SIX - Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, November 19,1997 PSU lists tw o local summer graduates Chamber Chatter Swiss exchange student attends HHS weeks vacation in the summer, the students attend elementary school; then, depending on grades and testing, students attend one of three types of schools. Students who do not do as well in school attend "real" school or "sekundär" school where they prepare for the workplace. After completion of four years of this school, those students will go out into the workplace, at around 16 years of age. Students who do better academically attend "Bezirks" school for four years. Then, depending on whether they pass an entrance exam, they may advance to four years of college and then, after college, two or more years at a university, depending on their goals. If a student wanted to become a teacher, for example, he or she would go to a teacher's school for two to three years after college, says Maja. If the student wanted to become a doctor, he or she would study at a university. Maja says that school here is easier than back home. "We don't have multiple choice questions and we don't have true and false," she says. "We have essay questions." She adds that normally, students do not get a '6', which is equivalent to our 'A'. "Its almost impossible, except if you are really good," says Maja. She says that teachers in the U.S. are more open to their students and more interested in them. "At home we just have to sit in class and listen. Here we can talk." While Swiss students go to school six days a week, the schedule vanes from day to day. Mondays at her school students attend classes for nine hours, until 5:15; Tuesdays school is seven hours; Thursdays seven to eight hours; and Fridays around nine hours; but Wednesdays and Saturdays they attend only five hours and don't go to school in the afternoons. Breaks between classes are much longer, varying between five and 15 minutes. In addition to the Swiss two- week ski holiday, they have five Maja Dietiker When you live in Switzerland near the Alps, it would only make sense to have a ski vacation. Maja Dietiker, Swiss exhange student at Heppner High School, says that her school in Switzerland has a two-week ski holiday, much like Christmas break or spring vacation in the U S Dietiker adds that that's one of the things she will miss most about being away from home this year, of course besides her family and friends. Dietiker, however, plans to take advantage of the HHS Outdoor Club ski trips this winter so she can snow board, a sport she loves. The 17-year old has snowboarded for the past four years and has skiied since she was three years old. She adds that one of the P.E. classes offered in school is ice skating. Maja says that the students skate on a pond that is also used for ice hockey. Another of Maja's passions is tennis. At home in Niederlenz, a city of around 3,800 about 20 miles from Zurich (pop. 384,000), Maja plays tennis year round. While in Morrow County, she hopes to be able to join the tennis team at lone High School. So far in Heppner, Maja has just finished volleyball season. She says that the rotations in American volleyball are different than in Switzerland, which was confusing at first. Sports in Switzerland outside P.E. classes are offered through community- The holidays are upon us and sponsored clubs, rather than Blue Mountain Community through the schools. Maja was a College announces its closures member of both a tennis and a for November. volleyball club. Many of the The college will be closed Swiss boys play on soccer clubs, Thursday and Friday, November which is as popular as football is 27 and 28, for the Thanksgiving here. While students there play holiday. The closure includes all basketball in P.E., they don't special services areas such as the have basketball clubs, she says. library and computer lab, as well Multilingual, Maja speaks as outlying centers. Swiss-German at home, German BMCC also reminds college at school and also has taken students to listen to their local three years of English, five years radio stations for information on of French and two years of class closures due to inclement Italian. Swiss speak German, weather. French or Italian, depending on Decisions on class schedules the area in which they live. are made by 6 a.m. and the English instruction is British following radio stations are English. Maja says when she called: KOHU/KQFM in speaks English now, she also H e r m i s t o n ; KUMA, thinks in English. "It would take KTIX/KWHT in Pendleton; KUJ too long to think in German and in Walla Walla; KLBM in La translate," she laughs. Grande; and KIOK in the Tri- Teens in Switzerland listen to Cities. music in English as well as Decisions on evening class German, but the music is a closures in Pendleton, different style from music here. Hermiston, Milton-Freewater and Maja says they definitely don't Morrow County are made by the have country-western music. The coordinator. The musical tastes of Swiss teens local coordinators try to contact local tends more toward techno, which is computer-generated music, rap radio stations by 3 p.m. with these announcements, said a and also rock music. Teenagers there, however, BMCC news release. dress much like they do in the U.S. "We don't have such big malls, says Maja. "But we have a lot of stores in the city." The H ave y o u r o w n word Levi is universal, but young Swiss spend a little more for those jeans than we do here. Levis cost between S60-S70 in Switzerland, compared to around S25-S40 in Oregon. Schools are quite a bit different between the two countries, says Maja. In Switzerland students 676-9228 attend nine years of mandatory school. For the first five years all BM CC to close Portland State U niversity (PSU) has released the names of the PSU students graduating sum­ mer 1997. Local graduates in­ clude Gretchen Berretta, formerly of Heppner, who received a BS in child and family studies, and Maria Rodriguez, Imgon, who received a BA in sociology and a two weeks in the fall, one to two weeks at Christmas and two weeks in spring. Sometimes on vacations, the Dietiker family travels to Germany, Italy, France or Austria. Maja says that the Swiss don’t eat as much fast food as we do in the U.S. The Swiss have many varieties of cheese, typically a part of a meal. Lunch is the big meal of the day there and lunch break at school is about an hour and a half. When Maja first arrived, she spent two weeks at a language and culture camp at Yale University with around 1,200 students from all over. Since her arrival she has vacationed with her host family, Bob and Marianne Kahl and their daughter, Abby, in the San Juan Islands, and has traveled to Portland and many other places with the HHS volleyball team. Maja won’t be able to go home until June, but her parents, 15- year-old sister, Karin, and aunt will come to Heppner then. She recently learned that her father and grandfather plan a weekend to Portland in December to visit her. Maja's father, Richard, is a medical doctor; her mother, Heidi, was a teacher, but now works in tandem with the schools, as a sort of troubleshooter, a job position we don't have in the U.S. While in the U.S., Maja hopes to be able to get her driver's permit, partially because of the expense in Switzerland.There teens cannot get their license until they are 18 years old and are required to take at least 13 hours in driving lessons with a driving instructor—at a rate of about $50 an hour. PUBLIC NOTICE REQUEST FOR COMMENTS HEPPNER RANGER DISTRICT MALLORY COMMERCIAL THIN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT The Heppner Ranger District of the Umatilla National Forest has completed an Environmental Assessment for the proposed commercial thin and sanitation harvest of 1028 acres located in Morrow County, Oregon, T.5S., R.28E. and R29E.; and T.6S., R.28E. and R.29E. The project includes commercial thinning of approxim ately 928 acres and sanitation harvest o f approxi­ mately 100 acres for approxi­ mately 2.9 MMBF of wood prod­ ucts. This project is subject to appeal pursuant to 36 CRF 215.7. To receive a copy o f the Envi­ ronmental Assessment, contact Charlene Bucha Gentry at (541) 676-2148 or at the H eppner Ranger D istrict, P.O. Box 7, Heppner, OR 97836. Any written comments should be addressed to D istrict Ranger D elanne Ferguson at the same address. Oral comments can be submitted by telephone at (541) 676-9187. The comment period ends De­ cember 22, 1997. Published: November 19,1997 Come Share With Us A t W illow C re ek B a p tis t C k u rck W o rsh ip S e r v ic e a t 3 p. m . M eetin g in the 7th-day A d v en tist C hurch 560 N orth M inor Statam i* of Ownarahip, Manasaniant, and Circulation I.M k M ta T B H iB P M T ------------------------ 2. O i m t l - T l — « _________________________ 1 4 2 6 2 O Oc tober 1. 1997 u n iM iim n iiW ta 12. 18. 25 » — * * * ______________________________________________ fla y I d n y k x x B ox 3 3 7 , H e p p n e r . O l 9 7 8 3 6 ¿ 4 1 -6 7 6 .9 2 2 6 aOfctaaiA CLASSIFIED DEADLINE: Tuesdays at 12:00 Noon A p r i l H i l t o n - S y k e e , P .O . Box 3 3 7 , H o p p n o r , OB 9 7 8 3 6 C A R D OF T H A N K S D a v id S y k o a , P .O . B ox 3 3 7 , H o p p n o r , OB 9 7 8 3 6 itataMta«a*ftam*4tf«NlA*tatatatatf«flr*aXt ’*tatata*ar«mtf ft* a « earn* «fata* * no, omrmt m m m ané m ttm m m t t f a M M X m tm tW m m td **- » * * * * * * m •* * a * g hm m mmm m o o + om m ton fm •*# m * a m t t Mtaflktf AtarirtM D a v id S y k o a a n d A p r i l K U t o n - S y k e e P .O . Box 3 3 7 , HOBBUOr, 0 « 9 7 8 3 6 ---------*•[Men* a ~'~r T m b w w i r n n i ~ ii Honoxid to fill lint OREGON EAST and Ctioxah. Uoicti 1 . «OMMHidN U BW QÉ 1 U temiK H eppner O ld Middle School G ym at the newly constructed Acoustical Shell ADMISSION IS FREE */L jji, * l m — r_ i, U4 -H?- a. w v >//____ c jl . t - u - Funeral services for William L. “Bill” Cox, Heppner, will be held at the Masonic Temple in Hepp­ ner Saturday, N ovem ber 23, 1997, at 11 a.m. A reception in his honor at the Heppner Elks Club is planned for friends and family following the services. Mr. Cox, 84, died at St. Vincent Hospital in Portland on Sunday, November 16, 1997 following a short illness. Bom on May 24, 1913, Mr. Cox resided his entire life in Heppner. His parents, William “Claude” Cox and Clara Hamp­ ton Cox were early residents of Heppner, arriving in 1905. Mr. Cox was married on Octo­ ber 3, 1936, to W inifred Thomson, with whom he had grown up and attended Heppner schools. They raised five sons, who were also bom in Heppner and graduated from Heppner High School. Mr. Cox owned and managed Morrow County Creamery, which his father began in the early 1900s. The creamery marketed products under the “Pride of Or­ egon” label throughout Morrow, Gilliam and Wheeler counties. An avid hunter and fisherman, he spent much of his free time hunting birds, deer and elk, and fishing for salmon and steelhead. A fter retirem en t from the cream ery business, Mr. Cox drove school bus for several years and was very active in Heppner community activities. He was a member of the Heppner Masonic and Elks lodges, as well as being a volunteer fireman, member of the Chamber of Commerce and planning commission. Bill always seemed to be available to help his fellow citizens. Mr. Cox is survived by his wife W inifred; sons David, Gayle, William, John and Todd; numer­ ous grandchildren; and his sister, Nancy Holden of Battleground, WA. He was preceded in death by his brothers, Clair H. Cox and Charles M. Cox. The family suggests that con­ tributions be made in his name to the Heppner Meal Site, where he could be found contributing a great deal of his time during his last few years. D a v id S y k e e , P .O . B ox 3 3 7 , H o p p n o r , O* 9 7 8 3 6 c A x ti C ou n cil o f