View in Full Screen Mode

Transcription

View in Full Screen Mode
today’s weather
Scattered T-storms
The early days of Keough’s Hot Springs
See page 18
63° HI | 42° LO
SUNDAY
MONDAY
71° | 43°
78° | 47°
Badwater Road reconstruction set to start See page 3
The Inyo Register
saturday, MAY 7, 2016 | INYOREGISTER.COM | SERVING THE EASTERN SIERRA AND BEYOND SINCE 1870 | 75¢
Olancha
welcomes
arson K-9
Vying
for the
vote
Congressional
candidates
discuss the
issues
Canine,
investigator
to work fire
investigations
in Eastern Sierra
By Jon Klusmire
Register Correspondent
By Kristina Blüm
Register Staff
More than 70 people
attended the first Eighth
Congressional District candidates forum in Independence
Tuesday.
Three candidates seeking
to unseat incumbent
Republican Paul Cook, were
on hand, and another candidate sent a surrogate who
read some prepared remarks
and spoke for the candidate.
Cook sent written answers
to the three questions given
all candidates by the
Independence Civic Club,
which organized and hosted
the event.
Three Democrats are seeking their party’s nomination,
and one Republican is challenging Cook in the GOP primary.
The following are brief
summaries of the candidates’
comments.
The candidates began with
brief opening statements.
Dr. Rita Ramirez (D): A resident of 29 Palms, she said
her family had been in
California for 100 years. After
coming from Mexico, her dad
was a miner and veteran.
“Forget my gender, forget my
nationality; I am an American
… I am the American dream.”
She said she has earned
four degrees and has been an
educator for 38 years, teaching from junior high school
to college. She said she
stands for “home, family,
country, veterans, civil rights
and democracy.”
Roger LaPlante (D): He said
he works for a veterans advocacy firm, is a combat veteran
and Sierra Club member. He
said he is “shocked by the
way our veterans are treated.”
He wants to “protect public
lands for posterity and will
fight to protect Social
See FORUM E Page 6
A four-legged member of
the Eastern Sierra Arson Task
Force has a nose up on arsonists and uses those skills to
sniff out the causes of fires.
This special investigator is
K-9 Remington, an accelerant
detection canine that partnered with Olancha Cartago
Volunteer Fire Department
member Capt. Jeff Schwing
during a four-week canine
accelerant-detection training
school in August.
Schwing has been a member of the Olancha Volunteer
Fire Department for 10 years.
Olancha Fire Chief Steve
Davis said Schwing is a
retired lead fire investigator
from Big Bear. Although he
does not live in Olancha, he
spends much of his time
there, volunteering as a paramedic for Olancha’s ambulance and helping train
Olancha’s volunteer firefighters.
See REMINGTON E Page 6
INDEX
Calendar............ 5
Classifieds........ 12
Faces................. 11
History.............. 18
Mtn. Report.... 17
Sports............... 19
TV Listings......... 8
Weather............. 2
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“A mother’s
happiness is like
a beacon, lighting
up the future but
reflected also on the
past in the guise of
fond memories.”
– Honore de Balzac
Copyright ©2016
Horizon Publications, Inc.
Vol. 146, Issue 55
County
puts PACE
on pause
Dena Gunnoe, expectant mother Taylor Gunnoe and Karter Luffman stand as three generations, celebrating what it means to be a
mother.
Photo by Kristina Blüm
Celebrating motherhood
Grandmas, moms
and daughters
share the beauty
of motherhood
By Kristina Blüm
Register Staff
Happy little laughs, tiny
toes and precious bedtime
hugs are some of the benefits
that come with the job of
changing diapers at 2 a.m.,
scrubbing crayon artwork off
newly painted walls and finding petrified goldfish crackers
between the couch cushions.
Being a mom is arguably
the toughest job on the planet but Sunday is a day to celebrate the women who take on
the challenge of motherhood.
Becky Parham of Bishop
has three daughters, all of
whom help her with her business, Bee Gee’s Beauty Supply
and Salon. Her oldest daughter, Marie Morris, has a
19-year-old daughter of her
own.
A lot has changed since
Parham raised her daughters.
“When my kids grew up,
they didn’t have all the gadgets that kids do now,”
Parham said. “The family sat
down and had dinner together and the family was much
more important.”
Parham said motherhood
is much more complicated
today than it was during her
time.
“So many mothers have to
work,” Parham said. “They
have to juggle the house,
children, shopping and their
jobs.”
Morris said one of the
biggest things that has
changed from her youth to
the time she raised her own
daughter was the front-andcenteredness of adult issues
in children’s lives.
Morris used the example
of the infamous “Stork,” that
was once used as an explanation for how babies were
brought into the world.
While that explanation
may have been acceptable
for children many years ago,
it does not work well in
today’s society. With the
Internet and pop culture
bombarding children with
adult topics, temptations and
issues, Morris said she feels
it is vitally important for parents to be completely open
with their children about
issues like drugs and pregnancy.
“More parents need to be
open with their kids so that
kids know to stay away from
that stuff,” Morris said. “We
have to be open with them
so they know the truth and
know how not to get into
trouble. Kids need to go out-
side and play, and just be
kids. They will have enough
time to do all those adult
things once they are adults.”
Morris said the piece of
advice she has for young
mothers is to spend as much
time as they can with their
children “because they grow
up so fast.”
Parham agreed and shared
a valuable lesson that she
learned from her mother and
passed on to her daughters
and grandchildren.
“Always respect yourself,”
Parham said. “Hard work
pays off.”
“My mom once told me
something I have never forgotten,” Morris said. “A
friend is someone who walks
in when the rest of the world
walks out and that is God’s
truth.”
Parham, who has three
granddaughters and one
See MOTHERHOOD E Page 6
Supervisors
decide to wait
and see with
clean energy
program
By Kristina Blüm
Register Staff
The Inyo County Board of
Supervisors examined the
property assessed clean energy (PACE) program and decided it would be best to wait.
Several county staff members raised concerns about
the PACE program and various fine-print problems that
have been discovered with
California’s PACE program in
other counties.
California’s PACE program
is designed to be a way for
property owners to afford
energy- and water-efficient
technology for their homes.
The improvements would be
paid for through the residents’ property tax. However,
several issues on the legal
end of the program are just
coming to light, Inyo County
Auditor Controler Amy
Shepherd explained.
“There has been talk of the
See PACE E Page 6
The Inyo Register
2 SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016 The Eastern Sierra Realty team is made up of, from left, Amy Cutright, Tonya Miller, Michael Schweitzer,
Randi Pritchard, Jose Franco and Connie Berrey.
Photo submitted
Eastern Sierra Realty
is on the move
Business to host
chamber mixer,
open house in
August
Register Staff
Representatives of Eastern
Sierra Realty, Inc. are excited
to announce they have a new
home located at 218 E. Line
St. in Bishop. The business will remain
at its current location on
Rose Street through May 16.
Representatives will be available by phone and email dur-
ing the move.
Randi Pritchard and Ann
Wong opened Eastern Sierra
Realty, Inc. in 2004, with the
desire to build a team of real
estate professionals to bring
the best possible service to
their clients. Over the years
the team has grown to Randi
Pritchard,
broker;
Jose
Franco,
agent;
Michael
Schweitzer, agent; Tonya
Miller, property management; Connie Berrey, escrow
coordinator;
and
Amy
Cutright, listings coordinator. After working more than
40 years in the real estate
business Wong has retired to
enjoy Bishop, spending time
with family and friends and
embracing her love of travel. The Eastern Sierra Realty
team prides itself in providing assistance with all real
estate needs. Working as a
team the business is able to
assist its clients and serve as
the local real estate resource
for the community.
Eastern Sierra Realty, Inc.,
will be hosting the Bishop
Area Chamber of Commerce
mixer from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
Aug. 11, 2016. For more information, call
(760) 873-4161.
services
Jacque Osborn
March 12, 1929--Oct. 13, 2015
A Celebration of Life will be held for Jacque Osborn at 11 a.m. May 14 at the Starlite Park.
Please come and share your friendship and experiences with Jacque’s family and friends.
A potluck will follow with ham and drinks provided. Bring your favorite dish for all to
enjoy. For more information, call Marie, (760) 937-0271.
births
Gillespie – son, Austin Jay Gillespie was born at 8:07 a.m. Monday, April 18, 2016, at
Northern Inyo Hospital to Brittin and Todd Gillespie of Bishop.
Weight: 7 pounds, 15 ounces
Length: 20 inches
Grandparents: mike and Drienne Gillespie, Bishop; Jeff and Staci Aukee, Bishop
Welcoming their new brother home are Owen, 6, and Grant, 2.
Get
the
news.
Get
the
story.
To submit a birth announcement for publication in The Inyo Register, simply drop by our offices at 1180 N. Main, Ste.
108, Bishop, and pick up one of our mail-in forms, or write a brief announcement similar to the format above. Please
include a telephone number in case a question arises.
lotto
Daily 3
Wednesday’s midday
picks:
7, 7, 9
Wednesday’s evening
picks:
1, 1, 5
Thursday’s midday picks:
1, 4, 9
Thursday’s evening picks:
1, 6, 8
Daily 4
Wednesday’s picks:
0, 0, 2, 5
Thursday’s picks:
0, 1, 3, 5
Fantasy 5
Wednesday’s picks:
14, 17, 22, 24, 32
Thursday’s picks:
15, 17, 25, 36, 39
Daily Derby
Wednesday’s picks: First
place No. 5 California Classic;
second place No. 3 Hot Shot;
third place No. 6 Whirl Win.
Winning race time was
1:49.69.
Thursday’s picks: First
place No. 3 Hot Shot; second
place No. 2 Lucky Star; third
place No. 6 Whirl Win.
The Inyo Register
www.inyoregister.com
word of the day
Winning race time was
1:42.85.
SuperLotto Plus
Numbers for Wednesday,
May 4:
1, 8, 13, 15, 39 19
Powerball
Numbers for Wednesday,
May 4:
30, 47, 57, 66, 69 3
For additional updates, call
(900) 776-4000 from a touchtone
phone. This is a toll call. Or, visit
www.calottery.com on the Internet.
McGovern
and Borin
Dental
Gentle
Family
& Cosmetic
Dentistry
760-873-3208
our
hygiene
team
Lori Plakos, RDH
Margie Hooker, RDH
Jan Hornby, RDH
Cara Borin, RDH
wayfaring
wey-fair-ing
noun:
1. Traveling, especially on foot.
examples:
<a poor wayfaring stranger>
<Mom will get some much needed rest while my
wayfring family and I visit Hogwarts.>
quote:
“He had wayfared long; he must have had many an adventure.”
– “Foes” by Mary Johnston
Synonyms:
ambulant, ambulatory, errant, fugitive, gallivanting (also
galavanting), nomad, nomadic, perambulatory, peregrine,
peripatetic, ranging, roaming, roving, vagabond, vagrant,
wandering, itinerant
origin:
[From Middle English waifaringe, journeying, from Old
English wegfarende : weg, way; see way + farende, present
participle of faran, to go on a journey; see per- in Indo-European roots.]
word of the day is sponsored by:
The Inyo Register
SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016 3
AT A
GLANCE
Love, Death and Prom
BISHOP – “Love, Death and
the Prom” is a one-act performance about high school students, their challenges and
issues they face. “Love, Death
and the Prom” is a comedy
and a tragedy in one.
Performances will be held at 7
p.m. today in the Dorothy
Joseph Auditorium. The
entrance fee is $3 per person,
seating is first come, first
serve.
Love, Death and Prom
LONE PINE – The Comrades
of Lone Pine VFW Post No.
8036 is hosting a Mother’s
Day brunch from 9 a.m. to
noon Sunday, 481 South Main
St.
The buffet, for a $10 donation, includes, ham, scrambled eggs, potatoes, veggie
quiche, biscuits and gravy,
fresh fruit, green salad, coffee, orange juice and “momosas” (orange juice and champagne).
Addiction Task Force
BISHOP – The Addiction
Task Force will be meeting at
noon Friday, May 13, at the
Northern Inyo Hospital Board
Room, NIH Birch Street
Annex, 2957 Birch Street,
Bishop. The task force is
being convened to address
prescription drug abuse in the
community.
Evening Under Stars
ROUND VALLEY – The 12th
Annual Evening Under the
Stars is set for 5 p.m. May 14
at the Arcularius Ranch in
Round Valley.
The event includes a happy
hour with live music, a silent
auction, dinner under the
stars, a live auction and music
and dancing. This event is
hosted by the Round Valley
School STEP Foundation.
Tickets for the Evening
Under the Stares are available
online at www.roundvalleystepfoundation.com.
Farmers market
BISHOP – Eastern Sierra
Certified Farmers Market is
hosting a membership meeting and scale certification
event 10:30 a.m. May 14 at
300 Mandich Street, Bishop.
David Miller of the Inyo and
Mono counties Agricultural
Commissioner’s Office will be
on hand to certify scales for
ESCFM members. The certification fee is $21.10 per scale.
Bring exact change or a check.
Membership forms will be
available and payment for
ESCFM membership will be
accepted. Potential new and/
or former, and honorary
members are welcome.
Contact Sue for more information at (760) 937-3768.
New officers for Elks
Elks sponsor many charities, including local scholarship programs, Eastern Sierra Disabled Sports, Wounded Warriors, drug awareness and the group’s major roject
the Purple Pig for Disabled Children. The group’s motto is Elks Care and Elks Share. Pictured here, from left, are Wayne Ball, trustee; John Nielsen, secretary; Jack
Baker, lecturing knight; John Lammiman, leading knight; Ray Stewart, loyal knight; Cynthia Langley, treasurer; Roger Langley, exalted ruler; Chad Cathey Tiler; Steve
Keef, trustee; Don Buser, chaplin; Jeff Pasley, trustee; Dan Jackson, trustee; Bud Moody, innerguard; Don Binns Jr., esquire; and Grad Wilkins, organist.
The Elks Lodge 1603 is accepting new applications from men and women. For more information, contact the office at (760) 873-3221.
Photo submitted
Badwater Road Construction Starts Monday
Death Valley area
remains impacted
from October
flash flooding
Register Staff
Construction on Badwater
Road will start Monday to
repair damage from October’s
flash floods, according to the
National Park Service.
The route from southern
Death Valley to Shoshone,
California will remain closed
until construction is complete,
which is scheduled for July
14.
Storms in October caused
severe flash flooding in Death
Valley National Park. Road
crews cleared debris off roads
and reopened hundreds of
miles of roads in the following
months. Badwater Road is currently open for 47 miles from
CA-190 past Badwater to the
unpaved Harry Wade Road.
The Jubilee Pass section of
Flash flooding in October has rendered Badwater Road into an island of intact pavement.
Courtesy National Park Service
Badwater Road is closed from
Harry Wade Road (milepost
47) to milepost 56.
Through traffic from
Shoshone to southern Death
Valley is not possible during
this closure.
This section of road has
been closed since October and
will remain closed during construction due to safety con-
cerns.
Due to concerns about
summer temperatures, some
construction work may take
place at night. Because of the
possibility of nighttime work,
residents of Shoshone may
see and hear construction
trucks at any hour.
October’s storms heavily
damaged the Jubilee Pass sec-
tion of Badwater Road and
washed away extensive sections of pavement and road
base.
The Federal Highway
Administration is funding
these repairs.
William
Kanayan
Construction is the general
contractor performing the
repairs.
Scotty’s Castle was the
other area of the park most
severely affected by October’s
storms.
A contract to connect a
temporary waterline from the
spring to the historic structures’ fire suppression system
is in progress.
Southern California Edison
has replaced power poles and
repairs of the electrical distribution system at Scotty’s
Castle should start soon.
There is still a lot more
work to be done, including
redesigning and reconstructing eight miles of road, replacing portions of the sewer system, permanent water line
replacement, and repairs to
multiple historic structures.
Water entered the annex
wing of Scotty’s Castle and
two other historic structures
again during a storm on April
27, highlighting the need for
repairs.
Park officials hope to have
Scotty’s Castle fully repaired
and reopened by 2019.
Aviation program
BISHOP – A new program is
starting for teens (13-19)
interested in aviation, engineering and science.
The program is free of
charge and will include
ground training, aircraft construction training and flight in
a general aviation aircraft
through the Experimental
Aircraft Association’s Young
Eagles Program. Meetings will
be held the first and third
Thursday of every month
with the exception of this
month with the meeting from
6:30 to 8 p.m. May 26th. at
251 Sierra St. at First
Southern Church. The program is headed by Tony
Unger. Call Unger for more
information at (661) 510-6351
or email pastorfsb@gmail.
com.
Quilt show
BISHOP – The Calico
Quilters Quilt Guild will hold
a quilt show from 10 a.m.-5
p.m. May 28 and 10 a.m.-4
p.m. May 29. The show will
feature quilts from local artists, bed-turning, demonstrations, door prizes, refreshments, marketplace and mini
raffle. The raffle for the 2016
Opportunity Quilt will be at 3
p.m. May 29. For more information contact Margi Duffy,
(760) 873-6147.
May is Well-Senior Discount Month at
The Bishop Veterinary Hospital!
There is some good news for people with eye complications from
diabetes. A network of researchers has found that the drug Lucentis
(ranibizumab) can be highly effective for treating proliferative
diabetic retinopathy, an eye disease that can occur as a complication
of diabetes. The researchers say this is the first major advance
in therapy in 40 years. Diabetic retinopathy is the leading cause
of vision loss and blindness among working-age Americans. An
Dwayne Wilson
advanced stage, called proliferative diabetic retinopathy, occurs when
abnormal blood vessels grow near the retina, the light-sensitive tissue at the back of the eye.
These new vessels can leak blood, which can obscure vision and damage the retina. Lucentis
is one of several drugs called VEGF inhibitors that can block this process.
Antibiotics may be linked to a serious disruption in brain function, called delirium, and
other brain problems, more than previously thought, according to a “Views and Reviews”
article published in Neurology®, a medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
Delirium causes mental confusion that may be accompanied by hallucinations and agitation.
Medications are often the cause of delirium, but antibiotics are not necessarily the first
medications doctors may suspect.
We are now compounding “all natural estrogen hormone replacement” as prescribed by your
physicians.
New research published in the journal Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice shows for
the first time that there is an association of verapamil, which is widely used to treat high blood
pressure, irregular heartbeat and migraine headaches, with lower fasting glucose levels in
humans with diabetes.
Presented as a service to the community by
dwayne’s
friendly pharmacy
644 W. LINE STREET • BISHOP, CA 93514
(760)
872-2522
Whether they like it or not, our furry companions are considered “senior”
after 7 years of age. Normal physical and mental processes may begin
to decline at this age, but early detection can be the key
to preventing and treating
these age-related
conditions. All pets
should receive an
annual exam,
but our “
senior” pets
should be
seen more
frequently,
about every
6 to 8 months.
During the
month of May all
of our “senior” patients
Call for your appointment today!
will receive a full work-up and
blood screening at a discounted price.
760-873-5801
The Inyo Register
OPINION
4
SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016
MIKE GERVAIS Publisher | tERRAncE VEStAl Managing Editor
Political cartoons published in this newspaper – as with letters to the editor and op-eds – do not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Inyo Register, its employees or its parent company. These cartoons are merely intended to present food-for-thought in a different medium. The Inyo Register (ISSN 1095-5089) Published
tri-weekly by Horizon California Publications Inc., 407 W. Line Street, Ste. 8, Bishop, CA 93514. Entered as a Paid Periodical at the office of Bishop, California 93514, under
the Act of March 3, 1876. Combining Inyo Register, founded 1883; Inyo Independent and Owens Valley Progress-Citizen, founded 1870; and the Sierra Daily News. All
contents are the property of Horizon California Publications Inc. and cannot be reproduced in any way without the written consent of publisher. Postmaster: Send address
changes to The Inyo Register, 407 W. Line Street, Ste. 8, Bishop, CA 93514. Phone (760) 873-3535. Fax (760) 873-3591
Significant Details
Don’t mess up
a mushy Mother’s
Day card with an
‘update’
It’s nearly impossible to ruin one of those mushy, sentimental Mother’s Day cards, but it can be done if you also
use the card to give Mom a little
written “update” about your life or
otherwise “catch up on a few
things.” (Heaven forbid that you pick
up the phone and call your Mother,
or send over a couple of roses, or
actually go visit the old gal.)
So, here are some of the things
that absolutely do not, repeat, do
not belong on the inside flap of the
mush missive you deliver to Mom on
Mother’s Day.
“Mom: I have finally freed myself
Jon Klusmire
from the life-draining mental trauma
OPINION
and psychic damage caused by your
cruel, overbearing ‘mothering style.’
But for me to achieve ‘closure’ on our alleged relationship,
please pay my $30,000 therapy bill. Goodbye forever.”
“Mom: Boy do I have a Mother’s Day gift for you: me and
the kids are coming for a ‘visit.’ I told you about getting
fired from my job because I’m bedridden after back surgery, which caused me to lose the house and get a divorce,
right? (Guess you were right about her.) Anyway, we won’t
be staying with you for too
long, just until I get back on
my feet (ha, ha, that’ll be
So, here are some the day). P.S.: We’re bringing
both pit bulls and the
of the things that snake. P.S.S: Why don’t you
go ahead and upgrade from
absolutely do not, basic cable to the premium
package so the kids can
repeat, do not
watch all those educational
sports programs. P.S.S.S.
belong on the
Corona is still my favorite
beer. ”
inside flap of the
“Mom: My life is total
bliss at my new home at the
mush missive you Vegan Village of Divine
Light and Love. It would be
deliver to Mom on great if you could come for
a visit, listen to the
Mother’s Day.
Enchanted Leader and join
our Organic Rapture Circle.
Please don’t tell people I’m
in a cult. Those stories and
videos on the Internet are all wrong and hateful.”
“Mom: I found a great ‘throw-back Thursday’ photo of
you that I’ve posted to your Facebook Page. It’s the one
with you on a Harley Davidson motorcycle. Smoking a joint.
Holding a bottle of whiskey. And you’re naked!!! And I
think some of your ‘friends’ are operating movie cameras.
It would be great if you would show the whole family your
little ‘movie’ next Thanksgiving.”
“Mom: Thanks for giving me your credit card number so
I could buy some new tires for my car over the Internet. I
only used it a couple more times but then it got rejected
(something about being ‘over the limit’) when I tried to
enter the third round of an online poker tournament. You
might want to call and see what’s wrong.”
“Mom: The papers from the judge are enclosed. You
have three days to pack up and move into the Sunny
Village Home. Remember, per the judge’s order, sheriff’s
deputies will be there to make sure your clothes are the
only thing you take; everything else in the house is now
mine. P.S.: Just leave the keys to the vacation cabin (also
mine) and the BMW on the kitchen counter.”
(Jon Klusmire of Bishop never tries to “catch up.”)
lETTERS AND TOP Of ThE MORNINg POlICY
• Limit for letters is 500 words; for
Top of the Morning, 1,000 words.
• Submission must be original and not
published in any other print and/
or online media. We will not print
letters also submitted to other local
media for publication.
• Writer must include a daytime phone
number for confirmation of authorship and town. (Number will not be
published.)
• Anonymous submissions and pseudonyms are not permitted.
• Inyo County writers and local topics
are given priority.
• Top of the Morning writers should
include a one- or two-line bio and
recent color photo.
• Emailed and typed submissions are
preferred.
• Writers may submit one item during
a one-week period.
• Writers must refrain from libelous,
slanderous and derogatory content.
• Pieces may be edited for content.
• The Inyo Register reserves the right
to reject any submission.
• Email letters or Top of the Morning
submissions to editor@inyoregister.
com or mail to:
Editor, The Inyo Register,
407 W. Line St., Ste. 8, Bishop, CA
93514
IN APPRECIATION
School
appreciates
community
support for ice
cream social
The Bishop Seventh-day
Adventist
Christian
Elementary School would like
to sincerely thank the local
businesses for their genergener
ous contributions to the
Seventh Annual Ice Cream
Social held on April 14 and a
huge thank you to the community for attending and
donating. Due to the generosity of the community the
fourth-eighth grades are able
to attend Science Camp in
Leoni Meadows in May as
well as providing other educational activities.
Community
members
made this possible by buying
tickets, making donations,
and bidding on auction items
donated by businesses and
services. We are all so proud
to be living in such a giving,
supportive area and again
we offer our deepest gratitude.
Special recognition is
given to the following:
Keough’s Hot Springs
City of Bishop
Chalfant
Big
Trees
Nursery
Bishop Nursery
Dan Connor on guitar
Euphoria Salon
Brenda Morris
New-Cali
Landscapes
(Todd Lembke)
Sage Restaurant
Joseph’s Bi-Rite Market
Zach Ranch
Aerohead Cycles
Mammoth Dental
Reagan’s Sporting Goods
Cherry Elliot
Eastern Sierra Tri-County
Fair
Bishop Country Club Golf
LADWP
O’Reilly Auto Parts
Body & Soul
The Meat House
Mountain View Animal
Hospital
Yamatani
Japanese
Restaurant
Anne
Marie’s
Home
Boutique
Our Water Works
Inyo Council for the Arts
K-Mart
Vons
Wave Rave
Xanterra-Furnace Creek
Resorts
Rite-Way Pool and Spa
Zikomo Drumming and
Origami
Rhianna Carter
Melissa Place & family
Mary Matlick
Dreamy Dresses
Dwayne’s
Friendly
Pharmacy
Pizza Factory
Great Basin Bakery
Mule Days
Mark and Jana Tillemans
Wayne Hinkel & family
Looney Bean
Value Sports
Jim
Marchio-Sierra
Aviation
Chris Carter Training and
Consulting
Bishop Twin Theatres
Perry Motors
Mountain Light Gallery
McDonald’s
Mission Linen Supply
Manor Market
Ace Hardware
Sage to Summit
Las
Palmas
Mexican
Restaurant
Eastside Sports
Linda Rogers
Starbucks
Spellbinder Books
Vitality Wellness Center
Western Nevada Supply
Dr. Richardson
Range & River Books
Schat’s
Roadhouse
Restaurant
Fendon’s Furniture
Country
Kitchen
Restaurant
The Sound Shoppe
Simplicity Salon
Jeff Bardonnex
Thomas
and
Brenda
Schaniel
The parents, volunteers
and staff of Bishop Seventh
Day Adventist Christian
Elementary School.
Almeida family
Main Street Trading Co.
We will see you next year!
Bishop Seventh-day
Adventist Christian
Elementary School
Bishop
Strong Editorial Newspapers Build Strong Communities
Mike Gervais
Publisher
[email protected]
Ext. 222
Terrance Vestal
Managing Editor
[email protected]
Ext. 208
Michael Chacanaca
Associate Editor
[email protected]
Ext. 211
Kristina Blum
Gen. Assign. Reporter
[email protected]
Ext. 212
Cynthia Hurdle Sampietro
Classifieds Manager
[email protected]
Ext. 200
Eva Gentry
Bookkeeping
[email protected]
Ext. 206
Stephanie DeBaptiste
Circulation Manager
[email protected]
Ext. 201
Terry Langdon
Sales Representative
[email protected]
Ext. 220
Veronica Lee
Sales Representative
[email protected]
Ext. 207
Jon Klusmire
Correspondent
Bryce Lyons
Movie Review
Columnist
Craig Jackson
Sports/Outdoor
Columnist
Chris Langley
Film History
Columnist
David Woodruff
History Columnist
Ted Williams
History Columnist
Phil Pister
History Columnist
Marty Voght
History Columnist
Pam Vaughan
History Columnist
Rob Pearce, PH.D.
History Columnist
Fred Rowe
Fishing Colomnist
Jarett Coons
Fishing Columnist
Carne Lowgren
Pop Culture Columnist
Conor Vaughan
Tech Guru
407 W. Line St., Ste. 8, Bishop, CA 93514 | Phone: (760) 873-3535
Fax: (760) 873-3591 | www.inyoregister.com
Your Comments Speak Volumes
Send us Yours: [email protected]
The Inyo Register
SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016 5
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
The Inyo Register runs calender
items for free events at no charge.
Events requiring paid admission
will be charged a nominal fee to use
this service. Call Cynthia Sampietro
at (760) 873-3535 for more information or email her at [email protected]. Due to space limitations, we can only guarantee one
run per item. All submissions are
subject to editing.
Saturday, May 7
Home Show
The Home Show continues from 9
a.m.-3 p.m. in the Charles Brown
Auditorium at the Eastern Sierra TriCounty Fairgrounds.
Big pine bake sale
The Big Pine American Legion
Auxiliary will hold a bake sale from 9
a.m.-noon on Main Street in front of
Carroll’s Market. Proceeds will benefit
the Girl State and Scholarship Program.
For more information call Rosemarie
Todd, (760) 938-2911.
Elks Mothers Dinner and Dance
The Elks Lodge in honor of
“Mothers” is hosting a dinner and
dance with the lounge opening at 4
p.m. and dinner at 6 p.m. Mothers are
free, everyone else pays $15. The Elks
Club is located at 151 E Line St.,
Bishop,
Bingo at Senior Center
AARP is offering bingo at the
Bishop Senior Center behind the City
Park. Everyone age 18 and older is
welcome to attend. Doors open at 5
p.m., Bingo starts at 6 p.m. For more
information, call (760) 873-5839.
Eastside Writing Circle
The Imagination Lab, 621 W. Line
St., No. 204, Bishop, hosts in-group
writing and sharing for folks interested
in writing, any genre, at 1:30 p.m. For
more information, call Kris Hohag,
(760) 920-3389, or Marilyn Blake
Philip, (760) 920-8013.
Friday, May 13
Aylanie Carrillo and Shania Carrillo looked like they had found a treasure trove of stuffed animals at
a recent Laws Railroad Museum’s Choo-Choo Swap Meet. The event returns Saturday at the TriCounty Fairgrounds. The bi-annual event is a fundraiser for the museum boasting “100 yard sales in
one location,” although this year it will feature some 150 vendors.
Sunday, May 8
Eastside Writing Circle
The Imagination Lab, 621 W. Line
St., No. 204, Bishop, hosts in-group
writing and sharing for folks interested
in writing, any genre, at 1:30 p.m. For
more information, call Kris Hohag,
(760) 920-3389, or Marilyn Blake
Philip, (760) 920-8013.
Monday, May 9
Big Pine Civic Club
The Big Pine Civic Club will hold its
May meeting at 7 p.m. at Big Pine
Town Hall. Residents are invited to
come and find out what is happening
in the community and the county. For
more information, contact Cindy (760)
938-2868.
Tuesday, May 10
Rotary club of Bishop
The Rotary Club of Bishop meets
every Tuesday at noon at Astorga’s
Pet Sitting & Grooming Services
www.petnannygrooming.com
Teri Burgess
Owner
Licensed and Insured
760-873-6131
Bingo at Senior Center
AARP is offering Bingo at 1 p.m. at
the Bishop Senior Center behind the
City Park. Everyone age 18 and older is
welcome to attend. For more information, call (760) 873-5839.
BP American Legion, Auxiliary
Big Pine American Legion Glacier
Post 457 and Auxiliary will hold their
monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the Big
Pine Town Hall on Dewey Street. A
fiesta dinner will be served prior to the
meeting starting at 6 p.m. For more
information, contact Rick at 760-9382319.
Teri Burgess, Pet Nanny
1411 Matlick Lane
Bishop, CA 93514
p.m., Bingo starts at 6 p.m. For more
information, call (760) 873-5839.
Taking Off Pounds Sensibly
TOPS weight loss program meets
every Thursday at 6 p.m. at the
Highlands Adult Clubhouse. TOPS can
help you reach your weight loss goals
by providing you with the tools, information, support, and accountability to
succeed. TOPS is open to men, women
and teens.
California Native Plant Society
California Native Plant Society is
planning an exploration of Union
Wash in the southern Owens Valley.
Meet at 8 a.m. at Independence Park
on the south end of Independence on
US 395 (Edwards Street). This will be
part driving tour and part hiking tour of
this rarely botanized alluvial fan at the
base of the Inyo Mountains. Trip will
be finished in the late afternoon. For
more information, contact Jerry
Zatorski at [email protected]. or visit
www.bristleconecnps.org.
Choo Choo Swap Meet
The Choo Choo Swap Meet will be
at 8:30 a.m. at the Eastern Sierra TriCounty Fairgrounds. There is a $2
entrance fee, vendor booths $40. Shop
antiques, furniture, home decor, collectibles, tool, honey, books and more.
For more information, call (760) 8735950.
munity projects are discussed. Everybody is welcome. Call Mike Johnston
at (760) 937-6663 for more information.
Mexican Restaurant at 2206 N Sierra
Highway. Visitors are always welcome.
Lunch is $12. Call Sue Lyndes for information, (760) 873-4958.
Bingo at Senior Center
AARP is offering Bingo at 1 p.m. at
the Bishop Senior Center behind the
City Park. Everyone age 18 and older is
welcome to attend. For more information, call (760) 873-5839.
Indian Creek-Westridge
The Indian Creek-Westridge
Community Services District will be
holding its regular quarterly board of
directors at 7 p.m. at the Christian
Science Church at W. Line Street and
Grandview Drive.
Wednesday, May 11
Hospital Auxiliary banquet
The Northern Inyo Hospital Auxiliary
will hold its annual installation and
awards banquet at the Roadhouse
Cafe at 11:30 a.m. All officers and
associates are encouraged to attend.
Please wear your uniforms. For more
information, call Shirley Stone, (760)
872 1914.
BUHS Choir Concert
The Bishop Union High School Choir
will present a spring concert at 7 p.m.
in the BUHS auditorium. Entrance will
be $4 for students and $5 at the door.
Program will include performances by
the student choir, honor student choir
and individual students.
United We Ride Bike Nite
United We Ride is hosting another
Bike Nite at 6 p.m. in the Starbucks
parking lot on Main Street in Bishop.
All riders are invited to come and
“Show and Shine” their motorcycles
and win some raffle prizes. For more
information, call John and Sally Ann
Salazar at (760) 920-8493 or (760)
920-8545.
Saturday, May 14
Republican Women Federated
The monthly meeting of the Republican Women of Inyo County, which
serves Inyo and Mono counties, will be
at 11:30 a.m. at Astorga’s restaurant.
For more information, call Virginia Lee
Chambers, (760) 872-2178.
‘Evening under the Stars’
This year’s star-studded fundraiser
at the Arcularius Ranch in Round
Valley will include a happy hour, full
western barbecue dinner, silent and
live auctions plus live music; all set in
a spectacular outdoor setting. Tickets
are available at $50 per guest, $90 per
couple or $320 for a reserved group of
eight. Come enjoy a truly unique experience with all proceeds benefiting the
students of Round Valley School.
Purchase “Evening under the Stars”
tickets at www.roundvalleystepfoundation.com or contact STEP Foundation
board member Lis Mazzu at (760)
784-5461 / [email protected].
Bishop Lions Club
The Bishop Lions Club meets every
Thursday, except holidays, at noon at
the Tri-County Fairgrounds Patio Building. Lunch is served and then the com-
Bingo at Senior Center
AARP is offering bingo at the
Bishop Senior Center behind the City
Park. Everyone age 18 and older is
welcome to attend. Doors open at 5
Thursday, May 12
Sunday, May 15
Tuesday, May 17
Rotary club of Bishop
The Rotary Club of Bishop meets
every Tuesday at noon at Astorga’s
Mexican Restaurant at 2206 N Sierra
Highway. Visitors are always welcome.
Lunch is $12. Call Sue Lyndes for information, (760) 873-4958.
Bingo at Senior Center
AARP is offering Bingo at 1 p.m. at
the Bishop Senior Center behind the
City Park. Everyone age 18 and older is
welcome to attend. For more information, call (760) 873-5839.
Wednesday, May 18
Hospital Auxiliary meeting
The Northern Inyo Hospital will hold
a workshop starting at 10 a.m. at 2957
Birch St. All members and friends who
are looking for a wonderful volunteer
organization whose funds support
buying life-saving equipment for the
hospital, will be welcomed. For more
information, call Shirley Stone, (760)
872-1914.
Thursday, May 19
Bishop Lions Club
The Bishop Lions Club meets every
Thursday, except holidays, at noon at
the Tri-County Fairgrounds Patio Building. Lunch is served and then the community projects are discussed. Everybody is welcome. Call Mike Johnston
at (760) 937-6663 for more information.
Bingo at Senior Center
AARP is offering Bingo at 1 p.m. at
the Bishop Senior Center behind the
City Park. Everyone age 18 and older is
welcome to attend. For more information, call (760) 873-5839.
United We Ride
United We Ride will meet for its
monthly meeting at 6 p.m. in the
conference room at the Pizza Factory
in Bishop. All riders are welcome. For
more information, call Dale Renfro at
(760) 873-7632.
The Inyo Register
6 SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016
REMINGTON
MOTHERHOOD
Continued from front page
Accelerant detection
canines are trained to find
minute traces of accelerants, such as gasoline or
lighter fluid, that may have
been used to start a fire.
Each dog works and
lives with its handler, a law
enforcement officer or firefighter trained to investigate fire scenes. The canine
and handler are required to
complete 200 hours of
training in Maine. The
training is led by Paul
Gallagher, owner and head
trainer of Maine Specialty
Dogs.
The program is funded
by State Farm and is available to fire departments
and law enforcement agencies across the United
States and Canada. Since
its beginning in 1993, the
program has placed more
than 360 dogs in 44 states,
three Canadian provinces
and the District of
Columbia.
“We put in an application for a grant with State
Farm, explaining that we
are all volunteer fire
departments and don’t
have fire investigators,”
Davis said. “We have to rely
on investigators from out
of the area. State Farm
agreed and paid for absolutely everything from the
training to the dog, to the
special vehicle – right down
to the dog food.”
Davis said Remington
has worked 18 incidents
thus far. Two of those
cases, a vehicle fire in
October and a structure
fire in January, were both
confirmed to be arson,
thanks to Remington.
The Eastern Sierra Arson
Task Force consists of the
Olancha Volunteer Fire
Taylor said one thing Dena
taught her is to always be
patient with her kids.
“I think about what my
mother taught me through
her example all the time,”
Taylor said. “She taught me to
love Karter as much as I can
and to be patient with her no
matter what.”
Dena was raised one street
away from the home where
she raised Taylor. Now, Dena
owns Bishop Fitness Center
but she also gets to enjoy lots
of time with her granddaughter.
Dena said she once read a
quote saying that if the writer
knew how much fun being a
grandparent was, she would
have been a grandparent first.
Dena laughed in agreement
and said the love of a grandparent is different than that
of a parent and it is wonderful.
“You love your kids with
all your heart, but when
Karter was born – oh, you
love them so much you can’t
even stand it,” Dena said.
“You get to enjoy the fun
things, the good things, and
not have to worry so much
about the future. If she
throws a fit, we just give her
back to her parents.”
Dena said it is amazing to
her watching children go
through their failures or
accomplishments.
“It all becomes a part of
their lives and shapes who
they are,” Dena said. “When
you see the success, you
know you helped them
become who they are and it’s
a great feeling.”
“Being a parent is the best
thing you could ever want in
life,” Taylor said. “It teaches
you to love someone way
more than you could ever
imagine. Having my daughter
is the best part of me.”
Parenting help
Jean Turner of Inyo County
Health and Human Services
said modern moms face a lot
of challenges.
“Many first-time moms in
our programs find themselves
balancing the benefits of tech
technology with the demands it
makes on the time and atten
attention they’d prefer to direct to
their new baby,” Turner said.
“There’s a lot of cool stuff out
there but there is also an overwhelming amount of information to sort, share, and stay on
top of flowing through our
phones, facebook accounts
and screens.”
Turner said many HHS services try to help moms focus
on the simple relational activities that promote optimal
development for their children.
“Studies show there is no
substitute for tuning in to children’s needs, talking to them
as much as possible, and tak
taking turns in a back-and-forth
learning pattern with them
throughout their early developmental years, “ she explained.
Some of the services
offered to moms and their
families by Inyo County Health
and Human Services include
parenting education for raising
children from birth to 20,
developmental playgroups, literacy resources, parent/child
interaction therapy, birth and
breastfeeding supports in
coordination with Northern
Inyo Hospital, and nutritional
support through programs like
Women Infants and Children,
and Cal-Fresh.
“Moms don’t have to go it
alone, “Turner said. “We are
happy to help them find places to connect and resources to
meet challenges that come
their way.”
To find out more about
parental assistance, call (760)
873-6453.
immigration issue on the
Mexican border and he
brought the message of broken borders to Sacramento
and Washington, DC, “where I
embarrassed President Bush”
into addressing the immigration issue. The borders need
to be secured, the legal immigration system needs to be
“fixed,” and existing laws
enforced, which will be hard
because immigrants are
“modern day slaves: The GOP
likes the cheap labor, the
Democrats like the cheap
votes.”
Incumbent Rep. Paul Cook
(R): The San Bernardino terrorist attacks were “a wakeup
call” to the need to “control
the borders and end illegal
immigration,” and not provide
amnesty to those in the country illegally. The Syrian civil
war “has no good guys,” and
the only way to stem the flow
of immigrants is to work with
other countries in the region
to “end the Syrian civil war
and defeat ISIS.”
The “polarized” nature of
today’s politics was the next
topic, and the candidates
were asked about their ability
to compromise.
Dr. Rita Ramirez (D):
“Compromise is essential, but
only for the benefit of the
people,” not one’s political
standing.
Roger LaPlante (D): Serving
as a sergeant in the Army
guarantees you understand
compromise, with those you
serve with and the system.
Today’s discourse is “out of
balance,” and has forgotten
“we the people make the
rules.” He said he would
“never sell out to the NRA or
any lobbyist, because you lose
your soul” when one starts
working for them instead of
the public.
John Pinkerton (D) represented by Al Morrissette: “I
know when to stand my
ground and when compromise is needed.”
Tim Donnelly (R): “Political
correctness” is the problem,
not polarization. “I will never
be politically correct and put
our community at risk,” like
the incumbent has done. San
Bernardino exposed “the jihadi next door and is the lifeand-death reason I got into
the race.” He said he wears an
NRA hat not because he has
been “bought,” but because
“they fight for freedom.”
Incumbent Rep. Paul Cook
(R): “The less healthy politicians only vote no. The worst
representatives do nothing
and grandstand. I promise to
always show up and always
work.”
Department, Eastern Kern
County and the Lone Pine
volunteers but Davis said
Remington’s services are
available to any of Inyo
County’s fire departments.
“We feel law enforcement
officials should have every
tool possible to combat this
costly and sometimes deadly crime,” said David Beigie,
State Farm vice president of
public affairs. “These K-9s
enable investigators to do
their job more efficiently
and effectively.”
“The dog will never
replace the arson investigator,” Gallagher said. “The
dog simply extends the
capabilities. The scent-discriminating abilities of a
canine are better than any
equipment we can take to a
fire scene when arson is
suspected.”
“Remington is one of the
top dogs they had available,” Davis said. “Jeff is a
great motivator and teacher. He is a great handler
and they work so well
together and are so well
bonded.”
Each K-9 is tested to
make sure it can discriminate among a wide variety
of odors, according to State
Farm. The dogs are a great
aid to the fire investigation.
They are right a high percentage of the time.
“A few years ago, arson
investigators would spend
days, perhaps even weeks,
sifting through evidence at
the scene of a suspected
arson,” Gallagher said.
“Today, with the help of a
canine, they can do the
work in just a matter of a
few hours. In this day and
age of doing more with
less, that’s very important.”
For more information
about the Arson Dog
Program visit www.arsondog.org.
Continued from front page
grandson, said she loves
being a grandmother.
“When you’re a grandmother, you let your grandkids get away with things you
never would have let your
own kids do,” Parham said. “It
is so rewarding to watch your
kids grow up and have kids
who grow into responsible
adults. Those grandchildren
really take a piece of your
heart.”
Taylor Gunnoe, mother of
two-year-old Karter Luffman,
is expecting her second child.
Taylor said being a mother
herself has given her a whole
new level of respect for her
own mother, Dena Gunnoe.
“I look up to her more than
I ever did before,” Taylor said.
“She had three kids and I only
have one. Before I had kids, I
never really thought about it
but now I respect her so
much more than I ever had.
Now, I want to be exactly like
her.”
Dena said one lesson her
mother taught her that she
passed on to Taylor is that of
loving her children no matter
what.
“My mom always told me
that your kids don’t have to
love you or give you anything
but you have to love them
and give them your everything,” Dena said. “You have
to love your kids at all times
and they don’t owe you anything.”
Dena said one major
change she has seen in parenting is the use of discipline.
She also said she is amazed at
how well Karter can navigate
technology.
It is much harder to be an
old-school parent in today’s
world, Taylor said. People are
much quicker to frown upon
young parents if they disagree
with their parenting.
the issue of public lands,
stances on more Wilderness
Areas and local economic
development.
Dr. Rita Ramirez (D): There
doesn’t need to be more wilderness, but there does need
to be “a community plan” that
guides decision-making.
“Keep what you have that’s
unique,” such as the outdoor
attractions. “Small business is
the way to go,” and add
“entertainment, music and
art.” But she added, “self-government starts at home ...
then you would tell me what
to do (if I’m elected), not the
other way around.”
Roger LaPlante (D): As a
Sierra Club member, he said
conserving the area’s mountains and wild places is a priority. Noting “all the LA
trucks” on the roads, he said
it might be time to “backtrack” on the “old regulations” that gave Los Angeles
water and land in Inyo
County. “LA needs to back
off; this is Inyo County” and
the local county needs to have
more say over its land and
water.
John Pinkerton (D) represented by Al Morrissette:
Small business generates
most jobs, “but the answer to
all questions is you … the real
direction comes from you.”
However, his statement said
“Inyo and Mono counties too
often are treated like unwanted stepchildren in Congress,
and that will change” if he is
elected.
Tim Donnelly (R): Public
lands need to be restored to
state and local control, “by
any means necessary”
because now federal bureaucrats “control you.” Less federal control could lead to
more mining, industry and
ranching. Los Angeles is a
“bully” locally and across the
state and he would use the
“bully pulpit” to “stand up to
the bully,” whether that’s Los
Angeles or (Gov.) Jerry Brown.
Incumbent Rep. Paul Cook
(R): His statement said federal
lands should be more accessible and “managed to benefit
local communities and economies.” He cited his work to
protect the Alabama Hills and
its multiple uses, the need to
release Wilderness Study
Areas from restrictions and
the necessity to fully fund the
Payment In Lieu of Taxes program, which sends federal
dollars to local jurisdictions
containing non-taxable federal
lands.
The candidates were asked
to address the nation’s immigration laws, and the immigration issue in general, and
immigration from Syria and
the Middle East.
Dr. Rita Ramirez (D): “We
are a country of immigrants,”
and over time immigrants,
from the Irish to the Japanese
who were mistreated in World
War II, assimilate and help
shape “the future of
America.” The nation can’t
“forbid any one group” from
immigrating based on religion
or ancestry. “It’s totally unAmerican.”
Roger LaPlante (D): As a
border guard in East Germany
in the 1980s, he said he
understood immigration, but
now “we’re not obeying the
laws and following protocol”
for legal immigration, which
means the system is broken.
Illegal immigration is “big
business.” There needs to be
some compassion on the
issue. Singling out one group
for restrictions “is not
American.”
John Pinkerton (D) represented by Al Morrissette: The
benefits of immigration “far
outweigh the costs,” because
immigration creates diversity,
and there is “strength in
diversity.” All immigration
laws “can never be inhumane.”
Tim Donnelly (R): He
joined the Minute Man movement that publicized the
Capt. Jeff Schwing, arson investigator with the Olancha Cartago
Volunteer Fire Department, demonstrates the abilities of his partner Remington, a certified arson dog, at sniffing out accelerants
Thursday in Lone Pine. Looking on, from left, is Inyo County Sheriff
Bill Lutze and Lan Hogan, a member of CalFire.
Photo by Mike Chacanaca
FORUM
Continued from front page
Security, seniors and the disabled.” Instead of corporations or lobbyists, like the
NRA, “we need to get back to
citizen-based government.”
John Pinkerton (D) represented by Al Morrissette:
Pinkerton is a high school
counselor in the Victor Valley
who built his own home out
of old tires and recycled
material. In 2012 he was
elected to the Victor Valley
College Board, garnering
46,000 votes and spending
only $5,000. In his written
statement, he described himself as “a Kennedy Democrat,”
who leans on the conservative
side of the spectrum now.
Tim Donnelly (R): “Liberty
is really what’s at stake in
2016,” he said. He served two
terms in the California
Assembly. He said the government shouldn’t own as much
land as it does in Inyo
County, and referenced the
recent occupation of an
Oregon wildlife refuge and
the Bundy Ranch standoff in
Arizona as examples of people “standing up to defend”
the Constitution, whether it’s
popular or not.”
Incumbent Rep. Paul Cook
did not send in a written
opening statement.
The first question involved
PACE
Continued from front page
federal government looking at
bringing all the states’ PACE
programs together and doing
umbrella legislation but it is in
the very early stages right
now,” Shepherd said
Wednesday.
During the supervisors’
meeting, Shepherd explained
several glitches in the PACE
program that are causing
problems for property owners
and counties.
The Bishop City Council
voted to adopt PACE financing
for residents of the city, how
however, the program has not yet
been fully implemented,
Shepherd said.
The supervisors agreed to
re-visit the issue sometime
after August.
The supervisors also
approved the county’s updated Emergency Operations Plan.
Inyo County Administrator
Kevin Carunchio has said Inyo
County, like every county in
California, has an emergency
operations plan for how the
county, its departments and
its partners will react in
response to an emergency scenario.”
The board also continued
the state of local emergency
for the Death Valley Down but
Not Out emergency, the Gully
Washer emergency and the
Land of EVEN Less Water
emergency.
Look
who’s
turning
18!
Justin Michael Alvey
May 8, 1998
Happy Birthday, Sugar Pie!
Love, Mom, Mua & Ken
The Inyo Register
RELIGION
7
SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016
From the Pulpit
By the Creek
Smart but not very wise
A very clever escape artist
lives in our neighborhood.
She has four legs built for
speed, keen eyesight, an
inquisitive nose and selective
hearing.
She’s smart, but the question still begs to be asked,
“Don’t you know your freedom won’t last?”
She’s quite intelligent, but
certainly lacks any real wisdom. At least that’s what we
think each time we see our
neighbor’s dog race out of
her yard to join us on our
walk around the neighborhood.
A person (or dog) may be
intelligent, but knowing how
to put that intelligence to
work is another thing altogether. In this case, the dog
is smart, but not very wise.
Solomon was blessed by
God with wisdom and great
insight. His résumé found in
1 Kings 4:29-34 includes the
fact that his wisdom “was
greater than the wisdom of
all the people of the East,
and greater than all the wisdom of Egypt.” No question
that Solomon was a very
intelligent man and this
intelligence was demonstrated by knowledge and wise
speech.
A familiar story illustrating this combination of intelligence and wisdom is his
Linda Wisdom
Columnist
handling of two women both
claiming to be the mother of
a small baby. When Solomon
offered to divide the child
and give each woman half,
the real mother was willing
to give up her baby to let the
child live. Solomon knew
this would be the outcome,
awarded the child to its
mother, and amazed everyone with his wisdom.
Is there a difference
between intelligence and
wisdom? Both are important
and require diligence and
discipline to acquire.
I read recently that wisdom is often considered the
appropriate application of
intelligence – and that’s the
subtle difference. Knowing
the facts about something is
one thing. Acting wisely with
what you know is something
entirely different.
People who claim to know
the Bible, but don’t act on
what they know are a bit like
our neighbor’s dog, smart,
but not very wise.
Solomon wrote most of
the book of Proverbs and
had much to say about
searching for wisdom and
the rewards of applying
God’s wisdom to our lives.
In Proverbs 2:6 we are
reminded that “the Lord
gives wisdom; from His
mouth come knowledge and
understanding.” Solomon
also asks “How does a man
become wise?” and answers
with “the first step is to
trust and reverence the
Lord!” (Proverbs 1:7 TLB). In
the book of Romans Paul
reminded his readers of
God’s great wisdom when he
wrote “Oh, the depth of the
riches both of the wisdom
and knowledge of God … For
from Him and through Him
and to Him are all things….”
(Romans 11:33-36).
James talks of the importance of acquiring God’s wisdom in his book. He explains
that wisdom is more than
“intelligence;” it’s the ability
to live in a way that pleases
God and fulfills our responsibility to others.
James states “but the wisdom from above is first
pure, then peaceable, gentle,
reasonable, full of mercy and
good fruits, unwavering,
without hypocrisy” (James
3:17). Thank goodness that
the ever-practical James also
assures us that if we lack
this wisdom, we can ask and
God will provide what we
need – generously and without rebuke! (James 1:5)
Our neighbor’s dog is
smart enough to achieve her
freedom, but not wise
enough to understand it
won’t last. Her escape plan
has predictable consequences that she forgets.
There are also consequences for our actions, and
being wise is to search the
Scriptures for “wisdom that
leads to salvation through
faith which is in Christ
Jesus” (2 Timothy 3:15).
That wisdom leads to true
freedom!
(Linda Wisdom is a friend of
Bishop Creek Community
Church, an Evangelical Free
Church. We meet Sundays meet
Sundays at St. Timothy’s
Anglican Church at 700
Hobson Ave. (corner of Hobson
and Keough) at 11 am. 760872-7188. www.
BishopCreekCommunity.org)
Expect only the good
Expectation is vital to
your Life experience.
Whether positive or negative events, a leading causation of what takes place
is the expectation behind
it. We are spiritual and
emotional beings. We
become involved with matters that really don’t pertain to us. We symphonize,
rather them emphasize
with calamities that don’t
pertain to us. We project
theoretical prognostication
on news events that we
have little or no control
about. We are easily
swayed by limited opinions
of others we regard as
superior thinkers. In short,
we have let others, be it
parents, teachers or others,
shape our opinions and
expectations. Well it’s high
time we turn our future
around, and take control of
our life.
To begin with, we need
to focus our attention on
solutions and not the problem. We must realize that
problems are temporary
and solutions can be permanent. Divine intelligence
relies on our expectation
Rev. Walt Sharer
Columnist
ingredients necessary to
make it happen. On the
other hand, an expectancy
of good will give us the elements needed for the solution, provided we maintain
the expectation.
There is nothing wrong
with being aware of current
events, or of looking to the
stock market as long as
you realize you are not limited by predictions and
opinions of others. You are
a Divine Being, fully capable of going beyond what
others regard as facts.
Reality is not always what
you see, touch, taste, hear
or otherwise sense. The
Perfect Expression of God,
indwelling and executing
Infinite Intelligence is
always available and present. You are the agent of
the Divine here and now.
God has Life by means of
you, through you.
Through you life happens. Your wishes and
desires are reflected in
your attitudes and expectations. Nothing happens to
you unless it happens
through you. You are in
control. Unless you allow
others to lead you, you
direct the manifestations in
your experience. Good or
bad, you determine how
Divine Mind, Infinite
Intelligence and Perfect
Peace will respond.
In the Book of Genesis
we are told that God
looked at all that was created and called it good.
There are many things we
might not call good, but
even those things we might
not have wanted are perfect responses to our
beliefs, thoughts, and
actions. We set the tone for
Divine manifestation. God
does not see imitation or
negation, only the Perfect
result of the Law of Mind,
whose first law is from
Jesus, who said, start utilizing your divinity to know
good and only good. Take a
pass on entering into negative conversations. Enter
into praises sessions rather
than complaining seminars.
Life is meant to be whole,
happy and complete.
Goodness is never boring,
and always productive.
Enjoy it to the maximum!
God is Love and Loving
You Right Now!
(The Rev. Dr. Walt
Sharer is minister at Bishop
Church of Religious Science,
located at 129 E. Line St.,
Bishop. Rev. Freda Lindsay
and Rev. Walt officiate the
weekly, Sunday services at
10 a.m. You can hear Rev.
Walt’s message on “The
Devotional Hour” on Sierra
Wave KSRW 92.5 FM
Sunday mornings at 8:30.
The church can be reached
at (760) 873-4195 for more
information.)
Living up to a high price
Let me tell you a story I
heard recently. It took
place on one of the larger
Pacific island chains some
years back. According to
custom, when a man settled on who it was he wanted for a wife he would
approach her father and
bargain for the bride price.
The usual payment was in
cows, from one to six. The
more cows, the more
expensive the woman, and
the more that was expected
of her in the way of beauty
and household skills.
Obviously a one or two cow
woman was not very highly
regarded. Conversely, living
up to the expectations of a
six-cow price was pretty
steep. That woman had to
be very special.
As the story goes, there
was a man who was considered to be very competent
in all things, except love.
He worked hard and
shrewdly as a trader and
became very rich, but he
never seemed to be interested in a wife. Never, until
the day he finally went to a
local chief with whom he
had traded.
Philip Severi
Columnist
The chief was surprised.
No one had ever made an
offer for his daughter. She
was rather plain, sometimes called the equivalent
of the runt of the litter.
Her household skills
matched her looks. Two
cows was all the chief had
ever expected for her, at
most. The bargain was
struck. A few days later the
trader ceremoniously came
for his bride and took her
to the island on which he
lived.
Some months later the
chief had occasion to go
Get the news. Get the story.
The Inyo Register
www.inyoregister.com
visit his daughter in her
new home. He almost did
not recognize her. Her
beauty and poise far surpassed his best memories
of her, even as a little
child. But this was not just
about looks. Her household
was efficient and perfectly
in order. This wonderful
woman was his daughter!
At the first chance, the
chief took the trader aside
and asked him how he had
worked such a miraculous
change in his daughter.
The trader winked and
reminded the chief of the
bride price, not two cows,
or three, or even six. The
price paid was eight cows,
something the trader had
told his new wife once they
had arrived at her new
home. So when the time of
day came for the women to
get together and talk about
their husbands and families, the chief’s daughter
only smiled. She knew
without a doubt that she
was valued and loved, and
it transformed her.
This story has several
themes. Partners in a marriage will always rest
securely in the relationship
if they know they are truly
loved and valued. Such a
love is transformative. In
addition, we are told in
Ephesians Five that the
marriage relationship is a
picture of Christ’s relationship with the church.
Christ died for each of us,
proving how high a price
he was willing to pay to
redeem us, both corporately and individually. We are
valued and loved, beyond
any doubt. Finally, Christ
valued each of us so highly
as to die for us, members
of the church or not. So,
who are we, all bought with
a blood price, to devalue
and look down on another?
Instead of minimizing or
ignoring others, we should
be doing what we can to
lead them to a closer relationship with God while at
the same time doing what
we can to build them up.
(Philip Severi, a former
Bishop resident, previously
wrote a weekly column for
The Inyo Register. He contributes to this page from
his home in Twain Harte.)
A prayer
for you
Prayer is often repeated
in the Christian community.
It is commanded by our
Heavenly Father so we
should heed this admonition.
Something often forgotten regarding this blessed
privilege is that Christ our
heavenly brother is always
in prayer before His heavenly Father.
His prayer is specifically
for all those who love Him.
Although our love may
be weak and wimpy He
still prays for us in our
sickness, sorrow and sin.
John 17 is a precious
example of Jesus praying
for us. The words from
His cross are for you.
“Father forgive them, they
know not what they do.”
What a comfort to know
that His presence is not
dependent on my prayer.
With His prayer behind
and ahead of us, can we
fail? Your heavenly brother is your beloved substitute taking your sins into
His perfect body.
He was condemned to
Hell for you that you can
be declared perfect in
prayer and every other
good work.
When the week is not
worth living look to the
Lord of months, weeks,
days and years, and know
that His prayers sustain
you.
It is Mother’s Day weekend, a great time to cherish those we love (our
beloved) in a unique way.
Let your mother know
Rev. Kent Puls
Columnist
that Jesus prays every day
for her in compassion and
concern. It is good to have
the prayers of the one who
is the same yesterday,
today, and forever. It is
good to have Him interceding for us beyond
human needs.
Take the time to read
His royal prayer for you
and the church of all time.
In John 17 He offers His
best brilliance and beauty
to the Father on your
behalf.
See you Sunday.
(The Rev. Kent Puls
serves both Grace
Lutheran and Mammoth
Lakes Lutheran churches.
Grace Lutheran Church is
located at 711 N. Fowler St.
Bishop. Sunday services
are at 10:45 a.m.
Mammoth Lakes Lutheran
Church is located at 379
Old Mammoth Road.,
Mammoth. Sunday service
us at 8:45 a.m. For more
information, call (760) 8729791.)
CHURCH OF RELIGIOUS SCIENCE
REV. FREDA LINDSAY, MINISTER
rev. dr. walt sharer
129 East Line Street, Phone 873-4195 & 872-4686
Sunday Service: 10 a.m. - Meditation: 9:40 a.m.
Wednesday, 5:30 p.m.: Prayer Group
Practitioners: Rev. Dr. Juanella Evans
Please call Church Office for an appointment “the church for the sierras”
first southern baptist church
251 sierra st.
(Next to Starbucks)
services sunday 11:00 a.m.
Bible Study - Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. • Pastor Tony Unger - 760-873-6022
Dress casual or dress up • www.churchforthesierras.com
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
CHURCH
2956 W. Line St., Bishop
Sunday School . . . . . . . . 10:00 am
Church . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00 am
Wednesday Evening . . . 7:30 p.m.
Reading Room Open
Tuesday 10 a.m.-1 p.m. and after Services
Childcare provided
First Baptist Church
of Big Pine
293 Chestnut St.
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m. & 6 p.m.
Wednesday Prayer Meet. 6:15 p.m.
Pastor Tim Toppass
(760) 387-0024 & (760) 938-1153
Valley Presbyterian
Church
Fri. Bible Study 1:00 p.m.
Sunday Worship & Sunday School 11 a.m.
873-8960 • 2912 W. Line • Bishop
Bishop Creek
Community Church
An Evangelical Free Church • Kelly Larson, Pastor
Come and join us!
700 Hobson St. (at Keough and Hobson Sts.)
11:00 a.m. Sundays at St. Timothy’s Anglican Church
Luke: “Destination: Jerusalem”
Luke 9:52-61
www.bishopcreek.org
The Inyo Register
8 SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016 Mathletes teams end their seasons with success
Varsity squad
takes first place
in its league
Register Staff
Both the Bishop Union
High School varsity and
junior varsity mathletes finished up successful seasons,
with the varsity team earning the league championship and the junior varsity
team coming in with a
strong second place.
Leading the way were the
Varsity Mathletes who competed in their last meet of
the season in Bishop on
April 20. Bishop won not
only the meet, but also the
league’s high-point champion team of the season.
Bishop earned 141 points
over the course of the
2015/2016
season,
Tehachapi earned second
place team honors with 125
points and Rosamond came
in third with 118 points.
BUHS senior Jamie Shultz
was Bishop’s high-point
individual scorer for the
year with 40 points and
earned an individual finish
... when
“compared
to
teams like
Tehachapi High
School that are
three times our
size, it really puts
into perspective
how talented the
team really is.
”
– DeeDee Buchholz,
Mathletes coach
of second place out of the
approximately 70 students
who regularly compete from
10 different schools.
Other top scorers for
Bishop were junior Duncan
Reid, who earned 32 points
and an individual sixth
place finish, and senior
Logan Stephenson, who tied
for a 14th-place finish with
18 points.
The BUHS junior varsity
team finished second place
overall in the league, behind
Desert High School.
The JV team had strong
individual performances
from Jim Tomasek, who tied
for an individual third-place
finish with 27 points, Carter
Silva who tied for a fifthplace finish, Dylan Fitt who
tied for eight-place with 21
points,
and
Jeanine
Lomaintewa who finished in
13 th place individually,
earning 17 points.
The
mathletes
are
coached by BUHS math
instructor DeeDee Buchholz,
who said, “I love coaching
mathletes! These kids are so
outstanding and I just love
spending time with them.
Winning is certainly fun but
winning alongside teammates who are just as kind
as they are smart is extremely rewarding. The JV
Mathletes team has so much
depth that I am certain
BUHS will see success in the
future. The varsity team
took home first in the league
which is outstanding in
itself, but when compared
to teams like Tehachapi
High School that are three
times our size, it really puts
The Bishop Union High School varsity mathletes team is made up of, from left to, top row, Liam Grah,
Dezert Kiddoo, Jamie Shultz, Dani DeRousseau, Emily Ball, William Moore, Chet Shultz, Makayla
McDevitt and Duncan Reid; botton row, Zoe Anderson, Anna Brown, Joey Harvey, Alan Torres, Sam
Hess, David Chavez, Logan Stephenson and Ethan Lamb.
Photo submitted
into perspective how talented the team really is.
Congrats to all my Mathletes,
you have made your coach
TV SATURDAY
proud!”
The Mathletes Awards
Ceremony will be held on
Tuesday, May 17 th at 5:15
p.m. in the BUHS theater
and is open to anyone who
would like to support and
celebrate the teams.
FOR
saTurday 7 May 2016
B
2
4
5
6
7
8
9
11
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
41
42
43
44
48
64
65
66
67
69
70
79
L
2
4
5
50
7
9
11
28
602
603
772
109
113
125
361
362
121
251
253
256
132
119
790
179
303
326
451
453
129
152
181
135
165
255
560
567
356
315
141
146
139
384
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
41
42
43
44
48
64
65
66
67
69
70
79
L
2
4
5
50
7
9
11
28
602
603
772
109
113
125
361
362
121
251
253
256
132
119
790
179
303
326
451
453
129
152
181
135
165
255
560
567
356
315
141
146
139
384
sporTs
neWs/TalK
Kids
B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV
C S1 S2
10 aM
10:30
11 aM
11:30
12 pM
12:30
1 pM
1:30
2 pM
2:30
3 pM
3:30
4 pM
4:30
Stories End in Thanks
PGA Tour Golf Wells Fargo Championship, Third Round. From Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, N.C.
Sports Central Best Pan Ever!
Celebrity Page
2 2 (KCBS) Paid Program Coffee Bar
142nd Kentucky Derby The Triple Crown season begins with the 142nd running of the Kentucky Derby.
NHL Hockey: Penguins at Capitals
4 3 (KNBC) (9:30) NHL Hockey St. Louis Blues at Dallas Stars. Western Conference Semifinal, game 5.
Dream Quest
Hatched
Animal Atlas
Zoo Clues
Coolest Places On the Spot
Paid Program
5
5 (KTLA) Dog Town, USA Dog Whisperer Dog Whisperer Dog Whisperer Dog Whisperer Save-Shelter
Nature
NOVA
NOVA A city of stone.
Time Scanners “Petra”
China’s Challenges
Antique Show Antique Show
(KOCE) Antiques Roadshow “Detroit”
Sea Rescue
Wildlife Docs
Rock the Park Born to Explore World of X Games
30 for 30
Paid Program Vista L.A.
Eyewitness News 4:00PM
7 7 (KABC) Ocean Mys.
Coolest Places PiYo Workout! World of X Games
30 for 30
How the World CIZE Dance
Paid Program World News
19
(KOLO) Rock the Park Born to Explore Animal Adv
Career Day
WHADDYADO Wild America
Hollywood
Real Life 101
7 Day Spot Free Paid Program 7 Day Spot Free REAL-Diego
Guilt Free Fry Paid Program
9 9 (KCAL) 7 Day Spot Free Larry King Spc. Aqua Kids
LifeLock
I Love Lucy
I Love Lucy
I Love Lucy
I Love Lucy
I Love Lucy
Xplor. Planet
Outer Space
Earth 2050
I Love Lucy
I Love Lucy
11 (KTTV) Paid Program Paid Program Fighting Can.
Celtic Thunder Heritage Celtic and Irish roots.
Three Nights Three Days
Rick Steves’ Dynamic Europe: Amsterdam, Prague, Berlin
George Perris Burt Bacharach
28 28 (KCET) Burt Bacharach’s Best (My Music Presents)
30 for 30
2015 XTERRA USA Championship Hollywood
World News
7News at 5PM Saturday
2
(KMGH) Rock the Park Born to Explore Paid Program World of X Games
142nd Kentucky Derby The Triple Crown season begins with the 142nd running of the Kentucky Derby.
NHL Hockey: Penguins at Capitals
4
(KUSA) (9:30) NHL Hockey St. Louis Blues at Dallas Stars. Western Conference Semifinal, game 5.
PGA Tour Golf Wells Fargo Championship, Third Round. From Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, N.C.
Paid Program Evening News CBS4 News at 5
7
(KCNC) Paid Program Paid Program Stories End in Thanks
College Softball Texas A&M at Auburn.
E:60
NBA Basketball Toronto Raptors at Miami Heat. Eastern Conference Semifinal, game 3.
SportsCenter
8 140 206 (ESPN) College Softball
SportsCenter Special
Canelo/Khan
30 for 30
30 for 30
College Lacrosse Big Ten Tournament, Final: Teams TBA.
15 144 209 (ESPN2) Welcome/NFL Welcome/NFL SportsCenter Special
The Auto Show “New York”
West Coast Customs
NHRA Drag Racing NHRA Springnationals. From Houston, Texas.
(FXSP) Tennis PowerShares Legends Charleston. From Charleston, S.C.
Law & Order “Nowhere Man”
Law & Order
›› Clash of the Titans (2010) Sam Worthington, Liam Neeson.
› Wrath of the Titans (2012) Sam Worthington, Liam Neeson.
22 138 245 (TNT) Law & Order “Evil Breeds”
›› Due Date (2010) Robert Downey Jr., Zach Galifianakis.
››› The 40-Year-Old Virgin (2005) Steve Carell, Catherine Keener.
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
13 139 247 (TBS) (9:00) ››› I Love You, Man
NCIS
NCIS
NCIS
NCIS “Yankee White”
NCIS “Dead Man Talking”
105 242 (USA) (9:00) English Premier League Soccer
Paid Program Toni Braxton: Unbreak My Heart (2016, Docudrama) Lex Scott Davis.
››› What’s Love Got to Do With It (1993) Angela Bassett, Laurence Fishburne.
›› Why Did I Get Married? (2007) Jill Scott
108 252 (LIFE) CIZE Dance
The Other Wife (2016, Suspense) Kimberley Hews, Tonya Kay.
My Mother’s Secret (2012) Nicole de Boer, Yannick Bisson.
A Mother’s Nightmare (2012) Annabeth Gish, Jessica Lowndes.
109 253 (LMN) (9:00) Lost Boy (2015, Drama)
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws
9 182 278 (DISC) Fat N’ Furious: Rolling Thunder Fat N’ Furious: Rolling Thunder Street Outlaws The 405’s top five. Street Outlaws
Long Lost Family
Long Lost Family
Long Lost Family
26 183 280 (TLC) Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress My First Home My First Home My First Home My First Home Long Lost Family
Dogs 101 “Designer Dogs”
Insane Pools: Off the Deep End
Tanked: Unfiltered
Tanked: Unfiltered
24 184 282 (AP) Extraordinary The Secret Life Dogs 101: New Dogs 101: New Dogs 101 “Best Family Dogs”
Restoration
Restoration
Restoration
Restoration
Restoration
Restoration
Restoration
Vice World Sp Restoration
Alone
Alone “The Knife’s Edge”
120 269 (HIST) Restoration
Criminal Minds “Amplification”
Criminal Minds “To Hell ...”
Criminal Minds “... And Back”
Criminal Minds
24 to Life
24 to Life “Reckless Decisions”
25 118 265 (A&E) Zombie House Flipping
The Rifleman
The Rifleman
The Rifleman
The Rifleman
›› The Shakiest Gun in the West (1968, Western) Don Knotts, Barbara Rhoades.
›› The Reluctant Astronaut (1967) Don Knotts, Leslie Nielsen.
254 (AMC) The Rifleman
›››› The Hustler (1961, Drama) Paul Newman, Jackie Gleason, George C. Scott.
››› Them! (1954) James Whitmore.
(:15) ››› The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) Michael Rennie.
132 256 (TCM) (9:00) ››› Dark of the Sun
››› Steel Magnolias (1989, Comedy-Drama) Sally Field, Dolly Parton.
(:15) ›› Failure to Launch (2006) Matthew McConaughey, Sarah Jessica Parker.
›› Monster-in-Law (2005) Jennifer Lopez.
180 311 (FREE) Mamma Mia!
K.C. Undercover Walk the Prank Stuck/Middle
The 2016 Radio Disney Music Awards
K.C. Undercover
Liv and Maddie Liv and Maddie Girl Meets
Bunk’d
17 173 291 (DISN) Bunk’d
We Bare Bears Uncle Grandpa Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Steven Universe Steven Universe Steven Universe Steven Universe Scooby-Doo! and Kiss: Rock
176 296 (TOON) Wrld, Gumball Clarence
House Hunters Renovation
Move-In Ready Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
112 229 (HGTV) House Hunters Renovation
Cake Masters
Cupcake Wars
Chopped Junior
Chopped “Cinco de Mayo Fiesta” Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive
110 231 (FOOD) Spring Baking Championship
Two/Half Men
›› Iron Man 2 (2010, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow, Don Cheadle.
››› Iron Man 3 (2013, Action) Robert Downey Jr. A powerful enemy tests Tony Stark’s true mettle.
››› Thor
137 248 (FX) Two/Half Men
Anacondas: Trail of Blood (2009) Crystal Allen, John Rhys-Davies.
››› The Fifth Element (1997, Science Fiction) Bruce Willis, Gary Oldman, Ian Holm.
122 244 (SYFY) Piranhaconda ›› Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid (2004, Suspense)
Manzo’d With
Manzo’d With
(:31) Manzo’d With Children
Don’t--Tardy
Don’t--Tardy
Don’t--Tardy
Don’t--Tardy
Don’t--Tardy
Don’t--Tardy
Don’t--Tardy
Don’t--Tardy
Don’t--Tardy
129 273 (BRAVO) Manzo’d With
Botched “I Love New Work”
Botched “Boob-Watch”
Botched “The Bacon Bra”
Botched “House of Horrors”
Botched
Botched
114 236 (E!) E! News Weekend
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
truInside “The Groundlings”
Beach Volleyball NCAA Women’s Tournament.
204 246 (TRUTV) truTV Top Funniest
Bizarre Foods America
Man v. Food
Man v. Food
Street Eats
Street Eats
Food Paradise
Food Paradise
Food Paradise
215 277 (TRAV) Bizarre Foods America
Insp. Station
Praise the Lord
Max Lucado
Christian News Praise the Lord
The Bible
Precious Memories
260 372 (TBN) Ishine Knect
College Softball Santa Clara at BYU. Game one of a double header.
College Softball Santa Clara at BYU. Game one of a double header.
American Ride The Story Trek
374 (BYU) College Football
Golden Girls
Mom’s Day Away (2014, Drama) Bonnie Somerville, Ona Grauer.
Perfect on Paper (2014, Romance) Lindsay Hartley, Drew Fuller.
I Do, I Do, I Do (2015, Romance) Shawn Roberts, Autumn Reeser.
185 312 (HALL) Golden Girls
Loud House
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
Power Rangers Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and SpongeBob
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
171 300 (NICK) SpongeBob
(:13) ›› Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (1997) Mike Myers.
(:26) ››› Dazed and Confused (1993, Drama) Jason London.
Longest Yard
107 249 (COM) (9:29) ›› Dinner for Schmucks (2010) Steve Carell, Paul Rudd.
›› Final Destination 2 (2003, Horror) Ali Larter, A. J. Cook.
› The Final Destination (2009) Bobby Campo, Shantel VanSanten.
Cops
Cops
Cops
16 168 325 (SPIKE) (9:00) ›› Final Destination (2000) Ali Larter
Instant Mom
(:24) Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
106 (TVL) (:12) Instant Mom
115 235 (ESQTV) Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Friday Night Tykes: Steel Country Friday Night Tykes: Steel Country Friday Night Tykes: Steel Country Friday Night Tykes: Steel Country Friday Night Tykes: Steel Country Friday Night Tykes: Steel Country
saTurday 7 May 2016
B
2
4
5
6
7
8
9
11
MoVies
MoVies
sporTs
neWs/TalK
Kids
B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV
C S1 S2
5 pM
5:30
6 pM
6:30
7 pM
7:30
8 pM
8:30
9 pM
9:30
10 pM
10:30
11 pM
11:30
Evening News CBS 2 News
Paid Program Paid Program The Insider
Scorpion “Super Fun Guys”
Criminal Minds “Future Perfect”
48 Hours
CBS 2 News
SoCal Week
2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News
NBC 4 News
Access Hollywood
Extra
Saturday Night Live
NBC 4 News
Sat. Night Live
4 3 (KNBC) (4:15) NHL Hockey Pittsburgh Penguins at Washington Capitals.
Name Game
KTLA News at 6 News at 6:30
Two/Half Men
Two/Half Men
Friends
Friends
Two/Half Men
Two/Half Men
KTLA 5 News at 10
News at 11
Person-Interest
5
5 (KTLA) Name Game
NewsHour Wk The Lawrence Welk Show
Antiques Roadshow “Omaha”
Masterpiece Mystery!
Call the Midwife
Masterpiece Classic
Doctor Blake Mysteries
(KOCE) LAaRT
Sports Zone
Wheel Fortune Jeopardy!
Eyewitness News
Eyewitness News 11:00PM
7 7 (KABC) NBA Countdown NBA Basketball Golden State Warriors at Portland Trail Blazers.
KOLO 8 News MomsEveryday Jeopardy!
Wheel Fortune What Would You Do?
KOLO 8 at 11
(:35) Castle
19
(KOLO) NBA Countdown NBA Basketball Golden State Warriors at Portland Trail Blazers.
Family Feud
Sports Central CA Bountiful
KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM
KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM
KCAL 9 News Sports Central Mike & Molly
Mike & Molly
9 9 (KCAL) Paid Program Best Buys Alan Family Feud
TMZ
How I Met
How I Met
Houdini & Doyle
American Grit “Charlie Foxtrot”
Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News
Party Over Here Cooper Barrett
11 (KTTV) Fox 11 Weekend News
BBC Newsnight McLaughlin
California’s Gold “Laguna”
Luther
The Fixer
New Tricks “The Fame Game”
Luther
28 28 (KCET) Burt Bacharach’s Best
Sports Xtra
RightThisMinute 7News at 10PM (:35) Castle
RightThisMinute (:05) Comedy.TV
2
(KMGH) NBA Countdown NBA Basketball Golden State Warriors at Portland Trail Blazers.
1st Lo Crown
Saturday Night Live
9News at 10pm (:35) Saturday Night Live
Your Move
(:38) Extra
4
(KUSA) (4:15) NHL Hockey Pittsburgh Penguins at Washington Capitals.
Criminal Minds “Future Perfect”
48 Hours
News
(:35) Blue Bloods “No Regrets”
(:35) The Good Wife
Rizzoli & Isles
7
(KCNC) Paid Program Paid Program Scorpion “Super Fun Guys”
30 for 30
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
8 140 206 (ESPN) SportsCenter Special
30 for 30
30 for 30
NBA Tonight
SportsCenter Special
NBA Tonight
15 144 209 (ESPN2) College Volleyball NCAA Tournament, Final: Teams TBA.
Angels Pre.
MLB Baseball Tampa Bay Rays at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
Angels Post
Angels Weekly Before the Bigs
World Poker Tour
(FXSP) Cuba
›› Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides (2011, Adventure) Johnny Depp, Penélope Cruz.
The Day the Earth Stood Still
22 138 245 (TNT) ›› Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007, Adventure) Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom.
2 Broke Girls
2 Broke Girls
2 Broke Girls
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Full Frontal
The Detour
13 139 247 (TBS) 2 Broke Girls
NCIS “Under Covers”
NCIS “Chimera”
NCIS “Jet Lag”
NCIS “Seek”
NCIS “Berlin”
Modern Family Modern Family
105 242 (USA) NCIS Biohazard isolation.
›› Tyler Perry’s Madea Goes to Jail (2009, Comedy) Tyler Perry.
The Real MVP: The Wanda Durant Story (2016) Cassandra Freeman.
(:02) › Tyler Perry’s Temptation (2013) Jurnee Smollett-Bell.
108 252 (LIFE) (3:30) Why Did I Get Married?
A Mother’s Instinct (2015, Suspense) Josie Bissett, Spencer Drever.
A Mother’s Revenge (2015, Suspense) Jamie Luner, Steven Brand.
A Mother’s Instinct (2015)
109 253 (LMN) A Mother’s Revenge (2015, Suspense) Jamie Luner, Steven Brand.
Deadliest Catch “100 Injury Rate” Deadliest Catch “Legends of the Bering Sea, Part II” A boat special aboard the ships.
Deadliest Catch “100 Injury Rate”
9 182 278 (DISC) Deadliest Catch “Swedish Twins” Deadliest Catch
Dateline on TLC
Dateline: Real Life Mysteries
Dateline: Real Life Mysteries
Dateline on TLC
Dateline on TLC
Dateline: Real Life Mysteries
26 183 280 (TLC) Dateline on TLC
My Cat From Hell
My Cat From Hell
My Cat From Hell
(:01) Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet (:02) Dr. Jeff: Extra Dose
(:03) My Cat From Hell
24 184 282 (AP) My Cat From Hell
American Pickers
American Pickers
American Pickers
American Pickers
American Pickers
Car Hunters
Car Hunters
120 269 (HIST) Alone “The Beasts of Night”
The First 48
The First 48 “Fatal Call”
The First 48 “Dark Waters”
The First 48: Drugs Kill “Missing” The First 48: Drugs Kill
(:03) The First 48: Murder for Hire
25 118 265 (A&E) The First 48
››› Secretariat (2010) Diane Lane. The story of the 1973 Triple Crown winner.
The Night Manager
(:05) The Night Manager
254 (AMC) Reluctant Astr. ›› The Ghost and Mr. Chicken (1966) Don Knotts, Joan Staley.
››› The Catered Affair (1956) Bette Davis.
(:15) ›› Another Man’s Poison (1951) Bette Davis, Gary Merrill.
Six Men Get
Grandmo
132 256 (TCM) ›››› All About Eve (1950, Drama) Bette Davis, Anne Baxter, Celeste Holm.
››› Twinsters (2015, Documentary)
(:45) ››› The Parent Trap (1998) Lindsay Lohan.
180 311 (FREE) Monster-in-Law (:45) ››› Pitch Perfect (2012) Anna Kendrick. College students enter an a cappella competition.
Jessie
Girl Meets
Backstage
Best Friends
K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover Lab Rats: Bio. Lab Rats: Bio. Best Friends
K.C. Undercover
17 173 291 (DISN) Austin & Ally
› The Smurfs (2011, Comedy) Hank Azaria, Neil Patrick Harris.
Dragon Ball Z King of the Hill King of the Hill Cleveland Show Cleveland Show American Dad Family Guy
Family Guy
176 296 (TOON) Scooby-Doo! and Kiss: Rock
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Property Brothers “Chris & Mike” Property Brothers
House Hunters Renovation
Bought Farm
Bought Farm
112 229 (HGTV) Flip or Flop
Chopped “Mother’s Day”
Chopped “Sitcom Moms”
Chopped
Chopped “Mother’s Day”
Chopped “Sitcom Moms”
Chopped
110 231 (FOOD) Chopped “Momumental”
›› Thor: The Dark World (2013, Action) Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman.
››› Captain America: The First Avenger (2011) Chris Evans.
137 248 (FX) (4:30) ››› Thor (2011, Action) Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman, Anthony Hopkins.
›› Fast & Furious (2009, Action) Vin Diesel, Paul Walker.
›› Fast Five (2011, Action) Vin Diesel. Dom Toretto and company ramp up the action in Brazil.
122 244 (SYFY) ›› The Fast and the Furious (2001) Vin Diesel, Paul Walker.
Don’t--Tardy
Don’t--Tardy
To Be Announced
129 273 (BRAVO) Don’t--Tardy
›› It’s Complicated (2009) Meryl Streep.
114 236 (E!) Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows ›› It’s Complicated (2009, Romance-Comedy) Meryl Streep, Steve Martin.
Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
204 246 (TRUTV) Beach Volleyball
Ghost Adventures
Ghost Adventures
Deadly Possessions
The Dead Files
The Dead Files
215 277 (TRAV) Ghost Adventures “New Orleans” Ghost Adventures
Hour Power: Schuller
Billy Graham Classic Crusades
› Left Behind (2000, Suspense) Kirk Cameron, Brad Johnson.
JUCE TV
260 372 (TBN) In Touch W/Charles Stanley
Riding Tornado (2009, Drama) Danny Keogh, Matthew Dylan Roberts, Quentin Krog.
Austin Stevens Adventures
Random Acts
American Ride The Story Trek Riding Tornado (2009, Drama)
374 (BYU) Passport: Earth
A Country Wedding (2015) Jesse Metcalfe, Autumn Reeser.
Love’s Complicated (2015) Holly Marie Combs, Ben Bass.
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
185 312 (HALL) Dater’s Handbook (2016) Kristoffer Polaha, Meghan Markle.
SpongeBob
Thundermans Thundermans Henry Danger Henry Danger Henry Danger School of Rock Bella, Bulldogs Game Shakers Full House
Full House
Friends
Friends
171 300 (NICK) Loud House
(:16) ››› Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008) Jason Segel, Kristen Bell, Mila Kunis.
› Walk of Shame (2014, Comedy) Elizabeth Banks, James Marsden.
107 249 (COM) (4:36) ›› The Longest Yard (2005, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock.
Jail: Las Vegas Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Jail: Las Vegas
16 168 325 (SPIKE) Cops
›› Sister Act (1992, Musical Comedy) Whoopi Goldberg, Maggie Smith.
Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond George Lopez George Lopez King of Queens King of Queens
106 (TVL) Reba
›› Transporter 2 (2005, Action) Jason Statham, Amber Valletta.
››› Fight Club (1999, Suspense) Brad Pitt, Edward Norton.
115 235 (ESQTV) Friday Night Tykes: Steel Country ›› Ninja Assassin (2009, Action) Rain, Naomie Harris, Ben Miles.
The Inyo Register
TV SUN./MON.
SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016 9
FOR
sunday 8 May 2016
B
2
4
5
6
7
8
9
11
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
41
42
43
44
48
64
65
66
67
69
70
79
L
2
4
5
50
7
9
11
28
602
603
772
109
113
125
361
362
121
251
253
256
132
119
790
179
303
326
451
453
129
152
181
135
165
255
560
567
356
315
141
146
139
384
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
41
42
43
44
48
64
65
66
67
69
70
79
L
2
4
5
50
7
9
11
28
602
603
772
109
113
125
361
362
121
251
253
256
132
119
790
179
303
326
451
453
129
152
181
135
165
255
560
567
356
315
141
146
139
384
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
41
42
43
44
48
64
65
66
67
69
70
79
L
2
4
5
50
7
9
11
28
602
603
772
109
113
125
361
362
121
251
253
256
132
119
790
179
303
326
451
453
129
152
181
135
165
255
560
567
356
315
141
146
139
384
neWs/TalK
Kids
B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV
MoVies
sporTs
neWs/TalK
Kids
B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV
C S1 S2
5 pM
5:30
6 pM
6:30
7 pM
7:30
8 pM
8:30
9 pM
9:30
10 pM
10:30
11 pM
11:30
Evening News CBS 2 News at 6PM
60 Minutes
Madam Secretary “Vartius”
The Good Wife “End”
Elementary “A Difference in Kind” CBS 2 News
Ent. Tonight
2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News
Nightly News
NBC 4 News at 6pm
Dateline: On Assignment
Little Big Shots
Carmichael
Crowded
Dateline NBC
NBC 4 News
NBC 4 News
4 3 (KNBC) NBC 4 News
KTLA News at 6 News at 6:30
Person of Interest “Beta”
Elementary “A Stitch in Time”
KTLA 5 News Sunday Edition
KTLA 5 News at 10
News at 11
Bensinger
5
5 (KTLA) Divine Secrets-Ya-Ya Sisterhd
Call the Midwife
Masterpiece Mystery!
Masterpiece Classic
Inside
(KOCE) Studio SoCaL NewsHour Wk Travel Detective Steves’ Europe Doctor Blake Mysteries
World News
News
Eye on L.A.
America’s Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time “Last Rites”
The Family “Election Day”
Quantico “Closure”
Eyewitness News 11:00PM
7 7 (KABC) Eyewitness
World News
KOLO 8 6:30
America’s Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time “Last Rites”
The Family “Election Day”
Quantico “Closure”
KOLO 8 at 11
(:35) Castle
19
(KOLO) KOLO 8 at 5pm Reno 411
Sports Central Mike & Molly
Mike & Molly
2 Broke Girls
2 Broke Girls
KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM
KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM
KCAL 9 News Sports Central Joel Osteen
Bobby Schuller
9 9 (KCAL) Raw Travel
Modern Family Modern Family Bordertown
The Simpsons The Simpsons Bob’s Burgers Family Guy
Last Man-Earth Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News
The Simpsons TMZ
11 (KTTV) Fox 11 Weekend News
Artbound
SoCal
California’s Gold
Father Brown
Shetland “Dead Water - Part 2”
Vera Son of a prominent family is murdered.
Father Brown
28 28 (KCET) Full Frame
The Family “Election Day”
Quantico “Closure”
7News at 10PM News
Castle
Scandal
2
(KMGH) America’s Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time “Last Rites”
Little Big Shots
Carmichael
Crowded
Dateline NBC
9News at 10pm 9News
Whacked Out
Paid Program Paid Program Top Blower
4
(KUSA) Dateline: On Assignment
Madam Secretary “Vartius”
The Good Wife “End”
Elementary “A Difference in Kind” News
AutoNation All Blue Bloods “Loss of Faith”
Rizzoli & Isles “Phoenix Rising”
7
(KCNC) 60 Minutes
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
8 140 206 (ESPN) MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at New York Yankees. From Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, N.Y.
World of X Games
E:60
30 for 30
MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at New York Yankees.
15 144 209 (ESPN2) 2016 Invictus Games Opening Ceremony.
West Coast Customs
World Poker Tour
World Poker Tour
UFC Main Event
World Poker Tour
World Poker Tour
(FXSP) Red Bull Cliff Diving
Inside the NBA
NBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at Oklahoma City Thunder.
Law & Order
22 138 245 (TNT) NBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at Oklahoma City Thunder.
(:15) ›› Oz the Great and Powerful (2013, Fantasy) James Franco, Mila Kunis, Rachel Weisz.
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
The Detour
The Detour
13 139 247 (TBS) (4:00) ››› Twister (1996)
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Motive “Fallen”
Law & Order: SVU
105 242 (USA) Law & Order: SVU
The Real MVP: The Wanda Durant Story (2016) Cassandra Freeman.
›› Tyler Perry’s Madea Goes to Jail (2009, Comedy) Tyler Perry.
Real MVP: Wanda Durant
108 252 (LIFE) ›› Lila & Eve (2015, Suspense) Viola Davis, Jennifer Lopez.
Mother of All Lies (2015) Francesca Eastwood, Jennifer Copping.
Where’s My Baby? (2016, Suspense) Nicole De Boer, Gina Holden.
Mother of All Lies (2015, Drama)
109 253 (LMN) Where’s My Baby? (2016, Suspense) Nicole De Boer, Gina Holden.
Naked and Afraid: Tough
Naked and Afraid: Tough
Naked and Afraid: Tough
Naked and Afraid: Uncensored
Naked and Afraid
(:01) Naked and Afraid
9 182 278 (DISC) Naked and Afraid: Tough
Sister Wives “Countdown to the New Season”
Sister Wives The aftermath of Meri’s online dating.
(:01) Single Dad Seeking...
(:07) Sister Wives
26 183 280 (TLC) Sister Wives “Meri Catfished”
River Monsters: Unhooked
River Monsters: Unhooked
River Monsters: Jeremy’s Fav
How to Catch a River Monster
(:04) River Monsters
How to Catch a River Monster
24 184 282 (AP) River Monsters: Unhooked
American Pickers
American Pickers
American Pickers
American Pickers “The Superfan” American Pickers
(:03) American Pickers
120 269 (HIST) American Pickers “Motor City”
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Intervention “Luke; Shantel”
Intervention “Kacy”
Intervention: Then & Now
Intervention “Kent”
(:02) The First 48
25 118 265 (A&E) Storage Wars
(7:59) Fear the Walking Dead
Fear the Walking Dead “Captive” Talking Dead
Fear the Walking Dead “Captive”
254 (AMC) (4:30) ››› The Shining (1980, Horror) Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall, Danny Lloyd.
›››› I Remember Mama (1948, Comedy-Drama) Irene Dunne, Barbara Bel Geddes.
› Mockery (1927) Lon Chaney, Ricardo Cortez.
››› L’Avventura (1960)
132 256 (TCM) ›››› Sounder (1972, Drama) Cicely Tyson, Paul Winfield.
(:45) ››› Mrs. Doubtfire (1993) Robin Williams, Sally Field. An estranged dad poses as a nanny to be with his children.
180 311 (FREE) The Parent Trap ›››› Forrest Gump (1994) Tom Hanks. An innocent man enters history from the ’50s to the ’90s.
Liv and Maddie Stuck/Middle
K.C. Undercover Best Friends
Liv and Maddie Stuck/Middle
Bunk’d
Girl Meets
K.C. Undercover Best Friends
17 173 291 (DISN) The 2016 Radio Disney Music Awards
Family Guy
Rick and Morty Robot Chicken
176 296 (TOON) Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball King of the Hill Cleveland Show Cleveland Show American Dad Family Guy
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Lakefront Brgn Lakefront Brgn Caribbean Life Caribbean Life Island Life
Island Life
House Hunters Hunters Int’l
112 229 (HGTV) Fixer Upper
Spring Baking Championship
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cooks vs. Cons
Spring Baking Championship
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cooks vs. Cons
110 231 (FOOD) Food Network Star
›› Thor: The Dark World (2013, Action) Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman.
››› Captain America: The First Avenger (2011, Action) Chris Evans, Hayley Atwell.
››› The Avengers (2012) Chris Evans
137 248 (FX) (2:30) Thor
›› John Carter (2012) Taylor Kitsch. A human soldier becomes embroiled in a conflict on Mars.
122 244 (SYFY) (4:00) ›› Fast & Furious (2009) ›› Fast Five (2011, Action) Vin Diesel. Dom Toretto and company ramp up the action in Brazil.
Shahs of Sunset “Oy Vey, MJ!”
Shahs of Sunset
Shahs of Sunset
Thicker Than Water
Shahs of Sunset
What Happens Shahs-Sunset
129 273 (BRAVO) Shahs of Sunset “C’est la Vida”
Keeping Up With the Kardashians
114 236 (E!) Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Rich Kids of Beverly Hills
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Late Snack
Top Funniest
Top Funniest
Top Funniest
Top Funniest
Top Funniest
Top Funniest
Top Funniest
Comedy Knock Comedy Knock
204 246 (TRUTV) Imp. Jokers
Food Paradise “Buffet Paradise”
Food Paradise
Food Paradise
Food Paradise
America Declassified
Mysteries at the Museum
215 277 (TRAV) Food Paradise
Kerry Shook
K. Copeland
Creflo Dollar
››› Exodus (1960) Paul Newman, Eva Marie Saint. Israeli nationalist and refugees break 1947 British blockade.
Paul: The Emissary
Praise The Lord
260 372 (TBN) Joel Osteen
Relative Race
›››› Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939) James Stewart, Jean Arthur.
Relative Race Music & Word HI Devotional
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
374 (BYU) Relative Race
All Yours (2016, Comedy) Nicolette Sheridan, Jayne Eastwood.
Good Witch
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
185 312 (HALL) Just the Way You Are (2015) Candace Cameron Bure, Ty Olsson.
Thundermans Thundermans Henry Danger Other Kingdom Other Kingdom School of Rock Nicky, Ricky
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends
Friends
171 300 (NICK) SpongeBob
(:39) Archer
(:09) Archer
(:42) Archer
(:15) Archer “Honeypot”
(7:48) Archer
(:21) Archer
(8:54) Archer
(:26) Archer
(9:58) Archer
(:29) Archer
Archer
(:32) Archer
107 249 (COM) (:08) Archer
Bar Rescue “Sticky Situation”
Bar Rescue
Bar Rescue
Bar Rescue
Life or Debt “In God We Trust”
Bar Rescue “Sticky Situation”
16 168 325 (SPIKE) Bar Rescue
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
(:36) Reba
(:12) Reba
Love-Raymond Love-Raymond George Lopez George Lopez King of Queens King of Queens
106 (TVL) Reba
NCIS: Los Angeles “Bounty”
NCIS: Los Angeles “Absolution”
NCIS: Los Angeles “Deliverance” NCIS: Los Angeles “Disorder”
NCIS: Los Angeles “Overwatch”
Friday Night Tykes: Steel Country
115 235 (ESQTV) (3:00) ››› Fight Club
Monday 9 May 2016
B
2
4
5
6
7
8
9
11
sporTs
C S1 S2
10 aM
10:30
11 aM
11:30
12 pM
12:30
1 pM
1:30
2 pM
2:30
3 pM
3:30
4 pM
4:30
PGA Tour Golf Wells Fargo Championship, Final Round. From Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, N.C.
Sports Central Paid Program Rocket!
Raw Travel
2 2 (KCBS) Paid Program Paid Program PGA Tour: Destination Sunday
NHL Hockey New York Islanders at Tampa Bay Lightning. Eastern Conference Semifinal, game 5.
On the Money Astroblast!
The Chica Show Noodle/Doodle
4 3 (KNBC) Noodle/Doodle Equestrian Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event.
Omega
Paid Program Paid Program Coffee Bar
Paid Program Paid Program Laura McKenzie The Middle
The Middle
›› Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood
5
5 (KTLA) In Touch W/Charles Stanley
Rick Steves Special: The Holy Land, Israelis and Palestinians Today San Diego: Above and Beyond
(KOCE) Suze Orman’s Financial Solutions for You Finding financial solutions. Celtic Thunder Legacy Celtic Thunder performs.
News
TBA
NBA Countdown NBA Basketball Cleveland Cavaliers at Atlanta Hawks.
Sports Zone
Eye on L.A.
Eyewitness News 4:00PM
7 7 (KABC) Eyewitness News 10:00AM
Its Not Just
NBA Pregame NBA Countdown NBA Basketball Cleveland Cavaliers at Atlanta Hawks.
How the World Paid Program Sanctuary “Vigilante”
19
(KOLO) Best Pan Ever!
Woodlands
Amazing Facts Coffee Bar
Paid Program Paid Program Hollywood
Paid Program Paid Program Rocket!
Raising Hope
Raising Hope
2 Broke Girls
2 Broke Girls
9 9 (KCAL) Pastor Mike
I Love Lucy
I Love Lucy
I Love Lucy
TMZ
11 (KTTV) Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program ›› National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2007, Action) Nicolas Cage, Jon Voight.
Things That Aren’t Here Anymore
More Things That Aren’t Here Anymore
Celtic Thunder Heritage Celtic and Irish roots.
Dining Chef
Full Frame
28 28 (KCET) Over Hawai’i The cultural traditions of Hawaii.
Makeup!
TBA
NBA Countdown NBA Basketball Cleveland Cavaliers at Atlanta Hawks.
Politics Unplug World News
7News at 5PM Sunday
2
(KMGH) To Be Announced
NHL Hockey New York Islanders at Tampa Bay Lightning. Eastern Conference Semifinal, game 5.
Paid Program Nightly News
9News at 5pm
4
(KUSA) Noodle/Doodle Equestrian Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event.
PGA Tour: Destination Sunday
PGA Tour Golf Wells Fargo Championship, Final Round. From Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, N.C.
Relieve pain
Evening News CBS4 News at 5
7
(KCNC) Paid Program Makeup!
30 for 30 Shorts MLS Soccer New England Revolution at Los Angeles Galaxy.
SportsCenter
Sunday Night Countdown
8 140 206 (ESPN) PBA Bowling Elias Cup Finals. From Portland, Me.
30 for 30
30 for 30
30 for 30 Shorts 30 for 30
30 for 30
SportsCenter
15 144 209 (ESPN2) SEC Storied
Golf Life
Destination Pol. Angels Pre.
MLB Baseball Tampa Bay Rays at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
Angels Post
UFC Unleashed
(FXSP) Bundesliga Soccer
›› The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008) Keanu Reeves.
›› Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides (2011, Adventure) Johnny Depp, Penélope Cruz.
NBA Tip-Off
22 138 245 (TNT) (9:00) ››› War of the Worlds (2005) Tom Cruise.
College Volleyball
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
››› Twister (1996) Helen Hunt.
13 139 247 (TBS) (9:00) ›› The Hangover Part III
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
105 242 (USA) Law & Order: SVU
Little Women: LA
Little Women: NY
Deadly Daycare (2014, Drama) Kayla Ewell, Christy Carlson Romano.
Pretty Little Addict (2015, Suspense) Andrea Bowen, Scott Lyster.
108 252 (LIFE) Little Women: LA
The Good Mother (2013, Suspense) Helen Slater, Meaghan Martin.
A Mother Betrayed (2015, Suspense) Lynn Collins, Adam Kaufman.
109 253 (LMN) (9:00) Like Mother, Like Daughter Mommy’s Little Girl (2016) Fiona Gubelmann, Emma Hentschel.
Naked and Afraid: Tough
Naked and Afraid: Tough
Naked and Afraid: Tough
Naked and Afraid: Tough
Naked and Afraid: Tough
Naked and Afraid: Tough
9 182 278 (DISC) Naked and Afraid: Tough
Four Weddings
Four Weddings
Sister Wives
Sister Wives “A Judge Decides”
Sister Wives
Sister Wives “A Boy or a Girl?”
26 183 280 (TLC) Four Weddings
North Woods Law “The Rookies” North Woods Law: On the Hunt
Finding Bigfoot
Finding Bigfoot
Finding Bigfoot: Further Evidence Finding Bigfoot
24 184 282 (AP) North Woods Law
Mountain Men “Deadly Ascent”
Mountain Men “Snowblind”
Mountain Men “The Fallen”
Mountain Men “Lifeblood”
Mountain Men
Mountain Men “Man vs. Winter”
120 269 (HIST) Mountain Men “Best Laid Plans”
Criminal Minds “... And Back”
Criminal Minds
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
25 118 265 (A&E) Criminal Minds “To Hell ...”
››› The Professional (1994, Suspense) Jean Reno, Gary Oldman, Natalie Portman.
››› Die Hard (1988) Bruce Willis. A New York policeman outwits foreign thugs in an L.A. high-rise.
The Shining
254 (AMC) (8:30) ›› Lakeview Terrace
››› Imitation of Life (1934) Claudette Colbert, Warren William.
››› Mildred Pierce (1945, Drama) Joan Crawford, Jack Carson.
››› Light in the Piazza (1962, Drama) Olivia de Havilland.
132 256 (TCM) (9:00) ›››› Marty (1955)
›› Monster-in-Law (2005) Jennifer Lopez, Jane Fonda.
(:15) ››› The Parent Trap (1998, Comedy) Lindsay Lohan, Dennis Quaid, Natasha Richardson.
180 311 (FREE) ››› Twinsters (2015, Documentary)
Backstage
Girl Meets
Girl Meets
Liv and Maddie Best Friends Whenever
Bunk’d
Austin & Ally
Stuck/Middle
K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover
17 173 291 (DISN) K.C. Undercover Liv and Maddie Backstage
176 296 (TOON) Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Steven Universe Steven Universe Steven Universe Steven Universe Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
112 229 (HGTV) Flea Market Flip Flea Market Flip Flea Market Flip Flea Market Flip Flea Market Flip Flea Market Flip Fixer Upper
Chopped “Mother’s Day”
Chopped
Chopped “Momumental”
Chopped “Chopped Family Feud” Spring Baking Championship
Guy’s Grocery Games
110 231 (FOOD) The Kitchen
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
››› Thor (2011, Action) Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman, Anthony Hopkins.
137 248 (FX) How I Met
›› Starship Troopers 3: Marauder (2008) Casper Van Dien.
››› Starship Troopers (1997, Science Fiction) Casper Van Dien, Dina Meyer, Denise Richards.
›› Fast & Furious (2009)
122 244 (SYFY) Starship Troopers 2: Hero
Housewives/NYC
The Real Housewives of Dallas
Southern Charm “Invite-gate”
Below Deck Mediterranean
Million Dollar Listing New York
129 273 (BRAVO) Housewives/Atl. The Real Housewives of Atlanta
114 236 (E!) Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians
Top 20 Most Shocking
Hack My Life
Hack My Life
Hack My Life
Hack My Life
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Comedy Knock
204 246 (TRUTV) Top 20 Most Shocking
Mysteries at the Museum
Expedition Unknown
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America
Delicious
Delicious
Food Paradise
215 277 (TRAV) Mysteries at the Museum
It Is Written
Pathway Victory Supernatural
Daniel Kolenda Jesse Duplantis John Hagee
MarriageToday Balanced Living Gregory Dickow Potter’s Touch Everyday
Lead the Way
Blessed Life
260 372 (TBN) PowerPoint
Joseph Smith Joseph Smith Book/Mormon Book/Mormon BYU Idaho Dev. Profiles
Generations
Music & Word BYU Devotional LDS Conference Generations Project “Nick”
374 (BYU) (9:00) LDS General Conference
Golden Girls
›› The Nanny Express (2009) Vanessa Marcil, Brennan Elliott.
For Better or for Worse (2014) Lisa Whelchel, Kim Fields.
Harvest Moon (2015, Drama) Jessy Schram, Jesse Hutch.
185 312 (HALL) Golden Girls
SpongeBob
Teenage Mut.
SpongeBob
Open Season 3 (2010) Voices of Matthew J. Munn.
Loud House
Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and SpongeBob
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
171 300 (NICK) SpongeBob
Ways to Die
Ways to Die
Ways to Die
(:13) Archer “Drift Problem”
(12:47) Archer (:20) Archer
(1:53) Archer
(:26) Archer
(2:59) Archer
(:32) Archer
(:04) Archer
(:36) Archer
107 249 (COM) Ways to Die
Detroit Muscle Bar Rescue
Bar Rescue
Bar Rescue “Hole in None”
Bar Rescue
Bar Rescue
Bar Rescue
16 168 325 (SPIKE) Truck Tech
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Reba
Reba
106 (TVL) (:12) The Golden Girls
›› Transporter 2 (2005, Action) Jason Statham, Amber Valletta.
››› Fight Club (1999, Suspense) Brad Pitt, Edward Norton.
115 235 (ESQTV) Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat ›› Ninja Assassin (2009, Action) Rain, Naomie Harris, Ben Miles.
sunday 8 May 2016
B
2
4
5
6
7
8
9
11
MoVies
MoVies
sporTs
neWs/TalK
Kids
B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV
C S1 S2
5 pM
5:30
6 pM
6:30
7 pM
7:30
8 pM
8:30
9 pM
9:30
10 pM
10:30
11 pM
11:30
CBS 2 News
Evening News The Insider
Ent. Tonight
Mike & Molly
Mike & Molly
Big Bang
The Odd Couple Person of Interest “SNAFU”
CBS 2 News
Late-Colbert
2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News at 5:00
NBC 4 News
Nightly News
Extra
Ac. Hollywood The Voice “Live Top 9 Performances” The top nine artists perform.
(:01) Blindspot
NBC 4 News
Tonight Show
4 3 (KNBC) NBC 4 News at 5pm
KTLA News at 6 KTLA News
Two/Half Men
Two/Half Men
Reign “Strange Bedfellows”
Jane the Virgin
KTLA 5 News at 10
KTLA 5 News
Friends
5
5 (KTLA) Crime Watch Daily
Studio SoCaL PBS NewsHour
LAaRT
Antique Show Antiques Roadshow “Cleveland” Independent Lens “Peace Officer” The militarized state of the police.
Tavis Smiley
(KOCE) Wild Kratts
News
World News
Jeopardy!
Wheel Fortune Dancing With the Stars
(:01) Castle “Hell to Pay”
News
Jimmy Kimmel
7 7 (KABC) Eyewitness News 5:00PM
World News
KOLO 8 6:30
Jeopardy!
Wheel Fortune Dancing With the Stars
(:01) Castle “Hell to Pay”
KOLO 8 at 11
Jimmy Kimmel
19
(KOLO) KOLO 8 at 5pm KOLO 8 5:30
Family Feud
Family Feud
2 Broke Girls
2 Broke Girls
KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM
KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM
KCAL 9 News Sports Central Mike & Molly
Mike & Molly
9 9 (KCAL) The People’s Court
Dish Nation
Modern Family Modern Family Gotham
Houdini & Doyle
Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News
TMZ
Dish Nation
11 (KTTV) (4:58) Fox 11 Five O’Clock News TMZ
Business Rpt. World News
Newsline
California Gold Steves’ Europe New Tricks
Luther
The Fixer
New Tricks
28 28 (KCET) World News
The List
Dancing With the Stars
(:01) Castle “Hell to Pay”
7News at 10PM (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live
(:37) Nightline Inside Edition RightThisMinute
2
(KMGH) 7News Right
The Voice “Live Top 9 Performances” The top nine artists perform.
(:01) Blindspot
9News at 10pm Tonight Show-J. Fallon
(:37) Late Night With Seth Meyers Last Call/Daly
4
(KUSA) 9News at 6pm Ent. Tonight
Mike & Molly
Mike & Molly
Big Bang
The Odd Couple Person of Interest “SNAFU”
News
Late Show-Colbert
Late Late Show/James Corden
News Repeat
7
(KCNC) CBS4 News at 6 CBS4 News
Baseball Tonight
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
8 140 206 (ESPN) (4:00) MLB Baseball Detroit Tigers at Washington Nationals.
30 for 30
NFL Live
Baseball Tonight
NBA Tonight
Jalen & Jacoby 30 for 30
15 144 209 (ESPN2) E:60
NHRA Drag Racing NHRA Springnationals. From Houston, Texas.
West Coast Customs
World Poker Tour
(FXSP) (4:00) UFC Reloaded
NBA Basketball Golden State Warriors at Portland Trail Blazers.
Inside the NBA
NBA Basketball: Raptors at Heat
22 138 245 (TNT) NBA Basketball Toronto Raptors at Miami Heat. Eastern Conference Semifinal, game 4.
Family Guy
Family Guy
American Dad The Detour
Family Guy
Family Guy
Full Frontal
Conan
13 139 247 (TBS) American Dad American Dad American Dad American Dad Family Guy
NCIS Tony searches for answers. WWE Monday Night RAW
Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows
105 242 (USA) NCIS A murder is caught on tape. NCIS “Baltimore”
› One for the Money (2012) Katherine Heigl, Jason O’Mara.
›› Ghosts of Girlfriends Past (2009) Matthew McConaughey.
(:02) ›› The Nanny Diaries (2007, Comedy) Scarlett Johansson.
108 252 (LIFE) (4:00) › A Little Bit of Heaven
Text to Kill (2015, Suspense) Dina Meyer, Emily Tennant.
Final Destiny (2016, Suspense) Kerry Condon, Ennis Esmer.
Text to Kill (2015) Dina Meyer.
109 253 (LMN) Final Destiny (2016, Suspense) Kerry Condon, Ennis Esmer.
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws: Full Throttle
Street Outlaws
Fat N’ Furious: Rolling Thunder (:02) Street Outlaws
9 182 278 (DISC) Street Outlaws
Monsters Inside Me
Little People, Big World
Little People, Big World: Jeremy & Audrey- Our Story Relive Jeremy and Audrey’s love story.
Little People, Big World: Jeremy
26 183 280 (TLC) Dateline: Real Life Mysteries
Yukon Men “Tanana’s Test”
Yukon Men “Life on the Line”
Yukon Men
(:01) Yukon Men “All In”
(:02) Yukon Men “Breaking Point” North Woods Law: On the Hunt
24 184 282 (AP) Yukon Men “Gut Check”
American Pickers
American Pickers
American Pickers
(8:59) American Pickers
Iron & Fire
(:31) Iron & Fire Car Hunters
Car Hunters
120 269 (HIST) American Pickers
The First 48
The First 48
The First 48
Bates Motel “Forever”
(:08) Damien “Ave Satani”
(:09) The First 48
25 118 265 (A&E) The First 48
››› The Hunt for Red October (1990, Suspense) Sean Connery, Alec Baldwin, Scott Glenn.
TURN: Washington’s Spies
TURN: Washington’s Spies
254 (AMC) (4:00) ››› We Were Soldiers (2002, War) Mel Gibson.
›› Two Guys From Milwaukee (1946)
(:45) ›› The Youngest Profession (1943)
(:15) ››› Hollywood Canteen (1944) Robert Hutton, Joan Leslie.
132 256 (TCM) ››› Dear Brigitte (1965, Comedy) James Stewart, Fabian.
››› Grease (1978, Musical) John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John, Stockard Channing.
Monica the Medium
The 700 Club
180 311 (FREE) › Hope Floats (1998, Romance) Sandra Bullock, Harry Connick Jr.
Liv and Maddie Liv and Maddie Austin & Ally
Girl Meets
K.C. Undercover Stuck/Middle
Bunk’d
Best Friends
K.C. Undercover Stuck/Middle
Austin & Ally
Liv and Maddie Bunk’d
17 173 291 (DISN) Best Friends
Wrld, Gumball Powerpuff Girls Teen Titans Go! We Bare Bears Wrld, Gumball King of the Hill Bob’s Burgers Bob’s Burgers Cleveland Show American Dad American Dad Family Guy
Family Guy
176 296 (TOON) Clarence
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
Listed Sisters
Tiny House
Tiny House
House Hunters Hunters Int’l
Tiny House
Tiny House
112 229 (HGTV) Love It or List It
Cake Masters
Chopped “First Responders”
Chopped “Firefighter Chefs”
Cake Masters
Chopped “First Responders”
Chopped “Firefighter Chefs”
110 231 (FOOD) Cupcake Wars
›› Hancock (2008, Action) Will Smith, Charlize Theron.
›› Hancock (2008, Action) Will Smith, Charlize Theron.
137 248 (FX) ››› The Avengers (2012, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo.
›› John Carter (2012) Taylor Kitsch. A human soldier becomes embroiled in a conflict on Mars.
12 Monkeys “Emergence”
Hunters “Her Body in My Soul”
Tremors 5: Bloodlines (2015)
122 244 (SYFY) (4:00) Tremors 5: Bloodlines
Shahs of Sunset
Southern Charm
Southern Charm “Invite-gate”
Southern Charm
The Real Housewives of Dallas
What Happens Southern Charm
129 273 (BRAVO) Shahs of Sunset
Rich Kids of Beverly Hills
Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians E! News
114 236 (E!) Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians E! News
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
truInside “Tommy Boy”
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
204 246 (TRUTV) Almost Genius Almost Genius Imp. Jokers
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America “Austin”
Delicious
Delicious
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Hotel Impossible
Hello Goodbye Hello Goodbye
215 277 (TRAV) Food Paradise “London”
BillyGraham.TV Joel Osteen
Perry Stone
Jerry Dirmann Creflo Dollar
Drive Through John Gray
260 372 (TBN) Trinity Family GregLaurie.TV Kingdom Conn. Jesse Duplantis Praise the Lord
Random Acts
The Story Trek The Story Trek American Ride American Ride Studio C
Random Acts
The Story Trek The Story Trek
374 (BYU) The Story Trek The Story Trek American Ride American Ride Studio C
Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
185 312 (HALL) Little House on the Prairie
Alvinnn!!! and SpongeBob
Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans Other Kingdom Other Kingdom Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends
Friends
171 300 (NICK) Loud House
(:19) Futurama (5:50) Futurama (:16) Futurama (6:48) Futurama (:20) Futurama South Park
(:24) South Park (8:56) South Park
South Park
South Park
The Daily Show Nightly Show
107 249 (COM) (4:48) Archer
Undrcvr Stings Cops
Jail
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Countdown to Cops
16 168 325 (SPIKE) Cops Sting.
Andy Griffith
Andy Griffith
Andy Griffith
Andy Griffith
(:12) Everybody Loves Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond George Lopez George Lopez King of Queens King of Queens
106 (TVL) (:09) The Andy Griffith Show
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat
115 235 (ESQTV) CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
The Inyo Register
10 SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016 Give difficult mom a hug
once in a while
Dear Annie: I am a
15-year-old boy and an
only child. I get good
grades and my social life
is somewhat fair. I have
no drama except for one
thing – my mom.
Mom is 40 years old
and has a full-time job.
But every time she talks to
me, she yells. No one can
tell her that she needs
help -– she gets angry. She
cooks, but rarely cleans. I
do most of the chores in
the house. She is stingy
when it comes to money
and won’t even give her
spare change to charity.
She rarely listens to me
unless I say something
about my dad. My parents
had some trouble not long
ago and contemplated
divorce, but they are now
back together. But she is
still mad at him for cheating on her.
I’ve suggested we go to
counseling, but she refuses. Every day I try to put
up with her, and I know
my dad does, too. Is it too
much to ask that she be
more polite and friendly?
It hurts me to know I can’t
make her happy. I can’t
take it anymore. I want
her to understand and listen to me more often.
– Misunderstood Boy in
Guam
Dear Misunderstood: It
sounds as if your mother
has been going through
some rough times and she
is angry and frustrated.
You are right that counseling would be good, but
smokes a corncob pipe,
then you are showing
YOUR ignorance.
West Virginians are
wonderful, smart, decent,
hardworking people with
great senses of humor. We
invite everyone to come
see our beautiful seasons,
and our mountains, parks,
forests, rivers and streams
– but most of all, to experience our small-town
hospitality. Thanks for
letting me vent.
– Grammie in
Fairmont, West Virginia
Kathy & Marcy
you can’t force her to go.
You, however, should talk
to someone who can help
you deal with this situation better. Does your
school have a counselor?
If not, do you have a favorite teacher or relative who
might be able to offer useful advice and a shoulder
to lean on? You seem like
a terrific and caring son.
Please try to give your
mother a hug once in a
while and tell her you love
her. She needs to hear it.
Dear Annie: May I use
your column to defend
our beautiful state of West
Virginia? For the umpteenth time, I’ve heard
someone comment that
people here have no teeth
and marry their siblings.
While most of us take this
with a smile and a shrug, I
want to tell people that if
you think our governor
wears bib overalls and
Dear Grammie: Feeling
better? We’re happy to
give tourism a boost. As
anyone who has visited
knows, West Virginia is a
beautiful state with lovely
scenery and a gracious
population. All stereotypes
show is the speaker’s ignorance, but they are hard to
eradicate, so it’s a good
thing you also have such a
great sense of humor.
Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please email your
questions to [email protected], or write
to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o
Creators Syndicate, 737
3rd Street, Hermosa Beach,
CA 90254. To find out
more about Annie’s Mailbox
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.
com.
Salome’s Stars
ARIES (March 21 to April
19)
A
once-harmonious
relationship appears to be
hitting some sour notes.
Spend some time together to
see why things have gone offkey. What you learn might
surprise you.
TAURUS (April 20 to May
20) You feel a need to make
some changes. Good – you can
do it on a small scale (some
new clothes, for example), or
go big and redecorate your
home and/or office.
GEMINI (May 21 to June
20) Control your tendency
toward early boredom. A
situation in your life might
be taking a long time to
develop, but patience pays
off. Stay with it.
CANCER (June 21 to July
22) You might feel that
you’re on an emotional roller
coaster this week. Don’t fret;
just ride it out and let things
settle down. A Pisces shows
understanding.
LEO (July 23 to August
22) Do something different
for once -- compromise.
A stubborn stand on an
important
issue
proves
counterproductive. You need
to be open to new ideas.
VIRGO (August 23 to
September 22) A friend offers
advice that you perceive
as an act of betrayal. But
before you turn against the
messenger, pay attention to
the message.
LIBRA (September 23 to
October 22) A year of riding
an emotional pogo stick
finally settles down. Use
this calmer period to restore
frayed relationships and to
pursue new opportunities.
SCORPIO (October 23 to
November 21) Your words
can sting, so be careful how
you respond to a friend’s
actions. A calm approach
could
produce
some
Last Week’s Answers
surprising facts.
SAGITTARIUS (November
22 to December 21) Be
careful about whose secrets
you’re being asked to keep.
They could impose an unfair
burden on a straight arrow
like you.
CAPRICORN
(December
22 to January 19) While
you prefer taking the triedand-true course in life, be
adventurous this week and
accept a challenge that can
open new vistas.
AQUARIUS (January 20
to February 18) Your strong
sense of justice helps you
deal with a job- or schoolrelated situation. Stay with
your principles. A Sagittarius
emerges as a supporter.
PISCES
(February
19
to March 20) You need to
build a stronger on-the-job
support system to convince
doubting colleagues that
your innovative proposals
are workable.
BORN
THIS
WEEK:
You might not say much,
but
you’re
capable
of
extraordinary achievements.
You are a loyal friend and a
devoted family person.
The Inyo Register
FACES&places
SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016
11
Spring’s arrival celebrated at GardenFest
Eastern Sierra land trust hosts annual community event
At GardenFest, Eastern Sierra Land Trust (ESLT) celebrated the completion of their new Mary DeDecker Native Plant and Pollinator
Garden with some of the many supporters who helped make their beautiful front yard come to life; from left, Catherine Tao, ESLT, Sara
Kokkelenberg, ESLT, Amy Saladin, Chalfant Big Trees Farm & Feed, Katie Quinlan, California Native Plant Society, Julie Fontaine, Trestles
Environmental Corporation, Susanna Danner, ESLT, Steve Blair, Chalfant Big Trees Farm & Feed, and Kay Ogden, ESLT.
Submitted photos
ESLT Education Coordinator and AmeriCorps Member Catherine Tao poses with Steve Parmenter,
California Department of Fish and Wildlife, to show off the California Native Plant Society – Bristlecone
Chapter t-shirt.
Everyone enjoyed the fantastic selection of vegetable plant starts
provided for sale by Chalfant Big Trees Farm & Feed. Here, two
GardenFest guests show off the plants they picked out for their
garden.
Erin Livingston, of A Whimsical Face, brought cheer to the ESLT backyard with her face painting.
Eastern Sierra Land Trust staff members Catherine Tao, Susanna
Danner and Kay Ogden welcomed guests into the ESLT backyard
for GardenFest.
Margaret Phelps, left, and a friend were eager to check out all the
native plants sold by California Native Plant Society – Bristlecone
Chapter.
Mark Wagner and Adrianne Hnizdil of Owens Valley Growers
Co-Op were on hand to satisfy the hunger of GardenFest guests
with their brick oven pizzas, made on site.
Master gardeners Roberta Lagomarsini and Harold McDonald
helped answer guests’ gardening-related questions and provided
tips to help their gardens come to life this spring.
California Native Plant Society – Bristlecone Chapter President Katie Quinlan, left, helped gardeners such as Sydney Quinn find the perfect native plant seedlings for their yards.
The Inyo Register
12
eASTeRN SIeRRA CLASSIFIeDS
SATURDAY, mAY
AY 7, 2016
READ.
RECYCLE.
READ.
RECYCLE.
READ.
RECYCLE.
READ.
RECYCLE.
We now use
40% recycled
newsprint.
Thank You
for recycling.
020 HAPPINESS IS ...
HAPPINESS IS É
OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS
Help and Hope for People Who have
Problems with Food
Overeaters Anonymous members meet
to share their experience, strength,
hope and the OA program of recovery
every Saturday from 10:00AM-11:00AM
in the library of the Calvary Baptist
Church, 1100 W. Line St., Bishop. For
more information, call Marilyn at (760)
872-3757 or (760) 920-8013. Hope to
see you next Saturday!
HAPPINESS IS...
SIERRA GRACE SAA
New, local meeting for Sex Addicts
Anonymous. SAA is a fellowship of men
and women, who share their experience, strength and hope with each
other so they may overcome their sexual addiction. For more information,
visit www.saa-recovery.org
or call
800-477-8198. Look for "Meetings
...USA...Bishop"
045 HELP WANTED
PROVIDING PEACE
OF MIND
Looking for trustworthy
caregivers to share
in the privilege of
home care and hospice.
CNA/CHHA preferred but
not necessary.
Please apply in person.
Pioneer Home Health Care, Inc.
162 E. Line Street, Bishop
CASHIER, BARISTA - June Lake
Junction now hiring for summer season.
Stop by or call 760-648-7509
P/T DIETARY COOK/SERVER
P/T ACTIVITIES ASSISTANT
(VairIed Shifts Available)
Sterling Heights is a Residential Care
Community for the eldery. We are looking for reliable, trustworthy, caring and
compassionate team players.
If you are interested in working with our
residents, please pick up an application
at 369 E. Pine St., Bishop or email
resume to:
[email protected]
Must successfully pass Criminal
Background Check and Drug Screen
EOE/ RCFE#147203373
MAMMOTH LAKES TOURISM
Content Marketing Manager
CASHIER/STOCK PERSON WANTED
Mature, responsible person for full/part
time shifts. Apply in person at Bishop
Creek Chevron, 2329 N. Sierra Hwy.,
Bishop.
ROUND VALLEY JOINT
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DISTRICT
Notice of Classified Vacancies
(2) INSTRUCTIONAL AIDES
040 BARGAIN CORRAL
Salary: $13.24 to $14.95 per hour
dependent upon education and experience
HARLEY DAVIDSON - Ò WILLY GÓ
LEATHER MOTORCYCLE RIDING
CHAPS - Genuine leather, lined, Made
in
USA, new cond., $125.
760-937-8326
SINGER SEWING MACHINE, Fashion
Mate. Works good, $35. Call
760-873-9227
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
EQUIPMENT MECHANIC
Salary Range is $45,257 - $63,683
THE COUNTY OF INYO
Currently accepting applications to fill
the following Countywide positions,
with deadline dates as listed:
The Town of Mammoth Lakes is
searching for a full time, permanent
journey level Equipment Mechanic to
join a group of dedicated, diverse, collaborative professionals with a commitment to public service in our Public
Works Department.
SUPERVISING AGRICULTURAL
BIOLOGIST
Department - Agricultural Commissioner
Salary - $5303 - $6445
Closing Date - OPEN UNTIL FILLED
Come be a part of the changing face of
local government in Mammoth Lakes
and make a difference in our community!
T he Value Sports / Sierra Lifestyle
store in Bishop has an immediate
opening for a bicycle mechanic.
Experience is a must. Hours are
flexible. Please email:
[email protected]
and provide your resume and contact
information.
New PositioNs
Server
House Keeper
Cocktail Server
Card Dealer
Full-Time Employee Benefits:
FSick Leave
FPaid Holidays
F401K
Applications are available at the Casino Cashier’s Cage 2742
N. Sierra Hwy., Bishop, CA 93514. Phone: 760-873-4150 ext.
214 & 220.
www.paiutepalace.com
Paiute Palace Casino is an Equal Opportunity Employer
Check out the Town's website for a full
job description, a Town application, and
instructions on how to apply:
www.townofmammothlakes.ca.gov
Applications due by May 15, 2016.
FRONT DESK FULL TIME SWING SHIFT
To apply, stop by front desk for application at 636 N. Main, Bishop. No phone
calls please.
TOIYABE INDIAN HEALTH
PROJECT, INC.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR POSITION
VACANCIES
Toiyabe is currently accepting applications for the following open
positions with deadline dates as
listed:
INSURANCE CLERK II
Status: Non-exempt/Full-time with
benefits
Starting salary: $14.04/ hour
Work station: Bishop Clinic
Closing date: 05/13/16
For more information, complete job
descriptions and applications, please
www.toiyabe.us or contact:
visit
Toiyabe Human Resource Office, 52
Tu Su Lane, Bishop, CA 93514
Telephone: 760-873-8464
Fax: 760-873-3935
email: [email protected] or
[email protected]
Toiyabe is an E.O.E. within the
confines of the Indian Preference
Act.
ASSISTANT OR SENIOR
ASSISTANT CLERK OF THE
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
Department - Board of Supervisors
Salary Assistant Clerk - $4188 -$5088
Senior Assistant Clerk- $4601 -$5589
Closing Date - OPEN UNTIL FILLED
ASSISTANT CIVIL ENGINEER
Department - Public Works
Salary - $4709-$5728
Closing Date - OPEN UNTIL FILLED
ENGINEERING ASSISTANT I OR II
Department - Public Works
Salary Level I - $4493-$5462
Level II- $4941-$6005
Closing Date - OPEN UNTIL FILLED
BUILDING INSPECTOR
(FULL-TIME OR PART-TIME)
Department - Public Works
SalaryFull-time: $4188-$5088/month
Part-time - $22.45-$27.27/hour (up to
29 hours per week)
Closing Date - Extended to May 26,
2016
BUILDING & MAINTENANCE
WORKER I or II
Department - Public Works
Salary Level I - $3163-$3839
Level II- $3471-$4216
Closing Date - Extended to May 26,
2016
LIBRARY/MUSEUM ASSISTANT I
(PART-TIME)
Departments - Inyo County Free
Library and Eastern California
Museum
Salary - $13.42 - $16.36/hour - 20 to
29 hours per week with some prorated benefits
Closing Date - May 26, 2016
All of the above monthly salaries are
paid over 26 annual pay periods.
For more information, complete job
descriptions and an Inyo County
www.inyoapplication form, visit
county.us , or contact the Personnel
Office at 760-878-0407. Must apply
on Inyo County application form.
EEO/ADA.
Schedule: 5.0 hours per day/5days a
week
Starting Date: August 22, 2016 with an
additional 5 hours of training before
school begins.
Qualifications: AA degree or equivalent
applicable units. Baccalaureate Degree
from an accredited University preferred.
Fingerprint and TB clearance will be required of selected candidate.
To apply: For application please contact
Cathy Molina
[email protected]
Phone: 760-387-2525
Please submit application with current
resume and two letters of recommendation.
Deadline to Apply: 2:00 PM, Friday,
May 20, 2016
SEASONAL TRAIL CREW
Friends of the Inyo seeks energetic,
detail-oriented individuals who don't
mind working outside and getting dirty
to join our Stewardship Crews. Experience in trail work, backpacking, and
Wilderness First Aid is preferred. Complete job description and information:
http://friendsoftheinyo.org/foiD7/node/1
443
RETAIL CASHIER/TEAM PERSONS
WANTED Looking for mature and reliable team members. Full and Part Time
positions. Please apply in person @
1290 N. Main St. Bishop
GOLF COURSE MAINTENANCE Golf
course Maintenance person needed.
Couples encouraged. Wages based on
experience. Housing included. Apply at
the Mt Whitney Golf Club in Lone Pine.
SOUTHERN INYO HOSPITAL has jobs
available for RNs, CNA, Physical
Therapists, PTA and more! To see all
or our jobs and to apply visit
www.SIHD.org
NOW HIRING SEASONAL TRUCK
DRIVERS FOR 2016 POTATO HAUL.
800-289-1639 WWW.YCTINC.COM
MAMMOTH DISPOSAL IS
currently hiring a CSR!
In this position you will be providing
customer service to our local customers
via phone, email, and walk in traffic.
This full time position with a M-F,
7:30am-4pm schedule. We offer family
benefits, 401k and vacation! Apply today at www.wasteconnections.com
AA/EOE
Join the team at Northern Inyo Healthcare District
Northern Inyo Healthcare District is looking for
team members who share our commitment to
improving our communities, one life at a time;
and our passion for high quality medical care
and service. If your next career move calls for
new challenges and true collaboration, visit us
at www.NIH.org for a complete listings of
our most current employment opportunities.
The week’s featured employment opportunities
Catch the latest
FISHING
REPORT
045 HELP WANTED
EXPERIENCED SERVER WANTED,
Alabama Hills Cafe, Lone Pine. Call
760-876-1807 or email:
[email protected]
20 PC. DINNERWARE SET Floral print.
Set includes: Dinner plates, dessert
plates, bowls, cups and saucers. $30 or
best offer. 760-872-4505
Positions
AvA
v ilAble
FMedical
FDental/Vision
FVacation
045 HELP WANTED
The Superintendent of the Round
Valley Joint Elementary School District
is currently seeking two part-time
Classified Instructional Aides.
BICYCLE!MECHANIC
The
Inyo Register
045 HELP WANTED
Medical Assistant-Specialty Clinics
RHC Physician Assistant/or Nurse Practitioner
Nuclear Medicine Technologist
Director of Pharmacy
Certified Dietary Manager
Staff Physical Therapist
Radiology/ CT Technologist
Clinical Lab Scientist
Staff Occupational Therapist
Respiratory Care Practitioner
Certified Phlebotomy Tech
Staff Speech Language Pathologist
Financial Budget Analyst
Qualified Nursing Positions
Nurse Education Manager
ICU RN
Surgery RN or RNFA
Med/Surg RN
ED RN
House Supervisor
Perinatal Services RN
Director of Nursing Perinatal Services
Case Manager
Pediatric Clinic RN
Position Profile
Under the direction of the Director of
Marketing, the Content Marketing Manager will work with a highly energetic
and collaborative team and be responsible for increasing website visitation,
email subscribers and driving engagement on owned channels.
Responsibilities Include
- Building on an established framework
for content development and delivery.
- Collaborating with content creators to
deliver branded content in the right formats, to the right channels and in alignment with MLT core pillars, storytelling
priorities and marketing/communications themes.
- Collaborating and managing a detailed content calendar that ensures
production of compelling content for all
channels including online, social, email
and other untapped opportunities based
on organizational strategy set by the Director of Marketing.
- Implementing keyword-driven strategic content plans by combining marketing strategy, UX and keyword analytics.
- Writing monthly and weekly email
newsletters to segmented interest lists.
- Ensuring all content promotion activities are coordinated across channels including social promotion and email.
- Partnering with multiple stakeholders,
including local businesses and community partners to deliver content that
drives engagement and conversion.
- Working with the Social Media Coordinator to identify influencers and providing customized outreach.
- Monitoring and tracking performance
of content by channel, leveraging good
performance, determining the root
cause of any poor performance and
taking action to improve it.
Job Requirements
- Proven editorial ability with excellent
writing skills, including a command of
grammar, spelling and punctuation. Familiarity with APA or Chicago style preferred.
- An understanding of how to create
shareable content that tells a story and
engages an audience using words, images, video, and graphics.
- Experience aligning content development with brand voice and communicating that alignment to content creators
and writers.
- Project management skills to manage
editorial schedules, content creators
and deadlines within ongoing and new
campaigns.
- Experience with keyword research
and optimizing blog articles and web
content for search and social media.
- Outstanding leadership qualities, including the ability to communicate effectively to directors and modeling best
practices to community businesses and
stakeholders.
- Successful track record of elevating
brand perception and awareness
through strategic and creative content
initiatives.
- Experience managing social media
content production and working with
various media (photography, video,
etc.) and platforms (Facebook, Twitter,
Pinterest, Instagram, Periscope, SnapChat, Stellar, etc).
- Experience with web and social analytics monitoring tools and content management systems.
- Working knowledge of basic CSS and
HTML preferred.
- Strong interpersonal skills, including
the ability to work on team.
- Comfortable in a collaborative,
fast-paced team environment.
- Detail-oriented.
- Strong sense of UX.
- Photography skills and Lightroom or
Photoshop editing a plus.
Education
Any combination of training and experience that provides the required knowledge, skills, and abilities is qualifying
for this position. Bachelor's degree in
related field strongly preferred.
Experience
3+ years of experience in multi-channel
content creation in tourism or other related field.
Compensation/Benefits
Starting salary depends on qualifications. Please submit your salary requirements with your application.
Mammoth Lakes Tourism is a private,
not-for-profit 501c(6) organization that
provides its employees a benefits package that includes Mammoth Mountain
winter season pass, Snowcreek Resort
golf season pass or Mammoth Mountain Bike Park pass, company paid
medical plan, retirement contribution
plan with a 4% company match.
Application
1. Please email cover letter and resume
along with salary requirements to
[email protected]
2. Include any links to portfolio pieces,
your personal website or blog and any
other relevant links.
No telephone calls, please. Position remains open until filled.
WE MOVE ITEMS FAST
The easTern sierra Classifieds 873-3535
Please check website for a complete Job Listings
www.NIH.org
in
The Inyo Register
Subscribe Today!
760-873-3535
NORTHERN INYO HEALTHCARE DISTRICT
One Team. One Goal. Your Health.
150 Pioneer Lane, Bishop | (760) 873-2145 | Visit us at www.NIH.org
Applications available online | Questions? Email us at [email protected]
PHONE (760) 873-3535 | FAX (760) 873-3591 | 407 W. LINE ST., STE. 8, BISHOP, CA 93514 | E-MAIL [email protected]
The Inyo Register
SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016 13
045 HELP WANTED
045 HELP WANTED
045 HELP WANTED
045 HELP WANTED
AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN AT Least
two years experience general automotive repair, Trade school, completion,
computer skills a plus. Call for more
information 760-258-0773
TRUCK DRIVER WANTED Petroleum
work. Mature experienced clean CDL
with hazmat & tanker, Clean equipment, Salary DOE, Medical Plan, 401k,
Send Resume/Driving record to ICI,
1274 N. Main St. Bishop, 93514
COOKS WANTED FOR Olancha Cafe,
housing avail. Call 818-831-9117
LA QUINTA / DAYS INN ARE HIRING!
Looking for experienced front desk reps
for part/full time work.Customer service,
computer skills, light housekeeping.
Applications available 651 N Main.
Resumes welcome. For more info call:
760.873.6380
THE FORT INDEPENDENCE Tribe is
seeking qualified candidates for the
position of:
Environmental Director
This position is full time with a salary of
$20-25 /hr plus benefits DOE/DOQ.
Please send resume to:
[email protected]
or call
760-878-5160 to request an application
and job description. The application
deadline is May 20, 2016.
WATER SAFETY INSTRUCTOR
(SWIM INSTRUCTOR)*
Salary:
$15.00
per
hour
Hours: Subject to sufficient swim lesson enrollment.
*This position could be performed by a
qualified Pool Manager/Lifeguard.
LOCATION: Lone Pine Memorial
Plunge
REQUIREMENTS:
Must hold (or be
willing to obtain) a current Lifeguard
Training Certificate, Water Safety Instructor, First Aid and C.P.R. certifications. Must communicate effectively
and work well with both children and
adults.
CLOSING DATE:
Application must
be received in the District Office no
later than Friday, May 13, 2016 by
3:30 p.m.
APPLICATION PROCESS: For a
complete job description and application contact Kasey Wuester in the
District Office, 301 S. Hay Street, Lone
Pine, phone (760) 876-5579 or email
[email protected].
EOE
045 HELP WANTED
Eastern Sierra Interpretive
Association
FRONT DESK
HOUSEKEEPING
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Part time, full time avail. To apply
stop by Best Western Bishop
Lodge, 1025 N. Main, for application.
Full & part time positions. Apply at
Best Western Bishop Lodge, 1025
N. Main St., Bishop.
CREEKSIDE INN - BISHOP
FRONT DESK SUPERVISOR
NOTICE OF SUMMER 2016
LONE PINE POOL OPENINGS
POOL MANAGER/LIFEGUARD
Salary: $15.00 per hour
Hours: Part-time as determined by pool
operation.
045 HELP WANTED
EASTERN
SIERRA
TRANSIT
AUTHORITY is seeking DRIVERS for
the Red's Meadow Shuttle Service.
Must be responsible, energetic and
have clean driving record. Training for a
Commercial License, Passenger
Endorsements and Airbrake Certificate
is available.
Hourly salary range: $14.65 - $17.80
Full and Part-time hours available
Pre-employment and random drug
screening required.
Also seeking PASSENGER SERVICES
AGENT for the Red's Meadow Shuttle
Service.
Duties include ticket sales, assist in the
boarding of passengers and provide information on the Reds Meadow Shuttle.
This position requires strong customers
service skills; computer and Spanish
Language skills are a plus. Background check and pre-employment
drug screening is required.
Seasonal position 20-40 hrs per week.
Hourly salary range is: $12.49 - $15.18.
Applications can be found: online at
www.estransit.com,
Mammoth Office (210 Commerce Dr),
Bishop Office (703B Airport Rd) or
Call 760-872-1901 ext. 11.
EOE employer
COUNTY OF INYO
Department of Health and Human
Services
Is currently accepting applications to
fill the following Countywide positions,
with deadline dates as listed:
BEHAVIORAL HEALTH
REGISTERED NURSE I OR II
Salary Level I $5303-$6445/mo.
Level II - $5559-$6761/mo.
Closing Date -OPEN UNTIL FILLED
REGISTERED NURSE OR PUBLIC
HEALTH NURSE
Salary R.N. -$5303-$6445/mo.
P.H.N. $5559-$6761/mo.
Closing Date -OPEN UNTIL FILLED
COOK'S ASSISTANT (PART-TIME)
Salary -$12.28 - $14.92/hour
20-29 hours per week with prorated
benefits
Location - Lone Pine, CA
Closing Date - May 26, 2016
The above monthly salaries are paid
over 26 pay periods annually.
For more information, complete job
descriptions and an Inyo County
www.inyoapplication form, visit
county.us , or contact the Personnel
Office at 760-878-0407. Must apply
on Inyo County application form.
EEO/ADA.
Bishop Creekside Inn, consistently
rated # 1 Trip Advisor, is now hiring a
Front Desk Supervisor. This position will be responsible to oversee the
front desk team & operations by exhibiting professionalism and the ability
to lead a team to provide exceptional
service and flawless execution of
front desk procedures. You must be
able to work independently yet as a
cohesive team with other departments.
To be considered for this position we
require current background in hotel
front desk operations demonstrating
progressive leadership and/or responsibilities.
Wages $16 - $18 DOE. This is a full
time, year round position and includes
Health Insurance.
Bishop Creekside Inn is ALSO hiring
FRONT DESK AGENTS to continue
our tradition of personalized, attentive
service. This position is a full time,
year round position with Health Insurance provided. Previous Hotel experience is not required. Wages $13 $15.
To apply for either position, email
a resume to :
kalynn.rose@thebishopcreeksideinn.
com or apply in person at 725 N.
Main St.
ESIA seeks an Executive Director
with an outstanding track record
in leadership, management, collaboration, and program and product
delivery in order to further develop
relationships with the U.S. Forest
Service and other public land
agencies, build a strong relationship
with ESIA staff and The Board of
Directors, and manage an annual
budget of at least $1.4 million. The
successful candidate will have a deep
appreciation for interpretation and
education along with a strong interest
in partnerships and connecting
people with our publically accessible
lands.
Who We Are: ESIA was established
in the early 1970s to help the Inyo
National Forest provide information
and interpretive programs to the
public. We now operate eleven
bookstores in five Inyo National
Forest Visitor Centers, five
Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest
Ranger Stations, and one Tahoe
National Forest Ranger Station.
Proceeds from these operations
support numerous public lands
management agencies and other
priority projects and programs.
ESIA offers a competitive salary
commensurate with experience.
Benefits include PTO leave, 100%
health insurance coverage and the
pleasure of living in the beautiful
Eastern Sierra region of the country.
For a full job description and details
regarding ESIA , please view our
website at www.esiaonline.org.
To apply, please submit the online
application and contact Robert
Gardner at 909-325-0999.
CREEKSIDE INN - BISHOP
GUEST SERVICE AGENTS
Consistently rated # 1 on Trip Advisor
as the preferred lodging destination in
Bishop, the Creekside Inn is now accepting qualified applications for the
position of Guest Service Agents. The
ideal candidate will demonstrate
friendly, professional hospitality skills
to continue our tradition of personalized, attentive service. Position is
Full-Time, $12-$14 base on experience and includes Health Insurance.
We invite you to apply to join our
team, email a resume to
kalynn.rose@thebishopcreeksideinn.
com or apply in person at 725 N Main
TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE
OFFICE MANAGER
Bishop Tribal Office, Bishop CA
Deadline to apply: 5:00pm on Friday
May 6, 2016. Contact the Timbisha
Shoshone Tribal Office for job description and employment application
760-872-3614 or email [email protected]
PART TIME JANITOR wanted. Must
have experience. Position is located in
Bishop. To apply call 818-216-3077 or
email: [email protected]
PART-TIME GALLERY SALES
ASSOCIATE position at Mountain
Light Gallery. We are looking for an
upbeat, outgoing team player with
retail sales experience. Must work
weekends. Apply in person at 106 S.
Main St., Bishop or email resume to
[email protected]
760-873-7700
www.ovcdc.com
045 HELP WANTED
OFFICE MANAGER
J. Rousek Toy Company is hiring an
experienced Office Manager. Sales,
customer service, strong people skills
and computer experience required. Full
time M-F, days. Applications are available online at www.jrousek.com/jobs
and can be emailed to [email protected]
or dropped off at 1325 Rowan Lane,
Bishop.
BISHOP PAIUTE TRIBE
The Bishop Paiute Tribe is currently
accepting applications for the following open positions with Extended
Deadline of 5:00pm on May 10,
2016.
PEER CRISIS COUNSELOR
RAVE Program (Relief After Violent
Encounter)
Regular Full-Time;
Exempt Ð Salaried; Pay Range T-6
$16.48 - $23.07/Hr. (434,278.40 $47,985.60 annually) DOQ.
Under the direction supervision of
the Program Coordinator, assists in
providing direct service assistance
to community members in the
designated service area who are
victims of domestic violence, dating
violence, sexual assault and stalking.
For full position descriptions with all
qualifications and responsibilities and
employment applications please visit
the Bishop Paiute Tribe website
at www.bishoppaiutetribe.com or
contact the HR Office at (760)
873-3584.
Employment eligibility criteria for most
positions with the Bishop Paiute Tribe
include criminal background checks
and clearance, valid driver!s license
and insurability with company
insurance, and submit and pass a
pre-employment drug screen.
Additional requirements may apply to
specific positions in accordance with
applicable laws, regulations, and
funding agency requirements and
may include education verification,
individual credit checks, TB Test,
Physical Examinations, Fit-for-Duty
Tests, etc.
Employment Applications must be
completed in full and submitted by the
deadline date with appropriate
documentation in order to be
considered for the position.
Indian Preference: Native American
Indian preference shall apply
pursuant to the Bishop Tribal
Employment Rights Ordinance No.
1992-01 (as amended on June 28,
2012) and the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (24
U.S.C. 450, et seq,), 25 CFR 271.44
and other relevant laws
BIG PINE
INDIAN EDUCATION CENTER
4 Summer Student Intern Positions
Seeking four (4) interns to assist with
the Summer Enrichment Program.
Students must be currently enrolled in
an accredited college, university or
other institution of higher learning. Activities will be focused upon providing
meaningful and interactive work experience with an under served you population on or near the Big Pine Paiute Reservation. TANF background check form
must be completed and submitted with
application in order to be considered.
Program runs June 20 to August 4,
2016. Stipend: $15/Hr.
Summer Assistant Cook
Under the supervision of the BPIEC
Director and Nutrition Coordinator, the
Assistant Cook will assist in preparing
nutritious meals for the youth in the
community as well as assisting with
necessary clean-up of kitchen and
dining areas for the duration of the
2016 Summer Enrichment Program.
This employee must exhibit excellent
work ethics, work well with Big Pine
Indian Education Center staff & interns
and be a good role model to students
and families. TANF background check
form must be completed and submitted
with application in order to be considered. Part time with no benefits. $12/Hr.
Contact Violet at the Big Pine Tribal
office for full job descriptions 825 S.
Main St., Big Pine, CA 93513. Tel:
760-938-2003.
DEADLINE TO APPLY: Friday, May 12,
2015 at 5:00pm.
Indian Preference shall apply pursuant
to the Big Pine Tribal Employment
Rights Ordinance and the Indian
Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (24 U.S.C. 450, et seq.) 25
CFR 271.44
045 HELP WANTED
YOGURT & WINE BAR
TEAM MEMBERS
We know that the success of a business depends on their employees and
we are excited to create a team of individuals to be the start of Good Earth
Yogurt. If you have an outgoing personality and love working with people in a
fun upbeat family environment, this may
be the job for you. We are filling full and
part time positions. Jobs will require
flexible hours with the ability to work
evenings and weekends on a regular
basis. Basic wine and beer serving experience a plus!
If you think you are the right fit for this
fun new business opening in Bishop,
please
send
resumes
to
[email protected]
170 HOUSES UNFURNISHED
1BED/1BATH COTTAGE
DOWNTOWN Bishop - Small yard, no
smoking, no pets, washer/dryer, great
location. Super clean and quiet.
$700/mo. + security deposit.
760-872-3423
2BED/1BA WEST BISHOP Gourmet
kitchen, garage, office space, walk in
closet, fireplace and two patios. Includes water, trash, electric and gardener. Sorry no children and nonsmoking only. $1800/mo. 310-251-8142
[email protected]
1BED/1BATH INDEPENDENCE Small
Non-smoking cottage. One year lease.
Sorry no dogs. $550/mo. + $450 sec.
dep.760-920-1690 Please call before
9:00pm.
175 MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT
CREEKSIDE INN - BISHOP
SEASONAL GROUNDSKEEPER
Landscape and maintain grounds of
property using hand & power tools.
Care for established lawn, trimming,
edging, weeding, pruning trees,
shrubs & hedges. Provide upkeep of
sidewalks, outdoor seating areas,
driveways, flower beds & ground
features. Plant, seed, water and
maintain flower beds. Must have previous experience in landscape
maintenance.!!$12 - $14 per hour,
DOE.!Apply in person at 725 N. MAIN
ST.
PIONEER CEMETERY DISTRICT
TEMPORARY GROUNDSKEEPER
$11/HR. General knowledge of maintenance of cemeteries. High School
graduate or equivalent, must possess a
California motor vehicle license. Drug
and alcohol free work environment.
Pick up applications Tues. thru Sat. at
the East Line Street Cemetery, 2000
Poleta Rd., Bishop. Applications must
be returned by May 13, 2016
TOW TRUCK DRIVER wanted - part
time to full time, will train. Pick up application at 175 Grove, Bishop.
ELM TREE TRAILER PARK
Large and small trailers with patios &
storage units starting at $475/mo.
Judy 760-914-2834
180 SPACE FOR RENT
STORAGE UNITS - Many sizes available: 6x10, 8x12, 10x16, 10x20. Ask
about special Ò First Month Half PriceÓ .
760-873-7339
260 TRAVEL TRAILERS
2007 ALJO 26! FT.
TRAVEL TRAILER
Original owner. Large gas / electric
refrigerator, AC, cookstove with oven,
twin beds in front, bathroom in rear.
Fully carpeted. Slide out at sofa area.
Dinette. Winterized, current license.
Parked under an awning and still
looks new. Used only once before illness hit us. $18K. Call for appt.,
leave mssg.
760-872-3139
065 APPLIANCES
MAYTAG HE WASHER AND DRYER
$100 for both or $75 for washer & $50
for dryer. Call 951-454-0312 or email:
[email protected]
105 MISCELLANEOUS
TRAVEL
SAVE 30% on an ArcticCruise this
summer. Visit Inuit communities inGreenland and Nunavut. See polar
bears, walrus and whales. CALL FOR
DETAILS! 1-800-363-7566
www.adventurecanada.com
155 APTS. UNFURNISHED
1 BED/ 1BATH recently remodeled. Includes washer and dryer, fenced yard
$775/Mo. 760-937-2609
2012 KEYSTONE
COUGAR 4 SEASONS
5TH WHEEL TRAVEL
TRAILER
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
16-17-18
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
THE FOLLOWING PERSON
IS DOING BUSINESS AS:
BAYHURST FIREWOOD
1888 Saniger Lane
Bishop, CA 93514
SCOTT ANOTHONY BAYHURST
1888 Saniger Lane
Bishop, CA 93514
This Business is conducted by:
INDIVIDUAL. Registrant commenced to transact business
under the fictitious business name
or names listed 4/01/2016. This
statement was filed with the
County Clerk of Inyo County on
APRIL 21, 2016. File #16-00064
(IR 4/23, 4/30, 5/7, 5/14/16,
#12099)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
THE FOLLOWING PERSON
IS DOING BUSINESS AS:
714-292-2403
RITE-WAY POOL & SPA
137 E. Line Street
Bishop, CA 93514
MEADOWLAKE APTS. - BISHOP
STUDIO & 1 BED Apts. available now.
Call 760-873-7339
280 TRUCKS
2000 TOYOTA TUNDRA $4,500 TRD
Off Road 4WD; runs well; 186,000
miles; smogged; undercarriage rust.
Call 760-872-3379 [email protected]
290 VANS
MT. WHITNEY APTS.
375 N. Mt. Whitney Dr., Lone Pine.
Spacious 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms, Energy
Efficient Appliances, Central Heat &
Air,On Site Laundry Facilities & Tot
Lot. Near schools, hospital & clinic.
Accepting Applications. Call today
9:00am-4:00pm. This institution is an
Equal Opportunity Employer and Provider.
TDD 1-800-735-2929
760-876-4272
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No. 16-00069
The following person(s) is (are) doing
business as:
ALL IN ONE, 101 S. MT. WHITNEY
DR., LONE PINE, CA 93545 County of
INYO
Business Onwer(s):
WING LEUNG, 101 S. MT. WHITNEY
DR., LONE PINE, CA 93545
This business is conducted by: an
Individual
Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name
or names listed above on N/A.
I declare that all information in this
statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material
matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the
Business and Professions code that the
registrant knows to be false is guilty of
a misdemeanor punishable by a fine
not to exceed one thousand dollars
($1,000.)
S/ WING LEUNG
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk of Inyo County on
04/28/2016.
Kammi Foote, Inyo County Clerk
By: B B, Deputy
NOTICE - In accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious
Name Statement generally expires at
the end of five years from the date on
which it was filed in office of the county
clerk, except, as provided in subdivision
(b) of Section 17920, where it expires
40 days after any change in the facts
set forth in the statement pursuant to
Section 17913 other than a change in
the residence address of a registered
owner. A new Fictitious Business Name
Statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement
does not of itself authorize the use in
this state of a Fictitious Business Name
in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (See
Section 14411 et seq., Business and
Professions Code).
First Filing
5/7, 5/14, 5/21, 5/28/16
CNS-2865781#
INYO REGISTER
(IR 5/7, 5/14, 5/21, 5/28/16, #12115)
Brand new, excellent cond. 2 slides,
30.5! ft. long, sleeps 6, microwave,
stove, oven, fridge, 32Ó TV, outside
radio and many more extras. Must
see to appreciate. Other accessories
included.
2007 FORD E350
PASSENGER VAN
Offered in average condition. Asking
$6,500 OBO. Leave message if interested.
760-873-8503
✄ CLIP HERE & TAKE WITH YOU ✄
STEPHEN B. CHRISTENSEN
DEBBIE K. CHRISTENSEN
210 Osage Circle
Bishop, CA 93514
SCOTT JAMES LEVALLEY
CHARISSE HEATON
170 Pa Me Lane
Bishop, CA 93514
This Business is conducted by:
GENERAL PARTNERSHIP. Registrant commenced to transact
business under the fictitious business name or names listed
04/21/2016. This statement was
filed with the County Clerk of Inyo
County on APRIL 27, 2016. File
#16-00068
(IR 4/30, 5/7, 5/14, 5/21/16,
#12104)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
THE FOLLOWING PERSON
IS DOING BUSINESS AS:
VALLEY SUBWAY SANDWICHES
102 N. Pearson Rd.
Pearsonville, CA 93527
KIRAT!S LLC
1457 Wild Olive Rd.
Tehachapi, CA 93561
PLACE YOUR GARAGE/YARD SALE AD HERE!
bishop
! - CHOO CHOO SWAP MEET - TRI-COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS, SATURDAY, MAY 7,
8:30AM - 2:00PM $2.00 Entrance fee, Vendor booths $40. Vendors from all over in one place!
Come shop antiques, furniture, home decor, collectibles, tools, fresh local honey, books and so
much more. Don!t miss our semi-annual event! For more info. call 760-873-5950
! - (DT) - 661 SYCAMORE (NEXT TO FAIRGROUNDS), SATURDAY, MAY 7,
7:00AM-1:30PM DISCOVERY POINT PRESCHOOL FUNDRAISER YARD & BAKE SALE! Huge
Yard Sale with something for everyone! Hunting gear, children toys and games, home decor, furniture, trampoline, clothing for all ages, lots of picture frames and much more. BAKE SALE with lots of
yummy Treats and Coffee!
! - (BA) - 2715 UNDERWOOD, SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 8:00AM-1:00PM?? Kitchen items,
clothing, perfume/ cologne, DVDs, audio books, 2 snowboards, bedding, electronics, costume
jewelry and lots more, too much to list!!
! - (MC) - 1477 BEAR CREEK DR., SATURDAY MAY 7, 7:00AM-10:00AM Doll house,
ski jackets, ski boots, exercise bike, clothes, toys, misc. items from my wacky in-laws. This is a fundraiser for school trips. Rain or Shine.
CODES FOR BISHOP AREA
DT: Downtown Area
WB: W. Bishop
BH: Highland
MC: Meadowcreek
Bids will be received by OVCDC
until 5:00 pm, local time, May 20,
2016 at the office of OVCDC Finance, P.O. Box 847, Bishop, CA
93515 or 432 North Barlow Lane,
320CA
PUBLIC
Bishop,
93514. NOTICES
This RFP will
remain open until awarded if sufficient qualified proposals are not
received by May 20, 2016. For
further information please contact
the OVCDC Purchasing/Contracts
Administrator by telephone at
760-873-5107
or
email
[email protected]
(IR 5/5, 5/7, 5/10, 5/12, 5/14,
5/17/16, #12110)
The Inyo Register
14 SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016
BA: Barlow Area
RK: Rocking K Area
BG: Glenwood MH Pk
DL: Dixon Ln Area
MM: Manor Mkt. Area
WK: Wilkerson
LA: Lazy A Area
This Business is conducted by:
INDIVIDUAL. Registrant commenced to transact business
under the fictitious business name
or names listed 11/18/2004. This
statement was filed with the
County Clerk of Inyo County on
APRIL 15, 2016. File #16-00063
(IR 4/23, 4/30, 5/7, 5/14/16,
#12100)
NOTICE OF VACANCY
MT. WHITNEY CEMETERY
DISTRICT
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
the Inyo County Board of Supervisors is accepting applications for
two vacancies on the Mt. Whitney
Cemetery District Board of Trustees, to complete four-year terms
ending May 1, 2020.
If you are interested in serving on
the Mt. Whitney Cemetery District
Board of Trustees and live in the
District, please submit your request for appointment to the Board
of Supervisors at P. O. Box N,
Independence, CA 93526. In
order for your request for appointment to be considered it must be
received by the Clerk of the Board
on or before 5:00 p.m., May 23,
2016.
(IR 5/7/16, #12112)
The Owens Valley Career Development Center is seeking Proposals from responsible qualified independent contractors to coordinate
and provide Equestrian services to
include cultural and historical educational components weekly in
Bishop, California to TANF eligible
participants including children.
For full RFP package please visit
www.ovcdc.com
Bids will be received by OVCDC
until 5:00 pm, local time, May 20,
2016 at the office of OVCDC
Finance, P.O. Box 847, Bishop,
CA 93515 or 432 North Barlow
Lane, Bishop, CA 93514. This
RFP will remain open until
awarded if sufficient qualified
proposals are not received by May
20, 2016. For further information
please contact the OVCDC
Purchasing/Contracts Administrator by telephone at 760-873-5107
or email [email protected]
(IR 5/5, 5/7, 5/10, 5/12, 5/14,
5/17/16, #12109)
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
16-17-19
The Owens Valley Career Development Center is seeking Proposals from responsible qualified independent contractors to coordinate
and provide Equestrian services to
include cultural and historical educational components weekly in Big
Pine, California to TANF eligible
participants including children.
For full RFP package please visit
www.ovcdc.com
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
16-17-20
Bishop Group Fitness Classes
OVCDC is seeking bids from
qualified vendors to provide a
Fitness program for TANF eligible
participants including cultural
components (such as Paiute
Language) that can be provided by
OVCDC to vendors for use in
weekly classes in Bishop, California. The Fitness program will
include nutrition guidance,
quarterly family nutrition based
workshops, facilities, equipment
and instructors for 12 to 19
participants per one hour session.
For full RFP package please visit
www.ovcdc.com
Bids will be received by OVCDC
until 5:00 pm, local time, May 20,
2016 at the office of OVCDC Finance, P.O. Box 847, Bishop, CA
93515 or 432 North Barlow Lane,
Bishop, CA 93514. This RFP will
remain open until awarded if sufficient qualified proposals are not
received by May 20, 2016. For
further information please contact
the OVCDC Purchasing/Contracts
Administrator by telephone at
760-873-5107
or
email
[email protected]
(IR 5/5, 5/7, 5/10, 5/12, 5/14,
5/17/16, #12111)
Bids will be received by OVCDC
until 5:00 pm, local time, May 20,
2016 at the office of OVCDC FiSTORAGE LIEN SALE
nance, P.O. Box 847, Bishop, CA
ATTN: ERIC HILL
93515 or 432 North Barlow Lane,
UNIT#W5 & #R13
Bishop, CA 93514. This RFP will
Silver Canyon Storage, 111 Silver
remain open until awarded if suffiCanyon Rd., Bishop, CA 93514
This is notice that the contents
cient qualified proposals are not
will be REMOVED ON June 1,
received by May 20, 2016. For
2016, 10:00AM. If left unpaid,
further
please contact
For information
Home Delivery
call
the OVCDC Purchasing/Contracts
storage contents considered
Administrator by telephone at
abandonded.
760-873-5107
or
email
(IR 5/7, 5/14, 5/21, 5/28/16,
[email protected]
#12103)
(IR 5/5, 5/7, 5/10, 5/12,
5/14,
320 PUBLIC
NOTICES
5/17/16, #12110)
BISHOP PAIUTE DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
The Inyo Register
873-3535
270 See Vee Lane, Box 1, Bishop, CA 93514 Tel: 760-872-4172
Fax: 760-873-3982 www.bpdcorp.org
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL (RFP) FOR ARCHITECT SERVICES
to provide conceptual plans for fuel station, convenience store, car
wash and retail space within the Bishop Paiute Development Corporation Commercial Park, Bishop Paiute Reservation, Bishop California.
The Bishop Paiute Development Corporation is hereby seeking qualified Architects to develop conceptual plans for the above described project. The proposal should be clear and concise as possible so that
BPDC can properly evaluate and determine if it meets the requirements. The consultant must clearly state in the proposal any exceptions
or deviations from the specification of proposal. This proposal and contract may be binding for a period up to construction and completion of
the project. A pre-conference will be set for the consultant selected and
will be given the opportunity to present questions, receive clarification
and be allowed to ask questions of Bishop Paiute Development Corporation. Any changes resulting from the pre-conference will be discussed
and changes will be agreed upon by participating parties.The Bishop
Paiute Development Corporation reserves the right to negotiate or reject all proposals received and or reserves the right to extend the deadline for submittal of proposals if necessary. For complete RFP you may
contact Dave Moose, Asset Manager at (760) 872-4172 or request by
email: [email protected]. You may also find the RFP on
our Website at www.bpdcorp.org. The deadline for submittal is Tuesday, May 31, 2016 at 5 PM. You may drop off at 270 See Vee Lane,
Bishop CA 93514 or email to [email protected]
(ir 5/7, 5/10, 5/12, 5/14, 5/17, 5/19, 5/21, 5/24, 5/26, 5/28/16, #12116)
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF
ROBERT C. TANNER
CASE NO: SICVPB 16-59390
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons
who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of
ROBERT C. TANNER
A Petition for Probate has been filed by: ROBERT H. TANNER in the
Superior Court of California, County of: INYO.
The Petition for Probate requests that ROBERT H. TANNER be
appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the
decendent.
The petition requests the decendent!s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and codicils are available for examination in the
file kept by the court.
The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the
Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the
personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court
approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the
personal representative will be required to give notice to interested
persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed
action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless
an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good
cause why the court should not grant the authority.
A hearing on the petition will be held in this court as follows:
Date: MAY 20, 2016 Time: 9:00 A.M.
ADDRESS OF COURT:
SUPERIOR COURT COUNTY OF INYO
168 N. Edwards Street
Post Office Drawer U
Independence, CA 93526
If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the
hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court
before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney.
If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you
must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four
months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general representative, as defined in Section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2)
60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice
under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California
statues and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor.
You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in
California law.
You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special
Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate
assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court
clerk.
ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER:
LINDA D. HESS
Law Offices of Linda D. Hess
218 S. Main St., Bishop, CA 93514
(IR 5/7, 5/14, 5/19/16, #12117)
The Inyo Register
SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016 15
The First Annual
“Catch of the Week”
Fish Poster has
arrived! GET YOURS NOW!
On sale for $5.99
Posters are available at the following locations:
Alpine Signs
Bishop Art Supply
The Inyo Register
Reagan’s Sporting Goods
If you would like to carry this special edition poster in your
store, call (760) 873-3535.
The Inyo Register
407 W. Line Street, Suite 8 • Bishop, CA 93514 • www.inyoregister.com
(760) 873-3535
The Inyo Register
16 SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016 OBITUARY NOTICES
MYRNA
“MICKEY”
PALLEY
DAVID
AARON
CRANE
1935 - 2016
Myrna “Mickey” Palley passed away on Thursday,
February 18, 2016, from complications of pulmonary
disease. Mickey is survived by her long-time partner,
Fritz Klinger; daughters, Risa and Karen; sons-in-law,
John Flynn and Randy Peterman; grandchildren, Jack,
Max, and Emma; cousin Mark London and ex-husband
Norman Palley.
Mickey was born on October 31, 1935 and raised
in Philadelphia, PA. She studied Literature at Temple
University. She married Norman Palley in 1957 and they
had two daughters before moving west to Los Angeles in
1963. Mickey returned to school at UCLA for a Master’s
degree in Education and worked for the Los Angeles
Unified School District from the mid-1960’s until her
retirement in 1990. She taught English and English as
a Second Language to thousands of young people at
Foshay Junior High School and Ulysses S. Grant High
School, as well as mentoring many colleagues.
Mickey and her partner Donald Henze bought their
Cartago, CA home in the mid-1980’s where they planned
to retire together. Although Don died in a tragic climbing
accident in 1988, Mickey made a rich life for herself for
more than 25 years at the edge of the Owens Lake. She
loved reading and exploring the beauty of the Eastern
Sierra through hiking, walking and watching – and feeding
– the great variety of birds.
Mickey was active in her community, returning to work
as a teacher of ESL in Inyo County. She served her friends
and neighbors both as a member of the local water board
and as a volunteer for the local fire company.
Mickey was very grateful for the community of good
friends she found in the Owens Valley. Her kindness and
generosity were well known and she will be sorely missed
by her many dear friends, her family and the scores of
students she inspired, who knew her simply as their
beloved “teacher.”
An informal memorial service will be held at her home
in Cartago on Saturday, June 18 (an announcement with
specific details will be placed in this newspaper.) At that
time, her family will welcome all who knew and loved her
to help us celebrate her life.
LUELLA
THOMPSON
1925 – 2016
David Aaron Crane, 91, died peacefully at home in
Fair Oaks, CA on April 19, 2016. He was born to David
Lester and Margaret Elizabeth Crane on February 22,
1925 in Seattle, WA. Dave was raised with two brothers,
Jim and Bill, on a dairy farm in Castle Rock, WA. He is
a decorated WWII veteran, having received the Bronze
Star while serving with the 101st Airborne in the Battle
of Bulge in Bastogne, Belgium in the winter of 1944-45.
After service in Belgium and France, his division chased
the retreating German army across southern Germany
until Hitler surrendered in May 1945. He trained with the
82nd Airborne Division to paratroop onto mainland Japan,
and was spared when the war in the Pacific ended in
September 1945. Dave marched in the Victory Parade
down 5th Avenue in New York City on January 12, 1946.
After the war, Dave attended Lower Columbia College in
Longview, WA, where he played football wearing a leather
helmet. He graduated from the University of Idaho in Civil
Engineering and became a highway engineer for the State
of California in 1951 in Bishop, CA. Later that year, he met
his beloved wife of 64 years, Elizabeth Garrigues, and they
were married 10 months later. Following 8 years in Bishop,
he worked for Caltrans in San Luis Obispo, CA from 1959
to 1968, and in Sacramento, CA from 1969 to 1988,
retiring in 1988 as a Supervising Highway Engineer. Over
that time, he worked in Right of Way, Planning, Design,
Construction and Maintenance. Dave enjoyed hunting,
fishing, golfing, skiing, windsurfing, gardening and beach
bumming. He was a member of 101st Airborne Division
Association – Northern California Chapter, SIRS, Quarter
Century Club, and Trinity Episcopal Church in Folsom, CA.
Together with his wife Beth, he circled the globe. Dave and
Beth never met a beach they didn’t love. He is survived
by his wife; daughters, Marla Crane of Sacramento and
Lori Crane of Evergreen, CO; sons-in-law, Dennis Bane
and Tom Edwards; granddaughters, Ellen Bane, Robin
Edwards and Monica Edwards; sisters-in-law, Lillian
Crane and Norma Crane; and many nieces, nephews and
cousins. A celebration of life will be announced at a later
date. Airborne!!
1936 - 2016
Luella went to be with the angels
on May 1, 2016. Luella was born on
August 21,1936 to Fred Thompson
and Nellie Kennedy Thompson in
Sharp, NV. Luella spent her younger
years prospecting with her grandfather, Robert Thompson
which gave her some very interesting stories from that
period of her life. She started school in Ely, NV living with
her grandmother, Minnie Blackeye and with her aunt and
uncle. After she was diagnosed with tuberculosis she was
sent to Weimar Sanatorium. After her recovery she was
sent to Stewart government school in Carson City, NV.
While at Stewart she was reunited with her siblings. She
spent her summers in Fish Lake Valley, and Lake Tahoe.
Upon her graduation from Stewart government school she
traveled back east for a while then resettled in Keough. In
the late 1950’s she met Billy Connor, settling down in June
1960 she gave birth to Billy Gene Connor Jr, then in April
1963 giving birth to Glory Dawn Connor having settled in
Porterville, CA. While living in Porterville, Luella worked for
Tulare County Lemon Association for 38 years. She also
worked seasonal jobs at Lindsey Olive, Tubs Cordish, and
Central Valley Citrus. Luella was proceeded in death by
her mother, Nellie Kennedy; father, Fred Thompson; son,
Billy Gene Connor, Jr.; brothers, Clarence Thompson,
Nelson Thompson, Cline Thompson and Bernard Seepie.
Luella is survived by her daughter, Glory Dawn
Connor and her partner Greg Casada; brothers, Fredrick
Thompson, and Jean Thompson; Sisters Darlene
Thompson, Geraldine Seepie, Gerry Thompson Riley,
Lorraine Thompson Whitzle; grandsons, Levi Cregar, Jerry
Cregar and wife Mary Ashley Cregar; granddaughter,
Tiphani Connor, and seven Great-grand children. Luella
Loved sports, spending many hours watching Little
League at Hays Field in Porterville and watching golf at
home. Luella was also very proud of her Native heritage,
The Timbisha Shoshone tribe has lost a wonderful soul.
Per Luella’s wishes, no viewing or cry dance. There will
be a graveside service at the Lone Pine Indian Cemetery,
Lone Pine, CA on May 14, 2016 at 11:00 am.
Brune Mortuary
325 West Elm Street • Bishop, CA 93514 • 760-873-4266
want to get your picture in the paper? here’s how!
eastern sierra
e
fi
l
Se
challenge #7
Our Next
Eastern
Sierra Selfies
page will be on
Tuesday, May 31, 2016
To participate in this challenge,
send us a Selfie taken of you:
• With Your Mom, or
• With a Mule, or
• With a Margarita
• Deadline for Eastern Sierra Selfies is Wednesday, May 25 by 5 p.m.
• Send Selfie photos to: [email protected]
• Photos must be tasteful, must include first and last names of everyone in the
photos and please include ages of children under 18 years of age.
• Photos will not be published if they are not in good taste, do not meet
the challenges given, if they are not in focus or without identification.
You don’t need to get all 3, any one will get you on the page!
Good Luck and Have Fun!
The Inyo Register
mountain report
17
Saturday, MAY 7, 2016
Sierra Sojourns
An Onion Valley
kind of day
(Hiked on April 29, 2016)
If you blow through
Independence on your way
to other destinations, you’re
missing out on a great drive
that gains more than 5,000
feet in 15 short miles. The road and the campground at Onion Valley
starts at the Owens Valley
floor with sage and bitterbrush and ends in a magnificent mountain setting with
creeks, waterfalls and
13,000-foot peaks.
At the end of the steep,
curvy road is a place that
seems other-worldly, with
Independence Creek coming
down from the west,
Robinson Creek from the
south and Golden Trout
Creek from the north. Due south from the forested campground, and the
Kearsarge Pass trailhead, is
11,744-foot Independence
Peak with Robinson Lake
below to the west and
13,632 foot University Peak
a mile to the southwest.
There’s plenty of eye candy
at the trailhead alone, but I
suggest a hike on one of the
three trails that originate
near the parking area.
A mere 1.4 miles from
the official start to the
Robinson Lake trail, and
1,300 feet higher, is a spectacular small lake at the
base of Independence Peak. Unfortunately last Friday it
was 100 percent covered in
snow, and having done it
before and knowing how
steep it is, I passed on it for
the time being. The main
trail up to Kearsarge Pass
appeared free of snow at
the beginning, so that’s the
path I took when I got my
boots on the trail at 9:05
a.m. The trail starts next to
Independence Creek and
immediately begins its
uphill journey through
Whitebark and Foxtail Pines
with extending views down
the canyon. I’ve hiked this trail a few
times now and wasn’t aiming for Kearsarge Pass but
looking to get to Matlock
Lake, which is 3.6 miles
from the trailhead. On the first switchback
though, I encountered a
nice hunk of snow and after
turning up canyon, it was
becoming more present on
the slanted slopes.
The trail levels off two
switchbacks in and becomes
a slushy mudbath in the
sloppy quagmire, dirtying
my boots up to my ankles. I passed some large boulders on the left then followed the trail as it makes
two more switchbacks up to
Little Pothole Lake. Bad on my part, I took
my microspikes out of my
bag a couple of weeks ago,
would’ve helped in this situation. On the second
switchback, the trail totally
disappears under a steep
slope of stiff snow. Following others vanishing boot prints now, I made
it up to Little Pothole Lake,
only 1.5 miles from the
trailhead but felt like five. At this point, I opted to
forego the next 2.1 miles to
Matlock Lake and head back
down to the campground
and plan my next move.
Before reaching the trailhead, I turned left at the
Golden Trout Lake/Dragon
Peaks Lakes trail and immediately began enjoying the
sight of the waterfall coming down from the hanging
valley above. Again I began to encounter a lot of snow and since
I’ve never hiked this trail
before, I decided to turn
around at take the stock
trail down. Strolling
through foxtail pines, I
stopped often to marvel at
their statuesque grandeur
while the wind whipped
through their branches. The stock trail crossed
the creek coming down
from Golden Trout Lakes
On the trail with Independence Creek in the center and 13,632-foot University Peak behind.
Photos by Craig Jackson
and ended at the oldest
looking stables I’ve seen
lately. I peeked inside the lone
stable and saw some
labeled posts with the
names “Barney, Ida and
Jasper” on them. Perfect
mule names. The road from
the three very old looking
buildings leads back to the
parking lot, where I picked
up some food I had left in
the bear lockers, got in my
car and started driving
down Onion Valley Road. Three miles later I
stopped on the side of the
road and hiked up some
dirt a few hundred feet to
the top of a hill, happy to
have some great views
down to Independence and
the giant peaks of the Sierra
escarpment. Next to where I had
parked was another dirt/
asphalt road that I had seen
from the hill and crossed
Independence Creek a couple miles up the canyon. Could this be the original
road up to Onion Valley
that I see to the left from
the present day road?
It was about 2:30 p.m.
when I started up the road,
walking on decades-old
pavement with rusted kneehigh road signs, possibly
telling motorists to slow
down. The asphalt ends quickly
as the now one-lane road
curves to the left through
some heavy brush. Looking
at the tire marks in the dirt,
it appears the majority of
off-road vehicles turn
around here and head for
other adventures. Four
switchbacks later and I was
within striking distance of
the creek crossing, but the
old road was now a pile of
jumbled rocks and sticky
brush, making it worth the
effort. A use-trail led down
through the thick brush and
introduced me to a still perfectly constructed rock and
mortar bridge. If I didn’t
know I was on an old road,
this would have blown me
away more than it already
did. I crawled through the
brush and took some pictures, pushing the branches
to the side to get a better
view. I’m still curious to
know when it was built,
seems like it was quite a
few decades ago.
Rain began to fall when I
left the old bridge and
enjoyed the great two-mile
walk back to my car. Despite not making up to
Matlock Lake, the day
turned out to be well worth
the drive and time. I saw another dirt road
switchbacking up the east
side of Kearsarge Peak,
sounds like a great future
adventure.
(Craig Jackson is a Bishop
resident and avid hiker/
backpacker who enjoys
exploring his new backyard
after having relocated here
in 2013 from Southern
California. Email him at
[email protected].)
MOUNTAIN BRIEFS
Outdoor activities
May
MLC Natural History
Ramble
Today
Hike with a naturalist guide
and learn to identify local
plants, birds, mammals, clouds,
rocks and more. Family friendly. This trip will meet at the
Mono
Lake
Committee
Information Center & Bookstore
in Lee Vining and caravan to
the destination. There may be
multiple stops to visit a few
different habitats. The group
will hike approximately two
miles on easy to moderate terrain. Call (760) 647-6595 for
more information or go to
http://monolake.org/trips/
tripcalendar.
Sierra Club Outing –
Ski Tioga Pass Area
to Greentreble Lake
Sunday, May 8
(depending on snow conditions): +- 10mi, strenuous,
meet 8 a.m. ML Union Bank or
8:30 a.m. Lee Vining Ranger
Station, contact Brigitte (760)
924-2140, jungberman@mac.
com).
Understanding earthquake
and volcanic hazards in
Mono County
Cynthia
Pridmore,
Engineering Geologist, Seismic
Hazards and Public Outreach,
California Geological Survey
and Dr. Margaret Mangan,
Scientist-in-Charge, California
Volcanic Observatory, United
States Geological Survey; 7 p.m.
Tuesday evenings at the Page
Center at SNARL, 1016 Mount
Morrison Road; admission is
free and the public is invited.
Not suited for young children.
Lectures last approximately
one hour. Please no dogs at
SNARL. For more information
contact Annie Barrett, anne.
[email protected]; (805) 8935655 or Kim Rose, krose@
ucsb.edu; (805) 893-565
ESLT – Stewardship
Workday: US 395
Highway Cleanup
Thursday, May 12
RSVP to [email protected]
for details
Help keep the area’s scenic
highway clean and remove
trash and debris from ESLT’s
adopted section of Scenic
Highway 395 along Sherwin
Grade.
ESLT – Black Lake
Celebration Day
Saturday, May 14
May 14 is International
Migratory Bird Day - and in its
honor, ESLT will be out on the
land with Eastern Sierra
Audubon celebrating the donation of the new Black Lake
Preserve.
Name That Eastside View
There were no corrected guesses for last week’s Eastside View, which was Piute Creek looking back towards Mt. Humphreys to the
east If you have a photo you’d like to share as the next Eastside View, by all means send it in! If you think you know this week’s
View, give the editor a call at (760) 873-3535 or drop him a line at [email protected] with your guess. First correct respondent is the winner, and will receive two (2) free 25-word classified ads. It also comes with the satisfaction of knowing you’re helping to sustain a much-loved feature of your local community newspaper.
Photo by Amy Friedrichsen
Do you have an “Eastside View” you’d like readers to try and identify?
Email your submission to [email protected].
For more information, call (760) 873-3535.
2
for
7
Original 1/3 lb.
$
Thick Burger
NOW HIRING
Mammoth, Bishop & Lone Pine locations
For all positions, please apply at:
www.WRIjobs.com
Served on a
Fresh Baked Bun
Offer not available with Combo purchase. Offer valid thru 5-31-2016 at participating restaurants.
Sales tax not included. Oregon is exempt from sales tax. One coupon per customer per visit. Limit one
discount per coupon. Not valid with any other offer, discount or combo. Price and participation may vary.
Not for resale. ©2015 Carl Karcher Enterprises, Inc. All rights reserved.
lone pine • bishop • mammoth lakes
2 for 7
$
Served
6:30 a.m. - 11 a.m.
Purchase 2 Breakfast Burritos for $7.00
Breakfast
Burritos
Offer not available with Combo purchase. Offer valid thru 5-31-2016 at participating restaurants.
Sales tax not included. Oregon is exempt from sales tax. One coupon per customer per visit. Limit one
discount per coupon. Not valid with any other offer, discount or combo. Price and participation may vary.
Not for resale. ©2015 Carl Karcher Enterprises, Inc. All rights reserved.
lone pine • bishop • mammoth lakes
The Inyo Register
18
EASTERN SIERRA HISTORY
Saturday, MAY 7, 2016
The early days of Keough’s Hot Springs
Water from melting
mountain snows trickles
deeply into the Sierra Nevada
fault system, that long crack
at the base of the granite
escarpment of the Sierra
Nevada mountain range that
reaches hot rock deep in the
earth. Water touches the
rock, rises to the surface,
and pours onto the Owens
Valley floor between Bishop
and Big Pine. There at the
base of the Sierra Nevada
escarpment lies Keough’s
Hot Springs.
First humans to experience the hot springs were
the Native Americans. For
perhaps thousands of years,
people cherished its
138-degree water pouring
out at more than 500 gallons
a minute. Based on interviews with local tribal elders,
in a well know paper written
by Jeff Cook, the springs
were called u’tu’utu paya.
Its healing and sacred waters
sat at the center of a thriving
Paiute village. An intricate
irrigation system tapped
nearby Freemen Creek and
carried its cold water to
fields of selected plants that
helped feed the village. But
life at the sprigs was soon to
change.
Over time, interest in the
hot springs provoked a succession of take-a-ways: First,
the Native Americans found
the hot springs; then the
white settlers took it away
from the Paiute people; then
the city of Los Angeles took
it away from the descendants of the white settlers.
While there are many stories to be told of the rich
human history at the
springs, there is one particular period between the time
of the Paiutes and the city of
Los Angeles. It’s a time when
the inhabitants of the “white
villages” incorporated into
their social lives the cherished healing waters of the
soon to be called Keough’s
Hot Springs.
In the early 20th Century,
Phillip P. Keough was a
northern Owens Valley civic
leader, a large land owner,
and proprietor of City
Market on Main Street in
Bishop. Keough attributed
his initial wealth to his role
as a superintendent of the
regional Wells Fargo Stage
Company. One of those
stagecoach stations was built
and run by Keough north of
Bishop. Passengers planning
to travel north out of the
area would meet at his station located near a spring at
the north end of Fish Slough.
His name can be seen to this
day carved on a boulder near
that spring.
Around 1918, Keough
became intrigued by the lush
hot springs south of Bishop.
It lacked the sulfur-smell
associated with most other
hot springs and showed
potential for development.
According to Jeff Cook,
Keough began envisioning: a
first-class health resort with
therapeutic baths and swimming pools, cabins heated
with piped in hot water and
hot houses filled with wintertime vegetables and flowers. Phillip Keough purchased the hot springs and
began construction of his
dream. Owens Valley residents had no idea the social
impact it would soon have.
It was July 10, 1919, and
The Inyo Register reported
on the near completion of
the resort. In an article
titled “MUCH WORK DONE
ON A FINE RESORT,” The
Register proclaimed: “The
site certainly presents
almost unlimited opportunity for development into an
unsurpassed resort. Many
years of occupation have
View of early Keough’s Hot Springs from the hill to the west. In the foreground is the bath house, to the left of the swimming pool lies the dance floor. Date unknown.
Inyo County, Eastern California Museum
grown fruit and shade trees
in profusion.”
The “big tank,” as swimming pools were called at
that time, was ready but
“will not be covered over to
begin with, but probably will
be roofed later and made a
winter as well as summer
resort.” Nearly 100 years
later, the 38-foot-by-100-foot
pool still is waiting for a
cover. The resort would also
include vapor baths, a daily
laundry, and electric lights
with electricity to be generated by a hydro-generator fed
by the 700-foot drop of
Freeman Creek.
In August 1919, Keough’s
Hot Springs opened to the
public. A mere two months
later, the Los Angeles Herald
already was writing about it
calling it “a modern swimming pool with every convenience that goes with a similar metropolitan institution.”
The Herald reported that “an
average of 30 or 40 cars with
their occupants are camped
there and it is a common
occurrence … for hundreds
daily to patronize the pool,
which is to be doubled in
capacity. A hotel with 100
rooms is contemplated, with
a free camping ground
equipped with permanent
conveniences.”
Although the hotel was
never built, Keough’s was
truly a complete resort with
fishing, dining, dancing, cabins and camping. Shade trees
and free fruit for the picking
made Keough’s an oasis for
visitors and locals. But tragedy soon struck.
Just a few years after the
realization of his dream,
Phillip Keough suddenly
passed away at his home at
Keough’s Hot Springs.
Hundreds came from around
the region to pay their
respects and celebrate 40
years of contributing to the
community. And that contribution continued after his
death as Keough’s Hot
Springs became a center of
social life.
Dining and dancing was
something special at
Keough’s. Big Pine resident
Lillian Nelson recalled: “Oh it
was so beautiful; there was
all these dining tables with
the white linen table cloths.
Children pose in this 1933 photo as they enjoy one of the many school picnics held at Keough’s Hot Springs.
Inyo County, Eastern California Museum
They ... specialized in steaks
and chicken dinners. Oh yes
and they just had everything
you wanted to do there, the
dance floor was just like
glass and they had big
orchestras come in from
Southern California. You
could swim or go into the
steam house and take steam
baths or dance and all just
everything!”
Keough’s was in its social
heyday in the 1920s, which
included boxing matches (an
Owens Valley entertainment
staple), vacationing movie
stars and tourists heading to
and through the area. Many
stopped just to stroll
through the lush oasis of
fruit and shade trees, green
grass and flowers. But it
was the social gatherings
that gave effervescent life to
Keough’s.
Keough’s Hot Springs was
a gathering place where all
major holidays were celebrated.
Lillian Nelson recalls: “...
Every Easter all the schools
from the valley would come
there and they hid Easter
eggs up on the hillside and
then everybody brought food
there. A lot was furnished by
the schools. Picnic tables
everywhere and then there
was a pond just to the south
of there and they had boats
on there. A lot of people
went out and paddled
around.”
Big Fourth of July celebrations took place and on one
occasion a baby beauty contest reportedly attract nearly
1,200 people. But soon
things were about to change.
The city of Los Angeles
was overwhelming the
Owens Valley with wholesale
purchases of property to
obtain water rights for
export to a thirsty city. By
1926, the juggernaut had
reached the resort, the
springs and surrounding
land were purchased and the
buildings and swimming
pool were to be removed.
The thought of losing
Keough’s resort forever created a public outcry that
saved the main structures
from demolition. The city of
Los Angeles, relenting,
offered a standard five-year
lease to run the property.
To keep Keough’s Hot
Springs alive, local rancher
George Vonderheide and his
strong-willed wife, Rowena,
signed a lease and did their
best to keep the doors open.
But ultimately a downturn
in the economy influenced
by the Great Depression, and
the lease’s onerous property
constraints, caused the
Vonderheides to struggle
financially and they chose
not to renew the lease.
In 1934 Keough’s closed,
but only for a while.
Keough’s reopened under
various lessees over the next
few decades.
In the 1980s, Dick and Liz
Denniss took over the lease
and allowed only adults. In
1998, the Brown family took
over and once again opened
it up to children and families.
Today Keough’s is a modest resort with a large swimming pool, RV and trailer
park and campground. The
Browns have saved the historical aspects of the buildings, but the surrounding
land only gives a hint of
what it was like in the 1920s.
Regardless, Keough’s Hot
Springs continues to offer a
relaxing respite from busy
life here in the 21st Century.
Copyright © 2016 Ted
Williams. All Rights Reserved
(With grandparents living
in Bishop since the 1940s,
Ted Williams moved to the
area in 1970 and graduated
from Bishop High in 1971.
Over the last four decades,
he has raised a family,
worked in local radio and
television, co-produced a documentary on the history of
Laws Depot, and became
Inyo County Third District
Supervisor. Now working for
the county as a real property
appraiser, he has visited
every remote corner of Inyo.
His interests include weather,
geology, fossils, four-wheeling, birding and hiking.)
The Inyo Register
sports
SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016
19
On the Owens
Back in the day
Opening Weekend has
always been the biggest
holiday of the year if you
ask me. The whole area is
charged with energy and
town is packed with people
from all over. Everyone has
big plans and big hopes of
getting that monster trout.
I remember my openers as
a kid, they were like going
on vacation with Clark
Griswold. It was funny, my
Dad was an amazing fisherman and hunter but when
he took the whole family on
one of these trips it sometimes turned into a circus
especially when my grandpa came.
Dad would put the SixPack camper on the old
Ford and we would head
for Crowley Lake, sometimes he would let me and
my brother ride in the
camper on the way to the
lake (The 80’s were great!).
Dad had a foolproof leveling system for the camper,
he would dig a hole in front
of the tires and drive into
them. After that he would
fill a clear Dixie cup with
beer, set it on the hood and
when the beer was level we
were good to go! It wasn’t
always as easy as that.
Grandpa would follow us
to the lake with the boat
and after launching it
would drive it over to
Sandy Point to meet us, at
least that was the plan. My
grandpa was a flight engineer on a B-29 and a line-
Jarett Coons
Columnist
man for years so he knew
how to fix things, just not
boats. Every time we took it
out something happened it
was cursed! One year it
died in the middle of the
lake during a hurricane and
the police boat had to save
us. The transmission never
worked right so we couldn’t
go in reverse, this always
made launching the boat a
catastrophe. I remember me
and my brother trying to
keep a straight face as my
Dad and Grandpa yelled at
each other in the marina.
Another time we were driving by Tom’s Place as we
look out the window to see
the tire off the boat trailer
passing us by in the next
lane. I’ll never forget the
time I was messing around
on top of the motor cover
(It was an inboard motor).
My Dad had just told me
“Get off of there you are
going to fall in!” “Yeah
right” I thought to myself
and before I could finish
that thought wouldn’t you
know it, I was in the lake! It
was April and when you hit
water that cold you don’t
function well so you can
understand how relieved I
was to see my Dad’s arm
reaching out to me. Relief
turned to panic as I realized he was not reaching
for me; he was grabbing the
fishing rod I had in my
hands when I fell! He pulled
the rod back into the boat
as I began to sink and he
was gone. I don’t remember
how I got back into the
boat but I DO remember I
did it all on my own. It’s
funny, I can’t remember the
fish we caught back then
only the crazy things that
always happened to us and
that’s just fine because
that’s what opening weekend is all about.
Big Pine Lady Warriors Aurora Toledo throws a pitch during the final league game for the season
against Immanuel Christian Crusaders Friday in Big Pine.
Photo by Mike Chacanaca
(Jarett Coons was born in
Bishop, California, and has
spent the majority of his life
fishing and hunting from
Lone Pine to Bridgeport.
Owner of Sierra Mountain
Trout Guide Service he now
spends his time guiding for
Trout, Bass and Carp on his
home waters in the Eastern
Sierra. When not on the
river he can be found hiking and camping with his
wife and son or donating
his time to kids fishing
events.)
Lone Pine softball, baseball
win against Desert
Register Staff
Tied 1-1 with Desert
going into the bottom of the
sixth inning on Wednesday,
the Lone Pine Lady Eagles
finished the game with a 3-1
win.
Lady Eagles Lacie Jones
pitched six innings striking
out five, walking one and
allowing five hits. Teammate
Juliann Jones stepped into
the pitcher’s circle for the
final inning allowing two
hits.
At bat for the Lady Eagles,
Jessianne Joiner was 2-3;
Jones 1-3; Katelyn Button
1-3; Ronni Siddall 2-3, 2B, 2
RBIs; Celia Ray 1-2; Shelby
Chavez 1-3, 2B.
Lone Pine baseball
Lone Pine Golden Eagles
kept Desert from crossing
home plate Wednesday,
defeating the visiting team
by a final score of 10-0.
Eagles Garrett Sullivan
was on the mound for the
entire five innings of the
game striking out five, walking one, and allowing 4
hits.
Offensively, Sullivan went
3-4, with a 2B, 2 RBIs; Ryan
Cappello 2-3, RBI; Adrian
Gonzales 1-3, 2 RBIs;
Nicholas Dawson 2-3, RBI;
Eddy Ivey 3-3, 2B; and Matt
Campbell 1-1, RBI.
Lady Warriors Toledo was on target to connect with the ball Friday against Immanuel Christian for a
hit that would start her off on a trip around the bases.
Broncos golf team wins title
Register Staff
Bishop Broncos golfers have
won the High Desert League
championship title for the season and now move on to play
in Monday’s CIF match in
Lemoore.
HDL individual league
champion is Broncos Nic Orrill
who shot an 81 in the HDL
final match.
Individual scores for the
Broncos from the final match
include Brian Jones 86, carter
Silva 87, Charlie Boling 98, Troy
Erickson 989, Chase Cortez
100 and Chet Schultz 104.
Big Pine’s Toledo demonstrated her speed by safely getting to second base during an attempt to throw
her out.
Pitching final game
Big Pine High School senior Jacob Bacoch pitches his last game for the Warriors Friday in Big
Pine against Immanuel Christian. Friday’s home game closed out the season for the Warriors.
Photo by Mike Chacanaca
Toledo gets a high-five from a Lady Warriors teammate after scoring a run during the first inning of
Friday’s game against Immanuel Christian in Big Pine.
The Inyo Register
20 SATURDAY, MAY 7, 2016 What is your idea of bliss?
Exploring wild areas in the Eastern
Sierra and Desert Southwest with
my wife, Karen, and our dog,
Nellie. It’s hard to beat walking
up a desert wash on a cloudy day
in the spring, or photographing
flowers in an alpine meadow in the
Sierra.
What is your idea of misery?
Dealing with insurance claims
adjustors.
In-Depth &
Personal with
Stephen Ingram
Stephen Ingram is a part-time photographer, writer and biological
consultant. His photos have been used in numerous books, magazines,
calendars and as note cards. Ingram’s first book, “Cacti, Agaves, and
Yuccas of California and Nevada,” was published in 2008. More
recently, Ingram collaborated with author Cathy Rose for “Rock Creek
Wildflowers,” which was published in 2015.
Ingram was born and raised in L.A. but fled after high school for
Oregon where he studied biology at Lewis and Clark College. A few
years after that he got a master’s degree in botany at U.C. Santa
Barbara, doing research on epiphytes in a Costa Rican cloud forest. In
Santa Barbara Ingram joined forces with Karen Ferrell, a Bishop girl
who worked at an orchid nursery and they spent six months collecting
orchids in Costa Rica for Selby Botanical Gardens for its Flora of
Costa Rica Project. That led to a job at Selby managing the herbarium,
doing several research projects in Florida, Belize and Costa Rica and
spending his free time photographing tropical display plants at Selby
Gardens. After getting married in Buttermilk, Stephen and Karen
decided that they had enough of the humid flatlands of Florida, so they
moved back to Karen’s home turf – the high, dry and photogenic
Eastern Sierra.
After 22 great years in Swall Meadows, last year’s Round Fire
burned their land, home and most of their possessions – a major
interruption in their lives. Thanks to the amazing support of their
friends, neighbors and the community at large, they are re-building
their house in Swall Meadows. Stephen and Karen now spend their
free time weeding and replanting bitterbrush for the deer.
With whom do you identify from
history?
One historical figure I really
admire is Alexander Von Humboldt,
because of his major contributions
to our understanding of the natural
world, and his significant influence
on Charles Darwin, John Muir,
Henry David Thoreau and others.
Who do you admire?
I admire a lot of people, but in
general, those who are kind, hardworking and trustworthy, like my
father-in-law, Jack Ferrell. Good
science writers are also high on
my list. Eminent biologist and
writer Edward O. Wilson, who
popularized the term “biophilia”
(our innate urge to associate
with other forms of life), is an
especially inspiring person with a
strong conservation ethic. Energy
efficiency guru, Amory Lovins is up
there too.
What among your traits do you
dislike the most?
The occasional bout of frustration
or impatience.
What trait do you most dislike in
others?
Although I like dogs, I don’t like
dogmatic people. On a cultural
level such self-righteous ignorance
may lead to dangerous ideas
such as Creationism, religious
extremism, climate change
denialism, etc.
What scares you?
A bombastic narcissist as president.
What is your extravagance?
Soaking in a hot tub while
watching the moon rise over the
White Mountains.
What is a favorite trip you have
taken?
My wife and I travelled to Australia
in 2013, with our main objective
to see lots of wildlife and birds
and we were amazed! I had been
to Australia with my college as a
biology student 32 years ago, so I
knew it would be wonderful.
Where would you like to live?
Swall Meadows, California.
Do you ever lie?
Only when necessary for the
greater good.
Who is the greatest love of your
life?
My wife of 25 years, Karen FerrellIngram
When in your life were you the
happiest?
Probably when Karen and I worked
in Costa Rica, where we spent all
day wandering cloud forest edges
and gaps looking for flowering
orchids.
greatest achievement?
My greatest achievement would
be meeting and marrying Karen.
My second would be finding and
photographing the 60 or so species
for my cactus, agave and yucca
book because it was a really fun
challenge. It combined many of my
favorite things: exploring, camping
in the desert, observing plants and
their pollinators, research and, of
course, photography.
In your next life, you want to be …
My wife’s dog
What is your favorite way of
relaxing?
A good trail run followed by a
hot shower and a cold Mountain
Rambler brew.
What is your present state of
mind?
Improving every day as our house
rebuild takes shape!
What quality do you most
admire in a person?
The ability to listen well.
What fault can you most easily
forgive or overlook?
Forgetfulness or absentmindedness
Who is your favorite fictional or
non-fictional hero?
Gandalf
How would you like to die?
Peacefully.
What hidden talent do you have?
Cloudspotting
What is your motto?
“There is no present like the time.”
What natural talent do you wish
you had?
I wish I were a really good animal
tracker, especially of mountain lions.
If you have another resident in
Inyo County that you’d like to
get “In-Depth & Personal” with,
email that person’s name and
contact info to Terrance Vestal at
[email protected].
What do you consider your