Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current, July 21, 1966, Image 1

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    -Sandy Post
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___
great way
TO THE MT. HOOD PLAYGROUND
voi. 2a
TEN PAGE.1,
SANDY, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 21, I960
Single copy 19c
No. 29
Hood Delegation Gets
New Highway Promise
At a special hearing before
the Oregon State Highway Com­
mission last Thursday a dele­
gation spear-headed by
the
Hood-Land Chamber of Com­
merce was given assurance
widening of Highway 26 between
Melvin Fritsche, Rt. 2, Sandy, was able to walk away from his car after an accident
Friday on new Highway near Kelso entrance. The Fritsche car heading east, was struck
In the side by a car driven by Ivy Jane Vaeretti, Rt. 1, Sandy. Mrs. Vaeretti was taken
to Gresham hospital suffering from shock. A passenger In the Vaerittl car was uninjured
Fritsche, who was also unhurt, said the Vaerittl vehicle failed to stop at the Intersection
and he could not get out of the way In time to avoid being hit.
(Post photo;
Zig Zag and Alder Creek will
be scheduled next year.
Senator John Inskeep (chair­
man of the State Highway In­
terim Committee) was spokes­
man for the delegation and made
the presentation regarding the
Mt. Hood Ski Areas
To Get New Lifts
Addilival ski facilities are
planned for Timberline and
Multorpor Ski Bowl and are ex­
pected to be in operativ for the
1966*67 season, according to
informativ received from the
Forest Service.
It was announced that a new
5100-foot double chairlift with
a vertical rise of 851 feet will
be Installed at Timberline while
Multorpor Ski Bowl will get a
new double chairlift of 34 80
feet with a vertk le rise of 716
Mt. Hood College Urging
Early Student Enrollment
While applications for admis­
sion to Mt. Hood Community
College are being made dally,
there is no reason to believe
that admissions will be closed
in the near future. Applicathna
will be processed until Sept­
ember 19.
The
college does not an­
ticipate the need to stop accept­
ing applicative, however, stu­
dents who wish to be assured
of a registration appointment
should get their applicative In
aa ao<ai
possible. Tra*
dttivaliy there Is a last minute
Sunday Crash
Injures Two
rush in the admissions office
and many students delay making
formal application until the time
for registration has arrived.
After September 1, it will not
be possible to guarantee a full
selection of classes tor those
people who are late in applying
for admission.
The college will he hvsed tn
temporary
quarters v the
Multnomah County Fairgrounds
for this first year ot operattv.
C las rooms will be
portable
units especially cvatructedfor
Mt. Hood. Because of the limited
MMvtber of rooms for classes,
vrollmvt will be limited. But
the total capacity of the class­
room units will accommodate
up to 1,000 students,
Anyve interested in apply­
ing for admisslv this Fail
garter should cal) the Office
of Admissive and Records or
write or visit the college of­
fices al 225 E. Bumside In
Gresham. The college teleph ve
number is 665-1131.
-
Two men, a physician and
an architect, were injured in
a head-V collision V the Mt.
Hood Highway near Brightwood
early Sunday morning.
Fred E. Miller, Portland ar­
chitect, was taken to Gresham
Hospital with multiple lacera-
tlvs andposslbieheadInjuries.
He was later removed to Port-
land’s Emanuel hospital where
his condition is reported to be
improving.
Dr. Thomas Eugene Brug-
ger, Gresham, who suffered
The majority of the Sandy
multiple lacerations, was also
taken to Gresham Hospital and Cvgregativ of Jehovah’s Wit­
nesses will be joining some
later released.
30,000 from Alberta, British
Columbia
and
the
Pacific
Northwest for their annual dis­
trict convention August 3-7 in
the Empire Stadium, Vancou­
ver, B. C. Others from the
cvgregativ
will attend a
simultaneous assembly in San
Francisco's Candlestick Park
which is expected to draw 55,-
feet.
More than 2 milliv visits
were recorded at 28 winter
sports sites Ln the Natival
Forests of Oregon and Wash­
ingtv during the 1965-66 sea­
son, said J. Herbert
stve,
Regional Forester U. 8. For­
est Service.
The total represents about a
10 per cent Increase <n«r the
previvs year. Nearly three-
fourths of the visits were for
skiing, Stve said, although
all types of snow fun are grow­
ing in popularity.
In additlv to general main­
tenance and slope grooming v
all sites, other new facilities,
Including a new site, are also
reported to be planned for the
1966-67 seasv as follows:
Mlsslv Ridge — Wenatchee
National Forest -- New site 13
miles southwest of Wenatchee,
Wash., will <g>v with a day
lodge and two dvble chairlifts
in tandem.
Crystal Mountain — sno-
Vaimie
Natival Forest —
Additional overnight facilities
and admmirt-atlKiXildtag are
planned.
Snoqualmie Summit -- Sno-
Valmie Natival
Forest —
New Dvble chairlift is planned.
Bachelor Butte — Deschutes
Natival Forest — New lodge
providing overnight facilities
is to becompleted this summer.
Hoodoc Ski Bowl — Willa-
mette National Forest -- Com-
pletiv of new day lodge and
new dvble chairlift scheduled.
THE CHARLES MARSH FAMILY FIRST PRIZE WINNERS
(Sandy Post Photo)
Crowds Throng Sandy Stores
For Moonlite Madness Sale
“It looked like a carnival
was in town," said one Sandy
merchant speaking of Friday
night's Moonlite Sale. “Every
store and street was thronged
with bargain hunters and as the
good-natured buyers sought out
dollar-saving values, a holiday
spirit prevailed.*’
Customers got many good
laughs from the sight of usually
sober-minded businessmen and
clerks dressed in outlandish
sleeping garments. On the other
Sandy Bowler
Will Compete
On Pro Tour
Ruby Langlois, Sandy's first
and
vly
member of the
Womens Professlval Bowl­
ing Assorlativ, left yesterday
for California where she will
compete In the Golden Gate
Pro Tournament in El Cerrito.
Canada Convention
Youth Group
Sets Car Wash
Draws Witnesses
SUHS Graduate
Enlists in Army
000.
Ray A. King, presiding min­
ister" uf the Sandy group, re­
marked: “We do not send just
one or two representatives; at
our conventions entire families
are welcome and expected to be
present. Convention time for us
is a combination of pleasant
vacation and profound instruc­
tion so we return home re­
freshed!”
Sandy Cooks Expected to
Excel at Gresham Fair
0
18, a 1966
Craig Nakunz
graduate of Sandy High School
enlisted in the Army last week
and
has departed for Fort
Lewis, Washingtv where he
was ordered to take his basic
training.
Craig Is the only son and
eldest child of Mr. and Mrs.
Hobert Nakunz, Ht. 2, Sandy.
June Graduate to Start
Teaching Career in Fall
Cake bakers and pickle ma­
kers from the Sandy area are
again expected to be in the
prize winners’ circle at the
60th annual Multnomah County
Fair at Gresham July 28 th rough
August 6. Deadline for foods
competition entries is Monday,
July 25 between 10 a.m. and 7
p.m. at
the Gresham Fair-
grounds
Entries of floral ar-
rangers and garden clubs will
be received July 27 between
noon and 8 P.m. at the fair
Candidate to Attend
State GOP Convention
George Elvers, candidate for
State Senator from Clackamas
County, position number 2, and
his wife, Ruth, will leave Thurs­
day, July 21st for the Repub­
lican Party State Cvventlv In
Coos Bay.
Colette
McKinnon Gray,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Angus
McKinnon, Sandy, received the
degree of Bachelor of Science
in Physical Education when she
Mr. Elvers, an official dele­
graduated last mvth from the gate from Clackamas Cvnty,
University of Oregon.
will serve v the committee to
Starting in the fall, Mrs. Gray help draft the Republican Party
will teach physical educatlv at state platform.
a Lake Oswego junior
high
school. She and her husband, ,
c°nvvtlv Is scheduled
Steven, reside In West Portland. for the weekend of JUly 23-24th.
Floral building.
In addition to household, 11 ve-
stock and commercial exhibits,
the fair will offer twice daily
free stage shows starring tenor
Dennis Etay and “The Frivol vs
Five” - a surprising combo of
middle aged ladies who under
their funny hats possess un­
common talent for a smashing
brand of Dixieland jazz. The
Multnomah fair also Includes
a nine-day parimutuel horse
racing meet.
Opening day, Thursday, July
28, will again be “Kid's Day”
with children up to 16 admitted
free until 4 p.m. and given
reduced rates during morning
and afternoon hours on Carnival
Gay Way rides.
Jaycettes to Assist
At X-Ray Unit Visit
The Mt. Hood Jaycettes will
be assisting at the Mobile X-
Ray Unit when it comes to Sandy
on Friday, August 19. Another
future service project of the
club Includes dlstributiv
of
magazines to local nursing
homes.
hand the customers provided
the store personnel with some
laughs of their own when many
of them paraded through town
in their nightwear.
Choosing the winners in the
Pajama Parade was difficult
for the judges, but they finally
(and sleepily) announced their
decisions.
In the clerks division First
Prize of a $20 merchandise
certificate went to Ross Wil­
liams of Sandy Big Chief. Sec­
ond prize, a $15 gift certifi­
cate, was won by Jack Scales
at William’s Thriftway.
In the Customer Division
First Prize of a $20 gift cer
tiflcate was won by the Charles
Marsh family and, tied for Sec­
ond Place, were Barbara Dy al
and Kay Kirby -- each winning
a $7.50 gift certificate.
Doug Beach, sale chairman,
said the winners could pick up
their certificates anytime dur­
ing storehours at Mountain
Electronics on Proctor Ave.
Beach said, the certificates
are good for the value indicated
at any ve of the 17 stores that
participated in the sale.
ournament is the second
one of three in the western
half of the women’s Pro Bowl-
ers Tour and will mark Ruby's
first appearance as a profes­
sional since she stepped up to
the big time ranks of theWPBA
last spring.
After bowling in the 6 game
Pro-Am event on Friday, Ally
22, the Sandy pro will compete
against the nation’s leadingeo­
men professional bowlers in
the tournament rounds sched­
uled for Saturday and Sunday,
July 23 and 24. In head-to-
head competition they will roll
four 5-game blocks on Saturday
and one 5-game block on Sunday
before the field of 80 is cut to
24.
If she survives the first cut
in the grueling competition of
skill and endurance, the Sandy
bowler will face another 15
games of bowling before the
field is cut again to 12 con­
testants and, if still “alive'*
must bowl 18 more games,
after which the four top scorers
will bowl a onegamesemi-final
match. Two finalists will then
bowl three games forthecham-
plonshlp.
Huby, who has been training
and putting in long hours of
practice since becoming a pro,
says she has no dreams of
winning, that she only hopes
to “do well and to learn a
lot.”
She explained
that
“Tournament bowling on the
prolevel requires not only the
necessary
bowling skill but
steady nerves, stamina and the
ability to pace yourself.”
Christ Ambassadors, yvng
people’s organizativ of
the
Sandy Assembly of God church,
have scheduled a car wash v
Saturday, July 23, from 10a.m.
to 4 p.m. at Shaw’s Richfield
stativ at the east end of town.
The car wash is being held to
raise funds for Speed-the-Light
which Is a missivary project.
FIRST PRIZE WINNER IN CLERK’S PAJAMA CONTEST
CSandy Post Photo)
Weather Perfect for Kiwanis
Fly-In Breakfast on Sunday
The
9th
annual Kiwanis
Breakfast is over, but will be
Ivg remembered by those who
attended. Sunday's weather was
perfect — clear blue sky, a
scattering of baby piumpclvds
for accent, and appetite sharp­
ening, sunshine providing just
the right amount of warmth.
Some 1415 breakfasts
were
served to hungry customers by
the hard-working Sandy Kiwan­
is and their wives, assisted at
the tables by the Girl Scouts,
and Rainbow Girls. Boy Scvts
and Explorers assisted in the
Flight Line and helped in the
general clean-up afterward.
Everything went off without a
hitch except some delay was
caused when one of the new
stoves failed to work properly,
FULL HOUSE at the Fly-In Breakfast. Scene was
repeated many times over as constant 5-hour stream
sectiv of U. S. 26 that is of
such vital concern to people of
the Hood-Land area.
Weekend
traffic often is
bumper-to-bumper over the
entire eight-mile stretch
of
road, Inskeep said. He told the
commisslv there are times
when residents of the area have
to wait Ivg periods of time
before being able to break into
the steady flow of traffic v the
highway, he said.
County commissioner Dar­
rell Jaes, who accompanied
the delegativ of residents from
the mvntaln area to the con­
ference of highway officials,
said
it was promised the
project would be scheduled when
the next sesslv of the legisla­
ture comes to an end.
Jones said that officials rec­
ognize the traffic problem that
exists v the two-lane stretch
of U. S. 26 due to the large in­
crease in the number of perm­
anent residents in the area
and the heavy travel resulting
from recent recreatival de­
velopments.
The chairman of the State
Highway Commisslv, Glenn L.
Jackson, said hewaswell aware
of the situativ caused by the
“terrific peaks” and that it
will be placed v a “high pri­
ority” list.
Others who attended the hear­
ing as part of the Hood-Land
delegativ were Rep. Richard
Grover, Phil Barker (a rep­
resentative from the Bureau of
Land Management), Jack Sills
representing the Bend Portland
Trucking Co., Chamber presl -
dent Dr. Roy J. Carothers and
Chamber members Dv Cham­
berlain, Ed Cook, Lev Fields
and George Staggs.
Those wishing to read the
material prepared for the High­
way Commisslv are welcome
to do so. There are two copies
— ve is at the Zig Zag Inn
and the other is at the Barlow
Trail Inn.
Work on New Church
Will
Start Soon
reported club president Olin
Bignail. Bignail said that his
group was more than rewarded
for their efforts by the fine
attendance and wished to thank
all who came and helped to
make possible the club’s sup­
port of community
service
projects and aid to the Kiwanis
Crippled Children’s Camp.
3-Boys Market Has
Two New Employees
New employees in the meat
department of the Sandy 3-Boys
Market are meat cutter, Sam
Solders, and his assistant,
Tennie Post. They will fill the
vacancies created by thereslg-
nativ of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
O. Bowen.
o
Ground breaking for the cv-
structiv of the new Sandy First
Baptist church is expected to
start sov. The church grvp
recently purchased property
near Kelso and a zving change
which will allow use of the
property for church purposes
has been
approved by the
County Planning Commisslv.
First Baptist services are
currently being held in
the
Sandy Women's Club
with
sunday school at 9:45 a.m.,
church at 11 a.m., training
union at 6:30 p.m. and evening
service at 7:30 p.m.
The Rev. A. C. Wade of Port­
land is pastor of the church and
associate pastor is Wayne C.
Cosby, Rt. 2, Boring.
guests enjoyed hearty open-air meal.
(Post photo)