Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 08, 1997, Page TWO, Image 2

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

    •. * -
f ’■< s * :'*•
« ■ . -w . % •tÈ-**'
;■■ * . . • » A
. • •
. .* * • ’
' • k ,
1
. . •
' *•
» *# • •
è
Lady Cardinals defeat Helix Grizzlies
!»
£;'• S l
5 #
By Kara Miller
lone took to the highway again
Oct. 3, and met the Helix Griz­
zlies for the second time this sea­
son. Helix started the game with
the serve, but a slamming kill by
Brenda Bumght put lone’s Katie
Tworek behind the line to fire off
a streak of five points, with one
coming off of a block and a kill
by Brenda Burright.
Helix picked up a point in their
side out and Jenny Sullivan added
one to lone’s score, then lone and
Helix traded side outs. Helix
picked up three to bring the score
to Cardinals, 6, Grizzlies, 4. Niki
Sullivan increased the Cardinals’
lead to 8-4, followed by Nikki
McElligott who also added two
more points to make lone’s lead
10-5.
Camie Burright slammed a re­
turn back to the Grizzlies and lone
regained the serve, putting J.
Sullivan in rotation to score one
off a set assist by Kara Miller to
B. Bumght for a slam. After a
Tourism committee identifies goals
m
s * : •
*4
;
•:
'
•
•
•' : -• i
• •• •*
.T
? •..»
.•• -
, ; --v
■ ■
[
A
••
* «
-s-
.*.-•■
t
- v : *•’.* > y
] i* ■
I. *•
/ • /.
► ...........*;
< ’ - J
* ¿ £ r G - ■%
*•
L
* "■ ■
• i ’ •: •: ■ ■ï
ï * ■ f i ' ■ ï
*y
t .Vr
> §
i
Driftwood Village RV Park in
Boardman hosted the fall
meeting o f Morrow County
Tourism Committee September
19.
Participants at the quarterly
meeting reviewed past county
tourism goals, and discussed a
variety of goals for 1998-2001.
Visitor hospitality continues to
be very important, especially
now that the county has
increased lodging facilities,
according to Carol Michael, 1998
committee chair
"The goal of increasing
awareness of the tourism
committee, particularly to visitor
related businesses, helps us
distribute visitor information.
The business community helps us
to be aware of new and emerging
trends in recreation and leisure
time use," says Michael. "For
example, a local business owner
shared a project to develop a
brochure informing cyclists
about Morrow County back roads
perfect for safe and interesting
cycling. Community input helps
us re-discover our county's
unique qualities."
Continuing development and
refinement of the county
community event calendar is
another goal. Marsha Sweek,
director of the Morrow County
Museum, is the "keeper" of the
calendar. Tourism Committee
members check their local
communities to update '97 events
for the '98 calendar. This is a
helpful
tool
for
county
Chamber's of Commerce and
lodging facilities, says Michael.
When visitors inquire about
lodging, and ask "what else is
happening
that
weekend",
information about events and
activities encourage visitors to
stay another day or two in
Morrow County, she says.
To add new events to the 1998
county event calendar, contact a
member
of the Tourism
Committee. Members present at
the last meeting included Jean
Nelson, Lexington; Claudia
Hughes, Heppner; Ted Lieurance
and Carol Michael, Boardman,
and Lisa Mittelsdorf, Port of
Morrow. For a copy of the
updated 1998 calendar, contact
Sweek at the Morrow County
Museum in November.
The committee is spreading the
word that the Oregon Tourism
Commission just announced a
Small Grants Program for Rural
C om m unity
A ssistan ce
Programs. The maximum grant
per application is $5,000. A total
1:1 match is required. Project
Guidelines and Application
forms-
are
available
by
contacting the Oregon Tourism
Commission/Doris Nelson, 775
Summer Street, N.E. Salem OR
97310, FAX 503-986-0001.
Michael says that Chambers of
Commerce, city, county and
tribal government or non-profit
tourism related organizations that
wish to apply must hurry. The
completed grant applications are
due in Salem by
5 p.m.,
November 20.
Pahl tops poll
' ■ • • m
ça»
.v
• ‘
• -.* •
: V* r i : • - V
' 1. . . V .
P
î ' î ' v 4
- •"*
*’ * ’ w
1,1 'j \ - - «».j;
- - •
5 . .. .
fîy / * v
** 8
■ v# y . * -
•••- L*.
f
"■1
'j-'
^ ■■KM " .
-'.’ . 1 Z
I j- V v ». • m. * * - . V*
K
1 K %
s;
Attorneys in Morrow and
Umatilla counties were recently
polled by the Oregon State Bar
regarding their preference of
candidates for a circuit court
judgeship open due to the
resignation of the Honorable J. F.
Olsen effective December 1,
1997.
Ronald J. Pahl was the top
preference for the position of
circuit court judge among four
candidates with a total o f 29
votes of a possible 95. Pahl has
been a bar member since 1989
and practices law in Pendleton.
Other candidates received votes
as follows: Daniel J. Hill, eight;
Richard McNemey, two; and
Robert E. Ridgway, 21.
Members of the bar are
routinely polled by the Oregon
State
Bar
on
upcoming
appointments and elections for
judicial positions.
The Morrow County Tourism
Committee meets quarterly, and
rotates meeting locations around
the county. The January 21
meeting will examine community
Web sites as a tool to extend
visitor information to potential
county visitors. All interested
persons are invited to get in
touch with a community
representative, and take part in
the January 21, 1998 meeting.
»*. . . *
•
,
* *
• •
' "
mm
* v «• * . •
TW O - Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, October 8,1997
> K
*
.c“
quick, scoreless side out to He­
lix, C. Bumght served and scored
one for lone. Helix made one
more point before N. Sullivan was
up for lone and put the game
away for the Cardinals, 15-6.
In the second game, Tworek
got the first points on the board
for the Cards with two, followed
by Helix getting the serve and
scoring one. Both teams struggled
with serving and traded scoreless
side outs until C. Bumght got two
over and assisted by a kill from
Miller, lone was in the lead, 4-1.
A brief side out to Helix, N.
Sullivan stepped up for lone and
put over 10 serves, scoring nine
points for the Cardinals, now in
the lead 13-1.
Helix scored two more points
before McElligott put the final
two over the net and lone finished
the game, 15-3. J. Sullivan was
the only lone player hitting 100
percent serving, but N. Sullivan
and Tworek were at 98 percent
and Miller hit 97 percent.
Heppner C team takes match
lone Lady
Rhea
Turning in 100 percent at the
Cardinals fly By The Molly Heppner
Mustangs’ C service line for the match were
volleyball team traveled to Pilot Maja Dietiker, 11/11, Laurie
on Monday, September 29, Michael, 5/5, Jenm Patton, 4/4,
in Honkers' Rock
to take the match in two games, and Juana Elguezabal with 3/3.
15-9, 15-11.
The Cs will see action again at
According to C team coach home on Thursday, October 9,
face
Dana Reid, "This was our best when Wahtonka comes to town.
By Kara Miller
Beginning a week on the road,
lone’s Lady Cardinals flew into
Arlington to match up against the
Lady Honkers on Tuesday, Sept.
30. The red birds won the match
irt two, but the geese put up a
strong serving game against the
noisy lone team.
The lone team came out strong
in the first game with Kara Miller
: serving seven points and Katie
Tworek, six. Miller and Brenda
Burright each had 15 set assists
and Camie Burright had four
spikes and four kills, with Jenny
Sullivan adding four spikes and
two kills. Arlington proved to be
one of the hardest serving teams
the Cardinals have faced this sea­
son. lone won the game, 15-2 and
15-10.
game of the year, the girls really
won with total team effort."
This young squad is coming on
and well worth the bleacher time.
16 16161616161616161616161616
HAPPY
16
16
16
BIRTHDAY 16
16
SW EET
16
SIXTEEN, \t
16
. RAINBOW
|6
16
¡J
BRITE!
16
Love, Mom, Dad, Chris,
Andy & Cam ille
16
16
16 16161616161616161616161616
I
DO YOU OR SOMEONE YOU KNOW
NAVE A GAMBLING PROBLEM?
>
i t .
s 3 H B |k i - •
• « •
« * <
W 'H u K •'»(» >
fi* : hf** O 'f «♦
-. . • ‘ -
For most people gambling is an
occasional thing to do for fun. But
for some, gambling can become a
compulsion affecting every aspect
of their lives. Problem Gambling is
There1) HOPC.
There1) U€LP.
iM ii
a treatable illness. To get help for
yourself or someone you know, call
the Gambling Hotline.
1-800-233-81,79
.■.»Vf*-
èl
Sponsored by the Oregon Lottery and the
Oregon Gambling Addiction Treatment Foundation.
1
,! ;P ,
1 *
* 1 -
.*»
*
•
~ T " - ' !»
1 > »
■
• s■ :
*• f .» 1
. •** ,