RECORDS Wednesday, June 19, 2019 East Oregonian A5 PUBLIC SAFETY OBITUARIES DEATH NOTICES MONDAY Leo Thaut Juanita Bradshaw Hermiston Pendleton June 17, 1927 — June 13, 2019 Leo Thaut of Hermis- band, Mel, Stockton, Cal- ton, Oregon, was born on ifornia; Phil Thaut and June 17, 1927, in Union wife, Allison, Elk Ridge, Gap, Washington to par- Utah; Jeff Thaut and wife, ents, Henry and Katherine Dona, Graham, Washing- Koch Thaut. He died on ton; Annjanette Clayton, June 13, 2019, in Hermis- Hermiston, Oregon; and ton, Oregon at the age of 91 Tony Duncan, Hermis- years. ton, Oregon; sis- Growing up, ter, Claire Tessier he worked on and her husband, his stepfather’s Ernie, San Jose, 1,000-acre wheat California; 19 ranch. Leo joined g r a nd ch i ld r e n ; the United States 35 great-grand- Navy as a Yeo- children; three man 2nd Class great-great- and served in the g r a nd ch i ld r e n ; Seabees where he numerous nieces learned the con- and nephews. struction trade. Leo was pre- He was honorably ceded in death discharged and by his parents, worked with his siblings, Heine, Thaut brother, Mason, Mason Ella and on a dairy farm. Art, and a son-in- Leo was united in mar- law, Gregory Clayton. riage to June Scarry on A funeral service will May 4, 1984, in San Jose, be held on Saturday, June California. He worked in 22, 2019, at 11 a.m. at the construction as a surveyor Church of Jesus Christ until retiring in 1989 and of Latter-day Saints, 850 they moved to Washing- S.W. 11th St., Hermiston, ton state. They have lived Oregon. Burial with mili- in Hermiston, Oregon, for tary honors will follow at the last seven years. They the Hermiston Cemetery, were active members of the Hermiston, Oregon. Church of Jesus Christ of In lieu of flowers, please Latter-day Saints, serving make contributions in Leo’s on missions to St. Kitts & memory to Alzheimer’s Nevis and Nauvoo, Illinois. Research at www.alz.org Leo was dearly loved Please share memories will be greatly missed by of Leo with his family at his family. He is survived burnsmortuaryhermiston. by his wife, June Thaut, com. Burns Mortuary of Hermiston, Oregon; chil- Hermiston, Oregon, is in dren, Sue Lincoln and hus- care of arrangements. April 16, 1927 — June 13, 2019 Juanita Bradshaw, 92, of Pendleton, died Thursday, June 13, 2019, at a local care facility. She was born April 16, 1927, in Leflore, Oklahoma. A memorial service will be held Wednes- day, June 19, 2019, at 1 p.m. at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Pendleton. Share online condolences with the family at www.pioneerchapel.com. 5:48 a.m. — Two Umatilla men were injured in a crash about 12 miles east of Kennewick, Washington. Jimmy Radillo, 22, was driving west in a 2004 GMC Canyon pickup on Interstate 82 near the entrance to Coffin Road when the vehicle crossed the median and rolled into the eastbound lanes. Radillo and the passenger, Miguel Radillo-Ramos, 58, suf- fered injuries. Ambulances took the pair to Trios Health South- ridge Hospital, Kennewick. 9:31 a.m. — A 17-year-old male from Dale crashed his par- ent’s Dodge Dakota on Highway 244 about 7 miles east of Ukiah. He was driving east, according to Oregon State Police, when he fell asleep, awoke, over-corrected and crashed into a field. The Dodge caught fire moments after crashing. The teen got out but was injured. An ambulance took him to a local hos- pital. The Ukiah Volunteer Fire Department and other agencies responded. 1:50 p.m. — A man asked to speak to a Umatilla police offi- cer about theft from his business. 2:29 p.m. — A caller reported the theft of batteries from a construction site on the 400 block of South Main Street, Milton-Freewater. 3:26 p.m. — The Irrigon Rural Fire Protection District and other emergency agencies received a call out for a brush fire in front of a house on Columbia Lane, Irrigon. A private party extinguished the flames with a garden hose. 4:23 p.m. — Oregon State Police advised the Morrow County Sheriff’s Office of a complaint about a semi-tractor speeding and cutting off other vehicles while towing three other cabs west on Interstate 84 near Boardman. 5:08 p.m. — Hermiston police received a report of a vehicle theft at East Catherine Avenue and Northeast Fourth Street. ARRESTS, CITATIONS • Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office arrested Juan Carlos Pena, 35, of Stanfield, for unauthorized use of a vehicle. • Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office arrested Jacob Carson Royce Barthel, 24, of Hermiston, for trespassing, second-degree burglary, unauthorized entry into a vehicle and second-degree theft. • A woman in Irrigon called 911 at 7:12 p.m. and reported her boyfriend was attacking her. The Morrow County Sheriff’s Office responded and arrested Jasper Ambrose D. Elliott, 34, of Kennewick, Washington, for fourth-degree assault and felony strangulation. MEETINGS WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19 MORROW COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS, 9 a.m., SAGE Center, 101 Olson Road, Boardman. (Roberta Lutcher 541-676-5613) OREGON TRAIL LIBRARY DISTRICT, 6:30 p.m., Oregon Trail Library District office, 200 S. Main St., Boardman. (Kathy Street 541-481-3365) BOARDMAN PLANNING COMMISSION, 7 p.m., Boardman City Hall, 200 City Center Circle, Boardman. (541-481-9252) PILOT ROCK SCHOOL DISTRICT, 7 p.m., Pilot Rock High School library, 101 N.E. Cherry St., Pilot Rock. (541-443-8291) UMATILLA HOSPITAL DISTRICT, 7:30 p.m., Umatilla Medical Clinic, 1890 Seventh St., Umatilla. (541-922-3104) By HILLEL ITALIE AP National Writer THURSDAY, JUNE 20 WEST EXTENSION IRRIGATION DISTRICT, 9 a.m., Irri- gon Fire Department, 705 N.E. Main St., Irrigon. (Lisa Baum 541-922-3814) HERMISTON IRRIGATION DISTRICT, 4 p.m., Hermiston Irri- gation District office conference room, 366 E. Hurlburt Ave., Hermiston. (541-567-3024) ECHO CITY COUNCIL, 4 p.m., Old VFW Hall, 210 W. Bridge St., Echo. (541-376-8411) UMATILLA COUNTY SPECIAL LIBRARY DISTRICT, 5:15 p.m., Pendleton Center for the Arts boardroom, 214 N. Main St., Pendleton. (Erin McCusker 541-276-6449) MONDAY, JUNE 24 CASON’S PLACE CHILDREN AND FAMILY GRIEF RECOVERY CENTER BOARD, 6 p.m., Cason’s Place, 1416 S.E. Court Ave., Pendleton. All those interested in volunteering are encour- aged to attend. (Matt Terjeson 503-720-1620) UMATILLA BASIN WATERSHED COUNCIL, 6 p.m., Eastern Oregon Higher Education Center room 134, 975 S.E. Columbia Drive, Hermiston. (Michael T. Ward 541-276-2190) MILTON-FREEWATER CITY COUNCIL, 7 p.m., Milton-Freewa- ter Public Library Albee Room, 8 S.W. Eighth Ave., Milton-Free- water. (541-938-5531) HERMISTON CITY COUNCIL, 7 p.m., Hermiston City Hall council chambers, 180 N.E. Second St., Hermiston. (541-567-5521) IRRIGON COMMUNITY PARKS & RECREATION DIS- TRICT, 7 p.m., Irrigon Fire Station, 705 N. Main St., Irrigon. (541-922-3047) MORROW COUNTY HEALTH DISTRICT, 7 p.m., Pioneer Memorial Hospital conference room, 564 E. Pioneer Drive, Heppner. 6 p.m. provider dinner, 6:30 p.m. board meeting. (Tonia Adams 541-676-2942) TUESDAY, JUNE 25 UMATILLA-MORROW COUNTY HEAD START, 11:30 a.m., Head Start boardroom, 110 N.E. Fourth St., Hermiston. (Mon- ina Ward 541-564-6878) IONE SCHOOL DISTRICT, 3:30 p.m., Ione Community School, 445 Spring St., Ione. 4:30 p.m. board meeting, 5:30 p.m. bud- get committee meeting. (Kim Thul 541-422-7131) UMATILLA PLANNING COMMISSION, 6:30 p.m., Umatilla City Hall, 700 Sixth St., Umatilla. (Brandon Seitz 541-922-3226 ext. 103) MORROW COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION, 7 p.m., Port of Morrow Riverfront Center, 2 Marine Drive, Boardman. (Stephanie Loving 541-922-4624) LOTTERY Monday, June 17, 2019 Megabucks 15-20-37-45-47-48 Estimated jackpot: $4.6 million Lucky Lines 2-6-10-13-FREE-20-22-25- 32 Estimated jackpot: $53,000 Win for Life Author Charles Reich dead at 91 15-42-49-58 Pick 4 1 p.m.: 1-2-9-4 4 p.m.: 4-6-7-9 7 p.m.: 7-0-2-0 10 p.m.: 5-8-6-1 Tuesday, June 18, 2019 Pick 4 1 p.m.: 6-6-5-0 NEW YORK — Charles Reich, the author and Ivy League academic whose “The Greening of America” blessed the counterculture of the 1960s and became a mil- lion-selling manifesto for a new and euphoric way of life, has died. Reich’s nephew Daniel Reich said he died Saturday after being briefly hospital- ized. Charles Reich, a long- time resident of San Francisco, was 91. Reich was a popular Yale University professor whose students included both Bill and Hillary Clinton and a respected legal scholar when a 39,000-word excerpt from “The Greening of America” ran in The New Yorker in September 1970, generating a massive volume of letters. The book was published a few weeks later and sold more than 2 million copies, making Reich a middle-aged hero for a rebellious generation despite scorn from both conservatives and liberals. “The Greening of Amer- ica” expanded upon such cri- tiques of conformity and con- sumerism as David Riesman’s “The Lonely Crowd” and Vance Packard’s “The Sta- tus Seekers” and presented American history as an evolu- tion of consciousness, a three- part story with a surprise end- ing. Consciousness I, dating back to the country’s begin- nings, reflected a Jeffersonian society of individualism, vir- tue and suspicion of govern- ment. Consciousness II, which matured in the 20th century, believed in the “organization,” in technology and government and big business. “Insanity, artificiality and untruth are the commonplace stuff of the Corporate State,” Reich wrote. The uprisings of the 1960s marked the dawn of Con- sciousness III, the triumph of compassion and imagination, an awakening enabled by sex, drugs and rock music. Best of all, Reich concluded, violence The most valuable and respected source of local news, advertising and information for our communities. www.eomediagroup.com and mass protest were unnec- essary. Consciousness II was so stagnant, so helpless “once it loses the ability to create false consciousness,” that acts as simple as refusing a promo- tion at work would hasten its collapse. “This is the revolution of the new generation,” he wrote. “It is both necessary and inevitable, and in time it will include not only youth, but all people in America.” The establishment thought him a fool. Newsweek’s Stew- art Alsop called the book “scary mush,” while Har- vard academic Charles Fried, who later became President Reagan’s solicitor general, scorned Reich’s “fascination with anything that will pro- cure novelty on the cheap.” On the left, activists dispar- aged Reich’s faith in painless change. Around the same time “Greening” was published, the Black Power movement was at its height and antiwar activist Tom Hayden was advocating a nationwide network of “liber- ated zones,” in constant battle with government forces. But young people — and some older ones — were inspired by Reich’s book, with one fan letter reading, “Right on. You’ve managed to put into words what we have known for a long time.” Garry Trudeau introduced Reich as “Professor Green” for his Doonesbury comic. Rolling Stone publisher Jann Wenner would credit Reich with per- suading him to collaborate on an interview with the Grateful Dead’s Jerry Garcia. Leslie Thomas “Tom” Harper Hermiston Aug. 31, 1922 — June 11, 2019 Leslie Thomas “Tom” Harper longtime Hermiston resi- dent, was born on August 31, 1922 in Emporia, Kansas. He died on June 11, 2019 in Hermiston, Oregon. A celebration of life service will be held Saturday, June 29, 2019, at 11 a.m. at Burns Mortuary Chapel, Hermiston. Arrangements are with Burns Mortuary of Hermiston. Share memories with the fam- ily at www.burnsmortuaryhermiston.com. Michael Patrick Lowery Milton-Freewater September 18, 1945 — June 16, 2019 Michael Patrick Lowery, 73, of Milton-Freewater, died Sunday, June 16, 2019, in Walla Walla. He was born Sept. 18, 1945. Arrangements are with Munselle-Rhodes Funeral Home of Milton-Freewater. UPCOMING SERVICES WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19 BRADSHAW, JUANITA — Memorial service at 1 p.m. at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 609 N.W. 12th St., Pendleton. JUNE 20-21 No services scheduled SATURDAY, JUNE 22 FERGUSON, DORIS — Celebration of life service at 1 p.m. in the banquet room at The Pheasant, 149 E. Main St., Hermiston. MAEL, JAMES — Graveside service with military honors at 11 a.m. at the Monument Cemetery. A celebration of life remembrance gathering and potluck luncheon will follow at the Monument Senior Center, 269 Main St. THAUT, LEO — Funeral service at 11 a.m. at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 850 S.W. 11th St., Hermiston. Burial with military honors follows at the Hermiston Cemetery. SUNDAY, JUNE 23 FERGUSON, DORIS — Graveside service at 1 p.m. at the Athena Cemetery. WESTON, JANE — Memorial service at 1 p.m. in the chapel at Burns Mortuary, 685 W. Hermiston Ave., Hermis- ton. Burial will follow at Desert Lawn Memorial Cemetery, Irrigon. A celebration of life gathering will follow the ser- vices at Stokes Landing Senior Center, 150 Columbia Lane, Irrigon. MONDAY, JUNE 24 TUCKER, BETTY — Memorial service at 1 p.m. at Cross- roads Community Church, 350 N. Sherman Ave., Stanfield. +HUPLVWRQ 1(:*6&0$775(66287/(7 23(112:1H[WWR*UHJ¶V6OHHS&HQWHU 6RIDVµQ0RUH *5$1' 23(1,1* *UHJ·V 6OHHS&HQWHU 6RIDV¶Q0RUH 0DULDQD $GMXVWDEOH%HGV 0HPRU\)RDP 1RZ 1RZ