East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, January 26, 2018, Page Page 5A, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    RECORDS
Friday, January 26, 2018
East Oregonian
PUBLIC SAFETY LOG
OBITUARIES
DEATH NOTICES
WEDNESDAY
Nathaniel Lee ‘Nathan’ TenEyck
Mildred Burden
Portland
January 8, 1991 - January 15, 2018
Pendleton
Nov. 14, 1925 - Jan. 23, 2018
7:53 a.m. - Cows were on the loose at Northeast 10th Street
and East Diagonal Boulevard, Hermiston.
10:15 a.m. - Hermiston police took a request from a father
to check on his son and daughter. The father claimed two
juveniles are harboring the 13-year-old boy and giving drugs to
him and his sister. The father said he was just at the home on
Southwest Debra Court, and the occupants said his son was
sleeping inside and wouldn’t have him come out.
12:50 p.m. - A caller reported a white KIA Sedona hit a
mail truck at East Elm Avenue and Northeast Fourth Street,
Hermiston, and left the area.
1:14 p.m. - A resident on Minnehaha Road, Hermiston,
reported someone in a red Dodge single cab pickup fired a shot
toward his home.
2:46 p.m. - An anonymous caller in Boardman reported
someone in 2000 or 2001 set fire to her neighbor’s mobile
home and other neighbors helped cover it up and gave her
cash.
4:44 p.m. - Someone dumped three puppies about a month
old that appeared to be a Labrador and pit bull dog mix about a
half mile east of Bowdin Lane near Bensel Road, Hermiston.
6:30 p.m. - When you know you’re in trouble, sometimes the
best thing is to face the consequences. A wanted man called
Hermiston police to turn himself in.
7:11 p.m. - A caller reported someone in a vehicle threw
out “a bunch of garbage” at the Pilot Travel Center, 2115 S.
Highway 395, Stanfield. Police responded but did not find the
litterbug.
7:49 p.m. - Someone egged a house on the 300 block of
North Elizabeth Street, Milton-Freewater.
9:17 p.m - A Milton-Freewater caller reported the theft of
multiple items from the 900 block of North Elizabeth Street.
11:58 p.m. - Hermiston police received a report of five
gunshots from the area of Northeast Fourth Street and East
Elm Avenue.
Warren Miller Co. via AP
In this undated photo, Warren Miller is shown pos-
ing for a photo with a film camera. Miller, the prolific
outdoor filmmaker who for decades made homages
to the skiing life that he narrated with his own
humorous style, died Wednesday at his home on Or-
cas Island, Wash. He was 93.
Legendary skiing filmmaker
Warren Miller dies at age 93
By PHUONG LE
Associated Press
SEATTLE — Warren
Miller, the legendary
outdoor filmmaker who
for decades made homages
to downhill skiing that
he narrated with his own
humorous style, has died.
He was 93.
His family said in a
statement that Miller
died of natural causes
Wednesday evening at his
home on Orcas Island in
Washington state.
A World War II veteran,
ski racer, surfer and sailor,
Miller produced more
than 500 action films
about a variety of outdoor
activities including surfing
and sailing. But he was
best known for his thrill-
seeking films featuring
daredevil skiers barreling
down breathtakingly steep
slopes.
His annual ski movies
served as informal kickoffs
to ski season and became
a rite of passage for the
legions of ski bums and
snowboarders who flocked
to see them at movie
theaters and played them
on video while relaxing
with drinks after tough ski
days.
“Warren’s
legacy
of adventure, freedom
and humor carries on in
the countless lives he
touched,” his wife of 30
years, Laurie Miller, said
in a statement Thursday.
“Warren loved nothing
more than sharing his life’s
adventures and hearing
literally every day from
friends old and new about
how his stories inspired
others to enrich and enjoy
their own lives.”
Miller was born in the
Hollywood area of Los
Angeles, California, in
1924. He grew up during
the Depression and said
his family struggled to put
food on the table.
According to a biog-
raphy on his website,
Miller bought his first
camera for 39 cents when
he was 12 years old. He
used earnings from his
newspaper route to buy
his first skis and bamboo
ski poles when he was
15 and took his first run
at Mount Waterman near
Los Angeles with his Boy
Scout troop.
“I really believe in my
heart that that first turn
you make on a pair of skis
is your first taste of total
freedom, the first time in
your life that you could go
anywhere that your adren-
aline would let you go,” he
told The Seattle Times in a
2010 interview.
Miller played varsity
basketball at the Univer-
sity of Southern California
and served in the Navy.
In 1946, he bought a
camera for $77 and set off
with his friend Ward Baker
in a 1936 Buick Phaeton
towing a teardrop trailer to
ski destinations across the
U.S., including Yosemite,
Jackson
Hole
and
Mammoth Mountain. They
camped in parking lots of
ski resorts, perfecting the
ski bum life.
He once recalled loving
the smell of rabbit frying
in the silent evening while
parked in Sun Valley’s
parking lot.
Miller launched his film
career in 1950 with his
first skiing film, “Deep and
Light.”
He headed Warren
Miller Entertainment until
the late 1980s when he
sold it to his son, Kurt
Miller. Time Inc. bought
it in 2000 and later sold it.
Warren Miller Entertain-
ment It is now owned by
Active Interest Media.
Miller was inducted
into the U.S. Ski Hall of
Fame in 1978.
Aside from his wife,
Miller is survived by sons
Scott and Kurt, daughter
Chris, a stepson, Colin
Kaufmann, and five grand-
children.
MEETINGS
For a complete listing
of regional events, visit
easternoregonevents.com
FRIDAY, JANUARY 26
EASTERN
OREGON
TRADE & EVENT CENTER
AUTHORITY, 7 a.m., EOTEC
main building, 1705 E. Airport
Road, Hermiston. (541-289-
9800)
MONDAY, JANUARY 29
UMATILLA MORROW RA-
DIO & DATA DISTRICT, 1:30
p.m., Umatilla County Fire Dis-
trict Station 23, 78760 West-
land Road, Hermiston. (Shawn
Halsey 541-966-3774)
CASON’S PLACE CHIL-
DREN AND FAMILY GRIEF
RECOVERY CENTER BOARD,
6 p.m., Cason’s Place, 1416
S.E. Court Ave., Pendleton. All
those interested in volunteering
are encouraged to attend. (Matt
Terjeson 503-720-1620)
MORROW
COUNTY
HEALTH DISTRICT, 7 p.m.,
Ione Community Church, 470 E.
Main St., Ione. (541-676-9133)
Nathaniel “Nathan” Lee
TenEyck, 27, of Portland
(formerly of Umatilla)
passed away on Monday,
January 15, 2018, from
injuries sustained in an
automobile accident. He
was born January 8, 1991,
in
Hermiston,
Oregon, the son of
Roak and Sabrina
(Tusten) TenEyck.
He attended school
in Umatilla and
graduated
from
Umatilla
High
School in the class
of 2009. He played
many sports during
his school years
such as football, TenEyck
basketball, base-
ball, wrestling and
track.
After
high
school,
Nathan worked for Rent
A Center locally and later
in Bend, Oregon. He then
began his career with the
Plumbers and Steamfitters
Union Local #290 in Port-
land where he has worked
for the past five years. He
was serving an apprentice-
ship and was just short of
obtaining his journeyman
status.
In addition to sports,
Nathan enjoyed outdoors
activities such as hunting,
hiking, wakeboarding and
had just began practicing
to archery hunt. He was
an active person who took
pride in his physical abilities
and actively worked out,
ran and ate right to stay in
the best shape possible. He
lived his life to the fullest
and enjoyed encouraging
his friends and associates to
be the best they can be. He
was frugal and independent
and enjoyed negotiating for
the best possible deal and
doing his own home repairs.
He will be missed by his
two beautiful pitbulls (kids)
Capone and Callie, who he
spent lots of his free time
with.
He is survived by his
mother,
Sabrina
TenEyck of Bend;
father
Roak
(Toni)
TenEyck
of Umatilla; sister
Kayla
(Mick)
Brandt of Echo;
brother
Trevor
TenEyck
of
Hermiston; sister
Lindsey Powell of
Hermiston; brother
Bruce
Brockett
of
Kennewick;
sister
Randi
(Ricky Leetch) Brockett
of Richland; eight nieces
and nephews; grandfather
Warren “Dale” (Nancy)
TenEyck of Pendleton;
grandmother Leita (Marvin)
Jensen of Richland, Ore.;
grandfather Donald Tusten
of La Grande; and many
aunts,
uncles,
cousins
and close friends. He was
preceded in death by his
grandmother, Gloria Wong
Tusten, aunt Debbie Stolz
and aunt Fredericka “Linda”
Tusten.
A memorial service
will be at 1 p.m. Saturday,
February 3, 2018, at
Umatilla High School.
Memorial
donations
can be made to the Warrior
Angel Message Fund, which
will at the Banner Bank in
Umatilla.
Burns
Mortuary
of
Hermiston is in care of
arrangements. To leave an
online condolence for the
family go to www.burns-
mortuaryhermiston.com
Page 5A
Mildred Burden, 92, of Pendleton died Tuesday, Jan. 23,
2018, in Pendleton. She was born Nov. 14, 1925. Visitation
will be held Monday, Jan. 29 from noon to 8 p.m. at Pend-
leton Pioneer Chapel, Folsom-Bishop. Private interment
will be in the Pilot Rock Cemetery. Online condolences may
be shared with the family at www.pioneerchapel.com
Norma J. Coe
Milton-Freewater
Dec. 24, 1923 - Jan. 25, 2018
Norma J. Coe, 94, of Milton-Freewater died Thursday,
Jan. 25, 2018, at her home. She was born Dec. 24, 1923.
Munselle-Rhodes Funeral Home in Milton-Freewater is in
charge of arrangements.
Laila S. DeMartini
Spray
March 31, 1942 - Jan. 24, 2018
Laila S. DeMartini, 75, of Spray died Wednesday, Jan.
24, 2018, at her home. She was born March 31, 1942, in
Copenhagen, Denmark. Arrangements are pending at
Sweeney Mortuary of Heppner.
W. Jean Thomson
Pendleton
Dec. 16, 1924 - Jan. 24, 2018
W. Jean Thomson, 93, of Pendleton died Wednesday,
Jan. 24, 2018, at a local care facility. She was born Dec. 16,
1924, in Washington, Ind. Burns Mortuary of Pendleton is
in charge of arrangements.
UPCOMING SERVICES
FRIDAY, JAN. 26
BLEDSOE, JIM — Memorial service at 2 p.m. at the
First Baptist Church, 102 S. Main St., Milton-Freewater.
HANDEL, LAWRENCE — Celebration gathering from
3-5 p.m. at New Hope Community Church fellowship hall,
1350 S. Highway 395, Hermiston.
NEUMANN, CHUCK — Celebration of life service at 5
p.m. at the A.C. Houghton Elementary School gymnasium,
1105 N. Main Ave., Irrigon.
SATURDAY, JAN. 27
BRUSE, TOINE — Memorial service at 4 p.m. at the
First Christian Church, 518 S. Main St., Milton-Freewater.
DANIES, MARIE — Mass of Christian Burial at 10 a.m.
at Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church, 78922 Olson
Road, Boardman. Burial will follow at Riverview Cemetery,
Boardman.
SPEAKMAN, MARJO — Celebration of life and potluck
from 3-6 p.m. at the Walla Walla VFW, 102 N. Colville St.
EPA ends clean air policy opposed by fossil fuel interests
WASHINGTON
(AP)
— The Trump administra-
tion announced Thursday
it is doing away with a
decades-old air emissions
policy opposed by fossil
fuel companies, a move that
environmental groups say
will result in more pollution.
The
Environmental
Protection Agency said it was
withdrawing the “once-in
always-in” policy under the
Clean Air Act, which dictated
how major sources of
hazardous air pollutants are
regulated. Under the EPA’s
new interpretation, such
“major sources” as coal-fired
power plants can be reclassi-
fied as “area sources” when
their emissions fall below
mandated limits, subjecting
them to differing standards.
Though formal notice of
the reversal has not yet been
filed, EPA said the policy
it has followed since 1995
relied on an incorrect inter-
pretation of the landmark
anti-pollution law.
“This guidance is based
on a plain language reading
of the statute that is in line
with EPA’s guidance for
other provisions of the Clean
Air Act,” said Bill Wehrum,
assistant administrator of
EPA’s Office of Air and
Radiation. “It will reduce
regulatory burden for indus-
tries and the states, while
continuing to ensure strin-
gent and effective controls
on hazardous air pollutants.”
Prior to his confirmation
by the GOP-dominated
Senate
in
November,
Wehrum worked as a lawyer
representing fossil fuel and
chemical companies. The
American Petroleum Insti-
tute was among the industry
AP Photo/Branden Camp, File
In this June 3, 2017, file photo, the coal-fired Plant Scherer in Juliette, Ga.
groups that had called for
the longstanding policy to be
scraped.
The Clean Air Act defines
a “major source” as a one
that has the potential to emit
10 tons or more per year of
any hazardous air pollutant,
or 25 tons per year of any
combination of hazardous
air pollutants. For more than
20 years, EPA’s “once-in
always-in” required major
sources to remain subject
to stricter control standards,
even if they took steps to
reduce their pollution below
the threshold.
Republicans
quickly
cheered the move by EPA
Administrator Scott Pruitt,
especially those from states
that produce oil, gas and coal.
“The EPA’s decision
today is consistent with
President Trump’s agenda
LOTTERY
Wednesday, Jan. 24
Megabucks
01-07-19-20-30-46
Estimated jackpot: $7 million
Powerball
05-09-11-33-64
Powerball: 21 Power Play: 3
Estimated jackpot: $92 million
Win for Life
12-16-53-69
Lucky Lines
01-06-09-13-FREE-19-23-27-30
Estimated jackpot: $31,000
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 7-5-0-5
4 p.m.: 5-4-1-6
7 p.m.: 5-4-8-6
10 p.m.: 5-6-3-7
Thursday, Jan. 25
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 0-7-3-2
OBITUARY POLICY
The East Oregonian publishes paid obituaries. The obituary can include
small photos and, for veterans, a flag symbol at no charge. Obituaries may
be edited for spelling, proper punctuation and style. Expanded death notic-
es will be published at no charge. These include information about services.
Obituaries and notices can be submitted online at www.eastoregonian.
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.
to keep America’s air clean
and our economy growing,”
said Senate Environment
Committee Chairman John
Barrasso of Wyoming.
“Withdrawal of this policy
means manufacturers, oil
and gas operations, and other
types of industrial facilities
will have greater incentive to
reduce emissions.”
Environmentalists
predicted the change would
drastically weaken limits on
toxic heavy metals emitted
from power-plant smoke-
stacks.
“This is among the most
dangerous actions that the
Trump EPA has taken yet
against public health,” said
John Walke, the director
for clean air issues at the
Natural Resources Defense
Council. “Rolling back
longstanding protections to
allow the greatest increase
in hazardous air pollutants
in our nation’s history is
unconscionable.
Fri - Wed, Jan. 26 - Jan. 31, 2018
Subject to change. Check times daily.
Destiny
Theatres
John Coequyt, who leads
climate policy initiatives
for the Sierra Club, said the
move will lead directly to
dirtier air and more deaths.
“Trump
and
Pruitt
are essentially creating a
massive loophole that will
result in huge amounts of
toxic mercury, arsenic, and
lead being poured into the
air we breathe, meaning this
change is a threat to anyone
who breathes and a benefit
only to dangerous corporate
polluters,” Coequyt said.
1/26-28
Cineplex Show Times
$5 Classic Movie
1/31 12:00 PM
Prince of Tides
Maze Runner: The Death
Cure (PG13)
12:30* 3:30* 6:30 9:30
Hermiston Stadium 8
Hostiles (R)
1:10* 4:00 6:50 9:40
H OSTILES
12 Strong (R)
1:20* 4:10 7:00 9:50
Hwy 395 & Theatre Ln - 567-1556
MoviesInHermiston.com
(R-17)
M AZE R UNNER : D EATH C URE (PG-13)
T HREE B ILLBOARDS O UTSIDE
E BBING M ISSOURI (R-17)
12 S TRONG
(R-17)
D EN O F T HIEVES
(R-17)
T HE C OMMUTER
(PG-13)
J UMANJI
$5.
50
(PG-13)
Bargain Tuesdays**
**ALL DAY TUESDAY, MOST MOVIES.
Check ONLINE for more information!
Jumanji 2D (PG13)
1:50* 4:40 7:20 10:00
The Greatest Showman (PG)
11:40* 2:00* 4:20 6:40 9:20
Credit & Debit Cards accepted
Cineplex gift cards available
* Matinee Pricing
wildhorseresort.com
541-966-1850
Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216