Christian Churches'
Bible School Records
Large Attendance
The Vacation Bible school
ITocrnm of the Heppner-Lrxlng
i. ,11 riirUllMii church wan me
sen ted Friday evening. June 27,
at the Heppner church, with a
larjje number or parents ana
friends in attendance.
The preschxI group, led by
their teacher Sharon Harrison,
presented their memory work
and soncs. Norlta Marquardt,
who led the singing, was also
In charge of the first Erade. Sec
ond grade teacher was Clarice
Baker, and the combined third
ind fourth grades were taught
by Judy Jones and Florence No
lan. Fifth and sixth grades were
taught by Betty and Rena Mar
quardt. Each class, led by the
teacher, gave the memory work
and religious poems learned
during the school session, and
all Joined In singing songs
learned in Bible school.
Each student was presented
with a Bible school certificate.
Average attendance for the
week was 72.
"This is the largest Vacation
Bible school I have helped with
since coming to the Christian
church." said Mrs. Opal Cook,
director.
During the week the children
made articles during craft per
iod, and many of the articles
wore on dLsnlav in the Fellow
shin hall where a coffee hour
was enjoyed after the program.
Among the articles displayed
were many fine handmade
leather articles constructed in
the leather craft class conducted
by Betty and Rena Marquardt.
Ann Knolls to Study
At English University
Miss Ann Knoll, daughter of
Mrs. W. W. Weatherford, is trav
eling in Ireland this summer for
10 davs. She will be moving to
Kngland for the summer session
at Wimbledon, a suburb of Lon
don, after completing the spring
semester at a university in Avig
non, France, where she lived
with a French family. She is
studying in Europe through Ore
gon State University.
In England she will live with
an English family and will
commute daily to London by
train.
Next fall Miss Knoll will be
a senior at OSU, in the School
of Humanities and Social Sci
ences. She is majoring in anthro
pology. Mr. and Mrs. George Steagall
tind family traveled to Portland
last Monday, where they plan
ned to spend a few days visit
ing friends and their daughter,
Mrs. John Ratcliff in Beaverton.
Later in the week they planned
a trip to Spokane where they
will visit friends living at New
man Lake.
EOC Lists Variety
Of Short Sessions
Workshops varying from one
to two weeks In length will he
effered during Summer Session
of Eastern Oregon College in
La Crande.
Fees for any two week work
shop are SIG.50. Students regis
ter the first day of class at the
leglstrar's office.
Following are the workshops
and special courses available
during the remainder of the
summer:
Monday, July 7 The Malad
lusted Child. 8:00 a.m.. Ad 213.
H. Anderson: Seminar: Intro to
MnHonr KHxnrp. 9 '(Ml a.m.. S
211, Holton; Applied Mental Hy.
giene, K:3U a.m., Ad 211, wint
ers; Workshop: individualized
Instruction, 10:00 a.m., L 305,
W. Wells: School Health Pro
gram, 11:00 a.m., c luz. men
nrrlsnn- VVnrkshnn: Imnrovemcnt
of Instruction, 10:30 a.m., L 306,
Shore; Workshop: High School
Drama. 1:00 p.m., Ad 207, Hiatt;
Math & Res Materials: PE, 2:00
p.m., C 115, Odegaard.
Saturday. Ju v 12 Workshop:
Laboratory in Communication
Disorders, Meadowood Speech
Camp, Murray.
Mnnrtav Jnlv 21 Practicum.
9:30 a.m.', L 30(5. Henry; Semin
ar; Mam et Mai in itaaiauon
Detection, 9:00 a.m., S 214, Hol
ton: Workshop: Elementary Mu
sic, 10:00 a.m., Ack 205; Bar
bour; Seminar: Transformation
al Grammar. Nature of the Eng
lish Language, 11:30 a.m., Ad
212, Klamme; Physical Educa
tion in Grades, 10:30 a.m., C 102,
Richardson.
Monday, August 4 Research:
Community Action, 9:00 a.m., L
305, Briggs.
Monday, August 18 Work
shop: Band Jamboree, 9:00 a.m.,
Ad 105, Lanyon; Seminar: A
Typical Child, Meadowoodl
Speech Camp. Murray; Commu
nity Structure & Organization,
10:00 a.m., L 305, Briggs: Work
shop: Color Photography, 11:00
a.m.. S 210, Hermens.
Mondav. August 25 Work
shop: Hearing Impaired Child
ren in the Classroom, Meadow
ood Speech Camp, Murray.
For further information re
garding Summer Session con
tact Mr. Osterloh at the college
lone Girl Records
All A's at OCE
FT
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1
WATCHING HIMSELF tell about his pigeons Is this youngster, one of 12 students participating
. ti,a ...mmor school Title I oroiect at Heppntt Elementary school. Extensive use of television
tapes is part of the project
(G-T Photo),
Title I Project Helps Youngsters
rionipfl Matthpup3 nf Tnnp is
one of 46 students who earned
straight-A grades during spring
term at uregon college oi cuu
cation.
Doniece will be a junior at
OCE npxt vpar. She is the dau
ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Matthews.
Mr. and Mrs. Stan Kemp drove
to Walla Walla last bunaay to
visit her mother, Mrs. Edna
Harshman, who is recuperating
in a hospital there toiiowing re
cent surgery.
BICYCLE RIDERS IN THE CITY OF
HEPPNER MUST STAY OFF THE
SIDEWALKS.
GLENN KOLKHORST
Chief of Police
Visual literacy.
That's the term Al Martin
uses to describe what he teaches
to youngsters during a four
week session for "educationally
deprived" children which con
cludes today here.
Martin, principal at Heppner
Elementary school, is the coord
inator for a unique program in
Oregon education, called Title I.
So named because it receives
its funds from an act with the
same name, it is a program to
help youngsters with problems
during the regular school year
Rock Hounds Banned
From Warm Springs
Until Tours Developed
Rock hounding on the Warm
Sprngs Indian Reservation will
be discontinued until guided
geological tours of the areas
formations can be developed,
ht Trihal Council
of the Confederated Tribes.
In a request asking tne pud
lic to comply with the Tribe's
t Waheneka.
chairman of the Tribal Council,
said that in the summer lire
season when reservation foliage
i hicrhlv flammable. brush
fires threaten grazing .lands, as
well as the Tribes umDer noia
ings. . .
"Requests for rock nounaing
directions at Kah-nee-ta Vaca
tion Resort will be referred to
the rock hounding areas at
Prineville," Waheneka said. The
city of Prineville has staKea
mining claims in wnicn root
hounds may work to encourage
tnii-ists in Ontral Oreeon to
make the area their headquart
ers.
get more individualized instruc
tion with special methods.
Communication is the key
word of those special methods,
according to Martin. Children in
volved in the program learn to
communicate through audio
video television tapes, critiquing
themselves after they tell of a
field trip they took the week be
fore.
There are 12 children in the
program at Heppner, which by
gan June 9. The entire program
will move to Irrigon next Mon
day, where 11 youngsers are in
rolled. The voungsters. according to
Martin, are recommended by
their teachers as students who
would benefit from the special
help.
While reading is the main
area stressed, there are several
important areas, according to
Martin. Thpv are all in the
realm of communication.
The youngsters are encouraged
tr iico on pvnpncivp PnlnrniH
color camera, for example, and
to take photographs that show
people in action, vjn a receni
trip to the Jack Sumner ranch,
a fifth erade vouth took a
series of pictures, and develop
ed a story in pictures from them.
Of course, there are the con
ventional books, but even these
are adapted to a reading pacer
IT'S
OPEN MOW!
NEXT TO HARRIS
DRIVE-IN IN THE
OLD RICHFIELD
SERVICE
STATION
CPs! I
FEATURING
Two Stalls
Vacuum
High-Pressure
Washers for
Motor Cleaning
DRIVE IN TODAY FOR A WASH THAT
LEAVES YOU A SPARKLING CLEAN
CAR!
New Bank Debits
Higher Than in '68
Rank riphito fnr thp Ppndlptnn
area including Gilliam, Grant,
Morrow, Umatilla and Wheeler
rnnntipc InprpnQpH In Mflv 1 QfiQ
compared to May, 1968, the Uni
versity of Oreson Bureau of Bus
iness and Economic Research
has reported.
Debits for May, 1969, totaled
$57,829,727. For April, 1969, the
total was $59,030,276, and for
May, 1968, the total was $53,
037,587. Oregon with 346 banks report
ing had a percentage increase
of 1.0 in May 1969, compared
with April, 1969, and a 20.1 per
centage increase in May, 1969,
compared with May, 1968.
Total bank debits for May,
1969, come to $4,565,928,287. For
April, 1969, the total was $4,
519,617,605, and for May, 1968,
the total was $3,803,012,414.
to help the child keep a steady
pace. There are also siuay
sheets, which the students use
as they would normally.
The activities in class are
"those activities not normally
done in a traditional classroom,"
Martin says. Field trips have
been taken to the Pendleton
airport, to the Sumner ranch and
to the fossil beds at Fossil.
After each trip, the children
tell about the visit, but rather
than sitting down and writing,
use the television camera.
Martin also stresses drawings,
and the youngsters draw pic
tures after their experiences on
a field trip.
The morning sessions are rath
er informal, thus atldng to the
general feeling that this is a
situation where the children can
be more relaxed.
Other teachers in the program,
which gets all its funds from
the federal government, are Mrs.
LaVerne Partlow and Mrs. Zoe
Billings, both of Boardman. They
will continue when the program
moves to Irrigon.
HEPPNER GAZETTE-TIMES, Thursday. July 3. 1969
5
Elks Give $15,000 to Meadowood
Meadowood Springs Speech
Camp, Pendleton, has been ael.
-vU'J Irikfiiluiv of a ma
jor project of the 54 Elks Lodg
es that comprise the Oregon
State Elks Association.
Announcement of a gift of
$15,000 to the camp was made
June 30 in the office of Gover
nor Tom MoCall. President of
the State Elks Association. Bob
Clark of Bend, presented the
check to Ernest Crist ler of Ore-
gon Institute of Rehabilitation
and Research. Inc., sponsor of
Meadowood Springs Speech
Camp.
The money will be used as
partial scholarship support for
Mr. and Mrs. Mel Slat and
daughter Leslie, of Santa Bar
bara. Calif., visited at the L. E.
Rnhl hnmp in Lexington last
week enroute to Seattle. Slate,
a mucin nf Mrs. L. E. Ruhl.
was born in Heppner and start
ed to school in Lexington, dui
had not been here for 32 years.
Rnn Daniels, sunerintendent
of Morrow county schools, will
be in Las Vegas, JNev., irom Juiy
812 for the meeting oi tne nat
ional Federation of school ac
tivities associations. He is a
member of the board of direct
ors of the Oregon School Activi
ties Association.
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Nash
are enjoying a two week vaca
tion trip to Forman, N. D., where
they are visiting her mother,
Mrs. Mary Nogowski and her
brother and sisters and their
families.
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Blake of
Renton, Wn are spending a few
days this week visiting here
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Jones. The couple recently
visited in Grants Pass with some
of his relatives and plan to trav
el to Hood River on Friday to
see her brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Jones
and family.
Traveling to Eugene over the
past week end to participate in
the Jay we sponsored Junior
Champ track meet were three
lone boys, Eddie Sherman, Frank
Halvorsen and Doug Beggs, ac
companied by Tom Beam of
Heppner. representing the Mor
row County Jaycee chapter.
Sherman qualified in the 100
yard dash, Beggs placed second
in the Intermediate division in
the 100-yard dash, and Halvor
sen placed second in the senior
division in the high jump.
Mrs. Francis Curry of Spring
field, Mo., is visiting with her
cousin, Mrs. Amanda Duvall.
They spent the week end at Cra-t-i
Lake and were dinner guests
Tuesday with Mrs. Duvall's sis
ter. Mrs. Lula White, near Pilot
Rock.
Traveling to Astoria over the
past week-end to attend a state
Jaycee president's college work
shop were Mr. and Mrs. John
Privett and Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Wilson. Privett serves as presi
dent of the Morrow county chap
ter of Jaycees and Wilson serves
ar the clubs' 1st vice president.
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Privett and
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Brown are
vacationing this week at East
Lake in Central Oregon.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hasvold
of Phoenix, Ariz., are planning
a three day visit at the Norman
Neion home over the July 4
week-end. The couple formerly
lived in Heppner where he was
employed with the Empire Ma
chinery company before their
move to Arizona. They would
enjoy seeng all their old friends
and neighbors while visiting in
the area.
Traveling to Eugene re
cently to attend the gradu
ation of Laura Lee Sumner Hud
son from the University of Ore
gon were her brother, Jack Sum
ner, her sister, Mrs. Jeanne Lov
gren, and another brother, Jay
Sumner of Santa Monica, Calif.
Others traveling to the gradu
ation exercise were her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Sumner and
Mrs. Anna Sumner, all of Prineville.
youngslerst from over 40 com
munities In Oregon.
Al llii last It'iiUUIive M'vilxi)
both Governor McCall and the
gislture endorsed the OIRK
and Meadowood Springs.
The speech camp was begun
by Crist ler about live years ago
atid for Its first few vears was
dependent upon volunteer help
and small gifts. The Heppner
Elementary PTA and the lone
PTA organizations had pro
prams in which Crlstler showed
slides of the camp and told of
the need for support. The Hepp
ner PTA provided several schol
arships for local children who
attended the camp.
Recently Meadowood was
adopted as a project by Elks
Clubs in Northeastern Oregon.
It was through their instigation
that the State Elks Association
became Interested in the proj
ect. The Elks organization for
many years has aided the blind
and also children in need of
eve glasses as one of its spe
cial projects.
The speech camp is aimed at
those children who have diffi
culty, in hearing and speech.
The use of natural surroundings
of Meadowood Springs, located
outside Pendleton In the Blue
Mountains, aid these children to
communcate on a different lev
el than their home environment.
Eastern Oregon College lists
two workshops this summer
which will use the facilities of
Meadowood. for teachers who
are interested in speech and
hearing difficulties.
Visiting here from Wichita
Falls. Texas, while on vacation
are Mr. and Mrs. James McNabb
and family, who are staying at
the home of her sister and brother-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Borman, and visiting her father,
Ben Cox. Enroute to Heppner
the family visited for a time
in Stockton, Calif., with his par
ents. The McNabb family lives
at Shepard Air Force Base in
Wichita Falls. Mrs. McNabb is
the former Rachel Cox.
Recent guests at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Pieper, Lex
heir daughters.
Mrs. Lavelle Nelson and Mrs.
Earl Hall, and little Jodi Hall,
all of Portland. The visitors ar
rived Saturday, June 21. Mrs.
Neson returned to Portland June
23. Mr. Hall and son Larry came
for Mrs. Hall and Jodi on June
28.
Mrs. Malda Britt accompanied
Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Britt and two
boys to Hermiston recently
where they enjoyed a visit with
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Britt and
family, brother of the late Dew
ey Britt. While visiting in Her
miston, the group also stopped
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Al
bert Schunk, brother of Maida
Britt.
Summertime
. . . Means Vacation Time
AND THAT MEANS TRAVEL
BEFORE YOU LEAVE BE SURE YOUR
CAR IS READY TO ROLL WITH A
VACATION TUNE-UP FROM CAL'S
RICHFIELD
With Each Lube Job A Free Car Wash
At Harris' Car Wash
Cal's Richfield
HEPPNER
Main St
p5f
Al UAVS FIRST QUALITY
Like It!
Charge It!
STORE HOURS
9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
5th
Big July
argaln Pays
Men's
FIRE HOSE JEANS now 366
50 Polyester 50 Cotton Orig. 4.98
BEACH TOWELS " 1"
100 Cotton ori 3-
WOMEN'S JAMAICAS i
Assorted Prints slze 8-16
WOMEN'S HANDBAGS now 99
Summer Straws oria $S
Bov8'
KNIT SHIRTS 266
100 Polyester 18 only Orlg. 3.98
Girl's
KNEE HIGHS 'uced j0c
Assorted Fashion Colors
Girl's
PANT DRESSES 2"
Sleeveless, Asst. Colors Oxig. 4.15
Women's
TANK TOP SHELLS 400
100 Polyester, Asst. Stripes Repeat of a Sellout
WE WILL BE OPEN SATURDAY,
JULY 5
Ph. 676-8981
J