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today’s weather
Mostly Sunny
95° HI | 57° LO
sunday
monday
86° | 52°
84° | 51°
Lone Pine versus Bishop volleyball;
Desert versus Bishop tennis See page 19
Craig Jackson hikes Chocolate Mountain
See page 18
The Inyo Register
saturday, september 12, 2015 | INYOREGISTER.COM | SERVING THE EASTERN SIERRA AND BEYOND SINCE 1870 | 75¢
Water Walking
group: LA is
addicted to water
Sending
smoke
signals
Air district asks
fire mangers,
politicians for big
changes
LADWP spokesperson says
department continues to make
strides in conservation and
environmental protection
By Wendilyn Grasseschi
Mammoth Times Staff Writer
More than five weeks of
smoke and the prospect of
more from the growing
Rough Fire finally prompted
the local air district to put its
figurative foot down this
Thursday.
“Enough is enough,” said
Great Basin Unified Air
Pollution Control District
board of director member
and Mono County Supervisor
Larry Johnston during the
district’s Sept. 10 meeting in
Mammoth. “You have to take
a stand, we cannot be all
Goody Two Shoes about this
and still it get it clear how
badly this is affecting us.”
Although Johnston and
the rest of the board of directors made it clear they didn’t
think they could do anything
to literally stop the Rough
Fire’s growth, they did vote to
send a letter to fire managers
and state and federal authorities and politicians, including
Senators Dianne Feinstein
and Barbara Boxer, that
requests that the needs of the
Eastern Sierra are better represented before, during, and
after the smoke from a wildfire on the west side of the
Sierra crest affects the
Eastern Sierra.
What is needed, said board
member Matt Kingsley, Inyo
County supervisor, is to start
the work to put the Eastern
Sierra on the map when it
comes to managing west side
fires, rather than either ignoring the Eastside or, considering the region to be a convenient way to get rid of the
smoke that would otherwise
be a west side problem.
“We need to ask them to
more formally recognize
when there is a fire, what the
impacts are on the Eastside,”
he said. “We should work
toward institutionalizing
this,” he said, adding that the
letter noted above was a good
way to start.
Board member and Mono
County Supervisor Stacy
See smoke E Page 6
INDEX
Calendar.......... 10
Classifieds........ 11
Faces................... 7
History............... 17
Mtn. Report..... 18
Obituaries.......... 2
TV Listings........ 10
Weather............. 2
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“When the well is
dry, we know the
worth of water.”
– Ben Franklin
Copyright ©2015
Horizon Publications, Inc.
Vol. 145, Issue 110
By Terrance Vestal
Associate Editor
Bump, set, spike!
Bishop outside hitter Carly Todd (15) sends it over the net as Lone Pine’s Niki Martinez (6) and Katie
Lacey (7) charge in to defend. There aren’t too many “Highway 395” games, so the Bishop vs. Lone
Pine volleyball game on Wednesday afternoon was a special treat. For results and more pictures, check
out today’s sports section on page 19.
Photo courtesy of Gary Young
Bishop school district officials seek
bond refinancing to reduce taxes
Proceeds to be
dedicated to
further school
repairs
Register Staff
The Bishop Unified School
District Board is in the process of refunding the bonds it
can while simultaneously
issuing the remaining authorization from 2008, according
to a recent district press
release.
In 2000, more than three
out of four Bishop voters
approved bond measures in
both the high school district
and the elementary district to
improve classrooms and
other facilities. In 2008, nearly 70 percent of voters also
approved Measure “A” for the
elementary district, funding a
variety of repairs and the
installation of a renewable
energy generation system
that has reduced operating
costs and continues to put
more money back into classrooms.
To serve as good stewards
of local taxpayers’ investment, in 2007 both prior districts “refunded” (or refinanced) the bonds issued in
2000 to reduce costs and
thereby reduce the tax rates
of local taxpayers, according
to the district. The net impact
of these refinancings was to
save the community a combined total of approximately
$300,000. Unfortunately,
because taxable property values did not grow as quickly
as anticipated due to the
Recession, tax rates for the
elementary district’s Measure
“A” bonds have exceeded
estimates made when they
were issued in 2008 and likely will continue to be somewhat higher than was expected. However, the tax rates for
the high school district’s
bonds continue to be less
than original projections.
This combination will
result in the best bond structure to minimize the total
cost to taxpayers while also
substantially reducing the
required fees for attorneys,
bankers and other consultants. Indeed, the cost to taxpayers of accessing the
remaining Measure “A” funds
will be less than $1.40 for
every dollar borrowed – less
than a typical home mortgage
repayment – without extending the final date for repayment of all bonds.
With the remaining proceeds from the Measure “A”
authorization, the district is
planning to replace windows,
improve HVAC systems and
make other basic repairs at
Bishop Elementary School
and Home Street Middle
School.
“As a BUHS alum and a
resident of Bishop for most
of my life, I’ve always known
how this community feels
about our schools,” said Barry
Simpson, Superintendent of
Bishop Unified School
District. “Local support really
makes it an honor to lead our
now unified district – and I
was especially pleased to
have been able to turn that
support into solar panels on
the roofs of Bishop
Elementary.”
Currently, interest rates
continue to be at near record
lows and the district again
has the opportunity to refinance many of the outstandSee bonds E Page 6
If Daniel Pritchett had his
way, there would be a great
big intervention for the city
of Los Angeles to address the
metropolis’ addiction to
water – more specifically –
the water of the Owens
Valley.
Pritchett, member of the
Owens Valley Committee and
conservation chair of the
Bristlecone Chapter of
California Native Plant Society
for 15 years, participated in a
roundtable discussion
Thursday with other officials
and activists including Harry
Williams, Alan Bacock, water
Daniel Pritchett,
coordinator for the Big Pine
Bristlecone Chapter
Paiute Tribe and member of
of California Native Plant
the Bishop Paiute Tribe; and
Society
Teri Red Owl, director of the
Owens Valley Indian Water Commission.
The discussion, which drew about 100 people to the the
Owens Valley Paiute Shoshone Cultural Center in Bishop, was
part of the Walking Water pilgrimage in which people are
walking from Mono Lake to Owens Lake to raise water awareness.
Williams discussed the history of indigenous people in the
Owens Valley and how they developed elaborate ditches and
aqueducts that respected plants and animals.
“Then the ranches came in
the 1860s and then they
started killing us,” Williams
said.
Then LADWP came in the
early 1900s and consolidated
the waterways and either
were ignorant or didn’t care
about “the devestation it
caused.”
“Some people call it the
City of Angels,” Williams said.
“Well, Lucifer was an angel.
It’s a monster that keeps
wanting more.”
The conservation of water,
the recycling of water and
better management of the
Amanda Parsons,
resources are all possible,
Pritchett as well as other
Senior Public Relations for
speakers said.
LADWP
“This is possible but it is
politically difficult,” he said.
“But we can’t say it is hopeless, that is self fulfilling.”
But Amanda Parsons, senior public relations representative
for LADWP, said while the department “appreciates the
Walking Water team for leading a pilgrimage from the Mono
basin to Los Angeles focused on the region’s water issues …
some misinformation was presented by speakers that LADWP
would like to remedy.”
“Thanks to progress that has been made through the Inyo/
LA Water Agreement the Mono Lake Agreement, and other
Agreements, LADWP and the Owens Valley community have
made great strides toward protecting the environment in the
Eastern Sierra while providing water supply to Los Angeles,”
Parsons said via email. “These agreements represent a solid
middle ground between environmental protection, conservation and water use, which the department values. This can be
evidenced by our damming the LA Aqueduct south of Owens
Lake this year, effectively keeping what limited water supplies
available during this extreme drought, right here in the Owens
Valley.”
Unfortunately, Parsons said, the region is in the midst of a
“very serious drought and the dry creeks and streams people
are witnessing are a result of limited snowpack runoff, not
increased department exports.”
“In fact, Los Angeles is receiving only a small fraction of a
See water E Page 6
The Inyo Register
2 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015 obituary notices
son, Blake (Penny) Andrews;
brother,
Gary
(Vonnie)
Andrews; sister, Judy (John)
Lauffer; grandchildren, Joey
Medora, Katie, Joe and
Brynley Raftevold; Romi and
Reef Andrews.
Services will be held in
December
at
the
Independence
Cemetery.
Notification and details for
the service will be in the Inyo
Register at a later date.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the
Carson Colorado Railway,
P.O. Box 194, Independence,
CA 93526.
Joseph H.
Andrews
Eaton. Charles is also survived by many beloved grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
Chuck joins his father,
Charles Fazio, mother, Mary
Fazio (Mazza), and brother,
Gene Fazio, in death.
Private services will be
held. Please contact Alyx
Rossi at (760) 937-0048 for
information.
1944-2015
Joseph H. Andrews passed
away on September 7, 2015
in Bend, OR.
Joe was born on March 15,
1944 in Van Nuys, CA and
grew up in the San Fernando
Valley, graduating from
Reseda High School in 1962.
Joe enlisted in the United
States Air Force and was stationed
in
Alexandria,
Louisiana, serving until 1966.
Joe married Sharron Major in
July 1967 and then after the
birth of their daughter moved
to the Owens Valley in 1968
where
they
made
Independence their home for
47 years. Joe worked as a
machinist for the Department
of Water and Power, retiring
in 1998. Joe was involved
with several different organizations,
Independence
Volunteer Fire Department,
American Legion Post 265,
Mt. Whitney Fish Hatchery,
Carson Colorado Railway.
Joe served on the Owens
Valley School Board, coached
Farm Team and Little League
baseball for many years and
was a ski instructor for the
Owens Valley School ski program.
Joe was preceded in death
by his mother, Lillian
Andrews; father, Harvey
Andrews; and sister, Irene
Stegeman.
He is survived by his wife,
Sharron Andrews; daughter,
Cynthia (Daniel) Raftevold;
Larry Gene
Meyer
1936-2015
Charles Steven
Fazio
1948-2015
Charles Steven Fazio, born
in Ohio on March 11, 1948,
died Saturday, Aug. 29, 2015
at his home in Big Pine. He
was 67, and had been a resident of Big Pine and Bishop
for 23 years.
Chuck Fazio was a kind,
compassionate man that
lived a life full of laughter
and love. Chuck was a retired
Southern California Edison
supervisor who enjoyed
coaching youth soccer. He
held his family paramount
and had many close friends.
Chuck is survived by his
wife, Carol Fazio; brother,
Francis (Skip) Fazio; sister,
Patricia Larson; sons, Troy
and Charlie Fazio; daughter,
Crystal Fazio; stepdaughter,
Caron Gluek; as well as
adopted
daughters,
Alyxandra Rossi and Daryl
Larry Gene Meyer was
born in Topeka, Kan., Aug.
18, 1936 and passed away in
Bishop, Sept. 5, 2015.
Larry spent his childhood
in the northwest part of
Oregon before relocating to
the LA area. Larry worked in
the bakery industry and later
as a prop maker for
Hollywood Studios.
Larry has been a resident
of Bishop for 17 years. He
has touched any lives with
his generosity and kindness.
Everyone Larry met became
his friend. He will be greatly
missed by all who knew him.
Larry was preceded in
death by his father, Henry,
mother, Frances, stepfather,
Andy, and wife Roberta.
Larry is survived by his
daughter, Tina, granddaughter, MyAngel of Illnois, care
givers Sonny and Michele
Hornbake in Bishop.
Per Larry’s request there
will be no services. He wanted everyone to remember
him fondly.
services
Lois C. Wilson
Oct. 20, 1931-Aug. 29, 2015
There will be a celebration of life at 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 12 at Big Pine Park.
Charles Steven Fazio
tion.
March 11, 1948-Aug. 29, 2015
Private services will be held. Please contact Alyx Rossi at (760) 937-0048 for informa-
lotto
Daily 3
Wednesday’s midday
picks:
8, 4, 6
Wednesday’s evening
picks:
9, 8, 2
Thursday’s midday picks:
7, 8, 0
Thursday’s evening picks:
0, 5, 3
Daily 4
Wednesday’s picks:
2, 4, 5, 8
Thursday’s picks:
1, 2, 3, 4
Fantasy 5
was 1:46.46.
Wednesday’s picks:
6, 10, 12, 28, 39
Thursday’s picks:
14, 31, 32, 33, 34
Daily Derby
SuperLotto Plus
Numbers for Wednesday,
Sept. 9:
9, 15, 18, 21, 22 26
Wednesday’s picks: First
place No. 11 Money Bags;
second place No. 2 Lucky
Star; third place No. 3 Hot
Shot. Winning race time was
1:41.13.
Thursday’s picks: First
place No. 6 Whirl Win; second place No. 8 Gorgeous
George; third place No. 7
Eureka. Winning race time
Powerball
Numbers for Wednesday,
Sept. 9:
44, 45, 47, 50, 51 8
For additional updates, call
(900) 776-4000 from a touchtone phone. This is a toll call. Or,
visit www.calottery.com on the
Internet.
Get the
news.
Get the
story.
The Inyo Register
www.inyoregister.com
word of the day
obdurate
ob-doo-rit
adjective:
1. unmoved by persuasion, pity, or tender feelings;
stubborn; unyielding.
2. stubbornly resistant to moral influence; persistently impenitent
examples:
<tIt happened because of massive and obdurate resistance to
reasonable change. >
The Inyo Register
<Obdurate is a formal word meaning stubborn. If you want
to major in English, but your parents are obdurate that you
should go premed, they might go so far as to threaten not to
pay your tuition.>
Rena Mlodecki
Publisher
[email protected]
Ext. 222
Darcy Ellis
Managing Editor
[email protected]
Ext. 211
Terrance Vestal
Associate Editor
[email protected]
Ext. 208
Louis Israel
Reporter
[email protected]
Ext. 214
Cynthia Hurdle Sampietro
Classifieds Manager
[email protected]
Ext. 200
quotes:
“In some ways it has evolved by becoming more obdurate,
by standing still rather than pointlessly moving.”
–New York Times, Aug 2, 2015
“Then there is the obdurate skepticism of Pakistanis who
view polio eradication as part of a Western plot against
Muslims.”
–Washington Post, June 17, 2015
origin:
C15: from Latin obdúráre to make hard, from
ob- (intensive) + dúrus hard; compare endure
Stephanie DeBaptiste
Circulation Manager
[email protected]
Ext. 201
Eva Gentry
Bookkeeping
[email protected]
Ext. 206
Terry Langdon
Sales Representative
[email protected]
Ext. 220
Veronica Lee
Sales Representative
[email protected]
Ext. 207
1180 N. Main St., Ste. 108, Bishop, CA 93514
Phone: (760) 873-3535
Fax: (760) 873-3591
www.inyoregister.com
word of the day is sponsored by:
The Inyo Register
AT A
GLANCE
Annual poker run
BISHOP – United We Ride
is hosting its 15th Annual
Charity Poker Run at Brown’s
Town Campground in Bishop
today.
Registration is from 9-11
a.m. Cost is $35 per rider or
$30 per passenger. For more
information, call Dale Refro
at (760) 920-8274. All vehicles welcome.
Laws Good Ole Days
BISHOP – The Laws
Railroad Museum will be
hosting its Good Ole Days
from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. today.
There will be working
exhibits of pioneer trades all
day. There will be a special
presentation, “Spirit of 45 70th anniversary of World
War II” at 1 p.m. with a color
guard. There also will be a
camp and vehicles.
The Laws Railroad
Museum is at 95 Silver
Canyon Road in Bishop.
Jury duty
INDEPENDENCE – Those
who were summoned for
jury duty by the Superior
Court on Monday, Sept. 4,
are still scheduled to
appear as stated on the
summons at 9 a.m.
Tribal consultation
INDEPENDENCE – The
Inyo County Board of
Supervisors is scheduled to
conduct a workshop regarding a draft tribal consultation policy at 1:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 15, in the
Board of Supervisors Room
in the Inyo County
Administrative Center, 224
N. Edwards. For more information or questions, contact the Planning
Department at (760) 8780263 or inyoplanning@
inoyocounty.org.
4-H Sign-up Fair
BISHOP –There will be a
4-H Sign-Up Fair on
Tuesday, Sept. 15, from 5
to 7 p.m. at the Tri-County
Fairgrounds. For more
information, contact Callie
Peek, at (760) 873-7854.
Fair board meets
BISHOP – The regular
meeting of the Board of
Directors, 18th District
Agricultural Association
will be Thursday, Sept. 17,
at the city of Bishop office
meeting room at 10 a.m. for
a financial analysis meeting.
The board will continue
at 1 p.m. in the board room
of the Main Office at the
Tri-County Fairgrounds and
via conference call in the
County of Alpine
Administrative Building,
Board of Supervisors
Chambers.
Rate proposal meeting
BISHOP – The Los Angeles
Department of Water and
Power is hosting a workshop about the department’s proposed five-year
rate proposal. If you receive
a power bill from LADWP,
this proposal may impact
you.
The meeting will be from
6 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
Sept. 17, at the Los Angeles
Department of Water and
Power Multi-Purpose Room,
300 Mandich St. in Bishop.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015 3
Taking the oath
Inyo County
Sheriff’s Office
adds two new
deputies and one
correctional
officer to its
ranks
Funds would be
used to preserve
Japanese
American
confinement sites
Register Staff
The National Park Service
is now accepting applications
for $3 million in grants to
preserve and interpret U.S.
confinement sites and other
locations where more than
120,000 Japanese Americans
were imprisoned during World
War II. The deadline for applications is Tuesday, Nov. 10.
“Telling the difficult stories
of our nation’s history, along
with its successes, is an important responsibility of the
National Park Service, and
preserving the experiences of
Japanese Americans imprisoned during World War II is
one of those important, but
challenging stories that must
be told,” National Park Service
Director Jonathan B. Jarvis
said. “These grants support
projects that are vivid reminders of the continuing need to
guard the constitutional rights
of all Americans against injustice, prejudice, and fear.”
Congress established the
Japanese
American
Confinement Sites Grant
Program in 2006 to preserve
and explain the places where
Japanese American men,
women, and children – most
of them U.S. citizens – were
incarcerated after Japan
attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941.
Japanese
American
Confinement Sites grants are
awarded to eligible groups
and entities, including nonprofit organizations, educa-
HEALINGS
Mind, Body & Spirit
BISHOP – Bishop Union
High School Class of 1975
is inviting all ‘70s alumni to
help it celebrate its 40-year
reunion. It will be at the
Tri-County Fairgrounds at
7:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept.
26.
For more information,
call Marydawn Deat at (760)
873-7587.
Therapeutic & Holistic
MASSAGES
INYO COUNTY – In the
recent “Best of Inyo
County” publication the
winner of “Best of
Audiologist” is not an audiologist. Thomas Metz is the
only audiologist in Bishop
and surrounding areas.
Register Staff
Sheriff Bill Lutze holds a swearing-in ceremony to officially welcome, from left, Officer Jennifer Martinez, Deputy Dan Thomassian
and Deputy Kevin Reynolds earlier this week. Martinez is now
serving as an Inyo County correctional officer and Thomassian and
Reynolds are serving as sheriff’s deputies.
Photo courtesy Inyo County Sheriff’s Office
in criminal justice.
Reynolds grew up in
Bishop; he spent three years
working on an ambulance but
his goal was to develop a
career in law enforcement.
Reynolds attended Cerro
Coso’s Peace Officer Reserve
Program. After completing
the program in 2013 he
worked for both Mammoth
Police Department and Bishop
Police Department simultaneously as a reserve officer for
about a year and half.
Officer Martinez also grew
up in Bishop, and knew she
wanted a career in law enforcement. She enrolled in Cerro
Coso’s Administration of
Justice degree program and,
according to the Sheriff’s
Office will be earning her AA
soon. She also just completed
Cerro Coso’s Peace Officer
Reserve Program.
“On behalf of everyone at
the Inyo County Sheriff’s
Office, we welcome Deputy
Thomassian, Deputy Reynolds,
and Officer Martinez to the
Inyo SO Team,” a press release
from the Sheriff’s Department
states.
Park Service accepting
applications for grants
BUHS Class of ‘75
Correction
Doctor: Hospital
has cutting-edge
equipment for
early breast
cancer diagnosis
Register Staff
Two new sheriff’s deputies
and one new correctional officer were officially welcomed
this week in a swearing-in ceremony held at the Inyo County
Sheriff’s Office by Sheriff Bill
Lutze.
Lutze officially welcomed
Deputy Dan Thomassian,
Deputy Kevin Reynolds and
Officer Jennifer Martinez.
According to the Sheriff’s
Office, Thomassian has a long,
successful history in law
enforcement. He has worked
for Nye County Sheriff’s Office
in Nevada as a detective sergeant for 15 years and before
that he spent four years with
Pleasant Hill Police Department
in California. He has been
with the Nevada Army
National Guard for approximately 10 years, and currently
is a commander in the 1864th
Transportation
Company;
prior to that he spent three
years active duty in the Army
and one year in the California
National Guard. Thomassian
also holds a master’s degree
Official
dóTERRA
Retailer!
Also offering skin care, face & body
waxing, aromatherapy and more.
Gift Shop includes custom jewelry,
gift baskets, candles and accessories.
725 N. Barlow • Bishop
Mondays-Saturdays
(760) 937-3391
Irma West • Owner
Rotarians learn about
new tech at NIH
tional institutions, and state,
local, and tribal governments,
for work to preserve confinement sites and their histories.
In establishing the program, Congress authorized
up to $38 million in grants
that can be awarded over the
life of the program, with funds
appropriated annually. Grant
money can be used to identify, research, evaluate, interpret, protect, restore, repair,
and acquire historic confinement sites. To date, the program has awarded more than
$18 million in grants to 148
projects involving 19 states
and the District of Columbia.
In fiscal year 2015 (Oct. 1,
2014 to Sept. 30, 2015), the
National Park Service distributed 20 grants totaling more
than $2.8 million.
The
President’s budget for fiscal
year 2016 seeks $3 million for
the next round of program
grants.
Grants can be used for a
variety of efforts, including
the design and construction
of interpretive centers, trails,
wayside exhibits, and other
facilities, oral histories and
site-history research, school
curricula, and purchase of
non-federal land at authorized sites.
The program requires
applicants to raise project
funds from other sources to
“match” the grant money,
which is awarded after a competitive review of project proposals. Successful grantees
must match $1 in non-federal
funds or “in-kind” contributions to every $2 they receive
in federal money. Matching
funds can be raised and spent
during the grant period and
do not have to be “in the
bank” when a group applies
for a grant. Applicants can
receive up to two grants a
year.
More than 60 historic sites
are eligible for grant-funded
work. They include the 10
War Relocation Authority centers that were set up in 1942
in seven states: Granada
(Amache), CO; Gila River and
Poston, AZ; Heart Mountain,
WY; Jerome and Rohwer, AR;
Manzanar and Tule Lake, CA;
Minidoka, ID, and Topaz, UT.
Also included are more than
40 other sites, including
“assembly centers” and U.S.
Army and Department of
Justice detention and internment facilities.
More information, including 2016 application materials and lists of the program’s
most recent awards, is available on the grant program
website: www.nps.gov/jacs/
Bishop Rotarian Victoria
Lane, who also is the CEO of
North Inyo Hospital, invited
Dr. Stuart Souders to speak
on the latest equipment currently being installed at NIH
for the early diagnosis of
breast cancer. Souders said
NIH is today among the best
hospitals in the nation in its
diagnostic capabilities for
breast cancer.
Souders, who lives in
Huntington Beach, has been
the director of breast imaging
at NIH since 2009.
He said he agreed in March
of 2009 to come up on a temporary basis for a few weeks,
but then after a while he came
to love Bishop, and the tremendous support and enthusiasm he experienced at NIH.
Souders noted that he has
consulted at many hospitals
and imaging centers in this
state, and NIH has cuttingedge equipment rarely seen in
many facilities.
He continued to work for
five years “on a handshake”
from the previous hospital
CEO. After five years John
Halfen told Souders that he
had “passed his probationary
period,” and offered him a
contract. Souders said he has
enjoyed Bishop so much he
gave up his positions in
Southern California and now
works
here
exclusively
because he “loves the community.” He said it reminds him
of the small community in
Nebraska where he grew up.
Victoria Alexander-Lane, CEO of Northern Inyo Hospital, Dr. Allison
Robinson, newly hired surgeon who recently joined the NIH staff
after retiring from the Navy, Dr. Stuart Souders, radiologist, Patty
Dickson, administrator of the Radiology Department at NIH, visit at
a recent Bishop Rotary Club meeting.
File photo
The Inyo Register
OPINION
4
SATURDAY, september 12, 2015
Rena Mlodecki Publisher | DARCY ELLIS 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., 1180 N. Main Street, Ste. 108, 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, 1180 N. Main Street, Ste. 108, Bishop, CA 93514. Phone (760) 873-3535. Fax (760) 873-3591
So, who do you like?
By Thaddeus Taylor
As one would imagine,
many people ask me what I
think about the Republican
candidates for the party’s
nomination. It appears that
they suspect I have some
insight or, failing that, inside
information. They are usually disappointed. It is time for
me to come clean and tell
you, Dear Reader, how I see
the contest and who I would
like to see as the Republican
nominee.
Let’s get one thing out
there: I am not a fan of
dynasties. It seems to me
that the whole 1776 business was about ending that
sort of thing in the Colonies.
The best person for the
job probably does not want
it. Presidents Calvin Coolidge
and Harry Truman are such
men. Both did the job to the
best of their abilities. They
were not power-hungry control freaks but decent men in
very difficult situations.
Let us take a look at what
I see as the skills and abilities that the president
needs.
Understanding the law:
the president is the chief law
enforcement officer of the
nation. Presidents take a solemn oath to protect and
defend the Constitution
against all enemies, foreign
and domestic. Article II of
the Constitution details the
duties of the president.
Please note that the job is
not about “helpin’ people” as
stated by President Obama.
Humility: The president
is not the “leader” of the
nation. He/she is the chief
executive of the executive
branch of the government.
There are two other, equal
branches. It is important that
the presidents understand
that they are government
employees and not rulers.
Experience: It would be
nice if a candidate has some
actual executive experience.
The candidate’s track record
should be examined to determine their ability in that role.
Thus, I prefer former governors or corporate leaders as
they have actually been in
charge of something other
than a political campaign.
President
Eisenhower
showed his ability to manage
things when he was able to
coordinate sometimes fractious allies while planning
and running one of the great
military campaigns in world
history. Many former military officers have held the
presidency. Some were generals and some were somewhat lower on the food chain.
I prefer someone who has
Top of the Morning
Guest Columnist
been a junior officer because
they were right there when
his young countrymen got
turned into line items on the
butcher’s bill of foreign
interventions (think JFK,
Truman and George Bush
41). I hope that they would
remember that while pondering military and foreign
policy decisions. Former military men had to perform in
management
situations
fraught with danger and
adversity. That should give
the voters an idea of the
character and abilities of the
person seeking the office.
Realism: When Harold
MacMillan became prime
minister of Great Britain he
was asked by a reporter what
he intended to do. He
responded by saying that “I
expect that I shall deal with
whatever comes up.” He was
being realistic. Whoever the
next president is, they will
have to deal with some
severe problem or crisis that
is now totally off the radar.
Whatever they claim as their
agenda, no matter what
fancy and pointless their slogans, “hope and change”
and “a bridge to the 21st
century” are particularly vacuous, mean absolutely nothing. Things happen and an
executive must be able to
deal with them. At least JFK’s
“New Frontier” had meaning
when you consider the space
program. And LBJ’s “Great
Society” would mean the
same thing if you swapped
out “Great” for “Expensive.”
Decisiveness: The great
Winston Churchill defined
the job of head of government as that of a man on a
raft going rapidly down a
river. Equipped only with a
pole to try and keep the raft
off the rocks all the while
keeping the logs of the raft
from becoming untied and
the raft coming apart.
President Truman had a sign
on his desk that said “The
Buck Stops Here.” He knew
that the president had to
make the truly difficult decisions because the easy ones
never got to his desk. It
would be good to know what
kind of person is seeking the
job. Are they able to do what
the nation needs and the
Constitution requires even if
it is unpopular. When things
go sideways it is good to
have someone who is decisive. These guys had a handle on the job and had a
good idea of the job description. This is another part of
the job where character matters.
Works for all of us:
Individuals that campaign
using divisive issues do us
no favors. All too frequently
they change their views when
the political winds change.
Same sex marriage, abortion
and economic disparity are
such issues. Some folks are
never going to agree on some
things and some solutions
are too draconian and perhaps unconstitutional to
actually be implemented.
The unscrupulous candidate
knows this and cynically
exploits the divisions created. It is instructive to note
that both Mrs. Clinton and
Mr. Obama changed their
same sex marriage position
from 2008 to now. When the
press refers to that fact,
however infrequently, they
call it “evolving” and not flipflopping. In reality, we need
a problem solver not a problem exploiter. Mitt Romney
was a successful profession-
al problem solver but he
lost.
Basic honesty: I am tired
of guys like Bill Clinton and
Obama looking right into the
TV camera and lying like a
cheap rug. The lefties went
nuts on G. W. Bush, “Bush
lied and people died” for the
second Gulf War. It would
appear that bad rhymes are
more important than facts
for the left. Bush didn’t lie,
he repeated what the CIA
told him but the other two
guys did lie and the left was
silent. Dishonesty should
not be a partisan issue.
Miracle worker: If someone running for the presidency was able to show me a
plan to resolve the nation’s
debt issue I would not only
vote for that person but I
would send them money and
campaign for them. The
funded and un-funded liabilities of the United States are
totally out of hand and
unsustainable. I don’t care
what party that person
belongs to, heresy to some,
but I would support them.
Otherwise, I will support the
party’s candidate.
(Mr. Taylor is a 30-year
resident of Inyo County and
is currently the chairman of
the Inyo County Republican
Party.)
Significant Details
There is a reason we
are wading in denial
Apparently, that’s the end of that.
Kind of snuck up on us, eh?
We should have known this was coming all along and done a better
job anticipating it. We might want to try and convince ourselves that we
didn’t see it coming, but in reality that was just our denial overwhelming the reality bearing down on us. We can try to convince ourselves we
were too busy with all our important “personal
stuff,” to pay attention, but in the overall scheme
of things, our “stuff” was pretty petty. In reality,
we probably just decided to ignore what was happening, or consciously diverted our attention
away from some of the more obvious warning
signs, like a 5-year-old who believes that by covering his eyes he can stop whatever is happening
right before his eyes.
Anyway, it’s a sad day of reckoning that we can
no longer ignore, thanks to the heart-thumping,
emotional development occurring this last
Jon Klusmire
Thursday that shattered our complacent little
opinion
world. It was a blaring, unmistakable signal that
cannot be ignored or denied: The NFL regular season has started, signaling the true end of summer and beginning of fall.
Oh quit being a stickler for detail. We know, we know. According to
the calendar or the moon phases or the Wiccan’s Sun Salutation
Calculation or the Earth’s rotation or the trine square of Jupiter and
Uranus, “fall” doesn’t really, officially start until later in September.
We know. We just don’t care.
We have been baking in a summer of denial and we are not happy
about stopping our summer fantasy just because of some silly grown
men in gladiator suits are giving each other concussions.
We all knew we were in for a weird summer when it rained on the
Fourth of July. And I do mean rain. Usually, “rain” in the Owens Valley
feels like being doused with the mister in the produce department of
the grocery story. But these were big, real raindrops that created real
mud puddles. And it didn’t stop on the Fourth. The July rainfall total in
Bishop was 1.36 inches. That doesn’t sound like much, but it was a
record.
And what did we do during this moisture miracle? Stood around saying, “I don’t believe it.” Some of us covered our eyes, and said, “never
seen such a thing.”
Next up was the beetle infestation that swarmed the land. Out of selfdefense, we made jokes, said it wasn’t that bad, said we didn’t mind
bugs in our coffee cups and on our houses, said we would only start
worrying when the frogs started appearing and the rivers ran red. Ha.
Ha. Ha.
Lucky for us, the smoke from wildfires descended and killed the
bugs. Yippee. When the smoke obscured the mountains on both sides of
the valley, we said, “oh, this won’t last.” Then it started raining ash. We
soldiered on, forcing fake smiles and covering our irritated eyes.
So is it any wonder after enduring those plagues that we cheerfully
denied the seasons were changing because we were clinging to a little
sliver of hope that once those catastrophes were behind us, we could
get a few weeks of “normal” summer? But we ran out of time. Summer
is really over.
(Jon Klusmire of Bishop is hoping for a “normal” fall.)
letters and top of the morning policy
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Editor, The Inyo Register, 1180
N. Main St., Ste. 108, Bishop, CA
93514
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The identity of a Good Samaritan
shopper sought
Bill: Best intentions with
unintended consequences
On Aug. 25 I shopped at Smart and Final and forgot my
wallet at home. I went home and returned and found out my
bill was paid by the lady in front of me in line. No one remembers who you were or your name. So I would like to have your
name and address or phone number so I can repay you.
Thank you.
There are thousands of bills introduced in the California
Legislature each session. It is therefore impossible for citizens to study, and respond to all bills. I would however invite
you to pay particular attention to one bill, Senate Bill 350 The
Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015. As with so
many legal mandates SB 350 approaches the state of
California from a one-size-fits-all perspective. The bill’s proposed reductions in the use of gasoline and diesel may be
doable in some areas, but would seem problematic with the
Ib Sorenson
Bishop
distances traveled in the rural areas of California. Can we live
with the potential rationing of gasoline and diesel?
One may find the goals of SB 350 to be admirable, for
renewable energy is the way of the future. Yet, given today’s,
or for that matter tomorrow’s, technology and infrastructure
deficiencies the bill seems to be betting on the outcome.
Additionally how the cost of implementation is to garnered is
not addressed. If you would search the Internet for SB 350, or
otherwise investigate this legislation you can form your own
opinion. Pro or con please share your thoughts on this important bill with your legislators and governor.
Jay Smart
Bishop
The Inyo Register
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015 5
wRiTe YoUR RepReSenTATiveS
City of Bishop
City Hall: 377 W. Line
St., Bishop, CA 93514;
(760) 873-5863;
www.ca-bishop.us
City Council:
• Mayor Patricia Gardner
(760) 873-8579
[email protected]
• Mayor Pro-tem Laura Smith
(760) 872-4034
[email protected]
• Karen Schwartz
(760) 872-1756
[email protected]
• Joe Pecsi
(760) 784-0699
[email protected]
• Jim Ellis
[email protected]
(760) 872-0780
Address for all: 377 W. Line
St., Bishop, CA 93514
Regular meetings of City
Council: second, fourth
Mondays, 7 p.m., City Hall
City Administrator/
Community Services Director:
Jim Tatum, (760) 873-5863,
[email protected]
City Attorney: Ryan Jones
City Treasurer: Robert Kimball
Fire Chief: Ray Seguine, (760)
873-5485
Planning Director: Gary
Schley, (760) 873-5863,
[email protected]
Police Chief: Chris Carter,
(760) 873-5866
Public Works Director: David
Grah, (760) 873-8458, [email protected]
County of Inyo
168 N. Edwards St.,
Independence;
(760) 878-0366,
(760) 873-8481,
(760) 876-5559,
(800) 447-4696;
www.inyocounty.us
Inyo County Grand Jury: Jean
Adair, Robert Klinger, Robert
Miller, Said Berguem, Debbie
McCormick, John F. Harris,
Velia Kutzkey, Sandra
McDougal, Jim Scott, Dave
Tanksley, Peter Thomsen
To submit a concern or complaint to the 2015-16 Grand
Jury, send correspondence to:
Inyo County Grand Jury, P.O.
Box 401, Independence, CA
93526. To use a formal complaint form, visit Inyocourt.
ca.gov/grandjury.html. The
current Grand Jury accepts
signed or anonymous letters.
Board of Supervisors:
• District 1 Dan Totheroh:
(760) 872-2137
• District 2 Jeff Griffiths:
(760) 937-0072 Office and
Cell
[email protected]
• District 3 Richard Pucci:
(760) 878-0373 Office
[email protected]
• District 4 Mark Tillemans:
(760) 938-2024 Office
(760) 878-8506 Cell
[email protected]
• District 5 Matt Kingsley:
(760) 878-8508 Office and Cell
[email protected]
• Address for all:
P.O. Drawer N, Independence,
CA 93526
Regular meetings of Board of
Supervisors: Every Tuesday, 9
a.m. (some exceptions), County
Administrative Center in
Independence.
County Administrator: Kevin
Carunchio, (760) 878-0291,
[email protected]
Agricultural Commissioner:
Nate Reade, (760) 873-7860
Assessor: David Stottlemyre,
(760) 872-2702, (760) 8780302,
[email protected]
Auditor-Controller: Amy
Shepherd,
(760) 878-0343
Coroner: Leon Brune,
(760) 873-4266
County Clerk: Kammi Foote,
(760) 878-0223, (760) 8732710
County Counsel: Margaret
Kemp-Williams, (760) 8780229,
(760) 872-1169
District Attorney: Tom Hardy
(760) 878-0282,
(760) 872-1078, (760) 8736657
Health & Human Services
Director: Jean Turner, (760)
878-0242, (760) 873-3305
Integrated Waste Management
Director: Pam Hennarty,
(760) 873-5577
Museum Director: Jon
Klusmire, (760) 878-0364,
(760) 878-0258
Parks & Recreation Director:
McGovern
and Borin
Dental
Gentle
Family
& Cosmetic
Dentistry
760-873-3208
Kevin Carunchio,
(760) 878-0291
Planning Department Director:
Josh Hart, (760) 878-0263,
(760) 872-2706
Probation Dept. Director: Jeff
Thomson, (760) 878-0274,
(760)
872-4111, (760) 872-4005
Public Administrator: Patricia
Barton, (760) 873-5895
Public Works Director: Clint
Quilter,
(760) 878-0201, (760) 8722707
Sheriff: Bill Lutze,
(760) 878-0320
Treasurer-Tax Collector:
Alisha
McMurtrie, (760) 878-0312,
[email protected]
Water Department Director:
Bob
Harrington, (760) 878-0001
State of
California
California State Capitol,
Sacramento, CA 95814;
www.ca.gov
Governor: Edmund G. "Jerry"
Brown, Jr.
Mail: Gov. Jerry Brown
c/o State Capitol, Suite 1173
Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: (916) 445-2841
Fax: (916) 558-3160
Website: www.gov.ca.gov
Senator, 8th Senate District:
Tom Berryhill
Capitol Office:
State Capitol, Room 3076
Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: (916) 651-4008
Fax: (916) 651-4908
Modesto District Office:
4641 Spyres, Ste. 2
Modesto, CA 95356
Phone: (209) 576-6470
Fax: (209) 576-6475
Fresno District Office
6215 N. Fresno St., Ste. 104
Fresno, CA 93710
Phone: (559) 253-7122
Fax: (559) 253-7127
Website: http://berryhill.cssrc.
us/?utm_source=cssrc&utm_
medium=senator_list&utm_
campaign=senator_list
Assemblyman, 26th
Assembly
District: Devon Mathis
Capitol Office:
State Capitol
Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: (916) 319-2026
District Office:
113 North Church St., Ste. 505
Visalia, CA 93291
Website: http://ad26.asmrc.
org/
United States
www.usa.gov
President: Barack Obama
Mail: The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20500
(Please include email
address)
Phone Numbers:
Comments: (202) 456-1111
Switchboard: (202) 456-1414
Fax: (202) 456-2461
Website: www.thewhitehouse.
gov
Senator: Barbara Boxer
D.C. Office:
112 Hart Senate Office
Building
Washington, D.C. 20510
(202) 224-3553
Website: http://boxer.senate.
gov/
Fresno Office:
2500 Tulare St., Suite 4290
Fresno, CA 93721
Phone: (559) 485-7430
Fax: (559) 485-9689
San Francisco Office:
One Post Street, Suite 2450
San Francisco, CA 94104
Phone: (415) 393-0707
Fax: (415) 393-0710
Fresno Office:
2500 Tulare St., Suite 5290
Fresno, CA 93721
Phone: (559) 497-5109
Fax: (202) 228-3864
8th Congressional District
Representative: Paul Cook
D.C. Office:
1222 Longworth House
Office
Building
Washington, D.C. 20515
Phone: (202) 225-5861
Website: http://cook.house.
gov
Sacramento Office:
501 I Street, Suite 7-600
Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: (916) 448-2787
Fax: (202) 228-3865
Apple Valley District Office
14955 Dale Evans Parkway
Apple Valley Town Hall
Apple Valley, CA 92307
Phone: (760) 247-1815
DRIVE 4 UR
SCHOOL EVENT!
at Bishop Ford
our
hyGiene
teaM
Lori Plakos, RDH
Margie Hooker, RDH
Jan Hornby, RDH
Cara Borin, RDH
HELP
US
RAISE
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently approved the
first generic versions of Abilify (aripiprazole). Generic aripiprazole
is an atypical antipsychotic drug approved to treat schizophrenia
and bipolar disorder. Schizophrenia is a chronic, severe and
disabling brain disorder. About one percent of Americans have
this illness. Typically, symptoms are first seen in adults younger
than 30 years of age. Symptoms of schizophrenia include
Dwayne Wilson
hearing voices, believing other people are reading their minds or
controlling thoughts and being suspicious or withdrawn. Bipolar disorder, also known as
manic-depressive illness, is another brain disorder that causes unusual shifts in mood,
energy, activity levels and the ability to carry out day-to-day tasks. The symptoms of
bipolar disorder include alternating periods of depression and high or irritable mood,
increased activity and restlessness, racing thoughts, talking fast, impulsive behavior and a
decreased need for sleep. All atypical antipsychotics contain a warning alerting health care
professionals about an increased risk of death associated with the off-label use of these
drugs to treat behavioral problems in older people with dementia-related psychosis. No
drug in this class is approved to treat patients with dementia-related psychosis.
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We are now compounding “all natural estrogen hormone replacement” as prescribed by your
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In a study of 1,964 patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), extending the dose of
natalizumab from 4 weeks up to 8 weeks was shown to be well-tolerated and effective in
patients, and resulted in no cases of the potentially fatal side effect progressive multifocal
leukoencephalopathy (PML). The findings were presented at the American Academy of
Neurology Annual Meeting.
Presented as a service to the community by
dwayne’s
friendly pharmacy
644 W. LINE STREET • BISHOP, CA 93514
(760)
Senator: Dianne Feinstein
D.C. Office:
331 Hart Senate Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20510
Phone: (202) 224-3841
Fax: (202) 228-3954
TTY/TDD: (202) 224-2501
Website: http://feinstein.senate.gov
872-2522
1440 N. Hwy. 6, Bishop, CA 93514
760-873-4291
Fax 760-873-7196
The Inyo Register
6 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015 bonds
Walkers continue their trek through the area to raise awareness regarding water.
Photo by Mark Dubois
water
Continued from front page
typical water supply this year
from the Eastern Sierra while
still meeting all of its environmental and water supply
commitments in the Owens
Valley,” she said. “LADWP
wishes the Walking Water
team a safe pilgrimage and I
encourage anyone with questions regarding our operations in the Owens Valley and
in Los Angeles to reach out to
me. I can be emailed at
Amanda.Parsons@LADWP.
com.”
Other Walking Water
events planned for the area
include:
• Community Day, 8 a.m.
Saturday, Sept. 19, Owenyo
area, northeast of Lone Pine
to Lone Pine Paiute Community
Center – Local community
members are invited to join
with Walking Water for a day,
to walk, share a story and
celebrate the beauty of water
and the Owens Valley. Bring
own food for picnic lunch and
drinking water for the day.
• Around the World of
Water: Thinking Local and
Global; 6 p.m. Saturday, Sept.
19;
Lone
Pine
Paiute
Community Center; presentation by the Lone Pine Tribal
Youth program will open the
evening followed by pot luck
dinner; 7 p.m., roundtable of
stories from around the world
– what are the world water
stories, and how is the Owens
Valley part of that? The discussion includes Bacock,
Kathy Bancroft, member of
Lone Pine Paiute Tribe and
tribal historic preservation
officer; Marcela Olivera, a
water commons organizer
and key international liaison
for the Coalition for the
Defense of Water and Life,
Cochabamba, Bolivia; Mike
Prather, board member of
Friends of the Inyo and chair
of the Inyo County Water
Commission; Rajendra Singh,
water specialist working with
local rural communities in
India; and Sabine Lichtenfels,
founder of Tamera peace
research center in Portugal.
indicated, after four smoky
summers, they might not
come back again next year.
“Once you lose this momentum, it’s hard to get people
back,” Eastman said. “It can
take years.”
The smoke’s health effects
did, however, take center
stage during the hour-plus
discussion. Dr. Rick Johnson,
Mono and Inyo County Public
Health Officer, reiterated what
he has been saying now for
several years; that wildfire
smoke is much more dangerous than the air pollution
caused by, say, the Owens Dry
Lake dust, due to its much
smaller particle size and, the
duration of the smoke and
the intensity of the smoke
both are adding up to a clear
health effect for locals.
“We have had a lot of
“unhealthy” and “moderate”
air quality days and for sensitive groups, like people with
asthma, children, the elderly,
it’s been much worse,” he
said. “If you really think about
it, these ‘sensitive groups’
comprise a lot of us. And
most of the mitigation directives that the state and feds
post doesn’t work here. They
say, turn on your AC to filter
the air; we don’t have AC.
They say close your windows;
it’s been too hot to close windows here and that’s the only
way most people stay cool.
They say go to a mall; we
don’t have malls. They say go
to the library or a cooling center; we don’t have facilities
with the capacity to do this.”
Some members of the
board wanted the letter to be
more of a challenge to the
Sierra National Forest, where
the fire started, and to other
agencies and entities involved
in managing the fire.
“This fire just increased by
another 20 percent in the last
five days after five weeks of
burning,” said Eastman. “In
my mind, they are not trying
to put it out.”
He said he believed that
fire managers had not been as
aggressive on suppressing the
fire in the beginning as they
might have, because it was a
“natural” (i.e. lightning) fire
and that was a code for allowing the fire to burn.
But Eastman got some
pushback.
“This fire was considered a
full suppression fire from day
one,” said Deb Schweizer, the
public information officer
with the Inyo National Forest
and a former information officer for Sequoia Kings Canyon
National Park, which is now in
the fire’s path. “The problem
is, the terrain was so steep
where it started, they could
not get hand crews into the
fire at all. They had to go aerial only and they were lucky
they could do that, because
most of the resources were
already allocated to the fires
in Northern California.”
She noted that the Rough
Fire is in some of the steepest,
canyon-dominated country is
the state; thus is has some of
the most erratic winds. It is
also riddled with some of
heaviest bug-killed forests in
the state. All of these things
made – and are making – the
Rough Fire an incredibly dangerous to fight, she said.
In the end, the board did
vote to send a comprehensive
letter to a wide variety of
agencies and individuals asking for a change in the way
the Eastern Sierra is integrated into west side forest policies that involve any kind of
fire issues; everything from
prescribed burns to fighting
and managing wildfires, to
communicating with the
Eastern Sierra.
smoke
Continued from front page
Corless agreed with Kingsley.
She said the issue of smoke
impacts to the Eastern Sierra
from west side fires is only
likely to get worse as the climate warms and fires, fed by
drought, beetle-killed trees
and too many years of fire
suppression policies, get larger and hotter.
“We have to recognize that
these large fires like the Rough
Fire (the Rough Fire is now
one of the 20 largest fires in
state history, she said), are
climate-driven fires, that there
will be more of them in the
future, and that we have to
start accommodating that
reality in our policies.”
It isn’t like the Rough Fire
is the first fire to cause problems, either, Johnston and
others noted. For the past
several years, almost like
clockwork, a series of west
side fires have impacted the
Eastern Sierra; the Cabin Fire
this summer; the Lion Fire,
the Sheep Fire, the Aspen Fire
and several other fires over
the past four years all have
had a strongly negative effect
on the Eastern Sierra.
The impacts have not been
just in the obvious ways, i.e. in
health effects on local residents and/or visitors, either.
“We have worked for years
to bring the cross-country
runners to the Eastern Sierra
to train in a high altitude environment,” said board member
John Eastman. “I ran into a
group
from
Stanford
University recently and they
said that every August when
they had come here to train, it
had been smoky. They said
they are not coming back next
summer.”
Others noted they had similar experiences with visitors
who had come during smoky
days and either left early, or
Continued from front page
ing bonds in order to reduce
costs to taxpayers by more
than $200,000. Additionally,
approximately $500,000 of
Measure “A” remains to be
accessed and refinancing the
prior bonds will allow the
district to “efficiently” issue
that amount, offsetting some
of the cost to the community.
As such, “Serving on the
previous elementary board
and the now Unified Board,
our goal has always been to
continually improve the education we provide to our students as well as maintain and
improve our classrooms and
facilities – all while remaining
fiscally responsible,” said
Trina Orrill, president of the
Bishop Unified School District
Board. “The generosity of our
community has allowed us to
do this and, in return, we
strive to minimize the monetary impact incurred by our
local taxpayers. Though the
magnitude of the economic
downturn surprised many of
us, things are looking better
and we now have the opportunity to further repair and
modernize Bishop schools,
while simultaneously reducing the cost as much as possible.”
“We are excited to get some
new projects underway,” said
Kathy Zack, vice president of
the Board. “Despite our best
efforts to maintain classrooms and facilities, our
schools continue to age and
this $500,000 will allow us to
make
some
important
improvements happen soon.”
District and the board officials say they welcome feedback about their efforts to
improve local schools. Those
who have any questions or
would like to schedule a tour
of any of the district’s schools
or visit the district office
behind Bishop High School
can call Simpson at 872-3680,
ext. 8.
The Inyo Register
FACES&places
7
saturday, september 12, 2015
Fender benders
Eastern Sierra Tri-County Fair goes out with bangs
Car No. 13 had as much personality as any driver at the derby this
year. On fire and left for dead on numerous occasions “lucky 13”
refused to yield. Seen here with driver ‘Double J’ Jimenez just after
winning the main event, the 13 car would also go on to win the
powder puff event with pit member Stacy Santana as driver.
Photos by Seth Conners
Fire Department legend Larry Huffman poses with rodeo royalty
Kaitlyn DeMott during a break in the action.
The truck event at the derby was much anticipated and no one was disappointed. Here, the crew for
the No. 14 truck celebrates after their victory in the 2015 truck class. The all-Bishop crew (l-r) Mike
Barron, Shawn Barron, Rudy Madera, Stacy Santana, Double J Jimenez, Israel Santana, Erik Hannon,
Cory Barron and Isaiah Vargas.
Relaxing with the No. 18 car are (l-r) David Hazel, Bobby Patterson, driver Brian Watters and Dennis
Helsel after winning the first heat of the night with minimal damage.
Symons EMT crew (l-r) Crystal Alvarado, Laura Lingeman, Ariana Wilie and Pete Schlieker are thankful
for having an easy night.
Bret Metcalf (l-r) stands with pit crew Tim Miller, Sean McWiliams and Zeb Metcalf after winning heat
two at Sunday night’s Destruction Derby.
Tow crew (l-r) Fidensio Garcia, Jose Roberto, Lane Suleski and Tony Roberts all of
Bishop, await the start of the next heat. Clearing the arena after each heat requires
multiple tow trucks and a strong team of drivers.
Heat one winner Brian Watters awaits the main event with the
derby’s traffic director Brian Simpson.
Arena crew (l-r) Chris Riggins, Sam Blum and
Lauren Partridge kept things moving along in a
timely manner throughout the night. Sam and his
starter shotgun stopped hearts at the beginning
and end of every heat.
The Inyo Register
8 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015 Condo neighbor is acting crazy
Dear Annie: My husband
and I live in a single-story
condo that is adjacent to
another condo. We have
been dealing with a horrible
neighbor
for
seven
months.
When I moved here three
years ago, the neighbor’s
son was taking care of her
condo, since she traveled a
great deal for work. Now
she has decided to work at
home, and she is a tyrant.
She is constantly complaining that she hears our
garage door, that our vacuum is too loud and that we
run our dishwasher too
often. She has harassed us
about going up and down
our steps to the basement.
She has even called the
police on us for “door slamming.” We don’t slam our
door, but it does make a
normal sound when it closes.
This woman never leaves
her home, not even on
weekends, so playing a
radio is out of the question.
I had three contractors look
at the walls, and they told
her that there are about
two inches between our
units.
She is really making me
miserable. I should be able
to relax in my home and do
my laundry and cleaning
without worrying. The
police told me she has
“every right to complain
about noise,” but they also
told her that she should
expect to hear sounds coming from our home and the
noise is not unreasonable.
I think this woman is
crazy, and she’s trying to
chase me away. I’m tired of
walking on eggshells. What
can I do?
KATHY & MARCY
– W.
Dear W.: If you are not
making excessive noise, you
should ignore her. She is
obviously very sensitive to
sound and should take the
necessary steps to insulate
her home, such as adding
carpeting and wallpaper,
and using white-noise
machines or sound-canceling headphones. If you are
willing, you could put on
your kindest, most sincere
face and pay her a visit. Say,
“Louise, I’m so sorry that
our noise levels bother you,
but there is nothing we can
do about the thin walls.
Maybe
a
white-noise
machine would help to
drown us out. Or perhaps
wear some noise-canceling
headphones. It must be
hard to be so sensitive to
sound.”
Dear Annie: I read the
letter from “Mother-in-Law
from Hell,” who thinks her
daughters-in-law
don’t
show her respect because
they only call her when they
want her to babysit.
I’m the mother of three
boys, now men with families of their own. I have
three
daughters-in-law,
some of whom came to our
families with children.
Here’s what I’ve learned: If
you put 100 people in a
room and ask them to
define respect, you will get
100 different answers. Her
daughters-in-law may be
respecting her by their definition, just not hers.
As for her complaints
about the grandchildren,
grandchildren are a gift,
whether they are bloodrelated or gifted through
marriage. Every minute we
spend with them, whether
picking them up from
school, taking them to the
doctor or just hanging out,
is an opportunity to love
and encourage them, and
let them know they are valued people. Life is too short
to miss the chance to make
a difference in the life of
another person.
– Grandmother
and In-law
Dear Grandmother: You
have the right attitude and
a generous heart. Bless
you.
Annie’s Mailbox is written
by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy
Sugar, longtime editors of
the Ann Landers column.
Please email your questions
to anniesmailbox@creators.
com, 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) Personal matters claim a
good deal of the Lamb’s time
in the early part of the week.
But by midweek, pragmatic
considerations (work, school,
job-seeking, etc.) begin to
take priority.
TAURUS (April 20 to May
20) The seasonal shift ignites
the Bovine’s creative aspects.
You could do well if you try
to combine your penchant
for innovation with the more
pragmatic demands of the
week.
GEMINI (May 21 to June
20) Ideas come easily to you
this week. And never mind
that some might suggest
they’re unworkable and/or
impractical. It’s your vision
that counts. Work them out
and see what turns up.
CANCER (June 21 to July
22) Personal matters continue
to dominate the early part of
the week. By midweek, more
workaday issues once again
begin to emerge. Balance your
time to give both the attention
they need.
LEO (July 23 to August 22)
A new contact could provide
an expanded opportunity. But
be sure you get all the facts
before you consider signing
on. Ask questions, and be
wary if you don’t get the right
answers.
VIRGO (August 23 to
September 22) An unexpected
development could cause
some supposedly resolved
disagreements to reignite.
Deal with the situation before
it leads to some really serious
problems.
LIBRA (September 23 to
October 22) A clash of worklinked viewpoints needs to be
discussed openly, honestly
and calmly by all concerned
before it can impede progress
on an ongoing project.
SCORPIO (October 23 to
November 21) The Scorpion’s
pragmatic side helps you
accept the possibility that a
change of plans might be the
wise thing to do. Be sure to
weigh all your considerations
Last Week’s Answers
carefully.
SAGITTARIUS (November
22 to December 21) Some
people might not take no for
an answer. Never mind. Keep
your resolve if you’re sure you
don’t want to be involved in a
potentially sticky situation.
CAPRICORN
(December
22 to January 19) All other
facts and figures aside,
it’s what you learn about
potential colleagues that can
be most helpful in assessing
any decisions you’re likely
to make regarding a new
project.
AQUARIUS (January 20 to
February 18) You might want
to reconsider some of your
outside commitments if they
continue to demand more
time than you can spare. Be
honest with yourself when
making a decision.
PISCES (February 19 to
March 20) Pay attention to
that inner voice of Piscean
wisdom counseling you to
remove those rose-colored
glasses and take an honest
look at any decisions you
might face this week.
BORN
THIS
WEEK:
You have a penchant for
persuasion that would make
you a fine candidate for a
political career.
The Inyo Register
RELIGION
9
SATURDAY, september 12, 2015
By the Creek
Autoimmune
disorder
We have all heard of those
diseases that doctors just can’t
figure out. The person is doing
all they can to fight the disease
but their own body is working
against them. These types of
diseases are known as autoimmune diseases. Autoimmune
diseases arise from an overactive immune response of the
body against substances and
tissues normally present in the
body. In other words, the body
actually attacks its own cells.
The immune system mistakes
some part of the body as a
pathogen (intruder) and
attacks it. In the simplest of
terms the body interprets a
part of its own body to be an
enemy and seeks to destroy it
at all costs, even at the
expense of poor health to the
rest of the body.
Nowhere is the statement
more true, “a body divided
against itself cannot stand.”
From the outside it is clear to
see that the end is dismal,
even though the body unknowingly thinks it is doing its job
to the best of its ability. The
antibodies are released; the
white blood cell count rises.
What often happens is that the
body is brought to a state of
disrepair and brokenness, all
due to an inner conflict within
the body. Obviously, this is not
how our bodies were originally
designed by the Creator, but
this is the resultant effect of
sin.
It’s doubtful the apostle
Paul understood this micropathology of the human body
when he wrote to the
Corinthians but he still captured the essence of it in 1
Corinthians 12: 20-21, 26, “But
now there are many members,
but one body. And the eye cannot say to the hand, ‘I have no
need of you;’ or again the head
to the feet, ‘I have no need of
you.’ … And if one member
suffers, all the members suffer
with it; if one member is honored, all the members rejoice
with it.” Paul stresses the interdependence of the Body of
Christ, that we really do need
each other. Can you imagine
an eye, or a leg trying to go it
alone? Or an ear trying to be
independent? Of course not; it
sounds like a 1950’s “B” movie.
Unfortunately we see this
autoimmune disorder occur all
too often in the Body of Christ.
One member of the Body deliberately attacks another feeling
like they are doing the right
thing in eradicating an “evil
disease.” The result is an emaciated structure, not glorifying
to Christ. When we as the Body
of Christ do this, we amputate
Pastor Kelly Larson
Columnist
part of the Body. We sever fellowship with someone whom
God has placed within the
Body of Christ. The Body of
Christ is fragile. Paul cautions
against this in Galatians 5:15,
“But if you bite and devour
one another, take care that you
are not consumed by one
another.” If we are not careful,
we will end up looking like a
bunch of body parts strewn all
over rather than finely crafted
diverse parts working together
for the glory of the Kingdom.
Don’t get me wrong, if there
is sin in the Body we need to
address that, but we need to
be real careful to do it according to the surgical procedure
outlined in Scripture, according to Matthew 18, and above
all with love and respect.
Remember, they are part of
YOUR body. Discipline is
intended to restore an ailing
member to the Body. Nowhere
in Scripture do I see that we
have the right to simply walk
away from fellowship with
each other because that “member” is bad. We need to
address their sin for the health
of the Body. There is a difference between restorative healing and an amputation.
If you need to make a call,
make a call. If you need to visit
someone, visit someone. Rub
shoulders with someone with
whom you used to fellowship.
If there is something crooked
in how you have treated someone in the body of Christ – set
it straight! Visit another church
from time to time. See how
others in the Body of Christ
are doing.
Above all, Glorify Christ!
(Kelly Larson is pastor at
Bishop Creek Community
Church, an Evangelical Free
Church that meets Sundays at
St. Timothy’s Anglican Church
at 700 Hobson Ave., corner of
Hobson and Keough, at 11 a.m.
For more information, call 760872-7188 or email www.
BishopCreekCommunity.org.)
Open your eyes and see how
good God is
The oddest things in life
can have the most profound
influence. What is even more
unusual is that they can be
time delayed. In my early
teens, Star Trek was a brand
new concept for weekly television. And yes, the character
of Spock was intriguing. He
was a being standing astride
two cultures, motivated by
the logic of one parent, but
grounded in the emotions of
the other. The conflict
between his two natures was
often used as a plot twist.
That logic plot twist was
the most pronounced in one
episode. The episode’s premise was a common one for the
day: humans were not fit to
pound sand in their own playground, let alone throughout
the galaxy. As a result, Kirk,
Spock and company were condemned to death, with memories from Kirk used as the
means of execution. The ever
insightful aliens chose the
events leading to the final
moment, the gunfight at the
OK Corral.
Philip Severi
Columnist
Kirk and company were
doomed, until Spock discovered that what was happening
to them was an illusion. He
realized that it was the crew’s
belief in that illusion that
would actually kill them. So
logically, there could be no
doubt on anyone’s part that
their situation was completely
illusory. The solution? Spock
pulled off a linked, multiple
mind meld imparting the
solidity if his logic to fight
Rev. Walt Sharer
Columnist
Sharer, you stated on your
questionnaire that you
were a minister of the
Church of Religious
Science. Could you briefly
explain to the court what
the tenants of Religious
Science are?” I responded,
after a minute to phrase
my answer, and stated,
“Religious Science teaches
personal responsibility for
our actions, and that by
our choice we can chose
the way we live, move and
have our being.” Needless
to say, the defense attorney quickly asked the
judge to dismiss me from
the case, which he did.
believe. Help me with my
doubts!’” (Mark 9:23-24)
Are the two situations
between James and Jesus
mutually exclusive? A contradiction? No, they are not. But
there is a difference. Jesus
was dealing with a man whose
experience told him nothing
short of a miracle would work
for his son. Miracles were in
short supply. So the man
went to Jesus, not out of a
sense of cynical skepticism or
self-centered gain about
which James was writing, but
out of a sense of hope. He
wanted his doubts erased! It
was an up front application
right out of the Old
Testament, “Open your mouth
and taste, open your eyes and
see – how good GOD is.
Blessed are you who run to
him.” (Psalms 34:8).
(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.)
From the Pulpit
Mammoth and Bishop football
The rivalry between
Mammoth and Bishop football teams is always exciting
for our local communities.
Years ago this was an easy
allegiance. Living in Bishop
and having my sons play
for the Broncos made the
rooting choice easy. The
former head coach at
Mammoth (Tom Gault) is
my Mammoth member, and
the new coach (Bubby
Greene) is a member of my
church at Grace Lutheran in
Bishop. As you read this
you may know the winner
of the game. If not check it
out on Google under MaxPreps.
The Lesson that comes to
me is what happens in
churches on Sunday mornings. God brings coaches,
teachers, janitors, students,
moms, dads, husbands,
wives, and children to worship the King. One day we
will all bow before Him,
why not get a head start
now? Bowing to Jesus is a
wonderful blessing to your
life.
Folks come to receive the
divine gift of forgiveness.
Stained sinners declared
innocent saints by the
blood of the Lamb – what a
gift given from the King.
Winner and loser receive it
all. Scholars and flunkouts
receive majestic mercy.
Young and old, rich and
poor, clever and foolish, all
receive mercy big-time from
an unchanging God.
Whether you hate losing or
really only enjoy winning,
Christ the sinless Son of
God is for you on the cross.
He is there splattering you
in divine blood and making
you His own. He is without
comparison the God of the
centuries who by himself
redeems you. He delivers us
from much worse than 911
tragedies. He is the mighty
fire fighter.
Due to minor injuries
some blood is spilled at
football stadiums everywhere as two teams battle
courageously. But the blood
spilt by Jesus saves billions
of souls and that includes
you.
This Sunday a special
guest is with us at both
churches. Rev. Dr. Loren
Kramer and his wife Arlene
have served our church
body together over 50
years. Dr. Kramer was
President of our district and
also President of Concordia
University. He will preach at
Mammoth Lakes Lutheran
Church at 8:45 a.m. and at
Grace Lutheran in Bishop at
What it takes to be
a metaphysician
Every organization has
some form of requirements
for admission of new members or associates. Even
people have subconscious
check lists of requirements
before they associate with
others. It can contain
things like racial, social
class, age, address or even
hair color. Religious
Science does not care
which side of the tracks
you hail from, or what age
you were brought into the
study. It does not matter
what you have done or
where you have been. It
only cares about what you
are doing now.
One problem many
encounter coming into the
study of Religious Science
is that most of your
friends and associates have
either never heard of
Religious Science, or if they
have, considered it another
cult down the street. I,
myself have some difficulty describing Religious
Science in a one sentence
manner. I once was on
jury duty in Independence.
The process of jury selection was being conducted.
The defense attorney questioned me like so: “Mr.
any creeping doubt the rest of
the merely human crew might
have. They day was saved.
Isn’t it great that God does
not work that way? I cannot
say that doubt is welcome.
James makes that perfectly
clear in the first chapter of
his letter when he wrote that
being double-minded (doubtful) makes one, “unstable in
all his ways.” But doubt does
not mean one is finished!
Why?
The answer to that is
found in Mark, chapter nine.
A father brings his son to
Jesus, hoping that He will
cure the boy’s problem. It has
been a long standing problem
that has often caused the boy
to injure himself. The father
is at his wits’ end. He has
heard about Jesus, but he still
has doubts. Recognizing this
Jesus says, “‘If? There are no
‘ifs’ among believers.
Anything can happen.’” The
father’s response was immediate. “No sooner were the
words out of His mouth than
the father cried, ‘Then I
So what do we need to
be a Religious Scientist?
An open mind comes to
me first. Stagnant theologies and repressive dogmas have driven many
from the orthodox churches. Many of these believe
in God, but cannot believe
or follow the sickness, sin
and death message
preached from many
orthodox pulpits. How
can you believe God is
Love and He has given you
free choice, but if you
chose wrong, he will not
only judge you, but send
you to a lake of fire.
Religious Science desires
that its adherents have the
ability to look into the fire
and see something totally
different; something good
and very good. As Jesus
was able to look into a raging storm and say, “Please
be still”, and know it would
be still. Ernest Holmes
stated, in How to use the
Science of Mind,” It is necessary for the practitioner
to withdraw his thought
from things as they appear
to be and to think independently of any and all existing conditions. No one can
hope successfully to prac-
tice this science unless he
is able and willing to do
this.”
Its not easy to look at
current conditions and see
the opposite, but if the current viewpoint is maintained, one can only expect
more of the same. Change
takes place in mind.
Conditions are never cause;
they are effect. When we
withdraw energy from the
limited and negative, we
change causation and thus
change effect. It is something we all can do, if we
so desire. Change your
thought change your experience.
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.)
10:45 a.m. See you Sunday
to hear God’s ever relevant
word.
(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 Rd., Mammoth.
Sunday service us at 8:45
a.m. For more information,
call 760-872-9791.)
Rev. Kent Puls
Columnist
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 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
urc
Ch
h of Chri
st
287 Grove St. • Bishop
Sun. 10:00 a.m. Bible Service
10:50 a.m. Worship Service
873-3769
First Southern
Baptist Church
251 Sierra St., Bishop, CA
Sunday Worship Service 11:00
a.m.
Sunday Morning Bible Study
10:00 a.m.
Wed. Evening Bible Study
6:30 p.m.
(760) 873-6022
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
Follow Me! “True Fruit”
2 Peter 1:1-15
Pastor Kelly Larson
www.bishopcreek.org
Valley Presbyterian
Church
Fri. Bible Study 1:00 p.m.
Sunday Worship & Sunday School 11 a.m.
873-8960 • 2912 W. Line • Bishop
Church on the Mountain
Pre-Service Prayer: 8:30-9:30 a.m.
in the Garden House of Prayer
Sunday Service: 10 a.m.
Children’s Ministry & Nursery Available
Mike & Heather Gehringer/ Pastors
384 S. Landing Rd. • Crowley Lake, CA 93546
www.churchonthemountain.org
(760) 935-4272
The Inyo Register
10 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015 COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Private businesses or groups
holding events for profit are not eligible to use this section. Due to space
limitations, we can only guarantee
one run per item. All submissions are
subject to editing.
Saturday, Sept. 12
Annual poker run
United We Ride is hosting its 15th
Annual Charity Poker Run at Brown’s Town
Campground in Bishop. Registration is
from 9-11 a.m. Rider: $35. Passenger: $30.
Entry includes a poker hand, ride pin and
barbecue lunch, live music and a raffle,
too. For more information, call Dale Refro
at (760) 920-8274. All vehicles welcome.
friends host field class
Clinical herbalist and educator Tellur
Fenner will lead a day-long field class
geared to identifying local edible and
medicinal plants. Cost is $20. Meet at
9:30 a.m. at the Eastern California
Museum parking lot, 155 N. Grant St.,
Independence. Bring water, lunch, sunscreen, etc. The group will spend the
day (until 6 p.m.) exploring and identifying the flora in nearby Onion Valley.
Sponsored by the Friends of the Eastern
California Museum. Call (760) 8780258 for more information and to make
a reservation – space is limited.
COSA BIRD WALK
Eastern Sierra Audubon Society’s
monthly Conservation Open Space Area
Bird Walk will be held at 7:30 a.m. at
the Conservation Open Space Area on
the Bishop Paiute Reservation. The
group will be looking for migrants,
especially hummers and “blue birds” –
grosbeaks, mountain blue birds and
pinion jays – as they have all been seen
Independence to Bishop. This is a great
walk for birders of all ages, abilities –
more information, call Cliff Beck at 8735941, or, in Mammoth, Joanne Hihn at
709-5050.
beginners to advanced – and all physical abilities as the pace is slow and
easy, and the path flat, wheelchairaccessible and ADA certified. Extra binoculars and field guides will be available to share. Meet at 7:30 a.m. at the
BLM/Forest Service Building on West
Line Street in Bishop. For more information, email [email protected] or
check out the web: www.esaudubon.
org.
Hula girls
The Hula Halau O Koru meets every
Monday at 5:45 p.m. at the Jill Kinmont
Boothe School on Grandview Drive.
New dancers are always welcome. For
more information, call Kymberlee
Nalumaluhia at (760) 873-9818 or
email at [email protected].
knights of columbus sale
The Knights of Columbus are holding
their annual rummage sale from 7:3011:30 a.m. at Our Lady of Perpetual Help
Catholic Church, 849 Home St., Bishop.
The sale is a fundraiser for Knights’ charities.
farmers market in Bishop
The Eastern Sierra Certified Farmers
Market will be held from 9 a.m.-noon on
the Church Street lawns behind the Bishop
courthouse. There will be fresh fruit, vegetables, non-ag products and live entertainment, as well as a raffle.
bridge in bishop
Lenee and Tim Talbot were
cooking green hatch chiles at
the Saturday, Sept. 6 farmer’s
market in Bishop. The Eastern
Sierra Certified Farmers Market
will be held from 9 a.m.-noon
on the Church Street lawns
behind the Bishop courthouse.
File photo
Bingo at Senior Center
AARP is offering bingo at 6 p.m. at
the Bishop Senior Center behind the
City Park. Everyone age 18 and older is
welcome to attend. Callers and cashiers
are needed. For more information, call
(760) 873-5839.
Sunday, Sept. 13
sierra club outing
Join the Sierra Club on an outing to
Casa Diablo, a 7,912-foot peak reached
by trail and cross-country. Trip will be a
moderate five miles round trip. Bring
extra water. Meet at 9 a.m. in the
Mammoth Lakes Union Bank parking.
lot. For more information, contact
Brigitte at [email protected].
Monday, Sept. 14
big pine civic club
The Big Pine Civic Club will hold its
September meeting beginning at 7
p.m. at the 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 Rick at (760) 938-2319.
Eastern Sierra chorus
The Eastern Sierra Community Chorus
is beginning rehearsal for the fall-winter
program at 6 p.m. Monday, Sept. 14, at
the Highlands Mobile Home Community
Center in Bishop. The chorus rehearses
in Mammoth on alternate Mondays. For
The Bishop Bridge Club will meet at
12:15 p.m. at St. Timothy’s Church Hall,
700 Hobson St., Bishop. For more information, call (760) 873-4325.
Tuesday, Sept. 15
Rotary club of Bishop
The Rotary Club of Bishop will meet
at noon at Astorga’s Restaurant, 2206
N. Sierra Hwy., Bishop. Today’s program
will be a Club Assembly. Rotary is a
global network of community volunteers. For more information, call Sue
Lyndes, club president, at (760) 8734958.
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. Callers and cashiers
are needed. For more information, call
(760) 873-5839.
Wednesday, Sept. 16
hospital auxiliary
The Northern Inyo Hospital Auxiliary
will hold a workshop at 10 a.m. at the
hospital annex, 2957 Birch St., Bishop.
Members will be working on unique
and new items to sell at the fall bou-
TV SATURDAY
FOR
saTurday 12 sepTember 2015
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tique. All members and friends are
encouraged to attend. For more information, call Shirley Stone at (760) 8721914.
sunrise rotary
Bishop Sunrise Rotary will meet at
7:11 a.m. at the Northern Inyo Hospital
Conference Annex at 2957 Birch St.,
Bishop. For more information, contact
Tom Hardy at (760) 920-0109 or [email protected] or visit: www.bishopsunriserotary.org.
bridge in bishop
The Bishop Bridge Club will meet at
12:15 p.m. at St. Timothy’s Church Hall,
700 Hobson St., Bishop. For more information, call (760) 873-4325.
free computer classes
Free weekly computer and Internet
classes are held at the Bishop Senior
Center at 506 Park St., on Wednesdays.
Beginner-level classes are from 3-4:30
p.m. and 5-6:30 p.m. for users at the
intermediate-level. The purpose of
these free weekly sessions is to help
the residents of Bishop become more
acquainted with computer and Internet
skills needed in today’s online environment. If you are scared of using technology, this class is for you. It is a
hands-on, interactive learning experience (iPads provided) that requires no
previous knowledge. Any and all questions are welcome! The training is provided by the ESCRBC through a Pillsbury
Foundation Grant. For more information, contact all the instructor at (760)
263-9687.
Thursday, Sept. 17
United we ride meeting
United We Ride will meet for its
monthly meeting at 6 p.m. in the con-
ference room at the Pizza Factory in
Bishop. All riders are welcome. For
more information, call Dale Renfro at
(760) 873-7632.
Saturday, Sept. 19
music festival golf tourney
The Eastern Sierra Music Festival is
holding a golf tournament at Bishop
Country Club as its next fundraiser. This
will be a four-person scramble. No
handicap is necessary. Sign up at the
BCC. The event will start at 7 a.m. with
a continental breakfast sponsored by
Top Notch Barber Shop, and then move
on to registration at 8 a.m. Fee is $40
for members and $65 for non-members. The tournament begins at 9 a.m.
with a shotgun start. A dinner of babyback ribs and roasted chicken will be
served after golf. Please join us and
have fun supporting the ESMF and the
National Wounded Warrior Center in
Mammoth Lakes.
Class of ‘65 reunion
Members of the Bishop Union High
School Class of 1965 invite all classmates to attend a reunion picnic at
Bishop City Park, rear pavilion. The
gathering will be informal and attendees are asked to bring their own picnic
(potluck food, plates, utensils, drinks,
etc.) and a chair as well. Suggested
start time is 4 p.m. Graduates from
1962-68 are welcome. Organizers have
been reminded that alcohol is not
allowed in the park.
farmers market in Bishop
The Eastern Sierra Certified Farmers
Market will be held from 9 a.m.-noon on
the Church Street lawns behind the
Bishop courthouse. There will be fresh
fruit, vegetables, non-ag products and live
entertainment, as well as a raffle.
Wye Road
Feed & Supply
Open 7 Days a Week
Owned and Run By Animal Lovers!!
1260 N. Main Street on Hwy. 6 in Bishop
760-872-8010
b - bishop, big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV
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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
Paid Program Lucas Oil Off Road Racing
College Football College Football Georgia at Vanderbilt. From Vanderbilt Stadium in Nashville, Tenn.
Sports Central Fall Preview
2 2 (KCBS) Cindy’s Skin
Prem Goal Zone Action Sports From Los Angeles. Boxing Premier Boxing Champions.
Going Roggin Earth to Luna! Poppy Cat
Tree Fu Tom
4 3 (KNBC) English Premier League Soccer
State to State
Coolest Places On the Spot
St Jude Children’s Research
5
5 (KTLA) Calling Dr. Pol Dog Whisperer Dog Whisperer Dog Whisperer Dog Whisperer Dog Town, USA Expedition Wild Rock the Park Animal Atlas
Dr. Christiane Northrup -- Glorious Women Never Age!
Downton Abbey Rediscovered
50 Years With Peter, Paul and Mary
Antique Show Antique Show
(KOCE) Country Pop
College Football College Football Notre Dame at Virginia.
College Football Eyewitness News 4:00PM
7
7 7 (KABC) (9:00) College Football Oregon State at Michigan.
College Football College Football Notre Dame at Virginia.
College Football Small Town Big Paid Program
19
(KOLO) (9:00) College Football Oregon State at Michigan.
WEN Hair Care Aqua Kids
Career Day
WHADDYADO Wild America
Hollywood
Real Life 101
The First Family Mr. Box Office Jane Seymour REAL-Diego
Hollywood
Fish Oil
9
9 9 (KCAL) 21 DAY FIX
Col. Pregame
College Football Iowa at Iowa State. From Jack Trice Stadium in Ames, Iowa.
11
11 (KTTV) MLB Baseball Kansas City Royals at Baltimore Orioles. From Oriole Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore.
More Things That Aren’t Here Anymore
Ed Slott’s Retirement Roadmap Saving money for retirement.
Liberace Live With the London Philharmonic
Celtic Thunder
10
28 28 (KCET) Things That Aren’t Here Anymore
College Football College Football Notre Dame at Virginia.
College Football 7News at 5PM Saturday
2
(KMGH) (9:00) College Football Oregon State at Michigan.
Prem Goal Zone Action Sports From Los Angeles. Boxing Premier Boxing Champions.
Earth to Luna! Nightly News
9News at 5pm
4
(KUSA) English Premier League Soccer
Lucas Oil Off Road Racing
College Football College Football Georgia at Vanderbilt. From Vanderbilt Stadium in Nashville, Tenn.
CBS4 News at 5
7
(KCNC) Paid Program Flipping
College Football 2015 U.S. Open Tennis Women’s Final. From the USTA National Tennis Center in Flushing, N.Y.
College Football Oklahoma at Tennessee.
23 25 8 140 206 (ESPN) College Football South Florida at Florida State.
College Football College Football Fresno State at Mississippi. From Vaught-Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Miss.
College Football College Football
24 26 15 144 209 (ESPN2) (9:00) College Football Buffalo at Penn State.
College Football Texas-El Paso at Texas Tech. From Jones AT&T Stadium in Lubbock, Texas.
Before the Bigs
My Own Words
25 27
(FXSP) Bundesliga Soccer Borussia Mönchengladbach vs Hamburg SV.
Law & Order “Blood Libel”
Law & Order “Remand”
›› Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad All By Myself (2009) Tyler Perry.
›› Why Did I Get Married? (2007) Tyler Perry, Janet Jackson.
26 42 22 138 245 (TNT) Law & Order “Angel”
(:15) ›› The House Bunny (2008) Anna Faris, Colin Hanks.
›› Ghosts of Girlfriends Past (2009) Matthew McConaughey.
Friends
Friends
27 41 13 139 247 (TBS) ››› Sleepless in Seattle (1993) Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan.
›› Big Momma’s House (2000) Martin Lawrence, Nia Long.
› Big Momma’s House 2 (2006) Martin Lawrence, Nia Long.
››› Bridesmaids (2011)
28 34
105 242 (USA) ›› Semi-Pro (2008, Comedy) Will Ferrell, Woody Harrelson.
Dead on Campus (2014, Drama) Katelyn Tarver, Tamara Duarte.
Sorority Surrogate (2014, Drama) Cassie Steele, Chris Bruno.
The Choking Game (2014, Drama)
29
108 252 (LIFE) Paid Program WEN Hair Care Bring It! “Pom Pom Panic”
›› The Face on the Milk Carton (1995) Kellie Martin, Jill Clayburgh.
Driven Underground (2015, Suspense) Kirsti Swanson, Emily Tennant. The Haunting Of... “Johnny Weir” The Haunting Of... “CoCo”
30
109 253 (LMN) (9:00) ›› Vows of Deception
Dual Survival “Swamplandia”
Edge of Alaska
Edge of Alaska
Edge of Alaska “The Breakup”
Bering Sea Gold
Bering Sea Gold “Girl Drama”
31 74 9 182 278 (DISC) Dual Survival “Grin and Bear It”
Say Yes: ATL
Say Yes: ATL
Say Yes: ATL
Say Yes: ATL
Say Yes: ATL
Nightmare Next Door
Nightmare Next Door
Nightmare Next Door
Dateline: Real Life Mysteries
32 73 26 183 280 (TLC) Say Yes: ATL
Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet
Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet
Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet
33 64 24 184 282 (AP) To Be Announced
The Templar Code
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
34 36
120 269 (HIST) Behind The Da Vinci Code
Flipping Vegas “Haunted House” Flipping Vegas
Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty
35 43 25 118 265 (A&E) Flipping Vegas “Dream House”
›› Sahara (2005) Matthew McConaughey. Adventurers search for a Confederate ship in Africa.
›› The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008) Keanu Reeves, Jennifer Connelly.
I, Robot (2004)
36
254 (AMC) The Shakiest Gun in the West
›› Triple Cross (1967) Christopher Plummer, Yul Brynner.
(:45) ››› No Time for Sergeants (1958) Andy Griffith, Myron McCormick.
37
132 256 (TCM) Mouse-Roared ›› The Hunters (1958, War) Robert Mitchum, Robert Wagner.
›› Pocahontas (1995) Voices of Irene Bedard, Judy Kuhn.
›››› Cinderella (1950) Voices of Ilene Woods, Eleanor Audley.
››› Sleeping Beauty (1959) Voices of Mary Costa, Bill Shirley.
38 19
180 311 (FAM) (9:00) ››› A Bug’s Life (1998)
I Didn’t Do It
Girl Meets
(:40) K.C. Undercover
(:40) Jessie
(:10) Jessie
Liv and Maddie Liv and Maddie Star vs. Forces Gravity Falls
(:40) Bunk’d
(:10) Bunk’d
Spy Kids 2: Isl
39 18 17 173 291 (DISN) Jessie
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
Power Rangers Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and SpongeBob
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
SpongeBob
Alvinnn!!! and
40 66
171 300 (NICK) SpongeBob
Clarence
Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball ›› Monsters vs. Aliens
41 16
176 296 (TOON) Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! We Bare Bears We Bare Bears Steven Universe Steven Universe Clarence
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Flip or Flop
Property Brothers: Buying
Property Brothers: Buying
Property Brothers: Buying
Property Brothers: Buying
42 44
112 229 (HGTV) Flip or Flop
The Great Food Truck Race
Cake Masters
Guy’s Grocery Games
Cutthroat Kitchen
Chopped
Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive
43 45
110 231 (FOOD) Rachael Ray’s Kids Cook-Off
Two/Half Men
Two/Half Men
Two/Half Men
19th Annual Prism Showcase
››› Flight (2012) Denzel Washington. Troubling questions arise in the wake of a plane crash.
››› Avatar (2009)
44 40
137 248 (FX) Two/Half Men
45 37
107 249 (COM) (:08) South Park (:40) South Park (:12) South Park (:44) South Park (:14) South Park (:44) South Park (:14) South Park (:44) South Park (:14) South Park (:44) South Park (:14) South Park (:44) South Park (:15) South Park (:45) South Park
(:07) ›› Jaws 2 (1978, Suspense) Roy Scheider, Lorraine Gary, Murray Hamilton.
(:39) Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
46 76 16 168 325 (SPIKE) (9:00) ›››› Jaws (1975, Suspense) Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw.
››› Back to the Future (1985, Comedy) Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd.
››› Back to the Future Part II
48 75
122 244 (SYFY) (8:30) Beautiful Creatures (2013) ››› The Fifth Element (1997, Science Fiction) Bruce Willis, Gary Oldman, Ian Holm.
Roseanne
(:24) Roseanne ›› Footloose (1984, Drama) Kevin Bacon, Lori Singer, John Lithgow.
Reba
Reba
(:36) Reba
(:12) Reba “The Steaks Are High”
63
106 (TVL) (:12) Roseanne
WAGS “Never Have I Ever”
Don’t--Tardy
Don’t--Tardy
Don’t--Tardy
Below Deck “Off the Radar”
Below Deck “Pretty Cheeks”
››› There’s Something About Mary (1998)
64 203
129 273 (BRAVO) WAGS “Is It Another Girl?”
House of DVF
House of DVF
House of DVF
House of DVF
WAGS “The WAG Life”
WAGS “Set a Date or Die!”
65
114 236 (E!) E! News Weekend
Imp. Jokers
Friends People Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff.
66
204 246 (TRUTV) Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Imp. Jokers
Bizarre Foods America
Man v. Food
Man v. Food
Food Paradise
Food Paradise
Food Paradise
Food Paradise
67 63
215 277 (TRAV) Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Insp. Station
Nest Family
VeggieTales
Heroes & Legends of Bible
Bless the Lord Christian News ››› Angel in the House (2011) Toni Collette.
Best of Praise Precious Memories
69 99
260 372 (TBN) Ishine Knect
Dining-Dean
Passport: Earth
Turning Point Listen
1000 to 1: The Cory Weissman Story (2013, Biography) David Henrie.
American Ride The Story Trek
70
374 (BYU) College Football Houston at BYU. Dining-Dean
American Ninja Warrior Obstacles include Doorknob Arch.
American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Las Vegas finals.
American Ninja Warrior
76
115 235 (ESQTV) American Ninja Warrior Obstacles include Floating Monkey Bars.
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
› Flower Girl (2009, Romance) Marla Sokoloff, Kieren Hutchison.
››› Wedding Daze (2004) John Larroquette, Karen Valentine.
A Ring by Spring (2014)
79 35
185 312 (HALL) Golden Girls
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b - bishop, big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV
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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
NCIS “We Build, We Fight”
NCIS: Los Angeles “Black Wind”
48 Hours
CBS 2 News
SoCal Week
2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News
Nightly News
NBC 4 News
Paid Program Open House
Running Wild With Bear Grylls
American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Las Vegas finals.
NBC 4 News
Sat. Night Live
4 3 (KNBC) NBC 4 News
Name Game
KTLA News at 6 News at 6:30
Two/Half Men
Two/Half Men
Two/Half Men
Two/Half Men
Family Guy
Family Guy
KTLA 5 News at 10
News at 11
Kill Bill: Vol. 2
5
5 (KTLA) Name Game
NewsHour Wk The Lawrence Welk Show
Il Volo: Live From Pompeii Italian favorites.
Victor Borge
Yanni: World Without Borders
Downton Abbey Rediscovered
(KOCE) LAaRT
Sports Zone
Football Weekly Castle Death of a teenage boy.
Eyewitness News 11:00PM
7
7 7 (KABC) College Football Oregon at Michigan State.
KOLO 8 News Jeopardy!
Wheel Fortune Castle “A Dance With Death”
KOLO 8 at 11
Burn Notice
19
(KOLO) College Football Oregon at Michigan State.
KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM
KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM
KCAL 9 News Sports Central Mike & Molly
Mike & Molly
9
9 9 (KCAL) Derm Exclusive! Best Buys Alan Tim McCarver Chargers Insid. Sports Central CA Bountiful
Studio 11
TMZ
RightThisMinute Empire Season Bullseye “Bullseye Bumper Cars” Home Free “Dream Holmes”
Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News
Animation Domination High-Def
11
11 (KTTV) News
BBC Newsnight McLaughlin
Road Trip With Huell Howser
Ed Slott’s Retirement Roadmap Saving money for retirement.
Ed Slott’s Retirement Roadmap Saving money for retirement.
10
28 28 (KCET) (4:30) Celtic Thunder Heritage
7NEWS Special 7News at 10PM (:35) Castle
RightThisMinute (:05) Comedy.TV
2
(KMGH) College Football Oregon at Michigan State.
American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Las Vegas finals.
9News at 10pm (:35) Saturday Night Live
Your Move
(:39) Extra
4
(KUSA) Paid Program Paid Program Running Wild With Bear Grylls
NCIS “We Build, We Fight”
NCIS: Los Angeles “Black Wind”
48 Hours
News
Football Blitz
Blue Bloods “Age of Innocence”
The Good Wife “Pilot”
7
(KCNC) Paid Program Football Pre
(:15) College Football LSU at Mississippi State. From Davis Wade Stadium in Starkville, Miss.
(:15) SportsCenter
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
23 25 8 140 206 (ESPN) College Football
(:15) College Football Boise State at BYU. From LaVell Edwards Stadium in Provo, Utah.
(:15) College Football Scoreboard
Baseball Ton.
24 26 15 144 209 (ESPN2) (4:00) College Football East Carolina at Florida.
MLB Baseball Houston Astros at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
Angels Post
Angels Weekly Bull Riding Championship.
World Poker Tour
25 27
(FXSP) Angels Weekly Angels Pre.
›› Tyler Perry’s Why Did I Get Married Too? (2010) Tyler Perry, Sharon Leal.
››› A Time to Kill (1996) Sandra Bullock. A lawyer’s defense of a black man arouses the Klan’s ire.
›› Why Did I Get Married?
26 42 22 138 245 (TNT) Get Married?
Friends
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
America’s Next Weatherman
27 41 13 139 247 (TBS) Friends
› The Ugly Truth (2009) Katherine Heigl, Gerard Butler.
›› Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Witness Protection (2012) Tyler Perry, Eugene Levy.
Modern Family Modern Family
28 34
105 242 (USA) (4:00) ››› Bridesmaids (2011) Kristen Wiig.
The Murder Pact (2015, Suspense) Beau Mirchoff, Alexa PenaVega.
(:02) A Teacher’s Obsession (2015) Mia Rose Frampton, Boti Bliss.
29
108 252 (LIFE) (4:00) The Choking Game (2014) Til Death Do Us Part (2014, Suspense) Haylie Duff, Ty Olsson.
The Haunting Of...
Last Goodbye Last Goodbye Intervention “Andrew”
The Haunting Of... “Diane Farr”
The Haunting Of...
Last Goodbye Last Goodbye
30
109 253 (LMN) The Haunting Of... “Diane Farr”
Rusted Development
Fast N’ Loud A ’65 Chevy Impala. Fast N’ Loud
Fast N’ Loud
Fast N’ Loud
Fast N’ Loud
31 74 9 182 278 (DISC) Rusted Development
Dateline: Real Life Mysteries
Dateline: Real Life Mysteries
Dateline on ID “Circle of Friends”
Dateline on TLC “Deadly Denial”
Dateline on TLC “Bad Blood”
Dateline on ID “Circle of Friends”
32 73 26 183 280 (TLC) Dateline: Real Life Mysteries
Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet
Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet
Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet
(:01) Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet (:04) Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet (:05) Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet
33 64 24 184 282 (AP) Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
The Knights Templar
The Knights Templar
The Knights Templar
34 36
120 269 (HIST) Pawn Stars
The First 48
The First 48
The First 48
Behind Bars: Rookie Year
(:01) Behind Bars: Rookie Year
(:02) The First 48 “Night Run”
35 43 25 118 265 (A&E) The First 48 “Life Snatched”
››› 300 (2007, Action) Gerard Butler, Lena Headey, David Wenham.
››› Troy (2004) Brad Pitt, Eric Bana. Achilles leads Greek forces in the Trojan War.
36
254 (AMC) (4:30) ›› I, Robot (2004) Will Smith, Bridget Moynahan.
(:45) ››› The Sins of Rachel Cade (1961, Drama) Angie Dickinson, Peter Finch.
››› Dark of the Sun (1968) Rod Taylor.
(:45) It’s Alive!
37
132 256 (TCM) ››› The Nun’s Story (1959, Drama) Audrey Hepburn, Peter Finch, Edith Evans.
›››› Toy Story 2 (1999) Voices of Tom Hanks, Tim Allen.
››› Wreck-It Ralph (2012, Comedy) Voices of John C. Reilly.
(:15) ››› Monsters, Inc.
38 19
180 311 (FAM) ›››› Toy Story (1995, Comedy) Voices of Tom Hanks, Tim Allen.
›› Spy Kids 3: Game Over (2003, Adventure)
› Spy Kids: All the Time in the World in 4D
Gamer’s Guide Gamer’s Guide Lab Rats: Bio. Jessie
Jessie
39 18 17 173 291 (DISN) (4:40) Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams
Thundermans Full House
Full House
Friends
(:36) Friends
40 66
171 300 (NICK) Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Thundermans Thundermans Henry Danger Henry Danger Henry Danger Game Shakers “Sky Whale”
41 16
176 296 (TOON) (4:00) Monsters vs. Aliens (2009) Steven Universe Steven Universe Steven Universe Steven Universe Dragon Ball Z King of the Hill King of the Hill Cleveland Show Cleveland Show American Dad American Dad Family Guy
Property Brothers: Buying
Property Brothers: Buying
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
House Hunters Renovation
House Hunters Hunters Int’l
42 44
112 229 (HGTV) Property Brothers: Buying
Chopped “Chopped, Again!”
Chopped “Amateurs Redemption” Chopped “Return and Redeem”
Chopped “Chopped, Again!”
Chopped “Amateurs Redemption” Chopped “Return and Redeem”
43 45
110 231 (FOOD) Chopped
››› Pacific Rim (2013) Charlie Hunnam. Humans pilot giant robots to fight monstrous creatures.
Mike & Molly
Mike & Molly
44 40
137 248 (FX) (4:00) ››› Avatar (2009, Science Fiction) Sam Worthington, Voice of Zoe Saldana.
(:18) South Park South Park
(:24) South Park South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
South Park
45 37
107 249 (COM) (:15) South Park (:45) South Park “Insecurity”
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Jail: Las Vegas Cops
›››› Jaws (1975, Suspense) Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw.
46 76 16 168 325 (SPIKE) Cops
››› 1408 (2007, Horror) John Cusack, Samuel L. Jackson, Mary McCormack.
››› The Conjuring (2013, Horror) Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson, Lili Taylor.
Sinister (2012)
48 75
122 244 (SYFY) (4:00) ››› Back to the Future Part II (1989)
(:24) Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Johnny Cash: American Rebel Exclusive First Look
King of Queens King of Queens
63
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›› Baby Mama (2008, Comedy) Tina Fey, Amy Poehler.
››› Mean Girls (2004, Comedy) Lindsay Lohan, Rachel McAdams.
›› Baby Mama (2008, Comedy) Tina Fey, Amy Poehler.
64 203
129 273 (BRAVO) There’s Something About Mary
WAGS “Never Have I Ever”
›› He’s Just Not That Into You (2009) Ben Affleck, Jennifer Aniston.
›› He’s Just Not That Into You (2009) Ben Affleck, Jennifer Aniston.
65
114 236 (E!) WAGS “Is It Another Girl?”
Fameless
World’s Dumbest...
Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Fameless
Carbonaro Eff. (:01) World’s Dumbest...
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204 246 (TRUTV) Fameless
Ghost Adventures
Ghost Adventures
Ghost Adventures
Ghost Adventures
Ghost Adventures
The Dead Files
67 63
215 277 (TRAV) Food Paradise
Hour Of Power with Bobby
Billy Graham Classic Crusades
Where the Red Fern Grows The word of God is taught and preached.
Real Videos
Night of Joy
XVZ
69 99
260 372 (TBN) In Touch W/Charles Stanley
Inside BYU
College Football
Wonders of the World
Granite Flats
Studio C
(:29) Audio Files American Ride The Story Trek Post-Game Shw College Football
70
374 (BYU) Studio C
››› Rocky III (1982, Drama) Sylvester Stallone, Mr. T, Talia Shire.
››› Rocky II (1979, Drama) Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire, Burgess Meredith.
›››› Rocky (1976, Drama) Sylvester Stallone.
76
115 235 (ESQTV) (4:00) American Ninja Warrior
Love by the Book (2014, Romance) Leah Renee, Kristopher Turner.
Cedar Cove “Engagements”
A Wish Come True (2015) Megan Park, Benjamin Hollingsworth.
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
79 35
185 312 (HALL) (4:00) A Ring by Spring (2014)
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The Inyo Register
TV SUN./MON.
FOR
sunday 13 sepTember 2015
moVies
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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015 11
Wye Road
Feed & Supply
Open 7 Days a Week
Owned and Run By Animal Lovers!!
1260 N. Main Street on Hwy. 6 in Bishop
760-872-8010
b - bishop, big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV
C S1 S2
10 am
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11 am
11:30
12 pm
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1 pm
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2 pm
2:30
3 pm
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4 pm
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(:25) NFL Football Baltimore Ravens at Denver Broncos.
Sports Central
2 2 (KCBS) NFL Football Indianapolis Colts at Buffalo Bills.
World of Adventure Sports
Cycling
Auto Racing Global RallyCross Series. From Los Angeles.
On the Money Nightly News
Football Night in America
4 3 (KNBC) LPGA Tour Golf
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Cosmetic Surg WEN Hair Care Laura McKenzie What Went
Walk Tall-Kristian Bush
›› Van Wilder (2002, Comedy)
5
5 (KTLA) In Touch W/Charles Stanley
50 Years With Peter, Paul and Mary
The Pain Prescription With Dr. Mitchell Yass
Il Volo: Live From Pompeii Italian favorites.
In Their Own Words
(KOCE) ›› Hava Nagila (The Movie)
Vista L.A. at the Mexican Independence Parade
Jack Hanna
Ocean Mys.
Sea Rescue
Wildlife Docs
World of X
World of X
Outback Adv
Born to Explore Eyewitness News 4:00PM
7
7 7 (KABC) News
Paid Program Sea Rescue
Wildlife Docs
Outback Adv
Born to Explore Animal Adv
Coolest Places World of X
World of X
Its Not Just
Paid Program Sanctuary “Tempus”
19
(KOLO) Top Cooker
Woodlands
Fish Oil
Paid Program IT Cosmetics
WEN Hair Care White Collar “Gloves Off”
IT Cosmetics
US DOCTORS Paid Program Paid Program Family Feud
Family Feud
9
9 9 (KCAL) Mike Webb
The OT
Bundesliga Soccer FC Bayern Munich vs FC Augsburg.
Winning Edge TMZ
11
11 (KTTV) NFL Football Green Bay Packers at Chicago Bears.
More Things That Aren’t Here Anymore
Ed Slott’s Retirement Roadmap Saving money for retirement.
30 Days to a Younger Heart With Dr. Steven
Full Frame
10
28 28 (KCET) Things That Aren’t Here Anymore
Born to Explore Incredible Dog Challenge
Incredible Dog Challenge
World of X
World of X
ABC Fall Prev FeelSexy
Ask America
World News
7News at 5PM Sunday
2
(KMGH) Outback Adv
World of Adventure Sports
Cycling
Auto Racing Global RallyCross Series. From Los Angeles.
Tree Fu Tom
Nightly News
Football Night in America
4
(KUSA) LPGA Tour Golf
(:25) NFL Football Baltimore Ravens at Denver Broncos.
News
7
(KCNC) NFL Football Kansas City Chiefs at Houston Texans.
30 for 30
Blue Carpet
2015 U.S. Open Tennis Men’s Final. From the USTA National Tennis Center in Flushing, N.Y.
SportsCenter
23 25 8 140 206 (ESPN) College Football Scoreboard
Basketball
Golf Walker Cup, Highlights.
MLS Soccer New England Revolution at Toronto FC.
Sunday Night Countdown
24 26 15 144 209 (ESPN2) Running
Golf Life
Destination Pol. Angels Pre.
MLB Baseball Houston Astros at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
Angels Post
UFC Flashback Red Bull: Air
25 27
(FXSP) Bundesliga Soccer
Law & Order “Atonement”
›› Think Like a Man (2012, Romance-Comedy) Michael Ealy, Jerry Ferrara.
›› Diary of a Mad Black Woman (2005) Kimberly Elise, Steve Harris, Shemar Moore.
26 42 22 138 245 (TNT) Law & Order “Deceit”
Friends
›› Life as We Know It (2010, Romance-Comedy) Katherine Heigl, Josh Duhamel.
›› Due Date (2010)
27 41 13 139 247 (TBS) MLB Baseball Toronto Blue Jays at New York Yankees. From Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, N.Y.
NCIS “Escaped”
NCIS “Twisted Sister”
NCIS A Marine on life support.
NCIS “Angel of Death”
NCIS “Knockout”
NCIS “Aliyah” Tense reunion.
28 34
105 242 (USA) NCIS “Untouchable”
Atlanta Plastic “Surgery Sisters”
Atlanta Plastic “A to Z Cup”
›› The Gabby Douglas Story (2014, Drama) Regina King.
With This Ring (2015, Romance) Jill Scott, Eve, Regina Hall.
29
108 252 (LIFE) Atlanta Plastic
A Nanny’s Revenge (2012) Jodi Lyn O’Keefe, Victoria Pratt.
A Mother’s Nightmare (2012) Annabeth Gish, Jessica Lowndes.
›› Crash Site (2011) Charisma Carpenter, Sebastian Spence.
30
109 253 (LMN) (9:00) In the Dark (2013)
Epic Private Islands
Buying Hawaii Buying Hawaii Buying Hawaii Buying Hawaii Ultimate Homes “Hawaii”
Ultimate Homes “Islands”
Naked and Afraid
31 74 9 182 278 (DISC) Epic Beach Homes
Sister Wives
Sister Wives
Sister Wives
Sister Wives
32 73 26 183 280 (TLC) Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Sister Wives
33 64 24 184 282 (AP) To Be Announced
Ancient Aliens
Ancient Aliens
Ancient Aliens “The Vanishings”
Ancient Aliens
Ancient Aliens “Dark Forces”
Ice Road Truckers
34 36
120 269 (HIST) Hangar 1: The UFO Files
The First 48
The First 48 “Cold Betrayal”
Behind Bars: Rookie Year
Behind Bars: Rookie Year
Behind Bars: Rookie Year
Behind Bars: Rookie Year
35 43 25 118 265 (A&E) The First 48
››› 300 (2007, Action) Gerard Butler, Lena Headey, David Wenham.
››› Troy (2004, Adventure) Brad Pitt, Eric Bana, Orlando Bloom.
36
254 (AMC) ›› Predator 2 (1990, Science Fiction) Danny Glover, Gary Busey, Ruben Blades.
››› Mogambo (1953, Adventure) Clark Gable, Ava Gardner.
(:15) ››› Kim (1950, Adventure) Errol Flynn, Dean Stockwell.
(:15) ››› The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) Michael Rennie.
37
132 256 (TCM) (9:00) Bell, Book and Candle
›››› Cinderella (1950) Voices of Ilene Woods, Eleanor Audley.
››› Sleeping Beauty (1959) Voices of Mary Costa, Bill Shirley.
›››› Toy Story (1995)
38 19
180 311 (FAM) ›› Pocahontas (1995) Voices of Irene Bedard, Judy Kuhn.
Liv and Maddie ›› Spy Kids 3: Game Over (2003, Adventure)
› Spy Kids: All the Time in the World in 4D
Austin & Ally
Jessie
Jessie
Jessie
K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover
39 18 17 173 291 (DISN) Austin & Ally
SpongeBob
Teenage Mut.
SpongeBob
Game Shakers “Sky Whale”
Henry Danger SpongeBob
SpongeBob
Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and SpongeBob
SpongeBob
40 66
171 300 (NICK) SpongeBob
Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball We Bare Bears We Bare Bears Teen Titans Go!
41 16
176 296 (TOON) Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! ›› Monsters vs. Aliens (2009) Voices of Reese Witherspoon.
Love It or List It “Delilah & Dan”
Love It or List It
Love It or List It “Pam & Brad”
42 44
112 229 (HGTV) House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters Vacation House House Hunters Love It or List It
Carnival C.
Beach Eats
Chopped “Return and Redeem”
Chopped “Chopped, Again!”
Chopped “Amateurs Redemption” The Great Food Truck Race
Guy’s Grocery Games
43 45
110 231 (FOOD) The Kitchen
››› Avatar (2009) Sam Worthington, Voice of Zoe Saldana. A former Marine falls in love with a native of a lush alien world.
›› Battleship (2012) Rihanna
44 40
137 248 (FX) (9:00) ››› Flight (2012) Denzel Washington, Don Cheadle.
(10:47) ›› Bruce Almighty (2003) Jim Carrey, Morgan Freeman.
(:04) ›› The Incredible Burt Wonderstone (2013) Steve Carell, Steve Buscemi.
(:19) ›› Bruce Almighty (2003) Jim Carrey.
45 37
107 249 (COM) (:15) Tosh.0 “Brad the Actor”
Detroit Muscle Bar Rescue
Bar Rescue “Brawlin’ Babes”
Bar Rescue
Bar Rescue
Bar Rescue “Brokedown Palace”
Bar Rescue
46 76 16 168 325 (SPIKE) Truck Tech
› 6 Souls (2010, Horror) Julianne Moore, Jonathan Rhys-Meyers, Jeffrey DeMunn.
›› Sinister (2012, Horror) Ethan Hawke, Vincent D’Onofrio, James Ransone.
››› 1408 (2007) John Cusack.
48 75
122 244 (SYFY) (9:00) House of Bones (2009)
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
(:12) The Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
(:12) Reba
63
106 (TVL) (:12) The Golden Girls
Ladies of London
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Manzo’d With
Manzo’d With
Don’t--Tardy
64 203
129 273 (BRAVO) Million LA
I Am Cait Cait is on a road trip.
I Am Cait “The Road Trip: Part 2”
I Am Cait “Family Interference”
65
114 236 (E!) Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians I Am Cait “Meeting Cait”
Fameless
Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
66
204 246 (TRUTV) Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Six Degrees of Hack My Life
Mysteries at the Monument
Bizarre Foods: Bizarre Foods: Bizarre Foods America “Detroit”
Bizarre Foods America “Boston” Bizarre Foods America
Food Paradise International
67 63
215 277 (TRAV) Mysteries at the Museum
It Is Written
Pathway Victory Supernatural
Daniel Kolenda Jesse Duplantis John Hagee
MarriageToday Balanced Living Gregory Dickow T.D. Jakes
Joyce Meyer
Lead the Way
Blessed Life
69 99
260 372 (TBN) PowerPoint
Generations Project “Matthew”
BYU Devotional Address
Granite Flats
70
374 (BYU) (:01) BYU Women’s Conference Joseph Smith Joseph Smith Book-Mormon Book/Mormon BYU Idaho Dev. Profiles
›››› Rocky (1976, Drama) Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire, Burgess Meredith.
››› Rocky II (1979, Drama) Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire, Burgess Meredith.
››› Rocky III (1982) Mr. T
76
115 235 (ESQTV) The Agent
Golden Girls
› Love’s Unfolding Dream (2007, Drama) Erin Cottrell, Dale Midkiff.
››› Love Takes Wing (2009) Cloris Leachman, Sarah Jones.
›› Love Finds a Home (2009, Drama) Patty Duke, Sarah Jones.
79 35
185 312 (HALL) Golden Girls
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sunday 13 sepTember 2015
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
Big Brother
Madam Secretary “The Kill List”
CSI: Cyber “Bit by Bit”
CBS 2 News
Entertainment
2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News
The Challenge NBC 4 News
Dateline NBC “Second Chances”
NBC 4 News
NBC 4 News
4 3 (KNBC) Football Night (:20) NFL Football New York Giants at Dallas Cowboys.
KTLA News at 6 News at 6:30
Monopoly Mil. The Middle
Friends
Friends
KTLA 5 News Sunday Edition
KTLA 5 News at 10
News at 11
Bensinger
5
5 (KTLA) (4:00) ›› Van Wilder (2002)
The Great British Baking Show
Masterpiece Mystery!
Masterpiece Mystery!
Vicious
Jesse Cook Live at the Bathurst
(KOCE) Studio SoCaL NewsHour Wk The Doctor Blake Mysteries
World News
News
Eye on L.A.
America’s Funniest Home Videos Shark Tank
The 2016 Miss America Competition Women vie for the crown.
Eyewitness News 11:00PM
7
7 7 (KABC) News 4:00PM
KOLO 8 6:30
America’s Funniest Home Videos Shark Tank
The 2016 Miss America Competition Women vie for the crown.
KOLO 8 at 11
(:35) Castle
19
(KOLO) KOLO 8 at 5pm MomsEveryday World News
Sports Central Raising Hope
Raising Hope
Mike & Molly
Mike & Molly
KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM
KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM
KCAL 9 News Sports Central Joel Osteen
Hour Of Power
9
9 9 (KCAL) Raw Travel
Studio 11
Modern Family Modern Family Bob’s Burgers Bob’s Burgers The Simpsons Brooklyn Nine Family Guy
Last Man-Earth Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News
The Simpsons TMZ
11
11 (KTTV) News
BrainChange With David Perlmutter, MD
Road Trip With Huell Howser
Father Brown “The Deadly Seal”
Vera “Silent Voices” Murdered social worker.
More Things That Aren’t Here Anymore
10
28 28 (KCET) Full Frame
The 2016 Miss America Competition Women vie for the crown.
7News at 10PM News
Castle “A Dance With Death”
Scandal “The Trail”
2
(KMGH) America’s Funniest Home Videos Shark Tank
News
9News at 10pm 9News
Meet the Press
Paid Program Paid Program
4
(KUSA) Football Night (:20) NFL Football New York Giants at Dallas Cowboys.
Big Brother
Madam Secretary “The Kill List”
CSI: Cyber “Bit by Bit”
News
AutoNation All (:07) Blue Bloods “Silver Star”
(:07) The Good Wife “Stripped”
7
(KCNC) 60 Minutes
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
23 25 8 140 206 (ESPN) MLB Baseball Kansas City Royals at Baltimore Orioles. From Oriole Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore.
Wrestling 2015 World Championships. From Las Vegas.
Armwrestling
NHRA Drag Racing
ESPN FC
MLB Baseball Kansas City Royals at Baltimore Orioles.
24 26 15 144 209 (ESPN2) SportsCenter
Bull Riding Championship.
World Poker Tour
World Poker Tour
World Poker Tour
UFC Unleashed
World Poker Tour
25 27
(FXSP) (4:30) Red Bull: Air Race
››› The Blind Side (2009, Drama) Sandra Bullock, Tim McGraw, Quinton Aaron.
››› The Blind Side (2009) Sandra Bullock.
26 42 22 138 245 (TNT) ››› A Time to Kill (1996) Sandra Bullock. A lawyer’s defense of a black man arouses the Klan’s ire.
›› The Change-Up (2011) Ryan Reynolds, Jason Bateman.
››› Knocked Up (2007, Romance-Comedy) Seth Rogen, Katherine Heigl, Paul Rudd.
› Killers (2010, Action) Ashton Kutcher.
27 41 13 139 247 (TBS) (4:00) ›› Due Date (2010)
NCIS “Double Identity”
NCIS “Broken Arrow”
NCIS “Enemy on the Hill”
NCIS A petty officer is shot.
NCIS “Better Angels”
››› Skyfall (2012) Judi Dench
28 34
105 242 (USA) NCIS “Flesh and Blood”
›› Tyler Perry’s the Family That Preys (2008) Kathy Bates.
Tyler Perry’s Temptation: Confessions of a Marriage Counselor
Family That Preys
29
108 252 (LIFE) › Obsessed (2009, Suspense) Idris Elba, Beyoncé Knowles.
Two Wrongs (2015, Suspense) Gillian Zinser, Ryan Blakely.
Mother of All Lies (2015) Francesca Eastwood, Jennifer Copping.
Two Wrongs (2015) Gillian Zinser.
30
109 253 (LMN) Mother of All Lies (2015) Francesca Eastwood, Jennifer Copping.
Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid “Colombia”
Naked and Afraid “Jungle Love”
31 74 9 182 278 (DISC) Naked and Afraid
Sister Wives
Sister Wives Counting down to the new season.
Sister Wives
(:01) Sister Wives
32 73 26 183 280 (TLC) Sister Wives
Rugged Justice
(:01) North Woods Law
(:02) Ice Lake Rebels
(:03) Rugged Justice
33 64 24 184 282 (AP) To Be Announced
Ice Road Truckers “Trail Blazers” Ice Road Truckers
Ice Road Truckers “Power Trip”
Ice Road Truckers
(:03) American Pickers
(:03) Power & Ice “Thin Ice”
34 36
120 269 (HIST) Ice Road Truckers “Icy Grave”
Intervention “Amanda; James”
Intervention “Justin; Kayne”
Intervention “Matthew; Olivia”
Intervention: Then & Now “Sara” (:01) Intervention: Then & Now
(:02) Behind Bars: Rookie Year
35 43 25 118 265 (A&E) Behind Bars: Rookie Year
Fear the Walking Dead “Pilot”
Fear the Walking Dead
Fear the Walking Dead
(:06) Fear the Walking Dead
Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior
36
254 (AMC) (3:00) ››› Troy (2004) Brad Pitt, Eric Bana.
››› Hush... Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1965) Bette Davis, Olivia de Havilland.
››› The Kid Brother (1927) Harold Lloyd.
The Face of Another (1966)
37
132 256 (TCM) ››› Gaslight (1944, Suspense) Charles Boyer, Ingrid Bergman.
›››› Toy Story 2 (1999) Voices of Tom Hanks, Tim Allen.
››› Wreck-It Ralph (2012, Comedy) Voices of John C. Reilly.
››› Monsters, Inc. (2001, Comedy) Voices of John Goodman.
38 19
180 311 (FAM) (4:00) ›››› Toy Story (1995)
Bunk’d
Best Friends
Best Friends
Liv and Maddie Liv and Maddie Liv and Maddie K.C. Undercover
Girl Meets
I Didn’t Do It
Liv and Maddie Liv and Maddie
39 18 17 173 291 (DISN) K.C. Undercover Bunk’d
Thundermans Thundermans Henry Danger Henry Danger Game Shakers “Sky Whale”
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends
(:36) Friends
40 66
171 300 (NICK) Game Shakers “Sky Whale”
Family Guy
Rick and Morty
41 16
176 296 (TOON) Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! King of the Hill Cleveland Show Cleveland Show American Dad American Dad Family Guy
Love It or List It
Love It or List It “Jamie & Greg”
Beach Bargain Beach Bargain Island Life
Island Life
Island Hunters Island Hunters House Hunters Hunters Int’l
42 44
112 229 (HGTV) Love It or List It
The Great Food Truck Race
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
The Great Food Truck Race
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
43 45
110 231 (FOOD) Guy’s Grocery Games
››› Pacific Rim (2013) Charlie Hunnam. Humans pilot giant robots to fight monstrous creatures.
The Strain “The Assassin”
(:01) The Strain “The Assassin”
44 40
137 248 (FX) (4:00) ›› Battleship (2012) Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgrd.
(:10) Tosh.0 Tosh plays a game.
(6:46) Tosh.0
(:21) Tosh.0
(7:54) Tosh.0
(:27) Tosh.0
The Comedy Central Roast Various celebrities roast Justin Bieber.
Natasha Leggero: Live at Bim
45 37
107 249 (COM) Bruce Almighty (:34) Tosh.0
Bar Rescue “Twin vs. Twin”
Bar Rescue “Spoiled Brat Party”
Bar Rescue “All Twerk & No Pay” Bar Rescue
Bar Rescue “Schmuck Dynasty”
Bar Rescue “Lagers and Liars”
46 76 16 168 325 (SPIKE) Bar Rescue
››› The Conjuring (2013, Horror) Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson, Lili Taylor.
›› The Last Exorcism (2010) Patrick Fabian, Ashley Bell.
› Silent Hill: Revelation
48 75
122 244 (SYFY) (4:00) ››› 1408 (2007, Horror) John Cusack.
(:24) Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
(:36) Reba
(:12) Reba
Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens
63
106 (TVL) (4:48) Reba
Don’t--Tardy
Married to Medicine
Married to Medicine
Married to Medicine
Married to Medicine
Don’t--Tardy
Manzo’d With
What Happens Don’t--Tardy
64 203
129 273 (BRAVO) Don’t--Tardy
I Am Cait “The Dating Game”
I Am Cait “What’s In A Name?”
I Am Cait “A New Beginning”
House of DVF
I Am Cait “A New Beginning”
House of DVF
65
114 236 (E!) I Am Cait “Take Pride”
truTV Top Funniest
Top Funniest
Top Funniest
Top Funniest
Top Funniest
Top Funniest
Top Funniest
Six Degrees of Six Degrees of Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
66
204 246 (TRUTV) truTV Top Funniest
Food Paradise
Food Paradise
Big Time RV
Big Time RV
Mega RV Countdown
Extreme RVs
Extreme RVs
67 63
215 277 (TRAV) Food Paradise
Kerry Shook
K. Copeland
Creflo Dollar
› Solomon (1998) Ben Cross, Anouk Aimée. David’s son inherits his father’s kingdom of Israel.
TBN Remembers Paul F. Crouch A celebration of Dr. Paul F. Crouch.
69 99
260 372 (TBN) Joel Osteen
Granite Flats
››› The Muppets Take Manhattan (1984, Comedy) James Coco.
Granite Flats Ashmeade stirs up confusion and danger.
The Muppets Take Manhattan
70
374 (BYU) Worldwide Devotionals
American Ninja Warrior Obstacles include Cannonball Alley.
American Ninja Warrior Obstacles include Floating Monkey Bars.
American Ninja Warrior Obstacles include Doorknob Arch.
76
115 235 (ESQTV) (4:00) ››› Rocky III (1982)
›› Love’s Everlasting Courage (2010, Drama) Cheryl Ladd.
›› Love Comes Softly (2003, Drama) Katherine Heigl, Dale Midkiff.
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
79 35
185 312 (HALL) ›› Love Begins (2011, Drama) Wes Brown, Julie Mond.
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monday 14 sepTember 2015
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
Entertainment Big Bang
The Odd Couple Scorpion
(9:59) NCIS: Los Angeles
CBS 2 News
Late-Colbert
2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News at 5:00
NBC 4 News
Nightly News
Extra
Ac. Hollywood American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Obstacles include Psycho Chain.
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
Penn & Teller: Fool Us
Whose Line
Significant
KTLA 5 News at 10
KTLA 5 News
Friends
5
5 (KTLA) Crime Watch Daily
Studio SoCaL PBS NewsHour
LAaRT
Antique Show Antiques Roadshow “Survivors”
American Experience The life and legacy of Walt Disney.
American Experience
(KOCE) Wild Kratts
News
World News
Jeopardy!
Wheel Fortune Dancing With the Stars
(:01) DanceBattle America
News
Jimmy Kimmel
7
7 7 (KABC) Eyewitness News 5:00PM
World News
KOLO 8 6:30
Jeopardy!
Wheel Fortune Dancing With the Stars
(:01) DanceBattle America
KOLO 8 at 11
Jimmy Kimmel
19
(KOLO) KOLO 8 at 5pm KOLO 8 5:30
Family Feud
Family Feud
Mike & Molly
Mike & Molly
KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM
KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM
KCAL 9 News Sports Central Entertainment The Insider
9
9 9 (KCAL) The People’s Court
TMZ
Dish Nation
Modern Family Modern Family So You Think You Can Dance The winner is chosen.
Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News
TMZ
Dish Nation
11
11 (KTTV) Studio 11 LA News
Business Rpt. World News
Newsline
Calif. Parks
Steves’ Europe New Tricks “Deep Swimming”
Scott & Bailey
Borgen “Decency in the Middle”
Rick Steves’ Europe: Cultural
10
28 28 (KCET) World News
The List
Dancing With the Stars
(:01) DanceBattle America
7News at 10PM (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live
(:37) Nightline Dish Nation
RightThisMinute
2
(KMGH) 7News Right
9News at 10pm Tonight Show-J. Fallon
(:37) Late Night With Seth Meyers Last Call/Daly
4
(KUSA) 9News at 6pm Entertainment American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Obstacles include Psycho Chain.
Big Bang
The Odd Couple Scorpion
(7:59) NCIS: Los Angeles
News
Late Show-Colbert
Late Late Show/James Corden
News Repeat
7
(KCNC) CBS4 News at 6 CBS4 News
(:15) NFL Football Minnesota Vikings at San Francisco 49ers.
SportsCenter
23 25 8 140 206 (ESPN) (3:55) NFL Football Philadelphia Eagles at Atlanta Falcons.
2015 World Series of Poker
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
Baseball Tonight
30 for 30 Shorts
24 26 15 144 209 (ESPN2) 2015 World Series of Poker
The Game 365 Angels Pre.
MLB Baseball Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim at Seattle Mariners. From Safeco Field in Seattle.
Angels Post
Angels Weekly World Poker Tour
25 27
(FXSP) UFC Main Event
Castle “Undead Again”
Castle “Always”
Castle “After the Storm”
Castle
Bones
Bones Pregnant teen murdered.
26 42 22 138 245 (TNT) Castle “Headhunters”
Friends
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy
Family Guy
American Dad American Dad Family Guy
Family Guy
Conan
27 41 13 139 247 (TBS) Friends
NCIS “Vanished”
NCIS “Lt. Jane Doe”
WWE Monday Night RAW
(:05) ›› Big Momma’s House
28 34
105 242 (USA) NCIS “Good Wives Club”
›› Friends With Kids (2011) Jennifer Westfeldt, Adam Scott.
››› Friends With Benefits (2011, Romance-Comedy) Justin Timberlake, Mila Kunis.
(:32) The Preacher’s Mistress (2013) Natalia Cigliuti
29
108 252 (LIFE) (4:00) ››› Another Happy Day
Bad Behavior (2013, Suspense) Hallee Hirsh, Austin Rogers.
Forget and Forgive (2014, Suspense) Elisabeth Röhm, Neil Napier.
Bad Behavior (2013) Hallee Hirsh.
30
109 253 (LMN) Forget and Forgive (2014, Suspense) Elisabeth Röhm, Neil Napier.
Fast N’ Loud
Fast N’ Loud
Fast N’ Loud: Revved Up
Fast N’ Loud
(:01) Rusted Development
(:02) Fast N’ Loud
31 74 9 182 278 (DISC) Fast N’ Loud
The Man Who Lost His Face
Human Spiders
Mermaid Girl: Shiloh’s Journey
Body Bizarre “My 80 Pound Leg”
32 73 26 183 280 (TLC) Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Randy to the Rescue “Miami”
Treehouse Masters
Treehouse Masters
(:01) Treehouse Masters
(:02) Treehouse Masters
(:03) Treehouse Masters
33 64 24 184 282 (AP) To Be Announced
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Outlaw Chronicles: Hells Angels Outlaw Chronicles: Hells Angels Outlaw Chronicles: Hells Angels Outlaw Chronicles: Hells Angels
34 36
120 269 (HIST) Pawn Stars
The First 48 “Underworld”
The First 48
The First 48
(:01) The First 48
(:01) The First 48
(:02) The First 48
35 43 25 118 265 (A&E) The First 48 “Cut Down; 9-1-1”
›› The Quick and the Dead (1995, Western) Sharon Stone, Gene Hackman.
››› Tombstone (1993) Kurt Russell. Doc Holliday joins Wyatt Earp for the OK Corral showdown.
› Wild Hogs (2007, Comedy)
36
254 (AMC) Mad Max 2
(:15) ››› Running on Empty (1988, Drama) Christine Lahti, River Phoenix.
››› The Verdict (1982) Paul Newman, Charlotte Rampling.
Just Tell Me
37
132 256 (TCM) ››› Deathtrap (1982, Mystery) Michael Caine, Christopher Reeve.
Reba
›› Step Up (2006, Musical) Channing Tatum, Jenna Dewan, Mario.
Switched at Birth
(:01) Chasing Life “First Person”
(:01) Switched at Birth
The 700 Club
38 19
180 311 (FAM) Reba
Best Friends
Austin & Ally
Austin & Ally
Austin & Ally
Bunk’d
›› Teen Beach 2 (2015) Ross Lynch, Maia Mitchell, Grace Phipps.
Liv and Maddie Jessie
I Didn’t Do It
Austin & Ally
39 18 17 173 291 (DISN) Best Friends
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends
(:36) Friends
40 66
171 300 (NICK) Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans Thundermans Game Shakers “Sky Whale”
Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! We Bare Bears Wrld, Gumball Regular Show King of the Hill King of the Hill Bob’s Burgers Cleveland Show Rick and Morty American Dad Family Guy
Family Guy
41 16
176 296 (TOON) Total Drama
Love It or List It “Mike & Danny”
Love It or List It
Tiny House
Tiny House
Tiny House
Tiny House
House Hunters Hunters Int’l
Tiny Luxury
Tiny House
42 44
112 229 (HGTV) Love It or List It
Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives
Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives
Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive
43 45
110 231 (FOOD) Rachael Ray’s Kids Cook-Off
Mike & Molly
›› Here Comes the Boom (2012) Kevin James, Salma Hayek.
›› Bad Teacher (2011, Comedy) Cameron Diaz, Justin Timberlake.
›› Bad Teacher (2011, Comedy) Cameron Diaz, Justin Timberlake.
44 40
137 248 (FX) Mike & Molly
Nightly Show
(:18) Archer
(6:50) Archer
(:22) Archer
(7:54) Archer
(:26) Archer
(8:58) Archer
(:29) Archer
Archer
Archer
At Midnight
Nightly Show
45 37
107 249 (COM) (:13) Futurama
(:04) ›› I Am Number Four (2011, Action) Alex Pettyfer, Timothy Olyphant.
(:35) ›› 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003, Action) Paul Walker, Tyrese, Eva Mendes.
(:07) ›› I Am Number Four
46 76 16 168 325 (SPIKE) (3:32) › Never Back Down
››› Hanna (2011, Action) Saoirse Ronan, Eric Bana.
›› Secret Window (2004) Johnny Depp, John Turturro.
››› Se7en (1995)
48 75
122 244 (SYFY) ›› The Last Exorcism (2010) Patrick Fabian, Ashley Bell.
Facts of Life
Facts of Life
Facts of Life
Facts of Life
(:12) Everybody Loves Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens
63
106 (TVL) (:12) Gilligan’s Island
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Ladies of London
What Happens Housewives/OC
64 203
129 273 (BRAVO) Housewives/OC
I Am Cait “A New Beginning”
E! News
Fashion Police
Fashion Police
I Am Cait “A New Beginning”
E! News
65
114 236 (E!) I Am Cait “What’s In A Name?”
World’s Dumbest...
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
Six Degrees of Six Degrees of Imp. Jokers
Imp. Jokers
66
204 246 (TRUTV) World’s Dumbest...
Man v. Food
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America
36 Hours “Quirky Portland”
Bizarre Foods: Bizarre Foods: Bizarre Foods America
Uncommon Grounds
67 63
215 277 (TRAV) Man v. Food
Joel Osteen
Perry Stone
Jerry Dirmann Creflo Dollar
God For the
Praise The Lord
69 99
260 372 (TBN) Bless the Lord End of the Age Kingdom Conn. Jesse Duplantis Praise the Lord
The Story Trek The Story Trek American Ride American Ride Studio C
Studio C
The Story Trek The Story Trek
70
374 (BYU) The Story Trek The Story Trek American Ride American Ride (:01) Studio C Studio C
American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Las Vegas finals.
Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat The Soup
The Soup
76
115 235 (ESQTV) (4:00) American Ninja Warrior
The Waltons “The Caretakers”
The Waltons “The Shivaree”
The Waltons “The Choice”
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
79 35
185 312 (HALL) The Waltons “The Beguiled”
B
2
4
5
6
7
8
9
11
L
2
4
5
The Inyo Register
12
eASTeRN SIeRRA CLASSIFIeDS
SATURDAY, SepTembeR 12, 2015
020 HAPPINESS IS ...
HAPPINESS IS ÉA
LANON
Help and Hope for Families and Friends
of Alcoholics
045 HELP WANTED
MONDAY NIGHT GROUP meets at the
Methodist Church in Bishop (corner
Fowler & Church Streets) every Monday from 7:00PM - 8:30PM.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT GROUP meets
at Northern Inyo Hospital Administration
Building in Bishop, every Wed. from
6:00PM - 7:30PM. For more information call 760-873-8225
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!
• Community Project Coordinator Administration Department (Permanent Full-Time, Non-Exempt, eligible
for benefits)
Salary Range T-6
$16.48 - $23.07/Hr ($34,278
-$47,986/annually) DOQ
High School Diploma and/or GED
required and two (2) years of college
preferred or equivalent of 2-3 years'
experience working with Native
American Communities.
Must
possess a valid California Driver's
License and be insurable under the
Tribe's insurance. Responsible for
the day to day operations of the
Family Formation Program including
the planning, implementation and
reporting on al projects, workshops,
events and activities to ensure the
program's goals are being met. Will
be working with Tribal Council,
Tribal Administration other tribal
departments, local schools and the
community to ensure the program is
providing quality cultural educational
and family oriented activities and
services to the Bishop Paiute Tribal
Community.
HAPPINESS IS....
NAMI - EASTERN SIERRA
(National Alliance on Mental Illness)
FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP
Join our local Inyo-Mono Group on the
FIRST Wednesday of EVERY month.
(APRIL 1 • MAY 6 • JUNE 3, and so on)
First United Methodist Church, 205 N.
Fowler, Bishop. In the “Adult Lounge”.
OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS
IS food a problem for you? Do you eat
when you!re not hungry? Go on eating
binges for no apparent reason? Is
weight affecting the way you live?
Bishop Overeaters Anonymous
welcomes you Ð no dues, fees, or
weigh-ins. For more info, call Marilyn at
760-872-3757 or 760-920-8013.
Bishop Overeaters Anonymous
Saturdays 10:00 a.m. -11:00 a.m.
Calvary Baptist Church Library
1100 W. Line St., Bishop
025 LOST AND FOUND
FOUND: LARGE GENERATOR in Lone
Pine. Please call 760-873-7887 to
describe
045 HELP WANTED
ATM SERVICE TECHNICIAN
PART TIME
Diebold, Inc - Part Time/On Call service
technician committed to being available
evenings/weekends to service variety of
ATM and other banking equipment
Candidates should possess electro-mechanical experience. Networking and
software experience a major plus.
E-mail resume to [email protected] (Website: www.diebold.com)
READ.
RECYCLE.
READ.
RECYCLE.
READ.
RECYCLE.
READ.
RECYCLE.
READ.
RECYCLE.
READ.
RECYCLE.
We now use
40% recycled
newsprint.
Thank You
for recycling.
The
Inyo Register
045 HELP WANTED
• Tutor - Education Department
(Part-Time - range from 4 hrs./Day
and/or up to 12 Hrs./Wk. for the
2015/2016 School Year and eligible
for limited/prorated benefits)
Salary Range $9.27/hour $17.30/hour ($19,282 - $35,984 annually) DOQ
Must possess an acceptable level of
study in the field of Mathematics,
English, Science and History.
Able
to work effectively with and relate to
Native American students of all grade
levels. CPR certified, in the process
of certification, or able to become certified within 30 days. Good communication skills to work effectively with
Nati8ve American youth and adults.
For full position descriptions with all
qualifications and responsibilities and
employment applications please visit
the Bishop Paiute Tribe website at
www.bishoppaiutetribe.com or con tact 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 prevailing Bishop Tribal
Employment Rights Ordinance and
the Indian Self-Determination and
Education Assistance Act and other
relevant laws.
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
TOWN OF MAMMOTH LAKES
EQUIPMENT MECHANIC
Salary Range is $45,255 - $63,678
MECHANIC TRAINEE
$18.55-$19.48/hour
The Town of Mammoth Lakes is
searching for a full time, permanent
journey level Equipment Mechanic
and an entry-level Mechanic Trainee
to join a group of dedicated, diverse,
collaborative professionals with a
commitment to public service in our
Public Works Department. The
Trainee is a temporary, full time
position that is expected to last six
months and could lead to a permanent position.
Come be a part of the changing face
of local government in Mammoth
Lakes and make a difference in our
community!
Check out the Town's website for a
full job description, a Town application, and instructions on how to apply:
www.townofmammothlakes.ca.gov
FILING DEADLINE:
October 14, 2015
Wednesday,
FRONT DESK AGENT
Part to full time. To apply stop by
Best Western Bishop Lodge, 1025
N. Main, Bishop.
Does Harriet
need a new
chariot?
045 HELP WANTED
BIG PINE UNIFIED SCHOOL
DISTRICT
Classified Openings
Mechanic/ Haul Truck
Driver/ Building
Maintenance
INSTRUCTIONAL ASSISTANT II,
SPECIAL EDUCATION
SALARY: Range 5 - $13.77 / $17.21
per hour
HOURS: 7.5 hours per day, part-time
with prorated Benefit Package
OPEN UNTIL FILLED
JOB DUTIES: Under direction of the
classroom teacher, assist in a variety of
instructional activities with a special
needs student
QUALIFICATIONS:
• Preferred therapeutic aid and/or training in behavioral support
• Preferred experience with special
needs students & behavioral modification techniques
• Knowledge of IEP - directed activities
of special needs students
• Must comply with NCLB post secondary education requirements
• Cultural competence experience/
training preferred
• Valid TB screening with Certificate of
Compliance and security clearance as
mandated by CA Ed Code and Dept. of
Criminal Justice required
U.S. Pumice Co./Featherock Inc. in
Lee Vining is looking for a full time
Class A or B truck driver/mechanic to
haul material from our mine to our mill
in Lee Vining. Must have a clean
DMV record and pass a drug test.
Knowledge of heavy equipment operation, maintenance and repair is required. Mill and building maintenance
experience is also needed. MSHA
certification will be done upon hiring.
Live and work in the beautiful Eastern
Sierra year round and enjoy 4 day, 10
hr. work weeks. Good pay and benefits. Fax resume to: 760-647-6015
Send resume to P.O. Box 328 Lee
Vining, CA 93541. You can stop by
the mill site at 141 Airport Rd. in Lee
Vining, 6:00 am - 4:30 pm,
Mon.-Thurs. or call 760-647-6535 and
ask for Mark or Theresa to make an
appointment.
CLASSIFIED SUBSTITUTE
VACANCIES
Big Pine Unified School District is seeking candidates for our classified substitute pool. On-call substitutes are
needed for a variety of positions: Clerical, Cafeteria Worker, Instructional Assistant, Yard Duty and Crossing Guard.
Salary dependant on job assignment.
Security clearance mandated by CA Ed
Code and Dept. of Criminal Justice and
TB screening required with Certificate
of Compliance.
For further information or an application
contact: Terri Parks, Administrative Assistant, Big Pine Unified School District,
P.O. Box 908/500 S. Main Street, Big
Pine, CA 93513; 760/938-2005 ext 224,
Monday through Friday, 8:30 AM 11:30 AM; at [email protected]; or
apply on line with EdJoin at
www.edjoin.org. Big Pine Unified
School District is an EOE.
CREEKSIDE INN IS undergoing a
multi-million dollar renovation. We
are hiring for the following positions:
FRONT DESK AGENTS to continue
our tradition of personalized, attentive
service.
Duties include delivering
personal and outstanding service to
guests at check in and check out and
answering phones. Basic computer
skills are necessary. We are currently adding to our results-oriented
team which continues to provide superior and unforgettable service to
our guests.
MAINTENANCE ASSISTANT responsible for service, repair and preventative maintenance of all mechanical, electrical, HVAC, boilers, chillers,
plumbing equipment, pool & spa.
Skill & ability to repair and/or maintain
wallpaper, woodwork, carpets and all
physical building assets while supporting Creekside Inn's goals of guest
satisfaction. Must be self-motivated
and have ability to prioritize.
HOUSEKEEPING
duties include
cleaning of guest rooms and some
common areas. Must be energetic,
outgoing and professional.
Please
email
resumes
to
[email protected] or drop off
your resume & fill out an application
in person at 725 N Main Street,
Bishop.
MED-TECH / CAREGIVERS
PART TIME
(AM/PM/NOC SHIFTS AVAILABLE)
Sterling Heights is a Residential Care
Community for the Elderly. We are
looking for reliable, trustworthy, caring
and compassionate team players.
The open shifts we have available are
ideal for college students or those who
just want to keep busy and make a little
extra money. We are flexible with
schedules.
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
MT. WHITNEY COFFEE ROASTERS
is hiring a part time Product Preparation/Distribution Worker. Duties include
packaging, shipping, and occasionally
delivering orders. Weekdays On Call
2-8 hours per day depending on
workload. Clean driving record and
ability to lift 50 lbs. required. Email
[email protected] or call Karie
or Leann at 760-873-8319 for an application or stop by J. Rousek Toy Company at 1325 Rowan Lane behind
O'Reilly Auto to pick one up.
045 HELP WANTED
FULLY EXPERIENCED COOK wanted
for Lone Pine restaurant. Monday
through Friday, $14-$16/hr. + gas or
travel time allowance. Email resume
to: [email protected] or call
760-876-4675
FRONT DESK CLERK wanted. Computer experience required. Please apply at Super 8 Motel, 535 S. Main,
Bishop (760)872-1386
FRONT DESK/NIGHT AUDIT.
Graveyard shift. Stop by front desk for
application to apply at 636 N. Main,
Bishop. No phone calls.
BISHOP PAIUTE TRIBE
Is accepting applications for the
following positions with the deadline
to apply for all positions as 5:00pm
on September 24, 2015.
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
CARPENTER / LABOR WANTED for
remodeling in Mammoth Lakes.
Please call 760-468-3860
GUEST SERVICE ASSOCIATE
Bishop Creekside Inn is hiring Guest
Service Associate. Duties include check
in/out guests, handle reservations, attend to guest inquiries. The position requires employees to stand for long period and lift up to 50lbs. Must be energetic, professional, and dependable
with availability to work morning or evening shift any day of the week. Wages
$12 to $14 DOE. Please send resume
to:[email protected]
www.bishopcreeksideinn.com
SALES ASSOCIATE AT&T WIRELESS
Full & Part time positions available.
Hourly+comm. Send resumes to [email protected]
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
TOWN OF MAMMOTH LAKES
TEMPORARY
SNOW REMOVAL OPERATOR
Hourly Salary Range is
$18.26 to $22.20
Bishop/Mammoth Lakes Area
Librarian/Information Competency
Instructor, PT Adjunct Pool
$60/hr.
Flexible, as needed
All applicants must apply online at
http://apptrkr.com/670252
Emails will not be accepted.
As an Equal Employment Opportunity
Employer, the Kern Community
College District encourages
candidates with diverse backgrounds
to apply.
BIG PINE PAIUTE TRIBE/
CDD HOUSING DEPARTMENT
PROJECT MANAGER
Under the supervision of the CDD
Housing Manager, the Project Manager
is responsible for the rehabilitation of
various housing projects on the Big
Pine Paiute Reservation. Full Time
w/benefits (40 hrs./Wk.): Tribal Prevailing Wage Rate.
LABORERS (2)
Under immediate supervision of the
Project Manager or Foreman/Lead
man, will perform any combination of
duties on construction projects. Tribal
Prevailing Wage Rate based on level of
Trade being hired.
Contact Violet at the Big Pine Tribal
Office for Full Job Description; Employment and TERO Applications: 825 S.
Main Street, Big Pine, CA. 760938-2003. Closing Date: Friday, Sept.
18, 2015 @ 5pm.
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.
The Town of Mammoth Lakes is
accepting applications for full-time,
Temporary Snow Removal Operators
for the winter months. Position starts
November 2, 2015. Visit the Town's
http://www.townof website detail:
mammothlakes.ca.gov/jobs.aspx
Application Deadline: September 30,
2015
TUTOR!
TUTORING FOR GRADES 2 - 4,
10-15 hrs. per week. Must have teaching experience and knowledge of CA.
Common Core Standard. Must pass
background check & drug test. E-mail
[email protected] or
call 760-751-3068 for more information!
WANTED - PIANO TUNER
Please call 760-938-2937
090 FURNITURE
LARGE DISPLAY /
STORAGE UNIT
Solid wood, glass shelves & sliding
door. Measures 74Ó high, 6! ft long,
18Ó deep. Interior space 30.5Ó wide,
49Ó tall, 18Ó deep. Any reasonable
offer considered. Must sell. Call evenings, if machine answers please
leave message & your phone
number.
760-872-6836
HOUSEKEEPER - LONE PINE Home.
All facets, housekeeping, laundry, yard
maintenance, and small cleaning jobs.
cooking etc. 5 days per week, 20
hours/wk. Morning shift only.
Salary
negotiable. Spanish and English ok.
Translator available. Call Saveria
760-876-1807
NIGHT AUDITOR
To apply stop by Best Western
Bishop Lodge, 1025 N. Main, for
application.
BISHOP HIGHLANDS FAMILY
MOBILE HOME PARK - Part time help
wanted, 16 hrs. per week, answering
phones, collecting rent, computer entry,
cleaning and organizing, property
rounds, great customer service. Please
submit resume to [email protected]
CITY OF BISHOP
POLICE
PART-TIME OFFICE ASSISTANT
MAINTENANCE
DOW VILLA Motel is now hiring for
General Maintenance. Wage depends
on experience. Apply in person 310
S. Main, Lone Pine.
MAINTENANCE POSITION
Bishop Care Center Now Accepting
Applications for Maintenance On-Call,
As-Needed. General Maintenance skills
required. Weekends and holidays
required. Please come fill out an
application at Bishop Care Center, 151
Pioneer Lane. Drug screen and
background check required.!
PART-TIME OFFICE ASSISTANT
POSITION (approximately 20 hours per
week) requiring clerical, general
accounting and record keeping, phone
and computer skills and general office
experience. Job description and application forms and a detailed job description are available by contacting Pam
Galvin at Bishop Police Department,
207 West Line Street, Bishop, California 93514. Telephone (760) 873-5823
or on the City of Bishop Website at
www.ca-bishop.us Salary range $13.25
to $15.25 per hour. Applications
accepted until 5 p.m. September 24,
2015. EOE.
Join us at NIH.
When you care for our community, you want to assemble
the best team possible. Northern Inyo Hospital is looking
for team members who share our passion and commitment
to quality care. If your next career move calls for new
challenges and true collaboration, visit www.NIH.org
for a complete list of employment opportunities.
This week’s featured opportunities
Perioperative Unit Clerk/LVN • CNA/Unit Clerk
RHC Clerk • Food Service Worker • Security Officer
Find a new or
used auto in the
EastErn
siErra
ClassifiEds
873-3535
NORTHERN INYO HOSPITAL
150 Pioneer Lane, Bishop | (760) 873-2145 | www.NIH.org
Applications available online | Email: [email protected]
PHONE (760) 873-3535 | FAX (760) 873-3591 | 1180 N. MAIN ST., STE. 108, BISHOP, CA 93514 | E-MAIL [email protected]
The Inyo Register
090 FURNITURE
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015 13
155 APTS. UNFURNISHED
BISHOP STUDIO $575 + dep. Quiet
street. Close to shopping, park and canal. No pets, no smoking. 12 mo lease.
760-258-9466
BEAUTIFUL!LARGE 2 BDRM. apt.,
West Bishop.! Central H/Air, new
carpet, paint, covered parking, laundry.! Quiet complex near shopping &
hospital.!$850 + dep.! 760-872-1186
160 CONDOS FOR RENT
OAK ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER / ARMOIRE
175 MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT
SIERRA RESORT PROPERTY MGMT
Maggie Larson, Owner Broker
(760)937-4502
www.SierraResortRealEstate.com
165 HOUSES FURNISHED
100 LAWN & GARDEN EQUIPMENT
SOLD
IN 7 DAYS!
ELM TREE TRAILER PARK
Large and small trailers with patios &
storage units starting at $475/mo.
Judy 760-914-2834
$1,500/MO. Beautiful home, lovely
yard. Quiet and private. Amenities,
wood stove, washer/dryer, quality furniture, patio and stream. Includes
sewer, trash, gardening and electricity. No smoking, no pets.
760-872-1688
170 HOUSES UNFURNISHED
Fully loaded, 236,300 mi., last
211,000 mostly highway. Full service
record. Runs great, everything works.
$2,000.
760-258-7372
2005 HONDA CIVIC COUPE
HX 98, 400 miles, up to 44 MPG Hwy.
Recent service & regular maintenance. In excellent condition, includes
2 studded tires, chains, & bike rack.
$5,900
760-937-2618
180 SPACE FOR RENT
185 BUS. PROPERTY FOR RENT
2BED/1BATH MCLAREN
1999 TOYOTA CAMRY
15X16 STORAGE UNIT - In town
Bishop location, big enough for a car
plus storage. $245/mo. 760-258-9684
STORAGE UNITS AVAILABLE
6X18 $65/Mo. and 9x18 $85/Mo. In
town Bishop location. 760-872-1419
MODERN STYLE TWIN
SLEIGH BED
Solid wood with pillow storage headrest. A steal for $100. Call evenings,
if machine answers, please leave
message and your phone number.
760-873-5452
2 MONTANA - 3 Bed $950/mo.
21 IDAHO - 2 Bed $875/mo.
33 DAKOTA - 3 Bed $925/mo.
35 DAKOTA - 3 Bed $900/mo.
36 DAKOTA - 3 Bed $925/mo.
For details go to rentbishop.com Call
DeLaRosa Property Management
760-872-3188
760-920-3483
275 AUTOS
New granite counter tops, new stainless steel stove, dishwasher, and
microwave. Washer/dryer, fridge,
fireplace. Central heat/air. Storage loft
and balcony. Pool, jacuzzi, & rec
room on site. $2,000/mo.
[email protected]
www.benleedsproperties.com
PINE CREEK VILLAGE
Double bottom drawers, glass inserts,
double interior lights. Like new cond.
Orig. cost $1500, asking $600 or best
offer.
SOLD
IN 2 DAYS!
170 HOUSES UNFURNISHED
4BED/3BATH
MAMMOTH
COMMERCIAL SPACE / STORAGE DOWNTOWN Whitney Alley location,
Bishop. $450/mo. 760-872-9836
2012 SUBARU
FORESTER 2.5 SPORT
Excellent condition, new brakes,battery and 2 year old tires, full detail,83k
miles Only $16,500 OBO.Call Maggie
760 937-4502
190 ROOMS FOR RENT
ROOMATE WANTED IN 3 Bed/2bathhouse. Non-smoking, no pets. Call for
details. John 760-258-1554 or cell
760-784-4924
205 ACREAGE & LOTS
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
THE FOLLOWING PERSON
IS DOING BUSINESS AS:
DREAMY DRESSES
103 N. Main St.
Bishop, CA 93514
CRAFTSMAN LT 2000
RIDING LAWNMOWER
Briggs & Stratton, INTEK twin, 22
OHV 6 speed,!42 inch. Used less
than 10 times.!Paid $2500.00, asking
$800. Runs great, all new hoses, real
clean!!
105 MISCELLANEOUS
1 BED - BIG PINE
Open concept, one bedroom upstairs
with deck, fenced yard, parking space
for RV and garage. All appliances
incl. washer/dryer, kerosene heat,
evap. cooler, water & trash paid.
$800/mo. References & income
verification req!d.
0.21 Acre lot along Bishop Creek with
great view of Table Mountain. All underground utilities; easy access in
winter. Financing possible. Inquire:
760-873-4730
[email protected]
ASPENDELL CREEK
LOT
DANNY R. THOMAS
MARIA J. THOMAS
280 Owens Circle
Bishop, CA 93514
This Business is conducted by:
MARRIED COUPLE. Registrant
commenced to transact business
under the fictitious business name
or names listed N/A. This statement was filed with the County
Clerk of Inyo County on JULY 21,
2015. File #15-00114
(IR 8/22, 8/29, 9/5, 9/12/15,
#11806)
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN the
Inyo County Planning Commission
will hold a public hearing Wednesday, September 23, 2015, at
10:00 a.m. in the Board of Supervisors Room, County Administrative Center, Independence, CA, to
consider the following:
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
THE FOLLOWING PERSON
IS DOING BUSINESS AS:
Tentative Parcel Map No.
408/Magnificat Ventures General
Plan Amendment 2015-01/
Magnificat Ventures Zone
Reclassification 2015-01/
Magnificat Ventures Conditional
Use Permit 2015-04/ Magnificat
Ventures
The applicant proposes to subdivide a 17-acre parcel of land into 2
parcels, Parcel 1 consisting of
approximately 3- acres and Parcel
2, approximately 14-acres. The
subject property is located in
Charleston View, adjacent to Old
Spanish Trail Highway on the
north and approximately 1.5-miles
west of the Nevada California
border. This subdivision will require a Zone Reclassification (ZR)
and a General Plan Amendment
(GPA). The applicant is requesting
a Zoning Designation of Highway
Services and Tourist Commercial
(C2) and a General Plan Designation of Retail Commercial (RC). A
Conditional Use Permit (CUP) will
also be required for the continuing
use of the existing columbarium .
If you challenge any finding, determination, or decision made regarding this project in court, you may
be limited to
raising only the issues you or
someone else raised at the public
hearing described in this notice, or
in written
correspondence delivered prior to
the hearing.
Comments can be made regarding
this project via U.S. Mail (PO
Drawer L, Independence, CA
93526, by Fax: (760) 878-0382,
or by email ([email protected]). If you have any questions, please contact the Planning
Department at (760) 878-0263.
Project materials are posted on
the Planning Department website
at: www.inyoplanning.org under
Ò Current Projects.Ó
(IR 9/12/15, #11838)
240 BOATS
1BED/1BATH
HO TRAIN SET
Includes 4x8 table. Many pieces over
35 yrs. old, more than 14 engines (2
still in orig. boxes), approx. 50 rolling
stock (some still in boxes), 2 transformers, approx. 50 ft. of cork board,
approx. 300 ft. of track, over 20
display bldgs. Several switches, many
never used. MAKE OFFER.
DOWNTOWN Bishop home, fenced
backyard, storage shed, all appliances plus washer & dryer, pet upon
approval, water, trash and sewer
included at $920/mo.
760-937-6663
CANOE - WENONAH ITASCA
Kevlar with additional full layer of
Kevlar. Bombproof yet lightweight.
Inflatable pro-grade pontoons attached
to sides for extreme seaworthiness on
big lakes or white water. Pontoons detach and become a paddle craft with
included frame. Middle seat with rowing
rig. Side transom and 3HP gas motor.
Paddled, rowed, or motored. Fast, large
capacity. On lightweight trailer. Dark
green, black trim. Cost $7,100. Asking
$2,500. 760-873-7387
255 MOTOR HOMES & RV
760-937-1165
155 APTS. UNFURNISHED
• BIG PINE -STUDIO APT Elmcrest utilities and cable included $560/mo.
• BISHOP - E. LINE ST- 2 BED 1BATH
Townhome, Large kitchen w/ dishwasher,washer/dryer hookups, no pets
$895/mo .
• BISHOP - E. PINE - This one has an
attached GARAGE, 2 BED Townhome,
dishwasher,washer/dryer hookups, no
pets, 1 yr. lease $900/mo.
DeLaRosa Property Management
760-872-3188 For all available rentals
go to rentbishop.com
2BED/1BATH
1982 LEISURE CRAFT
INDEPENDENCE-Cute & cozy home,
beautifully landscaped with many fruit
trees. Kitchen includes stove and
refrigerator with ice maker. Basement includes washer & dryer.
$810/mo. with lawn service included.
Tenant pays all utilities. Small pet
negotiable. Call for more details.
24! Ft. Class C motor home. 45K
miles, 350 V-8, generator, good tires,
furnace, fridge, stove, Everything
works!" Very good condition and runs
strong." Just Needs TLC." $3.000
OBO." In Bishop.
775-790-0091
260 TRAVEL TRAILERS
760-258-5991
RENTED
IN 5 DAYS!
2BED/1BATH - BIG PINE
3BED/1BATH
363 Short St., Bishop. Small fenced
yard, laundry, covered parking. Water & trash paid. No smoking, no
pets. $875/Mo. + dep.
AVAILABLE October 1st. Small 2
bedroom, 1 bath detached house.
Recently remodeled. Includes range,
dishwasher, refrigerator, new kitchen
cupboards, carpet and paint. Woodstove and gas heater, swamp cooler .
$650/Mo. plus security deposit. Call
Lynn for application, pictures and
information.
760-914-1574
2007 FLEETWOOD
CAMPER TRAILER
This Arcadia is fully loaded, excellent
condition. Opens to 26! ft. Dinette
slide out, two 77x70 beds, sleeps 8.
$8,000.
760-920-1400
265 MOTORCYCLES
RENTED
IN 5 DAYS!
2BED/2BA-CHALFANT
2BED/1BATH
NEWLY RENOVATED, SPACIOUS,
Gated front yard, fenced dog run, on
3 acres, 1950 sq. ft., carport, secure
storage area/workshop. Walking distance to Mercantile. $1250/mo. + Pet
$100/mo.
2012 CAN AM
SPIDER LE
Model SE5, auto trans, fully loaded
with extras. 8k miles. Asking $16,000.
760-258-6358
310-806-8488
SMALL FENCED yard, laundry,
parking for 2 cars. Water/trash paid.
369-A Short St. No smoking. No
pets. $775/mo.
WE MOVE
ITEMS FAST
The easTern sierra
Classifieds
873-3535
CUTE 1 BED
COTTAGE + LOFT
HARLEY-DAVIDSON
1974 SPORTSTER
Shady Rest Trailer Park, Bishop.
Laundry on site, Sewer & garbage
paid. $625/mo. + electric and deposit.
For appt. please call:
Recently refurbished, comes with
2,000 lb capacity trailer and some
rare vintage Sportster parts. $6,500.
Call Katy:
760-873-3430
760-876-4321
GYPSY KING TATTOO
324 N. Main Street
Bishop, CA 93514
KATHERINE J. BANCROFT
985 E-Sha Lane
Lone Pine, CA 93545
This Business is conducted by:
INDIVIDUAL. Registrant commenced to transact business
under the fictitious business name
or names listed 9/01/15. This
statement was filed with the
County Clerk of Inyo County on
SEPTEMBER 3, 2015. File
#15-00129
(IR 9/12, 9/19, 9/26, 10/3/15,
#11837)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
THE FOLLOWING PERSON
IS DOING BUSINESS AS:
1. DEATH VALLEY INTERNET
CAFE;
2. TWO CHEFS AND AN ARTIST
CONSULTANTS
420 Tecopa Hot Springs Rd.
Tecopa, CA 92389
ERIC SCOTT
6807 Hetherbrae Lane
Las Vegas, NV 89156
ROBERT SURDEL
1010 Atticus Ave.
Henderson, NV 89105
This Business is conducted by:
CO-PARTNERS. Registrant commenced to transact business
under the fictitious business name
or names listed N/A. This statement was filed with the County
Clerk of Inyo County on SEPTEMBER 3, 2015. File #15-00129
(IR 9/12, 9/19, 9/26, 10/3/15,
#11836)
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN the
Inyo County Planning Commission
will hold a public hearing Wednesday, September 23, 2015, at
10:00 a.m. in the Board of Supervisors Room, County Administrative Center, Independence, CA, to
consider the following:
R o aYOU
d
A b a n d✄
onment
✄ CLIP HERE & TAKE WITH
No.
2015-01/Aspendell Mutual Water
Company Conditional Use Permit 2015-02/ Aspendell Mutual
Water Company Variance
2015-01/ Aspendell Mutual
Water Company
The applicant is requesting a road
abandonment of an approximate
5,000-sq.ft section of an unnamed
road located in the community of
Aspendell, CA, approximately
17-miles southwest of the City of
Bishop CA, between tax assessor
parcels (APN) APN 014-294-09
PLACE YOUR GARAGE/YARD SALE
AD
(west);
and,HERE!
APN 014-294-07 and
APN 014-294-08 (east). The site is
big pine
currently vacant and the County
road department stores snow from
! - BIG PINE - 262 SARA LANE, SATURDAY, SEPT. 12, plowing
8:00AM-???
on it inFABRIC!!!!
the winter. The
OVERFLOW BLESSINGS is OVERFLOWING with fabric ,craft items and
many other
items too!will consider
Planning
Commission
a resolution
finding
the
! - BIG PINE - 324 RICHARD ST., SATURDAY, SEPT. 12, 9:00AM-???
TOO MUCH
TOthat
LIST
- proposed abandonment is consistent
DOWNSIZING--EVERYTHING MUST GO!
with the Inyo County General Plan
and recommending approval to the
bishop
Board of Supervisors.
The applicant
is also requesting
a
! - (DT) - 218 E. LINE, SATURDAY, SEPT. 12, 8:00AM-12:00PM Furniture,
kitchenware,
pots &
Conditional Use Permit and Varipans, clothing including lots of cute Jr. clothes and more.
ance to construct a well and well
! - (DT) - 849 HOME ST., SATURDAY, SEPT. 12, 7:30AM-11:30AM OUR
LADY
PERPETUAL
house
on aOF
section
of the abanHELP CATHOLIC CHURCH - KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS ANNUALdonment.
RUMMAGE SALE! Always
great with tables full of treasures, collectibles & everything under the sun.
Don!tchallenge
miss!!! any finding, deterIf you
mination, or decision made regard! - (BA) - 2494 SUNRISE DR., SATURDAY, SEPT. 12, 8:00AM-2:00PM
Tools,
household
items,
ing this
project
in court,
you may
furniture, sports gear, leather jacket and more.
be limited to raising only the
issues you or someone else raised
! - (LA) -1560 ROCKING W, SATURDAY, SEPT. 12, 8:00AM-??? Antiques, colllectibles, glassat the public hearing described in
ware, DVDs, some old jewlery, old pocket watches, video games, old wrist watches100!s of , Pez
this notice, or in written correspondispensers, appliances, old fishing rods & lures and much more.
dence delivered prior to the hearing.
! - (MC) - 1811 SHOSHONE DR., SATURDAY, SEPT. 12, 7:30AM-11:30AM
Trolling motor, boat
Comments
canitems,
be made
regarding
seats, tabletop BBQ, tire chains, exercise bench, Christmas decorations,
household
clothes
and much more.
this project via U.S. Mail (PO
Drawer L, Independence, CA
! - (MC) - 2175 SHOSHONE, SATURDAY, SEPT. 12, 7:30AM-??? TWO
FAMILIES!
93526),
Fax (760)Household
878-0382, or
misc. sporting goods & gear, furniture, lots more!
by email ([email protected]).
you have
! - (DL) - 2302 WILSON CIRCLE (@ CORNER VALLEY VIEW), SAT.
& SUN., If
SEPT.
12 &any
13, questions,
please
contact the
8:00AM - TILL ALL GONE! MOVING SALE - We!re selling EVERYTHING
in our
full garage!
YardPlanning
&
at (760) 878-0263.
garden equip., sporting goods, tools, machinery and LOTS more. All hasDepartment
to go!
Project materials are posted on
the Planning Department website
estate sale
at: www.inyoplanning.org under
Ò Current Projects.Ó
! - ESTATE SALE - 2512 LONGVIEW, SUNDAY, SEPT. 13, 7:00AM-4:00PM
No early birds
(IR 9/12/15,equip.,
#11839)
please! Appliances, furniture, vintage stuff, lots of kitchenware items, gardening
tools, jewelry, decades of living! Big items priced, the rest? You make a reasonable offer.
! - ESTATE SALE - Lots of new and nearly new!!! Smaller oak roll top desk, round dining table + 4
chairs, hide-a-bed, 3 wood bureaus, 2 wood knee hole desks, vanity, large jewelry cabinet, antique
mirror, large wall mirrors, Baker!s racks, bookcases/shelves, marble coffee/end table, 2-3-4 D file
cabinets, office chairs, like new Kirby G6 vacuum/cleaner, vacuum, Clarity phone, Bushnell SkyChief
telescope, 1930!s Remington typewriter, 1950!s projector/record player unit, paintings/art work, commode, shower chair, walker, toilet helper, wheelchair, medical supplies, bed lounge, linens/bedding,
storage stuff, AbScissor, Lifestyle cycle, exercise equip/gadgets, office supplies, cookbooks, books,
Playboys, PBs, encyclopedia, 33!s, 100!s of DVD!s/CD!s, 100!s of video games/Nascar, War, Sports,
Momo pedals/wheel, Thrust Master Elite rudder pedals, Thrust Master Hostas Cougar, Alienware, 2
Gaming cordless mouse, PSION Series 3A, 1985 Nintendo with all controls/12 games, new poker
table top/new chips set, wood speakers, old games, fishing poles, new/nearly new ice skates (3),
M/W X country skiis/shoes, Columbia blue bowling ball, outdoor gear, Marmot, Sorrels, Moss Stardome tent, Army clothing, Harley posters, new infrared heater, new TrueAir purifier, heaters, fans,
aquarium, local crystal clusters, Pawley island hammock, dog crates, flower benches, patio furniture,
bistro set, bug zappers, Ducame gas grill, Char grill, BBQ/smoker, camp cook stoves, garden supplies, bird feeders, extension ladder/ladders, tools, Lots of hardware, heavy duty pulleys/chains,
Craftsman industrial worm saw/drill, Craftsman tool chests (2), grinder, 1983 Workmate, new strobe,
new pumps, Shopsweep, 2 large Viking windows, greenhouse fan, Monster steam cleaner, New:
Panini maker, grill/griddle, Showtime rotisserie, Cafe Latte; Food Saver, Krups slicer, Farberware,
many other new kitchen small appliances & gadgets!!! New WOK, Lodge cast iron, Dutch oven,
T-Fal, Desco ware, Scan pan, Emeril ware, Victorinox Chef!s knives, Flowblue 50!s lemonade set
and other nice glassware. And EVEN bottled, preserved real snake & octopus, LEAD shoes!
(LA) - 2499 BAR L, (BEHIND RITE-AID), FRIDAY, SEPT. 11, 8:00-1:00-ISH & SATURDAY,
SEPT. 12, 8:00AM-3:00-ISH
CODES FOR BISHOP AREA
DT: Downtown Area
WB: W. Bishop
BH: Highland
MC: Meadowcreek
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
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
ing this project in court, you may
be limited to raising only the
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN the
issues you or someone else raised
Inyo County Planning Commission
at the public hearing described in
14
SATURDAY,
SEPTEMBER
12,
2015
will hold a public hearing Wednesthis notice, or in written corresponday, September 23, 2015, at
dence delivered prior to the hear10:00 a.m. in the Board of Supering.
PUBLIC
NOTICES
320 PUBLIC
NOTICES
visors320
Room,
County
AdministraComments
can be made
regarding
tive Center, Independence, CA, to
this project via U.S. Mail (PO
consider the following:
Drawer L, Independence, CA
93526), Fax (760) 878-0382, or
Road
Abandonment
No.
by email (inyoplanning@inyo2015-01/Aspendell Mutual Water
county.us). If you have any quesCompany Conditional Use Pertions, please contact the Planning
mit 2015-02/ Aspendell Mutual
Department at (760) 878-0263.
Water Company Variance
Project materials are posted on
2015-01/ Aspendell Mutual
the Planning Department website
Water Company
at: www.inyoplanning.org under
Ò Current Projects.Ó
The applicant is requesting a road
(IR 9/12/15, #11839)
abandonment of an approximate
5,000-sq.ft section of an unnamed
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
road located in the community of
The County of Inyo, Department of
Aspendell, CA, approximately
Recycling Waste Management, is
17-miles southwest of the City of
requesting proposals for:
Bishop CA, between tax assessor
parcels (APN) APN 014-294-09
WASTE HAULING SERVICES
(west); and, APN 014-294-07 and
WITHIN PERMIT AREA C,
APN 014-294-08 (east). The site is
HOMEWOOD CANYON
currently vacant and the County
road department stores snow from
The County of Inyo will be acceptplowing on it in the winter. The
ing proposals for providing waste
Planning Commission will consider
hauling services within Inyo
a resolution finding that the proCounty Waste Collection Permit
posed abandonment is consistent
Area C, specifically, Homewood
with the Inyo County General Plan
Canyon, from November 1, 2015
and recommending approval to the
to June 30, 2018. Proposals must
Board of Supervisors.
be received on or before 3:00 pm
The applicant is also requesting a
September 15, 2015, addressed to
Conditional Use Permit and VariInyo County Recycling Waste
ance to construct a well and well
Management, 163 May Street,
house on a section of the abanBishop, California 93514. Please
donment.
mark the envelope: "Proposal If you challenge any finding, deterTire Hauling." The company name
mination, or decision made regardand address (not handwritten) of
ing this project in court, you may
respondent/proposer must appear
be limited to raising only the
on
the
envelope
when
issues you or someone else raised
returning/submitting the proposal.
at the public hearing described in
Envelopes without a return
this notice, or in written corresponaddress will be disposed of without
dence delivered prior to the hearbeing opened.
ing.
Comments can be made regarding
All questions regarding this
this project via U.S. Mail (PO
Request for Proposals should be
Drawer L, Independence, CA
directed to: Inyo County Recycling
93526), Fax (760) 878-0382, or
Waste Management, 163 May St.
by For
email
(inyoplanning@inyoHome
Delivery call
Bishop, CA
93514; Office:
county.us). If you have any ques760-873-5577; Fax: (760)
tions, please contact the Planning
873-5599.
Department at (760) 878-0263.
(IR 9/10, 9/12, 9/15/15, #11830)
Project materials are posted on
the Planning Department website
at: www.inyoplanning.org under
Ò Current Projects.Ó
(IR 9/12/15, #11839)
The Inyo Register
873-3535
The Inyo Register
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
REQUEST FOR BIDS
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
To be held by the Inyo County
Board of Education
The City of Bishop requests bids
for recapping 4 wheel loader tires.
Tires are Michelin XLTA 17.5 by
R25. Recapping shall be non-directional E-3 recap. Prices shall include pickup at Bishop Public
Works corporate yard in Bishop,
shipping, recapping, remounting in
Bishop area, delivery back to yard,
and all required labor, parts, and
materials. Bids shall be received
by Bishop Public Works at
[email protected] or
377 West Line Street, Bishop,
California 93514 no later than 3
pm 22 September 2015. For more
information call 760-873-8458.
DATE: Tuesday, September 15,
2015
TIME: 4:00 p.m.
LOCATION: Inyo County Superintendent
of
Schools
George Lozito Conference
Center, 166 Grandview Drive.
Bishop, CA 93514
SUBJECT: Public Hearing On
Textbooks & Instructional
Materials Compliance for 2015-16
CONTACT:
Pamela Jones Deputy Superintendent of
Curriculum 760-873-3262 ext. 405
Public Comment Welcomed
(IR 9/12/15, #11835)
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
REQUEST FOR BIDS
Toiyabe is requesting bids from qualified individuals and/or businesses interested
in providing the following services for the 2015-2016 Fiscal Year (Beginning
October 1, 2015 - Ending September 30, 2016).
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
320 PUBLIC NOTICES
•
TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE
INVITATION FOR BIDS
FOR THE GRADING AND INSTALLATION OF ASPHALT
CONCRETE PAVEMENT
The Timbisha Shoshone Tribe (TST) will accept Bids from Licensed Contractors,
until 2:00 p.m., Monday September 21, 2015, at the Timbisha Shoshone Tribal office, 621 W. Line St. Suite #109 Bishop, CA 93514, to provide the necessary materials, labor and equipment to complete Road Improvements in the Timbisha
Shoshone Village in Death Valley, CA. At that time the bids will be opened and
read aloud.
The scope of work will include: Grading and preparation of approximately
2,840' of existing road for Pavement; Installation of 3Ó Asphalt Pavement;
Misc. gutters, rip-rap as required; Signage and cleanup; Asphalt and/or
Concrete Dikes will be bid as an alternate item.
Grounds keeping Services - Lone Pine Clinic site
Janitorial Services for all facilities - Bishop, Coleville and Lone Pine
Clinic sites
Carpet & Floor Cleaning - All Bishop Facilities, Coleville Clinic, and
Lone Pine Clinic Facilities
Physical Activity Instruction & Classes (multiple locations available)
Podiatry Services for Bishop, Coleville and Lone Pine Diabetic Clinics
Courier Services (services between Lone Pine Clinic and Bishop Clinic
daily)
Acupuncture Services for Family Services Intensive Outpatient Treat
ment Program Clients
Catering - (multiple functions and locations)
Complete bid packets for each individual service is available at Toiyabe Administration office at 52 Tu Su Lane, Bishop, CA 93514 or on our website at www.toiyabe.us . For more information on a specific service or to request a specific bid
packet, please contact Toiyabe Human Resource Department at 760-873-8464
extension 224/330..
Bishop Paiute Tribal TERO regulations apply to services provided on the
Bishop Paiute Reservation. A TERO Compliance Plan Agreement must be
completed and submitted for any person/business providing services on the
Bishop Paiute Reservation. Failure to comply with TERO Regulations may
result in bid not be considered.
Bids will be reviewed and selected based upon bid amount, qualifications, experience, references, and other relevant factors. Bidders may be contacted to answer
questions or provide clarification regarding bids.
Deadline to submit bids: By 5:00pm on Friday, September 18, 2015
Plans, Specifications and the required bid documents are available from the
Timbisha Shoshone Tribal Office, 621 W. Line St. Suite #109, Bishop, CA,
Telephone 760-872-3614.
SUBMIT BID IN A SEALED ENVELOPE CLEARLY MARKED WITH THE
SERVICE YOU ARE INTERESTED IN PROVIDING. SUBMIT A SEPARATE BID
FOR EACH SERVICE AND LOCATION TO:
This bid is subject to Indian Preference as well as other Equal Opportunity regulations, may be subject to bonding requirements, is subject to Davis Bacon and
Copeland Act regulations , is exempt of state taxes but is subject to Tribal Sales
tax and is subject to Anti-Discrimination regulations.
Human Resource Department
Toiyabe Indian Health Project, Inc.
52 Tu Su Lane, Bishop, CA 93514
For the full announcement or more information, please contact Robert Vance,
Housing Director at 760-872-3614, ext. 2005 or e-mail; [email protected].
Proposals may not be withdrawn for a period of 30 days.
(IR 8/20, 8/29, 9/5, 9/12/15, #11805)
Indian Preference: Native American Indian preference shall apply pursuant to the
prevailing Tribal Employment Rights Ordinance and the Indian Self-Determination
and Education Assistance Act (24 U.S.C. 450, et seq,) 25 CFR 271.44 and other
relevant laws.
(IR 8/29, 9/1, 9/3, 9/5, 9/8, 9/10, 9/12, 9/15, 9/17/15, #11817)
Community
Bulletin Board
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The Inyo Register
FOOD
15
SATURDAY, september 12, 2015
FAMILY FEATURES
M
ake your next friendly gathering a popping success
with desserts and snacks made from a wholesome
simple grain. Not only does popcorn bring out the
kid in everyone, it’s a naturally healthy treat you can feel
good about serving your guests. And, because it’s naturally
low in fat and calories, non-GMO and gluten free, you can
rest assured that party-goers will keep popping back by for
one more guilt-free bite.
What’s more, freshly popped corn makes it easy to tickle
all your guests’ taste bud cravings. Salty, spicy, sweet — the
options are nearly endless. Serve it up with flavors already
mixed in, or let guests mix and match their own favorite
toppings to create unique tastes of popcorn perfection.
These recipes make it easy to prepare crowd-pleasers
for all ages ahead of time so you can focus on the fun. Find
more festive popcorn recipes to help plan your next party
at www.popcorn.org.
Sea Salt Caramel Popcorn
Yield: 3 quarts
2 quarts popped popcorn
1 1/2 cups pecan halves
1/2 cup almonds
1 1/3 cups granulated sugar
1 cup (2 sticks) butter or margarine
1/2 cup light corn syrup
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon coarse sea salt
Line large, rimmed 17-by-12-inch baking pan with foil and
spray lightly with cooking spray; set aside.
Spray large glass or metal bowl with cooking spray and place
popcorn and nuts inside.
In medium saucepan, combine granulated sugar, butter and
corn syrup. Bring to boil over medium heat, stirring constantly.
Clip on candy thermometer and boil, stirring occasionally, until
temperature reaches 290°F (about 15 minutes). Remove candy
thermometer and stir in vanilla. Pour mixture over popcorn and
stir to coat well.
Spread popcorn mixture in even layer on prepared baking
pan. Sprinkle with sea salt and allow to cool completely before
breaking into pieces to serve.
Store in an airtight container.
From Seed to Snack
Popcorn, like all six types of corn, is a
cereal grain. It resembles corn on the cob
in appearance and cultivation, but only popcorn kernels have the ability to pop. Most of
the world’s popcorn is grown in the central
United States.
Popcorn is usually harvested with a
combine, which strips the ear from the stalk
and shells the kernels from the cob. The
kernels are then loaded into a truck and
transported to a storage bin for drying. Then,
after cleaning and sorting, kernels are
packaged for distribution, allowing Americans
to consume more than 16 billion quarts of
popped popcorn each year.
Marmalade Popcorn Balls
Yield: 15 balls
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 1/4 cups water
1 cup orange marmalade
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup light corn syrup
1 teaspoon vinegar
5 quarts popped popcorn
In saucepan combine sugar, water,
marmalade, salt, light corn syrup and
vinegar. Bring to boil, stirring until
sugar dissolves. Cook to hard-ball
stage (250°F).
Pour slowly over popped popcorn and
mix thoroughly. Butter hands and shape
into 2 1/2-inch balls.
Nutty ’n’ Natural Popcorn
Yield: 3 quarts
2 tablespoons sunflower seed
kernels, finely ground
2 tablespoons almonds,
finely ground
2 tablespoons walnuts or
hazelnuts, finely ground
4-6 tablespoons melted margarine
or butter
2 1/2 quarts popped popcorn
2 tablespoons wheat germ
1 6-ounce package (1 2/3 cups)
chopped dried fruits
and raisins
Pour melted margarine over popcorn.
Sprinkle with ground nuts and wheat
germ; toss to mix. Stir in dried fruits.
A DIY Dessert that Pops
A popcorn bar is a fun and easy way to have guests take an active role in
the party. Provide a wide range of toppings and watch them get creative
dreaming up delicious flavor combinations. You can even host a taste test
and award prizes to the tastiest concoctions.
Simply set out a large bowl of popcorn and surround it with smaller
bowls with various popcorn fixings. Let each person fill a paper bag or
other container with popcorn and top or mix with their desired flavorings.
Topping ideas:
n Dried fruit (raisins, cranberries, apricots)
n Dried herbs and spices (oregano, cinnamon, nutmeg)
n Nuts (pine nuts, peanuts, slivered almonds, pumpkin seeds)
n Small candies (chocolate pieces, peanut butter chips, marshmallows)
The Inyo Register
16
EASTERN SIERRA pet care
SATURDAY, september 12, 2015
From the horse’s mouth
When Fido or Fluffy is getting ‘sick’
Just like in people, vomiting and diarrhea in animals
can be caused by many different things. It is often a relatively harmless problem of
dogs and cats, but can become
serious and require a trip to
the veterinarian. Some of the
most frequent causes of gastroenteritis (inflammation of
the gastrointestinal tract)
include a change in diet,
dietary indiscretion, infection
with a gastrointestinal microorganism, a reaction to medication or an intestinal bacterial imbalance. Often times
the exact cause is never identified by the time the symptoms resolve. This kind of
acute nonspecific gastroenteritis is usually a mild and
self-limiting kind of stomach
upset that improves on its
own in 24-48 hours. Many
times the required treatment
is minimal, but in more serious episodes a dog or cat may
become dehydrated, very
weak, and have such a loss of
appetite that hospitalization
may be necessary.
In these more serious cases,
your veterinarian may perform blood work to rule out
other causes of vomiting and
diarrhea, such as pancreatitis,
liver or kidney disease. In
some cases, an X-ray may be
taken of the stomach and
intestines in order to rule out
a blockage or foreign material
such as plastic toys, bones,
rocks, towels, etc. More serious causes of gastroenteritis
also include parvovirus in
dogs that has the potential to
be life threatening, especially
to unvaccinated puppies. A
simple test on your dog’s
feces at your veterinarian’s
office can diagnose this virus.
Full puppy vaccines and yearly adult vaccines can prevent
this disease. A blockage of the
intestinal tract (think of a cork
in a bottle) may require immediate surgery. There is also a
condition where the stomach
may bloat and twist upon
itself cutting off vital blood
supply that requires immediate surgery. These dogs are
VERY painful, and will have a
very hard and bloated abdomen to the touch and will also
have uncontrollable vomiting,
and labored breathing. If your
dog has any of these symptoms, please call your emergency veterinarian immediately.
So now, what should you
do when your pet shows signs
of gastroenteritis? The most
important immediate treatment is to rest the intestinal
tract. Do not give your pet any
food or water for at least one
hour following vomiting.
Dr. Janice Pfeiff
Columnist
Intestinal rest can last from
1-2 hours to a full day, depending on your veterinarian’s
assessment and severity of
symptoms. When you resume
feeding, it should be an appropriate bland, low fat, and easily digestible food. You want
to start small and slowly
resume to regular meal size.
Your veterinarian will help
you with this. A quick call to
your veterinarian can help you
to decide if the gastroenteritis
can be treated at home, or if
your pet needs a trip to the
vet and possible medications.
Rest is essential for your
pet while it heals. It is OK for
your pet to sleep more than
normal and not be as
active. However, you want to
look for more serious signs of
lethargy including sluggishness in response to your call
or touch, weakness, difficulty
rising, or even an inability to
stand. Call your vet if you see
any of these signs. If any
medications were prescribed,
make sure all are given as
directed and your pet has
access to clean water at all
times. If he or she drinks a
large amount at once and then
immediately vomits, you can
offer small amounts at a time
at least 15 minutes apart. This
helps reduce vomiting from
distending the stomach with
larger amount of food. Make
sure to not feed treats during
recovery, these are often high
in fat and calories. You also
don’t want to feed a bland
diet longer than recommended by your veterinarian, since
these diets long term can be
devoid of needed nutrients.
Seeing blood in the vomit
or the feces can sometimes be
a sign of worsening problems,
but the significance of fresh
(bright red) blood in the feces
is often over interpreted and
not a reason to panic. This
suggests the problem is at the
level of the colon, and is often
a result of the patient straining from diarrhea. Mention
this to your veterinarian and it
can help guide them in what
Things to do before bringing
a new cat home
Area shelter ideal
place to look for
a new furry
friend
Special to The Inyo Register
Cats and dogs are the two
most popular types of pets in
the country, and while dogs
have been dubbed “man’s
best friend,” cat owners are
quite vocal when expressing
their love for their feline
friends.
Those looking for a cat
may not have to look far. The
ASPCA says approximately
7.6 million companion animals enter animal shelters
nationwide every year, and
roughly 3.4 million of those
are cats. An area shelter is an
ideal place to find a new pet
for those thinking of getting
their first cat or adding to the
pets already in the household.
Cats, can be purchased from
pet stores, but they also may
be available via friends or
family members who have
recently welcomed a new litter.
Before bringing your cat
home, it is best to make sure
you and members of your
household are prepared to
welcome a furry feline friend
into your home.
• Is everyone ready for the
There are many considerations a potential cat owner should keep
in mind before bringing a cat home.
Photo courtesy MetroCreativeConnection
responsibility? Pets are a big
responsibility, and all members of the household should
be ready and willing to pitch
in and care for pets. Divide
duties based on age and physical ability. If a member of the
family doesn’t support the
decision to get a cat, this
might not be the right time to
do so.
• Find the right match in a
pet. Temperament can play a
role in how well a cat fits in
with your family. A cat that is
fearful and skittish may not
be the best match for a family
with young, active children.
Special-needs cats may be better for adult-only homes or
for people who can devote the
extra time needed to properly
care for the animal.
• Designate a cat-friendly
spot in your home. A new cat
may need some time before
he or she acclimates to a new
environment. To facilitate this
process, designate a room or
area in the house for your cat.
This should be a low-traffic
spot. Keep a litter box and
food and water bowls nearby.
• Stock up on your supplies. Cats will need various
pet supplies to be comfortable and healthy. For the time
being, use the same products
the cat had at the shelter or
pet store, which can create a
sense of familiarity that makes
cats more comfortable in their
new homes. Over time you
can transition slowly to new
supplies, including:
• litter box and litter material
• food
• food and water bowls
• scratching posts
• interactive toys and solo
toys
• brushes and other grooming supplies
• sturdy cat carriers
• Find the right veterinarian. Select a veterinarian whom
you trust and makes you feel
comfortable. Have your cat
examined by the vet and discuss any questions or concerns you may have. A vet
may be able to install microchip in your cat for identification purposes as well.
• Safe-proof your home.
Cats can be curious, and many
will want to investigate rooms
throughout your house. To
protect curious cats, keep
cleaning products and other
chemicals locked away and
secure electric wires with cord
containment devices. Know
which houseplants are toxic
and, if you don’t discard them,
make sure they cannot be
reached by cats.
Cats make wonderful pets.
Bringing a new cat home often
requires taking certain steps
to ensure your furry friend is
comfortable in his or her new
home.
Pointers for traveling with pets
Special to the Inyo Register
Many individuals and
families simply cannot part
with their companion animals for long periods of
time. As a result, it’s become
much more common for pets
to accompany their owners
on vacations. A study by
AAA and Best Western
International found more
than half of American pet
owners take their cats and
dogs with them when they
travel.
Pet owners traveling with
their four-legged friends in
tow can make the experience
a fun and safe one by planning ahead. Be sure the pet is
up-to-date with immunizations and bring documentation of those immunizations
with you when traveling.
Update any dated information on secure tags so pets
can be returned promptly
and safely should they
become lost. Take frequent
breaks on road trips to allow
the pet to get some exercise
and relieve itself. Some pets
do not fly well and certain
airlines no longer transport
certain breeds in the cargo
hold, so inquire with airlines
before planning a getaway.
For those traveling outside of the country, recognize that some countries initially quarantine animals
from other countries for a
certain period of time to
ensure the pet is in good
health. Look for pet-friendly
hotels and verify that pets
are allowed before booking.
Pet dander sans the pets? It’s possible
Special to The Inyo Register
Even people who don’t
own pets may have pet dander in their homes. Pet dander is the tiny, sometimes
microscopic skin shed by
cats, dogs and other warmblooded animals, such as
rodents and birds. Pet dander
can be carried into homes on
people’s clothing, which is
how even homes and offices
without pets likely have pet
dander in them. Though dander is natural, it’s also an
allergy trigger for many people. But pet allergies are not
entirely a result of pet dander, as the American Lung
Association notes that allergens come from sources
other than pets’ skin. For
example, the ALA notes that
urine and feces from cats,
dogs and other pets can cause
allergic reactions in some
people. Dust from dried feces
can suspend in the air and
eventually be inhaled by people with allergies, triggering a
reaction. Pet allergens can
maintain their strength for
several months by sticking to
clothing, walls and other surfaces. Pet owners with pet
allergies can still keep their
pets, but they must be prepared to make extra efforts
to comfortably coexist with
their pets. Removing wall-towall carpet, keeping pets off
of furniture and keeping a
home clean and free of clutter are some ways for pet
owners to reduce the symptoms of their pet allergies.
Wearing a mask while vacuuming also can reduce the
severity of allergy attacks, as
vacuums stir up dander and
other allergens.
treatments to use.
Other signs to look for that
require a call to your veterinarian include feces looking
“tar-like,” or vomit having the
appearance of coffee grounds.
If your pet does not drink
water for 12 hours or doesn’t
eat for 24 hours, or if after
seeing your veterinarian their
symptoms get worse. Most
importantly, don’t panic and
if you are concerned give your
veterinarian a call.
(This column is designed to
educate the community on a
variety of topics relating to the
health and well-being of our
pets from horses to parrots and
everything in between. These
monthly articles are written by
your local veterinarians and
address regional and seasonal
topics in animal health. If you
have specific questions or topics that you would like covered,
please email [email protected].)
Sure they a lovable and loyal but commitment on the part of the
dog owner is critical
Photo courtesy MetroCreativeConnection
Things to
consider before
getting a dog
Owning a dog
means taking
on significant
responsibility
Special to The Inyo Register
Dogs are wonderful companion animals, providing
their owners with loyal friends
who are seemingly always up
for walks or games of frisbee.
Dog ownership is rewarding, but it’s also a significant
responsibility. Before adopting a shelter dog or buying
from a breeder, prospective
dog owners should consider a
host of factors to determine if
now is the best time for them
to welcome a new four-legged
friend into the family.
• Time: Some pets do not
require their owners to commit much of their time. For
example, fish and bird owners
don’t need to take their pets
outside for walks or bathroom
breaks, making them ideal
pets for men and women who
want a pet but don’t have the
time to devote to caring for
more needy animals. Men and
women considering getting a
dog should make an honest
assessment of how much time
they have to take care of their
animals. Dogs don’t just need
their owners to take them for
walks and let them into the
backyard to go to the bathroom. Dogs are social animals
and need their owners to
spend time with them every
day. Men and women with
especially hectic schedules
may want to delay getting a
dog until they can free up
more time in their days.
• Money: Owning a dog
requires a considerable financial commitment, one that
extends far beyond the adoption fees or prices established
by private breeders. Dogs
need food, comfortable shelter, toys, and medical care,
which can be extensive should
dogs get sick. Some dog owners buy pet insurance to offset
the cost of veterinarian visits,
while others simply pay out of
pocket when their dogs have
medical expenses. Dogs tend
to hide physical problems
from their owners, which is
why routine veterinary visits
are so important. Many veteri-
narians recommend at least
annual visits for dogs under
the age of 10 and visits every
six months for dogs 10 and
older. Men and women should
make sure they can afford
those visits before bringing a
dog into their lives.
• Climate: Where you live
should also influence your
decision to get a dog. Though
climate won’t necessarily prevent you from adopting a dog,
you may want to avoid adopting certain breeds of dogs
depending on where you live.
For example, short-nosed
breeds, including English bulldogs and pugs, are highly
susceptible to heat stroke, as
their shorter airways give
them less of a chance to cool
the air they draw into their
bodies. Men and women living
in especially warm climates
may want to avoid shortnosed breeds in favor of dogs
that are better equipped to
handle the heat.
• Age of the dog: Many
prospective dog owners want
to adopt puppies so they can
be with their new best friends
throughout the dogs’ lives.
But puppies can be difficult to
house train, and that training
takes a combination of time,
money and patience. If you
are not ready to commit all
three to house train your dog,
then consider adopting an
older dog that is already house
trained.
• Family members or roommates: Dogs make wonderful
additions to a home, but not
everyone is cut out for living
with dogs. If you live with
other people, be it family
members or roommates, it’s
best to consult with them
before bringing a dog home,
as dogs can change the
dynamic of any living arrangement. In addition, you may
unknowingly live with someone who has a dog allergy and
cannot cohabitate with a dog.
Consult the people you live
with before bringing a dog
home, and only do so if you
have their blessing.
Dogs are great companions
who can greatly improve their
owners’ quality of life. But dog
ownership is not for everyone,
and prospective dog owners
should first consider a host of
factors before bringing dogs
into their homes.
The Inyo Register
EASTERN SIERRA HISTORY
SATURDAY, september 12, 2015
17
Inyo’s Trans-Sierra highways
Around 15 years ago,
according to local legend,
a semi-truck and trailer
headed up Bishop Creek
Canyon. Undeterred by
the fact this two-lane highway reduces to one lane,
the driver continued all
the way to the Lake
Sabrina parking lot and
was no doubt shocked to
find out the road did not
continue to Fresno. He
reportedly had to wait
until the parking lot emptied before he could turn
his rig around and retreat
back down the mountain.
Numerous tourists have
been similarly misled over
the years by maps showing the non-existent road.
The effort to breach the
granite wall goes back
nearly 100 years. Three
trans-Sierra highways were
Ted Williams
Columnist
road, a reconnaissance
trip was financed and
assembled by the Bishop
Chamber of Commerce. A
local pack outfit carried a
highway engineer, a few
prominent business people, a local service station
owner, L.A. Hazard, and
Bishop Creek Canyon in 1915, part of the “High Sierra Piute
Highway,” barely allowing a vehicle of the day to pass through the
remnants of spring snow. The expectations of keeping the TransSierra roads open through Nov. 1 seemed a little optimistic.
Photo courtesy County of Inyo Eastern California Museum
proposed in Inyo County:
one each out of Bishop,
Independence and Lone
Pine. These roads were
not just a local aspiration,
but rather part of a much
bigger picture.
At the time, Henry Ford
began mass production of
an affordable automobile.
Americans were soon on
the move and the pace of
road development surged.
Roads were being
improved and assembled
into highways. Those highways were getting ready to
link the East and West
coasts via the developing
transcontinental Lincoln
Highway. Competition was
fierce in California for the
anticipated flood of travelers, and it looked like that
flood was going to sweep
through Reno to San
Francisco passing up businesses in the San Joaquin
Valley to the south, and
those businesses couldn’t
let that happen.
Great effort was being
expended to lure travelers
to the Eastern Sierra with
the promise of superior
driving conditions in the
winter. After making it to
the Owens Valley, transSierra highways would do
the rest. Their development was key to San
Joaquin Valley’s economic
growth. And the people of
Owens Valley were more
than happy to leverage
that desire to help breach
the granite wall.
BISHOP TO FRESNO
In the summer of 1920,
Bishop began looking for a
trans-Sierra route and
found “Piute” Pass, as it
was spelled in those days.
To determine the feasibility of constructing this
W.G. Scott, a tireless promoter of road development who was in the
midst of promoting “El
Camino Sierra,” later to
become U.S. Highway 395.
After the trip, Hazard
told a local reporter, “It is
really hard to understand
why a road has not been
built … before now.” Mr.
Scott elaborated saying no
engineering difficulties
would be found on the
route and a road could
“easily” be built. Citizens
of Bishop reportedly considered its cost a small
price to pay compared to
the value of the investment. Newspaper accounts
also suggested Fresno
County would be more
than happy to incur the
cost since the result would
lay the new transcontinental highway right at their
doorstep.
Hazard, Scott and the
others envisioned a vehicle traveling through
Bishop Creek Canyon, up
The “Cedar Grove to Independence Road” over Kearsarge Pass
would have been the eastern entrance to the Giant Sequoias. Its
fate was tied to the proposed Trans-Sierra to the south.
to North Lake and up and
over Piute Pass. Over the
crest, it would then connect to a proposed road to
be built by Southern
California Edison Power
Company from Fresno to
Florence Lake Reservoir,
just a couple of dozen
miles west of Piute Pass.
The proposed road had
a name – High Sierra Piute
Highway – and can actually be seen up on a 1927
map titled Map of the
National Park-To-Park
Highway. Historical details
are sketchy, but it seems a
realistic cost evaluation
never took place and a
funding source was never
identified. The dream
slowly faded away.
INDEPENDENCE TO THE
GIANT SEQUOIAS
To provide direct access
to the developing Sequoia
National Park, another
trans-Sierra road was proposed in the early 1930s.
The route, reportedly
called the Cedar Grove to
Independence Road, would
travel from Independence
up to Onion Valley and
over Kearsarge Pass. From
there it would drop down
and head to Copper Creek,
just 13 miles as the crow
flies from the pass. The
road would then connect
to State Route 180 and the
developing road system.
Historical information
about the road is hazy, but
its fate was clear: Its
future was tied to the
trans-Sierra route to the
south, the highway most
likely to become reality.
LONE PINE/PORTERVILLE
HIGHWAY
On the skirts of the
Sierra Nevada southwest
of Lone Pine, a set of
switchbacks stands as a
monument to the unrelenting pursuit of a dream:
a 115-mile long 12-foot
wide dirt road that would
take travelers over the
11,300-foot crest of the
Sierra, higher than Tioga
Pass, then deliver them to
cities in the San Joaquin
Valley. It was called the
Lone Pine/Porterville
Highway.
The idea surfaced
around 1915 when the
Automobile Club of
Southern California proposed legislation that
would create nearly 7,000
miles of new roads,
including the Lone Pine/
Porterville Highway.
Piute Pass circa 1929. The “High Sierra Piute Highway” would have
carried travelers from Bishop over this 11,409-foot pass and down
into the San Joaquin Valley.
Photo courtesy County of Inyo Eastern California Museum
Legislation was approved
and the highway became a
part of the state highway
system on paper. It just
needed to be built.
That effort got underway in the summer of
1923 as the Lone Pine
Chamber of Commerce
coordinated a four-day
inspection tour of the
region. Mules and horses
carried representatives of
the Automobile Club and
prominent civic leaders
from the San Joaquin
Valley and Owens Valley
into the backcountry. A
preliminary route was
established and Tulare
County officials soon
passed a resolution calling
for the coordination of
county, state and federal
resources.
The size of the project
exploded. By 1926, Kern
County joined forces with
Inyo and Tulare counties
to send representatives on
a larger 10-day wide-ranging reconnaissance. As a
result, the single highway
would now branch out to
Bakersfield, Fresno and
Visalia. The grand plan
included a lateral road to
the base of Mount
Whitney.
That same year, the Los
Angeles Times’
“Automobile Section”
reported that the “million
dollar road” running over
the roof of the United
States (the Sierra) should
be ready for service
“shortly” according to
“definite” plans which had
been drafted by state,
county and city officials.
And true to the article,
road construction shortly
began.
1929 marked the completion of the first link.
Vehicles could now travel
from Porterville to Camp
Nelson, 30 miles into the
High Sierra. An official
dedication took place on
July 3, 1931 with great
fanfare and included state
and county chambers of
commerce, the Forest
Service, California Auto
Club and civic leaders
from all over the region.
Representatives from the
National Park Service were
there as well, which was
not without irony.
A few years later,
Owens Valley citizens
started building their part
of the highway. A gas/
electric shovel began cutting switchbacks into the
Sierra southwest of Lone
Pine. Even though funding
for the entire project had
yet to be realized, residents of the Valley felt it
was a prudent investment
of time and money since it
would open up a new recreation area around
Horseshoe Meadows.
After the links were
built, there was still a
47-mile gap to close and
Auto Club engineers estimated the price tag to be
around $800,000. It was
hoped this figure would
make it into the upcoming
1935-37 highway budget.
But the State Highway
Commission required an
official engineering survey, and money for that
wasn’t even close to being
A 1934 map from the Official Journal of the Department of Public
Works shows the three Trans-Sierra highways under consideration
at that time out of Bishop, Independence and Lone Pine.
Photo from the Official Journal of the Department of Public Works
budgeted. Money for construction seemed a long
way off, and the promoters were running out of
time.
Sequoia National Park
had been growing steadily
for four decades along
with its network of roads.
Park Superintendent
Colonel John White came
to believe preserving roadless areas was a moral
between two wilderness
areas, a corridor created
specifically for this road.
It was promised the road
would not impact the wilderness experience “ …
even after the far-off day
when the highway is finished.” That far off day
has yet to be realized.
EPILOGUE
The dreams of the day
This gas/electric shovel begins construction of the Lone Pine/
Porterville road in the early 1930s. This view of Owens Dry Lake can
be enjoyed today on what is now called the Horseshoe Meadows
Road.
Photo courtesy County of Inyo Eastern California Museum
responsibility. The Park’s
priorities changed and the
grand plans for roads
began to crumble. The
Park’s elaborate high elevation road called Sierra
Way was killed; the Cedar
Grove to Independence
Road was permanently
halted; and the dream of a
million dollar Lone Pine/
Porterville Highway vanished … or so they
thought.
In 1966, a version of
the Lone Pine/Porterville
Road came back to life.
The new vision was an
unbroken highway from
Death Valley to Olancha,
and over the Sierra to
Porterville. State Route
190 would be a continuous route spanning the
wonders of California
through pristine deserts,
over cool high alpine
meadows of the Sierra,
and down to the pastoral
flatlands of the San
Joaquin Valley.
The California Highway
Commission adopted a
plan to bridge the 47-mile
mountain gap between
Horseshoe Meadows and
the west side of the Sierra.
According to the 1966
March/April edition of the
California Highways and
Public Works Journal, the
highway would pass
were grand. There was
talk of enhancing the
trans-Sierra experience by
diverting creeks to create
manmade waterfalls; a
ski resort was proposed
for Onion Valley out of
Independence; an aerial
tramway was envisioned
to the top of Mount
Whitney. What would the
Owens Valley look like
had these roads been
built … what if?
(Editor’s note: This history column originally
ran in the Inyo Register
on Sept. 13, 2014.)
(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
mountain report
18
SATURDAY, september 12, 2015
At the summit of Chocolate Peak with two of the Chocolate Lakes below.
Photo by Craig Jackson
Sierra Sojourns
Semi-sweet hike to Chocolate Mountain
(Hiked on Sept. 6, 2015)
Normally, I’m not one to
complain much about the hot
temperatures, dry conditions,
drought or high winds, but I
must say that I am sick and
tired of the smoke. The vistas along the trail are one of
the best parts about hiking.
To hike up to a high lake or
on top of a Sierra peak is
mostly for the views alone,
but those scenes are nonexistent with all this smoke
in the air. Patience and time
and it will all be gone, but for
now, it won’t stop me from
getting outdoors.
My son surprised me and
came up for the Labor Day
weekend, eager to get out of
Orange County and into the
mountains. We spent
Saturday in Mammoth doing
a couple of short hikes and
just enjoying being in
Mammoth together. There
were quite a few people in
town for the holiday weekend, milling about at The
Village and Main Lodge.
Not much for big crowds, I
drove us up to Horseshoe
Lake for a couple of short
hikes and a cool walk near
the Earthquake Fault. The
next day, we chose to climb a
small peak along the Bishop
Pass Trail almost seven years
to the day since we last
Craig Jackson
Columnist
climbed it.
Chocolate Peak, elevation
11,682 feet, sits east of Long
Lake along the Bishop Pass
Trail and west of Cloudripper
(elev. 13,525) and the
Inconsolable Range. From a
distance, the color of the
rocks on Chocolate Peak
resemble an ice cream sundae against the blue sky.
After purchasing supplies
at the Bishop Creek Lodge,
Kevin and I started our hike
at 11 a.m. at a very busy
South Lake trailhead. The
repaving of the parking lot at
the trailhead started the day
after our hike, making this
possibly my last hike up here
in 2015. That’s about a
dozen hikes up here this year
so I think I can wait.
Kevin standing on the south ridge of Chocolate Peak.
The late morning was
quite cool with a nice breeze
blowing as we made our way
up the initial steep portion of
the trail. With South Lake to
the right and Hurd Peak
straight ahead, I knew it was
going to be a great day,
despite the apparent smoke
all around.
BLM to mark National Public
Lands Day with three events
Public invited to
join in on trail
construction and
maintenance, fire
area restoration
Register Staff
In recognition of National
Public Lands Day, the Bureau
of Land Management Bishop
Field Office will host three
stewardship events this year:
Alabama Hills Trail
Construction,
Saturday, Sept. 26
The
Alabama
Hills
Stewardship Group and
Bishop Field Office invite the
public to join in a morning of
trail construction in the
Alabama Hills. Participants
should meet at 8 a.m. at the
junction of Movie Road and
Whitney Portal Road for a
volunteer orientation and to
carpool to the project site off
Whitney Portal Road.
There will be barbecue for
volunteers at Spainhower
Park in Lone Pine when the
work day is finished. For further information, contact
Becky Hutto, BLM park ranger, at (760) 872-5008 or Doug
Thompson, Alabama Hills
Stewardship Group, at (760)
937­-2257.
Tungsten Hills Trail
Maintenance,
Saturday, Sept. 26
Sierra Responsible Riders
and the Bishop Field Office
invite the public to join in a
morning of single-track trail
maintenance in the Tungsten
Hills. Participants should
meet at the Tungsten City
Road and Ed Powers Road at
9 a.m. BLM will provide water and
snacks. Participants should
bring gloves, hat and sunscreen.
For further information,
contact Richard Williams,
BLM recreation planner, at
(760) 872-5033.
Bitterbrush Planting in
Indian Fire burned area,
Saturday, Oct. 3
For the third year in a row,
the Bishop Field Office invites
volunteers to join in a morning of bitterbrush planting
located off State Route 120 in
the Indian Fire area. According
to BLM, this project will help
to restore native plants to the
area that was burned in 2012,
thereby improving habitat for
birds and other wildlife. Participants should meet at
9:30 a.m. at the junction of
highways 395 120. Participants
should bring their own water
and food. For further information contact Martin Oliver,
BLM botanist, at (760) 8725035.
Volunteers for all events
should wear sturdy shoes or
boots, long pants, a hat and
gloves. Sunscreen is also
strongly recommended. Tools
will be provided.
For more information, contact the Bishop Field Office at
(760) 872-5000.
Just over a half mile from
the trailhead, we passed the
trail to Treasure Lakes on the
right and 0.8 mile later, the
left turn to Marie Louise
Lakes. Soon thereafter, we
made a left onto the trail to
Bull Lake and the three
Chocolate Lakes. Earlier this
year, and for quite some
time, there was a wood sign
screwed to a tree at the junction, but it is now gone.
We turned left and
climbed a short, steep ravine
and popped out at Bull Lake.
On a clear day, the view from
the shore is spectacular with
Cloudripper behind and
Chocolate Peak to the right.
The trail then took us around
to the east side of the lake
and up another steep section
to some level terrain at
Lower Chocolate Lake. Even
with the blurred views, this
Photo by Craig Jackson
lake has great scenery and
some great spots for a break.
We had nice hiking as we
wound our way around
Middle Chocolate Lake and
finally Upper Chocolate Lake.
The last lake sits in a granite
basin directly below the
Inconsolable Range. We took
a nice long break here before
starting a very steep climb,
on a nice use trail, to the
south ridge of Chocolate
Peak. Twenty minutes later
we were on the summit ridge
and heading uphill towards
the summit. This portion is
all off-trail but the route
finding is easy as there is
only one way to go, up.
My son took the lead on
the final stretch, leading us
up the rocks and between the
trees until we reached the
summit at 1:15 p.m. Kevin
was 17 when we first climbed
Chocolate Peak and wore basketball shorts and sneakers.
Now 24, he’s become a fullfledged hiker while it has
made me a very proud father.
At a glance:
• Trailhead parking area
at South Lake under construction
• Smoke may alter views,
be prepared
• 8 miles round trip, 1882
feet elevation gain
• Some steep sections and
seldom used portions of the
trail
• Many recent signatures
in summit register
(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].)
briefs
Great Sierra River Cleanup
The Great Sierra River Cleanup is set for
Saturday, Sept. 19, and is being organized in this
area by the Bishop Paiute Tribe and Eastern Sierra
Land Trust.
Those who want to participate should meet at
50 North Tu-Su Lane in Bishop. It is scheduled to
run from 9 to 11:30 a.m.
Organizers suggest participants bring sturdy
walking shoes, sunscreen, water, and a hat if
desired.
This event is kid-friendly. Breakfast and snacks
will be provided. It’s a day for Sierra communities
to demonstrate their desire for clean water and
healthy rivers. It’s an opportunity to learn about
California’s water source, and it’s a time to come
together with your families, your neighbors, your
community, and your friends to accomplish something vital and worthy on behalf of our great
Sierra rivers.
For more information contact Tiffany Mikamo,
760-873-3584, ext 223, or [email protected].
Sierra Club hikes
A Sierra Club outing is planned for Sunday,
Sept. 13, to Casa Diablo, a 7,912-foot peak,
reached by trail and cross country. It’s considered
moderate at five miles. Bring extra water. Meet at
9 a.m. at Mammoth Lakes Union Bank parking. For
more information, Brigitte, jungberman@mac.
com
Sierra Club Back Pack – Monday through
Thursday, Sept. 14-17, Mt. Sill, 14,153-foot peak.
Strenuous, 11 miles on the longest day, maximum
gain/loss 4,000 feet per day Participants should
be comfortable with cross-country travel with a
full pack. Explore Palisades Basin. Advanced signup required. Contact leader Rob at (760) 93704466 or [email protected].
The Inyo Register
sports
19
SATURDAY, september 12, 2015
Bishop volleyball defeats
Lone Pine in straight games
Broncos
overcome
injuries to beat
the mighty
Golden Eagles
By Louis Israel
Register Staff
Saddled with two big injuries and hosting coach Mel
Joseph’s heavy hitting Lady
Golden Eagles, the buzz was
not in the Lady Broncos’ favor
going into Wednesday’s game
between the two local teams.
But the Broncos ladies
came out looking like they
had something to prove, and
won the match in three
straight games, 25-20, 25-10,
25-15.
In the opening game,
Bishop jumped out to a quick
lead and was up 8-3 before
Lone Pine seemed to get a
handle on their game. The
Eagles kept nibbling away, but
the Broncos kept the pressure
up, bouncing the lead back
out to 24-16 before the Eagles
made one last run at a longshot comeback. That comeback attempt ended after four
points and the game ended
with Bishop winning 25- 20.
Lone Pine was seemingly
warmed up and ready to go,
but Bishop freshman Sydney
Frigerio had other plans.
Frigerio held serve for the
first 10 points of the game,
changing speeds and placing
her serves with precision,
including slamming three
aces. Bishop continued to
dominate game two on the
tail end, with sophomore
Ashley Worley serving up the
last five points of the game
including three aces.
Game three opened 1-0
Bishop, but the Eagles seemed
determined, and quickly got
back a small early lead, going
up 3-2 – their only lead of the
day. From there it was the
Broncos running off points
once again, taking a 10-4 lead
and controlling the game all
the way to 24-13, point-game
situation.
Knowing the day was out
of reach, but fighting for
pride, the Lady Eagles then
had their biggest highlight of
the day. The two teams battled in a tremendous volley,
both teams digging their
Ivy Means in a seemingly zen
moment awaiting the serve.
Means and her partner Caroline
Hagopian had a strong day at
doubles with two wins including
a 6-1 set to finish their day.
Sam Hess, above, guts out a long tiebreak with her partner Madi
Tomasek under the hot sun.
Photo by Louis Israel
Photo by Louis Israel
Sydney Frigerio’s serves were
wicked. Bishop ran the score up
to 10-0 to open the second
game before Frigerio relinquished her serve
Bishop’s Ashley Worley jump
serves with power. She finished
off the second game for Bishop
with a long run of aces.
Photo by Louis Israel
Photo by Louis Israel
opponents’ best spikes, setting and serving up spikes of
their own, only to repeat on
the other side. After a full
minute of volleying, the neversay-die Golden Eagles won the
point, taking the score to a
still insurmountable 24-14 –
but bringing the entire crowd
in the Gus Klekas gym to their
feet in appreciation of the
effort and the event, knowing
that would likely be the final
highlight.
Feeling the moment, coach
Joseph called a time out, to let
the applause sink in as well as
to speak to his team, perhaps
to encourage them to capture
the moment of heart that they
had just showed on the
court.
Game back on, Lone Pine
took one more point before
Bishop won the game 25-15 to
finish their very impressive
day.
Stats and quotes
For the Lady Broncos, Carly
Todd led the team in kills
with 44 percent of her 16
attacks scoring for the
Broncos, followed by Rebeka
Riesen and Little Eva Lent.
Serving for the Broncos was
tremendously effective, highlighted by Frigerio’s and
Worley’s jump-serves. As a
team the Broncos achieved an
amazing 95 percent success
rate serving.
Some of the standout stats
for the Golden Eagles include
setter Niki Martinez with 18
assists; outside hitter Abby
Southy 9/9 serving and four
kills; Lena Cariou 9/10 serving and eight digs; and libero
Lacie Jones 7/7 serving and
18 digs.
Coach Joseph was blunt
about the game, “Bishop kept
us back on our heels the entire
match with their aggressive
serving and attacking. We did
not bring the right attitude to
compete,” he said. “The only
real highlight for us came in
game three when we won a
very long rally, had we played
the entire match that way the
outcome may have been different.”
Nevertheless, this nonleague game was a lesson for
both teams. “This was a great
preseason experience, one to
build on as we head to the
Mammoth Invitational this
weekend, said coach Joseph.”
Junior Varsity
Lone Pine JV defeated
Bishop in two competitive
games 25-18, 25-13
Next up
The Mammoth Invitational
tournament started yesterday
and runs through today. Both
teams are playing in the tournament.
Bishop Broncos Tennis
stays close with Desert
Scorpions edge
the Broncos in a
beautiful
afternoon of
tennis
By Louis Israel
Register Staff
Under the clear sunny
Thursday afternoon sky, the
Desert Scorpions came to play
the Bishop Broncos at Bishop
City Park, and the Scorpions
edged out the Broncos 10-8.
The names “Scorpions” and
“Broncos” don’t quite do justice
describing the pleasant atmosphere of this event. Tennis
brings with it an enjoyable formality that was evident in the
attitudes of the players and
coaches, as well as the observed
pomp.
Rather than chants and huddles, the day began with a formal introduction ceremony
emceed by Bishop coach Patty
Cummings and Desert coach
Paul Horton (who at 6’ 11” with
an acerbic wit to boot, is quite a
character). Goodwill and sportsmanship was the order of the
day, the
players officiated
themselves, shared a cooler of
water and Gatorade and by the
end, many of the girls could be
seen in animated conversation
with their opponents – they’d
become friends somewhere
along the way.
“We lost 8-10 but I feel it
could have gone either way
with Desert just edging by
with the tie-breakers they
won,” said Cummings. “If we
would have won them we
would have won so very good
match for the Bronco squad.”
On the singles side, the
scores for Katrina Biehl were
Freshmen doubles team Molly Foster (l) and Tamara Lee (r) flank
coach Patty Cummings as all three are delighted with the girls’
win.
Photo by Louis Israel
6-0, 1-6 and 2-6; identical
scores for sophomore Lily
McGrale. MacKenzie Brown
had scores of 6-1, 1-6 and 3-6.
“I lost all my singles players
from last year to graduation so
I thought these girls stepped
up and did a great job for their
first year,” Cummings said.
Doubles teams Ivy Means
and Caroline Hagopian’s scores
were 6-4, 3-6 and 6-1.
Madi Tomasek and Sam
Hess had a marathon tie-break
going 11-13 to drop their first
set. “Normally a tie-break is
first to seven, win by two, so
these girls stayed tough. I was
very proud of them,” said
coach Cummings of the longest match of the day. The
doubles pair gelled after that,
going on to win their second
set 6-1.
Evelyn Lopez and Nora
Cimino also fought hard just
losing their tie-break 3-7.
New to the team Bailee
Piper and Katherine Doonan
got to play their first match,
losing 4-6.
Cayley Dishion and Josie
Dillard took on Desert’s top
doubles team and won 7-5.
The final match of the doubles were the freshman Molly
Foster and Tami Lee. Put in by
the coach to get their feet wet,
the pair wound up playing
extremely well, and won their
match 6-1. They came off the
court beaming, and simply put
by Cummings, “they did awesome winning, playing their
first match ever for the
Broncos.
“I was very pleased with the
outcome of this first home
match and the way the girls
represented the Broncos with
great sportsmanship and great
play,” added Cummings.
Next up
Bishop faces Desert again
in just 10 days, this time they’ll
go on the road.
Katelyn Button jumps to unload an all-out power
spike at Bishop.
Photo by Louis Israel
Bishop junior MacKenzie Brown
keeps cool under her blue visor
as she loads up to serve.
Photo by Louis Israel
Lone Pine’s Lena Cariou launches into her jumpserve.
Photo by Louis Israel
Athlete of the Week
Name
Sydney Frigerio
School
Bishop
nickname Syd
Team
Broncos Volleyball
Grade
Freshman
Position
Setter
Each of the Bishop Lady Broncos played so well on Wednesday,
any could make a case for player of the week. But for opening
the second game by serving 10 straight points, it’s freshman
Sydney Frigerio earning the honor.
Favorite subject: English
Sydney Frigerio (18) sets up Carly Todd as Katie
Lacey (7) and Abbey Southey (far right) get ready
to defend.
Lone Pine’s Shyann Padilla bumps it up as Lena
Cariou (16), Lacie Jones (10), and Taylor Corona
(2) get ready to set.
Madi Tomasek keeps the shades
on as she serves early in her
first match.
Photo by Gary Young
Photo by Louis Israel
Photo by Louis Israel
Career/Future plans: Sports industry - management,
broadcasting, collegiate level volleyball.
Photo by Louis Israel
The Inyo Register
20 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015
What is your idea of
bliss?
Launching my paraglider
off of a snowfield in the
Sierra.
What is your idea of
misery?
Feeling stuck and
unmotivated.
With whom do you
identify from history?
The explorers.
Who do you admire?
Happy healthy people
doing what they love.
In-Depth &
Personal with
What among your traits
do you dislike the most?
I sometimes speak before
When Kari Castle was a little girl, she had I think.
Kari Castle
a recurring dream about flying over her
neighborhood like Peter Pan, landing and
taking off at will. Today, to see Kari Castle in
flight is to understand that dreams can become
reality. You clap your hands and believe.
Castle, who lives in Bishop, is the most decorated woman in hang gliding, and she is the
first and only woman ever to qualify for the
U.S. National Hang Gliding Team. So far, she
has accumulated 14 U.S. National
Championships
and
three
World
Championships, plus a Canadian National
Championship and several state, national and
world records. She currently is organizing the
Owens Valley XCC PG Nationals Competition
2015 set for Sept. 19 – 26.
What trait do you most
dislike in others?
If they talk at me and not
with me.
What scares you?
Heights of course!
Actually … falling.
What is your
extravagance?
A pedicure.
What is a favorite trip
you have taken?
Film shoot in Peru for
a month. Flying hang
gliders and paragliders
over places like: The
Nasca Lines, The Sacred
Valley, a 19,200’ volcano
and Machu Picchu!!
about hosting the U.S.
Paragliding Nationals
next weekend.
Where would you like
to live?
On a sailboat for a
year or two. Traveling,
exploring and kiting.
What quality do you
most admire in a
person?
A warm, genuine, friendly
person.
Do you ever lie?
Never.
What fault can you
most easily forgive or
overlook?
Many, I believe we are
all a bunch of weirdos, so
who am I to talk?
Who is the greatest love
of your life?
My mom.
What hidden talent do
you have?
I used to play the cello.
What natural talent do
you wish you had?
To be a healer.
What do you consider
your greatest
achievement?
Living and following my
dream.
In your next life, you
want to be …
Good question!
What is your favorite
way of relaxing?
Being close to or in the
water anywhere!
Who is your favorite
fictional or non-fictional
hero?
Peter Pan.
How would you like to
die?
Gracefully – quick.
What is your motto?
Live life to its fullest.
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
tvestal@inyoregister.
com.
What is your present
state of mind?
A bit busy but excited
CUSTOMER SERVICE
T
he Inyo Register would like
to introduce Kristina Blum
as their new Customer Service
Representative.
Kristina will be randomly calling
subscribers to ensure our delivery
is satisfactory. She values your
time and has only a handful
of questions. Feel free to share
comments about your overall
impression of The Inyo Register.
Thank you!
The Inyo Register
“Strong Editorial Newspapers Build Strong Communities!”
1180 N. Main St., Ste. 108, Bishop, CA | (760) 873-3535
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