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The San Bernardino County Sun from San Bernardino, California • Page 22

Location:
San Bernardino, California
Issue Date:
Page:
22
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Jon. 8, 1970 (CCCJ THE SUN-M Schedules, Routes Changed Bus Service Not Doieg Well effort to eliminate some streets that were providing no passengers and to increase the service. "Mr. Deaton tells us the bus has averaged a cash take of about $9 a day, less than one-third needed," Wagner reported. He said that it might be too soon to tell what normal operation will be since the service began just before Christmas and the week between Christmas and New Year's is an exceptional period.

To better serve the north route, the bus will make its first trip from Sage's at 8:30 a.m. each day and depart again from Sage's at 9:15 to make a second trip on the north route. From then through 4:30 p.m. the schedule will remain unchanged, but the last trip will be at 4:30. There has been no business later than that, according to Deaton.

On the north route the bus will now continue east on Brockton Avenue to Judson Street and south on Judson to Colton Avenue, then west past the University of Redlands. The trip out Redlands Boulevard to Texas Street will be eliminated, as will the loop around Center Street to Brookside Avenue. The change on the south route will send the bus south from Fern Avenue on Cajon Street to Highland Avenue, then west to San Mateo to Cypress Avenue and west on Cypress, Terracina Boulevard and the Hospital. The bus will return from the hospital on Fern to San Mateo and north to Brookside, resuming the original route. The bus will not travel along Olive Avenue at any point in the future.

Schedules are available on the bus, at City Hall switchboard and the Chamber of Commerce. Punishment Allowed REDLANDS -At the end of the se. cond week of operation, Redlands Bus Service has not been doing "too well," according to owner Roscoe Deaton of Yucaipa. In a report to the City Council Tuesday -night, John Wagner, assistant to the city manager, stated he had conferred with Deaton about some modifications to the schedule and the routes in an If Zt's Reasonable ral YUCAIPA -Policy No. 3166 which authorizes teachers, principals and other certificated personnel to administer reasonable corporal or other punishment to students "when such action is deemed an appropriate corrective measure" was given second reading and approved Tuesday night by the Yucaipa Joint Unified School District board.

The policy Mas given first reading on Dec. 16 after being submitted to the county counsel and given his approval. "A decision to take disciplinary action of any sort with a student calls for a considered judgment by a competent professional," a section of the policy 1 reads. "A further judgment is necessary relative to parental notification and follow-up. Responsibility for appropriate decisions in these areas shall lie with the building principal or assistant principal.

"When reasonable corporal punishment is deemed appropriate by a principal or assistant principal, the student's Corpo Ancient Asistencia's Adobe Walls of On -Site Bricks He also gave details on practices followed in language learning and specific skills developed in the course. Another oral report was given by Hurry Townsend concerning the district's maintenance program. He also discussed future plans for the area regarding gardening and grounds work, servicing of equipment, painting and repairing of buildings and facilities, and replacement of equipment. The board also accepted books donated to Yucaipa Elementary School by the Yucaipa Elementary PTA, then approved a plan to have a thank-you letter be written to that PTA. The more than 60 books were selected in accordance with the rules and regulations developed by the district media center.

A thank-you letter will be sent to the Redlands-Yucaipa Chapter, California Association for Neurologically Handicapped Children, for a $25 gift donated to the district for use in the educationally handicapped students' classes. The board was informed that the money will be used to buy instructional REDLANDS A description and illustration of the San Bernardino-Asistencia of the Mission San Gabriel at 26930 Barton Road appeared in the December issue of the monthly newsletter issued by the San Bernardino County Museum Association. "In reconstruction, dirt on the site was found suitable for making bricks but material for the roof tiles had to be brought from another source," it was revealed. The guava, a plant next to the adobe, is described as one of the many new plants brought into Alta California by the mission fathers to teach the Indians Janet Jordan and Hilliard Rhoades Installed to Rebekalu IOOF Posts parent(s) shall be contacted. Corporal punishment shall only be administered with parental consent, then only by a principal or assistant principal and in the presence of an adult witness.

"In each instance when reasonable corporal punishment is administered, a report setting forth circumstances surrounding the incident shall je submitted to the superintendent within one week. "If corporal punishment is not administered, the student shall suspended for the remainder of the school day." A report on the foreign language instruction program at Yucaipa High School was also presented Tuesday night by Dr. Thomas P. Cahraman, principal, and representatives from that YHS department. Vincent R.

Magana, Spanish teacher who is department chairman, made the main portion of the presentation. Objectives of the language program, he said, include mastery of the language, culture receptivity and study and application. it 17' JANET JORDAN treasurer; Mrs. Gilbert, warden; Mrs. Pinto, conductor; Mrs.

James, chaplain; Mrs. Anderson, musician; Mrs. Fulton, color bearer. Mrs. Hammer and Mrs.

Hall, right and left supporters to noble grand; Helen Walsh and Mrs. Jennison, right and left supporters to vice grand; Mrs. Edmondson and Margaret Rhoades, inside and outside guardians; Bessie Simms, assistant inside guardian; Mrs. Hoar and Mrs. Bumstead, right and left altar bearers.

Courtesy officers were Mmes. Blackburn, Larson, Pierce, Lucy B. Gray, Viola Condley, Curtis, Swenson and Sallie Littleton. NEW FROM PROVIDENT FEDERAL! Council Appeal REDLANDS The pharmacy without a name, open since last November, is still without a name, but doing business in Redlands. The latest sign proposal for the building at 232 Cajon St.

was turned down flat by the City Council Tuesday. Agreeing with the Planning Commission that the wording of the sign, "Cajon Professional Pharmacy and Dental Building," would give a commercial flavor to the area (in the administrative and professional zone), the council was unanimous in its opposition to it. An appeal filed with the council after the last denial by the Planning Commission asserted the commission's action was "arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable and that the ordinances to the extent they purport to authorize the foregoing arbitrary and unreasonable actions of the Planning Commission were and are illegal and void The appeal was signed by Dr. John L. Paulus as one of the owners of the agriculture.

Details in the newsletter concerned the history of the site; a mural done in fresco by Miss Lauretta Hardesty and Richard Beaman, University of Redlands art instructor; the rose of castile, favorite plant of Father Serra, father of the mission; olive tree, an agricultural introduction to California: fountain ornament, a carved replica of the Virgin de Los Lagos; chapel; altar ornaments; virgin figures; the museum that includes mission brands and handicrafts made by the Indians; and a gate which was formerly the main entrance to the mission. and to FONTANA 822-1137 REDLANDS 793-2174 saving's Denies for Sign building and the authorized agent of the other owners. Atty. Robert Fullerton. representing the appellants, reminded the council that the planning staff had recommended approval of the latest sign, but that' the commissioned had disregarded Planning Director W.

C. Schindler's re- commendation and rejected the proposed sign. "It is not necessary for either the council or the commission to adhere to the recommendations of the staff," Burroughs responded. Two Enter Competition YUCAIPA Two candidates have already signed up for the Miss Yucaipa Valley 1970 contest, according to the Yucaipa Valley Queen Pageant Committee. One is Sandy Mishodek, 18, of 1152!) Casa Blanca, and the other is Pamela F.

Wright, 17, a Yucaipa High School senior. Miss Mishodek, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mishodek, is five feet and one inch tall, weighs 118 pounds, and has hazel eyes and blonde hair. Her father is in the real estate business and her mother is a housewife, and the family includes four brothers and two sisters.

Miss Wright is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Malpass; her father is retired and her mother serves as a piano teacher. This contestant is five feet and five inches tall, weighs 115 pounds, has hazel eyes and brown hair, and she has three brothers and three sisters.

VICTOKVTLLE 245-8676 BARSTOW 256-6866 certificates free safe deposit box. REDLANDS Sapphire Rebekah Lodge and Redlands Odd Fellows Lodge held joint installation ceremonies recently, with Janet Jordan and Hilliard Rhoades installed noble grands of their respective lodges. One hundred and twenty-five members and guests attended the installation, held in the IOOF Hall, 255 E. Olive St. Harold E.

Love, district deputy grand master, and Helen Walsh, district deputy president, were the installing officers. They were assisted by the following deputy officers: Ben Elam and Evalyn Jen-nison, marshals; John Waugh and Peggy 'Pinto, warden; Clarence Quick and Sallie Littleton, secretaries; Everett 'Smith and Myrtle Curtis, treasurers; John Puckett and Edna Larson, chaplains; Helen Anderson, musician; Melvin Bisbee and Marjory Hoar, inside guardians; Elton Kitt and Rosalie James, outside guardians. Bible bearers were Grace Keiffer, Vinetta Blackburn, Maude Bumstead and Alma Swenson. The escort team was Mildred Hammer, Ethel Pierce, Orma Gilbert, Goldie Edmondson, Dorotha Meumann, Viola Condley, Effie Hall, Mrs. Jordan, Lucille Keener and Katherine Fulton.

Odd Fellow officers Installed with Rhoades were: Lawrence Osborn, past grand; Jack Bumstead, vice grand; J. D. McQuinn, warden; M. L. Anderson, conductor; Howard Keener, chaplain; H.

A. Fulton and George Gray, right and left scene supporters; Clyde Hays and Raymond Curtis, right and left supporters to noble grand; Albert Jennison and Willard Parker, right and left supporters to vice grand; Paul Finstein and Claude Jolly, inside and outside guardians. Officers who will serve with Mrs. Jordan are: Adela Jolly, past noble grand; Mrs. Keener, vice grand; Mrs.

Keiffer, recording secretary; Henrietta Smith, financial secretary; Dorothy DeMirjyn, Note: Accounts now insured Provider's new six-month certificate accounts earn 514 compounded at daily from the very day you open your account. the account remains a minimum of six months. After that the full 514 annual rate is paid quarterly. Open a six-month certificate account, or any account, for $1,000 or more, today. When you do you're entitled a free safe deposit box.

They are available at our main office in Riverside or our Los Angeles County regional office in Westwood. 514 5-year growth certificates guarantee an annual rate of 5'i. 5o Regular Passbook Accounts compounded daily. True annual rate of earnings 5.13. 514 6-Month Bonus Accounts pay 5.25 per annum on multiples of $1,000.

Bids Too High, New Call Pending for Franklin School Leonard Grindstaff, Riverside County superintendent schools; Harvey Irwin, Victor Valley School District superintendent, and Dr. Leonard Fullerton School District PROVIDENT FEDERAL school office facility and the library expansion there." Based on the six bids made, the construction projects at both schools would total $2,025,000 while only $1,800,000 is available. Consequently, the district board declined to accept any of the six bids as it approved a motion to call for new bids on construction of only two units of the Franklin Elementary School at a total cost of no more than $1 million. The trustees also approved a plan to have three school authorities from other districts evaluate the candidates for Heisner's position, then make recommendations to the board. These authorities are Dr.

A new call for bids on the Franklin Elementary School construction project will be issued in the near future as a result of a decision made Tuesday night by the Redlands Unified School District trustees. were prompted to make this move after studying sue bids already made on the Franklin job. These bids ranged from a low of $1,293,000 to a high of $1,415,938 and all were higher than had been estimated. Taking note of this situation, Dr. H.

Fred Heisner, superintendent, said, "If we did accept-one, we wouldn't have enough money left to complete the new senior high CUSTOM DRAPERIES and CARPETS SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION REDLANDS: 125 E. Citrus Avenue at Sixth Street 793-2992 OFFICE HOURS: Monday to Thursday 9-4 Friday 9- MAIN OFFICE: 3756 Central Avenue, Riverside 686-6060 Offices also in Downtown Riverside, Westwood, Sun City and Hemet IMPERIAL 19 E. Citrus Ave. 793-2917 REDLANDS TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD, JUST San Bernardino 888-0181 RIALTO 875-3633 Try a Sun Telegram Classified Ad.

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About The San Bernardino County Sun Archive

Pages Available:
1,350,050
Years Available:
1894-1998