East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, October 13, 2017, Page Page 5A, Image 5

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    RECORDS
Friday, October 13, 2017
East Oregonian
Page 5A
PUBLIC SAFETY LOG
DEATH NOTICES
UPCOMING SERVICES
WEDNESDAY
Richard D. ‘Rick’ Cossitt
FRIDAY, OCT. 13
CHAMBERS, MARY — Recitation of the rosary at 9:30
a.m., followed by a funeral mass at 10 a.m., at St. Rose of
Lima Catholic Church, 2727 N.E. 54th Ave., Portland.
SATURDAY, OCT. 14
GILLPATRICK, BETTY — Celebration of life at 2 p.m.
at the Pendleton Eagles Lodge, 428 S. Main St.
GREEN, CLIFFORD — Memorial service at 11 a.m. at
Heppner United Methodist Church, 175 Church St.
HAMPLE, CLARENE — Memorial service at 3 p.m. at
Central Lutheran Church, 1857 Potter St., Eugene.
MARSTON, CHERIE — Celebration of life at 11 a.m.
at Einan’s at Sunset Chapel, 915 Bypass Highway, Richland,
Wash.
OTTESON, BEN — Celebration of life at 1 p.m. at Pend-
leton Pioneer Chapel, Folsom-Bishop, 131 S.E. Byers Ave.,
Pendleton.
RIKER, KAY — Celebration of life service at 1 p.m. at
Crossroads Community Church, 350 N. Sherman St., Stan-
field.
8:03 a.m. - A man spoke to Hermiston police about a male
harassing him via Facebook.
8:12 a.m. - Cows on West Fourth Road, Irrigon, continue
to trespass, a caller reported, because their owner does not
maintain the fence. The caller also said he was concerned
someone might hit the cows while driving.
11:44 a.m. - Hermiston police took a report of possible elder
abuse.
12:09 p.m. - An Ione resident at Morgan Road and
Lundstrom Lane reported someone shot his drill. He said he
found several bullet strikes. The Morrow County Sheriff’s Office
took a report.
12:25 p.m. - Milton-Freewater police took a report for the
theft of medications from a home on the 400 block of Northwest
Second Avenue.
12:33 p.m. - A woman told Hermiston police she left her
purse in a restroom at Good Shepherd Medical Center, 610
N.W. 11th St., and when she returned to get the purse, it was
gone. She said no one turned it in at the hospital, and the
purse contained her Motorola cellphone and prescriptions
for Oxycodone and an antibiotic. Her wallet, which had her
identification, was not in the purse, she reported.
3:16 p.m. - A Umatilla resident on Monroe Street told police
someone within the last few days took her handgun from her
purse.
3:46 p.m. - Someone stole items from the back of a guest’s
pickup at the Tillicum Inn, 1481 Sixth St., Umatilla.
4:52 p.m. - The Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office took a
complaint about public urination on East Main Street, Athena,
5:35 p.m. - Stanfield police received a report of two females
possibly littering and dumping garbage behind the post office at
130 W. Main St., Echo.
6:56 p.m. - A caller reported possible poaching after hearing
a gunshot and seeing deer flee from private property near the
cemetery in Lexington.
ARRESTS, CITATIONS
Wednesday
•Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office arrested Michael Jacob
Morris, 21, of 430 E. Ridgeway Ave., Hermiston, for fourth-de-
gree assault, resisting arrest and interfering with a peace officer.
Morris has a Jan. 3 trial date for similar charges stemming from
an arrest in July.
Thursday
•Oregon State Police arrested Santiago Lopez Ciprian, 32, of
700 Wilson Lane, Boardman, for driving under the influence of
intoxicants.
Garden City, Idaho
Oct. 17, 1954 - Oct. 6, 2017
Former Hermiston resident Richard D. “Rick” Cossitt, 62,
died Friday, Oct. 6, 2017, in Garden City, Idaho. He was born
Oct. 17, 1954, in Hermiston. A graveside service will be held
Tuesday, Oct. 17 at 10 a.m. at the Hermiston Cemetery. Burns
Mortuary of Hermiston is in care of arrangements. Sign the
online condolence book at burnsmortuaryhermiston.com
Robert ‘Bob’ Johnson
Weston
Dec. 4, 1944 - Oct. 10, 2017
Robert E. “Bob” Johnson, 72, of Weston died Tuesday,
Oct. 10, 2017, in Walla Walla. He was born Dec. 4, 1944.
Munselle-Rhodes Funeral Home in Milton-Freewater is in
charge of arrangements.
Rev. Keith Ervin Krebs
Walla Walla
July 18, 1932 - Oct. 11, 2017
OBITUARY POLICY
Rev. Keith Ervin Krebs, 85, of Walla Walla died Wednesday,
Oct. 11, 2017, at his home. He was born July 18, 1932, in
Castle Rock, Wash. A memorial service will be held Monday,
Oct. 16 at 2:30 p.m. at Christ Lutheran Church in Walla Walla.
Burial will take place at Mountain View Cemetery in Walla
Walla. Munselle-Rhodes Funeral Home in Milton-Freewater
is in charge of arrangements. Leave a condolence online at
www.munsellerhodes.com
Jesse Villarreal
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
Pendleton
Feb. 3, 1943 - Oct. 11, 2017
Jesse Villarreal, 74, of Pendleton died Wednesday, Oct. 11,
2017, at his home. He was born Feb. 3, 1943. A memorial
service will be held Monday, Oct. 16 at noon at Pendleton
Pioneer Chapel, Folsom-Bishop. Online condolences may be
sent to www.pioneerchapel.com
FRIDAY, OCT. 13
EASTERN OREGON TRADE
& EVENT CENTER AUTHORI-
TY, 7 a.m., EOTEC main building,
1705 E. Airport Road, Hermiston.
(541-289-9800)
UMATILLA AND MORROW
COUNTIES BOARDS OF COM-
MISSIONERS JOINT MEETING,
10:30 a.m., Bartholomew Govern-
ment Building upper conference
room, 110 N. Court St., Heppner.
Hanford completes installation of two new nuclear waste melters
By ANNETTE CARY
Tri-City Herald
Hanford workers have completed
two key steps toward getting millions
of gallons of Hanford’s radioactive
waste turned into a stable glass form.
The vitrification plant now is on
two tracks to completion.
First, low-activity radioactive
waste will be turned into glass,
starting as soon as 2022.
Wednesday, Hanford nuclear
reservation officials announced
that the single most-complex set of
equipment in the facility that will
treat low-activity waste has been
installed.
The Low Activity Waste Facility
will have two melters to turn waste
into glass. They arrived at the plant
in November 2010 and workers
recently finished the complex task of
assembling them.
“When operational, these melters
will be the largest operating vitrifica-
tion melters in the world,” said Bill
Hamel, the Department of Energy
project director for the plant.
The second track toward the
plant’s completion is preparing to
turn high-level radioactive waste into
glass at separate facilities at the plant,
with all facilities fully operating by a
court-enforced deadline of 2036.
Construction has been stopped
since 2012 at parts of the plant that
will handle high-level radioactive
waste until nine technical issues can
be addressed.
The fourth of those issues,
requiring a laboratory built at Wash-
ington State University Tri-Cities for
testing, has been resolved, Hamel
said Wednesday.
“It’s a great achievement,” said
Alex Smith, manager of the Wash-
ington State Department of Ecology
Nuclear Waste Program.
Testing in tanks the size of those
that will be used at the vitrification
plant’s Pretreatment Facility showed
that a mixing system will be able to
keep even the most challenging of
the waste well mixed at the plant.
Earlier calculations had shown
that a pulse jet mixing system should
keep the waste well mixed, but
former Energy Secretary Steven Chu
ordered a full-scale test to confirm it.
The pulse jet mixers are designed
to have no moving parts that would
require maintenance after they
start mixing radioactive waste and
become contaminated. They work
like a turkey baster, sucking up
mostly liquid waste within the tank
and then expelling it, mixing the
waste in the process.
Testing started in 2014 at what is
now called the Atkins Engineering
Laboratory at WSU Tri-Cities.
It showed that waste that may
include heavy particles of plutonium
and may have the consistency of
peanut butter can be kept mixed well
enough to keep the treatment system
operating. If some waste settles out it
could pose a risk of an uncontrolled
nuclear reaction or a buildup of
flammable hydrogen.
The remaining four technical
issues are expected to be resolved by
the end of the year.
“The key to protecting the
(Columbia) River is vitrifying the
56 million gallons of waste in those
tanks here at Hanford,” Smith said
at an event announcing the final
assembly of the melters Wednesday.
Construction on the Low Activity
Waste Facility should be finished
by June 2018, after significant
progress was made this year, said
Peggy McCullough, vit plant project
director for contractor Bechtel
National.
Assembling the melters was a
particularly complex task, Hamel
said.
The inside surface of each melter
is a refractory made of a layer of
hundreds of interlocking bricks of
different sizes and shapes that must
fit within a 16th of an inch tolerance,
Hamel said.
When the melter gets hot, the
refractory will expand and form a
seal.
The refractory is surrounded with
a metal shell with a bolt system to
keep it from expanding or contracting
too much, then a cooling jacket and
another shell.
Each melter also has a system of
lids, with one serving as a radiation
shield and the other sealing the
melter to allow a ventilation system
to keep radioactive gases contained.
Within the melters, concentrated
low-activity radioactive waste
will be mixed with glass-forming
materials, including silica, and then
heated to 2,100 degrees Fahrenheit.
The mixture will be poured into
stainless steel containers to harden
for permanent disposal at Hanford.
The melters are 10 times larger
than the melters being used to
process high-level radioactive waste
at DOE’s cleanup site at Savannah
River, S.C., McCullough said.
Each of the Hanford Low Activity
Waste Facility’s melters weigh 300
tons and measure 20 by 30 feet and
16 feet high. Together they will
produce 30 tons of glass a day.
Bechtel National earned $4.275
million, as outlined in its contract,
for getting the first melter assembled
earlier this year. It is due another
$4.275 million for assembling the
second one.
Construction work still to be done
at the facility includes installing
electrical equipment and permanent
lighting and hooking up mechanical
equipment.
When construction is completed,
systems — electrical, water,
mechanical, steam and chillers —
will be started up, first as individual
components, then at the system level
and then facility-wide.
That will be followed by commis-
sioning. Vitrification processes will
be tested first with water and then
with mock waste before the plant
begins treating radioactive waste by
a planned date of 2022.
LOTTERY
COMING EVENTS
For a complete listing
of regional events, visit
easternoregonevents.com
GAMER’S NIGHT, 7-10:30
p.m., Pendleton Recreation Center,
510 S.W. Dorion Ave., Pendleton.
Tournament gaming and activities
for teens. (541-276-8100)
FRIDAY, OCT. 13
SATURDAY, OCT. 14
BOARDMAN QUILT SHOW,
10 a.m.-4 p.m., Boardman Senior
Center, 100 Tatone St., Boardman.
Annual show features the work of
local crafters. Prizes in several age
groups including youth quilters,
mini classes, educational displays,
fabric and quilting supply vendors
and more. Lunch will be available
for purchase. Raffles and door priz-
es. Admission of $3 is good for both
days of the show. (Kathy Hyder
541-571-7009)
BOOK SALE, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.,
Pendleton Convention Center,
1601 Westgate, Pendleton. Mem-
ber’s Only Preview Thursday;
memberships available at the door.
All books $1 a bag on Saturday
from 3-5 p.m. (541-966-0380)
FOIL ANNUAL BOOK SALE,
10 a.m.-5 p.m., Irrigon Public Li-
brary, 490 N.E. Main Ave., Irrigon.
A wide variety of books including
children’s, cooking, history, ro-
mance, westerns, biographies, re-
ligious, mystery and more. A bake
sale will offer homemade goodies.
Proceeds benefit library programs.
(Loa Heideman 541-922-0683)
KRISPY KREME DONUT
FUNDRAISER, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.,
Walmart, 1350 N. First St., Herm-
iston. Stanfield HS band students
will sell the donuts for $11 per doz-
en until sold out. Proceeds will help
pay for a tour to Lake Chelan and
Leavenworth, Wash., in April 2018.
(Deborah 541-240-1513)
STORY TIME, 10:15 a.m.,
Hermiston Public Library, 235 E.
Gladys Ave., Hermiston. (541-567-
2882)
TODDLER STORY TIME,
10:15-11 a.m., Pendleton Public Li-
brary, 502 S.W. Dorion Ave., Pend-
leton. (541-966-0380)
STORY AND CRAFT TIME, 2
p.m., Echo Public Library, 20 S. Bo-
nanza, Echo. (541-376-8411)
PENDLETON
FARMERS
MARKET, 4-7 p.m., 300 block,
South Main Street, Pendleton. Lo-
cal produce, baked goods, crafts,
jewelry, live music, food vendors
and more. (Cheryl Montgomery
541-969-9466)
SPAGHETTI DINNER FUND-
RAISER, 5-7 p.m., Pendleton Ma-
sonic Lodge, 1350 N.W. Carden
Ave., Pendleton. Cost is $10 per
family. Proceeds benefit the Sun-
ridge Middle School cross country
team. (Rod Harwood 541-969-
2129)
VFW BINGO, 6 p.m., Hermis-
ton VFW, 45 W. Cherry St., Herm-
iston. Doors open at 6 p.m., games
begin at 7 p.m. Everyone welcome.
(541-567-6219)
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT BREAK-
FAST, 6-10 a.m., White Eagle
Grange, 43828 White Eagle Road
(between Pendleton and Pilot Rock
on Highway 395 South), Pendle-
ton. Suggested donation is $7 for
ages 8 and up, $4 for ages 5-7 and
free for age 4 and under. (Gail Wil-
son 541-276-3778)
PRE-HALLOWEEN
FLEA
MARKET, CRAFT SALE AND
BREAKFAST, 7 a.m.-3 p.m., Co-
lumbia Grange Hall, 32339 Diag-
onal Road, Hermiston. Halloween
goodies and ideas; vendor tables
$8. Breakfast and lunch will be
available for purchase. (Pat or Do-
ris 541-567-5706 or 541-567-8663)
NONPROFIT BOARD TRAIN-
ING EVENT, 8 a.m.-3 p.m., Pendle-
ton Convention Center, 1601 West-
gate, Pendleton. The Center for
Nonprofit Stewardship will provide
training for nonprofit organizations
of all sizes achieve their missions
more effectively, including topics on
responsibilities of board members,
finances, program evaluations
and managing risk. Free, but reg-
istration is requested at www.non-
profitsteward.org or thecenter@
nonprofitsteward.org. (Heidi Henry
541-230-1036)
NATHAN WEBBER MINIS-
TRY, 8 a.m., Crossroads Commu-
nity Church, 350 N. Sherman St.,
Stanfield. A gifted storyteller and
respected community servant will
minister to the area. RSVP request-
ed for Oct. 14 Men’s Breakfast; all
appearances free of charge. (Mi-
chael Kinlock 541-449-3434)
L’IL BUCKS OPEN GYM, 8:30
a.m., Pendleton Recreation Center,
510 S.W. Dorion Ave., Pendleton.
For students in first-third grades.
AARP
SMART
DRIVER
CLASS, 8:45 a.m.-4 p.m., St. An-
thony Hospital, 2801 St. Anthony
Way, Pendleton. Learn valuable
defensive driving skills, proven
safety strategies, current technolo-
gies and rules of the road, and how
to accommodate for age-related
changes in vision, hearing and re-
action time. Cost is $15 for AARP
members (bring card) and $20
for non-members, preregistration
requested. Lunch is on your own.
(Nikii Murtaugh 541-861-0024)
HERMISTON
FARMERS
MARKET, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., Festival
Plaza, Northeast Second Street
and Main, Hermiston. Local pro-
duce, baked goods, crafts, jewelry,
art, live music, food vendors and
more.
PUBLIC ROSARY CRUSADE,
9 a.m., St. Mary’s Catholic Church,
800 S.E. Court Ave., Pendleton.
Join congregations in cities across
the U.S. for this vigil. Free. (Bernie
Moore 541-276-1358)
AUTUMN IN ECHO, 9 a.m.-
3 p.m., downtown, Main Street,
Echo. City-wide yard sales, side-
walk sales on Main Street and
more. Maps available from Main
Street merchants; $10 for Main
Street spaces, add your yard sale
to the map for free. (Brandi 541-
371-2110)
BREAST CANCER AWARE-
NESS EVENT, 9 a.m.-12 p.m.,
Mirasol Family Health Center, 589
N.W. 11th St., Hermiston. 5K walk,
free breast exams, raffle prizes,
games for kids, rock painting, face
painting and more. Register in ad-
vance for the 5K at www.eventbrite.
com and get an extra raffle ticket.
Free.
FREE FOR ALL, 9:30-10:15
a.m., Pendleton Center for the
Arts, 214 N. Main St., Pendleton.
Free art classes for children up to
age 12. Children under 8 should be
accompanied by an adult. (Roberta
Lavadour 541-278-9201)
YARN CLUB, 10 a.m.-12 p.m.,
Hermiston Public Library, 235 E.
Gladys Ave., Hermiston. (541-567-
2882)
BOARDMAN QUILT SHOW,
10 a.m.-4 p.m., Boardman Senior
Center, 100 Tatone St., Boardman.
Annual show features the work of
local crafters. Prizes in several age
groups including youth quilters,
mini classes, educational displays,
fabric and quilting supply vendors
and more. Lunch will be available
for purchase. Raffles and door priz-
es. Admission of $3 is good for both
days of the show. (Kathy Hyder
541-571-7009)
BOOK SALE, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.,
Pendleton Convention Center,
1601 Westgate, Pendleton. Mem-
ber’s Only Preview Thursday;
memberships available at the door.
All books $1 a bag on Saturday
from 3-5 p.m. (541-966-0380)
SAGE SATURDAY, 10 a.m.-
1 p.m., SAGE Center, 101 Olson
Road, Boardman. Free admission
and activities for families with chil-
dren. This month: decorate a tote
bag perfect for collecting treats any
time of year. (Stefanie Swindler
541-481-7243)
FOIL ANNUAL BOOK SALE,
10 a.m.-4 p.m., Irrigon Public Li-
brary, 490 N.E. Main Ave., Irrigon.
A wide variety of books including
children’s, cooking, history, ro-
mance, westerns, biographies, re-
ligious, mystery and more. A bake
sale will offer homemade goodies.
Proceeds benefit library programs.
(Loa Heideman 541-922-0683)
ECHO CORN MAZE AND
PUMPKIN PATCH, 10 a.m.-9 p.m.,
Corn Maze, 100 N. Dupont St.,
Echo. Corn maze, zip line, corn
box, kiddie carts, pumpkin patch
and more. Admission is $10 for
ages 3 and up. (509-528-5808)
HIP & HANDMADE, 11 a.m.-
12 p.m., Pendleton Center for the
Arts, 214 N. Main St., Pendleton.
Free drop-in project class for adults.
(Roberta Lavadour 541-278-9201)
OKTOBERFEST
PENDLE-
TON, 12-6 p.m., Pendleton Round-
Up Grounds, 1205 S.W. Court
Ave., Pendleton. Live music, kids’
activities, food and beer. $12 in-
cludes beer mug and drink ticket,
$5 for non-drinkers.
COUNTRY HOEDOWN, 1-4
p.m., Milton-Freewater Neighbor-
hood Senior Center, 311 N. Main
St., Milton-Freewater. Live music,
dancing and singing. Admission
$2, refreshments available for pur-
chase. (541-938-3311)
“GET INTO THE SPIRIT”
ARTIST’S RECEPTION, 2-4 p.m.,
Arts Portal Gallery, 508 N. Main St.,
Milton-Freewater. The exhibit, fea-
turing artist Julie Culjak, includes
activities for all ages, treats, a win-
dow decorating contest by local
high school students and live mu-
sic by Jimmye Turner. Free. (Laura
Rose 541-938-5516)
ALTRUSA OKTOBERFEST, 4
p.m., Hermiston Conference Cen-
ter, 415 S. Highway 395, Hermis-
ton. Authentic German meal, si-
lent/live auctions and a raffle for a
$2,000 VISA card. $30 admission.
FALL FANTASIA, 4 p.m., Uma-
tilla High School, 1460 Seventh St.,
Umatilla. Inland Northwest Chorale
will perform a selection of music.
A reception with refreshments will
follow the concert. Free, but dona-
tions accepted. (Salli Ketchersid
541-289-4696)
HEPPNER BOOSTER CLUB
DINNER AND AUCTION, 6 p.m.,
Heppner Elks Lodge, 142 N. Main
St., Heppner. Dinner begins at 6
p.m., live auction begins at 7 p.m.
Silent auction and raffles also in-
cluded. Dinner tickets $15; free
admission for auctions and raffles.
(Melissa Lindsay 541-256-0366)
NATHAN WEBBER MINIS-
TRY, 6 p.m., Crossroads Commu-
nity Church, 350 N. Sherman St.,
Stanfield. A gifted storyteller and
respected community servant will
minister to the area. RSVP request-
ed for Oct. 14 Men’s Breakfast; all
appearances free of charge. (Mi-
chael Kinlock 541-449-3434)
SUNDAY, OCT. 15
PAUL GORHAM MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP BREAKFAST, 8
a.m.-12 p.m., Pendleton Masonic
Lodge, 1350 N.W. Carden Ave.,
Pendleton. Cost is $6 for adults
and $4 for ages 6-12. Call-in orders
welcome. (541-276-3760)
FAMILY BREAKFAST, 8:30-
9:15 a.m., First Christian Church,
518 S. Main St., Milton-Freewater.
Donations accepted. (541-938-
3854)
NATHAN WEBBER MIN-
ISTRY, 10:30 a.m., Crossroads
Community Church, 350 N. Sher-
man St., Stanfield. A gifted story-
teller and respected community
servant will minister to the area.
RSVP requested for Oct. 14 Men’s
Breakfast; all appearances free of
charge. (Michael Kinlock 541-449-
3434)
SPECIAL NEEDS OPEN
GYM, 12-1:30 p.m., Pendleton
Recreation Center, 510 S.W.
Dorion Ave., Pendleton. Free for
special needs children and fami-
lies. (541-276-8100)
KBLU CITIZENS ADVISO-
RY GROUP, 3 p.m., Pridogal Son
Brewery & Pub, 230 S.E. Court
Ave., Pendleton. Share ideas on
format of Pendleton area’s newest
radio station. (Vickie or Gary 541-
566-2744 or 541-566-0131)
FALL FANTASIA, 4 p.m., Pilot
Rock Elementary School, 200 Vern
McGowan Drive, Pilot Rock. Inland
Northwest Chorale will perform a
selection of music. A reception with
refreshments will follow the con-
cert. Free, but donations accepted.
(Sally Ketchersid 541-289-4696)
Destiny
Theatres
Fri - Wed, Oct. 13 - Oct. 18, 2017
Subject to change. Check times daily.
Hermiston Stadium 8
Hwy 395 & Theatre Ln - 567-1556
MoviesInHermiston.com
H APPY D EATH D AY
T HE F OREIGNER
M Y L ITTLE P ONY
(PG-13)
(PG)
F LATLINERS
$5.
00
10/13-15
Cineplex Show Times
$5 Classic Movie
12:00 PM
The Bride of Frankenstein (1935)
Happy Death Day (PG-13)
12:10* 2:30* 5:00 7:30
10:10
The Foreigner (R)
11:40* 2:10* 4:40 7:10
10:00
Blade Runner 2049 (R)
11:40* 3:00* 6:20 9:40
(R-17)
M OUNTAIN B ETWEEN U S (PG-13)
A MERICAN M ADE
Thursday, Oct. 12
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 8-5-8-1
My Little Pony (PG)
11:30* 2:00* 4:30 7:00 9:30
(PG)
B LADE R UNNER 2049
Wednesday, Oct. 11
Megabucks
09-14-17-32-42-44
Estimated jackpot: $8.4 M
Powerball
01-03-13-19-69
Powerball: 23
Power Play: 2
Estimated jackpot: $128 M
Win for Life
16-24-28-36
Lucky Lines
03-05-12-15-FREE-17-22-
25-30
Estimated jackpot: $17,000
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 2-2-3-4
4 p.m.: 7-3-6-6
7 p.m.: 0-2-7-3
10 p.m.: 4-3-0-4
(R-17)
(R-17)
Bargain Tuesdays**
**ALL DAY TUESDAY, MOST MOVIES.
Check ONLINE for more information!
TIMES SUBJECT TO CHANGE
CHECK TIMES DAILY!
Movies in 3D subject to a 3D surcharge
The Mountain Between
Us (PG-13)
11:50* 2:20* 4:50 7:20 9:50
Star Wars: The Last Jedi
Tickets available now!
Credit & Debit Cards accepted
Cineplex gift cards available
* Matinee Pricing
wildhorseresort.com
541-966-1850
Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216