NEWS Wednesday, december 15, 2021 HermIsTOnHeraLd.cOm • A9 Knowledge Bowl team readies for first competition of the year By ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Herald Take the number of legs on Santa’s reindeer from the number of geese a-laying in the entire song “The 12 Days of Christmas,” and what is the answer? If you answered that the answer is six, you might be a good fit for Hermiston High School’s Knowledge Bowl team. Of course, you would also have to be a HHS student. Big things are happening for Hermiston’s Knowledge Bowl bunch, according to John Lauck. Lauck, a retired HHS teacher, is the school’s current Knowledge Bowl team co-advisor. He works with Maggie Hughes-Boyd, fellow co-advisor and high school counselor. Their team competes against teams from Umatilla, Echo, Helix and Stanfield in a local Oregon league. Pilot Rock and a few Washington schools may soon be compet- ing against Hermiston, too. The big news, Lauck said, is that the team is very large this year. The team currently John Lauck/Contributed photo Hermiston High School students Dillon Herron, Joey Gerguson and Gavin Doherty pose for a photo on Nov. 17, 2021, during a Knowledge Bowl meet at Echo High School. Ferguson, the team captain, is a senior, as is Doherty. Herron is a junior. boasts at least 17 students who appear at practices, he said. He said this is enough students to form four teams and is the largest group he can remember. Schools will convene for a competition Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2022, 4 p.m. at Hermiston High School, 600 S. First St. At the competition, there will be three rounds of 50 ques- tions. Teams, each with three to five individuals, will be asked questions. When they have an answer, they will hit a buzzer and respond. Questions are difficult, he said, and they can be on many different topics, including math, history, current events, art, astronomy and biology. A dinner break is sched- uled for the kids after round two. After dinner, the teams compete for a third round, then a final for the top three teams. He said the kids seemed to enjoy the last meet, which took place in Echo on Nov. 17. Hermiston teams took first and third places at that meet, which was the school’s first Knowledge Bowl meet of 2021. It was nice to have this meet, the advisor said, as the previous meet was in 2020. The 2020 meet was the only meet that year, a small com- petition in Echo that included one Hermiston team and two Echo teams. This year’s team includes both experienced and new competitors, he said. Among the competitors are three seniors and a handful of promising young freshmen. He said he expects them to do well, depending on the other teams that appear at future meets. Lauck said he is hope- ful that his kids can face off against bigger schools in Washington. “Some of them are just outstanding,” he said of the Washington teams, but he added that the Hermiston students are good, too, and the competition should be interesting. Historically, he said, Hermiston High performs well at local meets. This is the way it should be, Lauck said, as Hermiston is a com- paratively large school. Echo, though, is a competitive team that “should be hard to beat.” Helix, too, has had good teams. “You’d be amazed what these kids know, especially when they work as a group,” Lauck said. Heppner wheat farmer takes seat on State Board of Agriculture eric Orem says he is not going into the position with a set agenda By ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Herald Eric Orem of Heppner said he hopes his experi- ences and personal story will prove to be a boon as he joins the State Board of Agriculture. “I felt that with the board experience that I have,” he said, “having served on co-op and commod- ity group boards, that I can bring something, maybe a different perspective to the board of ag.” Orem owns and oper- ates a diversified dryland wheat, hay and cattle farm- ing operation in Heppner. Gov. Kate Brown recently appointed him to the board. His four-year term began immediately, according to a press release Wednesday, Dec. 8, from the governor’s office. The state ag board advises the Oregon Depart- ment of Agriculture on pol- icy issues, develops rec- ommendations on key agricultural issues and provides advocacy of the state’s agriculture indus- try in general. Orem, who grew up in Morrow County, said he is excited for these challenges and enthusiastic about joining this 12-mem- ber board. He is a past president of all through high school. the Oregon Wheat Grow- “From a young age, I ers League and said peo- had a passion for agricul- ple from the league encour- ture, but I never thought I aged him to “throw his would get to be a part of it name into the hat” for the or own my own operation,” agriculture board appoint- he said. “It just wasn’t in ment. He applied the cards.” for the position, and He was told that he said he was a lit- farmer owners had tle surprised to be to either inherit their selected. He also farms or marry into expressed feeling them, he said. humbled as a result. “I don’t know if Born in Ore- that is true, but it is gon City but raised Orem tough,” Orem said. in Ione, Orem was After his high no stranger to agricultural school graduation, he work. His grandfather had attended and graduated a small farm and his father from Blue Mountain Com- worked for a wheat and cat- munity College in Pendle- tle ranch. As he got older, ton. Then he started work- he graduated high school, ing for Les Schwab Tire having worked for farmers Center, and “moved around in management,” he said. After being away from the area for nine years, an old employer contacted him. One of his old bosses, who had no children of his own, told Orem he was get- ting ready to retire, he said, and he offered Orem the chance to lease his farm. It was 2001, and Orem said he was thrilled for the opportunity to become the farmer he had always dreamed of being. He took the offer and he relocated his young family. “From there, we’ve grown,” Orem said. He picked up other leases and started doing custom seeding and spray- ing for neighboring farms. Orem grows hay to feed his cows. He also sells hay to others. He farms 7,000 acres of dryland wheat in the Lexington area and has 100 head of cattle. “Oregon agriculture has been good to me,” he said. He said he thinks by sharing his personal suc- cess story and network- ing he was able to gain the attention of the state board. In becoming a part of the board, he said he hopes he can do good work. He said he wanted to give back to the industry that has given much to him during the past 20 years. “I am not going into it with a set agenda,” he said. “I’m hoping to help guide agriculture, not signifi- cantly change it.” 33 rd AN N UA L LIGHT UP A LIFE CHOOSE ANY PHONE ANY BRAND FUNDRAISER FOR FREE Vange John Memorial Hospice Invites the community to support your local hospice through this fundraiser which takes place during the month of December. Your contribution to Vange John Memorial Hospice will illuminate a symbolic light in a window display area provided by Victory Baptist Church on Main Street. You may dedicate your light in honor of someone you admire or in memory of someone you miss. All memorials and honoree names received during the campaign will be read January 9, 2022 at 6:00 p.m. on our local radio station, KOHU 1360 AM and will be shared on Good Shepherd Health Care System’s Facebook page. An MP3 recording is available upon request. A meaningful gift, your contribution will help you celebrate the life of loved ones during the holiday season and help us meet the needs of our hospice patients and their families all year long. Join us for the Light Up A Life Memorial/Honoree Reading of the Names Broadcast on KOHU 1360 AM or @gshcsnews January 9, 2022 | 6:00 p.m. Plus, *Also, join us this spring for a Community Memorial Service in the park! 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