TWELVE ■ Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Boardman Tillicum Club awards three scholarships
T h ree R iv ersid e
High School seniors have
received $250 each in schol
arships from the Boardman
Tillicum Club. The awards
were given based on com
munity service involvement.
T he stu d e n ts are
Aaron Hendricks, Heather
Hancock and Juan Calvillo,
all of Boardman.
Aaron Hendricks is a
m em ber o f the N ational
Honor Society. In 2006 he
was awarded the Riverside
High School Renaissance
Award and is an Eagle Scout
with Full Com plem ent of
Palms. His community ser
vice involved building and
in stallin g benches along
Boardman’s Main Street and
the riv e r w alkw ay. Red
Cross blood drives, display
ing American flags on Main
Street for holidays, assisting
with the Community Break
fast at the Fourth of July
Celebration, and assisting
with the Kids Club wrestling
and track programs. Hen
dricks has been accepted into
Oregon State U niversity’s
pre-engineering program.
H eath er H ancock
served as ASB activities di
rector her senior year and
was the senior representative
to the Boardman City Youth
Advisory Council. She has
been involved in 4H, softball,
and volleyball. Her commu
nity service involved coach
ing Little League, Cycle Or
egon volunteer, and keeping
stats for the Riverside High
School bask etb all team .
H ancock plans to attend
Lewis-Clark State College
to obtain a degree in nurs
ing.
Juan Calvillo was in
volved in soccer and wres
tling. His community service
includes being a Cycle Ore
gon volunteer, canned food
drives, city-wide clean up,
and spent m ore than 30
hours helping neighbors
clear farming areas. Calvillo
plans to attend Troutdale
Lake JCC trade school to
receive a certificate in auto
body paint and repair.
The Boardman Tilli
cum Club is Boardman’s old
est service club and annual
ly gives scholarship awards
to graduating Riverside High
School students with an em
phasis on community ser
vice. Applications for 2008
high school graduates may
be obtained at the council
o r’s office at Riverside High
School.
the school year,
the H th annual Or
is now history. W ith their S a a ta H t* for
Schools ke scraper in-hand, 6 0 0 team members
representing 75 participating schools from across the state
had some great fun earning over $ 8 5 ,0 0 0 for their schools this year!
Since the Scratch-it* for Schools program began, schools participating have
won over $8 0 0 ,0 0 0 !
Over the years, schools have used their S a itd r if" for Schools winnings
to pay for digital cameras, books, field trips, assembly proarams, playground
equipment, computer hardware and software, and many other things.
PARTICIPATING SCHOOLS - SCRATCH-ITM FOR SCHOOLS 2007
W ttm I. I m M i l Séta-Mmi
P ta r a ta R M i^ r L iilfttm *
1
* . ^
H U JW T
■ k ----- » - AM-A. > J , ----1
ài------------ L
VW ppOTv
---------
r w H n ji MMti' niujitx
U t J . C - A ..- I U-----------
em% m p i X H 9 M
h* ---i-i- mJL
e_L—t ».-.- a --
W J * X H Q it - r w n c u i
•Band
-Granfe Pto
—.U Ur m «
' f jiwnonm
ta c tta QTy Mgè S é ta urton Gy
ii.JLJ
'MMSORj
-Kano
-Oregon Gty
Uwb a d C M t o n t a * -St. M m
P ta lq b N ^ S é ta M m *
P ta G rave E k ra ta v y - Hood R ta
naanr Sdaoi-tatnoi
rfWtfS l i f l XMOOI rOWVS
Prato Oty S é ta-fato G*
-Portland
•OragonO*
MM* H |i $< m m
t\-A_1
nrac
ScawKXKe
I IL a j A u e
^ — A —.
U M v T y U M N O T y -M D G P V
•Granfe Buss
tatto
■toséug
>* —L a --
■ Mpm
-Shanraod
Ml. V im » M i l S é ta Ht Wmon
Htw prt Mgli S éta Nmport
•tato
•d p i
■ÊtKf
•fatal
S tar O u t Etatitory Staton
Stayta» Htyh S é ta Sttyton
KbndfiFafc
-liralidy
TdotoRVUi S éta tent
* IOM RKVOi
HVJ W
A _ r-i.-i
ütewwiury xWw
Titom RMMi S é ta Paini
U a ta E ta M lM y Uran
VktorPikl S é ta State
fatai
P O I M O R I A I O U T S C R A T C H - I T ’“ FOR SCHOOLS, 6 0 TO W W W . 0 R I 6 0 H L 0 T T E R Y . 0 R 6
1 0 T T I I V • A M I S A l l I A S I I ON C N A N C I A N I S N O U I O I I K A T I O
O REG O N
LOTTERY.
It does good things
*
t
1 01 I N T I I T A I N M I N T ONIT.
O S U to bestow n early 4,600 degrees
on June 17
Oregon State U ni
versity will graduate the larg
est class in its history this
Sunday, June 17, during its
138th-annual com m ence
ment. The ceremony, which
will be broadcast live over
Oregon Public Broadcast
ing, begins at 2 p.m. in Res-
er Stadium. Students from
Morrow County who will be
graduating are:
B oardm an: Sara M.
Fritz, Bachelor of Science,
Health Promotion and Edu
catio n ; A driana Z uniga,
Bachelor of Arts, Spanish.
H eppner: Mitchell
S. M athew s, Bachelor of
Science, Business Adminis
tration; Travis S. Wilhelm,
Bachelor of Science, Me
chanical Engineering; Harley
B. Young, Bachelor of Sci
ence, C onstruction E ngi
neering Management.
lo n e : Cam eron L.
Krebs, Bachelor of Science,
Agricultural Business Man
agement; Cayle H. Krebs,
Bachelor of Science, Gener
al Agriculture.
I r r ig o n : K yle R.
Carson, Bachelor of Science,
Exercise and Sport Science;
Justin R. Garcia, Bachelor of
Science, Business Adminis
tration; Angela S. Sabuco,
Bachelor of Science, Busi
ness Administration; Jesse N.
Steele, Bachelor of Science,
E n v iro n m en tal S cien ce;
Rocky A. Turner, Bachelor
of Science, Recreation Re
source Management.
A m bassador Mary
Carlin Yates, political advis
er to the United States Eu
ropean Command and an
OSU graduate, will give the
commencement address.
OSU President Ed
Ray and the academic deans
will hand out diplomas to
graduating students. Oregon
State is one of the few ma
jor universities of its size to
present actual diplomas to its
g rad u ates d u ring co m
mencement.
An estimated 4,313
students are expected to re
ceive 4,497 degrees this
year, with about half of those
students expected to attend
the commencement ceremo
ny. The number of degrees
easily surpasses last year's
record totals when 4,178
students received 4,334 de
grees.
Family and friends of
graduating students w on’t
need a ticket to gain access
to the ceremony at Reser
Stadium this year, according
to K avinda A rthenayake,
chair of the university’s com
mencement committee.
“The new side o f
Reser Stadium can accom
modate more than 18,000
people and last year we had
about 14,000 guests,” Arth
enayake said. “Now students
won’t have to worry about
who should or should not be
invited to the ceremony due
to a limited number of tick
ets.”
Previously, the uni
versity allocated eight tick
ets per student - a tradition
e sta b lish e d w hen c o m
mencement was held in Gill
Coliseum, which had a small
er capacity.
Among the special
awards to be presented dur
ing commencement will be
the university’s 2007 Distin
g u ish ed S erv ice A w ard,
w hich goes to R ollin G.
“Rollie” Sears, one of the
world’s leading wheat breed
ing experts who launched his
career after earning a Ph.D.
from OSU in 1979. Sears has
developed more than 30 dif
ferent wheat varieties that
have been grown on more
than 100 million acres since
1988, producing grain val
ued at more than $14 billion.
A m bassador Yates
and noted screenwriter Mike
Rich will receive honorary
doctorate degrees from the
university.
The OSU-Cascades
Campus also has a separate
cerem ony, scheduled for
June 16 in Bend. Some 190
students are expected to
graduate and the state’s First
branch campus will award its
1,000th degree.
W c Print
Business Cards
H e p p n e r S o le tte