La Grande Observer 06-05-15

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l M ORE IN SPORTS: EOU RB EARNS PRESEASON RECOGNITION,8A AND INSIDE: MIGRATION IS A PHASE OF LIFE,1C

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LA GRANDE LA GRANDE SCHOOL DISTRICT

Parents want guicker teacher hires

ofFicer

funding

dropped • Police Chief Brian Harvey says service level will fall

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By Dick Mason The Observer

A group of La Grande parents are encouraging the La Grande School District to speed up its hiring of elementaryschoolteachers forthe 2015-16 school year. A group of about seven elementary school parents met with La Grande School District Superintendent Larry Glaze earlier this week to discuss their concern about classsizesfor the upcoming school year. The parents are worriedthat classesin some schoolsmay be toolarge if additional teachers arenot hired, said Devon Myer, a Central Elementary School parent. Glaze said it is too early to tell if additional elementaryteacherswillbe needed because the school district's enrollment picture can change significantly over the course of a summer. "It is hard to know since people move in and out over the summer," Glaze said. He prefers to wait until August when the school district will have a much better idea of what its elementary school enrollment will be before making hiring decisions. Myer, however, believes that the school district should hire any additional teachersitneeds before this. She said this would enhance the school district's chances of hiring high-quality educators. "If you hire someone late, you may be getting someone who is less qualified," Myer sald. See Teachers / Page 5A

W hat do you think? We want to hear your thoughts. Email letters to the editor to news@ lagrandeobserver. com and join the conversation on The Observer Opinion

page.

By Kelly Ducote The Observer

The La Grande Police Department will not be getting a new police officer after all. The La Grande Budget Committee in late April voted to fund a new officer position, but the La Grande City Council on Wednesday night switched gears and optedtodrop funding for theposition ahead ofbudget adoption. In reading a prepared statement to the council Councilor Gary Lillard voiced concerns for funding the position, particularly in future years as funding only gets tighter.

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awe have no idea how

we're going to manage this expenditure long term. We've said we will pull together a committee and 'do something' to make it possible. However, See Budget / Page 5A Cherise Kaechele/The Observer

The La Grande High School auditorium may have to wait a bit longer to get an upgrade. The auditorium will be completely gutted and then updated with a brand new sound system and seats.

EASTERN OREGON UNIVERSITY

TWO SUMMER BOND PROJECTS Tuition hike on the table • Otherbond projectsscheduled tobegin thissum mer expected toproceed By Dick Mason

Glaze explained that one reason Speakout theschooldistrictreceived fewer TODAY'S QUESTION bids than anticipated is that the What do you construction business is picking up. "Many contract ors have already think of the school district's decision committedthemselves ito projects to delay two bond for the summer)," he said. projects in order to seek more Another factor is the relatively bids for the projects? late start the school district got SOUND OFF off to in seeking bids for summer www.lagrandeobserver.com projects. Glazesaid thattheschool distric twas notable to begin takand gym locker rooms. The coming bids for projects as early as it mencement of these projects will be w anted to because ofa lagin getdelayed until 2016, said La Grande ting an architectural firm for bond School District Superintendent project work. The delay was caused Larry Glaze. by a contract negotiation problem. The school districtreceived fewer The school district also is delaybidsfortheprojectsthan itwanted, ing theprojectsbecause itwants to causing the delay. get morelocalcontractorsbidding awe want more bidders in the for projects. "One of our goals is to keep mix. To get a better price, we need more bidders, "Glaze said. See Delays / Page 5A

The Observer

A busy summer on the construction and renovation front is looming in the La Grande School District. W ork on close to a dozen projects

funded by the $31.85 million bond votersapproved in November is set to start this summer. They include security upgrades at all schools, the installation of doors for all classrooms lacking them, the construction of two classrooms at Greenwood Elementary School and the addition of air conditioning in the upper levels of La Grande Middle School and La Grande High

School. Two projects initially set to start this summer, however, will be delayed: the renovation of the La Grande High School's auditorium

INDEX Calendar........7A Classified.......1B Comics...........7B Crossword..... 4B Dear Abby .....SB

Police

WE A T H E R Health ............6C Outdoors .......1C Horoscope.....4B Record ...........3A Lottery............2A Spiritual Life. 11A Obituaries......3A Sports ............SA Opinion..........4A Television ......3C

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By Kelly Ducote The Observer

Eastern Oregon University students will likely be paying more for tuition in the 201516 school year. The EOU Board of Trustees on Thursday voted to increasetuition by 4.9 percent for in-state students and 3 percent for non-residents. The board has also pro-

poseda $500differentialtuition for full-time undergraduates and graduate students admitted to any business degree program, which would take effect during the summer term. Differential tuition is an additional tuition See Tuition / Page 5A

CONTACT US

F ull forecast enthe backof B section

Friday

• State board to hear proposal today in final meeting

Sunday

87/53 Partly sunny

541-963-3161 Issue 66 3 sections, 28 pages La Grande, Oregon

Email story ideas to newsC~lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page 4A.

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2A — THE OBSERVER

FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

LOCAL

TOP 10 SMALL TOWNS

DArLY

LA GRANDE SCHOOL DISTRICT

Budget committee

PLANNER TODAY

makes proposal

Today is Friday, June 5, the 156th day of 201 5. There are 209 days left in the year.

• Proposed budget set to spend an additional in operating would finance full- $575,543 expenses for kindergarten school year because daykindergarten next of the switch to full daykindergarten. The school district's The Observer proposed 2015-16 budget The La Grande School calls for 4-V2 kindergarten District is a step away fiom classroomteacherstobe adopting a 2015-16 budget added plus a part-time that will add close to 20 new music specialist position, a part-time special educaeducators to its payroll. The La Grande School tion teaching position and a District's budget commitpart-time media specialist tee voted Wednesday to position. recommend that the school The budget also adds nine part-time paraeducaboard adopt a general fund budget of $19.58 million for torsand fourspecialeduca2015-16. tionparaeducatorpositions The proposed 2015-16 for kindergarten. Paraedubudget calls for the equiva- cators are also known as lent of six teaching positions teaching assistants. The budget also callsfor plus13 part-time paraeduWillow Elementary School, cator positions to be added for the school district's a kindergarten-only school, kindergarten program. to boost its part-time custoThe educators are needed dial position to full time. "I think that we are in because the La Grande School District is shifting good shape budget wise," fiom half-time to full-time said La Grande School Diskindergarten in 2015-16. trict Superintendent Larry The school district is Glaze. By Dick Mason

TODAY'S HIGHLIGHT On June 5, 1968, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated in Los Angeles' Ambassador Hotel after claiming victory in California's Democratic presidential primary. Gunman Sirhan Bishara Sirhan was immediately arrested.

ON THIS DATE In1794, Congress passed the NeutralityAct, which prohibited Americans from taking part in any military action against a country that was at peace with the United States. In 1884, Civil War hero Gen. William T. Sherman refused the Republican presidential nomination, saying, "I will not accept if nominated and will not serve if elected." In1933, the United States went off the gold standard. In1947, Secretary of State George C. Marshall gave a speech at Harvard University in which he outlined an aid program for Europe that came to be known asThe Marshall Plan. In 1967, war erupted in the Mideast as Israel raided military aircraft parked on the ground in Egypt; Syria, Jordan and Iraq entered the conflict. In 1975, Egypt reopened the Suez Canal to international shipping, eightyears after it was closed because of the 1967 war with Israel. In 1981, the Centers for Disease Control reported that five homosexualsin LosAngeles had come down with a rare kind of pneumonia; they were the first recognized cases of what later became known as AIDS. In 2004, Ronald Wilson Reagan, the 40th president of the United States, died in Los Angeles at age 93 after a long struggle with Alzheimer's disease.

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Cherise Kaechele/TheObserver

Mount Emily and La Grande can be seen from the top of 12th Street. Recently, La Grande was named one of the top 100 small towns in America.

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By Kelly Ducote The Observer

The criteria

La Grande has been ranked as one of the best small towns in the U.S. by Livability.com La Grande was one of five Oregon cities to make the list, coming in at No. 60. Livabilitycom has previously put out a list of the Top 10 Small Towns and has rankedlarger cities,but this is the first year for a top-100 list of small towns, accordingto thewebsite. awe examined more than 40 datapointseach form ore than 12,000 towns with populations between 1,000 and 20,000," the website says. For some, the ranking only solidifies their decision to live in La Grande. "I think it validates what those of us who live here know," said Robert Strope, La Grande city manager. "I think you just start with looking out your window and seeing where you live. Then you take into consideration the amenities we have fora city ofour size." The Livabilitycom ranking includes a short paragraph about La Grande and its amenities, noting recreational, shopping and educationalopportunities and the presence of Eastern Oregon University. Strope said the commitment from residents is evident, particularly asthe La Grande School District recently passed a $31 million bond levy for improvements. La Grande Main Street Director Saira Siddiqui agreed that community involvement makes La Grande special. "The way everyone is involved with somethingit's such a grassroots city," said Siddiqui, who moved from Buffalo, New York."I

The following is the criteria used by Livability.com to compile its Top 100 list of small towns. ACCESS Start with the basics: A city needs good schools, hospitals, airports and infrastructure, low crime and a good climate. Then add amenities like parks, golf courses, farmers markets, and arts and culture. AFFORDABILITY Affordability is about more than just cost. Income comes into play, too. Several variables related to spending were layered on broad categories like housing, transportation, health care and food, as well as data about income to ensure cities where livability isn't a luxury but is the norm. CHOICE The more options a city offers, the more it can be livable for everyone. For example, by looking at the percentage of commuters who don't drive alone, you can gauge if there are transportation options. We rewarded cities that offer residents the most flexibility in choosing a hospital, school, park, farmers market and commuting mode. UTILIZATION Finally, having all of these great things is important but so is using them. Esri provided us with lifestyle variables that allowed us to see which residents were making the most of their opportunities in their cities.

December 21, 1942 — June 2, 2015

iMainel tells me we have a community to be proud of, a community that offers high quality services and opportunities, and a community thatisattractiveto others," he said."My hope is this kind of recognition will attract business interests and new iColoradol, Los Alamos iNew citizens who share our values Mexico) and Bar Harbor and desire for livability."

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Orin Franklin Gaskin, Jr. 72, of Union, passed away at Grande Ronde Hospital on Tuesday, June 2, 2015. A Graveside Service will be held at the Union Cemetery on Friday, June 5th at 2:00pm. Orin wasborn December 21, 1942 in Madera, California to Orin Franklin Gaskin Sr. and Irene Ellen iBuckleyl. He was married to Charlene Cavin for 49 years. Orin was employed as a millwright until his retirement. He loved horses, trail riding and spending time with family. He was a loving husband, father and grandfather. Orin is survived by his son, Frank Gaskin of La Grande, OR and his daughter, Connie Twisselman and her husband Jim of Union, OR; grandchildren, Eric DeWitt of Union, OR and Kim George and her husband Casey of Union, OR; 2 great-grandchildren and 11 nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his wife, Charlene and parents, Orin and Irene. Online condolences may be made to the family at www.lovelandfuneralchapel. com.

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feel like the people are really molding the city." La Grande Mayor Steve Clements said he was glad to see La Grande on the list — and in good company. "I think having La Grande ranked along with notable communities like Aspen

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FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

THE OBSERVER —3A

LOCAL

LOCAL BRIEFING Erom staff reports

Elgin summer lunch program launches ELGIN — The summer lunch program in Elgin begins Monday and will continue until Aug. 14. Free lunches will be served to those aged 1-18 from 12:15 p.m. to 1 p.m. Monday through Friday in the Stella Mayfield School cafeteria.

Cove School Board meets Monday COVE — The CoveSchool Board will meet at 7 p.m.

Monday in the high school math room.

Lutheran is located at the corner of 12th and Gekeler in La Grande

Help clean up MERA's trails Saturday Rabies, license clinic offered Saturday Volunteers will gather at 8a.m.Saturday attheFox Hill Trailhead for a MERA trail work day.

FaithLutheran holds benefit yard sale Faith Lutheran Church is having their annual benefit yard sale from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. Faith

UNION — The Animal Rescue Center of Eastern Oregon, aka Blue Mountain Humane Association, is holding a rabies/license clinic from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday next to the Union Carnegie Library. For more information, call 503-5516827 or 541-963-0807.

IC City Council meets Monday evening

and Martha iKunzl Smith 7 in Pendleton. The family later moved to Banks Wa l lowa. She graduatedfi om Wallowa High School with the dass of1987. In 1990, she moved to La Grande. She later lived in Idaho and Irrigon before returning to La Grande. She loved to sing and watch Japanese animation. She enjoyed the outdoors, camping and fishing. She also loved dancing, her animals and working crossword puzzles. She was known for wearing old 45 records in her hair. Survivors include her children, Keanua Banks of La Grande and Shawn Banks of Imbler; mother, Martha Smith of Echo; father, Allen and his wife, Cheryl Smith of Pendleton; siblings, Steve and Dianna Smith of Georgia, Tina and Stephen Jenkins of Toledo, Washington, and Brenda and Rick Denning of Echo; and other relatives. Memorial contributions Uf

Formerly of Cove Meyer Lewis, 96, of Walla Walla, Washington, and formerly of Cove, died Thursday at his daughter's home. Munselle-Rhodes Funeral Home in Milton-Freewater is in charge of arrangements.

Evelyn Pollard La Grande Evelyn Pollard, 83, of La Grande, died Thursday. Arrangements will be announced later by DanielsKnopp Funeral, Cremation & Life Celebration Center.

Vicki Lynn Banks La Grande 1969-2015 Vicki Lynn Banks, 45, of La Grande, died May 25 in Portland. A memorial graveside will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at Island City Cemetery. Vicki was born on Aug. 22, 1969, the daughter ofAllen

The Union City Council will meet at 7 p.m. Monday at Union City Hall. Ken McCormack will be sworn in as Union's new mayor at the meeting.

Arrested: Christopher Lee Cox, 30, unknown address, was arrested Wednesday on charges of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle and driving while suspended. Arrested: Geoffrion Crawford, 19, unknown address, was arrested Wednesday on an Ada County, Idaho, warrant charging parole violation on original charges of burglary. Arrested: Dennis F. Peck, 49, unknown address, was arrested Thursday on a Douglas County warrant charging possession of methamphetamine. Peck was alsocited on a Josephine County warrant charging failure to appear on original charges of driving under the influence, reckless driving and three counts of recklessly endangering another person. Arrested: Anthony Michael Shrout,32, La Grande, was arrestedThursday on a Morrow County warrant charging failure to appear on original charges of driving while suspended. Arrested: Ricky Joe H elton, 25, unknown address, was arrestedThursday on charges of disorderly conduct.

LA GRANDE FIRE AND AMBULANCE The La Grande Fire and Ambulance responded to four calls for medical assistance on Wednesday. Crews responded to six calls for medical assistance on Thursday and one police assist.

UNION COUNTY SHERIFF Arrested: M eli ssa Ann Wing, 36, La Grande, and RodrickW. Smith,48, Pendleton, were each arrested Wednesday on charges of second-degree disorderly conduct from an incident on May 26. Arrested: Norma Beth Wasson, 51, was arrestedThursday on a Union County statewide misdemeanor warrant charging violation of a release agreement on original charges of failure to perform duties of a driver including property damage,

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driving uninsured and failure to renew registration. Arrested: Steven Ray Lawson, 51, unknown address, was

Anne was born 16 October 1935 in Big Cabin, Oklahoma, the fourth child of James and Goldie Weaver. Growing up the family lived in Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Arkansas before moving to Medford, Oregon in 1945. Anne graduated from Medford High School in

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1953.

may be made to the Shriner's Hospital for Children or the Blue Mountain Humane Association. Toleave acondolence or signtheonlineguestbook, go to at danielsknopp.com.

Lois Rogers La Grande Lois Rogers, 85, of La Grande, diedtoday ather home. Arrangements will be announced later by DanielsKnopp Funeral, Cremation & Life Celebration Center.

Teddy G. Rorden Union

Teddy G. Rorden, 60of Union, died Tuesday at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland. A full obituary will be published later. Loveland Funeral Chapel & Crematory will be handling the arrangements.

Sylvia R Aldrich Formerly of La Grande 1952-2015 Sylvia R. Aldrich, 63,

formerly of La Grande, died at St. Anthony Hospital in Pendleton May 25. At her request, there will be no service. Sylvia was born Jan. 29, 1952, in La Grande to Floyd A. and Wilmerth D. iBristowl Bates. She resided in Cove and La Grande. She married James GaryAldrich and they later divorced. Sylvia was a stay-at-home mother to her son, Leon. She loved fishing, horseback riding, gardening, mushroom hunting and anything outdoors. She raised a wonderful son and was an amazing grandmother, family said. Sylvia is survived by her son, Leon Fritz of Pilot Rock, ex-husband, Leon Fritz, Jr., of Oroville, Washington; mother Wilmerth; sister, Kathy Musick of Cove; brother, Gene Bates ofUnion;fi vegrandchildren and five nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her father, Floyd, and nephew, Caleb Musick. Online condolences may be made to the family at www. lovelandfuneralchapel.com.

PUBLIC SAFETY REPORT LA GRANDE POLICE

October 16, 1935

Union City Council to meetMonday

OBITUARIES Meyer Lewis

Sarah Anne Weavre Bateman

ISLAND CITY — The Island City City Council will meet at 7 p.m. Mondayin the city hall building. The next meeting will be held July 13.

arrestedThursday by the Burns Police Department and lodged in the Harney County jail on a Union County statewide

misdemeanor warrant charging probation violation on original charges of contempt of

On the 29th of August 1953 Anne married her high school sweetheart Franklin "Bruce" Bateman at the Friend's Church in Medford, Or-

egon. Together they raised three daughters, Katheryn, Christine, and Cynthia. Anne and Bruce also loved children of the heartSarah McNair Clark and Eugene Bowlin and taught us that family is not always about blood bonds but of heart strings that connect deeply. For morethan 40 years Anne worked asoffice manager for Dr. Raymond McNair (orthodontistl whose office was on East Main Street in Medford. They also had a satellite office with monthly service in Brookings, Oregon. Both her husband Bruce Bateman and Dr. McNair were active Rotarians and Anne supported the work of these good Rotarians as well as the purpose of Rotary. Anne retired when Dr. McNair discontinued his practice in 1999. Anne received her greatest enjoyment from her family, her grandchil dren, and great grandchildren. She loved the Rogue River and also liked cruises going to Mexico and the Caribbean several times with family and friends. Anne passed away quietly under hospice care in Medford, Oregon ontheafternoon of 22 May 2015. Anne is survived by Bruce, her devoted husband of 61 years, her brother Gary Weaver, her sister Millie Patterson VanAusdal, her three daughters and their husbands Kathy and Bo Shindler, Chris and Greg Barreto, Cynthia and Phil Sander,children of the heartSarah and Glen Clark and Linda and Eugene Bowlin, as well as eighteen grandchildren and eighteen great-grandchildren. Anne was preceded in death by her parents, her sisters Cora Ellen Vinson and Margaret May Wingert, her brother LeonardWeaver, and herhalf-brother Clarence McGeary. A family memorial service will be held in Gold Beach 20 June 2015 where Anne's ashes will be spread, followed by a celebration of life to be held at the Shindler home in Gold Beach. In lieu of flowers the family suggests donations to St. Jude's Children's Hospital or Shriners Hospital for Children in honor ofAnne's wishes to help children.

COUrt.

Gary Le e Waxbom

Donald "Don" Ralph Taylor

September 13, 1950 — June 1, 2015

1934-2015

On June I, 2015 Gary Lee Waxbom, Sr. went home to be with Jesus after his battle with cancer. He was born September 13, 1950 to Catherine (Peckhaml Waxbom and Neil Waxbom in Pendleton, Oregon. Gary was raised in Elgin, Oregon where he enjoyed fishing, hunting and was active in high school football and basketball in which he excelled. After graduating from Elgin High School in 1969, Gary married Jackie (Southardl Graves and that union brought forth two sons. After ten years of working for Boise Cascade Elgin, he and his family moved to Hermiston, Oregon where he found employment at Marlette Homes for several years. When leaving there, Gary went into construction work as a laborer and never seemed to lack for work, when jobs came to an end, since his reputation for working hard proceeded him. From the age of eighteen, Gary gained a passion for sturgeon fishing and spent many hours on the banks of the Columbia River fishing. He had an uncanny knowledge and success rate in catching the beasts that, in that circle of fisherman, he was dubbed" the king of the Columbia". No matter the endeavor, he wanted to be the best and he never hesitated to help anyone who wanted to learn how to fish. Gary eventually became a guide on the Columbia River and offered sturgeon, walleye, steelhead and salmon trips through 'Columbia River Guide Service'. His greatest reward was fishing and filming a television segment with Al Lindner of the In Fisherman on sturgeon. Gary k Jackie divorced after 20 years of marriage, and he married Elizabeth 'Liz' (Buckl Collins on July 14, 1990. That union garnered for both of them a new 'blended' family. They owned G k L Tackle in IJmatilla, Oregon until May of 1995 and in August of the same year they moved to northwest Montana. They lived in the Yaak for eleven months before moving to Troy. Gary mowed yards and cut and sold firewood before gaining employment as a log peeler for Les Winn who was a log home builder. They came to be very good friends over the years. Gary enjoyed Montana and the outdoor activities it offered him. He loved to fish and looked forward to hunting season every year. He often said that he wished he would have known about northwest Montana when he was younger.

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In 2005 he and Liz moved to Libby after a work related accident in 2001 forced him to retire. He stayed active helping his elderly neighbors whenever he could whether it be mowing yards or snow-blowing their driveways. He was always a caring and giving person to others and would do what he could to help. In 2011 Gary started making copper bracelets in his little shop at home. He was very creative with that and enjoyed trying new designs. It eventually became his 'ministry' in 2013 when he rededicated his life to Jesus. He went from selling them to giving them away just because he wanted to help others whether they could afford to buy them or not. It brought him great joy when people would tell him that the bracelets helped their pain. His rededication to Jesus brought a 'new life' to Gary. He often said during his illness thathe did notknow how anyone could cope with a major illness without God in their life and their Church family. Gary is survived by his wife Elizabeth, Libby; sons Gary (Katyl Baker City, Or.; Jared, Libby; step daughter Julie (Collinsl Woolery, Goldendale, Wa; stepson Lucas Collins (Lindseyl Kennewick, Wa.; mother Catherine Waxbom, Elgin, Or.; brothers Roy Waxbom, Elgin, Or.; Jerry Waxbom, Elgin, Or.; and ten grandchildren in this blended family. Services will be held Saturday June 6, 2015 at 11:00 a.m. at Libby Assembly of God with a luncheon following at Wilkinson Hall. The family requests in lieu of flowers to prayerfully consider a donation to Wings PO Box 7852 Kalispell, MT. 59903

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Donald Ralph Taylor passed away May 24, 2015 in Elgin, Oregon. He was born on December 10, 1934 in Jackson Hole, Wyoming to Ralph Donald Taylor and June Seaton Taylor. He graduated from Jackson Hole High School. Don married Laurane Walters after High School and they were blessed with four sons, Ralph Donald, Ronald B, Richard Lee and Russell Gerald. He loved skiing, being a cowboy, riding horses, shoeing horses, participating in rodeos, ranching, truck driving and operating heavy equipment. After he was married, Don worked at the BKW Market and then the Federal Elk Refuge. In1966 Don moved his family from Jackson to a ranch west of Wells, Nevada where he managed it for three years. He then moved the family to a ranch in Skull Valley, Utah where he became the manager of it. While living there he divorced Laurane and married Ruby Hoffmeister. Don and Ruby moved to Rigby, Idaho where he drove a semi-truck hauling products for Golden Valley. Don and Ruby moved again to Elgin, Oregon where he drove trucks for Alaskan Sea Foodand Globe Sea food. Don and Ruby were divorced. Don met Patty Bennett at an LDS singles picnic in Sumpter, Oregon and shortly after that they were married on September 22, 1995. He will be dearly missed and may God be with you, Dad. He was preceded in death by parents; sister Helen Taylor; first and second wives Laurane Walters Ford and Ruby Hoffmeister. Don is survived by his wife Patty, sons Ralph Taylor, Ronald iLillianl Taylor, Richard iPaml Taylor and Russell iLoril Taylor, step children Tim iRondal Collins, Debra Frogner and John Frogner, 12 grandchildren, 14 great grandchildren, 2 great great grandchildren, brother Clay Taylor, AuntJeanine Mayer. Funeral services were held in Jackson, Wyoming, on Saturday, May 30, 2015, 12:00 p.m. Condolences may be sent to the family and a life sketch can be read at www.valleymortuaryjackson.com

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THE FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

SERVING UNION AND WALLOWA COUNTIES SINCE I666

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C B 1B . Eugene has long called itself track capital of the world. Union is becoming track capital of Northeast Oregon. The Union High School girls track and field team won a state title at the recent Class 2A championships, held at Hayward Field in Eugene, with the boys finishing second. Coach Jay Blackburn's squad reached the Oregon pinnacle for Union's first girls track and field championship since 1996. The Union girls also won in 1977. It's an interesting trend — every 19 years, a state championship. Blackburn, just completing his fiAh year as head coach, is hoping, while the team loses some stalwart seniors, the current group of athletes coming back will be able to buck that trend.

The Bobcats' depth paid dividends with quality and quantity. Union's girls team had more individuals qualified for state than any of its rivals. They competed in 11 events and made the podium, the top

eight, in all 11. As a whole, the team has 39 athletes — 14 girls and 25boys— an admirable turnout in a school with a total of 115 students. Considering the sokball program narrowly missed returning to the state title game aker winning two years in a row, that is an amazing turnout for a sport not in the big three-

volleyball, basketball and sokball. Blackburn said a lot of the success has to do with the attitudes of the kids. Union has been on a winning roll oflate, and success in one area leads to success in others. While he has a voluntary winter training program for his team members, he prefers they do a winter sport, if that is their choice. But when he is working as a wrestling coach, in winter, and sees some ofhis track athletes doing stairs, or some other activity, it gives him optimism for future success. It helps that the Union sports complex offers outstanding facilities for spring sports, and the community gives its support for not only the outstanding softball program but also baseball and track. Blackburn said he doesn't have a lot of rules but one is to respect teammates and not speak anything negative, like "I don't want to run today." Negativity breeds negativity, he said. Keeping things upbeat, he says, helps instill a positive attitude throughout the program and a love for the sport. Another key to success is Blackburn's talented stable of assistant coaches. For example, the assistant track coach, Steve Sheehy, has been coach of the year in the state something like seven times and national coach of the year once. Other assistants contributing to the success are Josh Chiraboga, throwing; Kevin Sheehy, sprinting; Eleina Baird, triple jump; Tim Vandervlugt, distance running; and ScottSchroeder, javelin and hurdles. When theteam award was given in Eugene by Dan O'Brien, originally of Henley and an Olympic gold medalist in the decathlon, that was a high point. Union track can take the championship with them forever and will build on that success in the future with more runs at the state title.

e © CC~ TN4,M r CAgl,aPenC64C.5bnV

A case study in rapid radicalization H

ere'sacase study in rapid radicalization. Just three years ago, the House voted overwhelmingly to extend the charter of the Export-ImportBank and to expand its business of loaning money to boost American exports. Among Republicans, 147 voted yes and 93 voted no. Nothing much has changed since then. The Export-Import Bank supporteditselfand generated returns of $675 million for taxpayers last year. Its default rate as of March was under twotenths of 1 percent. Yet now Republicans say a majority of the caucus wants to abolish the bank, and the Republican Study Committee — representing 170 House conservatives — has come out against renewing the charter. Opponents in both the House and Senate have so far succeeded in keeping the renewal from coming up for votes iin which a pro-bank, mostly Democratic coalition would almost certainly prevail), and without action the bank will shut down at month's end. "Here I am, in the minority of my own conference, fighting to defend the Ex-Im Bank that is the best example of creating jobs in America," Rep. Chris Collins iR-N.Yl, said at a news conference with manufacturers and fellow pro-business Republicans on Wednesday morning."I am befuddled by what's going on in the heads of some of my fellow members in my party that want to have the Ex-Im Bank charter expire and cost us thousands upon thousands of small-business

jobs." Collins shouldn't be befuddled. Republican presidential candidates trying to harness the populist energy in the electoratehave come out againstthe bank, which has become a bete noire with the tea party set. Conservative groups howling about corporate welfare and big government have,forthe m om ent, bested the corporate interests thathave previously co-opted grassroots conservatives. There's little chance the rebellion will kill the bank permanently, but there's a real chance the bank will close temporarily. At an Ex-Im hearing before the House Financial Services Committee on Wednesday, veteran congressman Frank Lucas iR-Okla.l tried to talk sense into his hotheaded GOP colleagues — one of whom, committee chairman Jeb Hensarling iTex.l, has bottled up legislation renewing the bank.

iR-Mich.l. Calling the bank's record "abhorrent" and "beyond broken," he complained that"American taxpayers have beenunwittingly propping up foreign state-owned companies" in Saudi Arabia, Russia and elsewhere while the bank"has an unsavory track record involving corruption, bribery and fraud." Rep. Scott Garrett iR-N.J.l took the counterintuitive position of arguing that the bank, which essentially subsidizes U.S. exports, causes American manufacturers toshipjobsoverseas."How do you make those decisions on a daily basis, knowing that you are hurting families, hurting people, hurting?" he asked of Fred Hochberg, the Ex-Im president. "I just find that unimaginable." Perhaps the most curious case against the bank was made by Rep. Sean DufFy iR-Wis.l who portrayed Ex-Im as a creatureofDemocraticpresidents."Mr. Hochberg, have you ever stayed at the White House?" DufFy asked. "In the 1990s." ''With Mr. Clinton?" 'Yes, sir." "Lincoln bedroom?" "No, it was actually a different bed-

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room." "OK. And you are an Obama bundler, correct?" "I raised money for Mr. Obama." DufFy, triumphant, said this revealed "your political afiliation." It's true: Hochberg, the political appointeeofa Democraticpresident,supports Democrats. This revelation was almost as shocking as the discovery by lawmakers that Ex-Im has made some bad loans ias virtually all banks have done) and has been defrauded by corrupt actors ias virtually all government entities have been). All this was true, as well, in 2012, when a large bipartisan majority blessed the Ex-Im Bank. The only thing that has changed is the ideological center of gravity within the GOP.

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"Whether it is 14 days or 14 weeks or 14 months, this institution will be reauthorized," he said."It may take a number ... of occasions where U.S. companies lose business, substantial business around the world, to help us focus." Lucas pointed out that his colleagues' ideological purity puts the United States in"a position of surrender" with foreign competitors. "Do whatever you have to do, my friends, from your philosophical perspectives," he said."But don't in a competitiveworld say thatwe're going to establish a principle so perfect, so idealistic, so philosophically straightforward that everyone else will flock to it. That's not the way it works." But most ofhis colleagues on the panel were happy to surrender for the sake of free-market purity. "I'm dismayed that some of the best American companies believe that they need special programs and carve-outs like Ex-Im to remain competitive on the global stage," said Rep. Bill Huizenga

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FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

THE OBSERVER — 5A

LOCAL

TUITION Continued from Page1A charge, typically applied to more costly programs. The tuition increase goes today before the State Board of Higher Education for approval. Eastern officials said the 4.9 percent increase in tuition amounts to about

$100 per term. At the same time, the university next year intends to increase fee remissions, or tuition and housing discounts, by $700,000"to help offset the tuition increase," says a memo &om Lara Moore, EOU vice president for finance and administrati on,totheboard oftrustees. Interim EOU President Jay Kenton, who will retire at the end of the month, saidover the past42 years,tuition at Eastern has increased an average of 7

percent each year. The 2015-16 increase would raise an additional $1 million in revenue, according to documents prepared by Eastern officials. Kenton said they began the process of discussing tuitionincreases early this year with a consulting committee. Since then, he said, officials have met with students in a student forum and met with the Associated Students of Eastern Oregon University, the student governing body. Kenton said the tuition increase will help Eastern build much needed revenue. Moore and Kenton noted that Eastern will still be the most affordable university in Oregon. '%e really feel we are in the pack" with other universities, Moore said. Tuition at EOU was last increased during the 2012-13 school year. Trustee Jer Pratton said even with

DELAYS

the tuition increase, students will get a "red-eye bargain." But Elsie Praeger-Goller, the student representative on the board,said she felt there was not a compromise made for students, many of whom had requesteda 3percent increase forresident students, and ultimately voted against the increase. Trustee Ray Brown, who abstained during the vote, said he worries about the differential tuition proposed for business students. "I do have concerns for the retention of our business students," he said. M oore said room and board rates, which were not raised this year, will remain flat for the 2015-16 school year. At the nearly four-hour meeting on Thursday, the trustees also approved a number of changes to various documents with which the board will lead after it becomesofficial July 1.

Continued ~om Page1A

:t

c.h-

Cherise Kaechele/The Observer

A group of about seven elementary school parents met with La Grande School District Superintendent Larry Glaze earlier this week to discuss their concern about class sizes for the upcoming school year.

Continued from Page1A The Central parent also said that by hiring now the school district would more likely find qualified teachers who are living in La Grande who would otherwise move. 'They can't stay here and wait for the schooldistrictto add teachers,"M yer said. Glaze does not believe that hiring teachers later in the summer jeopardizes the school district's chances of landingtop educators. 'There is no shortage of quality teachers in our own backyard who are looking forjobs,"Glaze said."One reason is that Eastern Oregon University is here." The superintendent said that some quality teachers might leave the area

BUDGET Continued from Page1A we really don't know what we'll do to avoid the longterm impacts that, in my opinion, will be devastating and unavoidable," he said. Funding the position, Lillard said, would be "gambling with our fiscal stability." City Manager Robert Strope said the budget situation will continue to worsen as projec ted costsincrease and revenue remains stagnant. '%e are on a course where in the next couple years we aregoing tocrossthe line where we no longer have the fund balance accumulated to make it &om the first of July to the time when we get our first property tax infusion,

iofl $1.4 to $1.6 million," Strope said. Strope said in the next fiscal year the city will spend more in operations than it brings in. Councilor John Lackey countered that the council should prioritize essential services, like police and fire.

"There is noshortage of quality teachers in our own backyard who

We want to hear your thoughts. Email letters to the editor to news@ lagrandeobserver. com and join the conversation on The Observer Opinion page.

are lookingforjobs. Onereasonis that Eastern Oregon University is here." — Larry Glaze, La Grande School District superintendent

if they can not find ajob earlyin the summer, but on the other hand, quality teachers sometimes move in over the course of the summer. "Quality teachers from other areas have moved here over and over iduring the summer)," Glaze said. Glaze said it would be a financial risk for the school district to hire additional teachersbeforeithasa solididea of

What do you think? We want to hear your thoughts. Email letters to the editor to news@ lagrandeobserver. com and join the conversation on The Observer Opinion

page.

building, major renovations of the LHS gym, the construction of a new vocational technical building at LHS and the construction of aboutsix classrooms at Island City Elementary. Baxter said that the relatively minor inconveniences the projects will cause will be more than worth it. Baxter cited the auditorium as an example. "The auditorium will be worlds apart from what we have had," he said."The community and outside entities will want to use it." Baxter is also excited about the renovations planned for the gym, which will include new bleachers and floors. "It will be one of the premier gyms in all of Eastern Oregon if not in the state for a school our size." Contact Dick Mason at 541-786-5386 or dmason C lagrandeobserver.com. Follow Dick onTwitter C IgoMason.

It takes more than a Pulaski to fightfire.

what enrollment will be. '%e want to be as careful as we can," he said. Glaze said the district hires elementary school teachers when it appears thatthe average district-wide classsize fora grade willexceed recommended guidelines set by school district policy. Contact Dick Mason at 541-786-5386 or dmason C lagrandeobserver.com. Follow Dick onTwitter C IgoMason.

— Brett Baxter, La Grande High School principal

Steps it will take to do this include providing contractors with assistance in preparingtheirbids. '%e want to address this so that bidders can hopefully feel better about the process," Glaze said. Chris Panike, the La Grande School District's director ofbusiness and operations, said he believes that local contractors may have been hesitant to subm it bids because theprocess seems daunting due in partto allthepaperwork they need to complete. He said one local contractor told him he was confused and intimidated by all of the paperwork. Panike said he can empathize with these concerns, saying he would feel the same way if he were a contractor. Panike supports the schooldistrict'seffortsto delaythe startofsome projects in order to attract more bids. '%e can't let the schedule run the budget into the ground," Panike said. LHS Principal Brett Baxterbelieves thatthedelays will prove beneficial. "It is disappointing to put things ofE but this is the right thing to do because we will geta betterproduct with more bids," Baxter said. Bond projects that will start in 2016 in addition to the LHS auditorium and locker room work include the construction of a new Central Elementary School

HAIlt A 0000 ~ M

W hat do you think?

more bids."

bids.

r

TEACHERS

is the right thing to do because we will get a better product with

dollars local," Glaze said. The dist ricthasdirected the CM Company,the contractormanager/general contractorfor bond project work, to pursue more local

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Itis disappointing to put thingsff, o but this

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Speakout TODAY'S QUESTION What do you think ofthe La Grande City Council decision to drop funding for a new officer for the La Grande Police Department? SOUND OFF www.lagrandeobserver. com

The motion to pass the budget without theofficer funding was approved 3-2, with John Lackey and Troy Pointer voting against it. Justin Rock recused himself due to a conflict, and John Bozarth was absent. In addressing the council, La Grande Police Chief Brian Harvey said cuts in the level of service by the police department will be coming. "The likelihood is we're just not going to be going to

some calls, and people iwilll With police station concerns, increased mental health calls and changes in drug laws, "to eliminate this officer, I think, would be a great error," he said. When asked about longterm stability of the police officer funding, Strope told the council it could not be done because the city is already running a deficit. "To me, the question isn't as much'can we fund

either file reports themselves or online, would be the most likely scenario," Harvey said. In other news, the council: • Adopted a new ordinance regulatingconductin cityparks • Passed a resolution establishing new monthly

there of $200,000 in the long term," he said.

Contact KellyDucote at 541-786-4230 or kducote 0 lagrandeobserver.com. Follow Kelly on Twitter @IgoDucote.

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memberships for Veterans' Memorial Pool • Awarded towing and impound service contracts forthe policedepartment to Captain Hook's Towing and Rock & Sons Tire and Auto iwith Councilor Justin Rock recusedfrom the vote) Convening as the Urban Renewal Agency, the body adopted the 2015-16 Urban Renewal budget and approved a memorandum of understanding with the Union County Economic Development Corporation. The current MOU expires at the end of the month.

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6A —THE OBSERVER

FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

LOCAL

CRIME

Car reported missing; police located it within an hour By Cherise Kaechele

Brian Harvey following Cox in her car and get pulled into Bubbles Laundry. A car was stolen, and quickly recovered, "It was a very short window of time when thanks to the La Grande Police Department she found out her car has been stolenwithin five minutes," said Harvey, who added and some poor choices by the thief. Christopher Cox, 31, was arrested on that doesn't happen often."I went down and Wednesday afternoon and is charged with tookthe reportforthe stolen carandironically I spotted it driving down the street." unauthorized use of a motor vehicle and driving while suspended. Harvey said Cox actually stopped and On Wednesday afternoon, Taylin Espipulled over before Harvey turned on his lights. noza, 17, reported her 1997 BMW as stolen Cox was cooperative while being arrested, Harvey said. The police department has just minutes after seeing it in the Bud had"many dealings with iCoxl before this Jackson's parking lot. According to Espinoza, she saw Cox driving incident. His name is well known with the her car from where she was standing in the officers from his past history." Espinozasaid she appreciatesthe parking lot after she had reported it missing. Instead of making an escape with the La Grande Police Department and how vehicle, Cox decided to make a few pit stops. fast they responded to her report and how 'This is how dumb this guy is — all the quickly they were able to apprehend Cox. 'They were amazing," she said."The chief change is missing from the car," Espinoza was right on top of it. They did such a good said."He went to the car wash and he went job." to Safeway and bought a soda within the hour of when he stole it." Cox is being held on $30,000 bail at the Union County jail. She said she saw La Grande Police Chief The Observer

Observer file photo

Fire crews extinguish a car fire on Interstate 84 on May 21. Avis Elain Thomas, 59, of Portland, sustained major injuries, according to the accident report from the Oregon State Police.

Armvrecrnitersaveswoman fromcar I-84vehiclefire "If I would not have shown up, she would've been dead," Jury said."The only other person who was remotely willing to help was the truck driver. Everyone else was scaredofthe vehicle." He added the vehicle, amazingly, never did explode. He believes it didn't have a full gas tank, but there was an oxygen tankinside the SUV. Thomas said the total time from when he stopped the vehicle to when he dragged her away from it was maybe one minute. ''When I put on this uniform,it'sm yjob toprotect the people in this country," Jury said."She had no time, she was about to punch her one-way ticket out ofhere. I didn't have time to assess the vehicle." Jury said he had gotten off work that day and left immediately for Baker City, so when he arrived on the scene he was wearing his uniform. Walking away from the accident, he said, he was covered in blood and his uniform was burned. "I shook the hands of the truck driver iwhen everything was finished) and told him, We just saved someone's life.'Then I thanked him and drove home." According to St. Alphonsus in Boise, Idaho, where Thomas was taken for her injuries, she is in fair condition. Oregon State Police are investigatingtheaccident.

By Cherise Kaechele

she passed out." He said it's pretty typical of victims Whether it was impeccable to pass out when someone timing or a guardian angel, assures them that someone Sgt. Thomas Jury was in the is there to help them, like he rightplace atthe righttim e (hd. Thomas sustained major and saved a woman's life two injuries, according to the acciweeks ago. dent report from the Oregon Jury, 30, who is an active duty Army recruiter out of State Police. She broke both Yakima, Washington, was her legs during the accident. driving home to Baker City Her 5-year-old grandson, where his family lives on who was the passenger in the May 21. Jury was driving on vehicle, had been pulled to Interstate 84 eastbound near safety before Jury arrived on the Perry exit when he spot- the scene. Thomas'injuries prevented ted smoke in the sky. "I saw the smoke a halfher from getting out of the mile back," Jury said."It was vehicle. The SUV was on fire pouring down rain and I and Jury sustained burns thought there's only one thing on his hands, ear and neck trying to get Thomas out. The that could've been on fire." Jury saw a 2000 Chevy man that had originally been Tahoethatwas on fireand yelling as Jury came onto the a smallgroup gathered scene assisted him in pulling around. Thomas from the burning car. eWe gother about 10 feet He had slowed his car down and put on his hazard away from the vehicle before lights and he saw a guy flail- the flames were coming out ing his arms asking for help. the car window iwhere she "I heard him yell at the had just been)," Jury said. woman in the car to get out," eWe could feel the heat." Jury said."I immediately Jury propped Thomas' slammed on the brakes." head on some clothes he The car was on fire, Jury found and checked her pulse. recalls, and he knew he It was very faint at the time, didn't have long before the he recalled. He waited with vehicle could explode. her until the paramedics "She only had maybe one came, he said. minute," he said. Jury said if the man, who Jury struggled to get the was a truckdriver but Jury didn't know his name, had not driver, Avis Elain Thomas, 59, of Portland, out ofher have helped, he wouldn'thave car. When he ran up to her been able to getThomas out of vehicle, he said,"'I'm going the car and no one else stepped to get you out ofhere,' and up to help, likelyout of fear. The Observer

Union County receives 53,000 in wolf depredation funding By Cherise Kaechele The Observer

Union County was

awarded $3,000 to gotoward confirmed wolf depredation, commissioners said during Wednesday's Union County commissioners meeting. The county has been awarded a small sum of moneyfrom the Department ofAgriculture for wolf depredation forthelastthree years, according to County Administrative Oflicer Shelley Burgess. Arearanchers must submit applications to receive the money, which must go toward compensation for a positivelyidentified wolf attack on their livestock or to implement methods that limit wolf-livestockinterac-

tion, reimbursement for qualified expenses incurred by the county for implementing the county program or compensation for missing livestock or working dogs resultingfrom an attack. Commissioner Steve McClure said there has only been one confirmed case of depredation in Union County. "Our surrounding counties have been hit much harder," he said. The grant agreement states if the county does not use all $3,000 then it must be sent back to the Department of Agriculture. "Last year, we dispersed $2,000," McClure said.»We're able to inventory application for the next cycle. Too many

people apply and there's not enoughfundsleft s The commissioners also approveda grant from the University of Oregon Law Schoolto begin the process of funding the Eastern Oregon Mediation Center for

$50,000 this biennium. The mediation center runs out of the Union County SherifFs Oflice and works to promote and support mediationand other collaborative problem solving and dispute resolution efforts throughout Union County, according to county documents. This grant will cover the 2015-2017 biennium. Ifthe centerreceivesthe funding, it will constitute 50 percentofitstotalbudget.

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Join uS fOr the EOLS Parade - a highlight Of EOLS ROdeO Weekend since 1908. It's toe-tapping, flag-waving fun for all ages. The parade begins at 2:00 pm sharp on Friday afternoon and travels through historic downtown Union.The parade features the Grand Marshals, rodeo queens, horses and more horses, classic cars, floats, musiCal grOuPS, and So muCh mOre.

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THE

BSERVER FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

THE OBSERVER —7A

JUNE

5FRIDAV • Art Friday:1 p.m.; Elgin Community Center, 269 N. 10th. • ArtsEast Biennial Honored Artists Exhibit Opening Reception:6 p.m.; Art Center at the Old Library, 1006 PennAve., La Grande. • Chair Exercise Class:10 a.m.; Union County Senior Center,1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • Free Children's Clinic:free health care for children without medical insurance; 9 a.m.-noon; Grande Ronde Hospital Children's Clinic, 612 Sunset Drive, La Grande. • Hog Wild Days Roasted Pork BBQ:hosted by Island City Lions Club; 5:30 p.m.; $8.50, $5.50 for kids younger than 12; Island City Elementary School gym, 10201W. Fourth. • La Grande Summer Lunch Program:11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; free lunch for kids age1-18, adults $3; Riveria Activity Center, 2609 Second St., La Grande. • LiveMusic by FineTunes: 11 a.m.; Union County Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • Lower Valley Farmers Market: noon-6p.m.;Telephone Building, 301 E. First St.,Wallowa. • Open Mic Night:7 p.m.;Terminal Gravity Brew Pub,803 School St., Enterprise. • Parent & Child Playgroup:ages 0-5; 9 a.m.; Enterprise City Park. • SHINEVBS:preschool-6th grade; 6 p.m.; Nazarene Church, 109 18th Street, La Grande. • Teen Movie Night:grades 6-12; 6 p.m.; Cook Memorial Library, 2006 Fourth St., La Grande. • Wallowa Valley Festival of Arts:opening reception, 7-10 p.m., $20 in advance; Joseph Community Center, 201 N. Main St.

II SATIIRDA V • 3 Rivers Race Against Domestic Violence:6 a.m. start for bikers, 10 a.m. for runners; Pioneer Park, Palmer Avenue, La Grande. • The Basics of Fly-Fishing: 7 p.m.;Wallowa Lake State Park. • Blue Mountain Conservancy BumblebeesWalk & Talk: 1 p.m.; Cook Memorial Library, 2006 Fourth St., La Grande. • Faith Lutheran BenefitYard Sale:8 a.m.-2 p.m.; Faith Lutheran Church, 12th Bc Gekeler, La Grande. • Free Fishing Day Kids Event:

10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Marr Pond, Enterprise. • Hog Wild Days & Parade:food, craft, and game vendors all day; parade at11 a.m.; Downtown Island City. • Hog Wild Days Pancake, Egg & Sausage Feed:6-11 a.m.; $5, $4 kids; Fire Station, Island City. • Joseph Farmers Market: 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Joseph Avenue 8c Main Street. • La Grande Farmers Market & JuggleFest:9a.m.-noon,live music by Kupenga Marimba; Max Square, Adams Avenue Bc Fourth Street, La Grande. • LEGO Play:9 a.m.-noon; Cook Memorial Library, 2006 Fourth St., La Grande. • Live Irish Music:7 p.m.; Lear's Main Street Bar Bc Grill,111W. Main St., Enterprise. • Lower Valley Farmers Market: 11 a.m.-4 p.m.;Telephone Building, 301 E. First St.,Wallowa. • Maxville Heritage Interpretive Center Open House: 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Maxville Heritage Interpretive Center, 403 N. Main St., Joseph. • MERATrail Work Day:8 a.m.; Fox HillTrailhead, La Grande. • RabiesRicense Clinic: sponsored by Animal Rescue Center of EO, aka BMHA;10 a.m.; next to Union Carnegie Library, 182 N. Main St., Union. • Wallowa Valley Festival of Arts:10 a.m.-5 p.m.; 6:30 p.m. "Night of the Quick Draw," $5 admission; JosephCommunity Center,201 N. Main St. • Zumwalt Prairie Preserve Wildflower Hike:meet at Wallowa LandTrust office at 8 a.m. to carpool to the site;116 S.River St., Enterprise.

1SDIIDAV • Hog Wild:food, craft, and game vendors all day; downtown Island City. • Wallowa Valley Festival of Arts:10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Joseph Community Center, 201 N. Main St.

/ MDIIDAV • Bridge:1 p.m.; Union County Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • Chair Exercise Class:10 a.m.; Union County Senior Center,1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • Cove School Board:7 p.m.; high school math room, 803 Main St., Cove. • Elgin Summer Lunch Program: 12:15-1 p.m.; ages 1-18eat free; Stella Mayfield School, 1111 Division St.

• IC City Council:7 p.m.; Island City City Hall, 10605 Island Ave. • The Jordan World Circus: 7 p.m.; $14-$18; Mavericks Arena, 3608 N. Second St., La Grande. • La Grande Summer Lunch Program:11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; free lunch for kids age1-18, adults $3; Riveria Activity Center, 2609 Second St. • Live Music by Dennis Winn: 11 a.m.; Union County Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • Pirates of the Caribbean Summer Music Camp Opening Day:week-long camp for pre-K through 2nd grade; 9:30 a.m.12:30 p.m.; $80, sibling discounts available; Art Center at the Old Library, 1006 PennAve., La Grande. • Ready2Learn Storytime:11:30 a.m.; Cook Memorial Library, 2006 Fourth St., La Grande.

9TDESDA V • Beginning Guitar for Kids: age 7 and older, no experience necessary, must register through Parks Bc Rec; 10a.m.; $30 for 6 sessions; Direct Music Source, 1206 Adams Ave., La Grande. • Bingo:6:30 p.m.; Union County Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • Cove City Council:7 p.m.; City Hall, 504 Alder. • Cove Fresh Food Alliance: 11 a.m.-noon; United Methodist Church. • Elgin Summer Lunch Program 12:15-1 p.m.; ages 1-18eat free; Stella Mayfield School, 1111 Division St. • International Folk Dancing: 7:30 p.m.; Art Center at the Old Library, 1006 PennAve., La Grande. • La Grande Farmers Market: 3:30-6 p.m.; Max Square, Fourth Street and Adams Avenue. • La Grande Summer Lunch Program:11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; free lunch for kids age1-18, adults $3; Riveria Activity Center, 2609 Second St. • Live Music by Blue Mountaineers:11 a.m.; Union County Senior Center,1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • Live Music by Steve Hines: 8 p.m.;Ten Depot Street, La Grande. • Page Turners Book Club: 1 p.m.; Cook Memorial Library, 2006 Fourth St., La Grande. • Pinochle:1 p.m.; Union County Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • TOPS (TakeOffPounds Sensibly):fragrance-free venue.; 8 a.m.; Island City City Hall, 10605 Island Ave.

I WEDIIESDAV • Building Your Budget:5:30 p.m.; Cook Memorial Library, Community Room, 2006 Fourth St., La Grande. • Chair Exercise Class:10 a.m.; Union County Senior Center,1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • Dehydration Presentation: noon; Union County Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • Elgin Summer Lunch Program 12:15-1 p.m.; ages 1-18eat free; Stella Mayfield School, 1111 Division St.. • Joint MERA Meeting:7 p.m.; Joseph Building Annex, 1106K Ave., La Grande. • La Grande Summer Lunch Program:11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; free lunch for kids age 1-18, adults $3; Riveria Activity Center, 2609 Second St. • Live Music by Blue Mountaineers:11 a.m.; Union County Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • National Association of Retired & Veteran Railway Employees:10:30 a.m.; Cook Memorial Library, 2006 Fourth St., La Grande. • Pie Auction:11:15 a.m.; Union County Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • Rotary Club of Wallowa County:noon; St. Katherine's Catholic Church, 301 E.Garfield, Enterprise.

g THIIRSDAV • Beginning Guitar for Kids: age 7 and older, no experience necessary, must register through Parks Bc Rec;10 a.m.; $30 for six sessions; Direct Music Source, 1206Adams Ave., La Grande. • Blue Mountain Peggers Cribbage Club:5:30 p.m.; $7; Denny's, 2604 Island Ave., La Grande. • Country Swing Thursday: 7:30 p.m.; $3 before 8 p.m., $5 after 8 p.m.; Maridell Center, 1124 Washington, La Grande. • Courthouse Concert Series: 5:30p.m.;W allowa County Courthouse lawn, Enterprise. • Elgin Summer Lunch Program: 12:15-1 p.m.; ages 1-18eat free; Stella Mayfield School, 1111 Division St. • Enterprise Farmers' Market: 4-7 p.m.; Wallowa County Courthouse lawn. • Karaoke Night at Bud Jackson's:9 p.m.; Bud Jackson's, La Grande. • La Grande Summer Lunch Program:11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; free lunch for kids age 1-18, adults

$3; Riveria Activity Center, 2609 Second St. • SafetyClass forTeens:opento boys and girls in middle and high school; 3 p.m.; Cook Memorial Library, 2006 Fourth St., La Grande. • Union County PFLAG:6 p.m.; Zion Lutheran Church, 902 Fourth St., La Grande.

]$ FRIDA V • Art Friday:1 p.m.; Elgin Community Center, 269 N. 10th. • Chair Exercise Class:10 a.m.; Union County Senior Center,1504 N. Albany St., La Grande. • Elgin Summer Lunch Program: 12:15-1 p.m.; ages 1-18eat free; Stella Mayfield School, 1111 Dwision St.

• Free Children's Clinic:free health care for children without medical insurance; 9 a.m.-noon; Grande Ronde Hospital Children's Clinic, 612 Sunset Dr., La Grande. • La Grande Summer Lunch Program:11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; free lunch for kids age1-18, adults $3; Riveria Activity Center, 2609 Second St., La Grande. • Lower Valley Farmers Market: noon-6p.m.;Telephone Building, 301 E. First St.,Wallowa. • Oregon Mountain Cruise Car Show:registration Bc social hour 4-6:30p.m.,dance7-11p.m.;M ain Street, Joseph. • Parent & Child Playgroup:ages 0-5; 9 a.m.; Enterprise City Park. • Wallowa Mountain Quilt Guild Show:9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Joseph High School, 400Wm. E.Williams Ave. • Wallowology Presents Karen Antell's Wildflowers of NE Oregon:7 p.m.; Wallowology Center, 508 N. Main St., Joseph.

MENUS UNION COUNTY SENIOR CENTER 1504 N. ALBANY ST., LA GRANDE LUNCH MENU JUNE 8-12 MONDAY: sweet-n-sour meatballs, rice pilaf, gravy, steamed vegetables, salad, rolls. TUESDAY: baked potato bar with all the trimmings, salad greens, fruit.

WEDNESDAY: fried chicken, seasonedred potatoes,steamed vegetables, molded Jell-O, breads, cake. THURSDAY: cabbage rolls, spinach salad, fresh fruit, bread sticks, dessert. FRIDAY: almond chicken, rice pilaf, steamed vegetables, salad greens, rolls, fruit.

Cyberbullying incident leads to concern over app known as 'Whisper' don't create their own user names; the app does that for BAKER CITY — When storesite.Itencourages users them and hones in on their a cyberbullying incident to engage in"anonymous location. "It is the most anonymous rocked Baker High School a secret-sharing and messaging few weeks ago, it didn't take for&ee!Seesecretsposted by social media hosting site there is," Merrill says. Principal Ben Merrill long to people near you or kom your gettothebottom ofit. school!" He learned about Whisper But a new social media Merrill, who's known for be- &om an Oregon State Police app that's gaining popularity ing tech savvy, says he fails to ofHcer who encouraged him to among BHS students has see any benefit the app could learn more about it. left him shaking his head in possibly provide. To demonstrate the app, "This is one of the scariexasperation. Merrill downloaded it on his The app known as'%hisesttechnology apps thatI've phone. One question posted per"allows studentsto post seen," he says."It concerns by a user asked students '%ho has the best truck at anonymous messages to a me that in our society people wide audience targeting those develop technology that is school?"Whisper produced a at specific locations, such as hurtM anddamaging." photo of a pickup truck — not Baker High School. Those who post on the site one at Baker High SchoolBy Chris Collins

vvescom News service

The app can be downloaded

&ee at the Google play app

with the question typed over the image, and waited for responses to roll in. But that's not all students are"whispering" about at the high school. They post comments about drinking, there's an offer kom someone to pay another $100 to take a computerized test, and then there are the scathing insults. "Some can get very hurtful," Merrill said."Kids don't understand how disrespectM their comments are." And those comments target not only students, but teachers and administrators as well.

e

Twenty years ago, when insults were hurled in faceto-faceconkontation,people who knew full well who was making the attacks, Merrill noted. But that has changed. "If you don't like someone, you have the best media to attack them and you are not vulnerable to getting caught," Merrill says of Whisper. He'sseen a postalleging that someone at the school had drugs in his or her car, anothercriticized a student's appearanceand stillanother m ade refe rencesto a student's sexual orientation.

Merrill is helpless to track these posts down or to check them out in any way. He hopes parents will join him in his campaign to get kids to stop using the app. That's going to be a hardfought battle. Merrill said even students who have been harassed on the site are addicted to checking it, even if they never post on it themselves. "Our kids are addicted to technology," Merrill says. And they want to communicate with systems that are fast, short and fairly anonymous such as Snapchat.

For information on clinic dates and to schedule an appointment,

call: (208) 367-2328 Saint Alphonsus Medical Group

TWO CliniC IOCatiOnS in La Grande . Steven Fonken, MD

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G RA N D E R OND E H OS P I T A L

HEART CARE

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Friday, June 5, 2015 The Observer

AT A GLANCE

Williams rallies to reach finals Down a set and a breakThursday and clearly not herself, an ailing Serena Williams summoned the resolve to reach the French Open final by beating 23rd-seeded Timea Bacsinszky of Switzerland 4-6, 6-3, 6-0. After getting broken to fall behind 3-2 in the second set, Williams claimed the final10 games. She had a 12-2 edge in winners in the final set. "Stunning," said Williams' coach, Patrick Mouratoglou. "This is the difference between champions and everyone else. There is no logical explanation." Now one victory from her third French Open championship and 20th major title in all, Williams faces 13th-seeded Lucie Safarova of the Czech Republic on Saturday.

i in sevname sreseason - mencan COLLEGE FOOTBALL

By Josh Benham The Observer

W hen your name appears in the Sporting News, you know you're doing something right. But for senior Jace Billingsley, it also brings expectations. And none are bigger than his own. The Eastern Oregon University running back was listed as a preseason NAIA All-American in the

publication's recently released college football preview issue. "Iguessit'spretty excitingtohave it going into my senior year," he said. "It means I've been noticed in the year leading up to this. At the same time, it means I have to leave an impression this year." Mountaineer fans, rest easy: you

won't have to worry about the star running back resting on his laurels, or letting the recognition get to his

head. "I want to have a great year this fall," Billingsley said."I'm just motivated to come out this season. What I really want to do is lead this team to the playofFs. We were really close last year, and if an All-American 4onorl happens, it happens. But that's not

my goal. My goal is to lead this team." Eastern went 8-3 in 2014 with a 7-3 Frontier Conference record. However, it was the first team out of an at-large bid for the NAIA Football Championship series playofFs, even though the Mounties defeated Southern Oregon University, the eventual national champions, in the season finale on the road. SeeAll-American I Page 9A

YOUTH TRACIC AND FIELD

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EOU hosting summer camp The Eastern Oregon University men's basketball program will host a summer camp for first though eighth graders June 18-20 at Quinn Coliseum. First though fifth grade campers will be on the court from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. each day, while sixth through eighth graders will go from 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. The cost is $75 if registration is completed before June 18, and $85 if completed on or after June 18. Signups are available online at www.eousports. com under the men's basketball tab. For more information, contact Assistant Coach Kevin Attila at 541-497-3238 or attilak@eou.edu.

Wendt, Flyg earn honors Eastern Oregon University softball player Cassie Wendt was selected to the Academic all-American team by Captial One. The senior was a first-team selection. Wendt led the Mounties in several offensive categories including batting average, home runs and RBI. Wendt was also named an NAIA Scholar-Athlete along with teammate Gracie Flyg.

Cherise Kaechele/TheObserver

Joe Lathrop, left, and Jarom Huntsman approach the finish line during the 100-meter race in the boys 11- and 12-year-old division Wednesday at the TrackTown Youth League meet. The top two finishers in each category qualified for a championship meet June 27 at Hayward Field in Eugene.

V • Track Town Youth League draws a crowd to Eastern Oregon By Josh Benham The Observer

Youth track and field athletes from the area earned the right to compete in the same venue their high school, collegiate and professional heroes do. The Track Town Youth League meet took place at Eastern Oregon University Wednesday evening. The event was open to boys and girls, and events included the long jump, the "turbojav," a 100-, 400- and 1,500-meter race. The top two finishers in each age division qualified for a championship meet, June 27, at Hayward Field in Eugene following the USA outdoor track and

field championships. Union's Jaimee Baxter won all three running events in the girls 13- and 14-year-old division. She started the meet by winning the 1,500 in a time of 5 minutes, 50.3 seconds. "That was kind of slow for me," Baxter, 13, said."I think I'm a little out of shape. I haven't really run since track has been over. I've been taking a little break." She also won the 100 with a time of14.4 seconds and the400 i1:12.1l .Baxtersaid she began competing in track and cross country in fifth grade, and has run at Hayward for the Hershey's Track and Field Games in the past. But she was still excited to get back to "Track Town USA." "It's really cool," Baxter said of the venue."I think I got so SeeYouthIPage 10A

Cherise Kaechele/TheObse rve r

Julianna Joyce prepares to launch a throw in the turbojav event in the girls 11- and 12-yearold division at Eastern Oregon University.

PREP BASEBALL

Fourchosentoal-shNeroster • Tigers land four players on the squad for second year in a row By Ronald Bond The Observer

Even though the La Grande baseball team didn't get as far in the Class 4A state playoffs as it hoped, Oregon took notice that the Tigers were a talent-laden team.

Led by Jared Rogers' secondteam selection, four Tiger seniors were named to the all-state team fortheireffortsand performance during the 2015 season. "I think that says a lot about our team having four all-state selections," Rogers said. It's thesecond consecutiveyear the Tigers have put four players on the all-state squad after landing just one in 2013.

The Tigers' season was cut short following a 10-1 loss to Cascade in their Class 4A state play-in game, but La Grande still had asolid season with a 15-12 overall mark and a 9-3record in the GreaterOregon League that gave it a share oftheregular season title. Observer file photo Rogers was chosen to the second La Grande's EliWisdom was named a Class team asacatcher.Itisthe second 4A third-team all-state outfielder, one of four SeeAll-state IPage 10A Tiger seniors chosen to the all-state team.

OBSERVERATHLETE OF THE DAY

TOMORROW'S PICIC

WHO'S HOT

Rogers namedsecond-team all-state

Round two in Ranhy CupFinals

ANTOINE VERMETTE:The Chicago Blackhawks center scored his team's second goal in 1:58 late in the third period as Chicago rallied for a 2-1 win over theTampa Bay Lightning in Game1 of the Stanley Cup Finals.

After helping the La Grande Tigers baseball team to a 15-12 mark, a share of the Greater Oregon League regular season title and a berth in the Class 4A state play-in game, Jared Rogers was chosen as a second-team all-state athlete. The senior was selected to the team as a catcher and headlined four Tiger seniors who were allstate selections.

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he winding down of each sportsseason brings time of reflection. The wondering about the season that has just ended. The "what ifs" thatplague players,coaches and fans alike. Learning from the mistakes to better preparefor thefuture. The end of the spring sports seasonalsobringsabout the time when Oregon School Activities Association addresses any changes for the next school year. Lately, the group has been making almost annual summer tweaks to the rating system it uses to help determine playofFteams. This summer would be a great time to make a change back to its former ways. The current system, adopted before the 2010-11 season and adjusted each year since, uses an RPI rating and a Colley rating to come up with an official OSAA rating of each team in the different classifications. The aim of thiswas tobetterreward the teams that play what these computer matrixes deemed stronger schedules. While some like the OSAA system, it has been under fire since its inception. I, for one, have never been a fan of the system. For me, it started when league championswere being forced to travel for first-round playofF games against teams who SeeBond/Page 10A

Rogers

After blowing a one-goal lead late in Game 1, the Tampa Bay Lightning look to bounce back against the Chicago Blackhawks Saturday. 4:15 p.m., NBC

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WHO'S NOT

JOSH HAMILTON:Only a week into a triumphant return to the

Texas Rangers, his comeback has been put on hold for three to four weeks afteran MRI onWednesday revealed a Grade 2 strain of his left hamstring.

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FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

THE OBSERVER —9A

SPORTS

SCOREBOARD MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore Boston

W 29 29 25 24 24

Minnesota Kansas City Detroit Cleveland Chicago

W 32 30 28 26 24

Houston Los Angeles Texas Seattle Oakland

W 34 28 28 24 23

East Division Pct GB W C G B L10 Str Home Away .537 7-3 W-3 12-10 17-15 '/~ 5-5 W-3 14-16 15-10 .527 .455 4 '/ ~ 4 64 W-2 14-12 11-18 .453 4 '/ ~ 4 4-6 W-1 15-12 9 - 17 .436 5 '/ ~ 5 3-7 L-2 12-14 12-17 Central Division L Pct GB W C G B L10 Str Home Away 7-3 W-2 19-7 13-14 21 .604 3-7 L-1 18-9 12-12 2 1 .588 1 27 .509 5 1 2-8 L-7 14-15 14-12 27 .491 6 2 6-4 W-1 10-14 16-13 28 .462 7 '/ ~ 3'/~ 5-5 L-1 12-10 12-18 West Division L Pct GB W C G B L10 Str Home Away 21 .618 5-5 L-1 19-13 15-8 '/~ 6-4 L-2 16-13 12-13 2 6 .519 5 ' / ~ '/~ 7-3 W-1 11-15 17-11 2 6 .519 5 ' / ~ 30 .444 9 '/ ~ 4'/~ 3-7 L-6 12-17 12-13 3 3 .411 11'/~ 6'/ ~ 7-3 W-4 9-17 14-16

x-Monday, June 15: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 17: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m.

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

L 25 26 30 29 31

NCAA Division I World Series Championship Series IBest-of-3I Florida 2, Michigan 1 Monday, June 1 Florida 3, Michigan 2

Tuesday, June 2 Michigan 1, Florida 0

Wednesday, June 3

New York Washington Atlanta Miami Philadelphia St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Cincinnati Milwaukee

W 36 29 28 23 18

Los Angeles San Francisco San Diego Arizona Colorado

W 31 30 27 25 24

East Division Pct GB W C G B .545 '/~ '/~ .537 .491 3 3 .407 7 '/ ~ 7'/~ .382 9 9 Central Division L Pct GB W C G B 18 .667 2 4 .547 6 ' / ~ '/~ 24 .538 7 29 .442 12 5'/~ 3 6 .333 18 11' / ~ West Division L Pct GB W C G B 23 .574 2 5 .545 1 ' / ~ 28 .491 4 '/ ~ 3 28 .472 5 '/ ~ 4 28 .462 6 4'/~ L 25 25 27 32 34

All Times PDT AMERICAN LEAGUE

Wednesday's Games Boston 6, Minnesota 3, 1st game N.Y. Yankees 3, Seattle 1 Toronto 8, Washington 0 Oakland 6, Detroit 1 Minnesota2,Boston 0,2nd game ChicagoWhite Sox 9,Texas 2 Houston 3, Baltimore 1 Kansas City 4, Cleveland 2 Tampa Bay6,L.A.Angels 5,10 innings

Thursday's Games Oakland 7, Detroit 5 Baltimore 3, Houston 2 Minnesota 8, Boston 4 Texas 2, Chicago White Sox 1, 11 innings Cleveland 6, Kansas City 2, 8 innings Tampa Bay 2, Seattle 1

Friday's Games L.A. Angels (Weaver 4-4) at N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 4-1), 4:05 p.m. Houston (R.Hernandez 2-4) at Toronto (Aa.Sanchez 4-4), 4:07 p.m. Baltimore (Tillman 2-7) at Cleveland (Marcum 2-0), 4:10 p.m. Oakland (Kazmir 2-3) at Boston (Miley 4-5), 4:10 p.m. Detroit (Ryan 1-0) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 2-6), 5:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Lohse 3-6) at Minnesota (Gibson 4-3), 5:10 p.m. Texas (Ch.Gonzalez 1-0) at Kansas City (Volquez 4-3), 5:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 4-5) at Seattle (Happ 3-1), 7:10 p.m. Saturday's Games Houston at Toronto, 10:07 a.m. Milwaukee at Minnesota, 11:10 a.m. Texas at Kansas City, 11:10 a.m. Oakland at Boston, 1:05 p.m. Baltimore at Cleveland, 1:10 p.m. Detroit at Chicago White Sox, 4:15 p.m. L.A. Angels at N.Y. Yankees, 4:15 p.m. Tampa Bay at Seattle, 7:10 p.m. Sunday's Games L.A. Angels at N.Y. Yankees, 10:05 a.m. Houston at Toronto, 10:07 a.m. Baltimore at Cleveland, 10:10 a.m. Oakland at Boston, 10:35 a.m. Detroit at Chicago White Sox, 11:10 a.m. Milwaukee at Minnesota, 11:10 a.m. Texas at Kansas City, 11:10 a.m. Tampa Bay at Seattle, 1:10 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE Wednesday's Games St. Louis 7, Milwaukee 4 Arizona 9, Atlanta 8 Pittsburgh 5, San Francisco 2 Philadelphia 5, Cincinnati 4, 11 innings Toronto 8, Washington 0 Miami 7, Chicago Cubs 3 Colorado 7, L.A. Dodgers 6 San Diego 7, N.Y. Mets 3 Thursday's Games Chicago Cubs 2, Washington 1 Cincinnati 6, Philadelphia 4 N.Y. Mets 6, Arizona 2 St. Louis 7, L.A. Dodgers 1 Friday's Games Chicago Cubs (Wada 0-0) at Washington (Roark1-2), 4:05 p.m. San Francisco (Lincecum 5-3) at Phila-

L10 6-4 3-7 4-6 5-5 2-8

Str Home Away W-1 21-8 9 -1 7 L-3 15-10 14-15 L-2 12-10 14-17 W-2 12-16 10-16 L-1 14-14 7-20

L10 8-2 8-2 4-6 5-5 2-8

Str Home Away W-3 22-7 14-11 W-3 15-9 14-15 W-1 15-11 13-13 W-1 13-11 10-18 L-2 9-20 9 -1 6

L10 4-6 5-5 6-4 4-6 7-3

Str Home Away L-2 21-8 10-15 L-5 16-14 14-11 W-2 15-15 12-13 L-1 13-15 12-13 W-1 10-15 14-13

delphia (Williams 3-5), 4:05 p.m. San Diego (T.Ross 2-5) at Cincinnati (R.lglesias 1-1), 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Morton 2-0) atAtlanta (W.Perez 1-0), 4:35 p.m. Milwaukee (Lohse 3-6) at Minnesota (Gibson 4-3), 5:10 p.m. Miami (Koehler 3-3) at Colorado (E.Butler 3-5), 5:40 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Niese 3-5) atArizona (Hellickson 3-3), 6:40 p.m. St. Louis (C.Martinez 5-2) at L.A. Dodgers (B.Anderson 2-3), 7:10 p.m. Saturday's Games ChicagoCubs atWashingt on,9:05 a.m. Milwaukee at Minnesota, 11:10 a.m. San Francisco at Philadelphia, 12:05 p.m. Miami at Colorado, 1:10 p.m. San Diego at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m. Pittsburgh atAtlanta, 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets atArizona, 7:10 p.m. St. Louis at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m. Sunday's Games San Diego at Cincinnati, 10:10 a.m. Pittsburgh atAtlanta, 10:35 a.m. San Francisco at Philadelphia, 10:35 a.m. Milwaukee at Minnesota, 11:10 a.m. Chicago Cubs at Washington, 1:05 p.m. Miami at Colorado, 1:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets atArizona, 1:10 p.m. St. Louis at L.A. Dodgers, 5:05 p.m.

BASKETBALL NBA Playoffs FINALS IBest-of-7; x-if necessary) Golden State 1, Cleveland 0 Thursday, June 4: Golden State 108, Cleveland 100, OT Sunday, June 7:Cleveland atGolden State, 5 p.m. Tuesday, June 9:Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Thursday, June 11: Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. x-Sunday, June 14: Cleveland at Golden State, 5 p.m. x-Tuesday, June 16: Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. x-Friday, June 19: Cleveland at Golden State, 6 p.m.

HOCKEY NHL Playoffs FINALS

IBest-of-7; x-if necessary) Chicago1, Tampa Bayg Wednesday, June 3: Chicago 2, Tampa Bay 1 Saturday,June 6:Chicago atTampa Bay, 4:15 p.m. M onday, June 8:Tampa Bay atChicago,5 p.m. Wednesday, June 10: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m. x-Saturday, June 13: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m.

RODEO

Florida 4, Michigan 1

PRCA Leaders

COLLEGE BASEBALL

NATIONAL LEAGUE W 30 29 26 22 21

def. Ana Ivanovic (7), Serbia, 7-5, 7-5. Serena Williams (1), United States, def. Timea Bacsinszky (23), Switzerland, 4-6, 6-3, 6-0. Doubles Men Semifinals Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, def. Simone Bolelli and Fabio Fognini (6), Italy, 6-3, 6-3. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, and Marcelo Melo (3), Brazil, def. Jean-Julien Rojer, Netherlands, and Horia Tecau (5), Romania, 6-3, 7-5. Mixed Championship Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Mike Bryan (2), United States, def. Lucie Hradecka, Czech Republic,and Marcin Matkowski, Poland, 7-6 (3), 6-1.

Through May 31

NCAA Division I Super Regionals All Times PDT IBest-of-3; x-if necessary) Host school is Game 1 home team; visiting school is Game 2 home team; coin flip determines Game 3 home team At Davenport Field Charlottesville, Va. Friday, June 5: Maryland (42-22) at

Virginia (37-22), 1 p.m. Saturday, June 6: Virginia vs. Maryland, Noon Sunday, June 7: Virginia vs. Maryland, Noon At Alfred A. McKethan Stadium Gainesville, Fla. Friday, June 5: Florida State (44-19) at Florida (47-16), 4:30 p.m. Saturday, June 6: Florida vs. Florida State, 2 p.m. x-Sunday, June 7: Florida vs. Florida State, 3 or 4 p.m. At A-Rod Park at Mark Light Field Coral Gables, Fla. Friday, June 5: VCU (40-23) at Miami

(47-15), 9 a.m. Saturday, June 6: VCU vs. Miami, 9 a.m. x-Sunday, June 7: VCU vs. Miami, 9 a.m. At Jim Patterson Stadium Louisville, Ky. Saturday, June 6: Cal State Fullerton (37-22) at Louisville (46-16), 8 a.m. Sunday, June 7: Louisville vs. Cal State Fullerton, 9 a.m. x-Monday, June 8: Louisville vs. Cal State Fullerton, TBA At lllinois Field

Champaign, III. Saturday, June 6: Vanderbilt (45-19) at lllinois (50-8-1), 5 p.m. Sunday, June 7: lllinois vs. Vanderbilt, 6 p.m. x-Monday, June 8: lllinoisvs. Vanderbilt, TBA At Alex Box Stadium Baton Rouge, La. Saturday, June 6: Louisiana-Lafayette (42-21) at LSU (51-10), 5 p.m. Sunday, June 7: LSU vs. LouisianaLafayette, 3 or 4 p.m. x-Monday, June 8: LSU vs. Louisiana-Lafayette, TBA At Baum Stadium Fayetteville, Ark. Friday, June 5: Missouri State (48-10) atArkansas (38-22), 1:30 p.m. Saturday, June 6: Arkansas vs. Missouri State, 11 a.m. x-Sunday, June 7: Arkansas vs. Missouri State, Noon At Lupton Stadium Fort Worth, Texas Saturday, June 6: Texas ASM (49-12) at TCU (49-12), Noon Sunday, June 7: TCU vs. Texas ASM, 11:15 a.m. x-Monday, June 8: TCU vs. Texas ASM,TBA

TENNIS French Open Tuesday At Stade Roland Garros Paris Purse: $30.86 million IGrand Slam) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men Semifinals Stan Wawrinka (8), Switzerland, def. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (14), France, 6-3, 6-7

(1), 7-6 (3), 6-4.

Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, vs. Andy Murray (3), Britain Women Semifinals Lucie Safarova (13), Czech Republic,

All-Around 1. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas $68,014; 2. TufCooper, Decatur, Texas $36,366; 3. JoJo LeMond, Andrews, Texas$35,968; 4.ClintRobinson, Spanish Fork, Utah $33,898; 5. Clayton Hass, Terrell, Texas $33,306; 6. Russell Cardoza, Terrebonne, Ore. $31,143; 7. Dakota Eldridge, Elko, Nev. $30,310; 8. Rhen Richard, Roosevelt, Utah $29,341; 9. Josh Peek, Pueblo, Colo. $24,644; 10. Jordan Ketscher, Squaw Valley, Calif. $24,184; 11. Caleb Smidt, Bellville, Texas $23,361; 12. Bart Brunson, Terry, Miss. $23,195; 13. Steven Dent, Mullen, Neb. $21,397; 14. Doyle Hoskins, Chualar, Calif. $20,482; 15. Garrett Smith, Rexburg, Idaho $17,946; 16. Chant DeForest, Wheatland, Calif. $17,233; 17. Morgan Grant, Granton, Ontario $15,749; 18. Blake Hirdes, Turlock, Calif. $15,368; 19. Blake Deckard, Wagoner, Okla. $14,797; 20.Landon McClaugherty,Tilden,Texas $13,985. Bareback Riding 1. Bobby Mote, Stephenville, Texas $49,759; 2. Tim O'Connell, Zwingle, lowa $46,024; 3. Evan Jayne, Marseille, France $43,746; 4. Seth Hardwick, Laram ie, Wyo. $43,025; 5.Austin Foss,Terrebonne, Ore.$41,062; 6. Luke Creasy, Lovington, N.M. $40,824; 7.Kaycee Feild, Spanish Fork, Utah $34,432; 8. Caleb Bennett, Tremonton, Utah $33,639; 9. Ryan Gray, Cheney, Wash. $29,694; 10. Clint Laye, Cadogan, Alberta $28,804; 11. DavidPeebles, Redmond, Ore. $27,781; 12.Steven Peebles, Redmond, Ore. $24,384; 13. Clint Cannon, Waller, Texas $23,762; 14. TannerAus, Granite Falls, Minn. $22,818; 15. Winn Ratliff, Leesville, La. $21,217; 16. Will Lowe, Canyon, Texas $21,072; 17. Tyler Nelson, Victor, Idaho $19,908; 18. George Gillespie IV, Hamilton, Mont. $17,881; 19. Jake Brown, Hillsboro, Texas $17,823; 20. Jessy Davis, Power, Mont. $17,597.

Steer Wrestling 1. Seth Brockman, Wheatland, Wyo. $43,811; 2. Ty Erickson, Helena, Mont. $40,632; 3. Hunter Cure, Holliday, Texas $35,692; 4. Olin Hannum, Malad, Idaho $31,204; 5. Casey Martin, Sulphur, La. $28,859; 6. Luke Branquinho, LosAlamos, Calif. $28,820; 7. Dakota Eldridge, Elko, Nev. $26,913; 8. Kyle lrwin, Robertsdale, Ala. $25,635; 9. Tyler Pearson, Louisville, Miss. $25,419; 10. Beau Clark, Belgrade, Mont. $24,925; 11. K.C. Jones, Decatur, Texas $24,367; 12. Nick Guy, Sparta, Wis. $22,333; 13. Clayton Hass, Terrell, Texas $21,775; 14. Dirk Tavenner, Rigby, Idaho $19,630; 15. Baylor Roche, Tremonton, Utah $18,908; 16. Adam Strahan, McKinney, Texas $18,658; 17. Cody Cabral, Hilo, Hawaii $17,468; 18. Tanner Milan, Cochrane, Alberta $17,179; 19. Blake Knowles, Heppner, Ore. $15,920; 20. Matthew Mousseau, Hensall, Ontario $15,553.

Team Roping Iheader)

1. Clay Tryan, Billings, Mont. $61,061; 2. Derrick Begay, Seba Dalkai, Ariz. $41,599; 3. Erich Rogers, Round Rock, Ariz. $34,554; 4. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas $30,889;5.Jake Cooper, Monument,N.M. $29,381; 6.Bubba Buckaloo, Caddo, Okla. $28,138; 7. Jake Barnes, Scottsdale, Ariz. $27,223; 8. Coleman Proctor, Pryor, Okla. $26,144; 9. Tyler Wade, Terrell, Texas $26,111; 10. Chad Masters, Cedar Hill, Tenn. $26,093; 11. Nick Sartain, Dover, Okla. $26,090; 12. Riley Minor, Ellensburg, Wash. $23,385; 13. Charly Crawford, Prineville, Ore. $22,439; 14. Jesse Stipes, Salina, Okla. $21,303; 15. Kaleb Driggers, Albany, Ga. $21,034;16.LeviSimpson,Ponoka, Alberta $20,696; 17. Aaron Tsinigine, Tuba City, Ariz. $19,677; 18. Joel Bach, Mount Vernon, Texas $18,024; 19. JoJo LeMond, Andrews, Texas $17,206; 20. Doyle Hoskins, Chualar, Calif. $14,826.

Team Roping Iheeler)

1. Jade Corkill, Fallon, Nev. $61,061; 2. Clay O'Brien Cooper, Gardnerville, Nev. $47,039; 3. Travis Woodard, Stockton, Calif. $34,830; 4. Cory Petska, Marana,

Ariz. $34,554; 5. Patrick Smith, Lipan, Texas $30,889; 6. Russell Cardoza, Terrebonne, Ore. $27,319; 7. Junior Nogueira, Scottsdale, Ariz. $27,223; 8. Jake Long, Coffeyville, Kan. $26,144; 9. Rich Skelton, Llano, Texas $26,090; 10. Shay Carroll, La Junta, Colo. $24,199; 11. Kinney Harrell, Marshall, Texas $24,191; 12. Brady Minor, Ellensburg, Wash. $23,385; 13. Travis Graves, Jay, Okla. $23,053; 14. Tyler McKnight, Wells, Texas $20,743; 15. Jeremy Buhler, Abbotsford, British Columbia $20,696; 16. Billie Jack Saebens, Nowata, Okla. $19,778; 17. Buddy Hawkins II, Columbus, Kan. $17,605; 18. Cole Davison, Stephenville, Texas $15,663; 19. Matt Kasner, Cody, Neb. $14,313; 20. Martin Lucero, Stephenville, Texas $14,226. Saddle Bronc Riding 1. CodyDeMoss, Heflin,La.$62,896; 2. Spencer Wright, Milford, Utah $54,834; 3. Taos Muncy, Corona, N.M. $44,980; 4. Rusty Wright, Milford, Utah $38,810; 5. Jake Wright, Milford, Utah $30,897; 6. Jacobs Crawley, Stephenville, Texas $30,604;7.ChuckSchmidt,Keldron, S.D. $28,212; 8. CortScheer, Elsmere, Neb. $27,383; 9. Heith DeMoss, Heflin, La.$26,787; 10.Wade Sundell,Colman, Okla. $25,658; 11. Bradley Harter, Loranger, La. $25,277; 12. Joe Lufkin, Sallisaw, Okla. $24,993; 13. Isaac Diaz, Desdemona, Texas $23,990; 14. Clay Elliott, Nanton, Alberta $23,980; 15. Zeke Thurston, Big Valley, Alberta $23,060; 16. Allen Boore, Axtell, Utah $21,297; 17. Sam Spreadborough, Snyder, Texas $18,492; 18. Sterling Crawley, Stephenville, Texas $18,207; 19. Jesse Wright, Milford, Utah $17,996; 20. Chad Ferley, Oelrichs, S.D. $16,426.

Tie-down Roping

1. Cory Solomon, Prairie View, Texas $42,934; 2. Timber Moore, Aubrey, Texas $41,867; 3. Hunter Herrin, Apache, Okla. $38,429;4.Monty Lewis,Hereford,Texas $37,652; 5. Marty Yates, Stephenville, Texas $37,409; 6. Adam Gray, Seymour, Texas$32,464;7.ClintRobinson, Spanish Fork, Utah $30,336; 8. Blair Burk, Durant, Okla. $28,927; 9. Tuf Cooper, Decatur, Texas $27,154; 10. Sterling Smith, Stephenville, Texas $26,051; 11. MarcosCosta,Childress,Texas $24,669; 12. Chase Williams, Stephenville, Texas $23,959; 13. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas $23,867; 14. Cade Swor, Winnie, Texas $23,073; 15. Randall Carlisle, Athens, La. $22,400; 16. MattShiozawa, Chubbuck, Idaho $21,710; 17. Jordan Ketscher, Squaw Valley, Calif. $18,837; 18. J.C. Malone, Hooper, Utah $17,663; 19. Michael Otero, Lowndesboro, Ala. $17,038; 20. Bart Brunson, Terry, Miss. $16,744.

Steer Roping 1. Neal Wood, Needville, Texas $34,943; 2. Vin Fisher Jr., Andrews, Texas $34,812; 3. Mike Chase, McAlester, Okla. $30,072; 4. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas $26,730;5.Cody Lee,Gatesville,Texas $25,862; 6. Jess Tierney, Hermosa, S.D. $22,951; 7. Scott Snedecor, Fredericksburg, Texas $22,192; 8. Rocky Patterson, Pratt, Kan. $19,027; 9. J.P. Wickett, Sallisaw, Okla. $18,782; 10. Shay Good, Midland, Texas $18,090; 11. JoJo LeMond, Andrews, Texas $17,181; 12. Jarrett Blessing, Paradise, Texas $15,368; 13. Troy Tillard, Douglas, Wyo. $13,118; 14. Brodie Poppino, Big Cabin, Okla. $13,066; 15. Ralph Williams, Skiatook, Okla. $12,118; 16. Landon McClaugherty, Tilden, Texas $11,613; 17. Bryce Davis, Ovalo, Texas $11,511; 18. Jason Evans, Huntsville, Texas $9,821; 19. Chet Herren, Pawhuska, Okla. $9,692; 20. Brady Garten, Claremore, Okla. $9,676. Bull Riding 1. Sage Kimzey, Strong City, Okla. $64,823; 2. Wesley Silcox, Santaquin, Utah $56,158; 3. Brennon Eldred, Sulphur, Okla. $40,909; 4. Chandler Bownds, Lubbock, Texas $38,858; 5. Parker Breding, Edgar, Mont. $36,367; 6. Reid Barker, Comfort, Texas $36,119; 7. Tanner Learmont, Cleburne, Texas $35,704; 8. Trevor Kastner, Ardmore, Okla. $33,496; 9. Cody Teel, Kountze, Texas $28,506; 10. Joe Frost, Randlett, Utah $27,339; 11. Brett Stall, Detroit Lakes, Minn. $23,194; 12. Kody DeShon, Helena, Mont. $23,060; 13. CalebSanderson, Hallettsville, Texas $22,536; 14. Zack Oakes, Tonasket, Wash. $21,899;15.Steve Woolsey, Payson, Utah $21,892; 16. Ardie Maier, Timber Lake, S.D. $21,217; 17. Jacob O'Mara, Baton Rouge, La. $21,138; 18. KaninAsay, Powell, Wyo. $20,912; 19. Cody Campbell, Summerville, Ore. $20,833; 20. Clayton Savage, Yoder, Wyo. $19,918.

Barrel Racing 1. Nancy Hunter, Neola, Utah $60,700; 2. Lisa Lockhart, Oelrichs, S.D. $57,171; 3. Sarah Rose McDonald, Brunswick, Ga. $54,616; 4. Callie Duperier, Boerne, Texas $53,801; 5. Fallon Taylor, Collinsville, Texas $51,013; 6. Alexa Lake, Richmond, Texas $42,116; 7. Sherry Cervi, Marana, Ariz. $40,404; 8. Cassidy Kruse, Gillette, Texas $33,817; 9. Meghan Johnson, Deming, N.M. $33,782; 10. Michele McLeod, Whitesboro, Texas $32,933; 11.

Layna Kight, Ocala, Fla. $30,360; 12. Victoria Williams, Kiln, Miss. $27,194; 13. Jana Bean, Fort Hancock, Texas $26,324; 14. Kaley Bass, Kissimmee, Fla. $25,077; 15. Britany Diaz, Solen, N.D. $24,346; 16. ShellyAnzick, Livingston, Texas $24,311; 17. Shelby Herrmann, Stephenville, Texas $23,938; 18. Kelly Tovar, Rockdale, Texas $23,331; 19. Jackie Ganter, Abilene, Texas $22,174; 20. Carley Richardson, Pampa, Texas $22,170.

TRAN SACTION S Thursday's Moves BASEBALL COMMISSIONER'S OFFICESuspended Texas 2B Travis Demeritte (Hickory-SAL) forviolating the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program.

American League BOSTON RED SOX — Transferred RHP BrandonWorkman tothe 60-day DL. Designated OF Carlos Peguero for assignment. DETROIT TIGERS — Optioned OF Daniel Fields to Tacoma (IL). MINNESOTA TWINS — Placed RHP Ricky Nolasco on the 15-day DL, retroactive to Monday. Returned RHP Michael Tonkin to Rochester (IL). Recalled LHP Tommy Milone from Rochester. SEATTLE MARINERS — Designated OF Justin Ruggiano for assignment. Recalled C Jesus Sucre from Tacoma (PCL). TEXAS RANGERS — Placed OF Josh Hamilton on the 15-day DL, retroactive to Monday. Assigned INF Tommy Field outright to Round Rock (PCL). Reinstated LHP Ross Detwiler from the 15-day DL. Agreed to terms with SS Beamer Weems on a minor league contract. Sent OF Ryan Rua to Round Rock for a rehab assignment.

National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Placed RHP Archie Bradley on the 15-day DL. Recalled LHP Robbie Ray from Reno (PCL). Traded OF Mark Trumbo and LHP Vidal Nuno to Seattle for C Welington Castillo, RHP Dominic Leone, OF Gabby Guerrero and SS Jack Reinheimer. PITTSBURGH PIRATES —Assigned RHP Radhames Liz outright to Indianapolis (IL). WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Optioned RHP Taylor Jordan to Syracuse (IL) and INF Wilmer Difo to Harrisburg (EL). Reinstated INF Anthony Rendon from the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP A.J. Cole from Syracuse.

Eastern League TRENTON THUNDER — Sent INF Dante Bichette Jr. to Tampa (FSL). American Association AMARILLO THUNDERHEADSSigned RHP Charlie Gillies. JOPLIN BLASTERS — Traded LHP Kristhiam Linares toAmarillo for LHP Rigaberto Arrebato. LAREDO LEMURS — Traded INF Matt Padgett to Wichita for RHP Omar Bencomo and cash. LINCOLN SALTDOGS — Released RHP Kaohi Downing. Can-Am League QUEBEC CAPITALES — Signed INF Jerome Duchesneau. FOOTBALL National Football League NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Signed LS Joe Cardona. OAKLAND RAIDERS — Signed WR Kris Durham and LB Chase Williams. ST. LOUIS RAMS — Released WR Bud Sasser. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Promoted Scott Fitterer and Trent Kirchner to codirectors of player personnel, Ed Dodds to senior personnel executive, Dan Morgan to director of pro personnel and Matt Berry to director of college scouting. Canadian Football League EDMONTON ESKIMOS — SignedDB Kacy Rodgers. WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERSSigned DB Vernon Kearney. HOCKEY National Hockey League TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS — Signed F Andreas Johnson to a three-year, entrylevel contract. Re-signed D T.J. Brennan to a one-year contract. MOTORSPORTS SPORTS CAR CLUB OFAMERICANamed Andrea Albin digital marketing and communications coordinator. COLLEGE CLEMSON — Fired baseball coach Jack Leggett. GEORGETOWN — Announced women's basketball G Mykia Jones is transferring from Wake Forest. GEORGIA TECH — Announced senior men's baskeball F James White is transferring from UALR. HOLY CROSS — Named Peter Roundy men'sassistanthockey coach and Jim Barr men's rowing coach. LA SALLE — Named Jamie Platt men's and women'sswimming and diving coach. STOCKTON — Announced softball coach Val Julien is stepping down and will remain at the school in the athletic department' s game management and operations staff.

NBA FINALS

Warriors take Game 1 in OT • Golden State overcomes 44 points from King James to win thrilling opener The Associated Press

After an eight-day break, the NBA'StoP teamS and biggeSt StarS Put Dn quite a show. Only one kept it up for 53 minutes. Stephen Curry had 26 pointsand eight assists,and the Golden State Warriors held Dff LBBron JameS and the ClevelandCavaliersfor a thrilling 108-100 overtime ViCtOry in Game 1 Df the NBA FinalS Dn ThurSday night. In the finals for the first time in 40 years, the WarriorSgaVe their1Ong-Suffering fans quite a treat. They rallied frOm an early 14-Point deficit, absorbed a finals-best 44 POintS &Dm JameS and shut down Cleveland in the extra session. JameSShOt18 Df 38 frOm the field and had eight reboundS and SiX aSSiStS

in 46 minutes. But the four-time MVP missed a 1Ong jumPer at the end Df regulation, and Cleveland missed its first eight shots Df OVertime.

'%e got to do mOre arOund

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him," Cavs coach David Blatt

a timeout with 24.1 seconds

SRld.

left.

Adding to theCBVS'&uStf ation, POint guard Kyrie IrVing limPed to the 1OCker room after aggravating his troublesome left knee in OVertime. He dtd not return. Blatt had no immediate

JameS, trying to end CleVeland's 51-year championship drought, dribbled down the clockand missed a contested jumPer OVer Andre Iguodala just inside the left arc, and Iman Shumpert's desperation ShOtnearly rimmed in at the buZZer, Sending a ColleCtive sigh through the crowd.

uPdate Dn IrVing'S StatuS.

Game 2 is Sunday in

Oakland.

There were 13 lead The CBVSneVer Came So changes and 11 ties in a close again. game tightly contested Curry dreW tWD deeP across the board. There was ShOOtingfOulS at the Start Df little edge in shooting (War- overtime and made all four riorS44.3 PerCent,CaValierS free throws, and Harrison 41.5 percent), rebounding Bames hit a corner 3 just in (WarriorS 48, CaValierS frOnt Df the CBVSbenCh to 45) Dr aSSiStS(WarriorS 24, give Golden State a 105-98 Cavaliers 19). lead With 2:02 to Play and In the end, it came down sent the crowd screaming at to the biggeSt StarS making full throat. PlayS — Dr not. IrVing, Who finiShed With James and Curry car23 POintS, SeVen rebotmdS ried their clubs through the and SiX aSSiStS, limPed to the fourth quarter, trading scores benCh trying to Shake DffhiS and assists in a back-andtroublesome left leg after forth duel that had a sellout the play. He was replaced by CrOWd Df19,596 — mOSt MattheW DellaVedoVa. wearing those blinding, The Warriors went ahead 108-98 Dn freethrOWSWith golden yellow shirts. Both alSO had a ChanCe to Win the 1:16 to Play. JameS' layuP game in regulation. with 8.9 seconds left accountCurry, the current MVP, ed for Cleveland's only points beat IrVing Dff the dribble in overtime. and mOVed in fOr the goJameS, Who miSSed three ahead layup. Instead, Irving ShOtSand had tWD tLtrnoVerS blOCkedCurry &Dm behind, in OVertime, Walked Dff the J.R. Smith came up with the courtin frustration astim e rebound and the Cavs called expired.

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Observer file photo

Eastern Oregon University senior running back Jace Billingsley was named a Sporting News NAIA Preseason AII-American.

ALL-AMERICAN

BillingSley Said.'%e're all kind Df getting intOthe right PlaCeSand Starting toreally Continued ~om Page8A underStand the OffenSe noW.The (DffenSiVe) line 1OSta lot Df guyS, but the guyS (ComBillingSleyWBSa huge Part Df the SuCing back) have stepped it up this spring. CeSS,and 1OOkS POiSed to leaVe hiS name AS 1Ong aSeVeryOne COmeSready to go and allover the Eastern record books after puts in work in the summer, we should be this season. He ran for 870 yards and pretty good." 10 touChdoWnS, eVen thOugh he SPent a Billingsley is one player that head coach gOOdPOrtiOn Dfthe Start Dfthe SeaSOn at Tim CamP and the reSt Df the EaStern wide receiver. Billingsley finished with a Staff dOeSn't haVe to WOrry abOut in that team-high 59 receptions, 637 yards and six regard. "EaCh Summer I head hOme (to scores through the air. He will be a full-time running back this Winnemucca, Nevada)," Billingsley said."I fall and iS SurrOunded by a ton Df OffenSiVe have a couple coaches back there that work firePOWer. QuarterbaCk ZBCh BartloW rewith me, and I have teammates Michal Areturns after throwing for 2,318 yards and 19 naS and CalVin ConnorS (Who are alSO&Dm touChdoWnS, and Wide reCeiVerS AleXander the area) there With me. It'S that time Df the MileS and CalVin ConnorS, alOng With Billyear where we push it. We don't have school, ingsley's backfield mates in T.J. Esekielu So We take adVantage Df the time DfK We and A.J. Prom, should form a potent group. Want to COme in and be in the beSt ShaPe." '%e'Ve got a lot Df WeaPOnSCOming baCk," So FrOntier fOeS,beWare.

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10A — THE OBSERVER

FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

SPORTS

M'saddlrumhohINdrogsixthinaroIN The Associated Press

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

Erasmo Ramirez, who spent three seasonswith Seattlebefore being traded to Tampa Bay on March 31, held the Mariners to one run and seven hits in 5 V3 innings in helping the Rays to a 2-1 victory Thursday night. Relievers Xavier Cedeno, Brandon Gomes, Jake McGee and Kevin Jepsen gave up just three hits and no runs over the final 3 2/3 innings. Jepsen picked up his second save in four opportunities and sent the Mariners down to their sixth straight loss. M ark Trumbo, acquired by Seattle

ALL-STATE Continued from Page 8A year in a row he's been an all-state player after being chosen honorable mention as a catcher in 2014. "It's definitely nice having peoplenotice,"he said,noting thatthevotesarebased solely on stats. Rogers definitely has the numbers to back up his play, as he hit .471 with two home runs and 31 RBI on the season. Eli Wisdom, who hit.410 and scoml a team-high 27 runs, was a third-team all-state selection as an outfielder, the first time he has been chosen. ''When I found out I was really excited," he said."I guess

fourth with a single to right. With one out, Forsythe was hit by a pitch. Butler and Forsythe then pulled ofFa successful double steal. Souza, who grew up north of Seattle and had a small cheering section behind home plate, followed with an RBI single to center. That ended Elias' 0-for-16 streak with runners in scoring position, overfour-plusstarts. Forsythe scoml on Jake Elmore fieider's choice, which held up as the winningrun. Cano's run-scoring single in the fifth made it 2-1. The Mariners have played 37 gamesdecided by two runs orfewer.

in a six-player trade with Arizona on Wednesday, had a pair of singles. Roenis Elias i2-3l went eight strong innings, allowing two runs on five hits. He walked one and struck out six. Ramirez bailed himself out of a jam in the fifth. With runners on first and third with one out, he picked Robinson Cano ofFfirs tbase. "I was just leaving the bag right then and I crossed my feet," Cano said."And when I tried to go back, it was too late." Joey Butler opened the two-run

I felt like it was icing on the cake from the GOL selections. I was really happy." Kurt Boyd and Drew Hively were chosen to the all-state honorable mention teamBoyd as a pitcher and Hively as a first baseman. Boyd tied for a team-high with four wins while batting .350, while Hively hit.357 and owned a.976 fielding percentage. "Those kids all had strong numbers and spoke to why they hit in the lineup where they did," head coach Parker McKinley said. Wisdom said the team is what drove him to succeed on the field. "I don't think I could have worked so hard to get the award without the team," he

®y-

Observer file photo

iliII'

League champions potentially having to travel in the first round of the playoffs, like the La Grande football team did last fall, is just one of the many flaws with the OSAA's current way of determining playoff positioning.

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BOND

play). Neither of those two "bestteams" areplaying for the title. And I don't think Continued ~om Page8A that is the result of upsets, didn't win their league, but bad rankings. The teams but owned a higher rating. playing for it all are ranked This hit right away when in fourth and sixth, but won 2010 my alma mater, Vale, theirrespectiveleagues. won its league in football OSAA also uses the but had to travel to take on rankings to determine Blanchet in the first round tiebreakers as opposed to — a team which placed head-to-head matchups. third in its league but had a In 3A football last fall, this higher ranking. resulted in Taft making Iwasn'tbitterjustbecause theplayoffsover league the Vikings were having to opponent Amity because of its "better" ranking. Both travel. I feltit was wrong to make aleague champion teams were 3-3 in league, travel, especially to face a but Amity throttled Taft 54-32 in league play, and team which placed third. OSAA has worked since on that alone should have to clean this up, but it qualified for state ahead of still can happen, and did Taft. Instead, the sabermetlast football season when rics of the OSAA system La Grande, the Greater put Taft in despite the head-to-head loss. Which Oregon League champion, was on the road in the first is basically saying, "Amity, round at North Bend. good job on beating Taft, Prior, the committee put but Taft is going to the playa higher emphasis on winofFs because our computers ning league. It placed all saytheTigersarebetter." the seedsin each sportprior Another atrocity. to the season beginning, Another example from and a league champion was 2014 football: 1A Lowell was always guaranteed a home the No.1rated team despite game its first time out. No. a lopsided loss in the regular 3 seeds iand No. 4 seeds) season to Dufur. Adrian was would always travel. For rated No. 2, but went undethe No. 2 seeds, it depended feated and thumped that on which leagues OSAA same Dufur team. Its schedpredeterminedwould have ule was somehow deemed two host teams. weaker than Lowell's. Now, it emphasizes Adrian won the state strength of schedule, and title. Lowell lost in the puts more weight on the quarterfmals. combinedrecord ofa given A final example: the 1A, team'sopponents i65per3A and 5A champions in cent) than its own record i35 football went a combined percent) in the RPI ranking. 36-1. Their ratings? No. 2, Meaning this: how your op- No. 7 and No. 5. ponents do is nearly twice as Space does not permit me important as how you do. tolis tthe otherexamples of That is not right, and, as the flaws in this rating syspointed out in an article I tem, but take a few minutes read on the topic, can result to look through the ratings in schools setting schedules and results throughout the to helptheirteam rate bet- years, and you'll see there terrather than getbetter. are many others. The OSAA wants to The prior system was a rewardthe"better"teams preset bracket. Teams knew with the home games, and they would get to hostif they I get that. But why use a won league or would have to computer system to prede- travel if they squeaked in the termine who is better and playofL It was fair. insteadletthe teams prove Now, it's almost a flip of it out on the field in league? the coin where your favorite The ~ sha ve actually team will end up come come thmugh at times.As playofF time. And it's deteran example, four of the five mined by computers. It may softball championships being be seen as being less flawed played this weekend put No. than having the human ele1 seeds against No. 2 seeds. ment, but I disagree. But on the baseball side, The OSAA mtroduced only one of the brackets this system to try to improve played out to a No. 1vs. No. upon what it had been doing 2 finish. And while there prior. The committee has were upsets along the way, tinkered and changed the there were also some faulty rating system each year tryratings. In 6A, for example, ing to get it right. It's broke, the top two teams, Clackaand they are constantly mas and North Medford, trying to fix it. were not league champions. The OSAA could get it iNo. 2 North Medford did tie right once and for all by in its league with Sheldon, changing things back to the but droppedtwo ofthree way it was. It wasn't broke, to the No. 4 Irish in league so why try to fixit?

Observer file photo

Kurt Boyd was named all-state honorable mention. said."I didn't want to let my teammates down." The good work ethic is an attribute Wisdom said McKinley teaches and that all the playersstrivefor.

eiThisl is a feather in their cap, which is good for them," McKinley said.'They've all worked really hard for the program and worked hard for me the last two years."

YOUTH l e

Continued from Page 8A

i

nervous before because the Olympic trials had been held there, and it has the best of the best." Fortherestofthe girls, Ashley Wilson qualified as runner-up to Baxter in the 1,500with a time of5:54.00. In the 11-12 division, Julianna Joyce won the

~

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1,500 i6:07.2l, and Samantha Starner-Durning was second

i6:37.8l. In the 11-12 division, Emma Baeth took first i14.7l in the 100 while Ahnica Shoemaker was second

i15.3l. Kaelyn Shoemaker finished with a time of 19.3 to win the 100 in the 8-10 division, with Dania Sather

taking second i20.3l. In the 11-12 division, the 400 was won by Baeth i1:15.5l, and StarnerDurning was second i1:17.5l. In the 8-10 division, Jaija Powell won the 400 i1:43.2l while Mikinah Browne

Cherise Kaechele/TheObserver

Jaimee Baxter, left, and AshleyWilson round a corner in the 1,500-meter race in the girls 13- and 14-year-old division Wednesday at Eastern Oregon University.

placed second i1:44.0l. In the 13-14 division, Wilson won the long jump with a leapof8 feet,8.5 inches. Baeth captured first in the 11-12 division long jump i10-0 feet), with Elizabeth Harris taking second i09-11 feet). Rylee Elms won the 8-10 division long jump

i09-09.5 feet) and Jayda Blackburn took second i05-

11 feet). Baeth won the 11-12 division turbojav i74-03.5 feet) and Julianna Joyce took second i63-08 feet). Elms won the 8-10 division turbojav with a throw of 38-11 feet, and Sather placed second

i31-03 feet). On the boys side, Jarom Huntsman took home first in the 11-12 division in the 1,500 with a time of 6:00.7. In the 8-10 division, Taylor Fox took first i6:00.2l in the 1,500 while Tavi Jacobson

placed second i6:08.9l. Westin Blake won the 400 in the 13-14 division with a time of 1:05.1. Joe Lathrop placed first in the 400 in the 11-12 division i1:16.6l and Kellen Joyce was second i1:29.0l. In the 8-10 division, Dominick Carratello won

the 400 i1:22.1l and Jaime Ramirez was second i1:22.7l.

Jacob Huntsman won the 100 in the 13-14 division

i13.0l and Blake took second i13.4l. Lathrop won the 100 in the 11-12 division with atime of14.7,and Jarom Huntsman was second

i14.8l. Sovann Chab took r VrilRfirirtpiiiri

first in the 100 in the 8-10 division i15.2l, while his cousin, Jacob Brown placed second i15.6l, tying with Carratello. Chab, 7, said he knew he was fast when he started running at 5 years

old. "I've been running for two years," Chab said."Just started running around my house." Union's Patrick Sheehy won the turbojav in the 8-10 division with a throw of 60-10 feet, and Ramirez was

second i59-11 feet). Sheehy was also fifth in the 100 in the first time he's ever run the event. He said he's been to Hayward before, butjustasa spectator. 'Yeah, to watch state track," Sheehy said when asked ifhe's ever been to Hayward. Jarom Huntsman won the turbojav in the 11-12 division i83-11 feet), and Lathrop took second i50-03

Cherise Kaechele/TheObserver

Jay Brown flies through the air in the long jump event in the boys 8- to 10-year-old division at the TrackTown Youth League meet inLa Grande. feet). Blake won the turbojav in the 13-14 division i108-11 feet), and Jacob Huntsman

--

sion i11-05 feet), and Caleb

was second i101-05 feet).

Brown was second i10-02 In the long jump, Gage feet). Jacob Huntsman won Martens won the 8-10 divithe 13-14 division with a sionwith aleap of10-09 feet, jump of 14-08 feet, and Blake and Carratello was second was second i12-10 feet).

i10-0 feet). Jarom Huntsman took first in the 11-12 divi-

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FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

The Observer

ByWilliam Bowman

campus clergy. A graduate it was its goal to "plant reliof EOSC and an ordained giousseeds thatmay develop Koinonia. A Greek word, into a strong faith when they priest, Fr. Strachota was a meaning communion, joint no-collar"cowboy" priest who need it later."And since, the K participation, sharing in councilled students, studHouse has continued in this community. A word that Paul ied math, and even taught purpose; namely, to provide theApostleused to describe classes in German, logic, ecumenical fellowship for the and"Morality and Science Christian community in the campus, churches and comFiction" at the K House and munity with each other and New Testament. A word that FUTUREHOMEOF ultimately means fellowship. on-campus. God himself. NITEDCHRISTIANNINISTRIE And fellowship is exactly The K House, said Fr. STUDENTCENTER For more information on UCM what La Grande's Koinonia the K House today, read"The Strachota in 1974, is an"open Koinonia House, Part 2: A House has tried to provideto place for students of all faiths for study, rap sessions, meetstudents, college faculty and Relationship Hub" in The staif, and community meming orthe useofa theological Observer Spiritual Life secbers for more than 40 library or cable TV." tion on July 4. Or visit the K In keeping with this years. House website at http J/khoudescription, the K House Cauttesy phota seeou.org/for information or A history volunteer opportunities. provided myriad events like This 1972 photo shows the K House lot at Sixth Street and I Avenue. The Koinonia House ioraK' volleyball tournaments, WalHousel was conceptualized by lowa Lakeretreats,hayrides, United Christian Ministries Bible studies, talent nights, in 1972. Purposed as a gathdancing nights, movie ering place for campus and nights, and much, much community members, it was more. Staff, EOSC professors to be an ecumenical institution built and maintained and specialists also taught by six La Grande churches: intact classes at the K House United Methodist, First over the years, classes on C. United Presbyterian, First S. Lewis, Paul's Epistles and Christian, St. Peter's Theology, Religious Cults and Episcopal, Our Lady of the Society, folk dancing, guitar Valley Catholic, and Zion music and more. Students Lutheran. oftenreceived creditforthe The K House was to classes at EOSC. replace"The Hobbit," a small The Rev. Richard Thew, Courtesy photo after-s choolcoffee-shop and This 1975photo shows a completed K House, designed present Cove resident and gatheringplacefor students. campus clergyman fiom 1975 by La Grande resident Nic Shur. During construction, UCM to 1977, said he loved teachsaid it was to be"a place ing the classes and that that stulKu early 1990s, events continued, where students, faculty, resispirituality is an essential Thew also said he thinks events like square dancing, dents, and college chaplains part of students' liberal students questioning their morningprayers,a Camp Ida can pool their resources ... education. childhood faiths is good retreat, aclasson"Hassidic 'You don't want to get into and learn and practice ... and K House offered them Tales" and a"clown ministry." skills and experiences as a a position where you're pros- an opportunity to question Dixie Lund, EOSC graduChristian." elytizing as a state instituhealthily. ate and two-time interim "I think questioning your Contractors completed tion," he said."But exposing president of the university, the K House in 1975. After students to that as well as faith makes it stronger," he said in 1985 that the K House Cauttesy phato was "an atmosphere of fellow- In 1981, eight K House students dressed up as clowns for completion, Father Dennis exposing them to things like said."And I encourage that." Strachota became the first communism, it's good to know During the 1980s and ship and fiiendship,u and that "clown ministry" to enlighten people at the mall. ForThe Observer

Prayer line started earlier this year receives hundreds of requests • Requests range from ones targeting injury and addiction to ones of thanksgiving "Youcan cure a disease, people who have not been because,first ofall,they butyou still may not have cured of their cancer, but they have to cross turflines," she

ByWill Bowman ForThe Observer

One of the Catholic church healed from it.Wehave fathers described prayer as a people who havenot been spoke: we are the rim of the wheel, and God is the hub. As cured fotheir cancer, but you follow the spokes toward they are at peace with God, you invariable come where they are." closerto thosepeoplewho were once farther fiom you. — Pastor Steve Wolff And this was exactly the vision of Sheila Cooligan when and conversation. Requests she startedherlocalprayer about injury, addiction and line: closer relationship with recovery, family, fiiends, and greater care about God kids, missions trips, religious and others, both for those persecution around the world, praying and those being jobs, country and, on the othprayed for. er hand, thanksgiving. Prayer "Prayer is a means of isn't just about sadness and knowing you're not alone," suffering, Cooligan said. Cooligan said. SteveWolff,pastorof Cooliganstarted the La Grande Methodist, one of prayer line earlier this year the participating churches, afterseveralmoving experiadded that prayer isn't ences praying for others. always about physical cure Since, she's enlisted multiple either. There's a difference churches and dozens of peobetween cure and healing, he pletoparticipateand pray. sald. 'You can cure a disease, but Hundreds of prayer requests have been received you still may not have healed to date through phone, email &om it," he said.'We have

Tim Mustae/The Observer

The prayer line can be reached at 1-541-786-PRAY whether that is to volunteer or submit a request.

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said. Wolffadded that,no matter what your theologicaldisagreements,prayeris something all denominations can agree on. Cooligan said many who use the prayer line don't go to church, that they feel they God, she said. can have the spiritual connecWolff also agreed with a tion without the expectations lesser-known theologian that attachedto attendance. prayeriscare."It'sjustreasThe prayer line can be suring for someone to know reached at 1-541-786-PRAY thatthere arepeople out to volunteer or submit a there who I don't even know request. Requests can also who care about me," he said. be submitted by email at 'You'vegotto take solace Igumc@eoni.com or via fiom that," Cooligan added. personal conversation. No 'There's no way you can't." identification is required, But those being prayed and all requests remain for aren't the only ones who anonymous. 'The last words Jesus ever benefit. Thepeoplepraying and churches also benefit. spoke in Matthew is that he Many feel a sense of purpose, will be with us to the end of valueand help by praying for the ages." Cooligan said."And others, aswellasa closercon- I think prayer is a means of nection with each other, those remembering his words," both they pray for and God. for those praying and those "It's great for the churches being prayed for.

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publicizing your event is now as easy as one, two, three:

are at peace with where they are." Cooligan said that the centerofprayeris actually relationship. Every time she prays for someone she experiences a closer spiritual connection with them and

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12A —THE OBSERVER

FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

SPIRITUAL LIFE

Church plays host to sanctioned homeless encampment By Kyle Mittan The Daily World, Aberdeen, Wash.

As campers continue to adjust to their new home in the Amazing Grace Lutheran Church's parkinglot — Aberdeen's first-ever sanctioned homeless encampment — the reactionsofneighborsranged fmm concern about safety to an openness to see how things workout. Campers spent Monday moving to the new location, honoring a deadline imposed by the city to have a piece of property along the Chehalis riverkont cleamd of campers and trash by the first of the month. By Tuesday afternoon,

the camp at the church had nearly doubled in size, with 12 tents sitting on wooden pallets amund the parkinglot. Most campers said Tuesday that the first nightin the new site was relativelyquiet. "I slept like a baby," said Justin Hughes, one of the first campers to move in on Monday."Nobody bothered us." Donald Jackson, a camper who spent Monday leveling off pallets and building tents, said the onlyproblems thmugh the night were the theftof a walking stick and a mess left in the portable restmom in one corner of the lot. The camp, Jackson added, would hold a

meeting with church leadership on Wednesday to outline guidelines that would curb problems like these. Jackson said he's seen the community taking notice, too, with some passersby alerting volunteers about campers who had spilled over onto neighboring property and congregated on a set of stairs behind the Drifbvood Theatre. He's happy, he said, thatpeoplearekeeping the campers honest. ''We're not trying to be like everybody thinks that we are," he said. Even as quiet as the first night was, some campers said their concerns regard-

ing privacywere confirmed ama have remained open after the first day. As a gmup to the idea of the campsite, fixed sandwiches and made induding George Susewind, small talk outside their tents who has lived in a grayhouse directly acmss the alley fmm Tuesday afternoon, a md sedan passed through the alley thelotsincethespringof1980. adjacent thelot. Susewind said he's remained The people inside castglanc- neutral on the subject, and hasn't attended the church's es that camper Larry Osborn meetings with neighbors to couldn'thelp but notice. 'Sometimes I feel like fm avoid any conkontations. 'They're good neighbors," livingin a different world with people drivingby and looking," Susewind said of the church. "As far as I was concerned, Osborn said. they're trying to do something Calvin Forbes, another camper, felt the same way, call- good, so let's see what haping the campsite a"fishbowl." pens." He added that he liked the Leaders kom the church scenery he had along the river. and the Drifbvood Theatre also Some neighbors in the met to discuss concerns theater

leadershad about thesafety of volunteers and patmns. Moving forward, the theater will ensure that the building's doors and locks are working properly, said Ben Hohman, thetheater' spresident-elect. Though Hohman said he hasn'theard any outcrykom patmns regarding safety concerns, the board is pre-emptivelyaddressingtheissue. ''We're just thinkingin terms ofif there were something like this up near a theater in Seattle or Olympia and I had to go to it, would I be sortofconcerned aboutleaving my vehicle in the parking lot," he said.

HIGHLIGHTS Pastor: 'Love Builds Up the Church' Doug Edmonds at the La Grande Church of Christ will speak Sunday on"Love Builds Up the Church" coming kom Romans 12:10. Communion is taken every Sunday. Children's church is available during the sermon for kids age 2 through kindergarten. Sunday morning classesbegin at9:30 a.m., and the worship service follows at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday small groups are at 7 p.m. at various home locations.

Explore mystery of second coming Saturday during the 11a.m. service atthe La Grande Seventh-day Adventist Church, Pastor Mike Armayor will continue to explore the answer to the question of why Jesus hasn't returned yet, by compar-

ing the Exodus movement La Grande United Methodist of ancient Israel with the Church will include CommuAdvent movement of today. A nion. Communion is open to Mexican-style lunch follows all and is served with glutenfor good conversation and free bread and grape juice. making new friends. Child care is available.

Friends and family gather at Riverside

Service focuses on Psalms 113

The second Sunday after Zion Lutheran Church Pentecost willbe celebrated (ELCAl in La Grande celduring the 9:30 a.m. worship ebrates the second Sunday serviceattheFirstPresbyte- after Pentecost with commurian Church in La Grande. nion worship at 9:30 a.m. Pastor Keith Hudson will Pastor Colleen Nelson's leadthe service,and his message will be a continuasermon, "Doers of the Word," tion of lessons on the Psalms. will be based on James 1:1This week the focus will be 27. Fellowship follows the Psalm 113, a psalm ofpraise. service. After the service will be During June and July, fellowship at 10:30 a.m. and fiiends and family will meet classes at 11 a.m. at 6p.m. everyWednesday at Plans are well advanced Riverside Park for fellowship. in celebrating the 125th Bring everything you need anniversary year of ZLC for dinner. this year, including crafters and quilters making "church Gluten-free wafers dolls" out of handkerchiefs available Sunday that children would have The 10 a.m. service at the had in church more than 100

years ago.

Eucharist offered Sunday, Wednesday St. Peter's Episcopal Church in La Grande will observe the second Sunday after Pentecost with Holy Eucharist at 9 a.m.. The Rev. Kathryn Macek will preside and preach. Duringthe week, Morning Prayerisoffered at8:30 a.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays in the chapel. A midweek Eucharist isoffered at 12:15 p.m. Wednesdays, also in the

chapel.

Lutherans hold benefit yard sale The sermon text for the service this week at Faith Lutheran Church will be kom Mark 3:20-35. In these verses, Jesus explains the close relationship he has with his followers, saying, "Whoever does the will of God, he is my brother and

I CHURCH OF CHRIST (A desrription not a trllej 2107 Gekeler Lane, La Grande 805-5070 P.O. Box 260 Website; www.lgcofc.org

Sunday School 9:30 am Sunday Worship 10:30 am Sunday Evening 6:00 pm No meeting on 3rd Sun. night of month Wednesday Night Small GrouP: 7:00Pm Call for I xntIon Preacher: Doug Edmonds

CovE UNITED METHoDIsT CHURcH 1708 Jasper St., Cove, OR

NoRTH PowDER UNITED

METHoDIsT CHURcH 390 E. St., North Powder, OR

JOIN US... Catch the Spirit! Worshi:P 9:00 a.m. Cove Worship: 10:00 a.m. N. Powder

First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) 901 Penn Avenue 963-2623 web: firstchristianlagrande.orI.

Worship 10:00 a.m.

Zion Lutheran Church (an ELCA church) 902 Fourth Street, La Grande, OR )QN • R4N (541) 963-5998

UI GRANDE

9:30 am - Worship 10:30 am - Fellowship & Refreshments 11:00am - Classes

eee.ziontagrande.org

First Baptist Church Crossroads SIXTH 8c SPRING • 963-3911 Community Church 601 Jefferson Ave., La Grande

Quilding TagetherQn ChristAlone

Sun. 8:45 AM — Bible Classes Sun. 10:00 AM — Worship Wed. 6:15 PM — AWANA

FIRST LANDMARK V AL L E Y CELEBRATION MISSIONARY BAPTIST F E L L O W S H I P COMMUNITY CHURCH CHURCH 9 63 - 0 3 4 0 EVERYONE WELCOME

2707 Bearco Loop 10200 N. McAlister, Island City Pastor Dave Tierce• 541-605-0215

Sundays at 10 a.m. DCln Mielke 541-663-6122

wwwcelebrationcommunitychurch.org

A Place where hoPeisfound in Jesus Join us in Fellowship 8c Worship Every Saturday 9:30 a.m.- B>ble Study/Fellowsh>p 10:45 a.m.- Worsh>p Serv>ce

2702Adams Avenue, La Grande • 963-4018

Pastor: Mike Armayor www. lagrande22adventistchurchconnect. org Learningfor Today and Eternily Little Friends Christian Preschool/Childcare 963-6390 La Crande Adventist Cbristian School Christian Education K-8th Grade 963-6203

+G .

BAPTIST CHURCH

CHURCH OF THE

507 P a l m e r A v e rjusr easr of clry p o o l )

SundaySchool 9 '.15 a.m. SundayWorship 10'.30 a.m.

Union

Baptist Church 1531 S, Main St,, Union• 562-5531 Pastor Dave 805-9445

S unda y % ' o r s h i p 1 0 : 0 2 a m

Sunday School — 10:00 am Worship I I:00 am SundayEvening BibleStudy—5:00 pm Wednesday Evening — 6:30 pm

Come and share in a ti me of worship, prayer and the study of God's word with us. Worship inc l u d e s communion on Sunday.

" WhereyoucanJind TRUTHaccording io the scriptures"

www.valleyfel.org Email: church Q valleyfel.org

Come Celebrate the Lord with us!

1114 Y Avenue, La Grande (Corner of 'Y" Avenue and N Birch Street)

(541) 663-0610 9 am Sunday School 11 am Worship

Exalting God Edifying Believers Evangelizing Unbelievers solus chnstus, sola scriptura, solaGraua, sola aN, solt DeoGlona

ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH SERVICES

Faith Center Foursquare Church

Union-Sacred Heart-340 South 10th Avenue Sunday 6:00 pmMass Wednesday6:00 pm Mass Sunday I I:00 amMass Thursday 6:00 pmMass

North Powder - SaintAnthony's- 500 E Street Sunday Pleasecall 54 h963-734I Tuesday 6:00 pmMass

®

SPECIAL EASTER SERVICE 7:30 AM

Holding Services ac

2702 Adams Ave, La Grande PO Box 3373

(541) 663-1735 Regular services 9:00 am Sunday School Classes 10:00 am Sunday Worship Service

SUMMERVILLE

Sunday Services: SundaySchool k Adult BibleClasses 9:45AM Pastor Steve Wolff Children'sChurchk WorshipService 11:00AM Family WorshipService 6:00PM Igumc@eoni.com www.lgumchurch.org Wednesday: Office Hours: Mon-Thur 9am-Noon PrayerMtg, Children'sBibleClub, YouthGroup7:00PM

1612 4th Street — 963-2498

A churchforyour wholefamily Visit us atsummervillebaptistchuii:h.org

• 0

Roger Cochran, Pastor

541-910-5787 541-963-7202

IMBLER CHRISTIAN CHURCH 440 RUGKMAN, IMBLER534-2201

Sunday Services 9:00 a.m. 10:00 a.m.

Sunday School Worship Service

GRACE COMMUNITY LUTHERAN CHURCH On the seventh DayAdvenast church bu>ld>ng)

"We are called to Serve"

Sunday Schoolfor allages -9:00 am I|rst Service 9:00 AM — 10:30AM Sunday Worship 10:00 am SecondServiceII:00AM — 12:30 PM Pastor Carl Aeelho ff www.II,4square.com Phone: 541-805-0764 I0300South "D" Street - Island City OR97850 grace.lutherancove@gmail.com (54I)963-8063

LA GRANDE UNITED METHODISTCHURCH Community Church BAPTIFT CHURCH"OPEN HEART5,OPENMIND5, OPENDOORS" Seventh Day Adventist Church

2705 Gekelcr Lane, La Grande

5 02 Main Street In C o ve

SUNDAY SERVICE TIMES:

Elgin -Saint Mary's- 12th andAlder

You are invited to join us as we searchScripture for answers to Life Questions —come, enjoy warmfellowship. A Southern Baptist Church.

LCMC

La Grande -Our Ladyofthe Valley -1002 LAvenue Saturday 5:00 pmMass Sunday 7:00 am& 9:00 amMass Weekday 8:00 amMass

• 9:45AM sunday Biblestudy • 11 AM Sunday Worship • IPM Wednesday PrayerService

www.trinitybaptistlagrande.com

Weuse the King JamesVersion Bible

GRACE BIBLE CHURCH

Churches and faithbased groups are encouraged to submit Highlights for the Spiritual Life page by 4 p.m.Tuesday for publication Friday. Submit by email to news@ lagrandeobserver.com (with Highlights in the subject line), by fax to 541-963-7804, or by hand to the office.

La Grande Seventh-day

S unday School 9:45 a m Morning Worship 11 am sunday Night 6 pm Wednesday Night 6:30 pm Thursday AWANA 6 : 3 0 pm

www,flmbclagrande,com

Submissions

Adventist Church

109 1SthStreet • 963-3402

Sunday Worship 10:00 am Wednesday Night 6:15 pm "...where you can begin again"

UNION — Pastor Sue Peeples will deliver the message"Amazing Faithfulness" at the 11 a.m. Sunday worship at the United Methodist Church in Union. The service will include a celebration of Communion. Fellowship and rekeshments follow the service. Each Tuesday, the church hosts a senior lunch at noon. This week the main dish will be cheeseburger casserole. If you need assistance in gettingthere,call541-562-5848 a day in advance. The Wednesday Prayer Meeting is weekly kom 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. People can

NA Z A R E N E

(541) 963-4342

Kingdom Kids - Youth in Action

'Amazing Faithful ness'eyed

leave prayer requests at 541-562-5848 if they are unable to attend. The congregants also habitually pray daily for those they know are in need of God's healing as well as for those on the Grande Ronde phone line (541-786-PRAYI. Thursday at 1 p.m. is Bible study with Marguerite Pike facilitating.

I

Pastor: Rev. Colleen Nelson

-Join us at The Lord's Table-

sister and mother." Faith Lutheran is having its annual benefit yard sale kom 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at the church, located at the corner of 12th and Gekeler in La Grande.

Worship 10:00am

Fellowship Coffee Hour 11:00 am - Nurseryprovided-


FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

THE OBSERVER —13A

STATE

OREGON IN BRIEF Erom wire reports

Vigil held for boy's disappearance PORTLAND — About 75 people gathered for a candlelight vigil for the 5th anniversary of an Oregon boy's disappearance. The Oregonian reported that 7-year-old Kyron Horman went missing in June 2010 after hisstepmother Terri Horman dropped him off at his Portland school. An intense search came up empty. At the vigil Thursday, Kyron's mother Desiree Young spoke about trying to cope with her son still gone without a trace. Red balloonswere released into the air for Kyron and the crows latergathered with lighted candles and prayed for his return.

A $50,000 reward is being offered by the Multnomah County Sheriff's OffIce for information leading to the discovery of the missing boy. Anyone with information on the caseisasked to callthe sheriff's office tip line at 503261-2847.

Douglas County to close rural clinics ROSEBURG — Douglas County Public Health is closing its three rural clinics by the end of the month. The News-Review in Roseburg reported that the Douglas County Board of Commissioners voted Wednesday to terminateitsleasefor the Canyonville health clinic space. Other clinics slated to close are located in Drain and Reedsport. The Public Health Department has lost some staffmembers as aresultof cutbacks. Director Dawnelle Marshall says she has six nurse vacancies and her staff is down to 25 people. Services will be offered for the last time June 25 at the Canyonville clinic. The Drain clinic's last day will be June 26,and the Reedsportclinic's last day will be June 30.

Woman pleads guilty for trying to steal dogs PORTLAND — A 35-year-old woman has been sentenced to five years of probationafter shepleaded guilty to trying to steal two dogs from their yard. The Oregonian reported that Jaime Bailey-Latimer did not offer an explanation for her actions while in court Thursday. She declined to make a statement. Prosecutors say Bailey-Latimer crept into the backyard of a southeast Portland couple last August with another woman and tried to make off with the couple's llasa apso and shih tzu. When the wife came outside, Bailey-Latimer and the other woman tried to make off with the pups by climbing over the fence.

Wash. man arrested after high-speed chase SALEM — Oregon State Police say a 33-year-old Vancouver, Washington, man has been arrested after a high-speed chase ended in a crash on Interstate 5 near Woodburn. Sgt. Jason Lindland says state police received multiple complaints late Thursday morningabout a blueDodge Neon speeding southbound on I-5 and passing on the shoulder in the Wilsonville area. After one attempt to stop the car failed, police began

By Taylor W. Anderson

pursuing it. As the car neared Woodburn, police say it lost control while trying to pass on the shoulder and hit another vehicle asitbegan toenter a highway work zone. The driverwas arrested after crashing into some shrubs and driving into a state police patrol vehicle. Lindland says the driver told troopers he had smoked methamphetamineand marijuana. Troopers say Jonathan Oson was arrested for investigation of offenses including felony criminal mischief, recklessdriving and reckless endangerment.

Oregon lawmakers introduce mascots bill SALEM — Oregon lawmakers have introduced a bill seeking to allow public schools to continue using Native American mascots in certain circumstances. The move is the latest development in a long-running power struggle between lawmakers and the state Board of Education, which has tried to require schools to retire Native American symbols and nicknames. The bill introduced Thursday would allow schools to use a Native American mascot if they can come to an agreement with an Oregon tribe. The agreement would have to pass muster with the state Board of Education beforetaking effect. The board voted in 2012 to outlaw mascots including the Indians, the Braves, the Chiefs and the Warriors. State lawmakers tried to forceboard members to loosen the ban, but in a meeting last month, they refused.

Oregon Senate votes to double time for sex crimes charges SALEM — The Oregon Senate has approved a bill doubling the amount of time rape orsexual assaultvictims would have to press charges against theirabusers. The measure passed Thursday would set the statute oflimitations at 12 years, up from six. But sexual assault victims pushed hard to expand the limitto20 years,orto do away with it completely. Severalhave testified theircases were never tried because the time limits on prosecutions ran out by the time they were ready to come forward. Eugene Democratic Sen. Floyd Prozanski said he would convene a work group to study whether the statute oflimitations should be expanded even further. The bill passed 28-0. It now heads to the governor.

FRE •

of federal criminal penalties without a quick change in state law. SALEM — As lawmakers consider Many on both sides agree the a bill that would strip would-be hemp Legislature is taking the right path in growers of their newly issued licenses, addressing hemp as the state moves the farmers say they have just as much closer to a time when cannabis will be right as outdoor marijuana growers to legal for recreational and medicinal use farm and sell the plant in Oregon. and widespreadfarming. They're trying to grow for some of ''We can work together as a team with these marijuana growers," said the same patients, after all. Lynn Foutch, from Benton County,who Severalrecipients ofOregon's 13 hemp licenses say their primary goal is received a license to grow industrial to grow the plant — a non-psychoactive hemp. relative of marijuana — for CBD, an oil Michael Hughes, a Bend attorney extracted from hemp plants that has whose family has a history of growing hemp in Nebraska, said he's been qualities to help with symptoms suffered by patients with cancer, seizures breeding and researching hemp for two and other ailments. CBD is also used decades, the last three years in Oregon. in food products and textiles. He plans to grow and harvest the plant for CBD oil as soon as he's able to put Some are miffed lawmakers waited until the start of what would be plants in the ground. Oregon's inaugural hemp season to adBut unless the Legislature reaches a compromise on concerns raised both by dressconcerns raised both by medical marijuana growers who worry crosshemp farmers eager to grow the plant pollination will ruin their crops and by and medical marijuana growers worried about contamination, there may attorneys who say farmers are at risk WesCom News Service

not be a harvest in Oregon. Hughes said fields ofhemp can create tremendous amounts of pollen, and that the potential for cross-contamination between the two plants is a real concern without rules in place to try and prevent it. Rep. Peter Buckley, D-Ashland, has proposed banning outdoor hemp and marijuana farms from being within 5 miles of each other as a way to prevent cross-contamination, which would wreck the THC levels in marijuana plants and CBD levels in hemp plants. Buckley says he's not pitting growers against one another, but is instead trying to find a way to let both industries thrive without encroaching on one another and without interference from the federal government. "I do understand that it's been a long wait for farmers who want to grow hemp andIunderstand why they might be impatient, but we have to ask fora little m orepatience to make sure we're doing it right," Buckley said.

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Cougar spotted along creek in Grants Pass GRANTS PASS —A young cougar was seen walking through residential areas of Grants Pass. Police told the Grants Pass Daily Courier that they went looking for it Wednesday after a number of sightings were called in near Gilbert Creek, but couldn't find it. Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife district biologist Mark Vargas says cougars prowl inside city limits in Josephine and Jackson counties more than people realize, regularly moving along creeks and wooded areas.

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14A — THE OBSERVER

FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

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EMERSON MUSIC ARTS TODDLER MUSIC CLASS Dates:June 2,9,16,23 Time: 1:30 p.m. Cost:$40 Location:Emerson Music Arts classroom, 902 Fourth St. (downstairs at the Zion Lutheran Church), La Grande Register:www.emersonmusicarts.com or 541-605-0425. BEGINNING POTTERY FORTEENS Dates:June 3,10,17,24 Time:3:15 p.m. to 4:45 p.m Cost:$45/$40 members, includes supplies Location:Art Center at the Old Library, 1006 Penn Ave., La Grande Register:artcenterlagrande.org, 541-6242800, or stop in the Art Center between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., Tuesday-Saturday

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UNION COUNTY

Eastern Oregon Head Start

THE JORDAN WORLD CIRCUS Date:June 8 Time:7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Cost:$14-$18 Location:Mavericks Arena, 3608 N. Second St., La Grande STORY BOOK DANCE CAMP (AGES 3-6) Dates:June 8-12 Time:8 a.m. to noon Cost:$100

Location: Beckie's Studio of Dance, La Grande Register: Beckie at 541-805-8317, Heather at 541-910-2070, Besty 541-805-5358

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community room, 2006 Fourth St., La Grande Register:541-962-1339 or visit Cook Memorial Library (signed parental permission form required)

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"PIRATES OFTHE CARIBBEAN" SUMMER MUSIC CAMP (PRE-KTO 2ND GRADE) Dates: June 8-12 Time:9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Cost: $80, includes all materials and camp Tshiit, 30 percent sibling discount, limited need-based scholarships available Location:Ait Center at the Old Library, 1006 Penn Ave., La Grande Register:www.emersonmusicaits.com or 541-605-0425

STORY BOOK DANCE CAMP (AGES 7-9) Dates:June 15-19 Time:1 p.m.to 5 p.m. Cost:$100 Location:Beckie's Studio of Dance, LaGrande Register:Beckie at 541-805-8317, Heather at 541-910-2070, Besty 541-805-5358

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MISSOULA CHILDREN'STHEATRE CAMP, "THE JUNGLE BOOK" (GRADES 1-12) Dates:June 15-20 Cost:$65/$60 for Art Center members; BEGINNING GUITAR (AGE 7 & OLDER) some need-based scholarships available Dates: June 9-25, Tuesdays 8t Thursdays Location:Art Center at the Old Library, Time: 10 a.m. to11 a.m. 1006 Penn Ave., La Grande Cost: $30 Register:www.artcenterlagrande.org, 541624-2800, or stop in the Art Center between Location: Direct Music Source, 1206 Adams Ave., La Grande 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., Tuesday-Saturday Register:www.lagrandeparks.org or 541-962-1352 GYMNASTICS Dates:June 15-18 "TAKE RESPONSIBILITYFOR Time: ages 5-8, 9 a.m. to 10 a.m.; ages 3-5, 10:15 a.m. to 11 a.m.; ages 8+, 11:15 YOUR SAFETY" (MIDDLE SCHOOL & HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS) a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Date: June11 Cost:$40 Time:3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Location:1207 Hall St., La Grande Cost: Free Register:www.lagrandeparks.org or 541-962-1352 Location:Cook Memorial Library

~ 11-lehaCral qlelBarlBulIlH folksingers: umble and funny ~ 18-!, aareaSheehaaSIlaHBaal ~

grassroots music of America

25-Hear!aHam mer musical food for the soul For moredetals ontheperformersand up-todateperformanceschedule, visit

www.wvatuslcalliance.org 541-426-5350

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Recurring Activities The following is a list of events that are ongoing throughout the summer:

UNION COUNTY

KIHIEBMm%~ Preschool Children Ages3 &4 Call Robert Kleng at

64l-968-$6$$

Summer 2015 JUNE 15 - AUGUST 6 $30 for the first child in each family $20 for the second and $10 for children threeand four and $5 for each additional child for the entire summer. Drop-in feeswill remain $5 per child per week.

Pre-register through June 8 and save '5" VISITS 7 SITES EACH WEEK

lagrandeparks.org

CITY of LA GRANDE

VETERANS' MEMORIAL POOL Location:401 Palmer, La Grande Dates:June 1-Aug. 22 Recreation Swim Monday-Fri day 1:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Saturday 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Outside Splash Pool (weather permitting) Monday-Saturday 1:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m . Family Night Tuesdays7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.;$2/ person (resident); $2.50/person (nonresident) Parent/Tot Recreation Swim (parents/children 5 and younger) Fridays 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.

... and so much more 541-663-1492 or stop by: 2609 2nd St. La Grande, OR E-mail: kidsclub Ciccno.org

THE MARIDELL CENTER Location:1124Washington, La Grande Dates/Times:1p.m. to 7 p.m.TuesdayThursday,1 p.m. to 9 p.m.Friday 8t Saturday Skate sessions:1 p.m. to 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday summer skatespecial: 1 p.m. to 7 p.m.; $2 includes skate rental Friday skate special:6 p.m. to 9 p.m.; $12 admission and skate rental for two

MOBILE FUN UNIT Dates: June 15-Aug. 6 For: ages 3 and older Cost: $30 for summer, discounts for siblings; $5 per week drop-in fee Monday: BirniePark9a.m.to11 a.m.; Willow School 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday:Candy Cane Park 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.; Riverside Park1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday:Benton Park9 a.m .to 11 a.m.; Island City Park1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday:Pioneer Park,1 p.m. to 3 p.m. End-of-summer carnival:Aug. 11

ELGIN LIBRARY SUMMER READING PROGRAM Location:1699 Division St., Elgin Dates:Thursdays, June 11-July 30 Time: 10:30 a.m.

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Groups/Times:1st-6th grade group, Wednesdaysat7 p.m.;"SuperSummer Sundays," every Sunday at 11 a.m.

KIDS ZUMBA INPIONEER PARK Dates: June 2-Aug. 22, Thursdays 11:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. Offered by Veterans' Memorial Pool; included w/monthly pool membership or $5 drop-in fee

COOK MEMORIAL LIBRARY Location:2006 Fourth St., La Grande Stories/Crafts:Thursdays at 11:30 a.m. Baby Tot Bop:Fridays at 10:30 a.m. LEGO Play:Saturdays at 9 a.m. to noon Ready2Learn Storytime:second Monday at11:30 a.m.

JOYFUL SOUNDS PIANO & GUITAR LESSONS www.joyfulsounds88.com For: ages 4 and older for piano lessons, 6 and older for guitar lessons; beginners welcome Cost: $72 per month for weekly 30-minute lessons

Vi o e LLC Summer Happenings around the barnfor kids..

SUMMER FOOD SERVICE LUNCH PROGRAM Location:Riveria Activity Center, 2609 Second St., La Grande Dates/Times:June 1-Aug. 21, Monday-Friday, 11:30 am.-12:30 p.m. What: free lunch for ages 1-18, $3 meals for adults

Little Youth Horse Day Camp July 7-10th

WALLOWA COUNTY

Ages d-7; Camp A is9am-i2pm, Camp li is 2pm-5pm Cost: 5l50per camper/per camp(T Shirt included)

Camps

WALLOWA COUNTY SUMMER LUNCH PROGRAM Dates:June 8-Aug. 7, Monday-Friday Locations:Wallowa City Park, noon to 12:30 p.m.; Enterprise City Park, noon to 12:30 p.m.; Joseph, behind City Hall, 12:15 p.m. to 12:45 p.m. What: free lunch for ages 1-18, $4 meals for adults

SUMMERVILLE BAPTISTCHURCH "SUMMER OF SHARPENING" Dates: June 28-Aug. 2

Youth Horse Day Camp July 13-17th 8c July 20-24th Ages8-l5; Yourhorse,or useacamphorse! Cost: $300per camper/per camp(T Shirt included)

Candomultiple campsif desired Private Lessons w/ a school horse: 30Min.- $30 • 45Min. - $35 • 60Min. - $40

541.786.3218 victoryacres@hotmail.com http://www.sdctoryacresfarm.com Find Us On Facebook: hitp//svsvsvfacebook,com/VictorFAciesparm

THE Hun or NORTHEASTERNOREGON

g earpt ~ u s i c u s i n g f u p t /earpti ptg activi ti e s

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Lessons Joyce Hoke 541-910-3992

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FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 1B

l

PUBLISHED BY THE LAGRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA,UNION & BAKER COUNTIES

DEADLINES: LINE ADS: noon Friday

Monday:

Wednesday: noon Tuesday Friday: no o n Thursday DISPLAY ADS:

2 days prior to publication date

Baker City Herald: 541-523-3673 • www.bakercityherald.com • classifiedsObakercityherald.com • Fax: 541-523-6426 The Observer: 541-963-3161 ® www.la randeobserver.com • classifieds©lagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674 105 - Announcements '

105 - Announcements BINGO Sunday — 2 pm -4pm Catholic Church Baker City

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105 - Announcements PINOCHLE Fndays at 6:30 p.m. Senior Center 2810 Cedar St. Public is welcome

.

Classifieds get results.

100 - Announcements

ELGIN SCHOOL Dist. Free Summer Lunch Program. Ages: 1-18 yrs old o n ly. Every Mon. thru Fn., Beginning June 8th, l u nch is served at 12:15-1pm

600 - Farmers Market

105 - Announcements 110- Self Help Groups 120 - Community Calendar 130 - Auction Sales 140 - Yard, Garage Sales, Baker Co 143 - Wallowa Co 145- Union Co 150 - Bazaars, Fundraisers 160- Lost B Found 170 - Love Lines 180 - Personals

605 - Market Basket 610 - Boarding/Training 620 - Farm Equipment B Supplies 630 - Feeds 640 - Horse, Stock Trailers 650- Horses, Mules, Tack 660 - Livestock 670 - Poultry 675 - Rabbits, Small Animals 680 - Irrigation 690 - Pasture

700 - Rentals

200 -Employment 210- Help Wanted, Baker Co 220 - Union Co 230 - Out of Area 280 - Situations Wanted

300 - Financial/Service 310- Mortgages, Contracts, Loans 320 - Business Investments 330 - Business Opportunities 340 - Adult Care Baker Co 345 - Adult Care Union Co 350 - Day Care Baker Co 355 - Day Care Union Co 360 - Schools B Instruction 380 - Service Directory

400 - General Merchandise 405 - Antiques 410- Arts B Crafts 415 - Building Materials 420 - Christmas Trees 425 - Computers/Electronics 430- For Sale or Trade 435 - Fuel Supplies 440 - Household Items 445 - Lawns B Gardens 450 - Miscellaneous 460 - Musical Column 465 - Sporting Goods 470 - Tools 475 - Wanted to Buy 480 - FREEItems

500 - Pets 8 Supplies 505 - Free to a Good Home 510- Lost B Found 520 - Pet Grooming 525 - Pet Boarding/Training 530- Pet Schools, Instruction 550 - Pets, General

701 - Wanted to Rent 705 - Roommate Wanted 710- Rooms for Rent 720 - Apartment Rentals 730 - Furnished Apartments 740- Duplex Rentals Baker Co 745 - Duplex Rentals Union Co 750 - Houses for Rent 760 - Commercial Rentals 770 - Vacation Rentals 780 - Storage Units 790 - Property Management 795 -Mobile Home Spaces

800 - Real Estate 801 - Wanted to Buy 810- Condos, Townhouses, Baker Co 815 - Condos,Townhouses,Union Co 820 - Houses for Sale, Baker Co 825 - Houses for Sale, Union Co 840- Mobile Homes, Baker Co 845 - Mobile Homes, Union Co 850- Lots B Property, Baker Co 855 - Lots B Property, Union Co 860 - Ranches, Farms 870 - Investment Property 880 - Commercial Property

900 - Transportation 902 - Aviation 910 - ATVs,Motorcycles,Snowmobiles 915 - Boats B Motors 920 - Campers 925 - Motor Homes 930 - Travel Trailers, 5th Wheels 940 - Utility Trailers 950- Heavy Equipment 960 - Auto Parts 970 - Autos for Sale 990 - Four-Wheel Drive

105 - Announcements

110 - Self-Help Group Meetings AA

"As Bill Sees It" Satd 10AM — 11AM 2533 Church St Baker Valley Church of Chnst Open

LAMINATION Up to 17 1/2 inches wide any length

$1.00 per foot (The Observeris not responsible for flaws in material or machine error) THE OBSERVER 1406 Fifth • 541-963-3161 CHECK YOUR AD ON THE FIRST DAY OF PUBLICATION We make every effort t o a v o i d er r o r s . However mistakes d o s l i p t hr o u g h . Check your ads the first day of publication I!t please call us immediately if you find an error. Northeast Oregon Classifieds will cheerfully make your correction I!t extend your ad 1 day.

PREGNANCY SUPPORT GROUP Pre-pregnancy, pregnancy, post-partum. 541-786-9755

110 - Self-Help Group Meetings AA MEETINGS 2614 N. 3rd Street La Grande

AA MEETING: Been There Done That Open Meeting Sunday; 5:30-6:30 Grove St Apts Corner of Grove I!t D Sts Baker City/Nonsmoking Wheel Chair Accessible AA MEETING Been There, Done That Group Sun. — 5:30 — 6:30 PM Grove Street Apts (Corner of Grove Sr D Sts)

Baker City Open, Non-Smoking Wheelchair accessible

AA MEETING: Survior Group. M o n., Wed. I!t Thurs. 12:05 pm-1:05 pm. Presbyterian Church, 1995 4th St. (4th I!t Court Sts.) Baker City. Open, No smoking.

PUBLIC BINGO

MON, WED, FRI NOON-1 PM TUESDAY 7AM-8AM TUE, WED, THU 7PM-8PM SAT, SUN 10AM-11AM AA MEETINGS 2614 N. 3rd Street La Grande MON, WED, FRI NOON-1 PM TUESDAY 7AM-8AM TUE, WED, THU 7PM-8PM SAT, SUN 10AM-11AM

541-786-5535

AL-ANON-HELP FOR families I!t fnends of alc oho l i c s . Un io n County. 568-4856 or 963-5772

2810 Cedar St., Baker. Every Monday Doors open, 6:30 p.m. Early bird game, 7 p.m. followed by reg. games. All ages welcome! 541-523-6591

SETTLER'S PARK ACTIVITIES 1st I!t 3rd FRIDAY (every month) Ceramics with Donna 9:00 AM — Noon. (Pnces from $3- $5)

MONDAY NIGHT Nail Care 6:00 PM (FREE)

EVERY WEDNESDAY Bi ble Study; 1 0:30 AM Public Bingo; 1:30 PM ( .25 cents per card)

5 bdrm, 3 bath, two-story home, 9.77 acres, north of Summerville. Wood stove, garage, shop, garden, dog run, livestock facilities, pasture plus timber. Mountain and valley views.

$374,000

EVERY MORNING (M onday —nday) F

Call for more information or to schedule a viewing.

Exercise Class;

(54't )805-0241

9:30AM (FREE)

110 - Self-Help Grou Meetin s UNION COUNTY

©. KS

AA Meeting

Info. 541-663-41 1 2

1000 - Legals

110 - Self-Help Group Meetings AL-ANON MEETING in Elgin. Meeting times

Evenings ©6:00 pm Elgin Methodist Church 7th and Birch

Someone's drinking a problem? AL-ANON Monday at Noon Presbytenan Church

110 - Self-Help Group Meetings NEED TO TALKto an AA member one on one? Call our 24 HOUR HOTLINE 541-624-5117 oi visit

www.ore onaadistnct29 .com

OVERCOMERS OUTREACH Chnst based Corner or Washington Sr 4th 12 step group Baker City Sundays; 2:45- 3:45 PM 2533 Church St 541-523-5851 541-523-7317 AL-ANON Concerned about AA MEETING: someone else's Powder River Group Mond 7 PM -8 PM drinking? Sat., 9 a.m. Wedd 7 PM -8 PM Northeast OR Fnd 7 PM -8 PM Compassion Center, 1250 Hughes Ln. Baker City

(541 ) 523-3431 ACCEPTANCE GROUP of Overeaters AL-ANON. At t i tude of Anonymous meets Gratitude. W e d n e sTuesdays at 7pm. days, 12:15 — 1:30pm. United Methodist Church on 1612 4th St. in the library room in the basement.

4© El

®:

1st I!t 3rd Wednesday

Community Connection,

TUESDAY NIGHTS Craft Time 6:00 PM (Sm.charge for materials)

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Faith Lutheran Church. 1 2th I!t Gekeler, L a Grande.

Grove St. Apts. Corner of Grove I!t D Sts. Baker City, Open Nonsmoking Wheel Chair Accessible

SAFE HAVEN Alzheimer/Dementia Caregivers Support Group

2nd Friday of every month AL-ANON. COVE ICeep 11:45 AM in Fellowship C oming Back. M o n Hall (Right wing) of days, 7-8pm. Ca Iva ry Nazarene Church 1250 Hughes Lane B aptist Church. 7 0 7 Baker City Main, Cove. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS can help! 24 HOUR HOTLINE (541 ) 624-51 1 7

WALLOWA COUNTY AA Meeting List

AlcoholicsAnonymous Monday, Wednesday, Fnday, Saturday 7 p.m. www oregonaadistnct29 com Tuesday, Wednesday, Serving Baker, Union, Thursday noon. and Wallowa Counties Women only AA meeting ALZHEIMERSWednesday 11a.m., DEMENTIA 113 1/2 E Main St., Support Group meeting 2nd Friday of every mo. Enterpnse, across from Courthouse Gazebo 11:30 am to 1:00 pm. H ot lin e 541-624-511 7 1250 Hughes Lane Baker City Church WALLOWA of the Nazarene 606 W Hwy 82 (In the Fellowship Hall) PH: 541-263-0208 541-523-9845 Sunday 7:00p.m.-8:00 p.m. BAKER COUNTY Cancer Support Group WEIGHT WATCHERS Meets 3rd Thursday of Baker City every month at Basche Sage Place St. Lukes/EOMA © 7 PM 2101 Main Street Contact: 541-523-4242 Drop-In Hours: Monday, 9 — 11 AM CIRCLE OF FRIENDS • buy product (For spouses w/spouses • ask questions who have long term • enroll terminaI illnesses) • weigh-in Meets 1st Monday of • individual attention every month at St. Meeting: Lukes/EOMA©11:30 AM Monday 5:30 PM $5.00 Catered Lunch • confidential weigh-in Must RSVP for lunch begins at 5 PM 541-523-4242 • group support • v i sit a m e e t i ng f o r NORTHEAST OREGON CLASSIFIEDS of fers free! Self Help I!t Support 120 - Community G roup A nn o u n c e ments at n o c harge. Calendar For Baker City call: J ulie — 541-523-3673 For LaGrande call: E n ca — 541-963-31 61

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NARACOTICS ANONYMOUS

Goin' Straight Group ~M t

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Show it over 100,000 times with our

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Mon. —Tues. — Thurs. Fn. I!t Sat. -8 PM Episcopal Church Basement 2177 1st Street Baker City First Saturday of every month at 4 PM Pot Luck — Speaker Meeting

NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: Monday, Thursday, I!t Fnday at8pm. Episcopal Church 2177 First St., Baker City.

You too can use this Attention Getter . Ask how you can get your ad to stand out

like this!

130 - Auction Sales

EQUIPMENT LIQUIDATION AUCTION Saturday June 6, 2015 Owner: Dennis Burnell Located: 22191sland Ave La Grande OR 97850

Sellincei Excavators; Tractors; Boom trucks; Man lift; Vehicles; Classic car; Trailers; Equipment; Firearms I!t much more Sale starts 11 AM/PT Lunch Served

NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS Terms Cash or bankable check on sale day No credit cards HELP Everything sells as is where is LINE-1-800-766-3724 Baker Auction Co. Meetings: 1 -800-650-5808 8:OOPM:Sunday, Monwww.bakerauction.com day, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Fnday Noon: Thursday 160 - Lost & Found 6:OOPM: Monday,Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs- LOST D O G , F em, day (Women's) golden ret mix, Cove. 7:OOPM:Saturday 541-91 0-2444.

Home Seller Special 1. Full color Real Estate picture ad Start your campaign with a full-color 2x4 picture ad in the Friday Baker City Herald and The Observer Classified Section.

Rear Basement Entrance at 1501 0 Ave.

hree Loeattons

2. AmOnth Of ClaSSified PiCture adS Five lines of copy plus a picture in 12 issues of the Baker City Herald and the Observer Classified Section

LOST: BLACK I!t white c at, nea r C h e rry I !t Auburn. Contact Patty at BCH: 541-523-3673

To ServeYou

3. FOur WeekS Of EuyerS EonuS and ObSerVer PluS ClaSSifiedAdS Your classified ad automatically goes to non-subscribers and outlying areas of Baker and Union Counties in the mail for one month in the Buyers Bonus or Observer Plus Classified Section. 4. 30 dayS Of 24/7 Online adVertiSing That classified picture ad will be there for online buyers when they're looking at www. northeastoregonclassifieds.com — and they look at over 50,000 page views a month.

La Grande Office 541-663-9000 Baker City Office 541-523-7390

Home Sener Special price is (or aduertisi ttg the same home, with nocopy changes and no re(undsi(ctassi jied ad is kiI(ed be(ore end o(schedute.

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Get moving. Call us today.

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e

On cul-de-sac in Baker City, single level, 1688 sq ft, clean 3 bd, 2 bath, living & family room, skylight above dining area, pantry, utility room, fencedbackyard, automatic sprinklers, detached multipurpose garage 384 sq ft 1355 15th Street on lot 73 x 188.25

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2B —THE OBSERVER tk BAKER CITY HERALD

FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

PUBLISHED BY THE LAGRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA, UNION & BAKER COUNTIES

DEADLINES : LINE ADS:

Monday: noon Friday Wednesday: noon Tuesday Friday: no o n Thursday DISPLAY ADS:

2 days prior to publication date

Baker City HeraId: 541-523-3673e www.bakercityheraId.com • classifiedsObakercityheraId.com• Fax: 541-523-6426' The Observer: 541-963-3161e www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsOlagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674 xg w 150 - Bazaars, Fund- 2 1 0 - Help Wantedraisers Baker Co. ALLIANCE VENDORS WANTED HEALTHCARE Elgin Lions River Fest June 20th. Contact SERVICES Linda Johnston 541-786-0643 Deadline June 10th

Placing an ad in classified is a very simple process. Just call the classified department a nd we 'l l h e l p y o u word your ad for maximum response.

160- Lost & Found MISSING YOUR PET? Check the Baker City Animal Clinic 541-523-3611 PLEASE CHECK Blue Mountain Humane Association Facebook Page, if you have a lost or found pet.

180 - Personals MEET S I NGLES right nowl No paid operators, Iust real people l ike y o u . Br o ws e greetings, ex change m essages and c o nn ect live. Try it f r e e . CaII n ow : 877-955-5505. (PNDC)

210 - Help WantedBaker Co. BAKER SCHOOL DISTRICT 5J is currently

210 - Help WantedBaker Co.

BAKER VALLEY Vector

gN

Patient Coordinator Baker City Alliance HealthCare Services is seeking a Pat ient C o o r dinator

4 POSITIONS

to

support our A l liance R adiology d i v i s i o n . This is a part-time po-

2 - AatD Counselors • Powder River Correctional Facility s itio n w o rk i n g 3 • Elkhorn Adolescent days/week at our site Treatment Center i n Baker C i ty . P e r F/T Positions. High f orms a v a r i et y o f school Diploma/ GED tasks to include greetrequired. Must obtain i ng, s c r e ening a n d CADC I within 24 mos. transporting patients. Must pass DOC Customer service exBackground Check for perience and H.S. Di- Powder River position. ploma/GED required. 2 — Tx Facilitators MRI T e chnologist F/T Swing shift at Baker City Elkhorn Adolescent Alliance HealthCare ServTreatment Center. ices is seeking a MRI High school diploma T echnologist to s u por GED required. port our Alliance Radiology division. This is F/T positions include: a part-time p o s i t i o n Excellent Benefits working 3 days/week Package, Health at in Baker City, OR and Life Ins., Vacation, 1 day/week in Dayton, Sick, Retirement at WA. Responsible for Educational Training patient Safety and the www.newdirectionsnw.org performance of h i gh ddougherty@ndninc.org q uality M R s t u d i e s . 541-523-7400 for app. M RI experience r e quired and ARRT or WANTED: C D L w i t h ARMRIT certifications. tanker e n dorsement f or p o t a b l e w a t e r Please contact Blair at: truck. Must pass drug 949-242-5642, screening and b ackbbrown©alliancehealthground check. Forest careservices-us.com service experience a or visit: ww w . a lliance- plus, but not required. healthcareservicesCa II: 541-403-0494 us.com/careers for details and to apply BAKER SCHOOL DISTRICT 5J is currently accepting applications for nine (9) f ull-time Alliance HealthCare para pro positions and Services is the nation's two (2) part time para largest provider of p ro positions. F o r a advanced outpatient diagnostic imaging complete description of the p o sitions and services. qualifications p l ease EEO/AA/M/F/I/et/

ment division .

Yo u

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lyst. Closes June 19, 2015 at 4:00 p.m. To apply go to: COOK WANTED WorkSource Oregon All shifts. Apply at: locate d at 15 75 Country Cottage Dewey Ave. The City 2915 10th St., Baker City o f Baker C it y i s a n NO CALLS EEO employer.

WERXlRR

MRS X QI]3~

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MAID TOORDER Licenseda Insured

Child & Family Therapy Tammie Clausel Licensed Clinical Social Worker

Gommerdal & Residential

Call Angie iN 963-MAID Island City

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cants for the position of Management Assistant/Information Ana-

LIDD's IUTQ LLC Wrecking aRscycling QualityUsedparts New & UsedTires• BuyingFerrous&NonFerrous Metals • WealsobuyCars 8DavidEccles Rd.Baker City

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Disability Employer The Baker City Public for a Head Girls VolleyWorks Department is ball Coach at B a ker seeking qualified appliH igh School. F o r a www.baker.k12.or.us or contact the employ-

ew Diredions

JOIN OUR TEAM!

accepting applications

complete description o f the position go t o

Excavator, Backhoe, Mini-Excavator, Dozer, Grader, Dump Truck & Trailer

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nleyexcavaaon@gm ail.com CCBe168468

»o (6RMN ~

Shed Those Extra Pounds Dissolve Stress and Anxiety Stop Smoking Improve Your Pertormance

caii MilaCo541 786 7229 207 Fir St., La Grande OR

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STATE FARM

GRLGG HINRICHSLN INSURANCE AGENCY INC. GRFGG Hl RICHSFN,Agent •

1722 Campbell Street Baker City, OR 97814-2148

Bus (541) 523-7778

8ZR Q(6XMZI

WOLFER'S

Mowing -N- More

ServicingLaGrande,Cove,imi)ler&Union Lawns & Odd Jobs

9 71-2 4 1 - 7 0 6 9 58ZZ~' 4 THE D OOR GUY Marcus Wolfer RAYNOR GARAG E All Around Geeks SALES• SERVICE DOORS Grass Kings • INSTALLATION

PC Repair-New Corilputers Bob Fager • 963-3701 • ccn23272 (La!ItoPs & PC's) Gn Site Business & Residential Computer DANFORTH CONSTRUCTION Classes infoeallaroundgeeks.com Wayne Dalton GarageDoors

541 -786-4763 • 541-786-2250

1609 Adams Ave., La Grande

Sales• Installation • Service Rick 963-0144 786-4440 CCBN32022

• BAKER (ITY • Outstanding Computer Repair

$40 flat rate/any issue Specializingin: Pofuneup, pop-ups, adware,spyware andvirusremoval. Also, training,newcomputer setup anddata transfer,printerinstall andWifi issues. Housecalls, dropoff, andremote services. Weekdays:7am -7pm

Dale Bogardus 541-297-5$31

210 - Help WantedBaker Co.

EMKLX$C K auffm a n ' s C reenhouse

HOURS: 10AM-6PM MON-SAT Seed potatoes, Onion starts, Waves, Geraniums, Peieaias, Dahlias, Fuscias, Impatiens, Pereeaials and more. Vegetable plants, hanging baskets, pots, color bowls.

David Lillard

• Leaf Disposal • Yard Care • Trimming

541 663 7075

220 - Help Wanted Union Co. When responding to

220 - Help Wanted Union Co.

R E l '

220 - Help Wanted Union Co.

COVE SCHOOL District WE CURRENTLY have

230 - Help Wanted out of area Mental Health

Control is hiring field Blind Box Ads: Please openings at the RichTherapist Cove, Oregon t echnicians f o r t he be sure when you adland, WA , Y a k i m a, Wallowa Valley Center summer. Must be at dress your resumes that Position: Hi g h School WA, Walla Walla, WA for Wellness, located least 18 years old and the address is complete Assistant/JV Girls and La Grande, OR in Enterprise Oregon have a valid d nver's with all information reVolleyball Coach Community Based Outa t th e b as e o f t h e license. For more infor- quired, including the Application Deadline b eautifu l W al l o w a patient Clinics for; Full-Time Medical mation, please contact Blind Box Number. This Date: Open until filled Mtns, the pnmary proBa ker Valley Vector is the only way we have Salary: $1,500-$2,000. Support Assistants vider of mental health Control D i s t r ic t a t of making sure your reApplication The official site for applya nd alcohol & d r u g 541-523-1151. sume gets to the proper Procedures: ing for Federal employservices in W a llowa • Complete application m en t s County has an opening place. Compliance Analyst / which is available at www.usaiobs.gov for a M e ntal Health Technical Writer www.cove.k12.or.us Explore why the VA is Therapist. Qu a l i f ied Job training provided. under District Informaan employer of choice. c andidate will be r eBachelor's degree CADI AD tion. HUMAN RESOURCES quired to have a masrequired. Valid dnver's Fast paced treatment fa- • Letter ofinterest ter's degree in social (05) license; travel required. cility has an Immediate • Resume VA MEDICAL CENTER w ork, counseling o r Wage DOE. Contact Opening for a full time • Three (3) Letters of 77 WAIN WRIGHT DR. psychology; two years Browne Consulting at Alcohol & Drug CounRecommendation WALLA WALLA, WA related expenence and

541-523-5170 or

info©browneconsultin .biz

Roadrunner Towing is accepting applicat ions for a p art t i m e tow truck operator position. (All SHIFTS: Nights, weekends, tk Holiday) Ap-

selor. A s u c c essful Preferred Submission candidate must havea Method: Please mail minimum of a CADC I. applications to: M ust b e w i l l i n g t o Cove School Distnct w ork e v e n ings a n d PO Box 68 share call. Salary DOE, Cove, OR 97824 Health Ins u r a n c e, 401k. Please bring a ARE YOU looking for a resume and cover letcareer in Hum an ter to 1101 I Ave, La Services ? New Day Grande. Enterpnses is looking

p licant m u s t ha v e clean driving r e cord and pass a background check. & d r u g t e st. Qualified a p p l icants RISE, INC. is looking for must be able to obtain Direct Support ProfesClass A CDL. Contact sionals to provide life Enc at 541-519-3381. & social skills trng for people with Develop220 - Help Wanted

Union Co. IT IS UNLAWFUL (Sub-

mental Disabilities. Be-

ing a D S P i n v o lves helping in d i v i d u a ls

for enthusiastic i n dividuals to b e D i r e ct

Support Professionals available to work day, swing and graveyards shifts. $10.25/hr and up. Must be able to work flexible hours; be at least 18 and able to pass Criminal History and Abuse Screening, and a d r u g s c reen. Must possess a valid Driver's License. Applications are available at 1502 W ashington Ave, 8:00 am-4:00 pm,

99362 (509) 527-3453 This VA is an Equal Opportunity Employer and employs a highly diverse workforce.

230 - Help Wanted out of area WALLOWA V A LLEY Center for Wellness seeks a part-time Developmental Disabilities Services Coordinator to provide a vanety of case management services to individuals

with

d e v e lopmental

disabilities. Duties in-

knowledge of commun ity m e n t a l h e a l t h services. Ind i v i dual must also be licensed or be working on licens ure. T h e rapist w i l l s creen, d o men t a l health assessments, d evelop t r e a t m e n t plans with individuals and provide therapeut ic s e r v i ces . The population served will be primarily adolescents and adults seeking out-patient mental health services. T h is position will also be required to take part in a rotation for cnsis calls.

cludes assessing individual needs; develop- We are a p r o g ressive with d a il y a c t i v i t ies, sectio n 3, O RS ing service plans; coorgoing on o u t i ngs, & 6 59.040) for an e m mental health organiworking on goals. Min. dinating, m o n i t o r ing zation an d w e are ployer (domestic help and providing services; R eq: 18 y e ar s o l d , excepted) or employs een a s a lea d e r authorizing M e d icaid valid d r ive r l i c e nse, ment agency to print amongst o t he r r u ral services; and performpass background & UA or circulate or cause to community health proing related work as recheck, & c o m p l ete be pnnted or circulated grams. W e ar e intequired. 15-20 hour per p aid t r a i n i ng . C a l l Monday — Fnday. any statement, advergrated with our mediweek position. tisement o r p u b l ica- 541-663-0906 for more c al co m m unity a n d information, or apply at IMBLER SCHOOL Dis- Minimum qualifications: t ion, o r t o u s e a n y s trive to p r ovide t h e 1420 Washington, La Bachelor's degree and best possible services. form of application for tnct is accepting applitwo years work expenGrande, OR. Staff have f l exibility, employment o r to cations for the followence in human servm ake any i n q uiry i n ing coaching positions: self-care is s t r o ngly ices preferred; or five c onnection w it h p r oencouraged and we ofAssistant VolleybaII ELEMENTARY TEACHyea rs of e q u i valent f er a com pe t i t i v e spective employment Assistant Girls BasketERSManan Academy training and work exball and Assistant benefits package. We which expresses diCatholic school is hirperience. Knowledge rectly or indirectly any are looking for a dyBoys Basketball ing two FT teachers. of the public service limitation, specification Applicants must be willnamic individual to Ioin Visit website for more system for d evelopour team as a result of or discnmination as to ing to obtain first aid info www.thema na n mental disability servrace, religion, color, card, OSAA coaching g rowth and w e w i l l ices in Oregon is presex, age o r n a t ional certification and comcontinue to accept apf erred. M u s t p a s s plications/resumes unongin or any intent to plete criminal history criminal history backt il p o s ition i s f i l l e d . make any such limitabackground check. ground check and hold EOE. Please apply dit ion, specification o r WANTED ex p erienced For application informamanagerfor Fast Food a valid Oregon driver's discrimination, unless rectly through e-mail, t ion, contact the I m license. Send resume b ased upon a b o n a f ranchis e in L. G . bler School Distnct Ofa ttaching a r e s u m e Please send resume, fide occupational qualir ef e re n c e s : fice 5 4 1-534-5331 or t o J e a n Pek a r e k , a nd cover letter, and referWVCW, PO Box 268, Ste hanie.williams© fication. vIs It ences to: Enterprise, OR 97828 www.imbler.k12.or.us. bh. t by WAITRESS, NIGHTS & Blind Box ¹ 2433 or email to Wallowa Valley Center Open until filled. weekends. 18+ hours. c/o The Observer ean. ekarek© obhi.net. for Wellness Grav y D av e ' s 1406 Fifth St., ELGIN SCHOOL DISAttn: Human Resources 541-562-5717. La Grande, OR 97850 TRICT IS ACCEPTING WALLOWA SCHOOL P.O. Box 268 APPLICATIONS FOR District ¹12 Enterpnse, OR 97828 THE FOLLOWING PO- The following position is 280 - Situation SITIONS FOR THE available: 2 015-16 S C H O O L Maintenance/ Wanted YEAR: Custodial Position YOUNG WOMAN LookApplications and Iob deing for work. Can do JR High Football Coach scriptions may be obHouse/Dog/Horse Sittained by calling the ting & Ya r d / House Varsity Cross Country d istric t of f i ce at work. Have references Coach 541-886-2061. Call 541-406-9056 Please send resume and Varsity Girls' application to: Basketball Coach Wallowa School Distnct ¹12, Asst. Track Coach PO Box 425 WM~ KEK,M XIXXZiM Wallowa, OR 97885 CONTACT THE SCHOOL Or drop off at the Distnct JEA Enterprises DISTRICT O F F ICE office between 7 : 00 S TED F E L D M E D I AT I O N FOR INFORMATION a.m. and 3:30 p .m., veternn owned st opernted S E RVI C E S (541-437-1211) M onda y t hr ou g h SCAAP HAUHA CLOSING DATE: OPEN Thursday. Deadline for 320 - Business Pecceful, Alternctiye PaV!ng $50 a ton UNTIL FILLED. ELGIN completed application Investments Solutions 541-519-011 0 SCHOOL DISTRICT IS and resume is Tues0/ORKPLACE, ELDER CARE Jerrv Rioux AN EQUAL OPPORDID YOU ICNOW 144 day,June 16, 2015. BUSINESS, DIYORCE, ESTATE 2195 Colorndo Rve. TUNITY EMPLOYER. m illion U . S . A d u l t s enker City ( 54I) 9 I O - I 3 0 5 read a N e w s p aper WALLOWA V A LLEY ~~~.omediate.com/stedfeld ELGIN PARKS 8E pnnt copy each week? Center for Wellness RECREATION DISTRICT i s seeking t o h i r e a Discover the Power of XXiXQKRZ HIRING MAINTENANCE Registered Nurse for PRINT Newspaper Adv ertising i n A l a s k a, With and without general 32-40 hours per week. supervision, maintain General Duties: Provide I da h o, M o nta na, OreLifestyle photography the facilities including gon, Utah and WashNursing Care to the clithe community center, i ngton wit h I ust o n e Natural — Personal —Meaningful ents e n c o m passing phone call. For a FREE f itness c e n t er, a n d Sewlng:Ateration physical, mental, emopark in clean and funca dvertising n e t w o r k Mending Zippers tional needs, and utilizhttp://sturdyrosephotography.com tioning condition. P/T b ro c h u r e ca II Custom Made C othing ing the Nursing Procposition. Accepting ap916-288-6011 or email ess, Care Planning and 1609Tenth Bt. Baker City cecelia©cnpa.com plications until position the Recovery Model. 541 523 5327 is filled. Elgin Parks & Position requires a nurs(PNDC ALL OFFSET R ecreation District is ing degree, RN license an EOE. Applications YOU ICNOW 7 IN 10 COMMERCIAL a nd at Ieast two yea rs DID Americans or 158 miland Iob d e scriptions PRINTING of experience. A d d ilion U.S. Adults read can be obtained at ElTABS, BROADSHEET, tional education or exOREGON SIGN gin Community Cencontent from newspaFULL COLOR p erience i n soc i a l COMPANY ter, 260 N. 10th M&W per media each week? Camera ready arwecan work, psychology, psy12pm-4pm Tu, Th & Discover the Power of Signs ol a kinds io meetyour needs set up far yau. c hiatric n u r s in g o r the Pacific Northwest Fri 10am-2pm. Phone CNC Pl a sma Servi c es o the r ex pe r i e n c e Contact The Observer (541)437-5931. Newspaper Advertisworking in comprehen963-3161 i ng. For a f r e e b r o s ive m e n ta l h e a l t h UNION COUNTY Sherc hur e caII M 9, ~ R services is preferred. www.oregonsigncomp any.com iff's Office is accepting 916-288-6011 or email Salary: DOE, benefited a pplications f o r f u l l cecelia©cnpa.com position. time Corre c t ionsA pplications and a f u l l (PNDC) Deputy position(s). 10201 W.1st Street Suite 2, Iob description can be Must be 21 years of YOU ICNOW NewsLa Grande, OR o btained at 20 7 S W DID age to apply and have paper-generated conREAL ESTATEANDPROPERTY F irst S t r e et , E n t e r 541-786-8463 MANAGEMENT tent is so valuable it's a valid Oregon Dnver's pnse, OR. Open until CCB¹ 183649 License. A p p l icants taken and r e peated, 541-963-4174 filled. Mail application PN- 7077A m ust p a s s w ri t t e n condensed, broadcast, www.Valleyrealty.met and resume to P . O. A Certified Arborist tweeted, d i scussed, test, p h ysical a gility Box 268, Enterprise, test, psychological and O R 97828 o r e m a i l posted, copied, edited, MHX3 m edical exam, d r u g them to and emailed countless MILLER STREE screening and cnminal tammy.greer©gobhi.net. times throughout the DANFORTH b ackground c h e c k . day by ot hers? DisSENICE c over the P ower o f Please pick up applicaCONSTRUCTION Tree Trimming & Removal t ions at t h e O r e g o n PEOPLE READ Newspaper AdvertisOver 30 years serving Union County BBIN8911 Composition - Metal - Flat Roofs Employment O f f ice, ing i n S I X S T A TES THE Continuous Gsiten Sheriff's O f f i c e or with Iust one p hone 541-7S6-1602 call. For free Pacific on-line at unioncounty 963-0144 (Office) or CLASS I FE ID 'IJ'X~o. ER shenff.us. Return apNorthwest Newspaper You've just proved it Cell 786-4440 A ssociation N e t w o r k p lications to th e E m CCB¹ 3202 roc h u r e s c a II OAK HAVEN ployment Office, 1901 t o y o u r s e l f ! b916-288-6011 or email A dams Av e, La Summer Programs Reme m b e r u s Grande. The deadline cecelia©cnpa.com Ages 3-5• Ages6-7 for accepting applica- when you need effi(PNDC) LEGACY FORD Individual Tutoring

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VILLEY REILTY qpgg ~pggg MICHAEL

Home Lending Piano Lessonsfor Beginners Paul Soward Sales Consultant Kevin Spencer 541-663-1528 541 -786-5751 541-963-2161 Mortgage Loan Officer 24 Hour Towing rttthi.oakhaven@gmail.com NMIS¹3to) Ce 208-484-0085 Saturday Service • Rental Cars 2906Island Aye.,La Grande,OR kevi nspencer@umpquabankcom wwworeidahom eoans com visit your coses(UmpquaBank

tions for this position

is Wednesday, June 24, 2015 at 5:00 PM.

EEO/AA Employer

cient, economical DID YOU ICNOW that not only does newspaadvertising. p er m e dia r e ac h a HUGE Audience, they a lso reach a n E N -

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Discover the Power of Newspaper Advertising in six states — AIC,

ID, MT, OR, UT, WA. For a free rate broc hur e caII

coMPARE 0UR i2UALITY / PRlcE5 LiuAG-tZlll364iiNGH

60905 Love Rd. Cove 541-910-4632 541-568-4329

916-288-6011 or email cecelia©cnpa.com

(PNDC)

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FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD —3B

PUBLISHED BY THE LAGRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA, UNION & BAKER COUNTIES

DEADLINES : LINE ADS:

Monday: noon Friday Wednesday: noon Tuesday Friday: no o n Thursday DISPLAY ADS:

2 days prior to publication date

R E l

Baker City Herald: 541-523-3673 ewww.bakercityherald. com• classifiedsObakercityheraId.com• Fax: 541-523-64 The Observer: 541-963-3161e www.la randeobserver.co m • classifiedsOlagrandeobserver.com• Fax: 541-963-3674 330 - Business Opportunities

340 - Adult Care Baker Co. CARE OF Elderly, resonable, relaible, refere nce s av a il a b l e 541-523-3110

LOOK Ifrho'sreading tke classi fiedsl

8GAR GESALES RAKER CG.YARR 140- Yard, Garage Sales-Baker Co.

140- Yard, Garage Sales-Baker Co.

FULL editions of The Baker City Herald

ALL ADS FOR: GARAGE SALES, MOVING SALES, YARD SALES, must be PREPAID at The Baker City Herald

HUGE INSIDE SALE (Corner of Clark ar Baker)

2260 Clark St. Fn. & Sat.; Bam-4pm. Lots of new items

Monday, Wednesday, and Fnday's, to the following area's + Haul to Enterprise + Wallowa + La Grande, Stonewood area + Perry, Mt. Glen

HUGE MOVING SALE 2754 2nd St. Fn. & Sat; 7am - 2pm

Call Now to Subscnbe!

20 year accumulation!

541-523-3673

Ca II 541-963-3161 or come fill out an Information sheet

Oo

1. Register your account before you leave 2 . Call to s t o p y o u r pnnt paper 3. Log in wherever you are at and enloy

The Observer Office, 1406 Fifth Street, LaGrande.

wanted to deliver The Observer

CI

Adding New Services: "NEW" Tires Mount & Balanced Come in for a quote You won't be disappointed!! Mon- Sat.; Bam to 5pm LADD'S AUTO LLC 8 David Eccles Road Baker City (541 ) 523-4433

Story Book Camp I for a ges 3.5-6 y r s o l d starts Mon. June 8th t hru Fri. J une 1 2 t h, Bam-Noon. Cost $100. Story Book Camp II for ages 7-9 yrs old starts Mon. June 15th thru Fri. J une 19t h, 1pm-5pm. Cost $100. Camps include; Creative Ballet, Creative Tap, Tumbling, and Jazzy Hiphop. 5 Week session for ages 3.5 to adults all skill levels- Ballet, Pointe, Tap, Acrobatics, Mode rn J azz/Hiphop & C onditioning T e c h n iques. Every W e d . and Th urs. s t a r t ing July 1st t hru Thurs. July 30th. Discounts for multiple classes.

INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS

O

3 EASY STEPS

Office, 1915 First St., Baker City or

Beckies Studio of Dance 110 Depot St. La Grande

Ca II 541-523-3673

K3

are now available online.

INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS

and Fnday's, within Baker City.

SUSSCRISNS!

1789 POCAHONTAS, Fn & Sat: June 5 & 6. Ba-2p. Mens things & Lots of Good Stuff!

360 - Schools & Instruction SUMMER DANCETIME FUN!

Monday, Wednesday,

LIVING ESTATE / MOVING SALE 1350 11th St. Fn. & Sat.; TAICE US ON YOUR Bam-4pm. Tools,FishPHONE! ing, Collectibles, Art LEAVE YOUR PAPER table & Supplies, BeatAT HOME les posters, some furniture & much more!

1284 VALLEY AVE. June 6 th & 7th 9am-3 pm No early sales

DELIVER IN THE TOWN OF BAKER CITY

wanted to deliver the Baker City Herald

140- Yard, Garage Sales-Baker Co.

380 - Baker County Service Directory

INVESTIGATE BEFORE YOU INVEST! Always a good policy, espe-

CEDAR 8r CHAIN link fences. New construct ion, R e m o d el s & ha ndyma n services. Kip Carter Construction 541-519-6273 Great references. CCB¹ 60701

D 5. H Roofing 5. Construction, lnc CCB¹192854. New roofs & reroofs. Shingles, metal. All phases of construction. Pole buildings a specialty. Respond within 24 hrs. 541-524-9594

FRANCES ANNE YAGGIE INTERIOR 8E EXTERIOR PAINTING, Commercial &

Beckie: 541-805-8317 Heather: 541-910-2070 Besty: 541-805-5358

Residential. Neat & efficient. CCB¹137675. 541-524-0369

cially for business opp ortunities & f ran chises. Call OR Dept. o f J u stice a t ( 5 0 3 ) Make your advertising 378-4320 or the Fed- dollars go further! List eral Trade Commission your business every day at (877) FTC-HELP for f ree i nformation. O r in the Service Directory v isit our We b s it e a t in our classified section www.ftc.gov/bizop. of this newspaper.

U NIQN CO . Y AR B 6

HONEYBEE HIVE/SWARM Removal/Rescue Call for free removal 541-51 9-4980

SARASE SALES

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For information call ERICA 541-963-3161 Private party advertisers only. 3 days must run consecutively. Yard Sale map publishes Wednesday and Friday with minimum r r 10 ads

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385- Union Co. Ser vice Directory ANYTHING FOR A BUCK

DO YOU need papers to start your fire with? Or a re yo u m o v i n g & need papers to wrap Same owner for 21 yrs. those special items? 541-910-6013 The Baker City Herald CCB¹1 01 51 8 at 1915 F i rst S t r eet sells tied bundles of PARKER TREE Service papers. Bundles, $1.00 Local & E s tablished each. Since 1937. All your tree needs including; GOT KNE E Pain? Ba ck t rimming, s t um p r e Pain? Shoulder Pain? moval, and p r u ning. Get a p a i n -relieving CCB¹ 172620. FREE brace -little or NO cost ESTIMATES! Contact to you. Medicare PaGrant Parker tients Call Health Hot541-975-3234 l in e N ow ! 1800-285-4609 (PNDC)

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Wallowa ' Mountain D Ronde

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430- For Saleor Trade

CONTENTS 8E BUILDING. F r i . J u ne 5 & Sat. June 6 — 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. 7 m i les north of La Grande at the intersection of Webster Rd. and McDonald Ln. ( Iust west o f 6 3 9 7 0 M cDonald L n . , L a G rande. ) Ant iq u e wagon, horse collars a nd r e i n s , w ag o n wheels, " tons" o f m etal f a r m i n g a n tiques...great for creative yard art! Make an offer on barn wood rem ova I. Ca II ~541 963-8990 for details or

145 - Yard, Garage Sales-Union Co.

DISH NETWORK —Get MORE for LESS! Starting $19.99/month (for 1 2 m o nt hs). P L U S Bundle & SAVE (FAst Internet f or $15 more/month). CA LL Now 1-800-308-1563 (PNDC)

REDUCE YOUR Past Tax Bill by as much as 75 percent. Stop Levies, Liens and Wage Garnishments. Call the Tax Dr Now to see if y ou Q ual if y 1-800-791-2099. (PNDC)

145 - Yard, Garage 145 - Yard, Garage 145 - Yard, Garage SELL YOUR structured APPLE IPHONE (iOS 7) settlement or annuity Sales-Union Co. Sales-Union Co. Sales-Union Co. w/ user guide & accespayments fo r C A SH +++MONDAY ONLY+++ 100+ YR OLD BARN GIGANTIC Mu l ti-family FAITH s ories. Nearly n e w ! LUT H E RAN MOVING SALE. Fn. 5th, NEIGHBORHOOD SALE NOW. You don't have B arking B a s e m en t i s 2 SALE-ANTIQUE $200. 541-523-1035 or 6Yard Sale. Children & 12 Church Garage Sale. 19Sat. 6th & Sun. 7t h, 24Sat. 6th & Sun. 7th, to wait for your future 1 have a 50% off sale Monday, June 8th 1507 N Willow St. La Grande. New store hours. 12-noon till 6 P.M. Mon-Fri. All donation picked up for free you get a tax donation receipt. Call our director at 503-551-6827or 541-963-0807

145 - Yard, Garage Sales-Union Co.

(PNDC)

30

I

145 - Yard, Garage Sales-Union Co.

%METAL RECYCLING We buy all scrap metals, vehicles & battenes. Site clean tracting services be liups & drop off bins of censed with the Landall sizes. Pick up s cape C o n t r a c t o r s service available. B oard. T h i s 4 - d i g i t WE HAVE MOVED! number allows a conOur new location is sumer to ensure that 3370 17th St t he b u siness i s a c Sam Haines tively licensed and has Enterpnses a bond insurance and a 541-51 9-8600 q ualifie d i n d i v i d u a l contractor who has fulfilled the testing and ATTENTION: VIAGRA experience r e q u ire- and CIALIS USERS! A ments fo r l i censure. cheaper alternative to high drugstore pirces! For your protection call 50 Pill Special — $99, 503-967-6291 or visit F REE shipping! 1 0 0 our w ebs i t e : Percent Guaranteed. www.lcb.state.or.us to c heck t h e lic e n s e CALL NOW:1-800-729-1056 status before contract(PNDC) ing with the business. Persons doing l andAVAILABLE AT scape maintenance do THE OBSERVER not require a landscaping license. NEWSPAPER BUNDLES Burning or packing? OREGON STATE law re$1.00 each q uires a nyone w h o contracts for construct ion w o r k t o be NEWSPRINT censed with the ConROLL ENDS struction Contractors Art prolects & more! Board. An a c t ive Super for young artists! cense means the con$2.00 8r up tractor is bonded & inStop in today! sured. Venfy the con1406 Fifth Street tractor's CCB license 541-963-31 61 through the CCB Cons ume r W eb s i t e CANADA DRUG Center www.hirealicensedis your choice for safe contractor.com. and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharPOE CARPENTRY macy will provide you • New Homes with savings of up to • Remodeling/Additions 93% on all your medi• Shops, Garages cation needs. Call to• Siding & Decks day 1-800-354-4184 • Windows & Fine f or $10.00 off y o u r finish work first prescription and Fast, Quality Work! free shippinq. (PNDC) Wade, 541-523-4947 or 541-403-0483 DIRECTV STARTING at CCB¹176389 $19.99/mo. FREE Ins tallation. F REE 3 RUSSO'S YARD months of HBO 8E HOME DETAIL SHOWTIME C I N EAesthetically Done MAX, STARZ. F REE Ornamental Tree HD/DVR U p g r a de ! & Shrub Pruning 2015 N F L S u n d ay 541-856-3445 Ticket Included (Select 503-407-1524 Packages) New CusServing Baker City t omers O n ly. C A L L & surrounding areas 1-800-41 0-2572

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Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise and perform landscape con-

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This yard sale map is provided as a service by The Observer. Locations shown are approximations — Check individual ads for exact address. While we make every effort to be complete and accurate, we cannot be responsible for errors and ommissions.

L Ave Hickory Ct

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O R E G O N 450 - Miscellaneous

Landscape Contractors

Ca II 541-523-4578 Baker City, OR

is

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N OTICE:

SCARLETT MARY ijilT 3 massages/$100

eonard Ln Island;Ciiy Ceme iery

EOAve e

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p atching an d o t h e r Rangeland — Pasture heavy d ut y r e p a irs. Trees-Shrubs-Lawn Reasonable rates, fast Bareground - Right of Way service. 541-523-4087 Insect — Weed Control or 541-805-9576 BIC 541-523-8912

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445- Lawns & Gardens JACKET 8r Coverall ReJOHN JEFFRIES pair. Zippers replaced, SPRAY SERVICE, INC

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380 - Baker County Service Directory

baby items, children's c lothing, p l u s s i z e clothing, household, & furniture. Lots of good stuff. Sat. & Sun., 8-?.

Sat. only, 8:30a-2p. All p roceeds go t o H a it i Orphanage & School. 104 S. 12th St. LG

B am-?. 10302 S " F " St., IC. ICitchen & decor items, bows & arrows, tools, & clothes, lots misc.

7am-???. 10202 S Valley Ave. IC., behind D&B. Tools and equip., household items and clothing, an d v a r i es other items.

10300 S Valley Ave. IC GARAGE SALE. Sat. 13 only, Bam-4pm. 61005 MULTI-FAMILY Moving 1416 Y Ave. LG NEIGHBORHOOD Yard 10405 S Mc A lister Rd, Love Rd., Cove. Col- 20Sale. Fn. 5th & Sat. 6th, 8-1. 25SaleSat. Only, 7-12pm. lectible & etc. 7 IC. Guy stuff, reload, F urniture , k i t c h e n - 2501 E M Ave/2401 & fishing, misc. e v ery- HUGE BACK Yard Sale w ares, & c am p i n g 2403 E N Ave., LG. thing, & furniture. Sat. 14Antiques & colloecta gear. F urniture , de c or , only, 7am-2pm. bles, Fri. & Sat. 8-2 house itmes, baby & 1205 "N" Ave. LG YARD SALE. Sat. only kid itmes, clothing. YARD SALE. Fn. & Sat., 218am-5pm. At the end 8 8 -2. 6 1 0 3 5 W alt z HUGE MOVING Sale o f W h it e B i r c h S t . , P RE-MOVING S A L E . L oop, C ove . M i s c . , Sat. Only, 7:30am-4pm 10503 "I" Ave. Island 261105 Antles Ln. Cove. c raft s u p p l ies, W i i , 15 GREAT PRICES! City. Fri., 8-2 & S at., 8-2. women's clothing, & 62946 Fruitdale Ln. LG Fishing, hunting, furniALL YARD SALE ADS much more! MUST BE PREPAID LARGE MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE Fn & Sat, 8 ture, golf, t r eadmill, o ther t i me s t o v i e w 22-4. No Early Sales. t ires, r e cords, b u r n sale items. ESTATE SALE. June 16Yard Sale. Sat., 8-3. 1607 V Avenue, LG. barrels, bicycles, & so You can drop off your Furniture, household, 8-4. 2607 N 4th 10502 W 4th St. IC. Sat. 9 6th, much more! payment at: books, yarn, fabnc, vidSt. LG. Appliances, fur23 YARD SALE The Observer 3 & Su n ., B a m -4pm. n iture , e os, & m uc h m o re ! Horse hou s e h o l d Tack, collectibles, T WO-FAMILY Y A RD Lots of Antiques! 1978 1406 5th St. 473 S College. Union items, clothes, snowlace, material, kitchen- 27sale. Saturday, June 6, La Grande El Camino Car, comblower, f i replace inware, blue glass, Iew- from 8-12. NO EARLY pletely restored. MOVING SALE lots of sert, & more! elry, lots of misc. Fri SALES. H o u sehold OR 17items collected over 62416 LEFFEL Rd. LG June 5, 7am-6pm & i tems , f u r n it u r e , 35 yrs. This is a huge Sat. June 6, 7am-1pm. clothes, bikes. 408 L +Visa or Mastercard, 4 Sat. 6th & S u n. 7th, ESTATE/YARD SALE. sale! 2508 N 4th St., 8-5. Multi-Family, ca- 10 2507 N 3rd St., LG. 62274 Fruitdale Ln. LG Ave, a block from Cenare accepted.+ LG Saturday 9-2. tenng items, wood fur- Sat. only, June 6th., 8-?. tral School. n iture, kids i t e m s & Yard Sales are $12.50 for Too many puppies, not sports, good clothes, YARD SALE. Fri. 5th & MOVING SALE. 2805 enough room? Classified 5 lines, and $1.00 for Check out our classieach additional line. to much to list! 11 Sat. 6th, B a m-4pm. 18Gekeler In. Fri. & Sat., can help. fied ads. Call for more info: 9am -2pm. 1802 2nd St. LG 541-963-3161. BARN SALE. Sat. June 5 6th, 7a-2p. NO EARLY Must have a minimum of SALES! 62417 Igo Ln. 10 Yard Sale ad's to LG, 4 miles past Riverpnnt the map. side Park, left on lgo.

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541-51 9-4082

435 - Fuel Supplies PRICES REDUCED Multi Cord Discounts! $140 in the rounds 4" to 12" in DIA, $170 split. Red Fir & Hardwood $205 split. DeIivered in the valley. (541)786-0407

payments any longer! Call 1-800-914-0942

(PNDC) NORTHEAST OREGON CLASSIFIEDS reserves the nght to relect ads that do not comply with state and federal regulations or that are offensive, false, misleading, deceptive or otherwise unacceptable.

PRIME FIREWOOD VIAGRA 100mg or CIAfor sale: L IS 20mg. 4 0 t a b s Douglas Fir, Tamarack +10 FREE all for $99 & Lodgepole Pine including FREE, Fast Will deliver: Baker Valley, ICeating, Sumpter, Union, Cove, North Powder areas. 541-51 9-8640 541-51 9-8630 541-51 9-0479

and Discreet S H I PPING. 1-888-836-0780 or M e t r o - M e ds.net

(PNDC)

475 - Wanted to Buy

ANTLER DEALER. Buy440 - Household ing grades of antlers. Items F air h o n es t p r i c e s . S MALL U PRI G H T From a liscense buyer freezer, runs well,$50. Davenport, good cond. $75. 541-480-7831

using st at e

c e r t i f ied

skills. Call Nathan at 541-786-4982.

445- Lawns & Gardens CLEAN SAWDUST g

tf ~l d & horse ~beddin

$25.00 per yard. Ca II 541-786-0407

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4B —THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD

FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

PUBLISHED BY THE LAGRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA, UNION & BAKER COUNTIES

DEADLINES : LINE ADS:

Monday: noon Friday Wednesday: noon Tuesday Friday: no o n Thursday DISPLAY ADS:

2 days prior to publication date

R E l

Baker City HeraId: 541-523-3673e www.bakercityheraId.com • classifiedslbakercityheraId.com• Fax: 541-523-6426' The Observer: 541-963-3161e www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsllagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674 xg w 505 - Free to a goo home

710 - Rooms for Rent NOTICE

720 - Apartment Rentals Baker Co. ELKHORN VILLAGE APARTMENTS

725 - Apartment Rentals Union Co. FAMILY HOUSING

All real estate advertised h ere-in is s u blect t o Senior a n d Di s a b l ed Pinehurst Apartments the Federal Fair HousHousing. A c c e pt ing 1502 21st St. ing Act, which makes applications for those La Grande it illegal to a dvertise aged 62 years or older any preference, limitaas well as those dis- Attractive o ne and t wo tions or discnmination abled or handicapped bedroom units. Rent based on race, color, of any age. Income rebased on income. Inreligion, sex, handicap, strictions apply. Call come restrictions apf amilial status or n aCandi: 541-523-6578 ply. Now accepting aptional origin, or intenplications. Call Lone at tion to make any such (541 ) 963-9292. p references, l i m i t a -

Free to good home

ads are FREE! (4 lines for 3 days)

550 - Pets

NON!

tions or discrimination.

This institute is an equal

We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is

Use ATTENTION GETTERSto help your ad stand out

opportunity provider. TDD 1-800-735-2900

THE ELMS APARTMENTS

in violation of this law.

All persons are hereby The Elms Apartments is informed that all dwellcurrently accepting i ngs a d ve rtised a r e applications. We have available on an equal available 2 bedroom apartments in a clean, opportunity basis.

like this!!

Call a classified rep TODAY to a s k how! Baker City Herald 541-523-3673 ask for Julie LaGrande Observer 541-936-3161 ask for Erica

attractive, quiet, well-maintained setting. Most utilities are paid, with onsite laundry facilities and a

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

Welcome Home! Call (541) 963-7476 GREEN TREE APARTMENTS

725 - Apartment Rentals Union Co. LA GRANDE Retirement Apartments 767Z 7th Street, La Grande, OR 97850

Senior and Disabled Complex Affordable Housing! Rent based on income. Income restnctions apply.

Call now to apply! Beautifully updated Community Room, featunng a theater room, a pool table, full kitchen and island, and an electnc fireplace. Renovated units!

Please call (541) 963-7015 for more information. www.virdianmgt.com TTY 1-800-735-2900

725 - Apartment Rentals Union Co. UNION COUNTY Senior Living Mallard Heights 870 N 15th Ave Elgin, OR 97827

'

750 - Houses For Rent Baker Co.

*UVE INPARNISF Beautiful Home. 2-bdrm,1-bath in Sumpter.

W/S/G paid. Wood

stove Ltt propane. Pnvate nverside park

Now accepting applications f o r fed e r a l ly $500./mo. + dep. f unded h o using f o r 541-894-2263 t hos e t hat a re sixty-two years of age or older, and h andi- 3-BDRM, OAK Floors, New Ga s F u r nace. capped or disabled of Carport Storage. All any age. 1 and 2 bedKitchen A p p l i ances room units w it h r e nt inc. D/W No Smoking, b ased o n i nco m e S m. P e t Co ns i d . when available. $ 750./mo Ltt Dep. 541-383-3343 Prolect phone ¹: 541-437-0452

TTY: 1(800)735-2900

OREGON TRAIL PLAZA

"This Instituteis an equal opportunity provider"

425/mo. W/S/G pd. Nice

+ y)/e accept HUD + 2- bdrm mobile home quiet downtown location

541-523-2777

2-BDRM, 1 bath. duplex W/S pd.Gas heat. 2310 East Q Avenue Thisinstituteis an Equal playground. Income $450/mo + dep. La Grande,OR 97850 restnctions apply and 3-BDRM, 2 bath. home N HUD vouchers are w/2-car garage. gI accepted. Please 720 - Apartment $1000/mo + dep. Opportunity Provider 740 Duplex Rentals contact manager's office Rentals Baker Co. Affordasble Studios, Molly Ragsdale t~ 541 523-5908 t p Baker Co. 1 Ltt 2 bedrooms. Property Management 2-BDRM, 1 bath by the office at 2920 (Income Restnctions Apply) ATTRACTIVE 2-BDRM, Call: 541-519-8444 Downtown. $625/mo Elm Street, Baker City Professionally Managed 1 bath duplex w/appliLA GRANDE, OR W/S pd. No pets. for an application. 3+ -BDRM, 1 bath. Gas by: GSL Properties ances; Quiet area near 541-523-4435 fireplace, all appliances Located Behind THUNDERBIRD downtown. W/S/G and This is an equal La Grande Town Center yard maintenance in- including W/D. Attached APARTMENTS opportunity provider cluded. No pets/smok- garage, covered carport, 307 20th Street LA G R A NDE small fenced yard. No ing. $500/mo + dep. F ARME R S ' BEAUTIFUL UPSTAIRS 541-523-0527, Days or smoking. Small pet neg. COVE APARTMENTS M ARK E T STUDIO. Go r g eous $800/mo. 1st, last Ltt dep. 541-523-5459, Eves 1906 Cove Avenue k itchen w /c u s t o m TDD 1-800-545-1833 Avail. July 1st. HIGHLAND VIEW Max Square, La Grande 541-523-6246 cabinets. 10 ft ceilings 745 - Duplex Rentals Apartments UNITS AVAILABLE with ceiling fans. LaunNOW! Union Co. 3-BDRM, 1-BATH, EVERY SATURDAY dry on site. W/S/G Ltt 725 - Apartment 800 N 15th Ave No pets. $850.00 9am-Noon lawn care p r ovided. Rentals Union Co. 2 BD, small yard. Pets on APPLY today to qualify Elgin, OR 97827 541-403-2551 EVERY TUESDAY Close to park Ltt downapproval. $650.00 + for subsidized rents at 3:30-6:oopm town. 2134 Grove St. 3 STUDIOS $425-$450, Now accepting applicad eposit. M t . E mi l y these quiet and 3-BDRM, 1.5 bath close to EOU, all utili$450/mo plus dep. No Property 541-962-1074 ties paid 541-910-0811 tions f o r fed e r a l ly centrally located No pets. $1100/mo. pets/smoking. Through October 17th. 541-523-4435 funded housing. 1, 2, multifamily housing 541-519-585 2 or and 3 bedroom units properties. DUPLEX, 2BD, 1 BATH. 541-51 9-5762 www.lagrandefarmers CENTURY 21 3-BDRM, 1.5 bath with rent based on inLa Grande. Quiet Iivmarket.org PROPERTY No pets. $800/mo. come when available. 1, 2 8r 3 bedroom ing an d m a i n t ained MANAGEMENT 541-523-4435 units with rent based with care. This com"EBT & Credit Cards on income when Prolect phone number: fortable, clean duplex Accepted" HOME SWEET HOME La randeRentafs.com BROOKSIDE MANOR 541-437-0452 ava ila ble. may be the place for Cute Ltt Warm! APARTMENTS TTY: 1(800)735-2900 you. Living room, din2 Ltt 3 Bdrm Homes (541)963-1210 Brookside Manor, Senior Prolect phone ¹: ing area. Kitchen in- No Smoking/1 small pet "This institute is an equal and Disabled Housing (541)963-3785 cludes electric range, Call Ann Mehaffy opportunity provider." 1 bedroom, all utilities TTY: 1(800)735-2900 CIMMARON MANOR refrig., d i s h w asher. (541 ) 519-0698 paid, community room, ICingsview Apts. W/D hook-up, efficient Ed Moses:(541)519-1814 on-site laundry, clean, 2 bd, 1 ba. Call Century electric h e at . L a ndquiet Ltt on the river. 21, Eagle Cap Realty. scaped and f e nced, SINGLE WIDE, In CounRent based on income. 541-963-1210 o ff-stree t par k i n g , try: Secluded Ltt quiet. HUD housing units. quiet park-like setting W ater Ltt sewe r p d . SENIOR AND Please contact GET QUICIC CASH DISABLED HOUSING Water/ sewer paid NO $450/mo. Please call 702 - Wanted to Rent manager's office at p ets. N O s mo k i n g. 541-523-1077,evening CLEAN 1 BR in Tn-Plex t p WITH THE Clover Glen Union Co. ~541 523-5908 $585mo plus deposit. 541-523-4464, days. w/s/g pd, HUD OIC. Apartments, by the office at 2920 Avail. Aug.8. Screen61 YO, Vet, w/ limited in$395, 541-963-4071. CLASSIFIEDS! 2212 Cove Avenue, Elm Street, Baker City come. Seeks q u i et, i ng applicants n o w . Nelson Real Estate Sell your unwanted car, La Grande for an application. reasonable pnced first C all b e f o r e 8p m , Has Rentals Available! property and h ouse- Clean Ltt well appointed 1 541-786-0444. floor Apt. W/all util pd. 541-523-6485 CLOSE TO do wntown hold items more quickLtt 2 bedroom units in a need NLT end of June. and EOU, 2 B DRM, ly and affordably with quiet location. Housing CaII 541-962-5297, ask new carpet. No smok- the classifieds. Just call for those of 62 years EXCELLENT 2 bcl, clufor Red. ing, no pets, w/s/g o r older, as w ell a s plex, garage, storage, SUNFIRE REAL Estate us today to place your paid, $500mo, $450 t hose d i s a b le d or southside La Grand loLLC. has Houses, Du705 - Roommate a d and get r e ady t o deposit, 541-910-3696. h andicapped of a n y cation. No smoking or plexes Ltt Apartments s tart c o u n t in g y o u r Wanted age. Rent based on inREMODELED 1-BDRM pets, $675/mo. Call for rent. Call Cheryl cash. The Observer 541come. HUD vouchers 541-963-4907 HOME TO sh are, Call w/some utilites paid. Guzman fo r l i s t ings, www.La rande 963-3161 or Baker City accepted. Please call m e I et s t a Ik . J o $ 535/mo + d ep. N o 541-523-7727. Rentals.com 541-963-0906 541-523-0596 Herald 541-523-3673. pets. 541-523-9414 TDD 1-800-735-2900 NEWLY REMODELED 752 - Houses for T riplex, 3 b r d m , 3 Rent Union Co. bath, all utilities pd, This institute is an equal eREDUCEDe opportuni ty provider no smoking, no pets, $1,000 month, $900 IN UNION Large older home $750/mo + dep. deposit. 541-910-3696 Mt. E m il y P r o p erty 541-962-1074 Nl C E 3 B D, d u p I ex, 35 She broods ACROSS southside La Grande 2 BDRM, mobile home a lot READYFORA CHANGE?Don't location, private patio with addition, attached Iust sit there, let the classified 36 Revival shouts 1 Dinny's rider Answer to Previous Puzzle Ltt storage, no smoking garage, storage buildhelp wanted column find a new 4 Bachelor's 37 Little finger or pets. $725/mo Call i ngs. $700 plus d eand challenging Iob for you. 541-963-4907. 39 Sault — Marie VO W P U CE H A I L posit. 541-9638554 party

CROSSWORD PUZZLER

8 Karate cousin 12 Thurman of "Gattaca"

40 Compute the sum 41 Finally (2 wds.) 45 Mad scientist's aide 48 More isolated 50 Frosh's digs 51 Mouse alerts 52 Joey or Sandra 53 Float ingredient 54 Heck! 55 "Little Women" sister

13 Kind Of StiCk

14 Orient 15 Train depot 17 Housefly, to humanS 18 Furtive 19 Monk's title 21 — Plaines, lllinoiS

22 Fancy confection 26 Understandable 29 — Dawn Chong 30 Tarzan's nanny

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UNION 3bd, 2ba $850. 2bd, 1ba $695, senior discount, pets ok. 541-91 0-0811

770 - Vacation Rentals RV SPACES for rent in Halfway, Oregon. Clean, quiet, full hookups. Located near Hells Canyon. $22/day or $130/wk. 541-540-0976 (Call for monthy rates)

780 - Storage Units

STEV ENSONSTORAGE •MiniWa - rehouse • Outside Fenced Parking • ReasonableRates For informationcall:

528-N15days 5234807evenings 378510th Street %ABC STORESALL%

MOVF INSPFCIAl!

• Rent a unit for 6 mo

get 7th mo. FREE (Units 5x10 up to 10x30)

541-523-9050

8

J

e Security Fenced e Coded Entry e Lightedfor your protection

e 6 different size urits e Lots of RV storage 41298 Chico Rd, Baker City off Pocahontas

A PLUS RENTALS has storage units availabie.

5x12 $30 per mo. 8x8 $25-$35 per mo. 8x10 $30 per mo. 'plus deposit' 1433 Madison Ave., or 402 Elm St. La Grande. Ca II 541-910-3696 American West Storage 7 days/24 houraccess 541-523-4564 COMPETITIVE RATES Behind Armory on East and H Streets. Baker City

SAt'-T-STOR SECURESTORAGE Surveillance Cameras Computenzed Entry Covered Storage Super size 16'x50'

541-523-2128 3100 15th St. Baker City

by Stella Wilder

S

B S I I I B

T U B E

2 015 UFS, Dist. by Univ. Uclick for UFS

5 Broadway awards 6 — Khan 7 Tiger Woods' tote (2 wds.) 8 Godzilla's land

2 Bad or good sign 3 Fix apples 4 Volleyball player, at times 4

P EN

AVAIL. NOW 3 bd, large yard, shop, $1,000mo, plus deposit. Mt. Emily Property 541-962-1074

N E

R I C H E ND B L O EE L SHY T I R E O UGH CO M M O D TY Y O HO P I 0 VA L RO I NS T E YR E O D

1 Onthe-

leadership 32 Holiday cheer 33 Distort data 34 Ms. Gardner of old movies 2

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EV A A T OM E R N I L B E GU I L I I D EA L RI D VOL TA U WO K E A YE MO

752 - Houses for Rent Union Co.

9 Capitalize on 10 Speak ill of, slangily 11 Horse's morsel 16 Polite address 20 Sturgeon product 23 Harden, as clay 24 Forthright 25 Current events 26 Bloke 27 Strauss of jeans 28 Panache 29 Reagan nickname 32 Teased 33 Take a sniff 35 Stashed away 36 Swear to 38 Cause-andeffect law 39 Folgers rival 42 Verdi heroine 43 Strike one as 44 Deuce successor 45 Passpofts, etc. 46 Icky stuff 47 California fort 49 Above, to a bard

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SATURDAY,JUNE 6,20)5 dangers are unavoidable. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. )9) -- You YOUR BIRTHDAY byStella Wilder CANCER (June 2l-July 22) — You may must be willing to do more to improve your Born today, you are usually content with wake knowing that certain visions from the own physical well-being. Even little adjustdoing good work, developing your skills and night before arelikely to be realized before the ments have abig payoff. pursuing opportunities in such awaythat you day is out. This can beexciting! AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb )81 — Youcan progress incrementally without attracting a LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) —You're going to adjust your environment just enough to great deal of attention to yourself or your needthehelp ofsom egenerous friendsand increase the odds and improve your own endeavors. As aresult, it is likely that you will relatives in order to see a plan come to frui- efficiency. Much has to bedone at this time. seem to burst onto the scene fully formed, tion. Don't be afraid to ask! PISCES(Feb. )9-March 201—Though you ready to take theworld by storm with remarkVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - What you'Ne may bein no hurry to make a necessary able demonstrations of skill and confidence. been eagerly anticipating is likely to come to change, the fact is that time is of the essence, You're not the kind to let others see your pass, but certain details may actually surprise and you mustn't fritter it away. mistakes if it is at all possible to conceal them. you. ARIES (March 2)-April l9) -- You're fightBecause of this, then, it may seem to others LII3RA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — You have a ing against your own uncertainty, and this that you never make them — but nothing great many reasons to continue along the will surely slow you down. Your instincts are could be further from the truth! You do make same course, but you may still harbor certain keen; rely on them! mistakes ,butyou learn from each and every unexplained fears. TAURUS (Apr(l 20-May 201 — You can one of them, and it is your accomplishments, SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2l) - You're able propel yourselfforward ata much fasterpace notyourlearningprocessoryourerrors,that to do what others have said you would be thanusual.M ake sure,however,that you' Ne you put on display for the world to observe unable to do. Is it purelya matter ofwil(7 Luck taken all necessaryprecautions. and marvel at! certainly plays apart. fEDIlURS F «dl a q u pl« t 0 Ry P t « « C SUNDAY,JUNE7 SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 2l) — Your COPYRIGHT2tll5 UMTED FEATURESYNDICATE INC GEMINI (May2l-June201--You canallay ability to get to the heart of the matter will DISTRIBUIED BYUNIVERSALUCLICK FORUFS lllOWd tSt K Cty M O all0a Mtl25567l4 someoneelse'sfears simply by leading the way benefi tthosearound you aswellasyourself.A in a calm and confident manner. Certain key issue is revealed. SUNDAY,JUNE 7,2015 YOUR BIRTHDAY byStella Wilder Born today, you sometimes don't quite knowjust who you are or howyou want to be seen —or remembered — by the world at large. Becauseofthis,youmayappeartodrift quite often, moving from one endeavor to another in a seemingly rootless fashion. l3ut thisis,in fact,anecessarycomponent ofyour process, as it allows you to discover much about yourself, the world and yourplace in it as you experiment with your own talents and the opportunities that present themselves to you. You never feel as though you are in a

hurry to accomplish anything; in this way, you are almost certain to accomplish more than most! It is a curiousparadox that bynot seeming to try too hard at any one thing, you areableto mastermuch.

MQNDAY,JUNEs GEMINI (May 21-June20) -- Your ability to fix things quickly - especially where relationships are concerned — allows you to win the day. Timing is key.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) - You may CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Ifyou find yourself doing something you don't insist on taking everything literally, you'll really want to do, simply becauseyou're fol- surely fail to understand the real meaning lowingorders.Isthatreason enoughf behind most things. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You are able to AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) - Some use every moment of the day to your advan- things weremeant to bedone in tandem with tage, particularly before others rise and after others, and some things were meant to be they retire for the night. done alone. Youmust know which is which! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — You may PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — Your willhave to accompanysomeone on atrip that he ingness to put yourself front and center, or she is loath to take - but you both under- making yourselfa target for critics and others stand that it is necessary. who would put you down, is admirable. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) - You may not ARIES (March 21-Apru 19) -- Avoid have enough money to throw at a certain making judgment calls. Stick to the facts, and problem, so you're going to have to comeup rewardothers based on achievement — and with a creative solution. what they do for you. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Your TAURUS (Apru 20-May 20) - You may standing within your professional commu- find yourself shooting ahead of the competinity is on the rise. Others arewaiting for you tion quite unexpectedly. Perhaps it's the early to do something big. When can it happenf start that does the trick. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) —You knowone or two things that others don't, and COPYRIGHT2tll5 UNITED FEATURESYNDICATE, INC that's likely to makeall the difference. A famDISIRIBUIED BY UNIVERSAL UCLICK FORUFS 11lO Wd tSt K » C t y MO alIOa Mtl255 67l4 ily member applauds.

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FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 5B

PUBLISHED BY THE LAGRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA, UNION & BAKER COUNTIES

DEADLINES : LINE ADS:

Monday: noon Friday Wednesday: noon Tuesday Friday: no o n Thursday DISPLAY ADS:

2 days prior to publication date

R E l

Baker City Herald: 541-523-3673owww.bakercityherald.com • classifiedsObakercityheraId.com• Fax: 541-523-6426' The Observer: 541-963-3161owww.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsOlagrandeobserver.com• Fax: 541-963-3674 xg w 780 - Storage Units

ANCHOR

820 - Houses For Sale Baker Co. 3035 ELM STREET BAKER CITY

825 - Houses for Sale Union Co.

MINI STORAGE

KQ

• • • • • • •

f

oo

Secure Keypad Zntry Auto-Lock Gate Security Liipxting Security Garneras Outside RV Storage Fenced Area (6-foot barb) NEW clean units

All sizes available (Gxlo up to 14x26)

8 41-833- l 6 8 8 3 3l 3 l 4 t h

jyÃH~N

CLASSIC STORAGE 541-524-1534 2805 L Street

NEW FACILITY!!

/

Vanety of Sizes Available Secunty Access Entry RV Storage

tie RodCorvottou

Ilonaeo Dynasy 2004 - LOII0000' i e solid Features indud rface counters, 4dr fridge, convect' ,rni cro, built-in washer, ceramic tile floor, TV, DVD, saeh air leveiing ,lite d'is, e Ipa ss- -through storag ze tray, and a king si bed- All for only $140,000

one block from Safeway, trailer/RV spaces. W ater, s e w er , g a r bage. $200. Jeri, mana ger. La Gra n d e 541-962-6246

'4 0orvotto Coorro~.0 "Pe, 350 mlles, PQ- Ad rnore d nd Intere ac or $991 L a Qiri u

"auto, RV, motorcycle, ATV, snowmobile,

boat, or airplane

795 -Mobile Home Spaces SPACES AVAILABLE,

""eths!

' ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months

• II

$12 560

820 - Houses For Sale Baker Co.

(whichever comes first) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, bold headline and price.

l4484TH Sf.

s28g 000 Beautifully Restored 5 bedroom, 3 bath corner lot home

32'x56' garage/shop Contact Tamara 541-51 9-6607

by Stella Wilder CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Give

have in the works may cause some anxiety until you remember just why you came up with the plan in the first place! LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Tending to one thing after another, in sequence, is the best approach. You don't want tasks to become can without being too aggressive or combat- conf'used or indistinct. ive. You have a way of balancing the pursuit VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - They say it of your own needsanddesiresw ith ahealthy takes a village - and indeed, today you may respectfor the needs and desires of those find that you are part ofa well-organized and around you. Indeed, your world view is such synchronized team. that there is room for all different viewpoints LIBRA ( Sept. 23-Oct. 2 2 ) and lifestyles, and you never let your own Communication effortsma y be thwarted for tastes and habits intrude on others. Of a time, but you can certainly get your mescourse, you are no saint, and there will surely sagesthrough ifyou arepersistentand clear. be times when disagreement does result in SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) - You don't conflict - - but even then, you are almost want to profit from another's misfortune, but always the first to seek a peaceful resolution. you don't want to find yourself suffering, SATURDAY, JUNE 6 either. Balance is key. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — A planned SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Your rendezvous of sorts may get a little messy willingness to help out in ways that go above until you are able to remind all keyplayers of and beyondwillbe recognized and appreci-

yourselfa pat on the back,for you have achieved something that you may only have dreamed of in times past.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — You'll be figuring out probabilities and odds throughout the day as you work toward achieving something that others consider a long shot. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — Youhave a greatdealonyourmind,especially concerning a family member who simply isn't playing by the rules. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — Others may askyou questions thatare easy to answ er,but the questions you ask yourself are likely to be much more difficult. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Now is the time for you to do something that you've consideredin thepast,buthavebeen too cautious to commit to outright.

CQPYRIGHTalr UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE, INC 8818188188 BYUNIVERSALUCLICKFQRUrr lllOW8 1 K » a v18Qeli i i e 2 116718

CROSSWORD PUZZLER 38 W raP LIP

39 Sci-fi menace 40 Fish without scales 42 Not forward

1 Swear solemnly 4 Purplish brown 8 Stonelike precipitation 12 Peron or Gabor 13 Molecule part 14 Seaside raptor 15 None 16 Charming 18 Best possible 20 Unloads 21 Library abbr. 23 It follows sigma 24 Heard the alarm 27 Sailor's word 29 Crowds 33 Wiedersehen 34 Endorser's need 35 Sundial numeral 36 Opulent 1

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SELLERS RELOCATING 4 bdrm, 2 1/2 baths 301 B Avenue, La Grande.

Exceptional quality home t hat shows p r ide o f ownership. Located in quiet n e i g hborhood with sensational views of the valley. Call for personal showing! LOCATION LOCATION

LOCATION

$395,000 Sondra Rosholt, Broker John J. Howard 8t Associates, LLC Office: 541-663-9000 Cell: 541-910-1357

HOME FSBO Pnced below County assessed value 702 M Avenue in La Grande, Oregon $149,900 Adorable 3 bdrm, 1 bath home. Large garage 8t fenced back yard. Call SINGLE FAMILY Home, s ize 1,830 sq . f t . 3 today for a personal b drms, 2 bat h e s . showing! Wood stove, 2 car gaSondra Rosholt, Broker r age, u p dated w i n John J. Howard 8t d ows, i nsulation, 8 t Associates, LLC newly painted inside Office: 541-663-9000 and out. Lot size .30. Cell:541-910-1357 Asking $235,000, PEACEFUL taxes $2798.98. COUNTRY 1412 Alder St LIVING La Grande, OR. Please call after 5:00 pm 541-805-4506 or 541-805-441 8.

$149,000 1355 15th St.

Nice, clean, 1688 sq. ft 3-bdrm, 2 bath on cul-de-sac in Baker City Single level, Iiving 8t family room, skylight a bove d i n in g ar e a , pantry, utility room, fenced back yard, automatic sprinklers, detached multipurpose

(384 sq. ft.) garage 541-971-8759

845 -Mobile Homes Union Co. DON'T M ISS YOU R CHANCE!

TAKE ADVANTAGE of this 4 year old home! 3 Bed, 2.5 Bath, 1850sqft large fenced

ya rd. $1 99,900. 2905 N Depot St., LG 541-805-9676

5 bdrm, 3 bath, The only home for sale in t wo-story ho m e , Stonewood Commu9.77 acres, north of nity nght now. Brand Summerville. Wood new 1500+ sq ft doustove, garage, shop, blewide for sale. 3 bd, g arden, do g r u n , 2 ba, large family room livestock f a c i lities, and more! Park ameniasture lus timber. t ies i n c l ude h e a t e d Mountain and valley o utdoor pool an d a views. $374,000. large clubhouse. Call for more S elling f o r $7 4 , 0 0 0 . information or to P le a s e c aI I schedule a viewing, 541-910-5059 fo r de~841 808-0241. tails.

855 - Lots & Propert Union Co. 81X113, 1818 Z Ave, LG.

845 Campbell St Baker City, OR 97in4

Utilities available,

$36k. 541-963-2668 2002 PALM HARBOR 3-BDRM, 2 BATH $299,900 Basement, carport, sm. garage/storage. Fenced Triple Wide 2428 sq. ft. REMARKABLY WELL BEAUTIFUL VIEW lot in on 1.82ACRES back yard. 2690 Court St. built home, pnme locaCove, Oregon. Build $129,000. 541-856-3500 3 bd, 2.5 ba, shower 8t y our d r ea m h o m e . garden t ub , w a l k -in tion w/beautiful views, closet, m u d / laundry edge of Union in city Septic approved, elecSelf-sustaining tnc within feet, stream One of the nic- rm with own deck. Big limits. property on 1.6 fully r unning through l o t . kitchen walk-in pantry, est things about Ig. Island 8t all appli- fenced acres, l a rge A mazing v i e w s of garden space, mature storage space, mountains 8t v a l ley. want ads is their ances, 3.02 acres, $62,000 breakfast rm, f a mily fruit trees, ready for l ivestock , i r r i g a t i o n 208-761-4843 Living rm, fire place, I ov v c o s t . 8t well. 2,350 sq ft (aplots of windows lookp rox) home, 3 B d / 2 ing at Mtns., vaulted A nother is t h e B ath w/possible 4t h BUILD YOU D REAM ceilings, large covered bd/craft/sewing, cenHOME. Lots on quiet quick results. Try porch, landscaped, 2 tral air, 2 car garage. cul-de-sac, Scorpio Dr. car metal garage 8t 2 Separate 2,000 s qft a classified ad Bay RV metal building LG. 541-786-5674 (approx.) shop w/cengarden building, today! Call our wired, traI heat. 8t chicken area, fruit 8t $329,000 pine trees, ONLY ONE 1-acre Deal c lassif ie d a d flowering creek r un s t h r o ugh Shown by appointment Canyon Lane view lot only. 208-867-7977. left. I n side city limits d e p a r t m e n t property. Please drive by 8t with sewer and water a flyer. t o s i t e . Ca ll B i ll t oday to p l a c e 59519pick-up Tell someone H a p py Haefer Ln. Cove 541-272-2500 or Jodi Birthday in our classified CALL for showing today! 541-272-2900 for inforyour ad. section today! 541-91 0-1 684 mation.

Public Notice

O B A B R S S P E N

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Cr 2 0 1 5 LtFS, Dist. by Univ. Ltcttck for UFS

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8 Dirigible filler 9 Very dry 10 Lodging places 11 Drumstick 17 401(k) cousin

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A B N E K E L E N TO B JE

M E P E E S I A R S LI B D SA C M A I TH A I D A D G U S D A M MA R E S VV I E N E R S D R I B OT T 10 U S I N A ED S N I P A G A

2 Roman poet 3 Corduroy rib 4 Cellist — Casals 5 Western tribe 6 Gear

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• Deck • Fenced Yard • Storage Shed • Garden area Close to park, library, downtown shopping 8t the Leo Alder pathway For more info call (541) 523-2735 or (205) 257-9175

A nswer to P r e v i ou s P u z z l e

44 Run oLtt of

4

• New paint (inside gt out)

' 6320,000 POSSIBLE OWNER CARRY. Streets, curbs and side walks are in cn this 4.79 Ac. Currrently zoned for multiple housing, possible zone changetc medium density residential cr general commercial if desired. 12223877 Century 21 Eagle Cap Realty, ' 541-9634511.

Tamara@TheGroveTeam com

ated -- if not today, then verysoon.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) - What you

ACROS S

1100 sq. ft. , 2-bdrm, 2 bath ranch style home on 75x118 lot.

+PRICE REDUCED!+

*No refunds on early cancellations. Private party ads only.

their common motives.

Recently updated!

825 - Houses for Sale Union Co.

825 - Houses for Sale Union Co.

• Publication in The Observer and Baker City Herald • Weekly publication in Observer Plus and Buyer's Bonus • Continuous listing with photo on northeastoregonclassifieds.com

FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015 YOUR BIRTHDAY by Stella Wilder Borntoday,you area strong and decisive individual, yet you are never one to run roughshod over others. You always deal with disagreement or division in a way that supports all points of view as much as possible, I'urthering your own agenda as much as you

$90,000

TRAILER SPACE in Union, avail. now, W/s/g. $250/mo. (541)562-5411

aVelna

'

19 Gladiator's hello 22 Suit coat feature 23 Keeps an eye on 24 Tolstoy title wor'd 25 Gart;on's yes 26 Fast-food chain 28 Longing 30 Artist's paint 31 Sci. class 32 Close kin 37 Recluse 39 Provo sch. 41 Help-wanted abbr. 43 According to44 Saturday morning fare 45 Mischiefmakers 47 Pita sandw ich 48 Cascades peak 49 Skimpy top 50 T'ai — ch'uan 51 Fawn parent 52 Wall climber 53 Roofer's material

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NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING A public meeting of the Elgin RFPD will be held on JUNE 18, 2015 at 5:30 pm at The Emergency Services Building @ 155 N 10th, Elgin, Oregon. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2015 as approved by the Elgin RFPD Budget Committee. A summary of the budget is presented below. A copy of the budget may be inspected or obtained at 815 Hemlock (WC Construction), between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. This budget is for an annual budget period. This budget was prepared on a basis of accounting that is the same as that used the preceding year. ontact Jared C Ro eri

Tele hone 541437-0812

TOTAL OFALL FUNDS

Actual Amount 2013-2014

Beginmng Fund Balance/NetWorkmg Capital Fees, Licenses, Permits, Fmei,Assessments & Other Service Charges Federal State andAIIOtherGrants Gifts Allocations and Donations Revenue from Bonds and Other Debt Interrund Transfers/ Iniemal Service Reimbursements IIOther Resources Exce 1 Current Year Pro eri Taxes urreni Year Pro eri Taxes Estimated to be Received Total Resources

Personnel Services Matenals and Services 8 ital Ouila Debt Service Interfund Transfers

96,i 85 2,040 2,363

Ema i l a r e d deb hotmarl com

Adopted Budget This Year 2014-2015 86,27i 2,040

i 9,548 4,741 53 477 178 354

98,482 2,830

ioo

ioo

25,000 48 000 163 121

26,000 2,9ii 52 000 174 623

7,300 36,000 3,000 i 6,548 22,000 4,541

7,300 40,000 3,000 i 6,548 23,000 4,831

73 732 163 121

79 944 174 623

i,zio

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLAssIFICATION 4,880 34,372 i 6,548 i 9,548

onrrn 888188

eiral Pa ments na ro nated Endm Balance and Reserved for Future Ex endrrure Total Re uirements

Approved Budget

Next Yearzois-zoia

ioa 006 178 354

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT EMPLOYEES FTE BY ORGANIZATIONAL UNIT OR PROGRAM* ame of Orgamzaiional umi or program FTEforthatumior ro ram on- 8 arimenia o n - r o ram- u r a i r e r stncr FTE Total FTE

aieor mount m ose permanent Rate Levy (raie limit 0 4985 per i,ooo) Local Option Levy Lev For General Oba ation Bonds

aie or mount m ose

a ie or mount

$0 4985 er si,ooo

$0 4985 er si,ooo

$0 4985 er si,ooo

None None

None None

None None

LONGTERM DEBT Estimated Debt Ouiiiandmg on Jul i eneral Obligation Bonds her Bonds her Borrowrn 8- USDA LOANS 294,227 Total 294 227 morespaceiinee 8 t o competeanysecrron o 1 ii orm,rnsert ines rows oni iii ee i o ra

r ove

Estimated DebtAuthonzed, But Not lncurred on Jul 8

8 ee i i

ou ma y e e i e u nuie i n e s

Publish: June 5, 2015 Legal no. 4915

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6B —THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD

FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

PUBLISHED BY THE LAGRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA, UNION & BAKER COUNTIES

DEADLINES : LINE ADS:

Monday: noon Friday Wednesday: noon Tuesday Friday: no o n Thursday DISPLAY ADS:

2 days prior to publication date rn

R E l

Baker City Herald: 541-523-3673e www.bakercityherald. com• classifiedslb akercityheraId.com• Fax: 541-523-6426' The Observer: 541-963-3161e www.la randeobserver.co m • classifiedsllag randeobserver.com• Fax: 541-963-3674 855 - Lots & Property Union Co.

970 - Autos For Sale

ROSE RIDGE 2 Subdivi- GOT AN older car, boat or RV? Do the humane sion, Cove, OR. City: Sewer/VVater available. thing. Donate it to the Regular price: 1 acre Humane Society. Call 1-800-205-0599 m/I $69,900-$74,900. We also provide property (PNDC) management. C heck out our rental link on our w ebs i t e www.ranchnhome.co m or c aII Ranch-N-Home Realty, In c 541-963-5450.

880 - Commercial Property BEST CORNER location for lease on A dams Ave. LG. 1100 sq. ft. Lg. pnvate parking. Rem odel or us e a s i s . 541-805-91 23 GREAT retail location in the Heart of

Baker City!

1001 - Baker County Legal Notices Attorney for Personal Representative PO Box 1026, 1705 Main St. Ste. 400, Baker City, OR 97814

i ng is t o d i s cuss t h e

budget for the f i scal BANIC OF AMERICA, year beginning July 1, N.A. 2015 as approved by t he G reater B o w e n Plaintiff,

(Neg. per length of lease)

541-403-1139

Valley RFPD Budget Committee. A copy of the budget may be inspected or obtained by request. Mail request to P.O. Box 613, Baker City, OR 97814. This budget is for an annual b udget p e riod. T h i s budget was prepared on a basis of account-

SHOP FOR SALE 2.8 acres. Water, sewer, and electnc located on property on Oregon St. close to Hwy 7„ e dge of town. Heavy industnal property. For more info caII, 541-523-5351 or 541-403-2050

ing that is the same as the preceding year.

LegaI No. 00041342 P ublished: June 3 , 5 , 2015 •

930 - Recreational Vehicles

STORAGE UNIT AUCTION

yer Referral Service

Rear Dining/ICitchen,

Codes (503) 373-1257.

LegaI No. 00041348 Published: June 3, 5, 8, 10,12, 15, 2015

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON, FOR THE COUNTY OF BAKER

$16,000 Fully loaded! • 3 Slide Outs • W/D Combo • Kitchen Island • 4-dr Fridge/Freezer For more info. call:

In the Matter of the Estate of TIMOTHY

CARL SILVEN, Deceased. Case No. 15-326

2006 LIGHT 36' 5th wheel trailer. High book $30,000. Take over contract, $18,900. (Located in Richland, OR) Celk 208-571-6763

970 - Autos For Sale

additional information

quired to appear and defend the action filed against y o u i n t he above-entitled cause w ithin 30 d ays f r o m the date of service of this Summons u p on you; and if you fail to appear and defend, for w ant t h e r e of , the Plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded therein.

Notice, or they may be Of Attorneys for Plaintiff barred. A l l p e r sons tom 2 door with rebuilt whose rights may be NOTICE TO tranny and turbo 350 affected by th e p roDEFENDANT/ motor. New front disc DEFENDANTS ceedings in this estate brakes and new front may obtain additional and back seats. Runs READ THESE PAPERS i nformation from t h e CAREFULLY great! Must hear it to records of the Court, appreciate. Ready for the Personal Repre- Y ou must " a ppear" i n body and paint. Asking sentative or the attorthis case or the other $6,500 OBO. 541-963-9226 ney for the Personal side will win automatiRepresentative. Dated cally. To "appear" you must f i l e w i t h t he DONATE YOUR CAR, and first published this TRUCIC OR BOAT TO 22 day of May, 2015. court a l e ga l p aper HE R ITAG E FOR THE called a "motion" or "answer". The "moBLIND. Free 3 Day Va- Andrew Silven, tion" cation, Tax Deductible, Personal Representative, or "answer" Free Towing, All Pa- 1947 NW Penrose Ave must be given to t he perwork Taken Care Albany, OR 97321. court clerk or adminisOf. CAL L trator within 30 ays (or 60 days for Defendant 1-800-401-4106 David R. Auxier, (PNDC) OSB¹901975, United States or State of Oregon Department o f R e venue) a l o n g with the required filing f ee. I t m u s t b e in proper form and have proof of service on the plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not h ave a n atto r n e y , for our most curr ent offers and to proof of service on the plaintiff. browse our complete inventory. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Ore1415 Adams Ave • 541-963-4161 gon State Bar's Law-

I

MOtOrCo. M.J.GOSS •

$1,655,190 1,053,750 985,500 290,470 50,000 58,075 189,400 343,000 547 800 5 173 185

FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT EMPLOYEES FTE BY FUNCTION 1000 lnstruction $1,827,411 $2,155,150 $2,334,650 FTE 20 04 22 13 22 4 000 Su ort Services 969,798 1,477,750 1,658,240 FTE 7 95 7 47 79 000 Enter nse & Communit Service 83,451 93,750 100,095 FTE 1 65 1 65 16 000 FamhtyAcquisition & Construction FTE 000 Other Uses 5100 Debt Service* 88,611 5200 Interfund Transfers* 99,500 296,000 189,40 000 Contingency 123,500 343,00 000 Una ro nated Endin Fund Balance 1 234731 402 800 547 80 ota equrrements Total FTE 29.64 31.25 32.01 * not included in total 5000 Other Uses To be a r o nated se aratel from other 5000 ex enditures STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN ACTIVITIESand SOURCES OF FINANCING Even with state mandated implementation of full day kindergarten, the State Funding has slightly increased for the Distnct In addition, a correction in the Distnct's tate school fund formula calculation increased resources in 201415 This affords the Distnct to honor negotiated staff agreements and increase FTE in Instruction to teach fug-day kindergarten, but also provdes a foundation for the Distnct to be prudent in fiscally managing it's resources to offset early prolections of eclining student enrollment and the 2016-17 budget

FORM

FORM LB-1

BUMMARY DF ORBANIZATION UNITIFROBRAM BY FUND

urx

NOTICEOF BUDGET HEARING

'oh of this Publis ONLY m ama Fund BE N ERAL FUND NO. 1 Nemesf usiaproa bs psrimesl Adllllll sasawlbsasiaasla 1. Toiaipsasssi aervlcss

Amasgagcflhs N uallayonCommonCeancll willba held enJaM18,2015

Paa.

Actual Deta

a. Teisi iaasssa 4 esness

at B$$ QX.ra atHuafsgloaCilyHall. Thepurposeoflhis mesbrBis iddissassIhs budgetfor

3. TsisiOetast Ouiisy

Ibe liscslyearbeginning JulyI, 201$asapproved bythe Cgysf Naatiagtsa BudgetCemmi gse. AsammarycfIba budgalII pntxaadsdbatow. Acopysfthe batBetmaybeisspsstsd er sbbttrtedatHuntlaglaa CityHall $0 E. AdalM Straet batwsanBehears sf 800AM. aadBNP IL NondarIittalga Thaladay.Thlsbadget

4 Tstsr bssiasnxra s Tsl • I fmrsare

S. TotalCcsasasnrfee r. Teart Atl oarsrapesdissssssd Rsqsirsmssts S. Totsl usraprsprtstes EndingFundBslsscs 4, Totsl Rsasirsmsnls

wM prepared gn8 basis gf accaunlingIhatis QXconaislent:Paoi cgnsistentwith thebasis of accou8$ uasddurl Ihe recedi ar. Ma'crchan , if8 end theirefrstdcathe bu , are

IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: Y ou are h e reby r e -

first publication of this

I I

FINANCIAL SUMMARY REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT C LASSI FI CATI 0N $1,390,545 $1,540,500 833,186 990,200 420,368 837,700 176,793 253,250 25,499 50,000 34,268 55,000 88,611 99,500 296,000 123,500 1 234 731 402 800 4 303 502 548 950

ther Assoaated Payroll Costs Purchased Services upplies & Matenals apital Outlay ther Oblects (except debt service & interfund transfers) Debt Service Interfund Transfers* eratin Contin enc na ro nated Endin Fund Balance & Reserves Total Re uirements

PROPERTY TAX LEVIES P lacing a n a d i n Rate orAmount lmposed RateorAmount lmposed Rat eorAmountApproved Permanent Rate Levy IRate Limit $4 8120 per $1,000) $4 8120 $4 8120 $4 8120 Classified is a very Local 0 tion Le Le For General Obh ation Bonds $85 000 $0 $0 easy, simple process. STATEMENT OF INDEBTEDNESS LONG TERM DEBT Estimated Debt Outstanding Estimated DebtAuthonzed, But on Jul 1 Not lncurred on Jul 1 CARROLL; THE UN- Just call the Classified eneral Obh ation Bonds $0 $0 KNOWN HEIRS AND Department and we'll ther Bonds ASSIGNS OF TIMOther Borrowin s Total THY F. C A RROLL;help you word your ad ** If more space is needed to complete any section of this form, insert lines (rows) on this sheet You may delete blank hnes THE UNKNOWN DE- f o r m ax i m u m VISEES OF TIMOTHY Publish: June 5, 2015 F. CARROLL; AND response. Legal no. 4924 ALL OTHER P ER-

Silven has been appointed and has quali- By: tt Stephanie L. Beale fied as th e P e rsonal OSB ¹ 136474 Representative of the (858) 750-7600 estate. A l l p e r s o ns (503) 222-2260 having claims against (Facsimile) the estate are hereby sbeale©piteduncan.com required to present the s ame, w i t h pr o p e r Rochelle L. Stanford vouchers, to the Per- OSB ¹062444 sonal Representative (619) 326-2404 at the law of fices of (858) 412-2608 C oughlin & L e u e n - (Facsimile) b erger, P . C., 1 7 0 5 rstanford©piteduncan.com Main Street, Ste. 400, P. O. Box 1026, Baker Pite Duncan, LLP City, Oregon, 97814, 621 SW Morrison Street w ithin f o u r m o n t h s Suite 425 f rom the date of t h e Portland, OR 97205

Vis

Public Notice

ICNOWN HEIRS AND Lawyers, LLC AS S I G N5 0 F T I M 0- J. Glenn Null, THY F. C A RROLL;Attorney for PR THE UNKNOWN DEVI- 1602 Sixth StreetSEES OR TIMOTHY F. P.O. Box 477 CARROLL; AND ALL La Grande, OR 97850 OTHER PERSONS OR (541) 963-5259 PARTIES UNKNOWN within four months after C LAIM I N G A N Y the f i rs t p u b l ication RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, date of this notice or OR INTEREST IN THE they may be barred. REAL P R O PERTY COMMONLY ICNOWN Published: May 22, 29, AS 2928 MAD ISON 2015 and June 5, 2015 STREET, BAICER CITY, OR 97814, LeqaI No. 00041202

Dated: Apnl 27, 2015

69 CHEVY Impala, cus-

In Th eClassifieds

NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING A public meeting of the Cove School District ¹15 Board of Directors will be held on June 16, 2015 at 6:30 1010 - Union Co. pm at 708 Main St., Cove, Oregon. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2015 as approved by the Cove School District Budget Committee. A summary of the Le al Notices budget is presented below. A copy of the budget may be inspected or obtained at 803 Main St., Cove, NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS Oregon between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. This budget is for an annual budget period. This budget was prepared on a basis of accounting that is the same as the preceding year. Roxie Ogilvie has been Tele hone 541-568-4424 Email bruceneil covesdor appointed P e r s o nal ontact BruceNeil Su enntendent Representative (hereFINANCIAL SUMMARY - RESOURCES after PR) of the Estate TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS Actual Amount Adopted Budget Approved Budget Last Year 2013-2014 This Year 20142015 Next Year 2015-2016 of Estella Lucille Ogil- Be innin Fund Balance $1,117,421 $1,201,600 $1,806,050 vie, Deceased, P r o urrent Year Property Taxes, other than Local Option Taxes 640,479 580,000 577,000 bate No. 15-05-8538, urrent Year Local Option Property Taxes Union County Circuit ther Revenue from Local Sources 130,495 134,600 135,925 9,911 9,600 9,600 C ourt, State of O r e - Revenuefrom lntermediate Sources Revenue from State Sources 2,132,107 2,172,550 2,296,490 g on. A l l pers o n s Revenue from Federal Sources 173,589 154,600 158,720 whose rights may be Interfund Transfers 99,500 296,000 189,400 affected by th e p roII Other Bud et Resources Total Resources $4 303 502 $4 548 950 $5 173 185 c eeding ma y o b t a i n

f rom t h e c o u r t r e cords, the PR, or the attorney for the PR. All persons having claims V. a gainst t h e est a t e must present them to ESTATE OF TIMOTHY F. the PR at: CARROLL; THE UN- Mammen & Null,

NOTICE I S H E REBY GIVEN that A n drew PITE DUNCAN, LLP

(541) 519-0026

• 0

by

LegaI No. 00040974 Published: May 22, 29, June 5,12, 2015

large pantry, double Auction to take place on fndge/freezer. Mid living SONS OR PARTIES Wednesday, June 17, room w/fireplace and UNKNOW N C LAIM2015 at 9:00 AM at A surround sound. Awning ING ANY RIGHT, TI2 Z Storage ¹16, on 16', water 100 gal, tanks 1 7th S t r e et , B a k e r TLE, LIEN, OR INTER50/50/50, 2 new PowerEST IN TH E REAL City, OR 97814 house 2100 generators. P ROPERTY C O M Blue Book Value 50IC!! Name of Person ForeMONLY KNOWN AS 541-519-1488 2 928 M A D IS O N closing: A 2 Z Storage S TREET, BA K E R Units are managed by THE SALE of RVs not CITY, OR 97814 Nelson Real E state beanng an Oregon inAgency, 845 Campsignia of compliance is bell, Baker City, OR TO DEFENDANTS: illegal: call B u i lding 97814, 541-523-6485

2000 NEW VISION ULTRA 5TH WHEEL

.

ing (503)684-3763 (in the Portland metropolitan area) or toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636.

Descnption of Property: Defendants. Kitchen t a b l e an d c hairs , v a c u um , dresser, mattresses, Case No. 15175 c ouch, b e d f r a m e , clothes, and boxes of SUMMONS m iscellaneous i t e m s ESTATE OF TIMOTHY F unable to inventory

2007 NUWA HitchHiker Champagne 37CKRD Property Owner: Robert $39,999 Crawford Tnple axles, Bigfoot Iack leveling system, 2 new Amount Due: $335.00 as 6-volt battenes, 4 Slides, of June 1, 2015

Say

i~ ~i i b

LegalNo. 00041177 Published: May 22, 29 June 5,2015

THIS IS an action for Judicial Foreclosure of r eaI property c o m monly known as 2928 Madison Street, Baker City, OR 97814. A mot ion or answer m u st be given to the court clerk or administrator 1001 - Baker County within 30 days of the date of first publication Le al Notices specified herein along PUBLIC NOTICE with the required filing A public meeting of the fee. Greater Bowen Valley RFPD will be held on IN THE June 10, 2015 at 7:00 CIRCUIT COURT p.m. at the fire station OF THE STATE OF o n Highway 7 . T h e OREGON FOR THE purpose of this meetCOUNTY OF BAKER

1937 MAIN ST. 1550 sq. ft. building. $800/mo.

1001 - Baker County Legal Notices

Iainadbelow. Thisbgd iefor:

X Annaalpariod 2-Yeaf Period oetssa aiSasssrae TravisYpun r

arrsrr

Hungn n

541 BBtp2202

L SUMMAR Y pfOVB$ BtdtgBI NBd Year- 2015-201$ 239 50.00

TOTAL OFALLFUNDS This Year. 2014-201$ 1. Toal Faaasl Ssrvbss

2, TsblNstaMr salSsnsas 3. Tsal CapyaOsgsy

Anticipatsd

83,750.00 25,154.00 30,000.00

4. Toal gsb!Bsnaxr S.Tolsl Trssdas

RsggifNINllis

S. fsbl~ 7. Tslslall Othe Bpssditsaa ssil Reqstarrara

ltt TisslRssrdrsmsats - sisllisss I srresgb8 11.TdalItssssrsssBraftFrspsdy Tees 12. TclslprspsayTarssBraslalls ss Rroaad 1$. TstslRssssrsss addl - isss 10ssd11 14. TolslFrepatyTaaaEst teta Rscdarrlgise IB 15. FhsEsfbattd prrrpsnyTaes Rstts bs Rscrhstl 8 LessgsslsCcnrsttrrbmal taAs It BaxustsMarrat Olbsr VscdlsdsdAaasls 1$. TstatTaxLsrdsil - addBas 1$sal 14

Esgmahrd Ad Valorem PfopertyTees Tax Levies

7,500.00 10,000.00 3,100,600.00

$JN8$2lkg 3,758672.00 140J54.00 3, $ . 00

17Faararaa ltats Uaauar Irsteimsseas > 18. IccslOpysaTaas 19. ar a csdsd gsbtsr

ByTypb

25,154.M 40,M0.00 42,438.00

59,072.00 5000.00 10,000.00 3, ,000.00

S. TradUragrcpdstN BtgsgFatd Brraaa

Anlicipaied Resources

81,100.00

3,687 072.00 140,154.00

140154.00

140,154.00

15,000.00 12,637.00 167rrgf.N

1$,088.60 12,637,00 1$7,7$1.00

Aclual Data Last Year2013-14 0.00

S. Tsial Ilallsi'sfs e. TotsiOsllallassdss r. Tsisi All oiser Epsnsltursssat Rssllllemellts

a. Tsisi usspprspasiseasdinaFundasisscs

lss

h fsa

ss 4

Actual Last Year2018-14 12 047.M

Plepaiy gtarlmsra i. TatsiPsrsrasi Saviias a. Total atstsrisaa asntsss 3. Toisl CspssiOsasy • . Tobll bsllllaohs &alallxlesiie INIlecrryted

S. Tsaa Trsaslsrs s. Tstsl cslsillasltsiss 7. TsisiAlt ONer Epesiraxss ssdRsqsirsrserris a. Tstsi urappnaristse Esd'mFund a asisscs s, Total asssirsmssts sme s tioa gspsrimseisi 1. Total Psaosai Ssrvlsss

2. Total tastsasis & senscss s. Total ossssi osiiay s. ssac Ossirrraencas r. TotalAtl caher aasssitsrss ass Rsqulrsmssls e. Tstst usspplsanstsd arxana Fund asrssss

25154.08

bsbl uthsrbel, Bstliassal X Ar ssmmaisd gslsa

0.00 0.00 6.00 0.00 0.00 0.00

ii, Tstst Rstlslislllsrall

a Total drssiiasrxas& oonsso s est tobe Rsd s. Toisi Ttsnsisrs

F IIIDEBTEDB EBS

None

•o s ra pollss bsasiaaellt 1. Total FsrsssraSesscss 2. TotalSaxsasis a Ssnarss S. Tolsl Csaaai Orrasyoraa & Toisibebtaerra»

Adopted Budget

Approved Budget

Last Year2018 14 This Year2014-15 Next Year 2015-18 10 386 00 14,000.00 27,700.00 11,147.00 22,906.00 26,800.00 0.00 3 000.00 2,%0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 $1 100AIO BU get proved BU get This Year2014-15 Netd Year 2015-16 1 200.00 1,200.00 56 500.06 3,750.06 0.00 0.00 O.M 0.00 0.00 0.09 8 .00 $$ $00.00

oplad Budget

App

udg

This Year2014-15 Next Year 2018-16 15,008.00 16,808.00 4 500.00 9.500.00 8 175.09 7,590.60 5,000.00 O.gg 15,000.00 0.00

0.80 0.00 0.00 21 $IM.00

al Data Last Year2013-14 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00

00D.00

Adopted Budget This Year2014-15 0.00

BU get Next Year 2015-16 0.00 4,000.00 4,000.00 0.00 0.00 47,000.00 12,500.00

5 000.00

40 000.00

0.00 0.09 6.60

13,256.00 5,006.00

14,200.00 0 00 0 09 70 .00

S, Tstslaessirsmests

BNLY IFCOMPLETED Etasatsd gsbtgstsbargsgstdre

T sasgstx an' sls a Islasst Bsadsg Warrssts Oha TslallsdsblNssss aasrt-TsssOas

Mmasd gsbtAsdrsdad,RstIsmssdallhs

yea r

JulyI, 2$15.20IS Sands atrta

J s 1,2015.20IS

i

a .i

cf Ierasa ftaatTsiili

Name d usitrrasarsavosaslssrxa aeiie wssra bepsrassat 1. Taisi Fsrssssl esnasss 2. Tsisi tastsasis 4Ssrvlcss s. Tstsi ospilsioutay * Toaf Debt esnrice s. Total Trassrsls

as allsiliisalbsbri

7. TotalAll oissr apssdasrssssdasssirsmsas 8 TolaiussssrssaaisdEallsa Fund Balance S, Teisi aessiremsnts

FUNDS REQUIRINGA PROPERTY TAX To BE LEVIED

Publish ONLY com ielsd

' n of this e

ama Fund eENERALFUND NO.1

a ata 10,335.00 11,147.00

0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00

li r ee ~e r ~

r. TesAlloaaas me d~ s rrartxrsarsreass~

0.00

s res raamese is.Talri Rsrrrrxsrasss ararnr Tses 11 msmrT s u ~

l s

o Te l ~

10~ 1s

(~ l

6

u ge t

Last Yser201$.2014 Tbls Year2014-$gt5

l. res srnrrrasemx 2 T es ww s e 8 s. T» I osrsr oaar a Toblsrssesx» s ~

21 . BB 21,462.00 114 0!KDD 1$$ $47.00 114,065.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00

i sp~ r se ~ l i ~ a ii ) ia aseaas nrsely r~ Natrr ie rsseM A u» s I ~ ua il

s a~o ri 1s res rs srars (~ I ~ \s ~ 14

Rate or Amount

•me

14 250.00 44,000.00 30 000.00 13 250.00 5 000.00

3 000.00

74,918.00

34440.00 2 721.00 25,154.00 20,000.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 167 2$3 116,784.00 24 742.00 141 $2$.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00

s. Tea caae ouse s reaoax~

e ree~ r Trarxs rxi eseaN s reeu~ exseF ~M a ra l ~ ra nss ~ ~ nmmrr ii pssmrr~ s r l ~ d le ~ ia.Tes Rwxra» twdsmr is ee ii) i ameser see a rsl b ~ lxseheesmemrre Ia rl s x IAwe e~ u e

s I 'll

a ~ oae ~ sr r rs~ isrear rsee(~lsssrs~re

Rate elAilieulll

l al i tu e me a a s aaa

115,000.00

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9.6028

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Does your carrier never miss a cIay? Are they always on time, no matter what kind of weather? Do they bring your paper to your front door? If so we want to hear from you. The Observer and Baker City Herald wants to recognize all of our outstanding carriers and the service they provide to ensure your paper gets to you. Let us know about their service by sending your comments to cthom son@la randeobseroercom or send them to 14065t StreetLa Grande OR97850

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SB —THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD

FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

COFFEE BREAK

FBI SURVEILLANCE FLIGHTS

Softhearted woman just can't say no to wannabe boyfriend

e in survei ance aircra over cities

DEARABBY: I am 82 and need advice on setting personal boundatv'es inmy relationships. Simply put, I have a guy friend who has feelings for me thatI don't have for him.

sponsiblej ob, but he still sees me as a little girl. An example: He will tell me how to do everydaytasks and remind me not to touch the stove or leave the lights on. In his mind, I never grew up. We dated briefly. Ibrokeitoffand we have continued as It has always been this way with him. I friendsfortwoyears. have tried talkirg to him about it, but all he He knows I'm notinterested in an intidoes is roll his eyes like I'm a teenager. mate relationship with him. However, he has Dad is in his late 60s and I'd really like made it clear through words to have a relationship with and behavior that he's in love him while heis still alive DEAR with me, almost to the point and healthy. Is there anyof obsession. ABBY thi rg I c an do to make him understand his perspective I feel he doesn't respect my personal space. We argueis skewed and he needs to especiall y ifheends up crashing atmy house charge his behavior? — DADDY'S GIRL after a night at the pub. I ftrmly tell him he can only sleep onmy couch, but he'll weasel DEAR DADDYs GIRL: At his age, you aren't going to change your father. Your his way into my bed. I feel I'm enablirg him chances of improving your relationship with in his clingy behavior because Idon't want to hurt his feelings. him will be better if you change the way you I want to be able to act assertively with react to what he's doing, and realize he says him and others. I want to stop being so pasthe things he does because it's part of what he thinks is a parent's job. sive, especially with men. Please adviseme how to work on this. Once you see the humor in it, you'll stop — PUSHOVER IN feeling defensive and resenting him. Trust VANCOUVER, CANADA me, it will go a long way toward your having DEAR PUSHOVER: The man you dethe adult relationship with him that you scribeappears to beunder theim pression crave. that he can wear you down ifhe keeps at it long enough. He isn't interested in being DEARABBY: I live in Miami and my your"friend"; he wants to be your lover. motherin-law lives in Ohio. My husband Because you aren't interested in him j ust told me she is planning to move here that way, quit allowing him to sleep at your and live with us. I don't mind her moving place. Ifhe becomes so drunk he can't drive in with us because she is my motherin-law, himselfhome, get him a taxi. Allowing him but herboyfrv'end of15yearsisalsocoming to sleep over and weasel himself into your down. Her boyfriend's brother is moving to bed sends him a mixed message, and that's West Palm Beach. f'Its the reason why they a mistake. are moving) Does it make me sound petty To create effective boundaries, you must to say I don't want the boyfriend to move in be clear about the messages you send to oth- with us? — MOTHER-IN-LAW DILEMMA ers. What you appear to need to work on is DEAR DILEMMA: Petty? I don't think so. the ability to say no. Try it. You'll like it. You are not running a boardinghouse. The DEARABBY: I'm having a hard time boyfriend is no relation to you, and if you with my dad. He treats me like a little kid prefer not to have a stranger living under and refuses to recognize that I'm an adult your roof, that should be your choice. who can make my own decisions. It makes it Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van difficult for us togetalorg, andIhave been spending less time with him because ofit. Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and Abby, Iam 40.Ihaven'tlived athome for was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. more than 20 years. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com I'm married with kids and hold a reor PO. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069.

WASHINGTON — Scores oflow-flying planes circling Americancitiesarepartofa civilian air force operated by the FBI and obscured behind fictitious companies, The Associated Press has learned. The AP traced at least 50 aircraft back to the FBI, and identified more than 100 lightsin 11 statesover a 30f day period since late April, orbiting both major cities and rural areas.Atleast115 planes, including 90 Cessna aircraft, were mentioned in a federal budget document from 2009. For decades, the planes have provided support to FBI surveillance operations on the ground. But now the aircraft are equipped with high-tech cameras, and in rare circumstances, technology capable of tracking thousands of cellphones,raising questions about how these surveillance flights affect Americans' privacy. "It's important that federal law enforcement personnel have the tools they need to find and catch criminals," said Charles Grassley, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee."But whenever an operation may also monitor the activities of Americans who are not the intended target, we must make darn sure that safeguardsarein placeto protect the civil liberties of innocent Americans." The FBI says the planes are not equipped or used for bulk collection activities or mass surveillance. The

• ACCuWeather.COm ForeCaS Tonight

Partly sunny

Monday

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81I41 8

86 151 6

91154 4

88 153 4

81153 ( 4 )

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8 5 150 (6 )

8 1151 (4 )

8 6 151 ( 4)

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49 (>0)

83150 (8)

Enterprise Temperatures

48 (>o)

1149 (8)

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surveillance equipment is used for ongoing investigations, the FBI says, generally without a judge's approval. The FBIconfirmed for the first time the wide-scale use of the aircraft, which the AP traced toatleast13fake companies, such as FVX Research, KQM Aviation, NBR Aviation and PXW Services. "The FBI's aviation program isnot secret,"spokesman Christopher Allen said in a statement."Specific aircraft and their capabilities areprotected foroperational security purposes." The front companies are used to protectthe safety of the pilots, the agency said. That setup also shields the identity of the aircraft so that suspects on the ground don't know they're being followed. The FBI is not the only federal law enforcement

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Hay Information Saturday Lowest relative humidity ................ 30% Afternoon wind .. NNW at 7 to 14 mph Hours of sunshine ...................... 9 hours Evapotranspiration .......................... 0.22 Reservoir Storage through midnight Thursday Phillips Reservoir 40% of capacity Unity Reservoir 84% of capacity Owyhee Reservoir 21% of capacity McKay Reservoir 66% of capacity Wallowa Lake 48% of capacity Thief Valley Reservoir 104% of capacity Stream Flows through midnight Thursday Grande Ronde at Troy .......... 4880 cfs Thief Vly. Res. near N. Powder 150 cfs B urnt Rivernear Unity ............ 64 cfs Lostine River at Lostine .............. N.A. Minam River at Minam .......... 98a cfs Powder River near Richland .... 45 cfs

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Baker City High Thursday .............. 72 Low Thursday ............... a8 Precipitation Thursday ....................... 0.00" o.82" Month to date ................ Normal month to date .. 0.19" 4.40" Year to date ................... 4.72" Normal year to date ...... La Grande High Thursday .............. 78 Low Thursday ............... 4a Precipitation 0.00" Thursday ....................... 0.58" Month to date ................ 0.25" Normal month to date .. Year to date ................... 5.77" 8.05" Normal year to date ...... Elgin High Thursday ............................ 74 Low Thursday ............................. 42 Precipitation Thursday .................................. O.OO" Month to date ........................... 0.85" Normal month to date ............. 0.28" Year to date ............................ 14.26" Normal year to date ............... 12.15"

Tuesday

Shower/t-storm

Baker City Temperatures 7 (10)

The majority of Americans support U.S. drone strikes; however, concerns about the endangerment innocent civilians have been raised. Do you approve or disapprove of U.S. drone strikes to target extremists • Approve P Disapprove

1mana Sunday

Saturday

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........ The Dalles ......... Meacham .. Klamath Falls

agency to take such measures. The Drug Enforcement Administration has its own planes, also registered to fake companies, according to a2011 Justice Department inspector general report. At the ttme, the DEA had 92 aircraft in its fleet. And since 2007, the U.S. Marshals Service has operated an aerial surveillance program with its own fleet equipped with technology that can capture data from thousands of cellphones, the Wall Street Journal reported last year. In the FBI's case, one of tts fakecompanies shares a post office box with the Justice Department, creating a link between the companies and the FBI through publicly available Federal Aviation Administration records.

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Sunset tonight ........ ................. 8:36 p.m. Sunrise Saturday ... ................. 5:06 a.m.

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2C —THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD

FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

OUTDOORS 8 REC

SHOOTING

RangetimeusedtoiIreakinfirearms By Gary Lewis

e

For WesCom News Serwce

There was a bit of urgency. We will board a plane for Florida in the not-too-distant future, and that gave me an excuse to spend a couple of hours with my daughter Mikayla at the range on Sunday afternoon. aWould you like to go to the

COSSA Park?" 'This afternoon? I have to go to a party," she said. aWe leave for Florida pretty quick and you haven't shot your new rifle yet." "Oh, right." By happy circumstance, we both are carrying new rifles to Florida. We'll hunt feral swine, alligators and — if I can fit a fishing rod in the case — peacock bass. New rifles want breaking-in, sighting-in and getting used to. There was no one at the 200-yard range when we arrived. As we were setting targets, Vance Allen and Roger Points showed up. Mikayla showed off her new left-hand Ruger American. It is chambered forthe 7mm-08 cartridge, and is topped with a 3-9x Alpen Apex scope. With a compositestock and agood recoil pad, this rifle should fit her the rest ofher life. We anticipate deer and elk hunts this fall with this rifle on her shoulder. Our other project was a Montana Rifl eCompany rifle chambered in.30-06. Because a fine rifle should be topped with good glass, I installed quick-detach Warne Scope Mounts and a Leupold M ark 4I'veemployed on a couple of other rifles in the last eight years. The Mark 4 dialsfrom 4.5-to 14-power and is equipped with Darrell Holland's proprietary ballistic reticle. Instead of sighting her Ruger in for her, I decided to let 18-year-old Mikayla do

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Gary Lewis'daughter, Mikayla, enjoying breaking in a left-handed RugerAmerican chambered for the 7mm-08 cartridge. this one herself. We started by bore-sighting. A lot of guys pay to have this done, but it is easy. I had Mikayla bed the rifle in sandbags, and then we took the bolt out and sighted down the bore on a target 200 yards downrange. Then we cranked the windage and elevation dials until the scope's reticle was in line with the paper. Simple. No bullets, no laser required. The next step was to shoot at atargetat25 yards.M ikayla loaded the first round and fired. The bullet struck 5 inches below the bull. There is a wide divergence of opinion on whether a rifle barrel should be broken in or not. We had a cleaning rod, patches, solvent and lube, so we opted for a break-in regimen as follows: Clean the rifle with solvent on a patch, and then a dry patch. Fire the first round. Clean the rifle again. Fire five rounds. Clean the rifle. Fire five more rounds. After the first shot, Mikayla dialed the elevation 20 clicks up, which should have moved the point of impact 5 inches — one click equals a quarter-inch at 100 yards.

After her second shot, she switched to the 100-yard target. After aseriesofminor elevation and windage adjustments, she put bullet No. 9 a half-inch out of the bull. Bullet No. 10 was a bull's-eye. Mikayla has been shooting since she was a 2-year-old ia bow and arrow first, then a BB gun at age 5l and Roger, watching, noted she was right-handed, but she shot left-handed. He was perceptive enough to note it as a left-eye dominance issue and he questioned her about it. A lotofpeople are crossdominant. In our family, three out of five are righthanded and left-eye dominant. How the individual shootersolvesthedilemma of which hand to use is personal preference, but I've tried to guide our girls to shoot on the side of their dominant eye. Our oldest and youngest daughters with cross-dominance are great rifle shots, while our middle, right-eyed daughter is better with a handgun and a shotgun. After the Ruger was put away, I unsheathed the Montana rifle and started the break-in routine. With this one, I intend to journal every

Translocation is only part of the picture. Sween said Continued from Page1C the projectisa stop-gap measure to keep them from on the Snake River was going extinct in the Snake traced back to the first reRivertributariesand tokeep lease in Idaho back in 2007. the lifecycle going. Juvenile 'The genetic work allows us lamprey release pheromones to find out timing, movement that guide the adults back to and life history," Sween said. the spawning streams. "If we lose the juveniles, we Sween said the project will take years to bring lambreak the cycle. We are just prey back to their historic startingto address a dauntnumbers before the dams ing set of challenges, but the were built. Fish passage will silver lining is this translocahave to improve to help them tion initiative is working. We return to their natal streams are getting juvenile reproto spawn. Sween said their duction in these pristine numbers drop by 50 percent habitats," Sween said. as theyattempt to crosseach Without bringing the of the eight dams on the Co- lamprey back to the tributarlumbia and Snake rivers. ies, Sween said he thinks

they would potentially lose the eels locally. Acting on cultural knowledge, while using researchscience to learn all they can, tribal fisheries may have broughtlamprey from the brink oflocal extinction. aWe need these animals. We may not know why, but we knew they were here and we needed to keep them from going extinct," Sween said. "Now science is catching up with our work." He said therewas a lotof criticism leading almost to controversy when the project started."Now the hard facts are collaborating what the tribe already knew — they belong here; they are part of the ecology."

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Cameron Scott photo

bullet fired through it, a level of discipline I've aspired to, but haven't reached until now. After bore-sighting, the first round was on paper at 25 yards. After cleaning, the second round struck the 100yard target 5.75 inches low, which called for a bit more than 20 clicks. Rounds four and five landed in the sweet spot half an inch above the bull's-eye. It was time to switch to my chosen pig-hunting round, a hand-loaded 150-grain ¹ sler AccuBond. A three-shot groupimpacted the target an inch low and left, which necessitated four clicks right and four clicks up. Mikayla absorbed the math and focused on the fundamentals, and it reminded me of when she used to shoot free throws in basketball. If she was fouled and went to the line, there was a good chance she'd sink it. But basketball is for the young, and shooting is a lifetime sport. The time spent at the bench and in the field builds a discipline, attitude and conservationethicthatserves kids well the rest of their lives. It'sgood fordad,too.

Cameron Scott's migration to Colorado to be a fishing guide this summer felt as though it came on suddenly.

SCOTT Continued ~om Page1C age-domethan itever did when I was younger, similar to sleeping in the back of a vehicle loaded with fishing equipment and eating leftover meals for a few days. What once seemed like a state oflife has more and morebecome a statement I put extra hours of driving in to avoid. Gone are the years I would fall asleep in my waders and a few layers of extracoats,with a pillow under my head and a dewy park or sandy beach for a bed. About six or seven years ago, I bought a truck with a topper, which was a step up from those gritty mornings. But

now, I am truckless. With some cycles there is a slow tapering ofK Summer water levels, day after day, lessening. And with others, like a spring Chinook, there is a sudden drastic shift. The recent sale of my truck for a small SUV ione my clients will be much more comfortable in come guiding season) was sudden. This year's migration back to Colorado to once again become a fishing guidealso feelssudden. With leaving just around the corner, my thoughts are already ofhome. Here. Fall steelhead runs. Bull trout treks. Chinook breaking the smooth surfaces of deep pools in arcs ofbrilliance. And my own bed at the end of the day to fall asleep in. Open

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FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015

THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 5C

HEALTH 8 FITNESS

PARKINSON'S

Tanya gained familiarity with Mucuna while volunteering at OHSU as a research assistant.

Continued ~om Page6C Tanya said dopamine is not able to pass through the blood-brain barrier iBBBl. Carbidopa and levadopa are precursor to dopamine and do cross the BBB where they areconverted intodopamine. "iMucunal studies that have been done had really promising results," she said. "They showed less side effects and didn't have the on and off fluctuations or the need to up the dosage that standardizedtreatments have." Tanya said she wants to continue studies of Mucuna thatstarted in the 1980s but didn't go anywhere.

At JSS College of Pharmacy, Tanya will be working with Dr. S.P. Dhanabal, M.Pharm., Ph.D., FIC. He is aprofessor atthe college and also its principal official. The trip to India will cost

$30,000. John Denne and

At JSSCollegeofPharmacy, Tanya will grind Mucuna seeds into a powder and then analyze it for levadopa content using HPLC ihighperformance liquid chromatography) and TLC ithin layer chromatographyl, which are methods to identify compounds in a substance. Her research in India will also explore how levadopa levels vary in the different varieties of Mucuna grown by the tribes to identify which ones will show the most promise in the treatment of Parkinson's. Tanya said the top 10 commercially available Mucuna products contain less than 10 percent of the natural levadopa that the label proclaimed they had.

AWARD Continued~om Page6C "Mostpeoplereceiving hospice care arealraid oftwo things — a painful death and dying alone.' Hohstadt assurespatients that they will receive all the pain medication they need to be ascomfortable aspossible and that they will not be forgotten. "I will be with them until the very end; said Hohstadt

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S. John Collins/WesCom News Servrce

Clayleaves made byTanya Denne can be used to accent a houseplant, while others are designed as jewelry or for numerous other uses. "That's where the problem comes in — there's a huge discrepancy in what's being sold and what they contain," Tanya said. One of the goals ofher researchisto develop the best ways to prepare the plant to get the most"bang for the buck" to use it medicinally. Deschner said he is optimistic that Tanya's research will help the medical community to recognize the importance of herbal remedies.

s You just can't have all these cultures out there with their iherball cures and ignore them," he said.

"You focus on that, the good times, rather than on the end fotheir

Blake is more popular than heis. 'Tll see families iofhospice patients) and they will remember Blake's name but not mine,'he said. Hohstadt said a therapy dog such as Blake is a great icebreaker when talking to hospice patients. "It gives you a starting point. Everyone can relate to having a dogin their life,'he sald. Blake's popularity is easy to

journey." — Hospice volunteer Brian Hohstadt

who has been with Heart 'n Home Hospice for about a year. Hohstadt visits all hospice patients with his registered pet therapy dog, Blake, a French bulldog. Hohstadt said

Learning About Mucuna Tanya earned a Bachelor of Science degree in life science and a minor in psychology from the University of Portland. After her trip to India, she plans to apply to and attendmedical schoolat Bastyr University in Maryland to pursue a license in naturopathy.

Kiefer will make the trip with Tanya. They plan on spending three months in India. Kiefer will be there to film the research. John Denne and Kiefer are tasked with chronicling the trip to produce a documentary about it. Kieferhas film ed and produced several documentaries that have been on YouTube including "Two Dams,""Boobalogues" and "Dirt Roads." Kiefer shares Deschner's excitement about being a part of the research project. "I'm really grateful to have an opportunity to work with a young and enthusiastic person from Baker," she said. "It was cool to meet Tanya and discover something so meaningful." Deschner might accompany the group to India depending on how he heals from a recent back surgery. Potteryart piecesmade by Tanya and John Denne as well as Deschner's book "Travels With a Kayak" and his salt lick sculptures will be available for viewing and purchase. Tanya makes jew-

understand, Hohstadt said. "He has huge ears and an expressive face.He thriveson attention. They 4ospice patientsl are drawn to him and he is drawn to them. It works both ways,' Hohstadt said. Blake and Hohstadt regularlyvisit patients in La Grande at Wildflower Iodge Assisted Living and Memory Care, Grande Ronde Retire-

S. John Collins /WesCom News Service

Pottery created byTanya Denne's father, John, will be offered for sale beginning Friday at1719 Main St. All proceeds go to help fundTanya's research efforts. elry out of clay that comes in a wide variety of styles including renditions of the mucuna leaf. She will take pre-orders of her jewelry as an incentive for an IndieGoGo fundraiser icoming this summer)

which is an online crowd funding platform. The money raised will pay for travel costs,room and board, hiring an interpreterand other costs associated with Tanya's research.

ment Residence, La Grande PostAcute Rehab and Angeline Senior Living. The patients they see are in frail condition but Hohstadt, recallirg what a pastor once told him, said that as a hospice volunteer he must look past this. "He told me that the most important thingis not to focus on what lies before you. You may see a frail shell of a person

but their legacyis not what lies before you. Itis the life they have lived," Hohstadt said. Mindful of this, Hohstadt tries to get patients to reflect on their life, to discuss their lives, loves, triumphs and dreams. 'You focus on that, the good times, rather than on the end of their journey," Hohstadt sald.

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Friday, June 5, 2015 The Observer & Baker City Herald

BAICER HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE STUDYING HERBAL RELIEF FOR PARICINSON'S DISEASE SYMPTOMS

• Tanya Denne selling pottery to raise money for a trip to India to research medicinal plant By Joshua Dillen WesCom News Service

One person's research into an alternative treatment for Parkinson's disease has taken a path to Baker City and it might lead to the other side of the world. If everything works out for Tanya Denne, who grew up in Baker City, she will find herself in India thisfallperforming research into an herbal treatment for the debilitating disease. The 29-year-old graduate of Baker High School is raising money at tonight's First Friday Art Walk in Baker City to Tanya pay for a tripto Denne Ooty, India, where Denne plans to study the plant Mucuna pruriens iMucunal at JSS CollegeofPharmacy. Powder made from the plant's seeds is known to substantially alleviate the symptoms of Parkinson's disease. Denne is joined in the fundraising campaign by her father, John Denne, a Baker City potter; Baker City author Whit Deschner, who has Parkinson's and is the founder of the Great Salt Lick Auction, a fundraiser for Parkinson's research; videographer Kathleen Kiefer; and Terry Drever-Gee of Baker City.

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Dick MasonNVescom News Service

Hospice volunteer Brian Hohstadt greets Blake, his registered pet therapy dog. Blake is a French bulldog.

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S. John Collins/WesCom News Sennce

Whit Deschner, left, will be offering salt licks and other items for sale to help fund Parkinson's research byTanya Denne, right. Avideographer, Kathleen Kiefer, center, will accompany Denne on the research trip to India.

• Brian Hohstadt of Cove received the President's Volunteer Service Award By Dick Mason

her. "She had this vision of what she wanted to do and I gave into herin aboutfive minutes — she wanted money for her trip and research," he said with a chuckle. He joked that Tanya wasn't going to get any money until she came up with a cure. Tonight's fund-raising event, which starts at 5 p.m. at 1719 awe're doing a collaborative Main St. in Baker City, is called "Pottery for Parkinson's" and it effort,"Tanya Denne said."%hitl has been raising money for m ightnever have happened if OHSU ioregon Health & Science Drever-Gee hadn't taken a potUniversity) through the Salt Lick tery class taught by John Denne. Auction. I just needed to come Drever-Gee, while taking the back to Baker and be involved in class, learned about Tanya's the community." research into Parkinson's and her Deschner was taken by Tanya's passionforit.Drever-Gee already enthusiasm when he first met knew Deschner and admired his

work raising money for Parkinson's research, and realized she needed to introduce him to Tanya. Drever-Gee talked about Deschner's accomplishments locally raising money through the Salt Lick Auction and how he brought the community together to raise money for Parkinson's research. "I could see this had big possibilities for Baker," Drever-Gee said."It's monumental." Because she had no tenants in her building on Main Street, itwas logicaltogeteveryone togetherthere and raise some m oney to help pay forTanya's trip. Tanya's field research in India will include ethnobotanical studies iscientific study of the

relationships that exist between people and plants) with the Irula and Paniya tribes, who live near Ooty and cultivate Mucuna. The plant has been used since 300 B.C. for the treatment of "kampvata," which is similar in diagnosis to Parkinson's disease. Mucuna is a natural source for levadopa and has other compounds that might help relieve the symptoms of Parkinson's disease. Carbidopa and levadopa are the current standard medical treatment for the disease, which is caused by a lack of the neurotransmitter dopamine in the brain. SeeParkinson's/Page 5C

Bestdefensivestrategiesagainstcancer By Tiish Yerges

ourselves, but that's very highly regulated," Bronstein said.'When regulated, the cells "Cancer treatments have gotten a little grow when they are supposed to and stop better over time, but when you examine the when they should stop. But with cancer, it's statistics, they're really not much better than veryunregulated,and itgetstobedisorderly. they were 40 years ago," said Dr. Maynard Instead of producing nice sheets of cells Bronstein, oncologist and hematologist at where they are supposed to be, the cells grow lumpy." Grande Ronde Hospital in La Grande. This underscores the need to employ early There have been many theories as to why safetystrategieslike education,protection cancer is on the rise, but Bronstein has a and prevention, which are still the best demore simple explanation. "I don't think it's because of cellphones, fense against cancer. Addressing an audience at a recent diabepowerlines or preservatives in ourfood, tes support group meeting, Bronstein gave a although those things may have a little effect, briefhistory ofhow cancer rose in prominence but the real reason we're seeing more cancer as alife-threatening disease. deathsisbecause we'reseeingfewer deaths "At first there were a lot of infectious from heartdisease.Cancer deaths area scary diseases, typhus, polio and others, but by the problem when you think about the numbers." early 1900s, there were a lot ofbreakthroughs The four top causes of cancer deaths per that brought infectious diseases under con100,000population arelung cancer i51l,colon trol." Bronstein said."By 1950, heart disease canceri17l,breastcancer i13land prostate became the leading cause of death, which cancer i9l. has been the case for most of our lives. But in In 2014,an estimated 159,260 deaths octhe early2000s,we gotbetteratpreventing curred from lung cancer, but without tobacco, heartdisease.We became more aware ofits Bronstein estimated that figure would drop to causesand as cardiologistsdid theirjobsand about 8,000, and that about 151,000 Amerihelped people live healthier lifestyles, heart can lives would be saved per year. diseasestarted todecrease.No w cancer ison Lung cancer causes more deaths than cothe rise." lon,breast orprostate cancers combined, and Cancer is the uncontrolled growth of cells, survival rates for lung cancer aren't much and it's related to mutations of our DNA. better than they were 10 years ago. "Most cells in our body are able to grow and But with one behavioral change, those divide and that's how we heal after cutting statistics would change drastically. For WesCom News Servrce

"Ninety-five percent oflung cancer is caused by smoking," Bronstein said.cThe singlemost effective thing we can doto reduce cancer deaths in the U.S. is to stop smoking. There is no safe level of smoking." The five-year survival rate for a lung cancerpatient depends on the stage oftheircancer at the time of diagnosis. Always, the best case scenario is to find the cancer confined at its primary site 0ocalizedl. "Regional" stage means the cancer has spread to nearby lymph nodes, and "distant" stageismore widespread to other organs. "Understand the process and identify your risks," Bronstein said."Avoid risksthatlead to cancer like smoking. If you're at risk, get screened. If you are diagnosed with cancer, there's surgery, medication and radiation treatmentsavailable." With treatments that haven't changed much over the past 40 years, Bronstein recommends education, protection and preventionas the bestdefense againstcancer. "Eat a healthy diet as you would for diabetes, "he said."Eat fruits,vegetables,low saturated fats and sugar in moderation." Education, protection, prevention and healthylifestylesare safety strategiesthat save lives. Screenings, mammographies and colonoscopiessave livestoo.Ifyou are atrisk, have smoked or lived and worked around smokers, discuss your health concerns with your primary care provider.

WesCom News Service

COVE — The news jolted Brian Hohstadt of Cove like lightning from a fast-moving Northeast Oregon spring thunderstorm. Hohstadt was enjoying a special dinner for Heart 'n Home Hospice stafF and volunteers recently when he was stunned by a request. Hohstadt was asked to come to the front of the dining areatoaccept a President'sVolunteer Service Award, one signed by President Barack Obama. Hohstadt was momentarily thunderstruck. 'You could have knocked me over with a feather, " Hohstadt said. The award recognizes Hohstadt's extensive work as a hospice volunteer in La Grande. 'Your volunteer service demonstrates the kind of commitment to your community that moves America a step closer to its great promise," Obama wrote in his award letter. Hohstadt has served as a hospice volunteer in Union County for five years, all the while drawing on a bottomlessreservoirofcompassion to comfort people in their final days. His volunteer work, he said, is at once immensely fulfilling and heartwrenching. "Sometimes iafter a session) I cry all the way home," Hohstadt said."...But I get up the next day ready to do it all over again." He finds that reaching out to the terminally ill is rewarding because it affords him an opportunity to temporarily disconnect them from the present. "They are clearly dealing with painful stuf, you want to get away from all that," Hohstadt said."I don't dwell on what brought them there. There is no value in that. I focus on the person and what he or she has done." Hohstadt encourages hospice patients to tell him funny stories about their lives and families, even if their memories of names have forsaken them. "I tell them to not worry about the names. I just want them to share funny stories," he said."Anything to let them get away from what they are dealing with." Hohstadt also strives to alleviate the fearsofpatients.

EOU adding new degree program in emergencymedical services administration Eastern Oregon University (EOUj will soon be the only school on theWest Coast offering a degree in emergency medical services administration that meets standards set by the National Fire Academy. It is designed primarily for paramedics seeking advanced knowledge related to the management and administration of emergency medical systems (EMSj and is available entirely online, according to EOU. The new program starts this fall with classes in EMS risk management and

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safety, EMS communications managementand management ofEMS. Curriculum is based on the National Fire Academy's Fire andEmergencyServices Higher Education model for a bachelor's degree in EMSA. "Our program fills in the gaps to give managers the skills they need, but typically don't receive with on the Iob training alone," said Kevin Walker, EMSA program chair, associate dean and professor in EOU's College of Business. "We cover everything from communications to legal

aspects and the fundamentals of business with courses tailored directly to the specialized field of emergency medical healthcare." Walker has been answering questions from community colleges interested in the new degree. Students who have not yet completed paramedic training can also enroll in the program and earn their paramedic certification or licensure. If they come to EOU with an associate's degree, they will complete their bachelor's as a Bachelor of

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Arts, Bachelor of Science, or Bachelor of Applied Science depending on how their credits transfer in. EOU's program offers online tuition at $200 per credit hour compared with $500 per credit hour at other institutions offering the same degree. Applications will be accepted until the first day of classes, Sept. 28. For more information, contact Walker at 541-962-3373 or kwalker@eou. edu, or Dan O'Grady, EMSA program adviser, at 971-722-5498 or dogrady@eou. edu.

SeeAward IPage 5C

HEALTHY LIVING

Whole fruit or juice? rrM rh rherr hrgh lrbercontent and benelrcralnornenrs, whoreapples are the healrhrer chorce

What about the juice? While apple iurce is better for you than soda or some other dnnk alternatives, it does have a high sugar content end calone count Source Nutntion Journal, TNs PI10io s6I'VIC6

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From Red Bull Signature Series Astro- Lazy- Earth to Poppy KGW News at 5 (N)Nightly Straight 8 8 Paris. (N) n (Live) cc Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve in Montreal. (N) (N) n cc blast (N) Town Luna! C at (El) News Talk Good Day Oregon Sunday (N) Women's World 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup Group Women's World 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup Group ** Fled(1996, Action) Laurence Fish- Paid Pro- Next White Collar 'R' 12 12 B- Norwayvs. Thailand. (N) B — Germanyvs. Ivory Coast. "Checkmate" Cup Today Cup Today burne, Stephen Baldwin. g ram S t op Xplor. A nimal Pets. J . Van Derm 2 1 DAY ** <Diaryofa WimpyKid(2010) ZachClean Con- ** The Senti nel(2006,Suspense) The Closer "Ruby" The Closer"Round Republic of Doyle Mike & Mike & cc File" 'Identity Crisis" M o lly n Molly n ~up t4 13 Planet Rescue T V cc I m pe FIX ar y Gordon, Robert Capron. Zone s p iracy Michael Douglas, Kiefer Sutherland. Bounty Hunter Criminal Minds n Criminal Minds n Criminal Minds n Criminal Minds n Wahl Wah l Wah l Wahl W ahl * * Fo u r Brothers (2005) cc *** The Italian Job n A&E 52 28 Bounty Hunter Mad Men "Water- Halt and Catch Fire**4 Van Helsmg(2004, Fantasy) Hugh Jackman. A monster **4 Scream4 (2011) Neve Campbell. The Ghost- *** Drumline (2002, Comedy-Drama) Nick Can- *4 IVild Hogs(2007, Comedy) Tim Allen, AMC 60 20 100" cc "SETI" cc hunter battles creatures in Transylvaniacc face Killer returns to claim new victims. non, Zoe Saldana, Orlando Jones. cc John Travolta,Martin Lawrence. To Be Announced Last Frontier Last Alaskans Mou ntain Mon ANP 24 24 ToBe Announced Doc S o f ia the Mickey Tomor-Dog K . C . Aus t in & Girl **4Diaryofa Wimpy Kid(2010)Z ach- Dog D o g I Did n 't I D idn't Austin & Austin & Girl G irl Dog D o g Girl Girl DISN 26 37 McSt. First Mo u s e r o wland Under. Ally n M eets ary Gordon. n 'PG' cc Do It n Do It n Al ly n A l l y n M e e ts M e ets Meets Meets X Games Austin. (N) (Live) cc CollegeBaseball: NCAA Tournament MLBBaseball: Cardinalsat Dodgers ESPN 33 17 SportsCenter (N) (Live) cc (:15)SportsCenter SportsCenter (N) Countdown ** The Prince& Me (2004) Julia Stiles. Another Cinderella Story( 2008) * * * Me an Girls (2004, Comedy) * ** Pr e tty Woman(1990) Richard Gere. KnockedUp FAM 32 22 **4 TheLittle Rascals (1994) *** The AmazingSpider-Man (2012, Action) Andrew Garfield. **4 Knight and Day(2010) TomCruise. Austin Powers F X 6 5 1 5 Mother Mother Mother Mother **4 Spider-Man 3(2007, Action) Tobey Maguire. ** E/evatorGirl (2010) cc A Wish ComeTrue (201 5)cc /Do, /Do,/Do(2015) Shawn Roberts. HALL 87 35 L ucy L u cy Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden ** First Daughter(2004) cc AmazingJere Osteen Sub-D Preach cc Her Infidelity (2015) Rachel Hunter UnREAL "Return" Devious Maids * * * Cr ies in the Dark (2006) cc The Girl He Met Online(2014) cc LIFE 29 33 In Touch 0<I<I 0<I<I Power Sponge- Sponge- 100 Sponge- Sponge- Teenage Sponge 0<I<I 0 <I<I Henry Henry 1 0 0 Thu n der- Thunder- Nicky, 100 Sp o ngeSponge- Sponge- Sponge- 100 NICK 27 26 Parents Parents Rangers Bob Bob Things Bob Bob Mut. Bob Parents Parents Danger Danger Things mans mans Ricky Things Bob B ob Bo b Bob Th i ngs Quest Horns Knife Turbo 18 Holes Swing Blower K nife T h e Mariners Mariners MLB Baseball Tampa Bay Rays at Seattle Mariners. (N) M a r iners Mariners Jimmy Hanlin S hip M L S ROOT 37 18 Paid Focus ROCKE Off Engine Truck Muscle Bar Rescue n escue n (5:46) Bar Rescue SPIKE 42 29 BODY Total (:07) Bar Rescue (:15) Bar Rescue n (:23) Bar Rescue (:31) Bar Rescue (:38) Bar R Paid Pro- Paid Pro Joel I nTouchAlaskan Bush Alaskan Bush Collec- LostEpic Homes A pri- Epic Homes High Ultimate Homes Epic Mancave N a ked and AfraidNaked and Afraid Naked and Afraid TDC 51 32 gram g r am "Floating Houses" Builds (N) cc "Island From Hell" <rcc cc Osteen n People n cc People n cc t ors Sol d vate Florida Key. tech homes. n T LC 49 39 P aid P a i d 21 DAY Sexy! Love; L ove; Love; Lo v e; Lov e; Lo v e ; Love; L ove; L o ve ; L o v e; Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes SayYes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order La w & Order "Gun**4 Invrncrble(2006,Biography) Mark *** CatchMe rf You Can(2002) Leonardo Dicapno. A teen ***4 The Help(2011,Drama) Viola TNT 57 27 Tabula Rasa" n 'Empire" n 'Ambitious" n "Admissions"n s h o w" n Wahlberg, Greg Kinnear. cc age scam artist poses as apilot, surgeon and lawyer. Davis, EmmaStone. cc (DVS) Mysteries at the Mysteries at the Expedition Un- Time T i m e Sn a ck Like a Local Greatest Steaks of Food Paradise Vir- Food Paradise cc Food Paradise cc Food Paradise cc Water- Water- Xtreme Waterparks TRAV 53 14 Museum cc cc Museum cc known cc Trav. T rav. (N) cc America cc ginia country ham. parks p arks P aid P a i d Royal Pains cc Law & Order: SVULaw & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order:SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order:SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order:SVU Law & Order: SVU USA 58 16 Shark! Paid ** Bad Boys II(2003) Martin Lawrence,Will Smith. **4TheReplacements (2000,Comedy) **4 The Longest Yard WTBS 59 23 Married Married Friends Friends Friends Friends Anchormanr Legend of Ron REAL Sports (:15) GraceIs Gone(2007) Entou Re al Time, Bill Goo d Night, and Good Luck *** TheGoodLre(2014) n cc Judge HBO 518 551 Garfreld Charhe and the ChocolateFactory n Boxing ' ***4 The Paper(1994)<r cc ** Into the Blue(2005) Paul Walker. AL D D r' t Sh Th H (1999) P .n **4 Last Vegas (2013) n cc SHOW 578 575 (6:30) ***4 The Hurricane n cc

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SUNDAY EVEN ING LG BC

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2015 NBA Finals

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Jimmy

(:31) Paid UNCF: An Evening of Stars Supporting KATU Kimmel Program minority education. cc News The Forsyte Saga (:15) The Forsyte Saga n cc 50 Years With Peter, Paul and Mary Per13 cc formances by Peter, Paul and Mary. n 60 Minutes (N) n cc The 69th Annual TonyAwards Honoring excellence on Broad- News

6

(:35)

Castle Rick Steves Game On! Sports

way. (N Same-dayTape) n cc Dateline NBC "Grow Dateline NBC (N) cc A.D. The Bible Con- (:01) American KGW 8 8 ing Hope"(N) tinues (N) n cc Odyssey (N) n cc News Sunday Bob's B o b's Simp- Brooklyn Family Golan the 10 O'Clock News (N)Oregon Love12 12 Burgers Burgers sorts Nine G uy n I n s Sports Raymond Big Bang Big Bang Glee "Heart" n cc The Good Wife n cc The Good Wife n cc Oregon BensTheory Theory Sports inger **4 Two Weeks Notice(2002)n A&E 52 28 The Italian Jobn **4 The Proposal(2009) n « *** Erin Brockovich(2000) Julia Roberts. A woman probes a Halt and Catch Fire Halt and Catch Fire AMC 60 20 power company cover-up over poisoned water. cc 'New Coke" (N) "New Coke" cc ANP 24 24 Finding Bigfoot (N) (:03) Going Native Finding Bigfoot n The Last Alaskans To Be Announced Jessie cc Jessie cc Jessie (N) K.C. Un- I Didn't Girl K.C. Un- Liv & Jessie cc K.C. UnDISN 26 37 dercover Do It (N) Meets dercover Maddie dercover Spo r tsCenter (N) (Live) cc S p o rtsCenter cc SportsCenter cc ESPN 33 17 MLB Baseball * ** Pi t chPerfect (2012) Anna Kendrick Stitchers n cc FAM 32 22 (6:00) *** Knocked Up *4 Identity Thief (2013) F X 6 5 1 5 Austin Powers-Spy *4 Identity Thief(2013)Jason Bateman No vel Romance(2015) Amy Acker. G o l d en G o lden HALL 87 35 All of MyHeart(2015) Lacey Chabert. A Dou b le Daddy (201 5)Mollee Gray. cc Dea dly Revenge LIFE 29 33 Deadly Revenge(2013) Alicia Ziegler. H enry N icky, F u l l Full Full Full Full Fu ll Frie nds ( :36) NICK 27 26 Danger Ricky H o u se House House H o use H ouse House c c Frien d s MLB Baseball Tampa BayRays at Seattle Mariners Mariners ROOT 37 18 MLS Soccer (:17) Bar Rescue n Rescue SPIKE 42 29 (6:53) Bar Rescue (:01) Bar Rescue n (:09) Bar Rescue n Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid: Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid TDC 51 32 "Mayan Misery" n 'Primal Fear" n U n c ensored (N) n (N) n cc "Breaking Borneo" T LC 49 39 Say Yes Say Yes Return to Amish n Return to Amish (N) Gypsy Sisters (N) Return to Amish n ***4 The Help***4 The Blind Side (2009,Drama) Sandra Bullock, ***4 The Blind Side (2009, TNT 57 27 (5:00) (2011) TimMcGraw, QuintonAaron. cc (DVS) Drama) Sandra Bullock. Coaster Coaster Coaster Coaster Xtreme WaterCoaster Coaster Coaster Coaster TRAV 53 14 W ars W a r s Wars W a r s par k s cc W ars W a r s War s Wars USA 58 16 Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod FamMod Fam ** Men in Black II(2002) Longest WTBS 59 23 The Longest yard *4 Rush Hour 3(2007)Jackie Chan Game of Thrones Silicon Veep (N) Last Thrones HBO 518 551 (6:30) **4The Judge(2014) n Penny Dreadful(N) HappyishPenny SHOW 578 575 Nurse Happyish Penny Dreadful n Nurse H appyish

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magical services to his government. Norrell has sharpened his powers, which are o&erwfse longgone from England, through years of tireless scholarship delving Arough occult tomes. To gain the trust of a rising politician, Sfr Walter Pole (Samuel West), Norrell raises the man's

beloved late fiancee from the dead. In doing so, however, Norrell unwittingly unleashes a malevolent faerfe spirit (Marc Warren) known as TTte Gentleman wf& the Afstle-down hair. Norrell is understandably Irrftated when, as his own fame begins to rise, so does Aat of anoAer, previously unknown magician,

Jona&an Strange (Bertie Carvel), a weal&y dandy whose powers appear to be stronger Aan Norrell's, albeit wf& no apparent effort on

Epic fantasV

'Jonathan Strange a Mr. Norrell' comes to BBC America

Jona&an's part. TTtfs sets up a tense dynamic like that between Mozart and Salferf in "Amadeus," as each man tries to prove he is Ae greatest magician in Ae world.

If Jonathan comes by his gifts through no apparent effort on his part, however, the character grows in stature as the story unfolds. "More so than any other script that I have ever read or had a chance to be involved in, Ae arc of Afs man's journey is absolutely huge," Carvel says. "The horizon ofhis story keeps

receding, a bit like when you're walking Arough hills and you get to the top of a peak and you As England struggles to cope during Ae see another one looming beyond it. TTte story Napoleonic Wars with France, two great English just continually keeps surprising one. By the mages engage in a dangerous battle in " Jonathan end of the thfrd epfsode, you probably feel as If Strange 8< Mr. Norrell," a seven-part miniseries you've experienced seven hours' worth of drama. adaptation of Susanna Clarke's fantasy novel "Jona&an grows up once when his fa&er premiering Saturday, June 13, on BBC America. dfes and Aen again when he goes to war, yet he TTte story opens in 1806, as a reclusive continues to grow up again and again and again, gentleman named Mr. Norrell (Eddfe Marsan, and his arc becomes richer and richer as it goes "Ray Donovan") comes to London to offer his along, like a really good wine."


LG - La Grande BC - Baker City

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General Hospital The Meredith Steve Harvey KATU NewsFirst KATU World KATU News at 6 2 2 and Michael Vieira Show at Four News News Curious Curious Daniel Daniel SesameStreet Dinosaur DinosaurPeg Plus Super Varied Programs Charlie Rose Thomas/ SesameCat in Arthur Martha WordGirlOdd Wild Varied Busi3 i 3 George George Tiger Tiger C at W hy! Friends Street the Hat Speaks Squad Kratts ness Let's Make aDeal The Price Is Right The Youngandthe News Bold The Talk CBS This Morning The Doctors Dr. Phil KOIN 6 Newsat 4 News News News Evening OO 6 6 Restless News Today Paid Pro- Million- KGW Varied Days of our Lives The Dr. OzShow The Ellen DeGe- KGW News at4 KGW Nightly KGW News at6 glL 8 8 gram aire News neres Show News News Good DayOregon The 700 Club Paid Pro Varied Pro grams TMZLive Judge Judge Judge Judge 5 O'Clock News 60'Clock News (MI 12 12 gram Judy Judy Judy Judy Justice Judge The QueenLatifah Rachael Ray Judge Judge Paternity Divorce Hot H o t Jud ge Mathis The People's Court Cops Cops Cleve- Simp- Engage- Engage-Mike & Mike & ~tj pH 1 3 for All Faith Show Karen Mablean Court Court B ench Bench Rel. Rel. land sons ment ment Molly Molly I M' d Dog V aried C Criminal Minds CSI: Miami CSI : Miami Vaned Programs A&E 52 28 Parking Parking Dog D og Varied Paid Pro Varied Programs Movie Varied Pro grams Movie Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs AMC 60 20 gram Dirty Jobs Dirty Jobs Varied Programs ANP 24 24 Pit Bulls-Parole PitBulls-Parole Dirty Jobs Chug- Mickey Never Mickey Mickey Doc Doc S o fia theSofiathe Wil. Mickey Mickey Doc Doc Varied Programs Dog Do g Va r ied Programs DISN 26 37 gington Mouse Land Mo use Mouse McSt. McSt. First First W est Mouse Mouse McSt. McSt. SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportCtr Outside Insiders NFL Live Ques Around Pardon SportsCenter Varied Programs ESPN 33 17 SportsCenter '70s '70s '70s Middle 700 The 700 Club Gilmore Girls Gilmore Girls M i ddle Middle Middle Middle Reba R eba Reba Reba B oy... Va ried Programs FAM 32 22 '70s Movie Varied Programs Mother Mother Mother Mother V aried Programs Two T w o Mi k e Mi k e FX 65 15 Movie Varied Programs Home &Family Home &Family Little House L i t tle House T h e Waltons HALL 87 35 Lucy Lucy Golden Golden Golden Golden Home &Family LIFE 29 33 Varied Balance Unsolved Mystery Unsolved Mystery Unsolved Mystery Frasier Frasier Mother Mother Varied Programs Grey's Anatomy Grey's Anatomy Varied Programs Sponge-Sponge-Sponge-PAW PAW Wallyka- Team Team Bubble Bubble Team PAW PAW Blaze, Blaze, Sponge- Sponge- Sponge-Odd Od d Sp onge- Sponge- Thunder- Henry NICK 27 26 Bob Bob Bob Patrol Patrol zam! Umiz. Umiz. Guppies Guppies Umiz. Patrol Patrol Monster Monster Bob B o b Bob Parents Parents Bob B o b ma n s D a nger Varied Paid Dan Patrick Varied Programs ROOT 37 18 Pain Varied Paid Paid The Rich EisenShow • • SPIKE 42 29 Paid Paid Paid Paid Varied Programs Paid Pro- Paid ProJoyce Varied Collec- Lost- Varied Programs TDC 51 32 gram gram Meyer t ors S old My 600-Lb. Life Four Weddings Four Weddings TheLitt leCouple SayYes SayYes SayYes SayYes SayYes SayYes Varied Programs TLC 49 39 Cake Cake Cake Va ried Mom-Obsessed Hoard-Buried Ch d Ch d Supernatural Supernatural Supernatural Supernatural Bones Bones Bones Bones Castle Varied Castle AM Northwest

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Anthony Bourdain Varied Programs TRAV 53 14 No Reservations USA 58 16 Varied Programs WTBS 59 23 Married Married Married Movie HBO 518 551 Movie Varied Movie Varied Programs Varied Movie Varied Programs SHOW 578 575Movie

Weekday Movies A American Gangster *** (2007) Denzel Washington. A chauffeur becomes Harlem's most-powerful crime boss. « (3:30)AMC Tue. 12:30 p.m. Arachnophobia *** (1990) Jeff Daniels. Couple's new farm hastermites and Venezuelan spider.(y «(2:00) SHOW Tue. 9 a.m., Fri. 2:25 p.m. Begin Again *** (2013) Keira Knightley. An ex-music producer and a singer form a life-changing bond.(y «(1:45) SHOW Fri. 10:45 a.m., Fri. 6:30 p.m. The Bourne Legacy*** (2012) Jeremy Renner. Jason Bourne's actions have consequences for a newagent. (3:00) FX Fri. 5 p.m.

C Changing Lanes *** (2002) Ben Affleck. A car accident puts two men on a collision course. «(2:00)AMC Fri. 9 a.m. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes *** (2014) Andy Serkis. Humansandgenetically evolved apes battle for supremacy. (y «(2:15) HBO Mon. 10 a.m., Thu. 2:45 p.m. Dolphin Tale 2*** (2014) Harry Connick Jr..A new companion mustbe found for Winter.(y «(2:00) HBO Mon. 4:30 p.m., Fri. 3:30 p.m.

E Enough Said *** (2013) Julia LouisDreyfus. A divorcee is attracted to her new friend's ex-husband.(y «(1:45) HBO Fri. 10 a.m. Erin Brockovich *** (2000) Julia Roberts. A womanprobes a powercompany cover-up over poisonedwater. « (3:00)AMC Mon. 4 p.m.

The Fault in Our Stars *** (2014) Shailene Woodley. Twoteenagers meet and fall in love at a cancer support group. (y «(2:15) HBO Mon. 12:15 p.m.

The Good Lie*** (2014) Reese Witherspoon. AnAmerican woman helps Sudanese refugees.(y «(2:00) HBO Wed. 3 p.m. Good Night, and Good Luck.***5 (2005) David Strathairn. Newsman Edward R. Murrow confronts Sen. Joseph McCarlhy's ethics.(y «(1:30) HBO Wed. 1:30 p.m. Gravity ***f (2013) Sandra Bullock. Two astronauts becomestranded in deep space.(y «(1:30) HBO Mon. 3 p.m. Grease *** (f 978) John Travolta. Disparate summer lovers meet again as highschool seniors. (2:30)FAM Fri. 5 p.m. The Green Mile ***f (1999) Tom Hanks. A guard thinks an inmate has a supernatural power to heal. «(4:00) AMC Fri. 1:30 p.m.

H The Hurricane ***f (1999) Denzel Washington. Boxer Rubin"Hurricane" Carter is wrongfully imprisoned.(y « (2:30)SHOW Wed. 6:15 a.m., Wed. 4:30 p.m.

K Kelly & Cal *** (2014) Juliette Lewis. An unhappy new motherbondswith a teen who uses a wheelchair.(y «(2:00) SHOW Thu. 2:30 p.m. Kill Bill: Vol. 2*** (2004) Uma Thurman. An assassin confronts her former boss and his gang.(y «(2:30) SHOW Wed. 2 p.m.

Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome *** (1 985) Mel Gibson. Wasteland drifter Mad Max must fight a giant. (2:30)AMC Thu. 4:30 p.m. Mission: Impossible III *** (2006) Tom Cruise. Agent Ethan Hunt faces the toughest villain of his career.(y «

Food Paradise

Bizarre Foods/ Zimmern

Seinfeld Seinfeld Cleve Amer. Amer. Amer. Amer.

(:25) Movie (2:10)SHOW Mon. 10:15 a.m., Mon. 6:55 p.m.

N Nightingale *** (2014) David Oyelowo. A dangerously unhinged man i s obsessed with an old Army pal.(y « (1:30)HBO Tue. 11 a.m.

P Pacific Rim *** (2013) Charlie Hunnam. Humans pilot giant robots to fight monstrous creatures.(y «(2:15) HBO Fri. 5:45 p.m. Philomena***f (2013) Judi Dench. A journalist helps a womansearch for her long-lost son.(y «(1:45) SHOW Wed. 12:15 p.m. Pitch Perfect *** (2012) Anna Kendrick. College students enter an a cappella competition. (2:30)FAM Mon. 5:30 p.m.

The Rundown *** (2003) The Rock. A bounty hunter must find his boss' son in the Amazon.(y (2:30) SPIKE Tue. 2:30 p.m.

S Saving Private Ryan **** (1998) Tom Hanks. U.S. troops look for a missing comrade during World War II. «(4:00) AMC Wed. 1 p.m. The Shawshank Redemption **** (1994) Tim Robbins. An innocent man goes to a Maine penitentiary for life in 1947. «(3:00)AMC Tue. 4 p.m. That Thing You Do! *** (1996) Tom Everett Scott. Small-time rockers hit it big with a catchy single.(y «(2:00) HBO Tue. 9 a.m.

W The Way, Way Back*** (2013) Steve Carell. A fatherless boy finds a mentor in a water-park employee.(y « (1:45)HBO Tue. 2:30 p.m. We Were Soldiers***f (2002) Mel Gibson. Outnumbered U.S. troops battle the North Vietnamese. «(3:00)AMC Wed. 5 p.m.

Varied Programs Family King K i n g

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Law & Order: SVU Law &Order: SVU Law &Order: SVU Fri e nds Friends Friends Friends Seinfeld Seinfeld

Movie Varied Programs

MONDAY EVENING

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(:01) TheWhispers KATU Jimmy "Hide & Seek" (N) News Kimmel PBS NewsHour Rick Steves' EuropeTravel Skills Plan My Music: Country PopLegendsCountry 3 i 3 (N)n « ning a trip toEurope.n ia and popcharts. n ia Entertain Extra (N)2 Broke Mike & Scorpion "Pilot"n ia (9:59) NCIS:Los News CSI: Cri. O O 6 6 ment n cc Girls n Molly n Angeles n Scene Live at 7 Inside American Ninja Warrior Competitorstackle (:01) TheIsland KGW Tonight glL 8 8 (N) Edition obstacles inHouston.(N) n ia (N)n « News Show Family Family So You Think YouCanDance"Detroit 100'Clock News(N) News LoveFeud n Feud n Auditions" Hopefuls inDetroit perform. Raymond Big BangBig BangFOX 12's 8 O'Clock FOX 12's 9 O'Clock Law & Order: Spe- Law & Order: Spe~tj pH 13 Theory Theory News on PDX-TV News on PDX-TV cial Victims Unit n cial Victims Unit n The First 48 ia T h e First 48 ia (:01) TheFirst 48 (:02) TheFirst 48 A&E 52 28 The First 48 ia **** The Shawshank Redemption (1994)TimRobbins. An in TURN:Washing (:04) TURN:WashAMC 60 20 nocent man ton's Spies ia goes toaMaine penitentiary for life in 1947. ington's Spies n Wild manCall-Wildman ANP 24 24 Bigfoot Wildman Finding Bigfoot n (:04) Finding Bigfootn ** Beverly Hills Chihuahua(2006,Com Liv & K .C. Un- I Didn't Jessie Jessie Girl DISN 26 37 n ia Me e ts edy) PiperPerabo.n 'PG'ia Maddie dercover D oltn n « ESPN 33 17 College Baseball SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) FAM 32 22 (5:30) Pitch Perfect The Fosters ia (:01) BecomingUs (:02) TheFosters The 700Club n **1Rise of the Guard/ans (201 2) FX 65 15 M ike M i ke **1Rise of the Guardians (2012) The Waltons ia Middle Middle Middle Middle Golden Golden HALL 87 35 The Waltons ia Devious Maids(N) UnREAL"Relapse" (:02) UnREALia LIFE 29 33 **f 27 Dresses (2006)(« Henry 100 Full Full F ull Fu l l Fresh Fresh Friends (:36) NICK 27 26 Danger Things House House House House Prince Prince n cc Friends Soun MLS Soccer: Revolution atTimbers Soccer ROOT 37 18 MLS Soccer: Soundersat Sporling (:20) BarRescuen Rescue • • SPIKE 42 29 (6:58) BarRescue (:05) BarRescuen (:13) BarRescuen Street Outlaws Street Outlaws: Full Street Outlaws Fast N' Loud: De- Street Outlaws TDC 51 32 "She's a GoodGirl Throttle (N) ia "TexasGrudge"(N) molition Theater (N)"TexasGrudge"n TLC 49 39 Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Major Crimes(Parl 2 Major Crimes "JaneMajor Crimes "A Murder in the First Major Crimes "A TNT 57 27 of2) cc Doe Number36" Rose Is aRose" "Twenty-Fifteen" Rose Is aRose" Time T i me Bizarre Foods Bizarre FoodsWith Time T i me Bizarre Foods TRAV 53 14 Traveling TravelingAmerica ia Andrew Zimmern Traveling TravelingAmerica ia Chrisley Chrisley USA 58 16 NCIS "Enigma"n WWEMondayNight RAW(N Same-day Tape) nia WTBS 59 23 Seinfeld Seinfeld FamGuy FamGuy American American Big Bang Big BangConan (N) *** Dawn of the Planet of the Apes J u rassic Game of Thrones Boxing HBO 518551 The Out List ia SHOW 578 575(6:55) *** Mission: Impossible///n Pe nny Dreadful Happyish Nurse Penny Dreadful

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LG - La Grande BC - Baker City LG - La Grande BC - Baker City 5/9/15 WEDNESDAY EVENING 5/10/15 I IX ««I ~ I gll'g gllgl gggjg gggl LQ BC ~ ~ I II j i(I ~ LQ BC ~gjg ~ I gggjg ~ I IX ««I ~ I gll'g gllgl gggjg gggl 2015 NBAFinals: Warriors at Jimmy Larry K e ithUrJeop- Wheel of KATU Jimmy Jeop- Wheel of The G o ld - M o dern (:31) C e lebrity Wife Swap KATU Jimmy Kimmel King Sp. ban ardy! (N) Fortune News Kimmel News Kimmel © 2 2 Cavaliers © 2 2 ardy! (N) Fortune Middle n bergs Family blackish (N) n c~ PBS NewsHour *** Last Daysin Vietnam: American John Sebastian Presents: Folk Rewind PBS NewsHour Viewers' ChoicePopularprogramsfrom public television's pledgearerebroadcast. s is (N)n « s is (N)n « Experience(2014,Documentary) (My Music) Arlists of the1950sand '60s. Entertain Extra (N)NCIS "So ItGoes" n NCIS: NewOrleans (01) 48Hoursn cc News CSI: Cri. 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