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Page: of 26

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NEVADA COUNTY NGG CEES
Sen
Serving the communities of Nevada City, Grass Valley, Red Dog, T A 1g, Town Talk, Glenbrook. Little York, Cherokee, Mooney Flat, Sweetland, Al 0. French Corral, pny
rere rn thdiy eee Pes tee ug, Relief Hill, Washington, Blue Tent, LaBarr Meadows, Cedar Rid, e, Union Hill, Peardale, Summit Cin: Wcllenon, Coa
iberty Sailor Lake City, Selby Flat, Grizzly Hill, Gold Flat, Soggsville, Gold Bar, Lowell Hill, Bourbon Hill, Scotch Hill, North Columbia, C:
Willow Valley, Newtown, Indian Flat, Bridgeport, Birchville, Moore’s Flat, Orleans Flat, Remington Hill, Anthony House, Delirium Tremens.
h and Ready, Graniteville, North
Eye, Lime e Kiln, Chicago Park, Wolf, Christmas
mbia Hill, Brandy Flat, ‘Sebastopol, Quaker Hill,
Volume 39, Number7 10CentsACopy PublishedThursdays, Nevada City February 13, 1964
MERIT AWARD..
‘General Excellence’
.Nevada County Nugget’ editor
Dean Thompson (left) accepts the congratulations
of Governor Edmund G. Brown at Coronado Saturday after the governor presented the Nugget
witha California Newspaper Publisher's Association Merit Award for General Excellence.
Publishers Honor Nugget
A Merit Award for General
Excellence was presented to the
Nevada County Nugget Saturday
in Coronado, Calif., as a part of
the annual California Newspaper
Publisher's Association Better
Newspaper Contest.
The Merit Award was the second most prized award given to
weekly newspapers at the convention. The General Excellence
Trophy, top prize for a weekly,
was won.by the Menlo Park Recorder and Gazette, a metropolitan newspaper with 15,500 circulation. MenloPark's population is
27 , 233.
General Excellence awards were
also. won by the Van Nuys News,
andthe San Fernando Valley Shin,
both newspapers that publish more
than once a week; and by the Lodi
News-Sentinel, Roseville Daily
Press-Tribune, the Riverside
Daily Enterprise, andthe San Jose
Mercury, all daily newspapers in
two separate circulation classifications.
Nevada County Nugget editor
Dean Thompson, who with his
wife, Vee, attended the CNPA
convention and accepted the
award, said, "In view of the other
general excellence awards to
weekly newspapers all going to
newspapers that are situated in
metropolitan areas, we of the
Nugget staff accept this award to
mean that our publication is ac(Continued on Page 21)
i
Parking Is Indefinite
Officials ‘Hedge’ —
On Landscape Plan
By Dean Thompson
Representatives of the California Division of Highways met
with the Nevada City Council
Monday night and councilmen
learned:
1. The freeway construction
program has been delayed, with
current plans calling for the let~
ting of the Nevada City freeway
contracttobid in “late summer"
Gold Flat
‘C Zone ..
Approved
The county planning commissionhas recommended to the
board of supervisors that 25 of 42
acres proposed for a new C-Commercial zone in Gold Flat be so
zoned,
The application of Robert Graham forthe zoning was supported
at Monday night's commission
meeting by Neil Hennessy and
Wally Brunker, representing GraVada Enterprises, which will develop the property.
Brunker explained that the proposed shopping center would be
architect-designed. A sketch of
possible facilities, drawn by Forrest Duranceau, Yuba City architect, was displayed. Morgan Ford
Sales is expected to occupy a
comer of the property along Gold
Flat Rd. adjacent tothe projected
freeway.
Brunker saidthe southerly portion of the proposed zone might
be developed for multiple or
single dwellings. The commis-~sion saw no reason to include this
area.in the C zone.
Atentative map for a 137 unit
subdivision on 67 acres abutting
the north shore of lower Scotts
Flat reservoir was not approved,
due to lack of provisions for fire
protection, pollutioncontrol,
erosion control, utility easements, safety setbacks from the
lake, ‘and adequate roads. A
letter from EdBrowning, superintendent of the Nevada City School
District, recommended denial
due to lack of school bus access.
after completion of rights of way
acquisition in “mid-summer”.
2. The division has obtained
approval of the sale to the city
after completion of the freeway
of a strip of property north of
Ott's Assay Office for development by the city of an off-street
parking facility.
3. There will not be a freeway: landscaping plan presented
for an indefinite time, although
the division welcomes an opportunity to: meet with representatives of local organizations interested in voicing an opinion on the
type of landscaping desired in
Nevada City.
4, There will be nolandscaping at all unless the council adopts
abillboard ordinance which gets
the approval of the division.
The meeting was in the nature J
of a report by division regional
representative Bill Sherwood and
landscape architect Dana Bowers
Neither mentioned the loss of the
sequoia tree to the council---a loss which wasreported later in
the meeting to the council by a
letter from assistant state highway engineer Alan Hart.
The report left in the air some
statements made by Hart to the
council early in December. At
that time the engineer said that
although the state will do what
the city wants in landscaping, the
state will start out by presenting
a plan, a suggestion.
Hart in December said that
parking and freeway beautification are problems that go hand
in handin planning for construc,tion, and at that time asked for
the council's decision on the Coyote St. parking site, adding that
the state was working on landscaping for the freeway and would
present a landscaping plan for the
city's study as soon as it was finished by Dana Bowers.
Things have changed since
December, and apparently the
city will not have a freeway landscape plan until the highway is
well into its 18 months of cone
struction.
"We can't prepare a plan in
advance, " Bowerstold the coun(Continued on Page 2)
D
The 99-year-old sequoia com=
munity Christmas tree will f
removed during constructi
the Nevada City freeway, it'was
revealed Monday night.
In -a letter to the Nevada City
Council, assistant state. pore ay
engineer Alan Hart said free~
way contract will include the re
moval of the tree.
Text of Hart's letter, which was
mailedtothe city Feb. 7 sfollowst
“Gentlemen:
"This isin regard to the s
tree which, with the vari
torical features, has been the
subject of discussion and study as
to possible ways and means of
preservation,
"We have explored the possibilities of saving the tree by.
shifting the freeway alignment
aw ay from the tree or the con~struction of aretaining wall. The
latter alternate appeared the less
infeasible, but required a high,
costly, retaining wall and it
seems certain in spite of the effort
thatthe tree would not long sur=
vive and additionally if it continued to live with a greatly
reduced root system it vrobably,
in ahigh wind, would fall across
the freeway or Sacramento Street.
“Although we appreciate the
desirability of preserving the
tree we are developing our contract plans on the basis that it
must be removed,
"Very truly yours, AlanS, Hart.”
(Continued on Page 2)
City Leaves
Vacancy On
Council
High school teacher Dan O ‘Neill
came within one vote of getting
a seat on the Nevada City Council
Monday night.
O'Neill was suggested to fill the.
vacant council seat by Councilman Arch McPherson who had
high praise for the only man who
applied for appointment to the
post.
Councilman Ben Barry also
favored O'Neill filling the post,
citing respect he had for the
qualifications of O'Neill.
But Councilman Craig Davies,
later joined by Mayor Bob Carr,
suggested that the post be kept
open until it is filled at the
April 14 city election.
Mayor Carr suggested that a
"lame duck” councilman be
named to fill the seat, one not
running for the office, but did
(Continued on Page 2)
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