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Page: of 24

c
NORTHERN. MINES & CALIFORNIA REPORTS
ERE EEE HEI og FEE PE ot OE bP et +P tot
HARRY HILLMAN of Nevada City points to a portion of an old oven which he excavated during restoration of a building om Commerci
Salon, has been used for some time as a garage,
al Street last week. The building, located next to Alma’s Beauty
but was formerly a bakery and was also used at one
time as a laundry. The building is being renovated and will be the new location of Alma's.
Three Grass Valley Women Are
Sierra College Nurse Graduates
Three Grass Valley women will
be among the 13 graduates of the
third Vocational Nursing class at
Sierra College Jan. 21.
Nurse-Instructor Marjorie Sanchez will present pins at 8 p.m.
in the campus center to Mrs,
Harriet Boss, Mrs, Lillian Granholm and Mrs, Alice Severn of .
Grass Valley.
Also scheduled to receive the
pins symbolic of course completion are Mrs, Mary Hiatt, Newcastle; Mrs. Carolyn Gray and
Mrs, Lucille Hodge, Auburn; Judy
Koberlein and Mrs, Grace Mega~
han, Lincoln; Mrs, Margaret Roy,
Colfax; Mrs. Celia Schmidt and
Mrs. Sidney Bigley, of Greenwood,
Mrs. Gray, Mrs. Hughes, Miss
Koberlein, Mrs. Roy and Mrs.
Gehr willalso receive their Associate of Arts degrees from the
college.
The women have taken a minimum of three semesters of college
work and 1560 hours of instruction
to achieve their goals, They will
now take state cxaminations,
Sierra has never had a graduate
vocational nurse fail to pass the
exam and last year's class was
rated 12th best in the nation, a¢cording to college vocational dir~
ector Van Vliet, who credited
Mrs, Sanchez and local hospitals
for the record,
The program of graduation will
include remarks by Van Vliet,
College President Harold Weaver,
class president Mrs, Schmidt, and
an address “The Accomplishment
and the Inheritance," by Dr. C.
Jackson Rayburn, medical director of the Nevada County Hospital,
Mrs, Marie Crookshanks, director of nurses at Nevada County
Hospital, and Mrs, F. Coefield,
supervisor of obstetrics, Highland
General Hospital, Auburn, with
Mrs, V. Marstead, director of
nurses at Sierra Nevada Memorial
Hospital, will also appear on the
program.
Hostesses will be the District 19
Licensed Vocational Nurses Association.
Tax School For Farmers
ATax Management School for,
farmers and ranchers in Nevada
County is being planned by the
Farm Advisor's Office of the University of California. The instructional meeting willbe held at the
Veterans Memorial Building,
Grass Valley 7:30 tonight,
In announcing the program,
Farm Advisor Les McCabe said all
farmers and ranchers are urged to
attend this mecting as there have
been a number of important
changes in the tax laws this year,
In addition to presentations by
Farm Advisor Les McCabe, Uni‘versity of California Extension
economist Dr, Doyle Reed from
Davis and Grass Valley attorney
Harold Wolters w ill participate
in the meeting.
The 1965 edition of the
Farmer's Tax Guide covering income and self employment taxes
is available from the Farm Ad(Continued on Page 5)
County Will Get Chante AF
Parks And Recreation Funds
Within three weeks local county
governments will receive official
application forms for seeking
their share of $40 million in direct grants from the state's $150
million Parks and Recreation Bond
Act of 1964, according to Mrs.
Rudd Brown, Chief of the State
Division of Recreation.
In reporting to the State Recreation Commission last week at
a commission meeting held here,
Mrs. Brown said the application
forms, along with full information regarding their use, will be
mailed to all county supervisors,
the mayor of each city, and all
local and county recreation administrators, The information
packet willinclude a copy of the
Park and Recreation Bond Act, the
criteria on which each application will be judged, and, based
on population, the total amount
towhich each county in the state
is entitled.
Under the chairmanship of Mrs.
Dewey J. Forry, the Recreation
Commission spent most of the day
receiving the comments of representatives of county and city
governmehts and various recreation: organizations regarding the
Tahoe Personnel
Withdraw 3,188
Acres Of Mining
The Bureau of Land Management has published notice of the
proposed withdrawal from mineral
entry of approximately 3,188
acres of Tahoe National Forest
land.
Congressman Harold T. (Bizz)
Johnson, representing the second,
mountain-valley counties, district, said that notices published
in the New Year's Day Federal
Register state that the Forest Service desired the withdrawals to
provide a roadside zone along
both sides of U.S. Highway 40
and State Highways 89 and 20.
The roadside zones would extend three hundred feet on each
side of Highway 40 through por~
tions of TI6N, R11E, TI7N, R12E,
T17N, R15E, T17N, R16E, and
T18N, R17E.
On High 89 the strip would
be 200 feet wide on each side of
the centerline in townships 15, 16
and17, all Range 16 East. Highway 20 withdrawals would be in
Township 17};\ranges 11 and 12
East.
The -purpose’ of he withdrawal
from mineral entry is for the
protection of esthetic and scenic
values of the highway strips along
the roads mentioned, The withdrawal will prohibit mining activity in these areas, but valid
existing rights will be recognized
and the order will not alter the
applicability of public land laws
governing the use of national forest lands under lease, license or
permit.
proposed, merging of the state's
Recreation Commission and Park
Commission, and a reorientation
of the work of the State Division
of Recreation.
On ‘the recommendations of a
state commission on governmental efficiency Governor Edmund
G, Brown reported to the Legislature that he will ask them to
merge the Park Commission and
Recreation Commission into.a
single commission.
The 1963 Legislature advised
the Division of Recreation to ¢oncentraté on statewide planning for
recreation and to curtail its program of assisting local governments in initiating, improving,
or ex panding local recreation
programs.
Representatives of the California Supervisors Association, the
League of California Cities, the
State Department of Education,
the Recreation Educators of California, the California Parks and
Recreation Society and the National Recreation Association presented almost unanimous opinions
on both measures.
They indicated they would support the proposed changes only if
other adequate means of providing local recreation program as-~
sistance were established, ‘and if
they can be assured that recreation programs will not be outweighed by strictly park program
under the one-commission concept. The Recreation Commission
agreed that a committee of its
members should meet with the
State Resources Administrator,
Hugo Fisher, for clarification of
the Governor's proposal to merge
the two commissions,
Four Parks
Are Flooded
The State Division of Beaches
and Parks today warmed the public
to avoid four parks that have been
inundated by high waters, Edward
F, Dolder, Chief of the Division
of Beaches and Parks, said that it
is also likely that rising water will
close two other parks.
The flooded parks are: CurryBidwell Bar State Park, Butte
County; Colusa-Sacramento River
State Recreation area, Colusa
County; Caswell Memorial State
Park, San Joaquin County; and
Turlock Lake State Recreation
Area, Stanislaus County,
If present conditions continue,
McConnell State Recreation
Area, Merced County, and
George]. Hatfield State Recreation Area, San Benito County are
expected to be flooded.
Dolder said the closures are
temporary and just as soon as the
waters subside and the parks are
cleared, they will be reopened
for public use,
co6t ‘pr Arenuer’**1083nN Aiunop eperen*** ph Januarv 14. 1965...Nevada Countv Nugget... @n