COUGARS TO PLAY 6-MAN FOOTBALL HURRICANE LANE EASES UP ON HAWAII SPORTS/1B NATION/6A FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 2018 142nd Year, No. 210 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2018 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Your Weekend • • • Gib Olinger Elementary dedication M-F throws Broadway Block Party Woman shares near- death experience For times and places see Coming Events, 3A Weekend Weather Fri Sat Sun 76/48 76/54 75/53 MILTON- FREEWATER Staff photo by E.J. Harris Vickie Leonard of Pendleton is one of two wagon drivers that will be giving wagon rides around downtown Portland Aug. 28-31 to commemorate the 175th anniversary of the Oregon Trail. HITCHIN’ A RIDE Cantu Attempted murder added to charges in drive-by By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Michael Angelo Cantu of Walla Walla faces charges of attempted murder for Friday night’s drive-by shooting in Milton-Freewater. The Umatilla County District Attorney’s Office on Thursday arraigned Cantu, 27, on the following: three counts of attempted mur- der, two counts of unlaw- ful use of a weapon and one for felon in possession of a firearm, all felonies; and seven misdemeanor counts of recklessly endangering another person. Court records don’t indi- cate if Cantu entered a plea. His next hearing is Sept. 11. For now, he remains in the Umatilla County Jail, Pend- leton, in lieu of $1.81 mil- lion bail. See MURDER/8A Urban traffic doesn’t worry wagon drivers By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian N eed a lift? If so, you might consider going by covered wagon. The ride-sharing company, Lyft, and Travel Oregon will provide free wagon rides in downtown Portland from Aug. 28-31. The wagon will travel a predeter- mined route from the Oregon Historical Society on Southwest Park Avenue from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. each day. The event commem- orates the 175th anniversary of the Oregon Trail. Two Umatilla County wagon drivers, Vickie Leonard and Brian Cook, will navi- gate Portland streets with Leonard’s wagon and Cook’s mules, Mary and Jean. When Lyft called Leonard in December to engage a covered wagon, Leonard was confused. “I was sure it was a wrong number,” said the Pendleton horsewoman. Turned out Lyft Portland and Travel Ore- gon wanted to hire her and Cook’s company, Wagon Train Adventures, to ferry people in a covered wagon as a way to pay tribute to the historic Oregon Trail. Leonard’s wagon is a reproduction built by an Amish company, though she and her husband Randy have built other wagons with their own hands. The couple now has a fleet of 14 wagons and a pasture full of mules and horses to pull them. Insurance requirements, however, mandate using a commercially built wagon for such events. The wagon includes features not seen on covered wagons travel- ing the Oregon Trail so many years ago. This prairie schooner has roller bearings, hydrau- lic brakes, improved suspension, metal steps and hazard lights. The Portland gig was an outgrowth of another one in 2016. A production company from the Netherlands hired Leonard and two other local teamsters to drive a wagon for an episode of the Dutch reality show “Wie See WAGON/8A “I’m sorry to the buffalo. He didn’t deserve what I did to him” — Raymond Reinke Pendleton man gets jail time for harassing Yellowstone bison BOZEMAN, Mont. (AP) — An Oregon man who said he and his buddy were on a “last hurrah” tour through national parks before he entered alcohol treatment was sentenced Thursday to 130 days in jail for his drunken behavior, includ- ing harassing a bison that had stopped traffic in Yel- lowstone National Park. Raymond Reinke’s crimes drew national attention when at least one Yellowstone visi- Reinke tor caught his interaction with a bison on video . Reinke, of Pendleton, Oregon, pleaded guilty during a federal court appearance in Mammoth, Wyoming, where cases from Yel- lowstone park are heard. U.S. Magistrate Judge Mark Carman sentenced him to 60 days in jail for harassing wildlife, 60 days for interfering with law enforcement and 10 days for disor- derly conduct. He was given credit for 21 days served. Reinke, 55, is banned from Grand Teton, Yellowstone and Gla- cier national parks for a five-year probationary period during which he is not allowed to drink alco- hol. His planned chemical depen- dency treatment is now court-ordered. “I’m sorry to the buf- falo. He didn’t deserve what I did to him,” Reinke said, ABC Fox Montana reported. U.S. Attorney Leo Pico described Reinke’s behavior as the “most egregious” case of ani- mal harassment he’d seen in Yellowstone. The judge told Reinke: “You’re lucky the bison didn’t take care of it, and you’re standing in front of me.” Reinke was first cited for public intoxication and interfering with law enforcement in Grand Teton National Park on July 28. He spent a night in jail before posting a $500 bond. A few days later in Yellowstone, Reinke got in trouble after getting See BISON/8A AP Photo/Noah Berger Hannah Whyatt poses for a friend’s photo as smoke from the Fer- guson fire fills Yosemite Valley in Yosemite National Park, Calif. Tourism takes a hit due to wildfires Agencies from Oregon, California and Washington team up to assure people it’s safe to visit By LORIN ELENI GILL Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — Alarmed by as much as $20 million in lost tourism revenue in July due to vis- itors’ fear of wildfires, California’s state tourism agency said Thursday it is teaming up with Oregon and Washington state to reassure tour- ists it’s safe to visit. The states formed the West Coast Tourism Recovery Coali- tion to remind tourists that the fires have hit mostly rural areas, so will likely not affect their vacations, despite recent blazes that have clogged skies with smoke. “As we shift into crisis recovery mode, competition takes a back- seat,” said Caroline Beteta, presi- dent of Visit California. In a survey by the tourist agency, about 11 percent of 1,000 See TOURISM/8A