NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2022 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A7 Opening doors: Key Club continues service more than 50 years later By ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Herald The Hermiston High School Key Club’s meeting Jan. 12 was bustling with activity. Members played games, enjoyed snacks and discussed their community work. And they chatted about their club’s past, including how Uma- tilla County Commissioner Dan Dorran was a Key Club member in his youth and met none other than “The Greatest” himself, Muhammed Ali. Hermiston’s Kiwanis Club founded the Key Club more than 50 years ago. Then, as now, the club guided young people to develop as community-minded individuals. At the meeting, stu- dents expressed their thoughts about their club. Meanwhile, past members refl ected on how Key Club shaped them. Hermiston Herald Erick Peterson/Hermiston Herald Members of the Hermiston High School Key Club pose for a group photo Jan. 12, 2022. Today’s club Lilly Chase, Key Club presi- dent, joined the club as a fresh- man. Now a senior and 17, Chase said she is proud of the club’s work in park cleanups, charity fund drives and more. She said she has enjoyed being helpful, an ethic the club promotes. Janet Sexton is in her sixth year as Key Club advisor. She said the club, which has 51 mem- bers, gives students an oppor- tunity to do good works and develop skills. “It gives kids a chance to serve, to be leaders and have fun,” Sexton said. Key Club members in Decem- ber helped set up displays at the Festival of Trees and were serv- ers at Pancakes with Santa. Kiwanis Club President Jeff Kelso and member Tom Ditton attested to the excellence of Key Club members, past and present. They said the Hermiston Kiwanis sponsors both the Hermiston High School Key Club and the Umatilla High School Key Club, providing fi nancial assistance and service opportunities. “It’s a good group of kids,” Ditton said. Dairy Heifer Program kicks off 4th year in Morrow County Erick Peterson/Hermiston Herald Kiwanis Club members Jeff Kelso and Tom Ditton take part in a Hermiston High School Key Club activity at a meeting Jan. 12, 2022. Making community leaders Dorran said he was a member of Key Club from 1971 to 1974, something he told to Kiwanis members at a meeting in January. While speaking with the Kiwanis, he showed them momentos from his involvement in Key Club. Such relics included auto- graphs from boxers Ali and heavyweight title challenger George Chuvalo. Dorran met the pair on a Key Club trip to Van- couver, Canada. The two boxing greats were in town for an upcom- ing match in 1972, and they both made time to greet fans. “They were fun to be around,” Dorran said of the boxers. He said Ali asked him about Hermiston and whether the town had ever hosted a world heavy- weight championship fi ght. The commissioner said the champ was generous with his time. Dorran, a Kiwanian now, was a member of the Key Club when it fi rst began. He said he has good memories of the club, which helped guide him to community service as a youth. “I think Key Club is an orga- nization from which members can get a lot,” he said. “I’m a big believer in Key Club, for sure.” Another former Key Club member shared the importance of the club in her life. While she helped sell Christmas trees late last year, Kiwanis Club member Cindy Middleton discussed her present service to her commu- nity and her past involvement in the Key Club. Among her work in the area, Middleton is on the Festival of Trees committee and the Good Shepherd Community Health Foundation. She was a Key Club member in the early 1990s as a Hermiston High School student and served as a club offi cer. Kyle Kenni- son, a beloved educator, was the club’s advisor. Hermiston’s Ken- nison Field Complex was named after him. “It was a community activity and a way for high school stu- dents to get involved in our com- munity,” Middleton said about the club. She said community service was not new to her by the time she joined Key Club. Her fam- ily always worked for a better Hermiston. Also, she was a 4-H member, which encouraged par- ticipation in community activ- ities. The Key Club, though, cemented her feelings, she said, and it gave her more local work to perform. The involvement in the club had a practical benefi t: the Kiwanis Club awarded her a col- lege scholarship upon her high school graduation. As a Kiwanis Club member for several years, she has returned periodically to the Key Club. She was a liaison for the clubs and a “chauff eur” for her son, taking him to Key Club activities. “I think that Key Club gives our community a spirit of ser- vice,” Middleton said. “It installs in our young people a sense of giving back, and that’s what Hermiston is all about.” Twelve Morrow County 4-H stu- dents and their families started a new journey Friday, Jan. 28, as they picked up dairy heifers from Threemile Canyon Farms to raise for eight months. The Dairy Heifer Program, started in 2019, loans heifers to 4-H students, who care for and learn responsible animal management practices from Threemile Canyon Farms veterinar- ians and nutritionists throughout the year, according to a press release. Dr. Jeff Wendler, Threemile’s direc- tor of Livestock Operations, created and operates the program in collabora- tion with Morrow County OSU Exten- sion Service and Morrow County 4-H. “This program has been so reward- ing for myself and everyone involved from Threemile Canyon Farms,” Wen- dler said in the release. “The parents and students have been wonderful to work with and we are proud to partner with OSU and Morrow County 4-H to teach the next generation about the dairy industry.” Students interview before entering the program, and once selected work closely with Threemile staff on animal welfare, grooming and sportsmanship. Throughout the program, there are sev- eral vet checks and heifer weigh-ins, culminating in August, when partici- pants show their animals at the Morrow County Fair, competing in showman- ship, conformation and herdsmanship. Lisa Wedam’s daughter Isabel has participated in the program for three years, according to the press release, and said it’s a wonderful opportunity to watch the kids grow and learn about their heifers. Claire Lindsay, a fi rst-year partic- ipant, said in the release she’s very excited to be in the program. “This is my fi rst time showing in 4-H, and I’m super excited to start working with my heifer, named Milk Dud,” Lindsay said. Since the program started, 46 4-H’ers have participated, including the latest dozen. After the Morrow County Fair, the heifers are returned to Threemile and added back into the herd.