Wednesday, April 15, 2015 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon C O M M U N I T 3 Y Fundraiser to send ailing man on ‘bucket list’ trip Life-long Sisters resident Geoff Pepperling is facing stage 4 pancreatic cancer. With chemotherapy treatment, he may have a year to live. His last wish is to go to Yellowstone National Park, Colorado, and Salt Lake City. To help fulfill this wish, friends, family and supporters are hold- ing a “Bucket List Bingo” fundraiser for Pepperling on Wednesday, April 22, at 5:30 p.m. at Sisters fire hall community hall. There will be bingo, raf- fles and a silent auction to raise funds to support Geoff on this last journey with his family, while he can still enjoy the sights and the wild- life. According to his family, “the pictures and memories will help him through his last months and days.” Bingo cards are $1 each/ six for $5. A pulled pork sandwich, coleslaw, soda and a cookie are $10. For information contact Dierdre Jones, 541-306-0856. Sisters to mark Earth Day with clean-up By Jim Cornelius News Editor Dixie Eckford well remembers the inaugural Earth Day in 1970. It was the year she graduated from high school in The Dalles. “What I really remember is feeling part of something big… We were all really eager to do our part in the first wave of the environmental movement.” Now, 45 years down the line, Eckford is mobilizing folks in Sisters Country to do their part in making our cor- ner of the earth a little cleaner and healthier. She’s coordi- nating an Earth Day clean-up Saturday, April 18 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Volunteers meet at 9 a.m. at the Sisters Park & Recreation District (SPRD) parking lot (west of Sisters High School) to receive gar- bage bags, gloves and project assignments. Volunteers will clean up along Highway 242 and on Camp Polk Road, where there is a fair bit of roadside lit- ter, and in other areas of the surrounding forest. Sisters Trails Alliance has sponsored a couple of clean-up sites. Additionally, volunteers will do cigarette-butt clean-up on the streets of Sisters. The “Pick Up The Butt” challenge encourages people to recognize cigarette waste as litter, Eckford explained. “Cigarette waste is toxic,” she said. “It’s really not the See eArth DAy on page 30 photo by Diane Goble Black Butte school students showed their prowess in statewide academic competition. BBS students earn awards By Diane goble Correspondent Several students from Ethan Barron’s upper-grade class at Black Butte School have been recognized in state- wide competitions for their outstanding achievements. Kincaid Smeltzer, a 14-year-old eighth-grader, won an award for the best project demonstrating the use of water-quality principles from the U.S. Geological Sur- vey, Oregon Water Science Center-Stream Health. His project involved test- ing sediment samples down- stream after the removal of a culvert in Indian Ford Creek. The water had been diverted through a large metal pipe and covered with dirt so roads could be built over the stream- beds. Some of these are in the process of being removed, making them available for testing stream recovery downstream. Smeltzer got to work alongside Derrick Staab, proj- ect manager for the Upper Deschutes Home River Ini- tiative; and Nat Dachetler, a fisheries biologist, and says he learned a lot about rivers and fish from them. Sixth-grader Skylar Wilkins, who is 12 years old, entered an essay competi- tion created by the Securities Industry and Financial Mar- kets Association (SIFMA) winning first place among all of Oregon’s middle schools. Walker’s essay in SIFMA’s InvestWrite national competi- tion is titled “Why Nike is a Good Long-Term Invest- ment.” She states that over the years, the stock has been continually going up although the line looks “more like a drunken mouse running for some cheese while holding a crayon.” She learned quite a bit about the stock market, but winning the essay competi- tion surprised her because, she said, “It’s not usually my thing. I play all kinds of sports — soccer, basketball, lacrosse, rock climbing, skiing.” Christopher Lundgren and Conner Petke, both sixth- graders, 12 and 11 years old, worked together on their proj- ect to test rocket nosecone designs to determine which rose the highest and was the most stable. The parabola came out on top and their project earned them the Out- standing Science or Engineer- ing Project awarded by a U.S. Air Force program. Last year the boys tested rocket fins in different config- urations for trajectory and sta- bility; next year they will add more power and look at the effects on stability in flight. Lundgren’s favorite part was launching the rockets. Petke liked making the nosecones. SISTERS AREA MEETING CALENDAR Central Oregon Fly Tyers Guild 4th Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For location information: 541-549-2072. ALANON Monday, noon, Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church • Central Oregon Spinners and Wednesday, 6 p.m., The Episcopal Weavers Guild 4th Saturday, 1 to Church of the Transfi guration. 3 p.m. Sisters Library. 541-639-3217. 541-549-8737 or 541-549-1527. Central Oregon Woodworkers Alcoholics Anonymous Thursday & Guild 1st Monday. 541-610-9022. Sunday, 7 p.m., The Episcopal Church East of the Cascades Quilt Guild 4th of the Transfi guration • Saturday, Wednesday, September-June, Stitchin’ 8 a.m., The Episcopal Church of the Post. All are welcome. 541-549-6061. Transfi guration • Monday, 5 p.m., Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church Friends of the Sisters Library • Tuesday, noon, Big Book study, Board of Directors 2nd Tuesday, Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church • 9 to 11 a.m., Sisters Library. Public is Thursday, noon, Sober Sisters Women welcome. 541-977-8285. Meeting, Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Heartwarmers (fl eece blanketmakers) Church. 541-548-0440. 1st & 3rd Tuesdays, 1 p.m., Sisters City Authors Support Group 2nd Friday, Hall. Just bring scissors! 503-880-5832. 10 a.m., Sisters Area Chamber of Hero Quilters of Sisters Thursday, 1 to Commerce. 541-588-0081. 4 p.m. 541-549-1028 or 541-548-3304. Black Butte Macintosh Users Group 3rd Thursday, 3:30 to 5:30 p.m., Sisters Military Parents of Sisters 2nd Library community room. 541-549-1471. Thursday, 5:30 p.m., Ray’s Food Place community room. 541-647-7483. Black Butte Ranch Bridge Club Oregon Band of Brothers – Sisters Tuesdays, 12:30 p.m., Black Butte Chapter Wednesdays, 11:30 a.m., Ranch community room. All welcome; Takoda’s Restaurant. 541-408-5594. partner required. 541-595-6236. SAGE (Senior Activities, Gatherings Central Oregon Council on Aging Senior Lunch Tuesdays, noon, Sisters & Enrichment) Wednesdays, 1 to 4 p.m. at SPRD. 541-549-2091. Community Church. 541-678-5483. BOARDS, GROUPS, CLUBS Sisters Area Photography Club 2nd Wednesday, 4 p.m., Sisters Library community room. 541-549-6157. Sisters Area SketchUp Users Group 2nd Wednesday, 7 p.m., Earthwood Timber Frame Homes. 541-549-0924. Sisters Astronomy Club 3rd Tuesday, 7 p.m., SPRD. 541-549-8846. Sisters Bridge Club Thursdays, 12:30 p.m., The Pines Clubhouse. Novices welcomed. 541-549-9419. Sisters Cribbage Club Tuesdays, 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., Ray’s Food Place community room. All are welcome. 541-923-1632. Sisters Habitat for Humanity Board of Directors 4th Tuesday, 6 p.m. Location information: 541-549-1193. Sisters Kiwanis Thursdays, 7 a.m., Brand 33 Restaurant at Aspen Lakes. 541-410-2870. Sisters Red Hats 1st Friday. Location information: 541-279-1977. Sisters Rotary Tuesdays, noon, Aspen Lakes Lodge. 541-977-6545. Sisters Trails Alliance Board Meeting 2nd Wednesday, 5:30 to 7 p.m. The Pines Clubhouse. 541-719-8822. Sisters Veterans Thursdays, noon, Takoda’s Restaurant. 541-903-1123. Three Sisters Irrigation District Board of Directors 1st Tuesday, 4 p.m., TSID Offi ce. 541-549-8815. Three Sisters Lions Club 2nd Tuesday, noon, Ray’s Food Place community room. 541-595-6967. VFW 8138 & American Legion 1st Wednesday, 6:30 p.m., Sisters City Hall. Service offi cer available. 541-903-1123 or 541-549-1132. CITY & PARKS Sisters City Council 2nd & 4th Thursday, 7 p.m., Sisters City Hall. 541-549-6022. Sisters Park & Recreation District Board of Directors 1st Tuesday, 5:30 p.m., SPRD building. The public is welcome. 541-549-2091. Sisters Planning Commission 3rd Thursday, 5:30 p.m., Sisters City Hall. 541-549-6022. FIRE & POLICE Black Butte Ranch Police Dept. Board of Directors Meets monthly. 541-595-2191 for time & date. Black Butte Ranch RFPD Board of Directors 4th Thursday, 9 a.m., Black Butte Ranch Fire Station. 541-595-2288. Cloverdale RFPD Board of Directors 3rd Wednesday, 7 p.m., Main Station, George Cyrus Rd. 541-548-4815. See the agenda at www.cloverdalefi re.com. Sisters-Camp Sherman RFPD Board of Directors 3rd Tuesday, 5 p.m., Sisters Fire Hall, 301 S. Elm St. 541-549-0771. Sisters-Camp Sherman RFPD Drills Mondays, 7 p.m., Sisters Fire Hall, 301 S. Elm St. 541-549-0771. SCHOOLS Black Butte School Board of Directors 2nd Tuesday, 5 p.m., Black Butte School. 541-595-6203. Sisters Christian Academy Board of Directors 2nd Thursday, 8 a.m., RE/MAX Revolution offi ce at Outlaw Station. 541-549-4133. Sisters School District Board of Directors One Wednesday per month, SSD Admin Bldg. See schedule at www. sisters.k12.or.us. 541-549-8521 x4011. This calendar is for reg scheduled meetings; ularly em teresa@nuggetnews.c ail to om