Supervisors to review draft forest plan revisions
Transcription
Supervisors to review draft forest plan revisions
today’s weather Sunny 98° HI | 61° LO WEDNESDAY THURSDAY 96° | 57° 97° | 58° Residents and visitors remember good times in Lone Pine See page 6 Local girls soccer team places second in tournament See page 14 The Inyo Register tuesday, june 28, 2016 | INYOREGISTER.COM | SERVING THE EASTERN SIERRA AND BEYOND SINCE 1870 | 75¢ The battle of the blazes continues Keeler keeps history in focus High temps, winds could affect fire fighting efforts in Mono and Kern Residents of Keeler and E Clampus Vitus join to celebrate new monument marking the ‘End of the Line’ By Kristina Blüm Register Staff Firefighters continue to battle the Marina Fire in Mono County and the Erskine Fire in Kern County. The Marina Fire was listed at 654 acres in size as of press time Monday, which was less than the originally estimated 800-plus acres. The U.S. Forest Service reported the change was due to more precise GPS measurement. The Marina Fire was 46 percent contained with 11 hand crews, 23 fire engines, two dozers, six helicopters, two fixed-wing aircraft, three water tenders and a total of 483 personnel assigned to the fire. Firefighters remained on high alert Monday as temperatures were expected to reach higher Monday than any other day this week, along with wind and low humidity. Containment lines around the perimeter of the fire remain the main area of focus with mop-up operations set to continue as the elements and fire activity allow. After remaining closed since 6 a.m. Friday, Highway 395 was reopened at 8 a.m. Monday morning. Evacuations were lifted from the Lee Vining and Mono City areas, however motorists were advised to use caution while passing through the fire area as crews continued to utilize the highway to access the fire. Southern California Edison worked to repair and replace power lines affected by the fire. A potential for rockslides in the fire area remains, which will be monitored by fire personnel. The Marina Fire is believed to be human caused, however the exact cause remains under investigation. Erskine Fire Meanwhile, Inyo County’s neighbor to the south, Kern County continues to battle the Erskine Fire. California Gov. Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency for Kern County because of the fire, which has killed two people, destroyed 250 structures and damaged 75 more. At press time, the Erskine Fire was listed at 45,388 acres and 40 percent containment, with full containment expected by Thursday. There were 2,079 personnel assigned to the Erskine Fire. On Sunday, a drone was flying over the fire area, forcSee fire E Page 3 INDEX Calendar............. 9 Classifieds..........10 Faces................... 8 Opinion............... 4 Man on St. ........6 Sports.................14 TV Listings.......... 6 Weather.............. 2 QUOTE OF THE DAY “It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” – Confucius Copyright ©2016 Horizon Publications, Inc. Vol. 146, Issue 77 By Kristina Blüm Register Staff Grand Noble Humbug Jeff Preston of the Slim Princess Chapter of E Clampus VItus, along with Grand Noble Humbug Brandon Wilding of the Snowshoe Thompson Chapter from Genoa, Nev., christen the new Keeler Then and Now monument dedicated Saturday. The plaque will be attached to the dolomite rock this week. Photo by Kristina Blüm A new E Clampus Vitus monument celebrating “Keeler Then and Now,” was officially dedicated by the community of Keeler and E Clampus Vitus Saturday. “Keeler has been called a living ghost town, but today, it really is living,” Karen Riggs of the Keeler Early Era Preservation Society said during the plaque dedication. The Keeler Then and Now See keeler E Page 3 Supervisors to review draft forest plan revisions County wants plan to address cultural, economic factors By Terrance Vestal Managing Editor At its meeting today, the Inyo County Board of Supervisors is scheduled to hear a presentation regarding the Inyo National Draft Forest Plan Revision and Draft Environmental Statement from the planning department. The current forest plan is more than 20 years old and must be updated because of changing conditions and new laws and regulations. The Forest Service’s stated purposed for revising these plans is to: • Reduce risk of large high-intensity wildfires to communities, recreation sites and infrastructure. • Increase the ability to manage wildfires to meet resource objectives and reduce smoke impacts to communities. • Restore the resilience of vegetation and aquatic and riparian ecosystems. • Restore wildlife and plant habitat and diversity. • Reduce risk of large, high-intensity wildfire to wildlife and their habitats. From the county’s perspective, its priorities, according to county staff, incude: • Access – a sustainable road system should be implemented to enhance and accommodate vehicular use, packing, hunting, hiking and other recreational opportunities. • Vibrant economy – the plan should contribute substantially to the local economy due to the impact of the forest on the county’s culture and fiscal health and should not result in significant socioeconomic impacts. • Mitigation bank – rather than acquire land for mitigation and environmental impacts, the plan should promote restoration of degraded public lands to accommodate mitigation of human development elsewhere in the county. • Local culture – the plan should support and enhance the culture of local communities to the extent social and cultural issues revolve around the forest. Other issues the county has consistently raised and is a listed priority under vibrant economy and local culture is the potential losses of multi- The Inyo County Board of Supervisors are set to review the U.S. Forest Service’s draft plan for the Inyo National Forest. Supervisors are seeking to keep as much access as possible for recreational use. File photo ple uses because of wilderness expansion and more restrictions on uses based on habitat as well as possible road closures that would reduce access to certain recreation and other activities. This workshop is set to start at 1:30 p.m. North Sierra Highway Corridor County supervisors also are scheduled to give the planning department direction on setting up an advisory committee to help bring stakeholder and community input into the North Sierra Highway planning process. See plan E Page 3 Rossy embezzlement case could see final arguments today Dawndee Rossy’s trial could be settled soon; Ken Rossy’s case still to come By Terrance Vestal Managing Editor A superior court judge ruled against a motion to dismiss embezzlement and other charges against a former Inyo County Health and Human Services supervisor Monday. Dawndee Rossy in October 2013 had been charged with two counts of grand theft, 34 counts of identity theft, two counts of embezzlement, one count of possession of controlled substance, one count of welfare fraud and four counts of criminal conspiracy in a case involving the alleged embezzlement of more than $1.5 million from the Inyo County Health and Human Services Public Assistance program. Her husband, Ken Rossy, has been charged with one count of grand theft, one count of welfare fraud, four counts of criminal conspiracy and one count of possession of controlled substance. The cases against the two are separate and Ken Rossy’s case is expected to come before a judge after Dawndee Rossy’s case is completed. On Monday, Judge Phillip J. Argento, who is a visiting judge, denied defense’s motion to strike evidence, which means that the more than 500 hundred exhibits offered at trial are fully and finally received, according to the Inyo County District Attorney’s Office. The second motion was for a “judgment of acquittal” – meaning a ruling from the court regarding the sufficiency of the state’s case. “The court denied the motion of judgment of acquittal for most counts, but granted it as to certain counts that alleged identity theft but where we were not able to secure the testimony of the actual victim, and also granted it as to certain counts of conspiracy to commit forgery on individual documents,” District Attorney Tom Hardy stated in an email Monday. Because the alleged identity theft victims lived all over the country, while many were cooperative, “we never realistically expected all of them to be able or willing to testify,” he said. Even so, 91 felony counts remain, including all of the misappropriation of public funds, grand theft, embezzlement (and conspiracy to commit those offenses), tax evasion, failure to file California tax returns, filing false documents in the public records, creating false or fraudulent identity documents, and forgery. In making the ruling, the court found the total proven loss to be slightly in excess of $1.5 million. At a hearing set for 9 a.m. in Independence today, the defense will be given the opportunity to present any defense evidence, although the defense is not required to provide any evidence. After which final arguments will begin. After closing arguments Argento will make his final determinations as to guilty or not guilty as to each of the 91 charges. Hardy said he expects that Argento will probably take the case under submission to go through each of the 91 counts and that the case will return to court on a later date for a final pronouncement. In any case where a defendant is found guilty after a trial, the case is referred to the Probation Department for a pre-sentence recommendation and report and then a formal sentencing hearing is held where the judge determines the period of incarceration. The Inyo Register 2 TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016 lotto Daily 3 Friday’s midday picks: 2, 6, 6 Friday’s evening picks: 0, 1, 3 Saturday’s midday picks: 0, 1, 2 Saturday’s evening picks: 1, 4, 8 Sunday’s midday picks: 5, 7, 9 Sunday’s evening picks: 1, 8, 8 Daily 4 Friday’s picks: 2, 6, 8, 9 Saturday’s picks: 1, 2, 5, 7 Sunday’s picks: 0, 1, 4, 6 Fantasy 5 Friday’s picks: 7, 9, 14, 21, 29 Saturday’s picks: 2, 22, 32, 36, 38 Sunday’s picks: 1, 14, 15, 35, 38 Daily Derby Friday’s picks: First place No. 6 Whirl Win; second place No. 12 Lucky Charms; third place No. 4 Big Ben. Winning race time was 1:49.38. Saturday’s picks: First place No. 1 Gold Rush; second place No. 10 Solid Gold; third place No. 12 Lucky Charms;. Winning race time was 1:47.05. Sunday’s picks: First place No. 6 Whirl Win; sec- ond place No.3 Hot Shot; third place No. 11 Money Bags. Winning race time was 1:41.86. Mega Millions Numbers for Friday, June 24: 11, 14, 54, 57, 63 11 SuperLotto Plus Numbers for Saturday, June 25: 7, 23, 28, 39, 45 18 Powerball Numbers for Saturday, June 25: 3, 27, 36, 56, 69 25 For additional updates, call (900) 776-4000 from a touchtone phone. This is a toll call. Or, visit www.calottery.com on the Internet. senior center menu Following is the menu provided by the kitchens at senior centers in Bishop and Lone Pine, as well as the Meals on Wheels program (weekends excluded). Menus will be the same at both locations and for Meals on Wheels and are subject to change. All breads are baked from scratch. Menu subject to change. Are you 60 years old or older? Do you enjoy a hot lunch? Then come and join other seniors at the Bishop Senior Center every Monday through Friday at noon for good food and conversation. Call (760) 873-5240 and reserve a lunch; donations are appreciated. Spanish rice, beans, coleslaw, pears Tuesday, June 28 Chicken breast, Parmesan linguini, bread, green salad, fresh fruit Swiss steak, mashed potatoes and gravy, bread, corn, spinach salad, fruit cup Wednesday, June 29 Monday, July 11 Pizza, mixed squash, green salad, apple Thursday, June 30 Taco salad, corn salad, tortilla chips, fresh fruit Friday, July 1 Barbecued ribs, ovenbrown potatoes, corn, watermelon, ice cream. Monday, July 4 Closed for Fourth of July Tuesday, July 5 Chicken enchiladas, Wednesday, July 6 Mac and cheese with ham, winter veggies, bran muffin, green salad, peaches Thurssday, July 7 Friday, July 15 Oriental chicken salad, ginger biscuit, Mandarin oranges, ice cream Monday, July 18 Baked ham, potatoes, succotash, muffin, apple Tuesday, July 19 Tuna sandwich, spring vegetables, soup, beet and apple salad, cookie Beef ravioli, Marinara sauce, mixed veggies, spinach salad, banana Friday, July 8 Wednesday, July 20 Chicken Parmesan, Italian veggies, garlic bread, green salad, berries Tuesday, July 12 Turkey Divan, linguini, spinach, dinner roll, lime and CC Jell-O Wednesday, July 13 Barbecue chicken, french fries, baked beans, broccoli and cauliflower, salad, fresh fruit Thursday, July 21 Roast beef sandwich, broccoli cheese soup, Ambrosia salad, corn and black bean salad Friday, July 22 Meatloaf, mashed potatoes and gravy, peas, green salad, peach crisp Monday, July 25 Pork carnita tacos, Spanish rice, beans, coleslaw, fruit cup Chef salad, muffin, Jell-O Thursday, July 14 Pizza deluxe, mixed squash, green salad, fruit cup Lasagna, broccoli, garlic bread, green salad, cantaloupe obituary notices LOIS IRENE LEMMONS 1930 –2016 In loving memory of a life well lived, we honor Lois Irene Lemmons, with joy that her wishes to be at rest and peace with her Lord Jesus Christ is completed. Lois was a 41 year resident of Yucca Valley, CA and a short time resident of Bishop, CA. Born August 28, 1930 in Risco, Missouri to Harry and Jewell Walker, she passed away peaceably on June 11, 2016. She was 85 years old. Although born in Missouri, Lois lived most of her years in Southern California. She lived with her ex-husband Clifford D. Lemmons in Orange County, CA, where two of her three children were born and after living a few years in Missouri and Oklahoma, returned to live in Montclair, CA where she spent her time as a mother and homemaker. She set out with Clifford on an amazing journey in 1975 to become mobile home park owners. They lived together in Yucca Valley for 9 years and then entered into another business adventure in Bishop, CA. The two separated and she returned to her home in Yucca Valley where she spent the rest of her life, except for the brief time she stayed with her granddaughter in Texas, where she went to recover after having suffered a stroke in Dec. of 2015. Sadly in May of 2016 she was diagnosed with late stage cancer. She was an extremely good business woman and loved being in business. Her intelligence and strength of character made her the mighty rock in both her and Clifford’s businesses. She was the backbone that supported all their efforts, since she had found her place as a savvy and professional business woman. She loved her children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren and they were her reason to carry on in life. She was known to always be kind, loving, and often harshly truthful, but with the strength of many years of hard work and wisdom. She was loved by many whether by family or by her involvement in business. She will be dearly missed for her support of others, her business experience, and her strength of endurance and truth. She was preceded in death by her ex-husband, Clifford D. Lemmons, and her first born daughter, Linda K. Hein as well as her sister, Roberta Gibney. Lois is survived by her daughter Jane Lemmons of Twentynine Palms, CA; her son, Paul Lemmons of Henderson, NV; her sister, Mary Burnette of Tulsa,OK and Mark Hein of Hesperia, CA. She is also survived by her many grandchildren, Matthew Clifford, Sara Volkert, Anika Hein, Luke Hein, Norman Troy, Richard Eckersall, Jacob Lemmons, Noah Lemmons and Christine Lemmons, as well as thirteen Great grandchildren. She is also survived by and will be greatly missed by her many other family and relatives who will always remember her in their own special ways. She was a very special person and will be greatly missed. Services will be held on Friday, July 1, 2016 at Brune Mortuary Chapel, 325 W. Elm St., Bishop, CA at 10:00 a.m. Brune Mortuary 325 West Elm Street • Bishop, CA 93514 • 760-873-4266 Tuesday, July 26 Get the news. Wednesday, July 27 Get the story. Salmon, garlic potatoes, green beans, tropical fruit, ice cream Thursday, July 28 Sloppy Joe, French fries, peas and carrots, coleslaw, banana pudding The Inyo Register www.inyoregister.com Smile of the Week! Friday, July 29 Roast turkey, stuffing, gravy, mixed veggies, cranberries, pumpkin dessert 2.375 2.89 $9.37 2.500 2.73 $6.67 Jaxon Cade Read, 11 months old, helping in the yard. Photo submitted Do you have a Smile of the Week photo you want to share with us? Simply email [email protected] 58 SMILE of the week is sponsored by: Medical & Dental Clinics Accept most insurances • Dental services now available for Medi-Cal adult patients Bishop • 52 Tu Su Lane Medical: 760.873.8461 • Dental: 760.873-3443 Lone Pine • 1150 Goodwin Rd. Medical & Dental 760.876.4795 Coleville Clinic • 73 Camp Antelope Rd. Medical & Dental & Behavioral • 530.495.2100 The Inyo Register TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016 3 AT A GLANCE Calico Quilters BISHOP – The Calico Quilters monthly meeting will be at 10 a.m. today at the Highlands Mobile Home Park family recreation hall. All are welcome. Call Barbara Stuhaan for more information. (760) 873-9956. Walk for veterans BIG PINE – Big Pine American Legion Post No. 457, Auxiliary and Civic Club will sponsor A Walk For Veterans on July 4 at Mendenhall Park in Big Pine starting at 7:30 a.m. Preregistration will begin at 6:30 a.m. The $25 registration fee includes a T-shirt and breakfast. Proceeds will benefit Veterans Helping Veterans of Inyo and Mono County. For more information call Rick Field at (760) 263-4150 or Rose Todd (760) 9382911. The breakfast is open to the public for $5 and will begin at 8 a.m. Keeler Volunteer Fire Department Chief Glen Young stands next to a 1937 fire engine once used in Manzanar at the Keeler fire house. Photo by Kristina Blüm keeler Big Day at the Park BISHOP – Activities begin at 11 a.m. July 4 at Bishop’s City Park; exhibition baseball game, tennis courts open, bocce court opens, volleyball sand courts open; 2 p.m., live music begins, free watermelon, ice cream and pie, all festivities at the park come to an end at 4 p.m. Bishop fireworks BISHOP – The city of Bishop Fire Department will be presenting fireworks at the airport, Airport and Wye Road gates. Gates open at 4 p.m. on July 4. Trash facilities INYO COUNTY – The Bishop Landfill, Big Pine Transfer Station, Independence Landfill and the Lone Pine landfill will be closed on Monday, July 4, and for the Fourth of July holiday. They will be open regular hours on Saturday and Sunday. Crowd cooking Chef Eric Wood sautes peppers and onion to be added to rice and shrimp as he prepares shrimp paella for guests at the Wheeler Crest and Paradise fire departments’ annual fundraiser held Saturday at Hidden Creeks Ranch in Bishop. See page 8 for more photos from this annual event. plan Continued from front page The committee’s membership would include representation from Inyo County, the city of Bishop, Los Angeles Department of Power and Water, Caltrans, the Bishop Paiute Tribe, Eastern Sierra TriCounty Fairgrounds, Eastern Sierra Transit Authority and Eastern Sierra Community Services District. The committee would not have decision-making authority. Vacation Bible School fire LONE PINE – This summer’s Vacation Bible School will be held July 11-15 at Mt. Whitney Baptist Church at 351 E. Locust St. in Lone Pine. Children will meet each evening from 5:30-7:30 p.m. to study and learn about Joseph – “From the Prison to the Palace.” All children ages preschool to entering eighth grade are invited. Activities will include water games and play on Wednesday night (bring a towel and swim suit), a family barbecue and water play on Friday night. For information, call Linda Hubbs, (760) 876-5747, Pastor Jeff Basset (760) 8764651 or email jeffbasset@ gmail.com Continued from front page ing all aerial fire-fighting efforts to be grounded for a time. All drones, regardless of their size or weight, are considered aircraft by the Federal Aviation Administration and are required to abide by FAA regulations, including the temporary flight restriction area placed around fire areas. As of Monday, some of the evacuations from the Erskine Fire had been lifted. Residents of Yankee Canyon and Mountain Mesa were allowed to return, however, there was no electricity. Residents of the areas east of South Lake along Highway 178, Larson Tract, Navajo, Hillview Acres Bella Vista and Weldon were allowed to return to their homes as well and had electricity. Squirrel Valley and South Lake remained under mandatory evacuation. Highway 178 is now open. However some roads off of Highway 178 remain closed: including Entrada, McCray Road, Dogwood, Kelso Valley Road and Kelso Creek Road. Meeting cancellation INDEPENDENCE – The Inyo County Board of Supervisors has announced the cancellation of the July 5 regular meeting due to its proximity to the Independence Day holiday. The board will return to its regular schedule the following Tuesday, July 12. Photography Club BISHOP – The Eastern Sierra Photographers Club meets on the first Wednesday of every month. The July meeting will be held at 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 6 at Astorga’s Mexican Restaurant. The July meeting will feature a presentation by John Wilson. Meeting is open to anyone who enjoys photography and wants to learn more about it. Bishop VFW BISHOP – The Veterans of Foreign Wars Post No. 8988 of Bishop meets the second Tuesday of the month at 7 p.m. July 12 at 484 Short St. For more information, call (760) 873-5770. Supervisors reviewed the proposal at their June 7 meeting and agreed conceptually to institute the committee, discussed appointing Supervisor Rick Pucci to the committee and directed staff to reach out to all organizations identified as contributing to the committee. The supervisors meet in open session at 10 a.m. today at the Board of Supervisors Room, County Administration Center, 224 N. Edwards, Independence. The Pacific Crest Trail remains closed from Walker Basin Campground to Jawbone Canyon Road. McGovern and Borin Dental Gentle Family & Cosmetic Dentistry 760-873-3208 our hygiene team Lori Plakos, RDH Margie Hooker, RDH Jan Hornby, RDH Cara Borin, RDH Continued from front page monument was a collaboration project between the Slim Princess Chapter and the E Clampus Vitus chapter based in Genoa, Nev., Grand Noble Humbug Jeff Preston of the Slim Princess Chapter said Monday. The new monument was placed next to the historic Keeler fire house, marking the southern end of the Carson Colorado Railroad. Preston said another monument will be placed at the northern end of the Carson Colorado later this summer in Mound House, Nev. “I loved working with the people of Keeler,” Preston said. “There is more history in Keeler than I ever knew about.” Preston said there is so much history in Keeler that it was a challenge to decide exactly what to include on the plaque, and there could very well be more monuments added in Keeler in the future. The dedication was attended by more than 250 members of E Clampus Vitus from various chapters of the organization, spanning from Reno to San Diego. The dolomite monument and bronze plague were sponsored by the Slim Princess Chapter out of Bishop. Preston said there are more than 750 Clampers involved in the Slim Princess Chapter, with 300 active members residing in Inyo County. Each chapter has its own unique way of doing monuments. For instance, the Bodie chapter in Mono County uses river rock. In Inyo County, the Slim Princess Chapter uses dolomite sourced from the marble mine located in Inyo County and bronze plaques. There are more than 50 E Clampus Vitus monuments in Inyo County sponsored by the Slim Princess Chapter since its inception in 1972, Preston said. The Keeler Then and Now monument tells a brief history of Keeler from its beginning to its modern role in the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power’s dust mitigation obligations on Owens Lake. When the Carson Colorado Railroad ran the length of the Owens Valley, Keeler was the end of the line, said Glen Young, chief of the Keeler Volunteer Fire Department. When the Southern Pacific Railroad shut down the Owens Valley narrow-gauge line in 1960, the building that was originally used as the Owenyo railroad station was moved to Keeler, where it became the fire station. “They took two rail cars, put them together, and put a roof over the whole thing,” Young said. “Before 1960, the railroad took care of fires, but after the railroad shut down, that changed.” Today, the little fire house serves as a community gathering place for the residents of Keeler. It also is home to a 1937 fire engine once used in Manzanar and a historic water tender. Once a supply camp for the booming silver mines of Cerro Gordo and Darwin, modern Keeler is home to roughly 40 people, many of whom have banded together to preserve the unique history of their community. The Keeler Early Era Preservation Society, or “KEEPS,” was founded in 2014 when a group of concerned Keeler residents wanted to preserve the history of Keeler as the southern end of the Carson Colorado Railroad and home to the Keeler pool, a popular early 1900s swimming hole. The original 1883 Carson Colorado train depot remains standing in the center of town, along with several other historic buildings. The Keeler Fire House recently had a new fire siren installed. As part of Saturday’s monument dedication, the siren was sounded for the first time. Keeler also has a large historic fire bell, which Young said they hope to re-install in the fire house sometime in the near future. road closure information The following roads will be CLOSED on Saturday, July 9th, 2016 for the 2016 Tour of the California Alps – Death Ride® state route 89 monitor pass From 5:00 a.m. – 12 Noon state route 4 ebbetts pass From 5:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. Thank you for your patience and please plan an alternate route. Alpine County Chamber of Commerce (530) 694-2475 The Inyo Register OPINION 4 TuESDay, junE 28, 2016 MIKE GERVAIS Publisher | tERRAncE VEStAl Managing Editor Political cartoons published in this newspaper – as with letters to the editor and op-eds – do not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Inyo Register, its employees or its parent company. These cartoons are merely intended to present food-for-thought in a different medium. The Inyo Register (ISSN 1095-5089) Published tri-weekly by Horizon California Publications Inc., 407 W. Line Street, Ste. 8, Bishop, CA 93514. Entered as a Paid Periodical at the office of Bishop, California 93514, under By thaddeus taylor In his book “War What is it Good For?” Professor Ian Morris refers to two types of “Bandits.” One is the hit and run type. The nomads and others not fettered to a fixed source of food and wealth that prey upon the agriculturally proficient humans. The latter he refers to as “captives” due to the dependence upon their flocks and fields. The settled humans lived longer and more prosperous lives than the temporary bandits but when the depredations reached a certain level, everyone’s lives got shorter and more violent. The other type of bandit is the permanent one. These are the ones that set themselves up as rulers and are able to fleece the captive population for as long as they want. They can’t take too much and kill the goose that lays the golden eggs and all that, but they will take what they want by force whenever the spirit moves them. These bandits became a government, typically feudal in nature. They declared themselves above the commoners, began the system of clanbased royalty and sooner or later would declare that God(s) had blessed the captives with the Act of March 3, 1876. Combining Inyo Register, founded 1883; Inyo Independent and Owens Valley Progress-Citizen, founded 1870; and the Sierra Daily News. All contents are the property of Horizon California Publications Inc. and cannot be reproduced in any way without the written consent of publisher. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Inyo Register, 407 W. Line Street, Ste. 8, Bishop, CA 93514. Phone (760) 873-3535. Fax (760) 873-3591 Guns and bandits Top of The Morning the benefits of being ruled by such noble beings. The tradeoff of this rule was greater prosperity, longer lives and less chance of violent death. Church and state become one. Disclaimer: your humble correspondent is not a fan of royalty. The colonists in English North America faced both types of bandits. On the western frontier there were the hit-and-run type of bandit raider. Frequently, the Natives were encouraged to attack the English colonists by other European empire builders both French and Spanish. These attacks were part of European conflicts that colonists had nothing to do with but they paid with blood and treasure. Over the Atlantic, the stationary bandits, the British Royals and later Parliament, grabbed what they could through taxation and occasionally impressment into the Royal Navy and army. Those places that were the last to endure double banditry, Texas for example, are most reluctant to give up gun rights. The new American Republic held that the rights of man were inherent, not granted by the state but the state would be tasked to preserve their guesT ColuMnisT liberty. The people were declared to be sovereign not the politicians. Therefore, free men could have all the guns they wanted and, in many cases, needed. Do the citizens still need guns? Let’s try to look at the problem from the perspective of those that still see permanent banditry as an issue. What do they see that people in upscale urban America do not? They see government from local to national level that is incompetent and corrupt. They see government agencies from the I.R.S. to the Inyo County Counsel used to harass political enemies. They see elected officials violating the law and bragging about it (sanctuary cities, for example). They see the head of state openly lying to the people who elected him. They watch as the government hides its crimes after the head of state promises “transparency.” They see the FBI going after journalists that disagree with the administration as a part of a wider campaign against the First Amendment. They see domestic government agencies arming themselves to the teeth. They are obtaining everything from armored fighting vehicles to massive amounts of ammo. It seems that for agency heads in Washington you aren’t anybody unless you have a SWAT team. Why do the departments of Education, Health and Human Services and the IRS need a SWAT team? There are now more armed federal agency bureaucrats than active duty Marines. The citizen can see millions of un-vetted immigrants from places where violence, gangs and disease are endemic flooding over our border. These folks represent temporary bandits. They see over 100,000 criminal illegal aliens released to the streets. They see criminals being released because the jails are over-crowded. They see the spawn of the welfare state shooting one another, destroying property, attacking police and citizens. How do these people view the anti-gun hysteria? Two separate Islamist attacks in the U.S. have resulted in calls for the citizens to be disarmed. The “common sense gun law” argument has given way to ban “the weapons of war.” Who among us cannot see the ironies? They perceive the rise of the two kinds of bandits and their leaders call for them to be disarmed. The entertainment industry provides spokespeople to decry gun ownership. This is the same industry that makes big bucks selling portrayals of gun-crazy psychopaths and kill crazy corrupt cops while making heroes out of thieves, assassins and violent gangsters. Nonetheless, they have taken time out from celebrating the passing of drug-addicted pedophiles to tell us that our values are distorted. We are told that we don’t need “assault rifles,” highcapacity magazines and any other weapon that strikes their fancy. Means testing for obtaining things is not a hallmark of a free society. More people are bludgeoned to death than killed by rifle fire, but that does not matter. Facts are not as important as feelings to those that think of themselves as our “betters.” Gun violence has been in decline for years and gun ownership has increased for the same period. The anti-gunners don’t care. Mrs. Clinton is leading the charge against the existence of an armed citizenry. She said that we will be safer. This is false. Professor David M. Buss in his book, “The Murder Next Door” points out that 95 percent of all murder victims are known to their killers. Weapons availability, violent video games and other forms of bloody entertainment have nothing to do with the murder rate. His study spans multiple societies and nations. Killing is part of our nature, like it or not. Mrs. Clinton tried to get a campaign rolling to censor video games (remember that?) and now she is leading an attack against gun ownership. She recently stated that “violence never solved anything.” This, from someone that has armed security everywhere she goes and wants to be the commander in chief of the U.S. military. Go figure. (Thaddeus Taylor is a 30-year resident of Inyo County and is currently the chairman of the Inyo County Republican Party.) LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Republicans should not stall gun control legislation This is what happens when an out-of-control political party gains control of the U.S. government. Following the Sandy Hook killings of 20 children and adults Republican politicians did nothing. After the San Bernadino killings, Republican politicians who control Congress sat on their hands and did nothing again to deal with mass shootings in America. Republicans will not even initiate gun legislation to ban assault weapons. After the mass killing of 49 young people in Orlando, this same group of Republican politicians voted down four moderate gun measures. Eighty-five to 90 percent of Americans now support some form of gun legislation but Republicans continue to block all solutions to deal with the gun epidemic in America. This is crazy – a few hundred “do-nothing” Republican politicians are infringing upon the safety of 310 million Americans. Can anything be done about this Republican cancer that has infected the U.S. government and country. Yes! Come Nov. 8, vote these political bums out of office. Republican pols need to choose between guns and their jobs. Ron Lowe Nevada City We’re online! Get up-to-date news and information with The Inyo Register’s website, where you can submit your own photo, share comments and opinions on news stories and become a blogger. Check us out! The Inyo Register www.inyoregister.com LETTERS anD TOp Of THE mORnIng pOLIcy • Limit for letters is 500 words; for Top of the Morning, 1,000 words. • Submission must be original and not published in any other print and/or online media. We will not print letters also submitted to other local media for publication. • Writer must include a daytime phone number for confirmation of authorship and town. (Num- ber will not be published.) • Anonymous submissions and pseudonyms are not permitted. • Inyo County writers and local topics are given priority. • Top of the Morning writers should include a one- or two-line bio and recent color photo. • Emailed and typed submissions are preferred. • Writers may submit one item during a one-week period. • Writers must refrain from libelous, slanderous and derogatory content. • Pieces may be edited for content. • The Inyo Register reserves the right to reject any submission. • Email letters or Top of the Morning submissions to editor@ inyoregister.com or mail to: Editor, The Inyo Register, 407 W. Line St., Ste. 8, Bishop, CA 93514 Strong Editorial Newspapers Build Strong Communities Mike Gervais Publisher [email protected] Ext. 222 Terrance Vestal Managing Editor [email protected] Ext. 208 Michael Chacanaca Associate Editor [email protected] Ext. 211 Kristina Blum Gen. Assign. Reporter [email protected] Ext. 212 Cynthia Hurdle Sampietro Classifieds Manager [email protected] Ext. 200 Eva Gentry Bookkeeping [email protected] Ext. 206 Stephanie DeBaptiste Circulation Manager [email protected] Ext. 201 Terry Langdon Sales Representative [email protected] Ext. 220 Veronica Lee Sales Representative [email protected] Ext. 207 Jon Klusmire Correspondent Bryce Lyons Movie Review Columnist Craig Jackson Sports/Outdoor Columnist Chris Langley Film History Columnist David Woodruff History Columnist Ted Williams History Columnist Phil Pister History Columnist Marty Voght History Columnist Pam Vaughan History Columnist Rob Pearce, PH.D. History Columnist Fred Rowe Fishing Colomnist Jarett Coons Fishing Columnist Carne Lowgren Pop Culture Columnist Conor Vaughan Tech Guru 407 W. Line St., Ste. 8, Bishop, CA 93514 | Phone: (760) 873-3535 Fax: (760) 873-3591 | www.inyoregister.com Your Comments Speak Volumes Send us Yours: [email protected] The Inyo Register TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016 5 write your representatives City of Bishop City Hall: 377 W. Line St., Bishop, CA 93514; (760) 873-5863; www.cityofbishop.com City Council: • Mayor Laura Smith (760) 872-4034 [email protected] • Mayor Pro Tem Joe Pecsi (760) 784-0699 [email protected] • Karen Schwartz (760) 872-1756 [email protected] • Jim Ellis [email protected] (760) 872-0780 • Patricia Gardner (760) 873-8579 [email protected] 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) 8735863, [email protected] Police Chief: Ted Stec, (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, Phillip Hart, 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) 878-0302, [email protected] Auditor-Controller: Amy Shepherd, (760) 878-0343 Coroner: Jason Brune, (760) 873-4266 County Clerk: Kammi Foote, (760) 878-0223, (760) 873-2710 County Counsel: Margaret Kemp-Williams, (760) 878-0229, (760) 872-1169 District Attorney: Tom Hardy (760) 878-0282, (760) 872-1078, (760) 873-6657 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: 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) 872-2707 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 5290 Fresno, CA 93721 Phone: (559) 497-5109 Fax: (202) 228-3864 Sacramento Office: 501 I Street, Suite 7-600 Sacramento, CA 95814 Phone: (916) 448-2787 Fax: (202) 228-3865 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 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 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 Apple Valley District Office 14955 Dale Evans Parkway Apple Valley Town Hall Apple Valley, CA 92307 Phone: (760) 247-1815 Uncommon Sense Everyone likes the Fourth of July Everyone likes the Fourth of July, including the calendar. It’s a bona fide holiday that falls on a specific calendar day, rather than on the nearest Friday or Monday for the sake of convenience. The Fourth is our nation’s birthday, and we celebrate it with parades and fireworks. Is there anyone out there that doesn’t love fireworks? I didn’t think so. Perhaps there are people that don’t like parades, but it would be downright churlish to not like Fourth of July parades. I particularly like smalltown Fourth of July parades because they represent the best side of us in all of our corny glory. They are utterly idiosyncratic and representative of wherever they occur, yet the same everywhere. The local panjandrums come out from behind their desks and counters and roll down Main Street in home-decorated cars with the moms pulling wagonloads of little kids waving little American flags, off-key school marching bands and proud old vet color guards like triumphant centurions marching into Rome, but waving like friends and neighbors. I watched one in Volcano, Hawaii, and it was the same parade you’d see in any American town of that size from there to Maine. On another Fourth we were down at the waterfront in San Francisco at dusk. The streets were teeming with Americans from literally everywhere. Everyone was feeling celebratory and the stereo fireworks show was stellar. There’s something seriously heartwarming about this because it Carne Lowgren Columnist reminds me that we are a people and not just the descendants of wherever our forebears came from. What we celebrate on our nation’s birthday is as diverse as us celebrants. The Fourth of July is a good excuse for all of us to tip our stovepipe hats to whatever it is we think we like about our country and being Americans – and this being America we have a lot of options. For many it is a particularly grand opportunity to wave the flag and revel in our military triumphs and world preeminence. The United States is the Rome of modern times, and we like being the big dogs. No other country is as loved, respected, feared and yes, reviled, as the United States, and this is both the reward and the price we pay for being who we are. Who we are is what makes us what we are, and what we are is different – and our difference lies in our diversity. Since we are a nation of immigrants based on an ideal rather than a tribal nation based on an ethnicity, whatever customs, practices and beliefs people arrive here with find themselves crashing into and sometimes clashing with everyone else’s. Our nation is the result of this mash-up. This is the wellspring of our creativity, entrepreneurial spirit and dynamism, and has made us a cultural colossus as well as a military and economic one. We are a nation whose bottom-up rather than topdown culture generates homegrown religions as outré as anything from Darkest Africa or the Mysterious East, roadside dinosaurs, The World’s Biggest (you name it), new sports and musical genres, monster trucks, and solutions to problems we didn’t even know we had. There are days when I am dismayed by what we sometimes come up with here. In generic suburban landscapes defiled by strip malls, cookie-cutter townhouses and tilt-up corporate chain box stores it is sometimes easy to forget how weird and funny we are. They have castles, royalty and well-defined social customs held in place by the weight of history, taste and tradition in the nations my ancestors came from. We have whatever we can imagine and are willing to make happen here. There is never a day when I am not glad my ancestors came to these shores, and I wouldn’t have it any other way. That’s my flag, and I wave it proudly. (Carne’s mental jukebox has lots of bombs bursting in air.) The Inyo Register 6 TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016 MAN ON THE STREET What is your favorite memory of Lone Pine? By Kristina Blüm “The Dow Villa Hotel and all the people staying there. I also love the old guy at the bug museum. Everyone here is so happy. It is a beautiful place.” – Neema Kennedy, PCT hiker Philadelphia, Pa. “Everyone here has a story and I love learning about people, not the town. The people are the town. Small towns have a lot of energy and that is definitely true about Lone Pine.” – John Ivy, PCT hiker Portland, Ore. “Being able to grow up here, then come back, raise my daughter here and coach volleyball for 25 years.” – Mel Joseph, Lone Pine “There are just too many good memories. It is difficult to pin-point just one.” – Tami Riesen, Lone Pine “All of the wonderful people who work for me here at the VFW.” – VFW Commander John Martinez, Lone Pine “All of the wonderful friends we made here. We used to own Jake’s Saloon.” – Lyda McMann, Lancaster TV TUES./WED. FOR Tuesday 28 June 2016 B 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 11 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 41 42 43 44 48 64 65 66 67 69 70 79 L 2 4 5 50 7 9 11 28 602 603 772 109 113 125 361 362 121 251 253 256 132 119 790 179 303 326 451 453 129 152 181 135 165 255 560 567 356 315 141 146 139 384 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 41 42 43 44 48 64 65 66 67 69 70 79 L 2 4 5 50 7 9 11 28 602 603 772 109 113 125 361 362 121 251 253 256 132 119 790 179 303 326 451 453 129 152 181 135 165 255 560 567 356 315 141 146 139 384 sporTs neWs/TalK Kids B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV C S1 S2 5 pm 5:30 6 pm 6:30 7 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30 CBS 2 News Evening News The Insider Ent. Tonight NCIS “Lockdown” Zoo The team tries to rescue Jamie. CBS 2 News Late-Colbert 2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News at 5:00 NBC 4 News Nightly News Extra Ac. Hollywood U.S. Olympic Trials America’s Got Talent “Auditions” Hopefuls audition for the judges. 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 The Flash Containment KTLA 5 News at 10 KTLA 5 News Friends 5 5 (KTLA) Crime Watch Daily McLaughlin PBS NewsHour California-Rob Hearst Castle Genealogy Roadshow The Greeks “The Good Strife” Frontline “Policing the Police” Point Taken Tavis Smiley (KOCE) Wild Kratts News World News Jeopardy! Wheel Fortune The Middle blackish Uncle Buck To Tell the Truth News Jimmy Kimmel 7 7 (KABC) Eyewitness News 5:00PM World News KOLO 8 6:30 Jeopardy! Wheel Fortune The Middle blackish Uncle Buck To Tell the Truth KOLO 8 at 11 Jimmy Kimmel 19 (KOLO) KOLO 8 at 5pm KOLO 8 5:30 Family Feud Family Feud 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM KCAL 9 News Sports Central Mike & Molly Mike & Molly 9 9 (KCAL) The People’s Court TMZ Dish Nation Modern Family Modern Family Hotel Hell “Brick Hotel” Coupled “Chemistry Project” Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News TMZ Dish Nation 11 (KTTV) Fox 11 Five O’Clock News Business Rpt. World News Newsline Globe Trekker SoCal Connect Earth Focus Artbound “Artesanos” SoCal Connect Earth Focus Artbound “Artesanos” 28 28 (KCET) World News The List The Middle blackish Uncle Buck To Tell the Truth 7News at 10PM (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:37) Nightline Inside Edition RightThisMinute 2 (KMGH) 7News Right U.S. Olympic Trials America’s Got Talent “Auditions” Hopefuls audition for the judges. 9News at 10pm Tonight Show-J. Fallon (:37) Late Night With Seth Meyers Last Call/Daly 4 (KUSA) 9News at 6pm Ent. Tonight NCIS “Lockdown” Zoo The team tries to rescue Jamie. News Late Show-Colbert Late Late Show/James Corden News Repeat 7 (KCNC) CBS4 News at 6 CBS4 News SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter 8 140 206 (ESPN) College Baseball NCAA World Series Championship, Game 2: Teams TBA. SportsCenter WNBA Basketball Dallas Wings at Los Angeles Sparks. Entertainers Cl. NFL Live O.J.: Made in America 15 144 209 (ESPN2) SportsCenter Destination Pol. UFC Insider Angels Pre. MLB Baseball Houston Astros at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Angels Post Angels Weekly World Poker Tour (FXSP) Golf Life ›› National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2007, Action) Nicolas Cage, Jon Voight. Animal Kingdom “Dead to Me” Animal Kingdom “Dead to Me” Law & Order “Burn Card” 22 138 245 (TNT) (4:00) ›› Bad Boys II (2003) Martin Lawrence. Friends Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Wrecked Big Bang Conan 13 139 247 (TBS) Friends Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU ››› The Incredible Hulk (2008, Action) Edward Norton, Liv Tyler. 105 242 (USA) Law & Order: SVU ›› The Gabby Douglas Story (2014, Drama) Regina King. Gold Medal Families Gold Medal Families (:02) Gold Medal Families 108 252 (LIFE) Movie Remorse (2014, Fantasy) Katrina Law, Jody Quigley, Lili Bordán. Lethal Seduction (2015, Suspense) Amanda Detmer, Caleb Ruminer. Remorse (2014) Katrina Law. 109 253 (LMN) Lethal Seduction (2015, Suspense) Amanda Detmer, Caleb Ruminer. Return of the Great White Return of the Monster Mako Jaws of the Deep Wrath of a Great White (:01) Air Jaws: Night Stalker Shark Dark Wrath of a 9 182 278 (DISC) Super Predator My Giant Life “Tall Freak” Little People, Big World Little People, Big World Little People, Big World (:01) My Giant Life “Episode 4” (:02) Little People, Big World 26 183 280 (TLC) Dateline on TLC “After Midnight” Tanked Tanked “Nigiri and the NBA” Tanked (:01) Tanked (:02) Tanked “Shaq-a-Tank!” (:03) Insane Pools: Deeper Dive 24 184 282 (AP) Tanked: Unfiltered Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Top Gear “Cuba” Counting Cars Counting Cars Perfect Road- Magnus Walker 120 269 (HIST) (4:00) The Marijuana Revolution Counting Cars The First 48 “Lester Street” The First 48 ››› Taken (2008, Action) Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace. ›› Walking Tall (2004, Action) The Rock, Johnny Knoxville. 25 118 265 (A&E) The First 48 ›› Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Jude Law. Feed the Beast “Gimme a T” Feed the Beast “Gimme a T” 254 (AMC) (4:00) ›› Man on Fire (2004, Crime Drama) Denzel Washington. Band Concert Thru the Mirror ››› Waking Sleeping Beauty (2009) Flowers/Trees (9:55) Disney Shorts (:15) Hot Lead and Cold Feet 132 256 (TCM) ››› The Parent Trap (1961) Hayley Mills, Maureen O’Hara. The Middle Guilt “Exit Wounds” Pretty Little Liars Pretty Little Liars “Bedlam” Dead of Summer “Patience” (:01) Guilt “Exit Wounds” The 700 Club 180 311 (FREE) The Middle Liv and Maddie Liv and Maddie Bizaardvark Jessie Austin & Ally ››› Meet the Robinsons (2007) Daniel Hansen (:40) Jessie Stuck/Middle Liv and Maddie Backstage K.C. Undercover 17 173 291 (DISN) Austin & Ally Family Guy 176 296 (TOON) Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! We Bare Bears Wrld, Gumball King of the Hill Bob’s Burgers Bob’s Burgers Cleveland Show American Dad American Dad Family Guy Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Fixer Upper House Hunters Hunters Int’l Fixer Upper 112 229 (HGTV) Fixer Upper Chopped Chopped “Cooking Caribbean” Chopped “Military Vets” Chopped Chopped “Cooking Caribbean” Chopped “Military Vets” 110 231 (FOOD) Chopped Junior “The Big Stink” ››› Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011) James Franco, Freida Pinto. ››› Avatar (2009) Sam Worthington. A former Marine falls in love with a native of a lush alien world. Avatar (2009) 137 248 (FX) Mike & Molly ›› The Mechanic (2011, Action) Jason Statham, Ben Foster. ›› Faster (2010, Action) Dwayne Johnson, Billy Bob Thornton. › Friday the 13th, Part 2 122 244 (SYFY) ›› Freddy vs. Jason (2003, Horror) Robert Englund, Ken Kirzinger. Below Deck Mediterranean Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Below Deck Mediterranean Below Deck Mediterranean What Happens Southern Charm 129 273 (BRAVO) Below Deck Mediterranean Botched “Plastic Fantastic” E! News Botched “Seeing Double” Botched “Totally Waist-ed” Famously Single E! News 114 236 (E!) Botched “Breast Greedy” Hack My Life Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life 204 246 (TRUTV) Hack My Life Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Bizarre Foods America Bert-Conqueror Delicious Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Bizarre Foods America 215 277 (TRAV) Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Everyday Joseph Prince Bil Cornelius Praise the Lord Contemporary Journey of Faith World Impact Sekulow Creflo Dollar Call2All The Watchman 260 372 (TBN) The Blessed Wild Britain Wild Britain American Ride The Story Trek Relative Race Wild Britain Wild Britain American Ride The Story Trek 374 (BYU) American Ride The Story Trek Relative Race Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls Golden Girls 185 312 (HALL) Little House on the Prairie SpongeBob Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans Thundermans Nicky, Ricky Game Shakers Full House Full House Full House Full House Friends Friends 171 300 (NICK) Loud House (:22) Futurama (5:52) Futurama (:18) Futurama (6:49) Futurama (:20) Futurama (7:51) Tosh.0 (:24) Tosh.0 (8:57) Tosh.0 (:29) Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Not Safe With The Daily Show Nightly Show 107 249 (COM) (4:50) Tosh.0 ›› Tommy Boy (1995) Chris Farley. An heir tries to save his father’s business. ››› I Am Chris Farley (2015) Adam Sandler, Christina Applegate. ›› Tommy Boy (1995, Comedy) 16 168 325 (SPIKE) (4:00) ››› The 40-Year-Old Virgin (2005) Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith (:12) George Lopez George Lopez Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens 106 (TVL) (:09) The Andy Griffith Show NCIS: Los Angeles “Burned” NCIS: Los Angeles “Callen, G” American Ninja Warrior Competitors in Philadelphia. This Is Mike Stud American Ninja Warrior 115 235 (ESQTV) NCIS: Los Angeles “Hunted” Wednesday 29 June 2016 B 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 11 moVies moVies sporTs neWs/TalK Kids B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV C S1 S2 5 pm 5:30 6 pm 6:30 7 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30 CBS 2 News Evening News The Insider Ent. Tonight Big Brother Criminal Minds “Hostage” American Gothic CBS 2 News Late-Colbert 2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News at 5:00 NBC 4 News Nightly News Extra Ac. Hollywood U.S. Olympic Trials The Night Shift Jordan learns a life lesson. 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 Arrow “Beyond Redemption” Supernatural “Thin Lizzie” KTLA 5 News at 10 KTLA 5 News Friends 5 5 (KTLA) Crime Watch Daily Studio SoCaL PBS NewsHour Nature “Big Birds Can’t Fly” Supernature -- Wild Flyers NOVA 9 Months That Made You Tavis Smiley Charlie Rose (KOCE) Wild Kratts News World News Jeopardy! Wheel Fortune The Middle The Goldbergs Modern Family (:31) blackish Fresh Off-Boat Real O’Neals News Jimmy Kimmel 7 7 (KABC) Eyewitness News 5:00PM World News KOLO 8 6:30 Jeopardy! Wheel Fortune The Middle The Goldbergs Modern Family (:31) blackish Fresh Off-Boat Real O’Neals KOLO 8 at 11 Jimmy Kimmel 19 (KOLO) KOLO 8 at 5pm KOLO 8 5:30 Family Feud Family Feud 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM KCAL 9 News Sports Central Mike & Molly Mike & Molly 9 9 (KCAL) The People’s Court TMZ Dish Nation Modern Family Modern Family MasterChef “Top 17 Compete” Wayward Pines “City Upon a Hill” Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News TMZ Dish Nation 11 (KTTV) Fox 11 Five O’Clock News Business Rpt. World News Newsline California Gold Steves’ Europe Death in Paradise Link Voices Sound Tracker “Indonesia, Java” Link Voices 28 28 (KCET) World News The List The Middle The Goldbergs Modern Family (:31) blackish Fresh Off-Boat Real O’Neals 7News at 10PM (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:37) Nightline Inside Edition RightThisMinute 2 (KMGH) 7News Right U.S. Olympic Trials The Night Shift Jordan learns a life lesson. 9News at 10pm Tonight Show-J. Fallon (:37) Late Night With Seth Meyers Last Call/Daly 4 (KUSA) 9News at 6pm Ent. Tonight Big Brother Criminal Minds “Hostage” American Gothic News Late Show-Colbert Late Late Show/James Corden News Repeat 7 (KCNC) CBS4 News at 6 CBS4 News SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter 8 140 206 (ESPN) College Baseball NCAA World Series Championship, Game 3: Teams TBA. (If necessary). Baseball Tonight City Slam From Los Angeles. Baseball Tonight ESPN FC NFL Live E:60 15 144 209 (ESPN2) (4:00) MLB Baseball New York Mets at Washington Nationals. Bull Riding Championship. MLB Baseball Houston Astros at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Angels Post Angels Weekly World Poker Tour (FXSP) (4:30) Titans of Mavericks Castle “Last Call” Castle “Nikki Heat” Castle “Poof, You’re Dead” Castle “Knockdown” Major Crimes “N.S.F.W.” Major Crimes “Foreign Affairs” 22 138 245 (TNT) Castle Friends Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan 13 139 247 (TBS) Friends ›› No Strings Attached (2011) Natalie Portman, Ashton Kutcher. ›› Delivery Man (2013, Comedy) Vince Vaughn, Chris Pratt, Cobie Smulders. Royal Pains Law & Order: SVU 105 242 (USA) He’s Just Not › One for the Money (2012) Katherine Heigl, Jason O’Mara. ›› Ghosts of Girlfriends Past (2009) Matthew McConaughey. (:02) ›› Fun With Dick & Jane (2005) Jim Carrey, Téa Leoni. 108 252 (LIFE) Did You Hear-Morgans? Pretty Little Addict (2015, Suspense) Andrea Bowen, Scott Lyster. Break-Up Nightmare (2016, Drama) Jennifer Dorogi, Celesta DeAstis. Pretty Little Addict (2015) 109 253 (LMN) Break-Up Nightmare (2016, Drama) Jennifer Dorogi, Celesta DeAstis. Air Jaws: Night Stalker Shallow Water Invasion Wrath of a Great White Deadliest Sharks Sharks vs. Dolphins: Face Off Shark Dark Deadliest 9 182 278 (DISC) Tiburones: Sharks of Cuba Jamie Lynn Spears My Giant Life “Episode 4” My Big Fat Fabulous Life My Big Fat Fabulous Life (:01) I Am Jazz (:02) My Big Fat Fabulous Life 26 183 280 (TLC) Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Treehouse: Out on a Limb Treehouse: Out on a Limb (:03) Insane Pools: Deeper Dive 24 184 282 (AP) Treehouse: Out on a Limb American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers “Slim Pickings” American Pickers (:03) Pawn Stars (:33) Pawn Stars (:03) Pawn Stars (:33) Pawn Stars 120 269 (HIST) American Pickers The First 48 “Birthday Girl” Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Wahlburgers Wahlburgers 25 118 265 (A&E) The First 48 › National Lampoon’s Vegas Vacation (1997) Chevy Chase. ›› National Lampoon’s Vacation (1983, Comedy) Chevy Chase. ›› National Lampoon’s European Vacation 254 (AMC) (4:00) ››› Animal House (1978, Comedy) ›››› Hamlet (1948, Drama) Laurence Olivier, Jean Simmons, Basil Sydney. (:45) ›››› A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1935) James Cagney, Mickey Rooney. 132 256 (TCM) ››› Macbeth (1948, Drama) Orson Welles, Jeanette Nolan. › Big Daddy (1999) Adam Sandler, Joey Lauren Adams. Young & Hungry Baby Daddy › Zookeeper (2011) Kevin James, Voices of Rosario Dawson. The 700 Club 180 311 (FREE) Dead of Summer “Patience” Liv and Maddie Liv and Maddie K.C. Undercover Liv and Maddie Girl Meets Adventures in Babysitting (2016) Sofia Carson Bizaardvark Stuck/Middle Liv and Maddie Backstage K.C. Undercover 17 173 291 (DISN) Austin & Ally Family Guy 176 296 (TOON) Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! We Bare Bears Wrld, Gumball King of the Hill Bob’s Burgers Bob’s Burgers Cleveland Show American Dad American Dad Family Guy Property Brothers: Buying Property Brothers: Buying Property Brothers Brother vs. Brother House Hunters Hunters Int’l Property Brothers 112 229 (HGTV) Property Brothers: Buying Cutthroat Kitchen Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Cutthroat Kitchen Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives 110 231 (FOOD) Cutthroat Kitchen ››› World War Z (2013, Horror) Brad Pitt, Mireille Enos, James Badge Dale. ›› The Purge (2013, Suspense) Ethan Hawke, Lena Headey. ›› The Purge (2013, Suspense) Ethan Hawke, Lena Headey. 137 248 (FX) Mike & Molly ›› Faster (2010, Action) Dwayne Johnson, Billy Bob Thornton. › Friday the 13th (2009) Jared Padalecki, Danielle Panabaker. A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) 122 244 (SYFY) ›› The Mechanic (2011, Action) Jason Statham, Ben Foster. Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC What Happens Housewives/OC 129 273 (BRAVO) Housewives/OC Keeping Up With the Kardashians EJ NYC “Queen of Shade” Keeping Up With the Kardashians E! News 114 236 (E!) Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians E! News Fameless Fameless Fameless Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. 204 246 (TRUTV) Fameless Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown 215 277 (TRAV) Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Turning Point Joseph Prince Steven Furtick Living Proof Blessed Life John Gray Drive Through Ravi Zacharias Jesse Duplantis GregLaurie.TV Creflo Dollar Main Stage Trinity Family 260 372 (TBN) John Gray Studio C Heart of the Country (2013, Drama) Jana Kramer, Gerald McRaney. Random Acts Studio C Heart of the Country (2013, Drama) Jana Kramer, Gerald McRaney. Random Acts Studio C 374 (BYU) Random Acts Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls Golden Girls 185 312 (HALL) Little House on the Prairie SpongeBob Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans Thundermans Nicky, Ricky Game Shakers Full House Full House Full House Full House Friends Friends 171 300 (NICK) Loud House (:22) South Park South Park (:18) South Park South Park (:20) South Park South Park (:24) South Park South Park (:29) South Park Another Period South Park The Daily Show Nightly Show 107 249 (COM) South Park ››› X2: X-Men United (2003, Action) Patrick Stewart. A power-mad militarist pursues the mutants. › Wrath of the Titans (2012, Fantasy) Sam Worthington, Liam Neeson. Expendables 2 16 168 325 (SPIKE) (3:30) ›› Dredd (2012) Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith George Lopez George Lopez Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens 106 (TVL) Andy Griffith American Ninja Warrior Competitors in Philadelphia. Car Match. Car Match. Car Match. Car Match. This Is Mike Stud 115 235 (ESQTV) American Ninja Warrior Competitors in Oklahoma City. The Inyo Register TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016 7 MAN ON THE STREET What is your favorite memory of Lone Pine? By Kristina Blüm “Growing up here, we had the freedom to do just about anything.” – Ryan Lane, Lone Pine “Meeting my husband, Bob, here in 1958. He was driving his ‘57 Chevy. We used to drag Main in that thing.” – Emma Bills, Lone Pine “Back in the day, we could do anything we wanted. We didn’t need cell phones. If you broke down, you walked. If you got bucked off, you walked.” – Bob Bills, Lone Pine “The narrow gage railroad. I grew up in Keeler when it was still running. There was a lot of mining going on then.” – Larry Langston, Lone Pine (“Yup, I’m still here.”) “High school, growing up in Cartago, hanging out with my friends and having a good time together. We had good things to do back then.” – Matt Benbrook, Cartago “Alabama Hills Day. I love the rock climbing.” – Seth Tait, Lone Pine, Boy Scout Troop 82 E E FR “Catch of the Week” Mosaic Poster When you subscribe for one year! (upon request / new and renewal subscriptions) Take advantage of our already low subscription rates for one year and get your complimentary “Catch of the Week” Fish Mosaic Poster The Inyo Register “Strong Editorial Newspapers Build Strong Communities” ALL Motor route hoMe deLivery 1 yeAr subscription q $65.00 q $52.00 senior rAte (55+) 407 W. Line St., Ste. 8 • Bishop, CA 93514 760-873-3535 The Inyo Register 8 FACES&places tuesday, june 28, 2016 Enjoying great food, cold beer, fine wine Wheeler Crest, Paradise fire departments’ hold annual fundraiser Enjoying the food and drink offerings Saturday afternoon at the annual wine and beer tasting fundraiser for the Wheeler Crest and Paradise fire departments, hosted at Hidden Creeks Ranch in Bishop, were from left, BJ Schneider, Lila Bauter, Yvonne Katzenstein, Mark Buettner, Patricia Buettner, Denyse Racine and Mark Daniel, Paradise Fire Protection District assistant chief. Photos by Mike Chacanaca Fabbie Esparza and Manuel Esparza pose for a photo during the wine and beer tasting benefit for the Paradise and Wheeler Crest fire departments held at Hidden Creeks Ranch in Bishop. From left, Daryl Hooper, Terry Plum, Evan Russell and Joanne Parsons get together for a photo Saturday afternoon at Hidden Creeks Ranch during the Wheeler Crest and Paradise fire departments’ annual fundraiser. From left, Kay Ogden, Jeff Boone and Mike Weurdig look over some of the items offered in a silent auction during the Wheeler Crest and Paradise fire departments’ annual fundraiser held Saturday at Hidden Creeks Ranch. Roxanne Tallman, owner of Hidden Creeks Ranch, left, and Marilyn Durazzo stop by the Mountain Rambler Brewery booth to sample some locally crafted beer during the Wheeler Crest and Paradise fire departments’ fundraiser Saturday at Hidden Creeks Ranch. Victor Mora, left, throws some corn tortillas on the grill while Manny Astorga serves a taco to Hilde Reuland at the Astorga’s Mexican Restaurant booth Saturday afternoon during the Wheeler Crest and Paradise fire departments’ annual fundrasier held at the Hidden Creeks Ranch. Chip Wood, left, helps serve up shrimp paella prepared by his brother Chef Eric Wood while Evan Wood dishes up a serving as Rosanne Higley is off in search of a place to enjoy her paella. David Cooke suggests a sample of Eastern Sierra Cellars wine to Paul Bedell, Linda Arcularius and Howard Arcularius during the annual Wheeler Crest and Paradise fire departments’ fundraiser Saturday afternoon at the Hidden Creeks Ranch. The Inyo Register TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016 9 Son should find courage to stand up to daughter-in-law Dear Readers: Several years ago, our son lived with a very immature young woman. We tried to make her feel welcome, but she had no interest in getting to know us. The only thing she ever asked was how much our son would inherit. She then had an affair. Our son asked whether he should leave her. My husband said yes, but I told my son that people make mistakes and it was his decision. He stayed. A few months later, she was worried he might leave, so she lied about using the pill and got pregnant. The baby was christened and baptized with only her family present. We saw the photos on Facebook. When they got married shortly after, they never said a word to us. We decided not to hold a grudge. We bought a house where they could live for $200 a month in rent, and gave them $40,000 to furnish it. Our new daughter-inlaw said we should let them live there rent-free and they stopped paying rent. They also didn’t take care of the house. So we sold it, and when we didn’t give them the proceeds, she told everyone that we were terrible people and had stolen their money. They now have two children and a third on the way. We are not allowed to see the grandchildren. Our son calls us once a month, but he’s afraid to tell his wife. We just wrote a new will and are giving them nothing. We haven’t told our son this, but we’ve told our other children that they can give their brother a share if they choose. But his wife has also cut off contact with the siblings, as well as our son’s grandparents. It’s been five years. We would still welcome her, but we aren’t holding our breath. Our son says he’s OK with this. He says he’s not abused. Sometimes there COMMUNITY CALENDAR The Inyo Register runs calender items for free events at no charge. Events requiring paid admission will be charged a nominal fee to use this service. Call Cynthia Sampietro at (760) 873-3535 for more information or email her at classy@inyoregister. com. Due to space limitations, we can only guarantee one run per item. All submissions are subject to editing. Tuesday, June 28 Calico quilters day lillies The Calico Quilters monthly meeting will be at 10 a.m. at the Highlands Mobile Home Park family recreation hall. All are welcome. Call Barbara Stuhaan for more information. (760) 873-9956. Rotary club of Bishop The Rotary Club of Bishop meets every Tuesday at noon at Astorga’s Mexican Restaurant at 2206 N Sierra Highway. Mike Patterson of Sierra Lifeflight will be the speaker. Visitors are always welcome. Lunch is $12. Call Sue Lyndes for information, (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. For more information, call (760) 873-5839. Saturday, July 2 Bingo at Senior Center AARP is offering bingo at the Bishop Senior Center behind the City Park. Everyone age 18 and older is welcome to attend. Doors open at 5 p.m., Bingo starts at 6 p.m. For more information, call (760) 873-5839. Calico Quilters Night Owls The Calico Quilters night meeting will be held at 6:30 p.m. at the HIghlands Mobile Home Park family recreation hall. All are welcome. Call Barbara Stuhann for more information. (760) 873-9956. Sunday, July 3 Eastside Writing Circle The Imagination Lab, 621 W. Line St., No. 204, Bishop, hosts in-group writing and sharing for folks interested in writing, any genre, at 1:30 p.m. For more information, call Kris Hohag, (760) 9203389, or Marilyn Blake Philip, (760) 9208013. Monday, July 4 Walk for veterans Rotary Club of Bishop Sunrise meets at 7:11 a.m. at the Northern Inyo Hospital Board Room Annex, 2957 Birch St., Bishop. Big Pine American Legion Post No. 457, Auxiliary and Civic Club will sponsor A Walk For Veterans on July 4 at Mendenhall Park in Big Pine starting at 7:30 a.m. Pre-registration will begin at 6:30 a.m. The $25 registration fee includes a T-shirt and breakfast. Proceeds will benefit Veterans Helping Veterans of Inyo and Mono County. For more information call Rick Field at (760) 263-4150 or Rose Todd (760) 938-2911. The breakfast is opened to the public for $5 and will begin at 8 a.m. NIH Auxiliary Big Day at the Park Wednesday, June 29 Rotary Club of Bishop Sunrise The Northern Inyo Hospital Auxiliary will hold a workshop starting at 10 a.m. at 2957 Birch St. on the corner of Grandview. For more information call Shirley Stone, (760) 872 1914. Thursday, June 30 Bishop Lions Club The Bishop Lions Club meets every Thursday, except holidays, at noon at the Tri-County Fairgrounds Patio Building. Lunch is served and then the community projects are discussed. Everybody is welcome. Call Mike Johnston at (760) 9376663 for more information. Bingo at Senior Center AARP is offering Bingo at 1 p.m. at the Bishop Senior Center behind the City Park. Everyone age 18 and older is welcome to attend. For more information, call (760) 873-5839. Taking Off Pounds Sensibly TOPS weight loss program meets every Thursday at 6 p.m. at the Highlands Adult Clubhouse. TOPS can help you reach your weight loss goals by providing you with the tools, information, support, and accountability to succeed. TOPS is open to men, women and teens. Activities begin at 11 a.m. at Bishop’s City Park; exhibition baseball game, tennis courts open, bocce court opens, volleyball sand courts open; 2 p.m., live music begins, free watermelon, ice cream and pie, all festivities at the park come to an end at 4 p.m. Crowley Lake Bake Sale The Crowley Lake Friends of the Library are having their biannual Book Sale/Silent Auction/Bake Sale at the Crowley Lake Community Center (across the street from the Crowley Lake General Store on South Landing Road). The sale will run from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The silent auction has gift certificates from local restaurants, pack stations, and many other businesses from Bishop to Mammoth Lakes. Bishop Fireworks The city of Bishop Fire Department will be presenting fireworks at the airport, Airport and Wye Road gates,. Gates open at 4 p.m. Bishop Community Band The Bishop Community Band will be having concerts Monday evenings at 8 p.m. throughout summer at the Bishop City Park Gazebo. Bring lawn chairs, light jackets, friends, etc. Free admission. Tuesday, July 5 Rotary club of Bishop The Rotary Club of Bishop meets every Tuesday at noon at Astorga’s Mexican Restaurant at 2206 N Sierra Highway. Visitors are always welcome. Lunch is $12. Call Sue Lyndes for information, (760) 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. For more information, call (760) 873-5839. Wednesday, July 6 Photography Club The Eastern Sierra Photographers Club meets on the first Wednesday of every month. The July meeting will be held at 7 p.m. at Astorga’s Mexican Restaurant. The July meeting will feature a presentation by John Wilson. Meeting is open to anyone who enjoys photography and wants to learn more about it. Rotary Club of Bishop Sunrise Rotary Club of Bishop Sunrise meets at 7:11 a.m. at the Northern Inyo Hospital Board Room Annex, 2957 Birch St., Bishop. Thursday, July 7 Bishop Lions Club The Bishop Lions Club meets every Thursday, except holidays, at noon at the TriCounty Fairgrounds Patio Building. Lunch is served and then the community projects are discussed. Everybody is welcome. Call Mike Johnston at (760) 937-6663 for more information. Bingo at Senior Center AARP is offering Bingo at 1 p.m. at the Bishop Senior Center behind the City Park. Everyone age 18 and older is welcome to attend. For more information, call (760) 873-5839. Taking Off Pounds Sensibly TOPS weight loss program meets every Thursday at 6 p.m. at the Highlands Adult Clubhouse. TOPS can help you reach your weight loss goals by providing you with the tools, information, support, and accountability to succeed. TOPS is open to men, women and teens. Saturday, July 9 Bingo at Senior Center AARP is offering bingo at the Bishop Senior Center behind the City Park. Everyone age 18 and older is welcome to attend. Doors open at 5 p.m., Bingo starts at 6 p.m. For more information, call (760) 873-5839. Sunday, July 10 Eastside Writing Circle The Imagination Lab, 621 W. Line St., No. 204, Bishop, hosts in-group writing and sharing for folks interested in writing, any genre, at 1:30 p.m. For more information, call Kris Hohag, (760) 920-3389, or Marilyn Blake Philip, (760) 920-8013. HOROSCOPES BY HOLIDAY This is the last day of the Mars retrograde and an ideal time to touch back on the projects you feel have been stalled, thwarted or abandoned. What’s in there that’s worth picking up again? Fresh momentum is about to set in. Be like the surfer: ready to hop onto your board when the next wave comes in. ARIES (March 21-April 19). As for this recent baffling twist, don’t try to figure it all out just yet. At the very least, it will be more fun not to know right away. And if you never find out at all -- well, the mystery is something delicious. Milk it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). It’s a day for physical daring and endeavoring to act before thinking about whether you should. The result might be a performance of stunning grace, but there are other risks you’d be wise to consider as well. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). There’s some excitement, and it will enhance your experience of the day as long as you remain slightly detached. The drama will be fun if you take a step back and refuse to be overly serious about it. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ll probably have to alter your plan in order to accommodate weird circumstances in the morning. Your flexible attitude will contribute greatly to your success. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Everything is aligned. You say what you want, and then you do it. Your purpose is unencumbered by doubt or obstacle. Your focus is narrow and laser-sharp. Go! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). When you distance yourself from the forces that would rob you of your peace, you’re not running away: You’re protecting and fortifying yourself so that you can bring the best “you” to life. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Small-scale trials, tests and transformations are getting you ready for the Holiday Mathis bigger changes life will surely bring. Think of this afternoon’s test as a drill for the real deal. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Beware of those who would benefit from you thinking that the solution to the problem can be bought in a product. If this could really be bottled, it would be the most popular product sold on Earth. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). The thing you used to do for fun may now seem quite the opposite, but that’s the very nature of fun: Novelty, newness, risk and reward are all a part of the equation. It’s time to search for new fun now. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Success is rather simple for you today. Do what you say you’ll do. This is made even easier if you don’t say you’ll do anything, freeing yourself up completely for a change. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Everyone has a heart, but not everyone leads with it like you do today. You’ll wind up at a magical destination, all because you followed your heart’s dictates. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). If you’re not careful, your tangents will go off on tangents until you are so far from the main road (conversationally, geographically, creatively or otherwise) that it’ll take a major transportation upgrade just to get back. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (June 28). Your cosmic gift is a deep sense of belonging. The person who understands you does this so fully and with so much love that you feel more like yourself than you’ve ever been. July and August see you renewing contracts and bringing your home into the future, too. There’s travel to look forward to in September. Capricorn and Libra adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 7, 3, 40, 19 and 25. FORECAST FOR THE WEEK AHEAD: When young people make friends they often assume that this is the way life is: Friendships are plentiful, laughter and youth are in abundant supply and there are heaping displays of kinship and emotional brightness at life’s buffet table. People often have to get older to realize the beautiful rarity of friendships and the fleeting nature of youthful social ties. Connection isn’t so automatic later in life. The business of survival and responsibility can make it difficult to prioritize friendship the way one does in youth. The sweetness is sometimes better tasted in retrospect. The reason I bring it up has to do with the harmonious arrangement of jovial Jupiter and profound Pluto. These luminaries angle to provide a rosy glow in the backdrop that may feel totally natural and normal in the moment, but we should cherish this atmosphere of fresh hope, optimism and harmony, as the configuration will not repeat until 2024. Mars does an about-face on Wednesday with fresh resolve. What wasn’t accomplished can still be conquered. It’s not too late after all. In fact, all those other times it was just too early. To find out more about Holiday Mathis and read her past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. family to a shower and not the wedding. (Work showers fall into a different category.) It is especially rude to ask these same people to bake for the event, unless you are charging them a fee. However, there is a possibility that the bride assumes you will be in attendance anyway since you are preparing the desserts. You might talk to the bride’s mother and clear it up. We’d hate for there to be a misunderstanding. is no happy ending. – Resigned to Our Situation Dear Resigned: We are so sorry your son married such an unkind, immature person. Also, that he is too cowardly to take a stand, fearful that she might leave. But that is highly unlikely. We wonder how your daughter-in-law would react if she learned that you might reconsider including them in your will if you were allowed to spend time with the grandchildren. She sounds mercenary enough to think about it. It’s good that you have other children to lean on. Our condolences. Dear Annie: I just returned from a bridal shower and learned that a few of us were not invited to the wedding. I am a good friend of the bride and of her mother. The other women at my table said, “See you at the wedding.” I stayed silent. Several of us are baking Kathy & Marcy the cake and cookies for the wedding. Most of us who are doing the baking are not invited. When did it become OK to invite people to a shower and not the wedding? – Old-Fashioned Dear Old-Fashioned: It is not OK to invite friends and 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. Today’s Crossword Puzzle Previous Puzzle Solved The Inyo Register 10 eASTeRN SIeRRA CLASSIFIeDS tuesday, june 28, 2016 020 HAPPINESS IS ... HAPPINESS IS É OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS Help and Hope for People Who have Problems with Food Overeaters Anonymous members meet to share their experience, strength, hope and the OA program of recovery every Saturday from 10:00AM-11:00AM in the library of the Calvary Baptist Church, 1100 W. Line St., Bishop. For more information, call Marilyn at (760) 872-3757 or (760) 920-8013. Hope to see you next Saturday! HAPPINESS IS... SIERRA GRACE SAA New, local meeting for Sex Addicts Anonymous. SAA is a fellowship of men and women, who share their experience, strength and hope with each other so they may overcome their sexual addiction. For more information, visit www.saa-recovery.org or call 800-477-8198. Look for "Meetings ...USA...Bishop" 025 LOST AND FOUND FOUND - TOTE bag with towels and suntan lotion on 395, south of Keoughs.! 760-938-2723 LOST MY CAT - $100 REWARD Gray with green eyes, 11 mos. old, half Shpynx cat, wiry coat. Lost in east Chalfant, Wht. Mtn Rd. area. $100 Reward offered. If you have seen him or found him please call 760-873-3441 or 760-873-5241 045 HELP WANTED BEHAVIORAL HEALTH REGISTERED NURSE I OR II SalaryLevel I $5303-$6445/mo. Level II - $5559-$6761/mo. Closing Date - OPEN UNTIL FILLED REGISTERED NURSE OR PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE Salary R.N.-$5303-$6445/mo. P.H.N. - $5559-$6761/mo. Closing Date - OPEN UNTIL FILLED For more information, complete job descriptions and an Inyo County application form, visit www.inyocounty.us , or contact the Personnel Office at 760-878-0407. Must apply on Inyo County application form. EEO/ADA. JOURNEYMAN PLUMBERS BUS DRIVER 4 hours per day Monday-Friday: 6:30am-8:00am & 1:45pm-4:15pm (May Vary) Position is 182 days per year. Start Date: August 19, 2016 Starting Salary $15.16-$17.13 per hour Please inquire about available training over the summer. COUNTY OF INYO Department of Health and Human Services Currently accepting applications to fill the following Countywide positions, with deadline dates as listed: BEHAVIORAL HEALTH REGISTERED NURSE I OR II Salary: Level I - $5303-$6445/mo. Level II - $5559-$6761/mo. Closing Date - OPEN UNTIL FILLED REGISTERED NURSE OR PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE Salary: R.N.- $5303-$6445/mo. P.H.N. - $5559-$6761/mo. Closing Date - OPEN UNTIL FILLED MANAGEMENT ANALYST Salary- $5559-$6761/mo. Closing Date - July 11, 2016 The above monthly salaries are paid over 26 pay periods annually. For more information, complete job descriptions and an Inyo County www.inyoapplication form, visit county.us , or contact the Personnel Office at 760-878-0407. Must apply on Inyo County application form. EEO/ADA. HIGH SCHOOL INSTRUCTIONAL BI-LINGUAL AIDE III - TRANSLATOR / GIRLS PE AIDE (Requires A.A. Degree equivalent or above. Must be Spanish/English fluent in writing & speaking. Based on required duties, only female applicants will be considered) 30 Hours per week Monday-Friday: 8:15am Ð 3:15pm Position is 180 days per year Start Date: August 22, 2016 Starting Salary $14.04-$15.85 per hour Contact Kim Tiner at the Business Office 656 W. Pine St., Bishop, CA 93514 or call (760) 872-3680 or [email protected]. Applications are available in our business office or see our District Website: http://bishop-ca.schoolloop.com/HR. Full job descriptions are available upon request. Deadline to apply: Tuesday, July 5, 2016 @ 4:00pm. The Bishop Unified School District is an Equal Opportunity Employer THE FORT INDEPENDENCE Tribe is seeking qualified individuals for the following positions: Environmental Director $20-$28/hr DOE Environmental Assistant $14-$18/hr DOE Bookkeeper $16-$27/hr DOE These positions are full time with benefits. Please call Carl at 760-878-5151 or email [email protected] for job descriptions and applications. The application deadline is July 8, 2016. WE MOVE ITEMS FAST The easTern sierra Classifieds 873-3535 BIG PINE INDIAN EDUCATION CENTER Cultural/Language Arts Coordinator Full Time Sandwich Artists Two positions avail. Hours are from 8-4 but will vary by business volume. Weekends and Holidays are mandatory, pay is D.O.E. No Phone calls. Please apply in person at 763 N. Main St., Bishop. The above monthly salaries are paid over 26 pay periods annually. 045 HELP WANTED Good pay, company vehicle, plus other paid benefits provided. 045 HELP WANTED SECRETARY SMALL NON-PROFIT seeks self motivated, friendly individual for front office. Excellent communication & people skills, exceptional in MS Office, ability to work unsupervised. [email protected] COUNTY OF INYO Department of Health and Human Services Currently accepting applications to fill the following Countywide positions, with deadline dates as listed: BISHOP UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT is accepting applications for the following classified positions: EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY FOR JOURNEYMAN PLUMBERS Full time Monday - Friday + Overtime. 5 Yrs. experience. Send resume to [email protected] 045 HELP WANTED CAREGIVER NEEDED for disabled man. No exp. necessary. Must pass background check,drug test and have valid drivers license. Female preferred. Call 760-258-1390 Prep/Sanitation Worker Heavy lifting req!d. Hours will vary by business volume. Weekends and Holidays are mandatory, pay is D.O.E. No Phone calls. Please apply in person at 763 N. Main St., Bishop. Under the supervision of the Big Pine Indian Education Center (BIEC) Director, the Cultural/Language Arts Coordinator will work directly with students and families, will plan and implement cultural program activities and will be a good role model for students and families. Full time with benefits (32 hrs./wk), $14-$17/Hr. Qualifications: HS Diploma/GED, valid CA Driver!s License, insurable driver, pass background check, obtain CPR/First Aid certification, at least 3 years of experience in cultural activity instruction. Contact Big Pine Tribal office for full job description 825 S. Main St., Big Pine, CA 93513 Tel: 760-938-2003. Closing date: Tuesday, July 5, 2016 at 5:00PM. CUSTOMER SERVICE/REGISTER POSITION - BREAD DEPT. TWO full time positionsl. Friendly and dependable. Please apply in person at 763 N. Main St., Bishop TOIYABE INDIAN HEALTH PROJECT, INC. ADVERTISEMENT FOR POSITION VACANCIES Toiyabe is currently accepting applications for the following open positions with deadline dates as listed. FRONT DESK AGENTS Bishop Creekside Inn is hiring Front Desk Agents to continue our tradition of personalized, attentive service. This position is a full time, year round position with Health Insurance provided. Previous Hotel experience is not required. Wages $13 - $15. To apply for this position, email kalynn.rose@ a resume to: thebishopcreeksideinn.com or apply in person at 725 N. Main St., Bishop HOUSEKEEPERS BISHOP CREEKSIDE INN is now hiring Housekeepers. Starting wage of $11 - $12 per hour, depending on experience. Apply in person at 725 N. Main St., Bishop, CA or email resume and/or inquiry to: [email protected] IMACA JOB OPENINGS Inyo Mono Advocates for Community Action, Inc. (IMACA) has the following open positions: LEAD TEACHER/SITE SUPERVISOR Department: Head Start State Preschool Program Location: Coleville, Ca. Salary & Status: $14.51 - $18.56 DOQ 40 hrs/wk; non-exempt; 10 mo/yr Full Benefits - Medical, Dental, Vision, Life & Retirement, Vacation, Sick, Holidays Open: June 8, 2016 Closing: Open until filled TEACHER ASSISTANT Department: Head Start/State Preschool Program Location: Coleville and Lee Vining Salary & Status: $10.48 - $13.09 DOQ 25 hrs/wk;10 mo/yr Partial Benefits: Vacation, Sick, Holidays and Retirement Open: June 8, 2016 Closing: Open until filled Application forms and job descriptions are available at: 137 E. South Street, Bishop, Ca. 93514 or on line at www.imaca.net . Applicants must complete an IMACA application form. INYO MONO ADVOCATES FOR COMMUNITY ACTION, INC. IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Collections Clerk Status: Non-Exempt/Full-time with benefits Starting salary: $14.04 per hour/ $29,203.20 annually Work station: Bishop Clinic Closing date: Friday, July 08, 2016 at 5:00 p.m. Community Health Nurse Case Manager Status: Exempt/Full-time with benefits Starting salary: $67,420 annually Work station: Bishop Clinic, Coverage for all sites Closing date: Friday, July 08, 2016 at 5:00 p.m. Temporary Family Services Secretary/Receptionist Status: Non-Exempt / Full-time no benefits Starting salary: $14.04 per hour/ $29,203.20 annually Work station: Bishop Clinic Closing date: Friday, July 08, 2016 at 5:00 p.m. The Inyo Register Eastern Sierra Interpretive Association BOOKSTORE SALES ASSOCIATE ESIA is hiring a part time bookstore sales associate for our Mammoth Lakes Welcome Center and Mono Basin Scenic Area Visitor Center locations.! The ideal candidate has retail experience and a passion for the Eastern Sierra outdoors! Responsible for learning product base, cashiering, inventory, and customer service.!!Also responsible for assisting the bookstore manager with a range of duties including stocking, opening, closing and other. ! Please send your letter of interest and a resume to : PART-TIME CHILD CARE CENTER TEACHER/DIRECTOR -Inyo County Superintendent of Schools is seeking a teacher the Warren Hanson State Preschool in Lone Pine for the 2016-17 school year. 6 hours/day Mon-Fri. $14.26 - $15.79 per hour based on experience. CA Child Development Permit required. Site Supervisor permit preferred. Apply on-line at www.edjoin.org CONTACT: Marlene Dietrich (760) 878-2426 ext. 2222. PHILANTHROPY MANAGER LOCAL nonprofit Eastern Sierra Land Trust is searching for an enthusiastic and detail-oriented full-time Philanthropy Manager to help!strengthen their existing membership program, develop strategies for cultivating new members, organize donor and community events, and lead fundraising efforts.!Please visit! eslt.org!for a full job description and to apply. CASINO MANAGER WINNEDUMAH Winns is seeking an energetic, self-motivated person to manage the Casino, $20-$27 per hour Experience is necessary. Please email businesscommittee@fortindependence. com or contact Katie at 760-878-5160 for an application and job description. Please visit www.ovcdc.com to down load a job application and view full job descriptions. Preference will be given to Native American Indian applicants. Physician Assistant Status: Exempt/Full-time with benefits Starting salary: Negotiable - DOE Work station: Coleville Clinic Closing date: Open until filled NONPROFIT AGENCY PART time employment, flexible hours working with seniors. Benton, Chalfant, June Lake and Mammoth Lakes. Call for more information: (530) 495-2700 Closing date: July 8, 2016 Minimum qualifications include a Bachelor's degree in planning, natural resources, environmental studies, or a related field, two years of experience in a public or private land use environment performing planning related duties comparable to those of an Associate Planner, and extensive knowledge of the economic development process. Must be available to attend evening meetings, travel as required, possess or obtain by appointment date a valid driver's license issued by the State of California, and successfully complete a pre-employment background check. Potential flexibility for hours and work days but will not exceed 1000 hours per year. $40.00 per hour. Non-benefited. Job description and application forms are available at Bishop City Hall, 377 West Line Street, P. O. Box 1236, Bishop, California 93515 or online at www.cityofbishop.com . Telephone 760-873-5863. Applications accepted until 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, July 20, 2016. EOE 150 APTS. FURNISHED 2BED/1BATH BISHOP - In town, clean & quiet, covered parking, washing machine, swamp cooler, stove & frdige. No smoking, no pets. $775/mo. + $775 sec. dep. 760-387-2681 155 APTS. UNFURNISHED 1BED/1BATH MAMMOTH LAKES - 16 DAVISON RD. $895 REMODELED APTS. Minimum 6 months lease. Beautiful Mountain View, SUNNY and QUIET. Includes water, Stove/Refrigerator, Trash, Snow Removal. Close to Ski Lodge. New granite countertops. On site Laundry. Rent rate starts at $895. Sec.Dep. $900 / $950. Onsite Manager. Call Andrew (760)709-2601 at Unit #12 or Isabel (626)808-3416. 1 Parking Space. Garages available (Not included). [email protected] 2BED/1BATH 2 STORY APT., Bedrooms & Bath upstairs. Living room, kitchen & dining area downstairs. Quiet Neighborhood. New windows & flooring, new paint, laundry on site. Storage, swamp cooler, new stove, no smoking, no pets. $800/mo. + deposit. 760-872-2836 090 FURNITURE DOWNTOWN BISHOP AVAIL. JULY - 2BED/1BATH Laundry facilities, deck, clean, spacious. No smoking, no pets. $800/mo. plus $700 deposit. For more information, complete job descriptions and applications, please www.toiyabe.us or contact: visit Toiyabe Human Resource Office, 52 Tu Su Lane, Bishop, CA 93514 Telephone: 760-873-8464 Fax: 760-873-3935 email: [email protected] MAINTENANCE WORKER The Bishop Police Department is looking to fill the position of Building Maintenance Worker for general cleaning and building maintenance. $11.00-$13.00 per hour, 10-15 hours per week. Hours are flexible. For a complete job description please visit our web page http://www.cityofbishop.com/departments/administration/jobs/ . Contact Pam Galvin at [email protected] 760-873-5823 Application deadline 5:00pm Friday July 8, 2016. 760-872-8010 OWENS VALLEY CAREER DEVELOPMENT CENTER Dialysis Office Manager Status: Exempt/Full-time with benefits Starting salary:Negotiable DOE Work station: Bishop Clinic Closing date: Open until filled Toiyabe is an E.O.E. within the confines of the Indian Preference Act. OREGON BERRIES! Oregon Berry order forms available until June 30, 2016. Call for information or stop by Wye Rd. Feed, 1260 N. Main, Bishop. RN / LVN Position in busy medical office. Part time plus, pick up application at 152 Pioneer Lane, Suite B, Bishop. TANF Case Counselor/Trainee- Big Pine, CA-$19.23 per hour to start (trainee paid at lower rate). Behavioral Health Therapist Status: Contracted position - no benefits Starting salary: Negotiable DOE Work station: Coleville Clinic Closing date: Open until filled 105 MISCELLANEOUS [email protected] Human Resource Manager Status: Exempt/Full-time with benefits Starting salary: $67,142.00 annually Work station: Bishop Clinic Closing date: Open till filled CITY OF BISHOP PART-TIME ASSOCIATE PLANNER/ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COORDINATOR Answers will appear in Thursday’s classified section of 045 HELP WANTED 760-873-3280 VERTICAL FILE STORAGE 7 Sections of letter sized lateral mobile shelving. Black steel vertical file storage in three rows with 3 sections fixed across the back and two rows with two sections in each row. Each section is 36" with 7 shelves per section. Unit is perfect for medical, legal or other professional office. Unit is in great condition. Cost to purchase new over $4,000. Asking $1,500. 760-937-3473 760-873-7900 Need a new BOSS? Get One! In the easTern sierra Classifieds 873-3535 Positions AvAilAble New PositioNs Cashier/Vault (P/T) Cashier/Vault (F/T) Cage Shift Supervisor Full-Time Employee Benefits: FMedical FDental/Vision FVacation FSick Leave FPaid Holidays F401K Applications are available at the Casino Cashier’s Cage 2742 N. Sierra Hwy., Bishop, CA 93514. Phone: 760-873-4150 ext. 214 & 220. www.paiutepalace.com Paiute Palace Casino is an Equal Opportunity Employer PHONE (760) 873-3535 | FAX (760) 873-3591 | 407 W. LINE ST., STE. 8, BISHOP, CA 93514 | E-MAIL [email protected] NOTICE TO BIDDERS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Inyo County will receive sealed bids until 3:00 P.M. (PDT) on July 8, 2016. The Inyo Register 165 HOUSES FURNISHED 180 SPACE FOR RENT 4BR/2BA MCLAREN RANCH ESTATES $2,500 Long-term rental on 1 acre of horse property with barn, streams and pond up against greenbelt. Decks, propane and forced air with fireplace,pellet stove and swamp-cooled. Vaulted ceilings and hard wood floors. [email protected] 760-937-0626 Complete proposal specifications, instructions, and conditions can be obtained from the Inyo County website: http://www.inyocounty.us/Bid_Pac kages.html (IR 6/23, 6/25, 6/28/16, #12173) 170 HOUSES UNFURNISHED EXTRA DEEP DOUBLE GARAGE 3BED/2BATH LONE PINE - ALABAMA HILLS Open plan living room and kitchen, 2 car garage, on 1.4 acres. References required, $1000/mo.+$1100 sec. dep. 760-876-5526 Available for storage in Mammoth Lakes. Very long double garage 1/4 mile from Canyon Lodge avail. immediately. Comes with an extra loft for storage. Perfect for small boats, snowmobiles, furniture etc. Garage is located at 153 Davison, Garage #7. $295/mo. Call John at or text if you're interested. 805-450-7978 220 HOUSES FOR SALE 2BED/1BATH BIG PINE $950 Upgraded and fresh. Creek side, Mtn. views, wood floors, Jacuzzi tub, in unit washer/dryer,fridge./freezer,microwave, oven/stove, dishwasher, evaporative cooler, pellet strove, baseboard heaters, gated yard, storage shed, next to DWP land. Trash removal and water included. No smoking, no pets. 1-1/2 month!s rent for deposit. 818-312-2433 [email protected] 1BED/1BATH BIG PINE $550 Available in early July. Cozy cottage in Big Pine with side yard and view of the Palisades. $550/mo. plus security deposit. No smoking, no pets. Credit check required. Call Lynn at 760-914-1574 for application and information. 320 NOTICES BIDPUBLIC NO. RWM 1606 Trash Disposal Services, Olancha, Keeler and Darwin 3BED/2BATH MEADOW CREEK $385,000 This beautiful home is in a great location in a desirable neighborhood with views of the Sierra Nevada mountains. The living and family rooms are inviting with cathedral ceilings and updates throughout for comfortable living that include new paint throughout, Pergo flooring, updated kitchen with stainless steel appliances, granite counter tops. Cabinets are updated with new paint and all new stainless hardware. The immaculate fully fenced backyard has 6' fences offering privacy and tranquility under mature shade trees and a newly patio with views of the White Mountains. Also, included is an AKC dog run/kennel with two access doors, brick flooring and solar lighting. Completing the backyard is a separate garden area with fencing and arbor. 760-937-3077 [email protected] www.bishoprealetate.com NOTICE OF ELECTION OF BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF EASTERN SIERRA COMMUNITY SERVICE DISTRICT TO HAVE DELINQUENT SEWER USER CHARGES COLLECTED ON TAX ROLL AND OF HEARING ON WRITTEN REPORT REGARDING SUCH CHARGES On Wednesday, June 8, 2016 a report was filed with the Secretary of the Board of Directors of Eastern Sierra Community Service District, which report contains a description of each parcel of real property to which the district provides sewer service as to which there are delinquent sewer user charges and the amount of the delinquent sewer user charges for each parcel. On said date, said Board of Directors adopted a resolution electing to have the delinquent sewer user charges for each such parcel collected on the tax roll. On Wednesday, July 13, 2016 at 7:00pm at the Eastern Sierra Community Service District office, 301 W. Line St., Suite D, Bishop, CA the Board of Directors of said District will hold a hearing on said report. At said hearing said Board of Directors will hear and consider all objections and protests, if any, to said report. Upon the conclusion of said hearing, said Board of Directors may adopt, revise, change, reduce or modify any such charge or overrule any or all objections. DATE: June 9, 2016 1BED/1BATH WEST BISHOP One bedroom, one bath house with view of the Sierra, small creek, energy efficient newer construction, washer & dryer, storage area, pet upon approval, no smoking. $1000/mo. plus deposit. 760-937-6663 FOR SALE BY OWNER $359,900 131 E. South St.- Bishop 2 BUILDINGS ON 1 LOT Investor or Homeowner Wanted Clean downtown property, Residential and Commercial zoned just 1⁄2 block off Main St. in downtown Bishop. FRONT UNIT- Spacious front room area, 2 more rooms, 1 bath, mudroom, laundry hookups. BACK HOUSE - 1BED/1BATH Totally remodeled, generates steady income (1 Year lease in effect at the present time) Owner may carry, will work with agents. If interested please call or text 760-920-3727 260 TRAVEL TRAILERS BIG PINE - 2BED/1BATH Washer & dryer hookups, seasonal creek, shady & fenced backyard. $850/mo. + sec. dep. 760-920-0171 3BR/2BA BISHOP $1,600 Wood stove, solar water, dishwasher, disposal, garage .25 acre no smoking 1 year Lease. Pets considered. June 20th (562) 682-3831 [email protected] 175 MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT ELM TREE TRAILER PARK Large and small trailers with patios & storage units starting at $475/mo. Judy 760-914-2834 Does Harriet need a new chariot? Find a new or used auto in the Eastern Sierra Classifieds 873-3535 2007 ALJO 26! FT. TRAVEL TRAILER Original owner. Large gas / electric refrigerator, AC, cookstove with oven, twin beds in front, bathroom in rear. Fully carpeted. Slide out at sofa area. Dinette. Winterized, current license. Parked under an awning and still looks new. Used only once before illness hit us. $18K. Call for appt., leave mssg. 760-872-3139 320 PUBLIC NOTICES NOTICE TO BIDDERS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Inyo County will receive sealed bids until 3:00 P.M. (PDT) on July 8, 2016. BID NO. RWM 1606 Trash Disposal Services, Olancha, Keeler and Darwin JENNIFER J. KRAFCHECK Secretary of the Board of Directors of Eastern Sierra Community Service District (IR 6/28, 7/5/16, #12179) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT THE FOLLOWING PERSON IS DOING BUSINESS AS: 1. INDEPENDENCE INDUSTRIES; 2: INDEPENDENCE ARCHERY; 3. INDEPENDENCE ARROWS; 4. WWW.BISHOPARCHERY. COM; 5. BISHOP BOWS; 6. BRIDGEPORT BROADHEADS; 7.BRIDGEPORT ARCHERY; 8. BRIDGEPORT BOWS; 9. GLOBAL DISTRIBUTION; 10. PRO DISTRIBUTION AND MARKETING; 11. PIPELINE ARCHERY; 12. INDY ARROWS; 13. BISON BROADHEADS; 14. USA SHARPENING AND DISTRIBUTION; 15. INDEPENDENCE ARCHERY DISTRIBUTION; 16. MADE IN AMERICA DISTRIBUTION 17. BISHOP ARCHERY 433 Sunset Drive Lone Pine, CA 93545 BISHOP BROADHEADS, LLC 433 Sunset Dr. Lone Pine, CA 93545 This Business is conducted by: LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. 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 JUNE 8, 2016. File #16-00085 (IR 6/21, 6/28, 7/5, 7/12/16, #12170) TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2016 11 320 PUBLIC NOTICES 320 PUBLIC NOTICES NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING OF THE EASTERN SIERRA COMMUNITY SERVICE DISTRICT ADOPTION OF 2016-2017 ANNUAL BUDGET PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Eastern Sierra Community Service District Board of Directors will hold a Public Hearing to consider and adopt the District!s Annual Budget for the Fiscal Year 2016-2017. Said Hearing will be held on Wednesday, Jult 13m 2016 at 7:00pm or as soon thereafter as possible at the District Office, 301 W. Line St., Suite D, Bishop, CA. The Office Manager of the Eastern Sierra Community Service District has prepared a Proposed Final Budget for the Fiscal Year 2016-2017. Said proposed final budget will be available for public inspection in the District Office at 301 W. Line St., Suite D, Bishop, CA ten (10) working days prior to the Public Hearing. Any person may appear and be heard at said Public Hearing regarding any item in the Proposed Budget or regarding the addition of other items. Written comments are also welcome and should be addressed to Board of Directors, Eastern Sierra Community Service District, 301 W. Line St., Suite D, Bishop, CA 93514. Written comments received by 4:00pm on Wednesday, July 6, 2016 will be included in the Agenda information packet sent to the Board of Directors. For further information, please call Jennifer Krafcheck, Board Secretary at the District office 760-872-1415. (IR 6/28/16, #12178) NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING FOR THE OWENS VALLEY MOSQUITO ABATEMENT PROGRAM AND FOR THE MOSQUITO CONTROL AND DISEASE PREVENTION ASSESSMENT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2016-17 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Supervisors of the Owens Valley Mosquito Abatement Program intends to conduct public hearings for the CONTINUATION of two benefit assessments in fiscal year 2016-17 that fund the Programs mosquito abatement services and projects in Inyo County. The public hearing to consider the ordering of services and projects, and the continuation of the assessments for fiscal year 2016-17 for the Owens Valley Mosquito Abatement Program and for the Mosquito Control and Disease Prevention Assessment shall be held on Tuesday, July 12, 2016 at 11:30 a.m. at the County Administrative Center in Independence The proposed assessment rate for the Owens Valley Mosquito Abatement Program assessment is twenty dollars and eighty cents ($20.80) per benefit unit for fiscal year 2016-17. The proposed assessment rate for the Mosquito Control and Disease Prevention Assessment is twenty three dollars and seventy five cents ($23.75) per single-family equivalent benefit unit for fiscal year 2016-17. Members of the public are invited to provide comment at the public hearings, or, in writing, which is received by the Program on or before Tuesday, July 12, 2016. If you desire additional information concerning the above, please contact Owens Valley Mosquito Abatement Program at (760) 873-7860. (IR 6/28/16, #12174) The Inyo Register For Home Delivery call 873-3535 Complete proposal specifications, instructions, and conditions can be obtained from the Inyo County website: http://www.inyocounty.us/Bid_Pac kages.html (IR 6/23, 6/25, 6/28/16, #12173) E-Editions are Easy! with The Inyo Register 1 Day 75¢ • 1 Week $150 3 Months $1330 6 Months $2625 PUBLIC NOTICE OF PROPOSED ADOPTION OF THE UNIFORM FIRE CODE AND A FEE RATE SCHEDULE FOR USE OF FIRE AND RESCUE EQUIPMENT Notice is hereby given that the Board of Commissioners of the Big Pine Fire Protection District will consider input from the public on the proposed adoption of the Uniform Fire Code and adoption of fees for the use of emergency equipment. If you wish additional information concerning the above, please contact Damon Carrington, Fire Chief, P.O. Box 382, Big Pine, CA 93513. The Fire Chief!s report on the proposed adoption is on file in the office of the Fire Chief and is available for public review. Members of the public are invited to provide comment, in writing, on or before July 15, 2016. The regular meeting of the Board of Commissioners of the Big Pine Fire Protection District to consider the adoption of the above ordinances will be held at the fire station, 181 N. Main St., Big Pine, CA 93513 at 6:30PM on July 19, 2016. Any person challenging in court the decision made at the conclusion of such public hearing may be limited to raising only those issues raised at such hearing or in correspondence delivered to the fire district prior to the close of such hearing. Dated: 06/23/16 Damon Carrington, Fire Chief IR 6/28, 6/30, 7/2/16, #12180) 320 PUBLIC NOTICES COUNTY OF INYO DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS NOTICE INVITING BIDS The Inyo County Public Works Department is soliciting bids for: INYO COUNTY JAIL FIRE SPRINKLER HEAD REPLACEMENT PROJECT Bid Packages, which include the Notice Inviting Bids, Bid Proposal Forms, County of Inyo Contract and Bond Forms, Special Provisions, and Plans, may only be obtained from the Inyo County Public Works Department, 168 North Edwards Street, P.O. Drawer Q, Independence, CA 93526, telephone (760) 878-0201. The Bid Packages are also available for inspection at the department offices during regular business hours. There will be a non-refundable charge of $16.00 for hard copies of the plans and specifications; checks are to be made out to “Inyo County Public Works Department.” Bid packages are also available at no charge at the County of Inyo website at www.inyocounty.us. Bidders who obtain bid packages over the internet must notify the county that they are plan holders. Bidders who do not notify the county that they are plan holders may not be aware of any addenda that are issued. Bids must be submitted in a sealed envelope clearly marked with the bidder's name and address, the word "BID", and the Project Title: INYO COUNTY JAIL FIRE SPRINKLER HEAD REPLACEMENT PROJECT To be considered, bids must be received by the Inyo County Clerk of the Board of Supervisors, 224 North Edwards Street (mailing address: P.O. Box N), Independence, California 93526 at or before 3:30 P.M. on July 11, 2016 (Bid Deadline) at which time they will be publicly opened and read aloud. No oral, telegraphic, telephonic, or fax proposals or modifications will be accepted. Mandatory Job Walk time: 2:00 p.m., Wednesday, July 6, 2016 at the Main entrance, Inyo County Jail, 550 Clay Street, Independence, CA. General Work Description: The Inyo County Department of Public Works is seeking bids from a California licensed contractor for the removal and replacement of approximately 82 institutional 5.6K fire sprinkler heads located in the secure portion of the Inyo County Jail, 550 Clay St., Independence CA. The successful bidder will provide all labor and materials necessary to replace the existing fire sprinkler heads with new heads. The new heads will be appropriate to the application (correct “K” factor) and meet all current State and Federal Building Code mandates. It will be the responsibility of the successful bidder to provide all equipment necessary to complete the scope of work outlined above, obtain all required permits and work with the County to insure that all notifications are in place prior to the start of work and upon the completion of work. As a bid additive alternative, the Inyo County Department of Public Works is seeking bids from a California licensed contractor for the removal and replacement of 45 institutional 5.6K fire sprinkler heads located in the secure portion of the Inyo County Juvenile Hall located at 201 Mazourka Canyon Road, Independence, CA. The successful bidder will provide all labor and materials necessary to replace the existing fire sprinkler heads with new heads. The new heads will be appropriate to the application (correct “K” factor) and meet all current State and Federal Building Code mandates. It will be the responsibility of the successful bidder to provide all equipment necessary to complete the scope of work outlined above, obtain all required permits and work with the County to insure that all notifications are in place prior to the start of work and upon the completion of work. Technical questions related to project work, site conditions, or other related inquiries should be directed to Travis Dean of the Public Works Department at [email protected] . The Inyo County Jail is available for inspection by request through the Public Works Department at (760) 878-0201. Bids shall conform to and be responsive to the Contract Documents. Bids are required for the entire work described in the Contract Documents. Each Bid must be submitted on the Bid Proposal Forms furnished as a part of the Bid Package. Each Bid must be accompanied by a Proposal Guarantee in the amount and form described in the Bid Package, in an amount not less than 10% of the amount of the bid, made payable to the order of the County of Inyo. The check or bond shall be given as security that the bidder will enter into the Contract with the County and furnish the required Faithful Performance Bond, Labor and Materials Payment Bond, Certificates and/or original endorsements of insurance, or other required documents. The check or bond may be retained by the County for sixty (60) days or until the Contract is fully executed by the successful bidder and the County, whichever first occurs. The successful bidder shall be required to furnish a Faithful Performance Bond and a Labor and Materials Payment Bond on the forms provided in the Bid Package and in the amount of 100% of the Contract amount. The successful bidder must be licensed as required by law, and consistent with the Contract Documents, at the time the contract is awarded, which license shall be a current California Class C16 Contractor license or a combination of all specialty classifications that will be required for complete performance of all of the work in accordance with the Contract Documents, and if applicable, a joint venture license as defined in the Business and Professions Code, Section 7029. Failure of the bidder to obtain proper and adequate licensing for an award of a contract shall constitute failure to execute the contract and shall result in the forfeiture of the security of the bidder. In addition to the requirements set forth in this Notice Inviting Bids, all bids shall be subject to the requirements set forth in the Special Provisions, Standard Specifications of the Inyo County Public Works Department, dated October, 2015, Contract Documents and other applicable law. The Contract is subject to the State Contract nondiscrimination and compliance requirements pursuant to Government Code, Section 12990, and other applicable law. The Contract is also subject to and incorporates by reference the provisions of Public Contract Code, Section 22300, pursuant to which, the Contractor is permitted to substitute securities for earned retention or have them placed in escrow at the Contractor's expense, as also set forth in Section 1150.15 of the Standard Specifications. Pursuant to Section 1725.5 of the Labor Code, the bidder is required to certify that they, and all subcontractors listed on the submitted Bid Form documents, are Registered with the CA Department of Industrial Relations. Pursuant to Section 1773 of the Labor Code, the general prevailing wage rates in Inyo County have been determined by the Director of the State Department of Industrial Relations. These wage rates appear in the Department of Transportation publication entitled "General Prevailing Wage Rates,” in effect at the time the project is advertised. Future effective wage rates, which have been predetermined and are on file with the State Department of Industrial Relations are referenced, but not printed, in said publication. Such rates of wages are on file with the State Department of Industrial Relations and the Public Works Department of the County of Inyo and are available to any interested party upon request. Inyo County reserves the right at any stage of these proceedings to reject any or all Bids or to waive any immaterial defect in any Bid if it is deemed to be in the best interest of the County. Simply go to www.inyoregister.com and click “Subscribe Here” and follow the prompts And Yes! You can order your print subscriptions here as well! The definition and meanings of the words used in this Notice Inviting Bids are the same as set forth in Section 1070, “Abbreviations, Symbols, and Definitions,” of the Standard Specifications of the Inyo County Public Works Department, dated October, 2015. Each bidder must supply all the information required by the Contract Documents, Special Provisions and Standard Specifications. (IR 6/28/16, #12181) WE MOVE ITEMS FAST The Eastern Sierra Classifieds 873-3535 The Inyo Register FOOD 12 tuesday, June 28, 2016 Cowboy Burger with Grilled Pickles and Crispy Onion Straws Prep time: 20 minutes Cook time: 20 minutes Servings: 4 BBQ Mayonnaise 1/4 cup mayonnaise 2 tablespoons Stubbs Original Bar-B-Q Sauce Crispy Onion Straws 1/2 cup flour 1/4 teaspoon salt 1/8 teaspoon McCormick Ground Black Pepper 1 medium onion, very thinly sliced and separated into rings vegetable oil, for frying Cowboy Burgers 4 teaspoons McCormick Grill Mates Smoky Montreal Steak Seasoning 1 tablespoon McCormick Chili Powder 1 tablespoon packed brown sugar 1 1/4 pounds ground beef 4 slices mild Cheddar cheese 1 dill pickle, sliced lengthwise 1/4-inch thick 4 Kaiser rolls 4 lettuce leaves For the BBQ Mayonnaise, mix mayonnaise and Bar-B-Q Sauce in small bowl until well blended. Cover. Refrigerate until ready to serve. For the Onions, mix flour, salt and pepper in large resealable plastic bag. Add onion; toss to coat well. Pour oil into deep fryer, large heavy skillet or saucepan, filling no more than 1/3 full. Heat oil on medium-high heat. Carefully add onion rings to hot oil. Fry 4 to 5 minutes, turning once to brown evenly, until onions rings are golden brown. Drain on paper towels. Set aside. For the Burgers, mix Seasoning, chili powder and brown sugar in small bowl. Shape ground beef into 4 patties. Coat surface of each patty evenly with the rub mixture. Grill over medium heat 4 to 6 minutes per side or until burgers are cooked through (internal temperature of 160ºF). Add cheese slices to burgers 1 minute before cooking is completed. Grill pickle slices 2 to 3 minutes per side or until grill marks appear. Toast rolls on the grill, open-side down, about 30 seconds, if desired. Serve burgers on rolls topped with grilled pickles, Crispy Onion Straws and lettuce. Serve with BBQ Mayonnaise. FAMILY FEATURES T his Fourth of July, take your backyard barbecue staples from basic to bold with knock-out burgers, grilled fruit “steaks” and festive red, white and bluecolored desserts. Opt for burgers with a brazen rub that creates a caramelized outer layer. Make the meal an epic Fourth of July feast with a side of grilled watermelon steaks, marinated in white balsamic vinegar, lemon juice and rosemary, and topped with walnuts, lemon zest and fresh parsley. “Burgers are an Independence Day mainstay, but that doesn’t mean they have to be boring,” said McCormick Executive Chef Kevan Vetter. “Pick a flavor combo that packs a real punch for the rub, then build out the burger with toppings and condiments to match that taste. For example, use Smoky Montreal Steak Seasoning, chili powder and brown sugar to make a sweet and smoky rub, then top with a rich BBQ mayonnaise, melty cheddar, grilled pickle slices and crispy onion straws.” For more tips and recipes for unforgettable Fourth of July fare, check out McCormick.com and visit McCormick Spice on Facebook and Pinterest. Grilled Watermelon Steaks with Walnut Gremolata Prep time: 10 minutes Cook time: 8 minutes Servings: 8 1/2 small seedless watermelon 1/2 cup white balsamic vinegar 2 tablespoons olive oil 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 teaspoon McCormick Gourmet Crushed Rosemary 1/2 teaspoon Sea Salt from McCormick Sea Salt Grinder 1/2 teaspoon McCormick Coarse Ground Black Pepper 1/4 cup finely chopped toasted walnuts 1/4 cup finely chopped parsley 1 teaspoon grated lemon peel Cut 4 (1-inch thick) half-moon slices of watermelon. Reserve any remaining watermelon for another use. Mix vinegar, oil, lemon juice, rosemary, salt and pepper in small bowl. Reserve 2 tablespoons for drizzling grilled watermelon. Place watermelon steaks in glass dish. Add remaining marinade. Refrigerate 20 minutes, turning watermelon halfway through marinating time. Meanwhile, for the Walnut Gremolata, mix walnuts, parsley and lemon peel in small bowl. Set aside. Remove watermelon steaks from marinade. Reserve leftover marinade for brushing watermelon during grilling. Grill watermelon steaks over high heat 2 to 4 minutes per side or until grill marks appear, brushing with leftover marinade. To serve, cut watermelon steaks in half. Drizzle with reserved 2 tablespoons marinade. Sprinkle with Walnut Gremolata. Red, White and Blue Mousse Parfaits Prep time: 30 minutes Servings: 12 Serving size: 1 parfait 3 1/2 cups heavy cream, divided 1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar, divided 2 teaspoons McCormick Extra Rich Pure Vanilla Extract 2 teaspoons McCormick Red Food Color 1 teaspoon McCormick Pure Lemon Extract McCormick Assorted NEON! Food Colors & Egg Dye 2 tablespoons white chocolate chips Beat 1 1/2 cups of the heavy cream, cocoa powder, 2 tablespoons of the sugar and vanilla in large bowl with electric mixer on medium speed until stiff peaks form. Add red food color; stir gently with spatula until evenly tinted. Beat remaining 2 cups heavy cream, remaining 1/2 cup sugar and lemon extract in large bowl with electric mixer on high speed until stiff peaks form. Remove 1 cup. Add 3/4 teaspoon neon blue and 5 drops neon purple food colors; stir gently with spatula until evenly tinted. To assemble parfait, alternately layer red and white mousses in dessert glasses. Top with blue mousse and white chocolate chips. Refrigerate until ready to serve. The Inyo Register eastern sierra selfies tuesday, june 28, 2016 Challenge #8 a selfie with your dad, a u.s. flag or a graduate It’s a Hat Trick! Kali Barrett, 17, with her graduate boyfriend, Damian Roberts, 18, on May 10. 2016 Kim Hazley and Yolanda Cortez hanging out with their “Dads.” Bella Morgenstein, 11, Jenna Morgenstein, Nathan Morgenstein, Izaak, 16, and Lexi Ortiz with a father, a flag and a graduate. It’s a Hat Trick! Sara Sanders, 17, and her father, Steven Sanders posing for their Selfie Challenge #8, with a dad and with a grad. Emery Denise, 1, taking a nap with her daddy, Joshua Evans. want to get your picture in the paper? here’s how! eastern sierra challenge #9 e Selfi Our Next Eastern Sierra Selfies page will be on Tuesday, July 26, 2016 To participate in this challenge, send us a Selfie taken of you: • With Fireworks • Swimming • At a Barbecue • Deadline for Eastern Sierra Selfies is Friday, July 22 by 5 p.m. • Send Selfie photos to: [email protected] • Photos must be tasteful, must include first and last names of everyone in the photos and please include ages of children under 18 years of age. • Photos will not be published if they are not in good taste, do not meet the challenges given, if they are not in focus or without identification. You don’t need to get all 3, any one will get you on the page! Good Luck and Have Fun! Wyatt Sampietro, 8, and Radar Garrison, 9 months, with their flag 13 The Inyo Register sports 14 TUESDAY, June 28, 2016 Area soccer team finishes second in tournament play The Mammoth/Bishop team following their second place finish in the Cruisin’ Classic soccer tournament on Father’s Day in Ontario included, not in order, Hannah Goodwin, Vanessa Laguna, Caelan Nash, Maya Weber, Judith Maravilla, Emilly Cruz, Daniela Santana, Tayler Dailey, Lexi Whitehouse, Hannah Miller, Becca Quintano, Makayla Simpson and Emelli Mora. Photo courtesy of Andrew Whitehouse Mammoth Lakes and Bishop came together as one to make a soccer tournament team to compete in “Cruisin’ Classic” in Ontario over Father’s Day weekend. Andrew Whitehouse came up with the idea and with help from Yanet Maravilla a team was put together with six Mammoth girls and seven Bishop girls ages 13-14. With a little over a week to practice before the tournament, and with help from Tito, the Mammoth coach, the team was ready the their first game in the tournament. The team tied in the first game, and won the second and third games which put the Mammoth/Bishop team in the championship game. The championship game was played the late afternoon of Father’s Day with temperatures well above 108 degrees. The game was supposed to be two 35 minute halves but was changed to two 20 minute halves with a 10 minute half time. Wendi Goodman was the team nurse who kept all the girls hydrated. The Mammoth/Bishop team lost the final game in the second half with a score of 1-0, to finish second in the tournament. Local teen seeking help to finance trip to national rodeo finals Register Staff Allison Inderbieten, a 16-year-old cowgirl from Bishop, placed second in the state of California for barrel racing and will be competing in the National High School Rodeo Association Finals Rodeo in July. Inderbieten and the Bishop Committee for California High School Rodeo Association is seeking community support to raise $3,000 to help Inderbieten get to nationals. With her family, Inderbieten will be traveling to Gillette, Wyo. on July 15. The 2,000mile, 10-day journey will see Inderbieten compete as one of more than 1,600 high school rodeo athletes from 43 states, five Canadian provinces and Australia. “Traveling 2,000 miles with a horse, plus feed for the horse, a hotel room, food and stalling adds up fast,” Inderbieten said. A GoFundMe has been set up under the name “Alli Inderbieten is going to NHSFR,” and the Inderbieten family will have a yard sale July 9 at their home specifically to help raise funds for the rodeo. Allison Inderbieten of Bishop rides her horse Pard in a barrel racing event April 10 during a California High School Rodeo Association District 9 rodeo at the Eastern Sierra Tri-County Fairgrounds. Competing in the second go round of the CHSRA state finals on June 14 at the Eastern Sierra Tri-County Fairgrounds, Allison Inderbieten rounds the first barrel in the barrel racing course riding Pard. Photo by Mike Chacanaca Photo by Mike Chacanaca The Inyo Register A Picture Catch of the Week! is worth a Thousand Words! 4 Weeks at value This spring special is a gretime. for a limited period of the You can drive your item to to to pho Register office or email a m [email protected] Call us! (760) 873-3535 only 25 !* $ 00 We can take the photo for you too! Just drive it to the Register office! • Add inyoregister.com & Mammoth Times for $500 • Send your photos to: [email protected] • 5 Lines (approx. 30 words) • Bold Headline • Color Photo • Box/Border • Bold Phone Number • Put Your Ad on Facebook! $5 • Non-refundable; cancel anytime 760-873-3535 *Private Party ads only Jesus Aviles from Lone Pine shows a nice stringer of trout caught in Shepherd Creek using worms. Do you have a Catch of the Week photo you want to share with us? Simply email [email protected] Catch of the week is sponsored by: • Auto Body & Collision Repair • Auto Body Painting • Spray-in Bed Liners • Frame Straightening Inyo Mono Body Shop Since 1956 387 N. Warren St. Bishop, CA (760) 873-4271