Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, February 08, 2006, Page FIVE, Image 5

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    Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, February 8,2006 - FIVE
Mustang girls blow out Knights
early
Heppner High School announces 300 books donated in Heppner
honor roll
Elementary’s name
H igh
H ep p n er
School has announced it
ho n o r roll stu d en ts for
quarter two and sem ester
one. Students on the honor
roll received a gpa of 3.5 to
4.0,
Quarter 2:
7,h g rad e- Jo sep h
Armato 4.0. Bret Harrison
4.0, Devin Robinson 4.0,
D onald M atth ew s, Ian
Murray, Lindsay Cutsforth,
W illy
G entry, Ju stin
Gutierrez, Julia Meyer, Kelsi
Putm an, D aisy V ictorio,
K olleen C hapa, C o n n o r
C orbin
and T aig h ler
Dougherty.
8lh grade- Keenan
Jack 4.0, Frank Meyer 4.0,
Emily Thompson 4.0, Lacie
Wagoner 4.0, Ashley Wolff
4.0, Lane Wright 4.0, Kellee
Jones, Jodessa Chapa, Curtis
H arper, Jordan H atfield,
Jared H u d d lesto n and
Christopher Lien.
9,h grade- M aggie
Armato 4.0, Spencer Palmer
4 .0 , S h erily n Peck 4.0,
Joseph Pranger 4.0, Jordan
Sherilyn Peck scraps for the hall. Photo by Sandy Matthews.
S h ep h erd 4.0, K athryn
B y Kick Paullus
M oore, Luke Young,
early in the fourth. Taylor
S
tephanie C utsforth and
A 24-4 advantage in K em pas and P atton hit
Brittany
Boothe.
the first quarter led to a 55- jumpers and Sarah Milner hit
10lh grade- Viktoria
25 win by the H eppner one of two free throws to
K
och
4 .0 ,
W hitney
Mustang varsity girls over close out the scoring as the
Matthews
4.0,
Sean
Murray
the visiting Irrigon Knights M ustangs coasted to the
4.0,
Baillie
Keithley,
Megan
on Saturday, Feb. 4 in win.
O
rr,
Luke
B
asile,
A ftan
Columbia Basin Conference
B etsin g er led the
play. The Mustangs, 6-5 in Mustangs with 17 points, 14 Betsinger, Sarah Johnson,
the CBC and 8-11 overall, rebounds and three steals, K atie K ilkenny, P atricia
finish out the regular season with Seitz adding 10 points, Little, Kate Kendrick and
at Stanfield on Friday, Feb. four assists and three steals. Kelsey Wolff.
11"1 grade- Kimberly
10 .
Orr had nine points, eight
Crumbliss
4.0, Casey O'Neal
Megan Orr had nine steals and four a ssists,
4.0,
Sarah
Price 4.0, Regina
points, including a 3-pointer, Kilkenny had eight points
S
eitz
4
.0
,
Q uinn Peck,
R egi S eitz six, K atie and five rebounds, Peck had
K ilkenny five and Aftan nine reb o u n d s and tw o A aron A llsto tt, Ju stin
M ahaley,
B etsin g er fo u r in the steals, P atton had three D elv eau x ,
H
u
d
d
lesto
n
.
B rendan
Mustangs big first quarter steals and three assists and
M
cE
llig
o
tt,
Tony
and Betsinger added five Kempas had five rebounds.
H
aguew
ood
and
Chesley
more in the second as they
H eppner-
A ftan
Little.
led 33-10 at the half.
Betsinger 7 3-3 17, Regi
12lh grade- Daniel
Lyndi Patton opened Seitz 4 2-4 10, Megan Orr 3
Basile
4.0,
Lynan Bingham
the third with a lay-in and 2-
3 9, Katie Kilkenny 3 2-8
4.0,
M
atthew
Kenny 4.0,
after six straight points from 8, Lyndi Patton 2 0-0 4,
the K nights, B etsin g er Sherilyn Peck 2 0-2 4, Taylor Laurie M urray 4.0, Roy
scored tw ice insid e o ff K em pas 1 0-0 2, Sarah Proctor 4.0, Rory Kilkenny,
rebounds. Seitz scored inside Milner 0 1-2 1 and Kylie Krystal Naims, Katie Britt,
and hit one o f tw o free Doherty. Team: 22 10-22 55. Amanda Davis, Heather Rill,
Riley W ight, Abby Key,
throws and Betsinger hit a 3-
pts: Orr.
M ikel
B ritt,
C olton
short jum per to give the
Irrigon- Angulo 5 1-
Mustangs a 44-19 lead after 2 12, Johnso n 3 2-4 8,
three.
Hikichi 1 1-2 3, Guitterez I
B etsin g er scored 0-0 2, S m ith, Stanger,
Registration for the
inside, Sherilyn Peck scored F ran cis, B ow m an and 2006 season for Heppner
off a steal then fed Kilkenny Campos. Team: 10 4-8 25. Little League will be held
for a lay-in to make it 50-21 , 3-pts: Angulo.
Wednesday through Friday,
Feb. 8-10, from 5-7 p.m.,
each night at the Heppner
In last w e e k 's business and then became N eighborhood Center. At
Heppner Garden Club story, involved in real estate. Joe least one parent or legal
a p arag rap h about club then m oved them to guardian must be present.
Boys, ages 5-12 and
president JoAnne Burleson H eppner to cut down on
girls,
ages
5-15 are eligible
was inadvertently cut in half. Jo A n n e ’s
a c tiv itie s.
to
enroll
to
play T-B all,
F o llow ing is how the H ow ever, since m oving
minors
and
majors
baseball/
paragraph should have read: here, she has become very
The president of the active, she decorates the softball and also girls' junior/
senior softball. Registration
Garden Club this year is M eth o d ist
c h u rc h 's
JoAnne Burleson. She and fellow ship hall, monthly; is required even if the child
played previously. Cost is
her husband, Joe, moved to c h airs
the
H eppner
H eppner from C anby in A m bassadors (the group $30 per child, $60 per family.
If this is your first
1999. She has been a gives item s the city
time
or
HLL doesn't have
g y m n astics te a c h e r and merchants donate for new
your
information
from last
judge; her daughter, Lillajo comers); is on the board for
year,
p
lease
bring
three
was
in v o lv ed
in the Assisted Living; works
c h o re o g rap h in g
dance on the county fair and St. proofs of residency (must
ro u tin es for the M iss Pat’S parades; decorates for have physical address on
A m erica p ag ean t. The Town and Country and she them ) and a copy of the
Burlesons had a distribution is on the B eau tificatio n c h ild 's original or state-
service that extended from commission. She also plays certified birth certificate. A
driver’s license or utility bill
the Canadian border to the tennis in her “spare” time.
(only one utility bill) is
C alifo rn ia border to the
acceptable documentation. If
Idaho border. They sold their
H e lfre ch t,
B rittney
Herbison, Sloan Keithley,
Julianna M oore, H eather
Yocom, Amanda Miles and
Brenda Victorio.
Semester 1:
7,h g rad e- Joseph
Armato 4.0, Justin Gutierrez
4.0, Brett Harrison 4.0, Ian
Murray 4.0, Devin Robinson
4.0, Donald Matthews, Kelsi
Putm an, K olleen Chapa,
Lindsay Cutsforth, Taighler
D ougherty, Ju lia M eyer,
Daisy Victorio, Willy Gentry
and Amber Gray.
8lh grade- Jodessa
Chapa 4.0, Keenan Jack 4.0,
Frank M eyer 4.0, Emily
T h om pson 4 .0 , Lacie
Wagoner 4.0, Ashley Wolff
4.0, Lane Wright 4.0, Jared
Huddleston, Kellee Jones,
C u rtis H arper, Jordan
Hatfield, Zachary McCarl,
Justin Key, Christopher Lien,
Erin Price and Brynna Rust.
9th- Maggie Armato
4.0, Spencer Palm er 4.0,
Sherilyn Peck 4.0, Joseph
P ran g e r
4.0,
Jordan
S h ep h erd 4 .0 , K athryn
Moore, Luke Young, Joshua
Shank, Edward Waddell and
Brittany Boothe.
10,h grade- Whitney
Matthews 4.0, Sean Murray
4.0, Aftan Betsinger, Baillie
K eithley, V iktoria Koch,
M egan
O rr,
Ignacio
Elguezabal, Kelsey Wolff,
Jenna Bowman, Kelsey Fox,
K atie K ilkenny, Patricia
Little, Luke Basile and Kate
Kendrick.
1 l lh g rad e- Sarah
Price 4.0, Regina Seitz 4.0,
Aaron Allstott, Kimberly
Crumbliss, Justin Delveaux,
Mahaley Huddleston, Quinn
Peck, Chesley Little and
Casey O'Neal.
12,h grade- Daniel
Basile 4.0, Lynan Bingham
4.0, M atthew Kenny 4.0,
L aurie M urray 4.0, Roy
Proctor 4.0, Heather Rill 4.0,
Julianna Moore, Mikel Britt,
Brittney Herbison, Krystal
Nairns, Katie Britt, Abby
Key, Rory Kilkenny, Colton
Helfrecht, Brenda Victorio,
Veronica Wilhelm, Amanda
Davis, Riley Wight, Heather
Yocom and Amanda Miles.
1ÏK
Cidney Coster (left» and Alisha Taylor (right), both fifth
graders at HKS, read hooks to help reach the 300 books goal
for the Scholastic Book Club program, ClassroomsCare.
Students in the fifth
and sixth grades at Heppner
E lem en tary jo in e d in a
p ro ject sp o n so red by
Scholastic Book Clubs to
bring books to children in
need throughout the U.S.
The
program , called
ClassroomsCare, challenged
classro o m s around the
nation to read 100 books by
Feb.
17.
All
three
homerooms, Mrs. Dowdy’s,
Mrs. Smith-Griffith's, and
M rs. A lle n ’s, met that
challenge with w eeks to
spare, as they met and
su rp assed the goal o f a
com bined 300 books.
S ch o lastic d o n ates 100
books for every 100 books
read by classrooms, resulting
in a donation of 300 books
in the name o f H eppner
Elementary.
Scholastic hopes to
donate up to one million
books through this generous
program. The books will be
donated to three charities,
F irst B ook, Save the
Children and Reach Out and
Local winner heading to state
Hoop Shoot competition
Signups opens for HLL
Correction
tryouts please let HLL know.
The deadline for signups is
Tuesday, Feb. 28. For more
in fo rm atio n , call Renee
Yocom
at
676-9 4 7 4
(mornings) or 676-9821. At
this tim e, HLL is also
accepting applications for
coaches and volunteers.
Little League requires a copy
of your photo ID /driver’s
license to go along with the
application.
Little League is the
world’s largest youth sports
program with more than 2.8
million children and 1 million
volunteers in more than 100
c o u n trie s.
For
more
in fo rm atio n on L ittle
L eague, v isit the L ittle
L eague
w eb site
at
www.littleleague.org.
O rder
M agnetic
D o o r S ig n s
HERE
Heppner
Gazette-Times
Zac Orem, of lone Elementary,
placed first in the shoots at lone
and Hermiston to move on the
state shoot in McMinnville.
E lk 's Lodge #358
held th e ir annual Hoop
Shoot Free Throw Contest
on Sunday. Jan. 22. Thirty-
one boys and girls, ages 8-
13, came to show their stuff.
The 10 and 11-year-old boys
had the largest showing with
14.
In the 8-9 year old
girls category. Lauren Garret
placed first and Em ily
Holland Second.
In the 8-9 year old
(,7 6 -9 22
H B l T A N A M E R IC A N R E V O L U T IO N
We w ill m a k e o u r f ir s t p ric e q u o te o u r lo w e st
Now is th e tim e to s ta rt re g is te r-
ing fo r o u r 4-H p ro g ra m at G re e n
Feed & Seed, H e p p n e r!
As u su a l, w e w ill o ile r a 10% d is-
c o u n t on feed a n d s u p p lie s for y o u r
4-H p ro je c t.
Also, w e w ill a w a rd saving b o n d s to th e G ra n d
C h a m p io n a n d R eserve C h a m p io n o f eat h m a rk e t
class (S I00 to G ran d C h a m p io n a n d SS0 to R eserve).
S O R R E L L CH EVRO LET
MCGG GREEN FEED STORE in H ep p n er
2 4 2 W L in d e n W a y • 6 7 6 - 9 4 2 2
C O M M IT M E N T
We a r e n o t a b ig c ity d e a le r a n d do n o t o p e r a te lik e one
D E D IC A T IO N
-
D E D IC A T IO N
We t r e a t a ll o u r c u s to m e r s w itb r e s p e c t a n d h o n e s ty
S E R V IC E
-
S E R V IC E
-
S E R V IC E
We h a v e th e b e s t GM s e r v ic e d e p a r tm e n t in E a s te r n O reg o n
S A L E S
-
S A L E S
-
S A L E S
-
S A L E S
T h e M o st T ru sted N a m e In T he C ar B u sin ess
NEW CARS - 567-6487 • HERMISTON, OR - 800-567-6488 • USED CARS - 567-3919
I
R ead. F irst Book is a
national organization that
gives new books to children
who have little or no access
to books of their own. Save
the Children works in the
poorest communities of the
country in partnership with
schools, tribes and local
entities to provide children
in need with high quality
literacy program s. Reach
O ut and Read w orks to
m ake books and advice
about literacy a standard part
o f w e ll-c h ild care for
children, ages six months to
five years. Through Reach
Out and Read, doctors and
nurses are trained to talk to
p aren ts
about
the
importance of reading aloud
to their young child from the
earliest ages.
To see the names of
our c la sse s and o th ers
around the co u n try that
participated in this act of
k in d n ess,
v isit
w w w .s c h o l a s t i c .c o m /
classromscare.
M C G G • Lexington • 9 8 9 -8 2 2 1 • 1 -8 0 0 -4 5 2 -7 3 9 6
For farm equipm ent, visit our web site a t www mcgg net
\
place and Ross Cutsforth
placed second.
In the 10-11 year old
boys, Evan Rietmann placed
first and Trey Waite placed
second.
In the 10-11 year old
girls. Alana Wilson made the
m ost free throw s and
Shadow Kendrick came in
second.
There were no 12-13
year old girls that came to
shoot.
In the 12-13 year old
boys, Zachary Orem placed
first and Devin Robinson
made the second most free
throws.
The first place
winners shot in Hermiston at
the district Hoop Shoot on
Saturday, Feb. 4. Lauren
Garret placed third in her age
group and Zac Orem placed
first. Zac will continue on in
the competition going to the
state shoot on Feb. 18 in
M cM in n v ille. If he is
successful there, he will get
to the regional competition
in Portland.
Houweling
training new
artist
C harlene H ouw el­
ing. who normally paints
windows, has a new appren­
tice. Keshi Richmond. Rich­
mond is training under Hou-
wcling and will be painting
for St. Patrick's Day.
We Print
Letterhead
H eppner
G a z e tte -T im e s
6 7 6 - 9 22H
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