Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).

Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard

Show the Page Image

Show the Image Page Text


More Information About this Image

Get a Citation for Page or Image - Copy to the Clipboard

Go to the Previous Page (or Left Arrow key)

Go to the Next Page (or Right Arrow key)
Page: of 12

errr ener nena ee
(A summary of significant
events as reported in the
U.S. metropolitan press and
national periodicals. )
eeee8.
gressional charges of an arms
build-upin Cuba, Secretary
of Defense McNamara denied the charges on a 2-hour
nationwide TV broadcast
from WASHINGTON Feb. 6.
He supported his statements
with intelligence photographs from aerial reconnaissance flights.
On Feb. 7, CIA Director
McCone gave similar assurance tothe Senate Preparedness Subcommittee.
Athis Friday press conference President Kennedy
stated that the arms and personnel remaining in Cuba are
sufficient for defense only.
He called irresponsible the
Congressmen who give unsubstantiated reports and refuse to identify their informants. He saidthat “we have
to deal with facts. .not rumors and speculations. . . before we bring the U.S, and
-. our allies. .to the brink
again.” He said thereal
dangers to Latin America are
the “desperate conditions in
the countries themselves."
e@eeees
In WASHINGTON, William C. Foster, director of
the U.S, Arms Control and
Disarmament Agency, explained in a letter to the
House Republican Conference Committee, that a nucleartest ban would preserve
U.S. superiority in nuclear
weapons until agreement on
disarmament is reached.
With improved detection
methods, only single small
underground tests could go
undiscovered, he said. Little
military progress can be
made except in a test series,
_ which is easy to detect.
» Foster replaces Arthur
Dean as head. of the U.S.
delegation to the 18-nation
disarmament conference in
Geneva.
eeesees
Onthe eve of the resumption of test-ban negotiations
Following repeated con-°
’ safeguard. .a Europe econunited, towhich one day..
Britain will belong by accepting its rules," but that
first “the threat from the East
must cease, and a true detente must exist" between
Western Alliance, He said
that France favors cooperation between independent
national nuclear forces,
rather than one multinational nuclear force.
eeees8
In an interview Friday in
MOSCOW with a Canadian
newspaper publisher, Premier Khrushchev denied that
day join the west in an alliance against China, a theory
suggested by General de
Gaulle.
In MOSCOW, the Soviet
Communist Party offered to
meet the Chinese Communists “at any level and at any
time” to discuss idealogical
differences and pave the way
for a_general conference of
all Communists. It maintained its support of Yugoslavia, however, as a member
of the World Communist
Movement.
eee8 8
In PEKING, the Chinese
Communist Party turned
down Moscow's suggestion for
a preliminary meeting betw een the two powers, reiterating its demand that
Yugoslavia be ousted as
counter-revolutionary and a
menace to Communism.
1963 eseee
omically and: politically
the Soviet Union and the.
Nevada County NUGGET
Field Day Saturday .
GRASS VALLEY ---Nevada
County's 4-H Demonstration
Field Day will be held Saturday at Nevada Union High
School, Chairmen Lucille
Dittl and Phil Gregory announced today.
The public is invited to
attendthe day -long’ demonStration.
The program will open
at 9a.m. with registration
Continuing for an hour. A
brief assembly for announcements will precede the
opening of the demonstrations, slated for 10:15’ a.m.
Demonstrations will continue until a closing assembly is called at 2:45 p.m.,
with half hour luncheon
breaks in clothing and food
schedules at noon, and for
agricultural schedules at
12.30 p.m.
In the event of rain, agricultural judging will be
handled at the Nevada County Fairgrounds on McCourtney Rd.
Some 178 presentations
will be made in eight categories.
The following clubs ‘will
be represented, withthe
number of entries from each:
Alta Oaks Sunset, 16; Banner,
6; Chicago Park, 15; Forest
Springs, 6; Kentucky Flat,
10; Meadow Larks, 11; Ney=
ada City, 17; Shady Creek,
4; Spring Hill, 29; and Woodchuckers, 17.
Publicity chairman is
Betty Fusek; photographer,
Bob W yckoff; information
booth cochairmen, Francis,
Selvester and Linda Bigelow;
food consession chaixman,
Mrs. Barbara Flynn.
Other officials of the event /
include Helen Brown, Dorothy Wood, Virginia Fetz,
Vivian Scofield, and Don
Frasier.
A briefing for judges, area
chiefs and masters of ceremonies will be held twice
Thursday. The first briefing
will be held from 11 a.m:
to 1 p.m. in the Veterans
Memorial Building.
The Fantastic
Land Of Fungi
By Lillian S. Mott
County Is
Growing At
Fast Clip
LOS ANGELES --Population
estimates of the California
Taxpayers’ Association reveal that Nevada County is
growing ata faster pace than
is average in California.
The association estimates
Nevada County population at
23,370, up §1.3 per cent
at Geneva, the Republican
Committee on Nuclear Testing in WASHINGTON attacked the Administration's
position that recent advances.
in long-range detection
made possible a reduction in
on-site inspections,
from the 1960 census.
Placer County also shows
above average growth, increasing 17.2 per cent since
the census; while Sierra
County's growth is under the
average forthestate, up 4.6
per cent to 2,350 persons.
At GENEVA, Vasely Kuznetzov protested that U.S.
resumption of underground
tests seriously hampered ne-.
gotiations.
eeees8
The restless Middle East
erupted in a new revolution
on Feb. 8 when army rebels
in IRAQ seized and executed
Premier Abdel Kassim. The
Highway Rebate
SACRAMENTO ---TheJanuary split of highway users
taxes among the State, cities
and counties amountedto
$33,213,419, State Controller Alan Cranston reported today.
Nevada County's share was
This column is for the purpose of sharpening the interest of would-be Mycologists (those who study mushrooms) and Mycophogists(those who eat mushrooms), and
not tobe used as positive identification of poisonous and
non -poisonous mushrooms.
_ NG ‘my a p>
FAWN-COLORED PLUT EUS (edible),
Pluteus cervinus
Such an attractive group of three mushrooms growing
at the base of a dead oak--one couldn't help*but admire
their smooth, neat beauty! These slender-stemme d
lovelies stood seven inches tall on white stems with
brown ma rkings; the buff-brown umbonate caps, four
inches in diameter, having tan gills which turned pink
at maturity. The skin on the cap had the appearance of
kid-skin. T hese can be found on old sawdust piles and
in moist shaded places and are considered choice eating.
It is the combination of the features just described
which make these so attractive, rather than having any
bright colorations, which they did not. I was so taken up
with the three Pluteus mushrooms that I didn't even no=
= RY wea si — 2
HIGH WATER---Don Costa stands in the
$28,224, Cranston said. ground at the right edge of the picture.
tice the small Mycena mushroom lurking in the backcenter of where his living room used to be
and indicates the high water level. The
Costa home was washed from its foundarebellion was led by a 35year old officer, Abdel Mustafa, associated with a socialist pan-Arab movement,
Radio Cairo hailed the revolution as the beginning of
the end of monarchies in the
Middle East. President Nasser immediately recognized
the new regime, Abdel
Salam Arif was appointed
provisional president. The
new -government announced
itself for neutralism and Arab
unity.
e@seee
In CANADA, Prime Minister Diefenbaker's conservative government was toppled by a no-confidence vote
of acoalition of thé Liberal,
New Democrat, and Social
Credit parties, following
U.S. State Department cfiticism of Canadian reluctance
toaccept U.S. nuclear warheads for its U. S.made
missiles.
Diefenbaker called
for elections on April 8 and
calledhis opponent, Liberal
leader and Nobel Prize -winner Lester Pierson, a “tool”
of the U.S. Pierson, however, said that “Canadian
defense policy should be reexamined. . dependence on
American nuclear power
should be..reduced, and
Canada's conventional forces
built up."
eeeee
Attempts were made to
heal the breathes in both
Eastern and Western blocs.
French Ambassador Herve
Alphand, speaking at the
Ambassadors* Forum in
Chambersburg, PEN NSYL_VANIA, onFeb, 4, said that
_ France seeks “to preserve the
ONE WAY... -The Nevada City police department last week
erected one way signs on Bridge St., through the Purity parking lot, between Broad and Spring Sts. Motorists are cautio
alliance with America and . tO enter by Broad St. and exit on Spring St.
tion and destroyed. The rocks and debris
in this picture cover what was once yard
ofthis picture. The MacMahon, Costa, and Stevens homes were total losses and
and the Lolmaugh home was knocked off its foundation.
SAND---Great quantities of sand covered
a block long area on Water Street. This
garden gate appears to have been washed
up on the beach when actually the sand
has washed up on it.
ned
and garden.
ROCKLIN ---Only two students could pull "The Trick”
last se mest er=~-the trick
being that of compiling a
perfect 4.0, straight A's,
President Harold Weaver reported this week.
President Weaver's se mesterly honor roll of top students, those who earned
morethan a 3.5 grade point
average, last semester numbered 24, with Barbara Olgilvie of Cool and Kerry E.
Troutwine of Nevada City
scoring perfect 4. 0 averages.
Near perfect averages
were turned in by Auburn's
Michael Reuter (3.94) who
is now at UC-Berkeley; by
Carla Sepponen (3.83) of
day or night
simplicity..
ready to serve you
Roseville; by Kaye M. Nishio
(3.79) of Auburn; and Judith
L. Baldwin of Auburn, Robert L. Miller of Folsom, and
Theodora F., Simpson of
Grass Valley (all 3.75).
Others earning top honors
included---from Auburn,
Sandra Bonar, Linda Bohannon, Ruta Pavulins, George
Asay, Lana Cole and Karen
Huttula; from Grass Valley
and Nevada City, Nita Bird,
Douglas Evans and Earl HisCOX,
Seventy-three other students with 12 or more units
of work earned honors with
grade point averages between 3.0 (B's) and 3.5.
They included:
BERGEMANN
Funeral Chapel
246 Sacramento St.
Nevada City
Auburn: Richard Alman,
Kathryn Axhelm, Tom
Blackburn, Louise Brewer,
Robert Chittenden, Mary
Butler, Carl Fagerskog, Jo
Ann Griffith, Suzanne Jackson, Jeanette Jose, Ethel
Kanes, Leland Mansuetti,
Bonnie Meyer, Pat Quigley,
Dennis Ringer, Peter Van
Vleet, Frank Wilson; Itsuo*®
Yokota, and Quentin Headley.
Cedar Rid
Knox,
Grass Valley: Yvonne
e: William
Printing For
Every Purpose
**CIRCULARS
**STATIONERY
** MAIL PIECES
#*BILLS
**xFORMS
Mrs. Troutwine Pulls ‘Trick’, Gets Perfect Grades
Filer, Virginia Hagaman,
Carol Kennedy, Nancy
Miller, Patricia Osborne.
Nevada Cit y: Doris Jenkins, Tom McKenzie
Norden: Chris Schull
Smarrtsville:: Walter K.
White
' Give
Us
A Try
* Water Proofing
* Rough Dry Lavadry
* Finished Laundry
wm Alterations and
Mending
i]
* Hats Cleaned
end Blocked
“Dependable Service
NEVADA CO. PRINTING
end PUBLISHING
212 W. Meia St.
GRASS VALLEY
With Custom Care”
GORDON
CLEANERS
Hills Flat-next to Black Bart
PHONE 273-8571
Member of National
Institute of Dry Cleaners
ae —_ t
‘Seetk> . picah . Shas ec et ok
s
g
]
t
¢
a