Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, September 26, 2007, Page NINE, Image 9

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    Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, September 26, 2007 - NINE
The best time to plant trees
South
Morrow
Audiences o f all Kindle, Kaelyn Lindsay, and
ages will get a fresh look at Emily Pappas, while the perform tree County
an age-old fav orite w hen the galloping seahorses will be
Missoula Children’s Theatre played by Morgan Burch, trimming
Scholarship
(MC'T) and more than 40 Jacie Currin, Evan Colman,
local students present The Madison Combe, Madison operations
Little Mermaid on Septem­ Jewett, Dion Jose, Nicole
Trust
ber 29.
Propheter, Emma Rietmann,
The local cast fea­ Caitlin Scrivner, Makayla in area
winners
tures Cherisse Lemmon as Silvia, Kevin Smith, Leah
C
olum
bia
Basin
The Little Mermaid. Also Stone, Suzie Teeman, and
Electric Co-Op, and their announced
features are her three sis­ Kimmie VanArsdale.
subcontractors,
w ill be con­
Mrs. Merman/Mr.
ters, Ophelia, Amelia, Delia
The Little Mermaid to be
Electric
presented by Heppner students Co-Op to
who will be played by Lyn-
nelle Bowe, Jenna Bowman
and Ashley Wolff. Gil, the
merboy next door will be
played by Drion Donner.
The royal family includes
Patrick Collins as the prince,
Lexi Bray as the king, and
Ann Rietmann as the queen.
The snoopy seasiders w ill be
played by Michael Breiden-
bach, Onna Deloach. Riley
Gorham, Alex Lindsay, Nal-
ani Stone, Breawna Teeman,
and Reiah Waite. To com­
plete the ensemble, Makenzi
Hughes, Rylee Kollman,
Samantha Lemmon and
Maddie Lindsay will ap­
pear as the poetic town
criers; the dynamic scouts
include Paige Grieb, Micha
Hintz, Faith Jones. Mekayla
Merman and Starfish w ill be
played by MCT Tour Actor/
Director J D Henrieksen.
Keshi Richmond has served
as assistant director through­
out the week.
The Little Mermaid
will be presented at 3 p.m.
and 7 p.m. at the Heppner
Jr./Sr. High cafetorium. Do­
nations will be gratefully
accepted at the door.
The Missoula Chil­
dren’s Theatre residency in
Heppner is presented locally
by the Friends of the Hep­
pner Library with support
from a Cycle Oregon grant,
an Adopt-A-Teacher grant
and local volunteers. For
more information contact
Sally Walker at 676-9112 or
Bill Kuhn at 676-5033.
ducting their annual tree
trimming operation through­
out the service territory dur­
ing the next six weeks.
Trimming of trees
around power lines is an
annual chore and is required
by Oregon PUC and REA
to reduce outages and in­
sure continuity of electrical
service.
Areas affecting both
Primary (distribution) and
Secondary (individual ser­
vice connections) lines will
be cleared.
Any comments, con­
cerns or questions about
trees obstructing power lines
or the removal of them may
be made to Slater Mitchell
at 541 -676-9146 or slater@
columbiabasin.ee
The South Morrow
County Scholarship Trust
announces that Sara Peck is
the recipient of 2007-2008
Lexington Precinct Award
in the amount of $500. Sara
is the daughter of Steve and
Camille Peck of Lexington.
She attends Eastern Oregon
University studying Agricul­
ture Business Managemnt.
The winner of the
Beth Slotte Memorial Schol­
arship for the 2007-2008
year is Kylee Disque. She
will be receiving a check
for $1,000 from the South
Morrow' County Scholarship
Trust. Kylee is the daugh­
ter of Duane and Robanai
Disque of Lexington. She is
attending the University of
Idaho studying elementary
education.
By Mason Haguevvood
Do you know the
ideal time to plant trees? I
learned something new a
couple of weeks ago, fall
is the best season to plant
trees. A few of my teachers
taught me that.
Mrs. Orem said that
it’s a good time to plant trees
in the fall because it helps
keeps their roots strong.
Mrs. Fleideman said that
they grow slower in fall
than they do in the spring.
Mr. Holland said the roots
take up nutrients better in
the fall.
At lone School we
have beautiful trees for sale.
We have quaking aspens,
maples, snowberry bushes
and plenty more. Prices for
the trees are $3 for 1 gallon
pots, $5 for 2 gallon pots,
and $7 for 5 gallon pots.
Trees will be avail­
able for purchase at the
green house from 8 to 9 a.m.
and 12:15 to 1:30 p.m., and
after school by appointment
only. For more information
call 422-7131 ext. 4712.
FFA News DA’s Report
Last seen: lurking in your home—
under the sink, in the garage, in the basement. These hazardous waste items are
dangerous. They can harm streams, wildlife, drinking water, children and YO U !
T U R N T H E M IN!
contain mercury)-
— a tree, s
( T h e r m o m e t e r s with
, . d o T b lu e HQUW do "°>
OCTOBER 6th
from 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
at 365 W. Hwy 74, Lexington
DEQ
State of Oregon
^ _ - _ . . . . . . . . — â
u
e p arrm en i or
Environm ental
Q uality
(Morrow County Road Department)
OCTOBER 7th
from 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
at 69900 Frontage Lane,
Boardman
(North End Transfer Station)
Q u e s tio n s ? C a ll (5 4 1 ) 9 8 9 -9 5 0 0
Fer i complété llst i f househeld hazardous wastes and s ife r alternatives,
ca ll 1-100-732-9253 a rv ls lt www.deq.state.or.us/tNnc/selwaste/hhiiif.html
The Heppner FFA
Chapter was well represent­
ed at the Morrow County
Fair this year. Members
showing at the fair includ­
ed: Jpsie Miller, a futu­
rity heifer; Torri Lovgren,
yearling heifer; Brynna
Rust, breeding ewe; Emily
Thompson, breeding ewe;
Jessica Hughes, breeding
ewe; Kelsie Fox, breeding
ewe and Kendra Rayburn,
breeding gilt.
The Heppner FFA
Chapter also participated in
the Livestock Judging Con­
test. The Beginning Live­
stock Judging Team took
1SI place and the Advanced
Livestock Judging Team
took 3rd place.
Chapter members
have traveled to a few
livestock judging contests
(Union, MCF and Uma­
tilla County Fair, where the
beginning team won) this
summer and won their first
banners for new chapter.
The chapter was
quite busy during fair, be­
tween showing, judging,
picking up garbage, and
fundraising. The chapter is
appreciative to everyone
that helped us by supporting
our Basket Auction, Kabob
Dinner and/or Horse Auc­
tion. The chapter also ap­
preciates all of the parents
and family members that
helped with the preparation
and follow through of the
fundraisers throughout the
summer and specifically
fair week.
M orrow C ounty
District Attorney Elizabeth
Ballard has released the fol­
lowing report:
-William Charles
Reçd Jf-, 28, was convicted
df Ha'r'afcSment, a class B
misdemeanor, and was sen­
tenced to 90 days in jail
with 80 days suspended,
two years bench proba­
tion, complete 24 hours of
community service, other
numerous conditions, and
pay $913 in fines, fees and
assessments.
-Lawrence Allen
Perrin, 31, was conv icted of
Possession of Methamphet-
amine, a class C felony, and
was sentenced to 18 months
supervised probation, six
months driver’s license sus­
pension, 90 sanction units
with 30 jail units, complete
80 hours of community ser­
vice, other numerous con­
ditions, and pay $1,423 in
fines, fees and assessments.
Perrin was also convicted of
Unauthorized use of a Ve­
hicle, a class C felony, and
was sentenced to 24 months
supervised probation, 120
sanction units with 60 jail
units, complete 80 hours of
community service, other
numerous conditions, and
pay $173 in fines, fees and
assessments.
We Print
Business Cards
and
Business Forms
The Oregon State
coaching staff will run a
wrestling clinic on Saturday,
October 13, at Riverside
High School in Boardman.
The clinic will run from 10
a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 3
p.m. with a lunch break from
noon to 1 p.m.
The cost is $40 per
wrestler, if pre-registered,
or $50 at the door. The
pre-registration deadline is
October 6.
For more informa­
tion contact Richard Rock­
well at 541-720-6003.
Heppner GT
188 West Willow
676-9228
fax 676-9211
Oregon State
coaching staff
to run wrestling
clinic