Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 30, 1991, Page TWO, Image 2

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TWO - Heppner Gaiette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, October 30 , 1991
Schools install alarm system
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L-R: Fire chief Forrie Burkenbine, Marcia Kemp, Josh Dill,
Bryan Traylor, Ralph Reed and Molly Rill look at alarm system.
Josh Dill. Eugene, underwriter for
the Great American Insurance
Group. and Bryan Traylor. Heppner
Elem entary School principal
demonstrated the ADT fire and in-
truder alarm system recently install-
ed at the school.
The company is installing the
IN S U L A T E W A T E R M E T E R S N O W
This year the water meters will be read during the
winter months, but the meters will need to be in­
sulated. Please put the insulation material (foam
pellets, rags, newspaper, etc.) in a small plastic gar­
bage bag that can be easily removed or pushed aside.
Be sure that the bag is securely tied or sealed.
If you have had frozen pipes in the past, it is advisable
to let a faucet run at a fast drip during extremely cold
weather. Any damages resulting from frozen water
meters that have NOT been insulated will be repaired
at the ow ner’s expense.
systems at all schools they insure, in­
cluding all seven Morrow County
district schools.
Dill said that the systems would
cost around $3,000 each if they had
been purchased separately.
He said that the average loss in a
school without a system is around
$38,000 but schools with the system
are expected to lose only around
$5,000.
According to a Great American
news release, fires in Oregon
schools in 1989 cost $21.5 million,
more in one year than the previous
nine years combined. The release
also stated that of the 15 school fires
investigated in 1989, 14 were arson
related, with the typical perpetrator
a 14-year-old male underachiever
who usually entered the school
building forcibly after the hours or
on weekends
The system in Heppner Elemen­
tary school has smoke detectors, heat
sensors in the attic and motion detec­
tors in the office, said Dill. With the
motion detector, a person has 30
seconds to get out of the office, or
punch in a four-digit code before the
system is activated. The system is
monitored by ADT, who calls the
building principal, the custodian and
the police if the system is activated.
The school district is insured
through Van Marter and Kahl
Insurance.
Saturday Sunday
school starts
Saturday Sunday School will once
again be held for Valby youth and
friends on November 2 from 10 to
11:30 a m. There will be singing, a
mystery guest. Bible study and arts
and crafts. Children ages three
through sixth grade are welcome.
David Winters
City Foreman
City o f Heppner
Phone 676-9618
Mustangs whip Tiger Scots 27-15
clinch playoff spot
score after the second pickoff with
1:31 remaining. The Mustangs
dusted off the old flea flicker with
quarterback Rick Koffler hitting
tight end Ryan Currin in the right
Hat. Currin held the ball just the right
amount of time before lateraling the
; ■
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Ryan
Currin
brings
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Group 27 675 Amp.
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P in F o r S tu d s
tire
S tu d in g $ 8 p e r
carrier
The Wintermaster H/T Belted Radial
was specially designed lor use in
conditions where highway radials just
can t perform at optimum levels
Heppner Weston-McEwen
First downs
10
10
Pass Att/Comp/In*
11/5/0
20/9/3
Passing yards
51
136
Rushes/yards
33/149
29/89
Punts/yards
6/175
4/120
Fumbles lost
1/0
2/1
Penalties
8/66
12/110
7 0 0 x 1 5 6ply
7 5 0 x 1 6 8p ly
9 0 0 x 1 6 8 ply
P ric e
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LT
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Prices Include Mounting & Balancing
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Tiger
difference in the game.
It s said that the best players play
well in big games. Jim Kindle cer­
tainly gave graphic evidence of that.
He scored three of the Mustangs’
four touchdowns and racked up an
unheard-of 38 defensive points on
the night.
The game was suspenseful. The
Mustangs took the opening kickoff
and drove down the field impressive­
ly. The drive stalled inside the Tiger
Scot 15-yard line. After an exchange
of punts, Weston-McEwen drew
first blood on a 65-yard eight-play
drive with James Carlson hitting T.J.
Bailey with a 15-yard touchdown
pass with 1:08 left in the first
quarter. The pat was blocked and the
red and black Tiger Scots led 6-0.
Adam Bailey grabbed a 25-yard
touchdown pass from Carlson on the
Tiger Scots next possession to shock
the Mustangs secondary. T.J. Bailey
kicked the pat for a 13-0 lead.
Jim Kindle started the tide turning
with 5:56 remaining in the half. He
stormed into the Tiger Scot backfield
on a punt that was blocked and pick­
ed it up and walked into the end zone
for a touchdown. The pat featured
Kindle out of the shotgun. He crash­
ed over the left side for a two-pointer
for a 13-8 Weston-McEwen lead.
The Heppner defense stiffened
after the big play. Defensive back
Kevin Payne stopped the next two
T iger Scot drives with pass
interceptions.
Heppner had one more chance to
'll i
850 cold cranking amps
at 0° F
130 minutes of reserve
capacity
Group 74 675 Amp.
_______________
JU S T IN JIW E
f o b w in t e r
down
The Heppner Mustangs penciled
themselves into the 1991 class 2A
state playoffs with a solid 27-15 vic­
tory over the visiting Weston-
McEwen Tiger Scots Friday night.
Oct. 25.
The Mustangs got the win with an
error-free offensive performance
and an opportunistic defense that in­
tercepted three passes, blocked one
punt and recovered a fumble. Those
mistakes by the Tiger Scots were the
ball to a streaking Kindle down the
right sideline. The play covered 30
yards to the end zone. The run pat
was stopped and Heppner led going
into the halftime, 14-13.
The Mustangs kept up the tempo
in the second half against the Tiger
Scots who perhaps were too busy
remembering all the early season
press they received from the East
Oregonian to play aggressively.
Heppner kicked off to the Tiger
Scots and Currin sprinted down in
coverage and outhustled two op­
ponents to the ball, setting the
Mustangs up on the 24-yard line of
Weston-McEwen. Three plays later
Koffler found Len Brittner over the
middle for a 15-yard touchdown
pass. Brittner kicked the pat for a
21-13 Mustang lead.
The defense dominated for the re­
mainder of the game. Noseguard
Charlie Rathbun, linebackers Jason
Britt and Travis Greenup, along with
Kindle and Payne and the rest of the
defense, didn't give up the big play
to the potent Tiger Scots.
Weston-McEwens only other
score came on a safety when the ball
was snapped out of the end zone by
the Mustangs.
A nine-play 52-yard drive clinch­
ed the Mustang victory with Kindle
galloping 40 yards around the left
end with 4:54 to play. Paynes block
at the comer on the play gave Kin­
dle the daylight. The pat was block­
ed and Hepnper led, 27-15.
Two other drives were stuffed by
the Mustangs late in the ball game
to preserve the victory.
The win by the Mustangs sets up
a big game Friday, November 1, at
the Morrow County Fairgrounds as
the unbeaten Umatilla Vikings come
to town.
The Mustangs will be defending
their CBC league championship,
won last year with a 33-0 thumping
of the same Viking squad in
Umatilla.
The winner will host a first-round
playoff game against the Enterprise
Savages. The loser will travel to
Vale to face the top rated Vale
Vikings.
Heppner
0 14 6 7 27
Weston-McEwen
6 7 2 0 15
I 800 452 7396
LEXINGTON. OREGON 97839
PO Box 367
100 3 2
134 66
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