Thursday, February 6, 2020 • Vol. 135, No. 32 • Oregon, WI • ConnectOregonWI.com • $1.25
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Oregon Observer The
Village of Oregon
Pagenkopf gets board’s nod as interim police chief
File photo by Justin Loewen
Photo by Mackenzie Krumme
Jillian Beatty pets a baby goat right after being weighed. The goats were born at Oregon High School last week.
Cream of the crop Beatty to be honored as one of top state ag educators
SCOTT DE LARUELLE Unified Newspaper Group
W
ith a focus on hands-on learning and giving students opportunities through community partnerships, Oregon High School agriculture education teacher Jillian Beatty has built a reputation as one of the finest educators in the Oregon School District. That territory has just been
expanded. Beatty, in her ninth year at OHS after previously teaching in the Van Buren, Brodhead and Delavan-Darien school districts, was recently selected as the Wisconsin Association of Agricultural Educators’ Outstanding Agriculture Educator for section 5 (Dane, Rock and Green counties). She was nominated by her peers around the state for the quality of educational opportunities in the classroom, FFA (she is the adviser) and work to school
programs, Beatty told the Observer last week. The official announcement from the group will come in June, she said. “That was kind of exciting,” she said. “It looks at your whole lifetime of teaching, so for me, 21 years – what’s your philosophy, how do you continue to stay current and innovative and encourage student growth. (It’s) trying to help your students be the most well rounded.”
Turn to Beatty/Page 12
Caught in time OHS art gallery continues to expand, invites community MACKENZIE KRUMME Unified Newspaper Group
At Oregon High School’s art gallery, Gwen Maitzen displayed 54 framed sticky notes on the south facing wall. Each was decorated with a different creation, like a
Lt. Jenny Pagenkopf and Fire Chief Glenn Linzmeier prepare apple sauce for serving at the OPD K-9 breakfast. The Oregon Village Board recommended Pagenkopf be promoted to interim police chief at its Monday, Feb. 3, meeting in the wake of chief Brian Uhl’s resignation.
Police Commission gets final say on promoting lieutenant EMILIE HEIDEMANN Unified Newspaper Group
Five years ago, Oregon Police Department Lt. Jennifer Pagenkopf was excited to embrace new challenges as a lieutenant. On Monday, Feb. 3, the Village Board recommended promoting Pagenkopf to interim police chief in the wake of Brian Uhl’s resignation. The decision is in the
Inside Uhl investigation finds actions justifiable Page 3 hands of the village’s Police Commission, which typically meets once or twice a year and is scheduled to discuss the decision Thursday, Feb. 13 – the same day as Uhl’s last day with the village. That meeting is set
Turn to Pagenkopf/Page 11
Inside
life-like basketball player, drawings of winter birch trees or a written statement, “expectant space,” — a nod to the silent spaces of art, similar to the silence in musical composition, she said, when no one plays but are essential to the art. On Friday, Jan. 30, Maitzen, a former long-time OHS art teacher, held her exhibition opening at the
Panthers compete in Groundhog Tournament Page 7 Photo by Mackenzie Krumme
Sue McGrath and Ann Kleckner admire Gwendolynn Maitzen’s artwork which is hung on the walls of the Oregon Turn to Gallery/Page 2 High School art gallery on Thursday, Jan. 30.
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