Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current, July 26, 1979, Page 21, Image 21

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    Thor» July 26 1979
A
Sandy defeated Reynolds
14 7 Sunday to claim the first
place trophy of the Tri
County
league
A team
district tournamerit for 8 to
10-year-olds
Sandy dumped Lynch 13-5
Saturday to gain the finals
It was an uphill climb for
Sandy against Reynolds The
East County team jumped
out in front 5-1 after the first
inning tiefore Sandy pitcher
Darren Pullen settled down
But when he finally settled
down, Reynolds had trouble
hitting him.
Pullen accounted for all
three outs in the second
inning on two putouts and a
strikeout
Meanwhile, the
Sandy hats came alive in the
second frame
Gerald Hale led off with a
single and went to second on
a base hit by Randy Wheeler
Two passed balls later, Hale
scored and Ty Smith reached
first on a base on balls
Morgan
E m ric h
then
doubled
in
his
two
team m ates to cut the
Reynolds lead to one
Chris Palmer worked the
Reynolds pitcher for a walk
I’h® Sandy Kecreution Department has completed it*
rescheduling of Boftliall games postponed due to hud
weathor The makeup game* are scheduled to be
i ompleted by Aug :t ho that the city chart)ptoruthip* can be
played that weekend, according to new recreation
director Bob I a*wicki
The championships, tentatively scheduled for Aug 5,
would pit die winner of the Kecreution Division against
the winner uf the Coni mere la I Division in a best tw txxit
of three series Two games would be pluyed on Sunday,
ami a third, if necessary, would lie pluyed the following
Tuesday
Paola's I ’ izza I tarn is the current leader in the
Commercial Division with a 9 0 record It has a two game
lead on second place G riff’s
The Hoodview Royals are atop the Recreation Division
with a 7 I record The itoyals have u I'« game edge on
second pluce Ilea's
The Women's League has regular season game*
scheduled through mid August Paola's Pizza Barn is in
first place with a 5 0 record Ilea's In & (K»t is in second
w ith a 4 2 mark
Regular season games for t>oth the men's and women's
leagues will continur through the weekend Makeup
games w ill tiegm Monday
M AK EUP GAMES
lloudview Hoy a I * : July 30 vs Ileu s In A < hit
Photo In
Paola's Pizza B a rn ’s llr id i Sheppard cast* a pleading
g la m r toward Independents' third baseman Debbie
Stone, hoping her opponent will tell her whether it's safe
scoreboard
\dv enlist: No games
Mt Hood ( hristiun No games
lieu's In A <Hit: July 30 vs Hoodview Royals
Team S: July 31 vs Ron's No Pluce
Independents: No games
Carbon ( hevrolel: No games ta ll forfeited)
MEN'S LEAGUE
RECREATIONAL DIVISION
Whistle Stop: No gam e*
Paola's Pizza Hara: Aug tv s Sandy TV
Hoodview Royals
Dea's In & Out
Team s
Adventist Church
Independents
Ml
< hr isti.ui
COMMERCIAL DIVISION
Griff's Aug 2 vs Ron's No Place
Ron's No P la c e :
July 31 vs Team 5
Aug 2 vs G riff's
Aug 3 vs Sandy TV
Sandy TV:
Aug tv s Paola > Pizza Burn
Aug 3 vs Ron's No Place
W
7
6
3
2
2
L
1
3
4
7
8
2
8
W L
9 0
Paola 's Pizza
to try for home. It turned out to be very safe, because
Sheppard made it easily and Paola's came out on top 19-4.
7
5
5
4
i
Novotny also led the hitting
attack, going four-for four
and driving in three runs.
Palmer also knocked in three
runs with his three hits.
Sandy finished the season
with a 13-4 record It now w ill
compete
in the state
tournam ent,
te n ta tiv e ly
scheduled for Aug 3-5 at
Corbett
Sandy
then
dumped
Corbett
21-14
F rid ay
afternoon to win the Midget
National League East crown
Gifford. Mike Purcel and
Dale Boyd slugged homers to
lead the Sandy battin g
attack
The C inderella season
came to an end Saturday,
however, as National League
West team Margaret Scott
dumped Sandy 27-8.
In addition to its first place
trophy. Sandy players and
fans won the Sportsmanship
Award.
The Sandy 8-10-year-olds
finished the season with a 10-
5-1 record.
Sandy's Midget National
East team upset the experts
last weekend by winning the
league crown
2
3
5
3
7
Seeded only fourth. Sandy
pulled a shocker in the first
game
of
the
d is tric t
tournam ent by nipping
Fairview 17-16 Fairview had
been seeded first going into
the tourney.
WOMEN’S LEAGUE
W L
5 0
4 2
3 3
1 5
2 4
1 4
Paola's
Dea's In & Out
Carlson Chevrolet
Brinkley Const
Independents
GTE
Pullen also pitched three
innings in the opener against
Lynch,
recording
six
strikeouts
Novothy took
over for the final two innings
and whiffed five Lynch
hatters
Midget Nationals win
East; lose in playoff
Mar* Floyd
G riff’s
,
Sandy TV
W histle Stop
Ron’s No Place
•Carlson Chevy
•Carlson Chevy forfeited all remaining games
and Matt Novotny tied the
game by singling in Emrich
Then Pullen helped his own
cause by blasting an inside
the park homer down the left
field line to drive in three
runs 'That ended the rally,
hut Sandy had an 8-5 lead and
was never headed
Pullen pitched the first
three innings before giving
way to Wheeler Wheeler
hurled the final two frames
and fanned four Reynolds
flatters, tie struck out the
side in the fourth inning
Kandy Gifford slugged two
grand slam home runs for
Sandy, then went to the
mound and shut down the
Fairview batters in the final
frame to pick up the victory
as well. Clay Hull also had a
home run.
Anti-hunting groups sometimes harmful to wildlife
One of the niti»l effective
and lim e-tested w ild life
»tmsrrvallon efhwt» in the
United Stale», the Pltlm an-
Kobertson program, recently
suffered a lime- and money-
wasting lawsuit brought by a
d e v o te d
a n ti-h u n tin g
o rg a n iza tio n
The
»uit
c la im e d
the
p ro gram
benefit* only anim al* that
are hunted to the detriment
of nttnganie specie*.
Few
wildlife
manager*
view the «uit a» anything
more than a blatant attack
on hunting. National anti-
hunting group* h a*e*eldom .
if ever, done anything for
wildlife
Their effort* are
alw ays d irec te d against
hunting the activity that
provide* the financial base
(or virtually all wildlife
management in (hi* country.
The following, provided by
the W ildlife Management
Institute, exam ine* the other
side of the story.
"Ignorance is u personal
p ro b le m ." a perceptive
person once wrote "But to
take advantage of one's
position to share that
ignorance and call it gospel
|a a social crim e of
monumental proportions ’’
Wildlife are in danger id
becoming victims of this
alleged socal crime, not as
intended casualties, tail as
innocent bystander» Thpy
are being put in that
precarious
position
by
unreasoning
c ritic s
of
hunting, crusaders who seek
CCC slates
handicapped
track meet
A mini track meet for the
h.indi« .ipped w ill be held at
C la c k a m a s C o m m u n ity
College, July 27. at 9 a m
The meet is open to
handicapped persona ages R ,
years and older There will
be
special events and
division* of competition for
the b lind and persons
confined to wheelchairs
Among the events that w ill
iw contested are 50.75-, 100
and 400 mete^ dashes, mile
run. running and standing
long jump, lo ft ha 11 and
frisbee throwing and an
otMtacle course for persons
in wheelchairs
There is no charge to enter,
Init persons planning to
compete are asked to
register prior to the meet by
c a llin g
the Clackamas
C o m m u n ity
C o lle g e
C o m m u n ity R e c re a tio n
Office, 650 2631, ext 211
to
force
th e ir
m oral
standards on others who
enjoy an honored and
le g itim a te
outdoor
re ­
treat lor activity
The critics’ latest tactics
include efforts to destroy a
tim e - te s te d
n a tio n a l
program that is the ttackbone
<4 wildlife conservation in
thA U S Apparently they are
doing this because the
progrum is accused of tie ing
of primary benefit to game
uni ma Is and is financed by
hunters
That program is the
Federal Aid in Wildlife
OREGON
By Ken
Durbin
R e s to ra tio n
P ro g ra m ,
sometimes
called
the
Pittman Robertion or P R
program
a fte r
its
congressional
sponsors.
Created in 1937. it is funded
by manufacturers' excise
taxes on sporting arms and
a m m u n itio n , a r c h e r y
equipment, and handguns
Receipts go into a special
fundintheU .S Treasury ami
are apportioned among state
wildlife agencies on a cast*
sharing basis for research,
land acquisition, habitat
development and outdoor
education.
State
ap­
portionments are based on
lam! area ami hunting license
sales
In the past 40 years, the P
R program has financed
more than $1 billion in
wildlife restoration activity
Those who would undermine
the program claim that most
of the money is spent on
animals that are hunted,
such as deer and ducks, to
the detriment of species that
are not. such as evening
grosheuks and house finches
They are half right, which
makes them half wrong and
ignorant of some important
facts.
Most of the money is
invested
i|*
program s
designed and labeled to
benefit game anim als
Consequently, most deerand
duck populations are in
pretty good shape But these
programs do not decimate
nongatne as the crusaders
claim Evening griMbeak and
house finch populations are
increasing ra p id ly
The
reason is relatively simple
Certain groups of wildlife
species
(game
and
nongame > prefer certain
types of habitat.
For example, when a land
manager uses prescribed
annual burning in a maturing
southern pine forest to
stimulate the growth of low
vegetation that supplies food
and cover for bobwhite quail,
he a uto m a tica lly helps
cotton
rats,
co tto n ta il
rabbits, bobcats (which eat
the rats and rabbits) and at
least 20 species of songbirds
Il happens that way because
rats, rabbits and songbircfe
need the same type of food
and cover as do the quail,
and therefore, the bobcat's
dinner table is set, too There
are, .of course, many other
closely knit associations of
SERVICE
WE GIVE!
game and nongame in other
types of habitat.
That these associations
exist is an indisputable
scientific fact So much so
that experienced wildlife
managers can name the
anim als — game and
nongame — expected to 1*
present in any one area
simply by looking at the
habitat type Consequently,
if the P R program helps
certain game on certain
areas of land and water, it is
ecologically impossible to
avoid
helping
ce rta in
nongame. But that's only
part of the story
Any time an acre of land is
improved for one group of
species, its value may be
changed for another grixip
Grey squirrels anil Acadian
flyca tche rs
don't
like
annually
burned
pine
forests, fox squirrels and
pine warblers do. And so on
Therefore, when P R
funds are used to create a
certain type of habitat, the
results are not increases in
game and decreases in
nongame. The results are
that the land becomes more
attractive to those wildlife
species that prefer that type
of habitat, and becomes or
remains less attractive to
animals with different needs
ibis is w hy wildlife managers
try to create diverse habitat
types — so there w ill be a
greater variety of animal
species for people to enjoy
That is why the P R money is
used to burn in one place,
impound water in another,
cut timber in another, plow
and cultivate in another, and
provide complete protection
to vegetation in another
And the record shows it
works A visit to a water area
developed for ducks or to an
upland managed basically
for deer, turkeys or squirrels
quickly reveals that many
nongame
anim als
are
Federal judge reduces
Pacific salmon season
US.
D is tric t
Judge
W illiam Schwarzer of San
Francisco announced earlier
this week that he w ill cut the
commercial seLnon trolling
season by an additional 17
days.
T ro llin g
off
Oregon,
Washington and California
w ill now end Sept 1 instead
of Sept 8 and an additional
closure on port of the coast
w ill lie in effect from July 25
to Aug. 3
AT,VCH’ SOMEONE NEW
TO THE AREA?
( ’all Newcomers Service.............
Our
INSURANCE
WE SELL . . .
Th« personal
insurance counsel
and advice of a local
agent is im p orta nt
to you in planning
a com plete insurance
program .
Greeter« provide important
complimentary coupons for gifts
and
services from local businesses
21)7-2M t)
I
WCOMERS SERVICE
s"><* 19211
Betty Wolf,MA-4UUIl, Ruby Eliason. H4M-S3H2
2
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O R E G O N 'S L A R G E S T
M OTORSPORTS
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SCHEDULE OF
EVENTS
SATURDAY
JULY X8
FUNNY CARS
WHEELSTANDERS
ROCKET FUNNY CARS
ROCK BANDS
Discount Tickets
Available NOW at
Store Hours 7 30 to 6 00 Mon thru Sot
ABSOLUTELY THE BEST Pl ACE
TO BUY NAPA A UTO PARTS
C O M PU TE MACHINE SHOP SEPYKE
SANDY
G » o r f» M o rg a n
WALRAD
e
ÍGATél
during the early 1900's
Today, all these animals are
relatively abundant. The P-R
program helped finance the
return and maintenance of
these species and many
others, both bame and
nongame And it does not
cost federal taxpayers one
penny because all costs for
administering the program
are borne entirely by the
manufacturers' excise taxes
paid by those who enjoy
recreational hunting
I would be wrong to imply
that the program is perfect.
Certainly, it can be improved
and is being improved But to
scuttle it in ignorance of its
great value to America's
wildlife heritage, as some
would do, would be a social
crim e
of
m onumental
proportions
------- — and----------
lo c a l R » p r » « » n t a t ly »
INSURANCE
AGENCY
668-4421
benefited. In fa ct, the
number of nongame species
benefited invariable exceeds
the number of game species
But to appreciate the
present,
one
must
understand the past. About
1900, many authorities did
not have much hope that any
of the larger forms of wildlife
mould survive beyond the
1920's This pessimistic view
failed to foresee the scientific
w ild lif e
m anagem ent
programs that developed in
the early 1930's and which,
with the help of P R money,
have
expanded
trou th
subsequent decades.
The beaver, pronghorn,
bison, elk. white-tailed deer,
wild turkey, trumpeter swan,
wood duck, sea otter, and
several species of egrets and
herons were in dire straits
Schwarzer cited meeting
the
trea ty
rig h ts
of
Northwest Indians as the
main cuase for the season
reduction
community information
Sandy, O regon
3
Sandy Federate
nab league title
City League
nears finish;
Paola’s leads
Makeup Schedule
SANDY (Or» ) POST
{NAPA?
668 4444
GRESHAM
665Í118
255 « Hopn Rd
ESTACADA
630 6614
2 135 St Mam
GATES
ROCK BANDS
ELIMINATIONS
9:00 AM
NOON
6 00 PM
BEST LINE I P Oh
h l NNY CARS E l ER'
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HAWAIIAN
240 GORDIE
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CHICAGO PATROL
TWIG ZEIGLER
MIKE MILLER
HANK JOHNSON
p ic s many . many
MORE'
P ortland In tern ation al R a c e w a y
WEST DELTA PARK OFF 15
Race Information - (503) 285 6635
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