December 25, 1975 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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December 25, 1975 |
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do you want for
funny-looking little bearded
was roaming about town
iweekend with that question,
almost a third of those he
paused long enough
before scurrying off after
elusive gift.
y for them,
reporters do not good
make. Only a few
I even go so far as to bear glad
here's what the
on the street had to say:
RY BUCHANAN, 73,
red: "I'd like to see our
onal problems solved, the
our President is trying to
care of - or is getting us
whichever it may be."
ROLANDO BRENES, 17,
iehange student : "For
Oh... many things.
ything in particular?) No,
FIREWOOD
with a
Chain Saw
!NADIA HOVIND,
"1 would like for
to be happy. Just a
ago I ran into this man in
store who said he hated
Isn't that terrible! He
he hadn't finished his
~Pping and he hated
FROM
Crunch Those
Capsules
Bite your vitamin
blets to insure their
fectiveness, says Dr.
Miller, University
Southern California
of Pharmacy. He
that many vitamin
do not dissolve
turally in the digestive
and thus may be
!naergency Ph. 426:2165
& Franklin St.--426-3327
Daily 9:30 to 7:30
-- 9:30 to 6:00
MICHELLE HOWLAND: 5,
"Guitar! (Why?)'Cause."
DALE OLIN, 17, high school
senior: "How 'bout new skis? I'm
in the process of buying some ......
myself, but I'm trying to talk my ........
morn into it."
MARIE WINDSOR,
hairdresser: "Peace and happiness
- how 'bout that? Really, I can't
think of anything I want
especially."
REX MORRISON, 13,
seventh-grader: "Big or tittle?
Hmmm. A ten-speed - but I
won't get one. I haven't got any
idea. We're going to Disneyland."
GAYLE VOLK, 23, domestic
engineer: "I think I'd like for my
property taxes to go down. With
all the mess in the papers, that's
aH I want."
J O N I LAWLESS, 1 5,
ninth-grader: "Oh, that's a hard
question. What would you
suggest? I haven't been thinking
about it. I can't think of
anything... How about time,
lots of time? That's what I'd like
for Christmas."
CLINT WEAVER, 14,
ninth-grader: "A new bike. Just a
ten-speed; I won't get no
motorbike."
ii;!I
LARRY BOSWELL, 17,
another Tyee wrestler: "I told my
parents a long time ago that I
wanted a pool table. But I crashed
the car and that put them in a
pinch. They said I couldn't have
one, but they already bought it.
I'm not supposed to know yet,
but they've already gotten it."
ARCHIE SELDERS,
agronomist: "I'd like to see peace
on earth for everyone. I think
that would probably be the best
thing."
OTIS DWYER, officer at
Corrections Center: "Peace and
harmony."
• The new team...
::!:!ii :'i Larry Chamberlin and JesS Phillips. ~:I~ ~,
l ,wo s.,. I
1 JeSS PhilliPs LarrY Chamberh. I
/ , Larry's Union Service I
el m Hw S & Cascade 4
l Y pic y. • 26-5285 !
BRETT ANDERSON, 4: "A
tractor ... one that moves dirt."
STEPHEN ANDERSON, 5:
"An Evel Kneivel. He rides on a
motorcycle. You wind him up
and let him go and he takes off."
RUSS BASKIN, lineman:
"There are only two things I'd
want. One is a little more joy in
everyone's life, and the second is
a little more compassion."
SU:;IE COLE, part-time
housemother for Exceptional
Foresters: "Oh! What do I want?
That's a terribly hard question.
There are so many things. The
most important, though, is this: If
the Christ of Christmas and of the
cross and now the living Christ
could just live and rule in the
hearts of everyone, then we
would have peace - which would
be the ultimate."
MARTY CLASSCOCK, 5,
visitor from Port" Angeles: "A
saw.., and a hammer.., and a
screwdriver. The whole set. So I
can make something."
ROSS HAFFNER, realtor: "I
could think of some new clothes
I'd like. That's one thing. Some
more hunting clothes is what 1
was looking at. I'd also like to get
my jeep back from the repair
shop. The guy said he'd like to
have it done by Christmas so he
could have a good Christmas,
too."
GREETA VAN CLEAVE,
clerical supervisor: "Just to have
my family together. They all live
right around here except for a
daughter in Port Angeles."
KEN MOORE, 17, wrestler
from Tyee High School in town
for Shelton's Christmas
Tournament: "That's really a
hard question. Let's see. I'd like
things for my room, you know.
Like a light show and a waterbed.
And albums. Not toys. But
clothes would be fine."
OMER DION, grinderman t'or
Simpson: "Well, I really don't
need anything really. I couldn't
say that I'm lacking as far as
things are concerned. I would like
to get along with people the best !
Can ."
PETE KNEELAND, Shelton
native now working as a
restaurant manager in Tacoma:
"I'd like to see some peace
throughout the world, to tell you
the truth. I'm kinda past the
presents stage, the material
stage."
SHERRY BARREN, 1 6,
junior in high school: "I don't
know what I want. That's hard. I
mean, at home I can tell my
parents a lot of stuff. Hmmm. A
curlycue iron and a makeup
mirror - lighted. Yes, I've been a
good girl -- as far as Santa is
concerned, anyway."
GLENN KINKADE,
construction worker: "That's a
baited question, isn't it? Let's
see... I want everyone to be
happy and enjoy the season."
NANCY STULLER,
housewife: "All ! want are some
slippers.., and maybe perfume.
But that's all."
Armchair visits to a beautiful
island in the Adriatic Sea; to
Crete and Thera, Greece; to the
sand dunes of the Oregon Coast;
to an ancient Mayan civilization;
to Central Asia; or into the life of
a great 20th Century author will
be offered during a winter/spring
quarter "Wednesday Evening
Lecture Series" at The Evergreen
State College.
The series, open to the public
free of charge, will feature
lectures - most illustrated with
colored slides - by members of
the Evergreen faculty. Programs
begin January 7 and will continue
primarily on alternating
Wednesday evenings through May
26. All presentations will begin
promptly at 8 p.m. in Auditorium
One of the Lecture Halls Building.
The first presentation is
scheduled for 8 p.m. Wednesday,
January 7, with faculty member
and former Academic Dean Dr.
, Charles B. Teske discussing
"Literature Up To Tempo." The
program will feature
performances of literary works or,
as Dr. Teske puts it, "Getting the
words off the page - regarding
verse, drama, and prose fiction
not as documents but as
performances."
Other programs in the
five-month series are as follows:
January 21: "The Lions of
Hvar" by Dr. Mervyn L.
Cadwallader, sociologist and
historian. A color slide-music
presentation of one man's love
affair with a beautiful island in
the Adriatic Sea, off the
Dalmation Coast.
February 18: "The Lost (and
Found) World of the Quintana
Roe: A Visit to Maya Land" by
Dr. Donald G. Humphrey,
biologist. A slide-tape adventure
to the little-explored Yucatan
territory of Quintana Roe to
discover lost cities of the Maya.
Tiffs illustrated talk combines the
results of four expeditions to the
Yucatan - the most recent being
January of this year.
March 3: "The Ascent of
Man: Human Evolution" by Dr.
Mark Papworth, anthropologist.
Man's capacity for culture is
evidently more widely shared in
the animal kingdom than is
commonly recognized. The arrival
of Homo Sapiens is more recent
than is commonly believed. These
data force a new evaluation of
man's place in nature - and how
he achieved it.
March 17: "Country Music,..
Roots and Development" by Dr.
Thomas H. Foote, educator,
journalist and musician. A slide
and musical tape overview of
American country music
beginning with early southern
mountain string band music and
moving to the more sophisticated
sound we know today as country
and western music.
March 31: "A Man and a
Government : Solzhenitsyn's
Struggle with the Soviet Regime,"
by Dr. Andrew M. Hanfman,
language, literature and
U.S..Soviet relations specialist.
Soizhenitsyn once said, "A great
writer is like a second
government." His own life and
work exemplify this statement,
which will be elucidated in this
lecture.
April 14: "Recent Discoveries
in the Excavations of Thera," by
Peggy Dickinson, artist. A slide
lecture on a town (Santorini)
recently excavated on the Greek
island of Them. Like Pompeii,
Santorini - with a Bronze Age
culture of high artistic
development - was ruined in its
heyday.
April 28: "Nine Dyak Nights:
Religion, Myth, and Magic of a
Borneo People," by Lynn D.
Patterson, anthropologist. A slide
and tape presentation of the
religion, myth, and magic of the
Dyaks of Sarawak, Malaysia.
May 12: "'The Oregon Coastal
Dunes," by Dr. Alfred
Wiedemann, biologist. Dynamics
of the sand-wind-plant interaction
along the Oregon Coast. Slides
and motion pictures depicting the
various dune forms, the plant
communities of the sand dunes,
and the major dune areas along
the coast.
May 26: "Travels in Central
Asia," by Dr. Oscar H. Smile,
biologist and ecologist. The cities
of Samarkand, Bukhara,
Tashkent, and Dushanke comprise
some of the oldest (2500 years)
and newest (40 years) in the
Soviet Union. Via slides,
lecturer-goers will visit these cities
to contrast the new and the old,
as well as to sample some of the
scientific research being done in
Central Asia. Waystops at
Juveniles held
for burglaries
Three juvenile boys, ages 13
and 14, were taken into custody
by Shelton police last week on
second degree burglary charges.
Two of the boys were
reported as runaways from O.K.
Boys Ranch and the third as a
runaway from Olympia.
Officers said at the time they
were taken into custody one of
the boys had a pistol in his
possession which had been taken
in a burglary in Shelton. Officers
said the boys were picked up as
the result of a complaint received
from the Timber Bowl.
Officers said the boys had
admitted several burglaries in
Thurston and Mason Counties in
addition to two in the Shelton
area.
llmltltllllll l
Leningrad and Moscow are
scheduled as a preface to the
journey to the Republics of
Nzbekistan and Tadjikistan.
Whether you're cutting for your
own use or for profit, that log pile
grows quicker when you use •
HOMELITE E-Z chain saw.
Come in and try this great saw
Motor Shop
on Hillcrest
We Service What We Sell
I I I I I
Hiikrest
Mt. View
Thursday, December 25, 1975 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 5