anaheim-gazette 1961-04-20
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Kuchel Family Honors
(Continued from Page 1)
type on the San Francisco Chronicle, knew William Randolph Hearst while working on
Bengochea Heads Slate For Club
Charles Bengochea of 634 Fernwood St., plant engineer of Dixie Cup Division of American Can Company, will head the 1961-62 officers of the Anaheim Industrial Management Club. Induction is scheduled May 1 at the Anaheim Young Men's Christian Association, according to James Rinker, club president.
Fred Geibel of Los Angeles, zone representative, will induct the new officers, including Carmen Franco of Dixie Cup Division, program vice president; Tom Johnson of Electra Motor Company, vice president for membership; William Hall of Delco-Remy Division of General Motors Company, secretary; and Hugh Hicks of Screenprint and Plas-Tech.. Inc., treasurer.
For entertainment following the San Francisco Examiner, set type in San Diego and Escondido, then served as composing room foreman for General Harrison Gray Otis on the young Los Angeles Times after 1881.
Kuchel's campaigning, after he bought the Gazette in 1887, was largely responsible for the third and successful attempt to form Orange County in 1889. He was threatened with libel suits as he fought successfully all the way to the United States Supreme Court on behalf of orange growers opposing paying royalties on a patented process of night fumigation. He was a militant defender of water rights.
Famous figures in government, politics and business visited the blind editor and his paper was read and mailed widely.
He enjoyed writing historical stories about the early days of Anaheim and how colonists from San Francisco set out their grape vineyards only 11 years before the Gazette was founded.
The hand-operated Hoe press and type came around The Horn in 1851 and was destroyed by a Gazette fire in 1877. Kuchel brought the first lino-type to Orange County and the paper was always a weekly except for a two-year period as a daily in 1875-1877.
School Tells E
When the master plan for Orange County State College, Fullerton, has been completed, this area will have an investment of approximately $80,-000,000.
The college will help pace the future development of the
Zone representative, will induct the new officers, including Carmen Franco of Dixie Cup Division, program vice president; Tom Johnson of Electra Motor Company, vice president for membership; William Hall of Delco-Remy Division of General Motors Company, secretary; and Hugh Hicks of Screenprint and Plas-Tech, Inc., treasurer.
For entertainment following the induction, a colored Dodger team world series movie will be shown.
Anaheim Man to Attend Meeting
Agent Carlton Heil, Anaheim representative of Life and Casualty Insurance Company, has qualified to attend the annual company convention in Washington, D.C., April 27-30. He will join approximately 800 other delegates who qualified on the basis of sales records for the year 1960 in competition with 2,500 field personnel.
The hand-operated Hoe press and type came around The Horn in 1851 and was destroyed by a Gazette fire in 1877. Kuchel brought the first line-type to Orange County and the paper was always a weekly except for a two-year period as a daily in 1875-1877 and briefly in 1950.
Kuchel's father was a German immigrant mechanical engineer, Conrad Kuchel, and the family came to Anaheim in 1860 and owned 20 acres of vineyard where the present Gazette building is located. Mrs. Kuchel's family came to Anaheim from Texas in 1876.
The blind editor developed a remarkable memory to overcome his sight problem, enabling him to walk confidently around his office and downtown. He was a tall handsome man, an incessant cigar smoker and eloquent in his speech from diligent self-education after grade school.
When the master plan for Orange County State College, Fullerton, has been completed, this area will have an investment of approximately $80,-000,000.
The college will help pace the future development of the complex of communities in and around Orange County.
The $10,000,000 science building facing south behind the extension of Nutwood Ave. in northeast Fullerton will have a total floor area of over 6½ acres. There will be 13 classrooms and 76 aboratories in this ultramodern structure.
Other buildings also being planned are expected to grace the 252-acre campus. There will be buildings for music-speech-drama, gymnasium, and library. Also several buildings are planned which are not in the drawing board stage. They include a women's gymnasium, fine arts building, classroom
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E-KLATCH—Assemblyman Richard Hanna (center) addressed a group of
man, 50 persons in an informal koffee-clatch at the Martin Luther Hospital
heim. Hanna discussed legislation affecting schools and homeowners, then
open question and answer session on a number of subjects. An elaborate
was served after the meeting, and Hanna toured the modern hospital faith developer John Garraway (left) and Robert Wetzler, who was master
monies for the informal informative talk.
Pool Tells Expansion
The master plan for
County State College,
has been completed,
will have an investapproximately $80,000.
Gege will help pace
development of the
building, administration building, and cafeteria. There will
also be two swimming pools
and a number of athletic fields.
It is hoped there will be dormitories in 1980, although these
are not included in present
plans. A large portion of the
landscape campus will be as-
City Postal Employes Win New Positions
The promotion of three employees of the Anaheim post office to supervisory positions
Plans Started For County Fair Auction
Plans are already being made
for the 1961 Orange Countory Fair Junior Livestock Auction
to be held July 14, it was announced today by Elmer Olso
chairman of the Junior Livstock Auction Committee.
He said that Stewart V.
Yost, manager of the 1961 Fair annuenced at the April meeting that Charlie Adams will be auctioneer for his third consecutive year.
Yost told the committee thad Adams had brought in recorn prices for all livestock in his past two years as auctioneer.
Yost also told the committe that buildings in the junic area of the fairgrounds were being rejuvenated, that the Boys' Dorm and Beef Barn were to be relocated and that a new Dairy Barn with new wash racks and utilities would be completed by fair time.
Pool Tells Expansion
The master plan for County State College has been completed, will have an investment approximately $80,000,000 science building south behind the ex-Nutwood Ave. in Fullerton will have an area of over 6½ acres will be 13 class-76 aboratories in modern structure. Buildings also being expected to grace campus. There buildings for music, gymnasium, and so several buildings which are not in board stage. They women's gymnasium, building, classroom
building, administration building, and cafeteria. There will also be two swimming pools and a number of athletic fields. It is hoped there will be dormitories in 1980, although these are not included in present plans. A large portion of the landscaped campus will be assigned to parking.
In 1980, there will be approximately 3000 full-time personnel employed at Orange County State College. The yearly payroll then will be approximately $15,000,000.
The more than 1000 full-time teachers will have come from all parts of the United States.
Welcomed
Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. West of 709 Anna Dr. welcomed the arrival of twin boys this week, at the Westminster Hospitals. The infants made their arrival at 9:56 p.m.
City Postal Employes Win New Positions
The promotion of three employees of the Anaheim post office to supervisory positions was announced by Postmaster Marshall N. McFie.
Ernest D. Richards Jr. has been made a tour foreman in the incoming mails section. Richards has been employed in the Anaheim office since May 16, 1953.
Herbert Drury has also been promoted to tour foreman in the incoming mails. He has been employed in Anaheim since August 11, 1956, and was in the post office in Santa Rosa previous to moving to Anaheim.
Chester Wernquist becomes a tour foreman in the outgoing mails section. He has been a clerk in the local office since February 11, 1956, and came from the Los Angeles post office where he began his postal career November 1, 1949.
Church Begins Building Sunday
Ground breaking services for the church building of Lamb of God Lutheran Church in East Anaheim are scheduled for Sunday at the congregation's property at 14431 E. South St., at Sunkist St., Anaheim, it was announced by the Rev. Fred D. Dommer, pastor.
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Apartment Group Views Land Film
The Orange County Apartment House Association held its fourth monthly meeting at the Disneyland Hotel.
Dick Heald, chairman, introduced the program for the evening which was presented by Charles Dorsey, representing the Title Insurance & Trust Co of Orange County.
Dorsey showed a film showing how the lands in California have been transferred from the original Spanish land grants for the present-day owners of property large and small down through the years.
A special guest of the evening, Bob McCarter of McCarter Realty, 2569 W. Ball Rd., as a representative of the Anaheim Board of Realtors, spoke to the group about the controversial legislation which is now being brought before the Assembly in Sacramento, namely
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New Market Basket Opens
Market Basket's seventh store in Orange County opened yesterday, company president Neal D. Ramsey announced.
The new market, in Costa Mesa at 2975 Harbor Blvd., is the fifth opened this year and brings the chain's total to 48.
Area of the new store is 30,-300 square feet. Adjacent to the market are a pharmacy, laundromat, barber and beauty shop. Parking is provided for 179 cars.
The structure features natural brick, decorative textured concrete block, mosaic tile in custom patterns and porcelain enamel patterns.
Market manager is William Fihley, promoted from the company's Newport Beach store.
Scheduled for opening next month are stores in Canoga Park, Redondo Beach and Wilmington with new units in La Puente, Stanton and Burbank following.
Gemco Plans New Store in La Puente
Gemco, Anaheim membership department store, is planning a second Southern California unit in La Puente, President Jack LeVine announced today. The new installation, designed to serve the greater San Gabriel Valley area, will be constructed on a 15-acre site at Glendora and Francisquito and will represent an investment of close to $3,000,000. The unit is scheduled to open next October.
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committee approved the County Youth Band, a group of youngsters from 10 to 35 of age, to play before auction during the Buyers' Leader Jim Bailey was selected as Junior Live-Superintendent and 4-H or Bruce Campbell was needed to serve as co-chairlong with Elmer Olsonerman of the 1961 Junior Stock Auction Committee.
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WHAT'S DOING
Harvey Hendrickson, your Telephone Manager in Anaheim
What would you think of pushing buttons to make your phone calls? Well, someday you may be doing that instead of twirling a dial.
Telephone people are testing push-button phones like this in various places around the country. The tests show that most folks can push-button a number in five seconds—nearly twice as fast as they dial now.
I'm told that if these tests continue to go well our phones of the future may have push buttons instead of a dial.
Lots of new telephone ideas are heading your way. For telephone people are always working to improve your service.
I noticed in a telephone company magazine the other day that the Bell Solar Battery was first announced seven years ago this month.
At the time, it was big news that Bell Telephone Laboratories had found a way to turn sunlight directly and efficiently into electricity. But little did we know then that solar batteries would soon make even bigger news—
I noticed in a telephone company magazine the other day that the Bell Solar Battery was first announced seven years ago this month.
At the time, it was big news that Bell Telephone Laboratories had found a way to turn sunlight directly and efficiently into electricity. But little did we know then that solar batteries would soon make even bigger news—as a part of satellites in outer space. That's the weather satellite Tiros II in the picture above.
The Bell Solar Batteries on the Tiros II satellite furnish the power to send radio and television messages back to earth.
Telephone research produces a steady flow of new ideas like the Bell Solar Battery. And these ideas are opening new doors in every field of communications.
This 50 foot tower is under construction on top of the Telephone Company Building at 217 North Lemon Street in Anaheim. It will support Micro-wave Antennas for additional Talking Channels between Orange County and Los Angeles required by the tremendous growth here.
Pacific Telephone