram rode
N ~t--.r .11a1rm !!rl'Grnl!..'lg ke-pc. e\idence
100 1r~..W~1c:e-n1 to make-• Cl.S'... ~tcDor.ald. the ~ coo.vid frun
Orange Ccur:ll)', WIS !JOI idcntifi!d by ha
home citJ mi JWUOO offk'iais did. DO( say
bow long I term tJ' WU ~.g.
Fre• Pqe J
TAXES ....
Drug Hot Line
Direct Help for Users Studied
A Hot Line telephone hookup to bring
direct help to the-nat'Ctllics user caught
in the-searing agony of a bad uip or lbe
swuty dok1nnns of drugless. frieodless
des!>air is undu study today.
Conem.e-d abwt lhe Deed, a group of
more than 20 "'est Orange County
cilium has scheduled a series of
rnE"eCings lhrough July at Golden Yiest
C.OUege in Huntington Btach to study the
pnijert.
Tbty call it 1 thln black line-of hope-.
They want to pattern their system alter
an dltcth~ bol line ahndy esta blisMd
in ~ CaT1tos Junior C'.olltge district.
R~tati\'eS from tM Cerritm pro-
gram will tat to interested indhlduals in
V'ttkif meeungs scbe-duled from I p.m.
to J p.m... Juoe II and IS and J ut,, 1. 9
and tt. id non ltf m Cokleif West
~ Hot UDe-waWd pl"O\·idt a senn foc
drug ...... ..,,.._, Ad-·~
drug ...... --inlormatiiOf and help -the !ur cl beiog arral<d by
the potic<.
-rbe idea."' nplains Bruce Williams,
polliic rd.lticas -!or Golden"""· "is tD ~ • ~ line-24 boan •
Cay. gded by ,..,_is --
-they .,.. talking --"'""e .-an' be ~ for rocra1W:ng or ~· Ifs stridly fer help," he
adds.
Tbe area CO'\-ettd 1i'ilJ be-that gmera.1ly
""""' by GolOe ....... eon.g.. "1Illams
added PT'ese:ll!~· a.botn II kJcaJ c~'lne!I and
-~ G.x:tors and P5J~"'1S are i""-
,·oh ed m the program lbe-,. ~to h.2~c
11 ruJ hcc lme rrad"\· fur acuoo.. trr Ji.:h· l
111t!i a p;1bldted ~~ num~ · •
rm: Sft"\ices otfeed ...m simptJ oc
m~ 1~ ~,...here to~ !c~
spec.al medJct.I ;ud. and cwnsd!xg
Stt"o'X'f if ;.."le cailtr a!ks
11ir schea~ senn ci rneECMS "111
uti!.rir tbr Ctrrltos di:. to pre-~ local
Jl'"OfesUX"'..a!s for Hoc. Lme-arooo..
Tbe-following speaken are scheduled:
June l& -Jack ThomP900, vict prin-
cipal al Mll,)falr Higb &bool in
Bellflower and a group 0( rormer teenage
drag users.
June 2S -Richard ~fcGrath, head of
lbc Cerritos College police science
<k-patiment, who will teach identification
of ~ \'arious types of drugs.
July Z-Dr. Let Pittman. psychologist
at ~fetropolitan State Hospital in
Xon·an:. He will discuss tht beaJth and
p.sychological aspects of drug US(".
July ! -A general talk session \\"Jth
~1cGrath. :'\e!krN Dlcorp10 of Cerritos
College. t!"ie Ht'\. L.arrv Arends of Bcllfl~·cr and loc;;il law e3!orc~mera of-
ficers_
July 16 -nose• ~pc-._.r.~r ~~t.
OCJ C Sa1 arv
Schedule OK'<l
"1llle school le-achers <'IS<'\\'hcre were
fmding lifr \\"ith school OOard and ad-
ministrators rough this salary season,
Orange-Coast and Golden West in-
structors found reason to applaud
\Yednesday night
A salary scaJe th;Jl suited them \\'as
1dopll!d by the-Orange Coast Junior
conege DLct.rict Board.
Th~ new salary scale-ranges from r. 800 fu:--a beginning teacher up to
s.:;.;~ prp ~r.:ir Sala ries this Jear wer'
b~Wli."<'n S7.~ and SJ6..57S.
Tl\e rno" plan penruts teachers to reach
tl"M' ::lp sal;;,=1 1n i& years instead Of 20.
Al"<:. fr1r.;;e benEfilS \\'u-t-more lhan
c!<·Jble-d \\""Ith the-juruor college districl
ror-!n"lcting Q ?O per month inslead of
L"".' p~~::t SJ& 20 to rr.cdical and We in·
~.~oinct»
.JI. J. (Jarrell /:?epeal.J
7 STYW TO
CHOOSE RlOM
He said the 1904 U.S . .Cuban extradition
treaty pro vides for return of criminals
wanted for such deeds as murder, rol>
bery and kidnaping, but ··political
crimes are exempted unde r the treaty.
Cleaver contends the re vocation of his
parole was politically motivated .
furthermore, ti1cCloskey noted. '•i t Is
virtually impossible to apply the terms of
the treaty in the absence of diplomat1c
relations.''
Je\veler Wounded
By Gtuunan Still
Fights for Life
Satnuel Brucker. down\01rn Santa Ana
merchant who shill it out 11'it h t\\'O holdup
~en last Tb~rsday. IS still fighting for his
lue today 1n Santa .o\na Communi1y
J1ospttal.
Hospital aides said he is "still In
~enous condition but improving each day
and came through additional surgery sucp
~Uy \\'e-dnesda y."
'.\leanwhlle. Santa Ana Police Olle.C
Ed'>l·ard J. Allen has commended Brucker
for "his heroism above and beyond the
call of duty."
The 6S-)·ear-0ld Brucker. OY•ner of
Bro\l"n's Jewelry. 213 E. ~th St. was
wounded seven limes last Thursday 1n
the gun battle in his store. He killed one
of lhe alleged bandits. Louis Asmond . 37,
of San Juan Capistrano and the second
robber suspect. Arthur Kleis. 15. of
Anaheim. was captured minutes later two
blocks a~·av.
He fa ces Preliminary hearing Friday on
charg'5 of auempted murder.
Chief Allen said of Brucker. •· A.nyone
·who kno\\·s San1 as I do kno•·s he
possesses that kind of courage and dis--
dain for the armed !hugs prowling our
streets tak ing thr lil"ts and proper!)' o!
d('('('Jlt la\\·-abiding citizen~.
.. \\"e cannot commend him h.i ghly
f'fl(\Ugh {or his heroic act. It was in tM:
highest tradition of Am' r I can
citizenship."
Pro111 of i or J
SOFA BED SALE!
1o,. •0000 Now 299 .oo
H.J.GAl\l\EfT fURNflURE
'ICflSSK)t(Al
fNTY.fO\ ou ....... w
~
1llt l~'-Jll 11 •l¥1'1
Oi1A Mt•"-CAllr
t•••O'l ll t.•it·Ol t •
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---D~•ting~n Beaelt
• ~I .._ :: I .
YOL. 62, NO. 140, 2 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES
UP'ITt ......
WHAT TO DO WITH $25 MILLION LAUNCH PAD
Air FOrce Capt. David RJemondy at Vandenberg Wonders Too
Southland's MOL Toll
Set at 5,300 W or·kers
No one knows exactly how many will go
down the MOL hole, but 5,300 McDonnell
Douglas Corporation employes at lwt>
Southland plants are affected by can-
cellation of the $3 billion Manned Orbital
Laboratory project.
Executives of the giant firm announced
the dismal news in St. Louis, promising
every effort to shift personnel to
other plant work or find jobs elsewhere in
the aerospace field for those who must be
laid off.
The surprise announcement by Deputy
Secretary of Defense David Packard
Tuesday threw the future of not <lnly
many workers but some aerospace
facilities themselves into question.
The greatest wasted expenditure in the
increasingly-expensive MOL project ap-
pears to be the huge blastoff site itseU.
A 32·slory MOL complex designed to
fire it into orbit atop the mighty Titan
rockets was scheduled for completion at
Vandenberg AFB near Santa Maria only
this September.
"I don't know what it will be used for
now," said USAF Col. John Walker. look·
ing up at the $25 million structure
Wednesday as he conducted newsmen on
a tour of the Saota Barbara County
missile installalior..
•;This came as a shock for everybody."
Col. Walker added.
The MOL Launch structure -second
largest moveable building in the world,
OCJC Salary
Schedule OK~d
.
behind the Saturn complex at Cape Ken·
nedy ~ will be put into so-called
catetaker status with no plans for future
use.
Cancellation of the MOL project itself
does not stop work by 200 employes op
the launch spot at Vandenberg and thef
now continue the site atop a 1,000.foot
cliff over the misty ocean.
When finished, it will be guarded and
ma intained but not used, perhaps a $25
million monument to technology which
overtakes and passes plants buil t' to turn
theory into· reality before this is even
accomplished.
The MOL site visit by newsmen
Wellnesday was one of its first press
previews, since the tight security control
originally imposed now seems somewhat
meaningless.
The structure weighs 14 million pounds
and is easily moved from its stationary
launch tower by nine specially.equipped
flat trucks moved beneath after it is
lifted one inch from its foundation.
"I have no idea whether NASA has any
pla ns to take over this particular com-
plex," Col. Walker said, explaining
that the Titan rocket planned for the
blOL project is smaller than the Saturn.
The Saturn rocket used in the moon ex-
ploration shots is too big to fit into the
new Vandenberg launch facility, which
magically vanished Wednesday as cot~
tony fog oozed in and over it rrom -1.be
nearby Pacinc.
A total nf $1.3 billion had aiready been
spent on the MOL project ,when the Per>-
tagon announced its discontinuation, the
result oI major steps forwarded in the art
of unmanned satellite spying.
Originally, the MOL_Mluld have_ carried
two astronau(s on 30-day _ du&y shifts
which would include orbital surveillance
oI Russia, Red China and any other pc>-
tential American attacker.
ORAN.GE COUNTY, eALIF:ORNIA -.. -THURSD~Y, JUNE 12, 1969 • -
, -.
3,()UO JOhs Lost?
' " .
Douglas Pain·ts Glooi:uy Beach Picture
By WllJ.IAM REED
Of "" °"" ,,., ...,.
A black· picture of aerqspace tqtploy-
ment in Huntington Beach was painted
today by glooi;ny officials of the McDon·
nell Douglas Astronautics Corporation
who announced that 3,llOO jobs locally will
be"affected by dropping ·or the Manned
Orbiting Laboratory program by the U.S.
Defense Department.
Oflici~ls or th$ aerospace corpOrahon
LAE'C Surprise
said tbls• mominl tJiat abOut 7,J!O of Ill
penoonel are-·effected by ~Uon of
the program. 1,eoo in Huntington Beach,
1.700 at .Santa Monica, l,lllQ in the SL
Louis, Mo., area and.JOO !fl Florida.
Chairman James S. McllOaneU said
that evtry effort ls being . made to
transfer as many as possible to other
projec!s in the company anil ebewhere in
the corporati~'s fainlly ofcornpaillea.
"Our per""'"el MSl&ned to the MOL
Harbor District
Breakup Urged
pro(l'am ti.ve done a great, creative job
during the past tour yean," McDonnell
said.
"Details of their accomplishments have
been cJassWed, but J won't make any
secret of my admiration of the hard
work, professional skill and devotion
displayed ,by so many of my teammates/'
Even while stunned local McDonnell
DOuglu officials try to ligure out what to
do with the 3,600 persons involved in the
now-defunct MOL program, the possibili-
ty ol new programs taking up some of
the work slack may be in the offing.
The NatiOl)a) Aeronautics and Space
Adminlstralion (NASA) now appears to
be the only agency charged with putting
m~ into space and lhe military appears
to ,have gladly relinquished control over
men in space.
NASA has several projects in at least
the talking stage which could a.id the
financial plight of the workers of McDon·
nell Douglas If the company along with
its financial and engineering partners can
capture a share of the projects.
By JACK BROBACK
Of ltM DMfY. ~lllM Staff
One of those project! is conversion of
the S.IVB rocket, the third s~e of the
Saturn V moon rocket -to a space sta.
Harbour. The city maintained that It tlon. The S-IVB stq:e ls built In Hun·
should and wu performing th.e services tington Beach by the McDonnell Douglu
The county's Local Agency Formation and jt aboold ~ either compensated. by Astronautics Corporation.
Commission (LAFC) Wednesday voted s. (See BARBOR, P11e I) The NASA Apollo A p p I l c at t on s
2 to recommend to the Board of Program (.\AP) .would use the modified 4I·foot by lo-ofot rocket shell as a
Supervisors that the Orange ColD!ty 'Sex Boo' k' Case workobop for acientiots am! •cl•ntllic pr ..
Harbor District be dissolved and a county ject.s rather than the military ap.
wide department of harbors, parks and pllcaUons uslgned to MOL.
beadles 1ie created. Of w estminster Proposals were received Tuesday by
The motion, by Supervisor David r;. NASA for deyelopmental studies of a se-cond generaUOn of ·apace stations. Bid!
Baker, an I.AFC member, also required D 1 _ w • hed came from three consortlums made up of
that all assets of the Harbor 'Distrlct be eawr eig from two to four large aerospace firms
transferred to the county. including Mcl>orlrlell Douglas, mM and
Final acUon was deferred, bowtver, at Sex books and whether the Constitution Martin-Marietta Corp.; Gr u m m a n
the suggesUon of ASsistant County of the United states protects or con-Aircraft Corp., Lockheed Missiles and
Counsel William J. McCourt, to give the .Un SNlce Corn Gener-11 ""--1cs Corn.
LAFC a~.anf ~'!lOWllY COUJ"'1'1,• ~)b~ ~ ~~t qµ~.',1,1 ~· • .$i'1\'llWIO.r;. • ailil'ibGf'~ flee tinie to d .. ei.,. all requ!i*I ...,. """?· .bl \l\O ·w..i · orange COoinl1 ' Rockwell Corp.' and General EleCtric
ditiom to make dluolullon of the-dllbicl • Munldpal Court room ol Jud&• J:~ Coip. ' · ;.'
enforceable under ~w." . Smllli. Two al the poupo ~to be~ {qr
The 'staff WU iifdered to rePot\ ·~ ...,.ems b furtl!ir Jilaml1ils of l iJmn' Will
conditions nectsWY at the July I I.AFC Cloolng Y allomo1 Fnmt orbiting atatlon Wblch COdld be fn,opera.
meeUng, but LAFC chairman J1mes T. Laven and Stan stone in ormn. al four lion Iii lf/S \vlth attachable mocfulea
Workman made it clear that there would men accused of selling alle1edly smutty which could tncreue tbe station'1 capaci-
be no further public hearing on the _, bl a Weolmlmter liquor atore will ty to 50 person1 by IteO.
dissolution matter. "It is closed,'' be continue Friday in a hearing CJD a motion Although the local McDonnell Douglas
emphasized. lo suppress evidence in the trial Company is lamenUng losa of th< 1674
Ass istant County Counsel Robert F. 1be attorneys arcue that the P oo is million contract for the MOL vehicle
Nuttman said today that the Board of whicb·the ddenclanta ~accused of Bell· development, officials said today that
Supervison bas two options. 11ley may Jng at the IU·Llte Liquor SI.ore, 14111 they will vigorously press for their share
reject. the dissolution, or, if they accept Beach Blvd., Westmlnst.er, are not of any aerospace contrad5 coming up.
Jt, it must be submitted to a vote of the obsctne under state ~aws and are J1* In the meanUme Rep. RichanfT, Ha"'°
people because the district was formed in tected under free speech provisions of_ lbe na (D-Westmiruiter) is asking the
1933 by .such a vote. Jt was not clear et· U.S. Comtltution. Congress to Investigate the ramUicaUons
actly when the matter would go to county Accmed of aelling obscene ·boots ire of the MOL program cancellation.
supervisors for action. Wllliam Henshaw, ft, of 13191 Peet' Ctr· One of those ramifications is the
Dissolution of the di.strict bas been cle, Westmmster: Hannon SWart, 51, of possibility that placing men in space .bas
championed for more than three years by 11162 Autumn Clrcfe, Huntlngton . .Beaeb; been turned•over entlrety to the civliians
the City of Huntington Beach because and Arthur 1.er1a, 33, of 13721 Haftnwoocl wtl.h the military concentrating on other
that community was unable to reach an St., Garden·Grove. acUVities in space.
agreement wtth· the district on safety Los Angeles book distributor Frederick No timetables for either reas'signment
services 1 in the city's Hu n t i n g to o Weishit was a~ later ~ the same or rele• of Jocal personnel were an~
$3.6 Million
Budget Adopted
Westminster City Councilmen have
adopted a $3.6 million budget for fiscal
year 1969 • 1970. It represents a $600,000
increase over the privious budget.
Current tax rate in WestmJn.ster is. •t
per $100 assessed valuation. Tuesday
night councilmen deferted action on three'
proposed park items which could bring a
16-cent increase in the tax rate.
Westminster just lost a $1.9 million
park bonds lswe 8lld l!o!ied to make up
the difference-ln sUgll:U)r more1 than eight
years, said city admlriJstrator Robert
Huntley.
Total revenues figured for the new
budget are '4,379,400 .. Jncluded in that
figure is about llOO.OOO expecled to be
returned to the city from !tate gas taxes.
Councllmen will consider the tu rate
itself bl August, said HunUey.
charges as the local trio of men. nounced by the McDonnell Douglas· of-
A simlar trial occurrtd in Huntington ficials. They said only that the company
Beach in November and December <if is still "in a state of shock," but that "all
1967 when Uquor !tore owner Wllllam C. steps to make the bripact u light as
Bray ·was acaised of operating a ''eer, possible are being taken."
sin and sadbm." section of the Beach
Boulevard store whicb he then operated.
Bray was found guilty by a jury on one
of five counts and fined $1,000 and placed
on probation by Municipal Court Judge
Walter Charamza.
In the current acUon, Dr. Jay Martin of
the University of Callfomla, Irvine,
testified that be does not feel the five
novels 1D question go beyond the limits of
candor uaed tn other books readily
available today in the community,.
On the other )land, W!Uis McNol!y ol
California State College, Full e l"l oh,
described the books as contalninf
.. repetitive descriptlom of sei: acts.'
He said the ten is "unrelieved by
literary style (If, aocial vlaue."
lf11fe Judie deddel the ~ are pro.
tect.d by the free speoch pro~ • .J!loJ>
the tffill-WW-b> over, but Jl'he decides
the books.are·not protected the process of
Jury aelect!oa will bq!n, court aides said.
Electric Station
For Huntington
Golf Course Seen
'J'he ·atthltect's model doesn't show it.
but when the 13 mllUon HlD!tington C<n·
tral Part Is completed It might have a
one-acre electrical aubstation smack dab
in th< middle of the proposed golf cour,..
While school teachers elsewhere were
Unding life with school board and ad-
ministrators rough this salary season,
Orange Coast and Golden West in-
structors found reason to applaud
Wednesday night.
A salary scale that suited them wa!
adopted by the Orange Coast Junior
College District Board. The new salary scale ranges from
$7 .800 for a beginning te~cher up to
'17,139 per year. Sa laries this year were
between $7,500 and $16,575.
Deatlly Spiders Sought
Ralph Kiser, district manager for the
Sou11>em California Edison Company,
sald he w0uld go aheJJaW!th plans forUie
$ub6tatlor. and will see'k a permiJslon for
construct.ion even though the part bas
been given a green lighf thrOUih recently
acquired bond money.
ParU and Recreation commiuloners
hrd hoped the electrk:al company would
withdraw tts request durbig !he.ir
businm ~ng W~ntSd•Y night,, bu\
Kiser'• llll!IOUllCemenl today would tend
to put the pork and sube\lt!-On plans on a
collision course. The new plan permits teachers to reach
th< top salary in 18 years inst..d of 20.
Also fringe benelll3 were mOre than
doubled with the janlor college* district
contributing $38.20 per month instead of
the present $18.20 to ·qiedjcal and life in-
suranct. There also were raises for evening col·
lege lnsfrucfon and wrnmer school
teachers.
Stoelc MulceU
NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock
market today followed the example of the
other sessions this wetk and wound up
the day a toser. (Ste quotaUons, Pages
14·15).
The Dow Jones Jndustri,1 average fell
lboul nine poinU.
Nest Discovered in Sierra Madre Women's Club
Wary hunters today continued a root·
by.root search of Sierra Madre, hunting
up to 50 deadly South American violin
spiders apparently hatched in 8 women's
club they quJck.Jy infested.
Small as a dime and capable of running
anrl leaping long dista.nce.s like lightning,
the evil arachnids' bite eausea an oozing
ulcerated sore up to eight inches across
before death.
Authorities Wednesday discovered IZ
more or the deadly spiders -marked
with a grim, violet violin design on their
brown backs -in the clubhouse at Sierra
Madre MemoriBI Part in the community
east of Pasadena.
A total of 50 were found in park
b11ildln1s near t.he clubhouse ltst week
'llO!lg with coc....uke'Uint indic1Un1·al
least 50 more !;ltd batc:hed. COUJ!\ry to ~~t pOtenUal ·~tte ,,-ictims,
Authorilles specul~te".one of the sPiders but ~ medicaiton is available.
f · azi1 Spidir.frllhtened Soutl>landers c a n OUnd m the Br and .Chile area. II'-take comfort from the fact that violin
rived in the U.S. accldenlally in a pact· sptcrm.,. ex1reme17 ttmJd·and wlll mly
Ing c:rato and halcbed ill young Iatu. bite tt backed~ •a. Will and
The bunt 1B being supervlaed by Dr. threatened added Dr • n-p •~ I
Findley E. RuUell,-use SChooI o1 i..pe;-...!,--• -~ co •
Medicine profeuor of neurology ariif One · :2iW<!f 11y' the -.!Olin· spld..-
biology. and Includes cn<W• of bla denlo!>e n11r-,.cJtltla. and ...nltlnr
!ludenta. . -14 bours; .• rub -• ·lloun Houses near dw Wcmea'1 Club, t !I wt1 and a li:tb1n.ftve to""" cSayt:. ,,
., a nearby mortuary will be proboil Treotmem t n v o Ive,. !Jijectloa '"· before the hunt enda. -comJiOuoda and· m ...,. _.
The violin spider "°"' to tbe siu of a -Um or IUt~ cull1nt<ut of. the luilf-dollar including the legs •"'I e111 be ulcnted ~ .re.i. , ·
as deadly •• a un1ll raWesnake, but tis The yloliJJ lfllder'• teh!O]e en\blem
bile is only occaalonlllf fat.I. • ~ the ..Ck ol•the violin jJO!nUnfl \o,
Dr. Jack Welnchtl, an authority en thirtlf,whlle-W'd!rtbebrownback tbe
spiders, Nld U-fa no alillmlOfil a.·!llk ' -'ii ·~ ,,.,.i.ei,. eolor. ; . .· . " . . , -I
"Ttie golf Course is five. to seven yeira
h1 lM futtife " said KIJer "and our ·~ . ' subsl&t.lon will not do anything but com-
piimenl llie park. It wUI be an attractive,
atrucl1iraI dOsfp and will ban (encJni
aroand H." ,
ctt1, l>liIInlll11comm1BaJonen will lake
-..... the sube\ltlon, ·lll'OllOled for
IOClllon on the wort side ol'Golden West Stroe\ and llOfth of ~ll!s A venue al theJt
J""'! 17 rneOltrif.
MW/irb!Ie the parka and recreation
commlu1on unanlmoualy voted \o·••k the
c!ly Cowicn for en !ndeflnlta hold\11& ...,.
on the land for''the proposed park lD
avoid interference !mn other poouble dev.!~11 •.
••1 Woiilan1\ want anything to come
•'""" lnol ~ the plan," ~ -.. (8"t PAllS, hp Jf ,
l'hla Ja,,_
Jayme Boyd, 18. will represent
Westminster in the Orange
County Fair beauty contest
July 15, the opening day of the
six-d ay exposition in Costa Mesa.
Beach Trustees
Approve Budget
Of $12,409,043
A preliminary budget t o t a 11 n g
$1%,409,043 has been approved by the
Hun~ -HI&l»Sdtool District
-of Tnnteeo llld will be presenled for final adoption August e.
Tbe Income, which wu calculated from
current' ttate fomnda.s and laws ta tx-
clui!ve of a beginning balance of
$%,248,494.
The proposed budget is based on an
ea:Umated average daily attendance
(ADA) of 14,900 as compared to an
average daily attendance of 13,400 for the
curreut year. This n::presents an increase
of 1,500 in the student population.
Total expenditures budgeted In the
general fund for t•70 are $13,632,600 as
compared to $10,977,857 for the current
year.
AdmlnJstration officials predict that It
would take a lax rate of $1.80 to support
the expenditures.
'Ibe .voted limit of the current tu rate
ls $1.39, f o r c in g the district to
seek tax overrides of 39 cents pWJ an jn.
crease of a .02 cent to offset loss of ex·
emptioo ~ue to household furnishings and
personal effec!s.
The increase in overrides amounts to 20
cents primarily due to the addiUon o{
new overrides for educationally ban·
dicapped children, corrective measures
relating to earthquake aafety and an In-
crease In the heahb and welfare override.
A decrease of approximately .09 of a
cent Is projected for the bond interest
and redemption fund, due lo an tncreuc
in the cash carr)'-over from the current
year and a reduction in inierest -payable
on outstanding bonds next year.
The tot.al tu rate for the district dur·
tng the coming year will be ap-
proximately $2.22, but the tax rate cannot
be established tmW the actual as~
\'alUation is known.
SF Nurses Walk Out
SAN FRANCISCO (lll,'Il -Fivo·bun-
dred registered nurses went on !trike
today at live San Francisco Bay ana.
hospitals.
W•dler
The aun'•·lleeping .ln ag'lln Fri-:
day, IUL al leal\ nooo apd· lt'U'bO
only porl!y 111111111, then wlt~ . the
mereury . in•'the. UPl!'f eo;s along
the coast. •
INSmE TODAY,
Cradl"Jling from high aehool
can, be cm t~ prppor•
to11 -bot fl "°""''t liav•'tc>"'-s .. l'og• 11. •
11...:. ,.11 ...... n c~ , .. __..., ·tr ,......,..., '..,, ..... ,... ,.
(-'Ct J6 ............... .. Cree..... 11 ...... c.wr ,,
OMlll ""'-11 tJMe ,.,_ • M ~ .. 1 .............. .
....,.. ,... ' '""" 11':11 ........... , t t) lildl: ........ .....,, .. .__ , .. ,. ,,....,... M
...,... .. TllMllWl •
--~ '' ....... . Mt!... • ........... . ~""-............. . ...
,
\ ~ t
•
J _ --------~-~--·--__ ~ _ . .t-.c....~~·~.~-"'-'--· .. o>'~'"'· -·-"··~···-·-·-....ao",., '"-'-. ~"'-'''-'-~·u·~-~·-•"'•"'"""n"'"'~•"-"•~•~•-''C.:.. .. •----~·-'-'-~-..._..__• •'"'-'"-", ... " .. !! .• JJ.,.'·---_ J_ -~--
..
' BMCh (;irl., f:lusband•Get Jail for Drug Violation
j ; '" I ' I •I ')
-"~ ..... BAllLEY · • dl'Qi!trat1 dtllance o1 JQdse Qanlner'• bin<!," Welll uJd, Judp Qirlller w41 ·· -°',., ..., ""' -otil<ij-. ll<i4b c:ondemlled Judge .Q""'*'' alven tbe plc!&!r• ol ~/:flea Ultle ,Ul Kaooe.n· SUe StQrum went lo Superior aQlloo tn pre-court coover1at!l!ft D ·a lid Mltly Ii; i..t ilt . . ~ and
COUrt tOJday happy th~i the jurist who put "deU~ra~ Move to break up a h'.appy what he did was for her best interest -
her on probaUon wtth a solemn and uni· mamage. or wha~. he thought were her best in·
qbe w'atblng wasn't around to see her They might have been better off if terests.
back In trOnt of the bench. Judge Gardner and not Judge Howard Judge Cameron allowed Storum to
'l'1e 22-1d H Un'"n Beach girl Cameron had been ruling on the violation stand up in the prisoner's box and expl~ln Yt8NI · un ,. ..... n . ol probation. that the couple came back vo\untar1ly
told newsmen before 1he court se~ The Superior Court's senior jurist had from Oregon and that they were 2:~-~' :nee t.er o{ J~ ~ch no hesitation in putting Rodney in Orange dcter~ined "to live a ij;ood clean life and ·~ -ve an 8 County )all for six months and Kathleen take care of our two k:lds."
'urllt, ·ls·.~ ·temporary Appellate Court for three months. And the attractive Those comments were offered im· :ty -to wu;, the bell thlng that could blonde girl who walked into court with a mediately before Judge .Cameron handed
ppen U.S. • • --big grin, w81ked out in tears and with her out his stlff sentence.
By "us" sbe meant her husband, head bowed . Then Storum got up again, possiQly to
Jlodney, 21, and herseU both of 17882 Jae· Prosecutor-Al Wells probably made the offer a few more facts for Judge
quelyn Lane •. and both convicted on drugs difference by filling in Judge Cameron on Cameron's edification. ..
charges before Judge Gardner last the facts behirid Judge Gardner's unusual ".S:t down" Judge Cameron snapped.
January. Storum drew a short jail term, ruling. ''That's all we want to hear from yw}'
guspended by the judge, aod both be ancl "He was told by Mrs. Storum that she The Storums were arrested last August
his wife were placed .on prdbation. wanted no more of. her husband," he said. by Huntington Beach police and narcotics
But an eyebrow raising condition of "Here was a W'I convicted of selling $2.5 a.gents. Sto~m 'las been described. by' 6[·
that probation was that Kathleen should worth of seconal to a slate narcotics f1cers as a ' hard doper who uses his wife
not again associate with her husband. If agent and she was put on probation - a as a front to serve himself." .
Rodney took Kathleen home again, Judge unique sentence for this offense-because He was described by Judge Gardner m
Gardner warned she would go t.o jail. of her sob story which Judge Gardner ac-his earlier court appearance as "a louse • nd " Rodney and Kathleen admitted today cepted. a a creep.
that he'd not only taken her home again "She also said that she bad started
but be took her as far as Oregon iD a divorce proceedings against her bus·
Fr.om Pagel
HARBOR BREAKUP ASKED . • •
' Ole district or allowed to withdraw from
the district.
: Last year the L'AFC refused to let lhe
•ily witbdr••· -·r The lllssohttlon -recommendaUon. was.
4upported by Workman, Baker and com·
Vtiasioner Frank P. Noe, a Cypress city
~ouncilman. . . . • Opposing were Filth District o:iunty
t upervisor Alton Allen and Commissioner
Charles A. Pearson o{ Sant.a Ana ..
: When the county Board of Supervts0rs
laced the dissolution lsSue in 1968, _it
voted t to 1 against it, with only Baker in
support. · Ad .• tr'-•..;. · Huntington Beach City m1Dl$ ....,.
Doyle Miller offefed a stroo.1 argument
ffednesday for putUng the lssue before
()range County voters.
·• "It is yery apparent lhat the majority Of Orange ~ty cities are dissalllfied
with lh4Mperalloo ol· tbe !iJstrict • .• In •
4emocracy, the voiced. the people should
6e heard. u·we ·are.wUttng to put It to a
~ote of t68 peopl~'ivhy are the county
'1id the Glstrtct hesitant. to allow the peo-
ple the.Wi>ortunit)'._t,0·~~ the iss~e?"
(lliller:rotested,;, :: •.
PoLmCAL~LL
: "It;li obviOci-~fte have a political foot·
lall .. .:Miller contended. "We feel that the lksu~ ,are VerY. sknple ;~ Tbert , ~
diSsatisfacUon amOng the elected o{ficlal!
of the majority of the cities in this coun-
ty, and those officiab are the dtra:t
representatives of the citiz.tnS of this
county," be argued.
"Miller offered three alternatives:
1. Allow the issue to be decided by a
vote of the people.
2. Bring a~ut i chari;t in Ui~ '~d
ministratlve ...philosophy 0£ the district
Bnd resolve the complaints.
<: 3. Delly the appUcatiOn and force the
Issue to· the state Legislature or farce the
issue to be decided by the courts.
STAND PBESENTED
Newport Beach's stand favoring
~nuation of the dl.lltrict as is was
Presented by city Harbor C.oordinator
George DaWes. -·
He read a resolution adopted by the
Newport Beach City Council Monday
night opposing dissolution or the district,
but requesting Ute LAFC to launch a
study to determine how best to
reorganize the district so it can provide a
<;timprehensive program · of regional
rec:reaUor..
The resolution also called for the
Harbor District C.Ommlsslon to be ex-
panded to include representatives of
more cities.
The LAFC took no action on the latter
two suggestions.
BACKED A<;TIONS
Norman C a v a n a u g h , representing
Westminster. backed dissolution of the
district. He said his city favored an in·
tegrated regional program or parks,
beaches and parks carried out by a new
DAil Y PllOT
OllAMOI CO.V1 l'Ull l~HIM~ COMl•'.t.M'
lt•Mtt N. W11tl rraldiel>• 1...i P~1>1i.he1
J•oi a. c."1•r Ylc* ,.,.._.,,-:"° GtNtl M-•tr
Tho111•• k••~!I ··-lli•111•• A. M~rphin1 MIMll"'9 ftllltr
Ali••rt w. lat11 Wllll•111 •••' A-ltM .-llntloll 9Hal fclllor Clt'I ldllof
-Hwlls ........ ._..
JOt Ith Str..t
M1lliftl ,\441"" P.O .... no. •tMI --.....,.... ... tll. '"' Wiii .............. . (MM ... , ........... ._, \.....,... a.c:-1 ID ,.,...., ,,_
coWJ.lywide commiJsion and financed
from the county general funds.
Also supporting dissolution was Los
Alamitos City Attorney John Parker who
urged a vote of the people.
LAFC Chalrman Workman, mayor of
Villa Park, offered a lengthy explanation
of the whole problem, saying "it has
several solutions" but concluding that
there is "merit to th& proposaJ that since
the district was formed by the electorate
there could be no harm, in submitting
the i!sue to a wte of the people.''
Several s~~ ,made it clear that
there baa been no valid criticism of the
actual oJ)eration of the district under
Manager· Kenneth Sampson. But·the ma·
jority felt the district's separate taxing
powers. and the lack of overall recrea-
tional duties including parks, were
negatlve (actors.
ALLEN OPPOSED
Fiflh District Supervisor Allen strongly
opposed dissolution. "Nothing has been
suggested by the cities that can't be done
within lhe present structure of the
district," he argued. "I am against a vote
of the people. It is the responsibility of
Lhls commission to make the decision. We
make decisions constantly. We don't duck
. ow respanaibility and shouldn 't on this
issue."
Second District Supervisor Baker said:
"Nothing will be changed by ~Jution
'(of the dlstrict). The benefits thlfe. now
will not change. But there is strong 'feel-
ing throughoUt the nJition t o d.a t that
local goverrlment la not respon1ible or
responsive lo the ciUzens, That is
because it has become fragmented,
. "People think the district is :obscure,
hidden, therefore it has become Sllspect.
Changing to coum:·y conrtol is a s t e p
toward the mandate of the act forming
the LAFC -to consolidate local go\lfJ'D·
ment. strefllnline i~ ·
No New Salary
Schedules Set
For Next Year
No new salary schedules for teachers
and administrators in the Huntington
Beach City School District have been
adopted yet for the 1969-1970 school yea r.
Monday night trustees met in executive
session for an hour to consider safary
rates. but have not yet adopted a
schedule.
This morning S. A. Moffett, district
superintendent, said published reports
that the district had "quickly and ·unob-
trusively approved a 1969-1970 sal'ary
schedule" were absolutely wrong.
"We have an open-end salary policy
here," explained Moffett, "which allows
teachers to sign contracts based on the
past year's salary schedule. When the
board adopts. a ne,w salary schedule all
pay is retroactive to July 1, thus making
each teacher eli1t:ible fot the full in<
creases."
Teachers on tenure in the di.Strict must
hav e their contracts in by June 30. Ne~v
teachers, on probationary status, must
turn their contracts in by June IS.
"We have one more session-on-salaries
with our teachers on June 17," said Mof·
felt. "then both groups have agreed not
to meet again until Sept. 9."
Civic Unit Sets
Meeting Tonight
Members of the i·'ountaln V•lley Civic
Association will meet at 7:30 o'clock
tonight In SL Wilfrid's Episcopal Church,
8236 Ellis Ave., Huntington Beach, to con·
sider further steps in the recall action
directed against three Fountain Valley ci·
ty councilmen.
!Zugene Van Das\c, pt'tlident of the
FVCA, said a general meeUng would be
held and further plans drawn in the at·
tempted ousting of Mayor Robert
Scbwerdtfeaer and CouncU.mtn Donald
FrtgeiU and Joseph Courre1es.
FVCA members allege the three coun.
cllmen hava not conducted lhemselv('s as
repr~vu of the people, and formed
tho i.MocltUoo u an ald and eye on locaJ
government.
Courtroom
'
In Covell Trial
Covell Trial
Gilbert Covell's parking lot adjacent to
his teenage Syndicate 3000 club became a
courtroom Wednesday in Covell's trial on
charges of inciting to riot during the Hun·
tington Beach disturbance of April 20.
After the noon recess, the judge and
court officials v·ent to visit the scene
where Huntington Beach police allege
Covell was yelling through a microphone
urging thousands of beach teens to battle
the police.
Det. Cap<. Earl Robitaille told the court
Wednesday he heard Covell tell the
crowd, "We don't have to leave the
beach. We'll fight !or it U we have to."
But Mrs. Mary Uenshall. a witneS..'I for
the defense, ' contradicted th o s e
statements saying 'of Covell, "He told
them to be calm, not to block the.streets
or sidewalks, to .slay on the lot so no one
wou ld get hurt. He said he would ha~eto
call the concert off, but there would be
one next week."
Police witnesses said lhey never heard
CoveU tell the crowd to be calm, "but we
did hear him say there would be no con.
cert until next week," said Robitaille. A
band had been playing prior to the out.
break on the beach.
Arter the day's testimony and trip to
the parking lot, the prosecution rested ts
case. Defense attorneys we11 ppected to
continue their portion today: ·•
15 Girls Seek ·
Fountain Valley
CroWn Saturday
Fifteen young fem inine forms will light
up Fountain Valley's brand 11ew com-
munity center Saturday night in the 5th
innua.I MW Fount'ain Valley Pqeant.
The Americana Brap, six eighth ·erade
bay& from Tamura School, will begin 1he
show with a little music at 7:30 p.m ..
while the girls make their last nervous
arrangements before the judging begins.
Other entertainment will be provided
by the Madrigal singers of · Tamura
School under the direction of Mrs. Hope
Sauter.
Tony Cillo, reporter for the Long Beach
lndependenL-Press Telegram, will host
lhe event as master of ·ceremonies.
Saturday night's program is sponsored by
the Fountain Valley Woman's Club and
the Chamber of Commerce.
The difficult, but pleasant, task of ·judg·
ing the beauty pageant this year goes to
Marshall G. Weiner, a Fountain Valley
defltist; Donald Fregeau, city coun-
cilman; Charles A. Dixon, J r .. president
of the chamber of commerce:. Mrs.
Laurence Erwin, president of the
oWman 's Slub, and f.frs . Virgin ia Rick·
ter, fashion coordinator for the May Co.
store of South Coast Plaza.•
From P•11e J
PARK • • •
Norm Worthy. parks and recreation
director. __
"\\'c would like to give environmental
control nf the park area t.o the city, since
they \\'ill be investing from '3 to M
mi llion in that area," he added.
Robert Sutake, finance chairman for
the People (or Parks, who just helped put
a $6 million bopd iMUe over the top which
will finance consln1ction of the Hun·
tington Central facility, told the com-
rni&sion they expended a total of $1,S79
for the drive.
"That's just a drop in the bucket,"
replied CQmmissioner Jay Mastroiani,
''whenyou oonakler that tbLs was lbe best
organized and most ecanomical campaign
we ever conducted."
ln other business, lhc commlasiOft
decided to begin with an applicaUon for
funds wtth the Housing and Urban
Development Agency) <HUD) to acqulre
land for an additional park at the corner
of Springdale Strtet and Heil Avenut .
Architect Dick Bigler was alao alven
3pproval ol the final plans for LcBard
Park and told the commJsslon that "work
was ready to atart within two weeks."
Final plans for Eoder Park by the same
architect wert t JS() given the com-
mission's go-ahead signal.
UIJITI ........
Taking No (;ful~es
Among the 4,658 graduates from San Francisco State College Wed·
nesday was this unidentified young lady in a tasseled white helmet,
symbolic or the rioting d uring the year at the college.
Mine Workers to Stop
Work in Honor of Lewis
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -All coat
miners ia the United States aad Canada
were directed today to stop work begin·
ning Friday to mourn former United
Mine \Vorkers President John L. Le,vis
who died \Vednesday night at age 89.
UMW president W. A. 'Tony" Boyle
said the Jay-off should continue until a~ter
Lewis' funeral for which no date was Im·
mediately announced.
(Full details of Lewis' life on Page I)
Boyle indicated in his announcement
that the services may be held Monday.
On that day, he asked all miners to
gather in their churches and union halb
for memorial services.
Soyle added: "Beginning at 12:01 a.m.,
June 13, until afler the funeral, there will
be a period of mourning d':lring whi~ all
coal mining will cease 1n the Uruted
States and Canada as we honor our fallen
leader.
"It is altogether fitting that the coal
mines be silent while the men who work
in them come together to do honor to
John Llewellyn Lewis."
Boyle also demanded that in honor of
Lewis, Congress immediately enact
"strong coal mine health and safety
legislation ." .
··A John L. Lewis health and safety bill
would be a fitting climax and memorial
to the career of this outstanding cham·
pio n of coal mining safety," the union
head said.
Drug Hot Line
Direct Help for Vsers Studied
A Hot Line telepbone hookup .to bring
direct help to the narcotics user caught
in the searing agony of a bad (rip or the
sweaty doldrums o( drugless, friendless
despair is under study today.
Concerned about the need, a group of
more than 20 We&t Orange County
citizens has scheduled a series of
meetings through J uly at Golden West
College in Huntington Beach to study the
project.
They call it a thin black line of hope.
They want to pattern their system after
an effective hot line already established
in the Cerritos J un ior College district.
Representatives from the Cerritos pro-
gram will tak to interested individuals in
\vetkly meetings schedul ed from 1 p.n1.
to 3 p.m .. June 18 and 19 and July 2, 9
and 16, in roon1 Ill at Golden West
College.
Hot Line \vou\d provide a service for
drug users or rela!lves an d friends of
drug users who wa nt inforn1ation and
7 STYLES TO
CHOOSE FflOM
help wit))ou t the [c;ir of being arrested by
the police.
"The idea," explains Bruce \Vi\lia ms,
public relations director for Golden West,
"is to open a telephone line 24 hours a
day, staffed by professionals who \cnow
what they are talking about.
';We won't be there for moralizing or
philosophizing. It's strictly for help," he
adds.
The area covered will be that generally
served by Golden West College , Williams
added.
Presently about 10 local clergymen and
several doctors and psychologists are in-
volved in the program . They hope to have
a rea 1 hot line ready for action, by July 1,
with a published telephone number.
Firsl scr\1ices offered will simply be
referral, te lling someone where to go !or
special medical aid , and counseling
service If ihe caJler asks.
The scheduled se ries of meetings will
utilize the Cerritos data to prepare local
professionals for llot Line action.
,Beachlµgh ,
•
n~~s
1
Face "Prohe
By RUDI NIEl>Z!EaKf.
' ' Some al 1he old building. al lheJlunt-
lngton Beoch High School campua do
not comply with state regulations on
earthquake prooling and district ol/Jclals
are getting worried about it.
Acoording to lhe dlslttct's or<httects,
Neptune and Thomas Associates, a
detailed investigation will !lave to be con-
ducted tierore an estimate can be made
on how extensive rehabilitation work will
have to be.
This includes a termite Inspection,
checking of the exterior decorative cast
stone anchorage, reinforcing of columns,
plaster strength on concrete walls,
beams, girders, ·concrete piera and joist
anchors used for lateral support of the
walls.
The architects have been asked to ad·
vise trustees of the Huntington Beach
Union High School District of the cost of
the investigation within two weeks.
At Tuesday's board meeting Trustee
Joseph Ribal asked Deputy County
Couse! William J. !tft'Court to advise
him of the specific personal liability as a
trustee "for allowing students to use
these dangerous buildings," by the next
meeting.
"I do not want to incur any personal
liability," said Dr. Ribal. "These
buildings look pretty good, but if the
roofs aren't hooked up to the walls,
where are we in terms of a major earth·
quake?"
Trustee Schmitt reminded Dr. Riha!
that the board carries $5,000,000 of in-
surance to coverSUch liabilities.
"I'm afraid you 're not getting the
point," countered Dr. Rib al. "I'm con·
cemed about human life and not in·
surance coverage."
''Are you re ally interested in the legal
Implications or in the human Im·
pll cations?" asked Trustee Matthew
Weyuker of Dr. Ribal. "I think the rest of
this board is concerned with both, but I
think we shou ld hear from the architect
first."
Even though the buildings are not up to
the earthquake proofing standards re·
quired by the Field Act, they have been
in continuous use.
On two occasions in the past, the
di strict has tried to get voter approval of
bond issues so. that the rehabilitation
work could proceed, but both issues were
defeated .
According t.o figures presented by the
architects, 21 Southern California schools
which were rehabilitated from 1960 to
1966 showed a mean actual reconstruction
cost which was 43.8 percent higher than
estimated.
B8f;ed on actual costs, the mean was
found to be 86 percent of the replacement
cost or the buildings .
Football Signup
Slated Saturday
Boys between the ages of 8 and 13 ma y
sign up for the Junior All-American Foot.
ball at 10 a.m. this Saturday in the Hun-
tington Beach Higl1 School gymnasium.
A fee of $5 will be charged for registra·
tion.
Additional signup dates are July 12
and July 26 at the same place and time.
Further information is available from
Ralph Rutherford, 9952 Silver Strand
Drive, 962-4956.
SOFA BED SALE!
These •re very comfortable 1ofa bedc for
Sittin9 •"' Sleepln 9.
A wide selection of ~1brie s tnd Colon to
'hoose from.
.... 400.00 Now 299 .00
With Skirl1 $SO. erlr•.
H.J.GAl\l\fTI fURNflURE
•
rROFlSStONAL
INflRlOR DfSIGNH.5
-·-~~.---
lJI• HARlOk lLVD.
COSTA MlSA. CALIF.
646.0JJS 6~6·0J7&
,
I
I
I
I
I I
II
I I
I
II
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CAIL Y .. ILOT l"lltfif IW .191111 \llJIHU
Artists at Work
Members of Norwalk adult education class make
ske:t.ches of Newport Beach dory fleet for future
painlings during recent visit to Newport waterfront.
Colorful dory fleet , one of last rem~g fi shing
fl eets of its kind on west coast, is magnet for artists.
Rea Lists Students
Honored as Scholars
Rea !ntennediate Schoo!. In
CoU Mesa has published its
1 i s t of students receiving
scholarship and honor roll
ratings for the third quarter
of the school year.
Scholarship standing re-
quires at least as many A's
as B's and honor roll rank
requires at least a B average.
'The students are :
t lll Or1c1t Scr.olal'tlll,-Ann e,,,.,. ..
CllUlll'I, IC1rtn BtnlOI', I•-llodn1r,
s..,. C1r1aon, oonn1 C1u11111, sieve
ci.. .... 1n, Corle Cllrl1"'nMn, Oou1
C<Jburn, W1nd1 Colli.on, Jin Crvm,
COM1tt1 Crvm1>11tk1r, Fr1/lk c uri.t,
J01111 O.mwllk, G.t>rlilll1 F~nelldfl, N...,cy Hirt.
P1m Htnlev, letlll Hiii, SttYI
HI...,.,.., C1ro1 ll!t'da, OOt1n1 1(11!·
Ing, l•rbtr1 Komt, Mkh1rl LY•lfll,
Day School
Pays Honor
To Banning
Hancock "8111" Banning trr,
prominent Newport Be a c h
land owner and developer, has b¢:tn honored at his retirement
as prellident of the Harbor
Day School board of trustees
with a scholarship fund in his
name.
Banning, who headed the
board since the school's in-
corporation in 1964, will be
succetded by Luis R. Lazo.
The Banning Scholarship
Fund will help provide in-
centive to students of outstan-
ding potenlial .
Harbor D:iy School is an in-
d c p e n d e n t coeducational
school for children from
kindergarten through eighth
grade, located on a live-acre
campus in Corona del 1'1ar.
Other new officers of the
board of trustees are Mrs.
Charles S. Thomas, vice-presi-
dent: Dr. Allen 0 . Collie, vice-
president; Kendall W. Knight,
treasurer and Mrs. Graham
M . Jone s. !lecretary.
New boa rd members are :
Mrs. Graham M. Jones, Ken-
dall W. Knight , Or. Arnold
Binder and Frank H. Trane.
Banning \viii continue to
serve on the board, along with
members The Rev. John P.
Ashey, Josepll Carver, Harry
J . Early, Mrs. Tho mas B.
Fleming. Mrs. Merel K .
Gaede, Mrll. David W. Lang.
Richard R. Leitch , Dr. Samuel
C. McCulloch and William
McDowell.
Suu11 Nldlenon. Ju10. Pull, J1111111
lluth. Jud., snelten, SteYe s-otft,
1'11 W~m, Kll'Wfl Wol1!1ln, OeA11n
WM It. 1111 OrMe .. _ ll~A.lck ' a.u..
Shelly Bencto, 81rtlolr1 Bot0tr1, Litt
11-. A.ict. 8 """"11'!1, Oomi"lc C111-•no. 'rrrry COlklt-/, J,.n Cllrk. E1r~
een Ot.il'W'I. Holl"lll G011llnl111, Orbblt Hebert. Leslk! HUI, Mlchtle H!lmer•
'""· Glenn J .. res. 01.,ld Ke!ltl, Debby Kl_.,.. JrrDl'l'lfl Kn111b011,
Gll'l' L~l1, s~ MHtln. J•"'' MC· Elmetl, Hollv Mldtl>un, Ken Molltft,
Jo An~ Nr!Mltl, Vktorl1 Piton, Krlt
Pe""non' MltY Plle!I""', Molly A.191n,
1 ... c A.Ollle, A.obfrt Sa"lf't', Sifre Sliva, Shella Steflotd. Mlcf11tl T1,..
r1nt, Mkhffl Tr•nkr, D1rkl WllJCl'I,
C.rol Wukaw111.
7111 Cr..i. Sci.tl1nhl-Ttrtt1 Ack·
lln, Kim A~. 01w.wllt C1110,
A.It• Coe, Wiii G1rcl1, Oebblt Ge,..
lcisi, Kellv Gr""' Ct.rllll"I Grll'" ~I Grinr, Ll>bem H1n~, Ooue
H-trd, Lynn Jaenicke. C/\rltrlne ICrmp, P11ty L11Mk. ,
Eric LO'lll1190r, Jlldv LU!ll, Oel:lr1
LY!,,,.., LI""" """"'"°"' Judy llt-vle1, MICMllt ll/\Y1n, Ed"""ld l'tultl,
C.""v s.hlpm1n, Steve Sm!ltl, S/\Trlily
Snipe,, Din Stldc. Ed Slcdd1rd, 0..
1M1 VtnLt\lvan. Off/\ Wllll1m1.
1111 Gn.. Honor ltoll-Andy Alder·
"''"• Pam """'"· ~ '''"""'· OW. llerry. G1vlt Ill•""• C.nil
Crodcrll, Eddie F1rt1n. llex Foat-er,
0 11111 Gallion, SMllv Gftn111, S1!1'1'
Gurw!IJ, Jt1n"' GuY, G1y1t J 1riu1N. llu .. Ja11r11<1u1, ll«itcc1 Jant$, Miki
~-II, J ohn 1C lri<.m1 n. Plier KCl'l10I,
Denny ~ro1. Jall'lft M.tl'llftty, hol1
Marnrlo. Seal MatKl!n.lle, sre.,.. Ml~
Irr, J im tilewbon, Seo!! Orr, Victor
l'etff.on. T1r.nce llld',.rcbQll, Dou• Ill!.,..., J 1n1 S1lnl, S.lly S<nlndf,1, Kevin
Smlll. Kir"' Thom<>lOI\, Sieve T.,.....
lln, Jtmt• Whldcltn, Debr1 Wilder.
L1rry Wood, OOl'I Whelfff, 1-ttlen V!t-
1er, Melodv Wiiker, Doug 'r'am1ml,
KUfl'f llllV/\ltd.
El Morro
Student, 11,
Wins Honor
An II-year-old El Morro
student is one of two Califor-
nia boys selected lo attend
the National Atusic Camp, an
affiliate of the lnterlochen
Arts Acarnedy at lnterlochen,
Michigan .
Henry Adam Curti,,, son ol
Mr. and Mrs. David CUrtis of
260 High Drive, L a g u n a
Beach will atteod the prestig-
ious music program for eight
weeks this summer,
During the camp, activities
include concens given by Van
Cliburn , a symphonic pro-
gram conducted by Sexton
Ehrling of the Detroit Sym-
phony, an evening with Boris
Goldowsky, and a number of
instrumental and vocal re·
citals.
The young Laguna pianist
accompanied the El Morro
junior chorus under direction
of Deane Bott-Orf, and has
been an accompanist for St.
Paul's Lutheran Church and
C o m m u n i t y Presbyterian
Church choirs.
PILOT
PENNY
PINCHER
CLASSIFIED AD
AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE
3 LINES 2TIM
0
ES
DIAL NOW
2 DOLLARS
DIRECT!
6 7 8
CTell fr-. M.m c...,., 140-tUOl L 642·5
.... :.~~.:~.~~.~::~::.:~.c:::~.~ .... J.
•
DAILY PILOT J 3
ANNIVERSARY SALE
LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR. IN EVERY DEPARTMENT AT ALL 17 STORES
the cable stitch vest
... so rich in pure wool
The ca ble vest has become a real classic.
Like th is pu lled down one. 1t's great with
pants and with skirl s. Just one of dn as!t0r1·
ment. In sizes small , medium and large.
was 12.00 8.99
inay co sportswear acc.essories 7 .l
polyester -cotton eyelet
freshly bibbed blouse
This is just one from a collection. All just
as fresh looking as this one, trimmed with
eyelet ill the c.uffs, frosted wilh an eyelel
bi b. In while, 8 to 18. Come see them ;iill.
were 6.00 to 10.00 4.99
may co better blouses 39
\
,
•
easy-care culottes and
coo l summer pantskirts
One of a collection or pantskirts ;;ind
culottes perfect for golfing and bowling.
Th is is smar11Y pocketed. in carefree polyes·
ter and rayon, basic colors, in sizes 8 to
18.
"·ere 11 .00 to 15.00 6.99
maycoc.oordinates 101
Juniors' slinky tops in
breezy easy~care nylon
Tops so Hghl 11nd cool they're almost llke
wearing nothing at all. All shonsleeved in v-
neck, crew or boatneck styles. The v-neck
in brown, navy, red or pump. Sizes S-M-l .
compdr.tble \',d ue 7.00 4, 99
m•y co campus shop -43
pull -on acrylic pant
1s so cool and carefree
These are lhe pants that give you perfect
smooth fit With an elasticized waistband.
Cut with a new sligh1ly wider leg. Choose
them in pink, aqua, oran1-:e, or mint. 10 to 18.
comparable value 1 J.00 8.99
may co active sportswear 76
colorful cotton dresses
... from atamous maker
Choose from a terrific collection or lhe
styles Californians love. like !his easy-
shaped one, to wear belted or not. In wh ile,
orange, lime. or prints. Come see 1hem all.
were 28.00-36.00 19. 99
m.1y co forecast s:poruwear 86
may co south coast plate, san dlego fwy at bristol , costa mesa; 546 • 9321'
shop m.onday through aaturday I 0 a.m. to 9:30 p.m
MAVCO
• If DAILY PILOT H Th11rsdat, Junt 12, 1969
OU .Venture Your )loney's Worth
OVER. THE COUNTER -A-
.. ,.. " .. l,lllll,I H~ Ln C. .... Qt.
-C-LOO ANGELES fUPI)
Occldellll.l.l Petroleum Corp.
wld It hu joined In • joint
vedwre oU concession In
MOrocco wUh the Burea de
R~e-h 1 rcbe s 1E1 de
PatticiPltloo Mf>;e,..,. The
Moroccan. eove.mmtnt wUI be
...,_nted by the BRPM.
The area included In the
cessions Is comprised or about
1,700 5Qlll'1!1 miles off-shore
territory and J,900 square
miles onsho~.
H ow to R ate Job~ Emplo ye r ' 'l'J't}, ll ff~ R• ~· ::ll •jlL""i . n u~ Ii. "" -" 1,., ....................................... ,_ .. •l~~~~~~~~~~-l~~I ~~ ~ J nW H -In r f 'l!i : "!. l:l; :., It! = ., N LI d c ('II.... ,,..., ~ -1 ASD 1tlng1 f o r W.dne1 •Y· J une 11, '"' NEW ~··.w~Tllvt..S.V'I c.omlllelt (I •" ' • Ir r ... -..
By SYLVIA PORTER
!low does your vscation
compa re?
You work for a lrtinay
e1np!Qycr who It out of lbe
rnainstream if workers In yot:r
of rice do no! get:
I A PAID VACATION of one
===========, V.'eek. or one day for each
PHARMACY
TqPICS
, • . .
~~
~ TERRY GRANT, ft.Ph.
A man'1 hair l>f'O"'s approxl·
maLely flvt' inches µf'r year.
Tl\is is v.•hat your barbc1• d1>
JICnds on .
• •
Loul1 Pasteur suffcrl'd a
cerebra.I hl'morrhagP which
aJmost dl'Stroyffi half his
brain. Somr of his greatest
v.•as done aft<'r the hcmot'·
rhagt·.
• • •
?tfOl'l' tha n onC' hundrrd lyl'J('!i
of callCl'r ha\'e-l>N>n classi·
fied by 1hclr loca1inn v.•ilh·
In lhe body 11nd by thrlr ap·
pearRnc;c undrr thr rn1cru-
scopc. • • •
Epileps.)' dors not \1·orsrn
v.·ith a gt'. The ~eizurcs n111 y
fi'\'E'n lessen In fr('Qucncy and
Intensity as the indf,·idtuil
ages •••
• •
For modern schlicr 11•ilh nld-
fashloned <:ourl<'s.~. brinG"
)'Our prl'.scrfplions to:
PARK LIDO PHARMACY
351 Hoaplt•I Ro1 d ,
Nowport l •1cb 642-1510
"" Ofll_,
I month of ernploymenl. after a
1nere six months on the job:
A couple of weeks off 'A'ilh
pay after a year's ser vice, at
least three weeks orr aflcr 5
years on the job and in·
creasingly long vacations after
!hat.
Y~u work for a generous
fellow to whom you should of·
fer Tender Loving Care if you
get:
A TllRE&-WEEK vacation
after five years, a four-week
vacation .tfter 15 years, a five-
week \·acation after 20:
-A sabbatical leal'e, ex-
tended paid vacation, ir you
have a valid reason for one:
-The privilege or taking
your vacation in any form you
wish -one day at a lime. a
week at a time, v.·inter or
aummer, etc.
Despite : e ract thal at
many companies, vacation
time is now anytime, most or·
fices (and factories too )
report that winter vacation~
are not catching on. E ven
among companle.!i which en-
courage w i 1. l e r vacations,
workers still .choose to take
time ofl during the summer.
Even in the face of mounting
evidence suggesting that the
ofr-season vacation is fre-
quently the most desirable,
there are few takers.
THIS BEING SO, a new
Prentice-Hall survey of vaca·
tion p ractices is exceedingly
timely on !his early June ~ay.
I arrived a t the charac-
terization or a stingy employer
by noting the fat percentages
of offices whlch told Prentice·
Hall that they do grant one
HUGE SAVINGS on
Hl·FI EQUIPMENT!
EVEN
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
SYSTEMS & COMPONENTS
IEING CLOSED OUT!
LOWlll: PRICIES ON DEMONSTRATOR UNITSI
Watch for our Weekly Specials!
ORCO ELECTRONIC S
CLOSED CIRCUIT TV SPECIALISTS
1677 Superior Ave. Costa Mesa
(On1 block South of 17th St.)
6 4 6-440 7
wetk o!f after &iJ: months, two
"'etk1 afltr a year, etc. (Any
office which doem't LI below
l'-verege.) And I arrived at lhe
~haracttrliatlon 9f a generous
employer by noting the minor
percentages or offices which
grant as moch u three weeks
arter fi v' vears, four \\'ttk~
a rter lfl yea'rs, ell'. (Any office
which matches this schedule i:s
above average.)
The basic vacation !rend s
cuntinue as they h3l'P bl't'n -
only more so. To pul 1t sue·
cinctly:
-LONGER VACATIONS •
are being granted sooner.
Over one-half or the policy
changes pinpointed by P·H in·
volve lowering seniority re·
quirements for longer vaca·
tions. The most popular shifts:
a decrease rrom 20 l'I I:'!
years' service for four \\'eek~
off: a decrease from 15 to 10
years' service ror three weeks'
vacation.
-Maximun1 vacation time
is being increased. The nlost
frequently cited increase: a
fiflh week for worker~ wilh 15
years' service.
OTHER INTERESTING
developments:
-Office vacation policies
still are far more liberal than
ractory policies. After one
year's service, mosl office
" -,, "' .,_,, ·• 'I " -~ IW " • no-Ill' II ~-·r.·· O O 'ti • 11..,,-e-l1hw .............. -•lllfll .. 1,.,..,ll'Mfto'Y t lt,,M, lf'NI' PolASO. ._ ... , ,,-,rit .. ........ • S.ltl , .. , ':.\""' . ~ 1.. •.•. ,,.. • .• --.. , employes get two v.-eeks but .. • ..... ,.,. .,. ~w ....... ,.....,,. ... ffl!lllllMIM. cw..1 Klffl L• c• c.,, . l! ""' 00 !fl • ~1" +~'
rod I • ,, ... -~.... ·~· " '' ... • .• ~ ••• ~'" • ... • :! . ·~ ~ .... ·,' --.. most p UC1 On Wot~etS are _ TIW ~ t bid I~~ r n'° ~I J>A ».,,. yr"°~, l::l' 40\• -A,-Tt11·~.. I .0 •· ~• ._ ~ •lven only one wee.k. Alter aNt * · ._... J~ 1 • 1 t MoNoi Pit liv. 1' c°"'"' JI » ••-·• n m:• t ""' "' 1T 111 lM ' 'J ~ :w-. -• 1'-_, ... Mo It ~ l"O 10\i 11\oi I Coma '"" 6 -.w •'r. ltJ ~ Hi.< -~ LT F pU.50 1 ~flt ttt< lf4 +w.
tlvt yearsr· I serlvvke, thrftlo -in .rr Na~~~ ,.,, .,:1 'n'• ~I . ,! 11 '1t\: t!.J~M ,,~~Vi ~"1:0 J·.1:i '1: ;5 ~ Jl ~\\ 1~ !1:r :..."":n~JJ »~ l~~ I~ ..... ,w.*(t =11; ten Of ICtS g e emp Ye.I D<!ta Inc:., .,. nld11 0 -CMI 16V. J\ti k"'-H 27\\ 21'1'11 ~m.<:I 1,.... ~ 4'l4 ...... l\4 11'1' lnv;,t)Oli 2)11 JO ?I.. _ !~ -"i lh ' k hil I 0 I 110t •• tr•nNC· rlr'"l. '"~ •• A\lt Sc.t!p111 A •~ t .... mt Mk 1" 1-,,,~ = "-1,",,',"•' '·''•' "1 4'' ~u tt' -_,~ rce wee s w e on y ne n 11.,.., 1 a•• ,.... ..-111 tt ~ , 8, i 1,. YI,...,.., •• 11 !"' M•niE ·1. 1_, ~... .. .. ... ~ix factories match this for :.:=a=~~";. a~ a\11 :i"' :: ~~ ~!41 f'lli ~,... n~ .:."" ~°"::~11·1.~ ', t~ 1m lL~ :~~~~i~1 .::x J u~ Ht? bt: = ~
production ,,orkers. :.::~~r-wt>k:fl ~ •uc s::· ff4 ,l...., ==i Lb1Y W' ~ _ ~. :t ~ ~°!"'.:~, 1.., 1.W ir.:O\'J ~~ ~~ =1~ i.~1.r.111 1.5 n ~ti! i!i;t ll'~ ~\o Bo , k t M<urltl., ciculcl ,. PelO El 14'~ l~"i N•! 5e(lle 1.V. i. NII SO 51 :r;ulrr1 Ct1 51 u"' ... -... ~"IE 11 j· o10 $7~• 1 l1l\ _ ;• -nus \\et S' are OU -h•~· bft11 -· I Nii. 11\\ H"" Na! St! SY • l'li lin1 H n n ,. Prod ·*' olO ~ m· ... -t ~w Pl . uo 53 •• 521. -~. W·11h onfv "'"' of 151 companies a•Md ''"'"'! Of' 1 Nuc-1 !! Nt1ol ,. •lfo lit 11,..1 ,,~ ''"" A rR~~-· lli.JiGJiG 112 ut• • . ..,. -w P 1 , l30 30!lo ~ lO\• , v" told lb!dl. 1111<· l«'!cpy ' MEn• GE 711 Pa11 '°"32°"AJ l.__..,I • IM IA< l\lo U, -t\i I• 2.711 14 ~· 17'1 111.i.-"
.'
•,,•,ng Cn>p\oyes a bonus week Ot•l•r m1rktl• ll<CWTIM ~~ ...... NJ NtlG 2.!\.\o I.lo t NG \Pl. 14111 "•"i•!_ G;!! 'I 11 17f;i 1714 1'•' -.~. ltY!le plJ.SO 6 f~ll f>~ ll''o -:w, T l;ll•nt• lllrOllllll-ltc C.,p ltl'o 3'1" Nldll1n F :.If... 1c11 Wt! 1•tt 11 -•IOI.. ' SI 4]1,!o olrJiM ;J,. -I,· lorOJ; .S(lg 1-S ~ ·~ 1to~ -1~ -and that only arter 15 out 11141 CllY. Prlcff I ~ SY• '"' 7 Nltls A 3$\'t ~ .... •NE Ttl .d'lt 4~ .·.~ .. M,'" \·11" 'il -. f,}~ 10•• -+~ Cluet1P11 .'Ill 11, ;,Q\\ lO"' lO''o + \'f This do not !ncluOe 0111 77 U Nltbl 11 JS\; M\'J Soun G!' •• fl\~ P , It ,. ... ClutltP p1 1 1 j' 2<..t.. 70>t -"' years' service. once ''"II m.af'll; ..... Et Madu.I I JI;. , ... , ....... ~ft r• I'"' WI E I ¥ 111; ll' ~i:aau.e, .... 2. J ~ SO\i ~:; I~ "'"' Finl .so IM 51; u·. "-\4 +l'o I t f d'. g m•rk-11 Of' com.El'llpS Oil.,. \II ~C11r " I 'k 2 w G..C:• It 16\'I ... "It..,. pl J _ ff!' tlf -" MA pf Al.II U :12 11'1 ll••-1 1xipu ar cus om o rewar n rn1 ... 1...... I...,." iw 56 St ~! 011 /'~ s:w. PC"Y• 10.,4 11 AJMDPw 1.11 vo r :ioi! 11,. -1,. .,.,1 s1 c;.,, m u~• J J•1• _ 1•
e1nployes at live-year in-Ml C0t11 11111 1:"" ~no:r.~e ,m 1f"' ~W~t1G G 1 ~ :m l1':l ~~1 r.~ ~ ~~,n 1:~ U ~ii 'J9 ° = ~ ~~ol "f~j}t :f :f""' 711~ :f~ ti"°
tervals has been made~ s~, 1: ... ~1 ~:1\oi• 1ft? 1F ~~~~11ti 21 u = f111 Iit: ~ .... :m=~ ·~ M ! M~ ~~ ~s::l.11 i.R M m: !1~ =~ '.':'.~
obsolete by generally more :1. ~p 1k 2:~ Er::rllnt<:h ~;~ ~~ 81:~ ~'!, ul4 M"" 5 ~. l~'llo 1l11i :m::r::. $.J 11! 0W'''J9t'o .e .... c:t1!~1-"~~ 1n 1r' .m: J.MI + ~
liberal vacation practices. . ~l;,r,~. Fol
11i1 n~; !~,fT. ."I •• "I. elncwi~n ff"" H ~:~ ._!d IU• '"' :m:!~p . .: dO,•,.t u~ ~~ ll~ = ~ s:~1r:,~~ .::& 1~ ~14 tW. t~ ±,$
Ei\I PLOYERS are starting "•'-ca Sid ~ .. ',! . .._ F•Ftlrtld ,. "' TP 70~ '°" T,~. :;~1H\ll "•lllJ £..lllllm"' ' ,-, .. "' -·--\1o 'cola Sou pf • ?10 12~ S2~ """ ' . rt ti kers ' L -· ,,.YJ F81Y M• S2 I! NA u~ :la~ -lS'h "" JPIWI~ !Ill ~. ~ ,··, • -, C<>I• llld .SOI lt4' 1U ll"" 51'6 ~ ~' to give pa • me wor Al to 0d ."' \ t'li 11>t1 11:1r "· OJCr (1t 1,...., 11..,.. •:i:;tt u14 1, Alcoa 1,11 61 11 '' """' -~011 Jn pr•.23 at t:l'llO 14 13114 ~ · r· h ·Ulf · Alle9 11¥ ti~ lt•rrlnt t4W 2S\ll ~lbll 8r 171; tt•• TtY W ,1 ,4 AnMISutr 1.60 • lOl> lO''o --OH In Of1..0 ll1 JO" "'" ... -•·· \'8Cal100 bene !IS. A OSpl In Al~ Pe•' ·~ ·~ Ffd NMll 19' XI !'toe l'"11E Jf\ri .io~ Te• AmSul t lt AMIAC ..IO "oi fit• n~· Jl"° -~ 115 !,olOb 1 n s.t"il M~ s.A: :t° \; M . •n vacations to Alld "e•o ~ :" Fln Secur t¥I 101o11 Plllco 1ow. 11 Ther"" Air 111.'1 17\o'I ""-E"s 1..20 d.° ••~' ·~ -~ BS ,.. 1 11 n1~ l2 ))"'° +ll~ aine gran~ Amoc:r EQ I Fi111111 Cp ti K ••!la(ol 1~ 1•1.'1 Tiffiny :n n AmrE1 p11.t0 .. ,,, • .' ,11 111 =••,, oluG11 t.IO •1 ,~ 2'\lo lt\lo _ ~ . I who aver AIPll Gto lt 2(1 Fl!Gcn RE 2' 2t Pll: ..... 0!1 21\lo -,,_ TIHn I Iii" , .... A....r.01 J .... ,. luPlcl 451 11• l21'· ''' • .• parttime emp oyes · •m1dac • io F11 """• 15•.1o 16 Pa.ok.v P i1r. )~~ n11n i.li 1-4~ M'ir~!tr .ao 2ri 1: .... ~.! ~ -Y,: co1So01> i.1 15 a1~ J7•_; lN = ~ aoe 20 hours or rnore per Week "',~ ,o, ',•,,' f,:: ll'}\lv, Fsl Reo<'.p 6V• ,~ Ptvtillt 1J IJV! Tr•ll5 Cit IV. "< A,m lrtln .IO 1I I~ -+\.. CornbEn 2.-IO lO 66 ~ ''l-_ V. 0 • ... . ... F,1 Wti!F 7V. \It P• Ol•L11 1v. '"' T•IM c;,, 2.H!l 2S'rl m ktr ) 50 1 1}~ I • " ComlSol~ .•o ?(I ?(ll ~ 70 2(1 -,, O" a pro-rata basis. •"" E•or •11~ ', Flldll111 20",\ 111'1 P• E:n9ln '"' 11;. rr111CI 011 • t Am&dc11 1.44 " ~J.o 12 •1 -2,-:_ Co.'l"lwEe1 1.20 113 •s1-. •5 ,5 _ ~ " . Am Furn 11 \• 1 Fii"'! S.I ,, 11 ""-c;.&w H14 Ir: ~lld tlld ,,,.. 15v.t All\ C1>1 2.N 154 S3h 51h il -"CDrn E pl'l ,U 4 11'111 n11 21~ As a professional w 11 o Arn Gr~t l'V. ..ov. oodF P•P 1v. lb'o PEC ls•••I u Trlco P4 4llWt ACan pf 1.1s 11; ~ 1i., f~,, = i: conwr o0u .60 515 77'• JI!• n ~ ~• I. _ _. •rn Herl! 11\'3 11 or111 o ""' nYi Pffr!ni T 1,Vt Trldilr 11 lt\'I Arn c..m ·'° • ..... , ll'• 33,1 ~. l:ompk .02, '' "-'• 11 01 _. doesn't get vaca ions anu Am IMI D ll 37 F1;19ot G• .. 11 )I l2 Pt1111 ltEI .. ,. U'h Tropicn~ 36'4 31~,. CNl11 1,60 15 ;ri; 111. ll\1 -Comp SCI WI ll Uh 1S'o 15\'o -1\ot.
II h If ly f j Ve Am Medi 11 IO FolPdlrn '14 JIJo p.,.. Wtlll 1\.11 I~ Tsan Fd It 20 ArnCrfdlt 90 .,. l'tl 7'> • ~ C""'wt 90 41'" "5\t •5'o -l~o a ows e rse on ,. M IM• 111~ "'.' F•anlel CP 11' ... ll .... P••lnl u..,, 11-\0 Uni!K 14 15\ .. AC•YS..0. L.O J~ :;t: ,.~: ...,~ = ~ ,_ Milli ' 10 11\o II\~ Ill; •. h lld oU a year I gel a Arn P•..e l•'-71\• Fkln Ele<: :n\O "'" P~t "' ., unArl Th JJ1., :uv.. •rnCr•n 1.1s • 1)\'I 2s 15 _ ~ C•nracca . .o u "' .u\o ~ _1~, 0 ays • Am S1Gol;I 1V. ~ F,....,, A.IY 12•.13v.Pr,roi1 4 "Un Ooll3r 1•on 11 .... A;i;io1.111111' 611 IJl>a 12"' 11' ~.CDnEd/1 l.IO Ill l2 .... 31\~ :12'0-7,
pe.rverse ;>leasure out .or:::::~.Gc:l~,,l ,v.~~~~:t~ f~1:...,~~~a\ur ~lv.~t 8~ JJ~"c;";1 ll~~i'b.:11vi1.t.c: ,, 1J~1 1J 1J,;-~E:::E:J: :.1 ~ f 1JU ff<>; m!+V:
writing such columns as lh1s. """euoer 1>-1 6S %•1 5vc ls-1 U\'o 1"11111111 GI """ 11v, Un A.•111 lllh It ArnEIPw 1.51 12l :u~ ll\t 331• -t ConE plC•.•J 1110 ,, ,7 6~ -_ 1~ l Anketi CF 9•4 10\lo Alrcn '"' 10 P~11 Inc ""' 22'" us &•Nole 1•14 2S ""' Enll.• I a'11 311!1 let ::io -~Con Foods 1 ti ••"'• 4•'4 .U'!lo 14 lncidentallv, can any o you A•cat• N 01~ •ll't 0e.,11as ~ J14 1111:1 PG• 1 '"' us crown 1y, 11~ A"" Eap l!J!S ,1,,1 ~· ~.. -.~: ... • = l, '~,','·~',','·~, ,,,12 !!?~ ,'!ti'. !!1•· ~_-:..., • · . A•<• llld 21 15 n G lbtrt 31~ •"' Plnk1rtn SJlh s• us Envtl n 11 .... AGtnln1 .... ._. .. •• " C~. ,.., ,.., •• beat the Chicago newspaper •rc11n M n "" f l11tllo n, '"' Port.,. Htc: JO l1 u! 5"".,.. 5-l''f 56 AGn1n pf!.IO lit :lll'I ll~. ~l" -t:i.a ConNt t '-'i 11,. n 1, ,.~ tt•o _ \~ . • • k ArOtn PIP! .0 G GR Ell 10 ... II" Pro Goff 1'4111'0 .... tJ TntL .:) ... UV. AmHolal .nt 11 11\'o 161• I'll -l'O C11t15"""'r I.to 114 )I~ l1'4 l/l\li -1\o publisher w,,o gives one wee Ark MoP 1111. i:m Gtot1:• , ~ .,. lllR'n'• .. 11 ..., tJp P~P 25,. 2,"' A Home 1 . .0 110 ~Ioli 5.5V. "i,., -1 conPw ..... ,2 r10 61 61 611 _1..,
ft lh 0 lhs two weeks ,.,,_ H ~,,.,," 1no, J11~ ltV. P•Olil Ana1 '"' 7'4 ut•h St!La a 1~ A Home 111 2 •"• !~..._ !t, l1>, -+'• ConPw pU.50 1110 ll!i 6N "'° +1•, a er ree m n ' Arvld• ,,,,, 211':1 Glillelt di!. 4SV. Pubs NH 27\o ,....., u111 tlld l' :it Am H<iw> .22 ..... ....... C<>nPw Pl•.16 110 &0 60 60 _'Ill after •'x mo.,lhs three weeks •s cc ,&01 ,,,_. :nv. Glus11 w """" .u'l'o Pubs NM 7•"• 26~ LO.¥ llh l•'llo Amlnv,s1 1.,.10 2J 2ov. 19~• ?!!'~ ... con1A1rL ·'° 199 11,~ 17 11 + v. ~ · Aulo For• 19!11 JO Glober A.\lb 6 7 PS NC•ro 1~ 161'. S•n llV. 79V. ArnM dw · 96 :111'1 11 ~o 11-o -.,,;, Cont Cen 2.70 91 o9•i, ~t'4 69>,;, -y, after a year? Or lhe Io·:: a Auto Sci I ~"" 1n·1 ll'.'• l•!:o PYbl511rs 10 :io..., W<IDdwd 211/, 21v. ~'M~ J.90 2~* ;~ ~~ 1~ .... ·-~cont C<>11P .JO •O nv. 12/to 111:. .•.
d f. h. h I Avemto IO'~ 1 (;r1oll Con 10 21 Pure...: ' , Wtcldetl R 76\'J ti ' N ,~• J .. ,., ., '" •• , -,,,•Cont CP l.IO 130 ••\!I •l ., _ 'A mail or er 1rm w 1c gran s •VM co 1''"' l!V. Grilli' sc1 ~ " P ll~ne!I '1'1.! ~ Mwm P 22 2• m 11 11 ... l ... .-• -· Ci co p1A1..i.o JI 50 41 •1'14 +'• I ' .. tlK OU u~ 17 Grffn Ml l) 11\IJ Purl!, 51r u 1'1·~ RNde ·~ 10\~ AmP""I .Otv 1(1.1 11'.'t n-.i. 12,. -tit Ct c .. "'II',. 9 •!'II 4)\~ .... ,, _, four weeks lo all tmp oyes. 11~t1t1i11 1~ 11~~ Grlltld A.L 111~ itn POuo Cop 1 ,.., ••:.1> H lR. 1~ AA.eucil .lOc! lf 1u.,. 11111 1n ~ -1"'c1M1" 1.12a 1'5 •:r., Jl'h 31..., -4V. ll•••d Al 16'4 17'1.• GrlnMll 111 11' PutntmJ 11 11\IJ •st> NG 19"1o 10 Am Star I 21 U•o 2i~. -"'COtltM<>I .!Op t 70'> 20\t 'IO'•_'• l!loter M 2l'l:o '''" G•cwt Prs 79~; lOVt Rici °""'" 2J 1s •I rrmf '/O'~ 11 Arn Shl•r .60 41 21'~ 1s~, I'\• -'•Cont 011 1.50 Jl6 Jl~o :'6"-l6~i _,.,, 8~1 Paint 1 HI GrWlh lnll ,,,,,,. lSV. A.1n!lbg El l2 lJ Wtbll Res !5 15'!4 A Srnel 1.90 2'0 l!'.. lSli 35~'> +••Cont Oii DI 2 13 Sl''> 52 S1 -l BPu~I WI l \IJ ''fl Gvo•d Ch I'" • RIYCl'lm l•s 110 W•!dlrn 15 u AmSoAlr ,10 60 ss•1 SJ\'I »·• -B•c,,,,, 511 I ~ ,,v, 50 51\'t +Hil C lif 0 E I larwlU 15 16 Guido Tch 1'• JV• A.oymd C11 JO 31 ell/no M :n 31 AmSAfr In.IQ ,,: .so,.. ~ ~'I. l\lo Con! Tel .61 29$ 1l~t """ 22.., -1\lo a Ol·ma 1np oyn1e11t l!lo5!n P ll','' 1''1. uH Int 9\'t 10\IJ Rte09 EQ 51\lt 59V, till A.th U l'lh Am SIO I II·-, .. _ .~ • .__-,.~Control Otl• JIM llt US\lo !U•/'.o -I l•vleu l.W. ,,~, GyroGyne 10'4 11V. Rep M'9e 21 21 SC'l>I Pd 11 17U ArnStd pf •. ,, .., ...,,.. ,.,..,. -,,,.. Cn01t pf4.50 z9ll •J•., 6S ... ($1~ _lo\ l flCham M'i JS\~ H6m C°"c 19• lJO ll tllll Cr '! 11 Nllll NA IS •\ 1,._ A~.~11!'1"11' ... IS ll" JI.., 31'4 + .... Coot Unit .50 51 '2't •1 1~ •P• -11'• fle1i. h if. ,,.,_, 12,,. t4•11d \/09 ' 1 RIPf 51k n JI w11n M111e 110.:, 11'h ~.!':"•r .60 3' 21 77''1 271• -..._ Cooperrn 1 «t t 31'0 31 3Ht +"' lltlrn Ind " 16 H•IKl'ti!r s 71 Je A.-El ,."' 11~ ii Publlsfl 2314 24l~ ... , ... ~Pl .61 I 10'4 10•• le•. -It Coo•r Tll. 1 51 21~ 211•.; itlf.o> -I~ l tl:;.c11I R ll ll~4 H&~'n 11\d 'I~ ''ti Robbin M Jl ~ Ws,11 Sl!IH UV. 11 ... Arn T T 1.olO ls.ti Jl'tt 52> .. 52lo -~1 CoapT pll.25 , 7''\i 13'\9 T.-1 +11o J R d T I lltrst> H JS Jf Hl!h Mor 21t 21 Ro,.lan U 16 Wnt WllLt 11 17\~ Arn obK 1 111 lfl? :U\o °WI• -t.!O Cosiel11nd J.')r) lJ 4l:W. ,,,. •11"1o -It') t Ota flttr Lab 56\'t Siii> H1nrRd11 F 11!1> JO'it APll C1tle t•.~ 10 WiMbalO ld\o\ 3714 AmWWk1 .56 11 ll\o U~o 12'1t -~ COl>Pllgt 50b 28 45 .... -MIO "'• _ •t Unlps 0 ecol• l!llllllP$ w 10 10"' Hll"'IV" 11V, 11\o\ ~un 5tow 3''4 JI•/, 1 .... 1 T •lh s ",ww ..... , .• ,1 110 19\'• 111.:. 11\r. -h CQ11WISll i.l'O 17 """ ?JI~ ,..,, -'II" fl lrd Son '1 .CS Holm EP n 66 A.y•n H1'111 :11•~ 2t!Jo be PL 2111 23•4 l)ltl · J aso 11+. 17•r., 11~• ... Coftnlf\8 .!Sil 11 26..,. t61-;.:-:-1 +1.;, ll lrlthr av, l\'o ver 11 2)\lr SSI Comp , • ..., ?S'h ldW En l'h '"' Ani line JS l•l'I 2•\.'• lift +"' COfGW 2.so. 21 166\lo '""" 261'< ---.Ito
SACRAMENTO !UPfl
Employment in California
reached an all·lime record la.st
month, the State Department
of Employmeol repo r ted,
while unemployment reached
its lowest !t1ay level since
1959,
Civilian employment in May
reachc<l a record 7 ,9:->5,000, up
by 112,000 over April. The
figure represented a climb or
265,000, or 3.4 percent, over
May 1968.
Unemploymen~ t o t a 1 t d
327,000. Director or Employ.
1ncnt Gilbert L. Sherfield sairl
the figure represented a drop
of .20.000 under 1968 and lht
Jo1rcst in 10 years.
Stasonally adjusted
unemployment s tood at 4.2
Brahan1s P ick ed
Bl•ck His :M'4 l7 Hou•! Fis J•1 J\1 Sldller 10\4 IP~ Nvandol 12'~ 1ru Arneltlr. .60 19 :U 11 2• -2\-Coroneun .n 9 :!IJ.i 2t n _ \'i
. llwu• El Sli 'it Huck ll 1l\'t Scan11111 El t t\l>V•ra Elec 61~ ~ Amf1clnc .llO ~!? !~! ! ... ~ .. = ~-~ ,'-•c"o',,,·•, _ ,',' ,",~ !~!", l~ _. " percent the same as Apnl but Bou serN 1'\.'. 1J Hucl B•v 1t 10111 AMK Cp .lll .-....... .... •• .. ,, •v ., ....,.. ...,... ... • Bootl>t c l1V. Jal' Hucl pp A a •1 -~----AMP Inc ... 67 4S 44 •s +.l~Cr•ne 160tl It 66'~ 4j•\ •S''>-1'• down slightly from the May ao. C11>a JI 3' HU101 Ga• 15'~ 16•\ Arnpe)I C.,.DfP "' •l\lo :It>.< :>t:w. -l'A crcm111Ci. llO 2 1111. 1t"• 11•:. -'• Bow11,, ll'o '"• Hur11 p Jl\'I 32V. Armteo .. ..o 6 ll~ •I\, 'I'll +~ Cr1111~Hin "111 10 :!l'r. 71 :!I -1, t=• teo{46 nt llr.wJYG n 7l HYtll ll 31W. Amltl .:12 11 211'1 :20l-1 211'1 -"-Crow(:ol l.Sll 228 371, ~~'\ Wi-1'"
lftKI r.a . perce . l'lrown Ar JP[o J11'> 1..:1 (;&..W 20'\ 11 MUTUAL A"6COl\<I l .50 21' ..Oh ..o• ... -I0'1 -\'>Crown (gO: ,, ll'~ !11't 12'~ -2V. Th De rt t f E I ll rulh Ber ll'• J2 1..:1 N~I n•~ 1J1, AnctiHoo. .IQ ll •I"• 40 JO'i -11• Crwnzeu 1,-IO &O 61 >. "°''• (,11\1-~ e pa men 0 mp OY· llucktve 15\IJ 161':1 lnfole<: 611 )~, Ancon1N~v 1 S 31\I• ll'~ ll"" -,,_ Crn z pf• 20 r6•0 l>fu 67 f.O·'f -1 1ncnt said all ma1·or industries ll ur""• s lll• u•i. 1n1r1red 1•-. t Ana Cliv 1.20 ~ ,,i.;. 16'• J6·~ -,_. crs Corp '.•o n l••,r. 111~ 1s1;o _, .. llu~l~I~ F 1110 12"'9 I~! Cnlr 31h olll'lt Apach.C,o .20 2S 21\lo 15~o 26 -1\t Cudahy Co )9 11'• 11lt 17°' -t~ took part in the rise in '" w11Sv 11 21~ 1ncu Sv• n>, "" FUNDS ApeoOll l.•11 ... l9\I :ia lit~ -11':1 cud~v pll u 1 n•• n~1 J1'• _ 1·. Camc11 n 30 lnlrmk U•~ tl"• AQUi Chem 11 111• lS'lr. 36•, -'it Cu!lloJn :!I 28 25 .. l''i 7•"'1 -1\lo employment, with about half C•nnon M IJ 11 1n1Bk w~ 10•1o 11" "A" swc .... 12 101~ JOO..,, 1ap, +-,,. curnm!n .aot> 11 34~ ~\ J.1\11 +lo . C:1nnon B 12 IS '"' Ml\I J1>; 11', •rd\Oan 1.'° I Sl 51''1 52'"> ... Cu11n0'1lO 10 6 JS'o J5 ll -V. of the advance coming from C•n•ad ''' 1 in1N~1r 1.s>.1•i.. Ari1Pwt1Svc l •1 2P ; n •1. ?P.lo t U.curHnWr1· 1 100 201' 20·~ 1G'4-"t · ft h d Cap lnl" 1'0>1 11'!!. 1n1 Svt , 11Vt 1' A•l•ns OS .70 105 »>-:U'o ~~ t It Cu•! Wr A 2 l JS ;u::,., JS -i.,. agr1cu ure, were goo C•Pll Sow 11•,n Int svs Pl u ;,1t\'• 1 ~ ArmcoSt l .20 14 6014 lt-1 ~•-l'i Cu11er H l'lt 11 lf>.\ :.>.:. 2'·~~.
weather helped cultivating and ,c!~,~ TKI!'' ,•,'Jt ,~~ 1n1 ,.,"' u, u ~i~~.s1\ ~l 71' :io11 JO'' JO\.< -,,. CYcl°"" 1 io ,. 31•;. '.it.I, :J6i.o
h I• Catllt Gii ;u<~ y,i/; lnlt•I ~l ~ IUnt 11 !nV 111111< 16 J8 1& JI Ar;;,,_""' pl ~ ,5 J~ !:t! u:; 1:.~i ~ il~ Cvpru~ \.;o 11 Sl~o ':H• 52~ ; ;: :: arves mg. Ca• NG11 ll\\ •• l°"~uNi'c JO 30\'i NEW VOA.K IAPJ lnVt• Elo• U.611 IJ .... Arm~tCk n'10 1 ... 39'4 31 ]1\• -l'A -0 -Ctn \/IPS 12V. 'l'l>; J~b.I FL 11~ 1 -T~t lollowlng •uo-Inv"'! Group, ,\rrnCk pfll! ?113 SI 57'11 ~ -1 Oan Riv l 21t 16 20 19Ji 19\l. .• Ctnlru :»'l ll"' JacQuin c lJU 14'h Utlon1. "'""lied bv ~ lldl ~·!\ il:n ArmRub I 60 II """• Ult .u>', Otl\6 Cp 1:2s •l ,,,1 1••Jt '4'• _ 1~ Chit! Oii 111., U Jllm Wll 1-S'• 16\0 ITle Ntllontl .I.HOC:!• I 1 9 Aro Corp .90 S 15'• 1''-~,_, -'• Oarr llld 30t:t 101 •11'> •5-\\o 4•,14 -H.o Chm \..tom II\~ It'~ J•mt•bv 1J IJ ... ~!Ian •I Soc\l<lhtt r~ 2S 00 ;~·~Arvin lfld 1 10 12'/1 Jl •,. u •, -\, 01rl lnt1 'pj 1 lJ 51 411 •t -2', CntN>Old S'• !~I Jer1 ... 5 n .... 11• ... Dt•~sr. Inc.. .... Sel I :·ff 'IO ASl>ICI O•I 110 1312 41.'o 4•1• 's -•• D•vcoCP 1 olO 11 41'1 "'• ..... ,. -"" Chfl U!ll It " J!ljy Fa, ' 10 !ht IM'•Cti" Wllld'I \/KP tl5 ,\!.lllJll pl140l t 91•, "'~ Sl'l -011 D1vco pl•ls lllO 101 101 11» (l\J llr&I IO ll t(1!1er SI W• 6A~ the.., !tturlto'"' l 'k oli~V I~ s'l9 A•SC Brew 1' 1l Ul, lJ<. DavlnPl i 60 31 191,-, tt•t 21~ -'I Chro•I s 11~ 11' w::.1.,, ... 20'· n cou.•, .. 1J'1'':! ...... ~.~~ 1~i"t1 • 1! )II lS cs ~~!'1 DG' l..a! 161 .... ~ '6' • .U\1 -l CPL PIA l°IS llCO 16 "'~ S5'1t -t'. Recol,ll Mon lll Cnrl•!"' ti 103 w::~1var 1111~ "' v ··"""' , "' 1 511 17711 ....,..~111 '"" t J.I•• :J.1•, 11•,-• .• offrt co 1 I• '5 ,3,, ~•1-'111 cuaa.,t I'~ t•~t<N rn&T 11'!o1l dav ''' ,,,1 ~~ 10 ,21077 !1•"'1,•••• ,•,, 121 U'I> 15 IS -~oe1PwLr \Q& 1, 2JV1 n -•o n'Ho-•o c.n, urA n >, 16'h t(tll~n 1\1 a·~ Jntt , .ie t'..a "'soc 1v 11 '''~ 29 19 -\j Del Mnt• !'.10 Jt n•~ 71''" ltl'I -•t Cltll tJtB 111.0 U\'j K•llWood •l •J Abe•llffll 16! 2 15 J H.e lo. 9 ~· '11 •nCty l 1.lO 31 H\1 26'• 26•0 OentAlr •O 161 11'• 36' .. ~ -'• · J · Clark Mf l•' 1' w::eul&E 1i> 17 Aavl1eu Unav11! !\CO< ·'"' AllCEI pUll 1 109..,, 109111 109'> -1'~ Dtl!ec Int ~5 11l.. I&•, 1&> .• _ 1, Air Ca 1fo m1 a surpassed all ci~y11111 s~ ,,, Kevf'• Fib 20'"' Jl Yi A!llll•ted 1.1s t.o ~""n•11n Fn .!,! ~as A11 A.ich 1 10 .so;i 12J•1 170-. 1n~. +"' O•M Ml~ 60 5J "'"• .,,,. •S'• -'• d C:llnl Md'I ,(1.1.;, 11'.'I M:et1>1 Cus JI o10 A!utre 1l 0112 01 fYI""'" u I. AllRch pfl.75 1lll0 56'~ S)~~ 5''• -21~ De:1nyR11 O.t 131 36 JJ\o JS ..... + 11 previous passenger recor s cnn1on 0 331~ 34.~ Ker•t PC '"' 10..,, 1-11 ""'"' 1 °' 1.16 ~u, B01 i• 'n' ~,, •,1 Ari A.1c11 111 1 ?! ~!,~ ~ •. ~,,",.', + .. y, g~~""'', '·,"".•• ,•, •,,•,··. ',',,, •,,'.. --'"• d · M b · 71426Ck>w 7•"1o2!V.Klnt El t 10 Atp!\a n••llll c:u• 1 11 . IAnRch Pl1IO -_,. ,T ..,....A.Gt .. 1.:. unng 2Y ycarry1ng • Coleman E 9111 10·~1Clr19sp1Pr1, :!I Am<IP 61,611 us B• •~1ot1At111Chtrn 1 191 21 11'~ 2N·-t~g:·~ plll s 61 •/1 ~ 11\'o+P.;
passengers for a total or ?:1::.· [,~"' n,,. ?:lZ ~::.\ c.;Olr! 1~14 ll~ :::: gl':1~ l~ ~; 1~ '~ ~~: ~~ : gl : ~~ ~~~:,..ccpr.. 11~ ,r;: 11~ 11'" = i: o:~~d~~n~.ol09CI :( ~~~l i' 1' ;~l'I ::. ~~
25,498,400 revenue passengercomce1 21 29 Kor• 16 161,AE••P• 1011 ~~~~~ flJ;1fHAu1s•1r °'' "11•\ l•'"' 1e>.:.-l'1 0e•Ed P!!.lO 1 9l~i 1•n 9Jlh .. _ •f 0 df F M fl · Crnl Acpl t 10 LMC Dal ll'> ''"' Am G•lll 1 lt I OJ c Sl i 't1 tJI Au!....,tn Ina 50 16'~ 16 I& -'rt Ott S!tel .60 l9 u ''"' \6\-'2 -~ 1n1 es, U ey . I er, vice com c111r o11t\'l 1t1 Linet ll :ni.. .&m 1 ~v ••1 •1s c~: S• 6,s 7.05 ~~co CP3 ~1G 1.in H"-?I 21\'o -•\ Df.xl~r n.11 n 21 1A\'o 1S\'o -1~.
Pr''gident or marketing an• Com lnll l\l l"lo landt Ill 9.~ ''"' Am Mui lll.lJ 1l.OI Polarl• S 15 S ,, A ¥CO ~d 31 2: ~>1>1 ;l,"! tl!i =l~,' 8i:~f::11n 1.50.IO ~ 11~ ~~'i ~~>·0 =1!: ~ ' Com GAJ 1 U'" Jne Wd 1~\:o 24\lo Am HGw l ~S 171 Kn>ekb IOI I ll .,....,. · ""'"' ,. g nouneed today 1omw "'ltl '1•~ :!IV. l or1 lnll 11 11 "1Khor G•ou•· KnldC Glh 1194 ,1 .• •,•M1 "~,, .;!;O )91 1• l'll U l'o.----1 iaj\m 1.0 110 16"' J', j6'"' -'• . omp ... •\~ .... t.i. c .... 1 ·~ 70.:. CIP ·~ ,O..IO ····-· ,, • ., .. ·~ • ,.,, 1 11•.; 11 11 -Yi 11 r' (2 • '.M'"1 $ -1'•
Air Ca l Has
The May 1969 f igure m' Com :u lll Ltl1;>1re G lit TI Grw•h 1JS-11•.'-'tt•'A,c1111.li11.11AvonPa .IO 109100\.J ISS'41Sl\.-4 g·· ~t,10 15 19"4 l•"• 19~~+11
• • ~pff llld JS 11 ev•n Tn II 1' lnw t,4 10.)'I Llbtrtw 6 IS 7 It -B-0 lcl•• ,.. n, 71'1 2,',',1 27'1 -~ Laguna Beach r esi de n t .....,.,resentcd anincreaseof53.7 P Mlh • 7\; ewls BF l,1•.n 1• Fd!nv 10.s1 11.Slu1esto ,.1, s:io,,-,w '" oet>okl .•ti 1 i..i 1 w~-.,., '~I" mptrTct<711;72•'1.lb E•ull l'•i lf"'•••Geclald 1•1 l,6l•oo,,, .. 0·1 001 "'" . 1911 19'• ?ti.lo 1''1-1-oOIGIQrqlo .IO •9 J1~ l6 ltl•;,-1 RI.chord ·A Brohams ha• he"n pe l over M 1963 Th •-.. " ,, · ~ • · · Btk•Oll7 os !.I 11 11 n -1,,,-.101111nth"' .:i. •1 ,~,. 11 111 -\1. . ... rcen a y, , e one"""' 6 6 ... t111>1 A11rcn 11.11116.0lttl'>!I 795 169 EhltGE 1-,0 •S J?l o 32," J?•>-'!.<Dl!I"' otA2 J !Jl'f S''\ 5,,Jlh+Pr. assigned SS manager 0 f . d th on A.od: JI ll '.otllew 6'l 7"• A•I Hou<1~!an: Loomis ~•Vie'• Fti•· Ball (;E rt 1111 11 \1 l• 0 llonCas .S& t 11111 16 previous rccor mon was l°" Comp l•'• i.1.1. lon talldv ,, • •1• FYllCI A 1.n 1 . ..0 Cana.cl 4011 .ia.Ji 8 IG tfl' 50 1130 6,,,. ~ 6,., +I'-. 01ntrC1ut1 '° 59 :n Jt 11 -1~ Security Pacific Na t io n.al Augus t J96a when 70326 on1•ftfd '1' t•·1L<>11 Et• 111110'1> FuM B 9.111o_se CaPll 12:1•11.u11:n11P!n1 ·60 •1 :Jel'• ,.,., 19i•-••Ol.5n•Y .lOb ,9 n 1s·~ 16 -'• • ' • Conlrln 6•, 7'4 ~Ynd'< C l1 ll!"' $lock 7.6S l.Jll Mui lS.•l 15.0 llan11P pf l 11 42' 1 "°''° "°'"' -1\'3 Ol1tStilt 110 13 !3 Sl ll -~. Bank"s Lincoln and Valley passengers travelled on Air C""P<I' L 19'• '°'• Afta c;a.e ll n,~ Sci cco •.J1 &.II ~.,,,,,1n 119 1.o10 8an11P 1111.1s , 31~ 11"' 1114 _1 D•Pt'Ol>l'r .16 1 •8VJ .. ,~ 4 '" Cr1wtarO 31,1~-, Jc C~ 3''4 15\•flabo;on l.t•l.t•M1uFlldl1"2ll48an•T• 11• 1t 69'• 69 6f~1o -i.ll,DorneMon 10 1• ,. n•, n•o -1'~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~:;;:~~~~~~~~~~:;;:~:;;:~~;,,~V~i~e~w~b~ra~n~c~h~in~B~u~e~n~a~P;a~r~k~··==C~a~li~fo~r~m~·~a~=======:o,l''c'' co "'' l) ~ M• A.II\' H\i n aan0s"" '·'' 1.JJ Mau Gth 11·31 1iu aarbOO 15s1 to l61, 1;10 1s.11 +,,. o..mFa 1 11q l 1J•• 11 ll'•-+ ... • Crutch Res ll'~ 11'~ Malnctot SJ 1' l!I°"' 5!k 10.Sl 11.50 M1u Tr 1s'ti n·n 8•"' CR · 25 .:i i1~1 SI'-111~ -'~ Oonnellty .llO 115 'o 11(~ 31~. -~ :vPrtt C U<-. 11''1 M1ngrn ,\s 6~1 i\11 8111!an l.llO f.62 Mates fto 1'to <ic Inc '1ct 11 17''• 16>1 16\o-'•Dorr Oll~e• l 111 U~1 11'\o -., O&nltl In :!111• 1tl~ Mu>Our 15'~ 16\'. BrOld SI 15.01 11.13 Mattitts 1J'1a 11"10 Ila!'' M~ · 1J 11'• 11 11 _ \.1' D<>ver Co .U •O l l1' 31 JI~+ ~1
Just this once, don't
hire your nephew.
This wmmcr, tliere are 1 lot of kid! who will netd the job
n1ore than Ju: docs. Like this boy. And not for ju!l the monty -
though he can sure use 11.
lie needs the job for all tht things that con1e with earning
a day'' wage,. Things like pride, sclf·1cspect, self..wnfidcnct .
And mos1 i1nponan1, whal comes with kn1>wing somebody
tn 1sts him for 1 changt.
Rfght now :tll ht needs is 1 summtr job -501nething to
C3rry him through until school starts in the fall. And it's
important he find one. 11nportanr, thal i1, if he's going to
be able 10 rclurn to school. The summer job could nltan the
d 1fftrtnrt -it could k,ctp him in school.
He's one of the young people lht JOCiologisls labtl
"'disadvant3gcd." 1'hty Jon'! look any d iffc rtnt than you r
own kids. In fact, you probably cou!Jn't ttll them from
!he kids on your own 5lrct1. They do n·1 wtar a labcL
' I l rn:iy Mir prise you, but thtrt are a lot of I hem in
Orang<' Counly, Sun1e have had prtvKlus wurk cxptricn,,·.
others have not. But lhty 111 want to v.·ork. 'fhty ju)l
don·1 know v"htte to loo k.
They havt no 11n.:!cs :0111ake jobs f'-'r lhtJll, no inllue n·
tial 1cl.i1ivcs, no fne11dsah1ong tl1t hiehrr·urs. T hty hal'e
110 connectio ns -unless it's you.
Most of 1hem don ·1 have murh confu.len«', c11hcr. Ji nJ
l ha!'s lhc \\'Orsi pari o f all. 1 htir only qualifications: l\l.'O
:tl:tnds. l\\'O legs, ~trong backs. n1inds Lhal can think, sto111a~hs
h> feed, feelings 10 con~idcr. Juli hkc your nephew.
And like your nrpbcw, 100,_thcy'rt going to be.around
f ora long Limt.
So, is 1hcre a catc:h lo all 1h is? You bcL 1~·,you -and
the summer jo b you can give one of the:w= ki<ls.
You've rtad this far, so you're probably 1111crested. Why
nol go the 1e!t of the way and pick up lhc phone. Di3l
632·JOBS. ~'e'vc liitd 10 make ii e1,y,
Nationa I Alliarice •
of Businessmen
,10111
Orange County Metro
1193 North Mll:cr Street • Anaheim, California 92803
r
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Danly Md'I 151'> 16\(o M M»nlnp 111 I ll~llO<k IS.IS 17.34 M~Oon 10:15 n :si; Bl!h IMI 61 S4Vt 55!1 56 O~hm l.60 JJ n 1\''1 n•i, -~-Dolt D•1n l'O 11 M Br-er .0\11 "2 CG Fa 10.2011.roMldAMut 111111111mlnd ~rs (\Jll lJS 1J5 -3 Or1~0C11 1 . .0 18 'l •j'• •1'·•-1 01v!1 Fd 13'4 U•t. .v.ct ShlPO 31 3:1~ C•na<ll•n lt.s.f21.11 Mooav CP 16;1111: .. B•v1clllb .10 21 6) 6J'n 63 -·~ OrtHll\d 1.•0 ?ii JO o 3 ''< 3314 -'i 01~ Mir 21 l ' M1yer 0 4]1/i 44\\(1plt tnc tJ....,,,11,..,_y•s US!l5,16B••l•Llb .11 SS "''~ O•t Ulio -1\00re1lr pl1.10 1G •1""-ol(t\, 40h-~ Ottor Ind 17 11:W. McQuiY l-1 .... llVt C1pl1 Slor 7.51 l .U Monans F\1"'15' B•YukCll loll l'O lflo IS'o I.I~ -n Oreslr pr 82 J l''• ]7 31 -"1 Oell•nce I 10\\ 11 Medic H 1' l! Cl'!ll St!• H.il l1.J1 Grwltt 11/IJ~IJ " lltatl'IOI J IJ •l•O 41•, '"' . OrtylutCP lb .a5 JI'• ll'O 3SOJ,, +\lo O•Lu•e C11 ••• 4111 .. Mecll•ont JJ\) 3' CNMlllll Fune!.: tncom • ._ •"ff a,a, Fas 1 1n J7'• ]II~. 36._ -••1 OukePw 1.olO JI 36.,, 1''~ l~I> -l Ottlll APtl ,,,. t>.O M'l~r .... t i/> 811111 1J.t5 14.15 lnwr I JI •11 geat Fd• 111 4 1101 JOO\~ 100''i -1•:. Oun8rld 1.10 JI 'l""' •Ho •3'1 ... Ott CanT 11 11 Mldld C•P u·~ ,.,, Com $111 1.M 2.111 MIF Fd 19'1411'11 edo.m1n .50 6l !l SJ Sl'1 Ouplln (p JO 26 1S 1!"> -~ °'' l~t(lr n•\ l• Mldlfit ,,,, 11~ Grwltt 1.11 7.H MIF Glh ,,, '" Bl!'d Oltk .» ,, .a•.i •I "'• -'" dtlPOt>t 1.509 1'8 1lS"• 13' 134 -•• Ov•P Am 1''l u ·~ Mldw11 GT 1s•·, 16"• lncom I.JO •.o, Mu OmGtn s'i1 605 8e«n Air .rs 11 16 15'~ 1s•.o -•i duPO'lt pf~ so a n~~ 11 n;v; -" Chiwev El ll..., 11~~ Miit RQ~ 1l\.\o 7•1-'> S11tcla! 3.)5 3.66 mu Omln to'11 n 't'I Beech Cr~ 1 1100 JO 11 n -::t <luPQnt ftl.so 1 si;•., 5t11~ 5'!'., -" 01em Cry 19 19'l MPll G•• 31 Jl C~~S• Group: MY1 Shrl :>o.•12<1'0 klco Pel .SG 160 :19l; 16 )11~ -1~~ OUQ Lt .6& /1 11 11 ... 71"° -"-i Oil( ll'~ 11>.i. M!H V1tG lt\~ 2(1 Fulld 1'.H u .oe Mui Tru•I 2)1 ,:ll ll•ldHem .60 9 :is~. JS'\ 25•• +l'o Do 4.ISPfl.01 110 ::io JO JO -,,.. Front IOS.U\10.12 NEA Mui 11.60 11.•l Bell ~""' .60 51 71 15\·, 15" . OuQLt 4pt 1 l2olll JO 2t"t :19'~ Sl!<hld 13.10\~.31NalWSpcl0.'111 .11ftt!I lnll<'CDn J, 111\ 11 11 _1,0~N>O ln Jd! JS 72'~ 11'• 2!'-<-1-14 CllemiCJll 11.:lt 'JG.lo N~I llld 1111 12.11 aem11 CQ I 19 ll ;i.t>a ,.,, + It. Ovnt Am .40 101 n 1, "'' 11"--1 CPlonltl: Hal lnwe-.• 1:01 1.12 B~nllll I.Ml n,s ~.·. !,?',,• :;,", _+>~,, -E-F-
Building
P ace Jumps
EllUltY S.11 S 76 N~t Sec Ser· 8en<lll0-Pl l ,v •v •v Fu..:1 1115 U.O.t Bal#>~ l1 u n .11 Brne!Fln l ,llO •?I _,., •21) •1'1 -11, E•9ltPcll to U 1f 11'. Grwlh 7.06 1.1' Band 1:tG 6.34 Btt1!1F 1>15.'0 9 IJO 116 111 -131'> Eosto (p :9Q ?l 130•, 17i,. Venl 1.11 l .U Olvid ~.SS S.lll BtntlF .. 11.:0 ' ll\i ,, •.• l)lio -... E••t ... 1. 50 1<1!1 171,, n !ommtrc 11,'-lll,61 Pl Sf!< 1 .. 11' B•nF Sptl,!O 1120 3tl ll't J6 • Ea•tGF 1'15t 4d l>o ll''o omSt Bd l,2S S.11 lncom J,ll l.J7 Btno""l II• 11'0 n•. 11'' + "'EaUUHI i.•O 5 1s•1 15 ~ omrn•~Wt!h Fds: Srock t tt 10.1' Btn9\0l!I !n 111 211, 11 111• Eft>t Koaak 1 JJI 1•'• '1''> (IP FCI 10.6111.64 Grwlh ,)o 10,60 B!'<kPho .nt •Sl 1•'• 73v, 2J·~ + ·~ E~!OllYI 1 .0 159 JI l •'• -'M•·.·~ ,,... ,',','.",.!!' ,•,·:! 1!:~~ tr~i. (l~.: ~i': ll~~ u ll'• _-;: l:1!on 1>11 it 1 34'~ 3''' _,, 1 "' &M f u ,)l, 2l'~ 2''c _ •; Eb1w:11ln<1 2 11t 10'• lol'o lnve•I 16.1111.I NtwE ... 10I011.1' M Ir.aw n '"•·· -·· -··,_,.__EcnHnMI .n 26 11'• ll'l ~lack 10.•I 11..U N~ Hor 21:JO 11.» Bit Thtff ·'° .. ... ~· -· E ~ r<IO 11 'l'l U' Sl I M l (With A&& 1.6• 1,1:. Ntw Wld 1•." n.1-1 lllKl<Olt l ?0 t~ ~ ~~·· ~~·· -=1 '" E~:.ao: ;., 6 ,,,~ 211. 11 al·c l Cw!!!\ C&O l,to '·fl N<!WIO'l IS.IS 11.n :11n L~u~ ~ II 11" 60"• 60'1 -•• E"lso11Bros I 1, JS"' JS Comp ,., 17.51 lt.I Nore••I 16.&a 11.6' ""'lie. . '' ,,., ,,., ,,,, -•·, E'GllG .10 '6 JS>; JS'• Com•t 9.61 lOJO OtntPh t.16 10,01 Bobbit •kl !'M I !'I' .._ 6' 6' Como 8d 9.ft tO,IS Omoo• 1,11 1.t' Batln9 1.70 U9 U 'll •l\o 4J(t + 1-1 U! < 9 4•• • •
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"' I l!b 7'1'l 69 '6 61 -1'' IMul ln.!lfg ~ 0'• 6 ComP d 10. 1. 100 FCI 16.141 .U o g I · 10 11,, ll'·• ll'i _ ~ E!«t Anoe 57 ll'o 11"• Ca I i for n I a construction COl'll•ll< s.19 6.'l'l 101 Fulld 10.•tll.'6 llolld Strs l 0 , ••• ,,,, ,,,, _ ,_,e1ee1 5Dl'c 1a 15'• 15•. ConcorO It.SI 19.Sl o ... Wms 16.l.S 16,,S SOOl<Mlh 111 4 ~ e I 1 N d 11 ll'-lJ'
'
•afuau·on rose " pereenl from con1 111w 12.1s IJ.50 O'Neil 11.00 11.ot Borden 1 ?O 20l JI •• JO•• lO ,,._ ._ g n 81 ln • H Con""' I"" $.05 6.1701111tflhm t.Jt t.l) llar9Wlr l.7S 7U 71'~ 21'• 1f -~EIPtsoN(; 1 115 11 '1 211'1
$.100 ·11· I M h I elm!! CO!P La 16.lt 11.16 Ptnn SQ I.I• I.I• 8cnn•11F .IO ,, nr, 71111 73\'i EUr• CP 1 ?O II J2 JO'< mi ion n arc 0 .....,_. Cn••• c~· u .n 1s.t1 P• Mut 10.0310.03 ao1 fdl• 7.0I JJ :it~ » Jt _ v. Eltr• P!l.ai rlD 1''1 71''11 ·11 · ·A ·r d' C•own W 7.17 l.60phi!8 nu16.60 8<111•n• I,,.; 15 ;311 1J'~ 1l'4-l~EmtrElec t 111 SI '• 50'• ml IOn In prL , accor 1ng to 3 CrnW 111 11.U l'.OI Pllvrlrn 10.25 11.20 llt•nllAI< .50 UI l5'1 15 IS -<~ Emf.ryAJr .9) l1 Sl''> J l'< , . . . OtVe<!h M 7'1.67 ?'1.61 P)lol 1,311 9.U 8rltvSt l.olOI t SI S0'1o !.O•~ -lo Emh~t! l.70b 9Q U •?'• bulJd1ng perm it 8Ct1Vlly reporl Dec1I tnc ll.)1 l'.Sl P!11t SI 1!.3411.l• B•i11 Mv 1 ·io 115 '1"• 61-.., 61~\ -~. EmpOlt! 1.60 S '9•\ )I'• Oil-Ir~ U.60 15,91 PIO"'Of 1'.ll 15,llO 8rll1My pl' 1 •1';1 •l •2 + '" EmPOr( . .ilb l JP, )II~ hi b o .. -. ft T 16 ·~ 8 I 1 1 .i .CV. olO''• -H• EndJOh~ ,nco 1 :11'< 31'"> published mont y y .x.-..:ur y Dena r t .02 '· Pl1n 1ny 13.'S u.10 e1wv Ha e • .uVt •• 41 EngthMon 'D 106 111~ n •·, Olvld Shr 3,tl •.JI Prict "'IR 7•S5145S Bw.-Ha Pl Al II 1911 2''' tt·~-'\Ennlsllu• ,ol l JI'• :M'1
Pacific National Bank. ~!'/ In 1 ~.~i 1~:~i :~:.,;dnl 1t~ 1~:t; =~~uc;ca1.n " u•, u •• 11 .. _ ,1 EautG~• 1.?G 11 J6'• l6>o
Aff sectors Of the eon• Orevfus 11.10 15.01 ~•lien 1t,).llJ..l• B•own C• pl 11 11'1 1111 11\o _ 1, ESll Inc 120 6t 11'• 21 Ettont.Howard ; Put~am Fund•. llwn S~arp I 79 201> 20 10 ~ E!.llulrt .JO lS 1' 11'• . · · · ed flalan 11,lttl,IQ Eq\/H IJ.1,IJ." 8w11ShCe 1.!.0 11 -O'• •l •l _,,,E,..,_l~t 120 26 Wo Jl•o st ruction industry parlic1pat Grwth 11.1111 ,.JO Gto,11 1'.6& 11.02 11ru11Jw11; .osg :i:n n•• 1,,,, 7114 _ •1 E111v1 c. 11 J6 l1'1 J1 •~ . . lncorn 6.•4 7.2<1 Grlf\ l l.lt1'." l!lucvE r 1.10 4,1 ,,., 1• )o _ '' E!nvl 1>!1."11 1& •11• ''1~ on gains throughout most of sa~cl81 lJ.•1 u.61 1ncom t.91 t.i. eucrd co .IO 1011 21>. n~-11\oo _\'I Eurotnd .10!! 3• 231.;o 2J Stodt, 15.SI n .01 lnve•I 1.* 1.11 Bt.>d<l co o! s 110 n·~ n·~ n•~ . Eurc!d tn.lOt 1 1G''> 1G'·~ CJ·r . Et l 715*2 li lll'f B I 6 ~·II 16•1l& .. -•1EvansP .60b 1~-~l'••I a 1 ornta ,,.,rs 4-• ·n v111a n . · u<:rtl't n · • ,,, .. ,,., ,,, , _,,, 'm••••• 11 la), i1 . Ji"~r~I ,. 0 15. VCl'Y•a .... 10.IO f1\lt!Fo•1 1.10 ;;.,
Residential ronstruction $375 t~;;y Sc ,~:1l \~:~; :=:eJe"h 1t~ ,::~ :~~we R•~ 1~ r:~~ ~... ~':~ =1~ ~~~:~ !75 31 ~:: ~~;
E •l1M"l51 t 1t la '1 ~ 111tnl •ls lo 21 B llllA. pf! loll xi ll\> JI Ut 11'"' + ·~ FacklrA .11 •• JI'• '1•-. million, up 64 percent from E;.,11>1 1o:n 11'.tt ~"''tr 1':"' 11:21 11~ri 111C1 1:11 ,, :Jt ll'~ Mil. -114 F•lr<nc .!.Cle 1u 1s·~ ,,,, · 1. · M h Eau il Glh 11.11 20.!.0 k<l<ldt< Fulld>: 8~•n<IV 70 10 l1 l0 30\4 JO>~_·~ Ftlrcn Hiiier 11'1 l•\'• 11•, 5229 m1l 1on In arc ac· ~s~, 1•.11 1n1 t.,... una;y1u Bur<9h• i.o '" 126'• 11s•-. 111•, -1, F1l•mon1 ' s1 1111 n
counted for most of the in-E~r,;;; In ~ti:~~:~ \~1 TI:!iis:~f g~~~~:sh1·1~ 11 n" ll''• ~r · -;1"' ~:\~rt' .~o I 6~ t~.,. ~;,,
crease, and c 0 n t r i bu t e d ~~~~"BMu l~:~ H:J; ci"'D1v5' :~:U ltlt -C-~::::i,~~~ 11~ ll n:! ~i::
significantly to particularly ~V: ~= lt~ \~:~ 5« 1~:'1' ~~ ::U ~:r~1;:~1•60 ~ fa;! ti~: i~:;:: ~; ~:~.:~J ~ ~~ l:"' !r~ s•~o gains in the 10 Southern Fkl Fu..:1 11.n 11.77 Str.c Am 10.1211.so C•lhlhM .n1 m 341, n >, Jl +2'.11. F~" . .o 61 21•,,, 16'• ~;-o . . edb Lo Fkl TtM 1',611'.GtSelS!le<Sl7.llll.Uc.mpAL d• "ll'• 12'1 31''1 -l FtOMo9 l.IO 11 n 31" California counties. I y s Fl11ar.r:111 Prwrrn: Sh De•n )1.IO 15.70 C1mp5p i.10 116 11•. ll ~• Jl\I -'• FfdP•c Ei..c: 16 11'' JI I 0 _, S Dy""' 1.JJ 1.01 Sloe lO.t611 .tl Cft11$ou Ry J l'io It 61 ii +11., F PK pll.16 t 1'"' 11 Ange es, range auu an lndust 5.0? s.50 s1vm1 1\·" 11.u Cdn 3,,... .«t 110 \Ol~ 9.. ,,, _ ~ FNIP••ld 1 31 JH'> 71''• D. IMDm t.6• ,.:16 Sit Inv 1 .61 l.•9 Cdn8rw In'° I 191t l~'I l'"i FedSfqn$ .IA •J 3:1~ l1'o 1ego. _ v ... 1 t ,os .fl smun e 10.1110.11 c"n P•c i 10 11 IP• IJ 111 _..., FtclOS!r ,,! l?l l6'<o :Ul/i Advances were slron~er in F1tto va 11111v111sw1n¥est t ... 10.IOconPatt"J 1151, 1s1~ 1s,, Fe•roCP n.70 1,s "'' 1•1'1 F111n Giii t .M 10.t• Sower Inv lS .... 16.t:l (J"tlRCI 1 10 • JO',• l(I JO . -'lbrl'brd .ltt 6! 11,, ,, m u ltiple-unit dwellin"" an In •1' l -stf'""' Glfl t.u -l.u en c ~' 15-:JS ,.., :u•' _,"" FllldttM l.A .. JOU.. "" l>lkl lrrvdS!l"9 k11Sl•ltSI !1.50.S150c1rt>ru" l «t 'n1," .. , •• ~Flll•ol, ,, l&'~ JS''• S i ng J e fa m J I y h 0 me S . l<a! lnSll< t.:tl 10.11 51tldm111 Fdt: C1rllsle . .e 1n 7' n•. 11 -1 Fin f't0er1t11 66 2P• 11 . • f •t ·o. Fii Mul!I IG.lct 10.46 Am llld 11.7' U.ft C•n:> (I.Oh S 190 7)>. 7J IJ Fl'1'Slne 1A0 116 St•o ~to Statewide, sing e-uru penn1.., "" N., 1.oe 1.11 F1c1uc 1.10 1.1s l:•roPLi 1 .• 1 » l6'• :i& 36 _ v. Ftrchrt 1.611 1u o\~ a::t11:o
d eed " I f F~I Cap t ,3' $<It~ S.M l.olO 1••PTch \ 60 tt ll\'i JS'~ 11'~ .+-I> FitNC~ 1.ltt i,•, ~ ... '1~0 a van "" percen, rom 'r.' Fd 1•.•• s111n A.oe Fulldo: irr1mo '.a no l7 :i.o" 341~ -1t-FslNS1r .so.i .......... l6 382 9 862 h lf !ti f '. '• 0 -'·" '' ')r).t7 70.fl •> ,,· .. l•" ''' ••> F l•ctlbc~ 1 .0 l1 St Sl1~ fi , tO , 1 W e mU p e Flld G1~ 5,7; •·1f i~• 011 16.ll 11.~ ~:~n i.719 1 2 331: )J.; ff::_ .. FlshtrScl :Ii 8" 11 10'~
unJ\s jumped to 12,143, Up 82 ~:~t"I ,;·~ 1;::1 1u:~Gth 'f:l? '::s. c::T. .«ta 1~ n~ tl~ lt!: = ~ ~~~f '150 n ~;:~ ~~; pereent rrom 6 686 in March F<~Mlln c;,w., u• ISi 10.1' 11.0t (OH pf Al.. • 1• 21'"1 U•k -lt Flin! p Al.!O 190 ... ,., 11·~ ' . . • Com Sii< J,11 '·'' 5¥"nc< Giii 12.17 U .. lfl Ci5lle0oe ·.., u ll'~ ll"' l1'• -l''o "'lint ""111 ls I al'1 ~•1 In Southern Cahfomta the DNrc 'l·'J 1•..l'I T'Mtt AP ,,_15 ,,.,, C•tff'T• 1 20 s•s s11• ~w,, 50.,. _1,, Fl• e C1111\t n -s1• ;ri:
. "' t f \Jiii ~ 7.70!'"""' 11.Ull."cc• Mtroicrt II IJ\'I 11•.+\,FI• Ge1 . .o •'•' ........ g8.lnS were ;)"I perren flr tr.com '• 1 n K11nc1 1.n 7.5' cc1 M p11 25 1 31,, ., 31,~ _ ,., F1• P-1 n "" In f --• 128 rcenl fO Frtfdn't 9CM. ftlt TKl'ln l t.IS " CKiO Co Jo 12 11'• '!') 'S« _ 1, Fl1Pw\..1 1 IS •S 6f>1 f:,,_ s ~es IUIU pe r Fulld Am 10ll11 ).1Ttchnol l.5cr t,16CtltMHC~ l l&l 61'~ •S.'· 6&'•-2 ~~ $1etl .to 11 11 31'" m u II.pies as tolal residenlial Gt" Ste 12.11111' rern• Gt ,",,""•~ c11a11 "'"450 1 , ••• , ••• "'"' + ,, 1111<C• 1,nit M JI\\ !' • r.1br8llftt HIOUtoT-erMR '10Cent<>ln• lO 60 !1 5S\I 56>t+·~"~ pl 3 s~ H·~
volume. c.llmbed 99 percent to G~?o 1c<· t 02 '·" f~::, i~ 1:.r, lf.1: c::;1~~ \'~ s! 1J ?f4 ~'1.1 -;~ ~.;,.,~1; .: s1 1:-1 ill\
nt1 rrulhon. ~ri' ,.SJ 1::~ l:·g f= ?: j:~ t~ l"11/rf1Pl,:U 11lt n:: Jt,, ff;! ti~ ~;t: $i:190 1t ~:; ~~:
(;rth llld n 65 n .ll Unit Mui 1 .n 11.11 1~11•11PS 'l! .. , li:I 'JG'' 20•,., -Vo l"MC c II 20t , ... 1~ Gr¥1Dhon 11.:M 20.CM Uftl!CI ._ 11,lt 1t.)I tftll•EI to '111• 111r. -14 Fool ;, "7o 1 ~>; 11'~
M Of f OE~~ 2?·t!t!~ U=P"ll"1J~ t.Jll r:r:: l~ ;: ~·~ i·r~ l,'.,., -!" l'Qr.:clC )~ :37 lit ]'I>, er "a-er '"'°Ct1'1 t,;i1 tnc:om l'-.t71•.1J tn\Sov• .IO 31 1Jh j ~ :n•.=1,t~~1 ,1·; f~ i::: r°~: ... :;r 1~·1I 1110 u~~13"c1n t:~ ::H :~,..'1V~r H~ ~~ ff ~t; ! ~ ~trc~"o11.IO ™,•, ~i, !f• H~rtwtu u .11 1t9' v111u. Line ltuf\du ''""".0 11t ~~ ., ~·~· -::!' ',!!~ .. 511, .n ,, '!,"·, ·,,".', SAN FRANCISCO -John HI.I: L'~ v .... ...,.,. V•I Lin 1~ t.«t tri·w-:t 11/:io .. ~·"'" ttiri 1 R ·-"k It h I l boa d Htoe• u .• , l,.1s 1nc:om ·" I e tull!IAI• IO ~ ' 11'~ 11 .. -\~ "°"' w~ 11• I \ 161, \(ll~ . ~ e , c a rma n o r tt.•ll-l'' ,,,. s.p1 sn '·" t.n E' su ·!:: {Mr, ?l,, {:t ~ = ~: FoxllMo ~ •• )1'1 »"•
of Transamerica Corp.. and ~u=: 1,:~ ::.~ ~:~..,. ;:U ;·~ ld!M'~ .J"1o l01-> ~ ~~ _ \'I F-.. •na :1 .o·~ •"'
J ohn W. Kluge. chslrm•n cf JU?: ;:f t1l~rr°fn0P1 s:!! •:n l::~'M~ ,lo •1 !: ~:!~-';·~Ac '" llO ~~;;-~·· th. board .nd Preside nt of lrnD C•D 10.7t 11.u Vlklnt 1.;J t. .. ~M<t~• Tij g 111, "'\ tt\IJ -P• .t.f' c.,,. '° ;~t '"" Jn, -lmo (;1ft I 17 I lj Wl MOf8 t.n 11.~ {Mnwo•n I ~~:.. )\:l' l''h -1 AF 1111 10 11 '9'1 l't't Mctromedl~ Inc annouuccd inc FM 1111111• w1ns1 •n ,,,n ·~ ~•rnNv ,, ''" "'• .-.. -•• ~~ ... Sko 1 'O J1~ ,~ •• ',it" • " inc f dfl l6t 1.17 W•1'1 MY 1J.• u ,........v .?O ,,., 111• I~~ -'"r.•rnt 011 t \ I " that the proposal for merger 1...re<lnd i1:01 lj. t t lltton n • u' "'1 ~., 1 •6 • <G .1n '0 -• · "'•mS a!l H ,.., 11•, . . h Ind l •,M 1''11 .!tWnt Ind f.51 ·i N-<I .,.,o • It j~i, 6r 1 r• ~'Jor;n~! S U JO;•,~'• of the t \VO org;inu.at1on1 ad 1"4l''v 6 ?l , ""'h~11 i'·!t" Cttt.efl<'o ., n .1r , 4,..., o t, , ,, 1f. a1.o !
been tcrmin1ttcd by mutual 1~ 1~¥s1t J ;r J:J "'/=n; ! ff 1T· ~1111~~,,.~P !t ~l :;:: ::11 :r0 -1" o':...,~ l'~ 1.~ ~ .. t1 111¥ C~m U H lj... °"' I.Ml I. (II Mottle l ' 1710 ll" :f"• -II\ Giii' .IO !?• .. :;;
0
,; consent. ..... (;~IO 10:0. I ,oo ""' 3 I• •.ot (!! P!MUT ' Ill »i. ,,~ -ll. Gem nl 1:.. )J 1'11 Ii
..
71'· -'" 13•, + '•
22 -" n•? + ~. 2i'~ -•• 12'1,-l>.o l•'• -'• 34"• _,,,. .... -11/o
11'1 -·· SJl> -.1.,
21'h + '• J! -•. ,
JS\1 + ·~ &lo + •1 ' . 11·~ -.,
15'1 + >o 1)•1 -'1 20'" - ... ]Ol, _,
:19'~ _,_,,~
50\.o -"• ,1 -"' "'" -1'· 7t'• + '· Jl'~ -v.
.)P, + '• 11'1 -I, 36" -1'· J6'o-''I
16'• -"" " + ._. l1•1 -1'1
J1''1-'•
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SI'• + '' ,,,I -t1
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11\\ -'• 71 .. -.... 1)•1 -'• 11'• -'• IS'I -1'~ 16'~ -1 ll\o -'\ ,, -...
1• -h :I'll\. -1 ll'• -1"\ llll -'• 1S -Pi l.J1~ _,,,
... -\'J -.lS'• -"• ,,v;_ :it.
Wio -o.
40-\t -'• 61 _,..,,
361~ t ~· 58\0 . 10'> 16 -l~ 11·~ -'• u •-. 401' -•• u -\o
lt,. -I• ''" .. -'• 76'~ -'• 17'"' -1 . _,
7)1\-11\ 'I -" , \' -1, ll'• -,. ,. -1 . _,. ..e•1 + ,,
JO -It
"" -1, .,,, -~1 >i·~ -1'4
"1''" :j •1o -'1 H" lO'· -11 .0'l .._ '>
!810 -'' ,.
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nu .. <111 J'"'! 12, 1969 , H DAILY Pn.9T/ Ji. (
Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete ' New Yprk
American Stock Exchange l~ist
l
•
I
·------------·----------~----------------------------------~~~-,~-~ ...... "
J• DAILY 'lt01' 4"''-'-------~·~ "nlursday, June 12, l 96t
ANIMAL • ....... Area Men • Ill Servic-e Around .,World
' •Jo. ----_;------' GOOD W IU.
ce:: .--MIJ. Dwtglll M. Websl<r, •
son of "1.lrs. Kenntth E.
Gerard of 903 W. !?lb St.,
Costa Mesa, is a member of a
unJt that has earned tbe U.S.
Air Fcrce . outstanding Unit
~·*"'· Tbe·maior Is ao F-101'1lelta
Dagger p!Jol 'ill the 2111 Com-
posll< Wing at Elmeridorl
AFB, Allcll(lf'l!•, All\ska.
Ll . ~ B, Gtpfert, •
~NG.¢..1 ·!1'·1~ :.~:
Corona del ·Mar, ls serving
aboard the airCrafl: carrier
USS Franllin D. ,Roosevelt at
Norfolk, Va.
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
546·7080 COSTA MESA
WUIDAYS 9 to 9
SATURDAY 9 to 5:30
SUllDAY 10 to 5:00
ll,."""""l"llnoME EmlTAllllWIT CE
GARDEN CART
F"'=i-;;;;.-0 All 1t1el con1huction,
,l en1mel.d fini1h,
,O Deep b11in m1lc11 ! it h1ndy for big i cle111 up or nitil for
· petio p1rti•1, i111t
fill with icil,
711
3 CU. FT. WHEELBARROW
a· 11'1 pl1ntin9 tim •
"9ilin f good, I'll
tell my hippie
fri•nd1, thev'.,.•
b•e11 looking
••.dy.I.
~ 0 Ui• thi1 for lt1ulinq
tool1, 1m1ndm1nh,
ilnd 1uch. a••
McLANE FRONT
THROW POWER MOWER
~-e---· ......... ,., 0 M1r¥1lout Mcl1n1
mow•r m1lt11
mol1hilt1 out of
t;~
0 Get ihe best,
you'll 11w1 money
in th• long run.
15995
REED FENCING
, 1 0 N1t11r1I c;olor r11d form1
1 t 00 '!:. d11111 f111c1.
MALIBOU LOW VOLTAGE
OUTDOOR LITE SET
0 Low 12 •olh giw11
111 the light wifli
no 1hoc;~.
0 Muhicolor1d lighh
with 1pi•1 "'ou11h
c111 be 111 1nywll1r1.
0 l11d ud11 tr1111foP1111r
1nG timer.
7888
·------
The ship Is scheduled to
return to Mayport, Fla. 1n Ju.
Jy and then lea·1e for exercises
in the Caribbean.
U. Cmdr. ,I e:•·• P. ~r laft ot Mr. and
Mn. Hay LanceMelm of 1256
Rutland Roadi New po r t
Beach, aiaumed' coinmand Of
the aubmarine US.S Hallbeak
during ceremonies at Naples,
Italy,
Lt. Cmdr. Langenheim is a
graduate ol the U.S. Naval
Academy, Annapolis, Md.
1965. •
RJclwd M. Stein, 25, son ol
Mr. and Mrs. William Stein of
121a Starboard Way, Corona
del Mar, was commissiooed a
second lieutenant u p o n
graduatlon from Officer Can.
didate School at the Army
Artillery -and Missile Center,
Ft. Siil. Otla.
Jlo1pltalmaa Appru.
Michael C. Houst. son of Mrs.
Irene House of loot Gecrgla
Sl., Huntington Beach, is at·
tending the Basic Hospital
Corp1 SChool, San D)ego.
He bu been assigned to
work at the Balboa Naval
Hospital, San Diego.
Eu. Ml<Uel G. Hoffert, aoo
of Mr. and Mn.· C-10 B.
Hoffert of llU Hell, Hun-
Ungl<Jo Beach, completed car-
rier quall.Dcallon pbue ol ld-
vance pllol tralnlni alloud Ibo
USS LeaingtOo. ' c
He made two touch and go
and six IUT0.9ted landings ill
the 'J'S.1A .. Tr•ck~" a multi·
engined, carrier based anti·
submarh\e aircraft.· ·
ht. t.C. MttUe:I R. 'NGWUn,
son or Mr. and Mrs • .Robert E.
Nowlin of 58111 ~Drive,
Huntlngto.n n:eacb,
participated 1n ope r a.t lo n
0 0k!ahoma 'llills'' ~ the
'enemy In Vietnam.
Two Orange Coast men are
serving aboard Ibo u s s
Saratoga wbkb was visited i>y
Pmldent Richard Nixon on
Mmed Forces Day.
'Ibey are Avlatl••
Of'dl•Kfm11 J,C, ftJWp J,
Onnaa, USN, aon of Mn.
Levina Whalen or 3 w a J
Calilomln St., Cosl< Meaa and
Altmaa Apprea. Mlcllod D.
Gencl, USN, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jooeph Geraci of j<l?l
Werner Ave., HunUngton
Beach.
Alnnu Appru. Manhall E.
OPEN UP A ~HOLE
NEW WORLD FOR DAD
A BlC BEASf
AT A LO#ER
PR ICE !
0 Adv•rti1M 1p•ei•l1 9ood th,D' June 11 , '''' l •nd i1n'f it
wonderful h1vin9 th• kid1 home for summer
v1c•fio11 All DAY LONG !,
SCM GLUE GUN KIT
0 Complete d11I with
1bouf 5 buck1 worth
of glue, 111ler,
new type 9lu• 1tick1,
•nd th• gun with
b•nck r•1t for
•utom•tic; gluing.
0 I Do•1 SCM 1t1rid for
South•rn C1liforni1
M11cil•9•1
999
BLACK & DECKER 7 1/4 INCH
CIRCULAR SAW
0 C11ibr1t1d
d•p+h ind
bew1I
1dju1f,,.,1nh.
0 Power p1clted
•·l/4
ho'11pow1r
motor.
GLIDDEN SPRED
r""~-· -· ff:~ GLIDE·ON ~ J .~1 0 ld11I for 1tucco, m11011ry,
l \ bric•, .:oncr1l1 blo.:•1. t •1b11to1 1hi119l•1, 1nd I ' 'l tole roofs. . i D Dri11 quic•lv f,,. of lip
l 111d b1ud1 !'l'l1rlt1 I but ,. J witch tho11 finger111il1.I'.
.!:': J 0 In white ind more th111 ! 2,000 d1cor1lor .:olon. 499 GoL
GLIDDEN ENDURANCE
' HOUSE PAINT
1 0 Orie1 to 1 h1rd hr1tro111 fl11i1h,
on• eo1t eo!'l'lpl1t1ly c;owe"
moil 1url•.:11.
,j 0 Tough oil b11• it 11on-.:h1l•in9.
Gal.
679
<
AUTO DRIP PAN
0 Yo11 r11lly 111to 9ef ent
of tll•11 for 111 your
big drip1.
0 K11ps #it g1r19• floor
i nd 4riw1w1y fr•• of
IHJIY oil 1111111,
0 Why i• II 11g1y 111 dript
11Hi to b1111t1f11I in
gu1hi119 w1U11 2s9
FATHER'S DAY JUNE 15
BLACK & DECKER
1/4 INCH DRILL
0 A wond•rou1 tool from th• P•Opl1 who
mike th• b11t.
0 Aw1rd.d th• 11fety 1•11 by tti1 power tool
in1titute, U.L li1t•d, ind if they ge•• dritl1 01c1n,
it'd prob1bly h1v• on• of tho1• too !for
o"e•1ctin<J miyb.71.
0 1.9 •'"pl, 1/7 tiot11pow•r, 2250 RPM.
SEAVERS 8 PT~
~,,-r:v:''J""-' HAND SAW
,."<.,l•.1 0 Thi l.•11 11w you
\ .... , t1w for the
mon•y.
0 I And w• only ,,.,.1c.
bid jolte1 Cllllil w•
don't lcnow 1ny good'
on•1.l.
0 Combin1tion for
cron·cut or rip. 198
RAM 1/4 INCH
VARIABLE SPEED DRILL
0 Htl"V duty '¥1ri1ble
1p1ed drill m1ke1
gr11t qi~.
0 Go.1 through m1t1I
without eeni•r pu11chi11g,
c•n b. 111ed 11
1ulorn1fic 1cr1wdriw1r
by ch1nging the bit.
2199 YR-250
BLACK & DECKER
JIGSAW
0 U11 for 1tr1ight, c;urved,
ind ''roll .:uh i" wood,
rnet1I, pl11tic1, ind other
tnal11i1l1 fli•e whe1'1
left7).
0 Includes rougli woodc;utti11;
bl1de, he'll wrench
ind holder.
1499
u.15J
BLACK & DECKER DEWALT
ltADIAL ARM SAW
POWER SHOP
0 The complete ho"'• p•w1r thop with 4ir1ci 1h/w1 f111
cool.cl ll'IO!or illMI 1t11n11el pu1h bolton br1k•
#11! 1tops bl1tl• i11 11.:orid1. 0 L1r9e No.,.1p/y t1bl1 11low1 011! fippi119 will!
bl1d1 loc1t1d •••r t1bl1. D Duel 1rber 1JtOtor 1h1fl p1rmits 1111 of ri9ht h1114 tool1,
199°0
Milli, USN, son of Bon. F.
Mil~ ot"lllM W •. Wlboo St.,
Costa Mesa, graduated from
Avionlcl Fwxlamentals School
at the Naval Air Technical
Training Ctnter. Memphis,
TeM.
Airman Denali T. Dillon, •
son of Mr. and Mrs. Terrance
J. Dillon, 15382 Cambay Lane,
Hunllngt.on Beach, has been
assigned to Keesler AFB,
Miss. for lrainJng in the air
traffic control field.
The airman is a 1968
graduate of Marina High
School.
Sgt. WaJttr 0. W~ber, son a(
Mr. and Mrs. Donald E.
Weber of 428 Francisco Drive,
Newport Beach, has been
assigned to a unit or the Tac-
tical Air Command.
The sergeant. a r a d I o
operator at Myrtle Beach
AFB. S.C., Is a graduate of
Fullerton High School and
earned his A.A. degree at the
College of the Sequoias,
Visalia. •
Seaman Appren. Robert C.
Craig, USN, son or Mrs.
Robert Doyle of 2501 Orange
Ave., Costa Mesa, is serving
aboard the light guided missile
cruiser, U S S Providence,
Flagship for the commander
of the United States First
Fleet.
The ship saw extensive ac-
tion in Vietnamese waters
during deployment in the
Western Pacific.
Staff Sgt. Albert R. cw..
nlngbam -, USAF, son of
Mrs. Mary E. Cwmingham of
13741 Jefferson Drive,
Westminster, is a member of
the Aerospace Defense Com-
mand's 28th Air Division that
has won the General Frederic
H. Smith Trophy.
'11ie 28th, headquartered at
Ma\mstrom AFB, Mont., was
selected as the best. ground
defense unit within the com-
mand.
Yeoman 3.C. Christopher C.
Strutt, USN, son of Mr. and
ln du s#ries
G_OOO WILLY SEZ:
Have you ever m1d1 1
Goodwill tour? Thou11nd1
1 do each ye a r, and ar•
11tonlsh.ed 1t the scope of
Goodwill lndu1trle1 op.
er1tlon. Come 1ny week·1
day for a gulcMd tour of
Goodwlll'1 training Ctn·
ter. Coll 547-6301.
590 w. 191h 51.,
Costa Me11
Open Mon. thru Fri. 9.9
S.t. 9 till 5:30--646-2479
Your Dollar
Buys More
At The
GOODWILL
STORE
SPECIALS
THIS WEEK!
HOLLYWOOD
BED
FRAMES
$695
NEW
Mrs. Eric P. Strutt of 202411•--------
Commodore Road, Newport
Qeach, is serving at the Naval
Support Activity Danang, Viet·
nrun.
Pvt. 1st C. Dale F.
Fleischmann Jr., USMC, son
of h1r. and Mrs. D a I e
Fleischmann of 9692 Villa
Pacific Drive , Huntington
Beach, is serving with the Se-
C<>nd Battalion, Second Infan.
try Training Regiment,
h1arine Corps> Base, Camp
Pendelton.
Hotel Special !
MATTRESSES s5500
Twi n or Fu ll Set
King
S69.9ssgva1
9
u.
9
1
5
I
Size Seven Local $7995 Men Honored ~=:en .
By Douglas
Seven local aerospace
Workers are among 2 4
employes honored by th e
McDonnell Douglas
Astronautics Company f o r
outsanding service under lhe
c omp any's Value in
Performance (VIPJ program.
Honored were :
Richard D. Noren, 9419
Geranium St., :!' o u n ta in
Valley: Haro Id Halvorson,
tn09 Bushard St., Fountain
Valley; J. C. Hill, 6062 Shelly
Drive, Huntington Beach ; J.
G. Robbins, 5602 Fernhill Cir·
. cle, lluntington Beach; R. A.
Adams, 7522 Amazon Road,
Huntington Beach: N. L.
Whipple, 16991 Courtney Lane,
Huntington Beach. and E. P •
Wendkos, 3902 Sirus Drive,
Huntington Beach.
Each received a gold pen
and pencil set and a citation
p;n. \ The VIP rogram em-
Extra Long
Twin or Full
BLUE TAGS
1/2 PRICE
BOOK CASES
59.95
Special!
BOX SPRINGS
& MATTRESS
531.90
phasizes the importance of the
individual in working toward II ·--------
company objectives and cites
those who have turned in
outstanding performance.
PILLOWS
s2:1s ...
Please Use These
Booths In Your
Neighborhood
Coll 646-2479
For Pickup Service
r
I
I·
I
\
-Fountain
' .
llf'IT........_
WHAT TO DO WITH $15 MILLION LAUNCH-PAO
Air Force C•pt. D•vid Riemondy •t Vandenberg Wonders Too
Southland's MOL Toll
Set 'at S;300 Workers
No ont tnowt:.euctly bow many will go
down the MOL hole; but 5,300 McDonnell
Douclas Corporation emp1oyes at two
Southland planls are affected by can·
cellaUon of the $3 billion Manned orbital
Laboratory projed •.
Eiecutives ol tbe giant firm announced
the dismal news in St. IAUis, promising
every d!ort 14 llbltt penonntl 14
ether plant' work or find jobs etsewhert in
the aerospace field for lhole who must be
Jaid oU.
The surpri!e announcement by Deputy
s.creWy of De!e.,. David Packer<!
Tuesday threw the future ol not only
many workers but some aerospace
facilities themselves into question.
· The great.est wasted expenditur_e in the
lncreasingly.e1.pensive MOL P!"l>t.Cl ap-
pears to be the buge blastoff s1~ itself.
A 3kLory MOL complex ~e.!I~ to
fire it. into orbit atop the mighty Tilan
rockets was acbeduled for comp~.tlon at
Vandenberg AFB near Santa Mana only
lhls September. 01 don't knoW what It will be Ultd for
now" said USAF Col John Walker, look·
Ing 'up at the $25 million structure
Wednesday as he conducted newsmen on
a l.oUr of O)e Santa Barbara County
missile installatior.. .,
"This came as a shock for everybody .
Col. Walker added. The MOL Launch structure -second
large.st moveable buildin& in the world,,
OCJC Salary
Schedule OK'd
behind the Saturn complex at Cape Ken-
nedy -will be put Into so-called
caretaker status witb no plans for future
use.
Cancellation of the MOL project itself
does not stop .work by 200 employes on
the launch spot at Vandenberg and they
naw continue the site atop a l,®"foot
cliff over the misty ocean.
When finished, it will be guan!ed and
maintained but not used, perhaps a 125
million monument to technology which
overtakes and passes plants built to turn
theory into reality before this is even
accomplished. ·
The P.fOL site visit by newsmen
Wednesday was one of its first press
preview11, since Ute tight security control
originally imposed now seems somewhat
meaningless.
The structure weighs 14 million pounds
and is easily moved from its stationary
launch tower by nine specially-equipped
Oat trucks moved beneath after it is
lifted one loch from its foundation .
, "t have no idea whether NASA has any
plans to take over this particular com·
plex," Col. Walker said, explaining
that the Titan rocket planned for the
AIOL project is smaller than the Saturn.
The Saturn rocket u~ in the moon ex-
ploration shots is too big to fit into the
new Vandenberg launch facility, which
m.agically vanished Wednesday as cot·
tony fog oozed in and over it from the
nearby Plci{ic.
A ~ of 11.3 billion had aln!ady been
spent on the MOL project when the Pt,...
tagon announce<t its discontlnuatioii, the
result' ol. major steps forwarded in the art
ot unmanned aateIHte spying.
Originally, the MOL would have carried
two astronauti oo .30-day duty shifts
which would Include orbital surveillarice
of_Ruula. Red Oilna and any ofher po-
tentLal AmeiiCan attacker.
ORANGE COUNTY, CAL)!ORNIA THURSPAY, JUNE 12, 19.9
.
3,600 Jobs Lost?
Douglas Paints Gloomy Beach Picture
By WllLLUI REED
Of .... Dlltr """' .....
A blat:k picture of aerospace employ·
ment • tn Huntington Beach was painted
today by gloomy officials of the Menon~
ne.IJ Douglas Astronautics Cocporation
who announced that 3,600 jobs locally wiU
be aUected by dropping of the Manned
Orbiting Laboratory program by the U.S.
Defense Department.
Offlcii.ls of th: aerospace corporation
LAl!C Surprise
uld lhls morniDI' that about 7,lOO of Its
personnel are affected by termination of
the program, 3,llOO in HtmtJngton Beach,
1,700 at Santa Monica, 1,(WJ() In the St.
Louis, Mo., area and too in Florida.
Chalnnan James S. McDonnell said
that every effort is being made to
transfer as many as possible to other
projects in the company and elsewhere in
the corparaUoo's f'10lly of companies.
"Our personnel uslined 14 the MOL
Harbor District
Breakup Urged
By JACK BROBACK
Of the De#-, ...... S!l'ff
'lbe county's Local Agency Formation
Commission (LAFC) Wednesday voted J.
2 to recommend to the Board of
Supervisors that the Orange County
Harbor District be dissolV'ed and a county
wide department of harbors, park.s and
beaches be created.
The motion, by Supervisor David L.
Baker, an LAFC member, also ~ired
that all assets of the Harbor District be
transferred to the county.
Harbour. The city maintained that It
should and waa performing lbt: services
and it sboWd be either compensated by
(See HARBOR, Pa1e Z)
'Sex Book' Cas e
Of Westminster
Dealer W eighed
Final action was deferred, however, at Sex books and whether the Coo!tltution
the suggea!Jon of Alliatanl q>unty ~ llnllld~ ~~· • ' Cotmael. wuu.m J )4cCourt tq~._.~ .... -,;;i~ .,.,, . '
LAFC slaU and the county ;,..,,.;..., of-lla<ili ,al • I I.ID.
flee -rlO W.elop ilU requlftd con-Friday In the West ~ -c-tJ
dlllons to, make dl110h1Uoa ol the dlslrld ~ ..,dpal Qrarl room ol Jlldp S-U.
enforceable under law." ~th.
TM llaff wu ordered to report the · <6.arng ariumenla by altornty Frink
conditions necessary at the July 9 LAFC Laven a-.i r•--~·-· . .._,_.. I f meeting, but I.AFC chairman Jll'Qt! T. olUJU _. u~ m ~ o our
Workman made it clear that thert would men accused of selHng alletedly smutty
be no further public hearing on the books in a Wea:tmimter liquor store Will
dissolution matter. "It is clo9ed," he conUnue Frlday in a bearing on a motion
emphasized. to e:uppress evidence in the trial.
Assistant County Counael Robert F. TJie attorne:ys argue that the boots
Nuttman aald today that the Board of whicb the defendants are aocuaed of sell-
Supervisors bas two options. 'Ibey may ing at the Hi·Lite Liquor Store, Jtlll
reject the dissolution, or, jf they accept Beach Blvd., Westminster, are DOl
it, Jt must be submitted to a vote of the obscene under state 18ws and are prcr
people because the district was formed in tected under free speech provls1ons of the
1933 by such a vote. It wu not clear ex· U.S. Cpmtitutioa.
acUy when the matter would go to county Accueed of sei.llDg obscene books are
supervisors for acUoo. Wll1lam Henshaw, ¥1, of 13191 P~ Cir·
Dissolution of the distrlct has been cle, W~r; Harmon Stuart, 58, o[
championed for more than three years by 17162 Autumn Circle, Huntln(ton Beach;
the City of Huntington Beach because and Arthur Zerla, 33, of 13721 Havenwood
that community was unable to reach an St., Garden Grove.
agr~ent with the district on safet)I J_.os Angeles book distributor Frederick:
services in the city's Hu n t i n gt o n vm.srut was arrested later on the same
charges as the local trio of men.
$3.6 Mi11ion
Budge t Adopted
\Vestminster City Councilmen have
adopted a $.1.6 million budget for fiscal
year 1969 • 1970. It represents a $800,000
increase over the prtvious budget.
Current tax rate in W_estminster b $1
per $100 assessed valuation. Tuesday
night councilmen deferred action on three
proposed park iterm which could bring 1
lkent increase in the tax rate.
Westminster just lost a $1.9 million
park bonds Issue and hoped to make up
the difference in slightly more than eight
year1, said city administrator Robert
Huntley.
A simtar trial occurrtd In Huntington
Beech in November and December of
11187 when liquor store owner WUUam C.
Bray wu accused of operaUng a '"sex,
sin and sadism" section of the Beach
Boulevard store which be then operated.
Bray was found guilty by a jury on one
ol fivt counts and fined $1,000 and placed
on probation by Municipal Court Judge
Walter Cbaramza .
In the current action, Dr. Jay Martin of
the University of California, Irvine,
tesUfled that he does not feel the fivt
novels in question go beyond the limits of
candor used in other books readily
avaflable todty Jn the commurUtr.
proiram have done a great, cre1Uve job
during the past four years," McDonnell said.
"Detail! of their accomplishments have
been classified, but I won't make any
secret of my admiration of the hard
work, professional skiU and devotion
displayed by so many of my teammates."
Even while stunned local MCDoMell
Douglas olficlals try to figure out what to
do with the !,&00 persons involved In lhe
now.<fefunct MOL program, the possibili·
ty of new programs taking up some of
lhe work ~ack may ~ in the ofHng.
The National Aeronautics and Spece
Administration (NASA) now appears to
be the only agency charged with putting
men into space and the military appears
to have gladly relinquished control over
men in space.
NASA has several projects in at least
the talking stage which could aid the
financial plight of the worken of McDon·
nell Douglas tf the company along with
its financial and engineering partners can
capture a share of the projects.
One of those projecli is conversion of
the S.IVB rocket, the third stage of the
Saturn V moon rocket -to a space Bia·
tion. The S.IVB stage Is built in Hun-
tington Beach by the McDonnell Douglas
Astronautics O:>rporat1on.
The NASA Apollo Appllca l lons
Program (AAP) would use the modified
41-foot by IG-Ofot rocket shell as a
workshop for !Cientists an<l scientific pro.
jects rather than the military ap-
pllcatlons assigned to MOL.
Proposals were received Tuesday by
NASA for developmental studies of a se-
cond generaUon of spaeti stations. Blds
came from three consortiwns made up of
from two to four large aerosp.ce firms
including McDonnell Dougla.s. mM and
MafUn.Marietta Corp.; G.r um m &'n
~ ~ Lock!reed ·l'lu!lea .... Splttl'0.,.1 "eenehl n;.;Mtca ~
IOI! TRW Corp.; Incl North. ANrican
Rockwell Corp., Ind' Cl<nertl Ddrie
Corp. •
Two ol the llJ'OUl'I"" 14 be ..iected for
further planning ol a II-min earth
orbitinJ station which could be in opera-
tion in 1975 with attachable modules
whlcb could increue the station's capaci-
ty 14 50 personl by J!llO,
Although Ille local McDonnell Dougl ..
Company Is lamenUng loss of the 167t
mll1Jon conlract for the MOL ~cle
developmen~ officlals said today that
they will Vigorously pm.s for lhe1r share
of any lefOlpace contracts comini up.
In the meantime Re p. Richard T. Han·
na CD-Wee:tm!nster) ts asking the
Congress to investigate the ramilications
of the MOL program clnce.Uation.
One of thoae ramifications Is the
possibility that placing men In space has
been turned over entirely to the civilians
with the military concentrating on other
activities in space.
No Umet.ables for either reassignment
or rele.ue of local personnel were an·
nounced by the McDonnell Douglas of·
ficlals. They said only that the company
is stUI "In a state of shock," but that "all
steps to mate the hr.pact as light as
poe.slb\e 'are being taken."
Electric Station
For Hunting ton
Golf Course Seen
The architect's model doe!n't show it,
but whim the $3 million Huntington Cen·
trar Park is completed It might have a
one.acre electrical aubstatlon 1mact dab
1n the middle ol the pr._.s goU course. Total revenues figured for the new
budget are $4,379,400. Included In that
figure ia about $800,000 expected to be
returned to the city from state gas taxes.
On lbe other hand, WllliJ McNelly of
California State College, F u 11 er t on ,
described the books as containing
"n:peUtive delcriptlons ol sex acts."
He Wd the teJi is ,.unrelieved by
literary style or IOcl.a1 vlaue."
Uthe judge decides the boob are pro-• Ralph Kiser, dlslricl _.,. for lbe
Councilmen wUI con.sider the tu rate
11'eli ill Aucust, said HW!Uey.
tected by the free speech provtslom, then Southtrn California Edilon c.ompany,
the trial will be over, but if he decides aald he would go ahead wtth plans far the
the books are not protected the proces.s.of .
j·ury aetection will ._..k. court aides said. substation and will seek a penn.lsslon for ------~ ... •• -comlnJClion even though the pailrbas
While school teachen elsewhett were
finding life with school board 1~ ad·
minlstrators roC&h tbls 1 salary season.
Or e Cout and Golden West ln-•~s found ·reuoo to apptaiJd
Wedneodaynlghl. A salary -ICale that su.ited them WIS
idopted by the Orange Coast Junior
C.ileg< OOU'!cl Board.
The new aalary 1eale ranges lrom
$'7,800 for a ~ tucher ug to
$l7,139 per Year. Salailes this year 'ffere
between $7.500 and $1,575.
Deadly Spiders Sought
been given 1 gre<n llglrl lhroogh recently
acquired bond money.
Parks and Recreation commisaionert
had hoped the electrical company would
withdraw its request during their buslrJess meeUng Wednesday night, but
Kl!er's atrnOlll1Cel1lel 14dl)' ,,...14 tend
to put the"\>arl: and subitatlon plans on a
colUslon course. The new plan pennJU teachen to reach
the top'aillry:ln 11 Yol" ln!lead ol ».
Abo 111n(e IM!iJellb wire more,Uuin
doubiod.. w!UI u.e· ll!lliOr collqe 4Jllrlct
coiitrlbutJng $lUO per' montll lnlt<ad or
the prmt>t flllO 14 medical ""!'' µre Jn. ..,,..... ' . '.J'..'hert 1leo were raftes for eveml!_g col· ••cl> lnStnlclon and,-· iCbool
&fichers. -
NEW YORK clll'n -The otock
markd today followed ttie eiample of the
olhfr ld&iona this w~ and W'Ol!nd up
tbt. day 1 loler. (See quototfom, Paga
14-15).
'Ille Dow J-IJldu>trlal ovcrqe !ell
llboul -poiDI<. r
•
Nest Discovered in Sie rra Madr e Women's. Cluo
Wary hunters today continued a foot-
by·foot search of Sierra Madre , bunting
up lo 50 deadly South Amerlcan violin
•eidera apparently hatched in a·women'1
club they quickly Infested.
Small as a dime and capable of running
~ leaping Ion& dlstall<a Ute Dglrlnlng,
the evil arichnlds' bJte caU!eS an oozing
Ulc<raled sore up 14 elaht ln<h., aaoss
(;ie!ore death. ,
AufhorlU•• Wednesday dllcovertd Il
m<J'(! of the deadly e:piders -marked
with a grim, violet viofin deais:n on their
brown back.a -In tbe clubhouse at Sierra
Ji.fadre Memorial Park ln lhe community
east of Pasadena.
A total of 50 were found In park
buildlnp near the clubhoule last week •loiri wlUI cocoon-llke 1klnl lndJcatlng ot
least 50 more had hatched.
AuthorlUes _..rate one of the spiders
found in the Brui.I and. Qille areaa ar-.
med In the U.S. acddentally 1n a pacro,
Ing crate and hitched Its )'OWi( later'. •
The hunt II belna IUperv1led by Dr.
Findley E. &...11, UllC Sdlool of
Medicine f)nlfeaor ol neurology ml
biology, and lncludes crews ol bit
1tudmts.
Houses near the Women's Club, as well as a nearby mort\llt)' will be probed
before the. hunt ends.
Tht violin sptdtr grows lo the me of 'a
hal!.cfollar ln<ludillll the lep and till bo
as deadly as a small rattlesnake, but Its
bite II only occutonally !otel. •
Dr. Jack Wetnc~. an authority On
splden, said lbert II no anU-111 llrir
cwntry• to lroal polenliol bit, victims,
but other medlcltlon la avallablo.
· Splder~rlg!rtened Soulhlandert c a n
late ~ort _"'Im. llie. ~ lhtl.cvlolln lpijtjn ...... ~--..a .... -h., ···~·JI '" ~ ... , I 'f'""'' , lliJnlt • wall aod ,
' Uri • added' Or.. -.i,, ""' ool-1~ "I ., • •-,
One nlJ!lied by' tho •lalln--sPider
elev .. -· chllla ... •omltlng within lf ........, a tUh within II llGun
and i acab. In five to teven d•)'J ...
Treatment I n v o 1 y e 1 lrlJeciron o/
hormone-,,..,poanc11 Ind In -coses
'mputa!Joo or ~ cultfns-odl of the ol<'tralecf W mra. · >
'l'he ' vlolln, lpidet'a telllale emblem'
I ~ ifro ftldr of 'the viollh irolr\l"'c to'
the rear, WlrDe Utlder the blown lloct, lire
' -II I ll"Jl-lrtlie color. .
'1The goU courae is five to aeven years
In the ~ture." said ltl9er, "ad our
substatiOn will not do anyUl1ng but com-
pliment the pert. II w\ll.be an 1tlrlcllve,
~-~ and will hove !el)C:l\IC
: ei11 p~,.,..inluloiieri:wui lake' 'l"l'Gni... the .ttJbo!ation,.' ...._., lot
ljrcllloii on the wetl.licle. of Gold.. Wiii.
Slmt ud north of Ellit A.-at 11r11r Juqe l7~. . ' .
l!f,.nwhllC lhe parka and ncrellloo
commlsllon -.!moutly v0ted 10 Ilk 1be
city «>Ull(ll for 111 lndellolte r..1111n1 ...,.
on the )and for. the ~ porll 14
lvpld Interlerenc:e from other poalblo melOpa..ms.
"I -~ wan~ anylhlnJ 14 ....., a1oftl IDd j<Oplrrdl• the pllo,. said
(Illa PAJll, .... II
·I
-
Today's£1Mi --------
·-
..,,,,. ,.,, .....
Jayme Boyd, 18, Will represent
Westminster in the Orange
County Fair beauty contest
July 15, the opening day of the
six-day exposition in Costa
Mesa.
B each Trustees
' A pprove Budg et
Of $12 ,409,043
/I. yrelimll\ll')' bud4et l o t a II n I
112,409,0(! bu --ed bJ the HunUnglon Beach llll[b School Jllslrlct
Board of Tnrllees llld will be pruenled
for flDat adoplloa-Aoptt 1.
The tncome, wbJch was cakulated from
curttnt state fonnul.w and laws is ex·
elusive of a beginning balanre of
$2,Z43,t94,
The propc.ed budget ls baM!d (In an
e.!Umated average daily attendance
(ADA) or 14,900 as compared to an
av¥Sae daily attendance of 13,400 for the
cwtent year. This represents an incrusc
of 1,500 in the student population.
Total upenditures -bUdgeted In the
general fund for 1969-70 are $13,632,606 as
compared to $10,977,8S7 for the current
year. •
Administration officials predict that it
would take a tax rate of $1.al to tuppOrt
the expenditures.
The voted limit of the current tax rate
is $1.39, f o r c I n g the district to
seek tax overrides of 39 cents plus an in·
crease of a .02 cent to offset loss of ex-
emption due to household fumisb.lngs and
personal effects.
The increase in overrides amounts io 20
centa primarily due to the addiYoJ) of
new overrides fot" educationally ban·
dicapped children, corrective measurd
relating 14 earthquake u!ety IOI! an hr-
crease in the health and welfare ovenide.
A decrease of approxlmateJy .09 of a
cent is projected for the bond lllterest
and redemption ftmd, due to an Increase
In the cash carry-over frrim the C'tJJ'Terlt
year and a reduction in interest payable
on oul$tanding bonds neat year.
Tile total tu rate for the district dur·
Ing the coming year will be ap-
proximately $2.Z2, but the tu: rate cannot
be establiahed until the actual asseaaed
\'alualioo is known.
SF Nurses Walk Out •
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Five hun-
dred registerec!, nurses went on strik.e
today at five San Franciseo Bay area
hoopital!.
• Weadaer
The sun's sleeornrt in again Fri·
day, tnl' at iealrt nocin w '1111 be'
only ptrtlY li\tnil¥ .tli<n with th•
mer0ury In the upper IO'•· tlong
the ccld!. ' '
INSm E·, TODAY
Gtaduol!ng /J'01lt • 1\1Uh 1~hool
can: bt an ·~' propor,.. ton·.:_ but .ft d«m'tr Mlw"'tOJbA·
See P!Qe-1Jl. 1 •
'
•
•
I
;
j
I
~ DAILY ~ILOT '!;° T"'-,:Jlmt Uj 1"' ~ '
• 1-••• t -" ;;t-• ... .. ~ --..... t. -<t • .. • • 'N~~ (iRO'me!f· lor ·Kaihleen -j •
' \ . ' • I · ' ... I .._ ,., ~ ''" " L-1 ' '
, 1J1.eac~ Gitl,, H.usbalid {;~t Jail .. fPr Drug V~latio,._
' ~--.... ... ' ' . ' ' . .. . ' llY"l'CM ~ ' ' ~ale dellapce el illdte .Qril!r'1 -:· Welli said. J6dp ~ ~
ot .... •*"' ,,,·" order. ·BOih COlldemolcl' J~ .._.,, lh'W &ht Ptft\n of UllJliltlell Utue llFI ·
Xalhleen Sue Storum. went to Superior actloo · Ill jire.oourt coo""""ilen u 1 , JOd utray by h<r cllinliW llllsband and • OoJJrt Loda)' happy that lhe }urlst who put "deliberate move to break up a happy what he did was for her best interest -
htr on probaUoa wilh a solemn and uni· marriage." , or what he thought were her best in-
que wlZ'Dlng wasn't around to see her They might have been better off lf terests."
back tn front of lhe bench. Judge Gardner and not Judge Howard Judge Cameron allowed Storum to
-~ '2-_ Jd H tl 1 8 ch girt Cameron had been ruling on the violaUon !land up in the prisoner's box and explain
•1w · year--o un ng on ea ol probation. that the couple came back voluntarily
told newaa~ before the court session The Superior Court's senior jurist hf() from Oregon .and that they were
tbit ' 1he ablenct of Judge Robert no hesitation in putting Rodney in Orange determined ''to live a good clean life and ~~ -tbe veteran Newport Beach County Jail for six month& and K~th!een take care of ·our two kids." ~ ts .. on .temporuy Appellate Court for three months. And the attracUve Those comments were offered im-~~y -wu11 tbe ~ thing that could blonde girl ~ho walked into court with a mediately before Judge Cameron handed JUI~ Jo UI. big grin, walked out in tears and with her out his stiff sentence.
By 0 us" ahe meant her husband, head bowed. Then Storum got up again, possibly to
Rodney, 21, and he!se1f both of 17662 Jae~ Prosecutot Al Wells probably .malle lhe offer a fe\\' more facts for Judge
que)yn Lane, and both convicted on drugs difference by filling in Judge Cameron on Cameron's edification. •
charges before Judge Gardner last the fact,, beJiln(1 Judge Gardner's unusual •·s:t down" Judge Cameron snapped.
January. Storum drew a short jail term, ruling. -j'That's all we want to hear from you."
luspended by the judge, and both be and "lie was told by Mrs. Storum that she The Storums were arrest~ last August
bis wife were placed·orrprobatlon. ~·ant~ no more of her husband," he ~d. by Huntington Beach police and narcoU.cs
But an eyebrow raising condition of "He.re wa$ a girl conVlcted of selling tis agents. Stamm ~as been described by of-
that probaUon was that Kathleen should worth of sreconal to a state narcotics ficers as a "hard doper who uses his wife
riot qaln aaociate with her husband. lf agent.and she was put on probation -a as a front to serve himself." •
Rodney took Kathleen home' agaln, Judge unique sentence for this offense-because He was described by Judge Gardner in
Gardner wamctl she would "'O to jail of her sob st-Ory which Judge Gardner ac· his earlier court appearance aS "a louse ' • d • Rodney and Kathleen admitted today cepted. an a creep.
that he'd not only taken her home again "She also said that she had started.
but be took her a.s tar as Oregon in a divorce proceedings against her hu:r
From Pag., 1
HARB OR BREAKUP ASKED •••
Ile district or aUowed to withdraw from
lhe di.trlct.
: Last year the I.AFC refused to Jet the
tity withdraw. : Thi dlieOluUOn re:::ommendaUon. was
•upported by Workman·, Bak'er and CO!'"·
tuuioner Frank P. Noe, a Cypress city
eooncllman.
• Opposing were Fifth District . C~unty
$upervisor Alton Allen and Commlsstoner
~arles A. Pearson of Santa Ana.
·• Wben the coonty Board of Supervisors
faced the dissolution issue in 1968, it
toted 4 to t against It, with only Baker in
tupport. c· Admi-•-~-r ; Huntington B<ach 1ty •~u•w
l>oyle Miller offered a strong argument
'1ednesday for putting the imle before
()ran&e County voters. . .
: "It is very apparent that the ma~oryty
tf Orange County clUea ~e ,dissaJisf1ed
1fith the operaUon U: the district .•. In a
4]elnocracy, the voice of the people should
ie heard. l{.wt are ... willing to put it to a
iote of tbir people: why are the county
~d the dlStrict hesitant to allow t.he ~
;ie ~~lu!Jity to decl~ lhe issue?
11iller~.
fOLJTiCAL FOOTBALL
i "It!ti. obvi<M. We·have a political foot4
ftan,ili Miller contended. "We feel that lh.e
~el are very simple: 'There is
d~action among the elected oUiclals
of the majority of the cities in this coun-
ty and tho8e official! are the direct
rePresentaUves of the citizens or this
county." he argued.
"Miller offued three alternatives:
1. Allow the Wile to be decided by a
vote of the people.,·
2. Bring about a change in the ~d·
miniltratlve philoe<>phy of the district
pd resolve the complaint&. ·
.. 3, Deni the application and force the
lmle to the state Legislature or force the
i11SUe to be decided by the courts.
' &'IAND PllESENTED
countywide commission and financed
from ·the county general funds.
Also supporting dWolution was Los
Alamitos City Attorney John Parker who
urged a vote of the people.
LAFC Chairmart Workman, mayor of
Villa Park, offered a lengthy explanation
of the w~e problem, saying "it has
several solutions" but concluding that
there is "merit to the proposal that since
the district was formed by the electorate
there could be no harm in submlttlng
the issue to a vote of tlie people."
Several speakers made it clear that
there has been no valid criticism of the
actual . operaµ!'.>n · of the district under
Manager Kenneth Sampson. But the ma-
jority felt the district's separate taxing
powert and· the Jack of overall recrea·
tional duties including parks, were
negative factors.
ALLEN OPPOSED
Fifth District Supervisor Allen strongly
opposed dissolution. "Nothing has been
suggested by the cities that can't be done
within the present structure of the
district," he argued. "I am against a vote
<Jf the people. It is the responsibility of
this conpnission to make the decision. We
make decisions constantly. We don't duck
our responsibility and shouldn't on this jssue.•o...
Second District Supervisor Baker said:
"Nothing will be changed by dissolution
(of the dJstrict). The benefjts there now
will not change. But there ls etroo8: feel-
ing throughout the nation today that
local goveTnmeilt is not responsible or
responsive to Lhe citizens. That i!
because it has become fragmented.
"People think the district Is obscure,
hidden,• therefore it his become suspect.
Changing to coum'y conrtol ls a s t e p
toward the mandate of the act forming
the LAFC -to consolidate local govern-
ment, streamline it,
Courtroo m
In Covell Trial
Covell Trial
Gilbert Covell's parking lot adjacent to
his teenage Syndicate 3000 club became a
courtroom Wednesday in Covell's trial on
charges of inciting to riot during the Hun·
tington Beach disturbance of April 20.
After the noon recess, the judge and
court officials y·ent to visit the scene
where Huntington Beach police allege
Covell was yelling through a microphone
urging thousands of beach teens to battle
the police.
Det. Capt. Earl Robitaille told the court
Wednesday he heard Covell tell the
crowd, "We don't haYe to leave the
beach. We'll fight for it U we have to."
But ~· Mary Hen.shall , a witness for
the defense, contradicted those
statements saying of Covell, "He told
U1em to be calm, not to block the streets
or sidewa1ks, to stay on the lot so no one
would get hurt. He said he would have to
call the concert off, but there would be
one next week."
Police witnesses said they never heard
Covell tell the crowd to be calm, "but we
did hear him say there would be no coo-
cert until next week," sakl Robitaille. A
band had been playing prior to the out-
break QM the beach.
Alter the day's testimony and trip to
the parking lot, the prosecution rested ts
case. Defense attorneys were expected to
continue their portion todar..
15 Girls Seek
Fountain Valle y
Crown Saiurday
U,IT ........
Taking N o Chances
Among the 4,658 graduates from San Francisco State College Wed-
nesday was this unidentified young lady in a tasseled white helmet,
symbolic of the rioting during the year at tl>e college.
Mine W orkers to S top
.W ork in Honor of Lewis
WASHINGTON (UPI) -All coal
miners in the United States and Canada
wefe directed today to stop work begin-
ning Friday to mourn former United
Mine \V'orkers President J<Jhn L. Lewis
who died Wednesday night at age 89.
UMW president W. A. 'Tony" Boyle
said the lay-off should continue until af.ter
Lewis' funeral for which no date was 1m4
mediately announced.
(Full details of Lewis' lile on Page I)
Boyle indicated in his announcement
that the services may be held Monday.
On that day, he asked all miners to
gather in their churches and union halls
for memorial services.
Boyle added: "B:eginning at 12:01 a.m.,
June 13, until after the funeraJ, there will
be a period of. mourning during which. all
coal minlllg will cease ·1n the Uruted
States and Canada as we honor our fallen
leader.
"It is altogether fitting that the coal
mines be silent while the men who work
in them come together to do honor to
John Llewellyn Lewis."
Boyle also demanded that In honor of
Lewis Congress immediately enact "stro~g roal mine health . and safety
legislation." .
"A J<Jhn L. Lewis health and safety bill
would be a fitting climax and memorial
to the career of this outstanding cham-
pion of coal mining safety," the union
head said.
Drug Hot Line
Direct H elp f;0r Users Studied
A Hot Line telephone hookwp to bring help without the fear of being arrested by
direct help to the narcotics user caught the police.
in the searing agony of a bad irip or t4e ' "The idea," explains Bruce Williams,
sweaty doldrums of drugless, friendless public relations director for Golden \Vest,
despair Is under study today. "is to opeJl a telephone line 24 hours a
Coocerned about the need, a group of day, staffed by professionals who know
more than 20 West orange County what they are talking about.
citizens has scheduled a series of "We won't be there for moraliiin'K or
meetings through July at Golden West philosophizing. It's strictly for help," he
College in Huntington Beach to study the adds.
The area covered will be that generally
-
.Face Probe
Jly RUDI NIEDZIEISKI
04' ""' DIN1 ....... ,..,
-
Sqme el lhe old lSii1lmogs at the Hunt-
ington Bolch lllgll School oonpua do
nor cmiply with otale regulations on
eulhquate proo!ln( and dlltrlcl ofOcWs
are pttlJic "'1l'ried about· U.
Aocor.llD( lo the district'• ll'thlte<U,
N~ end ~aa Associates, a
detailed ln:vestlgatJon wlll ·have to be con-
ducted, before an estimate can be made
on bOw utenaive rehabilitation work will
have !O be. ,
Tbli lnclud,. a termite Inspection,
chO!Ckln( of the exterim' decorative cast
atone anchor~•. rein!orCl!i& of columns,
pluter •\ftnllh on .concrete walls,
beaml,. glnlen, coocrele pl"" and joil;t
anchon used for lateral lupporl oJ the wan..
The architects have been uked 'to ad-
vise trustees of the HunUngton Beach
Union lllgi> School Di>tr!ct of lhe cost of
the investigation within two weeb.
At Tuesday's board meeting Trostee
Joseph Ribal asked Deputy County
Couse! William J. McCourt to advise
him of the specific personal liability as a
tru£tee "for aliOwing students to use
these dangerous buildings," by the next
meeting.
"I do not want lo incur any personal
Jiability," said Dr. Ribal. "These
buildings look pretty good, but if the
roors aren't hooked up to the walls,
where are we in terms of a major earth-
· quake?"
~stee Schmitt reminded Or. Ribal
that the board carries $5,000,000 of ln·
surance to cover such liabilities.
"I'm afraid you're not · getting the
point'," COWJtered Dr. Ribal. "I'm con-
cerned about human life and not in·
surance coverage."
"Are you really interested in the legal
Implications or in the human im-
plications?" asked Trustee l\1atthew
Weyuker of Dr. Ribal. "I think the rest of
this board is concerned with both, but I
think we should hea'r from the architect
first."
Even though the buildings are not up to
the earthquake proofing standards re-
quired by the Field Act, they have been
in continuous use.
On two occasions in the past, the
district has tried to get V{lter approval of
bond issues so that the rehabilitation
work could proceed, but both l11ue1 were
defeated.
AccOT"ding to figures presented by the
architects. 21 Southern California schools
which were rehabiijtated from 1960 to
1966 showed a mean 6ctual reconstruction
cost which was 43.8 percent higher than
estimated.
Based on actual costs, the mean was
found to be 86 percent of the replacement
cost or tbe buildings.
Newport Beach's stand favoring
tpnttnuation of the district as ~ was
presented by city H._rbor Coordinator
George ·oawes.
No New. Salary
Schedules Set
For Next Year
project. served by Golden Wtst College , Williams Fifteen young feminine,fonns will light They call it a thin black line of hope. added .
uP Fountain Valley's brand new com-They v.·ant to pattern their system after Presently about IO local clergymen and
F oothall Sig nuP.
Slated Sa turday
He read a resolution adopted by the
Ne~ Beach City Council Monday
night oj>posing dissolution of the district,
but requesting the LAFC. to launch a
!ludy to determine how best to
~anize the district so it can prov~de a
®mprebensive program of regional -.;.tlOn.
·ffie -resolution also called for the
Itarbor District Commission to be ex·
paneled to include representatives of
more cities.
The LAFC took no action on the latter
two suggestions.
BACKED ACTIONS
Norman C a v a n a u g h , representing
Westminster, backed dissolulion of the
distilef. He said his city favored an in-
tegrated regional program of parks,
beaches and parks c8J'Tied out by a new
DhllY PllOI
OltANOa CO.Ut ru•llSHOIO. COM.,AN'I
ltMrf N, W"' Pl'ftlltlot 111'11 l"Wll-"tt
Jt clr l . C.rleY \'let ,........ '1'111 ~al Ma1111 .. r • j
Tli•llltl JCtlYil ·-TA.Mt• A. M111,i.r~. -·-"'",. W. l ttt• WHllt• l•ff
AMt!Me ~'°" INtdt E.,._ (II) adltw
"····-.... OMlit Jot 1111 Strttl
M.111111 AU,.,., r.o .... no, •2Ht _..._
......., t.lJI, m1 ..,., .. __ 1ou......,.
C...IMM:•W.tln......, '--"""'' m ,.trW ,,_
No new salary schedules for teachers
and administrators in the Huntington
Beach City t>chool District have been
adopted yet for the 1969-1970 school year.
l\1onday night trustees met in executive
session for an hour to consider salary
rates, but have not yet ad<Jpted a
schedule.
This morning S. A. Moffett, district
superintendent, said published reports
that the district had "quickly and unOb-
truslvely approved a 1969·1970 salary
schedule" were absolutely wrong.
"We have an open-end salary policy
here," explained Moffett, "which allows
teachers to sign contracts based on the
past year's salary schedule. When the
board adopts a new salary schedule all
pay is retroactive to July I, thus making
each teaCher eligible for the ruu in-
creases."
Teachers on tenure in the district must
have their contracts in by June 30. New
teachers, on probatiooary· status, must
tum their contracts in by June 15.
"We have one more session on salaries
with our teachers on June 17," said Mof·
felt. "then both groups have agreed not
to meet again until Sept. 9."
Civic Unit Sets
Meeting Tonight
Members of lhe ,.'ountaln Valley Civic
Association will meet· at i:SO o'clock
tooigbt in St. Wlllrid's Episcopal Church,
8Z36 Ellis Ave.., Hunlingloo Beacb, to con-
sider further steps in the recall actJon
directed against three Fountain Valley ci·
ty councilmen. .
Eugene Van Dask, president of the
FVCA. saJd a general meeting would be
held and further plans drawn in the 1t-
tempted oumlng of Mayor ft-Obert
Schwerdtfeger and Councilmen Donald
Fregeau and Joseph Courrtgu.
FVCA mtmbe.ri; allese the three coun-
cilmen have not condutted themselves as
repraentatlve' of the people, and formed
lhe a1soclatioo as an atd and eye on local
covcmment. '
n\unfty center Saturday night in the 5th an effective hot line already established several doctors and psychologists are in· Boys between the ages ol 8 and 13 may
annual Miss Foum8in Valley Pageant. in the Cerritos Junior College district._ volved in the program. They hope to have sign up for the Junior All-American Foot-
The Amer!Cana Brass, six eighth grade Representatives from the Cerritos pr~ a real hot li ne ready for action, by July 1, ball at 10 a.m. this Saturday in the HUD*
boys from Tamura School, will begin the gram will tak to interested individuals 1n 1vith a published telephone number. tington Beach High School gymnasium.
show with a little music at 7:30 p.m., weekly meetings scheduled from l p.ni. First ser vices offered wilt simply be A fee of $5 will be charged for registra·
while the girls make their last neryous to 3 p.nl., June 18 and 19 and July 2, 9 referral , telling someone where to go for tion.
arrangements before the judgin& begins. and 16, in room l 11 at Golden West special medical aid, and counseling Additional signup dates are July tZ
Other ·entertainment will be. provided College. service if the caller asks. and July 26 at the same place and time.
by the Madrigal s.ingera of Tamura Hot Line would provide a service for The scheduled series <Jf meetings will Further infonnation is available from
School under the direction of Mrs. Hope drug users or relatives and fr iends <Jf utillze the Cerritos data to prepare local Ralph Rutherlord, 9952 Sliver Strand
Sauter. drug users who want inforn1ation and professionals for Hot Line action. Drive, 962-4956,
Tony Cillo, reporter for,~ Long Beach t .:~c.:::::..:_.c..:::.__.c..::::...====---'----------------'-----------
1ndependent·Press Telegram, will host
the event as masler of ceremonies.
Saturday night's program is sponsored by
tbe Fountain Valley Woman's Club and
the Chamber of Commerce.
The difficult, but pleasant, task oI judg-
ing the beauty pageant this year goes to
Marshall G. \Veiner, a Fountain Valley
dentist; Donald Fregeau, city coun-
cilman; Charles A. Dixon, Jr., pre£ident
of the chamber of commerce: Mrs.
Laurence · Erwin, president of the
oWman's Slub, and llirs. Virginia Ri ck·
ter, fashion coordinator for the May Co.
store of South Coast Plaza.
Fron• Pa9e 1
PARK • • •
Norm wort h}'. pafks and reCTeauon-
dirrctor.
'''Ve would like to gi ve environmental
conlrol of ·the park area to tbe city, since
the~· will be inYeating from $3 to M
million in that area," he added.
Robert Sutake, finance chairman for
the People for Parks, who just helped ~t
a $6 million bond issue over the top which
will finance construction of the Hun-
tington Central facility, told Ute com·
mission they expended ta total of tl,S'lt
for the drive.
''That's just a drop In the bucket,"
replled Commissioner Jay Mutrolanl,
"when you cansider that this was the best
organized and rno8t e«momicaJ campaign
we ever conducttd."
Jn other business, the commission
decided to begin with an application for
funds with the Housing and Urban
DevekJpment Agency (HUD) to acquire
land for an additional park al the comer
of Springdale Street and Hell Avenue.
·Arehitect Dick Bigler wu a1Jo given
approval of the final pl1111 for LeBard
Park and t<>ld lhe commission that "W«k
was ready to start wlthln two weeks."
Final plaN for Eader Park by the same
architect were alliO given the com-
mission's ao-ahtal signal.
7 STYLES TO
CHOOSE FttOM -·
These are very comfortable •ol• b.d1 for
Sittift9 ancl .Sleepirtg.
A wide 1elec:tio11 of Fabrics and Colon to
choose from.
SOFA BED SALEI
.... 4MM Now 299:()(r
W-.tfi Skirt' $SO; edra.
H.J.GAf\1\Eff fURNll11 RE
'
PRORSSIONAL
INTEl.K>ll DESIGNOS
1116 MAllOl I LYD.
COSTA MtsA. CALI,,
Mi-0271 t46-017'
'
l
··.
I
I,
------·T...ay~•Fl-1 ~ . . . --
N.Y. Steeb
voe. 62, NO. '140, 2 SECTIONS. 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • THU RSO/-Y. ;uNE 12, l'l.*9 T!N CENTS
---·
Populace, Not Collec~or Main Trash Problem
By RICllARD P. NALL
Of .. Dlltt ...........
Trull problema In Laguna spring more
from the popllaoe llw> !ho trull rol·
lec1or who ii doing a good job.
'I1l.J.s was the ·opinion of Mayor Glenn
Vedder Wednesday as councilmen ;ifted
their trash situation with a fine tooth
comb. "
Trash contractar John Lindley, Lalllfla
Beadt Dispxal Service. Inc., reinforced
tbe m&J'Of'I COOtention &S tie detailed the
Dowa the
Mission
Trail
Cap0 Conducting
Voting , Signups
CAPISTRANO -Regi.stran o( voters
will be found at scattered loca.Uons in the
area from Capistrano Beach to San Juan
Capistrano lbrougb Sunday. To register,
a citizen must have been a resident of the
lla1e for a year, and the County for to
daya.
Friday, regillran will be at diJlrict
elemertary acboo1I from 8:30 a.m. to S
p.m. Io the afternoon or evening to I p.m.
Friday, and Saturday and Sunday,
ftgiltrars will be spotted In area shop-
ping centers.
V ot1ng registration may bt made
anytime at Sao Juan Capistrano City
Hall, and at Sao Clemente city ball dur·
tng worklna 11oon. '
·e -cett: .B-.111-iw-r . -,---.._
MISSION VIEJO -Juno • 11 lhe 1111
day thll -membenblpa llo !ho Saddloboct Valley Chamber ol Com-
"""'"wj!I be IJiv<o. N.,., oaly m. -1<s
old, the chamber bas more than ·IO area
bu!inesllmell and merchant 11111Dberl.
An ln!Ual membership meeting ol the
chamber will be held Tuelday at the
Mlslloo Viejo Inn. ReoervallonlJ abould be
made with Al Blais, temporary
chainnao, al 13'1-3137.
e Sa•-Sipap Set
MISSION VIEJO -RegbtraUon for a
JO.week summer recreation -program at
llie Mission Viejo lligb School will be held
Saturday from t a.m. until noon. First
classes in volleyball, phy11icaJ fitness and
swimming begin Monday.
Five cU aeniom are planned for the
tummer. Program will end Aug. %2. Fees
for the classt3 vary depending upon the
oubj<ct. In addition to previously mentioned
111bjecta. basketball, ping pong. and other
games will be in the program led by Bob
Minier, Bill Brow and Pat Roberts.
e Se1"1'ice Center Open
•'SAN CLEMENTE -A "'.home away
from home" for armed service personnel,
Mie San Clemente Hospitality Center will
•" Friday et a new location at 10 S. El Camino Real, San Clemente.
The center is a non-profit organization
run by volunteers from 20 area churches
and local merchants. Last year more
titan 10,000 Camp Pel'lliletoo Marines
registered at tbe center.
Hours at the center will remain the
·same, from 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. Friday, and
10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturdays. Swidays
and holidays.
headaches ol k'"!>lnl equipment that can
Nfely and efllcleolly handle Laguna's
htlls and goat-path roads.
Lindley ·said he can't keep a new truck
in Laguna for more than two years (then
shllts them to Costa Mesa), has trouble
getting labor, uses two men per truck ofr
hillside safety and has hJgb workmen's
compensation "lnsurance rates (workmen
get bact injuries lifling trash rece~
tides).
Tbe people aeem<d the biggest lboro In
Festival
Lettering
In Bronze
Despite the recommeodetion of their
architect, Festival of Arts directors
Wednesday held out for bronze letters to
Identity their new 236-seat thuter and
multipurpooe building.
Archjtect Don Williamson, producer of
the Pageant or the Masters, had recom·
mended letters of acrylic plastic with an
anodized aluminum face which he called
"practically ageless".
William.son opposed bronze because It
discolors and "blee«b" on lhe building.
Direclor David Young, a builder, led the
brooze forces. Director O. E. "Bud"
Schroeder sided with the architect.
'The board agreed that William.son
might pick the font (style) of the !el·
tering that is to have four:inch. letters
. saying Festival of Arts and e1gbt-mch let4
ten bekJw saying Forum.
William.son reported the t h e a t e r
generally ready for a June 28 dedication
ceremony from 4:30 p.m. until 7.
Wliliarmon oaid a extra_. must be
added to the bulldill,g bec•nse of fire maroh!l ~Young added.U.,
fire mlnhil• afinerally ca 0 n 0 t reaa
blueJ:Crtl and ma&t loot at a constructed
facility to ... what else is needed.
In oOJer -· !ho board: -Ezpressed Interest In a President
Nixon day proposed by Laguna Beach Art
klsoclation and learned that Publicist
Sally Reeve ls trying to determine if the
President is interested in attending the
Festival. -Held an executive session called by
Board President William D. Martin which
is becoming standard procedure each
regular ,....,.g.
-Dierected Williamson at t h e recom-
mendation of director Stuart Durkee to
make a feu.lbility report on an im~ed
entrance for Irvine Bowl. The study is to
cost $300 based on a rough ~onstruction
estimate of $25,000.
-Agreed that South Coast Community
Hospital may use the grounds Aug. 30 for
a fund-raising art aale.
-Heard a report that the new elec-
tronic aurveillance burglar alarm system
is now operatiotl91.
-Learned that Contractor James
Schmitz will operate the Festival
restaurant with Kay Southern acting as
hostess-manager.
-Directed director Verner Beck lo
work out a location for the information
booth to be manned by Chamber
Mermaids.
-Agreed that the erpensive Festival
organ, given the school district after it
was gnawed by pack rats and recently
given back to the Festival, should be put
in first class shape.
-Delayed a decision on purchasing an
expe.nsive piano for the new theater.
-Learned that only $2 ee.ats remain for
the sh-week Pageant and that receipts
from Ucket sales are running $35,000
ahead of last year.
La:guna Dancer's Choice:
;$5,000 Fine or 500 Days
' Suttry Carol Cybulski ol Laguna Beach
race11 an agonizing choice today -pay
out 1 tota'l of '6,800 in Ones or spend the
nut 508 da)'I boblnd (DOI bel<ih) llano
So ruled Slnta ADI Municipal Coor!
Judge Pill! Mast In senlencln& the
'Lagunl atJ..nude dancer oo 10 counts or
'lewd conduct and Indecent ._, She "W•• foond IUllty by a jury last llfay 17. Jn aay event, Judge Mul ruled Miu
cyt>ullti, 32, ol 30lt Cresta Way, must ai>end 16 dayo io Orange c.unty jaU and die ~ llQhstltute a fine fur tllat l«m.
He accepted notice ol ~ppeal from !be nlJ<le performer, a pel!tjoo wblch will be
n11ed oo by the Superior Court'• ap-
pellate cttndoo.
• •• M1's Cybulski. ·-·-ol lier ·unadorned deni .... bef«• pafmll "' the
Aj>ar1mtnl A.()o.(lo w11 viewed b)' In
~::.·:&rm".~==
bankruptcy with the court and confirmed
that ber funds bad been uhausted by the
long legal balile she bas fooght.
Judge Mast dismiMed attorney Berrien
Moore's motion for a oew trial. He
declined to eccept the argument that the
c:oort bad failed to establish community
standards for tavern perfonnances and
told Moore that Jt was a matter best
dl!clded by •ooe!late benchea, Miss Cyboltld need not comply with the
sentence until July II, Judge Mui ruled.
It Is e!peCted that the Superior Cow1 Ap-
pellate beocll ..m ha•• haJideil .down a
ruUng by !hit date.
Tbe Art Colony tntertalntr, atUted in a
mlnHtlrted aalmoD pink .,It and sUver
boots, backed her attorney's contention
tblt the ca!t wlll be arrued "all \he way
to ·the Supttme Coorf.' Both she and
Moore refuml to dlvuJge the source of
rurm ne<ded for the lengthy ·legal pro-.....
(
the side ol the traah i..stn.. Undley
caum.md that 100 IMlaineues doo' havo trash coUecUon.
"I don't know where the (buslDtll)
trash goes," aaJd Lindley. "One lady with
a beauty parlor takes tt home.'' He said
it' was rough getting people to pay and
saki on May 30 there were 599 trash ac-
count d<llnqu>ncla. •
City Manager Jlmes D. Wheaton noted
that IOITle of the city trash cam on the
l>oard walk were removed bltaua :.
nearby bu!ines.ses dumped the day'a
refuse into them. It waa al8o l&ld Lb.at
one downtown business, unwilllqly, bas
ill, trash added to by five to seven ·other
businesses. :
Llndley noted that Americans are pro-
ducing more truh -In Orange GowrtY
si,s pounds per person per day, be said,_
compared to tl~ee pounds in yesteryear.
In 10 years '-Ye-opening Laguna Beach
trash experienCt, be aaid, he bas btld Ille ,
ra~ down becauae of cost cutting and
eUiclency de.spite Laguna's qnjque pro-
blems.
~Lindley has asked a ~year e:r-
.jen.slon of hls contract that expltts SepL
:3J, 1970, and a three year opUon.
He said he has done a terrWc job which
should add up to contract renewal. Coun-
cilmen agreed the work has been
genera1ly good but will at ne:rt Wed·
ne.sday'• meeting receive letlers from
bolh Lindley and another controctor wbo
would lite dly i.w-.
nie council -.ed qreed a!IC) tbal
there Is need to mate !rub collection In
Laguna .compulsory. G<nerally ll>I• II
done by adding it to the tu bills or water
bills. -
Cooncilman Richard Gokl>erc said the
Laguna Beach Cowity Water District bu
been reluctant'.lo like on the chore. The
city now handles the billln& but an oalr, (See·Tl\ASll, Pip I)
Lagulla Purchase Asked
For Huge Canyon
Coal Miners
Mourning
Lewis' Death
WASHINGTON (UPI) -All coal
miners in the United States and Canada
were directed today to atop wort bcin4
ning Friday to mourn former. Unfied
Mine Workers President John L. Lewis
who died Wednesday night at age It.
UMW presklent · W. A. 'Tony" Boyle
said tbe lay.oft lllould c:on\lnue llillll-
LeWis' fliiiel'al cfilr wli1i:li no dait 'iiU bDo
mediat.ljo announced.
(Full detaill of Lewis' IUe Ga Pqe t)
Boyle lodicated in bla ............... t
!hat the services ma.y be held Monday.
On that day. he uted all mlnera to
gather in their cburcbes and union balls
for memorial services.
Boyle added: "~ginning at 12:01 a.m.,
June 13, until after the funeral, there will
be a period ol mourning durin( wblch all
coal mining will cease lo the United
State& and Canada as we honor our fallen
leader.
"It i.s alto&elber fltt1ng that the coal
mines be silent while the men who work
in them come together to do honor to
John Llewellyn Lewis."
Boyle also demanded that in honor of
Lewis, Congress immediately enact
"strong coal mlne health and safety
Jegislatlon."
"A John L. rlwts health and safety bill
would be a fitUng climax and memorial
to the career of this outatanding cham4
pion or coal mining safety'" the unlOn
head said.
Nixon Dilemmu:
Shape of Pool
In San Clemente
Besides international tensions, a loom·
ing lunar landing, campus chaos and
other proble11U1, Pre5ident Nixon today is
considering what shape be warils for a
swimming pool at bil San Clemente
home.
Omega Swirm:nine Ppol Co., 441 D St.,
Tustin, ia rushing to complete the job
prior lo the First Family's August vlslt,
1pokesmen for the firm renaled today. ,
Digging begins Saturday and the com,"
pany-hopes to have the pool finiBbed In
about two ween -a burTy-up job com·
pared lo what !be ...,... customer g.U.
_Foor ol fl\'.!_l)iilic ~ are being
atl.llled by the Nbona -one an une:r-
plalned baby -shape -and a decision
is expected by tliiJ weet!Od.
The SpanisJHtyle ma~ion built on the
oceanfront bluff by the late Hiram H.
Cotton olfered only the ocean for bathers.
Spokesmen for the pool builders declin-
ed to aay !low much the job will coot.
Dana Point Man . -
On Water Board
Thomas H. Brooks ol Dana Point has
been appointed a director ol the South
Cout County Water District five-member
board.
Brooks, 3Sltl Meaa VUJta Drive, a
rtaht..ot-way agent for S o u th e r n
Callfoml> EdlJon Company, will rm tho
vacancy left by the mlpatlon ol d!Hc>
tor Gustave A. BrolSmer on June 5.
Broamtt had been a member ol hi
boanl slnct hls election In Man:h ol 1.._
He rulpd for -of betltl>.
DAlloY'PtLOT ........ W ltlcMnil I'. Mel
No ltlore Books
School is out for the summer and these Laguna student. make no
bones about being ready to hit the surf. Looking forward to summer
free from studies are (from left) Floyd Cooper, Candi Mccure, Mark
Johnson and Victor Lee. Charge I
Artist Quits Court Fight
·On Booth Discrimination
Lal\llla Beach artist Charles Beauvais
!!ai _.-bil ·court batlie_qeinsl
the Festival of: Arts,.
He announced hit decision Wednesday
agatnsl a background ol Superior Cow1
rulinp which have broadly Indicated that
the angry Art Colony painter bu failed to
state a cause of act.Ion against Ute
"Festval's operators.
Beauvais dropped hlrbrusbe1o and mix·
ed a !.., legal colon last year wben, he
claimed, the Festival operators -he
particularly lll!nted g-al manager ~. 'AJitl .... cll8ct'lmluted ·qa1ns1
him. " ' Tb<~~ncs tl\at Abel bad asaum-
ed "uOlliniUd'1irid'dlC!iltorial powen" In
his allocall6n <!I bootlts lo Festival ll'llsts
ai1d that ' his ob)ec\IOOI lo Beauvais
himself ex1tnded to !ho point ol placing
the pal<tle performer behind a large
tm.
Other "m"'doua" action& by Abel in-
cluded !be _al m_,.,.'10mbllon ol
Bllllvali' jitiolqgriob !tom a 1.,una ~·· Fett.ival coverage, the com-p llMI.
l!ea'!val! ul!f he 1Qot lt.OIO beca111e o1
the "many acts·of discriminatJpn'' prac.
lit:<d apimt.hlm.~·u,...111ylb1ns
lite that amount this year," be said
Wednnctay, "because I won't be there.
"Many ol the exhi bitors who failed to
back me ln my court lllit last year are
now wJshlng they had," Beauvais said.
"Things are even tighter than they were
then and it's my predJctlon that before
Jong the Festival people will have
everyone wearJng little berets and
specially designed ll'llsts' amocl<a to
ensure that the v~ittng public IN the
right Image.
"The same CGnd.IUons ·pre v a 11, ''
Beauvais .sakf. ••nere lfr no true rotaUon
In tbe atlocoUon ol boolha IO 11'11811 who
wish lo eihlblt and Ibero never·ww be as
long .. they ICCOpl this lllale of affalra.
NEW YORK (UPI) -n.e atoct
martet.ll>d>Y followed the example ol the
other l<llllooJ this week and .......i up
the '3y a looer. (See quotatlooa, Pages
14-IJ) •
Are.a
Dilley Seeking
Big Greenbelt
For $4 Million
By JACK CllAPPELL
Of ... Dlllr ..... ,,.,.
• It bas beeo said !bat It ls better to light
one little caod!e than to curse the
darkness.
~an Jim Dilley hall a floodllgbl
and he's shining Jt on 540 acres of land
called Sycamore Hills located between
La&una """ ,\llao ca-.
1-a c:hasilploa for iw-·-ol naltlral Wl<I, Dilley, nin-ttoc tho
. Lquu. Greonbelt Commltlee, bas pro-
pelled lbat Ille <M1 -to purdlue Ibo
property for about IU million.
l'he money woWd be obtailled by !ho cl·
ty f<r that pun>O!W! rrom the state t.Ddl
Oommissk)o. he Sl)'I. ........ J.. •'This is a c1t.L.. .• ' appeal to the city
council to purchase !ho property lot
preterVation," Dilley Wd.
"It is an appcrtal to citlien$, too, to
atand with "' and see throolh !be purchase. ll tbe state Lands Commiaion
doesn't cune through, we must dig into
our own pockets."
The property is owned by the Gr<at
Late! Properties Corporatlon. ll wu
bought by tbe company about three year1
aao, DUiey said, for • figure of.about ..
million. Development plans called for
building about 500 one-halt acre atateJ
lSee GREENBELT, I'll" l)
Another Laguna
Coach Resigns
Another Laguna Beach !Ugh School
coach has resigned.
Ed Bowen, 36-year-old ualstant vanit.J'
foolball coach. turned In his m!gnaUon
today -the fifth ArUlt mentor to have
resigned or ~n firect In recent weeks.
Track coach Jack Lythgoe was tired
last month and four other coaches have
since quit in protest both over Lylbaoe's
dismissal and diug)'eements with pr!J>.
dpal Bob neev ...
8""en, who bad coached al Laguna for
10 :rears, was also the school's bead golt
coach. The other coachel who've resigned are
lightweight football coaches Warrtn
Walkins and Jerry Neumann and head
baseball coach .Norm Borucki.
For full detalll, see stcry on page 23.
Or ....
WNdter
The sun '1 sleeping ln qain Fri·
day, UU at least noon and ll'll be
only portly ounny then wilb the
mercury In the uwer !0'1 along
the coast.
INSmE TODA.Y
Grad .. t"'9 fr.., hig~ achoo!
am be an eJ:pt"MWe ·wopors•
ton -but it dotm't hctlf to br.
Sre Pao• ·11. -" = ...... tr --~ ~c.... '' ,..... ...,.,. l4
..... ..... U•• -.... --........ ~·· ·-.. -" -.
--ft --..
J DAILY '11.0T •· L, . . .. ~ ~ . ;
Cleaver's • -
Funds 'Held' .. ,, ....
' ~y'rreasury
}YASllJNGTON (AP) -The TreASUry
Dtpartment has blocked the U.S. !lnan-
cial assets or black mlllt1J1t Eldridge
Cleanr on sroundl that he la Illegally ln
Cilba, ~ Stal,'De\lenmenl Aid loday.
"'-O!nC.r Robert J. 'Mc;Closkey said
the clampdown on Cle4ver's funds was
taken under Cuban c:ontrol regulatlons taiued under the Tradin&' with. the
Enemy Ac!.
Cleaver, a leader ln the Black Panther
organization and author of the best.-sell-
Ing boot "Soul on Ice," Is wanted Jn
Califcrn.La to serve out a IS-year prison
aentence fdt asu.uJt ·•tth ~illtent to kin
and assault with a deadly weapon. He has
been IOUgbt since he falled to appear last
November following revocation of his
parole.
The State Department announcement
gave official · confirmation to press
re)>Orls that Cleaver had fled to Havana.
''We 1n· the State Department are
salilfied that Cleaver is in Havana," the
l()Dftlman said.
McCloelr:ey declined tt &ay how much of
Cleaver'• -tnoriey -i& frozen by ·lhe
Ttusury action. U.S. officials Indicated
t.be blocked funds woold include, among
other things, income from Cleaver's
writings.
Tbe State Department spokesman in·
dicated it is unlikely that the United
states wlll ask OJba . for formal ex·
tra~ .clelvet. .
He Uta the 1904 U.S.-CUban extradition
treaty providea for rtlum or criminals
wanted for such deeds as murder, rob--
bery and kidnaplng, but "political
crimes are exempted under the treaty.
Cleaver contends the revocation of his
parole was poHUcally moUva~.
Furthermore, McCJosftY· iioted," "it Is
virtually Impossible to apply .the lerm11 of
the treaty in the absence of diplomaUc relations." • ·
From Pase 1
GREENBELT • •
aloog with multiple hoaliiii" and two com·
mercia.l shopping ctaWs.
"Obvio~y. such devele>pment would
destroy the natural beaVty of the canyons
and eli!111nate forever .the posslblll1y of
our t.nuna Gr~n'beJ(, '" the Lagunan Uid. I ._ ' l
''Thli.Jand muSt be purchased if it ls to
be sate:!, and ft..Pl.ned assurances from
the coiftpany of thttr willingness to sell at
a stated price ol IU million," he said.
Tbe greenbelt concept pushed by the
citizens committee involves the con-
servation of a mtural zone of land around
the city -lhls for its landscape,
ecological, and watershed values.
In a listing of the advantages of the
land, a number of • recreational ad·
vent.ages are noted.
According to the Cominlttee, three·
large parka were sugcested for. the in-
terior area in a ctty study two years ago.
other sections of the land would pro-
vide areas for hiking, riding and related
activities, Dilley said. ' 1bl" _....erty also Ues with.in the
Laguna ~ch Unified School District. As
populatiotl climbs, sites for new schools
have-become dHfk:ult to find in hilly
Lagtm&. The "50-acre spot could be a
1oglca'I location for a school if city
development continues, officials said.
The dlstrict paitf about $280,000 for
Thurston Intermediate's 14-acre site.
The city as o{ yet has taken no acllon
on the proposal pendi n1 an lnvest11ation
of the matter.
Dilley. however, ha! already received a
$100 ®nation to the Greenbelt Committee
for purchase of the $4.S million tract.
.
Swedes Chide Russ
MOSCOW (UPI) -Sweden's Com-
mlll'liBt party Wday condemned the
Soviet·led invasion o( Czechoslovakia and
told . t~ Communist summit conference
here-tt could not support lhe meeting's
basic document which includes an
analysis of the internallonal situation.
I
OAllY Pl\Q I
OAAH'~ CC>Mt PU•L IJHING COMMN'I'
•• ..,. "· w ••• ,.rnw.nl ........ ....,
J•ck •. c;.,1..,
Via,.,...._.. 1101t °""' .. IN11ttl'•
TMMtii JCt1Y'll ....
T\•111•1 A. MM.,.lli"' ~ ... ldltor
~rclri•t4 P. Nttl L-•ff<h <lf'I' adll9r .._ __
212 Ftrt•I AYI.
MtHl"f A•••tt11 P.O. I•~ 661, 92111 --Cell• Mtw1 Jll -1 .... ,1..,1 ~ hood!~ 2711 W•I ................ ,.
...... lltUI: -Slfl ltrt.t
I '
ALMOST ALUMNI DEPT. -I'm
trying to take my la.st few hours of hlgh
school nice and slow, .aort of letting it
sink In.
Tonight it all comes lo an end. I and
200 ~r classmates have spent ap-
proximately 4,800 hours of class lime at
the old Alma Mater. That's a lot of
education.
With the sweep of the second hand. and
a hand.shaft ~ith either Dr. Norman
Browne or )\o~ Turner of the school
board, it will all draw to a close. I'll ac-
cept my diplonui , walk off the stage of
one of the m~ fantastic sites for 11
graduation -lrvlne Bowl -contemplate
tile spiril or. 169, and fight back the tears.
Well, _;hat'• whit my peers say .
I don't thin~ I'll cry. After lasting
through four years of Laguna Beach High
School, I'm conditioned enough to take
any tragedy without tears. The class of
'69 has gone through a lot o( rou.gh
going. ·
In fact, don't be surprised if you hear
some laughing within the cluster of
maroon and white robes. OUr class has
exhausted five differint administrations.
But that's not really so funny.
There were the happier moments. Like
watching Brian Bagley dive over the goal
line in the fleeting seconds of the La
Quinta ClF football game. We won , 14 te>
13. It's a sweet sight watching coach
AkJm yell in elation. I waan't watchlnj
. ·' . '
the La Quinta coach, but I can imagine , ,
We try lo forget things li)ce Jim Kuhn
breaking his hand in the Mission Viejo
game, w~ there was really no contest
fo r the v~c .
And th e are tbe rtwardlng moments
-lik"' e Senior Class fund drive for
Bia fran relief. The Dating Game was
very rewarding -with a grand prize or a
trip to San Francisco. Tom Tabor was
the chief engineer there. •
Then there wert all the great drama
productions, climaxed by this year'•
Brigadoon. John Chambfrlin, Ni c'k
Enright (will . we ever f(n'get ?Vck?),
• Glenn Daniels, !.1erilee Mapu.son ~ tbe
whole crew did another far out job on the
crumbling stage.
Rob Kronman made his impact on the
community, too. Just turn to page 197 In.
lhe yearbook, and read his me!sage of
Love wit hin the Youth Council. He was
president.
And there was a first this year, thanks
to the great spirit of Mark John.son and
Ron Coonrad, Boy yell leaders really
complemented tbe wi~ teams.
Talent abounded in the class 0£ '69.
\Vilh the. singing of Leah Cano, super
musician Ralf Reynolds (also voted class
comic), the electric sounds of Bob
Wright, GI¥ Cooper, Mike Loge, the beat
of Bret lABarts and the harmonica of
Pete Ollver, the halls were always filled
500 Students Sign Up
For Schools in Summer . . ---Appioximaiely 500 students h a v e
enrolled· In the six·week summer pro-
gram fOI" Laguna schools which beglnJ
June 23'and ends Aug. 1.
Classes will be h<ld al lh< high school
from a a.m. until noon dally. There wlll
be no bus service. The district has
employed 19 teachers for the session.
School is divided into four sections :
primary. kinder1arten through third
grade; elementary, fourth through sixth;
intermediate. seventh and eighth; and
high school subjects for which five units
may be earned.
Classes for high school students will be
pre-algebra, algebra, geometry, drivers
training, sewing and typing.
Elementary class subjects include
math, science, developmental reacting,
remedial math, Spanish, art edence,
ceramica, drama, reading·llterature, and
. music. Students may'take three classes.
Twc>hour intermediate 1ubjectl are
.remedial math, typing, wood and met.al
shop, choru11, se~ng and band. Students
may take two subjects.
Students have been asked to anive at
school before 8 a.m. A classroom lilt will
be posted on the· north .campus (old
Thurslon bulldlng). There will be sbarl
Saddleback Hires
New Consultant
Saddleback College has hired a con--
sultant at a rate of $10 a day plus ex-
penses to coorolnate planning: for first
permanent buildings on its new campus.
He is Dr. C. C. Colvert, director of a
rloctorat.e-level program in junior college
education af the Un!Venlty of Texas.
Dr. Colvert. who will be employed for
not h> exceed 25 days, repla ces Dr.
James W. Hobson, UCLA vice chancellor.
Dr. Hobson resigned his consultant posi-
tion with Saddleback because of in·
creased duties at UCLA.
Dr. Colvert will coordinate the in~
structors' ideas on what they want In
fa cilities with the architect.
The first group of permanent buildings
is now being planned with construction to
begin later this year.
The .Law's
brunch breaks to buy milk and cookies.
Dress requirements Wlll be those of the
regular school year.
Quinn Farnes will be .principal of the
six-week school. InrormiUon may be ob-
tained from the summer school office,
4114-8546, e:1ten.sion 69.
County Studies
General Plan
Design Project
A "Program Desian Project" for
developing an Orange County General
Plan was studied by counb' _aupervtsora
Wednesday and endorsed 11fn concept."
But they withheld final.approval until
cost figures are available and the Orange
County League of Citles and the County
Plannlna: Commlasion v&e thelr ap-
proval.
The 17-page report was pre5el'lltd to
the board by Planning Diredor Forest
DlCkaaon. It was developed Jn a 1lx
month, $50,000 project by TRW, 1 Redon-
do Beach COMulUng firm, aided by
members of Diclwon'I staff.
Supervisor David L. Baker hailed the
report ~ future planning as "the
grtatest innovation this county Gr ~ n Y
<Kher county bas planning ln this century.
lt l.s most important to proceed. I
espeelally like the atrong emphui&. pn
local government partlclpaUcn."
Six county civic leaders pralltd the
program includ.ini UCI Olance'llor Daniel
Aldrich Jr.; Doreen Marshall, mayor ol
Newport Beach : John Lawson, general
manager-of Phllec>Ford Division of
Aeronutronic, Newport Beach, and
chairman of "Project 21" a cltlzen plart-
ning group, and Harriet Be.mus of
Newport Beach, president of the Orange
County League of Women Voter1:1.
Chancellor Aldrich summed it up with,
1'the citizens are viLally concerned In the
quaTlty of environment in future Orange
County. There are now some 30 organlZi·
Uons working on the problems. They
stress human concerns not just phylical
envlronment."
The _L_aw
2nd Judge Agrees With 1st
By TOM BARLEY
Of 1'111 DtllY P'ltlt tt1ff
Kathleen Sue Storum went to Superior
Court tod&y happy that the jurist who put
her on probation with a solemn and uni·
que warning wasn't around to see her
back in front ol the bench.
The 22-yea.r-old ~lunttngton Beach girl
told newsmen before the court 5esalon
that the absence of Judge Robert
Gardner ..:.. the veteran Newport Beach
jurist i& on tempcirary Appellate Court
duty -"was the best thing th at could
happen to us."
By "us" she meant her husband,
Rodney, 21. and herseU both of 175$2 Jac-
quelyn Lane, and both convicted on drugs
charges before Judge Gardner last
January. Storum drew a short Jail term.
suspendod by the judge, and both he and
his wUe were plactd on probation.
But an eyebrow ralslng condlUon or
that {Jl"Obation .was thal K1lhleen should
11ot again ·aS30Clale with her hu sband . If
RGdncy took Kathleen home again, Judge
Gardner warned. she would go to jail.
-Rod ney· aiid ·Kathleen admitt ed today
that he'd not only taken hf!r home again
'
bul he took her as far as Oregon In a
deliberate defiance of Judge Gardner's
order. Both condemned Judge Gardner's
acUon In pre.court convenatlon as a
"deliberate move to break up a happY.
marriage."
They might ha ve been better of[ if
Judge Gardner and not Judge Howard
cameron had been ruling on the violation
U l)r.>baUon.
The Superior Court's senior Jurist hid
no hesitation in putting Rodney in Orange
Coonly Jail for abt monlha and l(alh\een
for three months. And the altracttve
blonde girl who walked Into court with a
big grln, walked out In tun and with her
head bowed.
Prosecutor Al Wells probably made the
difference by nutn1 In JtJd&e Camtr0n on
the facLS behind Judge Gardner'& unurual
ruling.
"He was told by Mn. Slorum that 1he
want.eel no mort of her husband," he aald.
''Hert was a titl C(ltlv!c:ted of aelllng SU
worth or aec:onal to 1 atate narcotics
a1cnt s.nd she w1s put on probaUon -a
unique sentence ror this offense-becauae
of har aob irtory which Judie Gardner ac-
cepted.
i.
: .
-. •
~Harbor Distri4ct
11'!"""~""
• ... -•
with .a tune of iome klnd4-. :.
'nie 9enlors were alwlfl wary of 0.
camera, with profeasioaa.Js. D le: k
B rothenon and Ari Brewer, In 1<Willon ·,.
Biii MWTO)', Slev• K1wanlanl, Miry
Mart.iQ, ud Tom Jona .-.
Speol<ln1 of pllolosrla!lv. the 'clils oi
'69 (IJld more notably Jim Warren; Salli
Shattuck.; Brotherton and Jill Hallock),
has attained fame wJtb the shor1 movie
Ice CretQl Cone.
And "' bid "" lbare ol c:lala beauU... Under Homecornlng Queen Ch r Is t y
Mikels, the comely court includod Debbie
Aubrey, Merilee Benton, Willa Cather,
Hilary Hulton, Merilee Magnuson, Lee
PaysO!l and Sue Wataon.
Des<rvlng Iola ol c:redll are Ille clau
leaders -President Doug Sopblan, vice--
president Ray Wilbur, aecretary Wu.rte
Bird and b'euurer Rick Enft\and, I gueu
Rick did a fine job; so full was the class
treasury that the senJor luncheon was
completely financed by Rick's bag of .
loot.
And .al! Pils Is ccming to an e . The
.chlefilln:hitect.of the New Pratlg Doug
Schmitz, 11 now ~ hu-betn. But be aid a
foundation lot cliwes to come.
And the spirit of '89 will haunt the alls
or Alma Mater tor years to come. But 't's
a good spirit, full of good times, and
LBHS is all the better because of the
class of '69.
Someone hand me a hanky .
l have a bit of dult in my eye.
Faculty Senate
Plan Approved
For Saddleback
Saddleback. College Instructors have
voted to form an Academic senate.
The Senate will operate apart from the
Faculty Association which m o s t in·
structor1 now belong to.
The Academic Senate will concern
itself mostly with curriculum matters
while the main function of the Faculty
Association is to look out for teachers'
welfare, Including salaries.
Approval of the Academic Senate was
given this week by the board of trustees
after the faculty had voted 21 to 17 to
form the or1anlzation.
The instructprs who voted against It did
go because they worried two faculty
groupg would fragmtnt the faculty and
because a connotation of the Academic
Senate name la ''this ls, where the ac·
!MIU lel," acc:or<llng lo Robert Pmons,
facully wocl1Uoo protldenl.
From Page 1
TRASH •.. .
cut off trash for non·payment of bills.
Councilmen spoke or adding trash col·
lectk>n to tax bills but pondered tbe l)ro-
blem of vacant lots and other com·
l)lexitles. No solution was found for com·
pulsory trash collectioo.
Ex-nun Weds Jew
ST: Louis. Mo. <UPI) -Jacqueline
Grennan, former nun and an innovator in
Roman Catholic education. ls now wife of
P1ul J. Wexler. a Jew. They were mar·
ried Wednesday at Webster College, a
small girls' 5Chool where the bride Is
president.
7 STYUS TO
C:HOOSE Fl.OM
•• •
By JAClt ·llllOllAllK ..... ..,, .... . ~. -~
The cowtll''• Local 'Apncy Fondlllon
Commlaaloo (I.AFC) Wedn09day vbled :1-
2 to rtc0mmend to the Board of
Supenlioon lhal lhe Orange Coonly
Harbor Distrlcl be d\aolved and a counly
wide deputmeol ol h.vbon, poru and
beaches be created.
The motion, by Supervisor David L.
Baker, an LAFC member, 11'9 ~
lhal all well ol lhe Harbor Dlllricl be
transferred to the county.
Final action wu deferred, however, at
the sul&'lllon ·o1 Aullianl Coonly
Counsel William ~-McCourt, to 1tve the
LAFC staff and the county couruel's of-
fice time to develop all required con-
ditions lo make dissolution of the district
enforceable under law."
The staff was ordered to r eport the
concUUons necessary at lhe July 9 LAFC
meeting, but LAFC chainnan James T.
Workman made it clear that there would
be no further public hearing on the
dissolution matter. "It ts closed," he· emphasized. ·
Assistant County Counsel Robert F.
Nutlman said today that the Board of
Supervisors has two options. They may
reject the dlsaolution, or, lf they accept
it, It must be submitted to a vote of the
people because the district was formed in
1933 by such a vote. It was not clear ex-
actly when the matter would go to county
tupervisors for acUon.
Dissolution of the district has been
championed for more than three yean by
the City of· Hunlfngton Beicli because
lhat community was unable to reach an
agreement with the district on safety
services in the city's H u n ti n g t o a
Jeweler Wounded
By Gunman Still
Fights for Life
Samuel Brucker, downtown Santa Ana
merchant v.·ho shill It out with two holdup
men la.st Thursda y. Is still fighting for his
life today in Santa Ana Community
Hospital.
Hospital aides said he Is "•till In
serious condition but improving each day
and came lhrou1h additional surgery 1uc·
cessfully Wednesday."
Meanwhile, Santa Ana Police Chief
Edward J. Allen hu commended Brucker
for "hi11 heroism above and beyond the
call of duty ."
The SS.yearo(lld Brucker, owner ot
Brown'B Jewelry, 213 E. 4th St., was
wounded seven times last Thursday in
the gun battle in his store. He killed one
of the alleged bandits, Louis Asmond, 37,
of San Juan Capllltrano and the second
robber 1W1pect, Arthur Kleis, 25, of
Anaheim, was captured minutes later two
blocks away.
He faces pr:eliminary bearing Friday on
charges of attempted murder.
Chief Allen said of Brucker, "Anyone
who koows Sam 111 I do knows be
possesse11 that kind of courage and dia·
dain for lhe armed thugs l)rowling our
streets taking the lives and property of
decent law-abiding citizens.
"We cannot commend him highly
.enough fo.r his heroic act. lt was In the
highest tradition of A m e r i c a n
citizenship.''
Urge.d
Harbour. The city maintained that lt
should and was performing thti services
and it should be Either compensated by
the district or allowed Lo withdraw from
lhe district.
Last year the LAFC refused to let the
city withdraw.
The dissolution recommendation was
supported by Workman, Baker and com-
misaioner Frank P. Noe, a Cypress city.
councilman.
Opposlng were Fiith Di!trlcl Coonly
Supervisor Alton Allen and Comrn.Wioner
Charles A. Pearson of Santa Ana.
When the county Board of Supervisors
faced the dissolution issue ln 1988, It
voted 4 to 1 against it, with Only Baker in
support.
Huntington Beach City Administrator
Doyle Miller offered a strong argument
Wednesday for putting the issue before
Orange County voters.
"It is very apparent that the majority
of Orange County cities a.re dissatisfied
with the operation of the district •.. In a
democracy, the voice of the people should
be heard. U we are willing to put it to a
vole of the people, why are the county
and the district ·hesitant to allow the peo-
ple the opportunity to decide the issue?"
Miller protested.
''It is obvious we have a political foot-
ball," Miller contended . "We feel that the
issues are very simple: There is
dissatisfaction among the elected officials
of the majority of the cities in thl.s coon·
ty, anj those officials are the direct
representatives of the citi7.ens of this
county," he argued.
Viva .Jayme
Jayme Boyd, 18, will represent
\Vestminster in the Orange
County Fair beauty contest
July 15, the opening day of the
six-day exposition in Costa
Mesa.
SOFA BED SALE!
Th••• •r• ••ry cOMforf•bl• &of• b.cl1 for
Sitti"9 •nd SIHpin9 •
A wkf• •~Ktioft of febria end Celon +.
chOCKe from.
... -·
00 Now 299 .00
With Skirt& $50. erlr•.
H.J.GARREJT fURNrplRE
~SIONAL
fNTH:IOl DlSIGMftS
2!16 HAll.IOlt llVD.
COSTA l.fl5A. CALI~.
"4M111 '46-0176
--'------~--------------------------------------------~---------------
Nixon Win s
Sureharige ,
Suppo1·ters
WASHING TON (UPI) -President
Ni1.on won bipartisan support from Houa
leaders today for continuing the income
tax surcharge. The leadus said he pro-
mised in turn to support an amendment
to the 1egi81atlon to exempt ~ million poor
people from tax rolls.
The agreement was worked out al an
hour and a half meeting of the President
and House leaders at the White House.
The White House said that Nixon had
won unanimous support for his reque!'lt
for a one-year extension of the surcharge
which would expire June 30 without con-
gi essional action.
Congressional leaders disclosed later
that Nixon agreed to include in the
sun:harge legislation a provision that
woold eliminate the k>west income lax·
payers.
Rep. Hale Boggs, acting chairman of
the House Ways and Means Committee,
t;aid he suggested to Nixon .that be in-
clude the plan to take the poor people
from the tax rolls in order to win reluc-
tant Democrats to vote for the surtax.
Nixon originally proposed a new scale
o( tax rates for tow income people in his
tax reform measure sent to Congress
earleir.
The proposal, Boggs said, now will be
attached to Nb:on's plan to extend fur six
months the 10 percent income tax
surcharge beyond Its e.zpiration June 30.
Nixon's plan then calls for a 5 percent
rate between 'Jan. I, 1970 and June 30,
1970, when it would expire.
Boggs said the Ways and Means Com·
mittee will take up Lhe new package
~tonday. He predicted it would win ap-
proval and also pass the House.
Under the plan lo help poverty.Jevel
people, a single person could earn up Lo
$1,700 a_ year before taxes would st~rt.
The maximum nontaxable income would
be $5,900 for a family of eight.
The proposal for low income peoj>le i!
expected lo cosl $665 million In revenue
annually.
Evans' Skipper
Not Informed
Of New Station
SUBIC BAY, Phill!JPlnes (UPI) -The
captain of the U.S. destroyer sliced in
tv.·o by ·the Australian aircraft carrier
~felbourne said, today ~ was not ~
formed In advance that his $ip . Y!°'td
change station during flight ~
the night' of the June 3 collision. r'
Seventy-four American c r e w m e n
aboard the USS Frank E. Evans lost their
Jives Jn the predawn aceident in the South
China Sea during maneuvers by a task
force of the Southeast Asia Treaty
Organization (SEATO).
Cmdr. Albert S. McLemore, 40,
testilied befo re the six-man joint U.S.·
Australian panel investigating the
mishap, that he knew the Melbourne was
to carry out flight operatlons at about
3:30 a.m. -or 15 minutes after tbe col-
lision.
He said he had no advance knowledge
the Evans would be designated as "plane
guard ." To bectime plane guard, the
destroyer had to move astern of tbe car-
rier.
It was during thia change of station
tha t the ~felbourne ripped through the
Evans, sending the forward section of the
destroyer to the bottom within minutes,
Australian officials said.
Trip to A valon
Goes Up 25 Cents
LOS ANGELES IAP) -It will cost 25
cents more to sail to Ca talina Island th.is
summer on the great white steamer.
The State PubUc Utilities Commission
authorized the ship's operators Wed-
nesday to up one-way fares by th a t
amount, per.ding action on a request for
an increase of $2.~1over the pres.ent f7 .50
roend trip fare. A.Jao, kids under 12 who noW travel free would be~Cti"irfed_so_
cepls for a round trip.
The operators say ei:eenses are up .
$110,000 over IMI', the last year of OJ)e1a~
tioo , bec~use of higher Wl'tarfage and
la6or costs. Due to a labor dispute, the
cr~l didn't sail last year .
•
Pair of Wintaers
A pretty exhibitor at the Colorado Springs Kennel Club dog .sbo\v
presents an exhibit that \Vasn't exactly intended. But her two Afghan
hounds, Qomar Azariz Sim Tij (left) and Qornar Axadi Sim Sc:h2~
displayed a more frontal if some\vhat unpronounceable· appearance.
250 Rally for Slaying
Suspects' Defense Fund ·
More than 250 teenagers and adult.s -
two t b i r d s of them \llo"hite -rallied
\Vednesday night in Anaheim to the sup-
port of three Black Panthers accused of
killing a Santa Ana police officer.
Meanwhile, Santa Ana city ofOciats
met for 90 minutes Wednesday afternoon
with 12 Negro miniSters over charges of
"police harassment" of blac k prople
following the slaying last Thursday of Of·
ficer Nelson A. Sasscer.
The Anaheim rally raised an estimated
$184 for the defense fund of the accused
trio. Daniel M. Lynem, U, is in Orange
County jail charged with murder and
conspiracy to commit murder. A na-
tionwide search is under way for the
other two, Nathaniel Grimes, 21, and
Arthur League, 20, all of Santa Ana.
In the Santa Ana meetlng, Mayor Lorin
Grisel and City Manager Carl Thorn ton
met with the ministers and all agreed
afterward that lines 'of commurrlcation
had been opened to prevent a racial
crisis.
In Anaheim, several Panther backer!
said they knew the accused trio and were
certain they couldn't ha ve committed the
murder. They charged that Lynem is a
political prisoner because of membership
in the Black Panthers.
Principal speaker Paul Mosett, deputy
chairman of the Southern Calilnrnia
Chapter of the Black Panthers, said the
charges against the trio are "part of a
nationwide aUempt by the Establishment
to crush the panthers."
Speakers also included Lynem 's wife ·
Alma Jean who appealed for money to
aid in the legal defen.se..
Priminent at the rally were memben
of the Peace and Freedom Party, the
Black Student Union and the Students for
a Democratic Society. They decided to
begin a "public education campaign" by
distributing leaflets in the county Satur-
day.
The Santa Ana session with city of-
ficials was called by the minister1 lo
dlscUss "pollce behavior in searching
homes and individuals in the aftermath"
of the slaying of the police officer.
The Rev. Robert Boyd or the
Interdenominational Ministerial Assoe1a-
tion, said after the meeting "there Is no
danger of trouble in the Negro com-
munity."
Welfare Branch Decision
Changed; Building Ol('d
County supervisors have reversed a "'liability In their action of the previous
derjsion of a week ago and asked the week, but Real Property Services Assis.
Real Property Services Department tG tant Director George Cormack said it had
negotiate a lease-pur chase plan for a new not .
20,000-square-fool build ing for a Santa "'Your board simply authorized vur
Ana branch of the county Welfare department to negotiate a lease and to
Department. come back with a form al document,.,
On June 3, the supervisors voted to Cormack advised. County Co u n s e I
lease two-thirds of a shoppifll center Cloyton Parker agreed .
building at 2029 W. Isl St. because it was Supervisor Robert W. Battin objected
I~ expensive than the new building now to the new building ga~iqg it would cost
favored, located in the 1600 block of West the county $70,000 mote over the Ill-year
1st, between Raitt and Pacific streets. period of the initial Lr:ase.
Su~rvisor Alton E. Allen led the But Welfare Director Granyille Peoples
revel'sit. "[ don't like le1~'~-.il1..-nid,.....'.' .. Uu1r.e ·i11.-not-that -mltt!t'mttertrr
''they are a liability in-fa~ ol lnflation. and we will develop.more "iDiormation to
But 1 have no objection to I· lea!!; if pro-clear up the point.·•
vision iJ made to a.......,ire the property at ~eo_ples said-iqe boa~d's ch~nge of
termination." '""''" rrund was "great." "IL 1s the first ob-
Supervisor David L. Baker wondered ii
the C{)Unty had as.sumed lega l financia l
jection I have hid. to a boird action in
.even years, as you know," the welfare
direct.or said.
County S:alaries Hiked 7 .2%
fringe Benefits Also Approved-by-County Supervisors
Fupervisor David L. Baker hid a
clllnge of mind Wednesday about delay· inf approval of the county employes
1a)ary agreement ror one week am: the
bQard voled unanimously to approve the
p-oPQSed 1.2 percent salary and fringe
benefit lncnue.
yeu effecUve June 27, so I propost we
approve the schedule today."
"I have reviewed the law," Baker said ,
"and it states that the county should
negoUate in good fatth with a reco1nl.ied
emp.loyes group. • ·•tn a resolution some months ago we
urdered the Personnel Director to
negotlal.l!l and reach an agree:rnenL Many
meetings were he1d and there was much
aive and lake."
in past years.
'nle approved $4.3 million addition wtll
be to a · current county payroll of Ml
n.ilJion a year. Salary Increases alone
amolint to 6.8 percent ol the incruse Ind
non-1a1ary ilems, .4 -percent., Personnel
Dl~r William Hart sald.
The 7 .2 lncreue compares with a t.olal
&.7 perct:nt. Increase lt1st year.·
Fringe beneflt changes Include increas--
ed mileage ratea tor e:mployes who must
uu their ~rsonal can, incrtased over-
time pay, a tultlon ttlmbursement pro-
1r1m, new grievance procedures and M~
1'1Nndly, Junt IZ, 1969 L
Deadly Spider§ s~ouglrt .. . ... . ·1.;..,:
•) _,.
)
N~st Di.scovered in Si.e rr.a ~q,dre Women's Club W~~ h.unle~ ~ay contl~ued a foot-buildings near the tlubhoule las& week hi.It~ t0c'"8, the JeR ant e1n be!
by-foot search of Sierra Madre, hunting along wllh cocooo.llke aklns incUcatlna: at as deadl1 al a amaIJ rattJllMD, bat ~
up to 50 deadl.1 South American· vidin least 50 more bad batched. bite ls~ occulonally fatal
1plders apparenUy hatched in a women's AutborlUe. ipCCUlate one of. the spiders •Or. JaCk WelncbtJ, an aulhortty Oft
club they quickly infested. found In the Brazil and all.le area _. spiders, said tbert II no anUvMOID In ~
Small as a dime and capable or running cowjry to. treat poUoUAJ tile vk:tlmlta. an~ luJMI klog.dislanceo Ub Ugblning, rived lo !1'6 U.S. ~enl&l)y Jn• pock·., bul'Olher medfcaii.n U'avilll&bi.. t
the evtl a.rachnlds' bite causes an oozing tng crate llnd hatched lts young la&e.r. Spider-frightened Southlandul e an
ulcerated si>re up to eight Inches acrQss The hunt b being supervlled l;i)'. Dr. take comfort from the tact that vloUn
before death . Findley • Ru ... 11, USC SchOol .. el apl<f .... Ore extremely llmld Ill\!. wjU oo1r
Authorities , Wednesd.ay discovered 12 Mediclne professor of Det.ll'Oloa 'ind blte If backed against a l'ID and'.'t
mote of the deadly spiders -marked biology, and Includes crew1 ot h11 threatened, added Dr. Russell, bUi colt~:
with a. grlm, violet violin design on their students. league. .~
brown backs -In ll'te clubhouse at Sierra Houses near the Women's Club, u, we ll One nipped by t.be vioUn spider: ' l\.tadre Mem.orial Park in the community as a nearby mortuary will be probed develops restlessness, chilli and vomltJai '°
east of Pasadena. before the hunt ends. ·!" . • within 24 hours. a rash wtthJn 31 houri
A total ol Ill were found In park 'Itie vioUn spider grows to the size of a arid a scab In five to"seven dayL .. 1' J-~~~~~~~-'-~~~--'~-=-~~'-'--~~~~~~~-..:.~--"· ., ,.
·-"
LIKE IT ••• CHARGE ITI " ..
" • • -• • • " • • • • • ~ • ••••
" ; •
Double edge • ;. •
Sa ve $10.0<4 on our double
edge d hedge trimme r!
Orig. 39. 99
Now29.95
Pay as little as $5 per month
• Unit feat ures teeth on both sides of cut-
ter bar to do the job in half the ilme.
• Unit is also double insulated for ele~tri·
cal safety.
•
Hedge Trimmer
•
Fatlter'1 Day Special •••
trees for your garditnl
·'
,
I
ITALIAN CYPRESS for b11 ic proft11ion--
al type land1cape plenting with little
upkeep.
MEYER UMON tree in 9ellon con·
fa iner. Grow your own lemon1 end heve
e n ettrective tree efsol
YOUR CHOIC'I 69c
A garden must • • • our
50' nylon 'l(inyl hose
5/8" diemeter hos• reinforced with
nylo n truck tire cord .
Beautify your garden
with pretty marigolds
Ea1y-to0 9row meri9old1 in red, told,
orange end mixed shede1. You'll find all
thes e in our Gercfen Center.
TIAY 44'
Many other Items to choose fro~
tonLI IOUSH ., OU.Cl PINI 2. 99 ., • .,. ..... ,. ' ..., .. ce11re ... ,. ..••••••••••••••
HOSI PISTOL MODI.I . 1.29
AM '",,_. , , , , , , , , , ••• , ••, •• , , , •• •• , • • • •• •• • • •
WHllLUl:llOW tf LAWN CAlT 6 88
1 ... tt .. ,_ ............................... . HOH NOZZLI 1 J9 ... ........................................ .
WPllNIHOSI 699 11 ft. 11r · • • . . • . . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • . . . •
Sl'llNI Llll M..
""' dleke, etcffl ......... ~ ............. •·•••• 7W '
w:~ ~ST~~. ~~~~,.,,. , , •• , , • , . , , . , , • , , , .• , , , 1, 99 Tew clriieke, Oftfile ll•••ll.W 1 .... .,,.., ., ..... , ,., •••• , ••••••••••••••••••
NEWPORT BEACH -FASHION ISLAND •
fbe approval will add f4.3 million to tl' county payroll. Baker Tuesday had
o ected to 8pproval at once because he
h nol had time lo study lht proposals.
ednesday he 111.ld, "l _now rtalb:e the
ti e tchedule Is too tight to properly im-
pl!mOlll UJe cbqM I« u. -Alll7
Baker continued, "l am satisfied that
the same accord would have been reacfl..
ed U thlt board bad met In several
per10GDt1 1tuk>n• for da.Y• and week.a 11 «~alberlleml. • r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'~~~~~~~~~~~-"
\ ! I > )
•
1 1
I
•·
•
.;.-::.:-.}'"" ...
,,,.,.,, J""' IZ, lM
Labor's John L. Lew.is Dies at 89
Fiery Leader W arred with White House , I ndustrialist s
There'• DO doubt about IL ·S.m ~ of Barrow·ln-F'umm, -~ l4 • happlly-married 1111!'-celebnited 25 years of wedded
not by giving bis wile a mere
esent or a bunch of flowers, but
-hauling up a huge British
( atop a 25 foot pole In his front
..,.i. -Filling his garden with
6,000 seashells spelling out "Pal
lild Sam, Silver Weddint June 10."
6id Pal: "I'm simply delighted."
~d Sam: ''A good wile deserves
f.'metbing special after 25 years.''
1' •
Hawk or spar-
row? Actually it's
a Ut·Ue of each.
with the Mtok TG~
ing a Sea Sparrow
surface-~ir mis·
sile toward an un-
i e e n target near
Point Mugu. TM
p h o t o graph tDOS
pm1 of a series of
rapid aeqwnce tno
g in eering photos
ofa routine
launch. The hawk
<11~1.f.1.J-.uflld, itvlig· nant, but unhor711-
• eel.
• • Kon Sh1w of Clnlerbury, Eng· lhnd, who ncently advertlaed In a
newspaper ''car or wUe m u1t go"
and put a price tag on each, re-
ports he baa had three offers for
Ills wile but no lnquirtea about the
Car. Shaw aaid: "So far no one has
ipquired about my car but I've had
three otiers for my wife. One man
wrote asking what coodltion she
was in and did I think she was
worth $60,000. Another man even
ttled lo Jowar the price. He said
ahe was loo old to be worth that
amamrt of money." •
Prowlers who broke into the
Fountain "Nursery School in Los
Angelea didn't steal a1111thing,
but theJI apparentt11 had a mes·
soge to get acrots. Thet1 lined
up plastic toldiers and tot1 buiki-
ing blockt into two opposing
armiet and m the: 'no-mans'
land" btt1aeen. the combatants
chalked in the words: "No more
tDOr tovs. plea.st!"
• Somebody baa rustled the may·
or's cattle. City of lndus>ry Mayor
John Fe rrero said a number of
prime Herefords worth '10,000
have been stolen from his ranch
in the past two month&. • Student Roger D1ncey of East
Horsley, England, is going to spe-
ctalize. Dancey, who is graduating
from the University of Exeter this
month, p1ans to get his PhD in
Soccer. He plans to write bis thesis
on Why one million Britons watch
P.rofessional soccer games every
week.
LABOR'S LION
Fighting J ohn L. Lewis
3 Gls Killed
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Jolin L. Lewis
bunt onto lhe American labar acene a\ a
time· when coal wu king.
When be departed tbouaanda Cl( coal
mlnerl ln Appalaclil• and elsewhere Jn
the oatton were out ol work. 'l1ley bad
been replaced by bulldows, augura, and
truckll. Coal bad been roplaced by 1u, oil
and even the atom.
Bui while coal relgned, so did John L.
Lewil. Hla mighty voice and righl<oo•
wrath were legend to some and terror to
othen:. But they were his toob in
dominating the American labor move-
ment for a half cem'ury.
He died Wednesday night 1t the aee of
19.
Lewla, longtime praldeot of lhe Uolted
Mine Workers of America CUMW) and
flrst president o the Coogreu of
Industrial Organizations (CIO ), retired
nine years ago as head of the mine
workers. He had warred with president&.
Industrialists and other union leadera.
Until recently he came ftom hll home
ln suburban Alexandria, Va., every day
to his !lxth floor office in Lbe UMW
building In Washington in his post as
chairman of the truateea of the huge
UMW welfare and reUremtnt fund .
Many said the fund which he won after
a long 1trike and btue:r batUe with Presi-
dent Hlrry S. Truman in 1946 was his
greatest monument.
Only a few daya ago safety crusader
Ralph Nlde:r 10Ughl to enlist Lewis' help
Jn ousting Tony Boyle as pres.ident of the
UMW.
U.S. Guns Blnst if part
300~man Red Attack
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. soldiers defen·
dlng a brand-new cam p northeast of
S&lgon leveled their artillery today and
bluted apart a 300-man North Viet·
namtse attack that carried through their
barbed wire.
Reporting the predawn battle, lhe
American command said 38 Communi!t
South Vietnam
Sa ys More U.S.
Troops Can Go
PARIS (UPI) -South Vietnam
negotiator Pham Dang Lam told 'the
Communists today that l•many more''
American troops could be withdrawn
from South Vietnam "if your s.lde
demonstrates Its good will for peace at
this meeting and on the bettldle/d."
Both Lam and U.S. negotia t or
Lawrence E. Walsh dlsmla.sed the
establishment of the Viet Cong'• ';revolu~
tionary government" as lntlgnl.flcant.
Walsh offered the Communist side a new
and flexible formula for peace.
There was no reciprocal offer from the
Communist.&. Jn.stead, Mme. Nguyen Thi
Binh, the womao guerrilla who became
head ol the Viet Cong delegaUon, called
the Midway meeting a farce and ap-
pealed for world support for the new
''provisional revolutionary government.''
Her statement, which repeated Com-
munist demands for a unilateral U.S.
withdrawal from Vietnam, reflected ob-
vious Viet Cong disappointment that the
world Communist bloc did not rush to
recognize the government in which ahe Is
fore ign minister, diplomatic sourcta: aald.
bodies wm left on \1111 betUellel<t, S7
miles from Saigon at dawn while three
G Is were killed and ail' woundea.
UP[ correspondent D av Id Lamb
said the North Vietnamese pounded
Artillery Base Joy first with 140 rocket
and mortar rounds and then charged
from all sides at 2 a.m. The b&R i.!1 thrte
days old.
With heavy monsoon c}Qucb blocking
support from gunships or divebombers,
the U.S. so\diera leveled their howitzers
and opened up with shelb filled -tiny
darts designed for just auch occasions.
Twenty Communist troops got through
the barbed wire but were atopped •t a
mound of dirt bulldozers had built around
the Gls' foxholes, Lamb 1ald. Three
hours after they attacked, the North Viet·
namese pulled back.
It was the second 1ucceaslve day of
Comriiunlst ground attacks following
overnight rocket and mortar bom-
bardmtnta that slammed Into 21 towns
Jnd allled tiases, causing ligbt. loues.
Govenunent spokesmen said the cost-
lieol bamlge Wednesday night Into a
population center was • two-roond salvo
that kl.lied eight civilians and wounded
eight at Khlem Due, 105 miles northeast
of Saigon.
Far to the north, near coutal Da Nang,
U.S. Marines turned hack 100 North Viet·
namue who tried to ovemm their camp,
killing 23 guerrillas while losing one
1t1arine dud and three wounded.
Jn a delayed report, the U.S. command
said two Marine helicopters were lhot
down over the demilitarized zone (DMZ)
during the past week~Dd trying to rescue
a leatherneck patrol under attack.
Spokesmen aaid the command 11 ten-
ding patrols into lhe zone ,...Warly with
orders not to shoot unlm shot at. "nle
weekend patrol lost seven men wounded
in its fight in lhe aoutbem half of the
zone.
This Can't Be Summertime
Tornadoes, Tliunderstorms Whip Midsectwn
r~ ..... .... _ MIMI~ l"rac. " . Anc:hort• .. •
~ .. ,,.. ----n-•7
..-~ a 61
'lbe famoua baallY eyobrowl and wlrll!y
hair were white wlieo bl died, his ......
voice bad d1mlnlabed.
He entered Doclon H01pllal Suqclay.
. Duth came•' 4:11 p.111. PDT from Wba\
Dr. Marcel Foret called "an acute D~ loeu" pending ootoome ol an ou!Opey.
He WU aurvJved by a MD, Dr. Jobn t.
Lewl.s Jr., who practlctS In BaJtt-.,
Md.; a brother, R. 0. Lewla, Fort Myers,
Fla., former UMW vice president; and a
sister, Mrs. Edith Col/lns, Kanns City.
He was preceded in death by bJI wilt,
Myrta F.dlth Bell, a former low~achool
teacher, in 194%: a daughter, Klthry11,
oooe active in the label' movement; and
anolher dauabler, who died lo drlldbood.
Descended from 1 long line of Welsh
miners, Lewis began his career u a coal
digger u a youngster in Lucas, Iowa,
where he wu born on Abraham Lincoln's
blrth<lay -Feb. 12, 1880.
Lincoln freed the American slaves.
Lewis's most ardent and emotional sup-
porters later seized on his birth date as
an omen Lewis would free the "Industrial
slaves."
A muter oC the English language who
pollllhed his usage by reading the Bible
and Shakespeare, Lewis used words to
cut his opponents down to size.
Of George Meany, now president of the
AFL-CIO, Lewis said : "An honest
plumber trying to abolish sin in the labor
movement, which is not a function of the
labor movement."
Of Walter Reuther, president of the
United Auto Workers, Lewis said: "An
---
Royal R eview
wnnt Mmllt chronlcally lnobrlatod, I
lboold thin!<, lly the -.,, hla
own vert>omty."
But theae barbl wen nolhinc ClWQDlred
to Ille ahafla he lav•led at poUUcala.
Perbape h1I moa:t famous wu 'dlrtcted at
Pnoldeol Frlllllllio D. Roooeve/L
During a mlnlog dillJIUI• In lhe late
1930s, Roosevelt quoted Shakespure and
Aki a "plague o' balh your houaes."
Lelris replied:
"lt W behoOves one who bu rupped at
labor'• table and who bu been sheltered
Jn llbor'1 house .Jto curse with equal
fervor and fine ~mpartlality both labor
and Its advuaaries when they betome
locked in deadly em bract."
In 1907, lhe yeat of his marriage, the
YOWll couple moved to Dllnois, and a
year latu Lewi.I began hi.I career in
labor when be was elected legislative
representaUve of Diatrlct lJ, UMW.
Samuel Gompers, pros/dent of tbe
American Federation of Labor, heard of
his work and appointed him to hlJ staff.
In 1917 he was elevated to the . vice
preslde.ncy of Ute UMW. and in 1919 he
became its president.
Walter L. Hart, editor of the Morg.n. town, W. Va. Domlnlon-Ntws,
biographer and 51).year friend of Lewis,
said Lewis' labor reign began in Sep-
tember, 1919 under a crabapple tree In
Osage, W. Va., a small town in the heart
of the Great Scot's Run Coal Field. Lewis
got up and said: .
"The working min has u much right
to gather together to improve his lot in
Britain's Prince Charles, seen in military uniform for the first time inap~ the Rorat Regiment of Wales durtng the regiment's inaug:
urat1on at Ca!"lifi Castle W~dnesday. The 20-year-old heir apparent
to the throne 1s colonel-in-chief of the regiment.
Reagan Gives Emotional
Eulogy for Robert Taylor
GLENDALE (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Req'an, his voice breaking, eulogized
actor Robert Taylor Wednesday as "one
o( dle lfeJit an<t_ endurlp,g moUon picture
stars ol all Ume."
and boots, squinting through a camp-
!. " ltt.
91~ 7S •1
9DI~ '' JI
eotf'oft n '' ct11caeo to 7• Cl~ntll ff JO
C~•tarod 1$ 71
OenYff SS 41
Dts MDI"'" ll U
R~an ns a longtime lriend of Tay-
lor, who dJed Sunday of lung cancer 1t
Tr the age of 57. More than 200 mourners,
including actors who appeared with
.11 Taylor in his films, attended I.he brief "' service 1t Forest Lawn's Olurch of Lhe
The governor 11ld Taylor was em-
barrassed by the "pretly bol'' /ma.I!•
he earned Jn the 1930s 1s a matinff..
idol "because he was a man who
respected his profession and was a
master of It.
"Only in l'tt't!nt years of our friend·
ship have I understood how truly pain·
ful this must have been for him. But
Lhe pretty boy tag couldn't i;urvive
roles like 'Johnny Eager,' 'Quo Vadis,'
'Ivanhoe,' 'Billy the Kid,' plclurea
which were true classics."
I
Metl'ty Ci.MY toe.y wtlll ~ If.
rw._ _.,.,1,,., Hi.II llffr "-V•r·
6tblt wlnOa *°"'"" ""'" M GUiii< tt•lltoU.._.
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,,_ 1 111,,. llf 51 lo ft, l~illl'ld """"
Jl'ff-1"1 ''"" -· " " "' w •• ., *'-ftltt Wff '2 °"'"""'
S1111, Moon. 'l'fdea
tM"lllOAY l'lftl l9W .. , , • ,. l1tf I.I'll. f ,J l'lr'lt Mttl .. .. l ;12 1.m. •.O ,lllOAY
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V.S. Summarv
Vloiltol ttlunftnion... fVl'llblM -• wlM 1trtltl'1 ol "'9 "'~IMftl fo.
CllY, tlk'"' -ltffl wllll wlncl .... 1'1111 11111 drtnelll"' oltltr:r. wllll ~
"'' nilnt. T1'll .~ ....... .,. ..... • ClllPt
,.._ wt!k.11 ci,_,.i lht "'""''""'' to lrtot1I"' In Mollt1n1 bt:hll't MYbrffk
.wil Wflllwned ""' ~TY "' Cut
lltflk wn11 ' ll'll;ftet o1 ~lltn •-· Tor.....xoet If'-' lrllo ""' .. k-MI, Okl1'-"o Ind ,_. illtt W"*"-
CltY. VloltM Winf 11111 "91......._ tho
..........., Meflllf'll llf -"*" llllllOI., ....,.,..,., WIM:OMlll Incl lltl"fl!Wtt,1'tlYI
M!uwrl.
A lomHD cflufMd Into 11111 nntt"tl 1ew1 ,._ ., 0'""'" -_,,., "'ldwrt
blfWttll °"' Mot-.. CH... ... in -WHntMtY l!lehl •Pld UUIH • .._ 11 .... M!Nff "" .. ,..., ,.._ ltN _.,,
11-.. Drlt l'lltft -·· """"'" ln!t1r4lllll ~ t ..... ~I .., 1111 flolJw,
fQ lnlll' ... fll' M•lcM 11--· t"""19c! In twldtr1 lllti IWilel!ttl f!IWft
brltl1¥ -Anll•lt-. "'-· ..,.. ,,, Oil~
..... ....,. • ,,... .. -· .. l'llt.
• L
°""" u n Et1...it• St $l
Fort Wortll ti 7'
I" 11111111 IO 55 ... ,.... 11 JI .01
M-*tflu &5 70 H........ M 7i
Kl-City II U .tt
L"V-.. •1 L11t ~ ff U
M'-1'11 k.tl " • Ml'-vl<M M •1 .M MIMeMIO!i. U SS .U
lffw ~ ...
N•Y-'t D '' NorMI l"llft9 '° 4' ... o.klend ~ It OrNNt ., 11 .n
P•to Jlo:fl1" 7• » ~1 ....... 11 II 6f ~,.. " .. l"lmbul"lfl .. ..
'"°"'~ 11 .. ll~ Clh' II JI 11.w eMt n u
·-,, Jt ,. ~"'""'° '' JJ lt. Leula !IO '' S.llnu U M
$ell LM:• City 7$ '' S.n D• 1' 60 s.n l'r11'1Cftao .. ji
"'''" """"' .. $l '""" n "' ,,..... u
'Tfl-• " u Wa&l'llnttM • 11
.
'
---~-------------------
Recessional.
j 1Some day," Reagan s~id, "I'll see
him on the late show, resplendent in
while rte and tails , . . ani I'll smile
because 1 will see him Jn blue jeans
All's Well Aboard
Transatlantic Ship
STOCKHOLM (UPI) -Thor Heyenlalll
and his crew aboard the pipyrul ship Ra
today reported all well on their cru!se
fmn Africa across the Atlantic to Mex·
tco.
Heymlahl r<ported Ra's posiUon as
aoutb of the C.pt Vtrde 1llands to a
Soandlnavtan Airline Systems (SAS)
J>411H11er plane on ltl way from Rio de
~inetro to Stoc.ltbolm vta .Llabon.
I
The services, conducttd by the Rev.
Gary Demarest, look only 20 minute$ in
response to Taylor's request that they
be brief.
Among the rnournen were his widow,
actrcN Un:ul1 Thiesa:, and ber chUdren;
Taylor's !lrst wife, actren Blrbara
Stanwyct; U.S. Sen. 0-ge MWlll\Y, (R·
ColU.), and acton Vu Heflin; Robert
stack, Walter Pidgeon, Eva Marie
Saint, Keenan Wynn and Gilbert Rolaocl.
Reagan's voice choked wtlh emotion
tcnvard the end of. .his eulogy wbeQ he
addressed hit mnarkl t'o Miu n.~
and the children. He was forced to itop
and blink the tears from his eye1.
"I spoke to Bob only a few daYJ ago
and J tblnk there was something he wanted me to tell )'tlll," Re1gan said.
"He wanted me to Nf, 'Unula, bt happy.' II
Ille b)' lelki111 with manqemenl a•
Judie Elbert Gary had In puttin&
topther Cmeale Stett and other firms
to form U.S. Steel Corp."
Shortly alter becoml"I/ president of the
UMW Lewi.I took hi.I 411,000 workers out
on strike for h!gber wagea . But President
Woodrow Wll!on 1nvoked a wartime
statute and Lewis Jost the flrst of what
was to become a long series of battles
with tbe Wblte House.
By 1933, when Roosevelt wu in.
augurated, the UMW bad only 175,000
members. Lewis quickly built Ail union to
more than halC a mUUon.
In 1936 be joined hands with other in-
dustrial unions aod left the AFL to form
the CIO. In 1942, alter a quarrel with CIO
President Philip Murray, Lewis took the
UMW out of the CIO. 1n ltfe he rtaf-
flliated with tbt AFL, but Utile more
than a year later, he sent AFL President
William Green a piece of paper with
these words scrawled on it : "Green. We
&affiliated. Lewis."
When he defied a government back-to·
work ordtr in 1946, he was slapped with a
personal fine of Sl0,000 for contempt. and
his union was fined $3.5 million. The
Supreme Court reduced the fine to
1100,000.
But it was lhat same year he won his
greatest triumph in establishment of the
welfare and retirement fund. Now 40
cents from every ton of coal mined goes
into the fund -$150 million a year -and
nearly all of lt is poured back lm·
mediately to coal miners. I
100 Walk Out
At Harvard's
Graduation
CAMBRIDGE, Mass (UPI) -Harvard
University Preaident: Nathan M. Puaey
thwarted a major disruption of com·
mencement exercises by s t u d e n t
dissidents today but at least 100 persoM
-including 25 students -walked out of
the ceremonies at which 14 persons, in-
cluding Mayor John V. Lindsay of New
York and union leader Walter Reuther
were awarded honorary degrees.
Pusey, in the face of a planned
takeover of the speaker's microphone,
permitted Bruce Allen, a member of the
Students for a Democratic Society (SOS),
to apeak for 10 minutes at the exercises.
Allen was coruitantly shouted down by a
chorus of boos, much of the dissent com-
ing frorri elderly alumni seatea oil to the
side.
Allen said it was a "hollow joke" to Jet
only one of the 16 1tudenta expelled or
suspended after a building takeover Apri l
9 to speak at tbe graduation, Harvard's
3llth.
j'Thi& university Is an obscenity," he
said.
Facing the audience from the etone
portico of Memorial Church, Allen said
the commencement at the nation's oldest
university "should be condemned -peo-
ple should walk out of It."
As Allen's speech extended beyond five
minutes, segments of the audience
shouted to "Shut him off.'' "He's been on
long enough," and "Throw him out."
Most of the graduating students neither
cheered nor booed but there were ex·
pressions of dissent when the SDS
member called Harvard "an obscenity."
Pusey at times attempted to urge
Allen, who wore a blue business suit, to
close his speech, and finally seven un-
dergraduates ran up the seven stone
slep:1 ·of the church and escorted Alle1
away. The walkout, including 10 honor
graduates from the portico, immediately
followed.
Market Picket
'
Oaims 4 Shot
Him in Thigh
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A picket In th•
Los Angeles arl!a market strlke-lockoul
told police he was shot In the right thigh
early today when four men stopped him
en route_to picket line duty.
The incident came as effects of tht
dbput<·spread110rihto·tbe San Frandaco
East Bay and south to San Diego .
Police a aid William C. Cramer, 26, of
Covina, told them he was accosted about
three blocks away from a food store
warehouse in suburban Glassell Park.
Cramer, a member or the bakers' union
helping out with picket lines established
by the Retail Clerka Union Local 770, wa1
treated and released at a ho6pltal, police
said .
The baker told officers he was on fool
because his car had broken down. A cat
pulled &longaide and one of four men ask·
ed •·you're one of. tbe loudmouth plcketi,
aren't you?" Cramer told pollct.
Offlcen said the baker related the men
got out ol lhe car, argued witb him, and
one man drew a pistol. Crame r 5lid ht
wa.s shot during the argument.
Pollet saJd I.hey had no clues to the
ldenUty of the four men and that there
wue :10 wttnesMs beJide1 those Involved.
?tfeanwhJle, there was llUle ailJl that
the lklay~kl marke~ dispute would end.
~ 175 workers 11.t a Safeway
warehouse In NaUonal City, which sup.
pUes 44 San Oitgo markets, refused
Wednesday to crOll 1 picket lint
ealabllsbed by Retail Clerks L<>cal no ol
Loa Anlel .. , the firm Aki.
•
•
'
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---------------·---------· Dl1'orees
FREE TICKETS
to Walt Disneys
CHICK IVERSON'S GALA PREMIERE NIGHT
at Fox South Coast Plaza Theatre
T~e Fox South C<lasl Plaza Theatre will premiere "The Love
Bug" movie for the first time in Orange Coun ty, the night of
June 25 at 8:30 p.m. Chick Ive rson has bought the entire
theater for th is Gala premiere and would like to share this
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This is how it works. and it's simple to get a free ticket.
Just fill in the coupon below and send to Chick Iverso n, .•
all coupons mu st be Jn Jhe mall no later than midnight
June 16, 1969: Each cou pon sent in will represent two seats.
If more coupons are sent in than there art avai lable seats,
then a drawing will deter mine the lucky winners. You will be
no tified by mail if you are a lu cky recipient of these seats.
'
-Buddy Hacket, Dean Jones, and many more star in this fun·
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"Herbia" will be a lone: remembered nl1ht. Only those with
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Send in the coupon today .•. absolutely no obligation except
to pick up your tickets if you are a lucky winner and have
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r------------------------------~,
MAIL THIS
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TODAY!
\)
CHICK IVERSON, INC,
A45 E. Coast Highway
Ne-otport Beach, CaUfomia
I underst•nd this coupon will be-ttll1!bl• for a dr1winl ol two ti<k•t• to
Iverson Premiere night of the Welt Ol1ney pto(luttion 'The Love l uc'' tl
t he Fox South Coast Plaza Th11tr• Junt 25, Jtl9.
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CHT ST ATC
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.very deers watdriibt.
In brown .,ma
or bl1ck t><f1rh~e ••
f-landsom• new Italian looJ<.
Comfortable SQUilf'9 tCltl
•od wide, brass
buckl.,str•p.
Elllsticized insttp.
Softy ~er.
Jn d•rlc ·browrt. / Mitt• or block.
The Lltest from ltal11n
·bootmakers. Sm<irt
0-rina buckla orn.11m1nl
Ellstlclztd lnttep.
In tn. ,_, oltv.
br~U!lblack.
Llbi Wlndna: on I cloud with
full eushioned insole and
axtrll soft: bPJ*S,
Comfort ruaranteed.
In d1rlc brown or
black grain
leather.
464 S. MAIN ST., ORANGE
333 E.17TH ST., COSTA MESA
OTHEll &I.A SHO!: STORES IN:
LOS ANGELES, 4012 W. SANTA BARBARA
BEVERLY HILLS, 9830 W. PICO BLVD.
W~STCHESTER, 8915 S. SEPULVEDA BLVD.
SANTA MONICA, !'000 WltSlllRE BLVD.
-N. HO!.J.YWOOD, 6512 lAUREL CANYON BlVD.
SHERMAN OAKS, 14645 VENTURA BLVD.
CANOGA PARK, 8393 TOPANGA CANYON BLVD.
VENTURA, 2280 EAST MAIN STREET
1.ANCASTER, 701 W. lANCASTER BLVD.
SHOP DAILY 9:30 • 9:00 /SHOP SUNDAYS 10 • 5
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VOi! '2, NO. }40, 2 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CAIJFORNtA
. l •
THURSDAY, .JUNE 12, 1969
\
---. . ----
JEN CENTS "
Populace, Not C·ollector Main Tra.sh· ,Problem
By RlCIWID P. NALL
Of .. DeltJ Pllll It-"
· Trash problems In Laguna spring more
from tbe popuJace !ban tbe trash col-
lector who is doing a good )Ob.
Tbis was the oplnjon of Mi.yor Glenn
Vedder Wednesday as councilmen alfted
their trash situatioc wllh a fine tooth
comb. Trash contractor John Lindley, t..aguna
Beach Disposal Service, Inc., rei¢or~
lbe mayor's contention as he detailed the
headaclles o! keeping equipment thal can
salely and efficiently bandle Laguna's
hllb ond goat-path roads.
Lindley aaid he can't keep a new truck
in Laguna !Of' more than two years (th,en
shifts them to Cos!& Mesa), bas !rouble
getting labor, uses two men per truck ofr
hillside sa{ety and bas high --·· compenaaU.on insurance rates (workmen
get back injuriu lifting trub recep-
tacl.,).
The people seemed lhe biggest thorn lu
~
tile side of tho lruh bualneu. Ll>ldley estimaled I.bat 100 boJllnmes doo,,.lum
trash collectioo. "
"I doo't know where Ille (bualneaa)
trash. goes," aa1d Lindley. "Ont lady·wttb
~ beauty parlor ta.ka tt home.". He aalcl
it was rough getting people to pay and
said on May 30 there were 591 trub ac·
count delinqllellCies.
City Manqer James D. Wheaton noted
that some of the city trash cans Oii the
board walk were removed because
nearby bulloesaes dwnped the day's
refuse Into them. It WU allo uJd that
one downtown bualness, unwillln&ly, tw
its trash added to by five to aevu other
buslneaes.
Lindley noted that Amerlcam are pro-
ducing more trash -in oranae qounty
ill pound! per penon per day, bo said,
rompared to three poo.nds ln yesteryear.
In 10 years eye.opening Laguna Beach
tra'h experience, be said, he ~ held the
ratoo down because ol COii cutting ond
efUclency despite Laguna's unique pro-
blems.
Lindley has asked a lhree-year ex·
lenslon of his conlracl that expins Sep!.
30, 1870, and a three year option. .
He said he has done a terrific job wblcb
should add.up to contract.renewal Coun-
cilmtn agreed the wort has been
generally good but will at next Wed-
nesday's meeting receive_ 1etten from
both" Llndley and another contractor w•
would like city buliness.
The oouncll ........ qreed alJO lhal
lbere ts· need to make !rub collectbl In
Lquna compulsory. Generally this Ill
done by adding H to the tax bIDs or w1te11 b)1ts. .
Councilman l\icbard Goldber~ tbo Lquna Beacb C:O..ty Water . bas
been reluctant to take on the chore: The
city now handles tbe billlna.but call onlf
(llee TIWll, !Al' ir
Down tlae
Mission
Trail
Festival
Lettering
In Bronze
Laguna Purchase Asked
Capo Conductin g
Voting Signups
CAPISTRANO -Regi5trars of voters
will be found at scattered locations in the
area from Capistraoo Bead1 to San Juan
CapiJtrano throulb Sunday. To register,
a cit!= nmt have been a residelll of tbe
stale for a )'<It and tbe counl)' for 90
days. ·
·Friday, r.ptrara will be at dlllrlct
elemerMr)' Doall -l :IO a.m. to 3
p.m. In tbe .,_ a< emilnc to 6 p.m.
Friday ind Salurd•Y and Sund>y •
regtatr:U.. will be spotted In area lbop-
pitlg cent.en. _
Voling ~ may be• ma:ite ~-·~--~-City ~=~l%.' 3'11 -~,~-ing -···-~ ..... -
•• tflf(: Dt!.U•~ rv.-
lollSstON VIEJO -June II! Is tlie last
da tl>l4 cbarter me111bmbip1 · io the s~ Valley Chlmber of Com·
.,.... will be given. N.,.., C11117 •il< ~
old, Ille c:llamber bas more t1w1 10 area
-and men:banl memben. An riiltW membership meeUng of the
chaliiher will 'be beld Tneoday at the
MisSion Viejo Ion. Reservationa lhould be
made with Al Blais , temporary
chairman, at 837-3731.
e Sum mer Sig"up Set
MISSION VIEJO -RegistraUon for a J~week summer recreation p~am at
the Mission Viejo High Sch~l Wlll be h.eld
Saturday from 9 a.m. 1Dltil noon. First
classes in volleyball, physical fitness and
owimmlng begin Monday.
Five class &esmom are planned for the
summer. Program will end Aug. 22. Fees
for the classes vary depending upon the
subject. . ned In addition to previously mentio
subjects. basketball, ping pong, and other
games will be in lbe program led by Bob
Minier, Bill Brow and Pa,t Roberts.
e Ser .,ice Cen ter Open
SAN CLEMENTE -A "home away
from home" for armed service personru;I.
the San Clemente Hospitality Center will
open Friday at a new location at 10 S. El
Camino ReaJ, San Clemente. . .
The center is a non-profit orgaruzation
run by volunteers from SO area churcbea
and· local mercllanll. Last year more
than 10,000 Camp P!:ndleton Mannts
n.gistered at the cent.er.
Hoon at the center will remain the
aame, from 4 p.m. to 10 .p.m. Frid.y, and
10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturdays, SCmdays
and holidays. ,
Despite the rocommeodalion o! !heir
architect, Festival of Arts dinctors
Wed~y held put for bronze letters to
identify their new Sse!,t theater and
For Huge Canyon
multipurpose building.
Architect Don Williamson, producer of
the Pageant of the Masters, had recom~
mended letters of acrylic plutic with an
anodized aluminum face which he called
"practically ageless".
W!lliamsm oppoeed bronze becaWlt it
d1scolon and ''bleeds" on the building.
Director David Young, a bulldu, led the
br002e forces. Director 0. E. "Bad"
Schroeder sided with the architect.
The board agreed that WilliamDt
might pick the font (style). of Ille lei·
tering that is to have lour-inch letten
saying Festival or Arb and eight-inch let-
ters below saying Forum.
Williamaon rej>ort.ed the t h e a t e 1
geQerally reody for. ,..,inne 21·.4e1!i<&Uon
Coal Miners .
Mourning
Lewis' Death
.. -i• .. ~· .. 1._,l!if'."; Wtm rirt I ''• ~
a&leil !if"~ !iiiililbig rt ni<dioll!IY ---f~ ~=1Y~~ ,!d (r.D deq1b al 1-il' Ille on Pap 'l
•• led Boyle lndfcllod In bll -blueprints and ll!usl look ot • comtruc that' the oervict1 may be held MClllda.\',
(aclllty Iv ... What else Is needed. On that dliy, he asked an -Li
lnotberbu!iness, the board : th · their cburcba od uni •-n--~--.....i interest in a Pnsldent ga er 10 a on~
"""'t''eACU for memorial aerviees.
Nl1oi: day propooed by LBiuna Beach Art I dded ·~~-"'-t 12 01 Association and learned that Publicist Boy e 8 : .u,o:;5 ......... ie a : a.m., June 13, until after the-funeral, thm'e will Sally ·Reeve is trying to determine U the be a period of mourning during whlcb 111
President ' is Interested in attending the roal minink will cease in the United
F~V:~ an executive session called by States and Canada u we honor our fallen leader. Board President William D. Martin which "It Is altogether fitting that the coal
ls becoming standard procedure each mines be silent while the men who work ~bfer=1~illiamson at t h e recom· in them come together to do honor to
rnendation of director Stuart Durkee to John Llewellyn Lewis."
make a feasibility report on an improved Boyle also demanded that In honor of
entrance for lrvine Bowl. The study ls to Lewis, Congress immediately enact
cost $300 based on a rough construction "strong coal mine health and ufety legislation." esm:;~ :!i~ Coasl Community "A John L. Lewis healtb ond safety bill
Hospital may use the grounds Aug. 30 for would be a fitUng climu and memorial
a fund--rafsing art sale. to the career of this outstanding cham-
-Heard a report lhat the new elec· pion of coal mining aafety," the wUoa
tronic survelflance burglar alarm system head said.
is now operational.
-Learned that Contractor James
Schmitz will operate the Festival
restaurant with Kay Southern acting 8JI
hostess·manager.
-Directed director Verner Bec k to
work out a location for lhe information
booth to be maMed by Chamber
1.tennaids.
Nixon Dilemma:
Shape of Poo l
I n San Clemente -Agreed that the expensive Festival
organ, given the school district alter it
was gnawed by pack rats and recently Besides International tensions, a loom-
given back to the Festival, should be put Ing lunar landing, campus chaos and
in fVst class shape. other problems, President Nixon today is
-Delayed a decision on purchasing an considering what shape he want& for •
upeosive piano for the new theater. swimming pool at his San Clmlente
-teamed thal only '2 seats remain for home.
lb• llx-week Pageant and that receipts Omega Sw1mmlng Pool Co., 441 D St.,
from ticket sales art running $35,000 Tustin, is rushing to complete the job
ahead of last year. prior to the First Family's Augult vblt,
'-"'=~~~Spokesmen-for theilrm revealt<t·toctay . ..__
DAILY "ILOT ...... n' ltfdln P. M•I
N o /tfor~ Books
School is out for the summer and these Laguna students make no
bone• about being ready to hit !be surf. Looking forward to summer
free from studies are (from left) F1oyd COOper, Candi Mccure Mark Johnson and Victor-Lee. Cbirgel ' ·
Artist Quits Court Fight
0n Booth Discrimfuatton
Laguna Dancer's Choice:
$5,000 Fin e or 500 Da ys
Digging begins Saturday and the com-
. pany hopes to have the pool finished In
about two weeks -a hurry-up job com-plred to what the average customer gets. Laguna Beach artist Charles Beauvais
· Four of five bulc destgmi are being bas abandoned his court battle against
stadled by the Nlloos -one an unei:· the Festival of Art.J.
plained baby ~ ahape -and a decision He ttnnounced b1a decision Wednesday
is expected by this weekend. The Spanish'.-style manalon built on the again8'. a backiround of Superior Court
oceanfront bluff by the late Hiram H. rulings which have broadly indicated that
the "many acts of dlscrirrllnation" prac·
ticed against him. ••J won 't Jose anything
like that amount lhls year,'' he said
Wednesday. "because 1 won't be there.
"Many of the exhlbitors· who failed to
back me In my court auit last year are
now wishing they had," Beauvais aakl.
"Things are even Ugbter than lhey were
then and 11'• '!lY prediction lhA before
long. the Festival people will have
everyone wearin& lltUe berets and
specially des!~ arttsta' smnckl to
emute tbat the vtslUng public gets the
Sultry Carol Cybulski of Laguna Beach
faces an agonl1ing choice today -pay
out a wtal of 15,DOO In fines or spend the
next !GO dlys l>eblnd (not bol ... ) bars.
So ruled Sillta Ana MunJclilol Coort
Judge Paul Mast in sentencing the
Laguna all-nude dancer on 10 counts of
lewd conduct and Indecent elJ>O'U". She
was found guilty by a jury tut May 27.
In any even~ Judge Mast ril1<d Miss
Cybu15kl. II. of 311611 Cresta Way, must
spend 15 dl!Y• In Orange COnncy jail and
she cannot substitute a ffnt for that term\ '
He accepted notice of appeal from the
nude performer, a peUUon which will be
ruled on by the Superior Court'• •i>-
pellate division.
Cotton olfered only tbe....., for bathen. the angry Art C<>kmy painler hu fatJed to
bankruptcy with the court and confirmed Spoke!men for the pool bulldm de<lln-sta'· of --•---~-the that her funds had been ezbausted by the eel to PY how much the job will cost. 1o11: a ca\lle '""'wn1 . .,...,.._
long legal batUe she has fou,ghl Featval'a ope:aton.
Judge Mut dismissed al!orney Berrien Beauvais dropped his bruahet ond mil<·
Moore'i rnotioo for • ..... trial. He Dana Porn' t Man eel • few legal colon lut yell' when, be declined to accept the argument that Ille ·-~ the __,, al __._ he court 'ad failed to eatobltsh community c~, < ~·• •.-·---" ' · portlcalll'.lr named 1eneral manager
11tandards for tavem performances and O W B d M Abel dllCriminated atmt told Moore Iha! ti WU a matter best n 8 ter oa r CJIOlll '-..
decided by appellale benches. • 1 ,hl~I.,,._.,. !hat Alli! blil·~
MissC)lbubidneednotc:omplywiththe Broo p · his"' 'iil·''iil~· ·~lctat<ita\--•.j se~'."'<' uni!! July .P1 5Ju~dee "'~-~)ed. ~~~ied :C ~an.: U:~~ ... ' ·llit fllaOa · Of bootlltl to.f~~ 11 ~ ~tfll that~ •J ""~\·Al> -<;<>ao!'COtili!1 waler btslr!ct nv .. mfbiw I '•~ .lhll' /ob~ ·1q et•uval• flollahi btncb will liiY<" . &Wn''o 1 tioanl ., y . ·' . • ' ~· mi<K'fxtend<d Iv the point of•plaeln•: ruling by that date. • . • ~-• The Art Colony enttttalner, attirod In a Brooks. 33161 Mesa Vlsts Drive, ,.. palauo performer behind 1 lorp
rlgbt lm&ge. •
r -•'The same co1tdUJoil1«--p rev I ~1 , ''
Beauva!J ·Mid. "·'l'bol:a: i. .0 tsuo: rolotlm lo.I:. altocod.in' ol bOotbo.to'Ctlits >1ho
.wlih,,to eaji\bl1 a00 U.• n.v.r wm be ..
·'""' u t1!<Y accept this lllllO "&!fotn. . .
Steele llffll'1ceU mlfti..skkted salmon ptnk 8lllt and sliver rtiht.-of·way a.gent for South e r.n 1 lret. .. 1 , •
boots, backed her attorney's contention CaUfornla Edison Company, wlD fill tfie <• otMrr "aiJ.allcloua"'actiorw l1i Abel Jn.. , '
that the cue will be argued "ail the way vacancy left by tbe rulgnaUon of dlri>o ! :cl~ U.._al...,,.ll!r"-" ··~ YORK ~IJ)'I) "~ •,,,.; 'll!Oel
to the SUpttme Collrt.' BoC1I she and tor Gllllave A. flt•Amer on June 5. • ''°'"' ' . liOm • IAClni ~todoJ I-lbe t,umjii.ol I.be
Area
By JACK CIW'Pl2L Of-----lt bas been aald !bit' I la better to lllltt
one Httle candle than to cune the
darkness. ., '
~ ,J,lm • llllley bas • ,floodllght
and bo'ltlllnlnc 'It°" 540 aqu of land
called Sycamore Hilla Jocatfll belw<on
LNima ond "1"'1 CIP\L . ~. -~r.r Uon ol
Ii-.! -. ' Ibo l..aauna. ar-belt ' bas pro-
.,_, tbal I.be -..... purcbaM tbo
property lolt about fl.l million.
Tbe money would be Obtained by Ibo c~
ty for that purpooe from tho llale Lindi Commtssioo, be NA ,..,.
••ni.11 is a ciUi...1 a appeal to the city
council to purcbase tbe proporty for
preservation," Dilley said.
~·1t ls an appta! to cltlzenst too, to
stand with us and Bee throu8h tbo
purchase. u Ille stale Landi ComlnilSioo
doesn't come through, we must dJt into
our own pockets."
The property Is owned by the Great
Laltes Properttes Corporation. It was
bought by the company about three years
ago, Dilley aaid, for a figure of about $4
mllUon. Development plans called for
buildin& about 500 ODe-half acre estate.
!llee GREENBELT, Page I)
Another Lag una
Coach Resig ns
Another Laguna Beach High School
coach has resigned .
Ed Bowen, 36:-year-old assistant varsity
football coach, turned in his resignation
today -the filth ArtiBt mentor to have
resigned or been !ired in recent weeks.
Track coach Jack Lytb.goe wu fired
last month and four other coaches have
since quit in protest both over Lythgoe's
dJsmiasal and dllagreement! with pr\na
clpal Bob Reeves.
Bowen, who had ooacbed at Lacuna for
10 years. was also tbe 1Chool'1 head golf
coach.
Tbo other COICbel wbo'vo reslgn"1 are
llgbtwetgb1 football Cl>ICbes • Warren
WaWna and_Jmy .lfeumarm .and !lead
bUetiatrcoacb Nonnllorucld: ,
For full details, see Story on paae 23:-•
Weadler
Tbe sun's· 11..,,inc· lo .. ain Fri-
day, UH al least noon and 11 'll be
only· parity llUlilly 'then with tile
mercury in the upper 60's aJonr
the cout.
INSIDB TODAY
Graduating from high 1chool
can it>e im ~ propor1·
ton -btd fl d«m~ have to be.
Sec Paas 11, , . ;.,,... ' tf.fi
allfiNWls ~ • ~ ,.t, ._ N -" 0.-Netlctl " °"""""' ,.1. ... ,.,.. ,. . ·-" """"' 1+1• -" ....... ~ ti Miss Cybulski, whose '1IJ>O!Ult al net
unadornod dt<rtere before p.u... al the
Apartment A-GoGo wu viewed• bf In
·-jlo:J, ·-red lo·be-·ed by Ille -Siie f 11 &d .. -ol
Moore refused to dlvulge the """"" of Broosmer bad been • member al ·~ -. ' -••• 'tlila ~ """·~·uy -. ..,.,.. u.-;.,.. ltmd1 needed for the lenglhJ legal pro-bolrd·llnce-ldr.-tn Marcb of !If. '. . . : • '._,:.,' ~ ·~!!'of: 1 .laoior<'(W.~pqea , ;
-· llHAlgnedfar.-alboalth. .. • .,.,~....,_ .... "'"-·" • .J*tll)l " • '----------'
.4. ' ' t
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DAILY PILOT -L
. '\ . : :~~ ' : 1 •
Funds ~Held!
..,;..... \ • i •••
By. Trea8ury
• ..
WASlllNGTON I AP) -The Tremry
J)!part.ment bas blocked the U.S. fin&n·
cial auets of black 1 militant Eldridfe
C1eaftl' on ground.I that ~ is illegally ID .
Cutia, .the Slate Departm<nt aald loday •.
·PreU'Officer Roberf'J. MeCloskey said
the climp®wn on Cleaver's funds was
taken under tuban Control regulations
tssued und"e.r -the Trading with the
Enemy Act.
Cleaver, a leader in the Black Panther
organizaUon and author of the best-sell·
Ing book "Soul on Ice," la wanted in
California to serve out a lS-year prison
.entenct tor assault with intent to kill
and assault Witb·i. dead If weapon, He has
been souaht since he failed to appear last
November following revocation of his
parole. ·
The Stale Department announcement
iave official confirmation to press
reports that Cleaver had fled to Havana.
"We in Ule State Department are
utisfied that Cleaver is ln Havana," the
1polresman said.
McClostey detllned tr say how much of
<;\eavfLs_.money . -ls .trw.en by ~
'treasury action. U.S. officials Indicated
tt:ie blocked funds would include, among
other things, income from Cleaver's
\fritings.
• The State Department spokesman in-
Qicated it is unlikely th at the United
States will ask ~bi. for formal e1-
tfadlli>o o~1:leavor.· : ·
· He satd the 1.tot U.S . .Cuban ettriClition
treaty provides for return of criminals
wanted for such deeds as murder, rob-
bery and kidnaping, but "po!Jtical
c;.rimr.s are exempted under the treaty.
¢leiver contends the revocation of his
jarole waa politically motivated.
; Furtbmnore, McCloskeY :~.~ •• t II
virtually impossible lQ..8pply~the terms of'
the treaty in the absence of diplomatic
~lllUOllll." .: : :
•
Front PGfle! 1 . .
GREENBELT
" along with. multiple hoi!JilN. and two com-
mercial shopping ...... •
"Obvloli!ly, such i!eveloprr1ent would
destroy,.sf\e natural heaUt.f of the canyQnS
and eliminate fore.vlr 1* possibility pf
our IMruna GrtiiliblJt," lhe Lagunan pld.,! "'~ ...... J ... '
· ''nll land<llllllt bt·purchaoed U ll is to be ~. and~t"ined assurances from the cOmpany of ~ir willingne11 to sell at
a stated prioe ot f4 .i million," he said.
The greenbeft'COricO'Pl 'l'>llilied by the
citir.ens comm.Jttee lnvofves the con·
l!iervatlon of a natural zone of land around
the city -thla for Ill landscape,
ecological, and watershed va1ues.
In a listing of the advantages of the
land, a number or recreational ad·
vantages are.n6ted. · ' · 1
According to ~ committee, lhr~
Jar1e p.arks were suggested for the In·
ttrior'area in a clty.1~ tWo year.sago.
Othei aecilons of the land would . pro-
vide areU fat hiking: riding and rtlated
activiUes, Dilley said. .. n. 'JlrOPtrlY tl91)· lle:i within the
taeuna Beach Unified School District. As
populatlon climbs, sitea for new ~cllools
have. become difficult to find in hilly
~ •. Tlle 450-acre s~t' could be a
logical tocatlon for a school if city
development CQntlnues, officials said.
The _di~rict paid a~l $280,!XXJ for
Thurston lnterru~ate'~ _14·acre site.
The city 11.s of yet hu· taken no action
on the proposal pending an investigation
of the matter.
· DtUey, lsowever, has already rece ived a
$100 dOnitlon to the Greenbelt Committee
{or purchase of the $4.5 million tract.
Swedes Chide Ru_ss
MO$COW (UPI) -Sweden's 'Com~
muniit . party today · condemned the
Soviet·l!d invasion of Ciechoslovakia and
told the Communist !Ulnmlt conrerence
here 1t could not 1upport the meeting's
buiC llocmnent which includes an
analysis of the lntematiooal situatioo.
)
IJJ\l lY CliLOI
~ ~ PVllflNIMG COMl".\MY
LMrt N, W•M
• ,.,_._.. .,. "*'llllllr
J•c• •· C•rl.., VlcA P~I.,,. Gefttr.,i ...,._Nltu
TM11111 K,,.,11 ....
T•olMlt A. M•rpt.lft• .-.......r111w
Jti,lri1r1' P. Nill a.-•...:.r. Cffr fflttr
' . . I 'If(' ' ' ' ' ' l ,,~,.,,:r,G· .UN. A' TE·· ·~~~h"1. .... ~·R·l;·
.... rLJl. . . .~~ .'24 ~ ~W,fJ
I "',,.._!lo.I......... ..,. .. • • ,. • ' ... r • II'. '~ • { '~, -' .. _._,,_ ":'" ... ..._ • • "'l. N... ..__ '. ... • ' . . ~ ..... .;. .. . ... .: .. ~1y '~~ ~ :·:~ . ,.,, ~ • I '..... _._ ••I ' \., " \ ~·~--J"':"'r;-·~· ; ·~ ,.. \ ,..1 f'•
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ALMcm' ALUMNI DEPT. -J'm
trYing io t8ke iQy last (ew hours of high
6Cbt¥>1 nice and slow, 1ort of lettlng it
' alnk in. • .
Tonight ~t Ill ~mes ,to an end. I and
200 other classmates have spent ap-
pi-olinl0ately 4,800 houi-s of class Ume at
tbe old Alma Mater. That's a lot of
education.
Wlth the sweep·of the eecond hand, and
a b.andsbake .. wtth either Dr. Nonnan
Bro~11e or Rebut Turner or the schoo l
board, it will all draw to a cl05e. I'll ac·
ctpt my dtploroa, wallr: off the stage of
one . qf the most fantastic sites for a
l;raduatiotr'-Irvine Bowl -contemplate
the seirlt Of '69, and fight back the tears.
wen,: !hat'i'what my peers aay.
I dOn't ihjnk · 1·11 cry. After lasting
through four years of Laguna Beach High
School, I'm conditioned enough to take
any tragedy without tears. The class of
'69 .has gone through a lot of rough
going.
In fact, don't be surprised if you hear
some laughinc within the cluster of
maroon and white robea. Our class has
exhausted·ftve different admlnl!trations.
But that's not rea11y so fuMy.
There were the happier moments. Like
watching Brian Bagley dive over the goal
line in the fleeting seconds of the La
Qitillta CIF football ·game. We won, 14 to
13. It's a sweet sight watching coach
_Akins yell in elation. I W3n't watcbina:
the La Quinta coach, but I~ imagine • ,
We try to forget things like Jim Kuhn
breaking his hand in the M1Sflon Viejo
game, when tbere was rully no contest
lor the victor.
And there are the ~arding mom e.,ts
-Ilkt the Senior Class fund drive for
Biafran relief. The Dating Game was
very rewarding -with a grand prize of a
trip to San Francisco. Tom Tabor was
the chlet engineer there. •
Then there were all the great drama
productions, climaxed by thia -year's
Brigadoon. John Chamberlin, Nick
Enrig~t (will . we .ev:er forget Nick?),
GJenn Daniels, ¥erilee Magnuson and the
whole crew did another rar out Job on the
crumbllng stage.
Rob Kronman made his impact on the
community, too. Just turn to pqe 197 in
the yearbook, and read his me.ssa1e or
Love within the Youth Council. He was
president.
And there was a firs t tbi1 yta.r, thanks
to the great splrlt or Mark Jotwon and
Ron Coonrad. Boy yell leaders really
complemented the winning teams.
Talent abounded in the class or '69.
With the singing of Leah Cano. super
musician Ralf Reynolds (also voted class
comic), the electric sounds of Bob
Wright, Gly Cooper, Mike Loge, the beat
of Bret LeBarts and the harmonica of
Pete Oliver, the halls were always filled
500 Stude.nts Sign Up
For· Schools in Summer
-· ,
~ppmtmate}y 500 students h av e
enrolled 'Vl the aix-wetk summer pro-
gram tar~ Laguna schools which begins
June 2land ends Aug. 1.
Classq will be held al lbe high school
from a ·a.m. until ooon daily. There will
be DO bus service. The district has
employed 19 teachers for the session.
-School ls divided Into four sections:
primary, kindergarten through thlrd
grade; elementary, fourth through 11xth;
intermediate, seventh and eighth; and
high l!iCbool subjects for which five units
may be earned.
Classes for high school students will be
pre:-a}&ehra. algebra, geometrv, drivers
training, aewing and typing.
Elementary class subjects include
math, science, developmtm:al ttadlng,
remedial math, Spanfsh, art lclence,
ceramics, drama, reading-literature, ~
music. stu4ents may iake three classes.
Two-hour intermediate subj~ · '1'e
remedial malh, typing, wood' and metal ,
shop, chorus, sewing and band. Students ·
may take two subjecta:. ·
Studenta have been asked to anlve at
school before 8 ~.m. A claaaroom list will
be posted Oil !ho north Cllftpul (old
• Thurslon buildinll .. There ~ll be ohort
Saddle~ck Hirei!
New Consultant .
• Saddleback College has hited a con-
sultant at a rate of $10 a day plus ex-
penses to coordinate planning for first
permanent buildings on Its new campus.
He is Or. C. C. Colvert, director of a
doctorate-level progTam in junior college
education at the University of Texas.
Dr. Colvert, who will be employed for
not to exceed 25 days, replaces Dr.
James w. Hobson, UCLA vice chancellor.
Dr. Hobson resigned his consultant posi·
lion wilh Saddleback because of in·
creased duties al UCLA.
Dr. Colvert will coordinale the In-
structors' ideas on what they want in
facilities with the architect.
The first group of permanent buildings
is now being planned with construction to
begin later lhls yea.r.
The Law's
brunch breaks to buy milk and cookies. Dress requirements will be those of the
regular school year.
Quinn Farnes will be principal 0£ the
six-week school. Information may be ob-
tained from the summer school office,
494-t54&, exteruiion 69.
County Studies
General Plan
Design Project
A "Program Design ~ject" for
developing an Orange County General
Plan was studied by county 1upe.rvi.9or:s
Wednesday and endorsed "in cooctpt."
But they withheld final app al until
cost figures are available.&n4 the Orange
Coonty League of Citlea an4 the Counly
Planning Commisaion volte their ap-
proval,'
The. 17-page report wu preMl'lted to
lbe board by Planning Director 'orost
Dtckuon. It was develaped ln a six
month, '51),000 project by TRW. a Redon-
do Beach coosultlng. Jinn, aided by
members of Oickason's staff.
S\lpervlsor David I... Baker balled the
report and future planning u "the
grtatest innovation thls county or a n y
other county has plann!ng ln thl:s century.
u Is most imporla!I\ lo proce¢· l
especially like the strong emphasis on
local government partidpalkn"
Six county civic leaders pral&ed .the
program Including UC! ChanctlJol: Daniel
Aldrich Jr.; Doreen Marshall, mayor or
Newport Beach; John Lawson, general
manager of PhiJro..Ford Division of
Aeronutronlc, N e w p or t Beach, and
chairman of ••Project 21" a citizen plan·
ning group, and Harriet Bemus of
Newport Beach, president of the Orange
County League of Women Voter11.
Chancellor Aldrich summed it up wlth,
"the citizens are vital ly concerned in the
quall~y of environment In future Orange
County. There are no\v some 30 organita·
lions working on the problems. They
stress human concerns not just physical
environment."
The Law
•
2nd Judg e Agrees W ith 1st
By TOM BARLEY
Of tllt Dl !tr ,lltf fltlf
Kathleen Sue Storum went to Superior
Court today happy that the jurist who put
her on probation wlth ·a solemn and uni·
que warnlng wasn't around to see her
back in front of the bench.
but he took her as far as Oregon In a
deliberate defiance of JUdge Gardner's
order . Both condemned Judge Gardner's
action in pre-court conversation as a
"deliberate move to break up a happy
marriage."
wllh a tune of '°'*· ldnd. • • • . The senion wife alw.,a: wary of lbe
camera, with profeaaionals D 1 c k
Brotbertop and Att1k'ew•, ln add.1Uon1 to
Bill Murray, Steve Kawaratanl, ~ary
Martin, and Toni J~. . . .
Speaking of pliolorril>!Jy, the c1llS of
'69 (and more notably Jfm WaJTen, Salli
Sbattuok, Brotbertml and Jill Hallock),
has attained fame with the short movie
Ice cream Cone.
And we had our share of claA belUUes.
Under Homecoming Queen C hr I 1 t y
Mikel!, the comely court lncludod Debbie
Aubrey, Merilee Benton, Willa Cather,
Hilary Huston, Merilee Magnuson, Lee
PaySO!I and Sue Watam.
Deoervtng lot& ol credit are the clus
leaders -President Doug Sophlan, vke-
president Ray Wilbur, eecretary Lamie
Bird and tttaaurer Rick England. J guesa
Rick dld a floe Job: so full was the class
treasury that the senior luncheon was
completely financed by ruck's bag of
loot.
Aod, alJ (his is coming to an end. 1be
chlofer<bitect of the New Prestige, Douc
Schmitz, la now • hu-beea. But be laid a
f01mdat1on for claaaes to come.
And the spirit of '69 will haunt the halls
of Alma Mater for years to come. But it's
a good spirit, full or good times, and
LBHS is all the better because of the
class of '69.
Someone hand me a hanky.
l have a bit of dust in my eye.
Faculty Senate
Plan Approved
For Saddlehack
Saddleback College · Instructors have
voted to fonn an Academic Senate.
Tht Senate will operate apart from the
Faculty Association which most in-
structors now belong to.
The Academic Senal' will concern
Itself m08tly with curriculum matters
while the main function oI lhe Faculty
As.social.Ion Is to look out for teachtrs'
weUare, including salaries.
Approval of the Academic Senate was
given thia week by the board of trustees
alter the faculty had voted 21 to 17 to
form the organization.
The instructors who voted against it did
so because they worried two faculty
groupa would fragment the faculty and
~~ a connotation of the Academic
Senate name la "this Is where ' th~ ac-
tivista get," according to Robert Parsons,
faculty woclallon president.
From PGfle 1
TRASH •..
cut off trash for non-payment of bills.
Councilmen spoke of adding truh coJ.
ltcllon to taz bills but pondered the pnr
blem of vacant lots and other com.
plexitits. No solution wu found for com-
pulsory trash collection.
Ex-nun Wed s J ew
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPi) -Jacqueline
Grennan, former nun and an innovator in
Roman Catholic education, is now wife of
Paul J. Wexltr, a Jew . They were mar-
ried Wednesday al WcbstC'r College. a
small girls' schoo l where the bride is
president.
jJ J.
7 STYUS TO
CHOOSE FROM
' LAff S•rpt•IJ!
I I •
' . . ' .
.
'
~::~Harbor n ·istriet
• . \
B ~ea~ap Urged
'
-The OOW1l7's Loeal ·Agency FOl'ftlallon
Commtalon (I.AFC) Wednesday TOied 3-
2 to recommend to the Board of
Supervi!ors lhat the Orange County
Harbor District be dlalolved and a coonty
wide departmen\ of harbors, paru and
beaches be creat'ed.
The motion, by Supervisor David L.
Baker, an LAFC member, also required
that all W<Ls ol lbe Harboi Dlrlrict be
transferred to the cotmly.
Fina1 action wu defenM, however, ait
the suggesllon of Asslatant County
Counsel William J. McCourt, to jive the
LAFC staff and the county counsel's of·
!ice time to develop a11 required con·
dillons to make dissolution ol the dlltrlct
enforceable under law.••
The staff wu ordered to report the
conditions necessary at the July I LAFC
meeting, but I.AFC chairman James T.
Workman made it clear that there would
be no further public hearing on the
dissolution matter. "It is closed," he
emphasized.
Assistant County Counsel Robert F.
Nuttman said today that the Board of
S~pervlsors has two options, They may
reJect the dissolution, or, if lhey accept
it, it must be submitted to a vote or the
people because the district was formed in
1933 by !UCh a vote. It was not clear ex·
aetly when the matter would go to county
aupervilon for action.
DJuoluUon of Ibo d!Btrlct has been
championed for more than three years by
!he Cily ol HlUltlngloo Beach bec111Se
that community wu unable to reach an
agreement w1th the district on safety
services in lbe clty'a H u n t 1 n I t o D
Jeweler Wounded
By Gunman Still
Fights fo r Life
Samuel Brucker, downtown Santa Ana
merchant who !Mt it out "'ilh two holdup
men last Thursday, Is still fighting for his
life today in Santa .li.na Community
Hospital.
Hospital aides said he Is "still in
serious condition but lmp~oving each day
and came through addltldna'l s'uracr)' sUC-
cessfully Wednesday."
Meanwhile. Santa Ana Police . CtUef
Edward J. Allen has commended Brucker
for "his heroism above and beyond tbe
call of duty."
The 65-year--0ld Brui::ker. owner of
.Brown's Jewelry, 213 E. 4th St., was
wounded seven Urries last Thurllday in
the gun battle in his store. He killed one
of the alleged bandits, Louis Asmond, 37,
of San Juan Capistrano and the .!leCOlld
robber su1pect, Arthur Kleis, 25, of
Anaheim, wu captured minutts later two
blocks away.
Ht faces preliminary hearing Friday on
char~es of attempted murder.
Chief Allen said of Brucker, "Anyone
who knows Sam as I do knows he
possesses that kind or courage and, dl.s·
tlain for the armed thugs prowling our
streets taking the lives and property of
decenl law·abiding citizens.
""'e cannot commend hlm highly
enough fo r his heroic act. It wall in lhe
highest tradition of A mer I can
citizenship."
Harboor. The city maintainl!d that Jt
should and WU perlonntns lhb HrVlcel
and It· ahould be tither· compensated by
the district or· allowed to wlthdraw from
the district.
Last year the LAFC refused to let the
city withdraw.
The dlssohrtlon recommendation was
supported by Workman, Baker and com-
missioner Frank P. Noe, a Cypreas city:
couocilrpan.
Opposing were FUlh Di!lrict Counly
Supervisor Alton Allen aad Commi.Uloner
Charles A. Pearson of Santa Ana.
When the county Board of Supervlaors
faced the disoolu\lon Issue In 1981, It
voted ·4 to 1 against it, with only Baker in
support.
Huntincton Beach City Administrator
Doyle Miller offered a strong afgument
Wednesday for putting the issue before ·
Orange County voters.
"It is very apparent th.at the majority
of Orange County cities lµ'e dissatisfied
with the operation of the district ••. In a
democracy, the voice of lhe people should
be heard. If we are willing to put it to a
vote of the people, why are the county
and the district hesitant to allow the peo-
ple the opportunity to decide the issue?"
Miller protested.
''It is obvious we have a political foot·
ball,·• Miller contended. "We feel that the
iss-Je.S .are very simple: There is
dissaUsfaction among the elected officials
of the majority ol the cities in this coun-
ty, anj £hose officials are the direct
representativea of the citizens of this
county,'' he argued.
Vi 1'a Ja11me
Jayme Boyd, 18, will represent
Westminster in the Orange
County Fair beauty contest
July 15, \he opening day oi \ht
six--day exposition in Costa
Mesa.
SOFA BED SALE!
The -22-yea'r-old HunUngton Btach girl
told ·newsmen be!ore the court session
that the abs,ace or Judje Robert
Gardner -the veteran Newport Beach
jurlsl is on temporary Appellate Court
duty -"was the best lhiria_ that could
happen to us." ·
They might have been better off If
Judie Gardner and not Judie Howard
Cameron had been ruling on the violation
<If probation.
TheM .,.. ••ry comforlt b'e soft beds fM
Sitti~ .... SIH pi'"J. .... 400M Now 299 .00
By "us" she meant htr husband,
Rodney, 2l, and hentlf bol.b of 1'1t61 Jae·
quelyn Lane , and both convicted on drugs
charges .before Judge Gardner last
January. Storum drew a short jail term,
mispended by the judge, and both ht and
• hiE wife wtre plaetd on probaUon.
But an tyebNw ra1slng condition or
The superior Court's senior jurist. bad
no be$itation in puttin1 Rodney in Orange
County jail for &lz months and Klthlflen
for three monlhs. And the attr8Ctlve
blonde girl who walked into court with a
big grin, walked out in tears and with bu
head bowed.
Prosecutor Al Wells probably made the
difference by filling In Judge cameron on
the fact.I behind Jud(e Gardner's unusual
ruling .
A wide i.'-ciiOfl of Ftbtics ertcl Ce*1 +.
chOOM from.
H.J.GAl\l\Eff fURNJlURE
., that probation wu that Kathleen should
not •JMn assOc:late with h'r hwband. II
nod.ney Cool! Kathll!en home 'again, Judge
Gardner warned , she wouJd go to Jail.
"He wes told by Mrs. Slorum lhat she
wanted no more o( her husband," he 11.ld.
''liere was a girl convicted of selling $2$
worth ol aeconal to a &tate narcotlcs
agent and sht was put on probaUOl'l ..... a
unique sentence for this offtnse--becaUK
of Mr sob story "'hlch Judge Gardner ac-
cepted.
PllOflSSfDHAL
INTU.fOl OISI..,., _.._ .................. 2116 HAlto• aLVD •
COSTA MUA, CALIF.
'4,MJ71 646-017'
Rodney and Kathleen admitted tod3y
that he'd not only taken her home again .. I
__.. ___ _ ----~---~--------------------~~------------------------
I
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voe: ~2. NO. '140, 2 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORAN&E COUNTY,~ • JEN CENTS • --.... . ';
~class of Chang~'-Gr ~duates . at ,-..· . -.
11le aun brote through for com.
meoc.nen& uerciltl at Davidlon Field
Wednelday aftemoon. which cloled out
the hip achoo! careers of W N•WJJO<i
Hll'bor High Sd>ool ""1-0rs.
Hundreds of pattnls and friends looked
pn u k>ng 'lina of blue-robed graduates
)>!eked up their diplomas.
Valedktorian CoonJe Oabom challenged
graduates to: loot Jt each person -
"het.bir' YOUdl:, 'J)ki, white or black -as
individuals and not u members of a , . ... ' group. .•
Seeing persons as part ot the establish·
ment or as Negroes makes it eaaler not
to listen to thim, she remarked. ''We
can categorize and dismfas them and sit . .
back lo l!lilHree silence. Their plight can
be little to ua if we don't see them as
human beings whb suffer."
• She.·said, "Life can be an interaction ol
symbols unUI we ourselves are reduced
to symbols. Or it can be more. If for a
moment we could see the world through
aDQther's eyes we might see the unique
beauty of what It means to be a human
being."
Stephen "Kent" Hammeras, the
salutatorian, said he found his high school
education ''in too great a measure a
waste ol time. 'Ibe moments when 1. was
forced to thiuk were precious few."
He said tn one class half the time was
~voted to busy wort, and suggested Ute
teacj)er could belter liPe-ibe-
Ume '"r<fatln& bll -leace ID llYla(. "W• will 'DOI "be ct1111mt to wai>der
almlealy In a JMBninP-life,"-~
meru Slid. "Wltb time we will find our
directtoo and .. Will-....... Ivel. Bui
bow mudt'btlt« h cOuJd have -wtlb the help of you who have gone before."
Principal OW-Jes Godllball said the
class ol '89 will be remembered as one
willing to bring about change through the
democratic process.
"Rather than protest., they involved
themselves iri meaningful dialogue with
the faculty," he said.
School Board President James "Bill"
Peyl<l!> told graduates that . In spite o!
. .
conunenta lie had Just heerd he-hopes the
-'Y.'l<m has prepared them to think.
"We are toki by lbe time the members
of thiJ•cJuo .,. IAf yean cfd about 7>
percent will be filling types of jobs that
do not now .ezist," be said.
Singled out ror speclal recognition dur-
1.Dg the ceremonies were honor gradu,ates
David Alward, Deborah Brown, John
Carlton, Kathleen Crawford, Jeanne
Egasse, Cynth.la Forbes, Maryann Gailis,
Richard Howland, Stephen Hammeras,
Karen Johnson, Tracey Kahan, Robert
Keigh, Mary Moise, Connie Osborne,
Patricia Payne, Cynthia Place, Jan
Schwartz and Nora Sterling.
LAFC·Joins Harbor Foes
Urges Breakup, Creation of County Department
By JACK BROBACK
Of 1M IMltf Pia.I Stitt
The county's Local Agency Formation
Commfulnn (I.AFC) Wednesday voled 3-
2 to recommend to the Board of
Supervllorl that the Orange County
Harbor District be dissolved and a county
wide department ol. harbors, parka and
beod>es be created.
The motion, by S~pervisor David L.
Baker, an LA.Fe member, also required
that all ....ta of the Harbor Dlslricl be
College Teachers
Satisfied With
Salary Seal~
Wblle ICboo1 .tacbers 11aewhtte were
fllllliq !He with ldiool board DI ado
mh!lsiraton roillh this laia<Y -. <nor• Coal and Goldm Wat ln-.iructon 1....il ,...... to oppilllll
W-aynlgbl.
A A1ary scale that suited them was
adopted by the Oringe Coast Junior
College Dlslrlct Boan!.
.'Ibe new aatary Male ranges from
fl,800 for a bqUmlng teacher up to
$17,131 per year. Salaries this year were
-f1,50I IDd 111,17>. Tb• new plan permlta teachen to reach
the top salary In 11 yura Instead ci 20.
Also, fringe berttfltl were more than
doubled with the juDlor college dlslrlct
contributing $31.20 per mooth imlead of
the pr .... t flUO to medical and llf• Ii>
SW"ance.
The.rt also were raise! for evening col-
lege in.structors and summer school ·-· Cost «. the teacher salary package and
" raises for non-teaching s c b o o I
employes and administrators, a l s o
adopted Wedne!day night by trustees,
tol!als about $750,000 not figured in the
preliminary budget for next year.
· Budget Director t.orrellan Thompson
aaid he thinka he sees ways to make .up
that difference, inclading a tar increase « probably a couple of cents more than
the-26-<:ent increase the board already
bat gone for.
Jfhe prtsent district lax rate i! S? cents
per ·•100 of uaeued valuation or $3S.62
paid this year by the ownrr of a 115,0llO -· ' The average pay raiJe for in.Wuctors
nest year is I.I percent. Non-teachinc
pmoonel will pt poy raiaes •trying
ftom seven to 18 pereent based on a
mrvey by GoW 1'o1npwtn c.ompeny of -uu .... _ paid by -Junior
(See f1A1A111E11,_ Pap I) .......
Weadter
The sun's aleet>inl ln apiJI Fil·
day, ·uu at I-noon and it'll be
only parUy wnny then with the
met'CUJ')' in the upper &O's along
Ille c:oul..
. INSmE TODA 'Y
'Graduating from high school
can be' a1i e%ptfttW~ propors-
ton -but U docm't havt' to bt'.
See Page 11 . -... :::_a II ·-· • " ·-..... ,......,.... " ._ .. --•• -"
.. __
" --II ·--.. -... --, ... ;::.·-• -.... v ·--l•U I WI , .. ,. T-.. -" -" ....... " -• -. --.. _....._ ---.. ... ... ... ,_ ..
' )
transferred to Ute county.
Final action was deferred, however, at
the suggestion of Ass.iatant County
Counsel William J. McCourt, to give the
LAFC slaf'f &.Dd the county counsel's of·
flee time to develop all required con-
ditions to make dissolution of the district
enforceable undtt law .''
The staff waa ordered to report the
conditions necessary at the July 9 LAFC
meeting, but LAFC chairman James T.
Workman made it clear that there would
be no further public hearing on the
dissolution matter. "It is clostd," he
emphasized .
Assistant County CoWISef Robert F.
Nuttman said today that the Board of
Supervisors has two options. They may
reject the dissolution. or, if they accept
it, it must be submitted to a vote of the
people because the district was fonned in
1933 by such a vote. It was not clear ex·
actly when the matter would go to county
supervisors, for action.
Dissolution ol the district has been
championed for more than three yean by
the City of. HunUngton Beacb because
that community was unable to reach aµ
agreement with the district on salety
ser.vicea in the city's Hu n t I n g t on
Harbour. The city-maintajn~ that tt
should and was perfonning tht. services
and it should be either compensated by
the district or allowed to withdraw from
IS.. BAl\IIOR, Page %)
* * * * * * Parsons Not Surprised Pole Come8 Down
After Protests
By LAFC's Turnabout . . . . -
Of Homeownei:s , '· .. ~ · . . . :-i .. , G_A~· • .., ,_ ... ·~ ~ .,;·,;~'-* ... ,·. B~~~-~unt~Vl&5!!";r~i.D"
lly· JEROME F. COIUN!I
Of .. ...., ,. .... Staff
'Ille J,ocal ~ FormatJon Com·
miaaion'• vote Wednesday to break up the
Orange COunty Harbor District came as
no surprise to Newport Beach . Vice
Mayor Lindsley Par!IOn!.
Parsons, ,wbo earlier this week fought
unsuccessfully against city council en·
dorsemeDt o{ tbe beleaguered harbor
agency, said today he is more convinced
than ever that the district's days are
numbered.
"1be strong expression against the
district by many oC the county 's cities
and now the LAFC decision is practically
a mandate on the Board of Supervisors to
call for an e.lection/' he said.
Parsons added that be regn:tted more
than ever the council majority's decision
·Monday to adopt a resolution of support
for the district. "It didn't do us a bit of
good," be said. "For years, we had main·
tained a dignWat pc:Wtion of neutrality. If
we had stuck to that position we might
have bad a stronger voice in any
reorgani.iation of harbor operations that
might now take place.''
While Parsons for months has been in·
sisting dissolution of the district as a
-dl0at1"'lriilit"'°1ddl'...., is I ~·"iftt'"'. dJ ,.:,~'.' • •
olher city ollicials bad felt otherwise.
Among t6em wu•City Manager Harvey
L. Hurlburt. "I was llUl"prlsnd by U>e
LAFC'a decision " ht said. ••Earlier com· ' ' ments by them had lndlcated the vote
would go the other way. l_don't_tnow
wbat the city's next step will be. That's
up to the council."
Councilman Ed Hirth, principal drafter
ol the council's resolution backing the
district, said he believed the decision
could have gone either w8y. "I thought
our resolution might have helped,'' he
said, "especially in view of the fad that
several clUes bad softened ttielr op-
position to the-district becaw;e of an iD-
crease in understanding of what it does.
We hekl beck on stating our position
until 1hat time."
Hirth insisted that the Harbor Diatri':t
has done a 0 good job". "Having been .ln
the boat business and knowing .a lot ol
boat operato"rs, I can say everyone
believes this. No one object.s to the
district. There have .been just a few
jurlsdictlonal disputes, that can still be
ironed out."
A 12,-uU11f.J pole l!lllalled ti •
week q o on Jrvtoe Cmnpaily land in ear-. de) Mar 4'11\ bo -ung .......
within .U>e nat two weeks, 'before it Is
energized.
Irvine and Southern California F.d.ison
decided to remove the pole after two
Broadmoor women whose homes face the
pole generated a few sparks of their own.
Wattage increased when the DA.ll..Y
Pll.QT began asking the companies why
the pole was imtalled on property car.
rying an Irvine Company ·promise of no
permanent-above-ground utiliUes. ·
"The pole has been installed on a tem·
porary basis," an Edison Company
spokesman ' slid. ''It will be put wr
derground when the freeway goes
through."
When asked when the Creeway would go
through, he replied, "In six to eight
yean."
Mrs. Lee Edwards, o{ 2501 Windover, eot the same information.
"I toJd .him I didn't know if I'd be alive
in six years," she said.
She sald she had been visited by an
Irvine representative, who told her the
pole represented a saving of between ten
and fifteen thousand dollars to the Irvine
Heim Sides With Hinshaw
Company.
"I told him we paid between '6,000 and
,7,000 for the view,'' she saJd.
Irvine cillclals could not, at that point,
.
'TOO MUCH BUSY WORK'
S•lutatorlan Hamm''"'
'LOOK AT-INDIVIOUf!(S'
_ Valedictorian O.bom ·.
be reached for comment.
In Fight on Irvine Taxes
The Edison Company sent a man out
twice to look at the pole and to talk with
Mrs. Edwards and bet neighbor, Mrs.
Keith Clark, of 11>1 Surfline Way, whose
view frvm her son~s and daughter's
Mine Workers to Slop
County Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw
Wednesday was joined by a llrq allJ In
bis fight ·with the Board of Superv1-Jr1
over tues on Irvine Company ~ in lhe
Upper Newport Bay eubange.
Super9llca'I tiave orOered taxes can--
celed on the 457 acres which the company
bas deeded to lhe city. BuL Hinshaw has
refused to take any action toward that
end, saying be will not do so until 90
ordered by a court of law.
Wednesday County Auditor-Olnlrollor
Victor A. Heim in a letter to the board
said, "I am not. al* to COOlply with your
••• order and direction."
NO TRANSFER
Heim said: "The passage of the bare
legal UUe from the Irvine Company to
the county does not., in the opinion of my
attorneys. transfer the o w n e r 1 h I p
nec6Sary to constitute a passing or
as.se.m.ble interest in the property lo an .,.,.pt public agency (th• county ) for
the following ....... ,
"1. The circumstances under which the
county agreed to tll< rec:ordlng of the cor-
poratloo grant deeds lndlcata that ocly
NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock
market today followed the e1ample of the
other 1eaiona lhll week and wound up
the day a loser. (See quolatloos, Pages
11-m. •
, -)
•
bedroom wtndows is obstructed by lhe
bare Jetial title was trl!lllemd, and that
this was apparently accampllilhed for the
purpose of providing property tax relief
to the Irvine Company while the currtnt.
pole.
"He II.Id that he'd bate to have a pole
!lice that In front of his house, but that tt
WQ only tez:npotlJ'1 and there WU
(See POLE, Pap%)
Work in .HQnor ol Lewis
litlgaaon Is pending.
(Heim Is party to a fawsuit opposing
the fand escbM(e of 317 acra o! Irvine
Upper Bay propiO ty Iii U>e county In ...
cbani• form acres ci <Odllly-htld land).
'11 ro this case 1t la qUllUonable 88 to
whether or not the county bas acquired
the property, even thollgb ll has hire
legal title; becau.se It doe.spot ha\·e the
normal Ind ice !J ()( ownership, J. e.1 possealon, the right · to make lm-
provements, and the rf&ht to alter the
Newport Beach
Boy K.idnaped,
Shorn Qf Looks
physical charat:teristics of. the property A Newport Beach boy bearing obvtous
(to dredge ii). sl1M of his ordeal walked Into Costa
STILL IN ESCROW M.... polfce beadquarter1 Wednesday
WASHINGTON (UPI) -.All . coal
miners In the United States ond Canada
were dJrected today to atop work begin-
nlng Frldar to mourn former United
Mine Wdrkera PresiClent John L. Lewis:
who died Wed~y .ik~t~t age It.
UMW president w'.. :A .. 'Tony" Boyl•
' Dance to No te
. '
"3. The conlracta between the partlel with a tale of belD( kldnapnd by five
cleerly Indicate lhal thett has been "' oulhl rmnd • consideration given the cmipany tirecawre Y • • with 1 ~of .ciuon: MmiC supplied by "Dry let" and""'~e
End of Sclwol
the county p-being U90d u 1Uc11 is Leon B. ,,,.,..., ·16, of 3Sll Seashore 'fl . ~~ . '"' ··~·, Drl not •·• Ing Rising Tbn•" wfB ll'lllil ~ when• •u• still in tserOW, F\lrthe:r, the county, under ve, was 1U,1W"ed,. accord to
the ttfsllng agreementa with the er.:· Patrolman Harry -Carter, but suffered and llh grade llUdMla of Llncolo aiid
pany ,,._ obtain UU. lmurance foe the -Joa Of priileln.""'lili PliYilCiil •Po Hococe E!Wgn Sd1oola celebra end
'ltans!emd' property pending the out-peorance. Of achoo!.
-· of litlgalloc. Tbe •• ·" _.. .... ~-Cl ~ (lllnshaw asked the oupervilors TIJ6o vlcl!m ufd be wu wawng aloog The dance,,,,... _ _. ., ·~ ty w
day to lbow him a tltle Jmurance policy. In Ille lOO block Of Eut 11th Street during Newpor\ ~ 1''!1\1 UJd ~Ion
They replied, through the County the_ nJ&bl houra, •bet> -ed by tll< lleportmenl lied Ille PQIJco DeparlDMll~
Counsel, th•I no MJCh policy mla ·-JmntandtltilPtlllllejllrps'Park. · wlll,bebeid.~Tl..O..ll>.11-li;w,8'br·
becaUBO the tra~ ww not be com:-. ·U,~bo wwllelinlollmllli!lalolllrilw· 1 dlf 1t'lllei • 111p-· g1r111
pleted un\11 the COurt .... 111etlled).. , .. m _.i1 ~, ~ .wllili!''•.llJl.,-lflth .,m. · • .-• · •
''.4• llu~~~i'. lhif l'l'O!>!>oa :: otdllioi:~ •u,.d·hlr f"'IJlh'biir,off.ln•' • ~~<!*~~-and .,,Y ~ pufch'5o <-~11:1'..U P•ll • .-, •,ct -«l;liltol , f "
• • -• • l .....
J .· " '
·said thf 1ay.orr·1boald conUnue unhl 1111 ..
Lewis' fimeril for wblcb·no date wu im-
mediately .announced.
(Full delalb of Lewis' !U• on Page 4).
Boyle Indicated In his allllOllnOOllenl
that the services may be held Monday.
On ~t 'day, he aJked all mlners to
g8'h« _In their churches an!' ·•ni"l hall<
for memorial services.
Boyle added: "aoimnJns aNl:~("a.m..
June 13, 1111til after the funeral; there' will
be a period of mourning during which .. n
coal mlnlDC will cease Ii> the Uolled
stiua and Clnada u we booor our fallen
leader. i·it· Js altoplhar.JJ-~Ibo coal
mlnla be 9llml wblk Ille _, who work
Jn 'ii. ..,;,. togother to do lloDorr to
Jdbn.Lleioellyn_ Lewla." •
Boyle·aieo danlnd«f that Iii -of
Lewis,. ~ lmmndlalely -"strooa COii mine lieol1h and safety
l·~1J:~~•~'iin ·:·:
woald•be'.a·flt1tlla ..... ~ lDnorW I to.Ille ·career of this llUllllndJas cbim-Pl\>h ~f coal ll1fnlllC ufety," U>e uni<K1
-aaltl. •
I
..
•
N . -. .. -~
WASRIMGTON <APi-'lbe Triuury
-1w blocl<ed the U.S. ftnan. cl.! -·-al black ll1illllnt llldridge
Claver e11 aoun<IJ thal h• la Wtgaliy !o Cobt;J~liia"' Dl(llrllllenl lald today._ "'-o-Ollotr -J. llcClollley ... id
the clMn*WJr C. Qea'f'll'11 f\mdJ WU
Wen under :Olbu oonlrol regl\la)lons
lamed -under--il>e-'frodlllg with the
~Ad. -·a IMdtr Ill Ille Btact PtDther
..... -Ind IVthor ol the ~ ~::.. ''Soul on Ice/' l1 waaLld In to Mn'e aut • lS.yur l!r'llon
Al 11 DI ,.. --.It wlth intent fo tul
ml ....... lrltb • ilfadlr --"" 1[111 -....... be"la!Md lo -Ii.it
.1•~•!° Catt S!-ln
-··countian
•
From Win 8lrYSeca
l!aclal hatred erupled· qalp In a..
Qllenlln Pri1on W-11)' ntllli. leavlpa
..,. 'whlla·11111ricl ilMllled lo-diith .a'nd
-11z .ui.r.. am°"' lhem u Orl"I• <lciUA-
ly,.. olfm<ler, slubed and""'" Auoclate Warden James Park aakl to-
d•1 the killing ol first degr ... munlerer
Robert J . .Adami, 3G, of Ventura, wu a
planood Job lo avenge UM W. April &tab-
bing dealha ol uu.. ~ prlaooera.
T b l victtm. WU killed by a llilette
faabloned from • toilet plunger rod lllod
dowil lo ruor alwpaul. Guard& Mlied
two 1uch weapona, plus a ICluorl bladl
alter the mayhem.
Knifed
will involve queaUonlng of al lust 451)
convicts, Park 11ald today , u lhe tanae,
3,600-inmate prJaon r!!D'lalned und• a
mulmum ,security .altrt to rtmaia in ef.
lecf lhtoufb loalcbt. • ' ·
He did not 1ndlcat.e whetbtt the seven
victims were singled out purposely or
sim ply because they were white and the
most convenient men prese.al at the mo-
ment of ~ re:veqe.
T1le ce.Ublock where racial violence
r111ect 11 ln .a ,eparate. Jectkla of San ·
Quenlln from Death Row, where Slrbal\
Slrban awaits aecution for l h e
asaautn1Uoo ol Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
N-followtnf nvocalloll al hll • • - . . MILY Plr..oT "8tt ,._..
COUNCltMAN OltUlllt, DOltYMEN 'CURLY' VETTIR ANO GENE Gl\VOFF ADMIRE NIW l'LAQUI
1'1< Nowport'1 Dory FIHI, Rttotnlllon From the Community •ncl A Pltco In Hl1twy
Priaoner1 John K. Harriaon, 26, Loo
Angel" bank robber Ind Rarry P&rker,
36, sentenced in lM Anaelea on a
11W11lau1htar char11 ar1 In <llr<mal)'
.. rioUI condlllon today, Iller ourpry.
Adams' death wu the fourth &lnc6
Aptil 23, when Jbe wlrtare ·between
whltea Ind bla<P wu oel off b)' the
murder of Negro prisoner Jell Cooper,
4.9, durin1 a movie. ~-~t.............t
-olllclal coollrmallon lo -~ lbal Claav&r had !ltd lo Hanna.
"W• In Illa Illa"' Dlp&rlment ... ,.u_,.,, &bat Clllver la 1D Havana." tht
.... ,.," uld. Blatorleal Ceremon11
Two days later, four · White convlcta
· were cut up, but DOile of than aeclouaJy. '
On April 28,. Nesr-Floyd Neal, 39,
and .Calvin Bonner, 44, were ttabbed to 1
death in .re.tallalloo. lkClallt11 dacllned ti> 111 bow much di c-··· -11 -. b)' the TN~ 1CSb:1. U I. dftcle1• IDdlcet.d
tho lllDcbd llmda wWld Include, -
ot111r 1111op, lnccla>t mm CIM."'''
JrtbbcL
Dory Fleet Now Landmark
Charle& F. McDonald,· U, ~
from OrllJll Cowi.ty far a au offllllt,
aufftt«I minor cull, aloDi :with Richard
Hol1WI, II, San DlalO bur&iar; Lunod
Caney, 33, l:ltimbOldt, Clllf. sU 'oUende.r
and Donald W. Rootamo, 26, Loa Angeles
bank robber aod drua offender.
The associate warden said the stabbing
attacks occurred 1lm.ulttine0llll7 at
several lpotl after IX> of 800 inmates in
the eut etllbloct had been marehld back
from supper ln the me!shall.
Prison authorities said several whites
were quesUoned as suspect! in the Neal
aod BGaner murders, but the prison.cod• ,
ol. bonOr a1ainst lnfonnilla: kept evidence ,
too insuttlclent to make a case.
Tilt Slata Dlpar1mtnt &polltlDWI tn.
dlcalod It ·11 Wlllkaly !bat tho Uollod • :. 11J J(!!IN VALTDZA
SW. will uk Cobe lor lor'mal n· "·""-·••-tradllloa al Clea"" Nawport llcacb'1 dory lilhmntn puall.
11a -·111o:UM:ti.s.;c.i.. atrWi11on oc1 o11 mm lbelr a.""' .. ld pleNlde lrtllr ·11••1dao for Hlllm at citiiilnall &Ind palcb u _., thll momlof, but
.,,.... for ouch -M ~doh; their lane hlld a new look -• hlltor1cai btrJ and lddaaplof, bul "1JOU11C"' plaque lrmod b)' pelma. .
crDa& an .... p1ac1 omdlf the tnafy. More than llOll Nowport re&ld«lt&, Ill·
Cll&YW"' -.cl• tb1 mocaUon of hll clud.lnc a dmen or '° memblrl ~ the ~~~ "ti 11 lletN..!:.:!~--w~! •• ttlll>ts· .. , thet virltlall1 lmpwlbl• lo • the -ol. ..... • -~--0 c e y tho lluty In the ........ of •lplomatlc" dtdloalad Ille ""'1 dory fbb!nl !Itel In
.-,. ·' . • the ullon u..• diY hlllorl..i landmark.
r • .• -; ~ 8ocltty ~· Lealle Staff-n _ .,.;~ '! ~· .and. Q(y _ Paul Gruber un·
. -" • Wiled .iba. . plllqllt otudded ,.,.... P•e 1 'lfflh a:-'1 whael emblml Ind
• -· • · .. llllOt!pl1tlo pralllq the lleet !or ad· SJ, T l DTES .. "clloaC61ortoNftpol'tllucb·1bl&tory. ~ • • • 1"' flitt'1 trtdtUon btpn before the
=·illllrldl:n11 mi:-~·for lum at' Ille cenlllry ........ unknown · lob cla&9lloi -lllbemiln deddtd lo cut out the middle
· OOll <i ~ tatiiliitr,Niie& will bt about 11W1 and peddle hll catch ltlmlell oil Illa
.... JI Iha l!O(ll~ -pommtl ... boal.
...io. -'9!0.000 .. al odml!Utr•lon ·s1nce then the noel, wbooe lllbermen
row thn>u&h the surf each day and relum
to llll their Wattl, has flouriehed.
A dozen fishermen still take their siTiall
Gloucester dories through the surf and
bring back their catch of rock cod, sea
trout and haddock .after dawn each morn-
ing for their wlvtt and children to aell.
After the dedicaUon «remoniea the
fishermen, their families and the citizens
fishermen, their families and the citizens
went to an informal fish dinner 1t last
year's aite ol landmark dedlcauon rltu,
lhe Balboa Pavilion.
The toelf @d' on the menu, 125 pounds
ot bonelesa file!, ""' caught by 1l1e nttt
the same daY.
The dinner meeUnc, belidu honorinc
the dory fleet marked the · Uri.rd annual
1eneral meeuna of the hlltortcal IOclety
and an lutaOatlon of nm year's di.rec·
ton.
Superior C.OUrt JIJd&e Robert Gardner
Jnstall~ the directors for I.he group.
Steffensen conducted the relatively
brief dinner meeting, praising the dory
r-tbout ... OOll;....,.. foe Ille tn. ......,. .. .f.r. _'""' aboutlllt,ooO ~.:...~...,~ -~ •PS t WU WOl'MIU out
From P .. e 1
..,, -NoriiiiitJll'.-.,...., with e. Jii:ully ..,.. &alary comml1-HARBOR BREAKUP ASKED • • •
fum~ 0r..,. ~-Oft!1 Golden II'."' campu.ea. Teicher• 1enera1ly &ot what
they uUd for.
the di.strict.
Lut year the LJJC rtfuled lo let the
city withdraw.
The dissolution recommtndltion was
To make up the fl!O,llllO dlllctl ln the
pnwWonal budget, Thompson said it
mighl be nece..uy lo: -IA¥J' foe tho lint lime an •dull aupporled by Wonman, .Baker anjl _.
-tu, a pmnlutve tu r .. ~ .... ~ Frtnli P. Noe, 1 Cyprttl city
nol ~'l'Wta' nl lbe -1e.·n.. -
llmlt on llia~tcdl, but Tblim]llOn' • Oppoa1nf wn Flllb Dlotrlnl County
Biid; "ll'•'r! ~ lo the realm of su-•-Allon • ,,_ and ,,.,;.,;;1ia1oner JlllObt'IWo w'llint Ctrilt" --· ~ ·---. · --iwv or h c..la would Charle& A. PMnon ol Santa Alli.
bt ll!0.000 or flll,llllO. When the COU1111. Board o! Supervleon -Aha'!'i'!' plw lo .11 .... purcU. a f1ce4 the .n.olutlon i-la 1111, It dfiltlel !"!ri\l•,"11"~ l>ulldtnc at rtc0m· . voled I 1o 1 q&lnll 11, with only BUsr In ,..,.a.ct Iii' an ~ 111ll'· · · · 1uppott. ~: about 111111,llllli. HuntlnfljlQ Be&eh Cily Admllllllr•lor ~ r_1..._ot111.Jower than lbown · ' · tn tbr proWdontl btid,.t. Lui 1 .. , Deyie Miller .Cllforod a otroo1 .,...,111t
J -•• tm;a •,llllO, •boul lour per. WedneocloY !or putUn1 the IJlu bof°"'
-al, the _.tin& bud(tk Tlloau>ton Ortna• Coull'T '°""'·
ti ralliiSiill btll wtlllll( lo CUI them' to "It 11 very •pp&rtnt thal the majority
wllal i. ealJ>.lla ...,_,1y low level" of Orllll• Collnl!' clues &re dlalltllllod
ot ... ' tl smnp over the (348,1111 -In lhe with the oper1 Oil c1 the dlatrlct •.. In a
~ budpt: iboul lllO,llllO. democr&ey, the voice of iii• people dJould
.. "l!'!Decfiim,. the allowance f o r be heard. U we art 'fflllina to put it to a
dtadbiat. Ill tu colltctlon from 10 per· vole or tho people, why "' lht county -to ftH ptr<tnt u per naw &talo law. and the dlatrlct heaitant lo allow the.,...
Pick DP ct Income. •bout llQO,llllO. t>l• the opportun1t1 to cltclde the IPue!"
• 1 • Miller prolelted. 5 Rioter11 ·Sentenced "It 11 obvious we have • poUUcal fooi.
·BiiRKELEY <6P)' ·-Five ~ .who
pli1lclpelod IJ\ !ht Third World Libera.
tion J'ront demonstrations Feb. 13 in
&erltfey and OOl1nd have been sen·
tenced -one to Jail and the others to
probation and $500 fines.
DAllY PllOT
nlNM• ~ PU•\ -.1q <CM'Afrl'W
..... ,. N.W.U
.,...... 11111 l'dlll!Mef
Ja1\: I . Cwrla'(
_...,,..... .... Glllirrtl .......
n..., ICHYll ·-11i•M•• A. Mtr,"111• .............. ! ... . J,,_. F. c.m., --Cfl'J h!llll' ----1111 w ... l11\o11 ... , ... ~
W•nlllf AUt.tet P.O. IH lt71, 916•1. --<all ,..., ..... , .. , """' L_.....,.1JJ1 .... •-........... ll MJth•1rt1t
-·--·--·-.. . ~::::-··· ...... ... ~.:!·-r~.l= ~--------·~.~ ........ -..................... .:--·
. :u: ·"··-vAl•W rYs*"" °""' ... ~ -Cllllf':fi!!' m?·'§:.'51.S::. =--· .... ·~~
•
ball, .. Miller contended. "We feel that the
l1aue1 are very 1lmple: Tbir. is
dis1alilfacUon amona the elected officia ls
of the ma/oritY of the cities In thU coun·
ty, an:I hose otnc1ab are the difect
representatives of the citizen! of thl5
county," he argued.
"Miller offered three alternaUves:
J. Allow the luue to be decided by a
vot.e of tha people.
2. Bring about a change in the ad·
--.. From P .... 1
POLE. • •
nothing he could do," said Mn. Clark.
But Irvine and Edbon Compony ol·
flclals continued to hear from the two women u well u from the Broadmoor
Hlll1 Community AUociaUon. T b e
homeownera' aroup charpd thtl lhe pole
was located .on a dangeroua embankment
which made it unufe al well as
unaesthetic .
finally, on Wednesday, Ronald Blake
of the Ediaon Comf)lny 1aid, "We have
1.a\Ked with stepben Smith of the Irvine
Company Md the pole will be removed In
the near future." -• ...
The uUllty wires attlcl'lld to the pole,
Blake said, will be run under nearby
MacArthur .Boultvard ~ "u aoon
u we cu do aome oddlUOiiiJ ·~· lng.'' .
Whta SmJl.h "U uktd wbat mot.IVlted
Ille lrvlnt C0mpen)' lo rtll10Vt Ille polt,
he replied, "We'd prtftr not to rntlkt ID.Y
slattmei-."
But Mra. E:dward1 made one.
"I'm not much of • crulld«t, but •e
hlld lo do IOllltllllnf •bout It," ilM Mid.
•
0Somethln1" m11 luiv• lo lie clooe
a&aln tomeUme. ~n 8\U4 wu uktd
whether there would be anoWer 11lem·
pOrary" 11bov...,-ound lntt.allaUOnl on
Irvine Company J'l'Operllea, ha uld ''We
just re.view each job on 1\1 own m;rlia.~•
mlnlltral!Vt phlloeoplty o! Ille dl!trlct
and resolve the complaint.!.
3. Deny the appUcallon apd rorce the
1'sue to the rtate Le&ialaturt or force the
ts.ue lo be decided b1 the ~-
l!T AND Plll!:SENTED
Newport Beach's 11 tan d , 'favorinr
continu.tion of the diltrk.i as ii was
pr<Katlld b)' clly Harbor Coanllnalor Gtora• Dawes.
He read a rtitolutlon adopted by the
Nowport Beach City Council ldonday
nishl oppo&ln1 di ... lutlan of Ille dlab'icl,
but • requtltlng the LAP'C to lluDcb a
sfudy 1o determine how beil lo
reortllllU the dlatrlcl so II can provide a
cornprebenslve proeram of repxi.1 recreauor:.
The resolution al5o called for the
Harbor District Commiuioo to ~ ex·
pendod lo Include repr<"'1laUV11 •f more 'clues. -
The LAFC took no act.ion on lhe 11tler
two suggestions.
BACKED ACl'IONS
Norman C a v a n au ll h , rtpresenUng
Wellmlllllar, b&eked dlaaolullon of the
dlllrlct. lie eald 1111 clill favored an Ill·
telf•led re1lonal proaram ol parkl,
beachts and parka carried oul b7 a new
countywlde commluion and flnanced
lrom the county 1eneral fwM11.
Allo supporllnc dluolutlon wu Lo.
Alamitos City Attorney John Parker ,.-ho
ur1od • volt ol the people.
LAFC Chalrnwi Workmu, maj.or o( vm. Plt'k, offered I lensthy apl1n1Uon
of the whole problem, aaylna "It has
llVtral a>luUona" b\ll concJudlac thlL
there ia "merit to the proposal that alnce
Ille dlalrtct WU IOl'll\lllll)' .llto •lectorate
there could be DO liitm In -.ubmlttlng
the luue to a vot.e of·tht people.''
Several apeakert made It clthr that
there has been no valid criUcism of the
actual operation o!' the district under
Manacer Kenneth Sampson. But the ma·
jority felt the dlltricl'• teptrtte taxing
powers and the lack of overall recrta·
tional duUes including parks. were
negaUve racton.
~LLEN OPPOSED
Fifth Dlltrlct Supervloor Allen 11n>n1ty
opposed dl&solutlon. "Nothlng has been
su,1ested by ihe cities that can't be done
within the present structure of the
district," be arped. "I am tp.lnlrt a vote
or Ult p<ople. It Ii the r-ibWty of ·
this commlaalon to make U>e dec1tkln. We
mak• decillone conNDtl)'. Wt don't duck
out rupcmalbllUy •nd abouldta't on this
ISIUe."
Second District Supervl&or Buer Mid:
"Nolhln1 will be clwlpd by dlaolutlon
(ol tho dlltrtct). Tho -ti then "°"
wlil nol change. But Ihm I• llroal IMI·
Ing ~t tho naUoo today th1t
local covernment la not respanatble or
ruponalvt lo the cldutll. Tllal is
becauK II llll btcol!IO lrlfD*llad. "Ptos>I• think \hi ~ ii oblc\ltt,
llldden, lberolort Ii llll booomt OUIJ'ICI. Qi•rct'11 lo ..,..qr conrtol II t I I t p
toward fbe mandate of the •ct forming
thc~W'C ~to consolld1te local aowm~
mcnt. stiumline IL
fllhennen for addlna "slanilk:antly" to
the C<>!orful history ol Newport Beach.
Investigation or lhe racial stabbings
McDonald, the wouDded convict from
Orange Coonty, was not idenUnad by bis
home city and t>rtson ofncials did not 111
how loog a term be was serving. AboOt a dozen fishermen and their
families attended the event as honored
guest!:,
A spoie11Dan lor the fishermen said the
rest ot the flett OMW'a "were jull too
plain bashful to come, but they sure ap-
preciated the honor.''
From Page I
The newly inatalled directors are Stef·
ftnitll, Jim Rubel, Jean Ritter, Carroll
Beek, "nleo Rotitns, Bummell Pe&H, T.
Weston Jay, Ted Finsttr, Darnen
McG1vren, Muon Slier, Pauline Mes-
sing, Bill Grundy, Joe Hamblet, Dorothea
Sheely, Jack Barnett, ·Marco Ankh and
PeBIY Bertulelt. ·
* * * Judge Reveals
Some Dry Humor
On Drunk Cases
Few dinner .speakm are a! v•elcome in
Harbor Area ci.n:I• u Superior Court
Judge Robert Glldntr, no matter how
brief hi! address may be.
During Newport Beach Historical
Society lnatallaUan ceremonies -UIUlll¥
dry II be.t -the judp Wednada1 in-
troduced a fell&W burtster, Dl1W rttlrtd,
who hu 1 Jepadary l'fPl.ltaUon for in·
ocrutabWty.
"Judie Donald Dodp," Gardner
related, "h•d a hard &nd rut rule about
drunken drlvers : all of them had to serve
five days In jail"
Girdner recalled one time when a
friend faced a drunken drtvint rap ("I
hi Ve had Very 1 Vlr)' re1f frJendl 1n that
predicament") and aai:td Gardner for
help before the defendant faced the dour
Judae Dodge.
"Alltr 1 long Ind very (rlelldlr,
conventatlon wtth my fellow barrister. ·
Gardner 11k!, "he looked up IJ'ld aa1d,
'Sure, I'll help your triend, He hu: his
cholce u to what five dayi he wants to
serve in jail, and furthermort, I'll ar-
ran1e a cell with 1 view for him'."
Amid the lau&}lter the elder ly Judie
peettd down hit noae tbrqu&h. his low·
•lun« glute1, Kt>tr u 1· jud1e for 1 lt-concf or two, then beamed.
IRVINE TAXES
that the boanf ha.& pnempled the rlllrt
and at1bltory mpon&lblilly of the County
AMesaor to aaess all · property In the
county equitably.
"5. There are five lea1es between the
comp.any
"5. There are five tuna between the
company a! leasor and various lesseea an
the land that hu been 'trantlerred' to the
county. Even thoqh the county 1a now
supposed to be the •owner' of thls pr!r
perty the Irvine Company still collect,,
the renU and will continue to do so until
such time as the pending litigation
tennlnates.
Auditor Heim conclude& with: "Allde
from the aforementioned legal qutst.ions,
the very fac( that there is litigation pen·
ding between the auditor-controller and
the county and the company in which the
validity and conttitutionality or the
Mesa Company
Looted of $2,650
A key-carrylna burglar haa looted a
Co8ta Mesa adverUaJnc compaey of ii.~ in electrical equipment, tool.t and
rtfrtaerallon l)'llellll, pollce &aid today ..
Oouglu McMurray, sopkuman for
Pacific Electrical Adveruatn1, ·iOll
PlacenUa Ave ., aald 1IO poundt of copper
was also included in the loot.
Patrolman Jack Koch said whoever
stole the materlllt: muat have loaded
them aboard a lruck, alnce the haul IJl.
eluded nine ae.parate refrij:eraUOn units.
Theft of 1415 worth ol pertl lrom Im·
pounded . can,· lncludtnc a Cor>ttte
tranamlslM>n1 was alao -r e 'po r l e d
Wednescla1 oy Harbor TOTo'lllJ service
employ< Ro1 K. Bennett.
He told Offtcer 01vld N. S~m the
tteml were removed with tools and • cut-ttlna 1orc11 tn the Impound ·1ot at 114 w.
17th SI., Coolll Meu.
•
jJ. J. (Jarrell
7 STYLES TO
C:HOOSI PIC*
• • •
transfer of tlUt Is being quealioned,
further dictates that I not comply with.
the board's order and dtrecU"e, linct to 1
do eo would be lnconsltent wltb the po11 ...
Uon·my office has taken in the court~
ceedlngs."
Aublant County Counael Robert NutJ
tman Ill.id the eounty Board o f
Supervisors and the company have two
11lemltJvea in view or. Htim'a ultlmeUnl
-they· can 10 lo CllUl'I, jolllUy or tltbel
ol them, or the Irvine Compeny can pey
the taxes tmder protest. ·
$4 Million Suit 1
Filed in Dispute
On Dune Buggies
A 14 million lawsuit which could put the
Harbor Area'• acceleratfnc dune bul&Y
bu1loeu IDto a &kid WU fllod 1oda7 Ill °''"'' .Cow\11 ,superior Court. N lmtd tn the 1cUori were three Santa
Ana firms described tcidl7 u prlnctpll
oupplien ol tht ruped, chwiky llUle
vehicles to Harbor Area dl.ttrlbulofl -
Action FibergllBI, Dtmn-Bu&llM Well
and Bucon Development Corp. ·
If an lnjuncllon IOllCht by Ben')' Mllll·T
of Lona Beach ls srlbted, however, lholt'
8Upplies seem deltiMd kl dry up. ror tbe
Lona Beub c:ompt111 cl&im& thal 111
compeUtors are Ullng a deai&n. perfec,ted
b)' Ben')' Mlnl·T engllleen. •
The complalnt 1llege1 that the dlfen-
daoll are wembllol and dlalrlbutlna
vel!lclet tbol ire complete copies ol the
dune buggies pioneered by the Lotc
Beach flnn. . ,
It pointa out that the Santa Ana fitmr
are capitalizing on the "large IWTll of
money expended by Berry MJnl. T •In
ruean:h and development" of the revolu-
tionary vehlcle.
·.
IOFA BED IALll
n .... , •• .,., c•fw+•W.
Sittill9 •nd SINpiflt. • ... 400.00 Now 299.00
A wMI• .~~." •f F.brict .fld Cof.n t. ....... frow1 .
H.J.GARRtfT fURNrJURE
o,_ M•11., "'-· I ""· ......
•
211~ HAltol It.YO.
COSTA MIS.A. CAUJ.
M6-0J7i 644.017•
I
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Cosia Mesa Teu)'fi Flilil
' -----~ .N.\". St.~:-
VOt:. 1.2, NO. '140, 2 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES
Weeping for Losi Faniily
ORANGE COUl'IJY, ~ALIFORN1A
.-. THURSDAY, ~UNE 12,'Tf6t.
~ ---,
Gad
' Instructors Like New Salary Scale
WhUe school le.ache.rs elsewhere were
findlnl llfe with ocl(ool boord and ld-
mlnlBlralors rOUih this A11ry .......
Orang< Coa!I and Golden West in-
structors found reason to applaud
Wednesday night.
A salary scale th.at suited them was
adopted by the Orange Coast Junior
College District Board.
The new salary scale ranges from
17 ,fKIO ror a beginning teacher up to
Sl7,139 per year. Salaries thia y~..a.r were
Coal Miners
Mourning
Lewis' Death
-$7,lOO and fll,175. Tl\t n<w pion pennlb teocben lo~
the l!ipulary in ll l"lfl lollold ci.IO. Alao; fringe bendlls wen ._ lllln
doubled with the jun1cr -collqe district
contributl.ne Pl.I> per montb inltead of
the present tll.20 ta medical and Ufe m..
suranct.
Thert also were raises for twnin1 cols
Jege instructors and· llDTllDft" IChoo1
teachen.
COst ol the ltacher salary po<Up and
A Din·ner Whin·e
Verde Won't Swallow Bike Noue
By ARTBIJI\ R. VINSEL
Of ... D111r Pttit 11.n J._ dinntr mllllc by NCh com-
posers u Hondo, Yomabl, Suzutl and
Kawuakt.are doine little for dipltkn tn
the Mesa Verde area these June: nights
and ....-. hive Mted Coote Mesa
police for I remedy,
Douglas Sage, 7, surviving brother ~f a Nebr~~ka
family which lost three sons at sea in the colhs1on
last week of the Melbourne and Evans ships, weeps
on one of the flags presented to the parents, Mr.
and l\.lrs. Ernest Sage.
WASlllNGTON (UPI) -AU coal
miners In the United States and Canada
were directed today to stop work begin.-
ning Friday to mourn former United
Mine Workers Pres£dent JOhn L. Lewia
who died Wednesday night at age 89.
UMW president W. A. 'Tonf" Boyle
said the lay-cff should continue unlil after
Lewis' funeral for .~hich no date was iJn ..
mediately announced.
State bureauc:Tatic .. ehanne}l!l1 hQ'ftver,
have patrolmen hlndcuffed for the time
being.
MotoreycUsta art uain( the hllla .and
d.iles of vacant land llOUtb. of SWu Drive
for offstreet and dlrtolraclr riding, dapllo
warning lilRI uylna they are
Jawbreakers:. Newport Beach
Boy Kidilaped,
Shorn of Locks
A Newport Beach boy bearing obvious
5.igns of bis ordeal walked in.t.o Costa
'-1esa ~ hlt•tw:• -.: .iiay
with a tale or being kidnaped by five
youths armed with' a pair of scissors.
Leon B. Thayer, 16, ol. 55ll Seashore
Drive, was not injured, according to
Patrolman ' Harry Carter, but suffered
some Joss of pride In his physical ap-
pearance.
The victim said he was walking along
in the-400 block of East 18th Slreet dW'ing
the night hours, when accosted by the
hoodlums and dragged into Harper Park.
He said he wu held down physically by
four or the suspects, while the fifth
scissorsman hacked his longish hair off In
chunks.
Young Thayer said the incident oc-
curred late Tuesday night, bul he waited
awhile to think over the fa ct he might be
required to testify against suspects in the
kidnap-assault as it is listed by police.
Picnic for Old,
New Next Event
Little remains from the big Lions Club
Fish Fry last weekend but paperwork
and pleasant memories, so plans are no\v
shaping up for Costa Mesa's own yearly
Oldtimer-Ncwtime,r Picnic.
The first session of the plcnic·s plan·
rung commiUee is scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
June 16 at Costa Mesa Chamber of Com·
merce offices. Among other things, pl an-
ners will sel the date ror this year's pic-
nic. .
Co-chairmen of the fifth annual event
will be Wayne Gra,Y of the Costa Mesa
Junior etainber-of'Gommeroe and -Dr.
Hilda McCartney, chainnan of the Ch11m-
ber of Commerce Women's Committee.
The community festival in Costa Mesa
Park is a joint production of the Jaycees
and their senior counterparts, featuring
an old-fashioned family picnic touched
up with modem attractions.
LAFC Urges Dissolution (Full details of Lewis' life on Page 4)
Boyle indicated In his announcement
that the services may be held Mondly.
On that day, he asked all minert to
gather in their churches and union balll
for memorlaJ services.
"°""""of us live In '40,000 -and
we have to kttp OID'-. and windows
clooed because <>I the nolle and dllll,.
-~ Kemeth J, Hlrtmln, 1111
Swan Drive, in a letter to police. Of Harbor District Boyle added: "Qeginnlni at 12:01 a.m..
llartmln asUd Chief Roter E. Neth r.. lltrlcttr tnforcanent ol pedellri1n
and vehicular ~ Ins on tbe
Nie pr'operty, but dldD, Woll 1<111,
By JACK BROBACK
, ""'~""' "l"he count,;s Local Agency Formation
ComntiSsion (LAFC) Wednesday voted J.
2 to recommend to the Board cf
Supervisors that the Orange County
Harbor Distric.t be dissolved and a rounty
wide depart.ment cC harbors, parks and
beaches be created.
The mot.ion. by Supervisor David L.
Baker, an LAFC member, also required
that all assets of the Harbor District be
transferred to the county.
Final action was deferred, however, at
the suggestion cf Assistant ~unty
Counsel William J. McCourl, lo give the
LAFC staff and the county counsel's of·
fice Ume to develolJ all required con·
ditions to make dissolution of the district
enforceable undei-law."
The staff was ordered to report the
conditions necessary at the July 9 LAFC
meeting, but LAFC chairman James T.
Workman made it clear that there would
be no further public hearing en lhe
dissolution matter. "It is closed," he
emphasized. ....,
Assistant County Counsel Robert F.
Nuttman said today that lhe Board of
Supervisors has two options. They may
reject the dissolution, or, if they accept
it. it must be submltted to a vote of lhe
people because the district was formed in
1933 by such a vote. It was not clear ex·
aclly when the matter would go to county
supervisors for action.
Dissolution of the district has been
championed for more than three years by
the City of 11untington Beach because
that rommunHy was unable to reach an
agreemenl with the district on safety
services in the city 's Hunting lo n
Harbour. The city maintained that it
should and was performing tht services
and it should be either ·compensated by
the district or allowed to withdraw from
the district.
Last year the LAFC refused to let the
city witMraw.
The-dissolution.Jecommendalion was
supported by Workman, Baker and com·
missioner Frank P. Noe, a Cypress city
councilman.
Opposing were Flflh District County
Supervisor Allon Allen and Commissioner
Charles A. Pearson of Santa Ana.
When the coun ty Board of Supervisors
raced the dissolution issue in 1968, it
vot.d 4 19 I •i•in8t il,.wilh onlj'*""" In
support.
Huntington Beach Clty Administrator
Doyle Miller ofiered a strong argument
Wednesday for putting the issue before
Orange County wters.
"It is very apparent that the majority
of Orange County cities are dis.satisfied
with tbe operation of the district ••• Jn a
democracy, the voice of the people should
be heard. If we are willing to put it to a
vote of the people, why are the county
and the district hesitant to allow the ~
pie the opportunity to decide tlle issue?"
Miller protested.
"It is obvious we have a political foot-
ball," Miller contended. "We feel that the
issues are very simple: There is
dissatisfaction among the elected officials
of the majority of the cities in this coun-
ty, anj those cfficials are the direct
representatives of the citizens of this
county,'' he argued.
"Miller offered three alternatives:
l . Allow the issue to be decided by a
vole or the people.
2. Bring about a change in the ad·
tSee HARBOR, Page t)
Mesa Company
Looted of $2,650
June 13, until after the fuOeral, there wfl1
be a period of """"""" dminl wb1cb all
coal 1111nljig will ~ in ·u;, 'United
~ ... l!olllill ..... ...,., ... lillilr,
leader.
"ft -;, aJtoceU... fittln& that 'Ille mat
mloelbellltnl.wbilttho_wllo_
in !hem ..... toceditr to do -to John Lltwollyn Lewis."
Boyle alao demanded that In honor ol
Lewis, O>ngresS" immediately enact
"strong coal mine health and aafety
legislation."
"A John L. Lew~ health and Nlety hill
would be a fitting climax 'and mtq'IOl'f.al
to the career of thia outstandiDi cbam·
plon of coal mlnlng ufety," the un1oo
head said.
$4 Million Stiit
Filed in Dispute
On Dune Buggies
or anply. · : , .
#1(<>1 P<l•tilllo~
my , nor 1-llt donl -·· Hartman ""mple'I 7 1 Udl .... -r---
Re ·~ ~ I'••·-....
-<>I two or -"""' e11 Ibo lllle' owned -. ........ <>I c.ta -Pollet ~ ..-ition o I
vlolalon.
The key to the ~. -ColUi M.,. Pollet Tralllc: Buruu· Sgt. Jolln
Regan, is that patroi;men once bad -....,,
3,600 Jobs in Huntington
Go With .Loss of MOL
By 'll'IWAM llBllD pUcatloos ..w,n.d to MOL.
OI "-a.lfr ~ ..... Propoea.ls Wtre reoe.lved Tuulay by
A black picture of aeroopaco employ-NASA for devtlopmeni.l 11udles ol 1 ,._
A $4 million lawsuit which could pat the ment In Huntington Beach wu pallrted cmd generation of space staUcm. IJdr
Harbor Area's accelerating dune buggy today by gloomy offldall of the Mcnon. came from three consortluma made up of
business into a skid was filed today in nell Douelas Astronau\iel CorporaUon from two to four large MrOlplC8 firms
Orange County Superior Court. who annouocecl tbaU,IOO job& locally wUI including McDoMtll ·Doaglu, IBM and
Named ln the actlon were three Santa be affected try dropping of the Manned Matlft.M.arJett.a C«p.; · Grum m •·n
Ana firms described today as principal OrblUng Laboratory-Im by the U.S. Aircraft Corp., Loct1-1 Mlasllts and
suppliers of the rugged, chunky little Defense DepartmenL . Space Corp., General ·Dynamics dorp.
vehicles to Harbor Area distributors -Officials of the aerospace corporation and" TRW Corp.; and rfoitb Nntrican
Action Fiberelass, Dunn-Buggies West said this morning that about ? ,200 of Us ~ell Corp., .and General Electric
and Beacon Development Corp. personnel are affected by '"termlnaUon of Ccrp.
A key·carrying burglar has tooted a If an lnJuncUon sought by Berry "'1ni·T the program, 3,800 in HunUnflon Buch, Two of the groups are to be selected for
Costa tt1esa adverlising company of of Long Beach is granted, however, those 1,700 at santa Monica; ·1~• In the st. further planning of 1 a.man "tarth
$2,650 in eleclrical equipment. tools and supplies seem destined to dry up. For the. Louis, Mo., area and 100 In Florida.. Orbiting station whlcb could be. in opera ..
refrigeration systems, police said today. Long Beach company claims that its Cbalnnan J~s s. McDon;oeU said tion in 1975 with attachable module&
Douglas McMurray, sopkesman for competitors are usine a design perfected that every eUort ta bei.n& made to which could .increue the ltltkm's capaci•
Pacific Electrical Advertising, 2011 by Berry Mlni·T engineers. A _ _. -tble to ..... '--t to 50 .......vi• """ 1J1>
P d The oomplalnt alleges that the deftn· tr-.uaaJI" ., many as ..,._., • UW1Cr Y r---"3 • lacenlia Ave., sai 150 pounds of copper projectl in the company and~ in AID>ougb the JocaJ M~ Douglas
was also included in the loot. dants are assembling and distributing the corporation'• family ol companlef. Company b lanwutlug Jou of the $flt
Patrolman Jack Koch said whoever vehicles that are comp'ete copies of. the "Our penonntl uilcDed to tbe MOG million coatrac:t f(I" the MOL vehicle
stole the materlaJs must have loaded dune buggies piooeered by the Long ruw:rram have done a -at, creative job devtlopment.. o1Dct1il said today thali
them sboard a truck, since the haul in-Beach firm. ,..-.,.. .... they will vtacroue1y for &betr abare
eluded nine separate refrigeration units, It points out thlt the Santa Ana firms du;rlng the ' put four YtUJ," McDQgnell o( ~ :-ccminl ap
Theft of $41~ worth of parts from im· · are capltall%ing Oii the "larp """' ollf ~""tafll of tbelr 1~.n..1-:..l. blVt ~ mwitbDe Rep. JIJdmU 1'. HAQ.
pounded cars, --including a Corvett< .money expended hl'-l!t!T}'-Mlnl-T-'ln been""~ I~ ~ ---cs..-MOL-JOllS;_Pip_ll --
transmission, was also re p 0 r t e d research and development" of tbe revolu-seaet ol my edmtraUcm of the , bard
Wednesday by Harbor Towing service Uooary vehicle. work, 9\Pftfeu1onal Dill and devotion employe Roy K. Bennett. ,.. .. '" He told Officer David N. Stem the dilplayed by 10 many ollny temnmiteL
I H · Even while stunned local McDonnell terns were removed with tools and , cut-Meetin' g alted nouaw 'offlcla1' try to .. u mt ~
tUng torch In the impound-lot at 964 W, do with the S,ioll -lnv~O<I in tbe
171h SI., Costa Mesa. now-dtfunci MOL .,...-.,,.., the pooatblll-
Or ... •.
Skull Murder Trial Opens By GraduatiQn :l:.'!:11o':"'~';'11e~•"
Graduation ceremonies at local schools
-Involving a number ol friends and
relatives -me.ans poatponemertt of the
Costa Mesa County Water District's
regular board meeting tonight.
The NaUooaf Atr<>Ollllld ""4 SpoOI
Admlnlltratlon. (NASAi ,_ owem· lo
be the only agency ~harged wjlh·~
men· into space~-~-~._.
to have 11-dl)' td........,.,~.-
Riverside Case Expected to Go On for Week
Prosecutors today presented the state·s
caui as a Santa Ana youth went on trial
in Riverside County Supertor Court,
charged with the grisly Skull A1urder.
discovered by three Costa Mesa rabbit•
hunters.
Rowland J, Berry, 21 , of_ 734 Toland St..
waJved jury trlal and the case ls: being
heard by Judge E. Scott Dales, with
courtroom observers estimating i' wUI
take a week to finish .
The suspect Is one of foor originally ar·
rested in the shooting death of Kent 0.
Davis, 21, ol Hayward and he has pleaded
innocent by reason ol lManily.
His three original ro<lefendants have
been released for lack ol ev:ldena:: linking
tMm to the execution more than a year
ago in remote Railroad Canyon neJr
Elsinore.
Sheriff's delecUves believe Davis came
south with S800 to buy marijuana 15
months ago, but purchased only death In
a lonely canyon at the hands of a person
or persons posing as drug dealers ,
Costa Mesa brothers Dave and Paul
Zimmann were hunting with a friend last
November when they stumbled over
Davis' bullet-blasted sku ll, anlmal·gnaw-
ed bones and an eneraved watch.
'
The victim was reported miss:ing in
April\ 1968 .and his car was found a~
doned aeveral mllu from the encutlon
scene near Elsinore about the same time.
OnJy a rew weeks alter the hunters
found Davis' remains, heavy wlnter rains
sen( floodwater casr.ading down the
watershed aod would have wiped out the
evidence.
Court-appoined psycbiatrisb who pro-
bed th e accused killer's mental state
c1trllcr this year told of Berry's drug
t'.lvcrdose suicide attempt last year and he
has sfnce been held in Jiilil Without ball.
.. ~ ...
'
Dlrecton of the CMCWD will mttt
next Thursday at 7:1> p.m., t'nsttad, with
adoption of a '2.35 tnillloo fl9C'1 bud&et
for llD'lll the major Item oo the apnda.
Coples of the prollminary buda<t ...,.
prost11ted two ntks qo; oootalnlng
plam for espanslon cl txlating llttVlce,
payment of bonds from the put and no
t.u: or water rate: tnerease.
NEW YORK (UPll -Tbe llOct
market tod1y followed the eslmple of Ibo
other seSlkms thls wttk locf wound up
lhe day 1 loier. (S.. quotllloos, P-
14·lll. ,
men bl apace, .
NASA his, MVetal pn>jlctaclo It ltut-
the talklni' .... --lld .the finandll pllibt of the --of,llCl)oo.
neU Do1111u II ~ olooi "1'h Ila fllllllC1af ml , ,....... ...
captur< 1 llhlre <>I the Jl">J!t:ti. • ·-
Ono " -projectl Is CIOll ...... of
lhe S.IVB -· tho tlllrd lllqo ol the• Saturn V moon rocket -to'.a lpiCI m-
tloo. Tbe SJVB Nae II ballt Ill Btm-
Unilloft Beidl. by the M"cl>aaoiJI DouS)al
AltrONWllcl Cirpor1Uon. '
Tbe NASA Apollo Appllc1'10•1
l'rop'1m (MP) would UI thl iDodlfted
fl0fool by 'lo:orot --' .... worbbop f'« ICltolllll lltll octoodllc:JIO'
loc\e nu.er lllln Uia mWlirJ •Po
INSmB TODAY
Grodvatinr /ff1fft 'Joloh achoo!
""" be "" ~ ~'1· toll -bvt It dotm~ llcwc' lo l>t. s .. ~.11. -... = . ,_ "'= -" Delltl ........ 11 ....._ ,. .. --. ............. 17 ,..... , .. ,.
~ r. -.. _,....." ...... ' ...
:tHL' ----r.:::=
•
\
' -'
•
.. ~ ,,/.i..;.----·
-..
,,
• ••-I ' '' t o l -:t ... , .. !;t "'11.•· ..... ..,,. ...... 'lllllr ....
I I • -... ,..... "' IJlilj;io •II,,.. .... , .. -• W """'-wblch closed out l!aill* ~ no ..a.r. • ..
ltie li!cJi c-n of $43 Newport Slit llld, "!Jiit cu lte-M lntenclloll of 1Wi>of H School "'fllor•-sylnt>ols '1nlll wo ourselves art teduced
, .of _paren~ and friends looked to Symboll. Or lt can be rpo~. If lor 1
CG u 1ofta es of bllJl'-robed gradu&les moment we oodld see the world through
plcted !lP lr dlplomu. s another's eyes we ~ht see the unique
Va1ecUc ian Connie .03born challenged beauty of what it means to be a human ar•1•t.u to look ·at each person _. being.''
whllbtr" young, old, Whitt or black -as Stephen 1'Kent" l{ammeras, t be
tndlflduals ud ,not I! members or a saluta\orian, said he found hil high school eroq. · education °1n too .,eat a meUllre a •Sillnc·penona as pert of the establish-wane of time. The momenta wh9f' 1 was
raent'of as NegroeS makes It euler not forced to think were ~eclou1 few."
to Ii5ten to them, she Temarked. "We Re 58Jd in one class half the Ume was
can ateiome· and dlsmls.s lhe.m and sit devoted to busy work, and suggested the
Froa Pflfl" l
11.tUQJOR BREAKUP ASKED •••
mlnlstraUve pb.itosOphy of the dist.r'ict
and re&olve the complaint.!.
3. Deny the application and force the
Issue to the state Legislature or force the
issue to be decided by the courts.
Newport Beach's stand favoring
cmtinuation of the district. as Ls was
]nl<nted by city Harbor Coordinator
George Dawes.
He read a rt.solution adopted by the
N_~rt ,6eacl\ Ciiy Council h1onday
liigbt opposing dissolution of the district,
but requesting the LAFC to launch a
study lo determine bow best to
reorganize the dlstrict ao it can provide a
comprehensive program or regional
ncreailon.
The ruolutloo aho called for the
Harbat':Dlltrid. Oofnmission ·to be tx·
panded to· 1nclode -representatives of
there cities.
• The LAFC toot no action on the latter
two suggestions.
. Norman C a v a n a u g h , representing
y;estmin&tu, backed dlasolutJon of the
, qlmict. He a&jd his city favorec:t· an in-
~grated regional program~ of pai'ks,
beaches and parks catrl.ed out by a new
c!oontywide commilslon and financed
lrom the county ll">"al funds.
; AlAO ruppartiq:' dluoluUon wu Los
llamltos City.:Attorney John Parker who
Urged • volo ·or the peoele.
: LA.FC ~ Wortman, mayor or
Vllla Park, offm..! a lengthy eJplanaUon
ti the ·whole problem,. aaytng "it has
~eraJ solutions" but· concluding th at
fttere is "merit.to the proposal that since.
diBtrlct was f~ by the electorate
could be no harm In subml!Ung
iuue1 to a vote (I( the people."
"&vetal speakers made it clear that
there bas been no Yalid critlciam of the
actual -~-GI the district under M~ Keniiell!"~ But the ma·
jorltifj'elt the·iliiitilct's Mp&t•lt tuiog
powen and the lack of overall recteJ·
tlonal duties iDcludin& parks, were
12eg1Uve factors.
From Pflfle l
MOL JOBS ...
na (0.Westminster) is asking' the
Congre.s,, ,to lnve&tigate lhe ramificatiOll.'l
of the MOL program cancellation.
One of those ramlflc.aLions is the
po.ulbWty that placing men 1n spaet has
been turned over entirely to the civilians
with the military concentrating on other
activities in apace.
No timetables for either reauignment
or release of local personnel were an·
nounced by the McDonnell Douglas of·
!icials. 'They said only that the company
is still "in a state ol shock." but that "all
&leps to make the hr.pact as Ugbt as
poui,ble are being taken."
Snow Greets l\lontana
Mter 80-degree Day
GREAT FAW, M~nt:'{UPll -Mon-
tanans, who Wednesday basked In 80·
d~~ temperatures, awoke lhi1 June
morning to find· winter on their doorstep.
Four inches of snow -a record for tliis
late ht the seaso~vered the ground
tiere...and the thennometer read a chilly
32 degrees as the wet flakes continued
10 fall.
DAl lY Pl lOI
_O!tANd Cl»olll' •Ul l IWllNO COM•AH'I
--t.Mtf N:-w.t4-
~rai..it Mil ....-.iltlotr
Jtt'c I . C11rl1y
VICI ,, ....... eNI lit111•.i M.~t9U
ni.,,.11 kttwlt ....
n ... , A. M11r,.~i~1 _ ..... .,_ __
3JO West llf Str.•I
Miiii•t .lUrt~n P.O. a.. 11•0. 1'2616 °""'-""'"" ...,.: 1711 ""'' ..... ""'".,.. .... ·~ ...,.t ,. ,..,.. ·-
~ INCi!:. tl!l f"9t
)
Flf.lh District Supervisor Allen strongly
~ed diiaolulion. "Nothing has been
sugg't!sted by Ult ciUes lhat can't be done
within the Present structure of the
diltrict," be argued. "lam against a vote
of the people. It ls the respon!lbllity of
this commission lo make the decision. We
make C::ecisions constantly. We don't duck
our responsibility and shouldn't on this
i.ssue."
Seco:td District Supervisor Baker said :
"Nothing Will be changed by dissolution
(o( the district). The beue.fit.s there now
will not change, But there is stron&: feel·
ing throughout the nation to d a y that
local government is not responsible or
responstve to the . cltiu:ns. That is
because it has become fragmented .
"People thlnk the district ls obscure,
hidden, therefore It has become JUspect.
Changing to coonfy conrtol is a s t e p
toward the mandate of the act forming
the LAll'C -to consolidate loca1 govern·
men!, streamline it."
From Page J
SALARIES ...
hu·g.,.,.for.
The ptt:Rnt dJslrlct tax rate la 57 cent.II
per $UD of assessed valuation or $35.U
paid this year by t.he owner of a $25,000
home.
The average pay raise for in.rtructors
next year is 6.8 percent. Non-teaching
personnel will get pay raises varying
fJl)ID seven to 18 percent based on a
.5Urvey by Gold Thompson Company of
oompetJtive wages paid by other junior
college districts and private industry for
simiJa:' job classlflcations.
Cost of the teacher raises wiU be about
$350,00'J, or th~ non-teaching personnel
raises about $240,000, of adminiatrators
ral.ses about $35,000, and for the ln·
creased employt insurance about ,U0,000
- a Iota! of l'/l>,000.
The salary .agreement was worked out
by Supl Nonnan Watson meeting with
the faculty aenate saJary comm!ttees
from the Orange Coast and Golden Weit
campuses. !fcacbers generally 1ot what
they asked for.
. To make up the '750,000 deficit .in the
provisional budget, Thompson said it
might be necessary to:
-Levy (or the first time an adult
education tu1 a permissive tu feature
not requlring ·a vote of the people. The
limit on the lax is JG cents. but Thonlpson
said, "We're talldng in the realm of
maybe two or three cent.!." ,
Income from .\wo or three cents would
be 1170,000 or1255,000.
-Abandon plan! to lease-purchase a
district admiriistration building as recom·
mcndea by an accredltlng team.
Savings: about $100,000.
-Drop reserves sUU lower than shown
in the provisional budget. Last year
reserves were $520,000, about four per-
cent of the operating budget. Thompson
is reluctant but willing to cut them to
what he calls "a dangerously low level"
or 1200,000.
Savings over the $349,805 show In the
preliminary budget : about $150,000.
-Decreasing the allowance for
deadbeats in lax collection from 10 per·
cen~ to five percent as per new state law.
Pick up of income: about $200,000.
Jeweler Wounded
By Gunman Still
Fight8 for Life
Samuel Brucker. downtown Santa Ana
merchant who shot it out with two holdup
~en last Th~rsday, is still flibtlng for his
life today 1n Santa Ana Community
Hospital.
llO!pital aides said he ls ''still in
serious condiUon but improving each day
and came through additional surgery suc-
cessfully Wednesday."
1ifeanwhlle, Santa Ana Police Chief
Edward J. Allen has commended Brucker
for "his heroism above and beyond the
call of duty."
The 65-year-<lld Brucker . owner of
Brown's Je~·elry. 213 E. 4th St., was
wounded seven times last Thursday in
the gun baltle in his store. He kJlled one
of the alleged bandits, Louis A.smond, 37,
of San Juan Capistrano and the second
robber suspect, Arthur Kleis, 25, or
Anaheim, was captured minutes laltr' two
blocks away.
He faces preliminary hearing Friday on
charges of attempted murder.
Chief Allen said of Brucker, ''Anyone
who knOws Sam as t do knows he
pogseucs lhat kind of cou.r•gt and dis-
dain for the armed thugs prowling our
struts taking the lives and property or
decent t,aw-abidJng cltJurui.
"We cannot commend him hl&hly
tTlOUgh for his heroic act . lt wu In the
hlahtst trtdlllon of Amer I c• n
clti.tcnship.''
I
-~-------
...... ·------
tes _at Harbor lJigh . ...... _. ... ~~= ..., ilJltmil llal Iii • -· ' ''Wt .. told by the limo t1:1e ftl!lllbers
of this clul are ~ years okt abwt 75
perceot Wiii IJ4 fj!llni t)'pu of Joba that
do oot now e1lst, ' he u.ld.
Singled out for special recogalUon dur·
ing the ceremonlea were honor graduateS
David Alward,1 Deborah Brown, John
Carlton, Kathleen Crawford, Jeanne
E1 ..... Cynthia Forbee, Maryaoo Gallil,
Rlcbard Howland, Sltpben Hammeru,
Karen Johnaoll , Tracey Kaiwi, Roberl
Kelllh. Mary Mole<, Connie Oabome,
Patricia Payne, Cynthlj Place, Jan
Sdlwarts and Nora Sltrllng.
Another Con Slain
Countian Knifed
In Quentin Fight
From Wire ServleCi
Racial haired erupted again in San
Quentin Prison Wednesday night, leaving
one while convict stabbed to death and
six others, among them an Orange Coun·
ty sex offender, slashed and cut.
Associate Warden James Park said to-
day the killing of first degree-murderer
Robert J. Adams, 30, of Ventura, was a
planned job to aven1e the late April stab-
bing deaths of three black prisoners .
T h e victim was killed by a stiletto
fashioned from a toilet plunger rod filed
down to razor sharpness. Guards seized
two such weapons, plus a scissors blade
after the mayhem.
Prisoners John K. Harrison, 26, Los
Angeles bank robber and Harry Parker,
26, sentenced in Los Angeles on a
manslaughter charge are In extremely
!lerious condition today after surgery.
Charles F. McDonald, 4.1, aenltnced
from Orange County for a sex afiensc.
iu!fered minor cuts, along with Richard
Homan, St, San Diego burglar; Larned
Caney, 33, Humboldt, Calif. su offender
and Donald W. Rostamo, 26, Los Angeles
bank robber and drug offender.
The aMOClate warden said the stabbing
attacks occurred simultaneouaJy at
several spots after 300 of 800 irun.atea: in
the east ceUblock had been marched back
from supper In the messhall.
Inve!!ltlgation of the racial stabbings
will involve questioning of at least 450
convicts, Park said today, as the tense,
3,600-inmate prlson remained under a
maximum security alert to remain in ef·
feet through tonight.
He did not indicate whether the seven
victims were singled ou~ fJW'posely or
simply because they v»ere white and the
most convenient men present at the mo-
ment of planned revenge.
The ctllblock where racial violence
flared i.!i In a se parate section cf San
Quentin from Death Row , where Sirhan
Sirhan awaits execution for the
assassination of Sen. Robert r . Kennedy.
Heim Sides With Hinshaw
In Fight on Irvine Taxes
CoWlly Al5esi0l Andrew J. Hinshaw
Wednesday was joined by a strona: ally in
his fight with the Board of Supervisors
over taxes on Irvine Company land in the
Upper Newport Bay exchan.1e.
Supervisors have ordered taxes can·
celed on the 457 acres which the company
has deeded to the city. But Hinlhaw has
refused to take any action toward that
end, saying he will not do 110 until so
ardered by a court of law.
Wednesday County Auditor-O>ntrollor
Victor A. Heim in a letter to the board
said, "I am not able to comply with your
•.. order and direction."
Heim said ; "The passage of the bare
legal tlUe from the Irvine Company to
the county does not, In the apinion of my
aUorneys, transfer the owners bi p
necessary to constitute a passing o(
asse6Sible interest in the property to an
exempt public agency (the county} for
the following reasora:
"J. The circumstances under which the
county agreed to the recording cf the cor-
poration grant deeds indicates that only
bare legal title was transferred, and that
this was apparently accomplished for the
purpose of providing property tax relief
lo the Irvine Company while Lhe current
litigation ls pending.
(Heim ls party to a lawsuit apposing
the land exchange of 357 acres of Irvine
Upper Bay property to the county in ex·
changt for 150 acre.s of county-held land}.
"2. In this case it Ui questionable as to
whelher or not the county has acquired
th• rroperty, even though it bu bare
lega tiUe; because it does not have the
normal ind Ices or ownership. L e ..
possession, the right to make im-
provements, and the right to alter the
phys!Cal characl eri!fics Of tliePfOpertj
(l<J dredge II).
"3. T!;le contracts between the partie!
clearly indicate that lhE!re has been no
consideration given the company because
the county property being used as such is
still in escrow. Further, the county, under
the existing agreements with the com·
pany cannot obtain title insurance for the
. 'transferred' property pendin1 the out-
come of litigation.
(Hinshaw asked the supervisors Tue!-
day to show hlm a title insurance policy.
They replied, through lhe County
Counsel, that no such policy exists
because the transactJon will not be com·
pleted until the court case i1 setUed).
company aa le.ssor and various lessees on
the land that bas been 'tran&ferred' to the
county. Even though the county is now
supposed to be the 'owner' of this pro-
perty the Irvine Company still collects
the rents and will continue to do so until
such time as the pending litigation
terminates.
Auditor Heim concludes with : "Aside
from the aforemtntloned legal questions,
the very fa ct that there Is litigation pen-
ding between the auditor-controller and
ttie county and the company In which the
validity and constitutionality o( the
transfer of title is being questioned,
further dictates that I not comply with
the board's order and directive, since to
do so would be inconsisent with the posi-
tion my office has taken in the court pro-
ceedings. ''
Assistant County Counsel Robert Nut·
tman said the county Board a f
Supervi sors and the company have two
alternatives in view of Heim 's ultimalim
-they can go to court, jointly or either
of them , or the Itvine Company can pay
the taxes under protest.
7 STYLES TO
CHOOSE RlOM
HARBOR HIGH SENIORS FILE INTO DAVIDSON FIELD
Sun Smiles on Commencement Rites for Class of '69
'TOO MUCH BUSY WORK'
S•lut•torian Hammeras
'LOOK AT INDIVIDUALS'
Valedictorian Osborn
Robin Hoods Hit Bank For Record Robbery
PUERTO LA CRUZ. Venezuela (UPI)
-Four bandi ts pulled lhc bigges t bank
holdup in Venezuelan history \Vednesday,
stealing $550,000 and painting ''Viva
Rockefeller ~" on the hank 's 1valls before
speeding a1•;ay in a geta1vay car.
They said the money 1vould be given to
the poor.
SOFA BED SALE!
-"I· 400.00 Now 299.00 "4. It would appear by thi.!i proposal
that the board has preempted U.. right
and statutory responsibility of the County
Assessor to assess all property In the
county equitably.
A wlcle ••~
choo•• lrom. With 'Skirt1 $50.
y-'""""" -dui9Mr -be ,.,_ to .,,;,, lfOU ••• "5. There are five leases between tht
Boy, 15, Dies After
School Bottle Fight
RICHMOND. Calli. (UPI) -A !$-year·
old Richmond youth died today of wounds
1uffered In an after school bottle fl5ht.
Hospital of a severed jugular vtln alltr
maulvt blood transfualons and surgery
failed to $ave htm.
H.J.GARRETf fURNlllJRE
'lOf=lSSIONAJ.
INTlllOI OlSIStff~ O~ Me•~ Tit-. I Fri. P••·
l 116 HAltlOA. al VO.
COSTA ~lSA. CALI F,
646-0Z1& 646-ot16
------...... -"':' .......... -.--.. , .•• .,., ' -.... ··-~ ---··'""'·•'. ,... ·-~ . .... ,_, _ ...... -......... _ ........... --~'"* • --
T11"1doy, Ju.,. 12. 196' S DAILY 'JLOT 3
Five Convicted in Fou~dation Fraii d . . . ...
Los Al.amit,os Man Among Those Facing 10 I-ear~ in Co!f-Rt -SUii~
A Los AlamUoa man was one of five ceedlnp: Doualas Faby, 45, of Long defendants hat: bee.n Jnvolved in a UL4lliea-Orm. •
princl1>4b cl an Orange CounlJ faun-Beoch; J.-Walsh, 51, ol Font.oM ; -me whereby their vlctllna were Gallal wu flned 11,IOO all!f ~-'"'
dallon ·"-led of fr ud -•--n-~-u." -ol ~--to DI nd ed "· •<--•"' old'-3E three Y-proballoo. A ,...._ ti -COllYa.: 1 ' l;lW"ge1 nuuci.~ •ULJ"es, .. ,.,• "'-11, .• a asaur ,, ~L-w...:y 'C'-J\I UlQU1 ~~in cciantj.~Jall WU ausprilltd 111.
Wednesday by 'a &iP.,ior Ciiun ·jury Fred K. Dell, 52, of Elmhursl, Ill., all and etlat4,qxea '"'duth\!il' lnves tK i ior CO..rUuidce ~-o~. '
\
W'hicb ended a 16-hour deliberation and 1 cootlcted of conspiracy to e<1mmll grand the "Americans 9 u I Id I n g · · But lfudge Gantner tW b8en "'1ed to
six-week trial with lb guilty verdict. theft •rid related c:harges. tionally" foundation. be wrong ln his dilpollUon of another aoo
Ordered to return fer sentencing July All went on trial foUowlng indictment Most cf the group'• lncome wu derived cused principal ~ the b"Ult group _
by the Orange ,County Gtand Jury and from tees levied for "lnalnlctiOn and Lymu Garber,16,ofBe'ferlyHllla.
13 on charges of coospiracy to commit District· 'tttorney Cecil Hlcka' claim that a.a:sistance" to investors attracted l.o the W. ruling that there wu insuffteilmt:
Pai r of Witataers
. !\ pretty exhibitor at the Colorado Springs Kennet Club dog show
presents an exhibit that wasn't exactly intended. But her two Afghan
hounds. Qomar Azariz Sim Tij (left) and Qomar Axadi' Sim Sabar
displayed a more frontal if somewhat unpronounceable appearance.
Welfa re Branch Decision
Changed ; Building OK'd
County superviso rs have reversed a
decision of a week ago and asked the
Real Property Services Department to
negotiate a \ease-purchase plan for a new
2 Youtl1s G11ilty
In Sl1ooting of
Market O\vner
1'wo Sanla 1\na youths accused of
shooting a market owner during the ir
robbery or his store changed their minds
and their pleas in Superior Court while
jury selection \.\'3S under way.
Ari n Bodiford Jr., 20. and Cary Keith
Quarles, 20, both pleaded guilty to reduc-
ed charges before Judge Byron K. McMil-
lan. Quarles asked for immediate senten·
cing on the rev ised grand theft count and
\vas ordered to serve fou r months in
county jail and placed on three years pro-
batioo.
Bodiford must return June 30 for
sentencing on charges of felonious assault
and fou r counli; of armed robbery. Both
men had earlier faced multiple counts of
dtlcmptcd n1 urder. armed robbery and
assault.
Bodiford and Quarles were arrested
follO\\•ing the holdup or a Greenville
SLrccl market in which the owner was
shot in the collarbone despite his im-
mediate surrender of the day's takings to
the armed duo. Thei r victim has since
recovered from his wounds.
Slin1, Trim Class
Set for Summer
A su1nmcr daytime slim and trim
course will be offered beginning Monday
20,IXIO-!quare-foot building for a . Santa
Ana branch cf the county Welfare
Department.
On June 3, the supervisors voted to
lease tWtrtbirds of a sOOpping center
building at 2029 W. 1st St. because it was
less ex pensive than the new building now
favo red, located in the 1600 block cf West
1st, between Raitt and Pacific streets.
Supervisor Alton E. Allen led the
reversal. ".I don't like leases," he said,
"they are a liability in face of lnflatloo.
But I have no objection to a lease if pro-
vision is made to 8f<!Uire the Prper!Y. 1t
termination."
Supervisor David L. Baker wondered if
the county had assumed legal financial
liability in their action er the previous
week, but Real Property Services Assis-
tant Director George Cormack said it had
not.
"Your board simply authorized our
department to negotiate a lease and to
come back wilh a form1l document,''
C<>nnack advised. County Cc u n s e 1
Clayton Parker agreed.
Supervisor Robert W. Battin objected
lo the new building saying it would cost
the county $70,000 more over the l~year
period of the initial lease.
But Welfare Director Granville Peoples
said, "there is oot that much difference
and we will develop more information to
clear up the point."
Peoples said the board's change of
mind was "great." "It is the first cb-
jection I have had to a board action In
seven years, as you know," the welfare
director said.
Trip to Avalon
Go es Up 25 Cents
for Fountain Valley women who were LOS ANGELES (AP) -It will C05t 25
unable to make the night classes because cents more to saU to Calalina lsl"1d thl.!
of a lilck cf babysitters. sum~er on the great white steamer.
Fountain Valley's parks and recreation The. State Public Utilities Ccmmi.ssion
1lcpartment has made arrangements £or authorized th e ship's operators Wed·
child care duning the summer classes nesday to up one-way fares by t h ·a t
running from 9:30 a.m.· to 11 :30 a.m., amount, pending action on a request for
hlondafs_and Wednesdays at Los Amigos an incr~e of $2.50 over the present fl .50
High Schoo1-:-cm care scrvT2"S Will rosr "l't'KllRf'll'lp-{llflf."'""Also---;lklr litillen2 wM
35 cents per session. now travel' free would be charged 50
First consists or exercises followed by cents for a round trip.
volleyball during the second hour. The operators say expenses are up
Registration for the classes may be $1 10,000 over 1967, the last year of opera-
niadt' rit th e Fountain Valley City llall. lion. becau se of hi gher wharfage and
10200 Slater Avenue, during the 'veck labor costs. Due to a labor dispute, lhe
from 8 p.m. lo 5 p.m. craft didn't sail last year.
grand theft was Char"8 Billings, 40, of the &?'OU~had. bUked CaUfQrnlans of proposit.icn of aetting up such tu•vadlnc ev\dence to proeecute Garber waa we...
12501 Christy Lane. A further COW\\ of "many t ousands of dcllan" in a foundations, prosecutors said. • cessfully challenged at the 1ppellltej
grand theft against the member of the statewkle lndle. He 5\imated losses in Senlenced in pre-trial court acUon -.is court level and state pr01eCUtor1 are,
"Amer!"'°" Building Co...UtuUooally" Or•nae ty alone at !20,000. Gusta"" Gailis, 39, of U'lt La Rooa Line, believed to be reviving clwps uab>ot
ln'lllip wu dismissed. The jury: accepted arguments by slate Huntington Beach. identified by pro. the Beverly HillJ man. He wW be tiled iii
o-~-and qiunty prosecutors that ~ five secutors as a principal in the Baningtob, Superior Court at a late date. Biilings laeea a J*>ible sentence of I 1---'---=---"------'----'---.:......::..:_::.:::::cc:::_::..:::..:=.::::=::c-=.'.::..::....:=:..::.:..:=...::=----
lo JO yeara in elate prloon. So do bb four
Co-defeodlnts in the lOog, coinp1e1 pro-
Jury Selection
Continues in
Embezzle Case
Jury selection continued today in the
Superior Coort trial cf an attorney
accused of embezzling $35,000 during !~-
his handling ()f a veterans' group's legal
affairs.
On trial before Superior Coort Judge
William Speirs is David Cadwell, 40, a
SaJta Ana attorney who is perhaps best
known in coonty legal circles for his
handling of civil liberties act'ions. lt is
alltied that the portly, bald Cadwell
look liberties wtth funds cl the Jack
Fisher chapter of the Disabled American
Veterans during his trusteeship (lf the
group's coffet"S. He was indicted by the Orange County
Grand Jury <m two counts: ()( grand
theft. Frequent mcves by Cadwell for
quashing of the gran4 JUry document
have been dimlissed by criminal court
judges.
District attorney's investigators allege
that Cadwell misappropriated the $35,000
from charitable trust funds en\ruste<I to him by the chapter during August and
Septimber, 1967. 'llKl8t funds, it ls said, were froien as a result of legal action
by the state against the DAV group.
Cadwell succe.sfully defended the
DAV c!iapter against d>arge. that the
group had illegally operated thrift shops
in Orange County in violatioo of state
codes. Fund! involved in the investiga-
tion were in his care during hb e<1nduct
of the litigation. it is claimed.
Adventure Club
Signups Due
The time has come for advance
registration in the Fountain Valley YM·
CA summer Adventure Club series of
field trips with eight events scheduled
this year.
Trips and dates include :
June 28 -Japanese Deer Park and
Movleland of the Air.
July 9 -ExposiUoo Park, science and
history museum.
July 12 -train ride, San Diego Zoo.
July 18 -swimming, craft!, games
and softball.
July 1&-lfl -overnight camping trip to
Silver Lake.
July %3 -1lligalor farm and Knoll's
Berry Farm.
July 26 -scavenger hunt and
Marineland.
J1:1ly 30 -Travel Town and Griffith
Park.
For further information phone 893-8511 ,
or visit YMCA offices at 14776 Beach
Blvd .. Westminster.
Library to Take
Space as Theme
Blasting off to the moon in a rocket
ship is the Huntington Beach Ltbrary'•
space.minded theme for this summer's
reading dub, announced Mn. GwenOO.
lyn R. Talbert, children's librarian.
Registration begins Saturday, and will
continue for several weeks. Program
ends With a party at Lake Park on Au-
gust 2f> with entertainment and refresh·
ments and reading certUicat.es with gold
seals will be awarded.
Bulletin board displays will show
each child's rocket.ship.ad\'l.ncin&_cl~er
to the moon with each 5 books he reads,
until it makes a luoar landing when he
completes 22 books.
t'hildren may join summer reading
clubs nt junior hbrary 1t 525 N. Main
St. at annex 1 at Edinger and Graham,
and at annex 2 al 9281 Banning St. on
th e John Eader schoolgrouods.
Save $I 0.0<! on our double
edged hedge trimme r!
Orig. 39. 99
NOW29.95
Pay a• li ttle a• $5 per month
• Unit feat ures teeth on both sides of cut ..
ter bar to do the job in hall the itme.
• Unit is alro double insulated for electri-
eal Hfety.
• •
LIKE IT ••• CHARGE Ill
• • ••• • •
• • • •
t
Double edge • • •
Hedge .Trimmer
Father's Day Special • • •
trees for your garden!
ITAL'fAN CYPllSS for besi ; professi.o~
el typ• l1ndsct pe pl1ntin9 with llttl•
up keep.
MEYEll UMON tree in I 91llon t o"'"
teiner. Grow your own lemons end hev9
en ettrective tree el10 !
YOUR CHOIC'.J 69'
A garden must • • • OIR'
50' nylan vlnYI hose
5/8" diemeter hose reinforctcf witfl
nylon truck tire cord.
4.44
hautJfy your garden
with pretty mcirlgolds ..
E11y-to.9row m•rltoJds In rt d, told,
ora n9• end mixed shedes. You'll find ell
these in our Gerden Center. ·
TllAY 44C
•,
-~----
County Salaries Hiked 7 .2% Many other Items to choose from
Fringe Benefits Also Approve d by Coun.ty Supervisors
Supervisor David L. Baker had a
fhange of mind Wednesday about delay·
ing approval ol the county e.mployes
salary ag reement for one week an<! the
beard voted unani mously to approve the
proposed 7.2 percent salary and fringe
benefit increase.
The approval will odd f4.3 millioo to
the county payroll. Baker Tuesday hod
objected to approval nt once because he
hud not had time to study the proposals.
year effective June 27, so I propose we
approve the &chedu1e today."
.. J have reviewed the law," Baker said,
''and it states that the county should
negcliate in good faith with 1 recognized
employes group.
"In a resolution some months ago we
orOOed the Personnel Director to
negotiate and reach an agreement. Many
meclings were held and there was much
give and take ."
ill past years.
The approved $U mUlion addition will
be to a curmit county payroU of $81
rrJllJon a year. Salary increases alone
amount to 6.8 percent of the incrtase and
non-ulary items, .4 percent, Pertonnel
Director William Hart aald.
The 7.1 lncre.ase compares with a total
6.7 percent Increase last year.
Fringe benefit changes include lncreu-
ed mileage rates for employes who mwt
use their personal cars, lnc:reased over·
time t>aJ, a tuition reimbursement pro-
gram, new grievance procedures and sev·
1on u D USH ., IU.C'k ""' 2 99 Te•r c~, I• I ... , .. celltel...n ••••• , •• , , • , • • • • • ~~~.:,:.o~ -~~-~L-~ . • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • .1.29
•
~~:.•~-:=w ~-:-:~. ~~·~'. ! ................. 6.88 ::· ~~~~ .................................. 1 J9
:p:~fJL/~' ~~~~•··•••••••••••···•·••••••••·•••·'·" r.::."~ ............. ,........ ..... ··········. 98c
:!"!~ :~~~~. ~~~-........................... 1. 99 Te11t • ...-, Ottk ••lfl1lll ... t..c-r •"9¥' ., ._.. ...,.n..t • • • . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • 'J'W
I
NEWPORT BEACH -FASHION ISLAND
\Vedncsday he said. ''l now realize the
time schedule Is loo tlghl to properl y Im·
plemcnt the changes for the new 1alsry
Baker conl.inued, "l am satisfied that
the iu1me accord would have been reach-
ed If this board hid met In 11everal
personnel sessions (or days and weeks u era! other it.ems. IL----------------------------------------'
'
• ·-~--._,.-... ---------'
' .
•
Labor's John L. Lewis 89
Fiery Leader Warred with White House, Industrialists
'nlore'a no dollbt about ll S.m
~1111• ury ol BarroW·ln·Furne••, J!ileland ii 1 hlppUy-murled mu.
He celebrated 25 years of wedded
Ille, not b7 giving bis wife a mere
present or a bunch of flowers, but
by: -bauling up a buge British
flag atop a 25 foot pole In his front
yanl. -Filling bis garden with
5,000 seashells spelllDg out "Pal
and Som, Silver Wedcllnc June 10."
Said Pat: "I'm almply delighted."
said Sam: 11A good wife deserves
aomethlng apeclal after 25 years." •
Hawk or spar·
row1 ActuaU11 it's
a little of each.
icith t~ hawk rac·
Ing a Sea Sparrow
iur/oce·UHJir mis-
sile to1Dm'd an un-
' e e n target uar
Point M'ugv. Tht
p h 0 t 0 grcJ)h WCJ
pa1t of a ,..,;., oJ
mpid .sequence "6
g in eering photos
o/a routine
launch. The hawk
toa.1 ruffled, indig.
nant, but iinharm·
rd.
• Kon Sh1w ot Ceterbury, Eng-
land, who f9C"!'llly advartiaed ID a
newspaper '1car or Wile m\Llt 10"
and put a price tag on each, re-
porla be ha& hid three olfers for
bis wife but no Inquiries about the
car. Shaw aaid : 11So fllr no one bas
Inquired about my car but I've hid
three otfers for my wife. One man
wrote asking whit condition ah•
was In and dld I think she was
worth $60 000. Another man even
tried to l;,.,,er. the price. He .•aid
•he wu too old to be worth that
amount of mooey. '' •
ProtDlnl who broke into the
Fountain Nur1eTJJ School in Los
Angeles didn't 1teal an11thing,
but th.ell' apparent111 had a me•·
1age to get across. The11 lined
up.plaltie 1oldftr1 and toy buitd-
ina blocks into two oppoting armie1 and ·tn the "no-mans'
· Jand• bitlotn the comboUmtl
chalked in the word.I: "No more
IDQf t.ov•. 'PleOle!"
• Somebody his rustled the may-
or's catue. City of Industry Mayor
John F•rrtro said a number of
prime Herefords worth $10,000
hive been stolen from bis rancb
In the past two months. • Student Roger D1ncoy of East
Honley, England, is going to spe·
clalize. Dancey, who is graduating
from the University of Exeter this
mooth, plans to get his PhD in
Soccer. He plan& to write his thesis
on why one mtllion Britons watch
professional soccer games every
week.
LABOR'S LION
Fi9htin9 John L. Ltwl1
3 Gls Kiiied
' WASHINGTON (UPI) -John L. Lewis
burst oilto the American Jabot ICt!M at a
-time when coal was ting.
When he departed thoutands <i coal
mlnera In Appalachia and el&ewhue in
the nation were oot cl. wort. 'Ibey bad
been replaced by bulldozen, augurs, and
ll'Ucu-Coal had been replaced by gu, oil
· and even lhe atom.
But while coal reigned, llO did John r;.
Lewis. His mighty voice and righteous
wrath were legend lo some and terror to
others. But they were bis tools in
dominating the American labor move-
ment for a half cem'ury. .
He died Wednesday nighl al the age of n.
Lewis, loqtlme preoklenl pf the Uniled
Mine Worker• of America (UMW) and
first president of the Congress of
Industrial Organizations (CIO), retired
nine years ago as head of the mlne
workers. He had warred with president!,
industrialists and other union leaderis.
Until recenUy he came from bla home
In suburban Alexandria, Va., every day
to his sixlh floor oHlee in the UMW
building In Waahl.ngton in hia post as
chairman of the trustees or the huge
UMW welfare and rettmnent fund.
Many Wd the fund which he won after
a long atrike and bitter batUe with Presi·
dent Harry S. Tnman in 1946 was his
greatest monument
Only a few days ago safety crusader
Ralph Nader 101.1gbt to enlist Lewis' help
in ousting Tony Boyle aa president of the
UMW.
U.S. Guns Blast Ap_art
3-00-man Red Attack
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. soldiers defen-
ding a brand·new camp northeast of
Saigon leveled their artillery today and
blasted apart a 300-man North Viet~
namese attack that carried through their
barbed wire.
Reporting the predawn battle, the
American command said 38 C.Ornmunist
South Vietnam . -
Says More U.S.
Troops Can Go
PARIS (UPI) -Soulh Vietnam
negotiator Pham Dang Lam toki the
Communists today that "many more''
American troops could be withdrawn
from South Vielnam "if your aide
demonstrates iLs good will for peece at
this meeting and on the batllefield."
Both Lam and U.S. negot ia tor
Lawrence E. Walsh dlsmlued the
establisllment of the Viet Cong's "rtVOlu·
tionary government" as insignificant.
Walsh offered the Communist aide a new
and Oexible formula for peace.
There was no reciprocal offer from the
Communists:. Instead, Mme. Nguyen Thi
Binh, the woman guerriUa who became
head of the Viet Cong delegation, called
the Midway meeting a farce and ap-
pealed for world sup port for the new
"provisional revolutionary government."
lier statement, which repeated Com·
munist demands for a unilateral U.S.
withdrawal from Vietnam, reflected ob.
vious Viel Cong disappointment that lhe
world Communist bloc did not rush to
recognize the government in which she is
foreign minister, diplomatic sourcea uld.
bodies were left on the baUlefield 57
miles from Saigon at dawn while three
Gii were killed and sis wunded.
UPI correspondent D a v i d Lamb
said the North Vietnamese pounded
Artillery Base Joy first with 140 rocket
and mortar rounds and then charged
from all sides at 2 a.m. The base b three
days old.
With heavy monsoon clouds blocking
support from gunships or divebombers,
the U.S. soldle.ra leveled their bowUurs
and opened up with shells filled with Uny
darts designed for just such occasions.
Twenty Communist troops got through
the barbed wire but were stopped at a
~un~1~~ dYo~l~~z~d 3~J~ a~~
hours after they attacked, the North Viet-
namese pulled back.
It was the second -succeas1ve day or
Communist ground attacka following
overnight rocket and mortar bom-
bardrnenls that slammed inlo 21 towns
and allied bases, caustnc light loaes-
Govenunent spokesmen. said the cost·
!lest barrage Wednesday nigllt Into a
population center was a two-round .salv o
that killed eight civilians and "oundecl
eight at Khiem Due, 1~ miles northeast
of Sal&on.
Far to the north, near coaatal Da Nang,
U.S. Marines turned back 100 North Viet·
name.se who trled to overrun their camp.
killing 23 guerrillas while losing one
Marine dead and three wounded.
In a delayed report, the U.S. command
said two Marine helicopters w.ere shot
down over the demilitarized zone (DMZ)
during the past weekend trying to rucue
a leatherneck patrol under attack.
Spokesmen said the command ts sen·
ding patrols into the zone regularly with
orders not to shoot untess shot al The
weekend patrol lost seven men wounded
in il.3 fight in the southern half of the
r.oae.
This Can't Be Summertime
Tornadoes, Thunderstorms Whip Mi.dsecti.on
r-.er.i•ra
'
Coastal
MoellY Qeuilly '°"' ""'"' -,,. "'"-' .,l'lllllnl. Hllfl Plffl' 61. V1r-~ -4 .... ~Int "" -IOlllllo ..t • ta 11 II""'-
Y~l'r'I '-ttl\I ..... f l ftl tlll
'""' 1 """ et 5f ff .._ lnia,. ""'" ..,._,. ,_ w'" M ff 11. W11ff
~-"..,__
Sw-. M-. TWes
T)IUllJOAY
l'nt '-• .• h• '·"'· '·' ,,,., hltll . 1:12 tl.ltl ••••
''"°"" l'lrll""' ............... l :f!1.m. I I
l'll'tf Nfll •••••••••••••tt:ll I .ft\. J.• ~ ""' ............ 1:14 '·"'· 1.• ...... flltill ............ l 1C '·"'· •.o
--~-----------·
v.s. Sum-rw
Vlolf:ftl ~torm1 ~19111 1U011
• wide 1lrftd'I ot fM m~tlntnt '°"
"'· •tl<i.rt. -«tll win. "111111 '"" 1'1111 ..... .,_,.,,. otMo wlth'""-
'l•I r•IM.
Tiit 1~"'11 bollM u. •left9 t CODI trofll ..tlldl cll'OPll>ld !I'll ._,ft\11',
.. ,, .. lint "' Moftl-llefcf• dt'rtll'ffk ,,.. Wllll'lnlll ni. <-ity et Cllt
8 ... Wini I lllctwl DI -.ftltiln -· T~ ell"" lttllf Nfh 'Ill Kt~
M .. Okllllllrllt Mel I-.... Wtelnb-
Hy, \11ot11t1I Wlo!il tlld lle\lllwrnl t hlo ~ ~ ol -rM!11 tl1ll'IOl1t MVlllll'ft WIKOttt.lft 11111 l'!Ofttrwli..,,..
M!wourL A ,.,,... dWr'l!l'll lottt 'I'll Cllltrtl
low• lllwn et OllMI~ -l'ltlflf mlfw.., beolwlwi 0.. M.I,... 11111 CedH' R-6ltl -w.,......., ft!IM a!'ld eel/Md ll!IM-
.i .... ~ If! •• , .. "'"' •1111 """" lltitt,. OM "",. ,,,,., ""'°"" lttfurtlll
"""" • "" l•!I "' h1• """•· Ho 1"1111''-or .. ,km 11..,, ... -• ,._..,, ,,. ........... ""' ,.,.,... dowft
twllli. -t Al!Ofll, it.n .. Incl lft ~
hon\I. _,,.. • mlllt """' el E~t.11.
·---Alleftt• ..........
Bl""1rG. ••M ·~ ... Clllllttlt c:i.w;111 .... 11 , ........
-~ 0.. Mol,,.
"""'' E11rel(1 ,..,_,,, ·-...... ·-· . _ ...
K.-, City
l..H v ....
L• AllM1-Mlloml hKtl
M!lwttlll;et
M"'"'•oll,
..... O..,.."S H.w Vao'll
Nortll f"i.ttt °"'" .. .......
'""" l.otlllo$ Alti.....i. ,,_,.
~-... -••loll'"" ..... l lllff -SllC:,._ ....
SI. Leub .......
'911 Lah (tty .... _
Stfl f"nl'llC'lllce
Unit ltl'blr• .....
SP9t.1,,.
"'"'" Wtlfl!!lf"°"
•
"ltlfil Lew fOr,.c..
" ~ .. ..--
n .. .. " " " " ..
" .. .. " " " " .. n
" " ... .. .. '·" .. " " " " " .. " n " ,, .. " • .. .. " .n • .. .. " " .. .. " ...
" .. .. • .. .. .. .. .. ...
" " .. " ,n
" .. .. ..
" .. .. .. n .. " • n " " " " .. " .. " " ..
" ..
" .. .. .. .. " n ..
" .. .. • "
The famOU!I bushy eyebrows and unruly
hair were white when .be Wed, h1a organ
voice bad dimlniahed.
He entered Doctors Hospital Sunday.
Death came al 4:15 p.m. PDT from what
Dr. Marcel Fortt ca11ed "an acute il·
lness" pending outcome ol an aulDply.
He wat survived by a son, Dr. John L.
Lewis Jr., who practices in Baltimore,
Md.; a brother, R. O. Lewis, Forl N~.
Fla., former UMW vice president; wt a
sister, Mra. Edith eoru ... Kanw City.
lie was preceded in death by hia wife.
Myrta F.d.ith BeU, a former Iowa school
teacher, in 1942; a d.lughter, Kathryn.
once act.i.ve la the labor movement; and
another daughter, who died In chUdbood.
Descended from a long line of Welsh
miners, Lewb: began hi& carttr ::s a coal
digger 83 a yOW'lg.ster in Lucas, Iowa,
where he was born on Abraham Lincoln's
birthday -Feb. 12, 1880.
Lincoln freed the American slaves.
Lewla'a most ardent and emotional sup-
porters later ae.ized on his birth date as
an omen Lewis would free the "industrial
1laves."
A master of the English language who
polished his usage by reading the Bible
and Shakespeare, Lewis used words to
cut his opponents down to size.
Of George Meany, now president of the
AFL-CIO, Lewis said: "An honest
plumber trying to 1bolish sin in the labor
movement, which ia not a function of the
labor movement."
Of Walter Reuther, president of the
United Auto Work.en, Lewis said: "An
Royal Review
eameat Man<lst chronlcally ln~brlaled, I
should tblnk\ by the esuberance of h1I
own verboli.tf.'' But theM blrbs were nothing compuod.
to the Iha/ti lie levelod at poUUcab.
Perhaps h1I mOol famous •N cllrected al
President Franklin D. -ve!L
During a mlnln( dllpata In the ·tate ·
!llOs, Roosevelt quoted Shakespeare and
sakt a ••p1ague o' both your houses."
Lewis replied':
"It ill behoov" one who hu-supped-.t
labor'• table and who bu been theltered
in labor's boule: lo curse with equal
fervor and fine impartiality both' labOr
and its adversaries when they become
locked Jn deadly embrace."
In 1907, lbe year of hi.s marriage, the
young couple moved lo Illinois, and a
year later Lewla began his Career in
labor 1Vhen he was elected leglslaUve
representaUve of Dislrlct 11, UMW •
Samuel Gompers, president of the
American Federation of Labor, heard of
his work and appointed him to his staff.
In 1917 he was elevated to the vice
presJdency of the UMW, and In i919 ho
became 11.3 president.
Waller L. Hart, editar of the Morgan-
town, W. Va. Dominion. New s,
biographer and 50-year friend of Lewis,
said Lewis' labor reign began in Sep-
tember, 1919 under a crabapple tree in
Osage, W. Va., a small tOwn in the heart
of the Great Scot's Run Coal Field. Lewis
got up and said:
"The working man has as much right
to gather together to improve bis lot in
Britain's Prince Charle~, seen in niilitary uniform for the tint time,
inspects the Ro:yal Regiment of Wales during the regiment's inaug·
uration at Cardiff Castle Wednesday. The 20-ye.ar.old heir apparent to the throne is colonel·in<hief of the regiment. · .
Reagan Gives Emotional
Eulogy f 01· Robert Tayl6r
GLENDALE (UPI) -Gov. Rooald
Reagan, hlS-voice 6retiking1 -eulogized-
actor Robert Taylor Wednesday a.s "one
of the great and enduring motion picture
stars c:i au time."
Reagan was a longtime friend of Tay-
lor, who died Sunday of lung cancer at
the age of :i7. More than 200 mourners,
including acton who appeared with
Taylor in his films, attended the brief
service at Forest Lawn's Church of the
Recessional.
"Some day," Reagan said, "I'll see
him on the lale show, resplendent in
white tie and tails •.• and I'll smile
becaUle I wi11 see him in blue jeans
All's Well Aboard
' . Transatlantic Ship
STOCKHOLM (UPI) -Tbor Heyerdahl
and his crtw aboard the papyrus ship Ra
today reported all well on thclr cruise
from Afri ca aer'Qss tho AtlanUc to P.1ex-
lc:o.
Jleyerdahl reporttd Ra'• poslUon as
south of lhe Cape Verde Islands to a
Solndlnavlan Airline Systems !SAS)
pa.s..unger plant on Its way rrom Rio de
J anelrC'I to Stockholm via Ll!bon.
r:
and -. squtnu., ~ i"cimi>'
fU'f!?' -
The governor said Taylor was em-
barrassed by the "pretty boy" image
he earned in the 1930s as a maLinee-
idol "because he was a man who
respected his profession and was a
master oC ii.
"Only in recent years of our friend-
ship have I understood how truly pain·
fut this must have been for him. But
tho pretty boy tag couldn't survive
roles like 'Johnny Eager,' 'Quo Vadi.s,'
'Ivanhoe,' 'Billy the Kid,' pictures
which "'"'e re true classics.''
The services, conducted by the Rev.
Gary Demarest. took only 20 minutes in
response to Taylor's requesl lha~ they
be brief.
Among the mournen were his widow,
actress Unula Thlesa, and her cb1ldren;
Taylor's Orst will!!, actress .Barbara
Slanwy<k: U.S. Sen. Goorae Mun>hY, (R· caut.), and ac\ort van lleflln; llobert
Stack. Walter Pld(eon, Eva Marie
Saint, Keenan Wynn and Gilbert Roland.
Reagan's voice choked with emotion
toward the end ol his eulogy when he
addressed hls remarkJ to Ml.as Thtes.<1
aDd lhe chlldrtn.. He was forced to stop
and blink the tears from his e'}u.
"I spoie to Bob only a few days ago
and J think there was something fie
wanted me lo tcll yro," Reagan said .
;'He wanted me to uy, 'Ursula, be
happy.'"
life by talking with 111sn1gemenl as
Judie Elberl Gary hOd In pulUng
together Carnegie Site! and other firms
to form U.S. Slee! Corp."
Shorlly after becoming president ol lhe
UMW Lewis took his 411,000 worken out
on ltrlke for higher wa.gea. But President
Woodrow Wilson lnvoked a wartime
1tatute and UWis lo.st the first of what
was to become a long seriet of baWes
with the White House.
By 1933, when Roosevelt WU ln·
augurated, the UMW had only 175,000
members. Lewis quickly built his union to
more than half a million.
ln 1936 be joined hand• With other In·
dustrW unions and left the AFL to form
the CJO. In 194.2, after a quarrel with CIO
President Philip Murray , Lewis took the
UMW out of the CIO. In 1941 he reaf·
flliated with the AFL. but little more
than a year later, he 11ent AFL President
William Green a piece of paper with
these words scrawled on it: "Green. We
disaffiliated. Lewis." When be defied a government back·to·
work order in 1946, he was slapped with a
peraanal fine of $10,000 for contempt and
his union was fined $.1.5 million. The
Supreme Court reduced the fine to
$700,000.
But it was that same year he won his
greatest triumph in establishment of the
welfare and retirement fund. Now 4G
cents from every ton of coal mined goes
into the fund -$150 million a year -and
nearly all of it is poured back im·
mediately to coal miners.
100 Walk Out
At Harvard's
Graduation
CAMBRIOOE, Mass IUP I) -Harvard
University President Nathan M. Pusey
thwarted a major disruption of com·
mencement exercises by s t u d e n t
dissidents today but at least 100 persons
-including 25 students -walked out of
the ceremonies at which 14 persons, in·
eluding litayor John V. Lindsay of New
York and union leader Walter Reuther
were awarded honorary degrees.
Pusey, in the face of a planned
takeover of l h e speaker's microphone,
permitted Bruce Allen, a member of the
Students for a Democratic Sodety (SDS),
lo speak for IG minutes at the exercises.
Allen was constantly shouted down by a 1
chorus of boos. much of the dissent com·
ing from elderly alumni seated off to the
side.
Allen said it was a "hollow jo'ke" to let
only one of the 16 students expelled or
suspeodecl after a building takeover April
9 to speak at the graduation, H.arvard's
318th. ~ • '
"Thi: university is an obscenity," he
said.
Facing the audience from the stone
portico of Memorial Church, Allen said
the commencement at the nation's oldest ·
university "should be condemned -peo.
pie should walk out of it."
A3 Allen's speech extended beyond five
minutes, segments of the aud ienc•
shouted to "Shut him off," "He's been 011
long enough," and "Throw him out. n
Most of the graduating students neither t
cheered DOT boo.ed but there were ex·
pre~ons of dlssent when the SDS
member called HatVard "an obscenity."
Pusey at times attempted to urg1
Allen, who wore a blue business suit, ta
close his speech, and finally seven un-
dergraduates· ran up the seven ston1
steps of the church and escorted Allen
away. The walkout, including IO honor
graduates from the portico, immediately '
followed.
Market Picket
Claims 4 Shot
Him in Thigh
LOS ANGELES (AP) .:. A pickel In lh•
Los Angeles area market sl.fike-lockoul
told .police he was shot in the rigbt lhlg!I
1 early today-when four men-atopped tum
en route to picket line duty.
The incident came as e(fects of th1
dispute spread north to the San Francisca
East Bay and sou th to San Diego.
Police said William C. Cramer. 26, ol
Covina, told them he was accosted aboul
three blocks away from a food stor1
warehouse in suburban Glassell Park.
Cramer, a member or the bakers' union
helping out with pic~et lines established '
by the Retail Clerka lfnion Local 770. wet
treated and released at a hospital, pollce
said .
The baker told officers he was on fool
because his car had broken down. A car
pulled alongside and one of four men ask• '
ed "'you·re one of the loudmouth plckel.3,
ai-en't you?" Cramer told police.
' Officer• ildd the baker related the men got out ol the tar, argued with him, and
one man drew a piatol. Cramer said he
was shot during the argument.
.Police said they had no clues to the
Identity of the four men and that thert
we.re :10 witnesses beside.s tho5e involvtG.
Meanwhile. there was little sign that
the 16-day~ld marke'. dispute would end.
Some 17' workers at a Safeway
warehouse in National City, which sup.
ptl!s 44 San Diego markets, refused
Wednesday to cross a picket line
establlsbOO by Retail Clerks Local T10 or
Loa Angeles, the finn 11id.
-· •
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I
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Ae1ae1oa TlaltdU So
t Military . Critics
Witch Hunters?
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Fonner secretary, of State
Dean Achetoo and Rep. )..
Mendel R1vv1, chairman of
the Houae Arnlod Servicea
Committee R Y the nation has
nolhinl IO fear from the
mllltary-indul!rlal eomt>!u-
Aehtloo, hll tongue sUll aa
sharp aa wberJ be waa former
President llllTy S. Tnmla•'• senior cabinet member, said
,criUcs cl military spending
are ualnl the ...,. witcl>lwnt
tedmkpw aa the mllltant
anti-OlmmUDiBts of the 19110s.
J11V<n uid that U lhe
United States ls overcom-
llllllod In the -Id and made
a mlllah by getUng Involved
In Vlelnam, H waa be<tuae of
declakm by civlliaM, not
mllltary men. A-tatllied Wednesday
be.fore: t b e Senate-.House
Econ<rny in Government Sub-
commlltee, whlcb has bten
holding two weeb of hearings
oo the Impact of the Pentagon
budtel oo natiGoal prtoriUea.
Riven opolle taclay after
Flag Day ceremmies ln the
Houae.
------~----------------·--~----------
By Ph1l ln1erlanc11 Soviets Lebanon Next?
"'1'llln, tJMn. now-rm aure the board ot din>ctorll
dldn't tilllend to be mean to you , •• "
•
.B91~ter 13 Die inR~n~ed
Fro~tier Mideqs. t Ftah·"-.ft\'ng
LONDON (UPI) -'!1le \ l!''
Kremlin has sent m~ve ·'-__ • , ,;:1 ,
..
,,,u.-..•-~rtlnforcements to strengthen Israeli spokesmen said to,.
dclenses along key poln18 of day In Tel Aviv eight Atab
tbe Soviet Union's 4,000-mile guenillas and five liraelis
frontier with c 0 m m u 0 1 1 t were killed ln a series of flghta ranging from the Suez Canal China, diplomatic reports said to the Samarian Hills north of
today. Jerusalem.
Despite the growing temlon. Beirut dispatches b l n t e d
the two Communist giants that lig)ltlng may erupt soon
were not expected to move along• the donnan~ lsraell-
toward a major anned con-LebaDon border· ·•
'!1le continued figlltiilg and froolation, at least not for the Israeli casualties could at-
J:l)me lime to come. However, feet crucial d Ip lo mat i c
diplomatic sources said latest negotiations under w a y in
indications s u g g e s t e d in-Cairo, London and the United
creased tension in months to Nations. Israeli D·e fens e Minister Gen. Moshe Dayan
come, with occasional local has made it clear Isreal, a na·
clashes or varying intensity.. tioo of 2.67 million, is Valley 50 miles north~ ,of
They predicted a prolonged prepared to strike baet to halt· Jerusalem. In a four-hour bat..
. ~ ..
OM. Y 1'11.Gr
·--DM.Y. 11-.ThnlSal.Fht ,....,.WlllcdlwS 1 ;45·
-·~1:11;
~--OADBtVOUR
IESBlYED 8f.ATI MOW . ,,__
·COllPlmCICEI'
....,_Pn..,_zaud
~aw. .....
#Jt
Senate Sees
Safeguard
Showdown
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Opponent.. of Prwdenl Nb·
o n 1 s safeguard antlmlaaile
aystem may try to knock the
money propa out from under
the weapomy in a Senate
showdown that could come u
early as next week.
The ''milillrY -lndultrlal
complex" ii a ietm widely
known through Pr eat dent-------------------
Dwight D . -·· reference to il In his fartWtll
period of ••mutua l Israelllosses.
i1arassment" which both AnS:~et f.0r~i:m~~n !!: ei~
Moscow and Peking would Cairo for talks with Egypilin
thoroughly exploit in an in-Ptts1dent Gama! A b ii. e I
tense propaganda batUe. N.mer and Israeli Premier
tie the Israelis wiped out an
eight·man Arab g.U e r r 111 a
patrol in camoufiage unll'orms
aod lost three meq killed. address. He warned of the
de..topment of a milllary-in-
dustrlal oompln M I Ii t ar y
men, however, uy the speech
alao ...,talned pcrtiolls oup-
porllng the mlUlui'.
12 Members of Family
Buried in Mass Grave
But Communist China ls ln Golda Meir was in London talking with British . ojficlals. no position yet to risk war and The talks were reported to
cannot be expected to reach conctm latest Big Four peace
that stage Cor years, the moves in the Mideast.
The Lsraelis had IO call In
artillery IO blast the guerrillas
out ol rock .Cl'ftlces where
they took covet during the
fight in the hot afternoon aun,
The Israeli Army suppressed
The plan -reported under
active consideration by the
bloc of eenaton opposed to the
AnUhallistic Mialile System
(ABM) -Involves attacbmeot
of a rider to a supplementary
appropriations bill.
The rider would stop the
Defense Department f ·r o m
spending any more money on
deployment of the ABM.
including site seeking. until
Congress specifically givea Us
permission. The P e n t a g o n
previously acknowledged it is
already u 1 i n g money . ap.
propriated f o r the Senllnd
ABM -the plan scrapped by
Nlxon -to buy r a ti a r and
computer parts for Safeguard.
Dtlense officials, however,
contend the procurement baa
been limited to par!> that
must be bought well ahead of
a n y deployment th a t might
take place. The Pentagon also
has bought some safeguard
missile.!i with SenUnel funds,
but said they will be uaed only
for research and development
"One of. our falllng1 as a
people Is our preoccupaUon
with witches ,'' AcbelOO said.
And the cwmit usaull on the
''mllltary·industrial complex''
... witch luml, ht 1114. .
To suggest defen ae con-
tractors are clilhooest w to in-
sinuate thst all retired
generals go te .w•t for
weapons manufacturers i s
"the 'McCarlhy' mel!lod cl at-
tacking the -,ratber1bao
the end to be sought."'
Warren Meets
With S11ccessor
WASHlllGTON (UPI) -
Cblef Justi"' Earl Wuno bad
as a guest for ha:b Wed-
nesday hit lltoCNIOI', CirtuJt
Judge Warren E. Buraer,
whose nomination was con-flnnec! Mooday by the Sen.ate.
1'be two judges pre&Ullllbly
discussed Ole court's 1d-
ministralion, but thert wu no ~ report O!I to the -tat ol lhelr .,,.. __
PARKERSBURG, W. Va.
(UPI) -'"Ibey shall hunger
no mort.'' aaid the preacher,
"neither thirst any more,
neither shaU the sun light
them, nor any heat."
A3 the service ended, Sheriff
Lee Bechtold stood 'up and
aaked _15-year-old Suaan Bailey
and her brother Roger. lS, to
come with him.
Su.san for a brief moment
buried her tear-stained face
against the aherifr 1 chest,
then the two teen-agtrs 'Were
taken nay weeping to await
the -cl ehqes of murder. •
Susan and Roger, police
Aid, admitted setting fire to
their tarpaper covered hOl,lSe
Sunday because.Susan,'s Cather
had told her to quit seeing her
boyfriend, a n l81'ear-old
cooaln. \)barles ~Iey, 41, hla
wife Ruby, 38, and 10 Bailey
children ranging in age from
•iJ: months to 11 years died in
tllo h1-
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The 12 were buried In six
coffins supplied by the state in
a communal grave about the
size of a small swimming pool.
Susan and Roger went to the
pre-burial funeral services.
but were not allowed to attend
the actual burial.
sources aald. The ·Big Four talks In New
The Soviet Union, in tum, ls York Wednesda·y aiain made
unlikely to unteash preven-no progress, a p p a r e n t I y
tive war aga1nlt China. even .wailing on outcome o( the
though its chances of success Gromyko missian.
are now better than in five or Ttte heaviest f i g b t i n g
10 years hence when Peking reported by Israel came Wed-
nu clear capabilities would be nesday ln the Samarian Hills
much higher. overlooking the Jordan River ~-----------~~ '
reports of the fight for uj;::=====~~::::::; :i~~·~t~~ni~ .9~. ~!,.!~8wt ... 1
Suez Canal during the night h•PP!"''"' o" TV; r•• TV
and that three Israeli soldiers WEEK -ctlsfrlb11f•d with th•
were wounded by Egyptian S.turd•y ••Utlon oJ tl'I• DAILY PILOr. . 1arU11~ in the Qantara area.
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"ONE-IN·A·MIWON D~D"
CORDLESS UGHT OF
J
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• State Man sion Neede~
...
"' . •
~ 1$ a state government with an annual
budget ct ~ billion more than 95% of the world'• na-
110.... Yet Caltiomta seems unable to pf1!vlde a place
for Ila governor to live in the dignity befitting hla olflce.
the American River lite with no tunds In agbt to build 1
the mansion. The Z'!!eiig (l'OUp bu the lite .~ut Reolpn
won't approve the ~ey for the mansion lllolf.
What is needed is a straightforward and forthrtpt
removal of the eotiro project Jrom political hands. A
blue-ribbon, working-size citizens, conunittee -eom-
prised of leading historian.s, archl!ecll and other pride-
ful Californians -could resolve the Issue. OplnlOD1
should ~ sought from former Govemor1 Warren and
Brown; mdeed, perhaps they, along with Governor
Reagan, should be a part of the commlttoe.
' .. The issue ts not a new one. Long before Goverqor
l\eogan refused to move into the decrepit mamnon on
!be Capitol ground•, governors before bun had pointed
' out that ti was unlivable. , G.overnor RO#gan declared that he wouldn t trust
the safety of his family in the manSlon. He leased a
$100 000-plus home In a residential section of Sacra-
m.en'to and moved his family into those quarters. ..
'
It appeared for a while that a new governor's r_nan.
sioo might be on the way. A private group--Oi-partisan,
but comprised cbieOy of California industrial and com·
merdal tltmis -launched a campaign to build a pri-
vately-financed home for Reagan and the governors
This committee could show· CalUornia how tof.""
vide a home in which the chief executive and bu am•
Uy can life in safety and a manner worthy of bis ottlce.
The cost? Well, eecb mile of the San Diego FreewaY.
.between Harbor Boulevard and the New&irt Freeway
cost about $1.S million -each mile. Surefy the nation's
richest state can put its spending into perspective loo&
enough to end thls disgrace.
.,..
•
..
'
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.·
.,
who will succeed him. .
The plan was criticized for many CalUonuans felt
the state itseU should tinanCe its gove1nor's home. '.l'h~
citizens' group to allay fears of buying influence, luru·
ted. contributi~s to $500 and u1tirnate[y raised enough
money to buy a handsome site on the American River Lowering the Flag
&<>me miles from the Capitol groun~s. .
The site was one Reagan heartily approved. He did
not care for a suggestion that the mansion be built on
near-slum, state-owned property adjoining the CaJ!il~l. ~ But the citizens' campaign ran out of steam. Luntl-
lng contributions to $500 put enough in the kitty to buy
the property, but not enough to ~uild the mansion .
While all of the fool i sh n e • 1 about raising and
lowering the American Oa~ was going on at the Uni-
versity of California, Irvine campus -and other
~ampuses as well -someone might have considered
Just who does have the authority to order the fiag low-
ered to half stafi.
Meanwhile others in the Legislature -headed by
Sacramento A;semblyman Z'.Berg, -have one~ more
been pushing the downtown site. Z Berg is seeking $1.5
million state funding to build the mansion on the stat~
owned property in downtown Sacramento. But Reagan's
office this week said "The governor would not approve
of that site and will Mt approve a budget that includes
that expenditure."
So there it stands. Governor Reagan bolds out for
With Our AAAAA
System: Victory
Herewith another unwrilten cbapter
from that unpublished work, 0 A History
or the World, 1950 to 1999." Its title:
"'Russia Ups the Anti."
THE PROPOSAL by President Nixon in
tbe spring or 1969 to deploy an $8 billion
Anli·Ballistic Missile System squeaked
lhrnugh Congress. Coostn>ctlon ol tbe
119.6 billion sylllem bigm that fall.
By working night and day on the: $3'1.C
billion system, the Nation wu able to
complete the $'76.4 billion system by 19'7t.
"At last,~' aald the typical Amet1cln do
ty dweller with a sigh of relief, "we can
sleep better each nighl knowing that our
ml.ssl1es, I[ not our cltlecs, are safe from a
Russian attack."
With lhe system complete, there was
talk in Congress of paring the annual
defense budget down to "a bare-bone-'271
billion,"
UNFORruNATELY, AT just this
critical point In fiscal history, the Pen·
tagon discovered the Russians were
working on a new top-secret weapon-an
AnU·Anti-Ballistic MWiJe.
The discovery WI!: made by General
Gropius (Nick-'o-Tirne) Grommet al the
Fort Dis: Officers' Club bar. He was
quickly equipped with charts, graphs and
fuJZY aerial pbotographs and brought
before Congress.
"Gentlemen," he said grimly, "we
tiave discovered that the Russians' new
STP~ Missile is specifically designed to
wipe out our Anti-BallisUc Missile
System. This would leave our ballistic
missiles vulnerable to a first str ike by
their SS-9 missiles. There is bul one
course open."
A $12.3 billion AnU·AnU-Anli·Balllstic
Missile System was quickly approved to
guard our 8Ilti·ballisUc missiles so that
tbe.y might guard our ballistic missiles.
Wart on the $93.2 biWon system wu
completed in 1979.
"AT LAST," aaid the typicaJ Amerlcan
dty Reller, "we can sleep better each
llighl knowing that our anU·balllltlc
miJsllel and our balllstic misslies, il not
JJ4Sl cities, .are safe Crom Russian atlact.:•
Unfo<lunatel:y, ui Pcntagcm ~llitd
that tht perfidlouJ BussiaM were wori·
Ing on an anti.anti-anti·anU Ballistic
mise.ile. There was no recoorae but to •••
Well, suffice it to say, Uiat the U.S.
completed work on it! $lt7.6 billion
"Lucky Seven Anti·Ballistic Mluile
Sys&em" in 1984 -just one ahcxt wttk
before the Russiam launched an attack-
"'nlant God, we're ready ," Slid the
President, graveJy issuing orders. uyire
our anU-ant.i-anU-anti-anU ••• Oh, the
bell with it Hit the button!"
DESPITE GLOOMY predictions, every
single antl-(etcetera)-bal.llill.ic missile
perfonned perfectly. And thus every
single anil.(etcetera)-ballistic mi.91ile oo
both sides was wiped ouL But the original
ballistic missiles emerged unscathed. The
President was quick to launch America's
before it was too late.
"It may have cool $603.2 billion to pre..
tecl our missiles," said General Grom·
met proudly as be watched lhem soar
skyward toward Russia. "But the system
worked precisely as designed. Is there an
American allvt today who doesn't think It
worth lhe cM?"
Unfortunately, the incoming Russian
ballistic mis,slles arrived at thal moment.
So, of course, there waa no answer.
We're Driving Better
The answer is that only the President of the United
States has tile legal authority to order the American
flag lowered ti> that position.
Well-meaning persons in and out of government
often order the !lag lowered to haU mast in respect or
honor to ~orne person of local or regional importance.
The f3;Ct is these l?Cal .orders have been illegal.
It 11 hardly a situation warranting mass arrem and
prosecutions, but administratcrs and students as welt
at least ought to know what the law is. And abide by iL
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
. . Wife Stays at H0nae
UCI llberala wsnted to fly our flag
at hall mast when a parolee was
killed during Berkeley rlota. What
wa.s tbtir reaction when a Santa
Ana polJCft!lan waa murdered?
-J.A.P.
F aitli Hegins
. Whe n Reas.on
• #" .. -•
Has Ended
,
I rectived a wickedly irreverent letter
yesterday, from a woman who considers
herself deeply religious. 'She wrote, In
part: "A God·fearlngllilll d°""''t.need to
know the racb, Ws tove""ot God will make bim tense ~_froth. n 'i
What a dreadful lmpWty thls is, mas-
querading as religion. Fer 1f you believe
In God, and love Him, you believe that He
gave man his reason to use for discover·
ing the fact! -and this faculty of reason
ls what makes us in God's image.
People like this woman -and there
are millions like her -use "fallh" aa a
substitute for reason, but it never can be
that without disastrous consequences.
Faith must begin where reason ends, not
an inch before it.
HER AmnIDE HAS done more to
discredit religion lhan all the attacks of
all the atheists put together. For: through
the centuries, so-called "God-fearing"
men have used their own blind sense of
the trulh to jusli!y witchcraft and
slavery, bigotl'y and persecuUon, and the
most vicious wars between different
"defenders" of the true faith. The re-
jection of reason ha$ always been a
Fortas Resting· in· Spain
Fonner Supmne court JUIUce Abe
Fortaa has gone abroad. At prwent, be is
somewhere In Spain. How ~ ht will
otay thert and whether be p!ans 14 go
elsewhere coulll not be tltertained. His
wUe, Carolyn Ager, 1 prominent at.
tomey Ill her °"" rtabl. ii not "1th bim.
She's In her office ln WubitJcton in her
husband's one-time law firm, of which
lb• Is th< lixtfl.ranklnti partner.
ln Spain with P'ortu is Paul Porter,
Jong-time close friend and former law
partner. • ~
' ..
A SOURCE OD-~~ledgieable terms
with 1Xlth men attributed their trip
abroad to the desire to "id away from it
all."
"Fortal WR IMiliP>·•·~goolsing
ordeal," this ~ :iai4. "~ltort him
apart. He juR cou1dli't ataodlany more
quesltuiing and prylnc br. ~-He
readied the point whers .tt bOc&ne im·
perative for hlm to go 101Dewhere to get
11ome quiet and peace. He isn't known in
Spain and won't be bothered."
It waa explalnecf·that P~rter also ls in
need of rest and rela:xaUon because of the
stra!ns he went through u Fort.as' con-
fidante and adviser during the tension·
filled weeks that preceded bis resignation
from the bench.
THE TWO MEN are very close. With
Thurman Arnold, head of the Anti-Trust
Division and a federal judge ln the New
Deal, they ~ed a law finn several
decades ago that now ls one of the largest
in the capilal.
As reported by this column several
weeks ago, Porter and Arnold wanted
Forlas to rejoin the firm, but an
overwhelming majority of the younger
partners and associates were against it.
At a straizled meeting of the enti.i:e
finn, Porter made an emotional p1ta that
Fortas be invited to return. Arno1d
w·ann1y seconded Utls. But the younger
members didn't see It that way. Without
direcUy criticizing Fortas, they made it
clear they felt the concern could best do
without him.
SOME VOICED surprise tha t Fortas
wanted to resume the practice of la\\'.
They implied he would be bet!er advised
to engage in writing or teaching.
Mrs. Fortas attended the meeting but
said nothing. ln the vote, she abstained
with Norman Diamond, fourth-ranking
partner.
Only Arnold, Porter , and Willi 3m
McGovern. fi!Ul-r~king partner, voted
for Fortas. nprty.four other partners
and associates were opposed. Stnce the
meeting, some firm members have
hinted they will quit if Fortas disrega rds
the overwhelmlng rejection and does
come back.
The Justice Dep artment refuses tn
comment on reports th al a federal grand
jury io Cleveland, Is conducting an in·
quiry involving the law firm.
Throw Away Pi·cket Sig ns
Dear Poor Mcm'1 PhUorophtr:
I am graduating from colUgt thL!
week and have a2rtady ordered a
frame for mv sheepskin.
Now I'm trying to fiQure out what
to do •next. Would you mind teUing
me how I can live a long and happy
life?
\Vonderlng •••
Dear Wondering :
Certainly, my boy. ll's easy to tell
someone else how to live a long and hap-
py life. Doing it one.self, of course, is
quite aoolhet matter.
The first thine I'd do If I were you la to
throw away any old picket signs you may
have been carrytni lately. You won't
need lbem anymore unless you have
* * * * * * The Saddest Sacks on the Ca1npus
from. a colunm by James Reston, associate editor, New York Timts
The saddest sacks i~ the present campus contro~~rsy are the old men -who arc
pretending lo be young men, and the young faculty members who are determined to
be wJth the young revolutlonaries, even if they defy the old rule of ends and means
and damage 111e conc;ept bf a frtt community of scholars in the process.
They are io 'd.itermJlte(t <IO be "'With it" that they fnlke;the ~st Q/. the counLry
want to be without-Ii, and this ls the new controvel'sy militants hav~e brought aboul:
Not the SOS or the militant black.a vs. the faculty and the college presidents. but the
universities vs. the rest of the country, which is bad for everybody concerned.
on your own. And don 'l worry too much if
you ami't offered a vice presidency of.
th< firm the lint few mooths. . .
Don't buy a house·that costs more than
twice your annurJ income.
By JAMES WllETMORE
Stlte Senator \ bloody pre1ude to barbarism.
Wblle the worW Is lull ol vloe
~ls, moot ol them llptnl ''""' before achlevfnfJ that thicti "" jl11 th< floor, that nameplate on the door, Be con-
tent to do !ht nltty-gjtly ta.Ill unUI you
decided to become a caner [IO:kel. The learn tbe rulel ol tbe b-P.n>e-.
Pay your ta.Jes on time, avoid watch·
btg~tbe late, late movies on tele\•ision
-u~t On weekends, remove your shoes
as often ·u yea can and rest your feel,
lake I! little medicine as possible. and
don't atart drinking a Martini at lunch
unfi:I you are over 50.
For the first time since 1946,
California's lrartic fatalities declint'd dur·
1ill 1968.
Last year we experienced fewer deaths
caused by motor vehlcles; t ,853 as com·
qared with 4,883 in 1967. During the same
period, the total number of motor veh.icle
miles tra"(elled in the state lncrea~ed by
9,000,000,000; from 101,000,000,000 1n 1967
to 110,000,000,000 miles in 1968.
nus indicates lhat while our state's
motor tr1vel wu increasing at a rate
faster than the national average,
Calllomla'1 lralUc fatalities decreased by
.6 percent while national fatalities in·
aeaaed five perceat,
EVEN THOUGH 1Mre ts reason to be
pltued at the doYntttnd in highway
latalJties, the death rate per 100,000,000
vehicle miles ls 4.t. A tragic number of
our citizens are sWJ dylng on ~our street.a
and htgbways; there ii no rOOID ror com-
placency. We must cootinue a po&lUvt,
dtttrmlned program ol tralfio safely.
A prime f.ctor In the reductd numbe r
of deaths wu renewed emphasis on safe-
ty ln construct.Ion. Some 1,100 1'b.1&b4c-
cldtnt'' loc:1Uon1 Jn the lllltl highway
l)'llem were corrected.
Ano4J>er talety flClor has beorl th< lo-
cttUe 1n mnpl)Wer of the CaJUornla
fllcbwlf Patrol -from 4,250 In 1W1 to
1,111 In 1111 -wllh Increased en-
-by local polloe asenciu,
r •
resulting in a dramatic tncreue ln ar-
rests for traffic offenses.
DRUNK DRIVING arrests made by the
Highway Patrol ln 1968 totaled t~,210, an
increase of 17 pe.rt-ent.
Studies have. proved that in more than
half of the traffic deaths last year,
alcohol was involved.
lo spite al increased enfottemeM prac-
tices, too much speed 1Ull contributes to
California's highway tteatb r•te, and a
major deficleney in traffic aafety la itbe
lack of well-coordioated emergency
medical services. About one-.fiflh of the
lives Jost Jn all types of accidents in
califomia could be saved by modernlz.ini
emergency medical care.
AT THE PR&'lENT TIME, th!> prob-
lem is being at1aektd on three fronts :
emeriency med.Leal care committee.a al
!ht """'*1•levtl, .. e<lvloory COW1cll to
the Assembly Public Health Commilt'ee,
and a study on the st.ate of the art and
the extent of the need by our Department
or Publlc Health.
These findings and recommendatlons wm be utilized u the bull of landmark
ltgi1lallon Ill tbe 1170..
A number of safety re.search projects
are being conducted within I ti e
departments charsed with tmplementlni
lralfi< lllet7.
/\
Refusal to push rea.900 as far as it win
go -though not further than II can
leglUmatdy take us -ii a deep affront
to God's crealion._For if we rewnble
God In anr war,tt'lif""uStDi fti our power
to lake conceptual thought. In fact, we
are the only creattats wbo can "con-
ceive" of the idea of God ; mlndleS!
animals live ln a purely contingent world.
"FAITH" and "reason" are not op-
p:>Sed to each other, as both the falsely
religious and the falsely scientific
believe; they are, rather, different
aspects of the same rtality. and it Is as
foolish to lal.li: about "fa.Ith'' in knowing
the facts aa it is to t.alk about "reason" in
sensing the hand of God.
Every discipline tends toward an im-
periallam: in the past, religion claimed
more for ils domain lhan it could
responsibly handle ; today, science often
makes assertions that go far beyond Its
competence. "n>ere are ooly cm.a.in ques-
tion.s ~llgion can aUempt to answer, and
no others; aM the.re are only certain
questions science can attempt to answer,
ind no others. To coofll$e lhese realms is
to confound th< w~le thlnldng pl'OC<&S,
tnrling only ln fuUJe controversy.
A "God-fearing" man nm of all
rtSpects the hard f actl or the unlverae.
and doesn't try to lgnore them or pervert
them Into conforming ti' hla preconce.lved
beliefs. To do this In tht narM of
••reliRion" 111 a greater tin than the non-
religious commit in denying the rutm of
lallll.
'
nut thin& to do. la to find a tleady Job, From the day you get your first
Your sheepokin oliOuld be of help Ill opeo-Jlllychecli uoUI tbe day you oJi}I your lasl
ing a few doors. Bu\ remember it·is only one, be lm"e to 11ve or lnvesl. at leasl .1~ • badf°'"'........,._':dl ii noL1.-. ,.,.-of~ -1"" get. Tiiis-on.,. passport ·to Immediate pwsperlty. ma,-mean a real aacrifiee, but it will
give )'OU • cushion or confidence and win UNLE&'I YOU are unusually self·
reliant, it is probabb' better to wort for a
corporation rather than they to st.art off
..--B• GN1'9e---1
Dear George:
Mr girt and I talk politics. She
gays Nixon 11 a Uberal, I say be'1 a
coneervaUve ; lhe aays he's a Flori·
dlan, I say he's 1 Californian; she
says he's 1 hawk, J say he'a 1 dove.
Do you think my girl and I can find
bspplaea?
CONCERNED
-Dear Concerned :
I think tt'1 aimool certain, If
asreeJn& "" poUllcl llke that is llll'
gauge -obvloualy you aee eye-to-.
eye, and hate Nl:Jon IWDmed up to
a T. There ii no reuon YoU cannot
go through Ille hannoniO<llly mil:·
ms one thine very clear to eadl other. .
CONFIDENTIAL TO A BE
FORTAS: The ~fn1 goes: "Judge not lest ye be judged."
(Write to George, He'• not lonely
wben th< poctman doesn't come,
hut his poor dogie bu .-Y to
bhe.)
Lbe respect of your peers. 1
AS SOON · AS you are on a regular
payroll, you will be astouncted at how
many young women are willing to marry
you. Don't be ln a hurry and wed a girl
merely because ahe is pretty, hu a
steady job herself or a rich papa.
Her beauty may oome from the
drugstore, sbe may quit her Job, or her
papa may lose hia riches. Waft and mar·
ry the girl you find you simply caMOt
live any longer without
Here are aome further itf*al rules
that sbouid belp bring )'OU -and
health:
If you !Ind you afmply <an1 stand the
line ol work you•ro In, qu~ while""''"' young and go tnto ooe you can !land.
Don1 call your -by hll lint ...,.
uniea: you marry bll daualiter or be bas
been calling you by your rJnt name for 11
least five yean.
Lend 0< borT'ow money on!)' when you
must do IO Jo keep your """' oelf...apecl.
WORK l'01\ ONLY a few good cau.c;es.
If you tty to wwt !or Mf1 ""'111whlle
cause1 lou'll frltler Younclf away. .
Doli' tty lo ~ up with the Jon<ses.
You'd be am1'zed at how oft~n the name
Jonea cn>po up In tbe bankruptcy oourta.
READ A NEW BOOK or an nld poem
at least once a week. get eight hours of
-sleep eweey night and wlllk three-.miles
evecy day, do your best to keep from fall-
ing in Jove with your neighbor's wife, and
never Interrupt your own wife when she's
telling you something she insists is for
your own good. ·
Keep oul of jail yourself. and teach
your children to stay out, too.
If you follow these simple rules, n1y
boy, you should Jive lo be 100. and Hie sol-
vent. If you don't-well, it won't be your
fault or mine either.
.
'\'hUrsday, June 12, 1969
ftc tdJtorlal paoe of th1 Dail¥
Pilot tttk! to inform ot1d ttim-
. uia.t.t f'9Cldnt ~ti presenting th11
~·· Ofrltd°"' and com-m.tn1arv on topia of i11tertst
and sjgn.i/l"'1nce, bt1 providing a
forum for &he t %pressima oJ
our rtodns' opiniom, and P>r
prtie:ntfng the diverse tilew-
pofnt.! of Informed observers
and q;iokt.rme n on. topics of tht
day.
Robert N. Weed , Publisher
. ' . .. . . .. . . ·-··~· .. ·-.. ·~·~ , _ _;_~~-,-,-,-.,~-.-,_-.,,-,-,-,---.-.~--.-,-.,-.. ::::::-::~·---,-,,~,-,:_-._-,-.-.---_-.-~-.-,-.. -_--,-,-,-.-,-•,.-· .... ~-,-,,~,-,-L ~·~.~-;;•-.. -,-·-·~---:.··,-,-.-,-N-.• -,-.,•·,--~~~-.. -... -.,--·----:::-;-::.,-;,~,::;;.:~:::::;~;i
Dead Sea'ls
Litter Beach
In Oil's Wake
µFE MAGAZINE
tFiftom ~ aeals ... --wltb HtinctJon -ol lhe conlfnuint oil iplD and seepqe at Santa Barbara.
If UnJon Oil has "spared no effort er
expense to clean up the oil" on the
rnahiland of the beach, It is a different
"""7 45 milts away at San Mi~ loland
wbel'9 tbe Ml herds swtm. Life staffer
David Soe1I wrila:
"In u liarsb and ugly a cl.!Jraption as
ever wu l.nflicted upon a harmonious el).
v~ lhe.otl Udo had aller<d lllaJl1
of na~·. sabtJe m«hanl.ml!."
AS A1'I BXAM.P.LE. a young seal
covered With oil net kJncer bas the same
scent wbJch Identified the pup to his
mother. "At a result," Snell write!, ''he
and many like him woold die ...
'Ille -and ~ Harry -r<ealled .-oclorbonie upon
lhe -aid ............. -that "' oil: "It ....... -ol ~... ha
On the nwlnlMcl, the oil company !I
sougj>t to cllopel • and qer of Santa
Barban ........,., by mew ol •DeJ'l'lic
and ezpemh'e i;Jeanup efforts along the
b .. ch. B1!t, iD the channel at San MilU<l
Jsland th.ire ha been no outcry, although
at the proddlDJ ol """""''tionl.ts the com...,. -·plan to 'launch a ~eanup
after the leall breedJag seuoo u over.
Snell deeulbes the ~ now :
"AT 'llATD'S BOOE 01'o the channel
beac:hos lhe bll&bt " oil --In both di:recUom u far as tbe eye OCl1kl see, a
• JlfJLY fllr!l..7 ---·-~ Todafl'• Tuies in Beok•
Risqu~? Okay, But Not Just Crude
--• .. -to lbe Editor:
Fran.kl,y, I have read~ tojoyed.many
a~ lbat is rilque (tJ8Ul)ltyJ, iac\udlng
the Decameron, Madame Bovary ~
, _., 1 ' • Lady Chatterley's Lover. But When thts
<11JpPery, IWlinc tJ4lt of 1&arr'Y blaeknea, •\a.Jntry's .beat seUer fOI' se'YerP' 'months
Lil< Wldlh of a• tidal ebb, ~, 'Ulms oul lo be clllmslly' ,writtion· and
through tbe ~ ~ the Jiv~.:. '¥ .· ~~ in last~. it's time-~ find ~t
dead creatures 1'h0ie· bright habflM VJls ~t. l! wrong with tb~ readlfll publ!c.
once had been. UnUl we became :~· ~1: do people read this stuff? Descrip-
and sici: ol the tally, we oowtted .~:~1 l-ttol\l ..• that make your gorge rise -
hundred dead seal lions lhd .e~ '1Vuk~ .
. teals in the immediate 1rea. ~ ·ot' (t do not mention the name oI the
tl>eBe were adult animals, Jlptmoit:weret: book: to do so would give il ad4ed·
newborn pups. 'lbe~e~.~ pubUclty!) . _.
cl. living specimens remllaecf be'*'9 It I can only cooclud,e that \he readlng
is an ancient habit of tbett Mr'dl tD t;ie, ID public bas a crumblinJ: core of del>ravtty
this very spot, whatevet Its diseot'litbrt or and decaaeoc-e. or ttiat many \If t.J:tem
peril." lnow so little about set that f:MY .ea~rly
Last January 28, lhe oation was ~-..-~b any ~that gets specific. Let the
ed when an oil well bltw ~t and ~ lett!laton .m the State-~oose take a tood
some quarter or a miJlloa calloaji of li:Jok al tblS, for here is one . book tha t
crude oil that blackened adjacent and really meets the deftru~lon o f •~---~--at .ro .. -... "Da.&...ra ~y or what ls CODSldered as ev.en _.. OIUUl1Cll oi>lllll.ll °°"' ..,. ~ th " · t " The IQlbel',,. aea1«1 u drys later·bot more an pr u r Jen • oil·--to I"'"!> ..,t ol (auli..m 1he Furthermon, it ~ the·m...t popular boot -lloor. ' : · , """ '"' ~ iD this counby, a sad ..n.o. lln'ii speclal.-Ullc ·~ Uon.oo the crude lp!e ol,,oor ·readln(
p4lbll ii.;; ............i.. a C..ne .,,... public. Whether or not it ~Id be. sup-.
Udll that would reopen driltinc on an .tvtn pressed ls another que.nion.
-aca1e ~.!)l'fSUmahly ,ta pump: Jhe , BERNARD.BURTON
underlyln( field dry. ' "I S Ed tl ·Llf~s article commeots:.''lt is a,'"SOlu-.... --·: .ex ura on
!io1r ejearly aatlsfactAry lo'!<~ -To'U.. Editor : > ..
oil companies wbleb .... a1(bOliJ: ~ )ias ' Doubtlea Uw publle<schOol system has
argued .tha!_~Ou ~ sC'.t.1 B:J':!°~1~ s.ome oblJga~oo in 1he field .o~ se1 educa-tbe.taation ';"""' ~111.... tioo -posslbly even more 1n the ar::11 of
-~ not ~ to •rt u•auu'6 family life and comamnity oriental.ion -
agalD. ln ~.Barbara lut week1bere and, especially, there.is an obligation in
wu a feeling ol ~ bordering matten ol basic health care. · on despair." ,
. .....;"""""'""'"'
LI"-" 1..-,......,. --Normlll'I' Wrllfl"I ll'lould C11111v1r .,..It ,,.,..,. Ill 300 \llOrdl " lua.
Tiii rllht ID ~ ""9111 " flt ...c. "'-1_nrnJ-
nll• libel i. ,_,....,., 411 Jt1Wf'f 111111t -"""
•'9nltw11 w -.m,. .... ,.... ~ n1-""'" • wlthneltl en .._, W IUtllcllfll ~ i. .., ......
Certainly comparali'le anatomy ls no
more subversive than comp a rat l v e
religion or anything else -yet the
drawbacks to the general teaching of it
are quJte apparent. Elementary aex can
not be equated with elementary math or
even science.
IN THE HANDS ol some teachers even
the most restricted and innocuous sex
education material could be made ob-
noxious and psychologically damaging to
many young people. On the other hand
vf!t'y detailed material could be presented
by other teachers with grace and un-
dentandin1 such that the results couJd be
effective and upliftiDg rather than o!-fenSi\'e.
Bui who Js it. or what administrative "J
device can be used to prevent the poor
leaching of such critical material to your
children or mine -lO their everlasting
detriment ~ and still maintain what we
like to call the advantages of free and in-
quiring education?
How can we monitor such things and
not ruin Lhc teaching system?
HOW CAN WE freely teach sei educa-
lion and not Infringe on extremely lm·
portant and detlcata penooa1 . ft<llngs
such as modesty, privacy, morality -
and the. mMt lnUmate emotiona1 These
lint characteristics we would find hard to
chart on a school blackboard. They are
developed slowly in the heart and mind -
and they could be wiped oot at • liiogle
stroke in the name of social progress.
It is hard to disagree with those who
feel that in this fa.st moving age pro-
tective information must be given our
young people at significant point., in their
growth. tt is also hard tG disagree with
those wbo want to be responsible and
protective of not only the individual lttJ..
de nt and their morals, but ol their feel-
ings and rights.
THE JOB OF this Chamber ol Com..
merce comnUttee, the school !xlard and.
admi nistration. ol lbia: whole community
is to carefully -and iM~ndent or
outside f~es -work out a program
that respects and saUsfies both slnctre
convictions.
DR. NOLAN FRIZZELLE
Chairman, Newport Harbor Oiamber
of Commerce Education Committee
Thb I• Econe111vl'
To the Editor :
The Newport--Mesa Uitified School
District Board of Education is to be con·
gratulated for their recent decision to
protect the taxpayers by offering a
substandard salary schedule to the
cla""°"m teachen ol lbis district. ,
This is true economy. Pinch aod 1ave
on the big budget u ....
ls this not tho amt boltd &ha& Ill 1111
Orange County reconl two~tf"1 • whoo it sporlOd the l>l#ltat td>ool
administrator? Wberfi were the bencb
mark districts then?
Were they equally concemed with
economy when auumzlng tecruWnc
trips to Lil< -lo 1he -ol -hi their search [or superior teac'hen?
Are the ]a'Oducts ol California teodltr
tralning lnltltutioas, also 1upported by
the local laxpayen, nol ol equol qualllyt
ON MAY lt, a survey of local t.ebel'
placement bureaus ttYeaied 1hat -supply exceeds demand. Of m fully
qualified new teacben, ooly 415 bid been
oflered """tracts. Cal Slata Lomg Beach
placed 181 elsnenlary teachers ol ltlO ap-
plicants. Of 5IO secoodary teac:hon. ooly us bad found positions. Qiapman Colle(•
reported that of 19 elementary can·
dldates, 2 were placed; of 30 ~
teacben, • found jobs. (Of -• lllcky
teachers, onJy two were emploJed tn
Onmge County.)
UC! fared better. Six ol the 211-·
tary candidates were placed and 10 ol lhe
31 new high school teachen. Are thele
. .newly trained teachers porpo•ely
avoiding employment in Orange ~ty
llr are they unwanted by the communl~
that have invested so heavUy 1n the.Lr
training?
Is this realty true. econom1 whan
something of valae is loll?
WALTER RICllARllt!ON
Special Edoootlon ,,_,
Corona de! M• Hiib -I
Harriman Words-
Deserve Review D 'T Ml
It would be wise to pay some attention
to America's senior slatesman who bas
spoken out twice now on the $Ubjed of
Vietnam, without apparently ma.tlng
anyone the Wiser. •
The senior statesman, of ~. is
Ambassador AvereD HarTima:n, almost
the only leader of the Fifties who has
refused to don the rusty annor of that
era and rush off to do baWt in another,
What Harriman has been saying in re-
cent speeches goes to the heart oC the
disappointment which bas followed Prai-
deni Ni.Ion's trip to Midway. FOi' at
Midway Mr. Nixon continued. tbe course
against which Harriman bu repeatedly
w•med: the eecalaUon fl. oar objectives,
OUR OlllGINAI; objecUv... u liar·
rim.an said on May 14. could be stated
l imply:
First, In Lil< military field: "Stop North
Vietnam from taking over South Vietnam
by force."
Second, In the poliUcal field: 0 Permit
the people of South Vietnam to decide
their own future."
We have made progress on objective
Number One, Harriman then said, as wit-
ness the fact that North Vietnam is now
in Paris.
But we have made little progress on
objective Number Two because we con-
tinue to support an unrepresentative
goverunent in Saigon.
TKE GREAT MISTAKE, Harriman has
since said publicly, is that we keep e1·
paneling our objecti ves. P r e s i d e n t
J ohnson did so when he demanded a
military victory. • . .
Our objective was not a military v1c·
tory and lhe past four years and a mel~ly casualty list are prool that
we cannot win a military victory where
the enemy can bring in reinforcements
from outside the fighting area.
By clear implication Harriman Is
saying that a1thougti Mr. Nixon ha! relin-
quished UM demand for victory he, too, is
makillH the mistake of expanding our ob-
jectives.
He does so when he prombes support
to the 'lbieu govem:ment'tn the fonn of
help to "local forces," a ib-ue froln.1~
MidWay communi~ wbkh in tr~Uon
means we. are gome to cootinUil · tbe banUupt 0 pacification effort. '1
We did not promise to . support a
military hierarchy in South. Vielnam, nor
to wipe out South Vietnamese who oppose
tt. All we promised was to "perntit the
South Vietnamese to decide lheir own
future." The only way lo do this would be
to demand an immediate .broadenipg ~
the base of the Thieu government ..... 1n
Harriman's phrase, a "politer term"
than "coalition" -leading to elections or
negotiations in which the objective ~
be attained. ·
SINCE HE LEFr the U.S. nqotiatlng
team in Paris, Harriman has spokery out
three times 11aimt what he considers
our greatest error: the military escala-
tion of the war. P~sident Johnson's
order to Gen. Creighton Abrams on Nov.
1 to slcp up the figbting once.rtegoti~tions
began was a mista.ke ol the . h1~hest
order Harriman think&, and 1t 1s a
mistake which Mr. Nixon-has not rescind·
ed.
Marriage Milk Curdles
By L. M. BOYD
LOVE AND WAR-"Women are all
alike. Before they are married, they are
as mikl u milt. But once make them
wives, lbeY lean Lll<ir backJ against their
marriap certificste3 and defy you."
Such were the cynical semttnenU or
Douglu Jerrold. Out Love and War man
disagrees. Marriage generally gives a
girl coofideoce, he says. and confidence
tends to aentle her.
NO MATTER WHAT the a(<, Lil<
averaee bullblnd makes more money
than tho._ bod>elar.,, WRY AU
so many twlna left-banded? The 1n·
ckienct of left-handers among twiD!I is
double that ol the general population. But
who knows why? , • , AT LAST REPORT
Tom Smothers waa making a lunchtime
habit oC avocado sandwiches in deference
to his ulcer , , • A HEAD NAMED ERIC
report.s some San Franclaco musicians
are Indeed lllTIOklng peppermint pot. Aho,
pot cured 1n wintergrttn. banana. and
lemon extract ••• THE STAnsTICIANS
NOW figure about 15 out ol every 1,000
whit• ...,, eventually wtll k 111
themselves.
CROWi -'Iba& crows talk to one another ti Widely known. What'a not
widely known, however, k that a..11 crows
talk dialect. Thal ii to aay, North
Carolina Cl'OWI do not necesurily UDo
dcrstand Iodlana crows nor do MlctUgan
crow1 c;owprebeod Te1u tTOWs. Such
are the fladlnp ol a bird man who made
a ie!lith1 ttudy ol Lil< aforementioned
fowl. In Lil< malt« <i langnagt, be ..,,.,
there t1 no such thlni u h1&b crow « low
crow, just JotaJ crow.
CIJSTOMEll SERVICE : ~"One out ol
every bow many womtn it over ab: feel
tall ?" A. About one in 1,000 ••• Q.
"WmCH HAI the more people, &wall or
M""'8na?" A. HanlL
OLD AG&-& you think you're too old
•
to make yOW' mark, do you ? All right,
but beu in mind ~elo did his
best work at age tr1. Verdi wa.s as when
tte turned out "Ave Marla." Kant at 74
wrot< l1Js keenest pbiiolophlcat stuff.
Goethe finished "Faust" at IJ. Titian at ~·
911 palnled Lil< ma!lerplece "Batlle of
Upanto." JusU<:e Holmes carrie up "1th
ffiliifiCJe(iropliililnJ 'iib>ii he Wlf 911.
And Tennyson wn:ie "Croain1 the Bar"
at the 11• ~ ao.
BEER-How did the saloon men keep
their beer cold around I.be turn of the
century? Tba1'1 what I ukfl'.d. JlepUes W.
H. MacArthur oi Oceanside, Cal : "They
stored their beer fn big walk·ln boxes,
tapped the kegs with hanl maple liptsot.s,
and aerved IJ.ouoce '""""' at • nickel each."
toNELINllllS-A -who lives alone says abe doem't dare give In to
melancholy ... Tl l dld, It would overcome
me," she aay1. ''Whene+er-J ftel the
blues coming on, I do three lhlng" Put
the teakettle on lo make it wl\lJUe. Gtt
.U liDg1e art1clu out ol algb~ like one ,
dirty TV dinner tray or a loae 'fork In the
i.lak, And then ail down to write an ln-
lllitla(, ol!enotve 1'ltot to tile tdlt<>r. It
never fails to cbeet me op."
RAPID REPLY : Yes, slr, t.bt lvtrlgt _....,, ts hall an lndl tailor than tho
average Amttlcan. lt
Yovr qutstioni ond commnu a:rc
ioetcomtd arsd urfU be uae<f tDlltrewr
po1sibU fn. "Chtc~"O' Up." Add;111
mail Ill L.M. BOJid, In "*'' of tilt l>AILY PILOT., Doz 1875, N<1Dp01'I
8<0<11, CoU/. 12~.
..
' '
PER
IANT '
• .v
! , '
: ' . : ~ > '
NAT PENNEY
'A~I< FOR YOUR AUTClGllAPH~D PICTURE
..
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•
A great price on 2 sidn of exc:ilement generoted live at their perlormanc:o at
Caeior"s Palace by the.most dls~nctlft and versatile musical group around .,.
in.-, tool Thi1•11roat~11 stalls wilh 'What'd I Soy' and really mavesl
PLUS TH•s• "'-0 SING.LIES
by the Cl411iates, Lid. ·--··-----·-.. ~-·-·-·----79° 'Love ia All I H11111 to Give' .. • . " . .., . .,. ,,.,,, by the Checlcmcd.., Ltd. ---, ........ _,_, ________ 79c . .
· . ,., ., lllTSL.Y A~'!'"11AllC!ll!J AT TH• COCOllVr. 0110,,. JU .. !18 TNllOUOH JUlla te
•m'APPii:utw:;i ATTH• TO-llOWUllD tlllUUOlr• Dt•11• ...... JUL.Y .. TNllOUOM JULY-. ,. . ·----
!) " '
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I
·1
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I
, e
Rate Hike
-· ~
• '· -
•
" 1 1l 11
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~· ~·i•:~o !!~~19\f-.
. , Strike SloWs ·Cedars
HOLLYWOOD (AP )
Cedars of Lebaitoft Hospital
nonnaJly ls a bustling place
with a Hollywood clientele, a
patl£nt load ln the hundreds
and a nursing •ta.ft of .295.
Today the patient roster ls at
about 150, a skeleton crew of
12 volunteer n11rses ls on duty
at any one um.,, no m.or.e ad-
. missions are being a~pted
and some services have been •
reduced or eulninaied. ·
A nurses' :walkout' is' ·In Its
third day with no develop-
ments in sight. • · -
A coronary· care unit is ~las--, ' ' . . ed. Surgery at Cedars has
balled and aa soon as patJents
-. . .
in pediatrics and obstetri~
art· dlacliarged, these . "¢ta
wDI be cl~. c , o1t>
Three 'pau!ot · f I o Q r 1 .•
sP!Jll...iY,. ~an -an-Il&httjt,
'' .
are vacant. Nursint statlona • on U'lose floors are fully equl~
pod but Unstaffed. T b e oni)'
lntnlden .,. gQards and 'aJi
-··"-'' j ···-~uu· amws ....
Flood' R~liet-O~(iyed
)\'AS,HINGTON (AP) -A permailent rebufldlng . o I
disaster relief bill authorizing. roade;.not pait•of any &edefaJ
up, to S30 million for res)alr highway system, . that ·. were
work .o n stof!n"(fainilged damaged lo la~ 19611 a~ early
eanrornJa roads bas bffn aP: 1969 .•
proved. b)I the House Public . nie measure alao would • w ks Cooimiltee • · ,provide for canceltation of op or ~ .J • • , io 1,800 Small BuaiQe1a
The bill, which e1me out of 'AdministraUoq Joans on prop.
committee Wednetday, .~OQ)d., "-'erty d a m a g e by storiQ
allow allocation .ol lundf Ii~ ~ or landslide. '
v •• •
• .. · .
I See by .f ~ay• t·
Want · Ads
• Diamonds are . .ttlll. a nl&'.
best fz:iend: ensapi:nent.
wcddinc 9l" cocktail n..;1.'
. ' • ~· to buy -,our •O'fftl,
7-Up· machine, Stodt Ull
for the.· aununer!
"
·•·The· seadck· ...Uor·11 atll·
i~ Out •. 21' Ve~.
molor, h'l.iler and &ll I
...-.~
..
D1~r~1C--;t1. · ~g--if1filt1 :' · ..... ~-~ ... Y ....... r t ..
........ " . . •· " . . ~ ~-" ' ' • I.~ ... -. ..~ ... ''-·-' !!"•.t.' ..._ ~,,.
'Premature'
Mental Care
Halt Denied
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
The Reagan administration
has denied tt· la prematurely
relea$ing patients at Modesto
State Hospistal so it can close
I.he mental institution ahead of
schedule.
The caurornia s t a t c
Employes Association leveled
the charge \Vednesday but a
spokesman for the Depart-
ment of Mental Hyii cne
replied: :~ •• .
"We are not tn the ~
of closing Modesto Slale
Hospital and will not until the
final leJislative and executive
determinations are made."
The adminsl.ration has pro-.
posed gradually shutting down
the World War 11-era hospHal
during the neit year. But both
houses a( the legislature have
budgeted funds to keep the in·
stitution open al.least through
June 1970.
Also, the Senate h a s
formally asked Gov. Ronald
Reagan to delay closure until
the upper house conducls its
owll investigation.
Thomas Jordan, CSE A
general manager, said mental
patients were being reJeased
ll'.dce as fast as normal and
many are ''physically and
menlally unfit tar re.lease or
~t~f!"1pti~~ Bil! P~~d .
~. ~· ' . sM~ (UPI) ~·~·: falalitiis on die bi&hways." 180-~. IX!si~sman ~¥:" 'The sMne bill 'was \11\ed last
drink· eJit]t hipt:iJllls durinl.ijt; year iii the Assembly, then
Jong .Jurich amt: .still dri've to · controlled by -J)emocrats.
workJeally soblr under a bill 1,, Reagan Is txpected to sign
awaillni·f· ll"'· ;• .l!. pJI •1 d ':1he meosute IOOll. Tbt = . ~~':iriil'i!Ju11!..'f .o..-· · . • Assem!i1Y111oncw. cra1r ~
liiir'If"hls·"l 2b ~f>'•·u n d, will talre '<lfed threm . .m• h•
secretary downed more .t:tian ··.pfler Uie ltklJlalur~i. .
sil' drinks, she would be ~toe... Sen. G~ Com 4/R·
drunk to drive. Indio), Senate. tnanageJ. ol lhe
The anti-drunken driving bill. said under .the proposal a
b!JI, an important part of man weigh) n g _ 18().pounds
Reagan 's· legislative prog ram, · · "".ould ~ave to drlnk ~arly
says that" It lf molorist's blood· nine drinks of 80 proof hquor
alcohol level is at least .IO in an hour and a half to be
percent, he is p rM·SUln\•e d · ~ound gulHy of drunken driv·
drunk. 1ng. ~ • . ,
That is, he is considered ;a<> ~ Someone else weighing 150
tip&y to drive when 6i»t:',,\>ounNould be . presum thousandth or his blood'~ is • drunk t seven..,and, a h
alcohol. The bill received final drinks. ~ hile a 12t).pou~ ,
legislative passP.ge Wednesday would be cons Ider e d llF"
when the Senate approved it loxlcated at slightly more
34+1. than six drinks.
Reagan. who has sought the On the other hand. he said, a
''presumptive limit.'i" drunken "social . drin.ker" c~u\d have
driver bill for two years, call~ four drinks tn 90 minutes a~d
ed the legislature's action a be "reasonably assured he LS
"great forward step in trying not going to be found under
to cootrol the trage4J of the influence of liquor.''
Sniper Sus~t ~ed
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A
suspected freeway sniper was
shot to death Wednesday night
after wounding an officer who
tried to question him.
Police identified the victim
as Donald Lee Oughton, 29,
Los Angeles.
OfOcers said a mOtorist
feported he had been fired
upon while southbound on the
Hollywood Freeway near Bel·
mont Avenue. Patrolman H.
R. Hagen and Henry Dublin
said there was no -sign of a
sn,iper when they arrived al
the scene. but they said some·
·000: fired at I hem fron1
across the Creeway.
Other units were dispatched
to lhe area and oUice.n Nor·
man P. O'Malley and Henry
Kennedy, 24, attempted to stop
Oughton on a nearby street for
questioning.
They . said Oughton pulled a
gun and opened fire. woundJng
O'Malley In tht hand. Ken·
nedy, a rookie who hu been
on the:· force less than one
year' returned the fire , killing
Oug)iton.
O'Malley underwent surgery
at Orthopaedic Hospital wh ere
doctors attempted to save a
finger which was n e a r I y
severed in the shootout.
transfer." r· · jiliiiiijiiiiii_iiii_•_iiii•li•_ii_ ijiiiiiijijii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij But he provided ·no fi1ures . , . . .i
lo .:.~v~;~):"'l:p.'rtmenl , Are You_ Tro~.~,!td "!'i!'1_Proble~
spokesman,' Af Cal.ais, con-•. T0Uth11 the111 oftf "'" t Coultloelor may soln tt..M.
ceded thal the patient popula· 'Call' DIVERSIFIED COUNSELORS Today
lion declined by 59 from 1,166 Hoirs: 10 his -675-2100 -En:. by Ap,o1~~.
on AprilJl to 1.107 aa~ 21.
Bla·iolAIE:' liSH .O·Es .
AT Dl.SQO.UjJ::-tJllCE.S!
,,,.· •··~· ... -~ r ~ • • ~ .· ... .. • f.
:Jor :Jaf h;~ j :JJ~'IJ . , ,
' . .
EN~S . ' SUF ,. .. •··· ... off! I
. . .... ' . . . ' . . . .
Forward Fashion ~ ~:~tiot1al Models · Ug/gweights and Year 'Ro~rid ~eighr~ .. , ·, _ l
SAVE 44~91: t~-' SAVE 62.50 ' SAVE 67.50 ' ' • I 98 . . ,, .50 '
. •
SAVE 36.66
73~~~
SPORT COATS , . . .
1/3.1/2 OFF
Ri!l''!.110 lo •160 ·-. ~
1, Q: & 3 Button model'S, Famous brands included.
'.
" . EXTRA S4lE BONUS!
'SEtECTEb GRODIHS
SUITS 25% OFF,
AND MORE
.·MEN'S SLACKS
.-. 1/3~1/2 OFF
Rt~ •15 to '45
Bell Loop and Tab-Waist Siyles
.,
Men's Sportswear
''
-.
Men's Furnishings
FAMOUS NAME DRESS SHIRTS ... $2.~3.99 KNIT SHIRTS! KNIT SHIRTS! ••... $3,99-$5.99
Reg, to S7-shorl slee~, perma presl '
Reg. to $10-fashlon collara and turtles
FAMOUS NAME DRESS5HIRTS .. •4.49 3/$13.00 MOCK TURTLE WOOL KNITS .:'. •. $6,99-$8.99
Reg. to $7.50-long sleeves, white, colors ~ Reg. lo S1•-solids and stripes '
.... I ' ' • • I • •
BmER NE.CKWEAR ........ , .. , .. $1,99-$2.99 .. PUi.LOVERrSWEATERS ........... , ......••• 90
Reg. SS & $6.50-Newesi strlpes.en<t pattem1 · '• ' Reg, tO~..;.Woob, orion actYI~ · · · .
MEN'S HOSIERY·,.':'.· ........... t11 pr. 6/$5.85 SHqRT. SLEEVE SPORT SHIRT$ ......... $3.99
Reg. to $.2.00-.anklet end OYef'-the.catf Reg.·$4 1 f7~d49 and patterns . '
FAMOUS 1'AN!E SPORT.SHIRTS ••. S4.M99 ,_ .
·. HANDCRAFTED Jl&:LTS.. •...•..• , , . $2.5fP4;99
!
'' ,,
" " . I
II
' I 11
:r II
II
'I 11
11
II
11
II
11
i I ,,
'I II
II
11
II
II
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t I RO~D-_HO·~· B~fWELLCO $..1{01$ ·-~ . '~ . -~ Many Othe·r Styres 'To Choose f.rom
·\-
Reg. to$7.50-supef'1~~~ -; ~
'--..BONUs:l'l!f:~HIEFS ....•• ::7.$3~99
Reg. $6-packigooG!ij:.itOil*~, · · '
:t
II
Reg. to $9-cciOI aummerstyles . _· • . . . . J ti!. • :
FAMOUS-NAME WASKPANTS~. ~, .p ·
Reg. to $13-varlety of fabrlct • · · · . .,, ,..
Brushed
Pigskin
We 1peeieli1t in finely
c.r•fted lhoes, mede to
look bett•') ..,,,ttr
lon~tr, end
provide foot
comfort! · ~ 1 • -
• ..
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$10.H Value
3 Days ,767 o.ry
V ·ON ·SHOES . "
23de;. ~H-&R8oltJ91vD.
1i.U.JOA 5110Pl'INCI CINTER
COITA ' 'Yl:4t l. '6 .J..,j5 .J COS~A MIS.A 0 0• I I · Ml54
.(-IO TlltHty -)
•
PAJAMAS, RO~·~NDERWEAR, JEWELRY
, ' I
GOLF JAc;KETS now .......... , ••••.••••• S7.99
At blg wind-up reduotfonl ·~ · Reg. $14-perma press pClplln .,
i·
f.a~fllous Savings on Women's Fashions
SHIRT SHIFTS now .... -......•.• ~ ..•••.. s&.97 FAMOUS NAME JEANS FOR GALS ..••••. s3;97 Reg.,.f15-famed'1fa~tylea ' Reg.$8 &$7...:you~inamellkeyour own
KNIT DRESs~now ........ : .......... $15.90 NEWEST FLARE PANT$ .. .' .............. s7.97
Reg. $25-,Jeeveleu, polyester pastel• • Reg. $11-solid col°" pattern• ,
SUMMERY SUITS now ......... ; ...... $19.90 JAMAICA 'sHOR'tS .to# ............... :. ,su7 . ............. " Flayon linen and allk-l~ Reg. $7-8S30l'fed aummerflbl1~
4-Pc. KNIT WAnRGB~ .............. s29,90 l.ACE 'TRIM BLOUSES ........... · ...... SJ.!J7
Reg. 1-48-a~ ... ~)"!"'ft S-Reg.$1·--locy.Jooks ..
#~ s• • ,..
• •• • A ort~•NfW--~···--....... n•·.,_~ ....... m ··---~ -~:·~~ .... -Jil..'!~TllMM"-... MlMCt.IMILl5$1'IWJ1~,.\·DOWHTOwllOOSo.8ftllldwrt •OUNDAL1Wli.otll8rlnd •P'AIAOIJCA.o(SI E.Colontdo•TOP'AHalPLAzA~PLl\~~~:;,,
UtnA MONICA 1 .-nfi Monlca·M.n • IOurH COMT PUZA COsll MM• ANAHEIM· ~-~19;c.n..r • M6NTct.MR P1.&li Montd'llf • 6. ~C.IU 11\AZA Santa Be'oiir1i''
: I
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BROADWAY·ANAHtlM CENTER, ANAtfEIM e ~OU.TH .COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA ::
• J • · • It Open ~. thru Fri. Evenings 'tll 9 p.m. ,; ~~~~~~~~----~~~~~~--~~~~~~~-,__,_·~~~~~~#'
••
• •
• • . . •
• •
•
•
• •
• . . . " •
•
• •
. Yd~r :J~ienll/g
Store
... ' 9 NO scRUBalNG . :, . . ·,
• ~ No sc®RING. . .. .
NO KAR$JI . . , .
OVEN CtwftR : ;.::' . . . . ' .. llVBB!
FE~TURING NEW
STAY CLEAN
·ov,EN ·LINERS!
•
..
'. ,
.. , . • t
. .
1815
. ·~ .,·.· •• ·1 .. NMtlitr :•>vo-.; . ~ ..
" ...-. • . ...-
• •
-.___: . ..
. ' . ' .... ~ ~
001JLY:mllf , ",
• Area
' •I/ • ,..1,...: • •
MIX o ·R MATCH
Plerih •~ lll"fl:!1.1 re lik• p1opl1: n..., Jl9ed 1 r9flilt' diet of t••• "foH"-ill<l 011.Jl'.JO.GRO liiiu«I· rltnt F.o4 i• lust th1
ri9hl ""'Jt•11"'t1 k1ep 'l1Wn• •nd 9•rd1111 li1althy tntl b1e11tiful.
GIJll~OL llON:.&h••• .tftltiint "••P 9r1111 te ltw111, 11i1h111•
dr~, 11Mf ell typM ~f pJ111t1, Ov1rcoll'l11 yellowint lchlor11i1I.
A 9111011 co••n 4,0j)O 1<111, ft. of lawn.
SAYE NOW and AVOID "SUMMER SLl,IMP."
l11y "tw1 '' 1 kintl" 1r 0111 of 1ach. R1911ler fltic1 $4.fl 11111. • 2 GALS.· 4''
-DIB'ROMs .
lawn : spray .
Doll.ii . Now """ c111 t t"'• d1141 tfltl 11u(ll1
ell th1y'v• 9ri Coftlint ft thern -
tw ice ti ""''h'itt feet.-Witll tli1 OR;lHO~ 1.\J6-GfrA· 12 ·.lb .. tw;n ,
peck f,pl tz.t6. ..
1(1) FEED PLANTS
12) KILLS BUGS ".
-BIG 22 ....
JET S'rRl)lM"IOMI"
SPRAY NOW· ,Diii
LAW~ INSECTS ·GRUIS
CUTWORMS-,LEAS.' l!TC. or
APPLES • .FIGS
APRICOTS e 'NECT~RINES ·
PLUMS • PEACHES
ADD l'D THE BEAUTY OF THE
LANDS.CAPE, WHlt& RIAPI~,
BOUNTIFUL tRO~~ OF DELI·
'CIOUS FRUIT. A~L HAVE AT·
, TRACTIVE SPRING. BLOS~. ·
EvERGREEN . AS!:! ~5
FASTESr SHADE ·; 31· 8 . IN THE WEST t FT. TAkL • . '
.. • ..
WELL ESTABLISHED. ,
TREES -l)P Tl!>· 7'' TAL~
$649
..
:RJll . . GROWN . _,,,_
. 'Rill
BLOOM
S-GAL •. ,
SIZf ,;-. . .
JUST ~ .·
11 ' • I , F U1 C H I A:Si c • .
: ' .. ~·
llST FOR SUMMER
. l j;OOM IN S8ADE
Rot. 4.95
2•1
\It. 4'8 ... ·1"··
. . · -'·s·ur•·•· ·---· l ~ ' . • ~ I " ' ' '"i.. 1-4:
SWIMMING POOL CHEMICALS
e : ~RANULAR ~LOllNl1 . .• :iii~~ POW .
I .•;·~'9AICIDE
•:tlDUCER .
.• llST-KJr . •
'
•. ALL YOUR l'OioL NllDS
• ...
i'iOURSf.MON. THRU SAT. t 'A.M. TO 6 ·,.M., SUNDAYS IO'<A.M.'TO I r.M •
, · ~~ ·' , Specjaf Prices -~ 1ThrOu9 Sundey, June I Ith. ' " '
..
• . SB
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-· , ..... . .. -····-· ... -.. . . . ... ~ ... .... -. • ••• -•• • • ....... t ·~.; ••" •• •••• •o v o o
Vital Statistie's
I Divorces
FRE'E TICKETS
··~to Walt.Disneys
•
'
CHICK IVERSON'S GALA PRQMIERE NIGHT
at Fox Sooth Coast Plaz~Theatre
,I>
The Fox South Coast Plaza Theati e will prem iere "The Love
Bug" movie for the lirst time in Orange County, the night of
June 25 at 8:30 p.m. Chick Iverson hi$ bought the entire •
theater for this Gala premiere and would like to-share th is -
night with his friends and neighbors: There are 1000 free
seats available. This hilarious Walt Disney movie wilf~lfght
adults and children alike.
This is how il work~ and it's simple to gel a free ticket.
Just fill in the coupon below and send to Chick Iverson ...
all coupons must be in the mail no later than midnight
June 16, 1969: Each coupon senl in will represent two seats.
If more co~lfns are sent in than there are available seats,
then a drawing will determine the lucky winners. You will be
notified by mil if you are a lucky recipient of these seats.
·-U.~
Buddy Hack_tt. Dean Jone~ and many more star in this fUn ·
filled Walt ~ey epic of "Herbie" the Volkswagen. A Gala
night with alt1he premiere trimmings, dignitaries, stars, and
"Herbie" willile a long re membered night Only those with
special lverl/!!i Premiere lid!ets will be admitted.
Send in the ·&upo n today, .• absolutely ii6 obligation except
to pick up JQ\Jr tickets if you.are a lttdy winner and have
a good tim?~ ~ • r,1-~::::::::--------~------------1
445 E. Coast Highway II
MAIL THIS
COUPON
TODAY! v
I Newport Be11ch, California ....
1
1
I understand this coupon will be eU
• twen•n,Preniie~ISf'tt~ w.-1 · the ¥ox liout11 Colst-Plitft
I I I "'"' I . AOO!OISS
~• drewinJ cf two tickets ta
uc:tion "Th• love B"f' et 919.
I CITY STATE 1. _.,,. __ , I Mini be postmulltd no Jal er lh1n midnl1hl ~ 15, 1961J to be enalblt • ..,_..,,.._, L--------------·----.-...----------1
' •
. ' ' ~ . " .. , .... --
~It.
$35.00 BRmSH }VALKERS$23'9
SIMI tNfll $11 on thlM . famous '"'Gtenadl81"'
brolues. A must in .wry dad's wardrobe.
In broW11 Ulm• or black
l>riarhlde.,
464 S. MAIN ST., ORANGE
333 E.17TH. ST., COSTA MESA
OTHER l&.A $H0£ &TOREI IN:
LOS ANGELES, 4012 W. SANTA BARBARA
BEVERLY HILLS, 9830 W. PICO BLVD.
WESTCHESTER, 8915 S. SEPULVEDA BLVD.
SANTA-MONICA, 1000 WILSHIRE BLVD.
N. HOUYWOOD, 6512 lAUREL CANYON BLVD.
SHERMAN OAKS, 14645 VENTURA BLVD.
CANOOA PARK, 8393 TOPANGA CANYON BLVD.
VENTURA, 2280 EAST MAIN SIBEET
LANCASTER, 701 W. lANCASTER BLVD.
SHOP DAILY 9:30·9:00/SHOP SUNDAYS 10·5
r
·\
.......... -.--~~~~~~~~~~~ ......... ...,~~1...,,....,,.,,,...,,......'"""~~..,.,!""'::-...,~...-~ ... ~~~~~ ... """l~ .... ~~ ........ ~ ... .,,.. ............................................. ~ ......... ~ .... ~ ..... ~~ ... !"""., • • • • • • • • .. • • • ••• • ......................... 1. -..
'
For The
Record
Meetitigs
THURSDAY
!111ntl1111ton 81ac11 Lion• Club, Hu,...
tl1111ton Se1c11u Coun1rv Club. JOOD
P11tr\ l4Y1., Hun111111ton &each, 6;30 a.m.
U.S. N.1v1! Se1 c-.:111 Cor111, 73.15 Biro
ranc.1 11,..d, Slnt1 AM, 1 P,m.
M.1'°'11C Lodge, IOOF H1l1,
W11lmlnsl1r Av9r!V& Md OllW Strnl, WMlmlmllr, 1;lll p.m.
COHta Mnli Gr111111 A t1ocl1Tlon,
Granq1 Hall, 11-"' Thl*rln AYI .• Cost1 Meia, 1:l0 P.m.
tlfWpcrl Harbor E1b Club, Elks Loc1v1,
3.15' Via Oporfv, Nt••1•11tt Beech. I p.m.
Mr..onie Gold9n Herbor WllU1 Sltr!n1
No. 91, MIM>nic Temple, "°1 ISlh SI., N1wpgrt BHCll, I P.rn.
t-:1110.,.1 ,t..sl0Ci1tlon tor lhl Aoh-1.,. c~nl of Colori!'d P-le. :k>\11'9mn II_,,, Senti ,t..n1 Llbr1ry, l!fl end llOl• )frffll, 51n!1 AM, I P.m.
FRIDAY
H11nllngt0fl Beech Rotarv c I u b,
SlleralOll Beech h1n, Hllnllftllon
Bee<:ll, 11:10 P.m.
Mlrln.,-'1 Uon• Club, Slull Shirt, 1241
W. Coesl H1ghw1y, N"""'°'1 Beech, l?:IJ 11.m.
Marriage
Licenses
OUCl<WORTH·SOU TH -Jel"ll'"ev Wade
OUc.kW!)rth, 10o lo Costa Mf,W, Incl
DOlln.t Gall Sooth, 11. of Bell G•r'INns
MIY Jt
TOCHER-SIQVIEROS -Lester H.
Toeller. 51, and Ev1"9elln• Pere1 SI·
qulero,, ?t. bollt ol Coste Mesa
8 ERGEN-OAMMER MI cit 1 a
LPDMrd Bergen, M. ot Wesrm!n111r,
l lld Verda Mae Demmer, 14, ol ll
Hel">rl
CAMPBELL-WINTERS -Jollfl Ke-l'!Mfll Cam<>beU, l l , of Cos!a Mesi,
Ind Belly lee Wint~. n. of Santa
"'' ROORIGUEl-UTTER -Tr I 1I1 n
Roar11uez, •1. of &111boe ••i.nt. -Di<lne J. Utter, J.I, of NIWPOl'I Beacll
8UTlER-THOMAl -Oevld Rall>h
Butter, 27, of Watmln1ter. and Sus.In
~ay Thomn. 14, Pl Hunllnvton aucn WEBE R-G#JNE~ Weber, ~ o1
Swrh l.QUfta, -A..-111 M.. (ialnes, .U, 01 WI~ c..-:
CADOEll-LOVElESS -Dini.I G. Cadcftoll, .Sf, Ind Lydl1 C, L~
63. befit of Wesrmln'"'r
SALA-BROWN -Joseoh V. 5111, Sil,
llNI Ell• L. Brown, Sol, bell! ol FOii,,..
lt!n V1llev
FORD-VENEMA -Rebert ff. Ford, 73,
end Edllh V1n1m11, lot, beth of
Wes!mins!er
CCRCORAN-MacRAE -Lyle S. COfcoran, 66. of Laouna Hllli, and
OoroTlll' M. Matlae, 51, cl SPOk.9n1, "'l••lt.
DEATH NOTICES
HANSEN
Erk H. Hal!M!fl. :M.19 Santa A,,., Ave .•
COii• MeJ.L D.lite of dMlll, Ju~ 10.
Sllf'llved bl' moth-r, Mrs. Yola"*
Currari. CO$Ja Mesi ; ''"'·lathff Huoh
Currin. Cosl1 Mllw; la!Mr, h1NeY
Ha,_/ brolllllf", ~ Currilln, Coll•
Ml!SI, Sel'YiC'tS win bl! llllkl F"rld1~.
June T' al ' 11.m. 8ell 8r°'4t!WI' Chepel. Rev. And"w Al\Ofrl.On Ollkl--
al~. Bell Broedway Morfu1ry, o r.....,_
·~ l\fEEK
~-~I (. Meek, Sr. Ul1 W. OllYI!
A .. e.. F ullenon. S11n i"ed by will.
ll•lll' Jean: CM1119heu , RObl!rt1 Jun
and Mary Nadoror; mother, Mrs. Ber·
tn1 Me-e-: brolner. Otis: sl1!ors. Uf1I
'""""Md' llel!v MtC•rlllY, E!Sle 0.
"-• Btrn1c.e H01>kl"1, ar>el IRIOllefll'
P..,,.,..1 !ltrH !frandch1ldr1n. Se!'Yka
W'lll be held' Friday 1t tO:lll &.m. at
Pttl< F1mlrl' (clcnial Fu~r1I Home,
Wntmlnster. Pfflc Family ColPnlll
Family Home, Olrtclorl.
YOUNG
Cl1ret11:t A. YOll"ll CC11. Sl6 W. Vic·
1c1rl1, (0$11 Mes•. Oe!e of «11t1,
June 10. Surv1ved' by wile. AllaU IOfl,
Bob. Founlll~ V1l1tv1 dauenfoer; Dori.
C<>ml'/, Pl!Hltdelllhl11 rnc11'1er, Wtlll•
niina P'l!rrlne, Camden, H.J.J ltlree ~l~toers; I brother. ~¥kn wlll be
~old Sal\Jrd~~. June !4 1t 10 1.m.
Wf'!tciiff cna..el. 1"1e~m 11 Harbor
R"I Memorial Park. Wntcllff Mortu-
ary, Dlr.c!ors.
ARBUCKLE & ~H
Westcliff l\tortaary
427 E. 17th St., Costa 1\-tesa
6411-4AS
BALTZ l\10R'ltJARm
Corona del ~lar OR S.Mst
Costa l\tesa l'ltl 6-ZU4
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY -~ . 116 Broadway, Costa A1esa
Lf 8-3433
DILDAY BROTHERS
lluntlngton Valley
l'ltortuary
17911 Beach Blvd.
llunling1on Beach
8.JZ-7771
PACIFIC VIEW
l'lfEl\10RlAL PARK
Cen1ettry • l'ltort1ary
Chapel .
3500 Padllc View Drive
Newport Beach, CaWornla
144-Z700
Pt:EK FMULY
COLOmA!. 1'lJNERAL
I ROME
'1801 Bolla Ave.
Wetlmlnster 193-aSU
SRl:FFER MORTUARY
.Laguna Beach 4N-JS3S
an Clemaite 41%-GlOI
s~unrs MORTUARY
11'1 Mahl Sc
JlunUngton Beach
LE MS.II
.
Dig De~per, Grads
Getting Out of SchoolCan Be Costly
By RANDY SEEL VE
OI tfll Dflty l'lltl Sttft
Graduation born high school
1n Orange County could-be an
expensive ordeal -but it need not be.
A survey of Orange Coast
schools has revealed that a
senior can go through the m~
tlons....oI his-final year in high
school for as little as five
dollars for a cap and gown.
Yet, lhe cost cooJC: soar as
high as $200 for an active stu-
dent. Just to skim the top of
t.he list of events could cost up to !80.
How ls it possible to run up
$200 worth of bills?
Just ask a graduale -ar
better yet h.is parents.
Expenses start to mount up
early in the term for year
books ($5 to $10 depending on
the sehOol), class rings ($14 to
$30) and senio r pictures ($5 to
$30).
One student at Estancia
lligh School spent $70 on
senior pictures alone,
Then, when spring rolls
around, the bills mount fast -
especially for the guys.
The Junior-Senior prom
could eas.ily set back a senior
boy as. 1be girls meanwhile
have the casta for a new
formal and halrsetling to wor-
ry about. Most 1nonetary wor--
ries are quickly passed to the
older generation, however.
'Then comes graduation.
Cap and Gown rentals run
five dollars and se nior
breaklast adds three more.
Then comes the prime test
al the pocketbook for the
graduate -grad night.
If he is joining the 100,000
students who celebrate that
momentous occasion at
Disneyland, it will cost '18.
At this point most Orange
County studenls can b e
thankful they Jive in the
southern part af the state.
lmagine living in San J ose
or San Francisco and at-
tending the party at
Disney1al'ld. -~pecial chartered
flights on Air Callfamla jeLs
run as high as $40 per couple.
When added to the Ill cost of
the party, it't a very u;.
pens.Ive evening.
The total ol actMtlos lllltd
above rqes from a low of
just under l80 to a high ol $17!
excluding all cosb for new
clothe.s. •
So, after rtalizlng the tosl
lnvolYe'd to join tht:.. activl.tiea
of tbe ''Clau of. 1969," mQbe
it would be a lot ee.sier to 1kip
\he hoopla and rent a Uve
dollar cap and pm.
It might be more fun to
start the summer solvent.
County Map
Collection
On Display
Recreation Reading
Program Announced
SANTA ANA -"Orange
County on t be Map," a CQI·
orful coUection of historical
maps af the county. Is cur-
rently on disJ?lay at the
Charles w. Bowen Memorial
Mll!eUlllbere.
It is another in the current
series of Bowers Museum u:·
hibits. planned in conjunction
with the Santa Ana Centennial
and California's Bicentennial
Year. ORANGE -A summer pro-
gram of recreational reading
for children begins June 16
when bookmobiles from the
Orange County Public Library
start regular rounds in 'I\JrtJe
Rock, University Park, CosLa
i\1esa, Santa Ana Heights and
Fountain Valley.
County Librarian Harry M.
Rowe Jr. said the program,
''1'1agic Miles,'' is open to all
young readers who have
Man Geared
111 Rohbe1·y
SANTA ANA -Qiu! or three
men sought by police after the
holdup of the Newport Na-
tional Bank's Orange County
Airport branch has been
cleared of attempted robbery
charges in a Los Angeles
Federal Court.
Freed by U.S. District Court
Judge Alber! Lee Stephens
was Daniel Jacques DuPree.
21, of Santa Ana. He was
alleged by officers to have
been one or three masked ban-
dits who took $2,000 from the
bank on Jan. 11 , 1968.
DuPree was arrested by
Santa Ana officers last Jan.
29. On that same day James
Roscoe Holmes, 26, of Santa
Ana was sentenced to 20 years !fl federal prison for his part
m the holdup.
Officers say the search for
the third man in the bank
heist is still "on ·the active
file."
library car d.s . Youngsters
without current library cards
can obtain them at the
bookmobiles.
Any member of the summer
reading club who completes IO
books between June 16 and
Aug. 2, when the program
ends, 'Will receive a certificate
and a memento upon presen-
tation af his or her reading
record chart.
Bookmobile stops include:
In Turtle Rock: 10 a.m. to .
noon Wednesday at Turtle
Rock Drive and Groermont..-·
By-Park.
In Uolvenlty Park: 1 p.m.
to 5 p.m. Wednesday at
University Park S h op p 1 n g
Center (Culver Drive and
Matthews Road ).
In Santa Ana Heights: ll:IS
a.m. to 12: 15 p.m. Thursday at
Bay View Avenue and Azure
Avenue.
1.n Cotta Mesa : 1 p.m. to
2:30 p.m. Thursday at Bear
Street School, Pa u I a r in o
A venue and Bear Street, and 3
p.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday at
Mendoza Drive and El Camino
Drive.
Alternate Stops beginning
June 26 are:
In Costa Mesa: 10 a.m. to JI
a.m . Thursday at Newport
Boulevard and 22nd Street.
In Fountain Vallty: IO a.m.
to II a.m. Thursday at the
Fountain Valley TraJler Park,
Bushard Street and Talbert
Avenue.
For additional informaUon,
write or call county library
headquarters, 431 S. Man-
chester, Orange, telephone
532-7841.
The ellilitt includes the first
official lnllp af Orange County
prepared by S. H. Finley in
1889, ~ year the county,
previously a part of Los
Angeles COunty, was formed.
The oldest map In the show
was drawn in 1800 or 11101 by
Juan Pablo Grijalve. It shows
central Orange County, then
grazing land.
A wllque map In the col·
lectlon, hand drawn by Frank
Salter, shows the tracts oc-
cupied by~ the early planeer
residents of Gaspel Swamp
(Huntington Beach) in the
1870's.
A series of maps dating
back to !Ml depicts th e
deve1opment -by nature and
by man -of Newport Harbor.
The Bowers Museum is
located at 2002 N. ?\.fain St.
here.
Museum hours are : 10 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday throogh
Saturday; J p.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday, and 7 p.m. to 9 p.:n.
Wednesday and Thursday. ·
Woman's Chili
Donates $500
IRVINE -Rossmoor
Woman's Club h.as presented
$500 to UC Irvine to be u s e d
for sbldenl scholarships.
Officers making the presen-
tation were Mrs . AUyn Bar-
rows, president; Mrs. George
Appelt, clubs ch ol ars h Ip
chairman; and Mrs. Robut L.
On-ill.
Today's go-anywhere,
do-anything Hush Puppies.®
·1052 Irvine
548-8684
KEEP DAD ON HIS TOES
••• AND IN COMFORT,
WHETHER OUT FOR AN
EVENING, AT THE
OFFICE, OR RELAXING
AT HOME.·
$13.
Rush RiPP.iett --
We1tclilf Pla11
Newport Beach
.
'
Tll\ndor, Jllot I~, 1969 DAILY P'ILO'I' JJ
• .. •·
ANNIVERSARY SALE
i:wlY~ter tw0:2iece knit suits
in solids, patterns, colors
Washable polyester suits, cool travel favorites at
eight dollar s~~ings. Choose from a collection Of
smartly tailored styles galore such as a club collar
lacy pattern, white on aq ua, ·Or piped lattice pat·
tern, navy or beige. Others in patterns, solids,
coral, aqua, blue, pink, yellow, Sizes 8·20. Order
·Yo\111 liow, tome see .the entire collection.
regularly 30.00, 21 , 9 9
may co cosmopolitan shop 96 .
may co soutli coos! plaza
son di19& fwy. et bri1tol, cost• meso; 546-9321
shop mondoy through nlurday. I 0 e.m. lo 9:30 p.m,
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D.lll.V PILOT Th111'Sd11, June 12. 1%~
Parle::-v ous Volleyball
Sonja Berggren, 21, a graduate student in Fre~ch
at UC Jrvine, pops a set for her partner dunng
recent volleyball game on sands of Newport Beach.
The sport, sometimes looked u~n .disd~Y. by
school children as merely a rainy day diversion,
reaches heights of competitive ardor among decU·
cated amateurs who play on Orange Coast beaches.
JC Ho nor Society
Picks Seve n at G WC
Seventy Golden Wesl College
students have been elected to
the Sigma Phi chapter of
Alpha Gamma Sigma, a
statewide junior c o 11 e g e
honors society.
To be eligible, students must
have a 3.0 grade average and
no grade Jower than C.
Permanent membership re--
quires even higher scholastic
standing.
10 on Coast
End Work
At College
T111 Orang> Coast rosidents
have received certlllcates in
pur¢aslnll fur the 11U«<SSful
compietion of evening busi·
ness classes at Orange Coast
College.
The certificates art given
to ~nt the completion
cf 24 units cl work in busi-
ness courses, with 15 units
in purchasing courses.
Honored from Costa Mesa
were Peter M. Wanbaugh and
Michael J. McGee. wh ile Don-
ald 1.f. Cole, George lf. Fos-
ter, Dan V. Ovist, Edward J .
Simmons, Stephen T. Barrett
and lAldie F. Lambright rep-
resent Huntington Beach.
Other certificate recipients
include Richard J. Doidge of
Laguna Beach and James M.
Alennder of Newport.
New members are'. Doug
Ahlvers, Gail Altimari, Ronald
Armbrest, Ray P. Baker,
Mary L. Ball, Gerald Baggs,
Larry E. Baggs, Katherin
Bern.son, Yvonne Bethurum,
Michael J. Biery, Ethelyn
Bradshaw:
Ellen A Brewster, Bev
Brockman, Martin· Broder,
Stephanie Burke. Chris
Cervin, Jim Childers, J ean
Cormier, Ken Davis, Fredric
Durham, Margaret Falconer,
Elizabeth Fenwick, Sharon M.
Fletcher, Amy Garrett;
Theda Gilpatrick, Ron
Hamarsky, Sandra Hancock,
Hazel Hatfield, Stephen D.
Hayes, V i c k i Hendershot,
Ellsen Hooper. Nancy Lynn
Johnson, Patricia A. Kemper ,
Carol Kenworthy, Gary E.
Kimbrough;
Randy Kirehner, M a r l
Kotsybar, Chris Lilley, Chad
Lunt, Irma Martinei. Chris
McClurg, Jeffrey G.
McGowan, Mary Ann Michaet,
David C. Mize, Patricia L.
Murphy, Linda Nicholas;
lttichatj Obradovich, Ross
Pearson. Patrick Powers, Elsa
J . Rasmussen, Pat Rudd ,
Laurel Rtiige, Bruce Saun-
ders, Stt!ie McGrew, Brenda
Stoddard, Susan Stout, Candy
Suermann, Susan Sugden :
Ron T~e. Diant: Thiel,
Ruth Thomas, Nancy Toombs,
Beverly Totman, Gary Turner,
Fred Van Horn, Karen
Westbrook, G a r I and G.
\Villiamson. Gerry W i I s o n .
Joan L. Workman and Debbie
Young.
Gals in Law
Men A ren't Too Happy
Women (If all shapes, sizes,
colors and ages are invading
the heretofore h a 11 o wed
masculine halls (If lhe San
Francisco Bay Area's major
law schools and are not only
doing well, but are even run-
ning awriy wilh top honors.
The remarkable increase in
would-be female barristers i~
most apparent in Stanford
Law School, where nearly 20
percent of the first-year class
are women (36 out of 189).
At Boa1t Hall l'f Law on
UC'1 Berke1S¥ campus, there
are 30 females in the first
year class, or 12 percent. And
at-the largest Bay Area Jaw
school, Hastings College of the
Law in San Francisco. 36
students, or eight percent of
lht first-year class, a re
women.
(In first-year classes JO
yean: ago, Stanford llad only
four women, Boalt had 10, and
Hutings sis.) n. majority .of lhesc bud-
dina: banisters are realistic in
t.befr p.11 and plan to go into
the pd>llc law field, BedrJ Snow, a Smith
to introduce innovations Into
the poverty area through
legislative procedures, and
Kathy Gabler, 23, wants to
work In the consumer protec-
tion field.
tl-foney doesn't· seem to be
the object to these highly
1nolivated v.•omen.
Mrs. William H. Sch ubach, a
third-year student at Stanford
v.·ho wants to l''Ork for the
California Hural Leg a I
Assistance office, says. "l'd
be happy to spend all lhe
money I earn for hou sework
and services. just so-that I •
i::ouid keep working .... ' (-She-
CQmmutes lo classes from
San ta Cruz. \\'here her hU!>.·
band Is doing graduate work
at the UC campus there.)
STUDENTS BRIGllT
• -~ gflldual< at Boall. ,,..,., ti ,,pedall.ze i n AmeriC:an lndiaD blw. She has .ue.11 -mt with Indians.
and tbeJ're bldly in need
There·s no doubt about the
fact that the female students
are bright. For the past three
years \l'Oml'n have held the
top academic spots at Boalt.
And at Stanford a third of
the members of Law Review-
chosen from top students in
second and third .year classes
-are women.
Many think that m a I e
students fee! threatened by so
many intelligent hardworking
female competitors. ''They
tend to doubt our motives for
being here," a Hastinp atu.
dent lheon...t.
oL
llooll
T
to
Mar I a "Many or t~e boys ~till think
"Wflltl ;'° !;,, that the woman's place is In · • r-the home." she cnn!inued. Maprlll .keln_p, • llut, obviously, these women ~ the tbinlc otherwise.
u DlllokMbu•F=======I
-;.::,.~ t THE BEST
q~ ~ ~-i.J *-'*'•r1hip po 111 pro v• 8ollt ~~ ~r atu "'"•n~h" i1 0111 of 111. world'1 ~ ~ -V..J! ! 'a r ~ -:-;~t,o~:l•;h;o;~,~~;)'1i_~j~d
un1 .. n111 Law Sdlool, ~
. ) ' . . ,,
AN , ·IVERSARY 'SA-[E
LO\YEST PRI CES O F THE YEAR I N EVER Y DEPARTM ENT AT ALL STOR ES~
\.,,
\ ' • . ..
Tarleton shirts for
Father on June 15
I e 99regula rly 2.99
Short.sleeve dress ~hirts that never need
ironing, that keep their cool alt the day
through. Polyester and cotto11 with but-
ton-down or regular collar, in White and
all the wanted col'°"' s;ze 14Y2 to 17.
casual jackets from
Tarleton, 10 colors
6.39 regularly 7.99
Choose nevy, azure blue, light bfue,
olive green, pewter green, lime, brown.
ton, gold or maize. Permanent press poly.
ester and cotton with zip.front, slash-
pockers, odjustoble cuffs. Sizes 36 lo 46.
men's ~ort~or 817, exc!pt Wilshire
our own Tarleton
sport shirt value
2. 99 regularly 3.99
A smashing variety. Solid colors. sum.
mertime prinls, plaids ••• all of perm~
nent press polyester and cotton. Short
sleeves for the sun-days a head ••• ·regu·
lar or button-dawn collar~ s.M-1.·Xl.
/. ,,....
save on Tarleton
ivy slacks in twills
4e 99 regularly 6. 99
f;neline twill _,.,. -~ed sloth
that ore mochine-woshoble ond permo-
nonl press. 50% polyester, 50% cotton
-Choose from block. navy, olive or ton.
Find them in 29-42 waist, 28-32 inseam.
may co south' coast pla1a, san "diego /wy at Dristol, costa mesa; 546 • 932 f'
shop monday through saturday I 0 a.m. to 9:30 p.m
•
trim Tarleton walk
shorts for all Dads
3.99 regularly 4.99
Permane nt press polyester and cotton,
slim trim walk shorts in a great range of
plaids and solids. All reduced, oll esp.
cially welcome on father's Doy, June
15th. Sizei29-44 in 9r01Jp.
....,\ lvmlobing> 806, -Wot-
our Tarleton terry
robes for summer
J • 99 regula rly 9. 99
Cotton terries fo r pool.side, for beach
days. for ell .summer wear. Easy-core ell
the way, machine--wosh end dry, find
them in blue, green, gold, oronge or
·while, all et a 2.00 saving. S-M-l·XL
rntn's furnid1i1191 806. extepl Wilshire
MAY CO
BUDGET
STOR E S
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Artists at Work
li.1embers of Norwalk adult education class make
sketches of Newport Beach dory fleet for future
paintings during recent visit lo Newp<>rt \vaterfront.
Colorful dory fleet, one of last remaining fjshing
fleets of its kind on west coast, is magnet for artists.
Rea Lists Students
Honored as Scholars
Rea Intennediate School In
Costa Mesa has published its
I i s t of students receiving
scholarship and honor roll
ratings for the third quarter
or the school year.
Scholarship standing re-
quires at least as many A's
as B's and honor roll rank
requires at least a B average.
The students are:
Ult Ori"-ScltolarM)p-Afl<'I &trr• (Ol!plt, K1r1n a ... 1or1, Ire~ Bolln1r.
Sue C&rlMlfl, Dorine C1udJIJ, S!ev1
ci..uvln. Carte Chrli!enwn, Oout
Cot>Uri\, W1ncl1 Colll1ot1, Jin Crvm,
CMe!lt CrvmNcktt, Frink Curlel,
Jotn 0.mw11k, G10rlellcl F-ncltr.
N11\C'/" li1r1.
~m Henr,>, Letllt Hiii. S1tve
i'l<Mll•W, Ca~I lkf'dt, Dor1n1 Ktlt.
Ina, 81r'W•1 Kg!ht, Mic.hi e! Lvkln1,
Day School
Pays Honor
To Banning
Hancock "Bill" Banning Il l ,
prominent Newwrt B e a c h
land owner and developer, has
been honored at his retirement
as president of the Harbor
Day School boa rd of trustees
with a scholarship fund in his
name,
Banning, v.·ho headed the
board since the school's in·
corporation in 1964, will be
succeeded by i.A.lis R. Lazo.
The Banning Scholarship
Fund will help provide in-
SUI.II~ NlckHIOll. Jullt • Putt. JeanM
i:tlltt!, Judy Snellffl, St~e S-Wn,
P•I WUhbun'I, K•nn Wo111e1n, ~Ann
Wl!lle.
lltl Gi"•• H-Ratl-Rltk &1ktr,
Shelly &fnC!'I, &1rt>.r1 11<.-o.r., Lkt
&O'llllffl. Rid< &•ownlnv, Domlnk Cap.
pelfo, T••"I Coeklev, Joan ci.rk, E1rl·
ttn Dunn, Hoi1n11a Goi;ilenlan, Otbf>11
Heoert, Letlll! Hiii, Mit,,tle Hiimer·
IOI!, G\efl" Jttn.1, Olvlcl Keith. DN>b¥ Kinney, Jtro""' KntX110t1,
G.ry Lewl1, sr-Meelln. Jan.I Mc·
Elmeel, i-.ou., Mldr,,u11, Ken Mollffl.
Jo Ann Ne!..,,,, Vlctorl1 Pilon, Krl1
PeffrlOll, Mary Phl-91!!y, MO!/y Re11111,
l1.111c Ror1lt, Robert S•r>lry. $"ve Sliva, 511-e/11 Stefford, Mlchffl T•r·
••nl, MlGh1el Tr1nrer, Oavld WI!..,.,.
C•r<>I W~k•Wllr.
1111 Gr1dl $cl11l1r1ltlP......Te~ Atk·
l!n, Kim A~rWll. D1wnllll1 C11to,
Rldt c~. Wiii G1rc!1, Debbie c;e.,.
1051, KlllY Gr~n. Christina GrlJ,
Oebta GrCllL 1.1~111 H1ruffl, Ooul
How1rd, Lynn J1enklr.t, Chrl1!111e
K~1>. P1llV labek.
Erle Lovl1191r, Judv Luth, 1>11:>r1
Lv!IW>n, Lin.... Pttenot1. Judy Re.
vi<•, Mltllellt Rhv111, E'.dmtwld lturh,
C1ncl'f Shlprmn. Slt:VI $mllrl, $Mrley
Sn<~. 0111 $1Kll, Ed S!oddtrd, ~
•M• Van.lei/Vin, ~n Wllll1m1.
Jlfl Gr1dl H-ltolJ-..Jt.ndy Alder·
m1i\, P1t11 Aflfl1n, Geor'1t1 81rren1,
Dou9 Berrr, Gavle Bland, C1rol
Croclr.ell, Elld!t F1rlan, Re~ Foarer,
Dl•r.e Gallion, Snelly Gttr111n, Sally
G11,...\IJ, Je1n11e GllV, G1vle J1nu11v. Ruu J1ureoul, R~tl JO!llf, Mike
H.,.ell, JClh11 Klr1cm•n, Ptll• Kot1tos, oe....., L1<01. J.,,,.., MlllM"-Y. 11011
M1rrvlo. SCI!! MllcKen.r!e, 5te11e Mlf. ter. Jim Hewbon. SCI!!! Orr. Vklar
P~er1"". T~r1<1te Rlci-.1rll1011. Dolio Rnvne,
J1~1 S1lnf, Selly Sdlefl<kl, Kevin
$mall, IC1rlft1 ThompllOn, Steve Tom-
Un. J1me1 Whklclt11, Debra WIH:ltr,
L1rry Wood, Don Wl'Wtlrr, l-ftlle11 Vlt-
ser, '-\eloclv W1l-l'f, Do\lp V1m1ml, K•'"" R1wn1rd.
El Morro
Student, 11,
Wins Honor
centive to students of outstan· An 1 l·yea r-old El Morro
ding potential . student is one of two Califor·
Harbor D::iy School is an in· nia boys selected to attend
dependent coeducational the National Music camp, an
i::chool for children from affi liate of the lnterlochen
kindergarten lhrough cighlh Arts Acamedy at lnterlochen,
grade, located on a five.acre Michigan.
cam pus in Corona de! Mar. Henry Adam Curtis. son of
Other new officers of the Mr. and Mrs. David Curtis of
board of trustees are Mrs. 260 Higti Drive, Laguna
Charles S. Thomas, vice-presi· Beach will attend the prestig-
dcnt; Dr. All en o. Cottle. vice-ious music program ror eight
president; Kendall W. Knight, wee ks this summer.
treasurer and ~1rs. Graham During the camp, activities ~I. Jones, secretary. include concens given by Van
New board members arc : Cliburn, a symphonic pro-
' K gram conducted by Sexton 1•lrs. Graham M. Jones, en· Ehrling of the Detroit Sym·
<Jail W. Knight, Dr. Arnold phony, an evening with Boris
Binder and Frank H. Trane. Goldowsky, and a number of
Banning will continue lo instrumental and vocal re·
serve on the board, along with citals.
members The Rev. John P. The young Laguna pianist
Ashey, Joseph Carver, Harry accompanied the El Morro
J . Early, Mrs. Thomas B. junior chorus under direction
Fleming. ?\-1rs. Merel K . of Deane Bottorf. and has
Gaede, Mrs. David W. Lang, been an accompanist for St.
Richard R. Leitch, Dr. Samuel Paul's Lutheran Church and
C. McCulloch and William Com m u n It y Presbyt"erian
f\.!cDowell. Church choirs. f voiiiiP*Ro.i'LEM:·:·-··**·1
• You w1nt to 1111 some lttm t" that you no longtr ""d but :
:;: someone el1• c1n u1• for ,.. ! , N ~ T ~ V E,R s,s 0 , ! i . . . . . . :
: YQUY~u c~~~E~~~: PILOT, 01k for i i Cl111ifi td Advertising, ind pl1ct 1 • • • • • • • • • • • r
PILOT
PENNY
PINCHER
= CLASSIFIED AD
t AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE
! 3 2 2 ! LINES TIMES . DOLLAR S
• DIAL NOW DIRECT! ~ 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ~ Cf.n ,,_Nd C..., 14t,122tJ ~ .. ,,,,,,:.~~.:.~~.~::~::.~~=.:.~ .... ~
•
I
Thu~st.t. June 12, l M OAILY PILOT J/I
\
ANNIVERSARY SALE
LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR IN EVERY DEPARTMENT AT ALL 17 STORES
the cable stitch vest
... so rich in pure wool
The cable v~t has become a real classic.
Like this pulled down one. /l's greal with
pants and wilh skirts. Just one of an assorl·
ment. In sizes sm.all, med ium and large.
' '
was 12.00 8.99
n1.1y co sponswear .acces~ries 72
r' I ,
\ '
polyester -cotton eyelet
freshly bibbed blou se
This is jusl one from a collection. All just
as fresh looking as tllis one, trimmed willl
eyelet at the cuffs, frc>s1ed wrtM an eyelet
bib. In while, 8 to 18. Come see them all.
"·ere 8.00 lo 10.00 4.99
mily co beuer blouses 39
I
\
easy-care cu lottes and
cool summer pantskirts
One or a collection of panlskirts and
culolles perfect for golfing and bowling.
This is sma rt1Y pocketed, in carefree polyes-
ter ar'KI rayon, basic colors, in sizes 8 10
18.
wen! 11 .00 to 15.00 6.99
Juniors'
breezy
may co coordi n;i;te s 101
slinky tops in
easy-care nylon
Tops so light ;and cool they're almOSI like
wearing not'1in1t at all . All shortsleeved in v-
n«k, crew or boatneck styles. The v·neck
in brown, navy, red or pump. Sizes S·M·l .
tomparablevalue7.00 4. 99 •
may co campus shop 43
may co south coast pla1a, un diego fwy at bristol, coste mue;
shop mondey through seturdey I 0 e.m. to 9:30 p.m
)
pull-on acrylic pant
is so cool and carefree
These are the pants that give you perfect
'!.moot h fit. Willl an elasticized waistband.
Cut witll a new sliglltly wider leg. Choose
them in pink, aqu.1, oranv,e, or mini. 10to 16.
compar.1ble v.1tue 13 .00 8.99
may co active sportswear 76
colorful cotton dresses
.•• from a famous maker
Choose from a terrific collection of the
styles Califomiaris love. l ike this easy.
shaped one, to wear belted or no!. In white,
ora nge, lime, or prints. Come stt them all.
were 28.00-3&.00 1 9, 99
m.ay co forecast sporuwear 86
546 • 9321'
MAVCO
'
•
_..:,. __ ...:c.:...:..-=~-==-'-----'--"''-."--"--''-''--'-'~-"-' -·'--·-·~·-------~--· _. .:.._ -·---• __ ._._ .. .:..• . • • . • ~~'I..\.!. :i.;...:._~.:.-.\ :.._.._...__ ... .;.":....'..~ ··-·~--~·--..... :=~=-
l_._. ..... ~~--~--~-~~~~~'""-"-~-~-----,~-~~~......,=----.......... --................................ ._ ........................................................................ ...
J 4 DAILY PILOT s Thursday, June 12, 196'*
Oil Venture Your Money's WoJ"th
OVER THE COUNTER LOS ANGELES <UPI)
Occident.al Petroleum Corp.
said 1t has joined in a joint
.,.enture oU conct!SSion 111
Morocco with tbe Burea de
Rech erc h es Et de
Participation Mhtleres. The
Moroccan gove mment will be
represented by the 81\PM .
ne area included in the
cessions ls eomprised of about
2,700 square miles off-shore
territory and 1.900 square
miles onshore.
How to Raw I ob, Employer NASO Lf1t ln9t for Wednesday, June 11 , 1969
-A-1t:Jr J:.ti1
~ki::-•1 :# '------------l;la'IC OU .ol(I 1 leYClll t.~ NEW 't'ORI( fA1'/•WfCl'*Clt"'JCOtN1l1!t 19YEU I 1-~ New 'l'orll Sloc:k ~. pricft: ltv PI ~
PHARMACY
TOPICS
by TERRY GRANT, R.Ph.
A man's hair grO\\~ a11proxi·
ma~ly five inchrs Jll'r yl'ar.
This is v•hal your ba1·1x>r de·
pends 011 ...
• • •
Louis Pastr ur suffert>d a
cerebral he morrhage \Vhich
almost destroyed hal f his
brain. Some of his g~a test
'A'&.'l done a fter t he hem or-
rhage
Jo.fare than ont' hundred ty!)(•s
of cancer have been classl·
fir.d by thl'ir location \\'ith·
1n the bodv a nd bv their BP·
pr.araiicC' ·undf'r ihl' n1icro·
SCO[X'.
Epitepsv docs not \vorscn
'''Ith a S;I'. T he seizurt-s may
f'ven lessen in freq ue ncy end
intensity es the individual
ages • , •
•
For modern service \\•ilh old·
fashioned courtt'.'Sy, bring
your prescriptions lo:
PAltK LIDO PHARMACY
UI Hosplt•I Ro.d
Newport •••ch M2·1510
F'" ~l•ery
By SYLVIA POR1'ER
How does your vacation
compar e ?
You work for a stingy
employer w ho is out of the
mainstream if workers in your
o rr1ce do not gel:
A PAID VACATION or one
week, or one day for each
month of e mployment. after a
mere six months on the job:
A couple of weeks off wiU1
pay after p year's service, at
least thre~ weeks orr a fter 5
years Dn the JOb and in·
creas ingly long vacations after
that.
Yo u work for a generous
feUow to whom y ou should of·
let Tender Loving Care if you
gel:
A THREE-WEEK vacation
after five years, a four .. week
va cation after 15 years, a tive-
week vacation after 20;
-A sabbatical leave, ex-
tended paJd vacation, if you
have a valid r ea son for one:
-The privilege of taking
your vacation m any form you
wish -one day at a time, a
week at a time, winter or
summer, etc.
Despite t'.:e fact that at
many companies, vacation
Lime is now anytime, most of.
fices (and factories too)
report t hat w1nter vacations
are not catching on, Even
among companies whic h en·
<.i>urage w i r. t er vacations.
workers still choos e to take
time off during the summer.
Even in the face of mounting •
evidenc e suggesting that the
off-season vacation is fre-
quently the m ost desirable,
Uiere are few takers.
TfflS BEING SO, a new
Prentice-Hall s.urvey of vaca·
lion pr actices is exceedingly
t1mely on this early June Jay.
I arrived at the charac-
terization of a stingy employer
by noting the fat percentages
of offices which told Prentice-
tlall that they do grant one
HUGE SAVINGS on
HI-Fl EQUIPMENT!
EVEN
NA TIO NALLY ADVERTISED
SYSTEMS & COMPONENTS
BEING CLOSED OUT!
LOWER PRICES ON DEMONSTRATOR UNITS!
I Watch for our Weekly Specials!
ORCO ELECTRONICS
CLOSED CIRCUIT TV SPECIALISTS
1677 Superior Ave. Costa Mesa
!On• block South of 17th St.)
646-4407
week off afler six months, two
weeks a fter a year, ete. (Any
<1ffioo which doesn't is below
average.) And J arrived a t the
characterir.ation or a generous
employer by noUna the minor
perceotages of offices which
grant as· much as three weeks
a fler five yeah;, four weeks
a fter 15 year s, etc. (Any office
whic h m a tches this schedule is
a bove average.)
The basic vacation trends
continue as they have been -
only more so. To put ii s uc-
cinctly:
-LONGER VACATIONS -
are being granted sooner.
O ver one-half of the policy
changes pinpointed by P ·H in·
volve lowering seniority re-
quir ements for longer vaca·
tions. The mast popular shifts:
a decrease from 20 to 15
years' service for four weeks
off; a decrease from 15 to 10
years' servic e for three weeks'
vacation.
-Maximum vacation time
is being increased. The mos !
frequently c1led increase: n
fifth week for \\'Orkerr. with 25
years' service.
OTHER INTERESTING
developments :
-Office vacation policies
still are far more liberal than
factory policies. Alter one
y ea r 's service, most office
11........,llll'l'f .. -... ~ ........ ,..._, •I a.,.~lmtl .. W t A.M, ff"lm NAS!I. s1o•>.) "''' , -w C-..,'!!', ~:11: 2"1/i 1
I t t k b t l'rk.. • ... lllfe rfl•ll ff _,...., !I'll,...... tr c•mmiHIOn. hft .... ._.. lev •• l'f'l:..SO --~~-·· ~~ ~Osl prOduclion workers are -Sf~~ ~1.iJA:J o:f~'·~ r4-\0 :~" ~.:' R ,iv. .t" RJ'1;.' 1,14 '"' -A-l:11~p1 ·ro
given Only OQe Week. After n 1 1tJ"I'~ B::.t-: I~ 1J.: MorllO\ ~ 16\lo (1 ~ c~/,J ~-· ~°'" m,f~f!·'r.1t ;J Hi n~ fa~=~ =~ f£~1iS 1Jve year&' service, three in 1r:"k'1t='1 ... noel. Or.w .fell 10 11 =:. ~ l~ l:~ Sci f:" i°i:l ilti ~fm.cf'1.~ IJ!7 ll~ ~l~ il*, -_ .. n r~:~I 1ff:
ten O{fjce& g~ve et'nployes~~ 1~'1~~: u~1~'g' ~l'l ==r1ubU1'1~1~~/'0'i 11 v,73 4<mtMlu~ ! J(., .SO-~ n «• I ~
three weeks while only one In 11111 -.c11111 irana.oo Du•l•on tt n N•n·• c 3-114 J5 k•I= A 1;~ 2:"" ~·~fm1 '.!! ~ J{lm • 1nr.!\lo l~ = \? • ~f l;· llOflJ bolt 1r1 r• E•rlll lhc 13 1)\0 NI Bt•lldt 51'1; S SNrk' Pf u 11'°" Ad(lrjlSJ 1 • .0· •1 lil ' • i~ ,,_ P of ~Ll factories match lhis for •-ltttvi ln!fr-~Ill ShC a 1~ Ntl EOU! il 70 5EOCO ~6U 11"" Atfm!ral '11 7111 17 1 -ol llAlll; l~ ~lier orlceu ff of~~· Lib V. 471/i Net "di>.I 31114 31\:o Sela (mp 35 )6 Atl~Lll I olO ~ll"' •lJ.7\.\ !!l't _.:..:,,~ ..,• r,.',,~, 0• production \70rkers. "'""°"'"'11••., 3 llgcto s11 2•14 " N1t ~ 1.wi l.f\jj 5.ecliJo.,.., ol6 4 "!uirr1 co ·~ ,. .. l>J!I., II Wll!c:ll tn.ew due SY• 12 131'1 Nol L l3 :U Se,..., UP M ,1 A r Prod 20b 10 .Q>,O -~ oil Ind _ Bonus weeks are out _ 11«ur11111 ocukl El Par.a Et u\~ lA:o N11 s... , 141'i i1 ..,,,D NO .so u A, Pd DI• 1s 14 1241'! ill l2• _, ~'' ''•. 111t hev• -PU•· El NII• U 'h 111'1 "''' Sii $¥ • tlli Siemens H n 13 AlrRect!n 1 so lt.0 1ra !oO ~ I'! 40b with onJy one of 158 companies ct>l!Hd Calkldl or El Nu(I 21 22 N11oC P 6'.'o 1 srenet 9\~ 1a14 AJ · 111C1u11rln 'J ,... 1!:'/! lht = \lo 111 1 lOld tbfdl. lnllr· EllDCICPY lJ 14 HEIHI Oe 7G ~~re ,. llJIJJ l2"'1 Alt Gh 1 :llf. 17\ii 11" -.... llGQ m a1ving employes a bonus wee k d<t•~r m1r11•i. Elt•cim•11 7\0 •Vt NI. NatG 1sv. 26\lo ~,, J8 13:\(o ui:. A l~rtoe ,:n ~"' •J'h .cllJJ _ ~• o,,~'" ,· • u a-an,. tl\rouol!o EIK Cao .... lf\.'J N d'il•n F 361/o le SCal w ! ""'"" AIClllAIU ,10 ,71 2'\(i 2t14 28\lo -IV. II• -a nd lat only after IS O<ll !ht 01~. PrlctS El t: SYI ''"' 1 N~~ A JSl'r 36V:i NE T~I '™' o~ Alleo Co .lOo 21 20 ll'loi 18\t -1\4 b n i.40 , · Thi oo nc1 lnc:lud<I EI Dell 12 1• Nltls B "'"' 3611> ~Un o l21' r,l'r .t.lll!!ILud 2 . .0 >t !l sov. so«. -"' l~J ,.0 years service. s once re111t mertuo, l!I Mlldul 9'h ~NorAm Aas 9\0 ioin •w e 1~~ lT'h l'h AllHPw 1.211 u '1"' n .• ,. omw 2 20
popula r Custom Or rewardl'ng m,,rkdown or oom· EmoS Oii 2(11;'; 1111. NC1r NG l l'lli n sw oa1CP 1, 161'> Alllide!\ I.JO 215 'h ~• 311.\i '!!.2.weo'o".-~ m!stlon. Enerw Cy 56 '9 NoEur OU Siio ~ S1><,.,.1 tG\'o 11 .t.p~~I~ ·"° 10 ~ nv• r"V. = t' ..,., II ou
employes at five-year in-M 1 CPro 171/) 1 • .,., ~"'C!nd':.' 1~~ 1l'"' ~Cl"~ p G 15'h 16V. s1d r.i .. 0111 29111 30111 :1•
1
p1A ·a .ll 37~ ~ ·~ _1" =~t"0=i
I h bee d ACll\<t El 1• 15 E c ~ 5\0 • 9~. JQ•,. ~Id ~tt•W Jl \'t 3J .. Sir 1'«1 !3 "° !'I omi.t terva s as n ma e ACfl\e v11e 391'1 ~1 e:~it.,Pau 1514 1~ ~w~ut>R~ ~~ n ~11nH Pct 251~ 21,... Al
1
..,s..., ·60 1 sim u 7 1 .:..:. u. M1t11 1
obsolete by generally m ore !i. ~P 7~111 1:,... ~·:e 1ree~ ll~ ~~ gf!for Art ls~ t:\. ~~:; f.:. 5m 51 ~~.t=2'~ i:u ~ ri;n -:iii Ofl.1.~ft' ,-=
llbe I C.1•10 ,. Al•brnF111 11""11'4~leCn 10 w~1 :n 31 ~uU<11Fa,13 lJV.Ai~·r.111 1!r t; 1l" n,,.=1"' ~ dls~ol • ra va n prac ices. Al~rh 13 13 F t<:D '"'. '"" 001 Se•~ Sol 56 s.z~ba Fd 11"1! 11~ Arna!SllQ 1.60 2 ~ ft"" 301* 011 pt s DfPLOYERS are starting Alea Std :Ill 31 F:~lrt~:'r '~"; nrmon!To •,,114. IJ T~ml>.I~ ,,~ 111 AMBAC "'° n ii tt\'t ··~ on JllC•,65 Aldon U\li 16V. FB " Ottt-r 0:. '°"" T•"ff:• l]V, 15V, Am«~ l.llO • 1;, v. ttl'l on Foods I Jo give part·time W-Orkers Alica Ld 20\1, 21<.1o ~~. ~·, ,", °"o' "'"c •,• >07lli ~~ T•Poen 1sv. 1•Yi Amer 3 in 1 11 in 11 .,,,, _ ... onFo Pl•.so . . . A!lell Bey JI(;, """ F I .... •lr .., • 1\11 111i> T1uene 15~ ,, .V.!rFI tr JO lS 3H'o XI\.\ l -... OtlFr.loh! 1 vacation benefits A hospital 1n Alle9 PeD '"' t•i> F!.!:r .':"'M-,• -~"" P0•b!il lire 77\\i 211J:i Ta~lor w n 7, Am A!rHn .IO n2 :u"" :U\.\ 3-4\~ -;\II ct1Nt1G 1 ,, . Alld Aero 6'1-i 6'-• "" " •• ..., ac Fir 19\0 ~ Te~ Am5ul f 12 Am Btk•r l •f lf\'t 11\~ lt\'. -'lo ~Pwr I 90 Maine g rants vacations to A.111ec1 f:q "'1014 F,",•""'c' ,•,\Ii ~v. Pak((! 10\~ 11 Tkerm Arr nv. nv. Ameac.1 1 60 l 1 651.4 4-11(, •·n• -1 "" w oil.SO . Alpn Gt>Q 1f 1(1 • OS P '"" P~ol l:J"', 1•\~ Tlff•nv 37 $7l:, Arn Can 2 7G 276 Sll'> im Sl'h -'11.i Otl!A!rL .50 Parthme employes who aver· Amid~ 1 10 ,F11Gen RE u 2a Pkwy 011 21·~ 2'1~ 1111n 1 uoi:. """ Ac1n 01 1.1s s 2~ 1" n 1't -v. ""' c1n 2:20 kAmOTaltl>~lJl/, ll Mloe »ii:» P.uffjyp 1)lo1''1t,Tllan t•'"'l~A1!Cem .'6 1?117 1 lW.-~ tCtn l1f4.2S age 20 hours or more per wee Am E1 Lib 10:\o ll'h F,", w'~' ,!, ~ p,.,, 1e 12 11v, Tr•ns c .1 6v, 6:w. "me""'•'-~ ,,' ,•,,~ ,'"'•• ,•,:,,\ _:. ~1, r,'c~-1111:g
t b · -.m E•or 67>a 61\(,, ' H 1F' 7., Pa Dl~L111 1'1• P4 Trilnt Gas 25'11! 1~'111 A rtcl I ,90 • 1\0 'II C I on a pro-ra a as1s. Am Furn 11v. 12 Flh:.i<l"ll 20\.':i ~,.,., P1 Enqln 11.4 1•~ Trind 011 8 9 AC2 S<la l.tO • JOl'o JO 30 -11/i er' cfAj',:0
' As a professiona l w ho Am Greet :itv. oov. F::t l,",', 2i..,, 2:h ~%,o,&w 1 '•'•"' ?nt Tref!d Ind 7•1!• zs11. !::;: f,~~111j·2l 11j ~:: ~ .. 10jS''< = ~ 1 c: :18 :.SO m Herl! 16'i'I 11 I 0 ' ., ,,.!' l j'I' Tr!co Pct ~ll~\? AO aJVI 1'19 " ni, 13~ 3''t -"• ~M!oe l.171 doesn't gel vacations and Am 1n11 o JS 37 F:r'Granc ~\"' ~\'t ~1Wl''7e'o ,",~ ,•, '1rld~lr is 1tv. A0~11 pt'1•a i?l 13.,_ 1l'!li 13,. _:;., OtllMot .l()o
h II I I · Am M'°I 11 IO F nn • Vo rooocn• 30'1. ll'h A EIPw "1 y ~9 33,0 Jl'• Jl'~ _ I'> nt 011 !.SD allows erse on y 1.v e " M inn• l&'h 19v, F~~":inc 1:~ 1~~ ~eD1 ,wa1h ''" e•n 11 lOll Fd 19 ;o ,.::: Ent• 1 M :io·, 30,, JOl• _ ,,. Cl)rl1 011 pt 2
h I'd f( I I A.m Pli>e 2l\:.. 2sv. ''' E c , er n nv. 12'11. Jnl!ec 1• 151 ·, •-'''' '"' •• ,,,, ,.. ,, ., coni sn 1 0 I ays 0 a year, ge a Am S1GQb , .... 8 F :, Aec fi~ fl,» Pelrlt St .16 41 UnAr1 Tl> ll') 31\~ AEi.:tnd D1A6 "" . .... -~·cl)llt Tel .6ll
I"°" I f Am S1 G i>t 11 lJ rn IV .,. Pelrolt 4 41 U11 Ocllar 761,) 281~ llOOO 7''; 7•1 i 7I''> + ~.Control Da1a perverse P ......,ure OU 0 .t.nd'l0t CD 16>..I 11v. FullYlaw IV• 9 PllRdg ol n 7' Un Ilium 3P\ ll"• I Oenlns 50 6S 1J>o 1l ll,,. _ ~ CnDa1 oil.SO 't' Ch COJUm • Jh'S Anllcuser 6• 6S Gartlnkl lJ'i'I 1111> Phil S~b 1S'I• 16 Un McGll 10'• 1n~ AGnln pfl eo ll J~>.;, JS'• JSi,,, ~ ,_. Conwod 1.8Da Wrl Ing SU ns as I · Anken CF w; 10\11 :r-• Svc lW. 16\.\ Pl!!ll~• GI Ulfl ll!'a Un Reio ll 'h lt AmH11lst 711 SI 17'o 17l'< 17\<i -l'i Cook Uni! .XI Incidentally can a ny of you "'-•Call N •71't o v. G DA!rd,t ~;'1 10, ... , .... ,' ',1nc: 1tl/) :n•ii us B•~ote ,,,~ 2S .. l-lome i •O e1, M~ 56 56\\1 Ccoperln 140 ' A•c• Ind 13 25 "I tu .,. "' t P 1 6 6'11< US C•own 1V. 8'~ A Home r>t 1 ..., 8l Sl -1'4 Cooo.r TR I beat the Chic ago newspaper ArdBn M n 11"'-Gr. O tblrt lV• ~\4 Plnkerin s1'h 59 us Enve1 n 2J,... Am H01o .n SQ l •Elt 11•;, ll"'--1•1o Copeland 1 7G . . Arden p!J>f 40 .o Klnetl(.& 4'\o , .... Porter HK lO :n US Sugar 5•1'1 56 AmlnV$1 1.10 ~1 10''< 19~• 101~ -l'r CDoP'1:oe .JOb publisher who gives one week Ark MoP 13v. l l'MI OR! e ,1 1ov. n v. Pro Go11 1~ 20vo u s TrkL ~J\'t ••I'> AmMFor 90 l•J vu. 21v. 'l'• Co>PW!S11 i.211
h k IV•-H 56 .... SI !fl 6 6~ "" MllYYlf. II •• Up PenP 7S'llo 16V. AMel c 1 f(I SS •no ~,,,. •1'n -~~ C0tlnTh8 ·~ after three ffiOAt S, tWO Wee S Arvld.a 21\1) 22 .... 10M•''o 37..\1• 31'4 P0rov Anal 6°" 71~ Via!\ S!\Ld I l :;lo Am Molor~ 1u 10 .. !Oli lOl>o -\'f CorGW 2.50.J
ft ' th th ks IU cc Bo! 28"< 29'11; I e I ~ .,,,. vbS NH 27"ti 211\1-Ulll Ind 37 :19 AmN.alGtl 2 u 31~ J7V. ,,., .. -1 C0tone!ln .2 a er Silt mon S, ree wee Auto Fire 29\'o XI lettn w 4"'A ~~ P"bs "M 26v, ~ a1 LDev lll'• j•'lli AmPhor .09o 60 l!"li 11'11t 12~1 -\~ Cowlcl .50
fl • 0 th (, Auto Sel 8 9' Gklber Rub 6 7 PS NCaro ls.ft l61'o Vance San 281'1 tYt ARnrch 1~ Al 19 117 1'10 +l V.Co~Sdcao ,50 a er a year · r e O.?a Av~ 10v, 10..., Gorfn'• 1314 1A'4 Publsl\rs 20 1ov. v woor1wa 21•,;. 11v. Am sear ·1 ' 21•1, 21 211,. + v. cPc 1M1 1.10
mail order firm which grants AVM CD l•V. lS'A Ora~ ~~, Ji •'•' •'"•"'""c 6 1 Wadd•H 11 76\'J 11 Am Shlo 60 JJ 21 2~ 26~0 -Crl!ne 1.60b Allee Oii 16~• 17 Gf"•,.., '""' ""' enn!ll S7V, 59 ltdw11! P n 2l A Smelt 1.90 1:18 ll\lt 35l~ 3S'i4 -•i. CrompKn 50 four weeks tQ all employes? e sbbnt 10¥. 11:v. fr..., Ml 17 17'11 Pur1fv tr 1' 11v. Rtltde 9'14 101-. AmSoArr ,70 1J1 S6'1i Sl 55 -'Iii Crouse111n lb Baird Al 16\'.o 17,,. rnfLd Ill 1&\'> 19 .... Pt>uo Cep I ~''> ersh 11 ll'~ Ul1. Am Sid I 110 J~o J7 31 -1 CtowCol 1.Slt 8~ker M 'JV. l•V. rlnMlf Ul lU Pvlnams 11 ll'h Waah NG 19~ 20 AmStO p!l.1~ 11 108\l:i 106V. \060J, -J Crow~ Cork Btl p1• ! 7 1'14 rove p.,. '9V. lCIV> f.lltd Dvnm 2J lS w11 1rm! 1o•f, n Am St..-!I .0 10 )!\.l Ji llV:i + ~l Crownc~ DI 1
California E1nployment
Ju1nps to Record Total
llPunJ :!;1 1v, 9v, Grwlh 11111 2n'I 25'h R1nsbg El :n JJ Wellb Re• 15 1514 A Svg1r l .60 4J 2# '11;. 19 CrwnZell 2 ,g B~rw!ctt 15 16 Guard Ch 1"' t Raychm 2•5 TSO elcltrh 15 16 All\Su! Pl .61 J 101/t io•, 10'• + ''t CrwnZcll wl flasln p IJ \lr l•" Gulde Ttft 2i. JV• Raymd Cp 30 J2 Welling M 'lt Jl Am T T 2 lO H'8 S. SJV> SJl'J -II> Crn l of•.:ro Ol!Yl~s lJ~ 14..4 Gulf ln1 t\I> ID.,, Recog Eq 511•.., 59'/t W•ll• Rth '' HY, Am Tcbat 1 131 JSSI JS 15 -,,, CTS Coro ·'"" 8ee<harn 3-11;, 35,,. Gyroctyne 101.11 111.r. Rtf. Mtge 26 21 Wsc.sl Pd 17 11i;~ AmWWll.s .Sc 16 11'11< 11 ll Cud1hv Co Rell• hie 17\/, 12~' Hllm C01c 19• no II:• Iii Cr ll 42 ... &tn NA 15\.\ 15~ A.WW5P! 1,2; I:IO 19''1< II''• .,,,. +H• (U(lhy oll.75 Bel Ind 1' 16 • Hef!d VOii 6 1 Rlk!V Slit 33 ll W•1n M!ge 11"1. 121'1 AW i>r•f 1.15 JSOCI 17"-11"-11~ Cullll!~n 71 Bel~ R ll ll\io H•nover S 21 JO Ro~aw E ~ 1Hlo 25~• N Publlsn 13'~ 7••.; AW • lpf 1.•3 iSO 23!1> 21~'> 23'h -II> Cummln .80tl Ber"" H lS Jt H1wn Ind •'t. ·~ Rot>bln M 31 3.1 W!!n S•!e' 1 IV. ""' Arneitk . .0 l6 16%, 261 o 241 • -~. Cu~nDrug .70 Belt l tt S6Yt SIV. Hllh N!Gt 70 71 ROl81on IS 16 Wng W~1$ lJ 17\lr Aml!Klnt 90 76 39 lllOo 38\li ., CurHS< Wrt I Blllupo •w to 10YJ H•nrt<ln F 21'11 lOl't Roy Colle t~ 10 WinnbftllO 36V. J7\lo A.MK Co .la 119 ~ ~ lei\.-+ ,. Crut Wr A 7 H!ll!lvn 17 .... 11\11 Ru.s StctV Joi"" 37"4 in•I T ,..., s A.MP lt>e .~ 61 .U ,3,,, lJ\• -~. Cu!lor H 110 :l:fa.~ ~''4 ~ .... Holm EP 62 66 Ryen Hm$ 18'4 79'4 Wist PL 21h 13V• Ampe~ Corp Bl ~Pl •O'M ll -'h Cvclo"" Lia
O ~' > er 27 27\lr $SI Comp 2•'1t 2$V, ldW En 1~1o 1~ Am•ltcl 2.•0 11 lUo 41 l1'• -'h CYPruoM 1 o111 0~ ~1~ 5~ I~ HOvs1 Filo J"" ~"' Sa<lller 10"' 11 '4 Nyando! 7711, 23U Amtel .32 1• 21 2n1 71''4 -~•
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
Employment in California
reached a n all-time record last
month, the State Department
o( Employment r eported.
while unemployment rea ched
its lowest May level since
1959.
Civilian employment 1n May
reached a record 7 ,955,000, up
by 112,000 over April. The
figure represented a climb of
265,000. or 3.4 percent. over
M ay 1968.
Unemployment t o t a I e d
327,000. Director or Employ·
m ent Gilbert L. Sheffield said
lhe figure represented a drop
o f 20.000 under 1968 and !he
lo\vest in 10 y ears.
Sea s o n al l y ad j ust ed
unemployment stood at 4.2
Brahan1s Picked
percent. the same as April but Bon"°1JerN 1•1f· 15 ~~~Bav li ~~ scantli" El ' 91.\iYird E1ec 614 6~ ~g:~~:~2.5~ 7%i !~'"' :g;: !/1:, +iU Dan Riv ,'·,',' . 80D!he c: J7t.r. 31~ Hud pp " ~ ,, ,... Ancor11NSv I 9 ll'h 32~• J2i'I -I'll Dan~ Cp down slig htly from the May 601 Cacu 31 Jt Huoat G•• 15'i> 16'1> · ·~ .,-A.nd Cl•y 1.20 • 37'4 l7 37 -\• oari Ind 30t> Bowaler 51/o 6\lo Hurl! p 111'1121/o ADac~tCo 20 7' 21:i. 26'.~ '1\~ .. oer1 Ind pf 2 1968 rate of 4 6 percent Brkw~~ o n 13 Hyan 31 JP.~ A.t>CoOil 1 •7t :IDI! lO'-lf"1. Jt'I -..,, a avcocp 1 6jl
· · Brown Ar Jl~ 311'1 Ind G&W ?G•• 11 MUTUAL AQva Chem 0n1 ,?, .. , H'• 1;tt~_·, -+ ~h DtYlnPL i.r.o Th n-l I f E I Bru"" Ber Jl'.• J? o-• " 0 .,..;~ ''" ARA Svc 8l ~ ~ .,. DPL --~' '' e ~par men 0 mp DY· 8vckt ve 151,-, 16V:. 0;.~.:_",.c "o•c ,0f Arc~Dln 1,60 1 S:2'1 52'~ 51'~ +,,., '" · El 1 '"U'"'-" ., A l1 Pub5 c I so 1l1> :ll'• 21•. -1'11< Deere 0 2 1nent said a JJ major indus tries "~~~:.,. sF ,7~ ~~ 11~,",',",, .~~~ ,!.~ A~i.ns o? .70 66 351') 14,, J.!V, _ \, 0t1Pwt.1 1 oa •• ., u ' A. mcoST) 211 46 61 '• 601> 601'> -''• Oc!Mn1e l 10 took part in the rise in l!1 w11sv ?: ~""Intl! svs ll~ i.·~ A~mccsu wl 32 Jl' .. JO'> 31 _ '• De1taA.1r . ..o
I ' h b h r mca ntrmk n o,;, ll',, FUNDS Arm<>Ur I 6(1 1J 53 51 l,,., -IV. Del!et Int emp oyment, Wit a out al ,cnn1111n M0 ',', ',', 1n1E1k ws11 lo•,-, 11 \<'/ Armr pl l.75 1 661; M'< u•, +~.Denn M19 ,60
r th d · f innon tnl Mlll 16~• 11~• Arm•tC~ n 10 25 lt'llo 31 la'"' -\'> Dtnnylh! Ol O e a vance coming rom canrad M~ 1 !nt Nclr 15"" •~~ ArmCk orl rs 1190 59 53 59 +1 on1sp1~ 1.:ro~ . It h d Cap ln!A 10'llt n~• Int Svs 21\1:1 29 ArmRv~ 1 60 65 "'i .U~I u .. -~ OenRGr 1.10
agricthu uhrcl, dw 'it'·' t'g o o d E:~u T~~ 2~r: 'J," tin: ~ ... Df Ir" i:v· t~ ... ~·e1ncor~ ""r J #.i! ~j,~ ~"• :· .:~ g:~1~ e90 wea er e pc CU 1va 1ng an C1r1, 81 10 10'-" ~tcdai>e n 21 "~hid 011 1.20 '91 •1v, .u~. "l.._ -2 oetEt11s 1 40 harves ting cari•r GP 14'~ l6\'o ionics inc: 11 ll J11ne 11 !ny lndlc 16.31 16.lll A.~dl Brew 30 13 12:i,o 111' -y, oer Eu r>tS so · Ca~ NGIH llh U la ScVlll J(I JO'h NEW YORK (APl lnVH Bo' 12,66 ll,M A»d !Xi l 20 • 4 1/r "811 l8~~ .. I Del SI~! 'a.o Con VIPS n"r. n>; Jtbt FL 61/> 1 -Tl\f following 'IVG-lnvesl Grouo: AJ<ISOQ 1.?Db 2 J,li,, :M'f? l-4'h -,, De~1er n 26 C<tntre~ J~'< Jn·, Jac<1uln c 13"1. lA'h 1a110~" •VPrllt<I by 10s ndl s 11 5.98 AsMIT•an .•O 11 lS!o lS'> u•.~ -~ Dialflnan' 10 r~art 011 13',., H Jam Wal 1$1~ 1614 th<! NallaNO Ali.otl· Mui 10,91 11.85 A5'sitlnv 1.40 ,10 :n:, 1»0~,' 1»0:·! = ~: Oiamll!ll 1:eo C~m Learn 11'4 19"• JllmosbY 13 l~Y, ~lion ol Stturltl11$ Pr"" s oo s" AllCTvEI 1 JO n... ·• OlaS!\ilm 1 • ~~tmold S''t S'liiJ"oens l7'}J l!\l 0e.tle•r, Int .. er., Siad< ,l ,J.123.19 AICltvEI ti!• ~:;o 66'• 661, 66"•-''• Che• UUI 18 19 JOO>< ''' o o ooo orlte• at wMlll Stilt'<! 9 11 9 la All llkn 1.10 Ola 12l l?O'h 117 -1 ~> D•eSll pr (2
'
v p I t.O 9 l! At1Rcn plJ 15 ll211 60 S9 '° .. >, D•ilS pf 01 )0 Chi 8r&I 80 "1 Ktlttr St 66:\!o 61:\io lhtSt secutll t • ar a• · · Rici! I l 23 200 :10• :IOS -<l'Jt D•Cl&chcn .. •8 Ckrl1t s 12l 117 Kais • DI :101 11 tO>Jld h&Vf bf<'n Inv Rt'h • '>] s J9 "\R l!.l IO 121 80 19 n •,. -,,, Olet>o!d .41b C~rat pl 9a 103 J(alv:r 111'192 •cld lbldl or bou!IM :11~:1 J~-~ fJ ~ ~:!asc~~~m I 1s1 211, 21•• 21•:. _ ~ OiGlcr~io .ao CIM0111 B'~ 9•'•Kt~rn&T 721~n dar. I i" 102210'2A!lts Coro 311 6'• 6•o 6'•-'•0<lllngt,m .:il.i (lllr U!A ?I" U•.., l(el!f!! S\1 8"' ~ :l ;•,111 J~~tee Q ~I 9 .q Aurore Pia• 1' !&>:. 16' 1 1611 + \'f Oiling ~I A 2
Air Cal I-las
Hec ord Month
','.~l:k,V~~ n,~i50l~:.~:~~or.,k ~.,.~~>''" ;~,f•,',e"£ l~~·~~1jt.ln~~~k 1fg~J:~~~~:~kCI~ 11~~ I~ 1~~: 1r• lr~=::g:~~~f1~·~ .1:0 .Ai~ Ca lifornia surpassed all Cl~ Q~ch 101l 11,,; ic:~:,• CV~ 39"" .io" Aiutre 17.011io1 l(ey•1one Funds A~~g ofJ.20··~ 12r: z:;~ 7 '; lJ·~ =l"• 81;ri:ao~2a pi CVIOUS passenger records cltnton D ~l'i J••1, Kivs• pc 9"" icv, Alt Amer 1 Dli 1.16 Cu• Bl 191-'n' ~.e,; Avoe1 Ill( •D 715 16 S'.4 1H~ -•1 orPeoi>er · so d M b · "l426 Clow 7l~2!'1>K1ng El 9 10 .t.IPha 1'44\311 Cu1 e1 7 .... 6Avr>e! onso•.--"c:1"" 11'~ l8\ll -8'h 0omeM!n 'to p~~~ge:: furcar;y1~t~I ' of ~~111~·~1 n13;..., ~:~ ~/;-:'~~ P•1;J. n ..... ~:;:c'~· 1~:;~1~?I ~~~ ~1 :·n l!:i) A•llf1 Pd i ~e:::: 151'1• !S9\~ -.,. 8:'.ie?ie~ o:~
CcQn St• Ui'lo 11'1. K11ep V09l 32 ll'1' Am Divin n · Cu• Sl 2i"a9 1la.3 1_ ~ _,, _,, 1 Derr Ollver 25.498.400 revenue passenger Come•! 71 29 Kor• 16 l6''< A E• '"' 10 Cu• 51 11 11 12•15 811>ck, 0 ,•,,' •, ,. .., ,, • •'ii" -:i: Dover Cp ,6, 'l Dud! F M'(J · Cml AtDI 9 10 LMC Oat ll'l 6'~ Am Gr!ll 1 39 I .Ill c Sl I 96 9·11 On r .6 62 27l'o n 1\ ·• -OcwChm 2 60 ml es, ey • 1 e r, vice com c1e1r ..O\lt "2 Lint• JJ ll'I. Am In• •.ts 9&.I c~~ S• 6 •s 7·°"' Bance l,1n 59 3111. :n~. ll . DravoCp 1...0 '" ( k ,. Com Intl IV. l "io L~nda In S'o ~'!• Am Mui 10 ll 11 01 p I I ~·lS 5'75 B•!G of8l,'IO JllO e.8" t.aq 61 .. -~ DreHlnd 1."'1 presruent o mar e mg, an-Com G~• 1s 15v, an• w11 i•11. 2•~· Am NGw J:.s 1·11 Kni~~ s 1·111 186 Ban0Pun1 .i.o 1'1 ~~ ~~ ~,; -;:; Drenr on.111 nouncedtoday Comw T!t 21V•7l1/>Lars Ind )1 11 Anc!\orGrouc. Knlcll"'Glh1!9i 130!l8nn~P ot l.75 11 69 t.!'1> 69 +V>Dres,_ Pf B} · Comp A •'I• •'ti eh Coal 6'1~ I"• C~P 951\10.SOL~•lnO! 10''611"11 :ftnbOT{12j~1 30 n /Sl'• IS'• 2, Dre-;1u•Co H> The May 1969 f i g U re (mp Com '.U 36 Leisure 0 30 l:2 Grwth 13.S• l•.I• L~• Rstll u :J1 11,83 .. ~rd CR · ?S JS Sl ltlo 51,~ Sl'!lo '.:. J, 00o0~",,',• ,•,.~ • ' Cmofr lf!d 15 11 evln Tn 11 ll Inv 9 4 10 3'I Llb•r'v 6 &S 7 '9 .,..r ' Laguna Beach re s iden t rcpresentedanincrease of5.17 Cmo Mth 6 7V>L,w!i BF 11'1<il9~l Fd 1nv lo.s111 .saLnei1K sn 5·10 Be51c ~.-~. 1 11•, 17" 11'-,+'•du 0111 1X111 ' Cmp1r Tell 21 'h tl'h Lib E~ul! 18'h 191,') Alo.otli!CI \,"8 l 62 Lii I I l! 8 OJ Baoi< ,., rlO •1« l1 ~2>.;. + 'h OuPcn! Pl~ 50 Richard A. Brahams has been percent -over May, 1968. The Conulomr ' '"' Llllv 7t , 80 A,1,cn ?J 86 26 oa Lon~ n• 195 1·69 2~10•0• 0('.:"]Q 5 17'• 12'• 121. -... duPoni pfJ ~ ' d h Con Rock. ]I Jl LcOll!W 6• .. ,,, AY• MQOqnton· Loomis SaYI•• Fo.. ..... .... 61 s1•,. 'Ill S6 -!'h D~Q LT l 66 assigned SS m a nager of previous recor m ont V.'ascon Comp ,,,,,u~'<Lcfl candy 7''1 •'• Fund" 111 e.•o Canid l011 1e1 1iB•"",'•"'•""•'• ll:la 113 !33 -2 ,aq l 10on10 S ·r N · I A t 1968 I 70326 contr~fd 9~. 9'oLo;o Etr 1~~~~v, FunllB 91310'>1! CaQlt ll~l l?6' ~~• u 19 os 6J'<·llJ'•-l'•Oq •,1$Pl1,0I e curity Paci JC a l 1 0 n a ugus . . w ien • Contr~n 6'> 11~ Lvncti c :t2 ll'h s1oc-1.is 1 ll Mu! 1f~7 u'•2 ~a~l•xLc""n ·~ ;~ ;~:: ;~:~ ;t:J :_ ~ ,':!.,',''°,,','-',' Bank., L' ol a d v 11 ' I a ell d A. Coon~r L 19\'o 10'" Mact GI E ll 1J1\ 5cf (p ~.J2 ~ a1 \lo••rn ',. ··"' avu .• g ~~ inc n n a ey p<1s.seng~rs r v c on lr c•awtoro 12'1'lJ''•M•9tc Ch l4Y.l5',"sall!on 8.9• B94Miss Fndll .'1ll,le6eM•n~· 1 s •1 •. •l '• •1 1. DQ 1.nPt1s1 j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~V;J~e~w~b~r~a~n~c~h~m;;B~u~c~o~a~P~a~r~k~. ==~C~a~J~,r~o~r~n~t~a~=========.,Jc'a~' co 1i1, J5'h Mal R itv
11
Yi n BO!"'!Jltt 1.61 all M~ .. c1h 11 31 ll l5 ie:: ~g· ~r •
71! 1~~ 1~n: 1~fi! =1~: g~;:i.0 i~ ·SZ6 • Cru!ch Re, 18\\ IBV. MJlnckt S? Jl 8osl Silt 10 S2 11 ,XI M~~· Tr l5°9l 17 '1 e~\i;mo~ SO 93 jl'o 503, Sl \J _ •• Cvpre• C 1.~,., \61 > M~ngm As 6'1i '"' Bo1ton B 80 9 62 M"l!"I 1 9(1 1 9!.l Bee! Oit k JO 31 •9'• '11''• l8' 1 -l•t D~nlPI In 1t'• 21~< Maf'!llv r 1S'4 16\'o Broe<! ~I lS,Ol l6.2l MMh~'' 11'10 ll0 IO ll~c~ Air 15 SI 76\> 70 26'.r. -, 1 EllglePch .to
t
Just this once, don't
hire your nephew.
This w.mn1cr, there are a Joi o f k ids wl10 will need the job
mOre than he does. Like thi~ boy. And not for just the n1oney -
though he can sure use it.
Me needs the job for :ill 1he ihings 1liat conic with earn in;;
a day's wages. Tbing5 J1ke pride, self-respect, self .. confidencc.
And mos1 importan t. what conics with kno\ving son1cbody
t rusts him for a change,
Right now al! he neeJs is a su1nn1cr job -~11ncth1 ng !o
carry h 1n1 1hrough u ntil school st:irls in the fall. And ll's
important he f ind one. lrnportant, that is, if he's going 10
be able to return to school. The summe r j ob could nlran the
Jifferencc -it could kr cp hi1n in ~hool.
tie's one of 1he young people the sociulogisls label
''disadvantaged." T hey don't look any different than your
own kids. In fact, you probably couldn't tell them fron1
!he kid s on your own st reel. T hey d on 't \Vear a label.
It niay surprise you , but I here are a lot of 1hc111 in
Orange Coun1y. Sonic have J1:id p1evi-Ous \vork expericni.:e,
others have not. But they all wan t to \\'otk. They Jll\l
don'I know whe1t {o look.
They have 110 u11clcs :o i11ake jobs for thc111, nu 1nll1Jen ·
lial rel;ilives, no f rrends arnung lhe hi!'-her·ups. They h~ve
uo connec tions -unless it·s you. · '
P.los1 or lhCl\l don·1 have much i.:ot1f1dr11ce, ei1hr r, A11J
that's the v .. orst p1rl nf all. 1 heir onl~· qual1fu:ation~: l\\'•l
h;inds. two legs. strong backs, 111indi lhat .,:311 ~li1nk, sr.1111ii~·hs
10 feed. feehngs to consider. J usi like. your nrµht\\'.
And like your nrphew. !OO, they're going to be 3ro und
for a Jo ng tin1e.
So.is thc1e a ca1chtoallth1s'! Youbel, 1 1':.y~iu -;ind
tlle summer job you can give one uf these kiJs.
You've read lh1s far, so you'1e prubalJly inlc1cslcd. \\'hy
not go lhc res1 o f tht. w:iy and pick up lhe phone. Di3l
632.JOBS. We've tried to make ii ra.)y,
Nationa I Alliance
of Businessmen
,10111
Orange County Metro
1193 North Miller Street •Anaheim, California 92803
r ~"
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•
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" . ',,. .... :··
"
OanlV Mc!\ IS"' 161.11 M M8nlrig 7'fl I Bullock 15 IS 11.36 McOon io:ss 11:S6 Seecll CMo;. 2 110 Jl Jl ll -'h El•cO Co 90 0•1' Dsgn 10 . 11 M Browrr <113..., •2 C:G Fd 10.20 11,01 Mid"'-Mui 7.17 111 B~lcc Pet 50 68 Jn< JO'~ lO\~ -1 e851 Air ~ Davll Fd ll••U•I Md ShlpD JI Jllllcana<l,an l9,S411.1lMoodvCP16181166BeldHem ·,o is 25'') 25'• 15'1+'/•E&•IGF 1H1 Oay M!t 2l l l M1ytr 0 llllo l•Yt Ca~I 10< Una u •ll Mocdv'> liS! IS016 Bell How • 60 •9 76'h 7S''t IS\.> -1 Ea>t Utll 1 o11.1 Otcor Ind !1 17'4 McQ\/ay l<l'h l!'h Ceoll $hr 7,52 8 1• Morion• F un~.: · Bel! !n1ercOn •1 11 1~ 11\'o 11•1 -'~ Ea•t Kocta~ 1 !HlitllCf I lOV. 11 Mell!( H :19 31 Cent $hr 11.26 12 JI GrW1~ n r,:s 11.9'1 Bemis 10 l 76 l~ :M ... l•.\\ ->, EatonYa l lO Oelu•e Cl! "'" •9'4 Mect!•onc JJV> l5 Channing Fund.: tncom • ..... A.19 BtnOI~ .,0 !O •l l2 •2>,c; -''• Ebesco Ind ~ 01lhl APe! 9\1 9'4 Melpar 1-..:. 9'h Ba!tn 12951'.15 Insur 831 911 Beml•~ "'J ll 71 lil''t 11 +''l<EcM•nMf .n Dd C•nT 1' 18 MIOld C8P ll'h l•V. Com Siil 1.90 2.M MIF FO 19'.o;.i 71.11 Bene!Fin I 60 91 ~5''o ~, .. •l~~ -I"• Ec~e<ctOq 18 Ott lntOt 131~2• Mldle• 6'\I 6 ... Orw!h 7.71 7,llll MIF Glh 619 669 Ele~flF pflSO 1!00 61'h 61 1'1 61•,,->,(, EtktrCIDq wl 0~10 "'-m 1•'1> I S'~ Mldws! GT 2Si.:. 26'.4 lt>ecm 8 :JO 9.07 Mu OmG!ti 5"37 6:os BenllF ell JO 12 7'>:.. 7' U -1 Edls011Bra1 1 O•wey El ll'n 111: Miit ROY 13\1> 2•'h Si>ecl~I J,JS 3.66 mu Omln 10.191!.'l'l BenF SP!2.S0 !IO J.6 Js-. J6 +'I EG!.G !O Dl~m Crv 79 19•. Mol• Ge' ll Jl\4 Ch"!.e Groun: Mvl S~r5 'O '1 :ro •1 Benouor 15'0 2&"11 17''4 77\'.4 -'·• EtMu.,c· Q9<o Di•C llV.. !11~ Miss ValG 19V. 20 Fund U 18 H 08 Mu1 Tru•t 7 77 7.83 Ben1uor tn 7H 11'> 26'1 27 EIM~s !11'09\:I
Buildit1g
Pace Jumps
li1 Marcl1
Front 10~l•ll0,1i NEA Mui 11 :..011,63 B~r Pl\Q 111 9l iJ'~ 21 231\ +'•Elect A>.loc Shrhld 1),10 lA Ji N~1 WSoc 10.~7 11,17 Berrnec CQrD lll lno ll'o \]I, -'• Eletl SPK Chem1c~1 18 39 :!C.10 \IA< Ina 11.1112 11 Be1h SH 1.8G no l<I~ l• J•"" -I~ EtglnN~t 1"<1 Colonl~I· N~t ln~~·l 1.01 1.n 6HM Ind WI 31 2''" ?Jl(o jl'> -"'EI P<lNG I Equllr ~.n S.16 Nal .Src Spr Ellq Th•ef l>O 2l •ll• •!l'o O>o ->. Eltra CP 1.?0 Fund n a.1 H,O• es1an ii 1• 11,ll Blac~Ok 1.20 19 61•• 61\• 62"• -'i Em~r Elec • Grw!h 1.1'.16 1 n Bord } &Q 6 lA Bills Lauq 1 d 16 1• 16 +7'"' EmE! pf 8 90 v,n1 7 11 8.u 01v.d , as s.lO Blu~ Ben 1.so 11 61'<, 61 61 -11> Em~rvAi• ro Ccmmerc 11 'cl IJ &7 pr so~ 1 •9 l .l'i 8obt>le Br~• lll 19>1 lB"t 18'• ->a Emh~rt I 70J Com$! Bd S ?S S.71 lncom 5.83 6.17 Blll!ll>CI 1.ZC IMS U~> •3'-" •l'lo -'• EmPO>•I 1 6'l Commanwlt~ Fd< .Sloe~ ~.'l11 10 1 • BolsC•• .2~t> l1S 10' > M>• • 6Qh -'1 EndJohn ilP C~D FCI I0,6J 11 .61 Grwm Q.10 1060 Boni_ 51r1s..,,l ll 213:. 21"• '111''> + ,., EndJohn P1 ~
lr>t· N~I l'.e•I 6 6l 125 Bor""w" ·,· ,, 108 31'• JPo Jl:I\ -'~ EnqlhM•11 •o oml06011~ N 1~ '.1&l~26 u Borq ar . 2115 311~• 29'~ 79>:.-'•EngM pfl 15 lnvi.<I '10.111111 N~~w~~g 10:..itll• ~g;~~?fi·~ H 23'1 1l'• 2J'it Enn•sElus 6' STock 10,'7 ll.U NPw Hor 28 30 71 :IO Bourns Ill( ~~ n:: ni; ~~; = ~~ EQutGos 7.10 Cwltn A.0.8 1 69 I Bl New Wld ll •9 15.M BranUAlr 511 Bl lS'~ lS'o H '• ~~:ul~~c .:1i/O Cwlth C&Dl'IO 2.DS N•wlcn 15a517,D&rl<>0$! 241lll 7 51 ~lt 51 ..,.,, Como A• 11.5l 19.J6 Nore~\1 16 68 16 68 Brlst Mv 1,'lO 191 63 67 01 -l>\ EssPxln• I 70 Caml>l!I f 6110,50ocngoh 9161001 8rlllM• 1:1!7 12 •1 ll '~ •l''.4 v,E•nv+ Co 11 r.omo e11 9.91110 es Omto~ 181 l.9l Bdwv Hile 1 78 •1>11 •l'• •l'• =1...., ~~~~\~gn ?/!. Ccmo Fd 10,S? 11 16 100 Fd 16 U 17.6• 6W-.H~ pf A? J: ~ ~~ ~><. .:_ i,~ Furold tn 1na
Ca I i r o r n 1 a construction ~::',~~ ,~·~~ 1t.fi b°~~F~~s :::!~ l!:~ ~~~r,:',,uGc01 .1< 3 1~ u u, _ .. , f~!~~~~,060b
Valua ll·on rose 55 percent from cons !nY 11 is 1 J 50 O'N~il 11 oo 11 09 Brown Co nr ' 19' • 1g•• 11'• -.. exceiia 1 21 Consm Inv S 65 6 11 Oppenhm 8 39 9.17 Bw~ Sk1tp I S 21)>~> ,','' , ... ,.~ , i.:; f'~IM!•oe w'1 'JJ · M h J $606 Co..-D Ld 16.1911.76 Penn S<1 e 1• 1.U BwnShoe LSO lQ 4 ; .,. ,.. f"ftctorA 17 $.)9() ITIL IOn ltl a r c 0 Cn!rvCaP lln159lpeMu! lOCJ 10.0J6runt.N~ 05o 387 2 1'> 21 ' .. 1'1\ .. -1? · ' . . . . Crown w l !I 1.60 P~1'e 111; 16 60 8ucvi::r l 711 'I ll\'• 21'• 2l» .<. fll ~a;rc~C 1111\i" rnllhon HI April. according to a crnw 1n u.H i..oe Pll!lrim io1s n .10 Budd 'c' -~, 1 11 n 21•. 11'• F:1~;,pn1 er . . . . . deVeg~ M 12 6172 61 Pllol 816 t.1' 8udd 0 p t?~O 73 17''t n''> + ""'F•!s••ll .0 bu1ld1ng permit a ct1 v1ty report Oec..a• !r.t 1111 1• ss Pine ~1 n ~l H.ll Budg F o!.60 J 1•1 iv. a·~ -'\Fam FJn 1 :)I) Dtl~w•re 1 •60 1 5~plqni!et lll71!608Ud'f:e'ln ,6' l~ ~~~( 11 11"'-+ '•Fanl!eel Inc
published 1nonthly by Secur ity 81~1~ s1ti'r r :l ::tt ~~~~e 1f'~ ~~.tt l:·~g ~~~ .. ~·9.aJ-10 .. Sll.I. :u.~ ~I' =1it ~~~a~t.', ~A'Jb
P ·r · N !' IB k DowTh In 71S 781p,0 106•106lBunll Remo ??I 12•'0 12'• 11v.-1,,.F'l'tlcte'1 ;o aci lC a iona an . ore~•I o J! 11.Jl Pravlctn• 5 •< s'.t'I Runk II pfl.!Q 76 l'I'~ 37''• 111,, -:•. FedMoa 1 tO
I l f lh DreYIVI U.ln 1501 Purlt~n 11.ll U16 Elurl Ind 1 M:l !1 39\/t 3&>• J!"'-->.. FedPac !Eec A 1 sec ors 0 e can· E8!Qn&Mow~rd· P1<!nam F~nao; 6urndY ,10 • JI'~ JI'.~ Jl " -"'F P1tc oil 16 , · · d B~I•" 11 ,361'.•1 EQull 11161l69Burrgns .60 161117'1115'•12J\.-1'"F'l't1PtnF\(l 1 struction indus try participate Grwlh lJ.DI H Y' Georo 1•'.66 16Jl2 8s~unv 1,111 1l 211, 11v. 2J'tt -~• FedSlonS .MJ lncom 6.61 11~ Grth 11.1911"9 Bu11e .. Sk .eo :ro JI 16 J6 -1\,, l'edOStt •s
in g ains throughout most of s ... er1~1 lJ l7 H .61 1rn:""' A,91 9 ,, -C-~~,~~" n1.i0 Sloe;~ 1516 17.nl 1"""'1 1.06 l,lS Sl ll''o D'• lJ'o ,~F•t>ret>r~ ,10
Ca!iforn1<1. ~~~;1 1 :.!~ liJ~ ~~V!g 1:·a l~ i~ ~:f"'~1;:n1·"° •'•'• u:", !,,~. ~'.· ++ ~~ ~ifi: .. ~1"; l 1e1
R 'd " ( t 1· $375 l'm~ra Sc t :>1 10 U ReP ·rotn ! M 6 'll C•lla~M 7ll ,,. " ""• •I' n ~.d~r~!n esi entl.'1 cons rue ion en,,raY u .111•'.11 R•~•rP ll.70 16:01 camPRL . .sa JO .:IA'• 31'• Jl'• -'' F1r~•tnt 1 i.o • • o.o t f · l'n!n•l•e ~1110.61 lo"nl~I 91S1DnC~mpSp l.10 SI 32\'o J!lo 31'•-4•,.,,C~r1 1NI! n1il hon, up ll"f percen iom e.,u11v lo.J?l1.1l>c11usl•r 166611.:21 CctnBrew . .o 36010 I~''" 9'' ,'j:~+,j:.FstNC:v 11Gc , , . M h !'cull r,1h !8,ll l'0.50 scud~t• Fund• Cdn P6C J 1G '~ ~l\'3 v, -• F'tNStr ,50n $229 mllhon Ill llrC <IC-E•I~~ 16,66 lni Inv una.val1 !an r,•,o 0o•0} i '" "' ~ F1irM>eh 160
f r U · Fv~••I In •~:Ill 17 II Snee I 3'1 ll 3'1 Bl In• . u ,.. .., Fl'"'rStl 16 counted or mos t o 1e ltl· E~pla• 76.6&)8.Ja 0~, 1s •1 H"1 ""c Bdt>I 116 lM• JA :14 -""F1•mlno ,.w
d
'
'b t d Falrk! 11111'311 C:DmSt 11.1&11.11 ~·t>•un llO l• l!·, ~a·, d'~-!•Fnnrko!r -• crease. an CO n r I , U e frm BMv n .1111.711 set Div 13 oe H.1s c•,•,•,i.l§&o•• 1 lto :l• 21·~ j', + , ., Fli"t o A•.541
I l c. ,1511 13 s1C c 1110 11•1 11 -'Fl• E ca~it sianiricanllv to parUcu ar y Ff'<! ·•1k 1•.s sec Equit ' • ~aroPL1 1 •7 ll ~.'1 36'• loll'> + ~ ... 11 r;1, . .io ~ , h 0 Sou h fi~ ;,an n '1113 6• SK Inv l.:tO f,01 •n;tlc~ I 60 lll ..., • l5 150.. -'" I'!~ P~w l 51 strong gafns int e I t e rn ..,_ w..a 17.rua.n Sal« Am 10.61 t •50 a,,1erco .~ Jl ll'-:14'• ~~ -:;· FIBPwL1 118 , , I d b 1 ~ Flt! Trnd U 62 19.09 Sel SPl'cS 11.11 11.17 Car1erW oll.I• l&I '••'!~ 22'• ,.~. -, "'" St~I 90 Ca lifornia counties. e Y uvS F i~~nclet P•i)P•m· s~ De•n ~s.10 25 10 caie JI · 61, ,, •• ,"," •,•,i. -'"'•· Fh.1orCP 7 ~Jf
0 d S, 0Ynm l,~llO'IS<d~ 10.9611%(:1~p1 Al •• Angeles. r a nge an .111 ind"" s ft1 S.SI! SiQrnt 11 ~111 S4 C••1l~Cke 'oo 90 Jj ff'' n i. =,;Fluor al BJ
D. !"com l ,6l 8 3e Sig tnv ll .62 ll.69 Cslfrlr 1,:Xi ?&6 !)11 •, ~,1, '•Fly Tl~cr 10 1ego. Vtnl 9,()S 9,91 smll~ B l0,111a.11 ~Cl M•rDdt 6l jlJ-i. \o ~1'1 =••FMC Ca e5
Adv ances were stronger in ~::Fn G~~ 9.~~~~1; ~v~rnvl~~~ 1~: /g·~ ,1t'~i!to ~ 1~~ ,,0 ~:l .~." ~1)! ~=;:J~'59:o
tnuJt;ple-unil dwe llings than ill au J ssu StFrm G1~ s.B.S 5.as ~•l•n o!A• ~ 2 ~
Mid 1n~(<~tln<1 k11 Sl~te St 161.50 }1,SO (9f'IC1 In~ ,30 ~ j~~: ~~:~ ~:~~I \~ ~::1~ ::\~"2<1
s lngle family .home ~. ~:l ~~1~, 1~~l:·1.Jsir~""::i~1·~11.wc:~'H~ i~ s 2t>. 11 11 -•1 FordM01 11e1
Statewide single-unit permits Fst Nit 1 °" 111 Flout 1.10 1.15 ,.., t!llt 1.J2 i~ '6 15~• 16 + h ForMcK 15 _,' 5S ( f Fle1 C~o 'Jl Stien S.16 6.AO C tllLI PloJ.SO z'I() 11'~ 10 10 FM<:IC ofl llO advan1...'-'U percen , rom F~t Fo i..9• St@!" Roe Fund,, cen111Ps 1.11 9: ~i! ~;; ~~ = :~ ~~~:~ Jot;
6.382 to 9.862. 1vhile multiple ~~ i 11i ~:~ IJ1 2:! OP ~:tr f::;: ~:~~i~1 1~~ 16 19'• 19 1''\ + '• Fo1bo•o ,60
units jumped to 12 ,!43, up 82 ~:::~:" 1,r.1t~~s~~~G1h 1:1f 1::~ ~~l~a'.~ ~ ft"I ;1~ ji~ :11.~~~s~tr ,.~
percent from 6 686 ln March Fr~n1en" Omuo. Sup 1$1 10.n 11.ll'I CenTtlUI ,11 •? 12•;, »"' n•• -"'-Fr.,..hCP 1 10 • ' Ccim Stk 7,16 7,IS Svnc;r Gttl \l.11 U 07 Cerro 1.tll! lolll :IO"' 30 JC'~ -~. FuQU& 111<1
In Southem California the DNTC 13.13 U,39 TMR Ac l.l5 21.16 Cerl·le<>Q ,llO 6' Jl XI'~ JI)•--1 VIit I.Cl 7 1'11 Tetctirs 11 ,1111 ... C1i.sn8Alr 1111 103 )V• 111'• 11'> gains were 94 pertent f'1r Ir.tom 14 11'/TK!\n(I 6.'1 l.S6CF • SU .l!O ?1t 111• 'Ji'~ 26'·•-.,,GAC (p ISi!
d 128 t I Frfl!dm t.06 9toTKhvsl I.IS C~IHlbrn lllC 15] JS\, l••t 1110 -~G-C C~ Pl l singles an percen or Fund J\m 10.11111 .i':: ~ch"°' 1 511 9 ?6 Ch•m~s 1 10 6~ Jl \1 :iioi. 100\ -\) GA" Coro .fCt
multiples, as total residential ~rbr~~, l!.~ l! J t~:. ~R 1.~na •. a~ ~~!;!~~v1.~ l~ ~ :::--; :~,~ ~ ~: g~ ~~~JO
Volume Cllmbcd 91J percent tn Group SM:: Tran CaP 9,7t 1r 10 C"Kller Mo! 1 2l'· 2l'• 1l'• G~ms ~11 11 Aero Sc 9,0? t.l6 T•••• IOQ 10.lJ' ,11 ChffN>tn 1 80 6 ll.·• ~'• l6',....: It Oam5 Dfl 611 12."1 million Com St 1'.:U IS 61 Tw~C G!~ 5.00 $,06 C!\-'1NY 1.14 )SS 61 6:1\o 62'~ -'" Gen~n .~5 • Ful Ad t.5010.)'I Tw1nC Inc S.21 5.7• (11«1\way .10 JO l ~•o 1•1• ll'•.; lo G~t Wood Grit! Ind 11 ~ 23.13 Uni! Mui 11.1111.11 Clln Va 1,6'0 ? (11).1.. 401.'> AO''I -\~ Ga•W Df.561< G,vpl\on n.:i.o 10.(14 Unl!d ll,l'f n ,:i.o !~ro ~ ~· Ml• 6)>. •»• -.. Gerdtrm I JO GGu•rdn 21:1J221.j2 U1111t<I Fuf!d5' o .'l'l \1 •}'. •S'• l$•~ + '• G••lock .flO
M Off flam hda J S, l ACC1'n 1,h. 1.50 h e£~1t Ill 19 llVI 11 .... Uh -'' (itmlnl C*P erger Ham 0th 9.M 10.51 1-l•.f) 16.:l:l ChlMll .S!P P ,'j •$ •• Ub ->t Gtmlnln S$~ liano~tr 1.n l.Sol Stl•~ I.~ t:is IMlo\StPP c1 """ •' .u -•-Gn,t.lnv 'lh Htrbor 1G.lf 11.l! UflFCI C6fl 8.lll f,IA ""'L"p pf$ , 711''1 }1 n -1 QAmO!I ,6'0t>
SAN FRANClSCO -John ~'1~w~!1Y "J~,'.~;11 VtJ': (1~ne ~~f!d~'.. ~,.~' 11 il !~: ?ir:~ ll'~ =1~ §!i:..,en or\'6~
R Becke tt, chairman of board ~~1~:Ve 1'j::; 'l~ ~':l"Sl1 I·~ i:ff ~:IC ~~1~X H ~~~ ~~;: ~r,: = ~ G~c~b;: 1 Ya ' ' c d H Mlflfl 1 .11 16,$3 Varn:tS •Pl 111 9..51 hi Tltlt 2.10 & 6114 '' ,, -ll Gen c111 1 ;o of Tra nsamerica orp., a n Hublm~ 9" 10.~ V1nd1bt '·°' '·" hal:lll"u!I .tO n ,,,. ''"" I•'• -,, Onl>9Yll ,7AI
John w. Kluge. chai rman of 111 Pi ttt t.;~:~naPI i.~ 1~ r:· (~~1.1&1 11 ~,,. ~1n !J~ ~Y;t1~~r1~"'~~
thC boa rd and pre_,ident of :~: 0i,.0 1tG '~·fl ~t"llor9 ,,;: 1i ... c,ti~1t' ,!. 1.~ ~;.~ ii~~ ~ !:. ~! &::r:; 1 :! ~felromed.ia. Jnc., annou1:ccd 1: ~~ "i·Il 13!·1~ ;:~' ~~ l~ ~ .~:~ ~~i~r i'.fCt 3j1 ~~~ ;! •• ;n; _ ,\ g~ ~~: 1,1 tha t th e propo.~1 for mflrgcr trldtnnd 1 011 .nwe111t!a~ n .4113 ... 1n r.E .,. l 11~ ti'• ~ '' -1 t.~~•"''' Q•l
o( the IWO organlMti<>n~ ha d :::,J.:-' 1:·ft 1l·:f~~11~1'/° 1~i!1t~ !~1~.111 '~ 11 ·~·, li" u~ +n.~;',!~111~nn , -" l I 1ns8• M-1 6? 1 Jl .v1...S50r 9,t) 10.IS 1TI'!11 .Ml 1&' ii'• ' lS r.~Me• 3 fCt.o been term1nt1 h.-.,1 hy 1n u Uil 1n, ~v ~J 11 •·~ ..,.,n11~td ~ <12 l.sa JT F o•s so • · • I ·~ 1111\ -1'. § MO! $<1'1 ~ Inv oAm l•.Ull. WI.con ;60 IO 1lles~•c l :U' '3'~ 11 -U• • M!!J ~1)1~ consent. 1 ~v yJd 1000 10 or111 .Jt •Pi 11y In• .Xltl J>o llllV. 2t1,1 311 -~' .,.11c.im so
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Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete
•
Thorsday June 12 1%t $
New York Stock Exchange List
American
,
.... "'1 llla.J ... Lft Ollt Cllt
4' 1101,;i 1j9\o I ltU -l XIII IN: < ... il" lfol<i + 1 Y11ttl'O I )0 UI l lU -1 1i.C«• M 1'1 Ml') 'A M ~~ i1P1ll NIIMI
Stock Exchange List
. ~·
DAn. y Pit.OT l G
I
I
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I
J~•c..:O::Al.::LYc..Pc:IL:.:O;.:.T ___ ~,,.,, -·June 12. 1969
Area
1\11). DwlgM Al. Webster, •
son of Mrs. Kenneth E.
Gerard ol 903 \\', 17th SL,
Coma Aiesa, is a member of a
unit that has earned the U.S.
Air Forw Outstandin& Unit
Award.
1be ~Is an F-102 Delta
Dagger pilot In the %1&1 Com·
!'°'Ito . Wing· ~t. Elmendori
AF!!; An-age, Ala!ka.
Ll ~t!I H. G<plert, -
USN. sou of Mr. and Mrs . C.
M. Gepfert of 717 Santana,
Corona: del Mat, is serving
aboard the aircraft carrier
USS ·Franklln D; Roos<vdt at
Norfolk, Va.
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
546·7080 COSTA MESA
WEEKDAYS 9 to 9
SATURDAY 9 to 5:30
SUllDAY 10 to 5:00
b~~HOME EllRITAllllWIT COOi
GARDEN CART
IF"=....: .. 0 Art 1te1I con1huctio11,
1n•meled fi11;1h.
0 Diep be1it1 melre1
it h•ndy for big
d aa111 11p or nice for
p•lio pertie1, ir.11t
fill wilft i~•. 7••
3 CU. n. WHEELBARROW
-··----. j
0 lt'1 planting time
•gain !good, I'll
tell my hippie
friand1, 011y'w•
been lookit19
•••dy.I. 0 U1e thi1 for h,1,1 li11<J
tool1, emendmet1h,
end 11,1ch. a••
McLANE FRONT
THROW POWER MOWER
r ·-.,-~-0 M.trYelo1,11 Mclane
1 mower m1ke1
molehill1 or.ii of
. ~.
mor.1nl•it11.
0 Get the best,
you"ll ••¥1 mon•-y
in +h1 long run.
15995
REED FENCING
ILi Nelur1I color re1d form1
• 100% dtn1e f1n~1.
0 AHord1 complete
prh•acy, 111• fot low
coil wln<lbr1•\1, p•lio
cowtr1, •nd <••porh .
0 Unp1•led raid, i re
wire wowen.
MALIBOU LOW VOLTAGE
OUTDOOR LITE SET
0 low I 2 ¥01!1 9iwe1
•II lh1 light with
no 1hocL
0 Multicolor11d li9hh
with 1pflre mo1111t1
c•n be 1el 111ywh1r1.
0 lnclude1 tr•n1fo.,..1r
end tim11.
7888
Men • Ill Service Around1' World -. GOOOWILL'
Industries : Tile ship Is scheduled to
return to Mayport, Fla. in Ju.
ly and then Jea·1e for exercises
In the Caribbean.
Mr. 3nd Mrs. William Stein of
1218 Starboard Way, Corona
del Mar, wu commissioned a
second lieutenant u p o a
graduation from OUJcer Can-
didate ~ at the Army
Artillery· and 'Missile Center,
FL Sill, 'Otl&.
, •
Ent. Mlchad o. Hou_., son
of Mt. and Mrs. George B.
Hoffert of Sltl Hell, Hun-
tington Beach, completed car-
rier qoallflcaUon ptlue of ad-v...,. pilol tnlmni·°illlolli; the
uss·~ · c
, e.nett\y 1q Vietnam.
Two Orange Coast men are
serviJl& aboard the U S S
Saratoga which wu vls.lted Oy
Pl<Sidebl RichaM Nlmt oa
Artn<d Forces Day.
LI. CIMr. Jobi P.
~ ..., of Mr. and
Mrs •• Hay 'Longenl1eJm of 1%56
Rutland Road, ft e w port
Beach, asslllhed command of
the submarine 'USS Halfbeak
du ring ceremonies at Naples,
Italy.
Be · made ·tiro !web ·Ind go
ail ·she amo\Od"landbip In
Jl·t •"P~l'ta'l m 1 a. 'AppreS. the TS-2A '"J'r~· a muJu.
Mic.bael C •• Jloue, son of Mrs. edgined, ... caJTM!r: based anU·
Irene Hou.te ·ol 1009 Georgia submarine -aircraft.. I ~ ·
They are A•l.atlea
Ofde•teem•• a.c. ftlllJ J.
Onua, USN, son of Mrs.
Levin& Whalen of 3 w a z .
Caillornia St., Costa. Mesa and
Altmu Appna. Mlcbad D.
Geiacl, USN, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Geraci of 4671
Warner Ave., HWJUngtoo
Beach.
Lt. Cmdr. t.angenheim ls a
graduate of lbe U.S. Naval
Acade'my, Aririapolis, 1'f d •
1965.
St., Huntin&toq Beach, is at--_i_ ·~
tending the )!aslc Hospltol Pvlr LC. ~,ii. Nftlln,
Corps School1 San Diego. • son.of Id<, and loln.'llobert B.
He ·bas· tieen a'tslgl!Od to , • N-Of 5111 am.ot.prive,
work •t the Balboi: Nl\l'al ·H_U.!D.tlngto:o 'a'",ach,
Hospital, San Diego. ~·1n..,1>il)allon
IUcbard M. Sttln, 25, son of ~ "(»~~;(,.....,the Alrmu Apprea. llllnUll E.
. ' ~ v~I· . •' ~ ••
OPEN UP A ·.OLE
NEW WORLD FOR DAD
A BlC BEAsr
AT A Lo.HER
PRICE!
0 Ad..-ertised tf"'ciel1 good tlH11 J11t1e I•. 1969 I et1d iu1't it
wonderf11t he..-ing fhe lcid1 home for 111mmer
~•~•tion ALL DAY LONGJ,
SCM GLUE GUN KIT
0 Complet• de•I with
ebout 5 br.1ek1 worih
of glue, 11eler,
new fype <j lr.te 1liclr:1,
at1d Ille 9"" with
bench r11t for
autom1lic glr.1i11<J.
0 I Do.11 SCM 1t•MI for
Sowthern Celifort1 ia
Mr.1cile911
999
BLACK & DECKER 7 1/4 INCH
CIRCULAR SAW
0 c.librated
depfh ind
b ..... 1
•djr.11lmenh.
0 Power p1ckad
1·1/4
hor1epower
motor.
GLIDDEN SPRED
[ ··--.,.-r-·~--:w· GLIDE-ON '. l ~
, 1 0 Ideal for 1tucco, m•1ot1ry, l briclc, concrete block1. j • e1be1to1 1hin<jle1, end
! til e roof1.
; 0 Ori11 qr.i ickly free of lip
'"i and br111h merb lb11t
2 ,000 decor1tor colors. 1
witch thote fingert1eil1.J. 0 In white end more th•n
L -.... ~--......_~: .• ~, 4 99 Gel.
GLIDDEN ENDUUNCE
HOUSE PAINT
1 0 Drie1 to a h.rd lr.11tro1,11 fit1i1h,
01)1 co1t CO.!!IPJ•t•ly , .... ,,
moil 111rf~ce1.
I
l 679
Gal •
AUTO DRIP PAN
0 Yor.i re•lly 11o1to git one
of the11 for ell -yor.ir
big drips, 0 Keept the 9areg1 floor
e11d dri"•••"Y free of
ugly oil 1t•i111. 0 Why i1 it 11gly i11 dr;pt
111td 1• be11o1tifr.1I i11
9u1hit1'11 w1U11
2s9
'
FATHER'S DAY JUNE 15
BLACK & DECJ(ER
1/4 INCH DRILL
0 A wolMferor.11 tool f rom the .,.ople who
fl'l•lc• the bett.
0 Awarded tbe 1•fety seal b'( the power tool
· in•tihrte, tl.L li1t-M, at1d if tltey t••• drills 01c•11,
'it'd probablv have one of tho•• too (for
o..-eractl119 m~yM?I.
0 1.9 •Mps, 1/7 hortepow1r, 2250 RPM,
SEAVERS 8 PT~
HAND SAW
0 Tli• be1t 11w -ye11
e..-er 11w for th e
fl'IOn e-y,
0 IA11d we 0111-y 1n11re
b•d iolr:e1 cau1;, we
don't know e11y 900'
one1.I.
0 Combin•tion for
crott·Cllf or rip.
198
RAM 11.4 IN,CH .
VARIABLE SPD*Jt: .RILL
0 Heavy 'duty ¥eri .tble
,,..d •drill m•lr11 9t••• .jiff.
0 6.~ thror.igh mat1I
'W'itb"o11t ce11t.r pr.1nchl119,
can h 11~ed e1
a11tomiiltic 1crewdriv•r
by ch er19 i119 Ih a bit.
2199 VR0 250
BLACK & DECKER
JIGSAW
0 U1e for 1tr1i9ht, C11r¥ed,
et1d 1.:roll c11h in wood,
metal, pl11tic1, et1d olh1r
m1t1ri•l1 llilce whet'1
left?J,
0 lt1clirde1 ro119h woodc11ttit19
bledt,.he)I wrench
111d holder.
1499
u.t5J
BLACK & DECKER DlliWALT
RADIAL ARM SAW
'PO.WER SHOP . 'r
0 Tha co~plef.: hom1 po.;., 1hop wifh di;ect drl¥e f111
cool•d motor end men11el p111)i botto11 brtlr:e
t+i.t tlop1 ltl•d• ;11 1ecoi.d1, 0 l.trt• No..-aply tabla ellow1 011t rlppi11g with
b11de loceted o..-er t1ble.
0 Dwel erbor lflotor 1heft p.tNnih 11te •f right h1"4 tOCl lt.
199°0
l\Ulll, USN, son of Boris F .
MlllJ of lOU W. Wilson St.,
Costa Mesa, graduated from
A vk>nlca Fundamentals School
at tbe Naval Air Technical
Training Center, Mempbia,
Tenn.
Alrmu lleuil T. D!Oon, •
son of Mr. and Mrs. Terrance
J. Dillon, 15382 Camhay Lane,
Huntington Beach, has been
assigned to Keesler AFB ,
Miss. for training in the air
lraftlc control field.
. The airman is a 1968
graduate of h-farina High
ScbooL
Sat. Walter O. Wtbt:r, son rl
Mr. and P..!rs. Donald E.
Weber of 4Z8 Francisco Olive,
Newport Beach, has been
assigned to a unit of the Tac-
tical Air Command.
The sergeant, a r a d i o
operator at Myrtie Beach
AFB, S.C., is a graduate of
Fullerton High School and
earned his A.A. degree at the
College of the Sequoias,
Visalia .
Seaman Appren. Robert C.
Craig, USN, son of Mrs.
Robert Doyle of 2501 Orange
Ave., Costa Mesa, is serving
aboard the light guided missile
cruiser, U S S Providence,
Flag.ship for the commander
of the United States First
Flee~
'Ibe ship saw extensive ac-
tion in Vietnamese • waters
during deployment In the
Western Pacific.
Stall Sgl Albert R. CllJI.
nlngbam -, USAF, son of
Mrs. Mary E. Cunningham of
13741 Jefferson Drive ,
Westminster, is a member of
the Aerospace De!ense Com·
mand's 28th Air Division that
has won the General Frederic
H. Smith Trophy.
The 28th, headquartered at
Malmstrom AFB, Mont., was
selected as the best ground
defense unit within the com-
mand.
Yeoman 3.C. Christopher C.
Strutt, USN, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Eric P. S!rutt of 2024
Commodore Road, Newport
}leach, is serving at the Naval
SUpport Activity Danang, Viet-
nam.
Pvt. 1st C. Dale F.
Fleilchma.nn Jr., USMC, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Da l e
Fleischmann of 9692 Villa
Pacific Dr Ive , Huntington
Beach, ls serving with the Se-
C{)nd Battalion, Second lnfan-
lry Training R eg iment,
Marine Carpi Base, Camp
Pendeltoo.
seven Local
Men Honored
By Douglas
Seven local aerospace
workers are among 2 4
employes honored by t h e
McDonnell" Douglas
Astronautics Company f o r
outsandiog service under the
company's Value in
Performance (VIP) program.
Honored were :
Richard D. Noren, 9419
Gtranium St., Fount ain
Valley; Haro Id Halvorson,
17709 Bushard St., Fountain
v alley; J. c. Hill, 6062 Shelly
Drive, Huntington Beach; J.
G. Robbins, 5602 Fernhill Cir·
GOOD WILLY 5EI:
H•v• you ever made •
Goodwill tour? Thous1nds
do each y •a r. and •t•
aatonished at the scope of
Goodwill Industries op-
1r1tion. Come •nY week·
d1y for 1 9uided tour of
Goodwill 's tr•ining Cen-
ter. Call 547-6301.
590 W. 19th St.,
Costa Mes•
Open Mon. thru Fri. 9.9
Sot. 9 till 5:3()....446.2479
Your Dollar
Bf(s More
At 11te
GOODWILL
STORE
SPECIALS
THIS WEEK!
HOLLYWOOD
BED
FRAMES
$695
NEW
Hotel Special I
MATTRESSES s5500
Twin or Full Set
$69. 95 Value I
s99.1s
Cj)ueen s791s
Size .
King
Size
Extra Long
Twin or Full
BLUE TAGS
1/2 PRICE
BOOK CASES
, 59.95
cle, Huntington Beach; R. A.~.-------Adams, 7522 Amazon Road, 1•
Huntington Beach: N. L.
Whipple, 16991 Courtney Lane,
Huntington Beach. and E. P.
Wendkos, 3902 Sirus Drive,
Huntington Beach.
Each received a gold pen
and pencil set and a cita.Uon
pin.
The VIP program em-
Special!
BOX SPRINGS
& MATIRESS
S]l.90
phasizes the importance of lhell ·--------indivldual in working toward
company objectives and cites
those who have turned in
outstanding perfonnance.
•
PILLOWS
. s2. 75 , ..
Please Use These
Booths In Your
Neighborhood
Call 646·2479
For Pickup S.rvlce
I
.
Curtai'n ''Rai ·s·ed ~ on Shared lnterest·s
By JEAN COX
Of TM OotllJ l"Ott Steff
Sibce Mrs. Vivian Mayer and Mrs. Doris Auerbach both have show
business backgrounds, it's not surprising lo find them entlius!astically in-
volved backstage in Irvine Bowl as the Pageant of the Masters nears Jts
opening.
However, the two have far more in common than· their interest in
show business and. the fact lbey both have worked in Ute headdress depart-
ment, under the ~tion of Bert Petty for the past three years. ·
First, they are avid animal lovers and both pamper aging dogs. Mrs.
Aueri>ach tenderly swaddles her Chihuahua in blankets each night by her
bed stand and each morning patiently grinds up pills for his heart condi-
tion.
Mrs. Mayer, who nurses her dog with equal tenderness, is an avid
supporter of the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and once
wen~ to court to rescue a horse from the ruthless and sadistic beatings it
received from its owner. ·
Secondly, they are closely related. In fact, Mn· Mayer ls Mrs. Auer-
bach's mother. . ..• , ..
The third common denominator is a muchiJess happy coincidence.
Mrs. Mayer and Mrs. Auerbach both are wido-.ys. Mrs. Mayer's husband
died seven mooths after her daughter's spowe; entertainer Artie Auer·
bach1 was struck by a heart attack. ·
Soon after, the widows left Los Angeles .Mr Laguna Beach, hoping
to leave as many painful memories as possible betiind them.
However, there is one thing they can't seero to forget -their undy-
ing passion fQr the entertainment business. 1: ; . • • • •
Mrs. Mayer began her career about 1915 when she app81red ·with
the Al Jc>Isen Show. Later she had the second:J,ead irl . wh1 1ai'n~ Powell's
first show, a musical HGoing" which ran for two years on Broadway. She
also had the second lead in "Irene" which ran for about five years on
Broadway and appeared for one season in the Ziegfeld Follies performing
with such luminaries as Fanny Brice and Eddie·Cantor.
A picture of Mrs. Mayer back Ulen shows her as a beeutlful girl
who could hold her own nicely with any starlet. It's not surprising the
lovely brunette was courted by a Wall Street stockbroker who loved 'sbow
business as much as she did.
_\ The two were married and moved to Park Avenue where Dorh was
bbrn. Later they moved to Westchester County and when Doris got out of
scbool she worked for the county paper doing huinan interest stories. ' ' (SH SHOW BIZ SHARED, Pot• 201
DAILY PILOT P""9 ~ •kMN ic..t!Mr
HEADDRE$S• SPECIALISTS -The art of outfitting participaqts
in Pageant of•tlle'Masters·with b..,d<!Tesses·ba~llerome jlerfi!ct&t
by these two workers over the past four years. Mrs.Vivian Mayer
· (left) and Mrs, Doris Auerbach help Mrs. Riclde Weir prepare !or
bet 'appearance in "The Tragic Muse" by Sir Joshua Reynolds.
'
I
Pharmaceutical Auxiliary Concocts New . Slate
c~g Ideas are (left to right · in mirror)
the Mmes. J . N. McClellan, second vice president;
Anthooy Williams, fir.;t vice ')>resident, and Robert
·Adler, president of 11!e-wcman's UX11Jary-to tire
Orange County Pharmaceutical Assoclal!on. Ot!J~s '
installed are the Mmes. Glenn McConnelee, treas-
urer; David Wells, secretary, alld Ronald Waters,
recording secretary. During tile fjrst meeting o! the
new season yesti!tday,-Mrs.!C'°L. '1Ramlrez served a
Mexican lunoheon.
State's First Lady Honored
Luncheon With Nancy Reagan will be shared by
300 wives of members of the Orange Coast YMCA
~ Executive 'Club and other friends of the Y Monday,
June 23, in the Balboa Bay Club,
Mrs. Reagan will be guest of honor at the lunch-
eon meeting to Organize Executive Wives for a
summer campaign to double Executive Club mem-
bership,
The hospitality and reception boor will begin at
11:30 a.m. wilh lunch and program scheduled for
12:30 p.m.
The Executive Club functions as the adult core
leadership group of the Family YMCA and the com-
munity. The growing association of more than 300
Orange Coo.st leaders is organized to sponsor and
support character and body building programs for
the boys and girls in the Harbor Area.
The club sponsors youth-activated ideas and pro-
grams which are advanced by young leaders fur
the betterment of the community and country.
Members meet for luncheon at the Y every Tues-
day for discussion of programs and to hear out.
standing speakers on current affairs. In addition
members are entitled to all the health club facilities
or the Y.
Serving as chairman oC the _luncheon will be Mrs.
Murray Chotiner, and assisting with arrangements
are Mrs. Charles Hostler and Mrs. Lee Jones, chair-
man of the attendance committee and Mrs. John
Skinner.
0 . W. "Dick" Richard will be master of cere-
monies~
Ass isting the wives with the membership drive
are cluh presideut. Edgar R. "Ned" Hill and his com-
mitllee, Alvin Cox, Art Birtcher, Ray Dike, Robert
E. Harris, Ernie Hartman, John Lawson, John Mac-
Leod, William Mason, Fred McMaster, Paul A.
Palmer, John Parker, James Penny, Richard,
Theodore Robins Sr., Alan ~_, Don Wells,
John C. -zamnba and 'Newpoif Beach Mayor
Doreen Marshall.
llJNCHEdN'WEST
Mr1. Roneld Rti191n
Airport Display, Sends Angered Woman Flying to 'Typewriter
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was silUng
• buJy airport IAst week, in Ille, ...
'I capital. Next to me 1 yoi.nillllltW
llhe couldn~ have been more than !3
• ean old) wu br<ast feeding her lofanL
know the glrl was not 1 fottfiner
• ... l heanl her spell to her ;s.year-nin perfect Enillsh.
She Jmdt • effori.to cover herself -
l"'l lhere in Ibo niJct!I• of the airport, Ith._,. of . ....,.. milling arouod.
\!lbmplellly bl>Uvkioi .,to the starq she
Wu 1iuin«·tr. men and the dirty 1oOU
she was gelUng from the women.
If you say there's nothing wrong with
lhiJ sort of thin( I'll take your word for
11. but lo my way of thinking, brtut
feeding a baby tn public LI the """" 11 'litlng a topl.., waitress. -MRS. B.
ANN LANDERS ~
DEAR MRS.' Tlim'1 "° ...,.
1i"'1Jarl1y ,,., ....... w.u1 reedlq • INlbf
lo pul>Hc ud beill a topkss w1Ute11
than there 11 11 udrts11n1 lo take •
1bo'frer· iied potla11ftr the center 1prud
of• &!tile ..........
Tloat --II 1_..~ 110t Im!. Iii ...... 1-·111a .... coii!-
pod 11m to bmtt fe<d • w;.· 111
public, bat 1bt: didn't t&ow l»ttt.tr.
-
' DEAR ANN LANDERS ' My husband
wW be 'comlng home rrom Vietnam Jn,
aeve.n weeks. We weren't getting along·
•• he left.' Jn fact Wt talked seriously
• aboUI 1 dh""~ ~ he left we agr<ed
to wait and ... what H>e separauon did to
our feelings fOlf' one 'tnot.hir.
PJujng bis ,-blve betn goipg
withe ~;~~·~•I cJecrded nor to snelilt iri>unl, so of course
a great many people h~ve acen me, in-
eluding my lo-laws.
These pa.rt few Weeks l 've done some
soul.searching and have decided I love
my husband more lban I thought. Dating
olhen has been a good thing because I
now re.al.tze that my busba.00 is the best
of the lot. I've decided I want to make a
go of our maniage and I cm willing to
work my heart om to achieve this goal.
Question (I): Should t tell my husband
I dated in Ills absence? .
Question (2): Did J do wrong? -
LEARNED A LOT
DEAR LEAJINED' U) YH .. Alld doo't .. II\' "!'J.·llme· Yll!'-<U be ,.,.. lial.• .. 11 .. ppo1nltd vlgilMle will r..a II II hi•
or ber sworn duty, 1s 1 trae friend, &o fill
' . ~
your husband la ou your acdviUts. ·
(II Probably.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A relative
needs advice. He and his wile didn't get
along. They we're divorced. He fell the
children would ·be better off U he ltopl out of the plcb.ire alter his wife remar-
ried. He left town and stayed away nine
years. Two weeks ago he returned Lo the
city and ftnt to see his chlldren., 1bey
were very unfriendly. Ht thlnb he made
a mis take. How can he win thtlr IOWT.-
SEAIT~E
D~ 5, A !allier wM ..._.,.
lllfr ..... -... .....,. .......
boin...,omlnf to be berllded wtlll blartn«i
trurapeta and • c1~t of r01es. He m.111-
ed the love boat by 1t:wr&l yean_. Now,
uGftrtultely, I.be belt be can expect Is
polite tolerance.
Give in or lose him .•. when a guy gives
you this line, look out! For tlpi on how to
hand1e the super aex salesman. check
Ann LaQ<lers. Reod her bootlct, "Necklnc
and Petling ~ What ire the Umlt.1!"
Send your request to Ann Landers in care
of this newspaper, enclosing 50 cents In
coin and 1 long, stamped, self-ad~
envelope.
Ann Lll1der• wlll be sJtd to help yoo
will> Yoif'problOma. Sead theln l<l..bor In
care of the DAILY PILOT,,encIOiJiii a
self·addressed. stamped envelope.
•
..
i
I
l
l
. . . . . . .
1lusl'Sda1. Junt 12, 1%9
Shipwreck Predicted on Fridoy,
Mi ssion Viejo Jaycees have chosen Friday, the 13th
for a Shipwreck Dance in Lak.e Fore·st Beach and
Tennis Club. Mike Collins, c98innan • prepares for
the party with the help of his wife. (left) and Mrs.
--the 13th
Tony Contino, decorations committee c<>-ebairmen.
The publlc is invited to attend. Further information
may be obtained by calling Collins at 837-2726.
I I
Herman Bogards Feted
On 50th Anniversary
GOLDEN WEDDING DAY
Mr.·a'hd Mrs. Hermo,n ~ard -..
' Door Opened on China
By OC Officer~' Club
China si nce 1920 will he three vears.
discussed when member s. Dr. ·Innerst has ...conlinued l
wives and guests of lhe his study of de\'elopmcnts. and l
Relired Officers' Association presently is cha irmali of the
meet Saturdav. June 14. in the I.;ndcrstan"ding China com·
r ecently redeCorated OHicer"s mitlee o( th e A 1n er I ca nl
Club of El Toro Marine Corps Fncnds Service committer.
Air Station. Pc1cifu: Southwest region. lie
Preceding the dinner and \1 a~ one or d 15 Arncrican
program will be a soci:.il hour Qu<1kers vthn served as ;i
beginning al 5:30 11.m. Dinner \\'Orklng party in \\'t iling the
v.•ill be served at 6:30 1>.m. book "'A Ne\V Chin:.i Policv"'
\Vhal ls Happening lnsid<': pobli.shed in 1965. ·' j
China will he discussed by Dr. Or. lnncrst r. \'Cd his
J . Stuart Innerst of La Jolla. bachelor or . •Jnily degree
A missionary there Uetwecn fron1 HTC' L"nited Sc1n1narv.
1920 and 1927, he 11.•i ll CO\'c>r l)ayton. Ohio. and a mastei-s
histor ical background as well dcgn-e fron1 Co I u rn b i il
as his own personal ex-Cn11·ersitv. He holds ;i n
pcricnccs 11·hen 1he Coin· honorar~: degree !ro1n Ot-
munlsts hrst beeamc act ive 1n lerbein College, Ohio. "'here
that country. lie "'ill C'Xpla1n he "·as pastor for 12 years.
why and how Commun1~1n ----'--------·II
began . the U.S. policy in rela-
tion to the Peking go\'crnmcnt
and the meaning of the
cultural re\'Olution the last
Now in Our Family:
Family Weekly
~Ir. and Mrs. Hennan
Bogard of Long J)each will be
feted oo their Golden wedding ·
annivci1ary next Saturday
during an open house and
reception in the ~a Mesa
home of lheir daughter. Mrs.
Edward \Ylnslow.
The open bouse 'Will take
place from 1 to 5 p.m._agd the
reception will follQW al 8 p.m.
Knov"n as "Mom'' and ··u.p" in th'c Indian .§er;,ice of th .S. DcpartmeJ'l-ot the
I ior. the ~le -served ln-
r-~ .• : ' ~ '1:
Decorat« 'Door ..
Watc,rproor oul@r wrap-
ping J4per and ribbon make it
easy -fo decorate your front
door and porch for special oc-
casiom.
Sfloct extrawide decorator
foil for doors.
Slo10
Careful
Training
of
Dancers
MONA FRANCES
Scho ol of BALLET
SUMMER CLASSES
NINE WEEKS -JUNE 16th to AUGUST 16th
Ki nderballet -Be9inner1 -lntermedi•t•
Ad ... artced Division and Pointe Work
Aho Clesse1 in Modern Jatt
642-4068
363 North Newport Btvd. Newport leaclt
Please meke reservetion1 early as c.l asses •r• limited
·FATHER:r DAY jjijjjil
1'11111111
Watch Specials from Weisfield's I 11111
11111111 Ill 1111
MAN'S
CARAVELLE
By BULOVA
Smi!rt 7 jewel water•-and
shock-resistant watch.
Handson1e leather str Jp.
/O!J5 a. SELF-WINDING
25 jewel Accromatic with
calendar date. Matching
Kreisler Dura flex@band.
b.SUB-AQUA
Our own fine, self.-wind ing
:!>kin·diver watch. tested
to 999'. Calendar date.
Penn State Students
Rite Date
The en1agement ol Susan
Mary Zl.ener of Pittsburgh,
Pa., to Larry Gene g, ans, ton
ol Mr. and Mn. Emmell E.
Evans of ~uoUngton Beacb.
bu Ileen announced by lbe
bride-elect'a pattnts.
r
Selected
Teen Weddings
Go On and On
The teenage inarr1ag~ go
on and on.
Modern Drkie maga,pne,
which sponsored an lm:fpen-
dent sampling ol the bridal
market. found that five percent
of women married for the first
time ln ~ last year were 15
on their wedding.day.
Four percent of the men
wed for the first time were 17
years old.
DO SIN•LI •IW
HAVI MOii l'UN7
..... 1,•t--
the RIOHT MAHt
CALL 1474667
-24-HMlr Rec~l"I -
Din~''' Edr•or4in•t•
im e. c:-11 Hwy. eor-0.1 ,,,.,
67M2'7 Ml&s Ziener, a &raduate of
lndlana University of
Penmylvanla, at present ls a
graduate student to child
development and family rela-
Uonab.ips a t Pellll!)'IVania
State Univenity. Her parents
are Mr. aod Mrs. Arthur
Ziener ol Pittsburgb.
Half Sizes
The bened l ct ·elect
graduated from Huntington
Beach High School and at-
tended Orange Coast College
for two years. He received his
bachelor of science degree
frnrn the University o f
MWouri and now is com·
pleUng bis PhD in metallurgy
at PSU.
, •
·~
The
iJif ~1,'t%if.(· r~~~~:,1
' '
" Tee
SUSAN ZIENER
Engagod
An Aug. 2 wedding is being
planned.
Tattler
~I'll G. L Pt1erme11. 311 P1YI Dunle11. P1ul Ryckoft, :n; Cleu D ...... Mmn.
GU $mlltl, 31Yt: Ike Arm11..-.. ll1 v. O. Shlekls, C.rl Hlllvren. :JJ.
IANCHO SA" JOAQUIN
SIHT •ALL flOUIMIMI-fllr~I. !he
MmeL 11. R. Koe~i.,,.,. c"'''" Callellen, RoOert H1r!le, k.1-ltl Wiiiey. Jf1 Stcord, the Mma. H1"11
Cott1m, Peul S"'-, Philip JohnllOll. F. W. Pekr..,,,, IJO; Tlllnl, rtie Mfr>el.
J.,.-es Emtr·-. W1rrtn CoHJ111,
LMW•llffl Thom11, J. L. Wtlbrklfto, "·
League Calls
'Hoist Anchor'
We shape your lightened hair into lovely curla.
J9"ay--traveler.
Washabl. as
your skift,
h drips d...,
ond pocb
in nothing
flat. Start
your trip
at Hatf.stz.
Shop.
from $16.00
We caress the curls with '"Nice Change"' -llO ~
In just 10 minutes your new blonde curls take on
whisper"'80ncolor·tone lhat last.s through several
shampooo. With no ryl>off, no retouch problem: we just
renew the color whenever you w:Uh l
11-10.
I
.,
. J , .
:,. ) ; <' ' "
,
ROUX
$3.00
PLUS SHAMPOO $2 50 ANO SET !Mon. thru Thurs.)
After 5 p.m., $2.75 ' · • .£"
1
J A' Friday, S.tunt.y, Sunday ...... $3.00 ~ w ets1? ettiS ~:-r...'!... ~~h, Calif. C~t:. .~~: .. Calif. c::~~:.Callf. fl·,~;;;~;~:.. Calif.
Use your chorge occountf
·.Wllellc.-. ~-c:r)'IUI ...mi .....
• J l::Y.'J.:I..EnS -------<:::=:::='""I-----· Maftc.t lnkft ...... M•Yf•lr CW.le!" K.,,,.,, f'Jey !..~!"'.~~.l.,t:tl P"°"" •1).IUI Pllone S446AI P"°"" ..... "U ,......,.. _._..
1
' ' ' i
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!
i '
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1
' . ~
SOUTH COAST PLAZA C~ST AtUMEMSIAcron from oolworth'1540.7187 A,~,~·~!:,_.~•llf. °:'!"rc11a~I!• F:',,"!:.1!1~11ley, C1lif, s:':~!~•;,!~'· F:;n::i:er ~~~!Y~ Calif.
-,Jb•IRIS10l At The SAN DIECO F.REEWAY U1e Welsfl1ld'1 "~•01,1..t c11~,.. •• l•11kA1Mflc.ard er M .. ,., cai.,.. ,,I _.:t-• .:....•.•.'..,.·'·'~.~·.•.'.~.".' __ :.~.~-f....~.::.~ _____ :_::_ • .1.•".'•i:•'-------::·!i"' •. ,.',...~.·;.;,, ____ .~.'.""-~.l".i...."-------
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.... ...-•• ".l', .... ....,~~~.~·~""'"~-.......... ~-........... """ .................................................................... """"""""' .... "'"" ........................... """ .......................... ~ ....................................... '!"" ....... ~
Horosco~
Arians: Avoid
Travel on . 13th
Hollywood· _St-yles
'Oliver' Premiere
FRIDAY
JUNE 13
By SYDNEY OMABR
ARIES (Marcb 21·April Ill)'
HoJd oU.on tr&Vi!I, lf practical.
'Ibere may be unfln!shed
business here and now. Run-
ning away merely de.Jays fac-
ing the MUJic. steer clear or
disputes with relatives. Accent
calm approach.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ):
You may feel you must have
something. But quiet rcfiee-
Uon could result in ultimate
bargain. Meam avoid acting
merely Oil impulse. A new idea
is worthwhile-if you nourish
IL
GEfttlNI (May 21..Junc 20 ):
Avoid unnecessary spee d.
LINDA WIESHEIER
Engaged
'
Date Set
For Rites
Don't drive with one tonight
who i s intemperate. Ex·
cit.ement indkated, but be
sure it Is constru c t ive.
Message clear before day is
11n1!11ec1. I
CANCER (JU111! 2hluly 22),
What ·was secret could be
revealed. Maintain poise-be
diplomatic. Social occasion
tonight resulm in extitlng, new ~'
contact. You make
discoveries.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): P
There are arguments-but
they are short·lived. Know
thi s-av oid being ~
supersensitive. You tend to be
impatient with rules, regula·
tions and restrictions. Try a
litUe patience.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22),
. , It will be Premiere Nigbt with all its glamour Tueoclay, June 17, when
two "firsts" are celebrated.
I In a red carpet setting, sparkling .with rainbow-hued gowns and black
ties, the Academy.award winning musical, "Oliver," will be &hown for the
first time in Orange Co1.1nty in the new Cinedome 20 theater, Orange.
· ' Taking home proceeds from the Hollywood-style opening will be the
Providence Speech and Hearing Clinic1 a Children's Hospital 0( Orange
County affiliated cl)nic.
Admission to the movie and champagne during intermission are l~
eluded in the tickets priced at $10, and guests purchasing a $25 ticket will
be invited to a buffet supper after the preirJere.
Patron memberships, at $100, include two $25 tickets.
Working behind the scenes to ensure success for the festivities are the
Mmes. John J . McConnick, chairman; Edmund Lynch, tickets; Walter
Schmin.ke, art work ;· Martin Hoy, invitations;·George Glade, supper chair·
man and ;Rictiard Hayden, public relations.
Also assisting are Mr. and Mrs. J. Simon Fluor, social patrons; James
Gallagher, treasurer; Rod Fraser, intermissiO:'.l refreshments; Earl Slush-
er, programs, and William Jolissaint, advertising. .-....... --~··
Conflict may arise between M B
duly and desire. II you apply Costa esan uccaneers
yolll"Self early, you can find
pleasure tonight. Obtain hint Will Marry 'Pirated'
from Leo message. Family
member means well, loves I By Krewe you. In LA Tempe
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22)' Balboa Pavilion wlli be
You may have to complete du· Selecting a Sept. 12 wedding transformed Jnto a pirate's
ty at home base before em-date are Lynn Allis Erskine cove next Saturday f o r
barking on journey. Domestic and Bryan T. Burt. members and guests of the
adjustment i s highlighted. Miss Erskine, daughter of h-1ystick Krewe of Komus.
Much is made clear by Mr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Erskine Table decorations for the
message, caU, correspon-of Costa Mesa, is a Banning 8:30 p.m . dinner will feature
dence: H.igh Schoo l graduate and a treasure maps and pirate
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21~): senior studying education at centerpi~. as those at·
Friendly gesture to associate, Brigham Young University. tending arrive in buccaneer
co-workers is advised. Go out Her fiance, son cf Mr. and garb in c<>Stume appropriate
ot your way to express ap-Mrs. Taylor Burt of Spring-for pir ate captives.
preciation for special services. ville, Ulah, also is a senior Accompaniment to dancing
Then day takes on meaningful at BYU and is majoring in will be by the ~1oonlighlers
glow. civil engineering. combo. and the evening's
SAGITfARJUS (Nov. 21-The couple will be married entertainment will feature a
Dec. 2J ): Play waiting game. in the Church of Jesus Christ boat tour of the bay.
Many around you rush, push, of Latter-day Saints, Los Dinner hosts are Mr. and
cajole. Exercise will power. If Angeles. They plan to conlinue t1rs. Nick Paolisso of Orange
you wait, you also learn. You thelr education following their LYNN ERSKINE and Mr. and Mrs. Kimball
have responsibility, obligation. marriage. September Bride Kahn of La Palma.
Keep this in mind. l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.11
19): Finish rather than begin
projects. Study Sagittarius
message. Accent q u a I i t y ;
don't skip essentials. Avoid ex-
tremes. Moderation is road to
LEARN TO SWIM
AT YOUR ORANGE COAST YMCA
642-9990
Thor$d•1. J11nt ll, 1969 DAILY PILOT J9
' Juniors Theme Select , T r~asvre
Treasures trom the Sea wlll
be the theme of Mn. LeoUe
WUliams, newly 1 n a t a 11 e d
president of El Camino Real
Junior Woman11 Club tor i•
70.
Assisting her will be the
Mmes. David La Roe he,
Norman Clow and Rob6rt
Crnelak, vice presidents, and
Charles Hayden and Hulh
Scallon, recordlne and cor·
respondbl« secretaries.
Other new officers are the
Mmts. Edwont i? 0 pp. -~. heallll i I\ .. -b In I.
lttU<lrer; • Edward l\uaell, hi>iorian, membenhip, ethJcs
aqdlfor · Patriot Ha,.., presa and amenllles~ Wamo Allan,
and cOmmumctitloot. .•)I d lnsplrallonal; K o p p , ln4
O.Yld Ro b'b In 1, lideMdlon ternailonal alfaln; Haydu
developmeQt. ond O.vld Lallocbe, -Dlirli\I l•b e instaUlllon ter ; CIN'ok, IOdal, lllld
ctrelDOll)I, -i i'ecelve<I Charill Han.-.10UIJI.
the Husbtnd:.of-the-year ·award
~I:::.i.·e11..U 00 behall o! ihe The Daily Pilot
Chairmen appointed for the
new Y.•ar Include the Mmes. Covers
Ruue.11, Americanism;' Larry Boating
An Aug. 9 wedding in the
chapel of St. Francis School,
Huntington Beach, is being
planned by Linda Wiesheier of
Laguna Beach and J o h n
success today.
AQUARlUS (Jan. 2Q.Feb.1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~[1ff
18): Impulsiveness could lead
to lover's quarrel. Fresh. view-
p o i n t is beoeficial. Realize
yoo don't own any one. Slart
with this premise and pro-
blems dissolve.
T. Hardy ol Newport Beach.
Their betrothal has been an·
nounced by Mr. and Mrs. J.
1'1. Wiesheier of Akron, Ohio,
parents or the future bride.
ti.tiss Wiesheier, a graduate
or Our Lady of the Elms High
School, Akron, and St. Francis
College, Loretto, Pa., is a
teacher in Rosila School, San·
ta Ana .
11er fiance, son of Mrs.
f\1aurice J. Hardy of Hun-
t ington Beach, is a graduate or
Laguna Beach High School
and attends Orange Coast
College.
PISCES (Feb. lg.March 20):
Routine is changed. Be ready
for new experiences. One you
respect shares knowledge. You
may be presented. w I th
valuable opportunity. Shake
off lethargy.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTllDAY you have a quick
wit, are a natural entertainer.
If single. marriage is on
horizon. It married, there
could be addition to family.
Business prospects brighten.
Expansion is indicated.
Give Him
Florsheim SHOES
FROM HEMPHILL'S
• BLACK
•BROWN
$26.95
SIZES JO I 1
WIDTHS A to lE
1831 llWPORT BlVD., COSTA MESA
'
=~· 7"~}.
I; I ,
I '
I' ! :
' .
KING-QUEEN -DUAL
KOOB. RUED-CUSTOM QUILTfD
VELVETEEN BEDSPREADS
This the gffl.line v.iv .... n bedspread to
mak• your room com• olive with the look
Df •legonc:e-Cu1tom .sculptured design over
b~towy puff Kodel fllllnglJ 16 gorgeous col·
ors In golds, blu .. , Ol'fffl•, reds and viol.,1-
Tran1form on ordinary bedroom lnto a room
of clo11lc beauty! Save today.
79~5
SAIS-""' lo<ltlro ... r.n. llH s1 .... Only ... 6t.IO .. , ..
SAW QvtltM 1'1W1lweqoio Sw ... & C.-dM. Only 12.tS,...
Ucl~f~~
South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa
lltlotol al tho Son D1e9" fr...,.y
PHONf1 546-6312
..
I
REPEAT OF A SELL.OUT!
20.00
LET US SHO'W YOU HOW YOU
CAN TRAVEL ALL SUMMER :FOR ONLY 20.00
Muty Cutmaeher bas created the perfect ltaftllng tlClllljMIN
for you. It's a lishtweiiht wa1kiq..Ut, blended of
eaq-care rayon..m.te and cotton. Hand-w.....,. ancl .
••
u
. .. . . ' . ~ . ... .. " .. ..... ..... --............... .. . . . • t •• ...
If D.lllV PILOT -• T1111ndq, """ 12, 1969
Anne Lesperance · _Wed -~:~~~~~~:T'~~
In Nevada Ceremony
MRS. JOHN u n ER
San Fr•ncisco Honeymoon
Arch itects
Help Student
W o m e n ' s Archileclural
League 0£ Orange Coun ty has
presented a scholarship award
to Steven Sheldon of Sherman
Oaks, judged this ,.....s
outstanding g t u d e n t of
architecture.
Architeet Ralph Allen of
Santa Ana and Mrs. Allen
made the award ~ell!Dtatlon
. lo Sheldon, a fifth year J-architectural student at the
University of So..u thern
Califomi~. ~
Fonner Newport B e • c h
resi d e nt ,Anne Marie
Lesperance exchanged wed-
ding YOM wllli John Utter,
$OD or Mr. and 'Mn. Jack Ut-
ter of Reno, during early
at~rnoon rites . ~d in st.
John's Presbyterian Churcb,
Reno.
Officiating during the'double
ri remony was 'the Rev.
Clawson.
For the rites the bride,
daugh •r of Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Lespe. unce or Newport Beach
selected a beaded floor length
dress enhanced with a
cathedral length beaded man-
tilla. A fan shapec; bouquet
complemented ber ensemble.
Gowned hi floor lenl!lh aqur
organu trimmed with white
lace were Mrs. T o n 1
~perance of Reno, sister-~
law of the bride, who waa
matron .of honor; Jill Baker
and Mary Morrison of Reoo
and Mrs. Dan Mlles of ~
City.
Robert Mcllollald Jr. aervecl'
as best man and 1J11i1t1 wen
escorted to their places by BW
Magee, Mark Sewell and
Henry Mosconi.
Hidden Valley.Country Club
in Reno was the 'setting for the
reteption attended by JOO
guests. Miss Heidi Haynes of
Ventura, niece of the bride,
circul1tod lhe..,...t book.
After bolieymoonint In San
Francta<o lhe couJile will eat11ilfoli• thOtr, l!Ome hi' Lis
Viii.• ' ~ ll<W Mn. \!II<;: J I I gr-d Nl'IQ>lit. Harbor
Hip SdlOol and Ille Universi-
ty of. 'Nevada where she af.
fillated with Kappa Alpha
'fheto; ' . ' f Her hu.sbana .. alSo ah alum·
nus of U of N. was a member
of Sigma Alpha Ep sil o n
!rNmlty,
/JENTAL PLA :TES
;di!-. «E,AllS I. ~NE.S WHILE-U-WAIT
WY COMP.LETE AlWAYS
CREDIT DENTAL SERVICE LOW
TERMS . IN OUR OFFICE PRICES .
All Hands Aboard
Don't Jet left at the dock, say members of the Surfside rs, who are planning
a cruise aboard the good ship Kapersvllle. The voyage wW begin at 7 a.ni. Sat·
urday, June 14, from the dock near the Newport Beach Elles Club, and aboard
will be-the Harmonaires to provide music for dancing. Mrs. Burleigh Burshem
(left), and ,Mrs. Ch arles Kirklen, the commodores, will be the first to board.
From Page 17
~ . . Show Biz Shared
She al9o was· Interested in
writing songs, and' after she
and her parents moved to
Ca1ifomia she began-·writing
for the Jack Haley Radio Show
Which starred Artie Auerbach.
Artie be&an his career as a
New York Dally New s
photographer and thanks to
his ability for 'dialect, wa.s able
to squeeze himself i n t o
verboten places for exclusive
shots. '
"He took. the :onl y
hospital, I told people he just "By the end of the summer,
had a cold. I thought he would we are pooped," said Doris.
recover. In show bwiness, No matter what emeraency
people always try to hide their may arise, the !how must go
illness. No one wants to take a on. La!!l year Doris doubled In
chance," explained Doris. a Japanese frieze for someone
"After my husband died," who didn't show up at the last
she continued, "I couldn't minute. "If there Is a blank
stand anything to do with show spot, the casting department
business." She wanted to get just grab.Ii one of t h e
away and so her mother and backstage crew,'' she ex·
she came to Laguna Beach. plained.
Now a decade has passed Although they have only eENTOTRAl
(For ~hi Exb""9s and f1ii.I , ,'photogr•pb of "~"'" · 'Child by pr.tending to ¥ a
Swedish gardener. By pttten<I-
~ klg to be an Italian, he was
"""'ible to meet Chicago gang·
aters," Doris explained.
since her husband's death, and betn connected with i t
Doris is interested in trying personally for the past few
her hand at song writing years, both mother a n d
.apin. daughter saw the pa1eant for . ~
'1 ~~COME~' .I
'U. ION
DENTAL PATIENTS
eor,..;Qft.y ... •
WELCOMID ,. e PENSIONERS
WEl:COME"
~g her career she wrote the flrsl time back in 194J
m8DJ songs. With Jimmy when Doris was a child.
Wakely she p:roduced "Night "It wu nothing then " said
After Night/~ "Smile When Vivian. "It was on a hat lot
You Speak of. Texas" and and they used one curtain and
----·-. ' . '
A nniversary Presents
Gift List Ann ounced
NEW VORK !UPI) -So il'1
the-tint wtddlng anniversary
coming up ?
Once upon a tJme, a couple
marked it with paper because
ln colonial days it was an item lamtllell needed. And for the second, cotton, and so on.
But !Ima have changed and
so have the needs oI couples.
The early years of mar·
riage, up to say the ninth, are
occupied. with buildlng a home.
During this time., anniversary
gifts of clocks, silverware.
china, glalsware, crystal and
electrical appliances are prac-
tical.
The next slx years are a
time whtn the parents renew
their desire to trave1, because
the ages of the children now
permit it . Personal gifts are
for Ui11 Ume -fun, tQtiles,
jewelry. watches.
The annJveraary years 18
througb Ill probably will find
tbe children showing new ~
teirest In their home, ao ideal
gifts tor this time are
furniture, silver hollow.are,
porcelains, bronus -gifts
that dreBS up the house.
When the children are
grown, and tht home again
conslsts of two -the an-
ni versary years 20 through 60
-let the gifts become "elo-
quenl e1pre58ions of all the
wonders love has wrought,"
says the Jewelry Industry
Council.
And 50th is the golden
jubilee, the 55th emerald, the
60Ul t~ diamond anniversary.
ID the Qaallt;y of the
Diamond, 1n the
of the rich oetlhlg,
backed by the
$425 integrit;y of
!(OVENS
~
• T1l1plloo1 546-4510 Sout1i c-Piao
Op11 Dally 10 to t :JO, Sat. 'tll 6 p.m.
'
IMk"'*1aA
• e lit MOS..
e NO A'P.OINTME.NT '
NECESSAlY
TO PAY r--P•H"O•N•l-"'I
S, I SAT. • OHM EVE
It was his a~ility for dialects
which •lso · led him to the
entertainment world. With his
Jewish dialect. he was Mr .
Kitr.el on the Jack Benny
Show, where he made the
song, "Pickle in the Middle
and Mustard on Top" famous.
''Bouquet of Roses."· one frame. We w e re
Currently she t 5 coJ. _iuc_ln=a=ted ... b~y:;.i"t~th~ou~g:;:n;.."===~---~=~======================, laboraUng with Vic Scla>en, .I
. -
w
M11!~ ··se HAILA
ESPANOL 842-6625 ·
-DR . JEPSON -· , ..
16121 BEACH BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH
NEAR EDINQER -GlOUND FLOOR -MODERN
MA CONDITIONED OFFICE
MEMIEll AMERICAN ACADEMY.OF DENTIST-
AMERICAH CREDIT DENTIST ASSN.
He appeatei:f often o n
television and In Las Vegas.
Doris .U driving ber hulband
to Las Vegasthe'evenlng after
they had celebrated New
Year's Eve with Doris Day,
her husband and two other
couples, when he had hi! beart
attack.
"All the time he was In the
who does the pageant's
m~sic. In the past Vic has
written a number of songs for
bo&b the Andrews Sisters and
BIN Crosby.
tniithe meantime, there ts
th< pogean~ which alter Ill, b
show business. To prepare for
the pageant's Press Night
Monday, June 23 and its run
from July 11 to Aug. 24
partldpants bepn rehearsals
March 6. [ There is plen y of ex-
citement behind stage, the
mothu and daughter agreed.
Flag s Unfurl
For Freedom
HUNTINGTON HARBOR COIN LAUNDRY e FRIDAY-SATURDAY, JUNE 13-14 e
South Coast Junior Women's
Cl.uh members are getting set
to unfurl their American flags
in observance oC Freedom
Sea!IOR, from June 14 through
Jul9 4. 9E,AUtlfUL•£D \ ON
0 111 orto .. C SELF S£l~ICE THE BOARDWALK
L_:.LA::.:...UN_D_A_1__ SHOPPING CENTU
0 Ul!der•C:.u1tt1r MH~ 0 ).cycle .,.nf118fy htch11f•1
"Rl11t• I,,...,.. cvcl• to
fr11h•11·111"tfortd cflth•t· a ll1tl..,-: 1potti11t of
tl•tNf •!Ml .11 •• , •ith
S,olt·Awoy Rini•
~ltion•1 n;.,~t 0 T ... you 1och .!.~ of
cyclol F101lblo collirol
•1111•1 h11 1•qu'"'•
llHficoti111.1 footu••·
OPEii 7 D.4 YS
8 .4 WEEK
.4.M. to 9 P.M.
This patriotic perioo, set
aside by Governor Reagan, is
a time when all California
Junlors are encouraged to
publicize Uie fiag and to
display the motto Glad to Be
an American.
0-AVIS·JROWN_-. -
411 E. 17tti St.-Costa Mesa
I v ... Wln'lflty IOI' Ill-It ol Ally Dof«I. ~ •YMr " ..
IKl!on """ lot•lt only I tor l'urnlslll"' Rtplt,_t IO• An'f 0.ltcll~ l'flrl 1<1 ll>f N.QfVr, Pull'IO .. WI!"' C!mlll!lflf
1¥1Mm.
-
~-------------
' WHAT
MAKES
UNIQUE?
(8)
I
; 1.
1, •
(Ci
JUST
TRY
IT
(Al Pretty Bali@ Li e•
underwi red br• with th•
netur1I look. 32-388
end 32-40C, 6.50.
JS-42D, DD, 7.50
(I) Sno·Fl1ke® wir•d
b1nd•1u, 32-318,
l 2•40C, 6.50.
!l-420, DD, 7.50,
Whit •.
IC! Sky Bel;@
long·lin•. 34-4081
l4-4lC, D, $11.
34 to 420.DD 12.50.
Veta's
llTIMAn A"AIU ................. ---
642-1197
Whita.
... ·---~--~-----·------------------~--------~--~-~----~-,
DAILY PILDf JI
E. Berliners Still Remember Nixon· . •' . . ~ ~
EAST IERLIN (UPI\ -On not "-the "M 111 our I
the ~ -of the Waltz," but be and the atrolJ.
wan, ~ s.rlljws iUJl Ing vloll~ play a medley ol
remlmber Prelldai Nlxoa u old Ew'Opean w1lb:a and
a mao ~ ~ tlie plliDo Huqarlu gypsy tunes for
, for them air-~ i go. dinner pests.
"lie sal riabl Ii-and used Oulalde, tbe city's principal
• Ent Berlin to queries about frllll. below-the-knee rult for to purthue a car or
the wbtteabouts o( the city's hiJ wife aoes lor $31 at a televi&ioa aet. A tblrd
1,872,000 lnhlbltanll. leadlna women'• abop. A small reb'flel"aton. and w 11 b J
It off sh can of hair spray COiis 12.50. madiln.-. en 1 arp contras! to In the face ol such prices, llltl .most ol tho 1tmtry·
WOii Berlin, wbtre 111 o1 that only JO percent ol lhe famlllea -to the Wea
clty'.s· 1.2 million seem to In East Berlin have managed J.Vallabae there.
ptber dally along I he Ir----------=--''--------"
eqUivalent of Karl Man: Allee, r-----------------.... 1-.
tbe Kurfurstendamm. SEE THE STARS
that same plano/1 said Petre, lborouabfare bears l l t t J e
bead wailtr at tho Bu....,._ i;esem61anco to the Karl Man
Cafe., PointiM to a blriek ll'Jnd Allee ~ saw under con.
·on a platform In the siiilCtloti ln ·1118.\. Block·loog,
J'e!tautant's ~ d I n 1 n g l~story apeirtment comP'ffee East Berlin's 3hop windows
i!POll'-, ,. ..1 llrttcl> oul'jllollg both ildes o1 l;eljer on abundance of let th. 1teri flll4e Y"• Sy4H1 o.M..."•11• •I tfl• Wwflr1 fon.
mo1t 11hol~n, -it•t ti.it ~.n, MroKo,. ••IW111• '......_,
111 lhe DAILY PILOT, Oiiier ,East ·Berll!Stn tell the met. all' of lheni Jl!hlle , nilrdlondiso.•"1111!!1 food •ond !~~, villiil«I . ~\ ,the·, olmanthe and almost Identical in coo: cldl$nc are_~expeni\ve .
.. All Presideh\, ci atruction. 'JM aver&ge Eat Berliner L-------------------.1-1
'world' leading 'n'on ::com--MUCH CONSTRUC'l10N , earns $1IO J>U month, com-•'"iO;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;li
munilll lllllon jllayed' at. the Elsewhere, construction ol pared with his West Berlin" LEG~ NOTICE LEG~ NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE cafe at' fl ·Karl Mari: Alll!f" new buildings and restoration oouhter'part's $195, gov~ CAR RENTALS
• one of 1 ~ city's oldest and of much of the old are un-ment statislic3 from both -lnL.,-llNch
SoddloboCk Im Nollrc OF INTENT TO ~e:J:'f!i'i!:;:~:·:·_ m:c;r::tr:~~ra:~~.n de;::ite· an obvious con-
11:°':tw::1~::'·spends \i~ ~"': :!'.~!1~/!2° ....!.« c:;:ti;: evening in East Berlin Juty."U, struction boom and a rtgime-from SO to 75 percent of his
DEED REAL PROPERTY ~~§~~t=~1EE !:;~e:rier =gnaff~: ·~~~~=re~ ::e!~ :oU,?n,,f~~·g or:'Je =~
1 ... 11111 1nd Pia« o1 .... 1c1onc1 1, 11 1o1-governorsbtp of cautornla. ms of East Berlin r~ain almost of his family.
"'"'' F wife, Pat, and daugbten Julie bl,r,rea of)iuman life. NO FRIU.S ITEMS
To THE STATE g=-~Z,~ ''"_, A~.. ~d::cJap. accompanied him A few ltrollers wit\~ With the remainder, he can
o-e111-11 .... , along Karl Man: AJJite; U¥! ,.-blq" suchritems u a blade and ~~~~vo~, ~ifNOGAENIA 1 11 AU. UNIMPRESSED pride of the c 0 m m.'u n.J st._.~-tele•ilion set with 17·
o.. M•y it . ,,.., betor• me, , Not•,.,. He played the "Missouri regime, and also on· BertlJl."s ·-1liicb '-ICreen. for $500, ot an
PUlll5"ANT TO SECTIONS W I ™•OVGl-I mJ llE\IENUE AND "TAXATION Jlul>llC In 11111 tor •lll Snit., "'°IOnall'f' Wal~" al the BU d apt St tho-•ghla .. , ••-Unteir ~ ~.•-.~ ,.,_ for $5,0llO. A no-cooE. T~I! NOTICE OP: INTENT TO DEED REAL' PllOPEllTY"TO THE STATI! •-r-.d Gl!NE (ttA,P~l!LL k-lo mt w. > """' WK; Ul7Q ,r_.wwvu ''('
IN ANO FOR TH I! COUNTY Ofl' ORAHOE. STATE Ofl' CALIFORNIA.. HAS lo be lht ""°" whDw 111me Is 111bstr~ dedicating it to former U.S. Linden.
BEEN 01\llOEO A.NO OISTAJIUTEO TO VAlllOUS NEWSPAPERS OF GEN· tel lo thl wlltlln lnitrvment •nd acknowJ. Prtsiden\ Harry S. Truman, • '
D1ily t~lefs et C-lf'lilive 1Jtic•t
le119 *'"" lee1i119 ef ell Makn eMI 111M•I•
Pi°'k·wp aM Dollw"Y Semce
494-6315
C.'A.lt UNTAL
LIASI ..
CAUFOINIA AUTO llWTAL LIAllff ,
696 5. COAST HWY . LAGUNA BEACH
ERAL CIRCULATION PUBLISHEO IN $AIO COUNTY, fl'OR PUl!ILICATION Ofl' ~Ll" executed the ··-· and con.....lnd afterward that Exce~ durif1tl the moi'nlftl
A PORTION TMEllEOF IN EACt1 OF SJllD NEWSPAPERS. Jtoselll IColvoorll ... ~ and eveniar weekday rush
'" 1"11 llst !hi tollowl111 abbre11 l1Hons
er. IAfd for ftle -• set -"' 1ntm: Ac-At11 or A~ ...,_....,, ... S-.Sou1"' No11,.,. Pubnc the patrons were as unim· hours, the streets are so qUiet
SE-Soll'"'"''' s1111 rA c111torn11 pressed with him as he was th t tr 11· P•lnclN I Offlc1 1n a a IC controls are UR·
-...o,,, .. ·-~.... 0t•fllll c-,., with the Budapest's food . necessary. Trailic 11·ghts are
"Artistry in Moving';. for ffll!
'BEST MOVE
of
YOUR LIFE
AOl-Adllllnlnt
AP~'1 Mio 1'1rcel Number
911c-lloc:k o ........
E-Ea.111
E1.,....e-111ertr El~ IO for1ll Ex-E•u vl
f"~-Frec:tlcln1I
Fl-FICI
FWY-Frtewtv
MW"!'-Hithwt'f
lnc.-/ntlullYt
IM-lnlef1st
1r.--ln'f11Ul1r
Mlfl-Mllllnt or Mineral ..... ""'
..--.. .. -...,,~ My Commluklrl l!it1lr11 ,,.,.._ __
s 1.,-$Cll;ttwrl'f o.c. '· l"9 • """'"' was no demand for turned off altogether o n
sf.....$1reet PublWoecl o~'"" CDlll 0111~ P11o1 an encore The food went weekends, when all busi'nesses Sub-$Ubdlvltklr\ ~, 22. 2f, JUN .\ 12, 1fft JN 69 •
sw-soul'IWHt down and did not come up, so and factories are closed. The ~~~:--tlrlr LEGAL NOTICE l guess it wasn't bad," Nixon U-bahn, or subway, is the
t r-TrKT told a news conference in West ~osf popular means of
Trl<ll-Tri."91/i.r NOTIC• TO c••DtTO•S Berlin··-follow•'ng day. 'T--T_...i.• SU,!Jtlott COU•T 011 THI[ l-IK; transportation.
Urld-UndlvlOed ST•T• Of CALlfO.NIA J'O• The food and wine at the "II th W-Wat TM• COUNTY OP o••NGE ey are not at their
Wl'l'-Wtm•IT • NI. A-m11 Budapest, as well as the cily 1·0•· East 0 -1· ·
PA•CIL ltlUMl!llNG El li .. of ETHEL E. ILAKEMORE, i'"'"'if. are not the same today. u;:;, .IK"r 1ners are in SYSTRM IEICftU.NATIOM DKN>ed. ..,., their homes unless they have
Tht "-w'• .._ Nrc:et 111.1mt.er NOTW:E u HE•e1v GtVEN to "" The Budapest now features specific eascns to go out or wi-uMd fo ittsc;rlbt 1~ In 11111 tndllon ol 1111 1tl0vt nemea cltte-denl _,. __
'"'· ~ 10 "" ~uor'• ,,,.,, bclot, llllt 111 """"' hlvlntl c111"" ... in11 tt1e an ex ... ·~ucnl pepper steak and specific reasons to go out or
1111 rntP -or block nutnblr "' t11t Mkl oec:eOtnt •re ·~wlrta 19 11"' tl'lem, a Hungarian red wine for STOCK ANSWER
Cal:
49~1025
NE-Norlhe11t
NEIY-florlhealltr!Y
Nly-Nclnllwll'.
No.-Numbtr
NW-Norfll...,..I
NWIY-Norltl...,..ltrlY
Oll-Clll'lt111 llkdl
Por-Por1ian
book 1nd ft1e fl"ldfvld!HI JWl!'C~I numbtr w!ltt Ille "'"5ll•'f YO\ldler1, In !ht office on Ille rnao P-IW or wlt!lln ""' blod:. of 111t ci.ni: o1 111t abovt 11111111H1 court. or $3.25. The piano player does This is a stock answer in
·-·•-fo """""' IMm, with t~1 MCaHrvl1f";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;iii;;;;;;;Oiiii;;Oii;;;ii;;;iiiiiiii;;~;;;;iii;;ii;i;,;;;;;~:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;~~~~~~~~~~:::;~~~:;;~:;:;;:;;~i!i~i:i;_, A Pll'C~ nul'l'lber I • tor _..,,...,.., -""" te 1tl• UfldtMll9ned t th oflk
"W6:MIS". -..Id meoin Book J ol tfle at Tl10MPSOH ANO MILLEA1 AN~ ~
AtlHIOl'I Maio., l!llodC 3'l fMIP ,,_ C. GAlllllCK, 1W Ptlntff A...,.ue, Wl'ift·
)l, l!llock )J 1nd P1rcel S wllhln 11111 11tr. CtllfCM'fthl wtildl 11 "" pJaq of
b!oc;k. TM fflNI rf(tfn'(f fo a•• IVtllo ~ " the 11nder11tNd In Ill "''"''' ob~ for 1-'IOn In llw Dlflot of 1111 pert1tnF119 le !hi nit!• Ill 11111 lflncl1nt,
-"-· wl111!n lour ~in. 1lhlr !ht l!rll p11bllc• Pt-Port
lloll OI !hi.I notfct. 11:-Atnot Ree11-A1C11ne~t1r
Re.ull-AHubdl11l11on
RS-AeslltldlYlllon
Ri-Allhll
• All pr_,,., Is In Town1hlp SOlllh Incl P•led M11 ,., 1Mt
A•nM wat of .S.n 1er111rdlno l1H · Vlrtlnla B. Jol'on10n
1nd Meridian. •crm1n11tr1lrlM
NOTICE
w-1111-~wlll a ...... xed
ul tlM! 11Mivt
named d9adenl
THOM,IOltl AND MILL•R
In "'"Wll'>l:e o1 lltw, Pllblk notlq Is l>trfllV glllefl fhtl, «i 1tia 111 dllY of ANO MAit C. OAR•ICIC
Ju11• J96f, al 11\t flour of 11:00 o'c!CIU'. A.M. of that dlY, nie uriders!t1!>td Ta• 1'2if l'alllllf Aw-
COltec:tor of 111• Counly of o.ranoe. II "'" llffkt tn 1111 Ci1"f of S..nta ""'· Slife Wfll!HH. Calfwnl•
rA C1!1fornl•, wilt deed fo IN Slllt, wnie. -• .-edftt"nc<I, or '" ln11•1lmtnt !-'' ftUl •"'*315 p!tn of redtfnPlklr> 11 lnllltled •• orowided b't law, ll>t real Prwert'f htr•llllfl'tf' ,.'~ f9f" A*nlnl1tr11f'l•
de..altltd wPDll wllld> dale tt.,.. or more yqfl wilt ha ... ti-<! ''°"' 1111 dale .,...i,.hld er.,.. CDlll Dally ftllot
"' 1tlt Nit of Mid Pf-i'tY' to ""' Stitt. The 1111PUnt for Wflldl 11\t deecl wrn J-!. n , It, "· 1Nf 1061-0
be 1s1uec1 win be ""' !0!11 _, cNe !or wnldl It ••• ,.,w to the ~'·~· i110 LEGAL NOTICE
"""""' btlM i.at lorth lfl dol'-" 11'111 cenh ~ !be dftcrllltlln of 1"41 P,._
•.1.11.1m
ertf, 11 lhe .,_,., 11 ....,_. lo 1tlt 11 .... fht rlttltl of NOtmPtim will ttrmlnahl 1-------------11
-anv 1~ 1.111 or olhef" CC1<111ef91W;1 bf IM Slate. Al PfOWIOed by llw, lfll 51111 11'1111 f\IW tt.. soil! a lJlllOtil'f fll rectlW •II ~ts lulltl and orollll 1rlll"9 lo! • ...., manner from fM ._,.,..,. 10 oetdl:d to
1'111 irate. All Information o;onc.r~lne rtdllmllioxl. or IM lnltlallon of an ln1!1llmenl 011n
o1 redemption wm. "'°" ,_If, tie twrnllhtd bf Ooll s. MoUl!Y •• Counl'f T1~
Colltetor. 110 Flntntt l ulllllnt, '311 Hor1h l rwdway, P.O. l ox l.Qt, s..n11 A111,
NOTIC'f: TO CltlEDITOlll
SUl'Elltoll COUll:T 01' TME
STllTi 01' CALll'OllN\A 1"011
THE COUNTY OF OltANQE
JM ........
E1t1t1 of JOHN WILLIAM SllOWN, E>Ke11o1o1.
NOTICE 1$ HEIElY GIVEM hi tM Cali:"~ ~1st -,.\' .; May, ftdt DON S. MOZLEY cndlton of 1119 l'boYe n1med deadent
Ti• Colleclor ot g.,,.. Coo.inty !Ml Ill HflOIU Mvl"' cl1lm1 q1l<U1! !tie
St1t1 of C•llfomla said dfoc..,.,,t ••• re<iulr't<I to flll l'llem,
TN orOIM!rtllo\ 1'11 bl! ~ed illd the tub ltd of 1'11$ r.arlc. 1r1 ..itu1ttd In :n::,:11e le~.,;' .=he•~it In fhf vffk1
fhl ~O!lnly of Orinai, st.ii of C111tornla, ind partk111&rly dnulbed 11 fallowlo, lo ,.:,.;;1 tlltm, with '"tM ltd=~~
to wil PltoPEltT'I SOl.O TO TH E STATE vavdler1, 111 tM undtohrMd II tht L1w
IN THE YE,t,lt 19" FOil THE TAXES, Olf!cn of WEI.PUTT ANO OKAl.AKt, 615 LEGAL NOTICE ••••SSMENTS AND OTHER CHARGES West E1t111n sireet, sulr. ns, s."11 An•. ------cc:::::------(~ Callforri.Ja t2l'01 llltlldl I• tfle •lac• ol P·»UI OF THE FISCAL YEAR 81..,..._ h IMJslrien ol 1ti. underlklned In all matte"
Cl!.ITll'tCATll Of IUSINl!.SS Newport eac pert1lnl119 kl th1 e1!1lt ol s1ld Cle(:ede..I, flCTITlOUS NAME wUhln four monttu •lttr Int llr1t ~bl!G-
Tht ur.dersi9Md clots cerlll'f tie 11 ~on· lion ol 11111 l!Ollce .
• ''
""' 1 .... •IM U al 11t E. 17th S1reel Oa!lld Ma'f 2l, lfff -· C't Marv C. Brown Sulit 15, Cos!• M111, C1llltrnl1, uMk• I y Admlnlilra1rlit
tile flctl!ID<Js llrm n1me of SELECTEO ~ INOUSTRIAL PROP;JTIES 1.-d 1h.tt ol t!>e l!illle "' 11\e 1tiov. n!JfMd lltQllllrl'll uloS firm Is tomPOS al the !C!llowln~ No. ll -Sale Ho. ;i.te, AP 0 -151·111, WIL,UTT ANO OKAlAIU
JIO•IOll, wl'losl n1m1 In !ult ll"ld PIKI ol New-1" lffCfl Cif'f' Loi 11 Ilk 21. s~~l.22 Al!W111fl al Ll"W
residence II II followl! No. IS -Sile No. 27t1, AP ~"°'3-10, '" w. 1!1911ltl '""' Sem c . TNba, 4Mll !Hnr A ...... Flrll Add .. Ntwl!Wf t1111111'l. Loi IJ SMI .. m
N--1 Bud\. c;,.l_lfefn!a. lllll 11, nil.II sant1 .. M. C111t1nt11 t2H1
01r.c1 MIY n, Ifft. : Cl T.i: 1n•1 546-14" s.m c. Tnibo San emente •ttwMY• ............ 1 .. 111.1h'l• STATE OF CALIFORNIA l P!lbtlllfltd 0..nH C•1I 01Jtv Jlllot
COUNTY Of ORANGE l " Ml • 12 lt "' ' °" Ml'! It,; INf, befortl -· I Nolarv ,, :n, Junt ... ' • I tllt7 ... ,
Public In and for '9ltl Slale, Pt•l<IMlt'f C 1' ty LEGAL NOTICE aP!>Hred $AM C. TAUIO k.-n to me to bf: 11111 __, wlloM nlr,.,. II tublcrlbed
to lfM within Instr-' and .O.nowltdt-No. M -?.tie No. :tUJ, AP 5MM-1l. l'IOTIC'll: TO CJtl:OITO•I
.ii M ••tcUled tfle """· Tr 71J Lot 11 I lle I, sn.u 'Uf'fll:lott COUJtT OP TN• {OFFICIJIL SEALI No 17 _ Slit No ltlO. AP SMIS.1J, ITA't'I 01' CALIPOllNI .. FOii:
PeH'f J . Nh:flOI' Tr .S1 Por Loi z. s7.s6 THa·coUHTY 01" OUNee:
Nott .... Putll1C • C11lforni1 c• Ne. A ... f7U
P•1nc1 ... 1 Otlk• 1n Costa Mesa ity e.,.~ °' Luc•LLE N. KAMMERER, Or111S1t CountJ. Dtcttsect. MY Comml11lon E1111lrt1 NOTICE 1$ HEJtEl'I" GIVEN lo tM
Ml¥ U, 1'111 S. H S152, AP 117 7'1 29 C"'211o,_ ol the t bci'lt """!I'd llKldtnl Publlilled Or1T1111 Coa1t Ot11't Pllo1, No. I& ;;.I h:e ,.:· Lot \l6 $7 •• " ' lrtal Ill "''°"" ll1vl119 tlalrns 1iilln11 tl'lt
M,iy 21, 7', Junt .S. 12. IM '954' Newl>llff• 's.•' No''"' ,.p lli.l.U-U .. ltl ~ l rt ,.qulrt.:I to tti. !Mm,
----:-:=-,-::-::::=:::::----! No. -,... . • ' wlfh IM f\fCM$a<V ..ou<:!>en. In ~ of'llu ~ Htklti~ POf Lot 2u. t.l.t2 "' the cl•~ ol tM •bove e!'lllled <.OUrl or LEGAL NOTICE No. 10 -Stl• No. 5810, AP 116-ln-3t. to ore1e11t thlm, wllh ftlt ntct1Mrv -----''-==cc--cc:::=::::::::::-=::I'• :u11 Por Lot s u.9~ "'llllthtu, to tt1e undffll•ned ,, L1w Of. CEllT1FICATE Of DIS.CONTINUANC E No. tl -S.le No. '°"· PO• Al" l:lf. !I«: of GALVIN A. KEENE, Attor ... y II
Of US• AND!OJt AIANOONMENT IJl-11 (tormerly AP 13'-lll·Oll, Tr :D63 Low, ~U NO<'lll Newport 8DU1w1!1rd,
OJ' flCflTIO.US 11Afll11: Utt t7 $243.0l N-rt l!l~ch, C1llforn!1, wllldl 11 1111!
TtfL! UNOEllilGNED din htrobY l Bea·· c' h DllCI of bWIMIJ ol 1tlt unde•1l1n1d In all Ctrllf'f lhlf, tllKl!W 7·1-4-9 lhe'f tened to ag Un a m1tlerJ Hfll1nl119 lo lhfl esttll of llld
do buJlllHI '"'"' ~ llclltlow llrll'I n1m1 dtc.clPnt, wl1111n 11• rnon1t11 1tt1r !ht llt1!
of DOLL y o DONUTS 11 toet Ad1m1 JWbUcatlon ol 1'hl1 nolltt.
AYI Huntlll'lllgn 8N<:h. Cllllornl•. u •f' d s h I Dai.cl Junt 2. Ifft w111C~ blhlnft• .,.. '°'""'" cO<nl>OHCI nl le C 00 WUll1m Morrl1 1<11n""''' o1 !ht fo!IOWl"ll PlflOfll, wtlo&I Nmf!I Eittc1.1tor
Jn fuM and plaat ot reslcllfo(.1 '" 1~ of t!'M! Wiii of
fv!lowl IO'"ll"lt· D' t < t ll>t abci'le Mmftl dKtdM!! wALTEA 0J, JACOIS, 21732 8rllon IS r1c OALYIN •. KEIHli
Ll"'ll Hwitlr>11ton S.-dl, C11lfornl1. A"'"'"' ti l.llw
LUCILLE M JACOBS nm Briton '14 Ntt1ll N._-i llulhr1rll L•~ Hunll"ll~ Bt1ch 'c1111'11rnl1. No. t1 -~le No. 7'l1. AP ~2.25. ~ -..C.11. CIM'-"'19
C.r11i1c11e IOI' 1r1ni.aC1fon "' l)ullntH '°' NW SE\lo ~ I) T-1 R ,, 111.n ...... I '*'lnl l!ndtr !hi abcvt fktllio<.11 n1me. l l"ld 11· NO. D -Slit ND. mt. AP st-110-4111 A"'"""' .... E•ICU'titr
todav!I of publlcallon thereof, .,.. on flit !formtrl'f AP S6'1llO-Cl2.!12J, 1l.t;9Wd al Pllblllfll:d Or-Coe1I 0111'1 1'11o1 In the of'llct "' 1111 Caunf'f' c~ "' LCll su ..... y Th•N Arci'l!I l'to. I ·t:• ,., JUN .s. u. ,,, "· 1Mt llMMt
A""'" ~. Ul'IOllr 11\t prlWl1IOM Ill 11'1.21 · t "DGAL NOTIC
s.dlon UM II tn, ,ClvH Code. l B h ~ E J.:!'.'~~-s -lie..i tt11s ,... 11.,, 11 aguna eoc 1,...,1111
Walttr J. Jecob1 HOTIC• 01' TllUITE•'I U.L•
Lucl!le M. JICOOS U 'f• d S h I ' Pt.. '""'. P uOlllMCI 0,."111 Coal1 01llY PllOI n1 19 C 00 On J-It, ltff, at 11:00 A.M.,
June J, 12. If, a. 1Mt 101..... FULLERTON M 0 RT G A G IE AND ESCROW COMJIANV, 11 Tf\11""-\UlldU
D• t • t N Mid PllMllilnl lo Ootd of Tr111I dllllll 1s r1c ow Mardi u. 196$ •Xtcl.lled by 11:01E11T T. VARNEY ANO OOASEV JO VAANEV,
LEGAL NOTICE
MOTICt °' "Tll:US1"11:1'1 U.L11: hlllband Ind wif't alld rKDf'do!d Mlrdl 24,
LO•H NO. 171 HS t2t • l Beach 1"5. "" booll 7Ufi, p-m. "'-Olfll:lal ffl NO. lml aguna AK'Ordl In fht offlC. of""" AKor ... r of On T~urtdl'f, JuiY J, lM, 11 11 :00 Or-t Counly, C1llfol'!111. Wiii sell al
O't lo<k A.M. Fl111nc.lll F9Claratlon, In(. .• a M11t auction to hlt1hfll blctotr for Alh
Oe1awar1 corPDtatlon, •• Trv1lft or c •t c...,abkl 11 lllM of wi. lfl lilwtul _,, ..ibsl11uled Trvsltle lllldf:• and DIH'wlnl 111 I y el 1119 U1111ed llatnl In ttw lobby of t!>e
!ht Cited of '"'"' r~tl'Tld kl In 1"41 Nvtlu main ... 1r1iq of ffll Olrden Gt•YI olflcl of Def1111t ,_.,. In bot*. .,, .,.. 715 of F11111r11111 i\loortffttl and EKrow Com-
"' Otr!dll Rtc0fi!1, Counf'f' Recorder of No. •4 -$alt, No. 1111, All J.S.~lt, l*ll'f, al lll-0 Ce111urv 11¥11., Garden Oral!Vtl Covnf'f', C11lf0mla, WILL SELL, Arc:h llHCh H'&tohh $lY 6 n Loi i Ilk ~. C.tlfunlll ell f19ht, lltlt tnll In-
• 91 ~lit aud~ to hlt1flell bidder !or 7, N,JI • ~ ......, to ~ -lltld bY If r.elh lilaV.019 ti ttm1 of .... In taw111I No. ts -P't. $M N"-111:1:, Al' SS. lll'lllllr'41ld Dwd In "Ille ...--rtY 11!u11H ~ of !ht United Stated Oii tfle $15 ('°"'*1Y AP ss.JD.1Ull, Ard! Ill ffll CJIY llA Ollll MIN, In .. 111 COunf'f'
il*Wa*. l'I 11\t .Mtrlld Ill S411ta No. ), ... di Htllt!tl Lola 17 and 11 I lk M. enll SI ... lllncrlbed 11:
1100 ~"""' OriYa aoui.v1ri1. "' ""' Clf'f 17.el lo! .. llA TrKf NO. ""'· .. """"" "" "' ~~ o-. COllntY If Or•-· St1'9 No. .. -$aW No. ll:IJ, AJI s.JD.11. I '""" ,_,, ... In Boot 161, ..... :w "' llf C1Utonll1, ab rfltll, tlHt, lt'ld "".;""' AtO. IMdl N~ohh Lo~ 23 to » Inc :W of MIKI!~ MaPI< r-... ol
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Collt .w.., COlllllY of Orll!ll, Slit. of t. p 11 cvrnbrlllef!I. to NY fht -•If •rlrdMI
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flNANCIMI .l"fOll;•AT~ 'l'r ... Lot f11 , Sit.IS • PULLf:1t'fON M011:1"GAGI ANO iNC. ., w<f1 Tf'\!tlee No. tt -'°le No. tUl, AJI l21•2'Wf IEICJtOW.COWAHV
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1 JDD sen lllen's llat DilJ .. JDU 1111 • •
Did yoo know lhal women shop !Wice for every article ol
clottsing they buJ? FIBI In Ille paper ... and.then in the
stores. In fa<.:t, 8outof10 women look to newspaper
eds for "'fashion and ltJ'e" tnformation before they go
shopping. :
tt you sen·clorhes. you need to run ads in the paper.
Your compeUtors are doing it In fact, retail.-S all over
America wilt spend nearty 4 biHlon dollars this year on
-ad...U.lng.Theaw,.ged~-·
puts 88 pen:enl al ill~ bu<lgll lnio-.
paperacts;wm1n-....,,lhopa.,11Sp.w~ -·n beclc*lt•·•1t1211a'l"°'tinf, ' ·
a
In an average week. about 30 women In 1,000 buy a MW
dreaa. So to sell 100 dresses, you must reach 3,300
women? How? ln the newspaper ••• the only medium
that reaches al1110st all women.
Like to aee more empty hangers at the end of a day's
selling? Reach your cUstomers on their first shopping
expedition each day-In the paper. That's what we mean
by Now_...,IUIJ,
Pul 'four 'Me·rchiin~ise on Display
lif'flle 40;000 Orange foasi Area
.... HOmes· Served by the
•
111-________ .,,
DAILY PILQT.
.,
1
j
I
1
• '
..
' ft b.111. y I'll.CT thlll'sd1y, June 12, 1~4
a Dodger· Again Maur~"s Hukh-hush (?) Mission :
Checks .Shady Links
CARSON CITY (UPI) -Mitchell
Rogovin , an attorney for baseball com·
missioner Bowle Kuhn, ia: on a "hush-
hush" mission he~ looking for links
between major league baseball club
owners and Nevada gambling.
Rogovin, an attorney lroni Washington,
D.C., Wednesday iMpeded state records
and also .met with Gov. Paul Laxalt and
state gaming control board chairman
Frank Johnson.
After his meeUng with the state of-
ficials, Rogovln sald lt would be "inap-
propriate" to comment on the progress or
his investlgaUon al this time and added
that he was sorry v.·ord ha'd leaked out lo
'
tbe news media that he was meeting with
Lualt and Joholon.
The lawyer, who said he was the only
investigator on the job, plans lo make a
report to Kuhn within the nen two
weeka.
The investigation started last month
after it was learned that Charles o.
Finley, owner of the Oakland Athletics,
had purchased 30,000 shares or 2.2 per--
cmt of Parvin-Dohrmann Co., which
operates three Las Vqu casinos.
Further investigation ahowed thrft
directors of the Atlanta Braves, including
president William C. Bartholomay, have
holdings in Parvin-Dohrmann.
Bartholomay and John J. Louis Jr., a
.
Braves director, own less than one paio
cent each in the company and anotbet
Braves direclor, Delbert Coleman, is
chairman and chief ezecutlve of Parvin.
Dohrmann and OWDI irT ,300 share. of lhe
linn's l,2511,000 outstanding lhare>.
Rogovin decllne.d to say whether be hid
met with Finley or the three Atlanta of.
ficiab yet or whether be had found other
owners or players who may have inter·
esb in Nevada gambling.
Johnson also refused to comment on:
the t a I k s with Rogovin but said, 0 we
dld not discuss perdlBliUes •or stock
holdings. We supplied him with all t h e
information he asked for."
Angels Shake Off Fines,
Shoot Down Birds in 14th
MIS f!UMtER!S UP -Dodger skipper Walt Alston ibOnd. Maury Wills his old uniform back after lhe
pub acquired him Wednesday from Montreal. The
Dodgers parted with long.time regular Ron Fairly
and second baseman Paul Popovich to get Wills
and Manny Mota from the Expos.
I
UP TO OLD TRICKS -Maury Wills, in hjs first
game \vith the Dodgers since rejoining the club
\Vednesday, sli des under the tag of Philadelphia's
Don Money during Wednesday night's 3-0 Dodger
defeat. Wills did this 104 times during the 1962 sea·
son to establish the major league record.
Wills Back With Dodgers
Old No. 30 Returns .to LA
LOS ANGELES (APJ-"Witlrbeat out
a slow roller lo short for a single. \Vills
stole secood. ·•
-&tccinclly. this desc r ibed a
sportswritcr·s notes in ...,•hal may be the
beginning of a new era in Los Angeles
Dodger history. ·
Maurice Morning \\!ills, Oeetcst Dodger
of them all, came home Wednesday in a
trade that sent 1 l·year Dodger veteran
Ron Fairly and quick-glove Infielder Paul
Dodger Slal e
Popovich to the Montreal Ex-pos The
Dodgers also got outfielder 1t1anny :\iota.
The Expos, however. turn~! aroutld
and traded PoPOvich to the t.:hicallo Cubs
for Odtflelder Adolfo PhUl 1ps and relief
Jlildie< Jack LaMabe.
Wills, llloullh, 11 the key man In the
awaps, H not ln feet lt>tn Jn emoUon. He
came to lbe Dodsen 10 ,.a.rs ago from
Spol<ane ol lhe Paclllc ~ Loague. He
wu an unknown but la bis first major
lague te:&IOl\ mltkld htmaell as a thief.
In I lllO ho llA!le IO b,... lo lead the
NaUonol 'Leap<. ,,,.,, followed with
......,. of 35. 104, 411, II llld K stolen
ba,.1. A typlcll Dod..,. rolly In the Wills er• wp--a nit; M•urJ,• Jteal ol aec:.uxt,
\ . (
a saci'ttice and a f1y ball for a run .
He helped the Dodgers to pcnnanLs in
1959, 1963, 1965 and 1966. mostly as a
SllOi'lstop, but Was 1 ra ded alter the 1966
season to Pittsburgh for Gene Michael
and Bob Bailey.
His relurned to the Dodgers was
BAN ON WOMEN
FINA LLY DROPPED
\Vomen have been accorded egual
righlS. ,
That is to say they've been recognized
by the Newport Junior Chamber or Com-
n1ercc as being admissible to a previous·
\y males-only event , .. the annual Yard-
Jy Banquet.
In an 8stoonding reversa.1 ol form , it
was announ~ today that gals wlll be od-
mitkd to the June 18 function at the
Newpoi1.er lnn, which inCludes dinner.
guest speaker Bill v a n Breda KoUf and
finaJly the selection of lhe trophy winner.
Further, in an equally shocking
turnabout. a special cut rate 1 lckel plan
has been annou nced. Early purchasers
gct the $6.50 duca!S for S6 , .. H they bu y
the ticket before $:30 p.nl. Tue$dny or If
they makt phone riservations (175-QIO)
by the· ll!ted deadline.
memorable, if not triumphant. The ~
Dodgers lost 3-0 Wednesday night to
PhiladelP._hia ~ _Mie _fbillies__broke a nine-
pme ioslng streak. But Wills, 36, opened
the game with a bouncing infield single
and stole second, his 16th theft of the
season.
'"I'm sure glad it's over," said a reliev-
ed Wills alter the game. "Now l can
relax and cet. to work. It's been a long . ' hard day."
\Yllls handled six chances flawlessly at
short.stop and said his Dodger unUonn,
with his familiar No. 30, "looked funny on
me."
In Mota. 31 , the Dodgers get an out·
nelder who was batting .318 in 11 games
for the Expos. * * ·i:r "MIU.Of.L.,.HJA {os AfllGll:Lll:I ..,........ .., ........
arin..tt JlllWltls.n •II
T.T•ylOI", 2'I • I 1 0 ll1-t. 211 6 I I
C•ll'-t1 • I 2 I P•rti.tr, 11> J I I lt..Atlfol, l11 • 0 0 0 1(-ff • I I ~· lb l 0 1 I Halllor, c: 4 1 t v.u •0 11$ud•kls.,. l I •
M.llllT•"• ( ) 0 0 0 Cr•wfonl, If • I t
1-(1111, (I l 0 0 0 Riii.Mii, cl ) I I cr .. mpipfl, II > 0 0 0 C.0.IHn. p l I 0
Mol9, pl\ 1 0 0
McB••n, f)h o II 0
TO!ll> JI 3 l J TO!~ll )2 S 0 r.iledelpti!• • 200 0111 000 -l
• MQ>tltl GOO OOll lllOI -I I -~y. OP -l'hUecle'Pllt I, I.ti A!'IWi.I
I. LOI -1'111 .... llll'llt J. I.ta ........... '· i• -t•Ulw'I. O. Jol'lnson. &iltfl'IO,.., C,tWIOl'd. SI -
Wiiia.
BALTIMORE (AP) -Manager Lefty
Phillips fined five California Angel
players Wednesday a total of $750 for
violating curfew regulations.
On Wedzlesday night, PhiUips was. all
smilea after the entire team beat another
curfew. This lime, he even helped .
There was a big difference, of course.
The fines, $150 each, were slapped on
pitchers Eddie Fisher, Rudy May, Jim
McGlothlin and Bob Priddy and ooUielder
Jay Johnstone, for staying out too late.
ln Wednesday night's game, three of
the offenders contributed to a 14--inning,
7-5 victory over the Baltimore Orioles, in
a game completed just before a local
curfew woo.Id have ended play.
Jotmstone, who doubled and scored in
the sixth, launched the wiMing rally with
a two.out single and then had to bold up
at third when Jim Fregosi's drive to right
bounced into the stands for a ground rule
double.
Tom Satriano, the 22nd player used by
the Angels and the last nonpitcher
available, then rapped a hard grounder
past first baseman Frank Robinson to
break the 5-5 tie.
If Be .Joins Lakers
''This goes back beyond last night,''
Phillips said. "There was a lal.lty in the
way these players were treated. They
had it too easy. They got away with too
much." 24-second Oock~ Wilt It was the first public announcement of
a fine by Phillips since May 27, when he
was named to replace Bill Rigney.
Biggest Tests for Boyd
Rigney long had said that he didn't
believe in putting a player to bed "I
would expect that ir you treat them like
men. they will act like men."
CALl,,OltNIA IALTIM01t• 1 .. rllrM • .. rllrtH
A speculative. but probably ~e rumor
printed exclusively in a Lorig Beach
paper \Vednesday, says USC basketball
boss Bob Boyd will be the next coach of
.the Lakers.
Does this mean lhat pro basketball is
going to shelve the 24·second rule to ac-
commodate Boyd's great (?) coaching
technique of stalling?
· Boyd's big moment in coaching (lo. his
way of thinking ) was probably the rught
when his Trojans got more points than
UCLA at Pauley Pavilion by using the
very controversial tactic of stalling.
It woutd be a farce to call it a victor y
for Boyd, but you are forced to admit
that on that night his team did have more
WHITE
WASH
GL.EMH 'frrHITI
points than the opponent it out.walked.
On another occasion. when Boyd was
trying the .more conventional and ac-
ct!pted way of playing basketball, his
Trojans were beaten by Athletes in Ac-
tion.
Fortunate1y his team wasn·1 put to any
other major tests -like (acing the
Salvation Army All·Stars.
In addition to coaching the mechanics
of the game, the new Laker chief will be
given the responsibility of making one
Wilt Chamberlain behave.
Wilt Chamberlain has r.1ore determina·
tion than one of Boyd's old cha racters,
L. J. Wheeler, and I never gathered the
impression that Bob had much control
•. , if any __ . over L. J.
Boyd as the head coach of the Lakers is
an almost undlgestible thought for this
writer -who appreciates basketball as it
is meant to be played.
* * * P•al Williams, the UCLA fl'Hbman
tl:'acl; star who prepped at Bmithligtoa
Beach HIP, is entered ill tbe NCAA
championships at Knoxville, Tun. 11ut
week. ---
Wllll1ms hM ron tJae 880 ill 1:50 this
year and mlghl slip la for a pobat If be
could get down around 1:49.5. . '
Only three of Michigan's stale high
school track champions would have plac-
ed in the recent Califomla state meet a:t
UCLA. Keven Reabe of Drayton Plaim,
, Michigan's fastest 880 men (1:52.7) would
hsve finished third against the Callfor·
nians.
Tim Drumheller of: Riverview's 14.2
high hurdles would have Lied him for
fourth at the UCLA spikefest.
And Steve Nelson of Battle Creek Cen-
Baja Race Ends
, ENSENADA, Mexico (AP) -James
Ekins of Sherman ()Us, drtvlng a Bapa
Boot, was theoverall wbmer today in the
Baja 500 Off·Road Racine Event
.With bis co-driver, Guy Jones of Ven-
tura, Edkins was timed in 1&-hours 77
seconds for the more than 500 mile Jong
course <'lrcllng the lower half ot &ja
California. The blg <:lau wlMer WM an American
Motors Rambler driven by Carl Jackson
and Jim Fricker oI Hemet. '
tral would have been fifth in the shot with
his 59-6o/, .
You might conclude the California kids
were pretty tough on the basis of that
comparison. Mich igan Is one of the na-
tion's top pre~ track stales.
Two-lime Olympic triple jump cold
medaJlst Adhemar da SUv• ls DOW
working for the BradUan State Depan..
ment. From convmaUon wltll Brull'•
new jumping jack, Nelson Prudencio, ooe
gathers Uiat da Silva ls not an admirer of
&he man who broke his record.
Pradenclo's 51-4 was more <lll two
feet betler than da Silva's belt.
Sports In Brief
.t.10,,,.,, 2b 1 o o o auton1. If 1 • ) J JO!vllfOfl'll, cf 1 2 1 o ai.11'. c1 7 o 1
Fregmr, u 7 1 1 o F.ltoblMOn, ff J o o
ltrid'ltnll, If • I 2 O ~II, lb ' 0 I
K.T•n.rn. p O I O O ltlcMM, ' 0 O t Mor10n. ph I I o Hlndrlcb, ph I I I
BnlMI. p O I O l .ltool-. lb 5 I I
lltNl5. pto l o O O.Jol'I,._,, ?b ' t I
8Mbal'l,p 000 S.lenger,U 'J2
$.ltrl-. ph I • 1 E~ ....... c • 2 l E.Fblllr, p O O O MOtton, ~ 0 I 0
l .Jlltlnsml, rl t O • O. lrymple, c I I I
\Ion, ff 5 t 1 Mc:Ntlly. p 2 t II
t...kOdrlQun. Jb ' 2 • LAw!Nrd. p D I 0 Hldu, lb 2 1 1 0 .IMy. pll I 0 I
.Spencer, lb J I l H•rOlft, II I 0 t ......... ,o. lb O O O ~1~nmund. rl I I 0
kodgefi, t 6 0 I 0 Murphv, p l o o o
WllMlm. P 0 0 0 0 R.M.ly, p o o o o
Ref>Ol, If l o 1 O
Tot1l1 SI 1 16 1 Tot1t, II I II I
C•Ulomla OJO 001 000 010 02 -1
ll•lllmore 010 010 200 010 00 -I
E -Hieb, a1i.no1r. OP -t•!!~I• 1. Btl!llN)re I. LOI -C.etltornlt 10, Selllmorw 11.
18 -Buford, Johl\lfOfl'll, Sl*l(tr, Fr"°'I. Hit -Hlc!U (2), Erch•rreri (U. 5 -Jt11i..muM1.
Alou:'WhatHappened?'
-Drysdale Beats Laver
HOUSTON -"What happened? Who Hyndman Ill of Huntington Valley, Pa.:
did 1 hit''" Pete Bostwick of Locust Valley, N.Y.,
These ~ere questions asked by Jesus and Pete Jacobi of Southampton, N.Y., are the Americans through to the fourth Alou from his Methodist Hospital bed. round.
There to answer the questions was Matty
Alou , Jesus' brother.
"You had a collision on the field ,''
answered Matty.
Jesus Alou, left fielder for lhe Houston
Astros, collided with shortstop Hector
Torres as they chased a pop fly Tuesday
night in a game between the Astros and
the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Alou suffered a Cracture on tht left sid~
of his jaw and a concussion. He was plac·
ed on the Astros' disabled list and is ex·
pected to be out of action four to six
weeks.
• Torres suffered a bruised l!f(k and cuts
on the forehead. He is due to play agaln...
in a week or 10 days.
•
BRISTOL, England -South African
Cliff Drysdale may have given an in·
dlcalion Wednesday of what's ahead at
Wimb ledon by beating the world's top-
ranked player, Rod Laver of Corona del
Mar, in the West of England Open Tennis
Ownpionshlps, +t, 6-2, 7...S.
Roy Emenon ol. Newport Beach had to
extend himself before he dispo!ed of
Charlie Pasare.11 of Puerto Rico 7·5, a.10,
H .
Drysdale's upset came In the third
round action which saw two American
aces Arthur Ashe and Clark Graebner. triu~pti and two others, Cliff Richey and
Dennis Ralston. lose In the men's singles
competition.
•
HOYLAKE, England-Dale Morey, IO-
year-old former American Walker Cup.
per, cruised lnto the last 32 of the British
Amateur Golf Championship and saJd
today: "I reckon I am playing as well as
ever." ·
The lut Amtrloan to win this title over
lhis layout was Diet Davles, Huntington
Harbour, in 1962. Th ls year he was
knocked out In Wedne.sday's third round
by Phllllpe W•tllme, a 28-year-old Fren·
chman from LUie, 2-up.
Morey, from High Point, N.C., BUI
I
• ST, PAUI.,.MINNEAPOLIS -Booton
catcher Joe Azcue ji.mped the American
League team Wednesday night and new
to his home hr Kansas City, Red SoJ: of·
ficials announced.
A Boston spokesman said Azcue had
been moody about not being played
regularly and had asked Red Sox ofilclals
to trade him.
Alcindor Hit
By Huge Suit
-Los ANGELES (AP) -Dennis Grey,
who can't talk because his mouth has
been wired to aid a broken ja,w, ~M
$750,000 damages from Lew Alcindor in
the aftermath of an altercation between
the two.
Grey, a Los AnceJes Star basketball
player, claims Alclndor, three.time All·
American at UCLA and rookte for the
Milwaukee Bucks, punched hlm last
Saturday and the punch broie the jaw.
Alcindor said he was sorry and offered
to pay all medical expemes but Wed-
nesday, through attorney Paul Caruso,
Grey filed a Superior Court suit asking
$500,000 punitive damages, $ 2 5 O , O O O
genttal damages and an UMamed sum In
case Grey loses salary if he can't play
basketball any IIlOTe.
AOO named as plalnllff1 are the
Milwaukee Bucks of the Nat.icwil Basket·
ball Assoclatloft, the NBA and Ila pm;.
dent, J. Walter Ke~.
The nareup between the players came
after a pickup game at Hamilton HJsh
School In Los Angeles.
Jim Hardy, general mana.ger or the
Stars of the ABA, says his team Is not
part of the suit.
Alcindor, a B average student at
UCLA. was unavailable for commenl •
N:a~ilJey
No111 _inees
•
MIKE MA RTIN DAVE GLEASON
·Martin: Aquatics Ace;
' Gleason Tops at Mesa
There are those who have
been 'tery clOR to tOe Orange
Cout ~,. swimming picture
for the lut 20 years who saj
Mike Marlin is the best swim·
mer the area has ever pro-
duced.
One such expert is Al Irwin.
Martin's coach at UCJ.
"Mike is very poa.Ibly the
finest swimmer ever to come
out of Orts area and certalnly
he's the best cOmblnation
w ate r polo-swimming m a n
ever from here," he says.
Martin, logically enough, i9
a candidate for the George
Yardley Trophy, awarded
each year Lo the most outstan..
ding male athlete from the
Newport , Beach-Costa Mesa
area, as selected by the
Newport Junior Chamber of Commerce. ·1
The IV.year-old MarUn, a
Corona del Mar High product,
made history at the NCAA 's
college division s w i m m I n g
champioruihips at Springfield,
Mass., two months ago. He
won three individual events
and was on two winning relay
teams.
His three individual wins
resulted in NCAA records for
each.
But for all his swimming
heroics, be prefen water polo.
"F..-his lhe (11-11, 142).
Mike Is a great defemi•e
player," Irwin confides.
"He was a third team A11·
American aDd first team in~
doors on the AAU team."
Irwin, an area swim coach
for 24 years, gives Martin the
highest compliment he can:
"Mike's the best swimmer
l 've ever coached."
When Dave Gleason
transferred to Costa Mesa
Hlgb Sebool two years ago u
a junior, football line coach
Doog Brown immediately dtJl>.
bed hhn "The Sloth."
At 6-2 and 220 pounds,
Gleason wun't eiactly a
speed mercbanl But be went
oot for the wrestling team and
increased his speed ap-
preciably. Brown still caJls
him Sloth, but there is more
banter than truth in the
moniker now.
Gleason is one of 14 can·
didates nominated to receive
the George Yardley Trophy,
given annually by the Newport
Beach Junior Chamber or
Commerce to the Newpdrt
Beach-Costa Mesa a re a ' s
outstanding athlete.
Gleason war Cosla Mesa's
best lineman for the two years
he played football for the
Mustangs and last eeason was
the Irvine Leag ue's
heavyweight wrestling c.hamp.
He's been named recipient
of the school's coveted
"Mustang of the Year" award.
A three-sport man. be tossed
Ole shot and discus for the
lrack squad this spring.
"I think Dave is going to be
a fine college football player/'
says his coach, Neil Peek.
"He lw ina<ased speed,
brains, obUity and a great at-
Utude.,, · • '
Gleason wu heavily
rocruited by the Unlvemty of
Colorado but will enroll at
Orange Coast College .in the
fall.
The lineman didn't wrestle
at Fresno High School and
Peek credits the sport for
turning bim into a flfSt-rate
gridder.
Baseball's Top 10
Loveland
Bags Title
Jack Loveland of Newport
Beach has won the Orange
Coast YMCA's class A.
handball championship.
Loveland defeated Charles
McLennan, 21-11, 21-14, in a
r e c e n t tournament cham·
pionshlp match.
The class B winner was
Dick Klein, who stopped Bob
Benner, 21-12, 21·14. Class C
winner wu Bob Hottman over
Jeff Toner, 21-10, 21-16. George
candy won the class D crown
by beatina: Jim Foruker, 11· u. 15-21, il-17.
Bowen
Late st
Io Quit
By E ARL OUBl'KEY .. ... Dlltr ,.., ,...,
Ed Bolftn, lf.ytOM>UI 111111-lanl vanity football cooch at 1.a.-Beich lllP Sdlool,
bu ...tped, lhe DAILY
PILOT taamed eulualvely to-
day.
"' Is tbe flflh ~ Hlih coach to dther qolt or be fired
Jn a rtce11t llarelJp between
coaclies and achool principal
Bob Reeves.
It wu Bowen who instlgated
a specla1 cloa<d meetlni ol the
ochool board Tuesday nlglit
and following lhat confab lllld
he'd decide whether or not
he'd quit wllhln H houri. .
"I'm q~Wni.'' he aa.id this
morning.
"I just can't ao akin& with
the dlatrlct's pbl l o1opby
toward Ila propoeed sevmth
period alhlellcl l<lup. I feel
it's an unbalanced teachinc
load for a coach."
Several Laguna Ctllehes are
being Wed to take on another
classroom asslgruneat for the
1989-70 achool year.
Dowen, who bu eoaebecl for
10 years at Laguna, also says
he resigned because "of the
prolessional relatiombip that
h a s developed between t h e
coaching staff and the &f.
ministration.''
Bowen is upset over a list of
provisions that Reeves asked
he and bueball coach Norm
Borucki sign before granting
them their 1969-70 coaching
assignments. Borucki quit last
week over the same issue.
"I may return to coacbJng in
~e future but as lt stands
right now I definitely won't be
coaching next year."
The loss of Bowen means
head football coach Hal Akins
has lost both of hls staff
assistantJ (Borucki was also a
footba ll assistant).
Akins is known to be also
upset over administration
policy but says he won't com·
ment on the matter until after
the next board meeting,
scbedllled for June 26.
The other c:oacbes who have
resigned w e re lightweight
football coaches Warren
Watkins and Jerry NeumaM.
Track coach Jack Lythgoe
was fired.
Grunion
Schedule
Following are the dates and
hours of expected grunion runs
during the remainder of the
1969 open season.
Where the time of the ell'.·
pected run Is after midnight.
the date of the night before is
shown. The times given are
bued on the predicted times
cf high tides at Los Angeles
Harbor.
The first ron ls due Monday
ni&ht.
. June
16-10:24 p.m. • 12:24 a.m.
17-11 :80 p.m. • 1:00 a.m.
18-11 :30 p.m. -1:30 a.m.
19 -12 : 12 a.m. • 2:1% a.m.
July
t -11 :06 p.m. • 1:06 a.m.
2-11:54p.m.·1:54 a.m.
3 -11:54 a.m. • 2:54 a.m.
4-1:51 a.m. -3:54 a.m.
16-.10:42 p.m. -12:42 1.m.
17-11 :18 p.m. • 1:11 a.m.
18-11:54 p.m. -1:54 a.m.
19-12:3' a.m. · 2:38 a.m.
AuJ.
I -12:30 a.m •• 2:30 a.m.
2-1:36 a.m. • 3:36 a.m.
3 -2:54 a.m. • 4:54 a.m.
4 -5:00 a.m. • 7:00 a.m.
lh\nd'1, Junt 12. 1%9 OAILY I'll.OT J;1
•
r STWYOUll-SWINQ·
ON A PllOPEll PlANE
J!I• "plane" ofllla110lfnln1
Is Of moJor lmporlln ... If Ille
swin1 Is too •~lar' (nlus-n
#1), Ill• aoKer will not1onarote
mud; ~r, Also, ha will h ... dlfflcu maldn1 Ill• dubhud
move a 111• llrsel li ne dur.
in1 lmpoc:.
11111• swina Is too "upri1ht" "-4--..-(lllustmlon 12), It mey become
too looae. Also Ill• IOlfer ...,.
find that he tops or scuffs too
many shota.
The -· swtnc plan• Is somewhere between these ax~
tr1mes. It varies with the Indi-
vidual and Is datermi ntd by (I)
how for he atonds from the ball
•nd (2) his hand movtmant
durin1 lh• llkeawey.
-1 think you will find your
propar swing pla ne If yo• will
follow two sim ple stors. Flrit,
• "
•
addron y0ur drives wilh your
h•nds •bout four Inch•• from
y01Jr body •nd th• cl•b's sol•
lying flat on Ill• 1ro•nd, On
shorter Iron 1hots, you will
stand 1 bit closer to the ball.
Second, durln1 your tak11way,
make c1rtlin that your hinds
pass diroctJy above tha top of
your rirht loot, •• mi nt do In
illustration #3.
In Majors
How They Stand
"Younges t
Matador
In Debut
Tbe accent wW be on youlh
SUnday when acUon return to
Plua El Toreo de Tijuana, tbe
downtown bul1rlng. 'The cor-
rlda wlll st.art at 4 p.m.
CUrro Rivera, M e J: I c o ' 1
youngest matador will make
his debut, accompanied by
Arturo Rull Loredo, another
young 111.r who will be pro-
moted to the rank of matador
in a apeclal cere.moay. Raul
Garcia. a top veteran
performers, will round out the
program.
Rivera, the 17·year-old son
of famed Fermin Rivera, took
MeJ:ico Clty by storm last
year as 1 oov\Uero (novice)
and was immediately jumped
into the ranks or t h t
matadors.
After a brief, but torrid
oovillada campaign, he was
elevated to matador jn Tor-
reon oo Sept. 21, 1968, al age
18. He had spent only one year
as novillero. His w a r m
personality communicates to
the fans, and they respond
wlldlf to what has been term-
ed his 1'psyched.elic" method
ol Jll'OVOkJng the bull's charge.
Slnoe bis debut in
December, Rlvera has chalked
up J4 •ppearances, lncludlng
It during the winter cam-
palp. He llUffered one minor
goring in Torreon Nov. 4.
The high point of hit young
career came oo April 20, when
Rivera was awarded the
"Gcldm Sword" trophy ln a
spirited compeUtion tn Plaza
MexlCil in the nation's capital.
Photos of the handsome
young matador will be elven
to the first 1000 ladies arriving
at Sunday's Cilrrida, Paco
Gorraez, the b ul l ri n g's
National Lape • .......,. •-lh manager said.
Eat Dlvisloll 09-i.nd •· Wflhllllt.1 4 CIJ 11'11'11"''' Garcia, a matador for 10
:::1llt•nl1 1, .. """"' S f\4 11'11'1"'") Woa Loi& Pd. GB o.i,..1t 4 '""" 3 u• lnnlftl•l years, is considered one of the Chicago 37 18 .m ... ,,,, MlnMWa 1 ~ polished members of his
New York 29 24 .547 7 w-Ytrt 4 Kl,... c1tt' (II 1iv1· profession. As senior matador,
Pittsburgh 27 29 .48% to in lntll he will sponsor Arturo Ruiz
St. Louis %7 29 .482 101,2 Ch""9 4 Ctn.Wiii l Loredo In a rihf, ceremonv ,_.._ lha ·v
Philadelphia 19 32 .373 16 ou11M CL.91.timu. 241 ~ Whhlne· t symbollies s promotion
Mootre.al 13 31 .2S5 22 ,.., 1111etler!Mdt •11. 111th1 to matador.
West Dlvhloe °""' .-ldleMllN 'Ibe YoWl& performer alone
AUanta 33 21 .611 ~., ':'::: i:,-;i.M with novtllero Mario Sevilla,
Loa Angeles 31 23 .574 2 ,.........,,. .. 1111--.... flltoll! was considered the cream of
Kokanee Biting at Talwe ~
Flth and pme 411partmtnL
nlllclals are boalflol ll'&t Jhe
eirot , '!:WI mo-tba t
flabennen Ifill . lrtak lut
year's ,_.i caJch.
Popular Choice forSummar-
Fancy Plaids by Harris
SILVERWOODS
,..,._ 11111' _,.. a ... ,. anarn.mt ~
ltll_1_W •Gll ••11.1,ct.--
l'l\IMIM ....... cama. NIOIWA CRT • caw ctn tu.•• TOPW PlAZl • ~ .._. • W ... , ...
.....,. 1U011L11 ..... mmaAll:I u.-.!I ... --S. Francisco 30 24 ~ 3 .. """"' ., ~Ifft! / the crop of younpten during
Cincinnati rt 28 .540 4 _il..~"~=;"'~•~::..:;w~,~-'.§; ,,~,...,~· ,~..,=---~M;mco~· ~C~l~ly~··~-==~-==o:n1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ H~ 21 31 .f1i 7¥..1• ~.............. lut llllDlntl'.
San Dl'IO 25 M .424 10\0
wa r 11 ,._ .. _..
Siii FrMC:!Ko 7. Nft Yortl 1 PllflldQlfll1 3, lM ... _ .. t
St. \..ol#t 'It. Clnc:l-11 s
Al1ant1 S. CllkMo I Plthtlu1'91t 11. lilwlM t s.n 01.-., Morlf,..11 !, no '""l..nJ ,....,. . ._
Chlcqo IS.1"'9 WJ If A111nt• fNll1
MU, nllthf SI. Louis llrlltl •·0 1t ClfttlMllll
CFhMr 14)> 1111111 Mantn1I (II.,,_ 1·21 1t S.11 D~
... INltknl WJ, n!IN!t PllJ'"91phr. CJICUM UI .t Lii Mo
..... 111-1-Jl, rtltllt
Pltt9tlurtll (9ufWllll9 ~) 1t HoullDll
(lay 2'1), """" Onfr .-Kf'ledllltd ,.....,... . ._
Atlttll• 9f ,.~, 111'1\f
......... ,, Sf. Leu!-. n!Mll ,,,.. Yott 11 LOI """9let, 11!1ht Cllk:e9i9 11 Cine'-"• 111-M ~llMti.111• If s.11 D ..... 11ltl'lt #MntrMI If $111 Frtl\Cllu. nltl'rf
Amer! ... Loape
Eut Dlrillon
Won lMt Pct. GB
Baltimore-40 17 .702
Boston 36 19 ."5 3
Dtlroil 29 23 .'51 '" New York 29 30 .492 11
Washington 29 31 .483 12\0
Cleveland 11 M .349 19\0
Wat Division
Minneeota 30 24 ,556
Oakland '¥1 24 .529 I~
Chl.cagu 2S 28 .451 51/i
Seattle 24 30 .444 I
KaMaS City 24 32 .429 7
California 18 35 .340 111/i
City Star
All-America center Bruce
Clark of Jeffenon Hlgb leadl
a lknan 1q11ad selected to
represent the Los Angeles City
Schools in the Second Annual
Southern California All-Star
prep basketball classic July 9
at The Forum, LA head coach
Jerry Mll"rin bu announced.
• •
. .
I
~ ii
I ~I
s'
I '· i' -i
i -I
I
J -I
I • • ,I
" .. I' ,,
Aussies Don't Fool Around
By JOEL SCOW ARZ
Of tfle Dalfr Plllf t•lf
The startH's gun for the se-
cond annual Orange County
JnvitaUonal Tract and FieJd
meet wm be fired In less than
48 houn and Jt three
Australian competttors are
lypial ol tbe alhlet .. who will
be particll"'llng, lhe com-
petitors are dead serious
about the meet.
Olymplc gold medal 1st
Ralph Doobell. -record
holder Ron Clarke and two-
mller l(erry O'Brien arrived
In the Unlled States Wtd-
~y nig)lt after a aruelln.I
trip from down undU and
llmost lmmedlataly be&llfl
working out for Salurdoy'1
meet, which ahars Up IS the
finest track 1n field event
evtr acheduled In Or•nge
County.
The Australian trio landed
at Los Angeles International
Airport around ~ p.m. Wednes-
day, rushed to Garden Grove
for a press dinner, then moved
along to Santa Ana to cbeck
Into lheir hotel and finally did
a litUe Jogginr to wind •P a 1on, day.
The three lolented ninnen
had started tbelt Jnnr da1 In
Australia mort that. 30 hours
before without sleep 1 n
prtparaUon for their first ma-
jor outdoor track lest of Jbe
year.
Clarke and O'Brien com·
peted In Jbe Australian crou
country season, runnJnc com-pttltlve races as recenUY u
two weeks ago. Saturday'• or.,,,. County lnvltallooal,
however, will be Doubell'1
first run under competltiYe
oonditJons si nce January.
Meet dtrector Earl Engmm
has announced &everal ad-
dltlonal entries for the meet
which Ifill be stared at Freel
Kelly Stadium on the campu1
of El M..iena !Dgh School In
Orange.
Mike Solomon o(
Wtltmln..ter and a tophomore
at tbe Unlvmlly or Kansas.
will run in the devil take the
hindmost mUe.
1'le. shot put tltld rectlved a
big boost lfllh tbe entry of
Nell Steinhauer, the Supu
~ who ls now competing
f" tbe U.S. Army, and
decalhlon star Rua Hodp ol
UCLA. Stelnhaller It the ,._
cood best 1hot pulter of a 11
Ume, rankJnt «1ly behind
Randy MalJoo-
UCLA sprinter R e g g I a
Roblnaon and Southern
C.II!ornla Junior colleae 100.
yard dash champion Bob
BaUard of Cerrllol College
have betl\ added to the cco·
tury field while San Oie10
Mesa College hurdler Jamel
Klng is an addltlonaJ entry In
a crack intermedlate hurdle
field.
Ed Hanks, a 11even-foot hlsh
jumper, added hi1 name to the
growing 11 s t of world-class
jumpers entered In h I s
•peclally.
Engman also bu tendered
an invitatlon to UCLA pole
vaulter Dick Railsback, who
was dec!Med Ineligible for the
NCAA cha m pl on s h I P l .
Railsback only had one jump
las\ yaar -his fiber glau
pole eiptoded, breaking hill
band and the injury put him on the Jidellnq for Jbe ent1tt ........
Tickets tor the meet are
available 1l all Mutual Ticket
Agcnclu.
-·-·· -·
my heart belongs to daddy
THE TRUE OLD.STYLE lENTUCKY BOURBON
1
~ j
• ,_14 DAILY I'll.OT . "
Start
Your
Engines!
by Deke Hou/gate
Auto ddng•a straoa:est spectacle unfolds to an audience of
burros and nutemakM tbM week on the arid peninsula of Baja
CalifornJa.
Jt'a called an off-road race, to run Ml miles in a rough circle
with Ensenada on the northern part of the loop. After leaving the
lively pueblo of Euenada, the contestants wiU encounter every
kind of unfavorable drivinl condition from sand beach to rocky
mountain trail.
The rugged silver of land that stretches 1,000 miles south of
California is one of the few wilderness areas left iD the world so
close to a big population. It ii noted for exceUent fishing, scen-
#r'f 1 bot sun and the timtlessoesa one feels wben be looks around
·and does not see power poles, TV antennas and guoline pumps.
Into this restful Utopia will roar JJO maddeoed Gringos, bent
on driving their w~ vehicles as fast as they can through the
beautiful countryside: 'Ibey wUI stop not for cervezas and siesla.$
but for casollne and fresh tlres.
1 'Ibe race i.s supposed to start at noon on Wednesday and end
• 'Friday night, but if it were orgaruzed properly, the Mexican way,
, it might start on Thursday after a nioe hot Juoch and perhaps con-
tinue unW lhe rnariachb atop playing and go home. 'lbe diabolical
American, however, baa brought with blm the benefits of a civiliz-
ed society, arid be will be punctual.
He will have stopwatches to keep precise time measurements,
charts and rally calculators, watkie-t.alk.ie radios, helicopters and
airplanes to move crewmen around, port.able machJne shops with
lathes and welding torches that will grind, whirr and crackle into
the dark hours of early morning.
Maybe the rigors of concentration on the job of racing and
winning the Mexican 500 this week will not be so taxing thal tbe
Gringos will mlsl one of Baja's surviving local customs/
· As the drivers stonn down a rutted country Jane,Past a (arm
cottage, should they take the trouble to look they will see for
themselves. There, in the doorway, a small boy and a girl will sit
and watch them.
The children always smile and wave.
Drillfll'• ClllW Hlrecl Bends
Lions Hot
(As Usual)
In Passing
The passing some seemj!d 1o
be Westminster lllgb School's
clUel oflenslve weai>on before'
the spring football drills and1
the recent touch game against
the gratluatlng seniors didn't
do anything to disprove U.
Althougb the 1969 varsity
was dropped by a 20-.& verdict
by the 1988 Sunset League
champions, C().Sch Bill Boswell
and hi! staff Hpressed their
satlsfacUon with the clUTent
crop of grid candidates.
"I was real pleased with the
kids that hung in there against
the seniors. They've got a
good attitude," .Jaid Boswell.
The 1969 aggre·gatlor'I
threatened the seniors three
times with scoring op-
portunities but were turned
away orl a couple of fumbles a.rut an interception.
Bos;.vell expressed h I s
delight with end Curt Dedrick,
who garnered eight o f
quarterback Ed B a n e ' s
aerials.
Bane, who Is inked and
certified as the s t a r t i n g
quarterback far the Lions for
the third year at Westminster.
is also considered the fastest
runner in the backfield, which
means he'll be doing a lot of
roll outs with options in the
fall.
The balance of the starting
backfield coosisted of Bob
Williams at tailback (a Mater
Dei transfer), Walt Maddocks
at wingback and John Gaize at
NOWHERE TO GO? -Wild Bill Todd, who races Friday night at
Orange County Fairgrounds, Costa Mesa, in the 20-event progran.
launching short track motorcycle races, is shown in a broadside in
front of oncoming Iiders. Surprisingly enough, Todd Whipped his
bike out of the tight spot and nobody got hurt. This type of racing
is popular throughout Europe, behind the Iron Curtain and in
Au stralia where crowds of up to 80,000 attend.
"Race driven are Ntblas: but a tiu.cll of bired hnds," u ld fullback.
lllo old-timer, -.,.. .... nc1a1 illalory .,... five decades Baize drew praise Jrom Island Trips Set
u driver, mechanic, speed Uop operator, car owner ud fan. Boswell. He played defensive Two More Enter Mesa Motorcvcle Races
"It makes .. tente &e me that everybody idollus these nee guard along with his fullback The 140 • passenger Island " 4riven.. ftey an all prlm.I domtaa. It's DODseue that they are duties. H lid ·11 be · d ·1 bnve. 'litey'd nther meet tlte wall at lndlu.apoU. thu. do the There'll be youth ,., the o ay w1 gin a1 Y ex~ Jerry Fairchild, wealthy Eagle Rock in Friday night's broadsiding pilots. Oxley bas 36 riders entered
curslon rull.! to Catalina Island Pasadena computer manufac-opening ~venl program o[ H a r r y O x J e y , tr a c k in the 20-event program to be tDe illlli& they reaUy dread -tlte thoagtit of poaching a tlm:e starting lineup this fall for from the Balboa Pavilion supervised by Gene Rhyne, ~--• m·•et "·m b..,-• .., •-• -Id -~ " da lurer and former racing short track motorcycle races manager, said the sixth mile """'.. -""'" -.. ..v a-.'" Westminster, magnified by Satur Y morning. Pasadena, former national
Tbat'1 oae man'• opiaJoe , ud It lft'ftl te lnb'Gdact the puzle two starting tackles and two Daily runs will leave at 9 mechanic for world champion at Orange County F a i r oval is being put in shape for hillcllmb champion and ex-
., Ute year, tlte aaexplalnable cominp nd goinp el atock car defensive backs in Friday's a.m. from the Pavilion and Jack Milne, today entered his.,_, Grounds, Cost.a Mesa. Friday's premiere with the mechanic for the late Lamny
drivGerlo= :~=~t lie couldued '°be a bad dttlskla tu ssle who11 be sophomores in 4:15 p.m. from Avalon, return-team of Terry Graham of San Fairchild :says ne evenlually working in of a fine gravel Lamoreaux, runner·up for the
the 'fall . ing to the mainland at 7 p.m. J ose and Dick Aurandt of plans a team of fiv e surface. world title in London.
duins: a ntCt eutltt w. yur. nc1 .. a bftter mood lte quit u.er-;::::::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~11;;:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii~ Ole NASCAR drarlt s&atllr Uaat lie w..W .ever retlrL
G-...... ,,... • Unl--klq lomlly. B•'• cutalaly "I.fill JO UYf THiii SIOIJS",
oef alnld" -· bot .. -~ --1111 ........ lo stay away from ate nciq. He: retarn ob Snday to NASCAR eom·
peUtioa at Ute RH! el a CoUoll Ona Dodge t'harger t. Ute
Micllfpo Speedway luupral.
Bodi lo April. Clmlle'• tlooe lrlmd Btuy PJWllps ""'" ''Qartie ia't ta. type Of py that (sic) AY1 ont UWig and
dies uedler. Felts .. '1s lllometon say tk entire Globhactl
' funily is tM: aame. O.ce a Glotzbadi m.Ues ap his mild about
-w.i. -, cW(ea It."
Well, tomebody did.
RaciDc fau win agaD have the oppommity to watc)I oae of
Ute leuer Down °cbargen" ill Red car nciai.
HI• IDOlt Important win IO far .... tk lKI Cbarlotk see.
wbtre he let a 135 m.p.h. rteord. He'll be re.membeml by fans
twllo watched tbe Daytona 511 tlW year a Ute mu who led golag
lato the fiDal tun, only to lose by imda a. Lee Roy Yarbroagll ta
Daytou's most thrilling finlsb.
Charging Cbarlle came back. Raclag faas are glad be did.
Netfl Foolishness
Goldfish eating. nagpole sitting and marathon dancing have
passed from the scene, only to make way for another sort or
foolishness. nonstop driving.
Two fellows from Seattle, Jim Rogers and \Ya~ Crum ,
recently completed a drive through 48 states in five days. 22 hours
and 21 minutes.
Driving a Datsun station wagon equipped with a mattress so
one of them could sleep while the other drove, they averaged 55.9
m.p.h. and y.·ere able to stretch their fuel supply by virtue or a
27 .9 miles per gallon average.
The car's only malfunction occurred when a light switch fell
off. and the only ill eHect.s to the drivers were that they stayed up
to look at the scenery the first three days and didn't take turns
sleeping like they should have.
Consequently. they were pooped the last couple of days on the
road.
The route started at Los Angeles City Hall and snalted across
the southern part of the country on a route recommended by the
AAA. On the East Coast they headed for New England and came
back across the northern part of the U.S.
Jn Montana they encountered a herd of deer that had to be
carefully steered around, and in Kentucky they were chased by a
carload or mountain folk .
Their run recalls another, probably more interesting drive
made several years ago by Bill Carroll, an automotive joomallst.
He took with him a couple of glamorous co-drivers, Paula
?tfurphy and Ba{'bara Neilan. and went from Los Angeles to New
York and back in something less than the five days required by
Rogers and Crum.
Thal's a real accomplishment. Can you imagine driving aD
the way across rountry and back ·with two young ladies~
I'd get tired of hearing about hemstitching and hair sprays by
the time J got to Phoenix.
SOFJ SELL SAM 12:00 p.m.
Rolling Review
cl mainllicent da.,Jc tnd Modem Mo!orlirs
2:00 p.m.
Men's Fashion Show Viinettes
3:30-p,m.
"Best of Show" Award$
Models wUI be on displ1y
. c .. _,.,ed by
The Southern C1liloml1 Centre
of the MG car Club of lil&\tnd
GIFT PARADISE
IUY OAD A Gin FROM HIS FAVORITE SPORT, SHOP
THOUSANDS Of GIFTS FOR "HIM"
GOLFERS
• General Tire cut
proof golf balls.
Gift set cf 6 wi!h
glove ..... $5.95
• Head covers for
clubs,
gift set . . $6.50
• Golf Ball name imprinter .... $5.25
•Practice Balls ..... , .... 12 fer 95c
•Home Drivi ng Range ., ....•.. $1.95
• Corfam Golf Shoes , ....... $16.95
DIVERS
•Jet Swim
Fins .. $20.00
• Electric Dive
Walch $45.00
• Blank Cartridge Powered Spear Gun
Single and Doubfe Barrel .•. $100.00
• Scuba Lessons ......... , .. $35.00
•Wet Suits by Sea Suits ....•. $62.0j)
GAMES .
•Dart Games
(Fun for all)
• • Horse Shoe Sets
• Flying Saucers
and
Boomerangs
• Badminton Set
•Jogging Suits and Shoes
• Shuffle Board Sets •..••••• $34.50
SKIERS
HUNTERS
• Gun fleece line cases . . $15.00 ......,,.,, -
• Gun· cleaning
kits .... $4.00
•Browning
Hunting Boots
• Game Hunting Coats
•Telescope Gun Sighls ...... $29.95
• Clay Target Throwers ...... $34.50
•Electric Sox ............... $9.95
• Browning Super Posed Shotguns $450
FISHERMEN
•Fish Lo-K-Tors-Finds
the fish for him.
• fish Glasses-See
the fish
• Browning Silaflex
the bes! fish ing rods
in !he world.
• fly Tying-Gift Kits V
• float Jackets (thal look like a
regular jacket) ............ $34.50
•Tackle Boxes from , .. , ...•.. $4.00
•Fishing Vests from .....• , , .. $7.95
(i -~ . BACK Ji'"" / . ~~~~~~!
_ of all Kelly Back .
Pack.
•Down Sleeping
Bags ....... $50.00
•Trail Shoes ............... $16.95
• Gerry Down Coals ..••• , ••. $30.00
•Mountain Tent-2 man ••••. $26.SO
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~GOT AN011IER ONc oor OF THf TVS! '
•
FASHION
SQUARE -'\
Bullock's Fashion Square
Santa Ana
Sant1An1 f1HW1yat Main strttt
.Eor Coast Are a ~11 Scnools ·
~nothtt school year Is in the books (M Or-Th' 'a l<lnJi• tied Magnolia ror ~rvinl!! I
Coast area high schools and olr the League honors, '
mances It's clear that It \Yas ,enolher, 1•• JfOlllltaif\' VaJ\e.y arid Newport Harbor su;-·
year for area sports buffs. 1 cesd~ ~ddended their league crowns 111
}tet°'11 l.ake a look back at what transpired wrestlfng. 1
In 'the Way of oulstanding achievements dur· 11;· 1 ..._ ~
' I ~ '"""f ' '
Halos-Plot
Promotions
For Big A
The California Angel& have
scheduled four special prcr
motions during th.elr next
home sland which runs fro1n
June 20-29.
IQr lU1M9, . . " . • ' 1 fn football it was Westrnlooter winnfug lhe Sprio1 1pcwt5 were lli&hhgllted ._, Ute fint
. &man League champlon&bip and advancing tea h'ont Orange Couty ever to wll the
Leadlna off the four special
days wilf be a repe1t of the
Mothers' Day free nylon pr~
motion Sattuday nl&bt. June
21, when the . HalOI play lhe
Chicago While Sox.
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~ the' GIF •A.AAA semifinal! before being CIF umnut1c1 ~
Wtstmlntkr turneif dle h1ck at 8ald'ltl1 No. I E .. le
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'' CAR1.SON
eliminated by El Jlancho -a team thf Llons
h•d beaten earlier in the year (3+!5.) ~luded on that team was the CIF AAAA
pl&yot 9! Ille year -Darryl Bcrg.
Lquoa Beach came up with iL<i greatest·
ever team in the Jt68 juggern aut. The Artists
posted a perfect regular season and advanc--
ed to the quarterfinals in AAA playoff action.
Westminster upped its cross country dual
meet win string to 49 in romping to the Sun-
set League tiUe again. Of the 10 runners for
the Lions, only three leave via graduation.
Nothing new in water polo. The Newport
lfarbor Sailors won their seco nd st raight
ClF championship and Corona del Mar \Vas
again the Irvine League titllst.
Newport and Corona del ~lar have ac·
counted for CIF crowns the past four years
with the latter capturing titles in 1965 and
'66.
And, it was basically the same story for
the Orange Coast area in basketball.
Huntington Beach won its league for the
third straight year before being upended
In lhe CIF AAAA quarterfinals and Corona
de! Mar came through with a berth in the
AAA playoffs.
Pe.ek m~. dethroat.r defeDdiag: champion
LaktWoed in t'HSy fUbion,
No lra~k artl field titles la· 'tan;lty co m·
pelllion wert scOred by att:a tel!n.s. Foun·
taln Valley, however, came the closest by
winning aU of its league dual metls and then
falling In UM Irvine League fi nal• by one·
llalf point to Loara.
Victory In the (inal1 along with a se<'Ond-
plact nnlsh in du.al m~tl cave Loara the
title over the dlscwMeu nu.is.
Corona del rtlar lUgb 111,,,Ued In baseball
-go!Jl:g all the way to the CCF AAA temi-
nnnl! before fallina: to eventual chnrilpion
Bl11hop Amal.
The Sea Klnts lied for second Jn the 1r-
vine ci rcuit while Newport llarbor made the
playoff~ 11fll"r taking second In the Simset
League lo Western.
"* * * Big news in area swimm ing was Costa
!l.1esa upsell ini:-Corona del Mar in a dual
mret -with the latter coming back to win
the league championship in the finals.
Marina fUJ!h was na rrowly defeated by
Anaheim in the Sunset League finals alter
being disqualified in the opening medley re-
lay event.
Newport Harbor again was the area t ennl~
power -going all the way for the second
ye:ir in a row lo the CIF finale before losing
out to Rollin e. Hills.
Estancia shO\Yed its 1vares in the CIF gol f
~ho1~1down -laking third place after 1~1in
nin1t: the CIF li!le in 1968.
And i-o ii goes. Three months hence it
starts all ovC'r.
-George Barnett was
named: the top alblete
of the year at Estancia
High School by a vole
of his classmates. Bar·
nett, a senior, was out.
standing in football,
bask.,.ball and track.
'He bolds tw o school
records in track -22-
Bli• in tbe long jump
and 6-3Y..i in the high
jump.
Sig nu p Set
For HB Ki ds
Helmet de.y has b e e n
sc heduled tht; following day.
June 22, when boys and girls
14 and under will receive a
plastic helmet with t he
Angels' insignia.
The annual father"!son game,
featu ring the sons of Angel
players and execulive3 , wiU be
played between games of a
June 'J:l doubleheader with
Seattle.
Saturday, June 28 will be
teen night, with pre-game dan-
cing fro1n 5 to 6:30 µ.m. A
4,000-square foot dance floor
will be placed near home plate
and Eddie Haddad and "The
American Revolution" will
suppl y the music .
For Low Gross Title
Bartosh Outguns Rivals
I rvine Cat
Fishin g Hot
Irvine Lake operalOr Russi
Cleary reports recen t catfish
catche3 have been the talk of l
the Southland fresh water
fishing set. ~
Biting on stink bait and
cheese. he says limits of cats
averaging 15 to 20 pounds are
being brought in .
Trout fishing, loo, is on the
rise. Trout Island and Privy 1 Point are the hol areas at the
moment. Rlchard r-itoorc nr
Gardena caught a \\YO-pound.
15-0unce rainbow recently. The
raintiOwS are running' from a
half-pound to lhrea pounds. -
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N MON.IFll.~ I ~ DAILY t-6 .... .... x
TENNIS RACKETS WILSON -DUNLO• -BAN CROFT
DAVI S -CR AGIN -SIMP LEX -WILSON STEEL RACKETS
TENNIS BALLS WILSON -PENNSYLVA NIA -DUNLO P
STAZENGER -SPAULDI NG -TRE~N
TENNIS SHORTS
TENNIS SHIRTS
TENNIS SHOES
White or
Ivory
CONVERSE ind JACK PURCELLS
TENNIS SWEATERS . and JACKETS
Champion .HANDBALL GLOVES $396 , •
SEAMLESS. and ACE HANDBALLS
SWIM TRUNKS $496 -$5es
L
SWIM FINS ...... MASK$. -.SNORKW
GOLF SHIRTS -GOLF BALLS
R.ALEI GH BIKES and PARTS •
Thr..doy, Junt 12, 1969 --OAILV PILOT 1 J&
Politic3l Bm dles · Haunt~d
I • r •
IOC's Meeilitgs at Warsaw
•
In lnlenllly ~ !obbyh!g.
One Olympic official sum~
med II up-!ll<e th~' "When you
look.aroul)d you, there you JM
100\,'delqale A ~us h In I ..e,.1e: B &o•vOCAPhil way on
pOlot ........ .. lhe agalda.
And there ls delegate l C
pres.sui1.ng de)egate 0 to vote
for E as a new member."
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
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•
ilEw MESSENGER -Comic George Carlin be-,
d0me6 a messenger on "This is Tom Joon" tonight.~
dn Channel '1 at 9 p.m. Patti Flood giws Carlln a
clake to bring bad< to the United States for her
tft.other's birthday. Other guests are Cass Elliott,
The Dave CJark.Ji'ive and Spanish vocalist, Massie!.
TELEVISION VIEWS
Today Is
Film Er.a
• By RICK DU BROW
: HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -It is 80llle!hing of a
garado:r that this is considered a film generation
qospite the tromendous outpouring Ii« books.
Many factors have contributed to 1he f4tsciJJa·
tlon of film 'for tbe yoang, and cer1alnlY one ol them
ii that, through televisi6n the n·ew generation bas friJwn up with a visual orientation.
PEOPLE PARTLY adapt to Life through the
1,p;>werful influence ol. habits acquired while young.
• ~if one is to believe the many surveys, boys and
· 6rls nowadays arow up spendinJ roughly a fifth to a: sixth ol. lhoir Jives watching video.
: ' I really dcm't believe that film· has appreciably
• roore -curremiy for the young than it did : fbr boys and girls of Pf1Si generation~. We were 111
· mesmerized by it. But our visual habits were not 1s
'. 1lrongty influenced simply because there was not
' aJways television to turn on.
· Years ago, one went to the moyi~s ,whenever •
possible. But when staying bOITI!' at l"ghl, tbert' w~s .
obviously more inclination to read. ·Today one wtll
.ften find persons who fend off loneliness by simp.Jy·
keeping a teleVision set on for hot.lrs ' at' a stretch.
eve1t wften not watching it. It is a form of imperson·
al company. and the visual orientation iS, b~gb~
ed by osmoslS". .. .,, ........ .._ .. __..
·IT IS REALLY no surprise to. read ·articles 1n l
whicb young people claim that .they don't r.eacl Ioli'
much or that they prefer ftlm to· books. But I do
thint 'that far too much serious respect is given this
outlook by pseudo-intellectuals.
I th.int a very good case can be made for the
fact that one of the chief reasons many youths pre-
fer mm to boots is that it requires less work, is
e&sier'to absorb. ln short, it is a good ·excuse for .sbM lazinesJ. Furthennore, i t requires less in·
telligeoce, and gives many i!l'erior t)'Pes a cban~e
to put clown art and inforrnaboo that 1s beyond th'"r
limited, film-oriented grasp.
WHILE MANY intellectually brilliant persons
are involved in flim·making, my own feelin~ is that,
when compared with fine books and clasS1c music
ol the highest order, even the better movies fre..
quently seem crude competition in terms of refined
expression. But perhaps that frequent crudeness is
fitting for our times, with the common man having
his day, and mass amateurism substituting for in-
formed professionalism.
It has Jong seemed to me that, as with poetry.
even an inferior intellect can be impressive in mak·
ing a movie if he has a briefly sustained emotional
inspiretion, and can harness it with some ~light
knowledge of construction.
. ON f'HE OTHER hand, it also seems to me that
no truly major book or significant work of classical
music can be accomplished without a creator who
posses not only emotional inspi ration, but deep in-
telligence, discipline of the highest sort, sustained
dedic.ation, passion and perspective. He must, in
short, be a superior person.
Someone once wrote, with shrewdness, that the
reason Beethoven composed greater music than
Mendelssohn was simply that he was a greater
man.
IN A WAY, it is quite understandable that the
new generation, in its introspective look at itself
and the nation, is more concerned with proper at-
titudes as opposed to mere facts. For the pioneer
daya in America are over, and the look is mward.
D..ennis the Menace
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JUDGE PARKER
MOON·MUWNS -~ .'
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By t<t..iil. Le Doux
By ,hrd Jolinsoii
r.:~~~~'"ll'"T'1 r----~-r.-rt1ose:.1e'TS
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By Tom K. Ryan
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By; Al Smltti
· · · •'WEI..J..;'"q<>llll; GOODIE
;:oR 'a'iii:,6AS RANGEi
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• . ACADIM-T AWAll WINNll .
S1WI Mc9UaN · ''BULUT,1"' . .. ....
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tnCIM "°11CI TO Oft PATIOMS ''
THI lllCTUltlS LISTI!> IH THll 'IOX 'MA,f-lf'1 coiiis'1b'••16
v , ~ to...11. U~f"JTAtlr,,• _ 110i .cH1L-DlfEN_ '•No' ToUH~ ''
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M,llAltlHe IL••WHllll YOUNG P•Ol"l• UNot:• It l HOT J~ ,.._
IU. NOT ... aaM11fWD> TO l"ACl,IC TNUTll•f TO Sia .1':''1/,"'··~.l?r~':lfil ,TMIS .. UNlil• lCCWll, ....... r· y Pf"!I Olt ADIJlT oU..•DlAH•' .,. ~• '' · r· ·1-,,,..\,, ...... ·,. . ,. .. ,
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ADULT Ol.IA•llAJI,
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AC~OSS
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' -... F~o)~t.=·:-~.CllSl=-
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,oto11 OI' PRtl PUKINO
HELD OYER
simw-'-, , Beryl Reid
Susannah York Coral·· Browne :-i.. ,,
•. "FACES~'. -,,... M~_;,;
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Thllrsday, J\Jnt ll,'ICJ69 · .
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DAILY l'ILOT fl.
---
NOW SHOWIN•
"THE BIG BOUNCE"
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HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE :.:H::.OU::.S:.:E:.:S:.;F:.;O;;.R:.:SA=L;;;E_1,H.;.;O;.:;U;.:;S.;:E.:;.;S FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
General 1000 General 1000 General 1000 Gonual 1000 Genorol 1000 Meso Verde 1-110 .Nowport Hel9~ts 1210 Corono dol Mor 1250 L-•• .~ch l~~,;miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiitl,;;::;;;:=:?.:=:~::;;;.1 20•124• Game Room So Ea$y to ow11 3 BEDROOMs BY ow!<Ea. NEWPORT HEIGHTS1 -N-v-E'"'s-T ..... ·NEA-R--THE-iv. ACRES
MESA VERDE COMMBIOAL n l2700 ...,,... 2nd. ~.950. OPEN DAILY OCEAN 3 Bh, 3" ........ 'Uod"1""""1 'fond, C;ty ol 4 BEDROOM EASTSIDE COSTA MESA. $173 Pays A Large lamU, room, 2 bath>, 4111.Santa Ana Aw. ""''" 3 ,.,...., brick, . . ••-.,.~
PACESETTER WILL SELL Wld t lo ltt any w/w carpeti, d r a Pe a , Tutefully decorated corner be am/cellinp. channlflc . ~· t --·· to ~" PROPERTY Three Bedrooms. Dining ~ 01!f" errns dlahwuher, extra cup. home ln nieeit resldeiitial home or wie u Duplex, or ~Ocean_ Vle,ln. Sbould, ·aiv>1<_ VA AT $'1 950 room plus 20x24 recreation budget from zem doWn lor " ,.,. •:.....-p .. ..i... "MOX! ~ o room w>"th "--'amln "'--'-. Veta to low, low dov.'ll en boards, fireplace, 'ah a ke area. Tbb: lovely 2 Bdrm build 2nd home on blJ tot. '1to ·.-..t -.a. ........... ...,. .
A charming 3 BR "shlp 11 1. 1 ~,·~ill ~1;_...... FHA. This m to be our root, double garage. Guava, borne ls lmmacW..te A hf;s ..,,..,,;BRO;:.::;;KER:=,:;:;,,;;;61"211tl:;::;;:._,;;; 29" Dri.. l'fflr~. Beautiful shag carpeting e Single ahapt>" home on large 84x n irep ace. '" eas..., a<> &st Home Value, loaded apple, avocado, or a n Ce lush crpt'g, drps, Jrg ldtch-a: MISSidN RLTY. 11'49f.m31
story floor plan e 'ttl~ive ~sed brick 23.1' Cl lot. May take 14 comodate pool able • slid-with charm and the pret-trees. 545,6446 en w/ bltns A: can be pur-s:!-: ~i~ =;. !n::
fireplace e All eleetr1c kitchen e rental units. Owner will Ing glass doors to patio and tlest In the area . Sh•ke roof MOVING East-Owner must chaRd w/ a low down pay-apt. & double garage. Pholle SUPERB view, newer C11St. J
1705
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Needs 5 0 me \YOrk e Tremendous ('Arry Jst TD of $32,000 @ large i:ear yard. Two separ-111llh ranch s(ylinr with sell! 4 BDRM, 1% BA. ment at S29,500. 642-2799 631_3052 or 83.')..5466 Br. Sell/trade. SIS.000 Eq. 1~%. Drive by 1919 Ana-al~ single garages. Full manicured 1awns It !ihnlbs. Close to schls, 1 hp· g. --;::;;:;::::::::::::::;::::;:::;==:I ~ 494-7161 Res. buy • Open daily, helm, CM & call to see In-Price anl! ~.~·.Excel-J big and cheerful bed-churches. $23,900 * 546--7308 BalbOll Coves 1215 • rn 6e~e, a~~ side, ~~t .. '!~1detnhulal .... ~1ghbor-rooms Spacious living room W ERFR 1-L-ldo __ ls;..l.;_e ____ 1_3_51 San Clement• ""'Q. ;f1' ·~ ~• • ~wre you . · AT ONT-I Be, 2 Bo, ~ ._., $~9 500 b ' with C!DZY log burning Jire· Collane P•rk 1115 LIDO ISLE ;J ' uy. place. Delux all built • in w• 200> sq It. ·Pier & slip. No. LG. Lux. new family home
Newport kitchen with eating area. WANT A 1% LOAN'!' Doctor 50 Balboa C.Oves. $58,000. Exceptionally attt. custom with view ol ocean & ci~. 2
I-d n P • I 1392 M home 011 Via Orvieto. Ideal · •-'-"-DI .I 2 til_ed baths. Even a sew-will finance his lovely 3 BR 1A1W w · • · o. mm. '"'"m . ..,..n e Io •• -·•· ofte ·-"100 for ~·-1-or small family. t BR, 2'' BA ina: room fur mom, Big, big 1% bath hQme with a "* ....... e r. ;.u..-.o """l'4"' reewy. 4 ;o11 , many
Vic!oria party fun time patio that sublitantial down payment. 2 Br., 2 Ba., lonnal din. or Xtras. Fully crptd. I:
J ' Oo e Sh 1227 ,,,_;,.,rm. Immaculate. d -~ Pre "" W•"ll Is all gla!!S enclosed. ust ., Has purchalled a new home v r ores ............, $5l,950 ra~. s..,.e area.
yea~ new and ab!olutely It want.& action! Asking BEAUTIFUL 3 BDRM, 2 LIDO REALTY INC. oons.ider rental to resp. par. immaculate. You better see $27,500. All nlfers will be ·ty\Owner TI4 494-#fl
today • Call considered. Ask for BiU baths, formal dining room, 3400 Via Lido 673-8830
1710
ZllG MllA VERDE DI. e COSTA MESA e PHONI 14"-lttO
Expect To Be
Envied
Evenings Call 545-81123 .,
Thal"s parl of o\lo•ning !his
charn1in~ Baycl'f'st 4 hed·
rooo1 hon ie. Extras galore
21~ ba!IL~. formal dining
ronm, :;rpard1e punt arra,
rnrner Jot with J car l!ar-
age, breakfast area in thr
kitchen. A sound invrslment
for you, l\lr. E.,>;rcutivr:
$6:1,500
645·0303 646-3255 or ~2054 Agt. :'~io~~~:n~ ~ii::f ~ BIG FAMILY? Dupl~et F~ !af.J 197S
"Far A \\'ise Buy"
Colesworthy & Co.
YES -We have BAY-
fRONT SU MMER
RENTALS • & very spee-
ial ones~! * 4 bdrms, private pier &
i;lip. Dt>signed for indoor-
outdoor living • Vit-w,
• Choice Peninsula loca·
ti on I year round \ease
available, too), pier ol slip,
5 bdrms, 31k baths +
n1aid's qu.arters. * Lcvely home in p:ime
art'a. Exeellent bl'ach &.
pier. 4 bmu, 3 baths.
tr you are looking for a lease
home with over 2,400 :.-quari:o
feel plus eoormous mast!'r Beat This
bedroom, (13 x 26) and 1 ,,, •
three otht'r queen siu bed-107" down · 1 A1 10 interest on
rooms, plus h11ge family a_ ,;ioo/o l?1N. NO L~AN
room, plus wood burning f Ii:~, This CL1;5tom 3 ":"
firepla(.'(' plu all electric 180 ocean view home is
built-In kHchesn , plus huge absolutely beautiful & can
patio and l:'nlertainment be. yours. Call oow for ap-
area, We have it, and a ler-po1ntment lo see.
rific buy Ill only $31,950. Sub-$43,500
mit your smaller home en
our guaranlC'c sale plan.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
..
PERRON
\6ffi w""'"' De NB &12-521JO Walker & Lee
RENT BEATER * 642-lnl Anytime
. . -, "
2043 \VestcliU Dr. ---~ --Great $ $ Potenti.al 646-7711 Open Ev{•s.
A penny saved is a penny SWIMMING POOL Unusual Pacesetter
I llHI \I I Ill \II\ . ., .
lmmed. Possession
3 BR 2 baths ,fireplace, car-
pet&, drapes, built•lns, dCIU·
ble garage. $23,750.
W•lls-McCardle, Rltrs •
1810 Newport Blvd., C.M.
548-7729 anytime
A BIG SYCAMORE
Provides shade for th!& doµ
house w/hdwd. Ors. 514 %
interest.
FORTIN REAL TOR
1701-A \Vestclill Drive
BY OWNER =ow="'=r=.=548-<00i=i=l====
1
•. 5
0
8,.0 ·R5 BoA. NwD/<harmF rm CdM, 514 Fernleaf, $55,000. 3 Br, 1" Bo, frple • HUGE · m. am. · __ ,_ 6~~ . 1 k. h ~. f ii t W Jiff 1230 • Worlmn pl111 Jrd c.arspace Contract nf ......, Ill in .
1tc en am y rm, crp s, -;;":;;t;;c ;::;:::;;:;;:;;:;;;.I • Home • 50, comer Sllli,OOO A ciev;den0e-R. cClrod drps, $27,500 Xlnl financing. • R. C. GREER, Re-alty srs-eck.f.1 "' I :.,t•.,
Open Sat & Sun. ~ ON A Lovely quiet WestcliU 3355 Via Lido 673-9300 flUPt.Ex $56,000 61/(% ln-
Carnegie. 673-8650 days. St . "-" El & N t t•-••· 514 .,.. __ ,_A. CdM. 545-2094 eves. ·in "..u'ner eni. P · LOTS OF ROOM '" .,_"-.u-..,
Hi Dillt. Fee simple, heavy Custom quality 3 Br., on 51• S. cf hwy. 6'T':>-61'J4.1 Brcker.
shake roof, panelled !iv rm, street to street lot 3 Car
din rm, elect. bit-ins, 3 BR 2 garage. Lge. South patio: Apa'rtment1 • 5~ o/o IBA, 3 Br. 1% Ba . Ba, clean cpts/drps • 2 nr. clubhouse & tennis cts. For Sale ...
$26,500 patios, dog run. $42,500 by $69,500. Call for app't,
2507 Holly Ln, J Br, eqty owner. 642--1598 WALKER Rlty. 675--5200 6X Scheduled gross. Price 1.4
SS.700 nwner moving, carry I~~~~~~~~~! -tro plus units. Max fnt
2nd. Also: For inveslment I" f BR 3 baths, 2 story, bit-in 8%. Also fO I: 50 ' units.
er exchange, 25Cl8 Universi-University Park 1237 kitchen & rolcr TV. $58,500 aevidence • R. McLeod
ty. J Br Condo, pools IF YOU LIKE full price, assume 5\4:% 675-.f,()44
S38.500. 2323 Eu:thlulf. J Br. SWIMMING, GOLF ;,1"";::"·=6;13-:m::6===== I RENTALS
Condo, $30,000, l eased, AND TENNIS 400 HouNI Furnished trouble-free tax shelll'r. A. Huntington Beach 1
Clevidence -n. McLeod. plus leisure time this iii the Rent1l1 to Share 2005
675-6044. place to live. Absolutely no LIST your property
lawn to mow. J bedrooms. 2 with confidence HAVE 5 BR 3 bath bousie,
Newport Beach 1200
1980
earned. Throw away . Y?ur 2350 ft 4 BR with SE'P·
1'iiiiiiiiliii642ii!· m!!!i!7 .. i!i!!!iiil rt'nt receipts! Start huild1ng 1 sq! ' .,., ni 3 car II your estate today with this ara e &mly rool"v•' home OCEANFRONT •-u ._.. B. garage, execu 1 •
Greatest value in Mesa
Verde. 5 bdnns 2%!
ha.ths. formal dining·
room, kitchen eating
~rea, 15 x 20' family
room with fireplace.
Only $43,950 buys this
2 story beauty.
HEIGH·HO bathli, beautiful carpeting SELL with profes· furn. Want mature man to
Carefree beach living nr. and drapes, Home i11 in im-sional skUI share $165/mo includ. util.
N.J.J. Yacht Club & also nr. maculate condition. Lovely THROUGH Ca.II aft 5 PM. 549-2623 or
Newport Beach 642-5000
4 BDRM· $22,500
3 bedroom '"' uuuse. • ig: wet bar Ready for cnter-
CAPE COD R-2 lot means future dollars tai · $45000 in your pocket. Only 1 block rung, ' ·
2 bath. Cwilom features.
Like new carpeting. All
electric bu 11 t I n kitchen.
Family room. Fireplaet'.
54B-lil0
bay gwimming beach, at a side yard fer children's play 646-1058 •
bargain. 3 Br., 1,. baths area, back patio overlooks YOUR
plus modem kit'chen. Older greenbelt and pool. This is REALTOR MEMBER WIDO\V desires mature:, con.
Just a few steps from tentl'r of !own'. Don'.t 2000 sq 11 4 BR formal
to your own sandy beach be sOIT)' -very few like this dinina: roo;,, 3 ca~ garage.
but well maintained. a townhouse. , .end unit. Huntington S.ach/ genial wcrking lady to shatt BURR WHITE Quiet cul-de-sac location. Fountain Valley home.. No smoking. Call from this beautiful homr at $.Hl.TJO; ~tart saving te>-His & heri°; master bed-
with 4 bedrooms & 4 baths day by diahng room very largl' t>ntry \\•ith TARBELL 2955 Hacbor REALTOR FP $29,500. Multiple 548-49J9.
• Red Hf'll •-' WILL •hare my homo with 2901 N Bl d NB Listinn ~rv1ce ewport v ·· ·-• two responsible gentlemen.
STh-4630 642-2'253 Eves. REALTY 8 ESTELLE 49'-8469 Laguna Bch
2 [)('ns + dining room. 645 0'03 ' • ., balcny, garde n bath. A Jovt'ly home in ~ COATS ~wAtLACe Costa Mesa 1100
A magnificenl Sl"lllng $47,500. 18068 Culver Dr.. Irvine O' BR I EN
Call \\'ally S~f~J1re!rt: l!P!fil4
1
l_jiffillM
1
• JI Re~. 644-!787 _, T...rt'mi"IT" IOKl\11111\0\
,,, .-4 ""
. REALTORS
--S4M141-
COpen Evenings)
2 STORY CAPE COD Opon 9 AM -8 PM 83.1-0810
REALTOR Newport Be1ch Deluxe 5 Br, Extra special · We Know It's Tough 2200
large home with many ex-E1stbluff 1242 302 Sth Stre•t, Suite 204
To find a large 4 BR home tras. See this $39,500 :;:;::;;:;;;::;;;:;:;.1 Huntington Beach DOVER Shores bay front
home. 6 Br, \4 Ba. large
patio, 70' private dock.
$1200. mo. on yrly lse.
213~13 or 213/785-633.1.
AUG. or yearly rental.
Elegant, fu.rn. 2 Bdnns,
split-level. 'lldults cn1y. Call
after 6 PMM8-2394
It'~ gof to he the CU\('St
house on the tnarket with
2 big bedrooms and a den,
built in kitchen, fireplace,
\\'all to '11all carpet, 2 pa-
tios, r\ouble garage, Immac-
ulate -ready to be lived \n.
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. 17th St. -94
4 BEDROOMS
No Down VA
This ls a quality horn(' \\'ilh
cement driveway & shake
roof. Only 3 years old. Sell-
er wilt pay all buyer'i; clos-
ing coi;!s & \\"\ll l!;iVI" you
$100 i'o move
546-9521 ., ~6631
fOUR HOMES
on large mrner Eaiilside
lot. Privacy prevails here!
3 BR units with garages &
privale patios. Live in one
& rent the ether 3.
$62,000
( 100/o Down )
Newport
el
Victorl1
646-1111-
RON T at LAST YEARS PRICE -WATERF b"t w• bovo lt. 1750"' II £'!' EASTBLUFF REALTY l-..,,-,,,'5~36-:,2=36~2~;:--
Q";'t '"""'· with no lcal-Newport Hei9hts 2 pW!mao bot~<. .,-and piano ~ PRESENTS POOL TIME ~Ii~~ ~~r::b~~l ~~GI Loan 182.00 mo k~~:,,Li~ Z:~bleel~~~~ ~::LT"!'-1. ~~ndT!!:rse~f,~nL~n-15x4J' pool. heater, Wter,
tio. • Pier and dock with No qualiling, a55ume 6% Walle tc all schools. Priced Near NB Post Olr. 640-2414 ish charm • 3 Bdrms. 2%1 diving boil.rd + 22x24' add·
room for 40 fl. boat. J Bed· loan, do you want open well belcw market with no I~..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,~ baths: split-level, on choice td fairiily room. Spotle11sly
rooms 2 baths spic and beam ceilings, brick ~ down VA or low down FHA Cul-de-Sac corner lot overlooking spac-clean throughout. Only span 'condition 'throughout place, hardwood Doors, art terms. CALL JACK HAM-kll15 greens -tile Doors, gor-$33.950 • better check this
$69,500, can be seen any· 5tudio, or guest room, boat MONO 540-1151 Heritage geous wall coverings plus oiie!
lime. or trailer access, ivy rover-Real Estate (open eves). many custom exlras. Below MUTUAL REAL TY
'-0 THE REA!,
''.""\.. ESTATERS
ed patio located in Newport I~!!!!~~~~~~~~ I Lot + Back Bay view. New ~pla<;ement 005t at $38,850. 842-1418 anytimr
Heights? Then cal! tcday. 3 BEDROOMS !oo~r:rm~~;.h=.' lot, Act pronto! DIVORCE
Delta Real Estate 646-4414 2. Delightful Dolcres • major Marine Hi Scbool, 10' comer
64• 7171 ••• 2313 BONUS ROOM greenbelt location. Quiet lot w/bloclc-fence: 3 lge l iiiiiOiv·iiiiiiiiOi·iiii~Oiii;;;·iiii .. I ORANGE COUNTY'S DOVER VILLAGE, \VestcliJf, 2\\ BR., 12tl5' lam rm. Sell U9'l5 full move in do1vn pay. " 1 --• ·n· m 2 cul de sac • 3 Bdrrns., '" s ory Cui,..,om1 111 I · FHA or GI, toke -·er 5" % LARGEST ment-no extras. Total pay. 500 Own baths, split-leve: 2 patios, u• "M
TOP LOCATION . m E . llth St. ,., •••• ~·91 · · bdr, 2~ ba. S2!J, · .. _, bu & loaded 1vilh dee-with cash, stso lotat mo. --" men! ._, mo. prrne, mt, Janel. Adults. $195 mo. incl. ~... pmt•. Large Mesa Ve~ Colon1al•':'i.;-=.,-,,-:-o;;,.-....., ''"' & ins @ \owl's! in orator's extra~. Steps to
I-BR. duplex, ·1 blk. ocean &
bay: $135 Mo. yearly.
J7ll W. Balboa Blvd.
Lido Isle 2351
224 VIA Lido Nord. $1500 mo
rent except Aug which is
12000, WE ~ Cl!' BR
0-4547
2707 "2 St B Ibo Pt "5 000 . 11 • laxes. Patio. courtyard, dbl BRASHEAR REALTY 5 bdrms (2900 sq f1) An-Y• I • • <r 1 terest. Heritage Real Esta!e 0 pool , $39,i;iO: on lo\V lease-
1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil thony pool home near gall 3 BR. 2 Ba., good, livable 540-1151 (open eves I ~B'kr., ~ll.n~18aint $25. wner hold. 847-8531 Eves. 431-3769
fl course. Fann style kitchen, condition. Some furniture -~===~="=~--I r . .,...,.."" Call us Ior other Bluffs
family & dinlng rooms. included. Rear patio can be FIXER-UPPER ~B~E°"A.,.:.,C~H~H'=ID~E=A~W~A~Y~ exclusive listings. Room for Boat
LUXURY area, 4 br, 2 ba,
July, Aug er yearly. Walk to
beat'h. Owner 499-3411 Could stand m:lecorating. made into small Br. Attr. J BR. Vacant. R-2 Lot. Featuring seclusion; steps 2414 Vista Del Oro or Trailer
Owner transfered • ma ke brick patio entrance. Va-1969115FU,1.!:i:rn10";?
0
NDo~~E. from ocean; quiet, private NE\VPORT BEACJI 3 BP._. home, ,.-.._,, drape•,
oiler! cant, open house daily. Come ~ ·ic ,-1 3 Bdnn• 2 Ba furn L""ll33 -" call: MR. ROBINSON "'"""' '• " ' _.... . hardwood floors, latgf! fenc· DOVER SHORES ~ 540.saao & :~~ aC~p''·· t Realty Dl\vi!I Realty 642-7000 FP•R"""oPYEdR. ""T,·E"s'·w"'E-eST H • .,(lr..N t'd yard. Priced right llt wB~T~.~NTNe~!~tu11st~ bu'I (n!artlnemathubt) -BLUF1'.S.WORT """"""" $20.900 GI or TilA tennl!. "' ,~ l\1agnilicent rustom 1 1 LLEGE REALTY Call Anytime e 675-6000 2419 Fairway Drive 1028 Bayside, NB 675-4130 BUT :l\1AKE OFFER! MUTUAL REAL TY Garg, lndry, boat dock. Wk.
home, 3 bedrooms. JI,~ baths, 1~ ••-•IH•rbo<,CM. 2Q2S W. Balboa Blvd., NB East.side 4 Br. 2 BA. Ccv BA EW LOT ft1ust sell View end unit "C" or mo. Sept only. 673-7861 er
famil y room, exquisite \\'tdl l:~;;;~-~-:;m~~~;;:1-;;;;;;-;;;;:~ t I h k I Y VI 3 842-1418 anytime 67,_1158 pa o, s a e r co , W"th mal be 1 tt plan \1//1950 sq. ft . 4 BR'i;,
coverings, I a r g e terrace ---Baycrest Barnain di~washt>r, tr,ilc, crpts, i s I ac iy co ?e. BA's. sep. dirting. Upgrad· NO DOWN GI BACHELOR Apt. excellent
ivith o\'en;iz~ pool. wet bar. ':II drps. 51,4'711 GI. $186 PITI. Suitable for building. ust ei< Immaculate! Call Mn. $223 Total Payment
$159,;,oQ, OCEANFRONT 5 bdrm J1h bath home in de-$l9,900. 646-2819 ~apcshlro. m public swimmln& While 673-9060 or G75--57S4 Lg 3 BR, "'w'" painted, ISx peninsula location. no cook-siM!able Jocatlon. Owner .,... Y ing, employed adult. Avail. DUPLEX movtng East. Must be sold. MESA VERDE rorner lot. 3 BURR WHITE eves. Owner/agt. 20' patio, buge lot, near ab!. June 27, $100. Mo. 'til
A. b"lt ~ ~ t A Id & F d lg, BDRM, 1% Ba, Jamily • NEW B--~L~U~F~F~S~.~ FV High. S25.500 Srpt 15 673-2123 !Xlt Dovrr Drivr, Suite 120 .... ustom-i m ....... ern ~n ""s rnO reu REALTOR HAFFDAL REALTY , . ,
john macnab Summer Rentals 2910
17141 642-8235
Nr"''J)Orl Brach beach. Booked tulJ this sum-rm. Fully crtd & drpd. 2 2 Br, 2 Ba split level. Many CLEAN Ba1boa Beach Units.
Je Ke NelChOIS "!!!!!!!!i!!!!!i!!!!i!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!' mer • alwa..ys filled winter 388 E. 17th .st., 0.1 • fireplaces, covered patio. 2901 Ne111port Blvd., NB custom features, a1 I elec, 8740 Wamer, F.v. 842-4405 Sleeps 2 to lO: fer summer
'! f'lr f'X<:ellent income. Pric-Realtors G46-17S5 3068 Gibraltar, C~1. 675-4630 642·225.l Eves etc. Lci\vest malnt. & Jease. RANCHO LA CUSTA. Tile reservation11 call 673-0045 COLLEGE PARK rd low at $77,500. HERE-'S 5 BEDRMSI $26,900 Owner. :116·2626 hold . MUSI' SELL • BY roof. Open be.A.m ceilings. 3 315 E. Balboa Blv., Balboa
Realtor 4 Bedroom + Pool \\'rtller Haase REPUBLIC Homl'. 8 n1os THE BLUFFS O\VNER. Call Dick Dyer BR, 2 BA. formal din., fam. LIOO Isle 2 BR apt furn.
•llli l3rdroon1 has scpar"' ~ UNDER $30,0001 old. 2 storv, 4 BR. 3 BA. E , B V'e 533-4456 ext 401 or 67J.Sm. nn, many extras. Walk to tlo I LI · ., •pan11ve ay 1 w B<'ach &: pier, g"'ge, pa • f'n1rllnL-e, firt>place .and h\Jth . Exquisitely pancl.ec , 111_ng fam rn1., rctrcal nn. 3 car " beach. By Owner $31.900. view. 673-39<1&
8 UNITS Gorg('QUS pool w11h .~olar ~family room .. ~itchrn .with gill'll.ge. Cor lot : $43,500. By Popular "T" model -3 Br, Cor11na del Mar 1250 Assume Jew FHA 6'4'j0
hral<'r .• S3J.500. Q\\·nr:r is D-k & ( rich 111ood cai>inets, finest 0111ner. 546-4415 21-: ba, crpls, dt'PS. 61' Joan 96l-002!1 CHARMING furn 2 BR 114 a n.~ious. Coldwell, u.n er O. built-in applianCf's. Only 4 0 ""w~N~Eo,R..:..:M:.,.c.,,::..:.,~V~,-,..~,-.,.~i-• By o\l•ner, 644-2370 BRICK & BEAMS GLEN MAR_ 4 BR, 2 bath. BA apt overlooking Emerald
Pride of Ownership 550 Neivport Center Dr. Y"'-new. 540-lTlO !!!!'!~..,!I!!!!!!!~~~,,., Ad bl b · k 1 ~--· Bay,_ $.350 mo. 494-5330 level. 4 BR. lg. lamiy rm. 0 er nc • roug 1 ..,.._..., Newly ........ led tlu"\MNt, 1.::::<;c;::::.::;:c,,::.:..:;::.:. __ I
All 2 Dr. .... I bn1h, bu1il-in Newport Beach, Calif. TARBELL 2955 Harbor tonnal DR. 3 car garg. ~17 TAX DEDUCTION new clll'p!'tlng and BelglA.n drapes, t;gp;.tlo, m&l\Y ex-SUMMER • Oceanfront •
range & ovrn, largr '1ard-833-0700 644-2430 PENINSULA PT. 546-8597 Duplex, fum .. I blk. ~an linen drapc11 bid you quiet tras. See to appreciate. 9102 beaut v:cw, Newport Bea.ch. robes. ne111 call>f'ls & drap-Kornat Dr., C.M. welrome 10 a settne ocean 3 Br .. 2 Ba. * 494-1296
es. Priva!I:' p1U10~. 546·2313 • 646·7171 Charming J Br. J Ba. home. * BY OWNER-POOL. 3 & bay, $3500 yr, income. view framed by prolessiona1 Gettysburg Dr,• HB.1.,:;,;:::;;.;:..;::;:..._;;.;:.:=--1
1$60 Newpo11 Blvd .. O.T B / B Lgc, sunny patio. Nr. OCi'.?an BR, crpls, drps, X-Lrg LR. S~~U~~~r1;ik~e~lvd landscapifla. Adult owners 962-6194 -Flexible terms. RENTALS
Rltr. 646-.1928 Eve, 64•1-1655 & bay. $49,500 J..ow ,maint yrd, $30,500. are Palm Springs bound. Hou ... Unfurnished
h Courtyard Poo1 BAY AND BE~Cll Balboa Real Estate Co. • 646-2895 • BLU1'~~~s-Bay Vie\'" on ma· suggr~t ss.ooo down. early Fountain V1Uey 1410 .ac enmyer-"Forever ~~~" N.ew \\'ells' ' RE.ALTY, INC. . 200 E ~alboa B_lvd., BatbQa -BY 0\V:NER 3..BR..l:lomes. 2'._ jor green bell . J Br, J Ba, e>~session guaranteed, N~~1i, ,El)'. Q.~r. 3 pit; 2~
-· · · ' pl;1n ready for' Aug. delfv. zo '£'a~'~ ~l'\Vf.IO_rt·f.rai:oor 6T.:l-4l40 · v 1 man"·--rost-fl!lltu~s. Low· Hal Plncltln-&-·"Asroc. Bal.h, \\'/'11 carpels, drapes,
f'ry. ·1 BR 3~ b:i, lam nn An'a. Spcc1ahz1ng in llstings F llb k 61/ A E. sldt" 2-biW.l s.iCe.1:,,e!7;',~ ISf', ·$48,500 value, Sacrifice 3900 E C H 615-4392 ~ --wrl bflr 19:<32. ! B and ~ale.~ of Bayfronts, G rOO 2 C trans era e oans a, .. ..,1"1 10. $.\4 950 S44-426:" . oast "'Y· block fence. Many custom NOW ONLY $18,950 now I<) ~lect. ~lnr~' Ul' OcPanrronts and In· Be-Million Dollar View Need cash. 548-l059 BY ·Ow~er, Bay~lT~l 4 Br + NEW LISTING ~~~":t~· n!3~ .. ~~~9 &
Ro J, Ward Co. l\\'f'f.'~s. Pleasv (·al.I U!I or New IU.'<UTY home .& Income C-2 HOME & comm'!. bldgi1. Corona Highlands; Ocean
.1 Bit hnn1r on Jar-t•r In! J~,, 0 ,,, stop 1n our new otricc loca· 2 BR + la.-ae • light -con-$28,700. 557 Plumer, C.M. den nr Sth, fm nn, ~Ba, lge view; 3 BR. 2 Ba, You own '" •.....,,cresl LUCe) .,., . 92 patio & pool. Be a u t . Nood.5 paint, FHA <JPpraJsal 11~0 G· I 0 646-l350 lion. ver!able studio. S54,COO • 646-56.12. eves. 646-14 -....i red ced the land. Full price $44.000.
$19.000 -Vt·lr•rans ST.'10 I ::::"'=':::':::ui,:y=e=.===~I 001 Dover Drive, Suit(' 126 10% on. O\vner/Bldr. tTI4) !~~7~~~~ u CORBIN-MARTIN Assume 51M,-. GI
rt ow 11, Sl71 1mo. includes I' NE\VPORT BEACll 7'l8-7ll.~ l --------1-l-OS Realtors l BR, 2 BA. New bltn.~.
everythlnr. Boat/Trailer Perking S.15.-200'.l Mesa del Mar REDUCED $2000-No\v $38,750 3036 E Coa l H CdM
Ernie Cleveland, Rllr. il!ESA DEL il1AR corner MESA DEL MAR Try Th1"1 For S'1•hs 4 Br., 3 Ba., fan1. dln, . 6r:..16f/J wy., i crpt'd, 2 frplcs, rede<:S37in500&
• uUl/laun nn. Total 2400 sq, ""'""""iiiiOiiiiiiiii""'""' I cut. Lrg tam nn. • · 645-0LSI tv~~ 616-l!'i/9 1u1n1i•. Neat.\ & raniily rooni New an market 4 bdmi & -O\vncr. 430-4097 · 9111·-S'" 1~ IMMEDIATE f,. 325 Vlstn Bayn. O\\•ner-AN pos~·::sion ""'· ~,,, ""· den, Iormni dining. loaded NEAR OCE • lo•" I • ·t ' BR 2 h•ll>. l•••·-'11"--' R-eves '"I"' ' rown or llUuini OCCUPANCY " "" ,...,._. '" with extras. spoUes~ inside,!------~----~="~-One nf the three Jlnest horn· VA/FHA/Conventional THE BLUFFS M s
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
Seal Be.ch -1450
1475
General 3000
J Ml. from heh, beL 2 shcp'r
ctn. 4 BR. i BA, toed. yd,
$250 n10 . Lease. Aft 6 PM
008-!"1
$150, 2 BR. 2 Ba. tri-plex,
gar, pa&, w/w, sto .... I:
drapes. Broker 534-6980
S165. J BR, gar, fenced yd.
Crpts & drp~. Broker
S34-<9llll
$1.IKI. 4 BR. 2 Ba. gar, RIO,
trplc, children le: peb O.K. ---;•6 5810 Oawlcss\y 1nanicured cut-es it1 the heart of QI . · tcps J BR 2 halh, drn, 2 1,.111 ,.~ · 4 hdrmi;. 1 1 ~ baths, family 1 1 Id hi fMattlnematht3trel ,·oom, ,~, .. d'8-• & ca•-Rand Realty ,-.-,.,. side, unique landM:aping, pa· 3 BR & 2 Ba \\'ith corner o to Ocean. 4 BR, 41,i ba , cpts l"fl!I. t-lll)', Rllf'Y ii<'• UEGE RE LTV "". ,,_ ' ~ ., -·1 . ~· 950 I • . <-u-n 19 000 <B l
,. 3 BEDROOMS $135. 2 BR, l!A Ba Tnwnhse
w/w, RIO, childttn 0 .K.
B\<r,,,._
' A La rd t OS & i•hfll"', -· . v ew SPACI0\111 "'"" ..... .,u ' • y ..... -u for l"'"I ti lri'l1le1· /11!1s. rge r e !Ir ya .)'!!~!'!"""'""'":'"."'~!!!!!! ~ ~ ~"" l500Adnsat lurtior,tM I' Bob Olson RJtr. 546-5580 Custom carptJ1, drps, other Delancy Real Estate
DAVIDSON Realty l :=~==~==:::z::I S5:.!.:JOO Nursery SChool--extns. Handy to pool. Own. 2828 E. Coo.st Hwy. CdM fllA or VA leu than U0.000
546..stGO t::v"s. ~)'1ll~4 j • JEAN SMITH POTENTIAL. 3 BR 2 bath l:'r $41,500, 644--0m 673-lTIO WHAT ELSE IS THERE
A·FRAME-OCEANFRONT R It horn<. "0"~' 1"!. l30xl80' M .. ::.;••::ac.V.:.e::.;r.:d::.e ___ l'-'l""'IO ~M"=o='e1,;L;;E~H~O~ME="'$1"9."'000,,-l•=mzmmm=~=Z-I TO SAY! Coste Meco 3100
Mndtm 3 BR. 1 Blk, t o ~ BR home on ex~lh•nl :32:r alJJenct'd,CiJlfordctails. -5 • I y Ba,ytrontonPtnlnsula l~S OM BUILT-Re>c L.34~~e&, Rlty SUBL£74Br1.2•.~BA.farn
-·· .,, 900 "' I ~ It pac1ous y ours 61>.3fOI 675 3226 cu T I'========-nn, W/W ap\',, ·-··. -· -· ""'"h' "'""• 1~ E. 111h .••• ,, "'-'' ,..an a .. ra 1J ===~·,_,__>~-,,11r w1b · .~11s· ~~ CAYWOOD REALTY '~' v.11< ome t mrome o '-' built·in&. Pool 1c rec Geocge WJTOlliemson ____ __ ___ "t "=--BAYFRONT bch. cotta,., 3 1 o w 11• Lo9uno •--ch 1-s w Coe 11 · - - -""'-uJOn Lovely 4 Br 2 ba home with oomer ot. wner w ''" -iv fllcllltles. Cblldren OK .
6308 5".1~90 "'Y· NU ti73--4350 REAL Eve~ 67:'1-IS&I NEWPORT HGTS.-\\10~1AN "'ith R.F:. Brokrr's separate dining rm. 2000 sq. ~ ~~~:l Lea51! anct, $69,900 BEAUTlFUL Ocnn vittW Avail July 15 (In I mot
FfUNTING70N BAY
-3 BR 1~ BA 'l'w'n l!Oui;c.
Pool, dub. ahoPPhlS ('t'nt1•r,
5 min to beach $,J.!l,500.
-PQmtnl• m tb&n rent.
Owncr!l4M!ll1
-DAILY J'IL<iT W>-Nf ADS
81UNG RESULTS!
.................. ,,· ,,,,,· ... ~1 $19,SOO lif'. nC'MOO. Specialilv offit:f', ft. localed C'xpt>rtly (!vet 2 ====~.-.--,==· On.nee Qiut Property home, 3 BR, 2 BA, loo.tt lca!ll". $230 mo. 642--1460
Uwr1y 11r1•11. Spacim111 bed· No €'/\fl ttq. xi.NT OP-levels. $38,900. 67>-4070. DELUXE Duplex. OCEAN 332 MarJuerltc 673-&50 Temple Hills Or. by owntr. CUSTOP.l J Br, den, Jcit w/
D'istress Sale rooms. i·h<'1Thll living room PORT. ~11-4900 arter 6 Stuart l Robblnl!I Realton VIEW. $42,5()0.\ow dn. Allk .~ .. 500 ~ _al • bl , _
t'nhan«ll hy \\vod bumlng pm for Naomi, Doyle Co. SHOREO.IFF 3 BJt. 2 BA.1 ,c~,-:,' =·,.•_,,...~ .. _~_,,.,1-,.,..= tna ...... home att0s1 from ~fll!lt !It'll now. '1 BR fam rm, lif""Pl.aCr 2 car garage. ' _ • BY OWNER 548-1168. Eves. 675-1'977 Qu~I tree lined~· by thf! LAGUNA canyon, 90' x 400': Mf!lll Verde 'Cntry O'ab.
2640 !'<I ft Mesa Verde. 3 Large l'alunhlf> ii;rounds. Real Estalt' !'.'ALESMAN cusro;i.1 .REPUBLIC HOME aea. Fet tdmp~. Acceu to 2 n11tk 2-11ty. house: po~lblt Leue $325 mo-cardnr lef.
bathi;, farm ~tyle kitchen, 540-lTlO NEEDED ON BE;ST VIE\V LOT OFF· THF. SUN NEVER ~San beaches. Under $50,000. By C·l er M·l zone: S4.000 dn. lmmed. occupancy, f'IS.;Jle,
bll·iri11. 50' alluminum peUo TARBELL l95S H•rbor Ne14·parl Realty & lri\'t'~I. '?°· ERED. 4 BR. 2 BA, SING· Oasslfied's eetlon JIO""r. owner. * 6'n-3681 Bkr. 675-6591: 494·7161 ~a. % BR. AduJb. Fully cptd,
"""'en Buy •jl is. S39.~. 1842 Npt. Blvd., 0.'1 548--0588 LE STORY o E SJ G N. For an ad to tt-11 around ck:l!it to mkt3 $160 Inc atn.
P.W. • 546-5440 0-lARGE IT! Dial 64Ui678 for RESULTS PHONE 519-1144. the clock, dlaJ MJ.56'7S. CHARGE YoUr want ad now. DAILY Ptwr WAiVf ADS? 83$..74-40 alt 6 "'-'-""--':....:.;.:..:..::..::__ __
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The
DA·ILY
PILOT
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RENTALS RENTALS ~F'4TAtS RENTALS RENTALS ~ENTAL~ REAL ESfltE llUSINISS and
H-Unfurnlshld Hou ... Unfurnished Hou111 Unfurnlshld Apb. 'urnlshM Aptt. Unfurnished Apts. Unfurnlshall Gonorot Pl~CIAL
Coot1 -3100 ~port BH<h 3200 ~otint~jn V~lloy t 3410 c.....,. dol Mor.~ 4250 !ffwport hMh 5200 Hunlln"°" !IH<h 5400 ~~J!!nte! 607' lw.,Opportunlll• 6300
R~ oc-l;o•. 4,llR. S315 month. 3 BR.'"6>1 FOR l:<o" luitocr' ...... 4 I BR ""· "°"'"' ""'""" ~!OD. 2 BR,P<ftl"°""' 1Y!>O 2 BEDROOM 2 SA'ru. .. iil!WPORT BLVD. CNmll'IQPO!y ...... """<r
Larp: '\l(lee oft.·\ 1il. ~.' , JD'!'llth. j Br 61mn ftu. ff'lllc. atrium refrl.I., •\QYe i.I ~'ft -e c; k 4 upptf, Sei4'.,. carpets &; 1 . ll"'llllNISHltD •; llMi.b&e \qr Com· tuU ttrM, 4a.Y1/C\lllll. Refill
Oean 3 ~. carpet& & ~ RN.lty 543-1290 & fttlar, S3Z mo. S68-369'J &at'I· T1S ~CdM drapes. G£ RA:'frla. A stove. UNnJRNtsHED ITltfda.I, Medical, Dental. 4 coded montY from min
drapes. Let> COveted paUo. Sell~lean.11\l,Oytn. SWldecil; Cptl. ,drapes. btf.Uins, best AiJ..oond .• crptl. elnator oPtf. 0~ in Cmtii
Cange ~ tool room. Owner Univenlty P•rk 3237 L•gun1 Niguel 3707 lly l1llndl' 43SO Adu1ta, nd pets. $115 yrly locaUon, 1 blk to 5 Pf.~1 3Sc PER. SQ .Fr. ~ l vie. No ll!llirw· ~ be at property 10 • 5 Jeue. Gou...3666 shoppiJ\i etc. from i-iii'i· 541-6032 OR '75.MM SlllOO Total cuh nq. Se~ ~ ly. 2549 Orange ':-~·· 3 ~o~ .2~ ba,~~ .. 11~ .... ro:?n1, 4PBr .• ,2 Ba., \(sic_:. home+. •.v.AJI. :-.... ~,!t.1,:.. '.·1'1so'.'! SPACIOUS 1600 n. studio TrOl. EUia~ apt. o. &U-• ~NEWPORT BLVD. D&me,' •dd'rtll. pboM to:
"'.M. or phone Whittier v ... w . .....,ase, ~""'" . a.>,;r\,Ol!W ace~ ter itrea . ......., mo pets~.~;;,,,~.. apt. Ault.II o/l8, 3 .Br. 2 ~~ 84.2-8303 \ Ofli«'a iWta~e for Com· Route Dept., f,'.O. Box 3846,
qx 6-4244. atter 6 p.rn. ~-673-9541 M" 495-4485 • _ •••• ~ Ba. Pool, prv patk>, elec kit, BA YF RONT mcrcia1. MedktJ. DcnfaJ. Anthebn 938{Q\
C BR home 1% baths, wlw Irvine 3238 San Clement• 3710 Huntin"ton h i ch 4400 sep. din'& rra, frplc/$2'1'5 Deluxe 2 Bedroom, 2 bath AJ.r..cond .. Ctpts, elevator FREE STANDING
cpts, 4rapes, bit-ins. Near • mo. 646-!)!i(ll. Clay & St. Fireplace, crpl.11, drpa, bJtn$. 35c PER SQ .rr. Fully t'QUipped tW out
shopping • iCMols. Oc-'turtle Rock next to UCl 3 BR. 2 Ba. Ocl?an vlcw, SUMMER rep\td, beautilul Andrews. OOWNlNC Apts.' $'1'/!t. £2131 m-5863 tV•s. ~ OQ.. ~~ t -¥: withiiMnin& rm. 2 yn, ~pa n e Y June 15th, 4 BR, 3 BA. fam rm, crplg, $40.000 home. Tmmcd. poss, bcac1l 11t yo\lr door. Start-at Ytu.Y. -IM. 2 Br.; fpl, 300 sq. Ft. 9'fjce . o~. ~lit Co.ta Mesa loc•·
/month lease. DW, stov, 2 sly, S car gar $260. Mo. 714/544-094 $50. per wll'-. 5$..-2$79. dish"'llhr, bltns, new)>' dt-c. COas'tal 5700 COSTA MESA MS-2130 ttoo, hie lot, COOd lease. !OM
Call 546-5440 P.\V.C. $325. lflC]ud club member-Kt:.N TAL~ -$235 • '!"lli handle. Call The Rl'a.I
i YR l.l)E w10PTtON ro >!hip. Lease OK. 833-2929 Apti: FurnJlhM Garden Grov• 4610 BETTY DAVIDSON (k&an' front Apls Industrial Prop. 6080 Eat.attn:, A 1 k for van
BUY l.ovt:ly 3 Br, den, 2 675-36.58 Shore Prop. 673-9000 &1&.7171
Ba. Cpts, drps, bltin.s. frplc. Corona del Mir 3250 Gener1I 4000 SINGLE Young Adults Lux· New • Deluxe HIGH INTEREST'' ESTABLlSHED prdenina: l11S _Mo &ts. . d ury garden apts wilh coun-2 BDRM. sundcck, garage, 67 -· " r. e q · I BOR I •-· cl·•b ,•--·p"--• .:.. close to beach. Yearly S185 •• route. trucks & ~!>" 642-'IOil ~ · split-leYl'I, 2'~ SUO. BACH apt. All util ... 1. u;, " • .,..,., '~"' •ou (7141 536-4616 hi 5 In .,. _ _. ment availabh! i:~o ""'"• baths. 3 out.side terrace&. .,.. complete privacy. SOUTH mo. No children, oo Wl:S· Not on t s 8<'ret .c.a:i• • ......-.r.>..u
RM DECORATED, 3 Br 2 ba Heart or Corona del 1.far. w/w, Avail now. BAY CLUB APTS. 13100 6u.-.3978 eves. (7141 536-1487 Anaheim, 6% note may be
home, new ept on patio, .,.,,,. ~ CHAP~fAN Ave.. Garden 3 Br ,. 0 .. .-.t,s 711 Ocean Avf'nue auumed. lAcatt'd ·on major Money to Lo.n 6320
bltin slv, dbl gar. Adlts, no '""" YEARLY ' .. J;Xl. ""r ' (3 blks W. of H. 8 . Pier) street In prime industrial __ ;......;...;;..;.c.;;__...:..:.:.c;
pets, SlOO mo, 548--0136 aft 6 '°"'=-~"-~-=_c_.,.'-"oJC.lo"'-'-Cetsta Mesa 4100 Grove 1714) 6J6-30.:I) d~. frplc. nr ocean. $235. area, Full price only $92,500. ht & 2nd loans for quick
PM 2 BR House, ex<.'t'llcnt <:ooo.1---------~to. 646-5800. REAL ESTATE For more lnlonnation please caah.. Borrow on_ YoUl' pro-
3 BDRM, 2 Bath. Lg. Fam.
Rm. Pool & main!. new ept.
& drps, Built-ins, spmkl.
$300. ~10. No lease. 642-21111
Adull• only. szo mo. * $30.00 Wk. Up RENTALS UNF1.JRNlSHED yrly, $150. Gtn•r1t call K. W. Sm11.ll. perty eq· without dlaturblnt1
6'5-3291 e Day. week, monlh. Aph. Unfurnished Other yrly rentals .. Calvin s. Rentals Wa~tM 5990 Eckhoff & Auoc., Inc. )'OW' low lllterett lat TDL
3 BR, 2 BA. Carpc>ting,
$250/yrly. lease. 846-1822 or ........,, • Sludio & Bach. Apt.s, General 5000 Foss. Rltr. &t2--.1850: 1818 W. Chapman Ave. Also buyers b 2nd .TD9.
• Incl Utils &: Phone serv, ---------BEAtrrlJ:o""UL 2 bdnu •Pt. Orange Calit S.'\ltler Mort.pge Co. Inc.
DELUXE 3 Br. ? BA. C.On-
dontlnium. New carpeling,
drapes. Pool & rec fac. m
mo unfum. CaU Kl 6-6829
ARTISTIC unfurn 2 Bn
duplx, encl pati<l, nr stores.
NO pets. $150.67S-29-i2 aft
12.
• !\laid Service. 1V avail, • RENT • couple only. No pets. Wfn-8 / B 511-2621, Eves-~ ·s:m-s,m Serving Harbor Area XI yrs . .._ .... .,_.., ,._,, 336 E. l7i4 St • New Cale & Bar 3 R nilrCd L. Foss, ·~· ~ \\'anted to rent --4 Jr 5 lxlm1 . ., .... 21n · <« ~· J:l~ntington Beach 3400 23 ooms Fumiture f :~'--" .,..._ ......,....,u 76 Newport Blvd. 548-ST:ii --· urn-..:1.1 hon1e on or ~o/ C d I 60851.,-,=======-
~~on rcnl. lease or ~al<'.
Custom home; 2 lrg BR &
den, w/runipus room in
garage; on ~" HCrc acro.~s
(rom r.1eadow Lark golf
course. Shown by appt. on-
ly. 1.6."151 Grahan1 St., H:B.
Call In Yorba Lind a,
52~-n87
$130 • 2 BR. util. incl. Older $20 • $25 & UP East Bluff $242 bay or ocean: Very nice ommtr 1 ANNOUNCtMEHTS
1crw.n1s preferred. 612-6560 Month-To-Month Rentals e NEW DELUXE e reliable ramily, e."<ccllt.'01 OFFICES FOR RENT and NOTICES
eves. 645-2020 WIDE SELECTION refcren<'CS . l'otod 1oQ f ·
3 Br. 2~ ba apt. for lease Please call A1r.o;. F11
1 ern, spac s, pro esmon-Found (free Adt) 6400
NEWLY Appliances & TV's iivan. di Y •I thl b•" A all ---------crptd 1 Br, furn. Incl. spac. rostr. iiuite, n B & B h on mon Y .,.s. v Lrg rms! $130 mo. 523 No Security Deposit rm. & dbl, s:arage, auto. ay eac 8/1/69. Contact Mr, Lapp, YOUNG male puppy, part
2 BDRM. crpl.11, drps. Garage
no pets, 2 children OK
54S-T:i40
Bernard St. Apt o, 642-6904 HF'RCFurniture Rentals d00r opener avail. Pool & R1alty,.lnc. Downey S & L ASl!OC, Mis-German Shepherd, well
517 W. 19th, CM 548-3481 rec area. Nr. Catholic 001 Dover br .. NB Suite 126 sion Viejo. 837-4911 trained, housebrkD Brown I:
2 BR $110/mo. 1989 Charlt'.
CM. Holl.st? C. No pets, 1
<'hild ok. 642--2259 or 646-717.
3 BR, 3 Ba, cpts, drps, bllnS,
$2.61). includes g a rd e n e r .
675--3131
College Park 3115
FOR Lease, superior home, 3
BR. 2 BA. family rm, sew-
ing rm. $225. 540-7823 eves.
Newport Beach 4200
F"O"°R"""l•::a-:-,..,...,0,,.-,-,.-.1,,-,-3~bd-.nn-. I SINGLE Young Adults Lux-
1-Tunt. Beach immaculate ury garden apts wiU1 coun-
adul!-occupied home 21,\ !xi. try c.IJ.ib almospbere and
stone front and fjroplaec. eomplele privacy. SOUTH 5\~'/c GI Joan call 9&2-SOOS BAY CLUB APTS. Irvine at
wknds or aH 6 pm 16th Newport B<'ach.
{714) 645-0550
FOR LEASE; 3 BR. 2 BA.
walk to beach &: schools, *NEW BAY FRONT*
$225 per mo. !lGS-5123, Winter rentals, lower duplex,
962-5959 2 BR. 2 Ba fum. Avail Sept.
4 6. $225. mo. 227 19th SI., BR., 2 BA, <:rpl.!i, drps. fen-N.B. 6'5-0236.
1568 W.' Lncln, Anhm 774-2800 Ch~h & IChool Ir' Corona 645-2000 Eve!!, MS-6966 C't, Ave f)c.l Mar. San white. Vic Newport I.stand.
BEACH .. YEARLY delMarHigh. • CIO?mente. ur x ion ·.1=673-8455~--------t 3 .Br, 2 Ba. unlurn .••.•• $265 e ONLY $260 • SINGLE professional man Owner, 49~ or 492--0386 OUT ol sight little do(.
2 Br. 1 Ba. unfum .•.. , .$215 831.871 Amigos Way, N.B. 40+ wants clean rnodern ffiondc brown eyes black
3 Br. 2 Ba. widen ...... SlOO Cumished apartment. June 1 d t . I R t l 6090 nose Ple.ytul Vic 'eouege
1 Br. 1 Ba. Unlurn .•..•. S200 Coran• dil Mt r 5'250 30 occupancy. \Viii conskler n UI ria en a Puk. For tnlonn,;tlon caU
3 Br. I Ba. tum ........ $275 I i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~m [ sharing new homt'. Recur-M-1. CORNER 127 x 90 96l-5416 BURR WHITE [I ., rent travel, CllliCreet. Any w/900 sq. ft. bldg, 19th &:l's=IL~VER=-M~i~nia-lure----~1,·I ~..,, beach area, prefer Corona Whittier CM. 642-3490 24 "th -• -"--y-··-• REAL TOR ~ dcl itar ~7000 • w1 •a.i. \;Ul.lil.I·, uu.i ... on
2901 Newport Blvd., N.8. tJ., ort• · hr. comer" c{ Fair • n d 67S463o 642-2253 Evt-i. • ; ' INTERNATIONAL Oil Co. M-1 Industrial Units Fairview .54!):.ooo9
t n d ustrial f't'..Prescntativc 1250 to 16,000 sq ft. PUPPY· • 6 wks b 1 , k $155. 2 BR, l ~ Ba studio. ON TEN ACRES wan11 unfum 00 t • • Elec kil. R/O, w/w • -1. ' . use or ap, C. Robert Nattress Rltr. w/whitc spots on tef:I, ,...... 1 Ir 2 BR. Furn &: Untul'.n yearly, I child. L.a.~:una. So. Costa Mesa 642-1485 ~ 1 · 1 S Balboa
Newport Bea~h 3200
Bkr. 534-6980 Frpk:s I prlv. patios/Pools. Laguna or Dana Pt Rn!a ma e, VlC t, .
Tennis • Conlnt'l Bld5t put-· limil $150 mo 499-3827 · NEW Industrial bldJt, 2500 sq.1~613-089--1-------I
«'d. $195 mo-lease. I mi to I========="°
ocean. 968-3497 East Bl\,lff 4242 --------
3 BDRt.1, 1~ bu, 2 mi Crom
beach. $210. Mo. on yrly lsc.
ting gr«'n. • LAND LORDS e g~1~6~:7 1639 Monrovia, BOSTON bull mixed, female, .. ----Tiffi BLUFFS on the Bay.
50' deck w"/awning & glass
enclosed gazebo. Charming
pslio off din rm, lge mastr
Br suite. Presently 2 Br, 2
Ba. Expansion to 3 Br, den
& 3rd Ba. $425 Mo/or S500
w/addilion. 644-0837 or
497-1537.
536-7744
SUBLET 2 BR, 2 BA, apt
from 6/15 to. 9/15. Patio,
Pool, linens, dishes. Util pd. 3 BR, 2 BA, mi. from beach, Adults no pets, $300. mo.
almost new, 21,a car gar., &14_1352 near all schools. 962-1141 I ;:,==;----,,.,.-,-~
IT'S Beach house time_ Big-BUSlESf marketplace in
town. The DAILY PILOT gest selection ever! See the Classified section. s a v c
DAILY PILOT Classified money, time & effort. Look
section NOW! now!!!
General 4000 Gener~I 4000 Gener1f
Solve a Simple Scrambled WOTd Puzzle for a Chuckle
O Reorrongs letters of the lour :icromblecl WOl'ds be-
low to fonn four simpl• wor~.
llXESHAN I) _ I I I' I' I .
-
I
-<
~ I
ITILEN ! I I I ' The trouble with tro nqulfi.
. . _ zers is that you find yourself
IBA l BED I ::ng nice to people y:~,;'.
i.,1-,~~,,.;;....,1-T11~r,-l e Comp!e11 lhe chuci:!e quoted
~V filling in rhe m1isin9 word$
~~~~~~-~~-you do'lelop I/om :.iep No. 3 below. e Pl!INT NUMBERED 2 J 4 S 4 1•
lETTER.S IN SQUARES I
_&_~-~~is:~: .... _"_fO~·l~l~l _._I .... I I I I
4000
SCRAM-LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8200
DIME-A-LINE WANT ADS -
Costa Meu 5100
HARBOR
GREENS
BACllELOR UNFURN.
from $110
900 &-a· Lane-, OfM 6«-2611 FREE RENTAL SERVICE 8~· l 'i-1 ,yn. "'.°I c · ,.._A ... H l -Fa11"V1ew Rd. <l WilAOn. !MacArthur nr. ""'a"' wy Broker 534-6982 Loli 6100 Ma°Y 30. 548-6059 eves only
\VANTED: One bedroom Ui · B / B house 1vith yard. up IQ 1140. LAGUNA BEACH SIBERIAN, m ti • colored, . c.all to Identify. 645-0831 Sparkling 2 bedroom 2 bath 675-5&.U 2 _Loli; Ccrr1t~ Dr., ~ct Newport Beach..
ground floor apt. Cheerlul 4 Bit house 10 tease for 1 or 2 2531 Temple Hills_ Strateg1c-1 ~='=--=--"~-~~
dcn-Oining roon1. All elcc. yea.rs on Lido !tile. Will con. ally located. Util in, st pav-MEN'S • Pr. or Horn-rimmed
Bit • ins incl. dishwasher. siclcr buying. 673-6.197 t<t. $19,000, '6?00 cash. Buy-bifocals, Vic Labrador Dr.,
Patio-deck & garage. 2 short --~~-----1 er aJL<i11me ex1stlng TD's. ~-540-4438 alt 5 pm.
blocks to Oc..'Can. Yearly 5 Lots Rimrock C, Rd., Sec. BL.ACK kitten with white ~~ ~V3Ak~1f lease S2SO per m_o_ Availab4! Rooms for Rent 5995 19, S21,000, S9000 cash. Bal pnws and nose, found at
July 1st. -ran be negotiated. For fur-C.M. fish fry. Call 548-4122 J.feated Pools, Child Care Bay &: Jkach Really, Jnc. SUr.1l\IEn renlal June 15 to ther details Contact S. S. . .
Center, Adj. lo Sboppini -6T::>-3000 Sept. 3. tWomenl Kitch' FMrnklln,. Wt E. 18th SI., STINGARY 8Lke VIC. 11th
No pets allowed 2407 E, Coast H"'Y·, CdM priv. No childrqn ar peb: ·CM 548-2251 or 548-5§43 eve and W. Oceanfront, Newport
2700 Peterson Way, at Har-Gn-9140'btwn'9 Al\1' & 1. • . ATT~NT-ION . Beach. 67J...488'I'
bor & Adams, Cos.ta Mesa NEW-3 BR. 2 BA., crpts, ~ .i..· FOUN[). Ticket&, vie 18th SL
MG-0370 drp!i, bltns. Garage. $260 Misc. R1ntal1 S999 8Ull0EKS k Santa Ana.Ave'., CM. s~ !!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!J!!'!!!!!Jl!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!l I mo. * 615-&154 ---------123Cb<300' Apt. Site, Cosia day 618• 646-4614
AVAILABLE JULY 1st • GARAGE • !ltorage only. 1'-fcsa. Room for 46 + units. ITE male 'poodle
2 King i;ized bedroor115 It Balba. 5300 Close to downtO\Oo-'11 Coi;ta Call for dl!tails. Pernin w':1 , r _ i · . ·
"-th u-•-•-. •·-clou• liv. ;:.;.c.:.;"-------Mci;a. 545-0032 f'vt'!n.lnga Realty &U-1771 • V1cmlfy amilton. ·l'bu.nn. "" ,.~.....," .._. GRACIOUS adult 1 iv in g • Flea collar. 545-0906
ing room w/tireplace &-"· s 2 BR 2 BA walk in n pac. · • -Acreage 6200 FOUND ~ Female Slameec · bath downstairs. Bll-ins, closet&. Bay & ocean vic1v, lncom• Property 6000 Fie Bristol 6 I'aularlno,
dishwasher. garage. Pool pool & boat &lips. 673-3003 Take over pymnl~. JO Acres CM. S45-2l66
and recreation facll!Ues in-5 Neglected Darllrn;:s no down. $29 mo. Near l==o=c--r--=-
cluded. Adulls. $185. lsl &. 4-3 BR + 1-2 RR ~P houses Lake &: City. 89<1-4743 TURTLE, med. size. Vi<'.
last monlhs plus S35 clean-Huntington B•ach 5400 011 % A. TLC. will return Keswick Lane, H .B .
ing charge. Fo r ap-S72S-S750 mo.· Asking only R E Wanted 6'240 968-5402
pointmen1, 549--0674 Exciting Living $48,500. D1ivc by 2·114 Sanra • • lp'~sr"'""-p'°1geo,.,--,-. -,.hu°"'rt.,,.....,V"°'"'1,
UNFURNISHED lovely 2 BR In new •pis_ 1 bedroom'"'"".2 Ana then call Jo flnnscn, \'I ANTED To buy from BristoJ &. Paularino, 'CM.
apt. Upper duplex. w/w b?droom • 2 bath. Rltr 646-8226 owner. Bayi;horcs, 3 or 4 BR Call to identity, 540-6109
c rpls, enclosed gar., no $140 to $195 12 BEAUTlrUL furnished h?usc under $45,000. Prin-LARGE Rabbit Vic. Mesa
pets. Infant ok. Sl50 mo. util spls w/pool. $1800. fK'r mo c1pals only. 213-693-9530 v--e cc --a. "" -· Swimtning pool. gym, saw1a, .,..., ...... ~ .... incl. 135 Albert Pl, CM. lncon1e. $135,000. By owner. CASH QUJCK"l.need 3 or 4 recreaUon room. Mngr Apt B, alter 5 pm. Cosln Afesu. Box P 862 Dai-Br. G.I. or FHA house nearl---------
1 BR, priv patio, all clec.
C!J>!S, drps, c ar p o r t •
Responsible adulto; only. No
pets or children. $110.
'48-13Il
Gcneral Electric Appliances. ly l>J.lot. here. 499-1948 Lost Adults only. 6401
Lamplighter Apts. FOR SALE BY OWNER F E M A LE pup. Pan 4 units. 2 • 2 BR, 1 BA & BUSINESS Incl Shcpberd .ti Bernard. Blk
16102 Springdale St. 2-3BR, l !i BA. 543-6155 "fl"N"A;;N.;.C=IA.;;L:_ ____ 1 with while 1a ....... pews • Phol'll? 592-J.tll --..15 ..
6060 Bus. Opportunttles 6300 white tip tail. I.mt in vie. of CLEAN 2 bdrm. c pt s., CHEZ ORO APARTl\fEi~TS 8u1ine11 Rental Victoria &: Federal. Little
drapes, stove, rclrig., enc. 8234 Atlanta ST'ORES For lease Vill~e AFFILIATE -boy broken he&rted. $50
yd., infant OK. no pet.s $150. New 1-2 Bedrooms · Pay j Shopping Center, cor. ol El CANOY SUPPLY Reward. '42--5761 or LI
2244 Stale, 642-7472 electric only Q Camino & l\tendosa, Cfo.1. ROUTE 1_&-_1_81_4-====c---
LARGE. clean, 2 Br, range P=si::;~~ Q Suilable Dell., 1V, variety, !No Seiling Involved) REWARD
& re!rig. New cpl. Mature Dress Shop, elc. ~ Liquor Dlccllcnt income ror !cw l{eirloom diamond dinner
adults only. Vic St, Uf $100. _,cPrl_c,.v.:•,c1•:.,G~"""-"'C:'-~-I Bfore for key. hours weekly work (Days or ring, lost Sat 6/7 vie. Mont-
fur $ll5. 548-2407. IMMAC 2 Bl' dupb:, ·nc,v Al Wognei: 213: 981-6510 evl!T1ings). Refilling & col-gomery Ward pkg, lot or
2 BR, 2 &, patio. trplc, paint, crpt. drps, bl tn.~. STREET FRONTAGE lccilng n1oncy from coin OP.-Fantasia ln. liunt. Ml.
crp!s, drps, newly dee., 1255 {relrig &. washr opl). Lg eraled dispensers in Costa 646-5908 oov patio. Lovely tnced On Beach Blvd, 1480 Sq, Ft. MC'lla & surrolUlding rea 1~=~..,-..,----~-1 SPECIAL "PERSON· TO· PERSON" WANT ADS Baker. S150. 540-4358 Model home Ideal for Insur., · a · LONG haired gray cat, Dea Apnaar in W"kend Edition Only QUlE.T 2 BR. l\~ BA. Pr-'"'· grnds. Gar &: boat park'g. Rltr .. etc. (Bet. Kalelle end We est. route. (llandlc~ collar. vlc 40lh N.B. Dear .-· ,.... $140. Quiet. adlts, no pets. IUUllc b r a 11 d candy &: (O.liver1d Saturdays) tio Gar-Adults-no pel.11. 23~6 C!'nit~) Sir n 11, lndscpd., · pct, any Info PI c a se ~
DIME-A-LINE ADS NOT ACCEPTED BY PHONE San!a Ana. 548--0728 841-4401 f.!50 mo. l065Q Beach Blvd. snacks. St450 Cas~ req~ur-675-1981 eves 548-0651 ext
2 NE ,-;;;;--=c::-=,..-=-c-3 BDRM, 2 bath, private • 636-4120 • eel, For pC'l'SOnal 111!erv1e\v 123 days ' '
' E DIM E•A•LI NE LI S •....... -... -• -• 2 DIMES 1 ·BR grdn apt. fpl, C!J)ls, patio, heated pool. ==-..,.---~~=I in Costa Mesa area, send ===-·---~-~1 Now S TH 3 LINES 3 DIMES Et drps, bltns, patio, pool. Call 962-89'J4 RENT or leaSt', center C.M. name?, address & phone num· SILVER gray poodlo with
· · -· -· · · • -· • · • • • C. Adlts, no ~ts Sl.20. 5'16-5163 3000 ro 6000 sq ft. FA heat, bcr to Mu!U-State Inc .. 9075 curly tall, wearin&: two col-* No Item For Sale Over $25 * 1 BR Duplex. gllJ'il., elderly NEW l, 2 & 3 BR. Hea!C(I & wood floors. lmproved park· E. Imperial Hwy., Downey, la.rs, 6/7/69 between Irvine
TIME FOR sauna pools, rec nn. lteil &. tnoo, 2 dbl car "" .... "es. All Calif. 90242 and 17th SI., Colla Mesa. pref'd. No ck:lgs, close to Al · M •••3137 ··• •--CASH RATE E I d. d II h k d I h ge™1um. gr ~ al >Jffi Charle St °"""'· FRIGIDAIRE Pl..,. pho•~ 64&-3222 --nc OH your 1me1, o ars, c 1c or money or er wt i;hop'g. 548-2720
d 646-4401, 85. Rent all or SMALL, 10 lb. white male your I -' SPLIT-level, l Br, new epts, NO matter what it is, you Ji'T ACTION.
QUICK CASH -For your 1d to qualify the OIME·A·LINE r1t1, you MUST Include drps &. slove. Adults, no can sell It with a DAILY one · · dog. Orange red oollar.
Price In ''For Sale" ad1 because lnclu~ing prices increases re1ult1. pets. 288.'i ~1cndoza M5-M21 PILOT WANT AD!! 642-5678 • PRIME Retail Location • Frigidalre 18 ' mirl. cyc11? ts Painful ean. REW. 646-4600 '°"='=======~========= 17X40, Xlnt Joot &. auto traf-the fa.s~1t in the industry. eves. -Sorry, commercf1I firm• may not take 1dv1ntage of this special rite. 1 • 5100 fi<'. un Harbor, c J\I 30
1 4
Frjgi
0 30d~• ~~ ... t.bl! workl;REW=°"ARD=".-"si"°lve-,-..,.1-,-,-.~.1 THROUGH A -You m1y run •s many lines •• you wish. If the coupon does not give 1 ~C;;";';;'•;;;Mos;;;;;•;;;;;;;;;;;5;;1;;00;;;C;os;;l;;•;;Mos;;;;;;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 6.16-fi654 o . mtn. w ...... ,ers. Find Persian M vie of Dutch 1mple spacti, print or type your Id on 1 pi1c"'e of piper •nd mill It, to-11 =,-==,,.-=,,--=-,,,I out how easy It ts to own · • gether with p1Yment in full (Or bring it In). Count 20 l1tter1 and 1pac11 FOR LEASE slorc 23x<12. 8 1111 1 lllldcy Haven Hms, Slah!r I
DAILY PILOT · .L 1• nd I di f h II Also ottlce space. 333 E. G~n C~ve, &.nta .t .. a Edwards, HB: Mi-7821 to NgJ 1n•1 enc OH' me or eac ne. 17th St. Cl\t. 645-2450. Tw:tin, o~-•. "--L~:" MIN. Poodle, male, bu.: w/ · ·UN one IJNCe for each letter, punctuation m1rk or 1p1ce. ... 0 S OMPLETING 54&-5508 ---e. .tU.wuw..., No Abbrevielions * CO,.,STRUCTI N JU T C C:oin-0-Mati'c:· white mko., ·.Black/gold • coUar &: Dea. REWARD. WANT AD Offie• Rent1I 6070 Equipment, Inc. Westcliff area. &t&-2668
LAGUNA BEACH 23341* w. Vall!Dcia LO!IT or •lnlYed t-wo full-
5678 HARBOR HEIGHTS Air Condltionod Fullor!Qo n•, 52S-7B33 growo "''""'"'· .,, Info. 642-our ON FOIU>;l AVENUE Shopping Center <all m-9131 Reward.
Desk spaces avAllab!e 1n fo L-LOST: Orange tiger cat,
---
BEST
lllS!
IMPORTANT NOTICE!
BE SURE your 1ddr ... ind/or phon. number ire Included In •di
GARAGE SALIS, PATIO SALES, LAWN SALES, ETC., 1ro N 0 T AC·
CEPTED 1t thlt -111 rott. ALL odt of thlt typo will bt cho rgod rogultr
rites 1nd publl1hed In the proper cl1tlific1tion.
ltNI E1t1t1 .cit (hoUMt ind Iott, .tc., for 111•, each1nge, or rtnt1l1)1 work
wontod or holp wantod tdt WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED ti thl1 spocltl rote.
LUXURIOUS 2 & 3 BEDROOM APTS.
• Flr-eplace1
• Dlshwa.,hcr
• Jl.1ammoth master
bedrooms e 2 Bathrooms
•Central foret!d
alr heallnE
HARBOR HEIGHTS
e Spacious cabinets
• Gaffers & Sattlcrs
Pl built-lns
• Balanced power living
• Enclosed parking
• catpeta A drapes
~our
3117·A Clnnemon Av•., Cotta Mu•
(1 block wat or Harbor Blvd.
2 blocks south ot tb• sa.n Dicao Freeway)
D•adlln•: 3 p.m. Frld1y
f ~ 13-* N;uii~;;. BF~~''s~ir~ "();;;d$2s *·!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ....... P .. h-!!!!!!!!!546-!!!!!!!!!1 .. 034!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'
I '
newest offtce building •~ f -se female. "Goldie." V I c
prime loc•Uon to downtown 24 stores .In Newport Beach ltarbor HI. M8-8710
Lagana Beach. Air eond> Call Oivt1ion of Highways OLIVE Green Ladle11 Wallet
tloned. carpeted, beaudtul ~~620f14 bc8t 8-U AM Vic Bristol &: Pau1srh1o
paneled partitioning. T w o "1 une 1 th only. Ctwrch. Reward. 673-7356
entrancer. Frontage on B u I L DE R -OJ.stom I'\'&. I~~~~-~~~~
Forest Ave. ttlU' leads to ~l & ntw ~t. hUI Lost female red Jrl.sh Setter
Munclpal ~g Sota. sso Estab. office 10 ·rn. ,Bal~ 616 vie 19th I-S.A. Ave CM
per month for space. l>Qk Isle 673-6500, ew.-613-1551 1,543-304==,_1_.,,,_,-,.-.,..,.-,,,..,.
and ch•il'I a•allab!e for SS. BEAUTY SALON-rent ~ LOST Check book/wallet.
Buslneu bovn anawertns Ji: have your own 'busiiiese plastic leath tooled, 6/6
service avaib.ble for $10. DeJighttuJ decor, ll m P 1 ~ Rewud. 847~6. 536-1!40
A1J qtfllU. paJd txCielJI parldnft, NB, CdM lln!8. ALL Whlte mall!. full sn>Wtl
telephone. .,.... ....... -1 name "M~ ..... ••· ·-'-OAll.Y PILOT "'~ ...... ' ... '3 ""'·
Z2:! FOREST AVENUE SUBLET or 1harc jewelry Oo'Yer Shores, NB. 645-1735
t.AGUNA BEA.OJ store, Ba.I. lll. Suitable-Pe I •~•
4DC-94G8 rllt1, ttpain, cte. 5116--723.1 ;..;.roo=-".;.1..;'----'-~·
OFFICES FOR RENT ""'· NOT ,......,.Ible loo-.,,,,
Modem. spe.ckM.11, pro(e1S!On-CHINCHILLAS dcbti othtr thJn my ewn.
A.I on monthly bbls Avail . An! )'OI! lnttrested!' Robert L. Opalek 1815 W.
8/1/69. Contact Mr.· Lapp, Visit our ranch 642MG.S Balboa. Blvd. NB 6/12169
Dow1~y S & L Allaoc, MU.. BEER BAR .l P1na. Walk in ALCOHOLICS ~
.11ion Viejo, 831-4911 cooler. Close to Whltefmnl, Phone S0.121l' or .m .. to
NEW deluxe oUlce IPRCl?I CM. Sile for Ca~h. ~ P.O. Box 1223 ~Mell.
:UO to 1200 1K1 ft al Santa WANTED: oU·lllle llquor BACH tttkl &lrl to o ch l1.1n-
Ann Fwy A C.""rown Ve.lley Ucen..11e, On.tlRft County. nls leaorw fo r daDCl~
t~U. SlL-1400, 499-'1!18. O.U: 6'UU9 leMorw. m.4381 f'WS.
I
----~--~---.~---------~---------------------------~~--------... ------···-----
I
1 ..
' " : I
'
,.. --;::-I· 1 "1 $ T•O.T f -. .,., .... ....,-...,.........,..,. ~-:"I'""'"~~~~.-~~,~~~~~~~ .... ---~---~~-----------------------------------------------~
f OiUL.Y l'ILUl lll&lrSdq, o1Unt 12, l9b9 " :i"'••z1111-.. z-•111;•••;!111••;iii1silE!i1RVIC~ECTORY JOBS .. EMPLOYMENT J OBS .. El,\PLOYMI NT JOBS .. EMPLOYMENT JOBS .. EMPLOYMENT JOBS .. EMPLOYMINT JOIS .. IMl'LOYMINT
Gtrdon ln9 6610 Job Wontocl, Lody 7o2o Help Wontod, Mon 72llO Help Woni.cl, MM 72llO Help Wantod, Mon 7200 Holp W•nled, Mon 72llO Holp W1-
£1JROPEAN lady, ExeelJantl--------W°"""
' ANlllOO'S
646-1941
~ducaUonaJ ~·
Wotld·travtled. TrlJtnculJ.
Pleasant per1onal lty
deaire1 po1ltlon u HUGHES
S •°'•'•'YI°""-NEWPORT BEACH ~ru7 eves
LADY With teena1•
daugh r ICl!!ks poattlon u has W'.lent requl.mnenla for
fuU ch8rse housekeeper in
HUGHES
NEWPORT BEACH
oeed£
ELECTRO.
PLAT ERS
HUGHES
NEWPORT l!!ACH
Hu e1tahll•bed a new
Plastics Mo1din& DepL
NOW HIRING
SIMEN
AIL WORK
BACKGROUNDS
ACCEPIED
Q.EJUCAL
CLEll(
TYPISTS
:M
Motherleu home. 5'9-0955
NEW lawns r e -1 e e din fl. EXPERIENCED Nur;;/oom. ,
Complete lawn cue, dean panlon. Cook diet.. Xlnt
I.IP by job or month. Free ~f•. Ex 103, 494-8541
estimates. For Into. call * * TYPING * * 846-0932 or 893-lOOS
SWISS
SCREW
MACHINE
OPERATORS
with a minimum of one. )'ear Immedia.te openln&1 are.
of cadnUum plating experi. avallable 1or experll!!nced
ence ~ with tbf.rmotel
LARGE COMPANY
EXPANDtNG IN O~OE COUNTY
Varian Data M.achfne:a. Jo.
cated In the Irvine lndUllt·
rial complex, has lmmedi-
a~ 0~1 tor 2 clerlr:
typist&
Whlddva Want? Whoddva Got?
S'!CIAL CLASSIPICATION POR
• injection mold experience. These a.ul,nments are.I In
our publicatioo., and E~b.P
•• _..... Good '>!lire NATURAL IORN SWAPPERS
Spacial Ritt --.,.o;;..-==--· 1 Wanted to do at home. Tam· ALLEN BROS. my Man.n 64.2-1281 GARDENERS sn.mEm'S 5 LI-- 5 11,,_ -5 bucka
alA..U -AD MUn INClUDll!! working way thru colleit'· EXPERIENCED nuree-com.-
Exp. Uc. Reu. ~ i~r-d.. ~ i:~· with Torno experience •. Abil· ......... "'._. .. ,,..... ........,,.._. .. ..... ... YOUI 11MN llftG.'lf ......_ ._. ................. . J L--"' n · • il;y to do own 1etupg 11 de-t-t+OfHINO !'"OR IAll -fltAOf:I OHLYI eJNne:!1g:;'1Cape l' .UUL y Ironings, wUI pick atrable. Top dollars lot top PHONE 642·5671
For Pl.ans 646-03M ~eliver. $1Ji0 per hr, men. To Pl-Your Tr .... r'1 Parodi• Ad
$9(llO et-In bl40 IW lot
w/ld mrted twr, nm. to
Garden Grove CMc Cntr &:
HS. total val D>.500. Trd
tor unlta «* 1 547"'468 Bkr.
Trade: ~ custmn-blt
Dodge Van Camper, sleeps
~ one of a ,ldnd, for equil;)'
in real estate, duplu or trl·
plex pret"d. .Norm er.ta:
548-96&1
WANT TRAILER. Trade '6f
Oldl 98 2 DR. HT, air, 8
pwr, R/H, new WSW, bckt
st1. tilt str. XI.NT CONDI·
TION. 53fi.ll31
MESA VERDE
FAIRWAY LOT
Wa.nt industrial, commercl· at. income or TT &ibinlt to ...,...., 642-411S
$00'.lCI eq. tn 50xl40 M lot
w/&d ttnted Me, next to
Garden Grvve Ovic Cbtr &:
HS. total va1. m.soo, r..i
for units or f 541.Mlil BJa.
Steel bldg for tmiltt, boat
m.fa. 140) 11q ft on 1lJ. te.nc-
ed acre nr Redlands fwy •
Trade for units. etc.
Eves 61J.l654
~ view pucel RJverside.
Trade 40 acres or mot'I!,
S2roJ • ~ acre cl@ar.
SUbmlt all offers. Owner
anxioua. Bkr ~!M-8563
Tax Shelter needed: tni.dtll
$25,CO'.l land equtty in rapid·
ly apprec. area fur units
or beach prop. Owner Box
678 Tustin 544-3666 evet1.
Frtt le clear 2~ arns 2
mi west. of Antelope: Valley
F'Wy .l Edward1 AFB plu1
!' For down P9,Yt. units or
GI or FHA eqtys. 499-I!KS
$1,(Q) equity in 1968 Ponti-
ac FtrdJird. Tni.de for equ-
ity In house or k>t. beacll
"'L * '1141 49&-1300 *
Lake Amr.vhe&d waterfront
tree Ir: cir, $50,000 val. Pa·
clflc Pallsadea ocean w J.ot,
~t I Edge Lawn J•,.ne•e HouNk .. per Openings on Finl and Sec· Mainte~nce. Licensed 54&-5l82 ond Shilt&. 543-4808/645-2310 a1t 4
HOUSECLEANING. Ex p ,
Dependable. Own car. Don't
smoke. $18 day. &G-7871
free &:. cir, $27,500 vat AL'S Gardenina: Ser v Ice.
'Vant: Income, Bkr. MS-77ll Lawn maintenance. gardcn-
Alrnost 1LUI ac., $250 M val, tng &: dean up. 646-3629
so mi trom dntwn LA, 5 YARD CI ea. 11 u P • Tree Oomntlc Help 703.5 min. trom twy on paved rd. service, new l a w n 1J , ;:..;.;.;.;.;.:c.;o..c;;;.;;.._...;..;_
btwn Beaumont A OU Glen. sprinklers, rototill. 646-5848 Georse Allen Byland Agency
1'rd for T ! 547~ mr. JAPANESE gardener Comp! Employer P13'1 Fee ~ bl m;..e E. 16th, SA 547..(1395 Lake Arnn\lhead waterfront aerv. "'""""'r, dependa e,
fi'ee & cir, $50.IQ) vai. Pa-fret esl 642--4389 Chinese llvo-ln.s. Oftrful
cWc Palisades ocean vu lot CLEAN.up Speeiallal! Mov-Permanent. Expaier>ced
lree I: cir, $27,500 vaJ. ing, edging, odd j 0 b 1 , Far Eut Agency 642-8100
Want: Income. Bia. 548-7711 Reasonable. ~
BAYFRONT le dock, 3 Br. Johnson's Gardening
3 Ba., val, $89,500 • .FOR Finest equip., expert care.
T.D. '• Coon.sider be/opt, or Planting, clea.n-ups. 962-2035
trade lat ?1 ! No. 2 Balboa Yamauchi Garden Service
Help Wantod, Mon 7200
EXPLORER
Relocation as&lstaneoe
provided.
HUGHES
NEWPORT BEACH
500 Superior Avenue
Newport Beach, Calif.
Equal opportunity
employer • M & F
CAREER
OPPORTUNITY! Coves. Owner 615-4331. Free Landscape Consultin& MOTORHOME CORP
Newport He;,hi. lowly 2 e 61J.1l66 e • Join""'"'" 1 ... ,,. ....,...,, •
BR home in nJcest resident-I 'EXP=~m=T~~,.-,...--,.--,,,.,~ .. -NEEDS profeasion-Mutual Fund salea
iaJ area. Trade $13,000 No experience neceuary-
.. ul•· 10, lnoo--.... ·-· tenance H.B .. F.V. area. W• ~·-lull --Om ~ .. _ -•• ~-"•ta·" 84" ..,, * ELECTRICIANS "-• · OI' P~• • cant land. 642-2799 .......... " ...... ~-u Mut I F d Ad ' -------~ -~--'-'~-'~--* MILL MEN UI un visors, Home on Alf&OO\a Goll Japanese Gardner * CARPENTERS Inc.
Coone $59,950 or 5 acres nr Exper, comp! yard servfCI!! * CABINET MAKERS Npt B. l!i0.1 Westclltt 6"2-6422
Arlington. view $25.00l. Free ett. 5e.7958, 546-0724 * WELDERS S.A. 121.2 N. Broadway
Trade tor Beach area. Own-ESTABLISHED &:ardening * GENERAL HELP 547-8331 er 60-3025 838-5712 roull!!. 67 truc1m & equip. TRAINE .::...:..;:c.;::.:....:c;;:.;=---1 ment availabl•. "'° -•. * LINOLEUM MEN ES: 23 yr old pro-Exchanp $16,mJ equity in ~ motional a.dvertialng firm
CM &: NB area house. will e ~fOW • EDGE • WEED. * CARPET MEN needs YoUng men. Company
lease back for 1 ye.ar for Prof. lawn ma.int by capable listed on two stock ex·
32'·38' ~sher. 5'8-13JO College students. 646-1234 Overtime • Day Shift changes, nalionwide TV. If
before 8 AM aft 6 PM * Expert Japanese YoU are ea.ming leu than
0 Major medical and life In-$150 a "-eek, caU for in· Comm C-1 apprx .. A,....""· tt FINEsr w RK MS-0384 ... --..... ho!'•ays, paw ,,........, "" ....... ""'"' .....,.. ... formation. Mon. thru Fri. Gd for Dr, & Dentist+ (1) Hiullng 45730 vacation and many other 6J8.-027D alt. 6 PM
2 hr, (2) be.ch apts nr new company beneflts. 1,,;~::c,:~::...:~::.._ __
l·•·-SA Eq -soo GARDENERS a ssl1tant < ·~ "'" · · • -· • GENERAL HAULING 8 yr new. Trd/units, 836-mB & CLEANUP APPLY IN PERSON single, for coastal estate.
3021 Newport Blvd. Farmer type preferred. Cot-Retlred~n't need tax shel-$12 per load. tage & smaU salaty. Good
ter. Want hlle free & cir for 96U846 aft, 3 & wkend1. __ c~o~ll~•=M~e"'•c,•.:,•~C;,,•c,l_lf.;.._1 job tor a. pensioner. Write
IJ8 M eq in 2 T-plex, bl TD HAULING, clean-upa, Iola, MECHANIC Box P 419 DaHy p ;Iol.
bal S38 M, poo~ prime Joe, garages, etc. Lrg truek, BUS BO no vac, 8 Yl'B old 540-6001 handyman, anut•me. c.au Journeyman mechanic, ex. Y, over 18, late nlle
:r"' perlence Foreign or Domes-weekend&/'l\'ill develop into
Will trade, Aug. Beaut borne ,,BO=B00645--,,...· -""'-,--=---I tic. One af the oldest For-fu.11 time, No expcr. 11t'~.
In Burlingame w/3 BR. 3 YARD/gar. clnup. Remove eign car service departments Apply in person Howard's
BA, den. pla. rm, Spec! trees. ivy, dirt, lractor back in Orange Co. F1at rate & Restaurant, 4001 \Y. C:OSSt
bay ~ ..... for accom. on hoe, grading. 962-8745 waJTanty work $9.00 per Hwy, Newport Beach
Bal. Isl, Newport, CdM. ;;B-..,.-;;--.,."'o,--,S..---,.-1 hour pa. hued on 50/50% Xlnt :er1. ("15) 362-1212 & G Hauling rvlce · . : M•c:hinist $695
wk days, 8:30-5:00 Reulnable. 642·1403 Excellent working condi· 3 to 5 years experience. CaD
tions. Must have own hand Dan. Merclwits Pel"90nnel
TRADE: '56 Ford % Ton HouHclnnlng 6735 ~ CaU Ken "94·9771 or Agency, 204.1 Westclill
P\ck Up FOR Motorcycle-CARPETS, ""~-fl · Drive, N.B. 64!>-2770 ""ex:"' •IRl!u. 120 :!!at ""~·0• "· WANTED
Please appl)o In person
HUGHES
NEWPORT BEACH
500 ~rlor Avenue
Newport Beach, Calil
Equal opportunity
employer • M & F
J. W. Robinson
H11 openinv for:
TV SALESMAN
E xper ienced
Full time poai lion. Excellent
company benefits:.
APPLY
PERSONNEL DEPI'.
F ashlOn Island
Newport Beach
Equal opportunity employer
GRANT'S
GULF SERV ICE
SERVICE STATION
MANAGER
lofust be Orange Co. residenl
tor at least 2 yrs. Major oil
company trainina preferred.
Excelent salary &: company
benetlts. Apply irl pel'tlOD 2
to6PMat
GRANT'S SURPLUS
1750 Newport ruvd, CM
Assistant
Manager
Retail grocery experience,
day or night 1hlft. Paid vac,
in&ur etc. Xlnt Oppty. Call
for appt. 642-8520
RETIRED man: tmt 3%
days per week in most lux-
urious lawidromat U.S.A,
Modest salary. Must bt
sober, ttsponsible Ir. get
along well with people. See
1tore by Pantry A1kt., Baker
al Fairview, C.M. Then
call: John Briscoe after 5
PM 644-1307
Management Trainee
PART TIME EVES.
$3e50 pet hr e 43' Matbew1 F /B yacht. twa
Imperial eng. I\llJ elec w/
alp, $5014 ckar. Want $50M run., bua. or llmlr. boat.
54&-8030, xa.t. 89MaM
St., Corta Meaa Apt Dor etc. Rel or Comc'I. Xlnt HANDYMAN & OIAUF-
54U.1Ui. worir: Reas! Refs. 548-4111 Reel Ettate S1leS:man FEUR tor local driving. Call 547-7782 Mr. Bond
Larg + Tired of sitting on the r;.ide Live in. Private room & ~Lc.;,,,c.,c.,..,~~Re'--al~Es-la~le~S.~,-•• Saa Dieao. 3 BR. 2 ba.
n'lOlltb to monlh M!!n~ $175
Equity $6,ml, Want local
area, duplex or trtplex.
Madg-e Davis lUtr 642-7000
* * * * * J1nltorlal 6790
roame ~uild.m:me _j", Ironing 6755 track watching the main bath. Pre!en:ably middle 88· ma.n needed tor immediate .,...... line run? Join a. winner. ed. No drinking. References
course, Trade !or tree & ffiONING \\/'anted: quick Makti more money with less required. Call (714) 642-86l9 employment. New unil fl0\1f
clear land or submit. service $1.7S / dozen selling. Will train.
1\.Iadge Da...i. PJtr 642-7000 6'16-6176 fru.c;tratlon. Call Randall Draftsman to $700. Four Seasont Homes
McCardle 546-2313 tor con· Simp~ dralting mechanical. Huntington Beach fidential interview, Call Dan, M~hants Per-
sonnel Agency, 20"3 \Vest· 968-4500
~--DISHWASHER
BOTH SHlm clil1 Drive, N.B. 6'l5-2'n0 BOYS 10 • 14 ANNOUNCEMENTS
and NOTICES
SERVICE DIRECTORY
6550
F 1 BERG L A s too I ing, Carrier Routes Open
We need: TpP PAY
e SETUP MEN e MAINTENANCE
MEN
-and -cl-1 Mmt be able to start lmmed· wort experienoe dellred.
lately. CAIL PERSONNEL We offer a lOQd 8~ &al·
OFFICE FOR INTERVIEW ary with ao excellent bene-e OPERATORS MONDAY & TUESDAY. fit program mcludh:w 12
774-7251 days vace;tion duf'lnc ~
()pentna:s are on &11 1hl1ta.l----,---,,-----1 tirlt year of employment.
:: ~ ,.,... "' ..... ... Apprentice varian data
HUGHES Unotrpe Machinist machines
NEWPORT BEACH
500 Superior Avenue
Newport Beach, Cellf.
Equal opportunity
emplayer • M & 1'~
GRANT'S SURPWS
Now Interviewi ng
SALES CLERKS
Full Tim• Only
The-DAILY PILCYI' has an
opening for a young ma.n
with mechanical background.
Must hr willing: 10 work
nl&hts. 35 hour week, e>i:cd·
lent oompany benrfits such
u paid vacatiorui, sick leave•
paid iroup insurance, c~dit
union, etc.
330 W. Bay St., C.M,
642-4l21, ext 310,
Lan;' Miller, 7 AM · 3 Pltt
e COOKS•
Apply in penon
REUBEN E. lEE
ISi E . P acific Cat Hwy
Ne wport Beach
YOUNG married man will-
Experlencect preferred but ing to work hard for future
not necessary Many ·com· with npldly e x pa n d i n g
pany benefit!. 'Apply in per-PLASTICS FIRM. Sl.85 to
son only between 2 and 6 start. 2650 S. Grand
P,l\1. UNIVERSAL FILTRATIC'N
2650 S. Grand
1750 Newport Blvd., CM Santa Ana
HYDRAULIC PRESS
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiOI OPERATORS for molding
rubber parta:. Top earnings.
Speciality Molden, 7 1 2
Yorktown Ave., HB.
MOTOR HOME
A VARIAN SUBSIDIAR.Y
2722 MlchellOn Drive
!Adj. to Orange Co.
A irport)
l rvlna, c.1~. 92664
An equal opportunity
employer M '= 'I'
HUGHES
NEWPORT BEACH
has hnmedlate openlna:1 for
HYBRIO &
INTEGRATEO
CIRCUIT
ASSEMllLERS
A minimum of. &lx months ol
experience !Ji desif'8.ble.
Openings are on Lst and 200
shifts.
Please apply in person to:
HUGHES
NEWPORT BEACH
soo -Superlor Avenue
Newport Beach, Callf.
Equal opportunity
employer 4 M &: F e BUILDERS e YOUNG man 18 :years or
alder tor Kentucky Fried 1----------1
e ASSEMBLERS Chicken, 693 S. C.OUt Hwy,
Laguna Beach EXPERIENCEO
Immediate o""'nings for men AUTO & BOAT • ESCROW • ..... UPHOLSTERER. Top pay, SECRETARY with experienee In plumb-40 hr. wk. Call 642-3789
ing, electrical, wall5, cabln·J========== I
ets_ and finish -or we will Help Wanted UNITED CALIFORNIA
train yolL hfust have some Wome 7400 BANK
hand tools. See Rick, 2135 n -Canyon Drive, Costa l.fcsa 3141 E. Coatt Hwy
"'-
9758 * C f • Corona del Mar
BUSBOYS
Days •nd Nights • DISHWASHER
Days
Apply in person
REUBEN E. LEE
151 E . Pacific Cit Hwy
Ne wport Beach
a eter1a 67).9240
Help
Sears
Costa Mesa
Full Time
Cooking •nd all-around
experience nee. •
EXPERJENCED
e NOTE TELLER e PART TIME
TELLER
UNITED
CALIFORNIA BANK
Pe'9Dn•l1 6405
Bobyslttlng
DAY Child CU!:. Vicinity ot
Bristol " F.dinger in Santa
Ana. Well equiped, 1enced
yard. Hot lunches &: a.f-
WALLS. WlndoM, floors.
carpets. Commerclal &
residential Dally, weekly
and/or Mo. 897-7350 Apply in Person molding. bonding, boa t for
SURF & SIRLOIN carpenter. Experienced only. Laa:una Beach, So. Laguna -BOY'S ATHLETIC
5930 Poe. Cs! Hwy AUTOCOAST DAILY PILOT ATTENDENT
E xcellent Benefits
222 Ocean Ave., Laguna Bch.
494-6546
Tbank You,
Allred w. Henry
and
Erling D, 01.<Jon
fur doq and ...... .....,,.
thiDg a rood father ahould
do and be, We think )'OU are
the "GM!!ale1t"
Papt:rhanging Ne wport Bea ch 1974 Placentia, CM ~==~642~-4321~:..,.==~ 1Knowledge of equipment &:
_P_al_n_ti_n_,gc..., ____ 6_8_50 "M"'o"T;E:L~~o~lg~h~l ~au~di~.'°':'!__°'.l ;;*:-E;:XPi<j;-"';jd~;s~h,;;"~'h"';;.:~&i-kkiit SERVICE STATION apparatus used in physical
te.moon snack&.. Ages 2 -(. PAINTING Int&: Ext Lowest
546-1879 contracted prices. Fully ins.
NURSERY Sehl teacher & Satisfaction guar. Free est.
Aut will babygit Toys, 1 ='-""=w,.c._1a"""673-=_ll766=-==
playmates, swimming. By e INT -EXT, ANY SIZE
da,y or hour. 536-2453 JOB. Xlnt work. refs, free
desk clerk with ex on helper, fu.11 time. DEPEN-Employee with experience education &: sporu pro-
""" DABLE 4""898 wanted for ~12 pm shifL ......,m ... Duties Include: stor-NCR 4200 11 PM to 7AM. · . .,...-,. e·~-d ' . , Benton s Coffee Shop Apply 604 S. Coast Hwy, ing, repairing &: maintain-
g pay & \YOrking cord s. l33 s Co t H LB Chevron itation. ing school's athletic equip.
Ben Brown's Motor Hotel, · as '"Y· Salary range $44.7-$553 Wril·
Laguna Beach.. 4gg...2271, Kennel. man, over 35. Apply WANTED: Clean cut college ten test to be given June
Mr G
'
in ----SPCA ~0 La student w/own car for part · a es ,._,.,., .. , • -~ • 17, 1969. Contact personnel
• Apply In Personnel Office
Monday lhru Saturday
lOAMto4PM
SEARS
Roebuck & Co. HAPPY
FATHER'S DAY
Dour and Judy
WE wiM it to be krmm,
herea.rter, that the greatell't
father ill the world ii being -o•
BABYSl1TING est. JIM 642-4669.
My home, Fountain Valely EXT/Int. pntg. Aver nn. S20
area. 968-3276 + &OOd paint, n<'al work,
loc reill, Roy, 847-1358
LATHE & M ILL guna Cnyn Rd, La.g Bch time ev~ning ddivery work. dept., 1-luntington Be a c b
Operators wanted. Also 1s"ER:::.:VI~CE::,;~S,.:.la=A~ll.:.ood:,_an,.:.l_and_,'J,.:.SOO~W.,.c.,. °"":::.:=1;..H=wy=•,.:.N.;;B:...._ Union High School Dislrict. SOUTH COAST P LAZA
SALES REP. Mechanic, Rell. Reqr. 1000 SALESMAN & e en e r a I 536-9331 3333 S. BRISTOL
Brfc~ Masonry, etc.
6560
Experienced only. E. Coast Hwy, N.B. helper for nU?'St'ry. COSTA MESA
9311 Kramer Ave., Unit E YOUNG man with inillaUve.1-=~*=54~W12__,~'=*==-e FIBERGLASS A Equ O
FATHER'S OAY
PAINTING, Papering 16 yrs
in Harbor area. Lie &. bond·
ed. Refs furn. 642.2356
oU Bolsa & Dillow, Wstmtr for restaurant work. BOAT SALESMEN e FOREMAN n E~p1:::tunity
STOCK CLERKS 1-:""'~1""~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;*;;64;~;""';;;,;*;;;:;,;;; He'• our Dad!
We low him dearly!
Judy, Wayne, Gerry
and Patricia
BUILD, Remodel, Repair
Brlck, block, conc r ete,
crpntey, no job too small.
Lie Contr. 96Ui945
NEAT, eXp. Painter, no
drinking. College l'itudent.
Low prices! Steve 548--4549
$450 per month to start. Nol1
* DIVORCED Corpenterlng 6590 Plastering, Rep1ir 6880
experience necessary. Mon-
day through Friday. Chance
lo advnnce. Write Daily
Pilot Box M-'1.17.
Archilectur1I
YES rrs YOUR FAULT CARPENTRY e PATCll PLASTERING. All
For ~ message that MINOR REPAIRS. No Job types. Free ntimate. CaU Draftsmen
wanted . Prior exper neces.
sa.ry, Small oUiee, primar-
ily residential. Richard H.
Dodd, Architect. 548-8818
wm cbanre )'Ottr life. Too &nan. l:.binet ID gar-I=-======== c.ALL ORANGE COUNTY ages & o t be r cabinet&.
547-6667 M.>81.'lS, it no answer leave
2ol hr recording mq al 646-2372. 1l O.
STUDENTS • college & hi ;Ande,;;;;c;"'°"iii''--,::=,.,,---:--, achl • improve your oon-REPAIR. Partition&, Small
centration A memory. Start Remodel, etc. Nik or day,
B>W to prepare kr next Reaal Call Kl!N 540-4679
8eme1ter. Le.am self ~ MASTER carpenter, $4. per aom. Yoo'll be alad )'Ot1 hour. Remodeling-Repairs.
did. For information call 642-64.09 or 536-3900
Plumbing 6890
PLUMBING REPAIR SHOE SALES manage r
No job too &mall trainee. America's largest
e 642-3128 e t't'tailf'rs ol \\umen's shoes,
LEEDS Shoe Store, So.
~~mode l, Repair, 694p Coast Plaza. Contact Mr.
Pht!IPll * IF you need remodeling, -,,,.,.,..,---,,,--~,__ painting or repairs, C.all Sa lesm en Exp. Only
YOUTH WANTS JOBS
If you't• 1 young
p•NOn willlng to work
or 111 edult looking
for 1 •illing work1r,
H111• fi"I Or•n7•
Co11t •111 non·p•o it
youth •111ploy111t11t
ctnl•t1 c•n ft•Jp you.
YOUNG PEOPLE:
Sip 1111 wllh "'4 Clftl9r '" .,.... ·~· "" . . . tw ,... .,,.1'111111!1 ...
FOUNTAIN
VALLEY YOUTH
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE
I Spon1or•d by South
Cota! J..,nior Wo111111'1
Club.I Offic• in NuN•'•
Offic•, Foun tein V1ll,y
Hi9h School, 17116 tu.
1h1rd St .• Founta in v.1.
ley, Op•n 10 e.rn.-2 p;1tt,
Mondt y through Fridey.
Phon1 962-2449.
tor gcleoating fiberglass,
chopper gun & fiberglass
and hand layup department.
Frlngl!' benefits. sallboal
manulacturer. Send resume
to Box M-631 The Daily Pl·
lot, or apply in person: 82ll
Lankenhim. Blvd., North
Hollywood, Calif.
*DRIVERS*
No Exp.rience
Necessoryl
?.fust have clean Calilomla
drM"l<. reoonl. Apply
YEt'l.OW CAB CO.
1116 E. 16th SL ·
Costa Mesa
PERMANENT: Mold Open.
KEYPUNCH
Experienced operators
needed for part time
work, either on regular
schedule or "on call"
buill.
Please call Mr. Chard
548-2201
CLA·YAL CO.
17th & Pl•centle
Cotta Mesa
An equal oPportwrily
employe.l'
5"-4614 REPAIRS, ALTERATIONS
LICENSED CABINETS. Any -Job
Dick, 642-1797 :>..1nt oppty, for right man.
Costa M~ American f\fo.
tors Deal('r, Jim Sothen
642.6023.
HUNTINGTON
BEACH YOUTH
EMPLOYMENT
Exp'd, (to $.150 hr >,1---------
Sptrltual Readinp, advice 25 yrs. expe:r. ~3
on all matt~n. 1QJ S. El QUALITY Repain: • Altera-Camlno Ru!, San Ocmentt 492-91l6. 10 AM·lO PM tlons • New ron~I. by hour
SPECIAL S2 READING or Contnlct. 646-344.2
Attractive E•pert Cement, Concrete 6600
6960
Dressmaking &
Alte ra tions
5'1().8870
MACHINIST
llAthe or mill)
Non military. Mission Ma·
chine 1402 l\fcGra\V Ave.,
S.A. 54CJ..7556
HARBOR ARE A
YOUTH EMPLOY·
ME NT SERVICE
SERVICE
Traince1 ($2.25 hr)
Core Makers. Exp'd. Uo
$.1.50 hr) Trainees 1$2.00 hrl
PRECISION CASTINGS
OF CALIF. INC.
2M4 Pla~ntia, C.l\f.
e EXPERIENCEO e
NEW ACCOUNTS
CLERK
-A°'U"T""O"'C"'A°'"R"'R,.,.I E"°R..-UNIT EO CALIFORNIA
n8Yf1Jort .
personnel
_age ncy
For lop paying Tempor&Jll
Positions seto Jane CargiU
in our Temporary Division.
833 Dover Or., N.B.
642-3870 549-2743
cibilities
anlimiteo
age nciY
Quality Posil.ions for
Qualitied Applicants
488 E. 17th St., Suite 224
Costa Mesa Ml-1470
BOOKKEEPER $600
Able to take books lhnJ fin-
ancial statement Ii co. will
negiotate tlJe fee. Manuf.act.
uring experience. ~.
Call Loraine, Merchant&
J>i:sonnel Agency, 2043 Welt·
cliff Dr., N.B, 645-mo
EXP pastry cook A
Exp lry cook, part
time.~
Bentort'a C.OUee Shop
133 S. O>Ut Hwy, lB
HOUSEJCEEPEJt. A .:hild
care, JiVf! in, 51' days
Private room Ir: bath. Refs:
$50 wk w/perioclic raises.
540-9212
YOUNG WOMAN
dancer wm teach )'O'J all
JatM *Pf. CaD AJdell
213: 591-45311 1·10 PM
e Dressmakina -Alterations
Cwitom Designs .......... • Concrete Ors, pa.tloc etc. 1--=c--"'7'--===-Concrele & blk top saw~. Alterat lont-642-5145 PAll T TIME \YORK
fibtrglass pattern and mold
tooling. 548-6178
l$po111or•d by J11nior
Eb•tl Club •nd A11i1°
tenet l•1911• of New•
port l•1c.h.I Offic•I In
C1ntr•I l t111ch, l oy1'
Club of th1 Herbor A•••
594 C•11t•r She1t--Co1.
te Mt11. t t .111. to I
P·"'· Mon41y throuth f ri•
tl1y, Jt;n• 16 tt,, • ..,,h
A119. IS. Ttlephon•: 642·
04 74.
rSpon1or•d by EIH1 A ....
nu• l•pli1t Church.I Of.
fic•1 tf 112 1 Ell i1 A"'·.
Hvnfinglon B•ech. Open
• t .1n,.!i p.1tt. Mondev
throvgh Fridey. Pho111
147-6067.
BANK Want mature, responsible DRUG Clerk, pt time, 2 _
person with auto for mom-min .1• ..
DRAPERY WORKRooM T_rain~11 -Immediate open.
1ng, Beach Drapery, 900 w.
17th SL, CM. S4Q.6f64
Reas, Don, 6f2...&514 Neat, accurate, 20 m . exp.
._.._ 6410 e CONCRETE 9.'0J'k ell TrM Service 6980
.,.... l'<>ol "'"" ~ cu.tom. I "-"'"'---'--'----'"'-Call 548-Im
(:l) SERVICE stalion at·
tend/l.nls (1) Mecba n lc. * THE CX>IN alEST * Ran: co1m. aef1. mall t.uc. e CUST'OM PATIOS•
don. *IC. 70 &. Out. L&-OCIOCftte sa'l\ing & removal
... Bch. «tt !il6 State Lie. •SU.Imo
TREES pruned, lopped & F.xp'd, Call 642-8).30 ask for
removed. 26 yrs t': x p . "-rl
PaulllOn Tree S e r v I c e :~=~· ==-=~--....,,, e.7234 CLEANUP MAN, o~ 18 .
HUNTINGTON
BEACH UNION
H IGH SCHOOL
OISTRICT JOB
R E FERRAL
ing ne">J:paper route: ap-~ 4667 MacArthur Blvd. eicp, ref,. Co 11 e. IJ e
Prox. time 4-6 A.M. 7 Days. Newport Beach SfG..4424. Pharmacy 440 Fair Dr c.M..
540-4"" Penn. position. Excellent Generel-offlce • ee.rnlng~ ~ :\1nt opp~ to Join (rOWing BABYSJTfER..S days wk, 2
TRAINEES. Full or part Ne"'POrt Beach co. Good sch! age chldrn. Live In or
time. COOK · FOUNTAJN • ad'V'anctment, Pretty ofca. out 644--0'781aft6 pm
DISH MACIONE. T H E $400, Can Edee 546-54.10 PBX Answering SU, exp'd
ZOO, W. C.OUt Hwy, Ir: Mac-JalOll Be:.t pre!. Must be avail for all
Arthur, N.B. Employml!flt A,aency shifts, sleady work. 536--8SBI
••
..
Sii\ilCI DliiiCTORY Carpet Laying &
11',ollllnt 6550 Ropalr 6626
Uphol1tary 6990
Sta.rt 6 AM. No exp, Will
train. 111E zoo. E. Qlast
Hwy & MacArthur N.B. SOUTH COAST
JOB P LACE ·
M ENT SE RVICE
CSpo111ottd by So11th
Ot•"'• Cotti YMCA.I
Offlc11 11 <!ti fofe1t A"•· -L19Mn• l11ch. Optn '1 1.111.·nooll tnd
121)0·4 p.111. Mond•y1,
T1111d1y1 , Th11,.d1y1 111cl
Frid1y1. Phont 494.Jl]J,
SERVICE Est im a tor to $1200 2120 So. Main, Santa Ana RN. Part time atternoom; Jar 1
Heavy exper'il!!JlCe, cau o.a, Typltt with • fvtur•I Cenen.1 Pradltionet'1 of.
WILL 1>ob19t ..,. -by CARPET • VINYL TILE l>!liJ, boar or nilbt. ~ Installation
11.B, .,... e -.25!0 e BLANKINSHIP FLOORS
ClYKOSKl'S Cu9t, Uhol.
Europe.II.ft Ctatsmaru.hlp
1005' Cln! 6~2-164
18&1 Ne.....'J)Ort Bl .. C.M,
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT IWll'll'ITJNO, ""' -· '42-!"'3 ~ ~ ~ ";" Dr1ftln@ S.rvlca 6637 Job Wonted, Man 7000
CllJLD.-.fdQw-1111 DESIGN °""'""'· •lecln> CARPENTER'S HEl.PER home. llatwe tNIDlllo medt P/C layout &. dotall· Experlt>nCC'd, Good ttlL Cal~
.. 190 Jnr. Kea sr. 6'75--ll91 Rttrh. 644-2227
D..'PERIENCEO . , , COOK.
Apply in pe:nion, Swiss
Chalet 4lol N. Newport Bl\ld,
N.B. I
EXPER.IElNCED Brcllkfut "
Fry Cook. Nn SU~ oo
nifcs. Apply 5U W, 19th St.,
CM.
Cl{ARGE )'OUr WA.nl ad now.
IS11p1 ,.,l11cl by Rob.rt
Mertin, dlr•cfor •f worlt
•-P•rlthct •due ttlon,
H11nfin9fon ltech U11io11
Hi9h School Ditlrict.I
Off1c•1 •I 1902 • 17tti
Str••I . H 111 l l n9to11
letch. Op111 I '·'"··4:)0
p.m. Mo11d1y thtc111th Fri· "•Y .u IUlllll'ltr. Ph•n•
116-9)) I.
DAlL Y Pl LOT WANT ADS! I'"''""""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,.;,
Mm:hants PeDOnael Acen. Unusual oppt.)' now open w/ flee. 548-'6U
cy, 2043 Westcll!f Dr., N.B. top notch So Santa Ana Co. WANTED: Part l f ai e
645-2770 WUI train nexowrt~. Start BARMAID for nlce bar.
SUMMER SEASON SOJ, Call F.dl!f:, 5'l6-5UO. Ja· l--;,*~Call=':,;642-4882;,::::=:..*:..__ Full ttme. Student lJ.20. llOn Best Employment~ WAJT'RESS, O\lt!!' 21 Eves. 54M038 cy, 112{1 So. Main, Santi Full or part Ume. *' KNOWLEDGABLE ptnion AM s.1~!11!63
in l-ti.:r1 compoocnl1. Sales1 ;R;,EU;;-;ABL°""E;;--7bal>,,-yal'""'ll"'or-~for I ;L;;JVE.;;;;;c;l'°N-,:b:.:a:,b::y::,:,1-1-1-,-,-,
lralnte. Call Mr. Van, working mot.her. nl". Bee.ch hoURireepcr, prv rm A: ba.
butween 2 Ir 4. 646-8891 Bfvd tl lieU, 1-1.B. 84T...f621 Refs, • 548-J07tl
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--·-----~·... ~~~,.,.-~·~-~·"···~·!'."""~~~·~ ... -:-~~~~ ....... ~~--............ ~ .................. ~ ... ~~~~~ ....................................... "'! ... ""' ..... ""' .. ""'""' ... . ' ' ...... , .... ~. . .. ·-..... ·~ . .. . . '· ......
I
JOIS A EMPLOYMENT JOIS A IMPLOYMENT JOIS A IMPLOYMINT JOIS A EMPLOYMINT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Help W•ntod
7400 w-Hor, Wanted
7400 w-7400
l
,.,~.
_:.I\
• •
J. c. ?trmey Co.
Fuhlon htand
Newport Beach
NEEDS PART TIME
SALESLADIES
.-CLERK TYPIST* HouHwlvos & Motl!ars
Diversltled duties ln-
cludlnC sortlne-and d~
livery of lntemal mail,
type 50 wpm on electric.
. Can YoU spare a tew houn
each da,y and add to the
famUy income at the aame
* CLERK * SALES ORDER
ACHIEVIMENT lou than ABILITIES?
too much PRESSURE? little SUCCESS?
Enroll now for fill t.rm
SAUCERMAN SCHqOL
KDGN. Ith County Felrvr..,nds , I
WHERE THE PROGRAM FITS THE CHILD
• since MOTIVATION Is 1n Inner . force
th1t grows with ffflings of 1uccess.
WILLARD H. SAUCERMAN, Ed. D.
Help Wonted,
Women
Toi: 548·1751
Jobt-Mef'.I, Wom. 7500
7400 Coll Penonnet Dept,
(714) 494-9401
time? S"bedules convenient ~enccd In &ales order
for )'OU. mornings, after-procesaiflK. m&lntaln order
noons, e\l'eninp or comblna. log and records, Type 60
tlon1 ol all. Work in a fun wpm on electric. ---------
store under the finest ol DUNCAN conditions ud top rupervl!-Call Personnel Dept. ''°"· (714) 494-9401 TELONIC · APPLY IN PERSON
*COOKS*
EXPERIENCED Ind
NON-EXPERIENCED
poaiUons open
YALU Es ·
NEVER BEFORE
SEEN!!!
Tearing Down
BuDding -·~Must
Be Out Ri1Jht
A .. way ••.•••
Contractor Says.
SALE-Stock
•
I
ENGINEERING CO. ,
L1guna B11ch
F,qual opportunity employer
PENNEY'S
FASHION ISLAND
10AMtoSPM
Monday tbnl Friday
TEL ON IC
EllGINHRING CO.
KEYPUNCH
OPERATOR
Require minimum 1 ~ar ex·
perience with IBM O'l4, 026
Keypunch a.nd ModeJ 59 ver-
ifier. Alpha numeric non-
lormatted source document.
Day shift opening. Excel-
lent working conditions and
employee benefits.
Apply in per-
REUBEN'S
COCO'S
A'NOTHER LANDMARK GOING 0 H d 0 I
TO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW BLDG. n an n y . : I
GENERAL
All Etudent posit.Ions filled.
Equal opportunity employer
Equal opoprtunlty employer * SPANISH and MEDITERRANEAN * J
* * JR. STENO CLERK 1555 W. Adams
Costa Mesi
. . I l!
PRODUCTION
NO EXPERIENCE
NECES.SARY
Apply in person
THE HARTlEY CO.
198'1 Placentia Ave. 'Costa Melia
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Progressive engineering tlnn TIRED OF LAYOFFS? -Minimum 1 yr
J[ you are interested jn ateady stenographic and gt"neral ot-
employment b a st!Ct'etary, fice work • Excellent op.
we have the job fur you • portanlty for co m p e t e n t
lots or variety, pleasant sur-young lady in a busy, con-
roundln.gs a n d excellent genial ollice. Salary open.
starting salary. Good short· Contact Personnel M g r ,
hand skills required, Apply °'54~ .. ~====~==~
at: BOOKKEEPER-GENERAL
Westminster Long~sta.blil!bed engineering
School District firm desires General Book-
14121 CEDARWOOD keeper (experience) all
WESI'MINSTER, CALIF. phases bookkeeping, job ac-
e SECl'Y /RECPI' counting, billing, payroll, J;;;'"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"';; Xlnt opply for girl w/ ex· etc. Salary open. Contact cepU pen10nality. Heavy Personnel Mgr. 548-7723 IMMEDIATE
OPENINGS
545-8161
2865 Fairview Road
Costa Mesi
Equal Opportunity Employer
*DINNER*
WAITRESSES
APPLY 9 lo 5 P.f.t.
HUNTINGTON
SEACLIFF
Country Club
3000 Palm Ave., H.B.
536 1866
Positions lmmediatl!ly
available at our E'llSt·
bluff Branch, for an Ex-
perienced Tellei.
Plee..se apply In person
2523 Eastblull Or., N.8.
SECURITY PACIFIC
NATIONAL BANK
Equal oppQrtunily employer
Real Estate Sales
Inspection & P1~king
typing, lite bkkpg, Advance COMPANION or adult altter
lo Exec Seely w/in 1 year. for older lady, days or
To $500, Call Mr. Richards, overnight, 4 to 6 wks. Prefer
54().6(155 younger \\'Oman. Lite duties,
e e EXPERIENCED
Experienced salesperson for
busy San Clemente oruce.
Free telephone service, lots
of Door time, listing com.
missions paid promptly.
EUen C. Mahoney Realty
1624 No. El Camino Real
AT UNBELIEVABLE PRICES!!
Dep1rtment
Starting salary $1.75 per
hour with automatic lncreas.
es. Apply:
Industrial Clay Products
18756 Fiber Glass Rd.
Huntington Beach, Calif.
COASTAL AGENCY good pay. Apply :
A member of HOMEMAKERS, 1638 E.
Snelling & $Mlling Inc. 17th S.A.
Z790 liarbor Bl, Costa Mesa 1--~s=e=c=R=E~T~A~R~Y~
NURSE AIDE KEZY, Inc, baa an imml!di·
ate ope ning for a secretary.
Seed resume to KEZY, Inc.,
II I te .__, . ll90 E. Ball Rd., Anaheim. you are n resu:u in: AUn. Dan Mitchell. * Progressive patient care
NURSE AIDE TRAINING • * Service education ELECTRONIC ASSEMBL-
An Xlnt opportunity for * Excell. working cond's. ERS No experience neces-
persons interested in a C.all Orange Counties largest sary. Small plant, day shill.
-TELLER -
UNITEO
CALIFORNIA BANK
300 Main, Hunt. Bch.
'3"'811
F.qual opportunity employer
EXPLORER
MOTOR HOME
CORP. health career. 2 wk. training extended care hospital. SENSITRON INC.
coune-no c~. lliriited 546-6450 225 Paularino Ave. Needs
San Oementc
or call collect for appt
(n4J 492-6145
Experienced RE
Salesman
EXCEL. COMMISSION
657 W. 19th SI.. C.M.
Rltr, 642-9730 Eves. 548--0720
e KENNEDY
No Down, Terms To Meet Your Budget.
Bank Financing, Master Charge,
Bank of America or Store Charge.
ONE OF MANY
SPECIALS
also matching coffee table
and commode -same price
lopeninpt ' See~ lull Umelnq, 1-FFOomm.ailletls.ctyiKtY..!siiooiO.:Cooo i ,,,,,,;eo...~';..'~1~""'~· _!Cal~il!:·~ Good typist w/some knowt. ~= e~p~.~ 0 a •· A top beach area co, is look· DREAM J~b · Keep ~ izn. edge o1 bookkeeping. $2.00 · 1 · gal 'th poriant JOb as wife &: per hr. Phone for interview
HA!RSTYWST lull or part TOO time. Some following prefd. MANY ITEMS TO LIST ALL • • • • • • • • • • •
Memorial Ho a p I t a J -mg or an attractive wi
by · JOl N ..--vvt sec. skills, great ~ mother & earn a wkly 546-3300. Pres tenan, e .. ...,. • ~";;'tlal and the co will re-paych~k. 544-3854, 636-3497 • 81''· NB lmbuno !ho loo. ·call i,,. WOMAN for full II m • BOOKKEEPER
raine, Merchants Personnel employment in beauty sup-Restaurant experienc•
Agency, 2043 \Ves1Fllfi Dr., ply store~ ~e beauty or preferred •
N.B. 6(5.2770. beautician exp'd required. • FOOD
Call alt 7 p.m. 833-0093
BANK Proof Oporalor/Com· CHECKER
puter Clerk. Position n ow 6-11 pm
See Seti)' Bruce at ·mi.16 ex~~:
' A&ency for Career Glrls EXPERIENCED
SECRETARY
Busy !ihop, Xlnt loc:.
=~=~'1'-33115=~~-~i • Game Sets
HAIR STYLIST. Est. salon e
in Lido area. Some follow·
ing pref. For appt., 673-4.186 e
Oinin9 Room
Bedroom Sets
Sets
PART Time piano player. e Living Room Sets
SCO'mES. 436 E. 17th St.
"M. after 6 pm. • Corner Units
Schools-I nstruction 7600 • Tables
• t..mps
• Recliners
• Decorative
Spanish Chairs
• Buffet w /china
tops, Mediterranean
• Pictures
• Wrought Iron
• Coffee Tables
• Commodes
• EVEN THE BUILDING!
Permanent, 20 Hour, 5 day available, at Security Pa· 673-2930 alter 5 pm.
w c e k position available. cific National Bank, s. La· COLLEGE at u d e n l or The Newport
Newport Beach, hrs. 10-12 guna Branch. 4!.19-2224 lcacher, 2 wk job, June 28-School of Business
410 W. Coast Hwy., N. B.
By appoinL 646-3939 *. Room Groups at Terrific Savings!
' •• NEEDED & 1.J PM Top salary. Write Be t O J uly 12. musl drive; for FEATURES: Box M-400 Daily Pilot. au Y perators • El t I Type ·1 • Full or part time, busy shop, girls companion & lite • Dicola:,: '."'" ers JEWELRY SALES Htg, Bch. 536-6TI4 housekeeping. 644--0439 c w•g equipment Two Office Girls • Bro» up Grogg Sh.
Mlllit be 21 and able to drive ·~~ ~ exp+ 5 days, SEAMSTRESS 3 days a wk Jobs-Men, Wom . 7SOO • l\.1odcm Ofilce procedure
APPROVED FURNITURE
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O • . ary , eomm., Exp pf'[!f'd. Xlnt wk. cond's. • Letter writing skills
co. benelits. ~wson 5 Jewel· W~n Blinn Canvas TECHNICAL ARTIST Your goals can be achlcv-l ers, 6500 Huntington C.enter, Prod ' rn ,633 -• I · · f 3
H.B. '· ~ Oynamk sc1onoe ~looking ;,;,~. m;:;;:,.:: 6 DAILY 9.9, SUNDAY 10-5 -12 years same location -same owners i '
APPLY
186 East 16th St.
2159 HARBOR, COST A MESA, PHONE 5~8-9660
Costa Mesa
GIRL FRIDAY, Book·
k e e p i n g I secretarial &:
sales. 9 to 5 p.m, Call for
appt. 962-3351
J .J. KNICKERBOCKER
(Building materiala and
carpet distributon).
18582 Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach
Bkkpr FI C to $650
Immed opening. Xlnt small
Newport Beach co. Ideal
1vorki ng oond. Know NCR.
Call Edee, 546-5410
JASON BEST
Employment Agency
2120 So. Main, Santa Ana
Receptionist-typist
Seal Beach area, well-groom·
ed exp. typist-<lictaphone
oper. salary negotiable,
California Artists, 3l1 Main
Street. s .B. £213> 431-132'1
Experienced chair side
assistant Newport Beach
orthodontic oftice. Send
resume to Box M 418
Dally Pilot.
Ca.bier/Hosten
SARAH COVENTRY has W00~>~IA=N-to_h_o~ip-,-,..,,--fo-r for a technical artist 'vith • "!!!!!!!!!!! j
wheel chair patient ft experience in layout, ink &: weeks. Ask for Nona :::; openings for Ml or part -' 1 e Hof[man at &12-3870 for 1100 time sales. Min. age 18_ !sework897. _&ood9123 OOme &: pasteup of chart!, grafts&: full particular.i. Furniture 8000 Furniture 8000 Office Equipment I011 ~A"'P,;P.;.11.;.•_n<_., ____ _
Pleai;ant work, no invest, no ages. pictorials for proposals & THE NEWPORT I------------------GE AtrroMATIC wuben,
deliveries. For interview LAUN DR y help, all technical reports. A know-SCHOOL OF. BUSINESS LEATIIER davenport & 2 ~ATE SALE ELEC 10 key add Ing
call 54Q.-(1614/ 837~749/ departments. Will train if ledge of repnxluc:tion & 833 Dover Dr. Newport Bch. chain, 2 end tab\C!s & Cocktail tablC!, 4x6, cwitom 1J1ll.Chinc~ add, sub, multi &: :;;;_,:;..~la ~~~t 'c ; c r:': __.
847-8950 la.st. Huntinaton B c h • photography is desirable. . • lamps. Excel. cond. $100 or . $350 credit bal, $104 val • $69.50, -~----~--• 842-5565 After July 1, we will be lo-Educalional Vacation. 5th sold separate. TV console 2 ~~1,.11""'""',--1~· ..,,o:;!r· ···-.'. only 10 left. Over 100 adding Repossessed, &81W'lle pm.eta, Cost Accnt. Clerk cated at 2400 Michclaon graders • . • Sr Citizens yr old $75 646-3695 .,.__., __ ,, ""'" ....,., ..... ._ W>al machines, calculators, cash no down, Dunlap'a. 1815
to $476 GENER AL lNSURANCE Drive, Irvine, cali(. 92S64. Chilcoat JO JeS!IOn typing MOVING · K" . bed Solid brwn 8' sect'!, best of· regs., typewriters at low-Newport CM. 548-T188
Able to use calculator + AGE~CY GIRL. Mu.st be Send rest1mcs & salary re-Sehl. Trial Lesson. 173 Del : ing size . ' fer. Stl'rro c 0 n • 0 1 e • low prices. 642-8811 PHILCO Electric ran a e,
e>p., call Lorraine. Mer-expenenced. ~Jary open. quiremems to: Mar C.M. 548-2859 teak radlo/phOno, 'vh1h? Ml-FM. best offer. Lamps, roa.slmeter infinite beat
54S-ll85 Mr Gibson DYNAMIC SCIE CE naug. couch, etc. 54S-7268 draperies odds & ends., chants Personnel Agency, · N POOR Grades? Sum m c r can be seen Sun. !IGS-3787 or 96&-2.005 eves. Garage Sale 8022 controls, rotl&serie, broil
2043 Wcstclill Drive, NB. DREAM Job· Keep your im· P.O. Box 668, Monrovia, cat Tutoring 1l0\Y avail. Remed , ~ under glass, exceUent cond. t
645-2770 portanth t &job as wife kl& Eq910l6. Attnport: A.~. DeLe1Uis. reading teacher (USC crcd) 8u~FA~~~~.:i~· ne1~ MODEL nomc furni~ng1 s. Cnmb',~;'T,,.0AST0 of!Cmos~,·ogE, 4 .,:968-~::;2985'""=-~-~-I , I General Office mo er cam ,"\ w Y uaJ op unity cmp oyer emphasis on p hon I cs . "'' . ·.,y ' · Oecora!o~ CO!lt & ""'ow. ''° • "" GE DRYER, electronic coit-
TYPE 60·+, experienced in paycheck. 544-3!JS.I, 63&-3'197 REAL ESTATE 644-4678 Matching love scat, $75. Country Club l-lon1cs. Cor-kids growing-up! Variety of trol. Best '69 model .
MATURE W f 11 I 7 SALESPERSON 537-8032 nt'r Hell & Springdolo, HB. ltc1ns from Barbie dolls to Re 1 .... encral office duties. Call oman or o QUALIFIED Public School -~~~~--~~ possess on, a !Is um e • N--• a Go~•n•tangio 7 (213) 3""" '""'" football equipment, •boo d Dun! • • -rraine, Mercha nt s shift In SAWYER .HOME. Opening lo r aggressiw, Teacher will tutor children ''''" .-.... •i.MIUUU pmnl!I, no own. ap •. ~ '-=========,,.:..========= skates, puppets, game ll, c M ,. .. -Personnel Agency, 2 o 4 3,.,_Cal=i "646'7!=='~--..,,--= 1 hungry but sincere person. all ages Jn my home durlngl · bicycle part!!', Il!'!t'!t of Big 1815 Newport · · ••oo
WestclifJ Or., N.a 64fr2770 • * WAITRESS * Over 21 Good commJulon, f Io or summer. Cal l 962-8312 Fumlture 8000Furniture 8000 Tonka trucks -!Io me LARGE General Motors
SALES LADY (20 to 45) full Graveyard shift Contact time, CC!nter of Corona del MONTESSORI & Pre-School furniture. 4' pool table. 270 Frigidaire re!rigemtor
• M z· c-• ~n Mar. Confidential Interview, 23~ S C Vory gd cond. $32. 546-5464 lime for children's store. r. immer I l""·~ Mr Ca 75-358 children accepted ye a r au t. .M. Fri-Sot.
Apply: BERGS~ ROMS DRESS OPERATORS . non 6 1 round. Age!! 2% to 10. Call: MOVING: Sale starts Thurs.1 =C~.M=. =-=,--===I
BABY STORE, So. Coast Top Salary. Call 646-2766 AUTO CARRIER 640-3706, 541-0097 Dolls, collector children's FRIGIDAIRE Automatic
Plaza, C.M. DFJ'ITAL SEC IRE C p T. Y.'anl mature, responsible VOICE preparation for books, good sofa, chn, patio washing machlne, tunJuolae,
HOUSEKPR · person with auto for mom-popular or classical lllnglng, tum. Li'e frost 1ree eo1.1 ...... t needs mlnor repair $00. companion. Single, 25 to 45. Exp, nee. ing newspaper roule; ap. ~ "" --• 6 = mils! have car & local rels. * 5§.3000 * BegiruK'r t h r u advaJ1C<!d Re(rig, prire winning oils, ~ .... , ~ ....
-boor k N rt prox. time 4-6 A.M. 7 Days. _,,,; ...... 642-551" 49'-9340 twin bed 11ets w Id I b KENMORE •--GE .. u wee • ewpo MEDICAL assistant, tront Penn. position. Excellent u ....... "' ~ gas ... ;,..__.,
Bea.ch 644-3285, 8-5 wkda,ya:. o'"-. Part "--. m"'t ~ In "'•"..,.,.... Swlmm1·ng Instructor tlresscr, 2 nlte Ibis, mirrors, portable dlahwuher,
Mr. Dun, ham ft=-~. :;-..:.-,HJ "" earn gs .............., decorator topiary tree, desk, each. Both c.xcdlent cond. -~·--~ WAJTRES Very Ctttilied, Qualified Ii GIRL to ~ big sister lo ll S. C 0 CK TA IL Experienced , SU-5562 '1'11()re. 4 days only, 507 543-4213
•
yr. old boy for summer. MR. Donut needs women. No w At TRESS. CO o Ks . Avoca&!, CdM. ·ss68-:-. FFRIRiiGJiiiiioiAAIRE:iiiioCiiii.i;;;J ExptrleN~NGS IN~pply Exp. ,,,,;th horses desirable. ~·E rith ~ly In ~n. J!U.~;;.1~ in peM!On c..:;~ S2~~~~ ~ :-G'~j~J:i:·=·=-\\ ;,':;: iM!di;;;f ·wr-"': GARAGE Sale, Fri, Sat, Sun. 1 mp e'r i P. l Mob 11 e
EIT MA Le'-· w .id) 546-8172 eves. . Newport Grotto Bob at 546-0011a1ter6 PM en, .. Dlaul~!\tl "~ .•• -"'.1.~.~~~.:::::::::: .... m:E June 13. 14, 15th. 1320 diabwuher. Cherry top,
oro Rd. ( ... ure or WOMAN, part ., __ Swnmer SIT'l'ER For 4_ children, 1= O.k ili'7 /.'Ji.·-' ~ 1'tbl~ .............. "°" !If-Antlgua Way, N.B. Contem. front load $130, 64S.688ll
Laguna liills 837-1014 ........ ,.., pennanent basi.s, 5 days • 3333 W. Coast Hwy. N.B. MERCHANDISE FOR :!'"1~:,!,;~~1=.~·C:-~ittl.':":lJ.rii:::::::::::.Mow ti: 5 pee bdrm set, bunk beds, 2 job, nights. Must be at least k ~d •-.,, ,.67 642-4298 SALE AND TRAD~ L d. I 3 bo _ 1 19 CU FT Freezer. Good con-
LARGE Group medical prao-18. Winchell's Donut House. w ~ '""· ~ REAL Eslate s a 1 ea men .. A decorator dream nouse on 1sp ay ~ x ....... nga & ma t • • dltlon SSS. '156 Center, CM .
tice n e c d a e:xperiencod 2941 Jlarbor Blvd., C.M. GENERAL Office Help part-F . 8000 rooms of gorgeous Span1·sL furn·1ture (•1as Bedspreads, kit miscl &-548-2092 I all •---of rro·nt "-gi 1 ,.. -c want c d, Beach olc., urn1ture 11 Y' clothe!, alze1 8 & 10 • .:.;;_:"='-~-~-~-I women n p .... ...,s EXPERIENCED WAITRESS '""e r ~-osta 1 ~
otticc. Back it round &: '""'r ~ Apply In """°"· Mesa Exterminating Co. established 25 yrs. Ap-SPANISH Retumed from reg. $1295.0Q FURNITURE. Ere. Must NORGE Automatic waaher, -··I•'-tloM " n--1728 ...... ..~ plkant must be exp'd, ...;........i 8 __ ,, .... ,i .. ~ •-"n. Fri ,_ Sat late model, xlnt cond. $75. ....... ..... ' °"'"' ' Swiss Chalet 414 N. Newport BABYSflTER, my hmc or & know I.he area. Xlnt ~";;. Model Ho.mes on u.le al SACRIFICE $39 ..,,... ...... ..,. "'"' "" &17-8115 Newport Beach. Blvd., N.B. your&. 3 chUdren (9,8,4) B to ml!!fllon split W Siuart lea than wbolesaJet Group • • • • • • moming. 8U6 Wildwood, =========-1
Part Tim. 5 • -9 PM 5 PM "-•Fri ru -0~ ....., ""' • • •--ludo• boautlful 9 6 ' • Circle, HB. 5JS..'1091 9 MOS old Wedgewood range, • • -BABYSITJ'ER. Mon thru ........ . ............... Foote, llll;)-UQ70 ""-' MO MC)tll•Y DM. •EaUlltEO -WE CAIUIY ou• CM'M ACC'TI. $75. Xlnt cond.
Deliver health guides while Fri. My home Mem Verde BABYSITTER, 7 yr old han-TEACHERS AND quilted sofa &: Jove seat. mm E PATIO SAL.E-Fbgls dinghy, •64.6--0740*
taking small on:lers. Sales area. M5-8012. can alter 1 dicapped girl &: active 4 yr 3 Spanish oak deooralor FURNITUR new ~ldlng kit, drafting exp. not nec'y, 968.J284 ~tw. p.m. or all dt.y Sat .l Sun. old. Call aft 5 pm. 847~ SUB TEACHERS tables, swag or table lamps, . tbl, typewrlt.cr. din'g sel. COLDSPOT refrlg, dble doo
5 and 6 pm ONLY. Summer employment· full wall pltcque, Jdna', queen. 1967 Ro1emary, CM. Good condition $55. Ca 1,;.:;::,.:.,;:::,,,;;;=.:c..~-~ INEED mmeone to care for LAD Y to live in temp., lite or part time. Guaranteed or full siul bedroom 1Ulte 646--4129 644-2104
EXPERIENCED Med 1 ca I 11eml-tnvalld lady. Llve-ln. housekeeping, must drive. lnComc. For appointment ind bmr rpr1nga 1844 N rt Bl d (at :=,;;;;======i
TraMCrlptlonlst • front of· ·Room k board. 5 day wk, Ref. SJ6.3552 call 838-0051 9-l2 am, 6-8 pm , :::=. linens • boudol; ewpo J •Harbor Blvd.) SAT. &: Sun. 11)..5; househo.ld, Antiques
fice girl; Radiology office, 64&-57ol MEDICAL RECEP'f.""" lamps, Spanlah oak 6 pc C I M I rarage Items, surfboard le Newport Beach. ~ BEAUTY Oporator I 0 r OS a esa on y etc. "' Siodm, C.M. JS Dad lnt'd In Fn>ollo CASHlER wanted • maturt • HOTEL MAID, hill time, Write ?-491, Dally Pllot deluxe u.lon: Niguel Hair dining set priced elaewhere GARAGE Sale: d i n e t t e ' Relics. gUns, Ovll W
A I I t pleuant mrroundings. GENER.AL bousekttP'r. 5 Fuhlons, No, 19 Monarch al approx. $1195.00 AU. E N~ 'Tit 9 w·• Sal l S 'TR• •--'-, .~ ~~furn. sa• • I U •~ not woman. pP Y n pe;non a ... u ·~-* 1:1 .. -p•--s 1 .......... FOR ONLY $399. $20 down, my ...-• -.-a., · vn. • ""'..,,.. ..... ..,vu""' ., tem.11' IO, w....,. Don the BeacbcOmber. 3901 '* "7'0".1..Li1111 Im dally -SWedish, Enilisb ~ ~. ' ._........ $4 .99 per 'il!ek , avt of l'!!!!!!~~ Sun 136 Topu, Bal Isle )'OW' Dad's De.Y ghop'c a •
E. Cout Hwy, CdM. MEDICAL Secretary, put or German. 494-6170 ,,<_,.99-;-;2221:-===:----o--, state credit OK. W 1111? ·---· -GARAGE SALE Helen Manning-AnL : ti
WANTED· ~ Dental time. 2 di.YI per 'Wttk. EXP£RIENCED M 11 d I c a I HAIR STYLISTS ntoeded , aepa.rate 1or qujcil: .U. ~ Furniture 8000 fumltur1 8000 JVNK TO ANTIQUE Newpt Blvd, CM (rear) A.miatani wttb sd· up. only. * &e-Ot60 * Assistant lmtructor. high comntlaion. R 11 8 • C.entury FunUtutt. 917 2 S3ll A. VlctDria, CM In rear 6of2.-92S1 lf -.alff HoiJSEKEEPER J>.65 refs. _ * 00.-29'J2 * Tbompaon Hair S t y Ii a t • Garden Ctov• B I yd • , Quality king bed, quUted, e 3 twin beds SS each, 9' ANTIQUE bangirw lamp; ,
1 MAID· Lqm. Reef Motel req. 2Xl/mo. room and EXPERIENCED Dental .. ~,.,.,.....,.1.,..,..-,.~=~-. Garden G~ Dally 10-9, complete, unu9!d $98; worth ~~~~pholttered cha1r Appl11nc• 8100 hob-nail 4 thurnb , 30!I06 's, Qie.a:t Jlwy,, ~ boclrd LJ8..40l!6 AaaistanL Write Box M-£3, MALE or female, eXP'd wool Sal 10-6, SUn ITT Come $250. Att 5 or wlcnda, 8f7.().IOO IMM. bras& bMe. , l
Ueuh. ~ BABYstM'ER my home Daily Pilot pr-.uer. Apply In pttaOn. in or call (714) 530--5:UO Blond dresaer w/mirror $25. • TABLE A. chain $7.00, USED Hotpolnt rtlrlgerator w\111 the wind lamp. mllC >,
Tues 8:4$-11, J.8. Thon 10-3, HAlRDR.ESSER needed Expert cleaners, 333 E. 17th Lawt0n 6• davenpMt Ca" 1tove, 6 rno old Xlnt atep table $2, foot 11tool $l.. apt alze l ytar old, like new a?S--U26 -t
EXPERIENCED Part•ttme Fri. 1().4. S40-8'774 88.lboa Ialaod salon. _s_L.,c,. . ..,M.,.,.-,o;----Gd. cont!. SOlld brown col'll'I sso. 6'12--8562 Step stool $2. 54&-.7'.t9'1 $87. Tenn• $6 mo. Used BAV'""u chino, ,. 1, mccHcal • lnsuranct". Write M.ayta.g walhel'!I f u 11 y ouwu~ P-4B2. 011.lly Pilot WAITRESS, Exp .• over 21..' fi15..42.'l2 or 67$.3701 Wanted 4 Manager 673-6469 70xl8x35 BLONDE 1.1 drawu Office Equipment 8011 reoondiUonC!d $99' P".Y oiity Hand palnttd $100. ;I c,,.=c.:.~..;;,.=-~.,-Appl)' In pcnon. Ro111 GIRL FRIDAY for 21 unit, In Anaheim. calico ==N~V~E=R=n=s~L=E-oo""'ta,-..,bod...,, cheat plua 3 drawer ma!-Addrcuognph _ Elllotl $8.SO mo. See at llen.. 5«M'l74 '-D~~~f~~ttlnt. Lanes, 2699 liarhor, CM Mac Gregor Yacht Cori>. Bill Burt for appt. -546-2313 like new. $150. chlng stand $35. $G-{!'1tl4 with suppl!rl, M!ll'Vk:c del'IOn'I. U77 li.tbor, 04, F« DaU;y PDot Want Ml '
~ 6*4801 SOCK rr TO 'EM! 1631 Pla.cenUa. CM DAn.Y PILOT WANT ADS! * M2-4tl'l'8 * SOCK TT TO 'EM! 77~ !HS-0155 Ote.l 64)..5878 for ftESULTS -~
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I i'Mftawelli l'Oll ~ibWi6iSE POil MlilOWftllSI l'Olt MllCHAHDISI l'Olt
IALI AND TltADI SALi AHO TRADE SALE AND TRADE SAl,I AND TRADE ,
M1111l1 I 35 WMIMellinMUI MOO Mltciell•neout l600Mbcell........ l600
I· * STOIAGE AUCTION *
· Uldllmed Stor11e
l'llDAY, 7::111 P.M., JUNE U
' ' Unopened boxes, dlsbpacks, complete bed-
room &ell, divans, desks, chests, mattfesses,
sewin& 1 machines, vacuum cleaners, bar
atoola, bunk beds, record players, stereos
and stereo components, lamps, mirrors, col·
or ·TV1, 2 Hammond organs, new carpets,
new drape!, Binks compressor and tank,
~r bar, refrJgerators, matched set wash~
er/dryer, and much more.
WINDY'S AUCTION BARN
Behind Tony's B1d9. Mat'I
2075~ Newport Blvd., CM 1411111
OPEN DAILY t TO 4
Sewl09MKhinot 1120 R_ec1_10 _____ 1200_
1 1959 SINGER with zig-mg A:
walnut COlmOl@. Makes but-
ton boles, dl!:lipl etc,. SS.25
mo. or $36.00 cuh. s:£6g16
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
URNITURE
AUCTIO~
THURSDAY NIGHT
7:30 P .M. SHARP!!
Inspect EARLY
As We Sell lj)UICKL Y !
AOK ·Commission Gallery
m:J GARDEN GROVE BOULEVARD
1 Block West of Beach Blvd., off G.G. Frwy.
AMBER A: Wblte 6 wk. <>Id
FREE TO YOU Pm'"' L1VIS10C1C TlANSl'OllTA'TlOfr TRANSl'OllTATIOH TRANSPORTATION
"MATI'llEW"' -• """' !!!!! aas Boot s.rvr-'°37 Trucb 9500 Im!'!!'-' --
home. Small. I yr. old, AL.<SKAN Mota ....... (st.d Slll'nl BOAT REPAIR '55 FORD % T v.a R.H., RAT
nude, tan. ""',...,, dos dorl -). AKC. beautilul .,_.... f, pal!!lb!c ....-Int. -lllOIJ, 1--------
aood with c tl 11 d re n . eoiodtW. lf'Ml ll.Y 00,.. Free Est UT&S.l ~ le» Llndien Pl. CM. 196'1 FIAT 850 Sports Coupe.
838-.523'f 6/12 friand.b', euy to ' $48-8439 13,500 m1, xlnt cond ! l'ree
train. Pme<t doc1. -• ' ·--~-.. Ra KITTENS eood Im' b r 0 d In I . loat• 'f .aw • 1966 otE;V, plc:k-u.p, pod aww e ... n•lllt. ~ ce
$-3581 Rntatem pure $125 Cha,..,. 9039 tirn 6 cyllrlder, 8' bed, std. Abarth cam. '9dki. man)'
HOUSEBROKEN up. '92.-3ST3 ahltt call evenlnp 673-3842 xtru. $1400 6tf..26l5
~ BLUEWATE!t OIART£RS FIAT '67 l50 Spfder, xlnt
6112 BEAUT, ml 27' Trojan. Power JMpe 9510 mechan1ca1 cood. Mut sell Kl=r=,.=EN~s~,~c~..,--.-whl-te ~r,:iw· . z· Thundtrhlrd, Sall . "61 J W SU)'). 64J..9421.
Jon&-h&ired male; t I g er 638-(i629 CG • Skipper ava.llable 6'16-91Ul HP. agoneer 'fll..J'lAT N ens tint A:
male; &ra,y I; w hi I e . ( wbed drive, q"ll!! ,ownp", paint. ,iso, ~ ~M aD \
ahortha.lred (email! ?~ wka l" YR old, ~e ~nnan Boafl Wal'tted 9050 low mileage, abaOl.uttly lJkt th &ll--&80
old. 546-ti:Jl" ·~-.. Shepberd. •ARC, •ll o t 1 • "'w. V-i, automatic trans-0 n . \
Champ. backeround • P'lBERGLASS BOAT. JO mlsalon, power steerina. KARMANN GHIA ADORABLE Pl(pp\ea, 6 wka. 64Ml884 ! . ' rw U tL with c:ir wit.bout powf:r bnket. factory air,
old, mixed khWI breeds. 1 , · r motor. 6'2-20'19 Wan:tn buba'.. ,heavy duty _ '
ma I e , l J em a I e, Afgli•n Hound 'PUpplft rubber, over!Oad springs. '62 KARMANN Ghia Conv,
64&-1071 6/13 ComP.&Olon. ud ~· ~. Mobi!e Home. 92 "Tbls unit sold originall;y gd cond, guide 1 ale ·
FR.EE to good home· Pu~ AKC rec. 962-91189 ror ~tely ~6." Sacrifice, $675. or beal
pies, 3 maM, 1 fe~ale. & OUTSl'ANDING Jc, Gnnan. BAY HARBOR Uc. NO'. vti't57 675--4800 '1 PM
wka. 1 mo old ma1., all Shep. """'· Panm~ on Mobile Home S.le1 $37tt .-CEDES BENZ shots. 546-3955 6/13 pttmi.91!:1. S30. 847-9936 CaM Loma • RcU·Away • ~ ..,,.,.
FREE to &ood home. 2 TOY poodle puppies, black or ~raton ~a.nor -Hornet~ • ,
gentle grey and "1Ute kit-white; are eligible for poo. Kit • Preqe • Sahara o ~ 67 Mercedt1 Benz 2505
tens. 10 weeb 0 Id . d1e aecurity. (1) 528-81.88 ALL SIZF..S ~ $4995
64U'189 6/14 TRANS NOW ON DISPU Y Ebony black tinWl with
, POltTATION 1415 Baker St ' " "lash full lealhcr interior. MOi'HER cat 8 ·mos. old It 11 ... ,_ .. ,,._... • • 0 " · lud
he' "'by need ho Boeh & Yachtt 9000 .,..,.,.. -.; ot Harbor Blvd. '" ~ M.B. acceuones inc · • new me. on Baker 1ng auto tnlnll power ste-er. ~Bay, Apt 8 atter 5 PM 37' J'/B Exprus '64 Costa Mesa ln4} 54G-!H70 brks, windows' i! FACTORY 3 PRIVATE GREENLEAF PARK AIR CONDmONING. Abo>-
Muslcal Inst. 8125 Shaken -Notch -Inlet -
Da~ -DON'T LIKE Mi1Ctllaneous l600 Misc. Wanted 1610 beautiful female cat,
---------I J.lsebrkn & weaned.
DOUBLES . 549-3001 Ext. 66 or 67 lutety nawleu condition. m clear, clean COOi Cotta 19'70 HARBOR BLVD Strict! 1 the diacri · t '!S 225'•. Onan, auto-Mn.a. New 92' apace adult COSTA MESA • ~ .... ~iV:uai mma -
DIG Ovations' Balladeer ... Tbe trouble ~th .tranQull·
Glen Campbell's Choice; iiers is.that yOU find founeU
Indestructlhle a.a a bowling beifl&: nice to people you
---------1 833-7795 6/12 SHIP WRECK
SALE WE PAY MORE
ball, exciting a.s your first 1 ·DO=N='=T=LlKE.======
strike. Strike ft rich with r • l20S the &ma%iJlg b i g. I o U n d _T_el_ .. _lsJ_on _____ _
(It you can't aUord a whoJ<!
boa.t, buy part of one.)
Large teakwocxl skylight
from schooner "Fandango"
S75. Teakwood skylight from
racing cutter "Vb;en" SSO.
Teakwood fOl"'sle hatch Crom
racin& yawl "Adacioui"
$250. Teakwood planked
hatches from "Sea.ta.ir",
wrecked Dana Point '67, $20.
each. Top hail or roll-top
desk $25:. Convert your reg-
ular d~ ! Small efmbeled
ship table, no top, from
''Fandango", collector'•
CASH roundback euttar ... easiest,
tallest ewr to play. Other
ruitus ~ $17.95. Latest
pvup11 an eusetret:. casset-
te player-n.dio $ 3 9 • 5 O •
Lessoni on all lnstrumenta
by .qua).lfted muaiclan. The
Music Mu on Balboa. J>el).
ninsula. 813% E. Balboa. mvd. fi73...62i1
Guitars e Amps e Dnuna
NEW AND USED
12 MAJOR BRANDS
Also Many Imports At
BIG DISCOUNTS
EVERYTHING IN MUSIC
Beach Music Center
RCA Victor color TV $99. We
have llCVl!:ral temporarily in
stock, fully reconditioned,
one wttb new pictures
tubes. Terms k:lw u S8
rnonljUY. Hehderson'a 1871
Harbor, CM. 548-0155
Bl.ACK & White Zenith TV's,
choice ol 2, h<lth good plc-
tutt. $100 ea. 496-3896
8210
For furnllure, appliances,
colored TV, stereM and an-
tiques.
Day or night
636-3620
$WE BUY$
$ FURNITURE $
APPLIANCES
C.to, TV'1-Pi•no'-Ster•o'1
I Pi•c:• or Ho1no Fwll
CASH IN 30 MINUTES
• 541-4531 •
WANTED
BEAUTIFUL GE stereo, item $100. Foe's.le hatch
sold originally for $269.95. from schooner "Dlablo",
Repossession, assume pmts. wrecked south seas S95.
no down. Dunlap's, 1815 From "Queen Mary'', Hon.
N~. CM. 548-1188 duras mahagony liquor cah-
90 WATT Hannon Kardom inet $75 .. smaller cab, w/ Daily l.t noon till 9, Sat, &-5 •-·-d uo all all
17 • ...., ...... ,.h BJ·... CH ....... l9) amp., 2 lancer speakers. g....,.,. oors ~ .. sm w We need quality {no junk
please). Furniture, co I o r
TV's, stereos, appliances,
tools and <>Hice equipment.
TOP CASH IN 30 Minutes!
~ ,gt;-.. .._ ~., 646-2130 mount bookcase $20., ma-
l'ni ml ao. San Diego Fwy. hagony bunk bed ladders
Huntington Beach 847-8536 SEARS Silvertone console. 119_50 ea .• !i' sllip's wheel
FENDER piggy b,a ck Xlnt <.'Ond. $500, Pvt pty. S200, 16" bronze portholes
Bandmaster AMP with 2l="""='=059=.t=t=·=5=P=M=.===-I $32, ea. 100 teak.:: mahag·
cu&l lS", 35 lb. Jenson S Good SSOO ony doors, all 1 of a kind 50c 531·l212 * 893-0555
WANTED: Child's playhouse
and covered sa n dbox
646-4116
speakers. $250.. 540-4088 or partln9 I to $5. ca. Liberty Ship halch·
962-.fJ63; Skin Diving Equip b o a rd s, binniclca. tele-
HAWADAN Guitar $15. 12 U.S. Divers tanks tr ...... $59 ~!15~r ~n~iiii.J ~~.~=;:;-
strirv Guitar $35. U.S. Diven regulators fr S40 ships & the seL Each piece * 9fi2.-6931 * New Nylon lined Wet Saits has a history, if in doubt,
FREE TO YOU
Pio-& Orpns 8130
PIANO SALE
NEW ................ USED
Grands e Consoles e Spinets
Practice Piaoos from S125
.................. WAS NOW
Starr Studio S445 $295
Knabe Pruv grnd $2Ta0 $2195
Cliickering grand $2395 $1725
Aeolian Grand $1595 $1CllS
Bramba.ch Grand $1595 Sl085
Chlckering Cons, $1395 $695
Lester Spinet ;rid 1445
MANY • MANY • MORE
Special Carlo.cl Buyl
Nationally Fa.mom Brand
$965 Consoles sm
Meditt walnut. bench lncl
Gould Music Company
204.5 N. Main, SA 547-«iSI
GULBRANSEN
ORGANS
WURLITZER
PIANOS & ORGANS
Planol I Organs Rented
EVERYTHING IN MUSIC
Beach Music Cenler
~;masd~k-~f· &;:~:~ y,'ilJ invent one to suit you?? NICE looking long haired
l\finney's Ship Otandlcry kitties. 6 wks. old lo a good
AQUATIC CENTER 2537 w. Coast Hwy home . Aft 5 p.m.
4535 W. Coast Highway Newport Beach, Calif. 642-132'1 6/14
Newport Beach 673-544!1 l\10VING, many hOuse items. ADORABLE puppies, black
Tabtei, chairs, tamps. TV & w/whie markings, 5 wks. Miscellaneous 8600 .stand, divans. hutch &; patio Call &1ler 5 p . m . ,
LAWN Sale: Complete 3 pc. furniture. Electric b o 11 t 846-09Th 6/14
bdnn. set $8(1, Antique cher· motor & tools. Complete KITTF.NS 6 wks old to good
ry wd. very good kitchen H.O. train layout. boys bike, home. 494-7431 Laguna
table $50. Antique doll needs repair. PI cc 111 o, Beach 6/14
JumilW't'. Exercise aaddle violin, organ. TO)'ll, all PUPPIES. small mixed
for tho!'OUihbred horses $5{), barpinA. 2573 F 0 rd h a m breed, fluffy, variety of col-
Clothes. miAe. • items. 2056 Drive, C.M. ors. 548-7087 6/1.!I
Jr\ine, Newport Beach. Sat WHAT KNOT SHOPPE NEED A summer playmate?
& Sun 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. NOW OPEN DAILY l<M try a puppy. Collie-La.bra·
3 V EN E T I A N Glass HANDCRAFTED Grn'S dor mix. 49'2-2362 6/12
chandeliers; 6 lamp, 25'' • ARTS & CRAFTS .e
dia meter, 22" long. $275. Items taken on <.'Onaignment. OLD Sofa. -small child's
494-3684 Brizw in your handiwork. dresser. 12%' ,Turquoise, Bal
--... ==---~--1 2622 Newport Blvd., New.1 ~"~'·==-~--~-UNICYCLE port Beach, near WoOdy's WANTED: Home for 4
$20 Wharf. a.d~rable kittens.
•n-2100
a1t
6 *HOUSEl:tOLD* """7971 •m PORTABLE TV, 15" screen, FREE to good home, Female
VHF-UHF, great condition, .a Floor macbinp: • Rue TftTi..poo puppies. 89'1-~
$40. 673-2706 all 6 shampooers • Roll ~ away al 6 bed e Cribs & laype ter P·l'l,1· Quality king bed, quilted, s • p ns. ~1ASKED Bandits \\ill be
complete, unusro S98: worth United Rent AU going to ja'Il Sat. Calico,
S250. Aft s or wknds 847--0406 no W. 19th St .. Coo Mea Tabby & Bua. 546--9965 , 6111
FREE To good home Orange
striped J em a J e kittens.
Weaned & trained. 8 wks
old. 5J6..6610 6/lJ
PAIR AKC ~ coat
Cbihuahuu f:rl!:e to good
home. Approx. wit. 6 !be.
"'8-1045
BLACK is be.autlful, female 8
wka old, bl!:aut leahln!s,
hahrim. gentle. 5 4 8 -9 5 7 8
eves. 6/13
ZOEI-grey collie shepherd 8
D10I, female, &ood &
permanent bog:le. S45-6831, ~ &-12
FOUR tabby kittent, 1 wka
old, box trained. 6 caru of
food goes with each. Mov-
ing. 646-fl97 6-12
WE Are moving -S fluffy 7
wk kittens. Delp, nd IDvina:
hms. Also a:pd. tortoise shell
F, l yr. 644.2176 6112
FREE Wood. Wooden &kids.
Cc.n~ct Laney or Martin at
the Dail,y Pilot, !30 W. Bay,
CM Saturday 6!12
9 ~ old kittens; 2 white
one tlger-11 triped .
Housebroken very i<lving.
646-7304 6/U
WE Mre abandoned! Please
give us a good home: Sign-
ed, Four Beautillli kittens.
MS-7016 6/13
BEAGl.E/Sheltie t.1 1 x e d
puppies Exceptionally cute
and lovable. 546-9963 6/12
PLEASE Gi\•e "F'roscy" a
g...00 home. Male, Samoyed
Dog. 548-iS69 6/12
2 SNOWBA.LI..S &. one honey
kitten to good h o m e .
836-4493 6/13
LAB/Ger. Shep. puppies, 5
wks., old, Call after 6
548-7142 6112
liAPPINES.S is having your
very own kitten. 01'1(! 7 wks.
aoother 1 yr. 54a-2ti74 6/14
~?c~R c!!:!~~~I~~~· :::~~
tion 548-5643 S.12
t FLUFFY tiger striped kit-
tens need good homes.
847-4600 6/13
KITTENS, Calico, black &
white, black Decked w/
gold, OuJfy. 492-2362 6/12
DARLING grey/white kit.
ten, 6 wks. 1630 Myrtlewood,
CM. 54&-.S242 6/13
pilot, TV, etc, Electric park, Models Ir Sales ottice , ,..,.. •
&alley, refrg. H/C shower, located at Park. ()pl!:n 9 AM 61 BRONCO Wagon 4 wheel
MUST BE SOLD to 6 PM. drive, 6 cyl., rad~. hea~r. 1
e PACIF1C YACHT SALESe ACCENT MOBILE rear seat. Red with white f!l'lll('ll i :
3446 Via Oport?, Newport HOME SALES hardtop. n ,895, Call 879-d
(213) 591.SSS:S (Il4) 61'J..l570 l 750 Whittler Ave. 194.2 JEEP Jill!pLll lc1
"7=;:-,,-,-,,_,~,:.._;c.:.:= Costa Mesa TI4: 642-1350 GOOD CONDITION. 0 UT B 0 ARD Cr u J 1 er Eves &44-078J 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. G~par 18' Sl!:afair sedan. DELUXE double wide, new'-=====· ===="'IG42·94Q) 540-1764 Priced for quiclt sale. 1960, ado.It park, C.OSta Mesa.•~--9520 Authorized MG Dealer
Xlnt cond. Twin 35 hp Awning, skirting It: util1 .... ·;;;;";;I'°;;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Johnaon motor. Xtraa Incl. abl!:d. lmmed. pou. Eves £:1• 0• ,111'.t-' County ,
L.1rq•·>' s ... 1' ,,,_,,1
N• v. & u, . .-d
fllr>rc-:Jr>s e,,,.,,
dopth •ow>d•>r, ba;t tank. wknds. ........ CAMPER
ship.to-shore radio. S1375. UDO Penimula. 3 5 x 8 ' . S•let. Rtntalt
644-0t39 furnilhed. Larat @nlc patio, Authorized De.aler
'61 32• CHRIS c.orinthi.an exclusive atta. 544-8910, Ildor¥do • Four Winds
tully equipped, like ne~ eves I< weektnda Scotsman • Barra.cud&
UIXkl for equity, Cal.: days VERY clean l{b(47 2 BD, 8' Ca.hover U>w As
Jim Sl em on s Imps.
\VJrner & NI"" ~I.
737--0651 Mr. Owen. Nigbta J'Ui>), drps, awn l n gs. $799
548--2434 Beautiful adult p • r k . Model # QXI '68 250-S <Bil' 4 /Dr. Sedan)
SantJ An,1 ).;r;,-+ i 1-t
16' BLUEWATER Glasaboat, 646-2632 Theodore Air-cond, elec w \' n d 0 w I '
50 HP """'· ''"'tri" '"" TRAILER ,., """ 35' x ,. ROBINS FORD AM-FM. $5,300. "49-214' C.O.St Guard equipment, tilt newly painted, p 1 as t l c 1.o60 Harbor m private party.
trailer with easy.life $1495. plmbg, cabana, eptd, $2400. Costa M ~D 180-'58 MERCEDES, good
645-1408 548-4983 aft 5:00 esa condition. Call after 5 pm.
BOAT slip wanted for Cal 24' JOX50, 2 BR., in quiet, adllit * 61 VW Camper w/new * 833-1050
sailboat. Contact M r 1, park. Cpts., drapes. Must motor, new paint, <>versizedl'M1'="'•68~~250~. -.7~-. -.-,ro~. ~F=M.
Carter 836-6681 before 5 pm, sell, make oUer. tires, sunroof &: "happy" like new, pvt party. 714;
<>r 837-5519 after 5:30 pm 548-8680 After ~:30 PM personality _ likes people! 6421677
14' F"lBERGLAS over wood. 27' 1 BR, BA & shwr. Frig. Make oUer. 497-1316 IMERCED'===ES=-=a.-,,,-..,300~~0
50 hp Sett wiO! elec. start-st~ve, H.W: heater. Nu * PAM-TOPS * Cusic, Auto., factory a /c,
ing battery. First· S25o takes ~I, leaving, S 11 7 5. All steel shells. Saiea & ren-Xlnt <.'Ond. 54.f.-0885
all. 5484657 2098 tals. $149 up. Buy factory l=========
12' ALUMINUM Boat FOR a new Mobile Home in direct. 1010 So. Harbor. SA. MG
Xlnt condiHon. $135 new Adult Park. Walk to WWANTEANTEDD'", Goodc;;;;-;;""'1;;;;t;,;;am;;;;;Pc;;;'·l----==----
841·7389 ocean, ~•1nd pool. Goll or shell to fit 1969 -%, ton '61 MGB Roadster
OWENS 1966 25' V.G. Cond. course, long bed pick-up. Must be in Deep ebony black with full
outriggers etc. marine radio good co n d I t i o n & blk leather interior, wire
RDS Sac. $4700. 54~ Mini Blkff 9275 reuonable, 642-3526 w'1et'la, radio, heater, etc.
26' srEELCRAFT, inbnt. MINI BIK£..'69 8 0 nan z a ,66 vw Camper. Comp. 6.000 actual miles, f.actory
Needs work. $2950. chrome feeders, lites, str. eqp'd. Xlnt cond. Mrs. Tap. 'tio~ty. Showroom cood~ '* 546--9390 * lic'd, big tires. S175. LI 8-pan, 846--0666/GT~ p.m.
Sailboats 9010
COLUMBIA Di>fender 29':
sleeps 6; 30 HP Inboard;
full racing gear It extras.
646-6047; 494-7735
SEASICK sailor s e 11 i n g
sa.llOOat -Venture 21., trlr,
Mere 3.9, all equip. $2595.
962-2136
19' LlGHTNING. dae sails,
trailer. .with &oodies.
SlSOO. 6 to 7 PM or before 10
AM 673-9039
WES'IWIND 20' glass sloop,
dinghy, motor. incl. new 25'
off shore mooring. $2,000.
675-3685 or 833-0386
CATAMARAN 12'
Wood, Dacroo sail Sl25
• 673-539t1 •
SAILBOAT 16' SKIMMER.,
lrlr, all equip., dac sails,
good cond. 613-2527
5453
BIG BEAR MINI BIKE C1mper R•ntal1 9522 J ~l'll1po1 ;
J11npor1 '-' 150
311
HP '"k ""'~'..1m * EXPLORER *
By 11r-eek <>r month. Lwcurl-
Motorcycl" 9300 oua. Sleeps 6. Self contain-3100 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. --~------1 ed Limited number call &12-9405 540-1764
1965 HONDA today. ' Authorized MG Dealer
250 Scrambler, 8,300 miles. LEISURE RENTALS '67 MGB
Good condition. A• k Ing (TI4) 642-6611, 1714) 837-3809 Rdst. with cover k wil'I!
$315.00. Call after -t:oO p.m. whe!'lfl, Excellent condition. 847-7187 Dunt Buggie1 9525 Only 33,000 miles Lie GHS-'68 TRIUMPH Bonneville, ()23 • '
chrome tanli & aide panr.ls. Dune Buggy Show Sale · $1795
Good _condition, nl!:W tires, Bodies lron1 $149. Chassis Holiday 1969 Harbor Blvd
Barnell clutch. S 1 5 o . from S249. Chrome rol! bars, Costa Mesa &t2-60zi
548-4987 Sl4.95. La Paz Dune Buggyl:o=o--~,...,,,,_...,,==
1969 HONDA 175 cc ,supermarket, 3623 W. War-~rusr .sen '69 J.1G-BGT,
Scrambler. Full warranty, ner, SA 546-4CM5. Open Sat. Brilish racing green,
Sun. am/fm radio. 5:D> mi. Xlnt
9XI mi. $500 or offer.1;:::::::::'~====;;:;;;~l:'°~nd~.;.67~5-;."""-~.--...,---.I 642-9482 I 1 Imported Autos 9600 '49 MG Tourin• '69 HONDA 90, Scrambler.1.;...:...---------1 •
MOOified for dirt. Xlnl cond. DATSUN 638-40l9
$215. -64 MGB • GOOD SHAPE!
'68 TRIUMPH Bonnovillo, '67 DATSUN $~ ~~ ':"
• Factory Sa1es &: Seivice HOBlE SURFBOARD 9' 64S.0760 2 GOLD Kittens, 2 mos old.
Scuba Tanks ATTENTION: Marquctle Please call ~2743 after MALE. 9 mo,
S hep/Colli~.
642-6989 aft 5 PM
Germ
gentle.
6/13
HOURLY XENTALS * Rhodes 19'1 * 3500 mi, paint A:. chrome.
pvt pty. 8U-381'2 l Daily 12 noon 'ill 9, Sat S.5
17.rot Beach Blvd., (Hwy 39)
l~ ml So. San Diego Fwy.
Huntington Beach 847-8536
ENROLL NOWI
Beginners clRS.~ I e s so n ! ,
learn to play the organ. Six
weeks coune, starting
June 11 at 7:00 PM.
Guaranteed re~lts, $12.
PractiO!: organs availabll'.
Also classes for rnorc ad-
vanced players. Join the
Jun! Register oow.
HAMMOND STUDIOS
2854 E. Coast Hwy, CdM
"""""
494-8212 chin.up @qu ip. like new. 5 p.m. 6/12
DIAMOND Solitaire wedding snap-0n air chisel & impact
&et Cost $395, sell S15 cash. wrench. Jet alr-cond. equip. 4 \VELl. mothered kittens, 6
673--3600 & stock. 7-UP mach. and wks. old. 642-7685, 406 E. ====~-~~-1 other 1nisc. call after 6 Bay CM 6/14
BIKE-BOY'S, 26" Raleigh 3 897--4837 5 CUTE playful kittens, 6
speed, $25. Excellent COD· t.~ Id --• • 1ra··-" KIMBALL 1~nsolt> piano. F'r. w.-a. o , wea11<0u <>< h ..ru. dition. ~~8 · 54" '"20 6/14
SET of rings: engagement &
wedding; never used, orig
cost S200, sell $125. 548-6787
LADIE.S ski shoes, si7.e 8 ».
E n c yclopedia American
$50. Both excelle.nt. ~7D17
OIAl\.10ND Cocktail ring.
Have apprsl $675, sell $250.
675-4lll
Prov. style. 18' upright ~
freezer. Meavy duty bench BLACK female puppy, 6 wk&.
vice. V3 Sack cement mix· old, needs a loving home.
er, 16' ext. aluminum lo.d-673--0891 6/14
den. 548-4657 1-~1vE kittens, ntal cute!
'65 P. 1'. Collier About 5 wks. 540-5104 6/14
Encyclopedlas w/bk. case. 2 KrlTENS. 1 calioo, l
Never used. Yr bk for every ora~. can 673-6483 6/12
yr untll 1975. $200 or best of·
fer . 675-3909 aft & & wnds. CLEAN Dirt. You haul.
Fun Zone Boat Co. Balboa
COLUMBIA 29, l/3rd ii).
FREE Brindle male pup. 3 teresl Top cond, extras.
mos <>Id, h o u s e b r o k e n SllXXl dn 642.J295 67J.Tlll
646-7951 6/12 . '
'
, -· bl ho kil FlBERGLAS.S Sa.bot, xlnl ...... va ~ uncy tens, rond F'"'I ra-,,. .1 BOX TRAINED. ~94-3185 · iu ._c, w hi s.
6/13 $200. S42-8690.
==~--~-~-20' CLIPPER CLASS
FRE;E to good home, female Sailboat • Cheap! !
pure bred SlameSI!:, no * 642-0048 *
-papen. 54::r2166 6/12
'65 HONDA 305 Scrambler.
$325 or best oUer. * 67J..2275 *
'67 YAMAHA 80 Trail master.
Clean, lo miles, extras,
* 673-5549 *
'65 OUCATJ, only 800 ml.,
SEDAN
4 speed, Full factory equip-
ped. TUP 945.
$1295
ATLAS
Many extras, make oUer. CllRYSLER -PLYMOUTH
646-9884 2929 HARBOR BLVD.
'61 HARLEY Davidson 250 cc COSTA MESA 546-1934
MGB
MG
Sales, Service, Parts
Immediate Delivery,
All Modat.
J!rlu pud
il11 1p o 11 s
SACRIF1CE Cal 24 • $3200 Sprint $450. Open Daily 'til 10 p.m.
Bl.ACX Siamese throwback, 548-2433 after S pm ,, 548-9739 * ,69 DATSUN 3100 W. Cou1 Hwy., NA
10 wk. old female kitten, 1..--d 642-S40S 541}.l"fM trained. 549--0985 6/12 LIDO 14 -1967 BSA, 650 Lightnihg, Blg sedan. 96 hp, over, ... ~ AuthOrized MG Dealer N Perfect cond. Best oUer cam eng., dlr, 4 spd, rad10,1;;;;,,--;;;=--,-,-,_., ___ I
FLUFFY l~r striped kif· ew hand trlr. 673--6132 over $800. 846--9154 heater, WS\11 tires, loaded! 196:6 MGB, hrd/S<lfl fOPfi,
JUNE SALE!!! CERVlTOR Boo,-°''""""'·
Factory authorized cl~ C.Oppertone. Holds half kea:.
of overage, returns & demos $100. 546-2815
Pianol a: Oraanl. Pnetic:e 1 c='R~IB~~l~l2.-"-,~hangi-~.,,.--,.-.~,,
847-467S 6/13 LAMP, Table, Patio set,
Dresser, Oriental rug, KENMORE Wa1he1
Studkt Bed. '68 washl!:r. ~liGt 6/U ~2Sf4 & Misc. Hema LFRE==E,,.._,,.,...,by-"Cali"""'m-"ki°'tt'-•n.
SAL&-~ m I 1 c. 646-2819 6/13
Moving ollt or 1 tat e, CMt 5tove works f ine .
everythina aoc:.st_2U l2tb 4~ . 6114
tens, 7 wka. 642--0896 &tter 6 9020 ~===~=~-~1 3200 Miles, under factory wire whls, showroom cond.
PM 61121 ;P;;ttw;;;;•;;r;;C:;ru;;l;H;l'1;;;;;;;;;;;~1 68 MB XC-100 15 HP C.eriani warranty, Bal to fine. Sl775. 6T:>-6912 sus H.i Perl Scrambler S350. , ._,=========I FREE adorable kittens, 2 645-l409 Take S15 ca.sh dels. .or old~r • ·
bll<, '· ~y, I blk/whll>. SCOTSMAN SPECIAL '" HONDA :Di nr.am. ~·-11'. D 80Zl, Call BiD OPEL Call 6U.:ll82 6/12 1,~~=""=~=-~,,_,1---------1
piano&, new walnut spinet $10.
pianos, ne• le WJed Grands
3 MONTH old kilten, used to Under~·:..~~ 'fi6 DATSUN Wagon. Good '66 Opel Kadett livi~ outdoors, lively gray ~~!;; =~~·1i;:: ~I .,,=========I ~7232 S!Wl. _Pvt. P 1 f · Fastback Coupe .Ir: demo Baldwin Orgaru:
re-any-&: tnlIY on money
saW. SALE!! Get in on
the big deals at~
: WARD'S BALDWIN SJ'UDTO i 1819 Newport, C.P.I. 642-11484
·~ ONO· Steinway •· 1-
: ' mah& .. ~·, ' used planog
: 1 ol all makes. Best buys In
I So. CallL rla~I ""'-SCHMIDT MUSIC 00.,
l9tl7 N .......
1 I • I ,
' I •
Sant. Ana
UPRIGHT PIANO
~=---
Dedric oraan
.. ,. aD """"""" -· m. Xlnl cood. lbrooaholll
Call 5«MTI.7 tl!WI' A: wkenda
PIANO WlHTio
(21!) 171.11111 Pvt Pa"1
-lJl!RIGllT PIANO
"""' • Oeft Piii ·-· ! 1----,w=ANTED==:----
I • IPIN1ll'S • GRAND11
·1· .. -. 6PJUGHT Plano. BauWilltJI
'~ ....... $150.
I .. 545-1U8(1 * " ,, DUL dftd. I06STI, a.tie
it _ ... -.. -""' -· .. ·-rllWI
J.s Your-Ad in OW" clasaifieds f
Someone will be lookln& f<ll'
it. Dial 642-5678
SL, HB. 536-3976 For Daily Pilot Want Ads
color. 962-3451 6/12 & out. S4950, Call ~ Auto Services ";;~;;~~:=;:~~:;;=:1'4--speed, chrome wheels, n -
MALE KlttoM, 7 w... old I~~~~ ............ ~ I & ...... --"o;N-~as· H FORD dio, u.. No. SPM118>
9698 Robin Ave. F v 31' CABIN cruiser, mint c. Q $799 962--04~ 6114 cond. stes 6. tulty equip; USED TIRE SALE ~ fishing &: pleasure, s/s, Name bnl.nd & mQllt size! ~.·~.s:~~~4z~i:,;i . ~::r:~w:,:~E:::~~ 1b#ta~r:.~:. ::§~~;:~~~ :~i:iif~l~ Q~·~,"~s0~ ~N'I." Y A«onli""'ofllMSfo,.,.. V 00_22 ~M) wka, S75 to $125. Miuion !lllt:a $35 and S50 a pair. 'w .
DAILY Pll.O'r WANT ADS! DIA! 642-5678
:<)\ .?-!~ to develop msog_e frK Friday, .4-17.~ Viejo, 83Q-.2794. Boat Melntenance 9033 545--0906. 1829 Iowa st., c .111. ..1~edEl&S~ ~~au FS<J,,~..,,=-~·~ 'h!Od"M)l'dtC011espan::lil'1jltorunbers ,,. WEIMARANER (@male . &.IU\.OJ "'~1 1 1"
.J.t TAU&us of)llU~birthslgr\ Sbots, AKC. S75. Call after JACK'S Electronk Service Trailer, Travel 9425 Theodore 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
it''\ ""·"' . , ,.., """' .. .,, 5, 543-0977 El~~' .. -'llo :-.. ~· ROllNS FORD 191'1 HARBOR BLVD. ·~ .IAA.f:io 2Avold 32~ tt'Jlv.Nr/ new u.aa b. ~ TE'.11.'T TRAILER. prop atv, ..,....,. u • ...i....-BJ·... COSTA MESA ,,_ 33 6J'--' Q{AMPJON bred female ~nu....,. .-u. !'======;;,== :...._ lG.22 ........,__.._ ......... iee box. wtr tnk xtra rm
""S4-65-74 ;~,t;tr i:&!..a. !;~:::, Engllsh BuU. AKC ttJ. Marine Equip. 9035 $400/bkt. 91lM6D . O>lta life• "P-0010
........ ,.,.,.._ .. c..o.i 1.o ... chUdren. 54>-2951 -'-'--~ PORSCHE
7v-3T c-tu!ly 61~ SCOTI'IE PUPPIES CONTROL S, Stetring Trailen_ Uflllty 9'50 ;=.,. f:~ =~' AKC, fcmaleA, 2 nlOl. assembly, props, bkl\\-ers. FDIAll 'U Porsche ''C" CouP9
1oeu.., AOThDt 70o..:..d 531 "°"' bucket aeata am fighting '""".....,. _,,_ 1 I ----~----Snow whit~ .... , blk inlt>r . 11 A-...:Jld •rt:',. 71 Do • * -"°""* cha' I u • u.. • • ..... ...,,., r; e e FER" •RI I .. nv 1r1, nslruments r--·~• ........... ....... ....... """ AM .F'M, wood whrfil. 12At+uios -• AKC A'-'-·· ""'oplts:. 7 wks. 1 ·~·.,.,,, -·-°" ·~• 13 Makt' .f.J ,...,,__ n 'T"-di ,.,...,, ,.... w n d 1 n i e Id a. inboe..ro $15. firm. MS-8554 N~ Imports Ud. Qr. ch~ whtt\a. l<>r lampe
l• DhpMo MC.-)'4C.-$DJ. ttan&mlMioD and ps tanka. l=========-1 • .. -,.. __ , -"" aulhor-etc. Orlalnal rhruout. Mini ' 1sv,.. 45~ 15Up 646-7589 AllO hard -·-.......... ..,. .......,
Ul,lpiM ~Gift' 76,..._ watt. All new T-·-..._ 9500 bed dealer. condition.
11o; n"*"" Jl~ e GERMAN Snephml pups. stock. R.euonable. 5f9....US30 .--.q SALES.sERVICE-PARTS i:~ =~ 79o.tt AKC, 10 weeka1 lat'le boned. QlRYSl.ER Outboard'> HP 'ST OOOOE Van· Truck, rAh, 3100 W. Cout HWJ. ri~ :?~ I\';.., SSO up. 496-218.t with remote and direct con-exttll cca1. SJl50, Pfiy pr-842•94~•WpOl1 Bet~l76C
22Pwlnrt SlG.fr r.tTe ' GERMAN SHEP JI ER D tmh. Extra prop. UJed 8 I)', 96Pr2MO or 540-4006 Authorlttd MG Dea1tt 7l~ ..,,.._ u,,,,,,,._ Bl " "' ......,,_ • ......, mod I -•-~"-
J~r lupon
~l1 11 por1 ~; 2 • ..._, s.tlw!N &I~ pupa, AKC ft.tir'd, ac.. .. '""""' ow e ~ '61 C:ORVAJR P.U .. ramp, ~~"!!! i!:= ~:;._. =~'-;;:;-.jli~~~ twn. 5 Wffkl. 545-4682 -~t~: ~~_:_M~ 47,000 ml, auto tra111. MOO RAT noo w. Cout Hwy., N.B.
71''Nhat ~7Yw 11ow LQVEABL£Dach1hu nd orbn:toffer.M6--m.69 6(2"9-105 540-l?M ~=!·ttiil r,l!; :lt'::'mn-pups, AKC, black I tan, 12 loaf Sllp Moorinp 9036 1962 ~ fieeta'<te PU, 8 cyl, '68 FIAT lll Spc cpe Auth(lriud P.1G Dealer
;1051'-"llrh ,!J,,,A. 90~ Wttkl., 897-7297 DOCK tor power boo.I. ZI' or ~Tm). See Ill 497 Costa Meu AM/Fl\1, Ptrellh1, ca 11 •6~ PORSCJ!E SU ,, ---~~~~~~·;MJ~~-;~®~~/W~w;~f)-~~N<;6Jw~';•~· J~~~~-_;_ _ _ITHE QIJtCKEii YOU CMk less S2 pr fl, wsttr &: elect St., an 5:30 PM &U-4991 aft. 7 pm. r:c.w, Mlir-·r.i. ch~pd. · llkt' THE nm~ YOU m.t. fUm. .._.. ,..,., • _. .... GK m ,.... '"' whls, "" ~ ~ ~ .,.. .. 1te t~ntal Dime-a.tine prl pty. 847~1480
' ,·
• 1
·-
~~~~~ ..... --....... ,..._,.~-~-~-~··~-~--~--~~~~--~~~ ... ~--............. ~ .............................................................................................................. ~ ... ..
TRANSPORTATION . TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
TllUNdat, Joni 12, 1'169 DAILY PILDT :J3
TRANSPORrfioN T!Wl~RTATION TRANSfiO_ltTA1'ION
I::+• IMI ~"'-·'llOD l""'°r!M .....,;; --~·~~!!!~"~!!'!~' ~A~w~•--~·r::·ri::· ~,~AutM~~':"#~·~.,..~~.d~· -·~VT~OO~I UMd tan_ , . 9too UMd C1n hoo . POISc:ttt I " TOYOTA i.. YOIJ(sWA .... W!! PAY . • • CHIVIOLlr -. -CHRYSLIR
U-t.n ,..._ u...i c.,. "°° .IJMd~· ..... ._ .. ,,.
-PO~C'
''4 Ponche "'l:;C.'' Cpe
~-w/blkln· tar. £¥try conc!:evable rX·
tn.. So don, dltticult lO
tell from new. Must be setn
It. driven. ~
TOYOTA . '61-VOOOWlGEll'. CASH
l?L lllPLl ll
Jl111p l1 l l ')
3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B.
642-941:6 540-1764
Authorized MG Dealer
'67 Po"cho 912
S speed. Ruby red w /blk. ln-
tt-r. Every poaible Pot!ICbd
aCCCS50l'Y. Immaculate.
J?ctupo1 r
31111port s
3100 W. Cul Hwy., N.B.
64>-.... 540-11'4
Authorl!ed f.1G Dealer
'68 Porsche 912
5 speed.Irish green \l!ith rich
parchment inter. M1./Fr.1
radio, chrome wheels, woOO
wheel. Perfect thruout
J1rluporr
Jl111p LH'[ ~,
3100 ~.'toast Hwy., N.B.
642-9405 540-1764
Authorized MG Dealer
'67 Porsche 912 Coupe
FACTORY Affi CX>NDITlPN-
ING. Irmine while finilh. 4
speed. chrome wbeels, AJI./
FM. etc.. etc, nawteas' in
every detail.
J2rlupo1 t
Jl111por1~,
3100 'V. Coul Hwy., NB.
642-9~05 54l).1764
Authorized MG Dealer
'66 Porsche 912 Coupe
Tangerine \11/blk inter. Every
µossible extra. Must see &
drive t.o believe.
J1rtuport
31Inporr~;
3100 \V. Cout Hwy .. N.B.
6-12-94<6 5-1().1764
Authorized ~tG Dealer
'63 Porsche Super Cpe
68,IXXI actual miles on this
one owner gen1. In!erior,
exterior, mechanically per-
fe ct. Very unusual. Huny.
J1rtuporr
]l111µul l~
$ SAYE $
ExKUtlv• Car S11S.
Hurry While They l11ll
el~
11166 Harbor, C.M, &16-9303
TOYOTA
llEADQUARTER.S
ELMORE
15300 Beach Blvd. \Vstrnnstr
Phol'lf! ~-3322
BILL MAXEY
!TJOjvlOITIAI
18881 BEACH Bl VO.
Hunt. Beach 847-8555
3 ml N. of C.oast Hwy. on Bch
'67 TOYOTA Pick Up truck.
Wlcamper shell. $1695. . ...._.
TRIUMPH
'61 TR 250 $2695
6 cyl. Rdstr. Brg, .blk in~.
radJaJ, AM/FM. Beauti.M
thruout.
J?rtupor1
JI 111 p L1 rt s
3100 W, Coast Hwy., N.B.
642-9400 540-1764
Authorized MG Dealer
1968 TRIUMPH MK..J Spit-
fire conv, Like new, $1800.
644-2768
VOLKSWAGEN
'66 vw, Sea.sand beige,
AM/FM rad. & tape. Blk
int. $1150. 642-8140 Aft. 6
PM
Bus
"""' fac!My "l\llpped, VGZ 189
$1695
ATLAS
VOLVO
VOLVO
Spart Co,.
Your Volkswagen or Pon;che '&:; RIVIERA. all equip.,
SUBARU & pay top dollars Paid for very clean. Nds body ~'Tk,
or not. Call Ralph, $2100~st. &lz..8584 * '62 V\V * 673--0900 '66 BUICK Riviera Art1-FM Subaru of Calif. 40 lip dependable. $625. I!-1PORr.s \\'ANl'ED rad, air cond. like new. Low
lnc.-Retail Div. 897-1974 after-6 PM Oranae Counties Blue Book. $2350 644-2448
$1297 POE BUSIEST marketplace In TOP S BUYER
Opt equip $30. Freight 514.so town. The DAILY PILOT BILL MAXEY TOYOTA CADILLAC
Oassifled section. Save 18881 Beach Blvd --·------llai~lh~:4:~d~ic!~!1·50 money, tim~ & effort. Look H. Beach. Pb. 847-8555 Beach City Cadillac•
1000 \V. Coast J·liway. N.B. nowt!! DAILY Pil..OT \VANT ADS * BIG DISCOUNTS ..
645-0050 * 54().2733 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! Dial 6f2..567S for RESULTS '65-'69 r.ADILLACS l"'==========:=....~==================1 All Full Power-Fact, Air Imported Autos 9600 !mported Autos 96001mporttd Autos 9600 '69 de Ville ............ S6l95 1;::==========================11'68 Sed ••••••••••••••• S468S '67 Serl, .............. $3195
' '
.,
F EE AUTO AIR
CONDITIONER
WITH THE PURCHASE OF:
FIAT 124 EAMILY SEDAN
l rin9 b1ck tl1e f11n c( f1m ilv clril·in9 withc11t cl1ntin9 th e f11•11ily
bud9et. Yc11r fi1t dee ler c1n fit yell into• four-door 1iden or we9on
ind hi• low f iet pric11 wilt le1¥• you pl1nty of c11h for summer fun l
l oth f•mily f ieh ••• fully equippid: •-wh1el cli1c br1le1, 4-1p11d
1tick 1hift, 911 ·1q u111in9 1n9in11, w11h1 bl1 ¥inyl inl1rior1, r1clinin9
front 111h. Com• in •nd 111k 1111 "How do11 Fli t clo 11 f11r ffi1 prico1"
FIAT 124 FAMILY WAGON
I
901E.1st ST., SANTA ANA 542-8801
• )
'66 Seel ••••••••••••••• $2895
'63 Sed. .. .. .. • . . . • . • • 1995
SOME EXAMPL£S
MANY MORE TO CHOOSE e $100 DELIVERS e EASY CREDIT e 48 MO. F1NANCJNG
on approved credit
Check \\'ith us before you buy
Cadillacs 847-1222
f728f Beach Blvd.
1 block s. or
\Varner on Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
e OPEN SUNDAYS e
'64 CX>UPE de Ville, full
po..w:r, atr. Mech xlnt.
$1200. 54()..7828
CA MARO
'68 -tiMARD---r-$pd std,
Rnt PS, yellow wlblk
int., Heart attack., m1.11t eell.
Pri ply 63J...84l2
CHEVROLET
'64 IMPALA Wa,zm 9 pus.
all accuworles inc. a/c exc.
cond. 147-2417
'l8 CHEV. 1225 gd lranlp.
See at SlA Shoes, C.M. or
call 548-1940 eves.
'&I IMPALA. Air con-
ditioning. Pl• V-8 auto,
R/l:l. Ken. 49f....4509
'69 El Camloo 396, 4 speed,
very low mileqe. '3200.
494-9494 bet. l &: ...
ST CHEV STA WAGON
Cood condftlon $125
• 54>S!llO •
'83 BEL AIR. rta wag, tac
air,---P/S, P/B, 1 owner,
good cmnd. $750, 197~
'$ CHEVY, 2 Dr. --Body Jtlnt, Nn1 IO o d,
dependabh:. $390. &t&-7953
FOR Sale ·n Chevy -&00-
11n. Good cond., S 3 9 5 .
536--0475.
CONTI NENTAL TWO-DOO R
1967 CORVETIE
STING RAY
A M1111tiful ori9in1I l rlli1h r1chu1 t rt•n
rn•t11IUc: f111l1h with whlle •P:rllqu1-bl1c:l-111·
lt rl or, 421 tn9in1, 4 1pe1 fr1n1., pow1r
tle1ri119. AM-FM r1d1o, .. e•+er, fectory A.C.
Oriwen on ly 24.000 n'li. by I own1r. lmm•c:·
ulet11 condition. UXV 959, 5elt pric t
$3395
1967 CHEVROLET
IMPALA SS HARDTOP COUPIE
l r11ilien Gold Mill fini 1 .. with ll1cli: interior,
Aulom1lic tr11n1mi1Jion, r1dio, h11ler, pow1r
1le11rin9, f1cJory 11ir. Lie. No. IQN 711
$1895.
19,64 OLDS
CUTLASS 1 DOOR HARDTOP
Arctic Whitt fini1h with Rid -b11ck11t I~
con1ol11. A11tom11tic tr11n1"'l11lo11, r11dio, h11I·
er. power t .. erl119, powt r br1k11, f1ctory 1ir,
1tc. Lie:. No, II.AS 260
$1095
1964 CHRYSLER
NIWPORT 4 DOOi SIDAN
W11hl"tton llv1 me111l:c f111thh with fft lfch•
Int interior. ,..wlom1ti1 tr1n1mi11ion, ••'lo,
he•ltt, P•••r 1t.erin9, oow11r br11ke1, f11c•
ttry 1lr. Lie. No. M6f615
s395
POID . .01.DSMOll.I. I . -... . . ' . ~ .... ~.
CHRYSLER -PLYMOUTH
2929 HARBOR BLVD.
OOSTA !.IESA 5-16-1934
Open Dally 'tU lD p.m.
PRE-OWNED
BIG SELECI10K
'61 THRU 'SB's
ALL MODELS
FROM $295. • • • • BRAND NEW '6.9 $1998
STUDEBAKER
* '59 LARK WAGON * ILIO
494-8469
T-BIRD
VALIANT .
JOHNSON I SON TURNS OVER THEIR
EXECUTIVE CARS AND DEMOS MORE
1966 CADILLAC
SEDAN DE VILLI
5fri~in9 Arctic whit1 with bltck Interior i ncl
bl1ck l1nd1111 roof. Fully luxury 1qui pp1d,
11uto. h 11n1 .. Jt &H, PS, PW, 6-w1y 11111, lie·
lory 1ir cond., 1tc. fSMO 15ll
s3195
CAR
OF THE
YEAR
'67 LINCOLN CONY.
V-1. 1111!0. tr1111., tilt wt!11I, 1uto11111tic
-~p11cl control. F~·cto~ 1if, j)oWer
1te1rin9, power br11k11, power win·
dow1, power 111h, AM ·fM r11dio,
ht1!1r, white tid11 w11llt, fintM og l111.
lndiwidu1I 1dj. 101 11. Atlr1cli¥I d1lul!e
l l1ck fi11i1h with Whlt1 fop I wh it•
l••lhtr int1ri11r. Drh•111 onl'I' 14,000
mJl11. Liko ntw. Sp1ci1I purch1t•
from Fo rd Motor Co. !OKLO]OJ.
1964 VW BUG
Groo•• Gt••n flnl1fi with l i ft • l11!1tior.
R1dio 1111td h11!1r, Lie. No. PCW 517
s795 _
USED CAR DEPT. 540.5635
FREQUENTLY THAN
DOES THE AVERAGE
DEALER. • THESE FINE AUTOMOBILES
ARE PRESENTLY BEING OFFERED
AT OUTSTANDING PRICE SAVINGS!
, , • BUY NOW AND SAVE!
1964 CONTINENTAL
CONYllTllU
6 old loit• lllt ft llic fln l1h witli l'll1ichin9 in•
terlot. Luwury 1quipp•cl. Aulo"'1tic tr1111•
l'lin ion, r1clio, )11el•r, power 1l1•rin9 , po•1r
br11k111, powtr Wil'Miow1, ~-w1y 1011t, f1clory
1ir, 1tc, Lie. No. ONR 709
s995
1966 FORD
CONYllTllLI GA L. 500 7 LITRE
Roy1I !lu1 Mi1t 11"111!1llic finish with !l11c;lt
top. 4 sp11d h1n1"'in ion, pow1r tl11rin9,
power br11ke1 , r1d;o, he11l1<. N11r n1w tir11,
etc. Lie. No. TVR 217
$895
196'6 FORD
GAL 500 4 DOOR HARDTOP
lormud11 l lij f m•t•llic fil'l ltli with "'1tc .. i~9
i11t1rior. l 52 CID 11n9in1. A11tom1tic: tr1nt•
1t1l1don, r•dio, h11t1r, pOWIT lf11rift9, ft<•
tort 1lr, •tc:. Uc. No. RTll. 481
s1495
' l967 FORD CORTINA
1 DOOJt SIDAN IHI DILUXI
M1reo11 finith with bl1ck b11~'•t 1111h. ll•'iia
1Mf h11t1r. Lie. No. WFV lf6 •
s1195
Johnson.son
1 8.Bil!C~B.ff! Cdllil!i Dil!IEil!ViB. • l illl 11 •IEllllY 1 C~ll!lH1I ..
212'-IOUUY-, COl'IA MBA t
'
l
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s .
1
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l
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•
f.I DAll.Y I'll.OT
-
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' ~ ·,:;! ·.' .• .. . ~. ,\
' ' 'one-stQ:p' sho]!ipihg
.,. ';at ft~ fineat!
--_.., I \ \ ..
... -· ,,._. T ·' • L~
.OPEN .THoRSOA Y & MONDA Y"'EVENINi;s
"°';." I •
,
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BUY A
NEW OLD GLODY
_ AN~ FLY IT PROUDLY
HARBOR W BOYS' CLUB
WILL BE SELLING ON OUR MALL
SATURDAY, JUNE 1+-10 A.M. 'iO 5 p.m.
3'x5' FLAG
6' STAFF
HALYARD
BRACKET
STORAGE
CARTON
, ~
* Halliday's Men's Shop * Charles H. Barr Jewelers * Rion Hardware · * Hlclcory Farms of Ohio * Westcliff Plaza Ba...,_rs · . * Paper Unlimited · * Bank of America * Antho~y's Cobblers Bench * Market Basket
~~ ,·__:.,., ... * La...,,~, . ' ' .
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Plus Other •••
* STAR *
ATTRACTIONS
FRIDAY, SATURDAY
1o ·yp s
ON ·OUR MALL
, ',
.TONY · CAPPASOLA ·
~~¢A:S1 MQST POPULAR
IT~~,pt-AN GRINDER
AND HIS :i.OY~ILE MONKEY '' MA,RIO'_,_ ·
\
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CHILDlllN'S PICTURES MAY · -
BE TAKIN W.ITH THI T~
MONKIY., .lllNG YOUlt
CAMlltA. •• NO CHAllGI
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•
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
* Robert Berkley Men's
* Sav·On Drugs · · * Westcliff Shoes
* Darrell's Dedrick Tux
*Baker's WestcHff .Camera
1rDr. Lou Roy Elder * Montgomery Cleaners
* Dick Vernon's
*Jean Dahl
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