Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, December 11, 2002, Page EIGHT, Image 8

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    fclGHl - Heppner Gazette-1imes, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, uecemœr n , zuuz
score over Condon
Mustang girls dropped by Blue Mustangs
By Kick Paullus
getting five points from Brad
U sin g a 2 0 -p o in t
Adams and extended it to 27-16
Devils
advantage at the free throw line,
By Kick Paullus
The Heppner Mustang
girls’ varsity had their pre-season
re c o rd e v e n e d at 1-1 by
dropping a 59-40 decision to the
Condon Blue Devils on Friday,
Dec. 6 in Condon. The Mustangs
will try to get back on the winning
tra c k a g a in st R iv e rsid e at
Heppner on Friday, Dec. 13 and
will play at Mac-Hi on Saturday,
Dec. 14.
The Blue Devils took a
16-9 lead after one, helped by
hitting nine o f 15 free throw s in
the first and six o f 10 free throw s
in the second quarter to extend
their lead to 28-19 at halftime
despite 11 points, including three
th re e -p o in te rs from Lacey
Matteson.
Chelsea Britt scored five
points in the third but the Blue
Devils took a 38-26 lead after
three and coasted to the win by
hitting 13 o f 18 free throw s in the
fourth despite 11 points from
Matteson who hit all eight o f her
free throw's in the quarter.
M atteson led scorers
with 24 points, 13 rebounds and
had two steals. Britt added seven
points and nine rebounds while
Brooke Rust had four rebounds
and a steal. Nikki Sisk had three
re b o u n d s and a ste a l and
Madison Bailey had two steals.
The Blue Devils hit 29 of
47 free throws for the game
compared to the Mustangs 16 of
24.
Heppner 9 10 7 14-40
Condon 16 12 10 21-
59
Heppner: Lacey Matteson
6 8-8 24, Chelsea Britt 2 3-6 7, Tylynn
Smith 1 1-2 3, Nikki Sisk 1 0 - 1 2 ,
S tefan ie H anson 0 2-3 2, Jesse
at the half getting six more from
Adams and Brian Hague wood hit
five o f six free throws in the
second.
The Blue Devils came
back in the third but the
Mustangs hit eight o f 14 free
throws to take a 37-31 lead into
the fourth. The Mustangs got four
points each from Justin Botefuhr
and Adams and three from Luke
Murray and as a team they hit
nine o f 14 free throw s to hold off
the Blue Devils and take the win.
B rad Adams led the
Mustangs with 18 points and 17
rebounds, 10 o f them offensive.
rebounds, Lynan Bingham had Chuy Elguezabal and Luke
six rebounds, Linsey Mitchell had
Murray each scored seven points
four rebounds and three steal and
and Haguewood finished with six
Wilson had three rebounds and
p o in ts and g rab b ed th ree
two steals.
rebounds. Donald Adams scored
Heppner 4 6 15 4-29
six
points and grabbed four
Condon 5 1 4 9-19
rebounds,
while Botefuhr pulled
Heppner: Blair Keithley 2 1-
down six rebounds.
4 5, Tiffany Piper 2 0-0 4, Krystal
The Mustangs hit 26 o f
Naims 2 0-0 4, Heather Yocom 2 0-0
42
free
throws from the game
4, Terra Wilson 1 1-2 3, Katie Britt 1
compared
to six of 14 for the Blue
0-
0 2, Laurie Murray 1 0-0 2, Lynan
Devils.
Bingham 1 0-0 2, Chelsey Betsinger
Heppner 11 16 10 15-
1 0-0 2, Amy Jepsen and K rista
52
Hendricks. 13 3-8 29 3-pt.: none
Condon 4 12 15 14-45
Condon: Barnett 1 3-5 5,
the H eppner M ustang boys’
varsity moved to 2-0 on the year
by beating the Condon Blue
Devils 52-45 in Condon on
Friday, Dec. 6.
The Mustangs will be
back in action on Friday, Dec.
13 with their first home game o f
the year against Riverside and will
be b ack on th e ro ad on
Saturday, Dec. 14 at Mac-Hi.
The Mustangs jum ped
out to an 11-4 lead after one
Kempas 0 2-2 2, Brooke Rust 0 0-2 0,
Madison Bailey, Shanna Rietmann,
Susan Southworth, Linsey Mitchell
and Tiffany Piper. 10 16-24 40 3-pt.:
Matteson 4.
Condon: Jessica Snyder 7 1-
2 15, Haylee Farrar 3 6-8 14, Angela
Anderson 2 9-1313, katee Humphrey
2 6-10 10, Janet McEUigott 0 3-4 3,
Norie Winters 0 3-4 3, Sharon Hawk
01-41 and kristinAamodt 00-20. 14
29-47 59 3-pt.: Farrar 2.
Mustang JV girls beat Blue Devils
By Kick Paullus
The Heppner Mustang
J V girls opened their season with
a 29-19 win at Condon over the
Blue Devils on Friday, Dec. 6
using a 15-4 advantage in the
third quarter and then hanging on
for the win.
The Mustangs will be in
action again at home against
Riverside on Friday, Dec. 13
before playing at Mac-Hi on
Saturday, Dec 14.
The Mustangs struggled
in a tight first quarter trailing 5-4
after one but rallied in the second
to take a 10-6 lead at halftime.
Blair Keith ley and Terra Wilson
each scored three points in the
th ird q u a rte r h elp in g the
Mustangs to a 25-10 lead going
into the fourth quarter. The Blue
Devils outscored the Mustangs
9-4 in the fourth but it wasn’t
enough as the Mustangs held on
for the win.
Keithley led a balanced
scoring attack with five points
and seven rebounds with Tiffany
Piper scoring four points and
getting three steals. Krystal
Naims and Heather Yocom each
sco red four p o in ts. L aurie
M u rray
g ra b b e d
seven
McCall 1 2-7 4, McEUigott 1 2-4 4,
Kilgore 0 3-6 3, Harsin 1 0-2 2, Stark 0
1- 21, Reser and Potter. 4 11 -26 19 3-
pt.: none
WE PRINT
BUSINESS
CARDS
LoU
- Lett
Colon
Heppner G azette-
Times
676-9228
Heppner: Brad Adams 6 6-
1118, Luke Murray 3 1-2 7, Chuy
Elguezabal 1 5-9 7, Donald Adams 2
2-2 6, Brian Haguewood 0 6-8 6, Justin
Botefuhr 1 2-2 4, Connor Kilkenny 0
2-4 2, Brian Smith 0 2-4 2, Josh
Winters, Tanner Britt, Doug Orwick
and Aaron Griffith. 13 26-42 52 3-pt.:
none
Condon: Zack Lantis 6 1-2
13, Riley Anderson 5 1-4 11, Josh
Wright 20-06, Ted Smith 12-5 5, Kyle
Barnett 1 2-3 4, Andrew Kilgore 1 0-0
2, Trenen Humphrey 2 0-0 4, David
Bednar, Justin Fennem, Clint Griffith
and Jason Watkins. 18 6-1445 3-pt.:
Wright 2, Smith.
NASS to conduct agriculture census
Farm and ranch operators in Oregon, and across America,
are about to participate in the nation’s largest, most detailed statistical
portrait o f U.S. agriculture - the 2002 Census o f Agriculture.
Conducted by the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service
(NASS) every five years, the census provides a comprehensive
portrait o f agriculture at the county, state and national levels, and is
the only source o f detailed demographic data on the farm population.
“Farmers and ranchers will receive the 2002 Census o f
Agriculture forms in late December to collect data for the 2002
calendar year. Factual information is critical for use in farm program
development and implementation, and for many other purposes which
directly impact the agricultural community. It is important for Oregon
producers to return their completed forms by Feb. 3,2003, as we
want to make sure that Oregon agriculture is accurately represented
.fS
in the final census results,” said a spokesperson.
Data provided by individual farmers and ranchers are held
strictly confidential by law (Title 7, U.S. Code). Statistical results are
totaled and published only in geographical summaries to prevent
identification o f individual operations.
New questions added for the 2002 census will collect
information on multiple operators per farm, production contracts,
certified organic acreage, grain storage capacity, computer and
Internet use, and the number o f bison, deer, elk, llamas, emus and
ostriches. Other questions will be similar to those asked in previous
censuses and will focus on key information such as acreage and land
use, operator characteristics, crop and livestock production and
agricultural product sales.
Twenty percent o f operators will also be asked about
production expenses, fertilizers and chemicals, machinery and
equipment, market value of land and buildings, and farm labor. Report
forms are tailored by region to make them less burdensome and more i
relevant to respondents in different parts o f the country.
A farm, for census purposes, is any place from which $ 1,000
or more o f agricultural products were produced and sold or normally r'l
would have been sold during the census year. Because a key strength
o f the census is providing detailed facts about all farms, every response •1
counts whether from a large or very small operation. By responding Ij
completely and accurately, farmers and ranchers can make the 2002 ft
Census o f Agriculture an effective tool to help chart the future of their
industry.
To find results from the 1997 Census o f Agriculture, plus a V
wealth o f current statistics on agriculture, visit www.usda.gov/nass/.
Results from the 2002 Census o f Agriculture will be released on Feb. F *
3, 2004.
The timetable for the census is: Dec. 16-over 3.2 million
report forms will be mailed across the country. More than 51,000 j :
will be destined for Oregon farmers and ranchers, requesting a reply
by Feb. 3. In February and March 2003, anyone who did not reply
in time to meet the Feb. 3 due date will be contacted by phone or in
person. On Feb. 3,2004, final results for the 2002 Agricultural Census
will be published.
SHOCKS
6 STRUTS
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$ 29.95
Tor B etter Hanüting amt Tire Mileage
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Severe
Weather
Travel Kits
$ 28.95
Over 90% of all cars built today should
have a 4 wheel alignment. Most front
wheel drives and some rear wheel
drives have rear wheel adjustments.
We invite you to ask us about it.
hH
STANDARD
ALIGNMENT
THRUST
ALIGNMENT
Be Ready For Holiday
Travel With These
Auto Aid Kits
4 WHEEL
ALIGNMENT
(Shims included)
“TTùuied
(fa ctt ßAni&fataA "Ptedentf
COMPUTI
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COMPLETE FRONT
DISC BRAKE SERVICE
COMPLETE REAR
DRUM BRAKE SERVICE
1. Replace with remanufactured
or rebuild front calipers
2. High Quality disc pads
3. Resurface rotors
4. Repack wheel bearinqs
(except FW0)
5. New front seals (except FW0)
I. Bleed it adjust entire system
7. Free replacement 25.000 mile
warranty
1. High quality brake shoes
2. Resurface drums
3. All new hold-down return
springs
4. All new wheel cylinders
5. Adjust parking brake
8. Bleed A Adjust entire system
7. Free replacement 25,000 mile
warranty
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95
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