Nyssa Gate City Journal 68th Year 11th Itiue The Sugar City Nyssa, Oregon Thursday, March 14, 1974 Thunderegg Capital 15C Per Copy Nyssa Bulldogs Prepare For State Tournament The Nyssa Bulldogs com­ pleted their season on a win­ ning note at Vale Saturday evening, and the players and Coach Gerald Talbot will leave Monday for the State ' I m * a BulwtbaU 1 our nament at Eugene. They plan practice sessions Monday Chamber Hears About Port Commission County Judge Roy Hirai told members of the Nyssa Chamber ofCommerce about the possibilities of organi­ zing a Port Authority Com­ mission in Malheur County to attract and aid industry. The meeting was held Wednesday noon at the Twilight Cafewith members of the Ontario and Vale Chambers of C ommerce and representatives from agricultural organizations present. County Commis­ sioner Emil Maag also at­ tended the meeting and res­ ponded to questions, Nyssa High School basket­ ball coach Gerald Talbot, assistant coach Max Britting­ ham and the varsity basket­ ball team members were guests of the chamber, prior to their departure to Eugene and the state basketball tour­ nament. Coach Talbot in­ troduced his players and expressed their appreciation of the support given the team by the community through­ out the season. Chamber members ex­ pressed their Interest in learning more about the Port Commission, and Judge Hi­ rai will attempt to get a state authority to come to Malheur County to speak to the representatives of the three cities. Practical Nursing Class Deadline Treasure Valley Com­ munity College Practical Nursing Department Chair­ man, Connie McClun, has set a March 20 deadline for applications for the 1974-75 class to be trained in On­ tario. The deadline for the program in Baker is April 1. Prospective Baker stu­ dents should contact St. Eli­ zabeth’s Hospital. Ms. McClun said her of­ fice hopes to notify appli­ cants of selections by May 1. and Tuesday in the Eugene area in preparation for their first game Wednesday at 3 p.m. (4 p.m. MDT) against Nestucca. See tournament bracket on page eight. Wednesday noon the Bull­ dogs andcoaches were fruests of the NyssaChamtier ofCom merce at the Twilight Cafe, one of the many gestures nt appreciation that they will receive from their com­ munity and school mates prior to departure tor the tournament. They completed their regular season with an overall 19-3 record, atten­ ded the Greater Oregon Lea­ gue campaign with a 13-1 record. The season’s finale at Vale ended in a resounding 57-44 victory for the Greater Ore­ gon League champs, a fitting prevue of »hat is expected at Eugene. The game was played before a standing­ room only crowd in the Vale gym, with a large crowd Solid Waste Council Favors Incineration The Malheur County Solid Waste Council voted twelve to zero in favor of incine­ ration as opposed to land filling as the primary me­ thod of refuse disposal In the county. A bill was sent to the finance subcommittee to review methods of finan­ cing the capital construc­ tion costs through household user fees. The committee learned that this would ne­ cessitate the formation of a county service district to administer the program. Fi­ nance subcommittee chair­ man, Ralph Cornmefser, set March 20 as the meeting date to discuss this issue. In other business it was reported that the Slides land­ fill is closed and the rural transfer system Is now col­ lecting the refuse that had been going into the Slides dump. One problem with the transfer containers has been Three File For School Board Nominating petitions have been filed by three candi­ dates for school board po­ sitions, according to Super­ intendent W. L. McPartland. The terms of Mark Hartley and Van Ure expire June 30. Petitions have been re­ ceived from Mark Hartley, Harvey Wilmot and Keith Langley. Deadline for filing is March 29, and the elec­ tion is May 7. The school board has also set the School Budget ejec­ tion for May 7, McPartland said. A Public hearing on the budget has been set for April 8, and will be adver­ tised at a later date. encountered the committee learned; this was that hot burn tarrels dumped into the containers has set the trash on fire. There has been little damage at this point, and hopefully residents of the Oregon Slope area will be more careful in the future. The committee also lear­ ned that the Juntura and Harper dumps either have been or soon will be clea­ ned up and blow fences con­ structed. A new site will soon be selected for both the Ironside and Jordan Valley landfills. The committee viewed se­ veral slides of different transfer system.- and an in­ cineration in Ogden, Utah. The next regular meeting of the Solid Waste Council will be held March 21. 4-H Ix*ad< *rship Forum Planned •’Leaders arc Teachers, Too” Is the theme of the 1974 - 4-H Leaders Forum. This forum will be Saturday, March 30, in La Grande, from 9:30 until 3 30 p.m. All Malheur County 4-H Leaders are encouraged to attend this one-day session. Transportation will be pro­ vided from Ontario, leaving the City Hall at 8:00 a.m. Cost for Forum is $3.00 which will Include lunch. Workshops are included within the day’s activities on a variety of topics - such as -records and awards,teach­ ing skills, and eye to eye teaching. Any 4-H Leader who would like to attend, please contact the Malheur County Extension Office by March 25. I from Nyssa present. Friday night at Burns the Nyssa team suffered its only league loss, losing to the Highlanders by a 53-52 score. A completely cold third period, when the Bulldogs could seemingly not do any­ thing right, was their undoing. They fought track from a 10-point deficit in the fourth quarter, and came within one basket of a perfect re­ cord. Box scores on page ten. Soloists To Be Featured at March 14, PTA First chair section lea­ ders of the 6th grade band will be featured soloists at the Nyssa PTA meeting on March 14 at 8 p.m. in the cafeteria. Soloists include: Natalie Mower, flute; Va­ lerie Messick, clarinet, Tonya Atagi, saxaphone, Bob Bass, trumpet, and NealLl- negar, trombone. The sixth grade band will present four numtiers. Also participating will be the sixth grade Flute Trio, including Natalie Mower, Kayleen Rob­ bins and Maggie Soliz; and the sixth grade Trumpet Quartet, with Bob Bass, Mike Blaylock, Rodger Haney and Mike Stan. Following,the eighth grade saxaphone trio, consisting of Donna Oldemeyer, Brian Piercy and Jim Wilson, will present a number. Concluding the program will be the Sophomore Wood­ wind Quartet playing Rondo by J. S. Bach. Members are Lori Miner, Shelley Myrick, Tammi Fredericksen, Kathy Kunkel and Kathy Shell. Hospital Board Election Set Three directors terms of office of the Malheur Me­ morial Hospital District board expire July 1 of this year, and they are Paul Kun­ kel, Jim Robinson andCyrus Bock. Kunkel and Robinson have indicated that they will file for re-election, and Bock has indicated he will not run again. Deadline for fil­ ing is April 7, and nomi­ nating petitions may be ob­ tained from Gale Christen­ sen, hospital administrator. They must be signed by 25 registered voters of the dis­ trict. The election will be held May 7, the date of the pri­ mary election. Friday Is Coffee Day To Help Handicapped Jim Kile will be serving as chairman of the fifth annual Coffee Day in Oregon, to be held inNyssa, Friday, March 15. BUCK-A-CUP to BRACE- A-CH1I.D is an Easter Seal sponsored project carried out by your local restaurants and for $1.00 you can buy a BAC buttonwhichentitlesyou to drink free coffee from any participating restaurant on Coffee Day. Those restau­ rants in Nyssa taking part are Twilight Cafe, Michael's Pharmacy Fountain and Brownie's Cafe. BAC Coffee Day is one of the Annual Easter Seal events which makes it possible for a handicapped child to spend ten days at a summer camp. We appreciate and need your support. April 1 Deadline For Veterans Exemptions Malheur County Assessor. Oscar Bratton, today re­ minded veterans who are 40^ or more disabled and wi­ dows of war veterans that April 1st is the deadline for making application for this property tax exemption. Ve­ terans or widows that have secured an exemption last year and do not make appli­ cation by April 1st will be notified by mail and if they still qualify may make application not later than May 1st accompanied by a late-filing fee of $10. Qualifying veterans and wi- Reid Saito l () Graduate The University of Oregon's Winter Graduation Convoca­ tion was held Friday. March 8, for a class of 777 can­ didates for baccalaureate and advanced degrees. Giving the address for the convocation was Linfield College’s President Gordon C. Bjork. His address was titled "1974 1984 TheChal lenge of Change.” Reid Saito, Nyssa, was among the 539candidates foi baccalaureate degrees with a B.A, in English. WEATHER TWO OWYHEE RIVER CROSSINGS are in the news this week. The top photo shows the new bridge (Hi the Overstreet Road which was bullt by the State of Oregon and accep­ ted by the Malheur County Court last week. It is completed except for filling and paving the approaches, and should lie ready for use by the end of March. The bottom photo shows the temporary crossing and culvert at the base of one of the approaches to the old bridge near Sniveley's which was destroyed in an ac­ cident last fall. Court suits are pending before settlement of damages can be made. In the meantime, Adam Focht, manager of the North Board of Control, said that the North Board plans to start releasing water from the reservoir Friday or Sa­ turday, depending on the inflow of water. Foehl said that high waler will wash out this crossing, and depending on the spring run-off, could put it out of use fol a long time. He advises those |>eop|e who need to get things from their cabins to do so before the Weekend. DATE MAX. MIN . PR EC Mar. 6 42 37 32 38 Mar. 7 29 Mar. 8 47 Mai. 9 45 18 19 Mar. 10 51 28 Mar. 11 50 .13 65 38 Mar. 12 36 Mar. 13 Owyhee Reservoir Storage 3/13/74 590.360 Acre Feet 3/13/73 641,440 Acre Feet Journal Photo UNITED STATES CAPITOL dows will receive a$7,500 re­ duction in assessedproperty value. In the case that the real estate value is less than $7,500 and taxable per­ sonal property is owned the balance is applied to this assessment. Assessor Bratton said, "Last year, veteran’s exemp­ tions amounted to $1,648,- 869.00 of value.” Beef Cattle Field Day Cattlemen will want tore- serve March 26 in their sche­ dule to attend the annual Beef Cattle Field Dav at the Squaw Butte Experiment Station in Burns according to George Bain, County Extension Agent. The program starts at 10:00 a.m. PDT at the Poi­ son Creek Grange Hall two miles west of Burns with a discussion of research pro­ jects and findings in the fields of range forage pro­ duction, feed requirements for fall and spring calving cows, beef production with irrigated pasture, and al­ tering the male calf for in­ creased efficiency. Lunch will be served by the Grange ladies. The afternoon will be spent viewing actual research pro jects in progress at the base operation of the station known as Section 5. Visitors will see work in supplements for weaner calves, digestive stu­ dies. straw feeding, liquid replacement, Buiret as a pro­ tein supplement, and algro- implant studies. Research at Squaw Butte is of a very practical na­ ture. Bain says their fin­ dings can directly affect the management procedures on many MalheurCountyranches Sugar Company Reports Results of Campaign The Amalgamated Sugar Company started its final phase of the 1973 sugarbeet processing season this week when all four of its facto­ ries completed beet slicing operations and two factories immediately initiated their juice processing efforts. Completing their entire factory operations were the Mini-Cassia and Nyssa fac­ tories after 121 and 129 days of continuous operation, res­ pectively. The Nampa andTwinFalls factories have also comple­ ted their slicing operations and are now processing the sugar juice that is annually stored on site during the re­ gular sugar campaign. This final factory operation will be completed in late March at Twin Falls and early June at Nampa. An estimated 7,600,000 bags of sugar (hundredweight) will be produced from the 1973 crop, reports Henry Jenkins, assistant to the vice president of operations for the company. Agriculture vice president Henry Zobell has also an­ nounced that 134,000 acres of beets were harvested and stored last fall for the com­ pany’s four sugar factories. A total of 3,000,000 tons of beets were rece ived, which produced an average vieldof 22 tons per acre, essentially the same average produced last year by the company’s districts in Utah, Idaho, and Oregon. City Council Approves Salary Negotiations The Nyssa City Council approved negotiation with city employees on wagesand benefits for the 1974-75 year at the regular meeting of the council Tuesday evening in the city hall. The council authorized the city attorney Powder Puff Mechanics Course Powder Puff Mechanics will be offered spring term at Treasure Valley Com­ munity College. There will be an organizational meeting Wednesday, March 27 at7:00 p.m., in the Tech-Lab Build­ ing. The class is especially de­ signed for women. The course content includes auto components, tools, safety, starting, carp of tires, belts and radiator, the oil and electrical systems, and trouble-shooting. Upon completion of the course, those women whopar- ticipate will have sufficient knowledge of their automo­ biles to correct minor prob­ lems that may arise when they are driving alone and to avoid costly repairs through intelligent maintenance. to prepare a formal con­ tract, and disclosure of its contents will be made public when the contract is signed, according to City Manager Henry Schneider. Sgt. Joe Rodríguez is pre­ sident of the employees asso­ ciation, and he, Ralph Lowe, Gene Orr and Frank Law­ rence represented the em­ ployees in the negotiations. Cecil Morrison, Councilmen George Coffman and Ernie Metcalf and Schneider re­ presented the city council. Schneider said the negotia­ tions were conducted amiably, and agreement was made after three meetings. The council had final rea­ ding and passed Ordinance No. 441, which gives city officials guidelines for re­ tention and destruction of city documents. County Treasurer Pat Bond talked to council mem­ bers about the investment program which she conducts for public funds. The City of Nyssa has profited by this program, and currently has over $400,000 in bond money invested earning ma­ ximum interest. THE ADRIAN HIGHSCHOOL MARCHING BAND, shown above, and the stage band are leaving March 14 for Reno, where they will play in the University of Nevada, Reno Jazz Band Festival. This is one of the largest festivals of this type in the nation, with approximately 100 bands taking partin four classes. They will proceed to Los Angeles where Real Estate Courses Set Real Estate Principles, the first in a series of three professional classes for which a new film and lec­ ture form has been deve­ loped under the direction of the Oregon Real Estate Com­ missioner’s Office, will be presented by the Treasure Valley Community College Office of Continuing Educa­ tion next term. Registration and the first class meeting are scheduled Wednesday evening, March 27 at 7:00 p.m. in room C-7 of the Admunstration Build­ ing. This class and Real Es­ tate Law and Real Estate Finance, which will follow later, are all approved by the Commissioner to meet the educational requirements for relicensing in Oregon. Enrollment is open to all Oregon and Idaho licensees as well as those wishing to enter the real estate field. For further information, contact the Treasure Val­ ley Community College Of­ fice of Continuing Educa­ tion at 889-6493. Rock Show At Emmett The Squaw Butte Rock­ hounds eleventh annual Rock Show is scheduled for March 16 and March 17 in the Ar­ mory Building at the Gem County Fairgrounds at Em­ mett. A special feature of the show will be Idaho Star Gar­ nets displayed by Stewarts Gem Shop of Boise. This dis­ play has been shown from coast to coast. Dealers from Alaska, Ca­ lifornia, Oregon, Colorado, and Emmett will be dealing in gems, rocks, jewelry, and accessories Aviation Safety Clinic at TVCC Treasure Valley Com­ munity College will sponsor a general aviation safety clinic Thursday, March 14 at 7:30 p.m. in the East- West Lounge of the Adminis­ tration Building. the band will march at Disneyland in a spe­ cial St. Patrick’s Day parade on Saturday, and will march at Magic Mountain on Sun­ day, The balance of the week will be spent sightseeing in the Los Angeles area, and points of interest on the way home. Jim Johnson, band director, will lead the group of 57 students and eight chaperones and they plan to be gone eight to ten days.