Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 1994-current, August 31, 2022, Page 10, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    OFF PAGE ONE
A10 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 2022
Busy
Wenholz
Continued from A1
Continued from A1
Adriana Coleman, 17, is a
senior, and was helping the stu-
dents on the tables outside the
high school building.
“As a student leader, I am set-
ting an example for the students
at earlier stages at school to
come back to normal after the
pandemic hit in 2020,” she said.
Adriana is a basketball player
at school and is looking forward
to seeing more students engag-
ing with extra-curricular activ-
ities and seeing the community
attending games.
“I’m a captain in the team
and everybody calls me ‘Dri,’”
she said, “and I plan to stay in
Oregon and major in marketing
at college.”
The district reported 5,482
students registered for the
school year.
Tallman also accuses
Umatilla Electric Coopera-
tive of working with Ama-
zon to take his family’s land.
He and his parents own a
coffee shop in Boardman in
which they sell their fruits
and vegetables.
“Amazon Web Services
has moved in right next
door and has teamed up
with UEC, by using the law
of eminent domain, to take
my parents’ land away from
them. They intend to use the
land to put in a 230 kilovolt
power line to deliver electric-
ity to their business,” he said.
According to Tallman, his
family offered to work with
UEC and Amazon to find
a way to compromise and
benefit both of them.
“They would rather just
take the land for their own
personal use,” he com-
plained.
Tallman said he remem-
bers that around 1994 he
met Wenholz and they used
to play basketball together.
“I still consider Jeff a
friend of mine, but he thinks
he is above all of us,” he said.
Wenholz, who lives in
Irrigon, has served on the
Morrow County Solid Waste
Advisory Committee and
Morrow County Planning
Commission. Additionally,
he served on the Morrow
County Umatilla Chemical
Depot Citizens Advisory
Commission for 11 years.
He has also served for the
past five years on the Mor-
row County Budget Com-
mittee, and since 2019, on
the Good Shepherd Medical
Center Board of Trustees.
He narrowly defeated Me-
lissa Lindsay of Heppner for
Position 2 on the Morrow
County Board of Commis-
sioners in the May 17 pri-
mary election.
Lindsay received 1,287
votes to Wenholz 1,313, with
six write-ins, for a total cast
of 2,606. Wenholz received
50.4% to Lindsay’s 49.4% in
the final tally. He received a
majority of votes, plus one;
the number required to win
was 1,304.
The race did not qualify
for an automatic recount,
despite Wenholz’s thin mar-
gin of victory, county Clerk
Bobbi Childers reported at
the time. To qualify requires
a difference of just a fifth of
1% of all votes, or about 5.2
in this case, well below Wen-
holz’s 26-vote advantage.
That’s just under a 1% differ-
ence. Childers certified the
results on June 8.
THINK BIG SPACE IN PROGRESS
Hermiston School District
also is a couple of months away
from opening its first Think Big
Space in partnership with Blue
Mountain Community College
and Amazon Web Services. The
space at Hermiston High will
provide enhanced classrooms
for students in grades three to
post high school to participate
in interactive learning experi-
ences, grounded in STEAM.
Umatilla High School, the
SAGE Center in Boardman and
the Umatilla Indian Reserva-
tion near Pendleton also have
the AWS spaces that promote
science, technology, engineer-
ing, arts and math.
“At first we will promote ac-
tivities to elementary and high
school students, but we are go-
ing to include middle school-
ers soon after,” explained Katie
Corral, science instructional
lead teacher for the district.
“This way we plan to integrate
knowledge from an early age.”
The space still is receiving
equipment and will have 22
state-of-the-art computers in
the computer lab to increase the
students’ technology literacy
in the areas of coding, robot-
ics, machine learning and in-
ternet-connected devices. The
space also includes 3D printers,
full color plotters to print post-
ers and laser engravers.
John Fisher, Hermiston
High’s engineering and robotics
teacher, said he was excited to
give a tour to seven high school
students who will volunteer as
monitors in the space.
“One of the most exciting
projects is the AWS Deep-
Racer,” Fisher said.
This autonomous 1/18th
scale race car is designed to test
reinforcement learning models
by racing on a physical track.
Using cameras to view the track
Photos by Yasser Marte/Hermiston Herald
Students work on 3D print mapping Monday, Aug. 29, 2022, at the Think Big Space in Hermiston High School on the first day of the new fall term.
Above left: Layla Lucas, 17, a senior at Hermiston High School, learns about the functions of 3D printers Monday, Aug. 29, 2022, during the school’s
lab tour at its Think Big Space. “What I love here the most is to be able to be in control of what I create,” Lucas said. Above right: Students line up
Monday, Aug. 29, 2022, at the administration office at Hermiston High School on the first day of fall term.
Above left: Hermiston High School atudents arrive on the first day of school Monday, Aug. 29, 2022, as they pick up their new schedules and nav-
igate their way to classrooms. Above right: Adriana Coleman, 17, a senior varsity basketball player and student leader, was helping her fellow
classmates Monday, Aug. 29, 2022, with their school schedules in Hermiston High School. “As a student leader, I am setting an example for the
students at earlier stages at school to come back to normal after the pandemic hit in 2020.”
and a reinforcement model to
control throttle and steering,
the car shows how a model
trained in a simulated environ-
ment can be transferred to the
real-world environment.
One of the monitors, senior
Jaxson Gribskev, 17, was de-
signing rooms for an engineer-
“As a student leader, I am setting an example for
the students at earlier stages at school to come back
to normal after the pandemic hit in 2020.”
— Adriana Coleman
ing class in one of the desk tops
in the Think Big computer lab.
“I’m planning to study me-
chanical engineering after I fin-
ish high school,” he said.
Senior Laylah Lucas, also 17,
is a graphic designer and has
been creating products
for the high school in the last
few years.
“What I love here the most
is to be able to be in control of
what I create,” she said.
The school is opening the
Think Big Space on Oct. 25.
Coffee Break!
46. Excessive fluid
accumulation in
tissues
48. Casino
machine
49. Contains
cerium
50. Something
with a letter-like
shape
51. Handwoven
Scandinavian
rug
52. Legendary
actress Ruby
CLUES DOWN
CLUES ACROSS
1. Taxi
4. Cattle disease
(abbr.)
7. Before the
present
8. They burn in
a grill
10. Enough
(archaic)
12. “A Doll’s
House” play-
wright
13. Long loop
of cloth worn
around the
waist
14. Napoleonic
Wars battle
16. Chinese
surname
17. Fragrant
essential oil
19. Follows sigma
20. Model
21. A place with
many dining
options
25. BBQ dish
26. Corn comes
on it
27. A sheep in its
second year
29. Triad
1. Conqueror
2. Kin relation
3. Increases the
30. They __
value of
31. Actor DiCaprio 4. Pack
32. TV’s “Edith
5. Popular nut
Bunker”
6. Dogs’ enemies
39. Sustenance
8. Former OSS
41. Man who
9. Unpleasant
behaves
person
dishonorably
11. Come again?
42. Cause a loud, 14. Beverage
harsh sound
container
43. A way to take 15. Rock forma-
in liquids
tion
44. Gene type
18. Dorm official
45. The Miami
19. The bill in a
mascot is one
restaurant
20. Type of jug
22. Importance
requiring swift
action
23. Outfit
24. Small Eur-
asian deer
27. Weight used in
China
28. A major
division of geo-
logical time
29. Popular
beverage
31. Confined con-
dition (abbr.)
32. Practical
joking
33. Pouchlike
structure
34. Pound
35. Lilly and Man-
ning are two
36. Stopped
discussing
37. Baltimore
ballplayer
38. Candymaker
39. One thou-
sandth of a
second (abbr.)
40. Northern sea
duck
44. Partner to
cheese
47. Cannot be
found
Be our exclusive Coffee
HERMISTON
HERALD
WORDS
AUGUST
BACKYARD
BARBECUE
BEACH
COOLING
ENJOYMENT
FAMILY
FAN
GRILL
HOT
JULY
POOL
RELAXATION
REST
RETREAT
SEASIDE
SHADE
SUMMER
SUNLIGHT
SUNSCREEN
SWIMSUIT
ULTRAVIOLET
VACATION
WARMTH
Break
Reach over 7,000 print and
digital readers each week in the
all new Hermiston Herald
sponsor!
Call
Angel Aguilar
today at
541-564-4531
for more
information
on this
new weekly
feature!