Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 81

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
81
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

5 pZ7At SECTION METROPOLITAN'NEWS VOL LXXX Timei ClaKified Advertising Number, MAdison 9-4411 CC SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1961 Time Office: 202 West First Street, tos 53, Calif. MAdison 5-2343 A NSN V. 1 1 tn -if A .1 1 i I JF 'll-i, r4 i 1 1 1 iwwiotaKifegi'i'iVi Tii'iirrfunt iiTiwm4 NEW INTERCHANGE This is an underside view of the vast interchange system of bridges constructed to connect the Golden State and Glendale Freeways at Allesandro St. and Riverside Dr. Tlmn phots Youn BY THE WAY An Interview Soviet Style Police Social Haters Danger Sections of Freeways to Open Soon Ribbon-Cutting on Santa Monica Link Set for Tuesday Create NATIONALITIES WILL JOIN IN YULE FETE A Christmas from Many Lands festival begins a 10-day run next Friday at the Municipal Art Gallery in Barnsdall Park.

Designed to reflect the Christmas spirit and to heighten the good-will tradition of the Yule season, the exhibit features displays from various national organizations in the Los Angeles area. A special opening night program at 8 p.m. will feature the United Nations Children Chorus from Long Beach. The exhibit and daily programs will be open from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m.

weekdays and 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday and BY BILL HENRY Adult Penalties Urged for Lawless Juveniles BY ART RYON This is going to be a big mniv important free Clinic Aids Juveniles in Trouble Dramatic Gains Made by Many Who Seek Help way The lir.t will be Tuesday when, wilh appropriate cele-hralive ceremonifs, the first link of the Santa Monica Freeway will be opened to traffic with ribbon cutting. This is a short, 1.1-mi. sec-1 tion that zips via viaduct from the complex East Los Angeles Interchange at 8th St.

and the Santa Ana Free Pair Honored by Press Had Interwoven Careers Otis, of Times, Started in Santa Barbara; Storke Began Here, Then Went North BY EI) AINSWORTII, Times Staff Representative SAN FRANCISCO A strange and fascinating story The County Probation Department's mental health clinic for juvenile delin of how the interwoven lives of two "boy printers" won quents has gained encour aging, results with two- them coveted places in the California Newspaper Hall of Fame was unfolded here Friday night for the Cali Ihirdsof the youngsters referred to it under a volun fornia Press Assn. iff-: tary program. The clinic lias produced dramatic improvement in a way-westward over the Los Angeles River to Hooper Ave. Scheduled for "Dec. 13 is the long-awaited opening of the Golden State Freeway from Arnold St.

to its present southern terminus near Glendale Blvd. 17 Bridges Built There are no less than 17 bridges in this 3-mi. stretch. And a lot of this is where the Golden State Freeway intersects with the Glendale Freeway near Allesandro St. and Riverside Dr.

This artistic swirl of variety of cases, according to Dr. Randall M. Foster, head of the clinic. Ins report was the first analysis made public since the program wws initiated Harrison Gray Otis, later a general, and Charles Albert Storke, later mayor and state legislator, -who were the nominees at the annual awards banquet of the press association, possessed almost identical backgrou ncls, And, by a quirk of fate, one started as a publisher in Santa Barbara and won fame in Los Angeles, and the other started in Los Angeles and won fame in Santa Barbara. Started at 1 1 Both Otis and Storke became printer's devils at 14, Otis in Ohio and Storke in Wisconsin.

Each served in the Civil War. Otis beinsr i i Rebellion against police authority has become a contagious condition and dangerous to the health of Southern California. Law enforcement experts now have the subject under, study, and their recommendations to the State Legislature in months to come may make the fact that a crime was committed against peace officers the most significant legal aspect of some offenses not the age of the person who committed them. Now peace officers who enforce the laws and courts which mete out punishment for violating them consider the age factor of law breakers. There are three broad classes by age of offenders: the juvenile, who is under 18 years of age; the minor, who is between 18 and 21, and.

the adult. The Rebels Are Youthful Police officials say the rebels against police authority are in the ranks of the first two age brackets. Recent rebellions against authority in Alhambra and Griffith Park are two typical examples. Scores of others, mostly on a smaller scale, did not receive public attention. Basically, it is a sociological problem, a problem of what to do with young persons who commit crimes of violence against peace officers sent to cope with situations which for the most part are misdemeanors.

Disregard for uniformed law by juveniles occurred in 69 separate cases in the first nine months of 1961 in areas within the jurisdiction of the Los Angeles Police Department. Thirty-three policemen and 106 juveniles were involved in 19 cases of assault with a deadly weapon, 14 cases of battery, and 36 cases of malicious mischief. Weapons Are Dangerous Juveniles attacked police with knives, clubs and guns. They fought police with their fists and they kicked officers. They threw rocks and cans of beer through the windows of police squad cars and even, precinct buildings.

This is cop-fighting. It has hit many of the large cities in the United States. Preventive measures have not been effective. In California, the Legislature has recognized the anti-police problem. Amendments to current laws became effective last Sept.

15. An assault with a deadly weapon conviction carries a penalty of 10 years in a state prison when the act Is committed against a peace officer. If the suspect has a prior conviction, he may get 15 years. A person convicted of battery against a peace officer Please Turn to Pg. fi, Col.

1 swooping ramps resembles a pile of ribbon propped by toothpicks. But, the' ribbons are concrete. And so are the toothpicks. That intersecting part of the Glendale Freeway, inci-i dentally, is expected to be! completed by mid-February. Gen.

Harrison Gray Otis wounded many times and Storke suffering in Confederate prison camps. Then Important Link An even more important WASHINGTON People will probably be arguing for months about the value of President Kennedy's interview with Izvestia's editor Alexei Adzhubei. The President himself characterized it as a "marked step forward in American-Soviet' understanding." Adzhubei described it as "well worth-while and one which ill lead to a better understanding of many Soviet-American problems." Some critics on both sides of the Iron Curtain have been less kind. The thing and this is only one angle that seems particularly interesting is the manner in which the session which was arranged as an interview developed almost instantly into a debate. It became clear right at the beginning that Adzhubei, who was under compulsion to print the President's words in full in his Soviet newspaper that had been the agreement had prepared himself in such a manner that no Kennedy statement would appear r.

tf without an appropriate answer. It is true that as a good reporter, which he seems to be, he had prepared a list of questions which, when we dropped in on the discussion near its close, he had in a little red-covered notebook which lay in front of him as he sat on a window-couch facing the President in his rocker. But they were not the information-seeking type of questions 'but the loaded, argumentative type. His first one was only 39 words long. (What must be done to improve U.S.-USSR relations?) But it was preceded by a 170-word preamble including a laudatory statement of Soviet good intentions.

The President gave a measured reply, whereupon Adzhubei said, "That is very interesting. However, as a citizen of the Soviet Union, as a member of the Communist Party, I cannot agree with you" And went on with a 245-word statement of the Communist viewpoint including a suggestion that the President admit United States "interference in the affairs of Cuba" was a mistake. He Had an Answer for Everything The President, a pretty fair jumper-down-the-throat-er himself as he demonstrated in the campaign debates with Dick Nixon, opened his reply to this by saying "May I just say, without getting into a debate And went on with a direct reply to Adzhubei's inquiries. The propaganda-loaded Russian came right back with another sample of the obviously-prepai'ed technique of seeing to it that his "interview" con-, tained the Soviet side of every question. "I understand you, Mr.

President," the Russian opened, "and I am very happy to hear these words from you," etc. "However, I would like to draw your attention to the following historical parallel," thus leading into a propaganda version of the birth of the Soviet. By this time the President realized that he was engaged in an argument rather than giving an interview and he rather dryly interjected, "You are (both) a newspaperman and a politician," which, to put it mildly, was the understatement of the year. Mr. Kennedy Gets Into the Act The President's counter to this well-planned Soviet method of inserting a counter-argument after every statement that he made was a pretty good one.

He saw that he would onTy be asked questions for which Adzhubei had a loaded answer, so, into his replies he introduced many facets of the United States position which he felt would never be brought out by Adzhubei's carefully-prepared questions. In this way he managed, by volunteering statements on points which he deemed important, to get into the "interview" a good many expositions of American policy which, had he allowed the session to be limited to Adzhubei's questioning, would never have appeared. He handled liim-srlf, on the whole, excellently, under rather difficult tmd somewhat unexpected circumstances. The net result of this technique was that in two hours of talk, obviously slowed down and extended by the necessity of translation, the Russian actually asked only some seven or right questions but the course of the argu-: ment actually covered an amazing area of the problems which divido the two great nations. Worthwhile? Who knows! opening on the Golden State: Freeway will be the comple tion expected by Jan.

13 or before of a 1.7-mi. section between Pasadena Ave. and Arnold St. When that's done, the two years ago under Dr. Harr) R.

Brickman. It was not an unqualified success story, but it demon-! strated the usefulness of psychiatric techniques in guiding jail-bound delinquents into constructive lives. Third Drop Out About one-third of the youngsters who complete initial interviews with the clinic staff drop out and never return. There are no statistics to tell the story of what happens to them. Of the two-thirds who accept, therapy with their parents at the clinic, the results generally are positive, Dr.

Foster said. The program provides 12 psychiatric conferences. The parents receive consultation as well as the boy or girl in trouble. As a general rule, psychiatry is most effective when the subject is intelligent, according to Dr. Foster.

No 'Occult Ait' "This kind does not regard psychiatry as an occult are," he said. "They see it for what it is a system of human understanding based upon scientific pnnciples." Cases from the clinic files show the importance of parental co-operation in Golden State Freeway will have a clean sweep from the Last Los Angeles Inter change (and, of course, the h- I San Bernardino Freeway) as far north as its connection with Lankershim Blvd. in the northwest "San Fernando both came west after the war to try their journalistic wings. A representative of The Times accepted the Otis Award on behalf of Otis Chandler, present publisher of The Times and great-grandson of the pioneer. Thomas M.

Storke, son of A. Storke and publisher of the Santa Barbara News-Press, accepted the other award. By coincidence, the honor for Harrison Gray Otis came on the eve of The Times' 80th birthday anniversary, the founding date having been Dec. 4, 3881, with Lt. Col.

Otis assuming the editorship, in July, 18S2. Before this Los Angeles career, though, the colonel had tried being a publisher a little farther north. Lt. Col. Otis went to Santa Valley.

Another vital function of this link will be its pretzel- ike interchange with the Pasadena Freeway near Klysian Fark. This will provide a short and easy route between the Pasadena area Charles Albert Storke Barbara in 1876 from his native Ohio at the invitation of Col. W. W. Hollister, a IMease Turn to P.

0, Col. 4 World Affairs Institute Opens Sessions Today the San Fernando Valley. It also will provide an rioase Turn to Tg. 7, Col. 1 The 38th session of the 1AH1A ANA.fWY, GOLDEN STATE FWY Institute of World Affairs.

Hamilton, administrator of the State Department's new Agency for International De A l.Vyear-old boy learned! to restrain anger andi SANTA MONICA FREEWAY sponsored by USC will open at 8 p.m. today with two addresses in the ballroom of the Huntington Sheraton, I'asadena. Buell G. Gallagher, chancellor of the State Colleges of velopment, and Julius Momo Udochi, ambassador of Nigeria to the United States. "The institute is directed by Glenn S.

Dumke, vice chancellor for academic affairs fif the SUnlo fYllfff rt v. l-f -n combativeness as he came to understand that he was using them as a way of dramatizing his resentment of his parents and his desire for more attention. At the same time, the parents identified their- subconscious, rejection of the child and the family, together, found more security through better understanding of themselves, C.irl's Problem A 13-vcar-ohl girl was Tu Horbor Fwy ft Cy of Sml Monica vuiuornia, -wun nr. uutus tf. Von KleinSmid, chancellor of USC as institute chancellor.

The institute is sponsored by USC in co-operation with California, and Harold B. i or, president of the American Friends of the Middle Fast, will be opening speakers. Gallagher will speak on "The Confidence of Free jthe other Pacific area col leges and universities. driven into trouble bv rigid, punitive mother whose i ul i iniiiHiu piuim-niM ere dom'' and Minor will discuss "The United States Position with the Emerging World." Panels, lectures and evening programs will follow Monday through Wednesday. Featured speakers at 8 p.m.

Monday will be Fowler Comic Dictionary SWINDLER A rhf at who Is alwayi putting people out by taking them in. Coovrlohf mi, by Evtn MT indiscriminately applied to the child. When both mother and daughter learned to ris Turn to Py. 7, Col. 1 FREEWAY COMPLEX Mop shows complex intersections of the Santa Monica, Golden State and Santa Ana Freeways.

Sections will open during this month..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Los Angeles Times
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Los Angeles Times Archive

Pages Available:
7,612,743
Years Available:
1881-2024