The SpokeSman • WedneSday, January 5, 2022 P3 FLASHBACK Musher competitions, floods and strong winds 75 years ago mushrooms Assn. and by team sponsors. Jim Keller is local co- ordinator. A mushers’ banquet will be held Saturday night at the VFW Hall. Ruth’s café will ca- ter the food, with Mrs. Rol- lie Ludwig is in charge of the meal. Jan 9, 1947 — Complete faculty hinges on housing Prospects for filling the last vacancy on the Redmond Union high school teaching staff appeared good today, when superintendent M. E. Larive announced receipt of a wire from Thomas McLough- lin of Portland, who stated that he would accept the faculty po- sition if he can obtain adequate housing here. McLoughlin, who is a grad- uate from Gonzaga University, is expected to arrive here Sun- day. Tentatively, he is scheduled to teach sophomore English, world history, dramatics and orientation. In the faculty re- organization, Clayton Norton will become assistant principal, and teach world geography and three classes of general science. Allen Mueller will teach ju- nior and senior social sciences and commercial law, Larive added, and Mrs. Maude Lee will teach another class of sopho- more English. Hugh V. Hancock is the new basketball coach. 25 years ago 50 years ago photo by mrs. W. h. hilands Jan. 5, 1972 — Musher due for annual Sisters Dog Sled race Sisters — upwards of 150 dogs representing more than 30 teams will be in Sisters this weekend for the 12th annual Sisters Sled Dog Race Jan. 8 and 9. Action will begin at 11 a.m. Signs will be posted direct- ing spectators to the race site. The race will be held as near town as snow conditions allow. Sisters Dog Race chairman Jim Keller warms up for the 12th annual event, where out-of-staters vie with local contestants in three classes of race competition. Mushers will come from Washington, Idaho, Califor- nia and Oregon. Local racers will include gym Keller, Jerry Klatt, Elmer Schwartz, Doug Willams and Stan Rasmussen, Sisters and Lloyd Van Sickle, Camp Sherman. Art Christiansen, Jeffer- son, is favored to win the race. Competition between Oregon mushers and out-of-state con- testants is expected to be keen. The race is divided into three categories, Class A, Class B, and Class C. A purse of $1,000 will be divided among Class A winners. Trophies will be given to all winners. Class A drivers travel a 12- 16 mile trail both Saturday and Sunday. Racers will leave at 1 p.m. with a dual start at two minute intervals. There will be no limit on the number of dogs used. The first place man will receive 15 per cent of the prize money each day. Starting time for Class B team will be 12 noon, with dual starts at two minute in- tervals. They will cover a 5 to 7 mile course. Drivers cannot run more than five dogs. Only three dogs can pull a sled in the Class C division. LETTERS AND COLUMNS PREP BASKETBALL Panthers see an IMC title in their future even with early growing pains BY BRIAN RATHBONE The Bulletin Just a short four years ago, Redmond boys basketball coach Reagan Gilbertson was giddy watching a young eighth grader on the hardwood. Coming up the pipeline was Garrett Osborne. “I could just tell by the way he moves on the court, the way he handled the ball, finished around the rim, that he was going to be a big part of our program for four years,” said Gilbertson. And exactly that has hap- pened. Osborne began as a role player on varsity as a freshman, then went from a second-team all-conference player as a soph- omore to the Intermountain Conference’s first-team as a junior. How far the Panthers go this season could be deter- mined by how their 6-foot-3 combo guard plays in his final season. “As he goes, we go,” said Gil- bertson. The college prospect headed for Oregon Tech is leading the charge for what the sixth-year head coach called his most ath- letic team in recent memory and what Osborne believes is one of the better teams in the IMC and in Class 5A . “We are big, athletic and can get out and run,” said Osborne. “We are really solid. I think we are a top-10 team in the state and have a chance to win league. I know we can compete with other teams.” The Panthers have won seven of their 12 nonleague Teams will leave at 11 a.m. and run a three to four mile trail. They will take off singly at one minute intervals. A peewee race on Satur- day will show the skills of the younger fans. On Sunday a weed pulling contest will determine the best pulling dog. The event will be sponsored by the central Oregon dog Jan. 8, 1997 — Flood waters receding, wind uproots trees, sheds A week of wild weather across the Northwest left a small imprint on the Redmond area. Jerry Rank of Lone Pine watched as flood water from the Crooked River turned his 60-acre alfalfa field into a shal- low lake. The water rose as far as the back door of a dou- ble-wide trailer Rank owns and rents out. Although he’s seen worse floods in the valley between Redmond and Prineville, Ranks said last week’s water was the highest in the nine years he’s owned the Lone Pine property. On New Year’s Eve, storage sheds in Redmond were tossed around like lawn furniture during an abrupt wind storm. Melba Olson reported a large metal shed blew off its foundation and landed on her car. As a police officer was in- vestigating, the wind picked up the shed and rolled it over his patrol car as well. The same night, three trees blew over in the 400 block of NW 8th St., breaking power lines and damaging a power pole. Redmond’s Garrett Osborne (10) attempts a shot around a Mountain View de- fender while playing in the Oregon Holiday Hoopfest at Summit High School on Wednes- day night. ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin games this season with three of their losses coming to 6A teams Mountain View (twice) and Summit. Still, since Dec. 7 the Panthers have been a fix- ture in the OSAA coaches poll, reaching as high as No. 6 ear- lier this week. There has been a steady ascension of the basketball program since joining the re- configured IMC in 2018. That year, the Panthers finished fourth in the conference, the next year third, and last spring they finished second to Crook County. While the team’s sights are set on winning a league title, there have been some growing pains through the team’s first games of the season. In a rematch against Moun- tain View Wednesday evening in the Oregon Holiday Hoop- fest at Summit High, the pains Ways you can support Thelma’s Place: • Vehicle donations • Cash donations • Sponsorships • Volunteer CHILD CARE AN INTERGENERATIONAL PROGRAM Your support makes a difference! Redmond: 541-548-3049 Day Respite and Support Groups www.thelmasplace.org showed in the first quarter when Moun- tain View jumped out to a 16-6 lead. And while the Panthers rallied in the second quarter to take a 22- 21 lead into halftime, Mountain View re- captured the lead in the third quarter and cruised to a 51-44 win. Gilbertson was a little un- sure why his team came out flat in a rematch against the Cou- gars. It is an issue that needs to be fixed prior to league play. “We have to be ready to play every night. We can’t just go into games just to have fun. We have to execute our systems and play hard,” said Gilbertson. “Winning and losing isn’t that important right now, it is all about getting our team ready for the league.” It is still a rather inexperi- enced team with Osborne be- ing the only returning starter from last year’s squad. With players like guards Yoshi Saito, Tanner Jones and 6-foot-8 big man Evan Otten taking on big- ger roles this season, there is confidence that those growing pains will not be around in the second half of the season. “Not all of us are ready for varsity pressure quite yet,” said Osborne. “But we will get bet- ter the more that we play.” e Reporter: 541-383-0307, brathbone@bendbulletin.com Get great service & great rates. Joe A Lochner Ins Acy Inc Joe A Lochner, Agent www.joelochner.com Redmond, OR 97756 Bus: 541-548-6023 Join in on the topics we’re covering. The Spokesman welcomes letters to the editor and guest columnists. Submissions may be edited or rejected for clarity, taste, libel and space. 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