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Ukiah Daily Journal from Ukiah, California • Page 4

Location:
Ukiah, California
Issue Date:
Page:
4
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4- Ukiah. Daily Journal, Ukiah November 14, 1972 ARTIST AT WORK Dick Leamon, who is pictured here doing a porirail in pasfels al (he Potter Valley Fair, will he one of the artists with booths at the second annual Mendocino County Art Association's Fall Art Pageant to be held Nov. 25 in the Pomolita junior high school gymnasium. Photo by Janet Chanoit Ar fists showing wares at Pomolita Nov. 25 "An original painting for a Christmas gift'' Why not!" The Mendocino Cyunty Art Association's second annual Fall Art Pageant will be held at Pomolita junior high school gymnasium Nov.

25 from 10 a.m. to 10 P.M. Ukiah Chamber of Commerce will be the sponsor. Artists are going all out for the Pageant providing both oil and water color paintings, and many other art 'forms especially suitable foi' Christmas giving, according to Frank Jones, pageant chairman. For the 'second Fall Art Pageant a new innovation has been planned.

An auction of art works will be held. Jim Morris of Builder's Glass and Supply Company will be auctioneer. Artists will maintain booths again this year with displays of many of their works, and many articles lor sale. A portion of the proceeds from the sales will benefit the Ukiah Public Library beautification fund. Artists presently scheduled to appear at the pageant are Jeri (hay.

Donna Miller, Minnie MrQucary, Bobbye Page, Adele Pruitl, norma Yde, Linda lligby. Vt'rnlynn Farnsworth, Francine Bearden, Richard Leamon, Alex Petry and Jones. There are still booths available lor both members and non-members of the association. All artists who would like to take part in the benefit-sale arc urged to do so, according to Jones. Application forms are available at the Renaissance Gallery, S.

Oak and Seminary Avenue, and at the Chamber of Commerce office, 570 N. Stale Street. Cl'T TIIKIR (WKF. Mr. and Mrs.

Mark Charles Evans (Kathy Lynn Kroh) cut the traditional first slice of their wedding cake following recent ceremonies in the Wil'its Methodist Church. They are now at home at 814 Jackson Street, Ukiah, following a Disneyland honeymoon. Photo by Stella Sanderson. i Favorite Recipe I Years ago, buttermilk was simply the liquid left in the churn after making butter. Today, the tangy taste is much the same, but the process has changed considerably.

Buttermilk is now made with a specially prepared culture, under careful laboratory conditions, to produce the desired flavor and texture so characteristic of original buttermilk. Its smooth, heavy body and tart flavor is created by the special culture and by pasteurizing the milk at higher temperatures for a longer period of time than other fresh fluid milks. Salt is then added to bring out natural flavor. The woi'ds "churned" and "real churned," often seen on buttermilk cartons, are terms describing nothing more than the yellow flecks in some buttermilks. These yellow flecks are actually real bulter granules added to give the drink eye appeal and additional flavor.

Buttermilks are pretty much the same, varying approximately one-half per cent, depending on the solid and fat content. Like the milk from which it is made, buttermilk's key nutrients are calcium, protein, and riboflavin (vitamin B2). VICLVKTV SPONGE FIE Yield: 1-9 inch pie 1- 9 inch unbaked pastry shell 'L e. sugar 2 tbsp. flour pinch of salt 2 eggs, separated 1' buttermilk 2 tbsp.

melted butter 1 tsp. vanilla 1 tsp. grated lemon peel tbsp. sugar Blend the cup sugar, (lour, and salt. Add to the slightly beaten egg yolks.

Add the buttermilk, incited butter, vanilla, and lemon peel. Beat the egg whites to soft peaks. Beat in the remaining sugar. Fold into the egg mixture. Pour into the unbaked shell and bake al 425 degrees for 5 minutes.

Reduce heat to 325 degrees and bake 40-45 minutes longer or Until a thin knife inserted in the center conies out clean. Day care center in Washington By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK day care center in Washington, DC, uses computer storage cans for chairs. A large plastic tub set into a wooden frame on casters becomes a sand, paint or water play area in a center in Cambridge, Mass. Waxed paper cups or cut-down milk cartons become the start of an indoor garden in a child research center in Washington. A plastic garbage pail and liner make a good contaner for modeling clay at a center in Nashville, Tenn.

A converted synagogue becomes a day center in New York City. All are cited in "Found Spaces and Equipment for Children's Centers," a compilation of resourceful.and creative ways for transforming the discarded, overlooked and inexpensive spaces and objects into useful places and things for learning for the pre-school and day care set. Many Examples Offered Marty of the examples offered by the booklet are the work of non-professionals, not the planners and architects, but everyday teachers, civic to inventiveness by need. The booklet is published by Educational Facilities Laboratories (EFL), a non-profit organization established by the Ford Foundation. It for EFL by Richard J.

Passantino, a Washington, D.C. architect with two small children of his own and "a dedicated involvement in the design of early childhood facilities." The book surveys indoor and outdoor spaces for children, as well as furniture and equipment; and details of licensing requirements and codes for centers. EFL says "found" space can fulfill environmental requirements for child development and do so economically. "A child jumping into a pile of hay in a converted barn, a group listening to a story in front of an ornate Victorian fireplace, children swinging from ropes suspended from a high ceiling-all are marvelous learning experiences and all capitalize on existing features." Here is where economy comes in; EFL says it is generally cheaper to reclaim existing spaces in structurally sound buildings than to build new structures." A Look at Locations In a look at some center locations, EFL found a former supermarket turned into a day care and neighborhood center. Amateur carpenters built a landscape of platforms, bridges, storage and nooks and crannies.

Carpets and paint helped to transform a shabby warehouse into a school. Children move planks and boxes around to make seats, desks or tables. Centers have used a lot of ingenuity in furniture and equipment. One has a homemade ferris wheel that organizes and displays learning materials. Another has a plastic "shoebox" library to organize instructional objects.

In general, before you and a group start such an informally planned center, check with regulatory agencies-the state Health Department (licensing), Building Department (building codes), zoning (zoning code compliance), Department of Social Services (for related services it can provide), local Board of Education (required in some localities), 'and fire marshal (exit requirements and combustibility characteristics of the building). O-Kl-Hi girls plant bulbs Members of the O-Ki-Hi Junior Garden Club studied spring bulbs, learned how to prepare soil, add fertilizer and plant daffodils. The Junior Garden Club is sponsored by Ukiah Garden Club. Members of the club will water bulbs they planted so that they will bloom in the spring, according to leaders Johnson and Payne. NEWS about MENDOCINO COUNTY QES honors Bl retirinq leaders Anniversary observed by the Gale Youngs Mr.

and Mrs. Gale E. Young. 45H Mendocino Drive, were married 25 years on Oct. 25.

They were honored al a patio dinner Oct. 28 al the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Landucci. Mrs.

Young's brother-in-law and sister. Guests from out of town included the Landucci's son. Edward, from Palo Alto; Dorothy Brooks of San Francisco and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Call of Cloverdale, sisters and brother-in-law of Mrs.

Young, and (he Call's daughter and grandson, Mrs. Doris Mentch and Bruce; the Call's son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Call, and children. Richard, and Julie, of Tracy; Mr.

and Mrs. Edward Brooks Yuba City, brother and sister- in-law of Mrs. Young, and their children, Ray, Kristina and Thomas, and the Young children's friends, Lydia and Bob; Mrs. Edith Frisbie of Sacramento, sister of Mr. Young, and Mrs.

Frisbie's daughter and her, son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Brian Weather- lord and daughter, Marci, of Santa Rosa. Also present were Hazel Zipperlen of Cloverdale, Mr. and Mrs.

George Frey of Santa Rosa and Mrs. Ellen Brooks of Ukiah, mother of Mrs. Young. The former Irene Brooks of Santa Rosa became Mrs. Gale E.

Young on Oct. 25, 1947 in Carson City Nev. They made their home in Santa Rosa for several years, and then moved to Hopland, where they resided 10 years before coming to Ukiah. Mr. Young is in construction work.

Mrs. Young is employed by Pacific Gas and Electric Company. Decorations for the couple's reception were in autumn Colors. A cake was baked and decorated for the occasion by Mrs. Lucille Call of Cloverdale.

'Guests unable to attend the reception were a sister and brother-in-law of Mr. Young, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Mazzuchi of Santa Rosa; Mrs. Ruth McNeal of Cloverdale, and a number of nieces and nephews who lived a long distance.

25 YEAItS Mr. and Mrs. Gale E. Young are honored on their silver wedding anniversary by friends and family at the home of and Mrs. William Landucci.

Former Barbara Hinds cardiac care nurse Barbara Robinson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hinds of 535 S. Spring Street, has been made the nurse in charge of the cardiac care unit at San Luis Obispo General Hospital, her parents- learned this, last week in a telephone conversation with their daughter. The nurse was sent to the University of California at Los Angeles medical center for special study and observation in cardiac care, before being placed in her new position of responsibility, A graduate of Ukiah high school, she studied at California Slate Polytechnic University completing her junior year there with a major in biological science, before entering Questa College in San Luis Obispo Dates to Keep Nov.

It Alpha Zeta Beta Sorority, 7:30 p.m., home of Jayne Maghetti, 1024 W. Perkins Street. Nov. ii AI Beta Tau, exemplar chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, 8 p.m., home of Connie Uarzini, 2251 Mill Creek Road. Nov.

14 Ukiah Emblem Club, 8 p.m., Elks Hall, Wabash Avenue. Nov. The'ta Eta chapter. Beta Sigma Phi, 8 p.m., home of Mrs. Don Mildenbeger, Upper Lake.

Nov. It Ukiah Promenadors workshop, 8 to 10 p.m., Frank Zeek School. Nov. League of Women Voters evening unit, 7:45 p.m., home of Flora Howard, 309 Hillview Avenue. Nov.

15 AAUW, 8 p.m., home of Lynda Myers, 1120 W. Slandley Street. Ukiah Area is Council. 8 p.m., NCO headquarters. 203 S.

Main Street. Election. Nov. is Abell Lodge No. 146, third degree, Masonic Temple.

6:30 dinner; 8 p.m. meeting. Nov. i(i AAUW Bridge section, 7:30 p.m., home of Diane Mayfield, 276 Banker Blvd. Reservations: 462-3142 or with Dale Broaddus, 462-4234.

Nov. Mi Oak Manor PTA, 11:45, school's administration building. Take hot casserole. Nov. Hi Potter Valley PTA, 8 p.m., Potter Valley Elementary School Members of Kingsley Chapter No.

58, OES, bid farewell to Inez Lombard as worthy matron and Shaffer R. Breers as worthy patron last week with a special program honoring the retiring leaders. Two china plates fired with the star emblem and names of the officers who served this past year with honored pair were presented the two at the end of a special skit of nursery rhymes, rewritten by Donald Musser. Members of the drill team carried pink appleblossoms and decorations were in pink against a blue background, Mrs. Lombard's chosen colors.

A large blue heart trimmed with pink apple blossoms was used in the East. Drilling team members formed an for Inez and Margaret Byrnes sang "Honey" in honor of Mrs. Lombard. When the drill team formed an members sang "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow," in honor of the retiring worthy patron. Among the many members and visitors from other chapters was the deputy grand matron of district No.

8, Dorothy Mehl, Who presented the worthy matron with an orchid corsage, grown by depuly's'husband, Robert Mehl. A carnation corsage was presented Mrs. Lombard by Grace Toles. The pink and blue of the chapter room was also carried out in the dining room by the committee for the evening. Long blue runners centered the tables with pink apple blossoms arranged on the blue.

Blue flowers trimmed the place mats blending with blue and gold napkins. Myrtle Oakley was chairman of the committee in charge of decorations and refreshments. Assisting her were Mildred and Vern Davis, Gladys and Roy Williams, Edna Neuhaus, Ethel Parkinson, Lucy McNab and Lyole Kenny. December wedding planned Mr. and Mrs.

Robert C. Shimmin, 14 Mill Court, announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Marie Shimmin to Jim M. Garaventa of Ukiah. The couple's wedding date has been set for Dec. 19 at St.

Mary of the Angels Catholic Church. where she graduated in June of this year as a nurse, with special certificate in cardiac care. She has since passed the board examination for nurses and is a registered nurse. Her husband, Ray Robinson, was graduated from Cal Poly two years ago and is serving in the U.S. Air Force, stationed at Vandenburg Air Force Base.

They have established their home in Grover City. Capt. Robert Hinds, Barbara's brother, also is serving in the air force. He is presently serving in Vietnam where he is a leader of a helicopter platoon. His wife, Lynette, and their two- year-old son are making their home in Ukiah while the captain is overseas.

lAROL MARIE SHIMMIN Both are Ukiah high school alumni. The bride-elect graduated mid-term and is presently employed by the Credit Bureau of Ukiah. Her fiance, son of Mrs. Elvin Stroglio of Ukiah, was graduated with the class of 1970. He is currently with the U.S.

Marine Corps at the Miramar Naval Air Station. After their wedding the couple will make their home in San Diego. TOASTING A HAPPY FUTURE Mr. and Mrs. Randy Borges (Joanne Ridgley) toast a happy future at their wedding reception Sept.

24 at Bromley Hall, United Presbyterian Church, following their exchange of vows at the Ukiah Seventh-day Adventist Church. by Stella Sanderson Ridgley-Borges vows exchanged in Ukiah Dr. K.O. Ridgley of Ukiah gave his daughter, Joanne, in marriage Sept. 24 to Borges of Dublin, at the Ukiah Seventh-day Adventist Church.

The bridegroom is employed as medical technologist for Aagaard-Falconer Medical Laboratories, and the bride is a medical secretary at Hillside Community Hospital. They are at home al 145 Laws Avenue. Attending the bride were Marti Ridgley, matron of honor, and Joyce Seasly, maid of honor; Conni Cash and Diana Eyserbeck, her bridesmaids. They were gowned in pink chiffon with pink satin ribbon threaded through ivory venise lace, detailing the empire waists, cuffs of long full sleeves, high collars, soft flowing skirts. The bride was gowned in white Gibson girl Aline silhouette of sheer sata-peau over taffeta.

A full sweeping chapel train completed the swirling circular skirt which was lucked at the raised waist trimmed with venise lace threaded in velvet. Lace also trimmed the high neckline and the deep tucked cuffs of the long Camels hair reappears In fashions The reappearance of the real camel's hair coat on the fashion scene is welcome news to many. A camel's hair coat in true classic styling has always connoted good taste self- in clothes. It speaks of a casual elegance in lifestyle. Now that it's back, its aura is in no way diminished.

The classic wraparound is recognizable but there are subtle differences. Rather than the raglan sleeves of the earlier classic, width is achieved by wider lapels. It's hardly a coincidence that the wrap silhouette is the most popular coat shape of the season. The lush camel's hair fabric is not limited to classic styling. There are double-breasted styles, rounded collars and a brass-buckle belted coal.

full sleeves. Tiny tucks outlined with lace detailed the bodice which was centered with a row of tiny covered buttons. A bonnet held her three tier elbow length veil of imported nylon illusion. She carried pink gladioli, pink and white carnations and white stock. Attendants bouquets were pink and while spider mums in liny baskets.

Liesl Cummings, flower girl, dressed identically to I he bridesmaids, also carried a basket from which she dropped pink rose petals. Elder Philip Dunham performed the ceremony with Dick Catalano, standing with Ihe bridegroom as his best man. Sealing the wedding guests were Bob; Hwang and Walter Garcia, friends of the bridegroom. Ron Ridgley, brother of the bride, Steve Medeiros, cousin of the bridegroom and Roger Rudd, friend of the groom, escorted Ihe bride's attendants. Jason Prater was bible boy.

The organ prelude, processional "Marche Nocturne" and recessional "Marche Nuptiale" were selections by Dr. Richard Guthrie. Tom Buller presented a trombone solo, "The Lords Prayer," and the bride's march was a trumpet solo by Marilyn Jones. Ron Ridgley, vocalist, sang "I'll Walk with God." Candles were lighted before the ceremony by Cindy Ridgley, sister of the bride, and David Broder. Dr.

and Mrs. Ridgley and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Borges, parents of the bride and groom helped receive wedding guests at a reception in the United Presbyterian Church's Bromley Hall. Bonni Trout was reception coordinator.

Diane Wolgamott and Pam Broder kept the guest book. The gifts were displayed by Candy Sollars. Pal Anderson was wedding coordinator. Includes Shampoo Set UKIAH BEAUTY COLLEGE 810 State St. 462-8831 Student Work Only SATURDAY HOEDOWN Nonie Moglia will be guest caller for the Ukiah Promenaders' third Saturday hoedown to be held Saturday from 8:30 p.m.

to midnight at Frank Zeek School, 500 Low Gap Road. There will be refreshments and door prizes, according to Bud Grass, club caller. Variation. Coconut Sponge Pie: Fold 1 cup shredded coconut into the meringue mixture. Proceed as above.

CLUB CALPELLA Holiday Catering Service 485-8630 UKIAH Boaiity Salon A eirls to care for Your Beauty Needs ou. GIFT SHOP For the Unusual 848 $: Sf fa St irays LADYBUG RANCH KNIT FABRICS NOW MONDAY NITE SEWING LESSONS FOR FOOTBALL WIDOWS PATTERNS Drafted to your measurements for a perfect fit WE COVER BUTTONS All sizes and novelty designs CUSTOM SITING YOUR MATERIAL OR OURS LESSONS: Monday, Wednesday, Friday P.M. Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday A.M. Monday Thursday Evenings STORE HOURS: Monday thru Saturday 9:30 Thursdays 9:30 to 9:00. PHONE 462-9190 162 W.Smith.

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About Ukiah Daily Journal Archive

Pages Available:
310,258
Years Available:
1890-2009