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About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 2001)
Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, October 17, 2001 - SEVEN lone defeats Cougars in three Ione victorious over Echo Brad Burright heads upheld for yardage against Echo By Debbie Radie The lone High School Cardinals were ready for the Echo Cougars on the Cardinals' last home game for the year on Friday, Oct. 12. lone's defense did not give up a touchdown to the Echo offense, and the C ardinals won 38-0. Leading unassisted tackles was Koby Rea with six, followed by Cayle Krebs with five; Andrew Rietmann, Nick Christman and Ashley Roberts with three; and Adam McCabe, Mike Radie, Brad Bumght photo by o.bbi. Radi. and Cameron Krebs with one each. Assisted tackles included four each from Bumght, Radie and Adam Neiffer; three for Cayle Krebs, and Cameron Krebs and two for Koby Rea. Passes to receivers included Colin McElligott to Adam Neiffer for nine yards and Christman to McCabe for three yards. Bumght punted twice during the game for 77 total yards. A fumble was recovered by Brian Gutierrez. lone's offense was comprised of a number o f running plays. Bumght had 21 carries for 169 yards. Bum ght's running moves through the Echo defense, blocked by lone's tough line, resulted in five touchdowns for the Cardinals. Gutierrez had seven for 31; Roberts had five for 30; Rietmann, 10 for 29; Christman, four for 20; and M cElligott five for eight. The next football game will be held Friday night, Oct. 19, at Arlington. lone is 2-1 in league play and 5-1 this season. lone Site Council discusses enrollment, bond project survey By Debbie Radie The lone Site Council Met on O ctober 10. The council learned that enrollment at lone has gone from 155 to 158 this year. Principal Mike Stuart handed out a prioritized report of the survey that was given by the architects for the bond project in lone. This month lone starts on-line testing. A series o f meetings is approaching district wide. lone's m eeting on Oct. 17 is for public input as to what people would like to see in a new superintendent. M eetings will be scheduled specifically for staff and also for com m unity members. On Oct. 23, the advisory com m ittee will meet with the architect who will have a preliminary drawing of what the new lone school building might look like. The m eeting is open to the public. Jim Swanson presented information on a video/TV project. Swanson discussed what he had found out in previous year and what the potential is for a school-operated com m unity channel. Darlene Marquardt said she would find more inform ation from a teacher at Arlington about how they do their program. Also discussed at the meeting was school-wide planning. The district-wide stated goal is that 90 percent o f the students in grades three and five will reach the benchmark in reading and math this year. Eighty percent o f lone third graders reached the benchmark last year. At the first o f the year, the staff conducted a "needs assessment" which will aid them in their goals. At the last faculty meeting the school's strengths and weaknesses were put together. The strengths included: high parent in v o lv em en t, com m unity involvement, small class size, stable teacher population, K-12 communication, mutual concerns about students, knowledge o f students, strong work ethic among students and staff, participation of most kids in school activities, fewer distractions, lack o f drug/gang involvement, handling disciplinary actions requires less time, reputation o f community and school, sense of community among our students (for example, high school students reading and helping teachers in grade school). Weaknesses included: teachers have more classes to prepare for, which includes more preparation time, students have fewer options in classes and in staff, scheduling conflicts, scheduling management, small class size, which affects statistical results, the lack o f typing skills, fewer resources for teachers and students, lack o f advanced placement classes, few vocational opportunities, too much district diversity, leadership, lack o f places to "hang out", and lone's reputation as a "private school". (Some items were added to by site council members). Faculty will be working to expand the strengths and improve, where possible, on weaknesses. Salli McElligott was nominated by the staff for leadership competition. She and Adam McCabe were selected to com pete in the W endy's Heism ann Com petition this year. McElligott was picked as the Morrow County Fair and Rodeo queen. Grade school students will receive a bag o f peanuts after receiving five Cardinal awards. The awards will be given by teachers when students are observed doing som ething positive. Teacher Linda Neiffer won $500 and a blue W al-M art smock from Wal-Mart for being selected as the Wal-Mark regional teacher o f the year. Last year Neiffer worked with a terminally ill child from Boardman with the use o f new technology in her classroom. Diane McElligott was accepted to be on a national volleyball team. COPY PAPER Ream • Carton Gazette-Times 6 7 6 -9 2 2 8 H e p p n e r B o o ste r ChuS zu ou i d tifçe to tfu in /ça tf o f the donors. [y o u h a ve h e tp e d to ma/çe our a u ctio n a huge success! 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McCabe was quick in getting the sets to her hitters. Caitlin Orem led the lone scoreboard with 10 points, including two aces. The Cardinals were at a 0-4 deficit when Orem delivered nine consecutive points to lift lone above Echo, 9-4, in the third game of the match. Orem also passed eight set assists to her teammates. Salli McElligott served seven points, three aces, 13 passes, six hits, two kills, four diving digs and one set assist. Amellia Peck played an excellent match, scoring seven points, two aced serves, controlled nine passes and had eight hits, four kills, four diving digs, five blocks and three set assists. Megan E. lone's volleyball team hosted Echo for their hom ecom ing games on Friday evening, Oct. 12, and took the match in three, 14-16,15-8,15-6. The Cardinals had a slow start in the first game and trailed the Cougars, 14-16. Some bad serves plagued the Cardinals in the beginning o f the second game but lone fought back and defeated the Cougars, 15-8. lone then defeated Echo 15-6 in the third game to take the match. The victory was a total team effort, with lone scoring 12 points o ff of unanswered serves. Diana McElligott and Amellia Peck hit several kills. Natalie McElligott slipped in several tips to the open court and Meghan McCabe slammed over six points, one aced serve and delivered 12 set assists. Natalie M cElligott scored six points, two aces, three passes, nine hits, four kills, five blocks and one set assist. Meghan M. McCabe scored four points and delivered 16 set assists. Diana McElligott scored three points, sent over two aced serves, 10 passes, two hits, eight kills, two diving digs, six blocks and five set assists. Cyndi Heagy accepted one pass, slammed over four hits, four kills, blocked one hit and delivered one set assist. Kristina Powell stopped four hit attempts at the net and hammered over one hit and one kill. lone varsity VB team overcomes Helix lone was stunned in the first game of their volleyball match on Saturday, Oct. 13, losing to Helix, 11-15. lone retaliated in the second game and refused to allow the Grizzlies to score for a score of 15-0. In the third game, lone came from a 0-5 deficiency to take the match with a 15-14 victory. lone's victory included several kills from Amellia Peck and Diana McElligott, superior blocking by Cyndi Heagy and Kristina Powell, and excellent offensive play on the net by Natalie M cElligott. Meghan McCabe delivered three consecutive aces to rally her team and close the score on the Grizzlies. Emily Key was a huge asset to her team, coming off'the bench, hustling to the bail and making several saves. Natalie McElligott led the lone team with 15 points, five aces, five passes, Echo boy killed Seventeen-year-old Tyler Campbell, Echo, was killed in an automobile accident Saturday evening, Oct. 12, on Highway 207 about m ilepost 20. A vehicle carrying five Echo students, including Campbell, rolled down an embankment. The teens were on their way home from the Ione-Echo football game at lone Campbell, w ho was not the driver of the vehicle, w as pronounced dead at the scene. One teenager was checked by paramedics on site and was determined to be okay, while three others were taken to Good Shepherd M edical Center in Hermiston. Two o f the teens were examined and released from the hospital the evening o f the accident. Another remained hospitalized in stable condition as o f Saturday afternoon Names o f the passengers were withheld due to the ages o f those involved. The Heppner Fire Department and Echo Fire Department and Oregon State Police also responded to the call, which came in around 10 p.m. Friday.. four hits, two kills, two saves and and two set assists before she was three blocked hits. Diana McElligott sidelined in the first game from an scored nine points, delivered four injury. Caitlin Orem scored one point aces, six hits, six kills, accepted nine and delivered seven set assists. Cyndi passes, blocked five hits and Heagy' hammered eight hits, one kill, delivered two set assists. Amellia had one save and two blocks. Peck scored seven points, delivered Kristina Powell had one hit, two three aces, accepted five passes, blocks and one set assist to her credit slammed over six hits, five kills, Emily Key accepted five passes and four set assists, saved two balls and delivered one hit for the Cardinal squad. Megan E. McCabe served blocked five hits. Meghan M. McCabe delivered 100 percent and delivered seven set five points, three aced serves and assists. The Cardinals served 83 percent 10 set assists. Salli McElligott scored four points, two aces, three passes and hit 89 percent for the match. Krebs, French honored by OSU Dorothy Krebs of Boardman and Raymond French o f Heppner will be among the 33 men and women who will be honored as 2001 Diamond Pioneers by the Oregon State University College of Agricultural Sciences on Thursday, Oct. 18, in Corvallis. The Diamond Pioneers will be honored at a luncheon in their honor at OSU’s alumni center. The Diamond Pioneer Registry honors those 75 and older for their contributions to agriculture, natural resources, OSU and their communities. Krebs, nominated by the OSU Extension Service faculty, is the only woman to everserve as a Morrow County commissioner. She was involved in the sheep industry, helping prom ote lamb and wool products, for 35 years. She is a past president o f the Oregon Sheep Growers Auxiliary and a former auditor for the National Wool Growers Auxiliary. Before Krebs' retirement the OSU chemistry graduate w orked for the Port o f Morrow' monitoring water quality and preparing reports for the Department o f Environmental Quality. Since her retirement she has been involved in the study of the history o f the Oregon Trail and W illpo w er , i O n sale r ig h t n o w S tock at W eig h t W atc hers u p to d a y a n d s ta r t lo sin g J oin now for only . $32 w eig htw a tche rs.com______ Consult w w w .w eightw atchers.com for times Heppner Methodist Church 176 W. Church Hermiston Senior Center 435 W. Orchard United Methodist Church 352 S.E. 2nd v e ltr i a t p a r t t r i p a t i n * I o r a t i o n * f o r a l im ita d U rna >OOl W aSrhara I n t r - ' * m - a , In , » • ’ »* .<f i h r W H - H H W* IV ' ~ . I l 1 I I I I the Lewis and Clark Expedition. French, also a former Morrow County commissioner, represented District 59 in the Oregon House of Representatives from 1985-89. French was nominated by the OSU animal sciences department Extension faculty and the Morrow County Livestock Growers. He is a past president o f the Oregon Cattlemen's Association and served two years as a director of the National Cattlemen's Association. He and his wife, Norma.began managing the family ranch in 1948 and operated it for nearly 40 years. Their granddaughters are the seventh generation o f the family to live on the Century Farm. French is a past chair o f the Heppner Soil and Water Conservation District, the Columbia Blue M ountain Resource and Conservation Board and the Pendleton Production Credit Association. He was a recipient of a lifetime achievement award from the Heppner Chamber o f Commerce and served as grand marshal of the 2001 Morrow County Fair and Oregon Trail Pro Rodeo. Wo Print BUSINESS CARDS G azette-Tim es ~ 676-V22H PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF DEFAULT AND ELECTION TO SELL Reference is made to that certain Trust Deed made by William Rill, also known as W illiam Dean Rill, as Grantor, to M orrow County Abstract & Title Co., Inc., as Trustee in favor of Daniel M. Snngl. Trustee for U/D/T as Beneficiary dated June 24. 1998, recorded June 24, 1998, in Book "M" Page 1998-54600 o f the Mortgage Records o f Morrow County Oregon covering the following described real property situated in said County and State: The real property described in Exhibit 1 attached hereto and incorporated herein. SUBJECT TO AND EXCEPTING: Those exceptions and tax Notes set forth in Exhibit 2 attached hereto W y n a W o o d fo rd continued next page