HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-08-23 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa•
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e·xans
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!iirport Noise
D ·a1nage Claims
To~ 512 Million
FRIDAY AFTERNOON;AUGUST 23, '1968
VOL. ,1, NO. :ltl, 4 l•CTIONS, M PAOIS
Sealah Coming
~ !':'~"~"
..
Sealab III is undergoing trim and _buoyancy tests at Hunter's Point
Naval Shipyard in San Francsico prior to scheduled start this fall
of 00-day experiment in w~rs off. San Clemente Island. The 300-1.on
vessel will serve as underwater home and laboratory for Navy aqua-
nauts and civilian scientists taking part in Man-in-Ule-Sea phase of
Navy's Deep Submergence Sy9tem Project.
Auto Crash Triggers
Coast Area Blackout
A 55.year-old Corona del Mar
driver's auto early today sheared olI a
power pole on Pacific Coast Highway
in Laguna Beacil, blacking out a wide
area of the coastline and triggering
another two-car crash.
Spectacular pyrotechnic1 ol
spraying sparks from the rupturCd
12,@volt po\\-"eT lin~ apparently
distracted t"'·o other drivers who col-
lided. One car dl'iven by a Costa
Mesan overturned on the center strip.
No one was hurt in any or the three
autos involved.
went bump. Neither driver saw the
other. The other car was driven by
l\iic.hael L. PeUrson, 19 or 2411 16th
St., Nev.-port Beach. He too was
distracted by elecbic sparking.
Before their sideswipe collision at
about eight minutes after midnlght,
said Fau:Ik, Beebe loot control of his
car. It sheared the big pole at the
ground and flattened an Irvine Cove
sign.
Top $12 Million
Texans May
·.
Seek ·LltJ
Nomination
CllliCAGO (AP) -The name of
Presidmt Johnoon was 'tossed back in·
flo tne Democratic presidential picture
today·as the party prepared to open Jts
national convention next week.
Frank C. Erwin, Texas national
Democratic committeeman, told the
Rules Omlritittee of "growtn·g sen·
tUnent" within his .9tlate's delegia1i:on to
normnate Johnson for re-election i! Ule
convention unit rule is abolished.
Erwin made the comment to a Rules
Committee session convened to con·
sider whettier to forbid the rule under
w.hich a majority in a delegatioo
detennines OOw the entire slate will
vote during the coovention.
Erwin appeared on behalf ol Texas
G1>v . J ohn Connally, a close associate
of Johnson. The Presidnet itaid last
MarC'h 31 be woold not ~k or a~
his party's nomination for a seeond
'term.
PURE DEMOCRACY
The matter arose When Erwin, who
had delivered a passioned defense of
the unit rule as "pure democracy," was oasked by George Cox of \Vyoming
how the Texas delegates would vote if
the unit rule were abandoned.
"DC the unit rule is abroga!ed or if
the cohvention next Tuesday night
votes not to dorce t:.hc unit rule,''
Erwin said, "ttiere is a growing sen·
timent .a,nong those or us here in
Chicago that Gov. Connally should
withdraw BS a f.aV'Oflite son and for
Texas to request one of the early
states to yield to Texas to mminate
another great-Texan \Yho holds the
hlghest elective ol'fke in the land."
Meanwhile Sen. Eugene J.
MoCarthy's supporters, undecided
whether to accept a compromise in
the Georgia credentials d I g put e •
(See DEMOCRATS, Paget)
? •
Three-Car Crash
Bla~ks Out Wide . .
Are~ Along Coast
Czechs. Launch ... '."' . . , . ,,,. ·~·1 ~ ~1' • ~ ,...,,.~.'11P~ .. General .· Str:ike· ·
PRAGUE (UPI) -C...ch<>slovaks
toda,y staged a one-hour general irtrike
whit'h 6't:opped Prague dead and fllled
it with the sound ol tooting h<:lrns in
protest against the Soviet occupation.
As .ta'ie 5br.ike ,got under wr."Y, a Free
Czech RadiO broadcast said Ce&tmir
Cisar, one of '1Je liberal bloc under
Communist Party First Secretary
Alexander Dub~k, had escaped! fro~
Soviet capitivity and was hiding
somewhere in Czechoslovakia. Dubcek
apparently remained in R u s s i a. n
"internment."
Clandestine radios repot'tled similar
work 6!.oppages in ottiu sections ot the
country.
President Ludvik Svobod·a n.ew off to
~1osCOw with a delegation of both pro.
and anti·Dubcek ol'ficials for con·
ferencn with Kremlin rolers, pro-
mising to return tonight to "report to
the nation." ..
The strike and the dramatic flight of
Svoboda to disc\Jss his country's plight
face-to-lace with Soviet Premier Alex·
ei Kosygin and party chairman Leonid
Brezhnev swung the country away
from the violence that has mm-ed the
four·day.old military occupation.
Prague was quiet today and no
shootings were reported elsewilere.
The Czechoslovak respcrn&e to the
general strike call in this capital clty
amazed news correspondentis.
One correspondent stepped into tile
street at the rtroke of noon and saw a
truck sailing along at a good clip
screech to e halt as the driver slam·
med on the brakes.
At the saine time, drivers clamped
down on their horns, bur.glar alarms
were 1et ofi and people made as much
noise as po9S1ble.
· Th< enllre city stopped -not a bus,
trolley or vehicle moved. A few people
continued walkine but most stopped in
.their tracks.
Rail workers stopped a train car·
rying Russian supplies.
Between 5,000 and 10,000 persons
were in Wenceslas Square, wt.ere
youths had battled Soviet tanks· with
fiery wads of paper and other im·
provised weapons \Vednesd·Sy. Bui
almost everyone left the square when
the horns began ID blare and the bells
rang and the sirens wailed.
The evacuation from U1e square Vt'QS
designed In e~v&nce to avoid any
possible incident that would give bhe
Soviet forces an excuse to open fire
and provide Moscow wltt propaganda
that there were disorders in Prague.
Most CiechoSlovaks were surprised
to }tear of Svoboda's mission to
Moscow. People ·expressed was some
hope I.hat the 'fisis would be resolved.
But the hoj>es were dashed by
reports from clandestine radios and
along the · Prague grapevine that
Russi-an secret police were arresting
Czechoslovakl. The reports even gave
the license plates ol the cars being us-
ed by the secret police.
* * * Russ Veto Vote
In U.N. Asking
Troop Ouster
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -A
Soviet veto today killed an e.ight-nation
reiolutiion tJ"tat asked the U.N. Security
Council to condemn the Soviet-bloc OC·
cupatlon of Czechoslovakia and to call
for the troops to withdraw.
Washington
D~clare~ !YQ ;• . .... ~ ~· ~ lJOh'l~c
~ :. • J • •
· From )lllre c8emeri· : . · •
Sl;!veral amateW"i adf.o oPeraton. in '
Europe and Ille' lJDiled Stites Rp\lrt ;;
recei-Ang ham broadcasts-fr o m ~·
Czechoslovakia safing that
munist party leader A l .e i. a n d ·9. t r
Dubcek is. dead. , · , ~ :
.There was . no iinmediate . oUid ~ '!
.confirmation of the report.a ,received ..
.Thursday. The Czedb.oslovak ·clan· 1
destine radio in Prague ,ta.st said •
Dubcek was seized Wednesday and
taken to an unknown destination.
A Sta.te Department soµrce In
Washington said U.S. government
listening 'posts had apparent!y heard
the same ~aJll broadcasts ~e otherp
reported but had no further detmls on 1t .. '
'0ne. of the amateurs who ·reported
the bro.&dcast was Fr'ank Melville, ol
Elmsford. N .. Y., a· ham opclriiitor for
.more than 40 years. H'e said he sent a
ge'ner31 <:all trying to ' make contact
with anyone in ~urope. '
Jn , response be 'received · sever~
~plles, ooe of which ended with the
words." ... was kitted two h'ours.ago."
He »ald he asked for · a repeat and
received, "Ducek was killed tWo houri
ago."· · ·
~1:!lv1.Ue said he then asked the
sender, who gave his call letter1 a,
OKIAY, "What do you want me to db
with it?" and the reply was, "Plea.!9
relay." He said the entire exdlangl
was in Morse code.
The Elmsford h11m· said OK Is I
Czech prefix, but he said be bad no
(See DUBCEK, Page Z)
Ora11ge
1t' eathtt
The power line l:reak, however.
touched off emergency alairns' in six
power company sub6W.ti.ans, including
Huntington Beach, Newport Beach and
O>sta Mesa, accorm.ne to Laguna
police.
Sgt. Wendell Faulk said the felled
pole near Irvine Cove caused power
crews lo scram.bit to the scene, fear·
1ng a major pawer outage.
Airport Claims Hiked
The vote was 10·2 with 3 .abstentions.
The Soviet Union and Hungary voted
no. Algeria, India and Pakistan abs·
tlaincd.
Soviet Ambassador Jacob A. Malik
vetoed the proj>osal at 3:2.8 e.m. after
.he and Hungarian, Bulgarian an d
Polish delegates had filibustered past
midn,ighl to delzey the voting.
Break out the shade11 and ~
sun tan lotion, ll's going to be
one of those weekends. Like 80
degrees on the coast and up to
90 In the Inland regions.
INSIDE '.l'ODAY
Will iht United States bo~cott
the. Olvmpic Games in Mexico
Citw becau.st of the Russian tn-
vasiqn of Czechoalovakia? A top
U,S. Olympic offfcio.ls admits the
Driver of the auto hitting the pole
wa. Marshall U. Beebe ol #JO Poppy
Ave .. Corona de! Mar. Police said he
had apparently lost control ol. his car.
Faulk said Lawrence \V. Epperly.
19, of 2527 Elden Ave., Costa h1eaa ,
was northbound. He saw the v.ire
1parking and slowed veerin& right.
The next thing the San Diego based
Marine knew, said Faulk, he was
upside down, bis litUe car skidding on
Its top.
The poIH:e officer said Epptrley's
IU'f ud • car ill th< nei&hbolikl lano ~ ,l ~ ·-
•
By BRUCE BENSON
Ot tM 0.11'1' , ........
Moving lo beat a Sept. 1 deadline,
Newport Beicb Qty Councilman Paul
J . Gruber today wa~ among the latest
group o( upset homeowners to Ille
damage claims over jet noise at
Orange County Airport.
The rormer two-tenn mayor said he
seeks $30,000 from the county Board of
Supervisors for depreciation in the
YalUe of his home sUK:e: Sept. t , 1967.
That's the date flat big jets started
flying out o{ Uie airport, according to
the Airport Notse Abatemeot: Conii·
miUee, sponsors ot the lawsuits, .,.QOW
lopping $12 million.
"The law is that if you have a claim
you have to file within a year so 1
decided the other day that I'd better
join Mt1l my neighbors and file my
suit aklng with theirs," Gruber said.
A Wal 118 Harbor Area residents
submitted damage claims for
$3,450,595 along with Gniber, ac·
cording to a committee official.
The ol!iclal said the new filings
bring the overall mmber of residents
seeking damages to 209, with their
claims &tanding collectively 1 t
112,801, 795.
Gnaber said he thou&bl many jet
pilots are flying higher now than they
were before voluntary noise reduction
methods were suggested by various
study groups.
"But we'rft swt gel.Ung very low
flights over heN at times when
they're absolutely UDC:llled for ,'' he
said. The councilman's house, at 14U
Vivian Lane, ii near the lla.rbor
Highlands neighborhood.
. "!'QI in the direct path o1 landlltgs
and takeoffs," Gruber explained, his
voice riling, "anu I ca'n tell you we've
got aome pllou who are rencpdes."
"A week ago Saturday night al 7:35
(See GRUBER, P1ge !)
. U.S. Ambassador George W. Ball
said.the Soviet Union bad just cast i'5
105tb veto. But he declared that ~t
could. not "suffocate the soul of a
proud people" in Czechoslovakia.
Cinadian Ambusador Geo r g e
lgnatiefC then liitroduc'ed a new rUolu·
Uon requesting Secret.ary-Oeheral U
TI\ant to "dispatch lmmecllately to
Prague a speciJI representative who
shall !eek the release and ' en.sure the
personal safety of the Czechoslovak
leaders under detention" and report
b&<k ureentJy.
· possibiliiv e.nsu. ........ " ~-C-'Y ' C.llfl"'I• ' led•I fftM ,.,,
• Cl•HMlef '1·M , ... ,,, , .. ,.
• C-k• n Ii.cir MWl!lh M ,_ .. , .. _ ..
Dllltt ~-• ·-• ... 11Ntl4 ·-• O!MiA 111'11'-" ,IMM• •• -·-..
, .... C.l!l • . ... --" ... _ .. ... ..-.. .. --• . Mii ... • -" ~ lk• ... t .. ... 1•11 --• ~ ••"'-• *' .. ••If• .. ......... • -· ..... • --• llllltMI ~ .. .. ,__,. ...
•
I ' •
1
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•
! _,2 DAJI. Y PllOT
Mystery Surrounds. Barho11r .Gun
A -In lonnJ drnlopod
today U Ml&hborl d<ocrlbed llain
Mrs. Sylvia Fenner, 39, u a goldtn·
halnd beauty wbo never railed bu
,,-..ice. -DOrhapo d-. her fiiial momenta ol ll!e. -
1 "" •1 Mn. Fenner wJt beard screaming
•animosity at bor h111bancl. Dr. John L.
Fenner, '5, •tc0ndl before they tn· . , f!!.',!1 In e lhootout Sunday In their
, ~·~~bull Drlw, Hunt·
' .
·~·Doctors
·Encouraged ...
. . WASHINGTON (AP) -Army doc-., t«s reported today 1ome "Ml·
'.......,mg" otpa In l<>rmer Pr<t!deot D'lrllht D. E1-er'• eonditioo, but
a.Md It ii still critk:91 and ttit queetion
ol whether ht wW turVlve will remain
• UOf><Odictal>le tor tom• time.
· The doctan, at Walter Reed ArmY
-itospital, gave this apprals~ in a
formal medical bulletin which was
later amplified in response to ques-
tl<lnS submitted by reporters.
Tbe fonntl bulletin &aid that
, KiHDbawer bu lbown less evidence
of beort Irritability -Irregular and
·rapld beltl -since 'nlursday night's
report and tl10I "w!ille this In lU<li 11
enoou:ragiDC, Ult rener-aI 's overall con-
ditlon must stl:n be considered
critical" and the outlook as to whether
or-not he will survive 1his .at·
tack remains "guarded" -rne arung
'"Unpredictable and uncertain.
Ont of the questions 1iubmitted by
newsmen was as follows :
"Would the 'immediate critical
period' for the general's present type
of heart attack -ventricular fibrilla·
tton -normally be expected to last l~ger than the week's period you
hive add in past 51.atemenU generally
constitutes the immediate critical
period followillg a myocardial in·
fraction? lf so, bow much longer?"
.. "cannot u yet be determined," was
the doctors' answer.
"Is it likely or possible that he will
be rfi'mO\led from the critical list
anytime sooo?''
Tbt ..wer WU "No."
Frem Page l
GRUBER •..
' p.m. they went right over my house
here with an absoluteJy clear sky. In
fact, my time they go over yoo can't
talk with each other," be declared.
"Your TV goes rhuddery and you
can't talk to your wife even if she's on·
ly 15 feet away."
"We 're not going to sit here and
have our property destroyed by this
Board qi Superyl•on," he sputt«ed.
The councilmao, v.'bo was in-
strumental in getting coundl col·
le<e.Jes to pass a tougl1, anti-ex·
pamiooist resolution a~ Orange
Cow>ty Airport, promised that he In·
teod• to "fight w. riijht ~ to tile
ground with the wpenrisott.
.. They a greed a long time ago this
.....uld be a !--type airport and
they've turned it into a major airport
operation.''
Gruber again hOO harsh criticism
l<>r Air Calilorllia, the airline -Mlkh
led the way in establishing lar~-1cale
commercial operatd.ons oot Of the
OOJ11ty facility,
"They came to tile dty of Newport
Beach and requested us to go alone
with them for fllght.s to San Francisco
with Electra.s. They said the Electras
can be handled in a manner that's
quiet and 1NQ!l't disturb your
noigbbor1lood.
DAILY PILOT
Ire~ .._. C••t• M.,.
"~......... Let•" .... w ........ , ,. ...... , .. ...,
CAUFOIN14
OllAHOf (o.uT ,Ulll5HING ctlM'AHY
Rei•f1 N. We1d
PmJdrlftl 1ftll Pl/tllllsllt!'
J1cli: I. Curl1y
Tholl'llt K1tvil .....
lh•11111 A. M11,,hi,,.
~Int £dllor
P••I Nln 111 ,_,, ... ......
C•• Mele: Dt Wftl .. ., ltrett
,._,~'nu Wnt a.~~
L-...,,; m l<wat ·-H .. M14 Ni .. Id!: • Mii ""'-'
I
Tbt traglo gunp!Aj' In tho ramblln1,
one story home in tbt plusb water·
front subdlvtsloa left Mr1. Fenner
dtad of a bullet la the heart and bcr
u1raJIJed busband cr!UcoUy woWl1lod.
'The dead woman's body was ship.
ped to Indiana Thursday night for
funeral services tentadvely scheduled
Soturdoy, wttb Interment to follow In
Dayton, lndlana .
Dr. Fenner, wounded twice in the
•bdomen by iholl from • .283 caliber
ood a .3!7 m.,.am revolvu, Is belnC
moved h'om the Huntington Interccm.
munJty Hospital lnlemive cart unit to
a private room today.
Hospital 1pokffUlen said Dr. Fooner
has been seeing family visitors, but
apparently has net been que1tloned b)'
police any further concerning the
Sunday llilht shooting.
0 Tbey haven't been around," 1aid 1
hospital ipotesman.
The ataff member abo said Dr. Fm-
!Dor •pPOr•ntlY ~ no plans to talk to
!anyone else either, hinting at denial of
interviews with reporters.
So far, the tale of deatli'• Intrusion
·lato <be ·~ ·-ladlelltoo
1 Mta. Fenner tir<d tO ilUl her bt11q.,,d
for reasons not yet plnpol:ated, but the
'f'Ounded man waa able to take away
her rifle.
At that point, polleo believe, •ho
9btalned the brut&lly po-iul revolv·
tr and fired again, at which time tht
pby1iclan toot her Ille to oave·bb own.
Mystery sWl 1111lrowidl Juli wbat
the non-practicing medical doctior dld
for a Uvlnf. although he It reportedly
a J.ecturtr lot PACij 6Mnl•an1 ~con·
ducted by James M. Newman and
A11oclates Inc., J..os Angeles.
Nellbbors repotteci_ bearlni Mrs.
Fenner scream: 0 1 can't go on Jiving
like thh1, day after day after day,"
1econds be!ore Dr.~ Fenne.r began
~suicide Attack'
aboutlng: 1'No, No •• .'' ~ lbots
rang cul
They said Mrs. Fenner bad a reaem·
blance to actress Donna Reed, and her
maJTia&e to Dr. Fenner appeared to
be an idyllic Jove -affair on the pol·
!shed exterJor.
The exterior appatenUy masked
some sort of festering torture; how-
ever, whlci. erupted shortly before 11
p.m. Sttnday, shattering the Image of
their happiness !or all time.
Red Rockets Hit
Da N~ng Base
r SAIGON <UPI) -M vtotnamo._
........ and .YM °"IC commandos I*!' atlllckod. 'tbe ·-uge U.S. ~
cwfjliex al ~Noai, SouU> Vietnam 1
. -llrpst e[ty, . rocutai's the
-<dr -·-Ot<llP)tBs. ~ 11111-ol llt -....... ., •.
'"1hll bu to be * ntdde atitrlct," a U.S .. Marine officer Nld. "Tho Com-
muniltl have no support and no
chance of making it out o.f here allvt. ''
The heaviest fighting was arOWld
the village of Cam Le which was 80
percent destroyed when caught in the
crossfire of allied ground and air
assaulUI .agaln.st tbe attackers.
A nwnbrr of villagers were killed or
'WOUD.ded and hundreds left homele~s
in tbe l!ghting, wblcb aboted late to.
-. ill 1lle top five proyillcto,
IJl!Jkormell said.
U.S. headquarters Yid It wu loo
early to t.ll ii tills wu lbe ·beginning
of tbe IODf .. Jpeotld llallOllwldo of •
fenslve. It -.11lt _. time llnct tile
· Ttt Offemhie Comm-fort•• bad moved 10 cloM to DI Nq in large
numbers.
U.S. and South Vietnamese forces
fought two sh1J1P battles in the Central
highlands and 70 miles north of
Saigon. They ~rted a total of 113
Communists killed .against ligtt allied
ce.<Sualties.
ROCKS VERSUS TANKS -Defiant Czeohs throw
stones at Soviet tanks as they rumble into Brati·
slava during invasion by USSR and Warsaw Pact
UPt C:.bl .......
allies. H.owever, sporadic violence which marked
first four days of military occupation appears to
have diminished.
~· S. Marine spOkeamen said 15
leathernecka were known killed uid 49
wcunded in the heaviest fighting at Da
Nang linee the Communist Tet Of.
fenslve in February. South Viet·
namese government 1otises were
desttibed ooJy al "light. ..
The communists ldcked off tbelr Da
Nang offensive with e. 36-round rocket
barrage into the U.S. Marine and Air
For~ war and air ba.se. Four round!
landed within 20 yM<ls of 100 Marlnts
wiitiog to go home. None was hurt.
Within :Ml minutes, the guerrillas at-
tacked two brldge1, a radio 1tatiion, a
prisoner ol war camp, a Marine sup-
ply ~ and a Marine beHcopte,-bo ..
will> rockets and on lbt ground Ju•t
outmle Da Nnag.
f'rom Page I
DUBCEK ...
Jdea whether OKlAY wa1 a valid
callsign.
In Egmond, Netherlands. operator ,V. De Vries said he had Morse con·
tact with a Czechoslovak ham who
signaled twice, "Please rebroadcast to
distant stations that Dubcek has been
dead for one hour."
Vienna monitors indicated today
that Fre e Ci:echoslovak Rad Io
reported the return to Czechoslovakla
of Mrs. Alexander Dubcek and two
sons of the Soviet-interned
Ciechoslcvak Oommuni!t party
leader.
Mrs. Dubcek and one son were vaca·
tioning in Yugoslavia when the Soviets
overran Czechoslovakia. Another i;on
had been reported in Egypt.
Earlier in the day Free Czech Radio
broadcast that Mrs. Pavlina Dubcek,
mother of the party secretary, pleaded
with the Soviet commander 1 n
Bratislava for her son's ~lease.
The commander was .aid to have
replied he was not interned, "We are
negotiating with him."
He added that Dubcek had broken
promise.t be made iat the Bratislava
negotiations earlier this month to the
Soviet Union and the other invading
countries, the Czech broadcasts 6aid.
Computer Shot,
But 'Recovering'
OLYMPIA, Wuh. (UPI) -Some·
one sneaked i n to the 1tate employ-
ment security building early Thursday
and fired two shots at computer 1401,
but technicians sakl the bulle'.a ltruck
a steel skullplate and did not penetrate
the brains cf the device.
The computer stores the information
from which the stale pays unemploy·
ment compensatoin clalms to a·bout
50.001 persons.
"I'd hate to think what migtit ha\.'e
happened if the bullets had harmed
the programmed tapes," one official
said.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
' Dem Platform Fight Due
Commuaiata lOSl!les were.placed at 81
killed.
Some of the Comm uni.at ~mandos
managed during the mornmc 10 reach
downtown Da Uane but ~ driven
out around noon by ~ent trope in armored vebicle1. ti S. Mar·
iDes battled an erimated _' y of
130 Communist.. in suburbul am Le
in 11ou ... t<>hoose fightiog. >1-
Parking Banned
Near Airport On Convention Floor? The Oronge County Airport parklog
situation was flD'tber CODl!Jlleat.ed
Tueoday wheo the Board o I
~ .... YOted to ban parldn( Oil
MacArlbur Boulewrd a<ljaceut lo tile
alrportentralJCe.
CHICAGO (AP) -The Democratic
party pla1£orm probably will be ham·
mered together on the floor of the con·
vention itself by the more Ulan 2,600
delegates -rather than by the UO.
member platform committee.
This prospect -which could me an
delay next week in nominating
presidential and vice presidential can-
didates -became more real today as
a determined minority of the plaU:onn
committee insisted on what a
spokesman called the strongest possi·
b\e plank for an early end to the Viet-
nam war.
The dispute over Vietnam, which
repe:itedly has shouldered aside such
concerns as social legislation to help
the poor and alleviate urban problems,
inspired two separate plank-drafting
efforts.
One is by the official 21-member
plattcrm d r a f t i n g subcommittee,
which met into the night Thursday and
resumes work today.
The other is by a· group of about 25
members of the platform committee,
who claim their ranks include sup-
porters of all of the major candldates
as 'rill ·as uncommitted delegates ,all
bent on writint specific instruction for
seeking .a disengagement of the United
States from Vietnam.
As few .u 11 memberc of the plat-
form committee by aigning a minority
r~ can force a floor debate and a
vote betw~e:n' altenlllte platform pro.
visions. -
The d e e p division in the platform
committee was dramatiZed Thursday
by its; reacUco to an emotJco.-charged
4 Hurt in Hotel Fire
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Four
rersons v.·ere treated for burns early
today after a fire broke out in an old
hotel in dov.mcv."R Los Angeles. About
30 gut.sts of the Imperial Hotel
escaped the blaze.
speech by Gov. John Connally of Tex·
as.
Connally said such proposai.s as a
bombing halt, a suspension cf ag-
gressive combat action by U.S forces
and ·a coalitian government in South
Vie1Ilam would threaten a ccmplete
takeover by North Vietnam and its
allies.
The U.S. military ~ped a ~ur
curfew oo. Vietnamese res=· ~·in Da
Nang, a city ot 220.000 people urg.
ed Americans to stay oft itreet's.
Da Nang is on lite coast ~t :Joo
miles nocth of Salgoo, th< latli!il( city.
The Da Nang' cffensive ~ only
part ol 50 shelllngs and gr~acu
repcrted. from the Mekong to the
nortl1ern lrootier. About hall llf.111em
'Ibe "No Par1clD.g" lign1 will 10 up
on both sides of 'the. boulevard betnen
the San Diego Freeway and 200 fee t
IOulh of Birch Street.
--~-
'.Ille dleoge was recommended by
tbe supervisors tralic commilidon.
............... m;;;;; ...... ~
LAST WEEK OF WAREHOUSE SALE!
I NEWPORT STORE ONL y I
DRAPERY & UPHOLSTERY FABRIC 50%-75% OFF
QUALITY FURNITURE AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS
C14AIRS, R99. 95
JAii F, Reg. 3 7 S
SAU 79
SAl.l 318
f'rom Page I ._.,..... .......... dlll ..... ,
wttt ntllnlf IO a" I 0' with -'-.
MoMJe --· .... LIDr _., ...... .,.. DEMOCRATS ...
renewed their efforts tcday in h\'o
other key cOm.mittees to l006~n Vice
President Hubert H. Humphrey's grip
on the convention.
And .as bol2l. forces w o r k e d
feverWily on behaU of their can·
did.ates for tht party's presidential
nomination, the 1hadow od Kennedys
past was ttcbed sharply aver this
((:eamy convention city.
Neither Julian Bond, le.ader ol the
Georpa loyalist ~. nor J oseph L.
Ra"1 Jr., bad decided \\bet.her to ac.
cept lite Credenbals Commltlee .,....
promlM &wording tho loyaligt1 half of
the St.at°e'S 4J CQOVentkm V'Otet. The
ngular party forcts led by Gov.
Ldttt G. Maddox were Ii""" the -bill.
Both Bond. a Necro Georgia
leJis!Mtt, and Ram, a Washinglbll,
D.C., attcrnty, ire McCarttiy sup-
~.
M-1• McCarthy m.1 on tbt
Rules Committee planned a crlUoal
reception Wdly for Texas Gov. John
Cmnally. an advoclte of rttaimng U!e
mt nlle requiring tl.I of the st:at1'1
de~ates to ''ote witlt th@ majority.
Stephen A. ~mchdl, McCarthy'•
convention chief, s-aid he would ask the
rules group fQI' pemnission to crrer
rebuttal lestintony. maldng clear he
considers the fight ag.aimt t~e Tezas
unit role a key weapon ln l\tcCarthy's
"In Texas," he said, "that's the very
considers the figbt against the Texas
trying to defend llle Connally and tbe
Johnson mactllne."
CurrenUy the favorite son leader of
the lCK-Tex.as delegaUon. Omnally if
expected to throw his support to
Hwnphrty before the presklential
nomination is dtdded nel1 "'-eek.
ln the Platform Coinm.Ittee, out·
numbered Mc<:-y for<U fought to
win approval of an antiwar plant and
were dettnnined to Pf!:SS for • floor
light u lllll=t!lful.
And the subs1d.lary bearer• of hte
once powerlul ma.nUes of t b e
urs•sinated Pretide.nt John F. Ken·
•«Ir and s... Room F. Kenn<dy
1..-ved bl.mt llotlce they too will carry
b> 1he floor, if necessary, a l'ght for
ttle "stroo1est possible pelK't pkmk."
f
• n• .,..,...., •" • Mi' cto.d" • .._ .................. ~-'·=·~
LAST WEEK FOR SALE PERIOD ON:
HENREDON FONTAINE
HENREDON UPH. 15 <y0 OFF
DREXEL ESPERANTO
DREXEL COUNTRY MANNER
EXCLUSIVE DEALERS fOR: HINREOON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
1 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGER TERMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CIUDIT
N!WPORT BEACH
1727 W"tcllff Dr. '42·2050 °"" ,., •• , ""'"'
INTIRIOllS
LAGUNA BEACH w North c .... l+#y.
Jlrofe11lon1I lnttrler
O.l1n•n
Avoll1bl+-AID-NSID Ol'IH •llDA'f.-rlL f
"-Ttl ..... W• _, 0..,. e....., 14 .. 116'
,_
•
Duniingion Bea eh Y oBI' Hometown
I -
Dally Paper
VOL 6f, NO. 203, ~ SECTIONS, 50 PAGES FRIDAY, AUGUST 23 , .1968 TEN CENTS
.Duhcel{ Dead or Alive?·
Ham Broadcasts ReportingCzech'sDeathMonitored
DAILY PILOT Pltfte W SIMI Mll1r
SISTERS UNITED -Mrs. Mary Bennett (center) and her English
sister Mrs. Annie Moss, were reunited this week after 47 years.
Mrs. 'Moss and her husband, John, were surprised to learn U.S.
Flag now has 50 stars.
Sisters Rennite·d
Mee t in Westminster After 47 Years
By SANDlJllA.IOR
Of ,... Dal" '"" .... Mrs . Annie Molls stared at Old Glory
aod counted.
"Thirteen stripel, IO .tare: .-. •
huh?" she mumbled' ID swpri.se.,
"I thought tben were ts stat.es,"
she questioned, and laughed that lihe
had missed hearing about the two
now-not·so-new additions.
This ls the first trip out of tlle
Bni.tim Isles f<Jr Mrs. Moss, who is .
here to see her sister, Mrs. Mary Ben·
nett of Westminster. They haven't
seen each ottier in 47 years.
The sisters never lost cootact with
each other through the years, even
though Mrs. Moss wa sonly l<I years
old when ber older sister left home to
stay with her gnandmother, who bad
moved to Cleveland, Ohio.
Mrs. Bennett, a Huntingtoo Beach
resident 44 years before moving last
year to rn1 12th St., Westminster,
was widowed last year. Her husband
had been a school bus driver for
Ocean vtew School DI.strict 25 years.
Mr.s. Bennett, IK>"N en American
citizen, doesn 't want to go back. to
England, eyen thougt she still calls
hersieU e Briton. Her i;ister, however,
cares notttlng about staying in
America.
"We'll take your weather, though ,"
quipped bet husbaJJd, John ,
The Mosses arrived by jet Tuesday
anct will tour Califorrtiia witil Sept. 17.
They have so far planned ma.inly to
see Disneyland. "We hear so much
aboot it at home.," Mrs. Moss said ex-
citedly. "I have to see it."
Their first nigjlt in America brought
news of the invasWn of Prague. 11tey
1ftT'e asked that night if they weren't
glad to be here instead of Europe.
Spoken as Winston Ohurchill woo.Id
have appreciated, they came back
'Ait.h "If anything happens, we want to
bt at home.
''It'~ rig1Jt in our backyard, you
know"
Huntington Councilmen
.To Set Tax Hike Monday
Taxes are going up in Huntington
Beach. Just bow high the tax mte will
go is to be determined by the City
Council in a special session Mooday.
The session begins at 7:30 p.m. in
council ch.ambers o! Memorial Hall,
5th Street and Pecan Avenue.
The tax rate has been pegged et
$1.33 for the past eight ye~ despit~ a
rapidly increasing population whi_cb
has demanded additional services tn·
eluding police and fire protection.
the tax rate fOr recreation to the full
20 cents allowed by city cbarler or
not.
In addition, the council is thinking
about contracting with the Chamber of
Commerce tor some services and ii
such contracts are 'hTibten the tax rate
could be increased to provide the
mooey.
Right now the administration is
discussing D :rate of about $1.45, which
would mean an increase to the owner
of an average home of about S7 per
year.
From Wire Services
Several amateur radio operators In
Europe and the United St!ates report
receiving ham broadcasts! fro m
Czechoslovakia saying that Com-
munist party leader A 1 e x a n d e r
Dubcek is dead. .
There was no immediate ornctal
confirmation (Jf the reports received
Thursday. The Czechoslovak clan-
destine radio in Prague last said
Dubcek was seized Wednesday and
's·hootout' .
Surrounded
By Mystery
A contradiction in terms developed
today as neighbors described slain
Mrs. Sylvia Fenner, 39, as a golden-
haired beauty who never raised hl!r
voice, except perhaps during her
final moments of Ure.
Mrs. Fenner was heard screaming
animosity at her husband. Dr. John L.
Fenner, 36, seconds before they en.
gaged in .a shootout Sunday In their
home at 4162 Trumbull Drive, Hunt-
in~on Harbour.
The tragic gunplay in the rambling,
one story home in the plush water-
front subdivision left Mrs. Fenner
dead of a bullet in the hear¢ and her
estranged husband critically wounded.
The dead woman's body was ship-
ped to Indiana Thursday night for
funeral services tentatively scheduled
Saturday, with interment to follow in
Dayton, Indiana.
Dr. Fenner, wounded twt~ in the
abdomen by shots from a .23.1 caliber
and a .357 magnum revolve11, ls being
moved ftom the Huntington'titercom-"""
munity Hospital intensive care unit to
a private room today.
Hospital spokesmen said Dr. Fenner
has been seeing family visitors, but
apparently has not been questioned by
police any further concerning the
Sunday night shooting.
"They haven't been around," said a
hospital spokesman.
The staff member also said Dr. Fen-
ner apparently has no plans to talk to
anyone else either, hinting at denial ot
interviews with reporters.
So far, the tale of death's intrusion
(See MYSTERY, Page %)
Eisenho,ver's
Doctors RePo rt
Hopeful Signs
WASHINGTON !AP) -Army doc·
tors rePorted today some "en·
oouraging" signs in former President
Dwight D. Eisenhower's condition, but
said it is still critical and the question
of wheUter he will survive will remain
unpredictable for some time.
The doctors, at Walter Reed Army
Hospital, gave this appraisal in a
formal medical bulletin which was
later amplUied in response to ques·
tions submitted by reporters.
The formal bulletin said that
Eisenhower has shown less evidence
o! heart irritability -irregular and
fapld be&ts -since Thursday night's
report and that '·while this in itself is
encouraging, the general's overall con·
dition must still be considered
critical" and the ouUook as to wheU1er
or not he will survive this at·
tack remains "guarded" -meaning
unpredictable and un<:ertain.
taken to an unknown destination.
A State Department so~ in
\l!ashington said U.S. government
listening posts had apparently heard
the same ham broadcasts the otliers
reported but had no further details on
it.
One of the amateurs wtlo repcrted
the broadcast was Frank Melville, of
Elmsford, N.Y., a ham operator for
more than 40 years. He said he sent a
ge~ral call trying to make contact
with anyone in Europe.
In response he received several
replies, one ol wh.icb ended with the
words,''. .. was killed two hours ago."
He said he asked for a repeat and
received, .. Ducek was killed two hours
ago ."
Melville said he then asked the
sender, who gave his call letters as
OKIA Y, "What do you want me to do
with it?" and the reply was, "Please
relay.'' 11e said the entire exchange
New Role tor Class Presidetat
Greg Holland, 17, president of the Marina High School Senior Class,
has been selected. by the Vtking Student Council to serve as Odin, the
school's mascot, at student 11!1.lies and athletic events during the
~oming y~ar.
Error in Ass esse d Value
Hikes County School Tax
• •
County taxpayers will be charged
five or six cents per flOO Of asse<ssed
valuation more this year than ttle')'
previously were told.
A COllnt~'Wide school tax that it was
earlier thought would disappear th.is
year has been revived, it became
knov.rn Thursday. The now you see it,
now you don 't tax is alive again
because or an error.
In recent weeks all county sehool
districts had adopted thelr budgets on
the assumption that there would be no
cquali1ation offset tax this year. Now,
Ernest Norton, assistant county school
superintendent, says there will be one
-amounting to five or six cents.
County residents paid 15 cents last
year.
The tax is levied when the ass6sed
value to full cash \'lalue ratio in the
county falls below the state average.
It is designed to compensate locaJ
school districts for loss o! revenue
because of low assessments in the
county.
Althoug!I getting closer, California
cowity assessments sW.I are not· up to
25 percent of full cash value. Board of
Equalization figures show Orange
Cotwty's ratio rtill below the statewide
average of 22. 7 percent. The assessed valuatioo of the city
has grown too, say the administrators,
but while the assessed valuation has
gro"Arn, tbe assessed valuation per
capita has diminished.
In 1960, with a population of 11,400
and an assessed valuation ol $78
million, the assessed valuation per
c.apit.E. was In excess of $6,600.
Vote Checkers Named
Preliminary fi gures last month ~
shown the county above average at
23.2 percent.
NGrton said there was a "misun-•
derstanding" som"1/here along the
line and U1e countY.'s gross assessed
value was used Instead of the net
assessed value with exempt i-'operties
subtracted. Today the adm.inistration is figuring
how t.o provide services to a popula-
tion o( more than 100,000 with taxes
based on an assessed valuation of
$284.3 million, about $2,843 per co.pi.ta.
City Administrator Doyle A-tiller has
attempted each year to keep the
budget wi1ltln the 11.33 tu -· but tbe administration s~ um year it
has to go up.
Just how high ii will go up depends
on whether the council will ina'use
DeMille Divorced
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -John . De
Mille, 54, adapted ion of the late
movie producer Cecil 8. De Mille,
Thursday wu sued f« divorce by bis
third Wfe.
4 '\ ..
Five t ountians to Monito r Mac liines
An initial group ol five Orange Coun·
ty leaders has been named by County
Clerk \Villiam St John to serve on a
task force to check 200 vote counti!'lg
machines in the Nov. 5 general elec·
tion.
St John sought and got pennission of
the supervbot'! to use the 200 Prin-
tomatic model voting machines of·
ferOO without cosl or obligation to the
county by the AutomaUc Voting
Machine Co.
Named as • nucleus of'· the task
forte I.re David James, RepubHcan
Oentral Committee chairman; John
Dean, Democratic Central Committee
chalnnan; Cecil Marki, r e t i r e d
Orange County farm bureau leader~
Joseph Irvine, public affairs represen-
tative far Pacific Telephone and
\\'Uliam Lindsay, county governmental
affairs committee chairman, Orange
County Chamber of Commerce.
In getting pejrm.ission to try the
voUng machines St John told the
supeTVisors the county's present
Coleman Vote Counting System ht
overburdened beymd Its capability to
prvduce final results within a
reasonable time.
"There ls danger of machine failure
with long sustained operations and
there is also the Jr'(lblem of extreme
penonnel fatigue during long working
periodJ over 30 hours," St John aaid.
Try out of the Printom.atic machines
-----~---
in November Is ooly tbe first ol
several systems St John has proposed
f\'.lr evaluation. 'Ttle Datavote punch
card system will be trted in Ille 6911t
Anembly District in the June, 1970
primary elect;on.
Al.$:> slated for test\ is the m~1
Votomatic System in the 1970 geooral
election.
Tho task ,....., will be wed to
assist In evaluating the irennt
operating 1ys~ms· and the new
systems in both Orange County .and
surrounding counUes. Th&y wiU be
asked to make recommendatioos to
the Board o! SUpervaon.
~
P a rking Banned
Near Airport
The Orange County AllJX)rl parking
situation was further complicated
'T'uelday when . -the Board 0 r
5up<rvisor1 voted to ban parking on
.M.ac:Arthur Boulevard adjacent to the airport tntr.ce. \ : •
The "'No Parking•• signs "111 go up
on botti 1lde1 of the boulevard betwe·cn
the San Diego Freeway and 200 feet
aoulh of Birch Strt•I.
The~ wa1 recommen~·by
the "11"'.['bors tN!fic C<llllJDlsolon.
\
was in A-1orse &de.
,...-The Elmsford ham said OK is a
Czech prefix, but he said he had no
idea whether OKlA Y was a valid
callsign.
In Egmond, Netherlands. operator
\V. De Vries said he had Morse con-
tact with a Czechoslovak ham who
signaled twice, "Please rebroadcast to
distant st'ations that Dubcek has been
dead fur one hour."
* * * Czechs Stop
Prague Dead
With Strike
PRAGUE (UPI) -Czechoslovaks
today staged a one-hour g1!neral strike
which stopped Prague dead and filled
it with the sound of. tooting horns in
protest against the Soviet occupation.
As rt.he strike got under way, a Free
Czech Radio broadcast said Cestmir
Cisar, one Of th"i liberal bloc under
Communist Party First Secretary
Alexander Dubcek, had escaped from
Soviet capitivity and was hiding
somewhere In Czechoslovaltia. Dubcek
apparently remained in Ru s s i an
"internment.''
Clandestine radios reported similar
work ~oppa;ges in other sections of the
country.
President Ludvik Svoboda flew off to
Moscow with a. delegation of both pro-
and anti-Dubcek oUictals for con-
ferences with Kremlin rulers, pro-
mising to return tonight. to "report to
the nation." ·
Tbe strike and the dramatic flight of
Svoboda to discuss hls country's plight
face·to-face withJSoviet Pr~er Alex·
ei Kosygin and party ch-Leollld
Brezhnev sWWl'g the country away
from the violence that has mared tile
(S.. CZECHS, Pare %)
Woman Facing
P sycho Tests
After Slaying
Mrs. Elsie Morine Wichman, ac·
cusOO of killing her police sergeant
husband, will undergo 90 days of
pyschlatric examination in 1 t a t e
custody prior to sentencing on her
guilty plea to .involunt•ry
m·anst.aughter.
'Jlhe widow of the 10-year-veteran o(
the Garden Grove force was arrested
last April 7 iaf'ter she shot her 38-year-
old bll3band, Henry; during a pre·
dawn quarel. She firOO ™"'<> shots from
bis serv.ice revolver. into bis chest.
Sile had originally been • dlm-ged
wiltb murder but on . June 26 ttie
district attorney accepted a guilty plea
to tile lesser charge.
Defense attorney 'Ilheo Lacy ar:gued
bef<re Judge Robert Gardner that
both the widow and her hU6band bad
called the shooting an accidenl
A probation department report
revealed that the couple had lived a
siometimes violoot married life.
Judge Gardner to3.id tie was contused.
as to her propensity foc violence at
this time and wanted the psydl.aatric::
report.
Orange
Wea ther
Break out the 1haaes and t..~
sun tan lotion, it'1 going to be
one of those weekends. Like 80
degrees. on the coast and up to
90 in the inland regions.
INSIDE 'l'ODAl'
Wilt the United States boycott
tlte Olympic Games 1n Afrzico
City becawe of thr Rwsian in·
vasion Gf CzrchosLovakia1 A top
U.S. Olympic official.! admits the
po.s.sibilily eziats. 'See Sport!,
Page 16.
...11.,. " Ora-CwttY • "'-' ..... """ 1>11 CleulllM tl·J4 ,_ 1 .. ,,
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MMllftr• • . .. -I _.,,. ...... " ·-.. • "'411i18' 111 ..... I
MW '=It • tlttltllel "'--.. .. ....... ~ ••
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•
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ll DAil Y PllOT
Texans Eye
Nomination
Of Johnson
CHICAGO (AP) -'111< name ol
Pre&lclmt Jolwon -to.led boclt in· bo tbe Democratic preSdential picture
~., Ille party prepared ro open iu
national convention next week.
Fronk C. Erwin, Texas nallonal
Democratic commltteeman, told the
Rulet O:lmmftlff of "growing 1en·
tlment" within his state's delep&n to
nommate Johnson for re-elect.ton if tbe
convention unit rule is abolished.
Erwin made the comment to a Rules
Committee sesaion convened to con.
&i.der whether to forbid the rule under
whtdl a ma]ooity in a delegation
det.ennines bow the entire slate will
vote during the conventioo.
Erwin iaweared on behalf ol. Texas
Gov. John Connally, a cloae aasociate
of Johoson. 'n>e Presidnet said last
Mardi 31 he woold not seek or accept
hi.! party's nomination for a fiecond
t«m.
!'URE DEMOCRACY
•
__ ..,,
. Ul'I '-'""'*"
'Suicide Attach'
Red Rockets Hit
'
Da Nang Base
' SAIGON (UPI) -Nortl! Vietnamese
recuiM'• and Viet ecma: commandos
today alil<:ked th<: huge U.S. miUtary
complox at Da Nang, So\ltll Vlefllam'•
llOCOlld largest dty, roc:ketlllg the
olilod a1r terminal and occupying a
village Juat south ot the baae runways.
'"lblt bas lo be a rulclde attack,'' a
U.S .• MMine officer said. ''The Com-
munists have no support 811.d no
cbance of making lt out ot here alive."
The heaviest fighting was around
the village of Cam Le which was 60
percent destroyed when caught in the
ausflre of allied ground and air
asaaultl again.st tbe attackers.
A number of villagers were killed or
woooded and bmdreda left homeless
In tile f!gbting, wblcb abated late to-
doy.
Force ww and air ball. Four rounds
landed within 20 yards of 100 Marines
wt.Jiting to go home. None was hurt.
Within .'Kl mimttea, the guerrillas at·
tacked two bridge., a radlo st.atioo , a
prisoner d. wai camp, 4 Marine su p.
ply baiie and a M&rine helicopter base
with rockets and on the grotmd just
outside Da Nnag.
Beach School
Board to Hear
Bond Opponent
The matter arose whml Erwin, who
had delivered a passiqned defeme of
the unit rule as "pure democracy,"
was asked by George Cox of Wyoming
how the Texa.s del:s would vote iI
ROCKS VERSUS TANKS -Defiant Czt<lhs throw
stones at Soviet tanks as they rwnble into Brati-
1lava during invasion by USSR and Warsaw Pact
allies. 'However, sporadic violence which_ marked
first four days of military occupation appears to
have diminished,
U. S. Marine spokesmen · said 15
Jeatbenleckl wer< known l<illed and 49
wounded in the heaviest fighting at Da
Nang since the Communist Tet Of·
tensive -in February. South Viet·
JW\lese government losses were
described ooly .. ''light."
The president of the Property
Owners Protective League will tell
Huntington Beach l!lgh School District
trustees Tuesday why his group
disagrees with the district's prOJ>06ed
$12 mill.ion bond issue.
the unit rule were doned.
"U the unit MAle is abrogated or i!
the conventim Mxt Tuesday night
votes Jlot to enforce IJhe unit rule,''
Erwin said, "there i! a growing sen·
timent among those of u.s here in
Chicago that Gov. Connally sOOUld
withdraw as a favorite son and for
Texas lo request one of the early
states to yield to Tex.as to mmlnate
another great Texan who 001ds the
highest elective office in the land."
Meanwhile Sen. E u g e n e J .
McCarthy's suppocters, undecided
whether to aocept a compromise in
the Georgia credentials d i s p u t e ,
renewed their efforts today in two
other key committees to l006en Vice
President Hubert H. Humphrey's grip
en the convention.
And as both forces w o r k e d
feverishly on behalf of their can-
didates for the party's presidential
nomina.Uon, the shadow od Kennedys
past was etched sharply over this
sleemy convention city.
Neither Julian Bond, lee.der o! the
Georgia loyalist group. nor Joseph L.
Hauh Jr., had decided whether lo ac-
cept the Credeoti.als Committee corn·
pre>mise awarding the loyalists half of
the state's 43 convention votes. The
regular party forces led by Gov .
Lester G. ·Maddox were given the
ottler hall.
Both Bond, a Negro Georgia
JegiaJ.ator, and Raub, a Washington,
D.C., attorney, are li-fcCartby sup-
porter&.
Meanwhtle McCarthy forces on the
Rules Comm.Jttee planned a critical
receptioo tooiay for Texas Gov. John
Cmoally, an advocate of retalni.ng the
unit rule requiring all of the state's
delegates to vote with the maj ority.
Stephen A. Mitdlell, McCarlhy's
convention chief, &ald he would ask the
rules group for permisskm to offer
rebuttal tesWnooy, making clear he
considers the fight a;aimt the Teias
unit J'!Ule a key weapon in McCarthy's
ofiensive.
'Land of Free' Review
Promised by Educators
By TIIOMAS FORTUNE
Of rti1 Oallr Plltl lflH
Willi State Sen. John Schmitz (R·
Tutti.n) leacting the attack, critics of
the elghlh grade U.S. history teiotlx>ok,
"Land of the Free," stormed tbe
Coonty Board cl. Education Thursday.
The three county school board mem·
bera who spoke indicated they are In
symp<Ally wi1l1 Ille protest.
They agreed to review the con·
troversial te:z:tbook and answer at
thek next meeting tale request that the
state·a~ed book be removed from
the public schools.
p.,cuono asking Ille book be Junked
were received by 'Im board bearing
the signatures of an estimated 2,500
pe1\90M.
"What are you g'Oing to do? They've
spent millions of dollars on th.is
already," school board member A. E.
"Pf.t" Arnold said .in an aside after
the meeting.
"We can do a little screaming,''
answered board Jnsident C 1 a y
~ell, cl. SoullJ Laguna.
ADVISORY NATURE
Since Ute textbook Is mandated by
the state. any stand by the county
board would be oniy of 811 adviaory
nature to the State Board Of Education
and local school boards.
Schmitz, a member of the John
Birch Society, said he was appearing
bef<ft the board not as a legi&'lab but
us a part.time history teacher. He
read from the master's tlbesis be wrote 10 years ago on "Oonaoveny
Over the Collectivist lnfhrence tn
Social Science Textbooks ."
Sclmitz said, "!be great m·ajority,
if not &11, ~ widely used rexts bave a
collectivist bent. People doo't realize
it They've been swimming in this sea
so loog they OOn't know what it's like
not to be wet."
Dr. Wf.d"etl CatToll, a Schmitz staff
member with a PtiD in history also
spoke. He cited What he believes to be
specific faults ol hi re-with
page references. His refereoces were
to vilificatioo of iDdustriallstl, un·
critical praise for the New Deal, t.nd
coodemnation of Sen. J o s e p h
McCarlby.
'NO BALANCE'
"The book shows no balence OI' ob·
Jectivity," he charged. "The authors
are making flat statement!. They have
no right."
He said the book would indodrinete
a student with hoistility for his own
country. "U textbooks erT, it would be
better oo tile side of patriotism inm!&d
of anti-Americanism," he s a i d .
"Student.: will nm into an avalanche
ol crtticism Jater on in college.',..
Russ Veto Vote
In U .N. Asking
Troop Ouster
Dem Platform Fight Due
On Convention Floor?
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -A
Soviet veto today killed an eight-nation
resolution th.at asked the U.N. Security
Council to condemn the Soviet-bloc oc-
cupation. of Czechoslovakia and to call
for 1be troop1 to withdraw.
The vote was 1().2 wt.tit 3 abstentions.
The Soviet Union and Hungary voted
no. Algeria, India and Pakistan abs·
tained.
Soviet Ambu:sador Jacob A. Malik
w toed the proposal at 3:28 e.m. alter
he a n d Hungarian, Bulgarian a n d
Polish delegates had filibustered pest ·
midnight to delay the voting.
CHICAGO (AP) -The Democratic
party plallorm probably will be ham·
mered f!Ogetber on the floor of the COll•
veoUon it.sell by the more than 2,600
delegates -rather than by the 110-
member plaUorm committee.
This prDSpect -which could mean
delay next week in nominating
presideotial and vice presidential can.
didates -became more real today as
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a determined minority of the platform
committee insisted on what a
spokesman called the strona:e1t po~si·
hie plank for an early e.nd to the, Viet·
narn war .
The dispute over Vietnam , which
repe:ltedly has shouldered aside auch
concerns as social legislation to help
the poor and alleviate urban problems,
in spired two aeparate plank-drafting
efforts.
One is by the offJcia.l 21-member
plaUorm drafting subcom·mittee,
whi.ch met into the night Thursday and
resumes work today.
The other is by a group of about 25
members of the platform committee,
who claim thelr ranks include· sup-
porters of aij of the major candidates
as well as WK.'OIDmitted delegates ,all
bent on writing specific instruction for
seeking a disengagement of the United
States from Vietnam.
As few as 11 members of the plat-
form committee by signing a minority
report can fgrce a Coor debate and a
vote between alternate platlorm pro.
visions.
The d e e p divbion in Ult platform
committee wu dramatiud Thurlday
by Its reacUon to an emotion-charged
l'i peech by Gov. J ohn COnnally Of Tex-••· Co nnally said such prOposa.ls u a
bombing halt, a wspenalon or ag·
gressive combat action by U.S forces
and a coaUtlQO government In South
Vietnam would threaten a co11>9lete
takeover by North V1etnam and ita
allies.
Drug Raid Ne'!! 11
TOl\J\ANCE (UPI) -A Torrance
coq>le and nine other persona flMXI in
llltir borne when poHce raided it were
1n custody today on narcotics charge1.
Marijuana, huhlah m:1 dangeroua
drugs wer• oonllocatod, ln lddiUoo to
...... toot. and Olllo pa:U.
'
-----~-
U.S. Ambassador George W. BAD
oaltt the Soviet Uriion had jolt cut lu
105th veto. But he declared that it
could not "sufiocat,s the soul of a
proud pepple" In Czechoslovakia.
Canadian Ambassador G e o r g e
Jgn.atieff then Introduced a new "'6'0IU·
tion requesting Secretary-General U
Thant to "dispatch immediately to
Prague a spectal representative who
shall !'eek the release and ensure the
per1onal safety of the Czechoslovak
leaders under detention" and report
bwck urgently.
From Page J
MYSTERY ••.
Into the ezpensive aub\D"b indicates
Mr&. Fenner tired to kill her bUJl»nd
for reasons not yet pinpointed. but the
wounded man was able to take away
her rifle.
At that point.. police btlieve, 1he
obtained the brutally po'ftl'ful revolv·
er and fired again, at which time the
ph ysician took her life to save hls own.
Mystery stiU &WToun<ll j ust what
the non·practicing medical doctor did
for a living. although he ta reportedly
a lecturtr for PACE Seminars, con·
ducted by James M. Newman and
A.ssoclatt1 luc., Los ADgeles.
Neighbor• reported hearing Mr1.
Ftnner tcream : "I can't go on Uvin g
like thl1, day after day •tter day."
seconds before Dr. Ft:Mtr began
shotiUng : "No, No ... " and ahota:
rang out.
They said Mra. Fenner bad a reaem·
hlance to actress Donna Reed, and her
marriage to Dr. Fenner appeared to
be •n Jd1Ulc love •flair oo the pol·
uhed emrlor.
Thi exterior •pparenlly m11ked l'Oml sort or (e1t.ering torture. how-
ever, which erupted shortly be.fore 11
p.m. Sundly, 1hatter1nc the !mag• of
their bappin1" for all tlm1 •
'
F.rom Page J
CZECHS ... Communista los8es were placed at 81
killed.
Some of the Communist commandos
managed during the morning to reach
four-day-old mllitaz:Y occupation. -,downtown Da Uang but were driven
Prague was qwet lod.:ay and no "Out around noon by government
shootings were reported elsewhere. trops in annored vehicles. U. S. Mar.
The Czechoslovak responge to the .ines batUed an e_slmated company of
geneMl strike call in tllis capital city 130 Communists in. suburban Cam Le
ed d -~~ in house-to--bouse fighting. runaz news correspon eui.>. Th' Us ·u h One cornspoodeot stepped into the e . . ~ tary clam~d a 24;-our
street at the stroke of noon and saw a curfew on. Vietnamese residents m Da
truck sailing along at a good clip Nang, a ~ty of 220,000 people &id urg-
screech to a halt as the driver slam· ed Amer1c~ns to stay off the streets.
med on the brakes. D~ Nang 11 on .the coast about .360
At the same time, drivers clamped miles north of Saigon, th~ largest city.
down on their hoI'D!'l, bm.glar alarms The Da N~g offensive was only
were set off and people made as much part of SO shellings and ground attacks
nolse as possible. reported f~om ~e Mekoqg De1ta to the
The entire city stopped_ not a bus, norttlern front1er . Abo1;1t half Of .them
trolley or vehicle moved. A few people were in the_ top five proVlDCes,
contim.Jed walki.ng but most stopped in spokesmen said.
their tracks. U.S. headquarters said it was too
Rail workers st~ a train ctr· early to tell if tru.<; was the beginning
rying Russlan supplies. of the Jong-expected na tionwide of·
Between 5,000 and 10,000 persons f . It -f' t tim. • th were in Wenceslas Square where . ens1ve. was 1.ue us e since e
youths had batt:l.ed Soviet taiiks with Tet Offem;ive Communist for~es had
fiery wads of paper and other irn· moved so close to Da Nang m large
provised weapoos WednesOO)'. But numbers. '
almost everyone left the square when U.S. and SpJtll Vietnamese forcts
the horns began to blare and the bells f~ught two shail> batue~ in the Central
rang and the sirens wailed. hi-~ and 70 miles north of
The evacuation from the square was Saigon. ~ey .reported_ a t~tal of 63
deQgned in advance to avoid any Comm~s killed a.gamst light allied
possible incident that would give the Ci$Ualties.
Soviet .fwce.!I an excuse to open fire The communists kicked off ttieir Da
and provide Mo.scow witt!. propaganda Nang oUensive with a 26-round rocket
that there were dis<rders in Prague. banage into the U.S. Marine and Air
"We are putting into written form
our opinions on every aspect of the
school expansion program," said Joe
Fenn, group president, '"including
construction, site acqulsitlon and bond
indebtedness.''
His request to speak at the 7:30 p.m.
trustee meeting Tufl9day .at Win·
tersburg High SCbool was granted by
school officials.
Basically, he says hi& group
disagrees with the tact taken by the
school district.
''\Ve are much concerned about get.
Ung ~e most for the least," the pro-
perty owner's leader said.
"In so far as looking uPon the board
as an investor, I would consider
·myseU a much better investor than
they have ever been."
His group's main dissent is over the
bond proposal, which calls for $2
ntillion far purchase on one site, $1.5
million to meet Field Act re·
quirements, fl.S million for the con·
struction of a sixth hi~ school and a
total of $1cKl,OOO to add classroom and
library spa~ at Westminster High
School.
Ferm declined to dlscuss before the
meeting the reasons f<r the POPL op·
J)0.5ition but &aid it was "on a ba.tlis
that has not yet even been considered"
by the board.
'The bond proposl was originally set
at $23 million but at their last meeting,
trustees whittled the figure to $12
million to be placed on the November
ballot, as recommended by a scant
majority of their citizen'& advisory
committee.
LAST WEEK OF WAREHOUSE SALE!
I NEWPORT STORE ONLY I
DRAPERY & UPHOLSTERY FABRIC 50%-75 % OFF
QUALITY FURNITURE AT FANTASTIC SAYINGS
• CHAIRS, Reg . 95
TAILI, Re9. 375
SALE 79
SAUJ18
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LAST WEEK FOR SALE PERIOD ON1
HENREDON FONTAINE
HENREDON UPH. 15% OFF
DREXEL ESPERANTO
DREXEL COUNTRY MANNER
EXCLUSIVI DIALIRS ,oa, HENRIDON-DRIXEL-HIRITAGI
fO DAYS NO INTERIST-LONGIR TERMS AVAILAB LE ON APPROVED ClllDIT
NIWl'OaTal.lCH
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Bea eh Today's Closing
• EDITION
vor. 6"f, NO. 203 , 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES l:AGUNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1968 TEN CENTS •
\
Laguna Pr .incip~l Plans 'Exciting Bill'·
By TOM GORMAN
OI ,,,. o.i•r ,. Sl .. I
When a new principal e-0mes to I!"
)l& high school, with seJjsoned pro·
~lems, interesting things happen.
"We're going to, make the year so
111ccessful, the :students won't want to
stay home," said Robert Reeves, new
principal of Laguiia Beach High
'chool. ·
Planning on student cooperation,
Ree ves has included the teachers in
u
his plan £or an exciting year. "Our
program will be as exciting as the
teachers can make it," he declared.
One product of the Reeves ad·
ministration may be a nP.w vitality in
the classroom.
The youth(uJ principal plans for
teachers to liven the class our with
such additions as movies and
demonstrations that bring across 1ub-
ject matter visually.
One of the problems facing LBHS is
the lunch hour. Last year, as in the
past,. neighbors complained about
stude.il.ts leaving trash on their lawns,
playing the car radios too loud, smok·
ing, and other offenses.
The spectre of a closed campus .
loomed over the student body.
Students protested loss of the ac·
customed freedom to leave campus at
noon.
Reeves is trying to oblige. lie has
developed a compromise solution with
Crash Kno~ks Out, Lights
• ' . ,..t~.,, ,
CORONA DEL MAR MAN'S AUTO FELLS POWER POLE AT IRVINE COVE, LAGUNA BEACH
sp.ctacul1r Spark1 Cau1td Two Other Auto1 to Crash, Set Off Alarm1 in l'iuntlngton Beach, Coste Mesa
I
FLYING SPARKS DISTRACTED TWO OTHER DRIVERS , ONE OVERTURNED
Laguna Officer Ken Brum1ge Inspects Damag• to Merine Lawrence W. Epperley's Ca,.-
Crash Shears Power Line
A s;.y..,.-old Corona d•I Mar
driver's auto early today sheared off a
power pole on Pacific Coast Highway
In Laguna Beacti, blacking out a 'Wide
area of the COMtline and triggering
another two.car crash.
!'pectacular p yr o t e c h n i cs or
spraying sparks from the ruptured
12,QOO.volt power line apparently
distracted two other drivers who col ·
lided. One car triv-en by a Costn
,.tesan overturned on the center strip.
No one was hurt in any of the three
aul.o!! involved.
The power line break. however.
!ouched ofJ emergency alanns in six
power 9"'1lpan)' subsUltioos, incJCdini:
' I ~·
HW>tiDg!on Beach. Newport Beach and
Cosla Mesa, acconling to Laguna
police.
Sgt. Wendell Faulk said the felled
pole near Irvine Cove caused power
crews to scramble to the scene, fear·
ing a major power outage.
Driver or the auto hitting the pole
\\as Marshall U. Beebe of 330 Poppy
1\ve .. Corona de! Mar. Police said he
had apparently lost control of his car.
1-'aulk said Lawrence W. Epperly,
19. or 2527 Elden Ave .. Costa Mesa ,
\vas northbound. lie saw thl!: wire
sparking and slowed veering right
The next thing the San Diego ba~r.d
1t1arine knew, &aid Faulk, he wa~ ....
upside down , his litUe car skidding on
its top.
The police officer said Epperley's
auto and .a car in the neighboring lane
went bump. Neither driver saw the
other. The other car \.\'as driven by
~·lichael L. Peterson. 19 of 2411 16th
St.. Newport Beach. He too was
distracted by elec-tric sparking.
Be!ore their sides\.\·ipe collision al
about eight minutes after midnight,
liaid Faulk, Beebe lost control of his
car. lt sheared the big pole 11t the
ground and flattened an Irvine Cove
sign.
lffth in It.
In order to leave campus t.hJs com-
ing semester, a student will need a
release. signed by a parent or guar·
dia11, filed with the administration.
Reeves is hoping the students will
!ind the campus is "where it's at."
"\Ve want to make the lunch hour so
exciting, kids won't want to leave."
The principal has plans to upstage
Taco Bell.
He said the lunch hour will include
or
danei!s, a juke box, debates, lectures
and movies.
Th05e students who still wish to
leave campus will have to stay out of
trouble. If a neighbor complains about
a specific student. his pass will be
revoked for five \Veeks.
If that person causes trouble after
live weeks. or is found off campus
before the five weeks are up, he wUI
be suspended for 1.hree days. If. after
tSee PRINCIPAL, Page Z)
ive?
Ham Broadcasts Telling
•
Of Leader's Death Heard
From \Vl.-e Services
Several amateur r<1diG operators in
Eur!>pe anrt the United States report
receiving ham broadcasts fro m
Czechoslovakia saying that Com·
munlst party leader A I e x and e r
Dubcek is dead.
There was no immediate official
confirmation or the reports received
Thursday. The Czechoslovak clan·
destine radio in Prague last said
Dubcek was ~ized Wednesday and
taken to an unknown destination.
A Sta.le Department source in
\Vashington said U.S. government
listening posts had apparently heard
the same ham broadcasts the others
reported but had no further details on
II.
One of the amateurs who reported
the broadcasl was Frank Melville, of
Elm~ord, N'.Y .. a ham operator for
more than 40 years. He said he sent a
general call trying to make comact
with anyone in Europe.
In response he received se·veral
replies, one of which ended with the
words," ... was kiiled two hours ago."
!·le said he asked for a repeat and
received, "'Ducek was killed two how·s
ago."
Melville said he then asked the
sender, who gave his call letters as
OKlAY. "What do you want me to do
with it?" and the reply was, ·'Please
relay." lie said the entire exchange
was in Morse code.
The Elmsford ham said OK is a
Czech prefix, but he said he had no
idea whether OKLA V was a valid
callsign.
Jn Egmond. Netherlands. operetGr
\V. De Vries said he had Morse con·
tacl \Vlth a Czecbos!ovak ham who
signaled twJce, "Please rebroadcast f.o
distant stations that Dubcek has been
(See DUBCEK, Page %) : r , •.
I i .11•' I
. 8 Nominated as Jurors
For '69 Festival of. Arts
Eight prospective jurors have been
nominated for the 1969 Festival of
Aris grounds admitt.ance jury.
Oea<lline for returning nomination
forms is Sept. 2. Any 1968 Festival ex·
hibitor or unsuccessful c:.pplicant may
nominate. They will also vote on the
nominees.
Four juror"S are to be elected by the
artists along with two alternates. Two
and an alternate are to represent
. traditional art and two and an
Eisenhower's
Doctors Report
Hopeful Signs
WASlflNGTON IAPl -.o\rmy doc-
tors reported today some ··en-
couraging" 11;gns in former President
Dwight D. E isenhower's condition. but
said It Is still critical and the question
o! whether he wiU survive will remain
unpredictable for some time.
The doctors, at Walter Reed Army
HOl!lpltal, gave this appraisal in a
fonnal medical bullet.in which was
later amplilied in response to ques·
tions submitted by reporters.
The formal bulletin said that
Eisenhower ha.~ shown less evidence
of heart lrritabilily -irregular and
rapid bcc:ots -since Thursday ni.l!hl's
report and that ··while this in il.~clf is
cnccuragi.ng. the gt>neraJ's overall con·
cl ition must still be cons idered
<·riti cal" and the outlook as to "'heU1er
nr not he will survive this al·
tack remains "guarded" -meaning
unpredictable and uncertain.
Bike Instructor
Without Wheel.s
It appeared today that Lagu.M's
YMCA bike instructor was tern·
porarily afoot, his $400 bicycle stolen.
Robert Leslie lies. 22 of 1530 N.
Coast liighway, told police his vehicle
\vas taken Thursday morning near
1380 llillcrest. It was only four days
old .
lies currently ha& been shepherding
• eroup of women on lengthy bike
ride!! through the ttea as pQrt oC a
Y CA program.
alternate are to repl'61Cnt moder art.
The Festival board then picks three
more jurors making a panel of seven
to judge wtio shall exhibit next sum·
mer.
The nominees are Dixi 11 a 11
1 mOOem ). sponsored by A r m e n
Gtisparian (a juror for 1963); Ja<:k
Dudley (traditional). sponsored by Dr.
f{obert L. French. George Beau Mann
(traditional) by Edward L. Fernsten :
Neal Butcher (traditional) by Ollie
. Fishers. Patricia Kelly {modern) by
James Tatum, Philip F' re em an
(m!Xl.ern) by Patricia Grinnell; Bob
Laney (modern) by Dick Kakuda; and
WilJjam A. Motta (modern) by Herb
Griswold.
Russ Veto Vote
In U.N. Asking
Troop Ouster
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -A
Soviet veto today killed an eight·nation
resolution that asked the U.N. Security
Council to conden1n the Soviet;"bloc oc·
cupatlon of Czechoslovakia and to call
for tlhe troops to withdraw.
The vote was 1~ with 3 abstentions.
The Soviet Union and llungary voted
no. Al ge ria. India and Pakistan abs·
tained .
Sov iet An1bassador Jacoh A. Malik
vetoed the 1)roposal ol 3:2a a.m. nflrr
hr an d llungnri::n, Bulgarian and
Polis h delegntes had r!libustercd past
n1 idnight to delay the \'oting.
U.S. Ambassador George \Y, Batl
saJd the Soviet Union had just cast ils
l 05th veto. But he declared that Jt
could not "suffocate the soul of a
proud people'' in Czechoslovakia.
Canadian Ambassador Geo r g e
fgnatieff then Introduced a new resolu-
tion requesUng Secretary-General U
Thant to "dJspatch lnuned!ately to
Prague a special representative who
shall reek the release and ensure the
personal safety of the Czechoslovak
leaders under detention" and report
back urgently.
Stock Uarkeu
NE\V YORK <AP) -Blue chips
~trengthened late this afternoon , giv·
ing tlte stock market a ·substantlal
aaln in moderatr: trading. (&!:e quota-
tions, P,.es 8-9).
NEW PRINCIPAL
Laguna High's . Reeves
Judge Delays
S111ith Hearing
On Forgery Rap
A preliminary examination of
forgery charges against Fraztr Smith.
former building fund chairman for the
Laguna.~1oulton Playhouse. todny was
continued until Sept. 6 in Laguna
Beach Municipal Court.
The distinguished looking New
r..:ngl.ander shook his head and said,
''No, sir," when asked by Judge
Rjchard HamUlon if he wlshed the
court to consider a lo\ver bail.
Smith, suspecled of f o.r g Ing ' . Playhouse checks worth $9,475, was
picked up in NeW York last week on' a
traffic violation. tte was brought back
to Laguna Beach by Detective
Sergeant Vic Sagan after he agreed to
waive extradition. He Is jailed in lieu
of $10.000 ball.
Three counts filed by the district at·
torney charge that Smith cashed forg-
ed chec-ks totalling $1 ,950.
The gray haired defendant entered
the court this morning clad itt-blue
dungarees and a gray. short sleeve
sweatshirt stamped. "Orange County
Main Jail."
After Smith conferred with the
public defender for about 20 minutes,
·the court was asked to gragt a con·
tinuance "tmlil Sept. 6. Permission was
granted. and Smith was returned to
the Oraoge County Jail .
BOA.TS, BALLET
WEEKENDER FA.RE
Boats and ballet make the outdoor
entertainment scene during the wan-
in~ days of August along the Orange
Coast. Newport's annual Character
r.c::ird Para1e casts of{ th.is S2turday
f;:r a t1frn aroun::I lhe harbor and La·
j.'una's B;UJet Alfresco comes lo life
Aug .31 at ti'.<' Irvine Bowl. Read about
them in today's \Veckender.
Orange
11'cul/acr
r.rrak out the ~hacr~ ?nd 1: ....
sun 1111 lotion. it"s goi ng to be
unr uf thu~e \\·ccl;cndll. J.iki; Gil
dce,rlltli; un the t·o:ist an<.! UIJ tu
I.JO in the inland rci;:lo ns.
l NSlltE TODAY
\Vilt the United Statt1 boycott
tht Olympic Gamts in Me.tico
City btcaust o/ the Russian in.-
va.riG,?i of C:rechosloookla1 A top
U.S .. Olvmpic officials admits the
. pos.tibilitv emts. See Sporu,
. PaQ< 16. ·
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'•" Ov~• I 0-"lflllll 4 --. 1t11tawtillh •n
•.
•
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% DAILY PllDT Ftld1y, AU<JUSl 2.J, 1968
Study Asked ..
Pollution Threat
Texans ~ye
Nomination
Voiced in Laguna Of Johnson
'Ibo opeoter ol & •bor•lioe polluted
like Lake Erle haa been prtsented to
Laguna Beach councilmen.
A letter written by Alex Hilkevitch,
95$ So. Cout Hwy., atked that the pro-
blem of water polluUon be tncluded in
the inveltiea:tiQn• undertaken by the
newly formed 25-n\em·ber citizens ad·
vtsory committee On the General Plan.
"A5 you know." Hilkevitch wrote,
"tb11 area Unger1 upon the thre1bold
of an unprecedented era of industrial
upanelon and economlc irowth."
}Jllkevitch said public bearings are
slated for Oct. 3 in Sacramento on a
bill wh1C'b would allow regional Water
Reeourcea Control Board!: to issue
~ far increased w a s t e
diacbarges into waters where the
quality 11 already less than minimum
t : .. nGt.rds.
The letter allked, "What are
minimum •Wlda<do ! Tho SI.ale Boord
definee; pollution only as that wblch
im pairs the 'beneficial u1es' o! water.
Regional boards are allowed to
designate which uses are con&ldered
beneficial. And rec:re&toln and COD·
servatlon are excluded from the areas
v.·here industrial 'interests · a r e
dominant. Will thls become true of our
region, too'!"
Colfficilman Roy Holm -sa.kl he
thought Ute writer WM ~ to call
attention to the problem/ ID IU?·
rounding comm~ Holm suggested th tbe city nfer
the matter to the d n1 edvi1ory
committee and th planning com·
mw1on, and get in touch with the
St.ate \Vater Resourcts Control Board.
He said he thought the city should
contact the \1.'ate.r Control board &Dd
;ilan to attend iU meetings.
U~I Celtlfphotl
CHICAGO (APl -The name of
Presided Johiison was to11sed back in· to tbe' Democratic presidential picture
today as tile part_y prepared to open its
national convention next week .
Fraqk c;. ~rwip, Texas national
Democratic committeeman, told the
Ru1el Cbmmtttee of "irowtng sen·
tinfent••·withfn his ttate's deleptkln to
nominate Johnson fat re-elecUon if the
conventiOn unJt rule is abolished. ~rwin made UM comment to a Rules
Committee 1eu.J.on convened to con-
sider ~etiler to furbkl the rule under
Vlbioh a majority in a delegation
determines how tm entire slate will
vote durlng the convention.
Erwin ~ppeared on behalf of Texas
Gov. John Connally, a close associate
of Johnson. The Presldnet 5aid last
March 31 he would not seek or accept
his party's oomination for a second
term.
20 Acres Offered as Site ROCKS VERSUS TANKS -Defiant Czechs throw allies. Ho\vever, sporadic violence which marked
stones at Soviet tanks as they rumble into Brati· first four days of military occupation appears to
slava during invasion by USSR and Warsaw Pact have diminished..
The matter arose \\•Mn Erwin. "'ho
had delivered a passioned defense of
the unit rule as "pure democracy,"·
was asked by Geor~ Cox of \Vyoming
how the Texas delegates would vote if
the unit rule were abandoned. ~~~-"-~~--'-~~~~~~~~~~~
For San Oemente Hospital A rt Association to Vote From Page I
DUBCEK · ...
41ff the uDit rule ts abrogated or U
the convention Mxt Tuesday night
votes not to enforce tht unit rule,'t
Erwin said, "there is a growing sen·
timent among tho~e of us here in
Chicago that Gov. Connally should
,.,.ithdraw .as a favorite son and for
Texas to request one of the early
states to yield to Texas to nominate
another great Texan who holds the
highest elf'Otive office in the land."
A lSO-bed satellite of South Coast
Community Hospital may one day rise
in San Clemente on 2D acres of land of-
fered by a hospital board member.
Currently the problem Is bringing
water and sewage facilities into the
hilly area. The site is part of 3,31?<1
acres annexed to San Clemente in
1963.
San Clemente councilmen agreed
\Vednesday to undertake preliminary
studies. The property has been offered
by hospital board member, Richard
O'Neill owner of the O'Neill Ranch.
City 1Manager Kenneth Carr said,
"We can't deal only with that 20 acres.
\Ve have to deal with the entire 3,300·
acre annexation. none of which as yet
is inc I u de d in the tTri..Cities
Municipal) water district.
South Coast Community Hospital is
currently in the midst of a fund drive
to expand the existing fa cilities.
Plans for the future inc 1 u d e
associated hospitals in the southern
part of the county. The first would
probably be located at Leisure \Vorld .
John \Veld , ho$pital board vice
president, said the San Clemente
Jacility was probably at least five
years away. But, he said, this would
depend on how rapldJ.v funds are made
available in the San Clemente area.
The associated hospital concept en-
visions the existing fac ility a s
somethini:? of a mother hospital with
associated hospitals each with Jt.s own.
speciality such as geriatrics or in·
dustrial accidents:.
A benefit of the plan would be
avoidance of duplications of equipment
and services.
Monday on New Bylaws dead for one hour ."
Vienna monitors indicated today
that Free Ciechoslovak Radio
reported the return to Czechoslovakia
of Mrs. Alexander Dubcek and tv.·o
sons of the Soviet-interned
Czechoslovak Communist p arty
leader.
Laguna Beach Art A.5sociatlon
members meet Monday, at 8 p.m. in
the main gallery, 307 Clilf Dr., for
voting on by-law changes, naminatkln
of the Annual Art Aucti<ln Committee
and the elect.ion of three Board
memben.
Earl Klein of Dana ,Point, Ralph
Tarzian of South Laguna and William
Mac~ay of San Clemente have been
nominated.
Organized in 1918 by Edgar Payne,
the non-profit organization i s
celebrating its 50th anniversary th is
year.
and gifts. At this ti.me there are 900
artists and non-artist members. · •
Membershi p to the Art Association
includes part Olvnership of one of the
few major galleries in the oountry
owned and operated by is mem-
bership, free admission to daytime
events and reduced rates for evening
events. Receptions honoring new ex·
hi bits and artists are held monthly.
Membership is open to the public.
Mr s. Dubcek and one son were vaca·
tionlng in Yugoslavia when the Soviets
overran Czechosl<1vakia. Another son
had been reported l.n Egypt.
Earlier in the day Free Czech Radio
broadcast that Mrs. Pavlina Dubcek,
mother of the party secretary, pleaded
Meanwhile Sen. E u g e n e J .
McCarthy's supporters. undecided
whether to accept a compromise in
the Georgia credentials d i s put e,
renewed their efforts today in two
other key committees to l003en Vice
President Hubert H. Humphrey's grip
on the convention.
with the SovJet commander in
Bratislava for her son's release. Lewis Meyers
The commander wai!i said to have Dirksen Says No replied h• was not Interned, "We are Rites Saturday negotiating with him."
He added that Dubcek had broken Services are 6Cheduled Saturday for
From Page I
Operating costs for the Art Assocla·
tion ·are met by a small admission fee,
dues, conuni&slon on plcturea sold
Europe Troop Ouster promises he made at the Bratislava Laguna resident Lewis Meyen, 55,
negotiations earlier this month to the who died Wednesday. He was a n w ASHING TON (UPI) _ Senate Soviet Union and the other invading Orange County resident for 25 years.
Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen countries, the Czech broadcast.a said. With Chaplain Gordon Gartbe of.
PRINCIPAL •••
that, be again causes trouble. he will
be placed in continuation school.
ln the meantime: parents will be
calJed in for a conference.
"Conferences are a good \vay to get
the parents involved with their
chiJdren," Reeves said. "The students
v.•ho get in trouble usually have
parents who aren't ioterested in wtlat
they are dol.ng."
Reeves con1inued, "I don't think
enough parents are interested in what
their children are doing. While the
teens doo't like to have their parents
around, they are pleased to see
parents give them merits when they
are due."
At Laguna, where many of tile stu·
dents are college boWld, par€nts can
confuse concern with pressw·e.
··1·here can be a tragic outcome
v•h.en a parent overpressures a child
toward college," Reeves said. "Some
kid.a just can't hack iL But I've se€n
jt where they were forced into college,
and there wer~ tragic result6. Par·
en.ts have to recognize the difference
between overpre!sure and interest and concern."
Reeves said the ratio ()f students
from LBHS going to college with tho6e
who ami't is about 80 to 20. At Ken·
nedy H1gh School, where he was prin-
cipal before coming to Lagw1a, the
ratio was reversed-20 to 80.
'"The difference is due to the linan·
cial backgrounds of the two commwii·
ties," Reeves explained.
Reeves ls presenUy v.·orking on his
doctorate degree in education at
UCLA.
DAllY PILOT
l.et•H IHI~ C..ltf.,_le
OllAHG[ COA!T f'UILllHIHG COM,.AHY
Robert N. Wood
Prnldlfrt ,,,. l"lltlll11M'P
J1dc II.. Cu1loy
Vici l"rnldlnl 11\f ~ti ~ft!"
Tho11-.1 K11vil
Edllor
Tho"'ltt A. M1ir,hl~• M111t1l111 Editor
Ri,ht•d '· Nill ,,~1 Nin111 LI ........ Kit .-_ttverl\11 ... Cl!'/' Efltor Dlrtt!w
Le,. ... '"'"" Ofnc.
221 For11t A••· M1ili~t A.dtlr1n : l".O. 101. ''' •2•11
••
Reeves went to high school at Ingle·
"'ood. He then went to college at
UCLA. San Jose Bible School and El
Camino CoUege. lie was graduated
from UCL.A ill 1953.
Misswn Viejo
Girl lnju.red
In Mesa Crash·
said today the Soviet invasion ot ficiating, services wlll be held at 3
Czechoslovakia has at least t.m· Drug Raid Nets 11 p.m. at the Pacific View Chapel. Inter· porarUy forestalled any move to ment will follow at the Pacific View
withdraw a large number of U.S. TORRANCE (UPI) - A Torrance Memorial Park.
troops from Europe. couple and nine other persons found in Mr. Meyers i.s survived by his
Dirksen told new!imen Congress their home when police raided it were widow, Kris, of 683 Thali11-St.; three
"definitety" would not give any in custody today on narcoHcs charges. daughteI'5, Karen Johnson, Meredith
further 'consideriaUon to such · pro· Marijuana, hashish and dangerous Meyers and Damari3 Meyers, ell of
posals "now or · iJ1 the foreseeable drugs Were 'confjscated. in addition to Lagur.a Beach, and a grandson, Mikel
fie took graduare courses at Los An·
geles State, and earned a Masters
credentials.
· Since then, Reeves has taught in
various school districts, in fields of
math, English and coaching. He djd
counseling work, and was the head
counselor at Bolsa Grande lilgh School
in Garden Grove in 1960. Jn 1961, he
became assistant principal of Santiago
High School in Garden Grove, and
then moved to Barstow High School
where he became assistant principal
in guidance curriculum in 1962.
futlire." guns, tools and auto parts. Johnson. · One girl is hospitalized today after -,-::..:::..:;_ ___________ ..,::_,c.. ____ _::_ __________________ _
an Alphonse-and-Gaston type rear end
collision in which one driver tried to
give the other the right-of-way three
times, Costa MMa police said.
l"rom 1963 to '68 he was principal
of J ohn F. Kennedy •Hgh School in
Barstow. lie ha5 since moved lo the
f\1ission Viejo area after accepting
the open position at LBHS.
Along with his wile, Sue, and their
five children ranging in ages from
three to 14, Reeves loves track and
field sports and water sport!.
But rigbt now he is dedicating him·
se-U to the high school and the coming
yur.
''The kid& will get out oC the year
what they put into it," he concludf.4.
·-• • I· Jf
Julie L. Brooks, 18, of 2560 Nesubia
Lane. Mission Viejo, is in sr ··fa ~· , .. v
co:1dition at Hoag Memorial Hospital
with a facial laceration and a hcau in·
jury.
Alfred !\'. Quiroz, 16, of 3214
Colorado Lane, driver of the car in
\Vh ich she rod~. \.\'as trc!!'.ej for a cul
and released fro1n the hospital.
Police sajd Gregory L. Keske.y. 21.
of 306 ·eabrillo St., made a right turn
from Estencla Drive onto eastbound
Ad.ams A venue 'llitirsday. ahead of
Quiroz' oncoming car.
"He was bearing down pretty fast."
Kesk•Y told police. ·
So Keskey changed lanes, just ~s
Quiroz chjlDged to avoid him. Keskey
changed \JaOk. So did Quito<. Ke>k<y
ind Qti:iroz Chait~ a.gain and QuirOz'
car piled into the rear~ police said.
Dance Co11cert Rehearsed
Members of Dance \Vorkshop of San Juan Cap istrano rehearse for
"Charisma." Dance cercert is for 8:15 p.m. Saturday at San Cir·
mente's Triton Ce nter. Dancers (from left) are Paula Delcolle, Ann
Jobton , Michelle Lacol\8gne, Robin Schlllet and OeAnne Shank. ,, '
I
•
LAST WEEK OF WA REHOUSE SALE!
I NEWPORT STORE ONL y I
DRAPERY & UPHOLSTERY FABRIC 50%-75% OFF
QUALITY FURNITURE AT FANTASTIC SAYINGS
CH~~. R~.95
JM' E, R119. 375
SAi.! 7'
SAl.E 318
....................... ., ....... ... u......,.a1,., .... ..._....._
"41161 .. -, I .. fot ..., .......
• 71• ~ .... '™'...., .......
bl!rirw. s-..l ftntlh-.. ~llflo+-~
LAST WEIK FOR SALE PERIOD ONs
HENREDON FONTAINE
HENREDON UPH. 15% OFF
DREXEL ESPERANTO
DREXEL COUNTRY MANNER
EXCLUSIVE DEALERS FOR' HENRiDON -DREXEL-HIRITAGE
to DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGER TERMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CUDIT
NIWPOllT llACH
17'27 WHtdlff Dr., 642·2050
ONN fllDAT 'T1L t
INT!RIOIS
,, ..... 19"tl tnttrl•r
0.01,.. ..
Avol11blo-AID-HSID
LAGUNA llACH
345 Nor1h Co11t HwY.
OPIN ,RIDAT "TIL '
I . I·
Fl'ld~ • .August 23, 1968 -DAILY ~U.DT 3
~Prague 'Stopped'
Czechs Stage Hour-long Str~ke
' PRAGUE (IJl.'I) -.Czech061ovaka
today'*fed a one·h .... _,al l!lrltr.e
wblcb oiloppoi1 PNllU• dead aod filled
it with trie' sound of tooting horns ln
~st aiaWt ttiJ Soviet occupation.
M ·tbe 1frike gof under w&'f, • Free
~h Radio Moadcaltc sald Cestmir
Cil:ar, one of the liberal bloc under
Oommunist Party First Secretary
Alexander Dubcek, bad escaped !rom
Soviet capitivlty· .and was hiding
somewhere in Cz:~loVak.ia. Dllbcek
app.arently remained in R u 1 1 I a n
'·lnttrnment."
Clandestine radios repcrted aimilar
work ist.Oppages in other 1ections of the
coumy.
Proaidenl Ludvltr. Svoboda flew oil to
M°"""' with a de!eplion ~ bot11 pr<>·
and antl·Dubcek oUlcLals for con·
fereftCI"! with Kremlin nilen:, pro-
miJing to return u.dgbt to ''report to
the nation."
The strike and the dramitic flight of
S'Joboda to discuss his country's plight
face-to-face with Soviet Premier Alex-
ei Kosygin and party cbairman Leonid
Brezhnev swung the country away
from the violence that bas ma'td tile
four4ay-<>ld military occupation.
youths had battled Soviet tanks with
fiery wads of paper and other im·
provised weapons WednesdDy. But
almost everyone lelt the 11quare w~en
the horns began lo blare and the bells
rang tmd the sirens waJle:d.
The evacuaUon from the 5<1uare w11
designed .. m advDnCe to avoid any
possible incident that would give tN
Soviet forces an excuse to open fir•
and provide MoscO\\o with propatand.a
that thete were disorders inl'ra·tu•·
'Dead' School Tax Hike
Alive as Error Found
County taxpayers will be charged
five CJr six cents per SlOO of. assessed
valuation more this year than they
previously were told.
A courrtywide school tax that it was
earlier thought would dii;app::ar this
year has been revived. it be.came
known Thursday . The now you see it.
now you don't tax is alive again
because of an error.
county !alls below the state averace.
Jt ls designed to compensate local
school districts for lOss Of revenue
because of low assessmenta in tbe
county.
Although getting closer, California
county assessments still are not up to
25 percent of full cash value. Board of
Equalization figures show Orange
County's ratio still below a1e statewide
average of 22.7 percent.
Preliminary figures last month had
shown the county above average at
23.2 percent.
Reds Attack Da Nang Base
Prague was quiet today and no
shootings were reported elsew:here .
The OU!chogJovak ~· to the
general strlk& call in tis capital city
amazed news cm-respondtnai.
In recent weeks all county school
districts had adopted their budgets on
the .assumption that there would be no
equalization offset tax this year. Now ,
Ernest Norton, assistant COlfllty school
superintendent, s.ays there 9/ill be one
-.amounting to five or six cents.
County residents paid 15 cents last
year.
Norton said there was a "mUun·
derstanding" 1omewhere along tbe
li ne and the county's gr°" assessed
vaJue was used instead of the ne&
assessed value with exempt propertiet
subtracted.
Nortli Viets, Cong Mount 'S uicide Assault'
One correspondert stepped into ttie
street at the stroke of noon and saw a
truCk sailing alon,; ~t a good clip The tax is levied when the as&ellsed
value to full cash value ratio In the screech to • halt .. th• driver .1.m. State GOP· Tak.es
SAIGON (UPI) -Ncrth Vietnamese
tegulus and Viet Con-g commandos
today attacked th~ huge U.S. military
complex at Da Nang, South Vietnam's
.secood largest city, rocketing the
allied air terminal and occupying a
village just south ol the base runways.
"This has to be. a suicide attack," a
U.S .. Marine officer said. "The Com·
munists have no 1upport and no
chance of making it out of here alive."
The heaviest fighting was around
the village of Cam Le which was 60
percent destroyed when caught in the
crossfire of allied ground and air
assaulta against the attackers.
A number of" villagers were killed or
wounded and hundreds left homeless
in the fighting, which abated late to·
day.
U. S. Marine sp0kesmen said 15
leathernecks were known killed and 49
wounded in the heaviest figbting at Da
Nang .since the Ccmmunist Tet Of.
ft!nsive in February. South Viet.
namese government losses were
described only as "lighf"
med on the brakes.
Communists losses were placed at 81 Tet Offensive Communist forces had At the same time, drivers clamped
killed. moved so close to Da Nmg in large dbwn on their horns. burglar alarms A C • A" U uh were set off and people made as much s1·a ommumst Im on nr Some or the Communist commandos numbers. noise as possible.
ntanaged during the morning to reach U.S. ar.d South Vietnamese forces The entire city stopped -not a bus. N • S 1.
downtown Da Uang but were driven foug ht two sharp batUes in the Cenb'al trolley or vehicle moved. A few people at1ons p It As Main Target
out around noon by government highlands_ and 70 miles north of continued walking but most stopped in
their tracks. Q R } trops in armored vehicles. u . s. Mar· Saigan. They reported 8 total of 63 Rail workers slopped a train ca.r· n USS nvasion SACRAMENTO IAP) T .J 0
ines battled an esimated company of Communists killed against light allied rying Russian supplies. Republican leaders made it clear. too
130 Communists in suburban cam Le co.5ualties. Between S.000 and 10,000 persons TOKYO (AP) -Asian communisnt d~ they will make Demoeratic
in house-to-house fighting. The communists klcked off their Da were in Wenceslas Square, where was split today over the Soviet in· Assembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh 1 vasion of Czechoslovak.Ja, with Red The U.S. military clamped a 24-hour Nang offensive with a 26-round rocket China savagely denouncing it, North major statewide campaign target this
curfew on Vietnamese residents in Da barrage into the U.S. Marine and Air p kin B d Vietnam supporting it and North fall.
Nang. a city of 220,000 people wd urg-Force war and air base. Four rounds ar g 8DDe Korea apparently approving. "He's become a Democratic party
ed Americans to stay off the streets. landed within 20 yards of 100 Marines The Indian Communist party joined liability," said James W. H~ey, atate
D wc»ting to go home. Nooe was hurt. N A" t many others around the world in Republican chairman, in a joint news a Nang is on the coast about 300 ear IrpOr criticizing the move. The Japanese conference with t.he Assembly minori·
miles north of Saigon, the largest city. Within 30 minutes, ttie guerrillas at· Communist party took a wait.and-see ty leader, Robert T. Monagan of
The Da Nang offensive was only tacked two bridges, a radio station, a The Orange County Airport parking attitude. publishing both Russian and Tracy.
part of 50 shellings and ground attacks prisoner ol war camp, a Marine sup· situation was further complicated liberal Czechoslovak stat.emen~. "Whettler we run Qirectly against
reported from the Mekong Delta lo the ply base and a Merine helicoptet-base Tuesday1 when the Board o f After withholding comment more him sta.itewide or not. .. people in tht
northern frontier. About half Of them with rockets and on the ground just Supervisors voted 1tq ban parking on than 48 hours, the Chinese compared main reject hi.m ," Hall~y said ot
outside Da Nnag. MacArttlur Boulevard adjacent to the the invasion to Hitler's World War JI Unruh. the Inoglewood. a56emb1yrnan
were in the top . five provinces. Over·all allied casualties were tight, airport '1)tranc.e. occupation of the Ci echo s 1 o v a k wtto attempted to keep the Assembly
spok~n r;aid. spokesmen said. The "No Parking" &igns will go up Sudetenland and U.S. "aggression" in in ser;s.ion earlier Utis month after the
U.S. headquarters said ii was too By noon, government r a n g e r s on both sides of ttie boulevard between Vietnam. Senate adjourned in a · di1pute with
retQ1.ed small bands ol Communist the San piege .Frffwv and 200 feet The official New CJ»na News Age.n-Unruh.
early to tell if this was the beginning infiltrDtors cleaned out of downtown south ol Birch street. cy ta.id "Soviet revisionists" were Halley said, "I think we're goint to
of the long-expected natioowide of· Da. N.ang. Seven ol them were killed The en.age was recommended by plotting witti "U.S. lmperia.J.ism in 1 gain everywhere he comes ' up in
tensive. It was the first time since the afld 10 captured. 'the niperviaors traffic comrni.Sl'Sion. v11in .attempt to redivide the world." somebody'll district."
~~~~~~~~~~~--'-~~~~~---'~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~---=~~~~~~~~---=~~--::--~~
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' V • • ••
WALK ON THE WILD SIDE
Take a bold fash ion stand. Show off the str6ng
"punched and perfed" took of Van Eli's Ita li an
brogues. They're meant to complement pants,
cul ottes, long-stockings and country skirts. Each21,DG
A. Pisa , antiqued while patent
B. Como, antiqued camel calf-
C. Sori , antiqued blue calf
D. Hardy, antiqued giey patent
Shoe Sal111, all stores except Lakewood
• • 11 F >.Siii Oil t Sl..ANI> : !'.
~
6:U.2200 .
. 0
• liOHD!Y, llt\IRSD1Y, FRIDAY 10oOO TILL f'.JO · -• • DTHfR DAYS 10:00 TILL 5'JI"
' '
-
4 DAILY fllllf
Lightning
Bolt Iillls
2'Soldiers
~ _,. .. 0.lly 1'lMt Steff)
The sixth child of Mrs. David
Blacktr of Dallas, Texas. became
an uncle be!ore he was a day old.
The d;ay tbe boy was born In Dal·
las , )lfs sister. Mrs RolMrt J . M1-
phie1 of Helena, Mom., ·gave birth
to her second child, a girl.
EGLIN AIR FORCE llASE, 'F.1 a. ·: 1V1>u • .;,.. A n1htnJn1 bolt ·era.~ into
a IJ'O~· of U.S. Army Rana:er1 uD.
dergoillg jungle 1urvival tralning
Thlirsday. killing two soldiers and in·
juring eight others, one critically.
•
A real doll? Not 7'taU11, it's Peter
K!!!tntr toho ploys tht title: role tn tht
new U:levirion 1how "The Ugliest
Girl in Town" that premitTS this fall.
Kastner .10111 thai he has uotten used
to 1HpPing into nylon&, skirts and
fan.cu blouses, but when he goes out
on location he gets some pretty
strange looks.
• Huntsv!Iie, Alabama, city offic·
ials invoked two ordinances in
closing the bU91bess' of David Bak ..
er; one governing food handling
and one l'Olluiring that no food or
drtnk be. served outside a. building.
W. T. Gilrrlson of the Madison
County Healtt! Department • • i d
that 8-year"°ld David's lemonade ~
stand had bee~ operating several
weeks; • A special police squad, ·w h o s e
members dress like hippies, has
done so well since it was formed
July 15, that it probably will be·
come a permanent unit. Lt. Col,
Frenk 14ittHll•, c~,patrol for:;
the Bollimore pqll(!tl depaJ;!n!ent,
said the' Z5 patrolhtm .~ IWoJ>o-
licewomen have made 112 arrests:
in tbe past 30 days on ii ·vmflly of
charges. •
A passing Riverside policeman
noticed the boys busy fr11in'1
'' food on a grill in an ice cream
s~op ... at 3:15 a.m. The cook-
in wci swifUy brokert up. A.'ll B·
vear-old and his companions, ~ 13 and 16, were booked on sus-
picion of burQlartf. The older ·
bo11s were turned over to Juve~
. ilt authoritiet and the voungeat
100$ bundled home bt1 h i a r mother .
• A tarantula, measuring 24 inches
from foreleg to rear leg tip, has
been reported stolen from a soap
box in Jamff McGuire's garage in
Ontaria, Calif. McGuire, 19, t o l d
police that his huge spider disap-
peared during lessons to teach it
how to jump. A police all-points
b ulletin warn~ tarantula, oam·
ed "Cuddles," is dangerous. • This may be a push-button age,
but the person who recently stole
the minibike of fireman Larry
Scerpace in Detroit may soon de·
cide never to push another button
again ... let alone steal again.
Scarpace, a clown in fire depart-
ment parades for 21 year s, had the
24-incb bike rigged with a variety
of gags, including a booby-trapped
h orn. When the horn button is
~pressed, the front end of the bike
fall s apart. • Jerry Edmonsan, a 26:>-pound
policen1an !rom Centralia, JU., was
t rapped in a stalled elevator at Lhe
city jail for more than an hour \vith
tv.io other officers and three pri son~
e rs. When the perspiring men step-
ped out of the elevator, Edmonson
weighed 250. • The plumber linllly uncro,.ed
the pipes in lrl•n 11111'1 new
home in Weymoutb, alld It II now
possible to r•t hot water without
f!U!hln£:' Idiot. Mn. EW. com-
plainJ IYlf Ulal "flit nellbbora
rUll kffP uklnf .us about our bot
seat.•• • Rod H<11111e, of Toptka , Kansas,
noticed ~ cau1bt under
L'le windsbltl4 wfper on the aide
away Crom the d.rtver 11 be was
driving to worlc. Wben be got out
to !aka it ol1, he found It wH some-
b5c1¥'1 upper diatart.
The Air Force cidentified the two who
were killed as Army Sgt. James S.
80\vden. 23, and Sgt. Charles E.
Smith, 20.
Sgt. Glenn G. Hammes, 20, was
reported in &erious condition in Eatin
Air Force Base boapital. 'The others
who were injured were not Im .. ·
mediately identified.
-Bowden .is survived by his father,
Oscar L. -Bowden of Courtland, OhiO,
and his mother, Mi-1. Lura L. Bowden,
of Marlon. Ohio. Smith "is survived by
hiJ parenta, Mr . .cutd Mr1. Howard 1.
Smith of Lebanon, PL The Air For~
said Hammes. parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Hammel, resfde in Wichita, Kan.
The injured Rangers, with the ex·
ception of the critical case, were
treated for shock and burns and
released. the Army 1aid.
'The Ringers had been nown to this
Air Force base in the Florida panhan-
dle for the "jungle phase" of their
survival training progr.am.
They were assembled at Eglin'•
auxiliary field No. 7, apparenUy
awaiting a return flight to their
Georgia base, when the lightning bolt
struck during a thunderstorm Thutl·
day afternoon.
Yippies Plan . '
'Pork Power'
For Barbecue
OllJCAGO (UPI) -A black on4 .
whitAI piJ and about 10 o1 hils YIR>io
ba.ebrs were , hu.ued into. a piddy
wagon todar, bef<n the pl( CO<Jld be
''nominat<il ' for pre<idO!lt 1')< the
Youtil Internatlo!ial !\arty.
The Ylppies, -ed and belded,
trotted out a 6().polmd porker named
Pip.sus alS their candidate tor presi·
dent, Qut police moved in befOre the
first nomUlatmg itpeech could be
delivered.
8-es ol opealators and • horde of
repoiUra and ~ lltllmll
en. ra mall under ~ ilw»w ot a five'.;.
nory piece of ·~ 1')< PoblO: 'Pu.Mo to witnO .. 'Wflilt tlie' Yl!>!>Ies
billed ao their . ...., . .nomlM!ilif CM•·
v.ention to upstage". the · Democrata
ga1herlng llere.
Police moved in ·Md charged the
ringleaders witlh vi-olating a local
stabute whicll prohibits livestock in the
city's downtown Loop area.
Some of the Yippies. about 50 of
whom gathered flor t he ceremony,
aareamed ''Pork Power" and one car-
ried a sign reading ''Live High on the
Hog.,, The Yi.ppioes , who said tniey con·
aider every representative of the
American culture a pig, pr-OTTti.sed to
eat pjguU3 before their convention
ends.
In steamy Lincoln Park 10 miles
from the oonventim site Thursday
night, w1"l·He a som band oi Yippies
clapped their hands Wider the droop-
ing trees to the beat of rock musi<c. a
bearded fellow weari!rlt an Arabian-
style burnoose explained tM Yippie-
plg pl>l.losopby.
He sa,rs be is Broetter Jaeeph and he
comes from "heft and tbet'fl."
"Pigs are anyone in authority .Of
repreeeating authority," he told 1
reporter. "They're t:be Johmon ad·
miniltraUon, the oppreltors who ~t
down freedom. the parents who try to
mold ftleir children -after themselv11.
No otfense."
M aboot that time • bl<lllde girl
perched on a cement railing at a park
bath house put down lb& Dute she was
tooting and cried "Give me an F ...
give me an R." She got the meagre,
swellering crowd of H~ppies and rub·
berneckers to spell out ''lree love."
She looked at the policemen leaning
aeainst their sqood oars in the
shadows ·and yelled, "I'm 17 so shoot
me dawn!" The police shifted on tOO:r
haunches and talked about baseball.
That is the tone oi the Yippiea. They
are the most strldent and perhaps
disariiented of tbe bands who claim
they will merch tn m1.stJve protest
against the Demoarats 1n the Interna-
tional Amphitheatre next week.
Marine Sentenced
For 'Resignation'
CAMP PENDLETON (UPI) -Pvt.
John Roblnaon, who "rtst11>ed" trom
mWtary 1ervlct July 17, ........
t.nced Thursday to 111 montbl bard
labor and a bad conduct dl1ehar&• -
the 1entence he wanted.
Johnson, who had a1Dd for the
aentence rather than duty ln the
Marlnt Corps and 1ervlce ln Vletnarn.
alto was ordered to forfeit two-thirds
of hla pay du.rtn1 hit six monthi; in the
b111 brlJ. Ht was convicted in a court
martial for unanthorizcd absence.
The ft.root -3 Marine i;aid he was a
cons c I en t I o u 1 objector. His
"resignation" w11 part of a public
demon~b'ation called "Nine Io r
Pt ace" in San Francisco.
-·-··-----~--------~----------
•
• •
$5,000 Reward
Negro Militants
.
_;\ssault-Offic:er
•
•j~
:._ 1
~ .;• ... i
PmSBURGH (UPI) -A hilb,ran)<. Ina opllce official wu pounced on and
beateu by a mob of aoreamib( ,Neero
militant& during a meetinf lo Cify
Council chambers Thursday.
About 25 to 30 Negro youths, most ol
them dressed in robe·like Afro.
American garb, surged toward ass.is·
tant police 5"perlntendent John P.
Kelly and punched him and l<nocked
him to the fiOOI' where a number of at·
tackers kicked him .
He was lifted and flung aoross a
mahogany table, dropping to the Ooor.
Safety Director David W. Graig and
s&veral newsmen jumped .Into the fray
to shield Kelly !Mn the attacken.
Dazed, be w.u led from tbe room.
Sniper Nabbed
In Wichita;
-Home Bombed
WICHITA. Kan. (UPI) -Police
traded fire with a pi.nned-dOWTI Sniper
early today in the ooeasy sll,PllS .of.
northeastern Wichita, shaken by tbr~
oohSecutive days of disturbances. No
one was hit.
Police said th.~ shooting stopped
abruptly after about 10 minutes. A
man, identified only as a Negro, was
arreit.ed and ta:lren to police head·
Kelly, ;who beach in. dlvlslon of
uniformed police, wu punched in ~e
face and In the cheat, Wt h• was aot
~ured severely,
Shortly after 'the outburst dozens of
policemen swarmed into the council
chambers and ordered an end ta the
meeting. The Negroes dispersed slow·
ly.
The meet.mg was called by officials
of the Allegheny County Port Authori-
ty Transit ht an effort· to stop mug-
gings and rock and bottle thr0;1.yin~
against bus drivers i:n 't h e
predominantly Negro Hom e w ood .
Brushton dittrict. •
Billy Johnson, 22, who said b•· WaJ connected With tile militant Negro
newspape;r Thrust, was identified as
the first attacker who punched Kelly
in the mouth. He was obarged with
assault and batt.eey on an officer,
dtson!oriy cooduct and clisrupti<Jn ci a
public assembly. .
He w& releued on $1 ,SOO bond pen.
ding a hearing next Wednesday. No
one else was charged.
The disorder erupted shortly after
Jolwon accu,sed Kelly ol giving
orders to police "to shoot anybody you
see in an alley" during a Ncial
disorder in the Homewood-Brushton
section Tuesday night.
· "You're a liar," Kelly retorU!d. ·
A shouting mat.ch. 'between b tWo
ensued and Jotmm allegedly pundted.
the officer. The other Negroes joined
the melee.
Industrtallst-Publiclst Mike Walson has offered a $5,000 -reward for
a picture of billionaire Howard Hughes. Watson would not name his
client nor the reason for. making the <Yffer. To vvin, the picture must
have. been made later. tb&ri Allgust 1, of this year. There have been
nO known photos ma4e· o1 Hughes since 1954 and be is known to go to
utrelnes tO avoid photographers.
quarters for questioning. ·
"We don't know v.nether be ran out
of ammunition or what," said one of.
fit::er. "The shooting jU5t stopped."
Four hundred National Guardsmen
joined city, county and state police
Thursday in .an (!{fort to enforce a
curfew", crd~ec:l.;a.f!ter roving bands of
Negroea robbed several businesses.
W esty Claims
Viet Attacks
Well Planned
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -GM .
Astronaut Down
T:Wo" police officei:s were fired oo at
a 'd~own inters~on in a separate
incident earlier today, but police &aid
ti\e assailant. who il'ed from an apart·
ment bowie, appm::~y escaped.
William C. Westmoreland, Anny chief
of staff, has described the recent at·
tacks around Saigon !And Da Nang u a
possible buildup for-another enemy
general ollenslve to coincide wi1b the
Democratic National Convention.
Scientist Can't Fly, Resigns
The law office of Cllester Lewis,
former pres:ident ol tlie Wichita
chapter of the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP), WBSJfi:rebombed and SUS•
ta.ined heavy damage. Police said that
was the day's. orily reported arson
Westmoreland, former U.S. com·
mander in Vietnam, declined. to com·
ment on the invasion of
Czechoslovakia whieh he called a
"political matter.'' SPACE CENTER,, Houston (UPI) -
For the first time in U.S. space history·
an utron.aut has resigned from the
spaceman corps beca\lse he failed to
pus a mandatory part of his tr.uting,
the spaCe age.nc:y Hid today.
He Was Dt. John A. Llewellyn, one
ol .fhe Cllly two Americazi spacemen"
born dti&eaa of for'elp COUlitriea. Th•' s~.Og'ency said he rei1,.;,lt 1SecaU1e
}\e . coµId . OQt leam ~OJ""IO fly' jet·
aircraft.
Llewellyn, a chemist from Cardiff,
\Vales, was part Of lie most recent
group of 11 scientist-astronauts named
to the space program.
His r esignation left the National
Ae ronautics and Space Administration
(NASA ) with 52 astronauts. 14 of them
scientists and the rest pilots. O! tM
scientists, five were chosen in 1965.
The latest group of &cieotisl-
spaeemen was picked a year ago. One
othm-member oC tb~t grpup, Bryan T.
O'Leary, resigned shortly after he
started flllht training, uytng officially
that "flying ji1st hn't Ill)' cup of tea ... O'~y; ~ pa.stronomef ( iriaae his
deaistoft' because he did tx>t Uki fl)'lng
and not. becau.se he w.u. failing the
pilot lnstruetion. tnfornj,~ 1outces
sakl" at tbe ume . be alto · ••• ' ..... -' ' disco~t:led by 'the .apace .cency
budget wblch ·:~tjioilid •tJelltlllc
•paoe IUalrtl he !jlllht-~'IA!·IJlalro.
A spokiimili. · Ill ., flit ~
spacecroft cenm •ill<( JJiWill)'.11
wamed Very much lo,leatil how to. fill,
but "Dlade llllMlis(f~ry~greH in
learning Mw to flY ·Uplanet. ''. He had
compieted his aolo fiilht in the pro·
peller-driven T4 IA at Reece Air
Force Bases. Lubbock, Tex.. tht
spokesman said, but washed out ol the
next step in fli ght training -jet ptlot
)n.struction. The spokesmaz. said
Highway Patrol
Gets Steam Cars
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The firit
of a fleet of alx ttearn-powered cara
will be deUvered to the Clllfornia
Hlfhway Pe.tro1 ln .about eight months
-for trywtl on Its sacrarnento test·
1n1 grounds.
The plan to chtck on claimed ad-
vantaaea of ateam over a110Une pow·
er for vehicles was r eported Friday
to thl Bay Area Transportation Study
Oommilsion.
lroce Samuels, an aide to Atsem-
blyman John F. For&n. (D-Sln Fran·
ciaco). said Oe~al MOl•rs had of.
feted ilx new OMmlobile chassis and
$129,000 for installation of the steam
propulsion eq_u.lpment and testing
expenses.
He said the patn:>I will sign a con·
tract with a steam engine manufac·
turer v.ithin two months and the first
car will be delivered about six months
later.
The patrol would attempt to deter·
mirie the $Uperiorlty In sper.<1, dur•·
bility, economy and freedom from
1mo1 which the manufacturer con-
t.end.I tttam power car1 would bave. ,
Llewellyn voluntarily dropped back a
class "two weeks ago to get extra
training but that he still was unable to
solo in the jet-powered T31 trainer.
"This fellow .liked it I bell Of a lot,
but jum couJ.tin't hack if," the
tp<>beman said.·
Le.wellyn had gone to special pains
to ·ll*> th.e aotroniut• piogram. A
~ ruling allowed him and P!'tlt~lil Di'. Pifilfp le. Chapman to •P· ~11.~ 'lli• ••1.ar. .• 'em . thougb nei1Jier wa.. e'. U.S. cil!Zen at the tilDe.
Two tnd· a half rilOMha before UM!
selecUon was &mounced last Augµst,
Llewellyn's na"turaliz&Uon was cOm·
pleted. At the time tie was an assilit.ant
professor of c he m i st r y and
astronautics at Florida State· Universi· ty.
Prematurely gray at 35, Llewellyn is
married to the former Valerie Mya
Davies-Jones of Cardiff, Wales, his
birthplace.
He celebl'ated his selection as an
astronaut with a bottle of champagne
to calm his "excitement, exhilaratioo,
apprehension and every kind of emo.-
tion you can imagine."
A friend said be wa glum about
h.avcing to resign from the program'. he
wanted to be in so much, but WU itot
talking much iabout it.
1fl April Llewellyn reported 't<J Reece
AFB fcrr 53 weeks of ptlot tr.a.lning
leading to a jet pilot's certillcation.
:nus: ls a mandatot"y part of astronaut
trainilig.
A ·~ center spokuman said
..:bleweµjn '. W.as looking •t "severaJ
'po&slbllltles1'1or the fUture, Including
.:.• non.,.ttonaut poa:t , with the space agency and the possiblllfy <ii r-.tng to t<•chtng.
case. -1
Police -!aJd the 11ituation was under
cmtrol. indicating . that a 10 p.m.
curfew c laniped ort the city and all of
Sedgwick CQµ,nfy bj' Mayor William D.
Alldersoa ~~!Robert B. Docking,
was ke~ tr®J>le.ot a minimum.
Early' tqda,Y.1'i°~ Mid 14 per~
had been.~~ charges ranging
from robbeq •to:· 111ault. Hcrmver. a
police .. r;pokesrnan said he expected
many more arrests, wouid be made /or
curfew violation.
Gunfire was reported in severaJ sec-
tions of the city a,fter the curfew wa~
invoked. but most of it was confined to
the northeast side .
Anaheun Firm Wins
UCI Building Joh
A . $6,18.5,000 contract for con-
struction Of a two.building, multi-story
complex to house the School of
Engineering at UCI has been awarded
to J . B. Allen and Company of
Anaheim.
The complex. which is scheduled for
completion in the spring of 1970, will
consist of en ef.ght·story tower and an
adjacent three-9lory structure with a
connecting plaaa and a fub-level floor.
Fund1 for the building were included
ln a etate conit:Nction bond issue
pr111ed by vote.rt. ·tn 1966. augmented
by a fl,6 federal grart \Rlder the Hither Education Facilities Act of
1963.
The genwal's remarks Thursday
came et a planeside linflerview on hi5
anival here to address the Disabled
American Veter ans 47th Natiocal Coo·
vention.
He sai.d the stepped-up i.attad.s:.., •
before the convention appear 'to be, f
well planned "to· create an attitude of .. ;
frustration in tlhe Unite.d Stat.es . , • ~j·
and strengUi on their part." f ..
' Westmoffla..qd,, wbO 'J'~ from f°X;
Vietnam last June, said (the eoemy f·'
does not have the unlimited resources '
or the will to contnwe the war in· ·-
definitely and hoped to gain politically
what it is unablti to gain on tlie bat·
tlefield. , >
He admitted ~at he saw little pro· *
gress in the Paris peace talks but ad· i
ded that at least the talks were still !
underway, ~·
Asked who he would vote for in the '
Nqvember election, the eeneral said
jokingly, "I'm apolitical. !·.don't vote. I
support whichever adnllnJstratton is in t
office."
Beatie Lennon's Wife
Suing Over Adultery
LONDON (UPI) -Bea.tie John Len·
non's wife Cynthia, 'n, is suing him ·1·
for divoree because of his alleged
adultery with Japanese-born actress·
artist Yoko Ono, court sources said to-
day.
The aources said lawyers for both
Miss Ono, currently married ta
American movie producer Anthony
C.Ox, and U:mnon have denied the
adulterY charge in court appearances.
Showers Dre-nch Louisiana ;!
Ewtern Seaboard Simmers for Seventh Straight Day
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l!.a!se
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11:10111 City
't!~ l!olutl
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~"''"'...,'" St Low f\ s.11,..,
Stlt L•~• C!!v
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S.1t Frftl(1l'"'
S•flll 111111.1••
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. ""'• ---·. .. ' ..... '.'< '.'.--"'"" .... ·~
.. ' .
"'·'• .. for the
.. ·~·1« '
Meetings ... •· .
• • PIUDAY
·11tt111r•/ l l-(lull of N-rl ~111111, llvft Shirl, H'1 W. C0.1t
.t!1"""r1 N1w.ort IHdl, 11:U 1.m.
MAr • Xlifm MAICHllc I.off•• IN_,lc T..M";-·l.tOI 15111 Strtef, N-r1
111c.+.,"f:J111.m.
N-.orf AIMl'ellr ltadlo ~IV. ll:tuHfltlll IMI., 111' aalbH 11\11! .•
N_.,,, .. Kl!. I 1.m. UCI . ~1111; OancJftl, C.-H11!.
U111'«mlY fff C1llfor11l1, lrv1,.., J:JO
~.IT\,,. -·-
• ' ,.. IATUllDAY
'"hrllfli11·' 'lllllllltMml'n'I C'.eonm1""t. 111~ 1.V·clllb. Ne-1t INdl. 7:10 , .... :·' .. , . -~ ..
Marriage
• 'J" ' •
LAS VrGAS, Nev.. -Mlrrt1.-i
Htl'ntff lllol.lltl 111r1· lfte:lllll1:
Arnold I. .. v1r1k, 41. or W•lm!Mter, 1nd L1Ul1 S. Mtl\dOU , 2', et
••lllloMtf'. !!rent V~ Jor111, ,!, i ncl Dorothy tlou.-u, 25. bolt! pf Cost. Miii.
Chlrlll Edwin lplnnlnt, "' ol N-11 a.Kh,'\n" ~lln M. 1<11m11n, Jt,_pf .. u-. HO\kn:I LN Jonff, lf, rtm1rrtlld ..... or J. i"""-'" 41, both or Wnlmln11er.
Loul1 Qfliottt lt-1lnt.... 2J. pf Hunt1111i.n encti.-1Qd Judl!h AllMn ,,,..,., 11,
ril Asll~m. M1rrv W. A"•int, 0 , 11'111 Tl\ern• l"r1nr Nolin. 5'. both or N.-t 9Mdl. M..,Mt4 •Mii .$lr1hll. :16, ...... rrted
c1reh'". J.,,.. srr1~1o. n , both or
C11il .tMi.a.
JI-$ Yt •5¥"1\ton. 3'. Incl J1ctutl1M KM' C"'"6. 21, both or Hu11tl"'1M
9MCh..-• ~ .. , V1nDvt1, 7', Ind blbll 11.,,.... tlou. :n. bo!ll ol
WMl!l!ll...t .... MJ<*l>.li. o.udi. 20, ol a""811. N.Y. M1f JorlJMI S..lcMr, U, el H11111-
llrtt,..,~.
H 11
H
·'
Record
Fire Calls
S..I ... ell
!l:Ot '·"'· Thu..-11, t1I tllll, 121 Main $1.
W1d1t11Mllr
1·u 1.m. Tl'lun.dty, 1 .. t11 11.,., 7251
l"MIWlf oriv.
•:OC. 1.m., ~. 5311 IMetrf ''" •.m~ .... flrt, l.W\1 Mat1tudl1I l :ll 1.m., tmdtt "'""t191tlein, Mew·
llnd Ind W"tlftW.1 ...
l0:4 '·"'" ~I ln'tfl'llt1ti.I, 1'61 $1ouK •oed
11:2' p.m .• recw, 1:i:u·w..,_i,
HIHl'flllllhlll hid! 1o:n 1.m. Thundn', trill\ "'" 16171 TrvOy Line
J:» 1>.m., 1r1u 11 .. , n22 k-•ltt .....
"'.....,..,. •Mdl 10:10 1.m. w.c1.,..c11v. mtdlu.I 11d,
l\00 w, •• ,. •llld .
S:•l 1.m., :ntur•Y. u.r ft..,, •U
H11'111M II.
6:2S '·"'· l<r\drf, ·mr fire, Goldtnllld
A-tnd (111 (Olll Hltthwey
c .. 11 Miii
11 ,tt 1.m. Thursdly, t1IM 111rm,
Vlclwi1 Ind H1rt.w -llW!lovlnf
4:30 ... m., 1pe/1Tl'ltnt 11,.... 10& '11·
llMll All. C
S:IW ,,,,,., lr11h ~re. 1ctm.1 ll'llm tM ·-'''° s-.m., ftlt11 111..,,, c"'"" •Ml .. ..
7:39 s-.m., mlnlblll1 tire. 30Dt l1btl St.
Supervisors
Approve 3
Rood .Bids "M!S .. IN. ,., ef Cos .. ,,,,.. ... end .
MIN -.~c.._ G.-. n. °' SANTA ANA -Road pro-• . . .... ~ Tr.:Jayn11, !t. " Wl!lttl .... Md jects ktaling $318,SU were
""""' •.• ~~. SebiillkY, H, ol (•II , """··· approved by the Orange , ... ~· 40. or (Olll Mn1, I nd , ~"---' Lllllt . 11rGer1 • .u. o1 T!llttn. Oounty Board of~ •• aors
M1rOllr . M ......... 41, " C•I• MIU. ....,_ week. i[f . 1!1 .. ,llmtr. 4 ol Hun-wim ••ell. The bt.ggest job is the O 'ta'~fon, 4'-Ind M1rl ... 1tt M. ,.....i-i .. ,,. J roft-i)rj t41vc& ... 4(1, bath 01 w1stmln1ftlr. .. ....... Y-06 .............. pul!I ve
Oukh He'•cx~ u . ol w"1m1n1ter, •Ml bonle:riDg ttie east side ol M1WI M: Gtrr•n:I, U , ol NtwPOrt , Inc": the Orange County Airport
Vlnon• RJY 011>bor1. u, fl. betw p li d R d and w1stm1111ttr, and "'II• Edl"' oi.11nc1, . een a sa es 08 .
1J; ot:C1-1 Mlrtiufll, Gtrm1n•. Mt11:Atthur Boulevard.
Jm 11, Ell'!lrtol•. )II. o1 Sent• ""'· •Ml A c-·-• -· awarded """~tt Mf~11n. '9, ol COlll Me51. -.,...-..'\. .. ..,..
Wlttlftr1 ohn Htnt•, 21,. _Of. L-! .. c:t to file E. L. White Co. Of :S:..lnli.:!:r. Ann ...,...,,, .,, Garden Grove for '12(),401.
D1\lkl -1.,nn DIWIXld'f, 14 el l.,. A u •.. •~ p·~· fm !,~':f(-t:..:'°'c. Elllrll Oltfll, 22, Jr'OY:;;:i..:i )ob -A:!i ai
..... ~···
Dl:Jlt.f!B NOTIVES
GIBB
Gi11tt,·.H1tltfl, fl, '?f ll"llnt ....... N""" "°" lwdt' P11Hd 1we1 Aut. n.
5unrhlfd. bt'-· lltlltllttr, Me1111m s.
w.cc.u1, Ht-' 111ci'I. l'rlv1rt ~
k 91. Ft!Tllly lllt'Clelh trllncb WllO Wiii\ to ..,,_, ,.,,,.._ .. , contr!bullMt. 1fftw
dllNll'll to !Mir ltWH'llt ™'ltv In Mr munorv. B11l1 Mo•tu•rt Dl...cfor1.
MEVERS
$84, 787 IA> tt>e GriUill! Co. ol
O®ta Mesa. The roadway
wiH be paV<d 2< feet wi<I•
between Ridge Route Drive
and 1067 feet south or
Galada Roed . There were
five bids.
Third project will see traf-
fic sign:aj and highway
lighting plus concrete curbs
and sidewalks oo El Toro
Road ai ttie. A venida Sevilla
lnteI'StOtim. Successful bid·
der was Steilly end Mitchell,
Inc. of Anaheim 8' $13,7«!.
F'rld11 • .t.119U1t 2J, 1'68 DAILY J'ILOT
Drug Offenders Ma~ked for Life
By JACK CHAPPEIJ, •emlnar hen Thursd!y.
0t .._ .. "' Plait st11t ,;Convicted user• wW not
SANTA ANA -The be doctors, lawyer s ,
Ora.nee County narcotics of· teachers, or dentists. They
fender not only facu im· cannot receive a security
mediate p!'oblems w1tb tbe clearance and wUl likely not
law tor,hia offences, but his be bonded. These are fac·
llle1a1 1ctivitie1 may follow , tors a young person should
him for the rest of. his llle;" c 9 n s l de r .before ex-
U:ya Cecil Hicks. Oran1e ~imemint with druga," County District AUorney. tht DA said.
"Drug offenders 1 r e He explained that there
denied a d m l 1 1 i o n to haa: been a great deal Of em -
vlrtually all professions Ind phasis on the medical pro·
occupation's whloh require bl.ems of drug abuse today,
any type or license.'' he said but not enough has been
dW'inc a "Law for Laymen" said about the legal and
_,.._ .A. .,.,._ practical consequences to
H H w: the drug user.
'Pot' Use
Effects
Reported
SANTA ANA -An
"Orut'e bOunty b noted an unusual trend in the use
fer beini a strong law en· of dangerous·dru11 ln recent
forcement 'area. We send: .Yeus.. ~increase tn ~~-~
peoOle 10 jail .(Or ?os1esslne, has · come at the · hlgber
m~juana, even the one or levels of soclety, he $1.id.
two cl&:are.ttes beinf re.-"T e n yeara 11Q n•codc
tainedJor one's·own use. offense1 were lar&ely com·
"Somt have 1aid we are mitte"d a-mona lhe
too touiJt, I don't tlJink IO. K'OnO!Jli,Cally deprived , , ln
Thli legislature bu made! it ar.eu ol1~iderable pover•
a mk>us crime and we ty a.nd une~pklyment. Drug
roi.Jow· the law. Cerlainl)' ... tbe use ·was then --described by Jail sentences Imposed in socioldgists u an ereapt
thJJ count)' deter some de'vi~e ·for those wUh lltUe
yQUiig people from gett.lng hopC. ·.The use or drua• in
lnyolved in the dru& cul that eCol;K>m..ic' group has re·
ture/' · J. mahied.abeo.t the same.
Hicks said ~ere has betD . 1'1)le spectacular increu~
In druf olfenset hu laken
pl.Ice ln the mlddle and Ill"
per income r;roup1, where
~oong people wllh great op.
port.unity and bright f1Jtur11
are belnl dfet:ted," Hieb
slid.
It " up IA> the medical pn. fe!l1oo to educate young
persons in "tbe b ta 1th
hazards of dru&: use. be aald.
Hts job, he stM'ed, w.trt:o'th·
form them of the legal CO!l·
sequences of drug Ilse .. ~d
to enforce the law to Ute let· ter.
Hicks said that every
pe~aon tempted by dni.gs
should ask ~mseU the qbes·
tiOn, "Is it worth l\?" '''The
answtt is 1 c~ar and loud
no," he said.
assessment of the current I
knowledge of the cut·
trovers.ial drug marijuam.
made by the Addiiretion
Researdl FoundllltioD of
Onlarlo, Canada, C111Tentl;y
is being <:mi.lated t o
Orange County dactu's in
the "Bulletin to PbysiC'lanl"
(d>l&ied by 1lle ONn(e
Coonty Heal\h °"'8rtlnent.
SEETOVATT'SNOW!
The report •YI lhe con·
sequences of the use of
marijuana are mt boAdy
different than the UM o(
a!odlol.
Lt ..WO says that 1ome
mers will be aflected ad·
versely by Pot while others
will rd.
MM of tile pniblel!l!
caused by tile drug, the
report says come not from
its ~Jqiical -· but from the fact that Ille
weed la Uli!-gal.
SPREAD
'!Ila re:><>rt -tho! Oanadlan use, """" ilrply restrWd to the lower
levels of 6'0Ciety a n d
"ywtiul pr-. """"'' au<hority," has now ..,.._
to adult members of OClll-
v e n t i o n a I middle-ctaas
groups.
Dr. J. R. Phllip, o.ange
County Heallh °"'l<lm<nt ~r. slid riptin-
ting of lhe CanadlM ._t
dots not reprueot eD·
·donoment by bio de!>ort· men< ... · .
The Addiction Research
Founilalivn is, aocordln( _,
the hoallh depot1monl, ..
organiz.a.tion. ltlNIS·
eslabllslled ln 1949 by · h
Ontario Legi.!rlature lod 1li
financed m·ai.Dly by tlJe
Can~ government. It
conducts research in aJl
fonns of addiction, including
alcoholism .
'UNDESIREABLE'
"It ls probably un·
desh'eable to eubject users
rl marijuana to tie aevere
peoolties -.... provlded in narcotics control legiel.a·
tioo. However. it WOldd also
be undesire.atlle to legaliu
the sale and U6e ol mari·
juana," the report AY'!.
Generally ttie "effects on
mcst subjecil ere mW end
a r e charlooterized prin·
cipally by eupho.ria ,
heigtltened intensity o f
v!Ju:al and auditory sensa-
tions. end a tendency
towonlo pasolvity end relax·
at>on," the report sayt.
CONNOISSEUR
19 CU. FT.
TWIN REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER
No Defrostinr E'l'tr in Freezer or Refrigerator! Hu19 226
lb. No-Frost freezer and big capacity rehi1erator, 1fde-
by.side and only32'4"wide! • Separate cold controls for
freezer and refri1tr1tor • Roll-out b1sktt In frHz1r
• Choice of wh ite, edged avocado or edged copper at no
extl'I chirp.
NOW -LIMITED TIME ONLY ! HUGE 19.CU. FT.
ONLY
FREE INSTALLATION
WHIRLPOOL ICE l'll~&ic:9
REFRIGERATORS
Exclu•iv• Autom11tlc le• Miker·-no
tr•ya to fill or empty! lei 11 1utomlti· early replactd ••you use It.
Mtnn, Ltwlt, '3) Thall1, LltUM
•nch. P••IM IWIY Aut. "· sur-
YI"" toy hll Witt, l(r\J, ol fflt .._ '"" ..,._I dlWthlfll"I, Kl rT!I JOl!n.m, ol l11vci.f,.9Mdll Mlndllfl M.wri,
O•m•d• • ."t"vera, ~ ~ lh1 l'lcml1 l 1ra1'1'41"• ,}o\Jkel JohMOn, ol L.afUM
e•U..•,Wvlc" Sit., l :OO P'M. In c~1 .. 1,.,c!llt v1-. '~'• I"• cHlt 1'VieW· Mlm«l1I P1rtl. ' .. , ..
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar OR s-"50
Cotta Me111 Ml 1-%0;4
' "
BEU: BROADWAY
·~IORTUARV
Alamitos Unification
Plan Hearing Slated
110 Broadway, Costa Men . u 11-3433 ....
DILDA V BROTHERS
Banttnitoa Valley
Momary
17811 Beach Blvd.
Hundngton Beach
84%-7771
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e Mortuary
Chapel
3500 PacUlc View Drive
Newport Beach, Calltondl
l«-!70t
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNEBAL
DOME
'J101 Bolla A••·
Wtotmlll!ler llWS!S
SllllTR'S MORTUARY
m l\-1aln St.
ffuMbrton Be1ch __ ..J.£ ..... ..... . ~
WE!l'Ci.iFF MORTUARY
1r1.&~~~ !It., Cotti Meta
~ -.-· '" '"'
'
LOS ALAMITOS -A
public heari:Dc oo t h e
unifloalion · of the L o •
Alamitoo School Dillr!ct,
which would bring in three
1ohools from the Anahetm
dimlct. Is set for Sept. 25.
.U.tant Super-ot
Geor.ge P1um1eilb ol the
currently kinderprten . ·to
grade·six Los A I am I to s
Elementary School District
&aid the plan, already IP·
proved by the Orange Coun-
ty committee on school
district organiiat..loo, will be
presented to the publir: at 8
p.m. at R0911noor School.
lf the plan i& .accepted at
thb meeting, II will be
tor-warded to Sacramento
for approval by the lltate
education agency, and a
pubUc e!ecUOll foe votor1 ln
Ille -let bounda:lol Will
be set. A llimpl1 m<Jori'-' of
50 percent ot ~e voten IJ
MctMAry for acceptanc1,
ht said.
Superintondoot Plumle!gh
s a i d tM earliest possible
unifi'caLion da te wo uld bf!
July 1, 1970.
The unUled dlattict would
follow the tame boundarte11
I« I.ht elementary dtttrlct
now ®es, the assistant
auperin&endent elfPlained .
Uni6oation would brini In
to tile district, makin1 it a
K-grade 12 s)'$tem , the Los
Alamitos High, Oak JlDor
High and Pint Junior Hllh
Schools .
This would &Ive t h e
district one high school , two
Junior highs and .....
elementary llChools.
The unification aho would
brine the district'• enroll·
meont, now at 4,200 student.I,
to more than 10,«KJ In lint.
Work OK'd
For Airport
SANTA ANA
1mSrowment1 Ill t ~
Orange Councy A I r po r T.
le.led "°"" -$123,0llO IA> 1115,000 ,..,. _...i tar
q!ne<ring 1tuey by the
Board ~ Sup«vllon thll
week.
Projtets ln<ludo povln& ln run·~ art•. povliic of tile
t...,...,.. norlh peridJlfl l<ltl
povlng of tte-.... ., •
termlnel e I ter 1tion1
Ktllnattd 1t $25,0llO.
c61ll M ... en1tneer J"""'' Montgomery ... , op·
polntld .. do 1111 lludy. ,,,
PLUG-IN AIR CONDITIONER s ooo BTU r1t1n1 -u•',•t:n:~~~ft. ' a• bedroom • ,.,.,. ted eoolln1 c•p•clty ref~IU!t't dfnumldlfl ..
: ~It JtiofM-tletP oooU
401 MAIN ST.
P1rm11111tt Pren
C1111 NEW WASHU
l DRYER !LIM
Buy the m1tehed pair ~r 1 no3lron P•rm1nent Preas C~~lm•tl(
• ·cycle, 2·•pelfd W•shtr • 5 W '-• temps, • S.eyc:Je Ory., With ••..--
l'trmantnt ,.,._ Ooor Dl:rMt
in Downtown
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Open 10 a.m. 9 p.m., Sat. 10-6 536-7561'
Also SPRINGDALE & EDINGER 892-4463
•
----------------------- ---. ---------- --------------
• -
J8 WLY ,!LOT
LEGAL None&
•• J .... o .. ., ...
CllW .. H~ --~~""*' 0r•ll99 CoNI O.llY Pl"', ,t.1J9Wt ~ 1• ,.....,
LEGAL NOTICE
l -
Chrysler
Sales Eyes
>,. )
--
OVER THE COUNTER
-
-A-
' ..
•
• • • • ' • t
' • ' • • • ' •• l • • l •
' • •
i • '• • • ' • • • •
i • • ' • • ' • ' ' • • l
• ' ' • ' :
' • • • " ' ., •
' ' •
• • •
' ., •
" •
" • ' • • • = • •
• ••
' • • • • •
I' •' ''·I '· ...
OAl~Y ,,~OT JJ.
Friday"s Closing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange List
1:..-........ &r :..---1:
------------------------------------------~------
•
-
I -l
• . •
\
I
'
I
I ,.
12 DAILY PILOT
Ill ,,
• " •
..
0
" • .. •
ONE DAY ONLY! SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED! SORRY, NO PHONE OR MAIL ORDERS
-
•• ' l,.,
Perfect 111ry-all
for 11•oolglrls
• Vinyl clutch'9s
. • Smooth or qrained
• Zip comp1rtment
• Pretty fall co!Ors
SAVE 62c
1ss
RECO. 2.50
SATURDAY ONLY!
New double-knit easy-care
acrylic cardigans for Fall!
• New designs, sm a rt
self-patterns, too
• For bac.k -to-school
• Best autumn colors
· • Honey tones and .t .... corals. Sites 36-42
SAVE 2.12 ·
618
RECO. 5'
SATURDAY ONLY!
30-pc. stl has 3/8",
1/4" sq. dr . sockets
• Full renge of soc.kets
• Quelity guerenteed
• Hot forged steel
• Custom fitted cese
UNCONDITIONAL
GUARANTll
If any Powr-Kroftt
1ocket, ralch11 ar
driv1 part ln thi• tool
Ml faih lo give you
complet1 sati1faction
Ward1 will reploce II
ot r1fundyourmon1y.
$'.AVE 15.02
1988
RECO. l4.TO VALUE
SATURDAY ONLY!
Sea•less •es• 1yl011
w11• n1 ••rrler
• Top, toe barriers
• Long·wearing
• Fashion shades
SAVE 33c <
2PR.66~
~ ~-
' .:1
' .· •
Misses ' flit ~o•hed
101101 p11tlesl
• Solt, comfortable
• Extra long wearing
/• .. / . ;
( '
~
SPECIAL
• While, siies•34-44
• Stock up today • Misses' si11s 9·11 RECO. 2/99c COREAT IUY
SATURDAY ONLY! SATURDAY ONLY!
.. •
_,,,.-. ~
l I ...
. , ... ,.
;..;~~
'
• Pocket big savings on Werds finest sportc.oats
• Big selection of fabr ics, patterns, styles and colors
REGULAR $55 MEN'S SUITS • • • • • • • • 39.97
REGULAR $75 MEN'S SUITS • • • • • • • • 54.97
199!2497
"CHARGE IT" REG. 29.95 • 39.95
SATURDAY ONLY!
SO-ft. relnlor11d
winyl 1ard11 hse
• Nylon reinforced
• Long lasti ng , sturdy
• Flex ible all year
• All brass couplings
• SAVE ·2.11 .. •' .
4ss
RECO. 6.9!
SATURDAY ONLY!
Human hair wiglets
for qui1k 1hang11I
• Natural or frosted
• Use just I, 2 or 3
• Match or highlight
your own hair color
• SPECIAL
688
AT WARDS
SATURDAY ONLY!
.. -
:t! .
Mu's s•a11Y ••alhtr
Orl01° atw so1ksl :;..
• Orlo n® acrylic, nylon
• long wearing, soft
• Great color array
• Men's 91/2 to 14
99~
RICO. I.st
SATURDAY ONLY!
.. ,
' ~
Adjustable cool-top ironing ·
board for easier, faster jobs
• Sit down or stand SAVE 2.11
• Table adjusts
• Plenty of leg room
• 11~6 air vents
• For easier ironing
911
• Standard 1i1e top REI;, 11.19
SATURDAY ONLY!
Brush hrown co tton
twill shell rut
• Roomy, bloodproof
game bag; 2 poc.kets
• 12 shell loops
• Zippered front
333
RECO. 4.tf
SATURDAY ONLY!
SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY TILL 9-SUNDAY ··11 A.M. TO 5 P.M.
HUNTINGTON BEACH s:~ a~i::: ~~~.v· PHONE 714-892-6611
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. JEAN COX, <IM--
hlM~, .,,,._, ii. 1Nt LI ''" 11
Group Offers
Double Gala
In addition to enjoying the .. one only" performance ()f the "Ballet
Alfresco" on Saturday evening, Aug. 81, members of the Laguna Beach
Civic Ballet Company and the public will be able to dine at their leisure
at the Terrace restaurant in Irvine Bowl.
Following the 6:30 champagne supper the curtains will raise at 8:30
for the performance in the adjacent bowl.
Dinner invitations have been m·ailed fo the 200 membership,. and
the public is invited to the double' gala. Advance reservations for the sup-
per may be secured by calling the ballet center at 494--7271. Tickets are $6
per person.
Co-chairing the supper committee and ticket selling have been Mrs.
Lloyd Bacon and Mrs. Basil Gannon, both members of the board of direc·
tors for the ballet company.
The third annual dance program ''Ballet Alfresco" has been sched-
uled to follow the Pageant of the Masters. Members of the ballet company
will present three popular items geared to appeal to every age group.
The company has been named a national honor company by the
National Association for Regional Ballet -the · only group in Southern
California to receive this recognition.
r The ballet company is supported by membership contributions and
grants from the city of Lagt\llll Beach, the Fest!V111 of Arla and the National
Foundation for the Az:ts·and Humanities.
SLIPPERS· llNDER GLASS? -It·appears that ballet slippers are
about to be served for someone's -dining pleasure by the Mmes.
Douglas Reeve, t.toyd Baqon anq S.:Sil Gannon (left to rtght), But
this Is not the case, they laughingly admit. The •lippera are to
remind the public and membership of the Laguna Beach Civic
Ballet &>mpany of the Aug. 31 performance of "Ballet Alfresco"
and the preceding 6:80 p.m. champagne supper, The Terrace
restaurant in Irvine Bowl will be the diruier setting.
\ . I Lagunans Forecast
A Special 'Fair' Day
It could be a day like any other day.
Except Nov. 11 is the date selected as the first Laguna Beach Book
Fair.
The date coincides with Veterans' Day and National Book Week.
On that Monday the City Council has authorized the closing of Park
Avenue between South Coast Boulevard and Glenneyre Street from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m.
Gaily decorated umbrellas will be tied to parking meters on both
sides of Park Avenue. Books, which will have be~n previously priced and
marked, will be displayed upon bridge tables. The sales people. after re·
ceiving the money, will insert a colorful bookmark in each book sol d.
SponsoMng the fun-filled day are the Friends of the Laguna Beach
Library and 1.he Mermaids. Chairman or the hostesses is Mrs. Lyman King
Jr .. member of Mermaids, the Friends and Laguna Beach Panhellenic.
Assisting ber will be eight members of the Panhellenic group.
Proceeds from the Fair will be used to enrich the library facility and
for beautificat;on projects in Laguna Beach.
Dr. William Ullom, superintendent of the Laguna Beach Unified
School District, has approved the Fair as a "fitting schoolwide project to
celebrate National Book Week ."
Augmenting the book sales will be numerous "Fair Day" attractions,
according to Mrs. Edward Reed, Fair chairman, who also promises "some-
thing different every half hour." Entertainment is being scheduled by
Laguna school children.
Laguna Beach authors will be invited to attend the festivities. There
will be a specially arranged area wh ere they can autograph their books,
stat!ild Mr~. Ernest C. Cannan and Mrs. James H. Keeley, co-hostesses.
Leaders of a11 civic, church, school and social organizations will.soon
receive irrv\tations for their members to actively participate in the Book
Fair.
Organizations can assist NOW by donating good used book s. €ouec ..
tton stations are Safeway stores, Laguna Federal Savings and I.Dan , the
Chamber of Commerce and the library.
THE MAIL MUST GO THROUGH -Lending a helping hand to
mailman Marko Woodbury are (left to right) the Mmes. Clifton T.
Nichols, president of the Laguna Beach Women's Club; Anthony
Demetriades, first vice president of Laguna Beach Friends of tbe
Library, and Pete Fulmer., ccrchilirman of Mermaids. They are
among many women working for the first Laguna Beach Book
Fair. Invitations will be sent to area authors to attend the one-day
gala on Nov. 11.
Pick up ·service may be arranged by telephoning Mrs. Reed at 494--
5047 or Mrs. Anthony Demetiiades, 494-2365.
Interested citizens need not feel left out. They also can participate.
Names are being registered at the circulation desk of the library for· those
wanting to enlist their belp at tbe gala one-day event.
Rea 'der A ·dvocates Problem Being Solved in a Family Way
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Recently a
woman who was Wlable to get preg·
nant wrote to ask if you thought it
would be wrong if her husband'•
brother substttuWd for him btcau1e he
bad fathered lour children !n lis years
and could rnrely help her-out. You told
her it would not be Jigbt to borrow her
brother-in-law for stud purposes and
that she should contact some adoption
agencies.
I thought you mjght like to knoW
how a similar case actually turned
out. You might revise your adviei!.
My husband and I wan ted a child
very badly. We had been married
\ight years and I could not get preg•
~l ~ weni both examlnecl '"'d
tasted. The teril indicated that w1
ANN LANDERS
were bod! OK phyl!cally, The doctor• secretly. Wt eoded up In 1 flerct .,-gu.
concluded that since there wu no or· ment.
ganic reNon for my inability to The next morning Sis came over
conceive. it must be emotiona1 . and apologized. She said she and her
To take our minds off the problem husband had talked it over and decid-
we went to visit my sister in California ed u I really wapted a 1:hU~ Ed would who was pregnant with her [ifth child. . Sis and her husband Ed kidded us help me out. I ·accepted their offer.
about not really wanting a farn.Hr. -After a three-week stay we returned
not reaUzing we were both sen11Uve..-. to the East. J learned shorUy after
about lt. The kidding went too t=.r an4 that that I waa pregnant. 1 do not
my allter accused me of tUJ.na: the pill know U Ed is tbe father or ii the child
belongs to my husband. Furthermore.
I don 't care.
Now, four years later, we have three
children and are a very happy family .
When I saw my 1ls and Ed last year
not a word waa: 1aid. The secret ia
between the three of us and it wW re·
main that way. Sign me -GLAD I
DID
DEAR GLAD: And people keep
11klnt me H I make up letters. Why
would I have to make up letters when
I iet fantastic mall like tht1?
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Plr.ase
don 't think I am a crabby old woman.
I'm a newly married girl wilh a pro·
blem that ii driving me nuts.
W8 have a small but lovely aPAfl·
meot and we adore it. 'lb.ere ii I back
porch which runs the length o1' four
apartments. We are in the middle. Our
dinette windows race the back porch.
The neighbor who lives on the end
has strung a laundry line the full
length of the ,porch. She must wash
every day because tbo&e Un.et are
never without clo41hel on them. Not on·
ly ii ;t embarrassing when we have
compeny but the clothe& throw grotes·
que shadows on our walls and ceiling
and it scares me to death when I am
alone .
This neighbor t\as a right to string
the line as we were told when we mov·
ed in that the porch belon~ed to all of
us. ls this worth talking to the
landlord about? I hate to start troublt.
-QUA!j)ARY OVER LAUNDRY DEAll QUANDARY: AJI< I b e
landlord If be will furnish a Venetian
blind for the dinette windows. U he
1ay1 no, buy one yourself. It "ill be
well worth tbe hlvestmenl.
What awaits )'OU•OD>the.otb.er·llda of
the marriage ·~en? How can you be
sure your marriage will work? Reed
Ann Lander•' booklet "Marriage -
What to E:spect." Send your reque.st
to Ann Landers in care of this news·
paper, enclosing 50 cents ln coin and
a long , stamped, seU-addre11ed en-
velope.
Ann Landers will be glad to help you
with your problems. Send them to b,er
in care of lbe DAILY PILOT, MClOS·
Ing ~ sell-addressed, , ~tamped C·
veiop..
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:14 DAllY ~!LOT Frld.t.Y, Autust 2J, 1968
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PROGRAMS GALORE -Mermaids, the Women's
Division of the Chamber of Commerce in Laguna
Beach, are busy scheduling tile agenda for tbe fol·
lowing year. The women will gather next Monday
at noon in Hotel Laguna for a luncheon and pro-
Mermaids Set Sights
On Numerous Activities
A trurd &eason of ac·
livities wt!! begin next Mon ·
day when the Women's
Dlvision of the Lagun·a
Beach Chamber of Com -
merce gathers for lunch.
A noon get together in the
1-lotel Laguna is scheduled.
Mrs. Robert Turner, presi-
dent of the group, which is
nicknamed Mermaids. in-
vites members, wives of
chamber membet'ls and in-
terested women to attend.
Discussed during t h e
meeting will be the slate of
officers. adoption of by-laws
and other organizational
1natlers.
f\-lrs. Leon A x e I r o d ,
chairman of the upcoming
new teachers luncheon. will
reveal plans fCJr this event.
Mrs. Peter D. Fulmer,
vice president and luncheon
arrangements chairman, is
taking reservations at 494-
1018 and 494-7575.
Among the Mermaid's ac·
tiviti.es for the year are the
Laguna Beall!.iful Contest.
annual awards luncheon,
master calendar, Book Fair
and Winter Festival F1ea
Market.
Toastmistresses
Surfside Clubhou.se i n
Huntington Beach is ftle
meeting place for members
ol. Las Olas Too-stmistress
Club of Huntington Beach on
the second and fourth
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Episcopal Ceremony
gram. Mrs. Doris Lindsay, Chamber of Commerce
secretary (seated) admires the Mermaid mascot
with the Mmes. Peter D. Fulmer, Mermaids vice
presideni; Robert Joyce, publicity coordinator, and
Robert Turner, president (left to right).
Har borite Weds
In Church Rite
Bouquet.I of w h I t e
cbry1anthemum1. dahlias,
baby'a breath and fern
deconated St. A n d r e w 1 s
Preabyteri.an <llurch where
Deborah L y n n e Howard
became the bride of Stephen
Earle Lewi1.
The Rev. Dr. Charles H.
Diereotield solemnized the
double ring ceremony.
The bride Lt the daughter
of Mr. and Mr1. Lloyd
Howard of Santa A n > .
P.arentl ci the bridegroom
.are Mr. and Mn. Frank E.
Lewis of Newport Beach.
Eecort.d to the altar by
her father, the bride wore a
white organza gown with
pearl beading on t h e
neckline and cuffs. Her il·
lust.on veil was held by a
whke organza rose with
beaded pearl leaves. Her
flower1 were whke rosebuds
and baby's breath.
Miss Dianne Davi! of
Tuttln was uked to be maid
of honor. She and the
bridesmaids wore 1 o n g
ereeo silk sleeveless gowns
with whlto leghorn bat.! with
green band• and bows. They
carried basket.I Of spring
flowers.
Ml11 Meagan O'SulliV'an of
Tustin was flower &irl,
wearing a long green dress
e"mbr'Oidered with dalaiea
an.d carrying ba&keta o!
fk>wers.
Robert M. Lewis o r
Newport Beach. was asked
to be best man. Ushers "'ert
Mike Wertman of S a n
Diego, Ted Fouts o l
Newport Beach, Jack MOies
of Los Angelei and Dean
Howard, the bride'1 ix'other,
Crom Tustin.
A reception in kvine
Coast Country Club ·took
place after the ceremony. ..
More than 250 guests
circulated among decora~ r
tions of white chry1an·
themums, yellow r o s es ,
y e I I o w chrysanthemums,
daisies and fff'n.
Assisting were M r s . *
William Wilsoo and Mrs.
Dale Wilson of Los Angelc3,
both cousint (If -t h e
bridegroom, and M i s s
Christine J a h n s o n of
Newport Beach. Sp e c I al
guests were Mrs. FraDk M.
Taylor of Pomona, the
bridegroom's grandmother : MRS. STEPHEN EARLl LE WIS
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Bridesmaids were Miss
Linda Tatum, Miss Jill
Worlund, Mrs. Step be n
Rillera, all ot 'I\J:ftin and
Mrs. Thomas Chadick of
Cost.a Mesa.
Mrs. G. L. Howard of Ha waiia n Hon•ymoon
Walnut Creek and Mrs. -,------------'---------
Construction Women
Fashions Play It Safe
Edith Buck of Tobie Rock,
both grandmothers of the
bride, and Mrs. Florence
Heilbron, of Fresno, the
bride's great-aum.
The bride is a graduate of
Tustin High Scb.ool and at·
tended California State Col·
lege .at Long Beach. Her
husband is a graduate of
Newport Harbor Ht g h
School iand the University of
Sopthern California. He
received a master's degree
in business ad·mln.istration
and affiliated w1th Sigma
Chi fraternity.
Building New Board
Mrs. Donald Ames will be
installed pres i dent of
Orange County Chapter 91,
National Association o f
Women in Construction
Tuesday, Aug . 'rl.
Marjorie Weil, all directors.
Mrs. Donald Ames and
Mrs. Kathryn Clay will at·
tend the group's national
convention to be held in
Washington, D. C. Sept. 20
and 21.
By SHEILA WALlH
ROME (UPI) -Rome's
high fashion designers are
playing it safe in their new
fall and wirrter collections.
No radical departures in
hemline, no massive swing
toward pants suits. Skirts
remained generally above
the knees and once in a
while a maxi-length coat
\vould appear. but only as a
"trial balloon," not a
general trend.
T'hese were some of the
hi~lights of the couture col-
lections shown last month to
an international set of
buyers and press.
In shape, the A-line was a
favorite. Waists were noted
ii nd usually belted. Most of
the frills and flutter were
for evening clofnes.
Subdued co\orli dominated
the fabric scene. Valentino,
considered among the t.op of
Italy'• pace setters and a
favorite with Mrs. John F.
Kennedy, presented a choice
of color&: far day clothes -
white , gray, brown, black or
bottle green.
But his edict WM: one col-
or at a time, please. Say
brown. Th.en make It a
brown look fr(lm head to
toe .
For evening, Valentino
·wa! a bit more leni.Mt with
color, but throughout the
collection, he 111 how I': d
preference for biack or
white.
After a wedding trip to the
Hawaiian IswXls th e
newlyweds will reside Jn Los
Angeles.
The 8 p.m. dinner in the
Caspian restaurant in Costa
Mesa will be preceded by 7
p.m. cock l •a i Is . Mrs.
Dorothy O'Connor , im-
mediate past president or
the National Association of
Women in Construction and
a member of the Los
Angeles chapter will be the
installing afflcer.
Also to be installed arl':
Women who ar•
associated with the con-
struction industry and
guests of chapter members
are invited to the in-
stallation. Reservations can
be made by calling Mrs.
Carroll Boles, 548-5671, Mrs.
Ann West, 52.8-7445 ar Mrs.
Patterson at 642-1511.
the Mmes. Richard Snider.=========="· ~ vice president; Catharine
Patterson, rec o rd i n g
secretary; Carl K o r t e n ,
treasurer; Jeanne Nelson,
c o rresponding secretary,
and William Adams, John
Bryson. Fred Tiffany and
QUICK
C1tdi up quickly on loci!
•v•nt1. R••d yoyr comp1ct,
compr1h1n1lv1 hom•town eil-
lioR of th1 DAILY "LOT,
aor•BR08uu
••tw,...•121;
Patsy Noroian Marries :Autlientic Wing Tip Styling Make This a S~ot
AnY. Boy Would Bo Proud To W oar!
lioney mooning in Hawaii
are ~1r. and .l\1rs. John
Richwine who ~·ere married
in St. Michael and . .\ll
Angels Episcopal Church,
Costa Mesa.
T'he Rev. Edward Allen
performed the double ring
ceremony . The bride, the
former Patsy Mari e
Noroian. is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Nish Noroia.n
of Costa Mesa. T he
bridegroom is the son of
1'-1rs. Ruth Ellen Richwine of
Balboa Island.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bri'de wore a flt·
ted floor-length gown with a
scooped neckline and elbow
length slee ve&:. The
candlelight satin g o w n
featured alencon lace ac·
cents and a king &atin train.
Her elbow-length veil was
held by a cluster of lace and
pearl flowers. She carried a
cascading b o u q u e t of
phalaenopsis orchids, Ulies-
o f -l he -v a 11 e y and
stephanotis. Vacationers in Canada Mrs. Da·vid Noroian of
Blythe served her sister·in·
law as matron of. honor Mr. and Mrs. Lou Grayson of Costa Meta wen visitors to the Cbateau Lake
while Miss Rachel Seale of Louise in Alberta province of the Canadian Rockies. Among attractions view~
Blythe was maid of hooor. ed in the background waa the Victoria Glacier.
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Bridesmaid was ·Miss Janer;;v;;::ijji;;;:;ij;;;;;:;;;v;;;~w;;;;~~;;~i;;;;;:;:;a;;;;;;:;;tj;;;:;tj;;;:;;a;;;;;;JI ~·' Krosse of New.port Beach.
Attendants were identically \ ' .,..,. . '
MRS. JOHN RICHWINE
Double Rlnt Rite
J)
gowned in floor length deep
pink silk frocks styled with
long sleeves. V-necklines
and a\encon lace ruifles at
th e neckllne and wris ts.
They carriOO nosegay bou-
quets of pink sweetheart
rosebuds, miniature pin k
carnatJon1 and lilies-of-the·
m1e. I
Stuart Maple o{ Corona
del Mar was the best man,
while ushering guests to J,
their places v.'t!.re Phillip
Maurer of Corona de! Mar,
Jim Splittgerber of Irvine.
Mark Miller of Newport
Beach and David Noroian of
Blythe, the bride's brother.
W.rs . Edward Allen was
organist and Norman Major
was trum-peter in the church
decorated "'it.h candelabra
and large arrangements of
white gladioli. stock and
chrysanthemums accented
by pink carnations.
The reception took place
ln the E mpirl': Room at the
Newporter Inn. S i l v e r
candelabra decorated the
cake table and h or s
d·oeuvrei; table as did bou·
quets of white gladioli,
stock, chry&anthemums and
pink carnations. More than
JOO relatives and friends
gathered at the champagne
reception. Mrs. Terry Lrance
circulated the guest book .
The newlyweds, both
graduates of Coron.a del
Mar High School, will reside
in Costa Mesa "'here the
bride attends Orange Coast
College. lil':r husba:Ild, who
complet.ed two years at the
University o! California,
Santa Barbara, will continue
hh~ .. at UC!. L
It's time to do it again
at
• • •
ENTIRE SUMMER STOCK
oOFF
SALE STARTS
SATURDAY• AUG. 24•10 am
33 Fashion Island, Newport Center
e Lido Isle • Sherman Oaks
e No Sale et Sunset Strip Shop
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·pectwin: ---
We.slclllf
Shoes
Where Shopping
b A a...! Pleasure
IN WESTCLIFF PLAZA
'17th ind lr~ine-Newport Buch
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'"""· ...... 23, 1'611 DAILV r!Lor JI I
iJj ., ~ ~ew Boats Outshone as Spectator Looks On'
•elee•e Abeard
Here ; s ·Some
. Smart Advice
!r ALMON LOCKABEY .. _.,.. _______ _
~: p.aj' H. Smart, chairman
of &' U.S. 01 y m p ie
Y~ Oommittee, has
.. somcecy decided opinions
_, on t:l\J.:'cliasses of sailboats
that !W'JlJuld. be included in
the )jtympic y achting
gamilj
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Anl, tt.e 77-year-Old dean
of ~ International . Star
Clas.g1 rd reluctant lo ex-
prest.Jjili; opinions on some
. . of th(,nngs going on in ttie
lnterturt!ooa1 Yiadlt Racing
4 umoi!."
"~ oot," grins the salby
sail.ir.. ~~rm used to opefling
my niouth ond put;ing my
fool Ii it ...
Sn1'rt ta!«• particular ex· ceptifjt tG the IYRU'1 an-
·nounoed plan to replace the
presemt Star and Dragon
clasSf!I& in the 1972 Olympics
with 'Yo .new designs -the
twcrman Tempest and Ole
three.:man Soling . Smm is
eqiiaDy emphatic in hls opi~
nion , Chat if .any of ttie
pres6'rt classes are going to
be ellm:inated from tile
Olymjiim it lbou1d be tll> !.!
metet:cla'ss whi.m. bas been wa~g diligently in th•
trials:here at Newport.
" FAS'l'J!ST BOAT
"Besides being a ·ridl
man's boat, t!he 5.5 as a
development class doe!l not
put enougtl emphasis on the
skill of Ube slaipper end
· •• crew. The man wjth the
fastest boat is going to win,"
1&)'8 Sm'art,
"And that's not t tie
~y ol 1he Olym·
pios," be COfltinued. "Olyrn·
pie medials shOuld go to ttie
mo.st c<impetent skipper .arid
crew, not to tlhe iia:stest boat.
Otherwirse' why not .wenl a
gold medal 1o the designer
of the winning boat?''
As t.o the ex..pense of tilt
,. S.S. Smart says he has it on
god authority that at least
one of lbe boats in the trials
has a price tag ol over
l.I0.000.
"How 0311 ~he MH.'!lllled
unden:h!velOJ*f natkln3 af.
fo rd to design. tank test and
build wch a craft -unJess
they form a syndic1te?"
Smart wants to know.
~ ~.5, Smart ~ts out,
is a "development" class,
~nin;g that they do not e IJ
ha~ to be. tK.adl>: ~ iO
long as they come out in
eoof-ormity 'Wiith the in-
ternational rule. This gives
designers a wide lattitude in
ingenuity in developing l:Jle
lastes-t possible boat.
"! havo nol2lin1! aptru;t
development classes," says
Smart. "I just don't think
they have .a place in the
Olympics. But M we have to
have dlem, ·"4Jy not a
9J1Ulller boat tl)at is not MJ
expensive?".
BI'M'Eit
Ii's understandable tllat
Smart .i6 more than a litUe
bitter about tihe proposal to
elimiMte the Star from the
Olympic classes. He ha«
been a championship Stiar
sailor since· yootti and for
1p.iany rears Mirved as head
of .tbe U.S, cl1s1 Associa-
tion. ' Smart argues that ttl•
Star is the most widespread
boat in the world -wi:ttl the
exception of the Snipe -
end that tt has a stl'Ong in·
tern1a1tional rassoctalion.
11he Dragon is admittedly
the slowest boot in the
Olympitc classes. but Smart
contend& tmt this should not
be a factor so lone u all of
the bclat! are .as alike as
they can bt!. He further
points oot Chat. the Dregms
also have • 8trong in·
tern.atiooal orpni~ and
usually attract the largfll'll
participetion in Olympic
yachting.
'TOO NE\\"
Smart hastens Ix> vow that
he has nothing against
ertlher tfl~ Tempe.st or
Solent. "It's just that they
are too new 6lld ck-not have
an. adequate back.around or
organizatian."
Botih. the Tempest and the
Solent were dHigned wittlin
the past few years in .a
design contest sponsored by
the IYRU to ccrne up wttti a , · k' T pair ol hiil> Jlft'formance BQ(> s itle boats ror "'• OI)Ulpi".
.. Tempest i.! e1bout Ule wne · ' N~. So Brief me .. a Star but featores a • ' ;. tr~ze for the crew to help
.. ~ YORK (UPI) _ A keep the bQ.at on an even '~~ keel. book;::tt'en· in !tie 16th ctn· ''l'Nlpe.zes are for Cf!fl·
tury . Padre Bartolome do te•board -ouch ., .,. ~~1s:i of as ~a:°~est u.!1: Fl)-ing l).Jili1MHt (mother
• by ~ .. "".... col· Oi)'mpic c I • I I ) • No .,,,.--· '""""""' -.id be hanglnf onlltSt•• one ol the lMge&t from the mMtheld m a
title1!1rhr for a bOot, says good lr:eel bolt," 1 a y r
Dr. J!dan M. Youngol, ~t Smart.
·. Oolle., professor l.Alln Smart 9drnita that his ii a
Amerbn Afiait1. voict crying in th e
The tit.Jt : "A Very Brief wilderness in many circles
·• Description of the Destruc· both in Europe in this ooun-
Uon of the Indians. Being a try.
Account of Cru~l "But I believe in tX• iii<.... aod Slaupten pr,..q my <>i*rion -. I
o( 'Jr,wenty Million Peopl•.u 'have OOt," bt CIOllcluded.
'
•
DAILY PILOT l i.H Pltttt
ing an old 5.5 Charade (No. 57) is leading Gerry
Driscoll (No. 82) and LoweU North (No. 76) both o!
Jl'RONT ROW VIEW -Lone sail()r in cat-rigged
double-ender attracted spectator interest as he lei·
surely cruised outside the r ace cour&e in the 5.5
•OAILY l"ILOT Ili ff PlleM
meter Olympic trials. In background is one of the
high-powered racing yachts.
whom ire sailing new boats.' ·
Gardner Cox Man to Beat
As Olympic Trials Resume
By ALMON LOCKABEY
O.lly fl li.t IMtlftt ll•ltor
The fourth ra.ce .of the 5,5.
meter Olympic trials got µn·
der way on the' Olympic ·
course off the Newport
Harbor entrance. The fifth
and six.th races will be held
Saturday and Sunday to
determine Who Will
represent the· tJ.S. in ~the
Olympic yachting .games at ·
Acapulco starting Oct t'.
Gardner Cox of Villanova,
Pa. was·considered the man
to beat as the fin.al phase of
the frials got Under way.
He is leading ~he serles
with two wins . and two
losses, a formidable lead in
view of the rule that skip-
pers can throw out their
won't race in computing
tt'leir. final score.
A.sked if he was confident
of winning the serier, Ccx
said : "We're hopeful, but
the series is a Jong way
from over."
He wa.s looking hard at
John Macshall's red.(i.ulled
Bingo from Stamford, Conn.
which stands in second
place.
Counling all rour rares.
Cox has a score of six under
and Marshall has 16. 7.
'Sudden Death' Ocean
Race Set for October
The ~an Racing FiMt
of Southern OalifrornJt.a ha~
eome ~ witlh a proposal tor
• niee that M il determine
the ocean racing oham·
pionship for llhe year.
Race Course
Planned for
New Lake
A m ile-l ong lake is being
created six mile& &00th of
Phoenix. Ariz. that may well
become a ho.at racing mecca_
in the southwest .
1'Mi proposal is Mr a
"Stldden-death" racf! 1lmilar
to the S<ln Diego Lipton Cup
Challenge race.
Tentiative date for the
race has been set for Oct.
19. Th quali!y~for entering
the race • boat must finiflti
ln the first five oveN.U in
the Whitney. Ahmanson.
Balboa Y'ldit Club's 66
series, Ca'?ffornta Y e e h t
Club's Overton or l.ioog
Bead! Yacht Club'~ Oatalin~
Islend Serie.s.
The fJ.llSt race will be
Sponsored by ttle 1,.ong
Beach Y'8'0ht Club. It will be
continued as an annual af·
fair.
A perpetual trophy will go
to the winner ~ well as
participation plaques and
orew patohes for everyone
invoNed, according to Jim
Llndermafl, prt3ident o f
ORF.
the Olymplc seorini &ystem
But with the throw-out race
the picture looka • Utle dif.
ferent at th.is point. Cox
would throw out a second
Place, leaving him with a
1oore of three, "" h i l e
Marshall would tos s out a
third place fin :sh, leaving
him with a first and {1\'0
seconds !or six points. On
the basis of 01rec 01:t of lour
races, Cox is lear1ing by only
three points.
None of the I'> other skip·
pers stands more than an
outside chance unless both
Cox and Marshall fold up in
the final three races. Ernie
Fay of Houston has a record
of 6-6-1 -3 for a Jour-raee
total of 29.1 points and Bill
Fieker of Newpo.i1 Harbor
Yacht Club has flnlshe~ or 2·
5-6-5 for a total :'If :11.7. Both
Fay and Ficker would throw
out a .!lixth place which i~
worth 7.1.
Hilton Wins
2nd Barthel
Series Race
TORnN1'o IAP) -,,,,
eight-meter yacht lroquojs
TT, s ktppertd by Carl Hilton
Qnd his five -man crew fr<1m
Chicaeo · s Lake Michigan
y ,acbtJ.ng Alsociation, took
h &eCOnd of 1tle Barthel
Trophy series races Thurs-
day witti a Ume of I: 16.57.
Cheeta. skippered by Tim
Nelson of tht Turonto Lake
Yacht A.racing AssrooN.tion ,
WM second in 1 :20 .38 .
Neorsema.n . handled by Jer·
ry Sulltwin « the C1eve\and
Inter l.;a<ke Yachting
Association. plaeed Wrd in
l :22.10. and Venture JI,
sk.ippered by Tom F'isber or
~ Detroit R·iver Yachting
Association, 1:27.29, WiB.s
fourtti.
Nel50n w.as leading witll
1•1 .. points wilih three races
sun to be 1ailed. Hilton ii
1f!oC.'Ofrd witti 5V4. Sullivan
ind P' i.loher tr-ail with. foo.r . .....
Three wells will feed the
lake from an underground
pool of hig h saJihe content.
1"he body DI water will be t.m feet wide, have an oval
shape and provide 1 surface
of 136 acre~. $40 ,000 Gold Cup
~ '~; ........ .4.
"'-.: 9TAl'tT
Ol YM~IC COURSE -Diagram shows the layout
of an official Olympic sailing course with a tli·
anguJar lap and a windward, leeward, windward
lap. Triangle is laid out in an imaginary circle.
Tioga Will Set Pace
For Outrigger E vent
Tho 58'foot ketd\ Tio«a
will be tbe pace&etting com·
mittee boat Sa'turday when
nine orews of rugged young
men depart rm U\e th'1t an-
n1ral Lona: Ba1ch-Cabalina
lslood Outrieger Ca no e
Re~tta.
The Tk>ga, CYWned now by
John Jamiffon of West
Covina. w.u built in 1932 and
was the prototype for !be
famous b I u e water yacht
Ticonderoga. 72rfoot ketch
now in charter service .atter
a distingui;&hed r a c i n g
career.
J.\~vorad in the race f{)r
tile 400-pound outriggers will
be the nine-man Haw.aiian
All ·S~ar3 Wm w·hiah last
Saturday won e 15-milt
tuneup race from Malibu to
Santa Monioa by way of a
tot1thernly dip to Venice.
The Hawal~ns negotiated
the dlstanCI!! in tw<1 hours. ll
minutes 'Ind 25 seconds . But
lhe Balboa Outrigger Canoe
Oiubls No. 1 boat w.as not
(ar berond a1 2:15:01 and the
K<ai Nalu (•Mar Vista) No, 1
team was in at 2: 17:25.
The fleet will depart Loog
Beach's Cherry St re e t
Beaatl section et 8 a .m . and
will include the Tioga, one
more smaller sailboat. es .a
commi.tt.ee boat. one speed·
boat rrom the 01.ltboard
Booting· Club or Long Beach
for each oaooe as a saiety
prec1uti<0n and bM>
powerboata for pr.•.
Teen-a ger
Tig htens
Thistle Lead
SAYVIU.E. N.Y. (AP) -
Dennis C\3'1'k , 17~ar-old
skipper from Se at t I e ,
tightened hi.s hold on first
place in title Natio nal
Thistleclass Sailing Oham-
pionsh.ips on Great Sootti
Bay Thursday.
Inboard hydroplanes a ~
large 13! &even li~ could
be accommodated for rac·
ing. Marina facilities also
are planned.
Hy droplane 'Bait' Offered
He sailed his Wizard of Id
over t:he n ine -mile
trlangular coor1e to win his
l'hird in tbe 5ix-race series
'-'hat ~ today. He le.ts
overall with SY" pointa for
the five races t<l date w4tti
fin!Mes ol. 1-1-2-4-1.
Development plans include
four separatl racing COUTS·
es revolving around a · mid·
lab illland . Jud... and
pree:t room facilities also
.,.. ptanll<d.
The four cour1e1 include
an approved APBA mile and
two-tnirda layout for record
clo9ed counie racing, a one·
quart.et-mile drag strip, a
one-mile 1traight away, and
a two.mile ·~ cl"'•ic and mooune.
DETROIT -A total purse
of "40,000 -tt1e higtiut in
boat racing for 1968 -
await& unlimited hydroplane
ownert who lhow up here
Sept. 8 tor the eoth running
ol tbe American Power Boat
Associatlon'1 Gold Cup.
In boat racing. the Gotd
Cup is tht most Important
power boat race o n
schedule. and ls symbolic of
speed suprein,acy ln com·
petition. .
QuaHlyinf triaia for ...
tr.ants will be held Sept. M
when a field ol tB unlimltedJ
will be sifted from ttie pack to race in thre. beat.a.
Ordinarily the Gold ~
has four he1ts, but thit year
there wu ,. vote of offidah
to race under the unlimited
ru.lu rather than tht Odd
c~ rules.
The decision emerged last
June when WMttler Ind
cou"'-coodit~ madt it
impos•ible lo qualify eoough
~au under .,,, Gold CUc>
rule and the race wa1
postponed until Sop(. I. The
vat. hO'Jds food fer tha
September event.
The rust two heat. will bt
run in thrte teetions each
wittl up to 1ix un&imited1 in
ead\ 1ectioo. The top s.ix
boa1* wil compete in the
final.
'The courH wUJ be five
laps over threl miles, ap•
proved for rtmrdi, CG tht
Qotroit RI var. 4, -.
WUliam Alexandler, Falls
Churd\, V•. finished """""1
lhnda.y and alS<I ls &eoond
O'VtT4lJ with 2:2 point!.
Ed FracUr, O>bJml>u•.
Cllio. ill third with 31 YJ:
poin~; <J\lrle1 Steigerw1ld,
al90 ol Columbus, fourittl ,
witfi 33 : Jd'ln W.anenoacher,
Cleveland, fiftlh . with 36 :
Dennis Poey, Wapp i n· I
Q,m,, lix" with 38, and
R1cNrd Pel"'COCCo, Houston ,
nvent!I, Wi1l1 40. 1,
Van Dyne
New Finn
Champion
Carl Van Dyne, Mantolok·
ing , N.J . is the new Finn
Class North American
Champion.
The ex-collegiate sailor
was virtually boosted Into
the tltlist position by Bob
AndN of San Diego who
.!!witched from sailing to
surfing In the final · two
races of the champlo~na:hJp
regatta at Alamitos. Bay
Thursday.
Andre held a fraction of a
poJnt lead in first place over
Peter Barrett of AlamJtos
Bay Yacht Club as the
regatta went into ff.a, final
three races Thursday.
Jt still looked good for
Andre in the first .race
Thursday as he ftnishoed fifth
while Barrett wa1 h~.Jding
second with 1 sixth place.
The wind was blowiiig a
moderate five knots.
But as the wind began pip·
lng up to 10 knots at the
.start of the second race
Andre got his 14-foot dinghy
on top of a wave ap.
proaching a mark. The sea
suddenly took control and
Andre lound himsell surfing
smack into the mark. So
much for a throw.out race.
It was ln the third and
final race that Andre wa11
completely wiped out. With
the wind now whistling 18
knots and the sea rising, the
San Dieii;an found himself
atop another roller as he ap-
proached the mark. Again
the 5ea took control, and
again Andre hit the mark.
This one he had to keep.
Meanwhile, Van Dyne,
who had been lounging in
third place before th• day's
three races started. sailed
conservatively along in ae·
cond , third and third places,
found himseU sitting atop
the heap when the show was
over.
Barrett was barely able to
stay in second place on the
scoreboard by virtue ol win·
ning the final Nee.
Third. only a tenth of 1
point behind Ba"ett w11
Clive Roberts of N e w
Zealand who Is tn th.is Coun-
try on his way to the Olym·
pics In October.
Andre 's two DNF'1 drop-
ped him to sixth place
overall . Here 11 the .ftn al
scoring o( the top 10 in Ute
regatta:
I. Carl Van Dyne, Man-
toloking, N.J .. 44.7
!. Peter Bamtt, AB YC
52.7 '
3. C1ive Robertr, New
Zealand, 52.8
4. Robert Doyle, Pleoa,
Maas., 88 ••
I. Peter Doherty. &aat
Guard Academy, M.'t .~
I. Bob Andn. San Dlefll
YC. 70.7
7. Chuck Miller, ABYC,
72.4
a. Fred Miller Jr.".ssse' 74 ••
t. Peter Conrad, St. rr1.n-
ci1 YC, 74.7
!!. Louis Nady, U C
Berkeley, 75.7
----------------------~-·------~-------~-~--~---~~~~~,_,_.._,__~~-~~--..0..----------~~-----~ .. -------
1 I
I
... , ..... .-... -. . . . .
DAD .Y PROT EDIT ORIAL PAGE
Pageant Deliberations
Festival of Aris directors are understandably cau·
tious about ruffling that goose that lays !he golden egg
each year.
..For seven years the Pageant of the Masters has
been a nightly sellout. This is success to a high degree.
Pageant visitors jingle the cash register of local
business, buy art, dine out and carry the word of the
resort art colony,
'Ibe Festival prospers. Its facilities expand and im·
prove. Municipal coffers benefit by $65,000 or more
yearly as the city takes its 17\-2 percent slice off the
top of Festival receipts.
Yet from time to time the board has before it t.he
task of enriching the golden egg without cracking it.
In the past this has been done by lengthenil;lg the
Pageant run (now six weeks) or adjusting seat prices
tn certain categories.
Currently the board is studying the recommenda·
tion of director William D. Martin that certain seats
be increased in price 50 cents in some cases and $1 in
others.
He has also recommended that the 50 Pageant
tickets each Festival member is authorized to purchase
be whittled to 30 per season.
Both recommendations seem sound. On a seJlout
basis the increase in seat prices would generate $43,994
annually in additional revenue for the Festival and
$7,698 for the city.
The ticket price increase would be in the better
class of seats which are among the first to sell each
year. The lowest price seats, $2 seats, are the last to
sell.
reduction might serve to spread the tickets arouod a
bit more.
Festival directors apparently differ on complaints
--...of blocks of seats being sold to persons who arrive by
us andaepart. ---
. This once helped to bring the sellout situation now
enjoyed. However, artists complain that the busloads
take up seats but buy no art -just see the Pageant
and leave. '
. Some of the business people voice the same com-
plamt. The theory is that affluent visitors, who wou.ld
stay a day and shop or dine, are denied seats filled by
the bused visitors.
There is: likely some justification for the premise
but tt seems a question of degree with more data need-
ed.
. From a business viewpoint it would be a happy
Cll'cumstance to sell all see.ts io affluent visitors. Yet
~m a practical standpoint it is quite an actnevement
.Just to sell all the seats.
Watch Lifeguard Signals
The red flag flying from !he Lifeguard towers of
Laguna Beach means that in the guards' seasoned.
opinion the ocean is then and there a dangerous place
to be.
Parents didn't seem to realize this in some cases
Sunday and Monday as they let their children enter the
dangerous surf. Guards had to respond in several in-
stances and pull the youngsters out of. danger.
:CS SC . . .. LL® a tf a z .4
It seems also that 30 tickets, or less for that mat·
ter, should still be ample for Festival members. The
Parents should pay heed: Green is go, yellow is
caution, red means the water is dangerous. •
L "WHAT'S ,\ NlCE GU'( MKE You DO/Na IN A PLACE UK~ T~rsr_
Naive, C:hil.dish, Syiiibol·Worshiping .
Today We Have Hippies
By GEORGE R. HOFF, PhD.
A rebel without a cause is nothing
more than a disgruntled, negative
obstructionist who hampers his own
fulfillment, not to mention the needs
and goals of those who are con·
scienti.ously attempting to make some
kind of sense out of their own lives .
Where are the angry young men of the
1950's? They have grown older and
now are the irritable, contrary men of
the 1960's. What have they done for
themselves or for the society against
which they spoke so vehemently and
eloquently? Nothing, really! Their
voices have been lost, not in the
wilderness, but in the vacuum of their
empty and trite slogans.
TODAY WE HAVE hippies-naive,
t•hildish, symbol-worshiping, ritual·
vvi ng exponents of a fatalistic
i•hilosophy which attempts to reduce
the essence of human ex.i.stence to a
lour letter word: LOVE. They
desperately try to ignore the fact that
hum.ans are multidimensional. After
all, to explore and attempt to un·
llerstand the complexities, paradoxes.
polarities, nuancee and varied facets
or existence is hard and frustrating
\\'Ork.
They want to leave the hard work
;>nd frustration to the stuffy scientists.
1 hilosophers and theologians who
aren't "free" enough to recognize that
all this sad \Yorld needs is more love.
FURTHERMORE, I.hey refuse to
acknowledge all Of reality. Instead,
they pretend that if only everyone
would Jove everyone else , Utopia
would result. They would llke to have
a world handed to I.hem in which there
is heaven without hell. good and no
bad, freedom without restriction , hap-
piness but never sadness, health and
no sickness, pleasure exclusive of
pain, etc.
They wish to OOLlterate a large
measure of how tttings really are, and
hold the delusion that the world is a
place of perpetual fresh air , blue sky,
and fluffy, whi te clouds. They say to
each other, "Wh enever it rains, let 's
withdraw into OW'Selves and pretend
that we can hibernate until spring
comes again."
THE PROBLEM IS, of course, that
a human can't naturally hibernate like
a bear. Even to approx..imate hiberna-
tion, he must induce an artificial state
of insensitivity and reality distortion
by using one drug or another. Then,
while indulging in idyllic fantasy, he
t!Xpects the more mundane and
unenlightened segments of society to
satisfy his basic needs and t.ake care
of him. He expresses righteous in·
dignation when the power structure -
the establishment, if you will -whlch
he believes is too up-tight to accept
and support his passive, inactive
search for authenticity, doesn't spoon-
feed him while he plays philosopher.
HUMANS CAN easily talk
themselves into or oot of anyihing. lt
is increasingly clear that hippies have
not only sold themselves a bill of
goods, they are also explaining their
cop-out by rationalizing that they are
searching for new meaning in being
human.
What they fail to appreciate,
however, is that the longer they ride
free . the longer they sit on their duffs
and scorn those who, in their own way,
are attempting to improve the state of
man, the more they will find
themselves losing sell-respect. Hippies
really can't ·be happy until they either
pay for their ride or do some driving
themselves.
A rebel WITH a cause, and the-
courage to be committed to it
regardless of the work involved, can
become a major force in reconstruc-
ting a more sane social order.
They Can't Repudiate LBJ.
\VASHINGTON -A peculiar kind of
tuMel vision afflicts those Democratic
elements Who think their party can
blithely repudiate or discredit the
Johnson Administration's policy Jn I.he
Vietnam war.
If they were to look to either side of
their tunneled view they would see
ample evidence that such a repudiat·
io n or discreditation couJd have sensa·
tional results.
Such men as Defense Sec. Clark M.
Clifford and Sec. Of State Dean Rusk
wauld have to ask themselves if they
could in good conscience support a
Democratic presidential nominee run-
ning on a platform that made them out
to be fools or knaves.
Nor would President J ohnson be ex-
empt from sell-interrogation on this
point. There are signs of a slow burn
in the Johnson Administration over the
shilly-shallying to which Vice Presi·
dent Humphrey has exposed himself
on the Vietnam issue.
THOSE WHO THREATEN to leave
I.he convention in Chicago next "''eek
unless the Democratic convention
repudiates the Johnson war poUcy ap·
parently have gjven no thou ght to
others 'Wtlo would go home and wash
-----Friday, August 23, 1968
TM 1dltorial pogr of th< Dallu
Pilot u1kl to inform and 1tim.-
tdaU readns b, pr11enting thU MfDIPCJP'f"• opfniom and com-
menlar!i on wplcl of mwut
olld llgnlflama, bg providi"ll o
forum for tht erpra1icm of
OU1' readerl' opinio'11, and b11
pre&mting tht dlvene vitw-
pointl of ffa/~d obseroer•
and spoJcumln °" toplu of th1
da~ I .k
Hobert N. WNd, Pub!Ji°"
Richard Wilson ,
their hands of a Democratic nominee
so terrified of defeat !hat he would
compromise his previous convictions.
This is the result of the limited focus
o[ that mi.norily (as confirmed by
public opinion 1>0lls ) "'ho wish to stop
the bomllin g unilaterally, invite the
CommWlist Viet Cong into a coalition
government and liquidate the war.
These elements of opinion have
deluded themselves into thi nking that
they represe.ot the majority. They
have talked themselves into believing
there would be nothing but favorable
consequences from wi ping a ll vestiges
of the .Johnson Administration from
tlle face of the Democratic Party.
TllE FACTS J\-11GHT as well be fac-
ed by the liumphrey side no w. The
chief reason why Vice President Hum·
phrcy is in a position to win a fiTst
ballot nomination for the presidency 1s
that he has inhe rit ed the delegate
strength \.\'hJch 01hcrwlse wou ld have
gone lo PrPsidrnt .Jo-hnson. There is
not the slightest rrason to bt:!Ueve that
Vice President ll un1ph.rey could have
demonstrated hi~ r>o1mlaT ity i n
presidential primary e\ecl.lons agalnsl
the late Robert F" Kennedy or Eugene
McCarthy.
Humphrey ls now in ti is favored
posit.Jon because the elemcnt.6 whlch
would have supported J ohnson. had he
been a candidate . trans ferred their
support to J ohnson·s heir. Humphrey.
ThHe elemenu Include A large par1 of
organized labor. big stste and big city
political organizations and l h e
.southern delegations.
llUl\1PllRE'' IS stamped by the
J ohnso n Adm1n1stration. All h Is
circumlocuti ons about being his own
man do not change I.hat. If he 15 a par·
ty now to repudiating not JOnly the
Johnson Admlnistrat.ion buf )l is owo
preViou.sly expressed op:Lnioot be Is
1 ·~
"Bye ilelrl .... 1 lict 11111."
likely to lose race witb I.he on I y
elements at the Democratic national
convention who can nominate h.im.
Ail this makes the vice president,
and the left wing part of his staff, ve ry
uncomfortable, The staff hates to ad·
mit where Humphrey's nomination
will come from , ·and would wish !or
the vice presl dent a great deal more
fl exibility, and a separate identity.
This separate identity is not to he
graTJtcd to l1umph.rey because a
minority ln the Democ ratic Party will
not permit it.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
That rescue at West Street
beach hy a South Laguna boy
of a 19-year-old girl and her
non-swimmer father is another
reminder that.. in this day and
age. there's no va lid reason why
every chl\d can't be taught to
swim at an early ase.
-B. W. A.
Tllll fNlwll ""*" ,....... """ -Cit
MU1Mrl1Y JflMt tf fti. "'"""'· N .... , ........... •"-" lh\o o.tltr , .....
Czechs Have
Less Capacity
To Compete
The following_ report was prepared
before the invasion of Czechoslovakia
by the troops of RWlsia, Poland, East
Germany, Hungary and Bulgaria. Last
Tuesday -night,
-Editor
The American Army has a
calisthenic exercise usually described
as ''running in place." You go through
all the motions of running, but you
stay right where you are , your knees
going up and down but never fdrward.
That, in a sense1 is w hat
Czechoslovakia's economy has been
doing for the past few years. Jn a
world of explosive economic growth,
the Czechs have been going nowhere.
The gross national product has re·
mained stationary or actually shrunk.
Ludvik Ubl, first deputy foreign
trade minister, recently commented:
"As a resuJt of the big volume and
stability of Czechoslovak deliveries to
the Soviet Union, this col)ntry a s a
producer and a trader became used to
a certain self-indulgence that con-
tributed to the general deterioration of
our goods and capacity to oompete."
The· C2leehs now want to become cam-
tative on w.orld markets again and to
climi.nlsh economic and political depen·
dence on the Russians.
MORE TH A N 60 percent of
Czechoslovakia's external trade is
with the eastern European satellite
bloc. Half of this is with the Soviet
Union itself.
But. as the British commentator
Michael Simmons reports, more than
20 percent of I.he country's trade is
also with the western industrial
economies. Exports to them in 1967
amounted to $3.11 .2 million, a decrease
of $55.2 million from 1966. At the same
time. imports rose from $328.8 million
to $.369.6 million. "Nearly a quarter of
the 1967 exports went to West
Germany and over $48 million each to
Britain and Italy. Western imports
came mostly from the same trio and
lrom France and Au stria."
Czech machinery is obsolete. H.igh
production costs make C z e c h
manufactured goods uncompetitive
abroad. Simmon.s quoles Prof. Ota Sik,
deputy prime minister in I.he Dubcek
regime and architect of I.he current
economic action program: "Th e new
economic system must effect a change
wl\ich wHJ entail oow methods of plan-
ning, changes in fin ancing and
crediting. removal of s u b s I d i e s ,
changes in price relations •·
JOSEPH WECUSBt;RG writes from
Prague : "I have heard no talk ...
about overthrowing communi'im. but
..many people be.re do want com-
munism plus freedom • • • The
Czechoslovak refonn is already a
much bluer thing than ••• even
Tltoism ln Yugoslavia ••• If the
Czecboslovalta prove that communJsm
can coexist with freedom. their suc·
ce:ss will unquestionably affect not on·
ly the Intellectuals but tht entire
populations of other Communist coun-
tries , .. Poland. Hungary. East
Germany , Jnd pm-haps even Ole Soviet
Union ."
In Ole talks at 06Mla and the
Brat.islava communique. the Czechs ·
showed remarkable resistallct to
Sovitt mllltar)' pressure.
• ----------~~----~----,.__,,,,__ ..&.....t.. --q • ·-... t.:: --".-------~~~
Why Are They
Dissatisfied?
Reading about a musical comedy
&tar who has gone to Europe to study
grand opera, I wondered again why so
many talented persons are dissatisfied
with the things they do well and feel
impelled to embark · on projects
beyond their powers.
The singer in question is one of the
brightest adornments of the musical
stage: Her voice is beguiling, her
comportment endearing, her success
full and justified. \¥hat need is there
for her to compete with opera singers?
Geoiige Gershwin was a classic case
of such artistic frustration. Tired of
the excellent popular tunes he tossed
off so easily, he went to Paris to
study co-mposition under Stravinsky.
The latter was puzzled by the young
man's desire to write "serious"
music, and tried politely to dissuade
him -but Ger sh w i n remained
disgruntled until his death,
EVEN SO GREAT a creative man
as G o e t h e thought lightly of his
tremendous literary works, and was
most concerned with his scientific
labors -especially a "theory of col·
or" he was convinced would place him
with Newton among the scientific im·
mortals.
"As for what I have done as a poet,''
he told Eckermann, "I take no pride
whatever in it. Poets more excellent
tha n I have li ved before me , and
others will come after. But that in my
own century I am the only person who
knows the truth in the difficult science
of colors -of that I am proud."
NEEDLESS TO SAY, no ooe today
pays attention to the theory of color
promulgated by the author of "Faust"
-who himself was apparently
unaware that his own hero, Newton,
dlsmissed his scientific work and
thought that his Biblical research
would live forever.
Nor, 00 take lesser examples , do we
read the "serious" novels of Conan
Doyle. which he ranked far above
Sherlock Holmes; nor listen to the
"serious" music of Arthur Sullivan,
which he though{ would outlive the
fri vol ous s,avoy operettas he composed
with W. S. Gilbert.
DANTE ROSSETTI, the fine minor
poet, wanted also to be a painter. aJJd
once showed Whistler a picture in its
early stages, which the American
artist criticized. Some months later,
Rossetti." again showed Whistler the
completed picture, this time in a
~autiful frame,
"You've done nothing to it since I
i;aw it, have you?" \Vhistler asked.
"No ." Rosselli admitted. "but I've
written a sonnet on the subj ect." He
then read the lines, which were lovely
il:ld te::.1er.
"Take out the pi cture," advised
Whjstler bluntly. "and frame the son-
net.''
'Radar Tracked Saucer'
To the Editor :
Concerning the Royce Brier column
on flying saucers (Aug. 19): While sta·
tioned in Germany in 1965, at about
2;05 a .m. from the angle about north,
northeast, and at about a 60-degree
angle, our base radar picked up a solid
metallic blip on the Ndar screen. It
came down at this angle and stopped
at apprnximately five miles due west
of the base. Its altitude was then ap--
proximately 6,500 feet .
It seemed to pause for ap·
proximately t h re e or four seconds
then shot inra directloo over the top of
the base at about the same altitude.
Radar tracking speed at the base
when this object pas,,ed over was ap·
proximately 8,500 MPH and picking up
speed . As it did so it had a clear
brilliant puli;ating tight which was in
color a blue. sil ver, green ligflt. Its en·
tire vision on radar from first sighting
to end was approximately 15 seconds.
J\fVSELF ANO FrvE other fellows
on guard mount around lhe l>a.st saw
this; a few othe rs alMl saw It. The sky
was perfectly clear. and not any
c louds in sight. Th.is was not a figment or one's imagination. It was real.
This radar report soon disappeared
.and the whole matter was under hush,
hush. When any of us asked about it
wt were told to keep our mouths 1hut
or else. Then later we wt-re told that
we were day dreaming and to forget
it. My triend in radar told me what
was in the r eport l&ter.
T'his a;oes to prove one thi.ng -that
the military lteep everything like thUi
top secret and don't tell the public a
thing but onJ.1 that it'& gases or lights
on clouds. Bunk. l know differently. It
disappeared in a perfect straight Hne
back out into space. Why doesn't the
govermn<ot tell tile public the truth I
H. L. ENGLE
i ' •• •
c • • ~
Voluntee,. B11reau
To the Sditor:
) ..
Congratulations are due tfie DAILY
PILOT for the excellent feature story
on the Volunteer Bureau -published
August 19.
Judy Hurst has done an outstanding
job in bringing to the attention of the
public the many facets of the bureau'!
acUvilies. which offer g en u l n a
services to the county's agencies, as
well as unlimited opportunities for in·
volvement on ttie part or the count>"'
citizens.
SYLVIA L. BOGEN
Board Member
Tlie Volunteer Bureau provide•
nssistanct to 6.'i agendes, schools,
hospital$ and co11vnle.!cent homes in
Southern Ora11yc County. Volunteers
ranging from t.een·agP.T$ to grundpor·
ents art needed. -Editor
r--B11 Gft>r•• --.
Dear George:
Today's 1<2nty draa I 1
absolutely disgraceful and I
would like your aplnion. Look at
au the go-go (iris!
SHOCKED
Dear Shocked:
WHE RE ? WHERE?
Oh.
Ahem yes. Abi°'ute.ly
disgraceful and I say tsk-tsk. Bu t
I wish you wouldn't do tlu1t
~fore J've had m.y secoOO..,cup o!
,-."O(fee .
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Newport
VOL 61, NO. 203 , 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES
Harbor
EDITION
.
DA-ILY PILOT ·
I __
NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1968
I
Today's Closing ~
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
Gruber Join·s ·$12 Million Jet Noise Claim·s
By BRUCE BENSON
Of IM D.llb' 1'1111 It.ff
Moving to beat e Sept. 1 deadline,
i :e"'port Beach City Councilman Paul
J. Gruber today was among the latest
broup of upset homeowners to file
llamage claims over jet noise at
Orange County Airport.
The former two-term mayor said he
seeks $30,000 from the county Board of
Su~rvlsors for depreciation in the
value of his home since Sept. 1, 1967.
That's the date that big jets started
flying out o{ the airport, according to
the Airport Noise Abatement Com· •
mittee, sponsors ot the lawsuits, now
topping $12 million.
"The law is that if you have a claim
you have to file within a year so I
decided the other day that I'd better
join wi.th my neighbors and file my
suit along with theirs," Gruber said.
A tc.tal 118 Harbor Area resldents
submitted damage claims l o r
S3,4S0,595 along with Gruber, ac·
cording to a committee official.
Tbe official said the new filings
bring the overall number of residents
seeking damages to 209, with their
claims standing collectively at
$12,Ml,'m.
Gruber said he thought many jet
piloU an Oying higher now than they
were before voluntary noise reduction
methods were suggested by various
study groups.
CORONA DEL MAR MAN'S AUTO FELLS POWE R POLE AT IRVINE COVE, LAGUNA
Spectacular Sparks Caused Two Other Autos to Cr•sh, Set Off Alarms In Huntington Beac
/
Texas Dems to Nominate S 4M'Man's Auto
Hits Power Pole;
Johnson at Convention? Area Blackened
C~ll CAGO (.'\.?) -The name of
President Johnson was tossed back in-
to the Democratic Jil"esidential picture
tO""Jay as the party prepared lo open its
national coovention next.v.·eek.
Frank C. Erwin. Texas nation.al
Democratic committeeman, told· lhe
Rules Committee of "growing sen·
timenl" \Vithin his s.l.ate's delegation to
nominate Johnson for re-election if the
convention unit rule is abolished.
Erwin made the ·comment to a Rules
Committee session convened to CQO·
sider whether to rorbid the rule under
which a · majority in a delegation
determines how the entire slate will
vote durlllg the convention.
Erwin appeared on behalf of Texas
Gov. J ohn Connally, a close associate
BOATS, BALLET
WEEKENDER FARE
Boats and ballet make the outdoor
entertainment scene during the wan·
ing days of August along the Orange
Coast. Newport's annual Character
Board Parade casts off this Saturday
for a turn a.round the harbor and La·
guna's Ballet Alfresco comes to life
Au g .31 at the Irvine Bowl. Read abou1
th<'ln in toda.v '~ \Yeekender.
or Johnson. The Presidnet said last
March 31 he \vould not seek or accept
his party's nomination ror a second
term.
The matter arose when Erwin. "'ho
had delivered a passioned defense of
the unit rule as "pure democracy,"
\\'as asked by George Cox of \Vyoming
how the Texas delegates would vote if
the unit rule were abandoned.
"U the unit rule is abrogated or if
the convention next Tuesday night
votes not to enCO't'Ce the unit rule,"
Erwin said, "there is a growing sen·
timent among those of us here in
Chicago that Gov. Connally should
withdraw as a favorite son and for
Texas to request one of the early
states to yield to Texas to nominate
another great Texan who holds the
highest elective office in the land:"
Meanwhlle Sen. E u g e n e J .
McCarthy's supporters, undecide<i
whether to accept a compromise in
the Georgia credentials d l s p u t e ,
renewed their efforts today in two
other key committees to loosen Vice
President Hubert H. Humphrey's grip
on the convention.
And as both rorceg w o r k e d
feverishly on behalf of tlhcir can·
didates for the party's presidential
nomination, U1e shadow od Kcnnedys
past was etched sharply over t.iis
steamy conventi on city.
A 55-year-old Corona del Mar
driver's auto early today sheared off a
power pole on Pacific Coast Jlighway
in Laguna Beach, blacking out a wide
area of the coastline and triggering
another two-car crash.
Spectacular p yr o tech n i cs of
spraying sparks Crom the ruptured
12,000.vo!t power line apparently
distracted two other drivers ",.ho col·
tided. One car driven by a Costa
Mesan overturned on the center strip.
No one was hurt in any of the Uu·ee
autos involved.
The power line break, however,
touched off emergency alarms in six
power company substations, including
flu.ntington Beach, Newport Beach and
Costa Mesa, accyrding to Laguna
police.
Sgt. Wendell Faulk said the felled
pole near Irvine Cove caused power
crews to scramble to the scene, fear-
ing a major J>O"-'er outage.
Driver of the auto hitting the pole
was Marshall U. Beebe o{ 330 Poppy
Ave ., Corona del Mar. Police said he
had apparently lost control of his car.
Faulk said Lawrence \Y. Epperly,
19, of 2527 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa ,
was northbound. He saw the wire
sparking and slowed veering right.
The next thing the San Diego based
1\1arine kneu•. said Faulk. he 'Va);
upside down . hi s tittle car skidding on
(See CRASJi , Page !!'J
"But..._Yle're still getting very tow
flights over here at times when
they're absolutely uncalled for ." he
said. The councilman's house, at 1412
Viv ian Lane, is near the llarbor
Jlighlands D(ighborhood.
"I'm in th~ path of landings
and takeof!s,'' Gruber expJajned, his
voice rising, "and I can tell you we've
got some pilots wllo·are renegades."
'·A week ago Saturday night at 7: 35
p.m. they went right over my house
here v.•lth an absolutely clear sky. ln
fact, any time they go over you can·1
talk with each other." he declared.
"Your TV goes shuddery and you
can't talk to yo ur 1vife even if she's 011·
ly 15 feet a"·ay."
"\Ve're not going to sit here and
have our property destroyed by this
.Boa rd of Supcnilsors," he sputtered.
The councilman. "'ho was in-
slrwnental in getting council col·
(See GRUBER, Page %)
Radios ltlo1iitored
Czech Leader's
·,
Death Reported
Fro1n \Vire Serviees
Several amateur radio operators in
Europe and the United States report
receiving ham broadcasts r r o m
Czechoslovakia saying that Com·
munist party leader A I e x and e r
Dubcek is dead.
There \Vas no immediate official
conf.irmation of the reports received
'f hursday. The Czechoslovak clan·
destine radio in Prague last said
* * *
Russian Veto
Kills U.N. Call
F o~.Withdrawal
"ilMTED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -A Sovt-M~ today Id.lied an eight,natlon
resolution that asked the U.N. Security
Council to conden1n the Soviet-bloc oc·
cupation of Czechoslovakia and to call
lor ~ troops to withdraw.
The vote was 10-2 wilih 3 abstentions.
T he Soviet Union and Hungary voted
n<t. Algeria, India and Pakistan abs-
tained.
Soviet Ambassador Jacob A. Malik
vetoed the proposal at 3:28 a.m. after
he and Hungarian, Bulgarian and
Polish delegates had filjbw:;tered past
midnight to delay the voting,
U.S. Ambassador George \V. Ball
said the Soviet Union had just cast its
1051h veto. But he declared that it
could not "suffocate the soul of a
proud people" in Czechoslovakia.
Canadian Ambassador G e or g e
Ignatieff then introduced a new resolu·
tie n requesting Secretary-General U
Thant to "dispatch immediately to
Prague a special representative v.•ho
shall ~eek the release and ensure the
personal safety of the Czechoslovak
leaders under detention" and report
ba'Ck urgently.
V olnnteers Aid
Airport Oaiins
StarUng Mon~ay. a group of Ha rbor
Area volunteers will staff a permanent
office to help residents fill out damage
claims against big jet operations at
Orange County Airport.
Dan Emory, chairman of the
Airport Noise Abatement Committee.
said the <;ffice workers will answer
questions. explain how to file claims,
and Wrect a mail campaign against
what Emory calls "the big jet e.x·
pans.ion."
I le .fiaid he has-workers lined up
from Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and
Corona del Mar, headed by Mrs. Betty
Godfrey. to maintain an office at 488
F.. 17th St. I le said trlephone service
starting Mondav would be offered on
airport information at 642-4404 .
Dubcek was seized \Yednesday and
taken to an unknown destination.
A State Department source in
\Yashington said U.S. government
listening posts had apparently heard
the same ham broadcasts the others
reported but had no further details on
ii.
One of the an1ateurs who reported
!he broadcast was f'rank Melville, of
Elmsford. N.Y., a h::im operator ror
niore than 40 years. }le said he sent a
general call trying to make CQntact
with anyone in Europe.
In response he received several
replies, one of which ended v.·ith the
words,", .. was killed two hours ago."
11e s.ald he asked for a repeat and
received, "Ducek was killed two hours
ago ."
~lfelville said he then asked the
sender, who gave his call letters as
OKlAY ... \Vhat do you v.·ant me to do
wlth it?" and. the reply was, "Please
relay.'' !·le said the entire exchange
was Jn Morse code.
The Elm1Cord ham seid OK ls a
Czech prefix, but he said he had no
idea whether OKlAY was a valid
caltsign.
In Egmond, rNtltberlands. operator
\V. De Vries said he had Morse con·
tact with a Czechoslovak ham who
signaled twict;; '1Please rebroadcast to
distant sta,iJons that Dubcek has been
dead for one hour."
Vienna monitors indicated today
that Fr e e Czechoslovak R ad i o
reported the return to Czechos lovakia
of Mrs. Alexander Dubcek and t\\'O
sons of the So v i e t -in t e r n e d
Czechoslovak Communist party
leader .
~1rs. Dubcf:k and one so n were vaca-
tioning in Yugosl avi a when the Soviets
o .. ·erran Czechoslovakia. Another son
had been reported in l::gypl.
Earlier in the day Free Czech Radio
broadcast that ~1rs. Pavlina Dubcek,
mother of the party secretary, pleaded
\vith the Soviet con1n1ander i n
Bratislava for her son's rele3sc.
The co1nmander was said to ha ve
replied he was not interned, ''\Ve are
negotiating "'ith hlm ."
He added that Dubcek had broken
promises he made iat the Bratislava
neg9Uations earlier this month to the
Sovfet Union and the other invadjng
countries, the Czeoh broadcasts said.
Erosion Front
Quiet as Rocks
Replace Beach
It was m uch quieter along the
erosion front today.
Newport Beach lifeguards reported
a "reasonable" surf of three to four
feet and no high tide problem.
Barricades of tons of boulders
n1eanwhile protected \Vest Newport's
once-endangered ocean front ho1nes
fron1 401h lo 44lh streets. J\1 ore rocks
y,·ere being h<Juled in today by the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers,
Schmitz Leads 'Land of Free' Foes Lifeguards said I.he beach \~·ill he
clused in that area until further notice.
Surfing will be permitted, but the
surfers must stay in the water.
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of ftlf Dtltr P'll•I Sl•ft
With suite Sen. John Scbrnltz (R·
Tustin) leadlng the attacic, critics ol
I.be eig!Jttl grade U.S. h1SIX>rY texd>ook .
"Land of the Free.'' stormed the
County Board of Education Thursday.
The thr('e county school bOard mem·
beri; "ilo spoke indicated they are in
sympr.(hy with Uie protest.
TI1ey agreed to review the con·
troversial textbook and answer at
their next meeting Ule request that the
i;:tale·apprOved book bt removed from
the public schools.
,
Petitions asldng 11le book be junked
were received by 1lle boon! bearing
the signatures of an estimated 2,500
persono.
"Wlu.t are you going to do? They've
spent millions of dollars on this
already.'' school board member A. E.
"Pat" ArnokJ said in an asiOO after
the m~Ung.
''\Ve can do a Hit.It" scrcaminR."
answered board president C I o: y
M;tchell. or South Laguna.
Since the textbook i~ mandated by
the state. any st.and by the county
board would be onl.y o( ari adviaory
I I
narure to the State Board of Education
ind local 1cbool boards.
Scl:unitz, a member of the John
Birch Society, 1aid he was appearing
before ttie board n<>t as a legislator but
liS a part-time hlstory teacher, lie
read from the master's thesis he
\\rrote JO years ago on "Controversy
Over the Coll<!ciivist tnnuen1.:e in
Social Science Textbooks."
Schmitz said. "The great majorlly,
i.r oot all, of widely used text!> have a
collectivist bent. People don't l'CQliie
it. They've been swimming in this ~a
10 kJD& they don't know wbat lt's like
not to be wet.••
Dr. W..-ren Caioroll, a Schmitz staff
member with a PhD in history also
spoke. He cited what be believes to be
spectfic faults o! t.he textbook with
page rererences. llis references were
lo vilification or ind ustrialists. un·
critical praise !or the New Deal. and
condemnation ol Sen. J o s e p h
McCar\lty.
"The book shows no balt.tK:e or ob·
jcetivlty," Ile charged. "The author111
•re making flat M:atemen.ts. They have
(Ste REVIEW, race ZJ
.) ..
Elsewhere on the beachfront Th11rt·
day, ll!egu.ards rescued 16 swimmers,
the lowest rescue total of the week, All
of the 1aves were described as
routine.
This morning the weather was
wann, the surf moderate and beach
crowds increasing. "It looks like a
nice weekend coming up," sald a
lifeguard.
Slack /tlarkel•
NE\\o YORK f A'P J -Blue chips
strengthened late th is afternoon, giv·
ing the 1tock market a Jubstantial
gain in moder-ate tradin1. (See quot~
lions, Pases 8-9).
. '
'SOME PILOTS RENEGADES'
Ex-Mayor Paul J, Gruber
Ar1ny Doctors
"Encouraged'
By Ike's Gai11 •
\VASl-IINGTON (AP) -Army doc·
tO'l's reported today some "en-
couraging'' sig_ns in for mer President
Dwi ght D. Eisenhower's condition, but
said it is still critical and the question
of whether be will survive will remain
unpredictable for some lime.
The doctors. at \Va.Iler Reed Army
Hospital, g::i\•e this appraisol in a
formal medical bL:l lctin -v.·hich 1vas
later amplified in response to ques-
tions sub1nitted by reporter!.
The forn1a; bulletin said that
Eisenhower has shown less evidence
of heart JrritabiIHy -irregular and
rapid beDts -since Thursday night's
report and that '·while this in itself is
encouraging, the general's ov~ra.U con·
dition must still be considered
critical" and the outlook 11s to whether
or not he will survive this at·
tack ren1ains ·•guarded" -meaning
unpredictZJble and uncertain.
"\Vould the 'immediate critical
period' for the general's present type
of heart at1ack -ventricular fibritla-
tion - normally be expected to last
longer than the v.·eek's period you
have s<:.~d in past statements generally
constitutes the immediate critical
period fol\o\\'ing a myocardial in·
fraction ? Ir so, how much longer?"
''Cannot as yet be determined,'' was .
the doc-tors' answer.
··1s it likely or possible tl1at he 1vHI
be removed from the critical list
anytime soon?"
The ooswer was '·No.''
Ex-LA Architect
Faces Tax Charges
LOS ANGELES {UPI) - A onetime
Los Angeles architect. now living in
England, was indicted Thursday on
charges he failed to report more than
$900,000 in income between 1962 and
J ul~s Salkin, 51. who also operated a
loan com pany here, \V3s indicted by a
federal grand jury on three counts of
filing false income tax statements.
Oran~~~t
Weather
Break out the shnoe~ and t!~
sun I.an lolion, it's going lo be
one or thusc weekends. Like 80
degrees on the. coast and up lo
90 in the inland region);.
I NSIDE TODAY
Wi ll the United States boycott
t li e Olympic Games in Mexico
City because of the Ru1sian in-
vasion of Czechoslovakia? A top
U.S. Olvmpic ofji.cia!s admits Cht
possfbUit11 c%islJ. See Sports,
Poge 16. ...... .. °'"•-c-tr ' ca,11.,11i. ' lftt.1 "'"' 1).U (S.HltllNI .... '""' , .. u -" n ·-.. ~ .. •• (~•'""" .. 1"-..l11M n 0.all• Hl'fl<tl ' Wt llMf • '"'-""•• ·-• OleM WMM .. l'l~•IO(t •• WwN ·-M
l'i .. c..111 • .... _ ....... 1(.,. " .. rt ....... , " An~ L .... t,.. " Dl"ll•-• Mt!llM• • Df"•m• " M.1n1t .. Ll<f!I"" 1 (Slfrn• ....
Mffll~•· • Pvto 011M11 • M9~1t Ovitt .. . ........ ""' • ""'"''' (Su111ft • -·-• Nllll'fltl H1w1 •• ll:•t1•111111111 ...
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Friday, j ug111t 2', 1968
Floor f latf orm Fight?
Sq uabble May Delay Denwcratic Nomination
CHICAGO (AP) -The Democratic
party plallonn probably wlll be barn·
rnered tocether on the noor of the con·
ventlon itaeU by the more than 2.600
delegates -rather than by the 110.
member plaUorm commJttee.
This prospect -which could mean
delay next week in nomlnatlne
presid111tial and vice preatdelltial can.
didate1 -became more real today as
a determined minority of the plaUorm
comll\itt"ee insisted on what a
spokesman called the strongest possi·
ble plank for an early end to the Viet-
nam war.
The dispute over Vietnam. which
repeotedly i... -ll>Ouldered aaide 1ucb
I· ·~ .
C<lft<Wlll M aedol l1S11l1Uon to http
the poor and alleviate urban probletn1,
inspired two 1eparate plank-drlfUng
efforts.
One is by the official 21-men1ber
plaUorm draft l n g subcommittee,
wtuch met into the' night Thuraday and
resumes work~ today.
The other 11 by a croup of about 25
members of the plaUorm commlttee.
who claim the.Ir ranks include 11up·
porters of all or the major candidates
as well as uncommitted delegatelli ,all
bent on writing !pt:Ciflc instruction for
seeking a d1senragement of the United
Stat.I from Vietnam.
County Goofed
Burnett Got Barnett's Things
Charles A. Barnett figures be has a
pretty good claim agalmt the County
of Orange.
In a letter to county aupervi50Ts,
Bamett explained that he waa ar·
rested last June 15 and placed in tlle
county jail.
Shorlly tboreafter. Barnett 11)'11, he
was bailed out.
OD.b' trouble w11 Jailen released tbe
wrong man -fellow by U1e name of
Burnett, Barnett claims.
To top it off. Barnett 5ays, county
jailers turned over all of. his personal
belongings to this Burnett fellow arid
he wants them back.
If the countr can't find Mr. Burnett
and his misSJng belongings, Barnett
says he 'll .settle for $55.23.
Fron• Page 1
REVIEW ...
no right."
He said the book would indoctrinate
a student with hostµity for his own
country. "If textbooM err, it would be
better on the side of patrlolism instec:.d
of anti·Americanism." he said.
"Student s will run into an avalanche
of criticism later on in college.''
Board member Dr. Dale Rallison
said he has noticed tbe book contains
manr more pictures ot! Democratic
presidents than Republicans. "It goes
along with the slanting toward the bad
things in our society," he said. Then
he added that ht meant facetiously.
Mitchell said the text is not proper
mat.erial fOr "th0&e little mind.a." He
aald., "There'd be terrific uproar if we
chopped off each student& little finger
ln a medieal experiment Ulsing their
minds is much more important than
losing their little fi.nge:r!i."
Mi-ssion, Viejo
Girl Injured
In Mesa Crash
One girl 13 h"'!'ltallzed today after an Alphonse·and-Gaston type rear end
collision in which one driver tried to
give the other the right.of.way three
times, Costa Mesa police said.
Julie L. Brooks, 18 , o( 2560 Nesubia
Lane, Mission Viejo, is in satisfactory
co:lditlon at Hoag l\1emorial llospital
'i''ith a facial laceration and a head in·
jury.
Alfred N. Quiroz. 16, of 3214
Colm-ado Lane, driver of the car in
which 1b1 rode, was treated for a cu1
and released from the bospi.tal.
Polle. aid Gregory L. Keskey. 21,
of 306 Clbrillo St., made a right turn
from Estancia Drive onto eastbound
:\dams Avenue ThW'!day, ahead of
Quiroz' oncoming car.
"lie was bearing do\\'n pretty fast,''
Keskey told police.
So Keskey changed lanes. just as
Quiroz changed to avoid him. Keskey
changed back. So did Quiroz. Keskey
and Quiroz changed again and Quiroz'
car piled into the rear, poll ct: ae.id.
DAILY PILOT
Htwpeft hlcll, C.rffM1lc
OJIANC.l COAST PUILl5HINI) COMPANY
Rob11t N. Weed
,., .. ..,.,,, tnd .. utillM!tl'
He also remarked that several years
agD his daughter brought heme from
Laguna schools a proposed sup-
plementary textbook that had the
United Nations wlnning the war in U1e
Pacific and the United Nations cro&·
ing the English Channel on "D" Day.
'M ISLEA DING'
United nations was used in a general
sense, he said, but lt was capita•lized,
making it mlsleadillg.
That book was not adopted, hut he
said he is highly concerned about the
textbooks the scboo'b are using.
Controveny over "Land of the
Free" erupted two years ago end
some revisions were made in the book
before it went into use 5tarting la5t
[all.
Although school districts in the
county are required to stock the state·
supplied text for their eighth grades,
the degree to which the text is actively
used v&rles. Teachers are free to use
supplementary texts in their classes. ,,
From Page 1
CRASH •.•
!ta top.
The police officer 1ald Epperley's
auto and a car in the neighboring lane
went bump. Neither driver saw the
other. The other car was drlven by
Michael L. Peterson, 19 of 241 1 16th
St.. Newport Beach. rte too was
distracted by electric sparking.
Before their sideswipe collision al
about eight minutes after midnight,
said Faulk, Beebe lost control of his
car. It sheared the big pole at the
ground and flattened an Irvine Cove
sign.
Pershing to Wed
Brother's Fiancee
NEW YORK !UPI) -John W.
Pershing, 27·year-old grandson of the
famed \Yorld \Var I general, will be
married next March to the fiancee cf
his ycunger brother, killed Jn the Viel·
nam war.
The bride·lo·be is Shirley Hildreth
Gay, 2J.year~ld daughter of Mr. and
J\1.rs. Philip D. Gay of Water Mill, N.Y.
She \\.'as formerly engaged to Lt.
Richard Pershing, 25, who died Feb.
17 of w0\Uld5 suffered. \\.'hile leading his
troops In a search for a man missin g
from his airborne unit.
Al ftw 11 II IMlllbon of tlll pie\.
form committee by slcnlna a minority
report can force a floor debate and a
vote between alteraate ,.platform pro.
visions.
The d e e p division Jn the platform
committee was dramatized Thurlday
by Its reaction to an emotion-chareed
speech by Gov. John CoonaJJy Of Tex~ ...
Connally sald such proposals as a
bombing halt. a suspension of ag.
gressive combat action by U.S forces
and a coalition government In South
Vietnam would threaten a complete
takeover by North Vietnam and its
allies.
Judge Delays
Smith Hearing
On Forgery Rap
A preliminary examination o f
forgery charges against Frazer Smith,
former building fund chairman for the
Laguna.Moulton Playhouse, today was
continued until Sept. 6 in Laguna
Beach Municipal Court.
The distinguished looking New
Englander shook his head and said ,
''No. sir." when asked by Judge
Richard Hamilton If he wished the
court to consider a lower bail
SmiU1. suspected of for c i n c:
Playhouse checks worth $9,475, was
picked up in New York last week on a
traffic violation. He was brought back
to Laguna Beach by Detective
Sergeant Vic Sagan after he agreed to
waive extradition. lie is jailed in lieu or 110.000 ball.
Three counts filed by the district al·
torney charge that Smith cashed forg·
ed checks totalling $I,950.
The gray haired defendant entered
the court this morning clad in blue
dungarees and a gray, short sleeve
sweat&hirt stamped, u0range County
Main Jail."
After Smith conferred with the
public defender for about ~ minutes,
the court was asked to grant a con·
tinuance until Sept. 6. Permission was
granted, and Smith was returned to
the Orange County Jail.
From Page,,).
GRUBER .••
leagues to pu s • tciugh, anti-ex-
pansionist resolution against Orange
County Alrport, prom1aed that be In·
tends to "fight this right down to the
ground with the supervisors.
"They a-greed a long time ago this
wcmld be a feeder-type airport and
they've turned it into a major airport
operation."
Gruber again had harsh criticism
for Air Calliorni:a, the airline which
led the way 1n establishing large·scale
conunErcial operations out Of the
county lacili!y.
''They CUM to the city of Newport
Beach and requested us to a:o along
, with tbem for fllgltt. to San Francllco
with Elodr&1. 'lboy Mid tlJe E1""tra<
c-an be bandied in • manner that's
quiet and won't disturb yo u r
nel-rhood.
"We went along witJ:i this. But then
t!hey c-ame and put Ule DC9's (twc·
en~ne jets) in.
'"!heir Electras still don 't bother us,
but these P.CO's, ~ ... they're regular
tigers."
Drug Raid Nets 11
· TORRANCE (UPI) -A Torrance
ccuple and nine other persons found in
their home when police raided it were
in custody today on narcotics charges.
Marijuana. ha1hlsh and dana:erous
drugs were confiscated, in addition to
guns, toot. and auto pam.
Jt,\ It Cu,lt'f
Viet l'mldfnl tnd Gt1*'1I Mtlltltf'
Tho'""' 'K1tvil E'111lr Sisters Reunited
1fte111tt A. Murpldd
,,..llttlnt Eclttar
Joro111• '· CeUl11• Ptul Nl11011 ,.._.. ·~ .-,1Ntrt111,.. Cttr Editor Cl,_. ---2 211 W11t ltlM• l ewlov11I
M1lll11t Addro11: P.O. le1t 1171 tl66J
Othff OffkM
c .. tt M ... : DI wm ,.., s~
u..,,.. ... ~: m '"°'"' ·~"'" H1.t11ll,..,... llMll; at atb tlntt
,
I •, •
Meet in Westminster After 47 Years
By SANDI MAJOR
Of t111 D1LIY Plltt llt ff
i\lrs. Annie ~Ioss sl!ared al Old Gl<>ry
and counted .
"Thirteen &tripes, 50 st.ar1 • , ,
huh?" she mwnbled in liurprille.
"l thought there Wf'!'e 48 it.at.ea,"
1be questlooed , mi laulhed thlt Ille
hid ml111ed hearing about t1J1 two
DOW·not·io-new addltlon1.
Tllll 11 tlJe flrot trlp au\ of t!l-
BriUsh Isle• for lltn. rtfoss, Who Is
btrl to'" her &Isler, Mr1. Mary Btn·
nett ol Westmtruttr. They haven't
1M1n taoh other in 47 y1ar1.
The sister• MVeT lo1t contact wiUi
each other through tbe yea.rs. evtn
though Mrs. Moa1 wa sonly J4 years
old "-'hm htr older sister Jett home tD
nay with her a:r.andmother, >n'ho b&d
moved to Cleveland, Ot\lo.
Mr1. Bennett. a Huntlnct-on Beach
reo!dent 4i y .... , before movin1 l11t
year to 7771 12th St., W11Jmln.Wr,
was v.idowt'd lMt )'Mt. Her bUl!:mld
had been a sdlool bus driver for
Ocean View School District 2S year1.
J\>trs. Bennett, now an American
citizen, doesn 't want to go back to
England~ even though she still calls
her1el! a Briton . lier sister, however,
cares nothing abo\Jt ataying in
America.
"\Ye'U take your weat.her, though,"
quipped her husband. John.
The i\1osses arrived' by Jtt TtMsday
and wllJ tour Calli•-unfit Sept. 17.
ThtY have 10 far plant1ed ma.inly to
&11 Dl1neylaod. ''We hear 10 much
about it at home.," Mra . Moss 11ld ex·
cltedly. "I h&VI to see It."
Their first nlrllt in Amerio brou&ht
ne~·s of the invasion Of Prague. They
were asked that night II they weren't
glad to be here instead of Europe.
Spoken as Win~ton Churchill would
have appreciattd. they came 'Dick
with ''If anythio& Dappen1, we want to
be tt home.
"lt'a rtlht ill our baclcyard. you
know"
,_
. -• -. -. . .
OAILY PJL.OT SllH Pltfl•
Making Room For More Books
fl1rs. F1orence Barnes (left) and Mrs. Felicia Young, librarians at
Corona del Mar b ranch, shift volumes to make way for $50,000 ex·
pansion project. Library on Marigold ~venue will be doubled in si~e
and interior will be completely re-.arranged. It is closed now, but will
re-open Sept. 3. Patrons can use Balboa and Mariners Libraries un-
til then.
Burke Against Huntington
As Site for New Airport
Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R·
Huntington Beach) doesn't 1hlnk a
county regional airport should be
located 1n Huntington Beach.
Burke today objected to con-
sideration of a Bolsa Chlca site east ot
Warner Avenue on Goast Highway. It
Is one of five suggested ias alternate
locations by the Willlam Pereira's pr~
posed master plan for county au
transportation.
The Jegislatcir said Ule Pereira
"t'e}fOrt ~·siio'ws a ·lot of bias!' He ex-
pWhed it seems t.o pla:ce greater
emphasis on the Bolsa Chica site than
on otbers.
·"I look at the San JoaqUin Hills loca·
tlon as the most desirable," said
Burke. This site Is about midway
between Corona de! Mar and Laguna
Beach near tbe coastline.
Burke added that \Vllliam Mott,
state director of packs and beaches,
agrees with him on keeping aircraft
out or the Bolsa Chica state beach
park area. "He didn't just gay no
about ffving up the beach to an airport~ ' saJd Burke. "He said 'Hell •
DD'."
. ---
5 to Wat ch
Connt y Vote
)
Tab Setup _
An Initial gr.up of five Orang• Coun·
ty leaders has been named by County
Cieri William St John to serve on a
task fori:e to .cbeck 200 vote counting
machines in the Nov. ! general elec·
lion. St John sought and got permission of
the. supervta.or• to use the 200 Prln·
tomaUc model voting machines of·
fei:e<i without cost or obligation to the
county by the Au\qma.tic Voting
Machine Co. ,
Name.d ,as a nucJew: Of .the task
fofce are Davld James, Republican
Oentral Committee chairman; John
Dean, Democratic Central Ccmmlttee
chairman: Cecil Marks, r e t i r e d
Orange County farm bun au leader;
J oseph Irvine, public affairs represen·
tative for Pacific Telephone and
William Lindsay, county gove.rnmental
.affain committee chairman, Orange
County Chamber of Commerce.
In getting pejrmission to try the
voting ntachines St John told the
supervisors the county's present
Coleman Vote Counting System is
overburdened beyond Its capability to
produce final results within a
reasooable time.
"There ls danger of machine failure
with long sustained operations and
there is al!o the problem of extreme
personnel fatigue during long working
periods over 30 hours," St John sald.
Try out of the Prlntomat.ic machines
in Novtmber is only the first of
several systelTl& St John Ms proposed
for evaluation, The Datavote punch
card system will be tried in the 69th
-Assembly District in the June, 1970
primary eleetion.
Also slated for test Is the IBM
Votomatlc System in the 1970 general
election.
The task farce will be asked to
assist In evaluating the present
operating systems and the nevi
systems in both Orange County and
surrounding counties. They will be
asked to make reeommendatioos to
tbe Board of Supervisors.
Funeral Services Set
For Helen Gibb, 92
Private funeral services wlll be held
for Helen Gibb, a 14·year resident of
Newport Beach who died Thursday
after a long Illness. She was 92.
Mn. Gibb, of 427 Irvine Ave ., a
native of Scotland, Is survived by a
daughter, Margaret S. MacOaul,
Newport Beach. The family sugge5t1
contributions to a favorite charity.
LAST WEEK OF WAREHOUSE SALE!
I NEWPORT STORE ONL y I
DRAPERY & UPHOLSTERY FABRIC 50 % -7~% OFF
QUALI TY FURNITURE AT FANTASTIC SAYINGS
CHMH, Re<J . 9S . .
,JUI I, R99. 375 :
$Ml ."
SAUJll
LAST WEIK FOR SALi PIRIOD ON1
HENREDON FONTAINE
HENREDON UPH . 15°/0 OFF
DREXE L ES PER ANTO
DREXEL CO UNTRY MANNER
EXCLUS IVE DEALERS FOR' HENREDON -DR!XEL-HUITAGE
90 DAYS NO INTEREST -LONGER TERMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CUDIT.
N IWl'O~T llACH
1727 WMtcliff Dr. 642·2010
OPI N Pltl.AY "TIL t
INTERIORS
Profttitional Interior o •• ,,.,.,.
Av11lablo-AID-NSID
LAGUNA H ACH
341 North Coal! Hwy, 4'4-4111
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Group Offers
o·ouble Gala
In addition to enjoying the 11one only'' performance of the "Ballet
Alfresco" on Saturday evening, Aug. 31, members of the Laguna Beach
Civic BaUet Com pany and the public will be able to dine a t their leisure
at the Terrace restaurant in Irvine Bowl.
Following the 6:30 champagne supper the curtains will raise at 8:30
for the performance in the adjacent bowl.
Dinner invitations have been mailed to the 200 membership, and
the public is invited to the double gala. Advance reservations for the sup-
per may be secured by calling the ballet center at 494-7271. Tickets are $6
per person.
Co-chairing the supper committee and ticket selling have been Mrs.
Lloyd Bacon and Mrs. Basil Gannon, both members of the board of di.rec·
tors for the ballet company.
The third annual· dance program "Ballet Alfresco'' has been sched·
uled to follow the Pageant of the Masters. Members of the bal1et company
will present three popular items geared to appeal to every age group.
The company has been named a national honor company by the
National Association for Regional Ballet -the only group in Southern
California to receive this recognition.
The ballet company is supported by membership contributions and
grants from the city of Laguna Beach, the.Festlival of Arts and ~e National
Foundation for the Arts and Humanities.
DOING SOMETHING WORTHWHILE
Mr .. Ed Hubb•rd •ncl Robyn Gl•n
..
SLIPPERS UNDER GLASS? -It appears that ballet slippers are
about to be served for someone's dining pleasure by the Mmes.
Douglas Reeve, Lloyd Bacon and Basil Gannon (left to right). But
this is not the case, they laughingly admit. The slippers are to
Time on Your Hancls?
• .
remind the public and membership of the Laguna Beach Civic
Ballet Company of the Aug. 31 performance of "Ballet Alfresco''
and the preceding 6:30 p.m. champagne supper. The Terrace
restaurant in Irvine Bowl will be the dinner setting.
-~,Young Mother Offers Own Solution
By JUDY HURST
Of th O.llY ~1111 Sl11f ,.
' Mrs. Ed' Hubbard was a newcomer to Balboa Island and an
expectant mother. But she pitched in and worked at the Volunteer
Bureau every day until the day before her daughter was born.
1'J was used to working and as a new resident I wanted to
meet peop1e. I wanted to do so mething worthwhile," Suzanne
Hubbard began. She shook her blonde hair for emphasis.
That was 1ast January when Suzanne and her husband, a
teacher at Corona del Mar High School moved into his island
home. Previously, she bad been a French teacher in Juno, Alaska,
where she met her vacatioRing husband·~be.
"The apartment is so sma11 and not hard to keep up . 1 was
several months pregnant and couldn't work. I didn 't know bow to
cook, but I couldn't clean house and cook all day.
DO SOMETHING
·"After two weeks I knew 1 had to do something," she said,
vividly remembering her plight.
0 In the yellow pages I looked up the Volunteer Bureau 's num·
ber. I thought I could tutor or work with the blind. I remembered
I called on a Wednesday in February and Mrs. Arkush {the direc·
tor) was marvelous.
110n Friday I went in," she continued. "and worked every
day until May 7. On May 8 Robyn Glen was born ."
Sitting back comfortably with her baby on her lap, she r e-
flected, "At first you have to make a place for yourself in the
bureau. I got interested in the Well Baby Clinic.
LACK VOLUNTEERS
"The main job of the bureau is to find people to fill jobs. We
get so bogged down with paper work that the main job is not being
done. We have requests which are not being filled . I often called
from 9 a .m. to noon for helpers and would reach only one person
who would help!"
She wondered why people could not give one morning or after-
noon a month to type , address envelopes or drive. "The more you
put into a job, the more you will get out of it." she philosophized.
"At the bureau you make the wor:. what you "'ant and, believe
me, it is a real challenge."
Suzanne represents the young mother or career woman who
can accomplish volunteer activities at home.
"I sti!J go into the bureau to show off our baby and help stall
the office. But us ually I work at home. I would like to go around to
clubs and teU people about th e bureau and its work. In rt.he fall I
may be doing the group's publicity and I would really like to sub-
stitute teach one day a week," she thought.
The women who work at the bureau really took to Mrs. Hub-
bard. They even surpMsed her with a baby shower. 1'We often get
together for lunch. And they are such wonderful £Mends!"
Why is the volunteer bureau needed in these changing times?
"Most organizations (hospitals, convalescent homes and schools)
don 't have volunteer bureaus within their midst to promote their
group. And they don't recruit members," she pointed out.
FULFILLMENT
Automat:oion is another factor. It gives people more leisure
time. People need contact with other people ; they are not fulfilled
and happy by spending their days punching buttons on machines.
It io the bureau's intention to find opportunities for people to
use their leisure hours in a more meaningful way.
Some people have full and Mch lives and don't have time to
offer their services. But not every one is like this, according to
Suzanne.
This attractive young mother iS not one to shun work.
As a teenager in high school she already was helping others.
"It was really nothing," she laughed and smoothed out her paisley
print dress. 1'I spoke before clubs for the Community €hest.1'·
HELPING OTHERS
Then for two summers while she was in college she and an-
other girl were day camp directors for a girls' club. 11We taught
arts and crafts, swimming, modeling and beauty courses.''
She studied histo"ry during her junior year at a university in
Southern France, then graduated from Georgia State in AUanta.
After teaching for a year she went to the University of Sorbonne
in Paris to receive her graduate degree.
Although she presently is not teaching in school Suzanne is
attempting to teach others it is better to give than receive.
Lessons begin daily at the Volunteer Bureau.
Reader Advocates Problem Being So~ve.d in a Family Way
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Recently a
woman who was unable to get preg·
nant wrote to ask il you thought it
would be wrong if her husband 's
brother substituted for him because he
. had rathered four children in six yea.rs
and could surely help her out. You told
her It would not be right to borrow her
brother-in-law for stud purposes and
that she should contact s.ome adoption
agencies.
I thought you might like to know
how a similar case actually turned
out. You might rc..vise your adv ice.
My hu sband and I wanted a child
very badly. \Ve had been married
eight years and I could not get preg·
nant. We were both examined and
tested. The tests indicated that we
.\
ANN LANDERS
were both·GK phystcally. The doctors
concluded that since there wu no or·
ganic reason for my inability to
conceive, it must be emotional.
To take our minds o ~f the problf'm
we went to visi t my sis:cr in C lifornia
who was pregnant with her firth child.
Sls and her hu sband Ej kidJ<'d us
about not really wantl ng a family -
not realiz.ing we were both sen~itive
about it. The k.iddjng went too far and
my siste'r accused me of takin& the pill
•
'
secreUy. We ended up in a fierce argu-
ment
The next morning Sis came over
and apol ogiz.ed. She said she and her
husband had talked it over and decid·
eel if I re;illy wanted a child Ed would
help me out. r accepted their offe r.
After a three-week sta y we returned
to the East. t learned shortly after
that' that I was pregnant. I do not
know lf Ed is the father or 11 the child
belongs to my husband. Furthermore.
J don 't care.
Now. rour years later. we have three
children and are a very happy family.
When I saw my sis and Ed last year
not a word was said. The secret is
between the three of us and it wiU re·
main that way. Sign me -GLAD [
DID
DEAR GLAD : And people keep
askln.~ me If I make up le tters. Why
would I have to make up letters wben
I gel fantastlt mall Uke this?
DEA R ANN LA NDER$: Please
don't thi nk I am a crabby old woman .
I'm a newl y married girl with a pro-
blem that is driving me nuts.
We have a small but lovely a.pert·
ment and wt adore it. There is a back
' . ,\
porch which runs the length of four
apartments. We are in the middle. Our
dinette windows fa ce the back porch.
The neighbor who lives on the end
has strung a laundry line the full
length of the parch. She must wash
every day because those Un~s are
never without clothes on them. Not on-
ly is :t embarrassing when we have
company but the clo'tltes throw grotes·
que shadows on our walls and ceiling
and It scares me to death when I am
a!one.
This neighbor has a right to string
I.he line as we were told wh en we mov·
ed ln that the porch belonged to all of
us. ls this worth talking to the
landlord about? I hate to start trouble.
-QUANDARY OVER LAUNDRY
DEAR QUANDARY• Atk t b •
/
landlord If he wtll furnish a VeneUu
blind tor the dinette wlndow1. U he
1ay1 no, )luy one yo unelf. I& wl1I be
well worlh the inveslmen&.
What awaits you on the other aide of
the marriage veil? How can you be
sure your marriage will wortf Rud
Ann Landers' booklet 11Marriage -
What to Expect." Send your requtft
to Ann Landers in care of thi1 news·
paper. enclosing 50 cents in. coin and
a long. stamped. self-addressed eD.·
veJope.
Ann Landers will be glad to help you
with your problems. Seod them to ber
In care of the DAILY PILOT, enclos-
ing a 1elf-addressed1 st.amped •
velope.
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•
• . , . • •
PROGRAMS GALORE -Mermaids, the Women's
Division ol. the Chamber o! Commeree in Laguna
Beach, are busy scheduling the agenda for the fol-
lowing year. The women will gather next Monday
at noon in Hotel Laguna for a luncheon and pro-
Mermaids Set Sights
On Numerous Activities
A third season of ae·
tivities w;u begin next Mon-
day when the Women's
Division of the Lagune
Beach Chamber of Com-
merce gathers for lunch.
A noon get together in the
Motel Laguna is scheduled.
htrs. Robert Turner, presi·
dent of the group, which is
nicknamed MermaidrS, in -
vites members, wi~ of
cha'tlrt>er membet'6 and in-
'erested women to attend.
Discussed during t h e
n1eeting ~·ill be the slate of
officer s. adoption of by-laws
a nd other organitational
matters.
Mrs. Leon A "e I r od .
chairman of the upcoming
new teachers luncheon. will
reveal plans for this event.
• Mrs. Peter D. Fulmer.
vice president and luncheo
arrangements chairman, i
taking reservations o8't 4!l '
1018 and 494-7575.
AmOng the Mermaid's at
tiv:i.ties for the year are th.
Laguna Beautiful Contest.
annual a.wards luncheon.
master calendar, Book Fair
and Winter Festival Flea
Market.
Toastmistresses
Surfside Clubhouse i n
H'l.lntington Beach ~ the
meeting place for members
of Las Olas Toostmistress
Club of Huntington Beach on
the second and r o u r t h
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Episcopal Ceremony
. . .. . ..... -. . . . .... .
gram. Mrs. Doris Lindsay, Chamber cd Commerce
secretary (seated) admires the Mermaid mascot
with the Mmes. Peter D. Fulmer, Mermaids vice
president; Robert Joyce, publicity coordinator, and
Robert Turner, president (left to right).
Harborite Weds
In Church Rite
Bouquets ol w h i t e
chryNDthemums, dahlias,
baby'• breath and fern
d!CO(llted St. A n d r e w ' s
Pre1b)'t.erian Oiurcb where
Deborah Lynne Howard
became the bride of Stephen
Earle Lewis,
The Rev. Dr. Charles H.
Dlerdield solemnlze<l the
double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Howard of Santa An a .
Parenti of the bridegroom
are Mr. and Mrs. Frank E.
Lewii of Newport Beach.
Eecorted to the altar by
her father, the bride wore a
white organza gown with
pearl beading on t h e
neckline and cuffs. Her il·
lusion veil was held by a
wtti.te organza rose with
. beaded pearl leaves. Her
flowers were white rosebuds
and baby''I breath.
Mia1 Dianne D.avis of
Tus.tin was asked to be maid
of hon«. She and the
bridesmaids wore lo n g
green silk sleeveless gowns
with white leghorn hats with
green bands and bo'ws. Thev
carried baskets of spring
flowers.
Bridesmaids were Miss
Linda Tatum, Miss Jill
Worlund, Mrs. S t e p h e n
Rillera, all of Tustin and
Mrs. Thomas Chadick of
Costa Mesa.
Miss Meagan O'Sullivan of
Tustin was flower girl,
wearing a Jone green dress
embroidered with dal1ie1
and · carrying baskets of
flowers.
Robert M. Lewis of
Newport Beaclt was asked
to be best man. Usher1 "'ere
Mike Wertman of Sa n
Diego, Ted Foyts o C
Newport Beach, Jack Moses
of t.os Ane:eles and Dean
Howard, the bride's brother,
from Tustin.
A reception in Irvine
eo..t Country Club todk
place after the ceremony.
More than .250 guests
circulated among decora-
tions of white chrysan-
themums, yellow r o s e 11 ,
y e 11 c w chrysanthemums,
daisies and fern.
A-ssisting were M r 11 .
William Wilson and Mrs.
· Dall!: Wilson 'Of Los Angeles,
both cousin! of t h e
bridegroom, and M i s s
Christine J o h n s o n of
Newport Beac h. Special
guests were Mrs. Frank M.
Taylor of Pomona, the
bridegroom's grandmother ; MRS. STEPHEN EARLE LEWIS
Mn;. G. L. Howard of Hawaiian Honeymoon
Waloot Creek and Mrs. -------------'---------
Construction Women
Fashions Pla.y It Safe
Edith Buck of Tuble Rock,
both grandmothers of the
bride, and Mrs. Florence
Heilbron, of Fresno, ttie
bride's great-aunt.
The bride is a gr3duate of
Tustin High School and al·
tended California State Col·
lege at Long Beach. Her
husband is a graduate of.
Newport Harbor H i g h
School iand the University nf
Southern Oahfornia. He
received a master's degree
in business administration
and affiliated wirt:h Sigma
Chi fTaternity .
Building New Board
Mrs. Donald Ames will be
installed p res l de n t of
Orange County Chapter 91.
Na tional Association o f
Women i n Construction
Tuesday, Aug. 'Zl.
Marjorie Weil, all directors.
By SHEILA WAI.SH
ROME (UPI) -Rome's
high fashion designers are
playing it safe in their new
rail and winter collections.
. 'l'o radical departures in
hemline, no massive swing
toward pants suits. Skirts
remained generally above
I.he knees and once in a
while a maxi-length coat
would appear, but only as a
"trial balloon," not a
general trend.
These were some of the
highlights of the couture col-
lections shawn last month to
an international set of
buyers and press.
In shape. the A-llne was a
favorite. Waists were noted
and usually belted. Most of
the frills and flutter were
for evening c lot!hes.
Su bdued color6· dominated
the fabric scene. Valentino,
considered among the top of
Italy's pace setlf.ers and a
favorite with Mrs. John F.
Kennedy, presented a choice
of colors for day clothes -
white , gray, brown, black or
bottle green.
But his ediot was : ooe col-
or at a time, please. Say
brown. Then make It a.
brown look from head to
toe.
For evening, Valentino
was a bit more lenient with
color, but throughout the
coUection, he show e d
preference for bl.ack or
white.
After a wedding trip to the
Hawaiian Isiands th e
newlyweds will reside in Los
Angeles.
The 8 p.m. dinner in the
Caspian restaurant in Costa
Mesa will be preceded by 7
p.m. cockt•ai\s. Mrs.
Dorothy 0 ' Co n no r , im-
mediate past president of
the National Association of
Women in Construction and
a member of the Los
Angeles chapter will be the
inst.ailing officer .
Also to be installed are
Mrs. Donald Ame~ and
Mrs. Kathryn Clay will at·
tend the group 's national
convention to be held in
Washington, D. C. Sept. 20
and 21.
\Vomen who •rt
associated with the con-
struction industry a n d
guests of chapter members
are invited to the in·
stallation. Reservations can
be made by calling Mrs.
Carroll Boles, 548-5671, Mrs.
Ann West. 528-7445 or Mrs.
Patterson at 642-1511.
the Mmes. Richard Snider .. ===========,
vice president; Catharine
Patterson, recor ding
secretary; Carl K o r t e n ,
treasurer; Jeanne Nelson,
c o rresponding secretary,
and William Adams, John
QUICK
Cttch up qulc•ly on Ioctl
ovenh. Rotd your comptct,
compr•h•ntivo homotown odi-
tion of tho DAILY PILOT.
Bryson, Fred Tiffany and __ _ _ __
BOYS' BBOGV&S
~..,.,... ...... ~
Patsy Noroian Marries Authentic Wing Tip Styling Miko This 1 S~o•
Any Boy Would Bo Proud To w .. r!
11oneymoonlng in Hawaii
are Mr. and Mrs. John
Rich'Ai.ne who were married
in St. W.ichae\ and AU
Angels Episcopal Church,
Costa Mesa.
The Rev. Edward Allen
performed the double rfng
ceremony. The bride, the
former Patsy Marie
Noroian, ir; the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Nish Noroian
of Costa Mesa. T he
bridegroom is the son of
Mrs . Ruth Ellen Richwine of
Balboa Jsland.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bri'de "·ore a fit·
ted floor-length gown with a
scooped neckline and elbow
length s leeve s. The
candlelight satin g o w n
featured alencon lace ac-
cents and a long r;atin train.
MltS. JOHN RICHWIN E
Doul>lo 11.1111 Rlto
Her elbow-length veil was
held by a cluster of lace and
pearl flowers. She carried a
cascading b o u q u e t of
phalaenopsis orchids, lilies·
of-the -v alley and
stephanotis. Vacationers in Canada
Mrs. David Noroian of ./
Blythe served her sister-in·
\aw as matron of hooor Mr. an4 Mrs. Lou Grayson of Costa Mesa were visitors to the Chateau Lake
while W..iss Rachel Seale of Louise in Alberta province of the Canadian Rockies. Among attractions. view~
Blythe was maid of ho.nor. ed in the background was the Victoria Glacier. '
Bridesmaid was Mfs-s Jane -;;;;;;:;::<ijii;::;:;<j~;;;~;;;;:;;ij~;;:;;ji;;;:;;;v;;::iiji;;;::ijii;;;:;;;iji;:;:~jii;:;;; Krosse of Newport Beach. I
Attendants were identically
gowned in rloor length deep
pink silk £rocks styled ~ith
Jong sleeves, V-necklines
and alencon lace ruffles at
th e neckline and wrists.
They carried nooegay bou-
quets of pink sweetheart
rosebuds, miniature p i n k
carnations and lilies-of-the·
nile.
Stuart Maple of Corona
de! Mar ""as the best man.
while ushering guests to
their places were Phillip -,
Maurer of Corona del Mar,
J im Splittgerber of Irvine,
Mark Miller of Newport
Beach &nd David Noroian of
Blythe, the bride's brother.
Mrs. Edward Allen was
organi-s t and Norman Major
was trumpeter in the church
decorated with candelabra
and large arrangernents of
White gladioli. stock and
chrysanthe1num.s accented
by pink carnations.
The reception took place
in the Empire Room at the
Ne111>0rter Inn. S i 1 v er
candelabra decorated the
cake table iand ho r s
d'oeuvres table as did bou-
qucU of white gladioli,
stock, chrysanthemums..and
pink camation.s. More than
300 relatives and friends
gathered at the champagne
reception. Mrs. Terry Lance
circulated the guest book.
The newlyweds, both
(!:raduate:§ of C<lrona del
Mar High School. "ill reside
tn Costa Mesa where the
bride attends Orange Coast
College. Her husband, who
It's time to do it again
at
•••
ENTIRE SUMMER STOCK
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SALE STARTS
:}A TURD A Y •AUG. 24•10 am
33 Fashion Island , Newport Center
e Lido Isle
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Where Shopping
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I
' \
. -. . -·
•
frldiy, Au911st 23, 1%8
:!Sew Boats Outshone as Spectator Looks Od
81 RDS OF A FEATHER -Three former world
champion star sailors are finding the competiition a
ljl&IA rough In the Olympic 5.5 meter class as they ··~an Olympic bertll .. Bi!I Ficker of NHYC, sail·
Weleome Alloard
Here's Some
Smart Advice
BY ALMON LOCKABEY
Paul H. Smert, chairman
of the U.S. Olympic
Y:achting OOmmittee , has
some very d~ed opiniof'llS
r on tihe classes of sailboaU
that should be included in
the Olympic yachting
game&.
And the 77-year-old dean
of the International Star
Class is not reluctant to ex-
pre!s his opinions on · tome
of the things going on in the
, lnternatioPal Yooht Racing
• Union.
"Why not." gr.ins the salty
sailor. ·~1'm used to opening
my moo.th and Putting my
.. foot in it." .. Smart takes partlclrlar ex-
ception to the IYRU's an-
nounced plan t'() rep!ace t.he
present Star and Dragon
classes in the 1972 Olympics
with tyo new designs -the
two-man Tempest and the
three-man Soling. Smart is
equally emJfla,tit in his opi-
nion that if any of the
present cluses are going to
be eliminated from the
.. Olympie& it !ho.ild be the 5.5
meter ckllls which bas been
w..a.tomng d.Jigently ln the
trials here at Newport.
FASTEST BOAT
"Beside,, being a Men
man's boat. tJhe 5.5 .&.t!i •
development class does not
put enough emphasis on the
skill of the slcipper and
crew. The m·an wjth the
fa.st.est boat is going to win,"
sa.~ Smart.
• "A.nd that's not the
., ¢>ilosophy of the Olyrn· J*is," he cootinued. "otym·
pi< medllls should go to the
most competent skipper and
crew, not to the fiastest boat.
otherwi5e, Vlby Mt aw'8rd a
gold med.al to the desip!ef
al the winning boat?"
< As to the expense of the
5.5, Smart says he has it on
god authority ~ at _ least
•.-· one ol lhe: boats in the trials
·~ .. hiM a price Dg of over
• i $50.000.
''How oan !tie llO-Cal.led
under<iewloped natiMS af. roro to desi(lll, oank ,.,t and
blJild IQ:h a craft -unless
they torm a syn<tiicat.e?"
Book's Title
: No t So Brief ..
'< NEW YORK IUP!l -A
book -Jn theJ&tll ce.D·
tury by Padre Bartolome de
Lu C.U to protest tM
lllllng ol -in IAllin • America by SporHb col·
• on1lll ....... of the toopot
titles wer fer a book, 1Ry1
.., Dr. Jordan M. YOW)(, 'Pace
Oolle.. professor of Lain
"' Amer1can Allain:.
The title: "A Very Brief
; Dewiption of the DeW'uc·
• tJon of the Indians. Being a
True Account of Cruel
'*iVilF•{flS and Slauchttr1
.Of'I'Woaty MiHioo 1'9<Jplo."
Smart wants to know.
'.l1he 5.5, -poinl& oul,
is a "development" class,
meaning that they do not ell
have 19 be ex.aictly aiikoe so
long as they come out iii
conformity wi1h the in·
temational rule. This gives
designers a wide lattitude in
ingenuity in developing ttle
~a.;tes-t possible boat.
"I have notftlng agiainst
develepmen.t clasMs." """
Smarl. "l just don't tmiic
they have a place in the
Olympics. But j,f we have to
have them, ..wty not a
smaller boat tha.t is not so
expemriW?''
Bl'ITER
It· s understanda'ble that
Smart Ui more Ulan a lttUe
bitter about Ile proposal to
ellntinate the Star h'om the
Olympic clasees. He has
been e champimship Stiar
aail.or met: youth iaOO for
many ;years ee?Vtd as head
d tfle. U.S. class Associ&·
t.\oo.
Smart argues that the
St.ar i-S the most widespread
boat in Ute world -With the
exception of tbe Snipe -
and that it has a strong in-
ternational .a:Mociation.
'nhe Dragon is lidmittedly
the slawe&t. boat in ttie
Olympi'c classes, bot Smart
c.ontends that this should not
be ·a factor i'tO long as all of
the boats are es alike as
1iley can be. He furtber
pOints oot that the Dragong
also have 11 strong in-
ternatiooal organ~ and
usually attract the largest
participation In Olympic
yachting.
'TOO NEW'
Smart hastens to vow that
he has nothing again.st
eittier the Tempest o r
Solent. "It's just that they
an! toO new and do not have
-an adequate balekground or
organwattm."
&o11ll the Tempesi and h
Solent.: 'ftl'e designed within
the past few years in a
design contMt sponsored by
the IYRU .tio,cune up with a
pair d high performance
boots for ttle Olympics.
Tempest is ~ the IUlle
siu aa a Star but featmes a
trapeze for the crew to help
keep tbe boM. on an evtn
keel. ·
··'n'lapeze.s .are tor ~
reri>oard -llldl u the
Fl)Ug ~-(~er
Ob'mlJlc c l • I • ) • No
<ffwtmll lbouJd be t.w9'11«
from h maltbead (I) •
good ktt I boat, II . I • y •
Smart.
Smart ldmiU that his ii a
vok-e C!')Ug ia t h •
wtlderlle11 in mmy circlel
botlt in Europe in *• coun-
try.
"But l believe in u -
pr!""irll r11Y ""*"°° "4lea I baYe aol," bl mDc:luded.
/
•
llAI L Y l'ILOT l leff 1'11919
ing an old 5.5 Charade (No. 57) is leading Gerry
Driscoll (No. 82) and Lowe\! North (No. 76) both of
whom are sailing new boats.
FRONT ROW VIEW -Lone sailor in cat-rigged
double.ender attracted spectator interest as he lei-
surely cruised outside the race course in the 5.5
llAILV l'l!,.OT l laffo n.ft
meter Oly mpic lrials. In background is one of the
high·powered racing yachts.
Gardner Cox Man to Beat
As Olympic Trials Resume
By ALMON WCKABEY
0.llY 1'1 .. 1 INTiq ••1ttr
The !ourlh race of the 5.5.
meter Olympic trials got un-
der way on the Olympic
course off the Newport
Harbor enb'ance. The fifth
and six.Hi races will be held
Saturday a11d Sunday to
determirre who ~'ill
represent tOc U.S. in the"
Olympic yar.ltt::ng games -at
Acapulco starting Oct. l?.
Gardner Co.-: of Villanova.
Pa. was considered the man
t() beat as the final phase of
the trials got under way .
He i1 leading , the series
w•th two wins and two
losses, a formidable lead in
view of the ru le that skip·
pers can throw out their
worst race in computing
their final score.
Asked if he was confident
of winning the aeriP.!:, C<lx
said : "We're hopeful. but
the series is a long way
from over."
He wu looldng hard at
John Marshall's red•hulled
Bingo from Stamford, Conn .
which stands in .~econd
place.
Counting all four races,
Cox has a score of six under
and Marshall has 16.7.
'Sudden Death' Ocean
Race Set for October
The Ocean Racing Flet.t
of Southem Oaliftlrnia. has
comr, up witih a prwosal for
a inace that wtll determine
the ocean racing obam·
pi~.11hip for tihe year.
Race Course
Planned for
New Lake
A mile·long lake is being
created aix miles south ol
Phoenix . .tuiz. that may well
become a boat racing mecca
in the southwest.
The propoN.I is for e
"sudden-death" ract> l>imilar
t-o the San Diego Lipkin Cup
Challenge race.
Tenbative date for the
race !has been set for Ocl.
19. Tu qualify for entering
bhe race a boat must finish
tn the first ftve overall in
the w,mtney, Ahmf:lnson ,
Balboa Yacht Club's &6
series, California Y a c h t
Clttb's Overton or Loog
Beach Yacht Club's Oataltnia
Island Series.
The firist race will be
sponsored by the Long
Beach Yacht Club. It will be
continued <as an annual af·
fair.
A perpetual b'ophy will go
to the winner as weU as
part.kipation plaques and
crew patches tor everyone
inYOlved. according to Jim
Lindermat"l, president o f
ORF.
the Oly1mpie scoring system
But with the throw~t race
the picture looks a litle dif-
ferent at this point. Cox
would throw out a second
place, le.aving him with a
&core of three, w h i l e
Marshall woulri toss out a
third place fin'.sh, leaving
him with a firs:t and ll\'O
seconds for six pOints. On
the basis of three oi:l oi four
races, Cox is lea<ling by only
three points.
None of the 1'1 other skip-
pers stands more than an
outside chance unless both
Cox and Marshall fold up in
the final three races. Ernie
Fay of Houston has a record
of 6-6-1 -3 for a IOUT·ra ee
total of 29.1 points and Bi ll
Ficker of Newport. Harbor
Yacht Club has fin tshe3 of 2·
fi-6-5 for a total of 31.7. Both
Fay and Ficker would throw
out a sixth place which 1s
worth 7.1.
Hilton Wins
2nd Barthel
Series Race
TORONTO r AP) -The
cight·meter yacht Iroquois
rI. s kippered by Carl Hilton
end 1his five -man crew from
Chicago's Lake Michigan
Y1adlting Association, took
t'he second of ttie Barthel
Trophy series races Thurs-
day witti a time of 1:16.57.
Cheeta. skippered by Tim
Nelson ol the Toronto Lake
Yacht Riacing As:sooiation.
wa,, secood in 1: 20.38 .
Ne()'J".seman , handled by Jer·
ry Sullivran o£ the Cleveland
Inter Dake Y a c ht i ri g
Association. placed third in
1:22.10, and Venture II .
skippered by Tom Fistler or
the Detroit RM?!-Yadlting
AssociMPion. 1 :27 .29, WlllS
rourtti.
Nelson wa.s leading with
71/4 points wil!h three races
~tit! to be aailed , Hilton is
secor.·d wittl 51/... Sullivan
Mid Fi.&dher tr&il wrth four
eadl.
Three wells will feed the
take from an underground
pool of high saline cont.e11t.
Thie body of water will hf>
I ,XX"I feet wide. have an oval
~h ape and provide a surface
of I 36 acres. $40,000 Gold Cup
...... ~I!." tl """c:QJ.
~ .......... J!
/ \ ~ FINISH
/ -=.:E \II
~ '~' ......... .J! '\...: $ TA"T
Ol YMPIC COURSE -Diagram shows the layout
of an official Olympic sailing course with a tri·
angular lap and a windward. leeward, wi ndward
lap. Triangle is laid out in an imaginary circle.
Tioga Will Set Pace
For Outrigger Event
far behind .at 2: 15 :01 and tht
~ai Nalu (Moa; Vista) No. 1
team was in at 2: 17 :25.
The 58·foot ket.dl 1\oga
will be the pacesetting com·
mittee boat Saturda'Y Mien
tiine crews of rugged young The fleet will depart Long Beadh's Cherry St re e t
me11 de~rt on the first an-Beach section .at 8 a .m. a11d
nual Long Beach·Ca:ba'lina will include the Tioga. one
lslimd Ovtri~ger Canoe more smaller. sailboat a-s a
Regatta. commi.\tee boat. one speed·
The Tioga, owned now by boat f;om the Outboard Booting Cl11b of Long Beach .Joh~ Jamie~ . of West for each canoe as a safety
Covina. was built m 1932 and pre c a u ti on and two
wa.\ the prototype IQr the. powerl::loaU for press.
famous b I u e water yacht"
Ticondie.-oga, 'n-foot ketch
now in chart.er service alter T ·
a distinguished r. <in g een-ager
car-eer.
Favored in the race for T" h Ille 400i>ouod oolriggers will 1g tens
be the nine·man Hawaiian
All-SW. team whlah last Tl • l d Saturday won e IS·mile llSt e Lea tuneup race from Malibu to
Santla Monioa by way of a
southernly dip to Venice.
The HaWa.tians neg<rtiat.ed
the distance in two hours . 11
minutes '8nd 25 seconds. But
bhe Balboa Outrigger Canoe
Club's No. 1 boat ms not
SAYVILLE. N.Y. IAPl -
Dennis Cl.airk. l7·year--old
skipper from S e a t t I e •
Lightened his hold on fir!)t
place in the N ational
Thistlec~as$ Sailing Cham·
pionships nn Ore.at Soubh
Bay Th-ursday.
Inboard hydroplanes as
large iM seven litr'efi could
be acoom modated for rac·
ing. Marina facilities also
are planned.
Hydroplane 'Bait' Offered
~le sailed his Wizard of Id
over~ n i ne -mile
triangular course to win his
third in the 1ix·race series
that ends today. He leads
overall with 8'4 points for
the five races to date with
finiohes of H ·2-4·t.
Development plans lnclude
four tepaeate radna; oours-·
ec revolving around a mid·
lake ialond. Jud.,. J,,.i
inss room facilities also
ar< planned.
The four course• include
a.n approved APBA mile and
two-think layout for reooni
cloled coune racing, a one-
q11M"W-mUe drag strip. a
one--mU1 10-•i!ht away, and
a two-mile 1peed cLIMic and
aid Cotll'fie, ,
DETROIT -A total punt
of MO,<XXI -ttie bighe.t!il i11
boat racing for 1968 -
await! w11lmit.ed ~ydroplant
owners Who 8bow' up htte
Sept. 8 fOr the 60ttl running
of the American Power Boat
Association's Gold Cup.
In boat r·ating, the Gold
Cup is the tn06l important
power boat race on
sdledule:. and fs symbOltc of
speed · &uprem·acy In com·
potttlon.
Qual!lylna trim l<lf en·
trants will be held Sept. S-8
"11eo a field o[ 18 Wllimltoda
will ba sift..i from the pock
to race in three heats.
OrdinOrlly the Gold OJP
has fout beata, but this year
there wa1 • vote of officials
to race um.er the unlimited
rules rattier thari the Gold
CUp rules.
The decisioo emerged la1t
.rune when weatbtr and
00\U'M conditions made It
lmpocslblo to qualify ~
boata undor the Goh! CUp
!
'.
rule and th@race was
poctponed unlil Sept. 8. The
vote holds good for the
September event .
The first two heats will be
run in three secUona each
with up to six unlimited& in
each section. The. top &ix
boata wtl compete In ttie
final.
The coorM will be five
lap& over tiv'ee miles, •P·
proYed for .-cl!, oo th•
Detroit River • . .....
I
W.Uliarn Alexander, Falls
Churdi, v •. finished ........i
111tnday and -also is second
over..tl w1tl\ 22 points.
Ed l'ract..r. Oolumbus,
C»Uo. Is tlllrd with 31 \0
poinb ; Oharles Steigerwald,
also ol Colum·bWI. fOl.nitti ,
with 33; Jdhn w,anenacher,
Cleve.land, tift!h . with 36:
Dennis Posey, W 1 pp i n· g
(bM., six·fl with 38, and
Rlcl'tlrd Percocco, Houston ,
1eventh1 wi1b 40.
Van Dyne
New Finn
Champion
Carl Van Dyne, Manthlok·
ing, N.J. is the new .Fjnn
Class North Amer\ c'a n
Champion,
The. ex-co\\eglate 1allor
wag vi.rlually boosted into
the titlist position by Bob
Andre o! San Diego who
switched from sailing. to
surfing in the final ,.two
races of the champtonship
regatta at Alamitos: Bay
Thursday. .
Andre held a fraction10t a
point lead in first place~' er
Peter Barrett of Ali\ toa
Bay Yacht Club as he
regatta went into its final
three races Thursday. ...
It still looked good · tfor
Andre in the firsf -race
Thursday as he Mished fifth
while Barrett was holding
second with a sixth pli!'ce.
The wind was blowj.J;Jg a
moderate five knots. •
But as the wind began pip·
ing up to 10 knots ·at the
start of the second" iiace
Andre got his 14·foot dlrl.hy
on top of a wave ap..
proaching a mark. The sea
suddenly took conhQ) and
Andre found himself ~urJing
smack into the mark., So
much for a throw-out race.
It was in the third and
final race that Andre wai'I
completely wiped out. With
the wind now whistling 16
knots and Ure sea rising, the
San Diei:an found himself
atop another roller as he ap-
proached the mark. Again
the sea took control. and
again Andre hit the mark.
This one he had to keep.
Meanwhile, Van Dyne,
who had been lounging In
third place before the day's
three races !tart.ed, sailed
conservatively ak>ng in se·
cond. third and third plaet's,
found himself sitting atop
the heap when the show was
over.
Barrett was barelv able to
stay in second place on the
scoreboard by virtut of win-
ning the final race.
Third, only a tenth al a
point behind Barrett was
Clive Roberts of New
Zealand who ill In this coµn·
try on his way to the Olym·
pies in October. "
Andre's two DN"f'1 drop.
ped him to sixth pllce
overall . Here iii: the Cina l
scoring of the top 10 In ' the
regatta:
I. Carl Van Dyne , Man·
toloklna:. N.J .• 44.7
!. Peter Barrett. ABYC,
52.7
!. Clive Roberti, New
7,ea)and, 52.8
4. Robert Doylt, P.leon,
Mass .. 64i
s. Peter Doherty, Coast
Guard Academy, 68.7 .
s. Bob Andre , San bie10
YC. 70.7
1. ChU<k Mllltr, ABYC,
72.4
a. Fred Miller Jr., SMC,
74
I . Peter Conrad. St. rran•
ci1 YC. 74.7
IO. Louis Nady, UC
Berkele)', 75.7
-... --------------a a ·--·· •• >C . 't. = e -e = O*Ot! -
•
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...
DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I
'
A Two-£ or-One Bargain
Sally R. is a June graduate ol Newport Harbor High
School. She wants to study nursing at Orange Coast
College.
Don G. didn't do $0 well in academic subjects at
Marina Jiigh. He would like to learn auto body repair
al Golden West College.
Teresa J ., a graduate of Estancia High School , is
aiming for a four-year BA degree but needs to live a t
home the first two years because her parents can't
afford to send her away lo college.
For one reason or another these three students
were not among the tirst to pre-register for Orange
Coast or Golden West junior colleges. Too bad, because
now there is no more room and they can't get in.
The year is 1970, and there is just no way to shoe.
horn all the students who want to attend into class-
rooms of. a school district that can't pass bond issues.
The open door of college opportunity for all is shut .
The California Master Plan for Higher Education which
says junior colleges shall accept all high school grad-
uates turns out to be just words on pa per .
But wait, it is not 1970 yet. It doesn't have to hair
pen that way.
Voters of Orange Coast Junior College District oo
Sept. 17 will be asked to approve a $7.25 million bond
issue tor new instructional buildings on the Orange
Coast and Golden West campuses.
There are no administration or cafeteria buildings
involved. OnJy buildings in which classes will be taught.
If passed, the bond money will be used during the
next four years to buy another $7 million in state and
federal aid. The aid money is given to districts that can
show their voters cared enough to tax themselves for
a half share.
In other words, voters can buy a second dollar for
local use for most of the dollars they provide. It is a
real two-for-one-bargain.
between $3.50 and '6 the fi rst year and less each suc-
ceeding year. Tbe owner of a $40,000 home would pay
$7 to '12 the first year and less lh.ereafter.
It's not a very high price to pay to keep the door
of educational opportunity open. Ever more students
seem to be headed for that door and that's the prob-
lem. Four of five high school students from the area
who go on to college go to junior college ..
The junior college education they have been getting
has been _a bar~!l· r"or years Orange Coast Junlor Cof-
!ege-ffi•lricthas been just about the lowest In uie state
in spending money on its students and at the same
time it ha s held its own academically,
Failure of two override elections in recent years
ha s meant the end of many adult education . programs
and increases in class sizes which have made instruc-
tors less effective. But still every student has been giv·
en a chance at education.
Failure of the bond issue will shut the door on the
chances of many thousands of aspiring students.
The World Stands Helpless
Revolted as it bas not been since· Russia's 1956
11ubjugation of Hungary, world opinion -not just west-
ern opinion -has rallied to Czechoslovakia's cause.
Unlike the pre-World War II period of Hitler's ag-
gressions, a direct confrontation between great powers
would inevitably involve use of nuc lear w e a p o n s .
Using them would be suicide for eiU1er side. So the
world, including some equally revolted Communist
countries and parties, stands helpless to counter Rus-
sia's brutal attack.
" ~ ~ 1'~\ ",
The cost to taxpayers will be spread out over 10 or
more years. The owner of a $20,000 home would pay
The only apparent hope for a Russian policy rever-
sal rests with the Soviets' realization that they are do-
ing themselves more harm through loss of power or
prestige within the Red bloc than they can possibly
gain in little Czec slovakia. N "WHAT'S A NICE GU'( LIKE You DOIN6 IN A PLACE UK~ TH lS?~
Naive, Childish, Symbol-Worshiping
Today We Have Hippies
By GEORGE R. HOFF, PhD. "'"!
A rebel without a cause is nothing
n1ore than a disgruntled, negative
obstructionist who hampers his own
fulfillment, not to mention the needs
and goals of those who are con-
scientiously attempting to make some
kind of sense out of their own lives.
Where are the ang:ry young men of the
1950's? They have grown older and
now are the irritable, con1racy mm of
the 1960's. What have tbey done tor
themselves Ol" for the society against
which they spoke so vehemently and
eloquently? Nothing, really! Their
voices have been lost, not in the
wilderness, but in the vacuum of their
empty and trite &logans.
TODAY WE RAVE hippies -naive.
childish. symbol-worshiping, rit.ual-
loving expobenhs" ol a fatalistic
philosophy which attempts to reduce
, the essence Of human existence to a
ff.)llf letter word: LOVE. They
desperately try to ignore the fact that
humans are multidimensional. After
all, to explore and attempt ta un-
derstand the complexities, paradoxes,
polarities, nuances and varied facets
of existence is hard and frustrating
work.
They want to leave the hard work
and frustration to the stuffy scientists,
philosophers and theologians who
aren't "free" enough to recognize that
all this sad world needs is more love.
FURTHERMORE, they refuse to
acknowledge all Of reality. Instead,
they pretend that if only everyone
would love everyone else, Utopia
would result. They would like to have
a world handed to them in which there
is heaven without hell, g~ and oo
bad, freedom without restriction, hap-
piness but never sadne5'. health and
no sickness, pleasure exclusive of
pain, etc.
They wish to ObllteMte a large
measure of how things really are1 and
hold the delusion that the world U a
place of perpetual fresh air, blue sky, ancl fluffy, white clouds. They say to
each other, ''Whenever it rains, let's
withdraw into olll'Selves and pretend
that we can hibernate until spring
comes again."
THE PROBLEM IS, of course, that
a human can't naturally hibernate like
a bear. Even to approximate hiberna·
tion. he must induce an artificial state
of insensitivity and reality distortion
by using one drug or another. Then,
while indulging in idyllic fantasy. he
1::xpeots the more mundane and
unenlightened segments of society to
satisfy his basic needs and take care
of him. He expresses righteous in·
dignation when the power structure -
the establishment, if you will -which
he believes is too up-tight to accept
and support his passive, inactive
search for authenticity, doesn't spoon-
feed ltim while he plays philosopher.
HUMANS CAN easily ta 1 k
themselves into oc out of anything. 1t
is increasUJ:ly clear that hippies have
not only sold themselves a bUI of
goods, they are also expla).ning their
cop-out by rationalizing that they are
searching for new meaning in being
human.
What they fail to appreciate,
however, is that the longer they ride
free, the longer they sit on their duffs
and scorn those who, in their own way,
are attempting to improve the state of
man, the more they will find
themselves losing seU-rupect. Hippies
really can't be happy until they either
pay for their ride or do some driving
themselves.
A rebel WITH a cause, and the
courage to be committed to it
regardless at the work involved, can
become a major force in reconstruc-
ting a more sane social order.
They Can't Repudiate LBJ
WASHINGTON - A peculiar kind of
tunnel vision afflicts tllose Democratic
elements who think their party can
blithely repudiate or discredit the
Johnson Admirtistrat.ion's policy in the
Vietnam war.
If they were to look to either side of
their tunneled view they would see
ample evidence that such a repudiat-
ion or discreditation coul d have sensa·
tional results.
Such men as Defense Sec. Clark M.
Clifford and Sec. Of State Dean Rusk
\\·ould have to ask themselves if they
could in good conscience support a
Democratic presidential nominee run -
ning on a plallform that made them out
to be fools or knaves.
Nor would President Johnson be ex·
empt from self-intenrogation on this
point. There are signs of a slow burn
in the Johnson Admitristration over the
shilly-shallying to which Vice Presi·
dent Humphrey has exposed himself
on the Vietnam issue,
THOSE WHO THREATEN to leave
the convention in Chicago next week
unless the Democratic cOnvent.ion
repudiates the Johnson war policy ap·
parently have given no thought to
othen who would go home and wash
------
Friday, August 23, 1968
2'M editorial page ·of th< Daily
Pilot tteb to inform and stim-
vlaU r...i.n by pru'1lling thu
M&DIJ)Ol)f'r'• opinions and com-
menla~ cm topics of interest
Ollil llgnifjamce, by providing o
forum for tM t:tprtssi.on of
oilr reodnl' opinions, ond by
fl"Ulnting th.I dl0611« vltw-
-poinll of bt/on'Md ob1trvtr1
IJlld ipoMmwn on lopici of th<
dor.
llDbort N. Wffd, Pub!W!or
their hands of a Democratic nominee
so terrified of defeat that he would
compromise his previous convictions.
This is the result of the limited focus
of that minority (as confirmed by
public opinion polls ) who wish to !top
the bombing unilaterally, invite the
Communist Viet Cong into a coalition
government and liquidate the war.·
These elements of opinion have
deluded themselves into thinking that
they represent the majority. They
have talked themselves into believing
there would be nothing but favorable
consequence6 from wiping all vestiges
of the Johnson Administration from
the face of the Democratic Party.
THE FACTS ?t-1JGHT as well be fac·
ed by the Humphrey side now. The
chief reason why Vice President Hu m.
phrey is in a position to win a first
ballot nomination for lhe presidency ill
that he has inherited the delegate
strength which otherv•ise would have
gone to President Johnson, There is
not the sli ghtest reason to bflleve that
Vice President ~lllmphrey could have
demonstrated his popularlty i n
presidential primary elections against
the late Robert F. Kenntdy or Euge ne
McCarthy,
Hwnphrey is oow in his favored
position because the elements whi ch
would have supported Johnson, ha.d he
been a oandJdate. transferred their
support to Johnson's heir. Humphrey.
These elements include a larg' pa.rt or
organized labor. big state and big city
political organizations and th e
southern delegations.
l!UMPllREV IS stamped by Ule
J ohnson Administration. All h I s
ci~umlocution:s about being his own
man do not chan~e that. Jf he is a par-
ty no.w to repudiating flot only the
.Johnson Administration but his own
prevlou.sly erpressed opinions be ls
S;;;I~
"Bro Mir! Wm I lllee lillt."
likely to lolie face with the o n 1 y
elements at the Democratic national
convention who can nominate him.
All this make! the vice president,
and the left wing part of !U s staff , very
uncomfortable. The staff hates to ad-
mit Where Humphrey's nomination
will come from , and would wish for
the vice president a great deal more
flexibility, and a separate identity.
This separate identity is not to be
granted to Humphrey because a
minority in the Democratic Party will
not permit it.
Dear
'Gloomy
Gm:
The dinky litUe "$l.OO" parkintt
fee sign at the entrance to
Corona del Mnr beach Is so
small that people are pAst it and
headed down hill to the be.Jch
before they realize they're go·
Ing to have to pay a v.•hole but k
to park lt't a trap. The $ip;n
should be bigger -and neater looking.
-R. J . B.
). I
Czechs Have
Less Capacity
To Compete
T he foUowing report was prepared
before the invasion of Czechoslovakia
by the troops of Russia, Poland, East
Germany, Hungary and Bulgaria last
Tuesday night.
-Editor
The American Army has a
calisthenic exercise usually described
as "running in place." You go through
all the motions of running, but you
stay right where you are, your knees
going up and down but never f-orward.
That, in a sense. is w ha t
Czechoslovakia's economy has been
doing for the past few years. Jn a
world of explosive economic growth,
the Czechs have been going nowhere.
The gross national product has re-
mained stationary or actually shrunk.
Ludvik Ubl, first deputy foreign
trade minis1er, recently commented:
"As a result of the big volume and
stability of Czechoslovak deliveries to
the Soviet Union, this country as a
producer and a trader became used to
a certain sell-indulgence th.at con-
tributed to the general deterioration of
our goods and capacity to oompete."
The Czechs now want'to become com·
tetive on world markets again and to
d.iminish e<:onomic and political depen·
dence on the Ru ssians.
MORE TH A N 60 percent of
Czechoslovakia·s external trade is
with the eastern European satellite
bloc. Half of thi s is with the Soviet
Union itself.
But. as the British commentator
Michael Simmons reports, more than
20 percent or the cou ntry's trade is
also with the western industrial
economies. Exports to them in 1967
amounted to $331.2 million. a decrease
of $55.2 milli on from 1966. At the same
time. imports rose from $328.8 mJllion
to $369.6 million. "Nearly a qu arter of
the 1967 exports went to West
Germany and over $48 million each to
Britain and Italy. Western irnports
came n1ostly from the same trio and
from France and Austria.'·
Czech machinery is ob~Olete. H1gh
production costs make C z e c h
manufactured goods uncompetitive
abroad. Simmons quotes Prof. Ota Sik,
deputy prime minister in the Dubcek
reghne and architect of the current
economic action program; "The new
economic system n1ust effect a change
\1rhich will entail new meth<>ds of plan-
nin g: . changes in financing .and
crediting. re1novaJ of s u b ~ i d i e s ,
changes in price relatio ns "
JOSEPH WECHSBERG wriles from
Prague: "I have heard no talk • , •
about overthrowl ng communi<;m , but
many people here do want com.
munism plus freedom • , • The
Czechoslovak reform is already a
much bigger thing than ••• even
Tttofsm In Yugoslavia • . • If the
Ctechoslovaks prove that communism
can coexist with freedom. their suc-
cess will unquestionably affect not oo-
ly the intellectuals but OW! entire
populations of other Communist coun.
tries ... Poland, Jtungary, East
Germany, and perhaps even U1e Soviet
Union.''
rn the talks at Oe.rna and the
Bratislava communique, the Czedl.I
showed remark-able resistance to
Soviet military pressure. ,
Why Are They
Dissatisfied?
Reading about a musical comedy
star w:ho has gone to Europe to study
grand opera, I wondered again why so
many talented persons are dissatisfied
with the things they do well and feel
impelled to embark on projects
beyond their powers.
The singer in question is one of the
brightest adornments of the musical
stage: Her voice is beguiling. her
comportment endearing, her success
full and justified. What need is there
for her to compete with opera singeri?
George Gershwin was a classic case
of such artistic fru.rtration. Tired of
the excellent popuJar tunes he tossed
off so easily, he went to Paris to
study composition under Stravinsky.
'The latter was puuled by the young
man's desire to write "serious"
music, and tried politely to dissuade
hlm -but Ger sh win remained
disgruntled until his death.
EVEN SO GREAT a creative man
as G o e t h e thought lightly of his
tremendous literary works, and was
most concerned with his scientific
labors -especially a "theory of col-
or " he was c:onvinced would place him
with Newton among t.he &cien\.ific im-
mortals.
.. As for what I have done as a poet,"
he told Eckermann, "l take no pride
whatever in it. Poets more excellent
than I have lived bef'ore me, and
ot.hers will come after. But that in my
own century I am the only person who
knows the truth in the difficult science
of colors -of that I am proud."
NEEDLESS TO SAY, no one today
pays atte-ntion to the theory of color
promulgated by the author of "Faust''
-who himself was apparently
unaware that his own hero, Newton,
dii.miSt'>ed his scientific work and
thought that his Biblical i esearch
would live forever.
Nor, l'o take lesser examples, do v:e
read the .,serious·• novels of Conan
J)Qyle , which he ranked far above
Sherlock Holmes; nor listen to the
"serious" music of Arthur Sullivan,
which he thought would outlive the
frivolous savoy operettas he composed
with W. S. Gilbert.
DANTE ROSSETTJ, the fine minor
poet, wanted also to be a pa.inter, and
once showed Whistler a picture in its
early stages, which the American
artist criticiz ed. Some months later,
Rossetti aga.in showed Whistler the
completed picture, this time in a
bEautifuJ frame.
"You've done nothing to it since I
saw it. have you?" \VhisUer asked.
"No," Rossetti admitted, "but I've
written a sonnet on the su bject." He
then read the lines, which were lovely
and tender.
"Take out the picture,'' advised
Whistler bluntly, ... and frame the son·
net."
'Radar Traclied Saucer'
To the Editor:
Concerning the Royce Brier column
on nying saucers (Aug. 19): While sta-
tioned in Germany in 1965, at about
2:05 a.m. from the angle about north,
northeast, and at about a 60-degree
angle. our base radar picked up a solid
metallic blip on the t"adar screen. It
came down at tltis angle and stopped
at approximately five miles due west
of thEi. base. Its alti tude was then ap-
proximately 6.500 feet.
It seemed to pause for ap-
proximately th re e or four seconds
then shot in a directioo over the top of
the base at about the same altitude.
Radar tracking speed at the base
-when this object passed over was ap-
proximately 8,500 .MPH and picking up
speed. As it did so it had a clear
brilliant pulsating light which was in
color a blue, silver. green light. Its en·
tire vision on radar from first sighting
to end was approximately 15 seconds,
l\1YSF.LF' AND FIVE other fellows
on guard mount around the base saw
U1is : a rew others also saw It The sky
was perfectly clear, and not any
clouds in sight. This was not a fi gment
of one·s imagination. It was real.
This radar report soon disappeared
and the whole matter was under hush •
hush. When any of us asked about it
we were told to keep our mouths shut
or else. Then later we were told that
we were day dreaming aod to forget
it. My friend 1n radar told me what
WjS in tbe report later.
This goes to prove one thing -that
the military keep everything like this
top secret -.and don't tell the publi~ a
thing but onJy that it's ga~es or lights
oo clouds. Bunk, I know dilfe.rently. It
disappeared In a perlect straight !in•
back out into space. Why doesn't th• aoovwmn.m i.11 tbt public tht l!Ulh? fl. L. EllGLll
,,. ,,._ ,.. _,•;
Volunteer Bureau
To the Editor:
Congratulations are due the DAILY
PILOT for the excelleflt feature story
on th'e Volunteer Bureau published
August 19.
Judy Hurst has done an outstanding
job in bringing to the attention of the
public the many facets of the bureau's
activities. which of£er gen u i n e
services to the county's agencies, as
well as unlimited opportunities for In·
volvement on the part of the county'•
citizens. ·
SYLVIA L. BOGEN
Board Member
The Volunteer Bureau provides
assist1J11ct to 65 agencies. schools,
hosritals and convalescent homes in
Southern Orange County. Volunteers
rat1ging f rnm teen-agers to grandpar·
ent.s ore needed. -Editor
.--~-By George~~-.
'
Dear George:
Today'! scanty dress is
absolutely disgraceful and t
would Uke your opinion. Look at
all the go.go girls!
SHOCKED
Dear Shocked:
WHERE ? WHERE?
Ob.
Ahem yes. Abs.oluttly
disgraceful and I say tsk·Uk. But
I wish you wouldn't do that
belQre I've b•d my second cup of
coffee.
' \
j
... -... --_. ~. ----... -.. -
r -~:_'>. .... _.,, ... ::"' ..::::..;~.;._~.;._· ____ ~.;._'_:_• ~·· • • ---.-
--.-.----.. ~---------:---..,.......-~..--....... -------------............. ~-..... ~""""'!'..._..,
Costa Mesa roday's ClosJng
VOL:. 6f, NO. 203, 4 SECTIONS. 50 PAGES COSTA MESA, CALIFORNlA FRIOAY, AU GUST 23, '1968 TEN CENTS
\
ROCKS VERSUS TANKS -Defiant Czechs throw
stones at Soviet tanks as they rumble into Brati·
slava during invasion by USSR and Warsaw Pact
Ul"I C1•1et>Ml9
allies. However, sporadic violence which marked
first four days of military occupation appears to
have diminished.
Texas to Nominate LBJ?
Growing Senti1nent Reported in State Delegation-
Cl-I ICAGO (AP) -The name of ~larch 31 he v:ould not seek or accept
President John.90n was tossed back in· his party's nominatioo !or a second
to the Democratic presidential picture term.
today as the party prepared to open its The matter arose w.hen Erwin, who
national convention next week. had deli vered a passioned defeDSe of
Frank c. Erwin, Texas national the unit rule as "pure democracy,"
, ,Oemocratic committeeman, told t he was asked by George Cox ol Wyoming
Rules Commllte< 0£ !~g sp-~~ .j!>e if_.•ileteg~~l<W<>!dd vote if
timent'' within"hls 'itlt~'if"<M!:gation to ··~'We.,-miit M~ Wefe':ii0arid6ned.
nominate Johnson~ror re-eleclion if the "I( the unit rule is abrogated or i(
convention unit rule is aboli6hed. the convention next Tuesday night
Erwin made the comment to a Rules votes not to enfor<:e the unit r ule."
Committee session conveoed to con· Erwin said, "there is a growing sen-
sider whether to forbld the rule under timent among those of us here in
which a majority in a delegation Chicago that Gov. Connally shoold
determines how the entire slate will withdraw as a favorite son and for
vote during the convention. Texas to request one of the early
Erwin appeared on behalf cl. Texas states to yield to Texas to nominate
Gov. John Connally, a close associate a~er gre~t Tex:an .who holds .. ~
of J ohnson. The Presidllet said last highest elective office m the land.
Meanwhile Sen. E u & en e J.
McCarthy's supporters, undecided
whether to accept a compromise in
the Georgia creden.tials d is put e ,
renewed their efforts today in two
other key committees to loosen Vice
President l:lubert H. Humphrey's grip il!1 tho,~-. . . . ' .. 'Allil '"Iii ''bOth .. f'"1be• .,,~,. r} e d
feverishly on behalf of their can.
did.ates for the party'1 presidential
nomination, the shadow'od. Kennedys
past v.·as etched sharply over this
steamy convention city.
Neither Julian Bond, leader o/. the
Georgia loyalist group, nor Joseph L.
Rauh Jr., had decided v.tiether to ac·
cept the Credentia.1.s Commit.tee com·
promise awarding the loyalists half of
(See DEMOCRATS, Page %)
Ne,vport Group
E11dorses Center
City Hall Site
Dem Plntf orm Fight Due
On Convention Floor?
\Vilh minor misgivings a Newport
Beach committee of p r o m i n e n t
citizens \Vednesday night unanimously
approved a report endorsing a site at
Newport Center as the best place to
build a new $4 million civic center.
The so.member group, appointe~ .by
the City Council. reached the dec1s1on
at a meeting held in Mariners Library.
Acceptance of the report came af~r a 75-minute debate on whether to ghift
City Hall over to six acres on the slop-
ing hillsides near Fashion Tsland, or to
stay put at the current site and
rebuild.
The strune:est reservations a~ut
abandoning t~ present 4.4-acre .city
Hall site came from two committee
members who live in Central and West
Newport.
CH ICAG O (AP) -The Delfiocratic
party platform probably will be ham·
mered together on the floor of the con·
vention itself by the more than 2.600
delegates -rather than by the 110-
member platform committee.
This prospect -whlch could mean
delay next week in nominating
presidential and vice presidential can.
didates -became more real today as
a determined minority or the platform
committee insisted. on what a
spokesman called the strongest possi·
ble plank for an early end to the Viet-
nam war.
. 'nle dispute over Vietnam. which
repeatedly has shouldered aside such
concerns as social legislation to help
the poor and alleviate urban problems,
inspired two separate plank-drafting
efforts.
O~e is by the official 21-member
platform d r a rt in g subcommittee,
wltich met into the night Thursday and
resumes work today.
· The o~her is by a group of about 25
members of the platform committee,
v.rho claim their ranks include sup·
porters of all of the major candidates
as well as uncommitted delegates ,all
bent on writing specific instruction for
seeking a disen~agement of the United
States from Vietnam.
As few as 11 member s of the plat-
form committee by signing a minority
report can force a floor debate and a
vote between alternate platform pro-
visions.
The deep division in the plaUorm
committee was dramatized Thursday
by it.s reaction to an emotion-charged
speech by Gcv. John Connally of Tex·
as.
Connally said such proposals as a
bombing halt, a suspension of ag·
(See PLATFORf\1, Page %)
Dubcek Executed?
Ham Radios Receive Death Report
From Wire Services
Several amateur radio operators in
Europe and the United Stiate1 report
receiving ham broadcasts from
Czechoslovakia saying that O>m·
mu.rust party leader A 1 e x a D d e r
Dubcek is dead.
There was no immediate official
conlirmation of the reports received
Thursday. The Czechoslovak clan·
destine radlO' in Prague last said
Dubcek was seized Wednesday and
taken to an unknown destination.
A State Department source in
Washingto1.i said U.S. government
listening posts had apparently beard
the same ham broadcasts the others
reported but had no further details on
it.
One or the amateun who reported
the broadcast was Frank Melville, of
Elmsford. N.Y .. a ham operator for
more than 4-0 years. •le said he sent a
general call trying to make contact
Ylith anyo ne in Europe.
In response he received several
replies, one ol wh;ch ended with the
\\'Ords. ·• ... ~·as ldlled two hours ago."
He said be asked for a repeat and
Army Doctors
'Encouraged'
By Ike's Gain
WASHINGTON (AP) -Army doc-
tor! reported. today some "en-
couraging" signs in former President
Dwight D. Eisenhower's condition , but
said it is still critical and the question
of whether he will survive wW remain
unpredictable for scme time.
The doctors, at \Va.lter }\eed Army
HosJllta1,-l;l•~ lht1• appra!UL In a forma!...._.!!l_~~cal Dltlletin wblch was
liiter....,DnPIIIled in response to ques-
U0111 submitted by reporters.
The (orma: bulletin said that
Eisenhower has shown less evidence
of heart irrit.abillty -irregular and
rapid bests -since Thursday night's
report and that "whlle thil in itself is
eooouraging, the general's overall con•
ditlon . must still be considered
critical" and the outlook as to whether
or,· not he will survive Ulis at·
~ck remains "guarded" -meaning
unpredict&tle and uncertain.
"\Vould the 'immediate critical
period' for the general's present type
of heart attack -ventricular flbrina.
tion -n-0rmally be expected to last
longer than the week's period you
have sc:_td in past statements generally
constitutes the immediate critical
period following a myocardial in-
fraction? If so, how much longer ?"
"Cannot as yet be determined," was
the doctors' answer.
"l s it likely or possible that he will
be removed from the critical list
anytime soon?"
The ooswer was '·No."
Mesa's Republican
Headqua rter s Open
r.ost.a Mesa R e p u b l i c a n Head-
quarters w1ll be open for voter
registration and Information from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays through
Fridays until the registration deadline
Sept. 12.
The office, 1951 Newport Blvd .. also
will be open Saturdays from IO a .m.
until 1 p.m. Tho~e wishing further in·
formatloo can contact Mrs. 11. J .
Wood, headq11arlers chairman at 543·
4009.
'•
received, "Ducek wu killed two hours
ago."
Melville said he then asked the
sender, who gave his call letters as
OKIAY, "What do you want me to do
with it?" and the reply was, "Please
relay." He said the entire exchange
was in Morse code.
The Elmsford ham said OK is a
Czech prefix, but he said he had no
idea whether OKlA Y was a valid
callsign.
ln Egmond, Netherlands, operator
W. De Vries said be had Morse con·
tact with a Czechoslovak ham who
signaled twice , "Please rebroadcast to
distant stations that Dubcek bas been
dead for one hour."
Vienna monitors indicated today
that F r e e Czechoslovak R a d i o
reported the return to Czechoslovakia
of Mrs. Alexander Dubcek and two
sons of the Soviet-i nterned
(See DUBCEK, Pafe %)
* * Soviets Veto Resolution
To Call for Troop Ouster
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) -A
Soviet veto today killed an eight-nation
resolution that asked the U.N. Security
Cou ncil to condemn the Soviet-bloc oc·
cupation of Czechoslovakia and to call
for the troops to withdraw.
The vote was 10-2 wit.It 3 abstentions.
The Soviet Union and Hungary voted
no. Algeria, India and Pakistan abs-
tained.
Soviet Ambassador J acob A. Malik
vetoed the proposal at 3:28 :i .m. after
he and Hungarian, Bulgarian and
Polish delegates had filibustered past
midnight to delay the voting.
U.S. Ambassador George W. Ball
said the Soviet Union had just cast its
105th veto.-But he declared that it
could not "suffocate the soul o( a
proud people" in Czechoslovakia.
Canadian Ambassador G e o r g e
Ignatieff then introduced a new reeolu-
tion .requesting Secreta.ry-General U
Thaqt to "dispatch immediately to
Prague a special representative who
1ball !eek the te-leue· Abdi t.oaure tbe
personal .safety or the Czechoslovak
leaders under detention" and report
back urgently.
At 3:54 1.rn. the council president
tor the month, Brazilian Ambassador
Joao. Augusto de Araujo Castro. ad-
journed the meeting to 5 p.m. today.
Malik told Ball the veto "w1JJ con·
tlnue to afford, .as long as tbe UnJted
Nations exists, the possibility for tile
Soviet Union to defend a just ca\ISe."
Malik indicated be would use it once
more against Igoatiefi's resolution. He
said the sponsors wanted to ''drag the
secretary-general of the United Na·
tions into the affairs of Socialist coun~
tries" hut wou ld ''not succeed."
Tbe resolution's sponsors were the
same eight cou ntries that sponsored
the condcmnat.ory resolqtion -Brazil.
Senegal, the Urrited Slates, Britain,
France, Canada, Denmark and
Paraguay.
The last six had asked for the debate
on \Vedrlesd:ay, the day after troopg of
the Soviet Union, Ean Germany,
Poland, Hungary and Bulgaria entered
Czechoslozakla, sayinlJ they sought to
suppregs counterTevoluUon. ·
Czechoslovak· Delegate Jan Muzlk
told the council Thursday 'night that
the occupation was "completely il·
legal," that ill "Immediate termina-
tkm" w a s imperative and t b at
Ciechostovakia's legalJy e J e ct e d
representative musl be allowed to
functiOll'l "without j 1 J e g a. J in·
ttrference. ''
He announced that Clecbo&lovak
Foreign Minister Jiri Hajek,-in
Yugoslavia-on vaoation at the time ot
the invasion, was eoroute here to U ·
ptaia Czechoslovakia '1 position.
Czech Railwaymen Halt
Soviet Train for . Prague
VIENNA (UPI) - A clandestine
Czechoslovak radio '4ppeal, to railway
workers io stop "at all costs" a Soviet
train laden with radio and radar
equipment semled today to have
scored an immediat.e iUCCess for
worker resistance.
Railwaymen 100 miles east of
Prague, answering the call, reported
they ·had brought tlhe Prague·bound
freig11 t to a stop.
The appeal broadcast from Prague
had said: "A train is on !he way from
the Soviet Union carrying tectinical
equipment for interference with out
transmitting equipment.
"It is necessary to stop that train at
all cost.s. RailWaymen. and all of you
who are listenlng, stop that train."
The train reportedly carnied full
shipments of radi-0 and radar goods
and tracking equipn1ent.
"The train, No. 5599, which is
travelling in the direction of Prague,
has stopped and is stationary near
Cesk-a Trebov<a." about 100 miles due
east of the capital.
"It has been reported to us by the
railwaymen at Hradee Kr.alove and it
mean~ that ttie railwaymen h&ve <kine
a goOd job. We · thank you, comriades.''
BOATS, BALLET
WEEKENDER FARE
Boats and ballet make the outdoor
entertainment scene during the wan·
ing days or August along the Orange
Coast. Newport's annual Character
Board Parade casts off this Saturday
for a turn around the harbor and La·
guna's Ballet Alfresco comes to life
Aug .31 at the Irvine Bowl . Read about
them in to::lay's \Veekender.
Orange Coast
However, both men in the end went
along with the majority in voting to
accept the findings of a 39-pa~ report
prepared at a cost of '30,000 by Welton
Becket and As socia tes , and
Economics Research Associates.
The consulting teams broke down
the reasons for moving City Hall up to
the hill like this:
Schmitz Leads 'Land of Free' Foes Weather
-It will cost about $1.069,000 less to
huild new facilities at Newport Cen!er
!hon it \\'Ould to put up the sai:ne size
s:rurtures at the c urrent locat!on.
-The ponulalion and b u s 1 n t' r. ~
,'tnlcr of Newport Beach \!I !'hittin'!
~.-.11th. and a civic c'ntcr at the nf'\V
~i le. "·ould he closer to the heart of the
city in years to come.
-The new site. on six acres of a 29-
acre tract, would have a lot of ~!bow
room around It for the construction of
other public btdldingt, l n c I u di n g
municipal courts, a city library and
civic auditorium. The expern said they ftgurecl pro-
ceeds from sale of the present City
Hall land would bring $1.3 million. The
cost of buving the new land was peg.
ged It $.588.00J.
Con5truction costJ would be 1357 .000
h!511 at the new site because of water
table problems at the pres@nt sea·level
Cltv l-tall . They estimated a cost of
$4 .459 million to throw up 111 .fWlO
iiquare feet or workinJ? space at 't"~
ltvel. ver~11~ $-4.l million tor the same
amount of space on thr knott
'
By TI IOMAS FORTUNE
0 1 tllt Ot llf r lltl Sllll
\VJU! Stale Sen . John Schmitz: ! J't.
Tustin I leading the cittack. critics of
the eighlh grade U.S. history textbook.
.. Land of the Pree." stormed the
County Board of Education Thursday.
'nle three county school bOard mem-
bers who spoke indicated they are in
symp;.thy with the protest
'Ilhey agreed lo review the con·
troversial textbook and answer at
Uleir next meetl.ne the request I.bat the
state·approved book be removed from
tbe public 1chooll.
PetiUons asking tile book bf junked
were ~ved by the board bearing
the signalurt!s of an estimated 2,500
penons. -
"Wht.( art you going to do? They've
spent mllllons of dollars on this
alttady," school board member A. E.
"Pat" Arnold 1aid in an aside after
the meeting.
"We can do • lllUe sereamin~.''
answered board iresident Cl 1 1
\
M:tcheU. of South Lag11n;1.
Since lhe textbook 1s 1nandatt!d by
the state, any stand by lhe county
board ,.,.ould be only of an advisory
nature to the State Bo;·rd of Education
and local schOol boards.
Schmitz. a memlJer of U1c John
Birch Society, said he was appearing
before the board not u a legislatoc but
as a part-time history teacher. lie
read from the master's thesis he
wrote 10 years ago on "Controversy
Over the Collectivist InOutnce in
Social Science Textbooks."
Schmitz &aid, "The great majority,
it not aD. of widely used texts bavt a
collectivist bent. People don't realize
It. They've been swimmlng In this sea
10 long they don't tnow what lt'1 like
not to be wet."
Dr. WUTtn CarToll, a Schmitz stalf
member with a PhD in history also
spoke. He cited Whet he belleves to be
1>pec:ilic faults of the textbook wilh
page referencts. 1-lis reference~ wf!r•
to vilification Of industriailJts, un·
criticer;,raisc for the New Dtal. and
ronden1nation of Sen. J o s e p h
l\1cCarthy.
"The book sho\VS no balt.-ice or ob·
Jectivity." he charged. "1'he authors
are making flat sta1cn1ents. They bave
no right ."
lie said the book would Indoctrinate
a student with hostility for his own
country. "If te:a:tbooks err. It would be
better OD the side of. patriotism tnste£.d
of anti-Americanism," be 1 a I d •
"Students wtll TUil into an avalanche
of criticism later on in college."
Board member Dr. Da1e Rallison
said be has noticed the book conte.tns
many more plcturc1 ott Democratic
presidents than Republicans. ''lt goes
along with the slantin~ toward tbe bad
thinj'.s ln our 1ociety, ' he said. Then
he added that he meant ftcetiou.sly.
Atlt.chell said the text ls not proper
material tor "those little minds.'' lie
said, "There'd be terrlfic uproar U we:
chopped olf each rtudents little finger
in a medical experiment. Losin£ their
~ \
mindii ill much more important than
losing U1eir little fingers."
He also remc.rked that several years
ago his daughter brough t h<l1ne fro1n
Laguna schools a proposed lt1lP·
plcrnentary textbook that had the
United Nations winning the. war in the
Pacific and the United Nations cross·
ing the E nglish Chtnnel on "D" Day.
United nations wa1 used in a general
sense, he said, but it was capi.t.alized,
making it misleading.
That book was not adoptod, but he
1aid he 11 hiah1Y coocemed abOut tile
textbookJ the 1dloolo are using.
Controversy over "Land of the
Free" erupted two years ago and
some revl.sfons were made ln the book
before It we1lt into use rtarUng last
fall.
Although school dlstr1cts ln the
county are required to stock the at.ate·
1upplled text for their eighth grades.
the deifee to which the text Is acUvtly
uM'!d varies. Teachera ar. fret to us•
1upplementary texts in their cla.sses.
... :~ -.•. )
Break out the 1h1ae1 and t.~
sun tan lotion. It's going to be
one or thoi;e weekends. Like 80
degrees on the coasl and up to
90 in the inland regions.
INSIDE TOD A¥
\VlU tlie United Staiea boycot&
tlit Olyrnpic Gamti in f.1erioo
City btcaust of tht Russian 11~
oo.tion of Cztchostovakia? A top
U.S. Olvmplc o/JldoZ. odmiu lh•
posribiUt¥ tzllta. Stt Sporu,
Page 16. -" C•ll"'"'i. 1 Cie.ll!M t'l·M c-1t1 n Cm,_. It °""' "-!Itel ' ••""'1•1 ,_ ,. ,...._, ...
"" C.111 ' -" AMI UMtn 11
M.11 .. 11 ,.
M•rfitw Llt"'tM t --. ,_.,.. o-iet '' ~ """" . ll.tl9fff ...... 64
Onlllt C-'r t 19cltl ,,.... 1>11
'""-1•11
1'9cll """""' ... ttlrrit* n ... ,.., ' .... ....... ,,
WN'N ,...,.. ...
WMl<t,.....
"" Ne.t 11 °'" ... « ' °""" ' 11 ,, , .. ,.
I'• .... t .. "" . Mto-1 ,_. •
l.uta1111W1h t.11
-
"
• •
•
2 DAILY rlLDT Frlday, '""' 2,, 1968
Grut.er Suitag Too
Air Noise Claims
Top $12 Million
By BRUCE BENSON
Of .... Delbo ''"' •••ff
Movbt« to beat a SepL 1 deadline,
Newport Beach City Couneilm~ Paul
J. Gruber today was among the la.test
group of upset homeowners to file
dam.age claims over jet noiH at
Orange County Airport.
The former two-term mayor sald he
seeks fS(),000 from Ult county Board of
Supervisors for depreciation in the
value of his home aince Sept. 1, 1967.
That's the date tllat big jets started
flying out ol \he alrport; according to
the Airport Noise AbaU!ment Com-
mittee, sponsors of the lawsuits, oow
topping •12 million.
''The law is that if you have a cla1ro
'Slwotout'
Surrounded
JJy Mystery . -.
A contradiction in terms developed
:iday as neighbors described slain
\frs. Sylvia Fenner, 39, as a golden.
haired beauty who never raised her
voice. except perhaps during her
final moments of life.
!llrs. Fenner was heard screaming
ri.nimosity at her husband, Dr. John L.
Fenner. 36, seconttr before they en.
gaged in a shootout Sunday in their
home at 4162 Trumbull Drive, Hunt·
ington Harbour.
The tragic gunp1ay in the rambling,
one !Jtory home in the plush water-
front subdivision left Mrs. Fenner
dead of a bullet in the heart and her
estranged husband critically wounded.
The dead woman's. body was ship·
ped to Indiana Thursday night for
funeral services tentatively scheduled
Saturday. with interment to follow in
Dayton, Indiana.
Dr. Fenner. wounded twice in the
abdomen by shots from a .2.83 caliber
and a .357 magnum revolver, is being
inoved from the Huntington Intercom-
munlty Hospital intensive care unit to
a prtvate room today.
Hospital spokesmen said Dr. Fenner
has betn seeing family visitors, but
apparently has not been questioned by
police any further concerning the
Sunday night shooting.
"They haven't be'en around," said a
hospital spokescnan.
The staff member also said Dr. Fen-
ner apparently has no plans to talk t()
anyone else either, hinting at denial of
interviews with reporters.
~o far, the tale of death's intrusion
into the expensive suburb Indicates
Mrs. Fenner tired to kill her husband
for reasons not yet pinpointed, but the
wounded man was able to take away
her rifle.
At that point, police believe, she
obtained the brutally powerlul revolv·
er and fired again. at which time the
physician took her life to save his own .
r..tystery still surround s just what
the non-practicing medical doctor did
for a living, althouf;:h he is reportedly
a lecturer for PACE Seminars, con-
ducted by James M. Newman and
A.!!1oclates· Inc., Los· Angeles.
Neighbors reported hearing Mr.s.
Fenner scream: "I can't go on living
like this, day after day after day,"
seconds before Dr. Fenner began
shouting: "No, No •.. " and 1hots
rang out
They said Mrs. Fenner had a resem·
blance to actress Donna Reed, and her
marriage to Dr. Fenner appeared to
be an Idyllic love affair on the pol-
ished exterior.
The exterior apparently masked
some sort of festering torture, how.
ever, which erupted shortly before 11
p.m. Sunday, shattering the image of
their happlness for all time.
DAILY PILOT
OltANOI! COA.ST 'UILISHING COM,ANY
11.o\l•rt N. W••d
Ptt11dtnl Ind Publ!thtl'
J1c1' R. C11rl1y
Viet f'rftiOfl'll Ind CO-•I MITNll'f
Thom•t K11Yil .....
Thtmlt A. Murplii"t
Ma"'~lflt ldltot
P1 uf Ni1ttft
Mvttll"M Olrtdor
c.n M ... omc.
JJO W11t lty Sttttf
M1ili"I Aldr.n: P.O. low 1160 92'2'
•
you have to file within a year so I
decided the other day that I'd better
join with my neighbors and file my
suit along with ttlein," Gruber Mid.
A t.;tal 118 Harbor Area re'11ldenta
submitted damage claims f o r
$3,450,595 along with Gruber, ac·
cording to a committee official.
The official said the new filings
bring the overall number or residents
seeking damages to 2«», with their
claim& standing colleot:lvely a t
$12,801,795.
Gruber said he thought many jet
pllota are flying higher now than they
were before voluntary noise reduction
met.bods were ruggested by various
study group$. '
"But we're aWl getting very 1ow
ftlghts over Mre at times when
they're absolutely uncalled for.'' he
said. The councilman's houst, at 1412
Vivian Lane, is near the Harbor
Highlands neighborhood.
"I'm in the direct path of landing~
and takeoffs," Gruber explained, hh
voice rising, "and 1 can tell you we've
got some pilots Who are renegades."
"A week ago Saturday night at 7:35
p.m. they went right over my house
here with 2fl absolutely clear sky. In
tact, any time they go over you can't
talk with each other," he declared.
"Your TV goes shuddery and you
can't talk to your wife even il she's on-
ly 15 feet away."
"We're not going to sit here and
have our property destroyed by this
Board of Supervisors,'' he sputtered.
The councilman, who was in-
strwnental in getting council et1l·
leagues to pass a tough, anti~x
panstonist resolution a·gail'l'st Orange
County Airport, promised that he in-
teocls to "fight this rigtlt down to the
ground with the supervisors.
"They agreed a. long time ago this
they've turned it into a major airport
wcnrld be a feeder·type airport and
operation.''
Gruber again had harsh criticis.m
Cor Air CalifonUa, the airline which
led the way in establishing large-scaJe
commercial opera~ons out of the
county facility.
"They came to the city of Newport
Beach and requested us to go along
with them for flights to San Francisco
with Eleetras. 'Ibey said the Electras
can be handled in a manner that's
quiet and won't disturb your
neighborhood.
"We went along w\th U;lis . But Ulen
they came and put the DC9's (two-
engine jets) in.
"Their Electras still don 't bother us,
but these DC9 's , why, they're regular
tigers."
* * * Volunteers Aid
Airport Oaims
Starting Monday, a group of Harbor
Area volunteers will staff a permanent
office to help residents fill out damage
claims against big jet operations at
Orange County Airport.
Dan Emory, chairman of the
.<\irport Noise Abatement Committee,
sajd the office workers will answer
questions, explain how to file claims.
and direot a mail campaign against
wllat Emory calls "the big jet ex·
pansion."
He said he baa workers lined up
from Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and
C.Orona del Mar, headed by Mrs,'Betty
Godfrey, to maintain an office at 488
E. 17th St,..He said telephone service
starting Monday would be offered on
airport information a.t 642-4404.
Mesa East Side
Under Scrutiny
By City Aides
Costa Mesa city officials are about
tc. take a new look at the older, east
slde of town, to determine whether
allowing multiple residential units
might add some punch to its develop-
ment pace.
Vice Mayor Robert M . \Vilson asked
Cor the study by Plann.lng Commission
members, after tlle City Council sun1-
marily rejected a variance request for
a duplex Monday. .
M. H. Maberry, of 2.11 Sherwood
Place, wanted to put a duplex In an
area zoned for single family homes at
398 E. 19th St .. but there was virtually
no discussion of his request.
Councilmen had ~arller approved a
similar request by Norman N. Tillner.
of 324 Hazel Drive, Corona del Mar,
for property 2388 Norse Ave., farthe1
north of the 19th Sb'eet site.
Many area residents oppotie multiple
units, but owne.ra of vacant propert)·
almost invariably a1k for them.
Ex-LA Architect
Faces Tax Charges
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A on•time
Los Angele• architect. now Uvlng in
England, was indlcted Thursday on
charfes he failed to report more th an
'900,000 ln Income between 1962 and
1964.
Jules Salkln, 61 , who a!Jo operated a
Joan company here, wts indfcttd by a
lldeNI arond Jury OD three cotmta ol
lll!ni la!,. Income taJ otatem<nta. ,. .
I \
S to Watch
·:county Vote
.Tab Setup
•
Ao initial group ol five Orange Coun.·
ty leaders bas been named by County
Clerk William St John to serve on a ___., --------tut lor<e to check 200 vote coon g
maohlnta 1n the Nov. S general elec-
tion. St JdhD sooght a9d ;ot pennlssloo of f.be supervisor& to u.se -the 200 Prln-
tomatic model votinJ tMCblnes of-
t.red without coat or ·Obligation to the
ci>unty by Ille Automatic Voting
Machine Co. -
Named as a nucleua of the ta1k
force are David James, Republican
Central Committee chairnwl; John
Dean, Democratic Central Commlttee
chairman; Cecil Mirk.s, r e t 1 r e d
Orange County farm bureau leader:
Joseph Irvine, public affairs represen4
taUve for Pacific Telephone and
William Lindsay, county governmental
affairs committee chairman, Ora,nge
County Chamber of Commerce.
In getting pejrmission to try the
voting machines St John told the
supervisocs tbe county's present
Coleman Vote CountJng System is
overburdened beyood its capability to
produce final results within a
reasonable time.
CORONA DEL MAR MAN'S AUTO FELLS POWER POLE AT IRVINE COVE, LAGUNA BEACH
Sptet•cul•r Sparks Caused Two Othtr Autos to Cr1th, s.t OH A11rm1 In Huntington Be•ch, Co1t1 Me11
"The.re is danger of machine failure
with long sustained operations and
there is also the problem of extreme
personnel fatigue during long worklni:
periods over 30 hours," St John said.
Crash Shears Power Line
Try out of. the Printomatic machines
ln November is only the first of
several systems St John bu proposed
for evaluation. The Datavote punch
card system will be tried in the 69th
Assembly District in the June, 1970
primary election.
A 55-year-old Corc.na del Mar
driver's auto early today sheared off a
power pole on Pacific Coast Highway
in Laguna Beach, blacking out a wide
area of the co~tline and triggering
another two-car crash.
Spectacular pyrotechnics of
spraying sparks from tile ruptured
12,000-volt power line apparenUy
distracted two other drivers who col·
lided. One car driven by a Costa
Mesan overturned on the center strip.
No one was hurt in any of the three
autos involved.
The power line break, however,
From Page I
DUBCEK ...
touched of1 emergency alarms in six
power company eubstations, including
l:tuntington Beach, Newport Beach and
Costa Mesa, according to Laguna
police.
Sgt. Wendell Faulk said the felled
pole near Irvine Cove caused power
crews to scramble to the scene, fear-
ing a major power outage.
other. 'The other car was driven by
Michael L. Peterson, 19 of 2411 16th
St., Newport Beach. He too was
distracted by electric sparking.
Before their sideswipe cotl,ision at
about eight minutes after midnight,
said Faulk, Beebe lost control of his
car. It sheared the big pole at the
ground and flattened an Irvine Cove
sign.
Also slated for test is the IBM
Votomatic System in the 1970 general
election.
The task force will be asked to
assist in ev;tluating the present
operating systems and the new
systems in both Orange County and
surrounding counties. They will be
asked to make recommendations to
the Board of Supervisors.
2 County Men Sought in Texas
Driver of the auto hitting the pole
was Marshall U. Beebe of 330 Poppy
Ave., Corona del Mar. Pollce said he
had apparently lost control of his car.
Faulk said Lawrence W. Epperly, STANTON -Two Orange County claim they found 102 diamond rings
19, of 2527 Elden Ave .. , Costa Me&a, men sougtit on warrants for a Texas and 20 rifles and sbotguna along with
was northbound. He saw tbe wire loan company robbery we.re ap· other property taken in evidence.
sparking and slowed veering right prebended by Stanton police officers "Property that was recovered is The next thing the San Diego based Marine knew, said Faulk, he was Wedneeda.y night after a day-long believed to be from the Suburban Loan
upside dawn, his little car skidding on search of the city by local and federal Company oo San Antonio, Texas," said
its top. of!icer.s . a Stanbon police officer.
Czechoslovak Communist p a r t y Captured were Brian Barricklow, 35, "We worked wi!rh the Treasury
leader. -1.., The police officer said Epperley'5 of Garden Grove and Johnny GiUbbs, agents in this c~se bec:ause of the in·
Mrs. Dubcek and one son were.va~a-auto and a car in the neighboring lane 30 or Stant.on. Officers and U.S. terstate flight of the men," the officer
tioning in Yugoslavia when the Soviets 1_w_e_nt_b_um-'-p._N_•_ith_•_r_dri_·v_e_r_•_•_w_th_• __ T_re_a_s_ur..:y_a_;g:._e_n_ts_wo_' r_ki_·n..:g_o_n_t_h_e_ca_s• __ •_x-'-p-la_in_ed_. ---------
overran Czechoslovakia. Another son
had been reported in 'Egypt.
Earlier in the day Fl'ee Czech Radio
broadcast that Mrs. Pavlina Dubcek,
mother of the party secretary, pleaded
with the Soviet commander i n
Bratislava for her son's release.
The commander was said to have
replied he was not interned, "We are
negotiating with him."
}le added that Dubcek had broken
promises he made at the Bratislava
negotiations earlier this month to the
Soviet Union and .the other invading
countrie.s, the Czedb .broadcasts said.
From Page I
DEMOCRATS •••
the state's 43 convention votes. 'The
regular party fOrces led by Gov.
Lester G. Maddox were given the
other half.
Both Bond. a Negro Georgia
legislator, and Rauh, a Washington,
D.C., attorney, are McCarthy sup-
porters.
Meanwhile McCar't2iy forces on the
Rules Conunittee planned a critical
reception t.oday fer Texas Gov. John
Connally, an advocate of retaining tbe
unit rule requiring all of the fitate's
delegates to vote \\-i.th the majority.
Stephen A. Mitchell, McCarthy's
convention chief. said he would ask the
rules group for permis5\on to ofter
rebuttal testimony, making clear he
considers the fight ag•hut ttie Tezas
unit rule a key weapon in McCarthy's
offensive.
From Page l
PLATFORM. • •
gressive combat action by U.S rorces
and a coalition ~overnment in South
Vietnam would threat.t'n a complete
takeover by North Vietnam and its
allies. Then referring by name to Sens.
Eugene J _ P.1cCarthy of Mlnnesota and
George S. tt1cGovern or South Dakota,
chief rivall of Vice President Hubert
J{. Humpbrty for the presidential
norninadon, Connally said it was "a
sad and traiic experience to see
pre1kt.tnUal aspirants or t h e
DemocraUc party try to equate out
cour1e of a"<:tion In Soutll VleUlam with
wbat the Ruasians have doQe In
Czechoslovakia, but that is precisely
what they did."
"I would implore this cc.mmlttec to
write a plank wlllch supports the
determined fight or the administration
to preserve . . . [reed.om," Connally
said. He got a standing burrt of ap·
plause from moat oC the platform com~
mJttee mernber1.
mfttee members. •
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··~ -
New Boats Outshone as Spectator Looks On
BIRDS OF A FEATHER -Three former worid
champion star 1ailol"I are finding the competition a
. • .!llllf J'Ollih in the Olympic 5.5 meter class a.< they ·•tor an Olympic berth. BiR Fic ker of NHYC, sail·
~eleeme A.hoard
Uere -, s Some
r·?..
Sinart Advice •
~
;E'ly ALMON LOCKAllY
""
Sul.H. Smart, cbairmao
ot:;ibo U.S. Olympic v@·•,., <Jomrmttee, 1>u
IJOGw..Ve.t'Y decided opi.niON onabe cla.11e1 ol ~ti "'40111ould be induded in
th•i"Olyq>ic ya c b tin I
g ......
.jps tile 77-ye..--old dean
ol ""'° lotematioo.al Star Cliil iJ rd rtluotatt to ex-
pr6'. bi• opini<>na on IOll'lle
of b · -f1 roine on in •tl>e ln~tioolol Yod>t Baaing u..,..
•!fby not," gMiJ tile salty ~-"'I'm used tK> opening
n>iioJMuai -putt;,,. my t.,qo. It.''
Sijirt 18:61 particu.t.r ex· oo9ll0o to !ho IYRU't on-
~ pllll .. ~·the prliliht SClar and °"8gon
claiiiN irt the 1972 Olyrnpl01
wi~ cy. new de5igm -ttie
........... Tempest and . ttie
thile-m.cm Soling. Smart is
eq'iany.enlf.batic in bis ~i
.. ; h>t if •DY d the
~mil c )ame.c;. me tome" to be"-::. tiiminated from the
OJlit!Ojal it -be d1e U
....... -bubeen
_, cllig<otly in tho
riili ben et Newport.
FAnEST BOAT
'/Snideo beine • rldi
mlfi'-i -·~· tbe S..5 u •
development clast! Cloes not
put enoogti empha&s oo the
1ld:U of tile 1kipper end
crew. The man Wilth the
1-boat 1' going to win,"
lay& smart.
"And that' I not th I
~Y of the Olym·
pial," be continued. "Ol)1n·
pie medel1 lihOuld go to the
mo11t "'"""""'nt sldpper aod crew, not to 1be iaotelt boa!.
Olllen<'M, ~ not -• lfOld med&! lo Ille cle<i.,..-
of the winnlng boat!"
.M to the e.rpenae of tJie
5.5, Smart &a.YI he hal it on
god authority that at \east
one ot lbe boaU in tbe m.11
has a price tag ol over
~.000.
"ijow .,.., Ille IO-Ollled
underdeveloped -al· torcfto ~. llank te1t oild
build .uch • er&ft -unl~
they form a tyndicate!''
.
Book'1 Title . --1\fut So Brief -lft:W YORK (UPI) -A
boS wrl-in the 16th .,.,, .
fur1 bJ P lldra Bortolome de W 0-. to protest tile
of Indiam In J.etln • bJ . co!-
bu -~IHt
tttiif ever foir a boot, •Y•
Dr.:.T<irdan M. YCJUDC, Plt<e
Oollep proleslO< of Loin
AmCbn Alfain.
,;;. 1itle: "A Very Brl•f
Dua1ption ol the Deltruc·
tion of tho Jndfam, Being a -rru. Acco\l'lt ()( Cruel
111 ,.. am &111111>tar1 °' ·iJI TW<M>Q-lllllll"" Poopla."
'Smart wants to know.
'l1h< 5.5, &11"lt points out,
it a "development" cl8",
meaning that they do not all
have to be eud.ly llikle ao
long u they come out in
confomil ty "1i1h the in-
t:ematiopal rule. This &ive1
de&igner1 11. wide lattitude in
ingenuity in devel<>pmc the
!MteM· possible boat.
"I ljave nollrinl oeatn•l
develqurl.ent cLas&es ," s.a.y11
Smart, "! juit don't tllink
they have a place in the
Olympies. B ut M we have to
have ·them, why ftot' a
llrrialle.r boat that h not "°
exJ,emiive? ''
Bl'ITllR
R's iunderstandialble that
~art-M more than a litue
bitter a·bout 1lhe pcoposaI to
eliminate ~ Star from the
Olympic cla&&e~. He has
been " champi.co&hip Stlar' lilllor lioot yooth and for
many ye.ar& lefV'ld M held
tt ·the U.S. ClaH Altocla·
~-Smart argues tha'l ttle
Stiar is the most widesprNd
boat in tile world -with th•
· e~ of 1he Snipe -
llrli that 't ~ a stronc in·
temtational tiSOciatioo.
The Dragon i.'i admittedly
ttie slowest boat in the
Olympic cluses, but Sn'mt
COlltenck-that this mud not
be ia fector so Ione u all of
the bdats are 115 .alike as
they can be. He furttter
points out that the Dr81f011<
also have • strong irl·
;ernatiODAI °"~ ond
U5ually attract the l~t
podicipotioo in Olympic
yachting.
'TOO NEW'
Smart hMteDll to vow 1hat
he has nothing •tainot
e:if'ler the Tempest o r
Solent. •·1t'1 just ttlat h y
att too new and do not have
Mi· aOequM:e balckjround or
ort<anization. ''
Bo11b the Tempeot ond Ill<
Soleot wen deRtned 1rititrin
the put: few years in a
design ooou.t 1pOMOred by
th& IYR.U itlO come up with a
poir ol hlllt ,,...,ormo11<"
boats for Ille Olymc>ie&.
T9rnpMt ;. -the ..... 8ize 88 a Star but futures I
trape>e fa-tho <NW "'belp
keep the boM on an even
keel.
"'l'Npezel '" b-cen-
tlet>lloaid -Nil u 111• FljUIC ~ ..... ,_
O~ c la11 ). No
a owDIJld be ...,...
from the m...,,_, m a
good kttl boat... • • 7 •
Smatt.
-od'11l1'I -bh Is • \Uce crying tn t h I
wiidmless in many eirclee
both in E.urope in this ooun·
try.
"But t be:Dew t_n ••· pr..mg mr .,,.,.., ...... I
baiY• odl," bl aonctuded.
I'
' '
DAll,,Y PILOT INff ....... 0..ILY PILOT It.ff l'!Mtt
ing an old S.5 Charade (No. 57 ) is leading Gerry .
Driscoll (No. 82) and Lowell North (No. 76) both o!
whom are sailing new boaU.
FRONT ROW VIEW -Lone sailor in cal-rigged
double-ender attracted sp~Lator interest as he lei·
surely cruised outside the r ace course in the 5.5
m eter Oly mpic trials. In background i1 one of the
hlgh·pov.·ered racing yachts.
Gardner Cox Man to Beat
As Olympic Trials Res1ime
By ALMON LOCKABEY
h lt't ""' ... 11 ... ••111111"
The fourth race of the 5.5.
meter Olympic trials got un-
der way on the Olympic
course off the Newport
Harbor entrance. The fifth
and six.tti r.acH will be held
Sa~day .and Sunday to
determine who will
~resent the lJ,S. in the
Olympic yachting games -at
Acapulco starting Oct. 1'-. ·
Gardner Co,x m Villanova, .
Pa. w» considered Ute man
to be1t .u the final phase o!
the trials got under way.
He is· leading the secies
wl'th two wins and two
losses, a f«midable lead in
view of the i-ule tna t 1kip-
p.r1 can throw out their
wor1t ract in computinc
ttieir fll!.al score.
Asked U he wrui confident
of winhing the serie:ir, Cox
sait1: "We're hopeful, but
the Mries ls a long way
from over."
He was Jooking hard at
John Marshall's red.ftllled
Bingo from Stamford, Conn .
which rtand11 in ~eco nd
place.
Counting all four race~.
Cox has a t.eore of 11ix under
and Marshall ha• 16,7.
'Sudden Death' Ocean
Race Set for October
Tho Ocean 11..,q Flfft
of SOu1hero OalifOrnta ha!
...,.. "" wt1h • prcpooal for
a reoe ttiat will detemtine
th11 ocean racing ctYam-
pion1hip for Cle yew.
Race Course
Planned for
New Lake
A mile:long lake ls being
crNted six mi\es 90lrth of
Phoenix, Ariz. that may well
become a boat racinc mecca
in the southwest.
'ft>e propoea I if! hr 1
"sudden-death" r ace 3imilar
tJO the San Diego Lipton Cup
Olallenge race. -
Tenbative date fOf' the
race bas been 8e'I. for Oct.
19. To qua'lify for entering
btle race a boat mu11t finiMl
m tile first five over.all in
tht WOitney. AhmWlSOn .
Balbo& Y8d>t Club'• "6
series. Cmfornta Y • c h t
C.W '• Overton or Loog
Beach Y.adlt Cklb'e Catalina
I11And Series.
The tirst race will be
spoosored by th! Long
Beech Yiacht Club. It will be
«.ntinued as 1n annual af-
fair.
A perpetual trOl'lly will go ro the winner a,, well fl3
participation p\aques and
crew patches lfrr everyone
invoMd, acoordini to ,Jim
Lindennan, preeident o r
ORF.
t!he Olympic tcorinv 1y1tem
But with the throw-out race
the picture looks a litle dif ..
ferent at tnis point. Cox
wou1d throw out 1 second
place, leaving hin1 with a
score of three. v.· h i 1 e
Marshall would tos~ out .a
third place fin !sh, leaving
him with a first and two
aeoond1 for six points. On
the basis <>f three Ollt o{ four
races, Cox is \earling by 011ly
three points.
None or the l!> tllher ikip-
pen at.and& more tlw1 an
ou.tride , c hance unless 00111.
Cox and Marshall fold up in
the final three races. Ernie
Fay of Houston has a recortl
of 6--6-1.J for a Jour-ra~e
"f.Qta l ot 29.l pointt .and Bill
Ficker of Newport Harbor
Yacht Club ha s finishes of 2-
5-6-5 for a total nf J1.7. Roth
Fay and Ficker would throw
out a sixth place '>''hich i11
worth 7.1.
Hilton Wins
2nd Barthel
Serie.e Race ..
TORONTO !AP) -Th•
eight~ete:r yacht Iroquois
II, 11\rippered by Carl Hllton
end his five-man crew from
Clticaeo'• Lake Miclrig.an
Yiad\tJng Association, took
the 9eCOnd of tt1e Barthel
Trophy series r.aees Thur1-
ctay witti 1 time Of I : 1&.57.
Cheeta, skinpered by Tim
Nelson of the Toronto Lake
Yacht ~ng All&OOAtion,
Wa!! second in 1 :20 .38 ,
Neorseman, handled by Jer-
ry Sulliwn ct the Cleveland
Inter I.Jake Ya ch t i n e:
Association. plaeed third in
J :22.10, and Venture II,
1k.ippered by T<>m Fidler of
the Detroit Riwr Yachting
AstoeiatliOn, l :27.29 , was
lourltl. ·
NelllOll \WM leading with 1v, poinu, willh three race•
1till to be 1.Uled. Hilton ii
11ecood witfl 5V.. Sullivan
Ind Fi.smlr tNiil W'ith four
eadl.
1"hree wells will feed the
lake from an undero-ound
pool of high saline contAmt .
11ll body ol water will be
l,D feet wide. taive an oval
shape and provide a 1urfaee
m 136 acres. $40,000 Gold Cup
t.u.lltC.!" t1 """c~
~ .......... ..£! / I ~ ~INISH
/ "·-~· ·~ \II
~ '~-.......... J!
"'-.:, 8TA'tT
OLYMPIC COURSE -Diagram •hows the layoQt m an official Olympic sailing course with a tri-
angular lap and a windward, leeward, windwa rd
lap. Triangle i1 laid out in an im aginary d rcle.
Tioga Will Set Pace
For Outrigger Event
The 53-foot ketdl 'Noga far behind at 2: 15 :01 end the
will be the pacesetting eom-Kiai Nalu ~1Mar Vista) N-0. l
mittee boat Saturday when ~ team was In at 2:17:25.
nine Cft'WI o1 nigged younc The fleet will depart Long Beach'a Cherry St r e et men depart oo the ftrst an-Beam section et 8 a .m. and
nool Lona: B•ach-Oaia'.liM will inc!Yde the Tioga, <>ne
Island OutriAger Can -0 t more smaller sailboat m; a
Re~ta . commj.ttee boat. one speed·
. boat from 1he Outboard The Tiog~, rYWned f1oO\\' by Boiatin$l: Club of Long Beach
.John Jam.12son <>f West for eacti canoe as a Jafety
Covina. wai1 built in 1932 and p r e c a u t 1 o n and bw<>
was the prototype for ttlfJ po'Nerboatfi for prelM .
famous b 1 u e water yacht
T.ironderoga, 7Uoot ketch
now in charter service alter
a distinguished r a c i n I « .......
Favored in the J'QCf: for
ttie 400-pound outriqers will
be the nine-man Ha"lt"laJian
All-Sbalw team whid\ lht
Saturday won • 15-mile
tt..de\rp r11ce from Malibu to
Santa Monica by way of a
:tc>uthernly dip to Venice.
The !·I awai iana negotiated
£ne distance In two hou7". 11
minutes •and 25 1econd11. But
Ille Balboa Outrigel' Oanoe
01\.,'s No, 1 boat Vt'la.1 not
Teen-a ger
Tightens
Thistle Lead
SAYVILLE. N.Y. IAPI -
Dennis ClaiJ'k , 17•rear-okt
skipper from Seattle,
t.igtltened hill hold ~ first
place in the National
Th.i.5tlec~as1 Sailing CJlam.
pk>ruh.ip1 on Great South
&&y Thurlday.
Inboard hydroplanet a8
Jar&• 1a11 8even litres could
bi aooommodated for rac-
int. Marina facilities alstl
art: planJ\ed.
Hydroplane 'Bait' Offered
He sailed his Wizani of Id
over the n i nt ·milt
trtangul• course to win his
lt\ird in the six-race serie1
~t endt today. He lelde
nverall with 81/• point.!i for
the five r&ee.!i to date Mth
ftnilbu d 1·1·2-4-1.
DeY'elopmenl pl.am inch.adil:
four le'l*"ltl r.adng ooun·
• revolvinl around a mkt-
laloe lellnd. Jud... and
_. room facW1ltl ii.o
.. planMd.
Th• tour eour1e1 tncludt
an ~ APBA mile and
two-tt!lnll layout for reoord
cloeed coun1 racin1, 1 one·
qumt.er-mHe drag ttrlp, 1
one-mile 1trai~t away. and
a twoo-mllo ~ clMeic and
old-.
9
DETROIT -A toW puroo
of '40.000 -the bigllffl In
boat r acinl f« 1918 -
awoill ~ hydroplane
ownere ~ show up her•
s.pt. 8 fOr the eodt runnin1
of thrt American Power B<lat
Assocbtion'1 Gold Cup.
In boat riactni, the Gold
CUp i1 the most import.Mt
poww OOat race on
schedule. and i11 symbo14 c of
tpeed 1upremacy ifl com·
pottt;on.
Qu&li1Yinl tnalt lot ...
tronts will be beld Sept. M
wtien • li<ld ol 18 unllmltfdt
will be sil~ from tho pack
to race in three heata.
Ordinarily th• Gold ~
has f()W' heats, but ttlil year
there was a vote of official&
lo r1et under the unlimited
rulM rattl• tl!M tbe Gold
Cup rule1.
'the c:!ecilion 1mt:r1ed last
,June wMn weatMr and
counN conditlorwo made it
impoeail>lo to qnali!J.:'"llfl
--·· OJI' •
,~,
rule and theract w11
poetponed until Sop!. I. Tho
vote holds -for thl
September •vent.
The !int two be.,. will bo
run in three ~ON eacl'I
wittl. up to six unlimited1 ln
eacfl section. The top -'x
boata wtl oompete In the
final.
The courM wUI bt five
lap11 nvar th'N mile1, .p.
pro""<! for rooordl, oo Ill•
n,trott 1Uv11.
Willlom Alexancltr, P<lllo
Churdl, Vo. linl.ohed -.!
Thrllclay and also iJ -ovu-Qtfl with 22 pokJts,
Ed Fradoer, Oolumbut,
<:tio. it IHrd -31\0
potnil ; <llarle1 ~.
alao c1' Columb.u, bdl,
wilt\ 3.1 ; Jchn W..anef'llllCher,
Cleveland, tittfi. w.ith 36 ;
Denni.I Po&ey, Wapp i n£
Com., li.xth wtth :wl. and
JUMird Pcoocco, Houm>a,
--. wltblO.
Van Dyne
New Finn
Champion
Carl Van Dyne, Man,tolok-
ing. N .J . i1 the new Finn
Class North Am 1 rlc 1 n
Champion.
The ex-collegiate ·1allor
w..a1 virtually boo1ted Ulto
the ti.tli1t position by Bob
Andre of San. Diego who
switched from s8'lin1 to
surfing ln the tina\ two
races of the championship
regatta at Alamlt-0s Bay
Thursday.
Andre held a fraction of 1
point lead in fir1t place over
Peter 8,arTett of AlamifD11
Bay Yacht Club ai the
regatta went into JU: final
three race• Thur1day.
It 1tiU looked gocil tor
Andre in the firrt r i ce
Thursday 11 he finiatad fifth
while· Barrett w11 holding
sec-0nd with 1 1isth pllce.
The wind was blowjnf 1
moderate five knots.
But as the wind be1an pjp-
lng up to 10 knot. at tht
start of the second· race
Andre got his 14·foot 'dinghy
on top of a WIV'I ap-
proaching a mark. Th1 sea
suddenly took c-0ntrol and
Andre found himself .1urfing
smack into the maxk. So
much for a throw-out race.
It was in th1 third 1nd
final race Ulat Andre wa~
completely wiped out. With
the wind now whlatllng 18
knots end the Jea riling, the
San Diegan found himself
atop annther roller 11 he ap-
pr-0ached the mark. Again
the sea took control, and
again Andre hit the mark.
This one he had to keep.
Meanwhile. Van Dynt,
vrho had been lounginc tn
third place before th• day's
three races 1tarted, 1aUed
c-Onservatively 1long 1tl ,..,
cond . third and third places,
found himself sitting atop
, the heap when the show wa1
over.
Barrett was barely abh!i to
stay in second place on th•
!M:Dreboard by virtue ol win•
ning the final Ntce.
Third, only a tentlt o' a
p<1int behi nd Barrett wall!
Clive Robert• of N e w
Zealand wno 11 ln th.LI coun·
try on his way to the Ol1ftl-
pjc1 In Ootober.
And.re'• two DN1'1 drop-
ped him to 11Ith plact
nverall. Here 111 the fln1l
scoring o{ Ute kip 10 In th1
regatta:
I. Carl Van Dyne , Man·
toloking, N .J .. 44. 7
!. Peter Bal'Ntt, ABYe,
52.7
J. Clive Robtrh:, New
Zealand, 52.8
'· Robert Doyle, P1-M111 .. M
I. Peter DahartJ, &&1t
Guard Academy, M,7
I. Bob Andre, Su DI ...
YC, 70.7
7. Chuck Mlller, ABYC.
72.4
I. Frtd Miller Jr 'I assc. ,.
I. Peter Conrad, St. Tran·
els YC . 74.7
IO. Lcmb Nacfl', U f
llrktltf, 71.7
. .
DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE '
A Two-for-One Bargain
Sally R. ls a June graduate ol Newport Harbor !Ugh
School. Silt wants to .tudy nuiring at Orange Coast
College. ••
Don G. didn't do eo well In acadomlo aubjedli at
Marina lll&b· He would like to Je11111 auto body repair
at Goldm West College.
. Tareea J., a graduate ol Est&Jlcia !Ugh School, is
mmsng tor a four-year BA degree but needs to live at
home the l!rst two years because her parent. ean't
afford to 'end her aw., to college.
For one reason or another these three students
were not among the first to pre-regis!u for Orenge
lloest or Golden West junior colleges. Too bad, because
now there la no more room and Ibey can't get in.
'Ibe year i.5 1970, and there is just no way to shoe-
horn all tht students who want to attend into class·
rooms of a achoo! district that can't !""' bond issues.
The open door of college opportunity for all is shut.
The Califomla Master Plan for Higher Education which
1ay1 junior oollegee ohall accept all high ecbool grad·
uatee tumJ oil to be just words on paper.
But wai~ It i• not 19'/0 yet. It doesn't have to hap.
peb 11lat way.
Voters of Orange Coast Junior College District on
Sept. 17 will be asked to approve a $7.25 million bond
issue for new instructional buildings on the Orange
Coast and Golden West campuses.
There are no administration or cafeteria buildings
involved. Only buildings in which classes will be taught.
If passed, the bond money will be used during the
next four years to buy enother $7 million in state and
federal aid. 'Jbe aid money is given to districts that can
show their vaters eared enough to tax themselves for
a hal1 share.
In other words, voters Oiµ,l buy a second dollar for
looal use for moat of the dollars they provide. It is a
between·'3.llO llld '6 the lirlt year and Jeo1 each 1uc·
ceedinf year. The ownv of a '40,000 homo would pay
f7 to $12 the !Int year llld ltH thereafter.
lt'e n'1' a very high price to pay to ketp the door
o! aducalioaal opportunity open. Ever more students •eem to be haeded for that door and that'1 •the prob-
lem. Four ot five high IChool 1tudent. (ram the araa
who go on to college .go to jumor college.
The Jaoior college education they have been getting
hM been a barpln: ~r years Orange coast Junior Go~
!ego District ha.s been juet about the lowest In the state
In opending money on It. ltudent. and at the same
time 1t has held its own academically.
Failure of. two override elections in recent years
has meant Ibo end of many adult education prograw
and increues in clasa lius which have made instruc-
tors 1 .. , effective. But •till every etudent has been giv·
en a d:tance at education.
Failure of the bond issue will shut the door on the
ohances of many thousands of aspiring students.
The World Stands Helpless
Revolted. as it ha1 not been Ii.nee Russia'& 1958
1ubjugati0!1 of Hungary, world opinion -not just west·
ern opinion -has rallied to Czechoslovakia's cause.
Unlike the pre-World War II period of Hitler's ag.
gressions, a direct confrontation between great powers
would inevitably involve use of nuclear w e a p o n s •
Using them would be suicide for either lide. So the
world, including eome equally revolted Communist
cowJtries and parties, stands helpless to counter Rus·
sia's brutal attack.
The only apparent hope for a Russian policy rever ..
• •• ~ ~
--~ real two-for""1e-bargaln. .
The eoot to lujiayer~ will lie spread out over 10 or
more years. 'Phe owner of a $20,000 home would pay
sat rests wi1!t ate Soviet.' realization that tliey are d.,. •
ilag themselves more harm through ross of power or
preslige within the Rad bloc than they can possibly
gain in little Czechoslovakia. :'WHAT'S lo. ~ICE 61JV lill<E You [)OllJ6 IN A PlAt:E WI(~ T~l«r
Nal~•, Chlklisla, S11mfJoJ,.Worslalplng
Today We Have Hippies
By GEORGE R. HOFF, PbD.
A rebel without • cause i6 notrung
more than a diag:runUed1 negative
obslructionlet who bompul bfJ own
fulfillment, Doi ~ •eod•
and goali "-tlto llf• ton·
scientiously · · rnAJce §om•
l<lnd ct _, out ' 9l'il llv.9f.
Where 11!1'6 tilt lllM cil the
1950's? 'rlte1.~· " oider end now are the Dible, me Clf
the 1960'1. t hav• they done for
themselves or for the aQd.ety against
which they opoke 10 VfhEmeotly and
eloquent!Y? liothiog• really! Their
vo1cea ha~ n loo\ not lo tile wildemetC, tbitfaeuumcif therr
empty 6lld il<>gani,
TODA'I' WEI IM'llllll'l>i'5 -Qtive.
childish. l)'mbol~, -1· loving exj>on-t!f • lalaliedo
philosophy which Mteinpte to reduce
the essence ot buman txistenet to a
four letter wordr LOVE. They
desperately Icy 1'l i(ll,... the faat that
human6 are mult'htfmenstonal. After
all, to explore oad ~ to un-
derstand the omJJPle!'!ltjts, parodox .. ,
polaritiOI, -411d Vatled facets
of existence !J bard and lrultiating
work.
They want to ~ve ~ bit<! work
and frustratim to BM ttUffy 1clfntist1,
philosophers and tlitOIOgians who
arei;'t "free" ~ ~ reco~ that
all tbil tad world needl ii more love.
FllRTl{ERMORE, they refult to
acknowltdge all of reality. lnotead,
they pretend that if ooly everyooe
would love everyone else, Utopia
wodld result. They would like to have
a world handed to them in whicti there
is heaven without bell, good and no
bad, freedom without restriction, hap-
piness but newr sadne116, health and
no sickness, pleasure exclusive of
pajp, eto.
They wish to obliterate a large
measure m bow tmngs really are, .and
hold the delU&ion that the world is a
place of perpetual fresh air, blue sky,
and fluffy, white clouds. They say to
each otter, .. Whenever it rains, let's
withdraw into ourselves and pretend
that we can bibe!-nate until spring
comes again."
'llllE PROBLEM IS, of. course, that
a human can't naturally hibernate like
a. bear. Even to approximate hiberna-~' he must mduce an artificial state of insensitivity and reality distortion
by using one drug or another. Then,
while indulging in idyllic fantasy, he
i:xpeots the more mundane and
unenlightened segments of society to
satisfy his basic needs and take care
of him. He expresses righteous in·
dignatim when the power structure -
the establ.i.sbment, if you will -which
he believ .. it too ~ght 1'l accept
and support hb pusive, inactive
search for authenticity, doesn't spoon-
feed him while be pla}'!i philosapher.
HUMANS CAN easily ta 1 k
themselves into <r out of anything. lt
is increasingly clear that hippies have
not only sold themselves a bill of
goods, they are also explaining their
cop-out by rationalizing tbat they are
searching for new meaning in being
human.
What they fail to appreciate,
however, i,, tflat the longer they ride
free, the longer they sit on their duffs
and soorn those who, in their own way.
are attempting to improve ttie state of
man, the ·more they will find
themselves loslng self-respect. Hippies
really can't be happy until they either
pay for their ride or do some driving
themselves.
A rebel WITH a cause, and the
courage to be. committed to it
regardless of the work involved, can
become a major force in reconstruc-
ting a more sane social order.
They Can't Repudiate LBJ
WASHINGTON -A JJfCUllac kind of
tunnel Visioo al!liot. tli91• Dem*"'ti•
elements who t:bink their party can
blithely repudla!e or discredit th<
Johmon Administration's pOlicy iD the
Vietnam war.
U ttiey were to look to either side of
their tunneled view they would see
ample evidence that such a repudiat-
ion or discreditation could have sensa-
tional results.
Such men as Defense Sec. Clark M.
Clifford and Sec. Of State Dean Rusk
would have to ask themselves if they
could in good conscience support a
Democratic presidential nominee run·
ning on a platlform that made them out
to be fools or-knaves.
Nor would President Johnsoo be e.x-
empt from sell-interrogation on this
point. '11lere are .signs of a slow burn
in the Johnson Admbri.stration over the
lhllly-ahallying to which Vioe Presi-
dent Hwnphrey has exposed himself
on the Vietnam issue.
TBOSJ: WHO THREATEN to leave
the ~onvention bl Chicago next week
_,.,.,,less the Democratic convention
repudiates the JohMon war policy ap-
pare:utly have given M thought to
otherc 'tl'tlo would go home and warn
----Friday, August 23, 1968
•ditorial ~· of u.. Dauv
t "'kl 1'> Inform and 1tim-t&lot4 nadtn b., pr111nttna thU
fl4WJ'IJIM1'• ~ and com.
""""'"11 °" topla of lnt..nl
and ligrdfiamu, bv ,,,.,ndlng a
/M'llm for IM upr•Hlon of
-rcaMrr' oplnlou, and bu
1m11"""11g U.. dlwru .,;_.
polnu of inf""11<d ob,.,..,.,
ond 1J>Orwm..t "" topla of 1M
dav.
Robert )I. Wood, hhllabtr
their hands of a Democratic nominee
so terrified o! defeat that he would
compromise his previous convictions.
This is the result of the limited rocus
of that minority {as confirmed by
public opinion pnlls ) who wish to stop
the bombing unilaterally, invite the
Communist Viet Cong into a coalition
government and liquidate the war.
These elements o! opinion have
deluded themselves into thinking that
they represent the majority. They
have talked themselves into believing
there would be nothing 6ut favorable
consequences from wiping all vestiges
of the Johnson Administration from
tile face of the Democratic Party.
THE FACTS Jl.IIGJIT as well be fac ·
ed by the Humphrey side now. The
chief reason why Vice President Hum·
pbrey is in a pooition to win 1 first
ballot nomination for the preside.ncy is
tha.t he has inherited the delegate
strength which otheni.·ise would have
gone to President Johnson. There is
not the slJghtest rl!'ason to believe that
Vice Preside'lt Jiwnphrey could ha ve
demonstrated his populaTity i n
presidential primary elections against
the late Robert f . Kennedy or Eugene
McCarthy.
Humphrey iii now in his favored
position because the elements which
would have SUpPorted Jotmson, had he
be<n a candid>te, ll'ansfemd their
s~ to Johnson's heir, Humphrey.
TbMe elC!ment& include a large part of
organiled labor. big otatt aod big city
political organizations and th e
southern delegatiON.
llUMPllREY IS st>mped by the
Johnson Administration. All hi s
circumlocutions about being his own
man do not change that. If he is a par-
ty now to repudiating not oniy thl!I
Jobmoll Administratioo but his OWll
pnvloully upreaed opinl<U b• lo
I .
...,. llllrl ... t .......
likely to lose face with the on I y
elements at the Democratic national
convention who can nominate him.
AU this makes the vice president,
and the left wing part of his staff , very
uncomfortable. The staff bates to ad-
mit w.here Humphrey's nomination
will come from, Qlld would wish for
the vice president a great deal more
flexibility, .and a separate identity.
This separate identJty ls not to be
granted to Humphrey because a
minority in the Demooratlc Party will
not pennit it
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Aw, come on, D. R. (Gus, Aug.
16)1 where's your sense of hum·
or? The Costa Mesa Playboy
center fold gir\.of-the·month ls
A cutie. Admit tt . Isn't she? A.lso,
the reporter wrote thal she wa!i
admlre.-able. not "admired," as
you had it. Laugh a little. You'll
live longer. --C. P. "'" ....,.,.. ,.,..,U!f:i..,... llfl MCelll;flf .... " .... .._ -_,. .. e ... Dt ......
) ....
I
Czechs Have
Less Capacity
To Compete
The following Teport was prepared
be/OT• the invasion of €uchoslovakia
by the troops of Russia, Poland, Ea&t
Germany, Hungaf'1J and Bulgaria last
T1l.!sdo11 night.
-Editor
The American Army has a
calisthenic exercise usually described
as "rurming in place." You go through
all the motions of running, but you
stay right 'Where you are, your knees
going up and down but never forward.
That. in a sense. is w ha t
Czechoslovakia'1 economy has been
doing for the past few years. In a
world of explosive -economic growth,
the Czechs have been going nowhere.
The gross natiooal product has re·
mained stationary or actually shrunk.
Ludvik Ubl, first deputy foreign
trade mini6ter, recenUy commented:
"As a result of the big volume and
stability of Czechosl<Wak deliveries to
the Soviet Union, this country as a
producer and a trader became used to
a certain self-indulgence that con-
tributed to the general alterioration of
our goods and capacity to compete."
The Cz.echs now want to be(.-ome com~
tetive on world markets again arid to
diminish ecooomie and political depen·
dence oo the Russians.
MORE T B A N 60 percent of
Czechoslovakia's external trade is
with the eastern European satellite
bloc. Hau of this is with the Soviet
Union itself.
But . as the British commentator'
Michael Simmons reports, more than
20 percent Of the country's trade is
alsG with the western industrial
economies. Expom to them in 1967
amounted to $331.2 million, a decrease
of $55.2 million from 1966. At the same
time, imports rose from $3'l8.8 million
to $369.6 million. "Nearly a quarter of
the 1967 exports went to West
Gennany and over $48 million each to
Britain and Italy. Western imports
came mostly from the same trio and
from France and Austria."
Cuch machinery is obsolete. Righ
production costs make C z e c h
manufactured goods uncompetitive
abroad. Simmons quotes Prof. Ota Sile,
deputy prime minister in the Dubcek
regime and architect of the CWTent
economic act.ion program: ''The new
economic system must effect a change
which will entail new methods o( plan·
ning, changes in financing and
crediting, rrunoval <J.. s u b g i ·d l e s .,
changes in price relations."
JOSEPH WECHSBERG writes from
Prague: "I have heard no talk ...
about overthrowing communi'im, but
many people here do want com·
munism plus freedom , . • The
Czechoslovak reform it already •
much bigger thing than • • • even
Titoiam ln YugoslaYia • . • U the
Czechoslovaks prove that communism
can ooexist with freedom, their sue·
cese will unquestionably affect. not on-
ly ~ intell~tuals but the entire.
PoPUJ11tions of other Communist coun·
tries ..• Pol.and, Hungary, East
GennAny. and perhaps even the soviet
Unl0'1 ."
In the ta\U at Qerna and the
Bratislava communique, the Cucbs
-ed remorloablo -to Soviet mllillrY _......
Why Are They
Dissatisfied?
Reading about a musical comedy
star who has gooe to Europe to .study
grand opera, I wcmd:er'ed again why 50
many talented persons are dissatisfied
with the tbi.ogs they do well and feel
impelled to embark oa. projects
beyond their powers.
The ,inger iD question is one of the
brightest adornments of the musical
stage: Her voice is beguiling, her
comportment endearing, her success
full and justified. What need is there
for her to compete with opera singers?
G00I1ge Gershwin was a classic case
of such artistic frustration. Ti.red of
the excellent popular tunes he tossed
off so easily, he went to Paris to
study composition under Stravinsky.
The latter was puzzled by the young
man's Wire to write "serious"
music, and tried politely to dissuade
him -but Ger sh w i n remained
disgruntled until his death.
EVEN SO GREAT a creative man
as G o e t b e thought lightly of his
tremendous literary works, and was
most concerned with his scientific
labors -especially a "theory of col·
or" he was convinced would place him
with NeVt'ton among the scientific im-
mortals.
.. As for what I have done as a poet,''
he told Eckermann, ';I take no pride
whatever in it. Poets more excellent
than I have lived before me, and
others will come after. But that in my
own century J am the only person who
knows the truth in the difficult science·
Of colors -of that I am proud."
NEEDLESS TO SAY, no oae today
pays attention to the theory of e10lor
promulgated by the author of "Faust'"
-who himself was apparently
unaware ttiat his own hero, Newton,
dismissed his sci'entific work and
thought that his Biblical research
would live forever.
Nor, to take lesser examples·, do we
read the "serions" novels of Conan
Doyle, which he ranked far above
Sherlock Holmes; nor listen to th•
"serious" music of Arthur Sullivan,
which he tttought would outlive the
fri'volous &avoy operettas he composed
with W. S. Gilbert.
DANTE ROSSETTI, the fine minor
poet, wanted also to be a painter, and
once showed Whistler a picture in its
early stage5, which the American
artist criticized. Some months later,
Rossetti again showed Whistler the
completed picture, this time in a
beautiful frame.
"You've done nothing to It since 1
saw it, have you?'' Whistler a,gked .
"No," Rossetti admitted, "but J've
written a sonnet on the subject." He
then read the lines, which were lovely
and tender.
''Take out tht. )'.Mcture," advised
\Vhistler blunUy, ··and frame tile son-
net."
'Radar Tracked Saucer'
To the Editor'
C.Oncerning the Royce Brier column
on flying saucers (Aug. 19): While sta·
tioned in Germany in 1965, at about
2:05 a.m. frGm the angle about north,
northeast, and at about a 60-degree
angle, our base radar picked up a solid
metallic blip on the Mdar screen. It
came down at this angle and stopped
at approximately five miles due west
of tile base. It¥; altitude was then a~
proximately. 6,MIO feet
It seemed to pause I«' ap.
proximately t h r e e or four seconds
then shot in a direction over the top of
the base at about the same altitude.
Radar tracking speed at the base
when this object passed over was ap·
proximately 8,500 MPH and picking up
speed. As It did so it had a clear
brilliant pulsating light which was in
color a blue, silver, green light. Its en-
tire viaoo on radar from first sighting
to end was -ap!m>::lllimately 15 second1.
~fVSELF AND FIVE other fellows
on guard mount around the base saw
this; a few others also saw it. The sky
was perfecUy clear. and not MY
clouds in sight. 'l'his was not .a figment
of one's imagination. It was real.
This radar report soon disappeared
and tbe wbole matter was under bush,
hush. WMn any of us Mked about it
we wue told to keep our mouths shut
or else. Then later we 'Wt!n! told that
wt w,... day dreaming ood tO forget
it. My friend ln rader told mt what
was in h report later.
This goes to prove one thing -that
the military keep everything like this
top secret .and don't tell the public 1
thing but only that it's gase!! or lighlii
on clouds. Bunk, I know d.lffert'nUy . It
disappeared in a per1ect 1traight linfl
bacll: out into space. Wby doesn't tbe
~toll 11>1 public tho truth?
H. L. ENGLE
•
Volunteer Bure ..
To the Editcr:
Coneratulationt1 &T'e due the DAILY
PILOT for the e:rcelleclt fearur. story
on the Volunteer Bureau pUbllshed
August 19.
Judy Hurst has done an outstanding
job in bringing to the attention of the
public the many facets of the bureau's
activities, wtLich offer gen u t n e
services to the county'15 agencies, as
well as unlimited opportunities for in·
V?~vement oo the part of the county'•
atizens.
IVLVJA L. BOGEN
Bould Miinber
fhe lf'ohtntecr Bureau provl~•
a.sristanct t1> 65 agenci11, 1ehools,
hospitals and conooltscent ltomc.s fn
Southern Orange County. Votu'IUears
ranging frGm U'en-ager1 to gnmdpar-
rnu ar~ netdtd. -Edilor
.-~-aw Geo.-.e~~~
Dear Gtorge1
Tod.ay'1 scanty dron I 1
absolultly disgraceful and I
would liJce your opinion. Loot at
all the go.go glrllt
SHOCKED
Dear Shocked'
WHERE? WHERE'
Oh.
Ahem -yes. Absolutely
disgraceful and r say t!k·t.slt . But
l wish yoo wouldn't do that
before I've had my second cup of
«>ffee.
I '
---
BY
WILLIAM
REED
Reeds •••
In the Wind
Huntington Valley Young Repub-
licans were treated to a real show •
Wednesday night. Speakers at the
meeting included Robert Burke,
who is nmning for election to his
second term in the 70th Assembly
District, Bruce Nestande, making
a bid in the 69th Assembly District,
and William Teague, trying to un-
&eat Richard Hanna in the 34th
Congressional District. ·
None of this trio provided the en-
tertainment. The entertainment
came from a meeting next door o!
the North American Manx Assoc-
iation.
The men from the Isle of Man
caused no end of consternation as
they played the "Star ppangled
Banner" while Bob Burki\ tried to
ipeak. Th en came "God Save the
Queen."
Bill Teague was the target a,; the
public address system suddenly
put out a call for ''Jack and Gert-
rude." Troopers a!L the trio of pol-
iticians managed to carry on in the
face of music, laughter and weird
noises including thumping and a
sound ve ry much like a Bronx
cheer.
* Bill suggested that what the na-
tion needs is to experiment with a
professional military as opposed to
one consisting of drafters.
•• u .. u --
U,.t Tt ....,.
Navel Etigagement
Actress Kim Novak poses in front f1f. Graurnan's Chinese Theater
with a 6.8 karat diamond planted prominently in her navel. Miss
Novak, who gained some notoriety by the same well-implanted
jewelry in the movie "Kiss Me, Stupid," was attending a premiere
of her new film, ''The Legend of Lylah Clare.''
Seal Beach Rate Holds
Seal Beam resideflts will contiooe to
pay the game lax rate next year that
they have Stince they were granted a
decrease three yeaJ'IS axo.
City council set the 1968-69 rate at
tl.35 per 1100 valuatidn at its meeting
f..1onday.
Of course there are a lot of y<iung
men who think that's a mighty fine
idea. Then you have to consider. a s
Bill put it, that everyone thinks
there must be a better way to draft
people -especially if you are the Long Beach Feting 'I1tle rate has been unchanged since
196.5. when oouncilmen dropped it
from $1.385 per $100 valuation. It had
been $1 .485 in 1963-64 .
one to be d rafted. W Il B' hd Bill i• noted for his light ap-a a ce on Irt a y
edi f li · d LONG BEACH {UP!) -Presiden· proach to the t ·um 0 po tics an tial aspirant G«irge Wallace wilt be
although it is a partisan race, I guest of tionor at a $25 a plate f u n d
couldn't help but be mu<:h amused raising dinne:r honoring his 49th birth·
with his routine on the posta1 pat-day Saturday night at the Lafayette
ron r eceiving from his congress-Hotel.
man the annual Jist of booklets Wallace. the American Independent
available from the U.S. Govern-Party candidate for president, wiU ,be
m ent Printing Office. 49 on Sunday.
~~~~~~~~~~~-
T'nii.s !tax rate is to brill'g in $886,470
in revenue, b as~ d on tot.al ia.ssessed
valuation figures tor ttle city ot
16.5. 664. 450.
The city manager's office noted !hat
the city had no outstanding bonded in·
de!tedness.
WALK ON THE WILD SIDE
. ' .
• •
Take a bold fashion stand. Show off the strong
"punched and p~led" look of Yan Eli's lla lian
brogues. They're meant to complement pants,
culolles, long·stockings and country skirls. Ea ch 21 ,DO
A. Pisa, antiqued while palent
B. Como, anliqued camel calf.
C. Sori , anliqued blue calf
0. Hardy, antiqued fey patent
Shoe Saloo, all stores except Lakewood
u .umS'
11 F ASHIOH ISLAHD • 644-2200 •
u '!,:X:Z '!,:a u • • • • • ¥ I 0 = • 5 0
F'rldly, Augutt D. 1968 Dill V PILOT .J
Sch9ol Succes-s Story
Fountain Va lley Offers Interest Classes
By SANDI MAJOR
ot rM 0.11' l"ltlt Steff
Fountain Valley school officials bave
found a way to make student.. like
summer school.
Teach them a:OOut Mex i co ,
oceanography, flying •nd travel.
It a:pparentJ.y worked this summer Jn
Fountain Valley.
Summerschool enrollment normally
drops off ~ percent during the four.
week sessions, said Fountajn Valley
Auistant Superintendent M I c b a e I Brick. .
But this year, in his district. 2957 of
the 3,289 klds, or 90.6 percent of them .
who started July ti went all the way
through to the end ol the session Aug.
2.
EaC'h of the 11 district schools took a
different "int.erest" and centered
rnath, reading._ lantuage and science
instruction eround it.
The special interest Mudie~ gave thf'.
children a chance lo take field triPfi,
learn phrases in f<lreign language, ex ·
periment with chemicaia and build
model aircraft.
New Courtrooms Planned
For West County Center
Open only six months tbe municipal
<.'CIU:rt buik!il>g Jn the Weat . Orange
~unty Olvk: Center in Westminster is
outgJ'O".~.
Supervisora have named architects
Rose and Fears of An.atteirn t.o draw
plans for three additional eourtrooms.
The sll original courts have been
Swimming Class
For Handicapped
Set Year Round
Swimming lessons for a d u I t s ,
students and children witb emotional
or physical handicaps will now be
taught year-round in H u n t i n gt o n
Beach.
The city Recreation and Park~
Department is no w ta.king reserV'a·
tiom for the fall session, which begin s
Sept. 30.
Childre':':'& lessons are scheduled
Sept. 30 to Oct. 30 and Nov. 4 to Dec. 4'
at 9::n a .m. to noon 81ld 2:30 p.m. to 5
p.m. Classes being offered are begin·
oers, adv.a.need beginners, specia'l
beginners and "Mo mmy and Me.''
Cost is $4 f<>r regular lessons and $5
tor "Mommy and Me ."
Adult beginner lessons will be off.
ered Oct. I to 31 and Nov, S to Dec. 5
at 8 p.m. Registration fee is $5.
Clas.se.ll for mentally handicapped.
educable m e n t a 11 y ret.arded and
emotionally handicapped children, are
6e-t for Aug . 20 to Sept. 19. Oct. 1 to 31
and Nov . S to Dec. 5. Cost ol each
a;ession is $4 .
Lessbns will be given at the City
Gym and Pool. 161lh street and Palm
Avt:nue. where regislZ'ation is un·
def way.
D
fully utilized since dedication on last
F'eb. 6 sceording kl C n u n t y
Admin istra1ive Ofticer Robert E.
ThDmas.
The new courts will house two new
judgeships .EJuthoriz.ed for' this year
and a third authorized for 1969.
The original court building cost $1.8
milloion and is leased to the county by
the Civic Center Autihority for $156.00)
a year.
7th Step Group
Planning Sale
The Orange County 01apter of 7th
Step Foundation will hold a rummage
sale in Huntington Beach oo Sat.urday
beginning at 10 a .m. at the Five Points
Shopping Center, Main Street and
Bt!Qch Boulevard.
The foondation is a n a t i o n a I
organization devoted lo preventing ex·
convicts from returning to prison .
lnformat~on on the foundation ma y
be obtained by Wl'iting to Box 544,
Huntington Be:ach, or by telephoning
coordinator Russ Olm at 839-6.115, 536·
3937 or 968-3993.
Westmont Youths
Win Baseball Title
Westmont. e.lemetary team took the
Second Annual Huntin-gton Bead\ City
"C" Letrgue Baseball Oiampionshill
la5l week by defea11nog Village View 8
to 5.
The champiordtip competition for
boys in 1econd through fourttl grades
wa1 &pmsored by the city recreation
and parks department.
StudenU at Areval08 School toured
the Starkist Tuna plant, Newport and
Long Beach harbors and the c:Gast
G·uard station in their study o(
ooeanograp!)~. They also had a Golden
West CoUeie instructor talk to them
about underwater sea life 9.Dd-worted . ' with scuba diving equipment In a
Newport store.
Hum an communications was ooe o(
the topia; at Tamura School.:i]er•
students worked at crealive g,
art and speech. Fountain Valley .C 1
student:! spent the summer studying
music.
Wardlow School tea.cher L)'Jlda
Moomow spent fou r years in the :far
East, an;I she helped her fourth to
seventh grade summer studer1U thi~
year le·acn aboot ii.
The students not only heard her
stories about the Orient, but they!law
films about it and corresponded "With
the em~ssies of some Far Eastern
countries.
.fa.pan was the focus or the Niebla11
School rirst and second grade summer
program. whjch offered nudentS a
chance to l~n to COUflt to. lO In
.Japanese and to speak a rew simple
Oriental phrases. B us hard kJn~
dergarteners picked up a few foreign
phrases in their study of Hawaii.
OWler Bushard students 1Ndied
~eology , and learned to pinpoint the
state's natural resource on a map.
They also experimenttd wtth chemical
studied fossils.
Reve lle Corp. furnished model
aircraft kiU for the second a.nd tird
graders at McDowell School, wtio
fOC'tlsed Ctn the Space Age tor the .um.
mer. They talked about Cape Ken·
nedy. then. built their rnodelsand did
research reports on them.
"Pa'l"ent.ll ask how can school be in-
teresting and fun and tbe kidls .still
learn anyttiing," the a s st 1 t a n t
superintendent said. "But !earing
doesn't have lo be drill."
Brick said this summer's ex-
perimental session was en attempt "to
open up the curriculum so that. 6um·
mer school had to do with things ttiat.
are inlteresting, not drudge." .
Older students at McDowell School
took the e~iment to its furthest
limits, by sperding tm summer "Fin·
d1ng Out About Things." In this pro·
ject. they were taught how to ust the
dictionary and enc~lopedia . then
Elllowed to do researoh and make a
report on any topic they chose.
School <Jlticials are pleased witt'1 tM
results of the program, so much 60
they are planning to do It again next
summer. ,
Parent'! i;eemed to like it. too . In a
survey m ade by Arevalos School Prin·
cipal R<ibert Lindstrom. most 1-.!d
they "strongly agree" the summer'
program was beneficiaf .and "1grff"
they would like to see ocoanograpfly
as their emphasia again next year.
• ' ' llM.lY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TIU. f:30 • OTHER DAYS 10:00 TILL S:Jlr HDPORT CEmR
I. t ll '• .
I
l • ~ I
\( DAILY PILOT
The si xth child of Mrs. David
Blacker of Dallas, Texas, became
an uncle before he was a day old.
The 'day the boy was born in Dal-
las, lits sister, Mrt Robert J. M•-
phiM of Helena, Mont., gave birth
to her second child, a girl.
• •
A Teal doU? Not reaU11, it's Ptttr
Ka.itneT who pla111 the titU rolt tn the
mtD Ultvirion 1hoto •"Tht Ugtust
Girl in Town" th.at prtmier1 this fall.
Ktutner 1a111 that he ha.I gotten uitd
to slipping into n11lom, 1kirtr and
fancy blou.ats, but when ht goe1 out
on location he oeta l()TM prttttl
~trange looks. • Huntsville, Alabama, city offic-
ials invoked two ordinances in
closing the business of David B•k-
er; one governing food handling
and one requiring that no food or
drink be served outside a building.
W. T. Garrison of the Madi3on
County HeaJtb Department 1 a i d
that 8-year-old David's lemonade
stand bad been operating several
week11 . • A special police squad, w h o s e
members dress like hippies, has
done so well since it was formed
July 15, that it probably will be-
come a permanent unit. Lt. Col.
Frank Batt•gli•, chief of patrol for
the Baltimore police department,
said the 25 patrolmen and two po-
licewomen have made 112 arrest.I
in the past 30 days on a variety ol
charges. • ' ,, ........ ...,..,_...,. _____ "'
'-' A passing Riverside policemon
noti ced the boys biuS{ fnltng
food on a. grill in a.n ice cream
shop ..• at 3:15 a.m. TM cook·
in WC! 1Wiftlt1 brok.en up. A·n B·
year·old and his companion&,
13 and 16, wert booked on IUS·
picion of burglary. Tht oldt:r
boys wtrt tttrntd ovtr to Juvtn-
ilt authorities and the t1oungtst
wa& btrndlt:d homt by h i '
mothtr.
.~ .................... .,.,. .... m>'I • A tarantula, measuring 24 inches
f rom foreleg to rear leg tip, has
been reported stolen from a soap
box in James McGuire's garage in
On la ria, Calif. McGuire, 19, to Id
police tha t his huge spider disair
peared during lessons to teach 'it
how to jump. A police all-points
bulletin warned the tarantula, nam·
ed ''Cuddles." is dangerous. • This m ay be a push-button age,
b ut the person who recently stole
t he m inibike of fireman Larry
Scarpace in Detroit may soon de-
cide never to push another button
a gain . . . let alone steal again.
Scarpace, a clown in fi re depart-
m ent parades for 21 year s. had the
24-i nc h bike ri~ged wi th a variety
of gags, including a booby.trapped
horn. Wh en the horn button is
pressed , the front end of the bike
falls a pa rt. • Jerry Edmonson, a 265-pound
pblicem a n from Centralia, Ill., was
t rapped in a stalled elevator at the
cjty j ail for more tha n an hour with
t wo other officer s a nd three prison-
ers. When the perspiring men ste~
ped out of the eleva tor, Edmonson
weighed 250. • The plumber tlnally uncrossed
the pipes in lrl•n Elll1'1 new
home in Weymootb, and it IJ oow
possible to 1et hot water without
llusblnJ 0.. lallet. Mrs. E1lb com-
plains ..,_, .. , IUI "the nelgbbors
still teep 11'1Q1 111 about OW' bot
seat•' ~ , • Rod H•-ot Topeta, Kansas,
noUced oomellllD6 Cauahl under
the wlndahleld ... cm lht tide
a,,.ay from the driver u be was
driving to wor~. When be got out
to talte It off, he found it wu 1om~
t !df's upper denture.
Lightning
Bolt l(ills
2 Soldiers
EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, F I a.
(UPI) - A lightning bolt crash~ into
a group of U.S: Army Ranger• un-
dergoing jungl e survival training
Thurt1day, killing two 1oldlu1 and in·
juring eight others, one critically.
The Air Force identified the two who
\ftre killed as Army Sgt. James S.
Bowden, 23, and Sgt. Charles E.
Smith, 20.
Sgt. Glenn G. Hammes. 20, was
reported in serious condition in Eglin
Air Force Base hot1pital. The others
who were injured were not im-
mediately identified.
Bowden is survived by his father,
Oscar L. Bowden of Courtland, Ohio,
and his mother, Mr1. Lura L. Bowden,
of Marion, Ohio. Smith Is survived by
his parentll, Mr. and Mrs. Howard I.
Smith of Lebanon, Pa. The Air Force
said Hammes parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Jack H.ammes, reside In Wichita, Kan .
The injured Rangers, with the ex·
ception of the critical case, were
treated for shock and burns and
released. the Army said.
The Rangers had been flown to this
Air Force base in the Florida panhan·
die for the "jungle phase" of their
survival training progr.am.
They were assembled at Eglin's
auxiliary field No. 7, apparently
awaiting a return flight to their
Georgia ba1e, when the lightning bolt
struck during a thunderstorm Thurs·
day afternoon.
Yippies Plan
'Pork Power' .
For Barbecue
OHICAGO (UPI) -A black "1!d
wb!to pig am aboot 10 ol m. Yippie
~ers wen'! hustled into a paddy
wagon b'.>day before the pig could be
"oominated" for president by the
Youth JnternatioDlll l'arly.
The Yippies, bearded and beaded ,
trotted wt a 61).pound porker named
P igasus as their oandiltate for presi·
dent, but police maved in before tile
first nominating speech. could be
delivered.
Scores of apechators and .. hor<le of.
~· and photo.O'll.pheI'l!I g.athered
on a mall under the Wdow o( a five·
Jtory piece ot scu.Jptuary by Pablo
Pioasso to witness what tbe Ylppie1
billed M their own nomin.a.ting con-
vention to upstage the Democrats
gatnering llere.
Police moved in aind ctiiargcd the
ringleaders witJh violating a local
statute whicfl prohibits livestock in the
city's downtown Loop area.
Some of the Yippies, about 50 or
whom gatt1ered for t ti e ceremony.
screamed "Pork Power" and one car·
ried a 1ign reading "Uve High on the
Hog." The Yippies, wbo said U1ey con-
sider every representative of ttie
Americ:a.n culWf'e a pig, promised to
eat Piga:rus be.fore their convention
ends.
In steam'}' Lincoln Park 10 miles
from the oonventioo site Thursday
night, While a soegy band ol Yippies
clapped their Mndl5 under the droop·
ing trees t.o ttle beat of rock musk. a
beanied fellow weardog an Arabian·
style bumo0&e explained the Yipple·
pig philoso¢y.
He &a')'I he is Brodlec Joseph and he
comes from "here -and tlhere."
"Pigs are anyone in 8\lthority or
representing authority," he told a
reporter. "They're tihe Johmion ad·
mini!tration, the oppressors who beat
down freedom, the parent.s who try to
mold ttieit obildren after themselveg.
No <Jtfense."
At aboot tbat time a blonde girl
perched on a cement railing at a park
bath hoose put dawn the nute she was
tooting and cried "Gi~ me an F ...
give mt an R." She got the meagre.
sweltering crowd of Hippies and rub-
berneckers to spell out "free love."
She looked at the policemen leaning
against bhcir squad oars in the
shadcws and yelled, "I'm 17 so shoot
me down!" The police shifted on their
haunches and talked Wool. baseball.
That is the tone of the Yipples. They
are the most strident and perhaps
disoriented of the banlh wha claim
t~y will march in mags.Ive protest
against the Democrats in the tnterna·
tional Ampbttheatre next week.
Marine Sentenced
For 'Resignation'
CAMP PENDLETON !UPI) -Pvt.
John Robinson, who "rtslgned" from
military servkt July 17, was 1en·
~need Thursday to 1i1 monUu h1rd
labor and a bid conduct dllCharge -
the H.Dtence he wanted.
Johnson, who bid asked for tht
sentence rather than duty ln the
Marine Cor1>t and service tn Vietnam.
allO wu ordered to forfei l two-thlrd5
of hit p.I)' during bis six months In the
hue bric. He w1s convleted In 11 court
martial for unanthorlzed absence.
The 6-foot-3 Marine said he was a
c on!c l e nt ious objector . llls
"resignation" W85 part Of II public
demonstration called "Nine r or
Pea~" in San Francisco.
$5,000 Reward
Negro Militants
_t\ssault Officer
,
PITl'SBURGH (UPI) -A blgh·ranlt-
ln& opllce official wu pounced on and
beaten by 1 mob of acreaminc Negro
militants during .a meettna: in City
Counell chambers Thursday.
A~ to 30 Neiro,yolltbs~ mOJt of
them dre11e<1 in robe·llke ~
American garb, surg~ toward aslis·
tant police superintendent John P.
Kelly and punched blm and knocked
him to the floor where a number of at·
tackers kicked him.
He was Wted and nun.a across 1
mahogany table, dropping to the noor.
Safety Director David W. O'alg and
several newsmen jumped into the fray
to shield Kelly from the attack.en.
Dazed, be w.u led from the room.
Sniper Nabbed
In Wichita;
Home Bombed
WICHITA , Kan. (UPI) -Police
traded fire with a plnned-<1""11 miper
early today in the uneasy sluma ot
northeastern Wichlta, sbaken by three
oonseeutive days of disturbancet:. No
one wu hit.
Police said the shooting stopped
abruptly after about 10 mi.nut.es. A
man, identified only .u a Negro, wu
arrested and taken to police bead·
quarters for questi<l'ling.
Kelly, who heads the division of
uniformed police, w11 punched in the
face and in the cheat, but he was not
injured severely.
Shcrtly after the outburst dozens of
pollcemen swarmed Into the council
cl\ambers and ordered an end to the
m eeting. The Negroes dispersed slow·
ly.
The meeting was called by offici als
of the Allegheny County Port Authori·
ty Transit in an effort to stop mug-
gings and rock and bottle throwing
against bu.1 drivus in t he
predominantly Negro H o m e w o o d •
BMlllhton dit1trict.
Billy Jobnlon, 2%. who said he was
connected with the militant Neiro
.i:tewspaper Thrust, was identified as
lhe first attacker who punched Kelly
in the moLJbh. He was charged with
assault and battery on an officer,
disorderly conduct .and di!ruptioo cl. 1
public assembly.
He was released on $1,500 bond perl·
ding a hearing next Wednesday. No
one el!e was cbar1ed.
The disorder erupted shortly after
Jomson accused Kelly ol giving
orders to police "to shoot anybody you .
see in an alley" during a rad.al
diaorder" in the Homewt>Od·Bnl&hton
sedion Tuesda7 night.
"You're a liar," Kelly retorted.
A shouting !natch betwMi tho t..o
ensued and Johnson allegedly puncbed
the officer. The other Negroes joined
the melee.
Industrialist-Publicist Mike Watson has offered a $5,000 reward tot
a picture of billionaire Howard Hughes. Watson would not name bis
client nor the reason for mak1ng the offer. To win, the picture mast
have been made later than August 1, of this year. There have been
no known photos made of Hughes since 1954 and he is known to go to
"We don't know whether he ran out
ot' amnnmitllon or wbat," said one of·
ficer. "The _, juot stopped."
Four hundr:ed National Guardsmen
joined city, county . .and It.ate police
Thursday In an efrort to enlocce .a
curfew, ordered aflter roving bands of
Negroes robbed several businesses.
W esty Claims
Viet Atwcks
Well Planned
extremes to avoid photographers. ·
PHll.ADELPHIA CUP!) -Gen.
Astronaut Down
TwO police officers were fired m at
a downtown intertection ln a separate
incident earlier today, but police said
the assailant, who fired Crom an apart·
ment house, .apparently escaped.
William C. Westmoreland, Army chief
of sbatf, has de1cribed the recent at•
tacks aroami Saia:oo rand Da Nang u a
possible buildup for another enemy
general offensive to coincide wilb the
Democratic National Convention.
Scientist Can't Fly, Resigns
The law offtce of Oiester Lew1s,
former pr-esident ol the Wichita
chapter of the National AssoOation for
the Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP), was ftrebombed and SUS•
tained heavy daml(e. Police said that
was the day's only reported arson
case.
Westmoreland, fonner U.S. com·
mander in Vietnam, declined to com·
ment on the lnvia1ion ol
Czechoslovalda whic'b be called 1
"political matter." SPACE CE~TTER , Houston (UPI) -
For the first time in U.S. space history
an astronaut has resigned from the
spaceman corps becmue he failed to
pas~ a mandatory part of his training.
the space agency said today.
He was IK. John A. Lle welly n, one
of the only two :\merican spacemen
born cltfzens of foreign countries. The
space agency said he resigned because
he could not learn how to fly jet
aircraft.
Llewellyn, a chemist from Cardiff.
\V ales. wa s part Of t.1e most recent
group of 11 scientist-astronauts named
to the space program.
His resignation left Ute National
Aeronautics and Space .~dministration
(NASA) with 52 astrona\lts, 14 of the1n
scientists and the rest pilots. Of the
scientists, five were chosen in 1965.
The latest group of scientist·
spacemen was picked a year a go. One
other member or that group, Bryan T.
o·Leary, resigned shortly after be
started flight training, saying officially
that "flying just isn't my cup of tea."
O'Leary, an astronomer, made his
decision because he did not like flying
and not because he was failing the
pilot instruction. Informed sources
said at the t;in'le he also was
discouraged by the s pace agency
budget which postponed scientific
space fli ghts ht might expect to make.
A spokesman at the manned
spacecraft ce11ter said Llewellyn
wa11ted very much to learn how to fl y,
hut ''made \lnsatisfactory progress in
learning how to fly airplanes." He had
completed his solo fligh t in the pro·
pellcr-driven T4 IA at ReE>ce . .\ir
Force Bases. Lubbock. Tex.. the
spokesman said. but washed out of the
next step in flight training -jet pilot
instruction. The spokesmar. said
Highway Patrol
Gets Steam Cars
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The fir st
of a fleet of six steam-powered cars
will be delivered to the California
High.way Patrol in .about eight months
-for tryouU on its Sacramento test·
ing grounds.
The plan to check on cl.aimed ad·
vantages of steam over gasoline pow·
tt for vehicles v.'as reported Frtda:--
t.o the Bay Area Transportation Stud:ii
c.ommission.
Bruce Samuels. an aide to 1\ssen1-
blyman Jo:in F. Foran. ID-San Fran·
cisco). said General r.1otor s had of.
rered six neu· Olismobile chassi~ and
$129.000 for instaJlation of the stca:n
propulsion equipment and test ing
txpenses.
He said the patrol u11\ si,f?n a con·
tract with a steam engine manufac·
turer v;lthin l\.\.'O month~ and the first
car will be delivered about six months
later.
'T"ne patrol would attempt to deter·
mine the superiority in speed. dura·
bllity, economy and freedom from
~mog which the manufact1U"f!r con·
lends steam power cars 9.·ould hsvt.
Llewellyn voluDtmily dropped back a
class two week! ago t.o get extra
training but that he still was Ut1able to
solo in the jet-powered T37 trainer.
•'This fellow liked it a hell of a lot,
hut just couldn't hack it," the
spolresman said.
Lewellyn had gone to special pains
to join the astronaut J:"Ogri.Dl. A
special ruling allowed him and
physicist Dr. Philip K. Chapman to ap-
ply for the selection even though
neither was a U.S. citizen et the time.
1'wo and a half months before ~
selection was announced lats t August,
Llewell yn's naturalization was com·
pleted. At the time ·he was an assist.ant
professor of c he mist r y and
astronautics at Florida State Universi·
ty.
Prematurely gray at 35, Llewellyn is
married to the former Valerie Mya
Davies·Jm?es of Om:hff, \Vales, his
birthplace.
lie celebrated his selection as an
astronaut wi th a bottle of champagne
to calm his "excitement. exhilaraticn,
apprehension and e.very kind of emo-
tion you can imagine."
A friend said he was glum about
having to resign from the Jrogram he
wanted to be in i O much, but was not
talking much e.bout it.
In April Llewellyn reported to Reece
AFB for SJ weeks of pilot training
leading to a jet pilot's certification.
Trus is a mandatory part of astronaut
training.
A space center spokesman said
Ll ewellyn was looking at ''several
possibilities"for the future , including
a non~tronaut post with the space
age ncy and the possibility of returning
to teaching.
Police said the 1ituation was under
corrtrol, indicating that a 10 p.m.
curfew clamped m the city "11d all of
Sedgwick County by Mayor William D.
Andersoo .and Gov. Robert B. Docking,
was keeping trouble ot a minimum.
Early today, police 1aid 14 persons
had been .arrested on charges ranging
from robbery tO a!lsault. However, a
police .-pokesman said he expected
many more anests would be made for
curfew violation.
Gunfire W88 reported in SE veral sec·
tions or the city after the curlew was
invoked, bu.t mQit Of it was confined to
the northeast side.
Anaheun Firm Wins
UCI Building Joh
A $6,185,000 contract for con·
struction of a two-building, multi-story
complex to house the School of
Engineering at UCI has been a warded
to J . B. Allen and Company of
Anaheim.
The complex. whi ch is scheduled for
completion in the spring of 1970, will
consist of an ei.ght•lory tower and an
.adjacent three-story structure wi th a
connecting plua. aod a sub-level floor.
Funds for the building were included
in a state con1truction bond issue
passed by voters in 1966, augmented
by a Sl .8 federal grant under the
Higher EducM.ioo Facilities Act of
1963.
The gel'lel"al's remark.II Thurs<Wy
came at a plane.side interview on his
arrival here to address the Disabled
American Veteram 47th Nltioul Con·
vention.
He said the stepp«!.up aU.Ckl
before 1he convention appear to be
well planned "to create ao attitude ot
frusu.tion in the Uttit.ed State1 ...
and strengtti. on their part."
Wesbnoreland, who returned trom
Vietnam last June, said the enemy
does not have the unlimited resources
or the will to continue the war in·
definitely and hoped to gain politically
what it is unable to gain on t!le bat·
tlefield.
He admitted that he saw Uttle pro•
gress in the Paris peace talks but ad·
ded •that at least the talks were still
underway.
Asked Who be would vote for in the
November election, the general said
joki.ngly, "I'm apolitical. I doo't vote. I
support whichever administration is in
office."
Beatie Lennon's Wife
Suing Over Adultery
LONDON (UPI ) -Beatie J ohn Len·
non·s wife Cynthia, 'll. is suing him
for divorce because of his alleged
adultery with Japanese-born actress·
artist Yoko Ono, court sources said to·
day.
l'he sources said lawyers for both
Miss Ono, currerrtly married to
American movie producer Anthony
Cox, and Lennon have dettied the
adultery charge in court appearances.
Showers Drench Louisiana
Eastern Seaboard Simmers for Seventh Straight Day
California
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Donated
FU!LERTON -Some
Uree tons ol. books about
fish are on the library
shelves-at Oa4 State College
h ....
'I1le collection of 19,000
volwnes and publications
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Leonard P. Schultz ol Port
Republic, Md., recentl y
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"Tile material c o v e r s
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accordin·g to Dr. David
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fessor or zoology. "Only
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Oceanography and Stanford
University have comparable,
ichthyological libraries in j
Ct.tifornia. 1
..,,.... ______ "*" ___ _
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FrldaJ, August 23, 1968
"'f'\.i1tl~h 20th ANN IV ER SA RY
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8 DAit ~ PILOT Fnda.y, August 23, 1968
Eig1at1a Jtlo11th
Hope Dims
For Pueblo
WASHINGTON (AP) -
The 82 of!icers and men of
the U.S. intelligence ship
Pueblo began their e.igtlth
morith of imprisonment in
N<dh Korea -today with the
Czech crisis thoogbt to
diminish any chances or an
early release.
'J1be outlook for release of
the Americans already wu
dimmed be<'.ause of hard·
line demands by the North
Koreans for a formal U.S.
.apology for the Pueblo ac·
tion in allegedly infringing
on their territorial waten.
gain the release of the
Pueblo and its et'ew," Kim
said in an interview.
Wintllrop Brown, acting
assistant secretary of state,
the head of a special U.S.
task force on tl1e Pueblo at
the S t a t e Department,
refused to comment on U.S.
e{furts to obtain the help of
Moscow in relet•sing the
men but he conceded the
situation is fMlstrating .
"We believe and hope that
patient discussion a n d
negotiation eventually will
secure Uleir relea s e,''
Brown said.
. --.
ur 1 ,....,"''
. -.
Ohio Prison
•
Riot A Ruse
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
-Ohio Penitentiary inmates
may have used their sei'zure
of four cell blocks and Ille
holding of nine guards
holtagea: to cover up c.i ef·
fort to dig an ..cape tunnel
_ ~ ~ prls~-~ni.ten·
IWy officials lh<!orlzed.
Ward.en M. J . Kolo6k1 said
'lbursday the prisoners had
cb~ throu£h several in·
ches of coocrete i'n a
celiblock basement during
the 28 hours they held con·
trol, apparently attempting
to tunnel into a mail office
adjaeent to the prison
business office.
Koloski saJ.d they also
!id.ala held with the 350 con·
victs actually were a pla~
ned ltaU Gr if some escape.·
mlnded.pr~onm1 just decid·
ed to take adwatafe of the
1ituati011.
A 500-mian aMault forc e
blew Large ll&Pillg holes Jn a
wall and the roof of the
prison with 90 pounds of ex·
plosives late Wednesday and
stmmed inside to r e s c u e
the guards.
Four prisoners were shot
to death Jn the fighting and a
ijfth was killed in the ex·
plosion. T w e l v e inmates
were fnj ured, one critically. The Diplomats here said
the Soviet invasion 0 r
Czeclloslovakia and t h e
resuJ,tant strain on East·
West relations hardly m·ade
it likely for a quick agree·
ment on tile Pueblo.
U.S. JUST WAITS
As for a U.S. apology, the
United States r e m a i n s
prepared to have the case
exiamined by an impartial
international body. When
the crew is released and
free to talk and iI the
testimony shows the Pueblo
was inside North Korean
territorial wuters, Ulen the
United States will take ap·
propriate action, B r ow n
said.
POPE PAUL STRETCHES ARMS IN GREETING ON ARRIVAL IN BOGOTA
were cuttlng a bole through
a roof in another cellblock.
He said authorities \ were
aw.are of the ereape efforts
and were rtady to confront
the convicu if they reactied
freedom before the guards
could be rescued.
He is flanked by Colombian P resident C1rlo1 R11tr1po and Foreign Minister Alfon11 Mlchtl1on Newsman Dies
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
William C. Stewart, veteran
newspaperman and
historian, ditd oC cancer
Thursday at the age of 61 in
his Brentwood H e 1 g h t 1
home.
CREW THREATENED
Pro-Moscow premier Kim
11-sung of North Korea, who
praised the Soviet interven·
tion of Czechoslovakia, has
. threateoed repeatedly to try
the !Puebo crew for spying,
Pope Hailed • Ill Colombia Koloski ..id he didn't
know if ·the bargaining
sessfons he and prison of-
but he has set no date.
No blanket U.S. apology is
in sight.
South Korea's am·
baissador to \Vash.ington,
Kim Dong-Jo, predicted tht\t
the Soviet use of foo-ce to
crush Czech liberalism
would have the effect of stif·
feIW?g Kim and his military·
minded cablMt bey<>Dd their
pi'Osent bard line.
NO HOPE SEEN
.. Ais long -Kim n..sung is
reWi1ed in powe< tllere ls
no hope to liberalize the
North Korean regime nor
l<'or the last 45 days North
Korea has either sidestep·
ped or completely ignored
U.S. requests for a 20th
meeting .at Panmunjom to
discuss secretly the re\e<isc
of the men and the ship. The
19th sessfon was held July 9.
The present interval is the
longest gap in negotiations
since the Pueblo, loaded
with highly sensitive elec-
tronic listening devices. was
seized in the Sea of J apan .
The North Koreans claim
t.he Pueblo intruded into its
territorial waters.
24 Americans Tell
Of Red China Visit
HONG KONG (UPI} -the plane was landing in
Twenty~four Americans told China.
today how they w e r e Their fears were put to
serenaded by Red guards rest 90mewbat after the
when their airliner made an plane landed, he said, when
unscheduled stop ln Com-Chinese ''in sh ia b by
munist China Thurs d a Y uniforms" came aboard and
night. spoke cheerfully to the
The American tourists passenger~. The Americans
and 30 other passengers were told they would be
aboard a Royal Air Cam· permitted to get off the
bod.ia DC6 got their glimpse plane but must remain in
of Red China when the plane the airport terminal.
was diverted to Canton on a The passengers w e r e
flight from Phnom Penh, escorted to the airport's
Cambodia, to Hong Kong. "cultural center" where
The Oigbt was waved away they were shown displays of
from Hong Kong's Kai Tak books by Chairman Mao
airport when a Japan Air Tse.Tung. An impromptu
Llnes jeUiner became ftuck song and dance show was
on tile runway. organized, Carroll said, con-
'Ibe JAL jet'.s port side sisting of Communist pro-
tires burst on landing. paganda set to music by
James Can'oll. one of the youthful Red guards.
travelers aboard Ute Cam· _ The Cambodian p I an e
bodian plane, said t h e spent about 90 minutes on
Americans "became very the ground before flying to
excited" when they learned Hong Kong Thursday night.
T ... •ltiltl
BOGOTA, Co Io m bi a
(UPI) -The vanguard o[
an expec,ted one million
peasants gathered in a
Colombian cow pasture to-
day to hear a "family unity"
talk by Pope Paul VI stress-
ing his ban on artificial birth
control.
Thousands of L a t i n
.-\merican poor set u p
campsites on the 60-acre
field where Vatican sources
said the pope would defend
the recent birth control en·
cyclical. that sent a wave of
controversy through t h e
world's Roman Catholic
population.
A white helicoptec was
bringing the 70·year.old pon·
tiff to the pasture 17 miles
nothwest of Bogota .
At least one million peo·
pie, waving handkerchiefs in
greeting and shouting
''Papa! Papa!'', crowded
the airport and the pope's
carav-an route Thursday in
welcome to the first papal
visit to Latin or south
America •
He won their hearts in his
first gesture -kissing the
ast>halt runway at Eldorado
International Airport after
alighting from his Boeing
7f!l jet from Rome.
'Ille crowds threw flowers
before him and twice press-
ed so close to his limousine
that it__was forced to stop
and he got out and walked.
Police said 536 persons col·
lapsed in the crush of the
_multitudes trying to 6ee the
pope.
Smiling, waving and wear·
ing wh)te robes and a red
skull cap, the pope walked
the final block into the 113·
year-old cathedral of Bogota
where 4,000 Roman Catholic
prelates, priests and nuns
received his blessing. He or·
'ftfoP!tJl!ll)k, lt*i\1Wl'lt\lll~ like "Little Mi" Marker" who just de· ftWn '''mt Q"4 l!ID · talM.~, 11 lnt..-viewed by ne\vsmen as she
. O\'tr fl'Cllll die bolilW CMC!loslovellla tnto Wm Germany. She was in
ftle Int Jong line ot can, filled with Western tourists, to cross into allied terri·
tory. Mrs. Black was caught in Czechoslovakia when the Russia.ns and four of
their caldlile countries invaded Prague.
dained 160 priests and 4l jnaugur.ate a meeting of
deacons. Latin American bishops.
Pope Paul Vi's sixth ~4 fr9m 1!\t ~fl!;Q!lf yl the
longest pilgrimace a~ mllbli!Wp't ""*'" ~'
brought him fu a land -..1\n ~'It ~ .,..lit liltftlll \t
poverty is Widespread iH aWi ~l!M I'! l l Ii «
the population increasq I.• hi~m ~· 'l'l\t
percenteach year. He. lli\\lllrti. -, · ""' ff\j\\ lrom the 39th Interna ' • \l\Wi · · · · ;etl\ llli\ii
Eucharistic Congress __ ._\iL.(" _Ill& .. ~
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P•nther Calm
. Newton Testifies,
"
_Denies Shooting
Tax Cuts,
School Aid
N_!) Package
SACRAMENTO <APl -
Gov. Reagan bas made it
bluntly clear hi w i 11
sacriflce chances of tax
relief thJs year U legislative
leaders insist on linking tax
cub with an increue ln
state aid to local 1cbooll. nie governor's written
statement lrsued Thursday
Jett no doubt that he con·
~ • redurtlon in pro·
pe:rty end Income taxe1 to
be the most pressing matter
that lawmaker• could con·
sider at next month'•
speclal leglslatlve session -
but it must be on his ternu.
Demands by l'lfslators of
both partiea and Max Raf.
ferty, state superintendent
of public lnstruction, that
the 111slon. also consider an
increase in the state aid to
local «hooll were given less
~oe by the governor.
a.acan saJd be "will not
healtcie tor a moment" to
put tax cull beforo ihe
seaslon. atartlng Sept. 9 if
leaders airee to his con· dltion1.
' • B~uty Gets
·N.ew Kidney
' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
~ B«bara Jane Porter, "II-Ca1ilornla of 1965, has
receiwd a new kidney from
be1" brother, Dougald Har· n..=z.
ll(rs. Porter, 33, received
tho .· .Jddney Tbunday to
~ the I.26th patient to
~o a rucceRful kidney
tiailiplant at the University
Of .·-Oallforn!a Med t cal ~-Mrlr P o r t e r was kept alive by kidney dialysis
Wtile a patient at a Sallta
Cruz ho<l>(lal and later et
uac Molfllt Hoopilal in Sao Frm.t.co.
'tAll Forgiven~
' V~tim, Mate Hold Hands
HAYWARD, Oaiif. (UPII to collect a $25,000
-AD attractive 20-year-old Insuraoce Policy made out
coc:MiaU watt.res• told police in her name.
two weeb eco her new bus· n...-A-k I d band. lured her to a lovers' Mn. '--u-.: craw f
~. Where he and another from the buning wreck-are
min beat her, set fll'e to of the car near San Leandro
ll1<!ft car and pushed the Aug. 10 and w .. hoopiWized
w'h.lde over a clilf with her tor a Short time. It was
in.side. reported that &be Ulen went
But Barbaril Carmack Into seclusion -awey from
held hands Mth h e r her husband.
b&rteader )Qbmd, Billy The appearance of the
Ray, 26, in Municipal Com-I coup!• bold!ng hinds Thurs-
Thunday as he and Thomas day touched oH • flurry of
Sa.n«on, 25, pleaded innocent excitement among court of·
ot · dW'gts ol attempted fldalJ:, newsmen and l'Pt'C·
mvder and arson in a P1?~--~·
. ..
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e HU dw Surf! ! 9' .fi" Mahof·
aey l\lftboard. c o Io r
Jtr1ngtn. utd ~. Vf'r1
rood buy •••
e A ~ T. Bird, ls tor .U.
Thia was a V«f"1 pod Ytv
t<r the "~1"•''.
e Witt JWr Brown Tl'frier
lost in the vk.inlty of Ed·
inftt & Bola named ''&I-
lle", ''Come btick Uttle
SUJSe",
e A lkmt B~' marktt
place CM be found fn the
"()pen HOUM' DinctOr)' ·"
What . cdlK'Uonll
• 1'rte room &: bot.rd la be-.., ..,_ ,.~
,4'_
._, or MadrlDt ia _.
-f«Wboannrll
-dt.y .
----r DAILY ,ll.01' 7.
• 4 .,
Frldl,y, Auousl 2J, l li68
By Phll lnlerlandl Stanford Doctors ~rf orm
Another Heart Transplant
llDI OUI HOUDI .... ,., ....... _ -----lllAUIU llANCM ...................
Colla c1t1 •n.utt
OPEN SUNDAY'S
NEW
HOURS: '
MON •• SAT. 7:30 a.m.·5 .p.m.
SUN. 9:00 a.m.· 1 p.m.
I ! • "· n.r.·1 • ....._.....,. llbout the Wt ·u Dollee D11""~ c1 ..... ~ •'-· w.•n 111-. "*" out: to tMk• room for the MW •n can. 1'19et'1 why we•,. nwklng hlth
,,..._ •11;; 11r ••• th wt of lwcury eatrM di..,..,. 'TMt'I why we' re.offering the ....... ....,... ~...,...you've...,....,, W. WlnttMfn to dlNP•W riglrt Into.,...,
.,..._ lwry .,, _..,., truok ••• u.outln rM4W• Md demoMtnrton too •••
....,.,. ................... ,.. during .... __ ...... ,_.
oPll"8tJon as 1 a 1 l n I .
"l:vtrythlng wait u well as
e.pectod. '!be patlent 11 lo
ultnctory coodttion."
Shumway led thb and
prtvtou. Wnspiclt teama.
Mike K&sperak, 54, a It.eel
worker from East Pf.lo Alto,
WOl lbe first recipJent at tho
hOO!Jlial In Jan11ar1_ and llv·
ed IS clays.
A .......S reclpleot lo ear-
ly lllay. "-Ph Rh«. 40, •
.,..,,.nt.r from Sallnl1, llv·
ed lour cloy•.
Drake, -bu l\lffend I heart a11meot f<r 11 Yftl'I,
bad worked for a year .at
baUlt for the Lane Count;y
D!strlct Court In Eugene
alter hb r<llrement from
the poll oHlce,
Ht wu trallllerr:ed to the
Stanlord holpllal In June.
Sbumwiry bad been owaKJnc
• subble donor linoe then.
'
........... """"
FURNITUU ..
CARPn
lft SOFAS $169. --FOltTltlL CAltPmNO
.... .... 5.95 J,J.KNIC ... IOCKll
4Ml lllCM IT .. N.L _._ ............. .
14M40t
Wholesaler Liquidation Sale
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
One bay Only-Saturday, Aug. 24
9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
MERRY MAID CO.: INC.
MANUFACTURER • WHOLESALERS • IMPORTERS
AT OUR OFFICE AND WAREHOUSE
1812 MONROVIA ST., COSTA MESA
First Sreet West of Placentia
AS A WHOLESALER WE ARE LIQUIDATING MANY
OF OUR ITEMS TO BE REPLACED BY NEW LINES.
WE ARE OFFERING THESE ITEMS TO THE PUBLIC AT
OUR WHOLESALE PRICES .
Example of Savings
BURGLAR ALARMS
MIN'S 01 LA.DID'
HIUIOS 01 WAL.THAM
WATCHES 1":~;:0•
llTAILS fOl
'·''
5100
MANY OTHER ITEMS AT WHOLESALE PRICE
TllANSISTOU llADIOS -IUCTRIC SHAYHS -STUM & DRT IRONS
CAMlllAI -TOASTIU -YllllA TOH AND MANY OTHIR ITIMI
~
·~ ..................... ~ ........ -· .... -·..,. ... _ ~ CORONETWldtcholct
of oolorl tnd ltyfel Jn eed•nt •nd hmdtopa.
&In I fM SUS* .... ancf RT'a.
WE'LL MAKE A DODGE DISAPPEAR INTO 'YOUR QAR)l'.BE! ---··-
BEACH CITY DODGE
16555 BEACH BLVD. <HWY. 391
HUNTINGTON BEACH
847-9631
HARBOR DODGE
2150 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
546-3050
. ..
..
I
' I
l
I
B DAILY PU.Of Frldu. Ait91Ul 23.1968
A Teache1· a1ad His Fatas
f
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NO'J'.19=
T•M:M$ Cl•'UPICATI o• au111111s• ,.......... "'""' IUl'•••o• COU•T 01' Tl41 IATI PtCTITIOUI ,,.,. NAMI CllT1'1CATI OJI •ulHllJI Cll'flfll(ATW Of' COll'CM.llnOlll l'Oll
OJI CAl..ll'OlNLA 1'01 Tiii ,.II... l'ICTITJOUI TltAllSACTION DP eUJINlll UlllDlft COUNTY D• OUJIOI IN" Ml MAMI PICTITIOUI ~ H .. AoM7tl Tl>t \llW9taltM4 M 1Mte tMI ,-,.. lllld9f'lleNCI doft ctrl'H'Y '-II COft> THI! Up.jOl!llllGNEO •atl61f
NOTICI 01' MIAllllllO O" PITITIOlll 1f1eV ,,. CW4\lefl""' 1 .. -:. C::.NY IO\lfl =.....:.. titne*' ti !1711 C1rllti. Ito.ti, .._ htftW cwtll'¥ """'l II t nt I
l'O• •toeATI OP WILL ANO 1'01 SM,.... .. ,...let blitl-• ti 1S'2 1,.. ' 1 ..,...It , 111111191' trw tlc11tlow i...JMH loUltd .. lu!,. A. F.A.A, C0ooo
Llnlll TllTAMllllTAIY ""•Trltl Wty, lltt11oo\, C..lll""'lc. ......... :~ fllM"':~~ttCA~~TENCllNEEll1NG trlll Tv..iit, Or•nte (oi;nh' Al"'°"' '"111
l!-11f't ff LOlllN I, COOKE, ~ lllot 11Cf11"'1. f1tfll 111,,_ Ill ACE MW CONSUl.TATION Jll&M. 11E~AC>t.OCUCAI. Me, C1lll-la "'"°'' IM tklltiou. II""
"'NoTICI II Hl!llltV GIVEN 'nlll :H~ ":,0~· ;"!9w1": 111,:..:."' :ri:. "iw: ~ lflet Mid";,..."~ I~ II .. ~'!JA:.A ~MIOW'::' ~ l!~tJ!! ~ c=t. "-;, f~~ MAlll ... ! ...._ ,.._.. "' IVll ln4 1t.c;" .. -~ f\11 Ind'::!~ r~-::-:: to':·"' -·'""' ...._ 1r1r1CINI lllW Oii Mio I: INI .... dtnc• .,. It toli..t. i.wu1 LEOltOLD CANN 11771 c . !WU II •• foo!lowti :::r::r "rt!= ~·..::.i~rv ~ = 11,DOlll I . llilCl(lllMAN, •741 0»-IDtd, 9.fllll ....... 'Ctllfornli -:;;: SANTANA HELICOliTl!ll SElllVICI!. Nrthff" .;rtkvlln. 911111 tlllt ~ ';1 Nil hnl DrW., H11tuin1'°" IHCll, C.11-T1lePlloM (714) l3W.21. ' ' IN(,, JI.A.A. (onlfol T_r, Or1nt1
1.fU .. lie I hit -1 fornll. Dtltd A11t111tl 1, lNI CW!lh' Alt"'1, 111111 Arll, Clllfol'11la. t, Sffi..t'li:~: ,:, ~:II I 11'1.~:;: 011.lllltT M. TAKIHAO~ lmt LEOP'OLO CANN WITNl!SS n. lllnd 11111 2"" 41J' qi
eour11""" o1 °'"r1~nl ·NI. ·1 O, Mid ~Q~ ltre.i, Wttt"'ll'llltt. C..lllon111. 1!1fl Ill' C1Ufon11a, °''"" '-""! J1i11Y. lMI.
ce;irt, II tell Norlll ·~· .. lft thl Clf'I A11t111tl lf, IHI. 0.. A11111111 ,, lNI, ti.fol• -· I Not1rr (COlltliOllATI! UALl Ill Santi Alie C.tllotnlt ' :~&°Elll E. llillKEll:MAH li\llllle 111 1two1 tor Mid $1•'-• "''°"'lly $AHTANA Hl;Llc;g:T£Jt
OATIO: A~1. .. 1 lJ, 1Mi STATE ()II CALl::ll~iATAk,.NAOA •-•&'ff Ll!OPOLO CANN known to Sl!.llVICE INC.;· 1 W. E. 'T JOHN, COUNTY Ofl Oll:ANOf ) 1'111 to k tt11 P~ WhoM nwnt I• 11:08EllT J. 81!NllH COUMY Clttk 0.. A f I I .. •UO.ctlbld lo ... wllhtn l111trvmen1 Ind lirttldlnl
MILLIKAN, MOMTOOMalV a li\lllllc ~u:n: for "'!~11~•.!.N::::: r:."r.C1:.":Efll 111ircvltd !tie Mint. fTATt: (Ht-CALl,OAMIA
OU.flSOM "rtONtlY IPINlrM ELOOlll! IE ' AL COUNTY OJI 011.ANGI! l .. Nl ••ti .,..... ''"""' SlilEl(ERMAN •two! GILll!llT M ' Mlbll fllhl'llotrl1 g,, Jflll ltltl llllY el JulY, A.O. 1 .... ,. ........ , C1I .......... fUfl TAl(l!MAOA k-' Nohiry liublt~lillt'!'lll bttoA 1M JOHfJI E. 01vl1 .-Not.,... Tlh tl).1tMI.. Hl'llOlll ~ 111..,.. ,.,r:i' tu::Cr~ ~ l'ub11'1*1 Or11111 Cot11! OtllY lillol, liubllc \11 1nd fll' Hid COllllh' Ind Sfl~
AnlrtllYI .., •ttl,.._. "" Wll!ltll 1 ... tr\lrfllf!t Ind ICkMWltdttd Aveu:ll t. '· 16. n. lNI llt74 '"1111"' ttitrll11. tlulY cotnml»~ Ind
liubllall... Onltlfl CMll Cllll'I' lilltl, to 1'111 ""'' tl'lly ••te'vtM ft1e Mme ,_..,, "rMnlllY 11'P1trt4 ROI RT J. Alltulf 16. 17, 2J. "" 101 ..... (Of<FICJAL IEALI • LEGAL NOTICE tENISH llrww!I to 1'1141 to M-tlll''"".nk:llM Jtrry ,,_ M\111111' ti 1M COl"tlOl'lllon lhll. tJo.KVted "" Not•rv lillbllc-c..1 ....... 1111 P·Jl.., Wllt\lll lnatl'lll'lltnl IMI bel'llll. ~ (0!'9
""llCIHI Office 11'1 CallTlfll(ATa °" IUSIM•SS. _...,. thlrtlll Ml'lllCI, ·~-lld .. °"'"" Covntw fltCTITtOUS MAMI! tel l'o mt tflll wi;h ~~,l~Kllltd
1"-1nu ~!.,,'-, 1111on 11u1,.. Thi llM.m.11111 -. cll'tffY "' 11 eon-~;.11':..ww~:;•,.-11tt ~ ,,..,"''::.
c••TllilCAT• o .. IUSIMISS. f'ublhl>td0 ',,n Mn111 I bllt!MH II >01'"1 M1llld1y St .• flcltl -I "" dlY '""' ,;1 ,,. lhll ,ICTITIOUI NAM• • .. r11111 Cotst Cl•llY Pllot, .. ,.,, AN. Clllfomll, lll'ldtf""" flctl!IOUI <ertff!Wtl "nt lllOYt .=<.L;;-ol'l • '
Tiit 1111Mnllnld dol• ""tty JM. II CGrl" u~"·· 22. • lnlll SlllM'lbtr •• 11. flrni 1111'111 of SEAV MANUFACTUltlNG (OFFtCIAL .. SfALJ ... '!..,..,.'I
ll\lcH11t I bwlflftl 11 1• NIL <Altl 1'724. COM!iANY lftll tfllt Mid llr"' 11 aim-Jolllh II! OI~......_.. ..
Hleh"ftY. LI•-8t1clt. C111forn11, llndtr _.,, of tfll folloWlne "''"'°"' whoH Nl1ll"I' ,.U-1 •
1111 tlctl!law firm rw.n11 of AMEAICAN LEGAL NOTICE 111-111 f!Jll 911111 •lie• of rnJdenct i. 11 lirl11C1"1 Otfkl 1 HEARING AID CENTEllt Ind 11111 Mid follows: Or-Gollnl'f-
llrn'I II COl'llPOHd Ill "" lollowlne Plr)Clll, JAMl!S &OIEllt IEAY. fS!l ••P My Comrfl.IHl«I ~, ••
wtlotl: n1rn1 11'1 f!Jll 111d •IKI el r~ NO"ftcl Ofl' OISIOLU'rlOH 01" Or .• Mvrlllft9fOll luch, C1lllol"lll1. J1,1111 21 1'111 :-.
It It l'ollowl: liAltTNl!lllHIP °'"" ""91111 lS. lNI. Publ1thld o •• ...;. c ... 1 ~ .. riot. Rlctwird W"lrt FrwM, 1'2t Mt. P11blle llO!let 11 hfftb'i' t 1Yln of thf JAMES It SEAY Aututl ! t 1• 2J lt&I · 1l«21' .sr..rrv l..1ri1, No. 22, S1nt1 Ari., Cit~ Clluo1v11on ol !I'll P1rtntr1111a llsfwttn ;11t1 Ill' C1lrtornll, Df•nt• Ceu11ty: -'--'-'--''--' ---,.,,-,.---
klrn11 '2701. Fll:ANI( J, HAMN Ind II. H. ("lltUOY"l On AU'lusl IS. INI, before"''' • Not1rv AL NOT!~
Ol!td Auguit u , 19'1. ANTHONY, Nf"1"11or1 doh" blnln"t liutlUc 111 1M for Hid $!1t., Hrson1ll'I ____ LE __ G_:_.,,_,,,,=--"""D''---Alch1rd WnllY Fr"51 Under IM fldtllout flr"' flll'lll Ind styll IPNlr'ld JAMES llOllEltT SEAV k1111Wft
511!1 of C1tltornl1, Or111111 County: Clf DORM.till liROV ISION CO., 11 l:ltl E. lo rM to be tt.. "''°" who11 ,,.. ..... It li..JlMI
LEGAL NOTICE
Tennis bufis who play regularly at Newport Beach's
Las Arenas courts think Jay Robinson, their instruc·
tor for the past five summers, is one fine fellow. So,
\!.'hen Robinson, 21, announced he 'vas going off to
law school thls fall, they decided to give him a send-
off on t he last day of tennis classes. They surprised
him with a silver cup. Inscription identifies him as
the "World's Best T ennis Teacher."
On Auoun 11, 1'61, before 1'111, 1 NotlFY •l!I Slrffl. Cltv of Sant• Ant, Counly o1 tuluttlblll lo tfll within lr.atru"'tnf Ind Cl!llTllilCATI Oli COllPOltATIOM
Public In Ind for Mid •Slllt, ............. 11y Or•1111t. $1111 of C1l1lornJ1, an lh• lrd 1dlnowl.clted M ll!l<Utld lilt 11am1. •o• TllANSACT IOM Ofl IUllHlll oPPt•rtd Rlditrd Wtt!W Frttst known d•Y of All'lutf, lffl, Ind !ht! 1111 '''""" t0f'FlCIAL SEAL! UNDlllt ,!CTITIOUS MA.Ml
lo me to be !ht ""'""" wllolt n1 .,,.1 IJ hlG 1111!1ortl~ la lnc11r obll11tlon1 tor 11ld lltOSELLI! C. l(NOX THI! UNDEASIGNEO CORliDlllATIOH
1ub$crlbed to 1~1 within l"'lrumtnl Ind llrn1 •ll•r u ld dll•. Not.rv 1iublle.C•Ulornl1 dlllt "'rtbY Clr!ltY !ht! II It conducll~•
1c-nowltdg1<1 111 e)(Klllfll 1111 Mmt. ... D0 •ltd 11 N..,,.POrl le•ch. C1lllor11l1, lirlnclPll Otflc1 In I Rffl ftl•lt lroktr'I bu1lntN !cal'l!d (OFFICIAL SEAL) m I 72ftll d1y of AUIUll, lfilt. O"ntl County 1t 4'30 CtmPlll Orlvt. 511111 tell, Ntw-
Roy M1rco"', Jr. R. M. C"ltUDY"l ANTHONY Mr Commli•lon E•bhu port lt1c~. C1IHornl1, ~ 1.11\dlr' 11"1 NollrY Public: -C1Uf11t11!1 Lltv• I . lla111>IM, Jr,. July I, lrn t!dll!ou1 firm n11r"' ~ tf'l90f'ElltT·IES
Mv Cornm11,lan expires :.i:;';jv ~ Pubt!~l>td Or1no1 Coat D1llV Piiot, WEIT OIVl510N 111d t~ A id llrrn 11
Augual 24, 1f4t H 1 A119 u1t 1', 2l. 311 Ind Sll!t"'btr ,, tomPOStd of !hi MU-1111 eo.,..,,1llon,
liubtlsl\9'11 Or1nge CNtl OtllY Pile!, T~).l~IC/I, Clllllnlll lNI 102"'9 WlloW ptir>CIPll PllW GI bul1MH II 11
All81tll u, 2J, lO •nil SaPtcm~• ,, P~bll111td Or1nt• C011t 01llY lillot, LEGAL NOTICE lotloWI: -~ lNI 41WI Auvull 23, ltlol l~. GATEWEST NATIONAL, C., 'uo w. commonw .. 1111 Al.'Q!!i•
P41.. Fulltr'ton. C1IUONlll "'IJ. ClllTlfllCATI OJ' IUSIMISI, WITNESS Its tllncl thlt ff ' llllJ' II
Thousan ds State W ru·ns Deadly Pira1tha LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
Will Sing
At Du11es
Coul(l Survive • m Southland
ClllTll'ICATI 01" IUStNass. •• ,,,, J'ICTITIOUI NAMl!S Aututt, lNI. fllCTITIOUI MAM.I TO CllDITOlltl The 1111C11r1llF1111, INTERNATIONAL !CtrPOrllt $e11l Tht utwoltnltMCI do ctrtlf'I fhl'f irt IUli•lltOll COUltT OP TMI TELEliHOME ANO Tl!LEGlltAliH GATEWl!ST NATIONAL~ IN~ corw:tvtllllll 1 butlllfft 11 27'9 Me!ldotl I TAl'I Clli CALlliOll:NIA "OR COllliOll:ATtON, Wllkll !wt 111 irlndlltl J-h C. M«1111. Jr., l':r.,ldtnl
Drlv1, Ca1t1 ,.,,,...., C1lllomle, \llldet' ll'le TMf COUNTY Oli OllAllft• iol1e1 GI b\131,,._t 11 320 1i11'11 Avtnut, Prll~ IE. Kll11111, S.CrlllO'
I I c I I I Io 111 flrni Mnte of 11:, $. E"•" .. ..,,:,'""'••'NOR D••<E Mtw York, N-'l'orlr doe1 Pllreby Corti• STATE OF CALIJIORNIA, • -'
r·O'f the 12th stralght year.
several thousand teen·agers
\\ill converge on Newport
Dunes Aquatic Park today
for the annual
"Singspi.ration by the Sea."
Financed and sponsored
by the Torchbe3.rers youth
group of Costa Mesa First
Christian Church. the event
has become one of the
l::.rgest gatherings of young
people in the \\'est, drawing
youttis from as far away as
Nevada and Arizona.
Objective of the program.
said church o!!icials, ls to
create "a new spiritual and
scci.al awareness" prior to
the start of the fall school
term. The public is invited.
During the day organized
events such as run-swim·run
relays, volley ball
tournaments ·and s a D d
sculpturing contests will be
conducted.
A tzient conte9f. w I 11
feature \\i.Mers of semi-
final tournaments in the
early evening. Following
this \\'ill be a giant "Sing-in"
with "Red" Florence o!
Scottsdale, Ariz.. leading.
Jack Boal, minister of the
Tustin Christian Church will
deliver a brief .address. Also
appearing on the program
will be the Jimmy Owens
Singers.
Upper Bay
Friends
Plan Tours
SACRA.i\1.E NTO (AP\ "1'here'5 s uch a trC"men·
The deadly piranha, flesh· that it's almost impossible
eating devil fish of South dous traffic in tropical fUih
America, could gain a that it's almost impossible
foothold in South er n to check every shipment
California's warm water that comes in," St. Amant
lakes and streams, state of-said in an interview.
ficials said today. Complic.ating the situation
These fearsoml! an d is the popular tropical fish
fearless natives of the vast kno~'ll as t he silver d ollar.
Am.~zon and Orinoco river It's a harmless fellow, but
basins have been known to strongly resembles some
devour men and l a r g e species of the piranha .
animals such as cattle ill .a
matter of moments. BOOTLEGGING
A Sacramento tfopical
Although officially outlaw-fish dealer said piranha
ed in California since 1961, often find their way into the
thousands of piranha are state and into colla1ors'
living io the state -mostly tanks under virtual bootleg
in aquariums in the homes conditions.
of avid tropical fish col-
lectors. ''Sometimes they are
brought in under different
State Fish and Game names," snid the dealer,
Department official! fear who asked not to be quoted
that s 0 me. unsus;>ectiog by name. They u sed to sell
person might dump a pair in for $3.98 to $4.98 each. But
a river or stream to dispose now they can cost up to $35.
of them. And piranha likely
could survive and multiply Her sOOp has several, but
in some warm Southern for display purposes only.
Caliiornia w a t er s, a she added.
fisheries biologfst says in a ".4.ll kinds of characters
special department report. "·ant piranhas," the dealer
said. ABUNDANT
Some California waters Some type of piranha are
have be I t d .1h relatively harmless. St • come popu a e w1
goldfish in this way. Five Amant said ln his report.
But his research turned
carp were imported from up a number of cases in
Germany in 1872 and now South America in which
have become abundant in p iranha -either alone or in
much of the state, reported schools _ inflfcted serious
James A . St. Amant, Fish and sometimes fat a I
and G am e Department damage on humans.
biologist. In a letter, St. Amant was
'Vhle doing research for told by Dr. J. Alex Munro of
his piranha report. St. an a1tack on a friend of his
Amant "''as told by Jose while swimming in a s low,
Carlos · ?\-1aga111 a es, a deep Bolivi<in river.
BraziLian authority. "m y
common sense tells me that SUDDEN ATTACK
you have 99 perctnt chances "!·le was so suddenly at-
of disaster to the local fauna tacked by a school of these
if piranhas are ever at home fish that he died 3..!I a
in California \\'aters." result,'' Munro "Tote.
The Friends Of Newport State fish and g a me St. Amant related a
Bay have winged their w·ay wardens work closely with pers onal experience as he
back from summer ,·aca-U.S. customs officials in an t · d l t I · tions and hr.ve started plan-\IC o ca c 1 a specimen
ning f or fall and winter attempt to prevent im-piranha from a bucket.
public outing!ii to ob!iierve portation of the fish. A ship. "The piranha bit into my
ffi;)J"ine wildlife of Upper ment of about 1,000 was con· second finger, right hand,
fiscated from an 3.irlincr at below the fo'rst i·om· t and Newport Bay .
The first tour in the series Los Angeles International v.·o uld M>l release its hold
is set to start at 9 a .m . Airport recently, s a ill until forcefully shaken
Leooo.rd 0 . Fish, lleputv loose ,'" l1e said.
Saturday from th e in· director of the depar\menl's \ k I ct . . I f tersection of Eas tblu!! and i ·ey a or In surviva o fisheries branch. p '-anl1a 1'n Cal'f · · Back Bay Dri\•es. The tour lT 1 orrua IS But state oifici3.ls ndm1·t wl1ethc r they could stand or is free and parents are en-' couraged to bring their their enforcement program :::idapt to, the cooler \\•aters
school·&.ge chi Id re n , ac •
1
,·s;;;;on;li;y;p;a;r;ll;y;;;;";>r;c;c;ss;f;u;;l.;;;;;;;;•;;! ;,th~';;';;'';';;';•;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
cortling to a f' r 1 e n d s
spokesman.
'I11e private citizens group
v.·as formed earlier in the
year for the twofold purpose
of increasing public interest
in Upper Newport Bay as a
marine sanctuary while at
tt'Je sane time trying to
bring pressure on
developeri to set aside a
portion of the area as a
preserve .
Dr. \\-"heeler North, noted
m.arlne ecol~t. profes1or
at the Calikll'lli& Institute of
Kerckhoff fi1arine
I..aborttory tn Corona del
Mat, will conduct a part of
Satuntay'1 outing. B j rd
authcl'ity Olarle.s Crff:tling
also w!U partJdpate.
Fire a Day
In Philippines
MANILA (UPI) -A mo·
)or fin breakt out In the
PhJIJpplne1 tt Litt oact a
dQ dm"ln& the dry llllOD
ttom January to June, Ac. cordfnl to fipres complied
by lb• Pld!JppU. ~ .....
Service.
Rancho San Joaquin Goll Course
Golf Special
WHkd171 Aft•r 2 ,.r.1.
2 f.f'ffn FtMI
Plus £\cctrlc Ca.rt
$10
W1tktncl1 Afttr 1 lt.M.
l Grttn Fffl
Pu1 Elttlric cart
$12
CANTINA OPIN DAILY
P1tm1 ftttoa• Fer SNttfftt T1m•
833-1253
R1nche S•n Jotquin Goll Couri•
11011 Culver Rd., 1,....;"' R•11ch, Ntwporl l1•cft
'4 Milt• South of S1"f• A"• Ft11way
INVESTMENT COMPANY 11111 hi Hid •• " tv th t It 1 dol bu 1 COUNTY OF LO$ ANGELU, "-Hr"' ls cOl'llPOttd Clf the l'ollowl1t1 ,,,_., O~e•itd. . 1111 1 1 ~T 1J "'10~ undir ""' fl~ °" 11111 llfl div of A11111nt • .A...O. 1t&t. NOTICE IS HEll:l!llY GIVEN t.i 1110 OUI lll<nH it. CO I ncl ITT lllfOrt "'' AIYI" M. kur11tn111~ & f'lel~,,. ;""e';:: .. ,:·1i:·:. ::uo!~I~ 111d PllCH of c1'911Jtort ot lt11 lboYt "•mH dtcedll'I• FLUtO HANDLING II 145" Dllt W1y, li11bllC ... Ind "" u ld C-Qll..Md Slt!t. St. Amant concluded they HARADA, ll:OY. 27., Mlftdoll 0 1 11111 111 Hn.on1 llevl.,. cl•lm' •••Inst the c11111 "'""'· er .... , C11<1111"1', Cll/lor1111. ••ldlnt 111tre111, du!~ ~Mklcleod 1rot11 could thrive in such warm rvi, wld dtetdtnt 1r1 rMUlrtd 111 1111 fhc"" DATED: July u. 19'1. 1worn. ,.,.son11.., •••••red··"°"''" c. Co11• """'· C11l+ornll . D' wtl!I"" lllCISUFY -..cl'lttt. Ill 1111 office INT~llNATIONAL MOl'llll. Jr,'""' Frltr E .. Kl"I"" know" California waters as the HAllAOA, SUE1 17'9 Mtftl:lou r ve, ol !M cllrt: of 1111 1bov1 tnl!HM cwrt, or TEl..EliHONE to "'• to 111"" lirttkttrll 1...! Stcret1•Y•
Salton Sea and parts of the ~~ =~~1c1·~~~=" !! .. .!~'"•1 ~· wtl!I ""' "~•n•rv APJO TEL,•,•0RAliH l'ftO«t!ve1., of 111e con><>r111on lh•t ••-AOY H.lltAOA """'"'"""• .... Ul'lffrtltl\td II lhl ol'llct COllliOlllA H KU!fd Ille Wl!\'1111 IMltVl'lllnt on blhllf .,r
Colorado River. SUE HARADA of hit Altorftrf, D1vld W•lh, 13:2 Wt•! I Y JOHN J. NAVEH "" ~11r1llon lh1re!11 n•IMll. '""
His research revealed that s111t of c1ntor1111, or1nrie COUflty: :1~11 s1{."\t..L°:.1:C':'':i:" ~.\1,::1• .,..too~ Sttte "' N~:trv) :-~:~ ::m": trYt i11u.car..or1t1on
. On Auou•I It, 19'11, WI-1'111.,,•, undtn !111lll In 111 "''"'" ""•In!.,. lo COllnlV of Ntw York} ti 111 Wllnnl Whtreol, t h1v. tierwnto
piranha had survived In Not1rv Public 111 ind .,tor :1'bAst • ""' Klett-Clf ••Id dK~n1, w1111111 1111 On Jul'I 1t. 1u•. betor• "'" 1 PJel•rY ut mv tllnd •nd 1n1.td m~ 0111c111 te•I
South American w a t e r s ~1°"~~~ ... "6:'·:~w!011 :: 10 "' •,~ ~,',,"",. '"'' "" tint 111buu11on of 11111 Pub11c. 111 '""' tor Th• Ntd ste11 1nd ""' d•v •nd yur In this ~·•fifll• ''"' ·~ C011nty, Plnc<11lly 1111>11~ JOHN J. tbove -lftll'I
\\"here the temperature dip· ~er'°"• wllose nome• ire •Yh'lcrlbld Oiled AUllulll t, IHI MAVEN, known tom• 10 be 1111 s.crot•rv !OFFICIAL si::ALI -~• ' .. d · to th 40s d . to !lit Wltllln ln1l1Yrnenl Ind 1Cknowlrclii< Elberl 0 OW.11 al INtflllNATIONAL TELEPHONE Alvin M. Kurlll'l\lll
pe in e ur111g ltd !My IK!CUltd "'' 11mt. ExtcYtor' al 1119'w111 ~ AND TELEGltA~H CORliOltATION, wlla Nol1rv liubllc.C1llf11tl'lll winter !OFFICIAL SEAL! 11\t 1bov1 111mld <11cld1nl execvled Th• within 1n1trvme111 on ti.h•tf Prlndpil Of!lc1 llf .. '!I . Emmi Je1nt Duckworth OAVID WELTI. ol "'' uld Coroat•llon Ind 1cknowltd•ld Los A1'9tlt• c-.v,:-... l't 'fhe average minimum Nollrt PubllC-CtlllOfllll In WHt fllrll Slrllt, to ml 1!111 1111 COJPOrtllon 1Xec\11ed !tie Mv ComrnlHlon ExPlr11
t . Or•n9t Counh' Svlll Nu1T1tw 21:1. "me. All9. 11. lf70 ....
emperature U1 llensha'v MV Cotr1mlulo" Expllel LM A1191ll1, c.1111111111 ... ,, S..r•h J. Gow ICUITZMAN • IAltPATY ' ••••
Lak. e in San .Diego County, :~s~ ~~.~~nsrvd.. T,~.!!1," .... , ,',~..... Not1rv liubllc. 11111 If >11 s. '"""' orlvt. 111111•2'1· '·
J C llf •·-·-... ~,., N•w Yort l•verlY Hllll. Cllll. "21t .... ,. _.. in anuary, JS 50 degrees, ~~;1ni1ton llcich. I • Publl1lild Or1no1 CD111! 0111'1 lillct, No. l1·1f23S1S An_.,.. .,._r ""
St. Amant rPnl"lrted. GEOIOE SHllATA Autu1f t, 16. U. JO. 1na 1-... Qu111111c1 111 P11b!l1htd o,,.,., Co11t· DlllY P\llJt, ~rv 11'SJ a11ch llllltYIN N"""' Yor11 County .t.11'11111 16. 2,, .10 Ind ~, '-
TRIBUTARIES Hunnnt1..., t11c11, c.•111'1111 LEGAL NOTICE ~o:"rc'i:1~;;~•1lrtt lffl .-..... ·141MI
All..,,tY JAMl!I M. LIGMAllD LEGAL NOTJOB-· •• Are as th at a r e Publlll>td Or1ni:re Cotti D•llY lil\111, MOTtc• Ofl T•UITll!'I ML• Atl_, ,, LIW
rf I I 'tab! I .t.uou11 21. .10 ind Sfft!t"'ber 1, 11, HD. 1.n..mt 1"'1 V•Wrl '"" pa ICU ar y SW e 0 r 1'6f 1"'"611. Ori Wtdl'IHCl•Y· .S.IWl'llbl• 11. II•'-111e1 .... C1ll1Wftl1 NOTICE 01' Tll:USl'l!l'S· SAL•
pirantias are c er t a in LEGAL NOTICE a'ckH:-•·"'·· ,1 -Soul!I M1111 Entr•..c• T1h uu1 m-nn Ht. 1•n ' • • ~·b •·-· f th S Jto "· of 111t Court Hou", 111 fill Cl.,. et 511111 T !IPf On 5fftttmblr 10, 19'1, 11 ll:to A.M., ul U"4.lieS 0 e a n .xa, A111. C1lllornl1, UNITED CALIFOll:NIA ~llbllll'lld Or1nri• COllst ••11Y lillo!, lltA,o.jliAllT INVESTMENT COMliANY ••
th t · I · J T ltt A ctulY IPPOlntld Ttu1IH .u-r Ind e wa ers 1.n mperia NOTICE OJI MA•SHAL'S SALi!. llAMI(, TrvtlM or IUCCHlOr IVS 1191111 '" "· )Cl 1M . s.Ptembor '· iiurt11•nt to Deed Ill Trvll dlted AUIUJt
C · ltETAIL MEit.CHANT$' C ll E 0 IT l,ll'ldtr lh<! Deed ot Trvil "'ldt Irr CAllL IHI lQ).&I, ounty, sections of the ASSOCIATION OF LO$ ANGEi..£$, I T. lllUSSELL, ... UNTllrrltd min, end 2,, lff7 ••tc'1lld .,... J.l.MES· ft.AOUL
Colora do River and low Con>or1rlon, Pl1l11tltt Ill. WENTWOATM rocorded OKll'llbtt IS. 1"6, Ill llooll: 112'. LEGAL NOTICE EGEA ANO AUOlllEY J. Ei;>lt'A, tilt wilto . • . L. SCOWN •~• DA. WENTWOllTH L Pitt $It of Olfld1I lltc0rd1 et Or111111 11111 •-did Stoltmber IJ, lf:d), f• l111tr.
elevation reservoirs in San SCOW N Ind SHIRLEY L $COWN, Olflll. '°"""'· C1llfornl1. t lVtll lo HC\IFI In I,,. li41fn ::".aw~· 11~ "c;! 11;}jc:'l.!,-~!1 ~..:i~~
Diego County" he said d•"' H<>. 421110 debltdllHJ 1" l•vor of WALTON C•llTIPICAT• 01" I USIHISI Recorder of Orll'lgl Cou111V:¥\...'!. n1or1111.
The F 'sh .~ G 73 "" ... "" MunlCIP•I Court. Los td 111 EARL G. ELL1$ Ind EVELYN M. ' ' 1 ' • 11," vlrtw ol I~ txecvllon luutd an July TOMEll:l..IN, I l'lllrrlld mt ll, Ind HS!tn-JllCTITIOUI HI.Ml 1 WILL SELL AT PUtlLIC lffDN TO
J ""' am e .t.;,,tlt:I Judl<l•t Oltltld, CounlV If Lot. El.LIS, l'luSbllld 1nd wlfl u cornmunlh' Mo undt"lt"ld do crrllJv tMv 1r1 HIGHEST llOOEll FOR A : •Ytblt
Department has had reports ,.,.,...1n. 11,i. o1 c1111ornli. _ , kidl-~ • ..,. .....,.. 11 lh<! W.•dl Clf nr-conducTlnt • buslneu 11 o:i1 l frdl s1., •I llm• Clf Nie In l•wtul · of Th•
f 'b -. . . mtnl tnltrtd rn , ........ If llETAIL Ill" obll11tloni IKllttd llltrtb'I'. llOllCI of N........n •••di. C1lfloml1, under !tie fie:-Unllld St•!") II 15711 E11t'll str .. 1,
0 poss1 le piranhas liVlllg In MERCHANTS' CAEOIT Al50CIATION which bn!lch w•• r1cordfd Nllv 17. '"'· ltllovs fir"' "'"'' "' OECOllAT ING Clf'I Clf Sin!• A111. Sl•lt of Cfltfoml1, on
Californ:i'a waters already OF LOS ANGEi.ES • Coroor1llon •• In l!ill(lk '604, ,.,,, IU, al ••Id Olflclll ~E~l'i..~1o·-t !hit ••Id '~ COl'l\Plliri ~!:~, ·~ ;~'.;.1:''~1'i'~u"°~::'~ ~',:!;
B · tudgm1nl c rt d I i or • 11 d 11~11111 RICOl"ch, wrn toll 11 oubllc tudlon lo 1111 w nt ""°"'' "'""" 11 I t 1 Ill I nd ""Iii by If ut none of the r eports bas WENTWOllTH L SCOWN ..... Ollt highest bidder tor, • .,., PIY•bll 111 hlw!UI ru, ,u Ind PllCll of rttldtMI IA ••. ~" c,,''•"w,.. ~·,· '-, '1..... .... •·· ified . • """""' DI 1111 Unllld Sllltl 11 Thi 11"'9 of O loWt: '"""'' M "' rul n ""',,.,_.r,. ~n Ver J • WENTWOlitTH L. SCOWN Ind $Hlll:LEY Nit, w!lllOUI w•rrtlltY H to lltlt, liAUL L. JACOBS, 1112 Mornlr11 Olory 1t!U1ltd 111 lht Cltv of• C6t11 ·· Mro-. "The L, SCOWN, •t ludgtml!ll debtor1. tllow• POUHJlon or ~cwmbrtnctt. 1M lllltrKI l1111!, Yltlt, C11ltornl1. Or111111 County, Slllt ol C111fol"ft11,·ln H"'
re are som e problem rn1 , 1111 11111nct of Mto.2• 1ctu111v '°"v.-,.r11 1a •nd ,_Mid b~ t•ld Tru.iie ROBEll:T G. TUllNElll, ll301 Chicorr county •nd s1111 descrlbed '': ·
waters where swimmers du• on 11ld ludg,.,.nt on 1111 d•tt "'the under 111d oer11 of Trvtt 111 th• P,..,..,,..,. W1v. 1rvi111. C111forn11. LOI 11 of Tr1c1 No. ?l!.:I, 1i-111awr1 011 . l11uanct al ttld t•1cu!lon, I htve lftVleod tlllJ•le Ill orintt CoYnfl'1 C1lllornl1, 01tld Au1u1t S. 19'1. I ....,.,. rKOrdld 111 loot "fl, "·Mitt 341
have been bitten, but we 111>1111 111 1111 rlo~1. 1111, •nd lnttrtit of d11erlbed 11: liAUL I.. JACOBS ind 1f gt Ml1<rl11nroo1 MIJ"PI, rtc:0rd1
don't know by What " St 1•Td ludgmrnl dl'blal't Ill !ht PrOPtr'IY ill Th1t 1<1rtl011 of Lei 1 of J111rvltw ll:OllEltT G. TURNEil of Or11111 Cou111"1', C1lllorl\f1. • · !hi County of Ort1'91, St1i. elf C1lllornlt, '•""' It lhown Dll 1 Mii' recorded 111 Slife et C1 llfor1111, Sin 011110 County: l1ld 1111 wltl Ill m1d1, bl/I wllllouf
Amant said. "We believe it's detcrlbecl 11 Ml"-': eoot 1: 11111 n of Ml1c1l1t111111S M1p1, On •·1--61, btfor• m1. 1 No11rr Publlc ln cov1n111t or w•rr1111Y, npre11. ~ lmPlled,
f. h ,. Lei .io. Trtd 1011, Mii' tlcxiic M, rl'C:Of"lll ol Or•llllt Counfl', C1lltor11I•, Ind for Hid $1911, otrllllfllllY tllltlN!d r1111rdltlf tttlt, l<llltUIOl\o· or tn-a JS . li•oes 31f«J, •nd ,.,,..,1 COl'llmllfli'l' ~nolllrl dltcrlbld 11 followti: PAUL J. JAC085. known f1l me lo bl cumt1r1ncu , to PIY 1111 rrm1Tnl111 ,;,,.,..
The piranha ranges in size 11 .io l•lbol Covtt. N•WPOrt leldl. Bettn11ln1 11 ""' s.utt.wnl corner ot ""' Ptnon whole n1mt It 1ubKrlbed to tlP•I •u"' o1 thl 111111 MCured. b:t N fd . c1111ornl1. 11ld lot, bl\111 In ttie center tl"' ol tht wllllln !ntll'll"'"'' ind 1ctnowltd!Md Otld ol Tru1 t, »wit: t2~A1'.5l. •Uh r ... up to about 20 inches long NOTICE 1$ HERE8Y GIVEN 11111 '" F1lrvltw AvtnUI. II ahowl'I on 11ld l'lllP"' lllKUlld ""·11m1. letlll , ........ Nove .... ber 1, .u.u 1&.ln 1&ld
and five nnrinds in weight F•Td••· A11911it .10, '"'' •I ~:oo o'clock •nd r1111n11111 thtflct E111 11<>111111t South !OFFICIAL SEAL) ""'• proYld<ld, 1dv1nct1. If env .. under 1111 rv-• . , · P,M, 11 lrot1I of Court Mou"' ,U1 Wal 11111 of !!aid lo!, l3ll IHll IM-nct ltlly Lou RYll'I ltrml Ill Mid Deed of Trl,lfJ,.Jlfl,-c:ll•r•n
St. Amant descnbes 1t as 11th ll•Ht, City of coa" Mffl, counh' of NortlltrlV incl 11r111t1 with 1111 .. 1d Nal•rY Pllbt1«:1Uton111 •nd el1P1nst1 et "" Trw!eJ lfid.,. of 1~1 .. . f' Or•nve. $11!1 Ill C1lllor1111, I w!l1seU11 center lint el F11rv1"""' Avtflut, '° lirlndP•I Office In ll'llJl1 crt1lld by 1•1d Ottd.llf .irusl.
pretty typical Of pan ISh -i>Ubllc 1ucllon to 11\t hlohtil blddtr. far fHti lhenc:• W""""' 1M P1r1tlel with S.11 Cl1"o Coun!Y" Tht bentflcl1rv undlr ttl~ Oltd ef
round like a blue ll'ill or a c•lh 111 lt-...fl!I manev of Thi Uftllad s111n. 1111 Soutlle•IY lint el 11ld Jot, JJO feet 1o Mr Commlulon E11'lr• Tl"\llt, b'I' r••oon of • brtld'I ,,.,~111<111ut1 111 e.-111 1111 •Ith!, lltle 1nd 111111"11! of u td tile c111ttr of F1lrvl"""' Awnut 11111 Junt 11, 1tn IM obt111t!anJ IKll!'ld ,t,111.rebv , Sunfish. 1 ludgmenl debtorl 11'1 !hi t bovl dOKr!bld tlltncl Soutiler.., llent thl Ctnltr of STATI! OF CALtFOll:NIA l h.retofort lxtarltd Ind d,l!_.,t to !hi --------------1 prOPtr'IY, or Ml much IMrtal It may be F1lrvl"""' AYl!IUI, IO fHt to ffll P0111t Ill COUNTY OF LOS ANGELE$ ) ts uncle"l•ntd • wrllltn Dt,lfiJ-llori gt · 111'C'ftMlfY la Nll11Y Mid e11ecutlon, wUh lil91nnlnt. O!o A111utf J, lNI be'IOl'I l'llf, ttie Ott111tl Ind Dtmlnd tor Sall, 1rid written
1ccrved ln1tr11I tnd ~II. fOr ""' P\'rl011 of PIYllll obll11tklol1 unMrolo,...., 1 Notary liubltc 111 111111 fOr nellcl fllf br1•ch •M of •lrtllQl\...10 c1u11
£v1ry w•t~ MMCO 1•ti1fllil _,,
th111 10.000 tr1111.,,.l11lon probl1n11.
Yo11 11t free 1awl111. • lrt1 told·
Chi ck, l11t. lflicltnt tll'VIC-t Ii"''' in lust ""' day, Al'ld with MMCO. your tr1n1n1i11io11 Clft bl
Ptoltctld by owr $00 AAMCO C•"·
''" cu11t to co111.
Ev1ry n1lnut1 1nd 1 ltllf, -•·
Ont ptoYll ...
l'H U•tr.lt,...r
~ .... AA.weal
COSTA MBA
1745 New1tert II. M6·1 '''
Gard•n Grove
ft'l 01rdt!I ON•t l tvl. .... Ul-atl
Sant• An1
, , ,. Ml...Ul
O VEO t.f\ .\AV C0 'i>..j O;>'l
•"J CA.IFO~f',.1J.
LOCAC
No 1tl11r 111w,p1p1r t1l1t vo•
"'o,., 1v1"f cl1y, 1bo11t wli1t't
911119 011 in !111 Grt1!1r Or11191
Ce•d tli111 tli1 0>.ILY PILOT.
01lecl 11 Casll Mt ... C1llloml1, AU'IUSI i.tc11rtd b'I' Mid Ofttl, l..cl!xllltl lrtt, Ml" County 1nd SI•!~, Plrwnt!IY IP. 1M uftderiltntd lo ltll lfi4.. lllOMrl'I" lo 7, 1'61. di••-•nd lllPlnlK IJlf !hi Trvs"9, Id• Hired llOllEIT G. TUltMElit, known "' Nllllv ••Id obll11lk111t. •ild lhtitintr 011 FRANCIS L 0\.ASEll YlllCH, If l nJ, Ulllltr ""' tll'ml of u ld "'' fl be 1111 terllO'I wl'lotl 111.,.e !t MIV 7, 19611, IM unMnltl'ltll.U.UUCI 11ld MlrraMI Otld, lnlttttt llllr-., Ind 112.IOO.OO In tublcrlbtd te 11>1 within !nslrumtnl ind llO!ltl Df brtlch Ind of 1IKl!an to be
Mu11lc!o1I Court, vnllkf Drlnc!tll of 11\t NOi• t«Urtd by 1ct1111wltdolll 111•1 M 1xReU!td Ille U/Tll, rtcanlld Jn boot; ms, 1111 .~t, of 11\d
Ortna• Cou111Y H1rbor Hid Dltd, with lnttr11t tfllrtOll '"""' WITNESS "'y hind 1Nil 8111cltl MIL Olflcltl RKlll'dl. -JU<llclet 011l•ld Dl:toblr U. lH<ll It 111 Hi. Kol9 l'TOVlffd. !OFFICIAL SEAi..} Oiled: A1111111t 12, lNI. er L. H. Oa~tt D•'" Aue1r1t 20, 19'1 C1rrol Pftlfftr RAMliAllT IHVESTME!tT
S.roeint UNITf:O CALIFORNIA IANK Not1ry 1illtll1c-C11lfontll COMPANY
liMILlli H. HAlllllS Trv1"9 Prlnc!oll Otfle<I In 11 uld Tl'Vllll
lfS S. LIC111I SI. HAll:OLO S. IAUE R LOI APlltlts County I J Ii, E. MolnlUo
1nt19WIO<l. CtlllOl'lllt '*' :tfW Mv Commlislon E"lr• Vici lire1!11tnl
1ilellllllf'1 Alll""" liubll111td Or111111 Cotti Dtll'I lillol, Ftb. 1', 1Ht ttU1 Pub1!1htd O•t1>11t Cot11I CltllY ,.lie!. Au1ut1 24, JI Ind Stt191'1\ber 7, lNI Publl5htd Or1no1 Co11I 0111¥ lillot, li11blf11\td Orl nOI CN•I lhllly l ilol, Au1url t, U, 21, !NI 1~7641 1"45-" Autust t, 16, 71, lO. lt" l37J.41 Aueu11 16, U, JO, 19'1 10.1.&I
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N~j;;
OllOINANCI HO. U.M , frMWIVI l~tnce norlllllderl'I 11cnf till ••Plr•llon Of tlf!llfl (15) dlYI from Int Ordl11•nc1 No. &I~ wal, w· roducMI AM OllDIHAHC• Oli THI CITY COUJll• 11ld norlllW11!..-.... tint, lFJ.41 let!: Thi Pllll9t llltrfOf shtll be 011bllthtd •nd cantldertd .Mellon I!)' M( I"" 11 1 CIL Oli l'HI CITY Oli COSTA Ml!SA llltnc• norlhwttttrlV •I rlehl l lllltt to Ofl[I 111 "'' OllANGE COAST DAILY '"Yllr m11!111• al !ht 111.f •.., !~~Ol!ncll CHAHOIHO THI ZOHINO 0 .. A liO•· 111d nortllwtt!l•IV tlr11111.'1 ft:ll lo lllt PILOT, I ntW11>1.,.r of ltMr•I tlrc11ll• ll1kl 111 Ille Siii d1v of .t.111u1t: ~ind
TIOH 0, LOT 1, ILOCI( "I!" 01' TH• 111>rlllrrl'I 11111 of llll llnd d11erlbtd In I lion, prlnltd Ind PUblltheod ln IM City of IMrNlltr llt"d 1nd t dol!lld 11 S"wholt
llllltT TlltACT flllOM Ml II Cl-CP. DMd to Fnonclt X. Sllwft, Sr., In "'°" Cotti Mt11, footl~tr 1111111 th• 111mes of ti I r11911l1r "'"'!Int of 11\t llfd City Tiii CllY C111111cll of lilt Cl.,. Clf Caslt "''rrled m111, rlCOO'dtd Jlebr11U'Y 25, 1111 "''"'ben ol !ht City Council vot1nt Councll held 1111 11>1 ltltl tl•v ef A11tuaf,
Mt" doet htr1bl' Ol'dllll II tollawl: lt'6. In look l]ff. llVI 174 of Olflcl•I tor Ind •••lrt1I 1111 ume. 1'6f, ""' ""' follow11'9 "'" alt-¥01• to SECTION I. Atl lh1I POrtlClll GI ttlt Rircon:l11 thtnct wtlllrl~ 11olll u ld liASSEO AND A.OOliTEO ltll• ltltl d1r wit: '
tollowlnt 11Uctlbtd r11I PrOPerh' 11 norlllerlY lint Ind 111 wttTlrlY Ito-If Alllllll1• lt... . AYES: COUNCILMEN St, Cllll'; ~··bl' pltcld end \Mtudld 111 !tie Cl·CP lont•flon. 212.!7 1111 "' Mid lint A. L. PtNl(lEV Jord111. lill'lkll~ L!t>f, hi w!I: Jllflllel Wiii\ •1111 '°·00 IHI 111t1rly of Nllvor el 1111 CJ1V HOE5: COUNCILMEN "Tucker, Wll-Thll POr!lOll of Lot 1, 91ock NE" Ill !ht wnltrho !Ina of Mld Loi I; ""'"~ OI COlll Mist AllSl!"NT: COUMCll..MEll ..._
1M ltrrv Tr1cl, It U>Own on 1 "'•' S0111!11r1Y 11ent 11\d 1•r1U11 lliw, 371..U ATTEST: IN WITNE15 WHEltEOf I hiv• record"<t In Book :JO, Piii 2• of f1tl to 1111 Nini el betlnnl,,., C. I(, PlllEST lltteunla Ml mv lwnd 1twol 11111!1111 !f11 kit
MIKtlllntOU• 1tircord1 or L"" Anttltt SECTION ?. liunuent ta IM l"""!tl-Cltw Clerk ol tile Ill' 1111 City Ill CNt1 Mui, 1!111 2'0fh dlY ~ COll~ty. C1lltorn11, dlKrlbed •t follOWi: of Stdlon 9'l>0.4 11' 1111 M1111lcl11I Clldt ot Cltw Df Caslt Mt11 A.1111111, lffl.
IHl11111.,. 1t l!le l"!e"tdlon of !ho 11\t Clh' o1 Cotfl Mtll, Olllrlct ...... P E·7 STATE 01' CAl..IFOll:Nl,lli l C. I(. lilltl EST norlMrlY lint IJlf 91ktr Slreet, tcl.00 1111 If t111 Clh' of Cot!• MeM It lllrtlw COUNTY OF 011ANG£ l SS. Cltw Cl11111 11111
wlll•• wll!I 1 llM P8rlll1!1 with ind d!t· •mtll<flll try tl>t •ddlltoll llltrtlo el IM CITY OF COSTA Ml!U I ll·ol'llcll Cllltl ti t8nt tlJlerty, 10.00 fffl. '""" Ille (1..Cli 1ru M'crlbld 11'1 SK'tlon 1 ,_.,. I, C. K. PlllEIT, Clh' Cltrk el t111 Cltr ""' Clh' C1111"Clf &I -~l'I lint el ••Ill Lal l J "'-r>Ct SECTION J. Tht1 Ordl111na WH '·-· of Casi• MIU Ind ••-officio Clll'k of "" tile Clly tf eo.11 Nd ,,,1.,-1'1 11ont 11ld lllltlhfrl'I lint, 1'Q ""' 8f!KI Ind bl ln full lorct llllr!Y !)Cl] d.vt CllY COlll'ICll ot !ht CllV ~ C•TI ~. lil/blt1llt<I Ortntt Colitl , OtllY lillaf
1111tthwttlt•lv lint el 1111 H--' f"O<'ll Incl lfflf" 111 lllU-. Ind prior le Mrtby ctrtli"I' llltl ll'lt 1bovt Ind """-All!lutf :ll, 1'61 1.,....
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.;"r"a,•
~"''A -..
F:or the
•.m.
Meetings
' ...
Marriage
Licenses
DEA'FB NOTICES
GI BB
Gibb, Htollft, n, ~:17 INll!e A.,.., ~
POr1 lwdl. ..... ._., ..... 22.
Survt.....rtfv dAuthl'lr, IM'91rtt S.
M<;(;.eul. N""""'1 Bfft!'I. 1"rtv1i. MrV·
kel. f"tml!Y 1un•h tTi.twlt wllo wl91'1
Iii .,..k, memerltll contr!butitn" •'"'-
dotMte ht their f1 "'111'1!1 ChlrlfY '" Mr m......,..,..._ 111h Morlu•rr Olrtetora. ' MEYERS
M...,.,... .L.1.wl1, a> TN 1!1, laeuN l~dl •• • .... Md ,IWIY A111. 11. Sur-
v!vK ~ "'' wl,., Kr.,, llf tt1* ,_.,. •ntl bY S d11111httn. K1nin JohflHn,
llf l 1tu1111 11 .. du ~rllde1!l ~.
01m1rl1 M~t1. batll ol rr.. l'lotM1 l
t rMlilot\, Ml~ll Ji:flnlOll, af L .. llN
l'lqd'I. S..-.lcn S.I., l :OO PM, In
Ch-I l'1cJtlc v i.... ln......,.,l, I'•
c:lll• \Uew Me<norl•I 1'11'k.
BAL'l'l MORTUARIES eoreU ·•· Mar OR l-NSt
Colta-MclO Ml l-14U
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 BrJ•dway, Costa Mell.
LI l-343S
DIWA Y BR0111ER8
Huntlntto• Valley
Mortuary
17111 Beach Blvd.
Hundncton Beach
841-'11'71
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • Mortoary
Chapel
3500 PacHlc View Drift
Newport Beach, Callfonda
t«-!700
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
ROME
'Tiil 'Bolaa A•e..
Westm~1ttr Ill SUS
SMITJl'S MORTUARY
m Malo SI.
·RuU."410 -_ .. LE..-
Wl!S')'CLIP'P' MORTUARY
4%7 ih-Hui st .. C:.1ta Mesa
..... 1!88
• " • " • • • " -• • -" • -• • -• --• • -
' Fr!A)', AUgust 23, 1%8 DAILY f'fLOT 9
Drug Offe n ders Ma rked f or Life
Ii 11 ft
,1
Recor.d
Fire Calls
... , ... ct.
11 '°' •·"'· Tl'IUrtoNy, N I 1•111, 11J "'9111 11. ... ,"""" ...
l:IJ •·"'· TIM.lrlder, tl'uti tire, 7"' ....... .,0,.,....
•:Ot "·"'·• '"°"'' llDI 8-"t ....... 6:55 ........... !Ire, 1Ml2 NMtuckH
l :lll •-'"·• ·~ 111 .... tt .. tlm, ......... 11"11 1M Wldml,.fw
IO:.tl -.m., .moi<I ln ..... tlpt!Ofl, llU .... --H :211 "'"'" rll(lle, 1JU ~ Mwt11 ... -..a
!0:32 '·"'· T1111rHay, tralfl ""' 11771 TrvdY i...111
J:X "·"'" 1ra1.t ""· on klMrll -...........
10:11 '·"'· ~y. fl'IH!al 1111, l!Dll w ....... 81Y'll.
1:41 ....... T1Wrsd1r, car ""'° 413
H1rdl1111 St.
l::U '·"" "rkWly, Q f fl,., ~rod
,,,,_ and East Coest Hlthwar
Cllta Miia
ll:lt t .ll't, TltvrM11y, faltl alal'll't,
Vldorlt t ncl tt.rtwlt' eoulw anl
4:JO p,m,. '"'"""'"' !In , \IMO v ..
l111d1 """'· c J:l)4. 11.m., tratfl fir'!, acraaa '""" tff ·-1:20 11.m.. taltl allrrn. CwilV •!!d .. ~
7:)9 p.m., mlnt.,;k1 11,,, Bf ••II!' It.
Supervisors
Approve 3
Road · Bids
SANTA ANA -Rood. pro·
ject. lot&iDg 1318,!IM ,..,e
approved by ttle Qli.mge
County Board ol ~rvilor•
t1li6 week.
The biggeet job ii the
~ of Campua Drive
bonl&iDg tile east Pride ol
the Orange c.ounty Airport
between Palisades Road and
MacArthur Boulevard.
A coo.tract was awarded
to tile E. L. ~te Co. Of
Garden Grove for $220,401.
A Mooltm Piar'tway im·
irovernent job went at
'8',787 to the Griflilh Co. of
Oo6lta Mesa. The roadway
wiH. be pa~ 24 feet wide
between Ridle Route Drive
ud. 1067 fietet south of
C&nada Road. 'Ibere we re
five bids.
Third project will see traf·
fie sip! and hifl)lwoy
lighting plus concrete cmbs
and sidewalkl on El Toro
Road e.t tbe A venida. Sevilla
int.erseotilon. Successful bJ.d·
der was Stemy and Mitchell,
Inc. ol Anaheim at $13,746.
By JACK CllAPPEIL
Of .. 0.11'1' •lilt '''" SANTA ANA -T he
Orange County narcot.l::s of·
fender not only fac'5 lm·
mediate problems with the
law for his offencest but his
illegal activities ma7 fOllow
him !or the rest of his life,
says Cecil Hickt , Orange
County District Attarne_y.
"Drug offendeni • r-e
denied ad m it ~io n to
virtually aB prolea:sions and
occupations whieh require
aay type of lice~." he said
durinc a "Law fer Laymea"
'Pot' Use
'
Effects
Reported
SANTA ANA -An
&sse:9Sment al the currentJ
knowledge of the coo-
traverslal drug marijuana
made by ttie Addict.ion'
Researctt Foundation o l
Ontario, Canada, wrrentiy
is be\ng circulated t o o.... County -. in
the "Bulletin to Physicians"
Jd>listled by !the Orange
· Cowrty Health Depamnent.
The report 1&ya the COO·
sequences Of the use ol
marijuana are oot besidy
different than the use ol
a:k»!lol.
Jt al.so says that some
users will be affected ad-
versely by Pot while others
will oot .
Most of tlhe problems
caused by the drug, the
report says come not from
i\s phamlaoologlcal a<tion•,
but frn1n the !act that the
weed Ui illegal.
SPREAD
The report ~ tti.at
C&oadian use. oott larigely
reltrid.ed to the lower
levels of '90Ciety a n d
"fruttwl protteoteni agQ!nst
a~." hat now spread
to adult members of cm-
v e n ti o n a I mtddle~lass
gr-oops.
Dr. J . R. Phil;p, ONnge
County Health Department
admini.st1'ator, sai4 reprin-
ting m t.he Canadian report
does not r epresent en-
doraoment by hio dep&rt-
menl ..
The Addiction Research
Foundation is, eocording to
the hoallh departmont, an
orga n i z.a·t ion . Itw.
established in 1949 try the
Ontmio Legislature end is
financed mainly by Ille
Canadian government. It
conducts research in all
forms of a~. includifti
alcoholism.
'UNDESIREABLE'
"It 1li p r o bably un·
dMi!'eable to subject users
ol. marijuana to the severe
penalties that ~ prov-ided
in narcotics control legisla-
tion. However. it w<JUki a lso
be undesireable to legaliz.e
the sale .and use of mari-
juana," the r eport s:ayg.
Generally the "effects on
ma;t subjects iare mild And
a r e cha1'31Cterized prin-
cipally by e u p h or ia ,
hei~tened intensity o f
visuaI and Mldi'tory sensa -
tions, end a tenden c y
towards passivity arid relax·
ation," the report sars.
Alamitos Unification
Plan Hearing S lated
to Uie district. making it a
K ·grade 12 system, the Los
Alamitos High, Oat Jtui:or
High and Pine Junior High
Schoo!J.
This would give t h e
district one high school, two
jlllliu' hlgbs and seven
element.ary sichools.
Tbt unifioation also would
bring the di.cl trict's enroll·
ment . now at 4,200 studeats,
to mOf'e than 10,000 in 1971.
seminar here Thursday.
"Convicted users will not
be doctors. I aw ye r s .
teachers, er dentis ts . They
cannot receive a security
clearance and will likely not
be bonded. These are !ac·
.tors a young person should
c onsider befcre ex·
perimeoting with drugs,"
the DA said .
He explatned-1hat there
has been a great deal of em·
phasis on the medical pro-
blems of drug abuse today,
but not enough has been
said about the legal and
practical consequences to
the drug user.
' "Oran&:e C.Ounty is ooted
for being a atrong law en·
!\tttme.nt aref. We send
~le to jail f.;: poi;;•-;:3ing
rn arlj11ana. even the one or
two cigarettes being re-
tained for one's OW1l use .
''Some have said we are
too tough. I don't think so.
The legislature has made it
a serious crime -and-we
follaw the law. Certainly the
jail 5entences Imposed in
this county deter some
young people from getthl,g
involvied in the drug cul-
turt."
flicks said there has been
a.o unuaual trend in the use
of dangerous drugs in recent
ye4?'.s. The increase l.Q 11$agt?
ha.5 come at the higher
levels of society. ·he said.
"T e n years ago narcotic
offenses were largely com·
mitted among t he
economically deprived, in
areas of coosiderable pover-
y-and--unemployment. Dru'g
use was then described by
sociologis ts ~s. an escape
device for tht>se with little
hope .. The use of drugs in
that eponomic g:roop ba.s re·
maJned about the same.
"The spectacular lncrt&$e
In druc offenses bas taken
place in Ute middle and up-
per Income groups, where
young people with great op-
portunity and bright futures
are being affected," Hicks
said .
It ls up to the medlcal pro.
Cession to educate young
persona in the h e a 1 t h
hltards ot"drug1.Jse;lie sard.
His job, he sta1ed, was to in•
form them or the legal con·
sequences or drug use and
to erlf<U'C'e the law to the let•
ter.
Hicks , said that every
person tempted by drugs
'
should ask him5'll .tht que3•
lion, "Is it '4'orth il!" '"rhe
answer is a clear and loud
no," be said.
SEE TO.V ATT'S NOW!
IF YOU CAN BUY FOR LESS
YOU CAN'"J: GET THIS QUALITY! .. ·,
• Ir
Whirlpool
.
401 MAIN ST.
CONNOISSEUR
19 CU. FT.
TWIN REFRIGERATOR·FREUER
No Defrostinc Ever In Freezer or Refrigerator! Huge 226
lb. No.Frost freezer and big capacity refrigera tor, side·
by· s ide and only 32%" wide! • Separate cofd controls for
freezer and rtfri1erator • Roll·out basket In freezer
• Choice of wh ite, edged avocado or edged copper at no
extra charge.
NOW-LIMITED TI ME ONLY! HUGE 19-CU. FT.
FREE INSTALLATION
WHIR LPOOL ICE Magic"
REFRIGERATORS
U:clusive Automatic Ice Miker -PIO
tra)'l to fill or empty! Ice i. 1utomat1·
c1Uy r1pl1c.ct as you use It.
I
•
JO DAILY PILOT
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
MOT1Ca TO Cll'OITOllS
SU,.l!IUOll COUJIT OF THI! STATlf
OF CALll'OllNtA 1'0111 THE COUNTY 01' OltAHOI!
"'· 1..-11 E"I" d llOIERT A. IJlOCK. O.-
c:e1Hd. NOTICE IS HEll:El'I' GIVEH f6 tht
Ul'dltotl ol rM 1bov• ntmed 6tctdtnl
""' 111 ...,_ ri.vl"ll c11rm1 ~111.,1 I~
_.Id d«91iefrt ire rt11Ulre<I fo Ille ~.
wllfl """ ~"' YOUCM.,,, In """ office
o1 1M dtrtt ol IN 1-1 tnllti«I tO\IM, "' to .,,.....,, fM!n, wlllt lfW M<n••rv ~n.. "' """ UNHrtl'llM<I 11 t11e attic• al 1\ls Alt-Jloblf't A. f11tm111, 71'0
tltl'bor 8oull'v1rd, SI/lit Numti.r 3111,
CMll Men. C11tfoml1 nm wtlltll h IM
911ct trf bvslntts el IM undt1'1ltl>ed In 111
m11ter1 Hrttln!M fo """ nflote fll w ld ~Ill, w!lflln alir IMllfM en.r fl'll llrsl
_.,,,ell(;lllon ol 1111• Mlll t•.
STEVE 1". llltOCIC
Admlnl1tr1lw
at -El!ttr fll Tli+ tbovt 111~ doc~etl!
11•.t A. E*1hn11
t7tf MIA« hl!1Wtr41
Sllltt NvmW »1
CHll Mn.a. C1Rlw .. 1 nJU
Tth 17141 J.tt.4IM A_,..,. fw Mlmhlllfr...,
,-ublltl'led Ortntt COol•I 0111~ '°llllt.
All9Ull 7l. 30 1tld Sellmll~r 6. 11, ,... 1471 ....
LEGAL NOTICE
Chrysler
Sales Eyes
On Youth
PLACE
OVER THE COUNTER
Newport Beach Office of Dean ~'ltter
881 Dover Drive & Co.
INST RUCTOR:
f . Kimball Conrad. Account Executive
DEAN WITTER. al: Co.
•.. th1 p1opl1 who:d(qld••P
......... ,_ YM fma llrMIW' • P'tdflt C.... JMd IMMAtt
881 Dover Drive 642-6050
NEWPORT BEACH
MUTUAL SAVINGS
& ................... ..
2867 t11t COl)t l-411hw1y • Corona Otl I.tar, Ca11f. 92625
T1lephont 675·5010
MUD OfflCt • ""9(1ll
lU {. COtlll-00 ll'ltl. • flPOl ,.,_. CALrr, l llD'J
\: \
J, l
-A-
·' \
11 • -•
•• • Cllt . -..
• •• ~ -" •-+. ,_,,.
,,. .• -· -··· :..:_ 141 -· :.. \•
-~ ·~ -" ~ ... -· i!'~
'• • -· -· -· _, ••• -~ -·· .. -· + '• .;· ... -· -· -· -· .:·\t
:~ -· :,'•
-·~ -·
b ' ..
'
• I ~
'
------------------~-~----~~~~-·---
Aug1t5t -I 1968 DAILY PILGT
New York Stock Exchange List
·-
·-
.. •
J2 DAil V PILOT Friday, Augu~t 23, lW..::
I --
I • I
• ' ' ,, '
I·
• • • • --
• • . •
ONE DAY ONLY! SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED! SORRY, NO PHONE OR MAIL ORDERS
Ii
Perfect ttrry-all
for sc•oolglrls
SAVE 62c
• Vinyl clutches i . • Smooth or grained
~-• Zip compartment
1sa
HG. 2.50 f • Pretty fall colOrs
SATURDAY ONLY!
New double-knit easy-care
acrylic cardigans for Fall!
• New designs1 smart
self-patterns, too
SAVE 2.12 ·
• For back-to-school
• Best autumn colors
• Honey tones end ~ "-corals. Sites 36-42
688
REG.$'
SATURDAY ONLY!
~=c :::.-
UNCONDITIONAL
OUARANTll
If any Powr-Kraft~
1otltet, ratthet Or
drive part in this tool
Mt foils to give you
tompl•t• 1otl1fotlion
Wordt will reploc:e ii
or ref~ your money.
SAVE 15.02
•. Full rongo of •ockets 1988
• Quality guaranteed
• Hot forged steel HG .. 34.to VALUE
• Custom fitted case
SATURDAY ONLY!
Sta•less •es• 1ylo1S
wit• n1 •arrler
• Top, toe barriers
• Long-wearing
•.Fashion sh ades
• Misses' sites 9-11
SAVE l lc
2n.66~
HG. 2/'9•
--
Misses' f111 !O•hd
tOllH p11tl1SI
• Soft, comfortoble
• Extra long wearing
• White, sizes 34·#
• Stock up todoy
SP ECIAL
GHAT IUY
SATURDAY ONLY! SATURDAY ONLY!
·• Po cket big savings on Wards fin est sportcoats
• Big selection of fabrics, patterns, styles and colors
REGULAR $55 MEN 'S SUITS • • • 19.97
REGULAR $75 MEN'S SUITS • • 54.97 19'!24'
"CHARGE IT" REG. 29.95 • 39.95
SATURDAY ONLY!
50-ft . nl1fore1d
Yl1yl 9ard11 •ose
• Nylon reinforced
• Long Jesting, sturdy
• Flexible oil yHr
• All brass couplings
SAVE 2.11 ·
4sa
UG. '·"
SATURDAY ONLY!
..
H11na1 hair wlgl1ts
for quick ch11gesl
• Natural or frosted
• Use just I, 2 or 3
• Motch or highl igh t
your own hair color
SPECIAL
AT WARDS
SATURDAY ONLY!
• t
Mu's s•a11J •••t•er
Orlo1• a1w socks I ·;.,;
• Orlon® acrylic, nylon
• Long Wearing, soft
• Greet color array
• Men's 91/1 to 14
,,~
HG. 1.3'
SATURDAY ONLY!
!~ ~
Adjustable cool-top ironing
board for easier, faster jobs
• Sit do wn or stand SAVE 2 11
• T oble odjusls
• Ple nty of leg room
• 11 .. 6 air vents
• For ••sier ironing
• Standard si11 top HG. 11.9'
9sa
SATURDAY ONLY!
lru• brow1 cctl on
twill s•1ll vest
• Roomy, bloodprool
gomo bog; 2 pockets
• 12 shell loops
• Zippered fr ont
333
llG. 4.9'.
SATURDAY ONLY!
-.
... .
...
-~ .. -.
SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY TILL 9 PM-SUNDAY JJ AM TILL S PM!
SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY TILL 9-SUNDAY -11 A.M. TO 5 P.M.
HUNTINGTON BEACH s:~ :ei::: t,~;.Y· PHONE 714-892-6611
••
l •
...
------~~------------------
... --.. -........... - . - -. ._.........,.. ~--~---~ --··-·-·-·-·-~~·~·~--~·~·-----·-· ~·-· --------,..1·----..----· ---
JOOEAH H~STINGS, 642-4321
,,,..,, ....... Jl.1MI "' ... 1•
Ne w Membe rs Needed
Volunteers
Vary Duties
Ousting off the welcome mat are members of the Westminster
Community Hospilal Guild.
An orientation for new members is being planned at 7 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 12, in lhe hospital, 202 Hospital Circle, Westminster,
All area women over 21 who woold like to help others are in ..
viled ID -the meeling and learn about Ille many volunteer
services performed by the guild.
Since i,t began as a section of the Woman's Clµb in 1961, the
guild's' role bas become an increasingly important one, with many
new services assumed by the willing volunteers.
Members staff the nourishment and gift carts, issue passes to
visitors in the maternity section and JK>st a monthly maternity tea.
They also conduct Terry Tours twice a month for youngsters entering
a hospital for the first time.
In addition they conduct workshops and sponsor fund·raising
projects to provide four $500 scholar ships for high school seniors in ..
terested in pursuing a career in medicine.
From Uie initial membership of 11 women, the volunteer group
grew until it was officially incorporated as the hospital guild in 1962.
Past preiidents include the Mmes. Curtiss Bluemke, William
Magill, Marion Richards, Dorothy McNely, Hugh Salisbury and Bern·
ard Mieth.
r .
INVITATlONS ·TO TEA -Mrs. Leonard Ash, mat-
ernity tea chairman, and Mrs. Harry Sigeske, pr~
ident (left to right) discuss plans for the rnatenuty
teas conducted the first Monday of each month by
members of the Westminster Community Hospital
Guild • .'This service was one of. the first provided by
U!e guild when it was fo!Jlled 7 years ago ~d si.nce
completion of the hospital's new matenuty wing,
the volunteer group also issues passes to visitors
in that section.
The executive board which will be serving during the coming
year include the Mmes. Harry Stgeske, president; Carey Baird, first
Wee president; Fletcher Woodruff, second vice president and memb_er ..
ship chairman; Elwood Haws, treasurer; Dean McGowen, recording
secretary; Charles Keiter, corresponding secretary; Nick Ekovich,
historian and publicity, and William Ragen, parlian,.entarian.
VOLUNTEERS CIRCULATE -Malting the rounds
through the hospital each day are the nourishment
cart and gilt cart, both services staffed by gµild
members, who also deliver baby pictures to new
mothers. HQn the go'' are {left to right) Mrs. Don
Walker, Mrs. George Hays, co-ch~nnan of the
scholarship corrunittee, and Mrs. Stan Richards,
gift cart chairman. Proceeds from gift cart sales
aid the scholarship fund.
FOR YOUNG PATIENTS'-Making PU!>'
pets to give hospitalized. childreh and con-
ductin·g Terry Tours to soothe apprehen-
sive youngsters are two of. the services
provided by guild volunteers. Adding the
finishing touches to the delightful .hand
puppets are (left to right) Mallie Ekovich,
Mrs. Art Munns, tour chairman, and Mrs.
Bud Bair, chairman of the work.sbop·wbich
is conducted. twice a month .
Reader Advocates Problem Being S ~ved in a Family Way
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Recently a
woman who was unable to get preg-
nant wrote to ask if you thought it
would be wrong if her husband's
brother substituted for-him becat1se he
had fathered four children in six years
and could surely help her out. You told
her it would not be right to borrow her
brother-in·law for stud purposes and
that she should contact 80Dle adaption
agencies.
I thought you migllt like to kn<>w
how a similar case actually turned
out. You might revise your advice.
My husband and I wanted a child
very badly. We had been married
eight years and r could not get preg·
nant. We were both examined and
tnted. The tests indkated tllat we
ANN LANDERS ~
were both OK physically. The doctors secretly. We ended up in a fierce argu-
concluded that since ttiere was no or· ment.
ganic reason fer my inability U). The next !llornlag . Si& came. over
conceive, it must be emotional. and apologized. She said she and her
To take Olli' minds oU the problem husband had talked it over and dec'id-
we went to visit my sister in California ed if I really wanted a chUd Ed would
who was pregnant with her fifth child. help me ·out. 1· accepted ·their offer. Sis and her husband F.d kidded us
about not really wanting a familr. -After .a three-week stay we returned
not reali1ing we were both sensitive to the East. I learned shortly after
about it. The kidding went too far and that that I wa. pregnant. I do not
my sister accused me of taking the pill -.-know il Ed K the father or if the child
----------'-----
belongs to my husband. Furtherm e.
I don 't care.
Now, four years later, we have three
childirell and are a very happy family.
When J saw my sis and Ed last year
not a word was siid, The secret is
between the three of us and it will re·
main that way. Sign me -GLAD l
DID
DEAR GLAD, And people keep
a1tfng me If I make up letter1. Wby
would I have to make up letters when
· I 'get fanta1tfe mall Ute thlt?
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Please
don't think I am a crabby old woman.
I'm a newly married girl with a pro-
blem tbat is driving me nuts.
We haVe a small but lovely apart·
meot and we adore it. There ii a back
porch which runs the length Of four
apartments. We are in the middle. Our
dinette windows face the back porch.
The neighbor wtlo lives on the end
has strung a laundry line the full
length of the porch. She must wash
every day because those lin~s are
never without clothes on them. N-Ot on-
ly is :t embarrassing when we have
company but the clothes throw grotes-
que shadow• on our walla and ceiling
and it scares me to death when I am
alone.
Thi! nel~bor bas a right to 1tring
the line-as we were told when we mov·
ed in that tlle porch belonged to all of
us .. Is this worth talking to the
IAndJord about? 1 hate to &tart trouble.
-QUANDARY OVER LAUNDRY
DEAR QUANDARY• AP I be
landlord If be will furn.lib a Venetian.
blind for tbe dinette wladow1. If be
1ay1 no, buy one yourself. I& WW. be
well worth &be tnve1tment.
What awaits you on the other side of
the marriage veil? How can you be
sure your marriage will wort? Read
Ann Lenders' booklet "M<lrrifie -
What to Expe<>t." Send your requesi
to Ann Landers in care of this news ..
paper, enclosing 50 centa in coin and
a long, stamped, self-addreued en·
velQpe.
Min Landers will be glad to btlp you
with your problema. Send them to her
in care of the DAILY PILOT, enc.Ios·
ing a · 1elf-addressed, it.Moped en ..
volope.
' '
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}4 DA!LV "LOT
PROGRAMS GALORE ~ Mennaid1, tbe Women11
Division o(,.lihe Chamber of Commerce in Laguna
Beach, are l;lusy scheduling the agenda for the fol·
lowing year .. The women" will gather next Monday
at noon in Hotel Laguna for a luncheon and pro.
Mermaids Set Sights
•• On Numerous Activities
A third sea'son of ac-
tivities will begin next Mon-
day wh en the Women's
Division of the Laguna
Beach Cha mber of Com -
merce gathers for lunch.
A noon get together in the
1-lotel Laguna is scheduled.
~1rs. Robert Turner, presi-
dent or the group, whictl is
nicknamed Mermaids, in-
vites membet~. wives of
chamber membeNi and in-
tere&ted women to attend.
Discussed during t h e
meeting will be the slate of
officers. adoption of by-laws
and other organizational
matters.
Mrs. Leon A x e 1 rod .
chairman of the upcoming
new teachers luncheon. wlU
reveaJ plans for thit event.
Mr1. Peter D. Fulmer.
vice president .and luncheon
arrangements chairman, is
taking reservations at 494·
1018 and 494-7575.
Am-0ng the Mermaid's ac·
tivi.ties for the year are the
Laguna Beau+.iful Contest.
annual awards luncbeon,
marter calendar. Book Fair
and Winter Fe1tiva1 Flea
Market.
T oa1t mi1treue1
Surflide Clubhouse I n
Huntington Beadl is '1tle
meeting place tor members
ri Las Olas Toa«tmiJtcesa
Club of Huntingt.on Beaoti on
the 1econd end f o u r t b
Wednesday at 7:30 p .m.
Episcopal Ceremony
·--gram. Mrs. Doris Lindsay, Chamber of Commerce
secretary (seated) admires the Mermaid mascot
with the Mmes. Peter D. Fulmer, Mermaids vice
president; Robert Joyce, publicity coordinator, and
Robert Turner, president (left to right).
Harborite We.ds
In Church Rite
Bouquets of w b i t e
cbry1anthemums, dahlias,
baby's breath a.nd fern
decorated St. A n d r e w ' s
Presbyterian Cburcb where
Deborah L y n n e Howard
became the bride of Stephen
F.Mle Lewis.
The Rev. Dr. Charle1 H.
Dierdeld solemnized the
double rlng ceremony.
The bride Lt the daughter
ol Mr. and Mr1. Lloyd
Howard of Sama A D a .
P.arents. cl the bridegroom
are Mr. •nd Mn. Frank E.
Lewia or Newport Beach.
F.ocorted to the altar by
her father, the bride wore a
white organza gown with
pearl beading on t b e
neck1ine and cuffs. Her i1·
lurion vell wa1 held by a
wttite organza rose with
beaded pearl teaves. Her
flowers were white rosebuds
and baby'11 breath.
Miss Dianne Davit of
Tu1tin wu &liked to be ma.id
or honor. Sbe and the
briderma..ids wore I o n g
green siik sleeveless gowns
with white leghorn hats wtth
green bands and bows. They
carried bask.ett of spring
flowers.
Bridesmaids were Ml.ss
Linda Tatum, Mis1 Jill
Worlund, Mn. Ste p hen
Rillera, all of Tustin and
Mrs. Thoma1 Chadick of
Costa Mesa.
Mill Meagan O'Sullivan of
TuAin. was Dower girl.
wearing a long g:retn drt1s
embroidered with daWes
aod carrying bauet.t of
flowers .
Robert M. Lewil o f
Newport Beach was a10d
to be belt man. Ushers weR
Mike Wertman ol San
Di.ego, Ted Foull o f
Newport Beach, Jack Moses
of Los Angeles and Dean
Howard., tbe bride's brother,
from Turtin.
A reception in Irvine
eo..t Country Club took
p'-ce altB the ceremony.
More than ~ guests
circulated among decor•·
tions of white c:brysan·
themums, yellow . r o 1 e s ,
y e 11 o w dlrysantbemums,
daisies and ftl11.
Assisting were M r s .
William WWon and Mrs.
Dale Wihon of Los An&eles,
both cousW of t h e
bridegroom, and M i s s
Chriatine Johnson of
Newport Beach. Spec: i al
guests were Mrs. Frank M.
Taylor of Pomona, the
bridegroom's grandmother:
Fashions Play It Safe
Mrs. G. L. Howard of
Walnut Creek and Mrs.
Edith Buc:lt of TOOie Rock,
both grandmothers of the
bride, aod Mn. Florence
Heilbron, of. Fresno, the
bride's great-aunt.
The bride is a graduate of
Tustin High School and al·
tended California State Col·
lege at Long Beach. Her
husband ia a graduate of
Newport Harbor High
School and the University of
Southern Oalifornia. He
received a master"s degree
in business administration
and affiliated with Sigma
Chi fraternity.
By SHEILA WALSH
ROME <UPI) -Rome 's
high fashion designers are
playing it safe in their new
fall and winter collections .
No radical <iepartures in
hemline, no massive swing
toward pants suits. Skirts
remained generally above
the knees and once in a
while a maxi.length coat
would appear, but only as a
"trial balloon," not a
general trend.
These were some of the
hfgtllgnt.fi of the couture col-
lections shown la.st month to
an international set or
buyers end press.
In shape, the A-line was a
favorite, Waists were noted
and U1Ually belted. ~ost of
the frills and flutter were
for evening cloltles.
Subdued colort> dominated
tfle fabric: aceoe. Valentino.
considered among the top of
It aly's pac:e setter1 and a
favorite with Mrs . JObn F .
Kennedy, presented a choice
of colors for day clothes -
1~·hite, gray, brown, black or
l>ottle green,
But hi s edict wcu : one col·
or at a time, please. Say
brown. Then make It a
brown look from bead to
toe.
For evening, Valentino
was a bit more lenient with
color, but throughout the
collection, he •how e d
preference for black or
w'hite.
After a wedding trip to the
Hawaiian Isl-ands th e
newlyweda w!ll reside in Los
Angele•.
MRS. STEPHEN EARLE LEWIS
Hawaiian Honeymoon
Construction Women
Building New Board
Mrs. Donald Ames will be
installed president af
Orange County Chapter 91 .
National Association o f
Women i n Construction
Tuesday, Aug. Tl.
The 8 p.m. dinner in the
Caspian restaurant in Costa
Mesa will be preceded by 7
p.m. cock tia i Is . Mrs.
Dorothy O'Connor. im-
mediate past president of
the National Association af
Women in Construction and
a member of the Los
Angeles chapter will be the
installing officer.
Also to be installed are
Marjorie Weil. all directors.
Mrs. Donald Ames and
Mrs. Kathryn Clay will at·
tend the group's national
convention to be held in
Washington, D. C. Sept. 2AJ
and 21.
Women who :are
associated with the con-
struction industry a n d
guests of chapter members
are invited to the in·
stallation. Reservations can
be made by calling Mrs.
Carroll Boles. 548-5671 , Mrs.
Ann West, 52.8-7445 or Mrs,
Patterson at 642-1511.
the Mmes. Richard Snider,.===========.
vice president; Catharine
Patterson, recording
secretary; Carl K o r t e n .
treasurer; Jeanne Nelson,
c o rresponding secretary,
and William Adams, John
Bryson, Fred Tiffany and
QUICK
Cite.Ii vp qvic~ly 011 Ioctl
OT1nt1. R11d yo11r c.0111p1d,
c.0111pr1h1nfi'!'• ho1111town 1di·
tio11 of tll1 DAILY PILOT.
BOYS' BBOGVES
that.,.,... and wear
Patsy Noroian Marries ;&;uthe nt ic Wing Tip Styling Malo This a S~oo
AnY. Boy. Would Be Proud To Wear!
llone ymooning in Hawaii
are Mr, and Mrs . John
Richwine who were married
in St. W'Jchael and All
Angels Episcopal Church,
Costa Me6a .
The Re\'. Edward Allen
performed the double ring
ceremony. The bride, the
former Patsy M a r i e
Noroian. ii the daughter of
Mr. and Mn. Nish Noroian
of Costa Mesa. T h e
bridegroom is the ion of
Mrs. Ruth Ellen Richwint of '
Balboa Island.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a fit-
ted floor-length gown with a
5Cooped neckline and elbow
length sleeves , The
candlelight 1atin g o w n
featured aleocon lace &C·
cerrta and a Jong satin train.
--MIU. JOHN RICHWINE
O...blo Rln9 Rite
Her elbow-length veil was
held by a clu1ter of lace and
pearl Clowers. She carried a
cascading b o u q u e t of
phalaenopsis archids, lille1·
of-the -v alley and
stephanotis. Vacationers in Canada Mrs. David Noroian of
Blythe served her si1ter-in-
law as matron ot honor Mr. and Mrs. Lou Grayson of Costa Mesa were visitors to the Chateau Lake
vt'hile N.:isa Rachel Seale of Louise in AJberta province of the Canadian Rockies. Among attractions view-
Blythe was maid ol honor. ed in the background was the Victoria Glacier.
Bridesmaid was Mfsa Jane 1 1;i;;;;;;:;iti';;;;;:;1;i;;:;;;iji;;;;~jj.;;;:;;;jw;;;:;;a;;;;;::ijj;;;::;w;;;;;:;iti'~;;ii;i;,; II Krosse of Newport Beach.I
Attendants were identically
gowned in floor iength M:ep
pink sill< lrocb otyled wUh
long sleeves. V-necklines
and elencon lace ruffles at
the neckline and wrists.
They carried noeegay bou·
quell Of pink sweetheart
rOM:buds. miniature p I n k
camatiooe and lilles..of-the-
nil•.
Stuart Maple of Corona
del Mar was the best man,
whi \f: ushering gueru ta
their places W'!:re Phillip -1 Maurer of Corona del Mar,
Jim Splittgerber of Irvine.
Mark Miller of Newport
Beach and David Noroian af
Blythe, the bl'lde'1 brodler.
W.rs. Edward Allen was
organi.&t and Norman Major
was trumpeter in the church
decorated with candelabra
and large arrangements or
wtiite gladioli. stock and
chrysanthemum~ accented
by pink carnations.
The reception took place
in the Empire Room at the
Nev.-porter Inn. Si I v e r
candelabra decorated the
cake table iand h o r s
d'oeuvres table as did bou-
quet& of White gladioli,
stock, chrysanthemums and
pink carnations. More than
300 relaUves: and friends
gathered at the champagne
reception. Mn . Terry Lance
circulated the guest book.
It's time to do it again
at
1rlie I,ool.
•••
ENTIRE SUMMER STOCK
so oOFF
SALE STARTS
~ATURDAY• AUG. 24•10 am
33 Fashion Island, Newport Center
e lido Isle • Sherman Oaks
pedwin.' ----
Weslclilf
Shoes
Where Shopping
lo A Real Pleasure
The newlyweds, bot b
graduates of Corona del
Mar High School, will reside
ln Costa Mesa where the
bride attends Orange Coast
College. Her husband, who
completed two years at the ·
un1..,..;1y ol Califumia, J IN WESTCLIFF PLAZA
s.nte Barbara, will continue 17th and Irvine-Newport Beech m1otudi~atUCI. lo'\,....,.illi. ... ~ ..... ;wo~~~~-.i~;;iOi~~~...;;;;"'11~~~~..,.~ ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
• No Sale at Sunset Strip Sh op
'lo-, . \
----------------------------------·---------------------------------
------·-·------.... -.. ------· -
Crystal Ga zi ng
Harbor Council's Movie Guide
CEdltor'1 NOf*: Thll rno\111• t llld• la
•rer>elW lW ffle lllm1 'onvnltMe ot
.,..,_. Col/IKLI PTA. Mn, ltotwrl $cl•
-11 itr•ldlnl 1/111 Mr.. H1r1 s-
"" 11 toll'lmltt. dwllnMll. It It In-
~ ••• r.t..-.nee Ill __ lfl.,..
w llebM tllnl1 for (ltfll ln '" tr(lo!P• 1MI wll -r .,.....IY. Your vi.w. ,,.. lalld,_,, AUii !t1em to MOvle
GlllOll. Cll,.. .t !tit DAILY PILOT.)
1V0men.
THE p ARTY -Slapsdck
eornedy occurs w b e n
disaster'-prone East Indian
aotor i1 invited to chic
Hollywood f."rty.
THE SCALPHUNTERS -A
MATUBE TEENS AND trapper and a runaway
ADULTS slave folk>w the trail ol
BANDOLERO -P o s s e stolen pelt,, ln this O>ry
t:Nlcks escaped bank rob-4lnd violent film.
bera to ¥exico. W·HERE WERE Y 0 U
DARK OF THE SUN -WHF.N THE L f G H T S
Tribal civil war in the WENT OUT! -Famous
Congo backgrounds a blackout of November,
violent a d v e n t u r e 1965 serves as background
melodrama. for thU frottiy comedy.
G!IDlS WHO'S COMfNG TO ADULTS
DINNER? -Mo vi-n g THE BIRDS, TilE BEES
story of parents' reaction AND THE ITALIANS -
to a racially mixed mar· An acid ccmedy o n
riage. hypocrisy of Italian man·
HANG 'EM HIGH ners and morals.
Marshal hunts vigilantes nIE FOX -The rela-
'who tried ill> lynch hlm. tionsbip between two
Isolated farm ls shattered
with the arrlvaJ of an •t·
tractive man.
THE; GRADUATE -Comic
satire of a young man who
breaks out of t h e
materlallstic world <JI bis
elders.
HAMMERHEAD
Unde..cover agent i 1
assigned by the British to
ttiw.an a u.distic ~vlllain!s
attempts to steal vitaJ
missile information.
ROSEMARY'S BABY -In
thi& blending of horo-fan-
tasy and every day reali·
ty, girl tries to saw her
baby from! mp end ln g
deviltry 1n this sordid and
blasphemous film.
SWEET NOVEMBER
Dying woman goes to
unusual lengths to be
remembered.
X denote.s excellent fUm . HOMBR·E -White man women living on a n
raised by Apaches finds it ••••---------•••••••-difficult to adjust to the
white man 'a world o f
Arizona in 1880s.
KONA COAST--A ram-
bunctious beachoomber is
Peering Around
determined to avenge the •••••••••••••••••••••• death of his daughter.
'Polishing up' their membership lists are members of the La gun a Beach
Chamber Music Society the Mmes. Roger W. Russell, Edward R. Nell and
Bob Werlemann (left to' right), who are breaking out the heirloom crystal in
preparation for the social season membership drive. The drive, which form-
ally began Sunday, will continue until the society's first performance, Nov.
3, by an Austrian chamber orches~ra playing an all-Bach program. Season
membership (for all four events) is $10.
MADIGAN -New York
pol.ice manhunt reveals
the problems of the police
commissioner and h i s
1taff in this action-paced
drama.
NO WAY TO TREAT A
LADY -Psychopath, in
Wll'ious disguises ,
becomes • murderer at
l a r g e of middle-aged
INCLUDED in a series of
prenuptial parties honoring
Miss Anne Scott was the
shower given by M r s .
William B. Tritt ln ber Lido
151.e home.
The bride-to-be, daughter
of the Wmen A. Scott.. of
Eastbluff, will marry
Charles E. Ortman. son of
Mr. ond Mrs. William R.
Ortiman of Berkeley, Sept. 7
Carolyn Collins, Helen Hall,
Jackie Casa:la, M a r y a n n
Green, Susan Hancock, San·
dy Shaw and Roizie
Richards.
Out-of·town guests were
Mrs. Leo Depuncian of
PM&dena, the hoooree's
aunt; Mi'111!i Donna Swangren
of Beverly Hills; Mrs.
Joseph Munoo of San Diego ;
Mrs. warren McQuillian and
be.r daugtiter Lenny 0(
Betlflower; Mrs. Mkheel
Oman of La Jolla, aOO Mn.
James Lawrence, Gardena.
Horoscope in Ou.r Lady Queen of
Angels Catholic Church.
Mn:. Tritit selected for
decorations a white satin
Sagittarius:
Laguna Beach Art Unit
Hosts Annual Meeting and tulle umbrella bung ALSO entertained during
with wedding bells and a miscellaneous b r i d a 1
doves, and the refreshment shower was Miss Gloria
table was dres.wd with a Castillo who will become
d French lace doth, centered Mrs. Michael A. Johnson The annual membership missions on pictures sol with fresh flowers and
meeting of the Laguna and gifts. There are 900 ,.,_""ked b .1 and stal Sept. 14.
Beach Art Association will artist and' non -art i st U4U Y 11 ver cry HosteS'5es were Mn;. O. J.
k I M d A 26 members at this time. appolntments. c-.ftwA .... and Mrs. K. W. ta e pace on ay, ug. , Guests from ....... Harbor "'vc °"~ at 8 p.m. in the Main Anyone interested m a y ... .,, Johnson, and the party was
Outline Plan.s
SATURDAY
AUGUST H
By SYDNEY OMARR
"11J,e wise man controls
his destiny . . . Astrology
points the way."
ARIES ('March 21·April
19): You can improve work
and health conditions. Day
· to study ways, means of ex-
panding. People who work
with or serve you are more
cooperative. Social event
tonight oould seal agree-
ment
TAURUS (April 20·May
20): Very good for dealing
with children. instigating
crea-tive projecL Day
features change, variety,
stimulation. Status quo is
shaken. You can be
versatile and could be star
of your circle.
GEMIN1 (May 21-June
20): You find greater hap-
piness at home base. An
event occms which makes
life more meant ngfu I,
pleasant. Welcome change,
adventure. Include family
members i n chaUenging
plan.
CANCER (June 21.July
22 ): Excellent for dealing
with relatives. You can also
profit from ideas, journeys.
Much pressure lifted. What
appeared to be a problem
tends to dissolve. Be fiex·
ible. Highlight versatile ap-
proach.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)'
Could be the day you close
deal which means more
money in your pocket Ele-
ment of timing is on your
side. Don'it be afraid of
financial expansion. Group
or f!'aternal order aids
cause.
VIRGO (Aug. 23.sept. 22 )'
You continue to make pro·
gress. Circumstances are in
your favor. Obtain ltint from
LEO message. Give at-
tention to your appearance.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
What was a secret fear is
resolved Now you can pro-
ceed with less anxiety.
Finish project which had
been left hanging. Excellent
evening for attending
theater, changing pace.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21 ): Fine for taking steps
whi ch help fulfill hopes,
desires. Be optimistic. You
can em'baMI: upon program
which brirrgs d e ' i r 1 d
Club Bakes
For Funds
"Sugar and spice" wUI be
offered tomorrow when the
Marina High School PTA
9P0n&on a bake sale.
Two locations fer the first.
fund-raising e v e n t of the
year have been announced
by the group's pretident,
Mn. Ge<rge Walton. Mem· hen will be Idling an .. _
sortment of baked goods in
bath the Marina and Spring-
dale Centers betwflell JO
a,m. and 2 p.m.
I •
Gallery in Laguna Beach. become a member and Area included Miss Scott's given in the st~' Costa
d thereby a part owner of one mother and her sister, Mesa home. The agenda i n c l u e s Susan; the Mme&. William voting on by·law changes, of the few major galleries in .,.,..... o.J.-F Among the 15 c 1 o s e results. Accent on
friendship, social activity.
SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dtt. 21): Some people you
want to contaot could be out
of reach. Don't i et this
discourage you. 0 u t I i n e
plans. Gcl Mots on paper.
nomination of the annual art the country owned and A. n..u'JI., o.vui:i-,, • friends and relatives at-
. d 1 operated by 1· ts mem Kingaaro, Kent G. Snyder, tending were "-Raoul auction committee an e ec-· Jack Fer 6 us 0 n, i..e .. u •.
ting three board members. bership. Albe• C k V Castillo of Santa Ana, Ml'!'.
Earl Klein of Dana Point, Day events are free to Larabee, rt o er, an Jerry Mihld and Mrs. Roy
r So h members while evening Johnson, Aims Orozier and Mihld of Los Angeles; Mrs. Ralph Tarzian o ut ts oar-'e Lawrence. r M · Laguna and w i 11 i a m even are at .a reduced "" Ted !merman o onrov1a,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan. 19): Correspondence,
messages prove stimulating
in constructive m a n n e r •
Good for writing, publishing.
Add to knowledge. Check
your paper for facts which
aid personal cause.
Mackay of San Clemente rate. Receptions honoring Others were the Misses and Mrs. 'Ted Guinn and
have been nominated. new exhibits and artists Sonnee Stallman, Denise daughter Nancy of Man.hat·
Remaining on the board _ta_k_•_P_l_•_ce_m_o_n_th_l.:,y_. ____ P_,_·c_k_er_ln_;g:;,_Les1J ___ •_N_e_w_q;;.w_·s1-'-, _tan __ B_e_ac_h_. _____ _
will be Mogens A b e l ,
Richard Brooks. F r e d
Briggs, Harry E 11 i o t t •
Donald Vanderbilt and Pat
Cotterell.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Money situation is
brighter and has special ef.
feet on mate, partner.
The gallery is celebrating
its 50tlt anniversary this
year. having been organized
by Edgar Payne in 1918 and
housed in the same location
since 1929.
rISCES (Feb. 19-March
20) : One close to you
performs action which
stimula.tes your pride. Show
appreciation. Express feel·
ings. Rediscover loved ones.
An educational, non-profit
organization, it meets its
operating costs by small ad-
rnissi<ln fees, dues, com.
At RO!&
1 Stalty
1tsldu1 of ,,.,, growltl
6 One of
superior
soc I al status: CO'lloq.
10 Went under 1l .,,,,,,.
17th Cl!llbn:y
painter
15 R1gulatron
16 At the timt
speclfltd W To even the
least txlent:
2 words
19 Author un·
known: Abbr.
19 Branchts 20 Fragranct 2Z Explorer of
Newfouml ·
land .
23 Not relax1d
24 Gorge
through •
rid gt
25 Latin: Abbr.
28 Britf i1111ntrsion
2'f Corne out
on top JO Bibllcal
VISStl » Having ., .... -te
''"" J6 Supremacy
over othtrs
)8 Acute abdo·
minal pain
40 Morose 41 In a vtt'/ slow"'"'""
42 Wind ;augt 45 Salad
lrtgrtdi1t1t 46 Went first
47 Cltar IWl)'
48 Femalt
animal JO Drunkard's
tear: Informal 51 Not rat1on1I 52 Sourct of
diversion 5:4 Path
57-Row
61 Throw
62 Fttl anxiety 8/Z3/68
62 Fr. uppef 'low ptaly 34 Poorly
houst land llghltd 1
&4 ·-· flxt 10 Pl.l'lish In Jh Btlng with•
65 Russ. certain way out !loss Orthodox )1 "Moby Oick" 37 Des gnalt
safnt character 39 Color '6 Ga in 12 Thread: 43 Halfway firsthand Comb. tonn 44 Crucifix
knowledge of 13 Tit togethtr 49 Moves by
lt7 Not far away 21 Wife in violtnt
68 Econonil· "Arthurian mot ions
tally . Rtn11111ce" Jl Track
u1 tfeu 22 Welland-· con!Hlant
plant 24 Cotton sort·· si Largt billow n Sttalt so11r1t i119 dtvict s Pay
25 Not another's
wides1:irtad expensts
2h Without 54 Sllght l Engage In tht aid of 55 Lacking
a skirmish another In crafts·
2 Calfy by 27 Cov!l'ed a manshlp
hand floor 56 Open space J Way for IM!b· 2;9 Gtntralty of land
lie panage prevalent 57 Mannish
4 As.sign JO Dlsp/tyed 58 Noun 1ndlng
5 Spri1119 up illld osttnta· 59 ValUltlon
poured fotth tiously 60 One that
6 Interchanged ll Ell!!. lexl· does :
7 Weight unlt cograDher Suff ix 8 Floatlng )2 Boy Scout'& ~Ste 41
ice mass concern Auoss
DOWN
Boys' slacks with
new Soil Release
Reg. 3.98
NOW 3.33
'abu!oui Penn-Pre1t' fini1h ,ombl-wllh-loll
lltleo"' to tn0k1 wery!hing comt out In tt.-"'
weep! tl,e prH1 I Skinny Gnid 11yle in ol;.,., blue,
-and mcii11. 61o17 regulor and™"• I to,,
hl.llky.
14 M 11 ... ...cl oil'", 14 M 1, ..... ~.
..._ ..................................... NOW J..99
lave on 111an'1
Penn.Prest llack1
Reg.1.98
NOW 4.99 ,..._. --.1oo1o:._. ........ ,,....
top Mkh UoOrod ... «Jtlti-"DI ..,..... wltll:
"""',...,.. flMI' w.n !Wn-,.,.., ....... ,..,,.
ml!ln,www'1..._
COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
The Great Orange Coast's
No. 1 Paper!
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"
---------~--------~----------------------------------
---...-r--------•
ur O~ILV PILOT
OlyIDpi~ Tor~h Lighting . Ritual Set Today
MEXICO CITY !UPI) -The cur-
tain soe1 UJ.> on the Ctrst •ct of lht.
196& O\)'mp1c Games lOday featur· inS the oldest of Its traditions -the
Olympic flame.
In the mountain &rove of Olym·
pus, just as their ancestors did 26
1..-enturies ago, Grttks will light the
Olympjc flame by concentratin~ the
rays of the sun on the torch wtth a
mirror.
Mexico, where 1pectacle ls a high
art. will take It from tbere.
The Mexicans have planned a
route overlaid with ceremony and
symbolism fC9' carrying the flame
to Merico City, where the games
begin Oct. 12.
Official
By Associated Press
Mexican hosts to the politically
harassed 1968 Summer 0 l y mp i c
Games, first threatened by a Russian
pullout over the South African situa·
tion, faced more rumblings today -
talk ol a possible United St.at.es boycott
over the Czedlollovakian invuioo.
A Baltimore television announcer
s a i d the U.S. Olympic Committee
would meet Saturday night in Long
Bea.ch alter the diving trials to discuss
the possibility of such a boycott.
Everett Barnes, executive direct.or
The theme of the. Games this year
i~ the old world meeting the new.
with the place ol honor going to
Christopher Colwnbu,.
Before lighting the nwne, the
Greeks pay homage to a relic.,
preserved at Olympus -the heart
of the Baron de Coubert1n, the
French nobleman who refounded
tl'le Olympic Games in 1896.
-Togaoelad-Oreelr maldens wilJ
turn the torch over to a runner, the
first In a relay of 2,989 athletes, In.
eluding 17 swimmers, who will car·
ry It to Mexico Qty.
The Greek runners, 4.50 of Utem,
wUJ carry the torches, through
sunshine and olive trees tn th~
11ints
of the U.S. Olympic Committee. said
Thursday night "thert might be
debate" soon about the possibility or
an American boycott of the Olympics.
Barnes said. however, the 1ubject
definitely won't be discussed at Satur-
day night's routine meeting of coaches
and a1hletes, even though there his
been talk Of such a boycott.
Althoug!l it is not on the agenda of a
Sept. 7-8 meeting Of hiJ committee in
Chicago, Barnes said a boycott might
be discussed at that time.
John Kennelly, ipOrta director o1
In Invaded Nation
Czech Crisis Recalls
'!Verve-tingling Trek
Little Czechoslo¥akia's invasion by
· s Red brothers brings back recolle<:·
iions of a tourist's experiences with o!·
ficials and people during a nerve-ting!·
ing 1965 to v 11 i t _the ~R
t Czechoslov.altian Socialist Republic).
Rigid cbecldn& of the most minute
details by border guards and• gu~·
ed but noticeably friendly-to-Amer1·
cans relationShip with the Czech citi·
ze n are at1ll fresh in mind.
Although it was obvious by the
countlest red stars which stood at the
top of buildings that Comn1unism was
in control, the only sign of the milit.ary
v.·as an occasional Red Army truck
ambling down Czecho.!lovakia's nearly
isolated roads.
People were unusu.ally helpful and
they seemed to go out of their way to
be friendly.
It was suctl aid that finally got. me to
the World War II monument of where
the village of Lidice stood before it
was flattened by vengeful Nazis.
.\nd it was such help Uiat enabled
me to get out of a ghastly pred.ica·
ment.
Having taken the wrong h.ighway out
of Prague, I was driving ea.st toward
Warsaw instead of sout.h and the in·
tended destination : Vienna.
Gasoline was running low by the
time I got back on the correct
h.ighway. And time was running out on
my visa. I had exhausted my Czech
Green's Shot
Swats Halos
Into 2-1 Loss
OAKLAND IAPl -Second baseman
Dick Green of Oakland discovered that
it doesn't take a big swing to hit a
home run.
He shortened his swirig and hit a
ninth-inning homer that gave the
Athletics a 2-1 victory over th e
California Angels Thursday night.
"I wasn't seeing the bat! weU. I was
pulling my head away from the plaW .''
Green explained.
"I came out early for batti.ng 'Pfac·
tice and took about 10 cuts with the
shortened swing. J hit the ball so well
tilat J quit." he said.
Green saved one short liwing for the
game. His homer came ofi Angel
roolde southpaw Dennis Bemttt, 0-1 ,
with one out in the final frame.
Ttie teams play again tonight with
Jim McGlothlin, t-11 . pitching for
California a11Nnsl Oakland·1 Lew
Kn.Ulte, 8-10.
CAUl"OfllOA OAIU . .ANrt ... rlll"lll ... ,~,..,
ltfVll'kt: rf 4 t I t (.,,..,..,;, N J I J 1
,.,_, .. llftl(-...h ll , •••
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......... JllOl..,.Jll •0 1~ (_., a t I I t ,,,.,,., d J t I o
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·-J. .._..,,.... lll:flldlt,., ~-..
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......., l. •• • 14 • t J t s
lt""'9r w. , .. If ' 1 ' • • • Hll'o 1••..r.. Mtlldn. t-ir•. A-4M.
curren~ and by now the bub were
closed making any exch&a.p d. c ur·
rency impossible and illegal.
It wa1 a race of enoup •••line vs
enoup Ume with the eoueqaeece pro-
bable detention by CSSR aat.borltlea
for belaf .ID the eooutry whh 111 ex·
plred vlu.
Yo1 learn by e:rperieoce with Cftm·
mHht efftclals that ,.,. either follow
tbtlr rules or yoa don't, with no room
•••••••••••••••••••••
WHITE
WASH
-···••h•h•••···-
for logic or allbl ln the eYenl of !ht
latter.
The kilometers wbl1ked by 111 th e
car mot.ored through the cherry trtt
lined countryside toward Austria.
The fuel gauge needle also mo'1ed
swiftly.
I decided to drive as far as l could,
then ftgured I'd push the rest of the
way. Wit.It else waa there to do'
The Austrian border was about 18
miles away when I pulled into a little
t.own which had a gasoline pump. [
knew that because a sign depicting a
pump was at the city limit.Ii. Service
stations in the CS.SR are few and fiar
between.
Desperate because the gas needle
was riding the empty mark and
because there was only 90 minutes left
on the visa. I pulled up to the g a s
pump. Unable to speak German,
Russian or Czech I used sign language
to communioate.
The fellow recognized the problem
But he seemed powerless to he.fl. I
had no negotiable currency. The man
wanted chocolate. I had none. I had
CSSR stamps. But he didn't want
them.
It .._.·as an impossible b'ansaction
Resigned to the thought of spending e1
number of days in jail, I prepared to
leave.
But before I could star1 the engine
the man began to yell and wave his
arms. He gestured for me to raise my
hood. then took the hose off the pump
and gave me two liters of the precious
liquid. at his own expense.
Knowing the economy of CSSR. I
realized what a sacrifice thii fellow
WM making.
I shall never forge1 his k.indnesJt, nor
can t help wondering at this moment
(!( Ciech crisis wtiat will become of
him and hi1 baaudful homeland.
TV Views
< p.m. 11 llCL-FOOTBALL -Bul-
falo Billi vs. Houaton Oiler~. Tom
Kelly mikeside at Tulaa. Okla.
7,IQ p.m . i>ICL -BASEBALi, -
Angels at Oakland Athlctks. Buddy
BlattneT. Don WtUs mikeside 1t Oak·
land Coiiaieum. Dick Enberg with pre
and pod game shows.
II p.m. 1'4lF -LUCHA LIBRt:-
(0. Mexico.)
t.owru: where Grtek.s ol another ag~
forged the Olym]»c ideal -Pyrgoa,
Patru, Corinth, Me.a:ara -to a
ceremoay 1t Panathenian Stadium
in Athens on Saturday.
Sunday, 1 Greek destroyer wl.11
bear the name westward to Genoa.
birthplace of Columbus.
One hundred Italian runners will
bear it through the streets to the
house where it is believed Col·
umbu.s was bom. Then an Itallan
navy ship, the "Amerigo Vespuc·
~I." will transport jt to,.Barcelona,
Spain, where Colwntiua land.eel
after d.lscoverirl& America.
The route of the name aymbo1ites
the redlscovecy of America, the
organizers say, and the meet1nc of
th'e Ind.Ian cultU.res ol. the mainland
with Spanlah explorera that produc·
ed Latin America.
Mexico 11 I.ht first L a t J n
A meric1n nation to host Ule E>lym·
pic1.
1l1e Spanish Olympic t-ommlttee
has mounted a force o{ l.372 run.
ners to bear U1e flame across the
peninsula to Palos -the port from
where Colu mbus 1ailed to the new
warld iD 1492.
A Spa.nUh navy lr\iat.e leavea
with the Dame Sept 12. Aboard will
be a d.lrec:t deacendant al tbe "ad·
miral of the ocean 1e.a. '' HiJ name:
Crbtobal Colon, Columbua' name in
Spanlih.
The Spanish sh.Ip ia to dock Sept.
29 at Watline's Isl and ln the
Baham.as, wllich Columbus called
San Salvador -the 1pot wttere he
found the new contlnent.
Mexico has already dlspatcbed a
gunboat loaded with 100 tons of ce·
ment and steel to build a
permanent monument on the spot
where the creat navigator landed.
The gunboat salls with the flame
Sept. 30 for Mexico, droppinc
anchor Oct. 6 "-I Vtra(.TUJ., where
Herna.n Cortez landed to be&in th•
Spanish conqutat of the Americas.
Seventeen swimmers will ctrry
the torch ht reli;ya the list 900
yardl to land. It will be the first
time swimmers have carried the
torch.
Pedro Ramlrti, head o! the Mes-
ican organi.ting commlttee, will
take the torch from the last swi m-
mer. and hand it over to the first of
1,000 Mex.lean runners.
For the first time, a girl, Enri·
queta Basilio. will be the final
torchbearer, loping into the main
Olympic stadium here Oct. 12 to
light the ceremonial pyre.
Possipility of U.S. Boycott
WJz.tv in Baltimore, 5aid Thursday
night Bames told him of the Saturday
meeting in a telephone conversation
from Los Angeles.
"When I asked j/ anyone had st.1g·
gested ii boycott," Kennelly said,
"Barnes replied, 'No, not yet'."
•·Barnes 5aid there had. been aome
comment on sucb a po.ssi bility,':..Ken··
nelly said.
"I know there will be debate,'' Ken-
nelly quoted Barnes as saying.
'The whole question arose -only SO
daya befot-1 the Gameg begin Oct. 12
-· after Russian troops occupied
C7.echo3lovakia this week, prompting
cries of protest throughout the world.
Russia, remember, joined a bloc. of
African nations last spring .in a
threatened pullout over any presence
by South Africa, with iU segrega·
tioni.sl apartheid policy , at the Games.
That problem eventually diSS(llved
The Perils of Pitching
when South Africa was banned from
the Games.
But despite the denunciation of the
Russian action against Cze<:hoslovakl a
there seems little possibility they
would be ousted from Mexico.
"I don't know of any regulation that
1!'-'0Uld bar Russia from .the Olympl~s
because of the invasion," 1aid Avery
Brundage, preliident of the Interna-
tional Olympic Co'mmittee, in Chicago.
"I anticipate no development along
· that line. At least, I hope there are
none."
Brundage, u in ttie Sooth African
Detroit's Dick h-1cAuliffe wrestles Chicago pitcher
Tom.my John to the turf after John whizzed a pitch
too close to McAuliffe'.s head. The scuffle forced
John out of the game with torn .shoulder ligaments.
In Sympa.thy for Czechs
Sports Reaction Begins
STOCKHOLM (AP) Sweden
decided Thursday to cul off au sportli
relations with the fjve powers OC·
eupying Cze<:hoslovakia.
The decision was taken by the Na.
tional Sports Federation .et a meeti.ng
vith its executive committee. Tl was
namimous.
Bo Bengtson, managing direetor of
he Federation, said:
"The recommendation Ms nothing
'o do with Sweden's participation at
lhe Olympic Games. but only applies
tn the direct exchange with thf! five
..:ountries."
* * * LAUSANNE. Switzerland CAP) -
l<'lsberm~n from Bulgaria, E a s I
Germany and HW11ary have been ban·
ned frt1m tbe forthcoming World
Caatlng Champion1hips because of the
lnvaalon of Ctecho1lovakia.
* * * BERG. Ausb-ia (AP) -The Red
Star soccer team of Belgrade. 16
husky Yugoslavs, came across th e
Czechoslovak frontier Th u rs d a y
without playing their scheduled game
with the Trnava Spartaks in a finat of
the Central European Cup. They wei-e
scheduk!d to play the game Wed·
nesday.
An oflicial of the Belgrade club
spoke to a Russian general and asked
permission to go ahead with the game.
"Impossible." the gef'l('l'al said. "We
can't have so many people in one
place."
One Frenchman complained that the
hunting season opened several day.,
aJ{o but the Russians had banned all
hunting.
* * * TORONTO (AP) -A spectacul ar
farewell Co akating. planned for
Prague, may have been wrecked for
Otto and Maria Jelln~k.
The Ciech·born figure skaters. who
fled Prague with their family !O yeara
a~o but returned in 196! to win thf!
~'tJrld pairs champion1hlp, had plan·
11ed 10 bow out of prtJfeaalonal 11lating
there after a show to be bu.Ill arouud
them next March.
Otto said he doubled whether a
Cr:t.ch Olympic team cou.ld be es·
peeled at the Ott. l!-.%7 Games h•
l'lfexico ctty.
affair, has taken the position that the
Olympics are olltside of polita.ca.
Russia participated in the 1956
Games despite its invasion of
Hungary. although a bloody fight
erupted in a water polo game between
the Russians and Hungarians durin1
those Games.
However, a pullout becauae of
fighting is not without precedent.
Switzerland, The Netherlands, Spain,
Iraq, Lebanon, Communist O'lina and
Egypt did not compet.e in 1956 when
lighting broke out in the Midd!e J!'.aot,
Last Shot
At Olympics
For Sims
By RON EVANS
Of ttot Dt!IY l'lltl $1111
LONG BEACH -Laguna Beacli•s
Patti Sims takes her last and best shot
at a bertti on Ule United States
Olympic diving team today, dueHng
the country's leading platform per·
formers at Belmont Plaza Olympic
Pool in this city.
Miss Sims, competing under the
standard of Mesa Verde Country Club
of Costa Mesa. was involved in morn·
ing prelims and was expected to
survive that action to advance into
tonight's fins.Ls at 7.
In Thursday's men's springboard
diving here, Fred Whiteford of Mesa
Verde CC failed to survive morning
prelims, finishing 19tb out of a field of
21 with 233.85 points.
Eventual victor was .Jim Henry, 19·
year-old economics major from the
University of Indiana.
Henry earned first place on the final
round of £ct.ion. piling up 72.09 points
while previous leader Ber n i e
Wrightson slipped to 54.60 points in his
last effort .
Henry's total for the day was 511 .23,
barely enough to get by Keith Russell
of Arizona Sta.le (510.69) a nd
Wrightson 1506.10).
~e 3:1ternate orr thf' eontingent ls
Uruversity of Indiana whi.i ruck
Gilbert 1477.0).
Orange County ace l..arry Andreason
was in solid contention for a position
on the squad. He was fourth going into
tht; final round and was only 12.09
points away from third.
Bu.t the for.mer Western Hlgb diver
blew it on his last effort. suffering a
ghastly sprawled out entry into Uie
m illlion gaUon pool on a forward 31h
somersault.
The d isaster cost him dearly in point
aw<ird with 24.30 fo-Jlowi.ng his two
p!'evious evening totals of 68.04 and
6.5 .52.
He also had a horrible score in ttie
Jf!O~ing. chalking up 28.80 point.II on
his fifth dive.
However. be w~ phiJosOph.ic about
~he unhappy tW"n of events. "Plllf'onn
1s my best event anyway," he told the
DAILY PILOT. "I don·'t know what
happened on ttle last dive. Jt WM just
one of those things."
Joining Andr@ason in Saturday
morning's ptatiorm prelims will be
Whltef<rd and Mesa Verde mate Bob
Wilhite. a CJF champion wtiile at Costa Mesa High.
Saturday's qualifying opens at 11
witti finals at 1 p.m.
Hewitt Takes Most Important Swim
By GLENN WHITF.
OI ,... 01Ur 'llM 11•1•
LOS ANGELES -Toni Hewitt takes
the biggest swims of her 16 years on
this earth when she squa-es olf
against the nat:ton's top butterfly
perfcnners Saturday and Monday in
the Olympic trtals at Los Angelf!s
Swim Stadium. wtiidl ts adjacent lo·
the Coliseum.
She competes ln tm 100 nn ~~turd&)'
Mid tht 200 on Monday anj is ~ivtn an
e,11:cel\ent chance at making her coun·
try'1 team in both distances. Firll.
thrtt finishers wl.H malce the squad
whic h U'tkll to Mexico City in October
to vie against 100 other countries.
The C<>rona de.I. Mar High terior
competes i.n the mcrning prelim1 and
figures to be a cWdl to prtJe1' a. 1pOt
in the 4.30 p.m. finals Saturday and
Monday.
She's performin~ Sunda y In tht ln·
dividual medley -primarily for the
-eompetltive work out .
Also representing tht Orange Coast
area in the trials are Kim 11tomton of
Corona del Mar in tne breaststrokes
and Individual medleys, .Janice Allen
()( Corona de! Mir in the JOO
backstroke (Monday).
They are not eitpect.ed to be. among
the top t.hree finWlers 1n their
speclaliUes. however.
Miss H~wltit has the second swiftest
ttme of Saturday's 100 field -a t :05.8
rflCOr'ded e.wtif!'r thU summer at Santa
Clwa, when she a.Ito broke her own
Amenoan 200 mark wMIJ a 2122.0.
Leading entr.ant is EllJe O;i.niel or
Ph.iladelphja, with a I :05.fi Olympic
champion Sharon Stooder is indudf!d
among the next three tpeed.sten wittl
a best of 1:08.8 this yf!ar.
She stiU oYfflS the Americari best of
I 04.7 and merits 1 er i o u ,. con·
s.ideratiort for• place oa tf\e team.
Sara Wiley (!:OS), Susie Shields
(1:06.9), Kendls Moore (1:'11.2), Dillle
Giebol (1 :07.51 and ll«ky W•lton
(1:07.5).an1lso prime dlallengtors.
In the 200. Mil& Hewitt is easily the
.. ... " Ille crap, ""'° • 1.9 l<C<l!ld
margin over the lifetime be s t
performance of tht r>ext closest toe -
Miss Danif!J.
Miss Giebel 12:24 .8l ~ the only
other entrant who has ~ne UDdu
2:27.3.
Misl! Hewitt wu once 1 nervous Ut-
Ue girl who admits 1he didn't apprtcl·
ate the magnitude ot the Olymplca
when she tried for 1 1pot on the '&4
U.S. contingt.nt which 'ftt'lt to Tokyo.
She did not make 1lbt ~ tn l!llld'Jer
the 100 OI' 200 freestyle -ber
specialty it that lime.
"I'm ready now.'" .the RY•· "I had
good wcrkouts all weet MJd now t
think I beUer understand .and a~
preciate What the Olympic Games ar1
all about. ..
I'. I
I
-''-----------------------------------• t
• t= = ·--------------·~-~-~-~-~--·--~ ............. ,... ... -.~--... -... ~ ... -.. -~---------... -......... _~-----... -.......... _,...._...,_.,.. __ ~~ .... ~~~~~·-~~~~~ ·~~~~ -~--·--------------··--·.......-.--..-.. -......... _.,..._ ... _ _..-..-....--
I
I
rnd~, ~' 23, 1%8 D.41LV '!LOT JZ
Winn Directs 49-8 Electrocution ·pf _Rebels ..
Coon Offers
Apology
For Debacle
By EARL GUSTKEY
0t ,._ Dlllb' 1'111t JMtf
A grim-faced Jim Coon refused to
indulge in conversation w i t h
sportswriten f'olloM.ng bis South
team's 49~ shellacking in Thursday
nights' county prep all-star football
,ame at Orange Coast College.
Coon had every reason to be upset
and he was. It was the worst beating
any team had 11uffered in the nine-year
history of the classic, although f e w
would call it that today.
Harvey Winn , a five-foot, eight-inch
dynamo quarterback from Loara High
School in Anaheim, stunned the 7 ,356
fans with a sensational 102-yard return
of an interception in the secood
quarter that made the score 14--0 for
the North and the play seemed to
paralyze the Soutbernen from that
point on.
Asked if that was the case, Coon
responded: "My only comment is that
I want to publicly apologize ·for the
whole thing."
It was later suggested to Coon that
hi'I SoutberMra were caugbt up in a
mismatch, that the North team &imply
had better football players.
"I doubt it," he mapped. Then he
ordered his players into .a bus that
took them back to Marina High, their
training quarters.
It was awful. If you can imagine
Don Knotts squaring off with Sonny
Liston then you have a rough idea of.
what transpired at OCC Thursday
night.
It was what the pros likt to call "a
laugher."
Winn, the same. Ut.tle guy who tore
Costa Mesa High to ribbons on the
same field last season, did it all. He
ran, he passed, be punted, ht:
recovered fumbles and be intercepted
passes.
North coach Hub Hill, Winn's coach
at Loara, pointed to Winn's nifty in·
terception return as the turnbt1 point.
"That broke 1t open," he said, "that
gave us the momentum and we never'
lost it.
•·we had that momentum early in
the game and that was the difference.
The South had a fine coachiD1 staff
and fine football players but it waa
just our night."
The South would've been blanked 49--
0 );ad it not been for tMir TD with four
seconds left.
Ex-Tar Aids
In New U.S.
Swim Record
Ken Doesberg, former Newport
Harbor High and Or3!lge Coast
College swimmer. was a member cf
the 220-ya'fd medley relay team that
broke the American record Thursday
night at Culver City.
Doesburg, now swimmiflg for the
Navy, teamed with Carles Van-
dermaiatil, Jeff Losch and Phil Heuser
to trim nearly six seconds oil the old
record, clocking a 1:53.8.
Doesberg will be swimming in the
U.S. Olympic swim trials next week.
The Culver City meet was a pre-Olym·
pie invitational.
'l'he 220 medley record was one of
Ille three American records which fell .
Roy Saari, Bill John!IOO , Russ KJd-
.:ter and Steve Freben joined forces to
set a mark in the 880-yard freestyle
relay with a time of 8:06.4. This lopped
more th-an six seconds off the aid
record of 8:12.7 set by the U.S. na·
tkmal team in 1967.
Dan Frawley, Henry Dewitt, BUI
Passey and Don Havins tapped the
evening cff by splMhing to a 1 :39.0
clocking in the 2.IX>-yard freestyle Telay
lo ecli1'5e the old record of 1:42.1 set
fiy the U.S. Olympic Team in 1964.
DOWN HE GOES -Anaheim High's Tom Fitzpatrick, the CIF"s player
of the year last season, i! stopped here after a six-yard gain by Mari-
na's Rick White in the county North-South game Th~day night. At
Alston Back Sports In llrlef
DA.11,.T 1'1LOT 1'MN h' D9i. '-'kw
ril(ht is Charles Meyerett of Westm!nst..-. No. 87 In background is
Doug Casey ol Corona de! Mar. J
But Dodgers
Still Fall, 3-1
Newport Cyclist Seeks
LOS ANGELES (uPI) -Walt.r
Alston is back with the Lois Angeles
Dodgers after a week's absence but
nothing has ctianged.
Alston, who was gone from the dub
a week because of the death of his
moither at Darrtown, Ohio, watched
Dodger Slate
A.VI. 2l Dodters .... kn Fr1nclKO 7:15 •.m. k,I "'" """· u DOlf1tr1 n sen Fr•ntltce1 7:U '·'"· K'I ""'
the Dodgers suffer their sixth straight
105! Thursday night, a 3-1 tetback to
the San Francisco Giants.
"Well, we at least hit the ball better
than they did," the Lois Angeles
Manager sighed.
Alston referred to the fact that the
Dodgers collected nine hits including a
double off Gaylord Perry while the
Giant.a were able to manage only four
singles against Don Sutton.
It was another tough Joss for Sutton.
The 23-yard-old righthander, who gave
up only two hits until the ninth inning,
suffered his 13th defeat in 18 decisions
despt.e a 2.85 earned run average.
The loss came in the opener of a
four-game series with the Gianb after
a road trip whioh produced a 1-7
Dodger record.
Alston's team now rests in last place
with a 54:-72 record, 26 games out of
first place and 21h out of ninth .
Thlll"9day night's defeat equalled the
Dodgers' longest losing s t r in g
established July 1-6.
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Spot on Olympic Team
ENCINO -The U.S. Olympic cycl-
ing trials move indoors tonight as
competition in the 4,000-meter pursuit
and the 1,000 meter match sprint gets
Wlderway at tbe Encino Velodrome.
Three Olympic veterans are among
the pursuit riders. They .are Skip Cut-
ting of. Riverside, Bill Kund of Glen-
·dale, and Wes Chowan of Newport
Beach.
1bere w 111 be ooe match sprinter
selected tonigbt to make the trip to
Mexico City in October. Four time
state champion Tim Mountford figures
t.o be the ledng candidate.
In tandem cycling competition held
Thursday at the Rose Bawl, Jack
Disney, Monrovia, and Chuck Pranke,
Santa Monica, took two match race&
from Jack Simes M1d Sam ZleUand to
earn a spot on the Olympic team.
Disney and Franke won the first
race by a matter of inches, but peda1·
ed. to an easy win in the second race of
the best two out of three series.
Simes and Zietland protested 1tie se·
rond match. claiming they were forc-
ed ofi the course at one point during
Bolsa Kids
Out of Series
WILLIAMSPORT. Pa. (AP)
Hidek.i Sawa's bases-loaded triple with
two cut in the fifth inning broke ~
scoreless tie and sparked Wakayama,
Japan, to a 3--0 victory over Santa Ana.
in a Thursday semifinal al the Little
League World Series.
Sawa's hit put the Pacific champs in
the series final against Richmond,
Va., the Southern champs, Saturday.
the 2,000-meter clash. However,
judges disallowed their claim. ...... the
PHILADELPHIA -Dudley Wytonc
Jr., Iabelln1 goU a "funny came," toot:
a two-stroke lead la today's seccn4
round of the Pblladelphla clasalc, hop-
ing be would be able to "feel" bla way
toward the eventual $20,000 firtt prize
moaey.
Tbe J'OUDC TtJ:U pro, DOW pla)'blc
oat Of RawaH, wbo admitted to be1n1 a
"streaky putter," scrambled into the
lead "af&er the flrat 1o•nd of tbe '7!-bole
Whitemarsh Valley Country Club with
an erratic seven uader paT 115.
"It Wat the best patua1 round of my
career and tbe worst clrtvtni rcund,"
said the zt.year.okl Wysong. But, II
wai 1ood eaoap to rtve him a two-
1froll:e le•d over rnnnen -ap Al
Balding, veteran pro from Canada and
Sooth Afrtca'a young: Bobby Cole, who
had 671.
Eight playen were banched at 88. ......
KARLSKRONA, .Sweden -Bodo
Tuemmltr of West Germany won the
mile at an international track meet
Thunday night in 3:53.8, one of tbe
fastest on record.
Ron Clarke cf Australia won the
3,000 meters in 7:49.4. ......
LOS ANGELES -Tbe Los Angeles
Rams Thursday acquired tight end
Kent Kramer lrcm the New Orleans
Saints.
The · Rams 1ave up an undisclosed
draft choice for the U.year-old third·
year player. 1
Kramer, who was the ninth draft
choice of the San Francisco Forty-
Nlners In 1966, will play for Los
Angeles In ftl exhibition fame at Saa
Diego Saturday night.
STARTLED -North coach
Herb Hill ca n't believe his eyes
as his team rolls up a 49·8 vic-
tory over ihe South at Orange
Coast Thursday night. His own
quarterback from L<lara High,
HMVey Winn, dominated ttte
game. •
The Virginians won tht first
semifinal earlier Thursday, defeating
Sherbrooke-Lennoxville, Que., 8-5.
Sadao Fujimoto and Y u k i o
Yamashita combined for a five-hit
~hutout again9t t.he Californians, who
had men on base nearly evtty inning.
Ba$eball Standings
National Leaiue
Woa lml Pct. GB
Amerlca11 League
Won Lost Pct. GB
St. Louis 81 47 .53.1 Detroit 8t 45 .643
San Francisco 67 S9 .5..12 Baltimore 73 52 .584 71\
Ramblers Land Iowa Great Cincinnati 65 58 .51.8
Chicagc 68 61 .527
Atlanta &1 64 .496
Pittsburgh 61 66 .480
13
131\
131\
17
191\
211\
22
Z'l\\
2'
Boston 68
Cleveland 69
Oakland 64
New York 59
60 .531 1'
81 .531 14
62 .508 17
83 .4&1 20
By EARL GUSTKEY
Ot ,,. llloltr ,1111 ltlft
Those who belittle die Continental
Football League became of it.a lack of
"big names" should cbect a lltUe
closer.
On the ro1ter (I( the Orange County
Ramblers, under the "QB" section,
you'U find the Mme Gary Snocik .
Snook, you ahould recall, wa. one of
the Big Ten'• bert quarterbaclu dur·
ing the 1961, '64 and '65 seuons.
He's trying to nail down a first
string quarterbacking job with the
Ramblen; while still the property of
the St. Louis Cardinals.
"I was drafted by st. Lolli& after the
1965 season but the Army drafted me,
t 1" o days b e f o r e the first 1966 es:-
tu1>itJon game," be 1ay1.
Snook wu dilchareed by the Army
two months aeo and immediately
,..porled to the Conliolll' camp al
Lake Forell, IlL
,.
• •
"They had four quarterbacks there
and they told me I wouldn't I e a r n
much 1itUng on the bench so they ar·
ranged to send me to the Ramblers."
Snook, wha lives in a Seal Beach
apartment, ltlll draws bis paychecks
from the Cardinals. He geu no
renumeraUon from the Ramblers.
For the past two seasons he has
quarterbacked the Hahn Air Force
team in Germany.
While with the Cardi at t he I r
Lake Forest training camp. be
became a cl OM b':leod of Phil Spiller, a
defem:ive back who played at Newport
Harbor High and Orange Coast
College.
Although Rambler head co 1 ch
Homer Beatty was elated to learn of.
Snoot'1 availabWty, ltdoe1 compUe:1te
hJs quarterback picture.
The Ramblr.rs have three different
types of quarterback& and all of them
~re first rate.
Jerry Otterson, formerly of Cal
State (Loog Beach), ii the dropback
passer. He wu the starter last year.
Dunn Marteen, ex.Santa Ana JC and
Cal State (Los Angele•) star, is the
good running quarterback and a
~I threat.
Then you have Snook, with the quick
arm.
"Gary said he had a phone call three
weeks ago from Charlie Winner, head
coach of the Cardinals.
"He asked me: 'How would you like
to have a quarterback out there?' I
told him we'd be happy to havt1 Gary.
1be aJTangement 11 that he pl•ys for
us one year white being on St. Louls'
taxi squad and then be aoe• back nezt
year.
"We Jcnew he WU a erttt passer
before we £0l him btCaUH he broke
all thole Bit 10 record& at Iowa,''
Philadelphia 58 f:t1 .464
Houston 59 69 .461
New Yark 58 71 .450
Loa Angeles 54 7% .428
,~MHt 1•111• ,,'l,~'~:!r:•, 1tnu11e
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Minnesota 59 68 .472
CaWornta 57 70 .«9
Chicago 82 74 .413
Washington 47 78 .382
Orange Co.11 Oldtst ' Mott Rtspccted Ltncoln·Mtrcurv Dcaltr
Johnson & Son
900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BEACH
642-0911 545-1271
2t \\
141\
29
321\
7,356 Watch
Loara Star
Run Wild
By JOEL SCHWARZ
ot ftMo Dalb' 1'11" Staff
Harvey Winn of Loara Hi!,11 S<hool
in Anaheim e1ectri!ied. 7 ,358 fans and
electrocuted the South in the ninth ..,, ..
nual county blgti school all-star game
at Orange Coast College Tburaday
night with a dazzling performance of
offensive and defensive football.
The 5-foot 84.nch quarterback led tile
Norttl to the most one·slded game in
the charity series, a shoe.king 49=8
romp. The YGees now lead the
aeries 7·2. .
Winn scored three of the North's ....
·teven touchdowns, two of them on
short rurui. But it was his second
score, .a 102-yard run with an in•
terceptioo that transformed a 7-0
game in tbe second period into a
laugher for the North.
Six .and a· haU minutes into the game
Winn gave the Yiankees the lead
following an interception by Alex
Henderson. WiIWl climaxed a 50-yard
march by jogging into the end zone
from the eight on a rollout. Henderson
then added tbe Ont of exb'a pointa to
tnlake it 7--0.
The South threatened to even the
score early In the second quarter u
Marina High School's Mike Tamiyesu
moved the North to a first down In·
side the North 10. But three plays
later, Winn darted in front of a
Tamiyuu pass two yanis deep in the
end zme and started churning for
daylight up the western sideline.
Bob Wickernham bad the only shot
at Winn, but the little quarterback cut
back toward tlhe center of the field at
the South's 30 to complete his 102-yard
run untouched.
1'1e South, rattled by the sudden
change of events, qu.ickly yielded
another score. On the first play fOllow ..
lng the ensuing kickoff, the North
recovered a fumble at ttie Re bel 41
and scored. In fJve plafs. Bead Wekall
p&&ed. IS yards to Blaise Evers for
the score.
Winn moved the South to one more
score before the half, completing four
of five lasses on .a 48-yard march that
ended two seconds before the gun.
A 12-yard pass to Greg Haydon and
Henderson's fourth conversion m·ade it
28-0.
The South averted a whlte-washing
In the closing minutes of play, going 53
yards in nine plays for its only score.
With four seconds left in the game
Tustin's Rod Graves hit Joe Silv.a just
short of the goal line, but Silva spun
Into the end zone forth e six points.
Costa Mesa's Ray Ricardo ran for the
exb'a point.
TIMI STATISTICS
l'lnt doWPlll rvnnll'l9 • •• • ' Flrn down1 ''"''"' " ' Flu! dow111 ••n•lllts • ' Tat1I lffll dav .. ,, " " V1r111 11ln9d rvt11!111 ,. '" V1nh ••111111 P•ulnt m "' Ytnh loll • ~ Ht! Yl nb •tll>ld "' m ...... 1 •tl-•rtd ~ • , ..... compltttd " " f'llll'I !! ... lt>1frC ... led • ' Numb.r .. P!.lftll • ' ""''"' dl1l1na ••• JJ., "'"'Ill" " • Yt nll "n1ll1td " .. Fvmb1e1 ' • fllf!'lb!•• loll • ' ltlfl r, Gll•rtt" ..... ' " " ,...,,
'""" • • • 0-.
INOl'llDUAL STATllTICI
ltUIHING
HOltTH 1'"-Ytr "' n TtYlor " ..
Flf1•ttrfdl: " 6 Winn • " Ow1111 ' ' Wlk11I ' ' TOltll • , .
IOUTH 'llYlr "' YO fluchholr • .. T1rnly11u " " ll;lc•nlo ' " , .. ' ' Porhr ' ' Grt"* • • Toi tit • ,.
INDIVIDUAL ,ASllHG
HOltTH ,LIYl'I' " " "' Wl1>n " " • W~tU " ' • Tott II " " • SOUTH
""-Y .. " " "' TlfftfYllU n • ' Gr•Yll • ' • Toll ti "' " '
WHY IS THIS YEAR
AHY DIFFERENT!
Traditionally
YL • • " • • " YL • • • • • " ff
YO 'u " ••
YO
" " "'
A1o1t1111t i nd S1,t1mb1r •r• +ht month1
tll1t yo1o1 1r• boll'lli1rtil1til wit+. 1pl11hy
'"y11r·1 nd cl11r•nc1" 1111 1til111rti1lnt.
Yow 9•t it from 1v1ry dir1ction~ 11•w1-
p1p1r1, r11l10 •ntil TV. y,,, In i nd
Y••' out it'1 tht t1m1 oltil ttory,
But This Year is
Different At Johnson's
l•ctYIO lhl1 it th. y11r of tllf ,, •• ,
MOVE. Aft•r flft1111 y•1r1 1t tht t1m1
loc1ti111 wt wlll b1 1111,lnt 101n to
• 111119nlflc:111t flt• fe,llity lfl H1rlior
lewl1v•"' 111 Co1t1 M111.
Naturally
w• hop• to dltpo11 of 01o1r ENTIRE In· ''"'•l"f of 61 m•d•I ctn lief.,, wt
1'10111 -10 flri1f OWf lllW fttlJlty C•ll
111 1fotk14 with llrtnif 111w ''''
Moif1l1.
Naturally
fO do thlt WI 11'11111 lilt r11fh1tttly COM•
,OfltiYI ,
Naturally
fOll will -·~· ........... 1111,. tf
tlii1 11~1111111 1ifll1ti11.
Today
A I
• •• ••• ••• u
I.• ••• ...
4'0 ... ... ••• ••• ••• .... ..
.... .... ....
.•11 .... .... .m ...
I
J £ J 3 3 2 3 3 4 $ 15 2 0 $ § ( ( 5 $ 0 $ 0 6 P 4 U a O ; t a 0 S ; I ; O e c; a s e e p o u t o a o • s ea o > o • • • = •• --..----~~ ---- --·---
l)ll DAJLV 'llOT fridQ, A~uit 2l, 1968 •
• Ramblers Gals Vie . • • •
Start Y our
Sign Parks;
Release 5
Los Alamitos In Olym pic
Track 'l 'es t
Del Mar
• • • • • (
En gines Entries Entries
__ b_y_D~oulgate The Orange County Ram-•••••••••••••••••-••-I"eatured by a neet of
top sprinters and including -------------------• -
The way they name things lo racing. you'd think we were
stiiLyoliD__J for FDR and working f<lr the WPA.
After you wade through USAC. NASCA'R, SCCA (th~t:on.e
ou can't even say like a word) and achieve a bit o~ fam1bart·
y with what they stand for y<iu next have to digest CID,
·trmula A GT and E .T. It's a struggle, and even some of us
:-;.enthusiasts' don't make our way completely through the
r'a}t>habet jungle. ~ _ All of this is by way of introducing the big dea.1 coming up ~ raclng. something called th~ Can·Am. That LS the sho:t
J.;;*flY of saying Canadian-Amertcan Challenge Cup .. and if ~mebody will ever figu« a way to say it. better 1t could
;. become the most popular series in motor racing.
~~ The Can·Am is a series of six professional roa~ rac.es,
."" arting Sept l at Elkhart Lake. Wis. Pardon me for ignoring 'P e technicai name of the cars running, but it is for sports ~cars . If you're a purist, call them Gr<iup 7 yourself.
;n After the first race. others are at Bridgehampton, N.~ .. :! Sept 15; Edmonton. Alberta, Sept. 29; Laguna Seca, Calif .. ~Oct. 13; Riverside, Oct. 'II, and Las Vegas, Nev., Nov . 10.
f£ Very conveniently, one-week holes. are left betw~n each ~race not onJy to aid the competitors in car preparation but
!!atso 'to make way for other great road racing shows.
:;-~· They .;e the Canadian Grand Prix Sept. 22, U.S. Grand r Prix Oct. 6 and Mexican Grand Prix Nov. 3, all world cham·
!:'.pionsh1p events: with many of tbe drivers commuting from Z.Uie Can-Am· circuit. ' ..
:•· 8500,000 in Pri%es
...
What the Can·Am has that other racing serie1 don't
have ii a tight sh-n ee package with more than
'500,000 ta priu money for the drivers. American
engine powered fiat-out 1port1 car1 that feature way·
out en(lneertng and the beat drivers In the warld.
It ts held in the fall to take advantage of the annual
lull in racin g everywhere else In the world 10 tbat the
be1t road racing pilots can be on thi1 C1lntlnent.
Prize states are high becau1e what used to be paid
out to three or four forei(D drivers ln "starting money"
ba1 been consoUdated Into the pat, and because a major
company, Johnson Wax, ha1 tossed in $12&,000 to help.
Only a handful of USAC championship races and
NASCAR Grand Natlonal1 can match the prize money
paid out during the Can·Am. It ranges from $46,000 at
Bridgehampton to $69,720 at Riverside, not ccmnting .. •
what the manufacturers pay for use of their products.
How It Started
So far, onJy the USAC group has joined the s~rty car
bunch in dipping into this prize kitty. Slakes may be htgh. but
NASCAR drivers are busy with their own year-end point
races down south. ConsequenUy they are the only missing
parties.
. , So all there were left to run the Can-Am last year were
L Bruce McLaren, Mario Andretti. Dan Gurney, A. J . Foyt, the
1-.te Jlrn Clark. Jim Hall, Denis Hulme. Parnelli J ones, Roger
McCluskey, John Surtees. Mark Donohue, Jerry Grant and
biers have acquired 2&>-
pound defensive end Perry
Parks from the Los Ange·
les Rams, placed two play.
ers on the reser ve Ust and
release<!. three others.
Parks, who joined the
Ran'iblet!"for theirtlnat four
games in 1967, recently wa.s
released from m 11 i t a r y
service and , was on the
Rams' taxi squad.
To meet Ute Continental
League limit of 40 players
this weekend, defensive
hallbacks Dale Jackson.
Marv Pettaway and Phil
Spoto were released.
Linebacker Mark Wicks
was called into military
service and tackle Richard
Cooper retired because of
b u s i n e s s commitments.
Both were placed on the
Ramblers' reserve list.
The Ramblers will hold
their final full-scale scrim·
mage 2 p.m. Sunday at
Chapman Stadium in Or·
·ange in preparation for next
week's league opener in
Sacramento.
NB Trio
On All-Star
Polo Team
Eric Lindroth, Jeff Wilcox
and Tom Warnecke of the
Newport j u n i or Olympic
water polo team have been
named to rt.he SPAAAU play.
off all-tournament team.
Newport, which won its
first three st'ar,ts in the
district playoffs held at Los
Angeles S w i m Stadium,
dropped the championship
game to Downey, 4-3.
Newport opened a 2--0
lead in the first quarter,
but Downey battled back in
the final minutes of play to
win the district Litle .
In its first three starts,
Newport bombed Millikan,
12·2. edged Arth. 54, and
defeated Lakewood, 6-3.
,., l"n..y, .. .,,, n. u...._Ultl ~r c ... , 6 '"'· ,.,.., ...... l ;Q f',M,
"ll~ST 11.liCI , 400 Y•rd,. J Vii•'
olch I nd V. ln Grlde I Pll>t, PurM
51loti0.
F•5! SltOHr (I T Llplllml 111
B1IG1"1do (H P1n1o1 111
Tiil> Frllllt IJ JloDi....onJ 111
BUlv G'Pl'f (J 1-r·~ 11 1
·~-••~&tWIWlr lit C1Pt•lll't C111 Do CB Miiis) Hit
Jldtle H""' CW S'-J 111
Ton Mlfl IH P1") U~
EU1'1 JIOCk (0 CtrdouJ 111
Eiq>rna Man Cit AO.Ir] llt
Alie •11tH•1t
Otncl'f llldl. C2 T Llph1m) 116
Alldlor ht !I JI B•llll•I Tn
~trr>el CJ A B1M•l 11•
IV\f's Wll!Mr (I" Croatrr) 11•
SIECOND A.Ii( •• JSO Vtrdt, J rt'lr
ol<h •nd "' In Or1cit A Mlnu•. Purw 11100.
Tll•RU OoC (C $mllllJ 111
Jle!1m1>110 N"''' CB Brl111lltYI 120
TOMlll• CJ RObll>Mll\) 111
Jl ov•I TlemPO (A B1nk1} 115
Moollh 81rdtll (2 T Lkol!.1mJ 116
Connie'• Jlequt•I IA Ar1lu) 111
BU<l<!'f lilldtlr IJ 1(1nlt) 116
Otlldt M Vi n (2 o· ~rrl1) ' 116
Mr, ~It Bir IU
Oto L.IKk'( {J Dr"Wer) 116
AIWI •Htllt"1
Ton1 .lillf\ CW s1r1uu1 lU
lrHlf Mt On 11 O Morris} 116
WUIOW Gola Cl T Lipham) 116
Cusrv. Brow11 U Wll'OllJ 1 ll
THIRD A.liCI!. lSO v1rd1. 1 )'Mr
Old•. Allowl"CH. Purie uooo.
R11>ld Marl1 !C Smith) 11'
$11tdow TOii !T LIPllam) 111 s-ooc1 Rocket CR Stroud\ 110
R•e Del Roc:llet IH P111t) 117
Don Putblo Ill AO.fr) 120
MldW•Y Mllllt CJ! links) l lr
Wiid Wcncll {J Drtl'e•) 117
FOURTH 11..liC•. ~ YI""· J VHr
old' I nd UP In Gr10. A P!ut. PurM ....
Who Pl1y (C $ml!h) 117
L..ty Mltllty Shot (D Morrl1) 111
Miu 0 1•1 Tl .... (L Wrltllt) 111
Fleet Tlnk'1" (J K1nh) 117
81YCO De919f't'e tW Strl USS) 111
Miu Moon Prl11t (T Llph•ITI) 11 1
F~tnkl1 Frn (J JI ltnlcl) 12l
Rodtel'1 K•hY IW Slti>e) 11 1
Jlmmv M•c Btr 111 Flvuero.l 1211
our1111 Ent CJ Drr,o!n JU
.liho 1Eli11blt
Trvcklln Gii (I A Ar•l1a )
Jlldtt111111 Jl1voen (JI Adair~
Ct• 8cb {2 R ltllkJ)
Lis• Oetr !2 A ArllII)
Fll'TH Jl.liCt:. .iQO Yl rds. ) YH r
olds and uo 111 Gr•de AA Minus.
Purse $2100.
Vullly Olli CJ W1tson)
Tiny B!QUtll IA Aralit )
H111Y Ro.d CP Crosby)
Deeo Go IC 5ml!llJ
He's A Re<!UMt {J K•~ll)
Glad Lid IW Slrl UH]
Robin Dobin !Z Colll"'l
Seven Sl>ttd> (R AG1lrl
Cu~;d'I 11<>111 lH P1"io)
Tiptoe Bar tT Llpf\•ml
Al11 En11t11t
Ola\ Brandy (II l •nl<s)
old• and up ln Gr1de AA Plu1,
52300.
Mollv•lor (JI Sitoud)
MIH Josie Go tJ llal;ll1111ort)
SIXTH 11.liCE. 3511 y1rds. t
olds •1111 uo In Grade AA Plu•. moo.
"'""'"""'"'"' ......... =.,..,~. ,,,,.,.,.,,.,S1 ....... 5 ............................ , .......... ~
Los Alamitos Results
• h~lf a hll!ldred other drivers good enough to stay on the same
-tll8cks with them. ..,.,. ......... ,,._..,,..,..,.,. .. ..,.,n .. ..,-.... ,.,..,.
•'
How did such a great series come about'.' There are those
who may disagree with me. because many people had similar
ideas about a fall series of sports car races. but the fir st tim e
I heard about it was in 1960 during a conversation with
former Army·Rams football star Glenn Davis.
At the time I was working for Glenn, and we were driving
north on U.S. 101 en route to Monterey for the San Francisco
EXam iner Grand Prix. Glenn had just staged the highly sue·
cessful Los An geles Times Grand Prix at Riverside, his first
race as a promoter.
He addressed him sell to the problem : How do you take a
: fixed budget, pay for top drivers to appear, locate cars good
enough for them to win in, put up a decent purse and have
. enough competitors to make a good show for the spectators'.'
•·, He had just spent 2S percent of hls "appearance money"
budget on one driver . Stirling Moss. who had lasted only a
few laps at Riversid e but who was to win at Laguna Secs that
~ weekend.
.. .-
"Ma ybe we are doing this -all wrong," Davis said , half
, talking t~ himself. "What would you think of an all-American
r.acing ClTCuit with big prize money and a championship that
. one driver could win at the end'.'"
What's a fell ow going to say to that'.' It was e great idea.
I t J111t K e p t 61-owlng
As be talked, the Idea grew. Re named tracks and
fitted them Into a 1cheduled. Increasing prlie money
would gradually reduce the need for paying expenses to
foreign drivers.
,. Davis envlslfllled a time when there would be
enough good U.S. drivers that the foreign stars
·wouldn't be essential to success of road racin g to t bls
country. Re turned out to be a prophet on that.
...
He envisioned that the Riverside race would re·
main the biggest (It still Is) and th at other cou rses
would be geouaphlcally 1ltuated so that every fan to
the C1lun try could 1ee at least one race.
The current series falls a little short there, but
VSAC must have been tuned in , judging from Its cbam.
plonsbip trah e:spanslon.
Rall Plans Sho,;,ker
. 'ryie .can·Am is a lo! m~re highly developed than the
c1n:wt visualized by DaVIs eight years ago, but the idea re-
, maJns unchanged.
. '
This year ~~ers are already grumbli ng about the costs
of buying, mB.lnt.a1ning and racing their cars. Charlie Hayes
says one fellow h.as a $12.5,000 budget for the series. win or
lose. Another driver told me he is looking for a m.ooo
sponsor to carry hlm.
You ~an ima~ne development money Jim Hall has SPf'nl
getting his new big-engine Chaparral prepared for the Can.
, Am are close to half a million going in.
Deep Sea Fish Report
lllUNTINOTON •t.t.Clt -:i. '"'"'"'
(I' Mrr....,t, 121 bonlfO, '3 ~tljl IMI""
ft M/lf 111 ... ' llllfWI, I) rNtttrtl
11 ... -11 1,_ltrtl 160 llonlto. t Mt· r..CW., lt lllllbllf, 1S1 NM,
OC•ANSJOI -"1 eM .. rll U ·~ 11' N ,..IClldt, ,., Mu. ll'O
Mn!i.. 1 Miff ,.. blM ) rat1owt111. $
f'Wl"lllll·' ,..llir#flrl ..,,.,
l•AL l lACH -100 1"'1itn; J1 ... ,. ,.ewe, '° ..,.,.,. ,,. ,.,... lllu. 10
llllllul. llll"M -,. -lltnl " bol'llto.
I MIMI Mtt. U lllflbVf, U.111 C:LIMINT• -U ,.......,.., ..
..... Clll -·· btM. ' lllll!lvl. NIW,.CMIT CClewY't Udttrl -JG
'"'Ifni ti •lbffo,.., • vlttlilwfln NM,
110 ae u. '" 11on1-. 11 111rrlWClt• u ll1lllM. fA.ri'I Lallfllltl -,,. •ntlllrt•
I 1flllar1, I' blrrtevtt . I ratlowtlft
ivn.. m 0ori11to ' ,.illrwflll. IM k••·
!i,lt,Jt l'EDlllO (t1M II, Lat\41111)--JI
•ntltn: l ''llowt•ll, llCI c•llc"o ti.u,
110 bonito, (Nw111•1 L•,..lnt l -1n
•"'lien: 1) llboCO<I, 6 Ytllowt•!l. 11
llnd blo!l. ! bl\lf!'fll! tu.... I i'wlllbul 117 tl>iffK\16f, ... bonltt. ,.. Cl llA ....
l.liN DIEGO !1'1 Lt ll'l t •H &M -
l'ltMrm111•, LllMllftt) -1.S1 IMll"'
511 1lbtCOl't', M vlH-111. 7t tu~ •. JI 61111~111.
LONG 11.li(H !J'Klfk l.wff!Pll"ll
-IOI '"'"'"I I •lllowl1!1, •1 bllr f9(VC!I, 1oJ11 Uill:t blu. )41 b!)rll>o, I<
l\.tfftlut, (hlMtftl "l•l -ts .........
1J1 l>fin , 1'7 bonlhl, l b1t•ttU11•, t
lllllbllf. ··--,, l "tlt>J; l ll i:loflllfl, U kit. 4 bill'l'tcudl, 7 h•Ll>ut ~l"lt•·
..,. "81'1111,.,.) -2n •ntle"1 u
1lr:MI~ IU btrrecuo.. 1,1)1 N u . 67•
llllrlf"'-I Nl!Wt, I rtlklwf1ll ~.
THUJISO.liY. AUG. 22, IH& DH·PrlHY LUI• (Lipham)
Cltlr & "''' T!mt-11 ~/10,
l"lltST ltACI!. l!O v1rd1. Maloten 2
"'r ol$. c1.rm1119. Purw s11tl0.
C111tcmi• Smog
flrl11kl..,.)
P1nidon Bar (l(•nlO
Bud Eve ISmil"l
Tlme-11 6110,
J.6C S.00 l.:10 '·'° 2.IO ,..
Scr•tel\ed-MI Proltlo, W"lrllWIV 2,
Rocle A Bu•, Ttrrtmoto.
Sf:CDl(D lt.li(I. 000 v1rC11. J ve•r
old• 1nd UP I" Gr1<1e I Plu•. Purlll'
ll~.
Aeciuest J•nt (Str1u1s\ U.20 7.2C 1.00
M-. e11rt11v 1w111on\ t.'11 '.~o
Hobler Jloc:ktt (Banktl 2.CI
Tlme-21 3/10.
Scr1tclle<I -.lin'flt.ln! S1r, MCCO'f'l
l•bf. Bell+ Doyle, Mlt Flttl Chlcli.
D.lilLV DOUILE -1 · C•llforftMI
lmot & l·At•lllMI Jt ,.., "•If SH.ff.
THlltO !UICI:. lJO ,,n11. J YNr
olOS Ind IHI lft Gr1de A Mlnu•. Purs1
\UOCI.
Mr. Sov ll•r (P Craobv\ 1.IO l.IO J.te
MadllY Jucly !l•n~sl l.KI 'IO
Btbe Chtr9t 15111>!) S 20 Tl,,,_11 1/10.
Ser11clle<l-Ch1m11 a t llle Bl1. Pel·
l.0'1 cnu rv, 010 Lucky, Mool1h Btr-
dell.
FOUATM 11.t.CE. "° v1rd1. J Ye.I•
okh •nd UP In G••!le A/' MlllUI.
PwrJe 12100.
4,00 l .20 J . .O
5.00 3 I'll
'00
P.an 81' 1c1,do••l
B•rrtG'• 6 l1cull CB•n~sl
Ml•• P11t Due !P CrD:lbYl
Tlme-18 $/10.
$C••tchecl--Chlll B1r. Ont 0t Thrft.
'IFTH A.liCE. 150 v1nl1. 2 vet •
otds. The Klllllu11trten Trl•h -h!
Div. PuOf l 2500.
H!«lno (Hlwkt•nonl 10.00 •·'° l.00
DH-Four Fvty King (1(~1111) 2.111 ~.00
No SC'31Cllt•.
OH-0.•dl"lal lor 1KPnd.
SIXTH AACI!. JJ0 v1nl1. 2 V"r
olds, Tiie Kln<le'9•rl•n Tr!1l5 -21'1d
01¥, Pun. 12500.
K1w"ll Bir (Ad11r) l.60 2.'° 2.:10
01ndv Btr Diii !M1ti.ud1)
Un1tr1ch!<I CWrlp~I!
Tlmt"--11 f/10.
Ho Krl~S.
SEVENTH AA(I. "° v1rds. 2 Ytl•
olds, The Kln<l•ro1rten Trl1li-3rd
Olv. Pudte 11500.
Sailor's Nl11M (l lPh•ml 23,IO 1.20 '·'° Charil"" Mid 4Morr1J) 3.60 J.IO
Bro.d Auet1 llrl11kl..,.) 1J.il0
T l~11 1110.
.1i110 Jlan-Jlunn!11 Roc:kel,
Bor Miu , Ounn1 Rtwtrd. Whtrt'd
$11"'°, Sw1110 M1n, Ml9110llt E111lt.
No scr•!chet.
l:IGHTM JIACI:. J50 VlnlS, 3 V!l r
old• and up In Grid• AA Minus. Purse
$2100.
O.lldv Moo1•h !Morrl•J n.oo 11.20 l.llO
Mr. 81mett {A .. flt) IJ.IO 700
Dolldrurnt I B1nk1l J.20
Tlrm--18 1110.
All4 R1n-Cl1bbl!t'' Jl<x.ket. MIC·
ktv 8. St1rr, lloval 11Pi>el. Jloc:ktt
Lh11e. VIII Bar e e11. A1111Cll1 Rov1I.
Scr1lolled-Moon O' Su91r.
NINTH llACE. IOO v•'°"· J Vt!•r olds Ind up 111 Gr•lle A Pl"'. Purte
Sl9DO.
Lltll! Obit lH Croibvl l~.1111 1.oltl ,,_,
Too Side (Smith! ,,00 6.00
811 Gr•n<laddv (,lt,rt lUl l . ..O
Tlrn!-21 II•!.
Al'° R1n -Stlld River Win, 0-
Rul!tll, Aon Sltklf, April Rocle~!.
Miu Trey ll1rs. H1n;IQ#n, Marlttlt
Two, Scrt1ched-Cetch DtcJ(, ltvco Oe-
11trte.
UW:#.b~
Del Mar Race Results ___ .,.._,,., ...
OEL MAii llE!iUl.T!i
Wl!DNE!iDAT 22, 11"
ci.1r '"" ""' l'lllST ll.liCI -6 1,,.rlollv1. T""" ve••
old mtldl<i lllllet. Ct lbrt'd1. C1•1ml"t
Pune 1?.XIO.
Our Rtlurn IA Ol11l 1.IG
Mv Cam.o IJ hllt"l PPOl'll Ftl lW Mahornt¥)
TIME -l.U
•Ill 300
5.00 J Dl'I ...
At.SO JIAN -.linnl! Mu1I, F1t.nlM
Bttle, Miu C"tr;• Ott, Our'll'Oll••·
llldt A Clcull, H_,..., Lid¥, l udo•
lltbel, Vetlow Rl~tr, On The Mmd
5CR.liTCHEO -Trul\I F ie~. Ga>''
Ftncv, Jovt'ul l-loslt<i1. FD1 Pll•· •11
The S•ml. IC!t'ICllln Cot.
SECOND 11.li(I! -Ont m11o l and <
ve•• old m•ldtn• Punt tJ.000 .
Fout ll'ld Score 10 Plerc!l
1''0 SOO l •O
P•mHre<I IC I"' (ll CtmPt>I l_ol(I '90
P.o<11e Wllffl'1" r J Seller1) J "°
TIME -l.ll-115. ALSO JIAN -f 1k• A T•IP, Ju•ll
C1lun, B•oaGwt v !;tow11, Dlt•ndlt,
Tt!al_Joi!, COllH CM. MC~•I
5Clnl.TCHEO -Ureent, Gk1t1<1<11
\'lctoi" OAILT DOUSLI:. f.Our llttyn1 le I· ,._ ..... ktrt. •1!<1 Ul.41,
THlllD lt.liCI -• lu•loll"'-3 ¥!>0t old' •1111 w . Cl•lml11.,. P~'1• f),100
L• TcrtV111 111 Tor~l 111111 •oo Jl'll
lllno F'" tJ L•mherll J,IO T 6(l
Jlul!l.h H-IA 0!•11 1.'11
TIME -110.115
ALSO llA"I -Lll'11 Llbrtr, Mu,\f
Cn•l'll. C~rr• Tho . .lirO\lf\CI Sea. P•~o1 Silwr
HO SCllATCHEi
r<OUll lH ltAC~ turloM1 1 ¥~••
ftld• Alll:Wll'COI l'ur\t 11.JOO
.,.,>nO<I L~I (J Stllori\ 16.0CI J l'O l.llO F~H MN\U .. (A Pl-a} '6(l ! 20
l(leo Mltl1~t Cit C.•n'111111 '10
TtME -I Ot·l/J
ILSO ltAH -Nor L,11ov. """ 8••A. Siie• 111 T,,.. Mud.
"10 SC~.liTCHl!S
"11"TH llACI -Abovl 1''1 lur~s
M tvrt } ¥Ht ~kh •lld .... (l1!ml"t
DU''° tl.000 flffU'I llN f ~
tJ Limber!\ U .'i!
Coon! Ch••lu CO Pl••cel
T•h•r• (JI C1ti.11erol
TIME -I )0.1/S
ALSO ltAN -Gin Tou•, DO" Swtn,.,
C~•~loto, Everv Cha..ct, Black Mood. 0e"'rmlnecl Ltd. En;!I•~ Comic.
"ID SCR.liTCHES
SIXTH llACI -6 lurio11e• ] Vtl r Did• allll UP A\low&11Cf1L PurH U .500.
5nlo' And 5nllls I.Ii 0111) 11 • .0
l~ndl>elm [A Pl<'ledl ) Ludlv l ush ID Pierce)
TIME -1 Of·llS
Al-SO RAN -(artu!6. £1 Sc1mlt1r,
Sl•dQf, /'d<)~!l"ll
HO SC llATCHES.
SllllEHTI( llACIE -OM milt ""
turf J Ytt • old•. c1.1ml"O Punt
u ... Tao Floo• 40 Plt•c•1 'IG s,. j 70
Ml1!er Ed M lM V11ff11w11) U.IO 1a.70
l(Qdla-kid IW He•tac-l • 20
TIME -1Jl·1/J
ALSO JIAN -Wiich'• ll rolll, Chtrm·
I .... Flfft, Promol Otli~ry, Vinci Jr.,
Bovtr loll, Ci'>«~PCif>t Ch t rllt, Prlt!Ct
Juli ti\. S.CJIATCHEO -C•tllOm!e e.....
llGHTH AACI -' lur,,,.,.,. Two
Ytl• Did llll!n . Allowt11ce1 Punt
$S,MIO.
Jin Jttolt (0 Plutt\ J IO
Fourlh R..und IJSel!trol
S11ltten Court !W H1rtttkl
TIME -1 Of ... /J.
Al.SO lit.liN -Ell .lif'CI £-"', Allclltt"1,
.lil'tel"'M HO SCAATCHE$
NlltTH 11.li(I -About ,,_., !uf!onll
on rurl J ~e .. 61dl tlld uP Cltm!I,,.
IMJrlt 13.JOO.
M(lttwtet flralltr
/A PIM<l•l 1 tll '-'° F1ct)blf {M v1i.11WfMI} !0.10
Actor l'nd ID l'ltn:t)
TIME 1,)0
.liLSO llAN -Jot Jetn. Mull••· "Iv Sl•lt• ,...,, J•I Pt!rc1, Afd V11'1d1I,
N""'•w-\1"1, Xlr•umcn. SCll.ATCHEO -Cl•Y'I H_,-, $,tt!n
)On, ShOl'I A.cc-.1.
Motlv•tor !ll Slrou4l 116
Min JOllt 0. (J ltobl-1 111 •
~ C.rdMf' 18 lrlnrr.ltYI 111
Solllh.,....1tm Ot P'"! 116
JIHd C"-'" hr tW Sh'•111•l 111 •m• SUri>rl• tJ wu'°"1 111
S.lfl'O JO. 0.. tP CroWI) 11!
I'll It MtrN CR 11 .. •I 115
Miu Bir Cllldr. ltl
Gnl'ld DtCIC ~J Or91-er1 120
• .. ... t!"9ttllt
Tr\111"' lftl !C Smtih) 116
11" For LllCk (J K.o11ltl 11'
Gar-t T.,. CR .lid1lr) 111
Tll.,,lti IT Ll9ll•ml 111
SIVl!HTH •ACI!. lJO Ylrdt. J Y••• otos 111d UJI In G...at AM Mlnu•, ""''" .... 1,..._ J_. Girt IL Wrltftl) 1U
Slrea•r J111t J tW Sl•llS) 115
Strtw Doll (H CrotDYl 1u
Deck NolM (2 D MorrlU JU
Mark T, ltrt (lit 81nJu) 116
On Tiit Betm Cl Co1Un51 115
OaYJd Jtflt CW $1rtuU) 1111
Otb't &.Ir None Cll Mll~I 10i
Scon>lon Otnelr IC Sml"') 116
EXPl'dltlout IT LlplllmJ 111
A1t1 IHtlD ..
' Wlllnlnt Strt1k C1 0 MoHll) 111
Jd Str1w U Wll>onl lU.
Oii Llm l11 !JI Adair) 111
War GlllJ<lt (J ROblMOnl 11l
IEIGHTH llACE. JJO ,., ... 2 w•r
~. All-tne.n. The VtMlll Off.
P\lrw uoco.
Cli•rM Forthre. IT L1Plllm) IU
Lott11on tA A.dtln 117
Sonic M-. IC Smllll) llt
Peet111 11 Brl11kleY) ,,,
JClll!v't FlllCY (I A B1nlo.1) 116
N•th111 Detroit 117
Jell 0 Je-1 (W S11i>el 111
WJldl (llldt !l CoUIM) lit
P1111um Sttp (J Rolllns.onl 117
JUM Pttlt Fll"1 (H Croatr'f) 116
AIM l:fltlblt
A.prll 0111 (2 R 81nk1J 11t
Tllrottlt IKll. IP Crt»b\') 111
NINTH !UICI!', $ff 'flrdl. I Ye.Ir
oio. tl'ld up. .1ioow1ncn. Pllrte
l1IO:t,
P1rker'1 lrn ... (JI A<Ylr) 1711
Tt>e Po!lrPOl'I IL Wrlvh!J 116
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a host of outstandlng ath·
lete1 In all ot the 10 events,
the U. S. fin al Olympic
Games women's tr.a.ck and
field trials begin Saturday
and wind up Sunday at lb.e
world-famed M . &an-An
tonio College track.
Opening ceremonies start
at S p.m., the first event at
5;30.
There will be preliminary
trial!: and finals on both
days, as follows :
Saturday, 80 meter hur·
dies, 200 meters, shot put
and long jump.
Sunday : 100 meters, 400
meters, d i s c u s, javelin.
high jump.
In addition, there will be
two special relay races
aimed at world records at
400 meters and 3 x 800 me-
ters.
Several exhibition events
are scheduled ea<:b day.
Three of the leading
Olympic candidates for 100·
meter honors have equaled
the world record of 11.1-
Margaret Bailes of the Ore·
gon Track Club, a high
school junior; Wyomia Tyus
or Tennessee._ State, the 1964
Olympic Games champion,
and Barbara Ferrell &! the
Los Angeles Mercttrettes.
Together with any ooe of
other top contenders. they
should make a strong bid
for the world record of 43.6,
held by Poland.
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475 E. 17th St. 646-2444 16171 leach llvcl. 147-6081
IOTH STOHS MONDAT.JlllDAY I A.M. • 9 l'.M.
.. . I
F'rlda,y. A\19Ust 2J, 1%8
•
-.
New Boats Outshone as Spectator Looks O:rl
BIRDS OF A FEATHER -Three former wortd
champion Star sailors are finding the competition a
little rough in the Olympic 5.5 meter class as they
bid for an.Olympic berth. Bill Ficker<>! NHYC, sail·
' )Veleome Aboard --I~ ;~ Here's Some · ' -
t -.
Smart Advice
lly Al,MON LOCKABEY
~ ~-'' M A f!M!' AM
~ . . ·• .. . .
. ' ,.
. ·~
0 .. . ' -"
. , -..
:
PiauJ H. smart. chairman
of the U.S. Olympic
Yachting Oimmittee, has
some very d~ded opinions
on the c;r.asses QI · sailboats
that 5'1rould be lndluded in
ttie Olympic yachting
game:s.
And the 77-year-old dean
of the international Star
Class .is oot reluctant to ex·
press .i\is opinions on some
of t!he Chings going on in the
1nternatim'a1 Y'8'Cht Racing
Union.
"Why not," gr.ins the saJcy
sailor. '"I 'm~ to opening
my mouth and putting my
foot in it."
Smart takes part.iculiar ex-
ception to the IYRU's an·
nounoed plao lo i<place the
pres~ ,Star . and Dnlgon
c lasses in the 1972 Olympics
wi tih tyo new designs -tbe
two.man Tempest and the
three-man Sol:ing. Smart is
eqll8lly em;hltic in his opi·
nion talat if any of the
present classes are ·goizlg to
be el.imioated fr<llll' the
Olympics it Should be the 5.5
meter class which has been
wattihing ciligeotly in the
trials here rat Newport.
FASTEST BOAT
"Be.sides being a ridi.
man's bo:at, the 5.5 e.s a
development class does not
put eooogh emphasis oo the
skill d tlhe skdpper end
crew. 1be man Wlith· tile
fastest boat is going to win,"
says Sm'art.
"And th.at's not I he
philosophy of the Olym·
pies," he continued. "Olym·
pie me.dials Mould go to tbe
most competent skipper and
crew, not to llhe .fiastest boat.
Othervt'ise, why not 8Yr'Qn1 a
gold medal ~ the designer
of the winning boat?''
As to the ex,ipe.Me of the
5.5, Smart says he has it on
god authority that at least
one of the boats in· the trials
has a pr.ice tag of over
SS0.000.
"How can tile lll0--61.lled
underdeveloped nations af·
f(lrd to desi!'l, tank test and
build &UCh a CMft -unless
1:1ey form a syndicate?''
Book's Title
Not So Brief
NEW YORK tuPll -A
book wriUeD in the leth cen -
tury by P~ Bartolome de
Las Casu to protest the
killing of tnclans in Latin
America by Spanish co1-
onist1 has one of the longest
titles ever fer a book , says
Dr. Jordan M. Young, Pace
College profess« o( Lain
American Affairs.
The title: "A Very Brief
Descrip&n ol the De9trU<·
tion of are Jndi"ans. Being a
True Acco\D'1t of Cruet
Mass.a.<:res and Slaughters
Of Twenty Millioo People."
Smiart wants be> know.
11he 5.5, Smart po_ints out,
is ia "development" class.
meaning that Ibey do not iau
bave to be exactly ·mike so
Jon·g u they come out. in
cohlonnity ~th the in·
bemational rule. This gives
designers a wKle latt.itude in
ingenuity iirt developing the
fiaelest possible boat.
'1 r hiw9-nat!Jing against
devel~ment classes," says
Smart.. "I just don't tink
they have a plaoe in the
Olympics. But~ we have to
have tihem. Why not a
smaller boat that ls not so
expensive?"
BITl'ER
~t's · unders11andi.1ble that
Smal't is more than a little
bitter 'aboci: 1he Jnll)osal to
eliininate the Star trom ~
Oly,mpic c lasses. He has
been a cOampiooship Star
sailor since youth iand for
many years serv-ed as head
of. the . U.S., class Assooi.a-
tion.
Smart argues that the
Star ~ the most widespread
boat in the wocld -wittl the
en:~n of h Snipe -
and that it has a strong in·
temalional ia5$0Ciation.
The Dragon is admittedly
ttie slowest boot in tile
Olympie cfasse&, but Smart
contends that this should not
be a factor so long as au of
the bolats are as alike as
tiley can be. He furtber
pOints out that tM Dragorn;
also have a strong in-
ternational organi2la'&n and
usuaUy attract the largest
participetion in Otymp;c
yachting.
'TOO NEW'
Sme.rt hastens 00 vow that
he has nothing against
elUher die TempeSl or
Solent. "ft's just that t'hey
Bre too new and do not have
an adequate balCkground or izatioD ti
ort"lill tte Tempest and tilt'
Soleot wert d~ within
the past few years in .a
design Contest sponsored by
the ·JYR.U 1(1() come up with a
pair ol high performance
boats for the Olympics.
Tempest is-~ the same
me '• a Star but f&atilres a
trapeze for t.ht crew to help
keep the oo.t. on an even
keel.
"Thape:z:es are fa cen-
ter.board boat4 sud1 u tile
Flying Outmman (~er
ObmPic c 1 e s 1 ) . No crewman !hnlld be hanfi:ng
from the masthead on a
good keel boat," 1 ra y 1
Smart. .
Smart drli~ thM. his 15 a
voice crying in t h e
wilderness in many circles
-Ill Emope in tlU COUD·
try.
"Bul 1 believe in ex-
pressing my ot*Jion when I b~e (Jle," bl~·
OA!l 'f PILOT lt•ft PMN
ing an old 5.5 Charade (No. 57) is leading Gerry
Driscoll (No. 82) and !.<>well North (No. 76) both of
wbom are sailing new boats.
FRONT ROW VIEW -Lone sailor in cat-rigged
double-ender attracted specuitor interest as he lei-
surely cruised outside 'the· race course in the 5.5
OAl,l..T PILOT ttllff .......
meter Olympic trials. In background is one of the
high-powered racing yachts.
Gardner Cox Man to Beat
As Olympic Trials Resume
By ALMON WCKABEV
0.1/r Plkll INtlnt Edltr
The fourth raee of the 5.5 ..
meter Olympic trials got un·
der way on the Olympic
course off the Newport
Harbor entrance. The f;fth
and six.th races will be held
Saturday and Sunday ' to
determine who v.•ill
represent the U.S. in the
Olympic yachting games at
Acapulco starting Oct..l?.
Gardner Co:i.:: of Villanova,·
Pa. wis considered the mi.In
lo beat & the £100'1 pha!e of
the trials got under way.
He is leading the series
wtth two wins and two
losses, a f<>rrnidable lead in
view .of the rule that skip-
pers can throw out their
worsi., race in computing
their final score.
Asked if he was confident
of winning the series. Cox
said: "We're hopeful, but
the 5e:ries is a long way
from over."
He was looking hard at
John Marshall's red•hul!ed
Bingo from Stamford. Conn .
which stand~ in second
place.
C.Ounting all four races,
Cox has a score of six under
and Marshall has 16. 7.
'Sudden Death' Ocean
Race Set for October
The ~an R.aaiog Fleet
ol Southern OaJl.f\'.lrnt.a has
come up wi1h a proposal for
a f'Qce that v.;J.I detennine
the ocean racing dlam·
pionship for ttte year.
Race Course
Planned for
New Lake
A mile-long lake is being
created six miles 80Uth ol
Phoenix. Ariz. that may well
beoome a boat racing mecca
in the southwest.
'ftie proJ)O!l81 is for e
•·sudden-death" race similar
to the San Diego Lipton Cup
Challenge race.
TerAative date for thr:
race has been set for Oct .
19. Tu qua1ify for entering
the racr: ra boat must f!niftl
Ul the n.rst five over.a,11 in
the Whitney, Ahm·anson.
Balboa Yiactit Club's 00
series. Catifornia Y a ,c 'n t
Club's Overton or LOng
Bead'! Yacht Club's OatalinQ
Island Series.
The tilist race · will be
sponsored by the l.Llng
Beach Y aoht Club. It will be
oonti.nued 3S an annu.al ar.
fajr.
A perpetual ~y will go r.o the w,inner as weU as
participation plaques and
orew patches for everyone
involved, according to J im
Lindemvan. president o f
ORF.
the Olympic scorinF system
But with the tiu"ow-OUt raee
the picture looks a litle dif.
ferent at. th.is point. Cox
would throw out a second
place, leaving hin1 with a
score of three. v.• h i I e
Marshall woulQ toss out a
third place fin :sh, leaving
him with a first .and llvo
seconds for six points. On
the basis of three Ot:l of four
races, Cox is learting by only
three points.
Nooe of the I'> other skip-
pers stan'ds more than an
outside chance unles~ both
Cox and Marshall fold up in
the final three races. Ernie
f'ay of Housiton has a record
of 6-6-1-3 for a iour-rai.:e
total of 29.l poi.ats and Bill
Picker of Newport Harbor
Yacht Club has fini she:; of 2·
fl-6·5 for a total 3'f 31.7. Both
Pay and Ficker would throw
out a sixth place whi ch is
worth 7.1.
Hilton Wins
2nd Barthel
Series Race
TORONTO !AP) -The
eight-meter yacht lroquols
11. skippered by Carl Hilton
a.nd his fiv-e ,man crew from
Chicc.p:i's Lake Michigan
y,a.dlting Association, took
the 'econd of 1ile Barthel
Trophy series races Thurs-
day with a time Ct{ I: 16.57.
Cheeta . skippered by Tim
Nelson of the Toronto Lake
Yacht Rla.cing ASSOciiation,
was second in 1 :20.38 ,
Nearseman, hand.Jed by Jer·
ry SulliVIBn oi the Cleveland
Inter i.JB'.ke Ya c h ti n g
Association. placed Utird in
1:22.10. and Venture JI ,
skippered by Tom Fisher of
ltie Detroit R·iver Yachting
Association, I :27.29, w"s
fourttl.
Nelson was leading with
71/, poinM winh three races
still to be sailed. Hilton ls
secor:d with 51/,. Sullivan
and FiSdler tNtil with tour
eacll.
Three ~Us will feed the
lake from an underground
pool of high saline content.
The body ol water will be
I.DJ feet wide. have an oval
shape and provide a surface
of 136 8CT'e6. $40,000 Gold Cup
OLYMPIC COURSE -Diagram shows the layout
of an official Olympic sailing course with a tri-
angular lap and a windward, leeward. windward
lap. Triangle is laid out in an imaginary circle.
Tioga Will Set Pace
For Outrigger Event
The 58-foot ketch Tioga
will be the pacesetting com·
mittee boat Sa.turda'Y "'4ien
nine crews of rugged young
men depart on ~ first an-
n11al Long Beach-Catlalina
lslatld Outrigger Ca not
Regatt..
The Tioga, owned now by
John Jamie.son of West
Covina, wa.s"built in 1932 and
wa s the prototype for the
ramous b I u e water yacht
Ticonderoga, 72-foot ketch
now in charter service alt.er
a distinguilshed r a ~ i n g
coreer.
Ji~vored jn (he race for
the 400-pound outriggers will
be the nine-man Hawaiian
AIJ...Stani 1'eam which last
Saturday won e 15-mile
tuneup race from MeJibu to
Sanlla Monica by way of a
90uthernly dip to Venice .
The l·lawaliaru negot.iated
the distance in two houn. 11
minutes rand 2.5 seconds. But
'he Balboa Outrigger Oanoe
otub's No. l boat was ~t
far behind-at 2:15 :01 and the
K>ai Nalu (·MaT Vista) No. 1
team was in at2:17:25.
The fleet will depart Loog
Beach's Cherry St r e et
Bead\ sect.ion et g a.m . and
will include the Tioga, one
more smaller sailboat a .a
commMbee boat. one speed-
boat r.orn the Outboard
Booting ChJb of U>1Ig Beach
for each canoe as a .Wety
precautJon and "'"1
power'borats for prt•.
Teen-ager
Tightens
Thistle Lead
SAVVILLE. N.V. (AP) -
Dennis Clark. 17"')'ear-old
s.k1pper from S e a t t 1 e ,
t.igtitened hiJ hold on first
place in the National
Th.istlecla&s Sailing Cham-
pi'Onshlps on Gr•at. South
Bay Thur May.
Inboard hydr0pl~ aJ11
large. ias seven litres coold
be acoommodated for rac·
ing. Marina facilities alsn
are planned.
Hydroplnne 'Bait' Offered
He .sailed his Wizard of Id
over the nine -mile
triangular course to win ms
!Nrd in the six -race terie1
that ends t:.oday. He leads
overaU with 81/, points r o r
tile five races to date wittl
fin.iilhes ol 1·1·2-4-1.
Development plans include
four teparate racing <.'OUt'I·
es revolving around a mid-
lake island. Jud.goes and
press room facilities aJso
we planned.
The four courses 'include
an ~ APBA mile aod
two-tti.irds layout for record
closed COU111e racing, a one-
quarter-mile drag strip, a
~mile straight away, and
a two-mile Jpeed cl.auic and
ski courait.
DETROIT -A total purse
of $40,000 -the highest in
boat racing for 1968 -
awaits unlimited hydroplane
OWTIU'6 ~ shOw up here
Sept. 8 for the 60th running
ol the American P-0wer Boal
~ociat:ion's Gold Cup.
fn boat racing, the Gold
Cup is the moet important
power boat race o n
tCbedule, and fJ aymbotic of
tipeEd supremacy in com-
petition.
Qualif>'\nl lri"1a !er en-
tr-ants will be held Sept. 5-6
when a field of 18 unlimited.a
will be sifted lrom the pack
to race in tilree heats.
Ordinarily the G<>ld Qip
ha,, four heats, but ttd1 year
there was -a vote of officiala
to race un:Jer tN unlimited
rules rattier than the Gotd
Cup rules.
The decision emerged la!t
June when weather and
course condi liona made it
Impossible U> qualify omugh
boats under tlle Gold Cup
rule and therace was
postpon<d until Sept. 8. The
vote holds good fOI' the
September event.
The first two heat.A will be
run in three section11 each
with Ul) to six unlim:lted11 in
each section. The top aix
boat& w1;1 oompet.e In tile
final .
The course will be five
l~ over three miles, .ap-
proved for reoordl, M th•
!:¥tro.t.t Rivar.
William Alexander, F'a\\a
Churdl, V•a. finished leCUX1
'llhtnday and trl!IO is second
over..iall with 22 points.
Ed Fracker, 001umbus,
Ctio. is third witb 31 'ii
points; Q\ar\es Stei'gerwald,
al10 ol Colwnblll, fouritl ,
wittt 33; Jdm W.anenacher,
Cleveland, til!ll. with 36:
Dennis Pote)', W 1 p ping
Cbno.., llxf\ wHt\ :II, and
Riobard Percocco, Houlton.
nvendl, WiCh 40.
Van Dyne
New Finn
Champion
Carl Van Dyne, Mantr>lok~
lng. N.J. is the J'!ew .. Finn
Class North Ame r-ic an
Champion. .::
The ei:-eollegiate ··a.ilor
wias virtually boosted into
the . ti.tlist position bY.· Bob
Andre of San Diego~ whit
switched from saill'.Dg to
s.urfing in the .final two
races of the champj(lruihip
regatta 1t Alamitos · Bay
Thursday.
Andre held a fracti(ln or a
point lead in first placi over
Peter Barrett of Alamilo!
Bay Yacht C1ub u the
regatta went into its final
three races Thuriday,
It still looked good for
Andre in the firsl . race
Thursday as he finish~ fifth
while Barrett wu holding
second with a sixth place.
The wind was · blowing a
moderate, five knots. ·
But as tbe wind began pip-
ing up to 10 knots at th•
~tart of the second ~race
Andre got hi! 14-foot dinghy
on top of a wave.. ap-
proaching a mark. The sea
suddenly took control and
Andre found himself sUrting
smack into the mark. So
much for a throw-out race.
It was in the third and
final race that Andre was
completely wiped out. With
the wind nowr whistling IS
knots end the sea rising, the
San Diegan found him1elt
atop another roller as be ap-
proached the mark. Again
the sea took control, and
again Andre hit the mark.
Th.is one he had to keep.
Meanwhile, Van Dyne.
who had been lounging in
third place before the d.iy's
three races •tarted. sailed
conservatively along in se-
cond, third and third places,
found himseU siWng atop
the heap when the show Was
over.
Barrett was barely able to
1tay in second place on the
scoreboard by virtue o{ Win-
ning the final nee.
Third, only a tenth or a
point behind Barrett ~ wa111
Clive Roberts of N e w
Zealand who 'ls In this coun·
try on his· way to the Olym·
pies in October.
Andre's two DNF1 drop-
ped him to si:r:th place
overaU. Here ii the .final
scoring of the top 10 in the
regatta:
I. Carl Van Dyne, Ml.n·
tololdng, N.J ., 44.7 i
!. Peter Barrett, ABYC,
52.7 .
3. Clive Roberti, New
Z.aland. 52.S
4. Robert Doyla, Pteon,
Masi., 86
S. Peter Doherty. Ootat
Guard Academy, fll.7
1. Bob Andre. san :Dior• vc. 7fl.7 .
7. Cbuck MiUtr, .u!YC,
72.4
A. Fred .MillM Jr., SSSC,
74 .
t. Peter Conrad, St. Fran-
ci.8 vc. 74.7
19. l<>uis Nady, UC
Berkeley, 75.7
'
-~-~------------~~~~~~~~ ... ~~~~ ................................................................................................................. ..
DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL I-AGE I
A T wo-f or -0 -ne Bargain
SaHy R Is a June graduate ol Newport Harbor High
School. She want. to study nurslng al Orange Coasl
College.
Don G~ didn't do so well in academic subjects ~t
Marina Hi.R:b. He "'ould like to team auto body repair at Golden West College.
between $3.50 and $6 the tlrs-t year and less each sue.
ceeding year. The owner of a $40,000 home would pay
fl to $12 the l'trst year and less thereafter.
It's not a very hlgh price to pay to keep the door
of educational opportunity open. Ever more stUdenls
oeem lo be beaded for that door and that's the prob-
lem. Four of. five high school students from the area
who go on to C"Ollege go to junior college. Teresa J,1 a graduate of Estancia Higb School, is 1'·
oimlog for a.f®r-year BA d~gr!lQJ>ul needs to live at .,.
home the first two years because her p8rents can't
afford to send her away to college.
For one reason or another these three students
were not among the first . to pre-register for Orange
Coast or Golden West junior colleges. Too bad, because
now there U no more room and they can't get in.
-'l'he junior eoUege-educaUon tltoy have been get.ting
has been a bargain. For years Orange Coast Junior Col-
lege Dt.strtct bas been just about the lowest in the state
In spending money on its students and at the same
lime II has held It. own academically.
1be year is 1970, and there is just no way to shoe.
hom all the students who want to attend into class· . roonu: of a school district that can't pass bond issues.
The open door of college opportunity for all is sbul.
The California. Master Plan for filgher Education which
says junior C?Olleges •hall accept all high school grad-
uat.M turns out to be just words on paper.
But wlrit, it is not 1970 yet. It doesn't have lo hair
pen lllat way. .
Votero of Orange Coast Junior College District on
Sept. 17 will be asked to approve a $7.25 million bond
lsaue for new instructional buildings on the Orange
Coast and Golden West campuses.
There are no administration or cafeteria buildings
involved. Only buildings In which chlsses "1U be taught.
H passed, the bond money will be used during the
next four years to buy andtber $7 million in state and
federa1 aid, The aid money is given to districts tba't can
show their voters cared enovgh to tax themselves for
a half share.
In other words, voters can buy a second dollar for
local use for most of the dollars they provide. It i! a
real lbw~for-one-blll'gain.
The cost to tiaxpayerc will be spread out over 10 or
more ~eaH. 'File owner of a $20,000 home would pay
Failure of two override elections in recent years
has meant the end of many adult education programs
and increases in class sizes which have made instruG'"'
tors less effective. But still every atudent has been giv-
en a Chance at education.
F'a1.lure of the bond issue will shut the door on the
chances of many thousands of aspiring etudeots.
The World Stands Helpless
Revolted as it has not been since Russia's 1956
subjugation of Hungary, world opinion -not just west~
em opinion -bas rallied to Czechoslovakia's cause.
Unlike the pre-World War TI period of Hitler's ag-
gressic;>ns, a direct confrontation between great powers
would inevitably involve we of nuclear w e a p o n s .
Using them would be •uicide for eithor side. So the
world, including some equally revol(ed. Communist
countries and parUes, 1tands belple!S to counter Rus-
sia'5 brutal attack.
The only apparent hope for a Russian policy rever-
sal rest. with ~ Soviet.' reallz.ation that they are do-
ing themselves more harm through loss of. power or
prestige w!tllln the Red bloc than tlley can poosi'bly
galn In little Czecboslovalda. H
Naiv e, Childish, Symbof,.Worshlplng Czechs Have
Less Capacity
To Compete
Today We Have Hippjes
By &EORGE R. HOFF, PhD. -
A rebel wit.bout a cause is Mdling
more than a diagrunUed, negative
obstiructionil't who hampers hll.s ovm
fullillmecit, not to mentioo the needs
and goals d tiQJe who are con·
sclentiously atiem~ to make some
kind of eeme out of their own lives.
Where are the 8lll8l'Y yoong mep ol the
19SO'a? They have £l'OW!I older end
naw are the ini.table, cantmey men of
the 1960's. What bave they done for
themselve1 er for the sodefy against
wbicil Chey opoke 10 VEilemontly and
eloquently? Notbing, really! Their
vole~ have been lost, not in the
wlldenel!, but in t!le va01um o£ their
empty and trite elogam,
TODAY WE BA VE hippies -naive,
childish, oymbo!.......rup;ng, ritual-
loviog fi1JWt!l1ltls ci a fatatisdo
p~ which attempts to reduce
the eest11C1 of human exiistence to a
lour letter word1 LOVE. 'Ibey
c1e_.ately I:)' to ignore the fact that
humans are multidimensional, After
all, t.o ex-plore aid attempt to un-
derstand the cample1tti.es, paradoxes,
polarities, nuances .and varied facets
of existence ii bard and frustrating
work.
They want lo leave the hard worlt
and fru.rtratloD to the ~tuffy scientists,
philosophers and tbeologians who
aren't ''&tt" enough to recognize that
all this sad world needs is more love.
FURTHERMORE, they refuse to
acknowledge all Of reality, In:&tead,
~y pretend that i! only everyone
would Jove everyone else, Utopia
would result. They would like to have
a world handed to them in which there
is beaven without bell, good and no
bad, freedom w.ithout restriction, hap-
piness but never sadness, health and
no sickness, pleasure exclusive of
pain, etc.
They wish to Obliterate a large
measure of bow things really are, and
bold the delusion that the world is a
place of perpetual fresh air, blue sky,
and fluffy, white clouds. They say to
each other, "Whenever it r.aim, let's
withdraw into ounselves and pr&tend.
that we can hibernate until spring
comes again."
THE PROBLEM JS, ol course, that
a human can't naturally hibernate like
a bear. Even to approximate hibema·
ti.on, he must !induce an artificial state
of linsensltivity and reality distortion
by using one drug or another. Then,
while indulging in idyllic fanta.&y, he
eXipeots the more mundane and
unenlightened segment. of .society to
satisfy bis basic needs and take care
of him. He expresses righteous in·
dignatioo when the power structure -
the establisbment, if Y0\1 will -which
he believes ii too up-tight to accept
and mpport his passive, inactive
search for authenticity, doesn't r;poon.
feed him while he plays philosopher.
HUMANS CAN easily ta l k
themselves into or out of anyttiing. It
is increaUngly clear that hippies have
not only sold therru;elves a bill of
goods, they .are also explaining their
cop-out by rationalizing that they are
searching for new meaning in being
human,
What they fail to appreciate,
however, it that the looter they ride
free , the longer Utey sit on their dulls
and scorn those who, in their own way,
are attempting to improve the state of
man, the more they will find
themselves losing self-respect. Hippies
really can't ibe happy until ttiey either
pay for their ride or do some drivirlg
'bhemsel ves.
A rebel WITH a cause, and the
courage to be committed to it
regardless of the work involved, can
become a major force in reconstruc-
ting ia more sane :90cial ordier.
They Can't Repudiate LBJ
WASHINGTON -A~ kind of tunnel vision affllcb thooe Democratic
elements wbo think their party can
blithely repudiaite or discredit the
Johnson Admini&tratioo1s policy in the
Vietnam war.
If ttiey were to look to either side of
their tunneled view they would see
ample evidence that :such a repudiat-
ion or discreditia:tio:n cou1d have sensa-
tional resulU.
Such men es Defense Sec. Clark M.
Clifford and Sec. Of State Dean Rusk
would have to ask themselves if they
could in good conscience support a
Democratic pre.sidential nominee run·
ning on a platlform Utat made thM"I out
to be fools or knaves.
Nor would President John.son be ex·
l!!mpt from seU-tnterrogatiu'I on this
poiDL There are 6igns of a slow burn
in the J ohnson Administration over the
sbilly~ying to which Vioe Presi·
dent Humphrey has exposed' himself
ac th• Vietnam issue.
THOSE WHO THREATEN lo l .. ve
the convention in Chkago next week
tmless the Democratic t'Onventaon
repudiates the Johnson war policy ap·
parently Mve given no thought t.o
othen; wbo would go home end wash
___ ..._
Friday, August 23, 1968
TM tditorla.I page of tht Dail11
PUoC 1t:ekl to inform and •t.im-
~ rf'aden br prurnting thU
......,..,,.,.,, opbliam ond CO""
tNlltoT1f Oil toplcl of fnt<r<ll
a1ld tfg!llfia=t, b~ !"Oofdfnj1 C
forvtn for t.M e.rprt11ion of
our read4r~ opinions, and. bv
prcunting the c:Uon'11 view-
pol1lti of lnftJNMd ob"""'7
and IJ'O,.._ on topfa of tM
daf.
Robert N. Weed, PuhllJber
their hands of a Democratic nominee
so terrified of defeat that he would
compromise his previous convictJons.
This is-tihe result of the limited focus
of that minority las confirmed by
public opinion polls ) who wish to st.op
the bombing unila.teN1Uy, invite the
Communist Viet Cong into a coalition
government and liquidate the war.
1'hese elements of opinion have
deluded themselves into thinking that
they represent the majority. They
have talked U\emselves into believing
there would be nothing but favorable
consequences from wiping all VC6tiges
of Ule Johnson Adntinistration from
tne f13ce of the Democratic Party.
THE FACT'S J\tlGHT as well be fac-
ed by the Humphrey side now, The
chief reason why Vice President lium·
phrey ia in a position to win a first
ballot nomination for the presidency is
that he has inherited the delegate
strengtih which oUierwise would have
gone to President Johnson. There ls
not the slightest reason to believe that
Vri.ce President Humphrey could have
demonstrated his popularity i n
pn?s.identiaJ primary elecUons against
llhe late Robert F. Kennedy or Eugene
McCarthy.
Hwnphrey is now in his favored
position becau.5e the elements wh.ich
would have supported Johnson, had he
been a Candid.'lte, transferred their
support to JMnson's htir, llumphrey .
These elements tnclude a large part or
organized labor. big state and big city
poUtical organlzati~ and t h e
southeni delegations.
RUMPl!REV IS stamped by I.he
Johmon Admini$tration. All h I s
dttwnlocuUca about being his own
man do not chMp thiat. tf he is a par·
ty now to repudiating not only the
Johns@D Admlrustratlon but his own
prevtou.slY expressed opjoi.ort1 he ii
... -----·--------------------
( ~
,..,. Ml IM I lief tiM."
likely to lMe face with the o n l y
elements at the Democratic national
convention who can ncminate him.
All this makes the vice president,
and the reft wing part of his staff, very
uncomfortable. nie staff hrates to ad-
mit Where Humphrey's nomination
will come from, <and would wish for
the vice prelSi.dent a great deal more
flexibility, '8lld a 6epllNlte identity.
This separ&11te identity is not to be
~nted to Humphrey because a
minority in the DetD.ocratic Party will
not pennit iL
Dear
GJoomy
Gus:
Assemblyman Bob Burke sug.
ge-sts that the Edison Co. might
have been less reluctant to build
the Bolsa Ji;land nut lear power
and desalting plant had it been
named Ille Ralpil Kiser J sland,
-8. H. R.
,.
The following 1'eport was pT"epared
before the invasion of Czechoslovakia
by the troops of Russia, Poland, East
German11, HungaTJI and Bulgaria last
Tuesday night.
-Editor
The American Army has •
call9thenic exerdse UBually described
as "running !in place.'' You go through
all the motions of ruruW.ng, but you
stay right where you are, your knees
going up and down but never !«Ward.
That, i.n a sense, Ui w h a t
Czechoslovakia's economy has been
doing for the past few years. In a
world of explosive economic growth,
the Czechs have been going nowhere.
The gross national product has re·
mained stationary or actually shrunk.
Ludvik Ubl, first deputy foreign
trade .minister, recently commented:
"Al a result of the big volume and
fitability of Czedloslovak de.liveries to
the Soviet Union, this coimtry as a
producer and a tr.ader became used to
a certain self-indulgence that con·
tributed to the general deterioration of
our goods and capacity to compete."
The C:riecbs now want to become com·
tetive on world markets again and to
d.im.Wsh economic and political depen·
dence on the Russians.
MORE TR A N 60 percent of
Cr.echoslovakia's external trade is
with the eastern European satellite
bloc, Hali of this is with the Soviet
Union itself.
But, as the British commentator
Michael Simmons reports, more than
20 percent of the country's trade is
also with the western industrial
economies. Exports to them in 1967
am0W1ted to $331.2 million, a decrease
of $55.2 million from 1966. At the same
time, imports rose from $3'28.8 million
to $369.6 million. "Nearly a quarter Of
the 1967 exports went to West
Gennany and over '48 million each to
Btitain and Italy. We stern imports
came mostly from the same trio and
from France and Au.stria."
Czech machinery is obsolete. High
production costs make C z e c h
manufactured goods uncompetitive
abroad. Simmons quotes Prof. Ota Sik,
deputy prime minister tn the Dubcek
regime and architect of the CUITent
economic action program: "The new
economic system mu.st effect a change
which will ootail new methods d plan·
ning, changes in financing and
cred.iting, removal ol s u b s id i e s ,
changei in priCi! relations."
JOSEPH WECHSBERG writes from
Prague: "I have heard no talk , ••
about overthrowing communism, but
mlUIY people here dn wara rom·
munism plus free6om • • . Tbe
Cuchoslovak reform hi already a
much bigger thing than ••. even
Titoism in YugoslaYia . • . U the
Cz:echoslovaks prove that communism
can coexist with freedom, their &UC·
cess will unquestionably affect not on·
ly the intellectuals }AA-I.he entire
populations of other Communist coun·
tries ••. Poland. Hungory, East
G<nnan,y, and~ ••'"1 lbe Soviet
Union.''
fn ttw! tallu at Clerna and the
Bnti1lava communique, the Cze<:M
showed remar~able resktanc:t to
Soviet military -=··
-,......~·----~-----· ........ ,_,,, ____ .,.
., ,,
r~' .,;;::;;
Why Are They
Dissatisfied?
Rea.ding about a musical comedy
star Vlbo has gooe to Europe to &tudy
grand opera, I wondered again why so
many talented persoog are dissatllfied
with the things they do wen and feel
impelled to embark on projects
beyond their powecs. .
The singer in question is one of the
brightest adornments of the musical
stage: Her voice :is beguiling, her
oomportment endearing, her success
full and justified. What need is there
for her to compete witti opera singers?
Geo11ge Gershwin was a classic case
or euch Wstl.c frustration. Tired of
the excellent popular tunes he tossed
otf so easily, he went to Paris to
study composition under Stravinsky.
The latter was puzzled by the young
man's desire to wrlte "serious"
music, and tried politely tio dissuade
him -but G e r sh w i n remained
disgruntled un1:5] his death.
EVEN SO GREAT a creative man
as G o e t h e thought lightly of his
tremendous. literary works, and was
most concerned with his scientific
labors -especially a "theory of col·
or" he was convinced would place hJm
with Ne~on among the 6'cientific im·
mortat.s.
"M, for what I have done as a paet,"
he told Eckennann, "I take no pride
whatever in it. Poe~ more excellent
than I have lived before me, and
others v.'ill come after. But that in my
own century l am the only person who
knows the truth in the dilficult science
ol color« -of that I am proud."
NEEDLESS TO SAY, no ooe Cx>day
pa~ attention to the theory of color
promulgated by the author of "Fall5t''
-who tum.self was apparently
Wl.8.Ware that his own hero, Newton,
dismissed his scfentilic work and
thought 11\at his Biblical research
would live forever.
Nor, to take lesser examples, do we
read the "serious" novels of Corian
Doyle, which he ranked far above
Sherlock Holmes; nor listen to the
"serious'' music ol Arthur Sullivan,
v.Wch he thought would outlive the
frivolous savoy operettas be composed
with W. S. Gilbert.
DANTE ROSSEM'I. the fine minor
poet, wanted also to be a painter, and
once ·sf1owed Whistler a picture in its
early stages, which the American
artist criticized. Some months later,
Rossetti' again showed Whistler the
completed picture, this time in a
beautiful frame.
''You've done nottting to it since I
&a'W it, have you?" Whistler asked.
"No," Rossetti · admitted. "but I 've
written a sonnet on the subject." He
then read the lines, ~ch were lovely
and tender.
"Take out the picture," advised
Whistler bluntly, "and frame the son·
net."
'Radar Tracked Saucer'
To the Editor o
Concerning the Royce Brier column
on fl)"ing saucers (Aug. 19): While sta·
tioned in Germany in 1965, at about
2:05 a.m. from the angle about north,
northeast. and at about a 6Ckiegree
angle, our base radar picked up a solid
metallic blip on the radar scree.n. It
came down at this angle and stopped
at approximately five miles due wesC
of the base. Its altitude was then ap·
proximately 6,500 feet.
It seemed to pause for ap·
proximately t h r e e or four setond11
then shot in a direction over the top of
the base at about the same altitude,
Radar "'tracking speed at the base
when this object passed over was ap·
proximately 8,500 MPH and pickjng up
speed. As it did so it bad a clear
brilliant pulsating light which was in
col« a blue , silver, green light. Its en·
tire vision on r.adar from first sighting
to end was iapproximately 15 seconm.
MYSELF AND FIVE olher !ell°"'
on guard mount around the base nw
this; a few others abo saw it. The sky
was perfectly clear, and not any
clouds in sight. This wa,, note figment
Of one's imagination. It was reat
This radar report soon disappeared
and the whole matt.er was under hush,
hush. When any of us .:W:ed about it
we were told to koop our mouths shut
or else. 'Iben later we were told that
we. were day dreiJl\ing and m fcrget
tt. My friend in radar told me what
w11s in the report later.
'rhis goes to prove one thing -that
the milll:aJ')' keep everything like this
top aecret and don'L tell the public a
tbinl bvt only lhlt K'1 -tr Ugbta
on clouds. Bunk, I know differently. Jt
~ In a potfect otralght lino
back out into 'lpace. 11'11)' doesn't 1lto
eovemmmt tell \be pUbHc \l1e nth?
H. L. ENGLE
Volunteer Bureau
To the Editor:
Congratulations are due the DAILY
Pil.,QT for the ex.oellent feature story
on the Volunteer Bureau published
August 19.
Judy Hurst has done an outstanding
job in bringing to the attention of the
public the many facet.s of the bureau'•
activities. w1lich offer gen u t n •
services to the coudy's agencies, as
well as unlimited opportunities for in·
volvement on the part of the county'1
citizens.
SYLVIA L. BOGEN
Board Meml>tr
The Vo!unU~r Bureot1 providu
CLS$Utane1 to 65 ourn.cie1, 1choolf.
hospitala and conoole1ceni homes ill
Southern Orange County. Volunum
ranging from tecn.-agers to gntndpo?'-
e.nts art medtd. -Editor
8 11 ~r9e ---.
Dear Geora:e:
Today's :i:oa.nty dren I s
absolutely dtagramul ..,d 1
would like Your opinion. Look at
all I.he go-go girls\
SHOCKED o .... Shocked:
WHERE? WHERE 1
Oh.
Ahem -YeJ. Absolutely
di&gracefUI and I say tak-tak. But
1 with you wouldn\ do that
before J've bad my 1econd cup of
coif ...
•
---------------
. .
l '"""-~ .. ' I
•
'
DAILY PILOT 21
During This Clean·u of 1968 Models You
Can Save Hundreds of Dolle.rs On New
Plymouths, Chryslers and Imperials.
BRAND NEW
IMPERIAL HARDTOP COUPE
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mirror deluxe wheel covers, light package, 3 speed wipers, undercoating.
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'66 TOYOTA
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heater, AIR CONDITIONED.
White wall tires.
'65 BONNEVILLE
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white wall tires, very sharp.
Stk. 4780A $1895
'64 DODGE
Sta. W gn. Auto. trans, radio,
heater, PS, white walls, very
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'62 CHRYSLER
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OPEN 7 DAYS
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'67 COUGAR
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A beautiful car with automatic
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Stk. #WlllA
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'64 DODGE
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/
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$ '19 5
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'63 CHEVROLE T
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'66 vw
Radio, heater, 4 speed. Low
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'65 Cl~~YSLER 300 '65 PL VMOUTH
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radio, heater, power steering,
brake5, fact. air, elec. windows.
Stk. # Ul519. $~~95
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Now In Progress
---CHRYSUR ·PLYMOUTH· IMPERIAL
4201 WILLOW • LONG BEACH
AT THE 'LAKEWOOD TURNOFF FROM ORANGE COUNTY
OF THE SAlf DIEGO FREEWAY .., 426·7~J I 543·6663 527·2341 ·. ' ,, .. '
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DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ,
A Two-for -One Ba ~gain
Sally R. Is a June graduate of Newport Harbor High
School. She wants to study nursing at Orange Coast
College.
Don G. didn't ·do so weli in academic subjects at
Martna High. He would like to learn auto body repair
at Golden Weu College.
Teresa J., a graduate of Estancia High School, is
-ng for-& fn.ur,year BA degree but needs to live at
home the first two years because her parents can't
afford to send her away to college.
For one reason or another these three stud ents
were not among the first to pre-register !or Orange
Coast or Golden West junior colleges. Too bad, because
now there is no more room and they can't get in.
'l1le year is 1970, and tilere Is just no way to shoe-
hom all the students who want to attend into class4
, rooms of a school district that can't pass bond issues.
The open door of college opportunity for all is shut.
The California Master Plan for m.gher Education which
says junior colleges shall accept all high school grad· u.ates turns out to be just words on paper.
But wait, it i& not 1970 yet. It doesn't have to hap-
pen l!lat way. .
Voters of Orange Coast Junior College District on
Sept. 17 will be asked to approve a $7.25 mlllion bond
issue for new instructional buildings on the Orange
Coast and Golden West camPuses.
There are no administration or cafeteria buildings
involved. Only buildings in which classes will be taught.
If passed, the bond money will be used during the
next four years to buy anather $7 million in state and
federa1 aid. 'lbe aid money js given to districts that can
show their voters cared enough to tax themselves for
a baif mare.
In other words, voters can buy a second dollar for
local use for most of 1he dollars they provide. It is a
real two-for-one-bargalll.
The ~Mt: to taxpayer& will be spread out over 10 or
more I"""• Tl>e owner ol a $20,000 home would pay
between $3.50 and $6 the first year and less each suc--
ceed.ing year. The owner of a $40,000 home would pay
fl to $12 the first year and less thereafter.
l\'s not a very hlgll price to pay to keep the door
of educational opportunity open. Ever more students
.geem to be beaded for that door and that's the prob-
1em. Four of five high school students from the area
who go on to college go to junior college.
-'lbe junior college education they have been getting
has been a bargain. For years Orange Coast Junior Col-
lege District has bean ju!! about the lowest In I.be state
in spending money on tts students and at the same
time it bas held its own academically.
Failure of two override elections in recent years
has meant the end O'f many adult education programs
and increases in Class sizes which have made instruq-
tors less effective. But still eve-ry student bas been giv·
en a chance at education.
Ji'allure of the bond issue will shut the door on the
chances of many thousands· of aspiring students.
The World Stands Helpless
Revolted as it has not been since Russia's 1956
subjugation of .Hungary, world opinion -_not just west-
ern opinion -bas rallied to CzechosJova.IUa's cause.
Unlike the pre-World War II period of Hitler's ag-
gressions, a direct confrontation between great powers
wouJd tnevi.tably involve use of nuclear weapons.
Using them would be suicide for eitll~r side. So the
world, including some equally revolt'ed Communist
countries and parties, 1tands helpless to counter Rus·
6ia's brut.al attack.
The only apparent hope for a Russian policy rever·
sai rem with the Soviets' realization that tt:iey are do--
ing themselves more harm through loss &f power or
prestige within the Red bloc than they can poosibly
gain in little Czechoslovakia. H
Naive, Childish, Sytnbol-Worshiping Czechs Have
Less Capaci ty
To Compete
Today We Have Hippies
By 6 EORGE R. HOFF, PhD • .,..
A rebel without a cause K nothing
more than a disgruntled, negativ'
obstruationist who hampers his own
fulfillment, not to menOm the needs
and goals <:I. 1hoae who are con·
scientiously attem~ to make crome
kind of eense out of their own Jives.
Where~ tile angr:y young me,i:i of the
1950'a? They have £rown older and
now are the irritable, a:mtrary mieri. of
the 1960's. What have ttiey done for
themselves or for the sodety against
wbicll t!iey opoko IO vehemAlntly Bild
eloquently? Nolblog, really! Their
voices ha~ been lost, not in the
wildemem, but in ~ vawum o£ their
empty and trite slogans.
TODAY WE RAVE hippies -naive,
childish, eymbol..wonJilping, ritual·
loving ezponents ~ a fata!istio
pmJooopliy whidi oltempls to reduce
the essence Of human exiistenoe to a
fotr letter word1 LOVE . They
despe?'ately 12')' lo igno<e tl>e fact that
humans are multidimensional. After
all, lo explore o'1d attempt to un-
derstand the ccunp1ex!ities, paradoxes,
polarities, nuances and varied facets
of existence is bard and frustrating
work.
They want to leave the hard worlc
and frustration t.o tbe.$tuffy scientim,
pbilosopbm ""'1 lheologians "110
•
aren't ''l!ree" enough to recognize that
all this sad world needs i3 more love.
FURTHERMORE, they refuse to
acknowledge all Of reality. lnstead,
they pretend that if only everyooe
would love everyone else, Utopia
woutd result. They would like to have
a world handed to them in which there
is heaven without hell, good and no
bad, li"eedom without restriction, hap·
pines! but never sadness, health and
no sickness, pleasure exclusive of
pain, etc.
They wish to Oblit.eMte a large
measure of how things really are, and
hold the delusion that the world is a
place of perpetua1 fresh air, blue sky,
and fluffy, white clouds. 'llley say to
each other, "Whenever it rains, let's
wrthdr.aw into oumelves and pretend
that we can hibernate until sprtng
comes again."
THE PROBLEM IS, of course. that
a human can't naturally hibernate like
a bear. Even to approximate hlbema·
tian, ~must linduce an artificial state
of insensitivity and reality distortioo
by using one drug or another. Then,
while indulging in idyllic fantasy, hf:
apeots the more mundane and
unenlightened segmenta of society t'O
satisfy Im basic needs arid take care
of him. He expresses righteous in·
d.ignat:ion when the power structure -
the establi&funent, if you will -which
he believes ii too up-tight to ae:cept
and support his passive, inactive
search for authenticity, doesn't spoon.
feed him while he pJ.ays. philosopher.
HUMANS CAN easily ta 1 k
themselves into or out of anything. It
is increaiingly clear that hippies have
not only sold them&elves a bill of
goods, they are also explaining their
cop-out by rationalizing that they are
searching for new meaning in being
human.
What they fail to appreciate,
however, b that the longer they ride
free, the longer they sit on t.beir duffs
and soorn those who, in their own way,
are attempting to improve the at.ate of
man, the more they will find
themselves losing self-respect. Hippies
really can't be happy until they either
pay for their ride or do some driving
tilemselves.
A rebel WITH a cause, and the
courage to be committed to it
regardless of the work Involved, can
become a major force in reconstruc-
ting ia more sane IOcial order.
They Can't Repudiate LBJ
WASHINGTQN -A pecu,llar kind of
tunnel vision afflicts those Democratic
elements Who think their party can
blithely repudiate or discredit the
Johruon Admini.stration1s policy in the
Vietnam war.
If ttley were to look to either side of
their tunneled view they would see
ample evidence that such a repudiat·
ion or discreditation could have sensa-
tional resulU.
Such men as Defense Sec. Clark M.
Clifford and Sec. oC State Dean Rusk
would have tlo ask themselves il they
could in good ccnscience support a
Democratic preJiidential nominee rllfl·
ning on a pl:aitlonn that made tbMI out
to be fools or knaves.
Nor would President Johnson be ex-
empt from &elf·lnten-ogation on this
point. There are 6igns of a slow burn
in the Johnson Ad.m.Krlstration over the
shilly-sballying t.o which Vic:e Presi·
dent Humphrey has exposed· tiimself
G4 the Vietnam jssue.
THOSE WHO TIIREATEN to leave
the convention irl Chicago next week
unless the Democratic conventioo
repudiat.el the Johnson war policy ap·
pareDtl.y Mve Oven no thought to
others wtio would go hOme and was~
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Friday, August 23, 1968
T1u edieorlal page of tht Dail-11
Pilot •e•kl to inform and 1tim-
ulaU rt4dtr1 bll presenting tJW
MIDlj)dJ)tf"'I opini07u: and com.
""1JfarV °" iopfct of fntereat
ond ilgmficonce, bv protrldl1111 •
forvm for Us.t czpre11fon of
our rcqdnr opfnionl, and b11
prcunlino Ui. div1ri1 vit'w-
,,.W. of mf.,....i ob1<111<T1
ond "'°""""" on lopla of U.. daJ,
Robert N. Weed, l'ublkber
J
their hands of a Democratic nominee w terrified of defeat that he wou{d
compromise his previous convictions.
This is tllie result of Ule limited focus
of that minority (as confirmed by
publie: opinion polls ) who wish to stop
the bombing unilaterally, invite the
Communist Viet Cong into a coalition
government and liquidate the war.
These elements of opinion have
deluded themselves into tlUnking that
they represent the majority. They
have talked themselves int-0 believing
there would be nothing but favorable
consequences from wiping all vet;tiges
of the Johnson Administration from
tbe face of the Democratic Party.
THE FACTS fl.11GHT as well be fac·
ed by the Humphrey side now , The
chlef reason why Vice President ~tum·
phrey is in a position to win e first
ballot nomination for the presidency is
that he has inherited the delegate
strength whi ch otherwise would have
gone to President Johnson. There. is
not the slightest reason to believe that
V~ce Presidont liumphrey could have
demonstrated his popularity i n
presidential primary elections against
the late Robert F. Kennedy or Eugene
McCartty.
Jolumphrey Is now in his f11vored
position because Ute elements which
would hwve supported Johnson. had he
been a candida.te, trdn.sferred their
support to Johnson's heir, Humphrey,
These ~lemont.s include 11 large part of
organizt!d labor. big state and big city
pollticnl organizations and th e
southem delegations.
llUMPllR EV TS stamptd by the
Johnson Adminlstr ation. All h i s
drcwnlocutiom •bout being his own
man do not chan(t th.at. JI he L! a par·
ty now to Tepudiating not only the
Johnson Admlnirtration but hi:; own
previou.slY tl"pre&Sed opinions be 1.3
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likely to Jose face with the o n 1 y
elements at the Democratic national
convention who can nominate him .
All this makes the vice president,
and the left wing part oC his staff, very
uncomfortable. 11lfl staff hales to ad·
mlt Where Humphrey's nomination
wi ll come from. Gd would wish for
tihe vice president a great deal more
flexibility, <8lld a aepaMte identity.
This separate i~ntlty ls not to be
wanted tn Humphrey because a
niinorlty in. the Democratic Party will
not pennit it.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
A.ssembl)Wan Bob Burke tug·
stests that the Edison Co. might
have been Jess reluctant to build
the Bolsa Island nuc1Mr power
and d~&ldng plant had it been
named the Ralph Kl!er Island.
-8. H. R.
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Tht following report was prepared
before tht invasion of Czechoslovakia
by the troops of Rwrio, Poland, East
Germany, Hungary and Bulgaria last
Tuesday night.
-Editor
The American Anny has a
calisthenic exerd.se usually described
as "running d.n place." You go through.
all the motions of running, but you
st.ay right where you are, your knees
going up and down but never forward.
That, in a seme, is w h. at
Czechoslovakia's economy ha.'! been
doing fur the past few years. In a
world of explosive economic growtb,
the Czectis have been going nowhere.
'Ibe gross national product has re·
mained stationary or actually shrunk.
Ludvik Ubl, first .deputy foreign
trade minister, recently e:onunented:
"As a result of the big volume and
stability of Czechoslovak deliveries to
the Soviet Union, this country as a
producer and a tr.ad.er became used to
a certain self-indulgence that con·
bibuted to the general deterioration of
-0ur goods and capacity to compete."
The Czechs now want to become com·
tetive on world markets again and to
diminish economic and potitioal depen·
dence on the Russians.
MORE TH A N 60 percent of
Czechoslovakia's external trade is
with the eastern European satellite
bloc. Half of trus is with the Soviet
Union itself.
But, as the Britilsh comment.ator
Michael Simmons reports, more than
20 percent Of the country's trade is
also with the western industrial
economies. Exports t-0 them in 1967
amounted to $331.2 millioo, a decrease
of $55.2 million from 1966. At the same
time , imports rose from $328.8 million
to $.'69.6 million. "Nearly a quarter o{
the 1967 exports went to West
Gennariy and over $48 million each to
Britain and Italy. Western imports
came mostly !.rem ttle same trio and
from FTance and Austria."
Czech machinery is obsolete. High
production costs make C z e ch
mMu!aotured goods uncompetitive
abroad. Simmons quotes Prof. Ota Sik,
deputy prime minister in ttie Dubcek
regime and architect of the current
econonrie: action program: "The new
economic system must effect a change
which will entail new metJlods ol plan·
ning, changes in financing and
credlting. removal of s u b s i d ies ,
change$ in price relations."
JOSEPH WECIISBERG wntes from
Prague: "I have beard no talk .. .,
about overthrowing ~mmunism. but
many people here do wam com-
munism plus freedom . • . The
Cr.echoslovak reConn ts already a
much bigger thing than • • . even
Titoism in Yugoslavia • , • U the
Ciechoslovaks prove that communism
oan coe.xin with freedom , their nc·
ce!IS W'l1.1 unquestionably affect not on-
ly the tntelltctuals but the entire
populations: of other Communist COUD·
tries ••. Poland, Hungary, East
G<!nn>ey, and pertiopo ev"' th< Sovi<t Untoo.''
In tte talks at Oema. and the
Bratislava communique, the Czech$
showed remar.krable ~ to
Soviet milltary pressure.
---~-
Why Are They
Dissatisfied?
Reading about a musical comedy
star who has gone to Europe to study
grand opera, l wondered again why so
many talented pel'5006 are dissatisfied
with tbe things they do wen and feel
impelled to embark on project.s
beyoOO their powers.
The singer in question is one of the
brightest adornments of the musical
stage: Her voie:e is beguiling, her
comportment endearing, her success
full and justified. What need is there
for her to compete with opera singers?
Geo11ge ~rshwin was a classic case
of such artistic frustration. Tired or
the excellent popular tunes he tossed
off 90 easily. he went to Paris to
study composition under Stravinsky.
The latter was puzzled by t!he young
man's desire to write "seri'ous"
music, and tried politely tlO dissuade
him -but G e r sh w i n remained
disgruntled until his death.
EVEN SO GREAT a creative man
as G o e t h e thought lighUy of his
tremendous. literary works, and Was
most concerned with his scientific
labors -especially a "theory of col·
or" he was convinced would place him
with Newton among the acientifi<: im·
mortat.s.
"As fOr what I have done as a poet,"
he told Eckermarm, "I take no pride
whatever in it. Poet.\ more excellent
than I have lived before me, and
others will come after. But that ill my
own century I am tlle only person who
knows the truth in the difficult science
oi colors -of that I am proud."
NEEDLESS TO SAY, no.,.,.~
paJIS attention to the theory of. mlor
promulgated by the aU'thor of "Faust"
-who himself wias apparently
unaware that his own hero, Newton,
dismissed his sci'entific work and
thought that his Biblical research
would live forever.
Nor. to take lem!r examples, do we
read the "serious" novels of Con
Doyle, which he ranked far abov
Sherlock Holmes; nor listen to th
"serious" music of Arthur Sullivan
which he dloug'ht would ouUive th
fri'voJ.ous savoy operettas he composed;
with W. S. Gilbert.
DANTE ROS,SETI'J, the fine minor
poet, wanted also to be a painter, and
once showed Whistler a picture in its
early stages, wbicil the American
artist criticized. Some months later,
Rossetti' again showed Whistler the
completed picture, this time in a
beautiful frame.
"You've done nothing to it since l
saw it, have you?" Whistler asked.
"No," Rossetti · admitted, "but J've
written a sonnet on tile subject." He
then re.ad the lines, vA:l.ich were lovely
and tender.
"Take out the picture.'' advised
Whistler bluntly, "and frame tile son-
net."
'Radar Tracked Saucer'
To !lie Editor'
Concerning the Royce Brier column
on flyting saucers (Ang. 19): While st.a·
ti<>ned in Germany in 1965, at about
2:re a .m. from the angle about north,
northeast. and at about a 60-degree
angle, our base radar picked up a solid
metallic blip on the Nldar screen. It
came down at this angLe and stopped
at approximately five miles due west
of !tie base. I~ altitude was then ap·
proximately 6,500 feet.
It seemed tc pause for ap·
proximately t h re e or four seconds
then shot in a directioo over the top of
the base at about the same altitude.
Radar tracking speed at the base
when this object passed over was ap·
proximately 8,500 MPH and picking up
speed. As it did so it had a clear
brilliant pulsating light which was in
color a blue. silver, green light. Its en·
tire viston on radar from first sigtdng
to end w~ approximately 15 seconds.
MYSELF AND FIVE other lellO'NI
on guard mount around the base saw
thls; a few others also saw it. The sky
was perfectly clear, and not any
clouds in sight. This wa,, not a figment
Of one's imagine.don. It was reat
This radaT report soon disappeared
and the wbo1e matter wa.s under hush,
hush. When any of us asked about it
we we.re told to keep our mouths shut
or else. Then later we were told that
"'e were day dreaming and to forget
it. My friend in radar told me whet
was in the report later.
nu& goes tc prove oM thing -that
the mllttiary keep everything Jike thJs
top Sj):_cret aqd don't tell the public a
t11in1 but only lhot II'• gases or lights
on clouda. Bunk, I know differently. Jt
c11s_,...i In • pelfect 1tralght lino
back out Into )l>M.'<. Why doesn 't tile
aovemmmi teU t!le pu1>1ic t1>< nlh?
H. L, ENGLE
11 ol unteer Bu reau
To the Editor:
CongratulatiOl'lfi ere d'Ue the DAILY
PILOT for the excellent feature story
on the Volunteer Bureau published
August 19.
Judy Hurst ha, done an outstandiDg
job in tringing tx:i the attention or the
public the many facets of the bureau'•
activities, wbich offer gen u j n e
services to the eoud.y's agoocies, aa
well as unlimited oppcrtuniti.es for in·
volvement ro tbe part of the county's
citi.zem.
SYLVIA L. BOGEN
Boord M•mber
The Volunteer Bureat.1 providtl
cutist.ance to 65 aoendr.1, •ch-OoZ.,
hospitals and convaltscmt homes t.
Southtrn Orange County. VotunU•n
f'angfng from t1:1rt-cgtf'1 to grandpa"'
enti ore Mtdcd. -Edltor
811 George ---.
Dear George :
Today's scanty dte!iis I s
absolutely d!Jgracelul 8lld I
would like your opinion. Look at
all I.be go.go girl& I
SHOCKED
D...-Shocked:
WHERE! WHERE?
tb.
Ahem yes. Abcolutoly
di&grace!ul and 1 &ay tsk-tsk. But
I wilh JOO nuldn' do tll1l
before J'vt bad my second cup of
collee.
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DAILY PILOT %1
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I E BIG BLUE TAG
SALE •••
Now In Progress
CHRYSL.IR • PLYMOUTH • IMPERIAL
4201-WILLOW • LONG BEACH--
AT THE LAKlWOOD TURNOFF FROM ORANGE COUNTY
OF THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY 426·7 ~.J I 543·6663 527·2341 -. • .\ •
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DAll. Y PILOT
MILLION DOLLAR MYSTERY -Richard Bradford
meets an old friend, Yoko Tani by chance on "Pw1an
in a Suitcase," tonight in color at 8:30 on Channel 7.
His search for a hidden fortune leads him to Europe
where be picks up the threads of an old romance.
TELEVISION VIEWS
Soap Operas
Going Modern
By ROBERT MUSEL
NEW YORK (UPI) -The dartime serials are
beginning to turn their power of daily repetition on
such national problems as race and the generation
gap and while there are some who scoff at the in-
fluence of soap operas on the great issues of our
time Mary Stuart is not among them.
MISS STUART, who bas been Joanna Tate in
CBS-TV's "Search for Tomorrow" since the series
made its debut 17 years ago, is convinced the daily
shows are uniquely placed in the television firma-
ment to shed the most light where it is most needed.
0 We are on five days a week in contrast to the
single hour on a single night of a prime time
Special." she said. "Our audience does not forget
the problems we are examining intensively and
dramatically because we won't Jet it. We get much
more involvement from our viewers than the single
special can hope to achieve. And we can and do take
up issues long before they become acceptable in
prime time."
IT IS, of course. a noteworthy fact that such
delicate subject,, as abortion go-t their first airings
in the daytime serials.
Miss Tate is a sharpwitted, talented lady with
a slightly ret.rousse {tip-tilted) nose who sang and
cted in Hollywood musicals. She thought up the
al idea for the serial herself .still offers "valid
seful" advice to the scriptwriters, composes
songs and has other irons in the fire. She find s all
this activity a not urunixed blessing. "Competent
women," '1>.e said wryly, "turn some men off.''
HER OFFICIAL biography hints that she was
approaching stardom in films but the insists she
was simply an actress who worked regularly.
"Don't believe that biography," lhe warned. "It
was wr!Uen by my ex-nu¥>and."
Since she feels da.)1.li'fte: serials should reflect
what is really going on in t.lie country Miss Stuart
said that when "Search for 'I'omorrow" goes into
tts new half-hour format in Se~ember (from its
present 15 minutes) it would take into account its
growing appeal to young viewers.
''WE KEEP LINES of communication open to
the young who want to reach our generation," she
said. "Because we dramatize situations we ' can
touch on subjects tilat might get us thrown off. the
air at night. Unlike the documentaries we don't
have to expkftt a situation abruptly. \Ve can take it
along day by day and do our bit to close the gen-
eration gap worrying so many people, young as well
es old."
In "Search for Torno~" Miss Stuart is a li-
brarian in a small city whlch she imagines as some-
where in Ohio. Her television husband died three
years ago and after exhausting all the permutations
of widowhood the scriptwriters are about to re-
marry her. She has a teenage daughter on the pr~
gram (and two subteenage children in real life).
DAYTIME SERIALS are hard y,•ork all around.
"We learn the scripts in our own time," Miss Stuart
said . "We rehearse frC>ITl 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. and then
tape until 2 p.m." She has a photographic mind and
memorizes scripts quickly, a facility she credits to
her days in B-pictures in. Hollywood. "They'd show
you 10 pages of script," she said. "and , whoosh!
you'd be on camera."
Dennis the Jtle11ace
J
~ 9 ·ll
l
• •
PEANUTS
•
•
DR. KILDARE
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
MOON MULLINS
®
TUMBLEWEEDS
WHAT YOO DOI
WAY OUT HERE,
l1JMBLEWEEDSP
GIW!81N' A BIT
Of SOUTUDE.
Mun AND" "E"" ' ·.
MISS PEAC:H
'• ·. ~ ..
....... _."""' '"'~ FIOM HtmlllS ~!. 'l"CXJ'Rf llGQ" ~ t
AM, RWlK ••• IJO 50li\f •
THING ••• 'I!~ .• THAT'S
RJ!IHT •• THAMK YOU,
FRANK ••••
nwfll llOC a::w.IN9 .,.,
frAM! PO 'IOI MINP Ill WI
PIM MJOINP FOi A NW
1'1MUTH to TMtJ
't CAM T'AlKf
.:.-·--k ---
fvTV~E
13USiNESWE/'l
of AM~~IC/i
·.AND ~TEVER T><E l'RO!>JC.T YOU
Pl.AN TO HAND!.£, TME ID£A WILL 8E TO
SHIP TMOUSA1'4DS Of' PJEQS A YcAR.
MILLION~, EVEN lllU.IONf IF p0SSl!ll£.-
Mf£r
rlE~f
•
ly Charles M. Sdilll
ly Ga Arriola
ly Harold Le Dom
1 THltOC MCIE OF nte llfJUCE«S THAN
I PO MY OWi FAMILY, SAM! TWA.IS WHY IT\ IO MAU TO TELL 'IOI! l'MAT I
MAW OM lltt MINP •• eur I ~'T
W"MT to tff THEM IREA.IC llP '
ly Ferd Johnson
tT1S NICe "TH.AT-n-IE
fft>EAAL <:io\lf~NMfNT
15 50 MANl>Y.
ly Tom K. Ryan
ly Al Smith
ly Men
OKAY,
8UT SUPPOSE THf"
BCTTOM1'ALU OUT
OF Tl<E MAl!'KET
f'Dll. SAND 7
•
fRIOt.Y
AUOUIT 21
I ~ t.,".TVf'1'.1
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:or:,t ,_,,,, t<I "'h '~""I "" ft~=-•~ tel ' Buffalo l lJla meat tht Houston & ~•CJ (C)
Oi!Mt 111 1 11vt broldasl front ......., ni.nt: "MlrtcUIM
lulu. TOlll it.Hy commenbtea. Joumt(' 1114 '7IMi D&llOfl ltlN"'I
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'9 utr1terratrlll trrvironmtnl ~~ '" ·---(C)
• MMk:le,. l4 (C) Ac1iM :: ~Act<c:, LM"
7;11. Iii m Cll hnhl1 ..... : (C) ind ''Ceab•h" '" ......... (~) W1lrer CB>MltL
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flriwe: (C) "You A111nst tht · s.111 .. ..i ...... (C)
Problem." Tht atory ol hoW tile JovrMJ tt Ill c..tlr ..
1111iv111ity tclentist ind tht f0¥lfll· I~"' IC'") ~ _ llllfll 111\lt ltaml'd up on ribl · u.. 1 u. ''"'' ~ r1111rcll ind '"'lopmtnl 10:00 ~ ~ SUmll Jf
Ill ,..,. ltlldllr ~ tti ::-:., k,
7:90 I) QI CJ) T1lt WM. Wi14 Wiit Mowit· (C) "Clttlt ~
(C, (60) SUrrin1 Robert Conrld (•Hl•m) ''5&-Joll MclttM, 5~
ind Rou M1rtl11. (R) Tilbott. Ii. (C) llO) Ill... ...... -,.i. ,,.$ 1C> 10:1s D llloftt: "ltlde • rw: ._.. ~: ) (60) ~i."=i (dnm1) '47-Robtrt Montcomq,
ftlllows t ntwlJ 1111rried «HIPlt on W1nd1 H~tlldrlx. l...t (C)
1 twr of colorful Mexico. The first IO:JOlft ::: ~ (t)
ttop en th• lt!111t1ry of Patrici• !ff IMlt ti Ille ...
111d Mlth1el NcCoJ or LOl Anpl• (
la Mexico City, wtiich brldrn !tit tl:OO!Q())MobJ Diet (C) ,.at, ,.-Htnt 111d futur1 with $1:ttu· • OO 111.._ l.llpl 1111111*
tty 11111 paltctl of 1111 Artet cMll· ( · •ml to be 1nnounctd .,..
ution, In fllltas ind bulllitf'itt alld the Ioctl stations.
h1 Mlristic bulldin1s. Other hilfl· M !HJ()) Tiii llll• (C) lltht1 lllf !ht !rip 1rt Acapulco, Gui· Anrd n-n: "s,111 If ..
1'1fj111to, P1ticu1ro, incl th• Procn· .. '
lio11 dt los Criltos. r • ...... , .... ::"'Iii Clrt ,,.. ll:JOSlRfE=~ll'== f1i"""" (dr11111) 63--Mnlmffiln H ir"cwle· (C) "AM At1JN1 Schtl~ie:':.!'{~ llomt" (~dYtnlurt) '60 -...,,,. m lll1run1 Dt Cny: Htrpht M1f· Lint, ROSSlnl Podesta.
ctlll DI CltY pl1ys seven cl1uical
llltdlons bp Prokolie-1, C.l'.E. Btch,
Hkldlmlth, 1nd othws. l\rTI P~Ot1r. .lwlltl M..ic.i
t.•8A111111 ......n; (C) (21/i llr) lZ:OOB)Un tint.• Mtrlao
BiMNy ll1tbw Ind Don W1U1 e1n 1Z:l5 0 MM: "ltM" (drMM) 'Si-
th• "'9 ICtiiMI 11 tht C.lifornl• Mlch1lll lltd1rav1 1111 stwli111o
"""" IMtt tht Otkt1nd A.thlttlcl '
11 .. o.k11nd eo1i..m. 11:30 B 9 m '°""' Qullf (C) IEI LI ,.......,. 0 @ (I) H1pptt1lnl 'II: (C) ....
1th1n H111is ind The R1ldll'I rUlllt m 11u• lllbboll ni.tn: "1111
Blatt Whip."
11:00 D Movie: (Cl "Tnll If ltiil Loflto
... Pl111" ('lltSllrn) '36 -Htnry
Ftflfl1, fftd M1eMun1p. Fllll toloi l
lllm m1de outdoor&.
II.I Nm (C)
m"' "" CCI 11:30 Q Miwle: "SKTtt ltrond lht
Dw"' (mrlll1ry) '4'-Joln lennttt,
Mlchnl tltdarm. Ga Ml-Nltlll DR: (Cl "The Hull!,~
Prilo11t1 of tht Junr11," "1Ullu1
Ar. Ch1lltnrtd." 1fl!f "M•ll• ti
tJile 'flofld: Q) Adlt11 Tllnltt: "Qun Moll."
1:9t 8 ..... : "CftJ Mttr Mld11l2'rt"
(_,..,,) 'S7 -P'llytlls Ill!\ Da11 0'1"""'· .. llft: (C} .,.ltM Cffait. ...
(t11m1) '62-f'lltr Clllhin&. "htnnc
llomelfl
fJ -CCI
l!I Anitl ft Monlllllw
1:00 e 9 rn Thi Lent .... tCJ 0 Movll: (C) "Mr I I• ........ (muslca!) 'SO-Betty Qnblt. 0 Mcwlt: (C) "Dm91 Alelt: ..
Moh1wk" (1dv1nture) 'l9 -H11117
Fond•, C11udett1 Colbtrt, m Opfnlot1: Wnhiftl\MI (C)
l:JOl!~(l)TM: Rold l1111n• ta Movit: "B1ndidl" (1dvlllhn)
' Robtrt Mitchum, Urwl1 TMta
2:00 f) SN M.,t -0 Mo,ie: (C) "'Pldlk ....,.
(1dYrnture) '55-D«ihu11 Ehl,
SUun st1pl11nl. m Coronet T'ltutnl: "'1111 M.W
Gun."
Z:15 8 Mll'lit: 'ftt11'911 ...,. (frt.
m1) '44-Fnncht:lt TOM, En1 tl•il'llt
Z:JD 1J llplenf 10: (t) Holt: JIMllMft
Jtckm1n studitS mtthoOI of lffhd.
1.!!i ind 1n1i,tln1 IHe.
0 M"lr. "AIHI tltt ll'lll ........
~1st1m) '51-Klft Dolrs1n,
fBChM •SI Cm
i:ao IJ hojtet Kud •rt <Cl r-,..
subject for Miss Moonrr ind !Ill
youn1st~ri Is ''ffow tlll f1ml(r
Wofks Torethtr.~ .... ..., ... _.. ( .... _
'!f-S!eph111 Mdtflty, llldltfd ~
l:"J tJ Dl1I M tor Mak: (C) frltl•
Norman J. O'Connor hocb.. QUiii II
lht lnt•fl'lfllontlly 1cdlillllilll )la
pi1nlst Ose1r l'lttnDt.
l •--CCI Cllllftr
Col« nt.h: IC> """' ..... rt0r1."
l<O,lnsld11/0lbiH' (C) · Hl1k 1nd Wihl (C)
Tlllt '"''..... (C) "'lolf.•
1111!)'111 " tM "°' ... "" Wind of IOlfl-C 11 ....... ...
by today'• '°' .... 0 CMrlll Cfllll .:., I V'JtWPOlnt (C) . fNtu11 (C) --·CCl"Tho'-htl C.mt 111 F~ thl Cold." 'flll
IOCCIU story lllf tilt Aftltrittll fMt•
bill Laa1ue lt.1turn IPICltl ..
motion 1nd bo11ttd u1111n ._
of AFL Super Sowl tum>-Oak11lll
and ll1nsas Cll)o--t114I ltltlf ...,..
1tars. m Yowr WK .. flllrl"" (q fD T11dltr 'II (II)
,.,oaoo cas ·--ICI Willer Crllnktlt. Cl Spe1kift1 fMr: fq (Ml
Newman holt1.
O @(f)AIC'1 WIN Wll'W ti1
Sports: {f) formtr 1111)or il•au•
oulfitlder .Hm1111 'ltrun II celor
eommentatlM Oft this CO'ttl'lrt tA
lht l ittl1 lttlUI lutMA WtrW
Serits, Tlli1 Is ff!• ?2nd itnnistl
strles and !ht 11111ts lrt lll•Yfd llt
HO'tl'tfd J. l1m1d1 Mtmerlll '1114
in William!port, Pennf)'fYlnia. Ctirll
Scl\tnk1I wm lit on ll111d bl ~
merit1tt.
E
l r1ndlill (C) '"'m llKt .......... (R) l•it•llflll '" ··-111
l :IO 8 T111 l it Nwa: (t) Citlt M--
trtJ,
I Atpb W«•.., (C) Twili~ b111
11) Cl) AFL fttCNn: (C) Llwt I~ IC111&111 CitJ. Tiii 0.kll_,
R1idt rs mttt t11t Ke11t11 City Qllfl.. m"" 1t1t
THE BOAT BEAT
Al•• ler.k1ii.y, ft1 flon•I 1•1rJ wi11ft1r f01 hit ••••••t• tA
ye .. ~H!lt, ''"'~1 the ti11t l.11f fir th1 DAILY PILOT. H•"1 tht
... ., f.11t1 .... •••""' •• ., ..... '" • ..,. o''"'' c'""'*" "''"''P'PI' ......
....................... -.-......... .--
Friday, .lUgUSt 23, 1968 CAIL Y PILOT 13
Everyone Has
Somethin9 That
Som•OM Els• W •nit-TUE BIGGEST SINGLE MARKETPLACE ON THE ORANGE COAST-PUONE DIRECT 842·5 818
You Can SoU It,
Find 111 Trada It
With a Want Ad
HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOii SALE
Gener1I 1000 General
HOW MANY
5 BEOROOM
3 BATH
home« can you lind with NO
DOWN pa,yment to Vet& and
onzy $3,800 to all others in
the very choicest O:>&ta MeSll
location'!' Spacious s.eparate
family room , ma.saive .fire·
place, tremendously large
kitchen and dining room
wilh electric built ins, dish·
washer and water 90ftencr.
Gorgeous deep Wp carpels
and bright huge bedrooms
w:ith closet& gal<>tt. 2 H~
B:alhs up and ooe do-Nn. It's
clean as a niodcl and land-
a,caped professiooally. A
'forced sale makes this un·
doubtedly ooe of the out-
standing buys of the year.
CJSTA MESA OFFICE
:.>790 Harbor Blvd.
545-9491 Open till 9 PM
NEWPORT ·
BARGAIN BUY!
J + Den ot' 4 Bedrooms with
l baths. Walking distanc.e lo
all IChool. and Westclitt
Shopping area. Hardwood
nooni, fireplace. large dou-
ble garage on big comer kll.
Room for boat or trailer.
Need& woril:, but our be&I
bey In thUP tine Newport
Sncti art>a at only $29.5'X>.
2043 WESTCLIFF DRIVE
646-ml Open Evo1.
OPEN HOUSES
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
SAT & SUN 1 -5
2301 Ct.AY Sf.· 3 bedroon1s
2 baths· top condition
2504 CUFF DR. • l bedrooms
2 baths -parqut>t flOOf's.
TH.E REAL ~'"TATERS 646-nn 546-1:.i1:1
SOCK IT TO 'EM!
Open Houses
THIS WEEKEND
k"i' tlllill M"d' dl...ctory wltlll Y•• rills WffllelMI ••
y•11 t• lll•11M ll1111tl"t· All n.. locotlo111 llstff Ml•w
.,. dnc:rlbed 111 ,,.oi.r cNtaU by ad¥9rtbl11t •IM•
wlwre 111 tff•y'1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS . Patro111
•llowl11t .,... lio11M1 for wl• or I• re11t are 11r9•d
t• list MIClll l11for-tlo11 hi thh cel•fll~ Hell Friday.
HOUSES FOR SALE
(2 Bedroom)
437 Seaward Road, Corona de! l\.1ar
673-0139 673-6015 {Sal & Sun 1·4)
(2 Br & Fam ily or Don}
1833 Pine SL, Huntington Beach
drive by {Sal & Sun 10-5)
(3 Bedroom)
*4527 Or:rington Rd., Can1eo Shores
673-9495 673-4978 (Sal & Sun 1-5)
*1601 Bonnie Doone. Lrvine Terrace
642-64 72 (Sun afternoon)
2020 Aliso St., Costa Mesa
646-3255 (Sal & Sun 1-5)
400 Pirate Road, Cliff Haven •
673-9200 Eves: 548-071 5 (F·ri & Sal 1-5)
(3 Br. & Family or Den)
393 Visla Baya. Back Bay, Npt Bch
642-4353 _!Fri & Sal 1-5)
3060 Country Club Dr. (MeEia Verde) C.M.
646-8811 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
223 Ocean View, Newport Heights
675-5726 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
2082 Valley Rd. (O<ff Victoria) C.M.
646-8811 (Sat 1-5)
1712 Tr adewi.nds, Baycrest
642-7777 (Sal & Sun 1-5)
929 Via Lido Nord, Newport Beach
675-4031 (Sa t & Sun 1-51
3099 Country Club Dr. {Mesa Verde) C.M.
540-1720 (Sal & Sun 2-5)
2301 Cl>y Pl., Newport Heights
646-7171 546-2313 (Sal & Sun 1·51
2504 Chit Dr., Newport Heights
646-7 171 546-2313 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
(4 Bedroom)
2146 Miramar Balboa Peninsula
642-4353 , lf'ri & Sal 1-5)
**312 38th St., Newport Beach
968-3623 c an for appl.
(4 Br. & Fam ily or Den)
2882 Stromboli (Mesa Verde) Costa Mesa
540-1720 (Sunday 1-5)
1934 Flamingo (Mesa Verde) Costa Mesa
540-1720 (Sunday 1-51
**333 Morning Star Lane, Dover Shores
642-8235 (Sal & Sun)
2352 Corn~ll Dr., College Park
546-6541 (Anytime)
384 Meadow Lane, County Corridor, NB
646-3255 (Sat 1-51
1501 Eton Place, Weslcliif, Npl Bch
646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
1842 Santiago Drive (Dover Shoresl N.B.
646-1550 (Daily 10-5:30)
2107 Santiago Dr., (Bayorest) N.B .
642-5200 (Sat & Sun 12-5)
1233 Portside W~y (Harbor View Hills)
Corona del .Mar
547-7041, eve 675-0907 (Sat/Sun 1-51
(5 Bedroom)
287 Sierks, Costa Mesa
673-8550 (Sun 12-61
(5 Br. & Fl'mily or Den)
1417 Mariners Dr., Harbor HigbJands, NB
642-4353 (DaHy 1-51
1350 E. Ocean Front, Balboa Peninsufa Pt.
673-9200 Eves: 548·6966 (Daily 1-5)
28-07 Carob (East Bluff) Newport Beach
546-7729 Eves: 548-0867 (Sun 1-5)
DUPWES FOR SALE
(I &2Br.&D•n)
601 Marguerite, Oorom del Mar
673-8550 (Sat I< Sun 12-5)
(2 & l Br. + Dan)
1351 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa Peninsulr
673-9200 Eves: 54U!le8 (!)ally 1-5) ..... *• Wemfrellf * ...... PHI Mid WwMfi ....
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi.
ltlOO General 1000 Gener1I 1000 General 1000 General 1000 General I 000
B/B Contemporary GENE'S GEMS B/B -9 ~ not ':loo OIJ
anJ Y~ Ur1/ Gxcilin'J
~LEGE
REALTY
Well Built! Bayfront
Wiii Last • Pier, Doa1J larl;e wwimmini;
• pool, 5 Beclrooma, rlln.lng
Orang• Co1at Property l~ne Norvell • Realtor) • * *
OCEAN FRONT
OPEN DAl L Y 1 to 5 PM
New·13SO E. Ocean Fr.
Balboa Peninsula Point TOR
quality built, 5 bedroom.I, 4
baths and den, &lJ electric
!Golcl Medallion homeJ, nice
kitchen. large playroom, ~
bar. plus many extra.1. Oo1.r
ble garage with t'Xt:ra perk-
ing. A truly bcautitul home-.
All quality throuehoul tnd..
lush carpeting. $99.SOO.
...
to live with. Together we can enjoy a World
of Happiness
Foreclosure
Good Value! rm , large patio, beautiful
ONLY $28 500 • cu•<tiUoo • ll«i.Wl. • ' Shown by appouument
The!lt'l Income Propertll'li on
Balboa Island
A fOOd neighbor la a
found trt•aur•
* • * Treaaur• Hunting? • • * ·w hy don't you call 673-2222 to see me.
P.S. -I'm a 3 Bdrm, 2 bath hon\e with large
Rumpus rm on Ocean Blvd. overlooking the
beautiful Blue Pacific.
Needs paint & yard work. but
here's a grNt buy Bl $.:.!7.500
with 10':~ down & a 90'7v
loan al 6.9 '/l, ir1terrs1 • Sh9
n10. include!\ e:ve1'Ylhini;. 4
BR. family room & semi·lor-
mal dining room. Good car.
peling throughout. Don't de-
lay on this one~
•k-.6 Zoned Lolli a.re Red Hot .
4 sold in record time. Th.is
"t>X t:ra Value" 2 Beclf'OOln Choice Sou!h Balboa Island
in good Corona dcl /'.111r aree. H~n1e w_ith fa~ta.stic Bay
is pr~ to b'O· Has well Vtew. pnvatl' pier. sund~
\anclscapcd yard, doublt' gdr-and float. 4 BR, 3 ba, ~Uti·
a;.:f' no alley, elec. door OfX'fl fully decorated. Move-tn COO·
er. Call Now! We'd kJve: to dition. Owner wW finant.~.
1 BR & den fot• ll Bacht>lor
Hide -away or a swinging
<.'Ollple. Colored 1V & Stt>l't.'O
included -maybe other
furniture !Do.
Don V. Franklin, Reoltor
3250 E. Coa st Hiw1y
show i! lo you.
675·3000 646-5127 Eves.
s 1.23 • OC'J.
.. * ... ..
2 BR Oitil'
Adel your own home.
• * *
673-9200 Eves. ~
ALSO
Coron• del Mar
Open fiouti e
2107 Santi1510 Drive
Bayer est (not leasehold)
OR 1.2212
Walk To 50 Acre Park
Also close tci shopping &
schoofs. ln1maculate 4. It.
familY rOom & rumpus room
-2260 sq ft. Outstanding gold
& blue long thag carpeting.
Ottered at Sll,950 • your
terms.
OPEN DAILY
140 South Bayfront
University Park •
Irvine Baycrest
. . . Home wh.ich wa.s planned tor
a ctivon·e s1tuaUon . ~rom?t:s both formal living and relax-
the owner to sacr1!1ce thL~ ation. 4 Bcdroon1, dining nn,
4 Bed.roon1 -21 ~ Bath Too·n· large acti vity rm wilh high
!louse a! a pnce below re-beam ceiling~. 3 TV anlefl·
placement l~SI. Cal'pet~ • nas in attic, sprinklers in
DraPf'S and Kitchen Blt.-tns, fron\ & rear intcn.'Ottl thru·
alS:O Refti.:. are included. out. Quality, carpets and
P'r'1ct> "'!':~· S'.J6,g:,Q. drapes. Room for billiard
675.JOOO EvH. 548.7962 Table. lmmaculatt':. Pt\rej
Other Tr•aaures: Rent
I block to Coron.; de! M.lr
beach. Newly furnished 2
BR It lam rm homf'.
OPEN DAILY I to 5 PM
135 I E. Bolboo BIVd.
Balboa !Peninsula. Bay View
Duplex: and view of ocean.
Ont> house from ocean. Up-
per unit has 3 bedrooms, 2
baths plus den. Lower unit
has 2 bedrooms, 2 baths plua
powder room and den. Also
wet bar and laundry room:
HUGE LOT
60' x 200' near ocean.
OPEN SAT/SUN 12-5
A beautiful 4 BR 3 bath Eng·
lish F1rmhouse v.·ith dia-
mond paned windows, heavy
low shake roof & stortt' planl·
ers. CHARMING! Formal
dining room. lg family room,
gracious living room with
lovely traditioncly iireplace.
Mazvelous p1ivacy in tb e
covered choreless patio. r-.le·
ticulously maintaint'd! Only
$50,000.
4 bedroom• -:.! baths.
New luxury Buccola • built
home (fee simplel. SJS,275 •
$2,57:> down to Vt'ls. $6,275
down F.H.A. -21561 Arc.her
Cirtle, near Brookhurst and
Hamilton, Uuntington Beach.
list signal North of Coast
Highway.)
Collega RH lty 546-5880
1500 Adams at Ha.rbor
!Near Cinema Theatt>rl
VACANT
Ready for occupancy. 4 BR
and Family Room . Room
for Pool and Boal. \Vestclirf.
$51,9".iO.
NICE, FRANCE
Bay & Beach below reproduction
Realty Inc cost Bl $79.500
2407 E. Coast' Hwy· .. CdM Shown ~ l f)pOintmenl
Ruth P•rdoll, Realtor
loo.> Westclilf Dr. 642-5200
$16,600
POOL TIME
Take time to see this cozy 2
BEDROOM home on quiet
strtel with immense back
yard with PL.A Y AREA &
POOL S4"parate. A litle paint
and yard work makes this
the yea.n BEST BUY AT
ONLY $16,600.
eosr A MESA OFFlCE
2790 Harbor Blvd,
S.\5-9491 Open till 9 P,M
EXCHANGE or SAL~
) UNITS -Beautilul house
and 2 duplexes, one new.
Will sell or exchange. Equity
$30,l:'JO, income $575 per
month.
BEACH TRIPLEX. one block
to ocean. Unusually high in-
come of over $liCKIO per year.
Can only increase in value
and incom~. Will trade
$?5,500 equity. Price-444,500
For information on these and
many other properties. con-
tacl
;,15.!)451
SHERWOOD ESTATES
by the Sea
T ol. 968-3036
Open 10:00 to 7:00 daily
Easlside Tri-level
Quicj cul-dc-.sac street. This
borne 1s extra special -ha!';
2 patios, a large Jot and
quality deluxe fe atu re 1
rtiroughout. Call now to stt
th.i s large home.
$34,500
Newport
ot
Victoria
Students. Apartment for sale
or exchange. $14 ,900.
INCOME
Charming 2 BDRM. Duplex.
East.side Costa Mt'Sll. lndi·
vidual patio, len<.'ed, separ·
ate yards. \\'ill take Jl)YJ-
down payn1enL $29.$0.
Bayshores
to/EAR PRIVATE BEACH -
O\armin~ 2 bdrm. din. rm.
on comer lot. w/w cpt. dni!)-
c~. ext:ellcnt <.-Ondition ·ASK·
ING $~1.500. ·
Cornmerc:ial
JEAN SMITH,
Reoltor
Income
NF.WPORT BEACH · l units.
400 E , 17th. C.l\.f, 6'1f>.l'l55 2'192 IQ. ft. air cond. Xlnr
,.. ... ..,.., ... ..,..,iiiiiiOiii I condition, gros!'; $8,580 per
yr. parking for 13 cars -
$~2,500 -Tern1s. Irvine Terrace
Special ! !
-POOL & VIEW'--
3 BR. 2 ha, rA, bit-in gas
kit, serv Pf'cb , dbl gar. par·
Harbor Hil;ihlands
-t bdrm. J bath, lam. rm. bit·
in's, elect. gar. opener ·
ASKING $33.S:.;>.
Dover Shores
Viitw
Magniticenr Vie'N home
fcatl!N'd In
Architf'Ctu11 ral Dii::est
OPEN DAILY
1336 G1la xy Drive
john macnab
REALTY COl\.IPANY
881 DOVFJR DR.
NEWPORT BEACH
(7141 642-8235
646-8811 quc-t flrs. Lov.· lease-hold. JO
day .pos.~. Smull. BUT has
(Open everything! $43.500. Appoint·
"C" THOMAS R.e•ltor
2'bt W. Coast Hwy 548-0027
Ncwpo1·1 Bch. Evr. 54;,..5643
UNCLE SAM
SAYS "OK"
""""'""w""o""nd!!!!!!e~~·: ... ~i ... ng• .. l 1 cuir'"oosH, Realtor I z:SP=W~Hi:::::-:::SP:::Ui:::::-S=H -c l
Buy FHA, VA • you
name ii. Uncle Sam
says, "valut>'s there,
price is right . ., Primt>
f\Jesa Verdt> area with 3
BRs, t'Xtra large family
room . CORNER wr
Westcliff
A dream come trut> -If you
are looking for the befit for
the least. • 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, custom drapes, new
dishwasht'r. new sink & dls-
posal .• Nice covered patio
a.nd Jhufnt'board courts.
42,!J'JO Easily finanC'l'd .
546-2313 646-7171
OPEN EVES.
THE~EAL I
ESTATERS ;
1730 W. Coa~t Highway
642-6472 EVES, ~3468
I) Attention!
Speculators
OPEN SAT lo SUN 1-5
123 Ocean View,
Newport Heights
VIEW 3 BR. 2 baths, large
play rm, patio". dbl gar. car-
pets, drapes, blt-ins · STEA!L
IT. $35,00'l.
w i ! h boa1 or trailer
storage. Pictw·~ your-
!l.elf under !ht' covered
patio, enjoying A sum--
mer BBQ. Full pri~
Summ<'r fun in your own
16:.;~ <."Ustom pool. f'inc l
BR + felmi\y room homl'.
SJJacious Jiving room, ~old
w/w carpets. heavy shake
roof. Spotless condition, n&ar
shopping & S<'tlOOls in Mt'sa
del Mar. Only S29.9.Xl . 11.S·
sume high GI Joan no CO!';!. only S2·1 .~ • low gov. Rmm iij~"~:{~CE
100.1 Baker c M 5'16·f>.140 REAL TORS . . . -S<ll>-4141-
\VALK.ER & LEE Costa Mesa I-----===~ lnco~ Dept. Mc. Levi"' OPPORTUNITY
Scenic Propertin
67S-5726 $16,500 (Open Even;ngs)
Just Whit You Wanted? e SiZl': 4 bedrooms! e Kind: Rambling!
• Baths: 3 (sparkling!)
• Game room: Great tun!
• Corn:lltion: Pilmpcred!
• Lot: 91 ' Frontage?
le Builder: Ivan Wells'.
9 Dining room: 12'x16'! e Pool: Large theatedl!
• Sunshine: So cheerful!
•Area: Best (~crest!!
• Price: $511.000 . bargain!
Ruth P•rdoll, Realtor
llim \Vestcliff Dr. fi42<1200
INCOME UNITS
1 BR Duplex , .. , .... $21 ,500 13 Duplexes .......... $57.500
6 3 BR Deluxe Apts .. $82,500
A Friendly Home
i" a good neighborhood New·
port Heights achoolll 3 BR. J"" be.th!, carpet&, drapes,
dbl gar. Only
$23.900 • 10% down.
DON'T MISS TI1IS!
Graham Reolty
Near NB Post Ole. 646-2.04
FANTABULOUS
FAMILY ROOM -
$22,500 '
Family room coveNI f!'rltire
length of home. Rich panel·
ing. lireplac-e. l bstha. King
1iZe bf!drooma. All built·in
dream kitchen. Sliding doors
to 1ovely yard 54().1720
TARBEU. 29fJ6 H.arbor 81.
4 BEDRM -$23,750
SUBMIT NO OOWN
G.J. or low dow" to others.
Completely ttfumiabed ~
ftde I: Olll. 2 baths. Quali1Y
ctll"Pfltlng. 2 padOll for ou,t•
dOor Uvhle at IU best. Bvtlt.
in ranae & ovtn. Emte
8!1.ed )'ard. 540-1720
TARBELL 2955 Horbor
BAYOlEST
106lt100 Come!' ftt llimpft
$29.~. WW oc~ for
N..,,,.... e<.cti """"""· Wolkar RNlty
:m& Via Lido 61!>6DI
for licensed ttal el!latc sales-
pcbple in well estab\i!';hcd
office, no t>Xpericnce neces·
sary, Training, prOgram.
Good walk-in tralfic. Y o u
have your own desk & phone.
Good listings to sell. floor
timt>, Top commission. P lcn·
ty of money to linance yoor
sale&. Call for intt>rvi<'w.
Young Executivn
Give your family a Jrcat,
dlive by these two beautiful
homes.
TOWN HOUSE -------
223 Robinhood Pl.
(o il Santa Ana Ave. I
2512 Davis Pl.
COSTA MESA • HUNTING·
TON BEAC1~ -Z. l and 4'
bedrooms, 2 baths, ooc and
~ stories. PRICED FROi\1
$16.~ . Good 1cnns.
SPECIAL!
Ocean View Hon11'
panl"llC'd livini; rooni
3 Bedrooms, 2 bathli
(off r-.1ontc Vista in C.M.l
CaU Rottman Rcalors
2199 Fairview Rd. 546-8Z?2
for prices. Submit your
2 separate ya.J'Cls
"'ilh lush landscapini;:
private rorner loceUon
OR.ANGE COUNTY'S in scenic
W. E. L.:icht>nmycr ReaHor
1860 Newpon Bl vd., CM
646--3928 EVI'. t.'734:i77
lerms. LARGEST llarbor Vit:111 llills
293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 WON'T ·LAST LONG!
GOLF <lxirse llomf'. Glow· -4-B-ED-RM-2 -8-A-T_H_ 11 $41.600. P.Xr term~
PARK LIKE
ing Spanish !ilr-n r.~ in entry, ~allery. din rm & kil. Es· $l3,7SO ~uick occupancy
posed bi>an1~. 2 RO~C'OU~ Qu~Jity earl)C'ling /, rus1om Call Jim Cobb
YARD $17,900 frplc~. desert /1 ton P . rlriipr~. :.! patios. Dream all 1'..'\•f'a, 67~1861
Jr. E:stalt":. ei7.l" lot, .l brri·
morns, 'l bl:lths. \\·ood b11m·
ing flreplacr. rirean1 kitcfl·
en, complete built·lns.
846-0501
TARBELL 5824 Ed;ngO'
Sparious ram rm. Brkf~! huil1 -i n k1trhrn. Jr. t:s1ri11·
rm. library. ~Ml ft built H11.C'd ~rounds. No down G.I
;iround beautiful open courl. nr Im·: Vown Non·Vt'lll.
$62,900, 046-4407 a.10·1720 ~~~~~~~~~!I TARBELL 2955 llarhor
BRING RESULTS!
SPECTACULAR VIEW--OCEAN and IAY
C/iann~f Jee/ -Aparlm~nl6
On W1terfrent Ne1r Newport H1rbor Entr•nc•
2525 Oce•n Blvd., Corona d•I Mar, Calif.
AMPLE GUEST PARKING and BOAT SUPS
Why Not Enjoy
The "Condominium" Way of Ufe
THI ADVANTAGES WILL SURPRISE YOU
You can purchase and get fee title -or le1se H you prefer.
ALL IOU. ha'Je WATERFRONT VIEW. All have two bedrooms
and two baths. -WITH LARGE PATIO.
YOU ARE INVITED TO INSPECT OUR FURNISHED MODEL
luy $59,500 and Up -"-e $445 Monthly & Up
l'hHe 6 73-1711 for further Information
I
B/B
UNBELIEVABLE
Only $26,950
Attractive l bedroom. 'l ba1h
immaculate home. Decorat·
ed in ~!lent lastr and
color. drapes and carpels, 2
f)fttios, gllt"dening minimum.
Nev.,>ort Shores.
GU.!r.m Evt'll. 548-6629
Bay & Beach
Realty, Inc.
Xl25 W. Balboa Blvd .• N.B.
Tired of Cracker-Box
Construction?
Then lhil ls the homt> for you.
QuaJity 3 bedroom, l bathll,
dining room. Finest location.
OPEN HOUSE
2CYlO Aliso, Costa Mesa
Thursday, Pliday, Saturday
& Swwlay I • 5 P.M.
JEAN SMITH,
REALTOR
400 E. 17th. C.M. &46-!255
Neat As a Pin
Good Eastslde loCllt~. 3 BR + d&n, AllM.lme 5'4 % loan.
$156 P .lT.I. Shown by 1ppt.
ONLY $22,2!0 MIZELL ....,.,,
543-""8
BEACH PALACE
Med 4 BR, l% b&, 1tep. lo °"""'-133.900. Coywood Ro.illy
qg W, CoA1t Hwy, NII
543-1290
• • • Le••e-Option
S:.!J.500 full prict>
Cu1r. 2 BR.
A-w...I ~ Total ot approx. 3500 1111. ft .
'A"'T';..... . _ ';"'!-Double garage plus enra.
parking area. $79,500. E:c.cel-
33:l Marguerite. Cd~1 lent terms.
673-8850 67J.9200 • Evei>. ~
~~I ALSO "'Ill Beautiful Ocean
front home,
Eastbluff
Everythinq
LUSK BUILT * Panoramic View * Formal Dining rm
• f"amily room
Balboa Peninsula. Just listed,
5 bedrooms, 4 batru, lara:e
living room with Deck over·
looking broad expanse of
oeean. f'ormal Dining Room,
all t'lectric home includliig
electronic oven. Many ex-* J Bedrooms * 2 Fireplaces
• Bt>1utltul yard
tra.s. All lu.XuriOWl lumittre
Included in price ol SU!S,00)'.
673-9200 Eves, 548-6966 * Compare at $43,500
Bay & Beoch
R.e1lty , Inc. EASTBLUFF
REALTY
2414 Vista Del Oro
Newport Beach
6'14-1143 Eves. 644-2626
2C".l5 W. Ba\Jio..i. Blvd.. NB
673-9200 Evo" 548-6966
$ $ $ Maker
5 Units, excellent rental are«..
beautlf\1\ Owner • Managt'r
Unit. ProPt>rty show1 attrac-
tive return on investment.
$56 ,900
THE FOX COMPANY
2863 East Oiast Hi way. CdM
613·9'1!fi 6734978
• TRANSFERRED •
Leaving Augus1 16th. Mu.st
sell 4 BR, 3 beth near acbooJ
& park. Low down. 6464414
NEAR HARBOR HI
.Dtlt• 11101 £statt
White eleptlanU;'! Dlme·a-Jlne
r11r SUN Nl:Vt:Jt SETS en
Oaaaified'1 action powl!f'.
~or an ad to sell around
the Cf('ICk, dial 642...5678.
,
Coldwell, Banker
OFFERS:
Dover Shores Exclusive
Exquisite 4 bdrm.Iden. B.ayfr~nt
with dock for lg. boat. Superb 1nter1or
decor, professional landscaping.
........................ $139.500
Patrick Miller
Dover Sharits Waterfront
Custom Spanish designed. 11' ceil·
in~s in upstrs, Iv. rm ., master suite,
rlin . room, wet bar, md ·s qtrs. Pi er
& float. . . . . . . . . $135,000
Mrs. Raulston
Ocitanfront Bldq. Sites
Rare and beautiful views overlooking
sandy swimming cove & craggy rocks.
We are proud to offer total parcel
for only ........ ,. ...... $120.000
Mrs. Harvey
Keep In View
The Newport Harbor tree tops & the
sea. Cleverly planned 3 Br .. 21h
baths. family room & rare tropical
plantings. . . . . . . . .... $61,500
Charlotte Long
Rent or Lease/Option
Or purchase xlnt duplex in best beach
area -3 Br .. 2 Ba. ea. -S250 mo.
or $52,750 -Upper Ir 23x26. all bill
ms. 5 yrs. old.
Welt.er Haase
Bayshore Exclusives
Tw-o comp. remod . 3 Br., 2 'Ba. w/
center patios & master br. suites, bit·
in kit. & t'A heat. Prl. beaches & boat
stwge. . . . . . . . . $48,500 & $46,000
J. Clarkson
OFFICE OPEN
SATURDAYS
COLDWELL IANKIR & CO.
2200 I. COAST HIGHWAY
NEWl'OltT llACH
Kl t.J>Sl
1 ' •
•
-
. ··r
.
·-. .
' '
: -~
'
,4.
Don't iust SIT there!
Grab hold of the
BIG action today!
Dial Direct:
642-5678
Just 1 say: "CHARGE IT!"
!North County, 540·1220, toll free)
IT'S EASY TO PINCH
PENNIES-EVEN DOLLARS
PENNY PINC HER
WANT ADS
NEW-LOW-RA ·TE
3 LINES
l TIMES
52.00
IN THESE CLASSIFICATIONS!
Fumlture
Office Furniture
Office Equipment
Stort Equlpmtnt
C•t., RMt11ur1nt
lar Equipment
HOUMhold Good•
Appll•ncts
Anllq-
Stwlnt Mlchln•
Music.I IMtrumenh
IOOO Pl1noo & Ofwens
IOIO Redle :g Ttl1Vltlen
8014 HI-Pl & ltortt
IOU Tept RHWd.,.
1020 c:.-rH & lqul-'
1100 Hobby .......
1110 Sportl .. OOocle
1120 11 .... 1 .... ._
1125 Mltctll1nMut
e EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e
e NO ITEM OVIR $50 e NO COMMERCIAL PIRMS e e NO COPY CHANGES e NO AllRIVIATIONS e
IUO
l200
l20J
1210
l220 .,..
l400
l500
USO
MOO
Let PILOT PENNY iflNCHER Want Ads Work for YOU!
I
' ' " I >
. .
I
•
DAILY '1L0f %S
HOUSES f OR SALi! j'HOUSES f OI SALi! • '"HOUSES fOll SALi! ' J HOUS ES f OR SALE HOUSES FOR SAll RE NTALS
Hou1e1 Fu mlthed
HOUSES f OR SA LE HOUSES FOii S.ALI HOUSES FOR SALE
1200 Corona del Mar General 1000 General 1000 G•n•r•I 1000 Ccn.ta "'-•• 1100 12SO Hunt ington leach 1400 Lagunt Beach 17051------.,.---1
Commercial Bldg .
$21,500
Selievf' us • It Is tl"Ull~ Build·
Ina r, years old • l 1ulleJ,
Owner will lea• bac* one
irulte &: alao carry l&t TD
for )'00. Located near 17th
le Newport, C.M. Pric• ln·
clllCb land • bu.ilding,
ReM.'b for your phone now!
Neve1" ap,in an opportunity
like tb.ii!
Newport
at
Victori1
646-1111
!Opon
Ev1ni n91)
lASTSIDE C.M. Homn for Tradt fU.2221
PRlCE LOANS EQUITY
You will love this attriilct.ivt'-$1!,500 Sl4,000 S5500 . oL.---bed SJ),500 $14,500 S6000 b' ouatomiJed uu-n room $21,!IOO SU,500 Sl0,000
ttwo bed&'OOM &Jld denl ~ SZZ,51Xl $12,500 $10,COI
home n e • r WESra.Jn $23 500 $11,500 $6000
SHOPPING ~-The' Biu Smlleiy, Prine, Ir Bkr.
master bedroom 1l elrtreme-
Jy 11Paciwi, muter bath has REAL VALUES
1unken roman tub w .shaw· J BR, l % be. ~ block
tt. DtllghU\ll kitchen w i I h To ~ch $35,500
IOads oJ oopboanis. Built-in J oa Sot, ~ dd Ma.r
Electric ra.n&e & n d oven. $6.950.
d!llbwai>her, dispo&al a ri d Newport B•ach, Rlty.
putone mixer. The pool haa 61!>-1642
a UNJQUE WATERFAU.
·Md lo.ds of deddng. Priced Co1t1 Me11 1100
unbelievingly low at only ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
$34,500. ~·T DELAY •
SEE THIS ONE TODAY !! ~LEGE '
REALTY
BY Ownci.r .. .Auomf! E'HA
6%. -t Br. fam rm, 2 ba,
crpts, d..,,., bi.tns, trplc. 960
(l)eyenne. 54j..7l'"a.l
1812 IJICHLAND Or, llrbr
Hlndt 4 Br 2 ba, fam rm, all
bltn•, frplc. $32.500 10% dn
Owner. 548--2847, 1~7n.2908
MOVE Int Nta.r new 4 BR.,
Mt•• Dal Mar 1105 frpl.. new epta. nr. tie.ch. ·---COOL SEA BRE E?ES 12~000. Opeo weekend•; m ~lul &•rdtn llllf'l'OUneled 62nd St. ()y,iner 6T"a-0144
by d:"cidng, adjoined a DELUXE Condo. View o(
bc1tutilully carpeted 3 bt, 2 pool 2 BR, 2 BA. 1'~1repl,
ba., home. Newly painted extraa. Sl'l'.950. 61~2.8(fj ~xt. waJldng distance to all I=========~
1210
Think of It , • •
4 BR, dinln& rm, ()(.>ell.I\ vl~w
beautiful pool, dl$<:0ver this
home for your family. ~
duced lo $.1'!,000.
Open Sat & Sun 1 • S
4627 Surr•r
Cari'•o H igh l1nd1
~~!:';!-.tehoolll, incl. OCC. Extra
bonus tor th@ lt.mlly or pro-
fessional man is ~ 22·,ao·
rea'. rm. or pr l Y. oU.
eod\plt. w/pool t•ble. Or;.
owner, 54.5-WOO
NewportHgl1. iiiii~iiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiriii j 332 Marguerite, CdM
673-8ile0
AMUME 5%.% Gt loen, 3 hr,
2 ba, fam. Rm . Mo11e in 3
wks. S25.~. 546-266'1
M•ta V•rd• 1110
Ch.arming
l Bdrm + Guest rm, t.i.mily
rm, lovely patio, lartt lot,
perfect condition • A TRULY
LOVEll... Y ltOME. $34,500
Drive by:
SECLUDED
tj)UIET GARDEN
" OCEAN VIEW Summer Rental• 2910 GI LOAN BY OWNER • Tempi• HU~ --------1
Owner deaperate wUl accept .14.'16 Terrace Way, 3 BR, 2 Ba L.AGUNA·Oceanfl"Orli, spec-
$2100 for Ilia ~ely :i BR Ii ele<: kit w/blt-io rana:• & taeular Villa, prlv. beach,
den home. Df.n beaulilully dlshwo.Jher, lge Uv .rm., hi.tat rooma, park·likt ~
panelled wi.tb mitchl.na: bar. fr-place. besmed cellmas. und11. 2 W~k• Sept. '$90!)., C
f\iUy Cli1')lleted. Bright .C:ep Le• oorner kit w/150' front. Weeka $1400. AllO Victm.
nving kitchen with .U lhe Landac.aped &: abrubs. Prlc· Beach Hoose, J BR. 3 RA.
modem appliances, adjoin. td r1&ht! $39,700. P.O. ~ Sept. $l!XXJ ,Qwntt. ~
in( tllmJly room. Onl~ 1t: 914 Laguna &a.ch 494-4726 494-4957 at 4~
VETERANS Sacrifice of Ho"'" "ENTALS MUSf BE SOLD! " We have a ¥uper iba.rp 3 BR Nl f Mod I H VI HoUHI Unfurnlahed home. beautiful],y carpeted Y urn e ome ew1_.cc;:..;..:.;.;;. ______ 1 with rove~ patio. <bance ~( Ocftn, 3 BR, 2: be, n"".''" G.ner•I 3000 ot a lifetime. $2a,500. No liv~ 11'1. !fooH! under nolicei.:.:;.:;;;.::_ _____ _
down • no mats. Must earn fin~ Ulcl all. Owner &Id FOR RI-NT
i750 moothly 10 qualify. LOS ~ADam Rt.TY . UNFURNISHED
LISTER REAL TY t..g Bch ..,.,.13 MESA DEL MAR· "'6 MO.
Hl612 Be-adl Bl., HB 842-663.1 una · 4 bdrms. family room. ptd.
' THE BIG ONE turn.
ROUGH AROUND Spra"'·llng 5 BR & den, Oe:I MESA VERDE . $200 MON'ra
THE EDGES Piao tile floors, Cathedral 3 bdrm1 • tamily room. All
But a little p&.int will make bean~ ceiling1, Mv rm , 'schools.
EA5TSIDE 3 BR u rgent1
2 be.thl. Family room, tirt-Divor"Ctt anxious to move
Mesa Verde
No Down VA or F HA
Transferred owner wants fast
actiM Oil this attract!'°"' 3
Bedroom and Famicy room
in II. quiet cul dt> sac. • Own·
er will pay JK>ints for VA or
FHA. Full price ~.900. -
S44 Aliso, Npt. Hts.
then call:
Chester Salisbury
REALTOR
Large Heatff Pool
Ea$Y 10 rna.lntain, Corona
Jlighlands 2 BR, 2 bath
charmer just $188.10 rno on
6'K contract with $10,<nl
down, no points. Open lor in·
IPf'Ction lo qualified buyer.
OPEN SAT & SUN 1-4
437 S•award Road
613-0l:f.I 673.fi015
It ''Home Sweet Home.'' Va· Sp'?illh !>)>Jc, w/w Cf'C)l.B, NEWPORT HGHTS • $300 MO
cant and will aell FHA and blt·in range&: oven, S3!,$0 • 4 bdr5. 2 ba .• Pool
VA and pay your coat1 to olfer your own pmt. M,iulon BEAOt DUPLEX· fJ60 MO.
allow for Pl\inting. Modem Rlty. 494-073! 3 bdrms ~ tfo()O 1q, ft . • 1 b!k.
place, FA beat, new carpels, «l'ea. Has net.t, small 3 BR
drfl.pes, fresh paint &. ifi; '••Ev..i""i;;;ii""i;'..icau ... ;;;5';-2833;;;.iiiiiiii• I 2 bfttb, family room al only
3 bedroom, 2 bath. Hard-• to beach.
wood floors fully carpeted. Laguna Niguel 1707 FURNISHED
vacant. Owner wiU 6ell VA I • $23,500 in Back Bay area.
et' FHA • S29.1SO. The Atrium &ady for olfer!
315 Marine Alie. Blllboa J6.
673-6900 SACRIFICE! PAC ISLAND V1LLAGE LIDO BAYFRONT · $4~ M
ALSO By Ivan Wells
3 BR I Nth, family room, G D •
fireplace. double garage. on alaxy nv•
.it9,850. Terms VA, FHA or Glamorous & distinctive, wilh
Conventional. a 14' beamed ceiling, tran1-
Wtll1·McC1rd lt , Rltr.. lucent roof. Ten·• tile Ooor-
1810 Newpor! Blvd ., C.M. ing & panelled wall~. Thi!
7>48-7729 Eves. :N8-6m thrilling atrium and the un-
EASTSIOE COSTA MES A
S20,500 FHA. W A L K TO
\VESTCLIFF CENTER. Two
BR Hdwrl floot-s • alley en-
lry for trlr storage. See I~
day.
HAR 8 0 R HIGHLANDS
$33,700 HI% On. 4 BR. :l Ba.
Convenient location • Marin·
e1's. Ensign, and H.Arhor
Hi scll00l11. l>t'Ji Go.
Colesworlhy & Co.
642-7777
1004 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
Open f;ves.
flXER UPPER
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
4 Bdrm. in excellent loca-
tion -1% baths, new car·
pets. Immediate possession
upon buyer's credit ap.-
pcoval, $24.500 with $1 ,950
down on FHA term&. Widow
moving out or country
wants offer.
646-7171 546-2313
OPEN EVES.
THE~EAL
'E S TATER S
A CHARMER!
obstructed vieYI are just two
ot the features yoo will want
to see in this 4 BR • 3 BA •
3 car garage home.
Two oI these exciting homes
are almosl ready for occu-
pancy. Make you!' choice
now and move in1n y(IUI"
sparkling NEW HOME be-
fore school staru.
Prief>ii S67.900 snd $68,7«1
.Model~ Open
10-5: 30 Daily
Roy J. W•rd Co.
~ Baycre&t Office 1
1842 Santiago Dr. 64&-1550
YOUR CHOICE
Veterans no dawn on either
one of the1e 2 homes. 2 new
listings -each 3 BR 2 bAths
In exceUenl condition. One
is a comer lot, the other ex·
n·a large inside lot Pa,y·
ment.s I either ooe 1
$150 Month P.I.
$22,950 ea.
N•wport
at
Victoria
6~6-1111
!Opon
Evenings}
Golf CourH V iew
Here's a tabWous big lot with
158' frontage along the lllir-
wa,y. Can't you just picture
your home ovetiooking the&e
beautiful. lakes & fairways.
C.oLFERS or WOULD·BE
G0Lr.ERS CALL NOW f()(·
appointment to H"e"!
College Realty 546-5180
1500 Adams al Harbor
!Near Cinema Theelerl
• A RARE BUY •
546-2313 646-7171
THE ~!-:AL
E!3 rATER.S
0 W N E R TRANSFERRED
Beautiful -4 BR 2 bath borne
with large family room,
massive double lireplace,
oversized master B R ,
gorgeo us n!'w nylon
* Pl..EASANT Clltf Haven 3
Br, '.l b• + 2 Br Ocean Vu
income Apt. $49.500 548-7249
Bay1hort1 1225
BEST Val. Custom
2 Br. 2 81th. Steps to
B1y Club, Mar ini, prl.
Mach. Brok•r-Owner.
646-6904 (eve1)
Wesk:liff 1230
earpeltng & fully built·in
kitchen. t:xce l l enr Wonderful
Balboa P•nin1ula '"'f3'&
Best
Peninsula Value
Ii! block lo Bay, Ocean le
Channel. Npw 4 BR Cll6tom
nn. Price !'educed for im·
mediate 11.ction, $59.950.
2146 M iramar
OPEN fRI. lo SAT. 1-S
Pete Barrett & Co.
2 BR 2 BA condominium 4 lldrms • 21,ii ba • pier le .Up.
Elcc kit, sunroom, many t'X-HARBOR H1GHLAN'DIS •
tras, 1500 d, trpl., garden $2'50 MO ..
patio. pool facility. Ex-3 bdrm11 • 2 ba. • nicely !um.
7682 EDINGER 1remel,y nice. THE REAL ESTATERS
842445.S or 540-5190 $39,900 &16-71n 546-2313
3 BR 2'12 BATHS c.u to,..· "'1-2'00 AVAIL, fOR LEASE
S.10,500 VA no down -F11A :nnl RiviC>l'a Really Apl 3 SR, 2 ba, crpts, drps,
$2100 down. 3 year old. 60 " S. Coa.si Hwy, Sn~ fplc. CdM . , . , , ... S250 mo.
IJO' Jot -biggest of the big RENTALS Bacbeiol' House, CdM •• $125
back yards. Shake roof, car. Hous .. Fum lahtcf House, 3 BR, 2 ba, CM $215
peta, drapes. Truly exciting CORBIN-MARTIN desl~ed landscaping, Used Rentals to Shar• 2005 Rea1ror:o; 67~166'l
brick fireplace with wll!not YOUNG h' d
panelling in living room & d . 1 •h=••1 dw/ohil · Costa Mase 3100
d I es1te1 o ave a y •are!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\ en, p enty ot wall paper, 1· · · 2 B 1vtng exp<>nses in a r. neighborliood • walk lo W tcl'ff
achoo!•. Prk ol to .. u " es I BIB 11.pL 54!1-39&4 1.ft 5: :ll) daily. Lido Isl• 13S1
$27,950 . 1or~ down. CALL ~BR & formal dinilig rm nn Unique Offerlrv1 3 MALE rollegt' ~tuden1s ro AVAIL IM iVIED. Mesa Verde
Lovely large &: rlean :l BR, MR. BLACK 54()...USl (open I!. Minny comer. lmmt11':\l• . ..., i:hare 4 Br h.se, NB area. $65 4 BR, la r liv ln& nn,
"""" tln. or ti ?G' beautiful I "· t l•t!'. nPwly decol'flted, Jl11>" HUGE gsrden &. BBQ w/3 Bd -"-4471 <« "t'l 54S-~l . f I d ' . t'Vl'S) Heritage RH ""'la e 2 ba, 1 f'p]{", 9l)acioul 80 . ..w ...-..;,...., v-mo. """ 11pattou~ 11.m tntng rm.,
lar\di,caped l't'QI' yard. This fessiona.IJy landscaped. Ex· comer lot . O:wen!d boat NEW.oPOR=-==,~D-=-cCA~(~H-bilt·in kitchen, beautifully
property ls zoned for sevt'nll Collq• Park 1115 i111ting 5~i% loan can pe •s-IK. Coata Mesa 2100 Landscaped ya rd. Yettrly
tlflits in nar yAtd I gives irumed with no COl!l:I. Only apace for 3rd ear, $89,00'.>. 1----------I lease S325/mo. incl water
ample privacy. Vacant. This COMPARE uea prices! 2352 t-47,900. R. C. GREER, Real.67~ty-2 STORY 2 BR. Fu1T1. garage,. IP.need and gardenu service.
is &'I excellent home close CorneU Dr., 4 BR, 2 BA p f Ba If Rlf l416 Via Lido •'"""'""-' , yard. Mature adults only. 673-3663 Eves 548-6966
to ehopping near 18th & 01:-$2~,450 by Owner 5\4 FHA, e e rre Y• Optn S1t. & Sun, 1·5 3. BR 2'tr bath~. l"lx_l8' fam· $135 mo. Inquire 331 ~3 E. '
angc. T"" SOC:OO down with nr scbools, sho!]fling, prof. 929 Via Lido Nord ily room: . with fii•eplace, l61h St. WEST Back B M~ 4
·J 642-4353 formal din1ng room com-· ay. uuern excellent financing. This landscaped. 546-6541 101 Ft. Frontage. huge patio pletely carpeted. Seil GI or 2 BR. Bltins. Fenced yd. BR. corner co~do.; balcony
properliY will not last. C&ll 1 A~CR=os=s~f'°rom=-=ac-:choo=01.°'3,-B"-r. Richardson-Purcell IBA Brookhon;t • Adams area. master Br. swt~ 2)i baths
now! Full price $22,499. 1~ ba, lge fam. rm, Har bor Hlghl1nd1 1235 :M4l E. Coost Hwy, CdM BRASHEAR REALTY $165 Employed. 963-1327 pan.elled Jam .. rm, frplc.
Lockh•rt Re1lty ' i;creened-in patio. with S4800 615-4031 -patio; exceptiOnal re e .
646-2301 Eves. 642-0067 down. $132.26/mo prin. &
84 ;:,'~·"-'~3~1 :;:~'4~l ·~24~4:.' ';"!168-~:ll~78;l;N;e;wp~o:;;rt;;;;B~n;;c;;h;;;2;2;;00;:1 fa~ilities pool services; 1417 M r. rs Dr CHARMING 2 BR, den, 2 pnv, adult/teens. $260 Mo. 5 BEDROOMS. ;,1. 54.>-47\3 a me • .. .... "'·"°·Owner"""' fountain Valley 1410 A,.;1. oow ... ,.. .. °' (2131.
$950 3 BR. 2 Ba., bltns, CtlJtl. ro ·Europe. 675-4234 . Winter Rentah 59l-lt66
Drps. Dbl. car. $23,950 Come Me this new listina: to =-=======
1
=
3
=
5
=
5
Ni« J_BR By OwneJ, 1%. FURNISHED • I AiVCiAlL~::,1'°M"M°'ED=.°'M7•-,-,~v~.,.~.,I TOTAL CASH By Owner 646-1492 be hel~A'jl y 1 • 5 Bilbo• Island BA , bltins, aoft H20, crpts, #1 • WATERFRONT • BR. 4 BR, lge living rm,
Required to rnovf! inlo this 1200 It has 5 Bedrooms, lam rm, 2-3 BR Units. Carporl!. Low drps, lrplc, panelled fam. 2 ba patio. spacious lam/dining rm,
large family home. 006e to _N;e;w;;;po;;;rt;;;B;;e;;a;;c;;h~;;;~~\ 3 baths. Ideal for th• busy down. Owner carry. Show rm., SC'reened patio, Jg fncd #2 ·VIEW", 3 BR. 2 be., tam hilt-in kitchen,. beautifully
shopping. •c h o o I s, and • family. week enda. 675-1900. lot. S2S.900 w/$2200 down rm lanclacaped yard Yearly
churches. Just put on the Long on Loafinq? 6%.% loan. CaU for appt. #3. PRIVATE Beacti. 3 BR lease $325/mo. u:ict water
market, this one won't last. Been dreaming 01 relaxing in Pele Barrett Riiy • Huntington B•ach 1400 962.1678 elle~. & wknds only patio. and gardener service.
1163 ""'t month includn tax· w 1 4 BR plia Bonus room. West-Mrs. Marion 673-3663 Eves. 54"966 ,.... 2200 IQ h of oustom es · 642 •353 •• and insu~! """ mont. GI Wan. $26.j()(). .......... LEASE < b 3 •· ti. clill home? Dretlln no more-"'!!!!!!!! 847 39&7 r. ......., execu ve
for this professionally de<:-::;;:: HUGE LOJ -type hm. Close to schla,
orated & richly landscaped Back Bay 1240 Sunset Beach 1455 Weostclif,ShopCntr.~1466
3 BR, tam rm & 2 ba home 60' x 2«1' near ocean. ----------;Coldwell Banker & Co by appt. ooly. R~f, req.
is designed fnr leisure li.v-4 bedrooms • 2 baths. OCEANFRONT Pri owner. 1211 :_ Coell Hltbw"' ' S350/mo. Isl ~ last U1 actvc.
in<', 15x30 It Vinyl covered With Must sell. Uninue custom ,. _ _, aN"'-c11111,..1t Incl. water & yd ca.re. AVIUJ
Immaculate -Early Amer!·
can. 3 Bedrooms, FamilY
Room, Double Fireplace;
Double garage, Work Shop,
Boat Yanl. Call for 1ppoin t-
ment to see this spacious
custom built home. $74,500.
THE BLUffS •
BEST B!JY
2043 WESTO..IFF DRIVE
646-7711 Open Eves,
Wooded Retreat
. ..., • New luxury Buccole. • built ·• 1<1 r-m1 011 1-1111 9/15
pool, patio with outdoor Country Living home (fee simple). S3S.250. home + Ap!. Top construc-1!"~"'\"""~""'~!!!! .... ~l ;;;;;;:--;-;:;;;-;:;;:-;:--,;;--:;::;:;I
lighting, completely fenced. N Bea h S3.300 down to vels, $6,850 l:ion, f"very IUXW'Y for lbeach 9 MO . lease Sept 15-June 15 $130, 2 BR house in court
JEAN SMITH,
REALTOR
400 E . 17th St., C.M. 646-3255
Lei's Join Forces
and Grow W ith
Our Community
JteaI Estate ProfessionaJg -
We can offer you 1. plett-
sant, active •tmosphere for
REAL production.
BOYD REALTY
3629 E. Coast Hwy., CdM
675-5930
Call;
Beautiful
Bayfront
Pete Barrett Riiy.
642-4353
tu see this ctJstom 5 BR home + maids room. Pif'f" &: ting·
f".X &lip. 3 car garage. Don't
mis.-; this if you I.ff" looking
for Bayfronl frontage.
Corona del Mar
10"!. DOWN VACANT
VieW borne. &rgain tiey.
South o1 Highway. 3 BR 2
baths, fireplace. bll·ins, lg
gar. 40' lot. Best of terms •
'52.rffi. Anxiou1.
Rltr. 646-3928 Evez. 546-fAfil
*LAC HEN MYER
Pr;cod Right $20,950
e ntA VA
• 3 BR + f1 m rm w/frptc •
• Cpts/drps, !>love & refrig.
Rltrs. 642-9730 Eves. :l48-0720 e KENNEDY
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
You can"l beat the'low price
on this beautiful )>l"ide of
ownership home. Four 1pec-
iot.ts bedroom11, 3 Queen siz.
ed baths. magnificent living
room with open bea111 ceil·
ings and restful vif!w. Own-
er tr;·ansfe1Ted out ol area 4
aays sell NOWl Only $36,500.
Su bm it your smaller home
on our guarantee trade plan .
Have you thought about coun-
try living in a spacious 3
bedroom home on a large
wooded Jot. ReJax in !hi~
co11ntry atmosphere for
Not leasehold $55,500. ewport C down F.H.A. 21531 Archer life. WiU ronside trade. Comp!. furn, Beaut. 2 Br, 2 carpeting in liv. rm, I:. ha.LI.
Charming 3 BR & fam rm Circle., near Brookhurst and 592-5478 ba, trplc, bltin kit , huge Yard & gar. 2 mo. rent and
2M~ WESTCUFF DRIVE
G4S-7711 Open Eves.
HUGE LOT
6<1" x 200' near ocean.
J bedroom11 • .l baths.
New luxury Bucrola -built
home (fee simple). $34,500 -
Sl,8511 dO\vn lo vets, SS.350
down F.H.A. 21541 Archer
Cirel!', near Brookhurst s.nd
Hamilton, Huntington Beach.
(1st signal North o( Coast
Highway.)
SHERWOOO ESTATES br. th• s •• Te . 968-3036
Open 10:00 to 7:00 d 1ily
12.1.000.
LAO
REAL ESTATE
:r.lO W. Cb.as! Hwy., NB
642.0344
1:•: $~;i~G CUtTP~i~~~SH • REALTY 3700 Ft. under mi!ISion li\P.
-· "ant1timt" roof. i Lee. bdrn\s., 3()'
·2629 Harbor Blvd., C.M. mlltr. suite w/trpl. Formal
din. rm .. lovely )iv. rm. w/
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION· frpi. Panell?d family rm. w/
FOUR BEDROOMS. Im-huge frpl., wet bar. S]:MlJlish
maculate tmne with lots o( lile floori;. cusL carp. & trees, shining b u i I t -i n 1 · Pro . .drapes. 58' Cov. pa!1<>. •
over51zed t•mily room on fess. lndscpd. 3 Car garage.
traltic-frett atreet. Large Ellery extra ~
covered patio & hul{e lot. BY OWNER 646-1846
Exlsting loan 11 Slh%-StU 1 ~""'~"'"""'""'""'""'""~ Iola! Ol" FHA termal: QUALl'Ji" cuslom buill home.
available, OALL 640-1151 Prestige .area. Fee land Pan·
!open eves ) Heritage Real ora.mic v iew of Bay
E5tAte. .froni apecia I view room •
QUICK SALE -Owner mov· can be used es guest room 2
ing out o1. stale -bring any BR. 2 baths, lg family room
rell600able otter! Fanca&tic bit-ins including ref r ig . ,
3 BR, 2 BA home with faml-dishwasher & wll&her. Elec-
ly room. Ex c • 1 l e n t tr'ic garage door. OO!le to
carpeting. on qoiel ah<eet &: schools. Rock bottom price -
m a n i c or I' d landscaping Easy 63 financing · no loan
Asking only $24,750 -may point.I . $60(X) down-S47.950
a11JWme 51.4 ~ loan. CAl.J.. full price. owner. CaJI
RAY GAULT, 5 4 0 -1 151 00-1819 for appointment.
topen ('llet) Heritaie Real BEST BUY BAYCRF..ST
.E&tate Quick Posseslon '!!!~!!!!]!"""""'"'-"~""'""''I ONLY $20,500 • J BR 2 b&th, Spacious 3250 sq. ft. cuot.,
Professional Zone nice area. Be.•utitul patio & profess. decor. & lndscpd., 5 OPEN OAIL Y I • S -~ ~~· N -• R b y ... ~11 ............. e garage. ew lg. BR. Xlnt Cvuu. are uy
JO'l-300 Cabrlllo. Corner San-c~hl in every room. at $69,500. S~o/o Lo 1 n
la Ana Avf'. OQ!le to 17th A1m1me high exiating &% % tranferrable. Not on leue
81. shopping •rl"ll. Dt1, den-Joen. $128 paymenb. incl udes 111.nd. 646-2828 I.Vea.
tal offices or lab .. exhibit prlnc., UN ., taxes&; ins. 2100 WINDWARD LANE
hall, answe1·inE •er 11 ice, CAlL LARRY BEAUTIFUL BAY VIEW
pho10 studio. general re-540-1151 lopen ~&I Heritage N. Shore Bluff'~ 2 ttory
..arch. 1 l1u·ge 4 BR hoo&es Real £stale
I 113 115. _,, ~-ld J Br, 2 &. 2.cxxr condo
on °1 x 10 avey.'""" NEW HOME Like ne"''· var.ant. Few bl.ks be rtmodeled ror 11.bo11e usts. J BR, 1'4 ba, crpll!i, drps, to proposed Marin11o. Quiet. L•on Vibtirt, Realtor _,......... ...... ~x.closlve, carefrtt. Under 548.(688 anytinte .,1 ........ a..-1er, range-, oven,
fenced. landsclped. .m:kt. $31,500. 613-4~
4 Bednns $23,750 642-""1 ""'"""· OWNER-Beoulilul. <>utom
No Down Payment * FAWLY HOLE-TO P built 1 Br. ramlly room.
LOCATION 3 Lge BR A fireplsce., etC'. S33.SOO. Lo 1 Batiu1, ktvdY <:arptling, _, l BS 1. din down or trade equity for b.tlll·in kitchm, 2 patios, no uen, ' iv. rm, rm,
hwd firs, t1-.i, bll~iM. , ~ .. ~ .. -"~·--~-"-'·-'-ll-4~91\1=~ down GI or Low down to ''"t'' ,. othrrs. 841~1 breeiewllJ' to dbl dt'd gar, BAYCREST -Owner. 3 Br. 2
TARBELL 1611 1 Bch Bl. I~ patio, }Ke eor Jot. BY B• .. family nn.; beautltuUy
OWNER $28,750. ~l3~ carp. & d r 1 JI e d , 1B06 DELUXE DJPLEX OWNER its,soo New ly Lttward Lane. OJ>tn weC'k·
201 • 39th St., NB pt.inted, 3 BR w/gar, tlO\'e, @rids L...'J. MS-0875, 5-iB-0970
Clow to Beach, Channel, ttfrlg, dr,,., crpte. Le bk • BR. I-Tome 40' WatttfronL
flnd Playaround. Ut,~ yard • p11.tlo. 914 Cmsrna New pttt. Ooet. Star.age
Gtorge Williamw.M, Rltr. • SL C.M. $45-«181 apace I: extru in.sidt A out!
573-650 OPEN EV~. $1800 On, $190 mo. priced YH 1i1nplt • B)> Qt.mer·
$1000 under •PJX"aJHl 3 mt. Evet. ~
CORONA DEL MAR 19 "2S tam room. Owner, BLUFFS Condo. Dlx 2 Br., 2
2 blodca 10 Bsc:h, 2 BR, 31Cli .ftoolevelt Way st&-300 bit. av:i pi1rio w/ gu
~~~-I RI~:, 139.~ ... -JO LOE. 4 Br. 3 B.t.. Carp., BBcu,. Salt/IM owner. •ft
U.UOVIJ.. V ........ _ drpg,, many f!xtru: l yr, 6" Sun, 644-Q.)7l
LIQUIDATION SALE old. 1% G.I. Looan. 0wn<r NEWPORT ""°"" 2 BR. l
ht Bluff, l ~ 1. l96A lrUCk ~ CMV, den ; comer, i23.500
• C9m~. 1981!1 Olryaler 14' ~,~BR.~~,lj~.,.-. ~p-.....,--,-,.-M-o. onfum. $24,500 furn 63.1-668.1
obost. 6*1149. >Ont lill'M.. Fttm nn.. trpk. DAJLY pn.ar WANT AD6
W'bH.t elepbantl.l Dim.-a·llllt 134,4ft0, Br Mm1!r M0-4'.ilJ. BJtlNG lU'.:SULTSI
.,
home on CUI de Sac. Occu-Hamilton, Huntington Beach. JlriV. palio, clubhouse. priv. cleaning deposit in advance.
pa.ncy abflilable for start ot I Isl 6ignal North of Coast Out of County 1605 beach, heated pool. AdulL!I. 232A, Cecil PL
school. $39,500. Highw•y.t -----~---No pets. $200 mo. See Son. VERY 0..EAN 3 BR 2 bath, OPEN FRI .. SAT I 5 ~ALE Or trade 2 Br. mod. • • • SHERWOOD ESTATES thru Tues. 1>13 Bayside .w/w carpets, fireplace, 393 V'.1ta Baya hse Yucca Valley priced V'I by the St• 1 lage -300 E. Coast built-ins. Mesa Del Mar
CALL Tel. 968-3036 $10,500 fq. $4300. 499-4ln Hiway $220/mo. COATS & WAJ.., Pele Barrell Riiy. Open 10:00 to 7;00 da;1y ~"'~"~·======if~w;:;;ATTIERFR~'iioOiN'iT;-:_:-:;wNimnit.;;, LACE REALTORS . .,...,.,
Lagun1 B•tch 1705 Lse . Upper. 3 BR. 3 Ba. ex-CHILDREN WELCOME
642-4353 ----·-----; tra lg. li11. rm .. trpl, ma1·ble 4 Br, 2 ha. home, gd Jocation,
in ba's; Auge rMtr Br. & Ls $235/mo. 3157 Kemy Lon.
Ea1tbluff ... 1242
4 STARS
Lovely Spn.ni1h Bluffs home
4 BR, l be, View from every
Living rm. Priced under
$40,<XXI.
CORBIN-MARTIN
REALTORS
3036 E. Co11t Hwy, CdM
67S-1662 . ANYTIME
OPEN HOUSE
SUN . I · 5
1301 Bonnie Doone
La rge Large Jlome
on 1 low low lease-hold
4 BR It. fam, 3 baths. $40.~
D•L1ncy Rtal Est1t•
2828 E. coast I-fwy., COM
673-3770
Cherming Pool Hou .. I
$22.750 for immaculate 3 BR
wi th luxurious carpeting
throoghout, new roof & de·
sired built-ins, & he.ted fil-
1.a'ed pool, Excellent loca·
I.ion near the beach Ii
schools.
Pacific Shores Re<y
847-8586 Eves. 897-4191
VA APPRAISAL
$25,400 • no down paymenl.
3 BR. '1-%. bath. Walk to the
beach. Bu ill·ln range and
oven, 1'"A heat, frplc, erpt&,
drps, fenced, land scaping.
lg cul-de-sac lot. The lowest
price in Newport West.
Village Real Eatate
962-1Ji1 J16 -8103
OPEN SAT /SUN
9332 NANTUCKET OR.
Hunlin&lnn Beach, finest loc.
2-Story 3 BR. la.mily dinln&.
DAVIDSON Really
dress. rm. Elec kit . 642-8989 fir 546-2801
• &loonies & patio. Adults, 2 BR C tta Furn
]
1 00 ""ls G7~S259 o ~. or "'" Unfurn, $87.~. No pets, URNER YRLY·FURN. A frame 4 br., mature adults only, 2070
u1oa11Y•• k>!t. 3 bths. dishwhr. 1lr blk. Newport Blvd. C.M.
•IAL ... Tl to bay• I blk. to ocean. S300. CllARM,ING Ex-Model rt.-.11 ..,.___ • n10. 206 15th St. N.B. d h ~~ u•--c.., 67!r-4169 e sac ome. 3 BR, l ba, '494·1177 · · carpets,drapes,blt-ina,
NEWPORT Shores, charming fenced. g11rdener incl, $235.
EMERALD BAY· An elegant 2 BR .• den, 2 ba. $235 Plus Bkr. 545-2424. Eves M6-949J
home with fabulous ocean Util. Sept.. lo Junt. Adults, Don"t 1, Sl900 d b
views offe~ privacy & no pets. 6J'.l.-6683 lhls 3 ~~ home pr;::; s.l°c:
beauty, spaclOl.l!I open ~m-OCEANFRONT 2 Br lower · t<I living rm deluxe kitchen . • . under appraJsal. $190 Mooth, ,, • 2 ._ _ _, duplex. Diap., gar. Avail. 19 x 25 family room Owner & breA ... 1asl rm, ....,....rms, c--1 15· wntr or • ...iy · · den 21,., baths "gaJ"<len-=11 • ' ~·· 3105 Roosevelt Way 546-3430 ' . 646-5832
tour" patio • $8'J,500. ===°'"="""''°"'"'= ;CUL DE SAC ~ 3 BR/ 2 Ba WINTER LEAtE. 2 hr, 2 ba, home -Jge. fncd. yd .• tncl.
LAGUNA NIGUEL -On the wilh lge fenced yard _on lanai/fam. rm. • carp . .r.
Terrac!' an attractivfiy channel, with dryer. 3507 drapes .. $210 Pe-r mo.
landscaPect home with fenc-Finley !714) 67H249 646-4ffi
Ed play &1'€8, 4 bedrms, OCEANFRONT 3 BR .. 2 car 3 BR. Townhou&e; Wn. rm.,
large family rm, 3 baths, gar. dean; i 275 Month, pool, clubhouse. Newport
exeeptional kitchl?'fl -~.000. )"l'arly Riviera. Children OK. LM.
TURNER ASSOCIATES e 675-1536 • AvaiL 9-1. $225. 646-1248
&fl No. Coast Blvd. BAYF'RONT 3 Br. l Ba. OLDER, Good cond.; untum
Laguna Beach (714l 494-1111 Winter S26(I mo incl Ulil. 2: BR &: dble garage, large
THE BIG ONE lllth & Bay. 67l-20U yard. AduUl!, no pets. Avail
Coron• dtl Mar 1250 Rltr. 2150 Harbor 5B, CM
Eves. 5">5142
Sprawling S BR 11. den, Del WINTER . Bay Beach Front. Sepl t. phone 5'.i&-9485
Piso tile Boors. Cathedral 4 Bdrm • 3 bath • $300 per LGE. :a BR. '.l Ba ., carp.,
bea_m ccUlnas. Uv rm, mo.9'l5W.Bay,OR3-6771 drps., bHn~. bease. ~am. 546·5460 llARBOR Vif'w '11 I i n e It
CUSTOM HOME Spanish Fplc, w/w crpts, --children or pets 545-88.1'1 Broadmoor home, "'The T~
ta) Home wllh !tie Total
Virw".
OP-n Sat I Sun 1.5
1233 Portsidt W1'1
Don Bird A56Qc~!es
547-7041 Evn. 675-0007
Cameo Shores
Spectacular V iew
Lcvely eustcm 3 BR, l bftth1.
pool. lntmaculale. l.mnwdl·
ate poAIHlion,
THE FOX 00.
61:J.M95 647-6009
HOME & Income: newly
decor. 2 BR, 2 BA .. 1'4
baths: 1•rti. disp.; dlb.
gar11ge.
Near FMhlort l1land
• 7Q2 A\'ocado. CdM •
ABOVE THE BEACHES
MllUon S View tmm 1780 IQ.
It of roof deck. CU1tom ce-
ment Nock 2 B"t'. 2 bl. By
0 w n e r S69JXX). 546-8693.
* 5'13-4953 *
MUST SEU. WlllWnl:burg 4
BR. Mn, ram nn. pool +
rental a BR, OX>. Nr sd\ls
&. bch. se.8,000. By cwntr.
m.ml
,.
V~ry spaciotis 3 BR 2 bath
with huge separate h1m ily
room, wet her Ir: 2 tlreplae·
es. BuiH on 2 tree-shaded
1ot8. A lot of hou!e for only
$28,500.
P aul Jon •• Re1 lty
847-1266 1::ve!. 847-6978
Vacant 5 Be~room
bit-In range Ir: oven. $31,950 • Bayshore s 2225 ===="=====I
n t l e r yoW" dov.'n mt. N rt le h 3200 Mission Rlty. 494-0731 . 4 BR, 3 BA., Privale com. •wpo IC
OPEN SUN 1-5 m""tly • .. sch. Sept.J""' 3 BDRM • Fam•y Room. S280. 642-5211 Lease or Leaee/Oplion $38(;
l3'l LA Brea St. mooth including gardner.
North-end • Dll'PLEX Balboa ~300
View, $35,900 4 BDRM I. l>Pl'I or ~
McCann Pros-r tles PENINSUl.A. Winter or BDRM. s.~ mooth ln-
12l7 So. O:Ni&t Blvd. Yearly.. Bayfront, P 1 • r ' cluding eardener. No ~11.
Laguna Btt1ch -491-5997 llOAI. 5 Br. 4 ba. 2 t~cea.
UNSURPA$ED VlEW whr/dryr, displ. 1st Ous. 2 BDRM Apt. Ot-tUI v i .. w
wilh 3 OOths. lovely ya.rQ I South • -........ 61J...2039 $200 month. No dlildnn or
Very dffil'l!)le •re111. '""""•-·· ............ 1t Blk J BR, 2 S., Own-Your-Own PENINSULA ~n • ~ ptts. HA.F FDAL REAL TY to oettn or bay. 3 Br. 2~
"Home• lo Mitch Incorn~" htxurioua apt., in elegant Ba. Yearly rent $235 pt:r Ag-I &46-32S5
8470 w butldJna on beach I-Pool. 1 iiiiiiiiiiii"iiii'iiiiiiiiiiii•• I itmer 84244m ~.(XX) Unfum. Furnltur. mo. Avail Sept. 3. 1: 11
OPEN 1-IOUSE avaUable. For lppointmmt m .1205 FURN o r UNFURN
W11Jk to bee.ch, Newport Wet! call .f99.346l OCEANFRONT 2 BR. 1,olle:ly • Bedroom View
low!'.!')(% GI, $174 pay1 all. I •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimlSllO mo Yrly 151!. Sm family Home in Dow!c' 'Short•.
J BR. 2 SA. lam rm, rock MAGNIFICENT only. 6'l5--098l Own« Y•ar1 I.HM WA mo. Call:
trplc, all GE kH, re:~. OCEAN VIEW LOT J OHN MACNAB. RWc;,
patio, crpta_ ~. $27.800. S!i.950 . M\aU, but ltm $JOOO Balboa l1l1ntl 2355 M2-lm
l20:ll Capiatram La., 11.B. down QaJ SM lA S4~9545 ot" !l6W839 Bch '(TI4} .. :1 IUfll BAYf'R.ONT 4 Br. 3 ~ .. BAYSIDE Villlgt, $115; 2
4 IEOROOM . dock. Wini""'· Avoil s.pt Br. 2 a.., .-. N!rfr.
rtrepltct-, blttns, 2 BA'a A: SPECl'ACULA.R OCt':AN 9. Cali 1: ~+t . ClrpttS. dl"14>H. Adults~
2 Mt ear11e. Call 84142-45 VlEW s en 2 BA m.soo Jy. No peta. fQcl, lllp; c:.U
or 213: 431-39'21 • <>wner. 494--47-$6 ' Laguna leach 2705 61>105'4 Afttor 4 PM
BEAU'1'lFUL 2 Bit. l•m. SPFX."TACULAR V'ew, 2 l1y SECLUDED VMY cnall 1 2 BR. Fenced blck }"U'd. l1SO
rm .. din nn. lfiOO 11!1-tt. Xlnt 3 BR 2 BA. f1m, trpl, dttk. BR tott11gt> rear rn. f!l"ld l mo. on l'ftT'ly 1 ..... Ill •
amt ()wneo, • $J6..6.183 ~-w/W ltt. ~ b\k bch ahoppi.n(. *4982 lfilh St.~
•
r.'-~!_ ...... ,.. ... ,.. ... !lllllllll!'"ll!l"IPllll!llll!!I .. "•""'•"""" .. ""'""""'"' ............................................................ ,...,... ............ __ ..,.. ........ --....-..--,,.. -- -... -•• • ... • • • • • • • -. •
~ I ' I
;,·
. !6 DAILY PltOT
~~u. .1ALS
H-Unlvntitllod Apia. Fomilllod
_ , RENTALS • -lttnlll• Wanted 5990 REAL ESTATE
Apia. Unluml"*' --------G ... ral
BUSINESS and
FINANCIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
and NOTICES .,..
_ _,_;;...~~~~-I -~~~~~~-
4200 Cotti Mffl 5100 WANTED'° tt:nt : s or 4 BR. eu .. Opportu,dtlH 6300 Found (frM Adi> 6400
NUTVlU.£, U.S.A. ii now SAMOYED, bl.lff colored,
Nowport S..ch 3200 Newport &..di Home ~ Apt. 80-8t90 after
4 80fU4.. 2 f>a. Catpe!tl,
dra.pt&. bullt·D, beaulitul
aardtn. Nr. \Y e •t c l If t
C.ellter. $215 mo. tnd w•ter.
61>-ll:lS
TEAC1t£R.S, 1v1ll. 8ept. 4"',
mod. 1 en.. a: 2 BR. fron!.
Nr. Oce1n & 1>61. Blbll;
dili> .. 1rp1. r .A. ht.. patio:
carport. No per.. Gaa •
water pd. $130. lll2 W
Balboa Blv,, Apt. C
2 BDRM •• epg,., &,is, bUm, 2 I ::u= .. ='"=· =====::. OWdttn OK. 2 Avail., $1\5
4 BR, 2 bl., pool, w/yard It
pOo1 malnmt~. $31S, 369
Vilt• Ba)'a Circle, N.B.
&U-3369 or S42-Si14
l BR 2 bathl, built-ha,
carpets througtlOUt. Step1 to
ocean. $..?00/mo yr l 7 •
Newport Shores 3220 1 ="'='-~"'~'='==~=-,-OCEANFRONT, WI n·t er -NEWPORT SHORES ~au. 2 Br. S150 mo.; 3 Br.
2 BR l Dt'n on ~an leue $11S mo. Avail Sept. a.
$190 C¥1-642-3430 96l-5056 I ====~========! WINTER R<nt&l, runu.b<d ' East Bluff 3242 BR s., b'oot. lAvelY view
& patio. 673-3(153
I/ I TEACHERS-Uve at t h e
Avail. Sept. lit Bnch. Plush 2 Br. Stei-to
·r.nr Bluff. 4 bMiroOm. lll'l:e i ..c°'co"":c:,c..' 11'--'-'6'-mo~·-rn-<963_~--
livine room, • dining room, 2 BR .. sma.11 ocean view.
family room. built-in kitch-$12!> Winter: couples onb
en, beaulifuU)' lan<bcaped • mrns •
yard and view. Yearly le1se
$425/Mo. Incl. water a n d
prd~r service.
I 67J..1663 EvH, 54&.f.866
-Bay & Beach
1 BR. $98 pei mo.,
utilities. Yeat'ly baN.
• 61~2256 •
Corona del Mar
incl.
4250
aruo.~
l/B
UNFURNISHED 2 Wroom,
2 bath unit near Hoeg Ho.
plt&I. Available Sept. ht.
$200. • • ALSO
3 BEDROOM, 2Mi bath, face
poot $250. Available St'pt.
15th. Adults only.
Bay & Beach
Re1lty, Inc.
202.S W. 'Balboa Blvd., NB
613-366.1 Eve11. 548-6966
~VER~Y~U&~l"!8'~l!"ba~dup~l!"ox". f
Bltns., crpt.11, drpa, pri patio,
1 blk/ba)I & bch. No J>EU,
yrly be $200 mo. 6'13-6316 aft
6 p.m.
Realty, Inc.
·29'ZS ·w . Balboa Blvd., NB
DLX. 2 BR el\fdio, adu1t.s, no
pet.I. R.ef'a. req'd. Lease
$150. Call 646-3580 o r
642-9470. lnquin: Mir. 1401
Superior, N.B.
t Bdrm Furn Apt. Ava.liable I ~-=~c'---~~~
immediately 'tll October 1st. 3 BR. 2 b& crptl, drpl, bltns.
Reaa rent. 503% Acacia Lrg yrd w/patlo. Pri rec'I
I ~rona del Mar 3250
Oli>ER. Good cond., unfurn
~}.Br I: de:n, garage, aduli.,
ORANGE COAST area • pool. $225 mo. Yr'a
PROPERTY' lse. 642--0603
67UWI UPPER. 3 BR, 2 BA. dub,
Rooma for Rent 599S
PRJV •• room. kit. prlvUett'I
for ttudl!ot tn lovely home.
Baek a.y Atta. sso. 542---lOOi
FREF; nn. A hoe.rd &o emp.
lady or 11uderit in exchan&:e ror 2-J bra. wtc. da.Y ~6
Guest Homee S991
REST home. lady, prtv r!n,
TV. tJpt care, )dry, r A b,
Exceptlona1 home. 610
Catalina, Lag Bch, CM-2425
ELDERLY ambulatory lady.
Private room. Loving cart.
Good nutritious m ea I 1 .
548-4153
Mkc. Rent1l1 S99'1
1 % c.AR Garai:e r1 ea r
Newport Ci t y Hall. $25
month Perron Rlly Co.
642-lm
STORAGE Garage for rent .
Cost.a Meaa. Clo5e-in, like.
new. 54S-3727
Garages for Rent.
Storage only.
• 6*-8226•
GARAGE For rent, .torage
only. Nt>w, $20 Month.
642-2651
Gllnat> tor rent
Olflco Rontal 6070 -·-. .--LAGUNA BEACH
Air Concfftfoned
ON )'0~/ AVENUE
DHk fl)aCe.t available tn
GeWeal offlct buJldtn& ll
prime locatJon ti:i downtown
~ Beach. Air coodi-
tioned, carpeted, beauUful
paneled partition!Jti. T w o
entrance1: Ftootage on
Forest Ave .• rear lt'&ds to
Mundpal .. -loto. $>O
pe11--month for •pace. .Desk
and ehaln availabla tor $5.
BU&ineu bOW'I 1J11Wuinr
service availli.ble for $10.
All utilltit'a paid except
relepbone.
DAILY PILOT
222 FORESI' AVENUE
LAG UNA BEACH ........
$40 MONTH
acctptina appllcat.loM fur male doa:, catona del Mar.
franchlae1 in Orana:e ~ 673-4429
t;y, Locatlon1 are watUng in MALE==-,s"1._.a-m-,-,-~-"s1'".,-I
Anaheim, Llawl& Bch., San. Rhlne$lone collar. V I c.
t• Ma, Ora.age, H1mtington Harbor • Baktt. S46-4501
Bch. 1 other are:u. u4.!L50 BLUE Parakeet with &dd Cub rtq. Fully .ecured lft. rolored b&JKI found vie W
vest. ahould return lit rr. 19th A M • . ~1&24 '
Call for •?Pt. &t2-27U or onrovia.
write to 1617 We1tcllff Or., SHAGGY Dog found vicinity
Suite 210, Newport &a.ch, l9fh &. Wallace S48-~
Cat. 92660 - -AOORABLE ~ kitten.
CORONA del Mar, E. Coast 9fO PaWarlno, CM.
~a~Ush:;a;~, s~: Lost 6401
673-7159 SEALPOlNT S I a m e I e
YACHT Sa\e1 Co. New sa.iL Female, Vie Orchid &:
power &. bkra. l:xd. water Seaview, CdM. Med .tu &
loc. AU/pa.rt. Box P-175 an& "M!too''. Plattlc fiea
Daily Pilot collar. Reward! 675-3233
•
Whadcty• Wint? Whaddy1 Got?
_SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Speci1I Rite
S Unu -5 times -5 bucks
lll Vlfl -"° MUSl IHt lllC6:
• 1SP
l-"""91 "9\1 lllW 10 tr.ii• t-W~•l 'l'OU .-&111 II! tr .... ~TOUI .,_ IMI• IMIOA.._ 6-> W.1 Of ~1'1al!IS.
1-HOTHINO l'Olt $All! -flllAOES ONLTI
PHONE 642·S678
Te Plmn Your Tr1der'1 P1r1dist Ad
QUICK Shop Barber Shop LT BROWN Wire hair fox t.AKE Tahoe View Lot Na-
Oleap! 16457 Magnolla St. Terrier, fk!:a colJ.a,r. Female. vada side, paved $12,500
Furnished office space. HOT W e 1 t m I n I t e r 9--6 PM An& "SUsle" · Vic ol F.ii~er cleat. Exchange for some--
SPOT! Utllitles pald. Pri· Tun-Sat. & &Isa Chica. HB Reward! bodys headaehe! Un it.s,
2 BR furn condo. on Bch
nr. Venice, Italy in exclus-
ive reson area. Trade for
local area 3 or 4 Br. home
or vac. lot or boat. 646-1271 vate entnnce. e Chickm Dellgtit e S16-SlB6 TD's, or ! Bier. 675-57l6
569 W. 19th, CM In Beautiful Laguna Beach 1:?ST -.. Gr_een parakeet La Costa Country Oub 4
Owner. * 494-8501 P~ while we were on Bd H 0 M E T R -A· 11 E ---~-~~-.--1 vacation. 1'.1eH Verde area. rm ·
Industrial Prop. 6080 BElER BAR 2 gal.I, business Call Linda -546-4418 if S15,00l Equity for CABIN
J yrs, Newport Beacti, offer found CRUISER or ? • 49-1-8437
FINE in<.'Ome on v er Y good her $7500. 67J..39J2 ~~·~=-~==~f-;-;;;;-;--;;;-:::=-;-::-;:;:deairable Npt Bch JndlJlt. =========!BROWN Alligator billfotd In 4 BR, 3 BA Dome. La Ha·
complex. No v a c a ncy. Bua. W•nted 6305 phone booth next t o bra Hts. Horses ok. 4: lJli
Perm. tennMta. $75,000 or I ::c=~=--'-"-----1 Albert5on'1 mkt. 19th I acre avocado. Sl.5.000 equity
Oiler. Owner 9tl-1368 (2131 CASH for 11ma1l 1ucces.dul Harb. Rew. &42-7890 trade for R.E., car, boat,
buaineu Newport • C.M. REWARD, Ladie:s bifocsl TO's etc!?? 496-2'931 eves. for app1.
aree. Prlv. pwiy. 548-2381 prescr glasses, Vic Gene's What do you think o! our
IU $4,800 TD 8
Tr<ide on 4 or 5 BR house
Nr1vpol't or Corona de! Mar
4!M-7508
20 Acres, c!t>a r, hi dPsert;
IC'vcl. nr YuC'ca Valll"y .
'J'rnde up for Income, motel
or aris .. or vacant.land.
0\VNER. 646-1615
. ·no petl, view. a•ail Sept 10. '~B~R~F~.-pl--,~1.,---,-_ 1 beach, "'fiew, dec::ll , $200 mo. , ire .. a u . no pt><A. Lease &42....Q36
$150. Agt, Al!IO 2 BR un-I "°'==--c.-ccc-=c=,,.-,= f~hcd. 675-439'2 NEW Soundproof 2 BR-2 Ba.
• Single -$20 month
64>-36t5
lndustrl1t Rental 6090 mkt? Lag. Deb t.lon 8/19. ''TRADER'S PARADISE"
Ocean View • Nr. Npt pier.
4 units !um, best ren;aJ
area. 5.)8,500 -take sm hse
in 1 r a cl e. 01V11er 2006~
CotU't Avl.'., 67J..6527.
LOVEJ.. Y Accessocy & Anti·
que sho[J, app1\"IX. S.\100
stock & flx(ures; trade for
!ale model car or what
have you? 67J-0."198
Ph::A1e 53&-948.i Money to Loan 6320 49(.6936 Drop us a card. Cla.ssJr;ed
:-NfisUt •Beacil, 001. 3 BR. 2
-ti.th&, $315 mo. G. H.
Acroaa tm . Coco'1. 1665
ONE 2 br, & OOt' 1 br, w/w Jn~e $185/UXI. 642-0239 REAL ESTATE, cpts, drp5. nr bcl!, AYail. I
2192 PAUSADES RD. Cl
For rent. 85x237
S350 Month. 54g..fj()l.f
__ .;.... ______ , n~ u.~ v· ho Dept, P.O. Box 1875, Daily
$12 000 ~· ,. .... ,,..,r iew mes Pilot Npt Bch C&llJ.
Avail. for good 1st or 2nd TO ar:a. Fe!11ale German alxw~ ' • ...,~ """"" -.. ,. .. ,. O.ner1 RobeNon, 1Uty ~2440 : '!"""======= : ~i:-ido l•I• 33Sl
now-ls. ~··1°1~ East Bluff 5242
A'ITRACTIVE Bat:helor • $85 Income Property 6000
mo. Avail 911/68 PRESTIGE Town Homes
M-1, 600 sq. tt., $75
2944 Randolph, O:>sta Meu
• 6'&5ll6 •
k>a.n. 1.3 yr tenn. Call Mr. hair Pointer, Reward . WANT Sony or other bat·
Adams bkr 494-fi650 549-0156 tery portable TV. Will tra<le
=========[REWARD. Yorkshire terrier Z7" TV. Low coosole. New
Real Est•t• Loans 6340 10 mo male, I~ Sunday viC' picturE" tube. $1131 ' · -l .BR .. 1% Ba., ~aut., ex.
; lite. patio: ~rp., 'drpa. OO . Brooks & GaV1ota., I:.e.guna GOLF Course Jot, 85' tront.
54().2286, 642-3.542 For leue, 2 br 4: den Ii 3 br Medical Groups
BACHELOR I N with 2 or 2~ baths. Gold 0 ••• _, H·"'--, North
• Adults. LR. $360 646-8)00 ap · e • r Medallion all electric. POOL _... .... ......... beach. Utilities paid. $85. ft-San Clemente Al't'fl on Coa!t
675-3153 aft. 5 Pt.1. 2-car 1ar. l\Cllt •tarts •t Hwy (101) Free I Cte&r 100'
L~o'-1-'•-_____ 6_1_ 80.RROW on Your Equity Beach. 494-5322 Fairway view, ll1esa Vei'df':
PORTAFINA LAGlJNA Private 2nd Mortg. money SIAMESE cat, Ir m a 1 r . value $?.!,500. Will trade !or
2 DUPLEXES val S:J7.~
u1 Costa ftlesa. Tr11de for
house or trust deeds. In-
come S415. Ownt'r. .. Huntington Beach 3400 $250 mo. x 100' Street to Stttet. Now
• B1lbo1 4300 837-871 Amigo Way, N.B. undtt 8u&ineM: Manage-
Panoramic Virw Uib FREE APPRAISAL & Brookhurst & McFaddm. unit.II or commercial.
Whlte water and coast· PROMPT SERVICE Reward. 531-3993 OWNER 64-2·2945 line viMVs Reputablt' C.Ompany 11erving .
426 Nyts Place Orangt' County 18 yean. LADIES preiCI'iptioo gla.sses * . FREE RENTAL BOOK m-t. I-•~ mo. Al> I d B Coron• del M•r 5250 .... .......... .,.,.,...
* 549-003 •
. Drop n •n roWH PENINSULA Point M!Tltet: OwnerSlip Ide a 1.
• 3.•.Bedroom, 2 Bath, Cozy 2 Br. 2 ba, car port. yrly to 2 BR., frpl., ba lc ony ; Don't disturb tenant.s. Put
Fireplace. Double Garage, desirable tenants $167.50. upata.in. Near ocean. $185. Offer in mail box. 1445 N.
Completely Fenc-ed. Lffse. 1544 Miramar, 67>1358 322 Heliotrope 675-36-ti El Camino Real (Coe.st Hwy
Laguna Beach Sattlt'!' Mortgage Co., Ine. & case. Vic 19th k
1714 ) 4!»-93&8 336 E. 17th SI., Coi;ta Mesa t.1onrovia. CM 642-2944 "!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I * * * * *
$181.50 Pl!1' month. I ,_B=al=bo=a=l=,=la=n=d===4=3=5'"5 2 BR apt.s, all elect. kit~. 101J San Clemente.
. patiot. very Ire rpool, $165 &: Pride of Pos1111ion
EXEClITIVE Type upper up. 673-3378 All adult community in Tu.
apt. on CUlal, J br, A den, 2 tin -100 Units full)' occup.
ba, alt Labor Day thru June Coron• del Mar 5250 It'd. Good retum1.
7682 EDINGER or yrly. 67J.7199 jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj.,Fitzmorrilll RJcy 673-9010
tw:z..f45.S or 54{).{,100 f =""'======== -LUXURY duplex, lncm. $425.
brand new 4 BR, 2 BA, w to I .., ~ old. ~·-50 yd"
R-1 CORNER Lot 50xl27 to
&llt'y. $1 3,500 net. Tuatin &
Cl.ay St. Newport Hts.
Owner. 64.2-2666
R-2. 60' x l!)' STT\11.ll hoose
341 16th Pl. C.M. 213:
"1-<1163
l LO'l'S on Santiago, NB
cash. terms or U"ade, Ftt
aimplt'. 64&-856S
642-2ln 545-06ll. Night.II LONGHAIR Grey female cat· =
A: wkenda fi'Tl.7865 642-ll57 Collar. Vic ~ Bluflll. ANNOUNCEMENTS
M TD , 634S Reward! 644-1486 •nd NOTICES ort91gu, . • 1
SAFE 12 % PER YEAR Person1l1 6405 Announcements 6410
$5,250 1st TD on ~acular BILL CUM1'.flNGS formerly Lifett• Health Studio
Oceanview lol Sold for operating tbt' service dept Hospitality is Our r>·lotto
$7500. PRyable 1% per for Superior Vacuum & Sew-FREE STEAM \\'!TH
month including 8%. All due ing Center, 1933 Harbor SWEDISH MASSAGE
3 yrg. 10% d i s c o u n t . Blvd, Costa ?i.fesa, i.s happy Open 1vkdys 10 am -11 pm
SERVICE OIP.ECi ORY
Cement, Concrete 6600
CEMENT \Vork, all type1.
No .)ob loo small. Free est.
H. STUFl.ICK 548-8615
e CUSTOJ\f PATIOS e
concrete sawing & removal
State lie. • 842·1010 Avallobl• ;mmodiatcly • Huntlnglon Buch 4400 ~~::, _. mo. 4 BR & furn. 2 BR .. 4
drpa bk IIlli trpl 1-BR. tum. apt. auit. for cp e. ,,.¥ ....... ~, W:crptg, ' -' c, Watt>r & gas turn. $80. 918 $38,900. Xlnt cond. 213:
fenced back yard, patio, H B ON 'TEN ACR~ 691-9575 landscaped, sprinklers, dble Palm St., . . 1 --~--~-~-
4~1131 to announce the opening or Sundays 10 am· 8 pm
Citrus Groves 6175 $1390 2nd TD beb.ind .$4865, ti.is ovro eewing &: vaC'uum 519 E. Broadway Child Care 6610
•,;;;,;-;;·.-;;;;;;.,,;;:;;;;;:;,I lsl TD payable 1% per sale:s & &ervice center. We Long Beach 1213) 437-70691----------1
.tatige. Leue $225. 897-2482 536-4678 536-4979 1 A: 2 BR. Furn i: Unturn INCOME ~ Home-Owner. orM'l~ Nl:.:;_CE_,:._c:,~B~.R~ .• ~l~bl~e<~k>-to'" from $150 mo. Frplea I Pri/ Exel. inc .. deprec/ ·tnvt 4
AVAIL. lmmt'd. 3 BR plU1 town or ocean. Permanent Patios/ Pools. Terina · C.On-Br. 2 ha. res. t().2 Br. apt.,
month Incl. 10% all due 5 •lllO sell nationally ad---ALERT, l\tature mother will TAXES HURT? yrs. C.Over11 e.xc Oceanview vertised 61.ereos. \Ve nope all Auto Transport 6445 give guaranteed loving home
or b1week222 8th St. tnt'l Bkf!L 9 bole PutV pool 3 Yr. old. 675-1393
.... goll coune home; yrly .=,:=;=:=:;=::::== [ Greon.
Soften the blow now by in-
vestin& In Real Estate. Pre-
pay interest for a writ~tl
thii; year & depreci•te the
lmproveme.ntJ whole you
own thl1 property. Try a.
)'OWll valenc.ia erovr. such
as "lhls 6 acres In a fast
growina: area. $45,000 Full
price. Terms to iruit. For
more information, call K. \V ,
Small with
lot. 20'7o distcount 4M-1137 our rriends will &top and see WNTD, ride Goldcnwes t & care to your child. 8 A~f to B'll ' A l · ain lo 5:30 Plll week days in U%% ~!ELD on M!!ason se-us al 1 s P P 1 an c e Edinger HB • Main & lovely home. Lge . gt"nc'd bk
tse.·$300 Mo. M2-2!l>B L-un'a Be•ch 4705 900 Sea Lane, Cdl\f 644-2611
3 BR, t ~ ba. Condominium ;::.:;-=•=.;;.:-'-----·I <MacArthur nr. Coairt Hwyt fl~ mo. on leue. NEW Furnished 2 BR 2 Ba -"!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!! i,~ · e 536-1!98'*' all eltt bu 11 t • In 1. ~
[========='-/ Panoramic 'riew overJooking Huntlngten S.•ch 5400
Lagun• S.•ch 3705 Al iso Beach. Mature •dult1 2 BR, 111,, BA, Bit-ins, only, no children. $185. MONARCH BAY ARE A 499-3755 washer/dryer, rehig., pool ,
VIEW 3 $150. 536-2«29 Call after 6 LOVELY OCEAN · 3 BR 21,S BA, all elec
BR & den, 2 BA, cpl.I, Orpe, built-ina. Panoramic view I ~P_,M,,.,_,,.-.,---...--,..
f.rpl , pool. $300 mo. Also overlooking All.ao Beach. 1 BR Condo, crpla, drpa,
avail. 2 BR. 1% ba. $225 mo. Mature adulst only, no 11tove, refrig, washer/dcyer.
11.dult1 49&-1243 betw 10.5 pm childrt'n. S220. 49Q.-3750 1125. 962-1489, 9&2-4349
LARGE 5 BR, 3 ba home, * JAPANESE MODERN * EXTRA Lg. 2 BR. $125.
newly decorated, $300 mo in-$185. 2 BR, vlt'W, NEAR Utilities paid. ~71Q2 or
eludini a:ardener · 54G-38S:l BEAOt. Adults. 494-3,j79 MS-0787
OCEAN View, 3 BR home, l BR rrpl t SLR TO
partly fum .. block to beach. BEACH'. near p 0 t t e r y
Utll paid. S175. 49!}-4055 Shack. Sl~ mo. 494-6083
2 BR. blt-iM, cpt.s, drps,
pa!lo, $150/per mo. 1503 C
Alabama St 53&-2014
Business Property 6050
Live High
Store Bid&-Balboa Arri,
llU!table for anything • Real
Estate, Bank, Fishing Tac.
kle, etc. Uving quarten up-
at:R.ira. Bargain 1t $56,500 -
will k!a.!t'.
BURR WHITE, Realto'
2901 Newport Blvd.
Eckhoff & A1soc., Inc.
1818 W. Chapm<U\ Ave.
Or11.nge, C.alil.
541-2621, Eves-wknds 538-5971 ======
Newport Beach
6754630 eve1: 642·2253
6060
P'OR Ren t: Sm all
Administrative Pro!~onal
bldg. $140 mo. 548-4476 evea
or wkendd
Acre• .6200
5 Acres for $5,000
cond tru!I deed. $4,CXXI cash . Center, 1S16 Harbor Blvd, Broadw'"' S.A. 8 AM rel s.
C M .,. m31 o.v yd, meals, all home ron-4M-75m M. C. Thoren osta eu. i1'I0"'1J' 897-D850 ven\ences $15 wk , 536-0300,
ANNOUNCEMENTS
and NOTICES
* ALONE? * Legel Nolle.. 64SO HB. •re•. CHILD care In my home.
WHY? I WILL,Jlot be uspml.ible fo r f enced yard, hot lunc~t'S.
Found (Free Ads) 6400 Let Psychological Sur v e Y any dt'blJ other than my $12.50 per week. SS each ad·
---····· -·--find the right person for )IOU. own. Clifford A. Berge ditional child. Huntington
MALE k 11 le n black w/ Information 24 lfn. a day. J \VIII not be r 'bl for Brach. 846-1933
whitt' paws & white hind PSYCHOLOGICAL SURVEY any debt.s ot~~~~an e my CHILD CARE my ?.1esa del
legs, wh . ~pot on nose, wh. 542-4776 own. Allen McL. Brnnett ~1ar home Night.s .
neck & chin. Found 16th & EXECtITIVE early 401 no 546-2531
Turstin CM 8/20. 642-2143 children, meet lady to age SERVICE DIRECTORY CHJLD cart'. my Dome. IIat
CASE 01 credit card.I found 40, no children. Enjoy sot:ial A h 1 2 lunch~ & naps. ~·enced play ~Laguna Bch. tht>ater. Call a recreational activities. sp a t, Oila 65 0 area. 5'IHS79
Ed Semling, 494-2508 lhru Photo? Ltfe time r~. DRJVE\.VAYS & Parking lots CARE for INFANT m my
Sat. or ~ l!'Vel a.JI. N.ewport. Box t.t.176 Daily reruir--' & ••·' -,1-'. '''' Sat .-n> """" ......... "" lovely Newport Beaca home · <Pilot t'ISt. Reas. 530-1413 57:.,5429
LADIES Bulova watch in tub PROBLEMS? Send $3 for QUALITY asphalt 1 t'a1
CUTE l BR, panelled, crpts,
dipa. New refrig & &love.
Blck to beach. $100. 499-4055
RENTALS
Apt•. Unfurnished_
S. An• Heights 5630 DELUX rHt., fully equip. ----~----Incl. neon sia:n, A·l loc. in 1 BR duplex apt nt'ar Pa.Usade-s Rd. $85 + clean-Ont. H.B. 536-1369
20% Down, l % per month
buys it! In subdivision,
Sllvtt Valley, near New-
berry Sprgs, 18 miles E.
of Barstow. 90 Man.made
Laal Pa YI!:!._ II 1!..,undr~mat, Ii am PI e le s • 0 n l n coating driveways & parking Contractors 6620
guna cu•. r•• ni l•. r.it~teph)lsics ·Personal .& lots. Wmstr. 894-3129 ---------1
494-7352 6Pllitual help. Lesson series I========= • noor.1 ADDmONS •
SM Siamese kirten vie s~nta • The MBgnificent You • Babysitting 6550 L.T. ConsU11ction
RENTALS G.neral 5000 Ana Ave. &: \Vil9Jfl, C.t.1. Martin· 1908 Miramar, #2C81 --'--"-----Family rooms, kitchen nr
Apt1. Furnished h1g charge. 613-llliS, S.9 PM Office Rent1I 6070 lakes ln area -betlluti·
tul high-dry deti'11 &: lev-
el land. Water guaranteed.
CRll ~'fler 847.fi640 aft 6
PM or weekends anytime.
Call ah. 6 & ldent.lly. 646-Lo:s Angeles 90057 CHILD Care for Prt'·SChoole r units. Single story or 2:
RENT 8715 * ACCOROIAN * by mother in pri home. plans custom designed. For
Pl•yroom 1n~ y, , d estimates & layout, phone Legun• B••ch 5705
---CORONA DEL MAR Gen•ral 4000 3 Rooms Fum1tur•
$25 Month
FUU. OPTION TO BUY
No dt>polrit o.a.c.
100 CLIFF DRIVE
LUXU RY FURN/UNF URN
Yearly Lease. 1 Ir; 2 Bdma.
Yearly Lt'ue. l bedroom
ateps to Shore & Shops
Oeeanvlt'w from every Apt.
OFFICE SU ITES
MUTUAL BUILDING
alr cond., Ct'ntrel reoept.
FOUND: wristwatch, vie. (Or small organ) player for · ''" ,
Sunview School, nr. Hunt. trio. Do 111andards, pop, lunche&, planned aeti\'ities. • 8~7-1511 •
Center, H.B. Call & identif.y, rhythm & blues. Male C1I' fe-Refs gladly ~iven. t.1esa HOLIDAY PLAZA
DELUXE spacious 1-BR.
tum. apt. $135 + util. 2-BR. + den $160 + util
Htd. pool, Ample parkina
No children. No pets
H.F.R.C.
Fumltur• Rent•I•
s11 w. 19th, c.r.i1. 548-3481
1568 W. Lncln, Anhm 774-2800
Costa MeH SlOO
from SLlO mo up. leas•
494-2449 .
NEW dE"lux lge 2 BR 2 BA, 1
blk to ocNn &: park. $250
mo. lease, adults. 4!H-4060
& te!.ephant service, Xt'l'OX 2~ ACRF.S. Sout hern
~ & drapes. 200-200) ft. Calilomla. $3.00 down, $3.00
CAU. &-5 fi15.4070 Pt'!' month, $295.00 full price.
SECRETARIAL L. Shewfelt, 326 W, 3rd St ..
847-5883 male. For immediate work. Vt'rde area. 54&-0313
MAN'S Go!d weddinR band
inscribed t.fon n o o n
Newport Beach Plaza , .,._,,.,,
!7141 689-'201 1 BABYSIT l\1y homf'. Xlnt
FLY TO CATALINA care. Nourishing mt>als ,
DAILY FLIGHTS F'ROM tncro play yrd. Hr. day &
ORANGE COUNTY A1R-wk. Start Sepe. 2. 968-1696 L.A. Phont>: (213) 623-5101 SERVICE MALE black min. poodle PORT. Catalina • Vegaa BABYSITIJNG my hon1e,
Modern oUices, carpe:t.s, 11lr 2 FOR PRICE o F oNE must identify, Call 613-7T7~ Airline& .• 546-6612 Wttkdays 8-5. Fencr<i yard
conditioning, parking. From ex('(!ptinnal investment or 842-4612 BALBOA lshrnd Methodisl $4 per day. \Vestside C.~1.
$65 per month. Orange Coun-Calif. city, low monthly PART Dachshund, ma 1 e , Oiurch Pre-School. Now 1"°'64'°'6-6.1=7=2==~--~
Llrrnscd Conu·actor
Res1dentl;il -Commercial
~'lain! & Rrpal rs. Free Est
673-2129
AdditiQns * Remodelin.it
l-'n-d H. Gerwick, Lie.
1173-60-11 * M:l-2170
PATIOS e Patio Covers
r:oom ~\ddiuons, Lie.
&12-5952 D11y~Eve-\Vknds
l96S Pomona., C-1'1. 642-5853
CHATEAU La POINTE
L.o\•dy furn. 2 BR. apU. OU-
street parking. carporu.
Heated pool. Sl.50 per mo.
Adulll, no pell.
™1 POMONA AVE., CM. HARBOR
GREENS Rentals Wanted 5990
ty Sank Bldg. 230 E. 17lh St .. 1,,_,,=""""=c-c'',..· .,""~""-'=-black & tan . Frun<I on Santa enrolling 11f1ernoon lll"Ssions. BABYS11TING for WOl'kini;:
Colt& Meu. 642·1485 40 ACRES ~rth San Diego AnaSt.,Cl\1546-7903 Hn J.3 PM 6 75-0950, mother, my home, hot Carpet Cleaning
J COMMERCIAL, t lndu.st., County Citrus aree. $48,CXXI • YNG tlge.r ltriped cat, Pink 673-9Zl3 lunch.
662S
Costa MeH 4100 NEED House for rtnt In l wllh llvina: qtn. 25% down. 549-3694 fi ea collar and flutry. Vic FATHER w/ 2 motherless 642-6550 Co&ta Mesa, prefer Mt'aa ,.._,, "" ~~
$25 Wk. Up BAOJ!l.OR • UNl"l.JRN.
from $100
Verde, Sept ld Jot In1nt ......_. CWMt: <nU"',....,.., R. E. W•nfed 6240 19th & Orange, CM 616~ cbldm, ages 2 &: 6 would like Ba:si1~~ ~y home,
faculcy mt'JTlber &: family of 1300 SQ. FT. $165. 1765 OIARGE your want ad now. rm & board w/ resp cpl. ac ater.
• Studio i: Bach apta.
• tnel UW. A Phone wrt'. lncl util
4. Price rana:e $200 to $300, 6 Orqe Ave., C.M., corner WANTED: Small house, very YOUT home. 540-4871, Bob. •842-54309
moe tot yr. 213: ll25-62llJ or bide. nr 17th St. M8-&.lS near Cathollc Church, for REAL ESTATE WIDO\VS & \VIDOWERS are CAPABLE, loving care for
e Maki Sttvke • TV 1vd . l • 2 A 3 BDRM.
• Nnr Cllfe • Bar n.JRN. • lJNFURN,
Zl.3: CL 7-2362 SOCK rr TO 'EM! 19.CXXI Gash. 213: 254-4~93 Gener•I forming a Social Grou p. If pre.school children, l\t 1
.,: "Y;;;R,:;.:I<:-.,::=,. :;3'-.74-;8;:,-. "unru"°'m=f..-=~================!-...:::::::::.:;::_ _____ intereslt'd, write Box Min, honie $20 wk. &12-1414
2376 Newport mvd. 541-gr.,s Heated Pool•, Oilld Care
2ROOM tum. garage •pt.+ Center, Adj, to Shopplns -h 'ha bl Acreage 6200 Acraage 6200Acre1ge 6200 Daily Pilot BABYSITTING. M>· homl!. m, w/ , In&, dw.sher, --"-'"----------=-----------=-------·I
. . . No pets allowed 220 wiring. by St>pl 13. Will NE\VPORT Beach Tennis Mesa. de! Mar. Any age
Club O'tarter membenihip welcome. 546-3003 h~Miw~ kitcht'll. E/51de 2'70) Peterson Wa,, al Ru-pay $250 mo max. Cdt.f area
CM. Sitlglr employed man bor 6 Adami Co.ta Mna. pref. Write E. D. Math11,
only. Alao garagt>1 tor rent. ~70 835 Ashley Dr .. Slm.t, CaW.,
stocqe only. 646-ttl26 ---,,'=..,=--.,--,.-,-~,,.--
$75, BACH. apt. tum. Re!.. ~ SEPT lit Bualnt'U Woman
hotplate, outdoor BBQ. UOl Excellent. p;uk • like sur-nttda l Br untum Apt,
pd. Woma.n only 642-5046 r0Wldinr1 tor •du.lb rpq,ulz-. C.M .. Newport, Corona drl
eVff. ing PffC• & qulel Mar Ol' l..a.guna.. To llOO mo.
Di1c:rlm1native Tt'flanta Gar or carport ntttlAJ')'
REDFL'ORATED I br. •lw l 2 A l BDRM. API'S. 6'2-0Bi &ft 5 ,
rrpta, drps, oonvmient loca-f.cx>L. NO CtillDREN er p.m.
Solvt • S!mpl• Scrambled Wort! Puulc for• Chuc kit
0 Reorronge i.tft.rt of the
fovr tcrambl.d wordl b.-
low 10 form four ill!'IPle words.
$600 + transfer f e e s. ~g...()llO Brick, Masonry, etc.
.U.COHOlJCS Anonymoua 6560
Harbor Atta. Phone 673·8724 BRICK. Concrete. Carpt'ntry
P.O. Box 1223 Costa 1'fe.sa. Custom Ca.blnel.B. Small jobs
DRIVING 8 I 26 tu Sa n OK Free Ellt 962-$15
Antonio. \Vlll take J or 2.
Call 67~7993 C1rpentering 6590
Announc•menta 6410 •NO J OB TOO SMALL •
Ravolution1ry Ho't
Ory Cleaning Method
Rugs, Drapes, Upllolslrly
can be used lmmediatcly
alter wcrk is completed
Sales, Se1'\icc
and lnstRllation
• i\'fastcr Charge
• BaMl:11mericard
Modern Rug & Carpet
433.'i Crensh111\', Loo Angeles
2L1 • 296·5100 Collect
CARPET & t urn. cleaning;
for l day M'rvlce & quali-
ty \\'Ork, call SterUn11 for
brighlnf'SS! &u-8520
.SPRING Special! 5c a ft.
AdvMced Carpel • Upholg.
tery, 543-1188 Toll free
Gardening 6680 """ SllO. 523 """""St. MARTINl"'UE REPtrrABLE ;ady ....... 1 BDRM furn ar pan, T rmployea In Npt Sch detlrec
IPYTHOR l I' I I. I' I' 1----------1Rtsidentlal • lndlllStrial Com-
Grand Opening Sale ! mercial. Repair & remodel ANTHONY'S
Garap. patio. s 9 3 Im 0. GARDEN APTS. :~e~~ ~~. -~~ :~
( ~. ~3 18th la Santa Ana, C.M. 735-t6Jg
• 1 A 2 BR iUm. adult&, 611 Call Mra. l:tender.::an 646-Mt.2 ===c---....... --
Vk1rx1a, a.ta M •a a , 1777 Santa AM, Apt lll. C.M. CPl..E Wttti t'elpec.t for )'(lttl"
IDES ET '111'1
THt PIRATE'S OTEST Rt'uonable. Lie, bonded, in· Garden Se rviee
Ciltt..l Dceoratlva Hema! tum!. 646-1948
551W.19th St. ~f. e 962-1961 e 962-8Jn e LANDSCAPING
5'8-flJI prQpeTt;y dNYe eomtUU.,.
~ ''THE GABLESn tmusual hi ho u 1 In1 .
NAssAU PALMS; 1 BR M-..._ .. i:-. Preftrably ~ch a r e , . ..._ ... ......._. "~ .. .._ "'9't. ls!: 2 BR. w/
1 ....-u.. --· r......._ pngt $135. Adulbl onl,y, 837...-
j--=-ln t:. ~ St. M2-3&15 Carp., drps, bltn•. ii-&. "0trr=....,.01=--,"'"u"'" .. -oo::=~..,.-
• 200 2-t37.(; ON.nae AV'I. def.tr.!• a.pt. or prlv. nn, ! · · !!';r-t a.di 4 Call BetwHn 2 A l Sept-Junt. ~ .... tn3) OX
:. 1 BR., wtnttr • &3Ml.20 • ~1166 bef 10 a.m. ot aJt 5
,. • CC winttr. 2 8Jt 1~ be, Onp/c:rpta. p.m .
. ~ Baab apt, wJnC4!1' or )!l1. Bin, pri pr/pado. Aduli. 1CPL :=-,ua=._"°""""",--,....--,,.-,.,-.,,.,d.
W. Oeelll f"r'Qqt f13.41577 $140. M9'-0W ~ t:Ye Want 1 Br. fum 1pt mu.
J BLKL to bMdl; J BR-AVAIL.~-1; 2 8fL IV'¥ ~$1,.,0-='33-~l.\21-'----~
.2 Ba. ~. Leue cpts., dr_,,e:a, blllw.. Adults, OLDER O>uple dNlrt: 2 BR,
.p25. Call: f0""36 no pela. S130. 54M769 Pnae Sl.»-$150. Ptrm.
6CiAifrii(jl& Dfluxr 3 Dr. AVAIL. ~pt. 1. 1£. 2 BR. 1~ _,"',,_'-'=· >..,·~,....,=-~,.---__..
$215 1: S3QO f2us t.iil. Year-ba~~E. blt..tna. Adults. UJ Fer Daily PDot Want Adi. !y.-,.., Z:.~1'1,C.M.-= DWMU611
IGERAZ I ----.._ ....... I ...... 1 -1,_1 ... , -I .. rich olt! man who ,, ...
.__.._._....__,--l~J frai,:agont (''Ir., tvrns his -
ID UM II E 1·-h.•,.-,1-r1 -.1-r.-.. 1-1 ~ 11.i!'::i.h~? E
• r:~:.r~1'1'0 I' 11 I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I
•:rAMll e "''' 111 ·11.1111 .....................
SCRAM·LETS ANSW£l IN CLA.SSIRCATION 9039
NU. DS.on'a hut;f' Shop MASTER CARPEm'ER LAWNS R010DELED
New k repalrt, S4 hr Exp hortlcultudst.
6412 ==-=..,_..,.•"lt=!~PM~·==I Re111. monthly Gardening
1;;;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1REPAIRS *ALTERATIONS MO\VING, F.di;ing, vacAlawn .
WESTMINSltR CABINE'!S. ""' ... Job. Geo'' '""""'· Hauling •
Funer1l1
MEMORIAL PARK "' yn. ._. 548-6113 °"" Jobo. * ..._
LOW COST ?.1aintenance Mortu•ry & Cemet•ry Cement, Concret• 6600 r.trnv _EDGE . SPRAY
Compl.te fvner•I• from $245 C'US1'0M PATIOS A FERTILIZE:. S.-73'19
C I Block walll. A1IO concrtt11 • JAPANESE GARDmTNG emetery oh "win" 6 .... m-·•I. Sll.\OlO •-l Cl ' __ , from $130 =-='•o,.--"c'---~~=-""" ..... rv re f'11nu r. ""''"'!IC'~ rndudes Endowment ear. BE.ST In C'Oncr'l!te. Walka, inf 531· 7034 a.It T p.m.
E'v@r)'tbln& tn on. beaLrtil'Ul pool dteks, f1oon, patios. 1.lowfng.Edge-V•cwm
place mMN lesa COii. •~"'-2-«I~~"-~~~--Light flsullnit .l Cle11n-up
No ttame problema. DlAJ4 ctlrttt &12-5678, cMrp • 646-<M31 Eves •
14.!01 BHcb, \\'t'stmtnster your ad, !Mn ~t h11ck Md tor quick, rttle:tent T"t'SUlt.s
5C'l·1'125 893-2421 11.st("l'I tn the phone ril.i,• P'I1m WANT A.DI!~~
r r-• r ,. r r p t r ·F ,. .. • -• .-• • • .. ........----,. -.--..
F Id r 11, Au9uJl ZJ, 1968 GAILY ~ILGT
S!llYICI DllllCTO•Y JOH & IM,LOYMIHT .ICllS & IM,LOYMINT .101S & IMl'\OYltJINT 'Oii & WLOYMllf! .IOU & IMnOYMlN Hiii & IMl'LOYM•N t ·~·a YMIJi1 ,,,.._A INLOfM&N 1 -· O.Nonln1 -Jolo W1nlod, Ledy 7020 Hol' Wanlo<I, Mon 7100
Hol, w ....... -7100 Holp Wanlod, Mon 7200 Help w ......
, Jo,. .... Sci.ol Olrl
Holp Wonted w-. 7400 Ho~ Wonted Help Wanted
GEN'L OH.n+!AP, tret ltI'V Wtld<n Women 7400 ....... 7400 w ....... 7400 n>toW. ......,,, oprb>lclen. Domntlc Work, Uv•in with ITT JABSCO Strike Co11dltlo111 .. _ ba\ll·a. Reaa • ..-faml1>. Gott to ITT JABSCO !:XPl!:IUI:NCZD -ocx:. M6-03S4 ot ~182. Exist SKreffry W<UTIYE Cuti Edp Lawn SOCIAL Sll:RETARY. llave lndustrl1I Project Engineer NEED ID PART TlldE Accounting
Malntmanot. L1c10Md excellent lf<:.Tttatial IMMEDIATELY •
S4!-480t,!WIH510alt4PM backlround. 1U1J or part Desrtt and 3-5 years Hper-"""'"'""" 80, b-!O PllOOf COMMI JlCIAL SKRfTARY Clerk limo, .,._ EnglnHr ience. * TOOL 4 DIE MAKER l8M electric. Exptrimce TELLER J1pan11e Gardenlnc tn die •*1.rullc ~ '
ProttJQonal MU!.tenance l>Hlrn and devtlopment of • G!:NERAL INSP£C1'01l dalral>lt. ""'Y dl<l&lion, ..... ohort· Raplcl,y 1icpandlnf Qr..
IA.ndtc&pln1 -Job Wonted Oppomutley to •""' -"" ftuld·hf..l'ldllns pumps and * MAurn::NANCE UNITID CAL.,DllNIA -Ind ""'"" """'-""· anre o:..m11 tkoctronka
Mon & w.,,,.n 7030 me~ under a S.nlor I.E. In M.ECllANlC IANK cebent ~\Al and work· ma.nut.M:Wnr hu lm.meO--·Soni-6612 aN.:aa of timt study, cost syswna. Respon1lble for * MAINI'ENANCE Securlly Clerk Int< cmdillmL late opening tor l\CCOW\t·
!:XPEIUENCED AYr MGR CQmplete specltlcatk>na: tor improvement., value ana!y. moton, ftttinrs, mtl~rlala:, ELECTRJClAN 4525 MacArthu r llv4. lng exprrlence ill pay.
PROF£'SS. Wtndow, walll I. ~· wtttii lll.UIY )'tlh tx-.... and al.l.ndard1 pro. * STOCKMAN-STOU • T,ype, file, "-'tall ....crl: Newport .. och Apply, Mr. l rown roll. accounu payable,
Or. dl&llltic; bu•ln•••· -In Onnp °'· if'VllL Prefer form.al edu-etc. Prtttt worJdna: know· LINE ...Wt~ ~fft-540-4424 and 1eneral aCCC1Unttns.
...td., • ......,..,...,. wants opportunlb' to handle ctitlon and tome tlmNtudy ltd&:• of motors, •nd •JC:Ptt'o * METAL ASSEMS1.ER tatb!., penonnri &eCUdlrt' UPLORfR ,.,,,... -· .... , try.tal Wlndow Cltaninr )'OW' property. m-4169 experience. Please apply in lenct with mettll, pluticl, • RIVETER. Cl'l~ttc.
l'l<e Dtim&tn 54M13'I penon or by c:ontktftlt!al and dutomtn:. * METAL ~ ll'tEk
Alloqu'1opportwllt>
Demoettc Help 7035 reaume 1ncludlnc salary re-* POWER BRAKE Clerk Typists omploytr MOTORHOME CORP. M1rshall e 1 DAY auvtc:e. llorne • Equal opportunity emplo)'er OPERATOR apt cleanina:. Opbl, walla, DOMESTIC quirernenbl to Penonnd.
-· palndng . ....-. 1415 Doi• Woy * PUNCH PRE5$ ,.,,,... 40 .... -111111•~ Waltreu 4000 Campus Dr. CommilnlcaHons
Sttrltn1 tor brightneU! Equal opportulty employer OPERATOR Newport .. och
Costa M"a * ENGINE LA'nlE m•ohlne . -....
"MR. FIX IT' OU Bob toe Phono: 5454251 (714) OPERATOR worit with flrurff, pitt -on!> 4 --·
S4~300 2230 S. Anno St,
home maintenance palntma:. HELP 1415 Dalo W1l: * TUM.ET LA THE and t 11 e. Accountlng/ San .. Ane, Calif.
ttpaln, "'"" •• -COit• Me11, Cellf. 2626 OPERATOR -...... ,...,.,,_ Ace 21 or over, me 14 or 540-2120
reference'•· 673-Sl63 Phono: 545425 I (714) * MllJ.JNC MAcmNE desirable. under. ~ prt:fMT· Repro Typists MATERIAL ed. Apprl)i 1n peraon after -Live in or live out OPD.ATOR s p.m. An ,....i -"""'"'
HHlth Clubo 6720 HouMkMpers * BENCH MACHINlST Apply Pot '•IMm To train on IBM MT-ST
... ...,..,
HOLIDAY Health Sp< Exeellior .\iency • Engine lithe FOLLOW ·UP ClfRK * HELIUM ARC WELD.tR UU600,ext222' PIVE CROWNS typewriter. Type "' mtmbe.rshlp for Ale. Ltl& U3 So. Broadwl)', LA fml3 * MACHINE WELDER RESTAURANT w.p.m. Apply
than % price. Mn. Smltb. (ll3)~7 1213) 6»1735 Mlchlnisls 'fo auiat In scbedullng, * EXPERIMENTAL COlllllS 3801 E. Coast HW)' J.C. Penney C.o.
"1>.m1 . LIVE INS materla.I follow~ f o r MECHANIC Carona d•l Mar M11sh1ll Fuhion Island
Employer ~ fees small precision manufact· * FABJµCA.TlON STllUC RADIO CO. No Phone calliJ p1eue Nrwport Beach
H1ulln1 •730 Georre Byland Aaency • Drill Press urtna: company. Must like TUR.E DEVELOPMENT Nttd•
MECHANIC Communic1lions . PART TIME
Ute Haullht./frln:l.mlnp, lOI B E. lSth. S.A. 047--0395 detail, be able to w~ m. * TUBE BENDER lf700 Jambo,.. 11.oltl SALESLADIES
Oper1lors dependently and coordi·
TtlUb, Gan..p Cleanups O:lintse liff-lnl. Oeerlul na.te work "'1th &ll de-* EL!x:TIUOAL Newport llNch HOSlW 2230 S. Anno St. Houaew1ve1 and MoUiers
Name tt! ReUODable Ptnn.anent. Experienced. pU1mt'nta. Will trah1 ag. INSTAI.L£R Sant• Ana, Cellf. Can ;yo" 9Pare a few hoUl'll
BIG JOHN 64l--t030 Far East AcencY MU103 (N ight Shift) irtuive individual. Apply * AIRCR.Arr PAIN'J'DS All applications ~'td Over 21 540-2120 each dQ and M\d to the
CLEAN Lots, prqes. etc.
on merit with no ~ ti>-An equal opportun11y family lnoome •t the ume
rfelp Wonted, Mon 7100 45 hr min V."Ork wffk P.,..,....l <lm« °""' """ Raoo. <Joler. 0-... .Apply in ,,r .. n time? Schedual• convent-Tr~ removal, dump, skip, Profit 1harlna: STACO, INC. 7amto9pm -7&Qr1 « sex. .,,,...,,..
ent l.ar :you, monrinp, aft·
backhoe, fill, crade. 962.8745 f .5 p.m. -emoons, eventnp or combi-
LITE HAULING I< CLEAN ,,...,....1._ menuf•c--1139 .. kor St. J. C. CARTER CO. SARGENT· Eltc01COI llBIBUI L LEE na.tlons: of all. Work .ln a
UP turl~ compeny wltft c"t' Mooe Strike C011dltio11S Connerclal bi store under the tlbelt
FllEE ESTlMATEI· exetl ent worklnt 549-3041 FLETCHER • ol conditkm and top .up.er-* 548-78'9 * condftlons ancl f.: 671 W. 17th St. 9t(O natr Dttv• hllt 151 E. C-Hl9hwoy vlllon.
Interior Decoretlnt1 6737 bonollts h11 Im I-Co1t1 Mesi All eq"'1 ._.,..., £1 Monte, Calif • ,....,.,. .... h Teller . APl>l>'lnponon
... Of'*nlntt for: 541-3421 employer (213) 213·7171 44:1.7171 Noodod lmmodla1tl1 Penney'a Fashion laland
e Re1klene1 • Comm'I • ILICTlllCAL Exc.U..t-""'1t>f 9:30 •.m. to 9:30 p.11\.
e Pain.tin&, int A ext. '1r1ub" All tq»al """"'""""' All equal -limit> ASSIMILY Accounting Office APPLY IN PERl!ON
Mood~ thru Friday
e Wall Covtrlnp: e .. ...,..,
SALES, 3 ONLY •m"-All student poll.dons filW
• Color Coordination Automatic Screw R1prdl1u el ... Dcpt1:h!>'ft in ~. 1st llltlon1I Bink --............
FREE ESTIMATZ or experience CAREER -m!pplnc, T .JI almp. -politlon.
Ucensed ' Inl\tl'td Plumber Some addiflc machlne ex·
MODERN Mach. Opers. e S975 FIRST MO. Ol'PORTUNITYI lngmadUn<. --· Mini· of Orange County R.N. 3·11 & 11·7
DECOllATDllS Potentia.I 1f )'OU 1ll'lctr& Join todays ~est lf'OWlnl P•raonnel Ottiot Open mum ap 21. Start $!50. mo. Part Time
!136-!lti13 2 years minlmum • Carpenter ly w1.nt to work and eam profession-Mutual Fund aalea 7 am.to9pm -7~· Richard's 1650 Adoma AIDES Cott• Mes. -
experlence blr money, can follow o~ No experience nece11ary. Udo Market Experience preferrtd
lrtlfllOI 6755 Cabinet Setter ders, yo u ahould write We train • run or part time SARGENT· 7-3 and 11·7 • one order everyday and Mutual Fund Atfvl1ot1, a433 Vii Lido An equal opportunit;y Park Lido
IRONING. TEJU'S PRESS • Liiie Operators With mobile home e:r· it )'OU can do th•t Inc. FLETCHER Newpert leech emplQ)'er Chnvalescent Hospital
SHOP HAS MOVED . 1 can affer you Npt B. 1603 Westelltt M2-6Ul 673-6360 14-fi Superior .
crlenct1. Excellent !MOO Flair Drtve -Experl<ne<d S.A. 1212 N. BroactwQ El Monb!, Calif. WARRESSES Newport Beach 642...2410
neflta. Apply In par4 • $125 w•kly 1al1ry
EXPER. ironln&: of all types. • New Cldlll1c furn. !547-8331 (213> :J8S.nn "':s.nn
$1.lS hr. 674 Ct.pitol, O>lt• Drlll Press son.
• Work 6 h'r1 • dey All •""'1 -.. GIRL FRIDAY l£LLER • 21 or over
Meaa. 543-7330. 56-16Cfi. EXPLORER • Execut ive tr1lnln1 WE HA VE an openln&: in the ~ployer Experienced only! Experienced, '°' P art time. Some expm. fastest.
Oper1lors • Bonus plen circulation department for Apply in Penon rrow-inl bid~ent bank
Land1c1pin1 6110 • No c1nv111ln9 an arnbltiOIJI Y0\1111 man HOSTUS ence requ1red. 60 w.p.m.. SURF & SIRLOIN in the area. Good working .
MOTORHOME CORP. eltttrlc typewriter, 11>-5930 Pac. Cst. Hwy. GAYNOR'~SCAPING Experien~ Apply 1500 Adams, Sulte 303, who 11 willinc to •tart at the Age over 21, experience key adder, cood with ~ conditions and benefibl, Sal·
I GARD G SERVICE C.oata Mesa. 11-4 p.m. da.lzy bottom of a buaine. and internd. I.lie 12 or Iese. ure1. N e e. t appee.rlng. Newport a..~h ary •cconlini to expert-
State licensed cootrctr, APPLY AT 4000 C1mpu1 Dr. work and learn. No ex-Apply after ' p.m. to MR. Send lett6 with expert. *REAL ESTATE SALES * ence. can
Rtsldential -Commercial Newport Beach Office Supply ptrienct neeeuary, Thia 1a ONDYKE ence to H.M.t., P • 0. If YoU are new to the RE p~ MR. BROWN 540-Zlll
Yard cleanup. Free est. STA.fAST, INC. a steady. permanent 1itua. FIVE CROWNS Box nt.5, Newport Beach tealon and are wllilnr to Newport Nation•I Benk
No job too biz -Sale1m1n tlon with the opportunlt;y fir RESTAURANT learn u YoU eam our lovely
CORRAL'S 1ndJCp • rototill 640 S. Sant• Fe St. Shop 11 Home Experienced for San Diego r a p t d advancement. Ex.. 3801 E. Cout Hwy Dew offtce in Sa:n C emente Telephone Girls cellent benefit. lncludin.:: the ml&ht just be ile anirwer.
1erv. Free ert, have own Sent• AM, C1llf. area. Write John Scott; peraonal use (( a company Corona de! Mar l£LEl'HONE For ccnfidentlal interview $100 WEEK equipment. 962-.(1&1 Stallonef'll Corp. P .0. Box No -""" ...... Carpel & Dr1pery c&.r. Must be at W!ut 11 &J'ld SOLICITORS cont.ct Sharl Ko p p e l, !:xperi~ed or not • fUD. 350 San Diego, Cal. 92112, or h•ve vllild driver'• llCfll.&e .,.._
PoporhlOllOI call 234-0344. Chnfidentlal. or part time. Apply.9 to
P'olntl"' 6150 ITT JABSCO and iood drlvlna: record. F'lllJ. or pvt time. P}euant l'OSmON Ol'EN 4, 1500 Ada.ma. a.lit• 303, Specialists Contact Milan Leavitt at the Waltres111 woridnf conditionL ~
Delivery loy DAILY PU..01', 330 Welt 11faJtl phll bont11. Apply In ln ~ldns and Wpfctlon Costa Mt••.
*PAINTING & -ALSO
DIXX>RATING * Design D11Hsm1n Carpet Sales experience a Over 111. Mu•t know local Bay St., Costa Mesa Cashf., Hosteu peraon. I.or ceramic induatry • .Ap. OfRCf WORK
Interior, exterior must. Drapery experience area. Apply In Peraon. Holldoy H111th sgo ply between I am, &: noon
Llc'd. Ins'd. Guaranteed. Work in development of Ftferred. Excellent com-Cr•wford'1 Ph1rm1cy MAINT£NANCE Nat~&rbJr. 2300 HARBOR BLV , lndum!&l Clay _.,,. Y OWi.i lad)' for J.l&ht office
CUstcm work Cfliy. eom~rcial pwnp line. Re-pany benefits. Apply. 180t N~ Blvd. No exper. neotMU)'. COSTA ME.SA lm5 FJberglua Rd. I t~epbone work. Neet ap. MECHANICS <No .tudenta P1ease) HuntinJtoo Beach, Callt.
HARRlS PAINTING ~ quil't'I 2-6 ~ experience. Colt.a Mesa Apply in penon pearance. Alie for Mr. Ken-
PAINTING And Paperln«. U BARKER BROS. Sales, over 18 Immediate employment for Bob's Ilg Bo1 MAIDS NEIDID LY er RN openinp I« 2 ntdy, 3034 So. Kil.loo, &A.
Outatand.inr owcrtunitlM, Senior Maintenance Meehan-alit!I, 3-11:30 PM, 2 lllbllta 540-8676 or Mt).8lT7
you. call me we both benefit. benefits and wortdng condi-1c1 with electrical or me-lM E. 17th St., C.~ Experienced or w1.ll train 11-7;:30 AM, a wk., ar ~ .ASSEMBLE Ir" Exclu.Jve but not expensive ll Huntlntton Center for .teady work.
Try me and see. 541-nsT tton1 for rla'ht ~-Sales promotion jobs 1vail. chanlcal ba.ckaroond. Delite work fUll time .u 3 llhUtll
Huntington Be1ch Lar&e int'!. corp. $10,000 lst applicant to ha Ye exPtrlence HOSPr'I' ALITt Hostea ii EXTRA GOOO WAGIS alternaUna. N""POf't Harbor Sm"1 ...... -ly. J'W)
PAINTING int. A: ext. A·l Eq.'1 -'"' ..,p1o,.,. An equal opportunity yrar. Manaiement opportu. in packaging meehinery op-kloldna: fo: a mahlrt •oinan Good ..,oddna condltklnl. Conva l e atie a t Home time. Onlr -rellohle ..
work, reas, Uc. 897-4522, e~ployer nille1. Call 10 am • 2 pm erat1ons, HPllt and main-with .. renulne tnt..rt and Appty in pa'lon to houte-6'6-Tl5> m.ey nred awJ.y. Refer·
893--0600, 839-1990. (714) 545-1251 539-ll83. tenance. A,pply or call love of people to welcome keeper Mn. JtYYCe Miner, DENTAL ASSISTANT ence nqu1nrd. ~1522 or
INTERIOR & EXTERIOR 1415 Dolo W•ri WE Need neat, :medt in-WestPeck n t w famWe1. Mu.t he v e bet 9 am I: 3pm. Om-25. Some front deak ex· -Paintln&. Free est. . Cotta Miu, Ca If • FRY COOK dined man to train for Machines Corp. car. t)'pewrtter, aales e.xpu. Lap• C'.oontry O ub Village perience prderreJ. M111t ACCOUNTS rec e lv•ble
Uc. &: Iba. Oluck MS-M14 Experienced only. Nlghtl. warehouse. HS Gr ad . 1166 W. 16th Stre<!t lence Ind bobdable. Call ll.106 s. Cout Hy. •t Allto have more than one )'tear tx· bkkpr, experl~. able to
P«manent. Age to 40. Apply Newport Beach S4(>.Q].61 -· Bffch, South Laguna prlmce in dnital office. operatt Burroua:hs 1465 date
"Paper Buigy" 8"7·1559 Salary open. ~ phone
Mobil store • borne calls call1. AJiply after 3 'p.m. In penon. Mon-Fri, ,2....4. 494-7U5 altr 4:30 proce.s.stna: machine &
We advise • tell • tmtalt MC DONALD'S Window Desi.gm 3737 Bircb, MC DONALD'S Dupllco11., Auf1t1nt BAR MAID -perform A/R analy1la. Xlnt
PAINTING Aver. r oom FIVE CROWNS N.B. Machine Oper1tor Ttl•tyP* Or.reter
GO-GO DANCER salary and fringe benefit..
compJ. $25. l.t up. Neat eany out re1taurant " RESTAURANT REI1RED Man wl.llhing to S43l to $474 per month. For Dtvmlfled du 1, broktr-Apply ia. persm, 2901 Write Bo;r M·180 DtalJ,J Pilot.
wonc. Local refs. 847-1358 look1na for profesl\onal 3801 E. Coast Hwy. supplement income for cleari it lookin.r for full or pvt fl1rtbet ln!onnaHon pleue ae• experienc~ preferred. Harbor, Saal)' Luly. • A Likable position for 1
INT • ext. Average 1 BR apt, JANITOR Corona del Mar up work at retall Bakery. time worker, Clean, con-call Mrs. Beclc:ttt, Fountain Sblrtlng lllllary ~. 640-!ll&I * likable per1t1n. CASHJER..
labor &: mat'ls i 7 f . 5 0. Apply in person at Frenche1 genial mrroWlding1. Ex. Valley School D 11 t r l c t Ooodbod1 & Compan1 CHURCH Stenographer, full convenient houri. Finl run
Pastry. 1170 W. Biker. C.M. cellent workinr conditions. MU651, ext 224. time. Excellent typt.t, Sonte LIDO THEATRE, Newport
642-1528, 543-4.927 full time. Excellent working Squeeur-Molder paid vacation & profit ah•r-LAGUNA BEAOJ lhorthand dffirable. Write B e a r h, Mr. He.wkinaon
PAINTING, Ext &. Int. Ext conditlonl, paid vacation Ir Electronic S•l•smen Ing. 'Apply l PM to S PM, WAITRESSES Call tor appointment &'B-7081 '
boUle trlr. 17 yrs exp, free profit aharing. Apply l PM Experienct'd SQtM!f:zer . mold--With knowledge ol partl and/ Monday thru Frid•)', 16866 Experienced only need PttRS. KIRNER ~ P . 0 . Sn 1536, Newport
UL Aecoust ceU. MS-6325 k> 5 PM, Monday tbtu Fri-er l<X" ain::ratt alwninum & or TV repair. Beach Blvd., Huntlngton 1.ppty, No phone calls Beoch. MAIUUEO WOMEN
day, 16866 Beach Blvd., magnesium IO\Jrldry. H. W. Wr ight Co. plea me. w~. Experienced. !\ill or p/tlme work, evn Beach. GIRL FRIDAY
Plutnblnt 6190 Hunttnaton Beach. Lido Ca1tlng1, Inc. 1770 Newport Blvd, CM OENNY'S mature. 3: 30-3 p.m. I day1. $50. per week or rnorr. Cat
735 Ohms Way, C,!d . FAYIT growtna: Datsun dealer 1600 S. Coa.t Hwy, S.-5 Y fan: well rounded ottlce Sunday off, Apply In penoa nee. No collectln1. No
* 24 HOUR SERVICE * .. ,...,, l..aruna Beach experience. 60 wpm electric HAMBURGER HENRY delivery and no ca.nvU1q;,
General Help """' 2 perm anent fRY COOK Plumbing ,..,..,. remodel 75 An equal opportunlt;y aalesmen, new & used. Top SECRETARY typewriter. Accuracy tuen· 2135 Placentia. Costa Mesa <All Mra. Todaro 893-974%
Guarantffd * ~1407 employer pay plan. Call t94-91't.2 u k
Experienced Life insurance backcround tlal. Cai»ble ot UIUming re-Ceahler Ex perienced HOUSEKEEPER • Uve out. Apply at aponsibillt)'. Salary commfn-
Marv'• Plumbln1 Service MEN TV Repairman for Gen Mgr. THE RIGGER preferred. Ext.Ntve train-w.nte with ability, M7-0&38 Walllch Music Clt,y • Ticket 5 da.ya wit for worldns
Repair -Remodol Good opportlmity with per. Service St1. Attend. No. 15 Falh!on Jlland ina to rlsht liz1. Newport or ~1234 dept. P /tlme with tome full parenta of 2 elem 1Ch1
•M&--91ll'l• cent age. Ne•port Center N.B. Beach area. "2-03M time. So. Coast Pilla, C.M. chklrn. F.V. Please call aft
Plumblns 24 br. KrV. Work Lerae exp. chain now taking Newporter TV
for bul)' production 1tallon. LJVE..tN Houaekteper and EXPERIENCED Automotive MARRIED Women ~ lull or 6 pm wk nitet. 1168-lt.DS
Comm, Mlary + IS'H.
gUU. lJc., insut.; remodel, appllcationl. P'Ull or p/tlme. c:hlld car.. Pri't'ate room 1trvi01 c:aahler and relief part time. Earn $50 wk. Car WOMAN To work Jn dcmut
ml Harbor Blvd. PLUS unltd. oppty. For appt . PBX. Contact Mrs. B • 11 repair, rooter aerv. ~-7568 Age 19 -11. and bath. $20l mo. SY. days nee. No collectinK, n o Sl>op AwJy In P''-. no
$4.00 per hour 548-3511 phooe/642-7816 ~usboys & wk. Ptm\. potltkin with ref. Ml-fi611. Wu.on Ford Sales, delivery, ft o eanvusln1. phone call1 pleaw. Win-
"temodel., lepelr. "40 PART T1mt crew manager, MAN to wwk fu ll time In U-Dishwashers No smoldnr. 545-6910 18'255 Beach Blvd., Hun. .,..1812 cbeU'1 Donut Shop. 21HT
easy work, 3 or 4 houra HAUL RENTALS. MUii be ttncton Btach. Harbor Blvd., Costa Mea.
e REMODEL I: REPAIR e Call 892-8332 evenlnp working with boys. neat in appearance, have Full time, over 18 RELlABLE Wom&n ...tit in BABYSrITER, My home 5 MATURE, YOW1C hlbyaltter
Carpentry . Paint -Plaster O.nerel Woodworking Must have c a r . Com. neat handwriting. Wiil train Apply in Pe.non ldtchtn for cattrlnc and dt11 a wk. Own trans. 3 to live ln In exchanp for
SPANISH --··
I: Concrete. Dick &12-1797 Machine Woo4c1rvlng minions. For Information right m ... Apply 1930 Bob'• 1119 lloy food Pf'til. tn deli. NtwpOrt (lrll ap g I: !. Call aft g room I: board and small ter. lJve In, Hrbt bou9ewotk
Wood Perts Asumbly call 893-5375 and ask tor Newport Blvd. CM . U4 E. 17tb St., C.M. Art C.tnter, '1400 w. Cout PM &&2-91'9'3 ta.lary, Unwed moth a r I: cooldnr. s cblldnm. Stal).
69'0 ""YOUNG MEN H'lfY., N.B. 8'2-3414 wek:ome. 53&-TllT ton 0) 827-3073 aft 6
Sowln9 Artlflclol Limb Fob. Bob WAi'I'RE§8 Nteded, fW..I tlmt CHILD care: 3 .chool Qt. TEMPORARY typll~ $1.llO
SEAMSTRESS Ma run, ,.......,,.... ln Cor Wash Help willlnr 10 work I: learn a LIOUOll CLIRK My borne. Own trans, Nr WIDOWER ..... m&tllft
WlU .ew for YOO -... Good med>-trade. FUll time empl. Retail. 1'ull Ume, Top aalll')', lllmmet, pt.rt timt wtriter. Adams I: Mqnoba H.B. hakpl'. Lfn.WI, eve 2 per hour. Repq P .0. Box
ank:al ability. <>then need Full t ime or w kends. 548-5625 Manitd. H.B. arH. S3S-4712 chtldren J I: 9 )Tl, Co.ta ll5, <hlt:a Me .. , slve pboae
Informa&I\ 642-311115 ... apply. Min aa:e lJ, •PP<IY In penon
Write BoJC M 172 Daily Pilot. .,.....,,., ,.,....,, MtN. Afft. 540-71'!7 number .
Allorollont-642~&45 Klnl)lley Mf9. Co. UDO CAR WASH Multlllth Operator SERVICE StAtlon Attcdant W6MEN Prr w/car. EXPER. cmmetlc • & 1e1 ; BAllYSITl'ER """"' by WAITRESS • pveJard aod
Neat, accurate, 21 yrs. exp. Experienced. 3 Shlfta AJ>lllJ beJeh arH. Full tlme. DO 431 E. lTth Costa Meu Mlll'lec ~roductlon1 Fullerett• HB. S2 hr ruar. teacher; 1-chl l d; lt. .-. """" In .........
Call 54Ul.16 for appt. 2180 Harbor blvd. CM. Lynne Brown s •o-111 2, S\Jn. '3 . $3.50 Ht. 10 •tart. houlek~. Muat ba't'e °"-o.11 .. Sloop TIL!, Ceramic 6974 EXP man for heavy clMnin&: 546-9240 SERVICE Station da1 work. --Reply Box M-119 Dally Pllot own tram. ga....egn !i82 w. Dlb St. CJ\I.. (yWi!I. Woodwork, flom,
* VmM:, tbt Tile Man * loot Elldrlclon wtndows. .stow, etc. Muat SERV. Sta Atten w/rnech Minor tune up Exp nee. CHILD cu.; a ICbool 11'9· HOUSEKEEPER wot.ct for DRUG Stan Qtrk, &11 time, BABYSITl'ER. Uve in or
i:x..,·kne<d exp, Start 1500 mo. APP!Y 3928 E. Ooa1t H'll)' OiM.. widow, live tn. drlvt, ovm. out Own tramp. Eve/acme CUit. work. Inate.11 I repain. h.avt refs. Will Pl1 l e-10-3 1697 PlacmdA CM Se~ M.y home. Own tnna. Nr nee.t, rxptr, JrlkMcied ,....r.
No job too small. Plub!r 11\a•lno DlaMI cordU. to Up. 6U-l420 E&ther TECHNICAL Wrlttrs and Ad1.1na 6 MQnOlla. HB. BR I BA. lttta req, fft..3046 Apply In ..,... WC S. Cot 4ayo. 54().6491110AAl ·S PM
patch. IAPirc s bow • r Motor Man btwn &-7 p.m. pe.rts l11ten. Expulll\ctd. ~ litnt1l Oflico Mon ... r llwy,So.Laflm REX!t:P'llONIST STmO
n p&lr. 117-1957-lslender Y echt1 MEii ,,.. earb' moming BELLY BOARD -MonlER'• twlpor, ..... liv· -·--~om...
1612 Placmti& Ave. LAMTNATOR Exp only, Ap-HOUSEKEEPER. To 1tv. "·
n~ dtUvery. Must DWVERY. M• t\n drl't'tf'. ID.. Muat be hotltll, r.llable. ·-· car. for ' cbAdtcn. a.ta * MW430 *.
JOIS & IMl'LOYMI Nl O>ola -
ply El Palpo 1114. Plaeftltll nlaht·wotit SAM. 'nit P1a:la have dtpenda~e cu It be Ave.Of.~ !loom, -• oaluJ, HEALTIIY HouttkHPl'f, nve MttL Call 4'1ril ~ LITE -'°' Jy W1nltd. Mon 7000 reliable. Write P .0. ~ 714. *1ANrl'Oll Exporienc<d.
M1.n M2-Mll aft 10 P -lo, no drink•. 1'ot b'thtr betwttn 5 PM I: a PM. -to4r. Liv• ... $l2S
IART£NDER C.M. ln!o. Clll M>Ull .... m.<1130 Cosat Mu11. Memorial """""' w-noo HOUSEWIFE -Ad t p t H OUSlXEll'!ll. BabJ""
Ell~ wbltt, 911 ,.., x1nt Send 1'tNM to P.O. Ilea m SER.VJCEMAN $UD. at. 1al. Haopltal Apply 301 E. VJo. lrlhmh to worlc In ai ... l\ELIIlF LVN 11-T A 3-11 M1'. Matvra. Uw In. Pri llOUSEWIVEI • EARN
bealtb. ln..WS..~ -kins Hontinitm Btach. After tralnlnc ptrlod. ~ tori.a, C.M. Pti. IU-2734 1tcn, Mn pt.:ttmHlexlb'9 ahiftl H.B. ane.. Good ..... S»$41wlo ............
sood position. R • I I & b I e , DISH MAO:llNl: ~tor. lftaalni to $120 + M\llt be DISHWASilER. 3 dlys 1 nlte. .. htt.1 Bnlc. at WeflclUr Plua &O-Om oaluJ. 117-1lln --~· ._,. H.B. l!"m. ND-1933 DU.
Write Boa 1SS5 co.ta M8* 0.ta MflNl"Memorial HOI-rr°'rrltd. Appbi s.r.tc-e10ft, S11.rt.ln1 ..... St , l 5, mi,,,, lxec wu;; STYIJIT, ""9rir1Ddd MOl'!1. AlDI Q'il4 ....... ""' ........ w~ n end°""· Ex·
ptal. IOI Victoria, c.M. Sft6 31.•t St.. Nnrport B11ch. Hl-Tlme OeH. M8-'93l.•. n5 ""'-.,. 5 4qt. No S.t Of lwl --Tlc.ltB. ptl'lenctd, ~ 8 ,. ' ••
Job Wantod, Lady 7020 • 642·2111 • SALESMEN E.17lh St. CM. Sn Tm'J fC.01 01! •m..etl • _....,&:IOPM Q\IJet tt• N. Ntwpori, N.B. --TEOINICAL ....... u6 Fer~~~ Rtt1Nd tucher fol Altn<f""C-Gh!a BABYSl'lTER tull time; my Part time aitwr, J m11. i.AI>Y tor,_ ... 'l'\M to M(Yt'EL Maid. -'10 W. Cout H..,. II.&
........ Good ""*' I.Ito ..... -.... ....... -. ~. s.Juy + earn, oar """'"7 -----.,x-.v..-. ..... In .,, ....... Cd.». 1"11 12:11M:>l Own ....... fftl., tnd --~ppq ---lllow. 19?-UBS n4: 145-9503 ·-· ...... ~-· JW.-. -ln-Dll-.. CM .
• t I
I r I
•
....... --¥1J DAl\.'t' PILU1 r .. J .. 1, .. 1.1111.i-.• ....,, '""°
JO s PLO MENl JOBS & EMPLOYMENI M RCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR I MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION I SALE AND TRADE '".E AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE ...,......... .... _ -~1
7500 Jobs--Men_,_wo!"_· 7~_oo_ 1 --------BOits & Yachts 7Y\lv • 1 y ht 1:;~;;.::.::;"::::::==::=::::::::=== --Furniture 8QOO Furniture SQOO Plano1 & Organ1 1 130 Ml1cella neou.s 8600 Ml1cellaneou1 8600 -·---·---.;~-gOC•h· rt" ------. --34' Chris Sf!t. SkUf, ON I •rs 9039 , •••••••••••••••••
Spanish & Mediterranean
Bought M1nuf1cturer's Showroom Si mples
At TerrUic Savings!
HAMMOND Spinet Ori.~ Mk.Ing ..• ,, ••••• $.13,700
P.1dl h1lll Excelll'nt eon-35· Yawl, '°ti rear A 11U1
dilioo + "" ... ""'· HARBOR BL VD. . ......... $16,500
,.,,__ DRIVE·IN THEATRE "'~~ :;;,'": .. ~':''
Televlslon 8205 Honolulu. 0 1-"FER!
SCH AM-LETS.
ANSWERS MARSHALL
COMMUNICATIONS 8' Wood carved arm divan, lg. man's chair;
beaut !abrlcs. 5 Pc hexagon dark oak din.
set, w/bla c.k or avocado framed chairs; 5
Pc BR 5et. 9-dr Mr. & fi1rs. dresser, 11, mirror,
2 c<llnmodes, decorative headboard m Span·
ish oak or avocado design.
REltT SWAP MEET 40' Owens Clrtter -l ast & Trophy -StMI -Guer -
fl.ble! •.••....... S22,500 lmbued-llEIRS GREY
One of O rang• County's fastest grow·
ing computer oriented companies has
im mediate openings for pecple wit h
the follow ing q ualifications:
Color TV BUY! SELL! TRADE! 27' Kinp Cruiser Sloop, A rich old man ""ho ii ex.
line" on ''"""' , !7.'"Q '""gaol of1'n lwTIO hb
lterm Sold Individually $9 PER MO. FREE BUYER'S PASS
TO SWA' Miit AT
HAllOI IL't'D. DllVl•IN TH~ATRI
FRASER YACHTS HEIRS CRF:Y.
CAU.! CIJUCK AVERY IT'S SMAR-~T'=E~R~--
Shop Around-before you by see OS!
VALUE $895 -FULL PRICE $429.95
or terms as low as $3.00 week
Rtnt1I can •pply to
Purchase
ORDEH BY PllONE
34W Vla OJ)On o, N.B. TO CHARTER
• System Engineers
• Logic Design Engineers
No Dow n-Use Our Store Charge Pla n
No Fancy Front-BUT Quality Values Inside
APPROVED FUR:;. _2159 HARBOR, CM
12 Years same Jocat1on-same owne rs
D•lly 9,9, tO-S Sunday e 548·9660
548°8511
9AMto8PM 1 Days
.... •<>0• 10 AM to 4 PM •Au <>oo•
$AT. 00 $UN. FREE MMISSIOH SAT • ..,, $UN,
PllSl!JrlT THIS flll PASS AT THlATll IOX O•FICI
PASS ADMITS CAR AND AU OCCUPANTS FRiii
673-5252 * 49-1·3916 Ew>s. Ca1 25 • Rawaon 30 • Alberg
ASSUME Balance on 19&1 35 • Bounty 40 • Ncwporter
Owens 30' Cabin Cruiser k e t ch • ~1ariner 40 •
Yacht, Twin 225 H.P. V8 Schooners· 27' Falrllner • 30'
engines, -r•"epa: 6, solid Tro;~," • SS' Spt Fl!her • tlU•
mabog. dooble plank ing bot· merous orht'rs.
tom & sides. All teak dec-k-CALIFORNIA CRUISES Hi-Fi & Stereo 8210 ing. Just loaded . Only 200 21.l yr··rs in Newport • Real·Time Programmers •••••••••••••••••• STEREO 1968 10lid slll.le
console mode.I wHh AM/FM
radio, 4 spd changer. Take
over small payments or
S93.20 cuh. Credit Dept.
hours. Call Roger ll-lilJer Ernie M inney 548-4191
..,,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 546-1200 • CHAR1'£R TME FINEST
VOID A'1llt DIC. JI, 19U
• Senior Designers
• Draftsmen
• Electronic Technicians
• MT /ST Operators
• Assembly Operators
1100 Office Equipme nt 8011 Appllancu
~------
----------1----------114· SKI & fish, just reflnisb·
Miscellaneous 8600 Misc. W•nted 1610 ed, J ohnson 35 hp, trlr.
Ne11• 40' l<elch
673-2517 • 61:>-2400
FOR Sale A.B. Dick ta ble
model 32Q offiet dupllcator.
2 yrs old, Good cond. S700.
Contact l.fia.I Cbrl.s tcnsen
542-4080
Hou1ehold Goods 8020
PHILCO Turq refrig 13.6 cu'. SJS-728> ' SWIMMING POOL Looks like "bltn." Sep
fre.ue.r sec. holds 181 lbs. S_portinQ Goods ISOO 18 Ft Pool, Filter. Surface
Xlnt cond. UOO. Thur&, Fri SJl:llnmer, Ma.!ntenance Kil.
& Sat (9-6) 673-1720 SURFBOARD 9'8" Jacobs, 3 FREE Ground Pad.
u FT, Coldspot Refl"igerato.r, mahog stringers, mahog tail $149.88
simulated walnut door $50; block, slnii-speed Sk~. Xln1 SECARD POOL
VERTICAL cJbie door ~;b~ ~S.:kis, anchor etc. $400
relrlg. freezer ·Also letter 1--c· ""°'=,,..---,,=-""-="'° sized file cabinet. top cond. 13' Whaltt '61, 40 hp, SI195
645-8226 Eves. LIDO 14 No. 7725 xlnt $1150.
BLUE\VATER CH.ARTERS
27'--!0' U·Drive Skip. Avail
Day/v.•k. 6-16-0000 24 hrs.
Days 642-9784 Eve. M&-6894 Aircraft 9100
PETS •Od LIVESTOCK bo --------Siil aft 9010 AERONCA 7 AC "Ow.mp".
DIVORCE forces sale o! all Dishwasher, Tappan $50. cond. 83()..l9S4 323 S. Main, Ora.op Dogs 1825 BEAUTIFUL Jolly Roger 25'
96° ·~· SURFBOARD 9'8" 532-l!m
500 S.l\10 H radio. ge n,
ceconite. !\-lu st sell. 497-1257
household !urn. incl. lent cr-•J ----------I sloop, l~iyrsold,pert.cond,
trlr, free zer , washer/dryer, WASHERS S29.95; dryers "Jacka'', Excellent condition GREAT Danes. 3 choice pick sleeps 4 w/head, galley, Mobile Homes 9200
& misc. Items. 002-7928 $35; Freezers $75; Relrig., $50. 5-l:>:-30l4 Put yourseU in our Place of li!!er pups. AKC Cha.m-stove, new 5 hp Scai;uU .
QUEEN Box springs & ma\. eopJX'rtone & Avoc.; Guu. SURFBOARD. 8'4''. J oe Harbor Blvd D-1 Theatre pion stoc k. Fa .. ~1n, 7 males . motor. Sacrilioe $4,500 firm. 30 TRAILER at Bayshot't's
tress Good cond. $50. Sealy. , _>1_1>-_1095 ____ ~~-~ Qu igg. 3700 McFadden, S.A. 1 female. 642·<002 Call for appt 673-5492, Trailer Park. 2 Bi;· & bath. 2230 S. Anne St.
Santa Ana, California, 5-15-6~ HOTPOINT elcc bili.n cook * 837-2907 * SWAP MEET POMERANJANS, 2 ma1es, 494--7445 s2.wo. TER.i.\IS OK. Ownc.r. 1 ~~==~--~~--1 t213) 332-0605 top & high oven combo. Like 4-10 Shotgun $25 !like AKC ISLANDER 24 v.· /c h o 1 c e -'=--'=---~=~~--1
new cond. S95. 842-1861 new). Greek surfboard Starts Aug 17 'reg., 8 weeks. $75 Each Newport Mooring. Full race. DLX. Vi~ing ZOX60 _ dhl.f cx-
STOVE $l5. Large h'Oot-free 9:6" $25, 548-1290 531-1212 aft 7 633-8355 dinghy, ma'!ly e.<tras. $4800, pando, air-cund, be~ut. _urn An equal opportunity employer
8022
GARAGE Sale J.~ri., Sat. & retrigerator-freezer $15. BEAUTinJL nickel plated CUSTOM Velvet d r apes, AK C Ml NI AT URE British Seagull Mlr. $70. & 2 Crypts &~-=flC View,
Sun. 10 AM lo 5 PM : antique 494-3052 9mm Luger automatic pistol never been used made to fit DACHSHUND PUPS, l.tale ·":9--095~:;,;'===co-=--ll;n;"~l.01_02AM1imilbill.i;;;-
fum., Dresden fi gurines, n 25. 642-5662 a !I' opaiing cl to Dr, or Female. &11-7846 or -SNOWBIRD # 379 10x50 2 BDRM builtim · glassware, household g""'3, KENMORE elect. dryer. Gd. °"'"°'=""'"'""°"'""'°"7.-,--,,, S•o=• S1" A d 847 •730 -mplt ~-m . Ex•ll -'. d .75
'
.. • ••9027 S""~nARO .... N I __,...ay '"1· a. voca o -,, with trailer. •'>'JC ... v ru " l.1alQ.
ltielp Wanted 7400 Schoola-lnstruction 7600 many other items, brass, con · · yrs "' O'tQ-"""u-uv 4 atura grn heavy mesh dra""" fits .,.,..., Tradewinds Parle. Sp. C·2, t1Jter 6 PJ\.{ mahno .. color stringers, u.s-r--v SCO'ITY pu"e for sale. 0cl."anic Yacht Sales ('tc. Price range from 50c to -.. 11' opening, $85, 5-19-1TI3 ,... G42-Ta18 Women ,:-==-'-----\YA NT ED Velerinarlan
receptionist. a&Sistant, bc.b
SCHOOL Children's vacation
rates. Chilcoat 10 · Lesson
Typing School. ~2859. 173
Del Mar, c .M.
$1 500 for Dresden !igurines. G.E. Electric Mobile Maid i ~ed=tw=;"'=· ="""==·=&12-3==19=7= GOLD COINS_ B.U. Mexican A.K.C. registered. I 7 14),,_,,__~·~~642-~5~15~1:_,.'e~~~1==========
Alm compL woodworking Dishwasher Large capacity. 492-1842 12' SNOWBffiD No. ?.H; MOTOR HOMES ~IS
M' ·11 8600 sold pieces. 50 Peso ($63.50), 74.
area, send age, exp, etc. to
i\1·178 Daily Pilot
shop, rools, table &aw, SlOO. 646-2095 11ce aneous 20 peso ($211.50) and 10 peso 1\-fIN. female Schnauzer pupa fiberglass bull, fair cond .• IC.---------1
joiner, sander, 1/li'' drill REIBIGERATOR, D e s k , ($15.25) or aii three for nM. AKC reg. Ears cropped. All trlr. incl. l.1ake o f I e r
* WAITRESS and HOSTESS
!\fr. Steak, F'a irview &
Learn To Be A Florist
• 545-~56 • Wilson C.M. 642-0732 1-----------Job.-Men, Wom. 7500
Collector Trainee
S•l•ry Plus Commission
Local Collection Agency
Call Mr. Bealer
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
Furniture 8000
$ 2.25 $
per wk.
BUYS
press l.'Ombin., dado & Antiquet 8110 Tables, s a 1admas 1 e r Call 548-6449 shots. 675-3251 545-4322
molding set, wood lathe, & --.-'-E>;'-'-'T-A_T_E_SA_LE __ * R. e frigerator, Remington KIRBY vacuum cleaner & Spitpoos Bladt & nutty_l'1"0~· """"FBG=~LS.,,.-~Del'""'ta,,..--d~m~g~h~y.
necess. cutting 1 0 0 ls ' Antique china, bric.a-brae, .shaver, new. Polaroid, Jiling attachments. Take ove r 1 male 1 female $10 each. Dacron ! ails, F1oatalioo
bandsaw , $4:,0 cost app rox. il I Sat A cabinet, Two TV's, complete small P'"'ments or 151.20 * 847-9581 * tanks. MllSt see lo apprec Sl200 or will trade !or low s verp ate, etc. ., ug. . b'· t. . ~ -oc=----,..-....,.---~.,.--1 $395. 633-4367 24th, 10.5 Pl\1 , Sun. Aug. aquarium, oom u1a ion mlX· cash. Credit dept. KE ~7289 AKC registered miniature l."~===~~----1 ~il~ ~~car~~ ~ec~!i-~ 25th, 1-4 PM. ONLY. 16386 er & blenders. Two portable * Rummage Sale * Schnauzer puppies, $75. 14 ' SAll.BOAT. New mast.
Fellows Dr, Orange. typewriters. Utensils, books, Anchor Lodge Vasa Order of 842-7361 dacl'Oll, rigging. Sea1>1orthy.
check-out. 21831 Ki 0 w a 1-c==~~-~~---= mony misc. items. All ex-•= 147" ll-1onrovia NB Lone, Hunt. Bch. 962-9717 J-IEAVY, Carved Spanish America. Aug, 23-24, 145 E, SAOtIFICE AKC h't ~""'· -• · cellenl! Yes, r ea ll y · wi e, 548-7807 Newport West area. sideboard $375. Napoleonic giveaway price!!. 2298 D 19th SL C.M. Poodle puppies. Excellentl;o,C.-ic.==-,,o--=::::::c
Must Sell Extra Items! loveseat $165, walnut m11-rdble Fountain Way W~t at Joann 21" KING-0-LA\YN power line breeding. ~7494 BY1 OWN1 FJR 318' ilsilh~ett2e
HOUSE ·ro SMALL top table $75. Several lea ed S mower with catcher. Good WEllMARA·NER p u P P i es c ass. s oop, sa s, s ps .
Tiffany type hanging shades I ~~',.· ='""'"'"°""c-c.,.-.-°'" condition $75. 846--0'h9 A.KC. \YUi be 6 wks 915, 5 0.B. incl. ;1450. 494-62,12 Custon1 made har w/4 stools, $8S & up. Zl3G Newport COLOR TV, Packard Bell, I""========= I HOURLY RENTALS
* DODGE * MOTOR HOMH
b1 T~AV CO
21. ft & 27 It . Modc•l'
.', JI, <>df f •..
l"'m".~"''' u. •· ·• ,
AT BEACH CITY
·, DOD.GE
'l65SS Beat~ BIYd
IHwy~ a91 .
'540-261>0
'HUNTINGTON &EACH
642°7352 3 complete rooms
Sofo & choir
metal bookcases, antique walnut console, remote, exc. 1emales, 3 males. 8-12-5187 Btva., Costa Mesa Misc. W•nt•d 1610 I c=c-o,--,,--,.,,-:-;---;;;---* Rhodes l!t's * cocktail tab!c, custom twin cond. $250. Original pai.n-1 ___________ 1 AKC Beagle, female $15. 6 Fun Zone Boat Co. B;.lboa Mini Bikes 9275
bed spreads, clocks, glass Sewing Mechines 8120 lings $125 lappr. $400). w A N T E D mo old, b:iusc broken 1------------NEW Motel now int('rviewing
maids; desk clerk & relief
clerk, some exper., good at
figures, men preferred. Men
for laundry & ground1>
ma.int. Write, giving phone
number to P.O. Box n.29,
t.a.guns Hills, or call n4:
83(h2550, Mrs. Han:len
2 .,., tobl"
1 cofffe table warr, racing; bike & 10 gear Ladies qual. clothing, like 548-1275 LID~ 14, 2 sets of 5a~s, BRIGGS & Stratton 4 HP
man's bike, antique rel.'ord 1967 SINGER, Wal console new, SI to 55 .. sza. 7 -8, cwt=R~E~F=o-x'""'T~e-m7·,-,°""p,,,--p,-1 ~~ good cond, $950. motor w I Fox f ram e. 2 lamps
pla.yer, books. Name It. It's incl. Transfer Of service S-10. Mesa Verde. 546--0625 WE need quality (no junk AKC champ. stock. Shots. Gt>arcd for dirt. $ 9 O. = =5 J>e~ ~n~tt~ !e£ = Probably Herc! Sat. Aug.~. m an for c es r c po . * AUCTION * please} -Furnitw-e, color TERMS. 642_9939 1968 Columbia 21 w/ Johnson 613-4281
O Bedr S t Sun. Aug. 2S 19-6~ 307 Esplan-T 0 u c tH> -m at i c, auto, TV's, stereos, appliances, ==-,;:.,..---;o:::;;:--n::==I ou tboard. 1\1 any Xtras! l-',-'17u-'sT"°""S~El.~L-, -A7lmoo--,-0,,.,-l pc. oorn e ade, cnmer Vis1a de! Ora, zig-zag, button holes, blind U you will sell or buy tools & ollice equipment. PURE·Bred Poodle ~ppies S2100. * Sl2-249-t
• Frame, Box & The Bluffs. Npt Bch. hems, fancy atitcbes, No at· git e Windy a try TOP CASH IN 30 l\1inutes l.1ale & females; avail. nOY1! l.c==7.""7.c--oo--c-:-= Bonanza llOO -$00. :fii atl, 6 drawer 137 85 Auctions Friday 1:30 p.m. 531 ~,,..,,, * on~ nc~5 $40 549-3654 LEHl\otAN 10. Good cond. • 642·3869 • CALLING All Can;! Police tachments needed. · ...... ._. ~ ' Alu m. spars. F iberglass. 1----------
d resser, Mirror, 2 Aux. Jrd annual garage sale. cash or assume $4.10 mo. W indy's Auction Barn 88.JO $275. Sacrifice. 675_2681 MESA MINI BIKES 39.95 up
PETER CHRISTIAN
of the
Newporter Inn
Has an opening for
BEAUTICIAN
Nile Stands, Head-Cklthing, boolu, •-•. bikes, Guar good. 526-661.6 Beblnd Tony's Bldg. Mat'I FREE TO YOU Horses Sales O Parts • Repairs
b d 2 La PS ~~ LOA Sloop, sleeps 2, 1 yr old. """1 H 00 c '' a "'8 --oa r • m · h-·-boid 1·1"m•. b a k, 2075% Newport, Cl\1 646-8686 H. hi · · _,bl k .. ~u ar r, ·· · .,.. ·.JVU! -' 8125 lg Y sp1nh:u ac • All extras! $1650 or trade FURNITURE ~ ""-· · s Mus;eal Inst. WAITTED -Good home '"' •••. h"""s ....... 6 aLn prlCC's. al., WALNUT Exec desk & chair, sleek Mustang g.,.. mg. for car. 842-152!1 M 9300
Aug. 24th, S.5. 1194 Boiiie il d like new, was $22;,, now lO mo. old Shepherd -Great Gentle with kids. Must _•_t_o_'<~Y~'-'-"-----LIQUIDATORS 'Y.'ay, Costa Mesa. 546-0'193 ELECTRIC guitar, co thco;l SIOO. Black African Mhg Dane. Female, all shots. .11ee toappreciale. $275. SNIPE 16' 9". Bargain, S300
with foUowing 1807 Ntiwport Blvd., C.J\.f. I Fairview lo Paularino to $45; amplifier f.!5. Bo · bookcase w/glass doors S50 Love ab I e . good wit Eves, £42-1044 inc. trailer. Glassed hull.
Call 644-0340 ____ O~pe_n_E_,_,_,.___ Van Buren, then N. 4 blks. ro I ;'°";;;'";·~u=on~-=54&-4'==355==== or Best Offer? Girl's 24" children. Good wa~ch dog. ----------1 Good cond. 494-612!1
Y:.O::U.:.N7G~m-,-.~.-w-,-m-,-0~2cc1.=35. EARLY American cu~~ _Bo="-,'ccwc;ca-,y.,,1.,...-,-.,--,I Pianos & Orgin~ ___ B~.30 bike, good cood. $15. 540-5487 8124 TRANSPORTATION 14' Satellite
made dining rm set, UlUP SAT. 24th 0n1 .......... io/•-1-' ---548-5984 all 6 8 ADORABLE kittens. Ali -.------$850. * 642-5151 Positions open for winter _,. ~ '""' ·~ ... v u E e -~~~-~~-~--1 B t & y ht 90001o==="=====7.:::'.'I employment. Full & part end harvest table ext.,,...,s to player, 2·3X6 windows w/ • PIANO SAL ONE Set of Box Springs, Grey & white. Will have oa s IC s I'
ti·me. Apply Th. e Dorymen 114· x 42" & closes to 26'' x frames for shrco. Misc. Fi"oal Summer Clearance! $10.00. Kitchen door, 6 11.. grttn eyes. 4\.1 wks old.W --,-h-,-,-,-.-00-,-m-w-,-,-,.-,.-,,,~-al Power Cruisers .9020
42", 8 cane S(>a( ladder back h · -'·'JI h · h 675--5983 8/24 Fl.sh & Chips. 2100 Ocean· c airs. """ pool table, rat-AJl .nianos pri(•cd to sell now! 7~., inc es long by 29 inc es small trade-ins that must be """ENS 2'" •obin cruiser, chn, 'l pc custom made bl & _.. 1' • T bl od TV LOVE v" • front NB btwn 2·5 pm. hutch, $600. Maple formica Ian Ill' e , .... air, baby furn· Mendelssohn Grand .•.. $645 wide, S5.00. a e m el 'ABLE Big orange sold. No reasonable oUer re-'66. Low hrs, fully equip. * ACCORDIAN * !able for corner hl'irl bed iture, conwl. new sink, 3 Fr. Estey Grand ...•• ,,.,, 5795 doesn't work ) good for altcrrd male, young spayed fuse<l! Sacrifice! S7100. 842.5789
(Or small organl player for grouping $25. 2 . 9' round Prov. tables, marble lop. Haines Grand , ......... $795 parts, $5.00. calico. Both mitteri toed. All '66-16' Lone Star, Johnson 25' OWENS CAB CRUISER
trio. Do standards, pop. burnt orang!." rugs $25 ea. ll-lisc, 3-'.11256 Stonington Rd., Brambach Grand ••• ••• $895 68~~S~07L~ID~,-.. -,-,-,-,-.,-,-o-con--.1 sh9ts. 542-2002 8/24 40 hp .. ""," ... $15!15. ::\1nt cond. Loaded! Sac!
rhythm & blues. Male or fe· 48" round green glass top Three Arch Bay, So. Laguna Kimball Grand -· ·•· ·•• $895 sole. Diamond stylllli, 4 AUSTRALIAN Shep h c rd '00-21' Hollywood Craft, 75 547_7103 £75-5008 eves.
male:. For immediate work. wroughl iron table & 4 chrs GARAGE Sale Sat. 9-5 Pi\1. Wurlitzer Spinet ....... · S395 speed. $79. Will accep t $2 female, 8 weeks, purebred. hp Johnson, SS trlr, S19!l) ' __ _
(714) 689-2011 $100. 644-ll58 233 Cos!a l\1 esa SI. C.M. Knabe Console ........ $595 weekly. Free home trial. 9 6 2 -5 3 3 2 18328 Santa '61-20' Burchcraft, 160 ONC, Speed-Ski Bo•fs 9030
.:.::o::..;c.:..ccc.._~~--l ~---------1 Capehan radio hi /fi comb. Many more to choose lrom. 5~1112 MarianaF.V. 1/0 , tralier etc ..... $2195 __ . --~
l\tEN & women, 18 & over, EARLY Amerkan custom w/ beaut maple cabinc-! ~d Bank terms -no payment MOVING SALE 63 TriumPh IF~REEo;;;;-1;:071;:0;:,.~b~l•'""°'ho=m;:,~.,=·th '61·19 ' MrCWlough Cralt, A True Winnerl ~~a! ~~i~e~; ~k~ ,i~~ made dining rm sel, drop workl,·ng cond, S50 turquoise till October. He-raid con v er\ i b I e large yard. l~Sc yr old Collie-Flying Smt.trlr ..• · 51895. CUSfOM BUILT Thunder-
end harvest I able e.l!te nds to wa s er & dry r r -f ro n t COAST MUSIC Household goods, baby she p herd , 1 ema 1 e ·;,g.15· Century Resorter, bird Formula 233. This 23·
mana.&er. Cali 548-6681 After 114'' x 42'' & closes lo 26" x loading stack model S50 2 items in c 1 u ding twirl ~3384 8/23 Needs.Ieng . Nice condilion! all fiberglass V-bottom beau-
1 PM 42", 8 eane seat ladder back upholstered chairs S25 ea. 1839 Newport Blvd., C.M. strolll'r. 67:,...2070 1995 ty has Americ.11.'s most fa·
RELIABLE co u ft 1 e to <-·hrs, 2 pc custom made Dishes & odds and rndJI 64&-0'271 BLONDE Mo. Beagle & Ter· 18' u 1u·1 v B k ro h l<'i"iiiiiro'iiMiriMin~ I 1' I Y, un s, P mous rac;"" design. SAF-15 unit apl house hutch $.'llO Ches1 freezer G RAG NO SALE E LE CT R IC Kenmore rier femai". Had 1 •bol. -~ manage · · · · A E 6alc · 3 spd gi r\'5 PIA \Vasher, ...,rfcct condition. .. Flsherman, Spec. lrlr $1250. EST SKI BOAT BUILT. It's No pets • Exp. pref. Call $25, l\1aple t-0rmica table for & 10 spc1 boy's bike_ S25 ea. 11,1oNTHS-END CLEARANCE .... Very cute & Jo v ab 1 e. \YEST COAST YACHTS rough water tested and
5S6-3634 for appl . comer twin bed grouping Wrought iron dbl headOOe.rd GRANDS * * SPJNETS Beige blonde wig. Bust 548-2407 8126 Newport Arches l\1arina equipped with a Berkeley
IHA . .:::f-'RD=R-'ES"'"'s=ER""-,"p,.~,71.-.,-m-, I 125. 2·9' round burnt orange S'.!5. Sabnt sail boat S115. * * * *WAS NOW de v c 10 ping machinf' COCO-POD, beautiful black 3333 W. Coast Hwy. "'t ... powered by a 450 hp
lollowi ng. Busy Nev.·port rugs S2.5 ea. ~8" round grt>en l\1ini bike $100. Lfmed oak i''r Prov gr $1395 SI09j -"'-""'-=-'-'~'=="'=~-=--1 & white markings, 9 mo. Newport Brach * 642-7711 A~l'O J\.larine. Cruises at 45.
Salon. Xlnt opportunity! 673-glass top wrought iron table dresser & niirror S50. Teak Sohmer \\'al gr S1 6Cil $13~5 • VACUUMS • old, has sh':lts. Adult family 16' PLYWOO D G 1a 3 s, All of the extras incl. sis
5342 Ask for Tom =·-'='-"'-'_s_i_oo_._64_<-.,..,ll_58_-c--I chrs SG ea . ;).JS-JS!H Kn<1be lvx gr S259:> $1875 SlO up. Repairs & parts. only. 847-8030 Hom ellte 55·196'1 outhoard, radio, 4 speaker stereo & + * COOK. Experiencro. Fumiture rcturnt'CI from dis-T \Y 0 Hou s e h of d s: Wurlitzl'r sp $.<;99 S499 Reasonable. Coa st Vacuum 4 DARLING Toy Collies· used 97 hrs. Xlnt cond, wheel custom trailer. Cost
Coi.ta l\1esa M c mo r i a I pla y studios, model honies, Stereo-HlFi equip. Au I o Kitnbal cons $.89.) SS75 333 E .t7th, 0.1, 642·1560 Shpeherd ipups. Females . 4 American trailer, must see over S12,000. Owner says
Hospital Apply 301 E. Vic-decorators cancellation. flar1s , Ira.Her parls An1i -Studio upr $5~5 S395 G.E. refrigerator top frer1er wks. old. 16-H Labrador Dr. to apprec. Entire outfit best oUer lakes & it's nearly
toria, c .M. Ph. &i2-2r34 Spanish & Mediterranean etc qu('S, Furniture. G!lrdrn SO New & Used Sale Pianos S50. Draperies · tan -I c.~1. S/26 $1600. 545--8998 new. 642-4321, Ext. 240 Days; RD FURNITURE too ls. 54(}-5750. 2 o 4 5 4 Gould Music Company widths bo!ll good condition AUGUST SPECIAL•. 1,0111 644-1742 Evenings and \Veek· ADULT Couple, ass1stanl "'· S 2015 N. Main, S.A. '54i-OJ.Sl $.";() !'149-ta26 BROWN & wht. 5 mo puppy ~ d
managers: able to d:> maint. 1844 Newport Blvd., CM '-Jpress 1· S.A. Hgts. · · ' Red Hill & £<.linger -nr El out, paint jobs . best price "ffi"''~·====,,,----I
& cleaning. 2 Bil. 2 ba. Apt. every night lil 9 PATIO SALE, c 1 o ! h i n ~, s s lef BEDSPREAD Brentwood T 0 ro , Au g. 2 o t h on the waleor front. VACATION SJX"cial!
!or srrvices. 646-12at \Y l'd., Sa1. & Sun. 'til Ii furniture, toys, beautiful eason a • original hot fJ\nk & olive, 646-9208 8/26 NEWPORT DRY 000{8 1966 Cris O'att 17' speed boat
GALLEY Cook. Par1 Time KNITTED FABRICS light fixturcs, & misc. Fall shipments of Baldwin S5panish sldtylc. s,ac. $45. Only CU'T'E 6 week old kittens. on the Ba,y at 20th 6.~ VW sunroof Ask $1.000 .. ~6S~H~O~N~D0~1"!1J.~C~B~,-,-nd~o-,w-I
itrms. 8124·25, l 6801 mo's o · 536-817 a 6~ l"-a Chev V8 eng inboard 40 ' on Sport Fishing boat. Pianos & Organs on the Calico mother. Aflernr.oonli.. •;>-JVJ • • • • . • only '110 mi. recorded Oil * 968-3220 * Newland St., H.B. v.•ay. Our {loor & discon FU RNITIJRE, appliances, 642-1323 Eves. 5-13-7786 19' CENTIJRY 225 HP ski & hrs. original -radio -all 9peedometcr cost over $400
_. .. _ ..., FOR SALE \\'ESTi\IINSTER l·LJSt Li:1dy models must go. Pric('S miscell. household items. 2 LOVABLE"'''·,. mo. m•I• spd boat, Xl nt cond. thru-~eathe~ int. Ski bar ~tcd ,,,. I add .accessories, witi HELP wanh ...... at ,,,.,, Remnants, ""'pies & t.till r--.. _ .. _1 lO AM & 8 ... 1n encnne ]"• b ~
J.·'· •· t•· Box -Beach Lions Annual Rummage slashed! Doesn't it make .......,, "" seen = · 1 & fem•I•. w1·11 •P•Y & alter, out . Worth $300). Accpt any .. -· -P "". r ne_w sac. for S300. Ov.oned by boys ""' "' '"'" ends Sat. Only 8 a.m. to 2 PM 501 F J f c M Coleman campmg -·lhl Ed. S•i" Sal A"" 2' f-m 9 6 •· 10 sho b•lo-y • ern •• h -8/23 -••.off•, 0·< •< '-k · 4208 . -· °"' w-k who W<"" ~und-Blvd. south ol 1nger. p.m. 9'19 Baker, Costa l.lcsa .... ....,.. "· "' · sen.,.. Pus ... ou ' · · plus all s ots. 542-~\1\1£ ... • ""-' ..,,,._ ..... '" ~"" at &;,3'2 We.stminstcr Blvd. buy? ELECTRJC Trolley '~ ton. River Ave. 61:>-1355 Ouis tent -3 v.·ay conv. ed. ~fay be &<'en at 4639
BLUE Beet -673-9!)()1 Dinner SOLID Birth bd. srt • 10 rl\\·r W~I WA RD'S BALD\VIN Sl'UDIO 1211 KW AC-J phase KITTENS, 5 -black & v.·hite, ;c-;-;;---.,.,,---,--...,-1706, cooler -2 gaJ snow lite jug -Gorham Dr. Corona dcl
Cook. 4-12 pm $.'lO. pt>r 6h11! dr('Sller & mirror D, brd I ~==~~~~---llO S red &: while, grey 4 mo's SAC· · 111 n es s; 3 burner camp stove -Mar. (Ca--Sho•"') . SUPER SALE! "·by, bd•oi. 1 1 Nev.·port, C.i\1.. 642-Sl84 generator. ki boat with old .•• , ·en• 8/23 "POW"_,,.. ····--1··· 65 I l 300 2 I "'" ' & up W;utress eves. bkcase hdboard lilt!' nf'w • .,.. • ,,., ..,. ...... , ....... ,. ..... , an em watts -s <'CP-l=c-cc--.,.---,"""...,.-'---1
"'
.t =11-f11m .. "''"'· Or•ngeCo"sL••gest motor.Shoptools.642-4610 f!P M•'" OS n--,· top . •-Uf 13295 00'66 H-da 300 D•ea-, y• m••• D co"•--• ,.,_1 •-~ ' old ... , .......,.., , , mg ~g• _ a 0, . v., ... , ...... Y,.., • '"'"' ... ~.... d I .. _ KrrJlENS, 8 weeks . black Ag•ncies, M. W. 7550 blanket & Bates bd-sprd. ~~.8Pf'5'n' c: ot,,.-s, 111 i 1 c • One--Stop Music Store REFRIG!top cross freeze r & black & w hit e. canvasses, trlr., etc. $1315. 100 % finan<'.:ing o, A, c , . . twlmel,
Us
S225. 544-6914 .,..;,-.]. \l;urlitzer pianos & organs. 13 cu ft frtoezer , couch & 675-3199 8124 644-2028 675-2147 (private party) windshield, saddle bagl.
ARG h B h DL'.'ING room set/ complcte EVERYTHING from Jewelry Fische.r, Kanabe JI i s nos, chair All for $125. 646-5270 rE'lALE K" 2 1964 29-0.....('1)5 DC. F1ybri~e. 1957 18. J\.lERCURY utility Xlnt cond. S400, ~8270
Work Ne1r t e ••c 10 furn ., incl. ~e 100111. Player pianos, reblt, guar,, 309 Monte Vist a \rear) CM r ~" 1lten.s mos. t 11 · ---i N · t '65 HONDA 30J Dre ~1M
PBX Op S350 S1 25. 3 {)C Krocltler sec· ,. I ~-G d Blue .• " y per$ j an . u y equ1pj.l<:U. ev.· pam • boat, with 1957 T Bird (11g. atn. _,,.,
···•••··· ·•·•••• tion;i\, make offer. 3261 an 1que a111erns. H('(.-o,"ion ran s. UPHOLSTERING -$79.50, 2 50 hm on overhaul. Make ol.-good family boot. TraHe r 642-5647
Cm Office · •· •• · ·•• .. • S3:iO Falkland a r.. Hunti!"@ton $115: new Univrrsal sPwing \VALL1CHS·P.1ANNING 'S pc. <European craltsmenl 646-T3-19 S/2G fe r. 548-3973 aft 6 PM $750. Ph. &12-1936, 80l2 320 Del Mar, Costa McSA
Line mechanics··••·· to $800 Ho~··•. (~!) 592 ~!""' IMch . S75: c111l 54;,...2.11.l J\.1USJC CITY f'rt'e '''· d"i, pi"k"P· 215 MALE Puppy -Cockapoo 8 STORAGE Tr ·i boa T I A 118 FOR Sal '6' __ , • """' ..., -.. "" ... .. , a1 eni, ts, ay or ve. . . c: Huuua 450 cc lte$1•urant trne • ·· · Sl.65 hr ==-"''--'=.;:..C:._:..-c__ I GARAGE Sale. s at' r i Ii c 3400 So, Bristol l.tain, H.B "Bemy" aJ6.6405 wks. -bas had ishot&. 11 d
ARGUS EMPLOYMENT CASH -cash for furn eppl C ,1 ""l).~65 8126 etc. S7.50 per/mo. Work INBOARD 48 cu. in. exec rnt con ilion. ~-" ., ho,,e•-Jd 1·1·m•. Lea•··1"g osta '' csa * "" '""' BUY YOUR FIRE\VOOD 54a-4595 642 ~ & ~0 3261 Call "'"' '""" CONSUl TANT AGENCV TV's, M tique11, glassv.•are, "" ' " 1.-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOi space. -"""' ...,,,... Hydroplane ready tn race. =v....,..., ~ · 8N'a. 2124 Highland Dr. NB. NOIV • SAVE'.•. 2 Kl'ITENS, 1-. & male, 2043 W -"" NB <-A<>........, tools, ini5e. Houseful or one NOW HERE th "" ... ,., 30' OWEN'S Cabin Cruiser. Boat , motor & trier $495. 1961 YAMAHA .3Cfl Scrambler est.~. · · ......,.,..,., 54S--090t -e new S35 a CORD. 540-9887 tiger stri""d &_ blk. &: wht. 6 JGlf E. 17th St., S.A. 547-6336 itl"m. ~1579 I ~=,.,.,=~~~~-~ Supersounding T·'200 ,.... 8 twin !JCrew, Sips 6. Many 646-3829 >.1nt cond. Must s e 11
2 DANISH mod end tablee, 1 GAR.AGE Sa.le: F\Jm, Ap-Hammond Spinet or&an DECORATING P aper, all wks old. ~lS70 /2l Xtraal CaU alt 4-549-4283 SKI Boal, extra sharp. 14·, drafted! $440. * 646-7332
Schools.Instruction 7600 sm '!Amp In gold & blk. J lrx ptlanc,-s. F'ri e\'C!, Sal I< Sun. -the linen yeti 1.ypes Sl · SS. Typewriter 2 Kittens, 9 v.·ks. old 1 :z f' T, Alum I n um wUh 65 HP Mere. $7S5. Trlr. 1968 Honda Scrambler 90
•i'll l•.f". from~ pi·-.. ,. 16460 Ross Circ le, $CHM1DT-PH!U.TPSCO. S30.PolarnidS35.549-0251 54H398 i.......1 t h l · J d-' -9652 XI 1 -·• •-'" " ""' ~'"' 1 ......_.1 mot(I" es t an yr. me u ....... :ow.-• n """''"· .... ...,,
If you are M:tkl" olrtt! 549-1713 ,17'~"'-17m~"~'~'"'------1907 N. MaJn 0 3>t.h 9X 13 TENT, lllderoom, 1 ~-~----~--81'1_.j Xlnt eond! $215. 961-4113 LATE '6T GLASSPAR *847-Bm•
,....rtterlnn the world W" "UT di-Ing labl•, ,·,, GARAGE Sale: furn., mi~.1 ~~~!!Sa"'o!!l1~A~na~ ....... ~1 molol -1,. Good --"1~n. HA LF ............, mal• Siamese, 7 AME M I boa l1' •1 ~.· ~ l967 TRIUMPH 650 Boo • ru..o• " ,..... ... ...,.iw"' ,. • .,~.. 1 ' R. arc a aaa I , ,, ere .... ,uiser l~u. new ·
of ,.!~s~~~s ;.;..M· • chairs, 3 leaves + custom c"""•"'1'°1 Ide Ml 1 <~!;! ~.;.. 230 PlANO 6 old E ll 40 _135=·~968-lm=c-o~'-,.---,,,-=c 1 gentle il aUecionate. -Call $500. HD trlr SlOO. Oliver 35 trailer. 641-5333 aft. S Pi\I . neville 2,000 mi. Best otier
COrNnDEN .............. .,..... • ......., · pads SZ75. &l2..-0568 8 rl o, 1 • U"N""""<JO<ll yr vere · RUGS SOc·JJ, d~ 5()c.fl, After 6 P.1\1. 673-1074 8123 hp motor S120. 515-4214 ta.kea. 6'&-2617 eves 675-2492 ~it :iu::ti~= &}ge & orange, non! GARAGE SALE :~. ~~~~1, ~.,~:; trunk Sl. ~ Eldr!D CM . 2 WASHING machines. Need 25· TROJAN, • i mm •c. Merine Equip. 9035 1968 125 cc Honda ScramNer
• 0,,.11~ "'''· 9 .. ~50• :n4 J6th SI., N.B. Sat/Sun .~,-,_1.1,., "-,.~mm-' 642-!i&llO work. 186 Del Mar Ave, lh-·ghoul with olfp 7•• ~ llh ~1 ~ • ~~1 14~ -·· ·-Oehl.,., ~~· ~ "'' lllJU ' DI.. "'I ~-.... '"" • W u r • 1963 7" h "'"" ("--' W I"-'.'. mo;\ ....,..,... C 4'1· ('l.n!fl', IWll C«n .,., .... Costa. l\fesa 711 p .. u. OU ..... ~ ...... td qWddy ~ clfectivd.,)', •673-2001• music rack, m • t chin g Boys Bikl! SS. Bell Topa 1 ==~~---~~-terttpter $4,950. 673-8158 motor, good eond. S50. 548-aSM __
.Ld m shoW )'Oil how. •DUNCAN Phyfe mahopny APfliancH 1100 bench. Xlnt a:xxl.. $500, 6 718 motorcycle he.Imel FREE Y°'"'i[ cau. Xlnt pets. 14' 01.Tl'BOARD w(28 HP. * Wit3rd hull 18 hp Mere '66 JiONDA 160: just ~t.
NODA Hotfmu dlnillc lable \\i th 6 cblin l Rtofrigl"ra'IQ' 67S-Jlm Clilce new ). $30. MS-1290 Call ~10 8126 and trailer SZ<l. or ma.Ice ol· mot« Elgin tn.ll~. good Xlnt CC!Dd . u~. bul Nar
Newport bolfet.SlOO.~S-7840 Tn C"rOOdcondiHon$35. PIAN O. PJO, atudlo 12x12 BAMBOO RUG S PUPPrES tree to good fer.548-4504 eond.$295...lil" 67S-ai25 abuM!d! 54&-42M
SchooJ of BuaJneu MUST atll Jum. -lt!O\oing, 1n7S Thurin AVe., C.M. Wurlilze:r, :<Int C'O n d, • $15. 642-4.115 tiorne.. 548-3369 8/26 16' SEi\RS outboard. glau, EVINm'711&75 SfiOO. Lobster 1996 Smdd Jro. Xlnt cood.
W Dover Or., N.8. t'-Verything goos. l 6 6 ·A THE QUICKER YOU CALL., Walnut caae. btnch. 5f8-.J200 JOIN ts. ••icae ti Ult CUTE mixed puppies 7·male1 35 hp, be.ti tank, ~starter skitt ~. Fatbometu s:m. Extns! s:LW, firm.
646-0JSJ ~. C.M. 646-2310 TICE QUICKER YOU SELL au.RGI! m DAD..Y PILOT W.\lft AOl!ll 1.femaJe. 54$.('625 fVts. 8124 I trailer. $000. m-1m 675-21!.2 OR. !HJ11) * 567783 ...
' ' ' '·
l
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
M9c;:.r.t:.::oc:.r<,,Y:::<:;;l•:::• __ _:9.;;3.:;;00 Imported Autos 9600 Und C1r1
HONDA 305 SCRAPt!BLJ!:R
1966. JUlit lil(e New! ,New
oversize Utts. Extr11 gear
!Jr c;: :. lliolur just rebuilt.
Lots of chrome. $t30 or best
o!ler. 962-7689
tATSUN MG 1------------'6B MG '67112 DATSUN YEAR END
1600 CONV. Cl t.~~'."::. ~".:'.~ earance
25 m.p.g Full factory AND
:.i~~~ .. ~ -Thi• woe• DEMO SALE
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION I TRANSPORTATION
UMd C1n 990U Imported Autos 9600 tmported Autos 9600 fmporttd Autos
PORSCHE TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN _V_O_L-KS_W_A_G_E_N_
'SS PORSCHE 912-5, blue, TOY OT AS Prlv. party, :l,900 ml.
•Stg...1810* Sport Stdan1, Coupe1, Waa:·
--------onl-We've cot thml. All
SPRITE t;ypta, 1Uckl, auto1natlcs.
Most one owner with low
'62 ~iK. II Sprite, ~ul.11 miles. Can finance all Cil'
nig., nu-brakes, rUM a:ood. part payments aa low u
1961 vw
SUn roof, r/h. $005,
T&M MOTORS
--• VW I< Ponocbe l:M>81 GARDEN GMVE Bl..
CAR.DEN GROVE
'68 VWs
$199 DOWN
36 AT $60.50
..
lmport9d Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9~
VOLKSWAGEN 1-V-O-LK_SW_A_G_E...;.N_1
165 VW '66 VOLKSWAGEN
Sq11orffoc .. ''"' 14111111p'4 + $1495 r1:dl.. Lle # SNRT.ti Not m11::h $1799 more n~ be &akl. at thlJ
'67 250cc Suzuki X-6 Hustler
lmmacu.late. Only an mi's.
$500. or bill offer,
834-8080/ext 14, bet. SAM &:
5Pri1, 812-5'l86 or 673--6595
aft. 6 Pi\t
Auto Servic•
end. Priced to .ell and we
mean to sell
$2195
$S1S 4~26M $22.00 per mo O.A.C.
SEE us TODAY! J"'--'-s-'uN'-B-EA-M--1 ELMORE -
ttutltlPOL· Rtml6T~· ----1 MOTORS
192-S5Sl or S34-22M
LATE '63 V\V Camper-
Deluxe. Family 2nd car.
$1400.
OR OUR
VW Today Plan
$199 DOWN
36 AT $44.02
prl~. But It's rte.Uy a wry
clean, dead ah1rp lltlle c.r.
Could be the b\1)-of tbe
month.
ZIMMERMAN
& Parts 9400 I.Jc. No. 'J"i'X858 '67 SUNBEAM TOYOTA
. .......,,.
Probe.bty the nicest Alpine Ph. 89t·S!20
In Orange CountY! FAC 15300 Beach Blvd,, Wstmnstr
••• r 70Xl4 Speedway wide
tread tiree. Over ~ tread
left. $60. 968-1589
ZIMMERMAN
DATSUN 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 TORY WA.R R ANTEE.
MUST BE SEEN! TRIUMPH
·~ VW Bllit. Xlnt cond, both
ill & oot. Hrdtop. Must 1el!
S9SO/beat otter. 548-9747
'65 VW Deluxe. Very &harp
car. No dwn OAC $40.60 mo.
Dlr. 842-4615
Inc. Fresh air Vft11!, heater.
defrool~r. Low seetll, vinyl
int. 24 months, '66 V\V 2 Dr. 1300 Deluxe, Lo
milage. Very clean. Must
Mll immtdiately. $1300:-Pr!
party. 9GS-IOJ9
Trailer, Travel 9425
J!Jf,g 14' NORTHWEST Little
Dipper. See a Pal or Ernie
at Fairview Enco Service,
Fair & Fairview C M •
>tthlt>lt
Trucks Y500
4 \VHEEl.. Drive. Mercucy
V-S engine big tires. Rusty
body. $350. 642-1943 Sat &
Sun
·at 1" TON Ford Pick Up,
Runs gd. -sharp body $350.
703 Larkspur, C.d.M. After 5
'66 CHEV. ~ Ton pic-k-up. 8'
Bf'd, s tand. trans. $1300 Or
best offer 545-3003
'61 Gl\1C ~~ ton pickup. Top
n1c>chanical con di Ii on
642-8119
THE llOUSE or VALUE
2845 Harbor Blvd. OPEL
Costa Mesa 5»6410 '64 OPEL RD<ORD sport
'64 DATSUN coupe Direct import. Like
Pickup new. Owner 67~:&>9
The popular and hard lo fllld
model~ lt"s red and has 4 PORSCHE
speed transmission. a real 1----.,.-----
mileago m'""· '63 Porsche
$1095
C all Co11,., 4 Spttd, radio, an finance or part Pay.
ments as low as $22.00 per $"' 199 mo 0 .A.C. .u>
ELMORE ~
MOTORS ft. " TOYOTA ... OP
15300 ... ;:" !::-.~•••m"'" ~le._ '"'~S
FIAT '•' ---
'67 FIAT 850 CPE. ,., .. ,., -"'·'"' J~•;.;•_,.P.;.• _____ 9..;5....:.10 Sharp • low mileage _ OO 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
-COSTA MESA 62' INTERNATIONAL Seoul m.p.h., 35 m.p.g, At the !-------....:.:.:.:. __
UNBELIEABLE Low Price
o( -4 wheel drive -travel top
-new til't>I • e1iCelle11t con·
dition $995. \\'ill consider
trade -642...{)297
1946 FORD w I shell
ratnper. V-8 engine, i;dck
shift over-drive. $ 2 9 S •
&12-1943 Sat & Sun.
'59 WILL YS Station Wagon, 2
wd. naeds work. ~ or best
offer, 833--0276
$1495
Lie No. 'T'C;CiJ8
ZIMMERMAN
1966 911 PORSCHE. Navy
Blue. Delta mark ten ig·
nition system. Special ex-
hall5t &ystem. Pr ice d
reuonable! Private party,
fTI4) 522-5304
1968 PORSCHE 912, $4799. DATSUN Bucgundy/blk mt. s ...i.
THE HOUSE Of VALUE chrome whLs, wood steering
2845 Harbor Blvd. whl, tinted glass, AM/FM
Costa J\lesa 5'ID-64.lO sttreo. 673-5Tr3
'57 PORSCHE, White, good
interior. Priv. pty. must
sacrifice! 494-1354
Price'! -How'• This for 1---------
openers . • . ~66 TR-4A
$1895 Ind. Re" Su.,eonon
Llc. No. TRK369 Ntar New Condition
Avoid the rush, come early. R!!DUCEO $500
'There iii only one. ) The Almosl
ZIMMERMAN R"·'"100' Pri"' 01
DATSUN $l 995
Lie. No. NRU661
THE HOUSE 01', VALUE Get he-re early for this ooe!
28!5 H-r Blvd. ZIMMERMAN
Costa Mesa 5't0-6410
TOYOTA
'68 TOY OTA
YEAR END
c:earance
AND
DEMO SALE
SEE US TODAY!
DATSUN
THE HOUSE or VALUE
2845 Harbor Blvd.
Chsta Mesa 54().6410
'6.2 TRIUMPH TR 4 ROAdaler
British racing greoen Many
xtraa. Excell. cood. 67J....42!1
1967 TRIUMPH 200> 4 dr
sedan. Private party Sl950.
Good cond. 675-4214
'63 VW Camper low miles
Xlnt cond. $450. dn, $36. mo.
pri pty. ~84288.
'&I VW DellL~e $59 dwn OAC
~.cm '-111e \Varnnty
T&M
MOTORS
P ymts onl1 $33.50 mo. Dlr. Garden Grove Blvd. et Beach
8-12-4615 89'J..5551 or 5J4.2'l84
'66 VW Xtra clean car . """""":~~~!!!!!!!!!!!
No dwn OAC Pymts o~'" $47 '66 VW '"" The Popular "Bug" mo. Dlr. 842-46li ..,_ ......,mpetltion Orange. Loaded
'66 VW Xtra clean car. No and absolutely lmmaC1lla!e.
dwn OAC Pymta only $47. Can finance all or part Pay.
mo. Dlr. 8-12-461!1 mts. as low 11 $-"2.00 per
'65 VW Deluxe. Veey sharp mo 0 .A.C.
car. No dwn OAC $40.60 mo. $1495
.Dir. 8'2-461S ELMORE
•54 VW Con,. RooJ nk• cu.
No dwn OAC. Paymts
ONLY $31. mo. Dlr. 842-4615
'64 VW, &ood condition!
$950. Call: John Mohler
• 64Hl03 .
MOTORS
TOYOTA
Ph. 894-3320
15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
Dial 642.5678 for REStn.. TS
J4f.Q30l -,,l-1190
lt70 HARl_~R ILVD,
COSTA'""MESA
1967 V\V, t('(!, y,•hite int. ra-
dio & bratl"r. tu9J.
T&M MOTORS
Specialiling · V\V & Pot'SCbe
OJ CiARD&.'/ GROVE BL.
GAROE:-i GROVE
892-5551 or 534-2284
'6J V\V, Radio k hea ter.
30,000 ~ti. Best offer over
$1300. Real clean. 67!H036
'63 VW. Sunroor.
Good cond. $800
~3939 af1er 5:30 pn1.
·GJ V\V beige sedan, orig.
owner, x!nt. cond., RIH.
• !1684343 •
'60 V\V wilh "62 trani;. A-1
cond. $625. Priv Pty.
Call 548-51~ aft 6 pm
VW engines. Steady in stock.
1500 cc . $395. 40 hp • $235.
1300 cc . $325. 36 hp • $1.56.
&l2-0350, 64&-7670 Eves.
'67 V\V Xtra nl ce car. S5D
dwn OAC. Pymt1 $53 mo.
Dlr. 842-4615
VOLVO
'68 VOLVO
GET OUR LEADERSHIP
SA VIN GS BEFORi:
YOU BUY!!!
.PttutlwiU
• IHPORTS
CJ-lARGE your \\'Mt ad now. 1966 ![arbor, C.M.
~ttutltmia New C1r1 9800Now Core 9800 New Cars 9800New Cars 9800 New Cars 9800
• IMPORTS
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-93')3
TOYOTA
HEADQUARTER.S
ELMORE
153CXl Beach Blvd., Wllblmstr
Pbon• 894-3322
GO OLDS RUSH DAYS
UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
Recreat'n Vehicles 9515
CORTEZ Motor Home -Xlnt.
cond., air cond., -me.ny ex-
tras. $9,460. 675-2962
New Cara 9800 New C1r1 9800
EVERY NEW CAR
IN THIS AD No Added Charges!
Includes Sales Exp.
EVERY NEW CAR
IN THIS AD
1966 Harbor, C.J\1. &16-9303
'60 AH 3000' hd tp, xlnt cond.,
'63 eng & trans, 9verdrive,
$1250. 49'1-i793 eve .
DATSUN
'68 DATSUN
2000 sPORTS
0.H. Cam. 135 H.P.
5 SPEED TRANS.
Can't be told from ntw.
Low locaJ mil.C9. FaC"UlfY
warrantee.
$2795
Uc. No. VZROOJ
ZIMMERMAN
DATSUN
( 2M5 Harbor Blvd.
Cbm .Mesa ~.10
TH~ HOllllE OF VALUE
'66 OATS'UN" "Rofldster JED), 4
IJ)d. Srwlu-. foS ltt. tr\llk
1'8Ck. $1le0. 54S.a663 aft '
pm.
'86 .. Modtl 19'.D Roadlttt, a.DOii m1. llood ....i. nm.
6!Wltl!
Over Factory
Invoice
1968 Olds 4-4-2 Hol Cpe
F1ctory Air Conditioning!
v.1, 1ufom11ic, rtdio, h11 f1t, powtr tft1rln9
whiit will fir11, vinyl fop, tinftd gltu, power
di1lr brtlrtt. No. 509T
$99.00Dn. $365347 PLUS TAX
& LIC.
Etc! You Don't
Pay One Cent More
For Any New '68
Olds Listed In
This Ad!
Over 100 More New
&S's at Unbelievable
Discounts!
$
DOWN PLUS TAX
& LICENSI
1968 Vista Cruis~r Wgn
Ftc:fory Air Conditio11in9, 6 p1utn9tr, Turbo
Hydttmttic, 'powtt 1ltttin9, powtr brtkft,
deluxe wht1f diJc, cudom sport wood tro1u1d
1t1trin9 wh1 el, til t-1-w1y wh1el, conv1ni111ct
group, door tdge 9u1rd, d1 luxt rtdio, t inftd
9lt11, powtr t1il gilt window, /u99191 rtclr,
ttmoft ouhid1 mirror.
Stock $3944'7 No. 673
v.a, euto., RIH, PS, Pl, ftc. fact. v.1, t uto., 11.&H, PS, PB, ftc. fact, v.a, 11110., R&H, full P, lac. '*"'· '68 OLDS 442 Holdy. C1s199 O•" '68 OLDS 442 Hol. Cp. s1' 99 OM• '68 OLDS Toron1do $199 °'"
t it c-ond,. vinyl top, tinted ,,,.,, 1lr conditionln9. Inv. 1ir, ww tirt1, vinyl top, tint. 1 ....
9l1u, Stock No. 622 Stock No. 615 9la11, 01mo. Stock No. 477,
'680LDS 442 Hol . Cp. s199 O•n '680LDS F·IS Sp.Cp. $199 °"' '680LD5Vl1t1 Cr. Wg.s199-v.1. 1uto., RIH, PS, Pl, ftc. · ,._,. Au to., RIH, PS, fie. ,;, ~ct. v.1, 1uto., R&H , PS, PB, fie. Pect.
1ir co11d., \ll11yl top, tf11t1d IM. cond., whit1 w•ll tir•1, tint. Inv. •ir, ww tir•1, tinltd 91111. lllT.
91111. Stoek No, 555 1cl wind1hlcl, Stock No. 624 Dtmo. Stoc k No. 414,
-EVERY VALUE RATED . USED CAR LI STED BELOW GUARANTEED TO BE
KELLY BLUE BOOK WHOLESALE OR _ LESS!
'66 FORD Custom 500 4-Dr.
V.I .,to., R&H, P.S., ••.. $1374
fee. •ir cond. Stk. No. 629A
'64 RAMBLER AMER. 300 2-Dr. Sttdoo
6 Cyl., 1tick shift, R&H. $524
Stock No. 720-B. ................ ,
'64 OLDS DYNAMIC '18' 2°Dr. Hdtp.
V-8, euto., pwr. 1tr., white-'924
wells tire1. Stk. No. P-1 1 '1 I
'63 PLYMOUTH FURY 4-Dr. Hdrp.
v.a, euto., R&H, pwr. 1tr., $649
pwr. brakes. Lie. 688-A ..... .
'65 OLDS Cutlou Cpo. v.a, e uto., R&H, pwr. 1tr., $I
br1k11 . Stk. No. 52°SA ...... ..
'H OLDS FIS 4-Dr. Sodu
Va, euto. Police car, 4 $I
to choo1e from. St~. 619-A
199
177
"63 RAMBLER Cioni< 770 4·Dr. s•
V-8, auto., R&H, p/1, full '624·-
p wr., fact. eir, b/1. Stk. 652A
'66 FORD Folrlane Con"¥ertlble
V-8, outo., R&H, pw•. '''· $1324
Stock No. bl6·A ............... .
"63 FORD Golo1l1 500 2-Dr. Sodu ,:
V-8, •u+o., R&H, pwr. 1tr. '574
Stock No. 664A ............... -~
OTHER DEALERS ADVERTISE IT , •• WE DO IT! ' '
"REMEMBU, WE AllE NEVER !IA 'l1Sl"IED \JNTIL YOU Alli"
,.
2850 HARBOR
BLVD.
COSTA MESA
NEW 546-5550
USED 546-5553
l
1"'!,~!"'!I""'""'"""" ..... "' .. """'"""'"'"'"'"'"""'"" ... """ ......................................... .., ........................ ,....,..., ........................................... ~ ............ ~ ............... ~~~~ .......... --.• ----~ -...... .
30 DAILY PILOT
1 litAN)t>CJK I A TION
'66 VOLVO 122·5
2-0r. Auto. i-r.tis
N'e•r fK'W ("()r\(ilhon both
1fwch. 11nd In af1PH.r&fl("r.
fti>ductd ~ 1a thta all
Ujn r lcw. pr1ct" . . . . $1895 r Lh: No. H.D\\'700
l ZIMMERMAN l j)ATSUN
~JIE 60USf: OF' VALUE
" 2&e M<1rbor Bil'd. ~ta Mrsa ;.l().6~1n
TRAHSPORTATION TRA SPOR;J"ATION -
~: -
9600 Autos Wanted 9700
VOLKSWAGEN
'63 VW put cond 35,000 mi,
nu tlre~. rbr bumper pro-
ttte:ln:. Musi lltt to apprec.
Sunroof SllOO/best Clffer.
Plr15e ca.II 548-9747
Autos WantMI 9700
Will Buy
~'our Volkswaeen or P~he
' pay top dollan. Paid for
or not. Call Ralph
473-1190
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOR
USED CARS
CONNEll CHEVROLET
2828 Harl.lot BJvd.
Co.sta Me.11a 546-1203
WE PAY .. ,
TRANSPORTATION I TRANSPORTATION
Und CaN 9900 Used C1n 9900
CADILLAC
1962 CADILLAC
Coupe De Ville
Pola.r while. Full powt'I', air
cond. Immaculate.
$1495
CADILLAC
1961 CADD..LAC 4 door Sedan
dt: VUle, 6 windows, power
Int, powt'r windows, power
steering, .power b r a k e s ,
power trunk o)X'ner, air con-
dit~. Nice body no
denta. $750.00 Pvt. party.
879-6088 (Fullerton)
'67 EL Dorado, white, Blk
padded lop, blk Int. ln11nac.,
under warranty. See at
Balboa Marina. Mr. Hovey
613-88-10
'6.'l CADILLAC Coupe dr
VIUr. low mileage. Call
after 4 PM 642-6974
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
U~ed Cars
CHEVROLET CHEVROLET
'64 MALIBU '61 Impala
Super Sport Convertiblt' medlu1n blue
F\asbing r e d, 11utomalic with whit~ top. Automat~
trans, po11i·er <tring, pow-lranami11ion, power 1teer-
f'r brakes, IM!t1ACULATE. ing. powtt brakeil. BEAU-
Only TIFUL. Only
$1495 $795
Can !inanre all or part Pay· Can linanct-aJI or part pay •
ments es low as $24. per ments as low as $22.00 per
mo 0 .A.C. mo 0.A.C.
ELMORE ELMORE
t.10T0RS MOTOR!->
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
9900 Used Cars 9900
CORVAIR DODGE
'64 SPYDER-Tan 150 hD.1---------
Turbo-Owi:cd. 4 I p d ,
R/H, w-w. xlnt eond,. Ask-
ing $925 O.f evea ~ Swi.
642-7776
'60 CORV AIR 600 " dr du11I
pipe1 good rubt>tt. B E S T
OITER ovl't' S2SO to 4 pm
Sal Allj!. 24. • 494-5'1!1 "
'63 CORVAIR Mooza 4 dr.
'63 DODGE Pol.ara 3&'!, 2 dr,
bucket seats. 4 on the Ooor.
Top cond. Muat tee llO ap-
preciate. 56oti!Qil
67 DODGE Sprtsman Van 6
·cyl Auto R/H. Extru
Orig. Owner M&-rul aft 6
PM
air. New paint. Good FALCON
mechanical cond. S 4 5 0 · I ----------1
64>-0990
MUST Sell '63 Corvair TOYOTA TOY OT A Mooia. 2 dr, 4 spd. Xlnt
Ph. 8~3320 Ph. 1194-3320 cond. $515. 646-1587
196'1 E'a.lcon Futura Convert
V-8, auto trans, ps, waw
Xlnt cond., blue. ~.
lt!ipor~d Autos 9600 lmport.d Autos 9600 CASH Can tinancr flll or part Pay-
menrs as low as $'12.00 per
nio. 0 .A.C. CHEVROLET
15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr I";;___:"'========' I FORD . = ' . ' ' ' .
. . -.
'
.
1'
I~ .. ..
" ..
" '
·.
'
• .
' . . . . . .
' '
' ' l ' 3
·'
--
for used can l trucka jU1\
call us for he estimate.
GROTH CHEVROLET
AJk for Sale• Manaca-
18711 Beach ID.,
Huntinzton Beach
Kl ~=
\VILL Trade 20· lnbrd v.•ith
completely reblt «ti I: other
equip. Value, $1,CXXI. 548-U31
Used Cars 9900
ELMORE
*TM ltrt We SeH, TM Lower Prices Ge!! * Cli1111 F.-Kindreds 11 Br•d New For4s at P11nlonl! * 91ge '88 Clean-up Time Sa Yi1gs Now!!
TIE BEST PRICES A'RE II THE BIG 'D' CORRAL
Cli1111 frtin Twenty.five '68 T·Birds
Lt.C1' ANO EVERY ONE BIG BONUS BUYS IN
4 SPEED "' CAMARO :m "' • ...... CORVETIE
SPECIALISTS ~;~ "' ..... "'"'· 1--------1"6 FORD \. '63 CORVE'ITE 2 TOPS. '66 2 Door hardtop, good titts £.
HIGH PERFORMANc:E •57 <;l!EV. BEL-AIR with Mwt sell. Best offer . brakes. Padded daab "
CUSTOM CARS '64 283 eng.: rlean. $395 eng. I body. Many Xtras! headliner are like new. Has
LARGE.ST SELECTION IN e 642 "oc.~ e 774--4110 Of' 675-1307 ask for .......,.. power v.·indow, br ak e a ,
ORANGE COUNTY -°'=""::::'·'--------1 gteering. lt al.so has a fie· Selected Aut-> . CHRYSLER '6t CORVET"T'E hd 1 P tory 1tr condilionine unit Center ·---convtbl maroon/blk int 4 plWI radio & heater. Total "L · W 11 spct'l! ~ood tires xll'aS price $Z'25.00. NO LOWER.
13032 Harbor Blvd. 5374646 UXUry GCJOft LlKJ:::' NEW. Pvt pty. $1 Ta0 Call 536-84U H.B.
'65 CHEV. Malibu·. ,1,-o.•d. '62 Chrysler Newporter Sta. 11 SJ0.-1268 * ~ w 62 FORD Galaxie 500. Pow Pwr. t:teer .. stereo, load-". agoo. Power steering & CORV~E '57 aass\c :ID! ,...... b ak R r..11 steering brakes air. Driven
xlnt cond $1295. ALSO '61 r es. & 11· BeautiJul 2-stick. Olt"IT)'. Must sell less than 7000 miles 1Jf'I'
Impala ~ Dr. hd>p., P"-. tone polar whitt-with broni b"' ......... r. """ ,.., uu~ year. See to believe al "''"
steer.. new tires, extras, rop. Matching 2 lone inter-• 548-2711 • "'· Coast Hiway. Ne1vport
Sl09j. 968-3275 ior llS only Oiryr!ler can ~ '63 FASTBACK, while, 327. Beach or phone 548-7751.
holste-r. Full price 1952 CJiEV'i. Nrw radiator, ,170 hp. Must sell $1900. Dir.
llood body & tires, engine $995 646-30115 alt 6 pm. 55 FORD Sta Wag. Stick. 59
ncf'ds work B!'St offer isl car Joi on Harbor Blvd . engine. Dependable $180.
"''" 611 """' P 1. , JOHNSON & SON DODGE ,..,01s
Newporl Heights. 646-4032 Lincoln-ti1rreury •59 GA~IE. Good cond.
·s.; IMPALA 4 door, excel. Costa Mesa Branch 1963 DODGE DART S295. Mission Viejo. 837-8850
cood., npw tires. Pow SIB 19-U llarbor Blvd. 64J.7cr,o Silvrl' blue with beautiful con· evC>s l· wk ends
S •• ~,,-,. "--•-tin d '67 NEWPORT c , I tr.,sting interior. Automatic. I ---~~---~~ "' u ~ • ......._., uc ance . us om, act. 1961 F'QRD Country S"'1an
67'"7·1 .,., .. ,. I , p · -• I slanl 11ix. Just a& fresh as ,,....., a · • ny op. nc<:U or Good rond. 139.i. 642-1450 or
qu ick sale. t I J 637-7496 can be. Onl.v ~8-4l2S
CONTINENTAL
COUGAR
·sg Cougar CXR-7) Air i nd
well equipped. Must sell or 1 ]fi!.se my defl'l()nstralor be-I
fore Aug. 22. CaU \Yayne I
Squi~ et Jotmson & Son, •
Orange County's oldest e-s-1
tablished Lincoln~ Mrrcury I
• Cougar dealership. New.
1 port -Costa Mesa. 900 "'.
Coast Hwy., Newpot1 Beach.
&i2-0961. or 545-8278
67 a>UGAR !G.T.1 Air co'1d .
Pow steer & brakt'S. Tilt
~way strcring anrl olhl'r ·
xtras. One owner. Sfi!l 1
under original factory war-1
1 ranry, Call days 642-00HI Cir
evf'. 548-TlSl."'No dealer~
plrasf'. Dir.
CORVAIR
"6.'i MONZA. Orig. owner.
Xlnt cond. $975, 846-9136
Before 7 AM or eves.
$995
Can finance all Of par! Pay-1965 fORD Van
ments as IOI'.' as $19.00 per heater, iiler~.
wl radio.
S I 4 0 0 .
mo 0 .A.C. 1 ~6~T.l-1=;~°'~~--~~.,-ELMORE '66 FORD Country Sf'd 1ta
l\10TORS
TOYOTA
Ph. 894-3320
w•g. fi ,..,, ... ci ,,;,, •Imo,
4 new tirea. 642-6974
15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
•57 FORD Country Squire 1ta
wag, fl pWl', excell. shape
642-697•1
AMERICAN
MOTORS
~~~·SALE
ltambl1r-
AMX-
Jfl•ll11
''I CLEAN·UP
SALE
81.nil N•w R•mbler1
Pric •il From
51969
Som• wit~
Ai< Conililioni"9
OPEN SUNDAYS e DRIVl·IN
DIS(rr=Olllm=D ==~USED CARS a~a~ara
0.0... Fro. 1115
'618
Mus tongs
~ -f¥r'I °"' ""to $600 "~·
$49.96 ....
GIGANTIC SEUCTIOIJI
.. STOC~ NOW1
'()8 FALCONS
~Stwt" lown
$1995
n.-R-.
· ....... 11!
CHOOSf FROM 12 UllfOIHIA
MUSTANGS
~'-~l
Itch aM lv.ry Ont
DISCOUNTtv
' I
$700
WU TllER£ BE
A & YEAR 50,000
MILE WARRANTY
II 1969?
PROBABLY NOT!
·Whidi meam thet !he t9E18 FORDS
might wefi be the lssl. cars to
c.,.,. a ~ 5-YNr, 50,000
mi~ .-BrTanty. So Duy now M
giant y..,ar-end :wivings . , • and
get • full s..,_,-.-arnnty ... for
the )Mt tirM.
W. be!ien 19611 priceg ...W be UP
•round bXl 1 car . , . and l'lO'lll'
'M d<*!«t prioN An! DOWN Oii
Foni'i, Ml.l!ltangs and T·Bird& at
mud! 1111 l l-000 I C•. So-0-o ...
W'Kh '!19 prices UP #Id ·~ DOWN
yow C'llll • . .
'R TIYOTA
SUTl()jj WAGON
~ ........ trtd; "'""
'1195
'63 VALIANT
WAGOll Y·200
~-·"-. ...-...;,
'795
'&&FORD
CUSTOM 500 4 DOOl
v.1. ,_.., ._ c.oflllll~. fW!v. 'f-. ---"""·
'1695
'17 COUGAR
'2595
'16 DLIJSMOBILE
'.f.5 2 DOOR HAJ!OTOP
=:: ~~ ---. ...
'1695
'116 CHEVROLET
WALA 2 DOo1I HARDTOI' v.e. --....._.. ai __ ,..
'k. -"· ...._,-• ........ ~ ............ ~--·
'1695
fOlll/
0,.. 1,30 A.Ji. -9 p .M. Moo..fri.
BL JJ:.J1"7070 SAT. TO 5 P .¥. ..... -nosio SUllDAYS
ELMORE MOTORS
The Largest Toyota Facility Anywhere
NOW AT OUR NEW LOCATION
CHOOR YOUI TOY OT A FROM THE LUOEST SILICTION
Just Arrived 1969 "Corolla"
537'Ii:.
OR
Fh1•11elttt A••ll•ble
OH APPRO'f'ID
CltlOIT -------
w. 101' mu•• ,. • .,. Toyol•1
111 tlle m•nlh of J..,ly f111 11 1ny
oth11 T oyol• 0.,1., i11 the
Unit•il St•te1 I
Tiier• m111I b1 • •••1011 , ..
11111 ffi••• i1. l1for1 you buy
tli1t ,. ... or 111•d To)'OI•, ...
\nwit1 y111 It ~om1 ;,. •"d •••
Ollr lllW "'Odlfll ll"'it l ft tij;,
ti11. off1•lnt ~011 tll 1 fin11t •ft.
Ir Stl• S•rwi~• yo11 will find.
"WE CARE" al Elmore
~folon.
15300 Beach Blvd.
WESTMINSTER
894-3322
Ptymt 11I . ... ..
011 l /J o .... n
OAC
Hardtop--
AMltlllCAN CAlllS
WANTID
IN
llADll
-
FFrrid~1y~,~·"9~~~tii2J~,~l'l68£fi(ff~r-1i .... ;;Si~D~~~LriY~~ijt~.~·~'.1 TAANSPOltTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOR TATION TRANSPORTATION TltANSPOltTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIO!il N &kANSt'UKIATION
9900UMd C1rt 9900 U1.c1 C1n ftOOUMdC•rr '900 UoM C.n '900Uood C•n 9tOO UMdC•rt
•• .s )
CONNELL CHEVROLET'S . USED CAR CENTER SPECIALS
'64 CHEVROLET
2.Door • .Automatic, radio, h!:ater, Roman
Red. (CK2973)
?95 .
'64 BUICK
Special deluxe "''agon. V8, automatic,
power steering, radio. heater. Sierra
aold w/btti e vlfl.)'I trim. (NYPt23J
1495
'64 PONTIAC
Grand Prix. VS, automatic, ~er 1t~r-
lng, eltt. wlndoWll, RA:H. ut>. blue
w/white vinyl roof. CNQX710)
$1195
'60 VOLKSWAGEN
2 Door. P..adlo, heater, blue w/o(f white
vinyl Interior. new engine lrutalled re-
cently. (QW'r.i23} $695
'
'65 MERCURY
Montclalr hardtop coupe. VS, automatic,
power steering, radio, heater, low mile-
age, ermine white with blue interior.
(RVM6851
~795 .
'66 CORVAIR
Coupe. AutomaUc tranambalon. radio,
beat.tr, Aztec Bronte. (RGV497),
~395
'66 MALIBU
Sport Coupe-. VS, autQmatlc, radio, heat·
er, Marina blue w/black ~l lnterlor.
CMV2762)-
51695
'68 IMPALA
Coupe, VS, automatic transmi&s.i.on, pow-
er 1tttrlnj;, rad.lo and h~te-r, whitewall
tires, pad ed. dash, 11,000 miles, new car wucancy.1695
'66 OLDSMOBILE
F-85 4 door sedan. V-8, automatic, radio, heater, power st@erlng and finished in
~quo~• S1795 .
'63 GRAND PRIX
Automatic, power steering, factory air
cond., Rl.H. SierragJold with Saddle bucket &eats. (NLM ),
51295 .
VIRY GOOD
SELECTION OF
VACATION CARS
At Great Savings!
'61 IMPALA
Sport coupe. V8, automatic, power steer-
ing, air cond., radio, heater, ennine whi te
w/ turquoise interior. (JCS239) $795
'64 IMPALA
SUper Sport, automatic tranamiuion, ra-
dio and heater, power steering, deaert
beige with beige interior. HCR973.
$1395
...... ---------'6tiLCAMiNo
CUSTOM. V8, automatic, power 15teering,
R&H, ermine white w/black vinyl inter~
ior. (V42925)
$2595
'63 PLYMOUTH
Fury convertible. VB, automatic, power
steering, radio, heat.er, cfean throughout.
White w/saddle interior. (PIV315) $895
'65 OLQS 4.4_,
Cullass hardtop coupe,, 4 1peed,. tailio,
healer. red with black. in tenor. (Pf>C434)
~495
"
'63 CHEVY II
Nova converUbht. AutomaUc, ~ow• r
1tttrln1, radio, heater, turQu e with
white top. <ASl.919)
5895
'67 PLYMOUTH ' . :~ &-lvedere II station waion. VB, automaue:='
CJiwer steering, radio, eater, white w1tb ,
ue interior. IUOY366)
52295
,.
. -
L·· -
'62 CHEVY II '65 GMC Nova convertible, automaUc trarumlJ.
lion. radio and heater. JFX319
5495
Suburban Carryall 6 cylinder enalne, extra. clean. CP85983).
$1495 . .. -· .
. . . -. -'66 YW
Squarebu:k 1 tat lo n. waaon, AM/TM
radlo. SLV799
$1595
.
'65 BUICK . . . ..
Deluxe sports wagon, 9 pUHnger, auto:"~ -matJc transmlulon, powtt stttrlng, factory . -air, radio and heater. NPW9fi7 ' --52495 .
'67 CAMARO '63 IMPALA S.S.
327 V8, automatic, rad.lo, heater, power
1ttertna:. (ULS185)
Coupe. AutomaUc, power steering, factory-:
air, radio, heater, 1&tln allver w/red vleyl ~ interior, {FYE139) '_
52495 $1295 . --
'" , .. -
'68 NOYA
2 • door, VS, automatic transmission,
power steering, air conditioning, radio ' an• heau$2495. VTI<J<
'64 BARRACUDA -'" . ---. ' ..
Hardtop coupe. Automatic, radio, heat.er, · ; Sierra..aold with black Interior. (0 .,..
$1295 = = I< -= -' -'
CHE R.OLE .
2828 HARBOR BLVD_., COSTA MESA ----=
·~!~ 546-1203 c~~ 546-12
Used C1rs 9900 UMd C•rt 9'00 U1od C•rt 9900 lmf!rtod ·Auloo
FORD
'62 FORO
F1lcon Deluxe
2 door, white with blue inter·
ior automatic transmission,
ndi.o, beater, a real mileage
. ptter. Only
$695
Can ttnance allp 'part Pay·
mentA u lO'w 11 $17.00 per
mo 0 .A:C.
-ELMORE
!\!OTORS
TOYOTA
Ph. 894-3320
1!i300 Beach Blvd ., Wstmnstr
FORD
63 GALAXIE 500
V8 2 dr Hardtop
Good tires, PIS-P/B. R/H
Very good CQJ\dition
• 646-04ll alt 5 •
-------9600 lmportod Autos 9600 UMd C•rs -· 9900 Import.cf Autos t6001..;,.;,.,oc1 Autos ;~
-----.. ,.~ ..
SELECT AITO SALE -~ =
I IS OVERLOADED WITM ::i'
FIAT TRADlfl
e LOT CUARANCE SAU ·~
'67 TR-4A Rdstr. . . . . . . . . . . ..... $2'i)
.. '-"' ..... 1•1. ............. ..,,... ..... ~ , ......
·~"'· ::;::;::
'67 FIAT 124 Wagon ............. $189
A --· mid .. 111 -rtt~ Ill~__,,.,., .... ~ ,.,11..... , ..
'66 CORVEnE .................. iitti
........., wtt11 ltclltt ..... ,AC'TOllY A-4• COMO.. I".&.' t. •&. ___ ........... -·
'65 M.G.8. Rdstr, ........... , ... $1 ~
A ,_. Wy, !...._., ..... AM~M ................ ft'IWt wll!I lllMX lllfW'tar. ..,.-..; --'57 M/BENZ 190 SL Rdstr, ....... , l$
-----~.De!9't--....... ~ ....
'60 JAGUAR 4-door ...... , . . .. .. • _
~·,_-=r-,::tlr. ""'*...-A...,• .-.-.
'62 A/H£AL£Y 3000 Rdrtr. , ...... .'1.IStt
11111 ...... Med ......,,.. A ........... _, ....... ~=
'65 V, W, 2-Door ............... , $11fi ~· 1 -· IUH feeflrt MVI""" IM:I ........... eN ....... ;:
'67 A/HEALEY MIC, 3 ............ $ms ..__.....,. ..... "' .. _... ................. ~ --.......... ;;"',
'67 ,V. W. SB>AH ....• ,, .. , , . , .. , 'fi7'J]
-· _\i '63 FIAT 1200 Rdstr, . , ..... ,, ... $ ~
1.llM 1t1W wlltl bl~ ......,.,., ll&H.. A .... ~ .. ...., ~ ' ~ '63 VOLVO P-18005 ....• ,, , ..... ~ ............... --""-· : ... '1 '67 OPR lbillye .......... ' ...... $1591 ....................................... ~ ... -· -~ '66 V,W, flsll>ock :, ... -•• ~ ... ~
no. ... IW ...... I -9 'ie': ~ .. . ~ '65 SUNBEAM Alpine Rd1tr ...... , .~l~ '"' __ . .....,. .. ~ ........... ",.......""'""""
ALSO ti STOCK • ~ICID TO sar·
'II Pl•T ....... Z1p1a e W IPl'll'IU
'M "°""Do" e 'II Pia .. C,.. e W ~ ... _ .... .,.. .. c,.. • ..,..-::;;,,,,
'R TIW .... _ e .. .,.....·~
'If lh 7 I a ........ e .. A/fl.., Mill\
'12 Jl'IM 1M NL a •a MOB MS.
•9.., ...... o.i. ..... ,,...,. -
..... , .... ~.,a.....,c.....,.(
'
SELECT AITO SAL.IJt _, -.11\1 ...... OlltA...S COUtllTY anilCm N ·'"~ .,., " --· 12!1 II; -II.VI.
32 DAILY PILOf frida1, Auoust 2', 1%8
.. ·-
·-..
. . . . -. ! : . . . . . --•
~ .. :
----
.
-..___COME IN FOR A--------·
TREMENDOUS YEAR END SAVINGS
ON A NEW OR PREVIOUSLY -OWNED CADILLAC
1968 CADIL1AC
SEDAN DE VILLE
A 1tunnln1 San M!'\teo Red exletlor. Thi! beautiful 1968 Cadillac hu
all Cadillac power equipment including brakes-at~ring-windows-fi way
aeat-door locks, tilt steering wheel, cruise control, gUide-matlc, level
control and bf courst factory air conditioning. Number L8148224
$
---OVER 80 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SELECT FROM---
'66 CADILLAC
Cou~ de Ville. Solid green finish ~th green
leather and nylon interior. Full ~~ll~c po~r ~ulpment plu1 factory air cond1tion1ng, tilt-
aleering wheel, power door locks, 6 way seat
and many olher of the extras offered by
Cadillac:.
SALi $3888 PRICl
'65 BUICK
Wildcat hardtop. Fully equipped with rad_io,
heater. power steoering, power brakes, while
wa.11 tires and tinted glass. Finished in beauti-
ful Arctic white with full red vinyl interior.
Top condition both inside and out.
SALi $1666 PRICl
'66 CADILLAC
Sedan de Ville. Finished In lush Sudan beige
with Sandlewood vinyl roof and Sandlewood
leather and nylon interior. Full Cad.iliac power
equipment includes factory air conditioning,
power vent windows. cr~ist'-corytrol. twlliJ:::ht
sentinel. tilt and telescopic 1teerm1 wheel and
other accessories.
SALi $3888 PllCl
'64 IMPERIAL
Crown -4 door hardtop. ~ather and tape!ilry
interior. Fully equippe:d with power steering,
power brakes. power windows, pow~r 6 way
se:at, automatic dimmer, AM/FM radio and
factory air conditioning.
SALi $1777 PllCl
'66 CADILLAC
Brou£;ham. Beautiful Topaz Gold with Sandle-
wood landau roof with leather intf'rior. Fu 11
Cadillac power equipment plus factory air
conditioning, power vent windows, door locks,
AM-FM r11dio and twilight sentinel. No finer
auto on the road than Cadillac's Brougham.
This Is a MUST SEE.
SALi $3999 PRICl
'67 CADILLAC
Coupe de Ville. Beautiful Monterey Gre:en fin-
ljh with Black vinyl root and full leather in-
rerior. Full <:adillac powf'r including power
vent windows and of course:, ractory air con·
ditionJni.
SALi $4777 PRICl
'63 CADILLAC
Sl'dan DeVille. 4 door hardtop. Lime green with leather and nylon interior. Hu power
6 wey 11Pat, power windows. power vent win-
dows. rx>wer steering, power brekl!:!, factory
air conditioning.
SALi $1444 PWICl
'65 MUSTANG
Economical 6 cylindC'r engine: with the stand-
erd transmission, radio And heater, white side
wall tirl'll. Snow white exterior v.•ith harmoni·
zing blue interior.
SALE $999 PRICE
OTHER SPECIAL VAWES
'62 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e
'64 FORD CONVERTIBLE e
'64 FORD CONVERT! BLE e
'64 PONTIAC STA. WGN. e
'66 BUICK LE SABRE e
'68 BUICK STA. WAGON e
'67 CHEV MALIBU COUPE e
'66 RAMBLER STA. WGN., e
'67 MERCEDES SEDAN e
'6 7 FORD RANCH ERO e
'64 RAMBLER STA. WAGON e
'63 CHEV HARDTOP CPE e
'66 BUICK H.T. SEDAN e
'67 BUICK EUCTRA e
. 65 THUNDERBIRD H.T. e
'6 7 FORD RANCHERO e
'63 CHEV H. T. COUPE e
'65 CADILLAC
Sedan de Ville. cadillac'1 finest and fully
power equipped for luxury driving. Ot course
this includes factory air conditioning, power
windows, .6 way power seat, tilt steering
wheel, and finished in gleaming Turquoise
with harmonlzirt& leather and cloth .interior.
SALi $2666 PWICl
'63 OLDSMOBILE
Thia popular Super 88. Fully equipped with
autumatic trarumi.ssion, radkl and heater,
power brakes, white: side wall tires. Finished
In a light green exterior with harmonizing
Interior. This car is sale pri«'d just rlghl for
you.
SALi $888 PWICl
'65 PONTIAC
Grand Prix. Automatic transmission, power
steering, power brakes, radio and heater, buc·
ket seata, center console, tachometer, white
side wall tittll.
SALi $1444 PWICE
'64 FORD
Gals.xh• 500 conve:rtible. Finished in Arctic white with a matching white top and full
vinyl interior. VS engine, automatic transmis-
1ion, power 1reering. radio and heater, tinted
glass and white aide waU tires. A very nice
automobile.
SALE $1222 PllCl
'64 CADILLAC
Hardtop sedan. Beautirul Topaz Gold finish
with matchin~ gold leather and nylon inter-
ior. Full Cadillac power equipment plus fac-
tory air conditioning, power windows. 6 way
power seal. This one is a dream and exhibils
the care only one owner can offer.
SALi $1777 PWICl
'62 CADILLAC
' Equipment include5 power steering, powe:r
windowJI, power brakes. power scat and fac-
tory air conditioning. Other Cadillac e."<trall
are power vent windows, 6 way 1eat and
autronic eye. Beautiful Normandy Blue fin-
ish with white top and white full leather in·
terior,
SALi $888 PRICE
'64 CADILLAC
Convertible. A cool coral finisO with black top and full leather interior. This is one of
those hard to find models with fuJI Cadillac
power accessories including brakell, stf'ering,
windows, seat, and for those very warm dayg.
factory air condi tioning. This is priced for a
quick sale this week.
SALi $1777 PRICE
'63 PONTIAC
BoMl!:'\'ille Coupe. Gold with harmonizing In·
terior {full vlnylJ. Automatic t.ransmiMion,
power 1teering, power brakes, radio and heat-
er, white side wall tires, tinted &lass and
much more.
SALi $999 PWICl
-------SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN
8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY
YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARBOR AREA
NABERS
2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa
Get More Car
for Your Money at ...
Tllar,uis
meters
900 So. Coasl Highway
Laoun1 Be1ch '''·7503
TOYOTA
CORONA LarCJest Stock
In Our History
We will pay
More lor clean
Tr1de-ins
5% Fi111ncina
Avlillble
The tdW.C Ta,oU ~ ~ "POl'I• sedon iWes )'OU • Zero-To-80 In 16 sec . ~ dn.ins ~ and ~ )'OU ~ in • • owners Report Up To 30 Miles Per &111on t:conomy
new ear. • A 90 HP, 1900cc Hi-Torque fllline • Optional Equipment includes Automatic Transmission
• 90 MPtt lllamwww Speed • 47 Safety 111d Comfort Features At No Extra Cost
Get yo.r hands on a TOYOTA ... you11 never le~~ .. ,.., .. ~-'" "·~··-~ . . .
.&. .
540-9100
... '-•
PLYMOUTH PONTIAC
1-~~~~~-1~~--:c::::::-:-:~ 4 SPEED 1962 PONTIAC
S.PECIALISTS LoM•n• Spt. Cpe. Automatic, arctic white with
HIGH PERFORMANCE red bucket seats. Beautiful
CUSTOM CARS condition.
LARGEST SELECTION IN $795
ORANGE COUNTY Can finance all or pare Pay· Selected Auto ments as low a.s S11.00 per
Center "" o .•. c.
13002 Hsrbo' Blvd 537_..,. ELMORE
'63 Plymouth Sta Wq:. Ex.
Cond. Or:11 owner $900 or
beat offer! es-2481 a.ft 5.
MCYI'ORS
TOYOTA
Pb. 894-3.tl>
15300 Be:1ch Blvd., Wsttnnstr
i--P_o_N_n_A_c __ 1'9uality Compact'
PONTIAC
4 SPEED
SPECIALISTS
HIGH PERFORMANCE
CUSTOM CARS
LARGESI' SELEC110N IN
ORANGE COUNTY
Selected Auto
Center
13032 Harbor Blvd. 537-4646
'&! PONTIAC G.P, F\111
power. air. N I 1ht 1 bade
544--1690
T·llRD ROY CARVEil
l'ONTIAC
1963 Poot . ~man1 V8 Spt.
,.__ 327'' engi.rw, powt!r "'""'"°' 64 T-BJRD. Hone)' btlce.
llttring. R.., H. auto tnlnL Dt-Wtn letl than 15000 miles
• H~ BJ., Cmtl ,._ BH.utilUJ broni exterior W\th P"'I' yeir. Mu.ti •ell. Call Kl 6-4444 •ddle tan letherette inter1or ~nrit Dir.
Onace CDwlty'i m.cww budcet RI.ta and plWlh car----:.;;-;;.6:J;;-;;T-"e'"1RD"'°e=---I
Dula b Jltoll.I • .,_ ud petg. Reduced this weekmd X1nt oond $700
Bently. enly, to sum f\J.ll ~. • 174-tsM • =-~-~~~~· lllt cat lot on H1rbor Blvd.
PRlV. Party 196< ,,.., ... JOHNSON & SON 64 T·BIRD f~I ,.,,., rsc-
Grand Prix, silver grey, Nk tory Air 4 I s track ~tereo.
vinyl top, fact. ait. full pwr, Lillcoln-Mercury M1n1 ("A'.Wld. &16-2387
all extru $1400. $400 under O>lta Mee& Branch ;:-,,:::-~=~-----1
BIB. $t&-.M96 190. Hart.ior B!Yd. 6C2-7<M e M T BIRD 1.U power It •It, ntW rt1'1'1, pr1.. pty,
• 962.fi)t • MUST SACRJTICE! Be:low 1966 PC>N'IUC GTO. \t~
wholtll.le: book, t owner blk hardtop, IJCl"!Wr b r • k e: s ,
'63 Grand Prix, full pwr, air slttl'ifli. Cootole 1 h If I,
o:ind, good tire•. 67J....3(l? or buc:ke:t 1e:1ts. 339 enc, 1ir
613-6733 cond. Ors owner. s2.m .
"62 TEMPEST, 1u.to, R/H, 2 ~a.II 5;1U ct.,-Sal 6-
dr .. 1ood condldcll, M51), 1,8~""~=~~~--~ • $36-1001 ·54 GRAND Prix. Afr ~.
--------·I St)l.2. Mutt ... u this wf'Ck.
Phont ~. Al« for Ed
Brown. Dir .
·~·~ T·fHnn. D. y I
~111 f:X1 m.
~A-f:vl'flinll'!· ggg...210&
'114 T·blJUJ, blk .. blk. inttr.
f"ull ""' , •ir--cond. Xlnt
t'IWI. $lt.'r.'I ~7i-otll
e 'M T.R";~.,-m-~,---
dltni 11712 Cimtron, H.B. ... .. "'
-No
. . -..
--
. -
. .
-.
• -c. ..
--
'\ tlOO Hewe. .. --c ... --ca ..
SAVE NOW •
FIREBIRDS!
FIRE BIRDS!
FIREBIRDS!
GREATEST SELECTION e LOWEST PRICES e BEST TERMS
'65 CHEVROLET $1977 1.,.p1la S1i1p•r SPort. VI, p·t lid•, PS, RI H,
whit• w•ll1, f•ciory 1ir • , ....• , , , , , , •. , ..
'65 CHEVROLET $1977 C1pric1 4 ~. H.T. VI , p-91id1, PS, R&H,
white w111i, f1ctory 1ir, p1dd1d roof ••....
'66 CHEVROLE T $1977 fMp1l1 Super Sport. VI, power sl11rin1J,
redio end h1efer, white 1ide wi ll tire1 • , ...
'64 PONTIAC GTO $1677 1: door h1rdfop. V-1, Hydr1m1lic, pow•r
1f1erin9, r1dio, h11!1r, white wi ll tire1 , ....
OF ALL THE SALES WE HAVE
THIS
'64 OLOSMOBILE $1377 Dyn•mic II 4 dr. H.T. Hydr•., PS, Pl, RI H,
whit• w•ll lir•1 I fatlaty •i• co11ditionint ..
'67 CHRYSLER $3277 Cu1t. N1wport 4 dr. Auto., PS, PB, R&H,
w/w ti•11 I fl!c. 1ir cond. I 6,517 1ct.1I 111ile1
'66 PONTIAC LE MANS $2177 4 dr. H.T. V.1, Hydr1m1tic, PS, RI H, w/w
lir11 I fe clory 1ir condition int , , , , , • • • . . . •
'67 FIREBIRO $2777 V-1, 4 1peed, r1dio, h11ter,
whil1 wi ll littl ........ , • , •. •,, •••••• , ..
--... ! . .-. ...
IS THE
GREATEST! .. :..-. . ....... · ... ·. . . ........ . :-· ... ·. \. ·. , ... . ... .... . : ... •::~ ......... · .. : ;:.· ....
I. '
----~-·
...
F"4o)o, A"9int 2l, 1968
i :;.~ ~
DAii. Y Pll;.ll1._;;a3
tlGO Nowcara ''°° -c. .. 1• 9IOO New Cera
• •• AND NOW,
DEMONSTRATORS TOO!
•. • • AND WHAT A SELECTION! ALL MODELS
••• FIREBIRDS, GTOs, GRAND PRIXS ; •• THE WHOLE
UNE. ALL WITH THE NEW CAR WARRANTY. PRICED TO SELL!
SALES DEPT.
OPBI DAILY FtOM
I A.M. TO 9 P.M.
SAT & SUN UNTIL 7 •
:1-.: ...... ~~ ......
-.-~ .. 1 .. ,
SERYKE AffiR SAlf
" 11 IMPORTANT To Usl
SERVICE
OP8I 7:30 A.M. TO
6 P.M. MON.· FRI.
CLOSED SAT. & SUN. •
'65 RAMBLER $1377 '66 BUICK SKYLARK $2477 Cla11ic 770 C•1u•tr1l i la. V-1, aut.1natic, 2 Or. H.T. VI, auto., pwr, .taar., radio, heal·
r1dia, kaat1r, wkila wall tir11 , , • , • , •• , , • . . er, WSW, factary air, pawar wi11daw1 •• , • , , .
'65 VOLKSWAGEN $1377 '66 PONTIAC GTO $2577 4 1p1ad, radla, I.eater, l Or. H.T. VI , auto., pwr. d 11r., r1die, h11t.
white wi ll Hre1 . , • , , , ,, , , ,, , , , , , •• , , , , , , 1r, ri d lin1 tlr11, f1clo•y 1ir. 29,Ml 111il11 • ,
'65 PONTIAC $1877 '67 CHEVROLET $3277 l1nn1vill1 1: tl r. H.T. Hydr1., p•w•t ri11rint, 4 Or. 9 p1i1, WtJ n. VI, 1ulo., pwr. 1fe1r., r•·
t1tll1, h11ter, white wi ll tir11 , .. , , • . . . . . . die, h11ter, white w1ll1, f'ctory 1ir • , , •••• ,
'65 FORD GALAXIE $1677 '63 PONTIAC $977 100 2 Oo1r H.T, VI, e111tem1tic, power lfetr• l1nnevill1 4 Or. H.T, VI , eulo., pwr. 1feer ..
Ing, r1di1, h11,1r, whH1 w1ll1, 27,666 111i111 • redio, h11ter, wliit1 1id1 wi ll tir11 , • , , , , • ,
•
•
--~ ......
•
" . -
. --
--,.-.......,.~..-.... ......... ......-....... ........-...,.....-........... ~ ......... ~ ...... -. ......... .,.. .,,,. . ...-,,.-..... --,.. .. --· ..... -· ----~ ........... -----_,..-----_______ __...._ ---.. --·-"' • • --..-..,...._........,..~., • .___.w •••WW••¥+ WW+•••,.._-._-...,. ----_. .....-"+'
EASIEST ·· TERMS OF 1968!
IUND NEW
1968 COR TINA "'°"' t>IK e·•~H. Ai r 11ow ....,111.u.,.. "'eai.
Al• >!Nier 1 111. wlodo111-ld wl111-,, Wl"lllofll~ld
Wl ll'>e-'5 ~· IGI. cl~lcn & b<'•k'ts "•-v!n¥1
llNlt & """' ""'""°' •rev. Pllll6td Door Ar"' RntJ. coumw ll!ltflor 111111
$199 $4 660
DOWN
Pl US
TAX & tlC. Per Mo.
llUND-·-'68 MUSTANG 2 Dlt. lfllDlW
Fre..., Air 1W1i.r I. Ott!'Clll'I!'. bdi 1111 oiwn. &
Cour!t•Y ll ltl'lri. lll.ICk~ ..... -Air vr"vt !'rim -nvi-. cer...,. -II ti ,..... mouldt..i '"
KaOO °'"".""'"' -""""1.io '""""' v --1n1, MIKt.._r.ISOfl'l..r 1 ... nt ,.._ llrH. -t'~;O!". r.Ole. Mid 1tH1. .._ "'1""1
DOWN
PLUS
TAX & UC. Per Mo.
&TOCI( NO. 1'91
1988 FORD
CUI-.,, I * ... ,,, Y..& -ll'lt. -'eel tn1l1&-
-rk '-·· -MrM. ._, 1'ICllM!-AM ~kl. """"' ,._, ,.,,,..,. LW '""'""·
DOWN
PLUS
TAX & lK.
NEW 196 8 T -BIRDS
55 TO CHOOSE FROM
New '68 SHELBY Americans
GT-150 GT-500 GT-500-KR
AT .
LEAST
OFF OF
WINO. STKR. ~000 PRICE
EVEN MORE ON SOME MODELS
AT
LEAiT
OFF OF
WIND. STKR •
PRICE
MN MORE ON SOME MDDflS
EVERYTH ING (Gnd 12nything)
GOES IN THE OF FICIAL FAC1'0RY
CLEARANCE OF 1968 FORDS
Rtad whit you w1nt -BELIEVE whit you w1nt, but remember -tM duler with tt.1 most c1n lo &1111'
before Ille '69's 1rrivt is Ille d11ler who must offer the highest discounts to git the job donol Aod wt
· hive one of Ille l1rgest '68 invento ries it! Southern Cal ilorni1I
WE ARE
PROUD TO
ANNOUNCE
FOR THE
2nd SYRAIGHT
YEAR
In fltCotnltlon of progr1tslv1 m.n1g1m1nt ..• modern ti le& ind service f1tUttM1, .!..~. Sound m1rth1ndl1"'9 practlcu •••
High eiu11ity 1t1nd1rd1 , •. Continuing lnt1r111t In r1nderlng Superior service to fldrcl owners during ytll' 1967.
E G ' • • '.3A VE. ON TRUCKS AND CAMPERS! No dealer-ANYWHERE-<an CJive you a better deal
on a new '68 Ford durinCJ this "Clean Sweep" sale of all
,.emaininCJ models. In short,
•
I
R~ncheros-F100-F250 -& up at great ye ar end model savings. large selections
to choose frofl)! Matching Holiday -Gold line -Southwin<k -[I Dorados-Scots·
man .ampe,. in 25 differen! floor piaM 1'1o being eioared.
SE.E US TODAY FOR THAT CAMPER UNIT
YOU'VE BEEN DREAMING OF!
AH. TERM& BASED ON 41 MO. AND APP. CRIOIT
USED CARS
Scientificllly
Tested
OYER 11111 WAYS
1000/o
GUARANTEED
' '61 VW Pickup $695 ,,,., J#, »~ ,._n or ..-.... • _. tnO •• Iii .....,...._
'66 MERCURY Commul1r W1gon s2495· It Ml; ~ ti!'. Vrf. •=· tr-.. :"': ...-. J I. 101\ -w "di. _. mo. '"°"""'-
.
CHEVY 2-Ton C1b & Ch1ssis .$995 'SI modtl, 4 -""lfh I 11111d 11119_ V4d1•. Wiii IMI• tt ... ...,..
e TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS e
~ -"" l! .... .:~~':,"J':,.~.l.~" ... Mii•.
+ IAYI +
,. -. -. ....;....;..
22 JL.Y!~~-~t!s .. 7 :!~'.', .. 2~ ,_
1n91r -1om1 wit+l 1lr coMltlo1t1ng. PLYMOllfH - '66 MOC
COMMUT111 -ECOHO BUS'S -FORDS -FALCONS -FAil·
UNIS -COUNTRY UOANI -(llEVY N WAGON -(OUNTRY
SQUIMS. ......... ... --~ tM9fl. 1'.I, Ml-· ='· -....,._ • ... _. Mil mt., • .
$f495
TRY US FIRST OR TRY US LAST •••
BUT TRY US BEFORE YOU BUY!
'63 CORVAIR MONZA $-695. ~ ...,, -.olo .... ..._ f6U ""· ... ..,.... .. """"· I
.. ,.. ""'·· '' lnorllll'ls.
'67 v.w. Deluxe s159 5 V~ 1 _., E11U1-d. (litt. Ill'). Jt'!I. .,_ w trld9. SU _. mo .. Ji ~
'64 RAMBLER $-99_5_
WAGON. 4oMt --111......._ fv.M 9NI. ~ ~ W ......
W2 -morMI 24 '""""'""
'64 MERCURY Wagon, Air -,,::----
cotonv "••ko Full -er, 1lr-CQ¥1, (OIV 1.Wl l0% -:)1 ·495
or tred<I. 9li -"""""'· ,.. """"""·
'67 T-BIRD Hardtop $3595
I ~ , Full -· OONI .• tNkw'i' • 1vtif'11•>. 20~ ..,..., or ............ --.. 31 ~ ---··
20 TO cHooM~l~~yuW 5'11DS, Auro.
MATICS. SOMI WITH POWH STHllH& & All COllMTI-.
1965 THRU 1967 MODIU, COIMttllltll, a.s, AND ut
MSTIACXS .
IXAMPll,
NOW ••. we c1n sci1ntific1lly
1n1lya. 1-nd chtc:k ov•r 100
•rut on 11.tl 11Hd 11r th8t 1f.
-lh ~prior lo Mttlot •• ., .. buy willo -
... eo11ffdenM ....... .,.., buy •
Tt.odo,.. Robint UMd Car thet
c1 rri1s the Di1gno1tic sticker.
The11 ca rs carry a 100% mech·
a nical guarant" for 30 days or
1,000 miles . USED CAR SALE PRICES GOOD FOR 72 HOU RS. PAYMENTS FIGURED ON APPROVED CREDIT.
..
j '·
l ,\
Frkf•y, August 23, 1961
JOHNSON, A
MAN OP MANY INTER-
ESTS AND TALENTS, IS
THE SUBJECT OF DORO-
THY PIER'S MEET THE
PEOPLE FEATURE ON
PAGE 3 TODAY.
THE EIGHTH ANNUAL
CHARACTER BOAT PAR·
ADE IS SCHEDULED FOR
TH I S WEEKEND AND
NEWCOMERS AND VISIT·
ORS WILL FIND THIS
EVENT IS SOMETHING
SPECIAL. OLD TIMERS
WILL ENJOY IT MORE
THIS YEAR THAN EVER.
THE WHO , WHAT,
WHERE AND WHEN ARI:
ON PAGES.
RE ADER S WILL B&
GLAD TO KNOW THAT
OUR OUT '~ ABOUTER
IS STILL BUSY KEEPING
UP WITH THE RESTAU·
RANT BEAT. THIS WEEK
SEA FOOD AND FISH 'N'
CH IP RESTAURANTSr
ALONG WITH A VARIETY
OF OTHER D I N I N G
SPOTS, OCCUPY PAGl!S
8 THROUGH 12.
1
BALLET IN LAGUNA BEACH
Special Events
CHILDREN'S THEATER-The Huntington Beach
Playhouae ii presentinJ a special chlldren'1
fantuy, "Sir Slob and the Princeaa," Fri. and
Sat. through Aue. K Curtain time Fri. at
7:30 p.m., Sat. 1:30 p.m. Tldets, $1 for adult..
50c for chlldren under 12. Phone 147·1'11.
LAGUNA ART FES11V AL -The 33rd annual La-
IUDa Beach Festival of Arb and Pateant of
1he Muter1 ls beinC stated throup Aupst M
at the Laiuna Beach Festival GrowMIJ, eeo La-
runa Canyon Road. 'llcbts for Pateant of tbe
Matters, a llvint creation of art woru, are OQ
sale at the box office dally 10 a.m. to I p.m.
Price• ranee from '2 to • and Include admJ>
1ion to the Festival crouncll. Slnele adml11ioa
to the Feltlval goundl, where art woru o1 all
kJ.nda will be dllplayed and IOld la IOc f•
adult.; lOc for chlldru. Houri: Doon to mld-
nltht dally. Phone tM-11'5.
ALL CALIFORNIA ART mow -AD invitaUonal
art •llibit ol approlimately JOO entriff by
Calllornla artlatl wW be OD dllplay DOOD to 10
11.m. dally at the Lacuna Beach Art Anocia--
tion Gallery, WI Cl1ft Drive, through Aur. U
u part of tbt U,.. Beach Festival ol Arta.
Hours: noon to 10 p.m. daily. Gt11eral admJnlon
&oc, Art Anociatlon members and one ,uelt,
fret. Pbone ~l.
CHARACTER BOAT PARADE -The eighth an.
nual Newport Harbor Character Boat Parade
beginJ at 3:30 p.m., Sat., Aug. ~ when decor-
ated boat. leave from the Balboa Bay Club,
1221 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. P~
ade may be viewed from shore line u lt Joi·
lows the channel around the lslandJ. The theme
of this year' 1 parade I.I "An Adventure at Sea."
See feeture and pictures on Page 5.
MOVIES -The Huntington Beach libraries art
1bowini family fllml each Sat. at dUJk thro\llh
Aug. 24 in the Beach Bowl juat east of Hunting-
ton Beacb pier. There Lt no admJ11Jon charge.
Featwtd films Sat., Aug. 24 are "Portugal With
Pleasure," "A Gitt trom Dirk" and "Venezue-
land Adventure ."
KNO'IT'S ART DAYS -The Buena Park Art Guild
will sponsor an Artllt'1 Roundup featurtni 150
exhibit.a of collages, ceramics, charcoal 1ket·
cbe1 l.Dd oU paJntinga Aug. ~and 25 at Knott'•
Berry Farm, ~ Beach Blvd., Buena Park.
Other Knott'• Berry Farm attrad:lons lnclude
a gbOlt town, rides, 1hop1 and animals. Opell
Mon. through Sat. 10 a.m. to 11 p.m., Sun. 10
a.m. to 10 p.m. Phone 522-1131.
MISSION CELEBRATION -One of the earliest
California milatooarie1, Padre Junlpero Serra,
will be honored in a day of celebration at Mis·
alon San LuJa Rey Sun., Aug. 25. A apectal
mus will be sung at 10 a.m. In the mJssion
followed by a narraUon on the Ule of Padre
Serra. Historic document!, artifacts and liter•·
ture wlU be on display in the Mission Museum,
located on Highway 7& three miles inland from
Oceanside. See Page 12 for more infonnaUon.
0r .... c .. 11
W-t1!41W
•
TO
Special Events
• • •
FUN
• •
DISNEYLAND ENTERTAINMENT -Tony MarUa a Shari Lewia wm enterta1n on the Tcimor-
rowiand Stage at .Dlmeyland, U.U S. Barbar
Blvd., Anaheim Aus. • throuib 30. A IJ)eCW
addWcG to the show will be "Wlnale tM Poola
... President'' tyt.ni la rib the currut ,..
tlcal teeDe. Performances t:l5 Md 11 p.m.
~. Sun., A&e. 25 comic weatml maers.
Homer and Jethro and llneer &DIClll c..,m
entertaln on the Tomorrowland '*'' wttll a Country MuaJc Jubilee et 3, I IDd 7 p.m. DlmeJ-
land la opeJl I I .ID. to mldnleht Sun. dlnQP
Tbun., I LID. to 1 &.ID. J'rt. and lat. PbclDe
~ lot further infonnation.
llEDCAN MAllDI G1lAI - A Mmca1 lutlTal m.
cludtnc dn1en, dancen, buDftpit lwclll, ~
lonetw and art exblblta la at the Unhwlal
City Studlot, LaDbn:blm at Rollynoct FreeW11
throup Sept. l. Hours : Mo&. tbrouP lllt.. I
p.m. to mktnlpt; SUD. I p.m. to mktnfpt Ad-
lllluion fer adult. $2.JO, ddJdreD under 12 fl.•
under S free. Phone (W) 115-aM for further
lalormatlon.
SBAIF.8PEARE FE8TIV AL -Tbe Jlth uaul
Su Diego Sum.mer National Shabspnn J'u-
tlval II be1q held thro\llb Sept. 15 at the Old
Globe Theater In Balboa Part. Su nt.10.
Plays being presented thiJ IWDDltr an "A..
You Like It," "Hamlet" and "Kini John.•
Performance• nlgbtly exeept Mon. with JD&
ineea scheduled for Wed., Sat. and Sua. l'or
further information phone cn~l) 2$9"9.
Coming Up
BALLET -The Laguna Ballet Company Pftlenta
their third annual "Ballet Allresco" Sal, Aui.
'1 at 1:30 p.m. Programs includes "FqiUv1
Vi.slons" by Prokofiev, "Mooda of A.nclent Ru.
ala," Ar~nsty and "The Enchanted Toy Shop,"
Joseph Bayer. nckets, '2, '3 and $4, half price
for 1tudenta In the side and center 1ectioD1, oa
aale at the Irvine Bowl box offic:e, 950 Laiuna
Canyon Road, Laguna Bead1 °" pboDe 41M-1147.
See feature on Page 7.
Things to Do
HARBOR CRUISES -Boat tours of Newport Har-
bor' 1 bJ1tortcal 1ite1, famous houses, Jalandl
and pointa of interest leave daily from the Fun
Zooe dock, between Palm and Main Su., Bai..
00., hourly 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tickets tor 9()..
minute cruise, adulta, '2; children, !-12, fl,
young~rs under 5, free. A ~minute cruiae
alao la available. Phone 873-0'J40.
CATAIJNA TRIP -The bland HolldlJ boat 11
making daily trips to Catallna Ialand leavinf
from the Balboa PavWon, 400 Main St., Balboa
at 9 a.m. and returning at 7 p.m. Roundtrip
fare for adult. $8.50; children, 5-12, $4.25 and
youngsters under 5 free. Resuvatlon1 re--
quired, phone 673--524$.
JAPANESE DEER PARK-Located at Santa Ana
Freeway and Knott Ave., ln Buena Park. Hourt
9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. Admission •t for adults,
50c for children. 200 tame de(!r to pet and feed
plus bears, swans, dove pavilion and Japanese
tea house. Phone 523-2381.
• • •
Places to Go
ESTANCIA ADOBE -An bbtoric landmark locat-
ed at Ada.mi and Mesa Verch Drive WKt,
Coata Mesa. Originally a way station for
lndi1n1, the biJtoric adobe bu been restored
IDd turnlahed and Js open to the pub& '11>m
1 to I p.m. OD sat. and Sun. No admlaaloa
c:harie. For information phone 549--0822.
Sports
HORSE RACING -Quarter Hon~ Racing even·
lap at the Loa Alam.ltOI Race CoW'1e, U81
Xatella, Los Alamltos. First Pott time 7:'5 p.m.
MOA. through Sat. Phone 527·2231.
filllE RACING -Tborougbbred horse racing at
Del Ma:r Turf Club, Del Mar, Moa. through Sat.
NlDt races dally, ftrat post time 2 p.m. Phone
(71~1) 755-1141 for further information.
DODGERS -The Los Anteles Dodten vs the
San Francisco Giants Aue. 23, 24 at a p.m.,
Aul. 25 at l p.m.; Houston A1tro1 Aug. 26 at
I p.m., Aug. 'Z1 at 8 p.m.; Chicaf o Cubs Aug.
• tn a double buder beginn.lni at I p.m. ID
tlM Dodlers' stadium, 1750 stadium Way, Loi
A.neeles. Ticketa availabM locally at Walllcba
Music City store.
ANGELS BASEBALL -California Angels vs tht
Oakland Athletics Aug. 30, 31 at 8 p.m., Sept.
1 at 1 p.m.; Cleveland Indiana Sept. 2, 3, 4 at
• p.m. ln the Anaheim stadium, m State
Collete Blvd., Anaheim. Ticketa available Jn
Orange County at United Calif. Banks and Wal·
licha Music City stores. Phone ~2000.
COVER: Hal O'Ntal and Odile de Witte
will dance in the new work, "Fugitive Visions,"
when the Laguna Beach Civk Ballet Company
stages its third annual "Ballet Alfresco" in the
Irvine Bowl at 8:30 p.m., August 31. S~e fe:-·
ture on Page 7.
GUde t. Fua
Meet &M People
Ganlea Ntte1
Dtaaeylud
Cbraeter Boat Parade
Destiaer'1 Not.ebeek
Balltt Alfresco
Oat •N' About
M.laloa Su Lata Rty
Carreat Art EDWtl
Un Tbeater
Elltutalnmeat
Mol'lt1
ORANGE COAST maamammaa
Aa1a1t %3, 1968
Parez
Paie 3
Paie 4
Pate 4
Pate 5
Paie I
Pa1e 7
Pages 1-1%
Pace 1Z
Pate JS
Pace u
Pates 1-15
Pages 13--15
MAGAZINE
C>nl!M c .. tt WIEIKliND•lt M ... llllt II IJllMllllH Prl4Ny1 .. -
lfftltll tf Ille DAll.Y l'IL..OT '1 1111 Ortl!M CMJf .. ......._ Ce ..
.._, IMdl, 14•nll-.IM l•Cll, C .. ht MtM, UMM IMCll. Wett>
llMMlw •114 '-••111 Veley, Callftn1I&. A..,_1 l'tlt Oft• lo 11171. Ntw1Nf1 IMdl, C1llftn&I nua.
Lucy Bell
Pbone HZ·43U
Editor
Ma .. 11111 ~AIL Y PILOT
,.rifey, A""'11 JJ, IHI
Teaching Students Fo.llows Test Of Himself
Time.ls a very lll\po~ant conupodity in the life of ceramics teacher
Oliver Johnson and he greedily stretches it to its limits as he pursues the
things be loves to do which include painting, writing, pot making, photo-
graphy, teaching and cooking. ·
Oj, as he likes to be called, was born in Los Angeles and enlisted in
the Navy after he was graduated -from Wilson High school. On his release
f.rom the service, he spent a short time at Pasadena City College then en.
rolled at Occidental and was graduated in 1950.
F:or seven years he taught speech and journalism in Long Beach high
schools, then began to wonder where his life was leadin& him. "I started
Mexican Players
"Tropical VerncruxH • colorful 1t19• production of carnival tlm• In V•rl-
crux is on stage at the Padua Hilla Theatre in Cleremont, through Septem·
ber 14. Performed by the Mexican Players, the production lncfudH tradi-
tional songs and dances of the cernlval. Phone (714-1) 62'-1211.
MllterMt SKllt~O,ttLY PU.OT
Prlff'(, AHWI 2J, lHI
doubting mysel! ... that I could only live in the world of children ,'' Oj
confessed, "so I gave myself three years to make my mark."
He went to work as publications supervisor for the Stanford Research
Institute, then moved on as assistant to the marketing direcor of Ling-
Temco. Still testing hemse lf, he took on the position of southwest editor for
Sunset Magazi ne. He covered Southern California, Arizona and northern
Mexico doing reporting, photography and public relations.
"I found out that wasn't the h!e for me. I don't like lo live vicarious-
ly, writing about what someone else has done. I like to do the thing my·
sell," Oj said.
While he was at Sunset Oj became interested in making pottery
through one of his neighbors. "It looked exciting, but I already had so
many hobbies I fought it. The clay won," be laughed, his tanned face
spo~ting a summer beard.
Convinced that his life's work was in the classroom, Oj six years ago
returned to teaching in the Huntington Beach Union High school district
and for the past two years has been teaching ceramics at Fountain Valley
High School. He also teaches at Orange Coast College two nights a week.
"I get some of the roughest kids in my high school classes and they
suddenly find themselves becoming very creative individuals. Some even
make money from their work. I teach them business methods so that they
don't think that they can just tie a rope around heir waists and call them·
selves potters," commented Oj, whose students last fall set up a booth at
South Coast Plaza and turned a profit of $600.
Johnson exhibits his own works at the Laguna Beach Festival of
Arts, the Manchester Gallery in Taos, New Mexico and in San Francisco. 1
He is now looking for new ways of working in the medium. He has added
leather to many of his pieces and hopes to study welding this fall so he can
add brass to his creations. "Pottery was always used for utilitarian objects
in the past," be explains, "but we don't have a need for water jugs any
longer so I am searching for new things to do."
In the time when he is not working or creating, Oj likes to travel in
Mexico with his two sons Doug, 13 and Dave, 11, who live in Chicago. This
enables him to study native pottery techniques. "Everything is coming to-
gether for me," commented Oj, who is a contributing editor of School Arts
Magazine. "I can integrate all the things I love, writing, photography and
the study of pottery."
He is a member of the Board of Directors of the Orange County Art
Education Association and a member of the American Craftsmans Council.
As are the sands of the painted desert, Oliver Johnson's life is never
dull , but multi-hued and ever changing.
-Dorothy Pier
WE HAVE EVERYTHING!
HERE AT "NEWPORT PRODUCE"' WE CARRY CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST se.
LECTION OF FRESH, FANCY, PRODUCE. COME SEE ''WHAT'S NEW" FOR
YOURSELF •• I
YOU'LL FIND
FRESH PICKLES
FRESH GINGER
IELGIUM SHALLOTS
1111 LmUCI!
WATER CRESS
FRESH 'IERRIES
FRESH FIGS
FRESH MANGOES
All IOINI PAPAYAS
FRESH KUMQUATS
AND 89 OTHER PRODUCE DELICACIES THE ARE "TH I TA L K 0 F TH I
TOWN" AND WILL BE "CONVERSATION PIECES" AT YOUR LUNCHEON OR
DINNER PARTY! AND THEIR SENSllLY PRICED HERE.
LOOK AT THESE THREE EXAMPLES r:--------------A RIAL TRIATI I A RIAL TIHATI I A RIAL TlllATI I
OCAL SUGAR IWHT I IXTRA FANCY ALL PURPOSI
IEEDLHS I GRAVINSTll N I Watermelon GRAPES APPLES I
1 2f •. ! I 1 Of.. I 1 Of.. I
LIMIT 2 I LIMIT 5 LIS. I LIMIT 5 LIS. I WITH THIS COUPON WITH THll COUPON WITH THIS COUPON I
______________ _..
COUPONS IXPIRI AU~UST 21tli
THESE FINE RESTAURANTS DEMAND THE FINEST FOR THEIR CUSTOMERS.
THAT'S WHY THEY CHOSE NEWPORT PlODUCE-L.&I. FOOD SERVICE with
CAFETERIAS IN "COLLINS RADIO," "IERTIA" AND "ATLANTIC RE·
SEARCH," "THE VIKINGS, SWEDISH SMORGASBORD.'' ''THE VICTOR HUGO
INN," BOB'S "llG IOY" AND OVER 200 OTHERS, PATRONIZE THEM! HOW
ABOUT YOU CALLING US 1
"WMN 91.nty It De ON« Of De H ..... ,
NEWPORT Open Six Daya
PHONI: CLOSED PRODUCE 673-8715 TUESDAYS °""'" c...tr'• ,.....
c hwtttt PrHtice Orf-lmtl"
Orlft .. CNtl
W•tllW 3
!
L
GARDIN NOTES
Gardeners On Vacation Take A Look At Gardens
,
GarcMners are a breed of people wbo like to look at other gardem
When they go on vacation, and that time hu rolled around again. There
are a number of interesting places for gardeners to visit on a trip between
here and San Francisco.
Santa Barbara abounds with well kept private yarda which are a
pleasure to see. The city also baa a botanic garden devoted to California
native plants.
Farther north near Santa Maria are the commercial flower fields
of Lompoc. Here hundreds of acres of flowers are grown for seed produc-
tion. During the summer months the Lompoc valley is ablaz.e with color.
On Highway 1 west of San Luis Obispo is the Hearst Castle at San
Simeon. Everyone has beard of its art treasures but it also is sWTOunded
by beautiful garden!. When William Randolph Hearst was reigning over
the castle he had plants moved in and out of the garden to keep it at the
peak of bloom at all times.
Now that the state has charge of the grounds they have turned to the
more economical method of using perennial plants which do not need to be
replaced seasonally. The garden abounds with roses, fuchsias, penstemons,
Japanese anemones and hydrangeas, all well maintained.
Farther north near Santa Cruz are the famed begonia gardens of
Capitola. Two large begonia nurseries there are within a short distance
of one another. These are the V etterle and Reinelt and the Antonelli Bro-
thers. Their great greenhouses full of blooming tuberous begonias must
be seen to be believed. There are a lot of other interesting flowers there
also. At Vetterle and Reinelt you can see their famous delphiniums. You
will find six foot stalks of delphinium flowers ranging from pure white to
rosy pink as well as sky blues and midnight purples. Antonelli Brothers
feature fuchsias aY'.d many other shade-loving plants.
In nearby Watsonville is the nursery of Will Tillotson which special·
izes in old roses. Planted around a packing shed are over a hundred vari-
eties of roses all labeled. Unless you are a buff for old varieties of roses
you will not have beard of most of them.
Such oddities as moss roses, striped roses and violet roses are to be
found among this beautiful and interesting coll ection. Spring is the best
time to go there, for some of these old roses only flower in the spring. But
no matter when you visit during the spring, summer or fall there will be a
number of them in bloom.
When In San Francisco be sure to visit Golden Gate Park and aee
both the flowers and the flo~r children there.
"""/ -Don Horton
ON
STAGE
U.S.A.
Tony Martin end Shari
Lewis open next Monday
August 26 es stars of
Disneyland's "On Stage
U.S.A." They wlfl appear
Monday through Friday
on the Tomorrowland
stage at 9: 15 and 11 p.m.
Another production num·
ber, 1'Winnie the Pooh
for President," will be an
added attraction of the
show. Winnie the Pooh
and the entire cast of
110n Stage U.S.A." sing-
ers and dancers and the
stiow band •Will be feat·
ured together in t h e
special numlMr.
Bulbs Give Color
MlllllM sectlllt-OAILY PILOT
,r1411y; ..... p, ,,..
.
The Bay Will Be Full Of Characters Aug. 24
AND THEY'LL BE PARADING TO
AMUSE 'N AMAZE ONE AND ALL
Every parade must include Its share of floats bedecked with spangles,
pretty girls and crepe paper flying in the breeze. Most certainly the Char-
acter Boat Parade will have these frills and lots more for its eighth annual
run Saturday, August 24. Of necessity it better specialize in floats. Every·
tiring from Chinese junks and specially designed boats ro decorated canoes
and yachts manned by costumed crews will be in view. Spectators may see
the parade from Balboa Island, Udo Isle or most spots along the Balboa
Peninsula.
The parade will get underway at 3: 30 p.m. Saturday with approxim·
ately 40 boats entered in categories ranging from those decorated to the
parade's theme, "An Adventure at Sea," to those entered in categories for
steamboats, use of animated figures, best costumed crew and other special
classes. The addition of a new trophy award this year for the best musi·
cal group in the parade brings the total number of trophies to ten.
Last year over 180,000 people viewed the boat parade which is spon-
sored annually by the Commodore's Club CJf the Newport Harbor Chamber
of Commerce. This year's parad!"will take an estimated two hours. It will
leave the Balboa Bay Club at 3: 30 and follow a route which passes the
county dock at 3:45, the Newport Harbor Yacht Club at 4:30, the Balboa
Pavilion at 4:40 and Balboa Yacht Club at 5 and circles back past Harbor
Island at 5:30 p.m. returning to its starting point.
The theme of the 1968 Character Boat Parade is 0 An Adventure at
Sea," but for spectators along the shore, colorful, costumed and comical
floats such as these, will readily supply an "adventure to see."
Mata!"" ~All Y PILOT
Frldly, A ... I U. INt
Those who are familiar with the Character Boat Parade through the YHrt
wlll recognize the old ''Mldtlgan" above, with Dick Shaw at the helm. It
Is one of the flfft of the BalbN Island SkulUng encl Punting Club. Below
left, 11 the "Afrlc1n Queen" which belongs t• Richard Croul encl et right
below Is Shfrley Leitch'• "Georg•'• Raft." There were some 40 entries In ·
lilt year'• parade encl m1ny more are expected to loln the fun this S.tul'lo
day H the parade winds lt1 way through loc1I waterways.
j
l
1
I ~
I
l
!
I
1
l
,. ~I
p.
•
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DESIGNER'S
NOTEBOOK
Questions and Answers
BY J. RU SSELL TUMELSON, ORANGE COUNTY DESIGNER-DECORATOR
Question: What about those hard-
and-fasl rules of correct balance and
scale?
Answer: It ls imperative that a
person knows the rules, but many
times a dramatic effect can be ob-
tained by breaking them. Some of
the best decorating jobs use over-
scaled objects in small rooms and
undersealed things in large rooms.
A vast collection of small objects on
a big wall can easily have more ef-
fect than one single large object.
Question: Can one successfully use
a mixture of furniture in a room?
Answer: Never give a thought to
the nationality or period of furniture.
Mix it or match it. The important
thing is the comfort an d harmonious
effect it has on the viewer. Fabrics
can come into play also. Don't be
afraid of mixing textures.
Question: Are fabrics ever respons-
ible for inspiration in interior de-
corating?
Answer: Absolutely. The modern
designers and weavers of fabrics are
the greatest exponents of breaking
all the set rul es. The play and inter-
mingling of unrelated yarns and tex-
~ures and clashing colors len d great
1m'>act.
Question: Can the average home-
maker decorate without profession-
al advice?
Answer: Without professional as-
sistance many costly errors are en-
countered which the average home
maker can ill afford. Even color
choices of appliances are important
in combi nation with vinyl floor cov-
erings, formica, tiles and wallpapers.
Question: Must one rely upon set
patterns and rules in decorating?
Answer: Break the rules where
possible. That's the key to flair in in-
terior design. Professional interior
designers who achieve flair and
drama often break the old rules. But
these are the people who know the
rules and the reasons behind them.
One must be the master of the rules
before he has the license to ignore
them.
NEXT WEEK: GLA SSWA RE
Please address inquiries and questions by letter to: Designers Notebook,
Weekender Magazine, Post Office Box 1875, Newport.J~each, California.
~, Orutt CHll fl w .. undtr
GEOMETRIC DESIGN RUG$
New math has invaded the home decoratively. Geometric designs
have popped up in fabrics, floor coverings, wallpaper and accessories add-
ing up to excit1.ng interiors.
Area rugs, such as the one above, command attention in neutral
s~rroundings or blend in with a variety of designs. This tufted rug is prac-
tical as well as striking. It is made on a woven backing of olefin fiber
which 1s stain repellent, moisture resistant and mildew proof. Approximate
retail price ot a 4 by 6 foot rug, such as the one above, is $70.
Below, bold lines in rectangles add a feeling of space to a small
. room. Other patterns of freely interpreted squares, triangles, and circles
can do much to .bring a room up to date or add that last touch of flair in
the kitchen, porch, den or bedroom.
Both rugs pictured are manufactured by Regal Rugs, Inc. and are
handled locally.
MAl .. llnt Stclleft-OAIL Y "' t·
FrlUy, Au1111t U, I•••
AGUNA a ·EACH BALLET ALFR·ESCO
AUGUST 31 PROGRAM SELECTED
FOR WIDE AGE GROUPS APPEAL
The third annual "Ballet Alfresco" comes to Irvine Bowl on Satur-
day, August 31 at 8:30 p.m. when the Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Company
will present three popular items geared to appeal to every age group.
"Fugitive Visions," a ballet based on color and danced to the music
of Prokofiev, will be seen for the first time in Laguna. The premier per-
formance was in Oakland last May when the Laguna dance group was
selected to appear on the gala program in the Pacific Western Regional
Ballet Festival.
The colorful and lively ''Enchanted Toy Shop" is ever popular with
the younger members in the audience with its shop full of toys that come
to life and dance.
The final item on the program will be "Moods of Ancient Russia," a
delightful Russian-type ballet danced to the music of Arensky. All choreo-
graphy for these three presentations will be done by Lila Zall, artistic
director of the Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Company.
A bonus number for those attending the evening of ballet will be the
Grand Adagio from "Paquita," staged and choreographed by Paul Petroff,
for lead dance rs Mary Han! and Gene Wilkes. Petroff, who has recently
joined the Laguna company, bas enjoyed training with many of the leading
dance mentors in the world and bas a repertoire of 22 leading roles which
he danced on an extensive tour which took him around the world three
times.
The Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Company, which was formed in 1962
by Lila Zali, has been named a National Honor Company by the National
Association for Regional Ballet. It is the only group in Southern California
to be so honored and selected to perform on both the gala and chamber
programs of the Pacific Western Regional Ballet Festival every year since
that Festival's inception.
The Laguna Company played host last year to the Festival, which
was held in Irvine Bowl. It further distinguished itself by winning the
Disneyland Community Service Award in 1965.
For ticket information see Guide to Fun, Page 1
Gene Wilkes, Hope So-
gawa and Hal O'Neal,
from top, Ir\ a "hear no
evil, see no evil, speak
no evil" pose from the
new work "Fugitive Vis·
ions" which will be per-
formed on August 31 in
the "Ba ll et Alfresco" In
Irvine Bowl.
Giselle Howell, Odlle de
Witte and Joy Sogawa,
from le~, will be sHn In
''The Endtantecl T o y
Shop" segment during
the evening of ballet un·
dtr the 1t1r1.
LHd dancers, Mary Hanf and Gene Wiikes perform In "Moods of Ancient
Russia," ont of thrtt ballets to be presented.
..
• • 4
~. '
We Get Letters
Whoa!
Out 'N' Abouter is sWl out and about.
Some Weekender read«s inferred from tll•
column two weeks ago that thi! weekly me-
andering through the restaurant and night
cluft scene· was being dropped.
OUT 'N' ABOUl
Reader Pat Niles writes, "J would like to
express my opinion that J am sorry to see the
Out 'n' About column of the Weekender Mag-
azine discontinued. I was a faithful reader of
the column. We aren't tlhe •every-weekend pa-
trons' of restaurants, but when we do go out
tt is nice to know of restaurants that have
good food and not ridiculous prices . . • it is
too expensive to try them all."
Thanks, Pat. 6ut 'n' Abouter will hang in
there and hopes to help 11ou select the restaur·
ants that please 11our palate and poclutboolc.
~
And Mrs. Calvin Foss writes, "Please do
not discontinue Don Wilson's column. I enjoy
it so very much. We are in the real estate
business and I show it to our out-of-town vis-
itors. We have tried many of Don's 6Uggested
restaurants-he's alwiays right." ·
Don WilsO't'I, who originated and penned
this column for mant1 a moon. h41 gO't'le on to
-new fielm. We'll tTfl to keep it a& helpfUl and
readable 4! J>O$!lb!e. ·
Presents
DISCOTHQUE
RED VELVET
FRI. & SAT.
DANCING-DANCING .HARD-ROCK-SOfT
UNl9UE LIGHTING EFFECTS
Tll DORIAN MODE TRIO
IN OUR COCKTAIL LOUNGE
Sun., Tues., Wed., Thun.
9 P .M. NIGHTLY
CLOSED MONDAY
No Cover-No Minimum
You Must a. 21
• I
• DINNER SPECIALS NIGHTLY e DAILY BUFFET LUNCHEON
• BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE
-/N4~~
~
"At The Entnnce To Balboa Island"
1045 BAYSIDE DRIVE
NEWPORT BEACH 675-0200
No-o"e can figure out why Vil.
le9e IM i1 1uch • 'swin9in9''
1potl Drop on in-maybe you
cen come up with the an1werl
VILLAGE INN
129 Marine 673-4530 l1lbo1 I.
Seafood Time
Judging from the menus at the majority
of restaurants along the Orange Coast, you'd
think we lived a thousand miles inland ratlher
than smack on t1* edge of the world's .largest
ocean. Far too often, a tired frozen fitet of
sole is the closest thing the restaurateur
comes ·up with for those ·who savor delicacies
from the ·sea.
However, it isn't all true. While the Or-
ange Coast doesn't have a 100 percent seafood
grotto to satisfy those who deal in such ex· crucs as fresh sof:tsbell crab or Mexican totu-
ava, we do ttave restaurants that specialize in
some fine delicacies from local and far-away
waters.
Local Lobster
Two of Calllornia's finest oiferin~ ·from
the sea -abalone and Ca.Ii.fornia lobster (lan-
q/~-~~
NOW
APPEARING
HERB & JOE TRIO
htKl119-lJttet1I .. h11t 1:41 Nltlttfy lacept l111ffy
e COCKTAILS e DINNER e DANCING
FOR RESERVATIONS: 536-1421
21112 Oce.n Avenue Huntln.aton Beach, Calif.
Bill Martini Presents
"THE COOK BOOK"
644-1111
0,.. I P.M.·11 P.M.
DANCIN6 Nl6HTLY
••. -4 llstetlS.t , ..... ,. tee!
Longes t
HAPPY HOUR in townl
10 •·•· hll,.M. MUy -llLLIAllD llOOM-LADIH WELCOMl-
BILL MARTINI
COCITAJL LOUNSI no L 17tlt COSTA MISA
g,!~!cl
RESTAURANT
twe Lecetlftt •••
COSTA MESA
c-ef ..... ,. ' lristef
540. 3641 °*" Leceta.. -L..t-• IHcJt
CLOHD MONDAY
All CONDITIONID
La Posada
MEXICAN
Family Restaurant
2200 HARIOI ILVD.
COSTA MESA _HOURS_
K ~rt C..,ter Mtot. "'"' nun. .... 2 ... 27.. ll:M 1.m. • f ,.,m. Phone ... • ,.rt. l11M 1.m .• 1 .... m. r., -a.ttl• Also Steaks and Si i . N-. lt 1.m.
Pttcher Ht1mburgers _!.u11. NM11 ·• •·"'· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'·~~~~~cio~NWNRmPAUINGp~«w--
aoo&te}-are,·unfortunately, in heavy demand
ind short supply.
The fresh native lobster appears, at the
most, very seldom and .ia instantly snapped
up by local restaurateurs. The same goes for
abalone, that delightful shellfish that offers
such a unique taste, especieJly when it is
properly done.
. Local lobster iJ served infrequently and
usually you will find a special note 9n the
menu when it is in season and available. Ab-
alone, while aim-06t twice as expensive as it
WAS a few years back, is on the menus of ..,
number of Oran~ Coast restaur~nts.
Abalone
The Fisherman in Huntington Beach has
abalone and about as extensive a seafood
menu as anyone in the area. Over in Costa·
Mesa, El Pesoador (which means "The Fisher-
man" in sr,anish) does a ifi.M job with ''catch
of the day' -seabass and swordfish, for In-
Dencing
--FRED CARROLL DUO --
At Our Frie"dly Pieno Ber
Cocktail Hour
4 to 1 Dally
CLOSED SUNDAYS
II!! ASK AtOUT OUR IANQUET FACILITIES E e: ____ :::::;.::....:.:..:=..:..:......=..=..:..:.....:..:....:..:._~=--_:_:..:....;;;..._~--~
The CASPIAN
. -642·12tJ -Ceste ......
INJOY DINING AT
SCHROEDER'S
STEAK HOUSE
!formerly Chef'• Inn)
featuring
It .... Chlcka, lobster, •9'd Ribs
1Iou.s1 Specialitv • • •
15 ox. T • BONE STEAK
NOW PLAYING
MARK DA YIDSON TRIO
WIDNESDA Y THRU SUNDAY
Open Delly l xcept Tuesday-I p.m.-Sunday 4 p.m.
'201 IAST COAST HIGHWAY -CORONA DIL MAil
For Resenotlows TelephoH '75-0470
Howdy and Art Presents
THE NEW LOOK
at •
JOSEF'S
• Quiet ... Private Dining Area
• New Cocktail and Dance Area
• Private Banquet and Party Room
Drep In Soon ••• We thin• you'll like th1 "New l o• .. '
• Luncheon " Dinner • late Supper
2121 E. COAST HIGHWAY
At The Jamacia Inn
Corter lA rrl MAR '71-1180
t ,,t M !~c: ..-~t\tl 'f I
U T : Or•• ,_, ........... 1111r111 ... k ..
J
J
-
I;
ftance -and carries other Haf ood items u
iveD.
Maybe the best abalone ll'ound is at ,
Woody'• Wharf ln Newport, but on the other
band, it may be further down the peninaula
at t.., l>avilion. Between the two, there is the bustlinf Crab ·cooker where owner Bob Rou·
bian oversees the charcoal broiling of some ·
of the tas~est fiBh and lhellfish any place
around. The setting T.s somewhat rufrtic, but
the lood ii alwa~s tasty, always hot.
'lbt ve•able Sea Shanty, hard by tbt
fishinJ docks at central Newport, is another
tong.tune favorite for seafood fanciers. It ls
a bit difficult to find, but aim t<>ward the Wi-
est bullding In. town, Vista Del Lido, from the
Newp<>l1 City Hall and you're practically
there.
Real
Cantonese food
Ht here or
t•k• home.
STA&
CHINESE CASINO
111 21st pl., Newport Beach ORlole 3·9560
Open y,.,. Round D•llY 11-11 l'rl •nd lat. 'Ill I a.m.
GRAND OPENING
TONICWHT-FllDAY, AUG. 23
of the beautiful new
Town and Country Inn
Cocktails • Dinner • Dancing
The Bill Friml Trio
APPEARING NIGHTLY
18582 Beach Blvd.
In the new Town & Country
Shopping Center
Huntington Beach
962-6666 ---··--.... -* M'GOO'S * * PIZZA * FfJN * SUDS * FVN * *DIXIELAND* FVN * P~STA *
* KAZOOS * FVN * FLICKS * ANTIPAST~ *FUN * IVGBAND
PEANtJTS * FfJN * SANDWICHES
SAi.ADS * FIJN * CHAMPAGNE
M'GOO'S, !tOt W. Co11t Hwy., Newport
"'~1•1l11t S«ti.-oAll.Y Pll.OT
J\'. lu1<u I Q, IHe
I
-I
Sand Dab@
Another delicacy which lucky Califo11-
nians ca.n find on many m.enus locall)' i6 the
11nd dab, a moist.and tender white ftsh with
a dainty and delectmble flavor. It ia bard to go
]VI'Olll <rdering und dabs It the Reuben E.
IAe, but of course seaf ()Od is a specialty of the
manently·beach.ed bark at Newport. The
E. Lee's bouillabaisse is an outstJandlng of-
ering, but make certain you have a big appe-
tite belore tackling it.
There is, ol course, far simpler fare from
tli.e sea. You'd think from the proliferation of
Fish 'n' Chip places in the past year that it
was our rrational dish instead of England's.. ecely a month passes that a new Moby
k's, H. Salt's Esq., Piccadilly Peddler or
ginal Fish & Chips doesn't open its doors
ofe Saini 'Jrop€z
RESTAURANT FRANCAIS
French Specialty
Chef Aene'
Hermerly with Rom•n•ff'•>
3012 Newport Blvd. Newport B11eh
OPEN DAILY 1:30 P.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.
CIOHcl Mond•y 673-7H3
TH' DORYMEN FISH & CHIPS
"Merchant• Luncheon lpecl•I"
I ._..~, ... Cilek• ...... , ...... c .. ,,., o ... "'""'
......... Dttllll .. '"' ...... .
ALL FOR 79c
2100 WIST OCEAN FRONT, NEWPORT BEACH
"Au.ti ...... Newpwt IMcll Pier"
DON JOSI
presents
The Fabulous
lecordfnt Artist
MARIO SAID
TR I 0
ENCHILADA & TACO ..•..••• 11.10
CHIU REWNO·ENCHILADA: •• 11.41
e COCICT AILS e
9093 E. Ad•ms (at Maenolla) Hunt. IHch '62-7911
to otter fish 4leep-tfted*.,..... 91enf wtttr
what we used to call trench fricw.
·"'-
No m~nUon of this kind Of olf erin1
would be complete without a word for the
ecean front establishment oi Hank and Ger-
trude Pabst near the Newport Pier. No one .c
is really certain how it's done at Hank's, bul
tw • tight ball of faithful f ollowen, it is well
known that. the fish 1here can't be beat.
Just down the 6treet from Hank's, right
past Scotty's, which is fine in its own rigb~
b the Dorymen. Fish and chips and 1brimp and ohip.s are the specialty.
Originator
The man wtlo claims to have originated
fish and chips in Southern California, Brian
Cameron of the Saucy Swan in Oo6ta Mesa,
says that the dJsh is too popular to please him
-he and Mrs. Cameron are English them-
selv~.
With all of the new fish and chipa placet
popping up, Brian switched his rnoou com-
pletefy iwnd now f ea tu res poached fish -
Continued on P•g• 12
~
INN
MARINE RESTAURANT
Serving Luncheon and Dinner from
111~0 AM ••• enchantinr atmoSJ)he1·e and
\'1ew •••
I& LIDO LOUNGE
'lhe FAST FEAST Luncheon Bufret-
Konday through Frlday ••• ll 180 AM.·
i:SO PM
/uld, from 6 :00 PM to clostq-1oft
Ughts, roomy club chah'J, eocktallt, ton•
tJnuous music for dancing:
Bill McClure Duo .. Art Bardultn Trio
I& BISTRO
A touch of Paris-open from 7 &00 AM-
Ereakfast, Luncheon, Dinner, lnaw,
Amerlcau lJar •••
EVERY SUNDAY!
BUNT ll\EAD.AST ........ 8130 AM•t100 J~
HUlVOS 1\ANCBE.R09 •••• I .t130 Af,(.S100 PM w
NEW I ,, 1h1 N1wpo1111
SUNDAYINTHB LIDO LOUNGE
'DIE BOST TABLB .• .1,00 m.1it0 nr
~ JOV19tDOJ. lf!NDKI BlllUD
JlVl1C • • • IJANCINO
~ NEWPORTER INN eu.1100
110'7 JAKBOBEE RD., NEWPORT BEACH
....... ( ..... ............
l I
• i
~
1
1 • I
-~-~~--------------------------------........... ..
\
j
'
Vina Harmer Trio
Monday thru Saturday
Dick Powell Trio
37 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER
Bdwee11 8uff11m1 A 8roagwa Ample Parking
R-rvationa • 144-2030.
TRY KEN'S SPECIAL
FOR THIS WEEK
2273 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
C~n'!l -SIO!' 642-1312 :~~~
KEN's SPEUAU Of THf WEEK
3 P.M. TO 11 P.M.-7 DAYS
GROUND
SIRLOIN
STEAK
with
Clioppecl ~'"" Pepper
a11d Onion
! :>"If or Salad, Potato,
Yeptable, Dinner Roll,
Ceuert and Coffee.
OR
SPAGHETTI
\':ttli S a • c e, Garlic
Brood, Soup or Solod,
Di:inor Roll, Deuett a11d
Coffee.
AT
VERSAILLES
The Thrff For All Trlo ls
playing lively music for
dancing six nights each
week at the Versailles
Restaurant on Westcliff
Drive in Newport Beach.
Harry Tucker plays the
piano and Gene Willf s Is
on bass with lovely Alice
Dupree doing the vocals
and handling the d rum-
ming chores. You can
I catch them in the lounge
every night except Sun-
day from 8: 30 p.m.
~OU'LL ENJOY OUR SUN.DAY
BRUNCH
11 A.M. TO 3 P.M.
IFM~
fo1~ L>i1111114 S111cc 1965
3801 E>Sr CoASr HIGHWAY·
CORONA Dl.L MAR, CALlrORNIA
P110NI: (71 4) 675-1374
•BREAKFAST SERVED 24 HRS. A DA Yll 1~---------1
>
VERSA ILLE S LOUNGE
Presents-Newport's very Finest
and Friendliest Entertainment
THE THREE FOR ALL TRIO
HARRY
TUCKER
FEATURING
ALICE
DUPREE
GENE
WILLIS
Nitely Monday thru Saturday 8:30 to 1 :JO-Danceable Music
ANNOVNCI NG OVR NEW POLICY
USDA Choice
.. PRIME RIB DINNER 3.95 Salad, Baked Potato, Cheese Bread, Beverage
Monday Thru S1turday, 6 to 9 p.m. only
For best service,
~ call for reservations
I 0 °'91111 CMtl 1 Wltkttt*r
For Dlnnet Oft~'·"Af ~ 1t ... rvatt0ft1 'JIIP -
Dlal 642-4141
1617 WESTCLIFF DRIVE, NEWPORT IEACH
From lh1 beautiful
new Sky Room oC tbe Grand Hotel, o' erlool\ln1
Dt1ne1la11d.
Flreworke b<>1tln "t
9:00 earh nh;ht during th• 11ummer.
Entertainment
night!)' b)' DEJ, N AOlll . .\U; op~n rrom f:OO p.1n.
''WMre l•dtl1111
Tllll!M.,.. "_,.,...
........ _________________________ ~~-
Ed
th
na
on
pii
~
R
... , ..
P'rlda1
-
AT REUBEN E. LEE
~~ " . . ,~; ;;f~tW · .. ,;i -:~· .
Edgar Hayes hat returned to the Reuben E. Lff, this time with his group called 'the Edgar H yes' Stardusters.
They feature a singer named Pat lngrem, left, with Edgar at the piano -where else? -end a young man
named Eddie Khan on bass. Tf\ty play Tuesday through Thursday from 8:30 p.m. and start a half hour later
on Friday and Saturday. If you llkt old and new songs this is the spot to hear them along ·with the superb
piano artistry of Hayes. Monday night Vic Garcia fills In and on Sunday, the Bob Ransom Trio is there.
Ulla nova
newporl
_.__
llll COAST HIGHWAY
NEWPORT HACH
Dinner Served 'Ill I 13t a.m.
RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED
642-7880
1:00 l'.M. • 2:00 A.M. Dally
PIERINO llNIGNl'I
Newport hacll
67J·29JO
VILLA ROMA
SpecioHzfnt In ITALIAN DINNERS
13 Varieties Sea Food
Lobster Tails Scampi
NY Steak Pizr.ailoa
14 Varieties Pizza S'ECIAL-TAKE OUT ONLYI
SPAG-HETII DINNERS 35 Varieties Pasta
With our delklous meat seuce PIUS Prawns Scampi Cioppi no 2 meal bells, varllc toast M1d tgp
11 otr with our 1mp0r1ec1 permesan 12 Varieties Veal ch«se. No order too small ,,.. lar1J9.
Olmt$ In dl~lll• wn111ner, no Scaloppine dlsM lo Wis.II.
$1.45 6 Varieties Ohicken
445 No. Newport Blvd., Newport Beech
Open 4 p.m. 12 ~.m. Ml 6-4929 OPEN 7 DAYS
HELEN FORREST
, formerly futured with Htrry J•mu' orche•tra
DANCING· DINNER RES. 714/ S34-f090 c .. 11 ..... hterhl••"' l :M-l 110 t ac. M...
FIBE STATION
NIGHT CLUB BEST!UBlNT
1112 miles south of Disneyland on Hartior Boulevard
TO' SIRLOIN
STEAK ••••••••••
NEW YOH
CUT STEAK ......
llJ lb. GROUND
llOUND STfAK ••
1.39
1.59
89c
ALL ABOVE INCLUDE BAKED
POTATO OR FRENCH FRIES,
ROLL & BUTTER.
DELICIOUS STEAK
SANDWICH
"IF MORE
PEOPLE WOULD
TRY
SIZZLER
Fa111lly Sfffll He .......
They WHl4 Net 01dy
' BE
SMARTER
'"' htttt '" -Richer, Al Welll"
HAMIUllGH •• , • 49c
CHUH .......... 54c
DRESS 'EM UP
AT FREE GOODY BARI
DELICIOUS 1 19 GULE SHRIMP • • • • •
WITH FRENCH FRIES
011 s.... Ron 89, coFF11 1 Oc
ffette• Fries (All YH coa 4ri•llJ
ALL STEAKS SERVED ON SIZZLIN' PLATTERS!
Mixed G,._.. Solo4 . 24C Choice of Oreuin9 ....••.•.•
~~~~ ............ 79c e DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS e
MONDAY FAMILY NIGHT 2:00 • 9:00 ,,M. $1 09 j
Rev. •1.3t TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
CHILD'S 'ORTION 1/1 PRICE e
FAMILY STEAK HOUSES
HUNTINGTON IEACH I COSTA MESA HILLGREN fQUARE TOWN & COUNTRY 8EHINO TEXACO STATION
11112 hod llvd. '62·H12 I. 17tti & Sa11ta AH 642·74'2 e FOOD TO GO e
....
l j
1
• 1
. .
'
. ,
..
-
PADRE
JUNIPERO
SERRA
DAY
Padre Juntpero Serra, Frandscan found·
er of the Old Missions of Calliomia; will be
honored with special ceremonies, Sunday,
August 25, at Old Mission San Luis Rey, near
Oceanside.
Junipero Serra Day will be observed by
the Franciscan padres at the Old Mission
and the public is cordially invited. A special
Mass will be sung at 10:00 a.m. in the mis·
sion church and the Padre Choristers will
sing selections of authentic chant sung orig·
inally by the Mission Indians. A special nar·
ration on the life and achievements of Padre
Serra will be given by Padre Valentine
Healy, O.F.M., of the Old Mission.
Historic Serra artifacts, docume1,1ts and
literature will be especially displayed in the
mission museum. Included will be photostat
copies of letters written by Padre Serra and
mission records bearing his distinctive calli·
graphic· signature. Posters and other memor·
abilia of the Serra 250th anniversary celebra·
tion of bis birthday on the Island of Mallorca
will also be exhibited as well as the United
States Government-minted Serra Memorial
National Medals.
Junipero Serra was born in Petra, on the
Spanish Island of Mallorca, 1713 and became
a Franciscan at the age of 16. In 1749 he
volunteered for Mexico missionary service.
In 35 years as a missionary he walked an
estimated 10,000 miles despite an 1.nfectect
leg.
From 1750 to 1758, in the wild and isolat-
ed Sierra Gorda in Eastern Mexico, he taught
the fierce Indian worshippers of the sun the
ways of civilization. For the next ten years
he criss-crossed Mexico preaching in rowdy
seaports, crude mining camps and cultured
cities.
In 1769, he began his greatest work.
founding the missions of New California
which bro11glrt civilization to the primitive
Indians. He died at Carmel in 1784. The 21
MErS Restaurant
''We prouabe uou good
CHINESE FOOD"
BEER and WINE
We feature DELUXE Dl11h19
BAN9UET ROOM
FOR PRIVATE PARTY
1505 Mesa Vtrde Dr. 15601 Buch Blvd.
1 llodl S. of Moma 1 ltoc• N. So• Ditto fwy.
Cotta Met4I. CaJlf. Wett111l11J1H, CeUf.
54U989 545·9048 892-2811
· PADRI JUNIPERO SERRA
missions scattered along the coast from San
Diego to Sonoma are among California'&
most cherished historical landmarks.
Padre Serra laid the foundationJ of
California's pres~t~ay agriculture and
stock-raising and the state's great coastal
cities grew out of the missions he establish·
ed. His zeal and vision caused him to urge
the exploration by sea of Alaska and over-
land to New Mexico.
Callfornla has always considered. Padre
Serra her most illustrious cttizen, and tribe
utes to Serra have grown with the years.
Throughout the length of California, organ-
izations, streets and buildings bear his name.
His statue, found in cities from San Fran·
cisco to San Diego, and at the &ate Capitol
in Sacramento, also represents the State of
California in the National Hall of Statuary
under the dome of the U.S. Capitol in Wash·
ington, D. C. The missions which he-founded
stand today as historic monuments of the
great statue's beginnings.
The public is cordially welcome at Old
Mission San Luis Rey to the observance of
Serra Day on Sunday, August 25. The mission
is three miles inland from Oceanside, on
St.ate Highway 76.
~
llunchton
weekdays
[I inner
served in the
Gra!ld Manner
•
571 S. MAIN, ORANOB
R.eservat.tooa: 54~359S
(OGied Sunday)
I OUT 'N' ABOUT I
' Continued from Paget
tole and talmon. He still calls the f rench fries
"chips:_, though; so there is still more than a
blt of mgland in the menu.
Add, out-of-the·way places you may not
have tried:
· Saddleback Inn, Laguna Beach. A warm
and open restaurant with historical mementos
acoenting the deOOI'. Serve-yourself salad bar
and a wen-balanced menu with well.prepared
f~ Priqet are moderate.' Outstanding aspect Of Saddleback, probably, is its cozy..yet-noti
dark atmosphere. Well worth a visit.
Add, places you won't fo rget:
Le Saint Tropez (just past the Newport
city hall on Newport Boulevard}. Service
might be a bit rocky here as this truly coni.
tinental restawant opens its door to more cus.-
tomers than it will seat, but the hosts ue
channtng and the atmosphere is anything but
dour. The specialty is continental cuisine, and
e~ct it to be done expertly -it always is.
Pnces perhaps slightly abov~ moderate, but
low considenng the quality of the food.
The summer season is here end with it
has come, as usual, tlhe widest array of enter.
tainment Of the year. Virtually every ni~ht
spot from Seal Beach to Laguna is oMenng
its own bmnd of fun and/or music this week·
end. If a night on the town is in your cards
and fits your pocketbook, check this issue of
the Weekender for a lot ot plaees to go and
see people and do things.
Out •n• Abouter solicits comments,
criticism and praise about Orange Coast
restaurants and night clubs. If you have
something you would like to say, write
Out 'n' Abouter, Weekender Magazine,
Box 1875, Newport Beach, California.
Not responsible for tenderness of steaks
ordered well-done or extra-well-done.
-
i········-~~~~········1
ftMEftA
ftESTAUftANT
Continental Cuisine
Cocktails
Serving
Luncheon and Dtnner
M011day through Saturda11.
Closed Sundays
Open for
Private Parties Only
We are located on the
GET ACQUAINTED
-OFFER-
Cut thi1 ad out end ptt• il Hiit It et Mike'a Side Door
1, for one Spaghetti Di1111er
I:, FREEi with every luge
: Pina order, • • •
: Also • FREE ORDEll of
BAKED BEANS with any
o~der of Barbecued Chick·
tn or Ribs,
MIKE'!i
SIDE DOOR
Bristol Street &ide be·
tween Mullen end Bluett
end the Mey Co. • • ' •
209 Palm-Entrance on
latt Bay Avenue
lalboli Ptnlnsula
UH ·l.lrlltol
Cett.:1 w .. 140-3140
• i Pltofte order-675-5774
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Current
Art
Exhibits
LB FESTIVAL OF ARTS -The 3.1rd WllW Fes-
tival of artl dilpUy la at the Festival Grounds,
ISO Laguna Canyon Roed, La&una Beacb
through August 25. AdmiuloA to the grounda
where all types of art work are displayed and
aold ls 50c for adults; 10c for children. Hours:
noon to midnlibt dally. PbODI '94-1U5 for fur•
Uier lnf ormation.
ALL CAIJFORNIA mow -1..a,_. Beach Art J.! ..
sociatlon Gallery, '.m Cliff 0.ve, Laguna
Beach. An invitational art exhibit of approxim-
ately 200 entriet by California artists will be
on display noon to 10 p.m. daily, through
August 25. The exhibit ii part of Ute Festival
of Arts and may be reached from 'festival
grounds by a tram 1ervice. General admission
50c, Art Association members and one gues~
free. Phone 494-6631.
SAWDUST FESTIVAL -935 Laguna Canyon Road,
Laguna Beach. The Artists and Gallery Own·
era Association ii displaying art in varioll!
media ttlrougb August 2.5. An auction of art
works wtll be held closing day, Sun., Aug. 25
at 2 p.m.
SPLINTER FESTIVAL -346 N. Coast Highway,
Laguna Beach. Exhibits of approximately 100
artista in variom media will be on display
through August Sl. Hours: noon to midnight
daily. There ia no adniission charge.
CHALLIS GALLERY -1390 S. Coast Highway,
Laguna Beach. On exhibU daily 11 a.m. to 5
p.m. a one·man show of paintings of Mark
Coomer and sea scapes of Bennett Bradbury.
\~.·~iQr4
Comedian 8111 Cosby IJ*l•I 9uett1,
•Inger 0. C. Smith and the Jackie Wllaon
Trio, appear at tht Mtlodyland Tht1tre
throuth Augu1t 25.
•111 SttitM-tlal\.'I' "LOT
/
•
JUNIOR EDELL EXBIBl11 -Art work from the
Junior Ebell Cblldren'• Art Worbbop will be OD
dilplay along with worb of local artirtl, Ester
and Jo Dendel, Lou Houston, Kay Davil, Merlyn
Aronovlc, Paul Dltzenbuger, Dianne Norton,
and Suzanne BlaUi at the Corona del Mar, Mar·
inert and Newport Beach Public libraries.
Nf;WPORT NA110NAL BANK-1090 Bayside Drive,
Newport Beach. On e:ahlbit during regular busi·
ness hours through August SO, a one-man show
of new oil and acrylic paintings by J a m e s
Clutte!'.
80. CALIF. FIRST NAT'L BANK -17122 Beach
Blvd., Huntington Beach. On exhibit during reg-
ular bmlness hours oil paintings by Huntington
Beach art league member, Monique Nelson.
CHARLES BOWERS MUSEUM -~ N. Main
St., Santa Ana. Hours : Tues. through Sat. 10
a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Sun. 1 to 5 p.m.; Thurs. eve-
ning 7 to 9 p~m. No admission charge. Currently
on exhibit, pen sketches by Richard K. Brookl,
Jr., and handicrafU done by Cuna women on
, the San Blal"bland.s, Panama.
COFFEE GARDEN GALLERY -2625 E. Cout
Highway, Corona del Mar. On exhibit Mon.
through Sat, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., watercolors llid
etchings of Arthur Miller sponsored by the New-
port Harbor Service League .
MUTUAL SAVINGS AND LOAN -2U7 E. Coast
Highway, C<rona del Mar. On exhibit during
regular business hours through Aug., Hungar·
tan folk art done m mixed media by Mancl
Schonthal.
LIVE THEATER
"American Hurrah"
Three anti-establishment plays "The American
Hurrah" will be pescnled Fri., Sat. and Sun.,
closing Aug. 25 at the South Coast Repertory Third
Step Theatre, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa.
Clll'tain time 8:30 p.m. Phone f>46..1363.
"Bill Cosby Show"
Comedian Bill Cosby witJ1 special guest jazz.blues
singer, O! C. Smith, will entertain at the Melody·
land Theatre, 10 Freedman Way, Anaheim through
August 25. Performances Tues. through Fri. at
8:30 p.m.; Sat. 6:30 and 9:30 p.m., Sun. 3 and 8
p.m. Phone 776·7460.
"Swe-et Charity"
Neil Simo.n's comedy of a girl with questionable
morals but a heart of gold, "Sweet Charity," will
be staged Thurs. through Sun., through Sept. 1
at the Laguna Playhouse, 319 Ocean Ave., Laguna
Beach. Curtain time 8:30. Phone -t94-9061.
"The Ocld Couple"
"The Odd Couple," a Nell Simon comedy about a
•lob and a nea~ will be stared Fri. and Sat.,
Aug. 30 through Sept. 14 at the Santa Ana Commun.
tty Playert Theater, 1020 W. 8th St., Santa Ana.
Curtain time 8:30 p.m. Phone 541-2188.
~ ----------TM Luxurlout New ... Offlq :'r.: Vlllte• Artbu DailY-12245 .M.
I 1161 W. 17*. ..... Ma l ePIRPORMANCISe
I ..... ,._ 14J•fJ17 -
1 • 3 ·I • 7 • f.11 P.M. ._ --
UNUMITD ND PAUiit•
WH!lf! THE 8RIG/1'fEST STARS SHINE
MERV GRIFFIN
Through August 26
Coming August 27
CAROL CHANNING
··-''Ill•-.-
l'Oll HOTEL USUVATIONS lttiONI! YOUR TlllAVIL AOllNT
.,_ -DVKE • Doris Day In
11WHERE WERE YOU WHEN
THE LIGHTS WENT OUT?"
. IOTH ,ICTUlllS IN COLOll
AUG. 28
Jack Walter Lemmon Matthau
The Odd Couple
or;:.:: 13
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TOtllte ot 5:30 & 10:00
<: ().\fN T
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Anlcl At 7:35 O.tr nm GR6'i BERETS
wAYN'i doSiBN
*HEY KIDS*~ C:•• Pel St.ow Set. 1 :00 _1
•
BALBOA
673-4048.
7H r. 1a11toa
lalltoa ,.nlnsula
., • Ora"" Coast
lfWfflttfMIW
EXTREMEl Y LARGE STOCK • btnln1s 'tll 10
PICKWICK ~· !u~~~~~~~.~!
S40·2l9l --670 Hollywood Blvd.
Hollywood <'ll} HO 9-1191
James GARNER
George KENNEDY
"THE PINK JUNGLE" e COLOR e Richard Wldmar'IC
Henry FONDA
"MADIGAN"
lleeomm9IMIM Fer Adunt
Mia FARROW
John CASSAVETES
"ROSEMARY'S IAIY"
e COLOR e
Shown •I l :IS end 10:.U
W.-W.tt a.ell
• 147·3Ml
I CemedY Al "'' aesll Oon KNOTTS e COLOR "THI SHAKlliST OUN IN
THE WEST"
Alan ARKIN e COLOR
"THI llUSSIANS Altl COM-
ING: THI llUSSIANS Alli
COMING" ------FOUNTAIN
VALLEY
Perftcl Family Entertalnmellt
Oorls OAY e Brian KEllH
"WITH 6 YOU 611
EGGlOLL"
Henry FONDA
"A llG HAND FOl A
LITIU LADY" ---.... . leedlM. tlT19111
134-6211
llKtmtne!ldad ftr Adultl
Jrd Small! WM4tl
AllM 8ANCllOl'T e COLOR e
"THE GRADUATE"
Shown at t :OO and 10:00
MOVIE SCENES
John Wayne gives instructions to a helicopter
In "The Gr..-n Berets," showing at the Surf,
Huntington Beach.
Alan Arkin and Frank Finley In a scene from
1'ln1pector Clouseau" now at the Port Th ..
atre, Corona dtl Mar.
DAILY .. . t A.M.
DAVEY'S IALl,OA PA YIUON
NEWPORT HARBOR to AVALON
A•ltt $1.St ... $4.JI a.-'"' HSHYATIONS (714>'71·5245
CATALINA ISLAND
LAGUllA PLAYHOUSE SUMMER THEATRE
,a.:~;:G SWEET CHARITY.
NEW YORK MUS ICAL HIT
NOW PLAYING
T\ursday tllt11 Sunday
Book by N1il Simon
Directed by: John Ferucca -Music Director: Oorh Shields
ALL SEATS RESERVED
2.50 Thi'$. & Su11. - 3.25 Fri. & Sat.
31 t Oceo11 An11ue 4'4·1061 lox Offlc:. Opeft
1 p.m. except Mon.
HARBOR at ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546-3102
~ EXCLUSIVE ··AREA ··RUN
I ACADEMY
I AWARD ·· t8 • IJ,Wl~ER :
.BEST DIRECTOR-MIKE NICHOLS
• Perform1ncff •
1-3-5-7 .9.11 p.m,
Daily
* *****~**************************** * ********************************* *
ROSEMARY'S
BABY
EVERY EVENING
AT••• -
8:00 and
10:30 PM
(!ACIP'IC'SJ
Harbor Blvd.
Drive-In ThHtr•
Hubor Blvd. at
McFedden
531 -1271
COltTllllOUS PllFOIMAflCH.,,
IOllDAY thru FllDAY
J:41 ·5:15·1:08111d10:15PI
IATUIDAY 1t.25 • 2:55 • &:!$
1:08 IM 10:20 Pl
MIAY 1t.JO • t.55 · 5:H
7:'5 ul t.50,.
EVERY EVENING AT •••
8:00 and 10:00 PM
AT Hl·WAY 39 DRIVE•IN
THEGUDUATE
,,,,,, IOJH THEATRES • EQUAL OPl'OltNNiTY twiOYElS ''''**' ,,,,,, PAQRC lHE.U!ES • AN EOUAL OPl'OlT\JN!IY Eb'C\OXEg ''*''' *
Ma11lln1 S.ctton-OAILY ~ll
f'rt{ay, Alltull 1l, I
J
UI
"
"I
llUPHONI 541·1552 FOi INFOIMATIOIL
--flRST RUN IN THE HAltlOR AREA-
JlllB llARl••-lllllllf • EVl-.zt ---a..,,"' tM"""""".,..,,"""""' tM .,.,., .. tM ...,..,,,.,. ..,,,, ""-"'
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'>· 'f'1f d i'.~· }t 1'J>,. , ·~'Ii· • ~ . '~11 f l ;,t; ' '1111111
I» JUNllU' -.,_.. .
ALSO ADDED ATTRACTION
AND FOi THI
KIDS AT 2 P.M. ONLY
"THE IATILE
IENEATH
nfE EARTH"
CONTINUOUS SHOW FROM 2 P.M.
WID.-THURS.-FRl.-SAT-SUN..
Show St1rtt 1t 7 PM. ~•Y 11)41 Tueed1y
"IATTLI BENEATH THE IAltTH".1t 2 P.M. Only
PINK JUNGLE 1t 3:30 -7:00 Ind 1:51
"'MADIGAN" It 5~ ind 1:55
YEAR'S llG COMEDY
EXCLUSIVE
flltST RUN
SHOWING
SECOND BIG COMEDY
Dultln Hoffman alMI Katherine Ro11 In a
sane ftom 'rrh• GrMluate" IMwlfte at E•
wanl1 Cinema 1'1tNtre, Cetta Meta, UnlW
Artlm Theam, Santa Ana and Hlthway Jt
Drlv•ln, Wlttmln1hr.
O..n Martin 1t1rt In "I Car4 Slur MW
lhewlnt at 1Etfward1 Cinema Wfft 11Mater
In Wo1tmln1tor.
Henry Fonda and Leul1e Troy share 1 drink
In 1'Y oun, Mine and Ours'' now at tho Ed-
wards Huntlntten leach Theatre.
1111 1
Derh Day-l ri111 Keith
"WITH SIX TOU •rr 16•lOLL"
phu
"I CAID STUD"
w/DH 11 Marll11, it.tit. Mltd111111
TROPICAL FISH
Largest Selection of
Tropical F i 1 h &
Suppljes ln the area.
Now 2 Lecatt.M
I1mU MU.· HBNRYFONDA
lburS.Mlneand I ' I )
'J , ........ ... 1t' w JOmlON ftW air •CU~ Dllm 1\1, STARTS WEDNESDAY
FREE PARKING
NEWPORT IEACH ·
PHONI Oil 1-1350
FIUT RUN IN THI HAlllOI AlllA
Does this look like
a movie that could
give you bad dreams?
Den Day and Brian Keith
'Tith Six Li Get EaroD"
ALSO ANOTHER GRIAT COMEDY
IT'S A DEMONSTRATION! IT'S A RIOT-OF FUN!! •;
~~R=
"WAlsGo--
itoub/e follows"
·~·, .... ~~ ~
,,,~~~. Y:~ .,., . .. ""'(
;(;· . I
111 'ff. WIUON, COSTA MISA -1Af!MN1 COlOl fl ,.,., ... •1v'"* or._...,., 1..a
IMNM 11tt ""' Offke> 646-W. m. IHOW STAm '14J-CONT. SUN.FROM l P.M
llff l'atnlew •-.) '*"" , • ~~~~~~~~~~~-=-~~;__~,,...,_..._,....._., ,_,_~~~~~~~~~~1 ............................. llli.i Ma..,._ Sed--.OA!l Y P'llOf
,,....,, A1t111I JJ, ltU 0r=11
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41o:so 4ro:90 41o~100
ubel"• 1lze1 6.95x14, 7.35x14 Tubeleu slu 7.75 x 15 for ford. i( Tiii( $30 • TWO TIRES $50 ON£ Tiii( $33 • TWO TIRES $55
r compactsh Muatane. C1m1ro, Plus $1.18 Fed. Ex. Tu' per tire.
ON£ Tiff $31 • TWO TIRES $10
Tubelesa sizes 8.25 x 14, 8.55 k 14.
l.lS x 1~1 us x 15 for Buick, Olds, Ood~•· Mercury, Chrysler, Plymouth,
Pon111c. Plus $2.06 $2.40, ~u. S2.35 Fed. (xclse Tu• per tire,
rracudl, C 1rser. Plua $1.75, 81 Fed. Ex. Tu• per ti,.,
GENERAL JO·AIR IIS
CAR
MATS
~~ by Rubbermaid
•Allvinyl SPECIAL ~277
• Choice of colora ~
• one·plece mat converts to
2·piece aet.
WHEEL
BALANCE
s200 MOST w~~~L CARS
RADIAL TIRES
w~~~~Aus s35as
WIDE OVALS
• Seconds
2.0S.141t
l .25r141t
2.1 Sr141t
l .55r14
Plus Fed. ExciH Tax $2.36
• SECONDS e RED LIN&
e WHITELINE
$21~.T.
2.20
E70X14
The tire.-
for ill I t
Imported and
sports <ar1J
The proven radlol for
wet ond dry weothe;..
Up to1 twlee the mlleoge,
· twice the traction,
twice the comfort .
(qntlnenfal
· RaP 14 Radial
Por Sustained Speeds of OYlt' 110 mpll
Continental Radials Offer
e Increased tread life, up to twice the mileage e Shorter bra Icing distance, up to 25 i'. e Improved gas mileage, up to 5 i'. e Increased lateral 1tability, up to I !5 i'. e More positive steering
•Stabilized tread elements
Trade in Prices
Porsche
600x15
165x15
Black-
Mustang ,
Comet
Chevy II $51 6F~
...... 2.16
195x14-750114-Whitt~all
Chev.
Buick
Olds
205x14
PKONE
646-5033
$58 2~
2.64
825x14-Whitewall ........
COMPLETE
TIRE Don Swedlund Hours: 7:30
to 6:00 Dilly
646-5033
M .. HiM Stdl--.OAJl Y ,.
Frlehly, Au. I