Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, May 08, 1996, Page EIGHT, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    .
Y TX0* * '
v i
- * -‘
»-• *
-tw
EIGHT * Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday. May 8, 1996
September football trip planned Wrangler's Club hold fourth playday
Come Share With Us
at
The Heppner Mustangs and
Ponies will travel to Yoncalla
for a preseason football contest
Friday, Sept. 13, and will watch
the University of Oregon (UO)
Ducks play the Colorado State
University Rams in noncon­
ference action.
A rooter bus will follow the
team, watching the junior high,
junior varsity and varsity foot­
ball teams play Friday after­
Willow Creek Baptist Church
Bible Study for all ages 2 p.m.
Worship Service 3 p.m.
Meeting in the
7th Day Adventist Church
560 North Minor
The Morrow County
Unified R ecreation D istrict
p resen ts a bus excursion to
Riders participate in bike-a-thon
HIlPtRIIlL
T01IIDS
or olimi
a t The Portland A rt Museum
Saturday, Ju n e 22
Buses originating in Heppner and Irrigon
REG ISTER (first-com e, first-served ) by calling
The M orrow C ounty M useum 6 7 6 - 5 5 2 4
8 a.m . to 5 p .m ., May 2 0 - 2 4
Children 5-18 must be accompanied by their parent
NO CH ARG E-
PA R T IC IPA N T S R E S P O N S IB L E FO R OWN M EA LS
G
en u in e
C
hevrolet
Remember when your word was your Bond. -
You sealed a deal with a handshake - That's still
the way we do business today.
COMFORTABLE • TRUSTFULL • HONEST • CARING
The Largest Volume Chevy Truck Dealer in Eastern Oregon
r•
•i
S H ER R ELL CH EVROLET
Hermiston, Oregon 1-800-567-6487
New Car Sales
Used Car Center
567-6488
567-3919
■ • '■
noon and evening.
The rooters will stay in Cot­
tage Grove Friday night, travel
to Eugene to watch the UO-
CSU game Saturday afternoon
and then return to Heppner
that evening.
The trip and accomodations
must be booked by Wednes­
day, May 15. Contact George
Koffler, 676-5192 after 6 p.m.
for reservations.
It was a pleasant afternoon
for the 35 participants of the an­
nual lone St. Jude Bike-a-thon
on Sunday, April 28. The
pledges are not all turned in
yet, but organizers expect that
a "good amount" was raised
for the St. Jude Children's
Research Hospital in Memphis,
Tennessee.
Miranda McElligott and
Adam McCabe led the riders in
from Ruggs, a 22-mile route,
completing the tour in approx­
imately one hour and 42 min­
utes. The other riders followed
in groups of two or more. A
stiff headwind and winter-
damaged roads slowed the ride
somewhat.
Alan Rietmann and Tyler
Raible paced the group riding
a one-mile circuit within the
lone city limits, with 13 laps
each. Kyle Palmateer, Kimber­
ly Morris, Abby Key and Missy
Baker all had 10 laps or more.
The deadline for turning in
pledges is Monday, May 13.
Funds should be turned in with
pledge sheets in an envelope to
the Bank of Eastern Oregon in
lone or to ride coordinators,
Janet Thompson or Anne
Morter. In Heppner, partici­
pants are asked to get their
funds to Judy Davis. Everyone
is urged to turn in his money
on time so that t-shirts can be
ordered.
Funds raised from this event
and others like it benefit the St.
Jude C hildren's Research
Hospital, a leading children's
cancer research facility.
IES plans kindergarten visitation
The lone Elementary School
will have kindergarten visita­
tion on Thursday, May 16, at
9:50 a.m. Children must be five
years old by Sept. 1 to enroll for
kindergarten this fall.
An informational meeting for
parents will be held at 12:10
p.m. that day in room 23 in the
elementary building. Parents
are asked to bring their child's
birth certificate, immunization
record and social security
number.
For more information, call
422-7555.
W ork party planned at Lindsay Prairie
The Nature Conservancy of
Oregon is seeking volunteers
for an overnight work party at
Lindsay Prairie Preserve near
Boardman. "Visit one of the
most endangered ecosystems
in Oregon at the peak of
wildflower season and help
rescue native bunchgrasses
from noxious weed encroach­
m ent," said a Nature Conser­
vancy spokesperson.
Those attending are asked to
meet at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday,
May 11, at the Irrigon exit off
1-84 on the south side of the
freeway and bring lunch,
gloves and a weed digging tool.
Those planning to stay Satur­
day night should bring camp­
ing gear and a potluck dish.
Camping is available at a local
farm.
For more information, con­
tact Conservancy Volunteer
Program manager Lupine
Jones, (503) 230-1221.
S a u E nds M ay
v
L*
.
.
See The Country With Cenex
/'
•
18 1996
.
Cenex has a battery for
every machine you have!
L. f : * ;
t ...
* ' • ,
. •• • ; ' .
: f •• ' *
Ir, . • •' i . . -
LV
■ • -.
• •/
'
W
arm
w eather
B R IN G S N E W
ACTIVITY FOR THE
. » , * .
.V •.
^
F».; . - -
Donald Adams, Brett Barber and Lacey Matteson assist rider
Donald Matthews at the Wrangler’s playday, May 5.
The Wranglers Riding Club
held their fourth playday Sun­
day, May 5. The results are as
follows:
Stickhorse race-first Sierra
Burton, second Justin Pranger,
third Taylor Parks.
Leadline barrels-first Sierra
Burton, second Taighler Doug­
herty, third Donald Matthews,
fourth Joe Pranger; poles-
Taighler Dougherty, Sierra Bur­
ton, Joe Pranger, Donald Mat­
thews; scurry race-Sierra Bur­
ton, Taighler Dougherty, Jared
Gorham, Joe Pranger.
Five and six years olds bar­
rels-first Mindee Papineau, se­
cond Paige Davis, third Shilo
Burton, fourth Regina Seitz;
poles-Paige Davis, Shilo Bur­
ton, Regina Seitz, Mindee
Papineau; scurry race-Mindee
Papineau, Shilo Burton, Lane
Bailey, Whitney Matthews.
Seven through nine year olds
barrels and poles-first Hailey
Davis, second Jennifer Griffith,
third Jessica Westburg, fourth
Jamie Westburg; scurry race-
Hailey Davis, Madison Bailey,
Jessica Westburg, Jamie West­
burg.
10-11 year olds barrels-first
Ashley Ward, second Tracy
Griffith, third Brett Barber,
fourth Lacey Davis; poles-Tracy
Griffith, Ashley Ward, Kelsey
Greenup, Lacey Davis; scurry
race-Lacey Davis, Brett Barber,
Ashley Ward, Meghan Bailey.
12-13 year olds barrels-first
Krista Adams, second Lindsay
Ward, third Shad Hisler, fourth
Tracy Griffith; poles-Lindsay
Ward, Krista Adams, Sarah
Eckman, Tracy Griffith; scurry
race-Tracy Rankin, Shad
Hisler, Lindsay Ward, Krista
Adams.
14-15 year olds barrels-first
Annie Hisler, second Bobbie
Rankin, third Heather Davis,
fourth Brooke Boyer; poles-
Jared Eckman, Kathleen Green­
up, Heather Davis, Bobbie
Rankin; scurry race-Annie
Hisler, Bobbie Rankin, Jared
Eckman, Jill Barber.
16 and over barrels-first Anita
Pranger, second Janice Davis,
third Nancy Gorham, fourth
Dick Temple; poles-Dick Tem­
ple, Anita Pranger, Janice
Davis, Nancy Gorham; scurry
race-Jennifer Rankin, Anita
Pranger, Dick Temple, Ken
Bailey.
The fifth and final playday
will be held Sunday, May 12,
with a Mother's Day barbecue
at noon and the playday star­
ting at 1 p.m. The end of the
year awards will be presented
after the playday.
Local musicians to perform in concert
A program has been plann­
ed by Oregon East Symphony
(OES) music director R. Lee
Friese for the Sunday, May 12,
Mother's Day Concert begin­
ning at 3:15 p.m. in Pendle­
ton's Vert Auditorium.
Local musicians, Sharia
Erich, Laura Burnside McElli­
gott and Kathryn Unruh, all
Heppner, will perform in the
concert. Pianist Denise Fillion
of Kennewick and Pendleton's
Sherie Adams, flautist, are the
senior and junior division win­
ners of the OES's Young Artist
Competition held in March.
Fillion will perform the first
movement of Mozart's Piano
Concerto No. 19. Adams will
perform the finale of the Carl
Stamitz Flue Concerto in D-
Major.
Other compositions to be
performed by the OES include:
"O verture to Huckleberry
Finn," by Erin Delmarter, Paul
Dukas' "Fanfare" for brass,
"Overture to Orpheus in the
Underworld," by Offenbach,
and Haydn's "Farewell Sym­
phony."
A pre-concert preview hosted
by Roberta Jones will begin at
2:30 p.m. in the Vert Audito­
rium. A post-concert reception
hosted by the OES Guild will
commence immediately follow­
ing the concert in the Vert
Clubroom.
Admission is by season
ticket, or $10. Tickets may be
purchased at the door, through
the symphony office, located at
17 S. W. Frazer, Suite 300, or at
the following outlets: Frazier's,
Great Pacific, Armchair Books,
Pendleton Chamber of Com­
merce, Hermiston Chamber of
Commerce, Hermiston Book
Co., Hector's Shoes, Saager's
Shoes,
M ilton-Freew ater
Chamber of Commerce, the
Bookloft, Common Good
Marketplace, and Doherty's
Loft.
Hearing set on proposed pool site
A hearing concerning the site
of the proposed swimming
pool in Heppner has been
scheduled for Thursday, May
16, at 7 p.m. at Heppner City
'.i
■H
W - ' •* .
T • ' *
t. • ;
* .
i
k ;;?// * '
E « > * • ; « . *
•» » *
1 ‘
:
?'
*
**• ' . ‘ T
* ' 4 ;
•.
‘
••
r [V • 1 *. * : • •
-*•
k
1
.
. ■»•
•
V.
& -
I /
• -•
-
•
V '
.:
V ;;
*
*
.
%
• * '
«
■ r.f.
*9
^
ff,
ir
r" f
<
rvtT.
"
■.........................................
■
•
Hall.
People are invited to the
hearing to state their preference
on a pool site, either on the
highway near M&R Flooring or
at Hager Park.