4 July 27, 2018 T he C olumbia P ress Reunion: Members of WHS’s 100 graduating classes gather to reminisce Continued from Page 1 type,” said Whetsell, 87. “I They were part of the com- used to disappear and be gone all day. We’d play munity. … It was very on the log rafts on the much a family kind of Skipanon. They used to place. Look at all these call me Skipanon Don.” people that still get to- Doris Dunn Larre- gether.” more was more into About 150 people music than sports and, poured through old Larremore like many teenagers, of- annuals, took photos ten felt as if she didn’t and chatted about high fit in. school days. “I got married and Don Whetsell, who dropped out and they now lives in King City, wouldn’t let me come was a member of the back,” Larremore said. class of 1950, the first to Dyer “That’s how things were graduate from the new WHS campus after it moved back then. I got married and from the site of today’s grade so they figured I might bring some sin if I came back. But school. “I was a Huckleberry Finn then I was told the school board can’t keep you out.” So she returned, graduated and proudly calls WHS her alma mater. There also were adjust- ments for Ginny Schlecht Dyer, who graduated in 1981. “I moved from a big school to a smaller school,” Dyer said. “It was a little different here at first. You don’t realize everybody’s related to every- body. But after living here for so many years, I can appreci- ate the bonds of a small com- munity and I understand the kinship.” For Robert Vollmer of the class of 1952, high school was a time of small rebellions and the comforts of community. The high school had no lawn back in the day, he said, and the father of a classmate who lived in a trailer across the street once came over and spun donuts with his tires in the dirt in front of the cam- pus. “As I look back, it was excit- ing,” Vollmer said. “As a kid, I was mischievous.” He got a ticket at age 15 for driving without having a legal driver with him. His mother knew the judge and was able to talk him into a reduced fine. Susan Jensen Walker, class of 1980, appreciated the small community and small classrooms. “Teachers could look right at me and know whether I’d gotten it,” she said. Later, he family moved to Corvallis “and it was totally different.” Above: About 150 peo- ple attended the July 21 reunion. Top right: Robert Vollmer confesses he was a bit mischievious. Left: Members of the class of 1962 sit still for a group shot. Below: Jerry Beard of Napavine, Wash., and Warren Hubbard of Longview remember when there were no traffic lights in town. Photos by Cindy Yingst Her husband, Bri- an Walker, class of 1975, has never lost his appreciation for the small town of his youth. “It was a nice small town and everybody knew everybody,” he said. “No. It’s not the same today. Today Warrenton’s got its own strip (near Cost- co). It used to be that the only strip in town was the one down Main Street.” Would he rather forego to- day’s better shopping oppor- tunities? “I’d turn it back. I loved that time.” Seaside offering beach wheelchairs The Sunset Empire Park & Recreation District has made two beach-accessible wheel- chairs available to the public. The wheelchairs create new opportunities for those with mobility issues. Outfit- ted with large, wide tires, the wheelchairs can be pushed across the sand. Manzanita was the first community on the Oregon Coast to provide beach wheel- chairs and Cannon Beach fol- lowed last year. Randy Anderson, a local painter, was one of the driv- ing forces behind the pro- gram. Reservations are en- couraged by calling the Bob Chisholm Community Center at 503-738-7393.