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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada County Nugget

September 24, 1964 (28 pages)

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25 ~ iY) oO oO Ej a > 5 to] O i] ~o > vo a o for) pa a N [I cy aQ = A) r~ a. LY) wn Mr. & Mrs. Lee Jordan University. Of California Offers Television Course. The University of California Agricultural Extension Service will present its first television short course on KVIE, Channel 6, this fall, announces Mary Hussey , home advisor. Home furnishings will be the subject of the course which begins October 8 at 8 p.m. and will continue each Thursday evening through November 12. This home furnishing course will give homemakers ideas and information for achieving pleas~ing design in their homes. It will help them make the best use of their living space, It will also help homemakers choose attrac tive furnishings and select the best buys for their money. Grace Kampen, Extension Home Furnishings Specialist, will be the instructor for this course. She received her Masters Degree Ronald Regan To Address Supporters Of Goldwater-Miller Screen starRonaldReagan will delivera major address in Placer County on October 7. Reagan, Chairman of Citizens for Goldwater-Miller .n California, will appear in the auditorium ofthe Placer Union High School, Auburn, at 8 p.m. Sponsoring the Reagan appear~ ance are Placer County Young Republicans and Mother Lode United Republicans of California(UROC). Tickets may be obtained in Grass Valley from Elizabeth Svenson, 273-8639, and Marilyn Dick, 273 -8275. from Washington State Univ ersity and has studied home futnishings in many foreign countries, Membership in the c ourse is free but will be by enrollment only. Only homemakers enrolled will receive the literature whic supplements each program in the \ series. They may also attend a special workshop at the conclusion of the television series conducted by Miss Kampen on “Choosing Colors For Your Home, ” Toenroll in this home furnish~ings television course, send a post card to station KVIE*TV, Box 6, Sacramento, Print your name andaddress on the card and state that you wish to be enrolled in the course, You will receive the literature supplementing each program, You will also be notified ofthe workshop meeting on “Choosing Colors For YourHome” following the television series. Dennis Mahaffey Serving On Oiler In Vietnam Waters vennis M, Mahaffey, radio manthirdclass, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs, Clifford L. Mahaffey of Nevada City, is serving aboard the fleet oiler USS Hassayampa, operating in the Western Pacific as one of the Seventh Fleet units put on alert following the recent North Vietnamese PT boat attacks in the Gulf of Tonkin. Hassayampa provides fuel to the ships of the fleet enabling them to remain at sea longer without the support of land bases. Double Ring Ceremony Marks Marriage Of Mary Jo Swartz On Saturday evening, September 12, Mary Jo Swartz became the bride of Lee Jordan. The double ring ceremony was held in the Community Baptist Church of Nevada City, with the Rev. B.J. Morford officiating. Miss Sheila Sims of Grass Valley was the organist and Mr. Legrand Stirling sang “Walk Hand in Hand" and “The Lord's Prayer.” The bride wore a Peau de Soi sheath gown with a pleated overskirt, which was secured in front by a flat bow, and was finished with three-quarter length sleeves anda bateau neckline, Her elbow length veil fell from a headpiece of silk rose buds and pearls. Her bouquet was of miniature carna~tions and stephanotis. Judy Gideon was her sister's matron of honor with Phyllis Lollich and Patricia Brown as brides~ maids, The three attendants wore identical ankle-length gowns of moss green delustered satin with matching jackets, Their shoes and Dior rose hats were moss green and they carried cascade bouquets of aqua carnations. Douglas Brown was the best man, with Kenneth Gideon and Willie Nobles serving as ushers for the many local and out-oftown friends and relatives of the bride and groom. The bride's mother wore a beige crepe dress with brown tone on tone accessories, Mrs. Jordon Joe Bottini To Speak To Pharmacists Joseph F, Bottini, the new Executive Secretary of the Calirocks Waite Board of Pharmacy,
will be the guest speaker at the tonight at the Hellenic Center) Alhambra Blvd, and F Streets, Sacramento, Bottini will speak\on "Quackery andthe Law," a subject on which he is an authority, having served withthe Bureau of Food and Drug Inspection for 25 years. \ The Sacramento Valley Pharmaceutical Association will be a grass roots organization meeti in the Capital City of Sacramento and bringing together all pharmacists fromthe greater surrounding area for the purpose of fellowship, post graduate education, and to further the standards of Pharmacy. Membership will be open to all registered pharmacists in the counties of Sacramento, Placer, El Dorado, Yolo and Nevada, Major items of business at this meeting will be the election of permanent officers and the adop~tion of a constitution and by-laws. All registered pharmacists in the five county area are cordially invited to this meeting. 7 chose a blue shantung suit with matching hat and black patent accessories, A reception was held in the Veteran's hall following the ceremony. Mrs, Alan Hahn and Mrs. Homer Sims cut and served the wedding cake while Mrs, Victor Berry and Mrs, Ed Drake presided at the punch bowl. Mrs. Harold Nobles was in charge of the guest book. The newlyweds left for a honeymoon in Yosemite and points of interest in Southern California, The new Mrs, Jordan chose for her going away costume, a suit of royal blue wdol and matching hat. The bride's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Swartz of 734 Zion Street, Nevada City. The groom isthe son of Mrs, Esther Jordan of Santa Rosa and Mr, Edgar L. Jordan of Lancaster. Mary Jo is a 1961 graduate of Nevada Union High School and Lee graduated from Antelope Valley high in 1957, They both attended Sierra College and are employed locally. State Chamber Takes Stand On Propositions Qualified endorsement of all three bond issues, Propositions 1, 2 and 3 on the November ballot, and unqualified opposition to the anti-pay-TV initiative measure, Prop. 15, were voted last week by the state-wide board of directors of the California State Chamber of Commerce, meeting at the El Dorado Hotel, Sacramento, Opposition to Prop. 16, the lot~ tery initiative proposal, and sup-port of Prop. 13 prohibiting the naming of a private corporation in a constitutional amendment, had earlier been announced by the State Chamber. The Chamber likewise had expressed support earlierthis year of the anti-featherbedding initiative measure, Prop, 17. Support for these additional November ballot measures was voted by the Chamber today: Prop. 4(residency requirement for veterans’ tax exemption), Prop. 6 (revision of retaliatory taxation on out -of -state insurers), Prop. 9(county supervisorial district boundaries), Prop. 10 (State School Fund), and Prop. 11(municipal functions of county officers). Chamber opposition was established for Prop. 5 (veterans' tax exemption for widows), Prop. 7 (public retirement funds) and Prop. 12 (property tax relief in disasters). "No position” was voted for Prop. 8(election of superior court judges) on the grounds that the issue is basically a local one, involving four counties. Proposition 14 (initiative endment aimed at repeal of the Rumford Act) has not yet been considered by the Chamber, On he bond proposals the Chamber, while recommending support of\all three, qualified its approvalon the basis of longstanding sup of the principal of “pay-as-you*go” on General Fund capital outlay financing rather than dependence on borrowing. IN The directors registered\strong objection to continuance of Yeliance on debt financing inherent in the three bond measures but agreed nevertheless to support them, with these qualifying statements: "Prop. 2 is the last State Construction bond proposal and Prop. 3 is the last State School Building Aid bond proposal the State Chamber can support as the programs are presently constituted. “If the intent expressed recently by the Legislature (in resolutions introduced at the State Chamber's request) to put more emphasis: on pay-as-you-go is carried out, Proposition 2 should provide enough monies to move pay-asyou-go on a gradual basis, thereby obviating the need for an additional bond authorization for a number of years if at all, " "Before 1966, a thorough Legislative study of the State School Building Aid Program must be made toward the end of placing more emphasis on pay-as-you-go financing and making substantive improvements in the programs themselves, " Prop, 1, authorizing $150 million for recreational lands, was supported by the Chamber solely because of its““one-time nature and the urgent need to expand state and local recreational facilities, " Chico State Receives Building Fund Monies A $409,700 building program for the Chico State College farm has been formally approved by a State Senate Fact Finding Committee on Agriculture, “ Although the Legislature had already acted favorably on the proposals, the committee's approval was necessary before the Depart ment of Finance could spend the money. The money will be used at Chico State to build farm facilities--a beef breeding barn, a farm mechanics building, a field and fruit crops building, a sheep barn, concrete aisles in the existing feed barn, and a well and irrigation system,