RECORDS Thursday, April 21, 2016 East Oregonian PUBLIC SAFETY LOG TUESDAY 1:25 a.m. - Umatilla police were called when a resident of +LJKZD\8PDWLOODUHWXUQHGKRPHWR¿QGKHUWUDLOHUEURNHQ into. The caller said there was a chair outside the window and her blinds were messed up, and that she was missing clothing, makeup and shoes. The caller also named a suspect, stating that some of the woman’s belongings were inside the trailer. 2:25 a.m. - A resident of South Franklin Street, Weston, reported her house broken into sometime since Saturday. The caller said a padlock was cut from the front door and the house and a shed were ransacked. She requested contact from a Umatilla County sheriff’s deputy. 6:25 a.m. - Goats at a white trailer house on the northeast corner of the intersection of East Punkin Center Road and Alpine Drive, Hermiston, are not being fed properly and are in poor KHDOWKDFDOOHUUHSRUWHGWRWKH8PDWLOOD&RXQW\6KHULII¶V2I¿FH 7:22 a.m. - Pendleton police received a report of a man charging at and attempting to assault another man on Bedford Bridge near Southwest 18th Street. 7:53 a.m. - A Pendleton resident reported a man violated a restraining order she has against him by following her in the area of the Eighth Street bridge and Southeast Byers Avenue the previous day, and was asking her mother questions about her. 6KHUHTXHVWHGFRQWDFWIURPD3HQGOHWRQSROLFHRI¿FHU 9:59 a.m. - A neighbor called in a possible burglary at a vacant house next door in the 1100 block of Southeast Alexander place, Pendleton. The caller said the owner of the home was deceased and no one was supposed to be in the house. 12:18 p.m. - A man on a black and red motorcycle ran a red light at Southeast Court and 20th Street, Pendleton, and was “driving crazy” heading toward Highway 11 out of town, a caller reported to Pendleton police. 12:19 p.m. - A Umatilla resident on Lewis Street came home early from jury duty and discovered someone had broken off a key in the knob of her front door, and she could not get inside the home. Umatilla police responded. 12:23 p.m. - A resident of East Punkin Center Road, Hermiston, reported someone claiming to be from the sheriff’s RI¿FHFDOOHGDQGOHIWDPHVVDJHRQKHUPDFKLQHEXWVKHWKRXJKW the call was a scam and requested a deputy come listen to the message. 2:40 p.m. - A volunteer reported her purse was stolen from Agape House in Hermiston. SP3HQGOHWRQSROLFHLQYHVWLJDWHGDUHSRUWRID¿JKWDW Pendleton High School, 1800 N.W. Carden Ave. 4:01 p.m. - Hermiston Fire responded to a two-vehicle crash on Westland Road where a Chevrolet 4-door rear-ended a stopped Nissan SUV. The SUV was stopped to make a left turn, and a witness said the Chevrolet was going about 50 mph when it hit the Nissan. The driver of the SUV and two children were transported to Good Shepherd Medical Center. 5:42 p.m. - A resident of Chinook Court, Umatilla, reported her home burglarized to Umatilla police. 6:22 p.m. - A resident of East Diagonal Boulevard reported VHYHUDOYHKLFOHVE\WKHEDVHEDOO¿HOGZHUHEORFNLQJKLVGULYHZD\ 6:23 p.m. - Umatilla police received a report of fraud from a couple that was attempting to buy a dog on Craigslist. The dog was in Arizona and the callers reported that “with shipping and everything they are now out $1,650.” They requested contact IURPDQRI¿FHU 6:34 p.m. - Umatilla County Dispatch received a report of a naked person, possibly female, walking in the vicinity of Stateline Road and Highway 11. 7:29 p.m. - Residents of Northeast Douglas Street, Pilot Rock, complained that neighbors are running ATVs up and down the street spraying gravel all over. They also complained about “a bunch of pickups out front.” The caller requested contact from Pilot Rock police. 10:32 p.m. - A caretaker for a home on County Road, Milton- Freewater, reported that the back door of the home was kicked in and the house gone through. The caller requested a Umatilla &RXQW\6KHULII¶V2I¿FHGHSXW\UHVSRQGWRWKHKRPH ARRESTS, CITATIONS •Oregon State Police arrested Bradley John Bettencourt, 27, address not provided, on charges of fourth-degree assault (aggravated assault), second-degree criminal mischief (vandalism) and second-degree disorderly conduct. •Pendleton police arrested Dillon Scott Carter, 18, address not provided, for unlawful possession of methamphetamine. HONORS Sunridge names Bronc Pride students PENDLETON — The following students were chosen as Bronc Pride Award honorees for March 2016 at Sunridge Middle School: Sixth grade: Tianna Arthur, Holly Chambers, Emma Coleman, Matthew Ellis, Ethan Farrell, Kaidence Fine, Sarah Griner, Eliana Hansen, Tony Hernandez, Lennox Lamone, Emily Lozier, Dakota Martin, Keilah Mossman, Payton Neren- berg, Tatum Paullus, Collin Primus, Pedro Rivera, Emily Rodriguez, Izayah Rufus, Caden Rugg, Corbin Sweet, Kaylee Zimmerman. Seventh grade: Nancy Arechiga, Tristin Armstrong, Trayton Bale, Demetrius Baune, Kyle Field, Valencia Fisher, Hope Harwood, Lakiya Heagle, Raiden Lenhert, Luis Magana-Dominguez, Elle Marsh, Shayna Medrano, Charlie McGirr, Kyndra Nelson, Ryan Page, Rooklor Russell, Daryn Sorensen, Johann Valera- Vega, Tucker Zander. Eighth grade: Logan Blackburn, DeeDee Brumer, Gabe Byram, Brit- tany Case, Jade Davidson, Danner Hamilton, Natalie Holton, Anton Hughes, Nyeli James, Katie Kline, Lane Maher, Kylie Moun- tainchief, Joseph Olson- Ruiz, Macy Rosselle, Cody Sherman, Bailey Stowers, Emily Rinehart, Hannah Rasmussen, Theresa Smith, Tanna Stewart, Brad Taylor, Landon Thornburg, Nakia Thomas, Sepp Williams, Andrew Wolotira. HERMISTON Regency takes trip to the movies By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian Residents of Regency Hermiston Rehabilitation and Nursing Center were in for a treat Tuesday morning after the center’s quilting club raised money for a trip to the movies. They watched the new live-action “Jungle Book” movie at Hermiston Cinemas, complete with popcorn and drinks. For many residents, it was the ¿rst time they had been to a theater in years. “I haven’t been to a movie in so long,” Dorothy Snyder said. She said she used to be at the old drive-in theater in Hermiston nearly every week, especially when there was a Western playing. “First with my boyfriend, then he turned out to be my husband,” she said. “It was our special thing to do on the weekend.” Tom Rach said he had never been to Hermiston Cinemas before, but he was excited to go. “I hope it’s an action movie,” he said. He asked why Hermiston didn’t have a drive-in theater anymore, because that’s where he last attended a movie screening. Fifteen residents attended the movie, along with staff and some family members. Kim Homer, activities director for Regency Hermiston, said they had taken residents on outings before but never to the movie theater. She said the home’s quilting club had been selling quilts, pillows and other items they made in order to raise money for the event. The movie theater gave them a discount to make up for the rest, and even ran multiple screens at once so that everyone in a wheelchair had room. “They’re excited,” Homer said of the resi- dents who went on the trip. “They worked really hard to do this.” Page 5A OBITUARIES Marjorie Jean Shankle Dena Lee Emery Boardman April 13, 1939-April 19, 2016 Albany January 14, 1929-February 29, 2016 Marjorie Jean Shankle was born April 13, 1939, at Arlington, Washington, to parents Jesse Willis and Mary (Lauck) Kissinger. She died Tuesday, April 19, 2016, at Good Shepherd Medical Center in Hermiston, Oregon, at the age of 77. She was raised in Marysville, Wash- ington. She lived in several places in Washington state and mainly in Eastern Oregon, ¿nally settling in Boardman, Oregon, Shankle where she lived many years. Marjorie was an active member of the Boardman Senior Center and their quilting group. She enjoyed sewing and loved spending time with her grandchildren. She was affec- tionately known as “Grandma Smorebutt.” She is survived by her children Skip (Chris) Davis, Boyd (Becky) Davis, Chad (Trish) Davis, Tyler Davis, Rick Shankle and Randy (Melissa) Shankle; brothers Bob (Betty) Kissinger and Terry (Kandy) Kissinger; 33 grandchildren; and four great-grandchil- dren. She was preceded in death by her daughter, Dana Davis; sons Rod Shankle and Doug Davis; grandson Gavin Roberts; and brothers Larry and Corky Kissinger. A celebration of life service will be held on Friday, April 22, 2016, at 3:00 p.m. at Burns Mortuary chapel in Hermiston, Oregon. Memorial contributions may be made to the Gavin Roberts Scholarship Fund. Please send condolences at burnsmortuaryhermiston.com Burns Mortuary of Herm- iston, Oregon, is in care of arrangements. OBITUARY POLICY The East Oregonian publishes paid obituaries. The obituary can in- clude small photos and, for veterans, a flag symbol at no charge. Obituaries may be edited for spelling, proper punctuation and style. Expanded death notices will be published at no charge. These in- clude information about services. Obituaries and notices can be submitted online at www.eastorego- nian.com/obituaryform, by email to obits@eastoregonian.com, by fax to 541-276-8314, placed via the funeral home or in person at the East Oregonian office. For more information, call 541-966-0818 or 1-800-522-0255, ext. 221. MEETINGS THURSDAY, APRIL 21 MORROW COUNTY COURT BUDGET HEARINGS, 9 a.m., Morrow County Bartholomew Building, 110 N. Court St., Heppner. BUTTER CREEK IRRIGA- TION DISTRICT, 10 a.m., district RI¿FH+LJKZD\%XWWHU Creek Highway), Echo. (William 3RU¿O\ ECHO IRRIGATION DIS- TRICT, DP GLVWULFW RI¿FH 73120 Highway 207 (Butter Creek +LJKZD\ (FKR :LOOLDP 3RU¿O\ 541-449-1327). HERMISTON IRRIGATION DISTRICT, SP GLVWULFW RI¿FH conference room, 366 E. Hurlburt Ave. M I LT O N - F R E E WAT E R SCHOOL DISTRICT BUDGET COMMITTEE, 6:30 p.m., Central Middle School board room, 306 S.W. Second Ave., Milton-Freewa- ter. PENDLETON PLANNING COMMISSION, 7 p.m., Pendleton City Hall council chambers, 501 S.W. Emigrant Ave. ECHO CITY COUNCIL, 4 p.m., 20 S. Bonanza St. FRIDAY, APRIL 22 No meetings scheduled Dena Lee Emery, age 87, of Albany, Oregon, passed away on February 29, 2016, at Timberview Care Center. She was born to the late Edward Vern Gabriel and Emma McFarland Gabriel on January 14, 1929, in Stan¿eld, Oregon, and was one of 11 children. Dena is survived by her sister Billie Mottice. Dena graduated from Stan¿eld High School before attending Eastern Oregon College of Education where she graduated from their secretarial school. She met her husband, Quenten Lowell Emery, while working at the Umatilla Army Depot. They lived in several cities in California; Carson City, Nevada; Olympia, Washington, and Altoona, Iowa, and Dena returned to Oregon with her two youngest children in 1975. She resumed her work for the Depot and retired in 1993. In her lifetime, Dena met and entertained governors, state senators and various celebrities. She had a very full life. She loved to cook, enjoyed entertaining and playing bridge with friends, family and co-workers. She also loved going on long walks, reading and spending time with her family and relatives. Dena had four children: Rae Ann, 62, La Grande; Rhonda Fay, deceased; Roberta Jean, 54, La Grande; and Roy Allen, 53, Corvallis. She has six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Dena requested no services. The family thanks the staff of Timberview Care Center for their care and support of Dena during her last few years. UPCOMING SERVICES THURSDAY, APRIL 21 FINCEL, NADINE — Graveside funeral service at 11 a.m. at Desert Lawn Memorial Cemetery, Irrigon. MCLEAN, KATY —Memorial service at 1 p.m. at Weston Memorial Hall, 210 E. Main St. Concluding services and interment will follow at the Weston Cemetery. TIMMONS, MARGE — Celebration of life service at 1 p.m. in the chapel at Burns Mortuary, 685 W. Hermiston Ave., Hermiston. ZIMMERMAN, FAYE — Graveside funeral service at 2 p.m. at Mountain View Cemetery, Amboy, Wash. FRIDAY, APRIL 22 EASLEY, ANNA — Funeral services at 10 a.m. at Pend- leton Pioneer Chapel, Folsom-Bishop, 131 S.E. Byers Ave. MEIER, ALICE — Funeral services at 2 p.m. at the Munselle-Rhodes Funeral Home, 902 S. Main St., Milton-Freewater. Interment will follow at the Milton-Free- water Cemetery. ROBERT, JOHN JR. — Graveside services at 10 a.m. at the Milton-Freewater Cemetery. SHANKLE, MARJORIE — Celebration of life service at 3 p.m. in the chapel at Burns Mortuary, 685 W. Hermiston Ave., Hermiston. WINBURN, SHIRLEY — Celebration of life from 1-3 p.m. at Wildhorse Resort & Casino Palouse and Tucannon rooms, 46510 Wildhorse Blvd., Pendleton. COMING EVENTS THURSDAY, APRIL 21 ADULT OPEN GYM, 6-7 a.m., Pendleton Recreation Center, 510 S.W. Dorion Ave. Half-court bas- ketball. (541-276-8100). COFFEE WITH THE CHIEFS, 8:30-9:30 a.m., Eastside Market, 582 E. Main St., Hermiston. Meet Hermiston Fire & Emergency Ser- YLFHV DQG 6WDQ¿HOG )LUH 'LVWULFW personnel and chat about emer- gency services and the upcoming merger. (Scott Stanton 541-567- 8822). WALKING FOR WELLNESS, 8:30-9:30 a.m., Pendleton Recre- ation Center, 510 S.W. Dorion Ave. (541-276-8100). PRESCHOOL STORY AND CRAFT TIME, 10:30 a.m., Mil- ton-Freewater Public Library, 8 S.W. Eighth Ave. (Lili Schmidt 541- 938-8247). BOARDMAN SENIOR MEAL SERVICE, 12 noon, Boardman Senior Center, 100 Tatone St. Costs $4 for seniors or $5 for adults. (541-481-3257). HERMISTON SENIOR MEAL SERVICE, 12 noon, Hermiston Senior Center, 435 W. Orchard Ave. Costs $4 or free for children under 10. Extra 50 cents for uten- sils/dishes. Meals on Wheels avail- able. Transportation arranged by donation. (541-567-3582). PENDLETON SENIOR MEAL SERVICE, 12 noon, Pendleton Senior Center, 510 S.W. 10th St. Costs $3.50 or $6 for those under 60. Pool, puzzles, crafts, snacks, Second Time Around thrift store 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. For Meals On Wheels, call 541-276-1926. (541- 276-7101). TAI CHI: MOVING FOR BET- TER BALANCE, 1:30-2:30 p.m., Hermiston Senior Center, 435 W. Orchard Ave. Free fall prevention program for older adults. No expe- rience needed. Wear comfortable FORWKLQJ DQG VKRHV ZLWK ÀH[LEOH soles. (Helena Wolfe 541-561- 5443). SKILLS FOR LIFE, 3-5 p.m., Pendleton Recreation Center, 510 S.W. Dorion Ave. Includes gym activities and life skills for middle and high school students. Free, but registration requested. (Danny Bane 541-379-4250). DANIEL TIGER @ THE LI- BRARY, 4:30 p.m., Pendleton Public Library, 502 S.W. Dorion Ave. Fun Daniel Tiger-related activ- ities for ages 0-7. (541-966-0380). PICKLEBALL OPEN GYM, 5:15-7 p.m., Pendleton Recre- ation Center, 510 S.W. Dorion Ave. Combination of tennis, ping pong and badminton. Opportunities to compete for those willing to travel. Free, ages 18 and up only. (541- 276-8100). HERMISTON CHRISTIAN SCHOOL OPEN HOUSE, 6-8 p.m., 1825 W. Highland Ave., Hermiston. Visit classrooms and tour new Event Center, view stu- dents’ science and art projects and have questions answered by alum- ni. (Sheila Hardin 541-567-3480). THE ARC UMATILLA COUN- TY BINGO, 6 p.m. doors open, bin- go starts at 7 p.m. 215 W. Orchard Ave., Hermiston. (541-567-7615). FIDDLER’S NIGHT, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Brookdale Assisted Living, 980 W. Highland Ave. Join jam session or just listen. (541-567- 3141). FIRST DRAFT WRITERS’ SE- RIES, 7 p.m., Pendleton Center for the Arts, 214 N. Main St. Fea- tures a reading by Kathleen Dean Moore; participants can sign up for 3-5 minute open mic. (541-278- 9201). FRIDAY, APRIL 22 ADULT OPEN GYM, 6-7 a.m., Pendleton Recreation Center, 510 S.W. Dorion Ave. Half-court bas- ketball. (541-276-8100). WALKING FOR WELLNESS, 8:30-9:30 a.m., Pendleton Recre- ation Center, 510 S.W. Dorion Ave. (541-276-8100). DRIVER’S SAFETY COURSE, 8:45 a.m. to 4 p.m., Ione Community Church, 470 E. Main St. Designed for drivers 50 and older, but all ages welcome. Costs $15 for AARP members, $20 for non-members. Lunch is on your own. Pre-registration re- quired. (541-481-2099, 541-989- 8141, amorter@bluecc.edu). STORY TIME, 10:15-11 a.m., Hermiston Public Library, 235 E. Gladys Ave. (541-567-2882). TODDLER STORY TIME, 10:15-10:45 a.m., Pendleton Pub- lic Library, 502 S.W. Dorion Ave. (541-966-0380). SOLAR CARPORT DEDICA- TION, 11 a.m., Tamastslikt Cul- tural Institute, 47106 Wildhorse Blvd., Pendleton. Speakers from the various funders as well as the Tribes and the Tamastslikt Trust Board and a blessing. Everyone welcome (www.tamastslikt.org). STORY & CRAFT TIME, 2 p.m., Echo Public Library, 20 Bo- nanza St. Oct-May only AFTER SCHOOL STORY TIME, 4 p.m., Pendleton Public Li- brary, 502 S.W. Dorion Ave. Older siblings welcome. (541-966-0380). TONYA’S HOUSE FLOWER SALE FUNDRAISER, 5-7 p.m., Walmart Supercenter, 2203 S.W. Court Ave., Pendleton. Buy a hang- ing planter or a cedar box planter with colorful summer-blooming an- nuals for $17, or call to order at 541- 276-2900. Home delivery available for $3 extra. All buyers are entered into a drawing for a Wildhorse Cin- eplex movie night package. PASSOVER SEDER DIN- NER, 6 p.m., Stateline Community Church, 85440 Highway 11, Mil- Fully Digital Enya 3 Series Hearing Aid Spring $ Special 995 • Enhances Speech • Reduces Noise Call 541-276-3155 Ruud’s Hearing Aid Service Sale price valid on the Resound Enya 3 series. Limit two at the promotional price. No other offers or discounts apply. Discount does not apply to prior sales. ton-Freewater. Potluck dinner fol- lowed by Jewish music and danc- ing. Bring a dish to share and your own drinks. (Doug 425-269-3458). VFW BINGO, doors open at 6 p.m., games start at 7 p.m., Herm- iston VFW, 45 W. Cherry St. “COME SEE THE TEM- PLE” ART EXHIBIT, 6:30-8 p.m., Church of Jesus Christ of Lat- ter-day Saints, 609 N.W. 12th St., Pendleton. Enjoy artwork of LDS temples and have questions an- swered. (Wade Petersen 541-969- 8385). SATURDAY, APRIL 23 LIL BUCKS OPEN GYM, 8:30- 9:30 a.m., Pendleton Recreation Center, 510 S.W. Dorion Ave. For VWXGHQWVLQ¿UVWDQGVHFRQGJUDGH and parents/guardians. Free bas- ketball skills and pickup games. EASTERN OREGON MS WALK, 9 a.m. registration/check- in, All Saints Episcopal Church, 460 N. Gale St., Heppner; walk begins at 10 a.m. at the church. 5K walk and 10K walk or run. Cof- fee and pastries will be provided prior to the walk, and a hosted lunch and door prizes follow at the church. Pre-register and www. walkms.org , by phone at 503-445- 8342, or on the day of the event. 9LUWXDOZDONHUVZHOFRPH%HQH¿WV Multiple Sclerosis Society. (Barb Orwick 541-256-0455 or Taylor Disque 541-256-0295). FAMILY HISTORY WORK- SHOPS, 10 a.m., Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 850 S.W. 11th St., Hermiston. Work- shops at 10 a.m., 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. (Jeanette Byers 541-667- 7046). STOP-MOTION ANIMATION PRESENTATION, 10-11:30 a.m., Athena Public Library, 418 E. Main St. Award-winning animator Tere- sa Drilling discusses stop-motion animation, and the group will make a short animation. (541-566-2470). TONYA’S HOUSE FLOWER SALE FUNDRAISER, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Walmart Supercenter, 2203 S.W. Court Ave., Pendleton. Buy a hanging planter or a cedar ER[SODQWHU¿OOHGZLWKFRORUIXOVXP- mer-blooming annuals for $17, or call to order at 541-276-2900. HIP & HANDMADE, 11 a.m. to noon, Pendleton Center for the Arts, 214 N. Main St., Pendleton. Free drop-in art project class for adults. (541-278-9201). SUPER SATURDAY @ THE LIBRARY, 11 a.m. to noon, Board- man Public Library, 200 S. Main St. Special activities for kids in K-6th grade. Free. (541-481-2665). VOTER REGISTRATION EVENT, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Java Junkies, 1510 Sixth St., Umatilla. Stop by and register to vote, or FKDQJH SDUW\ DI¿OLDWLRQ LQ RUGHU to participate in primary election. (Alex Hobbs 541-571-7503). MOVIE NIGHT @ THE CHURCH, 6 p.m., First Baptist Church, 200 Willow Fork Drive, Boardman. View “Chondra Pierce.” Refreshments available for purchase. (541-481-9437). CATHEDRAL OF SOUND, 7:30 p.m., Vert Auditorium, 480 S.W. Dorion Ave., Pendleton. The Oregon East Symphony will pres- ent Anton Bruckner’s Third Sym- phony (the “Wagner Symphony”) in memory of the late Dr. Al Baxter. Also presented will be Boccheri- ni’s “Cello Concerto No. 9” feature principal cellist Bruce Walker and “Overture for a Comic Book Hero” with the A Sharp Players. Tickets are $20 for adults, $15 for seniors and students and $45 for a family, available at Armchair Books, the 2(6 RI¿FH RU DW WKH GRRU 966-0320). LOTTERY Tuesday, April 19 Mega Millions 09-28-40-57-65 Mega Ball: 2 Megaplier: 5 Estimated jackpot: $89 M Lucky Lines 03-08-09-13-17-21-26-32 Estimated jackpot: $38,000 Pick 4 1 p.m.: 6-3-1-1 4 p.m.: 9-8-8-6 7 p.m.: 9-5-6-0 10 p.m.: 7-3-3-0 Wednesday, April 20 Pick 4 1 p.m.: 1-7-8-4 4/20 - 4/21 Cineplex Show Times $5 Classic Movie 4/27  12:00 PM A RIVER RUNS THROUGH IT JUNGLE BOOK (PG) 2D: 4:40 7:10 3D : 9:40 CRIMINAL (R) 4:00 6:40 9:30 M-F FM/AM DRIVE - IN RADIO SOUND 938-4327 Gates Open at 7:00 p.m. Showtime starts at 7:30 p.m. BATMAN VS. SUPERMAN ZOOTOPIA PG PG-13 STAR WARS: ALLEGIANT THE FORCE AWAKENS PG-13 PG13 Always two movies for the price of one! Fri. - Wed. www.m-fdriveintheatre.com Adults $7, Children 11 & Under $2 BATMAN V SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE (PG13) 2D : 6:50 3D : 3:40* 10:00 THE BOSS (R) 4:50 7:20 9:50 HARDCORE HENRY (R) 4:20 7:00 9:20 Credit & Debit Cards accepted Cineplex gift cards available * Matinee Pricing wildhorseresort.com 541-966-1850 Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216