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About Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 1994-current | View Entire Issue (June 3, 2015)
A2 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 2015 LOCAL WEATHER Hermiston CDA chapter awards scholarships The Catholic Daugh- ters of the Americas Our Lady of Angels Court #1692 awarded two $750 scholarships at the close of the 11 a.m. Mass Sun- day. The recipients of the Marilyn Harris Memori- al Scholarship are Luis Santoyo Jr. and Bianca Torres, both graduating seniors from Hermiston High School. According to the an- nouncement release, San- toyo has been very active in the parish life at Our Lady of Angels. In his biography, he said, “My Catholic faith has given me the guidance to make the right choices and avoid temptations that a lot of teenagers are ex- posed to in these days.” In the fall, Santoyo will attend Tabor College in Kansas in the fall and intends to pursue a degree in accounting. According to the re- lease, Torres said the Wed Thu 6/3 Fri 6/4 Sat 6/5 Sun 6/6 90/57 6/7 77/52 82/52 A mainly sunny sky. High 77F. Winds WSW at 10 to 15 mph. Mostly sunny. Highs in the low 80s and lows in the low 50s. Sunny. Highs in the low 90s and lows in the upper 50s. Sunshine. Highs in the mid 90s and lows in the low 60s. Mainly sunny. Highs in the upper 90s and lows in the mid 60s. Sunrise Sunset 5:09 AM 8:41 PM Sunrise Sunset 5:08 AM 8:42 PM Sunrise Sunset 5:08 AM 8:43 PM Sunrise Sunset 5:08 AM 8:43 PM Sunrise Sunset 5:07 AM 8:44 PM 95/61 99/65 Salem 68/49 Delia Wallis, from left, Catholic Daughters of the Americas Our Lady of Angels Court scholarship committee chair, Marilyn Harris Memorial Scholarship winners Bianca Torres and Luis Santoyo, and Kristi Smalley, Court treasurer, pose for a photo after 11 a.m. Mass Sunday, when Torres and Santoyo received their awards. Torres and Santoyo are both seniors graduating from Hermiston High School Saturday. most important things in her life right now are her Catholic faith, family and education. 2014-16 Judy Brown and Diana Ables; and Direc- tors 2015-17 Cathy Lloyd and Toni Skinner. Pictured DUHQHZRI¿FHUVIURPOHIW Diana Ables, Toni Skin- ner, Dorothy Smith, Jackie Dunlap, Stephanie Nobel, Nancy Lauck, LuAnn Da- vison and Kathleen Krost- ing. NEWS IN BRIEF er was David Alatorre, fourth-period reader from Team Wick. First-year teacher Daniel Tew’s fourth-period block team crept up on Team Wick’s total of 567 with a whopping 587 points, earn- ing Tew two tickets to any game this season, as well. The Tri-Cities Dust Dev- LOVDUHDI¿OLDWHGZLWKWKH6DQ Diego Padres, and Dusty awarded Sandstone Mid- dle School with a baseball night June 24. Sandstone Middle School will receive $1 back to the school for every person who comes to the game. Gates open at 6:15 p.m. The Dust Devils will be playing the Vancou- ver Canadians, and anyone who comes will receive hot dogs and Coke products for $1. Also, all Hermiston stu- dents will get to participate LQ WKH LQ¿HOG SURPRWLRQ activities, and Dusty will be signing autographs. 69/50 ed. All of the proceeds go toward providing shelter, meals and support services to victims of domestic and sexual violence in Umatilla and Morrow counties. For more information, or to reg- ister a team, contact Sharon Neuvirth, 541-276-3322, or Sharon@dvs-or.org. Medford 73/50 La Grande 68/45 Bend 58/37 Eugene She plans to attend Or- egon Institute of Technol- ogy to become a radiolo- gy technician. Pendleton 72/49 Hermiston 77/52 Portland 66/51 SUBMITTED PHOTO The Hermiston Altru- sa Club recently installed LWV FOXE RI¿FHUV The 2015-16 voting board members are: President Kathleen Krosting; First Vice President LuAnn Da- vison; Second Vice Pres- ident Nancy Lauck; Sec- retary Stephanie Nobel; Immediate Past President Treasurer Jackie Dunlap; Dorothy Smith; Directors Sandstone Middle School sixth-graders liv- ened up the last two months of school with a “Take Me Out To The Ballgame” theme, where math and science classes integrated vocabulary, percentages, measurements, fractions, graphs, averages and story problems and other concept lessons around baseball. Language arts and read- ing classes incorporated writing and spring reading goals and competed against each other to see which class would win a “World Series of Reading.” To celebrate, “Dusty,” the Tri-Cities Dust Devils mascot, ended the challenge with a surprise visit and honored the sixth-graders with free season baseball tickets to the top-winning readers from each class. The following winners earned two tickets for any game of the season: 6KDZQ &RQDQW ¿UVWSH- riod reader from Team Ut- ter 3DJLH &RXQVHOO ¿UVWSH- riod reader from Team Tew 0LFKDHO *DU]D ¿UVWSH- riod reader from Team Wick Brandon Rivera, fourth-period reader from Team Tew The highest point read- Local 5-Day Forecast Oregon At A Glance $ltrusa appoints of¿cers Sandstone sixth- graders celebrate baseball challenge Today's Weather Ontario 77/51 Burns 68/49 Klamath Falls 68/45 Area Cities City Albany Ashland Astoria Baker City Bend Brookings Burns Coos Bay Corvallis Eugene Hi 69 71 60 66 58 63 68 60 69 69 Lo Cond. 50 pt sunny 49 pt sunny 48 cloudy 43 pt sunny 37 rain 51 cloudy 49 pt sunny 52 foggy 49 pt sunny 50 pt sunny City Florence Grants Pass Hermiston John Day Klamath Falls La Grande Lakeview Lincoln City Mcminnville Medford Hi 61 75 77 65 68 68 68 60 67 73 Lo Cond. 49 foggy 51 cloudy 52 sunny 44 pt sunny 45 mst sunny 45 pt sunny 45 pt sunny 50 foggy 48 cloudy 50 cloudy City Newport Pendleton Portland Redmond Roseburg Salem Springfield The Dalles Tillamook Vale Hi 57 72 66 67 71 68 67 73 61 77 Lo Cond. 50 foggy 49 pt sunny 51 rain 42 pt sunny 54 cloudy 49 cloudy 50 cloudy 53 pt sunny 48 rain 54 pt sunny City Houston Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis New York Hi 89 74 84 75 67 Lo Cond. 69 mst sunny 58 pt sunny 75 t-storm 59 t-storm 56 pt sunny City Phoenix San Francisco Seattle St. Louis Washington, DC Hi 97 64 64 83 65 Lo Cond. 63 sunny 53 pt sunny 51 rain 64 mst sunny 62 rain National Cities City Atlanta Boston Chicago Dallas Denver Hi 83 59 76 89 82 Lo Cond. 62 t-storm 48 pt sunny 59 mst sunny 67 mst sunny 55 mst sunny Moon Phases UV Index Wed 6/3 Full Last New First Jun 2 Jun 9 Jun 16 Jun 24 ©2010 American Profile Hometown Content Service Thu 6/4 Fri Sat 6/5 6/6 8 8 8 8 8 Very High Very High Very High Very High Very High The UV Index is measured on a 0 - 11 number scale, with a higher UV Index showing the need for greater skin protection. 0 Domestic Violence Services fundraiser on tap Domestic Violence Ser- vices third annual bowl-a- thon will take place from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. July 25 at Desert Lanes, 1545 N. First St., Hermiston. Check-in begins at 5:30 p.m. Cost is $30 per bowler or $120 for a team of four. Cost includes three lines of bowling and shoes. Prizes will be award- PROUD TO SUPPORT THE SUCCESS OF STUDENT BUILDERS Happy 5 th Birthday, Kynlee! Energy Trust of Oregon congratulates the Columbia Basin Student Homebuilder Program on a job well done. This unique education opportunity allows students to work with industry experts to design, construct and sell a new energy-efficient home each year. Celebrate your fabulous day with lots of cake and family! We love you very much and think of you all the time. Love, Grandpa and Grandma Powell With technical guidance from Energy Trust, each student-built home meets EPS TM standards for quality, comfort and efficiency. EPS is a scoring system that measures home energy performance, and qualified projects are at least 10 percent more efficient than standard newly built homes. The student-built home in Hermiston is an impressive 25 percent more efficient. Now that’s an achievement worth celebrating. “ We wish you a Great Summer! ” D r. H ibbert D ental 1100 Southgate, Suite 3 Pendleton, OR 97801 www.drhibbertdental.com • 541-612-3707 Sun 6/7 For a closer look at the work of Columbia Basin Student Homebuilders, visit www.columbiabasinstudenthomes.org. Energy Trust of Oregon serves customers of Portland General Electric, Pacific Power, NW Natural and Cascade Natural Gas. 11