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Page: of 12

Frog flag is homeward
bound to Calaveras county
A mothball scented frog flag
has come from a 20-year hiding
place in a Nevada City trunk,
and next Wednesday will be
homeward bound to Frogtown,
Calaveras County, U.S.A.
The frog, leaping rampant
across a field of white, is the
symbol of the Jumping Frog
Jubilee, which annually celebrates Mark Twain's tale of
"The Jumping Frog of Calaveras County." It was uncovered recently “when City Councilman Bob Paine donated it to
the Nevada City Chamber
of Commerce Hall of Fame auction, :
Calaveras county chamber officials, learning that the flag
reportedly was the first to be
hoisted at Frogtown, topped all
bids for the banner.
Paine and county and city
chamber officials will deliver
the flag to its rightful heritage
amidst trumpeting and fanfare.
A pony express rider will run
the flag from Angels Camp to
Frogtown, where Calaveras
county will host a celebration
luncheon. The Angels Camp
Booster Club, which midwifed at
the birth of the Frogtown banner, will be special guests.
According to Paine, he acquired the Calaveras county
treasure through a “legitimate”
business. transaction, He swapped two pictures of Josie and
Betsy, the last of the Oustomah
Indians for the colorful Calaveras memorablia. The late Al
Trivelpiece, a former Angels
Camp resident, was recipient of
the pictures,
Carl Mills, who did a stint
as manager of the Calaveras
county event from 1938 until
' 1959, today said the flag first
flew over Frogtown during the
1948 fair and jubilee. :
According to Mills, now retired: and living in Sacramento,
after serving several years as
manager of» the amento
County Fair, he and Trivelpiece,
public relations man for the Calaveras County Fair and Jubilee,
conceived the idea of substituting the frog for the bear on the
California State Flag, and to seek
legislation for the switch, _
John Kemp, aSacramento artitst, was comandeered to design
the flag; a San Francisco firm
volunteered to manufacture it;
and the frog was in business.
Trivelpiece drafted a tongue in
cheek resolution proclaiming the
frog more symbolic of California
than the bear. The late Senator
Jesse Mayo of Angels Camp,
introduced the resolution into the
assembly. It was referred tothe
committee on swamps, rivers
and harbors. The swamp designation was: a spontaneous addition to the more formal Rivers
and Harbors Committee, and
was designed to be more fitting
for proposed frog .legislation.
The resolution contended
bears frighten women and children, raid chicken coops, upset
garbage cans, and are a general
nuisance, Whereas the bull frog
furnished food for early day miners, predicted weather by croaking out wet and dry spells, and
had been immortalized in history
by that great American, Mark
Twain. ;
Mills smiled as he told that
the Native Daughters of the Golden West opposed the proposed
change. He said a magazine
published by the Western Fairs
Association in December of 1956
‘quoted him as telling the native
daughters "go home and stick to
raising kids."
The new flag was unfurled in
the senate chamber while Angels Camp boosters and others
friendly to frogs cheered
from the gallery. But alas -the proposed legislation died
in committee.
However, the day followingits
death, the frog flag fluttered
from the flag pole at the University of California Campus
at Berkeley. . Firemen were required to. retrieve it, for some
enthusiast had. cut the ropes.
For a. period the same jumping.
. frog hung on the walls of the
Berkeley Elks Hall,
Ray Callahan, manager of the
Calaveras County District Fair,
today said a frog flag still flies
over Frogtown, and welcomes
the return of ‘the long-missing
banner. It will be hoisted again
come tke spring and jubilee time
to the Calaveras foothills,
KEEP FROM
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WINNER. @D TRAFFIC SAFETY
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THIS FROG FLAG reported to be the first ever flown at the
Calaveras County Jumping Frog Jubilee was unearthed froma
Nevada City trunk, and auctioned at the recent Nevada City
Chamber of Commerce Hall of Fame Sale,’ The Calaveras
County Chamber of Commerce topped all bids for its longmissing banner, and City Councilman Bob Paine and local
chamber officials will deliver the banner to Frongtown next
week, Nevada City Mayor John Rankin, pictured with the flag,
unofficially proclaimed Angels Camp a "sister city."
ASSEMBLY ©:
DISTRICT
An unprecedented four week,
33 campus tour has been completed by Assemblyman Gene
Chappie (R-Cool), It is believed
he is the first California legislator to undertake such an arduous fact finding campus project.
"I talked with over 10,000
students and over 400 teachers
and administrators", Chappie
said. "I took the tour to listen
and to learn what educational
and campus problems there are
at the high school and junior
college level. Iknow better now."
To visit all 33 high school
and college campuses in his
far-flung 11 county district,
Chappie had to travel about 3,500 miles, some by air. He
talked to the total student bodies of sixteen of the smaller
high schools and seniors or
selected classes in the bigger
schools. He met with faculties
and student councils at most
schools, answering. all questions posed,
"The concerns of high sehooi
students, as one would expect,
®
“Principally, however, today's
student has great concern about
our institutions and government
and legal, peaceful ways to
change them, In a progressively
libertarian world, they feel frustrated in a conservative, slowto-change, institution like ahigh
school. There is also great frustration about their "non-citizen
status' in society, They feel
‘acted upon’ rather than being
actors in it." j
The concerns of educators,
Chappie indicated, are not as
varied but equally deep-seated,
“High school faculty and administrators are concerned
about the public's apparent rejection of education at the bal_lot box -its poor image. They
feel education is not getting
‘
enough money from the’ state,
and that it is being used as a
‘political football,"
Rezoning.
goes back
to planners
To comply with a legal technicality, the Cherry Creek rezoning matter has been returned
to the county planning commission,
State law requires resubmission of zoning changes to the
_ planners if the board of supervisors alters the commission's
recommendation.
The board did just that in this
case, refusing to allow two exemptions that the commission
had said should be allowed.
The commission probably will
discuss the item next Monday
and can concur with the supervisors' change or Stay with its
own recommendation. Action
Monday could put the controversial rezoning back before
the supervisors next Tuesday.
The supervisors last week
denied exemptions for the Water
Wheel Recreation Center and a
piece of property at the southern edge of the proposed residential zone.
The Water Wheel's owner,
Richard LaRue, contended later
that zoning his property residential would prohibit him from
borrowing money to continue his
development as a non-conforming use.
Dep. County Counsel Brian
Bishop read an opinion Tuesday that stated LaRue’s use
permit remains valid, but ordinances prohibit enlarging a structure or expanding use of land
area which is non conforming.
However, the law also allows
LaRue to construct the specific
facilities for which he received
the use permit, Bishop ruled.
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WE, Oc1. 29, 1969 The Nevada County Nugget 5. 4