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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-06-19 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa' I " I • •• ., I ' m,· Prohes.-·Olane.e .sA:· ··staying . Suspee' ' .. Hii.a~ked Oallland Plane· to Bave-.ia ' • ' . ' ,. ' . ' . • • • ·L • Dirty!> 1Mngger ·Rohs Youth DAILY PILOT ,. Knifepoint • ID Newport r * * * 10= * * * . ' ' THURS[)AY AFTERNOON, JUNE 19, 1969 VOi.. 62. HO. 14'.1saCTIONS,12 ttAGIS ' . Clifford Gets Support ... <>,~•Withdrawal •' ,. ' ·• ~ .. ' pey Say B~s P•o•y ~ . ~ i ' . ·-H~:rinl~ T., """· .1 .,"11 1 ~iai,sliond botber~s : ·~1t.;;-; .. Dante Says Mesa Pair Involved in Shooting Dy ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ille Dlollf l'lllt 11'11 Hollywood hypnoUst Ronald Dante charged Wednesday that an Orange County boatbuilder is involved in his at~ tempted murder and felooy theft arrest, but the accused today is spellbound only by the intriguing tale. The seventh husband or actress Lana Turner narrowly escaped death Tuesday wben a. bushwhacker wearing a rakish Australian prairie hat pumped five pistol shots into his car as he drove into an underground garage. Slaying Suspect Hijacker of Jet Plane to Cuba? By JACK BROBACK Of """ Delly l'li.t ll•ff Santa Ana police said today the FBI is lnVestigating \he possibility that the man who hijacked a Trans \Vorld Airlines JeUiQer to CUba Tuesday may be one of the two men sought in the murder of San· ta Ana police officer Nelson Sassctr on June 4. "They have our photos of lhe suspects (Arthur League, 20 and Odis Nathaniel Grimes, 21, both of Sant.a Ana) and are showing them to passengers and crew of the jeUlner," a Santa Ana lnvestlptor said. "We hope to hear from them soon." In New York Wednesday night, the FBI reported it was studying snapshot.! of the hijacker. The plcturcs were taken Tuesdlly even-- lni by a passenger es the pollle. but "very desperate" hijacker left the plane in Havana. Passengers who had gone through the hijacker's bag while he was In the coCA>it said lie also had with him a copy of fugitive Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver's book, "Black Pan~er." , 'I't\e Negro, Identified on the p819tngtt Tilt II c. D a v I s. commandee.Md the BOelng m Tuesday afternoon over Nevada on a ncwtop filght from Oakland to New York. The plane arrlyed at New York'• Ken- n<dy Airport at 2,40 a.m. Wednesday. A third suspect ln the slaying c:I. of!icer SIWCt!r, Daniel Michecl Lynern ?2, c:I. Sant.a Ana, was arrested by police the day after the slaying and Indicted along with League and Grimes by the Orange County Grand Jury. Lynei:n, l<Nntlfied IS I Blalk Panther, pleaded innocent Monda, and a trial date was set for July 21. ' ' "I have a very good idea wOO be was," said the 4~year-ol.d )el 1et entertainer, who affects the t!Ue Dr. Dante, coo. tinuing to ttn of a phone "'arnlng be allegedly received Monday. He said the Vtl\geful callfr cla1med lo be the owner of a now-defunct Santa Ana firm which manufactured watercraft fol" Marlin Bo.at Co., whose outlet ia Mesa Boat Center, 1595 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Santa Ana poll~ who heard radio reports of the murder attempt recognized Dante's name and tipped oil Hollywood detectives, who arrested the hypnotist. in connection with a local 1968 boat theft case. WARNED OF BARiii The stage perfonner and self-declared psychology professor said his mystery caller warne.d of great bodily harm and possible disgrace in the eyes of his Q. year-old bride il he failed to cooperate. 0 0r '1•11 make llJI'e you never walk again," Dante quoted the man aJ saying, after a demand for payment of $5,000 in blackmail money. AU three principals In the May:, 1968 negotiations for Dante's purchise of seven, IS.fool Marlin motorboat& worth $18,500 denied knowledge and scoffed at the accusation. ~·He thinks I did It? No, I did not call Dr. Dante," declared Donald W. Albright, or Anaheim, whose firm Recreation Enterprises Inc., built the boats at a San-- ta Ana yard'. ••No, I did not make an attempt on his lif~:· Albright conUnued, "but yes, I'm stiU looking forward to .seeing Dr. Dante in court." Miss Turner'• busband of six weeks Is Cree, · on $12,500 IJaP., pending his preltminary hearlrlg iJiine 2e in Santa Monica M•.miclpal CouR In connection wiih the felony grand tbelt warrant. EQUALLY STAR11.ED Ron Snyder, 31, of 2320 College Drive, Costa .Mesa, WU equally incredulous Wednelday when notified by newsmen of Danit'• -lions ·-bis •Tll<llUj wauant.. ' Snydei' And bis latber Paul BIO prln, c1pals tn the Costa Mesi company with which Dante waf dealing more than a , year ago, while ..1ppearln& at the Villa Marina n\gbtclu\>-ln Newport Beach. "He's 1 phopbo 10n-of·1-cun," sakl Snyder, "I've never met tht man before, nor hU my father -be dealt with a iales representative.'' Snyder chuckled when told lhe contents • of Dante's alleged telephone cooveraaUon Mondax .. ,, .. "I wish rd go ftii he lfve ll'i,• be {Seo D¥<TE. P11t I) ' ' Senate Leaders.· . Back Proposal WASHINGTON {UPI) -W, A..,..ll Harriman and two top senate Democrattc Jea'ders' endorsed tdday ·former Defen1& Secretary Clark M. Clifford's pri>posal for withdrawal of 100,000 U.S. combat troops from Vietnam this year, aDd the remainder in 1970. 1 • Harrimln, chief u.s'. negotiator at the . J.>aris peac;e talU: in the Johmon .. a.. 1 mihls(ratfon. said 'that ht recxiriuitended 1 Ia.ii wlnikr an im!nediat. pul!Olit of '511,®il Amelj&:an .troops and an end to ~ : aniJ.destroy~ misslofts. 1 • TheMi ster.• Halriman said lh an ~ · terview, might 'have tnaucea tbe eam=- munists to take a reciprocal troop redac- tiOh step and· tO begin ·serious <ijscUss.icq of peace proposals. Clifford's P.ropos'al also won support from Senate . Democratic Leader ' Mike Mansfield and Senate· Democra\,IC \thip Edward M. Kennedy. Both said ·they ' hoped President Nixon would glVe serious corisideratlon to ·the ClUford plan a9 outlined in an article in the in8.gazlnil foreign affairs. Nixon ls expected to ~ questioned oh Clifford's ptoposal at a Wt\lte H~se ne~s·conference today 'a't t · p.ni.rll'l'.' · .· · · · · · 1 1, ...... 1.. ••••• ~ •.• :'...:'.t' •• ·;.'. ,AltboUgb ·Hmbncm ·dld :not 'su·.So: . , 1o-;t -,T,;"~~·t~ ~'~ .cnJ~. other offi~ls ~ye"~ported ' that 'h~ PRINCESS MOVES MEM~ER OF HER ADOPTED FAMILY TO MORE COMF.AAT~ll~E:,S!l~!Ji>!JJ.i DI,~$'. 1 pol~t 9L•li!JY,'l'Jo:.~e~l~\ w\Jjt.r by, For Trio of Motherl1u Huntlneton Beach Kittens Any Port In e Storm ·· · · ~sident Lyp$1pr\ .. 8 ••. J~nsoo, backed up • by i SiorelaiY ol ·SI.it. ·bean 'Rusk and ~idential adviser Walt W. ROilow. ' / Dog Has Kittens ~esa Stad.ent 'Roh~d of $95 · Asked whether lie thought. It wu too 1 late now to achieve this aim of luge withdrawals of U.S. forces, Harrlmao re~ "I juSt don't llllow." .He· said .thSit "hUe.l'he felt the earn. m~ would· ~aye resoo!Kkd ravora~ ' (See ~~!!-~:. P.•~ J) I 'Princess' Adopts Feline Orphans At .Newport Pier Princess Gretchen Neubauer is a rnolher. "And 80 what else is new?" Pr~s Gretchen Neubauer ls a female dog and her children are three lit· tie puff-ball kittens. The,1¥PPY family is· c u r r e n t I y ' quarteretJ at 20072 Harbor Isle Lane, Huntington Beach, under the care of Mr. and Mrs. John Dellea. Prfnceu (for !bort) Is the pet ol the Snrcbar<ge-Extension Gets C~mmittee OK WASHINGTON (UPf) -The ff9'ol" Ways and Means Committee formally ap. proved today 1 7w'1 ext<nBlon ol ill< Jn· ,come tax surcharge urged by Presidtnt Nixon, and Chairman Wilbur Miils said floor action would begin Wednetday. The commtttee vote was 16 to 9. The anU·lnflation measure would continue the ~eaent ttopercent iutcllarge untll Jan . I when tt _,kfdl<IP,lo 6 ,per.cenLfor the lollowln& 1\.1 months. • - Delleas .. The tru-q, young kittens wer.e. • , . . . . . broUght lnto the world by a c8t.owned b'y A 1' ' h · ed J . • ' Mri. DeUea'a sister-in-law, Mrs. Danie\ ong· air . ! d'heve ed mue,:er ar_m· Bigelow, who nloved to Mas,sachusett' · e<t wlth·a foot-lopi hun(ing ~n~e robbed a Satig:clay ,Wtlng Uie molher,·but ool the . CC?Sta Mesa st11dent W~ay of.,f95 kJt'ten'~,· .wit~ he~. . , arte~ shoving .him off a· Newpoi:t Beach 1 ''First we went to the animal 'hel~r/' , w,terf~nt sidewalk ;nto a ,qujet w~lk_way says· M'ra. Dellea, "'hoping they would . · tiave a cat to nurse the week-old kittens..~ 10:broad day!lght, Police reported.today •. , but they didn't." · , ·The 'thiefdeft hill victim a dollar. · "Then l'~ told my; sistcr.jirla)¥ .w~,h~ '."h'. v I ~ t l m·,·.l~frey· Cf,Smir :Luater, '. a stt,y ·cat, Who'd jl\St had kittens arid , 18, of. 2700. P~t,erson A,.ve., .Corta. ~el8 •. could probaJ>ly nur,se the llUle ones." · • told police the 1'd1rty" robber shoved tum , Orange . ' ' Weatiie'r Are ~·read.yr tor some, morning fog? ·That's corning ' nw but rri~ day 's iftemooit weather ahoutd be sunny and seventyish aloni the Orange Coast INSIDE •TODAY ."sa\urday night.we left.the kl\l<!ns wjlh · lnxil the 'aldewa\k In 'the 2300'.block of our straJ ,cat~" continues Mn:. Dellu,, West:OCUn.FrontnearNewport·PJer. l An t.Rrci.st in accompllah,.. "when we returned Princess Gretchen 1mant. the \Ve1tmi"'3t8" •Conv was there· wfth the kittens nufslng. We -'l1Je assaUant, 'Ufe victim '"Id, Priutd ' m1p•itg Thtai,rJ workshop Pf'O", first lhougl\t the dog might hurt the kit· the "knife against the student·i stoirlach duction1 o/ an •origi1fal drama 1a teps, but i¥>e just wan,ted to nurse them!" · and.demanded hlr' Wallet. · . · :reblewed toaau · i n Entertam.. Prtilcea Is hi(o years old and bas never' "Aiter taking the money from lbe hldden ,rntnt, Pa'Qe 11. · had pups. Sbe was ln false Rrtgnaocy and Wllllet cotnpartmeflt; Luster sald the thief ' • · capable•.of nursing 'II( hen the )d,ttens were returned 'the Walle( to 'bis 'VICUm, 1t1vlhg L ~== iw~ 1 :S~ ,._.. ' i: brought ,to the Dellea home. Now she Ute dollar.· 1 1 , ~ Cef!liu 11 ,....._ ..... ..., won~ let them out'<>( ber right, and the .Luster ~Id t.he-.Jlg~ k,nlferleldF ,had ' =-=~ 1 l: ··~'l:'.:r"' 1,:1 veterinarian aay1 , ahe can nune., 1~ • dbiv,, 1houlder-ltn~h hair and wpre a . lf-'""'91 "'" ' ,,,.,,., • '*· lfl"'IH ~ • .! f ~ Ifft*"""""', It •MM! ..... l 1 .. \1, , . aqothar three. weeks. , , . checketl 1ahlr1. with ee:vea torn 9'-i •t the ,~ 14-!I ,....,..., ' ,,, •And thal'• how 1 reglstered miniat.ur& bi~. ' · 1 1 1 . :::rr.=." · l~ ~.~,' , .'!: d•choiJuo<I ~!f tl(U!J'K";kl~'*--t'AA<-. lie ned1J!t•.I!' •lll!JI ~11!1.dl"ppeaffil : -" w, Utey pupplDll &lt•l'"lllt 1!!1J>p.m.'i!IM1, .. il!Jem.lilldi ·" • , w'.;· _. _; _____ ..;.._...1 -:r- ' . . • North ·Viets .. Launch Offens·ive : -' Reds Hit Province C~pital, Assault U.S·. Artillery Base • " SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietmunese troops today Invaded I.he Important pro- vince capital of Tay Nlnh, occupied several areal! on its outskirts and battled American and South Vietname1e forcea In 1tteel' fighting · that raged Into !be night. Hundreds of soldiers were In- volved. Field reports said at least 50 North Vietnamese were killed in the 'J'ay Ninh fighUng 5$ miles northweot of Sal(on near the Cambodlan border. B u t _ spol<umenatU.S.boldquarlensaidonJy 18 dead were confirmed. Allied 1osaea were not immediately reported. The invulon was acccmpanied by an assault on a U.S. 25th Infantry Dlvillon artillery baie ab: miles oorlhwest of Tay Ninh. Defeoden firlnl !~mm. howllwa From Page 1 DANTE ••• said, 1tres:sing he was Jokina. 0 1 read Wedneaday where he aaid he hid no idea who might want to klU bim- or why -unJess it wu because someone was jealous or the woman be married," Snyder continued. "And then he comes up with a story UPI TtllPl'lti. like this." , "Actually, it's kind or exciting," ~ concluded. lnlo the NGl'lh Vtetrwn. ranka hl>rlod ba'ck the assault but 14 U.S. troops were wounded. At least U North Vietnamese bodies were c<1unted. Si% prisoners were taken. In saigon, alHed bmlquartm reportA!d that American combat deaths ruie sharp. Jy last week amid contlnued heavy fight~ lng across South Vietnam, Tho c~ty rej)Otl for lhe week ended loat 5atuld&y li!!!!I ,. ~ killed and 1,695 wOwiiltd. Tbfl eompond with 2SJ killed' and l,US wouoded tbe ~ou1 week. The total ror the war was "plaCed at mart than '8,000. · A!Ued forces last week killed· 4,:ieo North Vietnamese &1111 Viet Coog, bead- quarten said. ' . -..: ~i ' -· Near· Da Nang, 6n Ille c..,t of Ibo South China s.. lOO ml!M north ol Saigon, other communist troops today smashed into an out~t, nicknamed "Tomahawk," manned by men or the lOlst Airborne Division and c•uaed heavy damage. · Front reports said North Vietnamese commandos attacking T om a b a w k destroyed at least three l 5 5 ·mm . 1 ®witzers with aatcbel cbargu Qf dynamite, killed IW1I Americans and wounded 24. Ten North Vietnamese bodies were found inside or im~ on the barbed wire barriCades surround.lng the camp. Street fighting was 1reported oo the . northern edge ol Tay Ninh during the daylfgbt hours today. other battles Oared on the eastern and western outskirta less than a mile from the temple of the C•o Dal religious sect, a ralth which embodies . elements of Buddhism, Ta o I s nt, Catholicism and Confucianism. ~ Military spokesmen said the action in· volved aevtral bUndred South VJetnam• militiamen reinforced by units of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division. First shots wete fired at 6:30 a.m. ' . Tay Ninh, a city witb about 150,<*l civilian retidents, bas k>ng been a majbr target fO( North Vietnamm cor:!t4 mandm. It sits astride major ~· munilt infiltration corridors lea~g toward Saigon from Clmbodla. . Tly Ninh was the site of a major battJe June 7-1 when North •Vietnamese trooj)5 alao occupied two hamlets in the cl,ty complex. Pulls Gun on Guards Crowd Disarms Gunman At Mesa's Sears Store Disarmed by a Costa Mesa department Georgia Gotlaie With apologies lo arliat GrlJlt Wood, Govemor and Mrs. Lester Mlld· clox &trike a pooo re*nbllng tbe famou& painting "American GoWc". wllile oo a toor ol the governor's gaiden bl Allanta, Ga., W,eclnesday. Tho tour followed. a vegetable dillner for Capitol newsmen. Despite constant ·quoS!ions, Mrs. Maddox would not lily whether she would nm for governor ln 1!!'!0. , Loa An&eiea COwlly -· Depui-ment detectives also said Wednesday that Dante's allegations had no basis for bellef, adding that he had been generally uncooperative in q,eir attempted murder inveatiption. A warrant wu I.slued for Dante's ar- rest. which came June 3, 1968, after his · store crowd, an Azusa collegian Ls in jail today af~t allegedly pulling a .32 -caliber pistol on two security guards questioning him obout a refund slip forgery s pree. No one was injured in the melee at Sean, Rl)ebuck I< Co.,.3333 S. Brillo! St., but the suspect reportedly threatened to kill his captors while clutching the l<laded weapon during the struggle, police said. voluntarily and was released but sud· denly whipped out the weapon ar. Hucriphrey walked behind and' Gow led hhl along. , Investigators said Humphrey pinned tho suspect's arms to his sides im~ mediately in a bear hug as Gow grappled for the gun,.which was snatched away by an unidentified customer. V a·lley .Recall Petiiion involvement in the alleged boat caper was probed by investigators. Dealer Ron Snyder said Wednesday that the seven boats might well have disappeaz:ed if It wasn't for a suspicious trilck driver who questioned a •too bonui for loadiJ!g ·in the middle of the night. James w. Needs, 29, of Azusa, was booked on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon, armed robbery and com· mission of burglary while armed with a loaded flrarm. A number of persons jumped to ·help disarm and subdue the suspect, Gow and Humphrey told Cosla Mesa police, who were seeking a complaint from lht: Orange County District Attorney's off.ice today. Action Still Up in Air "It just didn't set right and he refused to load them up, but called us instead and we called police," Snyder explained, saying Dante Wu found at the ecene, Buena Park and El Monte police are checking today to determine the extent of the forgery spree in which Needs and an uriidentified partner are suspected. Records show Buena Park police have a $202 forged refund purchase slip passedr at a Sears store in their city, one of an entire book reported stolen from the~ suburban Los Angeles County store. T" By TERRY COVILLE OI' 1111 DallJ 'll•t Sl•lf City officials in Fountain Valley were still waiting for word today from City ~t-­ lomey Edwin Martin on what to do with lhree recall petitions submitted June 2 by recall leader Eugene Van Dask. Tuesday night recall supporters served the city with a writ of mandate from Superior COurt ordering City Clerk Mary Cole to btgin validating the petitions. MarUn had originally ruled the recall petitions invalid because of what 1' caD· Susan Condition Still Critical But Improving Susan Maize's bid for life with lhe beaKhy kidney her mother gave her went Into lta: fifteenth day today but the con· !lition of the 17·yeaf'l<>id Orange girl re- 111ai.ns crttical. It eeemed today, however , that there was some lifting of the gloom evident Wednesday among those closest to the in- 1ensive care unit at the Orange County l!edlcal Center. "She had a fairly restful night," a 1pokf.isman commented. "One of her doc· tors talked to me about her this morning and he said ·she seemed quite alert and :heerful throughout their short con· rersation." · Doctors stress that the left kidney they grafted into Susan from her mother, Mrs. Florence Mazze, 42, is functioning perfectly. The high school girl's condition stems, they say, from post operative oomplicat.i.ons that are receiving round lhe clock attention. Mrs. Mazze herself is reported as being In "excellent condition." She was sent l>ome after doctors said she had made an "uncomplicated recovery" from the ma· jor transplant 5urgery, the first of it! Wxl in Orange County. DAILY PI LOT . ........... ......... " .... ---· .... --CAllMDIA OMMCJI CWI ll\tlL.lltftNO COMHJrlY Ko\tect H. Woo4 ,.__... ... ~ Jocil I. C ..,Cey Viet~ .... 0-rll MINICI' Ttio11M11 Koo•il ·-Tllo111.11 A. Mw,,illfto ~l:•itw - ----·-' ed "improper procedures" and had supervising the boat transfer. ordered Mrs. Cole not to validate the He said the hypnotist had broken a chain Jock to enter the Santa Ana yard signatures. and claimed to be owner of the boats Mayor Robert Schwerdtfeger, Vice when tawirten arrived. Mayor Donald Fregeau and Councilman 1'bls Ctal.ni, Snyder said, was bued on Joseph Courreges are the w bjects of the his payment with a $17 ,450 check that had petitions and objects of a concerted effort bounced, although he had pledged to by a number of residents to oust them make it up in cash on what would have rrom office. . alter lbe boats TU sda .. ; .. hf. Mar": ind' ted b been the morning were , e y '"6¥"l . , """ ica e hauled away. might defy the OObrt order and appear · ooct the u'nregistered boats were before Super~r~ Judge Claude M. ~oss the Nevada line en route to Las \)wens Ju)y ~·td.ijlow cause why be-· 'Vegas Snyder said Ibey would be not beli•'1 ~ l'J.l~ili'• valid. Marlln hJs unrec.iverable. ' the option·cf goiiig to court if be does not unrecoverable feel it proper to validate the petitions. Dante cta!IDed Wednesday that the Mrs. Cole told Martin that if she were document In qqestlon was a promissory to validate the signatures, the petitions note and that he thought the whole case would be smt to the county clerk's of· bad been cleared up after his court ap- fice at a cost of slightly ~o~re t~n '2 ~ pearance date of July 11, 1918 was hour to the city. She estirria~ tM toW cancelled cost at about •1eo for the W«t, which ft Anotbe; warrant was Issued shortly told the council would be too difficult for threafter but Dante was' not arrested the limiled city stall and m..i be ... t because.' accon!lng i. Ssnta Ana Police 00~artin said TUeaday night that ratber ~ ~~ ~!wmen simply didn't than erpe~ city funds be probably. would He told aberlff'1 deputies when bein& stand by bis original dectsloo unUI the booked at the Weot Hollywood station matter was heard in court.~uly 2. that be held a doctoral degree from He ·~~nally ruled that Improper pro-Singapore Un!vers<ty In psychology. cedures were followed in cJrculating tbe Peter lJ.m, public relations director for petitions, one for each of the three Singapore University, today denied the s~parate recall actions. More than 3,000 statement, pointing out that no s u c b si~~nf~ onccme.i:~ whether 1 decree ii available at that Institution. newspaper legal noUce -pbotoltaticall1 e-0pied by recall backers -was large enough for petition aJgnen: to falrlJ· read. Israeli Jets Again Hit Jordan PAllY PILOT Pllat9 IW \M Pl'fll.I Sunset Sail Sabot sailor• cruise water. ot Newport Harbor Wednesday. That bright, round !bing in the sky is the sun, which has not been seen regularly 'of late in local environs. View is toward Lido turning basin. Newport Driver Killed in Crtuh Patrolman James Farley said the dramatic incident was triggered about 2:50 p.m., when a cashier in the South Coast Plaza store sounded an emergency ala Tm. Guards Robert W. Gow, 47, and William Humphrey, Sl, ran to the acene, when Kathleen P. Shine, 19, handed them a $121 refund slip reported stolen from a Pico Rivera store and pointed at the suspect. Told he .must accompany them to the security office, said Gow and HWQphr~y, Needs refused, so'they each took an afm and begB:n to lead' him away. The pair said he then agreed to go From Page 1 CLIFFORD ... last J anuary, when he repeated his recommendations to the Nixon ad- ministration, he could not be certain now because he had been out of the discussions for five mont.hs. Harriman did not agree s~cifically with Clifford's timelable·for withdrawal, A Newport Beach man, possibly asleep calling for the pullout of 100,000 ground at the wheel, was killed early this mom· troops by the end of this year and the re· inA: when his car slammed inlQ_ a power maining 100,000 to 150,000 combat forces by the end of 1970. . IHI Coaaty 'l)'affic 1988 But he said: "I certaitily hope that we ts · Death Toll t7 will pull out t'oo,ooo by the end of this pole on Brookhurst Street, south of year." Meredith Drive in Huntlngtoo Beach. llarriman indicated belief that the Police said John William Myers, 52, of United States lost a golden opportunity in 332 Prosped Drive, Newport, was beaded late 1968 when he said Hanoi pulled out south on Brookhunt Street when for about 90 percent of its combat forces in some unknown reason he swerved across the two northem provinces of South Viet· the road and slammed head-on into a nam. •v U111t111 ,.,.., tllttnlftllfl.lf Southern California Edison Company He said he felt at that time that ir the CG Holds Slight Lead in College Sailing Match BELLINGHAM, Wash. (AP) -The Coast Guard Academy held a tenuous lead Thursday after six races in the N .. tional Collegiate Athletic Associatioa. Sailing Championships. Light wind.I held up the morning schedule Wednesday but a stiff breeze sprang up on Bellingham Bay in the afternoon causing some boats to have equipment troubles. The crews are sail· ing two-man, IS.foot C-Larks. Tbe Coast Guard led unofficially with. 52 points, but a breakdown cost them an as yet undetermined number of penalty points. Southern California was in second with 59 points. The races, for the Morss Trophy, are scheduled to end Fri8ay. 0£ficials i~ dicated light winds might curtail t hi schedule. MIT was in third with 62 points, follow· cd by Tulane with 63, Princeton with 70. San Diego State with 71 and Navy wi~ w. i Georgia Tech, which also had a breakdown, was next with 85 points. Notre Dame and Washington had 88 points, Indiana had 93 and the University of British Columbia had 105 points. Sweden. Takes Six Martin said no. but •ttc:Jriie.1t; P aul Augustine. Jr., and Robert S&saone, at- torneys for Van Dast, claim te1at precedence shows the sbe of type Ulled on the reprinted answers to recall charges ii correct and acceptable. Mrs. Cole has requested w:rttten in- structions from Martin before any action is taken. She said this. morning abe n:- pected to hear from him befote noon, at which lime a decisJon would probably be made. Iaraell jets returned today lo lhe power pole. Johnson administration had ended its Jordan Valley in a follow up raid to Orange County Coroner's ollice said policy of "keeping military pressure on STOCKHOLM <UPI) -The Swedish Wednesday'• masaive air strikes -the Myers died of chest and head lnjuries. by search and destroy· missions" and' Aliens Commission announced today heaviest since end of the 1967 six-day war some 1,20().volt power lines were pulled out the 50,000 troops he recom· another six self.proclaimed American -triggered by the death of an American broken. There were no witnesses to the mended, the Paris talks would have Vietnam war resisters had been granted woman tourilt in an art.lllery duel Tues-. accldenl shown immediate progre~. · asylum in Sweden. di~ 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;i;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Under elections code rules the petitions must be valld;ated by . J.ulY 2 (one month after they were submit~) unless the, ct. ty ·can prove in court I.bey are not valid petitions. A military spokeaman in Amman said 11 two Israeli Mystere jets struck in the aouthem Jordan Valley and that one clvillan was killed and 1i1 other persons wwnded. Inflation Flushed .JJ. J. (}arreffj 14th SEMl·ANNUAL Laguna Drops Li.don John Hike Boost There's sUll one thing that. will -cost a nickel, at least in Laguna Beach and th8t's the five-cent pay toilel Councilmen Wednesday night held the line against a national inflationarY spiral in the pay.for-public-comfort business. Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan, put champion of public restrooms, for a tJme seemed ready to give in to the b1an- dishmenta of Pacific Nlk.O.Lok Co. which, despite its name, urged that PUb- lic stall access in Laguna be hiked lo a dim<. Nlk.O.Lok wrote that It had been for fJve or lis years the trend in the U.S. and Canada to chaJ18e to a dime. Newport Beach mad< Ille chang~er successfully several years ago, they reported. After rectlvlng assurance from the clty manager that there 11 alwaya one 1tlll at a comfort ataJJon which b free, O'SulUvan (ashJoned a motion to raise the other stall.I to a dime. "Do yOU know whJt you're talking about?" uied MoYW Glean Vedder, who rallied the nickel fon:es. "Now we get ·'280 a )'tlr (from pay lollets). I doni . thJnk U -,, tn0u1h to worq about." Councilman Charlton Boyd 111ggesttd Nik-0-1.A>k might have to chanj:e its name u meyone charged a dime. He Nld, a bit wlltlully, "I feel k would be dellghUul to bold the lil'le 1n at 1ea!t one are.a." O'Sulllvsn suggealed thJt perhaps half the canfort 1tatloo locb could be • nickel and the Olherl a dime for those who b9d a dime but not a nickel. O'SUOivao'1 ori&lnal motion perished for lack of a aecand. Councilmen filed the dJrne ....,..uon. . . A r-1« eWd councilmen II the comfort Utkm: -two at Reitler Park, one at Main BfaCb and one at the library --..,.. Ille ..... free perking ~that--. wUJ oiler. Tbe city m•a,,rr lbouPt not. Vietnameee Question Resistance Leader . SAIGON (Ul'J) -Sooth Vlelna ..... Pollco olOdal• today ~ wbldl leader of a ...,. polltkal pwp wllldl called for a ••reeondllatarJ' IJOVtmment" to reptacePr .. ldent NllU)'en Van Tbleu'j government. PURNITURE CLEARANC• STARTS TODAY H.J.GAl\I\ETf fURNlTtJRE ' .. P1IOFUS10NAL • ltlTEAIOR DESIGN~ • 2215 HARIOR llVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF, 646-027' 646-02,. , 1. I· - --"---------~--~--·-----·~--~--..~~-~~--=----~-...:.--~----------~---•llli· I I I 11 t ' = Buniington Beaeh Today's Fmal • ._. ' ~ I ----N.Y. Steeb ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • YQ\:. 42, NO. }46, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES .THURSDAY, JUNE '19 ~1969 :TEN CENTS • Clifford Supported Harriman, Dem Leciders Bae~ Pullout WASHINGTON (UPI) -IV. Averell Harriman and two top senate Democratic leaders endorsed today former Defe11Se Secretary Clark M. Clifford's proposal for withdrawal of 100,000 U.S. combat troops from Vietnam this year, and the remainder in 1970. Harriman, chief U.S. negotiator at the Paris peace talk$ in the Johnson ad· ministration, said that be recommended last winter an immediate pullout of 50,000 American ·troops and an end fo search- and-destroy missions. These steps, Harriman said in an in· terview, might have induced the Com· munisls to take a reciprocal troop reduc· Attorney Overruled Next Valley Move On Recall Waited lion step and to begin serlous discus8ion of peace proposals. CWford's proposal also won support from• Senate Democratic Leeder Mike Mansfield and Senate Democratic Whip Edward M. Kennedy. Both said they hoped President Nixon would give serious consideration to the Clifford plan u outlined in an article in the maguine foreign affairs. Nixon Is expected to be questioned on Clifford'l!I proposal at a White House news conference today at 4 p.m. PDT. Although Harriman dld not say so, other officials have reported that his point of view was rejected last winter by President Lyndon B. Johnson, backed up by Secretary of State Dean Rusk and presidential adviser Walt W. Rostow. Asked whether be thought it was too )ate now to achieve this aim a large withdrawals of U.S. forces, Harriman replied "I just don't know.'' . OAll. Y PILOT P'*' h' T..,., C.WI .. He said that while be felt the Com· munists would have responded favorably last January, when he repeated his recommendations ' to the Nl:roD •d· ministraUon, he could not be certain now becau&e he had been out of the discus.sions (or five ·months. PRINCESS MOVES MEMBER OF HER ADOPTED FAMILY TO MORE COMFORTABLE SURROUNDINGS By TERllY COVILLE 01 fbt Call' Piiot Slllf City officials in Fountain Valley were &till waiting for word today from City At. t.orney Edwin Martin an what to do with three recall petitions submitted June 2 by recall leader Eugene Van Dask. Tuesday night recall supporters served the city with a writ of mandal.e from Superior Court ordering City Clerk Mary Cole to begin validating the petitions. Martin had originally ruled the recall petitions invalid because of what he call· ed "improper procedures" and had ordered Mrs. Cole not to validate the signatures. Mayor Robert Schwerdtfeger, Vice Mayor Donald Fregeau and Councilman J~eph Couneges are the subjects of the Newport Driver Killed in Cra8k A Newport Beach man, possibly asleep at the wheel, was killed early this mom· ing when his car slammed into a power 1969 County Traffic 1968 95 Death Toll fl pole on Brookhurst Street, south of Meredith Drive in Huntington Beach. Police said John William Myers, 52, of 332 Prospect Drive, Newport, was headed south on Brookhurst Street when for some unknown reason he swerved across the road and slammed head-on into a Southern California Edison Company power pole. ·Orange County Coroner's· office said Myers died of chest and head injuries. Some 1,200-volt power lines ""'ere broken. There were no witnesses to the accident. * * * Beach Man Hmt In Auto Crash A Huntington Beach man was severely injured early today when his car drifted off a dangerous curve at the Costa Mesa weat city limit and splintered a Power pole. Elroy A. Grawe, 29, of 19161 Delaware St., was listed in serious condition at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital wi'th head and chest injuries following the 3:45 a.m. crash. ~ Police said he was driving east on Vic- toria Strett entering Costa Mesa when his car went out of control 40 feei past Valley Road and smashed into the Southern California Edison Co. fixture. Bare Beachgoer Held for Drugs Ford thinks he had a better idea but sheriff's deputies think it was just bare defiance of the Jaw. They picked up Ford tngalsbee Beebe II Wednesday as the completely nude Laguna Beach man sauntered along El Toro Road. Officers said he was oblivious to the st.ares of astonished pa~Sfrsby and quie unconcerned when he was waylaid by de:puties. Jtls,stroll along the country road ended with .hi"I boOking on suspicion of Indecent exposure and being under the innuence of drugs. The 24-year-old Lagunan is in the 1 Or_ange Coonty Jail today. Fully dressed. Slayer Gets 5 lo Life LOS ANGELES (UPI) -George E. WilllMlS, 21, convicted of second-degree murder I• Jhc stabbl"l! death or a use freshman last Dec. 9, -was sentenced to fi\le yeai$ to ll!e In prLson Wedoad;:7. . ' petitions and objects of a concerted effort by a number of residents to oust them from office. . For Trio of Moth1rl111 Huntlnaton Be•ch Kittens, Any Port in a Storm Tuesday night, Martin indicated he might defy the court order and appear before Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens July 2 to show cause why he does not believe the petitions valid. Martin has the option of going to court if he does not feel it proper to validate the petitions. Mrs. Cole told Martin that if she were to validate the signatures,. the petitions would be sent to the county clerk's of· fice at a cost of slightly more than $2 per hour to the city. She estimated the total cost at about $160 for the work, which she told the council would be too difficult for the limited city staff and must be sent out. Martin said Tuesday nlg)it that rather than~ cllt fundl be Pl'!>bab~ woqJd 1tan1M>Y bbl original -slon until tho matter was heard in court July 2. 'He originally ruled~! "Jmproper pro. cedures" were followed· In cft'culating thf! peUUons, one for each of the three separate recall action*a. More than 3,000 signature! are on each petition. The point of contention is whether a newspaper legal notice -photostatically copied by recall backers -was large enough for petition signers to fairly read. Martin said no, but attorneys Paul Augustine, Jr., and Robert Sassone, a~ torneys for Van Dask, claim legal ptecedence shows the size of type used on the reprinted answers to rteal.I charges is conect and acceptable. Mrs. Cole has requested written in- structions from Martin before any action is taken, She said this morning she ex· pec:ted lo hear from him before noon, at which time a decision would probably be made. Under electlons code rules the petitions must be validated by July 2 (one month after they were submitted) unless the cl· ty can prove in court they are not valid petitions. Trailer Park Request Denied A proposed mobile home park was turned down Wednesday night by the Fountain Valley Planning Commission because developers couldn't prove their land useable only for trailers. Jim Kanno, speaking for the proposed tr~iler park north ol Ellis Avenue and west ot Bushard Street, told planners that a serious peat condition made lt difficult to build anything on the property. He was requesting • use variance to build the mobile homes. Planners, however, were informed that the same amount of fill dirt would be re- quired to build t~·trailer park as to build a single family residence development, thereby negating the need for a special Ul!C, Nearby residents had strongly opposed the trailer park two weeks ago when planners bad delayed a decision on the request. Haniman did not agree specifically with Clifford's timetable for withdrawal. calling for the pullout of 100,000 grow.a troops by the end of this year and the re- maining 100,000 to 150,000 combat forces by the end of 1970. But he said: "I certainly hope that we will pull out 100,000 by the end of this year." Haniman Indicated belief that the United states. lost a golden opPortunity in late 1968, when he ~l,i. Hanoi pulled out about 90 percent of its combat (or-ces in the two northern provinces of ·South Viet. narn. , . He aald be felt at lhal time ulai U,Pw j~ ~ .. had eii!W Ila pOllcy of "keep1,r;:tary presiure on by search abd mluiou" and pulled 11111-llle 'lq,000. to>oPo ht. -mended; U.. Paris talki Wllllld hive shown immedlate progress. Susan U>ndition Still Critical But Improving Susan M~'s bi~ ror life wlftt the healthy kidney her mother gave her went into its fifteenth day today but the con- dition of the 17·year-old Orange· lb'l re. mains crlUcat It seemed today, however, that there was some lifting of the gloom evident Wednesday among those closest to the in- tensive care unit at the Orange ~,,.~ Medical Center. · "She had a fairly restful nJght," a spokesman commented. "One of her doc· tors talked to me about her this morning and he said &he seemed quite alert and cheerful throughout their short con· versation." Doctors stress that the left kidney they grafted into Susan from her mother, Mrs. Florence Mazze, 42, is fUnction!ng perfectly. The high school girl's Condition stems, they say, from post operatj_•:'J complications that are receiving round the clock attention. Mrs. Mam 1ier .. u Is reported u being in "excellent condiilon." She wu sent home after doctors said she had made an "unCOmplicated recovery" from the ma· jor transplant surgery, the first of its kind in Orange County. Stock Morken NEW YORK (AP) -The lllock mork<t tumbled Jower today, with brokm reporting investor concern over tight money rontinuing to weigh it down. (Set quotations, Pages lf.15), Tr;:ding slowed near the clost. The Dow Jones industrial average at 1:30 p.m. was off 5.76 at 881.33. Key Witnesses Return to Stand In Murder Trial Key prosecution witnesses w e r e broug~t back to the st.and today for further questioning as the murder trial of Hehl'y Lopez Sianez moved into what are believed to be ils final hours. Much Of the revived testimony centered on the ·~lier evid~ 1""vlded · b£,~ --~ "-,'!" ~-' sarensen today repeated ..a,,. !he cloM ·=f ~ defeme •ttonieY !..lof'I ' wtiafh;told Judp1iowlid c.m.ron ht JIJe early; stagei of the trial -that lbe · blood stained fingerprints found on the wheel ol a Rolen car were those ol Sianez. They got there, the pr01eCutian claims, when $ianez, 25, of 312 Clay St., returned to the auto last Jan. 12 after killing Mr&. Hester Markee. And It ls argued that Sianez plunged his knife at leut nine Umea into the SS.-year· old widow artet she had pursued the car allegedly llolen '.by Sianez, and Edward Rpy HargraVe, 18, of 1739 Marken Lane, Huntington Beach. · .Testimoqy ,has indicated that Sianez panicked when he realized that the determiDed ·Woman was in pursuit and Wanted to question him about an earlier collbion between the two cars. Hargrave ball stated that he sat ln the stolen car as a hOrrifled ipeetator while Sian~ plung· ed bis -,veapon Into the woman .ind left her bleeding bcidy in the gutter. Hargrave has sat quietly through every minute of the Sianez trial thus far. He must go on trial himself July 14 to face charges of grand theft auto, scaled down from the murder count earlier recorded against him. Conviction on the first degree murder count could technically mean death in the gas chamber for Sianez. His earlier attempts for a guilty plea to lesser charges and his moves to establish ~ty have all been rejected. Beach Prizes, Pet Parade Set Got a prize.wlnnJng cat or dog at home? There ls one way to find out. Enter It in the HunUngton Beach Pet Par,ade Frldy. The' parade will be held' at each of the city's 21 playgrounds throughout the day. ProspecUve entrants are advised to con· tact their local playgrounds for parade times and instructions. · Ribbons will be awarded in several categorte1. All animals must be on a leaah « in a cage. FBI Investigating ... Murder Suspect ·Hijacker? By JACK BROBACK Of .... .,..,.. ......... Santa Ana police said today the FBI is 1nvestigating the possibility that I.ht man who hijacked a Trans World Alrlinu: jetliner to Cuba TUeSday ma.y be one of the two men 1JOUght in the murder of San- ta Ana police officer Nelson Suscer on June 4. "They have our photol.of the susped!I (Arthur Leaaur, 20 and Odis Nathaniel Grimes, 21 , both ·of Santa Aila) and are: Mowlng them to puserigera and crew ot the jetliner;" a Santa Ana investigator said. ''Wt hope to heir from them IOOJi.• .lloelns, 7V! Tuesday · aiwnoon over In New York Wednaday nigh~ the Fl!l Ntvada on a nonstop Olghl from Oaltland reported II WU atudylnc snapthots of !hi . tO New .York: . hlJacl<e;. --.. 1be plcttlres were taken Tuesday even ._~ pllne arr1ved at New Yor"' s'Ken-- lng by a pa>senger ., the potli. bub nedy. Afii>otl al 2;!0 a.1)1. WedneJday. , "very desperate" bijacker left the plaDe A third suspect in the slaying of oUicer in Havana. · · • Swett, Daniel ¥Jchael ~ 22, ol Pa.,.ngers who had gone through Jlio1 Sama Ana. was ~!Teoled by police tile hijaclter'a bar while ho was ht lbe ·codrft ' day af!Or Jhe &laying and Indicted alo"ll aald he alto had !'Ith him a copy ;,Iii with 'Leaa\le' anil G~ by lbe Orange fugitive Black Pmther leader El r'• lf'tQp~;~~ry. ,. • . Cleaver'• book. "Black Panther..'' ,:'"t i ~~lata: Black-Petber, The Negro, ldentllled on the l Moc\d81 IJl!I l'\rlal.-lilt u -c:D1vl1, ~ foll·lul7·1l. •. Dog Das Kittens 'Princess' Adopts Feline Orphans Princess Gretchen Neubauer is a mother. "And so what else Is new?" Princeas -Gretchen Neubauer is a female dog and her children are three lit· tie puff-ball kittens. The happy family Is currently quartered at 20072 Harbor lsll!" Lane, Hunt!ngton'.i!<!!ch, ~)be '!'!?ol'Jolr. aQd .~ Jbl;i(Dellea~" ;-lfl_,;..4;f; •. 'Princ~ss"(!o; shori)'ll ihe Pet ol the Delleas. 'Ille three ,...,..kltleriS ·~ere broulhl Q!Jo the world by-a cat owned ~Y Ml'I .. Dellea's lister:in·law, rMI· l>anJel Bigelow, who moved lo Massachusetts Saturday taklng the mother,· but not the kittens, wilh ·her. "First we went to the animal shelter,'' says Mrs. Dellea, "hoping they would have a cat to nurse the week-old kittens, but they didn't." "Then we told my sister-in·law we had a stray cat, who'd just had kittens and could probably nurse the little ones." "Saturday night we left the.kittens with our stray cat," continues Mrs. Dellea, "when we returned Princess Gretchen was , t)U::re with the kittens ours~. We first thqught the dog rni8bf hurt Uie kit- ten!, bUt she jii:st. 'wanted to nurse them." Princess is two years old and bas never had pups: She was in false pregnancy and capable of nursing when the kittens were brought , to the Dellea home. Now she won!t let them out of her sight, and the veterlriarlan says she can nurse them another three weeks. And that's how a registered miniature dachshund has pups-er kittens. or are they puppins? Dante Accuses Mesa P~ . They Say H;ypnotist Phony By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ti.. 0.llY Plltl St.U Hollywood hypnotist Ronald Dante charged Wednesday _ that an Orange County· boatbullder is involved in his at. tempted murder and felony theft arrest, but the accw;ed today is spellbound only by the intrigulng tale. The seventh husband of actress Lana Turner narrowly escaped death Tuesday when a tushwhacker wearing a rakish Australian prairie hat pumped five pistol shots into his car as he drove into an underground garage. "l have a very good Idea who he was,'' said the 49-ye.ar-old jet set entertainer, who affects the title Dr. Dante, con· ·tinuing to tell of a phone warping he allegedly received Monday. He said the vengeful caller claimed lo be the owner of a now-defunct Santa Ana firm which manufactured watercraft for Marlin Boat Co., whose outlet is Mesa Boat Center, 1595 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Santa Ana police who heard radio reports of the murder attempt recognized Dante's name and tlpQed off Hollywood detedives, who arrested the hypnotist th connection with a local 1968 boat theft case. The sl'age performer and sell-declared psychology professor said his mystery caller warned of great bodily harm and possible disgrace in the eyes of his 48- year-old bride if he failed to cooperate, "Or 111 make sure you nev~r walk again," D8!Jte quoted the tnan as saying, after a demand for payment o' $5,tlOO itl blacltmail money. · · ' All tliret principals in the• May; 1968 negoUaUoos fol! ()ante's{ ~tl\48,e ~f ,seven, 1s,toot.Matlm,11101ofboats worth $11,500 denied tnowlt<lge ~·seolled' at 1 the ilccwiatlon: " • "He,lhlnks I ~Id ll?>No, i did 1191·call Dr.'"Dante," declatea"Donald W. Albright, . of Anaheim1 wh0te . Urm Recreation Enlerpri"' In<:., built lhe boats at f San- ti: Ana yard. · "No, I dfd not mau 11t atlcmpt on His · ure," Albrlg6t contl!lued, "IJ!!Lyes, I'm . mil ~ookln1 ·forward to seelnc Dt. Danto In outl ... . ' 1 C • , \ l • · MW: Turner1s husban~ of aix weeb Is · riee on ·' fl2,500· ball, P.nc!lng hl3 prtllmlnar)' hearlnc •June 2f •in .S.nta Monica Manlclpol"CoUrt In · ~n ; Willi the leloo~ g111MheR warraot, Wednesday when notified by riewsmen of Dilnte's accusations about his Tuesday assailant. Snyder and his father Paul are ~ cipals in the Costa Mesa company willi which Dante was dealing more than a year ago, while appearing at· the Villa Marina nightclub in Newport Beach. "He's a phoney son<if·a-gun," said Snyder, "I've never met the man before. nor has my father -he dealt with a sales representative ." Snyder chuckled when told the contents of o·ante's alleged telephone conversation Monday. , "I wish I'd gotten the five G's," be said, streMing he was joking .. "I read Wednesday where he said ·he had no idea who might want to kill him - or why -unless it was because someone was jealous of the woman be married," Snyder continued. "And then he comes up with a story like this." "Actually, it's kind of exciting," he concluded. . Los Al)geles County Sheriff's Depart• ment defectiVes also said Wednesday that Dante's allegations h&t no basis for belief, adding that he had been generally (Set D..\NTE, Page %) Orange C:Out .. , . ·weather Are you · rtady for some morn~g fog?· That's coming next but Fri- day's afternoon weather should be t sunny and~seventylsb along the Orange Coast. INSIDE TOD"'l' An exercise in ·ac~onlPU.11L­ m1t1t, th.e We$£mimter Com. munity Theater'• wor~hop pro- dJACUon of an oriOi~l drama .is I revie wed · ·t.od911 (n Epte~tqn-! ment, Pdge l2. Ctllft!'llll I -·· " Clattlllf>I ..... M•MI ..... " """'' " ............... .+.t-,__. " ::.....r -=-,,.·: -·-" ••1"'191 ..... I -... l11ltl'lllfl-I " .... IMl1NN1 , .. ,.f .. _ 1 .... 1s Tl..,...,_• 114 .. _ n -" -,,_.. " -. -II --_ .. . Ron.-lln)'dor,~ot.ap< ~·on ... Colla Mtal, 1. .. ~uallf. olaindllloos ' ._ ________ __, '1 ') J IOY OF THE YEAR Morino'• Tln1loy ... GIRL O' THE YEAR Marine'• Bennett Tinsl.ey, MiSs Bennett . Top BOy, Girl of Year Mike Tinsley and Vtekie Bennett were named Boy and Girl of the Year during recent award ceremonies held by Marina High School. Tinsley served as president of the Marina AMociated Student Body and as sports editor of the school newspaper, the "Volsunga" 'for the put two years. He pacluated with honors and was also a tDember .ot the Senior Class.~Council, the Key Clµb, an4 t1ie seniO!' ~uatlon committee. His other extra-curricular ac.. tivities have included ~ng as student body camtv al chairman and candidacy for Christmas King. Miu Bennett has served as freshman, sophomore, junior and senior class com· mlllloner 'and bas been a member of the viking Council during all lour years of her-· attendance at Marina. . Jn her ·ju'nior year, she was Marina's fepresentaUve to the California Girls State and was selected as the most outs~cfine junior student. Ddring her .,tor year she was chosen Valtiltlne'1 Queei·of Hearts and received the Top Ten and jeweled Trident M awards for ber service to the school. Viking Council at Marina Names 1969-70 Officers Viking COUneil Debbie Williamson and Robert Doria Mtmben of the 1969-70 . will serve as Girls' and Boys' League have ~ announced by Hun~ presidents on the Viking Council. Beach's Marina Hlg!l School. Also elected to tbe council were Pa1,1\ New ' o1tiCer1 are ~im Brqo~ield, ~o,,5eniot class~resident, and Carol restd~; ~.run Haffiia, ~ce-*-6l!1enf.: Lamb, ~ cl&~~ mmis5ioner •. !eanne McKinney, secretary; Rachel . Representing the unior cla~s wtll be Shaffer, treawrer; and Greg .. ~g. Jan.. Jones,,, ~w)j_Q.r. class president and California As.1ocialed Student. ~;-.l}Dies·.~ itr ~.Jµnior c I ass CQ!P'" representative. · .JI/~.~,~....-~~ -~>1 · I Commissioners who will be servtng Oft ., 1risb "a&:!n's. and Gene Ta.ylor wJI the oouncil next school year are Derlhis serve .as_ sophomore c!ass president and Averyt athletics· Cindy Dircks, campus; comm1ss1oner, respectively. Mary Gross, ~ arts; Robert Houseal, f<'reshman class officers will be e~ected organiiations; Robin Spicer, pep; and after the arrival of new students m the Kathy Feehan, public relations. fall. Inflation Flushed LagunaDrQpsLidonJohnHikeBoost There's still onei thing that wlll cost a nickel, at least in Laguna Beach and that's the five-<!ent pay toilet. Councilmen . Wednesday night held the line against a na,tional inflationary spiral in the pay-for.,lublic-comfort business. Vice Mayor 'Joseph O'Sullivan, past champion of public restroonis, for a time seemed ready to give in to the blan· dishments of Pacific Nik.Q..Lok Co. which, despite its name, urged that pub· lie stall access in Laguna be hiked to a dime. Nik.O..Lok wrote that it had been for five or six years the trend in the U.S. and Canada to change to a dime. Newport Beach made the changeover successfull y several years ago, they reported. Alter recejving assurance from the city manager that there is always one stall a\ a comfort station which is free, DAI LY PILOT OlANOl COA$l t'Ul l!SHIHG tOMl'AH' Roiiort N. Wffi t>ruldont..,. ~, Joe .. •· Cllrkv \llU ~ .... -o-J Mo11tttl Tho11111 k••"il .... Tho11111 A. M111,lifft o Mt"''"-fd"" >JM11 w. ••••• w.1111111 •••' ••-'-" t'""'"'9!oll leod'! EtllO! Cll¥ ldllor H1 ........ .._.0Mll lot Ith Strool MolliRf Aitlrotu P.O. I•• 7'0, •1•41 --....,..., ... ~. ~211 """' .. ..., IOll1t'ttrl °""' Mal: • w.-1 eav ''""' ~ t.Kll• m ,.~ •""'"' I O'Sullivan fashioned a motion to raise the other stalls to a dime. "Do you know what you're talking about?" asked Mayor GleM Vedder, who rallied the nickel forces. "Now we get $260 a year (from pay toilets), l don't think it is enough to worry about." Councilman Charlton Boyd suggested Nik-0-Lok might have to change its name if everyone charged a dime. He said, a bit wistfully, "I feel tt would be delight.ful to hold the line In at least one area." O'Sullivan suggested that perhaps half the comfort itatioo locks could be a nickel and the omen a dime for those who had a dime but not a nickel. O'Sullivan's original motion perished for lack of a second. Councibnen filed the dime suggestion. A re1X1rter asked councilmen 1f the comfort stations -two at Heisler PJrk, one at Main Beach and one at the library -would accept the new free parking tokena that merchants will offer. The city manager thought not. 'Yankee' Final Film Off el'ing The current series of the Film Forum of the Huntington Beach Public Library ends Friday with the 7:30 p.m. showing of ''The Voyage of the Brigantine Yankee." The movie shows the adventures of capt. Irving Johnson, his wlfe Electra, and a college-age crew circling the globe in the two..masted vessel and recovering the rusty anchor of the scuttled muUny ship, H.M.S. Bounty. Showing of the National Geographic Society film is at 52.5 Main St. and is open to the public without charge. Valley School Board To Hear Final Re port Ytar-tnd rtportl and orientation pro- grams for teacherli returnina next fill make up the bulk of the Agtnda for U>nlaht'• FOlllllaln valley School Dillrlct Board of Trusttes meeting. The &e11lon btglns at 7:30 p.m. in·lbe Curriculum Ctnter, 1 Lighthouse Lane, Fountaln Valley. ! h Viets Launch Off ensivej . . I l~ Prov,i'f!Ce Capital ,· ;4 8Sllult U.S. 1-~til ~ Bas-e ' { . .Xki6N (t)\.f)~ ...... 'i.d\. VletnameM [n llfion, allied headquarters reported dynamite, _,Jd1led two Americans and Tay Ninh was tHe site of a major battle -Redi ' ' troops today invaded the important ~ that American combat deaths rose sharp-wounded 24. Ten North Vietnamese June 7-8 when North Victnamt5e troops vince capital of Tay Ninh, occup~. ly lut wttk amid oonUnued heavy fight· bodies were found inside or impaled on also occupied two barnlets in the city several areas on its outskirts and batUed Ing acroaa South Vietnam. the barbed wire barricades surrounding complex. ' American and South Vietnamese forces The cuualty report for the week ended tbe camp. in street fighting that raged into the last Saturday listed 33S Americans killed Street fighting was reported on the night. l;lundreds of soldiers were in· ~ 1,895 wounded. This compared with northern edge of Tay NW"I during the volved. 252 killed and 2,12S ·wOWKted the previous daylight hours today. Other battles flared Field reports said at leatl 50 North week. The total for Uie war was placed at on the ea.stem and western outskirts less Vietnamae were killed In the Tay Ninh more than 36,000. than a mile from. the temple of tbe Cao fighting ~ miles northwest of Saigon Allied loreea last week killed 4,3e0 Dal rellgiOO. sect, a faith which embodies near the Cambodian border. B u t North Vietnamese 100 Viet Cong, head· elements of Buddhism, T a o i s m , spokeamen at U.S. bt.adquarter1 said only quarters said. Catholicism and Confucianism. 18 dead were confirmed. Allied losses Near Da Nang, on the coast of the Military spokesmen said the action in· were not immediately reported. South China Sea 400 miles north of volved several hundred Sou th Vietnamese The invasion was accompanied by an Saigon, other Communist troops today militiamen reinforced by units of the U.S. asaault on a U.S. ~th Infantry Division smashed into • an outpost, nicknamed 2Sth Infantry Division. First shots were artillery base six miles northwest of Tay "Tomahawk," manned by men of tlie fired at 6:30· a.m. Ninh. Defenders firing 10$-mm. howitzers lOlst Airborne Division and caused heavy Tay Ninh, a city with about 150,000 into the North V:letnamese ranks burled damage. civilian residents, has king been a major back the asnul\ but 14 U.S. troop& were Front reports: said North Vietnamese target for North Vietnamese com· wounded. A\ least 35 North Vietnamese commandos attacking T o m a b aw k manders. It sits astride major Com-- bodies were counted. Six prisoners were destroyed at least three I 5 5 .. mm . munist infiltration corridora leading taken. howitzers with satchel charaes of toward Saigon from Cambodia. Driver Training, Typing Popular Summer Courses Driver education and personal typing lee.d the list of subjects most popular with the nearly 8,000 students enrolled in the aummer school program at four campuses ot Huntington Beach Union High School District. About 1,000 youngsters are learning to drive, acc.ord1ng \o District Supt. Dr. Max Forney. The session is sit weeks IODJ and began ·on June 16 with 200 faculty · members teaching subjectl ranging rrom pre-algebra through crafts with st.ops at speed reading, general matn, chemistry, history and life science. At Marina High School there are 339 students enrolled in personal typing courses, 300 in pre-algebra , 130 in U.S. history, 81 in marine biology, 109 in the clothing section of home economics and 54 in foods. Personal typing leads the list at Huntington Beach High School with 290 enrolled. Pre-algebra, 180 and U.S. gov- ernment, 153, follow. At Fountain Valley High School en· rolled are 386 in personal typing, 20 in pre-algebra, 178 in U.S. government and !45 in social psychology. Westminster High School enrollment lnc-Judes 153 in personal typing, 113 in pre-algebra, 00 in boys chef ind 229 in U.S. government, the only class more popular than t)'Jling. ~ · Class seMions are from a to 10 a.m. . ana-trom 10 a.m. to 12 :20 p.m. daily through July 25 e.xc~ for weekends and July 4, a legal holiday. Make Tennis Your Racket in Class If tennis could be your racket, perhaps you could get started With a nine-hour course now offered by the Huntington Beach Parks and Recreation Depart- ment Classes will be taught by qualUied in· structors during the summer at Marina and Huntington Beach High School, as well as Golden West College. Those interested may sign up now at the Recreation Center, located at 7th Street and Orange Avenue in downtown Huntington Beach. A $4 fee will be charged for instruction and teMis balls. The course will be taught in two age groups, Sth through 8th grade, and 9th and above. Beach Boulevard Battle Begins Pulls Gun on Guards Crowd Disarms Gunman At Mesa's Sears Store Disartned by a Costa Mesa. department store crowd, an Azusa collegian is in jail today after allegedly pulling a .32 caliber pistol on two security guards questioning him about a refund slip forgery spree. No one was injured in the melee at Sears, Roebuck & Co., 3333 S. Bristol St., but the suspect reportedly threatened to kill his captors while clutching the loaded weapon during the struggle, police said. James W. Needs, 29, of Azusa, was booked on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon, armed robbery and com· mission ot burglary while armed with a loaded firann. Buena Park and El Monte police are checking today to determine the extent of the forgery spree in which Needs and an unidenUfled partner are suspected. Patrolman James Farley said the dramatic incident was triggered about 2:50 p.m., when a cashier in the South Coast Plaza store sounded an emergency alarm. Guards Robert W. Gow , 47, and William Humphrey, 51, ran to the scene, when Katbleen P. Shipe,:191 h~l;led tpem a $121 refund 1Up' repo~ stoleh' from i Pico Rivera store and pointed at the suspect. Told he must accompany them to the security office, said Gow and Humphrey, Needs refused, so they each took an arm 2 Officers, City Facing Lawsuit Two Huntington Beach police officers and the city they work f9r have been named as defendants in a $675,000 lawsuit that charges the defendants with assault, battery and wrongful imprisonment of a Garde n Grove youth. Mary T. Lyon names officers Brian R. Davidson and Gary C. Kunc! with the city in her Superior Court complaint. She claims that the two officers "battered, beat and kicked'' her 16-year-old son; Robert Stewart Lyoo, last Sept. 8 in an incident near "Tower No. l" on a city beach. She claims that her son was arrested and wrongfully charged with assault and battery. And she notes that charges against him were dismissed last Oct. 9 in juvenile court acUon. Mrs. Lyon's clalm against the city for $110,000 in damages was recenUy denied by the city C<lllllCll. and began to lead him away. The pair said he then agreed to go voluntarily and was released but sud· denly whipped out the weapon as Humphrey walked behind and Gow led him along. Investigators said Humphrey pinned the suspect's arms to his sides im· mediately in a bear hug as Gow grappled for the gun, whlch was snatched away by an unidentified customer. A number of persons jumped to help disann and subdue the suspect, Gow and Humphrey told Costa Mesa polife, who were seeking a complaint frOm the Orange County District Attorney'$ office today. Records show Buena Park police have a $202 forged refund purchase slip passed at a Sears store in their city, one of an entire book reported stolen from the suburban Los Angeles County store. Salvation Army Meeting· Slated In Beach Center An organizational meeUng for the new Salvation Anny Extension Unit in Hll'n· tington Beach has been scheduled for noon June 25 at the Town and Countrr Shopping Center. Newly appointed chairman oI the volunteer community service group i1 the Rev. Roger Betsworth of the Community Methodist Church: He will be assisted in his duties by Capt: Earl Robitaille, detec~ live commander of the Huntington Beach Police Department, who will be lhe unit's wel fare chairman. Other mei'ribers 'of the loCal Chapter in· elude Fred Fried ow, of the Southern California First National Bank, Jay Garcia and Esther Luz of 11untington Beach 11igh Schoo!, Lois Dellota of Golden West Col!cgc , Alice Medina of the Community Center, Lorene Pehna\I of the Assistance League and Dr. C. O. Gruber, a local dentist. Among the services to be provided by the local unit are emergency disaster relief, homes and hospitals for unwed mothers, swnmer camps, aid for parolees, Boys' Clubs, family coonseling and a missing persons bureau. • DAILY ,.ILDT Sllff>,....._. P oste1• Girl Huntington Be a c h's Denise Barrett, 11, is runnerup in countywide f i r e p revention poster contest sponsored by Or- ange County Fire Chiefs Asso- ciation. Denise, a St. Bonaven- ture School student, lives at 6291 Bellinger Drive. From Page 1 DANTE ... uncooperative in their attempted murder investigation. A warrant was issued for Dante's ar· rest, which came June 3, 1968, after his. involvement in the allegetl boat caper was probed by investigators. Dealer Ron Snyder said Wednesday. that the seven boats might well have disappeared if it wasn't for a suspicious· truck driver who questioned a $100 bonUJ for loading in the middle of the night. 'It .. "It just didn't set right and he refustd to load them ll)), lnlt called us instead and we called police." Snyder explained, saying Dante was found at the scen~11 • supervising the boat transfer. · ' He said the hypnotist had broken a chain lock to enter th e Santa Ana yai;d and claimed to be owner of the boats when lawmen arrived. This claim, Snyder said, was based 4jl,n his pa yment with a $17,450 check that bad bounced, although he had pledged to make it up in cash on what would have . been the morning after the boats wer~ hauled away. Once the unregistered boats were across the Nevada line en route to Lu Vegas, Snyder said, they would at unrecoverable. • unrecoverable. Dante claimed \Vednesday that the document in question was a promissory note and that he thought the whole caA had been cleared u·p after his court aiJ! pearance date of July 11, 1968 was cancelled. Another warrant was issued shortly threafter, bul Dante wasi not arrested becau se, according to Santa Ana Police Sgt. Kent Reesor, lawmen simply didf'!i'1 know where he was. He told sheriff's deputies when being booked at the West Hollywood station tha~ he held a doctoral degree froTn' Singapore University in psychology. Peter Lim, public relations director for s:ngapore University, today denied the statement, pointing out that no s u c h degree is available at that institution. It's on th~ Superior Court calendar as Beach City Dodge vs. Beach City Cadillac but it's been known for some time In Huntington Beach as lhe battle of Beach Boulevard. Revving up their motors are the operators of lhe Dodge outlet at 1"55 Beach Blvd. in a complaint that charge! Cadillac dealer Richard T l m o th y Workman with using a business name that could be confusing to car buyers. JI. J. (Jarrett 'd 14th SEMl·ANNUAL Workman, they state, first used the Bet'drCUy CadUlac-title at~ his J-7281 Beach Blvd. location Ia.st May 25. 1be Dodge crowd began to roll as long ago as May 1, 1966 under the firm name staled on tbe petition. Beach City Dodge asks for a court order barring Beach City Cadillac from using a business Identification that could mislead potential customers. Huntington Y Plans Family Fun Night The public ls Invited to the lllmUncton Beaih YMCA'a Family Fun Night, from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday al the city swlmmln& poo~ 171h and Palm Streets. Evenla Include swimming, hlWonls, basketball and light ro!mhmenls. Cost ts &o cents: ror adults and 25 cents for chlldren, or 40 cents for adult Y-membcrs and 20 ·ceo\I for young Y·memben. Two Flee E. Germany ~BERLIN (IJPI) -Two YOWi( Eall Germans escaped over the Berlin Wall early today in a ha.II of Eeat Otnnan sub- machine 1\111 fir<, w..i BerDn police reporltd. I "• fURNlTURE CLEARANCE ST~ARTS TODAY H.J.GAl\l\EfT fURNll1JRE . . . ,. •. _I ... . 0,...-n...&Ma.-. I - 22 I I HARIOR IL VO. COSTA MESA, CALlf," "'44-4275 6'46.(ll76 I I ~ -----·~---.-.·-~-...-.... --~~-----------------------..,.-.,..---.~,...,.-.,..,.-=--.-=;ro,--:---.~~ ... ..,....-,--:-.-·~r-- .,._.l'-"_.,~11!;'7~~-;;;::;;;;:;z::;::::;:c:--;;; I I • . 1 ~ ' .. ., 'I •I ·; I TH UR I O A1 JUNE lt ' ~ l:00 11 lllt ... .... (C) (60) """ ' Dunphy. :1 -! D €!;) H1ntltf-lrilltley (C) (30) 1 0 stm AlttD Sllow (i) (90) ~ M11dows. G1bl Otlt, Jorct JIJnnQ,n Ind· Tidd)' NteJey a:uHL . " 0 Sii O'Clod. Movit: (C) ...,. SWtf of SilnJotd Fornt" (1dven- ture) '6l-Rich1nf GretM, ht« Ct!sllln1. 0 I "1 (t) (60) m I lowt LllCJ (60) PEANUTS ;,. m-.·C1;> <"> f;,.'@(JJ .......... CC) C'<ll l :DOfJ9 (i) CIS --(C) "1111 Mllllots'" (dramai) ·az- lliehlrd Todd. Anne Aubl'I)'. Todd '""~~ ltlft ts tilt lnlle dtflnffr fl In Ir •f J m Wlll"s Ntw? (30) ·ian111111 ot the Dfff." 8emie Sr•u. "Tilt.Qui MIR," lbows two )'OUllplm how r !ht deaf communicate. . ' ·• @Et Un Ctlof' Pn &ti PW (30) m ""' .... (t) <60> : l!O:lO 0 '"" ·-(t) (60) and onl• In • South Afrlcln l1t111> tltl' town. {R) . e @mmT>• • r .. -(C) (6i))~C.wtt, Tttry·Thomu, Tilt Fiftll Di111111slon, Stndlt Shew, Jullt Driall, 1nd Thi llrifl• ...., Trinity tuest. cm El .... &11 1.oct c60) ' m Vor•I• .. tM Ion.. •f .. 1:30 II @ Ci) m Dn(Mt (C) (30) St1 (C) (601 ''fl1reo1JU:-l>li:.~I." i;1nftf, • Ger· ' • f min Shtpherd, tS emplOJed by the ' ·; @ .@ thmtlrftrinkltf (t) (30) Los Allples PGllct Dtptrtmtnt to . .. fDFtn.t (C), (30) ''C,n1d1." A UllCOVtr blddtn m1riju1111, Ind ffi. cOrn'posite ~My of C.nadl from day ind G1n11011 USfl her In thtlr coast lo COlst with 1 .loo~ 11 peo-ti .. fonltllt. (R) pie and Industry. 0 Jhn (C) (30) a .CJJ m "'"'"ci c30l m 12 ....... ""' <60> m Motlcltrt 34 (C) (60) • :GD ID CIS Emln1 New1 (C) , t-\VIJtu Crenkitf. 0 wtuit'i MJ ll11t! (C) (30) mr....,cc> (30l 10:00 n 9 @m D1111 1111rt11 <C> 1 (30) (60) 61111 l.Grlotlria1d•, Phil Silwrs, Norm Crosbr ind Milburn Stolll tulSl (II) 19@ Hlitl t ld Wiid (C) (30) m Pllrlna .. c111t11 (30) "Strles in Sona Accompaniment." Frederick Noad is joined by sin1er IHI John. SOii in 1 proar1m dtsia:n!ld tD dem· onstr1!1 vtriotJs st)'l1s In Xllll IC· comp1nimenl ~ Cil MtH1l1's HIYJ (30) (B Drt1111 Ho111e (CJ (30) om-(t) c60l fJ--(t) (IO) m .. • (t) <60! @m •-(t) (lO) "Wbllt I fluo l1ib Rle&." ll!l"""" ... (30) K~ M111to-tt11I hosts. m 1i11rt1111 (30) m ._. " r .. ,., ce> C30l 7:30 IJ ®I@ Animal World (C) (3D) 10:30 OJ ... (C) (30) 9gi JohnL The killer coua:1r prowls tllt hi1h @11) fnbn (C) (30) ''Vme:r:u. counl!J of western America, and ltn Aif'tlnl11r1.'.' Animal World c1meras lol!ow this @)A, lnipt 11 ... ..... (C) f!ffmidtble , hunt~ durln1 his tn-(30) Artflur Knlrht. wlittr arid mo. counters ~1th othH creeturts com-tlon pictulW critic, lllkl wittl c ..... mon to his ru11td 'll'llrld, lricludlnt writ« Sftrtln1 Slllil)llW about his be1rs. bad1ers. dttr, fo111 ind work Oii '.'Cher1J," Ult Acld1111y. beaveri. Aw1rd winner allrrln&'Cllff Robtrt- 0 @ Cil m D1nlel IOOl!t (C) son ind Cl1!r1 Bloom. Hlf M1rilft. (60) ''A la1l'i1!1 of Pr1ter Bease· thal host.I thl procnm, whlcll will ly," An old storyteller (Bul1 Ives) show dips ffOl'I ''Clllrf1." uses his flctitloWI lrltlld,. 1 bur CEI , ...... eon. (SO) tilled Mr. Dob, to help • crippled ~ (Rort SteYens) lnrn ltlll·rell· aJ TwlftiM Z.. (30) tnce. ly!1 Seit&• ind Jeff Donnllll i' •ll;o ~ ,<R) llt'AS8Ult ..,_ lxln·CC).. ... -0 "" """' .(30) ' -· . • .. ' • , ' ., ~ • ' >' ' . ' • ' , ,, > ' • f • • < f. • < ' • \?o ®mm111t """•a (t) u:oofJOfJll!lmm-~ ~r~~~11~riJ: ~~ 1::: e Alhd Hlldact lint form 1 sin&inr bio for 1 bent-• B Morit: "'Tiii Min .w .. W .... flt •how, (I!) Aii Tiit" (f1nt1q) '6l_,1llr"fJIU. '"'· n MD11ctn $ Mow11: "'ltllllbMnl"I TM Ht11tflll(IOlll" thomM") '60 -. Geor11 Slnders, P>rinne Calvtl m ,HUMP,HREY BOGART m ,rn..,; ... ...,._ (t) ClO) , *film Festlval 11 pm/KTTY ~ rerr; .._. <60) m ..... ,..., 1eprt n. Jltftnl: fDlllck l'mpedtve <Cl (30) "erima Sctioor: (1931), co-atarrl,. IE Dutll dt P.lllon• (30) The Ottd End Kldl. m Merrie: "Mlnlldl'" <'•ntlsJ'I .,, t:OO 119 ([)Thi Prisoner (C) (60} -Glynis Johns, M1r11r1t Ruther· • l'fiii Prisoner defeats th• h1t11mbent ford. ~ (Erk Portm1n) for tlection IS Num· (ft! (ll ~Ci) 8 (]) ... (C) \ ber Z In the Village, 1 powerful . ~~~ ;n l~~!s~~s;~si~1!u~~JP•~ 11~ IJ ~: "f-. ~ (drt- th1 bid bJ Th• Prisoner, who vainly me) ,43-Roblrt i111n. 6111(11' ROI' tries to uttpt OllCI 111in befOIW ., .. ' winnln1 tht lffminJly detnOCtltlc a 9 @m '"""" ... (C) eletl ion. (R) O Zane Grer (30) o 117! m m "" '" (t) c30l ''Oec1sion8eftlre Dawn." Ann Marlt's dtllgtlt 11 receivin1 1 resldu11 chtcll ...... ., ..... '"*"' (mys. tery) '57--th1rle1 Coburn, Btrbtr• Bates. Jotin Mil!" fJ illlillaJ..., _ (t) lu~s to conrusi~n 11 she receives lZ·30 m 77 SuriMt Strip 1dv1ce lrom 111 s.des 11 to how abt ' -should spend il (I!) m Actlo1 TIIMtn: "Sh•dow of I m Haul (C) (30) Wom1n." fii) NET Pl1)'boost (2 hr) 't1 M• I ·• -· · ma Playwri1hts." Three plays bJ z ... 5 -Movit: ~ltik.~ IM h111111f111 young p!aywr!ihts from the LI Mona:" llci:f1) 60-.lohn Mtrf. Mam1 experimental st•re arvup In v1!1, Did! SuUiv1n. New · York. "P1vane" by Jun· Claude van It.Ille, "FourtHn Hun- dred Thousand" by Sam Shep1rd, .... and "The Recluse" by Paul FoM. el falicllno! (C) (30) UOQIDml!l lo...:.. (t) (60) "Why thltuudlJ AJmnoon Bridp Club Met on Thursday.N lronlidt's Aunt Victori• (.Jtsale Ro,tt Llndls) insist.I that one If htr friends h11 been murdtnd, 11lhouli! W Mi no evidence to support her claim. Arthur O'Connell 1lso auests. {flt FRIDA Y -.. 1:00 B Nowit F111r: "Swofd Without 1 Country." e C..••"r lldlltln .... (C) fJ-(t) 1:.JO m All-lllltM SW. °'Thi Min In the Whitt Sult," "Mtr1udm at Sff," Incl ''l>emon Blrtlw of fltlt stretl" i :1, Complete Printing Service . ::..Top Quality -Fast Service .. ' • .w • . . 2211 ·wnt llolbot Blvd. . -. ·-N...,.., ... ,h l'ERKINS I C"~ GIVE ME A VESCRIP'TlON! "'' ' l'lL PUT OUT A ALL-FIND MY l'OIN15 illJL.l.ETIN I HORSIE, • CHll'F! Mun AND JEFF -O~E' liUMAN BODY IS COMPC!Et> O'F WAn:~ lRON, SULP+IUR.- GORDO MISS PEACH SULJ>MUR? -liOWMUCll SUl..l'llUR. IS ~El<Etl A PERSON? • • 6REAT SCOTT} ... 1AA1'5 NOT MJCH 1V GO ON ! CE1'TA!NLV NOT! . /1' WAS &:We 6AO r SOIL. liy Cliarles M. Schull By John Miles By Ferd Johnson :INS l!Vll')I A FEW "T!lOU<OHTS Otl THI' snWARPESSl!S' ,.----....!:u:!:N~IFoRf,\s r wHYSOME GIRLS MAKE eE'TTER MATCHES THAN Oll!ERS! \ By Al Smith JES' A JOKE! I li07' THE crirs:· DA!t.Y~ TOM AND A FIFTH-Host Tom Jones shown with member of the fifth Dimension, part of a group which will entertain tonight on Channel 7 at 9' p.m. The whole group Will perform 11Aquarius -Let the Sun Shine In," from "Hair." The single record of this number is the bigges~ .seller currently. TELEVISION VIEWS CBS to View America No,v By. RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI)' -The late qovelist Thomas Wolle once noted : "America bas never really yet, in any profound and essential way, been explored -it has rather been surveyed. "The first problem of the people who settled in this immense and spatial continent was not to explore it but to 'lay it out' -to find the shortest distance between two points, to get the best and easiest grade across the continental divide ... we have hunted always for the short cut, the practi· cable way ... well, this is surveyordom -it is not exploring. 11 WITHOUT oversimplifying too much, it may be fair to say that one reason for the scrcalled ~en­ eration gap is that the new generation is almost \Vholly concerned with exploring the nature of America -often introspectively -rather than sur· veying it, because all of the surveying has been done. Television, which caters primarily lo the older generation, has be~un to explore more and more in the sense that Wolfe meant, but too many pro- gral;Tls are still essentially .surveys. That is why a broadcast sµch as t:he one announced Wednesday by CBS~ 11A Day in the Life of the United States'' -is of more than toutine interest. The program, which will be seen on CBS-TV next season, will record, for current and future generations, "What America was like on the his- toric day when Americans landed on the moon and brought the world into a new age." Jn short, the surveying in space -the new frontier -will be matched by an exoloration of the land that has already been tamed on earth. PLANS C,l\LL for the program to be filmed on .July 20, the day that the first men are scheduled to land on the moon, and the network says repo.1 ers will be at work recording what is happeni ••trom the first light of sunrise on tHe coast of Ma· to the last ray of sunset on the island of Ka ~ Hawaii ." If the execution is as good as the ' concept, It should be quite a broadcast. And the network is surely preparing for it in the right fr3.me of miJJd. For example, Charles Kuralt, who has proven his superior style with a human touch in his •ion, the Road" segments for the CBS evening news, will; be the chief reporter. And the network announcem~t says the program will attempt to capture. for t}\e future, "who we really are. what we were really like -those people who put men on the moon." MORE SPECIFICALLY, the announcement ob- serves : "While man is breaking the bond that has chained him to earth since the beginnin,I! of exist- ence. it will be a summer's day in America, a day packed with the things that have to be done,, in which kids have to be fed and diapers changed , when automobiles stall and bread is baked and money is earned and life is saved in a hospital emergency ward." · The network, in short, will try to record as much as possible "what concerns us and what doesn't,: what moves us , and what we ignore." It js. in other words, the kind of program that television was made for: It is ambitious. perhaps even a bit presumptuous in its attempt-but it is~ good to say, an attempt after alt, a risk to do something signifi- cant and perhaps even great. And if you risk noth.l. ing, then nothing is w!Jat you'll get . Dennis the Menace ' -- 0 -.. -'/"O'• . •-i!t"""" . - ---..... ---. -.. -. .... ~ DAIL V. fllOT H TlwnclU, JUM 19.196t LllGAI. NOl'ICZ LEGAL NOTICE ~NOTICE LEGAL ' NOTICE ()VER . THE COUNTER ·A· • • 1 r -"'"""'--"--' -- . ' ,_ Thursday's Oosing Prices-Con1p]efe Thutsd.ly, Juno 19, 1969 H New York Stock Exchan ge Lis t ..... ,. .. 11191·1 Mlt11 I.•• CIM• Cll• American S.ltf Nt1 ""' I Mit h Lt 'li (IHI (Ill Stock l Exchange . DAILY PILOT J ~ l~ist I I ' I I I ii lf DAJLV rlLOT "'"""'· ..... 19, 1969 Estancia H igh School Honors ' llecopltlon WU I I • e n lltUdentl who received award1 .ad ocboilnblpo for adlooJ IC• UYltlol at Estancia High 8cbool'1 annual awards bao- flllel. Sludenla and the booon they reeeJved : ' M._. SWarhig Lodge E. I.' Moore a"ardl -seniors, Gtrl FUet and 0 r e I ~ar: Junlon, Carol Cap. peUo and MIR Hays ; sophomores, Debbie Riley and Doul Weller: rreshmen, eo.. nle Holm and Sig Fl4ytie. Yearbook staff certificate of merit -Jo. Alln Taylor. !Jons Club scholarship - PnlrBrlue· Girls Leane Girl of the Year -Ue ~ween RotemU')' Subo and Sue Mantyema . Glrla League Scboiarahip - 8-mary Subo. Veterans of F,oreign Wan speech contest winners - Mike Sbwill and D a v e FUimore. Music awards -vocal, LEARN TO SWIM AT YOUR ORANGE COAST YMCA 642-9990 Tanya Foandt; m0&t improved vocal, Cadly W r I 1 h t ; instrumental, Dave Mullooe1 and Goy Fabre. BeUy Crocker Homemaker of the Year -Geri FOet. PTA scholarships -CharUe Hoyt and Judy Alch. Bausch and Lomb honorary science award -Charlie Hoyt. Foreign language certificates -German, Judy Ascb; SpanJsh, S 11 e Jun· danlan; French, CbarUe Hoyt ; linguistics, Lynne Jones. Perrect attendance -Paul Brlsso. Forensic award3 -Klm Kemea, Roberta P'ate, Dave' FlBmtre,M•eSbwta,Cartl CappeU., Jeff J..._, ~1 A•llta, Tim Ctutut and aw.- Speaker ol the Year -Dafe FllllDon .. 0Gold E · -...Uon U ... Frtneb. Sloe M.,.,...., -. ett RWdeU and Retemary Siabo; junion Janet AlltMQy, Carol Cappello, Georilana Dwl&bt, Andrea Fahy, Sudy Genii, Sue Janclaalan, Be&b Newmu, Mark SaaDden and Rayie.. Cowley. Service leadership award - Rosemary S11bo. BUY 2 • • • GET 1 FREE! THAT 'S RIGHT! Azaleas, Shade Trees Cam.Was, Avocadas, Citrus GIANT SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE BUY ANY TWO OUR NURSERY co~F TAINER PLANTS • GAL··· 5 GAL -I 15 GA[ ANO GET THE 3rd ONE FREE! SPEC1'ACVL AR SAVINGS! Vines. Junipers, Palms, Roses, Tree Roses, Fems See Our Super Special Bargain Block! Borrow the Neighbor's Truck-Iring Him with You! limited to Stock on Hand Buy 2-Get 1 FREE NATURE INA SACK MAKE THE BACKYARD PRODUCE PEACHES-APRICOTS-FIGS-APpLES REDWOOD HANGING BASKETS FREE PALM TREES • r • ' •'")\ PLANT IT WELL- TAKE CARE OF IT WATCH IT GROW! le1t Redwood • Strong metal !,e nds . Perf1ct for Ferns, Begonias, Fuxhies, etc, DECORATIVE BARK All 9r1dst e l1r91 e m•dium, tm1ll, Sr11tly 1nha"c11 th1 b11uty of the 91rd1". LAR laE 3 C~~T. 1 aa Feeds blade lawns with nature's rich balance of ferti lizers and minerals. Makes dichandra 50 l!;s , FEEDS a healthy, 2,SOO sq. ft. lush carpet 95 of green. Destroys 5 • soil pests, too. BANDINI IS THE WORD FOR FERTILIZER. FLOWER SHOP SPECIAL LONG STEMMED BEDDING PLANT SPECIAL lalANT FLOWERINla ZINNIAS ~~· 3 DOI . 119 ROSE5149 DOZ. HOURS' MON. THRU S'AT. 9 A.M, TO 6 P.M .. SUNDAYS 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M. "9uality and S.rYlc1 Since lt46" ' 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA CALL 546-5525 ' -~------·---------------------- Soroptlmbt ICholarablp - NtDey Wmttr. Bank of America achieve- ment awards -sclence and malb;'Clwlle Hoyt; fine aria, Jo Ana Taylor; liberal arts, Jud7 Aldi; vocallonal arts, Jeaa McDoaald; trades and industrial arts, Mite Powell; hustness, Norralt Andersen; Engli$h, Noey Werner; homemaking; Gerl F 11 e t ; matbemati~, &a B a x t e r ; social studies, lJnda Freocll; laboratory ecience, Bob Illy· molMI; music, Taay1 FoaDCb; arts, Patti Talbot; drama, Dave Plpw1, and foreign language, Jeaue Caffrey. Newport·Balboa Savings and Loan ac;bievements awards lo business -outstanding senior, Jua McDonald; senior bodk4 keeping, L I n d. a MercllaU; senior , MCretarial, D 'eb b I e Robertli senior clerical , MarilJ11 Kimer, junior book· keeping, Dlue Palmer~ junior 3 From Coast Gi ven P rizes Three to'p Orange Coast econoqiiCs sludeqts w e r e among 2$ prize winners in the Fifth Annual Fair Enterprise Medallion Competition. The winners, chosen for their outstanding aptitude in economics, include: Stephen C. Hoyt, Estancia H i g h School; C. Brian Wainwright, Laguna Beach High, and Ernest J; Gaughan, Marina. High. Studentl typewr!Ung, Stepbaale Quiroz: junior shorthand., D' e b r a lnke~"sophomore book- keeping, Robin Rath; sophomore typewritP1g, Anne Lee. Physical fitness awards - ADdrtu TltomptOn, JC.-aua Ftje~ SandJ C111ube, Amy ~usUa, Niu Baker, lkatber Jµbbard and JlOndA Oliver. .,Daughters of the American Re.voluUon good cltlzen award -Sue Maruyama. •ruesday Club award -Paul Brtaao. American Chemical Society award -Lany·Scbroeder. Costa Mesa Art League awards -scholarship, Jo Ann Taylor; commendation, Josie Van OUerlo. Thespian award -Dave Pigman. Student store award -KIC Weller. Hughes management award -Mike Skawln. Athlete 0£ the Year -Bob Raymond. Boys St.ate representatives -Tom Foss and Mark Den· nis. . Office service award -Nor· rah Ander1en. Art awards -district medal opaque water color, Nancy Gonya; district med a I sculpture, Gail Tyler. · California S c h o I a s t i'c Federation scholarship -Paul Briso. California Scholastic Federation gold seal life mem· hers -Judy Aseb, Paal Brtuo, Jady Edwards, Gerl FUet. IJoda Fnatb, Carol ' !1 ! l\fillar and NbCy WenerJ '1 Zonta Girl of the Yeai ~r Jo Ann Taylor. I: ,j Valedldorian -W e O d 1 Pope. I ~ I 8alutalorlao -Judy Ad.'!_ Newport.Balboa Savings1~ Loan scholarship -K I t Weller. 11 1 Callfomla Savings and Lo~ League award -~ FreBCb, ll • Honors at entrance -Jilly AJcb at 081 State Fullerton and Pacific Lutheran, but ahe will attend UC Santa Barbara. Calltornia state scholars~ps 1 -Clady Pe .... ka end JlidY, Robinson. College Aide ' Wins Post , J. P. Colyar, assistant pro- fessor rJ music at Orange Coast College, has been elect· ed to a third term as dean of the Orani!e County Chapter of the Amencan Guild of Orgaii· jsts. I The 95--member organiza· tion oC organists and choir· masters meets monthly for programs and workshops and sponsors a series oC organ r ecitals at coonty churches. other recently elected of· ficers include : Robert M. Estes, Fullerton, sub-dean; Winnie Carter, Costa MesB:, secretary; Katherine Deari. Newport. Beach, treasurer; Donavan Lenning, 0 r a n g e, awtitar, and Marina Col.bum. 'l'u3lln, reg;,trar. MagnCIV"a • ••. brings you both the look s1•. and sound of excellence, only . '· ' Stereo Phonograph Syat em- precjsion Automatic Player/Amp&,. .;i; fier (with d ust cove~) provides · ~ greater undistoned mu sic power f+ output banishes discernible record and Diamond Stylus wear. Now- your records can last • lifetime I -.... Four extended-range.speakers-tWo in each matching enclosure. Com-J.,. plete Audio Control functions plus many more extra-value features. Model 2501 is just one of several beautifully encased Magnavox stereo systems wJth lasting '60ltd- stata reliability. No costly installa--.1' tion; just connect to each other &OCIJ play. So Compect, any w ould b9 Ideal for use on tables, shelvos, « book--. Why not foll your home -beautiful'nuic 1 KERM RIMA MAGNAVOX Factory Di rect Dealer 2666 H1rbor Blvd., Costa Mesi, Calif. 6855 Weslminsler Westminster.Calif. 12116 So. Brookhu rsl Garden Grove, Calif. 12891 Chapm1n Garden Grove, Calif. IXPllT FACTORY SIRYICf 546-1 691 894-2350 530-4360 636-1250' ' I I rn I Fou.niain Valley ' '$t:. 62, NO. ·1~. 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 1969 TEN CENTS Clifford Supported Harriman, Dem Leaders Back Pullout WASHINGTON (UP I) -W. Averell Harriman and two top senate Democratic leaders endorsed today former Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford's proposal for withdrawal of 100,000 U.S. combat troops from Vietnam this year, and lhe remainder in 1970. Harriman, chief U.S. negotiator at the Paris peace talks In the Johnson ad· ministration, said that he recommended last wlnter'an immediate pullout of 50,000 American troops and an end to search- and~estroy miss ions. These steps, Harriman said in an in· lerview, might have induced the Com· munists lo take a reciprocal troop reduc- Attor11ey Overruled Next Valley Move On Recall Waited By TERRY COVILLE ·Of !ht O.llW Piiot Sllff City officials in Fountain Valley. were still waiting for word today from City ~t· torney F.<twi.n Martin on what to do with three recall.petitions submitted June 2 by recall leader Eugene Van Dask. Tuesday night recall supporters served the city wi.th a writ of mandate from Superior Court ordering City Clerk Mary Cole to begin validating the peUtions. Martin had originally ruled the recall petitions invalid because of what be call· ed "improper procedures" and had ordered Mrs. Cole not to validate the signatures. Mayor Robert Schwerdtfeger, Vice Mayor Donald 1'"'regeau and Councilman JMePh Courreges are the subjects of the Newport Driver Killed in CraJl&' A Newport Beach man. possibly a!leep at the wheel, was killed early this mom· ing when his car slammed into a power 1M9 County Traffic! 1968 95 Death Toll 97 pole on Brookhurst Street, south of Meredith Drive in Huntington Beach. Police said John WUllam Myers, 52, of m Prospect Drive, Newport, was headed south on Brookhurst Street when for some unknown reason he swerved across the road and slammed head-on into a Southern California Edison Company power pole. Orange County Coroner's ofiice said ~1yers died of chest and head injuries. Some 1,200-volt power lines were broken. There \\'ere no witnesses to the t\Ccident. * * * Beach Man Hurt In Auto Crash A Huntington Beach man was severely Injured early today when his car drifted off a dangerous curve at the Costa Mesa west city limit and splintered a power pole. Elroy A. Grawe, 29, of 19161 Delaware St.. was listed in serious condition al Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital with head arid chest injuries following the 3:4:> a.m. crash. , Police said he was driving east on Vic· tOria Street entering Costa Mesa when his car went out of control 40 feet past Valley Road and smashed into the Southern California Edison Co. fixture. ;Bare Beachgoer ;Held for Drugs petitions and objects of a concerted effort by a number of residents to oust them Crom office, Tuesday night, Martin indicated he might defy the court order and appear before Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens Jilly 2 to show cause why he does not believe the petitions valid. Martin has the option of going to court ii he does not feel it proper to validate the petitions. Mrs. Cole told Martin that if she were to validate the signatures, the petitions would be sent to the county clerk's of· fice at a cost of sliilitly more than '2 per holll' to the city. she estimated·the total cost at about $160 for the work, which shl! told the council would be too difficult fOf the limited city staff and must be sent out. Martin said Tuesday night that rather than expend city funds he probllbly would stand by bit original ded!lon until the matter was heard in couri JuJl).. _ He originally ruled that "improper pr~ cedures" were followed in circulating the t\1!11,U.1 Gilt ('l!'ll;IOCb Of the three separate reta.11 ~. More than 3,000 signatures are on each petition. The point of contention Is whethe r a newspaper legal notice -photostatically copied by recall backers -was large enough for petition signers to fairly read. Martin said no, but attorneys Paul Augustine, Jr., and Robert Sassone, at· torneys for Van Dask, claim legal precedence .shol's the size of type used on the reprinted answers to recall charges is correct and acceptable. Mrs. Co le bas requested wriUen In· structiom from Martin be/ore any action is taken. She said this morning she ex· pected to hear from him before noon. at which time a decision would probably be made. Under elections code rules the petitions must be validated by July 2 (one month after they were submitted) unless the ci· ty can prove in court they are not valid petitions. Trailer Park Request Denied A proposed mobile home park was turned down Wednesday night by the Fountain Valley Planning Commission because developers couldn't prove their land useable only for trailers. Jim Kanno, speaking for the proposed trailer park north of Ellis Avenue and west of Bushard Street, told planners tha t a se rious peal condition made It difficult to build anything on the property. He was requesting a use variance to build the mobile homes. Plariners, however, were informed that the same amount of fill dirt would be re· quired to build the trailer park as to build a single famlly-resii:feflce-development, thereby negating the need for a special use. Nearby residents had strongly opposed the trailer park two weeks ago when planners had delayed a deciaion on tbe request. Uon step and lo begin serious discussion or peace proposals. Clifford's proposal also won support from Senat'e Democratic Le2der P.fike '-1ansfie\d and senate Dema:cratic Whip Edward M. Kennedy. Both said they hoped President Nixon would give serious consideration to the Clifford plan as outlined in an article in the magazine foreign affairs. Nixon is expected to be questioned on Clifford's proposal at a White House news conference today at 4 p.m. PDT. Although Harriman did not say so, other officials have reported that his point of view was rejected last winter by President Lyndon B. Johnson, backed up by Secretary of State Dean Rusk and presidential adviser Walt W. Rostow. Asked whether he thought Jt was too late now to achieve this aim of large withdrawals of U.S. force.a:, Harriman replied "I just don 't know." He said that while he felt the Com· munists would have responded favorably last January, when he repeated his recommendations to the Nixon ad· ministration, he could not be certain now because he had been out oi the discussions !or five months. Harriman did not agree specifically with Cliffo rd's timetable for withdrawal, calling for the pullout of 100,000 ground troops by the end of this year and the re· maining 100,000 to 150,000 combat forces by the end of 1970. .But he said: "I certainly hope that we will pull out 100,000 by the end of this year." Harriman indicated belief that the United States lost a golden opportunity. iJ) late 1968 when he said Hanoi pulled out about 90 percent of its combat forces in the two northern provinces of South Viet· nam. He said he felt at that lime that U .the Johlllcn ldmlniatr-l>ld e-•lb po!lcy or "keeping rnWwy P""""' !¥1 by '""'~ and destroy mlailom" and -pulled out the I0,000 trooPo he1 !ecom- m...,! ."11 Paris talU WOW41. U¥.e shM liilftl~te pro1T<n. Susan Condition Still Critical But Improving Susan Mazze's bid ror 1ife with the healthy kidney her mother gave her went into its fifteenth day today but the con· dition of the 17-year-old Orange girl re· mains critical. It seemed today. however, that there was some lifting of the gloom evldenl \Vednesday among those closest to the In- tensive care unit at the Orange County Medical Center. · "She had a fairly restful night," a spokesman commented. ''One of her doc- tors talked to me about her this morning and he said she seemed quite alert and cheerful throughout thelr abort con· versaUon." Doctors stress that the ldt kidney they grafted Into Susan from her mother, Mrs. Florence Mane, 42, is functioning perfectly. The high school girl's condition stems, they say, from post operative com plicatiom that are receiving round the clock attention. Mn. Mane herself ls reported as being in "excellent condition." She was sent home after doctors said she had made an "uncompli cated recovery" from the ma· jor transplant surgery, the first <" !~ kind in Orange County, Stock Markets ~NJ;:w YORK lAP) -The !lock market-- fjjffible(l lower today, with brokers reporting investor concern over tigbt money continuing to weigh lt down. {Ste quotations, Pages 1~15). Trading slowed near the clost. The Dow Jones industrial average 1t 1:30 p.m. was off 5, 78 at 881.33. Ford thinks he had a better idea but il}eriff's deputies think it was just bare defiance or the law. FBI Investigating • DAILY f>ILOT ~""' .,., T.,., CM'llle PRINCESS MOVES MEMBER OF HER ADOPTED FAMILY TO MORE COMFORTABLE SURROUNDINGS For Trio of Mothtrle11 Huntington Beech 1Citten1, Any Port in 1 Storm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Key Witnesses Return to Stand In Murder Trial Dog Has Kittens 'Princess ' Adopts Feline Orphans Key prosecution witnesses w e r e brought back to the stand today for further questioning as the murder trial of Henry Lopez Si~nez moved into what are belleved. to be its"final hours. Much of the revived testimony ctnter:ed on the earlier evidence providtd by Sgt; Robert ~ of the Huntlngton Beach Pollot~·'-"\• If ~,· ~,µ., ~ Jo!l•X rape a led l\)'der. the ;ro;;--ques11on1ng • of def inst ~ttm.ey Lloyd Nocker whit he told Judge ffalfard Cameron In the early stages of the trial -that the blood ltained fingerprints found on the wheel of a stolen car were those of Slanei. They got there, tbe prosecution claims, when Sianez, 25, of 312 Clay St., returned to the auto last Jan. 12 after killing Mrs. Hester Markee. Princess Gretchen Neubauer ls a mother. "And so what else ls new ?" Princess Gretchen Neubauer is a female dog and her cltildren are three lit· tie puff·tiall -kittens. The hilppy famll)' Is c u r r e n t 1 y quartered at 20072 Rarbor Isl_e Lane, Huntin~n Beach, under the care of Mr. ~~~~) II jloi ' oHM lldi-.~ ll>ree )'UUl!J iil!'mi ~ broogtu into the world b1 1 cat OWM:id""by Mr&. Dellea'1 iister·Jn-l1w, Mn:. l>481el Bigelow, who moved to Masiacbu3etts SalUrday taking the mother, but not the kittens, with her. "First we went to the animal shelter," says Mr!. Dellea, "hoping they would have a cat to nurse the week-old kittens, but they didn't." "Then we told my slsler·in-law we had a stray cat, wbo'd just had kittena and could probably nurse the litUe ones." "Sattirday m~ht we left the kitlen1 with our stray cat, ' continues Mrs. Dellea, "when we rtturned Princess Gretchen was life.re with the kiltens nursina. We (irsl thought lhe dog might hurl llie kit- tens, but she just wanted to nurie Uaem.'' , ~ is two ytari olil and bu never i.,. _,.llbe wuJn falie prqnencjr Ind IL'4pabJe of nursing when ltie k.ltt~ were brought to the Dellea home. Now she won't let them out of her sight, jJJd the vcterfnarian says she can nurse them another three weeks. And that's how a registered mWature dachshund hu pups-er kittens, or are they puppins? And It is argued that Sianez plunged his knife at least rune limes into tht SS.year· old widow after she had pur11.1ed the car allegedly atoJen by Sianez and Edward Roy Hargrave, 18, of 1739 Marken Lane, Huntington Beach. Testirnon); has indicated that., Sianez panicked when he realized that the determined woman was In pursuit and wanted to question him about an earlier collision between the two cars. Hargrave has stated that he sat in the 1tolen car as a horrified spectator while Sianez plung· cd his weapon into the woman and left her bleeding body in the gutter. Dante Accuses. Mesa Pair; They Say Hypnotist Phoily; Hargrave has sat quietly through every minute of the Sianez trial thus iar. He must go on triaJ himself July 14 to face charges of grand theft auto, scaled down from the murder count earlier recorded against him. Conviction on tbe first degree murder count could technically mean death In the gas chamber for Sianez. His earlier attempts for a guilty plea to les!er charges and his moves to establish insanity bave all been rejected. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 1119 Delty P"91 St•ll Hollywood hypnotist Ronald Dante charged Wednesday that an Orange County boatbuilder Is involved in his at· tempted murder and felony theft arrest, but the accused today is spellbound only by the Intriguing tale. The seventh husband of actress Lana TUrner narrowly escaped death Tuesday when a bushwhacker wearing a rakish Australian prairie hat pumped five pistol shots into hLs car as he drove into an underground garage. "I have a very good Idea who he was," said the 49-year-old .jet set entertainer, who affects the title Dr. Dante, con· tinuing to tell of a phone warning he allegedly received Monday. Beach Prizes, He •aid the vongeful caller claimed lo be the owner of a now-defunct S~ta Ana firm which manufactured watercraft for Pet Parade Set Marlin Boal Co .. whose outlet is Mesa 1 Boal Center, 1595 Newport Blvd., Costa Got a prize-winning cat or dog at Mesa. home? There is one way to find out. Santa Ana police who heard r~dio Enter It In the Huntington Beach Pet reports of -~ mu:der attempt recogruzed Parad~ fr1dy. · Dante's name a~ tipped off Holl)':"'~ The patade will be held ·at each ·of-the-detecUvea. .wbo_arresled tho h~oti!t m city'• 21 playgrounds throughout the day, ~nection with a local 196B b0at the!t ProspecUve entrants are advJaed to con-case. tact their local playgrounds for parad~ The stage performer and sel£-declared times and instructions. psychology profespor said his mysterY Ribbons will be awarded In several caller warned Of great bodily harm· and· ~tegorleJ. All anim&b: must be on a poalble disgrace In the eyes of hii ta- ieash or in a cage. year.-old·bride if~ Ip.lied to cooperate.• "Or I'll make sure yoq .never wallt again," Dante quoted ~ maD u i~lng, alter a dernond lor Pllt!l<~l or l.t.®0. In blackmail money. · · ', •• 1 Wednesday when notified by newsmen of Dante's accusaUons about his Tuesdly assailant. Snyder and h!g father Paul are prln· cipals in the Costa Mesa company with which Dante was dealing more ttian a year ago, while appearing at the Villa Marina nightclub ln Newport Beach. "He's a phoney son-of-a.gun," sald Snyder, "I've oever met lhe man before, nor has my lather -he dealt wlth 1 sales representative." Snyder chuckled when told. the contents o( Dante's alleged telephone conversaUon Monday. "I wish I'd gotten the five G'ai'' be said, stressing he was joking. "I read Wednesday where he said be had no idea who might want to kill him - or why -unleS! it was because someone was jealou.s or the woman b~ married,'1 Snyder continued. "And then he comes up with a story like this." "Actually, it's kind of exciting," he concluded. Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deparl- menl detectives also said Wednesday that Dante's~ ~egations h~d no basts for -beliC:r,acli:llng that he ha'd been-generally (See DANTE, Page II Oru11e ' 'I Weadler Tbey picked up Ford lngalsbee Beebe n \\'ednesday as lhe completely nude Laguna Beach man sauntered along El Toro Road . Officers said he was obllvlow: to the stares of astonished passersby and qlllc unconcerned when he was waylaid by deputies. Murder Suspect Hij acker? .AH lhiee principals hi ·~.¥ll/"'1988' negoUauons for Dante'• purchfte.' of seven, 16-foot Maritn motorboall' worth $18,500 denied l<nowledge end scofftll al. • the accu1>aUO.n. . * "Ht thinki I dk1 11t'!i No, l did not call Dr. O.nlo/' declar1<1 Donald W. Albright, Ot -.Anaheltn, • Wbble ,.firm. Recrt1Uon ·En!e\i)ii;es Inc, bulh the' boals al 'a Slin- La Ana .Y~· 1 ~ '.'lit, f·dld IJQl'm'akoJIQ i~ ao ht5 !lie," Albright conUnued, "bU~ Y"· t;rn Are you ready (91', ao~ mm:nlng !og? Tbat's COO)lrig next but Fri· day's afternoon weltber should be sunny and seven tyish alonr the Orange CoMt. INSIDE TODAY llis stroll along the country road ended •ith his booking on suspicion of indecent uposure and being under the influence or drug•. The U-year-okl Lagunan ii in the Orange Coonly jail todoy. Fully dn~. Slayer Gets 5 to Lile LOS ANGELES <UPI) -George E. Williams. 21, convtcltd of second-degree raurdt.r "ln the 1tabbtng death or a use frtshman last Dl!c. 9, was sentenced to five 1~a.rs to life 1n prlaon Wedneedey. ' By JACK BROBACK OI 1119 Del" ... lttfl Santa Ana police said today the FBI is lnvesUgating ihe possibility that I.he man who hijacked a Trens World Airlines jeWner to Cuba Tutmy may be one of the two men IOUght in lhe murder of San- ta Ana police officer Nelson Sasscer on June 4. "They have our photos of the !U!peci• (Arihur L<que, 20 and Odis Nothonltl Grimes, 21, both or Santa Anal and "" ahowlng them to PMHDiert •nd crew or the jeutner," a Si.rita Ana lnvestla:ator •• . said. 11Wt hope to hear fl'()m them soon." In New Yori Wednesday night. the FBI reported It "" otuclYlnl snap!hola or the hijacker. . The plctum-wm taken Tutsday even- ing by 1 P,tsenger as Ult polite but "Vl:!"J d<o!perate''. hijacker left the plane In Havana. Pa....,..,. who had &one ~ the hlJacktr'1 baa wblle he wu tr. the cocip(t !la.id he also had f(it.b hl~ .f ~ of fug1Uve Bladt Panther leader 'fldridge Cleaver'• book, ''Bid ~1nthet.~ • •. The Negro, klentlOed on the p~ list u C. D a v I 11 commandeered W j &elna: 7(!1 Tuesday . aftemoon-. over Nevada on a nonstop flight £rpm o'iktant1 to New York. !J1le jltpe trrl..d il New York'a K!o.- ~ rport oll:le a.Iii. Wedlltiilay. • A third •-ct In the 1i>yl11& or officer SaM<cr; D~I Mlcbael Lyntm 22., o1 S&nla I AM; WU IJ'l'iali<!' by pal!Ci the day alter the olayiJ11 ood lndlcled-Ol<log wllll i.e.p 'an.( Grlnio1 1?1 lhe ~· ~11.llfll)il Jm • 1· •~""-' . 1.1-~ u a B iCI: P,,.,.,°" 'plea40d ~d MOlll!oY' and·• Ufil ~ WU .tel (,;, JIA!y 21, ' I • 1111\ loo~lonvard to ',..11\g;Dt. Dalli• In court.". · , · · • . MI? Tl•n•f'• '"''"nd of six,-•• Is (rte oil ,''IU,~""iau;. )endb;i.,....Jlio J>ttflrnlnar)' ~' June ts :m·Slllla ~felt,~.~~it ~·~ ~~·Stiidtr. fl-, pr 43il C"l>l!qo Drive, Coot• MW, was equaQy b\Orociuloul An t.tcrcUc in accomplil1'- ment, tht W e&tmimttr Com- mwntt11 Thtater'1 tDOJ"kshop pro- duction Qf an original drama ii reviewed todau in E11tert.a:fn. meflt, Poat 12 . C•ltf9nlll• • ..... .. ,....., .. ... .. MoltMI , .... .. ._ ... u .......... " .... ~ c;...-. ,. --.,,... ..... .. --.... lfi1""'91 ,_ • --. ..,.,...,. .... " ..... -, .. , . ·-1 .. u ·-.. ... _ " -" _ ... _ " ·-• -... .. -·-... -----"'f- J I j . . ... --. -North Viets Launch Offensive: , I • . ' .... . · ~ ·att Province ·Cqptiq,4 .. ·Assault U.S. Artillery Base \• ,., . ,.~N ~tuPJi' ~ t..b VietnJm• In SIJlotl, allied headquarters reported dynamite, ktUed two Americans Ind Tay Ninh was the site of a major bat6e IQY 01' THE YEAll Mlrln•'• Tinsley OlllL 01' THE VIAR -Morlnolollonnott -·· Tinsley, Miss Bennett To"/) Boy, Girl~ol Year . ' Mike 'fWloY and Vickie Bennett war• named Boy Ind a1r1 ol lhe Yur durln& .....i awanl c<nmonlu held b)' Marina Hlg!I Sdlool. Tinaley served u prealdoot of the Marina "-lated ·student 11o11y and as '"""' editor ol lhe 1Chool n<W1paper, the "'Volsunga'" for the paat two yun. lie iial!uotad will! lloDorl and, W!J alJo a 11\iml>Or of the Seilior C1Us Council, the•Ke1 Club, and the senior graduaUon committee. His other ertra-currk:ular IC· tivitiea have included serving as student body ·carnival chairman and candidacy ,, fo.:chrlstmas King. tMla Bennett has .strved as freshman, topimk.ft.. 'jUIJ,ior and senior clus com • ~ and bas been a member cl the Viking Oouncil duf;ng all four yean ol her att"endance at Marina. • In bfr junior year, abt wu Marina's representaUye to the Ca!Uomia Glr!J State and . was selected as the most ootitandlng junior student. During ber'""MN.or year she was chosen Valentine'• Queen of Hearts and received the Top Ten and jeweled Trident M awards for her service to the school. Viking Council at ~arina Names 1969· 70 Officers Members ol lhl 1570 Vlkinl Ceuncl1 Debbie wnuam.,n and Robert D!>ria will serve as Girl&' and Boys' League have been lnnowlced by Huntlftgtoo presidents on the Viking Council. Beach's Marina High School. Also elected tQ the council were Paul New-offtcen: are Jlm Broomfield. Larsen, senior class president. and carol pruident: Jim Hanna, ylce-presldent; La:~=~issloner. Jeanne MeKIMey, secretary;t~. ., • . U1Uor class w\11~ Shaffer, treasurer: and Greg Naro&. ~~ JOPia. j ' president and. California Auocialed student; ~· JAQ)_es .Paton .;-~r e I ass ~­ repra<ntative. h''~' ,.,..~, ' ' G T I will C'.ommlasloners who will be~ ~~;Jrl • ene ay or the eouncll na:t school year are De .erV'e ·_al. S(lphOmore e~ass president and Averyt, athletics; Cindy Dircks, campus; comm1ss1oll(!r, respe~llvely. Maiy Grau fine arts· Robert HQUJeal Freshman class officers will be elected orpnizatlo~; Robin Spicer, pep; and after the arrival of new students ln the Kathy Feehan, public relatl~ns. . fall. .. Inflation Flushed ' . ' 1isuna Drops Lid on John Hike Boost Thert'e mn one thine U:iet wiU cost a O'Sullivan fashi~ a motion to raise the . La Be eh nd other stalls to a dime. nickel, at least In guna s 1 "Do you know what you're talking lbat'.s the five-cent pay_ toilet about?" asked. Mayor Glenn Vedder, who Councilmen Wednesday night held lhe rallied the nickel force.a. "Now we gel line again.st a national infiatlonary spiral S260 a year (froin pay toilets), I don 't in the pay-for-public-comfort business. think it is enough lo worry about." · , I · t Councilman Charlton Boyd .sugge.sted Vice . Mayor Jonph 0 Su llvan, ~as Nik-0-Lok might have to change ltl name champion of public restrooms, for a time if everyone charged a dime. He said. a seemed ready to give in to the blan· bit wistfully, "I feel il would be dellghUul dishmenls of Pacific Nik-0-Lok Co. to hold the line in at least one area ." which, despite its name, urged that pub· O'Sullivan sugge~ted that perhaps Uc stall access in Laguna be hiked to a half the emtlort station locks could be a dime. nickel and the o~rs a dime for those Nik-0-Lok wrote that it had been for who had a dime but not a nlc~I. five or six years the trend in the U.S. and O'Sullivan's original ml?tlon perished Canada to change to a dime. Newport for lack of a second. Councilmen flied the Beach made the changeover suroessfully dime suggestion. aeveral years ago, they reported. A report.er asked councilmen if the After receiving assurance from the city comfort atatlons -two at Heisler Park, manager that there Is always one atall at one at Main Beach and one at the library a comfort staUon which Is frte, -would a.eeept the new free parking tt>ktns tb,al merchants will offer. The city manager thought not. DAllY PIL OT l•hrt N. W••I ........ , .... """'"""' Jee• •. c .... :r YIC• l' .. lftM -°"* MltllMt 711•••• k.nu -1110,,.11 A. M•r,hl11• ..... _lftl '"* AINrt 'W. l1t11 Willi•• •••' ..... It!. ~""""" ._. Etllwt C:lly l•llW " ............ ... J6t .... $1f••t Mallit11f >,441 .. 11 P.O .... itCI, •JMI --......... IMOI. mt #It• ..... koltve .. C....#lfM1•••kY•lfMf L4llllM hldl.i JD .. .,.., .i....wf ----- 'Yankee' Final Film Offering · The current series of the Film Forum of lhe Huntington Beach Public Library ends Friday with the 7:30 p.m . .showing of "The Voyage of the Brigantine Yanket." , Tbe movie shows the adventures o[ €apt. trv1ng Johnson, his wife Electra, and a eollege·age crew circling the globe in the two-masted vessel and recovering Ute rusty anchor of the 5CUUIOO mutiny $hip, H.M.S. Bounty. Showing of the Natlonal Geographic Society film is at 525 f.faln St. and la open to the public without charge. Valley School Board To Hear Final Report Year~nd reports and crlent.aUon pn>o grams for te1chen retumin1 ne•t fall make up the bulk of the agenda for toai&ht't Fountain Valley SChool Di>lrlct Board of Tru&tees meeUng. . The aeaslon btglm al 7:$0 p.m. ln the Curriculum Center, 1 Llghthouat Lane, Fountain Valley. troOps today Invaded the import.ant pro-that American combat deaths rose sha~ wounded 24. Ten North Vietnamese June 7-3 when North Vletna1'.1ese tr<q>s vince capital of Tat' Ninh, occupied ly last week amid conUnued heaVf fight· bodies were round inside or impaled on ·~-oceupled two hamlets tn the city several areas on its outskirts and battled ing acrou South Vietnam . the barbed wire barricades surrounding complex. a American and South Vietnamese forces The easualty report tor \bl week ended the camp. in street fighting that raged into the last Saturday listed 335 Americans killtd Street fighting was reported on the· night. Hundreds of soldiers were in· and 1,695 wounded. This compared with northern edge of Tay Ninh during the volved. 252 kJlled and 2.1~ wounded the previous daylight hourt today. other bettle1 flared Field reports said at least 50 North week. The total for the war was placed at on I.be eastern and w.esttrn ouU:klrta leu Vietnamese were killed 1n the Tay Ninh 1nore than 36,000. . than a mlle ,from the temple of the Cao fighting 5~ miles northwest of Saigon Allied forces last week killed 4,380 naJ rella:ioul sed, a faith wbich emboclies near lhe Cambodian border. But North Vietnamese .and Viet Cong, head-elemeola of Buddhlam, Tao I 1 m • spokwnen at U.S. headquarters said only quarters said. CathoUclsm and Confucianism. 18 dead were confirmed. Allied losses Near Da Nang, on the eaa.st of lhe Military spokesmen said the action in· were not immediate1y reported. South China Sea .f-00 miles north of vo.I~e;<f several hundred South Vietnamese 1be invuion was accompanied· by an Saigon, other Communist troops today m1Ut1amen reinforced by untta of the U.S. assault on a U.S. ZSth Infantry Dlvilion S1flashed Into an obtpo&l, nicknamed ~th Infantry Division. F1nt &bota were artlllery base siJ: miles northwest of Tay "Tomahawk," manned by men of the fired at 6:30 a.m. Ninh Oefendera firing 105-mm. howit:iers tOl st Airborne Division and caused heavy Tay Ninh, a city with about 150,000 into ihe North Vietnamese ranks hurled damage. civilian residents, has Jona: been a major back the assault but 14 U.S. troops were Front reports said North Vietnamese target for North Vietnamese com· wounded. At least 35 North Vietnamese command os attacking T o m a h a w k m~ers .• It si~ astride. major Com-- bodies were counted. sm prisoners were destroyed at least three 1 5 5 ·mm . mun1.st 1n!lllraUon eorr1d~r1 leadine taken. howltzers with &atchel charges of toward Sal&on from Cimbod,. Driver Training, Typing Popular Summer Courses Driver education and personal typing 1ead the list of subjecta most popular with the nearly 1,000 students enrolled in the 1U1M1er school program at four c&mpuses of Huntington Beach Union High School District. A~ 1,000 1oungster~ are learning to drive, according to District Supt. Dr. Max Forney. 1be session is six weeks long and began on JUne 16 with 200 faculty members teaching subjects ranging from pre.algebra through crafts wilh stops at speed reading, general math, chemistry, history and life science. At Marina High School there are 339 itudents enrolled in personal typing courses, 300 in pre-algebra, 130 In U.S. history, 81 in marine biology, 109 in the clothing section of home economics and 54 in foods. Pe'k'sonal typing leads the li st at Huntington Beach High School with 290 enrolled. Pre-algebra, 180 and U.S. gov- ernment, 153, follow. At Fountain Valley High School en· rolled are 386 in penonal typing, 243 In pre-algebra, 178 in U.S. government and 145 in social psychology. • Pulls Gun on Guards Crowd Disarms Gunman At Mesa's Sears Store Disarmed by a Coata Mesa department store crowd, an Azusa collegian is in jail today afler allegedly pulling a .32 caliber pistol on two security guards questioning him about a refWld slip forgery spree. No one was injured in the melee at Sears, Roebuck & Co., 3333 S. Bristol St., but the su.specl reportedly threatened to kill his captors wh!le clutching the loaded weapon during the st ruggle, police said. James w. Needs, 29. of Azusa, was booked on sus picion of assault with a deadly weapon, armed robbery and com· mission of bur&lary while armed wilh a loaded flrarm . Buena Park and El Monte police are cheeking today to determine the extent of the forgery spree in which Needs and an unldentlfied partner are suspected. Patrolman James Farley said the dramatic incident was triggered about %:50 p.m., when a cashier in the South Coast Plaza store sounded an emergency alarm. and began to lead him away. The pair said he then agreed to ao voluntarily and was rele&!ed but sud- denly whipped out the we2pon as Humphrey walked behind and Gow led him along. Investigators said Humphrey pinned tt)e suspect'& anns to his sides im· mediately in a bear hug as Gow grappled for the gun , which was snatched away by an unidentified customer. A number of persons jumped to help disann and subdue the suspect, Gow and Humphrey told Costa Mesa police, who were seeking a complaint from the Orange County District Attorney 's office today. Records show Buena Park police have a $202 forged refund purchase slip passed at a Sears store in their city, one o( an entire book reported stolen from the suburban Los Angeles County store. DAll.Y ,l\.OT lttN,.,... Postu Girl Huntington Be a c h's Denise · Barrett, 11, is nmnerup in countywide f i r e pJlvenUon poster .contest sponsored by Or- ange County Fire Chiefs Asso- ciation. Denise, a St. Bonaven- ture School student, lives at 6291 Bellinger Drive. From Pnge l DANTE ... uncooperative In their attempted murder investigation. A warrant was Issued for Dante's •r.· rest, which came June 3, 19&8, after hi• involvement in the alleged boat caper was probed by investigators. Westminster High . School enrollment Includes 153 in personal typing, 113 in pre-1.lgebra. 90 in boys chef and 229 in U.S. £overnment. the only class more popular than typing. Class sessions are from 8 to 10 a.m. and tfom 10 a.m. to 12:20 p.m. da ily through July z.s except for weekends and July 4, a legal holiday. Guards Robert W. Gow, 47, and William Humphrey, 51, ran to the scene, when Kathleen P. Shine, 19l tianded them a Sl21 refun4 ellp rspor1ed ttdlta fro.di a Pico Rivera .store and pointeo. ~ the suspect. Salvation Army Meeting Slated • . • I '•·'(I I In Beach Center" Dealer Ron Snyder said Wednesday, that the seven boal.s might well have . disappeared if it wasn ·1 for a suspicious truck driver who questioned a $100 bonus for loading in lhe middle of the night.. "It just didn't set right and he refused to-load them up, but ca\led us instead and v.·e called police," Snyder explaine<), SifJt!jRi Q.apte was (ound at the . see~. .suP11r1bhi8: the boat transfer. '·, He ~id the hypnolist had broken a chain lock lo enter the Santa Ana yard and claimed to be owner of the boats when lawmen arrived. Make Tennis Your Racket in Oass · If tennis coo.Id be·youi racket, perhaps you could get started with a nine-hour course now offered by the Huntington Beach Parks and ReereaUon Depart- ment. Cluses will be taught by qualified in- structors during the $U11lJnet at Marina and Huntington Beach High School, as well as Golden West College. Those interested may sign up now at the Recreation Center, located at 7th Street and Orange Avenue in downtown Huntington Beach. A $4 fee will be ch arged for instruction and tennis balls. The course will be taught in two age groups, 5th through 8th grade, and 9th and above. Beach Boulevard Battle Begins It's on the Superior Court calendar as Beach City Dodge vs. Beach City Cadillac but it's been known for some tirne in Huntington Beach as the battle of Beach Boulevard. Revving up their motors are the operators or the Dodge outlet at 16555 Beach Blvd. in a complaint that charges Cadillac dealer Richard TI moth y Workman with using a business name lhat could be confusing \o car buyers. Workman, they state, first used the Beach City Cadillac litle at his 17281 Stach Blvd. location last May is. The ~e crowd began to roll u Jong ago as May 1, 1988 urfder_the_ finn name~stated on the peUtlon. __ , Beach City Dodie asks for a court order barring Beaeli CUy Cadillac from using a bu siness ldentilleaUon that could mislead J>Qtenlial customers. Huntington Y Plans Family Fun Night the public Is invited to the Huntington Beach YMCA 's Family Fu.n Night, from 7 p.m. lo 10 p.m. Saturday al the city swimming pool, 17th and Palm Streets. Events include swimming, billiards, basketball and Dght refreshments. Cost Is 60 cents for adults and 25 cents for ehiklren, or 40 cent.I for adult Y·memberi and 20 cents for young Y -member1. Two Flee E. Germany BERLIN (UPI! -Two youn1 Etst Germani escaped over the Berlin Wall early today In • hail of Eut Geralon sub- mRChlne gun fire, West B<irlln po!lce reported. 1 Told he must accompany them to·the security office, said Gow and Humphrey, Need! refuud, so they each took an arm 2 Officers, City Facing Lawsuit Two Huntington Beach police officers and the city lhey work for have been named as de£endants in a $675,000 l&wsuit that charges the defendanta with assault, battery and wrongful imprisonment of a Garden Grove youth. Mary T. Lyon names officers Brian R. Davidson and Gary C. Kuncl with lhe city in her Superior Court complaint. She claims that the h~:o officers "battered, beat and kicked" her 16-year-<ild son. Robert Stewart Lyon, last Sept. 8 in an Incident near "Tower No. 1" on a city beach. She claims that her son was arrested and wrongfully charged with assault and battery. And she notes that charges against him were dismissed last Oct. 9 in juverule court action. Mrs. Lyon's clalm agaiqst the city for $110,000 in damages was re<:ent1y denied by the city council. An organizallona1 meeung for the new Salvation Army Extension Unit in Hun· tington Beach has been scheduled for noon June 25 at the Town and Country Shopping Center. Newly appointed chairman or the volunteer community service group is the Rev. Roter Belsworth of lhe Community Methodist Church. He will be assisted in his duties by Capt. Eaf.1 Robitaille, detee· tive eomniander of lhe Huntington Beach Police Department, who will be the unit's "'elfare chainnan. Other members of the local chapter In- clude Fred Friedow, of the Southern California First National Bank, Jay Garcia and Esther Luz: of Huntington Beach Hi gh School, Lois Deilota of Golden \Vest College. Alice Medina of the Community Center, Lorene Pehnall of the Assistance League and Dr. C. 0. Grube:r, a local dentist. Among the services to be provided by the local unit a~ emergency disaster relief, homes and hospitals for unwed mothers, su mmer camps, a.Id for parolees. Boys' Clubs, family counseling and a missing persons bureau. This claim; Snyder said, was based on his payment with a $17 ,450 check lhat had bounced, although he had pledged to make it up in cash on what would haV8 bl!en the inorning after the boals were. hauled away . ' Once the unregistered boats were across the Nevada line en route to Lp Vegas, Snyder said, they would If' unrecoverable. unrecoverable. Dante claimed Wednes<!ay that the document in . question was a promissory note and that he thought the whole ea¥ had been cleared up after hi.s court at pearance dale of July II , 1968 was cancelled. Another warrant was issued shortly lhreafter, but Dante was nol arrested because, according to Santa Ana Polioo Si!l. Kent Reesor, lawmen simply didn'L know where he was. He told sheriff's deputies when being booked at the West Hollywood slation that he held a doctoral degree from Singapore University in psychology. Peter Lim. publle relations director ror Singapore University, today denied tHe statement, pointing out that no s u c ·tt degree is available at that Institution. ' .JJ. J. {}arrell j 14th SEMl·ANNUAL • FURNITURE CLEARANCE STARTS TODAY • • • PllOFUSIONAI. lt<IUIOl OESl&NBS \ , .,,.. --" 1111. - 2211 HAR90R IL VD. COSTA MESA, CALIF, 646-0271 "''·0276 I Ii u L n 0 u b • c t I ( ' • • ( , t ' • -. Beaeh Teday's l'lllal EDITION • vOC. 62, NO. '146, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' • :THURSDAY, JUNi '19, 1969 .TEN CENTS " County Broadens Study of Ali ·so Beach Pie.r By JACK BROBACK or 1t1e o.1rr fllleil ll•tf Orange County supervi.90rS Wednesday listened to two noun al wrangling. over the proposed Aliso Beach Pier in South Laguna and finally vot.ed 4-0 to plan a new, larger concept of the facility which could cost $600,000. Four outspoken opponents present at the hearing and three who aubmit\ed let- ters called the proposed 600-foot pier everything from ~·unsightly and debris Down the Mission collecting'' to "dirty," "horrible," and .. destructive ol natural beauty." Proponents sang a different tune. They called the proposal a "boon lo oldsters and children," "a real, recreallonal asset," and "artistic.,,. Representative •of the opponents, most of whom live near Aliso Beach, was Mrs. Arnold Kern. "I am amued that COO· servationists would support this idea. Aliso Beach is one of the few that you _can see anymore (from the highway) and It's getting worse!' she said. Typk:al of those in favor of the pier was L. C. Baumgartner of ~isure World Laguna Hills representing a local rod and gun club. "We have 350 memben whC> like to fish and many of them cannot go out on live bait boats anymore," he related. "We pay our share of the tax burden and there an 30,000 people in the area of the pier, many who would use it. I am sympathetic with nearby property owners, but changes do come." More Supervi&or Alton E. Allen outlined the hl..tory of AliBo Beadi. "There used lo be a motel on the beach and a new owner p.oposed lo upand il Fortunately, the deal fell through and the property became available. The tint astlng price was Sl.2 million, but after long negotia- tions we (the county) got the beach for $607,000 ln 1967 ,"Allen explained. "We decided to buy the beach on Oct. 4, 1967, and were thinking of all the peo- ple of Orange County. We were UJing the money of-all the people for the purchase and it U our duty to uUU.ze It to lta belt recreation use. I realiie that m111y nearby residents want jusl a beach but the ldea that the pier will destroy the beach is unfounded. It amounts to a greater use for a uealer number " peo- ple." 'Ibe dealgn concepts for the facillty, which is what the hearing was supposed to be all about, were outlined by Oliver Fervor of Fervor·Dorlalld and Aasocl- ale!: of San Diego. "It' will be loclted.at the toUtburt end. of tbe parking lot to allow more putins area and for geological tea.IOOI. Our atudles show that there Is an ocean ~ yon there formed ~ the Ice .,.. and it ii more economical to build ca sand in that canyon," Fervor esplatned. "It will be a clean structure of p\eu- ing appearance with a spiral ramp • trance to accommodate wheel dWn. (SH ALL!IO, P ... I) Briclihats Tossed Trail Clemente Pier Crossing Nixed At Youth Street Dance SAN CLEMENTE - A level crossing over the Santa Fe trairf tracks proposed for the entrance of the San Clemente Municipal Pier has been rejected br the California Public Utilities Commission (PUC). The at-grade crossing would have eliminated a narrow, steep underpass and 5t;tlrs which crossing proponents say ~ar elderly and infinn persons from the pier. "Ibe PUC sa'id a level crossing would be too dangerous. Bet'ween five and nine trains cross the entrance at speeds of 65 mph. .e lohn1on Beads Club MISSION VIEJO -Guy Johnson has been elected president of the Kiwanis Club of Mission Viejo. Other new officers are Norman Fohrman. flf'St vice president ; Otto Gull. second vice president: and Ron Stoker, treasurer. "• Balloons to Soar Ml~ION VIEJO -Balloon to the Moon. A Jules Verne story? Not quite, it is a Mission Viejo Recreation Center con· test June 26 at 3 p.m. at the center. Children's postcards will be attached to gas filled balloons and then released. The child whose balloon travels furthest will receive a $25 Savings Bond. The person who returns the card will receive a prize too. :e Swim Classes Set MISSION VIEJO -Classes In syn· chronized 1wimming will begin Monday at 11 a.m. at the Mi.Won Viejo Recrea· tion Center. Eight one and a half hour classes will be taught. Participants must have pass¢ a previously held swimming test. The classes will teach swimming skills and interpretive strokes perfonned rhythmically to music. Fee is $8 for members and '18 for nonmembers. e Get Into the Swlno MISSION VIEJO -Friday is the last day to sign up for the Mission Viejo Recreation Center's Nadadores. AAU sanctioned !Wim team . Youngsters from 5 to 17 years of age are elig ible. The Nadadores now have 64 swimmers and "everyone swims." said Director Jerry Curran. Team members must be members of the recreation center. The team is a member of the Orange County Swimming Conference. :e Dh,lng Cl1U1e1 Slated MISSION VIEJO -Diving classes will begin Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. at the M!Mion Viejo RecreaUon Center. Si1 one. hour lessons will be taught for ~inning and intermediate divers. Fee. ill $5 for members of the Recrea· tJon Center and SIS for non·metnbers. 'Prospective divers ma)' "ftglsll!r a:nyttme up to the start of classes. Bare Beachgoer Held for Drugs Ford thinks he hid a better ldta but 1he.riu'1 deputies think it was just bare ' defja.nce of the law. They picked up Ford ln1allbe< Beebe 11 Wednesday as the completely nude Laguna Beach inan saunter9d along El Toro Road. Officers 1aid he was oblh•ious to Ult stares of 11stqnishcd passersby and quJe uncdncerned when he was waylaid by deputles . His stroll along the country rOlld ended with his booking on 1usplclon of Indecent exJ>OIUfe and being under the Influence or drut•· Th• 24-yea.r-old Lagun1n ts In the Oronge Count1 Jall loday. Fully dremd. .. ' " tip Toe View Jeni Johnston, 4, found her legs too short Wednesday to enable her to use coi~perated viewer at Laguna's Heisler Park. She'll have to wait a year or two. Jenl is daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Johnston, 581 Diamond St., Laguna. 7 View Assault On Waitress, But No One Gives Aid RIVERSIDE (UPI ) -Seven persons stood outside a doughnut shop ea rly today watching through the plate glass window as a waitress was beaten by a would·be holdup man. Despite her ·screams for help, no one came to Mrs. Anila Joseph's aid. Finally she broke away from the at· tacker, who appeared to be drunk, and rushed oul!ide. When she asked a man in the crowd to help her, be got in his car and drove away. Mrs. Joseph climbed into a parked car and locked the doors until the intruder, who was unsuccessful in his efforts to open the ca.sh register, fied. Then she re-entered the shop and telephoned police. • · ''Those people didn 't have to get lrt- volved," she said. "All they had to do was call the police." Harriman, Solons Back Clifford WASHINGTON (UPI) -W. Averell Harriman and two top ~nate Democntic leaders endorsed today former Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford's proposal for withdrawal of 100,000 U.S. CIJll!lbat 1roo111 f!un v-Ulll ¥"'• ..... iemlinder in 1970. t Hani.man. chief U.S. pegotialor at the Paris ...,-!alb In the Joh-. od· mlnislratlol). said that ~ recommended last winter an immediate pullout of 50,000 American &roops and a4• end to SW'Ch- and.<Jestroy missions. These steps, Harriman said In an In- terview. might have induced the Com- munists to take a reciprocal troop ffiluc· tion step and to begln serlow discussion of peace proposals. Cllfford's proposal also won support from Senate Democratic Leeder Mike Mansfield and Senate Democratic Whip Edward M. Kennedy. Both said they hoped President Nixon would give serious consideration to the Clifford plan as oOtlined in an arUcle in the magazine foreign affairs. Ni.J:on is expected to be questioned on Clifford's proposal at a \Vhite House news conference today at 4 p.m. PDT. Although Hamman did not say so, other officials have reported that his point of view was rejected l.ut winter by President Lyndon B. Johnson, backed up by Secretary of State Dean Rusk and presidential adviser Walt W. Rostow. Asked whether he thought it was too Jate now to achieve thi.! aim of large withdrawals of U.S. forces, Harriman replied ''I just don't know." ~Ie said that while he felt the Com· munists would have re!tponded favorably last January, when he repeated his recommendations tC> the Nixon ad· ministration, he could not be certain now because he had been out of the discussions for five months. Harriman did not agree rpeciflcally with Clifford's timetable for withdrawal, calling lor the pullout of 100,000 growxl troops by the end of this year and the re- maining 100,000 to 150,000 combat forces by the end of 1970. NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market tumbled lower today, with brokas re~rting investor concern over Ugbt mOOeY cOnlfnUinffo We@I if down. (See quotations, Pages 14-15). Kidney Patient Remains Critical, But Improves Susan l.la.zze's bid ror Ufa wtth the healthy kidney her mother save her went Into its fifteenth day today but the con· dltion of the J7-ytar~ld Orange glrl re- mains critical. It eetmed today, however, that there was 1ome lifting of tht gloom evident Wednesday amona those closest io the in- tensive C8Tfl unit aL the Orange County Medical Center. "She had a fairly tttlful nJiht,'' 1 1poke£tnarr commtnttd. "One of her doc~ tors talked to me 1bout her thla mornJng and he said abe seemed quite alert and chetrlul lhroulhOul ll1tlr Bhort c:on- veruU011." Doctors strea that the left kldn<y they , grafted into Susan from btr mother, Mn. Florence Mane, U, is fooctlon.ing perfectly. The high school 1lrl'1 condition stems, they &ay, [rom post operative complicaUons th1t are recelvlng round the clOC'k attention. Mrs. MUU herae.lf IJ reported u being in "m:ellen=u." She was sent home after d · d she bad made an "uncomplicated iecovery" from the tna· Jor transplant 1111r1ery, the first of Ill kind In OrlJllle County. Inflation Flushed Laguna Drops Lid on John Hike Boo~t There's still one thing that will cost a "Do you know what you're talking nickel, at least In Laguna Beach and about?" asked Mayor GleM Vedder, who that's the five-cent pay toUet. rallied the nickel forcts. "Now we a:et Councilmen Wednesday night held the $260 a year (from pay tol1ets), 1 don't line against a national inflationary spiral lhJnk it is enough to worry about." in the pay.for-public-comfort business. Councllman Charlton Boyd suggested Vice MayOC' Joaeph O'Sullivan, past Nlk-0-Lok might have t.o chana:e itl name champian of publlc restroom!, for a time if everyone charged a dime •. He said, a seemed ready to give in to the blan-bit wlstfully, "I feel It 1'ou1d be delightful di3hment.s of Pacific Nik~Lok Co. to bold the line in at least one area." which, desplte \ts name, urged-that> pub· O'SuW•an auggested that perhapa lie atall 1ccas,ln Lagu .. bechll!!d·lo.• "'11,.ibt.CDllJIPJI •ta\i<!lt •locl:o ,_1'!~ a dbne •• --··1 ., 4-o., ,J.;,. ·1~-'iblothtlt •"6at,'Mtiilll Nlk-Otiik wrote 'lllat It ha~ . for w1>0 ha4 a dilpe but not.' i!lcbl~.' IJveor·alx711nthe·tr.ndioU.!J,S..IQlf O'Suf-.u•1·or1Blnal D>llool ' Cuado lo "18Jllle to a dint&. NewpGl't for lock of a ltCOlld. c.ulicilmm Ibo Beach made the chan1eom succelafully dime ...;..tlon. several yeara qo, they reported. A reporter asked councllmi:n 1f the After receiving assurance from the city comlort atations -two at Heh:ler Part. manager that there Is alway.! .one staU at one at Main Beach and one at the library a comfort station which ia free, -would accept the new free parkin& O'Sulllvan laahioned a motion to rai.se the tokens that merchants will offer, other stalls to a dime. The city manager thou&bt oot. Dante Accuses Mesa Pair; They Say Hypnotist Phony By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 0t "" Dlllr ,1111 11.tt Hollywood hypnot.i.st Rona)d Dante charged Wednesday that an Orange County boatbullder is Involved in hi! at· tempted murder and felony theft arrest, but the accused today is spellbound only by the Intriguing tale. The seventh husband of actress Lana Turner narrowly escaped death Tuesday when a tushwhacker wearing a rakish Australian prairie bat pumped five pistol shots into his car as he drove into an widerground garage. "I have a very good Idea who he was." said the 4g..year<Qld jet set entertainer, who affects the title Dr. Dante, con· tlnuing to tell of a phone warning he allegedly received Monday. He said the vengeful caller claimed to be the owner of a now-defunct Santi Ana firm which manufactured watercraft for MarUP Boat Co., whose outlet 11 Mesa Boat Center, 1&96 Newport Blvd., c.oeta Mesa. Santa Ana police who heord radio reports of the murder attempt recognized Dante'• name and tipped off Hollywood detecUvea., who anested the hypnoUlt in connection with a local 1988 boat theft case. -- The stage performer and self-declared psychology profe8.!0r said his mystery caller warned or greal bodily harm and possible disgrace in the eyes of his 48- year~ bride If he failed t.o cooperate. "Or I'll make . sure you never walk again," Dante quoted the man as 11ayihg, after a' demand for payment of $5,000 in blackmail money. All three principals in the May, 1981 negotiations for Dante'• purchaae of 11tven, 16-foot Marlin motorboat.a worth 111,IOO denied linowledge and ICofled at the ICCWllUOn. "He thlnb I did It? No, I did not call Dr. Dant.," declared Donald W. Albright, of Anaheim, whose firm RecreaUon Enterprises Inc., built the boata al a San- "Ana yard. "No, I did not make an aUempt on his life," Albright conUdued, "but yf.I, I'm sUll looklng f011'anf lo oeeint Dr. Dant. In coort." Miu Turner's huaband of aiJ: weelal II free on llJ,IOO ball, pecdl"I his prellmlnoey hearing June 21 In Santa Monie> MWllcfpal Court In conoectlon with Ule felony l!"•nd theft warrant. Ron Snyder, 36, of 2320 College Drive, Costa Mesa. was equally lncredulous Wednesday when noUfied by newsmen of Dante's aa:usations about hiJ Tuesday assailant. Snyder and hi• father Paul art prin~ cipals in the Costa Mesa company with which Dante was dealing more tban a year ago, while appearing at the Vllla Marina nightclub in Newport Beach. "He's a phony so n-o f·a·iUn," •a I d Snyder, "I've never met the man before, nor has my father -he. dealt with a sales representative." Snyder chuckJed when told the content.! of Dante'• alleged telephone convenaUon Monday. ''I wi&h _l 'd IOtten Ule. five G'1," be (See DANTE, P11e I) Anoth~r Laguna Teacher Salary ~ion Slated "Teachers and achool offtclals of the Laguna Unified School Diatrlct will hold another salary bargaining aeuJon Friday at 2 p.m. In district headquarter11. Latest board offer t.o the teacHera pro- Vidett' for' a lump wm of·'72,000 to be ad· <fed In the pert0n>el budget !cir the nut tchool year. A ail percent increase. · Teachers had asked for •L&t,000, or about ti perc<nt. ' ni. ....... do DOI like lnlo con. aldf:ritlon an additlon&I '32100I> to which · all teacher• wotdd be entitled uhder their contract for steps up the utary laddef for experlen~ and education. 1 The lat.st aesslon will be the thin! round of salary negotladon11 between the teachers and the achoo! boud. Salaries of -teaching per'°"nel will be t,alt•n up by the board 1l a meelln& Qell 'Illlinday. At that Ame m ... lng, Uie board will ·con81der the adopt)on Of a prtllmlnory budcet of about IU million, up about ll0,000 .... this yeir'• budget A publJC hw111& II 'achoduJed lo dflc:uu 1>ud1et ii. .... Distressing fuciden~ Says Mayor. By RICHARD P .. NALL Of tM DIUr '"'' lhltf A Laguna Beach ~I daf10I that sparked · the in of downtown mercbantk alao toot ijs lumps in city CIJUDCll cllam1!'1 Wedndday. . ~ distreulng'' ... tho lift! hunl by Mayor G14l1n v edder u be cWAilld his ~ "-'"""' ••• cr)~1 ftom members of Ibo l!!Jc'I I commtmny. . Vedder 18Jd Jockr at two ;:y.•• were jammed. store froota ·-. hosed off where perlOOI had become m. Food was thrown on wfndon, Young peoo pie climbed on roofs. There wu candle wu on the sidewalks, evidence, he Aid, of a fin hazard. 0 TheY (merch8nta) sure worked me over for Jt," the ml.yor aaid. Charles R. McCaUa, Laguna Belcti buslneuman, had a1'o ~ llbarply critical of the conduct at the dance spon.ored by the SOuth ·0ran1e COunty YMCA. "Every hippie ln town wu there. We havti i~ made a· nk:e place l« these buml to enjoy," he had WTltten.. McCall•'• letter crlUclsed the ~""lber of out-of-town peoons, conduct generally, incense burning, llghted candles, loud music and other factors. Vice Mayer Joseph O'Sullivan nld he attended the flnt three or four F<Jr'9& Avenut dances and said younpten behaved well then . He uld It seemed tbl1 tlme the young people bad not lived up to their responsibility · and uid perhaps another dance location should be sought. "I have that feeling too, especially when you find that maybe only one fifth of them came from Laguna,'' said Ved .. der. "Maybe the Monarch Bay parkln1 area or maybe San Clemente. I don't 1ee why we aJwaya have io be the Ma to pick this up." Councilman Oarlton Boyd menUoned a commurrlcations breakdown. He said young peop!e should fee.I free to use the lllreets but Aid Ibey had lo be respono1. ble about Jt. Vedder &aid he WO<lld !Ilk with Ropr Carter. YMCA dlrtetor, lo see wl!Ot might be done. Carter suggested later in a news relea!e that Perhaps rnai:bants can help iron out "" probleml and tho "bodlJI (See DANCE, P~ I) • Or .... c.-' Weadler Are .)'OU rtad1·1or ..... marntac fOfl? '!'hat'• comlnr llO!ll bq! !lri- t1ay•1 aft.moon ..Ulher-eboWd be lllllll1Y and seventylsh alq Ibo Orange Coast. INSmE TODAY • An curdle fn accompUa"'° l mcnt, the Wc1tmin.tteT COW'loo ~ muni~ Thecttr'1 worklh6p pro. dtlCHOft o/ an orl¢nal drama 'ii revMtot!d todau i1' Entcrtoin- mtne, Page 12. ; . I 1 I I I I I ·--· .. ··· .. ·-... ."tKGUNt\ 'f t}:EN CORNEJl .ty TOM &OaW.N ' ' ' . . • llCllOOL MAY BE 001 and lhlunay be a bwb cammumtr. bu1 don't think tor .a -Iha! ·~ deaerted the halls ol Ille bilh 1Choo1, In Hl1dl of lUll and our!. &. Joi, ol UIHS 11&111en11 and reoeot .. -.... Llndod jobt (Of the -· -lo'*' llletr llmO (and·.,llMll\ lull. Glenn Daniele II one of two , ~g dlmOn I<>' the Pqeaal of Ille Mai.rs. Jol>t lib that don\ come •Joni every ~. especially for a teon. Job Knnman la -ldng at the Nnport N•tlooal Jllnk. He drives '""""' Ill a bank car l'UlllliJlc special er-,_ "ad• r Ille <llreollon d the Gbief ttller. I -Al*iallns· lhe 1llifillM et McHqh'1 Toy 5"" 11 ~ Ptden, while caDdl M.CU. _.... 'em up at Taco Bell. In lhe -1111 bullnOu 111 Grq Ktlljer llfCI Jiff Jur.,. (Lqima Lumber CO.) and Jim Kuhn (-OoulnldlGo). THE FOOD PEOPLE are employing a Joi of LBHS talenl lhJa summer. Mike Loge bu dOnned a Forest Market apron. while lllli• ~ and. TeUord Colllm J ' .. are a couple of block• over at Acord'•. <:a1Cbina froatbJte al Ba1ldn·Robbin1 Ice Cream are Denny Schmitz, Mark Sizelove, Mendy . Stevens, D I a n n e Slowsky, Mike McMulTay, Steve Wood .and Bari Tabor. WortdJli nfahll al lhe FaUvsf l'Ollnd• nslabrul wW be Sieve Wleibowllki, Merrilee Benion, Christy Ml~ell. Tom Tabor, ·Debbie Aubrey, and Steve, Mark and Loretta Klosterman. Qulll lhe group. Tom Tabor wW keep busy during lhe days, too,· cleanlq tbe beach at Tbret Arch Bay. Speaklna of the beach, llfeguardl eharlie and Dlger Ware, BUI Brown, John ~ky. Tom Holm, John Gi14 Bob 'o,Nner and Jemie causey wlll pl tao wti11e•>lltin1 around on the job. (If lhe sun ever comes out). Bob Cotterell ll•lt Challil Art studio, while Jim Waritn ii his own boll tn sell· Ing all ton.I ol metal work. Debbie Brek- ke 11 at the Laguna Country Club, and Jenny Jahrau.a at the A & W. . Kathy Sh~pard, Steve Hester and Rick , DeW"Uto , are employed at the Niguel ~;._while Rici's sister Odlle Is up-, Lagu·na Schools Succ eed l J!.l;iving .Flfndamental s· ' ~ J \' "If lflYOneldla yoo we're ool'leac!iing funcfamenlalJ In lhe L111111• Beach . uniiled Sehogl Dlalrlc!, you can t!ll ~ ~,fllR · ol ~· AMllllDI su~OW1n Tall, told tnllleU 1his wfiet. To ~II: up h1J statement, Tait had multa from .llall readlni •kilJa <Ums 11,.0 -~ third, alath and tent a:radtr1 in the district. AcconSina: to Tait. the 198 first graders in the dilWict who took the nam -can read ~tlr,lhu'ID pereenl of olhor flnl gracler1· lhrouahout California. The ttlt allo indicated an improvement from !all,..,. 'll>e11M IDllD raw 1Cor1 for the first pell WU II, while Ibis yeer • -1'7. . "Tile top scor< on lhe leel la 'II IDd IO of our kldl scored 70-'ll while four of them ......r in the 1~11 (IOWj., n=V '111t !TA 1yelem (lnltlll Toecllllfi ' bet) *"'' to lDdlelte .n all or petom" OOllllMllCld Ts~. addlnr, ''Tho _,, ·-• ii up and CM1r top kJcb m ruUy doln& well." < 1be HCOnd grader• alM> were t.aua:ht Wider lhe !TA sya1ern and also fared .... u. 'llle7 imP,rOved from a mean grde 1Cor1 In INt ol 1.7 lo I.I lhl1 Y•ll; and are better ruder• th.au 72 wcent <1f olhe< it<o!>d lfldes In the lllte. "1 attribute t,hia . lo · IT A because. It h.,n"'t ahoWn up In aeoond gre~ before. Tbe maJorlllr d !flt kids are 8'IOWllll llP. In the tdat>er~· · . 1l>t low scorm, u far u 1 ce mlde lhe trlftlillOn from irom !TA. .iiole teet '!al tuen Players to Get Gift From Irvine A $15,000 cl1edt will be pruented th< i.a,una Player• by the Irvine Foundation Friday for the new Laeuna·Moult.on Playhoul8 thlt Is nearJna camplellon. Irma Nof&l&er, Player• f e n er • I manqer, Wd Mrs. Chu lea Wheeler, a .1ember of the foundaUon board, will make the presentation of the final check. It wlD bring to '9(1,000 the amount given f« I.he new 350-aeat theater by the foun- dlUon. Gtorct Gade, Player• vice president, and William Harcum, treasurer, will ac- cept. the funds. The 10 a.m. presentation will be at the new thtater site. IJAllY PllUI ~ COAn "*IMIM ~ .. 11:.Mlt H.W ... ................ ,,... I. """"' ............. ea..ril ....... ' n.." ICM•ll -Tit•••• A.. M•,...111• · -"--., ....... '· "4.11 ...... _ . ., -i.---211 ......... . M1Ul11 ~4,,.., P.O. a.. 646. t261Z ----... ··-~: ._. .... I It '#ll!t ........ 1tun•:...-1•• lri TO (Trid!Uonal Orlhography) not JTA,55 Taft e:iplained. Third &raden, most of whom have not had ITA.. also d1a well, with a mean c.rade score of 4.1 as <1pposed to a 3.8 ex- pectancy,_ nitlr mean grade aoores between 1• and '1199 were exactly the same, and-they are better readers than ts percent of other Californians in the ir l!'adez. Sixth graders exceeded expectations of . 8.t by havJn1 a mean grade score of 8.67. Lut·)"tar tbe ·mean arade scare had been 8.1. so imJll'()\tUltnt wu: shown. nie state mean ii 50. Tenth arlde flprt.a were a little less excltiq. ~ the 180 1tuden1.1 who had taken tht a~emlc progress test ob- ~ a .man 1COre CJf 52, whlch ac- cordlnc to Tait •"represents dlatribuUon .ID· Jbo.• · ... bich Is just about . ••-7 '.:. . . Tbe·telt bai a possible score of 100 and about JS ilUdent1 scored In the 12·30 range. which Indicates they need help. However, about 23 fell In the 91 to 100 r1na:e. • Tait said he wa1 mMt ple1sed with the results which tnd.lc1te the effectiveness of teaching practices. "We will eramlne the scores very carefully and will attk n<1t only to m1in· tain our standing, but to wOrk at Im· provm, scorer1 even more, '1 he said. From Page I J)ANTE ••. nid, stresai.ng he was joking. '1 read Wedne·sday where he said he bad no idta who mla:ht want to kill him - or why -unlesa It was because. l()meone wu jealou1 of the woman he married,'' Snyder continued. "AM then be comes up with a story like lhla." "Actually, It's kind of exciting,'' he concluded. Los Ante!H County Sheiiff'1 Depart- ment detectlvts allO said Wednesday that Dante'• allea:aUons had no bull f<lr be.lief, addlna: that he bad bten generally uncooperative in their ~ttempted murder inveStlaaU<11'\. A warran( wa1 lssued for Dante's ar· rest. which c1.n1e June 3, 1968, after his Involvement in the alleged boat caper was probed by invl?stigat<irs. Dtaler Ron Snyder said Wedntlday that the seven boats might well have diaap~ed if it wasn't for • susplcl<1us tMJCk tbiver who que1tloned • $100 bonus for loading in the mlddlt of the night. "It just didn't set right and he refused to load them up. but called us instead and we called police," Snyder e'lplained. saytng Dante wu round at the scene, supervising the boat trarufer. He said the J'lypoolist bad broken a chain lock to enter the Santa Ana yard and claimed to be owner <1f the boats when lawmen arrived. This claim, Snyder sald, was bued on his payment with a $17,4~ check that had ·bounced, aflhough he hid pled(ld lo make it up in cash on what would have been the momlna: after the boats were hauled away. Oru the unre1i&tertd boall were acrou the Nevact. line en route to Las Ve1u, Snyder aald , they would be unrecoverable. unrecoverable. Dante claimed \\1ednetday that the document in quesU<1n wa1 a prom.laaory note and that be lhoo&ht the whole case bd been clffred up 1fter hil cOurt ap- pearance di.le of J11ly 11, 1961 WIS cancelled. Another warrant w1s iMUtd ahorlly thrtafter, but Dlnte wu• not arH&ted because, accordlna to Santa Ana POiice Sil. Kent Retaor, lawmen 1imply didn 't know whert he wu. He told sheriff's deputies when being booked at tht Wut HoU)'WOC)d alltion Iha! be "neld a doctoral d•arae from Slh(lport University ln'~)'CbolOI)'. Peter Lbn, public rtlaU<1ns director for S!neapcn Ul'llvtrllty. today denied the statement, poinUng out that no 1 11 c h degree la available at th1t Institution. .. • town at South Coast Theater. In the kitchen at COiony Kitchen Is Biii ~1urray, while Ray Wilbur, Jackie Miller and Keith Knight are at the Snack Shack. Keith is also a draftsman at Martinez and Edwards architectural firm, and · Glenn Handy ill working for local architect Chris Abel. The Pottery Shack has to get the trophy for the most teen employes, wlth Sharlene Sutton, Kathy Ryan, Loma Lum, Katy Healy. Peggy Holm, Amy White, Bob Benham, Wendy Taylor, Scott Hunt, Robert Powers and Kevin Nelswen· der. W<1rklng up the street at the Lquna NW"sery are Steve and 0 I en n K1waratanl. And then there is Doug Schmitz, who decided to vacate Sleepy Hollow and be gainfully employed as a flower 6oy al Eachbacha. 1 MUST HAVE set a new record for the number of names In one column. But then I'll probably get shot by somebody I forgot. That's what they call an occupational hazard in my line of work. From P nge 1 ALISO ... baby buggies, lifeguard jeeps and service trucks," he added. ~·we prepaerd two concepts, each to cost about $400,000. One would be f60 feet long with a col'lcfission and restroom building at the base. The olher 600 fee t with a separate restroom building. CONSIDERATIONS "Recently the possibility of a $300,000 contribution from Federal Land and \Yater Conservation Funds-allowed Con- sideration of a proposed exten sion of 100 feet with an offset square on the northwest side. Slate marine b!olog1sts approve this extension from which they would conduct studles. They say it would also improve fishing," Fervor continued. Al. Rush, assistant executive oHice r of U1e state Wildlife Conservation Board said that body had agreed to approve half the U00,000 coal and to further an ap- pllcaUon to the federal body for $300,000. "We feel that the larger project with the square extension would be more favorably received by federal officials." he &aid. "Under such a plan the federal government would pay one-half the cost, the state and county one-fourth each." Supervisor David L. Baker emphasiied that the "question before us today is the design ot the pier, not whether or not it should be built. That was decided long ago ." But Supervisor Allen noted that. although a public hearing had b:?en held on Oct. 4, 1967, "I am not sure everyone in the area was aware of it. \Ve should give them -a chance to be heard ." OTHER OPPONENTS Opponents, in addlLlon Lo Mrs. Kern were Glen McMullen of Laguna Royale (one-quarter mile south of the beach), Harry J . Early of Camel Point ("Within gunshot of the pier"), Gordon Brown of South Laguna, and letters from Oliver A. Lewis, Ceanothus Drive; Mrs. Davis K. Holies, McAulay Place, and Jeannette K. Sheldon, 234 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Pro)l()nent1 included Mrs. Jack Robb of Ceanothus Drive : Baumgartner and John Jansen of Laa:una Hills; Mary Cronquist. Laguna Beach arti.st-atld art dealer, and Richard S. Croker of Laguna Niguel. S<ime opponent. called attention to a sewer outlet which flows lnto the ocean at the beach {"That stagnant creek should be cleaned up"). Supervisor Robert W. Battin said the county Harbor Com· mlaslon should look lnlo that complaint. .Secret Research In Unive rsity Area Assailed PALO ALTO (UPi) -A member of Stanford University'! ·academic senate t<1ld a California edlt<lrs conference today that secret research 'lhould have no part In the university <Ir Its commU!'lily. An executive or the Stanford Research Institute. the private crganlzaUon whose ties with the univeratty are being 1evered because of the secret research Issue, replied ttffit mUCh iil -sRI's woflt was peaetflll and that the furor was cau~ed by militants whose only interest was dei;tructlon of American Institutions. Or. Leslie Zatz of 'the University Senate. an aS!oclate profeU<>r of radlok>gy, and R. K. Brunsvold, vice presid•nt for planni111 and coordlnaUng for SRI, both spoke at the annual United Press International California Editors' Conference. Capo to Decide Tax Override CAPISTRANO BEACI! -A IO-<•nt !ichool tax override with a three year time ltmlt wtll be voted M by residents of tbe Capistrano Unlned Schoof D~trlct on Od. 11 dlsttk:t tl'UJtees decided Monday. Thi tax lncrt&H W<1Uld g&ntrate an estimated '800,000 for the school•. A proposed oven1de ol 50 cents but with no tlmt limit w&& downed by voters April 15. Btailditag a Zi ggaarat Progress continues on new, $23 million A~tonetlcs pla nt being built in Laguna Niguel area by North American Roekwell. Seven-story ziggurat is scheduled for completion early next ye ar. Southerly aeria1 view also talces in Pacific Telephone's new $3.5 million Laguna Ni- guel central office (at bottom). South Coast Courts Get New Administrative Aide The helm of the Laguna-San Clemente Judicial District has come under a ne\~ hand. James B. llarris has been appointed new clerk and chief administrative or. fleer for the tw<l court district. Harris, 33, succeeds Ed Wilmington. In his new post, Harris holds complete administrative responsibilities for the district. These include budget prepara- Somewhere Liule ' Girl Awaiting Free Bicycle Son\cwhere there Is an 8-year-old girl waiting [or a shiny new bicycle she won at the YMCA 's >Memorial weekend carnival. The bicycle was a prize given by the YMCA. Carnival directors took down the llttle gtrl's name, address and phone number. They told her the new bike would soon be on its way to her. That was nearly tour weeks ago. The ticket stub with the little girl's in· formation on It has been lost and no one can remember the winner 's name. ad· dress. or phone number. "\Ve've torn the whole house apart looking for it. but it's gone and ""'e don't know what to do," Mrs. Hanns Baumann said. "She was so thrilled. We all just feel terrible about it." she &aid . Mrs. Baumann said they thought the winner Jived in the Mission Viejo area. but that was all an yone could remember. She asked that the DAILY PILOT at· le1npt to find the child. The girl may claim her bicycle by call- lng either Mrs. Baumann al 494-9271 or the YMCA offi~ at 494·9431 and iden· tifylng herself. tlon, assignment or personnel, and general supervision . With an Impending move of the court to new facilities in Laguna Niguel later thi s year, Harris has the added responsibility of mak:ing sure all goes smoothly. Befort coming to Laguna Beach, Har- ris worked for 12 years with the mun- cicpal court in Los Angeles. Most recently, he was a court branch supervisor in San Pedro. Harris said he consented lo come to a smaller court at no increase in salary, because he has always "preferred smaller towns and bigger challenges." He said he knew what to expect in CORI· lng to the South County court district, and that there is a lot to be done here. "But If there were nothing to be done. t don't kno1v \l'hc thcr I \vould have come,'' llarris ;1aid. llarris, his ·wHe, ,Joyce. and their rour children, James, Jr., II , Jeffrey, 10, Julie. 9, and Jerrold, 4 months, will soon move into a new ho1ne in Mi3sion Viejo. Harris graduated cum laude from the Los Angeles Metropolitan College of Business. He ls a vetcrao of the Korean War and while on dut y w.i.th the Navy In Japan, earned ~itst deir'!'f black belt In judo. From Pa!JC 1 DANCE ••• needed'' dance program can continue. He estimated the dances have provided r('crealion for 20,000 young persons since first approved by counci lmen in 1967. Carter slated not only merchants are needed to meet with young persons. but adults in general. "We ha ve more teens than we have ·adult advisors. These Laguna kids are hungry for in volvement in activities they find Interesting and meaningful and yet la ck or adult advisors sometimes stops things before they start." he stated. City Votes • I ' I -Hands Off t • I Free Scho ol . . I Loose ends tn r99uested city 1en- dorsement and support of a "~ee univer,siJY" to minister to social ill! WUI wrapped up \,y Laguna councilmen WednescJaY .u they •1rffd lo 'h·ands'tlft policy, - Mayor Glenn V e d d e r said he a~ whh city attorney Jack Rimel that it appeared to be a paper organiz.a· Uon. He said the city should not support and endOne an unknown quotient. City recognition, bleWng and support had been sought for the newly in· corporated undertaking by Dr. John Wallace, UCI associate profes.sor, 1nd others at a May z1· meetinc. Y..~.q,-~ tbe: request be received and filed. Councilman Roy Holm iniggested a mare final answer. He said a rundown on faculty, courses and location of the enterprise sought from Wallace had not been forthcoming. H~ suggested the {flayer frame a letter Btatlng that the project ia not the type thing lhe city wants to get involved with. Councilmen a~.· ·• · • City·attonfey"Rimel had in a three-page r~port suggested that the city could, if it WtShed, acknowledge that articles of in· corporation have been filed but could not acknow~edge _that a "(Oina University" actually wsted wlthOut ,further in· vestigation. -• He had said the city would probabl y want to determine whether the free university was ~arrying out the purpo$Cs stated in Its ·articles of incorporaton. He said financial assistance would be legal in certairi areas such as community healµt and recreation, but added : "Certain <1lher activities, however, such as general.educaUon, legal 1ervice1 a~_d draft counseling would not in .the opt- n1on of this office be included wJthlil allowable aCUvities which a city coufit subsldlze out of public fUnds." ' Annual Lag una Summer Water P r og ram Slated ; In true Laguna Lifeguard traditioi1, Main Beach will -be invaded by Mennaids and Sea CUbs July 1 and 8. • The annual summer p r () i r • m , sponsored by the lifeguard dtpartmen;f, will also include sessions for older boys l'n the 'untot guird'eategory. The purpose · of the 1f!erma!d a-nd st~ Cub program, Lt. Eugene DePaulis ex- plained. is to educate the younk btachgoers on beach and water. safety and beach lore. The groups will work both on the beach and in the water. ' Boys and girls ages 8 through 12 c1n s1gn up for the five-seek course at the Main Beach Lifeguard T<1wer. Clauea for the Mei:tnaids will begin July 7, and run every Monday and Wednesday from 1 through 3 p.m. Sea Cubs will begin to meet July 8. and meet every Tuesday aid Thui:sday at (he same time. · r The junknr guards, for boys aged -,2 through IS. will begin July 8. They wiU also meet every Tuesday and Thursday, from 10 p.m. to noon. The jun1or guards, many of whom ad\!ance Into the regular lifeguard department. will work With first aid , swimming and physical endurance. Last year's program involved 80 girls and over 350 boys. Nixon Picks Directov \YASHlNGTON tAP) -President Nix- on's search for a new director of the Na· tional Science Foundation ended today with his choice of Dr. WUllam · 0 . r.1cElroy, a Johns Hopkins University biologist known for his experimenl.I with fireflies. .J.J. J. (Jarrell '.1 14th SEMl·ANNUAL "' ' "" " FURN ITU RE CLEARANCE • .. 'I STARTS TODAY H.J .GAl\RETT fURNll1JRE ' f'ftOftSSIONAL lllTERIOR DESl<ONll\S Opoo M-. -._ & M. - • I Jl" HARIOR IL'1°. " COSTA MlS>., CAL1t.I~,,' '44--0215 '46-0216 \ \ I ~~~~~~~~~~, ........ ..,. ... ,..,...,....,...,..,"""'c"°'..,.4-:~c_;-~-:C::~~·-~-=·;:::""..,,.. .. ,. ........ ,.. .. .,.,_.,. .. ,...,. ...... .,.,...,..,.,...,...,,...,.,.....,. ... ,....,...,.,....,...,...,. ... ,....,. ... ,..~ ... ,....,."!I r ) .,. ' l'""'l ' I ., :· -• I AT ELLA ~ • •• • • • • • • 'NA,llAll " "" ~ • ~ ' • ~ l!lt!tt • ~POii· ·"'""' fl.Tftll llm!H 0 ..... "'""' ""°' ~ • ! ~ IA,1 Alli'. MArfJ.LA AV£. •AUIUT _,L " • • --~ • • ~ CHA,ltAM Al'C, MAP INDICATES LOCATION AND FLIGHT PATTERN FOR PROPOSED ANAHEIM METROPORT St1dlum Club Bec:om11 Polltlc1I Aren1 11 City Pl1nner1 Hear Testimony Metropor·t s~ored ,- Anaheim Residents Fear Growth By JACK BROBACK or ttwi o.irr Pl.., 11.tt Opponents of lhe proposed Anaheim Stadium metroport packed the Stadium Club hearing room Wednesday night and diarg".d that there was no guarantee that the facility would not grow in time into a major airport complete wilh noisy jetliners. The 450 attending the city Planning Commission meeting were supported by about 30 pickets who paraded outside the stadium with placards condemning the proposal. The commission was taking testimony on whether . to grant a conditiooal ~e permit to build the metroport bl art area south of the stadium and including part of the stadium parking lot. Commissioners will make their recom- mend~tion to the city council July 14. "This metroport will get completely out Y:f our bands," said Stuart Noble o( ·Anaheim. He said the permit application would allow a maximum ' ,runway lfngth of 2,600 feet which ht no~ i!: 1,100 feet ,\onger than now proposed by metroport .?ackers. . "This will eventually lead to converswn or the facility to a full-fledged airport," Noble charged. , Gerry Vind of Anaheim said the pro- posed metroport wa1 deficient Jn three areas. He listed them as regulation and ,conlrol of airspace, range of noiae and control of growth. He argued that aircraft density in the area is already dangerously high because of seven other air facilities ln the general vicinity. ••Noise levels would be inflicted upon resident.I ·nf lhe area of the metroport that is between 10 and 1,000 Ume1 higher than that coitsldered acceptable by engineers a n d aviation experts," Vind continued. Supporting the facility was a clty plan· ning staff report which stated that it would aid growing demands for ad- ditional air transportation for the com- munity and would provida economic stimulus to business and industry in the greater Anaheim areL The report said air passenger demand In .the area is expected to lncTeue from 366,000 reported in 1967 to 2.t million a year by l!ll!IO. Clyde Barnett president o[ C.ornmuter Centers which hopes to build and operate the metroport said his company is prepared to spend $4 million deY!:loplng the facility. Barnett aald 19 corporations operating !n ~ state now have shown an t.nterest in using the Anaheim rnetroport as well as 72 big industries throughout the naUon. Barnett denied that the airport would be expanded io the future. "We cannot see going beyond 50 to 60 passenger planes because of the lim.JtaUona of the site itaelf," be said. :,~{ey Witnesses Questioned As Death Trial Nears End Key prosecution witnesses w e r e brought back to the stand today for further questioning as the mUrder trial of ijenry Lopez Sianez moved into what are believed to be its final hours. · Much of lhe revived testimony centered ' 911 the earlier evidence provided by Sgt. 'R®ert Sorensen of the Huntington Beach Police Dept. Sorensen today repeated under the ClOse questioning of defense attorney Lloyd Nocker what he told Judge Howard Cameron in yie early stages of the trial -that the blood stained fingerprint.. pind on the wheel of a stolen car were ~ ol Sianez. , They got there, the prosecution claims, ~hen Sianez, 25, of 312 Clay St., returned to the auto last Jan. 12 after killing Mrs. Hester Markee. J And it is argued that Sianez plunged hls lnife at least nine times into the S>year- 6ld widow after she had pursued the car • • allegedly stolen by Sianez and Edward Roy Hargrave, 18, of 1739 Marken Lane, Huntington Beacb4 Testimony has indicated that Sianez panicked when he realized that the determined woman was in pursuit and wanted to question him about an earlier collision between the two cars. Hargrave has stated that be sat in the stolen car as a horrified spectator while Sianez plung- ed hi1 weapon Into the woman and left her bleeding body In lhe gutler. Hargrave has sat quietly through every minute of the Sianez trial thus far. He must go on trial hlmsell July 14 to face charges of grand theft auto, scaled down from the murder count earlier recorded against him. Conviction on the first degrtt murder count coold technically mean death in the gas chamber for Sianez. His earlier attempts for a guilty plea to lesser dlarges and his moves to establish insanity have all been rejected. f'BI Investigating I ~~~~~~~~~~~~ N. Viets Invade Key Capital City In Heavy Fight SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnamese troops today invaded the important pro- vince capital of Tay Ninh, occupied several areas on its outskirts and battled American and South Vietnamese forces in street lighting that raged into the night. Hundreds of sold iers were in- volved. Field reports said at ieast 50 North Vietnamese were killed in the Tay Ninh fighting 55 miles northwest of Saigon near the Cambodian border. B u t spokesmen at U.S. headquarters said only 18 dead were confirmed. Allied losses were not immediately reported. The invasion was accompanied by an assault on a U.S. 25th Infantry Division artillery base six miles northweat o€ Tay Ninh. Defenders firing 105-mm. howilters into lbe North Vietnamese ranks hurled back the assault but 14 U.S. troops were wounded. At least 35 North Vietnamese bo4ie.s were counted. Six prisoners were taftn.\ I ' ~ • I In Saigon, allied headquarters reported that Ameri(iill" cptnbat deaths rose sha~ ly 1as1 week atnld eo.filluid heavy fight· ing across South Vietnam. The casualty report f<t"the week ended last Saturday listOO 335 ~ericans killed and 1,695 wounded. This compared with 252 killed and 2,125 wounded the previous week. The total for the war was placed at more than 36,000. Allied forces last week killed 4,360 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong, head· quarters said. Near Da Nang, on the coast of the South China Sea 400 miles north of Saigon, other Communist troops today smashed into an outpost, nicknamed "Tomahawk," manned by men of the JOlst Airborne Division and caused huvy damage. Front reports said North Vietnamese tornmandos attacking T o m a h a w k destroyed at least three l 5 5 -m m _ howitzers with satchel charges of dynamite, killed two Americans and wounded 24. Ten North Vietnamese bodies were found inside or impaled on the barbed wire barricades surrounding the camp. Street lighting was reported on the northern edge of Tay Ninh during the daylight hours today. Other battles nared on the eastern and western outskirts Jess than a mile from the temple of the Cao Dai religious sect, a faith which embodies elements of Buddhism. Taoism, Catholicism and Confucianism. MJ!itary'spokesmen said the action in· volved several hundred South Vietnamese. militiam en reinforced by uniU of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division. First shot.I were fired at 6:30 a.m. Tay Ninh, a city with about 150,000 civilian resident.I, baa long been a major target for North Vietnamese COJD- mancle.n. It sits utride major QSm.. munlst infiltration conidora leadin& toward Saigon from Csmbodia. • • • Murder Suspect Hijacker? ' , : 1 santa Ana police said today lhe FBI i& ~estigallng the possibility that lhe mu, who hijacked 1 Trans World Alrlints !Uiner to CUba Tuesday may be one of e two men aought in the murder of San- Ana police officer Nei..oa Saslc<r on .lune 4. l "They have 001' pho"" of ·the su.spects trthur League, 20 and Odis Nathaniel rlmeJ, 21 , both of Sanl.t Ana ) and ... wtq I.hem to pa.Mer.gen and crew ot Ille jeUiner." a Sanl.t Ana lnve!tlptor ';"very desperate" hijacker left the plane in Havani. '. Pwe.,... who had aone through the h!Jaem'1 bq while.Ile was Ir. the cocllpll Police and Students Clash in Michigan ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!) -Hun- dreds of heavily armed pollcemen tangl- ed again with young people aJong South University Striet near the University of Miehig111 campus early today. said he also had with him a copy of fugitive Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver's book, "Black Panther." 1be Negro, identified on the passenger list as C. D a v I s, commandeered the Boe.ine 707 Tuesday .afternoon over Nev1da on a nonstop OJ&ht from Oak1and to New York. 'nle plane arrived at New York's Ken- nedy Airport at 2:40 a.m. Wednesday. A third suspect in the slaying of officer Saucer, Daniel Michael Lynem 22, of Santa Ana, was arrested by police the Thursday, Junt 19, 1969 • L DAILY l'fl.Of ~ Boy ·Snaps Out .. or-·coma · SAN BJ:RNARDllld (UP!) -A &,year. old bol'. lolll In u...rta1ne f<r. lout ""1• llld only • 1.., houri ln>m death when be was fomid. came out of a coma today,~ bis -ad lither and drank wan\> mlllt. Matthew Joseph Zbnmennan•1 heart stopped beaUng Wednesday ·u he was being taken by hellcop&er ou\ of tbe San Bernardino National Forest. He had wandered for more than 90 ho.un.wltbout food, water or shelter with lhe tem- perature dropping to 30 al nla:ht • His lather. Stanley Zlmmer.man, gave crtdl! to sheriff's Deputy Oliver Gray and the Marine copter crew from El Tqro for saving hls boy'1 Jife. Zimmenolft aald lie~ Mallllew WU -·""!ii ho llnl .. h!in.' Docton llld llrly ~ lhe-boy - wu IUllertq from utrome llydrllloa but wu mlllnc "1teod,y and ul!Jloclory progress." The e)der Zlmmtrroan described the helicoptor ffight out of the ruaged moun- tains. "The two men worked on him con. stantly on the way to Norton Alt Force Base," Zimmerman said. "Gray tO:Ok his cloUies Off and wrapped hl1 body around Matthew. The other man gave him moulh·to-mouth resusclt1UOn. · "! wanted to help but they jUll "pushed m• away, They knew what they .were ' dolnl-J -,,,,_ lbrJ did IDI)' baV$ bell>~lllt -........ . • 'C'oC'Jluliell C. P.,.., treated tho boy II -blfort lie WU laba lo It. Bemanlliie'• boapllal bm, Aid lllllhew probably oaly bad a lew houri to u .. w~n.be wu found Wed-1¥· The ,.archers found Matthew In a 300Wbalik at 1:50 a.m., tbout 2\i mllet from where be wu reported m ...... lut satuntay. The boy wa ..-... ad bil ., .. ""'"' . Matthew wandered for M houri In a s po r t •lhlrt, pant.I a,n d tem1lJ lhoel. Temper.atutes .at night at the 1,309 foot level where be wu lost dlopped to I.be low ·•· · AL!!s~!!~'fl SPECIALS Ortho-Gro Liquid Plant Food in the gallon size Orig. 4.98 NOW 2/4.99 A complete and balanced fer!lllnr foods through both roots and foliage providing quick plant response, •• for the wholo yard, Ortho Azolea and Camelia Pellets In 5 lb. ·box 2/1e98 Ortho Systemic: Rose and Flower Care In 5 lb. box ~ 2e98 ' OF THE WEEKI .. Feed your .plllnt8 for 1 """1· · 71/4" hanging baskets planted wltll lovely begonias, c:oleus, ferns or fac:ll1la1,,. y.,..•11won1tohcmg-loftholafor ............ 1 77 on your patio and pordiu.· e Mystery Gcvdenla Sn 1 gallon container, P'fitztr or 69C . Tom Juniper ••• 1 ;of. Ila Protect your home and garden with Ortho sprays! 1.98ea. Ortho i-SprGy b on -""" ,......_ 90rd•• -lcldo .. b °""" Malaihloo so Spray and Ortho Chlordane Spray • LIKE IT ... CHARGE IT! Hang a Mexlc:an hand painted bowl' la your patio for plc:tllraq11 plalflql .. 2.49 Hand 'palnMd Mexican ban:el W. -3.79 6'' clay pots. .................. -·-·-······-·-·--.. 29c 7" clay pols.-.................................. --39c 8" day pots. ................................. _.,.,_,69c id. "We hope to hear from than 900n ... In New York Wednesd1y nlglit the FBI ~ It was studying sriapa:hots of lhe ~jacker. State poJJce said 21 persons were ar· "'led ad ltVerol penons Injured but that the series of dlspened encounters was Jess lntenae than battle• Tuesday night . Police Aid no police officen were Injured and none of the 1njurle1 lo young persons wu cauaed by police. day alter the slaying and Indicted along with League and Grim .. by the Orange lr--------------------... -----...:..------1-----. County Gr1nd Jury. F h • I I d N B h i The plctum: 'Wtte taken Tuesday even-!W by a _., u the poltte but ' - • p1~n:i"'i.=~:;::.:.i.;::~·::i!'l~ as ion s an -ewport ~ac WU Kt lor July II. ----~ ---=='-'------ ' l • I I , j ......................... """" H UfHHfl !.s having lrou· • ble with the chastity belts she sells. The British government wants to classify them as fumi· lure. What this means, she said, is the chastity belts will be sub- .. ject· to a 13. 76 percent purchase I tax. &he is appealing the decision. The items are ,replicas of a lS!h· 10entury cbaslily belt. Miss Huge .. sen said they are popular wltli American tourists, who use them I to make flower pot holders. ;; . -' p ' ' Unioulitw of Ttm& Coed Katitt· JQto oob1 1tnnr dtt.tnniMd to find o1't toMt'1 'going on down there attn • spotting thil """" ""'""°" with 111<h 1 an tnticing.\dQta, A ctt11 taorlc crew- mcm explained tha.& the 1ian had been wed btcauie of a 1hortcgt of "st.av o~" rigM • • · Out of 20$ cenclldates for the New ,Mexico_ coostituUohal conventi on •Sam M. Laulhlin was the only one who reitlsed to· submit a biograj>h· ical sketch of himself to the sec· retary of state's office. "I f and when I am elected as a delefa· ti on," he ,said, "I will send it to you tmm.ediately i otherwise you will have~ no need for this infonna• lion. Laughlin won and the secre- tary of state's office expects hll biography in the next mail. • The Marion , Ind., Chamber of Commerce has the ugliest window display downtown - a four-foot- deep window fuJl of trash. The chamber, as part of an antllltter campaign, collected milk cartons, cans, newspapers and other debris from one-acre of a Marton park and deposited It In their window. • San Frcncbco'1 top~.11 dan.- Cffl rukfd the Park and Recre· · ation Deportment for a park or ·; beach where the11 can sunba&he, stripped to the waiat. The gir[a , explained th.ell like to get a lit- tle sumhiM, like an11one else, i but can't wear top! becaU!e the ' strapr leave line! on their "working c/othe1 ... • Edward Baldridge of Maquoketa, Iowa wa s fined $35 and court costs for stealing a golf ball. A member of the Maquoketa Country Club started court action, saying he hit the ball into the trailer court where Baldridge lives and that Baldridge picked up the ball and refused to surrender it. . ·Ponipidou TaICes Over Presidency PARIS (UPI) -C.Orgea Pompldoo wu .officlslly proclaimed pruldent of Frll)Ct ~ and COi on with the bullnw ol ,.lectln8 a new cabinet while the Gaulllatl .quabbled a in o n I tbtm&elves over W'bo would 1et what RQOI .. He became prf&kient at S p.m. (t 1.m. PDT) when Gaston Palewskt, president of the constitutional council, officially proclaimed lhe results of Pompidou's runoff election victory Sunday over ac· ting president Alain Poher. . W~ )flitinl for the announcement, J:torrq;~ and ?faUooal Assembly Prtsi· dent Jacques Chaban-Delmas, e>peeted to be the ne:rt premier, began their ron· fere°"" with pollUcaJ leaders. In doing IO theY bnl.shed uJile the Gaulllst party 11quabblea. Chaban-Delmas conferred for an hour with former premier Antoine Plnay, 77, expected to be the new finance minister under a program aimed at saving the Uuutened French franc. Then while Plnay confeqed with Pompldou, Chnban- Delmu mtt wtth a seriea of Gaulllsts who·bld ltZ'Ved former President Charles de Gaulle.· For the nn:t Ume in 11 years De Gaulle was absent from th!.s hectic political ac· Uvity. He wu flying back this evening from to days of self·imposed exile.vaca- tion in Ireland and will be at his country home I t C.Olombey·Les·DeUX·Egllses when his IUCCeSSOr takes ovu. But the shadow of De Gaulle has become an influence with the long-tlme • U~IT ........ '{AKES PRESll>ENCY France'• Pompidou Gaullists fighting any move by Pompidou to name liberal non-Gaullists to the cabi net. The stiffest opposition came against Pompldou's plan to name non-Gaullist Valery Giscard D'Estaing as foreign minister replacing Michel Debre, who had served Pe Gaulle loyally since 1968. Party sources said Pompidou had decided to keep Debre, yielding to the pressure. Glacard D'Estaing had been one of the liberal·leaning politicians who supported Pompidou in the runoff, apperently sym· pathetic to h1s Ideas on better relations with the United Stata and relaxing op- poeition to Britain'• entry into the Eur~ pean Common Market. Air Traffic Controllers I Starting WorkSlowdown WASHINGTON (AP) -Air traffic con- iroller1 at New York, Denver and HOUiton called 1n lick in large numbers ~ and othera bepn followiiig rtllll .. Uons to the Jetter, causing major delays to air traveler1. The full Impact WU not known iJD. mediately. In New York, operaUorui al the three a1rporta wen cut by at Jeut ~ perc:ent. At midmornlng, S2 planes were stacked up on runways at LaGuardia awaiting lai<O!ls. The Federal Aviation Administration said it wi!J take "appropriate disciplinary action" if the movement proves to be an illegal strike. The FAA said 36 controllers called Jn sick at the New York Air Traffic Control ceoter, and 24 at the Denver Air Route Center. At Houston International Airport, only one of the normal complement ol 12 tower controllers showed up for ,work. Supervisory personnel kept operations going. Jac.t Maher, national coordinator of the Proftuional Air Traffic Controllen Organization, said hl.s membership was 'ifed up with t.be FAA 's lip service of its regulations." The organization, with a membership of 7,400, revised its standards for safety regulation at a convenUon in Miami on May 27. ''This ls the Jmpact of our revised safe· ty operation aotne into effect," he said. "We are telling our people to ha ve . strict adherence to aafety rules, lo the regulaUom of botll the FAA and PATCO. In addition, we are telling our people if there Is any Jnd.k:atlon that phyalcally or menl.ally they are not able lo do top notch jobs, they abould not IO to work but to call in sick and have everything ti1cy need taken care IX." The FAA in a statement said: "If lt ap- pears there Is concerted action to stay oft the job -to conduct a strike in violation of law -the FAA will take appropriate dLsd.PtinFY action." U.S., Saigon Challenge Reds To Free Election PARTS (UPI) -The United States and South Vietnam challenged lhe Communist side today to submit to free elections in South Vietnam u n de r international supervision. Failure to do so, they said, would show the Communists were trying to impose their will. The statements by chier South Vietnam negotiator Pham Dang ~am and U.S. deputy negotiator Lawrence E. Walsh ap- parently were in reply lo the Viet Cong announcement last weeJt It had se t up a provisional revolutionary government for South Vietnam. Some AUied officials said they believed the Viet Cong decided to form the government so they C(lUld argue against the need for an election before formation of the roalition government they demand . The Communists said the ~ailed revolutionary government reflects the will of the people. Lam said the Viet Cong and Hanoi were seeking to follow the Communist strategy they used to take over Czechoslovakia in 1948. In 1948 the Czech Communists demanded a coalition but they exterminated the opposition and formed a dictatorial regime, Lam said. Walsh told the Communists, "If you truly believe you have the support of the people of South Vietnam. you should be prepared to test your claims in genuinely free elections rather than trying to fm. pose your views at these negotiations." Twisters Sighted • Ill South Tliunderstorms Shatter S um mer in Midwest Areas CaHfo"'la T"9 11111 ~ 11'1 Sovttler11 C1!11on•l1 '°""" •rte.' 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" " " " .. .. " " .. " " " .. " " .. " " .. " ., .. .. .. " .. • n " ., .. " " .. " .. .. " .. .. • " " .. " .. .. • " .. .. ,. " .. M .. " .. ., " " " .. " ,. ,. " " .. ,. " ,. .. " ., " ... " " " .. •• .., ... .. _ _.r .,._, __ Ship Signals Cross.ed • Inquiry Told of Course Change Mixup SUB IC BAY, Philippines (UPI) - Messages which might have separated the Australian carrier Melbourne and the U.S. destroyer Frank E. Eva.DI niomenta before thelr collision apparently croued · each oilier, it was discl06ed today. collision course." Melbourne to Evin!: "My rudder is bard Jett." Ev1N to Melbourne: 1iao,er. My J'Ud. der b hsnl rllht." Slovens and Jacobs bolh testified the tut two cour1e chance meuagea were uwlthln tecondl'' of ed other. On Monday, watch talcert on the bridge of the ac.companyine Amer&ain destroyers James E. Kytli aqd Evereu F. 4rtan testified the order of lhc meuaca wu reversed. ~.Hrller testim®Y It was apparent •bj <!flctr! oo the bridges o1 the Mel· bow'nl 'and the Evans both believed they hid -their .-sages ltrs~ indk:atlng a fatal c:rou oVer. lnfonnatlon given to a six·man, U.S.• Australian Board of Investta;atlon con- fi rmed again that both ahlpt w~ eDlll· ed In .sharp turn.s which brot,tght them together in.stead of apart. flad messages giving the intentions of the two ships been spaced farther apart, the tragedy might have been averted. Instead, the 20,000 ton Melbourne sliced the 2,200 ton Evans in two before daWll on J une 3 and 7f American llves were lost. Testimony about the messages was given by leading tactical operator Christopher Stevens , 22, Lake McQuarie, New South Wales, and tactical operator Rodney Howard Ja c obs, 21, Green.sborough, Victoria, who were handling communJcations traffic directly before the collision. Solon Says Campus Curbs Would Aid Student Rebels Shortly after 3 a.m. the Evans was ordered from a position ahead of the Melbo ume to a position 1,000 yards astern of the carrier for .,plane guard" duties. Aft.er the Evans made her tum, the message sequence went Jike this, ac- cording lo Stevens: Melbourne to Evans: "~fy course is 260." f\.ielboume to Evans: ''You are on a • • WASHINGTON (UPI) -The lesder of a Republican congre!!ional task force that toured restless college campuses cautioned today against r e p r e s s i v e measures aimed at disorders, saying this would simply ltn!:ngthen the "Uny minority" of student radicals. Rep. William E. Brock (Jt..Tenn.), who led the tour by 22 GOP House members of scores of campuses this spring, aald the group concluded that hardline counter moves might dri ve tbe "great bulk or idealistic, concerned students" into the arms of the vocal minority. SANTAANA 1 FASHION SQUARE • 547·7211 The report by Brock and his colleagues on tbtlr tour was presented to Prtsident Nixon Wednesday and urges that he try to establish an understanding wi th the so- called moderate majority before they become so disenchanted over outdated educational practices that they join the minority. The task force suggested that Nixon Improve relationlhip with students by ad· vocating a lowering of the voting age to 18, seeking draft reforms and pushing programs to get students more invol~·ed in politics. THE "GO'' COAT ... Breeze through a busy Summer In !hi~ great new cardigan coat ••• made of wool jar'sey and fully lined, It's the perfect wrap to canyon a plane ... go • sight-seeing in San Francisco ... or for Dinner at the Beach .. . Choose fro m white, na'I)', red; green or beige, Sizes 6to16 33.DO Venetia n Room Coats and Suits • FIRST flOOR I I Saddleha~k· - T"8y's Fina) ' ' N:oY.-·~ks \lbr. i1, NO. '1"6, 2 SECTIONS, 32 P>,GES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA JHURSDA Y, JUNE ·19, 1969 TEN CENTS County Broadens Study of Ali ·so Beach Pier By JACK BROBACK ot f!le Ot!IY l"IW lltlt Orange County supervisors \Vednesday listened to two hoW"S of wrangling over lhe proposed Aliso Beach Pier in South La"guna and finally voted W to plan a new, larger concept of t.he facility which could cost $600,000. ·Four outspoken opponents present at the bearing and three who submitted let- ters called the proposed 600-foot pier everything from "unsightly and debris Down the Mission Clemente Pier Crossing Nixed SAN CLEMENTE - A level crossing over the Santa Fe train tracks proposed tor the entrance of the S~n Clemente Municipal Pier has been reiected by the C!lifomla Public Utilities Commission (PUC). The at-grade crossing would have eliminated a narrow, steep underpas5 and stairs which crossing proponents say ~ar elderly and infirm persons from the pier. Tbe PUC said a level crosslng would be too dangerous. Between five and nine trains cross the entrance at speeds of 65 mph. , Johnson Heads Club ?.USSION VIEJO -Guy Johnson has been elected president of the Kiwanis Club of Mission Viejo. Other new officers are Norman Fehrman, first vice president: Otto Guli, second vice president; and Roo Sloker, treasurer. .e Balloons i.o Soar MISSION VIEJO -Balloon to the Moon. A Jules Verne story? Not quite, it is a Mlss.lon Viejo Recreation Center con- test June 26 at i p.m. at the center. Children's postcards will be attached to gas fil~ balloons and then released. 'The child whose balloon travels furthest will receive a $25 Savings Bonci. The person who returns the card will receive a prize t'oo. :e Sllllm Classes Set ?.USSION VIEJO -Classes in syn. cbronized swimming will begin Monday at lJ a.m. at the ?.fission Viejo Recrea- tion Center. Eight one and a half hour classes will be taught. Participants must have passed a previously held swimming fest. the classes will teach swimming skills and interpretive strokes perfonned iiiythmically to music. Fee is $8 for members and $18 for nonmembers. e Get lnio t he Swint l\USSlON VIEJO -Friday is the last day to sign up for the Mission Viejo 'ftecreation Center's Nadadores, AAU sanctioned swim team. Youngsters from S to 17 years of age are eligible. The Nadadores now have 64 swimmers and "everyone swims," said Director Jerry CUrran. Team me11J,ber.1 must be member.1 of the recreatiOn c~cr. The (iam Is a member of the Orange"\., County Swimming Conference. ·e Dl1'1ng Classes Slated MISSION VIEJO -Diving classes will begin Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. at the "'Mission Viejo Recreation Center. Six one· hour lessons will be taught for beginning an<! inten:nediate__diYers. • Fee is $5 for members of the Recrea· tfon Center and SIS for non-members. Prospective divers may register anytime up to the start of classes. ' collecting" to '1dirty,•• "horrible," and "desm,ctive of natural beauty." Proponents sang a diffel'f;nt tune . They called the proposal a "boon to oldsters and children," "a real, recreational asset," and "artistic." Representative or the opponents, most of whom Jive near A1i:so Beach, was Mrs. Arnold Kem. "I am amazed that con- servationist.a woukl sup~ tl\is idea. Aliso Beach is one of the few that you can $C!t! altymore (from the bia:hway) and •.. --... , ~~ PA.IL T I'll.OT Stiff Pltfte Tip Toe View Jenl Johnston, 4, found her Jegs too short Wednesday to enable her to use coin-operated viewer at Laguna's Hei sler Park. She'Jl have to wait a year or two. Jeni is daughter of Mr. and 111rs. Thomas Johnston, 581 Diamond St., Laguna. 7 V ie·w Assault On Waitress , But No On e Gives Aid RIVERSIDE (UPI) -Seven persons stood outside a doughnut shop early today watching through the plate glass window as a waitress WiU!i beaten by a would -be holdup man. Despite her screams for help, no one came to Mrs. Anita Joseph's aid. Finally sbe broke away from the at- tacker, who appeared to be drunk, and rushed outside. When she asked a man in lhe crowd to help her, he got in his car and drove away. Atrs. Joseph climbed into a parked car and locked the doors until the intruder, who was ul\succes.Vul in his efforts to o~n the Ct\Sh rea;ister 1 fl~ Then she re-et1teTec.t the sbop and telephoned police. "Those people didn't have to get In- volved," she said. "All they had to do was call the police." jl 's gettinB WWH, '1 she said. Typical of those in fa vor of I.he pie r wac L. C. Baumgartner of Leisure World Laguna Hills repl'f;senilng a local rod and gun club. "We have 350 members who like to fish and many of them cannot go out on Jive ball boats anymore," he related. "We pay our share of the tax burden and there are 30,000 people in the area ol the pier, many who would use it. J am sympathetic with nearby property owners, but ~hanges do come." More Supervisor Alton E, Allen outlined the history ol Aliso Beach. "Then: Uled·to be a motel on the beach and a ~w owner proposed to e.1paod it. Fortunate})',. the rleal fell through and the property became available. Tbe first asktng price was $1.2 million, but after long negotia· lions we (ll!e county)' got the •beach for S60'i ,000 In 1967 ," Alle11 explained. "We decided to buy the beach on Oct. 4, 1967, and were thinking of .all the peo- ple of Orange County. We were ·us.ing the • montY of all the people for the purchase and it is our duly to uUlae It to Its best recreation use. I realize that many nearby residents want just a beach but the Idea that the pier will destroy the beach Is unfounded. It amounts to a greater use for a greater number of pe4r pie." The design concepts for the facility, which is what the hearini was supposed to be all about, were outlined by Oliver Fer.vor ol. Fervor·Dorland and AsSoci· ates of San Diego. "It will be located at the southeast end ol. lhe parking lot to allow more parking area and for geological reasons. Our studies show that there is an ocean can- yon th~re formed durlrrg the Ice . ages and It 'Is· more ecoriomlcaJ to build on sand In that canyon," Fervor explained. "It 1'ill be a clean structure of plea5- ing appearance with a spiral ramp eir trance to accommodate wheel chain, ~ (See AJJSO, P11e I ) Bricl{bats Tossed At Youth Street Dance Harriman, Solons Back Clifford WASHINGTON (UP!) - W. Averell Harriman and two top senate Democratic leaders endorsed. today fonner Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford's proposal for withdrawal of l00,000 U.S. combat troopa from Vietnam &his year, ~ 1P, •rematnder in lflO. Harriman, cflief U.S. negotiator at the Paris ~· talks in the Johnson ad· minlatnllaD, ..id Ilia! he ~eillill last winter an immediate pullout of 50,000 American troops and an tnd lo search· and-destroy mi!sions. 'These steps, Harriman said In an In- terview, might have Induced the Com· -" munists to take a reciprocal troop reduc~ tion step and to begin serious discmsion of peace proposals. Clifford's proposal also won support from Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield and Senate Democratic Whip Edward M. Kennedy. Both said they hoped President Nixon would give strlous consideraUon to the Clifford plan as outlined In an article in the magazine foreign affairs. Nlton is expected to be questioned on Clifford's proposal at a White House news conference today at 4 p.m. PDT. Although Harriman did not say so, other officials have reported that his point of view was rejected last winter by President Lyndon B. Johnson, backed up by Secretary of State Dean Rusk . and presidential adviser Walt W. Rostow. Asked whether he thought It was too late now lo achieve this aim of large withdrawals of U.S. forces, Harriman repliP.d "I just don't know ." He said that while he fell the Com· munists would have rei.ponded favorably last January, when he repeated his recommendations to the Nixon ad· ministration, he could not be certain now because he had been out of the di scussions for five months. Harriman did not agree specifically with Clifford's timetable for withdrawal, calling for the pullout of 100,000 ground troops by the end of this year and the re- maining 100,IXMl to ISO,lm combat fortes by the end of 1970. Stock Markets NEW YORK (AP) -The stock marktt tumbled lower today, with brokers reporting investor concern over tight money conUnuing to weigh it down. (See quotations, Pages 1~15). Inflation Flushed Laguna Drops Lid on John Hike Boost 'There's still one thing that will cost a nickel , at least In Laguna. Beach and that's the five-cent pay toilet. Councilm~n Wednesday night held the line against a naUonal inflationary spiral in the pay-for-public-comfort business. Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan, past champion of public restrooms, for a time seemed ready to give in to the bl•n· dishments Qf Pacific Nik.()..Lok Co. which, despite Ila name , urged that pub- lic stall access in LagUna be ~ to a <lime. -,.,, ; . ·.l.< ·" .. '""' ""N-P-.LOt ·,~~1Jfat it hiil ·bttft ror fi'f't or lix ,Years the trend in the U.S,1ud C'.anada to ~ange· to a dqne. Newport Beach made.the c~aeove< IUCCeU!ully several years ago,· they reported. After reeelv1 ng aourance rroni the city manager that there is always one stall at a comfort station which is free, O'Sullivan fashioned a motion to raise the other stalls to a dime. "Do you know what you're talking about?" asked Mayor Glenn Vedder, who rallied the nickel forces . "Now we get $280 a year (from pay toilet!), I don't think it is enough to worry about." Councilman Charlton Boyd suggested Nlk-0-Lok mJght have to change ita name if everyon~ charged a dime. He said, a bit wistfully, "I feel it would be dettgbUul lo bold the line in at least 'one area." O'Sullivan suggested. tbat perhaps hat( the ~m!or\ station locks ~ki be a , oiciel Nll!,lbe ptheri ·• dll\>•·~·~ W ''had' i dlnii: but not 1t nlCUJ. .."' O'SUlllvan11 ·original tDoUciJl perisbed for lack ol a second. Coi.mcllmen filed 'lbe dlmF l!Olti'8llon. A i'l!pbrter asked councilmen if the comfort stations -two at He.Islet Park, one al Main Beach and one at the library -would accept the new free parking tokens that merchants will offl!r. The city manager thought not. Dante Acc11ses Mesa Pair; They Say Hypnotist Phony By ARTHUR R. VINSEL or -. Dlllr f11111 111tr Hollywood. hypnotist Ronald Dante charged Wednesday that an Orange County boatbuilder is involved In his at- tempted murder and felony theft arrest, htlt the accused today is spellbound only by the intriguing I.ale. The seventh husband or actress Lana Turner narrowly escaped dealh Tuesday when a bushwhacker wearing a rakish Australian prairie hat pumped five pistol shots Into his car as he drove into an underground garage. "I have a very good idea who he was," said the 49'-year-old jet se t entertainer, who affects the title Dr. Dante, con· tinuing to tell of a phone warning he allegedly received Monday. He said the V!!Ugeful caller claimed to be the owner ol a now-defunct Santa Ana firm which manufactured watercraft for Marlin Boal Co., whose outlet is Mesa Boat Center, 1595 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Sanla Ana police who beard radio reJ!J..._rts of the murdM attempt recQgnized Dante'iname and 1lpPed off Ho11ywood deteclives, who arrested the hypnotist in connection with a loCal 1968 boat theft case. with the felony grand thefl warrant. Ron Snyder, 36, of 2320 College Drive, Costa Mesa, was equally incredulous Wednesday when notified by newsmen of Dante's accusations about his Tuesday assailant. Snyder and his father Paul are prin· cipals in the Costa Mesa company with '°'Which Dante was dealing more than a year ago, while appearing at the Villa Marina nightclub In Newport Beacb. "fle's a phony s o n-of·a·gun," s al d Snyder, "I've never met the man before, nor has my father -he dealt with g sales representative." Snyder chuckled•when told the contents of Dante's alleged telephone conversation Monday. "I wish I'd gotten the five G's," be (Se< DANTE, Page !) Another Laguna Teacher Salary Session Slated Distressing Incident, Says Mayor By RICHARD P .. NALL ot ... Dill' f'lllf llttf A Laguna Beach street dance that &parked the lre of downt.Own mercbanta' also took !ta lumps in city cou.ocl1 chambers Wednesday. "Qtdte distreulac)• was the label ~ by Mayor Glenn Vedder as ~e detallld his morning.after inspectJon and criticism Crom members ol the businea community. Veddtr said Jocks at two bualneues were jammed. Store fronts were ·being hosed off where persons had become UL Food Wat thrown on windows. Y0ung peo- ple climbed on roofs. There was candle wax on tlle sidewalks, evidenct, he said, of a fire hazard. "They (merchants} sure worked me over for it," the mayor said. Charles R. McCalla. Laguna Beacfi busines.mian, had also been sharply critical of th e conduct at the dance sponsored by the South 'Orange County YMCA. "Every hippie in town was there. We have indeed made a· nice place for these bums lo enjoy," he had written. McCalla's letter criticized the number of out-of-town persons, conduct generally. incense burning, lighted candles, loud music and other factors. Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan :1aid he attended the first three or four Forest Avenue dances and said youngsters behaved well then. He said it seemed this time the young people had not lived up to their responsibility and said perhaps another dance location should be sought. "l have that feeling too, especially when you find that maybe only one fifth of them came from Laguna," said Ved~ der. "Maybe the Monarch Bay parking area or maybe San Clemente . I don't see why we always have to be lhe ones lo pick this up." Councilman Charlton Boyd mentioned 1 communications breakdown . lie said young peorle should feel free to use the streets bu aakt they bad to be responsi- ble about it. Vedder said he would talk with Roger Carter, YMCA director, to see what might be done. Carter suggested later in a news release that perhaps merchants can help iron out the pro_blerDJ and the "ba~ (See DANCE,-Pqt fl ~ - Orange Coast Bare Beach g oer :lield . for Drugs J(idney Patient Remains The st.age performer and sell-declared paychology pr<"fessor said his mystery caller warned of great bodily harm and possible disgrace in the eyes of hi' 48· year-old bride if he faill'd to cooperate. "Or 1'11 make sure )'{JU never walk again," Dante quoted the man as saying, after a demand for payment of ~.ooo In blackmail ,money. Teachera and school officlahJ of the Laguna Unified School District will hold another salary bargaining session Friday at 2 p.m. In district headquarters. Latest board of(er to the teachers pro- vided for a lump sum of $72,000 to be ad· ded 'to the personnel budget for the next school year. A si.J: percent increaM:. Wea titer Are you ready fqr some morning fog? Thal'a coming nut but Fri· day's aCtemoon weather should be sW'lny and seventyi.Sb along the Orange Coast. -Ford thinks he had a better idea but ·sheriff's deputies think it was Just bare defiance or the Jaw. Critical, But Improves All three principals in the May, 1968 negotlaUons for Dante's purcha11e o( 11cYen, US·foOt Marlin· motorboal5 worth cheerllll ,,_,.._, their short .,... 111,lOO'.denled knowledge and "'°!fed al They picked up Ford lnga lsbee Betbe Susan Mw:e's bid ror life wUh Ull!i ti \Vednesday as the completely nude he_,,._ u.. "--_ ..... r.._ .~ 1 al E an.ny •lllfleY ,,,., invlu1:i-&STe·.1111:1 wen Laguna Beach man sauntered 00«. L into its fifteenth day lodly bu~the con- toro Road. Officers said he was obUVJous dition of the 17.year~ld Orange &irl re· to the stares or astonis~ pas~rsby and mains crlUcal. qute uncon~ when he was waylaid tt ~med today,. bowtVCr-. JblL there by deputiu . wu some lifting of the 1loom evident His stroll aioni Ille counlly ,..d ended Wedntlday among lime cl.,.11 to Ille iJI. with hi• booking on suspicion of Indecent tetimve care un!t at the Orange ColiDty nd bei nd lh I n f Medical Center. uposure a ng u er e n ucnce 0 "She had a fairly rest!ul n.lght." a drugs. spokesman commented. "One of ber doc· The 24-year-0ld Lqunan is in the lors talked to me about her lhia morning Orali£e Coun1y jail today. Fully dres.sed. and ht said she setmed quite alert and 'J .... .,...,...,.., the _,., • .,·Uon. versaUon." ...... _.. Doclort 11r.-:that U.Jdl kidney Ibey "He lliin!)' I. did ill No. I did not call gralltd lnin Slllin'froii> her motlier. ~. ' Dr.~. defliiledJlonakl W• Albrr,i.1, Flortoce Mute · c I• fun¢iorllng l ot · •Anatttlm, whOlfr 'firm R<ip'c!stion perftdly. '!'lie hlaii ..Ji0oi gtrV• oo.dlllon : :.E~i.1<• 1nc'.,'bl\JttM.J>Qo1! ¥•.S~ •tems. U!t¥ AV • ..from pool operallt• ta·Al\il yard: . · complicaG'l"ll llial '"' ,...iving rvw>c1 "No, l~ld' ;l'Ui~ an ottempl on his lbe c10t'k a~n. life.:• Al t .~ufdf,' "~qt Yef, I'm M.a. ""'"' bei,.lf b l'<Porlcd as being •U~clOokl . lol'\llrd to Steine Di. Dante in "excellent cooditlon." She was sent in court." • home after doctor, aaSd she had made an MW Tumer'1 husband of •ll weeks la "WICOmpUcated recoYery" !rom Ille mt· lrt1. on flJolOO bail, pending h~ jor tran1piul .""11Ul' .. ~ flrll ot Us ""1lml!"'!Y . hearbl&· June • .IJ>.Santo kind Jn Oronp 00dl!7... M-•.liunlelp41' COUtl lli'i coonecllon . -. • ti.,., ~ I ' _. !"'/ , ~ •••.• Teachers had asked for $169,000, or about 13 percent. Those sums do not take into co~ skieratlon an additional $32,000 to whlch all tellcher1 woold be enUUed under their CU'ltr&cl for steps up the salary ladder for, eiperlence and educatJon. . ·''The' lital ·....ion. will be the lhlrd r~ ·Of aalary neg<itiations bctwttn the ltaolien Ind 11ie :sclool board .. : Salaries ol noo<eachlni ptl'sbmlol .will be taktn up by the l>Nlrd at a mettm1 nOirt' Thuroday. ' .:Al Ill•~ ume m"'11nt;. the board wtn coOlldtt lbe odopllon ol a prellmlnary il1!d&et 61 abart '111 mlltlon, up aboul '50,000 OWi' thtl Jtl,t1S ~ie-• li)liblio bearln&JI ocbed in-·budiet iiedla. ' . INSIDE TODi\ Y An eztrc~e fn accomplish~ 1he#it, tilt \V tstminsttr Com.- munit11 Theater't 10ork.,kop ·~ ductlon of an original dranw ;, , revttWtd today in Enter~·\ 1MJ1};~•0t' Ji, • ...,, ... .. " • .. ... ,. " .. M J --. --------I lWLY P1UJT L '-••,1"1!1! • • l'ytot.t·~ ,,.,,,. -.·MAY BE out and thll IMY be a --.nunlly, wt doo't lhlnlt for a ..-thlt •V<?YOOO deserUJd tile holl• o! the hl&b !icllool In ,..,.,h of S\111 and aurl. '-A kit of LBHS studtnll and recent aradlat. have llnded jobs for the 1um· mer to ileep !heir lime (and w~Uell) hill. Gle:nn Daniels 'is one of two casting directors for the Pageant of the Mastera. Jobi like that don't come along every day, especially for a teen. Rob Kronman ia working at the Newport NatJonal Bank. He· drives around in a bank car running special er4 rondl u • d • r the .direction of the cbid tell«. Aalltlnc -tlle 1llddJa al McHqb'a Toy Shop II Lynda Peden, while Candi Mc:Cue aerva 'em up at Taco BelL 1n the uwduat bullnesl are Greg K•ltt and Jdl Jahtaul (Lqllna Lumber Co.) end Jim Kulm (l!enton ConslrucUon). THE FOOD PEOPLE are employing a lot of ~ taleot this summer. Mike Loge haJ donned a· Fores\ Markel apron, while MB• Abbey and Telford Cottam . ' ' .. are a couple of blocks over at Acord's. Catching frostbite at Baskin-Robbins lee Cream are Denny Schmitz, Mark Sizelove, Mendy Slevens, D l a n n e Slowsky. Mike McMurray, Sltve Wood and Bart Tabor. Working rrlghts at the Festival lfOUnds restaurant wUl be Steve Wletbowskl, Merrilee Beaton, Christy Mi\..els, Tom Tabor, Debbie Aubrey, and Steve,-Mark and Loretta Klosterman. Quite the group. Tom Tabor will keep busy during the days, too, cleaning the beach at Three Arch Bay. Speaking of the beach, lifeguards Charlie and Digger Ware, 8'111 Brown, John Slowsky, Tom Holm, John Gill, Bob Gardner and Jamie Causey will gtl -tan while aiUing around on the job. (If the sun ever comes out). Bob Cotterell is.at Challis Art studio, while Jim warren is his own boss in sell· ing all sort.a of metal work. Debbie Brek· ke is at the Laguna Country Club, and Jenny Jahraus at the A & W. J<ethy Shapard, Steve Heste r and Rick .DeWJtte are employed at the Niguel Th.tater, wbUt Rick's sister Ocllle is up- Laguna Schools Succeed In .Giving Fundamentals I "if inyone tells you we're nol teaching fund,11J1.enials in the Laguna Beach umfied. School District, you can ~ them they're full of prunes, 1• Alsi!tant Superintendent .owen Tait, told truitees this week. To back up his statement, Tail ~ad results· from lta1e reading tkills eums given nm. «eond; tlllrd. sixth ·~ tent eradet& in the district. According to Tail, the 198 first graders in the diat.rict who took the exam can read better tt.an 80 percent of other flrst grndm througliout California. Tbe test al.lo indicated an improvement from lut·year. 'Ibl 1951 mean raw acore for the flnt graders wu 49, while this year It ..... 57. "'Ibe top ac:ore on the test it '1J and M of our kid> scored 'ln-73 wblla four of them scored in the 15-11 (low) nnge." Tbe !TA system i!nltlal Teadlq ~ bet) ....,,. to indlctle an all or aothinti patent" o:rnrnented. Tait, addlnr1 "'!be m.n lverace is up aDd oar top kids are really doinc well." 1be aeoood graders also were taught under tile !TA syalem and al so fared well 'Ibey improved from a mean 1rde ecore tn 1961 of 2.7 to 3.1 thi• year and are better reader• than 72 perctl'lt of oll1er ...,,.,.i l!l'lldes In . tile slate. "I· allrlbute lhl1 to !TA be<auae It hun1l .OOWn up in second grade belore. Tbe majority of tbe klda are sbowlni up hi the blgher ~· The lOw scorers, u far u I can tell, Just made the transit.Ion trom lrom ITA. Tbe whole test was taken Players to Get Gift From Irvine A $2$,000 check will be presented the Laguna Players by the Irvine Foundation l"riday for the new Laguna-Moulton Playhouse that Is nearing completion. Irma Nofziger, Players genera 1 'T\anager, said Mn. Charles Wheeler, a 1ember of the foundation board, will nake the presentation of the final check. It will bring to $90,000 the amount given for lhe new 350·seat theater by the foun· dation. George Gade, Players vice president, and William Harcum, trea.rur er, wUI ac· cept the fund!. The 10 a.m. presentation will be at the new theater site. OAllY PtLOf OIAMO~ eot.st PUel llMIHG C0M"Att1' l •Md N. W.M ---M~-<:.lo, Ylot ,........ .. -.,., Mtlllttr --- ln TO (Trad1tionaf Orthography) not ITA,55 Taft explained. Third graders, most of whom have not had ITA, also did well, with a mean grade score of 4.1 as opposed to a 3:8 ex- ~cy. Their me.an grade scores between 1"8 and 1969 were exacUy the same, and they are better readers than 73 percent ol other Californians in their grade1. . Sixth graders exceeded expectations of 6.1 by having a mean grade score of 6.67. La!t year the mean grade score had been 6.1, so improvement was shown. 11le state mean Is 50. Tenth grade fiaures were a little less exciting, ahowin& the 180 studenta who had taken. the academic progress test ob- .tained. a mean ~e of 52, which ac· cording to Tait "represents di stribution In the $3 i:terceiltile, which is just about a.eral:e.'.. · .. /1 .f . The ·lest baa a possible score ot 100 and a.tkiut 38 student.s scored In the 12·30 range, which indicates they need help. llowever, about 23 fell in the 91 to 100 range. Tait said he was most pleased with the results 'which indicate the effeCtlveness of teaching practices. "We will examine the scores very carefully and will seek not onl:t. to ma in· tain our standing, but to work at im· proving scorers even more," he said. From Page l DANTE ••. sa1d, stressing he was Joklns. "I read Wednesday where he said he had no idea who might want to kill him - or why -unless It was because someone was jealous of the woman be married," Snyder continued. "And then be comes up with a story like this." "Actually, lt's kind or exciting," he concluded. Los Angeles County Sheriff's Depart- ment detectives also said Wednesday that Dante's allegatioM had no ba!ils for belief, adding. that he had been generally uncooperative in thelr attempted murder investigation. A warrant was Issued for Dante 's ar- rest. which came June 3, 1968, after his involvement in the allegetl boat caper was probed by investigators. Dealer Ron Snyder said Wedne.sday that the seven boats mlght well have disappeared if it wasn't for a susplclous truck driver who quesUone<I a $100 bonus for loading in the middle of the night. "lt just didn 't set right and he refused to load them up, but called us instead and \Ve called police," Snyder explained, saying Dante was found at the scene , 11upcrvising the boat tranEfer. -m--aaiil -the hypnoUst had broken a chain lock to enter the Santa Ana yard and claimed to be owner of the boats when lawmen arrived. This claim, Snyder said, was based on his payment with a $17,450 cheek that had bounced, allhough he had pledged to make it up in cash on what would have been the morning after the boats were hauled away. Once the unregistered boats were across Uii! Nevada line en route to Las Vegas, Snyder said, they would be unrecoverable . unrecoverable. Dante. e\aimed Wednesday that the document in question was a promil&Ot}' note and that he thought the whole caSfl had been cletrtd up after his court ap- pearance date of July 11. 1968 wa1 cancelled. Aoother warrant was issued shortly thrufter, but Dante w1s1 not arrtsled beta.use, according to Sanla Ana Pollee Sit. Kent Rttlor. lawmen &imply didn't know where he was. He told s.~eriff'g deputies wbtn being booked at tile ll'est Hollywood 1tatlon that he held a doctora l dearet fn>m Singapore Unlvtrstty In po)'Cho!OIY. Peter Lim, p11bllc relsllons dlttctor for Sin11poro Unlvenity, today denied the statement, pointing out that no a u ch dtgrtt ls available at that lnstltullon. ' town at South Coast Theater. In the kitchen at Colony Kitch la Bill Murray, while Ray Wilbur, JackJe MUler and Keith Knight are at the Snack Shack. Kei th is also a draftsman at Martinez and &!wards architectural firm, and Glenn Handy is working for local architect Chris Abel. The Pottery Shack has to get the troplly for the most teen employes, with Sharlene Sutton, Kathy Ryan, Loma Lum, Katy Healy, Peggy Holm, Amy White, Bob Benham, Wendy Taylor, Scott Hunt, Robert Powers and Kevin Neiiwen- der. Working up the street at the Laguna Nursery are Steve and G J e n n Kawaratani. And then there is Doµg Schmitz, who de<:lded to vacate Sleepy Hollow and be gainfully employed as a flower boy al Eschbachs. I rt1UST HAVE set a new record for the number of names in one column. But then I'll probably get shot by somebody I forgot. That's what they call an occupational hazard in my line of work. From Page 1 ALISO ... baby buggies, lifeguard jeeps and service trucks," he added. ' "We prepaerd two concepts, each to cost about $400,000. One ~·ould be 460 feet long with a concession and restroom building at the base. The other 600 lect wilh a separate restroom building. CONSIDERAT IONS "Recently the possibility of a $300,000 contribution from Federal Land and Water Conservation Funds allowed con· sideration of a proposed extension of 100 feet with an offset square on the northwest side. State marine biologist! approve this extension from which they would eonduct studies. They say it would also Improve fishing," Fervor continued. Al Ru sh, assistant executlve officer of the state Wildlife Conservation Board said that body had agreed to approve half the $400,000 cost aod to further aa ap- plicaUon to the federal body for $300,000. "We feel that the larger project with the square extension would be more . favorably received by federal officials." he eald. "Under such a plan the federal government would pay one-half the cost, the slate and county one-fourth each." Supervisor David L. Baker emphasized that the "question before WI today is the design of the pier, not whether or not it should be built. That was decided long ago." But Supervisor Allen· . noted that although a public hearing had been held on Oct. 4, 1967, "I am not sure everyone in the area was aware of It. We should give them a chance to be heard." OTHER OPPONENTS Opponents, in addition to Mrs . Kern were Glen McMullen of Laguna Royalc tone-quarter mile south of the beach), Harry J, Early of Camel Point ("Within gunshot of the pier"), Gordon Brown of South Laguna, and letters from OUver A. Lewis, Ceanothus Drive; Mrs. Davis K. Holies, f.1cAulay Place, and Jeannette K. Sheldon , 234 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Proponents included Mrs. Jack Robb of CeanothuA Drive ; Baumgartner and John Jansen of Laguna Hills ; Mary Cronquist. Laguna Beach arti:it and art dealer, and Ri chard S. Croker of Laguna Niguel. Some opponenta called attention to a sewer outlet which flows into the ocean at the beach ("That $lagnant creek should be c.leaned up"), Supervisor Robert W, Ballin said the counly llarbor Com· mission.should look: into that complaint. Secret Researcl1 In University Area Assailed PALO ALTO (UPI) -A member of Stanford University's academic senate told a California editors conference today thar sccre.t r~search &hould have no part in the university or its community. -Kn executive or-The Slln!ont-itesearch Institute, the private orgariiiation whose ties with the univenlty ·are being severed because of the secret research issue, replied. that much of SRl's work was peaceful and that the furor was caused by militants whose only interest was destruction of American ln!tltutions. Dr. Leslie Zatz of the UnJverslty Senate, an associate proressor of radiology, and R. K. Brunsvold, vice president for planning and coordinating for SRI, both spoke at the annual United J>r,s11 International California Editor1' Conftrence.. Capo to Decide Tax Override CAPISTRANO BEACH -A 50-<ent school tat override with I three )'tM lime limit wtll be voted M by rukfenll or tile Ctplatrano UnUled Sdlool Diltr1ct on Oct. I, d!strlt'I trust ... --deelded Monday. The ta• Increase would gentrate 1n estim1ttd '800i000 for the school1. A propo1ed override of IO centa but wtth no time limit w•s: downed by ·Y'Ot«I April II. '• Building u Ziggurat , Progress continues on __ new, $23 million A~tonetics plant be.Lng built in Laguna Niguel area by North American Rockwell. Seven.story ziggurat is scheduled for completion early next year. Southerly aerial view aJ so takes in Pacific 'I'.~epbone's new $3.5 million Laguna Ni· guel central office (at bottom). South Coast Courts Get New Ad1ninistrative Aide The helm o[ the Laguna.San Clemente Judicial District has come under a new hand. James B. Harris has bttn appointed new clerk and chief administrative o(· ficer for the two court district. Harris, 33, succeeds Ed Wilmington. ln his new post, Harris hold& complete administrative responsibilities for the district. These include budget prepara· Someivhere Little Girl Awaiting Free Bicycle Somewhere there Is an 8-year·old girl waili ng (or a shiny new bicycle she won at the YMCA 's Memorial weekend carnival. The bicycle was a pri!e given by the YMCA. Carnival dire<:tora took down the little girl's name, address and phone number. They told her the new bike would soon be on it! way to her. · That was nearly four weeks ago. The ticket stub with the little girl's in- formation on it has been lost and no one can remember the winner's name, ad· dress, or phone number. ''\Ve've tor n the whole house apart looking for it, but it's gone and we don 't know what to do," Mrs. Hanns Baumann said. "She was so thrilled. We all just feel terrible about Jt," she said. f\1rs . Baumann said they thought the winner lived in the Mis.sion Viejo area, but that was all anyone could remember. She asked thal the DAILY PILOT at· tempt to find the child . The girl may claim her bi cycle by call· Ing either Mrs. BaumaM at 494-9271 or the YMCA orflce at 494·9431 and iden· tifylng herself. lion, assignment or persoMel, and general supervision. With an impending move of the court to new facilities in Laguna Niguel later thls year, Harris has the added responslblllty of making sure all goes smoothly. Before coming to Laguna Beach, Har· ris worked for 12 years with the mun- cicpal court in Los Angeles. Most recently, he was a court branch supervisor in San Pedro. Harris said he consented to come to a smaller court at no increase in salary. because he has always "preferred smaller towns and bigger challenges." He said he knew what to expect In com· Ing to the South County court district, and that there is a lol to be done here. ''But ll there were nothing to be done , I don't know whether 1 would ha ve come," Harris said. Harris, his wif~. Joyce, and their four children, James, Jr .• 11, Jeffrey, 10, Julie, 9, and Jerrold, 4 months, will soon move .into a new home in Mission Viejo. Harris graduated cum laude from the Los Angeles Melropolitan College or Business. He is a veteran Df the Korean \Var and \\'bile on duly wi\h the Nav)r in Japan, earned a first degteit black belt in judo. f'ro111 roge l DANCE ••• needed" dance program can continue. He esllmated the dances have provided recreation for 20,000 young persons since first approved by councilmen in 1967. Carter stated not only merchants arc needed lo meet wilh young persons, but adults in general. "We have more teens than we have adult advisors. These Laguna kids are hungry for Involvement In activities they find Interesting and meaningful and yet lack of adult advisor11 sometimes stops things before they start," he stated. City Vo~s Hands Off I I I I .L. I 'II I Free Sch90l ' I Loose ends In requested City tn· dorsemenl and sypport of a "the university" to minister to socl1 l Ills wJre wrapped up. bY' Laguna councill?lfn Wedne.day ill Ibey tsre!d to a: hfnds Pf! policy. Mayor Glenn Ve d d c r said he agreed~wilh cily attornry Jack Rimel that it appeared to be a paper organita· tion. He said the city should not support and endorse an unknown quotient. City recognition, blessing and support had been sought ftr the newly in- corporated undertaking by Dr. John Wallace, UCI associate professor, and otbers at a May 2l meetin&. Vedder suggested the request be received and filed . Councilman Roy Holm suggested a znore final answer. He said a rundown on faculty, courses and location of the enterprise sough t from Wallace had not been forthcoming. He suggested the mayor frame a letter &t.;iUng th a.t the project is not the typo th.ing ~e city wants to get involved with. Councilmen agreed. · ' City attorney Rimel had in a three-page report suggested that the city cou ld, if it "'ished. acknowledge tha t articles of in· co rporation have been filed but could not acknowledge that a "going university'' actually existed without further in· vestigatlon. i.. He had said the. city would probabl y \\'ant to determine whether the free univer~it~ was ~arrying out the purposes stated tn its arltcles of incorporaton. He said financ.ial assistance would be legal in certain areas such as community health and recreation, but added: "Certain other activities, however, such as general education, legal servic:~s and draft counseling would not in the oW· nlon of this office bf! included withTr} allo~a~Je activities which a city could aubs1d1ze out of public funds ." Annual Laguna .. "' Summer Water ., Program Slated : In true Laguna Lifeguard tradition. Main Beach will be invaded by Mermaids and Sea Cubs July 7 and 8. The annual summer p r o g r a m , sponsored by the lifeguard department, will also include sessions for older boys In !he junior guard c8tegory. · The purpose of the Mermaid and ·Se~ Cub proifam, Lt. Eugene DePaulis it· plained, is to educate the youtfC beachgoers on beach and water safety and beach lore. The groups will wor~. both on the beach and in the water. · Boys and girls ages 8 through 12 can sign up for the five-seek course at the !\-fain Beach Lifeguard Tower. ClasseS for the Mermaids will begin July 7, and run every Monday and Wednesday from I through 3 p.m. Sea Cubs will begin to meet July 8, and meet every Tuesday a~ Thursday at the same time. • The jul'tion guards, for boys aged 1% through 15, will begin July 8. They will also meet every Tuesday and Thursday, from 10 p.m. to noon. The junior guards. many of whom adva~ce into the regufar lifeguard department, will wo"rk with firat aid, swimming and physical endurance. Last year's prog ram involved 80 girlS" and over 350 boys. Nixon Picks Director WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nb:· on's search for a new director of the Nn· tional Science Foundation ended todnr wilh his choice of Dr. William {1). McElroy, a Johns •lopkins University biologist known fo r his experimenta wilh fireflies. .JI. J. (}arrett & 14th SEMl·ANNUAL " ,, . • FURNITURE CLEARANCE • -·--.. STARTS TODAY H.JaGAl\l\EfT fURNlllJRE l'ROFlSSIONAI. •>fTU IOl DISl6NllS ---·""·-2215 HAltlO" llVD. ' COSTA tlllA, CALIF. "' '4'-0271 646-0176 I I i -- Newpoi-J Barhom O. '146, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAE1ES ' .. . ~lifford Sitpported Harriman, Dem· L.ellders Back Pullou.t . ~. .. . ,WASHINGTON (UP!) -W. Averell lf.lrriman and two top senate Democratic leaders endorsed today fonner Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford's proposal for withdrawal ol 100,000 U.S. combat troops from Vietnam this year, and the remainder in 1970. Harriman, chlef __ u.s;. _n~tlator 'at the Paris peace 'talks ia.., the Johnson ad-mlnlatrauo~ sa1d tha,f tie recomme.nded last winter an immedJate pullout of 50,000 American troops ~.an end to search· and-destroy missions. 'These steps, Halriman ~d in an in· . terviEiw, might have induced the Com- munists to take a reciprocal trool)" reduc- tiol\ step and to begin ser!Otl! discussion of peace proposals. Clifford's proposal also won support · from Senate ·DerriocraUo, Leeder Mike Mansfield al)d Senate Democratic Whip Edward M. Keqnedy: Both said they hoped President Nixm{ would give serious consideraUon to the CliUOrd plan as ouUlned in an article in the magazine forej,gn affairs. Nixon ia expected to be questioned on Clifford's proposal at a White House news conference today at 4 p.m. POT. • - t'Today's Flml , . . ·v j • ' • • N.Y. Stoeb OAll.Y. •II.Of PIH""" bante Blames Murder Try On Mesa Firm Although Harriman did not say so, other ofticlals have reported that his point of view was rljected last Winter by President Lyndon B. Johnson, backed up by Secretary of State Dean Rusk and presidential adviser Walt W. Rostow. BE<!\UTY LINEl,IP -Miss Newport Beach will be Ball. Girls (from Jen) are Carol Neptune, Christina chosen from this bevy of beauties Friday night Rebard, Marty Moore, Bonnie Burke, Suzie Staub By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 ttw Dall' ..... '''" Hollywood hypnotist Ronald Dante charged Wednesday that· an Orange County boatbuilder is involved in his at· tempted murder and felony theft arrest, but the accused today is spellbound only by the intriguing tale. The seventh husband of actress Lana Turner narrowly escaped death Tuesday when a bushwhacker wearing a rakish Australian prairie hat pumped five pistol ahots into his car as he drove into an underground garage. "I have a very good idea who he was,'' l!laid the 49-year-old jet set entertainer, who affects the title Dr. Dante, con. tinuing to tell ()f a phone warning he allegedly received Monday. He said the vengeful caller' claimed tB be the owner of a now-defunct Santa Ana flrm which manufactured watercraft for Martin Boat CB., whose outlet is Mesa Boat Center, 1595 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Santa Ana police who heard radio reports or the murder at~~gnized Dante's name and tipped off Holl.Y,wood detectives, who arrested the bypnqUlt in connection with a local 1968 boat' ·fbett case. The stage performer and self-declared psychology professor said his mystery caller warned of great bodily harm and possible disgrace in the eyes or his 48- year-old bride if be failed to cooperate. "Or 1'11 make sure you never walk again, .. Dante quoted the man as saying, after a demand.for payment of $5,000 in blackmail money. All three principals in the May, 1968 negotiations for Dante's purchase of seven, IS.foot Marlin motorboats worth $18,500 d~nied knowledge and scoffed at th'e accusation. "He thinks I did it? No, I did not call Dr. Dante," declared Donald W. Albright, of Anaheim, whose firm RecreaUon Enterprises Inc., built the boats at a San- ta Ana yard. "No, I did not make an attempt. on his life,'' Albright continued, "but yes, I'm (See DANTE, Page Z) Badham Opposes ;~easure I.inking Regents, Students From Wire Services ~A measure urging the University oC eelifornia Regents to fonn a joint stu· dent advisory committee was approved today in Sacramento, despite claims it isn't needed by Assemblyman Robert lladham CR-Newport Beach) and a col· league. 1 Approval came on a split voice vote and the plan aimed at cooling campus iensions new goes to the state Seaate_for tftrlher consideration. Badham and Assemblymen John L. Col.lier (R·l.os Angeles) said, however. that lhe measure authored b y Assemblyman John Vasconcellos {D-Sa11 .lose) is simply unneeded. Regents could create such a commiµe <: Involving themselves and students without any prodding by the Legislatme, according to the Badham and Collier reasonin g. · "All we are saying to the Regents is conUnue what you are doing," Coutu Jjrotested, "including thumbing their ·fl06es at us." l"Vasooncellos has argued that Regents fail to communicate with students in a 1r,elevenL and ·intelligent _pianner and a ehannel for untroubled, almple com- ritunlcatiom ls needed. .. 'There's no way to communicate with -)'OU"!! people unless you sit down and talk .' said Assemblyman Frank Lan-·tennan '('fl.La CAnada) "in siding with Vasconcellos' proposal. The measure easily survived an an 8ttempt. to sidetrack tt Into the RuJes Committee for further consideration oo a 26 UI 21 vot. lhal cniosed party lines. A 41..vote majority would have been re.- quired to stall consideration of the st11o denl alflln proposal. _d_u_ri_n;:,g_N_•_wpo.:.._r_t_H_a_rbo_r_C_h_am_b_e_r':.:.•....c:C_omm=:.:.od:.:.:o:.:.r•::___c:a;::n;::d..:N:.:.an=:;c;!y_N::.:.:ep:::tune, Carol's twin sister. Tip Toe Viem Jeni Johnston, 4, found her legs too short Wednesday to enable her to use coin-Operated viewer at Laguna's Heisler Park. She'll have to wait a year or two. Jeni is daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Johnston, 581 Diamond St., Laguna. Wilson Reverses On Labor Law LONDON (UPI) -A yelling, stomping House of Commons today heard Prime Minister Harold Wilson officially say he has dumped his plans for an anti-wildcat strike law -a move Landon papers call- ed a surrender to labor. For the past 100 days Wilson had been telli,ng Commons he was bent on enacting laws to fine or jail the. wildcat.strikers he accused of damaging the economy. Under pressare from his Labor party supporters, Wilson stunned B r i t a i n Wednesday by scrapping the plan and agreeing to accept. a promise by the unions t.o discip~ tbenuelves. . Asked whether he thought it was too late now to achieve this aim of large withdrawals of U.S. forces, Harriman replied "I just don't know." He said that while he felt the Com- munists would have re3ponded favorably last January, when he repeated his recommeodaUons to the Nixon ad- ministrcltion, he could not be certain now because he had 'been out of the discussions for live months. Harriman did not agree speci!ically with Clifford's timeiable for withdrawal, calling for the pullout of 100,000 ground troops by the end of this year and the re- maining 100,000 to 150,000 combat forces by the end of 1970. But he said: "I certainly hope that we will pull out 100,000 by the end of this year." Harriman Indicated belief that the United States lost a golden apportunity in late 1968 when he said Hanoi pulled out about 90 percent of its combat fortts in the two northern provinces of South Viet- nam. ~ ~~ l\'--~\\_,U•tbat time 'r!·' li'J Jotinson aomuusuation had en tts policy of "~ping military pre re on by search ~nd destroy ml.ssions" and pun..iuliih• 50,000 trool>" he , ......, meOW,-the Paris ta,lks wouUI -btit shown immediate progress. Mesa Student Robbed of $95 At Newport Pier A long-haired, disheveled mugger arm- ed with a foot-long hunting knife robbed a Costa Mesa student Wednesday of $95 after shoving him off a Newport ·Beach \vaterfront sidewalk into a quiet walkway in broad daylight, police reported today. The thief left his victim a dollar. The v I c t I m, Jeffrey Casmir Luster, HI, of 2700 Peterson Ave., COsta Mesa, told police the "dirty" robber shoved him from the sidewalk in the 2300 blook of West Ocean Front near Newport Pier. The assailant, the victim said, pressed th e knife against the student's stomach and demanded hi! wallet. After taking the money from the hidden wallet compartment, Luster said the thief returned the wallet. to hls victim, leaving the dollar. Luster said the slight knife wielder had dirty. shoulder·length hair and wore a checked shirt with sleeves torn o(f at the biceps. He fled Into an alley and disappeared after the 1:30 p.m. theft, officers said. FarJ!ttg ;out· at River Irvine, County Silent CHART Hears Foes Of Back Bay Exchange By JOHN VAtTERZA directed appriJ•al." 01 th• DmllY •ott s1.tt "It is unrealistic and not In the boun<ls Three opponents of the Upper Newport of good practice. It is a compromise of Bay land exchange between Orange professional ethics. No competent ap- County and the Irvine Company repeated praiser woold have done it,'' he alleged. th Mrs. Robinson, a leader in the court their arguments this morning for e fight to test the constitutionality of the Citizens Harbor Area Research Team (CHART) meeting at the Costa Mesa ~roposed exchange, vowed a continued Country Club. fight. . . Speakers were County A 'Ii a·e s s 0 r S~; and Heims •. buns.elf a party ln the Andrew J_ ijinshaw County AuditOr.COn-Syperior Court swt, speed that the mat.. tn!l~·~~><<V!(' HeJl!l"Jf!t'\ip. ·~~foul'Jt:f$ ·~ Frank Ro~nson.~ l~11der of J' ~~ "We have . .,:n s 1~ ot havfu, Beach faction oppo&ng the so-called 1ahd totallY selfish aims inJbia ~t. anc1· 1t.i. swap. . . jusl n6i true. We're just u lnlerelted 'll\ ~o speakers were ,Present ·from the !nit Salt Creek as Back Bay " the Irvme Company or representing 98~ •-a • Orang.e County agencies favoring the land said. trade. COSTS 125,IMlll TOLD HIBTORY She said that the legal cost! to the Hinshaw dwe!Jed on the asseumeat layman foes of the swamp proposals will tOtal about $25,000. history of the bay's three islands owned "'That is a really nominal sum, con-- by the Irvine Co., saying.tha.t this year sldering the work involved, and .we're the assessment will soar ! to a st'iff proiid to say that our hmds are jUst'about $105,000 an acre. Only a few Years ago even. Next month's expenses stJU have t.o the land 'was assessed at $60 an acre. be raised, boWever. ~t'Jl 'be difficult, but. "lf the Irvine Company pays .It or not," we'll make It,'' she said. he said, "that will be a problem for the In her steadfast opposition to the Irvine ta:ic: collector, not me." assumption of control Bf the bay's Both Hinshaw and Heim last week tidelands, she alleged the swap con- defied the County Board of Super.visors stitutes a "monopoly" of tidelands by a by refusing to cancel taxes on the 457 private corporation, a situation which she acres of Irvine land deeded to the county and her group claims violates the State in the exchange plan. Constitution. Both men made it clear that even She criticized County Harbor Director though they disagreed with the county Kenneth Sampson for what she termed counsel's legal opinions on the tax his "reluctance in wanting to keep the elimination order, they were not casting bay." value judgments on the legal aide's abilittes. Hinshaw has told the supervisors that he would not comply with the order unless told to do it by a court of law. He attacked independent assessments made on the land as "obviously a Stock Markets NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market tumbled lower today, with brokers reporting investor concern over tight money continuing to weigh it down. (See quotations, Pages 14-15). . , . CHIDED SAMPSON She chided Sampson's department for concentrating efforts for rapid com~ ptetion of Dana Harbor, but 'ignoring the Upper Bay issue. "Mr. Sampson squirrelled away $5 milllon for the Dana Point project into a Harbor Department account. They spent that and are working on another $5 million," she said. The plucky Westcliff resident added, "1£ Salt !",:reek falls into private bands and if Back Bay is taken over, too, then soon we a.II will be living in a huge, con- crete asyl!Jm. '' Irvine Co. executives were invited to the meeting, CHART spokesmen sald, but they declined. Netf)port Driver Killed in Crcuh · A Newport Beach man, possibly asleep at the wheel , was killed early ,this mom· Ing. when his car slammed Into a power JKI County Traffic IHI ts Death Toll f1 pole on Brookhurst Street, south of · Meredith Drive in Huntington Beach. Police said John William f.fyers, 521 of 332 Prospect Drive, New;port, was headed south OD• Brookfiurst Street when for some unknown reason he swerved ecrou the road1 and slammed head-on into a Southern California Edia:on Company poWer poJe. .Orange County Coroner's office 1114 'Myors died Of chest add head lnjuiies. Some t,200-volt · power lines~. Jwere .brul<en~ There wero )10 wlJnes.'leS l<I tM aecldtn,. Slayer Gets'-.S . fo. Lile · . ~ Pier fistiermen will have to stay on Jiuntington .Be~. Newport and Balboa piers to pursue their raYorite pastime becaus~ this one, growing daily, from shoreline on Huntington Beach side of Santa Ana River is &>r-Q1ange CoU\'IY Sanitation Dl1tri,cts' n•w sewage dutlall..,Sand bar al right will _provide . itm !his fall &>~ n~w • b<acb replenlshmen( .ProJeCt down coast ln.Wesl'.N~wpor!, '·. · Lbs ANGELES' (UPI) -"Gtorge "E. WUUams, 21, convicted of.secontl4egrte ·murd!'" lnjlhe-•tabblng dUlb o1 a USC frwhlnan, aJ\ )lee. 9. waa sentenced UI flve'yeirt Jo life In prbon Wednead1y. I I ~ J Newport Beach's Commodore Ball Already a Sellout All 400 tickets to the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce Commodores• BaU were sold out as of last Tuesday, a record for the annual event. The ball, to be held at 7:30 p.m. Friday at·the Balboa Ba):' Club, will feature din- ner at 8 p.m., followed by dancing at 9 p.m. to the music of the Society for the Preservation of Big Bands, following the crowning of Miss Newport Beach. The beauty queen will be chosen from among six local teen finalists. They are M~rly Moore, Bonnie Burke, Carol and Nancy. Neptune; Christina Rebard ahd Su.s,le Staub. ·AJ!··"'"'"eds lrOnt the blael':tt..iiila1 gala will go into the Commodoret Club Fund to sponsor Newport · Beach .event! lnclliding the FesUval. of Llghb, the Character Boat Parade and the Flight of the Snowbirds. PlaJlllers Slate Meeting Tonight The Newport Beach Planning CO.. missioo, meeting tonight at a p.m. ln council chambers at city hall, will con- sider two requests for r~ev~Jopment of· the Bah.la Corinthian Yacht Club. Contitwed from the last Planning C:Om- mlssion agenda because t.he Irvine ·Co. architect was out of town, the first item will consider . approval for · the -con. strucUon of the Bahia Coiinthiali yacht club at 1601 Ba)'slde Driveo southeast. of the intersection of El Paseo and Bayside Drive on Irvine Company land. The second -request is for the sub-- division of 8.8 acres into 12 residential Jots, two comm·ercial lots and three underwater lots to accompany current marina development. Agnew .Predicts Nixon Will Endorse Marchi Pl'ITSBUI!GH (UPI) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew predicted Wednesday President Nixon soon will announce his 'endorsement of John Marchi, the Republican nominee for mayor of New York, over lnti.lmbent'J,;ibn -V. Lindsay, The vice president told e news con. ference following a speech to the U.S. Conference of Mayors he believed tie knew the President's poUtical phUotopby well enough to make the prediction. Marchi defeated .lJ?isay In the-tQP primary election in New York 'DJpday. Ol'ange C:out WeatJael' Are you ready tdf some rriorning fog? That's coming next but Fri· day's afternoon we'at.her shOuld be sunny and sevtntyish along the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODA.'l' An ezerd.!a in OCCQmplflh· ~!le:. t~t Wrstm.inatr" C0171" mum•u Theater's woi'k.!hop ~ 1 duc(lon of an orighlaT d~am4 -Ir f'tvirWed , t0dat1 · in E'nttrt.aino' fnent, Paga 12. C11111iitit • -.. CllM/111' ,,..,, ::::=..'=.. ~J ·-" ·-.. --.. _ ...... .. --,,.11 ......... ,, ... • -· .. . ·--" .... ~ M-11 \ -, .. ,, T""4Ntll 'IJ -.. -" ~--.. ·-•• -.. --.. • - I -' -... ~ ~-- i DiJl.Y I'll.OT N ~ .... 1', 1~ 4 What. Maae " (JOpt~r. ·D09r Fall Oiito ,Beach? , I • • -.. , ........ . .... Mr* -Air llaaiift ... .,....., • ., et11illodr1-W ~Jl)CJ/:.:.~.:... ... ~.;., ~'.·.::,,,. -'~.a;r,..:: ~ -Mil .. ~ •• " t •Sa• .. faD ct! from 1 height of ?00 feet Sunday and "land ·on the beach 1t 21st and West °""!'"\ !'Toot II llUll a ma\ter of con1 . ~ spobimen at Lok Alamito1 Naval Air StaUoo laid toda,y. ,, ______ ctf•lllOH.Mtbopo lln•llOJ,-• -111, per, Beach crowds ftte ,Parse because sometime, a dObr ' wur ran on or an ot the ovm:ut 1kte.. . engine will fail. It's as ctrtain aa "We are checking with the Federl!ll · autrunobilt accidents, or car engine AviaUon Administration (Jl'AA) to find failures." And what 'will be done lo prevent a recurruce 11 aUU an unanswered quu- tfG!>, Mid llaJ. Dorid Jobnl, operations out If other air space Is avaUable," Johns He said that pilots have been Instructed aaid. to land in Lhe ocean if they e1perience But he erpreued doubt that lhe route engine failure while fiylng over crowded .. B~i 'to .•• ,... Smell • City Plans 'Gas It la -of the moat lllll!ieuanl • .,. lo be O'lllld lo Newport Beach, and C11U1! vlJllon lo the Barbo! ,area probably bl1me allpihod 1eWate treatment u the caae ol the no:Eous smell alone Uie sec-- lion of··Weot Pacific Cout Highway. But It isn't man's fauJt. Na-i. the culprit calllln& Ille rotten· egg smell \hat -from underground nortb of the ArChu ...,,..... . Now the city, Under _a_ landqw'k agree- meot ~ munldpal projecla -.. priv.te-y, will build beehive OOrnera lo the ~ IRllflde swamp ps lo try to kill the smelt. Tbe greatest offender to the nostrils is the gas seep that comes up on land where a Union Oil Co. service ataUon It.and& a~ 3939 w .. Pacilic C<last Highway, The only effective measure thus far ,.as building a tal!. pipe which lets the 1as escape from the roof of the statlon, but it still smells. According to a special, volunteer study made by Newport Beach resident and en1ineer.Geot1e Zebal, burning the seep- ing stuff is the only way to cut down the smell. The pipe cost the oil company $5,000. A burninc device will cost more. . In a rtcePt rwart to lhe council City -Manager Hiney ,Hurlburt aaid the plans are "highly experimental." Zebal has told the council the gas seeps !>OSe a &real challenge. Tbe 1as burnin1 device resembling a Palls Gan on Guards Crowd Disarms Gunman At Mesa's Sears Store Dlaarrried by a Cost.a Mesa department Guards Robert W. Gow, 47, and store crowd, an A!Uaa collegian Is In jail William Humphrey, 51, ran to the scene. today afttr allea:edly pulling a .32 caliber when Kathleen P. Shine, ti, handed them c:I. on two aecuiily. "''•rda que&ti""1.,,., a Stzl refund slip reported stolen from a •" v•....., Pico Rivera store and polnteo at the about a refund sUp forgery spree. sUJpeet. No one wu injured in the melee at r---n-... ~"" 1. Co 3333 s Bristol St. Told he must accompany lhem to lhc ~·· .JWll;~• • " • ' security office, said Gow and Humphrey, but lhe ·ll!llP<CI r.,,.rtedly lllrealel)ed to kill hls ·capton while clutching the loaded Needs refuted, IO tJiey each took an ann ••· '-•••' llct ·d and began to lead 11.im away. WUj)Oll UE lw ..... e, po Ill • -· • said he the ed l James W. eeds, 29, of Azusa, was 11te pair n aare o go booked on suspicion of assault wtth a voluntarily and was released but sud· deadly weapon, armed ro~and COin• . .t;~e"wf.,hlnthed wdeaGpo~ led•• mission of burglary Jihlle a Wftlr a ' ' . r• . ~ an o loaded flrarm. him alo1'.1&'· . Buena Park and· El Monte police•~ :!111].Y.,Uia~ ~aid Humphrey · pinned cbecklni today to detennine lhe extent or me _suspects arms to his sides Im· the firgery spree In which Needs and an mediately in a bear hug as Gow grappled unidentified partner are suspected. for th~ gu~, _whlch was snatched away by Patrolman James Farley said the· an un1dentif1ed customer .. dramatic incident was triggered about A number of persons Jumped to help 2:50 p.m., when 8 cashier Jn the South disarm and subdue the sW1pect, ~ow and Coast Plaza store 80Ullded an emergency Humphrey _told Costa Mesa police, who I were seeking a com plaint from the 1 arm. Orange County District Attorney's office Joaquin School Pay Negotiations Still Going On Salary talk& and budget scrutiny In San Joaquin Elemtntary Scbool District so far remains inconclusive. Salary negoUations sUll art belng con- ducted behind clcieed doors: by teacher representatives and the school ad- mlnlstration. Teachers have not as yet come race-to-race with the board. Trustees met this week and talked over priorities for next year's budget, but did not make cuts in requests that exceed an- ticipated income by about $500,000. Written Into the tefltatlve budget is a five percent teacher salary Increase. Teachers say they want a $450 pay boost from $6,500 per year for b-;~inning teachers and St,500 more than the preaent StJ,400 per year for teachers with the most e1perlence. DAILY PILOT OlANGI COAl1 t'\ltl lllffMG COMPANY ••Mrt N. W.U ---J•t\: I. C11ltY -vo,.,..... .. ._."~ Th-·· ••• ~11 ·-th1Mll A. M11r .. lil~e ~••n• . J1...m• F. Colli~1 ..._. k•c~ a" utot---°""' 1111 W"t l•fil•• k11l1¥1rd Mtlllllf Atl'1•t1t P.O. a., 1171, tlUJ --c.-. """'' a w..1 .. , ..., .. 1 c,.....,. IMCftr m ir.-1 A-"""""'*" llMdl: .. tlfri fll'9't t.oday. Records show Buena Park polfce have a $202 forged refund purchase slip passed at a Sears store Jn ttieir city, oile of an entire book reported stolen from the suburban Los Angeles County store. Ralph Larrabee Memo1ial Rites Set Saturday A memorial service for yachtsman-In· dustrlalist Ralph E. Larrabee, missing at sea for three weeks, Is scheduled Satur· day at Pacific View Memorial Park, Corona del Mar. Close friends and relatives of the skip- per of lhe wrecked I61·foot schooner Goodwill will attend the 2 p.m. rites, ac- cording to Art Knievel, vice president of Larrabee's machine parts company. The $0metlme-Newport Beach resident and nine persons aboard the Goodwill when she went aground and broke up on Sacramento Ree f of Baja California about May 26 are presumed dead . Two bodies were found in the rough seas, including that of Tim Smllh, 15, or 18842 Sant a ~1ariana Ave., Fountain Valley, crewing aboard the Ensenada· bound schooner on a return trip from Acapulco. Contributions are suggested for the late Mr. Larrabee, mailed to tbe Rotary Lar· rabee Scholarship Fund. P.O. Box R. Huntington Park, Calif., 90255. Coast Guard Vets To Hold Reunion Now hear this. all you Coast Guard veterans of World War JI ! The ·first annual reunion of all Coar,i Guard veterans who served in \Yorld War It -including Coast Guard reservist!. enlisted men, officers and SPARs <women Coast Guard membr:rs) will be held at the Fort P.1acArthur Officers Club, in the U.S. Armory at 22nd Street 11nd Paclfic: Avenue, San Pedro, Friday at 7:30 p.m. Tickets v.·111 be sold at the door for latecomers. Ma rine Loses Life Marine Corp.s Sergeant David M. Kauf· man of Sant.a Ana, died In Vietnam action t.hta past week, the U.S. Defense Depart· mef\L IMOUneed today. He is lht hu,blnd of Mn. Nora J, Kaufman. 3002 Llngan ,,\\tt. l Attack' tarae beehive with vents will be built on a small patch ol land owned by Ille Balboa Coves Co1J1111unlty Association. Construction by a firm hired by Union Oil Co. will start as soon as agreements are made between Union Oil, the associa· tlon and lhe city. Each of lhe three parties will donate one-third of the construction cost - $3,500 each totaling $10,500. "While this is a cautious experimental program," Hurlburt said, "lhe potential benefits to the city and particularly this aru ahould merit the eipense." If it doesn't work, he added, the next idea might be a special assessment distr1ct and new methods to rid the area of I.he ameUy stuff, From Page J DA NTE • • • still looking forward to seeing Dr. Dante in court." ?-.1i.~s Turner 's husband of six weeks is free on $12.500 bail, pending his preliminary hearing June 26 In Santa Monica ?-.1'..lnicipal Court In coMeclion 1vlth the felony grand theft warrant. Ron Snyder, 36, of 2320 College Drive, Cost a Mesa, was equally incredulous \Vednesday when notified by newsmen of Dante's accuaalions about his Tuesday assailant. Snyder and his father Paul arc prin· cipals in the Costa Mesa company with which Dante-was dealing more than a year ago. while appearing at the Villa Marina nightclub in Newport Beach. "He's a phony so n.of·a·gun." s a Id S[\Jder, "I've ne,er met the man before. nor has my father -he dealt lvith a sales representative.'' Snyder chuckled when told the contents of Dante's alleged telephone conversation Monday. "I wish I'd gotten the five c ·s," he said, stressing he was Joking. "I read Wednesday where he sairl he had no idea who might want to kill him - or why -unless it was because someone was jealous or the woman he married ,'' Snyder continued. "And then he comes up with a story like this." "Actually, it's kind ot exciting.'' he concluded. Los Angeles County Sheriff's Depart- ment detectives also said Wednesday that Dante's allegations bad no basis for belief, adding that he had ~n generally uncooperative in their attempted murder investigation. A warrant was issued for Dante's ar· rest. which came June 3, 1968, after hi~ involvement in the alleged boat caper was probed by investigators. Dealer Ron Snyder . said Wednesday that the seven boata might well have disappeared if it wasn 't for a suspicious truck driver who questioned a $100 bonus for loading In the middle of the nigh t. "It just didn't set rlgbt and he refused to load them up. but called us instead and we called palice," Snyder explained, saying Dante was found at the scene, supervising the boat transfer. He said the hypnotist had broken a chain lock to enter the Santa Ana yard and claimed to be cwntr of the boals when lawmen arrived. This claim, Snyder said, was based on hi! payment with a $17,450 check lhat had bounced, although he had pledged to make It up In cash on what \1'ould have been the morning after the boats were hauled away. Once the unregistered boats were across the Nevada line en route to Las Vegas: Snyder said, lhcy would be unrecoverable. ___.__ unrecoverable. Dante claimed Wednesday that the document jn quution was a promissory note and that be thought the whole case had been cleared up alter his court ap- pearance dale of July II, 1968 was cancelled . Another warrant was Issued shortly thrcafter, but Dante was1 not arre!ted because, according to Santa Ana Police Sgt. Kent Reesor. lawmen simply didn't know where he wa.s. lie told sheriff's deputies when being booked at the West Hollywood station lh1t ht held a docior1I desr-e from Singapore Unlveratty in PIYchology. Peter Lim, public nlaUons dtnctor for S!ngaport. l/lllvenlty,. loda, cltnlld Ille slltemtnl, pointfna out thlt no s u c h d..,... la avallablt at that lnolilution. Vietnamese Question Resistance Leader SAIGON <UPI ) -South Vl,tnamtse police officials today quet1tioncd which leader of a new poUUcat group which called for a "rtconcillatory government" to replRce President Nguyen Van Thieu's govc.mme~t. l•P1 • '""1lr .. I ...., ......... ff *"""' ... Mil lie equipment, boull!t by lM tll9£LJ*a.. II loet. But we don't want to . scare or burt anybody on the ground." To prevent doors from falling off, he said, the mtrve ll expertmenUng with w1r1n1 tht doon; shut wtth Bungee cords. elastic devkes that, tightly wrapped. around the doors, should prevent such ac- cidents In the future. But Sunday's H.J4 • 7 .. ' ... e -1Jjili:a1i wtllJ I ....,.,_ A=• ~stlgation Is under Way, Johns said. - .. Until the Investigation is comi)leted an helicopter pilots have been inltructed to fly ovtr· the water, well IWjlY'from surfers, swimmers and suntannert. An aide to Johna emphutzed-tbat this was being done vdlun\arlly, saylnc "We are entitled to ny·ovu the bea~, juat DAILY f'ILOl' Steff !'Mi. PLANNING PYROTECHNICS -Kelly Mccann, Miss .Firecracker, and YMCA 1i1en 's Club volunteers Mike Matcham (center} _and Dr. Allan Osborn plan a sparkling show for annual Fourth of JuJy fire· works display at Orange Coast College. Off With Bang Fireworks Show Plans Under Way Plans are under way for the 11th An· nual Fourth of July show to be held at Orange Coast College Stadium. This yea r's display, sponsored for the second time by the Y's-Mens Club of the Orange Coast YMCA. will be put on by the California Fireworks Display Com- pany of Rialto. Prior to the fireworks show, the Y's· fl1cns Club has scheduled entertainment. Activi~s begin at 7:30 p.m .. The Glengarry Hlghlanden and the Orange County Sing Out group will open the proiuam. ,_'Or. Allan G. Osborn, ·2013" W01nos Ii' Drive, Costa Mesa , chairman of the Y's· Mens show, noted that the proceeds from the event will pay for· the YMCA 's swim- min1 facilities. Kelly McCann, 17, of 472 Esther St., Costa Mesa, has been chosen as "Miss Firecracker" by the club to reign over the fireworks display. Mis.s McCann is a recent graduate of Newport Harbor High School. Advance tickets for the show can be purchased at the Orange CoaSt YMCA, 2.lOO University Ave., Newport Beach . Tickets are prie«I at ;IL 75 for adults and 75 cents for children under 12 years .of age. '·' Newport-Mesa Pioneer Hugh Mc Vay Dies at 92 A longtime Harbor Area res.ident who once raised yams at a fann which later sprouted tall buildings, luxury shops and homes died at 92 Wednesday in Hoag Stereo Tape Player, Cartridges Stol en A stereo tape player and 30 tape cartridges valued at $250 ·were stolen Wednesday Crom the automobile of Richard Spangler, 22, of Sanla .Ana as the vehicle was parked in the 300 block of Calliape Street, Laguna Beach. Laguna Beach police Lt. Frank Schopen said 'ntry to the car was made by prying open a wing window. The crime occurred belWttn I p.m. and midnight. 1'.lcmorial Ho!pi tat: Servi ces for Hugh Mcvay, 196l Santa Ana Ave .• Costa Mesa. will be held Satur· day at 2:30 p.m. at Bell Broadway Mortuary with in~rment in Pacific View Memorial Park. Mr. McVay was a farmer for 55 years <ind raised crops on a 300-acre parcel in the \Vestcliff area of Newport Beach until retiring 12 years ago. He leaves a son Cecil McVay and a rl aughter Mrs. Louise Gilbert, both of Costa Mesa. four grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren. The Rev. James Legerwood of the First Methodist Church of Costa Mesa. will of. ficiate at rites for Mr . McVay, who had suffered 11 lengthy illness. - • llii Jiia ....... .ircntf -.. • ..,,._ ..... pt ......... the Marine Rt!.Ve Is that they .see our helicopters, but ibty don't see the larger civilian planes," the aide said. "1\'hat we're going to ~ is. endanger our pilots. We don't llkC-'to fly these helicopters. They're 15 fea'r1 old, they come back from Vletn:am and lhey 'rt kind of tired. But thia is what a reaervt unit gets," said the aide. . --Eagl~ defeats ' .Ondine in Big Atlantic Race NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -American Eagle; .. the 12-meter yac;ht ·.that ·neve:r made it as America's Cup defense can- didate, was the official winner on cor· reeled time, Wednesday of the bleMial Annapolis.Newport ya..:ht race. Eagl~. owned by Ted Turner of Atlanta, crossed the finish line at 2:26 p.m., Tues.. day 8itein00n • tTiitlutei ahead of 73-foot ketCh, Ondine ih Class I. Under a new timing system used ln the 473-mile race, American Eagle's elapsed lime was 69.4340 hours and her c.'Orrected t i"q) ct 61.tf73~-hours. Timq for Ondine Wert 59 .. 78!5 elapsed and. 64.0956 cor-- rected. Class II winner was Sal ty Tiger, owned by Walter S. Frank of Bombay Hook, Delaware .. Salty Tiger was 11th to cross the finish line . Thirteen yachts had finished the race by Wednesday evening, and of the five clas.se! entered, only two bad rtnUhers. American Eagle and Ondine will s~ battle again Saturday with the. start ~ the race from_ Newport to Cork, Irelan1i ,, CG Holds Slight'. Lead in College Sailing · Matcl1 BELLINGHAM, Wash. (API -~ Coast Guard Acade~y held ~ tenuo9'! lead Thursday after six races 1n the Na:. tional Collegiate Athletic Associatiop Sailing Cba.mpionships. ' Light W4'ds held up the morning schedule Wednesday but a stiff bree~ sprang up on aeniitgham Bay in the aftel')lOGn Causing ·some boats to bl;ft ~i~'nleTit troubles. The crews are sail· ing two-man. 18-fool C·Larks. The Coast Guard led unofficially with 52 points, but a breakdown cost them an as yet Undetermined number of penalty points. Southern California was in second with 59 points. Newport Officer · , Trial Dela yed • ~ • Trials for a former Newport Beach reserve policeman facing two charges stemming from a car crash Involving an off-duty Casta Mesa -officer last April have been-continued untJI July. ~ Leonard E. Yerkes. 23, of Orange, had been scheduled for jury trial on a charge of felony hit-and-run Tuesday in Harbor Judicial District Court, but July 29 Is I.be new date . Ordered to appear June 3 for jury tr)el on a drunken driving charge, Yerkes f;;.ces lhat count July I, according to court spokesmen. He has been free on his own recognizance since the April IO co\lisJOn whtch slightly injur~d Costa Me'sa Patrolman Richard Johnson , wh ose car was flipped onto Its side when rui fro1r(i the rear. · JJ. J. (}arrell'd 14th SEMl·ANNUAL FURNITURE CLEAUWCE STARTS TODAY H.J.GAl\l\EfT fURNf[URE l'lORSSIONAL INTUIOA 0£Sl&HEU llll HARIOR ILVO. COSTA MES/\, C/\LIF. 646-0275 64&.0?76 I • ' . f;osia Today's Final N.Y. Steeb VOC. l.2, NO. '1'46, 2 SECTIONS, 32 ~AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAll FORNIA ' THURSDAY, JUNE '"· 1969 TEN CENTS Dante Says So, But Mesa Firm Scoffs Accusation By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ot .. o.ir.-,, ... ,, ... Hollywood hypnotist Ronald Dante charged Wedllesday that an Orange County boatbuilder is Involved in his at· t'erbpted i-qurder and felony the{t arrest, buf the aC:cused today is spellbound only by the intriguing tale. 'Mle seventh husband or actress Lana Turner narrowly _escaped'" death Tuesday when a · t.ushwhacker wearing a rakish Australian prairie bat pumped five pistol Siore Crowd Helps Guards Disarm Man Disarmed by a Costa Mesa department store crowd, an Azusa collegian Is In jail today after allegedly pulling a .32 caliber pistol on two security guards questioning him about a refund slip forgery sprte. No one was injured in the melee at Sears, Roebuck & Co., 3333 S. Bristol St., but the suspect .reportedly threa tened to kill his captors while clutching the loaded weapon duripg the struggle, police said. MAP OUTLINES PROPOSED MESA BEAUTY DISTRICTS Beautification CommittM Saek.a Grut1r Efficiency James W. Needs, 29, of Azusa, was booked oo suspielon of assault with a deadly weapon, anned robbery and com· mw.ion of burglary while armed with a loaded firann. Buena Park and El Monte police are checking today to df!:termlne the utent of the forgery spree in which Needs and ari unidentified partner are suspected. • Beautificatwn 'Group Patrolman James Farley said tht i!ramaUc Incident ivas trlag<rri a~ ~'~ .p.m., "h'll a cashi!r in Ill; J«llh Cout Plaza store aounded en emercenc:i alarm. -' ' . ,, Splits Vp for Efficrency Guards Robert W. Gow. 17, and William Humphrey, 51, ran to the sceM, when Kathleen P. Shine, 19, handed them a fl21 relund slip reported stolen from a Pico Rivera store and pointed at the suspect. United. they stand for scenic. im· provement but divided -into sectional districts ..:. Costa Mesa Beautification Committee members expect to do a bet• ter job city-wide. A major self-analysis was recently finished by the advisofy panel which meets each month, resulting in a pro- gram aimed at better efficiency. The most drastic change in the be~utification committee operation is. a proposed division of the 17·59uai:e mile community into six separate districts for territorial reference. . . Anyone interested in representing. his area Is advised to contact Costa Mesa's Mesa Pioneer Hugl1 McVay Succumbs at 92 A lon~ime Harbor Area resident who once raised yams at a farm which later sprouted tall buildings. luxury shops and hotnes died at 92 Wednesday in Hoag Memorial Hospital. Services for Hugh McVay, 1961 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa, will be held Satur· day at 2:30 p.m. at 1:Je11 ~r?ad~sy Mortuary with interment 1n Pac1hc View Memorial Park. Mr. McVay was a farmer for 55 yea~s and raised crops on a 300-acre parcel 1~ the Westcliff area of Newport Beach until retiring 12 years ago . He leaves a son Cecil McVay and a daughter Mrs. Louise Gilbert._ bot.b _()r Costa Mesa, _four grandchildren and_ll great grandchildren. The Rev. James Lcgerwood of the First Methodist Church of Costa Mesa, will of· ficiate at rites""or Mr. McVay, who had suffered a lengthy illness. Right-of-Way Engineer Ro)'. Erickson at the Civic Center to be con11dered among applicants. The re-districting plan may be set up at the committee's Aug. 4. meeting, but there is no set time element lnvolved at this stage, Erickson sakl Wedne!day. Streamlining of the Costa Mesa Beautification Committee was initiated in April on a &Uggestlon by Costa Mesa City Councilman William L. Sl. Clair, whose original kl.ea has been·modtfied. He urged formation of a full com· mission instea1 ol an infonnal com· mittee , but members announced after discussion in May that they prefer to re~ main as they are now organized. One ol the more important St. Clair suggestions -approved by the group - is that a budget be established for their projects, to eliminate accounting pro- blems of the past. r~unds needed for various projects have come from several mun i ci pa I departments. In some cases with city of· ficials spending their own money and being repaid haphazardly. Besides district representatives, the beautification pane.I recommends seating of members-at-large from special com· munity ()lganizaUons, plus advisors from the ctiy government staff itself. Told he must accompany them lo the security office, said Gow and Humphrey, Needs refused, so they each took an arm and ~gan to liad him away. The pair said he then. agrtf:d to go voluntarily and was released but sud· denly whipped out the weapon as Humphrey walked behind and Gow led him along. Investigators said Humphrey pinned the suspect'• arms to his sides im· mediately in a bear hug as Gow grappJed for the gun, which was snatched away by an unidentified customer. A number of persons jumped to help disarm and subdue the suspect, Gow and Humphrey t()ld Costa Mesa police, who were seeking a c9mpla int from the Orange County District Attorney's office today. Neivport Driver Killed in Crash A Newport Beach man, poss.ibly asleep at the whetl, was killed early this morn- ing when his car slammed into a power ttn C..nty Tr1fffc Ila 15 Deatll Toll 17 Under the proposal as it now stands, Erickson would be replaced as chairman by a member of the committee, sinoe the duty was originally assigned to him as a community service. pole ()n Brookhurst Street, south of h Id oth ·t st ff Meredith Drive in Huntington Beach. Erickson as sa er ci Y a Police said John WUliam Myers, 52, of members or committeemen are better Suited through training· amt ,_.sonal ln-332 Prosj:Ject Drive, Newport, was headed izatlo ,..~. · south on Brookhurst Street when for terest to lead lhe organ· n. :i;ome,unknown reason he swerved across the· road and slammed head-on into a ~.Stock 1'lgf~tt• ___ Squlhern 1 C~l~Q111jA._Edi52n ComJ1&.!'Y ~ _ ~wer l!file,___ _ ~ YORKlXP) =tlliSfiiCK marli:e Orange County Coroner 's office said tumbled lower today , with brokers Myers died"Of chest and head injuries. reporting inyestor coocem over tight Some l ,200-volt power lines were money conUnuing to w~ it down. (See broken. There were no witnesses to the quot.atioos, Page! 14-1~ accident. Land Swap Foes Get Say Countt-!rv~ne Deal Opponents Speak to CHART By JOHN VALTERZA · Of .. Diii' ,!tit .,.,, Three opponents of the Upper Newport Bay land exchange between Orange County and the Irvine Company repcattd their arguments this mornlng for the Cltltt:ns HarbOr Area Research Team (CHART) meeting at the Costa Mesa CounlfY Club. Speakers were COunly A s s es so r Andrf:IV J. Hinshaw. County Auditor-Con· troller Victor A. ''Vic" Heim and Mrs. Frank Robinson, leader ol a Newport Beach faction opp::l5.in& the so-called land lwap. ·~ No speakers wm pr~aent rrom the Irvine Co m p a n y or representing Orange County a.gcncies f-avorina ttie land trade. Hinshaw dweUed ou the assessment history of the bay's three islands owned by the Irvine Co., saying that Ulis 'year the assessment wUI soar to a stiff $105,000 an acre. Only a fflw y~ars ago -thee land was assessed at MO an acre. "U the Irvine Company pays it or not.'' he said, '"that will be a problem for the La• collector, not me." Bolh Hinshaw and Hehn last wctk defied the County Board of Supervisors by refuslng to cancel taxes on lhe 457 acre! ol Irvine land deeded to the counzy in lhc -!.•s!l.!!liu•JAn •. -.. -......... Both men made it clear that evtn though they dlsagrttd with Uie county COWllt1'1 f~1I oplnlom on the tax , elimination-order, they were not casting value judgmklt3 on the legal aide's abUltlc& IUn.sbaw has told the supervisor• that he would not cunply with the order unleu told to do ft by a court of Ja.w. "' attacked Ind..,..,-AsseSlrnenb !S.. CllAJIT, Pact I) shots into bis car as he drove fnto an underground garage. "I have a very good idea who ht was," said the 49-year-old jet set entertainer, who affects the title Dr. Dante, con· tinuing to tell of a phone warning he allegedly received Monday. lie said the Vl!i1geful caller claimed lo be the owner of a now-defunct SSJlta Ana firm wh ich maoofactured watercraft for lt1arlin jk>at Co., whose outlet is Mesa DA l.;'I" 'II.OT l'M19 h' C... "'"'' Sumet Sall Sabot sailors cruise wate'rs of Newport Harbor Wednesday. That ·bright, round thing in the sky is the sun, which· has not been seen regularly · of late iri. local environs. View is toward Lido turnine basin. Badham Opposes Measure Linking Regents, Students Fr:m Wire Servlcei A measure urging the University cf California Regents to form a joint stu· dent advisory committee was approved today In Sacramento, despite claims it Isn't needed by Assemblyman Robert Badbam (R-Newport Beach) and a col· league. Approval came ()n a split voice vGtc and the plan aimed at cooling campus tensions . n~w goes to the state Senate for further consideration. Badham and Assemblymen John L. Collitr (R··Los Angeles} ·said, ·ho-wever; th at the measure authored b-y Assemblyman John Vasconcellos (D·San Jose) is simply unneeded. Regentl could creat'e 1uch a committee involving themselves and students without any prodding by the LegisJature, according to tht Badham and Collier reasoning. "All we are saying to the Regents is continue what you are doing," Collier proteoted, "Including thumbing !heir noses a' us," "Vasconcellos has argued that Regents !ail to Communicate with student& in a relevent and intelligent manner and 1 channel for untroubled, simple com· m1,11;1Jc1Uons . ...is .. needed ... ···---·--··--"There's no way to communicate with young people unless you sit do'l\'n and talk ,'' uid Assemblyman Frank Lan· terman flt-La Canada) In siding with Vruiconctllos' proposal. , The measure euily survived an an attempt M> 11detrack it into lhe Rules CommJttee for Curther con.slderation on a 26 to 24 ~ote lhat croosed party 11n ... A U·vot• majority would have bctn rt- quired to ltlll consldetatlao ol tho atu· dent• aflain propooal. • • 7 ·. ' " Boat Center, 1595 Newport Blvd.; Co&t.a Mesa. Santa Ana police who heard radio reports of the murder attempt recognized Dante's name and tipped off Hollywood detectives, who arrested the tiypnoijst in connection with a local 1968 boat theft case, The stage performer and self.<feclared psychology professor said hjs mystery caller warned of great bodily harm and possible dl!grace ln tbe eyes of his '8-- year-old bride If he failed to.cooperatf. : ··0r I'IJ make. sure you never walk again," Dante quoted the man as saying, after a demand for payment of $5,000 lD blackmail money. All three principals ln the May; 11168 negotiations fcir Dante's purchase bf seveo, 16-foot Marlin motorboats wort.Q $18,500 deni~d knowledge and scoffed at the accutsation. . "Ile thinks J did it! No, I did'not·ca11 (See DANTE, Pqe Z) Clifford Pull,o«t Plan Supported WASHINGTON (UPI) - W. Avcrtll Harriman and two top senate Democratic leaden endorsed today former Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford's proposal for withdrawal of 100,000 U.S. combat troops from Vietnam this year, and the remainder In 1970. Harriman, chief U.S. negotiator at the Paris peace talks ln the Johnson ad· ministration, said th.at be recommended last winter an innned1'te pullout ol l!0,000 Ariiuican troops and an end to search-• and-destroy miaslons. . Theg step.1, Harriman .aaid... ln an hl• tervl¢\V; might have Induced · lhe Com. """"'lf'lq a.q a reciproCal,'lrilOP;~ .......... IJoilil,-llil<:ulolot1 of .,.. ... i>-b. . -~ . CliU~s Jl"'PO'&I 1llo , Won , IUl'P'rl from Se¥1e Demacratlo. teoder ~ Mansfield ind Sen•le. llen\oc\ille' Wlllp Edward -M. Kennedy. BollL said Ibey hoped Prisldent Nixon would tJve serious consideration to the Cllfford plan a1 outlined in an article in the magaz.lne foreign a(fairs. Nixon is expected to be questioned on CUfford'a proposal at a • 7 View Assault On Waitress, But No One Gives Aid RIVERSIDE (UPI) -Seven persons stood outside a doughnut shop early lod;ar watching through the plate glass window as a waitress was beaten by a would·be holdup man . Despite her screams for help, no one came to Mrs. Anita Joseph's aid. Finally she broke away from the at- tacker, who appeared to be drunk, and rushed outside. When 1he asked a man in the crowd to help her, he got In his car and drove away. Mrs. Joseph climbed into a parked car and locked the doors until the Intruder, who was unsuccessful In his efforts to ()pen the cash register, fled. • Then she re-entered the shop and telephoned police. ''Those people didn't haYe to get in- volved," she said. "All they had to do was call the police." \ Mesa tudent ilo6bed of $95 At Newport Pier A long-haired, disheveled mugger atm• ed with a foot.Jong hunting knlfe robbed a Costa Mesa student Wednesday Of '95 after ihovlng him off a Ntwpcii Beach waterfront 1ldewalk into a quiet walkway In broad dayllg~I, police reporµd today. The thief Jen his victim a dollar, The v I ct Im, Jeffrey Cumir Lullf.er, 18, of 2700 Petenoil Ave.,. c.Mta Mesa, told pollc<> the ''dirty" robber shoved him from lbe sidewalk ln the 2300 block of We~t Ocean Front near Newp'brt Pier. _ ._thc_u.ullant, .the. victim said, pressed the knlfe against the student's stomach and demanded his wallet. After taking the money from the hidden. wallet compartment, Lusttt said the lhle.f returned the wallet to biJ victim, leaving the d<illar. Luswr ,.Id lhe Blight tnil• wl<lder hid dlrty1 should ... lenglh hair lliid Wort a checked ahlrl wilh aleev., torn all al lhe biceps. ·• , U. O<d Into an alley and diAppeated after lhe 1,!0'R.m. lheft, o!Ocen .aJd. White House news conference today at 4 p.m. PDT. Although Harriman did not say so, other officials have reported that his polnt of view was rejected last wlnter by. President Lyndon B. Jnhnson, backed up by Secretary of State Dean Rusk and presidential advi.ser•Walt W. Rostow. Asked whether be thought lt wu too 1ate now to achieve tfsts aim of large witbdr.lwals of U.S. forces_ Harrlmau rept!Ad ~·1 just \!OJl't .knowt'' He sild lhat whlle he f•lt lh6 Com-~"would ba"'·1~-~~tibty fajl JAN'"<)', ::Jl.", R ,.,. ,~8Jed" ~ •• "":."""' J'-... , ·-~ recomntendci:t1o to the · ixon aa. mllllllration, he could not bo certain .,,.,; becaUIO · he had · heen out ol the discusslOns for live months. Harriman did not agreo spedflcally wllh CIHford's timetable for wllhdrawal, calling for the· pullout of 100,000 Jround troops by the end of this year and the re- .malning 100,000 to 150,000 combat forces by the end of 1970. Bui he said, "1 certalnly hope·lhat we will pull out 100,000 by the end of Ibis year." Harriman Indicated be.lief that the United States lost a golden opportunity in late 1968-when-he~aid Hanoi pulled out about 90 percent ()f Its combat forcea in the two northern provinces of South Viet• nam. He ssld he felt at .that time that 11 the Johnson administration had ended its policy or "keeping military pressure on by search and · destroy missions•• and pulled out the 50,000 troops he recom· mended, the Paris talks would have shown immediate progress. Girl Bicyclist Survives Crash A Costa Mesa girl bicyclis:l run over by a neighbor's car Wednesday· escaped with much less serious injury than she might have, police said today. Theresa R. Wood, 6, of 2744 Lorenzo Ave .\ was listed in satisfactory condition at Hoag Memorial Hospital with scrape.11 and bruises ·after being held overnight fot observation. Traffic investigators said she was riding along El Camino Drive at Mendoza , Drive when hit by a car driven by Richard R. lsher. 18, of 2749 Lorenzo Ave . and tun ovJC. Islier was llOtCite<f.~ ~- Orange Ceu& Weedier Are you ready for some morning fog? That's coming next but Fri· day's afternoon weather should be sunny and seventyish alone the Orange Coast. INSIDE TOOll'Y An e.ttrd.!t fn accomplfah· ment, the Wtatmin.sttr Com· · munity Theater's work1hop pro- duc tirm of on original dt4ma i1 reviewed jodar1 in Entertain· melit, Page .12. C•H,.,,.i. c .. .., .... ...... ,_ .. --· ....... '"' --·-·--... .._. - • Mtvltl 11 1'41 Mt!Ntl ..... . 14 u • ,......, .... .. 14 or.•' C....it> .. If s.cl'1 """ IN1 • ........ -IWJ It 1"411: Mtl'hil , ...... 1+11 ,T..,...... lt ti ,........,, ,. '' ...... 4 11 ...,. ....... ... ' 1 ,,l -··'• .. -. • -. What Ma:Cle Copter Door Fall Onto Beach? I I I ' I , I I --Ille 11-fOw>d door o! a -Corpe Air P I 1e belloopCa' to fall oll (""" a heiahl ol 700 feel Sunday and land Ofl lhe beach at 21st and West QceAl Fro/ll 1, still a mallet of con4 jeeWre, spokesmen at Los Alamitos Naval Ak Station said today. And wbat will be done to prevent a recurrence ls still an unanswered ques-- Uon, aatd Maj. David Johns, operations oUlcer " for the Marine Air Ruervt Trainln& O.ladlmenl. -NiiliOily WU bl.rt when the •.r .. ~ partmenl door cime oil on the H·S4 chop. per. Beach crowds were sparse btcaw11!1 of the overcas t skies. ''We are checking with the Federal Aviation Administralion tFAA) to find out if other air space is available," Johns said. But he expressed doubt that the route Hopes to Burn St1tell City Plans 'Gas It la one o( the most unpleasant ways to be lfeO!ed to Newport Beach, and c~I vlslton lo the Harbor area probably blame slJpahod sewage treatment as tho cause of the noxiowi smell along the sec- Uon ol West Pacific Coast Highway. But it isn't man's fault. Nature la the culprit causing the rotten- egg smell that seeps from underground north of the Archel overpass. Now the city, under a landmark agree- ment governing municipal projecls On privale property, will build beehive burners to burn the hydrogen sulfide 6Wamp gas to try to kill the smell. The greatest offender to the nostrils is the gas seep that comes up on land where a Union Oil Co. service staUon st&nds at Georgia Gothic 393ilV. Pacific Coast Highway. 1he only etfecll\le measure thus far was building a ~11 pipe which lets the gas escape from the rocif or the station, but it stitl smells. According to a special, volunteer study made by Newport Beach resident and engineer George Zebal, burnini; the seep- ing stuff is the only way to cut do1\·n the smell. • The pipe cost the oil company $.''1.000. A burn1ng devi-;e will cost more. fn a receni report to the council City Manager Harvey Hurlburt said the plans are "highly experimental." Zebal has told the council the gas seeps pose a great challenge. The gas burning devlce resembling a Ul'I T1i.,t~11t With apologies to artist Grant \Vood , Governor and Mrs . Lester Mad· do~ strike a pose resembling the famous painting ''American Gothic'' while on a tour of the governor's garden in Atlanta, Ga ., \Vednesday. The tour followed a vegetable dinn.er for Capitol newsmen. Despite constant questions. Mrs. l\.1addox would not .say Y.'hether she would run for governor in 1970. Vietnamese Question Resistance Leader SAIGON (UPI ) -South Vietnamese police officials today questioned which leader or a new political group which called for a "reconciliatory government" to replace President Nguyen Van Thieu's government. OAllY PliOT OUNGI CO.Ur l'\lll llHIN• COM .. AN"Y 1.btrt N. W1•i Pr.."'-'t a!1t l"Vbllthlt J 1ck I. C11tltf ' vie. l"t111ft!ot llllf ...,,... .. ~,., T~'"''' 1e,,.,11 lfilw Th11t11t A. M11r11hl"1 ~l'fllor .,__.,_ lJO W•lf l1"t $ll1•t M1ili"I Atltlt1n: P.O. 111 1160, 9J•Zl °""' -~,.,.... .. ltll. nu wn1 ..... ...,..,~,,.. ~-111 m,_,._ f111111inrlDll "'-II: J119 $1~ lill'R I Water Directors To Study Budget Of $2.35 Million A preliminary fiscal budget of $2.35 million Including operations and staU ·salaries comes before the Costa Mesa County \Valer District Board of Directors for official action tonight. The meeling is scheduled for 7:3(1 p.m .. In board offices at the Costa Mesa Civic Center. The regular meeting v.·ould have been last Thtirsday, but it was postponed a wee!( diTc lo graduation programs in· \'olvi.ng friends and families of the bo:ird. No tax or water ralc increase is an- ticipated, district officials said. Mesa Buys Press For City Printing Gone are the days when city printed matter could be cranked out by mimeo· graph and 1he Costa Mesa City Council has approved purchase of a second off. set press 1it 14,000 to handle the gro~·· ing v.·ork load . The lithographic press will be used by the Central Services Department lo print bulletins. guidebooks, drpartment· al manuals, all ot v.·h1ch would aist more it contracted out. The ci1y already owns one such press, but it is kept busy nlnc:? hours per day, requiring oVtrtime pay for the operator. plus delay in delivery of some printed materials. Some city printing needs are still handled by mimeograph and other cheaper forms of reproduction. • I lhe ~ Oy on lraJnin( ........ '!ould chanae. · 114 a4fld tno~ II,~ p11a1s -Unue IO. lly oyer !he ~ ... _,, someilme, a door wUJ ran 'Off ·or an engine will fail . It's as certain as automobile accidents, or car engine failures." He said that pilots have been instructed lo lan:i in the ocean if they experience engine failure while flying over crowded Attack' large beehive with vents will be built on a small patch of land owned by the Balboa Coves Community Association. Construction by a firm hired by Union Oil Co. will start as soon as agreements are made between Union Oil. the associa· tion and the cily. Each of the three part1es will donate one·third of the constru ction cost - $3.500 each totaling $10.500. "While this is a cautious experimental program," Hurlburt said, "the potential benefits to the city and particularly this area should merit the expense.·• If it doesn't work. he added. the next idea might be a special assessment tlistricl and new methods to rid the area of the smelly stuff. From Page l DANTE ••• Dr. Dante," declared Donald W. Albright, of Anaheim, whose firm Recreation Enterprises Inc .. built tbe boats at a San· ta An!! yard. /'No, I aid not make an attempt on his life." Albright continued, "but yes, rm still looking forward to seeing Dr. Dante in court." Miss Turner's husband of six weeks is free on $12,500 bail, pending his preliminary hearing June 26 in Santa ,\1onica M"Jnicipal Court in connection v.•ith the felony grand theft warrant. Ron Snyder, 36, of 2.3211 College Drive, Costa Mesa. was equally incredulous Wednesday when notified by newsmen of Dante's accusations about his Tuesday assailant. Snyder and his father Paul are prin· cipals in the Costa Mesa company with whlcb Dante was dealing more than a Y!ar ago, while appearing at the Villa P..1arina nightclub in Newport Beach. ''He's a phony son-of-a.gun," s al d Snyder, "I've never met the man before. nor has my father -he dealt with a sales representative.'' Snyder chuck1ed when told the contents of Dante 's alleged telephone conversalion Monday. "I wish f'd gotten the fi\'e G's," he said, stressing he was joking. ''I read Wednesday where he said he had no idea who might want to kill him - or why -unless it was because someone was jealous of the woman he married," Snyder continued. "And then he comes up with a story lik e this." "Actually, it's kind of exciting," he concluded. Los Angeles County Sheriff's Depart· ment detectives also said \Vednesday that Dante's allegations had no basis for belief. adding that he had been generally 11ncooperative in their attempted murder in\'estigation. A warrant was Issued for Dante's ar· rest. which came June 3. 1968, after his involvement in the a\legetl boat caper was probed by investigators. Dealer Ron Snyder said \Vednesdav that the seve n boats might well hav'e disappeared if It wasn't for a suspiciou.~ truck driver who questioned a $100 bonus for loading in the middle of the night. "It just didn't set right and he refused lo load them up, but called us instead and we called police," Snyder explained, :saying Dante was found at the :scene, supervising the boat transfer. He said the hypnotist had broken a chain lock lo enter the Santa An• yard and cla.imed to be owner of the boals when lawmen arrived. 'l'his claim, Snyder said, lva~ based on his payment with a $17,450 rheck that had bounced. although he had pledged to make it up in cash on ·v.·hat v.·ould ha\•e been the morning after the boats v.·ere hauled a.,.,•ay. · Once the unrcgi~lercd boats were :icross th? Nevada-ttne-tln route to Lu Vegas. Snyder said, they would be unrecoverable. unrccovcrab!e. Dante claimed \Vednesday that the document in question was a promissory nole and that he thought the \v hole case had been cleared up after his court ap- pearance date of July II, 1968 was c.ihcellcd. Another ,,..arrant was issued shortly thrcafte r, but Dante was· nol arrested because, according to Santa Ana Police Sgt. Kent Reesor. lawmen simply didn 't know where he was. lfe told sheriff's deputies when btlng hooked at the West Hollywood station that he held a doctoral degree from Singapore University In psychology. Peter Lim . pubUc relations director for s:ngapore University, tod._,, denied tht statement. pointing out that no s u c h degree is availablt at that institution. l\farine Loses Life MArlne Corps Sergeant David M. Kaur. man of Santa Ana, dlttl ln Vietnam acllon this past week, the U.S. DtfeMe Depar1· ment announced today. He Is the husband or Mrs. Nora J . Kaufman, 3002 Llngan Ave. baach ' . "" ·"'llllr loahn IWr -., -Jnr. ... IM equlpmf!ll, bou1ht-by the ~ ll lost. But we don't:nnt to icare tit hurt anybody on the grotmd." To prevent doors trom falling off, he said, the reserve la experimenting with wlrin& the dapra ~ut wilb ..Buqee cards, elastic devices that, UgbUy wrapped, around the doors, should preyent sach ac· cidenLS in the future. But Sttnday's H·3f • • wu eq11ipped willl a .._ .... ~~·· ' A complete ln"istlgaUon.ls .-way, Johns said. Until the invtatlgation is completed 1U helicopter pl\ots have been instructed ~o Uy over the ws.ter, well awty from surfers, swimmers and suntanner1. An aide to Johna e:mphaaized that this W3S being done voluntarily, saying "We are enUtJed to fly over the beaches, just _ DAILY .. !LOT Steff l'llli. PLANNING PYROTECHNICS -Keliy McCann, Miss Firecracker, and YMCA Men 's Club volunteers Mike Matcham (center) and Or. Allan Osborn plan a sparkling show for annual Fourth of July fire- works display at Orange Coast College. Off Witl1 Bang Fireivorks Show Plans Under Way Plans are under way for the 11th An· nual Fourth of July show to be held at Orange Coast College Stadium. This year's display, sponsored for the second lime by the Y's-Mens Club of the Orange Coast YMCA, will be put on by the California Fireworks Display Com· pany of Rialto. Prior to the fireworks show, the Y's- fifl.'ns Club has scheduled entertainment. Activiti!s begln at 7:30 p.m. The Glengarry Highlanders and the Orange County Sing Out group will open the prO.P,ram. Dr . Allan G, Osborn, 2013 Lemnos Drive. Costa Mesa. chairman of the Y's· Y!ens sh ow, noted that the proceeds from the event will pay for the YMCA 's sv.·im· ming facilities. Kelly tiicCann, 17, or 472 Esther St., Costa 1'.1esa. has been chosen as "Miss Firecracker'' by the club to reign over the fireworks display. Miss !\icCann is a recenl gro.duate or Newport Harbor High School. Advance tickets for the show can be purchased al the Orange Coast YMCA, 2300 University Ave., Newport Beach. Tickets are priced at $1.75 for adults and 75 cents for children under 12 years of age. J l(idney Patient Remains Critical, But Improves Susan Maize's bid for life with the healthy kidney her mother gave her went into its fifteenth day today but the con- dition of the 17-year-old Orange girl re· mains criti<;al. It seemed today, however, that there was some lifling of the gloom evident Wednesday among those closest to the in· tensive care unit at the Orange County Medical Center. Sweden Takes Six STOCKHOL!\1 (UPI) -The Swedish Aliens Conunission announced today another six self·proclaimed American Vietnam war resisters had been granted asylum in Sweden. "She had , a fairly res.Uul nia:ht,:• 1 spokesman commented. "One ol her doc- tors talked to me about her th!! morning and he said she seemed quite alert and cheerful throughout their short con· \'ersation." Doctors stress that lhe left kidney they grafted into Susan from her moUler, !\1rs. Florence Mazie. 42. is functioning i::crfectly. The high school girl's condition stems. they 5ay, from post operative comf)lications that are receiving round the clock altentlon. !\1 rs. Mazze herself is reported as being in •·excellent condition." She was sent home after doctors said she had made an •·uncomplicated recovery" from the ma- jor transplant surgery, the fir:st of its kind in Orange County. .JJ. J. (}arretf ~ . ., M !Ila jeta ud..U. allcrlfl OI .. " ~ •-n.wa M Ht •alllJll the Mlrlnt R"""" I~ ~IM helicopters, but tbly don't see the largw civilian planes," the aide said. 1 "What we're golnf. to do is endang'r our pilots. We don t like IP flj the .. helicopter&. They're 15 yellr• old, lh.,- come back from Vietnam and they't• kind of'Ured. But this is what a reser.,.e unit gets," said the aide. 1 From Page l CHART ... J ,.._ I made on the land as "obviou.sly a directed appraisal." "It is unrealistic and not in the bounds or good practice. It is a compromlR: of professional ethics. No competent· a~ praiser would have done it," he alleged. Mrs. Robinson, 1 leader In the court fight to test the constitutionality of the praposed · exchange,-vowed a continued fight. She and Heims, himself a party in the Superior Court suit. agreed that the mat· ter eventually would go to the Slate Supreme Court for solution. "We have been accused of having tot<!lly selfish aims in this fight, and it ig just not true. We're just as interC$ted in saving Salt Creek as Back Bay," she said. COSTS 125,000 She said that the legal costs lo tho layman foes of the swamp proposals wiil total about $25,000. · "That is a really nominal slim, con- sidering the work involved, and we're proud to say that our funds are just about even. Next month's expenses atill have to be raised, however. ·1r11 be difficult, but we'll make it," she said . In her steadfast opposition to the Irvine assamption of control o£ the bay's tidelands·, she alleged the swap con- sti tutes a "monopoly" of tidelands by ~ private corporation, a situation which she and her group claims violates the State· Constitution. She criticized County Harbor Director Kenneth Sampson for what she termed his "reluctance in wanting to keep tho bay." She chided SampKin's department for concentraling efforts for rapid com· pletion of Dana Harbor, but ignoring the Upper Bay issue. "Mr. Sampson squirrelled away $5. million for the Dana Point project into a Harbor Department account. They spent that and are working on another $S million," she said. The plucky Westcliff resident added, "If Salt Creek fa lls into private hand!i and if Back Bay is taken over, too, then soon we all will be living in a huge, con- crete asylum." ., Irvine Co. executives were invited to the meeting, CHART spokesmen &aid, but they declined. Probe Continued. But No Leads In Mesa Slaying, Investigation continues today Into t!t drowning homicide of a Redondo Bea~ man dumped into a Costa Mesa field ir- rigation ditch last weekend, but detec· lives say they have no new leads. Herman C. EvereU ,. 35. had been club- bed between the eyes before his assailants left him in the fie ld along Talbert Avenue nea r the Santa Ana River channel. , The victim's wife, Dolore5, said he left home about 9 p.m. last Friday and Detcc• live Gerry Thompson 's tour of South Ba:.-' beer bars frequented by Everett turned up nothing Tuesday night. Investigators said he was not seen In the tavern haunts during the period In which he died -anywhere between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m., coroner's depu'ties estimate -and the else remain!' a puzzle. · 1 ' i 4th SEMI-ANNUAL ----- FURNITURE CLEARANCE -• •• • STARTS TODAY PROFESSIONAL INTERIOl DUl&NW \ Op• M• .. n... • M. ha 2115 HAUOk IL VD ... COSTA M!SA, CALl'i'< " 446.0t7S 6'16.0271' \ LEGtNO .. .. PltOf'O\I• ~ MJTlll LlllllTI ~ C> NOltM&&. FUGllT tAnlE .. -t-~~---+-~ ---./..: I ! ~ AV{. lfAICLLA .,, An•b•tm Sl#,1ilm 0 ~OLLIN$ AV£ ~ •llAll6CllOOfl • " • • • ~ a • • • ~ • • CHAPMAN AV • MAP INDICATES LOCATION AND FLIGHT PATTE.RN FOR-PROPOSED ANAHEIM METROPORT Stadiu m Club Becomes Polit.ical Aren. as City Pl1nner1 HNr Testimony Metroport s~ored Analieim Residents Fear Growth By JACK BROBACK Of ttte DfJlr l"llet 11111 Opponents of the proposed Anaheim Stadium metroport packed the Stadium Club hearing room Wednesday night and charg"!d that there was oo guarantee that the facility woold not grow in time into a major airport complete with noisy jetliners. The 450 attending the city Planning Commis;ion meeting were supported by about 30 pickets who paraded outside the stadium with placards condemning the proposal. The commission was taking testimony on whether to grant a conditional use pennlt to build the metroport in an area south of the stadium and including part cf the stadium parking lot. Ccmmissioners will make the.ir recom- mendation to the city council July 14. ''This metroport will get cmnpletely out of our bands," said Stuart Noble of Anaheim. He said the permit application Wt1Uld allow a maximum runway length of 2,600 feet which he noted is 1,100 feet longer than now prgpose<t by IJ.lel.roport backers. "This will eventually lead to conversion cf the facility to a full-fledged airport," Noble charged. Gerry Vind 0£ Anaheim said the pro- posed metroport was deficient in three areas. He listed them as regulation and coolrol of airspace, range ol noise and control of growth. He argued that aircraft density in th~ area is already dangerously high because cf seven other air facilities in the general• vicinity. "Ncise levels would be tnfllcted upon residents of the area cf the metropcrt that is between 10 and 1,000 Umes higher than that considered acceptable by engineers and aviation experts." Vind ccntinued. Supporting the facility was a city plan- ning staff report which stated that it woold aid growing demands for ad- ditional air transportaticn for the com- munity and would provide economic stimulus to business and industry in the greater Anaheim area. The report said air passenger demand in the area is expected to tncreue_ from 366,000 reported in 1967 to 1.4 million a year by 1980., Clyde Barnett president cf Commuter Cenlers whlcli hopes to build and·-ate the metroport said b~ comJ>lllY 11 prepared to l)lelld $4 !lllllion developing the racillty. Barnett said 19 corporations operating In the state now have shown an interest in using the Anaheim metroport as well as 72 big industries tllroQghout tht nation. Barnett denied that the airport \t'ould be eipanded in the future. "We cannct see going beyond 50 to 60 passenger planes becallle of the limitaUons of the site itself, .. be said. Volunteers Answer U.S. Problems Says First Lady LOS ANGELES (AP} -Pat Nixon goes home to Washington today predic- ting that volunteer social work "is going to be the IN thing to do." A f t er three days (If promoting that cause on her first solo official trip, the President's wife said, "l think this is the answer to our problems in America." Mrs. Nixon had an emctlonal finale as she'ended visils to 10 volunteer centers in three We.st Coast cities. l:tandtem of school children jumping and waving flags in excitement turned out from a predominantly Negro school alOng her route Wednesday. One Negro ' boy offered the First Lady a ".soul brother handshake." Later, visiting a foundation that aids blind youngsters, Mrs. Nixon said "we all had tears in our eyes" after watching the youngsters display the.ir Skills, from a stage performance to cooking. When her official schedule ended, Mrs. Nixon went out for an evening of fun. She spent five hours at the 420 1cre Universal Studios at University City, having dinner and going to a two-hour long preview of a new movie, which its producers re- quested be kept secreL ~ailing Out at River ~~~~~~~~~~- Seal Beach Bird Burned Up Over High Volt Perch A dauntless Seal Beach pigeon re- ceived a hot foot and the shock of his life early this Wednesday when he chose to land oo a 12,000 volt tn.Mformer. The e.arly bird roosied on the trans- former, located at ll3 14th St. at 3:31 a.m. and burned it out, causing a two- hour power interruption to eight Jocal homes. According to Ralph KlStt, manager of the Huntington j!eadl branch of the Edison C«npany whicll feeds Seal Beach, night crews had to replace the entire tTansfonner to restore service. "I guess he got fried," said Kiser. "That's what usually happens when they land on one of those things." He added that power interruptk>ns caused by birds are a rare occurrence. but ''there have been times when an eagle or a seagull have caused lrans-formers to burn out," Injured ChiJd Seeks Damages Damages totaling $50,000 are being sought by the father of a Hunlin&ton Beach girl alleged to have been seriously injured when struck by rocks thrown by neighborhood children. . The Superior Coort complaint Identifies Ray McKean, "Jane Doe" McKean, aged · 8 8nd "John Doe" McKean, aged s, all of 20072 Cove Circle as defendants. Howard Battis claims that his daughter, Jac- queline Marie, listed as "below the age of 13", was riding her bicycle in the area last Dec. 16 when she was struck by rocks hurled by the younger McKeans. It is alleged that the Battis girl suf- fered severe and possibly permanent in- juries as a result of the as5llult. Police Auction Set for Valley Various Items found by the Fountain Valley Police Department will be put up for auction at 10 a.m., June 28, at the police headquarters, 10200 Slater Ave. Bicycles, costume jewelry and other ti.ems turned in u lost articles through- out the year will be sold by auctioneer Officer Carl Lawrence. Proceeds from the police auction will be returned to the city treasury. Pier fishermen will have to slay on Huntinglon Beach, Newport and Balboa piers to pursue their favorite pastime because this one, growing daily from , shoreline on Huntington Beach side ol Santa Ana River ia for Orange County Sanitation Districts' new sewage ouUall. Sand ber at right will provide fill this fall for new beach replenishment project down coast in West Newport. - • • Thundq, ;l•na 19, 1969 • S ~All Y PILOT :J Boy Snaps · ·Out · of Coma SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) -A 1-y..,.. old boy, loll In the mowrtainl for lour days and oniy a '!" !lours from death when !le wu' found, came out of 1 <:01ft1 today, recognbed lill molhei atxf falber and drank warm milk. Matthew Joeeph Zimmerman'• ·heart lrtopp<d beating W-ay U he WU being taken by helkopter out of Ille San Bernar<llno National F....t. He had wandertd for more than to houri without food, w•lf.r or shelter with tbe tem- perature dropplng to 30 at nighl His iath:r, Slanley Zimmerman, gave credit to sheriff'• Deputy Oliver Gray and the Marine copter crew from El Ton> for saving his boy's life. Zinunennan ald he lhoobcl Matt!>ew WU dead" wllcn he fil'll .... him. • Doctors aaJd oarly"rt111raday Ille· boy waa 1Ufferi"41 INm ••tmne hydraUon but was maklng "1teldy and saUaractory _... .. The <Ider Zlmmtnnan ~bed lhe heUcopter fll&hl out ol lhe rugpd moon· talna. '"lbe two men worked on hlm~ con. 1lantJy on the way to Norton Alr ll'c:wce Bue," Zimmerman sakl. "Gray toot b1I clolhes oil and wrapped hlJ body IJ'GIJlld Matthew. The otMr man 1ave him moulh-tc>moulh ~talion. "l wanted to help bot tlleY just puoil<d me away. 'Ibey knew what they were dalnc. I lhink wllal lhe7 did piay mve bftn what aaved him." Col. Ruaaell C. Payrie, 'Oho lrealed the boy at Norton bdore he ... taken to SL Btmardlne'a boopltal !>en. Nld Matthew ...-1111 only hod a. few boon to live whoo he wu found W-ay. The aearchen found Mallhew In • snow~ at l :GO 1.m .. ~bout 1~ miles frmi ,mere he wu reporled mbs!OI !all 5aturday. The boy WU WICOnadoul aad hll eye1 open. Matthew wandered for 94 houri tn a 1 p or t shirt, pants a D d ttnnis aboes. Temperatures at night at the 8,XIO foot level where he was lost dropped to the low 40:5. SPECIALS Ortho-Gro liquid Pl1nt Food in the g1llon size Orig. 4.98 NOW 2/4.99 A complele and balanced fertlm feeds through both roo11 and foDage providing quick plant responot ••• for the whole yard. Ortho Azalea aad Camella Pallets 111 5 Ib. llox 2/1.98 Ortho Systemic Rost nd Flower Care 11 5 lb. box 2.98 OF THE WEEKI Feed your plants for a penny 71/4" hanging bu•ets plaited wl .. lovely bego1las, colau, ftru or flc•1Iu.,. You'lfWOld10hang__,af,_lor_"1hi• 1 77 on your patio and potehoo. I ~ Ganloola IA I galloft ... •w, l'9mr er 69C Ten Junlpor ••• I go!. alzo Protact your home and garclan with Ortho spraysl 1.98 ... Ortfio laolOx Spray la "" -.i -.Id F- gardon ..-.. "Ortfio Molallllon ao s,.ay and Ortfio Chlordane Spray. , LIKE IT ... CHARGE ITI Fashion Island - f Hang a Mellen •aad palmct bowl 11 yo1r patio for plctlresqae plalltl119l 2.49 Hand palnttd Mex!Ccln barrel vase _3.79 £11 -'-' • • 29c u _, pots__...-----·-··----- 7# doy" ~ ....................... -39c B!'day ~ 69c Newport Beach ... , .. r ' I I £ : f OAll.Y PllOT .. . ' ll·fllAn IEll .. " ., ...-..r • -. w.My Pl• ...... Anne Hugusen ls having trou· ble with the chastity belts she sells. The British government wants to classify them as furni- ture. What this means, she said, is the chastity belts will be sub-~ jecl tO a 13.75 percent purchase 1:" tax. She is appealing the decision. i~ The items are replicas of a 13th century ch•~tity belt. Miss Huges· sen said they are popular wlth American tourists, who use them "' to .:make flower ft hQlders. Univer.rity of Texas Coed Katit Ja- cobs seem1 determined to find out what's going on .down thare after spotting th.ts open manhole with .such an entici'ilg .rign. A city work crew- man e.:r:plaintd that · tht .sign had btt'n. u.seci becau.se of a shortage of "stay out" rigns . • Out of 205 candidates for the New Mexico constitutional convention Sam M. Laughlin was the only one "'ho refused to submit a biograph .. ical sketch of himself to the &ec .. retary of state's office. "If and \Vhen I am elected as a delega .. lio n," be said, "I will send it to you immediately; otherwise you will have no need for this infonna .. tion. Laughlin won ary1 the 1ecre.. tary of state's office expects his biography in the~exl mail. f The Marion, Ind ., Chamber of Commerce has the ugliest window displ ay downtown - a four-foot· deep \vind ow full of trash. The chamber, as part of an antilitter campaign, collected milk cartons, cans, newspapers and other debris from one-acre of a Marion park and deposited it in their window. • San Francisco's toplt&s dan.- ctrs asked the Park and Rtcrt- ation Dtpartment for a pork or beach. where they can su nbathe, slriTlPed to the waist. Tht girb explai1ied they like to get a lit- tle sun.sh.int:, like anyon.e ebt, but can't wear tops becau.se tht strops leavt lints on their "working clotht'.!." T • Edward Baldridge of ~1aquoketa , Iowa \vas fined $35 and court costs for stealing a golf ball. A member ol t he 1·1aquoketa Country Club started cou rt aclion, saying he hit the ball into the traile r court where Baldridge lives and that Baldridge picked up the ball and refused to .surrend er it. T11""4&y, .liint 1•. 1969 Pompidou Takes Over Presidency ' PARIS (UPJ) -Georges Pompldou was cUiclally proclaimed presld~t of France today and got on wtth the business of ae~g a new cabinet while the Gaulllsb squabbled a mo n I themselves over who would cet what post. He became ptts.ident at 5 p.m. (t a.m. PDT) when Gaston Palewskl, president of the constitutional council , officiall y proclaimed the resul ts of Pompidou's runoff election victory Sunday over ac- ting president Alain Poher. Without waiting £or the aMouncement, Pompidou and National Assembly Presi- . dent Jacques Chaban-Delmas, expected to be the next prem.Jer, began their con- ferences With pollttcal leaden. Jn doing so they brushed aside the Gaullist party squabbl~ .· Chaban-Delmas conferred for an hour with former premier Antoine Pinay, 77, expected to be the new finance minister under ,a program aimed at saving the threatentd French franc. Then while Pinay conferred with Pompidou, Chaban· Delmas met with a series or Gaullists who bad served former President Charles de Gaulle. For the first Ume in It years De Gaull e was absent from this hectic political ac· tivity. He was Dying back this evening from 40 day1 of self-Imposed exile-vaca- tion in Ireland and will be at bis country home at Calombey-Les-Deux-Eglises when his successor takes over. But tbe shadow of De Gaulle has become ID influence with the long-time UPIT .......... TAKES PRESIDENCY Franc•'• Pompldou Gaullists fighting any move by Pompldou to name liberal non-Ciaullists to the cabinet. The sti!fesl opposi tion came against Pompidou's plan to name non-Gaullist Valery Glscard D'Esta ing as roreign minister replacing Michel Debre, who had served De Gaulle loyally since 1968. Party sources said Pompidou had decided to keep Debre: yielding to the pressure. Ciscard D'Estaing had been one of the liberal-leaning politicians who supported Pompldou in the runoff, apparently sym- pathetic to bis ideas on better relations with the United States and relaxing op- position to Britain's entry into the Euro-- pean Common Mar.ieL Air Traffic Controllers Starting W orkSlowdown . W AS!llNGroN (AP) -Air traffic con· trollen at New York, Denver and Houston called in sick in large numbers tcxlay and others began following regula- tions to the letter, causing major delays to air travelers. The full impact was not known im- mediately. In New York, operations at the three airports were cut by at le~50 perce!lt. At midmorning, n planes were slacked up on runways at LaGuardia awaiting lakeofls. The Federal Aviation Adminis tration said it will take "appropriate disciplinary action" if the movement proves to be an illegal strike. 'Jbe FAA said 36 controllers called in sick at the New York Air Tra!fic Control center, and 24 at the Denver Air Route Center. At Houston International Airport, only one of the normal complement of 12 tower controllers showed up for work. supervisory personnel kept operations going. Jack Maher, national coordinator of the Professional Air Trafile Controllers Organit.ation, said l1is membership was "fed up with the FAA's lip service of its regulations." Tbe organization, with a membership of 7,400, revised its standarn s for safety regulation at a convention in Miami on May 27. ''This is the impact of our revised safe- ty operation going into effect ," he said . "We ate telling our people to, have strict adherence to safety rules, to the regulatioos of bod> the FAA and PATCO. In addition, we are telling our people if there is any lndicatioo that physically or mentally they are not able to do top notch jobs, they should not go to work but to call in 8ick and have everything they need taken care ol.." The FAA in a statement said: "If it ap- pears there is concerted action to stay off the job -to conduct a strike in violation or law -the FAA will take appropriate disciplinary action." U.S., Saigon Challenge Reds To Free Election . PARIS !UPI ) -The United States and South Vietnam challenged the Communist side today to submit to free elections in South Vietnam u nd e r international supervision. Failure to do so, they said, would show the Comm unists were trying to impose their will . The staten1ents by chief South Vietnam negotiator Pham DaJJg Lam and U.S. deputy negotiator Lawrence E. Walsh ap- parently were in reply to the Viet Cong announcement last week it had set up a provisiona l revo lutionary government for South Vietnam. Some Allied officials said Chey believed the Viet Cong decided to fonn the government so they could argue against th e nttd for an election before fonnation of the coalitioo government they demand. The Communists said the so-called revolutionary government reflects the will of the people. Lam said the Viet Cong and lianoi were seeking to follow the Communist strategy they used to take over Czechos lovakia Jn 1948. In 1948 the Czech Communists demanded a coalition but they exterminated the opposit ion and formed a dictatorial regime. Lam said. Walsh told the Communists, "tf you truly believe you have the support of the peopl e of South Vi~am, you should be pr epared to test your claims in genuinely free elections rather than trying to im· pose your views at these negotiations." Twisters Sighted South • Ill Thunderstorms Shatter Summer in Midwest Areas ·-----c'allfot'ftl'a----Temperature• T"'9 '"" '"°"" ln Soulllerft (1111<11'1111 lod11 tll'l'r 'tit' "'"'! N rlY mornl"' 1,,... clou1h •rel ICIC.ll IO'll 11on9 IM Ol\111 dl .. iolttl!O!, ~ ""' 111t1Wlln.o '#II p~~t.-d lo 111! 11\f"OVlll'I l"~T. It "'•l 11~11., w''"''' 111 lnl1nd 1 re11. L.,. il"9('le1 1!13 ..,MY 1-le1 11'1d IHTle N"""'•1!urt cl\tnve wll!I 1 ft lvh OI TT nllor W~""l31Y'1 75. Low !O- n•olll will be "''' •). Tht ilir Polluli.011 Corilrcl Ola!r!d M~ Iller~ .... lillf>! ....... 111 f!le LOI ... 119<'1fl 811111. 8HCl\ft we1e clwa.-Ourlne !!Ir "-lllllt. WI"" !Wlllft\'le .. llCI Pl!CllY clOIJOI. 1!1 '"" l!lt•..._t. H l~h1 netr H . T~ "'lltf" W11 '3 &>vrtts. Moun+1!"" 11!11 -1'1 were !tor Wiii\ Winch IS te ,, mlla Plr "°"'' 1.,u be!-Ille mwnT1;n N IJ.n In !flt ti,..,_ l'IO!l'1. Hi.tit; 11 "*""" t1ln ...on. _. In ~ 70I, .. 1111 hlel'll Mlf tS 111 "" -~w" Vllk)l'I ilftd """' 1M lft Ille •o~r _. .. 11tn. s-",... Wetlrwtdly •llCI ,_ tiftf IM9fot ,_,., l!l(lvlfn! l""' llKh ,,..,,, Slftll M""k1 .. ,., SOOTHllllM (;ALll<OllNIA, -""°'-11" ••• ,,,........f""f1 ,..,, ... f>lttll end "'~ ""°"'"""' '°'"' dwdt • ..., Ioctl fOf -.-1 tw!llM. Slltflrt, w1r""' ""' ~ .,.. .. 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" o.-i.11e1 .. .. ....... M .. l'•so lllob•1 ... " Pflll.MtlOfll• " .. ... ""°°""'• ~ " Pl"-burth " .. ... l'llrl!Uld u w 1111..id City " " Red llufl " u ·-••• .. Ster-to " " $1, Loui. " " St lln.1 .. .. Siii L•kt City " .. '"' 01"0 " .. $.in !"1'911dKll " .. StMt l t r.,.,. " • ii..in~ .. " Sll'llk•l'lfl " .. Tl>tf"M•I "' " Wt.tilnthlll ,. ., ... Ship Signals Cros·sed Inquiry Told of Course Change Mixup SUBIC BAY. Philippines .• (UPI) - Messages which might have separated the Australian canier Melbourne and the U.S. destroyer Frank E. Evans moments before their collision apparenUy crossed eacn other, it was disclosed today. Information given to a six-man, U.S.· Australian Board or lnvestigl!!Uon con- firmed again that both ships were eng1g. ed in sharp turns which brought them together instead of apart. Had messages giving the intentions ol the two ships beeo spaced farthu apart. the tragedy might have been averted. Instead, the 20,000 ton Melbourne sliced the 2,200 too Evans in two before dawn oa J une 3 and 74 American lives were lost. Testimony about the messages was given by leading tactical operator Christopher Stevens, 22, Lake McQuarie, New South Wales, and tactical operator Ro d ney How a rd Jacobs, 21, Greensborough, Victoria, who ..,ere handling communications traffic directly before the CQ\lision. Shortly after 3 a.m. the Evans was crdered from a position ahead of the Melbourne to a position 1,000 yards astern of the carrier for "plane guard" duties. After the Evans made her tum, the message seque nce went like this, ac- cording to Stevens: .Melbourne to Evans : "My course is 260." Melbourne lo Evans: "You are on a • • collision course." Melbourne lo Evans: "My rudder ls bard left" Evans tO Melbourne: "Racer. My rud- der ls hard rlJht." . Stevens and Jacobs both tesUfJed the tut two count chance mesaaies were "within aeeonds" of ea other. On Monday, watch oftlctrs oo the brldp of the ae«>mpanylni Amerlcon destroyers James E. Ky es and Everett F. LantoD testified the ordtr of the JnMt.,.. wu reversed . From earlier testimony it was apparent by Clllloen on tbe bridges of the Mel· b<Mime and the Evans both believed they had llent their measages n.nt, indicating • fatal crou over. Solon Says Campus Curbs .Would Ai'.d Student Rebels WASHINGroN (UPI) -'Ille leader of a Republican congressional Wk force that toured restleu college campuses cautioned today against r e pr e s s i v e measures aimed at dl5orders, saying this would simply strengthen lhe "tiny minority" of atudent radical!. Rep. Willlam E. Brock (R-Tenn.), who led the tour. by-%2 GOP House members of scores of campuses this spring,. said the grQUp concluded that hardline counter moves' might drive lhe "~at bulk of idealistic, concerned students" into the arm.! of 1he vocal minority, ' • SANTAANA The report by Brock and his colleagues on Lbeir tour wu presented to President Nixon Wednesday and urges that he try to establish an underitanding with the so-- called moderate majority before they become so disenchanted over outdated educaUonaJ practices that they join lhe minority. The task force suggested that Nixon improve relationship wilh students by ad- vocating a lowering of the voting age to 18, seeking draft reforms and _pushing programs Lo get students more wvolved in poliUcs. THE "GO" COAT ••• BroezethroughabusySummerlnthfs great new cardigan coat ... made of wool Jetsey and fully lined, It's the perfect wrap to carry on a plane ... go slght·seeing In San Franclsco ... or for Dinner at the Beach, .. c~ from white, navy, rad; IJ'Hll or l>olp, Size$ 6 to 16 33.00 Venetian Room Coats and Suits• ARST FLOOR 1 FASHION SQUARE • 547·7211 1 "I don't know bow to aay thle, but I think m:r body is reject.in&' your liver." NoDivorcesAnynwre, Just 'Dissolutions' DAILY PILDT $ NASA Feels Pinch, Too r SenateFight~ead Over Cigarette Ads Housing Cut $384. Million WASHING TON (UPI) -must, In It. dellberaUoos, tlve Praldent Jolmlon'1 Jamwy The H o u 1 e Appropriations consideration to all 0( these bud«et. The N l x o a ad-WASHINGTON (UPI) - A lerest leglslalloo" and aald It Committee, de•plle an ad-ministration "''lied thl1 bill banning co v e r n m e n t would make eiprfltel the on-mlssJon the urban crisis is problems, ~ prioriUes, downward to $2 bllllon, cutting c:ontlnuinf ' today cho--' .-.. and theri recommend the fun-out advanced urban rentwal C--~--· on c I g a r e t t e ly product immune from t'.,.. ... _.... d' 1 1 I"·· b·'· ,-~uu-..i• million rom N l x o n ad-1111 eve prov .... '5 a "-"'nc· and model cities financing. advertising bounced today government regulaUon ° f mtnistraUon h 0 u 5 i n g pro-ed space program," the corn-In applying a further $3M from a r~dlng House vie-advertising. _ems, mittee said. million cut, the committee lory to a largely hostile Moss promised d e t a I I e d Tho same e 0 m m l t t e e , The bluest cuts w e re noted the housing department Senate. hearings before his Senate however, in sending a $14.9 reserved 10r the Department budget was only a "smal! A strong Senate antbmoklng commerce subcommittee on billion money bill to the House of Housinr and U r b an amount of the total in- floor, agreed to spend $lSO,OOO Development, which originally volvement" of the government bloc was poised to IOUff out consumers, w h I ch has Newsweek to plan a $7SO,OOO officialr-'°"-=''-ht-'-14_.1_b1_u.;..1°"-'-'-'"-'fo"'rm=•-r-'-ln.;...:..P'..;'...;'l.cdln,;..g::.,;..n•;.w;.;.hoo=•lni=·-the measure to rewrite it lo in-jurisdiction o v e r ci.gartlte residence for the vice presi- elude mandatory health warn-legislation, and indicated he dent of the United States. ings on all cigarette com-had not altered his Intention Prohibited nie appropriations measure, merclals. Jf no bill ls puaed, to bottle up the bill by conl.alniog funds to run bous- the Federal Comnr-""·Uon filibuster if necessary. ing, space, veterans and --- Com-'-'"" (FCC).".'.:;. be SAIGON (AP) -The June mis cellaneous govemment•Me"1CA'S-LA.-.etsT-,.A .,.1c.v c~OT"W•N& CHAIN ,.,_....,.. nuwu The measure, pa.aed by the 23 issue of N e w s w e e k pt'ograms for 12 mo n th s free to proceed w1th regula· llouse Wednesday, would ex-Maiar.ine was banned 'today starting July t, was $473 lions whlch -according to the tend for six more years the by South Vietnam's Informa· million less than the $1S.4 tobacco industry _ would end present ban on government tion Ministry several hours billion sought by the Nixon ad· regulation of cigarette ad-after it went on sale at Saigon ministration. The big reduc· all cig&rette advertls.ing. vertising. It also w o u t d newsstands. lion, $S84 million, came from There were hints aome In-strengthen the warning on A spokesman said the action housing programs. nuential senators might give every cigarette package. in the magazine presented While chopping $19 million . the tobacco and broadcasting 'Ibe bill sailed through the "false argumenta'' and was from the $3.7 billion the Na· 1.; Industries one la.st chance to House on a voice vote after a "detrimental to the stability of tional Aeronautics and Space r· impoae a gradual phase out of motion to send it baek to com· the country." Adm in is tralion (NASA) t•:., cigarette advertising or strict mlttee was defeated 2S2 to 137. The article was one entitled sought, the committee said I~': rules to beam commercials But in contrast to the House, j'Vietnam Exodus: A Favored economies were needed ~ · · ~~tt only at· hours when chUdren where tobacco state Few," which ri!ported hun-because or problems back on :.;: ~~ are uleep. But baning quick lawmakers were s mo o t h I y dreds of the country's "more earth. /:.: and effective self regulation, organized, the pro<igarette atauenl a n d sophisUcated "With t h e lnftallonary , ~ 'b- they aaid, the government forces in the Senate were in citizens" have left South Viet-spiral, the crisis we face In the • should take action lhis year. disa?Tay. Tobacco state nam for "self-Imposed exile" inner cities, the crucial hous-1 or1N •:JO "" •:JO . SACR.\MENTO (UPI) -(~~!!~~ie~~~~~fu ui:-. :=n!i ~ossH~ :;~d ~::1~.:te~ ~~~=y0h=~o:S~ domestic and 1nternaUonal ~' . · Adultery 00 longer would be go into effect next Jan. t. bill as "blatant special in-leader. clamoring to leave." problems, the comm It tee ' • • ' i ' i~ grounds fur aCalifornla,1-''------------------------------------------------~ f; · , diovrce, under legislation now virtually assured of final TANK TOPS passage. Neither would the o Id standby "mental cruelty." In fa ct, "divorce," per se. would cease lo exist. \Vhen a couple split up, it would be called a "dissolution of mar- riage ." And there would be on- ly two grounds for that: in- curable insanity and "ir- reconcilable differences." The comprehensive, 42-page divorce reform bill cleared the Assembly Tuesday on a 60-6 v o t e and returned tc> t h e Sena te for concurrence in lower house amendments. The Senate will be asked to reject the Assembly amendmenlS. forcing t h e measure into a bi-house con- fearence comm itt ee for negotialion. But i n v o Ive d parties left little doubt the bill will be passei.1. It also "is expected" to be signed by Gov. Ronald Reagan, according to one of the ' sponsors, A~mblyman James Hayes {R-Long Beach). The measure, whose official Rook y Faces Aid Reques ts In Paragua y ASUNCION. Paraguay (AP) President Alfredo Stroessncr's military regime has prepared a whopping for eign aid request for Gov. , Nelson ,A. Rockefeller to take back to President Nixon. Rockefeller arrives t h I s afternoon for a 23-hour visit tG this la nd -lo c ked Latin American nation of t w o million persons. He is schedul- ed to meet Friday with Strocssner. St.roessner, who took power In 19~. presides over Latin America's oldest dictatorship. He has prepared a memoran- dum for Rockefeller asking fo r $115 million in long-term loans to build roads, modernize the national railroad system , con-. struct a ground station for satellite communications and imprcive public h e a I t h facilities. He also wants special allowances for sugar and tung oil exports to the United States. Paraguay, among Lill n America's poorest nallons, receives S35 million In foreign aid a year, mostly rrom the Unit.ed States. Its economy is in bad shape: because its im- ports exceed exports. Last year the defi cit was a record $13.9 million. MISTAKEN 'MUMMY' JACKSON. Miss. fUPll The "Egyptian mummy" was a popular tourist attraction in lhc Mississippi Capitol. The JJtate was proud of the relic of the ancient land of the pyramids. • REDUCED Ollr Pencraft" c.1-a1-1._ rolary._er Reg. $88 NOW '78 ,,,, ___ is,._ Slwdy3'htfengine.ho dodos a21" <Ullingwlddi, gas llC"IQll. ""'"-"' ~·2HP .,... .. edger 6991 • • •• • • • • • • • • • LIKE IT ••• • ... CHARGE IT! Reduced Penncraft® 21'' power propelled rotary mower Reg.$69 NOW $61 Pay as little as $.S per month Has a rugged 3 HP, 4 cycle Penncraft engine. Features include: steel dedc, engine shroud, recot1 stca tw, standard terminal, stone guard, d'oaphragm carburetor, easy height cutting ad- justment, standard rnufller, air cleaner and oil fill Throttle, slop and choke controls on handle for easy !90Ch. Penncraft" premium ,..., type mower 129'5 ,ay .. """' -fl ,,.. """"" "-mowethasa3HP cycle engine with an 18# cvtting width. Penncn lt"-1 type moww 16" hind """' .... _ 17" hone! """' ........... , 84.95 19.95 29.95 2 HP tron ttirow power propelled ,..., type mower 15991 ,.,, .. llttle -• ,,.. - Mel.one" moww has -4 cycle engine, 20" cut• ting wld!h, dutdi, blade and throttle con!rols en handle. 3 HP front throw lllOWet' 17991 • l • t · r l I . .) .. . ~' • ' ' -- I ... I ~~/.\ :V.'' ~ oj ., ribbed cottons or acetates at a cool savings price! 11-clingy linle tmb topa !Im - _, moJ,, 10 eomfortablB. IO femfni:oe .': • ...,.at Robert Hall'• dou- sale picel Ciolce ol IOOI -wllh alknr ribbing .•• er almq -ch JOOS acel>ts. Wrth a ftluuacl> u this one. 7"U can lllonl ID °"" a doMt loll! Solid .,.,;;.. -· s.i..i.. .. Open Sunday 11 to 5 ~I . ' ' ~ • 1 ' ' ~ j . i I. i ~ ~l! !ti. ,I Then came Gentry Yeat- man. 22, a medical student whOfie IChool project was lo X- ray the mummy and make a report to the Department of Archives and History. But Yeatman'• report said the figu re was papier-mache reinforced with boards and nAill and containing a few ribs. probably animal bones. HU NTI NC3TON BEACH CANOGA PARK NEWPORT BEACH COSTA MflA, 1601 Newport BIYd., 11 1~ • . FULLERTON LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR VENTURA GARDIN GROVE -12372 G ........ G.-IMI, • ' ' t ! I I t 1, • .. -.... -.. • I DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE I Time to Get With It \Vhen a m.idwestern new&paper far removed from Callfornla's coastline sees emphasis on explo.itaUon over protecUon of environment in Interior Secretary Hlckel's position on the Santa Barbara oll dlsaller, it's all the more apparent that offshore oil drilling is a na· tlonal polltlcal time bomb. A gue.t editorial from lbe Minneapolis Tribune ap· peartng below on this pa_ge indicates that pressures are continuing to bulld-ancf1!1>t just in California-against the Department of lnterlor. A panel of "experts," in recommending res~p­ Uon of drilling and oil production on the assumption that the pool involved is separate . from oth.e!s and could be drained, is not concerned with the political as- pects of the situation. This is something the Nixon Administration can'l Bllord to do. The panel could be technically right, but political· ly wrong. It also could be wrong on both scores-with disastrous consequences for the entire Southern ~­ fomia coast and a political disaster !or the Republican Party as well. Son, Alan Cranston ([).Csl!f.) appears to have gau~ecl public opinion on the oil vs. enVIronment pro- tection issue more qulckly and accurately than have the Republican politicos at the national and state level. Cranston was quick to introduce a bill to end drill· Ing in federal tidelands oil Santa Barbara. He thus far has not been supported by George Murphy, ~aliiornta's Republican senlor senator. And be has run into a wall of indifference in the Senate which translates: 0 Unless and until California acts to ban drilling in state tide- lands, why should we bother?" Jess Unruh, Assembly Democratic le~der, has ~w introduced a bill similar to Cranston's \vh1ch w~d give the State Lands Commission power to ban drilling un- der hazardous conditions. That. of course, means the geologically unstable ocean bottom off Santa Barbara. Now !bat he has 5rt from lbe technical ex· perts, lbe President be well advl1ed to get a report from a el of JlUcal exports as well. The Repub~an le. ership, at both 5\ate and na- tional levels,. had better, as lbe sa~g goes, get with i~ Make Hearings Mandatory Orange County's rapid urbanization has brought with it intensified public intereat and concern in pres- ervation of public lands for public recreation. Unless foresight is shown, green belts, view sites, beaches and park areas wUl rap.idly dlsappear. Beaches in particular have become a prime pub- lic issue as result of the disastrous oU leak di&cussed in lbe foregoing editortal. Another manifestation of this concern locally is the outcry over abandonment of Salt Creek Road, with resulting lo .. of lbe potential for ac· cess to a good surfing beach. As a result, lbe Oranie County Grand Jury has called for a state Jaw reqwrlng public hearings before county land is bought, sold or leased. In lbe interim, Ibis should be adopted as board policy. The supervisors• first reaction was that public hear- ings on all land transactions 0 could be very cosUy.'' They've called for a cost study. Whatever the finding the alternative (the present system) could be mor~ costly to the public. The public has lbe right to know, and to have a say In public Jand matters. Hearings have been held by public agencies where the transaction seemed of suf .. ficient magnitude or involved widespread public inter· est. Making such procodures mandatory makes good sense not merely for county land but for all public land to be dispoaed of by cities, lbe state and lbe many less prominent public agencies such. as flood control and water districts. Robert Kennedy Memorial Draws Fire They Aren't Much Shucks Public vs. Private Funds WASHINGTON -That proposal For the government to contribute $158,000 to help pay for the construction of an elaborate memorial to the late Senator Robert Ken· nedy in Arlington National Cemetery is running Into new opposition. . . Rep. William Scherle. R-lowa, 1s In· dignanlly as.sailing the plan as a waste of tupayers' money, and Is set to fight it if it reaches the House floor. Several months ago, Sen. John Wit· Iiams. R·Del.1 and Rep. 1-1. R. Gross, R· Iowa, leading economy ~dvocates, were sharply critical of spending govern~e:nt funds for I.hi& purpose. Gross caustical· Jy characterized the proposal as "al· most beyond belief." Scherle, in the forefront of lhe drive to enact legislation designed to curb &tudent violence on cam~s. is equally criUcal. He is stressing two points: (1 ) THE DISTURBING slate of the na· tional economy and the urgent need for cutting government expenditures; (2) that the government spends $22 to $34 for headstones for servicemen killed in combat. "At a time when the economy of our country is at a critical stage and budget priorities are essential." says Scher le. "it is preposterous for a family whose every member has trust funds and assets total· ing millions of dollars lo request lhLs ad· diUonal bUrden on the taxpayer. Kennedy family dedication would seem to indicate that a small part of this great wullh could finance the construction of this memorial -and that tapayers' money could be devoted to more important needs." Under the pending plan, the Kennedy family would put up $420,000 of the ap. proximate $750,000 estimated cost ot the Robert Kennedy m e m o r i a 1 . The government's share woukf be $258,000. SCHERLE ASSERTS flatly, "There Is no precedent for the use of public money to construct such a memorial for a U.S. senator." "Members of the COngress are entiUed to have their funeral expenses paid for by the government," says Scherle. "They are not entitled to have a free grave mark much less the granite wall and reflecting pool planned for the Kenned.v site at a cost of nearly three-quarters of a miWon dollars. The Kennedy proposal is in sharp contrast to the thousands oC 9mall white cr03Ses In A r 11 n g to n Cemetery that mark the final resting place of our veterans who died defending their country." Also bitingly noted by Scherle ii thal the memorial erected for the late Sen. Robert Taft, R-0.1 WU paid for tuth;ly by private funds. "SENATOR TAFT was a serious con· tender for the Jll'tsidential nomination of his party," declares Scherle. "He ran three limes and was the recognlud leader of his party. After his untlmelv death, an Impressive carillon costing $1 million was erected on the capital grounds -without tht government put- ting up one penny. This notable memorial was financed entirely by subseriptions from supporters of the late Senate Ma· jorlty Leader. "That is a very significant contrast, and worth noting at this time when an ef- fort i9 underway to tap the public treasury for the Kennedy memorial." TIJE PRQl'PSAL is now pending In the Appropriations Committee. A backstage effort is being made to include it in the multi·billion dollar budget of the Interior Department. By 'Robert S. Allen and Job A: Goldtmllll 'Thar's Gold in Them Pills' To the .Editor · Gold has been discovered again in California. The new gold is t.1edicare and jts twin Medical. The new prospectors are the entire 111edical profession. Shac!cs ol lhe 49ers please relire into your limbo and consider yourselves pikers, for the 69ers have discovered more gold than you ever dreamed or. "Thar's gold in the1n lhar pills and them thar shots" that people line up to receive. The American f.1edical Associa· tion, while being just another "union," and vociferously opposed to Medicare, now welcomes the vast sums or money made available to private doctors, hospitals and clinics. lt is a windrau for the unscrupulous. BEFORE I PURSUE this tirade against the r acketeers, lel me give respect to the dear family doctor, the G.P. (who is rapidly becoming extinct) and the good hospitals and specialists everywhere, no1 unmindful of the county hospitals wnich give bonest medical servi~ while deprec iating the patients' ego. These things fit Into the picture. Gold is \•ihere you find It, and Medicare is the rich vein that the AMA hopes wilt ------ Thursday, June 19, 1969 Th• •dUorlal peg< o/ tll< Dallu Pilot ••kl t.o inform and 1ti,,... Ml.ate rt.Gdni br pr1s111ting thiJ ~· opinions and com- mentarr °" topki of intere1t oll<l ngnl/iccmtt, bu prooidina • Jorum for LU ezpr•uion of our rtadt1' op1nlom, and b$1' j>runUl!g CM dlwrlt '"''"' point. of lnJ-4 obi•,,,.,., oll<l ""*'""'" on lopici of CM dar/. , Robert N. Weed, Publisher / . t • . ' • -.... This hate. thts malignancy cretping .., and smothering our communities is not Mailliox' ' -' Letters from rtadtn art tDtLcomt. Normally wriUrs 1hould co11vt11 thtir messa9t in 300 words or less. The right to cqndtnse lttttrt to fit tpa~ or eliminatt lib tl is rtstTVtd. AU lttters must include signature and mciting address. but names may be withheld on requ1it if sufficient rea- son U apparent. never peter out, allhou~h they were against it from the beglnn1ng. S. G. UNDINE S upport Police To the Editor : Nelson Sasscer, Santa Ana poli~ of- ficer. is dead, shot down in tht: line of du. ty. Hts death "'as not caused by a man 's greed for money or a man's deranged mind, but rather by a cold, calcul•ted hate -a hate directed toward authority and toward any man who tried to up-. hold the laws of socle(y, IT IS A calculated hate that, if allowed to grow and be nurtured. will destroy the very principles upon which the United St.alts is founded. One of these is that each man. woman and child ha~ l"" alienable rights to life. libert y and the pursuit or happiness. Some people feel, however. that their rights take precedence over lhe-rlghb of . others: that not only do their rights precede but that lhe11 righU and only the.ir rights should pre vail. And we sit by and shake our heads and hope that tomorrow everything will be all right WE SEND OUR police olflce.rs out to take cart of our dirtiest problems. but expect I.hem to remaln as unl.llnted as the pure driven snow. We ask them to keep the peace and yet we take the tool! of law away from them. We ask them t.o give their lives Al any Ume, but we rail to lUpport them. Tht consensus Ls that trs all necessary as long as It dOC!n't dlsturt1 us. going to go away by shaking our heads and wishing. It's not going to go away while we turn our backs on our police of· ficers. It's only going to go away when we stand up as responsible citizens and support our law enforeement agencies . SHARON BONNER Primitive Stor11 To the Editor : Now it is the P.:laMed Orbiting Laboratory project th.at has been drop- ped. What nexl? At this rate of attrition, the economy of Orange County will not have somethinc to crow about. The political overtones' in- volved in this make for poor readln&. The people involved in this debacle have little to look forward to. These abrupt choppings of personnel, so peculiar to aerospace. speak of a total lack of concern for human value!. IT IS A primitive story that pe.rs!Sts into this so-called modern age. The fang. ~ club. The cave. Realty? Who cares? Plenty of people do. They v.·i ll not take these deba9ements lying down. I am a salesman. 1 foreSte quite a few vacant homes -soon. This is not the on· ly damage foreseen. You ha'd best be con· cerned, sir. JOHN FISHER Dear Gloomy Gus: Dr. Nol•n Frtulle plagiarlzedl Ills letter on stx education <P.faiUm, June 12J was lifted from a <"OI· umn by J . J. Kllp&ltict ln a Loa Angeles ne'l\11paper. The lhoughts may be Frlzelle's but the words belong to Kilpatrick. L.A. JI. Tillt ...... ,. "'"'C'O'I ,....,.., ........ ... -ftl•PllJ ,,...,. .. fM lltw•-· ...... ...... HI -.. OleMir OUlo Otol" "1!111. As Moons Go A gentleman in government we will name Smith to protect the innocent, v .. rote a letter to one of the news magazines relative to that whimsy about towing one of the Martian moon1el$ to earth-side for inspection. This larcenous practlcal joke may be one of many floating about since the satellites were discovered in the Jast cen· tury. Surely science fiction scribblers haven 't forborne to drop lheir earthmen of! on one of them as a way.station to bigger things, like a Martian occupation. The Earthians are hell on occupations. Some wig last year, slightly daft with the current talk of space platforms, thought tbe moonk"' might be shells, space: relics or a vanished Martian civilization. Sounds reasonable in our space phantasm. THERE ARE TWO, and they aren·t much shucks as moon$ go in Solar pa.rta. Phobos is 10 miles in diameter, cirtling the planet at 5800 miles, and Deimos. is a S-miler, 14,600 miles out. This suggests the little one is no more than a flying Mount Everest, and maybe as rugged, because we don't know they are spheres, though we'll assume they are, for Ulls scientific essay. So they are peanuts compared with the moon we know so intimately, if vicarious· ly, and would hardly engage the attention of Martian poets or lovers. Back to SmJ th, he makes It plain he doesrl't favor stealing Ph<ibo8 or Deimos, seeing no point In it, an ad- mirable skepticism. But Ulen he makes a teasing, offhand remark, saying there is no "scientific obslacle" to the enterprise, "as every physics student knows." PONDERING THAT, yo u might have a nagging wonder. Even towing ~1ount Everest 3G-160 million miles across space, i! pointless, appears downright clumsy. Just how clumsy needs the ok:I pencil and paper, like beginning arithmetic. A cubic yard of basalt·like rock weighs around 2.5 tons. A cubic mHe contains aboot 5.4 million cubic yards, and weighs 13.5 billion tons. A '5·mlle sphere runs 75 cubic miles, and a JG-mile sphere about 600 cubic miles. This makes Deimos weigh roughly· a thousand billion, or I trillion tons, and Phobos 8.4 trillion tons. But these ar!: earth weights. and Mar· tian gravity Ls about one-Ollrd. So if you want Deimos you'll have to pry 350 billion tons from the planet. For Phobos it's Z.8 trillion tons. THIS APPEARS to be a formidable hoisting job, since the Apollo Ult Is a few tons. Of courH, onCe you escape the Mar- tian gravtty neld, an infant, so to speak, could push or tew a moonlet But when you're at the far edge of the earth's gravJly field (nUlllons of miJe9 beyond lhe atmolphere) you're in bad trouble, wtUch can only get worse. You can't stop your tow or steer It or arrest lts .ac- ctloraUoo, secood by second. You only hope ll Jndnerates in the atmosphere. A cinder on Chlcaeo. and no Chicago. lf it landed on a praJrla properly fragmented, it could provide lhrowlng·rocks for col· lel8 1tudent.s for ~ntlons. I& Is much mort to be feared "-'e are over-trained In the 8pace department. and that "what evtty phf!]cs student knows." taken as a ca.sual slogan. Is more droll than real. Hickel's Decision On Oil Leases Tnterlor Secretary Hickel's decision on oil leases off the California coast should be a telling indleatloo of what direction his department will take regarding the environment. The California matter is Hickel'$,.lirst real test. A special panel has recommended to Hickel that drilling and oil production be resumed on a Union Oil Co. lease in the Santa Barbara chaMel, where an un. dersea gusher erupted ln J a n u a r y. drenching the California coost in black goo . THE RECOrtltilENDATION ls based on an assumption that the Union lease covers a separata pool, and that withdrawing the underlying oil will stop a continuing leak. But there is no assurance that the pool is, in fact, a se parate reservoir; the Sierra Club, which warned agaifst drilling in the first place, aays Jt.s geological investigations suggest that the Union pool Is connected with other reservoir11. If that is true, new wells and more pumping will not stem the leak. The Union lease is only one of 71 which the Interior Department has granted pi the channel; each lease Involves potetl· tiaµy many wells. The January blowout was due to a geologic fault. A similar mishap could occur again, since this fault *"''"T' '"" - Guest Editorial .•. underlies the entire channel area, which has an unstable geology. A BILL IN CONGRESS would stop drilling in the channel and allow siupension of drilling eliewhere along the ouler conlinental .shelf off California , pending study o( tbe coastal geology. These seem to be sound precautions. The , country ba.9 no immediate need of thi• 1 oil. Why should additional drilling be permitted without 'reasonable assurance that beaches and marine life can be pro·; tected? The Interior Department opposes the • bill and reportedly favors a resumption ol, drilling. A better position, it seems to us, would be for Hickel himself to instituta1 the steps proposed by the bill. The· secretary told an audience recently that "you r future hangs on your en. vironmenl," and "the Department o' Interior is really the Department of Tota~ . Environment." On the Santa Barbara leases, Interior s':'!ems to be acting more' like the Department of Exploitation. lt1inneaJ><Jlis Tribune Call It What You Will Let me ask a simple. even a dumb, question of all my scientific friends -my friends in neurology and physiology and chemistry and biological physics. If it is true, aqd it is, that the cells In the human body are constantly changing. so that about every seven years we are composed of ull!flY new cells -then what accounts for the "continuity" in a personality? How can we call him lhe "same" person he was seven years ago? We could say that the continuity persists in the "brain," but the brain changes along with the rest of the body, sluUing off old calls and taking on new ones. How does the new brain know who it Is, and how does the\ cortex "remember" its identity under theS<? ron- ditions? TAKE A COAT. Suppose each v.'eek It tore and we replaced il with a patch, un· Iii finally ii was a coat entirely made up of these patches . Would it still be the "same" coat? And at what lime, al what particular patching, ~ould It change from the "old" coat to a new and different one? t It is plain lo sec that a garment Un· dergoing these consta;it changes, so lhat every seven years it was made up en· tirely of new material, could not be c3Jled the same garment you originally bought -so in what way is the person the same person he was seven years ago? \'ET WE KNOW he Is. Exttpt for cer· lain differences th"t experience and ag. Ing make on him, he looU the same, talks the same. thlnb the same, reell the &a.me, identifies hlmHlf as the &1me en· tily, Obviously, there ts IOMethfnJ "in" him that retains Its ideottty ~flrdleu or the molecular and chemJaal c:hugts in every part of the tis&ue and nervts, and all the synapses of the neurons. Now. we know that the eells aomehow "replicate'" themselves. Thal It, I( the liver Is damaa:ed, •nd 00 treatment i'.'I done to ii, a new cell coming Into lhat region or the !Ivar will be damaged in ex· actly the same way as its' predecessor, But we don't know why, ·or exactly how. ;\nd v.•c. are aware thal some or these v Sldney J. Harris • ---"~---~-'~ pathologie9 will spontaneousl:t remit--: them~lves -including c a n cc r o u growths. • BUT IF EVERY cell is constantly.. changing, and eventually dying, in tho ,. body, how can one belie ve that what wo:. call th e "identity" or a creature is •" material, physical thing consisting mere-J ly or biological and chemical processes? To me, this old·fash.ioned mechanistic • view is as superstitious and obsolete a9 the medieval belief in the "four.,.. humours." Thus. the "personality" or the 'psyche't . or the "mind," call it what you will. of~ person, Is something quite other, and dif-. ferenl, from the mere arrangement an4,..1 chromosomes or the body -soqu~_lhin . beyood these, a unifying and identlfyingJ clement we should not he sitate to call ''spirit." ' ,, .---B11 George ---.,1 Dear George· You aJv:ays take th e man·s side! This makes me. pretty mad. But I'll write to you anyhow, as sometime! you make sense. I want to k:no\Y why my husband won 't take me fishing with him. He jusl goes oft and leaves me. Why is this? I likt to fish. He knows 1 like to fish . But he won't take me fishing. Do you think It's right for him not to take me fishing? Wlien he goes fishing I - ESSI& Dear Essie: I dldn•t have room to print the l other nve pagts of your lttter. Jtowever. 8J a wild guess, J ' would say your husband doesn't take you !Jshlng because you talk too much. J , ~ . . .. Thmdq, June 19, 1'169 DA!iY i'ILOT 7 CHECKING •UP• ---.. MR.MUM---.._..._ ____ __ College Codell House Members Seek Action 'l'klaklttg ol Traul7' .,. ......... t. (111.-11 Tile BookataU n• 1. '"" •· c.. -MM<tt WASlll!IGTON (AP) -Six· dllrupted by a demoOltratlaa1";;iiiii .... iiiiiiiii;;;;o'"';;;;o"'o;"';; •-_, teen_ ...... o1 the -andU-wboC>pp*,..Yeot>ll Why an Alcoholic May Get Seasick Educatlaa .... Labor Com-_, al -~·-all mlttte are plllltlng a bill call· ... -oo --al · lnl for eollece• and n ~ rtqUlre unlvnltlcl mil_ to fDmlUW. c:odel app!Jlni for I-al l\mds to of -lot tholr llludeola file • -.. lhowlng thal ot r-Jou of I-al aid. -lftor COUlllalloa with ad- They took their 1DUrlot pro. mlnlolraton, faculty a n d polil to the fUU a.momber -la -a codt of conduc:l commlttte toda.y, coofldolll of :: r:..i-:b~-~tlom bu •llOU(h IUpporl to win IP" - I See by Today's Went Ads By L. M. BOYD IN LINE WITH th Is deportmenl's pledge lo report helpM data. k 1bould be noled Ol09t parrots are left.rooted •• • • GASOLINE FVM!:S '° deaden tbe nose tbal most any service stali()fl attendant is saJd to do his daily sUnt without a sense of smell .••• Mf ASKED HOW many st.ates require no wait between ap- plication for the marriage license and the wedding. Just 2Q •••• A Vl!."l"ERINARIAN ol considerable exp er I enc e claims, "0{ all domesticated animal!, the one most apt to become hysterical is the horse." , , . ODDLY ENOUGH, an ostrich is about the same size as a baby chick, when hatched. WEDDING RINGS -What so few husbands realiie hi the man who wears a wedding ring should put it on the third finger of the right, not the left hand. Such is the contention of an authority on matrimonial matters. A ring on the left hand signifies subservience, he claims, while a ring on the right hand signifies authority. WISH TO SUBMIT the following inquiry to t h e younger folk on that TV show called "The Generation Gap:" "How do you pronounce the name Cbolmondeley1" SEASICKNESS -"Why are alcoholics 80 apt to get seasick1" Inquired a clienl Was unable to answer that one. But a kindly subscriber replied as followa; "It ls my understanding certain vitamins In the B complex Pft'\lenl nausea.Howe" er, they are mollly alcohol ..iu. ble. So a drinking man crealel his own Vitanilii B delicl , thus making btm:':ff vulnerable to motion sicknw. 0 P'asclnating, if fac- tual LOVING MOTHER -"I think the best tblng I ever did for our t~year~ld daughter," writes a SL Louis mother, "was to give her my engage- ment ring, a full carat, to wear on the third finger of her left hand. We agreed she would tell nobody· where she got it. But within three months, her grades improved tremendously, and all her friends, who had ignored her so long, began telephoning." ' NOS~, FEET AND WHAT NOT -Why does a man always stand with his back to a fire? That's wh at I asked. \Vrites Mrs. E. E. Skaggs of Fresno, Cal.: "During the flood, the ark sprang a leak Noah sent a dog to plug the hole. The dog sniifed at it, but failed to st.op it. Then Noah sent a woman. She stepped cn it That didn't work, either. So Noah sent a man. He sat on it, saving the day. But ever since, all dogs bave had cold noses, all women cold feet, and all men have stood with their backs to fires. ' Your qiiestions and co'1t· ments are welcomed and wiLl be used wherever pos· sibte in "Checking Up." Addrtss mail to L. M. Bo¢, in COf't of tht DAILY PILOT, Bo:i 1875, Ntu1P0r: Beach, Calif., 92663. ---- Inflatable Air Bag proval ol the compnxn1se Erlenborn lald the goals plan. would be lo malotaln - lntn>duclloa of the bJD came o1........ioa. ..,bllc order and Mooday just u a prealdeottal Iha ellective functioning of the oommiAlon llaued a ftporl on educallooal .....,..,,. CUIJl'lS violence whkb recom· U ID Iaatltutlon did not Ille mended, among other things, &UCb a certlllcato. tt ...Wd nol that lawmabn not nilh to be JIO!mltted to l"l IDY withdraw flolndal aid from federal fUnda. Scbooll are nol ldlooll that fail to coolrol told bow lo write, the rqula- dlaordera. tieml. The Natlonal CommlNloa on The compromlle r •ta In • the CouJel and Prevenllon of Mn. G,....., c:utoff ol federal Violence lald WIUna laws lcmdl to llludenll and toadlen already withdraw aid from coavlcled of rloUng, and It H · lludenta wbo ens•I" In dlmlp-tends the cutoff to other tlve acta:, and "additional laws federal programs Including · alon1 the same lines would not the vtterana educational pro- e Gl'ftl KlcW N-In ICUba sear and all ~ , atdet. or treat that J'OUIW &rad with • On.M;k Dent or Hawa.11 aurfho1n:J. • Bea"""4 mountain lot ap In--°'""'" up a retreat or hlde+WQ' tn God'• countr.v. . Eyed f"r Auto Safety ar;compl!lh any use f u l,__!cr~am~. :::;:::;::;:::;~...::~========:;:~~~====~~ purpose." 1- Backera of the new House DETROIT (AP)-t ili.trotl finn bas developtdJ a new auto salety device,~· bag --"""""' . t9U11ly when a e ii in a fl'onl-end collision. Th< inflated bag ..,..... the riders into ~r 1eats, prewnllnc them f1Um being thrown aplnsl the dashboarcl or other portioo ol the car In- terior. The fin( .1mention device is intended only to prolect ......,.... duriog heed-on cotllslom, but the developer says more IOdiisticated de- vices could be bulll lo pm.ct passengers In cani hit from the side, or rear. 1be develaper said the de· vioe works this way: Bags oo the dub.board are released by a sen90r placed on d'le pasaenger side ot 1he flmrall -the eliilne and the -er ccmparl- menl Th< ...-m1e:ts to !be meuure a re led by Regs. quick -ol a c:ruh Jobn N. Erlenbom (R-Ul.), by O)'inS forwan1-the •me and F.dUh Green, an Oregon way a rider does-eomect1ng Democrat who headed a aub- an electric: c1n:u1t willob ~ commlttte that could nol leues com~ ~ reach apment on any bUl to gas and lnlhm!I bap In obout clamp down on oclloolJ wblcb one-fiftieth ol a aeoond. fail to cootrol disturbances. Each bag bu two lour-Inch Mn. Glftll !aid lhe would holes, allowing the bll: to de-ask Chairman Carl D. Perkins flate moments after ft ls In· {D-Ky.), to discharge her sul>- flated so passengers wlll not committee so the run com- be pinned in the car. J •--could•-• ••· •--• Dr. Peter H•Y marktti•• m t~ -e up --~ ·• Th< new bill IJ described u manager fer the new device a comproml.le be t w e en developed by Elton, Yale and "Artistry in Moving" for fflt BEST MOVE of YOUR UFE ean: 494-1025 Towne, Inc., llid the belts backers of plans to lbut oil would no( impolr the ellect funds lo ,..Y "91fep wblcb IJ olthebags.KellidttWOllJ<l·-~.....;.__;:-"-"~~~~~_..;;;;;;:;;:~...:::~~~~-'--...:.::;___;.....;.;.;;.;::__~~~~~~~~- take one to one and a half · -for the bop lo ll4rl deflatlnc. Hau uld Iha! In experl· meota with the .... deVice. baboona IW'Vived ......... the equ1valenl of a car traveling 60 1'o IO mlks an hour blttlnC a parUd car. 1bl.s compares wilb the 4S to 60 mile pel" boor limit ol llW'Vlvabllil>' of -belt ~. he uid. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE BUYS! 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I ' WASHl!IGTON (IJPI)-'llle they said th<y wanted otller quarters In OO!and, C.lif., Until llllHard took Control ogy, Its technique . ~ I(' young N~ couple, former Negroes t'o know the truth before they broke wkh the o( the Black Panthers f1'1:1m functioning.'', -Dktst· Kills One members of the Black Pair about the Black Panthers. group last year. HlJey P. Newton, who was Powell told lhe JUbCommi~· U»er Party, talked ol a revo-"Young people are giving Assuiinations and beatings -CGOvlcted-last year of killing tee, which is lnvestl-tln& the Jut.lon&ry m 0 v em en t be-up their freedom and their were commonplace within the an Oakland pollct ofllce!, the e .. · trayed. lives to people who don't want • militant .arganlzatlon as a party ·worked oftly to defend Black Panthers and other .\ ' ~o,--Clllf, (Jll'I) -which was pushed over an em-Oiie m.n wila Wed and bankment and rolled 50 feet . four ~•-, -· . . criUcally The dr!!et,1~ _the car, -Mrs. Larry Clayton Powell and anythJ.ng but money for them-· meaos of strengthening the ~~from Police bMallty, groups to see whetber they his wife, Jean, said they quit sefva,'''aa.ld Mrs. Powell, M. pc.rtion of the party's current they said. Now,· ..id· Powell, have played any role 1n:cam- the p&l'ty becauBe lt had 1ban-who worked wilh her husband. leader, David Hilliard, said 25, "the en\lre Plnther Part{. pus disorders,· that party dolled its original commit· at the party's national head, the Powells. has been changed-its kleo • discipline is extremelJ litrlct. m,e n t to . improvement· of 1---''-,,;,_--------------------.;.,..------=-----,,;,_-- UUftll" Darlene l."Ulllllli· B e v er l J IQJsred ''Wbea 'I ' guollne tank HWI, &\X1 .btr}dauihter, truol: ...numed, pourinl • Camile, 17, <llinbecl flun the tiYtrt o( fire down a wbldinl wrec.iage Bl Oaining gaaollne Negro Uvtng condi)ions and . now serv~ only. to build the p<>wor and 'wealth of itS lead· )~ •1o&' s.~'pu-lv.eda ~w:~i.~ Boa1¢vard WedneodJy. department hdicoPl<r as she --------- · enhip. The Po'wells, weering be- rets~ dart glasses and clad enttrely in black. testmed voluntarily Wednesday before the Senate permanent investi· gations subcommittee because ·MP Testifies 'lbe 0re: wtJch wu. ~t out tried to climb up the opposite by 17 city On unit. aided by a side ol the gully to escape the btllcopter, t b re ate n e d a flames. Camile dove into a . nUmtier ol homes when it meam in 'the gully to douse "lined to hUlllde ·"""" In thil the n.o.. • . • ' ' ' ' ' ' ,. ' ' ' " ' * ' ·*· * eq.oaof~~b'.ur ~."'."'"".m-Truck '11rtver Rolltit· C. •Of ~Mt•tiny·' ... ' .' ... · .~· . • · , . wooc1, '(woodland )!Ills. wu . . . .'I! . ··Black .Panthers the~~.;~=:_ ~;'~om.,..,..ec!: .. ~ F.RANCISCO ·<t1r1) ~ 1. · . )'t;ltlpl\<JD. 11~ver, U)ey and third dferee bums over,75 · A mmi.ry poUce!Jl'n b'!' tes-Deny C1.1arges, '""1d ihppeared the truck fall-per-of bjl OOdy. . Ufied.'11at. 27 ·Presidio , Stock-SAN FRANCISCO 'tUPI) '.... eel ~~~tetoa curvl • andcar . y ~rtr 1•~lctitn,V NB r u c e, adt prlkonen: whd took part . Black Panther Party leaders r0Vu1o1.11..--on p o a lAl\:IUNl , 11 , an uys, was In . d . d nst 1. · •· · criUcally injured when hi!: a sit own emo ra ion have denied charges f!lade ~ Sirhan Kin Gets Fine .· PASADENA (IJPI) -Sharif Bilbara S1rban, brother of ccmided auasain S tr h a n Sirhan, Wecjrwday waa fined $14.10 aft« be pleaded DO CO .. lelt to a speeding charge. He was Charged w l t h speeding on. the Pasadena Freeway Mardi •· lie ·told police he wa en route to St. l:.ub'• Hoapttal here to visit a third hro&ber, Saidallah Bil!WolSlrban, wbo bad been sll\Jctbyacar. -On !bO nigllt of hia arreat !or ,~;.be a1Jesedl1 creat.ed a -In tho-lntemlve can waid u be '°""'t ln-fOm\aliGn abOut hll brtltber'1 caadlt!Ga. He w 111 be tried 'Ibund., JD P a 1 1 d e n a MlmldpaJ Court OD a distlJrb. inC tba ~ charge in con- nectloo with the bospilal !n- cldeol. ' · LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ,UILIC AUCTION '4' Crul"'· CF•7311AT, •land by Rldlenl f'llllt. 1na LIM Strnl. Hunting"'" ltKll, C1lltornl1 will bl -.ldlotft Oii J~W 1 •• lHf 11 •:OO A.M. .,.. _..,. •lor-fMs falllJrtto $1 11.«I t>lvl c.t& lrKvrml Wlrwtll ldYtrllllf'e •l'ld ..... $lid wc:TPI . w1n t1~1 l'llA 11 l'05J ~ &!¥' .. CDS11 Mel .. Clllforftllo 11 1:• A.M. Publllflld OrtMoi Cotll D1llY Pllllt, ,,...,. "· '"' 117Mll pickup truck skidded into the the 1Anny call~ mutiny .bad fore a Senate cm:nnuttee In flames and collided with the to be hauled bodily from the Washington, D.C., by a form· burning "tanker. protest scene. er Panther who was expell~. He wu· rescued by two Lt. John T\emey, MP op-"He's a liar. The people · members of a fire departmeol eratioos officer and a prose-know that, pertOd," said lla· resCue complny who were en cution witness, testified Wed-vid Hilliard, party chief of route back to the1r station nesday 1n the trlal of P v ts • stall, referring to testlmol)y from another call when they Lawrence Zanlo 21, Toledo, by Larry C. Powell and h I s . sighted the smoke from the Ohio, and Michael E. Murphy, wife be£p11 the Senate-~ fire and reported the accident. 19, Coocord, Calif. commit~tt on investigatiUU:J. Breakthrough in c~for photogr.qphy! ,,,.,·-. '·, "/ ~'. "'-\ir ... 1,." . ~ FtiSt TIME .. _!: EVER OFFEJJ.ED . AT 99c • * IEllllE ·fill ·IATlllAl COLOR POltUITS! Not the old style tinted or painted black 6: white pbotol, * SATJSFACTIOI llUAITEED .or your money refunded. -* FOi All ABES! Babies, children, adults. Groups photographed at an additional 99c per· subject. *.LIMITED OFFEI! One per subject, two per family. THREE DAYS ONLY THURSDAY. FRIDAY'• SATURDAY -JUNE 19 ~ 20 • 21 PHOTOGRApHER'S HOURS JI A.M. T0,7 P.M. 3049' C 'OAST Hl'GHWAY CORONA DEL MAR " ONLY AT THIS LOCAJION DAVIS-BROWN E. 17th St.-Costa Mesa 646-1684 ' ' ~: ,. l WOMiN-5 li.ds llNG SANDAL\S . Womeri. you'll enioY th~ee Jmpart S...dl.l!l, Pe.dded Jll· IJOIN tor comfort.. l 1'6 "CATCH THE llRASS RING" MEN'S BRASS R.iN$ SANDALS Ru•red cOOl'I looklns ltall1.11. lniport.;,Le&tl'lefl upper.:. Non· 11kld ru1j ber .olN. Boy.1' 1!1t1, l to l . )hm"1 1 to 12. LITTLE GENTs ' . TENNIS SHOES ~ AND . SANDAL$. _. Sturdy and strongly made sandal1. Tenni1 Shoes. Non-skid sole. Cushio. insole. Denim and faded 'bhte. SIZES 5 TO 12 MEN'5--llOYS'-YOUTHS' INFANTS' , TENNIS SHOES ' Pretty little e1nves shoes. Non.oJkid soles. Padded insoles. Cho01e from Plaid, Red, Blue {Navy) and Faded Blue. ~~s -179 CLEARANCE DECK SHOES --. -... ·' Al10 youth1 sizes. The all pur1>9se we•r ' 1hoe, Non·skid soles. Cushion . insole. Green end Nary. BUY NOW LEATHER BOOTS VALUIS 7 00 TO ;. • Glove leather uppers, Moc.assin style. Heavily sewn. Non-skid oil resiit.ant rubber soles. Pull.on loop. .. ,, Odds ind Ends -of styles and colors. Hurry while your 1ite end choice is available. 1~6 EX'TIA sncwn 101 ' 5898 Edl119er at Spri119dale Huntington Beach-847·9125 I MEN'S WHITE WORK SOCKS Qu1lity cotton with reinforced toe and heel. For work-gym ind sports. . . I 10045 Adams at Brooldl.nt Huntl119tc111 Beach -962·9171 (Nut to Sav-On 01'119) STORE HOURS·· WEEK DA YS 9 TO 9--SUNDA YS 10 TO 7 .. J .. \ I ' ' ' •• • • I . ' • • ' ' " .j • ' I I I < I ' c 1 I "'' ' .. • • r t - -·-.. DAILY I'll.OT ;f Prosecutors ·shortage Hurts· Crime Fight .'WASHINGTON lAP> -A' , IDlllQOWer, law enforc:ement ls said Eugene CU!hing, U. S..At· autllorized complemenL ~ 32. Grace said, al°""ih "we've 10 Ullotants. ~dahortafeolfederal going' to be a poor cousin," torney in Seattle. A U.S. A"Y· Vincent T. got more judges than U.S. Atty. 'lbomu J'oran, proaecut.on ls contoriUnl the saJd Los Angeles' U.S. Atty. former state Superior Court McCarthy said, "We bav met memben of the U.S. 'at-whole Cbicago ofOce 11 abort ·Nbaa admlnlstra6on as it WUliarft M. Byrne, who cur-judge, CUshing sald his office all civil and criminal alt:n· torney's oUlce." · tix. men, said. ''The avense maps ltl war on organized rentJ;y is seven short of 'his is up to strength wt\h 10 dars/' and said no cases had "Sometimes," he· said, "U wart week ol 'av"*•nts waa crim\ authorlted Sl assistinl.9-. assistants but he needs ' at been dropped because of lack we would Have had one omre ti hl:iuts tut week. .: Of ~ 7111 ualstant U.S. at-Byrne added hls-office has least foUr more. of manpower. cc;umltment, that woWd have otndall blame the tnln· .tame)' poslUons throughout had diffiii.tlty lining up pro-Like m01t of the current However, federal c o u r t sunk us ... " power abortlie on the budee\ .-.. c.mtry, a Justice Depart.. aeaUon "to handle grand jury -U.S. atton;teys, Cuahing ctlm• observers said ~ew cases are The shortlp meansl on g plncb rather than the transl· ment spokesman said nearly investigation and to try tl)e in · during the Pre v Io u s being p~ted tG grand boors for the prosecutors. tlaa rrw:n~a DemocraUc to a 25 percent are vacant. He cases that are required to be De mocraUc administration juries in McCarthy's district "Everybody talks ab oat RepubUc:u admlnllt:raUoo in blamed it on the budget tried.'' and t.xpects "there'll be a because of the personnel backlogs but no one menUom Wublqkln. equeeze. "We haven'~ dropped any," replacement in here one of shortage. we've been working day aDd .COftgrea . imposed a M- An Aarpclated ~ survey he said, '\bet we've been these days.'' Jn Detroit, the U.S. at-night," said U.S. Atty. billlon speDdlng cut and a hir· of U.S.. attorneys' offices in restricted in 'those we have An area with a critical torney's office is operating :Bernard J. StupUnsiJ, whole inl. frede on ""the etecuttve Jritjor cli.les discl¥ed that, In selected to prosecute.,. sho,rta~e is the E a s l e r n with six assistants -less than Cleveland office has three department last year wben It ' i\ome. tnstances, c r i m I n a J His comments were echoed DlstriCt of New Yo r"I half Its authorized strength. assistants and two men on granted Pttsident Lyndon B. ca;es have not been pursued by U.S. attorneys in other ~(~B~rookl~~l"'~)~w~b~er~e~th:e~llaf~l~fl~· ~His~·~s':.la~f~f~h~.,~~m~e~t~al~l~tr:2!la:_l~loa~n~fr~om~~W~ashin~·~g1on~~to~do~~Johnso~~n~·s~r<q~~ue~s~t~for~a~l:!O:per_,!.._:•:•:-:. :;'"'::,.:::";::'•:"""=""'=:"'":~·:•:':':•:•:-=:' :"='":':'""=-="=""="' because of \he manpower cities. 1 • do'fll to ZO assfstants out of an dates, U. S. Atty. Robert H. the work normally handled by cent income tas: IW'Char1e. ' · ' • shortaet· "We just ~t ~ve enough "llDW J'OU provide adequate prople in here to dQ ~ wort," • • 'AMSttteA•e'A,_ ••• T ~PAMILV-CLOTHIN9 ~CHA IN .. ' . . i instant mmertun .... SU r ·u· st add water:. J I c)uRGREAT BIG WAVE .. oF"MEN'S AND BOYS' sYIJMWEAR FOR MEN ••• 399 4.99 and · Trim·Bt boun In .,,.popping plalds, run· bright oollds ••. up-tnmlcl' .. :hug-tit lastex modeJI ••• tropfc.lnspired prints, and moro. 1i1u 30 to 38 (5-M·LI FOR BOY$ ••• 199 to 349 Prints, plaids, lmiu, lastex models, 'trim- Bt borers. and many more in our big splashy lelecdco •• _.lots of ··waw'" coloJS, tool ' ~·toll Open . Sanday 11 to 5 COSJA MW, 1601 Newport Blvd., 11 1"'. "llOIN OllOYE-12372 Gorcr.n Goo ....... I '2666 HARBOR BLVD. 546·7080 COSTA MESA WUUAY$ 9to9 ~TUIDAY ·9 to 5:30 -SUNDAY 10 to 5:00 0 Anoth•r nic• gift for th• brid•. 0 Sh• c11n m11k• 1ur• ht.1hby do•1n't w11nd•r off 1t nif•. 0 Gi11vity drop1 th, bo lt, 39c ICE ·cuaE TRAYS "°t""""< D J1,1mha tr11y1 1!11ck to } ·J ...... 1p•t•. j D J utt twi1t 1111d cuh•1 pop out. 0 Will 1101 chip or br•••· 0 IUnl111 Cl1111cy'1 ~V •'••rnroll•r ••*' it. I. 35c EA. DRIVEWAY COATING & SEALER 0 R•11•w1 th• 1t.1ri11c .. •11d 1T11k1t yo1,1 f11f pr•tty good too .. D J1,11t po1,1r if Oii, hroorn it •rot.1nd, th111 t11k1 11 w11!.11 r111d 1111p. 99c . . 4 INCH DRYER VENT 'HOSE (":'~~~;;;:;~~1 . ' . Cl Sp,tct1I prl1" on both ... ..,, •ltd ho1• fo r cl1111n11r 11ir. 0 fin• for •lth•r 411r19• er ho1n• i111t11 ll11tion, 1111y to do. · DJt.YER VENT . • • (What's that thing she's dragging? I think · it's· ~e.:_groom.l. . . [J Ad~1rlit1d 1p1ci11l1 g•ad thrt.1 Jt.1t1• 25, 1969 11~ wii1t'h to ••r• II I d1y in Ju11• 11111111 it'• I •·v:·i11 July fft;t,cM..1r1 J1,1n1I. IONA 10 SPEED SOLID STATE BLENDlt b Solid 1f•I• hltnd1r com11 with 5 v•~r 9u11r•nl••· ,., O With ro •P•-'• to'' •v•rvthlng from p•bt11rn to p1nc11k1 i.•H•r. · O Choice of 11voc11do. (So, 11t 1uch 1 low pric• wh11 n••d1 1 lot of colon.I 2788 IONA ELECTRIC CAN OPENIR 0 fv•rv•,..'• f11vorit• 1ppli111C• 11t •11 t.111e•nny\ pric• (1,111c.1111ny ,1h ffi •t's ft.1n11y.I 0 Cornp1ct m.4111 t11k1t 1,1p littl• 1p1c:• ht.1t i1 • r1gvl11r pow1rhous•, 9•• G.E. DIMMER SWITCH 0 A1t in1•p•111i"• w11y to h1v1 th• 1ff•ct of •. ..,,,., 1~p•n1i"• ll 9hti119 1y1• t1111. O P1,1t 1witch wh11 r1 the old Olla Clfl'll 'Olf 11itll 1 Y•U : c111 90 froll'l,dl111 to m1diurn to "wh1dll1 y11,1 trying to . do,' 9i••. m• th• third 11,,,.; 1" 3'' .. ' .. REDWoOD STAIN 0 Oufdo;r furnlhlr• doas11't h••• ht look old b1for• it1 tim11. 0-&W• qliiCli f1c• lift with thi1 9r••t ' 1t1ln,. ' .. . o"· Nie• for f•llCM ., pl1nt•r1 too. 99c 3 CU. n. WHIELBARROW ' < , · 0 Cit yo1r worli 111 h1lf with thi• St.111 City Go·C•rt. 0 Or cit it .;.t 11lt.9•th•r•hy ftio•li.t te • hol•I. o Stvrcl.,. littl• 11,..,u c•rri•• to•11 1114 11m1"t11•nh t• W•rli •r••· ' -· . ' .. IOltA .3 : _l~U.Q PORTABLE MIXIR . . . [J A 1t.1p•r th!rtt fo.r • hrid•I gi.ft or th•t J1t1t right 1h'-•r' p!"e••nf, D ..,,,.il•iil •. in •voc•clo, golcl .or whit•, witli • s v• ... ,.,.,,Rt••·. D Et sily tfor.d i11 c•hili•f Of' c•n ff h~n9 o" ~h• w•ll lf yo1,1 lili•. Q l l•4•t pop 011t f•r •••Y cl••ni119 fin •ii• 1111• tti.., 4on't p;,-•ut 1o•n•r or yo1,1'll h•v• 1om• tot.1gh c•h.l . • "M1rrl•ii• r, • ,,.. .• t ln1litt.1tton If yo• lik • li¥ing In 1111 ln1tihltion." -Gh•119i1 lti•• IONA EUCTRIC DRINK ' . ' . MIXER • l O Gr••f f.w th• 1 ....... ,.., th•y'll 11J;., pl.,.ty fo, p11rfi•i _, .... nU1. 0 Mi1•s 111 tf.• l»O'Pt.1l11r 1lwk11 111d soft Jri1li1 wiffi ••••· 0 Thi littl•' 0,..1 Ii•• rt 101 for 1orn1 of their 11wf11I concoctions. 11•• KIDDIE FUN SHOWER • '~. ... 0 J1,11t 11tf11ch thi1 to th• ho•• f•r i11st11ftf-•ol. 0 fun for •icf1 11ncf 9r•wn-t.1p1 too I b1,1f yo1o1 gott1 ff Pr•tty w1rm to 9.t 01o1t ""''' 11ncf tl1rte• 11ro11ml Ii•• 1.111,1t,I [J K11p movi119 it 11rot.1nll, th• l1WT1 will 9•f w•f•rM t~ 59' 0 Shiny rn1l1I co11tt1ption th11t cl11111pt on tnywh1r• 111111 1pr••d• llght. 0 E1p•c l11lly gr••t for lit• nit• c11rcl p•rti111 or b11rb.qt.1•1, 0 T 1•1• ,,..,111r •r ht.19 r1p•ll•nt fight bulltt. 229 SORIN-TONE 2-snP LATd:~ ANTIQUE KIT ' 0 Flnhhlitg •It w•rli1 •qu1Uy w•ll •111 r-•lh1ly p•lnl .. turf•o .. , 11111fl111i1hM or 11•w weo4. 0 J.1t f.11•"! *'• •••Y~lrectio1u 11MI y.u ,,.,w wl!'NI '' wlf"-.•11 h1lrloo111. D Lit•• b••• m1•n1 yot.1 c1n cl1•n up with pl.in 'w1t.r, ,.. ' tlo.i1111•r "•"'"' cheot• from 111111y N11utlfllll co/o,. a•9 --· t' I I •• l l • • • ... _ --..... . . . . ' . . • l• DAll.Y 'h.OT '"""""''.hint 19, 1969 Harassment C:lalmed S-ant.a Ana Eyes I . \ Relations Group SANTA ANA -City «JUn· c:lhMI wlll decide July 7 · whether or not Santa Ana needs a Community Relations I CommlJsiOI\, Monday night the councll MEETI NGS THUaJDAY H11nt11111 .. •tKll L"°"' Club, I-tu,... tiMt.n SHc;HH C-lfll (lull, )00 .... Pf"". ffunf ........ --. •:• ~ H:r::.. ArM T ... .._,_... c-.. '1tu, • Mtl.I y .... ~ , ...... C.11 -·~ t U.S • .._, ... Ca«f (Ma 1UJ ''"'· ' ~--·-· Sll!fti Ali-.-,,··"'· OranH C-1'1' Crtdll U11IOlll L-ue. S.,.WllbMi llwi, $111111 Anl, 7:ll0 11.m. N.IJOnlc L.od9f, 1001' H I 11, Wntltll111t.r A-11 Otlvt Sltetl, Wntmrnst.r. J:JO '·'"· Hufllltlflall .... cf! Jvnlof C/\embl' of (-'1:t, Slwr110!1 kklo 11111, H""ll""ivn e .. cti. • a.m. • """""°" H1rbor Elks Club, El-i LodVt, J4'6 VII 0Porto. ~wporl 8tKll. I 1.m. ,. • A/Pll'lc111 l&11lon Poll ~)!. 11.merk1n L"lon H111. 5'$ w. 111~ St., Cast1 Mft.11, I p.m. Sis. SI"'°" ind JOO. M&fl'• Club, "•rl1'1 Hill, 321 lotl1 $1., Kuft!J,.ton 8-cl'I, I p.m. P•IOAY U!\l!t'd Fund FIMAd1I Mio~ Couf!d~ Unlt.d Flll'ld oflk1, 111 W, Wll-. COlll M-. I IJlll. DEATH NOT ICES EVA.NS H lldt /Me £¥-. ti.Ill cl dt.i~. Jllfle 11. SUt'vlwd by two '°"'" p..,1 H. l!v~ CRll Mewi F!'tMrkk Ev-. Plle«U11, T __ , lllrN ~lffl. Mf1o EIMI*" SelL Ml11 Cetvhm Ev.ns bofti d Coil• Meu; 11\ra, 1Mrlor1e ~. Fl. WIVN, I,,. di-; lhft>r, Mra. 8-lrlce A1111U-. P1lnlld P'oll, Hew Y«k; 11• ,,,,,... dllld~ lfld -•~••1r1ndctil1<1. FriMds mey C.11 1! 1111!1 Mofl!Hr•. 170 S.-lol', C01!1 MHI. 11nllt I PM tolll9ftl, FUNf'll WNl<.et Ind I,,. """""' wm "" Mid In ~""11lcl, MlllOllrl. &-411 Mortu1,.,, DlrKIOn. VEIT iwrtiert o . v .. t. 12112 Ocffn 8rHll St., Genftfl GrG11<1. survlVlcl bV wife. P•rl; '-ftf.IOhlen. S.undr1 Cooli:; and 0-. ~l two b~. Ol1t> Ind J1et>b1 two 1l1!tt1, MIUll 1(1"' 1ml Jtrtni. Gofl; 1no l~rH .,..,n&rnlld~. "001ry, f11111l1tll, Thurs- tlly, 7:JO PM, Pfflc F1mlly Colon11I FUne!'ll H-. """1"'" M.tt. Frldev, l :JO J.M, SI. 11-wnlllrl C111!0!1C Oivrd'I. Hvnll"'toll kKl't. Olrecit'd bV PMll; FM!llly co1 .... 111 F111Mf'1I ·-· MEGIE (111'1 T. Metile. A91! t7, of 6.MI LI,,. dwollurst, Lot Mwtin. 0111 "' de1ll1, j u,. 11. Survlltt'tl by mrH d11t1h!rn, "'"' w. M. A/ldltorlclft, •1io.1 Mn. tMfl Mc<:llt._ DIMit¥1 Mra, l v- cllle DHI\, (Mt. ll'tft.l1 -'""""· DlllY Fowlie. H""tlnv""1 ae1ch; 11 .... 1randdllld,..,1 -9r1ndd1UV~ler, Mn. Vlttlftll llrwwrr, 1m N-.t atvd., ~ SI. Corti Mn.1: 11 ..-e.11..,.1f'lddl\1drtn1 ind 1wo or"'' _1..,.1n0chl1drtn. J«vkn, Frld1v. 2 PM, kH ar--.v QI.IHI. with ft..,, Ti-..1 OvtortDn oftklllln9. l1111r-', 1 ... i..oo.:r ~II P1r1l. 0~ tr( 8'11 lln:MdMY Morflle,..,., 11~ lrmetnv, Co.11 Melt. GERLACH ._tv1,. G«Vdl. JI.-"· "' n• Con-t1M<1111. eo.11 "'"9. Dlte of dffth, JU'll' !$. Survlwd by ,llusblnd, Mr. w m11m G9nldl1 ,..,, LIWJ'911U. tJI te.n.111 tour d1U9hlft'I, Mrt. Ethel Mu"'hy, CllC.l""°'1"l Edllll Glbton, Wldl!l1, IY"M•; Grice Glnorlch, West Ct>'<'l.,., Doroth1 llrown. 0•1'1'"'1 lleldl, Flork111 '-bn:llh1tt1, Wll!lt I nd Fflllk Wllll•rm, Okllhomli lhrtt sl•!otrl, PNrl D:llh, Oki.11om11 Oel11 •~ Color1do1 Ml,., 1...,., Te••,, •!Id u vr1....:td'llldl'!'fl. Serv~. $1111r· drt', J-21, 11 AM, l'lnt Olrbtll11 Cllufdt of C0611 M111. wll!> llev, Jtrne. Piercy dfkllt!..-. f"~~I. "°""' Hiii• ~Ill Pork. DlrKted av a.en eroHwe~ Mor1111,..,., 110 S<Ol'dwlv, C•l1 ~. Sroldw1v. coo111 Mt11. Fl'"+ll~ wt· "'"' 1lloWI! w11111.., to mtkt mem.orl1I ca'ltrl""'"°"' PINM C'OMrlbult ~ !ht Finl O'lrillltn Ch11rcll of C:0.11 Mev Mtmorl1I Fl,H'ld. l\.1cVAY H"9h II. McV1,. Ait 112. of IMI $9m1 An1 Ave., C-1 Mt-M. Diii ol m.11>, JUM It. $urv!V9d by lOll, Mr. CIC\! Ml:Y•v. ot c .. 11 Mtt1r .,,....,,.. -... Mrs.. LoulM GllbH't, Cool• MIMI fwr W.lldctlllotrwl 1nd t llvtn fl'N!· tl'atlddtlklren. Servlul. Sll\l111•v. l:lO PM. llell arwctw1v Chlpel. lnlennen1, P1c1tk vie. Memorl1t P1rk, Rev. Jtmts L""9trwoo0 offlcl.lllnt. Bell Bro.dllt'IY Mor!\11,.,, 111 ll'WOWllv, C0.11 fk111, OlrfCIOl'I. ARBUCKLE & WELSH We1tcliff Mortuary G'7 E. 17lb SI., Costa Mesa 6<6-<888 BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR 3-9450 Costa A-1eaa 1\.11 6-2424 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY llt Broadway, Co1ta l\.tesa LI a.:uu DILDAY BROTHERS Buthsgcoa Valley Mortury 17911 Beach 81\•d. Hantfn~on Beach MZ..7771 PACIFIC VIEW 'IEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e l\1ortu1ry Chapel 1511 Paclllc View Drive Newport Beach, Callfonda 644-%700 PEEK FAllULY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7111 &lu Ave. Wettmlltater DWSZS WIER MORTUARY ·--4fl.lllS .. a w 0 4ft..flOI llllJB'l llOllTIJARY 117 Malo Ill. -:ir.:.:- LOCAL ... .tfi•t fl lWIJllplf 't1f11 .,.., ~ fi'lty ,., ....... wfri1t'1 ~ ......... ..... N0r. ~· •• "-DAIL't' heard char&" by several cltluns that many b&d been victims of ••police haramnent'' followiag lhe murder of Santa Ana police of- fictr Nelson A. Sassctr June 4. Clarence Jackson, county chairman of the National Association for the Advan- cement of C-Olored People tNAACP), told -of the concern of membtn of. tbe Negro community ovtr the way p>lice carried oul thllr investigaUon of Sasscer'I kll~ ing. He said Ron Lun<!i!:ford, ex- ecutive director of the Com· munity Action Council (CAC), had been one of those harass- ed. Lunceford was stopped by police June 5 and made to stand spread-eagled against his car with shotguns pointed al him , Jackson ;tlleged. Lunceford has recently been under fire in his own organiza- tion and was placed On three. months probation two weeks ago after a Jong series af hearings. Councilmen also h e a r d onetime Santa Ana police Lieutenant Loran Norton sug- gest Utat Chier Edward Allen be fired "before it (lhe mur· der of a police officer) hap· pens again." Norton, a longtime critic of the polict chief, charged that Allen had information for many months that "this was coming and be did little or nothing about it." Chief Allen, who was present, did not com- ment. SA Takes Step to City Hall SANTA ANA -'l!ie 'flnl 11ep toward llDPlal Binlo Ana'! propoltd new P.S mlllioo, el&ht-story city hall bas been approved by tbe San- ta Ana-Orange Countf Civic Center Commission. Ip a 3-2 vote, commlssioners ordered drafting of a leue for the structure to be finanCed under a joint .p o w e r s agreement. Under th~ plan the com~lon will construct the building and the city pay for it with "rental" payments out of general revenue. C<>mml.Woners Wllllam J. Stauffer and Thomas F . La= opposed the action despite Chief Deputy County Cou~ Clayton Parker's ad- monition they had "lltUe choice" 1n the matter. He said tem1s of the 1141 slate Joint powers act mandates such an agreement "aball'' be made "upon request ol the city." As commissioners wrangled over the approval of the agreement, Santa Ana City Manager Carl Thornton in· vited them to walk down to the old city hall and see what he described as "people sitting on top of each other," Grading Board Slates Decision on Sand Pit ANAHEIM -The Orange Through the hearings, the County Grading A pp e a I s cou nty ls attempting to lay the Board will meet for the third time July 7 to determine if the groundwork to recover more than SI00,000 spent la.!ll whiter controversial Burris Sand Pit in pumping water out of the property is "a menace to Ufe pits and reinforcing the pit and property at the present walls to offset "Imminent time." danger" to more than 400 Still ringing in the three homes in the area west of the board members' ears is the river channel north of Ball testimony of county Flood Road here. Control District Operations, __________ _ Engineer Carl Nelson, who testified last Thursday that, 'If the Santa Ana River levee bordering the sand pit area fails next winter, the flood · waten wouJd sweep through highly urbanized west Orange County and seek a new path to the sea. "If the levee fails, the waters will sweep acr05S Garden Grove, Westminster' and Huntington Beach seeking a new rolite to the ocean as they did in the 1931 floods . There would be no way to. divert the water back to lhe river channel," Nelson said. At the July 7 hearing, at- torneys for Mrs. Marjorie Townsend of La H a b r a , operator of the Burris Sand Pit Co., and the five owners of the pit properly will get their opportunity to refute the coun· ty's contention that the pit pools are "a public nuisance." Nelson's grim testimony was backed by Rob er t McNeill, consulting engineer for the county Building and Safety Department. Dam Park Pact OK'd FULLERTON -Architects and engineers have been ~ lecled for the $1.26 million Ful· lerton Dam Regional Park. The 125-acre facility adjoins Imperial Highway just north of the dam. Named by the Board of Su· pervisors were Charles Wick· ett and Associates of Fuller. ton, architects: Jones and Pet- erson nf Anaheim, landscape architects, and McLean and Schultz, civil engineers, of Fullerton. GDLDEI AJllllVERSARY SPECIAL Get a Gallon SAVE 25~ Help ce!ebnte our Golden Anniversary with e gallon of frosty, delicious A&W root beer and save 25c. Offer good June 15 thru 21 at A&.W--flll laJand of Refreshment A & W DRIVE-II 2155 Harbor ... lm..i - MEDICAL REDUCING W. DUANE AlBERT, M.D. 1827 WISTCLIFF NEWPORT BEACH 646.0ZSl Old Courthouse to Be State Shrine SANTA ANA -County ~rvtaort have appmed the rogi-of the lint COUll!y cow1howle building u l state landmark. The move was made upon recommendation of L I S A (L•t'a Improve 5anta Ana) a volwiteer citizens lf'OUP bead- , , . ed by G11tes W. Burrows. Mf1.. Weston Walker, LlSA chairman for the landmark designation, provided a brief history of the 63-year-old 1tructure, "When William H. Spurgeon foonded Santa Ana ln October 1869, 100 yean ago, he reserv- ed a blocl< then known 11 ''The Pla2:a" for the f u l u re oourtbouse. HJt wasn't until 20 years later that Orange County was crealed on March 11, 18119. The courthouse was b u 11 t for ltl?,000 ol Arizona r. d sandstone and d e d I c a t e d November 12. 1901. County supervisors have long pl11nned to eventually convert the building at 6th and Syearnore St.reeta into a coon.. ly museum. You receive 30,% earnings when all 1&vlngs and Interest remain In your account 5 years at our guaninteed 5.25% annual rate, compounded dally! Beginning July 1, Cali fornia Federal, the nation's largest federal, guaran- tees a 5,25% annual .Interest rate and dail y compound i.ng for live years! It's an absolute guarante e I You'll earn 30% on any deposit of $1,000 or more If you leave all savings and lr.terest to compound dally for the five years. High earn - ings are also available on shorte r term accounis of 3 or 4 years. In case of hardship or emergency, your fl\fldS can be withdrawn at the end of any quarter with full interest to that date, For compiete details on this exci ting new guaranteed lntereat plan, visit your neighborly California Federal office. AVAILABLE JULY 1 6% paubock accounts nallabfs any tltnt: Eam 5.13% annuilyfefd when Ill 11vlnga and lnttreat remlln • 'YMf II the 5" current 1nnu1l rate ls mllntalned and compoundtd dally tor a year. lnterett paid from day-In to day-out. More than ever ••• the place for the money ycu ca n't afford to risk! An applicaUon will be made to the state Parks and Recrea· tion Department to have \he building registered N a at.ate historical landmark. An appropriate plaque would be placed on the structure. by the state. ..... C,lllFDRNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS ... __ ••• • •• California Federal Savings and Loan J\ssociation • 11 Officu • Aslcll OYCt Sl .S Billk>n NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL ANAHEIM OFFICE: 800 N. EUCLID A VE. • 778·2222 COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 HARBOR BLVD.• 546·2300 ORANGE OFFICE: 3810 W. CHAPMAN AYE.• 839-3033 Head Otnce: 58'/0 Wllshl"' Blvd., Los Angalas lwOoea.,. ._...Gp to$1.J• ~ JCO•W-. ti &a. f\edmll Sintrtas A toan flWtlranct (!orpor1.tion, a ptrmanent apncy ef the Unittd Statr.s Oo~ment • r • I I • j ' • . J I I I l • l J 1 ~ • , ,, " ., ,1 ll ., ' I :1 " I • . ' ,: I; {! ,. I. .. , • " '· J, ., :1 ,I " l • " ,, " ,, " '1 ·' 'I . " 'I ' ', , ( I .1 I / . ' , ' ( f .f ; ( I I I I ! I I ( ! f f I ( I ( I I ' I ' • l hunday, J,nt 19, 1"69 0 DAILY PILOT J !, '· CdM High Give_s Awards, Scholarships' fYouR PROBLEM: A variety of awards and scholarships for all facets of school aeUvity we.re prese:nt- ted at Corona del Mar High Schooi'a annual awards ban- I You w1nt to ~Mll some Item awards -social studies, Jobnao1 ; nne arts, Henry science. dy Gadariu, Ooua Holmes, Gemco' scholarship -Steve · th•t you no foneer nMd but Robert Williams; science , Johnson; liberal arts, Kathryn Rocky Morgan award -Normaa Jobnsoa, Steven Jump. / aomeont else can UM for N 0 rm.. J 0 b n I 0 D : Lyncb; vocational arts, Nancy Gary Ne' 11 e s ' outstanding Jump, Kathryn Lyacb, Rick canfomla School Employe.s' N 0 T 0 y E R $ 5 0 1n a t h e m a t I es , Norman Stralloo. senior boy in $ c h o 1 a s t i c Nelsser, Elleo. Rose, Gllllan Association scholarship -• Johnson; English, Kathryn Bank or America certifieate Achievement, alhletics and Rossell , A11ela TOIU and MldteJJe Falrbalrn. ~-? ., ? ? ? Lyacll. winners -mathemaUcs, Ktn· leadership. Robert WUUams. California Savings and Loan ; • . ? qu;,t~denl& and the bonors they di~;~t~d~~~guage ~~::: :;it:n!~e~~on1 C ~ ~ ~ae \ ~ ~ ~ •a=lc~:c~=ety v~:~lack. ~!:~Yoong ~~~an~olarship -Cindy t YOUR ANSWER: l~ved: ~~!~:e:iif:::P~n~nfs~,m ch~ 1J18~sic,T~p::ge~~.da~i::-~ ~~.· 1A~:~an a~=~ l l u l~.:! ~:!ve~:!; J::~: B=':~ s~::~i:~ Rl~~d1:.i~~~ ~ You call THE DAILY PILOT, 11k for ' School service awards -,.... f I t T Lo J Id and Ju Trapbagen. "• Cl111lfltd Advertl1ln11, Ind place 1 ~niors Vickie Black, Sue Wharton and Marianne Co:i; KrlstiJle llougb; Eng Ii s h, McRae, r s ; om ve, ame1, UC San Diego. Dav • Deaver, Kevin Doranut, Cin. Latin, Nelson Johnson and Robert WUUams: soc i a r third; Keery Grt11. honor; Terry, Brigham Young : Brian Ebell Club scholarship -i '4y Gadariaa, Kltty Ganka, Be;~l~rv~nguage c I u b ~~;C:ge~ar~:~:~:~ f~~gxn To:.~;~· ::i m.;:~-award ~~di~~ ~~elei~ v~~ Anl:S T~i~b scholarship -: ~lnAnnd• HGlllk, Plleat bb?allullan, award -Norman Johnson. bus.mess, Donna Brown ; home -Nellon Johnson. Norm an Job a 10 n • Steve Jump. .ti "0 00 er, e ope, N B lboa Sa Voi·-of Democracy cont.est Massach11""'ils I••titute of S oro pt om l s t CI u b •. ~enry Joh.nson, Steve Jump, ewport. a vings and economics, Judi Dunn ; in· """' -. .... k N I T p Loan business awards -dust.rial arts, John WaLson. -Jue Mlllt:r. Teclmology ; Amorec Cardeiro, scholarship -Pew Adams. : le e sser, erry eg, outstanding senior, Patricia American Legion awards -Key Club awards -outstan-Yale University. Diane Guertin Memorial .ti J'>tanne Peyton, D 0 r 0 t 111 Y Sao·• · 1· bo stat · p 1 ••ng member, Doaglu On'·, California state ··•·1a~'ps award -c:o •• ,an Deaver. •. t acMlllari. and Judy Twileg:ar. l:llU.: senior accoun mg, ys e representative au w ,._ auiu 1~u .-1 sh' Juniocs Mark Brewer, Wen-Gary Ne tt I es ; senior S&.Dione; girls state represen· outstanding leadership ability, -"~Is Cooper, Ken Ewell, Music Camp scho ar 1p -: secretarial. Patti P a I m e r ; tative Janet Kati. Gary NettJe1. Nancy Garrect, Steve Jump; Sue Tbompson. • Y Broekett, Arnold Oark, senior clerical, Becky But-Masons Seafaring Lodge E. Golden Eagle award -Mis! Gary Nettle1 and Robtr1 Junior Ebell art scholarship • 1 J<fathy Duncan, Dave Dunlap, termore; se nior merchan-1. Moore awards _ seniors Cora Scbultz, rneritious effort WUllams. -Donna Sauders. 1 an e E 11 a s• 8 et s Y dlslng, FrancoJse LeClerc; Marianne Cox and Norman with the yearbook. National Merit scholarshi p Tuesday Club scholarship - lacomaul, Mary McDowell, junior book.keeping, Marlene Johnson; juniors Janet Katz Zonta Girl of the Year - -Kathryn Lynch. Susu Ande.noa. PENNY PINCHER CLASSIFIED AD AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RAR 3 LINES 2 TIMES 2 DOLLARS j'::lndl McWhlrt, M • r C •r e t Holcomb ; i'unior typing, Don· and Pa u I Sans 0 n e: Amy Dye. Bartmore Beauty College Newport-Balboa Savings and : :Tblel e melr and Susan na Reed ; junior shorthand. sophomores Janet Stanton and PTA award for outslandiog seholarship Conn I e Loan scholarship -Kea t D I A L N O W D I R E C T ! 4 "l'bomspon. Rohla. Steele; s oph o more Ken Neisser; freshmen Pennie group achievement -pep Armstrong. EweU. • .i · Sophomores l\tark Aldrich, bookkeeping. Shelley Snyder: Glasgow and John l\tlles. squad. Costa Mesa·Newport Harbor Rotary Club scholarship -: 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ; 'Christine B • k er• Erin s·· .. ·k--~re typing, Lau r i e Bausch and Lomb science California Sch o I as t t c Lions Club i· o ur n a I l s m Norman Johuon • 'Blaekwell, Ralpb Dady, Bar-"V'"""v • .fll CT~I "-N.m C...., 140-1220) Davis. award -Amoret Cardeiro. Federation sealbearers scholarship -Sann Deavrr. Newport Harbor J u n I o r • •ry Galloway, Nancy Harding. Bank of American palque Leon Meeks award -Ken Lyn.a Cardeiro1 Becky Carvtr, Girard's College of Beauty Chamber of Commerce • ANO YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD I t Kay l\lorrison, Ken Neisser •1 .~w~i~nne~rs~~~~sc~ien~ce~~an~d'.__~u~·n~d~ah~I~, ~ou~tsta~~nd~i~ng~{ju:n~io~r~M~a~r~l~•~·~·~·~~Co~1~,~La~a~r~aJs~c~h~o~I ~· ~r~s~h~i~p~s~~Ch~r=ls'.,_~sc~h~ol~a~rs~hi:'p'.,_-=-~R~o ~b~e~r~1lt~'~'~'~'§'§'~'~'~'~'~'~' ·~·~·~·~·~·~·~'§'§'§'§'§'~'~'~'~'§'~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~•, ~Douglas Rea vie and Ken m a t h e m a t i c s , Norman student in mathematics and Ferguson, Debbie Fields, Cin· Bartol.ne and Dianne Ross. Williams. ;Tilley. ' freshmen Monica Durocb·er, !Pennie Glasgow, Lind a •Jacobus and Maria Ricca. : American Field S e r v i c c 1 students -Matilde Mas· •11vara, Spain; Dej Bllltuk, Thailand; Anne Smlth- !Klellaad, Norway, and Judith •Grannum, Panama. { Drama award -Kevin , Doremus. \ Library awards -Alison : Weir and Kathy Temple. I Nurse's assistants -Kathy Arnold, Pam Casserly. Patty Branham and Bobby Mcinnes. Safety education award - • Brian Harris. , Speaker of the Year -Sleve -Jump. i T\'lusic Department awards , _ band, Henry Johnson; t orchestra. Carolyn t<emp, and choral Henry Johnson and 'JoAnn llooker. i Student store award -Ter- , ry Pegg. TridenetteS award -Angi • Tosti. Girls Athletic Association award -Unda Gill. Orchcsis award -Calby :rage. Boy's athletics awards - 1 1\like Reehl , four-year let- flerman golf ; highest grade t average for letter winners ; 1 senior Robert Williams, junior : Steven Tabak, sophomore Ken ; Neisser, and freshmen Jim ; Cote, Stan Vermund and . Wiiiiam Vlergever. 1 Art Departmen.t awards - Cathy Bellinger, Christine •Bradford. Sallie Gordon, Char- . maine Henderson, Ran d y •Reese, DoDDa Saunders, Jan 'Traphagen and C • t be r-1 n Mlcbaels. : Gary March award (or , outstanding service -Gary ~March. Perfect attendance a.,~1ard - •J im Ashcraft. ; Cheerleaders of the year - ·varsity, Amy Dye; junior ·varsity, Stancle Abbott. Songleaders of the year - ' Cindie Berkeley and Pam l\fcCullougb. Flagtwirlcr of the Year - Debbie Cooper. . Pep sqaud awards -most .Joyal and enthusiastic, Amy Dye: most improved, Jenny Nakano. Girls League awards -Peg . • J.Y Adams. Suzi Anden;on, Teri Baedecker, l\tonica Ben- nett, Carol Blanpied, Barbara Canfield. Angl Goggio, Kinuko Kumamoto, Sue Ml n k I e y , , Barbara l\1unroe. Roz Rawl- . in gs, Maria Ricca, Debbie Shannon, Andrea Waters and Cbri5ty Wharton. Journalism awards -Jobn Baker, Sue Ba meson, Fletcher Beach, Cindie Berkeley, Karen Burry, l\t i k e Christensen, Arnold Clark, Chris Cochran, Stan Cri ppen, Sue Deaver, Jim Edmiaton , Dlane Elias, Lynn Fro11t, Vickie Frost. Robert Garber. Al so, Betty Ganders on . Steve Jump, Janet Kats, Bob Lacy, Gttg Laurie, Toni Hewitt , Rick Marcus, Riek J\farvin, Lynn Odneal, l\tary o·shea. Cathy Page, Roz Rawlings. Donna Reed and Christy Wharton. S c h o 1 astic achievement Youth Honored T\fark Gutel, Jr. ot Costa ~tesa, has been named to lhe University oi Oklahoma honor roll. He had to maintain a "B" average to receive the honor. LET'S BE AllEllDL Y U you have new nt1':hbors or know or anyone moorln1 to our area. please tell UI 10 that we may extend • friendly welcome and help them lo become acquainted In their new tun'Oundinp. So. Coast Visitor 494-0519 Harbor Visitor • 494-9361 • • Sears on W-1-D-E GUARD 40 Months ' , I , Aak About Sears Convenient Credi! PltllDI Sale Ends Sa iurday, June 21 Guaranteed 2 Fiber Glass Belts Plus 2 Rugged Nylon Plies SIZE ~I~ T • ..i .. 1• ....... ... ..... ,., SIZE Tubele111 Whitewall• 6.50x13 27.95 25% 20.95 2.02 7.75x l4 35.95 25% 26.96 2.36 7.35114 30.95 25% 23.21 2.18 8.25xl4 38.95 25% 29.21 2.44 7.75xl4 32.95 2.1% 24. 71 2.36 8.'5xl4,_-C"'="~C'-"~-"77'-~2.~68'= 8.85x 14 2.86 41.95 25o/o 31.46 R.2.'ix14 35.95 25% 26.96 2.44 44.95 25°/o 33.71 35.95 25% 26.96 7.75xl 5 2.50 Tubtle~I Whilewa\11 38.95 :?5o/o 29.21 8.l.ixl 5 2.68 4l.9:i 25% 31.46 ·R.4.lx I 5 :?. 77 6.~rOx 13 30,q;l 8A~ 23.2l 44.95 25% 33.71 8.8:ixl5 2.90 6.95xl4 31.95 33.95 t 1or;t.l Stron11er than 196? new-car origi- nal tire~. J22'/o Bf!tler mile· age than origin•I tire1. 14 % Larger ro ot~ print th an ori5in1l liret. ~A " 23.96 8t;! 25.46 2.17 2.18 9.00/ 9.15x l5 47_9;; ~';/; 35. 96 2.94 WIDE GUARD GUARANTEE 'frt11l I.ire G1111r1nu·e f:1or•11ttd AfMM4: All f1il11rtt o( •fie '"e rt1uluna rrom .....,...,.1 r.....! h•11t~• or Mite" in "'"''' 111 or f'0•~-1tn.tulup. !'..,.II•"' l.0111: for loft ol ori,il'Ol urod. 11 hot ~-11 ill 0.; ~<pair ""'' l'llDlllltn u M>chor~. I• (-o(faol- lllf, 111 tuh•._ fot •hrort,rftll""t '' or .., (bl.,, of bol11fl' O(Cllft lllwronJ flfl'I /0 -h•. If,;,.. f1ih fltn th11 poriod. ttr>l.oct ;,, t h,,1i111 0<1lr 1ht proponintr of c11r1T11r """l•r wllinc prict pl111 ftdoenl lld M TQ lflttl't1I' rtffllfl lrt od ~ltd. TN'1d Weir-Out C11J1ranl4!e 1;•9!'•111~~d AJ •ill<Ot: Trt•d - ~" !'•r II•• l.aftl: ~O rno1nh1. '1'11.i ~"Will o., l•t•ll....,rot tl>c-ltlT, 1TplKt 11, <Mtsiq <•t,..M rtJlllot MlliflA'. pri<t phn FN.tr.1 E•· II~ 11,t k'I thf fl'llOWlftt IJIOWlll(f" 2)"6. ,-------------------------------------------------~ IUENA rAu:: TA 8-4400, 521 -4530 fl MONT£ GI 3-3911 \ONG lt:ACH HE .5-0121 r1co WE 8·4262 I CANOGAPAlk.3404661 GlENDAlt:Oi .5-100,, Cl .(.4611 OlYWIC l SOTOAN B·.5211 POMONA ED 2-11 45, NA 9·.5161, YU 6.0751 I COIUTONNE 6·2581 , NE 2-576 1 HOtlYWOOO HO 9-.5941 OPANGE 637·2 100 SANTA •NA Kl 7-337 1 COVINA 966-061 1 INGlEWOOO Cit 8-2521 PASADENA MU 1-3211, [l !.4211 SANTA rE SPRINGS 91114-801 1 VPtANO 98.S-1927 SANTA MONICA EX 4-6711 VAUtY PO 3·8461, 984·2220 SOUTH COAST '1.AZA 51110-JJJJ \l!IMONT ,l 9 ·191 f TOllUNCf 542· 1.SI I I I , ______________________ _ SL'i.trs _____________________ , "Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back" Shop6Ni9hl1Mondoy ihrough Saturday 9,30 A.M. ta 9'30 P.M. • I / - ·- ~-----• • JI DAil y ~!LOT Thurslb)', Jll"t 1,, 1969 Coast Pair in Leads Two Ora~e .Coast com-rering wire. mwiily \heater perf9J"fllers Both were seen in "The Best have WOI) the leading roles In Man" at the Huntington Beach the old time meloCirama "Ten Playhouse this season, while Nights in a Barroom," opening Griffith appeared ln "Once for next weekend at tbe Forw:p ·•1 the Asking '' at the Theater in Long Beach. Westminster C o m m u n l t Y DeMis Griffith of Newport Theater. Beach will play Joe Morgan, The· melodrama will open the "noble drunkard," with June 27 and will be staged Shirley DvOrak of Laguna Fridays and S a t u r d a Y • ~~O..~c~h~ca~s~tgas~~h~is~l\lflji~gsu~c~~lh~rou~g~hgthe~~end~~·~l~J~ul~y~.~~ ., ., • .. • • • • I • • • • • I DlnKt ,,_ lb ·--' .............. .......- ENDS MONDAY NIGHT ·~ . Art Americ'an nuclear-atta'k · sub sets out on. a mysterious mission ••• carrying a spy! The fate of the .world hangs in the balance. The spy could be anyone ••• even the Captain! ..-~~P'N"t5~Rniid'sflci.tdi::wlrl ··ice Station Zebra' ••ACH •Lv . llT •LLIS • IUNTINOTON ..... CH o •47·•eoC ~ A lam from th. No.1111 by Pltllip loth fl.,. •ufhor of tt.e now b1tt 11ll1r EXCLUSIVE PIEMIEIE IUN _,,,,_ J1~1 Fond1 •nd Rob.rt Redford i11 "Portnoy'5 Compl•int" "IAIEFOOT IN THI PARK .. P'1r 0.,,1 Adult C•mffr CHlllSTOl"HEll JONES "3 IN THE ATTIC" t<1Jlk DOUGLAS "THE BROTHERHOOD" PEJISONS UHOEll 11 WILL NOT •E ADMITTED UNLESS ACCOM PANtl!O IY l"Alll!NT Oil TDULT OUAllOIAN JAPANESE MOVIES EVEllY TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL NOTICE TO OUI PATIONS THI! PICTURES LISTED IN THIS IOX MAY alE CON51D•lll0 Y SOME TO aE UNSUITAILE 1'011: CHILDllEN ANO YOUNG £01"LE -ANP llEOUlllE PAllENTAL OISCllETION, ''MICHAEL I tlELCilA" "'l IN THE ATTIC," CONTlltAllT TO AOVEJITISING aEYOND DUii CO"ITltOL ANO AP'PllAlllHO IELSEWHEllE YOUNG PF.OPLE UNDER II CNOT 1') Ill HOT tlE AOMlnED TO PACIFIC THEATllES TO SEE THE PICTUllES LISTED IN THIS 8011 UNLESS ACCOMPANIED 8Y PAl:EN1' Ort ADULT GUARDIAN: • . . -·-··· .......... ~ lt•<I M Hit Top II lhl Wtrlf ltOCIC HUDSON EltNEST 801HlHINtl "ICE STATION ZEBRA" JIM 81tOWN "KENNER'' ............. .._.. ............ . Mir"-It tM e .. 1 hlky • •OI MOPE IACKIE GLEASON "HOW TO COMMIT MARRIAGE " 11100 STlilOElt CU.llE 8LOOM "THE ILLUSTRATED MAN" ............. ~ ......... ' •I-: ....... ·····-· dl!ld. t:!E.i Ctld• tllt lttifl .. w 'lllO •STAlllt: PETULA CL•alC "FINIAN'S RAINBOW " MICHAEL I . il'OLLAllO CONNER llliEO "HANNIBAL BROOKS" •ATEO ·M·· IEllCLUSIYE OltlY•·IM PllSMl•lll: l>llES9NTATIOM TM T,... Stery 91 0.. OM.I.II. SHAll:IP JAClt l>AllLANCIE "CHE I" PLUS "ONE STEP TO HELL" lllllllllllMl._.. ........... 94 L1,,..1 Yrwt SMry s115 "MICHAlL & HlLGA" lfl ,".•N!P ... .........=. J,_ '~-_:._ • • ... r ll T• y._..,., T11 ll\lt~ CAALOAD "'HILL'S lnLIS" Westminster's 'Hau1ated Wood' Mali.•_ a Date to Ane1!4 ! • O.riginal Drama Impresse·s !6thc.ANNUAL ~ YOUTH CENTER CARNIVAL By TOM TITUS DI ._ 0.11'1' , ... Si.If Every community theater actor, di.rector or serious stu- dent or acting should lake the time to avail himself or a most invaluable object lesson in his art, the Westminster Com· munity Theater production of "The Haunted Wood.'' Forget for the moment such nebulous virtues as plot con- struction, pace, timing and polish. This original drama stands as a glowing example of what can be done under the ''THI! H...UNlliU WOOD'' A 1>lo'f 1W Sondr• E¥llnl, directed b'f Dcrl• Allen, set <JeMgn Ill' Ar¥1d Mii• n11 11res1nled Jvn. U·Jl b'f the -~· .~ studlnh Cll the Wntmlnslet" Com· rnunll' Tl'lffler. S6lJ Wnlmln1ler Ave., WM!mln1rer. TH~ CAS1' D•vk! . 8111'1 Wi n.er R11ll'I . Pll w .. ner/LIOonNI De&lrros C>rlC• • !It'll> Clcllo! S:lr1 .. Sll!V Cro-lt,/Jorl Lou ...... Hler Perrv • . ...... An<ld Mllltlll Fent-rs .. . Emit C111un llt'tllKCI • Jin SIOrTOllLoi• WorlfllnllfOn Whitev ••• Jc.nn MOr1"1Mlkt Clutter ...,.,...11 . , Fra" Flocl1trorn/Suo1t1 Siiier most impossible of conditions . Conceived almost overnight and staged with a bare minimum of preparation by a group of students learning their craft while performing it, "The Haunted Wood" is an exercise in accomplishment. It is a workshop project mounted by sheer tenacity and desire by a cast of varying talents, half of which is completely new to the theater. Sondra Evans, a n ac- complished actress and in- structor of the Westminster workshop, has presented what amounts to the first draft of a most complex and diffi~lt slice of absurdist theater. fi.11SS Evans' script is astonishingly sound considering it was started from scratch just a few months ago. It certainly warrants further Ii t er a r y labor. Boone Cast • HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Richard Boone, the e x · television star, has been cast to star with Dustin Hoffman in ''Little Big Man." NOW PLAYING ·----·-·· ·--IACXMIM:I: M FE. CAlllO . Cab b/Oeln~ ··011e of the bftt plchtrn I'•• 1n11 i11 Y""'·" -It•• Rffd. Womllfl'I Wt.Ir Dlfl\' ,. . J "The I Killin 1feh s .. ,.. eorge"· Beryl Reid ® Susannah York Co[al Browne AIMo Plrrl11t ::> ----·Rlllll .. , • a niund heeled waitress look· ing for ' meaningful ex- perience. Pat Wamer, In the central role of a deaf gtrl with "se- cond sight" who "hears with her heart," is excellent, draw- ing on lhe fantasy of her character to give a capUvating ·and compasslonale perfonnance. AJ a drifting folk singer who pursues her, Burt Warner is less effective, wrestling with bolh his lines and his interpretation. ' . to be !i•ld· at COMMUNITY YOUTH CENTER 5th & Iris-Coron.a del Mar Sat. and Sun.-June 21 & 22 12 Noan to 9 p.m.-Fr .. Adml111on GRAND PRIZE $500 Savl1191 Bond DONATION $1.00 Tkketl .... n.w. ff-..y Ny 111 s.....r hMMll "etrc11 --PLU'S.5-- 0rawing Ev•ry 2 Hours for GIANT ANIMALS I As a plagiarlstiC novelist:/:~~~~~~~~~~~:::::::::~ Arvid Maloaa performs with an impressive economy of ac· tion and delivers a solid portrayal. Sally Crow I e y bandies the comic relief role of a stagestruck grocery checker with rollicking ef. fectiveness. Sit.Vt: CONFLICT -Arvid Malnaa and Beth Cicilol clash in a scene from ''The Haunted Wood" at the West· minster Community Theater. Both Ernie Casillas as a tired ex-eop and Lois Worthington as a widowed recluse achieve the physical weariness of their character, but each requires mo r e preparation to convey the dei::lred dramatic effect • The play's main thesis is that au men are brothers link- ed by a bond or pain and suf- fering, and for each. salvation is the ability to dream of a better life. It is succinctly if not sub~ly stated, but a con- densation of this nearly three- MCUJEEN AS ~·· •• ·~ Taking this raw material and giving it living in- terpretation, Doris A 11 e n shows enormous promise in her debut as a director. Miss Allen wields a sensitive hand for -the most part, threading her actors through some dil· ficult material and bearing the added burden of staging a show which is double cast in five of its nine roles. \llith few exceptions, the newer p e rform e rs are v i r t ually indistinguishable from 'the more experienced members of the cast, an added tribute to Miss A 11 e n ' s stagecraft. It is a show in which each character has his or her "moment" and most of them capture it with ex· emplary conviction. The story itself is a formula pl ay set in the Twilight Zone • 2 Newport Youths it1 Jazz Fete Two Newport B e a c h students at San Diego State ColJege, Stephen Pierce and Chris Babbit. will appear in two cOOcerts with the col- lege's Jazz Ensemble Sat~r· day in a festival production titled "Jazz By the Bay." The show is part of a week· long salute to American ja~ which includes Sammy Davis Jr., June Christy, cal Tjader. Paut Lopez Orchestra, th(' Clara Ward Singers, Herbir Hancock and the Ahmad Jamal Trio. Babbit, a drummer. f and Pierce, who will be featured on the trumpet, are part of the college's festival orchestra. They also will appear at a special concert al Balboa Naval Hospital Friday. . CINEDOM£ 21 532-33,, Cll•JRllR ti 5..,11 AM ,,_,., • 0fl .... Vanessa Redtrov• "THE LOVES OF ISADOU" ALSO •c.-c--... Cl -""""'"'ci..tl'--~ lff. Sttew St.rtf 6:41 C•11tte .. ott1 S1111dey fre11t J 11.1111. Nine persons or v a r y I n g background and ouUook find themselves throwtf'\ogether in an unknown spot, there to re· main until they can present a case for the survival of mankind. To accomplish this, each must search his own heart and come up with his own deren.se of the human race based on his memory of his long forgotten reason for existence. It is heady material, to be sure, and a formidable task for the mo s t practiced performers given the normal amount of rehearsal. For the Westminster group, lacking in both time and experience, the culmination of this project stands to be heartily ap- plauded. In discussing the cast, it must be honestly noted that lhe absence of cohesive, ensemble performance is in- deed evident. Yet there are some shimm·ering individu.:il moments made sometimes more delicious with t h e knowledge that it is the actor or actress' first time on stage. lletectiw U. franll llullitt • • SOOICI vther .l<lnd tf cvp. hour piece would clarify thel~~-~-~~~·M:-~,...:-:~~:~l~•~IB~M~•~·~·~-:-=~-=~-~~llll~ .. ~ theme somewhat. Particularly -·- tedious is the rambling second act with an overblown mock trial scene which could well be written or replaced. Technically, the play is in good hands with Gene Tardy supplying some tricky sound and lighting effects. Three more performances of "The Haul'fted Wood" will be 1 offered, with varyine .easls, tonight, Friday and Satufday in the Wesstminmr '11teater, 6569 Westminster Ave. in the Westminster Center Mall. Audie Producer HOLLYWOOD (UPI) World War ll hero Audie Murphy has formed FIPCO Productions, a new movie and television company, which will film "A Time for Dying" as its first project. STARTS NEXT WEDNESDAY EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY INDOOR THEATRE ENGAGEMENT Jack Lemmon and Catherine Deneuve are "The April Fools" Technicolor~ l!Jc:a; I ACillt'lnl Center rim. Pmtnt~tirwl.] A N1tional Gent-nit Pictures Relu•. Most notable in this regardlJ,::========== is Beth Cicilot, a stauteaque picture of cool beauty who portrays a woman haunted by her mll:ed blood and by her husband's casual acceptance of it. She is by far the strongest female perfonner onstage. Mike Clutter domiaates the " "' . -. --. LU4L11z ~ ·. ...........; FllST IUHI CMri•Ma o.Jly fr-1 Fred Asltira ~·· cast with a powerful in· Plui terpretation of a cynical "HANNIBAL a'ROOKS" "FINIAN'S RAINBOW" MlWPOl'f~-· .. -"" .......... UM hi. -0.. MIM N•w '°' ... wHk HJy bartender convinced or the Mich•i l J. Pollircl uselessness of mankind. As his 1":=::::=:=::=:=::=:=::==::=;:::;==ll 21111 POPULAI HIT part time girlfriend. Suzan1~ ,.,.----------, Slater presents a caricature, ~-~.,;;~v. but a most convincing one, of p Movie Debut HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Young Irish actress Yvonne Crowley will make her movie debut in MGM's "Ryan's Daughter" which stars Robert Mitchum. ~m-· .... •• DW1Jllli""'llAE It.WR =-----Cl.Ml_.... ";;-"-'=':." 1KfMlcm ALSO w--'THE GNOME MOBILE" CONTINUOUS DAILY fftOM 2 PJ1~ • j SH.VI: rt1CC2Uf'.f'.N AS PU.JI I II I' PLUS .. 1111111 -..... ..... d:.'iaaREa MIN. Vanessa Redgrave, ,....,,,.., • ...._.,,._.. The Loves of Isadora II ~.,.-~,,.-""~--rt .. Josef! Robc:rrds •Rd Jalltfl hi SEE THE STARS lit 1111 d1r1 9uid1 you. Syd111y Orn1rr, 0111 of th1 world'1 f,}rl • rno.+ 11+rolo91r1, writ1i th• d1ily horo1cop1 col~mn fe1lu•1d 111 th1 DAILY PILOT. Its ready' to'eolo~your world with happinc:,,;,.. Direct from . reserved seat °)\. {;} engagement! V' •/.. io· • :roMMY STEELE·~l l HARm "':t'IR!ll SMOI · d:HARBNis ·eu~~Ui ..- ltA'OMllOIY ~'t'l't' "'l)OuC[Ol't' 0111£CfmlY , ... llMCllllllCllU.• 1 , 11J lloindor1 • l t tWllUl6 I fiEll SllO!_: .KlS!l'll_ LAHOOll :filHCIS FORD COPl'llA--·--~ ' . NEWPORT <-... ~-.. • •••••••••• NOW AT ..OPULA.a LOCAL NICISJ S.n4 Oet1NllHll11t Hit , , l • , ' • • • • • r l ' j ' I I ' • I "" e n.. .,, -1C> (IO) 011f19/11. D Ill·--IC! (30) ·-... -(<)(30) ,...... Galle Diii, Jorct ind Tlddr N.itr 111est. 0 Sh ....... _ (t) sw; If SMrwMd forat" (tdwn- ture) '61-Rlchlrd Grtenl, Ptt• t C!Jshlfl(. ... -·-~·-- PEANUTS . ---=- 01 "' (t) (60) IDI lM...., liOJ ' 111-. (t) (30) ~ IHI fl)--ICi (30) t:llO ID 1111 IIJ cas --(C} '1111 lllllilll'" (dr11111) '62- """" T .... '-"""· T.W '\""Uo1i, lt•rs .. the k1M ~ ef 11w II and ore!« in • SMllll Africll tt. ,\ m WW'I NtW? (3o> "llnPllt tt11 1>111. .. e.rr.i. er.u. '1bt Qllfc Mtn," Mows two JOUlllMJ how "· tflt.delt tomllllJ~ •. (E U1 c.i..-Pn &Cl P'W (30) !ill ""' -(C) l!OJ l:JO 0 llllC ......... (C) (50) ti.-town. {R) , fJIDICD m nr. h ,,. -(C) ~ OiclCtwtt, l trrY·Thomq, Thi fiflll Dlrotflllon, S.lldlll SIMw, JI.Ill• Drbcol~ Ind TM lri11 Aupr T flni!J 111at. IE D ... ""'*' C!Ol m YllNI "· .. ltttoll II • \'\ SN (C) (60) . ' ~••llll@ lll.l-(C) (30) 1W1~·21." Gl111w, a s.. mtn SMphenl, It tmplortd bJ tht Loi Anaeles PG!lm Dtpertnltlit to UllOOW'tl' hlddtn 1111rijua11a, tlld fri- d'1 and Gtnl'IOll 1191 1111' In ttllir wt fDl'll&f'il. (R) @@--(t) (JO) m,_, (t) ~0> .......... c:ompo$itf IUl¥t1 Of C.llldl froiw coat to OClllt Wltii • kloll at ,... ~-...... ._. ~· 111> Ill m.-(t) (30> o-(C) (JO) m 11 ~-..-c!OJ h .,_ .. (t) (!O) [T:llO 9 CIS '"""' M.., (C) (30) Will« Cronkite. O:DOD til@ m!Dttn Mt1U1 (Cl a<l> "'{1111 Lollobrlald•, Pllll SllYtn, "Olm Crmbr llld Mllbuni Stonl ..... (R) o-·., u..r (C) (30) ID,._. IC) ClOl @@MIO ud Wiid (C) (30) fD PIQ!n1 Dlil lllitlr (30) "S!Jfts in Soni Accompanlrnenl" frtderick Noad ii joined b1 sinrer Bill Jah• son ill I Pfll(l'llft dnitntd to dem- onstrate v1rious lb!ts IA IOlll IC- companimenl QI()) Mdtail'a Jlny (30) m,._ -(t) CJOl BID -lCl CiOJ 0 --(C)(!O) o -(C) (!OJ @ (!) flltM (t) (30) "'WhD1 I Run liii• Rac..~ fD TMltr• lllt {30) Kii MW.. lh•l hotts. IE ..._C,~ !ill-.. ·-(t) (30) 7:30 119 (j) Alllatl Wril (CJ (30) lO:JO ID,._ (C) (30) Bill loh111. I Thi kf11« cou11r prowl1 tlll hitll IHI=• (C) (30) "'YIMrtll> counUy or westlr1t Am1f1c1. i nd Ian .. Animt1 World ctmeru follow thil fD A. lllictd It ....... CC) lormid1bl1 hunter durin1 his en-(30) Arthur l!llisrt. wfll« IN • counters with other a•tu~es com-tion pldm critic, tltks wl\11 ~ mon tD M1 ruQtd world, 1ndudln1 wrllll' Stl!iin1 Siftiplilnt about his bu11, bad&•S. detr, fom and won: 04I "alirtJ," tht ActdemJ. berlm. Award wlnlllf .Urrlnc. C8ff Rokrt· 0 ID roJ m Dtaltl loo111 (C) .111n and Ct1ir1 l looll'I. Htl MtriM- (60) "A~11na1. of Prttlf Be111-th•I llolts thl PR!Cflm, whldi will ly." An old stOl}'ltller (Burl Jwu) shcM d]Jt from ''tll1rl1." ~s-. h.is fictitious friend. • bur GI rllmli c... n1n. called Mr. Dob, to help • uippltl ,-. bOf (Rory Sttvtns) leem #11".flB. aJ hlrOI Z.. '30) 1nce. Lyle Betti• tlld Jtff Dololll "'° ..... fRl lo-ASBllllT --(C) • ,... _(JO) O @(J)li!JT>o -•• (C) U:GOIDDOllJmm-cq . ' (lil) "Slstef1 Socko 'In S.n T111CO." It Alf* Hlklatt Sisters e.rtrlllt, Si.l:lo ind Jtcqu. lint foml I :lin(int trio fat I blm-8 ~ "'fllt liltl ftl ...... lit show. (R) RlS Tail" (f111tuy) '61-l'tt« Olli- D MDIH $ Mwlr. .. l .. 1ds fil ..... , ......... (horrw} 'C.0- G•p S.nd111, Corin" C.l'fll. CD Ti.a • Cl-..q • (C) (30) ·m""' ... (60) __ ... _ (C) QO) e-•-Q~ ''" ID HUMPHREY BOGART · f.: Film Festivol 11 pm/KTTV ................. _ ~"" Sdiiol" (1938), CO-ltarrill Tht Deed End" kids. QJ ""* -Wn.dt" (l•ntny) ... t.-oo 11Cl.I(I)1111 PrhHtl' (t) (60) -GIJnil Jollns, Mttp rtt Rvthlr· The l'riaontr dtfub !lit IK!intbtnt tort. (Eric Portm•n) for lltctlon •• 1f11m· li2l (})ID (i) a()) ... (C) btr 2 in the Villll1e, • powrful . position in bis ptllOll WI~ bars. ll~ B "* '1't!Mlc ~ (d,.. f'hrptb« 2 clws t!!th~tc llllp to mt) ·~oblrt Rpn. C:.lnc• ROI-th• bid lly The t>rilonir, who n lnfy tries 1o ex1111 once •Pill beton winnint: tilt asn1nlfJ dllnCICrl · electiort. (R) 0 z.. c,., (30) .... u ooom1..iaMa..lCl II ~ ..,. ... • Trill" (fllP' twy) '57--0llf1es Coburn, ltlflllt Batts. Jol111 Miiia. D Ml CD m "" •~ (C) CJO) ~sion elJOfe Dtwn." Ann Mttie's O @l]) l!E Joe, Ii., (C) dtlf&llt 1t rectilln1 1 rttldutl chtcll lu~s to confusl~n •• sh• 11Ctlm 12:30 m 17 Suftllt Strip advice lrom 111 aiMs u to how lhl sh0u1d spend It. (R) ID AdStfl 1'Mh: "Stitdow of • tD Hml (C) (30) Womtn." ED NR ,.,,.. .. (2 hf) "lt M• l?:AS ~ "'tlMI. a. llUllltll ma Pl1J'Wflaht1." Thrn pll)°I 117 (xi-fl) '60-.lohn Mtri- JOU"I playwri&ll!J frt1m lht Lt nit Didi SuOi'l'tn. M1m1 .x111rim1nttl sta11 rrouP h1 ' Hew York. "P1v1nt" by JNn. Clllud1 v•n fbllie, "Fourteen Huft. 1:00 Cl Mn fotr. "'SWonl Wltholll t dred Thouund" by S.m Sheptrd, Country." l.llCi "The Rid use" by Paul mt.. 0 c..nnn"' a.n.t11 .... (C) II>""""" (C) (3-0) 0 -(C) LlO D @ 00 Ill '"""' (C) fiOJ "Why tht T INild'1 AftltlllOOfl Brid11 Club l1ht on Thursday." Iron.id•'• ,.unt Yictori1 (Jessi• ~orce llndis) Insists thtt Ofll ei '* fritndl hu been m~trtd. 11thoutft tht ''"a"""' . .., 'Ill """' (cornldy) '41-Abbotl I Cmt1llL l:JG GI All.Jli(M l'9r. '1bt Min hi !111 Whitt Suit," "Mtttudm •t s. •. ~ •nd "Dimon BlrtMJ ol """ Stnill." .. l'JO l'l'idtflel to tupporl liter dtilL Mhll' O'Conlllll tllo -.... ('-) FRIDAY DAYTIME MOVIES • • t. pl I W,,.t Balboa Blvd. Newport ... ch l'ERKINS I r:MOWmE w-11 Ar 'ffiE MOrEl PM C:J l'OU Foi: :TM E CA&, NT flY'E'S 50IAE1lUNG EXTRA FOR· WAmNG FOR ME ! MUTI AND JEFF GORDO MISS PEACH ' By John Miits . By Al Smith JES' A YOKE! By Gus Arriola . TOM AND A FIFTH-Host 'Fom Jones shown with member of the Fifth Dimension, part of a group which will entertain tonight on Channel 7 at 9 p.m. The whole group will f,4;rf0rm 1'Aquarius -Let the Sun Shine In," Crom 'Hair." The single record ·of. this number is the biggest seller currenUy. TELEVISION VIEWS ' CBS to Vie'v America Now By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) _:_ The l~le novelist Thomas Wolle once noted: "America has never reaUy yet, in any profound and essential way, been explored -it has rather been surveyed. . "The first problem of the people who settled in this immense and spatial continent was not to explore it but to 'lay it out' -to find the shortest distance between two points, to get the best and easiest grade across the continental divfde ... w~ have hunted always for the short cut, the p~ct~· cable way , .• weU, this is surveyordom -1t is not exploring." WITHOUT oversimpWying too much, it may be fair to say that one reason for the ~o--c~ed gen- eration gap is that the new generation ts almost wholly concerned with exploring the nature of America -often introspectively -rather than sur· vey lng it, because all of the surveying has been done. Television , wh.ich caters primarily to the older generation, has bej!:un to explore more and more in the sense that Wolfe meant, but too. many pro- grams are still essentially surveys. That is why a broadcast such as the one announced Wednesday by CBS -"A Day in the Life of the United States'' -is of more than routine interest . The program, which will be seen on CBS-TV next season will record, for current and future generations,' "What America was like on the his- t oric day when Americans landed on the moon and brought the world into a new age." In short, the surveying in space -the new frontier -will be matched by an exoloration of the land that has already been tamed on earth . PLANS CALL for the pro.'!'ram to be filmed on JuJy 20, the day that the first r'nen are scbedul~ to land on the moon, and the network-says report~ ers will be at work recording what is happening 0 from tile first light of sunrise on the coast of Maine to the last ray of sunset on the. island of Kauai, Jiawaii." If the execution Is as good as the concept, .'It should be quite a broadcast. And the network Is su rely preparinl! for it in the right frame of mi~. For example, Charles Kuralt, who has proven his superior style with a human touch in his "On the Road" segments for the CBS evening news, will be the chief reporter. And the network announcement says the program will attempt to capture, for the future "who we really are, what we were really ' h " like -those people \Vho put men on t e moon. MORE SPECIFICALLY, t.he announcement ob- serves: "\Vhile man is breaking the bond that has chained hini to earth since the beginninl! of exist· ence, it will be a summer's day in America, a d~y packed with the things that have to be done. in whJch kids have to be fed and diapers changed. when automobiles stall and bread is baked and money is earned and life is saved in a hospital emergency ward." The network, in short, will try to record as much as possible "what concerns us and what doesn't, what moves us and what we ignore." It 'is. in other wordS the kind of program that television wa·s made for.' It is ambitious, perhaps even a bit presumptuous in its attempt-but it is, good to ~y. an attempt after all a risk to do somethin~ sign.W- eant and perhaps eVen great. And i.f you risk noth- ing, then nothing is what you'll get. Dennis the Menace • .. 0 ~·· •...i9 • I • " If pAll.Y I'll.Of --JT""'l'H $ ,._,,n, •A•·lm c•lllTl,.ICATI o" •USINISS ,.ICTITtOUI l"lllM NAM• ,,... "'*'"'19"" do ~·eOT C..fltt? 11'111 • ...., .,.. .CON!Yo;tl... • "1011-•nd M:- nsMf"f' be9 tl\ltll'MIU It Co.•Pt ........ I ti US Wfllte(afl Strftl, 0tt"8t, C1llloml1, Undfo' tt.. flctltlaw fWm n-al JAY- KAY ENTElltPRISES •1'111 tlllt Hid llrm Is ~ flf IM followl'"' ""00'\i, 'frtla$e MIMI ... fvtl lr.d llKS ol rnld9ncl '"' 11 fellllwl. to.wit: WIUlatrl D. Mo119r, 10521 S, Collmt lld.. Wl\\nlel', C1IH.1 Armtnd "· v1,...lltfo, JOl!} CtrK Ave •• Wfl!ttltr, C1UI.; 1oh!I F. Kr1u1 .. Ill Whllt<.111' AW,. Ortl\94', Ctl!I, ~I-MIY 1, 1'6'. wm11m D. Mollf!r .Vmtt>d A. V1nv11i1to John F. Kr1u11 ST.t.TI OF CALIFORNI"' COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES l u On MllY I, 1Nt, befort me, I Not1ry Public In In!! tor H id County Ind Slote, ptOOMllY ll>PtOrfd Wll!ltm 0. Moller, Armlflll .... V1nven110 Ind Jolm F. K•tUH k-fo IM 10 bl! 1111 HtloOftl --n-t '"' 1ubt.crlbtd 10 !'he wll'hln lft· 1tnlrnent tncl Kk,_led9..i IO me ffltl ltllr ••eotttd IM w~. Wlll'IHI l!l'll Mnd Ind Mil Jotn I. D1v11 Not1ry Publlc-Clllforftll PrllldNI Offlct I" Lot .A,,..1n c°"""' M'r cemmtulon E.:plr•s Odablr u . lt6t l't.AMIC M. MOOllll, Arty • .... L.4'119 ... 11 •Ml .. ..._ ...o. Clllt9n!lt ,..., T91t fftH OAf~I ~Ubl!INd Ori-Coe1t Dill~ ~lie!. JllM n. If, ?'. • Jwl1 J, Ifft 11G1.., LEGAL NOTICE I .. Thursday, J~ 19, 196t LEGAL NOT'lCE LEGAL NOT'l<lE LEGAL NOTICE n ., •• " .. " -~=====-=.:._;::..:.__ ____ _:_:::~:___ ___ ..=_:_ ___ __:__ _ _:__. ________________ _ --=--:~---__.___..___. :Wednesday's ---~~~~~~~~~~~~ ............................................................................................................................ . Closing Prices_,,_ Co~plete New York Stock Exchange Li st - • ,, '" • • 1 l I I ' I r DAILY 1'11.j)T , • Thursdlf, .be 19, 1969 Estancia High School Honors Outstanding Students RecocnJUon was g l ~ e n -etudentl who r«:eived awards and scholarships ror school ac-tivtu.. at Estancia High Scbool's &Mual awards ban· uet. Sludenl! and the honors they received! , Masons Seafaring Lodge E. J. Moore· awards -seolors, . . Gut F1lt& and G r e I Goodyear: juniors, Carol Cap- pello and A11kt H • y I : sophomores, Debbie Riley and Doug We.lier; freshmen, Coll· ale HoJm and Sit Fidyke. Yearbook .staff certificate of merit -Jo. Ann Tty I or. Lions Club scholarship - Paul Brlsso. Glrll League Girl o! Iha Year -tie between Roltmary Szabo and Sue ~tarvyama. Girls League Scholarshlp - Rosemary Sll)o. Veterans of Foreign Wars speech contest winners - Mike SbwlD ·and D a~ e Fillmore. Music awards -vocal, ' . ' . Taaya Fouadl, m01t Improved K•nletl, -rla Fate, Doin SorOpUmill scholarship -typewriting, 8tepli1Dle ~; vocal, Cl~ W r I I 11 t ; Fillmore, Mike ' Sk1'1rio, Ceitl NIJIC)' Wmitr. Junior shorthand., De b r a Instrumental, Davt tifubone:a Cappello, Jeff Jobuoa, Amy Ban"' of America achieve-White: Ii op homo re book· and Guy Fabre. A1:11~ nm Conttaa& aod "I -. e e ping , Robin RaU.; Betty Crocker llomemaker Ollarlel ~1lllOa. ment awards -science arid sophomore typewriting, Anne of the Year -Ctrt Filet Speaker of the Year-Da•.e math, CbrUe Hoyt; fine arts, Lee. PTA scholarships -Charlie Fµtm:ore . Jo Aa.n Taylor; liberal arts, Physical fitness awards _ Jloyt and Judy Ascll. Gold E -senlort UNI J~y Ascll: vocitional arts, Audrtan ftompson, Joba1t11 Bausch and Lomb honorary r,renc~ Su.e ~1am•. ~I Ju.a Mc:DoOlld ;' trades .. and FUtt, Sndy Caa•'!.,be, Amy &elence a~ard-Cbarlle Hoyt. rt, R1i14ell ind llOH.mary , industrial arts 1 Mike p ell· 'A.uaUG, Nina Baker, He:atber MUlar and Nancy Wenatr. Zonta Girl of the Year - Jo Ann Taylor. Valedlclorian -W e a d y Pope. Sal utatoria n -Judy AM:b., Newport-Balboa Savings aod Loan scholarship -K I 1 Weller. Fore 1 g n 1 an II: u.a. g e Subo; jUDion•Juet AaU.O.y, busln · 0" ' Blbbard and Roada OUve r • , certificates -Gennan,. Jwly · Carol Ctppebt, Georclaa ' l:n i:• Jrlorrt:b w Aadenea; Daughters of the American LEARN TO SWIM Asch; Spanlsb, S •• J ... Dwtglt, ~.fllll7, ~ '.,_!I_ ·'•·~1· ·~••r! 1 Htvolulion ...... citizen award California Savings and Loan League a w a r d -Linda Freacb. danlan; French, OlarUe Hoyt; Genlt., &ie , Judutan, ~ • 1-.nnemaa,tng,J Gert F.1 1 e ,; a--AT YOUR ORANGE COAST YMCA linguisUcs Lyane Jo-N•......,· ~'80iuidm and malhemauc., Ira B.a•ter; · -Bi>• Mara1a.m• .• · · Perfect 'atteQdance _. paa.J Rayieae 'CowMy.. social studies,, Lbtda Fnadi; 'fuesday Club aw4fd-Paul 6 4 2 • 9 9 9 0 Brisso. Service Jeiiderabip award _ l~bor•'°'f sclegce, lift Illy· B~sao. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!'!:~~F~or~ensi~'c:._:a'.'.'w'.".ar~d~•_:-:_~K~lm~~Ro~..,.~~"7'.!,;s~u~bo~·:_.._ __ 1 mood; 'll'lustc, Tabyi Fllptda; . American Chernh:al Society ~ arts, Patti ~alltoi; dr,ama, award-Larry Schroeder. DaVt Pigma~, ·and t /ofeign · Cost;l ,Mesa • Aft ' League language, JelDIM! Cal~J· awards -scholarship, Jo Ann New~~·BaJlM}a Savmgs and T1ylor; conunendation, Josie Loan aChievements awards in. Van Ottulo. Honors at entrance -Jud1 Alcb at Cal State Fullerton and Pacific Lutheran, but slie will attend UC Santa Barbara. Ca:llfornia stale scholarships: -Cindy Petruska and Judy,' Robinson. -- BUY 2 • • • CiET 1 GIANT FRE:EI THAT'S .-RIGHT! BUY ANY TWO OF OUR NUR SERY CON TA INER PLANTS - GAL .• , 5 GAL -I 15 GAL • • • • ANO GET THE 3rd ONE FREE! Thousands of Top 9uality Plcmts to Choose SUMMER CLEARANCE SPECTACVLAJt SA fllNGS! Azaleas, Shade Trees Camellias, Avocados, Citrus S..Our Super Special Bargain Block! Buy 2-Get 1 FREE MAKE THE BACKYARD PRODUCE PEACHES-APRICOTS -FIGS -APPLES REDWOOD HANGING BASKETS FULL 14 inch SIZE! B•it Redwood • Strong mettl btnds. Perfect for Ferns , Begonits, FuKhias , etc.. FREE PALM TREES SALE Borrow the Neighbor's Truck-Bring Him with You! FOR THE KIDS! DECORATIVE BARK LARGE 3 cu. FT. 1 aa IAG Vines, Junipers, PalmJ, Roses, Tree Roses, Fems Limited to S1ock on Hand . .. NATURE INA SACK feeds blade lawns with nature's rich balance of fertilizers and minerals. . . Makes dichandra 50 ltis. FEEOS . a healthy, 2 500 • ~. lush carpel ' sq of green. 5 .9 5 soil~~::~~~~. BANDIN! IS THE WORD FOR FERTILIZER. FLOWER SHOP SPECIAL LONG STEMMED BEDDING PLANT SPECIAL . . GIANT FLOWERING ZINNIAS ~::·I 3 DOZ. 119 DOZ. ROSE5149 DOZ. HOURS: MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M., SUNDAYS 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M •. 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA CALL 546-5525 - businels -Otl~ Senior I • D 1 Jean ~aid,.; ·seni(>r.book-Thes,Ptan award -ave College Aide Wins Post I keeplnr: LI n d'~ Mertlwlt; PJgmap. • senior 'secrt!tartal, D i b b 1 e . St~ent store awli.rd -Kit RebtN;. senior c 1 t!: r J c' t , Wen~. MaliJJa KlaleJ'} junior book· Hughes management award keeping, Diane P~; junior -Mike Skawln. ·-· . . 3 'From . eo·ast Given Prizes ~ t09 Orange Coast economics students w e r e among 21 prize J'inners ln the Fifth Annual Fair ~nterprise Medallion Competition. The winners, chosen for their oUtstanding <q>titude in economics, include: Stepheo. C. Hoyt,~ Estancia H i g h School; C. Brian Wainwrigtit, Laguna Beach High, and Ernest J. Gaughan, ·Maijna High. Athlete of the Year -Bob Raymond.. Boys State representatives -Tom 1.-oss and ti-lark Den- nis. Oftice service award -Nor- rab Andersen. Art awards -district medal opaque water cok>r, Nancy Gonya; district med a I sculpture, Gall Tyler. California Scholastic Federation scholarship -Paul Brtso. California Scholastic Federation gold seal life mem- bers -Judy Ascb, Paul Briuo, .Judy Edwards, Gerl FUet, Linda Frtdcb, Carol . J. P. Colyar. assislan( pro- fessor or music at Orange Coast College, has been elect· cd to a third term as dean of the Orange County Chapter of the American Guild of Organ· ists. TI1e 95-member organiza- t ion of organists and choir- masters meels monthly for programs and work.shops and sponsors a series of organ recitals at' county churches. Other recently elected of· flee rs include : Robert M. Estes, Fullerton, sub-dea1,1; Winnie Carter, Costa Mesa, secretary; Katherine Deah. Newport Beach, treasurer ; Donavan Lenning. 0 range, aUJ'\itor, and Marina Colburn, 1\t.Stin, registrar. Magncrv-a •.. brings you both the look SJ3Ml1 and sound of excellence, only u· S tereo Phonograph Sy1tem- . l • l l :t Rr!'fe;isio n Automatic P;)ayer /Ampr.-,,. tier (with dust cover) provides greater undistor:ted mu~ic power • Output banishes discemibte record , •• and Diamond Stytus wear. Now-" your records can l.ilst a lifetime!' Four extended-range.speakers-two • In each matching enclosure. Com- plete Audio Control functions plus many more extra-value features. Model 2501 is just one of several beautifully encased Magnavo.x stereo systems with lasting solid- state reliability. No costly installa- tion; just connect to each other and play. SO compact, any would be ideal for use on tables, shelves, or bookcases. Why not fill your home with beautifurmusic1 KERM, RIMA MAGNAVOX Factory Direct Dealer 2666 Harbor Blwd., Costa Mesa, Calif. 6855 Westminsler Westminster, Ca lif. 1211 6 So. BroRhursl Garden 6rowe, Cali!. 12891 Ch1pm1n Garden 6rowe, Calif. EXPH T FACTORY SllYICE 546-1691 894-2350 530-4360 636-1250 -------------· ---... -- ---~-~---~-----------------------------------------------________ _,,_~--' Res~dents on English Court • - ' 'GOODBYE DROPSHOT' ~ Mrs. Rod Laver of Corollji del Mar says goodbye to her puppy DropshOC before leaving for England \vhere she will see her husband, the world's number one tennis player, compete in the Wimbledon matches beginning nexL Mon- day. ·--•• . ' • .. By JEAN ;:ox el IM Dallr f'lltt llltf Wimbledon in June is a profusion of hats, Cow- ers and cries of "Jolly good shot." And beginning ne~t Monday, during the next two weeks of intense competition, all &' England's attentiqn will be riveted on the fastest grass courts in the world. For two Orange Coast v;omen, the famous ten- nis matches will be particuJarly nerve-wracking. They are the wife ol Rod "the Rocket" Laver the world's number one professional player, and ... the wife of Roy "Emmo " Emerson, another Aussie considered. t o be one of lhe world's top five tennis players. JOINING HUSBAND Mrs. Emerson already has joined her husband with their two children, Antony, 6 (who according to RoY has a natural backhand) and Heidi, 4, along \\'ith her mother who is. visiting from Australia, the real home of all the Emersons who currently live in the Bluffs. After Wimbledon the Emersons plan a month t<Juring the continent, from Ireland to France, Switzerland, Austria and Germany, to wa le~ Roy in other competitions. M3rY Laver left today for Ef)gland and plans to return at the close of the tourriament for she is six months pregnant with their first child. Mi's. Laver arrives in London on her and her husband's third wedding anniversary, and Mrs. Emerson marked her 11th year anniversary June 7. However, for the wife of a tennis player, it is not unusual to celebrate enn!versarie s and other spe- cial occasions alone. NERVOUS EXCITEMENT "Since Jan. 6, Rod has only been home for 10 days . After Wimbledon will be better. He has one tournam,ent and then he comes home for three \veek s," Mary said. There ts .great nervous excitement in watching (See-WIMBLEDON BECKONS, Page 21) r.._...,.. ______________ __. • SUITCASE LIVING -Mr s. Roy Erner.son packs a few tennis dresses for her trip to \Vimbledon where she will see her husband, one of the top five tenn1$ players in the world, compete for two \veeks. After England, they plan a month 'tou'k' of lfie· continent, ... -~ _J. •. ~ •.• 1 ,,. ~ ... Fufu;e, Past in Harmony Path Laid for Another Season I ' BULL'S-EYE -New board ol directors for Orange J Cou nty Philhannonic Society are zeroing on anoth- er succe;ssful season. J ohn A. Vibert oi I:.aguna ! Beach, president, is joined by Mr~. John M. Owen I ' • l • • ' . '. ':: ... \ • of Newport Beach; Mrs. A. Bayard Dod Jr. of Hunt- ington Harbour, and J . Donald Ferguson of New- port Beach (left to right), Orange Counly Philharmonic Society's recent annual meeting afforded both a review of an out.standing 15th season and a preview look at exciting Utings yet lo come in the 16th season. John A. Vibert, who will rollow Tor- rence Dodds, accepted the office of presi- dent of the society during the meeting in Island llouse, Newport Center. Serving "'ith Vibert are J. Donald Ferguson, first vice president; fi.trs. A. Bayard Dod Jr.. vice presidenl and chairman of women's committees: \V, . A~en Grubb, vke president a·n d \treasurer; Mrs. Ralph Tandoi,•,.sky, vice President and chairm an of publi c re!a- tlcXlSj Mrs. John M. Owen, vice.president anl:I chairman of youth concerts: Mr.~. J'*1t F. Porter, recording secretary. and 1 Dana Latham, corresponding secretary. Board members re-elected for a three- year term are Mrs. Richard Allen. Dodds, Mrs. Eric Durand, J. Donald Ferguson, Clifford Hakes, Latham, Dr. Wilson Little, ~1rs. Marvin McClay , fi.1rs. Owen and Edward Pellegrin. >,nnual reports by commitlce chairmen indicated 1968-69 was a most successful year. For example , it was noted that 200 neW nlembers have joined the society and three new women 's committees arc being . orianized to bring the total throughout the county lo 26 wlLh an estimated membership of 875. Funds ralsctl by the women's committees during the past season total more lhan $43,000. Members also heard that the Con- tinuance 1'~und Membership Drive is v.·ell ahead of last year and that the 10 free Youth ConcerL'I were heard by more than 19,000 Orange County school children who listened to three different classical orchestra s and narrators. Tn addition, six scholarships totalling i1 ,000 Y.'cre award ed to music majors at UCI and Orange Coast College, and funds totalling ,6,710 were raised at the annual Youth Concert benefit, Vashion Concerto, Opus II, presented by I. Magnin of Santa Ana and cosponsored by Newport Harhor ~rvlcc League and the Philharmonic Society . The Philharmonic Juniors, daughle rs or members, reported a n enthusiastic membershi p ol 45 girls who also will work 1 in. conjuhction with the service league during the coming .~a~. Their dulies include distribution of progran1s ;it al\ evening concerls and assisling al all Saturday 1norning Youth Concerts. In· outlining plans for the 1!169-70 season. Vibert said there would be a subscription series of seven conce rts. Six of these will be played by Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra with Zubln Mehta, music director, conducting three. and oU1crs with guest conductors Rafael Fruhbeck de Burgos, Daniel Barenbolm and Ha n s Schmidl·lsserstedt. T(rt e season will open Oct. 14 with the ap- pearance of the N.D.R. Symphony o[ Hamburg, Germany, with Wilhelm Schuechler conducting. World famous guest soloists already signed for the new season are Byron Janis and Andre Watts, both pianists. In addition, at least 10 free Youth Concerts arc planlled for the 13th con- secuti ve year. They will be presented to ~tudcnts of all county school districts and tu many attending private and parochial schools. These programs are designed for 4th through 8th t;rade students. Incumbent directors of the society are Dr. Daniel G. Aldrich Jr., Mrs. Lloyd L. Aubert, Mrs. Sydney B. Gaynor, W. Allen Grubb, Mrs. William S. Holstein, Mrs. Tandowsky, Vibert, Mrs. Dodd, Mrs. James P. Judin, Mrs. Porter, Edwin F • Steen and John Scott Trotter . The society's ranks have opened to 200 more ne~ members, bringing the total membership to well over 1,200 individual members. This does not include the 8G , business. industry and r 0 u n d a ti 0 n members aftd contributors to the memorial fun"d. ~ 1 Teenager Flips, But Casanova~ s Hold Could Fracture Her 7 DEAR ANN LANDERS: t am 16. My 1f;>oyrr iend, Byron. is 17 and a judo buff. ~st 01ight he was praclicing some new Ids and flipped me over. l landed on y back. The pain was excruciating and f was sure he fractured my spine at . ast. I lold him to leave and I'd think up story. 1 I crawled to my folks' bedroom, woke lhcm up and said I had fallen out or bed t nd lo call the doctor. They got the truth • ut or me fast because they noticed I bad IJnY clothes on. The falling out-of-bed -.Ory didn't make any sense. A bone specialist who lives next door t.ame over right away. He soid nothing •as broken' but I bad a dislocated· hip. My folks are so furious with Byton they !Old me 1 can't ace him any more. Help A NN LANDERS this. Am t obligated to sell the rug back -uMt!riot the price I paid? I value hc.r friendship and I want to do the right thing. -FEELI NG RUGGED me, please. He's really neat. -CYN· THIA DEAR CYN: He may be neat but H '1 got no buslnes5 dislocating yo.r lllp • Promise me, no more judo, ud l'U ask your folks to givt: Byron ano&her cltbte to prove be can beMve like 1 gentleman. And yoa Cd be.Ip by behaving like a t.dy. DEAR ANN LANDERS , A lrlcnd who Wa3 moving lnto a smaller place sold me a beaumiJJ Oriental rug. Tl!e·prlce I paid , was a bargain and we both knew It. This wu 10 years ago. Last wee.k the friend telephoned and said, "You remember that Oriental rug I sold you, dear. Well, -my sister feels since' It la a family heirloom it should be kepi. in the family . I want to buy It back and give It lo her." It would cost me easily four times as much if I were to try t'o rtp~ace that n1g today. I'm sure my friend Is aware of -----------·---- DEAR FEEUNG: Ten years lattr ls prelty darned late lo remember tbat a rq 11 aa belrloom. 11 ~ woman va.fotd yW frlod1btp 1be woakhl't have sag· 1estec1 auch a thlng. 'If JIU don't 1eU the ntg back to btr for wbit you pajd, her nose will be tut of Jolat. If yaa do , your1 wlU be. Taite your cbol<e. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Two years ago my husband dropped oot o( 1lght. l had to move in with my mother and go to work to support myself and our two small children. Last week I ran inlo my husband al a suburban supermarket where he is employed. I nearly died of the shock. When I asked him where he had been, he said, "My, but you're nosy." 1 pleaded 1 with him to give me a divorce. Hi• answer wu, "Sorry, it's against my retia:ion." Ann, that bum never saw the in.side ot a church in his life. 1 d'on't know what religion he is talking aOOut. r want to leav-e the country with a man I've been in love with (or over a yea r, He has offered to Introduce me as his wife and change the children's na1ne lo his. lam templed. Whal do you eliy? -ESTRELLITA I DEAR F.S: Don't do It. Tbe bum coald have you stopped by the lmmJsraUoia aulhoriti~• and prevent you from tUtte bit cbildten out of I.be cou.ntry. Y• m iliU marked to him. Hlft I llW)'tr aad ,,... yoanelf ef iMa loiu, le~ally. · , Atcohol lt no shol:tc:Ut-to social suecesa. lf you th.ink you have to drink to be .o.. cepted by your frie~, get the faci. Read "Booze aftd Yoo -1'"or Teenagett • Only," by Ana Landers. Send 35 centa in coln and a long, seU-addrened, stamped envelope with your rcql4fst. AM Landers will ~ glad to he.Ip )'OI i with y?Ur problems. Send them to her iir care of the, DAILY PILOT. M<ioaln& a stamped. seU·eddreased envelope. ~· DAllY PILOT 1-. Ml,, 1!6t WHIRLYBIRD UP AND AWAY -Readying.for jet flight to Baltimore, Md., are (!ell to right) Mrs. Donald Benedict and Mrs. Murdock Payne who will attend Sigma Phi Gamma International sorority convention. 1-frs. Benedict is president and Mrs. Payne international organizer for the area Lambda Zeta chapter of Newport Beach. Convention will con- vene on June 2!i. Delegates Airborne For Maryland Trip Scholarship Winners Students Show Works Jn a whirl of . packing for stalled with her in September Paintings by Costa ~fesa Art rison, Chapman Colh~ge. departure to the Sigma Phi will bt the Mmes. Donald League !cholarship "'iMt'r3 Also c:dlibiting will be J') Gamma International con-\\'ill be displayed during the Ann Taylor and Josie Van Qt. __ ,. __ · Bal . Snyder, vice presid ent; t I !:' ... ~ • u; .. ., eo--1 v~uuuu m Umore, Md., is month of Ju!y in the leagu~'s er e, ""'"""ncia ~"'6" ~uuu ; Mn. Donald Benedict of Hun-Benedict, treasurer; Herman Paul Bogdanowicz and Ann . Ungtoo Beach, president of Tracht. secretary; Lawrence Costa ~tesa gallery. Langsto.,, Costa Mesa High Newport Beach's Lambda Rice, historian: Frank Pf~er, Students exht"biling !hei r School; Jan Trapboten and 1.eta chapter. editor: William Wallen:, social work v.·111 be Katherine Rhon· Dick Uvoni, Corona del Mar Joining her will be hirs. sec re ta r y; Dale Witcher da Erg~r. Orange Cu as t lligh School, and hf ark Murdock Payne of Newport Yt'elfare secretary, and Joel College : Patricia Pringle Mid McCullock and John Peterwn Beach, up for ~lection as in· Tate. ways and means. Ethlyn Bradshaw, Go Iden o( Newport Harbor High ternatiooal organizer, who wiU Rushees to be added to the West College ; Larry Veller, School. carry along campaign favors current membership au Mrs. California State College at The ctisplayo; may be viewed made by area c b a pl er \\'alter Quinlan of Costa Mesa Fullerton: Pt.tuip R Warne:-, W~ays rrom 10 a.m. tot memben. and hln:. David Abbott of California State College at p.m. and Saturdays and Sun· Mn. Benecfict as chapler·;--,";;;'WD;'J>OO __ n_Budl __ . _____ Lon_:.g _Be_ach:.._. _•:_nd:.._Eddi.::.::.:..' _HM_·_::d•::>::'':..fr.:.om:::..t:...::to.:.~:..;Pc:·:::m::._. delegate will attend business meetings and study programs offered dwing the coovention week, beginning June 25. Following the coovention. Mn. Payne will join a group of members taking a slde1rip to Puerto Rico and a tour of Washington D.C. b efore returning home. Lambda Zeta chapter has named newly elected officers for the coming year to include Mn. Herbert Bland of Costa hfesa as president. To be in· Lady Luck Beckoned Members of Temple Sharoo in Costa Mesa are set to try the whims of lady luck at a Las Vegas night nert SalUt· day at 8:30 p.m. Admission will include a chicken dimer and scrip fer the Las Vegas style gamine tables. Offmod by !he 1'f"P.: icana Hotel in Las Vegas will be a pri7.e of two nights at the Trwicana. 'I1l05C interested in ttserVa- tions may call Michael Bokor, vier president, at ~11%9. The Tee Tattler t,.f~o1e Group w..n.. o1 the M ..... 11sr. ·-the flnt and lhlnl 'l1lm"ldly of each month for n""liaco In M-. Home, ~Mesa. 'l1le P"'l'lllll beP •t I p.m. and Mrs. Wl!Hom <:allow17, 64'-4241, n111 be called for further in- fonnatlon regardin1 mem· bonhip. • Come help us celebrate the of our beautiful new RUTH BRYANT'S ffiERLE noRmAn COSffiETIC STUDIO 27 1 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 6<46-4026 From Fr;day, June "20 lo Monday, June JO. (/'~FREE c-...::i :\ complete new look and a co mpl exion ca re program de signed just fo r you. In private. Wnhout charge. Free favors ... exciting thank·you-for-coming gifts which will introduce you to ou r fabu lous selection UIOCAMlllU.aD MASTlll CMAll:I• of cosmetics and groom ing aids I ------------- Peering Around TOOIUNG Europe for lft moollll will be Diane Cam- ........ daqllter of Mr ..... Mn. Ernest Campanan> of Newport Beach. She will join Debbie w-In Germany to begin !be twr. A GAllDBN PARTY booot· Ing Kolby All<maa, Pal Jlm. oar and Beverly Bieslczad was ho.md by Mr. aod Mn. Frank L. Stm.i, Huntlngtoo Beach. Congratulaliag t b e three yoon,g women on their gradualloo from Marina High Sc:bool were many friends. relatives and Dr. P: A. Pep- per, an out.of.town guest. S1l1TZEJILAND WIU. be the initial desfjnaliM of Jack aod Maria Martlein when they Jeave.fqr Europe at the end of Juoe. 'lbe ownen of Maria's ArtisltJ in Oils in HUlltington Beach will travel also to Italy and Spain before returning lo Calilonlla the first part of Allgllsl. Calling All Soroptimisfs for Brunch Soroptimisls CJub members in District III will gather tor a brunch in Irvine Coast Country Club next Sunday where the governor of the Pacific. Region will be guest of honor. Laguna Beach Soroptimisls are hosting the affmr, and call· ing all members are (left to right) Airs. 'Thomas Pole, in charge of arrange- ments; ?\.!rs. Albert Cornelius, president, and Mrs. Kenneth Haas, director of District UI. B01'0RED during a buffel -------------~-------------­ dinner hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Hunter Coot of Corona del Mar...,.. Mr. and Mrs. Eimef Card, former Santa Ana Heights residents who are establishing lbeir residence in Portland. Card, an Orange County architect. has accepted a position on the faculty of Portland Community Coltege. Club Selects Winners CRUISE PASSENGERS on the SS Monterey, h1r. and Mrs. Herbert M. Ford of Costa A1esa Travel Agency. were among those stopping al Taboga Island. 12 miles across lhe bay from Panama. SS Monterey was the first ocean going vessel to. anchor off the island since lbe open- ing of the Panama Canal in 1914. A bronze medal and $25 gav- ings bond were presented to hfike Carter by Beta Gamma Ola.pt.er, Epsilon Sigma Alpha International sorority, Foun- tain Valley. A Nieblas School student and son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carter, the yooth wrote the winning essay, Being An American. during a coolest on What I Can Do for My Coontry. Special recognition also was given first and secmxl place coni.stants, Paul Cochrao and ~ -_.,....,.. ......... _.-.-.-.,. ·····-* --........ .,....- . Nowporl· ... ch, Colli. J11J'""'"" •JW. MIA.II .. 11111 ~ ........ •1J.NM ' Carol McMilWI, and making the prese.ntauoD for t h e chapter was Mrs. George Keller. 1be annual essay contest sponsored by Beta Gamma is open to an eighth grade students, and winners are selected on the basis of scholastic achievement, all· around acUviUes and essay contenL During the state convent.ion In the Beverly Hilloo Hotel last month, the area group wu f'Cl'lgDiud as one of the outstanding chapters in the state. It received third place award for scrapbook; sister award for organizing Dtlta Iota chapter, and Gold link award for educational pro- grams. In the region it received a first for scrapbook ; second for year book and outstanding chapter under 5 years old; third for rushing and social; certificate o f appreciation from March of Dimes. and recognition for most inc:re&se in chapter membership. >kipprrlt&I Be a.ut y Sa.lo na ITS SPRING! it's verve I it's instant color_with ' 75' PLUS SHAMPOO IM ___ I S<tlO 1' AND SET '"""' 5 P·•· SZ.711 £ Fri. ·Sal.· Sun ..................... $3.00 1 I Lent h•lr •.tr• I When Spring puts ve!"e in your life, we put it into your hair!Withour new comb-able, brush-able dos. And. with our color that just rinses in and "takes" while we set your hair.' It's marvelous Roux Fanci-full that • t'Olon in1tantl1-then ah1mpoo1 eat when :roa wish t • uses no peroxide, needs no afte:r-rin11 l1 • coven rra:r, refreshes dull 1tair, tonee bleached hair I Cosio -· C.111. not"',_ .... IC•wt .. llr. --Cotto Mota, Calif. ,.. w. ""' llrl9f _,. .... -~ I • I I l I I I ! I Arte1l1, Calif. 1Q1J """"' Or1nge, C1llf, 1Dt W, Cllll- Vlclor C"'l9r Fount1in V1H1y, Calif. Santi Ana, C1llf, lnJt ~---~ ..... e Sl .... NI Fount.in V1lt.v, C1Qf, M1 f1H ..... tf e«~.. _,, 1Mr1111 S.tllll c..,,.,. ""-MWDU .. ...,.. tnnu vm ... c111i.r "'"" Ct!llW ....... tU.JlllT ........ S0101 v.1..,. CfllfW _,.. """'-S:U.JNI -- ·s ., ~ 1, ... , •• ;'w~ ;be\ isu• -t~ <not ~tay 1110 .wi1 .. ~· 'I ;~etl ·vol ~ Wi( 'I'I> of r ei: I poi , bat •<I.el ref wi1 1 .. sar pe• me 1 pie ""' sh< 100 m• $50 est thi OW chi hai J at Ad m< ofl pri , cul · fer 1 Ser pn SW I La Bu CO! -wi1 ym Yo is /re ,or on ms ol bu: , r -: -----~--... -----------------~-----------------~-----------~----·-------00-0-,__o--,...._._ --• r -·-• • ' • • -.~ ... - Shopper Beware ' Beset Buyer ~ <'.an 1Flip \ Wig ' B7 SYLVIA PORTER ''I ·recently sent away for a :'w' advertised In the Sunday ,'t&ewspaper. 'Ilteri! was a !BUarantee that if customers BMre not satisfied, the price of t1he wit woold be refunded. '" ·~when r got· the wig it did ~bot fit but now the company Says tt cannot l't!fund my oney because l tri ed on the wig and that is against the ~ ealUt regulation! ••• " • This is an excerpt from a ;~etter typical of a swelling ,volume of complaints from 1t·wig buyers the nation over. , 1'he complaints from victims ''of wig sellers of questionable reputation center on these I. points: failure to honor money 1 back guarantees; months-long • -delays in wig deliveries and refunds; utterly phony "free" wig offers; fake claims that low-priced wigs are just the same as the fa r more ex- pensive ones sold in depart- ment stores. Today wigs are just another piece of clothing, in the ~tegory of a coat or a pair of shoes. Just since the early 1960s, the wig business has mushroomed to a volume of $500 million a year. Tl's now estimated that nearly two- thirds of American women own at least one wig, wiglet, chignon, fall or other hairpiece. A part of the boom has been a thriving mail order business. Ads promise "any style" wig matched to your hair color, often at unbelievably row prices. In fact, a major U.S. ~ coffoo company has been of- fering wigs as premiums for · sending in X number of ils product labels plus a small sum of cash. But, warns Dr. Irvin g Ladimar, the National Better Business bureau 's expert on cosmetic products, "buying a -wig by mail is like sending your head away for a haircut. You can't tell whether the wig is thick or thin, whether the :'real' hair advertised is human- .or animal hair. Colors can only be matched approxi- mate1y, even if a sample of hair is sent. It's stricUy buy-at-yoor--own , risk." A mail order wig peddler \Yas recently sentenced to jail f - In Philadelphia after bilking tens of thousands ol women out of an estimated minlmwn of '300,000. This gypster ln- fonned women the nation o-nr, by postcard, that they had won expemive "fret" v.·lgs in a coolest. All lhey had to do was pay for a couple oI hair styllngs. But, as it turned out, the "real" hair was synthetic and the wigs were valued at $1 or less. A gaggle of disgruoUed witnesses testified in court that the wigs they received looked like "dead string," and were "not even suitable for use at Halloween." To help you avoid a bad deal ln buying a wig, here are five basic guides 1've pr 11 e d together from various sources associated with the w i g business: (1) Wigs and other bairpieces are now being inade from synthetic materia1, human hair, animal hair and combinations of these. They may be handmade, machine. made, or made partly by each method. (2) Synthetic wigs are the most popular type today and the least expensWe -rosting anywhere from $4 to $1004150. They tend to look more artificial than humar: hair wigs, but there is a wide range of quality and new types of synthetics are being produced to look remarkably "real." (3) Human hair for wig· making may be imported eilber from Europe or from the Orient (usually from Red China, via Hong Kong). Wigs made from Oriental hair are usually less e•nsive than those from European hair - ranging in price from about $30 to $175. However, Oriental hair is coarser and, since most af it is dark co lor ed , it usually must be bleached and re-dyed to match your hair colar. (4) European hair wi gs are widely coosidered the best- and they are also the mast ex· pensive. A European machine- made wig generally C06ls at least $130. Handmade wigs of European hair run from $150 to $800, with most in the $200 to $400 range. accentuette SUN WORSHIPPER Ilot. vivid, fiery. A burning ma.ss of 1un colors in an Enka·Lurc Nylon print that11 practlcolly too hot to 11a1uilt:. sr.11+-Cup Ir•, JJ.J6, t.c, S16 Modifitd Sl.nl-Cwp. J2-l6, 1.c. Sl6 l i•tni, S.M.L, $9: Hip-Hu991r. s.M.L, SIO Wei1tll11e Brief, S-M·l. SI I Co~•t·up; On1 Si11 Fih All, $JO Veta's lllTlllATE APPAl£L Phone: 642-1197 DAIL V PILOT ~' ANN \IVER-SARY SALE1 LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR IN EVERY DEPARTMENT AT ALL 17 STORES poison rings with hidden compartments pure silk scarves, squares and oblongs These poison rings contain the ir own secret compartments. Pick your favorite . from this crop of snakes heads, cameos, florals and quaint old-fashioned scenes.' You'll find a marvelous variety of beauti· fu l prints in this ·collection of pu re silk scarvos. Choose either twenty-seven inch sq uares or long · rectangular •hapes. \ \ value 3.00 each · 1.69 values S.00 to 7.SO 3.99 3 for 4.50 may co fashion jewelry 22 may co fashion accessories l 9 Youthcraft/Charmfit bra and girdle Smooth nylon tr icot contou r bra to give you perfect fit and uplift. And the 'No Garter' panty girdle, to hold up stretch stockings and panty hose without garters, with a • band · and mesh inset. Both in white, beige;-5.00 bra, 32·36 a,b,c. 9.00 panty girdle, in s,m,I. 5.00 & 9.00 val. may co foundat ions 44 ; /.~ \..' • i . . summer straw bags . many favorite styles • • Choose a preuy straw handbag from this large collection. Many pouches, totes; and satchels in solt crochet or wicker straw. Wicker styles. crochet, re&. 7.00 -3 . 9 9 may co handbags 26 easy care Dacron @ and cotton gown Lightweight, just the thing fo r summer sleepi ng. Of Dacron® polyester and cotton, completely 'washable. Perfect for tra vel too. Square neckline . with embroidery trim. In s0ftest pastel colors of yellow, pink, and blue, in sizes small, medium and large. reg. 6.00 3.99 may co handbags 26 r---.. _ ' may co soutli coast pkaa, san ihcJo frHway at brfstol, costa mtsa; 546-9321' lllop monclay through saturday, .10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. MAVCO • ""' ................................................................................................................................................................ ~~~.,....~--~~·~~----- .or. -~ .. , ~- .. DAll.V 111.0T .,_, """' 19, 196'1 UCI Graduates to Wed Wedding VOWS will be ex· changed Aua. 23 in Sac.red Heart Churdl, Saticoy, by Wendf Karl Sdunill ol 8'boa Island and John 11:'.f°"' DrUcoU Jr1 ol Co6ta M!"'. Their berrothal bas been an- llOUllC<d by Mr. and Mn. Ed· mund Joseph Schmitt of Ven- turi, par<nla ol the future bride. BHS, sbt: wu u AFS .studeat in Brazil and wu booortd queen of Betbel 11?, JOb'• Daugbten. Her fianct, soa ol Mr. and Mn.. John Lawrence DrilcoU of Cost.a Mesa, is a graduate of Mater Dei H1&h School, Orange Coast College and UCI. He earned bla BA dell"" ln history.and currently teaches social studies at Costa Mesa High School where he also ls junior Yarsity basket· baU coach. WENDY SCHMITT Summer Date Miss Schmitt, a graduate of Buena High School, Ventura. was a charter student at UCI and graduated with a BA degree in mathematics. She currently is doing graduate work at UCI and ·will teach in the fall · at Foothill High School. While a student at The benedict..elect also has done graduate "·ork at UCI. While attending 0CX: he was assistant basketball coach and al UCI he was a member of the baskelb.U team. Everything You Need FOi THE Wedding Cake U.IGE ASSOITMENT OF OINAMINTS e P•nt • Sep•r•ton •Bells • Doves • Oecor•fin9 Tubes e Decoreting Books Wedding Invitations, Napkins, Cf..ampegne Goblets •nd Bride'5 Books 2J/ie :J.ro~ling .Jlowe Kiwi Beckons Stewardesses A summer luncheon is being planned at noon this Saturday in Berkshires rtstawant by members o( the Newport Beach Chapter of the Khri Club. AU former American Airline stewardes.ses are eliglble to join the group. and those 11•i.shing further infonnalioo may call Mn. Fred Betts, membership cba.innan, 642· 4817. lJM Hewpwt at..t. T1hpt1•: J41..57f4 C.... M-. Celif. Luncheon reservations are being taken by Mn. Mel Onneml, 962-Q!H. I IT'S GOOD TO KNOW ••• <\..,...-.. DAVIS is where you con always find the latest and most outstanding collections of the FINEST HO.ME FURNISHINGS in America, brought ta you al the ~ earliest possible moment and which includes every ! conceivable a nd wonted style including 18th Cen- tury Trad itional mahogany -10 hard to find these ~d_:_Y~.; · DAVIS offers the services of some of tho finest and most knowledgeable INTERIOR DESIGNERS avail • able, who are always ready, willing and oble to help you with every detail al your nttds. ,._ "44 • ' . .... DAVIS it a FURNITURE STORE tliot ~01 bffn in . bu.•ineu for over 53 y11Crs under the same owner•f ship and hos 90med a most enviable nputcztion fgrfAIRond IMPART~'DlALING.•. • AVIS is where yolJ the CUSTOMER ar9 truly pprecioted whether you ore in the market for a ; sofa pillow or a houseful! or whether you are a ; buyer or a browser. DAVIS' ANNUAL JUNE SALE, now in progress, i1 tr•ly a Sale where you can depend on Genuine and G•nerous markdown•, some as much 01 .50% off regular prices. 1975 LONG BEACH BLVD. LONG BEACH PHONE591-1347 STORE HOURS, MONDAY ANO FRIDAY9,JOA.M. to9P.M. ""-OTHERDAYS-9,JO.S ,JO .a u _ I Mission Viejo Leaders-·: in Jlewtl ~ olll'""ol the ~ -V i ejo Chopl<r, lormerl)I the Aliso Vllllq ai.lpl<r, ol Sweet Adolloot wlU be inslalled dur- ing a dinner 'Saturday, June .. . 11te new leaden will be the limes. Keilb L. Olien, pttsl· dent; Kent D. Shattuck, vice president; James Gardon and Jerry Stevens, secretaries, and Bruce: Wallace, treasurer. Otbers l ea ding the ba-.oop barmooy group wlU be lbe Mmes. 1rving Gaebtl, council member ; Now . , "! Harmony William G. Bames, Junior councti member; Leta llelaon, blaUirian, and William J. -~ pubUcrty. Tl>< prospectlve cbapler bas submitted 111 1ppllcatlon for dtarter and anUclpates the formal presentation of the charter in J anuarr to a~ company a 1peclal show. The group has an active calendar and hal several sing· outs scheduled during the summer. Area women are in· viled to join tbe group which meets Monda)'& at 7:30 p.m. in Mission Viejo !Ugh School. TOP HONORS -The three first-place winners of Riviera Club's recent hat decorating colhpetition proudly model their creatioos. They are (left to right) the Mmes. Ritchie Wilson of Laguna Beach, most original, for the "Jolly Green Giantess"; Remi Chabot of San Clemente, most beautiful, for "Carmen Miranda's Flower Power," and Rock Duitman of Newport Beach most humor- ous, for 11Hair.'' ' , Open Art Class Launched Bylagunan Teem interested in wielding palette and brushes this sum · mer may enroll in Friday mom.ing oil painting classes at Costa Mesa Art L e a g u e galleries beginning tomorrJw at t 1.m. Instrudor will be Mrs. Donald Biel. an utul>itor at the Laguna Beach Festival of Arts. Clas.sea will take. place for students from ages 12 lo 19, with lessons ICbeduled from 9 a.m. to ll:)o, at. $3.50 per lesson. Those interested may call Mrs. Biel, 546-8UMi, or Mrs. ·Richard Ingram, workshop chairman, at ~1667 and 543. i<M9. Growth Problems Discussed Recent AdvarK:es in Growth Hormone Delidencles will be discussed when H u m a n Growth, Inc., meets Sund~, June 22, between! and 4 p.m .• in the Children's Division, Los Angeles County-USC Medi cal Center, Los Ange.Jes. President d the LA chapter, J ohn Geron. wiJI outline the . organization'• activities and inlroduce the speaker, Dr. S. Douglas Frasier, assistant professor of pediatrics and physiology, USC School of P.1edicine. A question and answer period wW follow the talk, and refreshments y,•ill be served. Additional information may be obtained by contacting Mrs. R. D. Bertoch, 847.Ql31. See Sirens TOPS Se.a Sirens meet in Killybrooke School, C o s t a Mesa, every Wednesday at 7 p.m. Gardens Empty For Hat's Sake tr there are a lot of empty another Lagunan, won with a gardens along the Orange bowl of vegetables, which she! Coast area, it may be Riviera modeled wearinl!; a chef's Club members are the flower apron. poachers. -?.lost Original ; f\1 r 1 . The c 1 u b w 0 m e n put Ritchie Wilson of Laguna Beach won first place as a I everything that grows, (rom "Jolly Green Giantess ." The nowers to celery, on their second-place award went to heads for their recent annual Mrs. Harrison Chapin of hat decorating compeUtion io Laguna Beach for her design Balboa Bay Club. which she titled, "Old Girl A· Of course, with so many ~·" ~-Clyde Phelps, weanng a piece of driftwood hats to top, this didn't le.ave wrapped in vines, won third much in their gardens. And as . place for "Hollywood and EVENINGS and SUNDAYS RI SALONS 70 Fashion Island, Newport Center, 6+1-215 f 95 Town & Country, Orange, 541-6641 v· " one candid member admitted,,_.=""'~·=======~==:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=; it may have been necessary tolr go elsewhere fo r greenery. She named her hat, ''Stole nr Flowers.·• J With so many eyecatching I' hats to choose from, judges John Wekl, Arthur Briggs and Miss Diana Nies had a tough time selecting three winnen in each of the most beautiful, original and a m u s i n g categories. However. after mu c b deliberation and examination, they came up with these answers: -Most Beautiful: first prize to Mrs. Rem! Chabot of San Clemente for her "Cannen 11firanda'.s Flower Power," creation. Mn. Frederic.k F. Garcelon of Three Arch Bay won second place for her floral hat, and Mrs. Charles Morrison of Corona del Mar, v.·ho celebrated her Golde11 Wedding Anniversary the day of the contest. won third place y,'ith her hat of that title. -Most Humorou.s: First place went to Mrs. Rock Duil· man of Newport Beach who y,·as peeping out from vines of ivy during the entire luncheon. She called her creation "Hair, Or for Love of Ivy, or I Can't Do a Thing With My Hair Tt>- day." Mrs. J. Charles Rennie of Laguna Beach won second place with "Four Roses." and ~irs. Joseph A. Nemecek, HAUOI CENTEI 2300 Harbor llhd. eost.w .... MESA CENTll 221 E. 17tto St. Cosht ...... NOW GIANT CLEARANCE SALE STARTS THURS. 9 A.M. OVER 40,000 YARDS OF FINE DRESS FABRICS AND TRIMS f 00% Polyester Double Knlls 6.'5 fi,. 9 .. 111y 4 9 8 60" wide Never Iron. • HOUDAY BROCADES .... J.98 99¢ GAWEY -SUITINGS .... 1.7' 1.29. DACRON DOUBlf KNITS •s"-109. J.H Never Iron. VOILE PRINTS 45'' wide .... 1.49 1.99, 77¢ CllPP£R DUCK PRINTS KARAFUX CREPf 56" wide .... 5.95 2.98 HULlABAlOO SUITINGS <45" Solids .... 1.98 ACRYLIC PRINTS <45" w.,h 'n Wear .... 2.49 SAlHNS 1.39 1.98 <45'1 wide. Mini~Care 1 29 .... 1.98 . ' DAN RIVER SHORTS · Yoluts to 1.29 SERRANO PRINTS 59¢ $ 90 Unbeleivable prices on all the "IN" fashions .... Every silhouette and heel sh ape-sh oe s galore In white, pastels and favorite baslcs ••• Your size Is .----....here at savings of up to 10.00 a pair-so hurry, hurry 45 " wide .... 1.29 88¢ KRINKlE COTION PRINTS 98¢ Ee1y C•re .... 1.98 NnON CHIFFON 1.29 77¢ 1.69 1.79 .-. .. 15.!D , for the cream of the crop! . COSTA MISA ,,, SMftl C•st J't11:e l rlt!OI tT 1-t!! ~ ~. SANTA ANA .,, lulleck•1 ,athlon Stiu.re ANAHEIM .,. lrMlllwey Ceftter • , No-Iron .... 1.49 STOWE PRINTS 45" wlcle .... 1.n 89¢ <45' wide .... 1.4t BDNDID LACES 45" wide .... 2.'8 54" HOMESPUN PRllTS RAYON SUIDNGS 1.49 45" wide W ill not wrinkle R ... J.4t SEE · THESE AND MANY MORE TREMENDOUS BARGAINS DURING THIS GREAT SALE • -. -----~-·----··-----·----------. --· ·-- -·--~ ...... ___________________________ _ Horoscope Vi 'rgo: Enioy Yourself Tltursday, June 19, 1969 ·--DAILY PILOT JI CM Auxiliary Mes~ League The first Thursday · of the La. ~~· •&Utt D1fftB the month members o( t h e. secortl •II 7~.m. American Legion Auxiliary, Mrs, H. ·w. oore, 359, Costa Mesa Unit 455. gather in will answer q u e 1 J o n t the American Legion Hall, at 8 regardinj: 1 o c a t l'o n and p.m. membership. . • FRIDAY AQUA~ (Jan. 20-Feb. PISCES (Feb. 19 • Marth•1F~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;_ 11): Be persist.en(, Dig for · 20): Spoltight on how you ap.. • "DISTINCTIVE JUNE 20 facts. Refuse lo accept pear in public. Realize many ~ I / IJ J f JBY SYDNE" OMAllR superficial answers. Permit observeandlooktoyou!or ex-"(}Q....H-air l/Ve6f HAIR STY~ING ARtES (M•.l..• 21·Aprill9): mate, portner to take mooey ample. Be considerate of those MANICURES e PEDICURES' . $ ... ,... inlUaUve. Today, be a shrewd who confide problems. Let Accent on ::""Ctlcal issues. observtr. Then there Is others know you do un. 3305 Newport llvcl., Newoort IMC .. 4n ... 1u Highllgh11t moderate apProacb, .,;":'::\lm:::•te:,:g~am:·:::· ______ .:"':":::tand:::·:..._ ______ :!::==· ===='='="='="='='=""'= '',:"''1"=· =""='="=====' ::;-;:::~ ·""" ....... i ' ~ , I ! • especia y in eating, drinkiag.1• Don't make mistake of ac- cepting surface values. So- meone may be trying to deceive you. . TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Favorable tun¥' •sptq today coincides w:ith jwrney, com· munication ftom ·afar; special CQrrespondence.Yoq arc able to perceive future i.TenJs. Follow ·through. GEMINI (M8y 21-June 20): Stress on how to accomplish necessary tasks. Yoo wan~ change, but there art: obliga- tions, Key is to finish what has been started. Then you will have a more accurate view. A wide variety ot usable items will be offered at the Newport Harbor Busi- ness and Professional Women's Club rummage sale to take place next Satur- day and Sunday in the patio of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Broback's Newport Beach home. Proceeds will go for a scholarship to a busines student and Career Un- limited seminar for graduating students. Hauling in the kitchen sink are (left to right) Mrs. Vergil Oakden and Mrs. Ben Londeree, while Mrs. Jack Broback brings out a jaunty hobby horse. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Dealings with relatives highlighted. Take c o u r s e which leads to added in- dependence. State p o ~ I t i o n clearly, Be frank. You get c~ance to prove basic point of view. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Ac- cent on money, possessions. You can obtain legitimate bargain. But be SW't you 1now what you need. Strive for From Page 17 . . . Wimbledon Beckons practical approach. Then you gain feeling of fulfillment • VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. U), Take initiative. Be versatile. Have alternative methods at hand. You shine at social af. the matches. lt1rs. Laver said of \Vimbtedon. Her husband is seeded number one and is ex· pected to ·win, however, the pressure is great. ''He won the Australian and French Open already. These along with Wimbledon and Forest Hills comprise the Grand Slam of tennis which he won in 1962." Mrs. Laver, who has seen her husband play at the famed loumament three lin1es in- cluding las t year when he won the first Wimbledon open championship, said this match was probably her favorite though other tournaments are equally exciting and more lucrative. ''It has so much charm and grace. The men v.•ear tuxedos and the women wear formal gowns. After the fina l match, they roll out the red . carpet and the Queen comes Sweet Notes Signal Fall Linda Isle women interested in classical music may keep the date of Sept. 8 in mind during the summer months. Then will be the kickoff meeting (or the newly formed Linda Isle Committee of Newport Beach ror the Orange County Philharmonic Society. Mrs. Raymond Godber was chosen chairman of the group at an initi al galhering in lhe home of Mrs. Leon S. Lyon. Serving with her will be Mrs . Lyon, secretary; Mrs. Roy La Hue , treasurer ; and Mrs. Paul Salata , ways and means. out. ed on international courts fair: Tum on charm. Be According to Mary, the since 1954. During the eight definite, positive. Many are early round matches are the years before he turned pro-fascinated. Enjoy yoursftlf. most difficult for her husband fessional, he ranked among LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): to win. the top 10 in world amateur tennis, three times as number Stress on ability to be quiet .. He plays more tentatively within. If you are, valuable in the beginning," she ex· one. answers will be forthcoming. plained. "If he keys himself The Australian was t h e Remain in b a c k g r o u n d . up in the early rounds. it's mainstay of his country·s Realize being alone is not the hard to draw on the extra Davis Cup domination and same as being lonely. Zero is keenness to win at the end. He competed in nine challenge on true goals. has to pace himself.'' rounds between 1959 and 1967. SCORPIO (Oct. 2l·Nov. Zl): Rod 'had his greatest year In Davis Cup pl ay he lost You get much of what you in 1966. winning three out ot only once in 12 sing 1 es need if communicative. Means eigh~ U.S. Tournaments, the matches. speak your mind. Friends will Milan professionals, the Jo-Emerson won Wimbledon in come to your aid. Evening hannesburg professionals, the 1964 and 1965. If he had won favors social activity. Accept Cape Town Professionals, and in 1966 he would have broken invitation. the London Professlonal In- a record by winning it three SAGITIARWS (Nov. 22- door Champi onships. times in a row. Instead, his Dec. 21): Excellent for gelting ~le made his first overseas wife recalled, he crashed in-together with those who share tour in t95tl, at the age of to an umpire's stand and in· y 0 u r i n t ere sts-applies 17, winning the American, jured his shoulder. specifically to one :n charge. Canadian and Australian Jun-Emerson also won the U.S. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. ior championships. The next singles twice Jn 1961 and 1964, 19): Spotlight on long-distance year, as a member o( the the French Championship in calls, correspondence. Wise to Aussie-Davis Cup Team, he 1961 and ~967, and was the take Jong-range view. Discard reached the Wimbledon finals AustraUan Singles Champion narrow concepts. Broaden before losing to Al ex Olmedo. six: limes between 1961 and horizons. Obtain hint from The following year La ver also 1967. Scorpio message. reached the finals at Wimble--,:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;======;;;=;;;;:,-- don, but kist to Neale Fraser. He established himself as lhe world 's number one pre; fessiona l player in only three years and retained his posi· tion as world champion in 1963 when he won $70,359 by winning 77 out of 97 matches and 10 tournaments. Emerson, who turned pro- fessional last year, has play- Grandmothers At noon every second Thurs- day the Newport Harbor Grandmothers' Club meets in the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club. Mrs. Dorothy Van Marter at 962-0237 may be called for more information. SHOE SALE QualiCraft dress styles ' ·were 8.99 to 10.99 5.98 5.99to7.99 Casuals 3.98 Drw shoes in many heel heights, apen look1 ond pumpt. Cawol1 with o fun·feeling. All from ovr regular stock. • ,,,,,, ....... Nie, .... J.91' I• 1$.91' PAIHIOM llLAND #IEWPOllT 8E'ACfi SOUTH COAST PU.IA eo~rA MESA You'll love our Patri.ce wig with its contour .. haping It's easy to brush theoillcy Dyne!~ modacrylic into tlatterin1r 1tyles because it's expertly razor-cut. With a contoured ne!:kline, It •tretcbea to fit your head. And. the curl will not wash out, never needs resettinr. All natural eolors. Wi1r in carryinr caae. 2t.OO. 'Mjllin~,.all atorelucept JriarW .! I , - . i • . I \ 1. ' i I • 1 • I • • ' , cardigan suit. Three parts ~'ith endless fashion possibilities. Red or navy' double knit; 10 to 18, 55.00. From a col1ection o! imported knits from Honr Kong. Suncharm Sport.wear all ei1rht atorea • . \ \' • • • \ ' , ~ • • • • • • ~ • • llewport Center , tl fashi1111sllntf ·• 644-2200"• Mon., Thurs., Fii.·1o:oo·UJl 9:30'01her·days ·to:oirli1t5:3(t t -... -· -...... -----·--··--·-·· -··-···-. -·--·--·-·------------·---'--------------'--"'-""-'-'--....... ......;=--=- Q -IWLY PltOT Thul>dU, Junt 19, 196• • ... • Nancy ,Reagon in Town Lunch Date Nears \Vbat1 ·I\ e t,.t e r way Lo meet the state's First Lady than over lunch. The YMCA committee is happy to an- nounce that the original reservation cut-off date for the Luncheon With Nancy Reagan has been extended. The festive gathering will take place next !>.'londay in the Balboa Bay Club. Tickets may be purchased through next Saturday by call- ing the YMC:\ office at 642-9990. Japanese Stores Use , English for 'Class' ' TOKYO -Japanese depart- ment stores are using F'rench : and English words in an effort . to give more class to their · merchandise. , Middle-a~ed Japanese Lend ; to protest the trend. because · '. they were not allowed lo study : foreign languages d u r i n g World War IL "! protest the present use of foreign languages," said Mrs. Haruko Tsuruno. vice presi- dent of the H ousewive s Association of Japan. A pregnant farmwife told a Tokyo newspaper she cam~ to Tokyo to shop but could find no maternity dresses. \The department store she visited had a sign saying "maternity dresses." in English, a language the f:irm \\'Oman could not read.) Deparbnent stores have in· vented these foreign-language names: Salon De Chic -shop selling expensive women's clolhes. Jeunesse Shop - shop for girls' clothing. Executive Corner -shop selling men·s expensive clothes. Queen Size -large siies for women. Classic Panls -a loin cloth wom by Japanese men. Home Box -\\"aste paper basket. Baby Car -baby carriage. The Salon by the Seo FOR A HAIRDO that w•rms to t he su n, +•kes to the see, dries in e breete, end ke·eps the laughter in sum· mer, come to • 750 SOUTH COAST HWY., LAGUNA BEACH Tele phone: 494-5021 ,. President's Cousin Reminisces . • / ' Author T r~ces ·~·cia ke,r Fam_ily By JOY STULEY and mov~ chapter l n IMUttain peD .s writes ln bed, University of ca Ii for n J a, NEW YORK (AP) American history -~ere we oltem ft'Oh't~t to 10 in the mom· Berkeley, have a big, rambl· Jessamyn west's neiv book have search and . hiding and ing unW 2 p.m. ln sunny tng house in Napa, complete about the Quaker forefatbers fear. black and whites.work~ weather she writeJ outside with two streams. a view of she shares with her second togethei and white (lyrng too. recllnfug on a 'cot. 1'1 write the hllls, Tennessee walking cousin, Presiden_t Nixon, is Not only does she love lying down, maybe because horses a swimming pool, lots just off the press' yet being a wri~, but she loves actually I'm luy,'' she offered in ex-of dog; and two cats. writer was a chlldhood dream P!Jtling do~ words. "As some planation. "but P ~ ~ s i b_l Y But her favorite pursuits are she never expected to come ~~~ like to .~roch~t or because I S:lafted,,wr1ting lying reading and writing. ''If I had true. ,rut,,1 she snid, 1.10,.e the flat on my back. to give up one," she said "I wanted to write all my ~~f;;' cal ac~. of fornung words She and her husband, v•ho thoughtfully, "I'd give up Hfe." declared the author of a pen. has a doctors degree in educa-reading, but then I might bl "Except for Mt and Thee," Siie uses an old-fashioned lion and is a professor at the so rtesolate I cooldn't write." Linda New JOB 'S DAUGHTER Linda Weatherwax Weatherwax Honored Queen settling back comfortably in a big chair in her New York hote1 room and kicking ofr one shoe. ··eut writers lo me were people 'like Dickens. I didn't know that a writer was just a person wbo writes." she ex- plained. "I thought a writer wou1d be someone wearing a big sign saying 'I am a writer.' " Now Miss West is entitled to wear that sign herself. Since her first book, "The Friendly Persuasion'' in 1945, she has produ~d a dozen others. Her new volume is a com- panion piece to ··The Friendly Persuasion," recounling the earlier life of Jess and Eliza Birdwell and focusing on their activities with t h e un- derground railroad of Civil Wa r days. The characters are modeled arter Joshua and Elizabeth Milhous, great-grandparents of both Nixon and Miss West, whose maternal grandfathers ¥.'ere brothers. Born in Indiana, the author moved at the age o( 6 to Yorba Linda, then a Quaker community that had attracted many branches of the Milhous family. ··But we lived right across Using as her theme You·u Appointive oHicers are an irrigation canal from the Never \Valk Alone, Miss Linda Glynna Beeler. ch a p I a in ; Nixons and I fell closer to Weatherwax was installed Myra Mu e 11 er , treasurer; them than to my first cousins. Richard's mother gave me my honored queen of Bethel 15i, Jackie Hum b I e, recorder; first birthday party when J International Order of Job's Nancy Schoenmehl, librarian; was 7 years old." STEREO SENSATION! The colorful soun~ of Orange County Music RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM ... From Fashion Island, Newport Beach Daughters. Debbie Gracey musician; She went to Wh it t ier She and her new coort, all Kathy Knill. tvonn'a Schmidt,· College, which Nixon also at·/--------------------------------- carrying croosses with roses Marti Houston, Kathy Budd tended, and after groduation married H. M. McPherson, a and rosebuds, are the 1'1isses and J an et \Vi Ider, classmate whom she calls Debra Washko, senior messengers; Judy Barnett and ''Max." She did graduate work princess; Terri Seiling, junior Kim Shoemaker, custodians; at the University of California, princess; Kath y 1'1cMillan, Judy Paley and Kathy Kelder, seeking a PhD in English. guide. and Cindy Tu l , 'fhe date was set for her ouards. marshal. " doctor's orals when she was Ozzie Hulstroni. past master Special guests included the told she had an advanced case of Seafaring Lodge, served as 11ew honored queen ' s of tuberculosis and she went to master of ctremonies and in· grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. a sanitorium where she didn 't stalling officers included Von-Alex Speirs from Victoria, put a foot out of bed for two na Kinzer, Kathy Crosier, Brilish Columbia. Also at· years. J ulie Stone, Judy Shock, tending ¥.'ere her aunt and ''Sometimes I think I got TB Barbara Luden. Vicki Bani· uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Jack so I wouldn't have to have a field, Patti June and l/..shc Speirs and their son John froin life of scholarship a n d lfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiSihoiriLiii~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiii.iSiyiraiciusiei, iNiYi.iiiiiiiiiiiii teaching," she laughed. ''For 10 years I spent most o( my 1 ime lying on a couch almost Calon"c'-s new afraid to move. When I began Ud~f~~ Window Treatments for your home! lo get well I started writing stories, but 1 didn't send lhem self -cleaning oven °"\1y husband was so in- k sistent that 1 try to place ma es gr.ease d gn• lhem," she continued, "that I an me finally said 'I will write t2 stories and send each story to :l1"sappear' 12 magazines and when U 0 they're all tucnc" down will you say no more?" "\Vell, a story was taken @~@ S If Cl 0 and I slept with the letter A e ' ean Vefl,,, uoder my pillow," she smiled, Ll her expressive fa«: framed by and Bro1· 1er ! short gray-brown hair aglow 111ith the recollection. When she finished ''The Costs less than 3 Friendly Persuasion·• s h e c a cleaning·' lhooght she was finished with the Quakers. e o ... ,. •"cl b•oil,, ••• 1potl1nl1 d •e11 i11 two houri e R1~u:•e1 only lwo 1imol • ''•P• In OJ>ft1te • Fuu. "''" t11d •fiotl tro t llmi11eted e Plu1 t ll !ht olht t 9te1t Ctlo,;c fe 11urt• ... Ulht·R1~@ i11frt.t1cl broit or., • Th1 rrno·S1t ~ bur11t •·wot\,.,.b,1 111 •• , tulorn1hc m11t probe ... rotiue•ie . , , c110~ 111d ~••p·wtr "l 0 .. 111 , , • t 11d me11y ,,.or1! Modernize your kitchen now! No Down Payment -as low 11s ··eut then I started reading about the u n J erg round 1 railroad. It's such a.n exciting Members Welcomed I CALORIC SELF-CLEANING GAS OVENS ••• Mrs_ 1'1illard A. Plalc y,·iU I open her fluntington Beach home for the ne.it meeting of J the Gina Uhrlaub Chapter. Cl·j 1 ly o[ Hope. at 7:30 p.m. Mon-I day, Junf' 23 . I Guests "'ill include Gl"rald Reuben. coordinator for City of Hope. and i\lrs. Irene: PRICES ST ART AS LOW AS • • • • • • 411 E. 17th St. DAILY 9 • 9, SAT. 9 • 6 NO SCOURING NO SCRUBBING Sine:• 1947 Costa Mesa Telephone 646 • 1684 Chevez. y,•ho wiil offer tips onl makeup. I New membership in lhc group is welcomed . according ! to ~frs. Ed Uhrlaub, founding 1 president. Mrs. Corwin Tokes Reins !\!rs. Jess COf"'in of Seal Beach \\'as inslalled as presi- dent of Rocking Horse Guild. Children's Hospital of Orange County. during a dinner dance in the O!d Ranch Country Club. She .succeeds l\lrs. Carl Sorenson of Hunt ington Harbour. Also installed by l\1rs. Pete llettinga. installing officer si n· <.'e the guild's in«:ption in 1963, \\·ere the f\1mes. Tom Reed. Richard \\'estervelt .a n d Roberl L. Downing, vice prtSidcnls: Robert HarvC'y. treasurer: F. W. Bauer . rt>rording S«rctary. and Ray. mond Ritchie, corresponding ". ·, i. ' I I 11 I I ' :1 -custom made draperies our specialty.,, Ye.tr1 o( 1•pt r;111c1 h1v1 wo11 us •ccl1im fo• good l•1le 111d ser•ice, We 1p1ci1li11 i11 ,f,g.,nt win· dow l•talrntnh Ot11I 11dd to th~ over •II be•utv •!>d p11 .. cnelity cf your hcm11, lhou1•ndi cf f•b- ,;,, on hend for you lo 1.1.,,1 f•cm -ell f•om Am11.0ce'i for11mcll mill1. lowe•I mill ptice1 •lw11vt fe•!ured, 5.,, n • "'e 1 t colo,. end te~lu••• htnd. 1om11ly di 1 p I• v e d •I UdoH'1-in South Co111I Ple11i Ce"1pl•+• c111tom tt r .. :c11 ;~cludi n9 tod1 11nd in•+el. ltlion •I tli9ktlv 11ddi- 1:oeel co1t. Fot "1hcp ,.1 h em~" '''"'t• p hon 11 5'11·61t2. • lor>~ilt mi:rlcord e Ma1t91 Cfrart • 1'1011 e l11qu lr• abovt a11r t O-do1 'INTE RIST·~R.ll' plaRI South Coost Pla zo, Cosio Meso lri1 tol ot the Sol'! Die-go fretwoy PHONE' 546-6812 l<Cr<laT)', ---------------------------- . ' -------------------------------- . ' ' Ryun Wins Big Camble I At NCAA KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Kw... mUer Jim Ryun, winner in what hll coecb cal!ed a four·hour same of RuNlan roulette, was set tor a try at history as the 48th National Collegiate Track and Field Championsh.ipt opened here today . "l held my breath for four hourt," 11id Coach Bob T:lmmoDS, referring to the acratch mteUng held Wedntaday to finaliu entries in all events. Ryun, tbe world's best in the mile run. also wanted to compete in the three-mile event. And his team needed that effort to boost its ch~s of taking the NCAA team title. That was the rub. If u many as 30 of the to-odd initial entries decided to ac- tually run in the three-milt event, of· fieials said there woU:d have to be a qualifying run -and It was IJCbeduled only 15 minutes before the mile preliminaries. "It was like Russian roulette," Tim· mons said. "It would have killed J hn't cha~ in the mile and prOOably wi ped out our team chances. Our kids would never have forgiven me. "lt was all or nothing in that meeting.'' The coach waited until the la.st few minutes to declare Ryun for the ttu-ee- mlle event, and the gamble worked. Only 23 others stayed in. Should Ryun win both events. he will be the first ever to do it. It will take an almo6t super-humam effort, since the three mile finals an scheduled Saturday only one hour after the mile finals. The only finals today were in the six· mile run, in which Oscar Moore of Southern llllooi.s was favored. Besides the mile, trials were set in seven running, and six jumping and heaving events. Among tbe significant scratches In Wednesday's meeting was the Villanova mile relay team of Hardage Davis, Andy O'Reilly, Lamotte Hyman and Larry James. Coach Jumbo Elliott said he had just about given up on the team tille beeauu of injuries. "I'll sound like a hospital intern," Elliott said, "but we've got problems. Hyman has a pull which is bothering him ao we let O'Reilly go in the half and gave up on the mile relay. "Marty Liquori a top mile contender has a ligament in his heel which has been giving him trouble for a month. We've about conceded the team title to somebody else." Besides Kansas, top contenders for the t e am title include defending champion Southern California, UCLA, Washington State and ho.st Tennessee. Sports In Brief ' OAILY PILOT ll'llOll br Rk~lrG l(fftllfr YARDLEY WINNER-UCLA basketball star John Vallely (left) accepts the congratulations of Detroit Piston coach Bill van Bred a Kolff after winning the Yardley Trophy Wednesday night at the New- porter Inn. The lrophy goes to the Ne\\•porl·Costa Mesa. athlete of the year and is named in honor of basketball great George 'lardley. 100 Attend F ete Yardley Trophy to Vallely John Vallely, whose basketball pro. gress hasn't slackened since he first shol a ball through his Balboa Island alley hoop, was the 13th recipient of the coveted George Yardley Trophy Wed- nesday night at the Newporter Inn. The award is the most cherished honor bestowed oo Newport-Costa Mesa are.a athletes. The sponaoring Newport Beach Junior Chamber of Commerce presents lt annually to the athlete it considers the area's best for that year. Vallely came up the winner \Vcdnesda y over four oUier semilinalisls -ba sket· baller Bruce Chapman . UCI swimmer ~1ike Martin , UCLA and ex-Newport llarbor High baseball star Steve Shedd and all·round Orange Coast athlete Bili Jenkins, Nearly 100 people were on hand to see Vallely receive the award. \\'OrJrl . Vallely h:isn't reaC"hed such heights yet but he's certainly achieved more notorie· ty at this stage than any player fr om the Orange Coast area since Yardley. He was an all·CIF player at Corona del Mar before leading Orange Coast College to two Eastern Conference cham· pionsbips. Illness knocked hin1 out of last summer's U.S. Olympic Team trials and he enrolled at UCLA. New Eagle Fight Seen; "I thought they were going to award me a season ticket to the banquet," quip- ped Vallely, who had been nominated tor the award two other times. Ironically, this year's winner is follow· Ing a career that had a duplicate begin- ning to that of the man for whom the trophy is named. George Yardley began playing basketball in the alleys of Balboa Island in the ea rly 1940's. There were many who said the 6-2 Vallely would have difficulty adjusling from forward to guard at UCLA but he did far more than adjust. He cracked the starting lineup on the nation'11 best team and the NCAA's defen- ding champion . With Vallely starting all but one game (when he was ill), UCLA racked up it s third straight national title in Louisville last March. Bruin Netters Rocked BALTIMORE -Former Philade.1phia Eaclel owner Jerry Wolman said Wednesday he has a commitment for the money he needs to buy back the National Footba11 League club which he sold earlier thia year for $18.l million. "We received a telephone commltment Lefthanded Jinx .Strikes Angels Again MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL (AP) - 'l'bere'I something about so u t hpa w pitchers that the California Angels don 't like. The Angels can't seem to beat them . Ltft·hander Jim Kaat added lnaull to Injury Wednesday night. The Minnesota pitcher hit his first home run, a 410-foot Att9el Sl•te -AUl'\f ?O. A ... t1$ VI (11\at'O It), J:U p.m .. l(MPC C J~i...11, A,..tlS VII Cll!c.9tf, 1:55 •. m,, l(MM'1c'"<>lo'1 Jun.e U. """'•" Yt Clll~o, 12:$5 •.m~ 11.~ blast into the: right field bullpen, and limited California to eight hits u the Twins won 3·1. ·It was the 17th time this season the Angels have lost to southpaws against tour victories. In this afternoon's game, the windup of a four·game serie8, the Angels hoped for better fortune against M i n n e !I o t a tlghtbander Dick Woodson, 3·2. Georae ll;runtt.,.J.61. tried to stymie the Twins. yesterday for the money.*' Wolman said durina testimony at a bankruptcy hearing into his financial troubles. Leonard Tose, tM Norristown. Pa., trucking executive who bought the Eagles, says May 1 was the deadline for the repurchase agrffment agreed to between the two men at the time of the aale. Wolman has insiated, however, that he has until Aug. 1 to come up with tht money. . Toae sald earlier thb: lllOl'lth tha t Wolman "will never get them back. He's violated our agreement in at least seven instances. I'll take him to the Supreme Court U I have to." • PRINCETON -UCLA's hopes ol unseating defending champion Southern California in the NCAA tennis taurna· ment received a severe setback Wed- nesday when Luis Garcia, a Miami freshman, upset Bruin ace Roy Barth, 6· 1, 6-3. The loss for Barth, who Wl'..S ranked 13th in the country, mnoved UCLA's last chance for an entry in Thursday's quarter finals. Southern CaJifomia leW the tourna· ment with %4 p>intl to the Bruins' 21. use lw three quarter rktalists, including top-t<eded Bob Lutz. • BUFFALO -The Eric County Legislature voted Wednesday night to ac· cept a proposal offered by a private developer to build a $50 million domed aport.I stadium in suburban Lancaster. • He achieved stardom at Newport Harbor High and then Stanford Universi· ty. A gifted pro, he was the first player ever to score 2.000 points in an NBA season and was at one lime considered tG be one of the five best players in the With 7·llrit Lew Alcindor matriculating to the NBA next season, Vallely figures to be one of the Bruins' spollighted players next season. He'll be the club's <Jnly returning sen ior letterman. After that, he wants a crack at pro ball . Vallely Join~ Big Name s; 3rd Basli:ethaller to Win John. Vallely is the third baskel~all player to be awarded the George Yardley Trophy. Here's a summary of past winners: 1957 -Tod While, Newport Harbor High and Occidental College trackman. At Newport, White was the nation's first high school boy to run a 4:20 mile . 1958 -Paul Neuma nn. Newport Harbor High, Stanford and pro basketball player. Neumann . now freshman coach at Stan-. ford, played several NBA seasons with Syracuse, Philadelphia and San Fran-- cisco. 1959 -Dennis Fitzpatrick, Neumann's terunmale at Newport, led California to the NCAA championship over West ~ Virginia in 1960. 1960 -Robbie Griesser, a record· breaking backstroke swimming ace at Newport Harbor High and Orange Coast College. 1961 -Pete Reed , Like Griesser, a standoul swimming and water polo ace at Newport and OCC. 1962 -Eric Berge, a pole vaulter at Costa Mesa High who came out of nowhere lo win the Clf championship and establish a ClF record of 14.511,. 1963 -J im Corfman. a swim.water polo performer who made headlines at Newport High and Orange Coast. 1964 -Tom Corkett, the only yachtsman to win the award, Corkett was recognized for his prestigious sail ing vie· tories. 1965 -Bill Je'A'Cll, a s\vin1ming.water polo athlete who later switched to Kayak racing and made both lhe 1964 and 1968 U.S. Olympic teams. 1966 -Tim Troy, a 4:10 mllcr at Orange Coast who stunned area burrs \Yhen it was learned he'd won an im- portant race v•ith a broken bone in his foot. 1967 -Gary Magner. former Mater .[)ej High and OCC foot ball player who isl.arled for three seasons at USC before playing in the AFL witll the New York Jell. 1968 -Bill Voss and Phil Spiller, two fonner Newport Harbor l~igh athletes who became the first co-winners ot 1he award. Voss plays for the Angels and Spiller £or the AFL's Cincinnati Bengals. 1969 -John Vallely, who grew up playing basketball in the alleys of Balboa Jsland to play on a national championship collegiate team. Thunday, June l~. 196' /ti-DAILY PILOT eA ,,, • Laver Smashes Two Net Foes LONDON (A.P) -corona del M.ar't Rod Laver, the early favorite to win next week's Wimbledon ~wn. prepped for tennis' biggest tournam.ent Wednesday by downin& two foes In t~ London Grass Courts Championship and moved into the quarter-finals. Rocket Rod scored his two victories in 1 span of four hours. First he smashed Australia's Tom Ad- dison, 8~. 6·2. After a brief rest Nicky Pille of Yugoslavia extended him to three sets, but Laver triumphed, 6-3, 4-8, 6-2. Denn is Ralston, American tennis pr°" feti'.sional also hit form Wednesday and flattened two South African stars in quick &uccession. Ralston, of Bakersfield, his service working smoothly, scored. an easy 6-1, 6-0 vlctory over Frew McMillan, who plays doubles for Sou1h Africa's Davis Cup team .. That took ~sWn into the fourth round where he eliminated Cliff Drysdale, his fellow ·professional in Bob Briner's tour· ing troupe, 6-2, 6-J . Ralston reac~ the Wimbledon Final In 1966, losing to SpaL'l'S Manuel Santana. ''I'd like t.o do that again," the Califor- nian said. ''I felt relaxed and confiden l today -the way I Uke to feel with Wimbledon only five days away." Tuo other Americans, Stan Smith of Los Angeles and Earl Buchholz of St. Louis, batlleQ through long cliff.bangers before losing. ·Roger Tayolr, the British left-hander, clo"·ned Smith, 3--6, 6-2, 17·15. John Ne,vcombe of Australia, 1967 Wimbledon titleholder, downed Buchholz, 8·10, 6--0, 10- 8. Smith was well in command in the first set. But the second sel was delayed by a heavy shower, and when play was resum· ed the American appeared uneasy on the damp turf and dropped his service. The final set was an endurance test, with 31 &uccessive games going with service. .In the 32nd Smith trailed 15-40 on his service but saved the two match points. After three deuces, however, Taylor pas~ the American with a forehand and then lured Smith forward with a short Alston Enjoy s Dodgers' Big Hitting Spree LOS ANGELES (AP) -Dodger Manager Walter Alston is going to let all tho~e runs and base hits "soa k in for a while." "II doesn't happen to us very often. rve got to enjoy it while I can," he said Dodger Slate JUM 20, Oodttrs IT Clnclnnt!l, Ji''"'' l(Ft IUO) ..iunt 11, Oodtert t i C!ncln11tll 2: SP.,,.,, Ktel (..0) June n, Oodgtrl 11 Clnelnn11! U , 10:10 •.m .. 11.1'1 of his club's 16-hit 10-1 victory over the San Diego Padres in their National League clash Wednesday night. The Dodgers .took off today for Cin· cinnati wh-ere Don Drysdale will try to keep his comeback going Friday night. After four games wit.Ii the Reds the Dodgers play four at Atlanta then three more at San Diego. The Dodger triumph Wednesday gave Don Sutton his loth victory of the season. As for Sutton, Alston said it is strictly a matter of "maturity and control" which has transformed him Into one of the league's top rlghthanders. "I have to agree," Sutton nodded. "I'm not trying to do things which I koow I'm incapable of. I think I'm using my head a little more. Additionally, I feel stronger now than I have at any point in my career and I think that's a big factor." Every Doelger in the lineup, including Sutton, collected at least one base hit during, the rout with Ted Sizemore get· ting three safties. Wes Parker had a dou· ble in addition to his sixth home run and drove In three runs. s .. N OllGO lOI ANOl!LIS " , " "'' A•dl. ti l 1 I 0 Wiili, si 11.tlly, ib 4 O II 0 Molt, II 0 .11,....,.., >I ) 0 1 I Ptrlur. lb F1rr1r1, If • o 0 II l(o"o, rl Splt1IO, 3b 4 0 II 0 l l'ftbvrt, Jll A,Ptn•· lb l O o o Ruuen. cf Ctnnlwro, i; l o o o Slrtmort, Zb G••lon, ct ) o I O Tof'l:IOft-e ~·~r:oo1, o o O o o ~. o Poclra,p 10 00 lle.,.rg,,.,p 0000 Sip!~, ph I 0 0 0 &•ld•dlvn, o o o o o . Murrtll,i;I 1000 ,11 r II ,Ill • 2 1 0 • 1 1 0 ' ' l ' > I I • o I 1 s 0 1 2 J I J 1 J o I 1 4 I I II T0!1li Ill I S 1 Tcrt1l1 lt 10 1' t Sa~ OltOO 000 001 000 -I Los Anoelts :!OJ Olll 02'1 -It E -11.el!y, A•Cll. MtCoot. 1.0• -SMI DltDO 4. LOI All91!ff 10. tll -TorllOtf , P1rktr, lll ·- Gallon, HR -Jltrkt r "" Sii -WUif,, Moll. SF -Plrktr. IP"lt lt.•I SO Poclrtl (!,.,J.6) ),l/J 1 J l I 0 11""'9e• 1·1/J 1 o o o 1 llfdJt llvll , ' ' J 1 • McCOOi 2 122 11 Sut!Oll (W,10..51 t J I I 1 6 H8P -ti.-MC(ool IW111t ). 1111! -RtMrotr. 11'8 -Tortioro. Tlmf -2:n . AtttMt11c:t -'""'· service rttum. Smith put a low volley ln- to the net and loat the match. Bob Hewltt, South Africa's Australian. 1 bom Davia Cup star, produced some spectacular drops and cross-court abota lo defeat Clark Graebner, the U.S. No. 2 , player from New York City, 2-6, 6-3, 1-3 ' in the third round. Ken Rosewall, another Australian pro In contention for the Wimbledon crown, edged Dick Crealy of Australia 6-3, l-10, 6-3 in 1he third rowid. GLENN WHITE Sports Editor Rocket Rod Draws Italian At Wimbledon WIMBLEDON , England (AP) Arthur Ashe, Jr., America'S chief hope for the title. will meet a lonner Davis: Cup teammatr., Marty Riesaen of Evanston, Ill., In the first round of the 'Vlmbledon Tennis Championships next w~k. Another top opening match. sends Pancho Gonzales of Los Angeles, the 4().. year-old tourinl!, pro, against Charlie Pasarell or Puerto Rico. a U.S. Davis Cup player. The draw, made Wednesday, sends top. seeded Rod Laver of Corona del Mer, the de£endlng champion. against the veteran Nicola Pietrangeli of Italy. Clark Graebner of New York, w h o teamed with Ashe in helplng the Unlted- States recover the. Davis Cup last year4 has a rematch with the No. 1 Australian.., player, Ray Ruffels. % In the women 's division, Mrs. Bilile: Jean King of Long Beach, Calif., three· time winner, drew a bye and plays Mrs. · Bernice Vukovich. of South Africa in the second round. The wOmen's No. 1 seed, Mrs. Margaret Court of Australla, op. poses Betty Ann Grubb of Santa Monica. Cali(., In a first round match. The tournament starts Monday a conllnues for two w~ks, ending July S. Nancy Richey of San Angelo, Te:r., plays Brigitta Lindstrom of Finland; Julie Heldman of New York opposes Jil Cooper of Britain and Rosemary Casals of San Francisco goes against Valerie Ziegenfuss of San Diego, CaJlf. Prize money totals more than $80,000. AAU Gives in To .. <\thletes; " Meet Switched .: •• ~ MIAMI (AP) -The site and date of,t the National Decathlon Championship haS~ been switched out of concern for comi; petltors, says an AAU official, rathe~ than pressure from three top stars whO" threatened a boycott. J! . Hilmer Lodge, the AAU track and fielci;~ chairman, said Wednesday night lhef meet was shifted from Salina, Kan., July \' 4·5 to BakersfieJd, June 27·23. He said the action was taken solely for the purpose of providing athletes mor~ time between the AAU event and th~ U . S .• Russian·British Commonwtalt~ meet July 18-19 in Los Angeles. ~·1 llowever, last week three top decathlo performers, including Olympic ehampio Bill Toomey of Laguna Beach compla ! about the conditions al Salina and th lack of rest time between the AAU even ' and competition iri Los ~es: The 1 wrote LOOge that they would not com , pcte. Tht Angels had Ued Wednesday's game l·1 in the eiahth inning when pinch hitter• Wlnston Uenu and Sandy Alomar poked aucctSSiv1 singles aft.e:r two were out. But Harmon Killebrew cricked a base>Joaded two-run double in the bot· tom of the eighth. The los$ went to rtlief pitch<r Hoyt Wilhelm. (Alll'OllNIA MtMNllO'tA ATLANTA -Ught heavyweight cham· pion Bob Foster 1hoots for hl8 31st tnockout tn 40 fights tonight in a nonUtle match with Levan Roundtree at the City Auditorium. "I'm aoing to nail him early,'' Fl>!iter said. "You can bet on th.at. Aa 500ll as they rlna that bell, I'm going alter hlm." Roundtrtt, who wa~ knocked OOt by Foster tn the ninth round two years ago, 11aid he made 1 couple ot mlat.akes then but won't mate them again. Longden All for Match Race "Wl? realize the dp.Les were clOlt.' Lodge aaid. But Salina would aU!l hav !>ten the site of the championship lf could have accommodated the new date he added. 1 0 ~ "The only reasoo we're doing it il·1 those who are scheduled to compete I • both meeti and clve them U'9 maxlm amount ol mt ln between," be'°' ••'fl ·didn't want to 1impair tbe physltal .. , .. ,.. .. , .... A!eftwr, ,_ I f 1 IJ~lff'lftt, cf J I I 0 A,llodrlOvtt, A ' o t C1rew, )b • t 0 t ,.....,.1. • I l t Ollvt, rf :t I f I ll•lctltN'f, If ' O t ll;lllWI'•"· )b ' t I 1 AJ.c..,., c: ' t f OllUICI, JO t I 0 I M'"""-rt ) I t 11-t. lb J 0 t 0 Hktt. lll • 1 0 """'"!' If J t 0 0 .HtlfltlefM, cf t o • t:.,,1',:k. u • • t o l llt\M;"" t I 0 llostllelnt,'c: JI I 0 lt'"1, cl o I 0 COnlltnl'' tt a t 1 O #rfC!ottlllft. JI t 0 I T..,.r, If I t t 0 L.J~,,iil 1oic.tt.1 J ii i Wlllltlln. P o t t o Tettlt J1 t I I Tol1!1 11 a S I (1Hfer111e 0C0 000 110 -I Mlltflolol1 COO 010 n.-J OJI -M~lt 2. l Oll -(1lli.rftl1 ,, ~\lft11> _.. I. ti -"°""°'"" l(llfttltlw. Hit -tc.Mf. CJ,.. .. _ 1.111 ........ • PITTSBURGH -The Plttsburlh p,.~ Gauttt .. id Wednaday night It his learned that ~rd "Red" Kelly, former head coach of the Los Anaelu KJng&, will be the ntW coe.ch of the :e.;:au1n1 ol th• NaUooal CHICAGO (AP) -Trainer Johnny Longden said Wednesday he would welcome a proposed mat.ch race between hla: Afajeslic Prince and Artli and Letters. Such a $100.000 w Inner -take la It showdown wu proposed Wednesday by the Arllnjton Park managtmtnL Elliott Burch., tra1ner of Arts and ~t­ tt:rs, said llU<'h • match race is "a very interesting thought." Longden said ''J'll match Ma.itsUc Prince aplost Artl and Lttlm ot llU' distance from % mlle to a mile ind ~." Majestic Prlllee, Kentucky Derby :and J;lreakncss winner but. loser to Arts .and Letters in lhc Belmont, is being rested al Ca!Uornia. Arts and Letlers barely lost to the Prince In both the Kentucky Oe.rby and Preakness. Longtten said be could have the Prince ready in two months, lndlcallng a late August dat.e for the posslble match. "If we heal Majestic Prince again In a regular stakes race, it would be lime for ---------~· --- a match raet;" •aid Burch at Belmont Park. ' "Once you havc agrttd Ip such ·a match race you've 1ot to go lhrough with it even if you bone is dead lame. otherwise. they'll say you are chicken.'' Mrs. Marjorie Everett, president of Cllkago Tlloroughbttd Enterprlae1 which operates Arllngtoa Park, said that "If such a ma,tclJ race ii at an possible we will do it." •• dit.ioll of our athletes." Rlck Sloan, Who protested the ~na?J meet along with Toomey and Hod&•. ~Id the conditions there "I\& proven to be less than good.'' tlt aakl, "The heat there Is awtul they have a Grasetex track, which la - hatd on your legs. If we competed Sallna1 nrme of us would be reCo='!Yi tune few-the Russian meeL" I ') .................................................................................................. ..,,.....,,....,.,..., .................. ..,.., .... ..,.., ........ ,_..,..,...,..,..,~~~~...,, •• T0~0,,.-,.-.'"°··.........,,.,...,.~_,_.~-.-.--1 ••~,..... ••••• -.. ·-.~. _,. .. ·--... ·---- M OAILY PILOT 2 .. mile Rematch Planned A great re-match in the two- mile run ls In store for track and field fans Saturday when the Initial ruMlng of the Southern C&lifomia 1ovita· tional track and field meet convenes at 7:30 p.m. at Cer· ritos College. BUDDY MOEN Shortstop PHIL MC CARTNEY Right Field VINCE MOLL Catcher WILL MC CARTNEY Lift Fl11d BILL POWELL Third B ... PrepGrapplers~ye · . Junio1· World Meet The llriU Ii tlte end ol the rllnbow la the first edition <l !be -.1a1 world Junior w...W.C Ctwnplonshlps to be bekl al Boulder, Coto. July 14 throuCh ti. lt11 for boy1. age 15 through 18 and il.hleles from more tbaD JO countrlee are expected to compete lnctudlng Russia. Belon an American athlete carr make the trip, however, hf! mu.at "ade through the na- Uonal telecUon tournament at W,OTtand. Wyo. "-Inning l\lon-~ay and ~ lhroqh July Two station w1gons com- plete with coachu and nine rtpre'sentaUves' from t h e Orange Coal! YMCA .will be laiio( oil 1... !be lllgbom BatlJi eoun1r1 Friday with on- ly Oii' thing In mlnlS. TO place 1thltta on lhl American team for t b e BouJder, Colo. compeUUon. 1 Here'a ·a rundown on the. A bevy of state high school champions will parade their talents in the Los Angeles City 1 Schools vs the CIF southern section competition. In County All-Star Game Shrine Tilt Orange Cout team and bow each individual fared In tile Southern California quallfytng tournament at New po r •t Harbor ffigh School ,....,,Uy •. Stale champion R u b e n Chappins of Elcel!lior High School will gel a chance lo avenge his rectnt defeat at the hands of Freddie Rltcherson South Eying Upset To Honor Founders Chris Sone.s of Fountain Valley : first ln fretstyJe and second in Greco R o m a n (114.5). Rick Neff or Foothill lllglJ' alternate in Greco Roolan (132). of Salesian. Chappins, who set a state record of 8:57.0 in the state finals at UCLA was upset by Ritcherson at the Golden West Invitational in Sacramento Sa turday when the latter rac- ed to an 8:55.2. The Sooth, !021l<What bat· tered before the action befins, moves into La Palma Stadium at Anaheim tonight to batUe the North continent in the se- cond aMual Kiwanis North- South Orange County AU.Star Baseball game. Game time is 8. Last year the South upset ~~chnk~;2Smith of the South has lost four players he was counting on in the past two days. Tom Sandt of Pacilica, con- sidered a strong rlvat lo the Chappins was third at 8:59.0 State champions seem com· monplace. Jn the sprints is the southern section double.winner Willie Robinson of El Centro. The desert flash swept to 9.6 808 LEAVY * * * * * * Starting Lineups and 21.7 victories in the state Wildcird Nortk meel Decker Underwood of South ----------Herman (7-2) Torrance is the favorite in the Kepner (.341) m i l e. Th r ee. time M D • Wann (.356) state ch ampion Reyna Id o ater el Mack (.406) Brown, with a besl-ever mark Sweeney (.365) of 7-3, will be in the high jump Bannister (.S54) and Sam Cunningham of Santa N • D Marshall (.500) Barbara, stale champion in Ine rops Atwell (.455) Walker (.350) the shot put, will represent the southern secUon. p c tB 28 38 SS LF CF RF -Blyleven (lo-3) Moll (.250) Heierle (.500) Hayden (.381) Powell (.385) Moen (.260) W. McCartney (.3n) Sepulveda (.343) P. McCartney (.357) Only state titlist from the city is Ricco Sanchez, the classy half-miler who posted a 1:51.3 during the past season. Two runnersup in the state finals will be competing. They're Bill Sims of Whittier (southern section) in the 440 (47.$) and Charles Rich of Washington (city) in the high 4-0 Game Mater Dei was limited to rour scratch hits in submitting to a 4-0 loss to the Seniors in the Santa Ana s ummer baseball league Tuesday at Memoria1 Park. How They Stand In Baseball Races • hurdles. The Monarchs meet Santa Ana Tuesday at Memorial Park. NATIONAL LEAGUE Eut Dlvlaloa Waa Lest Pct GB cbicago 40 2.1 .&35 - Trout, Cats Remain Hot MATEll DEi II) .. R H II.II New Yorlf; 32 27 .f>42 6 Pittsburgh 34 30 .531 61h Catfish arid trout catches continue to be excellent at Irvine Lake with heavy action at Santiago Flats. H1tltr. lb A.dlml. u e .......... s. Mlr,..,.1111, rt·• S.ll11r, M R.....,... If ~r.Jb 1', LI-rt, llN Aolllton, '<I IC-I.II Now•L < Witt, d J.rrwo, • J. l lnnerl. l'f Toltli ' ' , , • ' , , , • , , ' , " • • • • • • • • • . ' . • • • • • • . , . • • • • • • • • • • • • . ' . • • • • • • • • • St. Louis 30 32 .484 9\.1 Fliiladelpbia 24 34 .414 131; ltfontreel 16 43 .271 22 West Dtvlslo• Atlanta 37 25 .597 - Los Angeles 36 26 .SBI I S. Francisco 34 27 .557 2\~ Cincinnati 31 2S .~ 2lh Houston 30 36 . 455 9 Typical action has been limit.s wilh the largest caUish eight pounds and the smallest five pounds. SEH/OllS l•l San Diego 26 41 .388 13'h 5111>ulvf<l1, cl 4 . ' . ' . . • • • ' ' ' • • • ic:.11. 1>-tb 4 w ........ ..-. ... ita P•rkl. 11 0 New Yorlt 2, PllU1dtllllli. 0 Pitt1Qur911 i, Ollutlo 2. \0 1111111191 Hou11!;1n I. At\anl1 I $•11nt 1. t 1 Best bet for results con- tinues to be an inch of cheese or stink bait on a No. four or six dough bait hook. S.bl>o. ' Veo1, II FNWO, 1b Gn>U,lb (VIM, 11 McGow1n. 111 .. 0..Mltt, " C"""°'owh. rl Toll Ii ' ' ' • 1 0 ' l 0 l 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 ' 0 l 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 l! 4 1 3 Clnciftnell 11. kn l"r911d.a 2 MonlrHI S. SI. loull 1 LOI ... _... IO, ~n Dlefo 1 TM1J"1 .... Nrw Y°"'-(SMVW 10.ll al l'llllfdl~ pl\11 IJd'lllllll!I J.f), nlll!t Trout are hitting cheese, Ooatin' bait, red salmon eggs and shiny spinners. 1,m ~1 lftRl1111 Safi Dino. cs...+or"'I ~l 11 11-1on !Wiii.On M l, nlltll Sot"ion 002 ino • -4 ' • MDnl rwl (Si-M l 11 SI. l.ciul:I IWlll!Oum 2-1} Mlle. 0.-1 000 000 0-O 4 $ Rips Offlclals, An nooncer Invitational Meet Deserved To Be Flop, Says Reader From the mailbag: I'm afraid l can't agree lhat the Orange County Invitational track meet was "an ar· tistic success." From the standpoint Df gen- eral management, it deserved lo be the fj. nancial flop that it appart.nlly was. Indeed, it was probably fortunate that there were not more fanat ic track fans pr es- ent , or there might have been a polite riot . Just to cite a couple of examples, the pub- lic address system, y,·hich had not said much of interest up to that point. quit entirely about halfway through the meet. That left us not on1y in the dark about who won. but about who was actually in y,•hat race in the flrst place. And one would think that in preparing for JOEL SCHWARZ 1 po~ vault competition In which Dick RaiJ.,. hick IJld John Pennel were scheduJed to strive, a try at the world's record Y.'ou\d have betn anUcipated, and a taller ladder p-ovlded. T1lk abool herk)'·jerky! Boo, l uy, to whoever ran that show. A,nd boo to you for not doing your home- work -John Carlos was not competing for San Joee Slate In thl.s meet. He Is now be- t,. COICbed, alonl with Bob Beamon, by PIPPJ Galt. J can only conclude that you're ·a tnct and lieJd reporter like I'm a abol· pultrr. Youn for better track reporti ng, Mn . Ann Lapides KeprdlMI' of the problema: with the pub- lic oddr'8ls syt1em and Ille IOAlu •I the pole \l'ault PH, the meet wu an artJsUc succt:u In """' " .... petlu.n. . No one will argue that somebody blew tt at the pole v1ult pU, (orclrll Railsback to I wait half an hour while a truck was herded onto the field so the crossbar could be mea· sured at 17·10. Dwain Esper, who was handling the p.a. chores, is recognized as one o{ the best in Southern California. Certainly be or meet director Earl Engman, can 't be blamed for a power failure. As for the competition, the caliber of ath- letes competing was world class and their performances matched their reputations. Olis BurreU and Ron Clarke turned in the ~'<>rld's best efforts of 19&3 in the high jump and two mile. And competition was uniform- ly fine in all events. ~ for Carlos, he's still competing for San Jose and will be through this wee.k's NCAA championships in Knoxville. U he was com· peting for Pappy Gault and the School of Seamanship in Maryland, how come he was running in his yellow San Jose SL shirt? * Golden West College baseball player My- ron Pines set a speed record of sorts earlier this year at the Olympic Auditorium in £os Angeles. It seems Pines and eome ol his teammates are big wre.stllng bufls and rq- ularly attended the Olympk: programs. One night Pines sassed wrestler Freddie Blassie, and the enraged grappler chased Pines around the auditorium twice, btiti1nev- er did 'tnanq:e to catch up wlt.b him. * Quickie quotes from Saddleback College track coach Jay Rotlen's, who'• 10-man team never had a home med and wu fOJ'C'ld to travel to such out-d-thf:..w11 pllCtl as Blythe. Polo Verde, Bantow and Loocuttt for mettJ. "Along with our regular equipment we wtte issued a roac msp and 1 survival kit "On our squad anybody who runs mott1 th3n 1 100 yards is a dl&t.ance man ••• "Tim Diamond, our pole vaulte.r, was M>mewha.t handicapped -he'• atrald of heights." ----------------- Cln<ln111H IMtrritt "*J •I 5-n Fr1n-CIKO (1'!-rl'Y t-J) on1, 9•rrlel IC:lledlllttl .UlERlCAN LEAGUE Eut Dlvltloo Won Lost Pct. GB Baltimore 46 17 .730 - Boston 37 24 .rm 8 Detroit 34 24 .586 9'h Washington 31 34 .4n 16 New York 31 35 .470 161h Cleveland 22 36 .379 21 ~ West Divis.ion Oakland 33 2tl .559 - Minnesota 33 27 .550 1h Seattle 27 33 .450 6 Chicago 2S 33 .431 7 Kamas City 25 37 .403 91/z California 20 38 .345 11 % ............ _lb C!eYtllnd 2. flOllOll I New YDl1c 4. Dt'lrolt 2 ~111,.... 3, W111'1lllO'tOn l Mlnntwtl 3,. Clllfornl1 t 0.-l•nd 1"'· IC-1 City 4-1 C~kno 7-J, 5e1tt1t U. >Ml ,.me, 11 lnttllWll T•Y"1G.- 8oiton (Cu• Ml 11 C~tnd !Etlt- -11'1 >-0. nltoht a1111more IMdl•llY 10-0! at Wasll- lt>tton CColfmiin :Ml, lllVM Ottroll fWllHn ~) I I Nrw Yortt llt~nwn :Jot), ~191>1 Ca!llomll 111'1.11Wf 2-$1 11 N1i'Mlr.ol1 IWoodoon l-71 *111• fT11bof 1·3) 11 OIQIO N.,.._WI Onlr ,."* lld'leclultd San Gabriel Stock Car Racing Set llattling Bill Meyer will have his 1957 Chevy Hardtop set for action when the new San Gabriel Valley Speedway opens its doors to t h e NASCAR sportsman divisiDn stock car racers Utls Friday evening at 8 p.m. The Anaheim speedster will tangle with some 70 other competitor! during time trlals al 7 p.m. to detennine starting spots in the evening's eight event program. Race fans dubbed Meyer "batUing Bill" after a recent speedway dispute with Ray Johnstone in which the pair engaged in a sideswiping coo- lest with their r a c in g machines, bringing down the wrath of NASCAR officials on the fiery competitors. Railbirds a r e predicting another outbreak or fireworks between the pair at San Gabriel this week. However, NASCAR officials are keeping: a wary eye on the offenders and lhU><!os!J>jj!ty al a suspension sboW<f1tttp their raging tempers cooled. The San Gabriel Valley Speedway is located II 4900 Rivergrade Road in Irwind1le. The speedway Is ruched by taking the Santa Ana Freeway to Fmw1y I05 and going two and oneM1f miles nor1h ol the San Bernardino Frte"1y. Trout Plants J North's Alan Bannister at shortstop, has signed a pro- fessional contract w l th Oak1and of the American Baseball League. Infielder Rex Snyder ·of Corona del Mar is lost to the Rebels with two b r o k e n fingers on bis right band. Another player to drop off the roster is Duane Shiffer or Garden Grove. He alllo signed a professional contract. All, however, is not bleak. The Rebs picked up Chuck Loseth of Estancia to nu a pit- ching gap and added Howard Hoyt of Foothill to the roster. Loseth, ahowever, has since signed a contract with t h e Seattle Pilots. DAN CLARK Wlkk<ird Top Skiers Compete At Havasu The 18th annual Shrine Chris Horpel or Newport North..SOUth football game and Harbor:fifit in Greco Romu pageant will be dedicated to (143). oobles Elmer P. Bromley and Bob Curry or NewpoQ Dr. Vterling J. Kersey, co-Harbor: sec<ind In Greco founders of the mid·summer Roman, lhlrd in freestyle charity classic. (154). Bromley and Dr. Kersey will Mike Roberts of El Modena: be signally honored during the first in Greco Roman (165). pre-game pageant, featuring Steve Clark of Rancho marching band!, crack drill Alamitos : first in Gr,eco teams, costumed patrols and Roman anQ freestyle (191.5). an equestrian unit. Wednesday Malcomb Poemoceah o f evening, Ju1y 23, in Los Anaheim High: first in Greco Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Roman (178.0). Since the inaugural game Al Thompson of VUla Park: back in 1952, Bromley and second in Greco Roman anJI Kersey have been serving as third in freestyle managing director and opera-(heavyweight}. lions director, respectively. Bob Walker of Fountain They now gain the title -Valley : third in Greco Roman "emeritus" -for all future (heavyweight). Shrine contests, bene£iting the That's the contingent that Los Angeles unit, Shriners will compete under the Orange llospitals for Cr i pp I e d Coast banner. Coach of the Children. outfit is Frank Horpel. Smith w a s particularly pleased with his charges' ef· forts Tuesday afternoon in their final workout before "the test, especially in the Santiago duo of pitcher Bert Blyleyen and catcher Tom Heierle. The pre-game pageant and With a two-wetk slay at the the halltime activities are nationals it's expected lo take Twenty-five skiers and boat being supervised by Edwnrd at least $1,800 to finance the M. Pzzo, director, assisted hy trip drivers from Orange County s c (Co ) Osbo To. date the team has raised . • n rn. Heierle b I a s t e d (our out past t he 350 mart at Golden West College where Smith's outfit was workina out and Blyleven was especlally impressive in the hurling are entered this weekend in Tickets for the event, all $1,300 -$500 short of the the National Water SkJ Speed reserved and priced at $5.00, minimum required . Championships at L a k e $3.50 and $1.50, may be ob-Financial aid should be Havasu City on the Colorado tained at the Shrine Football directed to the Orange Coa~t River. Office, 655 West , Jefferson YMCA, Wrestling. Some of them have good Blvd. in Los Angeles, by pbo-Clark is considertd the best chances to win lilies. ning (213) Richmond 9-0166, or bet to earn 1 spot on the U.S. duties. · He'll start on the mound for the South. Newport Harbor pitcher Steve Schoetuer is slated for duty in the fourth frame. Heading the group is Casey through the more than 70 team. He's the nationa1 high Harker, 16, of Westminster, Shrine Clubs in Southern sc hool invitational champion who is top-rated in tbe California. in the 191-pound class. Bill Powell of Estancia, who'll start at third base, drew praise from Smith for his hitting and overaJI speed. women's open class. f\;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;r The present leader in the National Speedboat and Water Smith Indicated that Dan Clark of Cost.a Mesa and Bob Leavy of Newport Harbor might be his choices for wild card duty. The game features the uni· que provision of wild card pinch-hitting_. The p I a y e r 'pinch·hit can continue in the game and the wild card pinch· hitter can play later in the game at fu11 -time duty. Ski Association 1969 point standings, she will battle It out with Sally Younger, 16, Ha· cienda Heights, and Linda Martini, 17, Upland. The three girls are rated close to even. Debbie Brown. of Fountain Va lle}', also is entered in the women's open and stands an upset chance for victory. She is fourth in the point stan- dings. Her sister, Donna Brown, is a strong contender in the girls 13-15 class. Casey's brother, Ke 11 y Harker, could win the boys 16- 20 class and a cousin, Gary Harker, of Loo Alamitos has a good chance in the boys l3-J5 HUGE SAYINGS on Hl·FI EQUIPMENT! NATIONALLY ADVERTISED SYSTEMS & COMPONENTS BEING CLOSED OUTI EVEN LOWER PRICES ON DEMONSTRATOR UNITS! Watch for our Weekly Specials! ORCO ELECTRONICS CLOSED CIRCUIT TV SPECIALISTS 1677 Superior Ave. Costa Mesa (One block South of 17th St.) 646 -4407 Smith acknowledges bis club does not have the hitting averages h I s counterparts have but doesn't conci!de the North anything in tbe pitching department. class. """"''" SWIM WEAR SWIM FINS MASKS-SNORKLES DUCK FEET FINS lllMl>H .... , • $6, 95 llGUtAa ........ $8, 95 • • S.95 & 10.95 FULL FOOT FINS $5.95 $6.95-$7.95 NYLON SWIM & SURF TRUNKS $4.95-$5. 95-$6. 95 SPEEOO & OCEAN CHAMPION lACIN• Suits & Trunks • • 3.50 lo 11.95 TENNIS RACKETS WIUOll • BANCROFT • DAVIS DUNLOP • CIAGlll • SIMPUX CONYllSI TBllllS SHOES • Mens 7.75 Ladies 7.25 ::::,:v: ........................ -....... $8. 95 PINNSYLYANl.A llTU DUTY 1B111S IAW • • • • Doz. 7 .SO MBU TBlltlS SHORTS • t9S lo 13.95 MB1S 11MIS SHIRTS • • S.00 & 6.00 TBllllS DRISSES • 9.00 lo 16.95 BOWS • ARROWS • QUIVERS TARGm ·GLOVES· ARMGUARDS PING POllG PADDLES • BAW • NHS DARTS & DART BOARDS BOOMERANGS & BEU Y BOARDS BASEBAU MITTS • SHOES • BALLS BATS • WARMUP JACKOS BAmNG HELMOS • CllST PROTECTORS CAPS • COLORB> SIHYE UNDERSHIRTS TIMERS WHIR STAG WARMUP SUITS 100% ACIYLIC NAVY ONLY • IODIL .. conoH SWEAT SHIRTS • 100"!. ACIYLIC SWEAT SHIRTS COTTON SWEAT SH!llTS COTTOll SWUT PANTS ACIYUC SWIAT • • • • • 12.95 & 19.95 • • 2.95 3.95 2.50 & 2.95 3.25 • • 5.95 6.95 10.95 SWEAT PANTS • • STRIPED T SHIRTS • • • 1.35 - RALEIGH BIKES PARTS • TIRES • TUBES -- I ~ L d a ~ l l fr S1 I" " •1 de S( yr n< m bl R I" B· h' C< bl cr M is "' of .. on th • E " lit I I -~-------~~----·----~· T-. Ju"' 19, 1969 DAILY I'll.OT 25 From the Tees Deep ·_Sea Fish Repoi;t Roseberry Wins MV Club Crown J I mer TO AC~IEVE·T.IMING, ~!Cf . • "Nnen your' t t mi n1 ~sour, th• couse·t1 probcab!,Y due iorgel)' to siorting-your downawln; solely whhyourhandl ondama. 1 - Phil Roseberry recorded a Freeberg wllh· his 144, Amte l 1$3 'over 38 holes to beciime Lff ·U$2). Don Weber (153), ~fike Mackovlch (lSS) and Hal McGuire (156). ch.a~plon of the Mission Viejo Men's Club recently in gros& compeHUon. ' J~oseberry is a two-han- dicapper. . Lloyd Freeberg became the low net champion with a 158- 14-144. Otto Gull Won the c flight bracket wilh a 14S followed by Harold Gagnebin (153) .. Bob Schrlffer (157), Jack Derchamer (157) and Gary Ashby (158). Deadline for the executive gold tournament for t h e benefit of the Multiple ScleroSis Society on Jllne 27 at 1t1Jssion Viejo is Thursday. I I 1u99•t>thot, to.cure hod thn- i~:;. you hit 1ome practice bolls with a short-il'U1 club, 1uch os o 9-iron. Concentrate on starting your downswing with )"cur low.,. ":ody , m 1 am doing in the Illus .. !ration. was The entry list is limited to 100 g.olfers with SCGA han-1 dicaps. The event beains with lunch, features 18 holes of golf 1 with a shot-gun start and wraps up with a aolf clinic conducted by Jack Fleck and an awards dinner. Larry Heckman won the A flight competition with a 147 followed by Roseben-y ( 149 ), Walt Pedgalki! (1~2), Jerry While (15.2) and Jim Clark Jr. (159). In B flight action it Soon you wi II reel thot good ti ming coming back into your swing as yourwrists automatic:all)" begin to unc~at the proper time save .. *2~~ Baseball's Top Ten ., Tht A1aocltll'd l"rH• \.___ AMa•tCAN LIAOUa "'"'"' Clllb 0 Aa • H '''· Ctrew Ml11 ~ U5 :16 " .1n F.Robillso!I 8tl •2 232 Y JI .ll6 Pd.-oulll 8M1 .0 19' .)9 U .132 R.Smilll Bi.n 51 lff :M 1M .321 tteoen SN ~' 111 21 ~J ,JtD 111t ir lltl 62 Hf 51 IJ .Ja,I F .H-trd Wt1 •s 2'1 ., TS .JO.I P-11 lltl 61 711 l6 65 .ll)J c.iw OH SI JU 11 11 .:IOJ 8ef11>11er 8tl 61 21f :It t:a ..2N MotM •11111 R..JKbotl, O.kltnd, U1 Pt!rocem, 801lon. 21; F.How1rd, W1tlllntton. "' Yal!nlftlslil, 81111on, 11; l"wlloric. fftw York, 17. •uni l1ttl'd 111 Kollebror-, Mlnnnolt. 5'; P-!1, ltlllmore, 551 Jt.JKJt.on, O.kltnd, ll; Yt>lrJIJ"l'kl, 8<11!on, 41; Murcer, New Y.,..k, .. 1 F.RotH ni.o,., lltllmort, ~I T.Horton, Cl~el•l'ICI, .... "llchl111 s De<lll- REPEAT PERFORMANCE -Matador Alfredo Leal returns to Tijuana's downtown bullring Sun- day in an attempl to match a spectacular perfonn- ance of June 1. Al so on the card are matadors f\.1auro Liceaga and Ma rio Sevilla. McNtll~. 81llhnor1, 0.(t 1.aoo; Lyle, llollon, 5·0. I.DOC!; Llndbftd, O.klan~. 5·0, 1 OOO; Lllllcl\, Detroit, 7.1, .llJ; Pll~Du•, 81ltlmor1, 1·1, .115. NATIONAL LEAGUE l"i.ttt Club 0 Aa • M l"(f, M.Alou Pgn 64 21• ... 101 36'1 A.J01111&an Cl11 !ll 2ll •I J.I ~ McCouty SF SS lit 4S 6J .J.n Sttrtell Ptll 56 211 lS 14 .351 B~ncll Cln 56 l'OO ll 10 .J~ li.Atron AH .o 72l :11 n .J~ Leal to Headline Card Perrz Cln 51 JU .., IO .MO C.Jone1 NY 59 716 0 Tl .lll M-1 Hin 64 JU JJ 75 .UJ Tlll111 (l'I SI 21.5 _.. U .m In Bulh·ing on Sunday Home llum McCovty, San Frin<lieo, ll< L.Mty, Ci~nntH. 111; R..AllC'n, Pll•lt6eh•ftlt, 11; H ..... ron, At\1ntt, II; Wynn, Hou., ron, 15. •uni l ttltcl '" Alf d • -I h · ll1n1<-. Clllc.fg.o, lo': S111ro, Clllct110, re o IA:a , w o returned with a show that earned him .:l s21 M<Co•••,,, s.n Fr..-c:IKO. ~•: To. Crom a triumphant .tQllr of · L 1 i-~ Sund ""i c1nc!n1Ltli, •11 L.Mty, c1n<:1~ . pal! o ears. n ..,,. ;iy'li·; 1111, .o. Spain to record the top , corrida, 17-year-old Curr 0 ' ~11c~1111 performance or the I 9 IS 9 ... Rtvera proved he was Ho111 .... ~. C~l=~~1 •. tOf/ $Tone. season, will make his .se,.,,...t ~. -,~thing his. aqvance.1Mtices A11u111, "'' .1s11 1111dKl'llln, S•" ~Tr.<( ,..~~ ~ O'"o. '·1, ,ISi; Aberntl'hy, Chlc.190, appearance here Sunday in (he-tiitihed. He ~orr an ear' from .. 1, .1'.1(1; McGr•w. New Yori<, .i.t, ~ f h. b JI .IOO; Mtr~I. S•n F11nclJcc, .. 2. downtown Tijuana bullring. eau1 o IS u s. .aoo. Competing with Leal will be l----------------------1 scrappy Mauro Liceaga and young Mario Sevilla , a newcomer to the ranks or the matadors. The t'rio will face bulls f r o m Coaxamalucan Ranch in a 4 p .m .. performance. Called the Prince o f Bullfighting by fans, the tall , handsome Leal rhowed his complete ma stery of the bullfighting art in his June I corrida. A matador for 16 years, the Mexieo City native P.roved he is in the· best form of his career. His oapework, placing of banderillas, and unerring swordsmanship wo1: him the only award of ears end tail this season. 'Liceaga, a d aredevil terformer who 'never shrinks (rom a challenge, has. been a ~rder afvorite ever since his ~t appeai'ance hert' in 1965. ~ The slight, cocky li ttle litlfighter will match his istry in placing bandcfillas th Leal, and display his 4"''11ng muleta style. ·Sevilla, one of lhe top villeros in Mexico City last ,,.._r, will be making h11 local t. has been comlng on g since his promotion lo ~tador and r ecently ~phed in CiUdad Juarez .. atina Tops ets, 8-5 uffman and. Broad Ina exploded for three •s in the fifth and siJ:tb in- to pull out an 8-5 win r the Jets in the Long ch Police baseball league &day. en Murillo and Len Beller · the Marina attack with tuts api~. ltAUl'l'MAN (II .. . " " > • ' . ' . ' . ' . ' ' I 0 I ' 0 I . . ' . . ' . . ' ll • 1) .... ..,,""' ... ~ 1a1m1 -t u 3 omoue -s • • 0 SINGLE MEN VE MORE FUN? •• .nly If ttt.n. mtt tht RIGHT GtlLSI CALL 547"'67 ~ Hew ltectn11,. - r . i. I ' i ' • SKIN DIVER and SURFER WATCH Ht1vy duty c1sed w1ttl't witl-t 1 d1y ind dite movement. Tested to S ATM. Outer rim gives time 1round the wor ld . Heavy vinyl strip. Alto •v1ll1blt In gold. SZS Ycilwe ' ' HUNTINGTON CENTER HUNTINGTON BEACH 89'.l-55Df . . . $15" 1 ...... • HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER COSTA M!SA l45·Mt5 Op• M•tllloy, Tl111"4oy a Frlcf.y 'ttl t p-. C:rHit Ttt1111 AHl!e!e ' .I I ' ' ' Further information can be obtained by calling 541-4359. Nelllporter 11111 Officers have been elected at the Newporter Ladies Golf Club recently. Eunice Peterson was elected president of the club and vice president is Marvel Caliva. Midge Howell was named second vice president , Florence Gay secretar.y, and Norma Darling treasurer. ~fickey Rabb and Pat Dye were low gross winners in the rerent President's cup cham- pionships and Bert Wright and Marvel Caliva were low net leaders. They'll receive their awards June 26 at the In11. in 1he hitting oreci. ' •• •HITTING THE IRONSM-offe11 .olid .gr~p, .tone• and,.wing poirtte" to boost hon play and lower 901f seoral Send 20(: ond . o slOl'l'lped, return envelope to ·Amold Palmer, c/o this ~r, Sports Program Offered A Boys Sports Camp is or. rered by the City of Costa Mesa Recreation Department this summer at Es tancia High School. The program, lasting six weeks offers six sports to boys age seven to 12. It's billed for 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. f\.fonday through Friday. Included in the agenda a r e base ball, basketball, track, tennis, football (flag) and comblnation week (aU sports). Cost of the cam p is $50 for the six-week period, or $10 per week. Swimming and w e i g h t training each day are included in the progr3m. Boys may register Uiis week at Room 305 in the Civic Cen ter at 77 Fair Drive in Costa Mesa from 8 a.m. to S p.m. Further infonnation can be obtained by calllng834-5IO.!. Sears Auto Ai1· Conditioner • • !<~a.st.er. cool-down time for •right-nor' comfort • High C.M.F. for greater air circulation • Sleek, clean design' .styling for a unart look, safety padded bezel •.. mounts neatly under the dashboard • Sears trained specialiats for profcssional installation REAL ~IPPIN'WUlmY' ~ IN~OAUDN~ . Regular $169.95 88 Model 6717 AM About Soal!I Convenient Cndit PlaM Guaranteed for As Long As You Own Your Car ••• Sears Revolving Charge! GUABANT>:J; u i.i'*'7-Dll1 Ao* - ... -... te '"""' -11i. lll>4 ........... _,,, .,., wblle 01W1M1 ..,- -u.o -1t W111111 -pll.O!Oll.,.,._"'-... dt.lrrl!, or Im --llll'lel 9'UIM~ Udoo- lllclM tbd ............... ...... 117 9"n, -•UI ,._ .... -lbedl ...__ ~ -..i ebarlt Jor a.-. Expert Installation Available! . Save $2! &8 Regular $7.99 Eadi • Ru1ged sintered iron pis.ton and chrome rod • Patented Elutometer dng means no !Id.ins • Aluminum cooliDI' fins prev,ent heat bttild~up • Built to wear for bettel: than orislnal lhocka • Terrific at this low, low price! ~---~-------------·-------------------------------, I ....,,...TAMa.,521.-...... Q,,,,,, ....... uw _ ... ..a MHfAN..a"6«111 ......... 1,.,.. I CAHC1G4 ,_ MQ.0661 0111eU Of ~1*, Cl ,,...II «mS AIDftl Ni ... ,..._ • MWC, M Nl•l, W MINI ....,,. llllClfllA fX .f.471 1 V"'6f fO ,......, ...... I ~Hff.."91~Hl!:f.f7tl ... ~tof-1141 OWllllll'3J.:f100 .......... ,.. IDUTllGWl'IWA~ -":'""" J ., °"""' ""°"' ~ca wm ,..,.... 1.mt. a Nltt -,M>otStt '---~~------------------_____________________ , ~ I ' . "111111ll11•••;At1._..aM1 l)ls.. -•• • ;IP[l'_ ................... A.&11,.r& '' • ---.,-.--------------------------------------..---....... -~ .... -.......... ~~~~T>n s -.,-.1 1 T l f'i l l l !-<l~•O·T 0 •0 f •; o • •••••~•"' HOUSIS l'OR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOii SALi HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES l'OR SALE ----------"'o;..;°";;;'°.;;;'c;•o.I ____ 1111111_ G•M_,_.1 _____ 1000_ Genor-'o'"l ___ _.1°"'000 Genor•I 1000 1 Gen,.;;;;;•;;;ro;;;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;;OOO~ Co&t• Mos• 1100 Nowport lloKh 1200 Hunll!'f'G!! lo•ch 1400Huntlnpton -h 1400 Ealhld. POOL TABLE SPANISH HAO ENDA 91., 2 Story I• REPUBUC Home. 8 moa BA YFRONr MOBILE ., TOP LOCATION old. ' 11<>ry, < BR. 3 BA, HOME Cua.de-sac. Been Jooldna: for a place to 5 Bedrooms Larae Mesa Verde Co!Olllal fam nn., retreat nn. 3 car 2 Br, cabana. l~ ba, trplc, MODERN LIVING put one J Here it Is -BNU· Qu&lnt Livinc Room e FOR-Svnee galore -for the family 5 bdnns (2900 sq ft) An-1arqe. Me58 Verde Cor avail boat alip, adlt M:ctioa. 4 Bedrooms• tlful family hOme in excel-MAL DINING ROOM with who netds lots of room, S thony pool home Mar roll tot; KJ,500. By Owner. Community clubbou1e, pool, 3 •....a.s lent location with separate MASSIVE ARCHWAYS: a huge !Jt.drooms -large fam· courw. Farm atyle kitchen, 546-4415 game a.rea, el.c. Wiii trade '"''" 18 x 20 foot rumpUs room to clusk ~tchen with lly kitchen with all deluxe famll1 & dlnitll rooms. Larp aunktn llvinf mom 11ccomodate recuiation slu clas&ic k I t c h e n w t t h built-Im. Slone fi~place, Could atand redecorating. MESA VERDE comer lol 3 up or down for turn or un- wttts dramatic mirrored titt· pool table, plus plenty of WROUGIIT ffiON bt'e'akliut wall to walj ca.rpelinc thru-~ trans!~ . make lg. BDRJ.f, 11', Ba, family turn Laguna Leisure World pla~ wall. separate 24xl!I room left over !or e~ nook. JNTERJOR DECORA-out. A big home at a low ofter! rm. Fully crtd & drpd, 2 or h1lWde Oran&e Co. ma.attt suite with full Ii.led TV and the mammoth stone TORS FORMER HOME with aacrlfice p~. Only $2995 fireplaces, covered patio. Home. ~7331 batb.. 5"% F.H.A. !inane-fireplace. Large ~ hand fitted wall shutters down and no second loal:t5. ~ $4&·SllO 3068 Glbral!or, CM. * REDUCED * inl anlla~ with a total 2 "Queen .. i;ii.e baths, din-and exciting hanging lamps! Call today to see. (nur ~lhlltn) $3),900 Owner. 546-~ monthb' payment o1 $112 ~r ini room and separate room Two bedrooms plus o& LUGE REALTY * BY OWNER-POOL. 3 THE BLUFFS month. Shalce roof and in for oUke or hobby. Aissume TACHEO DEN FOR TEEN· 64$•0303 1500Adlnll ~ BR, crpbl, drps. X·J...ra: LR. l .BR A 2 B.A comer lot, move tn rond1t10n. f u 11 low interest 51.4. % FHA loan. AGER OR INLA WS \VITH Low maint yrd. $30,500. Vll!W & spaicou.s feelln1. ~ $29,750. Paymenls of $183 per PRNATE BATit ASSU~tE ASSUME • ~2895 • Custom ca.rpta, drps, other New homes, ready to move in. Iii mile from beach. First payment up. to 60 daya after move in. Torma VA/FHA. From $22,900 The Beach Ion Brookhur1t 1 mile South of Ad1m1) 962. 1353 month, included everything. excellent $21.100 • 6'j0 FIN-extra.I. Handy pool. Chvner Sl/4 •/o LOAN BY OWNER 3 BR """"• 2-64<-0171 W01tcllff 1230 submit your smaller home ANCING and pay $156.00 E side 2-\V 11..-A v-Jrg •",500 v·"-. No•• 139 ~1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; HOUSES FOR SALi on our ,uarantee sal~ plan. total paymen\I EXCEL-4 Bedroom beauly with h~ · ' · ....,-. ~·.1 ~ '"""" -11 WE SELL A HOME LENT EASTSIDE NEIGll-familyroomwilhraisedfitt. =f~~e~~~~%. 200 Steps To Stach ON A Love.ly qujet WHlelW Lido 1110 I 3S I EVERY 31 MINUTES BORHOOD FOR $25.950! place. Has service porch and Beautiful 3 bedroom 2 bath St. in Mariner Elmi. It Npt. W I k & L May fl!:nced yard. N e w outside 9 fil.t, 5 BR, 3 BA + pool home, deep aha.c cari>el A Hi Dist Fee simple, heavy GREAT POTENTIAL Bayfront • 2 sep, kits • older home on 45' Jot • guest hie. and pool on 30' lot. 2 Pien & slips. $2'25,000 a er ee OUr greatest month ever paint· $31.500 • UnbeUevab-and guest house $38,950. exposed beam ceilinp shake roof, panelled llv rm, Over $14.8 m Wton in sales ly euy to buy. Prlndpal.11 only. 646-2544, throughout, 3 landscaped pa· din rm, elect. blt·lna:, 3 BR 1 r .... , ........................... I 548-8333' tio:!l, fireplace, all built-in Ba, clean cpta I dfl)ll, 2 2043 \Vestdiff Dr. ~mi Ope n Eves. R. C. GREER, Realty (OMMERCIAL 2 BEDROO!l-1. fenced yard. kitchen, d o u b I e garare. patm, dog run. $42,500 by avaftab!e June 25. 548-0701 $32.500. 642-3408 owner. 642-1598 3355 Via Lido 61J.9.10fl FOUR HOMES "For \Vise Buy" Coleswo hy & Co. on large corner Easlside lot. Privacy prevails here! 3 BR units with garages & private patios. Live in one 1-.e~~~';;;i~;;;;;--1 & rent the other 3. HUGE 2 STORY 562,000 (10% Down) lllltl~ PROPERTY -~===--I MH• Verde 1110 Evenings Call 673-6116 WANTED UNBELIEVABLE! A charming 3 BR "ship SPACIOUS 4 BR, 2 story $850 Down FHA. No cloal~ :!lhape'' home on large 84x Real Estate Saltsman Pacesettter, Country Club Ct>Sts buys a 3 bedroom, l ~I 233' C-1 lot. 1'1ay take 14 Tired of sitting on the: side 11 e r I e s . B ea u I I fully bath home. Look at the1e rental unib. Owner wW track watching the main landscaped w/patio & big ,_., w '--"'-· carry 1st TD of $32.00'.I @ line run! Join a winner. chlldren'11 play yard. 3 ex....... u .. .,r, ... ,,er, re-di frigcrator. Built in bar tor 7,,.%. Drive by 1!119 Ana· Make more money with less Baths, fam rm, formal n entertaining. Complete 5ter-helm. mt &: call lo see in-frunralion. Ca 11 Randall rm, decorator i n g p I re d to and speakt>n:. CU!tom side. 1.lcCa.rdle: 546-2313 for con-fireplace ln rn.uters suite. Beautifully appointed drapes throughout. p 1 u s $39,500 fidential interview. Quiet cul-de-sac street. By home in new ana or Newport thick, Jike new cafl)eli1lg. MESA VERDE• owner. 51Ai% loan availabll!'. ROLUNG HIU.S. Bl& at ALL nus FOR 0 NL y Newport $23,9501 Principals only. $U,950. Call wide lo!& a: UNDER-FUlJ.. RICE GI 540-0681 GROUND UTILITI£S! Victoria $18,900, P · at 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Built-In -~=~===~- ,., -11 l"'1 Down. Finl'°'"'· 1"'1 kl!•-r--1o D BY OWNER 'fbe inside ha, 4 bdrms, -Victoria c .. .,n. .........~ . rapes. OWNER'S NEW 4 BR. Harbor View Home, J ba'•, Jiv rm, din rm, Jam rm, bar, Jg. kit, 2 frpJcs, W/W crptg drps, yard & many extras: 6.9 fi n ancln&. -HARBGR"LIGHTS From this beaut. 3 Br. home, featuring family rm. & [or. mat dining room. SM.500 (154-CI PROPERTIES WEST 1028 Bayside. NB 675-4130 d' . &: HUGE senoe. HURRY !! Hard to find at this low CUSTOM REPUBLIC HOME ~~U~OOM, u WE SELL A HOME ~IT prlce in prestige atta. ON DESI' VIEW LOT OFF· Beautiful vie\v dw·ing: !he weIJ as lovely w/w car-EVERY 31 MINUTES (anytime) 54().1720 ERED. 4 BR. 2 BA. SlNG-day, breathtaking at nli:ht NEW VIEW University P1rk 1237 PARADISE FOUND Will be your comment when you see thill one. It has 2 bedrooms, 2 batha, built In wet bar, den, larie living room, beautiful patios, and landacaped to perfectlon. All this and a 61,i,% assumable loan. SEE TT TODAY. Pric- ed at $32,950. • red hill REALTY 18068 Culver Dr., Irvine OPEN 9 AM-8 PM 833-0820 JUST LISTED! Sharp 3 BR It conv. den. 2-Sty. Vacant • see today! LIDO REAL TY INC. 3400 Via Lido 673-8830 LlOO 2 BR • den. At. tractive. Own!r will carry large loan, 7~% $47,500. Phil SUilivan, 543.1761 ""'« ....... av.. Walker & Lee1"Z=======ITARBELL2955H••bo• LE STORY oEs1GN, +new<bedroom&3balh. 2300 sq fl. Fan!utic Iii DUPLEX-Balboa I 11 Jan d. PHONE 549-2144. Delta Real ~state 646-44141--------- l&ndl"P.... I ot 1 o! john macnab 7'82 Ed""'er l Throe ~. aood rental. BY Own<r. <BR., lllOO "I· It. IMMACULATE DUPLEX 2'l E .. tbluff Huntington Beach 1400 LIST your property with confidence SELL with pm. .. sionel skill THROUGH YOUR REAL TOR MEMBER Huntington Beach/ Fountain Valley Multiple stone work, shake roof M2-.f4S5 or 540-5140 Want cash/inte~st In 4--' J u:!lt vacated, cleaned. 2 BR. C.Orner, close to Lido enhance the exterior, LINDA ISLE Open Eves. Banelt IUHy unit. Tustin area. $31,000 Blks. Adams Sc h oo l, center. $49,500. owner will II'• all '°"" tor $14,450. l ;;;;;;;;oiiii .... ;o;;;o;;;;;--J -ulty. Wrilo C/0 J 0 -k Ub SALE .,, 500 1· Prln ·pa1 o1 • C:OATS Thia beaqtJful 2-ttory bay.1· BAYCREST present• t-..., e-:.ewer, General Dellve;, 1ea:'ko Mo·. -· or ~~~ Cl II 0 y. & front home with J.arre pier JUST um· D ~ Balboa Is. Crlsy to brkn. 837-9491 or 838-2914 =BL~U~F=F=s--~,-B=R=.~,~BA WALLACE & &lip, wu custom built 10 BAYCREST. °iG3iRREEAA;'iT~PPOOTTiE:iiNfiTfilAAJ:L:-\=========== w/Bayv lew on wide REALTORS the architectural p!ans of Parkllkegardenal:tall trees Exclusively Oursl Home on 80xl85 Jot, 1 blJc:. College P!rk 1115 greenbelt.Steps to poo l . -546-4141-the owners. 4 Beautifully surro~ sparkling. home & S....,,.a..i; .... _ _.ult OCC"P•·-• 4 to automobile row. Parldni Cusl. additions. Stea l decorated bedroonu. dining I o rimJ ti b ..--,....," °" " = (OllEGE PARK (<>Den Evenings) room. Priced under market !:. · 1f thh :!e na:ly 4 ;:,:.:: bdrm 3 bath home situated for camper, trailer & boat. . $44.500. O\vner 644-4265 t ~"000 wan ' n a quiet 1treet with park FORTIN, REALTOR DELUXE Dupl!!x. OCEAN a .,.....,..., · 3~ bath home WllJI'. fam. 0 .. • 1701-A \Vestcliff Drive UNBELIEVABLEll rm. & formal din. nn. like setfui&. Formal ~unng Newport Beach 642-5000 BIG LOAJt VIEW. $42,500 • low dn. $850 Down fitA_ No clos!JJ& (714) 642.au.5 174,500 room, unusual mother-m-J_aw Ask for Naomi, Doyle COl!lta buys a J bedroom, l~ 901 l>oowr Drive, Suite 120 Mn. Harvey ~c':n & f bath. F~~~; NurMry School Open til Sold l-5 Daily Co. 548-1168. Eves GTa-1977 bath ho, m1ve. L~k .. :: tbelle1'!!!!!!!'!N.owport!!.[!!!!!~Be!!i"i!hi!!~ ~ ~e~e. or appot POTENThome, -~2:;,r'1o"t,R ,; ..... ~~ Tremendous opportunity to ~~' Oba\~ ..... :~ry,1:~ extra.Ii. uuo::r .... .1"r, re-p~ '-'""" ........uov auume 7.2% loan. $182 mo. n • ........ ""'"• · !rigerator. Built in bar for 4 Bedroom all fenced. Cal lfor details. pays all. 3 Big bedrooms 2 $29,500 or be I opt. $1000/ entertaining. Complete 11ter· l61'.fi Weatcll!f Dr, NB 642-5200 lla:nf £ f baths, formal dining, huge 1 ,,==~mo=·-"""",....-'...,.,-.,= eo and speakers. OJ.atom Nantucket ,_1_.__ $ U a ea fg paneled family entertai~ DUPLEX 4 yrs old. 2 BR drnP<• throu&""'L P 1.u' 132.00 Mo. Total "'""'ti!, llMktr & Co. 20,950 F LL PRICE 642-6560 ment """'· Som<thlh&,.... each. Buill.;..,, apU, drp• thick like new carpetlJJ&. •-· ti 5M~ 1 550 Newport Center Dr. 4 Bedrooms, 2 fUil baths. OCEANFRONT find In most expensive born· $32,500 Owner. 6 4 6 -2 5 l O. ALL' nus FOR ON LY l\liliume ex11 ng I'<' oe, no Newport Beach, Calif. Plush carpets & d r a Pe• es 2568 Carnegie Ave .• Col· Principals only. $18.90.J, FULL PRICE. GJ ~ngh!:!!i~ =~ 833-0700 644.2430 =-'=I. =~k ~~ 3ti!~! ::~on excellent lege Park, C.M. Only $27,500 A BEAllI'Y by Owner. 2 BR-~·e~uitR~~ come, fint forced air heatiJ1&. ~ble j ,;========~I schoola. GI no ca.Vi needed. Gtorge WlllllmSOft ~; ~~:.:e~ ~~ 2 BA. Exceptional landscap.- WE. SELL A HOME I~, seller very arooous. TWO ON LOT $100 Deposit retundab~ or REALTOR ing. A~ume 67.. G.l. loan E VERY 31 MINUTES Don t wait. lake """ 5~% FHA loan m4350 Ev ... 613-1"' 645-0303 $27,0000. 54&-"'6 EASTSIDE. Newer 3 bdnn• with payments of $124 per 1242 BLUFFS-WORnt $39,SOC BUT MAKE OFFER! MUlt 15f!ll View end unit .. C" plan w/1950 sq. fl 4 BR's, 3 BA's, gep. dining, Upgrad- e<l Immaculate! Ca1l hlrs. \Vhite 673-0060 or 675-5764 eves. O\\•ner/agl. e NEW B"'L"'U"'F~FS~e"" 2 Br, 2 Ba split level. !\!any custom feature~. all eltt, etc. Lowert ma.int. &: lease. hold. MU57 SELL • BY OWNER. f'.all Dick Dyer 533-4456 ext 401 or 673-5777. Coron• del Mar 1250 GOURMET CHEFS Are at your elbow. itvefl when hubby brlnp home the Un- expected. Walk to Five Crowm or Don the Beach- cobcr, relax \Vilh a stroll along lhe ocean bluU. This Poppy avenUe gem is pric· Listing Service 0 R. D. SLATES • REALTORS 17252 lloach Blvd. Huntington Beach 847.3519 -~W~A~N=T-L.~o=w~-l PAYMENTS?? Here's 11 FHA loan v.ilh $127 Total Payrnenb, anyone can assume and qualify. Sharp, older California Horne. Huae Lot. 3 Queen sized bed· rooms. Luxurious b a t h. Double Gara.re Believe me, you ahould see this o n e! Prict'd al $19,500. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee Walker & Lee ~ol~!e~~:~~~~ mwn~h.SELL A HOME 1:-ve &ju:r-~~~us fl~= terior recently painted. EVERY 31 MINUTES an all . electric G o 1 d ed at lot value • $20,000 7682 Eding Newport Heights 1210, handles. S42-4-455 or ~140 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Hal Pinchin & As1oc. Open Eve6. I Oil I 'I I Ol \O\ 7'82 Edin& .. 842-44f6 or 540-5140 Open EvH. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 Only $29,950 w lk & L Medallion duplex at 127 38th a er ee SL, Newport Beach, Colli. ----- I • '" OPEN DAILY 3900 E. C.oast Hv.'Y. 675439'1 SELLING?? 401 Santa Ana Ave. La!it year Walker & Lee es· Tastefully decoi::ated comer NEAR OCEAN tablished a world'• ncon'f SQUEAKY CLEAN 7682 Ecfin&er 51/c%.G.I. 842-44.55 or 540-5140 $l19 Month pays all Jt.2 lot; home in nicest ~idenliaJ One o( the three finest horn-o( 154 "' sale homes told In --a Tho·, lovely 2 Bdnn ••in the heart of CdM. S!ep• MESA VERDE Ready for lmmed. occupan- cy. 3 BR + f'\l'Tl, nn .• l~f. Open Eves. 2 Br. home. $20,000. \.;=;;;;;;==== Pyramid Ex-.... ,.,. ... ~ · · one \\·eek. This year, •tart· B/B home is immaculate & hall to Oc'l!an, 4 BR, 41.l ba, ing June 22, we're out to 5 BDRM. SPLIT Popular 5 bdrm, t.plit level floor plan v•ith family room and fire. place, plus beam ttil· ing living room and fire. place. Neal )'ard. Vie-.v. Priced at $48,950. • )J:,·.;;1i\ ~ r~. ·)\' .1 l ti' 546·5990 . ba's. -dbl . gar. • bltin kilch. 1,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•/ • ,,.;,v calll'!s lhruout • I' drapes • 2 frplcs .• heavy shake roof • lge. patio area COUEGE PARK $25,950 • enlire yd. beautifully lnd- r-pd., sprinklers. 1750 sq. fl. of living area. Priced below replacement CO'S!.$ at $32.500. To Sl't'. call CHIL T ROBINETT REAL TOR Gt-0128 NO DOWN GI OR FHA TERMS OPEN DAILY I·! Needs paint but has <'Xtra 2578 GrHnbrl•r large room5. 2 baths. nag-fVac & ready for OCCQPB.ney) stone fireplace • and big R·2 lot .• Oose-to i:;chools. Immediate possession. Jusl $25,CXXJ. 'OTHEREAL '·""\.. ESTATERS .._ ( '. ·. ·.· '• lmmed. Possession 3 BR 2 baths .llreplace, car· Newport at Victor ia 640-8811 pets, drapes, bu!ll-ins, doU· l"'~""'l::!'""""""~~ hie garage. $23.750. N D GI Well1·McCardle, Rltra. 0 own . NEW HOMES 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. Eastsidc Costa l\l esa. From ~Tm anytime 4 bdnn + lam.Uy room. $183 S28,:.00. On!y 2 lei!~ 3 BR. .,.~~!!!!""!~"""""'I JWr mo Pll.YS all or FHA or "'~~;~. o:.'.L~ve Waterfront RAConNvoDnUoR$'L2TYi,9so ... '2"0 !Bel. 23rd & Santa Isabel) _,, ~ Realtor 642-3960 E\•t>s. 64" "106 Dupln '11i lh pif'r. all thial--'.,E~--='---•~R~E~-" -B<;y.;;;tl\(;;Oi'd'°-l'"'i!~"":"'!~~,;;;~~~ I for $63.500. Good n11ancl~ xperlenc-&.ycrett I Yr. Old --.--~ -1860 Newport Blvd., CM Salesman La.rre 4 Bdnn. l Bath qual. . Dirty & Neglected Rltr. 616-3928 E\'e. 646-7l90 EXCEL. CO!l-l~USSION tty home in top Al't'a. 3 Car $950 dn: .Nl'eds paint, tk'an L h 657 \V, 19th St., C.M. pr .• nict ~I b&r, formaJ up &: ltXlng. l\lesa Of>l ltta.r. ac enmyer Rltr, 642-9730 Ews. 54U720 din. rm., a:pac. Uv, rm. ·~ti 3 bdnn. fam rm, 1* ba. frplc. Lee. patio, 1uperb frplc, hlr·in kir. dblc gilt. • lfllllla\Y ~· $74,900. Tranafer-Pnce 126.000 • VA ttpo. ft.UWIUI rod ...... ,,, ~.w.c . 546-5440 FUN LIVING! __ Newport Hts. Modern ,""""· , block" OCEAN a BAY .... ~ OCttn. S2l,!QJ. P't-nlnaula PL Altr. l BR. 3 • I A L T y CAYWOOD REAL TY ba. "°""· Sl•"lou• '"""" " l BR 2 ba. df>n , 2 frplca.. 6JOEi \\' c.oast M11.y NB. pe.t\o. $49.!!iOO. 2025 W. Balboa BJ\'d., N.8. room for bolt or trailtr. · 541-l 290 ., ' lelbN Real Estate Co. Coll Anytime '7~ DAVIDSON R .. lty '""'l!'!~~~'l'l'!~:-\'l1lll E. BoJboo Blvd .• BoJboo $11 500 mo IWbor 18· C ~l. i · NEWPORT HGTS m.4t40 ttqaa 1lled ~rooms. Ora. ~ Eves. MB..s584 $19,50011 $15,tSO • NO DOWN mallc JIY!fw ._ wllh hJ&h 4 llEDRM.-$22,500 Spo<ioo, bedrooms, o1-'1ol Qui" otlfft. ,,.,.._.wall belJQed celllnp. Bulll • ln Attractive brick patio with llvinr room, fittplact:. Qua.I-~per. 2 be.tbs. Luxuriou• ,..,,._ A OY11n. Paneled flm· Ptl ftftd BBQ. 2 baths, ti~ lty ronitrucuon. ~ pool CllJll'ltlna. f'\1IJ dlnirie room. WOMAN with R.E. Broker'• lie. needed. Speciality otfice. No exp req. XLNT OP· PORT. 5'M900 alter 6 lush crpt'g, drps, lrg kitch· SU9,000. (By appl.) b ak Interested in lnterei;t '! en w/ bltns & can be pur-O.Lency Real Estate re our ov.'Jl record. can 5.5~. Mo-y av0 ;1able? us now to list your home ao 7fl "" "" chased w/ a low down pay-2828 E. Coast H\!•')', Cdi\1 ·11 h h Int.-~• In Ne••h'"_.. __ ,,'! \\'e ave some! ing to Sl!ll. •=...u ... uui-ll\IUU ment at $29,500. 642-2199 673-Jrro WE SELL A O Lovdy, qu;,, ,.,., In I =========·\•!!!!'!!"~;.;,,.;.,..,....,~\ H ME w .. tclilll OCEAN VIEW EVERY 31 MINUTES pm. OWNER -5'4% 3 br. Twnhae. H.B. S 1 fl7 /mo p.l.ti. blt-lm RJO, ref. wsh/dry, rec. facll. 847-1067 IntereatM In Value ? B1lbol Coves 1215 Oxiice Corona Hia:h1ands w lk & L Charming, v;ell ro111truct-3 BR. 2 Ba. You own the a er ee eel 3 Bdmi. home, priced WATERFRONT· 4 Br, 2 Ba, land b $ .. 5001 2000 gq fl Pier & allp. No. ! A UY at $44,000. at • · c 'ORBIN-MARTIN Jnle_,, .... ~ 50 Balboa Coves. $58,000. 7682 F.dlnger 842-4455 or 540-SJ.40 Open Eve1. Pl~"asc ""'~ $2000 dwn. P & I $392. Mo. Realtors F1orence 1.fcCue! or make otter. 529-8100 3036 E. Coast Hwy., CdM Bay & Beac:h • '"'"" • Realty, Inc. Newport Shores 1220 HOME & INCOME VA $600 move in. no other coirtA· 3 bedroom 2 bath, electric built-in ra.na:e & oven, car· pets & drapes. $22,000 full price $189 per month includ- ing taxes. 901 Dover Dr .. NB Suite 126 FOR SALE by Owner 3 2 Bdrm. home, frplc, lam. 64.>2000 Eves. 499-1641 Bedroom. patio, garaae. sit.e kltch. + a fully furn. c 0 m m u n i t y pool I: 1 • bdrm. apt. Reduced to playground, 2 blks from s.t.4,500. ocean, 'Newport Shores. w Oro1nge Coast Property Lugonla, NB 64~ 332 Margucrile 673-8550 ~-rr·s A REVELATION the many barpinll )'OU find ill aa..ili<d -°""' ..... 1\0\11! Cl-IARGE yoUr want ad now. Find it with a want ad! 1200 Newport Be1ch 1200Nowport BHch p@\\.oU'tvl-lt 'B~S" Solue a Simple Scrumblod Word Puzzle for a Chucklo ;--~--'-~---------""~----• f::"':rnb~n.n Wflfd's b': ~-... ..;;-- low to form four simple words. <I l ~OBSEM 1 . ' I I' I I' I ~ IDYNOW I . I' I' I :IL l'I~ Kl'E I' I Height of propriety>' Girl 1~:;· ;::;~· ;:;~· ==~·_, who - -from on cufornc>. t bile ohow • PALHIC I ~ t-,l,-..,,l'.-..-1 ""'1,-..,,1' ...... o c....""' "'" '""""' .;::.... by fl111r!g ,,. fM ""-'1'1111 web • )'OIJ dwtlop from st9p No. 3 Wow. ;.-e ..... :r,r_.:~·----1 .... I .... I .... I .._I • I I I I 1200 • INCOME, TOOi 2 BR. home, ocean side of Room for Boat Hwy. Newly painted; patio w/privacy AND sep. rear or TraiJer be.ch. apt. A good buy • 3 BR hom~. carpef8. drapes, can to :!ltt~ han:l~wd noors. IMa'e fenc- Cene Robert.~n. Realtor ed yard. Priced ri&ht at 67.S.2440 $20.900 GI or fllA tenns. Wolk to Tho lloach MUTUAL REAL TY 3 UR. den, 2 bath horn~. St?-1418 anylin'le You own !he l•od. V•01nt, DOWNTOWN quick occupancy. $42,500 LEIGIITON LINDEN RL TV 3 BR \.11ith added den, De· &12-7141 or 673-0372 taehed garage on alley, FREE' 4 UNITS beaulllul landscapmr. Cint· rAl Joe. Lt<li\ than $25,000 With purchase of 2 Jot&, Cose tcnns are ~·Kie open . to .shopping, Xlnt lncon1~. Rtx L. Hodges, Rlty. a money maker! 847.2525 CANON REALTY GLENMAR Owner • 67S.35ll • relocat~: o~·n land, 4 min . SHORE(l..Ili'F 3 BR. 2 BA. to beach. 4 BR. porch-front, Qulet tree lined area by 1he rc1r paUo. dor run w/ 11ea.. Fee simple. Access to 2 drain. Lrg room1. X!nt beaches. Under $.j(),000. i.D<lxPdft k Interior. $2.129 owner. * 673-3681 down 10 qualify buyer LGE. bUltop lot. Perm. view S27,.:ioo. 9351 Nantucb:t Or., ol ocean I: hills. HB. 96l-46.i7 R"11"' m>1JO * LOOK HERE * DUPLEX, nr. ocean. 2 BR. 2 Anumc lhi!!. 5~4 '>' ntA BA + 1 BR. &; ha. 1.&e. fol , J('\.\.'el for $8000. 4 br. 2 ba piva.ey. Rltr m..20IO fp. FAU. P1Hlo &: B8Q. Lido .... 1351 o...,,.. In.,.,...,,., lot, bool _ pte &: much more. $26.* LOTS OF ROOM Princlp"1 only. IG-1'16 t\lstom quality 3 Br., on ~1' 4 BR. S BA, Ip kilc:h. tam. a:tt"ltt to 1trtt1 101. 3 Car rm w/tpt. f'Ully dr,'d ~a i'Al'q'e. J.c:e. South patJo: cp!'d, dtn, llv rm, dbl p;, nr. clubhouse A teMls ct& J)llio, shade pl'den, Make 569.~. Call for •Pp't. orter to owner, Call S47~ WALKER Rily. 675-5200 •1tcm>0n or"""· Uy room . 540-1'72> place, f.artllty mmn. ~1720 s-ltl'tl grounda.. 540-1'120 HQ(te rear )'IU"d. 5tG-lT20 TARBELL ms Hubor TARiilLL 29SS Horbor TARBELL ms H•""' TARBELL 2'Sl Horbor SCRAMLITS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 7900 "'-"~:..::...;:=..:..;;;,;,~,__~~-'-~~"""'-"--~~~~~~~~~~ THE QUICKER YOU CAI.I., SOCK rr TO 'EM! nJE QUJO<ER YOU SELL SOCK rr TO 'EM! ·--"--'....;..;;,,..::::;;;_ j , • -. . ., " " " .... " M'° "' poftl! ••• "''' ·~ .... '" <W• <Wo "" ~ " Mo< ••• , . Tll: A!llt " Jun1 "' o ... '"•'t ·-,,_ ...i.c! (OUf 1011e+ ' ~ '" l "' '" ,, l ~· .. w• '" ' cl" "" "'' ... ~ •• " '". Coun w• ·-··~ 01•11 .... •W ~··t ' " "" ""'" Flltn ... ''" ... bu•I• ' "' o. ~TA" "'" Oo ••• " Wil l "· ' M"' (01 ... ,, .. ,. "''" 1n1t ., IOFI "' .... lilt Sulll St~li '" '"~ W> l!,t,L "~" otrh !or t w• "~ ·~· "® "' ~ lio~ l>tll " 11EA C11!1t ~lrlu "Mo ''""' '"~ "' o"ck> l\Vtr 101 .... ·~ .... , ... ·~~" ..i.. ' .., '"' "' •• ... "" ··~ 0••~ ... ••Tel ... !non o. "" "' <Ow ""'' "·~ nw·1 ov~ "~ !~•Ir Olfl< ••• wol HI Gr ... Unit T••• /Alt!! •l•ht -'" ' ro11 0<¥ ' • .. • .. .. ~ .... . ... ... ... • •• .... -"'' ..... "' '~ ... ,.,, ... """ .... ;:;: .. ,. ·~ ... ;;i .. --------~---~-·--... -----------------r.:11'------------------------~--------~----· --~· ------ • LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE P·ll7" LEGAL NOTIC& CIRTl,ICATI 011 9UllMlll ,KTITIOUS MAMI Tiit undtrsltntll 4oft CtMlf't' Ill It Ai1t dutt1n1 1 bllstneu tt 1Ml L1111n ,tiv•~ COl!t Mesi, Ctllf0tnlt , \lt>Oer 1111 lie· tltlou1 l!nn rwtme ol OUANTUM tnd llllt 1116 firm 11 comPOted of !tit "llowlM ptt"&Cfl, wt>o11 ntme In 11111 1nd -'•ct of reJlde nce 11 11 follow1: H.,.,..., C. McKoon, Ull Vons Drive, G1ra111 Gro~e. Clllf, Ptll'd June 11. lHt. H&$ml• C. MeKoon Slate of C1lllorn11, Or1n1t C011nlY: ltAR·Un CEltflFICATI!: OF COlll .. OltAT ION OOINQ aUSLNllS UNOlll On June 11, 1Nt, NfW• me, 1 Noflrv Putl!le In 1nd w Wld Sflh', ""•nellu IP,.lted Hoi,,,.r C. MCK-'llOWll i. ..-e 10 be "" Hrson ~t 111'111 1t 1vb5crlbtd to lf\t wlnllll J"1tru111e~t •Jiii •dlllCIWll'dted ht ••e«itld tlll ,,,,,,.. (OFFIC.IAL SEAL) Marv I(. Htnry il'ICTITIOUI NAME "loltry Pub!Jt • C11\for"l1 Prlnc1p1I Office '" 0••11t1• counl'I' My C&mml~loll Ex,lre:s Nov. 2.a. un PYDllVIH Ore,..t Cot$! DlllY ,.llol, Jun1 lt, 2• 1fld Ju1r 3. 10, 1Hf lll'Mf THE UNOER$1GNEO CORPORATION OOt• ll•rebv certl!v 111•1 11 ts 'Of'dud int • tot1!ract ,i11mt11nv buslnns 11 2202 We.ii Foflh Slreot, Stf\!t Ant. C111!Qrnl1, under the tlcllllcus firm name ol 8. " D. PlUMBING CO. tnd lhtf Ille 111mt of ••10 corPOmton 1111<l Jts 11r111clp1I •l•t• of bvs!ntn 11 11 follows: ALDRIDGE·TAYLOR, INC .• n02 West LEGAL NOTICE l'ilth S!•fff, Santa A111, c1111cr11lt. 1-----'":'.,,,,:=:----- 0atotd Mil!Y ll, 1~ ltAll:·l•I Aklrldge-TtYIOf, ll'IC. NOTICI' TO CRIDITOltS Wllll•"" It, Aklrldtt 1UPIRIOlt COUllT o• TNlf P""litent STATI OF CALlflOll:NIA H• IUtht rd H. Taylor THI COUNTY Oii 90.._I SKrfll!"I' Ne, A"'!tn sT,e..TE OF CALIFORNIA ) \.S. EslUt o1 MU•IEL FLECKNtAN. (OUNTY OF ORANGE ) Dece11"1. On !l!ls l)th dlY of M1y, ,Jff•, befarto NOTICE IS HElt'!IY GIVEN to fht ,,,1, • Notarv Publlc In ,,.., lot :111<1 Coun-cro!dltors ol fl'le 1bov. n1mecl dtc"'"'' iv a~d St1te, i>erS0111tly 1ppear11d rhll all ptr50nt tllv'"' clal-111!nsl Ille WILLIAM R. ALDRIDGE 1!\d RICHARD 11ld de«dtnl 1~ '"ull'td lilt 11~ ttllft'I, ~. TAYLOR known to me lo W tlle Prt!I-wrni the MtHlll'Y W>Udoer1, In l'llf .iflc. <1~~1 and se.:reiarv. res.siect\velY of the of nit c!trk of ,,,. 11X1v1 entltled court, e~ (OIC>cratlon 11111 ex&eultd I~ wllllln 1... lo pref.eflt tl!em, wltll lf'lt "'-5Hf'I' ,1r11me11! ooi behalf of tht cor11C1rtt!on veucr../'ll, to tf'>t uncler>IOlllll .t fht DlflA ll>••eln "'"'""'' Ind acknowled•ed to me of l'lt• Attor11e..-. TOMMY HAINES. EM., m1! •UCI> cerP9ratlM fXtcllle<I 1111 i.mt. ~11:15 Et tf flrotdwt'(, L*"' flMcl'I, WITNESS mY l>lr'ld .,.., ltll, Ca!lfou1l1 fCllO), wllldl Is "'' J>ft« el fOFF l_Cl "L SEAL! 111.JlfJleM el fl'le 11nOtrtllMllll'" I ll fl'lltlt~ Rltl!&rd "· Rt!lflY ... r'91nlnt le fl'le est.ttr {If Mid ""*'lflf, Noterv Publlt.Ctllfornl t within four fl'\Cllltl\5 lfler rht flrtl 111\1111~ PrlnclHI otflte In lion of tn11 noll<e. Or1n1e Cou"IY Piled Junt 11, Ifft. Mr Cofl'\mlukln EUlAI Eu1 Fl-.llm.11 ,O.pr\I $, 1f11 ,0.dmJl\l•lrWI• Wiit! Tiit Wiit lltATTllAY AND INYO!ll A11MHll el"'-Erler." f"- AtlvnltYI lboYI fll"*' ...,..., 1011 N. Mllll SI, TOMMY N.llltll, .... suu1 1u """,.., 1t Lew ' S•~tl A111 C.11i.r11t1, f!7tl Off lut .,......,, t11ltl tit. Publl1hed Ortl!H (otlt 01ilY Pl!tl l.-•-II. Clllfillnlll fmS Jur>e 12, lt, U. 1!111 Jutr J, 1"' 1101'*' Ttl: CtlJ) IJ>ll" LEGAL NOTICE TAX COLLICTOlt'S Of"l'ICI COUNTY 01' OftAHOll STATE 01' CALll'OllNIA """.,. ,... M111111llfl'1f111 WHll 1'1111 WUI A.nW Publt.r..d Ori-Cont 0.1)'1' l'lllt Jun• If, 26 Ind JI/I'( J, 10. Ttff Tln.fl LEGAL NOTICE HOTIC.I 01' SALi l'OR TAXIS MOTl(I TO ClllDITOlll OM UNSECURED l'•Ol'lllTY WHEREAS, SHERRY 11>11 MICHAEL SUPllllOlt COU•T Ofl TMI !~"LEY hive failed trld ""'ltcfff to p1y, STATI °' CALll"OW;•IA flOJI: uptn 11em1rld. t1•1s en 11nJecured 11ro-THI COUNTY Ofl OltAMGI ........ ,. c•~ty 111 tilt 1um ol $370.75, lluly IHtlled Eitti. " IETttEL E. aLAK•MO••• tor t~1 yeer JKI, WHEREAS. u!lde~ er>d bY vlrtut of 1~1 Otee11"1. "'°"lilons ot S«tlon 1fl• cf IM Ct lllvnlll NOTICE 1$ HEW;EIY 91VEH '9 ttt. ~l!Ytnve amt T1x1tlon Coot, Ille tclkrwlPll eredllors ol "" 1llou1 ~ ~I 1>•ooertv ~as be"'1 t11!led far ~ llUf'POM !hit Ill ,_,IOlll l\tulnt <!1lim H1l111t fl'll pl s&le el Public 1vct!o11 fOf the wt11flc· llld de~..,..,I 1•1 fftulrtd f1I flt<t """"'' 11e~ ot 111<1 unp11<1 11~es, lett!"91' with Wltll rht llKftllrY vouclllr-. 111 IM 9fllft 1>e111111es thetlPOl'I •!Id cost1 of 111e; Of t11t clerk o1 t11e tbevt "''"*" CllWf, er ~ow. THEREFORE. NOTICE IS to '''""' tlltm.. w1Tll .... lllWSlll"I' l!EllE8Y GIVEN tllat the County l1x v~1, fo tllt llllclt!'lltlltd If !ht -11'1t1' Co!lt <lor of O••ntt C1>vntv, 111'dtr 1nd tr¥" of lHOM .. SOH ANO MtlLllt. AND MAX ~l•luc ol !ht Aulhorltv conltrrtd by llW C. GAltlUCtC, 1U4 •11ntwr A""""9, Miff. •1oon •ela of!lcer, will sell 11 P1,1bllt 1uc· tier, C1tlforn11 ...,Id! b w. ~ flf ''"" !e the 1>lth•" bllllltr fer ut~. 11w1u1 b\11!11tt1 of t11t \ll'IH•1l1Mllll In 111 1111""'1 •~onev cl itie Unl!ea s1•m. on t~ 2•th IH!:rf1l11l111 1'11'M .. ,.,. ., 111'1 lllclclef!I. ll&Y of Ju.,., '"'· ,, ttie '10\lr of !:00 wlttll11 fovr monfl\1 lfltr tht first tJUMl(A• ll'C~k P.M ... of 11ld cltl" 11 701 Mtrl,,_ llOll of lt'lhl llO!flle, A~tnue. 81lb01 111111<1, Ctllforn11, tht 01~.~ev, ~, ·,-," •011owin1 dlscrlllt<I Pf'Gl>l!rJV, Of lO 11'\uch • •l'I 111 • n1tn lh!!f!'lll eJ m1v tit ntces11ru, lo 1'1111¥ Admln\1fr1fl'lt 1ne 11n1>1ld ta•ti.. IO!lelher will! 11t111n"' wllll-""°wlll 1111\U., •ner!'lln •rid thl COth of <olllluctl"' "'Id ol !111 lbovt salt, e1!1,,..tl'd ti the 1um of s.11.20: """" lftcWt!ll A.I+ 8yslness Personi! p,,_.ty o1 THOMPIOH AND Mil.Liit. "The lrOPtr<IJ SPot.'' 1 rel1lt btthlnt ANO MAX C. •ARJUC:K ~ult srert, lnc:ludlnt but no! tlmlled to~ nM P.i•"' •-~lore llx!urai, celh regltltr, m1chlntrv ~.;;i,c~~~I ~l'>d t<tlllP-111, 11111 1tock In Jrtdt. (Tiii ' ..._. "'o 11 svb!ecl to 1969 t1•e1 of s2n.1•l. A"'""11 fW ,..,..111"""'1• On tlle 1>1vment ot Ille 11rlc1 bkl for 1nu PubllsMd Orenee C•Jt C.!ly fll1M l>fOPUIY sold, lilt CO!,!lllY TtX COl!Ktor of JU!'ll s. ''· ''· ,., I"' , .. , .. , <lr1n1e Ce11nty, or !hi """" ccmludlnt 1ht 11le on hli be~atf. wlll den .... , 11\<t LEGAL NO'l1CE ••Id Proi>er!Y to tlle 1>11rc1111er, 10trlht•1------~------I w ill\ 1 bill of $l ie, ~nd the 111141 tllell IAlt•lnt lhtrt ufll'>n uest 111 sak:I purcht lt r. NOTICI TO CltlO!TOltl Deted June 11, 1t 6t !U•lltlO• COURT Ofl lMI f:nl~ ~:;1-zollector STl.TI 01' C4t.ll'OltHlA ll'Olt of Ori-• .-... n1, TNI C:OUNTY 01' OMHel '"" ......., Ht. A41:11t Bv H, H~rnllhrtY £•11" of JOHN WILt.IAM lllOWM, Ot11u1Y PtcHM!<I. l'vbll•htd Or11111 Co11I 0111'1' J>ll&I, NOTICE IS Hl!•llY Gl\ll!N tit t11t Jvtl"' l,, lt'' 111].ff erldlltrt f//f Ille t-.Ovt 111""41 ~ LEGAL NOTICE !Ml Ill --lllYllll <ltllM .. tllllt lf'll Wld dlCIClftlt IA rMUll'ld ,. fl" tlllm, with lflt lllCll .. rt' YllU(lltrt, 111 fht efflc. of "" (~111: " tllt .111 ..... ,, .... CtVrf • ., lo llAM!lt lhl!n, wltll rht _..,., YC\ICMrs, lilt tllt llflCllrslt!!9d .. tllt t.ew OlllAI f//f Wll•UTT ANO OICAZAICI, .it Witt E1911tll It....,, S11!r. t2J, '911'9 AM, C1lllO!"ll "'" Wl!l<ll t. rht llllW el b\11lnu1 " 1111 undtfl"11fd 11'1 11! fl'll'ftf'I 11trlt'"klll It 1111 .. i.,. " Mid dKlodt!lf, wll'll!" fcur fl'ICl'ltlll tfl'lr h fl'111 (IWllQ. lllt> of 11111 l!Ollt:1. O.ltd ~y ,,, lflt Marv c. a .. wtt Adml"t.lflfl'hr f//f fflf 1!1ttt11 tf lhl l ...... ,,........._..... Wlll'UlT AMD OKAIAIU A"'""9 .. Law '11W, ........... -... """' ...... c........ ""1 Tllr tn11 ...,, ... A•1111'• flor ....,.lilllltretrht llllllllttlld Ofaflfll Ctrttr 0.1'1 Plllf, M11 ft, Jllllll S. lL lf, 1'rff IOl1.ff LEGAL NOTICE • 6 4 2 -s 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 -s 6 7 8 HOUllS FOR SALi RINTAl.S RENTALS RINTALS lfuftt""'"" -1400 -Fumltllecl HeutM UftfurnftM4 Apta. Unlurnllhod ASSUMI t\4% LOAN ':!~ ~!•~1--2~! filklwoy City 3616 0.-01 sooc 1 2t>f20' P••IW Din LUXURY am. t br, 2 bl, 2 BR. fnodi yd, pr, wtr pd., +,JieSBR2ba.Denoould July,Allaory<....,.WalltlO New palrit. 110$ mo. VENDOME . al.lo 1 be beaut:UUI mNlef beach. OWblf 84Gl so.• bdm1. Only fJS,9!0. IMMACULATE • -s HAFFDAL RIALTY < .. m..,., R1nt1la 2910 L-• .. IMch 3705 ~· ' "" -.-AOUL'.1' 6 FAf.IJLY •FNTAL• Aoto. Unlvmflhod Nowport Beech • 5200 NEAR octan_ dP'X. yrly, 8 BR 2· bit., prlv pnl. bltn11. w/w cpl. drpt. No pett, Cm!ly only. $275 rn o . - dAILY PILOT IZ REAL HlATI I Gener at S740 W1rntr, r.v. SCMC SECTIONS AVAILABl.£ SHORECREST f BR. S BA, WATERl'RNT, pltr, • G.t UNIQUE l..quJI& Hkleaway, CkaH to thopplnt Perk Coron1 dtl Mir tam0¥ room. formal dinlna atepr to ocean. 2 or 3 BR, Ttrnccd prde-. IO'Cened * Spactoua 3 Br's, 2 B.. room, .:srtwater. °'Udml'• $W ptr wk A 11p. tolD room, fully crptd. Exqul1ite * 2 Bedrooms 5250 Income P".'!f!!rl! - Vlt\V OF THE BAY. Balbo9 Duplex iof>ed R.3. Boom to build. Should pay ... llOlll until rtady lo bulld. Price ~.500 A owner may flnnnce at 6l~%. To ate call Jt:AN SMmt REALTOR. ask for BUI 646-3255 or '46-ll).;4 pl-.y area. OPEN DAILY. Rtwr AW. NB. 673--8229 canyon view. $ 1 9, 8 0 0 . * S\vlm Pool Put/&fftn 98l-™8 CLEAN IWboa Beacb Unita. 49'M351 * Ftpl, Jnr:ttv/inctey fac'lt * BY OWNER * SIHpa 2 to 10: io. •ummer 1145 An•holm Ave. Watt'l'front, 2 BR, 2 BA, cpi.,. ftstrvatlont call 67M!MS La9vn1 Niguel 3707 COSTA MESA &C2·2824 drps, botlt slip. $49.500. 3l5 E. Ballm Blv., BIJb 1--------- !n<l 846-1122 or (213) LAC. Bcb \I block trom BEAUT. vi.w EXCL 3br 2 e RENT e SS'l-M.«. beach. One holds 6 • ha, bltns dshwr. crp/drpa:, 3 Room1 Furnfturei OWNER'S vacant 3 BR 2 $175/wk. another holds 3-4, fp. $300 836/5750 542-ms ba<h. >!i% FHA loon. 112'/wk . .......,, .<0 .. IALS $20-$25 & UP $120/mo.. 198ln bthmus Cnr BALBOA -Jntxpenaivt cot· Apt&. FurnlahM Month-To-Month ltentala Adama A Maano)la). ta(eL Weekly ntts Jucy, WIDE SELECl'J.ON 536-4568 AUfUSt, Sept.548-3158 Gener1 I 4000 Appllahcea Ir TV'a avail. •• • B d u --· ..-. No Security Depo&lt 3 Pn,." A. en. -v Au.-RiNTALS $125. 2 BR triplex, w/w, tc~ HFRC Furniture Rentals XJnt family home prittd to ....._. Uftfurnfthtcl ra~. Avail July lat. &-k. fil7 w. 19th, CM 548-3481 tell. 1930 Parle St., H.B.1----------1 534-6980 1568 W. Lncln. Anhm 77f.2800 536-'6:98 General 3000 $215. 3 BR upper duplex, e BEACH. YEARLY e Fountain ValJey 1410 FREE RENTAL BOOK ~a~sBkr octan, w/w. Child 3 Br. 2 Ba. untum .... $265 ~ . .., ~ ON TEN ACREs t &: 2 BR. rum 4 Untum Frplca I prtv. patios/Pools. Tennis • Contnt'I Bld51. put· nnr """' 900 S.. ~ OIM 644-XU IMacArtbur nr. O:lt.at H1')'l 5 Neglected Darllnp f.3 BR + 1·2 BR sep houNs on 'ii A. TLC. wiU return $725-$750 mo. Aalclnc only $18,500. Drtve by 2U4 Sal'lta Ana !hen call Jo HaMen, Rltr 646-3226 INDUS. Bldg. 100% oocpd, Nprt. Bch. 10% net llllturn. Jl 90,000. Phil S u 111 y a n .....,., ---------SO. ot hwy, 3 BR, '1114, <lrpa, 1.B_us_ln_--'-P_ro....:;.po;;.rty.;.:....;..;..;..:I pr, nr mid & heh. $250 lse. XI.NT Boslneu prope~ for Adlt.s, no pets. ~ aalo by cwner In N.a Zoned 1 B!t. W/W Cl"PICo Redec. C-1. 6f6..5161 Adults only. 3ll ·B Mariuerite aft 6 or wknds Businen R•nt•I ----------Real sharp 3 bedrooms. 2 _..:. · 534-6980 2 Br. 1 Ba. unturn •••• S215 Baths Electric built ins C .. _._ 3 Br. 2 Ba. wi den •••• J300 S.lboa 5300 STORES For 1eo11e Villap NEW, By owner, 3 BR, 2~ Bllh. '11/W carpets, drapes, block fence. Many custom featurtt. $31,500. Euclid & Talbert, nr trwy. ~79 earpei. Drapes and relrlJ': osta m.N 4100 t Br, 1 Ba. Wlfurn •••• $200 GRACIOUS adul Shopping ·eenter, cor. at El Lo!'ne Booch 1705 * EXCLUSIVE * BEAUTIFUL PROPERTY NEVER BEFORE ON THE MARKEI'. R-2 landscapE'd lot fromBlvd. to Oltf Dr. with substantially built and dlst:lncUve 5 bedroom home. 18 x 24 redwood paneled liv· inarocm with fireplace. 12 x 15 diniJlcroom. Entry. Larp: kitcben. Furna~. Bri~ patio. Only a few steps to Diver's Cove. $140,000. Term1 possible. e AWST BE SEEi'\ 8 MARSHALL • ROPP %11 Ocean Ave. 494-1021 .,...,. i..u.11ss "'mo SlO OO k 3 Br. I Ba. fum ...... $27S s 2 BR. t 11 v Ing. Camino Ii Mendosa, CM. Wa iker & Le'e • o,y, ~ .. k, :.~. llfl BURR WHITE .::: ... Bay ! :-.~~!'. :~~ .=.'°st!;: ;.;: • Studio & Bach. Apts. REALTOR pool & bot.t aliJJI. 613--3003 See Uquor •tore for key. 7682 Edinger e Incl Utila a: Phone senr. 2901 Newport :.~531::! 1 &: 2 BDRM apts. $165 & AJ Wagner 213: 98180 842-U55 or Sf0.5140 • Maid Service. TV avail 675-463() s. $3XI )'ttly. Anita, Jones • PRIME Retail Location e Open Evea. e New Cale & Bar $185. 3 QR. 2% ba studJo, Realty. 67l-6210 17X4D. Xlntloot a: auto traf. NEAR BEAOI 4 BR 2 ba 2376 Newport Blvd. S0.91":J5 RIO, w/,w, .flit Child & fie. mt 'Harbor, CM W/W cpts, tncd yd, lg BEST value 2 BR. pelS OK. Bkr. 534-6980 Huntington BNch 5400 646-6654 din/kit combo., lg 1 liv rm dishwasher, pool, Quiet $135. 2 BR 4-plex. w/w, Ex ltf Livi FOR. LEASE skn 2Jx.42. w/trplc. Bet 2 1hop cntrs, Adults. no peta. $140/mo drps, R/0, Children A: pets C ftCJ ft9 Also ottice space. 333 E. $235 mo. IR. 968-4541 aft. 6 utU pd. 2295 Pacific Ave. OK. 8KR. 53f..6980 In new apts. 1 b!droom, 2 17th St. CM. 6 4 5-2-4 so , LOVELY 3 BR, 2 BA, xlnt 548-6878 bedroom • 2 bath. 548-5508 oond • ...., exU'U.1275 P".l0B'°"ACH=EL"'lJ""R-.-cM~od~em-A'ICoota -5100 $140 to $195 mo. Fncd yard. Nr Harbor clean. $80 util pd. Man jjjjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Swimming pool, IYM, u.una, Office Rental 6070 High. 646-ll89 o I 30. 1637 Irvine Ave., HARBOR recreation room LAGUNA llACH EL Toro. New 5 BR 2 sty, 2 64-5736 General Electric ·Appliances. Air Condltlonecl BA Cpt. Drps. Fenced. We LGE furn ha.ch apt. $125i Adults only. ON FORES'/ AVENUE :~ ht • 1ut + dep. ~~~th July lst. 549-J866 i.rr. BACllELClGa~~~~.S La:i'L_~! A,sr."· C:e!. *•a= : $225. 3 BR 2 .ba. trplc, w/w, NICE 1 BR Dplx, Sep by u,.,. uni• ..,-,...,,~ ~ prime location ID downtown RIO. chil. It pets ck. Bkr. gars. Quiet. Older adll, no from $11 O Laauna Beach. Alt CCJDti. S3H90l ...... 540-1021 A!ID AVAILABLE 2 BDRMS •• 2 BATH ........ ...,.,.i. - 3\'i ACRES $75 b ch lo "°"""' -Two Und-.~~ !·-•. ~. ol Coda Miu 3100 mo, a e r apt. 1 -2 A 3 BDRM. ----_...._ ... ~ ...... .... • .,,. ilii<S.it.;;;;:;;;;;;:;--;;;;ii.l==M~'";;;only;f.~548"'577~~= H~ted Pool1, ChDd can $150/Mo. HEATED POOL eo. ... --: ... __... • La~-9 Bil<• <o be•ch ~-1-~, ~'~,Kl'· OK F ........... nor•~ 10 •-· ' 2 BR Self-contained unit. ..... nter, Adj. to Shopplnc -'JU.I '"t'V""V'" ... -Ocean views. Shoo.Id dlvlde N rt 8 h 4200 N ts .n---i DelaW.art Studio Apts. Mund»tl puidnc klta. ISO into 13 lots. Price }11),000; $!35. Mlll8cer at 2278A, ewpo ••c 0 pe .....,....,,. 2620 Delaware, H.B. per month tcr QllC9> Deak Placentia A v e • , CM. SINGLE y "ul 2'100 Petenon Way, at HU. .-~ .. ......,, and ch ... a-•·"-~ • 29% Dn. A real alttpt'r. 646-.5631 OI' call ( 714 ) ouna: -.i ts Lux· bot A Adam.ti, Cetta Meaa "'"'~' anytime 53&1816 ·-_. ..,. MISSIONRLTY. 4M-0731 496-3812 ury garden apts with coo~ setmO CHEZ ORO APARTMENTS Ballintu boun aunrtaa l!!O~~"'l!""""~"'"~~ I '"==~=~~-~-I try club atmosphere and' '!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!l!!'!!!!!J!!~ 8234 Atlanta aervice tvaili.bl• tor $lO. rultic 2-cty. house; possible Rm. Pool .I: maint. new cpt. BAY CLUB APTS. Irvine at AVAILABLE JUNE 25 ttlept.cme. LAGUNA C&nyon. 90' x 400'; 3 BDRM, 2 Bath, J..c. Fam. complete privacy. SOUTH I~ New 1·2 Bedrooms • pay 6 All utflldel paid ~ C-1 or M-1 zone: $4,000 dn. A <trp., Built-ins. frplc, 16th Newport Beach. * $UO ~~ ~272'1 Z22 ~~ ~ mer. &7S-6591: ~nn Rea. spmkl. UKl/mo 642-2718 <n4> 645--0550 * 2 BR with carport n...1 wa-•---~ * Water pa.id ..-u.i • ..,..,rs .... ,,, .. rs -LAGUNA BEAQI SUPERB view, newer cust. 3 3 BR, :I Ba. cpts, drJll. bltns, YEARLY Skps lo heh. * Near schools Private Ga.races ...,._ Br. Sell/trade. $15,000 Eq. $2llO. includes' a rd e n e r • ModE"m 2 BR, all bltn1, 2192 PlacE"ntia Ave, Apt D 2 BEDROOM • BATH 61<>6591 .f9f.ll61 RH. 675-313l frplc, beam ceU\rtg5. Adults, 636-4120 • ' 8EAtrrIFUL Prlvt.te ottb .. " .,_. FURNISHED A: with bath. acme ocean view, S J Dpoo!ELUXE 3 br. home with 36' no petll. -.J'l!IO LG. 2 BR, 2 BA, frplc, baJ. UNFURNISHED in the Glendale Fed. Sav-'c" •1•• 1720 • Lease~mo. LARGE 1 BEDROOM cony, a:ar. New cti>U, drps. Cpts. drapes, bullUna, best ings Bldc. Corona del Mar. ap strano $150 mcnth, yearly Adul ts, no pets. U55 Baker. location, -1 blk to 5 Points $75/mo. Call E v e I y n SPANISH·Contem p., NEWLYredec.2BRhome, **673-8Cll8** 54<M358aft5~wlmds.$160 shopping etc. from $l30. Halb&kken 675.-5444 or decorator 's delia:ht: .f br. 3 fncd yd, cpt-drp, slv. retr. l·BR apt., 1 blk to bch. Yrly NEW :I bdr apt. East-side 7701 Ellis, apt. 0. 642-2135, ~3165 Ba.: 6%% Int. $38,500. By wsbr.$220mo.~ l!;e. $160. Avail. July 1st. crpts, drp8, built-ins, dsh· 842-8303 l-334=,~N~EWPO==R~T~BL=vo~. Owner Phone: (1) f93.-46!0 3 BR home 11i9 batbll. 2 car Realtor 6~1642 waaber. Encl. 1ar. priv. 2 BDRM, 1 level Con-Otlicu: auitable for Com- &arace, mvered pat Io • patio. &C-1257 domlnium. ' Wuber/dryer, merclal. Medical, Dental Duplox• For Solo 1975 l'OO!mo. Art. 54Ml41 Cerone del Mor 4250 IJ1!i. 2 bdr vk. of J.9tll 4 encl patio, Ill llCWtla. AJr.<:ond., ..,..._ elevakl< ~UPLEX ~ooo lllU'""-·-AVAIL Aue •• 4 BR. 2 ba,,. rozy 2 BR., lrpl. Ground Anaheim. tanat:. retra:. no $175. Adults. 968-1394 35c PER SQ .rr. ,, _. .,,.,., .... st""" xtnt ne........ .-.oo: -1 call befu g NEW H~ up, 1·2-3 BR. Heat-, "'"541c.-.oo.12=-o_R,,,615-34M,___.-terert. 514 Femlea!. CdJi. ~,,; ·-r':!''::. • ..-.w;;i floor. Near shopping, Pf! s. re pm .-r; s. al ~ •• _ -·· ~.... tno. &Ali:: req. ~.wo Furn., $175. Adults only, no -",,2-4G!l8==-::-=-==-.= ed &: aauna pools, rec nn. NEW deluxe ottlce 1Paca ""~ .,.,...,..,.. "'""' "---.... Heil &: Aleonquln. Mer. 320 to 1200 sq ft at Santa RENTALS N •---h 3200 pets. vwu<:rl/aat., DUPLEX 2 br, Dpt. drpa. ._. .. "Ill ewport ~ Hal Pinchin •-•·-...-•392 I d tv • 1 ~ Ana. Fwy &: Crown Vall13r • rui"""' vi.,... enc y • aar., • ... re. _ ••- - Fur"I.•-• H~/ w I k _,. A .~ .. modern l or 2 BR. turnoff. 831·1400, -~ NEAR WESTCLJFFSMAU.semiApt$80utilltles • ....,mo an o . ......,, i~c. .. Sia' ... •7472 cpts, drpa. av1il July I. -Sq ~, ~-ltental1 te Shire 2005 dellahtful, tie. 2 Br. pnten p0L Till 5 • days 6~. • r s:JS.2S79 """ • r • VJT-apt Couple preL; SOIT)', no eves '75-6170 LARGE 1600 mq Jt 3 BR. CX>SfA MESA Mli-2130 GAL, 30. lbaM 2 BR, 2 ha pets, no childftn, $160 Mo. . W/W cpts, drp1. Avail Aue. LRG 2 BR, all extras, pool 1pt 'Ni~ u.me. Pri pat, Hal Pinchin " Anoe 615-4392 lhlboa' '· 4300 6: 549-3866 $139 mo. 847-15!M alt 8 pm pool., ..1-.i furn. H B --=~~,---.-..,~-1 wkday1. W ._. LOVELY Nwpt Bch home, 1 & 2 BDRM apta $165 &: 1 BR Duplex. a:ari.. elderly =='====== B-3 avall Junt 23rd. Back yard '""" 1 An! • lftf'd. No dogs., clOH to c 1 I 5700 HAVE 5 BR 3 bath houM!, pool. 2 blkl to ocean. 3 BR, ~~Jrno ta, Jonea shop'g. 548-7120 OI• • turn. Wut mature man to fncd. cpts, drpll, bltns. $300 REDEC 2 BR ret:tla: blUn1 Be h Apls. Mire $165/mo l_nclud. util. mo. 841-<163 Huntl""°n Buch 4400 "'"' drp" .,;, .,.,, 'SQ w'. IC ~2623 or &16-10:)8 DUPLEX avaWJuly 1, 3 br. Wilson. 545-0760 Will aha.re: my home 2 ba, bltns, Incl. dahwflhr. I: :r BR F'urn apt w/frplc, Quiet, Dix. 2 BR. apt. New • Deluxe with responsible person. frpl. 1 block from beach. bltns, l~J blk to ocean. Adults only, no pets. (714) 536-4616 lndUltrlol Prop. -$21,950 61'.bc14q' 1.one M-1 witb vacant 2 bedroom neat, dean boml!I. 922 SUnlel Ave., just oft Monrovia. R e al Eltaters 646-nn Commercial 49U469, Lacuna Beach 673-1758 or (213) 242-9371 Newly dee & crptd, a1ao 2 1777 Santa Ana Ave. 646-5.;42 (714) 536-1417 3 BR., E-Z walk to beach. BR 1pl1t level crpts, drpa. 1 BR util pd elec bltn• nl Ocean Avenue OFFICES FOR RENT Cost• Mell 2100 Cpta, drpl, bltnl. $250 Mo. hltns. Cpla prde?Ted. 322 rerr1i. no children or pet.'. {3 bJka W. ot H. B. Pier) Modern, AP&cklus, profelflk>n. SJNGLE HOUie. Rel.IOfl&ble. ::Y:'dy=lle=:. ':Rl7t1'':.=: ..... ":"1290==::::::1~:~.-·~t.,~HB.--~~~-·ar_ly 646-6222 before .. 1 "'R=eA=-L-E"S~T"A~T=e~-"'--I ~~~9.m~:1ct~:~· t::. ~er cider lady. Newport Heights 3210 NEW $200 up. lp:l-3 Br, hid 3 BR Deluxe, adulta, nc pets. General Downey s &: L Aaaoc, Mia- -A auna pools, rec nn. Hell 540--0154, S4&-348l or MI I -Re-.-,-,-,,-w-.-.-,-od----I sion Viejo. 837-49ll 2200 2 BR. 1 bath, lrplc, din rm. 2 & AI&oquln. Mar ,.._,137 ~ 5990 =========I \IN~o~W!JpCll~rt!_!Bo~a~ch~_2~ ear pn.ce. Yr'1 leue, $20IJ BEAUT lge :1 BR, 11..ii ha SINGLE protealonal man lndustrlal Rental '°'° DOVER.Shott• bayrrcnt !':!°1:1 .. ~ peta. 5'8-6640 or Garden Grewe 4610 studio, pool, adults. S155. 40+ wants clean modern 450 SQ. FT. BLDG, home 6 BR 4 ba. lara:e <N ......., 2310 Santa Ana. 64S-2993 furnilhed aparbntnt. June • • =========!SINGLE YOl!nl Adult. Lwi:-30 occupancy, Will a>ntlder E. 17th St., Costa Mela patio, 70' private dock. June UnlnnJty Park 3237 ury a:a.rden apts with coun-Ntwporf Beach 5200 •harln& new home, Recur-E!ec. power. I: July, $.2500 mo. Ber. -""-"'""'4.;...;c.;.;_..;..;c;;. -club atm,.p•-and ;.c;;;.:c.;...._._____ Ready JO!' tenant e-t ....... 111e 11000 rna •t .. ,, '""'"' rent travel, discreet. Ally ..,.., ., ., • .,,. • • 3 BDR 2n ba, family room, complete privacy. SOUTH DELUXE upper, 2 BR, new-be ch S60 Month. ~ 213: ?11().SOJJ or 21 3: view! Leue. Rm. l3S-0104 BAY CLUB APTS. 13100 ly dee, t:rpl, bltrui, )Tly. de~ Mar~~firi,fer Corona lndust bid& In M·l. CM 7~ llftu 6 p.m. CHAPMAN Ave., Gardea 6'5-0Thl er &U--0507 17th St. ~ sq. ft. LOVELY 3 BR. oceantrontl'1=-=1= .. ======,=2=•1'I Grove (ll.fJ 63&-lOl> NEAR Ocean.Upper 3 Br, 2 MAJQR oll co. manqemMt 645-lllJ Eve. 64:1-U79 home, avail. tor July 4 At11. , .. .. 1,PLACE'""'=-'"°"'=....:.: • .:.,,..:.,"..,.:,...._,,~-1 Ba, frplc. Le11.se $225 mo. :aineeho wtahe1 to rent 3 or 4 NE\V lndustrlll blda, 2iOO -. .... 'TOR 67•J642 ---------Avail lmmed. 4.,.. ,.._ r. me In HB atta. $175-., l=~===·=~====JSHARP• Univ, Park. 3 BR, 2 they UW looking -DAILY .,.,......_ $200. Occupancy July 15. fl 9c per ft, 1639 MonnMa, Balboa Jiland 2355 BA,, carpeta, drapes, built-PILOT cluliftedf MU6'7I NO matter what it la, you :ll!/31M324 CM. 673-9017 l'-'-.;.;;...;.;._.;;.. __ .c.;..;.1 ins. $275/mo. leue. Near IC.l::NTALS can .U tt wttb a DAILY z~"'c=-'°1 =R'iL.:.S~,--,-0~1~1-,-1-. =========I t Bit. Yrb or ..,.. Ma<utt ucr. l33-l047 ~ Unlvrnllhod PD.Or CauUled Id. oradJ..Princlpie duire room Lob 6100 67J..5177wlmd1., 5100 toptheT w/ Jdt prlvl, NB 1 .c~";;'°";H.':;"°:;:-;I :;:Ml;;:';;:;;;;-:3:;;2;;;so~tc;;;"';;';;;•;;;M;;;oo;;;• ;;;;;;;;;;;s;;1oo;;;c;;"';;';;';;M;;oo;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j ll'IL A"""" llOO mo. BAYFRONT Huntl"""" .. och 2400 12 8R HOllR, .... u ... 1 cood. "3/'IJl(l.:l913 co· MMERCIAL FOR Le.,. 3 blrm f\lrn Glon Murled "°"P1'1 4 m r=-AMI=~LY=w~an~l,~IO-,.-ot~3~or-4 Mar West Home. mo. * 61'S-3291 bedr house from $175 to 968-2'191 CONSTRUCTION JU5T'CDMPLETING l>lOlmo Good .. 1s. Cont- i========: I Huntl""on IMch MOO '~"'"""" '""'"'· JS48..8867 L19une IHch 2705 3 OR 4 BDRM .. rum. tit un- 3 BR 1" bathl. 22101 :J.. furn., Coeta Meta t1r N'pt. OLO Spelsh chann, Ip 4 Capiatrano Lan e CNr Beh. Now 'Ul OcL $200 to BR. _. ...... ""' wit Broolchunt a u.. 0cean>. HARBOR Her.im our poo. Flm!I>. 11Ck, -trMs, nr hllh .chool a mstmo. <n•> ems unt.a _ bead>, 1PP t -., 3000 oq ft 2 BR. ,.. -...,. ,..i, e LANDLORDS e rt toe. "°°mo. 4Mm2 w/w, ..... No ""· For LUXUIUOU5 2 & 3 IEDROOM APT$. l'llEE RENTAL SERVI<Z Broltzr5U-11112 NOW'S THE TIME POI fj>UICI CASH THIOUtfH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD QPt., aft 6. 213: m-1882: I• ba • I ~ Ft •---e s-·~ bl RELIABLE lam l 1 y, .f 3 BDRM, ,.. ' • m I.Wm • 1'9PJ.M:C1 _.,ow; ca nets children. want 3 BR., yewly, :_ac77h~.$210. Mo. on )'fly Jae. • Di1hwuher e Geffen 6 S&tti.n i... Jo'" ht ,..11 .-._,_. ''lll!!!!!!!l!l!!l]!!liil]ll!!!!!!!tl .,_. " • M1mmoth muter Pl built.Ins .,,, .., ........ v1-...1. 1: 3 BR, tun rm. bltln•, fhed, 8 r:=m, • B&Janced power llvtnr 11~. 23 ~! BR apt No. ft.1 Prime Lot. nr 9Chools A beach. Eva e centr&1 forc9cl • EndOHd parkln.r _ .. na. ._.. ~te. eo.ta Meaa's Mesa Verdi ~ atr beatlnc • Clrpttl • drap11 $17.50 mo. Bob fM..3'10 am 155 x 45 x 132 126. =====:::==:;:;'=:;-I Yii SELL A HOMI s BR. 2 ba, m1 rr.m -· R-,.. ltMt 5ns Almcot new, 211 cor pr.. -------~ !iVERY 31 MINUTIS - 111 -- 11 " :J.. ~.~~sr~"'S:M Walker & Lee • Bil, 2 BA. "'""' ftptC, dbl HARBOR HEIGlflS alt 3:30 PM . pr, l ml bell. lltJ mo. lit our 2'l1IO Hacbor IDvd. at Ad- A luL IW-2958 EMPl.OYED lldf-kitchton A 545-Nll fount•ln Velloy :MIO 4 BR. A: dfn, w/w CfPfC A: ceramtc tile: thn>OUt. 2200 "· n. sm per m&. -.ao BUSIEIT -In """" 'lltl DAILY PlLOI' era....,-. So .. -· -. -. ..... -II Rel'ltal ManQ!J-Mn. OirtrtlenNn laun. priVL 180 mo. Open 'tb t PM can eG401S BEAUT. Mountain tot. Ron-3117.A Clnno'""" Ave., Coote Mota (1 block -· ol Hutlor Blvd. 2 bloca -of Ibo S.. lllqo """'1> • RESPONSIBlX ~ to nlnr Sprlnp art.a. wm -.hare 2 bd:\' hwe. Call aacriflce, $2300 C LI lil . -847.QJS ,_ "'P!!'!! - FOR Ml.II: B\' OWll!Ck luntll.2-lBR.lBAA "3BR, .,. BA. - -"'M"tta-,,V"-,,=-r::-=--1 lat. a-. W-<llS , ~rrro'EMt -~~~-'-';....._;..._ _ _., . .. -------···------------------------~------~--~----~~~-~-~---------~~--------------~--~...;. ------------------------------------------~·-~· -------------- . • :ta DAILY PILOT ThUndal', J"" 19, 1969 ~JR~eA;.L;:;IST;..;.;Ar.T;;,E'----R ... lrA"'L"'E ... ST"A"Tliic"'="""-+.A:;;i;;,.,.ouNC!MINTS l"!'•-...... !ll'"-•*,._~!11'"-•*,._..,.* SEllVICE DIRECTORY Joas & EMPLOYMENT JOIS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ~Ip W1ntM, Men 7200 tf•lp W•nted .. Men 7200 Help Wanted, Men 7200 -.. ~-.. al ond NOTICES 1t >< * -r =~==:::...---1 Paporhantfng It. I. Wanhd 624Glt. E. Wanted 62411 Found (Frw .!_•I 6400 1' • Painting 61.!0 INT. I. Exl Palntioa -Ex· pUt Workmanahlp. Rt>u. RalH. Uc. • Jia. Call Chuck &45--0809 MOTOR HOME re• BUllDERS • * $$ MORE CASH $$ ft or Y 04.lt Home Equity AbsolJtely no CNI ••••• to you tht SELLERI ~s of paying MORE CASH !or Orange County Property. - Call the Rest ••. Thtn c•ll the BEST BEVERLY JACKSON REALTY 147-4033 545-1245 BUSINESS and 1:R;;.•;;.•;;;•h;;.•:.:• ____ 6_1_50 FINANCIAL North•rn California Rancho 35 A~ ot <'XceUent Cali· fomi& ranch land n e • r Chowchilla.. Ha' cotton allot· ment, homt', &;UHi house, all utililit>S, )aJ"ic yard, beaull- ful shade trees and sch001 bus to the door. Full price, SS),CKKI, with $15,oo:I down . Cood 1erms. For more infor- malion please call Glen TIK>mpson. Eckhoff &. Assoc., Inc. 1818 W. Chapman Ave. Orange, Calif. 541·2621 Eves-"·knds 538.6727 6200 Lagun• B•ach 7 ACRES W/PERMIT TO KEEP HORSES Adjacent subdivision o n e mile E. of hwy, util avail. $ l2,00J. I,~ Cish, bal ill ITUSI deed. \Vrite or contacl: George R. Kress, Box 914. Laguna Beach or phone 494-4726. Take over pymnts. JO Acres no down. S29 mo . Near Lake & City. 894--4743 R. E. Want_ed ___ 6_24_0 CASH QUICK-need 3 or 4 Br. G.l. or FtlA house near here. 499-1948 BUSINESS •na FINANCIAL Bus. Opportunities 6300 H£LP!! National co. neerl~ a distribu- tor fer candy & snacks in )'OUr area. Person selected must be able lo devote 2 to 10 hrs. per "'l'i!k {days or evt's) lo make very high Bus. Opportunities 6300 BUDGET RENT-A-CAR Major Orange County Expansion O\vncr-J\.1anaging Partners wan!ed \\'ill train -ambitious -dt:'di- catecl men &. won1en "'ho seek a challenge & want to Invest (financially & pt-rson- ally) ia~ a dynanlic growth business. People who "'ant to becon1e involved as O\VtJ- er-working partners. Will be r-e1varded with salary, 'fi9 car & 257;, of profits. Jnvesl· n1ent i-eturned firsl year. Frank V. Bianchini 645-0'110 HARDWARE STORE tiuntington Beach 10.400 511. ft. Busy shopping Cf'nter. Good will has been built over 44 years. Fin. avail. • BRASHEAR REAL TY 8·17-8531 1-;ve. 968-1178 ?\IAJOR Franchise drive-in; ire cream & food servic(', xlnl loc. Other interests net-essHatt' selling. Owner. !YIS-6681 eves. SUDLET or share jcy.·elry slo!'e, Bal. Jsl. Suitable· glfls, repairs, etc. 546-7231 a n1. CHINCHILLAS Are you interested? Visit our ranch 642-046.5 WANTED: ofI.sa,le liquor license, Orange County, Call: 6'12-8139 earnings. \'ou may keep Mon•y to Loan 6320 )'our pt'('sent J>Ollllion. No 1----'------- f.()\ling. No experience nec- essan' but must be !"(!liable. Company will teach. We meet "'ith Bankerll' Approv· al. $1650 cash required (st· cured). For irnmediate in· terview in your area send name, address I.:. phone number 10: ''DISTRIBUTOR DTVIS!ON'' P. 0. Box 58 Pomona, California 91769 ls1 &. 2nd loans Jor quick cash. BoITOw on your Pt'!> perty eq without disturblnj: ~'Our low interest ls~ TDs. Also buyers for 2nd TDs. SlltUcr Mortgage Co. Inc. Serving J-larbor Area 20 yrs. 336 E. l 7U. S!. 642-2171 545-0011 ANNOUNC•MENTS ind NOTICES SOJWINN bDI!! • old con- dition.. Vic Dover Ir Pacific: Cllt Hwy, NB. Call to Iden- tify. $48-13f7 WATC11, Vic. Newport llelghtg. Owner ple~ Iden. lily.~ BLACK f'enl&lfl puppy about 4 mo. La.brador Retriever! 84&-2900 ""' ., ..... PAJNTING Int A Ext Lowett contracted PriCH. Fully ins. S..UstacUon guar. Free est. Jim Weeki 673-U66 TRI-COLORED n1ixed wire IC'rrler male dog, vie Nwpt Back Bay area. 646-9895 PCX>DLE rnbced, malt pUp- py, about 3 tno. old. S.A. Heights. 545-0tm Whaddy1 Want? Whlddy1 Got? PAINTING, int. I e."L '1 Uniwrsity i;enion, 3 yrs exp. Rnp., neat, depen· dable. 833-2232, 4!JZ....«32 INTERIOR Paintin& U )'1'li Bay area. tmmed Service, Call Bob, 646-0446 SPECIAL Cl.ASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL llORN SWAPPERS Spoclol llltt e PAINTING, reuona.bJe, tree estimate. BLACK killen WI while feet, pink collar, no tail. Vic Nwpt Heighll'I. 642-7458 5 Lines -5 times -5 bucks llUL£1 -~ MUST tN('LUOI!: * 494-8238 .. 1-W~I YOU ll•w If, fr•O.. ~ "°I' wtftl Jn Ir ... 1-YOUll *"""' •ndl• ..,,,_ .._, llM• Of W'lilrtltlne. e INT • EXT, ANY SIZE JOB. Xlnt work, refs. tree est. J'IM 642-4669. .......... OTHtNG FOii lAt.f -Tll•O~I Otolt.Yl FOUND • Grey tiger striped & whi~ kitten on Pacific Ave. C.M. 546-1880 PHONE 642..5671 To Place Your Tr1der's P1rMllH Ad BOY'S Bike in my tront yard L.akt! Arrowh!ad waterlront 646-8257 Cree & cir, $50,IXXI val Pa- ----------lcific Palisades ocean vu kit, TURTLE tree & cir, $21,500 val. Red head, eyes. Buchard &:. \Vant: Income. Bkr. 548-ml \Valerlront. 962--0862 14,000 sq. fl. steel bldg for trailer, boat mfg. on 1%. Lost 6401 fenced acre nr Redlands ;:.;:.:.:._ ______ "--'::. fwy • Trade for units, etc. PLEASE return boxer. name Eves 673-2654 o( Ginger. Dog Is ill. HOME on Altadena goll RE\V,\RD with no questions course S59,950 or 5 ac vu Jot asked. Conta~t Mr. & Mrs. nr Arlington $25,000. Trade/ Nonnan Miller, B I Uc Beach a.rca· Owner 642-3025 Lagoon No. 4, Lai,runa. Lee 8.'\S-5712 ' 4~3..%5 Tax Sheller Needed: Lrade GR_EY & whit(' frrnalc CAT, S25,000 land equity in rap- Fr1day vie Ruby & No. idly apprec. area for units Bayf~'Ont. Bal Isle. 67J-8587 Jr beach prop. Owner Box RE\VARD 376 Tustin !>44-3666 eves. CHILD'S ~t Siamese. Turq. Will trade lO unils 11 hse-3 collar. ~nth Colorado ad-lrl-plcxes Grdn Grve) for dress. V1c. of Blufil:. Please :abin in Crestline-Arrowhd call 644-4836. Reward. 1rea, $13,900 gross per yr, RED male Daschund. 10 yrs '35,000 eq. Owner. 962-5381 old. Strayed Thurs, Jn. 12 Almost 1000 ac., $250 M val, J~unt. Harbor area. Children ~ ml from dntwn LA 5 grieving, 592-1665 min. from fwy on paved 'ro. BLACK Male 1 year old cat Jlwn Be11umont & Oak GI-en. rleclawed, flee collar. Losi Trrl for 7 7 547-6469 Bier. !11on. 16 Vic. Prcsligc Trac.l, Will trad• 1961 VW l-1.B. REWARD. 842-7930 Sedan for Bus or Van. BICYCLE In carton on * 548·3821 * Lake Arrowhead waterfront Pl•stering. R9P,9ir 6880 ~ & cir, $50,000 val. Pa-p TOI P" _ clfic. Paliaades ocean vu Jot • A ._,,,~~G. tree & clr, S27.500 val. All types. Free estimate, iVant: Income., Bkr. 548-Tnl CaII 540--6825 Level lot towerinc pines, on Plumbing 6890 exclusive GoU Course Rd., ---~------ Lake Arrowhead, FOR tri-PLUMBING REPAIR plex or 4-plex, {))$la Mesa No job too amall area. Fortin, Rltr 642-5000 • 642.-3128 • \Vil! trade, AUg. Beaut home Remodel, R•peir, 6MO ir. Burlingame w/3 BR, 3 -- BA, den, pla, rm. Specl * IF. you need remodeling, bay view, for accom. op painting or repairs, Call Bal. Isl, Newport, CdM. Dick, 642-1797 Xlnt ref's, (4151 362-1212 wk da,ys. 8: :m-5: 00 Sewing , 6960 --~-------3 BR, den, 2 ba, pool, cpt/ e oreumaking • ~tere.tions. drp, in No. Downey. Valued Custom Designs at $45,000. Trade for 4 BR •64EHi446* home in CdM or Nprt area. 213-9'13-1131 TILE, Cer•mlc 6974 S9000 eq. in SOxl.40 R-3 Jot * Verne, The Tile Man * w/gd rented hse, next to Cust. work. Install & repairs. Garden Grove Civic Cntr & No job too small. Plaster HS. total val. $20,500. Trd patch. Leaklng s h o we r for units or '! 547-6469 Bier. repair. 847-1957/846--0:ui Retired-don't need tax she!-T Servi~• 6980 ler. Want hse free & clr for -'"--------- $19 M or $38 M eq in_ T-TREES pruned, topped & plc.ves. $960.mo, pool, prlITlc removed. 26 yrs exp, Joe, no vac. 540-6001 Paulson Tree Se r v i c e 638-7234 Newport 1o·rc C'way Wed-18th. ltcward! 642-9635 'A * * * * * OLIVE Green Ladies Wallet tli!!!\!!'!!!!\!!~!'!!!!'!!!!'!'!!!!!!!!!J!!'!~!!!'!!!'!~~~!!l_!~;J Uphal1tery 6990 Vic Bristol & Paularino ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICE DIRECTORY Church. Rc"'ard. 673-7356 and NOTICES CZY'KOSIO'S CUst. Uhol. APRlCOT Poodle, red collar. Announc•ments 6410 "Bimbo". Vic w. Wllson,1:...-0...::.;.:..:;:.:.:;...::_...:;..:..:.; CM Reward. 646-6022 NEW OWNER, Chevron Sia· LOST: Blond Cocker nlale lion, Main and Beach Blvd, pup, 4 nios .. vie. Seashore & H.B. Sterling Cr o ( t, 48th, N.B. 213: 927--0242 Mechanic on duty. Haun: LOST fen1aJe black Pek· 6 ani to 11 pm M7-4500 ingcse. vie 19111. C, M , LEARN TO SWIM lN YOUR Rewarrl. 61.(i....{l6ol2 0\VN POOL! REAS., RED CROSS CERT. MRS. BEE 545-1498 C•rpet L•ylng & European Cratsmanship Rep1ir 6626 100% fin! 642-1454 CARPET • VlNYL • Tll..E Expert installation 1881 Ne1vport 81., C.l\1. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT BLANKINSJilP FLOORS Job W•ntecl Men 7000 642-1403 s.40-7262 • PHYSICS. microc.ircults, thin G1rdening 6680 films, optics, reports, math, ___ __,'-----'-'-' lab helper-, e.te. Summer ANTHONY'S job. Recent S .S. in Physics. Age 22. Box 581. Laguna *SAW Sears Costa Mesa TULL 'TIME OPENINGS TIRE SALESMEN Excellent Eamilli,lS Plus • Profit sharing • Hospitalization • Group Ille ins. • Paid vacation e 8 paid holiday!\ e 40 hr. work werk • Employee discoutit • Apply in Perllonncl Office Monday thru Saturday 10 A?.1 to 4 PM SEARS Roebuck & Co. ~SEMBLERS !mmedlo.~ openlne;11 ror n1r.n with experience in plumb:. Jnr;, electrical, walls, cabin- etzt and finish -or we 1vW train you. Must have some hand tools_ See Rick, 21.35 Canyon Drive, Costfl. J\.1esa 642-91>8 Junior Acct $650 O.C. Airpru•I a1>ea Excel.IPnt oppo11un1ly! ABlLITIES UNLIMITED AGENC\' 488 E. 17th SI, Suile :r.11 Costa Mesa 642-1470 J . C. Pt:nncy Cu. FuhiOll J11and NC\\'port Bc•ch We H•ve An Opening For A *COOK * Ret..>ent, SUC~!lllfuJ experlr.nc.e in all ph&.se11 of the food in- dustry ill required. Competa- tlve 11'&.ges and outslanding benefits including profit sh11.ring. APPLY lN PERSON 10 A?.f to 9 PM P..1onday th1-u Friday PENNEY'S FASHION ISLAND Licensed Real Estate Sales-EquaJ opportunity en1ployer nlil.fl needed ror immediate employment. New unit now * • sC'lling. \Viii train. I """""""'""""'""""""""'I Four S•asons Homes POLICEMAN Huntington 8 tach $667. 10 ~ a month 968-4500 ===~:==::::'... ___ IAge :.n to :n, up to 35 with MACHINIST: E.Xpt'r. in approved ex Jl c r i enc t' tracer. lathes. gun-drills & HEIGHT: 5· 8" n1inimwn. niillil. capable of se1-up11. \VEIGHT: \n proportion to Exper. in machining Jncon-height. p 11 y s Jc AL RE· ncl & Stainless s,ecJ. Exotic QUIREMENTS: lligh school Materials Inc., 54~9425, Mr. graduate, valid Calif. opcr· Colfin. Equal Opportunity atot'S license, U.S. citizen, Employrr Jo'ile application at City Hall, SOUTH COAST PLAZA YOUNG man willing to 11'01·k 8200 Wcstminstl'r Avr., \Vc~I· 3333 S. BRISTOL hard for fu ture wilh rapidly n1instc1·. Cali!. before July COSTA MESA <',x p anding PLASTICS 11 , 196S-5:00 Pi\1 . W1·Hte.n Jo lRi\1. e:-;am July 19, 1969 (TI4l An Equal Opportunity Employer UNIVERSAL FILTRATION 893-4511 Ext. 2(1.) 26.iO S. Grand SALESMEN Santa Ana Career opportunity w I t h P/S.S•les, start $550 growing Co. Prefer cxp'd DESIGNERS Xlnt opply wl dynamic O.C. men. Fast floor, guaranteed & flnn. Car allowant:e Call + t-ornn1ision -1-P.~1.'s. DR~FTSMEN Kay, j~s5:;~ BEST ~~P~Ylilh s1., Cosla Mesa People. Wllh _heavy ~pel'I-Employment Agency 464 S. l\1ai11 Sl., Santa Ana ence in rotating equtpnient 21?.{) So. Main Santa Ana ADVERTISING ARTIST are urgenUy needed by . ~ . : . progressive ain.:rart com-AS SE!\t.BLERS, ElcctJ·icaJ Due to expansion lhc Pcn- ponents manufacturer, Ex-and l\1ec.hanlcal, nevi or l'X· nysavcr is accepting ap- perience in fuel pumps, elC'C-~r. Slab IE" ~omn1ercial plicalions for part lime tric motors and fans h; de-f1rin. 40 yeal'!'l tn business. LAYOUT, PASTE-UP & sired. Big ~rnpa.ny benefils Christie ~ecrric Corp. . PRODUCTION. Exp. prel'd. with smaU company atmos-Optical Div., 2120 Placentia Apply in person \Ved. thru phere. Reply Box M 632, the Ave, Costa Mesa. · l"ri. Pc.nnysaver. l 5 4 5 Ne1vporl Blvd .. Cl\'!. DAILY PILOT. Servief! Station Attenclur1t 1---'------'---- Day or Ni~hl nights only, over 25, mus! I•--------- Canton•s• Styl• Cook be expcr .. good pay, in. Electro Mech 1..-entives, pern1anent. Apply Assemblers Apply Ill J>Cl'SOll Wu Ben's 333 Bayside D1il'C Newport Beach -*DRIVERS* No Experience in pcrson. North Coast $1.80 hr. 11•ill train it nee. Shell, 1342 N. Coast H11'Y, Milita.1:y complete. La~ Bch ABILITIES UNLI;>.11TED AGENCY 488 E. 17th St, Suite 22~ Costa l\1esa 612-1470 l'o1ana11:emC'nl Trnl11f"r PART TIME EVES. Sl\1ALL blk/wh fC'm cat, 4 ""'h pa11 s, yello"' rollar. Balboa Isl, Jun 6. 49-1-831-:' * THE COIN CHES'I' * Rare coins, st!ls, mail auc. lion, etc. 741 S. Coast. La. guna Bch. 494-5585. YOUNG Christian man. 24, Necessary! J~ ~st, costs~ more! desires eve or 2nd shift ?.1u.st_ have clean Calilornla Call 517 . .,.,..... ~I Bo·" Beach. 494-6393 646-1948 $3.SO per hr. YOUNG 1'1AN, mechanically 1nl'lined. Learn in growing, young, c.lcclronic." co. Odd jobs &-niechanical shop 11·01·k. $2.00 hr to start. Send hricf, JICl'sonal and work history lo 881 \V. 18th St., Cosla P..1esa, Calif. 92627 BEIGE Poodle, fem a I c. RC'~ard. Huntington Beach. 536-8058 "'""t"'nenced Mamtenanc• work for min. 2 yrs of day drMng record. Apply '•o:; • r. "" _ Budget Landscaping college Ume. Call Jim after YELLOW CAB CO. • E xperi•nced Cook YELLO\V kit1en, lost in lhe Cemetery Lots 6418 Graduate Horticulturist G. &tZ-6318 lB6 E. l6lh St. • Dishwasher vicinity of Pomona & AU.EN BROS. w"'-AX"'-'~,~ ... ~,-car-.~Co~ro-.,.-d7e7J Costa Mesa ( rnust be over 181 lian1ilton. &16-~ 2 GRAVE lots Jiarbor Rest, C~DENERS SI'UDENTS Mar area. 675-6726. Ask for Warehouse & Yard e Accordian or org•n LOSI': f.lin. Poodle. male, hl?st sect~n. Moved away, wmicing way thru colles:e. Jim Mon-Fri. 12-5 Sat & Superintendent to $900 player. Apply in pc-rson Apricot: blk. eollar. Vic. \viii sacrifice. Contact Mr. Exp. Lie. Reas. 646-421)3 .S~"~,·~9-;12~======= Xlnt opp1y! A!!llured fu1ure SWISS CHALET Birch & Elli.~. FV. 91i8-532j McGiii 646-0686 e MOW· EDGE * WEED. : \V/ stable coqi. Top Bcnr.-414 N. Newport, NB Prof. lawn maint by capable Job Wint.cl, L1dy 7020 1· bk 1 "·'J c· STOC rv Srnall dog: blonde. and SERVICE DIRECTORY lls, conslr grrx ......... \ay, K CLERKS College students. Reas! . ~ '6 5410 1vhilc. ~d harness. name Kalina Brothers 646-l234 1,~ DAY Sec'y, Your 0U1cc or :.>'• -$450 per month lo 1'ilal't. No A1ANAGEMENT TRAINEES FRIGIDAIRE JET ACTION Frigidaire 1B min. cycle Is the fastest in the Industry. 30 F'rigidaires do the work of 40, 30 min. washers. Find out how easy it is to own a paying laundry. Found (frH Ads) 6400 Herman: 1-e\vard. 842-7208 Babysitting 6550 mine. Expert spelling & JASON BEST experience necessary. tl1on· --·-------Sf.1ALL., Bro1vn poodle. vie. I CUt & Edge Lawn phraseology, speedy shorth. Employment Agency day !hrough Friday. Chance \\'HITE Poodle, f em a 1 c, Highland & Nottingham Molly G en Showcase Maintenance, Licensed & t $3 hr call Cl'cs. Ask 2120 So. Main, Santa Ana to advance. Wri!e Daily choke chain. Never ~n Rd .. N.B. S48--049S 2 pre-schoolers '? round _oul 548-4808/645-IJlO aft 4 for~~. 673-oo72 MATURE MAN Pilot Box M-417, Young, n1a.turc male, looking for good fulure. Mui;t be able to meet and' d~al with people. No C1'p. nee. 11·c Lrain, Apply in person 185115 f.1ain St., 15 points Shopping Center). }LB. Garden Grol'e, Santa Ana, Tustin. Orange. Anaheim Coin-0-Matic Equipment, Inc, 2334%. \"i, Valencia Fullerton 714: 525-7833 clip~1. Vic 2'lncl St .• C'l . .;.;;:;;._:_::.._c..;. ____ class ol 6. Creative acbe1ve. Reliable lawn se1"ice, PLUMBERS --• N 1"'" " 9-50c Practical Nurse seeks For pleasant outdoor work. . wank... . e\v Please idcntJfy i mm c d. ment. 1 pm. hr Mon mow, edge. trim. D•y d"IY ,-0 N<wpon p 1 Good A COllslruct1on No u n 1 on 642--0588 Personals 6405 1hru Fri. Lic'd. 540-5098 5311404 · c.nnancn · pay. P--· . ;...;_;__~-----"' * • * area. Top ref's. 835--1583 ply in person to Jack Brown membership re Q u 1 red. YOUNG male puflpy, part 3 SISTER sitter service • • , AL'S Gard~nlne Se. r v Ice, EXPERIENCED nurse.com-POOLE BUICK 646-0529 or •199-3157 German Shcpherrl, we 11 never '1·orry about a Lawn maJntenance, garden-· Cook diets Excel· SERVICE Station attendant. •rained, housc.brkn Brown & HAPPY babysiller agairi-1 call to ing &: clean up. 646-3629 ~'°~fs. Ext 103, 49.1-85-11 234 E, l71h St. Gr&\lt'yartl shift. Apply 2800 i1hitc. Vic Ne11·port Island. 4!W-5376 does the job. Ages APANESE ard Co I Cosla ~1esa \V. Coast Hwy ,NB or caU 6n.s1o;; ' ' BELATED ' ~17~. """-' ~"-· ~----J g oner mp MOTHER'S AID. SUMMER. -~SA~L=E~S.~T~R~A~l~N~E~E~ 5<&-32'i2 r: scrv. Expel', depeodable, Exp, H.S. senior. Live-in. ---'--------FOUND 6/J/69 young pup-\\'ILL babysit your home by free est. 642-4389 $l25 mo. l2U) 34&4121'.l $12.) 11·k + bonus. :X1nl oppty * KNOWLEDGABLE perso~ py, med. size, near J::1 81,RJHDAY 1hC' i1·ec.k, you furnish CLEAN. -UP Specialist! Mov· EXP. ~-·,,1 f70 wpm) full lo join young, fast gro1•ling if' Hl-Fi components. Sa.Jes Camino & Bu~hard FV. Blk transportation. 642·1407 _,, 1 odd j b .,,... co. Call Kay, 546-5410 trainee. Call Mr. Van. ing, .rug ng, 0 1 • time, summer, University JASON BEST EARLY Ai\1 Nc1vspaper Delivery Must have dcpcn- rlable car. Call in AM 548-1103 or 548-4752 \VOOD Pattern Alakcr expcr. Located nC'ar 605 1rwy & Alondra. 861l-240~ fu'ITERTAINER. 0 r g an, Piano Guitar? After 6 pm Scoltic's 436 L. l71h C.!\1. BUS Boy and Kit. Helper The Blue Beet 673-990-I SOUND JNVESTI\1ENT COI\1BINATION f.1AYTAG ,1·ith 11·hl. mrkgs. on chest BA B YSITilNC, Teaching Reuonab1e. 548-{i955 • r 833-......,.., behl'N'n 2 & 4. 646-8897 .962-32.Jb J !lot loehs, n1y ho m c. --Joj;;;;;;;;;';<;a;;;e,;;;;;0-\~"'~"~~~-~~-~~===~ Employment Agl'nl'y Johnson·1 Gardening 2120 So. !\Iain, Santa Ann YOUNG MAN for s1nall PART tin1c. S3 hr. 21 over PAIR Prescription ,1,~~ft.. • 548-&874 hrly/wkly = t · ---H I 7035 1...:.;:::..=c.=-=.;_c:..,~~.'--'-C:::. •. ,.,-,, ••. $2.00 -r 'I -., C V ·1 11 COIN LAUNDRY = lllltll.a S' .nes equip., ex_ ........... Domestic • p S M T .., .. "" ,..._ "arr1.,.., ar. en y sma 11•1\h black frames. Vic 19th Oi!LD care 5 days week, my Planting clean-ups. 962-2035 tore gr. ratnee hr. !>4~1686 orders. No rxp. 968-3284 DRY CLEANING-AGENCY '" St .. NC'v.·porl Beach 111 the home. 1la!ure woman. ' George Allen Byland Agency $500. , DiaJ &12-:;678 for RESULTS I"=~===~=~~ ~u!'f. 6-lZ·556.l 6<1&-l932 Yamauchi Garden Service Employer Pa,ys Fee Excellent furure ror i·is::hll==========_,;T~H~EQ;U~IC~KE~R~Y~O~U~S~E;LL; ?>.ta;or Shopping Center SOUTH LAGUNA For lnformaLion Call 540-6626 or (2131 6'14-3617 Other Locations /lvailablc Sf.1Al..L MACHINE SllOP "'ith back-up c:it'dC'rs, lx'st equip, needs capital to C'X- pand. Exel. oppor. t.lr. LL'wis 5-l~JJj() Free Landscape Consultlfl£' 100.B E. 16th, SA 547--0395 u Lo · a.1 BLUE·POINT SiameM" aduH e 673-1166 e ~h',"0•1, '"Pe-. 000",1'"'A· .,•,;,'". H•lp W•nted, Men 7200Help Wanted, Me-n 7200 1nalr ('a\. Vf'ry friendly. r; Brick, Masonry, etc. Chinese live-ins. Cheerful '-'" .. T;iOO Blk, NC'w['IOrt Blvd. 6560 EXPERT Japanese main-permanent. Experienced 2()t:i \Vcstcliff Or., N.B, :J IS...$1~7 1'€fj tenance H.B . ., F.V. area. Far East Agency 642-37036 ·~'~:l·~mc.:_o_~---~~-ll BUILD, Remodel, Repair Call Mack, 842-8442 -A • C · I BOSTON b"ll n1ixcd, •·m--1<. ol 1 rt1st· ommerc1a "' 0 Brick. bock, conc r e t e, J G d HI W ted Mt" 7200 ;1pprox. l ':: yrs. vi c. crpntry, no job too small. •panes• ar ner • p In • To Sl3:J wk. Position imn1cdi· FairviCll' Rd. S.· \Vilson. fl n I Lie Contr. 962-6945 Exper, compl yard service! atel.y avail \Vilh major t:o. ?.!Hy 30. ~1S-00.'l.CI rvC's only c:J..011.a (J..)itz.h Free est. 548-7958, 546-0724 Call Kay, 546-.).110. DAILY PIT.OT WANT ADS DiaJ 642-5678 !or RESULTS d JASON BEST DENTURES foul~-onl ,~· lla1.·e tun in Si11ga 1>0rr , Be Carpentering 6590 Hauling 6730 r.J'" En1ployment Agency mond SI. Ba""" s auu. 2120 So. Ma in, Santa Ana 636-lf.09 liUt't" !·~cc all !he sigh1s. CARPENTRY. Cabinet and GENERAL HAULING !i LOVE lumlture work. 40 yrs exp. & CLEANUP BOYS 10 -14 Bus. Opportunities 6300Bus. Opportunifift 6300 lron1 alJ or us &l6-60l4 eve Carrier RoutC'S Open CARPENTRY $12 per load. for NUTS OVER 300°/o MARK UP Reliable people no\v being selected in this area to service routes of ne'v coin operated HOT NUT dis pensers in local bars, bowling alleys etc. You can get in an the ground floor in this high profit buslne);s either s pare tinlc o r full time. No selling involved as old accounts arc established by company experts. This is not a "get rich ~uick" scheme but an opportunity to become estabLisbcd '"ith a.n eight yea.r old company that sets you up in business under a bona fide repur· chase agreement. This busi ness re-- quires a minimum cash investment or $1095 for !lock & supplies. YOU CAN MAKE UP TO S25t MONTHLY SPARE TIME & OVER $300 MONTHLY FULIJ TIME Our unlque bonus pl•n •n•bles you to trlp&. your lnltlel route without further 1nvt1tmwtt. For tnt.e.rvle\Y write to Products Di.!lrl· butJnc Co., PO Box 1976, C.M. (include phone number) !lti2.Q46 &ft. J & wkends. LICENSED MINOR REPAIRS. No J ob HAULING, clean--ups. kits, mlonlc LagunaD~~~hp~ l.ae;una Spiri1uaJ Rrad1ngs, atlvice Too S~ t;abinct inb_gu-ts. garages, etc. Lrr truck, 642-43Z1 on all mailer.ii, 312 N. ages "' 0 er ca rne handyman. anytime. Call Camino ,Real, San ClC'nlenlc S.15-8175, W no answer leave BOB 64;>-2256 TION DRILL PRESS OPERATOR ·l9'l.g1:~. or 4oo.g;,o7 msg at 646-2372. H. O. ==--,--==cl PRODUC i;ct up and operate small 10 A;>..l _ 10 PM Anderson YARD/gar. clnup. Re.mo\!(! TECHNICIAN Burg11as1C'n; and Delta. < -~==----~~-I trees, ivy, dirt, tractor back Small dOSl"·lolcrance in-LPECIAI. $2 READING l\1ASTl::R carpenter, $4 per '--A, ~••-. 9G" -•• C --ling.Re '"""' ··-u... ......,, y Sl1"Ull1Cnt var1~. DIS IN· STUDENTS • college & hi ' pairs. St Pttvlous RF and mim:i-STRUMENTS 2701 S. lloli-•chl·-••np-•,·c y 0 " r ·-o-642-6409 or 536-.1900 B & G H1ulin9 rvice 1 · ., '"' .. v .,_ bl ... 1403 \Vavc componcn expcn· day. Santa Ana. :,49-Q34j cl'titra110n ,ti; n1e1nory. s1urt CARPENTRY • repairs • ,...,asona c. 'D'U. coee lncludlng tuning and no11· ro pt'('parc for 111.<xl Cabinets & Remodel. Quali-673it testing lumped constant LATHE OPERATOR :;r-nir-sler, Lenrn sr-tr hi•p-ty "'ork. 642-8464 or 645--04.15 Houseclunint ~ lil Plaslics -FI berg 1 ass, RF · tc.rs. p r (t ciskln close.tolerance nosls. You'll hl' glad you REPAIRS ALTERATIONS CARPETS. Windows, fin, nl a c h l n t! r y. Full Co. did. for info call 541-4614 CABINETS. Any site,.. b etc. Res or Comc'l. Xlnt c.11 Pertonnel D•pt. s C·'I Ro -••MOt BenC'lits. SO. • .A. ..., n Attractiv• Exp11rt Z1 yrs. cxper. 548-6711 ""Ork Reas! Rehl. 54!1-tlll (714} 47"P" Block 540-4850 YOUNG WOMAN QUALITY Repairs -Altera~ E I $700 dancer will leach you all tion!\ _ New oon1t. by hour Interior Decor•tln9 6737 TELONIC ProJect ng neer latt-st step~. Call An'lcU or Contract. 64&-3442 Mech ab\111)'. know dra(thig, 213 591-4~138 1 10 rM R 0 BERT A'S Interior 2 yrA. colleac, call D;i,n, ·: · -REPAIR. Partitklns. Small Decorating. AMoc. Jntttlon l\:1erchanls Pel'!IOnncl A&:cn. \\'ELCOME SHAWN! Remodel, etc. Nile or day, by \Y'lriifred. 24 hr aerv. 636 DIGIMCmDl6 CO, cy, 2403 \\'cstcliU Drive, Duo April 27, arrlvtd Ju11cl~";';"~'=C;•~ll;,;KEN==:5"H6;;,;;";; E. Katella. Orng. 633-98 '" HHUl'lft .N=·="=· ~6=t;.~m:;,:.:o:... __ ~~-ll 17. Proud 1>-1rtnt1 "'tr. & - fl.11"'!1. RDbcrt !\fcConkey Ce-nl, eon~ 6600 J . . 6790 SERVICE SlAllon AHn'dn't., ..... ....,,,. •n1tor11I r xp'd., n timr. Union SIA. TE l\1 pr: RAM ENT AL . ________ ..;..; Laguna S.ach • p Ill d Rd t:ttlli.h-e ~tivof'C{'(' 1 e <' k" e CONCRETE Ors, patiO& \VALLS. \Vlndowl. Ooon;, Santa Ana 9 sa cs · bt1l;ht man, 40-!aO. Bo:it M r-tc. C~tl!: It blk top saw-ct.rpeUr. C.Ommcrcial lo. Equal opportunity empklyrr S.A. Hts. ~ SGa, Thi" DAU. y PIU)T 1ng. ~8.11. Don. 642-3514 ttSklentl!I. Daily, ~ ~;;:;,;:;;o::::::"'--=.-":''-':i· I PLUMBING w • r t> ho u • e ric and/or Mo. 897-1350 2 YOUNG men, prefe.r col· v.·holesale ro. n<'Cd1 fl.Ill fl.tARJlIAGE & 1o· AM IL y e CONCRETE 'WO all !-=========I 1-e ...... • for -....ienlntt .. _ .. __ Pool dedcl I: tom. ~.. "'~ •-" .... Ume exp'd warenuuac: man. PROBLEJ\1$ ca n ho llOlved. 1,ypca:, cw: Peperhen-ing help, for l Y..ttks, $2.~ 546--TIOO Call Dlvertllk)d CQunl(':lon Call MS-1324 I''' .... 0 hour, c • 11 alter 1 pm. ='.:'.:=----,,-..,.-.,-~2300 •CUSTOM PATIOS• Palntlnt --~ 642.-2814 2 FULL lime. exp'd 5tTYk:e RIDERS v.•an!ed Vic \Varner CODCn!!l.e sawing " ~moval EXT/Jn!. pnfl. AvtT' rm. $20 EXP'D ())unttt Man ~tnt'°n Mlp. No phone cJll!J. Ir Brkhurgt tn 6th It Sprlne. St11.te Llc.•842-1010 + rood pa.Int, l'li"et work ctTV AUTO PARTS RICHFIELD at l9th & LA, IC'al'e 111.m. AJ:9-.SM • CONCRE't'J-: Work. bond· Joe rets. Roy, 34'1-1$8 2072 Plaoonlia, C.M. Ne"-'POrt Blvd. Ci\f ALCOllOLrcs Anonymous c."d Ir llc. Col'ICt'tle ... wing. PAINTING, Papcrinc 16 yn COOK. Depcndabk. Steady. YOUNG MAN YOUTH WANTS JOBS H yo11',1 • younq p•t1on willinq lo work or 111 1dul l loo~in9 for • .,.;llin9 work••· lh•1• f;.,, Or•nq• Co••' •••• 11on-proflt y ou I h 1mploymenl ''"'"" c1n h11p you. YOUNG PEOPLE: 11>1• " •illl ""' , ..... . ... .,..,, ..... -.. . i.r JM 1,,.n111111;11, ADULTS: C~k wtlll tll-cm~,... ltr • -.y tt ,,... "°"'' "'""' . ,,,, .. ,,,.. .... .,..,, cllltf•• • • • If' ttr YIY"9 ....,., tM -'"' ... _1.., .... ''"' C''"' •pOl'tvnlfy ~"' <Ill llffr. HARBOR AREA YOUTH EMPLOY· MENT SERVICE CSpo111or.d liv Junior Eb11I Clulit •nd A11i1· l•nc1 L•19u1 of N•w• port l••ch.I Qff;c11 :,., C111tr•I fll1nch, eoy1' Cluho of th• H•rbor Attt 594 C111!1r S!r11t-Co1· I• M111 . Op•11 9 '·"'·to I p.m. Morod•Y th1""0u9h Fri• d•y, Jun• 16 thro1u;ih Au9. IS. T;rl,phon•1 642· 0474. SOUTH COAST JOB Pl ACE· MENT SERVICE I Spon•or•' iiy South 0•11190 Co11nty YMCA.I Olflr.11 •t 4,1 For11t A~1. • L•91111• lt•ch. Op•n t 1.111 •• 110011 '"' 1•00 • 4 p.m. Mo11d1y1, Tu••'•v•. Tllurtd•v• •!Id frld•v1. Plto11• 4t4.)))J. FOUNTAIN VALLEY YOUTH EMPLOYMENT SERVICE ! Spon1or1td by Sou+h Co•1t J11nior W om•n'' Cli.b. I Offic• in N11n1'1 Off;,,, Fo11n1,;n v,111., Hiqh School, 171 Ii 111· 1h••d St .• Fount1i11 Vil· 1,.,, Op•n 10 '·"'··2 p.m. Mofld;ry through Frid,y. Phon• 9112-244'1. HUNTINGTON BEACH YOUTH EMPLOYMENT SERVICE fS pon1or1d bv Etll1 A.,,. ,, ... l1p+i1+ c11,,.,h.I Of. f;,,, •t 1121 Elli1 ""''· • Hunlin9to11 81tc1I. Op•n 'I 1.m.-S p.m. Mond•y lhro1191I Frid,.,. Phon• ••7-60117 . HUNTINGTON BEACH UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT JOB REFERRAL SERVICE rsu~rv;1,d by Roi....t M,,1111, director of worlr •"fj!l1ri1nc• 1duc•lio11, Hunli119ton l••ch U11lon Hi9h School Di1trict.) Offic11 ,, 1907 • !?th Str1tl -Hu11tl11tl•11 lt•ch. 011•11 I '·"'··4:JO p.m. Mo11d1y throu9li Fti-d~v •II 1u~m1r. Pho11• Sl6·9lll. • I Phone 54.2-7217 01• wrile 10 l,h!IHps Ccmc."fll, ~~ In •ltlrbOr arta. Lie & bond-Small dinner houlc expcr. For Meft'I Clothirui: $tol'f". P.O. Box 1223 Colla ~teu. Whli. elephantlJ Olme-41,Une ed. Rell (um. 642-z:m& S'Pllt-1bllt. CdM. '13-Tm Apply 1912 Harbor Blvd., 011 ...... .,,,.,,,..,.,...,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ -' • I • -----... ----·-----·----------------------------------------r--------------·-----·-·---. -. ..-. • JOIS Ii IMl'LOYMINT JOIS ,I EMPLOYMENT JOU Ii EMPLOYMIHT JOIS a EMPLOYMENT JOU I. IMPLOYMINT JO.-I. IMPLOYMINT JOU a IMPLC!Y-~= ~!l""' , , Juu a DAA.v ~.":°T ~ Wom111 7400 I Women 7400 w-n 7400 w .... _, -We -We...-Hol~ Wat\!Od. Mon 71GO Help Wonttd Help Y(1n'"11 Holp W1nt.d Holp~nlecl 7,_ Holp~W•nnt.d 7,_ Holp~0ntod 7400 Joi,. -· Wom. 7500 Schoo1 .. 1n1tructlon 7.00 * ·,. c. l'eM<)I Co. * "r.tl • • EXPERIENCED * . * --ATTENTI N Exporl.,_ Be Prosperous! Fashion '"'"" ~ , -TELLER-J. C. "onney Oo. * WAITRESSES * ~-" GOOd l>'Plnr alcllla.,.. °"". N.....,t Buch Fubloo laland HARIOR AREA EMPLOYER$ (0..r 211 f. I ~~.:...."!!""'., ... about NEEDS \ ._ .. ., CALIF~~J~DIANK N:-::':TIME OUr·llrm 11 moving its co~ tr al office lo APPLY s to 5 P.M. ei!: -N~o~po·~~. MENS CLOTHING • SALESLADIES Fruno on June 27th. Unfortunatel y for us HUNTINGTON --•-L--• 309 Main. Hunl Bcb. some o( our best employees cannot make ~ of BusJneu SALESMEN * CLERK * 5!&aU Houaowlvoa a Motlwra the !nl>ve for personal reasons. We would SEACLIFF t<.....::' :.:: Dri~ SALES ORDER Equal oppor1tmity .,.,,_ like In see each find another gOOd job In the Country Cl.ill ASSEMBLERS Full time employmenl. exccl1ent inl.'Cntive plan and outstanding benetltl. A chance to participate in lhl5 compa.ny'5 expan. s:ion program. JR. STENO CLERK Can you spe.re a few boUr1 area. 3000 P•lm Ave., H.B. Prosreuive en&ineerin& fim1 each dQ and edd to tbt Educallcma.I Vacation 5tb aradm-• • • Sr Cli:.t11t 0.U-t IO "'"°" ~Uw Sehl. TrtaJ Leuon. 173 Del Mir C.M. !!e2ti<i9 Experienced In aale1 order processing, maintain order log ""'....,.,._ Type ID wpm on electrle. • Mlntmum t yr 1tenocnph-family Income at tba same If you are interested, call mt for details. * STATISTICAL ic and poenl ottlce work. tlrne f &--bedules eonwnient You can interview in my office, or we will ANALYST $575-$600 Electro • mechallical .. aembly of mlcron.w componea:itl. Ont year pmrbtl txpetlence. Excellent opportunity for for )'Oil. mornings, altu-give time off for them to visit you. Beet.ch area. Sec:url~ .t: cocpetent yoUng lady in a nc>on1, eve.nlnp or comblna-Jmura.nce Co. w/trn their APPLY IN PERSON 10 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. ?otonday thru Saturday busy, ooogenlaJ ottice. Sal· tloiu ot all. Work in a fun Each gal ls highly recommended, and they 1pectUc requirements. C.cl· ary oPU. Contact Personnel store ~r the fiMst ol have been with us from one to nine years. lege math. Econ A/or ~ Coll Po.-1 Dopt. llONTESSORJ A Pn>Scbool cNJdren accepted >' e a r l'OW>d. -21> lo JD. Call: 64IJ..J10S, Ml·5m7 Call Personnel Dept. 1714) 494-9401 ~· 548-1723 conditions and top ru,pervts. ance desirable. 'iS tee pd by Gen Ofc/Llbr•rian lion. 1 Top Person1I S.cretary ftllpl., "'by *PP. (714) 494-MOI J. C. PENNEY CO. TELONIC ENGINHRING CO. J Efficient General Clerluil Gala J R. Pl •--•-Xlnt Irvine area co, New, APPLY IN PERSON . ct'Ce IUBUO,;, o.&=...,3 TELONIC ENGHIHRING CO. SWIMMING INSTRUCTION P r'I v a t e WSI experience 543-7137, 67S-2961 pretty olflcea. CongenJeJ. co 4 Sptedy Univac Key Punchers 1885 Newport, C.M. MU7'20 ~~~.",· $400. Call Ed,,., PENNEY'S I Poyroll ond K•y Punch Gal ee NEEDED 24 F1shlon Island /Ul equal opportuaily emplQYer ~ I Port-Tlmo Clerlul & Koy Punch (Tops) SPANISH • private tutoring &: or cluse1. Your hoine er mlne. 54g..ll5J. Em~=,~~,,., FASHION ISLAND BE MY GUEST-Two Office Girls ~-So M in. San 10 AM to 5 PM ... ..... v • a ta Ana Monday thru Fridl.Y Mason \Vallaco Must be 21 and able to dri~ President • Partex Corp. APPLY • * Laguna Beach F.qual opportunity emplo)'!:r THEATRICAL 7900 l'ttATIJRE -SERVICE OOM- PLE'l'ED, Exp'd in factory . production, H.S. or College i:Eq~ual:::opo~p:rtwti::~ty~"~"p~lo~yer~ ELECTRONIC ASSEMBL- ERS No experience nece. sary. Small plant, day ab.ltt.. SENSITRON INC. 225 Paularlno Ave. C:O..ta Meta, Calif. All student position.a tilled. Equal opportunil)< employer 2000 Placentia, Cos~~ 186 ~t i:a St. SCR AMLEJS \voodshop and gen. cbemis-l1 !ry desirable, Job discrip-* * Conll'!!c';!'..~=T u.. General ANSWERS tion: e Batch mixing of plastics • Filling & handling molds e Stripping parts HUGHES Dental to $350 I girl oroce, Bea.ch area. EJ()>erienced. Call Lorraine, Merchants Pel"9()nnel Ai'f!n- cy, 20f.l WestclittDrive, NB. 645-2710 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'"-I Holp Wonlod Wom•n Help W1nted --" 7400 Women 7400 typing, pleuant pensouau~. A Somber -Downy -Leaky --'==---~=I Expene""" helpf\11 bu! DOI ((0Unllnf -Colll>h -WALKS HOME nee, will train. Good co. ff '-hi or • \Velghing components for niixing • Inspecting & eva.luating finished parts e Assisting in solving problems e A.~sisting in wood dept ~ KINGSLEY MFG.CO. NEWPORT BEACH has immediate openings tor HYBRID Ii INTEGRATED CIRCUIT ASSEMBLERS {Phone for a ppointmentJ 548-6116 A minimum of six months of ==-===~-=• experience is desirable, SALES ARE AllEAD OF Openings are on lit and 2nd PRODUCT ION. Immediate xhltts. opening s for Boat Assemblers, Woodworklng, Please apply in pertOD to: HUGHES Setting Deck Fixtures, etc. Only those willing to work need apply. Top salaries, plenty of overtime. MERIDIAN LTD. 109'l0 Haw-NEWPORT BEACH !home Blvd.. l nglev•ood, Ca.lir. 90304 (213) 675-5200 500 Superior Av.nu. l•"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'I Newport Beach, Calif. Test Tech to $3.50 hr Mech testing & test printed circuit boe.rds. Equal opportunity employer -M & F ASSEMBLER TRAINEES FOR SUBMINIATURE ASSEMBLY OPERATIONS SECRE"l'ARY part.time, ooo- glrl. ott.. over 22. ShJrthand, typing, tiling, etc. 10 am to 2 pm daily. Should de\-elop into fUll-time S2.50/hr Call Mr. Rogers 642-<1700 =n""v"a"o"ld:::;:bliod_.=.:.man=-w-.,-... 1 Must have good eyesight and competent woman to oc-fingtt dexterity, possess a casionally clean trtr, drive valkl California driver's lic- sm car or cook a meal, 4 ense, and be able to pass a hrs, '4 Umea wk, Pays $100. rigid pbysical exam. 536-0068 -Ge~no-'-",-.~1 ~Off=; .. --$400=.-1 P1Nae apply m person to: Type 60 eKP. in general oll- Jce duties, call · Loraine, Merchantg ~nonnel Agen-HUGHES cy, 20U W<roclill Drive, NEWPORT BEACH Newport Beach, 645-7110 SNACK Bar Girl ever 1B ap... ply in penon to Horst Chiesi, Newport Harb o r 500 SUperior A venue NeWpOrt Beach. Calif. ABJLITIES UNLIMITED AGENCY 488 E. 17th St, Suite 224 Yacht Club, m w. Bay F.qual opp:ll"tunity em~ I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• I Avenue between 11 am & J _ M .Ir ~ pm except Monday. C.Osta ?.1esa 642-1470 LATiiE OPERATOR, Top man only. Set up and operate Chucker or Second operation lathe. Small close- toJ{'rnnce instrume nt paru. DISC INSTRUMENTS 2701 S. Holiday, Santa Ana. a19--0345 Jr. Expeditor $2.45 High tchoa1 graduates. No experience nee.. call Dan, Merchants Personnel Agen- cy, 2043 Westcliff Dr., N.B. 645-7"0 RE Q UIRE a ctive, m~anically, electrically inclr~ man to help set up & O#lel'ate assembly llr::e for smaU parts. Bartell Corp., 1517 Monrovia. Newport h eh. LIBRARIAN $620-$754 Por Monlh (Recommended Jor $667.-$81L Joey 1, 1969) CITY DF NEWPORT BEACH Appointment above first step vossible for especi- ally well qualified candi- dates. Position involve• Administration of Refer- ence Service for Main aDd Branch Llbrvies. Minlmwn requirement MJ...S. from an Accredit- ed Ubrary School Apply bcfo['f!, 5 P.M., Friday. June 20, 1969, to the Per- sonnel OU\cc, 3300 New- port B 1 v d.. Newport Beach (714) 673-66.U SALESWOMAN. Experience In ladies ready to wear. Over 25. Apply Mon thru Fri lCM, APROPOS No. 27, Town 4: Country, Orange WIDOWER desperate for cook-bskpr. Ideal sit. for woman w/child who n!eds place to Iv. Lota of indep. time. 493-t677 PRACTICAL NURSE to aailt in care of scml-in- valld hwiband. Live in or ouL 546-3807 NURSES needed for private duty. RN, LVN. PRAC TICAL, AID. All shl!l!!. Must have referentts. Ca.11 any hour, 642-9955 Employment e Typists e Secretaries Work when & wh•r• you wantl INTERIM PERSOllNB. SERVICE 445 E. 17th St. Costa M•sa, Calif. 642-7523 Interviewing Mon. thru Fri. I •.m. to 5 p.m. EXPERIENCED e ESCROW e SECRETARY UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 3141 E. Coaat Hwy Corona del Mar 67:1-9240 Equ•l opportunJly emplO)'er . .=~E-x-,.~w~a1~-... -...,--.,,.-,-2l~for lu nch & dinner alert. neat, charming e KJtchen Help & DW.wubor ePart Time Sales Girl for Delicatessen Apply in Person DER BERLINER 18582 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach THURS • FRI a.tt6 4 PM SATURDAY 2-7PM Rtl or LYN (Calllornlo Llconaod) Rollo! .. I to 4:30 p.m. Apply in person Huntington Beach Convalescent Hospital 18792 Delaware St., H.B. EXPERIENCED e NOTE TELLER e PART TIME TELLER UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK DRILL PRESS OPERATOR Pl!t.!ilics -Fiberglass, :r.take own set-ups. Full C o . Bene.tits. So. Santa Ana area. can Ron Block ....... 850 e EXPERIENCED e NEW ACCOUNTS CLERK PHONE SOIJCTI'OR Evening work. No selling. 'Equal=;::..;':::'.:c'°'::"::u::m::·1y:....:•::m::;ployer::!C::.. 222 Ocean Ave., Laguna Bcb, Apply in person 18585 Main 494-6546 s1.. " Pou.1a s"""""' Sharp Gals C.enterl H.B. SENIOR INSPECTOR UNITED CALIFORNIA ---MASS==E"us"'E,-- wlth layout exp. BANK ?io!uat be licensed for rnagnt>sium and alum Apply in penon 18585 Main foundry for a er o s P a c e 4667 MacArthur Blvd. St.. (5 Point Shopping ~tis~!~~~ N~ L ido Newport Beach 540..f424 center) H.B. Car Wash Cashiers SHOE SALES manager Consultant t~ $5~5. YOUNG Attlactive girl, 21 trainee. America's largest Dept. head '?r financial a: yrs to 26 yn, tun daytime Car Wash Hoslesses * Matur• 11 to 4l> * EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES * Nlght Shifts ••• Unk>n Howie llosp., 1urgical, Medical, &: Dent.. Plans, Apply In p er1on HOWARD'S RESTAURANT, 4001 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. retaileni of women's shoes. estate ?lanning•. good typ-employment. Call 6t2-4567 LEEDS Shoe Store, So. Ing + figure. app1~. same ~"'"""k,.:l,;;°'c,Lloyd=c::.,-~=--I See Sett)' Bruce at "°"'' Plan. CoolaoC Mr. "°""' required. will tralo EXP'D baby•itt ... CdM 0• Aulo Rental Clerks m lx. Phelps right person,~ fee pd., call CM; for 1% yr old boy Mon, • Loraine, 1o1erchants Person-Wed, Fri, 10-10-BTh-627! Top salaries, growth com-16' eC REAL Estate Salesmen why nel Agency 2043 Westclilf Tues & Thurs. ul I · not sell &: be trained in the Drive., N.B'. 645-2770 ====~=-~~ pany, m 11 ocallons. Af~cy for Career Clrlt hottest area-Huntington WAITRESSES: Experienced. M t C Ill . 4.10 W. Cout Hwy .. N. B. Reach. Call Phil McNamee HICKORY FARMS Costa l'tl{'sa Golf and C.C. e ro • 1 omia By appoint 646-3939 1 t ·ew "ll Busin•ss Ent•rprl1e1 1-~=:==:==:==:=:==:==:=~ I 962-1471 Village Real Estate offenr: part time, enjoyable n etvi s .,.... a · m • 1 iiiiiiii *CLERK TYPIST* Diveralfied duties, Type 50 wpm on electric. Call Penonnel Dept. (714) 494-94l>I TELONIC ENGINEERING CO. L1gunt Belch benefit.a, located near Ol'o e'5 propriety: GtrJ ....__ who WALKS HOME from an ange County A1rporl. ~ Including all pnertl ac-automobile show. tact Mrs Lounsbery. 5tO-S550 counting functions In a small S ~Miioo> ... Frl;;.;boo;<;oo'"iii.i'ii'iOmii .... ;;;;; I mf&, co., audit ot account· ALE AND TRADE • i,.. "''""""' """'• journal MERCHANDISE FOR Meterliil Control entry preparation. pe.yroll F 1 Clerk $450 reports & contm. Cub di&-um ture 8000 Nice ofca, O.C. Airport vie. bursernents, p~tion ol SPANISlf Retumed frQm ABILITIES monthly Unanclal &: 1tatistl-~ Hom. on l&le al UNLIMITED AGENCY cal report. Aul.st controller IHI lh&tl wtnltsalel Group 488 E. 17th st, Suite 224 in dept. plarurlng i: 1peclal includel bet.uW\ll 8 6 • • Costa Mesa &fl.1470 autanmenbr. Relate<! exper-quilted 110fa A: love aeaL ience required. Knowledge 3 Spanlab oU: deeorator SALES W 0 MAN, Ex-of bookkeeping machine op. U:blei, nvaa: or table lamps, perie.nced in ladies ready to eraUon helpful. wall pl&cque, klna:, queen. wear. Apply Mon thru Fri or full aize bedroom aulte from, 10 -4, APROPOS No. APPLY AT complete incJ balr sprtnp. 27, Town&. C.Ountry, Orang<? mattreu, llnens A: boudoir HOUSEKEEPER -live in, SJACO INC lamps. Spani&b cak &' pc motberleu ho me; 2 ' • dlninc 11:t prked etanmer. teenage chldm, Woman w/ 1139 Baker St. al a~ $ll95.CO ALL l sm child OK. Pref. U/45. Costa Meui FOR ONLY 1399. OJ down, 542-7223 549-3041 $4.99 per 111-0 , out al Fl&tilig Rod Wrappers atate credit OK. W 11 1 Experienced. Top pay. An equal opportunity separate for quick Ille. 3)tb Browning Mlg. C.O. employer Century Fumiture. 9 TT 2 1919 Placentia, C.M. 548-ll71 Garder> Crovt 81 v d ., Equal opportunity employer SALES £\ LIGHT Of11ce work -;;;;:;;;,==,-,==~ Garden Grow DtJl.>' 1(1.9,, BOOKSTORE O.ERK S.t l°"' Sun U.S Come ---------1 in fashionable Lido Jewdry Receivlng & unpacking, pric-in er call cnt) s:J>...62.40 1tore. Jev.-elry experience Ing ~k king -•-• * ESCROW necessary. Call fOI' ap-Shouidha' &toe ~,...Yell, LEAVING STATE polntmen1. Permanent posi-ve gen. 1~ Early American 80l& • OFFICER lion. fi7l.9l34 of invoicing. Hn. during chair. Dlltfts&ed end tabl~ P · I ·1 bl f summer 8 to 4:30 pm, Fall coUee !able, 2 matcbi"f ostton ava1a e or per-SEAM S TRES S ES :Ex U ·30to 9·30p H lil " b I_,. "d -• 'lh · · m. eavy -lamp<. "-'" --• .,_, .. _ _. sona le_ nuJVl U.u "".1 loan perienced or will train. Full ting involved. $481 per mo. .,..... r>~ 0-:;:: ~ .. ~, or P.rocess1ng e x per1ence. lime. Apply in person to-Apply ·-Dq uu· Knowledge of new accounts Johal\5t!n & Christensen ORANGE COAST separate. Call aft 6 pm and relaled S & L duties 898 w. lSth St. N.B. JR. COU.EGE DIST. wskda~! .. ~.ru..t day Sat &: preferred. Type 50 wpm. (comer 16th & Monrovia)' 2701 Fairview Road un. ~ Excellent working condl "-la M .,,,_ 1 M=o"-VJN=G'"·--~,_-_-,-tiOM and fringe benefits. TEENAGE girl wanted % ......... eaa. ...,... ...... • Ip. p ......... I ereo, Pleue e&lJ Mr. Lcwl.t for day, 5 d.ay wlc., for 8 Mos. WAITR.ES.S. C 0 CK TA I L aMOrted cba.l.n " taba, appoinbnent. 642-4.TI.1-old, child care. C d M • WA I TR E SS. COO Ks living room, suite, cil.nb;la 675-2396 BUSBOYS. rm. llUJte, • bdrm&. one Glendale Federal Savings 1833 Newport Blvd. Coste Mes•, Calif. An Equal Opportunity Employer STENOGRAPHER To work In controls dept. of aerospace firm. Must have excellent 1horthand and typing skills. TWX and PBX experience help- ful. Excellent fringt! benefits Co1dlllac Controls Oivi!lon ol Ex-Cello Corp. 1866 Whittler Ave. Costa Mesa 646-2491 HOUSEKEEPER A: babysit· U?r for motherleY home, one child. 646-3033 a.ft. 4 pm. BABYSITl'ER. 3-4 dll)'S/wk 16 or over. Springdale A: Slater area 8~2646 Job.---Men. Wom. 7500 * J. C. Penney Co. Fashion Island Newport Beech NEEDS FURNITURE SALESMEN Full time emp1ayment, excellent Incentive pla.n and outstanding benefits. A chance to participate ln this company'• expan- 1lon program. APPLY IN PERSON 10 AM to 11:3() PM Monday thrll Saturday * apply la pen.on rebig. Other v al u ab J e Newport Grotto lterru!I. ~:nM • 3333 W. Coaat Hwy. N.B. 8' SOFA never used, Quilted ..,._ Doral. Seo-mo newport . personnei •. agency Matching Jove seat flS. '31.am LOVELY Danlah Teak Buffet 8..SxlO. Save $$. Never used, Too long for room. Call alter 5. 546-8634 Quality king bed, quilled. TECHNICAL Comple1o. W>Uled 198: _. POSITIONS "50. Alitt 5 "' "'°"" Many profeulonaJ &: tee~ ,"=' .... =="°'~---­nlcal poslHons 1.vallable. BEAUTIFUL Teak execut!V& Call M. Baughman, 642-3870. deak--paid $350. NOW $Dl. 8ll Dover Drive See • t 2456 H o & a r , Newport Beach Eaatbluff, or call 644-4170 SALES .. bo ELEGANT Maq . din. aet; : age1, me furn. T bl • 3 1 & prod. acll discount. no a e ""' eave1, 6 ~ compel. may work ftorn _buffo--'_1.;.•.;.mcclnw=cc·,.:642-4834.=.=:....-' home, your hours. We train. ---------i no cxper. nee. Need u.les Offic. Furnitu,. 8010 peM10nnel full or pt-bn, Mr ---------1 Swanson 968-5929 DESKS Walnut exec J:l:xSO, choke of 3. Swivel dealt School•lnstruction 7600 chn, 2 black leather 8ide ehn, 6' gold naug. IOfa. Daya ~181 Eve1. 646-4579 Olflco Equipment IOll DISHWASHER wanted, with work e~nlnga:. If you are a 541}-7200 2950 Harbor Blvd. Sales Secty "-+· own transp. App: Don the hou11ewile and want to make DREAM Job -Keep your Im-Cost.e Mt•• 546-1191 ..,_ Beachcomber. 3901 E. Coast extnl money, come in and portant job u wife A: -Prefer exp In sale1 dept. O.C. • SECTY /RECPT HICKORY mother .__ earn a wkly Airport vie. Xlnt opptyl Xlnt oppty for girl w/ ex· J. C. PENNfY CO. CALIFORNIA PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL ll\l')'., CdM. lK'C me at, ""' A f' 0 .... ABD..ITIES ceptl per10nality. Heevy TOOL Maker: exper. in a~um ~~:rie:·n~ = paycheck. 5#J85.4, 636-3497 ((0Uft lftQ 81a UNLIMITED AGENCY typing, Lite bkkpg. Advance tooling for vacuum forming . .:::=:;::::;:::""~="""''--SALESLADY -ladiel wear, 488 E. 17th SL, SUite tu to Exec Seccy w/in 1 year. 24 FHhlan Island An equal opportunity employer * Loooled """ 005 frwy & • BOOKKEEP'R "°""' experieoce ,,.i.--w, """ • ""°" "''°""ting C..ia M"' 642-14111 To l500. Call Mr, Rlcbanla, * Al d ~· "'01 s.day week -Mad Fashions, clerk to do typing, flH..... ~"'"'n"" on m. OU\r"..., Exporienc.cl, part lme ...... '6 ~ 1""""""'"'""""""'°"'"""' I022 A pl 10055 Adams at Brookhursl and use 10 ~ adding ma-WOMAN Want~ fur part COASTAL AGENCY I' PROGRAMMER nm CARA.GE TRAINEE manager -P Y • FOOD TURE -~ed ...;.i ___ _. chine In various routine but .,__ A be f u~ •-"·-Royal English Fish & Chips, · MA m ... ., is .. •,..,.,... '"""' work. Ger: .. ral oWoe mem r 0 Experience with dlllk: and/or aocu _..........,.It fumjlure. 488 E. 17th st., CM. CHECKER ed. to work ller'Vice supply 1 1mportant du~. Accuracy Jncludea lite t y p Ing , Snelling & Snelling Inc. 1,,.· •Y•lema. Prete• a B .. r I a In 1 I Dre•·• er M C ~ 21 s a requisite. Th.ls pordtlon 1•-·~~ -H bo Bl ~ .. M ]"--dbl Kennel man. over 35. Apply 11to4 pm ~73 us ""' or owr. ollel"I good pay, fine com-sw ""~• mail, 9-3 pm, .. ,...., ar r '"""" esa knowledge or Honeywell 200 ~ !:i uea, e A: sna:t bedl, In pe rson, SPCA, 2Q)l.2 La· =....,-..,,;•~73-~'930~:::-== I •iAim~iES:-ruiluOd pany fringe benefits and ill may become 1uU time, Receptionist to $400 series computers, with a .,..... gu & clec stoves, refric guna Cnyn Rd, Lag &h W~ Full • n d open immediately. Please perm. xtnt IJvlne area m. Pretty knowled1e of commW1ica-S20 & $30. 1550 A Superior, Part or lull time 10 women part-time. Apply In penon. tq>pi.y at the Daily Pilot, 330 HAR.RY a DAVID olllcn, tnterelting duties. tlons and a b&ckaround In CM. 6t&-SUl8 Help W•nted nt'cdedldlmmed. f~~ .. ~~d Swlu Chalet. il4 N. West Bay Street, Coata 215 Rlvenlde Ave. N.B. c:aJI Bobble, 546-5410 K-12 achool proce1&ing. Sal-2'°F'°'AMIL;ii;""Y"';:G:::anr=",-s.=i.-.1 Women 7400 care, a ~or 117..........-Newport, NB Mesa or call Mn. Green-Clerk Typist to $500. JASON B.Em' ary $785. to $958. NEWP000RT custom 3 pc aed.'l. olflce ---------BABYSITI'ER. full time, 6 man at 6fl..4321 Jor 9'1polnt.. Good w/tigurea • Uke num-Employment Agency MESA UNIFIED SCH L tum, beds, tablet, dretatr, ,,SSLSTANT Manager for Sitting P1 'w•~, Agency day wk. Nr. Harbor I: meat. tier typtna. to work tn mar-2120 So. MaJn , Santa Ana DIS1'1UCT, Ousified ~r-mile hou~d itema 4 S . 1 be Member o e ..,.t Better, k·"-de .n •--•MA IJQrlnel 1901 Newport Blvd clothe1. Sat • .,,_. l i"$0 a:rn. pcc1a t.y Shop, Mu.st So•-'~] • ,..,._..__ Adams, CM. 540-6ll8 Til ll eung pt., c un.u..,, WIDOW To Uve ln temp. Lite • '' ..... ., \\'illlng & able lo assume Inc. ~ ary °' """'"~ Al'tt S.cty. $500. $550 Men:hants Pel'llOnneJ. Agen-hou.sekeeplt11-mU11t d r Ive. Co!!ta Mega, &l5-0600 210 l'em St., Newport responsibility. RetailChroxp EXPProd. C.0:..._.64::2'7,4._ srrrER. M-1'~, l2:30 to S:30, A top beach area co. l.a look-cyN,B ~2170WeatcliU Drive, Retcrenoe1 5.16-3552 BEAUTICIANS Shorl!a. 842--8725. required. Apply at is' pas .. ., ......., "" own tra.ruL Must swim. pool ina for an attractlve p.1 with · · .....,.. BEAUTY OPERATOR BE YOUR OWN BOSS. Rent PATIO SALE -Spon.ored by 1'~ashlon11 South Coe.Ill Plaza, Exp fry cook, pRl't Ii: beach. 548-6038 aood aec. skilll, areat po-NEEDED! Apply In per.on. apace Jn Huntington Beach • Stucl•11t lo•"' Newpcrt ij&rbor Bu.llntu I CM .Ask tor Miss T. lkn:~; ~Shop ••SECRETARY, trall.ICrli>-tentlal and the m. wUl re-** GENERAL ** Olli for appt Ms..mm Salon. Reasonable. 847"8164 : ~f:,~ ... ~;1!:::~::••1 Everything lncludlrw: the e ~f.AJDS -Hotcl/Motcl S <mst 11 lB don experience. Sm a 11, lmburlo the fee. call lb OFFICE LICENSED ihampoo eirl aft 4:30 PM. S•n-lc• kitchen alnkl Sat I Sun 10-a Experience. $1.85 hour. HOUi:~ wan":! 9 to 6 priVllte IChool. Call ~ ralnt, Merchants Pef*)Md needed, top pay. BEAtmCIAN. Must be good ¢ For WOfl'l•ll of All At•• ~~'r8'1 ~am~ 'i:!: Call 67l-SUO LADY --""-........... 11 ..... t AltDCJ', 2>U Weatdll:f Dr., l876S nber Glua Rd., 642-Q:ST 1tyll1L Ftnt clul shop, e Prof•11ion•lly Stafftcl N ff •~ MEDICAL RECEPT. Tues, Wed, Thurs, t;;;L';-S,j" .... i;;_ N.B. 64S.2170. Huntlnfton Beach, Calli. WAITRESS, OVER 21 Q)rona. del Mar. Guar. + 0.11talCll11l•OfH11Te ewport e_.IL Write P-491 Daib' Pilot Minimum. Ceric Mil .tllot =bluff a~ ~~ DENTAL uailltant I Aecr& COMPANION to live in !or Full -~ . 60%. can 675--1727, eves. Tii• 'i;bllc SAT/Sun., 331 E. a>th st., ' work. Ph. 64U057 tary Laguna llill.a -Lebute )'OW1g lady with &llaht ~ or ..,.. ' time 67l-T35l 1ff1 NIWPOIT ILYD. C.0.ta ?i.tesa. Boat mtr .. 8 '- GENERAL housekeeper, S WOMAN part t1me Summer WAITRESS, Exp., over 21. World arta, All phues mu-dic:ap. Must be excellent 5f.5...9863 llAlRSTYUST full er part COSTA MDA 11 atette equip,, -..OmtO'I hrs daily -Swed.i.ah, English Job nla:bta. Must be at teut Apply in penon. Koba tercd... l41W5«1 •tart. Mo driver, Prefer girl ~35. WOMAN With atnerat tac· time. Some following prtf4. dollies, !Ike new, us. 11·12. er Germ•n. 4~170 18. 'wtnchcl!'• Donut Houae, LAnes. 2699 Harbor, CM •wne, P.O. Box tcms, Santa eocJd salary, call daya t.ory &: 111.embly. Specialty BuBY ahop, Xlnt 1 cc • 17141 141-JtJJ f\lm A: much mlscel1&'**8 EXPERIENCED Me d l ca I 2947 H.arlxr Blvd., C.M. NEED lady to babytlt my Ana smt. Replica •lrictb' 530-.a eve1 642--8933 Moldera ru Yorktown, HB. C.Onleua Jfalr FUhions MOVlNG -muat ••I J , Aasiltant Instructor. BEAlITitiAN, full time; no horM vicinity Beach I: confidential. WOMAN f'1onll Designer for WANTED: Chalnlde Dental 675-3385 POOR Gradll!ST Summer A&.'IDrted lfe19. S.turd.aJ - "" 645-2923 * cliente.le required: new Slater, H.B. I 4 T-14 9 I BABYSI'lTER wanttd MoJI part ume work. Apply at Assistant with good exper. 8EAUTY Operator needed, 1\itorlnc now avail. Rtmed SUnday. 10 •ID 6 pm. 5301 EXPERIENCED De n t a 1 iraduate. welcome. CUI between 6 PM II: 9 PM only. thns Frt., 7: 30-6:30, Prefer Pttk'a Fatn.U.V :nower Shop, only. ~ deluxe beauty Salen. No. 19 ft.&dinC teacher CU.SC cred) Mea.dowta~ llt Beach. AMiil:tant. write Box J.1-863, ~t&M,pr: 5Cl-99lt ENTERTAINER • , Orp..n, eollep qe atrt. SUmmrz PMlr'a FIJl\lly F 11 n er a I e MAIDS ~ Motel work. Monuc &)' Ptaza:_ 1 ••. em..i. .. ~i. on p boa I c 1 , NEIGHBORi TRASH 6 OIUly Pilot EXPERIENC£D Part--tlme Plano, GultuT Aftt'T 6 pm. only OK. Rm., 536-8615 Home, 1801 }\l)laa Aw., J0'21 Bleyalde Dr. Bcb-Npt Hair Fuhi:n ~ T REASUR.!9 ~ Dental Reeept. &r Skkpr. medka1 lnlurance. Write Scottte'1, '3S E. 1Ttb. C.M. GENERAL OfflC@.. type c; Wf!ltmlNler Newport Beach G.:lL DRIVING 1.J:S3>NS. 1 1 t Pl· ~ fi/2t, 21, 22. :94 &. Exp. or mlltge, 25-tS.. P-492, DIU,y Piiot TRAVEL AGDn'. Mlnlmum Ntat A Ptnonable, Pluab DRUG Q.ERKi.Top--.rrqes BABYSlTTER • for S pre. APT M.anqen for J.S.2 BR l4!SIOD .lift! Du.al CODlnN Bnvfn>nt. Bal la.~-~ 5f.6.3000 POWER macbloe cper.W, exper. reqWnd. 6t6-0203 OHitt, excellent benttltl No "'" or SUn. Refs. IChool boys. Afte11m1-. wtlta. Murl!d cpl w/ bu. can. Patlent, ioca.1 ln-ANTIQUE.$ I MISC. B_EAUTY OPERATOR., IDmt! Sallil by Schock. 50129tb SL. bltween 9. 5 ftl:Jll'kda.Ya-Call Mils Barnard 833-mo Q)llep: Pharmaey, HO Fair ~ton.-F'11. 844-.29fl6 atttt 6 band • Dx-lt type; laMl • ttructon. a-Altro Drlv1nc 2lll2 Q)mmodofl. Rd. following prdttred. Udo Newport Beacn. 6'75-1823 EXPERIENCED Med I ca I BADYSITT'ER,' needed Im-Or. C.M. 54i>-4580 pm. pool can!. 5f8.SG94 Scbool IJ6...&i31 1).a.rcmt llftt. 673--086 fOr appt. EXPE'U!NCED Sll&le N.. Trarwcrlptlontlt • .triont of. med. 11\1 hclme 9-2:30, ' de.y BA Bys I TT ER wanted BABYSrtTER wanted in Experiittrid DNk Qerk SOVI'H 0:..t SaWrc ldlJ, • Gan.p ~ * DRESS OPERATORS die r ..,. ..... A!>olf: 125 lloo r\l'I: Radiology offfce. ...ic. Near Wtmlltl Slq> Balboa Pt1111. I fine -Nwpl Hcta &tta. 6 A ! 71' HOTEL LAGUNA Loam ., .. u on :Ill' &aee 10 'tD 3 Sot. "°" -llll 'rOJ'I Salary. eau i46-27&6 w. 1J , St .• o.ia Mela. Newport Buch. 6G-64M ~nltt c.M. MA-16(& Aft 4 need ,.., ral8. 57$.6256 Didi. c.IJ alltr Bi 64)..7628 * 4fM..1.W • · Soop. MS-11'3 ~and DrMI NB _ .. !' l l • ! • • ~---.... -------~------------------ " 131 DAll.Y 11LOT -• .Jilf\CJ9, 1969 .'liiiUCIUUib15I JOl MiRCHAHDlsl FOR SALi AN°D TUDI SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADI MERCHANDISE FOR .,--------TRANSPORTATION ' SALi AND TRADE SALE AND TRADf ~ERCHANDISI POii MERCHANDISE FDR M~RCHANDISI POR SALi AND TRADE FREE TO YOU TAANSPORT ATION 'i eooo• I IOOO ::'.'.":..:..;;;;.::....:,;:::...;:..;::.;..,.11ooi. & Y1chh 9000 Mol>ll1 Homos 9200 '""""""9 IOOO FumltvN rvrn ture 1'urnlture IOOO Mlaallaneou, l600Mlseellaneout l600 TOO much tor f.ht. cld rpJI I"-"-'...;.=="--..;.;;.:.: 'l·9;;:~~~~===:~-~iiiiiiiiiiii~~--~:~~~~=~~iii.11;;;;;;;;1i~:>!~irs~iirsF:===;1 BftuWul while.-... 37' FIB -... GREENLEAF PARK R~POSSESSIONS -with 1""'"•and1 blk/""'L ~ PRIVATE ta cleu, dun, .,,.. O>ol• ! ~ kitten. WW P1¥ tor alL ol DOUBLES Mesa. New 92 apaee adult 1 VA LU Er * (Ind * moth" u,.. wW ...... TS 225'•. Onan, auto-...... MOO.b • ..,.. offi"' ~ _ ~ 6119 pilot, TV, etc. Electric located at Parle. Open 9 AM ~ NEVER BEFORE UNCLAIMED STORAGE ·~~·.:..•:;no~~ aa1:u5T""a.r'~o"i'.'D· to 6 ~~NT MOBILE SEEN 111 FRIDAY, 7:30 PM, JUNE 20 ....... Must haw f'!Pd ePAC!FlC YAOIT SALESe HOME SALES • • • yard. Xlnt watch d 0 g , 34f6 Via Opo.."1..,, Newport 1750 Whittler Ave. T • D Beaullful bedroom sets, divans, love seat&, ......., 6121 ml1 597-5568 mu mmo C..1& Me.. m, 642-J.350 eGMftCJ OWft dining room sets with China cabinets, desks, A """' ouppl> ol cat food FAMILY FUNll DELUXE dbl wld<, new Building coUee tables, lamps, upright piano, two new "''"' ..,. .,._ kitten. m"'t !O' aw Craft, flill> "'"'" adult ..,., eo.ta Me... Baldwin organs, color TVs, bunk beds, rnir· 11 n d coo d h 0 me•. twin 8CftW, depth finders, Awning, skirting &: util 12 DAYS LEFT rors, dinettes, Binks compresi;or and tanks 615--5983 612! lots more! Must Sell! &st shed. lmmed pop. Eves & Late m odel refrigerators, washers, dryers; DESPERATE Must 11 n d alferl 213; 27~ am: wknds. 646-4660 stovea. New carpeting by Lees, and much good' home• tot 3 beautiful 684-3684 HIGH Q u AL IT Y XLNT (Before new construction 1tarts on new bldg.) more. &nY and 'Nhtte part Persian '61 32• CHRlS Coril)thlan, cond. 6 clsts Cooler Sp rent Kittena. 6U-&tOl 6121 fully equjpped, like ~ $35 Jmmed pou. 642-4664 WINDY'S AUCTION BARN • MONTH old Ge<men Shep. i= ... equity. """ """ '59 UNIVERSAL 10. 5 0 . On H I nd Only 2075~~":_!.~Y~7v~~~~:~· .,., l ~ ~ mtm~ta.old ~ B~~ :--: Mr. Owen. Nl&hll =r ~~Um~~~· OPEN DAil Y 9 TO 4 St. 6/21 171A' Inboard tiberglu cabin 10 X 50 FURNISHED Jbdr SALE St k 1s~ee~r1!1!!"'~-Goods~~~~~~~~1~s!!oo:~M!1!! ... !!!u!.!!_~~~~l600~~ ~~J:'!J.r.~i, ~ g~=: 51;~ ;;·~: .~·::=.-:"", .. ui~ I ·oc Skin Diving Equip WEDDING Gown, ful l lldrt, ll!M, St0-2674 6121 23' OWENS Cabin cruiser, peel Not over/cab. $385. • • U.S. Diven tanks tr ...... $59 long llvs A train, like new, VERY Nice looking kitties 7 radio, on trailer. Equip'd l::64::Z-::7m==al::t::4====:-I U.S. Diven regulaton fr $40 az 8. Aslo veil and hoop slip. wks old ll'&Y-wh, Ing. bail' w/ bait tank & dinghy ANOTHER LANDMARK GOING TO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW BLDG. * SPANISH and MEDITERRANEAN * New Nylon lined Wet S;,iita 646-1097 aft 5 wk d "l •, to gd. hm. aft 5, Sacrilice! 54~1141 Mini Bikes 9275 low u .............. $39.00 anytime wknds. 642-1322 6/21 15' GLEN L. fish Ii ski boat, CU.tom du-• f t r·n, 18 ~ '68 .~ I 50 h M RUPP 3% hp. Xlnt cond, """' ee i .. ,i1J MAHOG. Secretacy, lamp, FREE tO owner or new . rr.uue' p. ercury. AQUATIC CENTER labl ho 646-6916 almost new. Loaded. $2'r.; es, matchin&" Hoffman me. Part male poodJe ==~=~----1 new w/take $150. 644-1496 4535 W. Coast Highway stereo, 42X72 drop.leaf din. puppy, 2-3 tt.onth.t old. OWENS 1966 V.G. c:ond. Newport Beach 67J.5440 rm. table, china doeet, like MS--0809 6/19 outriggen etc. marine radio Taco 44 Mini-Bike 7'9" CHUCK Dent surfboard, round !ail design. $85. ... -· RDS Sa "1110 $130 Call 546-4712 at:er 6:30. new. ~-'o)'t WORKING girl must nnd c . ..,... · 549-3695 new home fer lo n ely LEAVING oountry -must.1--------- Mlic. Wanted 8610 loveable kitten. Persian. 3 sell 17', 35 hp pleasure boat, Motorcycltt 9300 SURFBOARD SALE I:.:::::::..:~:::.;:::_ _ _:~ mo. charcoal/white. After 1 good cond, $425. MS-786.1 I·--.;_-'------' I $110 7'6 FlawleM Hubour PM .. 642-jl051 6/20 u· TRJ.ffULL Bay Boat. 1968 HONDA 646-4567 AT UNBELIEVABLE PRICES!! Rapier-others. 846-9527 WE PAY MORE BLACK miniature ~. 2117 s. I.,yon, S.A. ''350'' CASH =~~;..·~~~ ==="=>-0663='=== SCRAMBLER 8600 Fashion Wigs * Permanent CUr1 Pattem * Can be washed like fine lingerie * Lightweight • 2 ai.! * NEVER affected by weather or humidity after 5 PM. 6/19 S1Ubolb 9010 3.500 actual miles, hi·rl~ FIVE Dog-loving tiger kit-,;;;======== handle bars, dual carbs. For furnltW'I!!, appliances, tens 7 wks old, long or CORONADO 23 $500.00. Phone 962-1091. oolof't!d TV, stereoa and an-shott·hll.tr 545-7440 6/21 1965 Honda tiquea. CAUCO kitten, tn the couple Scrambler, 8,300 miles. Good Da.v or nlq:ht who saw her Tuesday. In the water demonstration condition, A&ktng $310, or 636-3620 546-9965 6/21 dlia weekend! best oiler, including Helmet • 2 to chool!e from • 'th B bbl ~" 2 GREY with white and 645-0810 WI u e. ._.. alter 4 "'s.-•w="E;--:B=u'"y""='"-$~I ~~7 w!ty whito kilt:;';; "'"'"'"'"'"'"'""'"''"'"'"'"""I ·~m H~~~~ LIO CLEAN, BOAT Show Excalibur, fol l LOW MJLES EL EC No Down, Terms To MHt Your Budget. * Shown In home or shop APPLIANCES snowb&ll kitten. 3 month• ~ STARTER $150 PV. PTY. I sails, varient winc h es , 61J.-7037 ! FURNITURE $ BLACK Calico kitten and race &: cruise. 5 A....... of · · C .,. TV'-Pl111o'-St.roo'• 0 d. &1&-4493 6/21 dinette, 6 HP outboard., =~~------1 Ramona McClintick I Pioco Of Hovw Fvll FR.EE females, O:tllie/Labra-many cruising extras. Kl '64 Honda 305 Super llawk. Bonk Finonc:ing, Master Charge, Bonk of Americ:a or Store Charge. 107 22nd St., NB 675-7311 CASH IN JO MINIJT.ES dor puppies, Calico kitten 7-1666 Days only, Eves: See at 1725 Superior CM or OPEN DAILY & SUNDAY • 541 ~~ • blaok & gold. 482-2.162 6119 TI<' 63'>-1226 ~cal!~7.646-4='0220'.,,~~--I e CLOSED SAWRDAY e W 13 CUTE I ........i KITE N 539 Like '67 HARLEY David.son 250 cc ANTED: Twin stroller ln pupp ea to •""" 0 · · new con-Sprint $450. ONE OF MANY SPECIALS WHAT KNOT SHOPPE good condition. Call 83'l-9682 homes. 64fr.7230 dition. Bikini blue, mist blue * 548-9'739 * NOW OPEN DAILY 10-4 anytime USED doors from garage deck, black boot strip. Hard ==.,.-~~=-~~I HANDICRAITED. GIITS i=========l apl. Call 673-4387 6119 sail, cedar rudder, 4 part HONDA 305 "Scrambler" also matc:hing c:offee table and c:ommode-same prlc:e : TOO MANY ITEMS TO LIST ALL • • • • • • • • • • • • Game Sets • Dining Room Sets • Bedroom Sets · • Living Room Sets ' • Corner Units • Tables * • Lamp• • Recliners • Decorative Sp5nish Chairs • Buffet w /china I tops, Mediterranean • Pictures • Wrought Iron • Coffee Tables • Commodes • EVEN THE BUILDING! Room Groups at Terrific Savings! * APPROVED FURNITURE e ARTS &: CRAFTS e vang. $675. 7141488-7188 Xlnt. cond. 337 Kit, Barnet1 FREE To You HALF·Siameae kittens. (4), clutch, $495. 546-8346 Jtems taken on consignment. blue eyea. 846-ll29 6119 OOLUMBIA De.tender 29'; Bring in your ha.ndhvork. &leeps 6; 30 HP Inboard; '56 BSA A-10; reblL engine, 2622 Newport Blvd., New-KTM'ENS, tree to good FEMALE Beagle. 1 yr. aid. full racing geB.l' & extras. semi-chopped; Excellent port Beach, near Woody's homes. 2 male, 2 female. 847-5990 6120 646-6047; 494-T135 condition. 642--3958 \\'harf. ll g b r' ri & we all e d . FLUFFY Gentle grey kitten.s =~P~O~R~T~Y"A-'-.,K~~SA!c:.:.LIN=~c 'li6 HONDA 160 CONTRACTOR EQUIP 648-l 403' 6119 64~ 6120 DINGHY, sail, alum mast, Xlnt con<! .Mu.st Sell! e Cement mixers e House MO'JliER Cat &: 4 kittens, OLD bike needs t Jr es, leeboards, cual r u d 'r . Best ofler takes. 6'7>1753 jacks e Impsct drill& &: assorted colon. F'l'tt to 645-2577 6/20 $89.50. 548-6617 Hammen. good ~me. Call 543-2981 SIAMESE Cat, Iemale Sea.I -Ll-DO--l-4_Sa_il_boa_t_N_o_. -413-Auto Services & Parts 9400 United Rent All alt" 5'''" alt day Sal 6/l!J PoinL 546-88511 6121 good coodition. LITI'LE black kitty with * 83.l-2267 * no W. 19th St., Costa Mesa unusual white k 1 PART Poodle pups, 6 wks. -~=-=::..::::.:_.::_ ___ , VW Pan, front end, & most 645-0760 gentle .. ..~brakn.r n gs ol.d. 8'7-8153 6/21 HOURLY h.ENTAI..S parts to build Dune Buggy. 548-9578 "" ,.. e~;~ 4 DARLING white kittem, 2 * Rhodes 19's * Be.o;t oiler. Darrell 642--3838 * f1lEE * SH Manx. 96>-0l21 Full Zono Boot Co. Balboa 10" Wiglet for bm;teaslng a ANE Needs love, black COLUMBIA 15, fibreglass wig party. For info call ~~a b r 8 d 0 r. very PETS •nd LIVESTOCK lloop, trlr., 14 extras. $1,050. 646-0139. 1n nt for 1 mos.1:..c:o.:.;;..;::.;.:,::;.c;..::.:..;,::;.::.:. ~4;~7187 POOL Table, Antique, slate, 549-1417 6/20 Pets, G1ner1I 8800 UOO 14 .No. 2661 w/trlr. Ex J Cond $995 u ............... 9 MONTI-I old female Part ce · .......... 6 ... .., toy Collie needs good home * BABY OPOSSUMS for Excellerit condition. ,, , ·)Tll fin,iah. 839-J022 prelerra!JIY with children. sale. A wUque & cle&fl pet! new. ~. ~ EYff Auto Tool1 & Equip 9410 VALUE grinder complete pilot. GoOO cond. Darrell 642-.1838 Trailers, Utility 9450 REDECORATING! Get a 673-1563 642--394[; SHOCK Racing Sabot No. ~1:!!i_mate r.fc~~ :~ j,AOO~~RAB:;:i;LLEEKKJtlttt.o;;n1~!i66)1 ;,;\:======== ~~J dally, $27S. * ~~r!':1~r~~~ ~'; ~~:: ~7272 wks. old. House tral.ned. Cits 8820 ,,:,:~="'~~~-~~ pony. 56-7873 \Vlll deliver to good borne SABOT No. 4144, good cond. I "=''=="='=====I RED leather chair $20, head· 673-1182 61-iJ SIAMESE Kittens ready for Full racing gear & dolly True•·-9500 2159 HARBOR, COST A MESA, PHONE 548·9660 12 years same loc:ation -SGftle 0Wft8r5 boards $5, waffie iron $5. VERY ,..._ tl adoption call~ after 6 incl. $350. ~nt6 --~-------1 Stainle• steel place settings .....,n e COUl'!e hair pm Deborah Seuffert 1967 OODG Dachshund, 1 YI' old. Raised 22' STAR Sailboat. Xlnt E Van, big 6, Pi1n0t & Oroant 8130 BE11A"u'TIFUL· 6'1>-0ll31R 1 .,,. I s ma 11 ch 1 d r n. SIAMESE kitten. 7 ~ks. cond. Deluxe trailer R/H, auto. Xlnt cond. ug; 4 x 16 546-5846 6120 Sealpolnl $15. Call 842-1339 $1650 LI 3-5982 $1725. 968-2040 or 540-4006 JUNE SALE!!! =t ~1• green. Top LOVABLE 14 \l.ttk puppy LIDO 14 No, 2775, good cond. 1966 CHEV Pick Up. 6 cyJ, 8' Factory. authorized clearance 64 .t....iJ.8 Will s. a c r 1 f 1 c e · liny black Labrador to gooci Dogs 8825 Full racing ge'ill' & yard bed, good tires, radio, gOOd o( overage, returns&: demos I ,CC!'.,:;.=-~~---~ I home. 673-4865 or 548-5006. ALASKAN Malamutes, (&led dolly incl $1300. 548-7116 end. $1275. 673·3842 eves. Pianos & Organa, Practice SOLD my oil burner, but ~ill 6/20 ..1~, pups), AKC, beautiful SPRITE, small fa mi I y '60 EL CAl\lINO, 283 auto. Furniture 8000 Furniture 8000 1~~;;;;~~~~;;;;;~~;ii;ii~ I GE Refrigerator 2 dr 18 cu ft Pirum, n.w walnut ,.,~,.t ha. ve 17 qt TeMco 4£1 \l.'i!Lghl NEED ---"boat ~~ I Like R/H ~ .o•h <>• ·~· all '"" food, shelter for coloring, ..-at •--"y ~,, _... • ~ "'"'l'i AS, • ,......., ...... · .,...,,...~ Pia.nos, new & used Grands 011. Make affer. 642-7682 ··-......... """' .-.oo Ev ~2865 3·30 Pti,f al 6 abandoned skinny -llow friendly, loving, .. ~ to new, ,., · ea. u1or-, __ .=~·------I & demo Ba1dwln Organs ter pm 1--1 , · l-'---'-=------1 manx & maltese. & wbt kit-train. Perfect sh:Jw dogs, LIDO 14 -196'l 1NTERNATIONAL l~IJ:J!tllt1)i[!t ~J§~~~~E, DECORATOR GETS CANCELLATION c.,,. Me,._ S<s-tnss OF 18 LUXURY APARTMENTS NEW d;•hw""' & 0100 range, still in cartans. Make Spanish & Mediterranean Fumitvre oner. 962-4565. 54s-3342 All BRAND NEW LIKE NEW. GE •ltttrio He-Medltt!rT--a.ii-~ltt"' PecaA clothes dryer. $40.00 ~ .1~~1,,,·cvsiom 1~1" Sot• w1111 rnMd'lin9 ·t:.c:'.•r-"'• 833-0369 dlok• ot btlllllful fal)l'IQ !It ... Mlt.H l ········-HOW PSS.• ~l•h 01n1:::r s.11 . .. . ........ ... • . '1s.• <I.I~ E Tit>ln Mod Co"-T1b!n .............. . 111.• 1 I Otcor11<>< T•~lt LI,..... (111111. M9.tll ............ Mow t\1·= 1P1nltll H_I..., Sw1• t.....,. U{e!I, Mf.t!l ,. ...... MO'# I. A decoralor dream house on display -3 rooms of gorgeous Spanish furnilure {was reg. $1295.00 SACRIFICE • • I • • • $398 JtO MOMl!Y DM. ltl!OUIREO -'#E c.AllllY 0011 <1WN ACCTS mm FURNITURE Sewing Machines 8120 1969 SINGER v>"ith zig-mg & \\'alnul console. Makes but· ton holcii;, designs etc., $5.25 mo. or $36.00 cash. 526-6616 Muslc1I Inst. 8125 Guitars • Amps • Drams NEW AND USED 12 MAJOR BRANDS Al.so f.tany Imports At BIG DISCOUNTS EVERYT!!lNG II\ f.IUSIC "''.ly & truly on money UNICYCLE t••"'""1B3 t i< ~ SCOUT< •--I d VSOD SALE I ...... ......,...., un 1 p.m. 15uuu for bree d ing. New hand trlr. 673-6732 w ... ~ l'. • • • saving ! ! Get n on $20 · E «• h 5 AOORABLE kltt•"'• lako Registered ...,,,...bred, $125 new paint. ves . .......-2670 t e big deals at; .. --\VARD'S BALD\VlN STUDIO 673-2100 aft 6 one or all five. Call Mr. or up. 492--3.573 Power Cruisers 9020 Jeetw 9510 1819 Newport. C.A1'. 642-8484 50 VOLUME C h 11 d re n 's Mn. Trimble, 494-19'10 6/21 Al h H •- Open Sunday 1 to 5 relerence mate l' ia I, In-LOVABLE 1 YI' old Genn. g an QUftd ~.'o!e~· ~ fr:t~rr;::. ALWAYS A BUY AT eluding bookcase. NE\V. Shep. female. trained. Likea r>enn ....,.,.. Lak A NB $35 56--0704 kid•. ~• '"'" 6/~ p O-R ;2659-0, r:.~"'e ~· • Gould Music Company 1=7.·=c~~~=-•' --Uppy ~ ~~ PIANOS -ORGANS DIAMOND Wedding Ring 11et FREE to good home -pup. new and used orig. $150 se ll tor $30. pies, 3 male, 6 wks., mixed AKC reg. 962.9989 ~J>!!C!-Skl Bo1t1 9030 guaranteed fine used organs 5J6-.3483 ~'>;""';;,,·c..:,54&-:;::=3955==-.,--~'l:!Siil'i'LKY"'-°'r'"",-,.,."'"1,-,-,,,..,m~al:::,=pu=.,, from $375 TEN Diamond Bulova white FREE kittens tn aood AKC "'•·Sired by tntern't SKI boat, JohMon 3S; trlr., Baldwin-Gulb remote controls; Completely ransen-gold wristwatch wa.s $250 bomeL champ, Good w/chldm. No \Vurlitzer.COnn-Thomas sell for $125. 53&-3483 , 536-2473 sheddi""• odorless. ,..._,, (II re.fin., fiberglass over wood. 76 · t b Id ·.. """" Make offer. 642-5495 pianos mus • so BIG Leather chair " 6' 3 p 893-1'03 new an<I used Grands-RETTY kittens looking I~~""-~~---16' nsER.GLASS boat, 65 hp console&-aplneu couch, har d wood con-for happy home, Pleue call POODLE Puppies, small molol' & trailer. $500. or any New Wuriltzrr spinets $569 I c'~tru.co:,t;;;l•.cn·,.;I00=·,.;64>-050.;;;_=1:_~ I 673-l01l min. 6 wks, AKC. Wht male re.as otr. 642-2869 Gould Music Company Quality kine bed, quilted, 3 KITI'ENS. Molly, Mark & $45, Choe brown male' $75. ~l!J;;:' =lN~BO;;,;AR;;;D=;;Chrlo,-,.-,,c...tt,.-, 2!H5 No. Main, SA 5(].o681 Complete. unused S98: worth Johnnie. 9 wks, tralned .. 1-962-=75~17-~~~~~ clasalc, 49 mod . with treiler. -'--'-::.0,.,:..::::::'c::::._::;.:=:1 $250. Alter 5 or wknda. 642-3:Z94. 6/20 'IWO, male, black & tan $525 complete. 673-6061 GULBRANSEN 847.-0400 2 MALE Cock..,·pooJBasset Dachshund. camp. sired. ORGANS HAWAn Surfboard S95: good puppies, pick your choice or 6 weeks. 646-&0Ce Boet M1lntenanc:. 9033 '68 JHp Wagoneer 4 w~l drive, one owner, low mileage, absolut!'ly like new. V-8, automatic trans- mission, p o we r steering, pow<?r brakes, factory all', warran hubs. heavy duty rubber, overload springs. "This unit sold originally for approximately S5816." Lie, No, VLF457 $3799 1844 Newport Blvd. H.:'.. 11vd.> Costa Mesa only WURLITZER piano $100; exerciser bike litter now. 642--4986 6119 ONLY 2 left! Adorable, Daily 12 noon till 9, Sat. S-5 PIANOS & ORGANS $45; hide.a-bed 40; all good 3 KITI'ENS, gray & wht. heal~ German Sbepbml JACK'S Electronic Service 1140-a Beach Blvd. (llwy, 391 Pianos & Organs Rented cond. Ml-6608 Aft. 4 P M. long ha.ired, 7 wka. old. pupp1e1. * 645-2920 Electrical repair, remod, l'A mi so. San Diei:;o Fwy. EVERYTlUNG JN la1USIC ELEGANT Quilted sect'!, 8 6'2-1322 , 6/20 BLACK male poodle puppies, new installation. 543-8329 549-3031 Ext.. 66 or 67 c~1~oJI ~~, Beach Music Center tnry Night 'TH 9 -Wtd., Sot. & Sun. 'TU 6 Huntington Beach 8'17-8536 ' cbr dinette, blue chip bookl, FREE Kittens 8 wkl old 1 min, & 1 toy, 12 wk:s old YACXI' maint. Pa 1 n t • 1970 HARBOR .BLVD. IG.:,•;..•_•ve.__s.:,1;:.. __ _:.80:;:;:22 Appli•nces 8100 SPINET \Vurlitzer Ebony Beach Music Center me.n's Schwinn. 64&-S340 673-3'.)65" housebroken. Oif. AKC. Call 545-fiOO.l varn!.ah. " wkwrlc. Quali~ OOSI'A t.IESA MOO~. Drexel de~k &r. LADY Ken m 0 re auto piano. Like new. $400. Violin MAPLE kitchen set, 3 Ii l ferent patterns. · 6/20 SMALL White male poodle ,worl<,,,;.;'="='"'=' =~===== '·67=LAN~~D'"""Rovo""-",,:::,:::,:.:nl--oond-!·I chalr, rnattttsses & box \vashl!r, coppertonc, late with case, exc. cond. $40. Factory Sales & Service captains chair. Good COD-4 ADORABLE kitter11 7 wks $10. Hsbrkn, good w / BoAt Slip Mooring 9036 $3800. Call [;38-7035 after 6 .•Pringa, books, h 15 t 0 r y mod!'!, xlnt cond. $ 95 . ~7531 Daily 12 noon 'tll 9, Sat 9-5 dillon, $50. 546-6306 old. 2 Orange tabby, 2 chldm. 213-592-1541 H.B. p.m. cLusie & paperback. lamps, 847.sus UPRIGHT piam with henc.h l7404 Beach Blvd., (Hwy 39) 52x31 MIRROR $25, 2 rocker& hilt/orange. 545-3520· 6/19 POODLE pups. bi a ck FREE Use of 50' slip In NB ========= gluswart. dishes. plaques, anOque green. ~J o v Ing 1~1 ~I. SO. San Diego Fwy, $25, table $30, lamp $15, mlnJatun AKC $'75. for occa..sional use ol 35 tn Recre1t'n Vehicln 9515 plctutts. frames, antiques. FRIGIDAIRE elec dryer w/ Thurll. must sell. $175 Huntington Beach 847-8536 planb S2 • $15. 837~7 TO LOVING home. 9 month 546-6230 53', power Qr sailbL GU-3233 cl guarantt'f! $100. used 2 mo. 644--0254 w··-ED old mixed bJ'eed female dog .. I ~=~,."-'-'-"--~=-0 ~ _ wC\lum eaners, hand -;""""'"'°""'"""=~=-SPINETS~"& GRANDS PORTABLE 'IV, 15" screen, 642-4986 · 6119 MIN. Sdmamen, ARC -'-"'-~-·~-·----- t -"--mod I A • .__ Admiral elec. stove, ........... FENDER -mea ....,.,.., , e w>:s & 6 """" JAZZMASTER 63& ~ VHF-UHF, great cooditian, 6 Weeks, males. "WANTED" Side Ue or II.Ip wN&; 8 1ug GM truck whls, :':1:.· 20333 Acacia, San-Guitar. Perf cond. Xlnt buy.1 =========i.i"°~·'j6~7'-fi2706~~alt;·~·~iiii0;;;;: 1 ;{! ~~~m 1 ca!u ~·, :o~lStl:;,,:;'°~$00;;:.. :::83M07~;:o·~~ I lor 24' pawtt boat. Jacu.a:i bath 1-; etc. etc. t'ri. ~~~Rid~~y;;g;;;;;;;;~ 1~""~'~$295~. ~64~"-~""~=== -B "·ro·-" ~ Pu ·~ Call 644-<l802 Sat '""'·-_.. "-brill c •i .. , """" .T.U.: air conditioner. 497-1808 613) m.i::.JUAL" PL Cb s""", ===="='""';=:"=== • ......,., -.....,, o, ·" · .. ASHER/dryer, Frigidai['(', T I I I -L''· $100 AKC n._ t f -·•-.... ,, _ • ev 1 on v.i;v5 llle new • Lee 327 W. ~ ... ,.,. 11 0o~nnan 11 reg. oniU · e.._... .. •~ ..... ~--l- '59 VW BUS Desert Special -·Wide track rear tih!s, engine recently completely overllauled. Lie. No. EGY 099 $799 """'"'u" Custom Imperial, mtchd Pianos & Or 1130l ;;c:;c;.;;,;:;;;;;-;;;;:;1,Y!'.!!'~~~~~~ ·~~ ~ ha hots ...... ......... _.. 019,,. ~·• wh Gd - =:.:.:..::...:.:.g!:1::n::•:._.:.:_;::: !tOn St. C.M. Sp 88. ,.. ... -A .... s~p·-~, 5 -·-tome ve 1 . _,..,,. GARAGE' SaJe-VW-door, ite. con:!. $00 pr. RCA Color TV, large scretn -.....,,,.,...,, '"" ''""'"' .. ~ ...... wtndDws, A fe~. Antique 673-0598 HAMri,!QND • Steinway •· .. Beaut. walnut • grained Complete 11euba-<'.llvini gtar, old, 646-ro8l til19 GERMAN S HE PH E RD desk. table, AM-FM-radio, FRIGIDAIRE Automatic maha • nei. Ir uaed Planol cabinet Make Pa>' men t g wl~;t=:goneL SfOO. TO GOOD home, auorted pupa.5 AKCQ ~lack Ii: round min'O'r, car ndlos, washing machi~. turquoiSt>, or all makes. Best bto's ln SlOJmo Ol' Utke o \I er after 5 PP.l klUens, 215 OC'eanvlew NB tan, 'll>tt • intn'com. '.62 QleV)'-4 cyl. netds minor repair $50, So. CaJ il. ri&ht ~. balance of $297.62 See at SET ol Prestige &liver, 646-3402 6/19 POPULAR ·Collie SI u d q. ,63 Ford wqon. cbeft, M9--02SJ aft 6 PP.1. SOlMIDT MUSIC CO., Hr_~l'80n'1 1877 Harbor, 7 place Rettings, $45. PUPPIE.5, amall mix breed, Normal eyed $50. 5t&--9965 SMml BOAT REPAIR ~ ~F c~10..Y Bicyde. mile. It 1 m 1 ' REF'RJGERATOR 14 C\I ft. ~~ ~ CJ.,, 548-0\55 ~l42" Ouffy, variety of colOl'I. ll30 Jllam--lDpm. 5'8-0368 Holpoint, 8 yn old $95. Xlnt BALD\\'IN A DRAFTED P.1uat s e 11 l NORCOLO Rebigerator • ~7087 6119 Hof'MI GARA.GE Sail Sat JG.6. Baby conclilion. 673-1551 . C1'080~lc French 1968-23" MotorolA Quasar, ~nvt gu ar elee, { cu ft., TOOL box for PU truek sm:n.AND Pony aood with Jtiema .. mite hlehOld pxll.. GAFFERS & SATTLER ~: :1\ne~or Pi=· r:;.~ complete aoUd state bl11 $~. 545-3500 aft 4 pm, .wide bed. {Oii Ford Road: children. • 10t 1rla, CdM. l&llef• gu range $50. Rlgp, 64G-«94 or 546-2759 fioor model, $400 or best of-KINC-StZE foam mattreu CM after 5 PM 6119 * ~ * 5-IS-l96S ft.r. tl) ns.-3482 •nd 11prinas $98. Excellent ~:;,::;;::;.;,;..:::,,..-~::.::1~=~;:....:::;;;;:::....:~.....,, STORY & Caril: ~lneL Just condition ~73 3 FEMALE P u pp I e 1 • AQHA Reg. Filly, pnd nat'I ---1100 • REF'R.IOERATOR • Stn.n. g )TS. offt. $425 calh.. HI.Fl & Ste'" 1210 ~. Labrador A Germ• n chmp &tock. S1llO ot best d&l"d. bronze. ww sell $40 or 6~ 962-256! CAR.Pt;r all styles and col· Shepherd mtx. se&.n.f2 S/19 otter. l38-S058 bl!ll offer. 6#-1351 --;,;;:;;.,;;::;;;~==-f...'lJ{ Slm'!O iw.rlt• 14. J. F. on. t'r'te estimate. Lie. PIANO WANTED ""' m. 2125 Shorintgon Pl .. Conl SIG-1l6:1 12U) 8TI·I035 Pvt Parlf Nowpor1 Beach D.\1LY PILOT WANT ADS! I • 2 FEMALE Kitten&, white GENTLE white m are , with blk. mrttp. to aood perfect f<r child'• ftrsl homoa:. 6424>43 6/19 hone. $100. Phon.i &f&..1124 I Boat· Y •cht 'J ., Ch1rt1'1 9039 BLUEW'A'l'ER CJIARTERS 27' Trojan. Powtt 26' 'lllUndt!rblrd, s~ Sklpptf' 1V11Uablf! 646-9000 -45, Aux sChooner C. Guard Uc'd, 21 pas.,, cn4) 548-5039, 543-4192 • 549-3031--Ext. li6 Ot' 67 1970 ltAROOR BLVD. OOSTA MESA BUSIEST marketplace ln tO'N'fl. Tht DAILY Pll.O'I' OasaUied leCtlon. Save money, time It e.Uort. LQolt new!!! ' ____________ __,_ ________________ _... ____ ....... ....._ ___________ ~.i-- " ·-----------------------------------,---..,--------·---------- 1 • ·"!!~f!!~~!!i~!!!~:Pt!!!!!!~DAl~LY!!l'l10T!!!~ t==-.......-.....,=I ~TATION . ~A11oM TIWllPQRrATION TIWlll'OllTA'nON TUN9POl'IA~ ~!!!_T • .::A::;TI::::!!~ ~,,.-, ~!!(;!1!!~ iii b!!pl li!fAllllle l!!'p•1'1911-, -!e'f'"""!!!'I MIO UllllCln · ~ ~~-_ 111111 .Cln ,_ '!mCIN '!! C'"uPER .-Ult · RENAULT VOLICSWA91N ll(I L-,UI 11t1 -CADILLAC •ALCON MUSTAN• PLfttOurH ---' l9lt Cod Qoio ..... ~ ~-· -·-·---1 . ~.,::~ Newport':'!!11Ltd. °" ·~iu:A~1'.;...,~= '68 YOWWAGEll ~atr-' ~..:. ;,,~ ;;.:~:·~ ~'-.~~.·i:: 1969 :!":"". '" PlYMOUIH Ektondo. l"ollr Wlndl anae Qoun!y'• OllJ3 author-Mech. eooiS. $15(1. 84T""581T a.-·-..,.... -......,..,_ ""'""v -.,....... &ollmaD • BuT&cuda 1zed dealer. -. Lie tll5 mo. Automathi ,.,ry t , .... ~.~ ---·•~ s---••T • Ca u ••o ·~,!DOOR. otldr. Gd. -. • ••9f5.00 St-"'=' I' Cabover Low AA SALES-SERVICE-PARTS SIMCA •..., VQi'ji'_.,..... ""''" ~-,._ .--" 1199 3100 w. Coast Hwy. • ~ LEASING '46-m> Ue. Ho. XNUlD -a. V.S, au"":" de, -~ Model # 600 642~94~ewport Bea~0.1764 '65 SIMCA liKXI Sedan exct. $1695 • S00 W. Cit Hwy, NB f6.2lU ST CAMA00 SS w/ILS. -THE <IQ:! UIT ~ .r. a.a.. OOT IU. Theodor9 Authorized MG Dealer cond. great 2nd car. $575. rmsr TIME! paclcqt s:io ' tp. J,IOSL.trac-FORD , + , dl1me •/ ~ • $995 ROBINS FORD Ownor 67>-2430 ATLAS· IAueaNtw'lllor611onlhl tlon. V.,,.. root. m;o. &Ulo. Ol\O owner w/ C>i"l'. ' 2060 -Bl"ll, FIAT SUBARU ~ .. = ;i:.:. "'~": llG-1&'!1 ·u FORD ~~ml. ..... -ATL•s· COiia M.., 64><)()IO CHRYSLER. -PLYMOtrrH ~-" Delalla -Cu...JROLET. • f!ir ~-Alo. PYt. ...... ~ Outatanding Buy! '67 Fiat "'~ new lff-lltl · 850 2929 HARBOR BLVD. 642<1110 G1l1xlo !GO W... · a!RYllLER -PL\'llOuTH All st!i ~:0~~11'6 .ttn-mi. ~~So 8ri':ne~"!e~,1~ Subaru of Calif. oosrA MESA MG-l.93t Ford Autboriad ·ss OlEVY 11 ss. 4 cieed. v.a. autQinatk:, power steet-• MUSTANG • ·qa. .-. , • H.\R80Jti BLVD. talL $149 ... Boy factory 6'13-0:Hl lnc:.--Retall Div. Opon Dally 'Ill lO p.m. Leaoq 3»,lem &Jr. Belt otlor. In&. -........ PDD m. milt ,ad. .:::ii ' ~ -511-1934 .,_~ .. -·So u.-~-SA '58 FI $1'97 POE '69 VW'• ThoadorO 4111-1121 alter 6 pm $895 ...,.... Dau,. 'tll lO p.m, ~·· ~. ..na.&UUI", • AT Convertiblo ••w -• 59 CHEV P .U. 6 eyl w/ engine, l!res, paint. ~. Opt equip $30. Freight $14.50 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ROliNS FORD '64 CHEV Impala. ~ ISpd '88 1 MU.,,ANG 390 Gt' ..,: Hiway C r;u ta e r shell Will consider offer. 642-8380 Handling $49, T>el, $1390..50 Bank Flna.ncl.ng 2060 Harbor Blvd Muat .ell, Xlnf co nd ATLAS ~71!1': 5mr., Ml. PON11AC camper. Good cc n d. MUST sell 1968 Fiat 850 + Tax and License $213 DOWN Costa Mesa sfumn throuahoul Call 6'6-~6 . · '0 LIMANS 548--5917 Take over paymenta. call 1000 W. Coast Hlwa,y, N.B. $44.03 * 36 mos '62 CHEVY SS Impala Comr. · '66 MUSTANG, P'*T bra. BadDtt 11at1. tadOrJ air, ALASKAN 10', but. ref.on 64&-5851 aft. 7 pr.1. 645-0000 * ~2733 Plua 1 final pymnt for Used Can 9900 32i eng. Ori&', ownr , $5oo CHRYSLER -PLYMOtn'H auto. trans. mao er tee pwr lteertnc, mt tires, xfnl ,65 % T Ford cmpr spec, title. Full 2 yr, 24,000 -cub or best otter. ~ 2929 HARBOR BLVD. ' wl'lla:. Clean. 837-.mT mndltlon. 'inside • cut. dlr; t b V.,S au t o JAGUAR TOYOTA ml wamu>ty. Avail only at TIRED of SHOPPING 1,57 CHEVY 4 DR. Good CX>STA MESA 516-1!3< OLJ)SMOllLE ll15 Cub or ' torelp cai. !ii10.~;'. ; t_~' t ,-um -·~ • "'. YOTA .J:..:.M=:Od;_ •lkiJtBE;'.!,5:'.2,;,.No condltlon,clean.U>J, Opo1n9Dally66 F'tUORlO~D.m. ~~~~""! --.. • .., •AO. u. !O,.,Olil:.,--• 1u 5Wli181--.,niea<:b ·u &;W• Dftl"I""" • '0u1 o1 * ~ * • • -· ~ ·---:·· Ca'" r ltMtii. 9 Wire wheob. -· ' • OPEN SUNDAY otate -tf '58 CHEVY. Xlnt -· F1lrl1ne 4 Dr, SACRD'ICE. "i5 GI'O HT * EY•LORER Qrlg • ._.._ -• • $" .. YE' s . '61 vw Call .. -·--~ l!lliM i':it\f _Call "':'1016 .. Slt5,!IQ ~ _ n ... . ... _ """" .. kt , By ...... ~montb.Luxuri-KJtRMANN 'GHI~ .• ......_.,., .... ~'"°""'tion ·lni!!fe• *'..,.,.* ,s;e~,-\,lc•N•.n)W~bir ' -. .. -Dml'~i-.o out. Sl. 6. Sell C1)ntafn. HurryWhlleThey l•1tl ~clc~~am=!= 1:,~~1:.!rlPi~ condition. i:m or~ ·~-~Autoqatic, 6 <UllASS ~ ~-::-~ ed. ~tied number, can FOR sale; Karman Ghia ~-L • d9b dlr ~ taJca 1ow A1-Q , 1961 T~Blrd ~t fer. ,..-. ut!,' ~ SUS U I'•• 5-CPI ~ Sold wfmttd! .. Jan. toda)'. Convt 1958. New tires, runs ean. fl0i4 · ' ' ??-• ' * 6'15-5l8S *' M . .'~ ~ ~ ...,. r-1.. • • du top. XIDt CODI!. Malt LEISUltE RENTALS gn>l. 1400. 642-7947 . · . =:"~ VW 1BI. c;.tJ :::"'.'.J>l'1,:'~;, *,lil~· :"' ' • · ~ ~ =if"'~·-SIMI. - (nl) ~. (nt).831-3809 IMPORTS. f'OR ·AGRADUAtli pit ; .· 7 -"""'·• l·l\lllllliliiW!: 7' -.. --• • • ' . 9600 MERCEDES BENZ roroT•·•DLYD Tan .•'6, vw Excl. °""' c""•ii!l!A~l.fll-•-u2D2J.3 Y .~ · ~..,. ....,$ ·l'.fll.-BiW.:!I' tlW . •• I'"~ Autoo 1966 llarl>or, CM_ 646-9303 'llJ>I oell, 21.,000 ml .... , • .... \o A 63"BE!;;"AillT,':!l!.a;t OOOd. l<Ullaulcl. -_ ~ , ALF~ ROMEO BILL MAXEY VWm. ~. $3QO 'L~~ ~ ~~~~ ;:i·,: m~~~~ I . fl.~11 I =~ "t:r~c;::,':;,,yc;;~;,~ !TIOJVJOl TlAJ .. W-1I01 • •harpoallov.,642-8996 CONTINENTAL ~lion w-. l'lusbTax&Lic., ·f ' :'w:'~Nj;.'~1~: 11881 BEACH BLVD. ··1 vw -book, bi~. B!liCK ~oro :':..alnc~~ A!nbl....Wtlt2Dr.:• 831..i34 _ Hunt. Buch 847-1555 ..., .. , w/'(w, "''!' ....., •· '62 CONTINENTAL 4-0001\ 4' t *''" * 00 48 montha, Appnr<ed Ha~ · ALFA ti 1965 Guilia . • · 3 mi N, Of Coast Hwy, on Bclt ~ sharp!. $Ui50 or bell-'68 Buick Swlal 0 NE -0 W NE R CAR '1£Fqrd ~dOn Wagon G't'dtt, SeriaJ.No 33l119Z1L V.S. automatic, ~ ' ' ' 813:-2266 .. ~2225 ,.. SHOWROOM roNDmoN. • 11!.'KE OFFEI\ • . ,...., ·-· ""'°' .' ~~·1~._RH~w~ a™"iiri?iN5tk.: 19-61 TOYOT~. jivw.Xlntcond.~!~~·,;..~! ... a~~htt.mtact. AU. EXTRAS. $800 PV.' .. --63SL ' SlRl03.$t• . : ant.tnna. Wbt W/ black int. . t.MCULATE OO~Dtr!ON. ' f"l•r.djop Coupe_, New paiiit. Private Par\Y Leisure World. $125 cash PTY .G73-7007 ~ f;BIIO 3jf350 Enatne "' Un'1vers'1ty ''l . .' 644-l351 . , _lllOO.~. 67>-1031 lll .• 95.0Q ' 6'15-0291 • . doL or tako fore;gn oar. Call """'xt,NT '>Ind· S2000. Call . , , -!• . jOQ s&11iri\ili!I !!i'riti!aift . 'I!•' . . ~ . '69 vw BUS Koo, 494-9m '"'45-0634. CO RV AIR Fj1/f<a~ 01\ J:2801 ATLAS . AUSTIN HEALEY '66, "'"""' lilt, '"'· .... I.lo, Ng, WITT111-Ir EXOE!J.EN1' roND.. STEAL, moving: m"'t "" s -• . o~ b'I -) roof. immao. rond. $4200. TOYOTA 644-2'66.,.... 6 pm. . by -~ ... ~.Buock"' '64 CX>RVAIR M0"'8 Spldor I 'NQOLN smo I e C!JllYSLER -?I;~ '59 AUS'l'tN Healey, 6 Cyl. 642-9899 or 54&6909 1960 Volk4wagen $400 -Sabre C" ' 400 ' n P\\T, 4i spd, stck, gd tires,. ndJ ... 2929 HA1'BCll BLVD. O'drive, .-ire whls, hard & '68 25()..S !Bi 4 D Sed ) HEADQUARTERS 344 E 16th St CM fine cond, best off e r . pnt., $400. 8002 Flamingo, 1981 • t-1.. clean 28 000 CX>STA ME$.\ Sti-tt ID fi42-3615 g r. an : ' '• ' ' 673-3921 FV 962-1128 ..._.--..; ' ' 2850 Harbor Costa M · 110 pa, Alr-cond,elec '1.1 in dow s, ELMORE . 642-8135 mU.,:.~alr.etc.Must .rJ111.-eaa OpenDaUy'l0 10p.m.,~ AM-FM. $5,300. ~2144 •60\ yw, 'new ~GOO e.ng., gujf., '62 LE ~RE cream putt, '65 CORVAIR 2 Dr. Private seq tut ~ 673-5180 .,_.. PRE-0'1fNEP ~ private party. 15300 Besch m:...:t. Wstmnstr new int.,· st~. XLN'I' lo miles. very tresll. $600 or party. $500. 6f6..2537 alt 6 OLDS '65 f42 CUtlau 2 dr BIG 'SELBcTIOK ., DftTSUN '58 MERCEDE.S 190, new int. Phone 894-33'22 ~; ~ • besL &42-8584 pm on wkdays "-. R""URY HT. Auto, Pl' P/b, 31,000 'SI nu;;:= ; now point, gd. 'on d , 1969 TOYOTA '6"••.:V,,V . i!Us."· '68 SWx@ 1954 BUICK, good rond!Lion CORVETIE ..,.. "' mL Qrlg. own or . Ex· AIL M . · " 540-1550 and 642-4688 Ini.r. ,._built ,.._ $"'1!11. $135. '6J MIRCURY "Ptlonally sharp! Prv '"' FROM j '67 DATSUN JEDAN 220 '61 MERCEDES Very Station Wagon 6'S.18M-&--m3:-9904 * 646-8047 * '64 CORVETl'E. conV. pfW, 60-3374i e e e e t cloan. Orig Ownor $ 1795.00 ~. VYf Swx!iaI Cam@, '66 BUICK Rivi"" AM-FM P/B, 321, 4 -· !WI, ......__ 1'83 H~ 4<!0or. BRAND •·SISI " ( -"· Ni Jaotory .,quip-p.,, TUf! 945. * 642-3666 * Lie. No. XNL266 894-3320 Dlr ~~~· 14,000 mlles. * ::; ~~!2350· like :244s lDw Best otter, &t2--0l02 aft 6. ~· SS 22 ~ --• AUf'll!!atlt. t>dlo, ........ $1295 MG TRIUMPH '6'1 vw oquarebaok. xJiit '65 RlVIEl\A, .u """"" PMr 51!-------i oond, low mu. Must ..u very cloan. Nda body wrk, DODGE $195 PLYMOUTH ATLAS CHRYSLER -PLYMOU'nt 2929 HARBOR BLVO. 14-Y-!\T--•@U 'lill . '61 TR 250 J259S !ioako ottu. <94-2515 . ' $2100/basl £42.'58< . British racblg , ~I; !eGJ: f tYJ~Adsir~:Bri: hri lAteti i VW.Squaret>apc. Ex. coijil. --- 166 Dodge Polar• ATLAS ~r™trti =th· W:t · ~"".:"',¢.5300,mt.XInt =L ~FM. e.autlful =u:.~ ll!l. .4'ADJJ4AG . ~-·t¥ai y • -PLYMOtml !l!!\!!1,1\0!!lfi~,~ a~t~ COSTA MESA · ~-Ope'n L\ahy •til 10 P.m. !=_ · · e '62 VW sunroo4 radio, '66" BRQGHM. QNLY 16,000 Pymnla $39.86 mo. LB YNW C!l\:-~R BLVD. THE HUB oC -lot Ml. Gooil cond 139li MGB good collditlon, $645. Enter-MI every Cad. extra. nl. 386, Call Ken. '9f.m3 or (QBTA MIM Sta.l!M tel'Ylct balln11112 ••• tha ~1'13-4SZ~===---"' j }t l llj.Jll l 1 Jl111po rts •ii DATSUN Big aedaft~ 96 hp, overhead MG Int< servl.,,, 494-1329 cond. ""'· -· 8C4l65 -O..n ,;.n,. 'Ill 10 p.m. 0 •a!lled Ada. Dial IG<l61I '62 llA-JQI, &Jr ~ 1964 VW New re-built en&. BUSIEST marketp1ace in OODGE '6f cutorp Mg 2 if, ·9 ~ .J.,;;;. ::se. · Iii otter J0Ur *'9ict NOW. Needl intmar, lmll ~ cam q ,, dlr, 4 spd, radio, Sales, ~rvice, .Parts heater. wsw tires, Ioadedl i.·~ ~edia~ Delivery, 3200 Miles, unde r factory ,-. . All· ?dodels warranty." Bal to fine. f1775. Take $7J -cash dels, or oldl?l' car, Ll)p 8025, Call Bill ~ . J1rt11port Jlrn ports $150 Depondablo town. The DAILY PlLOT ·irr, lac l!r .I< ~' if~ 11f11'111' PON'T sr., Jt • ...,A,._PI .JIO,). Call..._ : S:~o;w. <:out Hwys!i'i. • 646-2944 • no.s!)!!,_.,~r.:,: 'i",JmoWt1i!ll "l't·~ _ :S :;e~:~ :=,t;~ lw ~t Ill!!! l ~ \fl'H,T1-&Ir'. Author"'d MG Dealor VOLVO ::;:?!• -. : .... Ql>!D !!I • ~IQ .m.;"""" : ' -I EN(IUSH FORD '69 1 TRIUM P•I GT 6+, British racing grn, stereo tape, .5 mos new. $2850. Prlate party. 644--02'24 VOlVO u..i c:n 9900 uood c... 9900 11'"4 tn~~~~~u~...t5c.5,.~· 5555~~1!5$5~~ NEW 164 ;:: 310C W. Coa.St Hwy., N.B, 1958 TR-3 Sport car, metal & 'S 642-9405 54Q.171W top, wire wheels. Moving • NEW 1800 ORA fE COUNTY Authorn.d l\IG Dealor mu•t "" $345. 644-01&1 "N~W ON DISPLAY VOL '91E ~NGL1$H-DRAFTED! '66 M G B 1.:;,;,:,:;;,:.=:=,;=I FO p DEALER h.rotop, wire w"""· Fir.;t VOLKSWAGEN If L•nJ• SAL S .. SERVICE $1450 takes, 536-8640 before ean. UUIO . Ii ICOPMIA 11 and after 1• -· ' 19!16 YW "IU•'' · lmmodlate dollvery IMPORTS LARGE sl;LECTION '-pORSCHI $295.00 . TDYDTA·YOL'f!I Thoodo,. , ---, Ll\l. !'loiJ<Sl9Cll 894-3320 Dlr 191!6 -· CM, £46.!!liJ3 ROllNS FORD ... pOMCll!i 811 ••000 ml. . ., §ffiN.bl4Ck: m1FM'. '58 VOLVO "'· R ... ~. -Extras. Concourse, cond. Vent windows, coco mats. New brakes, reblt. ~ft~ 2.000 Harbor Blvd, $4900 646-0389 ........ -.,.. Otsta Mtp -&12-0010 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS'. Financing available, $1450. ft/H $125. 545--0882 j'l!:l'l!:l:!!!!l~~~~~G:;;;~~~;;;;~;,;;~,;Cal;;;_l ;''13-43~:;:":,;ev;•~•;,· 9 = 600 === ~~flqua, Clauta H'is Im~ Autos 96001mported Autos 96001mportecl Autos 1:;=:;::::=:.=::::::=::=::=='=============================::;·nneSOTO. Runs wtll, ex· h cellent body condition. Jm, -E AUTO AIR F R E CONDITIONER WITH THE PURCHASE OF: FIAT 124 FAMILY SEDAN 1}1119 .,.,1r th• fun of r.mi1y d1ivin9 witl11)11t dt ntin9 the ftm!ly b11d91f. Your f iet d11l1r et n fif you into • four-door ttdan or w19on ind hi1 low f itt priC•• will l11ve you plenty of c•th for 1ummer fun! Both f1mily Fith ••• fully 1qui pp1d: 4·whttl di1c br1 .. 11, 4·1 p19' iticlr 1hi ft, g••·•q11111in9 1n9itH1 t, wa1h1blf vinyl inferiors, 1ectf11in9 front ttth. Come In t l'ld e1k 11t : "How dotl f lt! do it foj. th1 pric17.'' FIAT 124 FAMILY WAGON Compl~f1i S.rvic:e Depertment With Fae*" Tr11inec:I And Authorized M1ch•nic1 To MMt Your ~Very NHCI, Open Monday Nltis 'til 9 i;~·10 CALIFORNIA SPORTS CARS · 901 L 1st ST., SANT A ANA • .. ----IL IG llD1 - 646,6404 Autos V(annd WE PAY •. CASH 6:r used cart • trucb fUll all DI for free estimate., GROTH OIEYROlft WE PAY Wit FOR YOUR W CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. ea.ta Maa 54&-UOO "*. ¢ONFIDENTIALL'Y We Pay Moie For ~Ailf,~.:!O: ~ I. J. SPORTSCAR CENTER 2833 Harbor Bl"ll. co.ta M,.,. ~ WE PAY TOP DOLLAR "" ..... clean .... """ ollmal<H.S..Goor,..Rtjl Tbootlora' Robina Ford 20lll Harbor Blvd. SM. ~ WDI Buy Y.,ar Vollcawapn or Pbnd9I -..... top dollan, PIJd ... <r"not.CaIIR&lpb 61J.4900 1967 CONTINENTAL 4. DOOR leeutiful Gold lei9e Mi1f fini1h with 11ddle ~ l••th•r interior efld bled\' l1 nd1u roof. Fully lullury equipp•d. Autom1tic tr1n1mi1•ion, AM·FM redio, pow1r lf••rin9, pow1r br1•e1, pow1r window1, 6·wey 1111, tilt 1teerln9 wh1el, f1ctory 1lr, door loc~1, tic. Excell1nt "·~··.,··s3·1"95 -1966 l'OlD CoUNTllY 19UIH 11 PASS. WAeDM D11ert l1i91 with '"1t1hh19 l11t1rl.,.• L.t• t•t• +.p tick, 11t.meti1, tr111Mh1i111, r•• ~I•, heeler, poWff 1fffrl119, p•w•r ltr•lcet1 po••r wlMl,wt, ••ltftr feel111, tfrl11'4 ttft, ft .. .,, '''t .... u,,. Ne. IVX JJO , '1995 ' 1963 RIVIERA COUl'I Affr1ctive Arlee Golllll flnl1h with ll9ht beit• interior, Autom•tic fre t1tfl'll1tlo11, relllllo, ht1fer, power 1teerl119, power bre•e•; etc. EJ1c1ptio11elly cleen t+iro11thout. Show1 e•· cellent cer1. Uc. No. OKN 017 s1395 1964 YW BUG -.. ---- Gro--r•ell finlth with leite Interior. R1clio trMI h••'•'· Uc. No. PCW 557 s795 , 1f66 CADILLAC QIAN DIVILLI Strlkl~ Ar•ffc White ~ltt. bleclc lnf1rlor ind bl1ck lencl111 tt•f, ll11llv lu•urv 1quipp•cl, 11111, tr1n1; ltM, PS~.pW, 6·wey •••f, fie· tory 4lr c•• ...... ($MD 853 1 '2995 -,. 1961 COm'.'NIN!Ai.s •TO c;"OOU ... 011 · \ . . . . ' . ....., Alt •t111,lettly IPWY !(lllllt""• ~ trtll•" rt4ro, hettfr, 0 ft.+ttt •Ir ........ , power 1h•rlt1f, ~·' In.lift '9"' wh'4fw.. 'tw•P "''• l.tNt1· -~ tk. ~·'Y ltw '"II" tfltl M•wMt.lfl Mllllltl119', • .,., NC11¥'9t fhe ji,1!•11U of th• QW ••r f1ttofY. W1rr1nty, At., ''''"" •• ,.,.. '"1••• 1f1rt •• - •4995 . ... •· .IOHNICIM i. SON llOfllUIN•OYll 200 l'INI CAU NOii W°n1Clt TO CHOOlll USID CAI DIPT. 540.5635 1963 LINCOLN CONTININTAL 4 Di>ocr 11cl111. &olcl Mi1t fin i1h ""Ith Wo114 ltttlitr lnftr1or. Autom1tlo tr111tml11lt111 ft• dio Ii httftr, pOwtr 1ftHi119, powtt \rtkt&o pow,, windows, •·wty •••f, f•ctotY •lr. Uc. No. LGP 776 $1095 . _ltH~JCON to .. , hertlt.,. kev•I 11 .. tHt•lll1 fi•lth • With '"'khl119 h1t1rlw. v.1 • .,., ........... tic tre.,-...Jnlo11, rMl•1 M1t.r, et.. $r-'••• • lto11 SPfff1L ·U-. Jll•. JZZ 111· : .•895 1966 T·lllD LANDAU lrltl.J1 8rHll fillltll wltli 111efchl1t ~., ( elld bl1ck l111dl" 'roof. Fully l11nry •tllllfp,.._ Autometic tre11tml11lon, r•di•, h••ter, .l"'!"ff 1teerln9, power breke1, 4•wty •••f, fidor( •Ir. Uc. No. lll 724 $2195 1967 llORD CORTINA 2 0001 IDAM ,,.. lllLlfD Mtl'OOft flnl•h wltli Meek Md:d ...... W. 1M h1thr, Uc. N .. WFV 196 $1195 ,. Job.n.lil·on.son ~ll!Gl@Llt Gl8DllllTA1 • l&llD: • 9.llllft • lllUI • . ' ' - • __________ ....... ~....:.;;_..::.....---------------------..---.-.--· I ' ., '. t•' • r M~RK .ET B~~J,<~T S·Pl-C I Ai. s'. ·. ... ' • :'f,ROM THE LAf!ID OF CORN" . ' ., '.RATHS . . 31k , ·Breakfast Saiisag~1 7 ~L . . . .NOllTH ATLANTIC COD HEAT & SERVE ''.COASTAL •~ s· ·. s.t· · .FISH ~TICKS . ~.... ·I ,Mqr~~t ~asket I ~TCUFF. P.1-~: .. . t ., • -·" •• ) '+t. •'. l fyn~time fashions OF EASY-CARE 100°/o NYLON IY Cotolma· Sizes 3-4 Shorts --·----$3.50 Sizes 7-14 Shorts ...... $4.00 Tops, from ·-~---$3 to $4.50 LOT1 Of WUI & EASY . ~iOUl YA~TION ll\Jl.f PTY D1Jl1V1Y . . ·011~111<11! SN<-. . ___ J OU Jll.Vl.N.E..,-.Jl.EWP.0 T B.ACl:I . -''>-t~· .• _·_ + l Day Di'cqtery S!tni~e, ! . , • 85! . . . ~ 'c • . . Pll tANIL : . CLEAN AND· FAN FOLD • "HOT CHAR" "-FAST STARTING-· EVEN BURNING ... 59' ' WITH HICKORY. .. 10 LB. BAG REG. 69' .. WE'LL .lO~tl .YOU· A NEW PENTAX : CAMERA FOR THE WEEKEND ••• FREE! PLUS •. e FREE ROLL BLACK & WHITE FILM e FREE PROCESSING $15. Returnable Deposit Required. Camera Must Be Returned By 5 P .M. Monday, June 23. Try One Of Th• World's Bost S.lllng 35mm Fine C1mer1 Systems ••• On Usl BAKER'S WESTCLIFF . CAMERAS WESTCLIFF PLAZA ¢HEESE ' ' . . "flccai'J ••!'!"• .TCUFF l'UZA ·' ,-. ~TIUC/I : "'· ~a co.uliiii' 'ft I OIA .... ~ .. ' . ,. ' ... ,.. j • ~· -~ • •. • '·.t• ' ' ' " . . ' ' ~ ! ' • I·. ~, •·1 lll'W.. •• , I· .. 1-• '• • ' ' • ~'.I'· . .., ,l•;o, J '• · · I , •· .' • . . ' . . •, . . . ' f ! • i \ • ·• • ' ... , l' . I ... ~' . : , ~·I·! ',, .. 1 1 l~ , ·•on&st~·.J ..i.'iil<I: " . .'' · ' · ·-~ ,t~,·., •1 •• ,:· .• ~ -~~ ·,, •. ·.:-: ~. ::··-'" •. ~~. ·I • ·',·"i• .'/I .. '·· '•:r ~~~ . ~. '.;.; ~' ~ .. ! · '., · : :at i ili! finest! ' · ·' ··:" olt~·THU~~AY, :& MONDAY EVENINGS '\i l-.'10.'•' t t!:1 1 I :'-,,,,.-J . . GET "SET11' FOR VACATION FUNi ,. 1 , ~ -T~ ~~.mpl,m~nt •your· ~usy. sch,du.I•, · · · .:; ~-~·· ~;!'.! _co~e: u; ~i~h Is~• sporttve I . •nc:hr.bm•nt•c vacation lOoM •• •. c:.11 ·-· 'n~ ~or 1n'·apP,ointm•nf. ·, • - ~n~····T©··· ~Rf.STYL~ PHONE NOW 548-0460 NEW PATTERNS JUST ARRIVED INOUR ~. ~· SUMMEL qr.ER . . . .:P'41JJ: .GOODS-_, ,. ' \ • l ' ~' .,, l -' l· PAPER UNLIMITEb · . 548-.7921 WESTCLIFF PLAZA (E11t of M1rket B.lsk9t). Optometrist , 0.. Lou Roy Eldor • CONT ACT LENSES e REFRACTINS • EYE WEAR' STYLING • 'PRESCR.IBl_NG . . WESTCPf,f: .R~A II 241l~~~-1 ~ ~~Cl;I!. " 642.0720 · I , " .