anaheim-gazette 1964-07-29
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COUNTY WELCOME
Huge Aerial Banner To Greet Goldwater
A helicopter trailing a lighted 35-foot long greeting card will welcome Sen. Barry Goldwater, Republican presidential candidate, when he arrives in Southern California next Saturday night.
The helicopter, piloted by Dennis Richards of Canoga Park, was commissioned by the Douglass Construction Co. of California, with headquarters in San Clemente, to fly from its Lockheed Terminal base in Burbank, to San Clemente, and then to the Balboa Bay Club, where Goldwater has scheduled a weekend visit with his family.
The lighted sign will flash the message: "PACIFIC ISLAND VILLAGE AT THE TOP OF LAGUNA NIGUEL WELCOMES BARRY GOLDWATER." Pacific Island Village is a $22 million planned community within the 7,000-acre master community of Laguna Niguel, a Cabot, Cabot and Forbes project in South Laguna.
Moxie George, vice president of Wite-Way Inc., the concern owning the helicopter, said the 'copter-carried greeting card message is lighted by an electronic programmer, running a pre-cut tape through a mercury bath which dispatches an electrical current to 500 flashlight bulbs.
The helicopter will circle the Balboa Bay Club for 30 minutes.
George said the helicopter will fly over Burbank, Los Angeles, City of Commerce, Fullerton, San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Santa Ana, South Laguna, Laguna Beach and Newport Beach, where the Balboa Bay Club, a private beach-front club, is situated.
George said the greeting card will be flashing its welcoming message during the entire 200-mile flight over Southern California.
Mrs. Cheverton Sets Retirement as Dean
Mrs. Vivian P. Cheverton, who has served Chapman College as a graduate, as wife of the president, and as a member Mrs. Cheverton, who was honored at a dinner given by the college faculty earlier this month, plans an extended trip to the eastern part of the United States.
A well known expert in field of technical criminology will be guest speaker at Saturday's breakfast meeting the Orange Y's Mens Club.
He is W. J. Cadman, a member of the Orange County Sheriff's Department.
The club, which recently nated $2,000 to the Orang YMCA, meets on the first third Saturday of each month Kims Restaurant.
Cadman began his study technical criminology (criministics) at the University of Florida at Berkeley, just prior World War II. Like many others, his studies were interrupted by the War.
Following World War II returned to the University California, at Berkeley, where he continued the study of criminalistics under Dr. Paul H.
He graduated from the University of California in 1947; did a year of graduate search before coming to Orlando County Sheriff's Department Orange County's first crime ist in September 1948.
The Laboratory of Criminalics was established by Sh James A. Musick in 1948, year after the famous Oyact Murder Case as a result of that case. All government
Mrs. Cheverton Sets Retirement as Dean
Mrs. Vivian P. Cheverton, who has served Chapman College as a graduate, as wife of the president, and as a member of the administrative staff, will retire at the end of the summer as assistant dean of students.
An alumna of Chapman, Mrs. Cheverton served as the college's first lady during the years 1930 to 1942 when her husband, the late Dr. Cecil F. Cheverton, was president of the college. As a member of the Class of 1923, Mrs. Cheverton first met her husband when she took classes from him.
The Chevertons and their four children later lived in Ft. Worth, Texas, where Dr. Cheverton was a professor at Texas Christian University from 1942 until 1953. Following her husband's death, Mrs. Cheverton returned to California and in 1958 accepted the appointment as assistant dean of students at her alma mater.
A recipient in 1955 of the Chapman College Alumnus of the Year Award, Mrs. Cheverton has served on the Alumni Association Board. During the past six years she has served on the college's Administrative Council, Planning Council, and Student Personnel Committee, and has been one of the faculty advisors to the Associated Women Students cabinet.
HOT CHICKS
LAREDO, Tex. (UPI)—Uncle Sam hoped today to sell 19,200 baby chicks to the highest bidder at a customs house auction. The chattering chicks were seized on the Rio Grande as smugglers tried to take them into Mexico without making a declaration of export.
Two men from the United States were apprehended as they unloaded the chicks in 200 small pens from a truck to a raft. Mexicans who were waiting across the river fled before authorities arrived.
Mrs. Cheverton, who was honored at a dinner given by the college faculty earlier this month, plans an extended trip to the eastern part of the United States during the coming year and will visit her sons David, a minister in Pulaski, Va., and Richard, a research engineer in Knoxville, Tenn., and her older daughter, Mrs. Paul H. Dunn, in Salt Lake City. Her younger daughter, Mrs. William Turnbull, lives in Los Angeles.
Orange County Employees Set Irvine Picnic
The Orange County Employees Association is scheduled to hold its annual picnic on Irvine Park grounds on Saturday.
More than 3,000 members are expected to attend.
The annual affair, which last year drew 1,800, will begin at 1:30 p.m.
Tickets are available from county employees according to picnic chairman Velda Patrick.
Highlights will include an old-fashioned costume parade and a procession to the park in vintage autos provided by the Newport Region of the Horseless Carriage Club of America.
The procession will start from the intersection of Tustin and Chapman avenues at 2 p.m. County supervisors, in stovepipe hats and beards, are expected to man five of the old cars.
DALLAS — A bill of exceptions to the conduct of Jack Ruby's murder trial, filed Tuesday by his lawyers, describing the testimony of a prosecution witness:
"Perjured, harmful, prejudiced, inadmissible and inflammable."
TURN BACK
Supervive Jubilee
Orange County supervise turn back the clock next Wednesday when they recreate first meeting of the board on Aug. 5, 1889.
The meeting will be paired with Orange County's Diamond Lee celebrations.
The supervisors and wives including other mitaries will be dressed in 1889 regalia, top hats, and coats, the ladies in their dresses, flower covered and parasols.
They will be transported Orange County Court House 15 horse drawn carriages.
The parade will start at Ana, and will go East to Street to Broadway, South Broadway to 4th Street, Eighth Street to Main Street, on West on 6th Street to the House.
All dignitaries will then directly to the Board of Suritors room. Inside, with man William Phillips owing a re-enactment will place bringing to the attention of the citizens many subjects that were discussed years ago.
Supervisors Cye Feen Alton Allen, William Hunt and David Baker along Phillips will present researched properly framed to the family members of the Board of Supervisors served 75 years ago.
Following the re-enactment program in the Court House
baby checks to the highest bidder at a customs house auction. The chattering chicks were seized on the Rio Grande as smugglers tried to take them into Mexico without making a declaration of export.
Two men from the United States were apprehended as they unloaded the chicks in 200 small pens from a truck to a raft. Mexicans who were waiting across the river fled before authorities arrived.
DALLAS — A bill of exceptions to the conduct of Jack Ruby's murder trial, filed Tuesday by his lawyers, describing the testimony of a prosecution witness:
"Perjured, harmful, prejudiced, inadmissible and inflammator."
Easy payment
Bank of America
NATIONAL TRUST AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION • MEMBER FEDERAL D
ORANGE BRANCH
245 East Chapman Avenue
ORANGE TOWN & COUNTRY
777 South Main Street
Criminology Ace's Mens' Guest
well known expert in the field of technical criminology be guest speaker at next Saturday's breakfast meeting of Orange Y's Mens Club, which recently donated $2,000 to the Orange CA, meets on the first and last Saturday of each month at its Restaurant.
Cadman began his study of criminal criminology (criminalists) at the University of California at Berkeley, just prior to World War II. Like many others his studies were interrupted by the War.
Following World War II, he turned to the University of California, at Berkeley, where continued the study of Criminalistics under Dr. Paul Kirk. He graduated from the University of California in 1947 and a year of graduate research before coming to Orange County Sheriff's Department as Orange County's first criminal investigator. September 1948.
The Laboratory of Criminalistics was established by Sheriff James A. Musick in 1948, the latter after the famous Overell Murder Case as a result of that case. All governmental agencies within Orange County are served by this Laboratory without fee.
The laboratory staff has now grown to six and is recognized as being one of the best in the State.
Cadman is a charter member and past executive secretary of the California Association of Criminalists. He has presented several papers to that group.
He is a Fellow in the American Academy of Forensic Sciences and past chairman of the Criminalistics Section of that internationally recognized body. He has also presented several papers to that Group.
He is a member of the American Chemical Society. By invitation, Cadman presented a paper on the subject of Gas Chromatography to the Forensic Chemistry Symposium at the National A.C.S. Meeting held in Cleveland in 1960.
He has written a chapter on Gas Chromatography for "The Methods of Forensic Science", a book recently published.
Cadman is a member of the Society of Applied Spectroscopy.
A thought for the day: Author Robert Louis Stevenson said: "The worst is yet to come."
Visitors Flock To Development
A continuing flow of visitors at Brookhurst Gardens, 400 N. Brookhurst, is anticipated this weekend by sales and rental agents of the development, which last weekend had a Grand Opening they characterized as "a big success." Over half a million dollars worth of property was sold at the Grand Opening weekend according to Frances V. Snow, of Roland H. Snow and Associates, Sales and Rental Agent for the county of 4-unit income apartments open — as stated Mrs. Snow. We greet prospective renters. Currently, rental availability areas are short supply in our Series."
Special sales financing offered, Mrs. Snow "While down payment is gle 4-unit $63,950 group 950 we are now making tactive for an investor two of the groups by the down payment on one group at only $2,250."
Residents in Brookhurst dens are offered a variety of accommodations. The seven different basic corporate, in various nations, two and three apartments, in one-level floor studio models, three bedroom homes able either detached or tached from the rental.
Recreational areas in Brookhurst block include park, swimming pool, croquet court, putting horseshoes, shuffleboard minton and volley ball courts with picnic table park building.
The park building Recreation Room for Billiards, a Sauna, the Navian "dry heat" bath Ladies' Health Room. Located on Brookhurst opposite the Anaheim Supervisors Set
Laboratory of Criminalissis was established by Sheriff
James A. Musick in 1948, the
ear after the famous Overell
at Murder Case as a result
that case. All governmental
A thought for the day: Author Robert Louis Stevenson said: "The worst is yet to come."
URN BACK CLOCK
Supervisors Set Jubilee Event
Orange County supervisors back the clock next Wednesday when they recreate the first meeting of the board held Aug. 5, 1889.
The meeting will be part of Orange County's Diamond Jubilee celebrations.
The supervisors and their ties including other digiaries will be dressed in their 99 regalia, top hats, and frock kits, the ladies in their long dresses, flower covered hats and parasols.
They will be transported to the Orange County Court House in horse drawn carriages.
The parade will start at 6th Old Parton Streets in Santa Ana, and will go East on 6th Street to Broadway, South on Broadway to 4th Street, East on 5th Street to Main Street, North on Main Street to 6th Street, West on 6th Street to the Court House.
All dignitaries will then go directly to the Board of Supervisors room. Inside, with Chairman William Phillips officiatig, a re-enactment will take place bringing to the attention of the citizens many peculiar subjects that were discussed 75 years ago.
Supervisors Cye Featherly, Alton Allen, William Hirstein, and David Baker along with Phillips will present resolutions properly framed to the living family members of the first board of Supervisors who served 75 years ago.
Following the re-enactment program in the Court House all old timers, visitors, and guests are invited to join the Orange County 75th Diamond Jubilee Committee at a no-host lunchroom to be hled in the El Rancho Room" of the new "Saddle Back Inn", 1st Street and the Santa Ana Freeway.
The luncheon will get underway at approximately 12:30 p.m., and will cost $3.50 per person tax and tip included.
A reception in the "El Toro Room" will preceed the luncheon.
William Gallienne, of Huntington Beach, General Chairman of Orange County's 75th Diamond Jubilee Committee, is in charge of all arrangements assisted by R. I. "Cuba" Morris, Kris Klinger, Carl Kymla, Richard Ruiz, Don Jerome, Jim Decker, Lou Truhill, Ted Parker, Frank Gelinas, Jack Barnett, Worth Bernard, Beatrice Cook, Don Flamm, Frank Grunenfelder, and Mrs. Tom Foreser.
There will be a limit of 400 persons for luncheon.
STEIN SELECTED
LONG BEACH, Calif. (UPI) — The American Newspaper Guild (ANG) wound up its 31st annual convention Monday with appointment of Bernard Stein as international vice president for region 5.
Stein, who had been second vice president of the guild's New York local, replaces Edward Easton Jr., who retired because of his health.
NSGW Ceremony
Santa Ana Parlor No. 74, Native Sons of the Golden West, held a joint installation of officers with Grace Parlor No. 242, Native Daughters of the Golden West at the Anaheim Ebell Club, July 20.
James J. Friis of Anaheim, heads the Native Sons of Orange County as president. Other officers installed were Steven K. Warner, Mike Reyes, Glenn Warner and Roy West, from Santa Ana; Arthur Novak Jr., Huntington Beach; Robert P. Loeffler and Jack C. Wilson, Costa Mesa; Albert Nieblas, Tustin; Bernard Claes, Fallbrook; Leo Young, Cyrus A. Palmer Jr., Ralph Bandick and Frank Shaffer; Orange and Joseph Cyprien, Anaheim.
Installing officers of the Native Sons were District Deputy Grand President Harry Starner, Colton; Supervising District Deputy Grand President Jesse Keer, San Bernardino and Junior Past President James Robertson, Riverside.
Anaheim resident B. Pierson has been provice president at Bankia's Anaheim Main was announced this Jesse W. Tapp, chairboard of the statewide Pierson has been vice president here for two years and prior to administrative officer executive training prince the bank's Los Angeles quarters.
He joined the bank keeper in Riverside it was promoted to assistant at the Ocean Beach in San Diego in 1948 he was in charge of its department at dale Main Office and district personnel relacer at Los Angeles in Born in Iowa, Piersonated from high school Dakota and attended Junior College. He studied with the An Institute of Banking,a cific Coast School oat at the University of Vpierson is a memlion Lions Club, Alta Y Club and Men's Executive Board of Red Cross and tha
of the citizens many peculiar subjects that were discussed 75 years ago.
Supervisors Cye Featherly, Clinton Allen, William Hirstein, and David Baker along with Phillips will present resolutions properly framed to the living family members of the first Board of Supervisors who served 75 years ago.
Following the re-enactment program in the Court House all
LONG BEACH, Calif. (UPI) — The American Newspaper Guild (ANG) wound up its 31st annual convention Monday with appointment of Bernard Stein as international vice president for region 5.
Stein, who had been second vice president of the guild's New York local, replaces Edward Easton Jr., who retired because of his health.
Installing officers of the Native Sons were District Deputy Grand President Harry Starner, Colton; Supervising District Deputy Grand President Jesse Keer, San Bernardino and Junior Past President James Robertson, Riverside.
payment plan:
OF AMERICA
ASSOCIATION • MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
TOWN & COUNTRY BRANCH
777 South Main Street
CHAPMAN-TUSTIN BRANCH
225 North Tustin Street
THE MAC RAES — "Bells are Ringing"
Rental Agent for the community of 4-unit income apartment houses with private recreation parks.
"Our 'Welcome' mat will be out and furnished model apartments open — as always," stated Mrs. Snow. We're glad to greet prospective renters and buyers. Currently, immediate rental availability are in rather short supply in our First Series."
Special sales financing is being offered, Mrs. Snow stated. "While down payment on a single 4-unit $63,950 group is $4,950 we are now making it attractive for an investor to buy two of the groups by setting the down payment on the second group at only $2,000 additional."
Residents in Brookhurst Gardens are offered a variety of accommodations. There are seven different basic plans, incorporating, in various combinations, two and three bedroom apartments, in one-level or two-floor studio models. Owner's three bedroom homes are available either detached or semi-detached from the rental units.
Recreational areas in each Brookhurst block include play park, swimming pool, regulation croquet court, putting green, horseshoes, shuffleboard, badminton and volleyball, barbecues with picnic tables, and a park building.
The park building houses a Recreation Room for cards, Billiards, a Sauna, the Scandinavian "dry heat" bath; and a Ladies' Health Room.
Located on Brookhurst Street opposite the Anaheim Municipal
HONORED TONIGHT
Orange Recognition For Library Worker
Certificate of recognition will be given tonight by Mayor Jack Hileman to Mrs. Ernest (Doris) Smith for 15 years of service to the Orange Board of Library Trustees.
The presentation will be made by the mayor before the City Council meeting.
Mrs. Smith of 258 N. Center St. retired from the board after acting as the chairman for the past 11 years.
"During Mrs. Smith's tenure in office the new Orange library was constructed and local library activities have more than doubled," Librarian Mrs. Ethel Swanger, said today.
"She has been very regular in both her attendance and interest in the library," Mrs. Swanger added.
In addition to acting as a member of the Friends of the Library Board, Mrs. Smith also is active in the Orange Assistance League, Woman's Club past-president, member of Columbia Arts Series of Santa Ana and a member of the board of directors of Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian at Costa Mesa.
"I guess my interest in the library stems from the fact that I have always been a reader. I also was interested in the civic development of a library for Orange," Mrs. Smith said.
"I'm not resigning from the board because of lack of interest, but because there probably are others who would like an opportunity to work on the board," she added.
"To me it wasn't work, I enjoyed it," Mrs. Smith said.
Mrs. Smith lists her hobby as traveling and said her next venture would be a Mediterranean cruise in mid-February. Other areas of travel interest viewed by Mrs. Smith include Europe, the Orient, Alaska and Mexico.
Police Let Girl Return to Home
Beverly Irons Out Details
Park, swimming pool, regulation croquet court, putting green, horseshoes, shuffleboard, badminton and volleyball, barbecues with picnic tables, and a park building.
The park building houses a Recreation Room for cards, Billiards, a Sauna, the Scandinavian "dry heat" bath; and a Ladies' Health Room.
Located on Brookhurst Street opposite the Anaheim Municipal Golf Course, Brookhurst Gardens is two blocks south of the Santa Ana Freeway Brookhurst Street access ramps.
Pierson Is Promoted To V. P.
Anaheim resident Donald S. Pierson has been promoted to vice president at Bank of America's Anaheim Main Office, it was announced this week by Jesse W. Tapp, chairman of the board of the statewide bank.
Pierson has been assistant vice president here for the past two years and prior to that was administrative officer for the executive training program at the bank's Los Angeles Headquarters.
He joined the bank as a bookkeeper in Riverside in 1939 and was promoted to assistant cashier at the Ocean Beach branch in San Diego in 1946. In 1952 he was in charge of the Operations department at the Glendale Main Office and was named district personnel relations officer at Los Angeles in 1955.
Born in Iowa, Pierson graduated from high school in South Dakota and attended Riverside Junior College. He has also studied with the American Institute of Banking, and the Pacific Coast School of Banking at the University of Washington.
Pierson is a member of the Lions Club, Alta Vista Golf Club and Men's Association, Executive Board of Anaheim Red Cross and the Ambassadors' Health Room.
Police Let Girl Return to Home
Beverly Irons Out Details In Long Counseling Session
After a four-and-a-half hour counseling session with Det. Gail Beverly, Colleen Braebec, the 16-year-old run-away who was gone 51 days, has gone home — probably for good.
During the long counseling period yesterday, Beverly, who has worked hundreds of hours on the case, talked individually with Colleen, her mother and father and the entire family.
Colleen returned home Sunday morning from Bisbee, Ariz., where she had been detained as a material witness to a burglary.
Beverly reported that several details in Colleen's two-month venture have been ironed out.
When she left her home, supposedly on her way to school, June 1, Colleen took a bus to Balboa and from there walked to Long Beach.
She met 19-year-old Patsy Daniels on the beach the following day after spending a night on the sand.
Miss Daniels, an Arizona girl who had worked at a Long Beach amusement park, invited Colleen to stay at her apartment.
After a two-week stay the two girls decided to leave for Arizona. They got rides from friends from Long Beach to San Diego and from San Diego to Tucson.
The two teenagers then took a bus to Douglas where Miss Daniels' parents lived.
Colleen stayed with the Daniels family for over five weeks before being detained by Cochise County Sheriffs.
The Daniels girl and another 17-year-old were arrested on suspicion of the burglary. Three ANWL officers provided information.
Born in Iowa, Pierson graduated from high school in South Dakota and attended Riverside Junior College. He has also studied with the American Institute of Banking, and the Pacific Coast School of Banking at the University of Washington.
Pierson is a member of the Lions Club, Alta Vista Golf Club and Men's Association, Executive Board of Anaheim Red Cross and the Ambassadors of the Chamber of Commerce.
He and his wife Elizabeth have six children.
THE MAC RAES — Gordon and Sheila, stars of "Bells are Ringing," Broadway musical hit opening July 21 at Melodyland Theatre for a two week run.