GOLF/1B STUDENTS EMBRACE EARTH DAY REGION/3A BUCKS SHOOT RECORD ROUND PRINCE DEAD AT 57 RECORDS/5A FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2016 140th Year, No. 135 WINNER OF THE 2015 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Your Weekend LOCAL CIRCUIT COURT JUDGE RACE • • • Oregon East Symphony at the Vert Auditorium Eastern Oregon MS Walk in Heppner Tonya’s House fl ower sale fundraiser For times and places see Coming Events, 6A Weekend Weather Fri Sat Sun 73/48 66/47 62/40 One dollar Candidates take different approach to the bench By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian The two attorneys vying for the local circuit court have attitudes on opposite ends of the judicial spectrum. Jon Lieuallen of Pendleton and John Ballard of Hermiston were part of a candidates forum Thursday in Heppner. Ballard told the crowd of about 50 he would not coddle criminals. “There are certain people who need to die in prison,” he said. “And I have no qualms about sending someone to prison for the rest of their life.” Lieuallen said most people who go to prison also get out. ³5HIRUPDWLRQQHHGVWREHVRPH thing you focus on, because the person is going to be back (in the community),” he said. %DOODUGWKRXJKFRQWHQGHGUHKD bilitation doesn’t work: “It costs just as much to lock them up, and we’re safe that way.” See JUDGE/9A Photo courtesy Malvin Jamison Malvin Jamison shot and killed this cougar April 11 on the Umatilla Indian Reserva- tion while turkey hunting. Man kills cougar before it attacks Watch a game vs. Hood River vs. Hermiston Doubleheader By TIM TRAINOR East Oregonian Saturday, Noon, 2:30 p.m., at Hermiston Malvin Jamison knew it was a life or death moment. Fox? Coyote? Cougar. As it leaped toward him he pulled the trigger. Jamison, 53, is an enrolled member of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla. He works IRU WKH 7ULEHV DV D ¿VKHULHV WHFK nician and describes himself as an avid outdoorsman. He has hunted nearly every game animal Eastern Oregon has to offer — duck, pheasant, chukar, deer, elk and plenty of turkeys. He has a favorite spot to go for gobblers, a canyon in the foothills of the Blue Mountains on the reservation — that’s as detailed as Jamison will be about the exact location of his encounter. He went up to that spot to hunt turkey on April 11, waking before dawn and leaving the house before his wife woke up. He didn’t tell anyone where he was going — a big mistake for such a seasoned outdoorsman — but hoped he would be back home with a bird in hand before his wife had gotten out of bed. +HJRWWRKLV¿UVWVSRWDERXWD half mile walk from where he left his vehicle, and began to imitate the sounds of female turkeys, a trick used by hunters to draw big males ZLWKLQULÀHUDQJH+HZDVGUHVVHG KHDG WR WRH LQ FDPRXÀDJH DQG KH had set out a fan — a decoy made WR UHVHPEOH VSOD\HGRXW WXUNH\ feathers that can make wary birds more comfortable to approach. He called for about 30 minutes, then walked another quarter mile to a spot where he has had success in the past. He sat under a group of hawthorn trees and started another See COUGAR/10A HERMISTON City seeks input on public art By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian The city of Hermiston is jumping into the art world. Consultant Rebecca Couch of Moscow, Idaho, is writing a public art plan overseen by the city’s Community Enhancement Committee. The public will have opportunities to comment on elements of the SODQLQ0D\DQGD¿QDOL]HG plan is slated to come before the city council for approval in July. Couch said her visits to Hermiston have revealed plentiful opportunities for adding more art to the public square. “They don’t have a lot of art currently, and they have a lot of public buildings that I would describe as blank slates,” she said. Hermiston does have some public art pieces, such as the clock tower and water fountain installation at 0F.HQ]LH3DUNEXWLWODFNV Main Street murals and See ART/10A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Eileen Laramore, a member of the Umatilla County weed board, walks though a patch of garlic mustard, an invasive plant species, while creating containment zones for the plant Wednesday in the Oxbow property in Hermiston. Invasive garlic mustard encroaches on Oxbow site Volunteers work to FUHDWHFRQWDLQPHQW]RQH By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian Eileen Laramore patrols the edge of the Umatilla River along the Bureau of Reclamation’s Oxbow site in Hermiston, her eyes trained on the bright green invaders with the broad leaves and small ZKLWHÀRZHUV It’s already too late to stop garlic mustard from moving in, Laramore said. The highly invasive weed is virtually impossible to eradicate once it’s been found. All they can do is raise awareness See OXBOW/10A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Garlic mustard is an invasive species whose root system produces a toxic that kills off native plant species. PENDLETON Ward 2 candidates put their experience to the test By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian an advocate for the city spending within its means and highlighting his 18 years on the city’s budget Though none are the incumbent, committee. ³, ¿QG ¿QDQFH DQG EXGJHWLQJ the three candidates in Pendleton City Council Ward 2 race have fascinating,” Ehmann said. A longtime attorney originally SOHQW\RIH[SHULHQFHLQFLW\JRYHUQ grew up in the Los Angeles area. ment. &XUUHQW RI¿FHKROGHU &KXFN Ehmann recently made a career Wood’s decided to retire from the FKDQJHDQGQRZZRUNVLQLQIRUPD seat, opened up the race that primarily tion technology. According to the Oregon State covers North Hill, Westgate and the Bar, Ehmann was facing disbarment Eastern Oregon Regional Airport. Information technology analyst when he submitted his resignation to Bob Ehmann is running to rejoin the Oregon Supreme Court in 2003. The disbarment order was the the city council, which he served on UHVXOWRIDFRPSODLQW¿OHGE\WKH%DU IURP Additionally, Ehmann has served which alleges that Ehmann violated a combined 36 years on various city 10 disciplinary rules across several FOLHQW PDWWHUV LQFOXGLQJ GLVKRQ committees and commissions. On the campaign trail, Ehmann See COUNCIL/10A has touted himself as a budget wonk, Bob Ehmann Scott Fairley Rex Morehouse Age: 66 Age: 49 Age: 77 Occupation: Self-em- ployed information technology analyst Occupation: Eastern Oregon coordinator for the state’s regional solutions offi ce Occupation: Retired salesman Hometown: Pendleton Years in Pendleton: 30 Years in Pendleton: 35 Years in Pendleton: 23 Highest Level of Ed- ucation: Law degree, Lewis & Clark College Highest Level of Education: Bachelor’s degree, University of Oregon Highest Level of Ed- ucation: High school diploma Hometown: Whittier, California Family: Married Family: Married, one child Hometown: Spirit Lake, Idaho Family: Widowed, two children, two grandchildren, two great-grandchildren