Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current, January 08, 1981, Page 4, Image 4

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    SANDY (Ore.) POST Thurs., Jen I. 1981 (Sec 1)
School menus
Sandy
Monda>, Jan. 12
Vegetable Beef
Soup
Cottage Cheese 4
Pear Salad
Orange Wedges
Bread & Butter
M ilk
Tuesday. Jan. 13.
Turkey Ala King
over Whipped
Potatoes
Seasoned Green
Beans
F ru it Crisp
Whole Wheat Bread
M ilk
Wednesday. Jan. 14
Beef 4 Cheese
Tostada w ith
Lettuce 4 Tomatoes
Sliced Peaches
Com Bread 4
Honey Butter
M ilk
Cottrell
Welches
Monday, Jau. 12
Hamburgers
Potato chips
Pickles
Mustard-catsup
Pope ye salad
Peaches
M ilk
Monday. Jan. 12
Pork Noodle Casserole
Buttered Peas and Carrots
Roll - Butter
Peanuts
Apple Wedge
M ilk
Tuesday, Jan. 13
B u rrito W-Sauce
Tater Tots
Green Salad
Cherry Cobbler
M ilk
Tuesday .Jau. 13
Barbecued pork sandwich
Buttered green beans
Carrot sticks
Chilled applesauce
M ilk
Wednesday, Jan. 14
Toasted Cheese Sandwich
Macaroni Salad
Applesauce
Gingerbread
M ilk
Wednesday, Jan. 14
Tomato soup
Toasted cheese
sandwiches
Crackers
Buttered corn
Crazy cake
M ilk
Thursday. Jan IS
Chili Con Carne
Crackers
C arrot Coins
Buttered Cornbread
Sliced Peaches
M ilk
Thursday, Jan. IS
Chicken Fried
Steak
French Fires
Catsup
Apple
Bread 4 Butter
M ilk
Friday, Jan. 16
Pork Gravy-
over Rice
Tossed Green
Salad
Apricots
Hot Cinnamon Bun
M ilk
Local lot applications before county
The Clackamas County
hearings officer w ill consider
a pair of P rincipal Use Lot
Size Variance applications
i n v o lv i n g S a n d y - a r e a
properties this Monday, Jan.
12, at 7 p m in the County
Courthouse
Next Thursday, Jan. 15, at
7 p.m ., the hearings officer
w ill consider two Non-Forest
Use applications involving
Boring-area properties.
Paul E. Tucker filed the
firs t application to acquire a
variance from the provisions
of Section 404.08, to allow the
division of his property into
two 20-acre parcels, and
development of a single­
fam ily residence on each lot.
The property is on S.E.
Laughing Water Road, ap­
proxim ately one-third mile
Friday. Jan. 16
Chicken Ala-King
on Biscuit
Buttered Peas
G.O.R.P.
F ruited Jello
M ilk
Friday, Jan. 16
Tacos
Tator logs
Shredded lettuce
Buttered peas-carrots
Frosted grahams
Choice of m ilk
10:30 a.m. Therapy Pool
12 noon Loaves and Fishes
1:00 p.m. Cards
group w ill practice for
several upcoming events.
Due to several requests, a
group of seniors w ill be
special guests at the Tim m
D airy in Eagle Creek. A tour
of the facilities and firs t­
hand observation of the
m ilking
procedure
is
scheduled for next Friday,
Jan. 16.
Tuesday, Jan. 13
9 a.m. to 12 noon Drop In
10 a.m.
G.A.C.
Board
Meeting
12 noon Loaves and Fishes
12:30 p.m. Bowling
1 p.m. Ceramics
7 p.m. Music Group
Activities
for the Week of
Jan. 8 to Jan. 15
Wednesday, Jan. 14
9 a.m. to 12 noon Drop In
12 noon Loaves and Fishes
1 p.m. F ilm
Thursday, Jan. 8
9 a.m. to 12 noon Drop In
9 a.m. Exercise
9 a.m. Law Project
10 a.m. Humanities Class
12 noon Golden Age Club
Potluck
and
Business
meeting
Thursday, Jan. 15
9 a.m. to 12 noon Drop In
9 a.m. Exercise
10 a.m. Humanities Class
12 noon Loaves and Fishes
12:30 p.m. T im m D a iry Tour
Friday, Jan. 9
9 a.m. to 12 noon Drop In
9:30 a.m. A rts 4 Crafts
12 noon Loaves and Fishes
12 noon High School Tour 4
lunch
Monday, Jan. 12
9 a.m. to 12 noon Drop In
9:30 a.m. Exercise
Grade school
may renovate
Sandy playshed
The Sandy Elem entary
School D istric t Board w ill
tonight consider a proposal
to renovate the playshed at
the
Sandy
Elem entary
School, using the remaining
building bond funds
The meeting w ill be held
tonight, Jan. 8, in the lib ra ry
at Cedar Ridge School at 7:30
p.m.
Included in the playshed
renovation would be a new
floor, new interior walls and
a rtific ia l lighting, according
to D istrict Superintendent
Clark Lund. He said that
more natural light would also
be utilized with the addition
of skylights at the fa c ility .
The
district
has
ap­
proximately
155.000
re­
maining in the bond fund,
he said
New
fencing
m aterial
would
also
be
placed,
replacing some that is badly
worn and rusted, l^und said.
The district board w ill also
look at some d istrict policy in
preparation for a stan­
dardization review which
w ill be conducted in the
district soon by the state
If it is prepared in tune, the
d istrict board w ill examine a
possible calendar of events
for the 1981-82 school year,
Lund said
«
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1
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Banclub
$20,000
Insurance
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Frt.
10%
ww
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B anclu b
$10,000
In s u ran c e
Insurance
W OOD STOVES !
I
p ro p e rty ,
would
allow
Thomas and Susan Perisich
to construct a residence, not
in conjunction w ith a forest
use, on a lot of record. It is on
the west side of S.E. Tickle
(Yeek Road, approximately
350 feet north of S.E. Knox
Road.
The applications for all
these hearings are available
fo r
inspection
at
the
Department of
Environ­
mental Services, Planning
D ivisio n , 902 A bernethy
Road, Oregon City.
BUXTON’S
Lee Meat Company
Sandy 668-4838
Custom Slaughtering
Grain Fed Locker Beef
• Cut, Wrapped & Frozen— Locker Packs
Cattle Hauling on Tuesdays
We Do Our Own Cure .. Smoking
© NOW
$30,000
The d istrict sent two
tankers to help the Hoodland
F ire D is tric t fight a fire at
Sleepy Hollow at 5:49 a.m.,
Jan. 1.
Sandy district firefighters
battled a fire early Monday
morning which destroyed a
house at 49025 Wildcat
Mountain Drive. Damage
was in excess of $300,000.
surpassing the total loss by
fire in 1980
A
class
in
cardio­
pulmonary resuscitation w ill
be held at the Sandy Com­
m unity School on Tuesday
and Thursday, Jan. 20 and 22,
at 6:30 p.m. There is a sign­
up list at the Sandy Fire
D is tric t’s maui station.
I’ .
Classified deadline is noon Monday
Banclub
Fire daims home
The Sandy F ire D istrict
responded to 986 emergency-
calls during 1980 It didn’t
take long in 1981 fo r the
alarm to sound
A t 12:24 a.m., Jan 1,
Sandy emergency personnel
responded to an automobile
accident on Coalman Road,
but were recalled before they
arrived at the scene.
mile south of its intersection
with S.E. K itzm iller Road, in
the Sandy area.
Next Thursday , Galen and
M yrtle Insteness w ill ask
permission to partition the
6.1 acre tax lot into a 4.1-acre
and a two-acre parcel, and
construct a single-family
residence not in conjuntion
with a forest use on each.
The property is on the
northwest intersection of
S.E. Tickle Creek and S.E.
Knox Roads, in the Boring
area. It is currently zoned
transitional timber.
The second application
next T hursday evening,
in v o lv in g
B o rin g -a re a
Thursday. Jan. IS
Fried chicken
Potato salad
Hot rolls w-butter
Italian vegetables
F ru it cup
Milk
Senior Center News
The Sandy Senior Center
w ill welcome the return of
Thursday’s exercise class
today in the 9 to 10 a.m. time
slot to avoid conflict with the
resumption
of
the
Humanities
Class.
That
class’ members w ill meet
every Thursday from 10 a.m.
to noon fo r the humanities
class in the center’s upstairs.
One half hour of free legal
counseling w ill be offered to
seniors
through
the
Clackamas County Senior
Law Project this Thursday
from 9 a.m. to 12 noon at the
center.
F or
more
in­
formation, call Jan, 668-5569
The firs t Golden Age Club
potluck of the year w ill take
place
today,
Jan.
8.
Following the meal and
business meeting, there w ill
be games.
The arts and crafts group
w ill continue to work on
projects in preparation for
the spring bazaar. Everyone
is invited for a fun and
productive activity every
F riday morning at 9:30 a.m
at the center.
This Tuesday evening at 7
p.m. the center’s music
southeast of its intersection
with S.E. Bull Run Road It is
a general tim ber district.
The second application for
consideration Monday night
was filed by Norma Ray
Norquist, Norma Ronald and
R ich a rd Thom as. They
propose
to
a cq u ire a
variance from the provisions
of Section 404.08 also They
want to divide property into
three lots of 40, 20, and 20
acres each, and develop each
lot with a single-family
residence.
The property , in a general
tim ber district, is at the
south end of S.E. Betty Road,
approximately
one-fourth
I
-i
L J -L
4
S en io r
• a •
citizen
C hecking
Golden
S e c u rity
Society
6
R e g u la r
C h eckin g
CHOICE PLUS
INTEREST
Clackamas County Bank gives you
a NOW Account option on
all checking plans.
You’re hearing more and more these days
about something new
called a NOW account.
It’s really nothing more
than interest on your checking balance,
something you’ve been telling banks
you’ve wanted lor a long time.
We at Clackamas County Bank suggest
that when you hear or see anouncements
about NOW accounts being offered
at other financial institutions,
you look carefully at the choice
of interest-bearing checking plans
they offer. We think you’ll find
most of them are saying you can
have any kind of NOW account you want,
as long as it’s black.
Well, Clackamas County Bank doesn’t believe
in forcing people into a single choice.
That’s why we’ve taken the
unique approach of oil ering
checking-with-interest as an
option on ALL our checking plans . . .
and for years, we’ve led the way in
designing unique checking plans
for people of all ages
in all walks of life.
So, when you come to
Clackamas County Bank
for your NOW Account,
you’ll have the freedom to choose the
checking plan that’s just right for you.
And isn’t that the kind of choice
you’ve come to expect
from Clackamas County Bank?
Clackamas County Bank . . giving you
the hometown advantage.
(NOW Accounts available December 31, IMHO)
Member FDIC
<23
H CLACKAMAS
" -■ COUNTY BANK
Sandy Off ice 668 5501
woodland Office 622 3131
Boring Off ice 663 3000