Image provided by: North Santiam Historic Society; Gates, OR
About The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1969)
the mill city enterprise S:.?,,Box 348 Pbone 897-2772 MUI City, Ore. 9736« ished at .Mill City, Marion County, Ore. every Thursday Entered as Second Class Mail Matter at the Postoffice at MUI Citj, Oregon, under the act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Mill City Enterprise assumes no financial responsibility for errors in advertisements. It will, however, reprint without charge or cancel the charge for that portion of ar. advertisement which is in error if The Enterprise is at fault An independent newspaper, dedicated to the development oi *he timber industry and agriculture in this area. MLMÖt« •| FWSPAPER EUHIIHItl association Association - Founded 1885 Subscription Rates Marion-Linn Counties, per year........... ......... $4.00 Outside Marion-Linn Counties, per year......... _................. $4.50 Outside Oregon, per year _____ ____ _________________ $5.00 DON W. MOFFATT.... ........ Editor and Publisher GEORGE LONG ...................... ...... Assistant Publisher-Printer GOLDIE! RAMBO.................................Society and News Editor ROSE CREE -------- --------------------------- Local News Editor CORRESPONDENTS Detroit-Idanha . .................................. _..... Boots Champion Gates ------------------------------------------------------ Toni Thomas Mehama.... —.......................... Mrs. John Teeters - Jean Roberts Lyons —---------- ---------------------------- „----------- Eva Bressler TIME TO CUT DOWN ¡Salem Technical College May Use Four Mobile Units For Classroooms The immediate physical and educational needs of Salem Technical Community College were spelled out to its newly formed board of directors by President Paul F. Wilmeth Wednesday evening. Wilmeth made recommen dations tj the seven-member board urging that action be taken at the earliest possible date to set in motion plans for the 1970-71 school year. The Mid-Willamette Area Education District and its gov erning board were established by voters September 23. The new district includes Mari n, Polk, Yamhill and the north end of Linn County. In pointing out the physical needs of the college, Wilmeth told the board that a total of 12.700 square feet of classroom and office space will be need ed by next fall to accommodate students, faculty and adminis tration. He said that nine 24 by 60 foot mobile units will be necessary to meet this need. The school presently has permanent classr om facilities for only 250 full time students with 774 full-time day students enrolled this term. Additional students are now accommodat ed in four mobile units with eight classrooms. Wilmeth said that of the nine needed units, three would I k - used for classroom space. He estimates an increased en rollment of full-time day stu dents to a total of 950 bv next fall. Normal campus growth will account for some of the stu dent increase and the expand 3—The Mill City Enterprise, Thursday, Nov. 13, 1969 ed site of the district is ex pected to bring another 100 ual phase-in of a liberal arts terms Henry Tiano, Salem, and students, he said. The college program beginning in the fall Ray Welch, Woodburn; and formerly encompassed Salem of 1971. He urged continual one-year term Mrs. Anne Bell. School District 24J only (great development of the occupa Rickreall. In the future all tional programs. board members will serve 4- er Salem area). A resolution was received year terms. Three mobile units are need ed for student lounge area, from the State Board of Edu In other action the board: one for a counseling and guid cation naming the length of —Set in motion plans for ac ance office, one for an admin terms cf district board mem quisition of the present col bers. istrative office and another for Serving four-year terms will lege campus from Salem School faculty office area. lie J. Earl Cook, chairman; District 24J. Estimates are lieing obtain George G. Strozut, vice-chair —Unanimously adopted the ed on leasing the nine mobile man; three-year terms Art bylaws and internal board op units and the costs of furnish Hebert, Sheridan, and Frank eration regulations for the ing and equiping them for next Crow, Jr., Stay ton; two-year new district. fall. The college officially re mains under the Salem Schoo l Transparent Plastic District until July 1, pending a budget election. The board will select a budget committee at the next board meeting. November 20. The immediate educational needs recommended by the president include the expan STORM WINDOW KIT 39ft sion of the adult education pro Kit consists of 36’ x 72’ tough plastic gram to a district-wide service, sheet, 18 ft. fibre moulding and nails. the expansion of the business STORM DOOR KIT 49?. education curriculum to a two- I year format, and the addition Kit consists of 36’ x 84’ tough plastic INSTALL of a nurses’ aide program sheet, 21 ft. of fibre moulding and nails. Inslda or which has been requested by At Hardware A Lumber Dealers Everywhere I local health organizations. Warp Bro*. Pionaar* in Ptastc* Chicago 60651 Established 1924 The president urged a grad- 3f STOP<§®&® WINTER DRAFTS STORM KITS \bumean electricity to run my appliances costs less now than it did 20 years ago ( CRB FEDERAL SPENDING Then- have been many panaceas proposed to curb infla lion, but the No. 1 solution seems to have eluded some of oui national leaders. It is, of course, to cut federal expenditures. Official Washington might well be particularly receptiv< to this method, for the cost of living seems to be getting out of hand in the nation’s capital. The Labor Department report- that while the national cost-of-living index was up 5.6 per cent in August as compared to the same period in 1968, it rose 6. per cent in Washington, D. C. While the Administration is attempting to hold down fed < ral spending, calling for a $5.9 billion surplus in 1970, th< House of Representatives appropriation bills in the present session are exceeding the budget by $231,021,000 and the Sen ate has exceeded the budget by $632,627,000. The House is also considering legislative bills with spending authorization ex ceeding the budget by $267,019,000, while the Senate has bills exceeding the Administration’s budget by $222,375,000. This means that with the bills now under consideration. Congress could exceed the budget by at least $1.353 billion. It is hoped that this tangible evidence of these figures, as well as rising living costs, will influence the members of Congress and the Executive branch to insist on an effective reduction in federal spending to help halt the ever-rising in flation. MEHAMA Mrs. John Teeters Mr. and Mrs. Mel Pankratz and Betty Sue visited with relatives and friends here on November 4. They have just recently moved back to Ore gon from Salt Lake City, Utah I Am Interested In Your Transportât ion Your Transportation Is My Business For NEW or USED CARS and TRUCKS Call JERRY COFFMAN Philippi Ford 9TAYTON Home 769-2117 859-2552 where they have been for some time. Mrs. Deloras Eas:m and son, Ronald, of North Bend, came November 5 for a visit here. Guests Sunday morning at the home of Mrs. Art Ander sen were Mr. and Mrs. Orville Oderman of Gold Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Matthis were in Portland Saturday and Sunday to attend the an nual show of Oregon Pheas ant Breeders at the Memorial Coliseum Mr. and Mrs. Keith Phillips were hosts at their home for the monthly meeting of their pinochle club Saturday even ing. The group had dinner at the Riverview then spent the evening in cards and visiting at the Phillips home. Members present were Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Myers, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bowes, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rienke, Mr. and Mrs. Giles Wagner. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Taylor and the hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Phillips. Mrs Dsnald Teeters and Mrs. Harold Longfellow visit ed Sunday at the home of their aunt, Mrs. Ellen Good in Sal em and also with other rela tives there. The committee in charge of the cake walk and bazaar held Saturday evening at the fire report that it was a successful event. Mrs. M V. Frame returned home Friday from Eugene where she spent several days visiting relatives and friends. QUALITY JOB PRINTING Phone 897-277$ or 887-2930 That's right. The average cost of a kilowatt hour of PP&L electricity is less now than it was 20 years ago! But the saving probably isn't apparent, because most homes are using so much more electricity these days. Just look around your home. Many of today’s convenient, work-saving electric appliances — television, stereo, air-conditioning, self-cleaning ovens, no-frost refrigeration, to name a few— didn't even exist just 20 years ago. Now they're working every day, helping take drudgery out of your home. It's really a good thing electricity costs so little, because people use so much of it to live the modern, all-electric way. Pacific Power Where they make the electricity that makes things nest for everybody.