TWO - Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, September 1, 1993
Fiber arts show to
Past queens gather in ‘93
New teachers hired for Morrow County debut in Heppner
Teachers new to the Morrow for schools in Boardman and Ir-
County School District toured the ,r l8°.n Th" '
n0 , "ew
____ .„ I and
,k.. the school
h..,i facilities
tirili.......,cachers
forUK Heppnerand lone
county
on
schools.
Tuesday, Aug. 24.
School begins on Monday,
Eight new teachers and one
' \ q '
returning teacher have been hired
■
Barbara Harrison (I) and Norma Eve, A.C. Houghton
Leo Cappello, CJH
Sharon Erck, Sam Boardman
Weather Report
L-R: back-Bob Davidson,
Jeanne Carroll
by City of Heppner
CASE LOT SALE!!
KIMBERLY-CLARK CORPORATION & MORROW
350 MAIM
CASE-LOT SALE!
LEXINGTON, or
ORDER
BY
THE
CASE
SALE
PRICE
PER
CASE
HI-DRI®TOWELS JUMBO
19.50 [] White
30/Is
DELSEY®BATH TISSUE 4-PACK
26.16 {] White
24/4s
.89
.65
7.20
1.89
1.09
19.20
KLEENEX®FACIAL TISSUE 175ct
39.24 [] White [] Assorted 36/175s
1.59
1.09
14.40
KLEENEX®FT FAMILY SIZE 250ct
35.76 u White [) Assorted 24/280s
1.99
1.49
12.00
KLEENEX®BOUTIQUE FACIAL
35.64 [] Prints {] Colors
36/95s
1.39
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KLEENEX*DISPENSER FACIAL 100s
36.00 [] White
48/100s
1.09
.75
16.32
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10.49
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KLEENEX®DINNER NAPKINS
28/50s
HUGGIES®BABY STEPS DIAPER
33.96 []Wht. Med.36ct [JWht.Lg 26ct
August 24 - 30, 1993
High Low Prec
67 40 .0
Tues.
.0
Weds. 69 41
Thurs. 76 45 .0
81 45 .0
Fri.
.0
74 42
Sat.
73 43 .0
Sun.
79 40 .0
Mon.
»783»
PER
AVERAGE OUR
CASE
RETAIL RETAIL SAVING
PRODUCT
33.32
“ By My Hand” , the annual
regional fiber arts show and sale,
will open at the Morrow County
Museum on Tuesday, September
7 and run through September 26.
Sponsored by the Country
Fibre Artists guild, Heppner;
Oregon Trail Fibers, Pendleton;
and Blue Mountain Weavers of
Walla Walla, WA. the exhibit
showcases rugs, vests, sweaters
and other natural fiber, handmade
items. The show will be juried by
a panel of judges including Bir-
dine Tullis, retired OSU exten
sion agent of lone; Vera Simon-
ton, fiber artist/teacher of
Pendleton and Keiko Hara ar
tist/teacher, Whitman College,
Walla Walla. Awards will be
made in each o f the five
categories: handwoven/non-
wearable, hand woven/wearable,
handspun (then handknit,
crocheted, etc.), felting and
basketry. Stringent professional
criteria will be applied and, in ad
dition to the category awards (rib
bons handwoven especially for
By My Hand), the judges will
award a Best of Show. Hand-
weavers Guild of America and
Interweave Press will also make
special awards.
By My Hand will open at the
Museum with a public reception
at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, September
7, which will feature a scholars
presentation by Sandra Van Liew
on the history of sheep growing
in this area with a special em
phasis on the unusual Jacob
breed. Following the opening, the
exhibit can be viewed during the
museum’s regular hours: 1-5
p.m. Saturday through Wednes
day; closed Thursday and Friday.
Following its venue in Heppner,
By My Hand will travel to
Pendleton and Walla Walla.
This year in honor of the
Oregon Trail Sesquicentennial
Celebration, the role of fiber ar
tists in preserving heritage skills
will be explored. Partial funding
for the show comes through the
O regon Council for the
Humanities under a grant to the
OCH by the National Endowment
for the Humanities.
For more information about
“ By My Hand” traveling fiber
arts show contact M arie
Struthers, 676-9061, Bert Yenney
in Walla Walla, (509) 525-3129
or Vanessa Thompson in Milton-
Freewater 558-3767.
Total Total
Cases
ROW DOBS A CASE-LOT SALE WORK?
1. BRING IM THIS 8PECIAL ORDER FORM BY 9/13/93
2. MERCHANDISE IS SOLD BY THE CASE ONLY.
3. PICK OP YOOR ORDER STARTING 9/23/93
Pictured above are the past queens of the Morrow County Fair and Rodeo, who were honored
during this year’s Fair and Rodeo.
PGE signs lease with Port
David Anderson
hired to new
position
David J. Anderson, son of Neis
and Esther Anderson of Dallas,
and a 1965 graduate of Heppner
High School, has recently been
named president and chief
operating officer for Brasfrutas
S.A., a Brazilian tropical fruit ex
port company.
Anderson graduated with a
B.S. in farm crops from Oregon
State University in 1971 and since
then has served in various ex
ecutive management positions
with Castle & Cooke Foods, Chi
quita Brands Co. and the Del
Monte Tropical Fruit Co. in dif
ferent foreign locations. Current
ly he is chief of party and inter
national agribusiness advisor for
the Bethesda, Maryland, con
sulting firm Development Alter
natives Inc. on assignment with
the United States Agency for In
ternational Development in
Quito, Ecuador for a non-
traditional agricultural export
development project.
In his new position, Anderson
will be responsible for the day-
to-day operations of a 4000-acre
fresh pineapple export business
and expansion into other tropical
fruit export products for the
European market. He will reside
in Joao Pessoa, Brazil, with his
wife, Barbara, daughter of Jim
and Barbara Bloodsworth of
Heppner and Elmer and Lavonne
Moriford, of Corvallis. Their son,
Severn, attends the Delphian
School in Sheridan.
St. Patrick’s
Senior Center
Bulletin Board
There were 110 people in attendance August 25 for the senior din
ner. Six dinners were taken out. Members of the Mormon Church
served. Lynn Bibby won the meal ticket, Beulah Ogletree, the door
prize and Marie Steagall received the birthday gift.
The menu for September 8 will be lasagna with meat, peas and
carrots, fruit salad, garlic bread and pudding. Members of the Catholic
Church will serve.
There was one table of cards in play Friday afternoon. Eight peo
ple were present for the movie “ West Side Story” Sunday evening.
Approximately 20 seniors enjoyed a picnic hosted at the Gonty
cabin at Penland Lake Sunday afternoon hosted by Eleanor and Tom
Gonty. “ It was a beautiful afternoon and no one got stung by the
hordes of yellow jackets that ^lso enjoyed the picnic,” said a
spokesperson.
WE WILL BE
NAME
ADDRESS^
C IT Y
STATE
ZIP
Use this ad as an order blank and bring it into our store
Morrow County
Crain Growers
Phone 989-8221
1-800-452-7396
PO Boi 3C7
CLOSED
Monday, Sept. 6.
Have a safe and happy
LABOR DAY
424 Linden W ay, Heppner
’S
Farm l Builders Supply
676-9157 o r 676-5001
Portland General Electric co.
(PGE) has taken several signifi
cant steps in moving towards
development of the proposed
Coyote Springs cogeneration
plant at the Port of Morrow near
Boardman, according to a Port
news release.
The company recently signed
a lease and two service
agreements with the port, and has
hired EBASCO as the contractor
to engineer and construct the pro
posed 220 megawatt fMW)
cogeneration facility. EBASCO,
a leading engineering and con
struction firm, is located in San
ta Anna, CA.
“ These recent actions have
moved us further along than any
other proposed power generation
project in the state,” says Dick
Dyer, PGE vice president,
marketing and power supply.
“ The cooperation and capability
of the Port of Morrow to
recognize the long-term benefits
of this project have been integral
in our efforts to provide a viable
energy
future
for
our
customers.”
“ The lease agreement and ser
vice agreements bring this very
important cogeneration project
several steps closer to reality,”
says Gary Neal, general manager
at the Port of Morrow. “ The
benefits that PGE will bring to the
Port and Morrow County will be
substantial and long-lasting.”
The three deals inked by the
Port and PGE include:
-A 50-year lease agreement.
PGE will lease approximately 30
acres of Port property with an op
tion to extend the lease for five
additional periods of 10 years
each.
-A steam agency agreement.
The Port will act as an in
termediary between PGE and
steam users at the Port.
-A services agreement. The
Port has agreed to supply water
for steam processing and cooling
and handle PGE’s waste water
discharge.
Under terms of its signed con
tract with PGE, EBASCO will
engineer the entire project, ac
quire all necessary equipment and
complete construction. EBASCO
has
already
com pleted
preliminary engineering and will
soon start more detailed design.
The project will use two
General Electric turbines—a .
160-MW high-efficienty, low-
emission natural gas-fired turbine
and a 60 MW steam turbine.
Designed as a cogeneration
facility, Coyote Springs will be
able to produce electricity for
PGE and steam for industrial
customers of the Port of Morrow.
The total 220 MWs of electricity
to be generated at the plant will
serve the power needs of about
150,000 residential customers.'
Steam from the facility will servq^
existing food processing plants
located at the Port’s industrial
park.
PGE submitted a site certificate
application for the project to the
Energy Facility Siting Council in
January. Receipt of the site cer
tificate is expected by the end of
this year. The application in
cludes an option to add an addi
tional 220MW of generating
capacity at the Coyote Springs
facility at an undetermined time
in the future.
Construction of the proposed
project will follow receipt of the
site certificate and is expected to
take about two years to complete,
adding about 150 jobs to the com
munity during that period, said
the release. Coyote Springs is ex
pected to be on-line during the
fall of 1995 with a permanent
work force of about 25 people,
the release continued.
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