MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL HermistonHerald.com WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 2018 $1.00 INSIDE Families wrap up holiday traditions HOPEFUL A Hermiston man looks toward an experimental treatment to slow his scleroderma. PAGE A3 DINNER TIME The Community Fellow- ship Dinner is looking for volunteers to help serve meals on Christmas day. PAGE A4 PERFECT The Hermiston boys bas- ketball team keeps their winning streak alive. PAGE A10 BY THE WAY Sign advertises new athletic club The Hermiston Her- ald offi ces will be closed at noon on Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve and closed completely on Christmas Day and New Year’s Day to allow our staff to enjoy time with their families during the holidays. • • • A banner outside the former Columbia Court Club at 80903 N High- way 395 is advertising the Hermiston Athletic Club “opening soon.” The building has been closed since a fi re in 2016, but former owner Steve Watkinds announced in October he had sold it to a new owner who planned to re-open it. We reached out to the email address listed on the website, www.hermiston- athleticclub.com, and hav- en’t heard back yet, but look for more information in a future edition of the Hermiston Herald. • • • A current display at the Hermiston Public Library features the art- work of Kim La Plant. The Hermiston woman, who grew up in the Ozarks, goes by the moni- ker Ozark Hippie. Also, due to upcoming holidays, the library will See BTW, Page A16 Staff photo by Tammy Malgesini Chet and Deana Hall with their blended family on their wedding day this summer at Rockaway Beach. The couple has incorporated the four gift Christmas challenge as part of their family holiday tradition. Staff photo by Tammy Malgesini Contributed photo Presents wrapped in the same paper don’t have tags on them at the home of Chet and Deana Hall. As part of the four gift Christmas challenge, the Hermiston couple’s family fi nds out which gifts are theirs when they get to the bottom of their Christmas stocking. Shawn Logue plans a family trip to Leavenworth, Washington, each December. Rather than spending a lot on presents, the Hermiston woman said they focus on family time together during the holiday season. By TAMMY MALGESINI COMMUNITY EDITOR anta Claus doesn’t have anything on a Hermiston woman when it comes to making a list and check- ing it twice. Deana Hall learned about the four gift Christmas challenge several years ago on the internet. The idea is to get four presents for each person with a focus on the catego- ries of something they want, need, wear and S read. She’s utilized the method for a hand- ful of years — even modifying it to include a “mom’s choice” for a fi fth gift. After marrying Chet Hall this past sum- mer, their blended family increased to seven kids between the ages of 10 and 26. Deana said the organized plan makes holiday shop- ping more manageable. “Before it was a free-for-all,” she said. “Also, it’s much easier on the budget.” Adding to the fun and surprise, gifts for the Christmas challenge don’t have name tags on them. Each of the seven kids will fi nd out which presents are theirs when they fi nd the piece of corresponding wrapping paper at the bottom of their stocking. James and Jolene Pooley were looking for a different way to approach the holiday season this year when they became aware of the four gift Christmas challenge. “It makes sense,” James said. “Last year we kind of went overboard for everyone. It’s See TRADITION, Page A16 Christmas Express delivers hundreds of meals, presents By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN STAFF WRITER 8 08805 93294 2 After one box brimming with canned foods and a whole turkey, an armful of wrapped presents and a pair of warm socks, everyone who walked out the doors of the Agape House on Monday felt the effects of Christmas Express as it rolled through Hermiston. The annual effort by the Hermis- ton Police Department yielded 500 boxes of food, turkeys, bags of pota- toes and onions, and hundreds of gifts for children ages 0 to 11. On Sunday, the police department delivered the haul to the Agape House, which is distributing the donations to families Monday through Wednesday. Volunteer Ginger Haley checked in families as they came to collect donations. She checked off a list of 350 families and individuals in need, who were recommended by the schools, Department of Human Ser- vices, Head Start and local churches. As families fi led in, the children gravitated toward the pile of stuffed animals in the corner, while the par- ents perused the tables of hats, gloves and stocking stuffers. Each family also got to take home a jar of oat- meal cookie mix, and wrapped pres- ents for each of their children. After collecting toys and gift boxes inside, visitors drove to the back of the Agape House building, where vol- unteers Doug Alvarez and John Car- raher loaded boxes of food into cars. Jan Maitland, an Agape House employee, said if someone was not Staff photo by E.J. Harris See MEALS, Page A16 Volunteer Doug Alvarez loads a box of food into the back of a vehicle during the Christmas Express on Monday at Agape House in Hermiston.