JULY!», 1978 PAGE 7
FAMILIES ENJOY A FABULOUS FOURTH
Parade marshals Andrew
and Edna David ushered in the
Fourth of July celebration and
disco dancing brought it to a
close as Warm Springs saluted
the nation’s birthday.
Thanks to the efforts of the
Fourth of July Committee, it
was a fun-filled day for families,
with activities for all ages.
Floats, fire engines and bi
cycles bedecked with streamers
snaked through the campus in
the morning, pausing before the
old agency building to be greet
ed by announcer Andy Lucas
and the small but enthusiastic
crowd. Kah-Nee-Ta captured
first place in the float category
with its dramatization of recrea-
PRINCESS - Pi-Ume-Sha Princess Rosalie Polk graced the hood
of her family’s car and helped the Polks win second place in the
decorated car division of the parade.
The Ike Family won the car
tion offered by the resort, in- own “Festus” and a string of
eluding golf, swimming, tennis ponies. The Summer Recreation division with their colorful dis
Program took third place with a play of Indian regalia and an
and a traditional salmon bake.
float full of kids entitled “The American flag, while the Polk
Family featured Pi-Ume-Sha
Second plajee went to Kah- Now Moment.”
Princess Rosalie Polk and earn
Nee-Ta’s neighbor, the Horse
Chad Smith, with his teddy
Hat Corral, which featured cow bear in tow, wooed the judges ed a second place.
As the parade broke up at
girl Lala Delude doing rope and won first place in the
the
Community Center, Neda
tricks, flanked by the corral’s children’s division. “My First
Greene and Charlotte Shike
Parade,” a decorated wagon were busy fileting salmon and
accompanied by clowns Sheldon staking it over an open fire for
and Sunmiet Minnick, took sec the community lunch. Don
ond, and Veronica Smith’s flow Maxwell and a crew of helpers
ering bicycle won third.
were yawning after their all
night vigil by the barbecue pit,
where beef that had been buried
sixteen hours before roasted
among hot rocks and fir boughs.
An estimated 200 people
were served, fewer than last
year. Assistant cook Satch Mill
er wondered if some people were
scared off by last year’s fiasco
when the beef came out of the
pit nearly raw and was rushed to
community center ovens.
Kids competed in informal
games after lunch and the adults
retreated to the cool indoors for
several rounds of Bingo.
As dusk settled over the
community, a cadre of firebugs
began igniting the 180 shells that
produced an hour-long display of
spectacular fireworks. Sleepy
youngsters and adults went
home but teenagers turned the
community center into a disco
and “danced the night away.”
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ANNOUNCER - Andy Lucas, lively social director for Kah-Nee-Ta, sang the Star
Spangled Banner and drew the crowd’s attention to passing floats, such as the one
entered by Horse Hat Corrals, featuring a trick roper
PHOTOS AND TEXT
BY CYNTHIA STOWELL
FRONT ROW SEATS - Curbs along the Fourth of July parade
route were claimed by kids to ensure a good view of entries like the
community fire engine and to get first crack at the candy tossed by
many of the entires.
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OLD STYLE - Salmon was baked in the old tradition, first fileted and then staked
around an open fire, at the community lunch on the Fourth. A second entree was beef,
roasted in a pit through the night and morning.
GRAND MARSHALS - Andrew and Edna David proudly
performed the function of parade marshals lending dignity to the
procession.