ST. HELENS, RAINIER ON ‘HIGH THREAT’ LIST LILLARD’S 41 UNRAVELS MAGIC NATION/6A SPORTS/1B FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2018 143rd Year, No. 8 Your Weekend Huckabee makes speech in Pendleton By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian • • • One dollar WINNER OF THE 2018 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Find a Halloween party near you Buy a book at Weston Library sale Run for the Hermiston Education Foundation For times and places visit www.eastoregonian.com Mike Huckabee’s speech at the Pendleton Convention Center was advertised as non-political, and the former Republican governor of Arkansas, presidential candidate, and conservative media personality stuck to the script. Mostly. Huckabee’s speech at the Pendle- ton Convention Center was delayed for two weeks when Hur- who packed into the con- vention center that to him, ricane Michael threatened being “pro-life” was not his north Florida home, a political issue, but was Huckabee came to Pend- leton on Thursday to head- instead about respecting line a fundraiser for Preg- life at all stages. nancy Care Services, a “I’m not pro-life Pendleton nonprofit that because I got into politics,” provides counseling, par- he said. “I got into politics enting classes, and other Huckabee because I’m pro-life.” services for pregnant Huckabee regaled women. the crowd with stories about his Huckabee told the 500 people upbringing, his daughter — White House Press Secretary Sarah Hucka- bee Sanders — and the time he gave the Heimlich maneuver to Robert Pittenger, who went on to become a North Carolina congressman. But he always brought it back to Pregnancy Care Services, which wants to raise $300,000 toward upgrading its facility to a clinic, which would also include hir- ing a nurse and buying a sonogram See HUCKABEE/8A Weekend Weather Fri Sat Sun 64/48 63/47 60/43 HERMISTON Watch a game Hermiston vs. Kamiakin Friday, 7 p.m., at Kennison Field, Hermiston McLeod- Skinner sees some hope in new poll By CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE Capital Bureau SALEM — Democrat Jamie McLeod-Skinner, challenging longtime Con- gressman Greg Walden, R-Hood River, in Oregon’s Second Congressional Dis- trict, is touting new poll numbers showing her oppo- nent with less than 50 per- cent support among sur- veyed voters. But the figures show she’s still behind. The poll, commissioned by the cam- paign, shows 40 percent of respondents favored her, and 49 percent favored Walden. About 5 percent of those surveyed were unde- cided and 7 percent favored the Independent candidate, Mark Roberts. Patinkin Research Strat- egies surveyed about 400 likely voters in the dis- trict. The poll’s margin of error is 5 percent. About 25 percent of respondents See POLL/8A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Head cook Karen Blair serves peas and carrots to Elaine Lindquist during lunch on Thursday at the Harkenrider Senior Activity Center in Hermiston. The lunch marked the first meal served to seniors in the new facility. Lining up for lunch First meal served at Harkenrider Center draws more than 100 By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian he first lunch at the new Harkenrider Senior Activity Center was a record-break- ing one. More than 100 people showed up for the inaugural meal of chicken, mashed potatoes, veg- etables and cake on Thursday. The senior center opened at the end of September, but its twice- weekly meals had remained at Our Lady of Angels Catholic Church until all of the equipment in the new kitchen was installed. T Virginia Beebe, the senior center’s vice president, was one of the board members run- ning around Thursday adding more chairs to tables and help- ing people with walkers navigate the line. While the old, smaller senior center’s lunches had been numbering 50 to 60, she said she wasn’t surprised by the large turnout Thursday. “We expected this today,” she said. Based on a show of hands, most seniors at the meal had eaten at the former senior center on Orchard Avenue at least a few times before it was torn down in 2017. Since that time, the seniors have been having lunch at the See LUNCH/8A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Senior center vice president Virginia Beebe, third from left, speaks to Donna Southwell of Umatilla about whether about the possibility of picking up meals to go while eating lunch Thursday at the Harkenrider Senior Activity Center in Hermiston. Preus passes torch with big project on horizon By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian When Blue Mountain Commu- nity College President Cam Preus arrived in 2013, her predeces- sor presented her with a three-ring binder of documents called “the turnover book.” A mix of static facts about the college and contemporary issues, Preus is giving her successor an updated version of the book when she leaves the college at the end of October to start her new job as the executive director of the Oregon Community College Association. Preus Green Starting Nov. 15, Connie Green will lead the college as the interim president for the next six months while the BMCC Board of Educa- tion conducts a search for a perma- nent replacement. A former president of Tilla- mook Community College who has worked with BMCC in the past, Green will be expected to help shepherd some of BMCC’s larger initiatives and projects. Green occasionally opened a notebook to take notes as Preus spoke to the East Oregonian edito- rial board Thursday about the Blue Mountain Regional Training Center and other college issues. Originally dubbed FARM II, Preus said BMCC spun off the rodeo arena/veterinary classroom space from the 2013 bond proposal that failed at the ballot box. The bond passed in 2015 sans the arena proposal, and the project received another setback when an anonymous donor pulled out of a 40-acre land donation for the arena. But Preus said these develop- ments were “blessings in disguise” because pursuing the project inde- pendently allowed the college to recruit the city of Pendleton, Uma- tilla County and other governmental entities to contribute to the project. “I think it’s kismet for it to work out the way that it did,” she said. With the Pendleton Round-Up See BMCC/8A