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About Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1966)
" Sandy Post GREAT WAY voi HOOD F n TEN PAGES SANDY, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 196« Wllglr « up) |l* No 25 Mt. Hood College Plans Move Ahead on Schedule Housekeeping operations of Mt. Hood Community College continued apace this week with these developments: ‘1. The former Jack White Tire building on Main street in Gresham was leased for vocational-technical classes. 2. Terms were agreed upon for rental of the County Fair- giounds as a temporary college location. 3. The college moved to take options on 173 acres of property at 242nd and Stark. The property leased for vo cational - technical classes is located toward the rear of Gresham Linoleum. About 3,500 square feet will be available week^^tu^^^’55 ‘U”' Ma?*‘ ”aker’ Ea»U Cr’*k riding enthusiast, .very weekend duruig the summer months. Here she is with “Chico,” 10-year-oId Pinto Ulumino. and t raping. that cost in the neighborhood of >2500. With “Chko" she won a 22-Inch trophy al the Phil Sheridan lk.ys parade June 18. In the Rose Festival Parade she won Mie^wll"’^ In June 25, . . hr. i v . 4 pa,ad* a‘ 1 ‘»“«'“xA. As a yuungstei In Nebraska, Mabel said stie • : -Ie horseback to grade and high school, and has been a lover uf horses ever since. Kiwanis Prepare for 9th Fly-In Breakfast T».„ v ....... V, t , . .. . . The Sandy Kiwanis Club has held as usual at Rich’s Airpun shifted into high gear as final two miles northeast of Sandy, preparations are being made I s scheduled for Sunday, July for the club's 9th Annual Fly- 17, from 7:3O-a.m. to 12 noon. In Breakfast, according to P. As a change in menu made N, Smoke, Kiwanis chairman to speed up service, ham, in of the event. stead of bacon, will be served The breakfast, which will be with the eggs, hotcakes, juice, * » milk and coffee. Price of the breakfast all you can eat, is >1.25 for adults and 75 Ç for children. Uirlng and after the break fast airplane rides will be available for Junior spacemen and view seeking adults. W The Fly-In is the Sandy Ki wanis' big money-raising event of the year and all proceeds go to the support of the club’s Sandy Community Service Fund and the Kiwanis Crippled Chil dren's Camp on Mt. Hood. Farm Labor Office Opens In Sandy The temporary farm labor of fice in Sandy, Oregon, was op ened June I, 19M. Hazel Mur- ray of the Pl.sieer Real Es- late Office in Sandy w|ll again serve the growers in Sandy, Boring, Dover and Bull Run She will also work with mi grant labor coining into Clack- amas County over the Loop Highway, as well as with local farm help. Workers may reg- Istei there for berry picking. In|ui.«s Fatal to Alder Creek Driver Glen Arnold Barstad, 49, of the Alder Creek Cafe at Alder Creek. dIM Thursday, June 16, at Providence Hospital from injuries lie suffered In an auto mobile accident near Sandv on June 6. Two other men, injured in the same accident have been released from Gresham Gen eral Hospital. Claude Earl Dove, 40, 202 Pleasant Avenue, Sandv was released from the hospital June 8 and Leonard C. Moore, 29, 12315 S. E, Merrill Drive, Portland, was released June 11. At the time of the accident a passenger in the car Bar stad was driving, Tom Neigh bors, also of the Alder Creek Cafe, told investigating officers the car had run out of gas on Highway 26 about 3 miles east of Sandy and was stopped in the roadway. Neighbors said he had start ed t o walk to the rear of the vehicle to flag oncoming traffic around and push the car out of the road. Before he reached the rear of the vehicle, Neighbors said, the car driven by Dove and occupied by Moore collided with the rear of the Barstad The phone number in Sandy is MU 7-2521. Applicants can al so register at the local Em ployment Service Ui Oregon City H CHighSLiort all ««.MN. The optioned property, own ed by Snider Farms, is viewed as insurance against the prob ability that government surplus property at 148th and Halsey will not become available, as long expected. The General Services Admin istration recently announced plans to trade the property for parking space in Portland. Actually, the college is con sidering several parcels of property -- Including the Fair grounds -- if the 148th property is lost. Options may be taken on other sites, too. The college has not deter- mined whether or not it will definitely buy the Snider prop erty, nor how much of the 173 acres would be needed were that site selected. The price of the property then would de pend on how much of the land and buildings would be used and could range from >500,000 to >1,000,000. Merchants Plan Moonlight Sale Sandy Merchants today an nounced plans for a midsum mer Moonlight Sale, under the chairmanship of Doug Beach, to take place the evening uf Friday, July 15, between 7 p.m. and 11 p.m. Special prices and surprise features will prevail at all stores during the sale hours. Presented in the spirit of fun, the idea of the sale will be to “Have a ball — while saving as you spend in Sandy.” To keep informed on the many new and unusual attractions of the Moonlight Sale watch for coming ads in the Sandy Post. THE GLOS Scholar-Athlete Trophy is shown being presented to Brock Jackley by Marshall Glos. This is the first year of what will be an annual award donated by Marshall Glos to a Sandy High graduating senior. Trophy, which will be’placed in the high school, is accompanied by a scholarship to school of the student's choice. Selection of the recipient is based on athletic ability, leadership and character, combined with scholas tic improvement. Brock plans to attend the University of Idaho next fall. (Post photo) Sprinkling Hours in Effect For Unmetered Water Users Senior Girl Will Tour Citizens Seek To Form New Water District The Sandy Water Department is notifying all unmetered water consumers that sprinkling h<«rs and regulations became effective for the 1966 season on June 1. The sprinkling fee for the 1966 season is >6.00. Sprinkling may be done only therel We will reach Grasse, during the hours designated for the home of the French per the zone in which the user re fume industry, by coach. Then sides and only one hose may be through the French Alps with used at a time. deep gorges and on to Geneva, A City Ordinance provides for today’s European headquarters penalties for not conforming to of the United Nations and many the regulations as set forth be low. American institutions.” Marci is particularly looking Districts divided as follows: forward to her visit toSwitzer- 1. Northeast Area: North of Proctor Avenue, East of Strausse Street, including Sandy Heights and North Bluff Road. Hours: 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. Europe With Teacher “It came as quite a shock to me when I found out I actually would be going to Europe this summer. My speech teacher. Miss Gutter, was telling us about the tour, and another girl and I decided to ask our parents just as a joke. So, I told them about it, and Mom didn't say anything, and Dud Just said "Oh”. Nothing Initial step?, m the formation of <i jew watc* district between Bluff Rued and Boring are being taken by a group of Interested citizens. Signatures are now being Mught for the petition for the district that will include Kelso and Cottrell and provide Bull Run water in unlimited amounts. Persons residing in the pro- posed district may obtain further information by cuntact- mg Lloyd Hult at Holt Shopping Center or phoning Mrs. M. C. Malar at MU 7-3007. more was said. When I got up next morning, my Dad told me that I could go.” This is a statement of Marci Kociemba, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E.A. Kociemba, of Route 3, Box 810, Boring. She will be a senior next fall at Sandy High School. Marci will be travelling in Europe this summer with a tour group chaperoned by Miss Diane Ginter. Pamela Denhart Gets Certificate Pamela 1 Denhart, daughter of M r. and Mrs. O. H. Den- hart, Route 1, Box 301, Sandy, was among the thirteen stu- dents at the Unlversity of Ore- gon Medical I School to receive certificates as registered radiologic technologists Friday night, June 17, at 8 p.m. in the medical school auditorium. Thomas B. Hutchins, pro ject engineer for the research division uf Tektronix, Inc. was guest speaker. Dr. Charles Dot- ter, chairman of the radiology department, and Mrs. Hilda Drum, R. T., assistant profes sor of radiology, presented cer tificates to those graduating. in which the college will house its classes in electronics, in dustrial mechanics and weld ing. A new entrance probably will be opened toward the rear of the building where a parking lo* for 75 cars is available. The property adjoins the County Fairgrounds. As to the Fairgrounds, the college will start moving in dur ing mid-August. Classes will get under way on Sept. 19. Some Fair buildings will be used plus portable classroom trail ers. GUESS WHO is the well known Sandy resident in this picture taken many years ago when man’s conquest of space was relatively limited. In those days It was quite a feat to climb the big Douglas Fir growing in this area. The climber has titled the photos “Underfed Sandy logger caught by camera as he prepares to go up in Space.’’ The identity of the plucky logger, which Is calculated to surprise many, will be revealed next week. Sandy SDA Church Gives Aid to Blind SANDY RESERVIST, Lynn M. Winchester, left, currently on duty with the Oregon - Washington National Guard, with two other members of “C” Company, joined in the spreading of huge quantities of sawdust around bivouac area to help hold down dust in the barren sagebrush country of the training site at Yakima Firing Center. Saturday, June 11, the Sandy Seventh-day Adventist Church joined the other Adventist church’s of America in giving the 400,000 blind of the United States and Canada a special offering for the Christian Re cord Benevolent Association of Lincoln, Nebraska. In mentioning the church’s desire to lend a helping hand to those without sight, Pastor George W, Chambers stated that the Christian Record Benevo lent Association Is the only association for the blind that has representatives making home calls to give assistance with problems the blind may be experiencing. He stated that it Is the only organization that provides special helps for blind mothers of sighted children. For these mothers, the associa tion publishes a book with Bible stories in Braille on one page and a full-page picture on the opposite page for the children to be looking at while the motner reads with her fingers. There 14,000 ,000 world with the United are an estimated blind people in the 400,000 of them in States and Canada. Ever since her father’s de cision in January of this year, Marci has been planning and looking foward to her depart ure date. The final two weeks had many date changes. “Up until a few days ago, we all thought I would be leaving June 17th. Then it was changed to the 12th, which was the origin al date, and only gave me 3 days to packl” she exclaimed. 2. Northwest Area: North ot Proctor Avenue, West at Strausse Street. Hours: 9a.m. to 12 noon. West Coast Adds New Phone Cable land: “After visiting Berne, the capital, we will travel to Interlaken at the foot of the majestic Alps. This should be quite exciting with an excursion by the highest mountain rail way in Europe to Jungfraujoch (11,333 ft.X The ride up to the Joch is supposed to be one of the most thrilling experiences in Europe. In a few hours we will be able to ascent the Jungfraujoch, from where it will be possible to gaze across the whole of Switzerland. We will also visit the Ice Palace cut out of the glacier, and if we wish, we can trytheunique thrill of a sleigh ride with polar dogs. That should be ciuite an experience!” Here, in Maric’s words, is part of her summer's itinery: “I’ll be travelling across Canada to the French-speaking City of Montreal. There we will board a plane for Paris, and from there go directly to Landon. London will be quite exciting. We have a complete day of sight-seeing, in which we will see The Tower, The Mall, Buckingham Palace, Westminster Abbey, the Houses of Parliament, Hyde Park, St. Paul’s Cathedral, and watch the changing of the Guards.” Following 2 days for shop ping» sightseeing, etc., the tour will travel through Holland, Belgium, Luxenbourg-Capital “Following a route via Lu of the Grand Duchy, down the cerne, we will return to Paris, Rhine River of Germany, stop where we are scheduled to see pin in Munich, Coblence and the well-known Eiffel Tower, Rothenburg. “Wewillthendrive the Arc de Triumphe, historic across the Austrian border to buildings, and the splendid Salzburg, where we will visit sights of Paris.” Mozart's birthplace,” Marci And then, she related, with continued. “Then a cruise on the unforgetable ’Blue Danube’ some resignation: “Our tour to Krems, where we will board will be ended, a TW a jet awaits a coach for Vienna, Capital of us, ready to take us to New- Austria.” York the same day, then con “In Italy, we will stop at tinue home to Portland the same historic towns such as Venice, day. In the 41 days 1 will spend Padue, Florence, Rome, Vat abroad this summer, I will be ican City, Naples, Pompeii, able to seethe sights and scenes Capri, Pisa and Genoa. While of ten countries.” in Rome, we will be visiting Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. the Pantheon, Trevi Fountain, E. A. Kociemba have this com St. Peters, the Vatican Mus ment about their daughter’s eums and the Sistine Chapel, trip: "We consider this tour the Colosseum, the Roman For as part of her education, and um and the Catacombs.” we’re thrilled that she has the “Then it is on to Monte opportunity to travel abroad. Carlo,’’ and an amused smile, We really don’t know who was “you all know what goes on more excited - Marci or usf’’ Juvenile Arrested In Sandy Theft County sheriff’s deputies ar rested a second juvenile June 17 in connection with a burg lary of the residence of John Vedeen Carlson, Rt. 1, Sandy. Deputies last week arrested a juvenile after a companion reported the incident to offi cers, The youth arrested at 7:35 Friday reportedly admit ted the theft of about 18 bottles of beer from the restaurant where he is employed in addi tion to the Carlson burglary. Plans Made to End Sandy Shoplifting The Sandy Merchants’ com mittee, meeting at the Dew Drop In yesterday, discussed the hiring of a professional detective to aid in protecting local stores against shoplift ers. The merchants plan to band together and prosecute to the full extent of the law any and all shoplifters. Gas Chromatography Arthur Smith, Rt. 1, Eagle Creek, Portland Water Bureau Bull Run Analyst, attended a two day course last week on Gas Chromatography. The course, held at the Holiday Inn, Portland, was given by Varion Aerograph Corp, of Walnut Creek, California. 4. Southwest Area: South of Main Street and West of Strausse Street. Hours: 6 p.m. to 9 a.m. NOTE: Strausse Street runs north and south past the Grade School and Odd Fellows Hall. Sprinkling reg ulations and fees apply only to those consumers not regulated by water meters. Use tot pools and car washing classified un der sprinkling regulations. New Mt. Hood Highway Open The Powell Valley - Duncan Rd, section of the Mt. Hood highway (US 26) was opened to traffic at approximately 4 p.m., Wednesday, June 22, it was announced today by Forrest Cooper, state highway engin eer. , 3. Southeast Area: South of Main Street and East of Strausse Street, to include Central or West Coast Telephone is cur rently placing more than eight miles ui new cable between Orient and Sandy to meet the demands for inter-exchange toll trunks and other services. Ac cording to Customer Service Manager Roger Danek, the to tal cost of the additional facil ities is more than >44,400. Business district between Proctor Avenue and Main Street and Langen sand Road. Hours: 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. The limited - access arterial is about 8.25 miles in length and is a four-lane divided high way. This new section connects with the section of this highway through Sandy which was com pleted last fall. The motorist will now have continuous four- lane traffic from Powell Junc tion at the east end of Gresham, through Sandy to Alder Creek. This new route will replace the existing Mt. Hood Highway between Gresham and Sandy and will greatly improve the safety of the highway. It is moving ever closer to Portland and in time will connect with the future Mt. Hood Freeway. Highway Department officials cautioned that there will be some construction activity along the new highway for an other two or three weeks but the area will be well marked by flagmen and signs. They urged drivers to obey instruc tions when driving through the a rea. Degrees Awarded Spring commencement ex ercises here held Sundav, June 12 for the University of Ore gon's 1966 spring graduation class. Sixteen - hundred candidates for baccalaureate and advanced degrees were presented at the 89th commencement exercises at Hayward Field in Eugene. President Arthur S. Flein- ming gave the charge to the class and conferred degrees on candidates who have completed all requirementsfor the several degrees. Candidates from Sandy in cluded: Colette Daren McKinnon Gray - Bachelor of Sc tence - daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Angus G. Mc Kinnon of Rt. 1. Frances Laverne Will . Bachelor uf Science - daughter of Mr. and Mrs. La Verne H. Will of Rte. 2