Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 07, 1992, Page FIVE, Image 5

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Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, October 7, 1992 - FIVE
Morrow County receives
Forest Service grant
Morrow County is one of four
eastern Oregon counties receiv­
ing grant money from the U.S.
D epartm ent o f A griculture,
Forest Service as part of a new
rural community development
program . M orrow , H arney,
Wheeler and Grant counties are
each scheduled to receive grants
of $20,000 to $30,000.
In 1990 the U.S. Congress
passed the Food, Agriculture,
Conservation and Trade Act,
otherwise popularly known as the
Farm Act of 1990.
The act authorizes the Forest
Service to assist rural counties
and communities near national
forests. Assistance can be in the
form of technical and financial
aid in community development
planning, technical assistance in
project design, and direct finan­
cial aid for projects. The Oregon
Rural Development Council was
Hospitality training workshop set
A hospitality training workshop
for ow ners, m anagers and
employees has been planned for
Nov. 5 from 7 to 9:30 p.m. at the
Morrow County Museum at
Heppner.
A workshop will also be held
in Boardman on Nov. 4 from 7
to 9:30 p.m. at the Dodge City
Inn at Boardman.
The workshop sponsored by
influential in linking aid to
Oregon’s rural counties. The
grant to Morrow County is for
use in the area of community
development planning.
"T his program is designed to
help communities and counties
with dependence on timber and
forest-related products to shift to
a broader economic base,” stated
Earle Rother, Umatilla National
Forest rural development coor­
dinator. "T he program is also
designed to assist counties and
communities to upgrade existing
industries to use forest resources
more efficiently," according to
Rother.
"Com munity leaders worked
together to write a community vi­
sion statement and action plan for
economic development. Their
devotion to the community and
willingness to work together has
paid o ff,” stated forest service
district ranger Delanne Ferguson.
By Patty Anderson
The Heppner Fillies welcom­
ed Sherman County back into the
Columbia Basin Conference Sept.
29 with a quick drubbing 15-8,
15-4 win on the Fillies home
court. The win puts the girls 1-0
in league standings.
Super team serving and a good
mixture of bump set spike team­
work enabled the Heppner girls
to take an early 7-2 lead. Holly
Eckman had the hot hand going
eight of nine at the net with four
kills taking the set from Jodi
Johnston. Sara Greenup had some
good power hits and Rondi
Robinson picked up the receiving
slack. The Fillies kept Sherman
offbeat from recovering as Hepp­
ner took the win 15-8.
Game two saw Heppner begin­
ning with Johnston and Eckman
taking care o f the setting duties,
advancing the ball between
themselves along with Jenny
Krein, Becky Norton, Donita
Sharp and Greenup. Keeping
Sherman off guard as to who was
hitting next the Fillies took a big
13-3 lead.
Greenup and Johnston round­
ed out the serving order follow­
ed with an ace dink by Donita
Sharp to win 15-4
Holly Eckman had a good night
going 12 of 13 at the net with six
kills. Ruth Norton came off the
bench to add a quick 4 4 with two
kills in a clutch situation to please
coach Terri Gentry, along with
overall solid team play and serv­
ing by everyone.
The C-team lost their First
game o f the night 12-15 with a
new player and setter. The young
team got off to a troubled start.
located at the com er of Cowin
and Alfalfa streets near Willow
Creek Dam in Heppner. Coffee,
hot chocolate, tea and donuts will
be provided.
Ruth Locust
to meet
P harm acy &
Your H ealth
Ruth Locust Chapter NO. 32
Order o f the Eastern Star will
meet Monday, October 12 at 8
p.m. at the Heppner Masonic
Hall.
Special visitors for the evening
will be Helen Felt, a member of
the Publicity and Awareness
Committee and Lucille Cohoon.
a member of the Special Projects
Committee of the Grand Chapter
of Oregon.
On Wednesday. October 21,
there will be a special meeting for
the School of Instruction, which
will be preceded by a potluck din­
ner at 6 p.m. The instruction will
be conducted by Elena Sipp,
associate Grand Conductress
from Corvallis.
BOARDMAN PHARMACY
& HARDWARE
202 NW 1st, Boardman
481-9474 or 481-7351
Use of Fluoxetine In
Women with Bulimia
Bulimia nervosa is an eating
disorder that affects up to 10 per­
cent of American women from all
social and economic classes. This
condition, which is seen more of­
ten in women in their teens and
twenties, typically involves com­
pulsive eating binges followed by
self-induced vomiting and use of
laxatives or diuretics in an attempt
to lose weight.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * *\
According to a study published
in a recent issue of Archives of
General Psychiatry, fluoxetine
(Prozac) may be helpful in the
long-term treatment of bulimia.
Three groups of women were
evaluated on the basis of their level
of depression, craving for carbo­
hydrates, and bulimic behavior
(binge eating and purging). One
group of women received 60 mg of
fluoxetine daily. A second group
received 20 mg of the drug each
day. The third group received a
placebo (blank). Women in the
group that received 60 mg of
fluoxetine showed the least amount
of depression, craving for carbo­
hydrates and bulimic behavior.
Other antidepressant medicines
have shown some promise in the
treatment of bulimia.
6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6
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Heather Ripple, out late in the
season played her First game and
was the teams new setter. For­
tunately Heppner took control of
the second game with a 15-6 win.
Unfortunately Sherman didn’t
have enough players to play a
third game so Heppner split with
Sherman. High scoring honors
went to Renee Devin and Tina
Kemp with six points each. Tina
Chinen contributed two aces to
the team. The Heppner C-team
record stands at 3-2.
The First game for the Heppner
J.V. team was a seesaw event.
When one team scored the other
would tie the game up. Sherman,
however, Finally came out on top
winning 17-15.
The Fillies, upset over losing
the First game were determined to
win the second. They put their
strength to the test and with grim
determination the Fillies spiking
ability shone through. With the
Fillies stufFing spikes into Sher­
man’s back row players the
Fillies took their win 15-4.
The war was on for who would
win the third game, both teams
wanting it. But the Fillies took
hold of the game and wouldn't let
go beating Sherman 15-6 for the
match. J.V .’s high scorer was
Alissa BrownField with eight
points. Char Coe served four aces
in a row.
October 1, Heppner JV and
Varsity teams traveled to Con­
don. The JV ’s lost their First
game 5-15. Determined to win
the match the Fillies played their
hardest and won the second and
third games, 15-9, 15-9. Ten aces
were served during the games,
three by Jessica Sumner and April
Rollis, two by Char Coe and Ruth
Norton and Dani Hill each had
one. Rollis, Hill and Coe were
high point scorers with six points
each.
The varsity team didn’t ac­
complish as much losing the
match 13-15, 10-15. Jenny Krein
had two aces and served for 100
percent. Rondi Robinson had
three aces. Sara Greenup had two
aces and was high scorer with
Five points. Kelsie Evans served
one ace and Donita Sharp had an
ace and 100 percent. Char Coe
also served for 100 percent. The
teams total serving average was
84 percent.
Stop in for a test drive!
A potentially beneficial effect
of fluoxetine in bulimia patients is
its ability to cause weight loss in
both depressed and non-deprcssed
individuals. According to the
American Hospital Formulary
Service, the exact method of weight
control is yet to be determined.
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W righ t Chevrolet, Inc.
Chevrolet & Oldsmobile
763-4175 Fossil
Herb Wright - Bill Moclnnes - Bill Maclnnes, Jr.|
Market Report
Compl i ment s of the Morrow County Grain Growers
Tuesday, Oct. 6.
Soft White
Oct.
Nov.
Dec.-Feb
1992
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BATTERIES
Our Most
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Guess the number of pieces of firewood ! "r
and win the wood delivered
cord of firewood
676-9481
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nhoto by Wayne Hams
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lone running back Jerad Ashbeck (11) is wrapped up by a
defender during the Card’s 14-12 loss to league leading Culver
Friday night.
lone led the Bulldogs 12-8 in
the fourth quarter, but a 70-yard
run by fullback
N athan
MacRostie pulled out the win for
Culver.
Culver scored First on an
80-yard touchdown play in the
first period, but lone came back
with a five-yard Mac Lovett
touchdown in the second quarter,
and a David Wagenblast to Jason
Proudfoot pass in the fourth to
pull ahead of the Bulldogs before
the long touchdown run.
lone is now 2-1 in league play,
3-1 overall.
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Photo by Wayne Hams
lone
C ardinal
M elissa
McElligott returns a ball against
the Culver Bulldogs in Big Sky
Volleyball action Friday night.
Culver beat lone 15-3, 15-12 to
improve its record to 7-0.
Wool contest planned Oct. 10
By Anne Morter
Contestants from as far away
as Hood River. Milton-Freewater
and Pendleton will gather in lone.
Saturday, October 10, for the an­
nual Make It Yourself With Wool
Contest.
The public is invited to attend
a fashion show starting at 1 p.m.
at the United Church o f Christ
Basement on Main Street in lone.
There is no admission charge to
the event which will also include
the presentation of awards and a
tea for p a rticip a n ts and
spectators.
Event organizer, M aureen
Krebs of Cecil, reports a good
turnout of contestants, not only
geographically but also in age.
Garments will be judged in the
morning, initially on the contes­
tant for style, then off for inner
construction and durability. Win­
ners will be announced at the con­
clusion of the fashion show. Win­
ners in the junior and senior divi­
sion will advance to state-level
competition.
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Heppner Day Care is sponsor­
ing a contest to guess the weight
o f a pumpkin displayed at Mur­
ray's Drug. The winner of the
contest will split the pot w ith day
care. Tickets are 50 cents each.
The winner will be notiFied on
Halloween Saturday. Oct. 31.
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HONESTY-INTEGRITY-RESPONSIBILITY-SERVICE
450-585 I Cranking / Amps
Doing business for over 45 years
in the same old fashioned way
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CHEVROLET
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SHERRELL CHEVROLET
Hermiston, Oregon
Phone 567-6487
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Day Care sponsors contest
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SERVICE
Heppner
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Over the years some things never
change at a quality dealership
60 MONTH BATTERY
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60 Month Warranty
550-650 Cranking Amps
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Fillies welcome back Sherman
Christian men’s group to be formed
The men of Hope Lutheran
Church invite the men of Hepp­
ner and Lexington area who are
in terested in form ing an
ecum enical C hristian m en’s
group to a meeting this Friday,
Oct. 9 at 6:30 p.m. at the Hope
Lutheran Church. The church is
the Morrow County Tourism
Committee, will concentrate on
hospitality and customer service,
"what to say and how to say it.”
Registration is limited to 25
participants for each session and
is due by October 23. For
registration or more information
contact the Heppner Chamber of
Commerce. Cost is $5 per
person.
Sports action in lone