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anaheim-bulletin 1959-04-24

1959-04-24 · Anaheim Bulletin · page 13 of 24 · OCR glm-ocr
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KORN POPPERS — Winning second place in the 4-H Club livestock judging contest held at Orange Coast College were the team of the Korn Poppers of West Anabeim. Shown here are (from left, front row) Russell Stouder, leader: Mike Clark and Lew Geiser; (back row) George Stouder Sandy Bingham and Bill Stouder. The young judged four classes of livestock — beef, swine and sheep. 4-H Judging Day Held at OCC Judging teams from Orange County 4-H Clubs tried their skill at judging livestock last Saturday as Orange Coast College hosted some 85 4-Hers for their Annual 4-H Judging Day. The youngsters judged four classes of livestock — beef, dairy, sheep and swine — in the contest to pick the three best teams who will compete for honors against judging teams from eight other Southern California counties. Clark - Korn Poppers, Peggy Hawkins - West Orange, and Steve Dobbs - El Modena. Individual honors went to Sandy Bingham of the Korn Poppers, Susan McAllister - Fullerton Country Clubbers, Benny Miller - El Modena and Barbara Cessop of the Yorba Linda Cloerleafs. Official judges for the event were Ken Johnson and Kent Kough both from the Bank of America Fullerton Branch, Jim Calder - a Orange Show to Ha Armed Forces Day Everybody loves a parade the saying goes. So the 1959 National Show, April 23-May 3, in San Bernardino is having not just but two. Veterans and armed units, bands and bugle corps march down "E" street, exposition grounds, San Diego Sunday, April 28, for American Legion and forces Day Parade. Judging teams from Orange County 4-H Clubs tried their skill at judging livestock last Saturday as Orange Coast College hosted some 85 4-H'ers for their Annual 4-H Judging Day. The youngsters judged four classes of livestock — beef, dairy, sheep and swine — in the contest to pick the three best teams who will compete for honors against judging teams from eight other Southern California counties at the 4-H Regional Field Day to be held June 6 on the Riverside campus of the University of California. Last Saturday's winning teams included El Modena Rancheros, first; West Anaheim Korn Poppers, second; West Orange Agriculture, third; Cypress Sod Busters, fourth, and Fullerton Feeders, Breeders and Seeders - fifth. High team members included: Bill Stouder - Korn Poppers, Philip Wagner - West Orange, Mike Clark - Korn Poppers, Peggy Hawkins - West Orange, and Steve Dobbs - El Modena. Individual honors went to Sandy Bingham of the Korn Poppers, Susan McAllister - Fullerton Country Clubbers, Benny Miller - El Modena and Barbara Cessop of the Yorba Linda Cloerleafs. Official judges for the event were Ken Johnson and Kent Kough both from the Bank of America Fullerton Branch, Jim Calder - a rancher from Buena Park, and Elgin HAll - chairman of the Agriculture Department at Orange Coast College. Finland, one of four former Czarist provinces to be established as Baltic republics after World War I, is the only one of them still independent. The other three — Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia — have all been reabsorbed into the Soviet Union. TOP MATH TEAM — Fullerton Union High School mathematics team members which swept aside 12 other Orange County high school teams to win the Orange Coast College Invitational Mathematics Meet accept the team plaque from Charles Lewis, OCC math instructor. Show (from left) Lewis, C. B. Redfern, Fullerton School math teacher; Leonard Dickey, Stone, Hal Sheller and Harold Coffer. FUHS Team Wins First Place at OCC Invitational Mathematics Fullerton Union High School took home the winning plaque in the Orange Coast College Invitational Mathematics meet sponsored by Orange Coast College last Friday. Members on the winning team place was won by Sheller and fourth place by Miss Stone. First place in individual scoring was won by Lauren Mather. 2022 N. Ross St., Santa Ana, of Santa Ana High School and third place was won by Tom Leichfuss. 184 E. Santiago Blvd., Orange, of Everybody loves a parade the saying goes. So the 1959 National Show, April 23-May 3, in San Bernardino is having not just but two. Veterans and armed units, bands and bugle corps march down "E" street, exposition grounds, San Luna, Sunday, April 26, for American Legion and forces Day Parade. Grand Marshal will be Adm. A. M. Pride, commander Naval Forces, Pacific Fleet viewers will include Thor Gates, Secretary of the Congressman Harry R. Shepherd Admiral H. A. Yeager, and Gen. W. P. Wilson, deputy State National Guard Bureau. The Sciots and Rodeo will come down the same final Sunday of the 4th exposition, May 3. Both start at noon. FUHS Team Wins First Place at OCC Invitational Mathematics FUHS Team Wins First Place at OCC Invitational Mathematics League Fullerton Union High School took home the winning plaque in the Orange Coast College Invitational Mathematics meet sponsored by Orange Coast College last Friday. Members on the winning team included Harold Coffer, 5922 Placentia Ave., Placentia; Leonard Dickey, 1144 W. Fern Drive, Fullerton; Hal Shelter, 311 W. Whiting, Fullerton, and Anne Stone, 409 N. Orchard St., Fullerton. Their team instructor was C. B. Redfern, 127 Rose Drive, Fullerton, a Fullerton High School mathematics teacher. Fullerton also took second and fourth individual places. Second place was won by Sheller and fourth place by Miss Stone. First place in individual scoring was won by Lauren Mather, 2022 N. Ross St., Santa Ana, of Santa Ana High School and third place was won by Tom Leichfuss, 184 E. Santiago Blvd., Orange, of Orange High School. Honorable mention awards were given to Christie Arvas, 2761 Circle Drive, Newport Beach; Newport Harbor High School; Coffer; March Kaufman, 10428 Pounds Ave., Whittler, La Habra High School, and Heather Wright, 1210 Sharon Road, Santa Ana, Santa Ana High School. Fifty-two students from 13 high schools competed in the meet which was sponsored by Orange Coast College Education Club and the mathematics science division. Barron tel, math instructor, was one of the event. Prizes awarded to first third and fourth place were a 20-inch and Esser slide rule; D. trand's Scientific Encyclopedia 10-inch Keuffel and Esser rule, and a 6-inch Pickel slide rule. Honorable mention winner received a copy of the Rubber Publishing Company mathematical tables. Allators received certificates... in an emergency ...in a FINANCIAL SIC S.I.C., too, is ever "At the Reach to your aid fast when you need You get service while you wait, w at S.I.C. arrange a loan for you! Whatever your need for C-A-S-N may be just SOS-SIC 344 W. Center St., Anaheim SAC Open House To Be April 29 New classroom and shop facilities of automotive trades classes in the new Technical Center at Santa Ana College will be shown to parents, friends of the college and members of advisory committees next Wednesday, April 29, as part of Public Schools Week. Open house will be held in the shops from 7 to 7:30 p.m., with members of the campus chapter of Future Automotive Technicians of America serving as hosts. Demonstrations of machines and equipment will be given from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m., including valve grinding cylinder grinding, Allen testing equipment, spark plug cleaner, transmission bench and practice engines. Three movies will be shown from 8:30 to 10 p.m., on automotive subjects. Refreshments will be served. The Technical Center not only comprises the automotive trades and diesel engine quarters but other facilities for electronics, welding, auto body-fender repair, and painting. Instructor George Sweeney, ad- Booklovers Section Elects New Officers GARDEN GROVE — New officers were elected for next year by the Booklovers section of the Woman's Civic Club of Garden Grove when they met for luncheon at the clubhouse at 12:15 p.m. on April 17. Mrs. Howard L. Pfleger was chosen to lead the group as chairman. Co-chairman will be Mrs. Francis Blender, with Mrs. Allen W. Bryan serving as secretary-treasurer. Installation will be held at the Imperial Restaurant in Garden Grove on May 15. The club president, Mrs. L. J. Tucker, will be the installation officer. Luncheon chairmen were the GARDEN GROVE, James Hod Centralia To Add Speech Consultant Centralla School district will add another specialist to its staff next year, if present plans are carried out and the proper person can be found who will meet the district's requirements. Last fall the staff was increased to include both an art and a music director. Provision has been made in the budget to secure the services of a speech consultant. Such an expert will find unlimited opportunities to help teachers at each grade level who will be ARGO FAIR EXHIBITORS Don Edwards count inch cub-foot cube project readied for will be held at the Garden Grove April 28. Arlene made a hy- Creative Writing Contest Launched GARDEN GROVE — A creat writing contest, open to all dents at Garden Grove School, is being sponsored by Everybody loves a parade, as the saying goes. So the 1959 National Orange Show, April 23-May 3, in San Bernardo is having not just one but two. Veterans and armed forces units, bands and bugle corps march down "E" street, to the exposition grounds, San Bernardo, Sunday, April 26, for the big American Legion and Armed Forces Day Parade. Grand Marshal will be Viceadm. A. M. Pride, commander of Naval Forces, Pacific Fleet. Reviewers will include Thomas S. Wates, Secretary of the Navy; Congressman Harry R. Sheppard; Admiral H. A. Yeager, and Maj. Gen. W. P. Wilson, deputy chief, State National Guard Bureau. The Sciots and Rodeo Parade will come down the same route the final Sunday of the 4th citrus exposition, May 3. Both parades start at noon. PTA Executive Board Plans Spanish Dinner STANTON — Final plans for the Spanish dinner to be held April 29 from 5:30 to 8:30 in the Savanna cafetorium were made last Tuesday when the Savanna PTA executive board met in the home of Mrs. Ray Morganstern. The dinner, served by the PTA, will be held in conjunction with open house held the same evening in observance of public schools week. Tickets are on sale for the dinner at $1.25 for adults and 50 cents for children. Mrs. Kenneth Lindley, ways and means chairman, announced. The regular PTA meeting will be held April 28 and will feature "Ladies Night," with a play starring members of the executive board. The cast has been rehearsing under the direction of Mrs. Bernard Engdahl, program chairman, and a hilarious evening is promised. Mrs. Gene Himbaugh states that the Mothersingers, under the direction of Mrs. Bessie Gray, will present the inspirational part of the program. Arthur Nieblas, principal, reminded all present of the annual Mother-Daughter Banquet on April 23, an annual school sponsored affair. Plans for the primary and upper grades picnics were also discussed with the PTA offering to donate cupcakes for the event. Mrs. Sidney Kurzbard, health and welfare chairman, announced that polio and DPT shots will be given to primary children on April 30 with PTA mothers assisting. Refreshments were served by another specialist to its staff next year, if present plans are carried out and the proper person can be found who will meet the district's requirements. Last fall the staff was increased to include both an art and a music director. Provision has been made in the budget to secure the services of a speech consultant. Such an expert will find unlimited opportunities to help teachers at each grade level who will be coached to assist pupils in their classes. There will be approximately 162 teachers for 5500 pupils at Centralia, Buena Terra, Mira Linda, Walter Knots, Glen H. Dysinger, Sr., Raymond Temple and Oro Grande schools. The consultant will concentrate on remedial work with extreme cases and helping kindergartners and first graders who have difficulty with more common defects in speech such as pronunciation of certain sounds. Special attention directed toward unusual difficulties as they crop up could conceivable be problems of the stutterer, the true monotone, or children who have difficulties stemming from sources such as bad hearing. Creative Writing Contest Launched GARDEN GROVE — A creative writing contest, open to all students at Garden Grove School, is being sponsored by Scholarship Society. In the three categories of poetry and short story, first, second and third prizes in cash will be awarded. The deadline will May 8, all entries to be handled by Mrs. K. Sloan, Room 48. For poetry: there is a 24 limit, any topic, 350-600 words; Maximum for short story: gory is, 5,000 words, any type story. All entries must be typed digitally, accompanied by a statement that is the writer's own work, written during the pro-school year. The writer's name and grade in school must be closed in a sealed envelope tached to the manuscript. National Mathematics Meet which was sponsored by the Orange Coast College Engineering Club and the mathematics and science division. Barron G. Knechtel, math instructor, was in charge of the event. Prizes awarded to first, second, third and fourth place winners and their donors were a 20-inch Keuffel and Esser slide rule; D. Van Nostrand's Scientific Encyclopedia, 10-inch Keuffel and Esser slide rule, and a 6-inch Pickett and Eckel slide rule. Honorable mention winners each received a copy of the Chemical Rubber Publishing Company's mathematical tables. All competitors received certificates. Arthur Nieblas, principal, reminded all present of the annual Mother-Daughter Banquet on April 23, an annual school sponsored affair. Plans for the primary and upper grades picnics were also discussed with the PTA offering to donate cupcakes for the event. Mrs. Sidney Kurzbard, health and welfare chairman, announced that polio and DPT shots will be given to primary children on April 30 with PTA mothers assisting. Refreshments were served by the hostess, Mrs. Morganstern, following adjournment by president, Mrs. Robert Etchandy. Female babies have a 12 per cent chance of being born alive than males do, and a 30 per cent better chance of surviving once born, according to the Health Information Foundation. Emergency! A FINANCIAL EMERGENCY SOS for SLC C., too, is ever "At the Ready"... Ready to come aid fast when you need C-A-S-H in a hurry! service while you wait, when the friendly folks arrange a loan for you! I.C. FINANCE 4 W. Center St., Anaheim 220 S. Main Santa Ana GO AHEA All you'll hear is this sound of a car door closing can tell you a lot about quality. Pull open the door of a '59 De Soto. Feel smoothly it swings out on its oversize hinges. Straight and true, year after year. Then listen to the deep and satisfying "thunk" the De Soto door closes tightly on its safety latch. This is solid quality. De Soto quality that's built to take it. Quality that runs throughout the car. See the fashion leader of the year at your De Soto dealer's today. Listen to the solid sound of quality. GRANT 253 No. Los Angeles Street, Anaheim, C RGO FAIR EXHIBITORS — Arlene Pitts and on Edwards count inch cubes in Frank Vullet's most cube project readied for the Argo Fair which will be held at the Garden Grove High School on April 28. Arlene made a hyperboloid and Don a probability board. These are two of the science projects to be exhibited along with the work of the other classes during open house in observance of Public Schools Week. (Bulletin Photo) Creative Writing Contest Launched ARDEN GROVE — A creative writing contest, open to all students at Garden Grove High School, is being sponsored by the The Bulletin County Creative Writing Contest Launched ARDEN GROVE — A creative writing contest, open to all students at Garden Grove High School, is being sponsored by the Scholarship Society. The three categories of poetry, play and short story, first, second and third prizes in cash will be awarded. The deadline will be May 8, all entries to be handed to K. Sloan, Room 48. For poetry: there is a 24 line it, any topic, 350-600 words. Maximum for short story: category is, 5,000 words, any type of poetry. All entries must be typed double space, accompanied by a state-ment that is the writer's original park, written during the present school year. The writer's name and grade in school must be enclosed in a sealed envelope attached to the manuscript. The Bulletin County Olive Williams—Editor Friday, April 24, 1959 Anaheim (Cal.) Bulletin—B-5 Sea and Sage Slates Overnight Field Trip Next overnight field trip of Sea and Sage, Orange County’s branch of the National Audubon Society, has been scheduled for April 25 and 26 to Anza-Borrego State Park. According to Harry Marshall, Sea and Sage field trip chairman, members will meet at Borrego Springs Campground at 1:00 p.m. on Saturday, April 25, for a trip with the Park Naturalist. Saturday evening they will attend the Campfire Program at Borrego Springs. Another trip to study wildlife and flowers of the area has been planned for Sunday morning. Additional information concerning the overnight field trip may be obtained by contacting Miss Fern Zimmerman of Santa Ana or calling KI 3-6019. AHEAD-SLAM IT! you'll hear is the solid sound of quality The smart way to go places... DE SOTO GRANT W. MUSICK Street, Anaheim, Calif. KE. 5-7278