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About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (June 11, 2008)
TWO - Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, June 11, 2008 The O fficial N ew spaper o f the City o f Heppner and the County o f Morrow Heppner GAZETTE-TIMES U .S .P S . 240-420 Morrow County’s Home-Owned Weekly Newspaper Published weekly and entered as periodical matter al the Post Office at Heppner, Oregon under the Act of March 3, 1879. Periodical postage paid at Heppner, Oregon. Office at 188 W Willow Street Telephone (541) 676-9228. Fax (541) 676-9211 E-mail editor^ rapidserve net or david(Srapidserve net. Web site www heppner net Postmaster send address changes to the Heppner Gazette-limes, PO. Box 337, Heppner, Oregon 97836. Subscriptions: $27 in Morrow C ounty ; $21 senior rate (in Morrow County only, 62 years or older); $33 elsewhere; $27 student subscriptions David Sykes.................................................................................................... Publisher Autumn Morgan ............................................................................................... Editor All News and Advertising Deadline is Monday at 5 p m For Advertising advertising deadline is Monday at 5 p m Cost for a display ad is $4 90 per column inch Cost tor classified ad is 5 0 ( per word Cost for Card of Thanks is $10 up to 100 words Cost for a classified display ad is $5 50 per column inch For Public/legal Notices public/legal notices deadline is Monday at 5 p m Dates for pub lication must be specified Affidavits must be required at the time of submission Affidavits require three weeks to process after last date of publication (a sooner return date must be specified if required). For Obituaries Obituaries are published in the Heppner GT at no charge and are edited to meet news guidelines Families wishing to include information not included in the guidelines or who wish to have the obituary written in a certain way must purchase advertising space for the obituary For Letters to the Editor le tte rs to the Editor MUST be signed by the author The Heppner GT will not publish unsigned letters All letters MUST include the author s address and phone number for use by the GT office The GT reserves the right to edit letters The GT is not responsible for accuracy of statements made in letters Any letters expressing thanks will be placed in the classifieds under 'Card of Thanks' at a cost o f $10 On the HEPPNER WEBSITE: www.heppner.net • Start or Change a Subscription • Place a Classified Ad • Submit a News Story • View Real Estate for Sale • City Council & Planning Minutes • Local Businesses • County Park • Willow Creek Park Reservations • Free Digital Postcards • Senior Housing • and more! Exchange students appreciates life in Morrow County To the Editor: Hello, my name is Camilo Acosta, I’m an ex change student from Colom bia, I live in Heppner but I study in lone. I came five months ago, and my time to depart is getting closer by each word 1 write in this letter, and the only thing I can do for this community is a letter in the newspaper sharing my appreciation to the all the people for all the good moments. I would like to start w ith Heppner, my living place, the first to open their arms to me, giving me warm clothes in winter when I was freezing and other things. I greatly appreciate the St Pat rick Catholic Church, espe cially Father Condon, for all their spiritual guidance dur ing this time. To M urray’s Pharmacy, Fam ily Foods and the Bank o f Eastern Oregon for their services. To Lois Hunt and to Diann and Dave Nagel for all their affection and teachings. To all the exchange students, my first friends, with them I share my first happy mo ments in the United States, I will never forget them and I hope to see you again. To Linda Corbin, our area representative, I really ap preciate all your counseling and accompaniment. Last in Heppner, but not least; I am very grateful to my Host Family: The Maricks, John, Kathy and my little Abbie, they becam e my second fam ily, now they have a space in my heart that is go ing to stay in there forever, they shared their life with me, also are included Bora, Hee-Young and the Fosters (Katie, Chuck and Olivia), they are my whole American family, I hope we can be al ways a family, no matter the distances, in our hearts. N ow , lo n e , th a t small, but cozy, charming and wonderful town where I made a lot o f friends and have a little o f amazing and unforgettable experiences, I had not enjoyed school that much until I came here. I’d Divorces The Circuit Court at the Morrow County Court house in Heppner has re leased the following infor mation: Divorces filed June 6-James Robert Jepsen and Gina Marie Jepsen. like to express gratitude to all o f the staff in the lone School, M rs. B row ning, Kay Aldritt, Kelly, Adena, Mrs. M cCabe, to all the teachers: Mr. Raible, Mr. Schaber, Mr. Holland, Mrs. H eidem an, M iss Wagen- blast, Mr. Rudolf, Maureen M cElligott, and all those who I’m forgetting now, I will never forget all your guidance, teachings, helps not only with my language, but also with my knowledge and life plan. Next there are my school friends; 1 didn't believe that in this short amount of time I could make those amazing friends as I did in lone, since my first day o f school, most o f them opened their arms to me, making me feel like I’m am in a big family, and offer me their friendship always: Beth, Mary, Sarah, Brianna, Tyree, Eric, Mikey, my friends in the ju n io r class: Tiana, Luke, Matt, Alex (you should be junior) and Tori, I passed so many excellent moments with all o f them, I will always re member the movie nights, the laughs, the lunches and all the thing that I didn’t m ention, all o f you also have a part o f my heart and I hope I can come back soon to visit you... and I am sorry if I forgot someone in there, it wasn’t my intention; I’m grateful even for the fourth and fifth graders, they gave me some headaches but I had good times with them. Finally, I would like to say that all my objec tives and my purposes that I brought to United States are reached, not only my lan guage ones, but also those like making new friends, a new family and knowing wonderful people, sharing my culture with another countries and learning about them, always with my mind, hands and heart open to learn new things that I will never forget, because after this I won’t be the same as before, now I am a better person, with new horizons and a bigger plan o f life, based on all the knowledge given by my parents during all my life. I am really going to miss this experience and all the people implicated on it, and again I wish to express my deepest gratitude to all who made this experience what it has become. Camilo Acosta (Marick) ~ Letters to the Editor ~ I'he Heppner Gazette Times will print all letters to the Editor with the following criteria met: letters submitted to the newspaper will need to have the name o f the sender along with a legible signature. We are also requesting that you provide your address and a phone number where you can be reached. The address and phone number will only be used for verification and will not be printed in the newspaper. Letters may not be libelous. The G T reserves the right to edit. The G T is not responsible for accuracy o f statements made in letters. Any letters expressing thanks will be placed in the classifieds under “Card o f Thanks” at a cost o f $10. Flag Day is America’s day Editor s Note: The following letter was sub mitted by Jean Jepsen. The letter originally came from public relations division o f The American Legion. Americans love their flag. If there is any doubt about that, ask the editors of “Time” Magazine. On the cover o f its April 2 1st issue, “Time” used the famous Joe Rosenthal image o f the Iwo Jima flag raising on Mount Suribachi. In what could be m ildly called a “ lapse o f ju d g ment,” editors replaced the U.S. flag in the photo with a tree, in ord er to make a statem ent about global warming. Donald Mates, a se verely wounded Iwo Jima veteran, said “to stick a tree in place o f a flag on the Iwo Jima picture is just sacrile gious.” T im H o lb e r t, a spokesman for the Ameri can Veterans Center, said the doctored photo “trivializes the most recognizable mo ment of one o f the bloodiest battles in U.S. history.” Readers were out raged at “Tim es’” lack o f respect for Old Glory. Today, we are not honoring only the flag, but what it symbolizes. We are honoring freedom. We are honoring the freedom to w orship as we please, to speak as we please and to vote as we please. We are honoring the hardworking men and women who have made this the greatest and most successful country that the planet has ever known. Flag Day is America’s Day. The 13 stripes on our flag are not just symbolic o f the original colonies but they are sym bolic o f the founding fathers who hailed from those colonies. They are symbolic o f their dreams for a great Republic, dreams that have been forged into reality by all the men and women who have defended this great nation. George Washington once said o f the original Flag, “ We take the stars from Heaven, the red from our mother country, sepa rating it by white stripes, thus showing that we have separated from her, and the white stripes shall go down to posterity representing liberty.” The U nited States Flag is the embodiment of our Constitution that pro claims our absolute com mitment to defending the freedoms given to us by our Creator. President Coolidge may have been known as "S ilent C al,” but he had plen ty to say ab o u t our Flag. “ We do honor the Stars and Stripes as the em blem o f our country and the symbol o f all that our patrio tism means,” Coolidge said. "We identify the flag with almost everything we hold dear on earth. It represents our peace and security, our civil and political liberty, our freedom o f religious w orship, our family, our friends, our home. We see it in the great m ultitude of blessings, o f rights and privileges that make up our country. But when we look at our flag, and behold it em blazoned with all our rights, we must remember that it is equally a symbol of our duties. Every glory that we associate with it is the result o f duty done. A yearly contemplation o f our flag strengthens and purifies the national conscience.” Legend says Betsy Ross created the U.S. Flag. What is not in dispute is that the U.S. Supreme Court has allowed misguided protes tors to destroy it. In 1989 the Supreme Court mistakenly ruled that flag desecration laws were invalid because o f First A m endm ent free speech protections. Yet, the First Amend m ent’s prohibition against “abridging the freedom of speech” clearly does not include all forms of expres sion. Why else would the Founding Fathers have sepa rately delineated protections for a free press, assembly and petition o f government redresses if these actions w ere alread y “ p ro tected speech.” Wouldn’t these addi tions have been redundant? As former Los An geles Dodger Manager Tom my Lasorda says, “Speech is when you talk.” Supreme Court Jus tice John Paul Steven dis sented from the Flag des ecration ruling. He wrote, “ s a n c tio n in g the p u b lic desecration of the flag will tarnish its value - both for those who cherish the ide als for which it waves and for those that desire to don the robes o f martyrdom by burning it. That tarnish is not justified by the trivial bur den on free expression occa sioned by requiring that an available, alternative mode r's Round-Up Reopened! Celebrate Heppner Days Friday, June 13 from 8 a.m . - 6 p.i SIDEWALK SALE Large num ber of b olts 40-50% off Fat quarters - 25 for $ 2 5 .0 0 M any other discou nted bargains! INSIDE STORE SALE Lots of other great bargains! Plus cook ies and juice rfntiM utfyitlciqe 193 N. Main St., Heppner • 676-8282 o f expression— including uttering words critical o f the flag...be employed.” So here we are 19 years later, respecting and honoring the Flag o f The United States but at the same time waiting for Congress to act. It will take a constitu tional amendment to restore the right o f the American people to once again protect their flag from desecration. All 50 state leg islatu res have petitioned Congress for a constitutional amend ment that would restore to Congress the authority to prohibit flag desecration. Poll after poll shows the overwhelming majority of the American people want to see their flag protected. L o p sid ed m a jo ri ties in both houses o f Con gress have supported a flag amendment. The House of Representatives has passed such an amendment in six consecutive votes and the Senate failing by only one vote o f a needed two-thirds supermajority in the 109th Congress. Rep. John Murtha of Pennsylvania has introduced H.J. Res 12, which would once again protect the flag. It is up to “We the People,” to tell our Representatives to pass H.J. Res 12 and for the United States Senate to follow suit. The American Le gion takes it personally when the Flag o f the United States is disrespected. As Medal of Honor recipient and retired Army Major General Patrick Brady often says, “ If the flag is precious enough to drape over the coffins o f our dead heroes, it is precious enough to protect.” A nother great Le gionnaire who knows some thing about protecting the flag is C harles B ennett, The American Legion’s 4th District Commander in the Department o f Maine. When a misguided student at the University of Maine at Farmington needed to conduct a so-called art ex periment, she came up with a truly offensive idea. The student placed American flags and like nesses of the American Flag on the floors o f a hallway to see how many students would walk on Old Glory and how many would walk around it. Charles Bennett bravely said, “enough.” Mr. Bennett attempt ed to pick up the flags but was threatened with arrest. As a police officer at the scene told Mr. B ennett, “ If you are arrested, they win.” Bennett, a Vietnam War veteran, then demon strated on his own. He b r a v e ly an d peacefully stood in front o f one o f the flags - holding a sign stating “Disgraceful” - and, by his m ere pres ence, discouraged many o f the students from trampling on it. Mr. B e n n e tt w as soon joined by Travis Hill, a young Iraq war veteran and member o f The American Legion. The pair bravely stood their ground. There w ere many faculty members and pro fessors at the university that day, but it was Mr. Bennett and Mr. Hill who were the true teachers. “ I love the flag and will protect it until I die,” Mr. Bennett said afterward. Y et, o fte n tim e s those who visibly love this country are mocked as “jin goistic flag wavers.” Some academics, politicians and even media personalities re sent seeing Americans “rally around the flag.” One huge exception is CNN’s Lou Dobbs. “ Like may A m eri cans, I began wearing a flag pin after September 11,” Mr. Dobbs said on his broadcast. “I do so out o f respect for those killed in the terrorist attacks, and in recognition o f this country’s war on radi cal Islamic terror. It turns out that some journalists and some presidential can didates are uncomfortable and even upset about flags on lapels. Their comments are both disappointing and bizarre given the very seri ous issues facing this nation. But maybe their superior and supercilious views offer a window into what ails us as a society.” But Mr. Dobbs was just getting warmed up. He continued, “Katie Couric o f CBS News takes exception to the whole culture o f wear ing flags on our lapel and saying ‘we’ when referring to the United States. "We are Americans, right, Katie? I’m sorry, but how can anyone possibly be offended by acknowledging that our troops who are sac rificing so much for us are ‘ours,’ and that we are their proud countrymen?” Mr. Dobbs conclud ed, “ I choose to wear that flag on my lapel because the nation it represents makes that choice possible.” As Lou Dobbs real izes, a pin alone does not make one a patriot. But no American should ever feel ashamed o f this beautiful symbol o f freedom. Thank you for being here. God Bless you all and God bless the Flag o f the United States o f America! The American Legion Births Austin Hale Willis- A son, Austin Hale Willis, was born to Sheila Marie Price and Chad A nthony Willis o f Bend on May 9, 2008, at St. Charles Medical Center in Bend. The baby weighed seven pounds, 10 ounces and m easured 21 inches long. G ra n d p aren ts are H arlan and L inda D un away, Lexington, and Don and Beth Willis o f Bend. Great-grandmother is Greta Adams, Bend. He joins a sister Ashly. HOME LOAN CENTER Oregon Division o f Net More America. Inc We are proud to announce that Kim Arbogast has joined our team as a Loan Consultant. We are pleased to offer our Mortgage Services to Heppner and the sur rounding communities. Call for an appointment. available at anytime! Kim Arbogast Loan Consultant P hone (5 4 1 ) 5 6 4 - 6 1 5 4 • C ell: (5 4 1 ) 9 6 5 - 1 2 7 7 kim.arbogast@netmoreamerica.com www.homeloancenteroregon.com 115 W. Herrmston A»*., Suite 140 • Hermiston, OR 97838