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Daily Independent Journal from San Rafael, California • Page 21

Location:
San Rafael, California
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Teach What Communism. Is, General Dean Tells Audience By FLORENCE DONNELLY communism in the family, church and schools. Teach what it is. Not what the Communists say it This was the statement of Maj. Gen.

William F. Dean, who was for nearly three years a prisoner of the Communists, who attempted to brain wash him. fie observed how they carri- to decide whom he wants in soldiers had to study, two president of Marin Unit, office, what measures he wish-j hours a day, books on the glo- Mrs. Herbert K. Walton es taken.

In a Communist state ries of Communism. They were vice president of the unit, pre- this is not possible. later quizzed on what they sided in the absence of Mrs. learned. The only newspaper, Floyd Bradley, president.

She The United Nations called party paper, headlined ev- introduced those seated at the for Korean unification and erything that happened in head table, with Dean. free Members of the Soviet bloc cast the only opposing vote. In June of 1949 General Dean be- juvenile came chief of staff of the SUSTAINED COMBAT America of which are not They were Mrs. George Steele, proud: racial violence, lynch- chairman of the luncheon; Mrs. ings, malfeasance in office, and Robert Tuckey, education chairman of Marin Unit; Mrs.

Edwin Long, corresponding secretary. cd on their propoganda, their Eighth Army in Japan and was General Dean declared Mrs. Paul Ciampi, treasurer; appointed commander of 24th 1 mumsm is sustained combat. Dr. and Mrs.

Charles Ryan, Mrs. Infantry Division, which was We are presented a Viola Priest, member of the ordered to Korea on June 25. said the Communist boast is state board: Mrs. Craig Carrier, GEN. WILLIAM F.

DEAN, principal speaker at From left Mrs. Herbert K. Walton vice president Lincoln Day luncheon of Marin Unit of of the unit, who presided. General Dean and Mrs. Pro America at Peacock Gap Golf and Country Club George H.

Steele, luncheon chairman. (Independent- chatted with members and guests before his talk. Journal photo) MARIN'S SOCIAL WHIRL Raynor Whiting And Fiancee Honored At Family Dinner By FLORENCE DONNELLY ward Pages and Mr. and Mrs. Mr.

and Mrs. John A. Tappendorff Jr. of San Rafael Parker Edwards. The party gave a family dinner Friday night in honor of her son, James Raynor Whiting, and his fiancee, Phyllis Amato.

The bride-elect is the daughter of Mrs. Robert Kreider of Berkeley. Mrs. Kreider and her husband were among the dinner guests. The future benedict, who is called Raynor, is the grandson of Mrs.

W. J. Daniels of San Rafael and nephew of Dr. and Mrs. Albert C.

Daniels of Ross. I ------------------------------------------The wedding will not take attended by Mrs. Jo- place until October as Phyllis Arons of San Rafael and Mrs. Harold L. Moose Jr.

of Kentfield. The event will take place in the Venetian Room of the Fairmont Hotel May 12. The models for the fashion show are now being selected. and her brother, Anthony Kreider, will travel in Europe this summer. They have a particular mission, a search for paintings by their grandfather, European artist.

Phyllis attended University of California. Raynor, a graduate of San Rafael Military Academy, is in his senior year at San Francisco Art Institute. MARIN COUNTY members of the San Francisco Museum of Art are putting on a party in the new Torrence Art Gallery in San Anselmo Feb. 24. The Olema Owls, a two-beat Dixieland jazz band composed of Marin residents, will play for the dancing, Mrs.

Jules Becker, party chairman, said admission to the party will be gained by bringing a new member for the San Francisco Mu- ON THEIR ANNUAL trip west and visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Kampmeyer Jr.

of are his parents, the senior Mr. and Mrs. Kampmeyer of Sioux City, Iowa. They traveled by automobile. Mr.

and Mrs. Milton Brennan of Sycamore, 111., accompanied them. HAL WAGNER, manager-pro at Rafael Racquet Club, entertained his long time friends, Ursula and Gerald Stratford of San Francisco, formerly of Marin. Sunday at the club. They played tennis and had luncheon theme was the Prohibition Era.

Anson orchestra played and the Charleston was danced by some of the experts, including Ursula and Gerry. DR. AND MRS. ROBERT L. Tuckey of Kent Woodlands recently visited the John Chan- celors at their show place ranch near Bodega.

Alfred Hitchcock was there directing the shooting of another of his TV thrillers, The buildings in old Bodega had been painted orange and black for the photography. The setting in the Chancelor home was complete even to the on the living room floor. MR. AND MRS. RUSSELL G.

Smith of Ross are entertaining a group of friends at the International Hospitality Center Ball Friday at the Mark Hopkins Hotel in San Francisco. In their party will be Consul General Adolfo G. Dominguez of Mexico and his wife, Messrs. and Mesdames Henry Drath. John Cosmos and Dudley Miller.

The John G. Ziels, who have a ranch in Nicasio, as well as a home in San Francisco, will entertain Adm. Rufus G. at the club. Hal has known Gerry since he was 12 when Thayer and Mrs.

Thayer, seum of Art. Assisting Jodie tJiey together. Messrs. and Mesdames Frank Becker will be Mesdames Rus- Sunday night the Stratfords J. Baumgarten.

Balfour James sell Jordan, Edmund Nash and attended the party Libbv and and Ernest Esberg. Among George Frankforter. Merrill 8ave at Roberts- others attending the ball from at-the-Beach to celebrate their Marin will be Capt. and Mrs. FINAL PLANS were made thirtieth wedding anniversary.

George Arntz. Dr. and Mrs. for the annual fashion show Among the guests were the and luncheon to be held by the summer neighbors in Mothers Club of Delta Phi Ep- Bolinas. Mr.

and Mrs. Ross silon sorority at University of Worn Beales, the orman California at the recent Fords, William Pomeroys, Ed- Lyman. Thomas Wiper. Messrs. and Mesdames Robert Blum.

John Dakin, D. S. Denman. David Plant. Roger Kent and John C.

Bay Area Author To Speak At Community Church Club and Lore of San Francisco will be the subject of a lecture to be given by Harold Gilliam, well known San Francisco author, tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the parish hall of the Mill Valley Community Church. Sponsored by Sempervirens, a couples club of the church, the program has been opened to the public. Gilliam is the author of "San Francisco hich received the Commonwealth Club award for 1957. Francisco, City of the Golden a small book of sketches on which he collaborated with his wife, Ann Gilliam, was given the graphic arts citation as one of the 100 best books of 1959.

Face of San was a collaboration with photographer Phil Palmer of Mill Valley. Recently completed are two forthcoming books on the Bay Area: and Climate of the San Francisco Bay to be published by the Univer-j sity of California Press. and; in Time the Point; Reyes to be pub- i lished by (he Sierra Club in connection with the proposal to make the peninsula a national park or seashore. There will be an opportunity to meet the author following HAROLD GILLIAM the program, when refresh-; ments will be served. Chairmen for the evening are Mr.

and Mrs. Victor Rowe. Mrs. Adrcn Aitken is tea chairman, assisted by Mesdames Henri Langncr and Preston1 Burris. Greeting guests at the door will be Mr.

and Mrs. Samuel Reed and the presidents of Sempervirens, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coulon. John Giuliani is in charge of posters.

Eugene Lee To Be Speaker Monday In Mill Valley Mrs. Edmund Gross, leader of Mill Awareness Group, announces that Monday's meeting at the Gallery should be of exceptional interest to the public because of the number of non-partisan positions to be filled in elections in the near future. The topic is Politics of and the speaker will be Eugene C. asssitant director of the Bureau of Public Administration and assistant professor of political science at the University of California. He was also assistant to Clark Kerr, former president of the University of California.

His book Politics of Non-Partisanship: A Study of California City was published in 1860 by the University of California Press. Reservations for the 11:30 a.m. sandwich luncheon meeting are made at the gallery. Mrs. Gross also announces that the Feb.

26 meeting, for which the speaker will be San Francisco mayor George Christopher, will be held at the Mill Valley Golf Clubhouse to accommodate more persons. Reservations for that meeting are being taken by Mrs. Horace 0. Schwartz. Federation Plans Sunday Card Party The Luso-American Fraternity Federation of Novato No.

59 will hold a card party on ruthlessness and brutality General Dean talked of communism at the Lincoln Day luncheon of Marin Unit of Pro America Tuesday at Peacock Gap and Country Club. are confronted with a brutal he stated. (the Communists) objective is always the same. We have to recognize what we he declared. was subjected to Communist indoctrination.

Their premise is there is no Creator. Man is only matter. 1 was told are too intelligent to think there is a I was regarded as a capitalistic The general said that without religi- ous belief there is no moral law. Communist promises mean nothing. Everything is in the interest of the party.

Any means will be used to achieve the goal. think of Communism as "We'll surround the United Mrs. Edgar Alexander, past States, that last bastion of cap- presidents of Pro America, and italism, until it falls." and Florence Donnelly, society General Dean was introduc- editor of the lndependent- ed by Mrs. Slyvester McAtee, Journal. 1950.

He said about two million Korean refugees had come south because felt freedom wras worth He said that 90 per cent, of the population of South Korea had registered for the general election and more than 95 per cent of these people voted in spite of Communists. They sent paid To Be Given By Cotillion assassins to the south, who killed 80 election officials, years of the Sauters. the Robert Lindskogs, their wives and children. The I will be recalled Sat- the Walter Riebelings, the Clay- 'Terrible Thirties' Party Sunday at 1:30 p.m., at the a political the speaker Petaluma Holy Ghost Hall on said. is In political par- Bodega Avenue.

I ties the individual has the right general said, is pretty terrible to see a bamboo spear sticking in an infant's General Dean was captured by the enemy on Aug. 25. 1950 and was not released until September of 1953. As a prisoner of war he was constantly moved from one place to another and generally was kept in Korean homes under heavy guard. had an unusual opportunity of seeing a satellite nation living under He said urday night at.

the Meadow; ton Haugues, and the William Club when the Marin Cotillion Houstons. presents its third dance of the season. ann omen SECOND SECTION Thursday, Feb. 15, 1962 21 Chairman of the evening, Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Skakel, have chosen as their theme the depression days, and members and their guests will wear costumes reminiscent of the days of the WPA and the NRA. Prizes will be presented for the hard times outfits. The Skakels will have as their committee Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Fontez and Dr.

and Mrs. D. Gwynn Thompson. An innovation in the way of a dance cocktail party at the Meadow Club has been planned, and all members and their guests are invited to join in the festivities. However, Mr.

and Mrs. Wesley Gudmundson are hosting a group of their friends, the Fred Teglers, the Arthur I The Berkeley home of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Smith will be the locale of the largest gathering. They are expecting Messrs.

and Mesdames John Lewis, Angelo Filipelli, Walter Tait, Robert M. Clark, John Plaich John Carbone. Al Liotta, Lynne Correll, George Cooley and Robert Kimball. In their Lock Lomond home Mr. and Mrs.

Willard Hall will pass potables to the Lynn Roberts, Jack Clancys, Robert Clarks, Sam Levins and Bert Chiaronis. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McGruder will be host to the Joseph Friedmans and the Sam Youngs, and the Kenneth Al- bachtens are bringing with them Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas Murphy and Mr. and Mrs. Hub Sundberg. IN MILL VALLEY New iiqM-weitjW- spoiTs 3button, pafdi pockets ni ve ut; blue 27.50 da cron and cotton, muted plaid.

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About Daily Independent Journal Archive

Pages Available:
270,152
Years Available:
1949-1977