Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, January 20, 1977, Page Page 6, Image 6

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    PhKp 6. THK C, AZKTTF.-T1MES, Heppner, OH. Thursday. Jan. 20. 1177
HHS league stats it
oiazers naiiu iitio ytn lo
A slow first period start and
a disastrous first five minutes
in the fourth quarter slapped
Heppner with their ninth loss
of the season Friday against
Oregon Trail, 71-60.
Heppner trailed by ten,
50-40, heading into the fourth
period tip off. Oregon Trail fed
big center Rich Snow and the
lead went to 70-44 with three
minutes to play.
In the final three minutes,
Oregon Trail emptied its
bench and the Mustangs chop
ped 13 points off the deficit.
It started in the first period,
though. The Mustangs, plag
ued all year by slow starts,
trailed 12-4 after the first eight
minutes.
By halftime, the eight points
had been clipped to seven, due
to a seven point second period
effort by Kevin Haguewood.
Oregon Trail went to Snow
in the third period and Don
Sutton had six to total 14 be
tween the duo and spark a
20-17 setback.
The ten point edge bounced
to 26 five minutes into the final
quarter.
The streaks that have upset
Head Coach Chris Borgen this
year were evident again Fri
day. After the slow start,
Heppner raced back to within
four points with less than two
minutes to go in the half.
Three game conference statistics show Heppner shooting
29 per cent from the field, making 62 of 213 attempts.
The stat sheets show the Mustangs canning 52 per cent of
their free throws.
Opponents this conference season are making 41 per cent
from the field and 48 from the line. Heppner is being
outrebounded 149-114 and are outfouling their foes, 82-53.
In total points, Heppner is being ousted 212-156 but have
made less turnovers than opponents, 65-56.
Top shooter in conference play is Ken Grieb, hitting 12 of 35
tries. Dennis Peck is 11 for 29.
Wayne Seitz has connected on nine of 12 free throws to top
the Mustangs. Leading rebounder in the three games is also
Seitz, yanking down 18 caroms. He is followed by Carl
Christman with 16, Jerry Cutsforth with 16, Kevin
Haguewood 14 and Peck with 13.
Both Grieb and Peck have 28 points in the three contests
and Seitz has 21.
Christman is the overwhelming leader in assists with 18.
The closest man to him is Grieb, with six.
Heppner fr os h split;
crash Viks, drop WM
Heppner overcame part of
an 11 point halftime deficit to
move within five points with
three minutes to play last
week, but dropped a 37-27 tilt
to Weston-McEwen.
The Mustangs hit just 24 per
cent from the field in the
game. The Mustangs outre
bounded WM, 31-23, but could
n't find the hoop.
Dale Holland, frosh coach,
praised the efforts of Larry
Palmer and Steve Marlatt.
Palmer had six points and as
many rebounds.
Jim Parker led Heppner
with nine points and nine re
bounds. Palmer followed with
Ron Young adding five points
and seven rebounds, Marlatt
four points, Chris Zita two,
and Mike Jones one.
Heppner watched WM race
to 11-2 first period lead and
improve it to 19-8 by inter
mission. Heppner closed the
gap by a fielder in the third
period, trailing 25-16. The
fourth period rally that came
within five points, fell short at
the buzzer.
Kim Devereaux scored 21
points for the Tiger-Scots.
Tough defense and an out
standing game from Jim Par
ker popped Heppner 's fresh
men Mustangs past Umatilla
last week, 43-24.
Parker, cited by Coach Dale
Holland, for his "best all
around game," sparked the
Mustangs with 25 points and 14
rebounds. Leading scorer and
rebounder, Dale Holland, Jr.,
is recuperating from an acci
dent that left him with a
separated Shoulder.
While Parker led the team
offensively, he teamed with
Larry Palmer, Steve Marlatt
and Lee McCarl to harass
Umatilla defensively. The de
fense allowed the Viks just
eight points in the first half.
Heppner built a 22-8 half
time lead and sat back on it.
At the end of three quarters,
the Mustangs were still doubl
ing the Viks, 30-15.
The win balanced the Mus
tang season at 3-3.
Behind Parker, Palmer and
Marlatt had six points, and
Ron Young, Tim Hedman and
Chris Zita each had two
points. Marlatt pulled down
eight rebounds and Young had
seven.
Ness paced Umatilla with 11
points.
I J
Consolidated Report of Condition
Bank of Eastern Oregon
AS OF 12-31-1976
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks ;
U.S. Treasury securities
Obligations of other U.S. Government agencies and corporations
Other Securities
Federal funds sold & securities purchased under agreements to resell
Other loans less reserve for loan losses
Bank premises, furniture & fixtures, & other assets representing
bank premises
Other assets
TOTAL ASSETS
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations
Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations
Deposits of United States Government
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
Certified and officers' checks, etc
TOTAL DEPOSITS
a. Total demand deposits 4,647,257.87
b. Total time and savings deposits 10,515,950.94
Federal funds purchased & securities sold under agreement to purchase .
Other liabilities
TOTAL LIABILITIES
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Common stock total par value
(No. shares authorized 6,000) (No. shares outstanding 6,000)
Surplus
Undivided profits
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES & CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar days ending with call date
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar days ending with call date . . .
854,884.50
1,937,338.94
355,000.00
2,635,789.06
None
10,288,436.18
280,839.32
82,245.81
16,434,533.81
4,000,691.64
8,528,440.15
26,159.06
2,523,807.20
84,110.76
15,163,208.81
None
128,544.79
15,291,753.60
150,000.00
750,000.00
242,780.21
1,142,780.21
16,434,533.81
14,933,000.00
10,771,000.00
I, JAMES H. WISHART, VICE-PRESIDENT, of the above named bank, do solemnly swear
that this report of condition is true and correct, to the best of my knowledge and belief.
signed James H. Wishart
Correct & Attest Directors
-s-Roy W. Lindstrom, -s-Gene Pierce, -s-Arthur A. Allen, -s-Wm. G. Jaeger, -s-R.B. Ferguson,
-s-Kenneth Walters, -s-A. David Childs, -s-D.L. Lemon, -s-Howard Bryant
State of Oregon, County of Morrow
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 13th day of
January, 1977, and I hereby certify that I am not an officer
or director of this bank.
Mary E. Bryant, Notary Public
My commission expires 10-21-1980.
MjtfBCT?Trii''-rrTr
But in that 90 seconds, HHS
went sour and Oregon Trail
took advantage of the oppor
tunity. Ken Grieb was the only
Mustang in double figures,
canning five field goals and a
pair of gift tosses for 12 points.
Snow had 18 for Oregon Trail,
14 in the second half. Charlie
Berry had 14, Don Sutton and
Mark McGunnigle added ten
" Heppner: Peck 9, Myers,
Christman 2, Young 1, Hague
wood 8, Huddleston 5, Skow 4,
Cutsforth 6, Rauch 4, Marlin 4,
Grieb 12, Seitz 5. Field goals:
22-76; free throws: 16-33;
fouls: 26; rebounds: 46; turn
overs: 19. Cutsforth had 11
rebounds.
Oregon Trail: Berry 14,
Sutton 10, Madison 8, Crowell
3, Snow 18, McGunnigle 10,
Nichols 5, Martin 3. Field
goals: 30-76; free throws:
11-31; fouls: 22; rebounds:
38; turnovers: 21.
Frosh stats uncomparable
On paper, it could go either way.
Usually, team statistics reveal areas where
teams are especially strong or especially
weak. Comparing team stats can come up
with a winner in many cases.
But Heppner's Mustang freshmen are that
rare exception.
From the initial jump ball, Heppner's team
stats are exactly, yes exactly, the same as
their opponents they have faced over the last
six contests.
Heppner frosh have scored 211 points this
year. Their opponents have scored 211 points
this year.
Heppner has connected on 86 field goals this
year. Their opponents have hit 86 field goals
this year.
Even free throws are the same. Both the
Mustangs and their foes have sunk 39 gift
tosses.
As if that wasn't enough, both the Mustangs
and their opponents are averaging 35.1 points
per contest. That's probably why Heppner's
freshmen are 3-3 on the season!
Late rally stops lone girls
A poor fourth period spelled
loss for lone Tuesday night in
a girls' basketball game in
Sherman, 30-17. lone led 15-14
at the end of the third period.
Coach Martha Doherty said
her Car girls quit shooting in
the fourth and Carla Van
Fillys win 67-24
Heppner's Fillies returned
to the winner's column Tues
day night, trouncing a hapless
Oregon Trail girls team, 67-24.
Thirteen girls scored for
Heppner. Jackie Mollahan
and Wendy Myers paced the
Fillies with ten each. Julie
Grieb added nine.
A big second quarter blow
out, 18-3, set the pace for the
route.
Borstle took over. Van Borstle
had 14 points, eight of those in
the last eight minutes.
Martha and Carol McElli
gott paced lone with four
points . each. Grace McElli
gott pulled down eight re
bounds. Ione's junior varsity slap
ped Sherman, 24-16. Lori
Edwards had 12 and Darcy
Rea and Donna Shari each
added eight. Robin Leavitt
had 13 rebounds.
21 Z3 IZLmhZbI J EZZLnS bhLmZS LmZbZiZI ZLw!3 IZZZZ3 ELbZZmS IZbZZZI ELZZLkZI LaIZZ3 LCZZZZI CtZiZZ!!
fJfo prices hvo
The answer is easy
mp QE8
Only 18 miles from Heppner, lone
businesses offer small town
service with big city discount prices.
See for yourself,
lone has...
friendly, courteous service
m
prices you can afford
i
ir a welcome atmosphere
it reliability
1 SI
ill -r JT & , If.
f : IfC
These lone businesses whole heartedly
welcome you to shop lone.
Beecher's Restaurant
lone
M.C.G.G.
Chemical & Fertilizer Plant
lone 422-7289
Rietmann's Hardware
lone 422-7211
Independent Garage
lone 422-7222
Bristov's Market
The Best of Everything
for Your Table
Bank of Eastern Oregon
lone-Arlington-Heppner
Aker's Motor Service
lone
B It C Parts and Repair
Moving to a new location
lone 422-7409
Dobyn's Pest Control
lone
JV's
TTA7T3
JELJLJL
(Continued from Page 5)
Mark Piper had 13, Randy
Worden had five, Curtis Sweek
four and Bob Miller and
Howard Huddleston each add
ed two.
Brett Rohde paced Oregon
Trail with 17 points, followed
by L. Holeman with 11.
Saturday night was bitter
for Heppner. The Mustang
JVs had to swallow a 70-36
beating by Weston-McEwen.
The blow came in the second
half where WM outscored
Heppner, 40-14. Lieuallen had
22, Jones 15 and Webb 10 for
the Tiger Scots.
' Gordon Hoffnagle scored
nine for Heppner, followed by
Mark Piper with eight.
Heppner trailed 18-10 after
one period and 30-22 at half
time. In the third stanza, WM
outscored the Mustangs 24-8
and then followed with a 16-6
tally in the fourth. '
From the field, WM scored
50 points to Heppner's 28. '
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422-7496
422-7112
422-7189
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