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About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 2016)
FOUR - Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, September 21, 2016 Huskies shut out Cardinals in league opener Ione Ed Foundation dinner, auction Saturday The Ione Education Foundation will hold its 14 th annual meeting, dinner, and auction this Saturday, Sept. 24, at the Ione American Legion Hall. The meeting will begin at 5:30 p.m., followed by a social hour at 6 p.m. and dinner at 7 p.m. Following the dinner will be a live auction of items donated by community members and businesses, raffles, grab bags at a set price, and new this year, a small silent auction. The foundation is still Lady Cards split heavy week of play Daniel Kelly (#86) looks for running room against Sherman as Austin Morter (#9) blocks. -Photo by Sandra Putman Ione hosted the Sher- man County Huskies last Friday to open league play. Ione began the game with a solid drive that stalled at the Sherman 30. On their opening drive, Sher- man’s Kyle Fields found Isaiah Coles for an 80-yard touchdown. From there, the Huskies were off to the races, scoring on the ground and through the air to build a 44-0 halftime lead. Ione would take their opening drive of the second half to the two-yard line be- fore giving the ball back on downs. Another drive in the fourth would stall at Sher- man’s 15. Ione was able to find some success on the ground from the efforts of Cord Flynn, Aaron Smythe and Henry Padberg. Ulti- mately, the Cardinals were unable to find the end zone in a disappointing 50-0 loss to open league play. Ione (0-3) will travel to Touchet (1-1) Friday, Sept. 23, to face the Indians in a non-league game at 3 p.m. Please note that this is a site Cardinal Cord Flynn (#22) holds off a Sherman player to maintain possession during last Friday’s home game. -Photo and time change due to a shortage of referees. by Sandra Putman Cardinal Sports Schedules Volleyball Sept. 22, 5 PM @ Horizon Christian, Hood River Sept. 27, 5 PM @ Sherman, Moro Sept. 29, 5 PM vs. South Wasco Sept. 30, 5 PM vs. Arling- ton Oct. 1, 1 PM @ Condon/ Wheeler, Fossil Oct. 4, 5 PM @ Mitchell/ Spray, Spray Oct. 6, 5 PM @ Dufur Oct. 11, 5 PM vs. Helix Oct. 13, 5 PM vs. Mitchell/ Spray Oct. 14, 5 PM vs. Hori- zon Christian (Senior Night) Oct. 22, 10 AM B i g S k y District Tournament, The Dalles Oct. 26, TBD 1st Rd. State Playoffs Oct. 29, TBD 2nd Rd. State Playoffs Volleyball - Middle School Sept. 23, 1 PM @ Pilot Rock and Weston, Weston Sept. 30, 1 PM @ Echo and Riverside, Boardman Oct. 1, 10 AM @ Condon Oct. 7, 1 PM vs. Irrigon and Helix Oct. 8, 9 AM @ Helix Tourney Oct. 14, TBD @ Heppner Oct. 15, 8 AM, Jamboree vs. Pilot Rock, Uma- tilla, Helix, Stanfield Football Sept. 23, 7 PM v s . Touchet, WA Sept. 30, 7 PM vs. Arling- ton (Homecoming) Oct. 7, 7 PM @ Perrydale Oct. 13, 7 PM vs. Mitchell/ Spray (Senior Night) Oct. 21, 7 PM @ Dufur Oct. 28, 7 PM @ South Wasco Nov. 4/5, 1st Rd. State Play- offs, TBD Nov. 11/12, State Quarter- finals, TBD Nov. 18/19, State Semifi- nals, TBD Nov. 26, State Champion- ship, TBD Football – Middle School Sept. 22, 5 PM vs. South Oct. 13, 2 PM vs. Dufur Wasco Oct. 27, 4 PM @Arling- Sept. 29, 5 PM @ Lyle, ton/Condon/Wheeler, WA. Condon Oct. 6, 5 PM @ Dufur Heppner Gazette-Times 541-676-9228 david@rapidserve.net Morgan Orem (#4) and Katelyn Bass (#16) show the intense concentration it takes to win during a volleyball game last week. The Cardinal girls had a full schedule last week with four games; they lost to Arlington 1-3 on Tuesday and to Dufur 2-3 on Thursday, but recovered their stride to win their games versus Sherman and Condon/Wheeler, 3-1 each, on Friday and Saturday. They will face Horizon Christian across the net in Hood River this Thursday followed by a contest at Sherman on Tuesday. -Photo by Sandra Putman seeking auction items; any- one interested in donating an item for the main live auction, please contact Joe McElligott at 541-422-7257 no later than Thursday, Sept. 22, to let him know what you plan to donate. The dinner will consist of prime rib, salmon, baked potato, bread, salad and dessert. The meal includes two beverages. Dinner tick- et prices are $25 for adults, $10 for children ages 7-12, and free for children six and under. Ticket sales will be lim- ited to 250 adults and may be purchased in advance at Bank of Eastern Oregon in Ione. Tickets may also be purchased at the door, if available. Tickets may be reserved by calling the bank at 541-422-7466. In addition, board di- rector Joel Peterson’s term is up for renewal, and he has chosen to extend it for another three-year term, and director Tim Holtz has reached his term limit and a nominating committee is placing Martin Medina on the ballot to replace him. A vote of these posi- tions will occur at the an- nual meeting at 5:30 p.m. on Saturday. Healthy Youth A Key Strategy—Promote Positive Development in Adolescents Editor’s note: This is part of a series of messages brought to you by your Morrow County health care providers. Adolescence (the teen years) provides many op- portunities to positively in- fluence future health behav- iors and health outcomes. In addition to the significant physical growth and devel- opment that takes place dur- ing this time, young people are increasingly expanding their social networks and making choices about their health. If you are looking for ways to promote positive development in your teen, the following information is for parents and the many people who support youth with the goal of promoting good health and well-being. A significant health impact can be achieved by making use of “protective factors” to encourage posi- tive development, reduce risky behavior and promote good social and emotional decision making. “Protective factors” are the conditions in place at home or in the community, or behaviors that reduce the effects of stressful life events. One important protec- tive factor is using positive parent engagement prac- tices. Parents are a power- ful influence in the lives of their teens. When parents make a habit of knowing about their teens—what they are doing, who they are with, and where they are, and setting clear ex- pectations for behavior with regular check-ins to be sure these expectations are being met—they can reduce their teens’ risks for unhealthy behavior. Another important pro- tective factor is “school connectedness”— the belief held by students that adults and peers in the school care about their learning as well as about them as individu- als. Research has shown that young people who feel connected to their schools are less likely to engage in many risk behaviors, in- cluding violence and gang involvement. They are also more likely to have better school attendance and stay in school longer, increas- ing their chances of finding future employment. A third strategy is parents being involved in their children’s school life. Parent engagement in schools is defined as parents and school staff working together to support and improve the learning, development, and health of children and adoles- cents. Research shows that parents who are involved in schools influence better student behavior, higher academic achievement, and also make it more likely that youth will avoid unhealthy behaviors, such as starting risky sexual behavior and tobacco, alcohol and other drug use. For more information about protective factors to help your children thrive well into their adult years, view the Centers for Dis- ease Control and Prevention website at http://www.cdc. gov/healthyyouth/protec- tive/index.htm and http:// www.cdc.gov/healthyy- outh/protective/pdf/paren- tal_monitoring_factsheet. pdf. HUNTER'S NIGHT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 STEAK DINNER AT 6PM LODGE AT 8PM PRIZES & RAFFLE A POTATO HAS EYES ALL NEWS AND ADVERTISEMENT DEADLINE: THE Town of Lexington Lifting burning ban September 22nd Please use caution and screens should be used on all burning barrels but it doesn't read the newspaper. You ought to be different. Don't be a potato. Subscribe to the Heppner Gazette Today! MONDAYS AT 5:00 P.M.