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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
January 15, 1970     Shelton Mason County Journal
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January 15, 1970
 
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't Comments The Shelton City Commission some comments on the system used for 'dumping at city garbage dump at its y. James Connolly Jr. told the )mmission that when the wind as blowing up over the bank ihere cars and pick-ups are now uired to dump that smoke and pieces of burning paper into vehicles as they unload taking a smelly and sometimes mgerous situation. Connolly suggested that those go to the dump grounds to of trash should have a on whether or not they from above or below. The commission indicated the new system was working lite well, and, that the situation ',scribed by Connolly occurred fly when the wind was from one reetion. The benefi, ts of the new Imping policy would be lost, :ey commented, if everyone had *~choice of dumping from above J" below. The comnlission received a tter from Larry Burfiend to the lack of width and Lrking on a section of Euclid re. 'Commissioner Glenn Watson id he woukl look into the :uation. Fire ('hief Allan Nevitt told Dump ;hange the commission the Arcadia Fire Department had renewed its contract with the city for the city fire department to handle dispatching for them. Police Chief Frank Rains was granted permission to hire the top man on the eligibility list established by the Civil Service Commission as soon as tests which are currently underway are complete. 1'he Mason County )remission this week named veral roads in the county which not been named previously. Also included in tile action ts naming or renaming roads in Mary M. Knight y Several an The Mason County Commission has written to the Lake Cushman Development Co. asking if they plan to name the park across from the Cushman Power Plant, and if no name has been decided on, it has been suggested the park bc named for the late F.('. Willcy, a pioneer Mason County Civic leader• Willey was one of the founders and the first president of tile Shclton Chamber of ('onlnlt.'rcc, county assessor one term, Shelton Postmaster eight years, mayor of Shelton for three terms, a [nember of the county commission two terms, a member of the Shelton City ('ouncil seven or eight years, justice of the peace eight years, served as county coronor. lie was the first undertaker in Shclton and was in that business 35 years. IIc was chairman of the Mason County Democrat Party for 35 years. IIc served as chairman of the food and rationing board and was head of the welfare operation in By DENISE AVERY Friday and Saturday nights the Owls played Basketball in their own gym. Friday night the Knight Owls lost to the Neselle (;omits I 12-49. Saturday the junior vai-sity outscored the Wishkah Loggers by 20 points while the varsity lost 69-98. Jan. 28 the second class of Wishkah to play and the following night travel to Lopez Island. They will spend the night at Lopez after the game. Mr. Stevens reports that he now has two advanced math classes. Also, all first semester shop bills must be paid by Jan. 16. Drivers Education started. im • Jan. 30 the Owls will travel to" ~ear|r~g Naselle to make a comeback. The following night Quilcene will be our guests. Feb. 2 the High School girls will travel to Oakville to play basketball. The girls have been practicing pretty hard we know they will do a good job. Feb. 6 the Owls will go the Shelton High Student Named Chris Bean, a student at Shelton High School, has been nominated by Rep. Julia Butler ttansen for the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point, N.Y. lie is one of four nominees named by Mrs. ltansen. tlis home isat Rt. 1, Box 210, Iloodsport. Heart Drive Film Showing Planned Representatives from the Washington Ileart Association headquarters, Seattle, will show fihns and answer questions at the meeting of the Mason County Ileart officers, workers and interested persons, tonight at 8 the county as county p.m. inthePUl) building. commissioner until the state took February is Ileart Month with that over. the fund drive ending the last lie served in both positions Is A hearing has been scheduled at 2 p.m. Friday in Senate llearing Room 10 on a bill for deferral of property taxes for retired persons, Mrs. Hal McClary, a member of the Governor's Council on Aging, said this week. The bill, Senate Bill 7, Mrs. McClary said, would defer payment of property taxes for all retired persons until their death or until the property was sold. At that time, the back taxes would have to be paid on the property. She said there was no means test involved in the proposed bill, and, the benefits of the bill would be available to all retired persons. There would be no interest charge, she stated. Mrs. McClary urged anyone interested in supporting the measure to contact their legislators to let them know how they feel about the proposed law. The state would pay the counties in lieu of the taxes which local government units would not collect, she said, and then when the property was sold or the taxes paid by heirs, the state would then collect the money. ame Donald Humphrey Donald G. Humphrey, Assistant Dean of Faculty and Professor of Biology at Oregon State University, has been named Dean of the Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics for The Evergreen State College at Olympia. Although Hymphrey, 42, will not assume his duties until June 15, 1970, he will immediately begin assisting with program planning, according to David G. Barry, Vice President and Provost of Washington's new public four-year college, scheduled to open in September, 1971. "He is the first dean appointed by Evergreen and will play a major role in both academic and science facilities planning," Barry said. "He also will be responsible - along with deans of Social Sciences and Humanities, whom we expect to employ in the near future - for recruitment of the first group of faculty members who will be critical participants in the development of our detailed curriculum plans." Chamber Renews me plats which had not been Sunday of February. reed in the original plats, without salary. While county Arrested Alderbrook Support The commission re-electedcommissioner, he furnished his Mason County authorities The Shelton Chamber Of own car and chauffeur atno Adult Art Group have been notified that Daniel Commerce Directors, at tl~eir mingartin Ausethyear. as chairman for the expense to the county. O'Brien, wanted here on charges meeting Friday morning, voted to The commission authorized Has B~eeting of grand larceny by check, has reaffirm their support of the ~)ves among the offices in the Asks License The regular meeting of thebeen arrested in San Rafael, Calif. proposed Alderbrook expansion ~urt house which will see the Shelton Adult Art Group was and to write a letter to the U.S. ck istice ('ourl Office move into The State Liquor Control held on January 7 in the PUD .mmmmm,m.m,.m..,,,m..,mmm. Army Corps of Engineers stating !'~ former prosecutor's office, lid the sheriff take over the Board announced today it has building. Here in America we are their support for the project. received an application for a Class A fra ruing clinic, with descended in blood and in spirit Several of the directors stated: .--.-~sent justice court office and I1 license from the Taylor Town demonstrations, was conductedfrom revolutionists and rebels - they planned to write letters to _.:~,~e of the small offices in the Cafe, Inc., to sell liquor by the by Ruth Johnson of Seattle and men and women who dare to the Corps as individuals JE! unty superintendent office, drink at the Taylor Town Cafe, Velma Graves. dissent from accepted doctrine, supporting the proposal. .tz..r~rn-h~r ,.,,~,.~.~,,.__ , . .y_-- -,{ Oscar Levin and Memor It. Route I. Shelton. llazel Beckwithwasprescnled As their heirs, we maynever The Corps of Engineers will HC~aniy'tcivi['ser~.ceP~°lanrdea to the Anyone who wishes to in a One-Man Art Show ffisplaying confuse tlonest dissentfrithhotd a public hearing at 1 p.m. support or oppose the application her various'hobbies which include disloyal Subversion. Jan. 24 at Hood Canal School on ~i~proved./~ nne platof Spencer GI nwase may write the Liquor Controloil painting,antiques,and - Dwight D. Eisenhower the Alderbrook application for a Board in Olympia. ceramics. ...,...m.m....m............0bulkhead and fill permit. '5:i '5 Frigidaire Range features lift-off door, big storage drawer RS.30P 30" electric Colors or white • Oven door lifts off in seconds--takes the "extra reach" out of oven cleaning, ii • Full-width storage drawer keeps pots j! FPD-146TN /! 14.6 cu. ft. and pans at the range. • Sturdy Radiantube surface units tilt uD~stay up for easy cleaning below. Ifr" I~asy-view surface unit controls. New corCvenience feature! Lowest priced Frigidaire Jet Action Washer with Frigidaire Frost-Proof with New Up-Front Lighting • Fr0st-Pr00f! You'll never de- frost again! • Up-Front lighting puts everything in plain view. • 126-1b. size top freezer. DW-CDTR Frigidaire Dishmobile -Glamorous. Super- Surge washing, too. • FORMICA® brand laminate top--like an extra counter • Slanted top design lowers front opening, makes loading a snap • Super-Surge wash- ing gets dishes shower-clean • 5-cycle versatility. OPC for n0-ir0n fabr.ics • Durable Press Care. Saves you ironing! Gentle wash- ing action plus a cold water cool-down help Durable Press fabrics keep their no-iron promise. • Deep Action Agitator. Creates currents that plunge clothes deep into sudsy water for thorough washing. • 2 Jet-Away Rinses. Get rid of lint and scum so thor- oughly there's no need for a lint trap. • Cold Water Wash Setting. Saves hot water. Saves clothes, from shrinking and fading. Model WAN, companion dryers, too- DAN, DAGN Model DAN, Snowcrest White Even this Lowest Priced Frigidaire Dryer has Durable Press Care • Durable Press Care helps Durable Press items keep their no-iron promise * No-stoop lint screen in the door • No-Heat setting for fluffing lllK OF EXCELL[IOC~ LT, YI HZ 'S Of Shelton "Buiidin, Mason County 426-2611 ''Mr. Humphrey is a distinguished administrator and scholar, known nationally for his leadership in the important area of undergraduate education," Barry added. "He is a sound scientist, a committed generalist and has much administrative experience in the interdisciplinary approach to education, which is of fundamental concern at Evergreen." "In addition, his broad experience as a scientist, administrator andstudent of science and public policy will enable him to bring unique and highly desirable knowledge to the planning of Evergreen's projected graduate program in Public Affairs, which will develop in cooperation with state government as mandated when the college was created." A native of Ames, Iowa, Humphrey's major field of study has been in zoology, with minors in botany and the history of science. He received his bachelor of science degree from the State University of Iowa m 1949, his master's from the Unversity of Washington in 1950 and his Ph.D. from Oregon State University in 1956. Postdoctoral work included studies of tropical biology at the University of Costa Rica in 1962 and the history and philosophy of rgreen science as a National Science Foundation Faculty Fellow at ltarvard University in 1967 and 1968. During his year at t]arvard, he was associated with the Kennedy School of Government and the Program for Culture and Technology and visited numerous East Coast universities to survey developments in interdisciplinary programs. Humphrey served as a Teaching Fellow at the University of Washington (1949-50); as an instructor in Science at Oregon College of Education (1950-52); a biology teacher at Oregon State University (1954-55), and an Assistant Professor in Science at Oregon College of Education (1955-57). He returned to OSU in 1957 as an Assistant Professor of Biology, became an Associate Professor in 1959 and a Professor of Biology in 1962. He was named Chairman of the Department of General Science in 1961, served as Director of the Honors Program in 1965 and 1966 and became Assistant Dean of Faculty in 1969. Humphrey is a past president of the Oregon Academy of Science (1962-63), former editor of the Oregon Academy of Science Proceedings and Newsletter (1959-65), former chairman of the Council on iege Curriculum and Academic Policy at OSU, and is associated with the Commission on Undergraduate Education in the Biological Sciences, sponsored by the National Science Foundation. His list of publications includes two textbooks and a number of scientific and scholarly articles. He currently is editing a third book. Humphrey and his wife, the former Eileen Wilson of Sioux City, Iowa, are the parents of two children, Ragan, 15, and Holly, 13. Buying Hei 426-2646 Himlie Realty Shelton ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY • .'.,."Tx~. ..~.~:::¢-':: • ' ~:~:" ....:~:~::i::::.. ...,::::::i:i::::::, .•.......' -: