t 1 BRAKY U or 0 EUGENE. ORE. 07403 THE Voi tQ N 34 I i Jokestrrs at Kinzua Corporation posted this notice on a utilitv pole near the plant Friday to greet the influx of hunters and. possibly, to dampen their enthusiasm for the hunt! It sent the staff on a hunt of its own through the new -.paper files for the piece of verse w hich appears below. It was written by Harry W. Fletcher and published in the Caette-Times'for Oct. 2, 19. It could have Inspired the author of the sign posted near the Kinzua plant. Equalization Oh where is mv wandering husband today . Well he's out in the hills and far. far away. He's out with his rifle a-hunting the deer With chums and a Jeep-load of whiskey and beer. And who shall assert that he hasn't the right. So that's whv mv husband is absent tonight. Each vear he looks forward to having his spree, without anv qualms or thoughts about me. He leaves me alone to look after the place And greet his return with a loving embrace. Of course I'll be here, where else would I go. But what I've been doing he never will know. He thinks 1 11 be knitting or darning his socks A'l.i!" he goes cavorting -ammt w Ihe rocks, i The coast is all clear and I sit here alone, The timing is ripe for a spree of our own. Come over, my lover, come in the back door. There's meat on the griddle and liquor galore. While he's hunting deer, his dear's on the loose. What's good for the gander is good for the goose. f '''w-fl s . . U-7 f V K 1 Kirdine Tullis. Extension assistant. welcomes Klrstia Howell. 1. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hoell. lo the Newcomer Night at the High School Cafrtorium Ust Tuedav. The balloon and the cookie belong U KrMia. bvl MitiKM had U bold her hf-kmgings bile the took a drink of punch. $1.6 would coEE3lo9o college The Blue Mountain Com munity College campui will be completed within two years if voters of Morrow and Uma tilla Counties approve plans proposed by the board of education last night. The board voted unani mously to ask voters on Nov. 6 to authorize a $1,600,000 bond issue to construct a physical education and music facility. If approved by voters, con struction could be completed by the opening of the 1975-76 school year. Amount of the levy was reduced by more that $300,000 when the board ordered re duction of the building from 55,000 to 47,000 square feet. The approved plan to cut the size of the main floor and relocated certain physical education programs to the basement. Board Member Bob Ab rams, Heppner, suggested the reduction in size of the facility, and all other mem bers agreed. He said he felt the district needed the com plete facility that would allow a full program of health, recreation and physical edu cation for residents of Morrow and Umatilla Counties. Kenneth Dauble, board member from Weston, pro posed a levy of $1,600,000 and an early vote. With building costs rising by an average of 1 per cent per month, the election should be held at the earliest possible time, he said. The full board agreed on both Jbe daieof the election and the amount of the levy. Although cost of the facility is pegged at $1,684,985, state funds will make up the difference between the levy and building costs. President Wallace McCrae pointed out. bond The full facility provides for a gymnasium, swimming pool, wrestling and weight lifting facility, handball, lock ers, storage and a 3000 square foot music room. The gym, although reduced in size, still allows for two intramural basketball courts or eight badminton courts or three volleyball courts. McCrae said the facility, although considerable smaller than originally proposed, still retains all the essential ele ments of a physical education-health-music program and would be adequate for both students and other residents of Morrow and Umatilla Coun ties. "The swimming pool," he said, "is not Olympic size but is adequate for our purposes and for recreational and health needs of our two-county area. It will be the only covered pool in the district that will be available to all residents of our two counties," he added. Men rood plan wins approval At a meeting of the City Planning Commission last Wednesday evening action was taken to approve another route, alternate B, as the new relocation road leading- from the Willow Creek Dam into the City of Heppner. The original plan submitted by the Corps of Engineers, plan A, met with opposition from some local residents because it necessitated re moval of homes in the area, and the proposed road itself had a grade of 8 per cent. Plan B, although longer, will have only 1 per cent grade. There are no homes requiring removal under this plan, although it will pass directly through the center of 10 building sites owned by Mr. and Mrs. Elwayne Bergstrom, and located just below Skyline Drive. Alternate plan B was ac cepted with some modifica tions, one of them being that an access road be provided for the residents presently living on Skyline Drive. Allowine Chase Street to remain open is another pro Trinidad visitor praises 4-H work Morrow County entertained another foreign visitor recent ly with the arrival of Albert Ridley Ranjattan, 40, 4-H Extension Officer from Trini dad, B. W. I. For a week he has been the house guest of C. R. "Dick" McElligott of lone. He is here on behalf of the government of Trinidad to receive training in 4-H work. He started his train ing in Washington, D. C, in September and will return to Trinidad, Dec. 8. Ranjattan told the Gazette Times that Trinidad has 45 4-H Clubs with 1500 members bet'veen the ages of 9 and 19. "What you have here is fantastic," he said. "Imagine, here youth is taught such things as forestry, how to make camps in the outdoors, how to control fires and survive with nature. Morrow County 4 H is a vibrant and functional one. Very good." He was impressed, he said, with the fact that half the eligible youth of the county is actively engaged in 4-H work. He was equally impressed with the wheat and grain grow ing capacity of the area. It was. he said, the first time he had seen such grain production, and he enjoyed riding horses on the McElli ossfjg The music facility will provide classroom space for general choral and instru mental instruction, plus prac tice area. Based upon present valua tion of the two-county district and a ( per cent interest rate, cost of the bond issue to voters would be about 25 cents per $1000 true cash value, McCrae said. In other action, the board approved final plans for a $40,000 agriculture laboratory to be constructed on the campus this fall. To be paid out of state funds, the building will include a laboratory for animal science and one for farm machinery. It will be located on the northwest corner of the campus adjoin ing the animal laboratory. The board met again last night to open bids for outdoor track and field facilities, including tennis courts, all to be paid from state funds. posal which will be submitted to the Corps. The final plan of the road relocation rests with the Corps of engineers, and at present nfiviost figures are available for plan B, which may be a determining factor in the choice of the two plans by the Corps of Engineers. The City Planning Com mission also recommended for approval a new 40-unit subdivision with some minor changes required. The pro posed site is located in the River Drive area. Builders of the units are Bill Nelson, contractor, and Al Nistad, general manager, Kinzua Corporation. MAN HELD ON DWI CHARGE William Henry Padberg Jr., 49, Heppner, was arrested for driving while under the in fluence of liquor, Oct. 8. Bail was set at $305, and he was released on his own recognizance. He is scheduled to appear in the Morrow County Court on Oct. 16. gott and Kirk & Robinson ranches. Last week Ranjattan gave a slide lecture to students of Heppner High School on 4-H work and on his country in general. He also spoke to three groups at lone High School. His English is precise and correct, with no identifia ble accent. The visitor has a diploma in agriculture from the Eastern Caribbean Institute of Agri culture and Forestry, Trini dad; has engaged in Rural Youth work under sponsorship of the United Nations: and earned a diploma in nutrition from the University of the West Indies. Jamaica. He spoke glowingly of his native Trinidad, which has had its independence from Great Britain for only 11 years. Trinidad is a minia ture United Nations," he said. We have all races working together in my country, and there is no friction. We all get along well together." There are large populations of Span ish. American. English, Ger man. African, Chinese, Indian and French people, he said. English is the official lan guage, but French is a second one Hindi ( Indian I is a third. He is of Indian ancestry, as his 4,000 i'Gsidotivs BOARDMAN The Board man City Council last week began working with the prob lem of low and medium cost housing need in the city due to the increased population. Mayor Dewey West Jr. announced that the new count is 405 certified by the state. The population is expected to double or triple within the next few years, if Portland General Electric decides to build a nuclear generating plant west of the city on land managed by the Boeing Company. Boardman's overall popu lation in the next few years is expected to reach 4,000, or 10 times its present size. Not only is the city faced with housing problems, it is already having to worry about doing some thing about a water and sewage system which will be needed in the near future. Jack McFadden of the city planning commission asked the council to reconsider changing the zoning in a portion of the Faler Addition to allow construction of mod ular homes or installation of mobile home units. He said he did not mean to turn the area into a mobile home park, but Welcome Night best yet : The third annual commun ity Welcome Night at Heppner ' High School on Oct. 2 featured displays by community mer chants. Newcomers were given pens, key folders, and their children balloons by Hepp ner's bankers. Coast-To-Coast Store passed out yardsticks, the Gazette-Times gave each new family an introductory 3-month's subscription. Hepp ner merchants had set up interesting displays. Marth McGowan, Pilot Rock artist, attracted atten tion with her instant cartoon pictures based on a few lines drawn by viewers. Herman Winters kept the talking and introductions to a minimum. Getting acquainted was the evening's main event. The evening was arranged by the Soroptimist Club, the Chamber of Commerce and the South Morrow Ministerial Association. last name indicates. The people do not seem to resent the influx of American capitaL Since oil is the No. 4 industry in Trinidad, Ameri can oil companies have exten sive concessions there. Agri culture is also a big business. Calypso music and the steel band are "native" to Trim dad, "and you will hear plenty of both should you come to Trinidad in February for Carnival." he said. One of the wonders of Trini dad is its Pitch Lake, 100 acres of pure, natural asphalt that seeps up from the earth and never runs dry. It is used to surface roads there. "You can take out a million barrels of pitch, and by the next morning the lake will be full again. We export a lot of it, mainly to Germany," he explained. Ranjattan is married and has five children. The family lives in a small town near Trinidad, Tacariqua. He wants to get back before cold weather hits. "I can't stand that cold and snow," he laughed. Whereupon he w hipped out a flash camera, took pictures of the Gazette-Times editor and staff, shook hands warmly and trounced out of the office with his guide." B irdine Tullis or was lookina toward the type of development where units are placed on permanent foun dations that would not be towed away in a few years. The land he referred to is along Columbia Court where the lots adjoin the Union Pacific Railroad yard and would not normally be used for residential construction. The council agreed some changes in the Faler Addition are needed to promote sales of lots in the area, but decided rather than re-zone the tract the city should curb and pave it to make the lots more attractive to potential buyers. .; ' -I ( ' -J- -V ; ' v' "" -' V . '' ) f 4' '1,fc i &'7 'SC. 1 n f -J State Senator Kenneth A. Jernstedt. Hood River, of the sprawling 28th senatorial district, was a Heppner visitor Monday and a luncheon guest of the Chamber of Commerce. Sen. Jernstedt told the Gazette-Times that the legislature opened a "can of worms" when it enacted, over his opposition, the law to extend collective bargaining privileges to teachers and other public employees. It is now possible, he said, for organized education to shut down the schools of the state over wage and benefit disputes. ':'7 . . ,. ....... . . ''7.. y I 7l " ' 7 . " i ' i - 7 v . :y 7 7 fir r . Jn 1 1 VjH I ALBERT the Extension Service. Ranjattan gave his talk and slide show at the Morrow County Chamber of Com merce meeting Monday. At or The council also heard a report on the city sewer and water problems from Stanley Wallulis. He said he is trying to schedule a date to meet with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to discuss using federal land for the city's sewage treatment project. He said the city has applied to be included in a proposed re gional water district study. The city has also applied for a $7,500 grant to study the city's housing needs. The city applied for a similar grant last year, but the application was not made in time for funds to be obtained. RANJATTAN the conclusion he said he had been impressed by the friend liness and hospitality of the people of Heppner and of his host family, tfic McEHigotts.