February 22, 1973 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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February 22, 1973 |
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Outs Plan
Rama
ay
annual Jam-O-Rama for,
Scouts, Cub Scouts and
in the Mason District
held from l0 a.m. to 2
Saturday in Ever~een
and on the post otnce
eout groups will have
of skills and crafts.
11 from Hoodsport
their display set up in
same time.
Jam-O-Rama will also
a recruiting drive and any
in joining one of
or any adult interested
with adult leadership
applications from any
In
annual door to door
drive in Mason
¢ls sCheduled to start
and will continue
3, Craig Chapman,
Unty chairman
Week.
St]ng with the
drive will be
girls. In the, Hillcrest
Scout Troop I 12, under
I of Gordon
be assisting.
officers of the local
chapter along
are Bill Blucher,
ty chairman; Russell
business chairman;
on Johnston, heart to
; Mrs. Jane
and Mrs. Karen Gunter,
t~heart chairmen; Mrs.
Ohrman, Hoodsport,
and LiUiwaup chairman;
icy Sushak, Agate,
Phillips Lake
Lake chairman; Mrs.
Use, Union area
Mrs. Robert Sutton,
chairman.
Since he appeared in student
productions at Shelton High
School several years ago, Don
Bearden has continued to pursue
a career as an actor.
He auditioned and was
accepted into the University of
Washington's Professional Actors'
Training Program and has taken
part in many productions,
including a current part in "Right
You Are" at the U.W. Showboat
Theater, which a review in the
Seattle Times calls "One of the
best productions I've ever seen at
the U.W." Don is one of the four
student actors for whom the
reviewer reserves special praise.
At Shelton High School, Don
played leading roles in "Teahouse
of the August Moon,"
career
"Carousel," and "Lilies of the
Field," graduating in 1968. His
parents, Jean and Robert
Bearden, live in Hoodsport.
Don will graduate in June
from the Rockefeller
Foundation-sponsored actors'
training program and the U.W.
with a BFA in professional acting.
During his five years of
college Don has appeared in three
plays at the Seattle Repertory
Theatre, "Richard the II,"
"Camino Real," and this year's
production of "Macbeth." His
work with the Seattle Junior
Programs for three years includes
his portrayal of Charlie Brown in
"You're a Good Man, Charlie
Brown."
Corps has application
for kland Bay work
Application has been received
by the Seattle U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers office from Harold
L. James, Kent, for a Department
of the Army permit for work in
Oakland Bay near Shelton. The
work will include construction of
a pier and installation of a float
and ramp for a private boat
moorage.
Interested parties may submit,
in writing, any comments or
objections they may have to the
proposed work. The decision as to
whether a permit will be issued
will be based on an evaluation of
the impact of the proposed work
on the public interest. Factors
affecting the public interest
include, but are not limited to,
navigation, fish and wildlife,
water quality, economics,
conservation, aesthetics,
recreation, water supply, flood
damage prevention, ecosystems,
and, in general, the needs and
welfare of the people.
Comments on these factors
will be accepted and made part of
the record and will be considered
in determining whether it would
be in the best public interest to
grant a permit. Comments should
reach the Seattle Corps office not
later than March 15 to insure
consideration.
get Sou
waters to
Seafood gourmets as well as
concerned citizens may wish to be
among those attending a
symposium at the Seattle Science
Center February 27 when
aquaculture and marine recreation
potentials are examined in detail•
Sponsored by Washington
State University's Cooperative
Extension Service, the one-day
Timberland gets
toll free number
A toll-free telephone line for
Mason County residents was
among items approved by the
Timberland Regional Library
Board of Trustees at a meeting
February 15 in Lacey.
The line will be designed to
accept telephone requests for
library materials, which then can
be mailed to the patron's home.
Information and quick reference
questions may also be answered
over the telephone.
The target date for
implementing the new telephone
service - on a trial basis - is
March 1.
THE WISE sceptic is a bad
citizen; no conservative; he sees
the selfishness of property and
the drowsiness of institutions.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
event in the Eames Theatre will
bring together many experts in
areas of competing uses for Puget
Sound waters.
Frank Jackson, Tacoma,
chairman of the symposium, said
the keynote address at 9:30 a.m.
will come from Dr. Robert Bish,
former University of Washington
faculty member, who will outline
his firm's unpublished three-year
study of Puget Sound waters and
the possible conflicts that are
foreseen.
The gourmets will have their
hour at a noon luncheon where it
is planned to display and serve the
many different sea foods that can
be grown and marketed from
Puget Sound waters, the
Washington Chefs' Association
has agreed to prepare the meal
and will feature Puget Sound
grown salmon.
Dr. Lauren Donaldson,
professor of fisheries at the
University of Washington and the
luncheon speaker, will discuss the
accelerated growth of Coho
salmon•
Speakers from the department
of natural resources, parks and
recreation and the Washington
Sea Grant program also are on the
program. Reservations at $15 will
be limited to 200. The WSU
program is being carried out with
the cooperation of the Sea Grant
Program, the Washington
Resources Council, the League of
Women Voters and the Pacific
Science Center.
meeting
Classroom teachers from
across the state will be meeting
February 23 and 24 in Olympia
for the annual business session of
the Association of Classroom
Teachers.
Shelton teachers who will be
attending are Lorna Dayton and
Evelyn Maranville.
ACT is the largest department
of the Washington Education
Association. Some 375 delegates
are expected to attend.
The Friday evening banquet
address will be given by
Representative Yvonne
Brathwaite Burke, ,newly-elected
Congresswoman from a Los
Angeles district. An attorney and
former state legislator,
Representative Burke served as
deputy chairman of the 1972
Democratic National Convention.
A special feature Friday
evening will be presentation of
Teacher and Administrator of the
Year awards. State
Superintendent Frank Brouillet
will nominate the new Teacher of
the Year for national honors.
In addition to taking action
on numerous resolutions and
hearing committee reports,
delegates will select a new
president-elect to take office in
July. Only announced candidate
is Robin Emmingham, current
president of the Richland
Education Association.
Additional nominations will be
accepted from the floor.
ACT President Roger Gray,
Mead, will preside. Carol Coe,
North Shore, will become the new
ACT president in July.
Church plans
family night
The Skokomish Valley
Community Church in the upper
Skokomish Valley is planning a
Family Night on Friday, March 2,
at 7 p.m.
Friends and neighbors are
invited to attend• There will be
homespun entertainment with
light refreshments following.
Eldon Parke promoted
by the state patrol
District.
Colonel Parke returned to
Western Washington in 1965 as
director of personnel and training
in headquarters in Olympia, and
in October of 1970 was promoted
to Lieutenant Colonel and
director of staff services.
Always active in fraternal and
civic groups, Colonel Parke is a
charter member of the Lacey
Rotary.
Colonel Parke lives in Lacey
with his wife Elsie.
Lieutenant Colonel
Eldon J. Parke
Lieutenant Colonel Eldon J.
Parke, a 30-year Washington State
Patrol veteran, was promoted to
full colonel in ceremonies held
recently in Patrol Chief Will
Bachofner's office.
Parke, a 1951 graduate of the
Traffic Institute of Northwestern
University, has served the patrol
and the people of Washington
since 1942. He is a member of the
governor's committee on
employment of the handicapped
and chairman of the state
community college board of
police advisors.
In March of 1952, he was
assigned as training officer of the
state patrol academy near Shelton
and remained there until 1959,
when he was promoted from
lieutenant to captain and took
command of the patrol's Spokane
Sandison has bill
on geographic names
Legislation establishing a state
board of geographic names has
passed the Senate, Senator
Gordon Sandison (D-24th
District) said this week.
"One of the purposes of
having such a board is to assure
that localities, mountains, rivers
and streams retain their existing
historic names that are in
common local usage," Senator
Sandison said.
"Such a board would approve
any changes in name of
geographic features, and guard
against the practice of developers
in taking over such areas as lakes
and renaming them for
promotional purposes."
Senator Sandison said the
board would cooperate with local
and state agencies and the U.S.
Board of Geographic Names in
making its decisions.
MODERATION IN temper is
always a virtue; but moderation in
principle is always a vice.
Thomas Paine
THANK YOU!
Our deep appreciation to all those in the
community who supported our very
successful garage sale.
Fire Station #5 at Agate
SPECIAL
3 DAYS
ONLY
of Dayton
4 ply nylon -- 1st line tires
TIRES
ANY
SIZE
ONLY
Plus sales tax only -- no hidden charges --' no bank cards
THURS.-FRIDAY-SAT.
NO LIMIT
C IxS E
saoo
e
NO BANK CARDS
CASE
Fram
I
FORD
Aut°!ite Motor Craft
Fram
For Toyota and Datsun
REBUILT
FORD
CHEV
CHRYSLER PRODUCTS
Original
all
cars ........
New Autolite
DISCOUNT PRICED
AT ABOUT
WHAT YOU'D
PAY FOR A
REBUILT
ELSEWHERE
cASE
tl
CHANGE
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20 OR 30 WT.
2O oR 30 2o
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SAVE
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40% TOO
Thursday, February 22, 1973 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 17