The BulleTin • Tuesday, May 4, 2021 A3 TODAY Today is Tuesday, May 4, the 124th day of 2021. There are 241 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On May 4, 1961, the first group of “Freedom Riders” left Wash- ington, D.C., to challenge racial segregation on interstate buses and in bus terminals. In 1626, Dutch explorer Peter Minuit landed on present-day Manhattan Island. In 1776, Rhode Island declared its freedom from England, two months before the Declaration of Independence was adopted. In 1932, mobster Al Capone, convicted of income-tax evasion, entered the federal penitentiary in Atlanta. (Capone was later transferred to Alcatraz Island.) In 1942, the Battle of the Coral Sea, the first naval clash fought entirely with carrier aircrafts, began in the Pacific during World War II. (The outcome was considered a tactical victory for Japan, but ultimately a strategic one for the Allies.) In 1945, during World War II, German forces in the Nether- lands, Denmark and northwest Germany agreed to surrender. In 1959, the first Grammy Awards ceremony was held at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. Dome- nico Modugno won Record of the Year and Song of the Year for “Nel Blu Dipinto Di Blu (Volare)”; Henry Mancini won Album of the Year for “The Music from Peter Gunn.” In 1968, the Oroville Dam in Northern California was dedicat- ed by Gov. Ronald Reagan; the 770-foot-tall earth-filled struc- ture, a pet project of Reagan’s predecessor, Pat Brown, remains the tallest dam in the United States, but was also the scene of a near disaster in February 2017 when two spillways collapsed, threatening for a time to flood parts of three counties in the Sierra Nevada foothills. In 1970, Ohio National Guards- men opened fire during an anti-war protest at Kent State University, killing four students and wounding nine others. In 1998, Unabomber Theodore Kaczynski was given four life sen- tences plus 30 years by a federal judge in Sacramento, California, under a plea agreement that spared him the death penalty. In 2006, a federal judge sen- tenced Zacarias Moussaoui to life in prison for his role in the 9/11 attacks, telling the convict- ed terrorist, “You will die with a whimper.” In 2010, a Pakistani-born U.S. citizen was charged with ter- rorism and attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction in the botched Times Square bombing. Ten years ago: President Barack Obama said he had decided not to release death photos of Osama bin Laden because their graphic nature could incite vio- lence and create national secu- rity risks. Officials told The Asso- ciated Press that the Navy SEALs who’d stormed bin Laden’s compound in Pakistan shot and killed him after they saw him ap- pear to lunge for a weapon. Los Angeles Clippers forward Blake Griffin was named the Rookie of the Year, becoming the NBA’s first unanimous choice for the award in 21 years. Five years ago: Sipping filtered city water to show it was again drinkable, President Barack Obama promised to ride herd on leaders at all levels of govern- ment until every drop of water flowing into homes in Flint, Michigan, was safe to use. One year ago: New York state reported more than 1,700 pre- viously undisclosed coronavirus deaths at nursing homes and adult care facilities. The Su- preme Court heard arguments by phone and allowed the world to listen in live for the first time. The U.S. Senate convened for the first time since March. Today’s Birthdays: Kather- ine Jackson, matriarch of the Jackson musical family, is 91. Jazz musician Ron Carter is 84. Pulitzer Prize-winning political commentator George Will is 80. Actor Richard Jenkins is 74. Actor-turned-clergyman Hilly Hicks is 71. Irish musician Darryl Hunt (The Pogues) is 71. Singer Jackie Jackson (The Jacksons) is 70. Violinist Soozie Tyrell is 64. Actor Mary McDonough is 60. Comedian Ana Gasteyer is 54. Actor Will Arnett is 51. Rock musi- cian Mike Dirnt (Green Day) is 49. Contemporary Christian singer Chris Tomlin is 49. TV personality and fashion designer Kimora Lee Simmons is 46. Sports reporter Erin Andrews is 43. Singer Lance Bass (‘N Sync) is 42. Rapper/singer Jidenna is 36. Actor Amara Miller is 21. Actor Brooklynn Prince is 11. — Associated Press LOCAL, STATE & REGION Methodists turn over Wallowa church to tribe Wallowa County Chieftain What once belonged to the Nez Perce people was returned Thursday with celebration and fellowship at Wallowa United Methodist Church in Wallowa. The deed and keys to the now-closed Wallowa United Methodist Church were turned over to the Nez Perce Tribe by The Oregon-Idaho Confer- ence of The UMC as a gesture of gratitude, respect and re- pentance, according to a press release. Leaders from the tribe, along with Methodist leaders, joined in a ceremony of celebration and fellowship as the prop- erty, which has been owned by the church for 144 years, is re- turned to the tribe. This is the second piece of property the church has re- turned to the tribe. In 2018, the conference returned 1.5 acres Photos by Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain LEFT: Nez Perce tribal member Lee Bourgeau, right, describes the his- torical significance of the garments she is wearing while Mary Jane Miles, of the Nez Perce Tribal Executive Committee, listens. ABOVE: Nez Perce drummers participate in ceremonies held Thursday surrounding granting ownership of the now-closed Wallowa Method- ist Church to the tribe. About 60 people, both from the tribe and the church, were on hand for the ceremony. of riverbed property from its Wallowa Lake Camp to the tribe to be used for fish spawn- ing habitat. Wyoming backs coal with threat to sue other states Lawsuits between states ar- en’t unusual and often involve CHEYENNE, Wyo. — natural resources, such as wa- While most states pursue ways ter rights. Such cases can go to boost renewable energy, directly to the U.S. Supreme Wyoming is doing the oppo- Court, if the justices agree to site with a new program aimed hear them. at propping up the dwindling Wyoming coal production, coal industry by suing other which accounts for about 40% states that block ex- of the nation’s “I will not waver in total, has been ports of Wyoming coal and cause Wy- decline as my efforts to protect in oming coal-fired utilities switch power plants to shut to gas, which is our industries, down. cheaper to burn particularly our to generate elec- The law signed April 6 by Repub- coal industry. The tricity. Solar and lican Gov. Mark wind power also use of coal is under are on the rise Gordon creates a $1.2 million fund coal’s share of assault from all as for an initiative the U.S. power that marks the lat- market shrinks directions. est attempt by state from about half — Wyoming Gov. leaders to help coal in the early 2000s Mark Gordon in the state that ac- to less than 20% counts for the bulk now. of U.S. coal production, which Who might be targets of is down by half since 2008. future Wyoming coal litiga- “Wyoming is sending a tion isn’t yet known. Pearlman message that it is prepared to declined to speculate, saying bring litigation to protect her Gordon and Attorney Gen- interests,” Gordon spokesman eral Bridget Hill would need to Michael Pearlman said of the study their chances of success, fund signed into law April 6. but they could include West The law puts Oregon, other Coast states including, again, West Coast states and Colo- Washington. rado on notice — all seek to Portland-based utility get a large share of their elec- PacifiCorp plans to reduce tricity from renewables but still its coal-fired generation by get juice from aging Wyoming two-thirds by 2030, partly coal-fired power plants. The by retiring generators at two approach may run into legal southwestern Wyoming power troubles, though, according to plants starting in 2023, as one constitutional expert. much as five years sooner than BY MEAD GRUVER The Associated Press envisioned just a few years ago. The utility serves four states with renewable energy stan- dards or goals — California, Oregon, Utah and Washington — and two that don’t: Idaho and Wyoming. PacifiCorp has been meeting renewable standards by getting electricity from the lowest cost and least risky sources like it has always done, so the stan- dards haven’t factored into its decisions to retire coal-fired power, company spokesman David Eskelsen said. PacifiCorp has no position on the legal fund, but the Wyo- ming Rural Electric Association supports the message it sends to states such as Colorado, which has renewable energy standards and gets coal-fired electricity from southeastern Wyoming, Executive Director Shawn Taylor said. “It’s just kind of part and parcel of folks feeling that states and state agencies and entities outside Wyoming are having more of an impact on our energy resources than we do,” Taylor said. The coal litigation fund WHY CHOOSE MIRACLE-EAR? L O C A L LY O W N E D A N D O P E R AT E D “Th e people at Miracle- Ear are aso friendly, so personable, and a very professional.” -Coleen Greene, Bend Miracle-Ear of 12 years! RECHARGABILITY Swastikas scrawled on Holocaust memorial in southwest Portland park BY SHANE DIXON KAVANAUGH The Oregonian At least one person struck the Oregon Holocaust Memo- rial in southwest Portland’s Washington Park, scrawling swastikas across the memorial’s stone wall, city officials said. The vandalism, written in white, also included the num- bers “1488,” a symbol popular among neo-Nazis and other white supremacists, a photo reviewed by The Oregonian shows. Portland and other commu- nities around the U.S. recog- nize May as Jewish American Heritage Month. Police notified parks bureau staff of the antisemitic graf- fiti about 11 a.m. Sunday, said Mark Ross, a Portland Parks & Recreation spokesman. Maintenance crews later managed to remove the graf- fiti, Ross said, adding that the vandalism remains under in- vestigation by police. “The damage to the Oregon Holocaust Memorial is heart- breaking, and it’s particularly painful that it happened during Jewish American Heritage Month,” Mayor Ted Wheeler said in a statement. “I denounce hate crimes, anti-Semitism, and white su- premacy.” The Portland Police Bureau said Monday that investigators were looking into the vandal- ism, which also included an- tisemitic tagging on signs and concrete barriers near the park, but no arrests had been made. The Oregon Holocaust Me- morial was dedicated in 2004. At the end of the memorial wall is a soil vault panel, where soil and ash are interred from six extermination camps of the Holocaust. Engraved in the granite pan- els on the backside of the wall are the names of people who died in the camps, as well as their surviving relatives who live in Oregon and southwest Washington. followed a 2020 bill that es- tablished a $1 million fund to promote Wyoming coal. Wy- oming is paying a nonprofit, the Energy Policy Network, $250,000 a year from the fund to contest plans in other states to shut down coal-fired power. “I will not waver in my ef- forts to protect our industries, particularly our coal industry. The use of coal is under assault from all directions. And we have stood firm in our support of it throughout,” Gordon said in his state of the state address in March. SAVE ON HEARING AIDS $ 995 No more buying batteries! Good only from participating Miracle-Ear® representatives. One coupon per purchase. No other offers or discounts apply. Discount does not apply to prior sales. Cannot combine with any other offers. Cash value 1/20 cent. 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