Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, March 29, 2000, Page EIGHT, Image 8

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    EIGHT - Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, March
29, 2000
High school, college rodeo
contestants take home wins
ŒXZS ri h =i .-T T ^
Local rodeo contestants are
taking home wins at high school
and college rodeos.
Bnan Knowles finished first in
saddle bronc riding and fourth in
steer wrestling at a college rodeo
held March 3-5 at Walla Walla.
Justin Matteson was second in
team roping and Lexi Matteson
was second in breakaway roping
at the Walla Walla rodeo.
Justin Matteson finished first in
team roping, along with Cody
Laumb at a March 25-26 college
£ t
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rodeo held in Lewiston, Idaho.
Matteson and Emmet Evans were
second in team roping and
Matteson also finished fourth in
steer wrestling at the Lewiston
rodeo.
At the Eugene High School
Rodeo held March 24-25, Blake
Knowles and Ryan Matteson
were first in team roping.
Knowles also took first in steer
wrestling and Matteson was
second. Lacey Matteson took
first in barrel racing at Eugene.
Evangelist Pieter Bos will be
guest speaker at Christian Life
Center, 535 W. Morgan St., on
Sunday, April 2, at 10:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m. He will also speak on
Thursday and Friday, April 6-7,
Sunday, Apnl 9, at 10:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m. and Monday through
Thursday, April 10-13, at 7 p.m.
Everyone is invited to attend.
Bos was bom in the Netherlands
and was raised in a Dutch
Reformed home. His desire to
become involved in ministry and
missions started when he was
about 10 years old, while he was
attending a Sunday school class
where missionaries were talking
about their experiences on the
field.
"Having been raised under
extremely difficult circumstances
and after a period of teenage
rebellion, he forgot about his
vision, but God didn't. When
God regained his attention, he re­
committed his life to the Lord
and was baptized with the Holy
Spirit," said a news release.
Before long Bos was involved in
a Pentecostal church and in
inner-city ministry.
A few years later he married
an American girl who worked
with Youth With a Mission in
Amsterdam, Holland. They have
two children.
Upon arrival in the U.S., Bos
taught
evangelism
and
discipleship; he worked as a
counselor/teacher and training
center director in the ministry of
Teen Challenge in Pennsylvania
and in Washington as a pastor
and as an "evangelist with a heart
for missions." He is an ordained
minister in the Assemblies of
God.
Bos "desire is to motivate the
body of Christ to operate in the
gifts of the Holy Spirit and
become active participants in
fulfilling the Great Commission,
and see people being saved,
delivered, healed, restored and
reconciled by the power of God,"
said the release.
Orchestra, chorale
concerts planned
Inland Northwest Orchestra
and Chorale presents the next set
of concerts in their current
season on Saturday, April 1, and
Sunday, April 2.
The Saturday performance
will be in John Day in the old
gym at Grant Union High School
at 7:30 p.m.
The Sunday concert will be at
3:15 p.m. at the Vert Auditorium
M CGC News
By Sandi Day
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Over 90% o f a ll
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The Morrow County Gun Club
(MCGC) held their weekly shoot
on a beautiful Sunday, March 26,
afternoon at the club in Lexing­
ton. A good turnout of shooters
finished the sixth week of league
shooting.
MCGC president Curt Day and
Harvey Childers shot near-perfect
scores at the 16 yard line with 24
of25, followed by Mick Sharp with
23 and Travis Greenup with 22.
At the 20 yard handicap line, Mark
Schlichting took first with 23.
Harvey Childers was second with
22 and Deona Hodges was third
with a personal bestof21 of25.
Junior shooters Chance Day
and Tayler Hodges shot a close
match with Chance finally taking
first and Tayler, second.
Four Annie Oakley shoots and
one golf round were held with
Mark Schlichting winning two
Annie’s and the golf round and
Brian Haguewood and Harvey
Childers each with one.
In other gun club news, mem­
bers Mark and Bill Schlichting at­
tended a 50-bird non-registered
shoot in Hermiston on Saturday,
March 18. Mark took second
place in the A class shoot with 47
of 50, and first in the short yard­
age handicap with 47 of 50, win­
ning two millennium coins. Bill was
first in the B class, after a shoot-
off, with 46 of 50.
The same weekend, club mem­
bers Curt Day and Sandi Day,
Barry Munkers and Rob Ashbeck
participated in a meat shoot at the
gun club in Fossil.
At the end of the sixth week of
league shooting, with only two
weeks left to go, the leaders are
Harvey Childers and Sandi Day,
followed closely by Mick Sharp
and Roger Mortimore. Stay tuned.
MCURD to meet
The Morrow County Unified
Recreation District will meet this
Thursday, March 30, beginning
at 7 p.m. at the Morrow County
Annex in Irrigon.
Old business includes a
resolution for public contracting
and a resolution for a public
contract board.
New business includes the
school district contract for the
school year 2000-2001 and
policy review.
The chairman's report will
include the Art Council-Willow
Creek Symphony update, the
school board budget committee
meeting, correspondence with
Kahl
Insurance
and
the
treasurer's report
The next meeting will be held
April 27 at 7 p.m. at the lone
High School, with a budget
committee meeting at 7:30 p.m.
APRIL 2000
CU1>
LUBE • OIL • FILTER
in Pendleton. The program for
both concerts includes two works
for chorus and orchestra and a
special selection by Copeland for
narrator and orchestra.
The orchestra and chorale
performs
Gabriel
Faure's
"delicate
and
subdued
"Requiem""; written in memory
of his father. Soloists RaNiel
Dunn of Hermiston and Harvey
Foreman of Pendleton are
featured *5n seven movements.
"Serenade to Music" by Ralph
Vaughan Williams follows, again
featuring RaNiel and Harvey
along with additional soloists
Philip Ruud, Larry Coppock,
Jedd Nelson, Kann Trees, Arlene
Thompson, Ray Trees Jr, Carl
Anderson, Mary Finney, Lora
Gosslee and Teresa Best.
The piece was composed in
1938 for a performance at Albert
Hall honoring conductor Sir
Henry Joseph Wood, with words
from
Shakespeare's
"The
Merchant of Venice".
The orchestra presents "A
Lincoln Portrait" for narrator and
orchestra by Aaron Copeland,
one of the best known and
respected American composers
of this generation. This piece was
written in 1942 in response to a
commission from conductor
Andre Kostelanetz for American
composers to write orchestral
works descriptive of great
Americans.
Katherine Brighton of
Pendleton will narrate, using
many of Lincoln's own words
and concluding with the closing
lines of the Gettysburg address.
Brighton has forged a 30-year
career in the entertainment
business, in particular directing
productions at Walt Disney
World, Universal Studios, FL,
and on TV and stage.
Local players include cellist
Laura McElligott, violinists Ben
Stillman and Kathryn Unruh,
trombonist Isaiah Stillman and
french horn, Jennifer Waldrep.
Tickets in Pendleton are $8 for
adults
and
$5
for
students/seniors. Students from
Pendleton and Pilot Rock will be
admitted free. Because of local
sponsorship, tickets in John Day
will be $5 for adults and $3 for
seniors. All students in and
around John Day will be
admitted free.
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