Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current, January 22, 1981, Page 13, Image 13

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    Thur» , Jan 22.1781 (Sac 2) SANDY (Ora ) POST—5
Hibernating in winter can be a real bear
In the spring a young m an’» fancy turns to love, but a
bear's turns more towards the opening of his cave.
The bear's arriva l back into the conventional world
after his Rumplestiltskin nap usually goes unnoticed by
most people The swallow’s re tirn from Capistrano and
the buzzard’s return from Hinkley get national wire
coverage An overgrown gopher called the Ground Hog
even has a day on the calendar, but the bear haa nothing.
A menu for such special luncheon must be carefully
thought over. The children correlated the bear facts and
finally came up w ith the following: A Bear-Faced
Sandwich (a hamburger with nothing on it), A glass of
orange juice (so the Teddy bearer wouldn’t get beri
beri) and for dessert, a Bear mud a Tri-angel (a piece of
angel food cake with Huckleberry ice cream ). They felt
it was a lunch that would sooth the savage beast in any
bear,
^ Q A g o A e t S d r a i e ’s
Unable to bear the injustice done to such a noble
anim al, some children in the Pacific Northwest
pioneered a new holiday The chikken felt one day was
not adequate for such a massive anim al so an entire
week was set aside as a coming out party Thus it hap­
pened, in a town bear-ly on the map that “ Bear Week”
was born
A bear in the woods is busy, but a Teddy in a classroom
is run ragged. The children pitted one bear against the
other in contests They had awards for the “ Most
Bearutiful Bear” , “ The Most Well Fed", “ The Bear with
the Most Holes” , “The Bear with the Most Stitches” ,
“ The Best Dressed Bear” , and of course, “ The Oldest
and Youngest Bears” . Some Teddy’s bear-ly made it
through the week.
The Teddy in this household didn’t come home drip­
ping with medals, but he was dripping with huckleberry
ice cream. One of his ears was pierced with a safety pin
and a tag with his owner’s name. The bears were all
tagged and then released just in case one of them got into
unfam iliar territory. His eyes were matted with chewing
gum and hlurred from the long hours in the classroom
and the rowdy parties.
But across his face was a slight smile and he still had
enough stuff in h im for one last bear hug.
and pieces
How does a person herald a bear’s ressurection from
the cave’ The first thing on a bear’s mind Just after he
yawns and scratches is food. Coincidentally the first
thing on most chikk-en’s mind, at any time, is also food.
brought home and many were disappointed when they
found out differently.
The burly mam m al lost his ferocity when Theodore
Roosevelt was presented with the first stuffed likeness in
1903. When he passed the newly designed toy over to his
child and it was christened “ Teddy", the beginning of a
long line of predessors was born. Most every child today
has a Teddy Bear in some shape or size. The only thing
the soft, pudgy bear has in common with the original
woolly beast is that they both like to be tucked into a
w arm , dark spot and go to sleep.
The grade school children had no trouble deciding they
would highlight their week with a special luncheon.
Since it ’s not healthy to beat around the bush during
Bear Week the luncheon was entitled simply, “Take A
Bear To Lunch.”
Most mothers automatically assumed that their
children were referring to them when the news was
I
COUNT ON THRIFTWAY!
WHEN QUALITY COUNTS
BANANAS
GOLDEN-RIPE
CHIQUITAS
3 LB.
BAG
PALMOLIVE LIQUID
NOODLE
SOW*
DETER-
GEHT
ASSORTED FLAVORS
27
□INKERS
Macaroni &
Cheese Dinner^
BEEF
TAM ALES
3OZ.
PKG.
OF 4
CLOROX
BLEACH
’’ALL"
GLAD, LARGE
DETER­
GENT
TRASH
BAGS
t e & g ® 33GAl
POWDERED
89c
I
TACO
F IL L IN G
49 o z .
BOX
1 6O Z .
ROLL
$179
■
■
GOLDBRICK
ZEE
M ACARONI & CHFFSE
Kraft
Dinners
A ll
four
of
Oregon’s
Congressmen
favor
the
reappointment of Sidney
Lezak as U.S. Attorney in
Oregon.
Jim Weaver, Denny Smith,
Ron Wyden and Les AuCoin
co-signed a letter to Ronald
Reagan asking the president
to keep Lezak.
THR/FTWAY'S
MEXICAN FOOD
SMALL
TENDER
SPEARS
LIQUID
$109
22 O Z .
Lezak favored
JIM M Y DEAN
FOR DISHES
3 89'
Audit figures were based
on the equivalent of 5,757 full­
tim e
students.
However,
M HCC
actually
enrolled
about 10,000 part-time and
full-tim e students each term
to obtain the equivalent of
5757 full-tim e students.
The Moss Adams report
showed 60 percent of the
“ We prefer to get the job
done by reassignments or
part-tim e help,” he said.
ALEX "XLNT"
SPARACUS
2 88"
TOP RAMEN
The
auditor's
report
detailed a cost per student of
$2,008 for the college in 1979-
80, an increase of 7.8 percent
over the college’s cost per
student of $1,863 in 1978-79.
“ In particular, we are not
filling all positions that open
up,” Nicholson said.
FIRST OF THE SEASON
RED LEAF LETTUCE
GREEN LEAF LETTUCE
BUTTER LETTUCE
BUNCH SPINACH
M IX OR MATCH
69
During the same period,
Portland’s consumer price
index went up about 13
percent.
D r. R. Stephen Nicholson,
MHCC president, said that
cost controls used last year
are being continued this
year.
CLIP-TOP CARROTS
PURPLE TOP TURNIPS
GOLDEN RUTABAGAS
LB.
BOILER
ORIONS
The audit by Moss Adams,
certified public accountants,
showed an increase of eight
percent in the college’s cost
per student for the 1979-80
academic year.
college’s budget spent on
instruction and instructional
support,
11 percent
on
student services, 15 percent
on college support, 13 per­
cent on plant maintenance
and operations, and one
percent on public services.
F/FSTA/
’ SALAD FIXINS"
SWEET, MILD
M t.
Hood
Community
College's cost per student
increased last year at a rate
well below that of inflation,
according to an independent
audit
of
the
college's
financial statements.
"STEW TIME SPECIAL”
M IX OR
MATCH
•
•
•
•
MHCC tuition stable
super
—
flUKMOUWlA* ^ ea,lo< lU E M O M O M
FIRST TW O
7 Vi O Z.
BOXES
Dog
Food
Nice ’n
Soft
ILLUSTRATED
FLAVORS
BATH TISSUE
WHITE OR
ASSORTED
FIRST FOUR 15 TO 15'/» O Z. TINS
HlcenSoft
CH EESE
SPREAD
$099
2 LB.
FOR
EA.
CASE OF 2 4 $ 6 . 9 9
A D D I . AT 3 /S 1 .0 0
A D D IT IO N A L AT 3 /1 1 .0 0
THRIFTWAY BEVERAGE CELLAR
REGULAR OR DIET
16O Z.
BTLS.
MU
VARIETAL
WINES
1
SIGNAL
M OUTHW ASH
EIGHT
PACK
■
PLUS
DEP.
■
24 O Z.
Beer.... S f .......A l g
Ulina*
5069
WW IVI
.....
w
Çhobl’\
A
a
A
a
S S fS X b
3
* y f ’.*0* ...............LITER
CAVALIER
$35»
$2«
NYQUIL
•
h
a
a
Liebfraumilch Lt? 5 89
6O Z.
t
*2 19
14OZ.
CLOSE-UP
REVLON FLEX
TOOTH
PASTE
SHAMPOO
REGULAR OR O ILY
• 119
6 .4 O Z.
CORN
T O R T ILLA S
COLD M EDICINE
MILLER
NORTH M O U N T A IN
ZINFANDEL FRENCH COL UNGARO
CHEN IN BLANC OR CABERNET
S A U V IG N O N
1%
LITER
HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS DEPT.
$ 4 3 9
PEPSI
ALEX XLNT’
A D D ITIO N A L AT 7 9 ‘
ALEX
• $019
16 o z
TACO
SH ELLS
Mb
AVAILABLE AT M OST THRIFTWAV STORES
ORTEGA
MILD CHILI SALSA
.......................
»2 0 2
LO G CABIN
PANCAKE STROP
NALLEV S
DILL PICKLES
.........................36 02
garlk or
KOSHFR
D U N C A N HINES
COOKIE MIX ...
low F.«o
22 02
’ 7 TO
»7% 0 2
NALLEV S
DEEF TAMALES
1SO 2
97*
$439
<
99*
I
8148
72*
Hunt’» “ Tomato-Rama”
4 ft»
Tomato Paste
6 02 W
O
Tomatoes
2» 0 2 79*
Tomato Sauce
4 .o?1
8488
Wesson O il....
4»
ThnFtwOy
Low Frico
W h ole R eeled
Th riftw oy
Low Fr Ico
02
<
WE CARE MORE . . . WE O W N OUR STORE"
TllH|[RlliFlTl>WÄ[Y
WILLIAMS, 17450 Mmrni Ave., Sandy. M l 4240
HOOOIAHO, Wotchos Rd.. Wommo. 622 3244
Frkcee e ffe c tiv e W ed Thru Twee . Jon 21 thru 27
PRKSS AMO SCLCCnOM MAY VAtY SllGMTlV IN SOME A .tASj
88
4O Z.
69