RECORDS
Thursday, July 28, 2016
East Oregonian
PUBLIC SAFETY LOG
DEATH NOTICES
Superish Company Inc. hauling a ish
tank was “all over” the eastbound side of
Interstate 84 near Boardman and almost
crashed into the person who reported the
erratic driving. Law enforcement did not
spot the vehicle.
12:07 p.m. - Pendleton police received
a report of a motor home possibly dumping
waste over the ledge at the historical marker
on the east end of town.
1:36 p.m. - A Hermiston woman
reported her husband was the victim of
a scam. She reported he sent $100 via
Western Union on July 16 to an outit that
promised he won $1,000 and a new car,
and since then they received 40 more calls.
She said they have not sent more money,
and the scammers threatened to kill them.
1:49 a.m. - A Pendleton man on
Southwest First Street again complained
about his neighbor throwing garbage into
his yard.
4:01 p.m. - A man asked to speak to a
Pendleton oficer about someone throwing
eggs at his house on Northwest 12th Street.
4:08 p.m. - A Pilot Rock resident on
Southwest Second Street told police an
Aaron’s Rent to Own truck parks in front
of his house two or three times a week for
10-12 minutes a day, but no one working for
Aaron’s lives there, and the driver does not
TUESDAY
1:14 a.m. - Law enforcement responded
to a report of domestic violence at a
residence on West Highland Avenue,
Hermiston. A person there refused medical
treatment.
5:51 a.m. - A caller on Cooney Lane,
Hermiston, reported a female tried to run
her over and was heading to Hermiston.
The dispatcher noted the caller and other
females were screaming at each other.
6:47 a.m. - A man on Harbor Lite Drive,
Umatilla, told the Umatilla County Sheriff’s
Ofice his property is missing a vacuum,
a mirror, a pump, and ilter system, and
someone “burned up” his barbecue. He said
a woman who once stayed with him could
be the culprit.
7:20 a.m. - Burglars hit a workshop on
North Columbia Street, Milton-Freewater,
and stole several tools.
8 a.m. - Someone during the night
put sugar in the tank of a woman’s car on
Southwest Jay Avenue, Pendleton.
9:38 a.m. - An Oregon Department of
Human Services worker told Pendleton
police a juvenile she was transporting took
off at Trailhead Park on Westgate Place and
crossed the Umatilla River. Police did not
ind the youth.
10:40 a.m. - A truck from Northwest
BRIEFLY
deliver or take anything during the stops.
The caller said this seemed suspicious
enough to at least report it.
4:45 - Pendleton police received a call
about a white GMC pickup driving over
all the mailboxes at a rental property on
Southeast 11th Street.
5:04 p.m. - A caller reported the theft
of his 1968 Sears 12-foot-long boat from
Bartley Road, Stanield. The boat was
on a 1975 trailer, the caller said, but law
enforcement found the trailer’s license plate
did not show the caller as the owner.
7:26 p.m. - Two boys near Marshall
Avenue, Pendleton, threw rocks at vehicles
driving on Tutuilla Road.
7:30 p.m. - A caller told Umatilla police a
man at a brown house on Southwest Sixth
Street grabbed a brown medium-sized dog
by the throat and threw it inside the house.
10:02 p.m. - A woman told dispatch she
was “everyone’s worst nightmare” and had
permission to stay overnight at Umatilla
Self Storage, 2541 Highway 730, Umatilla,
and people were trying to break into other
units.
Ballot Measure 98 could
bring $1M to high school
HERMISTON — Hermiston local Eric
Reise was recently recognized for raising
$100,000 for worldwide disaster survivors.
Reise has been volunteering with
ShelterBox — a nonproit that provides
humanitarian relief internationally — since
2011.
ShelterBox provides emergency tented
shelter and other supplies like stoves,
blankets and water ilters to help families
following a disaster. The nonproit has
almost 400 volunteer fundraisers, and Reise
is one of 13 who have reached the $100,000
milestone.
ShelterBox is currently working in
response to looding in Paraguay and Sri
Lanka, an earthquake in Ecuador, and
conlict in Niger and Cameroon, as well as
working to help Syrian refugees.
Reise is also a member of the Hermiston
Rotary Club.
By ALEXA LOUGEE
East Oregonian
A
campaign
spokesperson
with ballot Measure 98 spoke to
Hermiston Chamber of Commerce
members at Tuesday’s chamber
luncheon.
Oriana Magnera gave a short
presentation about the measure,
which seeks to give Oregon high
schools an additional $800 per
student to support career technical
education, advanced placement
and dual credit courses and provide
assistance to students at risk of not
graduating.
The measure would be funded by
surplus general fund surplus dollars
that have not been earmarked for
another use. Supporters of the
measure want to make sure new
revenue is allocated to high schools.
The measure would not take money
away from already existing alloca-
tions, nor is it a new tax.
Some have expressed concern
that the way the measure is written
would not allow the new money to
go to existing school programs.
Magnera said that the money
could be used for existing programs,
and bolster temporary and short-
term grant-funded programs.
“Instead of crossing your
ingers and hoping the grant comes
through each year,” Magnera said
the measure would provide a more
sustainable funding source.
Schools could also use the
money to expand current programs
by purchasing new equipment,
repairing equipment, building new
facilities or hiring teachers. The
purpose of the language in the
measure explaining how this addi-
Two to complete residencies
at Good Shepherd
HERMISTON — Two medical
students from Paciic Northwest University
of Health Sciences in Yakima will be
completing rotations at Good Shepherd
Health Care System.
The two third-year students, Megan
Hubbard and Leif Sjoren, will work in
family medicine, internal medicine, surgery,
women’s health, behavioral medicine,
pediatrics and emergency medicine this
summer to further their training and help
them determine which area of medicine
they would like to specialize in.
Sjoren is a Hermiston native, and
Hubbard’s father-in-law used to live in
Hermiston.
Medical students performing their
rotations at Good Shepherd will be
introduced by the supervising physician
to all patients, who must consent to any
observations by the student. They may
perform authorized activities only under
the direct observation of a sponsoring staff
member.
tional money could be used was to
ensure schools used the additional
funding to expand services, not
merely put more money in other
areas like athletics or administrative
costs.
The additional funding could
also be used to support dual credit
programs in high schools, such as
the Eastern Promise program. It
would also allow for the hiring of
additional tutors or counselors to
help students at risk of dropping out
ind ways to succeed.
According to 2014-2015 enroll-
ment numbers, Hermiston High
School would receive $1.1 million
in additional funding, Pendleton
High School would get $687,200
and Umatilla High School would
receive $327,200.
Supporters of the measure
include Stand for Children Oregon,
the Latino Network, the Coalition of
Communities of Color and former
Gov. Ted Kulongoski.
The Oregon Education Associa-
tion, which is the state’s teacher’s
union, does not support ballot
measure 98. The organization says
it supports technical education at
the secondary level, but does not
believe the measure creates the
funding needed to support it and
will instead earmark too much of
the general fund money to high
schools. The association also said
the measure takes away local
control from the district by telling
districts to spend money in a certain
way.
Oregon voters will decide on the
measure in November.
———
Contact Alexa Lougee at
alougee@eastoregonian.com
ADULT OPEN GYM, 6-7 a.m.,
Pendleton Recreation Center, 510
S.W. Dorion Ave. Half-court bas-
ketball. (541-276-8100).
CONAGRA FOODS HIRING
EVENT, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., SAGE
Center, 101 Olson Road, Board-
man. Positions in general labor,
sanitation, receiving operators and
heavy laborers for Boardman and
Hermiston locations. Bring a re-
sume and be ready to interview.
Must apply prior to event at www.
conagrafoodscareers.com
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 chil-
dren under 10. Extra 50 cents for
utensils/dishes. Meals on Wheels
available. 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).
SENSORY STORY TIME,
12:30 p.m., Boardman Public
Library, 200 S. Main St. Special
story time for children from birth to
age 4. Free. (541-481-2665).
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).
MAKERSPACE, 4-5 p.m.,
Pendleton Public Library, 502 S.W.
Dorion Ave. Children ages 3 and
up create and experiment with a
variety of tools, STEM challenges
and educational games.
PICKLEBALL OPEN GYM,
5:15-7 p.m., Pendleton Recreation
Center, 510 S.W. Dorion Ave.
Combination of tennis, ping pong
and badminton. Ages 18 and up
only. (541-276-8100).
BMCC POOL COMMUNITY
MEETING, 5:30 p.m., Blue Moun-
tain Community College McCrae
Activity Center, 2411 N.W. Carden
Ave., Pendleton. Learn about
pool’s issues and provide feed-
back on funding, maintenance and
upgrades. (Casey 541-278-5839).
“WOMEN WHO SERVED”
LISTENING SESSION, 5:30-7
p.m., Pendleton City Hall commu-
nity room, 501 S.W. Emigrant Ave.
The Oregon Women Veterans co-
ordinator is meeting women veter-
ans seeks feedback about access
to and obtaining services in East-
ern Oregon. (Liz 971-720-9116 or
elizabeth.estabrooks@state.or.us)
THE ARC UMATILLA COUN-
TY BINGO, 6 p.m. doors open,
bingo starts at 7 p.m. 215 W. Or-
chard 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).
OPEN MIC NIGHT, 7-8:45
p.m., Great Paciic Wine & Coffee
Co., 403 S. Main St., Pendleton.
Call 541-276-8100 to get on per-
formers list.
FRIDAY, JULY 29
ADULT OPEN GYM, 6-7 a.m.,
Pendleton Recreation Center, 510
S.W. Dorion Ave. Half-court bas-
ketball. (541-276-8100).
HEPPNER FARMER’S MAR-
KET, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Heppner
City Park. Food, craft and garden
vendors. (541-676-8957).
STORY TIME, 10:15-11 a.m.,
Hermiston Public Library, 235 E.
Gladys Ave. (541-567-2882).
SUMMER STORY TIME,
10:15-10:45 a.m., Pendleton Pub-
lic Library, 502 S.W. Dorion Ave.
(541-966-0380).
SENIOR CENTER PICNIC,
12 noon, Community Park Ki-
wanis shelter, 1000 S.W. 37th St.,
Pendleton. Hot dogs, hamburgers,
punch and table service furnished.
Bring a dish to share and a lawn
Milton-Freewater
July 7, 1955-July 22, 2016
Debra “Debbie” Amon, 61, of Milton-Freewater died
Friday, July 22, 2016, at her home. She was born July 7,
1955, in Walla Walla. A celebration of life gathering will
be held Saturday, July 30 at 6 p.m. at the Milton-Freewater
Community Building. Munselle-Rhodes Funeral Home in
Milton-Freewater is in charge of arrangements.
Pearl M. Holbrook
Pendleton
June 15, 1923-July 14, 2016
Pearl M. Holbrook, 93, of Pendleton died Thursday,
July 14, 2016, at a Pendleton care facility. She was born
June 15, 1923. Memorial services will be held Friday,
July 29 at 5 p.m. at the Pendleton Seventh-day Adventist
Church. Private inurnment will be at Skyview Memorial
Park, Penleton. Burns Mortuary of Pendleton is in charge
of arrangements. Sign the online condolence book at
www.burnsmortuary.com
Margaret M. ‘Margie’ Seibel Schwarz
Hermiston
Feb. 27, 1943-July 27, 2016
Margaret M. “Margie” Seibel Schwarz, 73, of Herm-
iston died Wednesday, July 27, 2016, in Hermiston. She
was born Feb. 27, 1943, in Hermiston. A celebration of
life gathering will be held Saturday, July 30 from 4-7
p.m. at the Stanield Moose Lodge, 615 W. Coe St. Burns
Mortuary of Hermiston is in care of arrangements. Sign
the online guest book at burnsmortuaryhermiston.com
UPCOMING SERVICES
THURSDAY, JULY 28
FUCHS, JOYCE — Mass of Christian burial at 10
a.m. at Our Lady of Angels Catholic Church, 565 W.
Hermiston Ave., Hermiston. Burial will follow in the
Hermiston Cemetery.
SALAS GARCIA, EDUARDO JR. — Recitation of
the rosary at 7 p.m. in the chapel at Burns Mortuary, 685
W. Hermiston Ave., Hermiston.
FRIDAY, JULY 29
CLARKSON, MARVIN — Funeral service at
10 a.m. at Attrell’s Funeral Chapel, 207 Villa Road,
Newberg.
HERRERA, RUBEN — Funeral service at 10 a.m.
at Faith Presbyterian Church, 1005 S.E. Ninth St., Herm-
iston. Burial will follow at the Hermiston Cemetery.
HOLBROOK, PEARL — Memorial services at the
Pendleton Seventh-day Adventist Church, 1401 S.W.
Goodwin Place.
SALAS GARCIA, EDUARDO JR. — Mass of
Christian burial at 1 p.m. at Our Lady of Angels Catholic
Church, 565 W. Hermiston Ave., Hermiston. Burial will
follow at the Hermiston Cemetery.
OBITUARY POLICY
The East Oregonian publishes paid obituaries. The obituary can in-
clude small photos and, for veterans, a lag 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 ofice.
For more information, call 541-966-0818 or 1-800-522-0255, ext. 221.
MEETINGS
THURSDAY, JULY 28
BUTTER CREEK IRRIGA-
TION DISTRICT, 10 a.m., dis-
trict ofice, 73120 Highway 207
(Butter Creek Highway), Echo.
(William Porily 541-449-1327).
ECHO IRRIGATION DIS-
LOTTERY
COMING EVENTS
THURSDAY, JULY 28
Debra Rae ‘Debbie’ Amon
ARRESTS, CITATIONS
•Umatilla County Sheriff’s Ofice arrested
Candelario Gutirrez, 29, no address
provided, for felony fourth-degree assault.
HERMISTON
Hermiston volunteer
recognized at national level
Tuesday, July 26
chair. All ages welcome. (541-276-
7101).
PENDLETON
FARMERS
MARKET, 4 p.m. to dusk, 300
block South Main Street, Pendle-
ton. Browse fresh produce, meats,
baked goods and plants, locally
crafted jewelry and items for the
home. EBT, debit and credit cards
welcome. (pendletonfarmersmar-
ket.net).
VFW BINGO, doors open at 6
p.m., games start at 7 p.m., Herm-
iston VFW, 45 W. Cherry St.
MOVIES IN THE PARK, dusk,
McKenzie Park, 320 S. First St.,
Hermiston. Family-friendly movie.
Bring blankets, chairs and snacks.
SATURDAY, JULY 30
IRRIGON
WATERMELON
FESTIVAL, 6:30 a.m. to midnight,
Irrigon Marina Park. Breakfast
from 6:30-9:30 a.m., parade at 10
a.m., entertainment includes live
music, rafles, children’s games,
food and craft vendors, water
slide, car show, Morrow County
Sheriff boat rides and street dance
from 9 p.m. to midnight.
HERMISTON’S OWN FARM-
ERS MARKET, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
McKenzie Park, 300 S. First St.,
Hermiston. Food, crafts, live mu-
sic, art.
LIL BUCKS OPEN GYM,
8:30-9:30 a.m., Pendleton Rec-
reation Center, 510 S.W. Dorion
Ave. For students in irst and sec-
ond grade and parents/guardians.
Free basketball skills and pickup
games.
PARKING LOT SALE, 8:30-11
a.m., Agape House, 500 W. Harp-
er Road, Hermiston. Clothing 3
for $1, furniture priced as marked,
knick-knacks you name the price.
(Dave 541-567-8774).
FREE FOR ALL, 9:30-10:15
a.m. Pendleton Center for the Arts,
214 N. Main St., Pendleton. Fami-
ly art experience for children up to
age 12. Children under 8 should
be accompanied by an adult. (541-
278-9201).
FAMILY HISTORY WORK-
SHOPS, 10 a.m., Church of Je-
sus Christ of Latter-day Saints,
850 S.W. 11th St., Hermiston.
20-minute workshops on the hour.
(Stephanie Blackburn 541-567-
6251).
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).
MASSIVE MONKEES, 4 p.m.
to midnight, Wildhorse Resort &
Casino, 46510 Wildhorse Blvd.,
Pendleton. Seattle hip hop/break-
dance troupe performs ive times
every hour throughout casino.
VANILLA ICE/MORRIS DAY
& THE TIME IN CONCERT, 6 p.m.
gates open, 8 p.m. concert be-
gins, Wildhorse Resort & Casino
outdoor arena, 46510 Wildhorse
Blvd., Pendleton. Food vendors
and no-host bar available. Tickets
are $29 for lawn seating, $49 for
Gold seating and $59 for Platinum
seating, available at Wildhorse gift
shop or www.wildhorseresort.com
MOVIES IN THE PARK, dusk,
Community Park, 1000 S.W. 37th
St., Pendleton. Family-friendly
movie. Concessions available for
purchase.
———
The EO publishes a list of com-
ing events as space allows. It’s
posted weekly at www.eastorego-
nian.com. All items are assumed
free, nonproit and open to the pub-
lic unless otherwise noted. Coming
events items should be submitted
well in advance to calendar c/o
East Oregonian, 211 S.E. Byers
Ave., Pendleton, OR 97801, 333 E.
Main St., Hermiston, OR 97838 or
community@eastoregonian.com.
Mega Millions
01-04-31-36-54
Mega Ball: 9
Megaplier: 3
Estimated jackpot: $15
million
Lucky Lines
02-08-12-13-FREE-19-23-
27-30
Estimated jackpot:
$35,000
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 2-4-1-2
4 p.m.: 5-6-1-3
7 p.m.: 0-3-5-8
10 p.m.: 0-4-3-9
Wednesday, July 27
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 3-1-8-1
938-4327
Gates Open
GATES
OPEN at
AT 7:00
7:00 p.m.
P.M.
Showtime starts at 7:30 p.m.
Shows playing Friday July 29
thru Wed August 3
ZOOTOPIA
GHOSTBUSTERS
PG
(PG13)
STAR WARS:
STAR
TREK AWAKENS
BEYOND
THE FORCE
(PG13)
PG13
Always
two two
movies
for the for
price
Always
movies
of one!
the price
of one!
Fri. - Wed.
www.m-fdriveintheatre.com
Adults $7, Children 11 & Under $2
Memorial Service for
Ruth Hughes
Pendleton Baptist Church
3202 SW Nye Ave
FRIDAY, JULY 29
EASTERN
OREGON
TRADE & EVENTS CENTER
AUTHORITY BOARD, 7 a.m.,
EOTEC main building, 1705 E.
Airport Road, Hermiston.
TWO
HOURS
every
paid off
my credit
7/28
card debt.
Cineplex Show Times
$5 Classic Movie
8/3 12:00 PM
THE SANDLOT
Ice Age: Collision Course (PG)
3D: 9:30
2D: 4:40 7:10
Star Trek Beyond (PG13)
3D: 4:20 9:40
2D: 7:00
The Secret Life of Pets (PG)
4:30
The Legend of Tarzan (PG13)
5:00 7:30 10:00
Jason Bourne (R)
7:00 10:00
July 28, 2016 • 2:00 PM
TRICT, 10:30 a.m., district
ofice, 73120 Highway 207
(Butter Creek Highway), Echo.
(William Porily 541-449-1327).
SALVATION ARMY ADVI-
SORY BOARD, 12 noon, 150
S.E. Emigrant Ave., Pendleton.
LOWER UMATILLA BA-
SIN GROUNDWATER MAN-
AGEMENT COMMITTEE, 1
p.m., Stafford Hansell Gov-
ernment Center, 915 S.E. Co-
lumbia Drive, Hermiston. Scott
Fairley with Greater Eastern
Oregon Solutions will speak
about the program and a pos-
sible partnership. (Janet 541-
676-5452).
UMATILLA
COUNTY
PLANNING
COMMISSION,
6:30 p.m., Umatilla County
Justice Center, 4700 N.W. Pi-
oneer Place, Pendleton.
morning
Ghostbusters (PG13)
4:50 7:20 9:50
M-F FM/AM
DRIVE
- IN
RADIO SOUND
Page 5A
Credit & Debit Cards accepted
Cineplex gift cards available
* Matinee Pricing
wildhorseresort.com
541-966-1850
Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216
Become an
East Oregonian
Carrier.
211 SE Byers Ave.
Pendleton
or call:
541-276-2211
1-800-522-0255