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Publications Anaheim Gazette 1963 July

anaheim-gazette 1963-07-25

1963-07-25 · Anaheim Gazette · page 7 of 12 · OCR glm-ocr
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WITH A SIGNAL GOOD WIN INTERNATIONAL GOOD WILL — Members of Troop 6, Ensenada under the guidance of Scoutmaster Rudolfe Gutierrez spent a week at the Northern Orange County Council, Boy Scouts of America summer reservation, Comp Ahwahnee in an international good-will exchange arranged by Scoutmaster Harold Bas-trup and assistant Scoutmaster Tab Cook of Anaheim Troop 74. Participating in the program included Rudolfo, Ana Sora Aguilar, Luis Fernandez Valdez, Estaurdo Zentena Soto and Jorge Vargas Estrada. The Anaheim Kiwanis Club also sponsored the foreign contingent. Eleven-Year-Old Joe Needs Man’s Guidance (Editor's Note: We support the work of Big Brothers of Orange County and in connection with this support will publish from time to time some "case histories" that are in need of solution. These are furnished to us by Big Brothers as a stimulus to men who are potential members of the organization. We suggest you read these brief resumes, realizing the names are not factual but that the individuals referred to are very real boys with very real problems.) Joe was four years old when his father and mother separated. Since then his father has remarried and is living in another part of the country and Joe has not seen him since he was seven. There is actually no contact with the father whatever, except for birthday and Christmas presents, always in the form of a modest check. Joe's mother has been careful, however, not to paint a dark picture of the father's actions, though this is hard for her because she apparently was badly hurt emotionally by the divorce. Until a year ago Joe had a Big Brother in the form of a neighbor who included Joe in most of the activities he participated in with his own 11 year old son. Unfort- Joe's mother has been careful, however, not to paint a dark picture of the father's actions, though this is hard for her because she apparently was badly hurt emotionally by the divorce. Until a year ago Joe had a Big Brother in the form of a neighbor who included Joe in most of the activities he participated in with his own 11 year old son. Unfortunately, the neighbor has moved away to follow a job. Now both Joe and his mother realize how much Joe depended on this man. Joe is big for his age and is an outdoor kind of boy. He does well in school and is well liked by most of his schoolmates. Joe's problem is twofold. He is growing and as his interests broaden he is finding it more and more difficult to get along without a man's guidance. Recently, after watching a family-type television program he threw himself on the sofa and cried out in anguish, "Oh, why can't I have a father, too." Joe is continually in hot water at home and his mother is afraid to make those decisions that she CONE-O'CONNOR MORTUARY 231 NORTH LEMON STREET, ANAHEIM KE 5-3209 Cotler's SALE OUR BIG TWICE - A-YEAR SALE SUITS Reg. to 49.95 now $29 Reg. to 55.00 now $39 Reg. to 70.00 now $49 Reg. to 79.95 now $59 SLACKS Reg. to 17.95 ... NOW $13.88 2 for $27.00 Reg. to 19.95 ... NOW $15.88 2 for $30.00 SPORT SHIRTS Dacrons—Cotton and Cotton Sateens—Italian Collar and Ivy Collar. Reg. to 8.95 Mixed Group Ivy & Continental Reg. to 6.95 Jarman and Freeman SHOES Reg. to 21.95 ... $15.88 Reg. to 19.95 ... $12.88 Reg. to 15.95 ... $10.88 Reg. to 12.95 ... $8.88 SWEATERS Reg. to 21.50 Our expert tailor, Orange County's finest, will have a perfect Cotler fit. Normal alterations are made. OPEN A CONVENIENCE CHARGE AGAIN KEystone 5-4224 118 W. LINCOLN • DOWNTOWN A New Quarters Soon Ready At Chapman Construction is now entering the final phase on the men's residence hall and married students' apartment building at Chapman College. The new structures, both located between N. Center and Shaffer Streets, are to be ready for use when the fall semester opns Sept. 16. Major structural work has been completed and prefabricated door-window, bathroom, kitchen, and storage units are now being installed. Designed by John Galbraith and Associates, Inc., Pasadena, the new facilities will provide housing for 136 men students and 32 one-bedroom apartments for married students. The $800,000 construction cost is being financed by the Orange County Regional Head Office of Union Bank. In addition to the two new buildings, work is also well under way on the remodeling of the west end of the college's Student Union structure to provide a new dining hall seating 700 students, of a new kitchen wing to the north and on the construction of a new kitchen wing to the north of the building. Furnishings will require an additional $125,000, which the college is raising through gifts, pledges, and memorials. The cost of furnishing a double room is $500; one-half of a double room, $250; suite for four students, $1000; married student apartment, $1000; head resident's apartment, $2000; and student lounge, $8000. Additional furnishings for the new dining hall will cost an estimated $10,000, and new equipment for the kitchen will total Marshall W. Johnson, radioman seaman apprentice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Johnson of 1931 Rosewood Ave., Anaheim, has reported for duty at the Naval Communication Station, Kodiak Alaska. Kenneth G. Kidwell, hospital corpsman third class, USN, son of Mrs. J. W. Jones of 1211 West Lynne, Anaheim, was recently selected "Sailor of the Month" for June, while serving at the Naval Station, Roosevelt Roads, Puerto Rico. The mission of the Naval Station is to support surface, air, subsurface and amphibious operations and weapons training — both conventional and missile. The Station also provides emergency supply support to units of the operating forces of the Navy and other activities as directed. Eugene H. Sweigart, seaman apprentice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Sweigart of 930 Fern St., Anaheim, was among 1,000 crewmen of the guided missile light cruiser USS Providence who were initiated into the "Shellbacks" league upon their first crossing of the Equator. The Providence corpssed the Equator at 105.5 degrees east longitude, west of Borneo and east of Sumatra and enroute to Singapore and the Federation of Malaya. The custom of initiating "pollywogs" into "shellbacks" is an old Navy tradition. The story goes back to the time of Leif Ericson and his Vikings, when the ceremonies were harsh and painful and designed to test a man's ability to withstand the hardships of life at sea. Marine First Lieutenant Thomas L. Elser, son of Mr. and Mr. Leonard D. Elser of 1835 South Manchester, Anaheim, a graduate of the basic jet course with Training Squadron Four at Fort Sherman Field, Naval A Station, Pensacola, Fla., has been transferred to the Advanced Training Command in Corpus Christi. His basic jet training was maxed by making four arrests carrier landings and four catapult take-offs from the deck of the amphibious aircraft USS Lexington in the Gulf Mexico, near Pensacola. Army PFC Daniel T. Doller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Doller, 2144 W. Ball Rd., Anaheim was assigned to the U.S. Army Support Group in Vietnam, Ju 9. Master Tab Cook oficipating in the pro-Ana Sora Aguilar, Staurdo Zenteno Soto La. The Anaheim Ki-ceded the foreign con-Leuenberger Photo) Tickets Ready The theater box office is open for the Orange Coast College productions of "The Music Man" Aug. 1, 2 and 3. The box office at the OC theater, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, will be open through July 26 from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 6 p.m.; July 27 from 9 a.m. to noon; July 29 through 31 from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 6 p.m.; and on Aug. 1, 2 and 3 from 10 a.m. to noon, 1 to 6 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Curtain times are 8:15 p.m. Aug. 1, 2 and 3. The Aug. 3 matinee will start at 2:15 p.m. Advance Mortgage Reports Big Year Advance Mortgage Corporation closed $3,000,000 in residential mortgages in Orange County during its 1963 fiscal-year ending April 30, Robert R. Bates, assistant vice-president in charge of the firm's Anaheim office, has revealed. Almost 95 per cent of the local mortgages were FHA and VA-insured loans on existing homes. Plan Will Be Decided Orange County's bid separate metropolitan state will be discussed at a meeting July 30 in Los Angeles on proposed five-county super-metropolitan area. Supervisor William Phillips says he is 90 per cent certain that the county will be given s-arate status. He is co-chairman of the Orange County Metropolitan Area Committee. The so-called 'super' area would include Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura Counties. James Decker, president of Orange County Associated Chambers of Commerce, will head delegation attending the Los Angeles conference. The county's joining the a-ll will depend upon what bene- such a designation would bring says Phillips. Super-metropolitan areas now existence are the New York C-Northeast New Jersey area or the Chicago-Northern Indiana statistical area. APPOINTED TO NAA POST Addison Fuller of Anaheim is recently been named as direc-tor of communications of the Oran-County Chapter of the Nation Association of Accountants. SALE MEN'S WEAR CE - A - YEAR SALE STILL GOING STRONG! SPORT COATS now $29 Reg. to 22.95 now $17.88 now $39 Reg. to 39.95 now $29.88 now $49 Reg. to 49.95 now $39.88 now $59 Reg. to 55.00 now $43.88 ANTS, Reg. to 6.95 ... $3.88, 2 pr. $7.00 Reg. to 1.50 ... 69c pr., 3 pr. $2.00 UNKS, Reg. to 5.95 ... $3.88 AS, Reg. to 6.95 ... $3.88 SPORT SHIRTS Authentic Ivies, Muted Plaids and Stripes and Short Point Ivies. $3.88 ATTERS $888 to 21.50 County's finest, will make certain you normal alterations are made at no extra charge. OPEN A CONVENIENT COTLERS CHARGE ACCOUNT Open Mon. & Fr. 9-9 "Look Your Best, Be Coller Dressed" DOWNTOWN ANAHEIM Look to Santa Fe for the extras in travel Your Santa Fe agent would like to tell you about these special services. Ask him about... PREPAID TICKETS—delivered to anyone, anywhere, to bring them here on Santa Fe. FAMILY FARES—for big savings on family travel. RENTAL CARDS—the comfort of rail travel and the convenience of a new car at destination. CREDIT CARDS—modern way to buy tickets, dining and lounge car services. A general credit reference. GO NOW, PAY LATER PLAN—take that trip now, pay for it later at your convenience. Ask your Santa Fe Agent E. L. SMITH, Agent Santa Fe Station, Phone Prospect 4-8148 ANAHEIM, CALIF. Anaheim High P.T.A Ratifies Chairmen Committee chairmen for the 1963-64 school year of the Anaheim High School Parents Teacher Association were ratified at the recent executive board meeting held in the board room of Anahim high school. Also on the agenda for the executive board, presided over by Mrs. Floyd Paterson, PTA president, was a discussion on good programs and good fellowship to stimulate the active participation of both parents and teachers. Committee chairmen for the ensuing year are Budget and Finance, Mrs. William Klapper; Character Education, Mrs. Rodney Parsons; Citizenship, Miss Dana Christensen; Dance Hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Anton, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Krey; Decorations, Mrs. Fritz Lindstrom. Founders Day, Mrs. Warren Hibbard; Health and Welfare, Mrs. Ernest Demler; Hospitality, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Lenz, Mr. and Mrs. Franklyn Michaelson, Lt. Col. and Mrs. Alva Neighbors; Juvenile Protection, Mrs. Lester Black, Jr.; Legislation, Mrs. Urho Jurva; Life Membership, Mrs. Ralph Chance; Magazines, Mrs. Ray Robertson; Membership coordinator, Mrs. Ernest Rose; Sophomore Membership, Mrs. Bryan Fults, Mrs. Otto Grigg. Junior membership, Mrs. George Johnson, Mrs. Giles Arbach; Senior Membership, Mrs. Dean Stephens, Mrs. Ed Baker; Faculty Membership, Mr. Carl Crane; Music, Mrs. Ted Pavne; Newsette, Mrs. Carl Zvistra; Parent Information, Mrs. Kendall Magill; Procedure Book, Mrs. Richard Gay; Program, Mrs. Robert Hunt; Publications and Elections, Mrs. Avon Carlson; Publicity, Mrs. Camille Sinor; Public Record Book, Mrs. Kiyoshi Shigekawa. Safety and Civil Defense, Mrs James Luskey; Scholarship, Mrs Tad Cook; Social Committee, Mr. and Mrs. Asa Sharples, Mr. and Mrs. Don Moore, Mr. and Mrs. John F. Gruver, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Smith; Special Events, Mrs. David Snow; Telephone, Mrs. William Koch, Mrs. Ewald Dargatz, Mrs. Floyd Keirman; Ways and Means, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Deverell, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bruce, Mr. and Mrs. R. Nifchke. ARMY - NAVY GOODS - HARDWARE - CA WILLIAMS CO. ARMY - NAVY SURPLUS GOODS 112 E. COMMONWEALTH DOWNTOWN FULLERTON 130 E. LINCOLN AVE. DOWNTOWN ANAHEIM ARMY - NAVY GOODS - HARDWARE - CA WILLIAMS Co. ARMY - NAVY SURPLUS GOODS 112 E. COMMONWEALTH DOWNTOWN FULLERTON 130 E. LINCOLN AVE. DOWNTOWN ANAHEIM Daily 9 to 9 — Sat, 9 to 8 SUNDAY 9 - 2 Daily 'til 5:30 Mon.-Fri. 'til 9 OPEN SUNDAY 10 - 3 POOL-O-RAMA CLOSE-OUT! 80"x16" Rigidwall pool Easy to assemble. Real summer fun in your own back yard. 8.88 60x12 Rigidwall Pool $4.88 80x10 2-ring, 175 gal. $4.88 €0x10 2-ring, 125 gal. $3.88 Also closing out Snorkels and Swim Fins FULLERTON STORE ONLY LIFE JACKETS U.S. Coast Guard Approved For a Carefree Vacation ADULT'S CHILD'S $3.68 $2.88 BAMBOO SHADES 3x6 ... 88c 4x6 ... 1.19 6x6 ... 1.49 8x6 ... 1.95 Shade your house with this decorative shade. For interior and exterior use. MEN'S PULLOVER BANLON SHIRTS A real value in the ever popular Banlon knit short sleeve pullover. Available in Six Different Colors Sizes S-M-L $3.99 $5.98 Value Mens Short Sleeve White DRESS SHIRTS BANLON SHIRTS A real value in the ever popular Banlon knit short sleeve pullover. Available in Six Different Colors Sizes S-M-L $5.98 Value Mens Short Sleeve White DRESS SHIRTS 100% Pima Cotton Made in U.S.A. Permanent stay. Smart looking spread collar and snap tab collar. Needs little or no ironing. Sizes 14 thru 16½ Value $3.98 MEN'S WHITE T-SHIRTS SLIGHT IRREGULATIONS. Sizes Sml., Med., Lge. 2 FOR $1.00 DELUXE GENIE TENT Ideal Family Tent. 12'x9' Model T-490 Self-supported. No guy ropes required. List Price $103.96 Dry-treated Shelter Duck. Zippered double door with screen and storm flap. One window with inside zippered storm flap. Rings in fresh well for distressing canopy. Extra-stretch duck dry-treated floor. Metal stake pops. Roof and insect barrier threshold. SEE THIS TENT ON DISPLAY! FULLERTON STORE ONLY PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JULY $1st HEADQUARTERS FOR LEVIS FREE PARKING IN REAR WORK CLOTHS • LEVIS • SHOES • HOUSE