anaheim-gazette 1963-01-30
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Anaheim Library Annex
116 N. Clementine St.
Anaheim, Calif.
Comp.
Downtown Anahein
Established In 1870 ... Published Continuou
Vol 91 — Number 25 10 Pages A
Yorba Linda A
Japan Counsel General Speaks
At Issei Appreciation Program
Matao Uriu, counsel general of Japan of the Los Angeles office will be the keynote speaker at the Orange County Chapter of the League annual Installation Banquet and special Issei Appreciation Night program on February 2 in Anaheim according to co-chairmen Henry Kanegae of Santa Ana and James Yamaski of Anaheim.
Over 400 persons are expected to attend the installation at Anaheim's Charterhouse Hotel. Pioneer Issei in the county will be honored by the local chapter and first vice president; Ben Shimazu, Huntington Beach, second vice president; Harry Okuda, D.D.S., Huntington Beach; Mrs. Takashi Oka, Santa Ana, secretary; Hitoshi Nitta, Santa Ana, 1000 Club Chairman; Roy Uno, Santa Ana, Santana Wind editor; and Dick Nerio, Huntington Beach, membership chairman.
Others include members at large Mrs. John Ohta, Santa Ana; Dr. Steven Abe, La Mirada, Harry Matsukane, Orange and Tok Yamada, Bill Asawa, Mas Ogata, M.D. all of Anaheim East
will be the keynote speaker at the Orange County Chapter of the League annual Installation Banquet and special Issei Appreciation Night program on February 2 in Anaheim according to co-chairmen Henry Kanegae of Santa Ana and James Yamaski of Anaheim.
Over 400 persons are expected to attend the installation at Anaheim's Charterhouse Hotel, Pioneer Issei in the county will be honored by the local chapter and will receive special scrolls. Awards will also be made to the outstanding bowler and fisherman.
A special award will also be presented to Bill (Mo) Marumoto, immediate past editor of the chapter newsletter, "The Santana Wind," that won Best Appearance honors in a national competition for chapter bulletins.
Orange County Superior Court Judge Stephen K. Tamura will serve as master of ceremonies. The Reverend David K. Shige-kawa of the Anaheim Free Methodist Church will give the invocation and Mrs. Henry Alhara of Garden Grove will present several Japanese vocal solos: James Howorth and his combo are providing the dance music.
Attorney Minoru Inadomi of Santa Ana will be installed as the 1962 president.
His sixteen member cabinet in-
COLONY CRIER
By DICK BOHRER
Do they do it deliberately? Are they out to fossilize us? They do it in classrooms to teachers and they do it at home to parents.
Our modern youngsters have devised an effective means to make us "oldsters" feel our age. "We're old if we remember anything as far back as the 1930's.
I warned the students in my Orange High journalism class that if they didn't turn in a certain assignment, they would be out of the frying pan and into the fire.
No one said a word.
Everyone looked puzzled.
Someone repeated, "Out-of-the-frying-pan-into-the-fire?"
Then one pert young redhead said: "Oh, you know. That's one of those old-time sayings."
old-timers: Fred Allen, Jack Benny (how old is he, anyway?) Norman Corwin, Dr. Lee DeForest, Arthur Godfrey, H.V. Kaltenborn, Graham McNamee, Don McNeil, Guglielmo Marconi (an old-time old-timer), Edward R. Murrow, Kate Smith, Gen. David Sarnoff and Paul White.
Old-time or not, these people made the fabric of our memories of the 1930's rich and colorful.
Did you know that Amos was also Kingfish, Brother Crawford, Madame Queen, and Lightning all rolled into one?
Andy doubled as Andrew H. Brown and Henry Van Porter.
Gosden and Correll wrote all more than 1000 dogs will be there!
Anaheim's Junior Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring and coordinating the fourth annual rabies clinic on January 31 at La Palma stadium in cooperation
I warned the students in my Orange High journalism class that if they didn't turn in a certain assignment, they would be out of the frying pan and into the fire.
No one said a word.
Everyone looked puzzled.
Someone repeated, "Out-of-the-frying-pan-into-the-fire?"
Then one perf young redhead said: "Oh, you know. That's one of those old-time sayings."
I felt all the more old time, nostalgically so, when I read a news release from USC, announcing Amos 'n' Andy's gift to the University of all their original radio scripts, appearance tour pictures, and scrapbooks of newspaper clippings.
Freeman F. Gosden and Charles J. Correll made their gift to USC so that students of radio, television, and drama might study the scripts in the library.
Amos 'n' Andy was America's first 15-minute program and radio's first continued story with a nightly episode.
Why. I was weaned on that program. It, along with Lowell Thomas, Myrt and Marge and the Easy Aces, were part of an evening ritual at our house. The four 15-minute programs followed one another and then I followed them, but in a different direction — off to bed.
The reminder of all this does make me feel ancient. Maybe my students are right. Old-time!
The same SC article mentions that Gosden and Correll were elected Fellows of the Radio Hall of Fame last year by the American College of Radio Arts, Crafts and Sciences.
In this they joined some real
Did you know that Amos was also Kingfish, Brother Crawford, Madame Queen, and Lightning all rolled into one?
Andy doubled as Andrew H. Brown and Henry Van Porter.
Gosden and Correll wrote all their own material for the first 17 years. They would agree on what they wanted to say, and Amos would dictate as he strode around a room with Andy typing originals and carbon copies. This was the way they got their top flight ideas.
Here was brainstorming before anyone thought of brainstorming.
Old Time? My hat!
Just last week in the Sales and Marketing Executives club meeting at Disneyland Hotel, Charles Clark addressed the gentlemen on brainstorming which he called, "a relatively new concept of producing a chain reaction of top flight ideas by ridding the mind of negativism and letting it take flight in a positive direction."
Clark's book, "Brainstorming" describes the psychological technique of idea-making as a method of "using the subconscious mind to produce more and better ideas — produce them faster than any other known method."
Amos 'n' Andy did this for years. They are not old-time.
"Out of the frying pan into the fire" is not old-time.
Anyone who says it is, is putting the cart before the horse and is changing horses in the middle of the stream.
More than 1000 dogs will be there!
Anaheim's Junior Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring and coordinating the fourth annual rabies clinic on January 31 at La Palma stadium in cooperation with the Southern California Veterinarian's Association.
Using the facilities under the north side bleachers on the Los Angeles St. side of La Palma Park the clinic will operate from 7 to 9 p.m.
A $1.50 charge for the rabies shot will be levied. Dog licenses at $2.00 will also be issued there by the Anaheim city license department.
The latter service is being rendered because a double price penalty will go into effect Feb. 1 on any dog over six months of age not having a license.
Last year's Anaheim rabies clinic was the largest in the United States, 1200 shots were admin-
Bridge Game Winners Named
Members of Young Ladies Institute of Anaheim held their regular weekly duplicate bridge game at the Moose Lodge, 1731 South Manchester in Anaheim with Tony Lipsky directing.
High scoreers were Roy Hughes and Mrs. Tony Lipsky, first; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Burg, second; Ed Stapp and Charles Rowland, third; Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hartford, fourth.
Anaheim Dollar Day
eim Gazett
published Continuously in Orange County's "Number One" City For 92 Years
Anaheim, California, Wednesday, January 30, 1963
da Annexation Nea
BIG IS THE BABY? She's so big as of yesterday when Miss Yorba Linda, as posed by Jennie Carol Moreland, is a step nearer to becoming part of the Greater Ana- family of communities. The East Orange County com- pany will retain its identity, post office, and master plan while becoming the Beverly Hills residential section of the City of Anaheim. Opponents of the annexation failed yester- tday to show proof that 51 per cent of the Yorba Linda property owners opposed the annexation.
Schedule Rabies Clinic for La Palma Field Tomorrow
than 1000 dogs will be listered to county dogs.
According to Bernard Ginsbarg, Jaycee chairman of the rabies clinic committee, there has not been one case of rabies to date within the county this year.
"We have virtually eradicated rabies as a threat to civilians in Orange County," he said.
Joining the Jaycees in the clinic are the Jaycettes, the Junior Ebell club, B'nai B'rith, the city of Anaheim license department and the signal detail of the local police force.
THE TRUTH IS OUT
FOR La Palma Field Tomorrow
be than 1000 dogs will be
heim’s Junior Chamber of
source is sponsoring and cocining the fourth annual ration on January 31 at La
stadium in cooperation
the facilities under the
side bleachers on the Los
St. side of La Palma Park
will operate from 7 to 9
charge for the rabies
will be levied. Dog licenses
will also be issued there
Anaheim city license detart service is being renbecause a double price pengo into effect Feb. 1 on
over six months of age
ang a license.
year’s Anaheim rabies
has the largest in the Unitities, 1200 shots were admin-
THE TRUTH IS OUT
What Being Number One
Really Means to California
California’s population growth of 586,000 in the current fiscal year will require a workload increase of $122.6 million in the budget Governor Edmund G. Brown will submit to the legislature February 4.
This forecast of higher costs in the essential operating services section of the budget was made today by Director of Finance Hale Champion.
He said the state’s population will total 18,274,000 on July 1, a jump of 3.6 per cent in one year.
“Certain growth costs are fixed by statute and the Constitution and must be met automatically,” said Champion. “Other costs of state agencies are tied to population increases and are unavoidable if we are to maintain present public service levels.”
Champion set the automatic increase by statute and Constitution at $90.1 million and broke it down into the following categories:
Public school assistance — $48.4 million.
Bond retirement — $6.9 million.
Teachers’ retirement — $4.3 million.
Categorical welfare aid — $30.5 million.
The Director of Finance estimated the unavoidable workload increase at $32.5 million: University of California — $9.4 million.
State colleges — $0 million.
Mental hygiene — $5.4 million.
Corrections — $5.9 million.
School textbooks — $2.8 million.
“In public education alone,” said Champion, “we will have a of 232,272 — and this includes only full-time, not part-time, students.
“We will have 219,763 more students in elementary and high schools; 4,074 more at the University of California, and 8,435 more at the state colleges.”
Champion said 1,450 more teachers will become eligible for retirement during the year, and youth and adult correctional facilities will have 2,097 more inmates.
“In categorical aid,” said Champion, “we will have 23,400 more people in the aid-to-needy children program by the end of the 1963-64 fiscal year.
“The old age security case load will be up 2,400 and we will have another 7,200 on the totally disabled rolls.”
The Director of Finance said the one reduction in workload will come in aid to the mentally ill, which will drop 500 to a new low of 33,900 by the end of the next fiscal year.
But this will be offset by an increase of 1,000 mentally retarded persons to whom the state will give assistance.
Champion said the total workload picture could improve or worsen, depending on economic conditions.
“Crime, unemployment, school drop-outs and births generally reflect the economic picture,” said the director.
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Nears Reality
April Election Will Determine Destiny of Historic Community
Anaheim may shortly have a Hollywood, a Beverly Hills within the borders of its city.
Opponents of the move to annex Yorba Linda to the city of Anaheim failed to show evidence yesterday before the Mother Colony city council that 51 per cent of the property owners of Yorba Linda oppose the annexation move.
Alfred S. Bradford, a leader and spokesman for the opposition, was unable to prove yesterday by the dead. If the protests are held to be insufficient, the proposal will move on toward an election, likely scheduled for April.
Following the ten day certification period, the city council will hear requests for exclusions and can reduce the area proposed to be annexed by not more than five per cent. Generally, oil properties on the periphery of the annexation may be excluded if they are outside the water district.
Election
The election will take place no
Opponents of the move to annex Yorba Linda to the city of Anaheim failed to show evidence yesterday before the Mother Colony city council that 51 per cent of the property owners of Yorba Linda oppose the annexation move.
Alfred S. Bradford, a leader and spokesman for the opposition, was unable to prove yesterday by the 3 p.m. deadline, that the owners of the greater portion of assessed valuation Yorba Linda did not want to become part of Anaheim.
Ten Day Period
Now for a ten day period the council will authorize the certification of the protests to ascertain whether they are valid. No more protests will be allowed.
If the protests are valid and sufficient, the annexation move is
Car Registration Remains Feb. 4
Tom Bright, director of the State Department of Motor Vehicles, today issued a reminder to motorists that Monday, Feb. 4 is the deadline for renewing their vehicle registration without penalty.
He also asked motorists to get new plates as soon as possible to avoid Long lines that annually jam DMV offices during the last days of the renewal period.
“After midnight Feb. 4, the department is required to charge a 10 per cent penalty on late renewals,” Bright said, adding that a 100 per cent penalty will be charged on the weight fee portion of each late commercial registration.
DMV offices will close at 5 p.m. on the lust renewal day, but Bright said that mail renewals postmarked before midnight Feb. 4 will be accepted without penalty.
He urged motorists to follow instructions on the backs of the punched card renewal statements that were mailed to owners of California’s nine million vehicles. This is particularly important for mail instructions, he said.
DMV advises vehicle owners who have not received renewal settlement cards to bring 1962 registration stubs to any DMV office.
Following the ten day certification period, the city council will hear requests for exclusions and can reduce the area proposed to be annexed by not more than five per cent. Generally, oil properties on the periphery of the annexation may be excluded if they are outside the water district.
Election
The election will take place no sooner than 54 days and no later than 75 days after the termination of the hearing. At that time the residents themselves will determine whether they want to become part of Anaheim city.
Yorba Linda is one of the oldest communities in the Yorba ranch grant. The annexation will give Anaheim an extension of prime residential land within the city limits.
Yorba Linda will retain the name Yorba Linda since it has in the belief of the Anaheim city fathers, distinction and significance as an historic community. The existence of the post office there makes the retention of the original name simpler. Only the Federal Government can officially change the name.
General Plan
The General Plan of the community, as outlined and developed by its citizens and adopted by the county, will remain the same so long as the residents of Yorba Linda uphold it.
Any future changes to the plan will have to come up before the Anaheim planning commission just as any changes in the city proper now do.
Policies carried out by the Yorba Linda water district will also remain the same.
The residents of the annexation gain the protection which being a part of Anaheim will afford. They will also be safe from the encroachments of other communities eyeing their land. They will have voice in the affairs and government of the City of Anaheim.
All this will become a reality when the residents of Yorba Linda vote officially in the April elections to become part of Anaheim
City Mothers Marched Here Last Night
An army of women moved silently through the streets of Anaheim last night.
Resolute and intent, they broke down the resistance of the city. Not a shot was fired.
They marched in the name of Motherhood. Their plea was, "Won't you give for the life of a child?"
Fire whistles blew and radio and television announced the news that mothers were on the march again.
"All of the volunteers in the March of Dimes Mothers' March know how important the job is," said Mrs. Donald R. Eels, general chairman of the Orange County Mothers March.
The 25th anniversary of the march took only about an hour last night. Proceeds go to the continuance of March of Dimes research programs which have already produced two polio vaccines. Patients now afflicted with birth defects, arthritis and polio will also share in the proceeds.
Roy Coleman Retires Today
Friends of Roy W. Coleman are dropping in on him today at his office in the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company, 200 N. Lemon St.
Today is his last day with the Company.
After 39 years and four months service as Engineer in Public Improvements, Coleman is retiring.
He resides with his wife at 846 S. Los Angeles St., Anaheim.