saturday, april 18, 2015 | inyoregister.com | … e-04.18.15.pdfsaturday, april 18, 2015 |...

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The nutritional impact that eating clean has on waistlines – and the environment – is the primary catalyst behind the movement. SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015 | INYOREGISTER.COM | SERVING THE EASTERN SIERRA AND BEYOND SINCE 1870 | 75¢ The Inyo Register The Inyo Register APRIL 2015 A SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT TO Health, Mind & BODY Are You Eating Clean? Optimism Helps Your Heart Healthy Mouth: The Early Years Kids and Television Preventive Tests for Men Hiking Tips to Help You Get Outdoors Are You Eating Clean? I t’s a health industry buzz phrase that has helped promote the effort of consuming healthier, more natural foods. But “eating clean” is anything but a passing trend. It is a lifestyle for many people as they try to cut out the added sugars and preservatives that make their way into American shopping carts, homes and bodies. The nutritional impact that eating clean has on waistlines – and the environment – is the primary catalyst behind the movement. Here’s how you can alter your eating and cooking habits to join the movement: FRUITS AND VEGETABLES The United States Department of Agriculture urges adults to consume about three cups of fruits and vegetables per day. The specific amount of fruits and vegetables your body requires to remain at optimal health depends on your age, sex and level of physical activity. By making half of your plate fruits and vegeta- bles at each meal, you can easily meet your body’s needs. And your body will thank you for the extra vitamins, antioxidants and heart-healthy fiber found in most all fruits and vegetables. CUT ADDED SUGARS AND SODA The American Heart Association recom- mends women consume no more than about six teaspoons of added sugar per day and men consume no more than about nine. Drinking one soda per day can wipe out that allowance quickly, since the typical can contains about nine teaspoons. Other foods to avoid or limit include sugary cereals, candy, yogurt and baked goods. Always read the nutritional information of the products you are considering buying. If the sugar content of a potential purchase makes up a large per- centage of your daily intake, consider swapping it out for a fruit or vegetable. COOK SMARTER Cooking clean doesn’t have to translate to you spending hours upon hours in the kitchen. In fact, by simply doubling your favorite clean recipe, you can have plenty to portion and store in the freezer for future meals. This strategy can help arm you in your fight against the urge to splurge on takeout. Instead, you can choose the easy and affordable option of reheating and enjoying your clean meal.

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The nutritional impact that eating clean has on waistlines – and the environment – is the primary catalyst behind the movement.

SATURDAY, ApRil 18, 2015 | INYOREGISTER.COM | SERVING THE EASTERN SIERRA AND BEYOND SINCE 1870 | 75¢

The Inyo Register

The Inyo Register

APRIL 2015A SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT TO

Health,Mind &BODY

Are You Eating Clean?Optimism Helps Your Heart

Healthy Mouth: The Early YearsKids and Television

preventive Tests for MenHiking Tips to Help You Get Outdoors

Are You Eating Clean?I

t’s a health industry buzz phrase that has helped promote the effort of consuming healthier, more natural foods. But “eating clean” is anything but a passing trend.

It is a lifestyle for many people as they try to cut out the added sugars and preservatives that make their way into American shopping carts, homes and bodies.

The nutritional impact that eating clean has on waistlines – and the environment – is the primary catalyst behind the movement. Here’s how you can alter your eating and cooking habits to join the movement:

FRUITS AND VEGETABLESThe United States Department of Agriculture

urges adults to consume about three cups of fruits and vegetables per day. The specific amount of fruits and vegetables your body requires to remain at optimal health depends on your age, sex and level of physical activity.

By making half of your plate fruits and vegeta-bles at each meal, you can easily meet your body’s needs. And your body will thank you for the extra vitamins, antioxidants and heart-healthy fiber found in most all fruits and vegetables.

CUT ADDED SUGARS AND SODAThe American Heart Association recom-

mends women consume no more than about six teaspoons of added sugar per day and men consume no more than about nine. Drinking one soda per day can wipe out that allowance quickly, since the typical can contains about nine teaspoons.

Other foods to avoid or limit include sugary cereals, candy, yogurt and baked goods. Always read the nutritional information of the products you are considering buying. If the sugar content of a potential purchase makes up a large per-centage of your daily intake, consider swapping it out for a fruit or vegetable.

COOK SMARTERCooking clean doesn’t have to translate

to you spending hours upon hours in the kitchen. In fact, by simply doubling yourfavorite clean recipe, you can have plenty toportion and store in the freezer for futuremeals.

This strategy can help arm you in your fight against the urge to splurge on takeout. Instead, you can choose the easy and affordable option of reheating and enjoying your clean meal.

health, mind&bodyThe Inyo Register

2 saturday, april 18, 2015

Optimism Helps Your HeartS

miling, laughing and simply being happy can make all the difference for our hearts. In fact, new research shows that people with higher levels of optimism may be less at risk for heart failure than those who

are more pessimistic.

And with the breadth of heart failure’s effect on the nation – about 5.1 million Ameri-cans are afflicted ever year according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention – a little extra optimism is surely needed.

HEART FAILURE STATISTICSOther eye-opening statistics from the CDC include:• One in nine deaths include heart failure as a contributing cause.• About half those who develop heart failure die within five years of diagnosis.Heart failure costs the nation about $32 billion worth of health care services, medica-

tions and missed days of work annually.

THE MAIN BEHAVIORS THAT CAN INCREASE YOUR RISK FOR HEART FAILURE ARE,

THE CDC REPORTS:• Smoking tobacco.• Eating foods high in fat, cholesterol and sodium.• Not getting enough physical activity.• Being obese.

POSITIVITY STUDYIn the study linking happiness to heart health, optimism was defined as “an expecta-

tion that positive things will happen.” Researchers from the University of Michigan and Harvard University analyzed the linkage between optimism and heart failure diagnoses in older adults, since statistics show that people ages 65 years and older are most prone to heart failure diagnoses.

Researchers gathered, analyzed and translated data of more than 6,800 older adults, including health history, background information and psychological

data over the course of four years. They also took into account factors that could affect heart failure risk, such as chronic illnesses and demographic factors.

The findings, published in the journal “Circulation: Heart Failure,” showed that the adults who had higher levels of optimism reduced their risk of heart failure by 73 percent. Researchers deduced that staying positive may lead people to making healthier lifestyle choices, therefore reducing their risk for heart failure.

Braces can be crucial to the future of one’s oral health and prevent serious issues down the line.

health, mind&bodyThe Inyo Register

3saturday, april 18, 2015

Braces can be crucial to the future of one’s oral health and prevent serious issues down the line.

Roughly 25 percent of the people in North America who get braces are adults. But braces still are geared toward young people and getting them on the road to straight and properly aligned teeth early on.

Braces correct a number of problems, including realigning the jaw and alleviating over-crowding of teeth. Crooked teeth can trap food and debris between them, making it harder to floss and brush. Wearing braces also corrects the bite. If teeth or jaws are not aligned correctly, it can lead to dif-ficulty chewing food or create jaw muscle pain. Braces also may boost self-confidence because they can remedy ap-pearance issues that may prove embarrassing.

Parents eager to get their children on the road to straighter teeth may wonder when is the right time to get their kids braces. Many kids are getting braces earlier and earlier, but when to get braces typically depends on the child and the shape of his or her teeth.

The American Association of Orthodontics recommends that children see an orthodon-tist for an evaluation by age seven. The best time for braces will be when the orthodontist and parents collectively decide it’s time to correct the misalign-ment of a child’s teeth.

Some orthodontists prefer a two-stage approach to orth-odontic treatment. They may use a dental appliance or a preliminary amount of braces to begin moving the teeth while a child still has most of his primary teeth. The second stage begins when all the permanent teeth are in. The thought is to shorten the overall duration of treatment.

Other orthodontists fol-low the traditional approach of putting on braces once all the primary teeth have fallen out. This occurs between ages nine and 14. This is often a less expensive approach because braces need only be applied and removed once.

A number of studies have shown that, for common prob-lems alleviated with orthodon-tic work, youngsters are better off waiting until all of their permanent teeth have come in. Antonio Secchi, a professor of orthodontics at the University of Pennsylvania, notes that if parents choose to treat crooked teeth too early, the child may need another phase of interven-tion a few years down the road.

Some problems, like crossbites, overbites or severe overcrowding, warrant early intervention. Scheduling an orthodontic visit early on means children can get the care they need when they need it. The orthodontist will be able to monitor how teeth are growing in and map out the best treat-ment plan for all.

Braces can help fix an im-perfect smile and alleviate oral health concerns. Parents should speak to a dentist or make an appointment with an orthodon-tist to evaluate their children’s treatment needs.

Dental braces have been used for

decades to correct various alignment and spacing issues in the teeth.

Healthy Mouth: The Early Years

Caring for your teeth and gums is a lifelong journey that begins shortly after birth. Dental professionals urge parents to bring their

child in for a visit whenever the first primary tooth is visible.

This recommendation, which used to define 3 as the starting age, has shifted over the years as the science related to oral hygiene has improved.

What’s behind the change? The importance of baby teeth now carries more weight than ever before. The American Dental Association says that properly caring for those mini-pearly whites that begin popping up through the gums at around 6 months is crucial in keeping space in the jaw for adult teeth.

PARENT EDUCATIONA child’s first trip to the dentist can be an educational experience for parents. Dental

professionals will show you how to properly clean your baby’s teeth and recognize trouble signs in the mouth, which are critical health tips not usually doled out during pregnancy or within parenting magazines.

Dentists can also explain baby-specific concerns regarding dental health, which include baby bottle tooth decay. Avoiding this potentially damaging issue is simple: The ADA recommends wiping your baby’s mouth with a clean gauze pad to help remove plaque that can harm erupting teeth. Gentle brushing with a toothbrush and water should begin as soon as you start seeing teeth.

DENTAL EMERGENCIESOnce more teeth start showing up, the risk for dental emergencies increases. Accidents

happen, but knowing how to react in such situations can be the key to retaining your child’s oral health. Here is how the ADA recommends you act in a dental emergency:

• Keep a knocked-out tooth moist at all times. If you can, place the tooth back in the socket without touching the root and call your dentist right away.

• For a cracked tooth, immediately rinse the mouth with warm water to clean the af-fected area. Look out for facial swelling and treat appropriately with cold compresses.

What is the right age for

braces?

health, mind&bodyThe Inyo Register

4 saturday, april 18, 2015

Kids and Television

How much daily tube time do you give your kids? Two hours? Four?Six? The amount of time children spend watching television can have a direct impact on their sleeping habits, according to new research.

The researchers, from Massachusetts General Hospital for Children and the Harvard School of Public Health, followed 1,800 children from infancy to almost 8 eight years old. The team asked their parents how much TV the kids watched when they were 6 months old, then every year after.

The result was clear: The more TV the kids watched, the less they slept. Children with a TV in the bedroom also lost sleep – sometimes up to half an hour less than those in TV-less rooms.

TV-SLEEP CONNECTIONOne of the main reasons TV can shift sleep

patterns is its ability to stimulate a delay in the onset of sleep. Watching violent TV might also lead to interrupted sleep, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics, since it might create anxiety that could prevent sleep if awak-ened in the middle of the night.

So why is sleep so importantto children? Sleep deprivation in children is linked to worse performance in school, along with depression, injury, and obesity, according to the sleep study

authors. By cutting down on TV and spending more time enjoying other pastimes, children can improve their sleep quality.

FAMILY MEDIA PLANThe AAP is concerned not only about chil-

dren and TV, but also what it describes as new media spanning cell phones, social media, iPads and other devices capable of connecting online.

TV remains the most popularmedium for children and adolescents, but

these other options are providing more “screen time” across the board. The AAP encourages parents to establish and enforce family media plans that spell out clear guidelines for when and how often children can have access to me-dia.

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health, mind&bodyThe Inyo Register

5saturday, april 18, 2015

Preventive Tests for MenT

he words “men” and “doctor” don’t always fit in the same sentence, but they should. Screening tests can find potentially harmful diseases early on, when they’re easiest to treat. This

can mean more years of enjoying time with your family and friends, as opposed to fighting illness or worse.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recommends the following screenings for men:

BODY MASS INDEXBMI is a measure of your body fat based on

your height and weight. It is used to screen for obesity and can serve as a helpful measurement to keep you on track with your diet and exercise plan.

CHOLESTEROLOnce you turn 35 years old, have your choles-

terol checked regularly. High blood cholesterol is one of the major risk factors for heart disease. Catching it early can lead to effective treatment and better heart health.

BLOOD PRESSUREHigh blood pressure increases your chance of

getting heart or kidney disease, and is recom-mended to be checked every two years.

CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASEBeginning at age 45, you should ask your doc-

tor about incorporating a daily aspirin to help reduce your risk of a heart attack. A special screening will help your doctor make the deci-sion.

CANCERSMen ages 50 and above should be tested for

colorectal cancer. How often you are screened depends on your risk factors, and you may need to be checked before age 50. Also ask your phy-sician about testing for other cancers, including prostate, lung, oral or skin.

DEPRESSIONIf you have felt “in the dumps” during the past

couple of weeks, you may need to speak with your doctor about depression. It is a treatable illness, and keeping it in check can help you maintain interest in the hobbies and activities that you enjoy.

DIABETESIf your blood pressure is higher than 135/80,

ask your doctor to test you for diabetes. High blood sugar can cause problems with your heart, eyes, feet, kidneys, nerves and other body parts.

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health, mind&bodyThe Inyo Register

6 saturday, april 18, 2015

Hikers of all ages and skill levels can enjoy trails of varying degrees of difficulty, all the while taking in picturesque landscapes that often cannot be found in de-veloped urban and suburban areas.

Hiking safety tips to help you get outdoorsN

ational parks are great places for outdoor enthusiasts to enjoy some of their favorite activities. Many such parks allow visi-tors to camp out after a day spent rafting or kayaking on the

water, making these locales the ideal vacation spots for families or groups of friends who share a love of the great outdoors.

Hiking is among the more popular activities en-joyed at parks across the globe. Hikers of all ages and skill levels can enjoy trails of varying degrees of dif-ficulty, all the while taking in picturesque landscapes that often cannot be found in developed urban and suburban areas.

But as much as hiking can be enjoyed even by novice outdoor enthusiasts, this rewarding activity also can be dangerous. Hikers often find themselves in remote locations where cellular phone signals tend to be weak, which can be troublesome, even when hiking in relatively crowded parks. That’s why it’s important to take the following precautionary mea-sures when hiking.

• Never hike alone. Many outdoor enthusiasts enjoy escaping from the daily grind and getting some alone time with Mother Nature. While some outdoor activities can be safely enjoyed alone, others, includ-ing hiking, should never be done without a friend in tow. There are numerous benefits to hiking in pairs or groups, not the least of which is having someone there to go for help should anyone suffer an injury on the trails. When hiking with a group or even with only a friend, make sure no one hikes faster than the slowest hiker. This ensures that no one will get lost and that each hiker has someone there to seek help should an accident or injury occur.

• Share your itinerary with someone staying behind. Even if you are hiking with others, it’s best to share your itinerary with someone who is not joining you on your trip. This way someone can alert authorities to you, and your fellow hikers’ direction if you get lost on a trail and cannot find your way out. When sharing your itinerary, share your schedule as well, telling friends who are staying behind to alert

the authorities if you do not return or make direct contact with them by a given time.

• Start early. Embarking on a hike early is ben-eficial in a variety of ways. Nature is beautiful at all times of the day, but part of the joy of hiking is tak-ing in all of the beautiful landscapes, which are easi-er to see during daylight hours than at night. Hiking during the day is also safer, as it’s easier for hikers to make their way on trails when they can see where they’re going than at night, when many hiking trails are cloaked in darkness. Scavenging animals also may be more prevalent after sundown. Finally, hiking also is legal during daylight hours, whereas many parks ban hiking once the sun goes down.

• Know the weather forecast. When planning a hiking trip, know the weather forecast for the day or days you plan to hike. Expect cooler temperatures, even if the forecast is calling for a beautiful warm day. Hiking trails are often surrounded by tall trees, which makes it difficult for warm sunlight to illu-minate trails and warm up hikers. So pack an extra jacket or coat, ideally a rain coat that can serve double duty should it start to rain.

• Carry water and snacks. Staying hydrated can make a long or challenging hike easier on your muscles, so be sure to bring plenty of water, which also can quench your thirst throughout your hike. Bring some snacks along as well. Snacks should pro-vide you with energy to continue your hike, so leave behind snacks like potato chips or pretzels and pack your bags with fresh fruit, granola, protein bars, or trail mix.

Hiking is a great way to enjoy the great outdoors. But even veteran hikers must take safety precautions to ensure their trips are as safe as they are enjoyable.

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“Caring For Our Communities”

saturday, april 18, 2015 | INYOREGISTER.COM | SERVING THE EASTERN SIERRA AND BEYOND SINCE 1870 | 75¢

The Inyo RegisterSuNDAY75° | 43°

MONDAY75° | 42° Local firm named ‘Premier Office’ for excellent service for 10

consecutive years see page 7

Students hold court in announcer’s booth at Bishop Broncos home games see page 19

Copyright ©2015Horizon Publications, Inc.

Vol. 145, Issue 47

today’s weatherMostly sunny80° hI | 43° Lo

Volunteers and Owens Valley Growers Cooperative members who helped get the inside of the old Mairs Market in shape last week included (back row, l-r) Ann Capodanno, Lynn Johnson, Ben Holgate, ursula Esser, Jose Sandoval, Mary Roper, Barbara Eskew, Noa Lish, David Woodruff, (kneeling, l-r) Tamara Cohn and Gayle

Woodruff. The OVGC is hoping to open the old market this summer as a food co-op, cafe and grocery store.

Photos submitted

Barbara Eskew applies some elbow grease to kitchen equipment.

Calendar ......... 10Classifieds ....... 14Editorial ............. 4 History ............. 18

Mtn. Report ..... 17Religion ............. 8TV Listings........ 10Weather ............ 2

INdeX

“Remember that the happiest

people are not those getting

more, but those giving more.” – H. Jackson Brown Jr.

author

QUote oF the day

New Jersey auction house cancels event under threat of lawsuitBy Mike GervaisAssociate Editor

Rago Arts and Auction Center has cancelled an auction of Japanese American artifacts from Manzanar and other World War II internment camps following the threat of a law-suit from the Manzanar Committee

Supercharger sees use ‘everyday,’ says museum director

By Darcy EllisManaging Editor

Giving Tesla Motors the green light to install a supercharging station on its grounds in January has proven a wise decision by the Lone Pine Film History Museum.

Viewed as a no-brainer at the time, since Tesla was footing the bill and

and the Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation.

The auction would have featured 450 prisoner craft objects, personal items, art works and heritage artifacts from the camps. Those items were given to Allen H. Eaton, the original collector, under the assumption that they would be put on exhibit to edu-cate people about the Japanese American incarceration experience

According to the Manzanar Committee, the items were never meant to be sold.

On April 13, the Manzanar see NIXed E Page 3

assuming all liability, the museum’s decision has resulted in increased vis-itation as hoped – to both the muse-um and Lone Pine.

“There’s Tesla cars here everyday,” Film Museum Director Bob Sigman said, noting that more Tesla cars – luxury electric vehicles – are appear-ing the warmer the weather gets.

The drivers are not your average tourists, either. According to Sigman, they come with money to spend. Tesla vehicles start out at $70,000, making it safe to say most Tesla own-ers are in the higher, even seven-fig-

see tesLa E Page 3

auction of internment camp artifacts nixed

Tesla charging station bringing visitors to Lone Pine

INF to release route

analysisPublic meeting scheduled for Tuesday nightBy Mike GervaisAssociate Editor

As the Inyo National Forest prepares to release its draft Travel Analysis Report, there is a growing concern among community members that some 800 routes will be closed to off-highway vehicle travel.

According to the Forest Service, the number can be misleading, since what consti-tutes a “route” can include a very short segment of road.

To help clarify the matter and gather public input, the Forest Service is scheduled to release the draft at a public meeting from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, April 21 at Cerro Coco Community College, 4090 W. Line St. in Bishop.

The draft Travel Analysis Report is a part of the Travel Analysis Process, which is mandated by the Forest Service’s 2005 Travel Management Rule.

The process requires the Forest to provide “a safe, financially and environmen-tally sustainable road sys-tem.”

To that end, the Forest Service is analyzing routes on the Inyo National Forest to identify roads that are not used, in poor repair or are redundant (multiple roads leading to the same destina-tion).

Removing little-used, high-maintenance or redundant routes will allow the Forest to focus its resources on the routes that need maintenance or other attention.

Though the draft is meant to identify routes that could

see taP E Page 6

Register Staff

Efforts to transform a long-vacant building in the county seat into a hub for healthy food and fellowship are being bolstered by the community’s volunteer labor.

Two volunteer work days held last week for the Owens Valley Growers Cooperative’s Food Co-op and Cafe in Independence are being called successes, with significant progress made on fixing up the interior of the old Mairs Market.

“The turnout was great and the work accomplished was incredible,” Co-op General Manager David Woodruff said of the April 7 work day. “The volunteers worked very hard and accomplished a huge amount of the tasks

that need to be done. One of the volunteers commented it was a lot like an old fashion barn-raiser and I’d have to agree that was a pretty good analogy.”

This past Saturday, another 10 residents came out to work from 9 a.m.-3 p.m., painting, cleaning – “lots of cleaning,” Woodruff said – and dismantling shelves and other items that won’t be needed in the co-op bakery/cafe. In general, volunteers helped prepare the facility for contractors to come in and do the heavy lifting, so to speak. “We have most everything ready for the skilled craftsmen (plumbers, hood installers, floor people, etc.) to come and do their work,” Woodruff added. “I am waiting to hear from the county on a few issues and

see co-oP E Page 6

Future co-op, café taking root in Independence

Group on track to open new community resource by July 4

2 SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015 The Inyo Register

1180 N. Main St., Ste. 108, Bishop, CA 93514 | Phone: (760) 873-3535 | Fax: (760) 873-3591www.inyoregister.com

The Inyo Register

Veronica LeeSales [email protected]

Ext. 207

Cynthia Hurdle SampietroClassifieds Manager

[email protected]. 200

Stephanie DeBaptisteCirculation Manager

[email protected]. 201

Darcy EllisManaging Editor

[email protected]. 211

Terry LangdonSales [email protected]

Ext. 220

Mike GervaisAssociate Editor

[email protected]. 208

Eva GentryBookkeeping

[email protected]. 201

Rena MlodeckiPublisher

[email protected]. 222

adjective: intransigent1. refusing to agree or compromise; uncompromising; inflexible. very stubborn.noun:1. a person who refuses to agree or compromise, as in poli-tics.

examples:<intransigence and unrealism are bipartisan afflictions. >

<His intransigence seems only to be increasing his popular-ity.>

quotes:“And I envy the intransigence of my own Countrymen who shoot to kill and never see the victim’s face become their own or find his motive sabotage their motives.”

–Louis MacNeice

“The real tragedy here is that over the last two years because of the intransigence of the Republicans we didn’t really have a budget, we didn’t do anything with Medicare, so those numbers are not as good as they could have been.”

–Dick Gephardt origin:1882, from French intransigeant, from intransigeant (see intransigent ). Related: Intransigency.

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Bruce CottonFeb. 9, 1952-March 22, 2015

Memorial services will be held at 10 a.m. today, Saturday, April 18 at Diaz Lake in Lone Pine.

Bob CornellNov. 24, 1940-March 19, 2015

A celebration of Bob’s life is planned for 3 p.m. Saturday, April 25 at the Benito and Azzaro Pacific Garden Chapel, 1050 Cayuga St. in Santa Cruz, to be followed by a reception at the Cornell family home in Aptos. Burial will be in Bishop.

Helen FanslerApril 15, 1926-Nov. 16, 2015

A celebration of life will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday, April 25 at the Methodist Church in Big Pine.

Virginia Mae EverettJune 26, 1928-April 2, 2015

A celebration of Virginia’s life will be held at 1 p.m. May 16 at the United Methodist Church in Wellington, Nev. She will be buried at the family cemetery in Wellington.

Don BantaJuly 8, 1928-Feb. 10, 2015

An outdoor celebration of Don Banta’s life will be held for friends and family on June 13, 2015 at the Lee Vining Community Presbyterian Church.

Rickard “Rick” RhodesFeb. 13, 1955-April 5, 2015

A celebration of life will be held in Rick’s honor at 3 p.m. June 13 at Mendenhall Park in Big Pine. The family asks that you bring a dish and your fond memories of Rick to share.

Alvina Isabel Aigner

1922-2015Alvina Isabel Aigner, life-

long Lone Pine resident, died Monday, April 13, 2015 at Southern Inyo Hospital. Alvina was 93.

Alvina (Vina), was born March 1, 1922 in Lone Pine. She attended Lone Pine High School and later met and married Al on June 13, 1942, a marriage lasting 72 years.

Vina was a homemaker and also worked at the Lone Pine Drug Store. Vina and Al and their three daughters lived in their home on Hay Street.

Both Vina and Al were members of the local Lone Pine Golf Club, enjoying play-ing golf with other members as well as taking part in golf course tournaments.

Vina is survived by her daughters, Earleen Ellis, Jeanne White, Linda Vasilovich and their spouses, Larry, Robert and Guy; grand-children, Larry Ellis, Valerie Munis, Pamela Daugherty and Robert White; and great-grandchildren, Christopher Munis, Shane Munis, Julia Ellis, William Ellis, Ren Bills, Harlee Daugherty, Jagger Daugherty and Alexander White.

Private services will be held at a later date in the care of Mt. Whitney Funeral Home.

Richard ‘Rick’ Rhodes

1955-2015Richard “Rick” Rhodes of

Bishop lost his fight to can-cer, passing away Sunday, April 5, 2015 with his family by his side.

Rick was born to Cecilia Flores and Garland Rhodes on Feb. 13, 1955 in Ashville, N.C. Rick was raised and grew up in Big Pine. He had a love for this valley, where he

spent many a day fishing and hunting with his family and friends.

Rick is survived by his daughter, Whitney Jacobsen; mother, Cecilia McCormack; brothers, Jim Sanchez, Garland Rhodes, Mike Rhodes and Josh Rhodes; his sister, Madeline Lane; grandson, Dominic Jacobsen; numerous nieces and nephews; and the mother of his daughter, Cynthia Del Fante.

A celebration of life will be held in Rick’s honor at 3 p.m. June 13 at Mendenhall Park in Big Pine. The family asks that you bring a dish and your fond memories of Rick to share.

Virginia Mae Everett

1928-2015Virginia was born on June

26, 1928 in West Los Angeles to Daisy and Alvin Coffman.

She went home to heaven on April 2 in Reno, Nev. with family by her side.

She was preceded in death by her parents; her brother, Walter and sister-in-law, Helen Coffman; sister, Marlayn Byrum; grandson, Douglas Keener; and son-in-law, Rodney Keener.

See obiTS E page 5

The Inyo Register SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015 3

Bob Sigman,Film Museum Director

AT A GLANCE

Plaque dedication

BISHOP – The Northern Inyo Hospital Auxiliary will gather for a dedication of a plaque in honor of Clara Armstrong at 1 p.m. Saturday, April 25 in the Northern Inyo Hospital Healing Garden. All who knew Armstrong are invited to attend.

AARP driver safety

BISHOP – The AARP of Bishop is sponsoring a driv-er safety program April 22 and April 23 at the VFW Hall on Short Street in Bishop. Both classes will begin at 8:30 a.m. Those who com-plete the class could be eli-gible for insurance dis-counts.

To register, or for more information, call Danielle White at (760) 873-5839.

Deer Assoc. banquet

BISHOP – The 13th annual Eastern Sierra Chapter of the California Deer Association banquet is scheduled for Saturday eve-ning June 27. The banquet will be held in the Charles Brown Auditorium at the Tri-County Fairgrounds.

This year’s banquet will include all the usual games and raffles, along with an exciting auction.

Tickets will go on sale Monday, May 4 and are lim-ited to 350 tickets. Those who purchase theirs on or before June 6 will be entered in the Early Bird gun raffle and be eligible to purchase Progressive raffle tickets and Winner’s Choice raffle tickets which include bonus general raffle tickets.

Tickets for the sponsor tables are limited to 12 tables and may only be pur-chased at the Window Fair.

Tickets and more infor-mation will be available at Reagan’s Sporting Goods, Boyd Fence, Mac’s Sporting Goods and The Window Fair.

Those who would like to help organize the banquet together or who want more information can call Doug Brown at (760) 937-7963.

Pete goes down to DV

DEATH VALLEY – Fiddlin Pete Watercott will be per-forming live in Death Valley from 5-9 p.m. Thursday through Saturday on the Plaza in front of the General Store at Furnace Creek for one more week. His last night will be Saturday, April 25.

Schulman to open

INYO COUNTY – The Inyo National Forest is planning to open recreation facilities on the White Mountain and Mt. Whitney Ranger Districts in upcoming weeks.

Grandview Campground is currently open and the Schulman Grove Visitor Center is scheduled to open on a Friday-Monday sched-ule on April 24. The summer schedule, open seven days a week, is expected to start mid-May

For more, see inyoregis-ter.com.

Warren Street work

BISHOP – Pavement work is expected to start next week, early Monday, April 20, on the Warren Street Improvements project. The work will last about two weeks and be especially dis-ruptive because of extensive street and intersection clo-sures, according to the city.

For the record …The “Throwback

Thursday” caption published in the April 16 edition mis-takenly reported that the Athena Club was founded in the 1950s. In fact, the club was founded in 1906 by Dr. Nellie MacKnight Doyle.

Also, a faulty email address was provided in Tuesday’s article, “Chance of a lifetime.” The correct link is: eastsidesports.com/east-side/esyouthoutdoors.

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TESLAContinued from front page ure income brackets.

The supercharging station was installed on the southwest corner of the museum property in January and opened Jan. 21. Tesla spent about $150,000 building the sta-tion, which includes four stalls and was constructed with muse-um input to ensure aesthetic com-patibility. The station can charge a Tesla battery in about 30 minutes, giving the driver 265 more miles before another charge is needed. In addition to the station in Lone Pine, Tesla has superchargers in Inyokern and Mojave and has plans to build more so that owners of its vehicles can travel the entire length of U.S. Highway 395.

When Sigman approved the project in late 2013, he said he did so in an effort to help attract more visitors to the museum, expecting

Tesla owners to stop in Lone Pine to make use of the supercharger.

What Sigman is seeing instead is Tesla owners making Lone Pine their destination rather than a pit stop.

“Some people are driving up just to charge their cars,” he said.

There’s a simple explanation for that, Sigman said: people who have invested an average of $90,000 in a vehicle want to be able to drive it – they don’t neces-sarily care where.

Indeed, even before Tesla opened the station at the museum, word of the station had traveled to the elite echelon in need of battery power to see the world. Sigman reported receiving dozens of emails and calls from Tesla own-ers either thanking the museum or wanting to know when the station would open.

There are an estimated 7,500 Tesla vehicles in Southern California, with about 20,000 pro-duced by Tesla Motors nationwide annually. The company has plans to make its vehicle more common

and thus more affordable, and thus more ubiquitous on the roads.

Tesla says it will be increasing both production and demand by constructing a megafactory in Reno that will manufacture batter-ies for an estimated 500,000 vehi-cles by 2017. These batteries will be able accommodate electric vehicles made by different compa-nies because CEO Elon Musk relin-quished his patent last year to encourage growth in the market.

For now, Lone Pine’s gain appears to be Bishop’s loss.

Tesla had approached the City of Bishop first, in May 2014, with a proposal to build a supercharger station in a city-owned parking lot. The station would have taken up four parking spots and been cen-trally located in Bishop’s business district.

But – in a move that still has residents and business owners scratching their heads – the city rejected Tesla’s initial offer and made a counteroffer that Tesla then rejected.

During a June 2014 City Council meeting, then-City Administrator Keith Caldwell said Tesla wanted the city to assume all liability and the city, not comfortable with that arrangement, drafted a revised contract. (The museum, however, faced no such liability issues and is, in fact, fully indemnified by Tesla, according to Sigman.)

The city noted that even though a station on municipal property was not an option, a supercharger could always be located on private property.

Whether Tesla would be inter-ested in giving Bishop another shot is another question.

NIxEDContinued from front page Committe issued a statement condemning the auc-tion, and calling for an open discussion on how to return the items to the Japanese American commu-nity. Shortly after that announcement, the Hart Mountain Wyoming Foundation (the Wyoming coun-terpart of the Manzanar Committee) joined the effort to prevent the artifacts from being sold.

After just a few days of organizing and mobiliz-ing, the Manzanar Committee, HMWF and the con-signor (the individual putting the items up for auc-tion) helped convince Rago Arts and Auction Center to remove the artifacts from its April 17 auction.

“The HMWF and the many people who have sup-ported us in the last few weeks are thrilled that the immediate risk to the collection has been averted, and we are appreciative of the wider Japanese American community’s concerns,” HMWF Chair Shirley Ann Higuchi said in a statement. “We now turn to the challenge of securing the future care of the collection and protecting it in collaboration with all concerned Japanese American-related institu-tions.”

The HMWF added that the threat of litigation also factored into Rago Arts and Auction’s decision to remove the artifacts from the auction block.

“Within hours after legal counsel for the HMWF communicated their intent to file a lawsuit, the Rago Arts and Auction Center announced that the auction

items would be withdrawn,” the HMWF said in a statement.

Like so many other Japanese American commu-nity leaders, Manzanar Committee Co-Chair Bruce Embrey welcomed the news.

“We are more than pleased that Rago Arts and Auction has decided to withdraw the artifacts from Friday’s auction, and has responded to the outcry from many, especially those who were unjustly incar-cerated during World War II,” he said. “It is indeed perplexing that, in this day and age, some in our country know so little of our recent history that the idea of profiting from the sale of artifacts of this nature would be acceptable.”

Embrey urged caution and vigilance, noting that this struggle is far from over.

“While we salute Rago Arts and Auction for with-drawing the items from auction, we note that the artifacts are not yet in our community’s possession,” Embrey said. “We urge Rago Arts and Auction and the consignor to negotiate with the HMWF in good faith to reach a quick, honest, appropriate and just settlement.”

Enbrey also said that the support the Manzanar Committee received in its efforts was a major factor in its success.

“We would also like to salute the HWMF, the Ad Hoc Committee, other community organizations, and all the individuals who banded together to effect

positive change,” Embrey added. “We reiterate that whether it be Native American artifacts, or items from the Holocaust or slavery, it is simply not accept-able for anyone to profit from the personal treasures or possessions of an oppressed people. The artifacts and possessions must be used to educate broader society about the true nature of America’s concentra-tion camps. This was, in fact, the very reason Allen H. Eaton sought, and was given, these items.”

Rago Arts and Auction Center released a state-ment Thursday announcing that the sale had been cancelled. “We have always wanted to see this prop-erty where it could do the most good for history,” the press release states. “We have done our best to pub-licize this auction by informing the media … We relayed every good faith offer for private sale to the consignor. For us, there could be no better resolution than for a suitable museum, foundation or member/members of the Japanese American community with the means to preserve this collection to come for-ward and secure it for education, display and research.”

Rago Arts Managing Partner Miriam Tucker said the next step will be to have a discussion about the sale of “historical items that are a legacy of man’s inhumanity to man. It extends beyond what is legal. It is something auction houses, galleries and dealers are faced with regularly. We hope this controversy will be the beginning of a discourse on this issue.”

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 employ-ees or its parent company. These cartoons are merely intended to present food-for-thought in a different medium. The Inyo Register (ISSN 1095-5089) Published tri-weekly by Horizon California Publications Inc., 1180 N. Main Street, Ste. 108, Bishop, CA 93514. Entered as a Paid Periodical at the office of Bishop, California 93514,

under the Act of March 3, 1876. Combining Inyo Register, founded 1883; Inyo Independent and Owens Valley Progress-Citizen, founded 1870; and the Sierra Daily News. All contents are the property of Horizon California Publications Inc. and cannot be reproduced in any way without the written consent of publisher. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Inyo Register, 1180 N. Main Street, Ste. 108, Bishop, CA 93514. Phone (760) 873-3535. Fax (760) 873-3591

OPINIONRena Mlodecki Publisher | daRcY elliS Editor

The Inyo Register

4

IN APPRECIATIONLETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Top of The Morning

guesT ColuMnisT

SATuRDAy, APRIL 18, 2015

• 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 publica-tion.

• 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 libel-ous, 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 [email protected] or mail to:

Editor, The Inyo Register, 1180 N. Main St., Ste. 108, Bishop, CA 93514

LETTERS AND TOP Of THE mORNINg POLICy

High speed (rail) road to perditionBy Thaddeus Taylor

My grandmother would frequently tell me that the “road to ‘hades’ was paved with good intentions.” I inter-preted this to mean that good intentions alone won’t get things done and/or there is always a cost associated with the inevitable unintended consequences.

When one takes a close look at the California high speed rail project they will see a boatload of good inten-tions and a mountain of con-sequences. The methods that the proponents of this proj-ect used are, at best, ques-tionable.

The good voters of California approved a $10 bil-lion bond issue to get the project rolling, as it were. The sponsors of the legislation prevaricated, exaggerated and lied about the utility and cost of the rail line. The first ten billion went to “study”

and plan the projected line. The ultimate cost was low-balled by the proponents. Current estimates, by the friends of the project, now top $68 billion just to build it, not to staff it or buy the trains.

Your humble correspon-dent will go on record now and state that if built as now envisioned, it will never make a dime. One hopes to live long enough to see the proof of this and in anticipation of this I would propose a wager with proceeds to charity.

Why such certainty? Easy, it is about the money. Money has a cost. Currently, that cost is clouded as the Federal Reserve is keeping short-term interest rates at close to zero. The true market cost of money is closer to 4 percent on an historical basis. Even now, financial sinkholes like Chicago would love to be able to borrow long term at 4 per-cent. California is nearing

that condition as well. Short-term debt is selling at sub-stantially lower rates but the high speed rail will not be financed short term.

Rounding up to $70 bil-lion, which will doubtless prove a conservative esti-mate, and estimating an inter-est expense that averages 4 percent we see the following: interest alone will cost $319,000 per hour.

The line will need an hour-ly income to average $319k

just to pay the interest. This is before state employees with their splendid health and pension packages are hired. These are the same sort of state workers who cannot be fired for simple incompetence without a seri-ous effort on the part of their employer. They will doubt-less be unionized adding to the Democrat party’s support base. That will be the folks actually operating the thing and it is not a comforting thought. When you add in the operating costs, maintenance and energy costs it is clear that the bill will be somewhat north of $319,000 per hour.

When the project was being sold to the largely low information voters, train usage in Japan and Europe was cited in support of the economic utility of the thing. They also mentioned the usage on the Amtrak line between Washington, D.C. and New York City. They

inflated all of the examples, shamelessly. Additionally, they gave insanely low cost estimates. In short, they lied. In business this would consti-tute fraud. Lately, the govern-ing board of the high speed line has been, like their breth-ren in Inyo County (who sup-port the Taj Ma Bishop county office building) been violat-ing the “sunshine laws” that require open meetings.

Dear Reader, I know that I am throwing out adjectives like confetti but it is done to make the point. This boon-doggle will create jobs and establish a sort of business but it will also place a heavy load on the future taxpayers for generations. All the kids in Central America will not be able to pay this thing off. Since when is it the responsi-bility of the State of California to create jobs and establish a business enterprise? It can-not even do what it is sup-posed to do, now. The gov-

ernment is the only entity I know that when they mess something up, like Amtrak, they want to do more of the same.

A word about government and jobs: Mr. James O’Keefe has an interesting video post-ed on Project Veritas (www.projectveritas.com) that shows an interview with some union bosses who are being advised of a State project that consists of digging holes and then filling them in. No gain for the taxpayer but a source of public employee union jobs. The bosses were on that like a duck on a June bug. On a cost basis alone, the pointless hole digging is the more economical alterna-tive.

(Today’s Top of the Morning is written by Thad Taylor. Mr. Taylor is a 30-year resident of Inyo County and is currently the chairman of the Inyo County Republican Party.)

Significant Details

Save water, save the planet, save yourself

the hassleEarth Day is now 45 years old and the eco-scolds have yet to figure

out how to package a “save the planet” message that actually works. For some reason that the greenies don’t understand, most folks just don’t respond real well to someone standing on a table, pointing a finger and screaming, “if you don’t pitch in you will be killing the polar bears.”

Not many Americans respond to altruistic demands to “do good deeds for the sake of the planet.” However, Americans will jump all over any activity or lifestyle change that puts more money in their pocket or makes their life easier.

Since we are still enjoying the benefits of a multi-year drought, let’s focus our attention on water use and abuse.

Right off the bat, do-gooders should quit insist-ing that people should use less water on their lawns to conserve this precious natural resource so there’s enough for everyone, including the birds, bugs and fishes that make up “the web of life.” Instead, tell them that the less they water, the less they have to mow. Bingo, that’s an atten-tion-getter. Go on to explain that, with careful planning, they can reduce lawn watering to the point that their lawn will only be vaguely green and will barely grow enough to need a monthly mowing. That’s inspirational.

You want transformative? Declare that in this ongoing “water crisis” there is no room, or water, for ornamental flowers and shrubs, so there will be no pricey trip to the Garden Shop to spend money on flowers that will take back-breaking hours to plant and maintain and that will bloom for a week. No flower beds, no weeding, no watering, no problem.

How about revolutionary? Just continue to follow the lazy man’s logic and you achieve a completely dead, brown lawn that never needs mowing, trimming or even a second thought. With any luck, the wind will blow a big batch of weed seeds into your near-dead patch of Mother Earth, and they will sprout, allowing you to declare that you have made the leap to “native plants.” And of course, when the neighbors com-plain, get indignant: “I’m not killing trout just for a green lawn.”

Likewise, when you shift to the “European Option” of personal hygiene by taking only two showers a week to save water, the primary benefit is that you absolutely will be getting a bigger cubicle at work and you absolutely will not be invited to lame dinner parties. All com-plaints about your “earthy” odor can be silenced with, “Unlike you, I don’t like killing trout for aesthetics.”

Only run the dishwasher when it’s full? Do that by going out to eat four days a week and let the professional dishwasher load the dish-washer. Doesn’t get much easier than that.

Finally, here’s the big payback for all your water-saving efforts. Since the water saved will help the trout, take the rest of the weekend off from lawn work to go fishing so you can reap the benefits of your efforts to tread gently on Mother Earth.

(Jon Klusmire of Bishop is all wet at least twice a week.)

OPINIONJon Klusmire

Eagles football team grateful for support

The Lone Pine Golden Eagles football team would like to thank all those who donated and partici-pated in the first Eagle Golf Tournament Fundraiser. Their sup-port is greatly appreciated.

Thank you all so much: Lone Pine Television, Dow Villa,

Gardner’s True Value, Lone Pine Propane, Sierra Storage, Joseph’s Bi-Rite Market, Rio Tinto Minerals, Totem Café, Ranch House, Lone Pine Dollar Store, Lone Pine Golf Course, Matt Kingsley, Terry Ditmar, Chad Clarke, Dugan Whisler, Randy Klopfenstein, Eagles Football staff and Eagles Football players.

With sincere thanks and appre-ciation,

Coach John A. Kane and Staff,Lone Pine High School

One more time(The following is a reprint of the

concluding paragraph of the letter by Kathy Dodson that was published in the Thursday, April 16 edition. A typo towards the end altered the sentiments being expressed and thus we’d like to share Dodson’s thoughts as they were intended to be con-veyed. –Ed.)

These items do not belong to Mr. Eaton, his daughter, the consignor or the auction house. These items belong only to the 120,000 Japanese Americans and their families who had been incarcerated at the 10 relocation camps. My guess is that any monies acquired at auction will be divided, between the Eaton fam-ily, the consignor and the auction

house. Nothing to be given to the actual owners of these precious items.

Like I said – unbelievable.Kathy Dodson

Big Pine

Clerk-Recorder clears air over April Fool’s column

In response to the April 4 article “Rush to cash in on Poverty Hills riches stresses Inyo County”:

After the April 4 column ran in The Inyo Register alerting the pub-lic to the thulium rush in Inyo County, it was uncovered that what

was first identified to be thulium by Jon Klusmire, museum director and resident geologist, turned out to be Fool’s Gold. Kammi Foote, the Inyo County clerk, refunded all filing fees to any unsuspecting member of the public that was tricked into believing that this valuable rare earth was being mined in the Poverty Hills.

“I’m sorry if I misled anyone into believing that thulium was here in the Owens Valley,” Klusmire stated. “Next time I will double check my sources before I publish my opin-ions.” In the end, everyone was made whole and all legal matters were settled amicably over a good laugh.

Kammi Foote,Inyo County Clerk-Recorder

Don’t toss ’em! Recycle ’em!Don’t toss ’em! Recycle ’em!

The Inyo RegisterThe Inyo Register www.inyoregister.comwww.inyoregister.com

The Inyo Register SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015 5

obiTSContinued from page 2

She is survived by her chil-dren, Dennis Everett, Margaret Everett Keener, Dianne Warner and son-in-law, Allen Warner; grand-sons, Skyler Everett, Jeremy, Thomas and Brandon Warner, Ethan and Jonathan and Harrison Keener; stepgrand-son, Travis Keener; great-grandson, Bruce Warner and Virginia Gavilan. She has numerous nieces and neph-ews and greats, too many to count.

Virginia lived with her parents in Los Angeles until she married Harry Everett and they moved to Wellington, then Gabs, Nev. They then moved back to Los Angeles where Harry got on with the DWP. They then moved to Lone pine where they lived until he retired in 1986. After that they moved back to the Everett place in Wellington, Nev. When Harry passed she moved to Yerington, Nev. and spent her last years there.

When she was younger she was quite the dancer. She loved to jitterbug. She and Harry used to go dancing at the Lawerence Welk Show every weekend. Santa Monica pier was a favorite hang-out too. She liked to tell the story of getting stuck at the top of the rollercoaster when it broke down and had to climb down a firetruck ladder!

During World War II she had her photo in Time maga-zine when she was working in an aircraft factory. In Lone Pine she was involved in the PTA, Boy, Cub and Girl scouts, and volunteered at the schools and library. She also made Christmas candy every year and took it around to the various doctors and dentists and friends.

Virginia drove her son Dennis to various trailheads and dropped him off for his many fishing and camping adventures. She helped her daughter Margaret move many times with much laugh-ter. She loved to travel, going to aquariums and beaches. We would go out every spring to look at the wildflowers and she would go out in the fall to see the changing color of the trees.

She was a member of the United Methodist Church in Smith Valley, Nev. and was the women’s ministries trea-surer for years. She quietly loved the Lord, family and friends. She loved gardening, embroidery, cooking, can-ning, reading and crossword puzzles. She always had a book at hand and a game show to watch.

Bird watching was also a favorite pastime. She always had a bird feeder, binoculars and a bird book around. She even had a clock that chimed bird songs in her living room.

She loved her kids and grandkids and would help them in any way she could. She and Harry had the grand-sons up for the summer every year. She lived a full and long life, seeing many changes in the world, from the first TV, a man on the moon to computers (which she refused to use). She even wore the first two-piece bath-ing suit when it came out – scandalous!

She was a loving daughter, wife, sister, aunt, mother and friend. She will be greatly missed.

A celebration of Virginia’s life will be held at 1 p.m. May 16 at the United Methodist Church in Wellington, Nev. She will be buried at the fam-ily cemetery in Wellington.

Revelation 22:16 Palms 30:5

Robert Van Thom

1928-2015Robert Van Thom, 86, a

resident of Bishop for 31 years, born in Florida on Dec. 7, 1928, passed away peace-fully on April 14, 2015 at his residence with his grandson Robert by his side.

Robert moved to California in 1942. He graduated from Narbonne High School the summer of 1946. From there went on to Compton J.C. (Junior College).

Robert served in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from September 1950 until discharged April 1952 as a combat medic. He earned the rank of Staff Sgt. and was shipped to Korea. He distin-

guished himself by Gallantry in action near Chung-Bang-P’yong, Korea on the 18th of February, 1952 and was awarded the Silver Star.

After his discharge from the service he was employed by Long Beach Oil Development Company. There he stayed for 34 years and retired as chief accoun-tant in Material Control. Shortly after retirement, Robert and his loving wife Thora, who were married for 42 years, moved to Bishop in 1986. Thora passed away Feb. 24, 1988.

Robert is survived by his grandson, Robert Thom and wife, Holly from Templeton; grandson, William Newton Thom of Templeton; and sis-ter, Adoree Suran and hus-band Richard from La Palma.

I would like to say to all my friends whom I know by name God Bless and Good Bye.

Melvin George Read

1936-2015Mel Read passed away on

March 20, 2015 at his home in La Pine, Ore. Mel was born to Howard Read and Margaret Price Read on March 24, 1936 in Ft. Collins, Colo. Mel moved to Bishop in 1938 with his parents and sister, Phyllis. He graduated from Bishop High School in 1953.

Mel lived in the Bishop area most of his life and worked as a truck driver. He also owned and operated Read Transport. He moved to the Lancaster/Palmdale area where he lived until moving to Oregon in 2014.

Mel is survived by his son, Paul and wife, Tracy of La Pine; daughter, Michell Farrell of Santa Barbara; sister, Phyllis Foxhoven; niece, Kathleen Foxhoven; grand-children, Kristen, Jason, Nick and Emilie; great-grandchil-dren; former wife, Joyce Read; and stepchildren, Sharon Yeager and John Mort.

He was preceded in death by his former wife, Bonnie Horne Trampus; brother-in-law, Roy Foxhoven; niece, Karen Foxhoven Siegal.

A celebration of life was held at Paul and Tracy Read’s home in La Pine on April 4.

Virginia Mae Everett

Jack and Pat Crowther celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary on April 16.

The CrowthersJack and Pat Crowther, married April 16, 1955, celebrated their 60th anniversary on

Thursday.The couple has lived in Bishop since 1970, and both Jack and Pat work for the Bishop

schools.They have a Daughter, Suzette Poirier, and son-in-law, Phil, and a son, Ted Crowther,

and daughter-in-law, Les. The couple has four grandchildren, Adam, Alex, Jacob Poirier and Jacqueline Crowther, and three great-grandchildren, with one on the way.

AnniVERSARY

6 SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015 The Inyo Register

Tamara Cohn and Gerrie Rodenburg clean away the six years of dust built up inside the old Mairs Market during a volunteer work day last Tuesday.

Photo submitted

Brett Jourdan and Kathy White tackle a shelving project during last Saturday’s work day at the old Mairs Market.

Photo submitted

City asking residents to be mindful of outdoor irrigation to conserveCity of Bishop

In response to the ongoing drought, the State of California recently expanded the measures it requires all water users in the state to take, including City of Bishop water users.

The state now requires that water use in the City of Bishop be reduced 25 percent compared to 2013’s usage.

Before the state announced its stricter water-use guidelines, the city was being asked to reduce water usage by 20 per-cent.

To achieve the new reduction goals, the state has added several new water conservation require-ments.

As a result, the City of Bishop is implementing a new set of restrictions that include:

• No outdoor irrigation except between 5 p.m. and 9 a.m.

• No outdoor irrigation that results in water running off the property

• No outdoor irrigation dur-ing and within 48 hours after precipitation (new)

• New landscaping must use drip irrigation or microspray

• No washing vehicles unless

hose is fitted with a shut-off nozzle

• No washing driveways, side-walks and parking areas

• No decorative water fea-tures unless there is recircula-tion

• No serving of water in com-mercial establishments except upon request (new)

• Hotel guests can choose to not have towels and linens washed each day (new)

• No water waste caused by easily correctable leaks, breaks, or malfunctions

• No use of potable water for construction purposes

• No hydrant flushing except when required for public health and safety

In the Eastern Sierra, most water is used for outdoor irriga-tion, so most measures address outdoor irrigation.

The city may allow excep-tions to some of these measures in some cases. However, more water conservation require-ments are expected from the state as the drought continues.

“The city has a standing water conservation incentive program available to help its water customers save water,” a press release from the Bishop Public Works Department states. The program provides free hose nozzles, hose timers and irriga-tion system timers and provides rebates for some sprinkler sys-tems and water conserving appliances.

The incentives are available only to water customers of the City of Bishop and are limited to one per customer account. Also, quantities of the free items are limited.

The free hose nozzles, hose timer, and irrigation system tim-ers are available at the City of Bishop Public Works Office. To receive these items, residents must go to the office, located at Bishop City Hall on West Line Street, fill out an application and pick one up while supplies last.

Rebates are available for installing water saving sprinkler systems and for eligible upgrades to clothes washers, dish washers and toilets. To receive a rebate, residents must fill out an application, have their old and new item verified by city staff, and get a check.

More information and appli-cations are available on the city website or from City of Bishop Public Works.

“Also, remember that land-scaping needs less water now than in the heat of the summer,” the press release states. “Tailor your watering to the needs of the plants and lawn to avoid overwatering. Saving water saves money, reduces water rates, protects groundwater, is the right thing to do and is required by the state.”

For more information, con-tact the City of Bishop Department of Public Works at (760) 873-8458.

New water restrictions announced in Bishop

TAPContinued from front page be a financial risk to the Forest Service (i.e., route that are in disrepair and may need reconstruction) and routes that pose an environ-mental risk, Inyo National Forest Public Information Officer Deb Schweizer explained that process itself does not include a decision on whether the routes will be closed or remain open, “but rather recommenda-tions.”

Because the process does

not render a decision on the routes, it is not subject to the National Environmental Policy Act.

The draft Travel Analysis Report that will be made available next week includes a review of about 800 routes.

“Although the Forest Service claims this report will not be acted on, it is obvious the direction they are moving,” Bishop resident and Eastern Sierra Four-Wheel Drive club member

Mike Johnston said. “There may be some roads that are suitable to be eliminated, but certainly not 800 roads.”

Schweizer said that, while 800 routes seems like a lot of roads to cover, many of the roads “are spurs or small segments, and very short. Some are roads that exist on maps, but not on the ground, and some are roads that have fell into disuse and are in a poor state of mainte-nance.”

She said earlier this year that the goal is not to remove frequently-used roads from the route system. Ideally, the Forest Service hopes to iden-tify the routes that can be removed with little or no impact to Forest users.

That’s where the public comes in.

“Your input … will help make this analysis more accurate and complete,” Schweizer said, adding that comments should be sub-mitted by May 18, 2015.

Comments may be emailed to [email protected] with the sub-ject line “TAP comments.” Input can be faxed to (760) 873-2486. Hard copy com-ments can be dropped off at the Forest Service Supervisor’s Office or can be mailed to Erin Noesser, Inyo National Forest, 351 Pacu Ln., Ste. 200, Bishop, CA 93514.

“Comments will be most helpful if they include spe-cific information or sugges-tions: for example, informa-

tion about risks or benefits of specific roads,” Schweizer said. “We would also appre-ciate any corrections of information in the draft report, suggestions about improving the analysis pro-cess, and suggestions about any future changes to spe-cific roads.”

Schweizer added that the Travel Analysis Process does not consider routes that are currently not on the National Forest Transportation System.

Co-oPContinued from front page once we get that cleared up, we will file our permits and start installing and remodeling things.”

Located at the intersection of U.S. Highway 395 and Kearsarge, the building has sat empty since 2008 when Mairs Market closed, leaving Independence without a grocery store and giving it anoth-er empty storefront along its main street.

The OVGC was formed two years ago and has been hosting farmers markets in Independence and Lone Pine with much suc-cess and a significant rise in popularity, so much so that its Board of Directors began looking for ways to expand its opera-

tions to better serve Southern Inyo County. The food co-op/café was identified as another way to help build a local and sustainable food system in the Owens Valley.

With generous support from Metabolic Studio, the USDA Local Foods Promotion Project and the Desert Mountain Research and Development Council, the OVGC is planning to open the old Mairs Market this summer as a food co-op/market/café/bakery and community center. According to Woodruff, the co-op will feature fresh locally produced and healthy foods and value-added products. The co-op will also provide a selection of basic sun-dry and grocery items, he said,

hoping to fill a void amidst the small number of retail outlets in Southern Inyo County.

Woodruff said the plan is to open for business by July 4, if work from here on out goes smoothly.

“We’ll have probably two more volunteer work days some-time in May, and a ‘come take a look’ reception sometime during that time as well,” he said.

The OVGC is optimistic about meeting its timeline and the future.

“Community support here has been outstanding,” Woodruff said.

For more information on the OVGC Food Co-op, call Woodruff at (760) 920-8061.

The Inyo Register SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015 7

Coldwell Banker recently gave its top award to the Bishop branch, consisting of: (back row, l-r) Ross Corner, Cindy Freeman, Carrie Kinman, Julie Bayer, Ruth Hughes, (front row, l-r) Jodi Chudy, Nancy Lowthorp, Pat Olsen, Shelley Corner, Jake Rasmuson and Curtis Amundson. Not pictured: Scott Swett, Claudia Alexander and Ron McCoy.

Photo submitted

Rotarians and Mammoth Medical Missions will field a team in May to offer vocational, hands-on training at the Hospital Basico San Andres Larrainzar in Chiapas, Mexico.

Photo submitted

PFC Jonathan F. Turner

Somewhere in this newspaper’s advertisements, we have hidden a small graphic of a mule. Scan through this paper and if you find it, call The Inyo Register at 1-760-873-3535 between the

hours of 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. and tell us where it is. If you are the first caller, you will win a

Please note the actual size of the hidden graphic in the upper right corner of this ad.

*Callers can win only ONCE per month

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$10 Gift Certificate206 N. Main StreetBishop, CA 935141-760-873-6882

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“Strong Editorial Newspapers Build Strong Communities”

The Inyo Register1108 N. Main St., Ste. 108

Bishop, CA 93514760-873-3535

FindThe Inyo Register’s Mule

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Millions of older Americans take the blood thinner warfarin, and many may also take one of a widely used class of antidepressants called SSRIs. Now, a new study finds that selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)—which include Celexa, Paxil, Prozac and Zoloft—may raise the risk for major bleeding in patients also taking warfarin. Warfarin has been prescribed for decades to help prevent stroke.

We are now compounding “all natural estrogen hormone replacement” as prescribed by your physicians.

According to research presented at the American College of Rheumatology Annual Meeting, a daily dose of strontium ranelate—a medication prescribed for osteoporosis—may delay knee osteoarthritis progression. The study also revealed that taking strontium ranelate may lessen knee pain and reduce joint damage and the need for surgery. Knee osteoarthritis is caused by cartilage breakdown in the knee joint. Factors that increase the risk of knee osteoarthritis include obesity, age, prior injury to the knee, extreme stress to the joints, and family history. In 2005, 27 million Americans suffered from osteoarthritis, and one in two people will have symptomatic knee arthritis by age 85.

In a randomized trial that included nearly 15,000 male physicians, long-term daily multivitamin use resulted in a modest but statistically significant reduction in cancer after more than a decade of treatment and follow-up, according to a study appearing in JAMA. Multivitamins are the most common dietary supplement, regularly taken by at least one-third of U.S. adults.

Brought to you as a public service by

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dwayne’sfriendly pharmacy644 W. LINE STREET • BISHOP, CA 93514

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Jonathan Turner now a U.S. MarineRegister Staff

PFC Jonathan F. Turner, 19, of Bishop, graduated from United States Marine Corps boot camp at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego on April 10, 2015.

PFC Turner successfully completed 13 weeks of inten-sive basic training at MCRD San

Diego as one of 69 recruits in Training Platoon 2166 of the 2nd Recruit Training Battalion Hotel Company.

While in recruit training, PFC Turner was honored with the Platoon High Shooter Award. His score was 336 out of 350.

Following his time at home on leave, Turner will report to Camp Pendleton for one month at Marine Combat Training and then on to Pensacola, Fla. for schooling in Helicopter Mechanics.

Local man graduates boot camp

Grant will help Mammoth Medical Missions team lend hand at hospitalSpecial to The Inyo Register

Rotary Club of Bishop Sunrise has been awarded a Global Grant from Rotary International for the Chiapas Austere Medicine Vocational Training Initiative.

While the Rotary Club of Bishop Sunrise is serving as the lead international club for grant administration purposes, the project is the result of the hard work and planning of both Sunrise and Noon Rotary Clubs in Bishop, the Rotary Club of Tuxtla Guieterrez, Chiapas, Mexico, Mammoth Medical Missions and the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International.

Taking advantage of relation-ships developed over time by Mammoth Medical Missions and contacts through the Rotary host club in Tuxtla, Gutierrez and regional health care provid-ers in Chiapas, Rotarians and Mammoth Medical Missions have put together a project to field a Vocational Training Team in Chiapas.

Mammoth Medical Missions’ team will provide intensive, practical austere medicine skills training for local health care providers in the remote high-

Rotary bringing medical training to Mexico

lands of Chiapas, one of the poorest and most disaster-vul-nerable regions in Mexico. Specialties to be addressed include rural obstetrics, austere emergency room skills, physical therapy, mass casualty and disaster medicine, and general surgery support for clinic staff working with transient foreign medical teams.

Mammoth Medical Missions doctors, nurses and staff will also perform four days of elec-tive life-improving surgeries for the indigenous patients.

All hands-on training and surgeries will take place in the Hospital Basico San Andres Larrainzar, a small, basic rural clinic serving a highly marginal-

ized population of approxi-mately 10,000 people, more than 90 percent of whom are characterized as indigenous Mayan (Tsotsil and Tsetsal).

In addition to the medical trainings and surgeries, Mammoth Medical Missions will also teach a course in disaster and mass casualty training. This training will take place on the campus of the State School of Civil Protection, reaching disas-ter management professionals, civil protection instructors and students, as well as community and political leaders serving the entire population of the State of Chiapas.

The project will take place in Chiapas, Mexico May 4-16.

Local Coldwell Banker named a Premier Office for 10th year in a row

Register Staff

Coldwell Banker LeeAnn Rasmuson & Associates, Inc., has been named a Coldwell Banker® Premier Office for year-end 2014, the highest honor given to Coldwell Banker offices.

This is the 10th year this office has been awarded this distinguished award.

“The Premier Office honor is the most impressive desig-nation awarded to individual Coldwell Banker® offices,” said Budge Huskey, president of Coldwell Banker. “LeeAnn Rasmuson, Jake Rasmuson, brokers and the sales associate

Bishop firm earns high honor

“LeeAnn Rasmuson, Jake Rasmuson, brokers and the sales associate team at Coldwell Banker LeeAnn Rasmuson and Associates have established a standard of excellence for offices throughout the Coldwell Banker system.”

– Budge Huskey,President,

Coldwell Banker

team at Coldwell Banker LeeAnn Rasmuson and Associates have established a standard of excellence for offices throughout the Coldwell Banker system.”

Coldwell Banker LeeAnn Rasmuson & Associates, Inc.,

has been an affiliate of the Coldwell Banker® system for 31 years and is located at 370 W. Line St., in Bishop.

For more information about real estate in the Owens Valley, call (760) 873-4264 or go online to BishopRealEstate.com.

Pastor George and Joyce Duerr passed away within 10 days of each other last month. They stead-fastly served the local community from 1971 to 2014. Grace Lutheran Church will be honoring their memory this Sunday during worship service in Bishop and Mammoth.

File photo

RELIGIONThe Inyo Register

8 SATURDAY, ApRil 18, 2015

CHURCH OF RELIGIOUS SCIENCEREV. FREDA LINDSAY, MINISTER

REV. DR. wALT ShARER129 East Line Street, Phone 873-4195 & 872-4686

Sunday Service: 10 a.m. - Meditation: 9:40 a.m.Wednesday, 5:30 p.m.: Prayer GroupPractitioners: Rev. Dr. Juanella Evans

Please call Church Office for an appointment

Valley PresbyterianChurCh

Rev. Tammy Mitchell Red OwlFri. Bible Study 1:00 p.m.

Sunday Worship & Sunday School 11 a.m.873-8960 • 2912 W. Line • Bishop

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH

2956 W. Line St., BishopSunday School . . . . . . . . 10:00 amChurch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00 amWednesday Evening . . .7:30 p .m .

Reading Room Open Tuesday 10 a.m.-1 p.m. and after Services

Childcare provided

First Baptist Churchof Big Pine

293 Chestnut St.Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Sunday Worship - 10 a.m. & 6 p.m.Wednesday Prayer Meet. 6:15 p.m.

Pastor Tim Toppass(760) 387-0024 & (760) 938-1153

First SouthernBaptist Church

251 Sierra St., Bishop, CASunday Worship Service 11:00

a.m.Sunday Morning Bible Study

10:00 a.m.Wed. Evening Bible Study

6:30 p.m.(760) 873-6022

Bishop CreekCommunity ChurCh

“The Fear of the Lord, Part 2”Jeremy Plum

Pastor Kelly Larson

An Evangelical Free Church • Kelly Larson, Pastor

Come and join us!700 Hobson st. (at Keough and Hobson sts.)

11:00 a.m. sundays at st. Timothy’s anglican Church

www.bishopcreek.org

Church on the Mountain

Mike & Heather Gehringer/ PastorsChildren’s Ministry & Nursery Available

384 S. Landing Rd. • Crowley Lake, CA 93546www.churchonthemountain.org

(760) 935-4272

Pre-Service Prayer: 8:30-9:30 a.m.in the Garden House of Prayer

Sunday Service: 10 a.m.

Church of Christ287 Grove St. • Bishop

Sun. 10:00 a.m. Bible Service 10:50 a.m. Worship Service

873-3769

Free family seminar

Mammoth Lakes Lutheran Church in Mammoth Lakes and Grace Lutheran Church in Bishop will be hosting a free family seminar on the topic of communication

within families. Dr. Daniel Puls and his wife, Janine Puls, will speak at 7 p.m. on Saturday, March 28 at Mammoth Lakes Lutheran Church, and Sunday, March 29 at Grace Lutheran Church.

Dr. Puls holds an advanced degree in psychol-ogy, and Janine Puls is a licensed Marriage, Family, and Child counselor. The Pulses will be speaking on “Keys to Connection,” with the main emphasis of

“Building Relations in Marriage, Family, and Life.” The public is invited to attend these free events. Child care will be provided. For more information, con-tact Grace Lutheran Church at (760) 872-9791.

bRieFS

The power is within youJesus said, “The kingdom

of God is within you.” It is amazing to me that main-stream Christianity groups have not latched onto this, rather than push the salva-tion message.

The Bible says, “Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and all these things will be added onto you.” This means the kingdom which is within you, needs to be recognized by you. God is not some far-off deity sitting on a cloud, judging our every move.

God is living by means of you and expressing at your direction. God does not pun-ish nor eliminate; that is your choice. God creates by means of your actions, words and emotions. For God so loved the world, he created by means of us.

It is clear that negative thinking cannot and will not reward the thinker with posi-tive results. This doesn’t mean that positive thinker will solve all of our prob-lems. Positive thinking is great, but it is not enough. Love is also great, but again, it is not enough. Jesus, and

many others have said, “It is done unto you as you believe.” All the positive words and affirmations can-not override a belief in lack, loss or limitation. All of the processions of love will not stymie a limited belief. In order to overcome and advance, something new has to be added to the equation.

A lifetime of pessimism and limited thinking does not readily vanish in a moment of inspiration. We have to start somewhere, but where? There is no one

answer solution for every-body. Some, like Spock on “Star Trek,” utilize logic. Some have a spiritual insight beyond what they have had in the past, and some just stumble on to the way. It doesn’t really matter how you came to a realiza-tion of God operating through you as you, what matters is what you do with it.

Once we are established with the knowledge of our relationship, to, God we can move forward. In our decla-ration of principles, we say, “God is personal to all that feel the indwelling pres-ence.” When that level is reached, there is a greater confidence and assuredness within each individual to handle whatever life throws at us. Life actually throws nothing at us, however, there is a momentum of lingering negativity which we must overcome.

Once we know the Truth, the Truth will set us free. The freedom we seek is the freedom to be the reality of who and what we

are. According to Genesis 1:26, we were each created in the image and after the likeness of God. We are to take dominion of the earth. Nobody or nothing can stand before us and claim dominion, unless we relinquish it.

All of the power in the Universe resides within you. What will you do with it is the question. You can lis-ten to useless debates about heaven or hell, or you can boldly claim your good. What the future holds is in your hands.

God is Love and Loving You Right Now!

(The Rev. Dr. Walt Sharer is minister at Bishop Church of Religious Science, located at 129 E. Line St., Bishop. Rev. Freda Lindsay and Rev. Walt officiate the weekly, Sunday services at 10 a.m. You can hear Rev. Walt’s message on “The Devotional Hour” on Sierra Wave KSRW 92.5 FM Sunday mornings at 8:30. The church can be reached at 760-873-4195 for more information.)

COLuMNISTRev. Walt ShaReR

COLuMNISTRev. Kent PulS

This title is a spin on and dedication for a couple who served our community from 1971 to 2014. Scripture, in James 1, commands Christians to be “doers” of the Word. Pastor George Duerr and his lovely wife Joyce were reflections of this command. Both were taken from this vail of tears, 10 days apart, last month.

George and Joyce were “doers” of the Word when they responded to the mis-sion call to Grace Lutheran Church in 1972. Both were instrumental in developing the Lutheran congregations in Bishop and Mammoth. Their four children, Liz, John, Matthew and Phil enjoyed fishing, backpack-ing and exploring in the Eastern Sierra. They com-peted in high levels of sport, found spouses and graced Bishop with their laughter, love and life.

You have been blessed by all of them! George and Joyce enjoyed the benefits of their children, and grand-children, all close to Jesus and the Church.

George loved hiking and used it as a tool for build-ing relationships. Joyce loved leading Bible studies and extending the gospel message through the Lutheran Women’s Missionary League. Each

always found a way of com-municating the cross of Jesus in creative and helpful ways.

A worship service this Sunday in both Bishop and Mammoth will honor this dynamic duo. Before their death they moved to Orange to be closer to their chil-dren, in another corner of God’s Kingdom. They con-tinued to live and serve under the righteousness, innocence, and blessedness of their Savior. Sunday we will worship the Savior who brought them to be His own. You are welcome to join this great occasion: 8:45 a.m. at Mammoth Lakes Lutheran Church and 10:45 a.m. at Grace Lutheran Church in Bishop. Mammoth Lakes Lutheran is located on the corner of Old

Mammoth Road and Meridian. Grace Lutheran is at 711 N. Fowler St.

One pure, perfect “doer” of the word exists. His name is Jesus, who lived the word of the Lord for George and Joyce, and for you. Our perfect living, which God requires, will not hold a candle to the holy standard of God. Jesus was the Lord made flesh, is the Lord now, and will be the Lord forever. This living Lord Jesus is your Savior from all your lack of doing the perfect will of God. He loves you, and placed all your laxity of doing on His bloody body. You are forgiven, freed and have a blessed future in union with Him. His church is not a museum for saints, but a hospital for sinners.

See you this Sunday as we honor the Duerrs and most of all the Duerrs’ Savior, Jesus, the ultimate doer of the word.

(The Rev. Kent Puls serves

both Grace Lutheran and Mammoth Lakes Lutheran churches. Grace Lutheran Church is located at 711 N. Fowler St., Bishop. Sunday services are at 10:45 a.m. Mammoth Lakes Lutheran Church is located at 379 Old Mammoth Rd., Mammoth. Sunday service us at 8:45 a.m. For more information, call 760-872-9791.)

From the Pulpit

Duerrs of the Word

Free screening of documentary being held next Friday in BishopRegister Staff

A documentary about six ordinary individuals with six extraordinary stories will be shown to the public for free next week in Bishop.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 725 Keough St., is presenting “Meet the Mormons,” a film that challenges stereotypes and preconceived notions about the Mormon faith.

The screening begins at 7 p.m. next Friday, April 24. Refreshments will be pro-vided and a church tour will be available after the movie.

According to www.meetthemormons.com, the film examines the very diverse lives of six devout members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

“Filmed on location and across the globe, ‘Meet the Mormons’ takes viewers on a journey into the day-to-day realities of individuals living in the U.S., Costa Rica, Nepal and beyond,” the website states. “From their individu-al passions to their daily struggles, each story paints a picture as rich and unique as the next while challeng-ing the stereotypes that sur-round the Mormon faith.”

Following is a look at the six individuals filmgoers will be meeting, courtesy www. meetthemormons.com:

• The Humanitarian: Bishnu Adhikari – After leaving his village to receive a degree in Engineering, Bishnu Adhikari returned to his home in Nepal with a newfound faith and a deter-mination to help improve the living conditions of the area. Adhikari now travels to remote villages in the Himalayan Mountains to build roads, schools and water systems, all while liv-ing with his faith and respecting his culture and his family’s expectations.

• The Coach: Ken Niumatalolo – As Head Football Coach of the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., Ken

Film challenges Mormon stereotypes

Niumatalolo balances the pressures of his high-stress job by putting his family and faith first. In the com-petitive, high-stakes world of college football, he made the shocking decision to cancel staff meetings on Sundays, traditionally seen as critical to the team’s suc-cess, to instead honor the Sabbath day.

• The Fighter: Carolina Muñoz Marin – With her husband’s help, extreme sports enthusiast Carolina Muñoz Marin has fought her way to the top of wom-en’s amateur kickboxing in Costa Rica, challenging the traditional stereotypes of a Mormon woman. In between

family time and training for competitions, Marin and her husband run a charity to help those in Costa Rica who are less fortunate.

• The Bishop: Jermaine Sullivan – Jermaine Sullivan works full-time as an aca-demic counselor to 200 stu-dents in order to support his wife and three kids. He also volunteers full-time as a Bishop of a Mormon church in Atlanta, Ga. He leads his diverse congrega-tion with youthful exuber-ance while shattering ste-

reotypes of what it means to be a Mormon Bishop.

• The Missionary Mom: Dawn Armstrong – Dawn Armstrong, a struggling single mother, had hit rock bottom and lost all hope. Then she met some Mormon missionaries who helped her and her son get back on their feet and start a new life. Her son is now older and ready to fulfill his two-year voluntary missionary work. As she helps him pre-pare to leave home for the first time ever, she also pre-pares to say goodbye.

• The Candy Bomber: Col. Gail Halvorsen (Ret.) – Known as “The Candy Bomber” during the 1940s

Berlin Airlift, Gail Halvorsen sparked a movement when he started dropping candy tied to parachutes out of his airplane window to chil-dren below. This small act of kindness quickly became a life-saving boost to the morale of the people of West Berlin and soon caught worldwide attention and support.

For more information about the film, visit www.meetthemormons.com or call John Rawlins at (208) 589-1705.

“From their individual passions to their daily struggles, each story paints a picture as rich and unique as the next while challenging the stereotypes that surround the Mormon faith.”

– www.meetthemormons.com

RELIGIONThe Inyo Register

9SATURDAY, ApRil 18, 2015

COLumNIstPhiliP Severi

By the Creek

Quiet livingBy Sarah Bradfield

The screens beckon: “You’ve got mail,” Facebook notifications, tweets, text messages and a missed call. Being a Millennial means that I seldom remember a time when instant infor-mation and communication were not at my fingertips. Our phones and com-puters call for us to share every thought and image to document the human experience. We like our music loud, our movies in surround sound, and our televisions for background noise. Our country is not a quiet one.

So when God’s word speaks about living quietly, it stands in stark con-trast to all we’re used to.

In his first letter to the Thessalonians Paul writes , “… make it your ambition to lead a quiet life and attend to your own business and work with your own hands, just as we com-manded you, so that you will behave properly toward outsiders and not be in any need” (1 Thessalonians 4:11-12). Note here that this is a command, not merely a lifestyle preference. His command is threefold: study to be quiet, mind your own affairs, and work with your hands. Yet this is not a call to become a recluse. In Paul’s second letter to the Thessalonians we get an idea into what prompted his encouragement for quiet living, “For we hear that some among you walk in idleness, not busy at work, but busy-bodies. Now such persons we com-mand and encourage in the Lord Jesus Christ to do their work quietly and to earn their own living” (2 Thessalonians 3:11-12). The command to live quietly was preceded by those who were living loudly, worrying about everyone else.

Each passage from Thessalonians above uses the word peripateo, which means to walk. When our Christian walk, our manner of living, aligns with

scripture and is fueled by the Holy Spirit it will be a witness because it will be so obviously counter-cultural. Paul alludes to this type of powerful witness when he writes, “You are our letter, written in our hearts, known and read by all men being manifested that you are a letter of Christ, cared for by us, written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone, but on tablets of human hearts” (2 Corinthians 3:2-3).

So when a believer takes whatever job the Lord has assigned to him and completes it quietly with integrity, outsiders won’t be able to deny what he believes is manifested in how he behaves.

If you have not believed in the Lord Jesus Christ but agree that our world is far too loud, try being silent before Him. Moses told the Israelites before being delivered from the Egyptians, “The LORD will fight for you, and you have only to be silent” (Exodus 14:14). In the same manner, God has already fought for you. You and I both were in need of a Savior because of our sin. He gave His only Son, Who willingly gave His life and conquered death so that you may live. It is a free gift which you accept by believing on Him!

If you’ve already accepted that gift, continue walking the quiet life God has prescribed in His Word. Doing so will cause your light to shine, “that they may see your good deeds and glorify your heavenly Father” (Matthew 5:16).

(Sarah Bradfield is a member of

Bishop Creek Community Church, an Evangelical Free Church that meets Sundays meet Sundays at St. Timothy’s Anglican Church at 700 Hobson Ave., corner of Hobson and Keough, at 11 a.m. For more information, call 760-872-7188 or email www.BishopCreekCommunity.org.)

Nobody’s perfectAnyone familiar with

the space program knows of its need for absolute precision. From the calculations of flight paths to the moon during the Apollo Program, to the observations of the radio-telescope arrays at the Owens Valley Radio Observatory near Big Pine, precision is necessary to ensure astronauts leave and return safely or tele-scopes acquire the desired data. Letting things be off point a fraction of a degree can result in lost lives or useless information.

James recognized this need for precision as well. Chapter two closed with the remind-er that faith, the prime mover, is demonstrated by what a person does as a result of its pres-ence. Chapter three opens with what appears to be a differ-ent theme. Don’t be in a rush to be a teacher because teachers are held to a stricter stan-dard. That standard is literally measuring everything a teacher says, in or out of the classroom, against what he or she claims to be the truth. Absolute precision, plain and simple.

James is quick to point out the problems with such a high stan-dard. Nobody can real-

ly meet it all the time. If any of us could be 100 percent, 100 per-cent of the time, we would be perfect. And of course, nobody is, or we would not use the old phrase “I’m only human” when things go south.

James had to drive home that point. Space programs did not exist 2,000 years ago, so he put the problem in terms everyone could understand. A bit in the mouth of a horse gives the rider control over the horse, one of the most versatile and powerful creatures of his day. A small rudder controls the largest ship’s movements, even in the face of contrary winds and waves.

But here’s the kicker. Like that fraction of a degree off mentioned earlier, it is the small aspects of a person that can take matters off point. The tongue is

a small thing, just a bit of muscle tissue, with dual functions. The sense of taste, with the proper training, can both help us enjoy our food or warn us against something that can hurt us, for instance, a poison. That is the per-sonal application. The ability to speak, howev-er, affects us both indi-vidually and collective-ly. What we say can help or hurt, not only ourselves, but others.

The effects of words are both our strength and our weakness as Christians. We can introduce people to Christ, or we can make Him a non-entity. What we say and do matters. Given what James said about faith being proved by actions, this writer thinks he would have no trouble under-standing our own idiom on this subject. “Don’t talk the talk unless you can walk the walk.”

The good thing is, we do not have to walk the walk solely in our own strength. We always have God’s help avail-able.

(Philip Severi, a for-mer Bishop resident, previously wrote a weekly column for The Inyo Register. He con-tributes to this page from his home in Twain Harte.)

10 SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015 The Inyo Register

Retired Department of Fish and Wildlife biologist Phil Pister shared stories of his personal interactions with Norman Clyde during the 2014 Norman Clyde Birthday Bash, and will be at today’s second annual celebration with more anecdotes.

Photo by Darcy Ellis

saTurday 18 april 2015 B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV

B L C S1 S2 10 am 10:30 11 am 11:30 12 pm 12:30 1 pm 1:30 2 pm 2:30 3 pm 3:30 4 pm 4:30 2 2 2 2 (KCBS) Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Real Estate PGA Tour Golf RBC Heritage, Third Round. From Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head, S.C. Sports Central Lucky Dog Dr. Chris-Vet OK! TV 4 4 4 3 (KNBC) English Premier League Soccer Prem Goal Zone NHL Hockey Conference Quarterfinal: Teams TBA. Going Roggin Tree Fu Tom Open House Nightly News 5 5 5 5 (KTLA) Calling Dr. Pol Dog Whisperer Dog Whisperer Dog Whisperer Dog Whisperer Expedition Wild Expedition Wild Rock the Park Animal Atlas State to State Coolest Places On the Spot Make $$ in Real Estate Locally 6 (KOCE) Antiques Roadshow “Biloxi” Nature Building plans of animals. NOVA “The Great Math Mystery” Royal Paintbox Royal Memories: Prince Charles Time Goes By Time Goes By Antique Show Antique Show 7 7 7 7 (KABC) Ocean Mys. The Grantland Basketball Hour NBA Countdown NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. Sports Zone Sea Rescue Eyewitness News 4:00PM 8 19 (KOLO) Outback Adv The Grantland Basketball Hour NBA Countdown NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. Animal Adv Paid Program Paid Program Burn Notice Rescuing Fiona. 9 9 9 9 (KCAL) 21 DAY FIX Paid Program Aqua Kids Career Day WHADDYADO Wild America Hollywood Real Life 101 The First Family Mr. Box Office New TV Offer! REAL-Diego Hollywood Paid Program 11 11 11 (KTTV) (9:00) FA Cup Soccer Reading FC vs. Arsenal FC. Paid Program I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy UFC Fight Night Machida vs. Rockhold - Prelims. 10 28 28 (KCET) BrainChange With David Perlmutter, MD 30 Days to a Younger Heart With Dr. Steven Edible Garden: Breaking Ground Sacred Earth Things That Aren’t Here Anymore More 2 (KMGH) FeelSexy The Grantland Basketball Hour NBA Countdown NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. WEN Hair Care Hollywood World News 7News at 5PM Saturday 4 (KUSA) English Premier League Soccer Prem Goal Zone NHL Hockey Conference Quarterfinal: Teams TBA. New TV Offer! Nightly News 9News at 5pm 7 (KCNC) Paid Program Paid Program Top Blower Paid Program PGA Tour Golf RBC Heritage, Third Round. From Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head, S.C. The 19th Hole Evening News CBS4 News at 5

23 25 8 140 206 (ESPN) (9:30) 30 for 30 2015 Draft Academy SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. 24 26 15 144 209 (ESPN2) College Baseball Vanderbilt at South Carolina. From Carolina Stadium in Columbia, South Carolina. College Softball Florida at Georgia. SportsCenter Arena Football: Gladiators at Soul 25 27 (FXSP) College Softball Baylor at Oklahoma. College Softball Alabama-Birmingham at Charlotte. UEFA Europa League Highlights Angels Weekly Angels Pre. MLB Baseball: Angels at Astros 26 42 22 138 245 (TNT) Law & Order ››› The Matrix (1999, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss. ››› The Matrix Reloaded (2003) Keanu Reeves. Freedom fighters revolt against machines. 27 41 13 139 247 (TBS) (9:30) › Mr. Deeds (2002, Comedy) Adam Sandler. ›› The Replacements (2000, Comedy) Keanu Reeves, Gene Hackman. ›› Paul Blart: Mall Cop (2009, Comedy) Kevin James, Jayma Mays. Friends Friends 28 34 105 242 (USA) Dig “Trust No One” Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU 29 108 252 (LIFE) Paid Program WEN Hair Care Terra’s Little Terra’s Little › The Resident (2011) Hilary Swank, Jeffrey Dean Morgan. A Mother’s Revenge (1993) Lesley Ann Warren, Annette O’Toole. Movie 30 109 253 (LMN) (9:00) ›› The Girl Next Door ›› Vows of Deception (1996) Cheryl Ladd, Nick Mancuso. › The Perfect Wife (2000, Suspense) Perry King, Shannon Sturges. To Be Announced To Be Announced 31 74 9 182 278 (DISC) Fast N’ Loud Barrett-Jackson Live From the South Florida Fairgrounds in West Palm Beach, Fla. Fast N’ Loud Fast N’ Loud Fast N’ Loud 32 73 26 183 280 (TLC) Lottery Changed My Life Lottery Changed My Life Lottery Changed My Life Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Hoarding: Buried Alive 33 64 24 184 282 (AP) To Be Announced 34 36 120 269 (HIST) Universe--Mysteries Solved Universe--Mysteries Solved Universe--Mysteries Solved Engineering Disasters Ancient Aliens Ancient Aliens Ancient Aliens 35 43 25 118 265 (A&E) ›› Two Weeks Notice (2002) Sandra Bullock, Hugh Grant. Terra’s Little Terra’s Little Married at First Sight Married at First Sight Married at First Sight ›› Miss Congeniality (2000) 36 254 (AMC) (9:00) TURN: Washington’s Spies ››› McLintock! (1963) John Wayne. A cattle baron meets his match in a strong-willed woman. › Fool’s Gold (2008, Action) Matthew McConaughey, Kate Hudson. Jurassic Park III 37 132 256 (TCM) (9:15) Children of the Damned › Attack of the 50-Foot Woman (:15) ››› Airport (1970, Suspense) Burt Lancaster, Dean Martin. (:45) ››› The Great Train Robbery (1978) Sean Connery, Donald Sutherland. 38 19 180 311 (FAM) ››› The Rescuers (1977) Voices of Bob Newhart, Eva Gabor. ››› Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs (2009) Anna Faris ››› Cars (2006, Comedy) Voices of Owen Wilson, Paul Newman, Bonnie Hunt. ›› Cars 2 39 18 17 173 291 (DISN) Jessie Girl Meets Dog With a Blog Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Jessie Dog With a Blog Dog With a Blog Girl Meets Girl Meets Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Liv & Maddie Liv & Maddie 40 66 171 300 (NICK) SpongeBob Harvey Beaks Breadwinners Sanjay, Craig Power Rangers SpongeBob The Fairly OddParents Odd Parents SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Bella, Bulldogs Bella, Bulldogs 41 16 176 296 (TOON) Wrld, Gumball Clarence Clarence Steven Universe Steven Universe Uncle Grandpa Uncle Grandpa Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Clarence Clarence Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball 42 44 112 229 (HGTV) Love It or List It, Too Love It or List It, Too Love It or List It, Too House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters 43 45 110 231 (FOOD) Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Restaurant: Impossible Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Guy’s Grocery Games Food Fortunes “Meal or No Deal” Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen 44 40 137 248 (FX) Two/Half Men Two/Half Men ››› Premium Rush (2012, Action) Joseph Gordon-Levitt. ›› Broken City (2013, Crime Drama) Mark Wahlberg, Russell Crowe. › The Watch (2012) Ben Stiller, Vince Vaughn. 45 37 107 249 (COM) (:06) South Park (:38) ››› Role Models (2008) Seann William Scott, Paul Rudd. (:42) ›› Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls (1995) Jim Carrey. (:45) ›› Ace Ventura: Pet Detective (1994, Comedy) Jim Carrey, Courteney Cox. 46 76 16 168 325 (SPIKE) (9:00) ››› Kick-Ass (2010) Aaron Johnson. › Never Back Down (2008, Action) Djimon Hounsou, Sean Faris, Amber Heard. Cops Cops Cops Cops Jail Cops 48 75 122 244 (SYFY) Bitten “Scare Tactics” ›› The Wolfman (2010) Benicio Del Toro, Anthony Hopkins. ››› The Descent (2005) Shauna Macdonald, Natalie Mendoza. ›› The Descent: Part 2 (2009, Horror) Shauna Macdonald. 63 106 (TVL) (:12) Family Feud Family Feud The Soul Man America’s Funniest Home Videos (:12) America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos (:36) America’s Funniest Home Videos 64 203 129 273 (BRAVO) Good Work Southern Charm “No Good Deed” Southern Charm “Shep-Istotle” Shahs of Sunset Shahs of Sunset Million Dollar Listing New York Housewives/NYC 65 114 236 (E!) E! News Weekend › Bring It On Again (2004) Anne Judson-Yager, Bree Turner. ›› Bring It On: All or Nothing (2006, Comedy) Hayden Panettiere. ››› Bring It On: In It to Win It (2007, Comedy) Ashley Benson. 66 204 246 (TRUTV) World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... 67 63 215 277 (TRAV) Bourdain: No Reservations Bourdain: No Reservations Man v. Food Man v. Food Man v. Food Man v. Food Man Finds Food Man Finds Food Food Paradise Food Paradise 69 99 260 372 (TBN) Ishine Knect Insp. Station Nest Family VeggieTales Heroes & Legends of Bible Bless the Lord Christian News Breaking the Press (2010, Drama) Drew Waters. Bless the Lord Precious Memories 70 374 (BYU) College Football Megacities “Las Vegas” Passport: Earth Inventions That Shook the World ›› Newsies (1992, Musical) Christian Bale, Robert Duvall, Ann-Margret. The Story Trek 76 115 235 (ESQTV) ›› Office Space (1999) Ron Livingston, Jennifer Aniston. The Runner-Up “Run Clay, Run!” The Runner-Up Brew Dogs “Louisville” Best Bars in America Best Bars in America 79 35 185 312 (HALL) ››› Wedding Daze (2004) John Larroquette, Karen Valentine. Nearlyweds (2013) Danielle Panabaker, Naomi Judd. A Wish Come True (2015) Megan Park, Benjamin Hollingsworth. I Do, I Do, I Do (2015, Romance)

saTurday 18 april 2015 B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV

B L 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 2 2 2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News Evening News CBS 2 News The Insider Entertainment Tonight CSI: Crime Scene Investigation NCIS: Los Angeles “Reign Fall” 48 Hours CBS 2 News SoCal Week 4 4 4 3 (KNBC) NHL Hockey Pittsburgh Penguins at New York Rangers. Eastern Conference Quarterfinal, game 2. Access Hollywood Extra Dateline NBC “Written in Blood” NBC 4 News Sat. Night Live 5 5 5 5 (KTLA) Name Game Name Game KTLA News at 6 News at 6:30 Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Family Guy Family Guy KTLA 5 News at 10 News at 11 Walk-Remembr 6 (KOCE) LAaRT NewsHour Wk The Lawrence Welk Show Antiques Roadshow (7:55) Call the Midwife Masterpiece Classic The Jewel in the Crown The Jewel in the Crown 7 7 7 7 (KABC) News 4:00PM World News News Vista L.A. Jeopardy! Wheel Fortune 20/20 20/20 Castle “Child’s Play” Eyewitness News 11:00PM 8 19 (KOLO) Anti-Aging Larry King Spc. World News KOLO 8 6:30 Jeopardy! Wheel Fortune 20/20 20/20 Castle “Child’s Play” KOLO 8 at 11 Burn Notice 9 9 9 9 (KCAL) Sexy Face at Paid Program Raw Travel 21 Day Fix Sports Central Crime Stoppers KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM KCAL 9 News Sports Central Mike & Molly Mike & Molly 11 11 11 (KTTV) UFC Fight Night Machida vs. Rockhold. Storm Stories Storm Stories RightThisMinute RightThisMinute TMZ Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News Animation Domination High-Def 10 28 28 (KCET) More Things That Aren’t Here BBC Newsnight McLaughlin Visiting... With Huell Howser Golden State of Mind: The Storytelling Dudu Fisher The Voice of Broadway New Tricks “Bermondsey Boy” 2 (KMGH) Operation Smile 20/20 20/20 Castle “Child’s Play” 7Sports Xtra (:35) Castle “A Deadly Game” RightThisMinute (:05) Comedy.TV 4 (KUSA) NHL Hockey Pittsburgh Penguins at New York Rangers. Eastern Conference Quarterfinal, game 2. Dateline NBC “Written in Blood” 9News at 10pm (:35) Saturday Night Live Your Move (:39) Extra 7 (KCNC) Paid Program Paid Program CSI: Crime Scene Investigation NCIS: Los Angeles “Reign Fall” 48 Hours News (:35) Blue Bloods “Loss of Faith” (:35) The Good Wife (:35) The Closer

23 25 8 140 206 (ESPN) NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. SportsCenter SportsCenter 24 26 15 144 209 (ESPN2) Arena Football: Gladiators at Soul SportsCenter Baseball Tonight SportsCenter SportsCenter NBA Tonight Baseball Tonight NBA Tonight 25 27 (FXSP) MLB Baseball Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim at Houston Astros. Angels Post Angels Weekly MLB Baseball Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim at Houston Astros. Angels Post Angels Weekly World Poker 26 42 22 138 245 (TNT) ›› The Matrix Revolutions (2003, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne. ››› Transformers (2007) Shia LaBeouf, Tyrese Gibson. Two races of robots wage war on Earth. (:03) ››› Transformers (2007) 27 41 13 139 247 (TBS) Friends Friends Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Your Family Meet the Smiths 28 34 105 242 (USA) Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Modern Family Modern Family 29 108 252 (LIFE) (4:00) Movie Text to Kill (2015, Suspense) Dina Meyer, Emily Tennant. Deadly Revenge (2013, Suspense) Alicia Ziegler, Mark Hapka. (:02) Her Infidelity (2015, Suspense) Rachel Hunter, Lane Edwards. 30 109 253 (LMN) The Haunting Of... The Haunting Of... “Diane Farr” Intervention “Darick” Intervention “Rachel” The Haunting Of... The Haunting Of... “Diane Farr” Intervention “Darick” 31 74 9 182 278 (DISC) Fast N’ Loud Fast N’ Loud A ’71 Challenger. Fast N’ Loud Dual Survival “Waterlogged” Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival 32 73 26 183 280 (TLC) Hoarding: Buried Alive Hoarding: Buried Alive Hoarding: Buried Alive My 600-Lb. Life “Amber’s Story” My 600-Lb. Life “Susan’s Story” My 600-Lb. Life “Pauline’s Story” My 600-Lb. Life “Tara’s Story” 33 64 24 184 282 (AP) To Be Announced My Cat From Hell My Cat From Hell My Cat From Hell Treehouse Masters My Cat From Hell 34 36 120 269 (HIST) Ancient Aliens Ancient Aliens Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Universe--Mysteries Solved (:03) Engineering Disasters (:03) Hangar 1: The UFO Files 35 43 25 118 265 (A&E) (4:00) ›› Miss Congeniality ›› Two Weeks Notice (2002) Sandra Bullock, Hugh Grant. ›› The Proposal (2009) Sandra Bullock, Ryan Reynolds. (:01) Married at First Sight (:02) Married at First Sight 36 254 (AMC) (4:30) ›› Jurassic Park III (2001) Sam Neill. ›› The Day After Tomorrow (2004, Action) Dennis Quaid, Jake Gyllenhaal. Orphan Black ›› The Day After Tomorrow (2004, Action) Dennis Quaid. 37 132 256 (TCM) ›››› The Hustler (1961, Drama) Paul Newman, Jackie Gleason, George C. Scott. ››› The Brave Bulls (1951, Drama) Mel Ferrer, Anthony Quinn. ››› All the King’s Men (1949) Broderick Crawford, Joanne Dru. Cat O’ 9 Tails 38 19 180 311 (FAM) (4:30) ›› Cars 2 (2011, Comedy) Voices of Owen Wilson. ››› Horton Hears a Who! (2008, Adventure) Voices of Jim Carrey. ››› Kung Fu Panda (2008) Voices of Jack Black, Angelina Jolie. ››› Hook (1991, Fantasy) 39 18 17 173 291 (DISN) Jessie (:25) Jessie (:15) Jessie Dog With a Blog Girl Meets (:45) Bad Hair Day (2015, Comedy) Laura Marano, Leigh-Allyn Baker. Kirby Buckets Lab Rats: Bio. Mighty Med Liv & Maddie Dog With a Blog 40 66 171 300 (NICK) Nicky, Ricky Nicky, Ricky Thundermans Thundermans Henry Danger Henry Danger Henry Danger Bella, Bulldogs Nicky, Ricky Thundermans Friends The 2015 TV Land Awards 41 16 176 296 (TOON) Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Dragon Ball Z King of the Hill Cleveland Show Cleveland Show The Boondocks American Dad American Dad Family Guy 42 44 112 229 (HGTV) House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Renovation Log Cabin Lvn Log Cabin Lvn 43 45 110 231 (FOOD) Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen 44 40 137 248 (FX) (3:30) › The Watch (2012) ›› Here Comes the Boom (2012) Kevin James, Salma Hayek. ›› Ted (2012, Comedy) Mark Wahlberg, Mila Kunis, Voices of Seth MacFarlane. Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly 45 37 107 249 (COM) (4:48) ››› Role Models (2008) Seann William Scott, Paul Rudd. (6:55) ›› Liar Liar (1997, Comedy) Jim Carrey, Maura Tierney. ›› Liar Liar (1997, Comedy) Jim Carrey, Maura Tierney. Zack and Miri Make a Porno 46 76 16 168 325 (SPIKE) Cops Jail Cops Cops Cops Cops “Busted!” Cops Cops Auction Hunters Auction Hunters Cops Cops ››› Kick-Ass (2010, Action) 48 75 122 244 (SYFY) ›› Resident Evil: Extinction (2007) Milla Jovovich, Oded Fehr. › Silent Hill: Revelation (2012) Adelaide Clemens, Kit Harington. ›› Underworld (2003, Horror) Kate Beckinsale, Scott Speedman, Michael Sheen. 30 Days-Night 63 106 (TVL) America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos Love-Raymond Love-Raymond The 2015 TV Land Awards Younger “Pilot” Younger “IRL” Younger 64 203 129 273 (BRAVO) Housewives/NYC Real Housewives/Beverly Real Housewives/Beverly To Be Announced ›› 50 First Dates (2004) Adam Sandler, Drew Barrymore. ›› 50 First Dates (2004) 65 114 236 (E!) ›› Bring It On: Fight to the Finish (2009, Comedy) Christina Milian. Grace Helbig Grace Helbig Botched “I Love New Work” Good Work Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians 66 204 246 (TRUTV) World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... World’s Dumbest... A Grown Up A Grown Up 67 63 215 277 (TRAV) Ghost Adventures “New Orleans” Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files The Dead Files 69 99 260 372 (TBN) In Touch W/Charles Stanley Hour Of Power with Bobby Billy Graham Classic Crusades The Investigator (2013, Drama) Wade Williams-James, David Sanborn. Praise the Lord 70 374 (BYU) Sue Thomas F.B.Eye College Volleyball Hawaii at BYU. Megacities “Las Vegas” Studio C Audio Files American Ride The Story Trek ›› Newsies (1992, Musical) 76 115 235 (ESQTV) Best Bars in America Best Bars in America “Louisville” ›› Beerfest (2006) Jay Chandrasekhar. Brothers play beer games in Germany. Best Bars in America “Louisville” Brew Dogs “Louisville” ›› Beerfest 79 35 185 312 (HALL) (4:00) I Do, I Do, I Do (2015) Surprised by Love (2015, Romance) Hilarie Burton, Paul Campbell. Good Witch “True Colors” The future of Bell, Book and Candle. For Better or for Worse (2014) Lisa Whelchel, Kim Fields.

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TV SATURDAYFOR Owned and Run By Animal Lovers!!1260 N. Main Street on Hwy. 6 in Bishop

760-872-8010

Wye RoadFeed & Supply

Open 7 Days a Week

COMMUNITY CALENDARPrivate businesses or groups holding

events for profit are not eligible to use this section. Due to space limitations, we can only guarantee one run per item. All submissions are subject to editing.

Saturday, April 18FIRE DEPARTMENT FUNDRAISER

The Bishop Country Club is holding a fundrais-ing golf tournament for the Wheeler Crest and Paradise Fire departments. The format is 4-person scrambles with a 9:30 a.m. shotgun start. There will be team and individual prizes, a raffle, lunch and awards. The fee is $50 for members, $75 for guests. Hole sponsorship is available for $100. Call BCC to sign up at (760) 873-5828.

LONE PINE TRIbAL EARTh DAYThe Lone Pine Paiute-Shoshone Reservation

invites the community to participate in the Third Annual Lone Pine Tribal Earth Day Celebration from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. at the Lone Pine Paiute-Shoshone Reservation Gymnasium, 1145 E-Sha Ln. This year’s theme is “One Earth, One Chance.” Events will include a reservation road cleanup, a community outreach fair and a luncheon. For more information, contact Lone Pine Paiute-Shoshone Reservation Environmental Director Mel Joseph at (760) 876-4690.

NORMAN CLYDE bIRThDAY bAShLive music by local band Idle Hands, free food

and cake, a “Pack With Legs” fun walk starting at 11 a.m. and guest speakers at 1 p.m. will all be part of the second annual Norman Clyde Birthday Bash being held at the Eastern California Museum, 155 N. Grant St., in Independence. The event hon-ors local climbing legend Norman Clyde, who recorded 100 first ascents in the Sierra, and would be 130 years old this year. For information, call (760) 878-0258 or check the museum’s Facebook page.

bINgO AT SENIOR CENTERAARP is offering bingo at 6 p.m. at the

Bishop Senior Center behind the City Park.

Everyone age 18 and older is welcome to attend. Callers and cashiers are needed. For more infor-mation, call (760) 873-5839.

Sunday, April 19EARTh DAY AND SPRINg MARkET

The Bishop Paiute Tribe’s Earth Day Community Clean-up and Spring Market will be held from 8 a.m.-2 p.m., at the Owens Valley Paiute Shoshone Cultural Center, 2300 W. Line St. Join in celebrat-ing Earth Day with stewardship projects in the community. The day is filled with activities and informational booths, along with Native American craft vendors, food booths, live music, kite flying and more. For more information, call Brian Adkins at (760) 873-3584. This event is open to the pub-lic.

POETRY READINgThere will be a poetry reading at 2 p.m. at

The Imagination Lab, 621 W. Line, Ste. 204, across from Dwayne’s in downtown Bishop. The event is free and there will be discussion and goodies.

Monday, April 20hULA gIRLS

The Hula Halau O Koru meets every Monday at 5:45 p.m. at the Jill Kinmont Boothe School on Grandview Drive. New dancers are always welcome. For more information, call Kymberlee Nalumaluhia at (760) 873-9818 or email at [email protected].

bRIDgE IN bIShOPThe Bishop Bridge Club will meet at 12:15

p.m. at St. Timothy’s Church Hall, 700 Hobson St., Bishop. For more information, call (760) 873-4325.

Tuesday, April 21ROTARY CLUb OF bIShOP

The Rotary Club of Bishop will meet at noon at Astorga’s Restaurant, 2206 N. Sierra Hwy., Bishop. Rotary is a global network of community

volunteers. Call Ed Nahin at (760) 872-2022 for more information.

FREE COMPUTER CLASSESFree weekly computer and Internet classes

are held at the Bishop Branch Library, 210 Academy St., Bishop, from 3-4:30 p.m. for begin-ners and 6-7:30 p.m. for users at the intermedi-ate level. The purpose of these free weekly ses-sions is to help the residents of Bishop become

more acquainted with computer and Internet skills needed in today’s online environment. If you are scared of using technology, this class is for you. It is a hands-on, interactive learning experience (iPads provided) that requires no previous knowledge. Any and all questions are welcome! For more information, contact the Bishop Library at (760) 873-5115.

bINgO AT SENIOR CENTERAARP is offering bingo at 1 p.m. at the

Bishop Senior Center behind the City Park. Everyone age 18 and older is welcome to attend. Callers and cashiers are needed. For more infor-mation, call (760) 873-5839.

Wednesday, April 22hOSPITAL AUxILIARY

The Northern Inyo Hospital Auxiliary will hold a workshop at 10 a.m. at the annex building, corner of Birch and Grandview in Bishop. Anyone is welcome who is interested in helping to vol-unteer to raise money for life-saving equipment for the hospital. For more information, call Shirley Stone at (760) 872-1914.

AARP DRIvER SAFETY PROgRAMThe AARP of Bishop is sponsoring a driver

safety program today and tomorrow at the VFW Hall in Bishop. Both classes will begin at 8:30 a.m. Those who complete the class could be eligible for insurance discounts. To register, or for more information, call Danielle White at (760) 873-5839.

SUNRISE ROTARYBishop Sunrise Rotary will meet at 7:11 a.m.

at the Northern Inyo Hospital Conference Annex at 2957 Birch St., Bishop. For more information, contact Tom Hardy at (760) 920-0109 or [email protected] or visit: www.bishopsunrisero-tary.org.

bRIDgE IN bIShOPThe Bishop Bridge Club will meet at 12:15

p.m. at St. Timothy’s Church Hall, 700 Hobson

St., Bishop. For more information, call (760) 873-4325.

Thursday, April 23TAkE OFF POUNDS SENSIbLY

The local Take Off Pounds Sensibly group, which promotes weight management with a philosophy that combines healthy eating, exer-cise, wellness, education and peer support, will meet at 6 p.m. at the Highlands Mobile Home Park Senior Club House. The TOPS group is open to men, women and teens. For more information, call Teresa at (760) 872-6729.

UNITED wE RIDEUnited We Ride will meet for its monthly

meeting at 6 p.m. in the conference room at the Pizza Factory in Bishop. All riders are welcome. For more information, call Dale Renfro at (760) 873-7632.

wEIghT wATChERS MEETINgA Weight Watchers group meets from 5:30-6

p.m. Thursdays, with weigh-in from 5-5:30 p.m., at St. Timothy’s Church, 700 Hobson St. in Bishop. Visitors are welcome to attend.

bINgO AT SENIOR CENTERAARP is offering bingo at 1 p.m. at the

Bishop Senior Center behind the City Park. Everyone age 18 and older is welcome to attend. Callers and cashiers are needed. For more infor-mation, call (760) 873-5839.

Friday, April 24MOvIE SCREENINg AT LDS ChURCh

The community is invited to a free screening of the documentary “Meet the Mormons,” a docu-mentary about “six ordinary individuals” with “six extraordinary stories,” beginning at 7 p.m. at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 725 Ke-ough St., Bishop. Refreshments will be provided and a church tour is available after the movie. For more information, call John Rawlins at (208) 589-1705.

The Inyo Register SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015 11

sunday 19 april 2015 B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV

B L C S1 S2 10 am 10:30 11 am 11:30 12 pm 12:30 1 pm 1:30 2 pm 2:30 3 pm 3:30 4 pm 4:30 2 2 2 2 (KCBS) Bull Riding Making Cancer History PGA Tour Golf RBC Heritage, Final Round. From Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head, S.C. Sports Central Anti-Aging Paid Program Raw Travel 4 4 4 3 (KNBC) (9:00) NHL Hockey Washington Capitals at New York Islanders. NHL Hockey Nashville Predators at Chicago Blackhawks. Western Conference Quarterfinal, game 3. On the Money Earth to Luna! Poppy Cat Open House 5 5 5 5 (KTLA) Hour Of Power with Bobby Real Estate Paid Program Real Estate Real Estate Cosmetic Surg Real Estate Laura McKenzie The Middle The Middle ›› The Art of War (2000) Wesley Snipes. 6 (KOCE) Aging Backwards Dr. Christiane Northrup -- Glorious Women Never Age! Healing ADD With Dr. Daniel Amen, MD & Tana Amen, RN Rick Steves’ Turkey 7 7 7 7 (KABC) Outback Adv 2015 Draft Academy NBA Countdown NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. Sports Zone Born to Explore Eyewitness News 4:00PM 8 19 (KOLO) Paid Program 2015 Draft Academy NBA Countdown NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. Coolest Places Its Not Just 21 Day Fix Castle “A Deadly Game” 9 9 9 9 (KCAL) Paid Program Woodlands Real Estate Paid Program 21 DAY FIX Real Estate White Collar “Dentist of Detroit” Young! Paid Program Engagement Engagement FeelSexy Focus T25 11 11 11 (KTTV) NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup Series: Food City 500. From Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tenn. RightThisMinute I Love Lucy I Love Lucy Teen Kids News Winning Edge TMZ 10 28 28 (KCET) Rick Steves’ Europe: A Cultural Carnival Over Hawai’i The cultural traditions of Hawaii. Celtic Thunder Heritage Celtic and Irish roots. WAR: KCET Pledge Special Shimon Return 2 (KMGH) Estate 2015 Draft Academy NBA Countdown NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. 21 DAY FIX Ask America World News 7News at 5PM Sunday 4 (KUSA) (9:00) NHL Hockey Washington Capitals at New York Islanders. NHL Hockey Nashville Predators at Chicago Blackhawks. Western Conference Quarterfinal, game 3. Paid Program Nightly News 9News at 5pm 7 (KCNC) Bull Riding Making Cancer History PGA Tour Golf RBC Heritage, Final Round. From Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head, S.C. Like a Pro! Evening News CBS4 News at 5

23 25 8 140 206 (ESPN) PBA Bowling Elias Cup Finals. From Portland, Me. College Softball Oregon at Stanford. SportsCenter SportsCenter Sunday Night Countdown 24 26 15 144 209 (ESPN2) Year of the Quarterback SEC Storied 30 for 30 MLS Soccer New England Revolution at Philadelphia Union. 30 for 30 25 27 (FXSP) Angels Weekly Angels Pre. MLB Baseball Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim at Houston Astros. From Minute Maid Park in Houston. Angels Post Angels Weekly Golf Life UEFA Magazine The Game 365 Destination Pol. 26 42 22 138 245 (TNT) ›› Bad Boys II (2003, Action) Martin Lawrence, Will Smith, Jordi Mollà. › Rush Hour 3 (2007, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker. NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. 27 41 13 139 247 (TBS) (9:00) ›› Zoolander (2001) ›› The Hangover Part II (2011) Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms. ›› The Campaign (2012) Will Ferrell, Zach Galifianakis. ››› Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004) Will Ferrell. 28 34 105 242 (USA) NCIS “Reveille” NCIS “Forced Entry” NCIS “Under Covers” NCIS “Bloodbath” NCIS “Once a Hero” NCIS “Driven” NCIS Intelligence officer is killed. 29 108 252 (LIFE) The Boy Next Door (2008) Dina Meyer, Christopher Russell. The Lizzie Borden Chronicles The Lizzie Borden Chronicles Her Infidelity (2015, Suspense) Rachel Hunter, Lane Edwards. Dark Desire (2012) Kelly Lynch. 30 109 253 (LMN) (9:00) Night of Terror (2006) Killshot (2009, Drama) Diane Lane, Mickey Rourke, Thomas Jane. ››› Cries in the Dark (2006) Eva La Rue, Adam Harrington. Megachurch Murder (2015) Tamala Jones, Malcolm-Jamal Warner. 31 74 9 182 278 (DISC) (9:00) Deadliest Catch Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Buying Alaska Buying Alaska Epic Bar Builds Naked and Afraid 32 73 26 183 280 (TLC) Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL My 600-Lb. Life: Where Are They My 600-Lb. Life: Where Are They 33 64 24 184 282 (AP) To Be Announced 34 36 120 269 (HIST) WWI: The First Modern War WW2 From Space Ten tipping points of World War II. The World Wars War breaks out again under new leaders. The World Wars Tension simmers throughout the world. 35 43 25 118 265 (A&E) Criminal Minds Criminal Minds “A Real Rain” Bates Motel “The Deal” Bates Motel “Norma Louise” The Returned “Lucy” The First 48 The First 48 36 254 (AMC) National Lampoon’s Vacation TURN: Washington’s Spies Abe wants to infiltrate New York City. ›› Sahara (2005) Matthew McConaughey. Adventurers search for a Confederate ship in Africa. ››› Air Force One (1997) 37 132 256 (TCM) (9:00) D.O.A. ››› In Cold Blood (1967, Docudrama) Robert Blake, Scott Wilson. ››› The China Syndrome (1979) Jane Fonda, Jack Lemmon. (:15) ›››› The Third Man (1949) Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten. 38 19 180 311 (FAM) ››› Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs (2009) Anna Faris ››› Cars (2006, Comedy) Voices of Owen Wilson, Paul Newman, Bonnie Hunt. ›› Cars 2 (2011, Comedy) Voices of Owen Wilson, Larry the Cable Guy. 39 18 17 173 291 (DISN) Liv & Maddie K.C. Undercover Jessie I Didn’t Do It Liv & Maddie Liv & Maddie Austin & Ally Austin & Ally K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover Jessie Jessie Dog With a Blog Dog With a Blog 40 66 171 300 (NICK) SpongeBob SpongeBob Teenage Mut. SpongeBob Monster High: Haunted (2015) Laura Bailey SpongeBob Bella, Bulldogs Bella, Bulldogs Henry Danger Henry Danger SpongeBob SpongeBob 41 16 176 296 (TOON) Teen Titans Go! Clarence Clarence Steven Universe Steven Universe Uncle Grandpa Uncle Grandpa Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Clarence Clarence Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball 42 44 112 229 (HGTV) Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Building Hawaii Building Hawaii Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers 43 45 110 231 (FOOD) The Kitchen “Spring Cooking” Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen All-Star Academy Guy’s Grocery Games 44 40 137 248 (FX) How I Met ›› Broken City (2013, Crime Drama) Mark Wahlberg, Russell Crowe. › The Watch (2012, Comedy) Ben Stiller, Vince Vaughn, Jonah Hill. ›› Here Comes the Boom (2012) Kevin James. 45 37 107 249 (COM) (8:46) › Half Baked (1998) (10:56) › How High (2001, Comedy) Method Man, Redman. (12:59) ›› Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay (2008) Kal Penn. Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay 46 76 16 168 325 (SPIKE) Truck Tech Detroit Muscle Bar Rescue “Swanky Troubles” Bar Rescue Bar Rescue “Twin vs. Twin” Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue 48 75 122 244 (SYFY) Stake Land (2010, Horror) Nick Damici, Connor Paolo. ›› 30 Days of Night (2007, Horror) Josh Hartnett, Melissa George. ›› Resident Evil: Extinction (2007) Milla Jovovich, Oded Fehr. Silent Hill: Rev 63 106 (TVL) The 2015 TV Land Awards Hot, Cleveland America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos 64 203 129 273 (BRAVO) The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta 65 114 236 (E!) The Royals “Sweet, Not Lasting” The Royals Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Good Work Botched “I Love New Work” Keeping Up With the Kardashians 66 204 246 (TRUTV) Barmageddon Barmageddon Barmageddon Barmageddon Barmageddon Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. 67 63 215 277 (TRAV) Mysteries at the Museum Breaking Borders Bourdain: No Reservations Best Parks Ever Best Parks Ever Best Parks Ever Best Parks Ever Extreme RVs Food Paradise Food Paradise 69 99 260 372 (TBN) PowerPoint It Is Written Pathway Victory Supernatural Daniel Kolenda Jesse Duplantis John Hagee MarriageToday Balanced Living Gregory Dickow T.D. Jakes Joyce Meyer Lead the Way The Blessed 70 374 (BYU) (9:00) LDS General Conference Joseph Smith Joseph Smith Book/Mormon Book/Mormon BYU Idaho Dev. Profiles The District Music & Word BYU Devotional Address Generations Project “Rachel” 76 115 235 (ESQTV) Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat 79 35 185 312 (HALL) Golden Girls Golden Girls Love by the Book (2014, Romance) Leah Renee, Kristopher Turner. Good Witch “True Colors” The future of Bell, Book and Candle. Surprised by Love (2015, Romance) Hilarie Burton, Paul Campbell.

sunday 19 april 2015 B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV

B L 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 2 2 2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News Evening News CBS 2 News at 6PM 60 Minutes The 50th Academy of Country Music Awards Honoring achievement in country music. CBS 2 News 4 4 4 3 (KNBC) NBC 4 News Nightly News NBC 4 News Dateline NBC A.D. The Bible Continues A.D. The Bible Continues (:01) American Odyssey NBC 4 News NBC 4 News 5 5 5 5 (KTLA) (3:30) ›› The Art of War (2000) KTLA News at 6 News at 6:30 Monopoly Millionaires’ Club Friends Friends KTLA 5 News Sunday Edition KTLA 5 News at 10 News at 11 Bensinger 6 (KOCE) Studio SoCaL NewsHour Wk Masterpiece Mystery! The Doctor Blake Mysteries Call the Midwife (:05) Masterpiece Classic Wolf Hall on Masterpiece Rick Steves’ Turkey 7 7 7 7 (KABC) News 4:00PM World News News Eye on L.A. America’s Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time Secrets and Lies “The Son” (:01) Revenge “Burn” Eyewitness News 11:00PM 8 19 (KOLO) Larry King MomsEveryday World News KOLO 8 6:30 America’s Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time Secrets and Lies “The Son” (:01) Revenge “Burn” KOLO 8 at 11 (:35) Castle 9 9 9 9 (KCAL) Tim McCarver Sports Central Raising Hope Raising Hope Mike & Molly Mike & Molly KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM KCAL 9 News Sports Central Joel Osteen Elevate Life 11 11 11 (KTTV) Studio 11 LA News Modern Family Modern Family The Simpsons Bob’s Burgers The Simpsons Brooklyn Nine Family Guy Last Man-Earth Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News The Simpsons TMZ 10 28 28 (KCET) Shimon Return SoCal Artbound Studio A Huell Howser Huell Howser Father Brown Vera Vera investigates a murder. He Touched Me: Gospel Music of Elvis Presley 2 (KMGH) America’s Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time Secrets and Lies “The Son” (:01) Revenge “Burn” 7News at 10PM News Castle “A Deadly Game” Scandal 4 (KUSA) Dateline NBC A.D. The Bible Continues A.D. The Bible Continues (:01) American Odyssey 9News at 10pm 9News Whacked Out Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program 7 (KCNC) 60 Minutes The 50th Academy of Country Music Awards Honoring achievement in country music. News AutoNation All Blue Bloods “Ends and Means” The Good Wife

23 25 8 140 206 (ESPN) MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at St. Louis Cardinals. From Busch Stadium in St. Louis. SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter 24 26 15 144 209 (ESPN2) 30 for 30 30 for 30 30 for 30 Shorts ESPN FC NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. MLB Baseball 25 27 (FXSP) PowerShares Champions Series Tennis World Poker World Poker UFC Unleashed Halo Hitters Angels Weekly World Poker 26 42 22 138 245 (TNT) NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. Inside the NBA NBA Basketball 27 41 13 139 247 (TBS) ›› Old School (2003, Comedy) Luke Wilson, Will Ferrell. Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang ›› Old School (2003) 28 34 105 242 (USA) NCIS “Hide and Seek” NCIS “Outlaws and In-Laws” NCIS “Guilty Pleasure” NCIS “Enemy on the Hill” NCIS “Thirst” NCIS “Housekeeping” Dig “Trust No One” 29 108 252 (LIFE) (4:00) Dark Desire (2012) Deadly Revenge (2013, Suspense) Alicia Ziegler, Mark Hapka. › Obsessed (2009, Suspense) Idris Elba, Beyoncé Knowles. The Lizzie Borden Chronicles The Lizzie Borden Chronicles 30 109 253 (LMN) Assumed Killer (2013, Drama) Casper Van Dien, Barbie Castro. ›› Deadly Sibling Rivalry (2011, Suspense) Charisma Carpenter. Assumed Killer (2013, Drama) Casper Van Dien, Barbie Castro. ›› Deadly Sibling Rivalry 31 74 9 182 278 (DISC) Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid “Primal Fear” Naked and Afraid “Survival Countdown” Naked and Afraid (:01) Naked and Afraid 32 73 26 183 280 (TLC) My 600-Lb. Life “James’ Story” My 600-Lb. Life “Chay’s Story” My 600-Lb. Life “Marla’s Story” Island Medium Island Medium Island Medium Island Medium Who Do You Think You Are? Island Medium Island Medium 33 64 24 184 282 (AP) To Be Announced River Monsters River Monsters River Monsters 100 Miles From Nowhere River Monsters 34 36 120 269 (HIST) The World Wars A global war is ignited. American Pickers Ax Men “Great Logs of Fire” Ax Men “All Hands on Deck” (:03) Rivermen “The River Calls” (:03) Vikings “Breaking Point” 35 43 25 118 265 (A&E) The First 48 Intervention “Tyler” Intervention “Katie” Intervention “Zach; Theresa” Intervention “Allisha” Intervention “Daniel” (:01) 8 Minutes “Gorilla Pimped” 36 254 (AMC) (4:00) ››› Air Force One (1997) Harrison Ford, Gary Oldman. ›››› The Shawshank Redemption (1994, Drama) Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman, Bob Gunton. Mad Men “The Forecast” (:04) Mad Men “The Forecast” 37 132 256 (TCM) ›› My Reputation (1946) Barbara Stanwyck, George Brent. ››› Baby Face (1933, Drama) Barbara Stanwyck, George Brent. ›››› Intolerance (1916) Lillian Gish, Robert Harron. Silent. People battle prejudice and inhumanity. 38 19 180 311 (FAM) ››› Horton Hears a Who! (2008, Adventure) Voices of Jim Carrey. ››› Kung Fu Panda (2008) Voices of Jack Black, Angelina Jolie. ››› Rio (2011) Voices of Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg. Young & Hungry Young & Hungry 39 18 17 173 291 (DISN) Austin & Ally (:20) Bad Hair Day (2015, Comedy) Laura Marano. (:05) Jessie Liv & Maddie Austin & Ally K.C. Undercover I Didn’t Do It Girl Meets Dog With a Blog Liv & Maddie Liv & Maddie Austin & Ally 40 66 171 300 (NICK) SpongeBob SpongeBob Breadwinners SpongeBob Harvey Beaks Sanjay, Craig ››› The Parent Trap (1998) Lindsay Lohan. Reunited twin girls try to get their parents back together. Friends (:36) Friends 41 16 176 296 (TOON) Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Adventure Time Adventure Time Adventure Time Adventure Time The Oblongs King of the Hill King of the Hill Cleveland Show Cleveland Show Family Guy Family Guy China, IL 42 44 112 229 (HGTV) Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Lakefront Brgn Lakefront Brgn Caribbean Life Caribbean Life Island Life Island Life House Hunters Hunters Int’l 43 45 110 231 (FOOD) Guy’s Grocery Games All-Star Academy “The Finale” Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen All-Star Academy “The Finale” Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen 44 40 137 248 (FX) Here Cm Boom ›› Ted (2012, Comedy) Mark Wahlberg, Mila Kunis, Voices of Seth MacFarlane. › Grown Ups (2010, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Kevin James. › Grown Ups (2010, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Kevin James. 45 37 107 249 (COM) Harold & Kumar (:36) ›› Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay (2008) Kal Penn, John Cho. ›› Pineapple Express (2008, Comedy) Seth Rogen, James Franco, Gary Cole. ›› Pineapple Express (2008) Seth Rogen. 46 76 16 168 325 (SPIKE) Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue “Beach Rats” Bar Rescue “Spoiled Brat Party” Bar Rescue 48 75 122 244 (SYFY) (4:30) › Silent Hill: Revelation (2012, Horror) ›› Underworld (2003, Horror) Kate Beckinsale, Scott Speedman, Michael Sheen. ›› Blade: Trinity (2004, Horror) Wesley Snipes, Kris Kristofferson, Jessica Biel. Stake Land 63 106 (TVL) America’s Funniest Home Videos Friends Friends Friends (:36) Friends (:12) Friends (8:48) Friends (:24) Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends 64 203 129 273 (BRAVO) The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta Blood, Sweat & Heels The Real Housewives of Atlanta What Happens Fashion Queens 65 114 236 (E!) Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians The Royals Keeping Up With the Kardashians 66 204 246 (TRUTV) Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Hack My Life Hack My Life 67 63 215 277 (TRAV) Food Paradise Food Paradise Food Paradise Bourdain: No Reservations Breaking Borders No Reservations The Layover with Bourdain 69 99 260 372 (TBN) Joel Osteen Kerry Shook K. Copeland Creflo Dollar Peter and Paul Apostles spread the word of Jesus. Bless the Lord Praise the Lord 70 374 (BYU) Turning Point The Story Trek ›› The Apple Dumpling Gang (1975) Bill Bixby, Susan Clark. Turning Point The Story Trek Generations Project “Ty” Music & Word HI Devotional (:10) The Apple Dumpling Gang 76 115 235 (ESQTV) Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat The Runner-Up “Run Clay, Run!” The Runner-Up ››› Lethal Weapon 2 (1989) Mel Gibson, Danny Glover. 79 35 185 312 (HALL) ›› The Lost Valentine (2011) Jennifer Love Hewitt, Betty White. The Makeover (2013, Romance-Comedy) Julia Stiles, David Walton. ›› In My Dreams (2014) Katharine McPhee, Mike Vogel. Golden Girls Golden Girls

monday 20 april 2015 B - Bishop, Big pine, round Valley, independence l - lone pine c - chalfanT Valley s1 - dish s2 - direcTV

B L 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 2 2 2 2 (KCBS) CBS 2 News at 5:00 CBS 2 News Evening News The Insider Entertainment 2 Broke Girls Mike & Molly Scorpion (9:59) NCIS: Los Angeles CBS 2 News Letterman 4 4 4 3 (KNBC) NBC 4 News at 5pm NBC 4 News Nightly News Extra Ac. Hollywood The Voice “Live Top 10 Performances” The top 10 artists perform. (:01) The Night Shift “Aftermath” NBC 4 News Tonight Show 5 5 5 5 (KTLA) The Steve Wilkos Show KTLA News at 6 KTLA News Two/Half Men Two/Half Men The Originals Jane the Virgin KTLA 5 News at 10 KTLA 5 News Friends 6 (KOCE) Wild Kratts Studio SoCaL PBS NewsHour LAaRT Antique Show Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow “Biloxi” Independent Lens “The Great Invisible” Tavis Smiley 7 7 7 7 (KABC) Eyewitness News 5:00PM News World News Jeopardy! Wheel Fortune Dancing With the Stars (:01) Castle “Sleeper” News Jimmy Kimmel 8 19 (KOLO) KOLO 8 at 5pm KOLO 8 5:30 World News KOLO 8 6:30 Jeopardy! Wheel Fortune Dancing With the Stars (:01) Castle “Sleeper” KOLO 8 at 11 Jimmy Kimmel 9 9 9 9 (KCAL) The People’s Court Family Feud Family Feud Mike & Molly Mike & Molly KCAL 9 News at 8:00PM KCAL 9 News at 9:00PM KCAL 9 News Sports Central Entertainment The Insider 11 11 11 (KTTV) Studio 11 LA News TMZ Dish Nation Modern Family Modern Family Gotham “Under the Knife” The Following Fox 11 Ten O’Clock News TMZ Dish Nation 10 28 28 (KCET) World News Business Rpt. World News Newsline Huell Howser Steves’ Europe New Tricks “Tender Loving Care” Scott & Bailey Borgen Sacred Earth 2 (KMGH) 7News Right The List Dancing With the Stars (:01) Castle “Sleeper” 7News at 10PM (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:37) Nightline Inside Edition RightThisMinute 4 (KUSA) 9News at 6pm Entertainment The Voice “Live Top 10 Performances” The top 10 artists perform. (:01) The Night Shift “Aftermath” 9News at 10pm Tonight Show-J. Fallon (:36) Late Night With Seth Meyers Last Call/Daly 7 (KCNC) CBS4 News at 6 CBS4 News 2 Broke Girls Mike & Molly Scorpion (7:59) NCIS: Los Angeles News Late Show With David Letterman Late Late Show/James Corden News Repeat

23 25 8 140 206 (ESPN) (4:00) MLB Baseball New York Yankees at Detroit Tigers. Baseball Tonight SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter 24 26 15 144 209 (ESPN2) 2015 Draft Academy 30 for 30 30 for 30 Baseball Tonight NBA Tonight Son of the Congo First/Re-Take 25 27 (FXSP) Ball Up: Search for the Next Angels Weekly Angels Pre. MLB Baseball Oakland Athletics at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Angels Post Angels Weekly FOX Sports Live 26 42 22 138 245 (TNT) NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. Inside the NBA NBA Basketball 27 41 13 139 247 (TBS) Friends Friends Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Family Guy Family Guy American Dad American Dad Big Bang Big Bang Conan 28 34 105 242 (USA) NCIS A survivalist is wanted. NCIS “Corporal Punishment” NCIS “Stakeout” WWE Monday Night RAW (:05) Dig “Trust No One” 29 108 252 (LIFE) (4:00) Movie ›› Mr. Brooks (2007, Suspense) Kevin Costner, Demi Moore. Movie (:02) ›› Gone (2012, Suspense) Amanda Seyfried, Daniel Sunjata. 30 109 253 (LMN) Assumed Killer (2013, Drama) Casper Van Dien, Barbie Castro. ››› Hush (2005, Suspense) Tori Spelling, Victoria Pratt. Assumed Killer (2013, Drama) Casper Van Dien, Barbie Castro. ››› Hush (2005) Tori Spelling. 31 74 9 182 278 (DISC) Fast N’ Loud Fast N’ Loud Fast N’ Loud Fast N’ Loud: Revved Up Fast N’ Loud Misfit Garage Fast N’ Loud 32 73 26 183 280 (TLC) Hoarding: Buried Alive Hoarding: Buried Alive Hoarding: Buried Alive Hoarding: Buried Alive My 600-Lb. Life “Marla’s Story” Half-Ton Killer: Transformed My 600-Lb. Life “Marla’s Story” 33 64 24 184 282 (AP) To Be Announced Alaska: The Last Frontier To Be Announced Alaska: The Last Frontier 34 36 120 269 (HIST) Swamp People “Gates of Hell” Swamp People “Under Siege” Swamp People “Crooked Jaw” Swamp People “Blood Moon” Swamp People “Bounty or Bust” (:03) Rivermen “Troubled Waters” Universe--Mysteries Solved 35 43 25 118 265 (A&E) The First 48 Bates Motel “Unbreak-Able” Bates Motel “The Deal” Bates Motel “Norma Louise” Bates Motel “The Last Supper” (:01) The Returned “Rowan” (:02) Bates Motel 36 254 (AMC) The Shawshank Redemption ›››› Saving Private Ryan (1998, War) Tom Hanks, Edward Burns. U.S. troops look for a missing comrade during World War II. TURN: Washington’s Spies TURN: Washington’s Spies 37 132 256 (TCM) ›› Kiss Me Deadly (1955) Ralph Meeker, Albert Dekker. ››› They Drive by Night (1940) George Raft. (:45) ›› Three (1969, Drama) Charlotte Rampling, Sam Waterston. (:45) ›››› Knife in the Water (1962, Drama) 38 19 180 311 (FAM) Boy Meet World Boy Meet World Boy Meet World Boy Meet World ››› Rio (2011) Voices of Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg. ›› Dr. Dolittle (1998, Comedy) Eddie Murphy, Ossie Davis. The 700 Club 39 18 17 173 291 (DISN) Liv & Maddie Liv & Maddie K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover Jessie ›› Princess Protection Program (2009) Liv & Maddie Austin & Ally Dog With a Blog Girl Meets Jessie 40 66 171 300 (NICK) SpongeBob SpongeBob Thundermans Thundermans Make It Pop Sam & Cat Full House Full House Full House Full House Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Friends (:36) Friends 41 16 176 296 (TOON) Clarence Steven Universe Teen Titans Go! Teen Titans Go! Wrld, Gumball Adventure Time King of the Hill King of the Hill Cleveland Show Bob’s Burgers American Dad American Dad Family Guy Family Guy 42 44 112 229 (HGTV) Love It or List It Love It or List It Love It or List It Love It or List It “YJ & Michael” Love It or List It “Brent & John” House Hunters Hunters Int’l HGTV Smart Home 2015 43 45 110 231 (FOOD) Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Food Fortunes Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Food Fortunes Diners, Drive Diners, Drive 44 40 137 248 (FX) Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly ›› The Vow (2012) Rachel McAdams, Channing Tatum. ›› The Vow (2012) Rachel McAdams, Channing Tatum. 45 37 107 249 (COM) (4:54) Futurama (:24) Futurama Nightly Show Daily Show South Park (:29) South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park Archer Archer Daily Show Nightly Show 46 76 16 168 325 (SPIKE) Cops Jail World’s Wildest Police Videos Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops 48 75 122 244 (SYFY) (4:30) ›› Ginger Snaps Back: The Beginning ›› Blade: Trinity (2004, Horror) Wesley Snipes, Kris Kristofferson, Jessica Biel. ›› Constantine (2005, Fantasy) Keanu Reeves, Rachel Weisz, Shia LaBeouf. The Punisher 63 106 (TVL) (:11) Family Feud America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos Family Feud Family Feud (:12) Everybody Loves Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens 64 203 129 273 (BRAVO) Shahs of Sunset Shahs of Sunset Shahs of Sunset The Real Housewives of Atlanta Shahs of Sunset Southern Charm “In the Cups” What Happens Shahs-Sunset 65 114 236 (E!) Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians E! News The Royals The Royals Keeping Up With the Kardashians E! News 66 204 246 (TRUTV) Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn Hardcore Pawn (:01) Fake Off “Roll of the Dice” 67 63 215 277 (TRAV) Man v. Food Man v. Food Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Time Traveling Time Traveling Bizarre Foods America 69 99 260 372 (TBN) Trinity Family End of the Age Kingdom Conn. Jesse Duplantis › Left Behind (2000, Suspense) Kirk Cameron, Brad Johnson. Joel Osteen Perry Stone Jerry Dirmann Creflo Dollar Drive History Praise the Lord 70 374 (BYU) The Story Trek The Story Trek American Ride American Ride Studio C Studio C The Story Trek The Story Trek American Ride American Ride Studio C Studio C The Story Trek The Story Trek 76 115 235 (ESQTV) Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat Parks/Recreat The Soup The Soup 79 35 185 312 (HALL) The Waltons “The Empty Nest” The Waltons “The Empty Nest” The Waltons “The Calling” The Waltons “The Moonshiner” The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls Golden Girls

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12 SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015 The Inyo Register

Salome’s Stars

Last Week’s Answers

you.VIRGO (August 23 to

September 22) Aspects favor moving carefully and deliberately when making any significant changes. Could be there are more facts you need to know, which you might overlook if you rush things.

LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) A problem neighbor might be looking to goad you into an action you don’t want to take. Ask someone you both respect if he or she would act as an impartial arbitrator for both of you.

SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) A recent workplace accomplishment hasn’t been overlooked by those who watch these things. Meanwhile, start making travel plans for that much-too-long-

deferred trip with someone special.

SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) Those money matters continue to move in your favor. Now would be a good time to start putting some money back into the house, both for esthetic as well as economic reasons.

CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) A changing workplace environment can create job pressures. But, once again, follow the example of your birth sign and take things a step at a time, like the sure-footed Goat you are.

AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) Cheer up. You could soon have the funds you need for your worthy project. Your generous gifts of time and effort are well known, and someone might decide it’s time to join with you.

PISCES (February 19 to March 20) Your inner scam-catcher is right on target, and you’re absolutely right to reject that “too good to be true” offer. Meanwhile, something positive should be making its way to you.

BORN THIS WEEK: You are generous, and also sympathetic to people who find they need the help of others.

Dear Annie: My chil-dren’s grandmother passed away a few weeks ago after a long battle with Alzheimer’s. Her children decided to have a service in the northeast where her husband is buried and where they all grew up. None of them lives any-where near that area. I live 1,200 miles away.

I was very close to that family for 13 years before my husband and I divorced. I stayed in contact with his sister for a while by phone and visited and kept in touch with his mother even after I remarried. I hadn’t talked to her in the last two years because they removed her phone.

My younger daughter is upset with me because I didn’t attend the services. We haven’t spoken in two weeks. She feels I should have been there. Believe me, Annie, had I been in driving distance, I surely would have gone. I actually checked into plane tickets, hotel and car rental, and the total for four days would have cost me more than I can afford right now. I didn’t want to tell my daughter how tight my finances are. I also couldn’t take two days off of work.

My children all went to the services, along with their father, and they stayed with an uncle. I was heartbroken when my ex-mother-in-law died. But I am no longer a part of that family like my girls are. They are a wonderful group of people, but it all seemed too much for me. Was I wrong?

– Heartbroken Dear Heartbroken: No.

Your children had their father and other relatives to comfort them. We think your daughter is grieving and taking it out on you. Call her and apologize for not being able to attend the service, and tell her why. If she still refuses to talk to you, please enlist the help of your other chil-dren and, if possible, your ex-husband to intercede on your behalf. And if she seems mired in grief, sug-gest she look into grief counseling services, often available through her doc-tor or the local hospital or hospice.

Dear Annie: This is in response to “The Oldest Sibling,” whose brother inherited Dad’s military medals and won’t hand them down.

My father-in-law served during WWII, and all of his

military awards have been lost over the years. We recently came across his discharge papers, which list all of his awards and decorations. An Internet search uncovered the National Archives Veterans Service Records (archives.gov/veterans/replace-medals.html) where one can request the issue of replacement medals. Because records for many who served were destroyed by fire, it is best to provide them any records one might possess so they can be verified.

“The Oldest Sibling” may even find that the replacement medals will be a more inclusive set than what her brother has.

– Iowa Dear Iowa: Thank you

so much for providing this information to our read-ers. We know that replace-ments are not as emotion-ally satisfying as medals that Dad actually handled, but they still are some-thing tangible to have as mementos.

Annie’s Mailbox is writ-ten by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime edi-tors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

Daughter upset mom didn’t fly cross-country for funeral

KATHY & MARCY ARIES (March 21 to April 19) You still might have to deal with some lingering confusion that marked a recent workplace situation. But for the most part, you should now be well on your way to your next project.

TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) A new commitment might demand more time than you’d expected to have to give it. But rely on that special Bovine gift for patience, and stick with it. You’ll be glad you did.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You’re earning the admiration of a lot of people who like the way you handle yourself when your views are on the line. Even one or two of your detractors are being won over.

CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Taking your responsibilities seriously is what you do. But ease up on the pressure gauge, and make time for much needed R & R. Start by making this weekend a “just for fun” time zone.

LEO (July 23 to August 22) Some recently uncovered information might make a change of plans inevitable. If so, deal with it as quickly as possible, and then find out what went wrong and why. What you learn might surprise

Elsa Granada, Mary Gomez (who played Mary Magdalene) and Laurita Rivera (l-r) mourn the death of Jesus just prior to Easter Sunday.

Mirta De Soto, Elsa Granado, Patricia Morenk and Laurita Rivera (l-r) played mourning friends and family members of Jesus during the Good Friday performance of the Stations of the Cross.

The Pharisees, played by (l-r) Carlos Morales Gulio Gayton and Miguel Gasco, call for Jesus’ death, accusing him of heresy.

On Good Friday, Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church staged a dramatic reenactment of the Stations of the Cross to remind residents of the sacrifice Jesus Christ made for humanity. Above, Jesus, played by Juan Rivas, is hung on the cross.

Photos by Gayla Wolf/Honeybee Photography

Before being crucified, Jesus was forced to carry his cross through the streets of Jerusalem.

Pontius Pilate, the Roman Governor, reacts to the call for Christ’s death. Ultimately, Pilate washed his hands of the affair, leaving the decision to kill Christ up to the people.

“He is not here, for He has risen.” Juan Rivas played Jesus in the Good Friday performance of the Stations of the Cross.

The Good Friday performance of the Stations of the Cross was narrated by Maria Romero.

Jesus, played by Juan Rivas, is flogged by Roman guards before his crucifixion.

FACES&PLACESThe Stations of the Cross

Our Lady Of PerPetuaL HeLP ceLebrates easter weekend witH dramatic PerfOrmance

The Inyo Register

13saturday, aPril 18, 2015

eASTeRN SIeRRA CLASSIFIeDSThe Inyo Register

14 SATURDAY, ApRil 18, 2015

PHONE (760) 873-3535 | FAX (760) 873-3591 | 1180 N. MAIN ST., STE. 108, BISHOP, CA 93514 | E-MAIL [email protected]

Positions

AvAilAble

Applicants must meet requirements to qualify for a Paiute Palace Gaming License. Applications are available at the Casino Cashier’s Cage 2742 N. Sierra Hwy., Bishop, CA 93514. Phone: 760-873-4150 ext. 214 & 220.Applicants should be aware that the Paiute Palace Casino is not a smoke free environment.

www.paiutepalace.comPaiute Palace Casino is an Equal Opportunity Employer

within the confines of the Indian Preference Act.

Full-Time Employee Benefits:

New PositioNs

FMedicalFDental/VisionFVacation

FSick LeaveFPaid HolidaysF401K

Cashier/Vault Attendant - Part-Time

Must be 21 or older to work at The Paiute Palace Casino.

NORTHERN INYO HOSPITAL150 Pioneer Lane, Bishop | (760) 873-2145 | www.NIH.org

Applications available online | Email: [email protected]

• Competitive Compensation• Medical, Dental and Vision • Retirement

• Life Insurance • Long-Term Disability Insurance • Employee Assistance Program

Our Benefits Include

Current Employment Opportunities

Licensed FT with Benefits

CNA Department Clerks

Med/Surg RNs

RHC Medical Assistant

Staff Physical Therapist

Perinatal Services RN

Director of Nursing -Perinatal Services

Radiology/CT Technologist

Licensed PT with BenefitsCNA Department Clerk

Perinatal Services RN

Licensed PD, No Benefits

Med/Surg RNLicensed Temporary FT,with Benefits

RHC RN

Non-Licensed FT with BenefitsEnvironmental Services -

Attendant

System Network -Administrator

Non-Licensed PT withBenefits

Quality Improvement Analyst

Non-Licensed PD, No BenefitsFood Service Worker

Northern Inyo Hospital is a 25-bed, not-for-profit, critical access hospital offering a wide array of medical services including 24-hour emergency care. We’ve been an integral part of the greater Bishop community for more than 60 years.

Visit www.NIH.org for a complete list of Job Listings & Details

Come Join Our Team

045 HELP WANTED

DELIVERY DRIVER, F/TMust be able to work any weeknightMonday through Sunday. 25 Yrs. orolder preferred with clean driving re-cord. Apply in person with DMV printoutat Pizza Factory, 970 N. MainSt.,Bishop. Ask for Matt or Bret West.

THE BISHOP UNIFIED SCHOOLDISTRICT IN THE BEAUTIFUL

OWEN'S VALLEY IS SEEKING VOCATIONAL EDUCATION

TEACHER IN AUTO MECHANICSFOR THE 2015-16 SCHOOL YEAR

Grades 9-12, under the supervisionof the Superintendent or designee.

SALARY RANGE: $38,548 - $75,286based on years of teaching experience.BUSD will recognize up to 15 full yearsof service.QUALIFICATIONS: Must have a highschool diploma and 5 years of full-timework experience in the field. One of thefive years of work experience musthave been within the past 3 years. Mustpossess or be willing to obtain a Desig-nated Subjects Vocational EducationCredential in the subject.Full medical, dental, prescription, visionand life insurance package is provided-Contact Kristin Carr, AdministrativeAssistant, at 301 N. Fowler St., BishopCA 93514, (760) 872-3680 or email,[email protected] for an appli-cation. Applications are also availableon EdJoin. Open Until filled.The Bishop Unified School District is anEqual Opportunity Employer

WANTED - HOUSECLEANER , week-ends only. Call John 760-258-1554 orcell: 760-784-4924

INYO MONO ADVOCATES forCommunity Action, Inc. (IMACA) hasthe following open position in theWeatherization program at the Bishoplocation:

WEATHERIZATION LEAD -CONTRACTOR

$20.00 - $26.00/HrAnnually $33,280 - $43,264 DOQ

32 Hrs/Wk, Full BenefitsMedical, Dental, Vision, Life & Retire-

ment, Vacation, Sick, HolidaysOpen: Thursday April 16, 2015

Closing: Friday, May 1, 2015 @5pm

Application and complete job descrip-tion available at the IMACA Office oronline at www.imaca.net Call760-873-8557 or email [email protected]<mailto: [email protected]> for anyquestions.To apply, please submit yourcomplete application, resume, coverletter and contractor license to theIMACA Administration Office at 224 S.Main Street, Bishop, Ca.

045 HELP WANTED

NOW HIRING!

TACO Bell is now hiring TeamMembers and Shift Managers for itslocation in Bishop, CA.

We offer: Great Benefits, Reward &Recognition Culture, Opportunities forAdvancement, On the Job Training, AGreat Future, Flexible Schedules

P lease ema i l resume [email protected] or submit an appli -cation directly to the restaurant to beconsidered.

STEVE!S AUTO & TRUCK PARTS hasimmediate opening for STOCKROOMPERSONNEL to handle all aspects ofshipping, receiving & inventory. Must beself motivated, highly organized, havestrong attention to detail. Please pickup applications at 555 S. Main, Bishop.

TRANSITIONAL HOUSING

CASE MANAGER

Provides direct services and case man-agement to transitional housing resi-dents who have been affected by do-mestic violence, sexual assault, or childabuse. Ensures the safety and securityof transitional housing residents. Pro-vides ongoing case management fortransitional housing residents. Musthave extensive knowledge of local re-sources, including TANF, MediCal, So-cial Services, Child Support, etc. Mustwork well in high stress and crisis envi-ronment.Requirements: High School diploma orequivalency and minimum of one (1)year in a shelter or residential programsetting with case management experi-ence; Certification as Domestic Vio-lence and Rape Crisis Counselor (WildIris may train the right candidate); validdriver's license, insurance and reliabletransportation; ability to work independ-ently with minimal supervision; abilityto work in multi-task environments; in-tegrity; must pass background check;possess good communication and peo-ple skills; good critical thinking skills;ability to use a computer and be profi-cient with Microsoft Office software; bewilling to learn industry specificclient-based software; willing to workoccasional evening and weekends.

Prefer: Bachelor's degree in humanservices; at least one year of experi-ence with a similar agency; at least oneyear of experience performing similar ortransferable duties; bilingual and bi-lit-erate in English and Spanish.

Must spend appropriate amounts oftime in Inyo County (Bishop office) andin Mono County (Mammoth Lakes of-fice) and may need to use own vehicleto get to regular job sites.

045 HELP WANTEDMAINTENANCE / HANDYMANWANTED. Intermediate level electrical& mechanical skills. Familiar with irriga-tion systems, Part time/full time possi-ble. To apply pick up application at BestWestern Bishop Lodge, 1025 N. Main.

MOTEL MANAGERS WITH experiencewanted. For more information call818-368-1151

OFFICE MANAGER TIMBISHAShoshone Tribe is currently acceptingapplications for Office Manager. Pleasevisit the Tribe's website for more infor-mation. Closing Date: April 24, 2015www.timbisha.com

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITYTOWN OF MAMMOTH LAKES

PARKS MANAGER(Salary Range $63,822 - $85,528)

The Town of Mammoth Lakes is look-ing for an engaging Parks Manager tojoin the Town's Parks and RecreationDepartment. This person must be or-ganized, hard-working, solution-ori-ented, a team player, and have a pas-sion for customer service. Come be apart of the changing face of local gov-ernment in Mammoth Lakes andmake a difference in our community!

Check out the Town's website for afull job description, a Town applica-tion, and instructions on how to apply:www.townofmammothlakes.ca.gov

FILING DEADLINE: Tuesday, May5, 2015 at 5:00pm

RESIDENT CARETAKER

APPLICATIONS now being acceptedfor psoition of resident caretaker atLaws Railroad Museum. This positionincludes janitorial, maintenance andgardening duties For more informationor application contact the museum at760-873-5950 before May 1, 2015.

SCHAT'S ROADHOUSE IS

CHANGING TO FULL SERVICE -

AND ADDING BREAKFAST!!

SCHAT'S ROADHOUSE IS SEEK-

ING EXPERIENCED FULL SERVICE

WAIT STAFF FOR FT/PT POSI-

TIONS ASAP. EXPERIENCED

COOKS NEEDED ALSO. WE WILL

SOON BE CHANGING TO A FULL

SERVICE RESTAURANT AND ALSO

WILL BEGIN SERVING BREAKFAST

IN THE COMING MONTHS. APPLY

IN PERSON 871 N MAIN ST.

BISHOP. REFERENCES REQ!D

EOE

Service/ Installation Technician

HIGH COUNTRY LUMBER has a jobopening for a full time Service Techni-cian. We are seeking enthusiastic,professional individuals with strongskills and background in carpentryand mechanical work. Successful ap-plicant will be required to perform me-chanical service and installation ofvarious installed building products, in-cluding hearth appliances, chimney &venting systems, cabinets, countertops, doors, windows and varioushousehold appliances & fixtures.High Country Lumber offers a com-petitive hourly pay rate w/sales com-missions + health benefits and 401kfor qualified full time employees.

Apply in person or submit resume to:

High Country LumberAttn: Steven Joseph444 South Main StreetBishop, Ca. 93514(760) 873-5874

045 HELP WANTEDACE ENGINEERING / ROCK

CREEK RD. PROJECTConstruction assistant wanted - Cleandriving record, valid driver!s lic., previ-ous exp. helpful. Call Jon 970-442-1111

COOK, CASHIER, BARISTA

June Lake Junction now hiring for fulland part time summer positions. To ap-ply please call 760-648-7509 or stopby Hwy 395, State Route 158, JuneLake.

SOUTHERN INYOHEALTHCARE DISTRICT

DIRECTOR of NURSINGSkilled Nursing Facility

POSITION SUMMARY: Will plan,organize, direct, control and/or coordi-nate medical and health services in theSkilled Nursing Facility. Accountablefor management responsibilities that in-clude staffing, leading, morale, cus-tomer satisfaction, quality, organizingand role modeling for nursing services.Performs the functions of a professionalleader in assessing, planning, imple-menting and evaluating services pro-vided. Full Time. CMS, Title 22 and/orMDS Certification preferred. CA RNand CPR certification required.

Job description and applications areavailable online at www.SIHD.org/Jobsor at the Human Resources office.

Southern Inyo Healthcare DistrictP.O. Box 1009, 501 East Locust StreetLone Pine, CA 93545, (760) 876-2205

COUNTY OF INYOENGINEERING ASSISTANT I OR II

Department - Public WorksLocation - CountywideSalary -Engineering Assistant I - $4405-$5355Engineering Assistant II- $4844-$5887

(Above monthly salary is paid over 26pay periods annually)

Minimum Qualifications: Engineering Assistant I - High schoolgraduate or equivalent with four yearsof experience involving knowledge offield and office engineering activities.College-level training in civil engineer-ing may be substituted for up to threeyears of the required experience.

Engineering Assistant II - High schoolgraduate or equivalent with five years ofincreasingly responsible experience ina variety of paraprofessional engineer-ing work. College training in civil engi-neering may be substituted for up tothree years of the required experience.

To obtain a complete job descriptionand an Inyo County application form,visit www.inyocounty.us or call (760)878-0407. Deadline for application:Applications must be received nolater than 5:00 p.m., April 29, 2015(postmarks not accepted). Must applyon Inyo County application form.EOE/ADA.

ACHIEVE BEHAVIORAL ASSOC. willbe hiring part time postitions for exp.and entry level behavioral staff. Yourskills, experience and training will bematched to the avail. positions. Thesepositions focus on young children withautism and other developmentaldisabilities; community based work foradults with developmental disabilities;and for individuals residing in thecommunity. Min. requirements: Highschool diploma, 6 mos. exp. workingwith special needs individuals. Bilin-gual applicants are encouraged to ap-ply but not a requirement for employ-ment. To apply, visit our website atwww.achieve-aba.com

Bishop Waste Disposal has an openingfor a Local Driver. You will be a port-able toilet truck driver & float driver forgarbage routes. Class A or B CDL pre-ferred, willing to consider those w/o. FT,stable year round work. M-F day shift.Apply online at wasteconnections.com.Affirmative Action/Equal OpportunityEmployer (Minority/ Female/ Disabled/Veterans)

045 HELP WANTED

COUNTY OF INYOMANAGEMENT ANALYST

Department - Health & Human ServicesLocation - CountywideSalary: $5450 - $6628/mo.

(Above monthly salary is paid over 26pay periods annually)

Minimum Qualifications: -Either-1. Two (2) years of experience in acounty system performing duties com-parable to the Administrative Analystclass; -Or-2. Depending upon the position re-cruited for: Three (3) years of experi-ence performing a broad range of pro-fessional, analytical and/or administra-tive duties in the areas of general ad-ministration, personnel, fiscal, staff de-velopment, or program analysis work.Supervisory experience is desirable.-PLUS-A Bachelor's Degree from an accred-ited college or university.Note: Additional years of the requiredexperience can substitute for up to twoyears of the required education on ayear-for-year basis.

To obtain a complete job descriptionand an Inyo County application form,visit www.inyocounty.us or call (760)878-0407. Deadline for application:Applications must be received nolater than 5:00 p.m., April 29, 2015(postmarks not accepted). Must applyon Inyo County application form.EOE/ADA.

FORT INDEPENDENCE

CASINO MANAGER

Independence, CASalary $21.00 - $25.00/Hr. DOQ

Train newly hired cash operations cash-ier and personnel. Supervise recordkeeping for variances and attendance,able to work window or vault asneeded, coaching, counseling of cash-iers as needed. Supervise all Casinostaff

High school or GED. AA Degree or fiveyears casino main cage cashiering ex-perience. Two years of supervisory ex-perience needed.Indian Preference: Native American In-dian preference shall apply.

Please send all resumes to LindseyStineEmail: [email protected] or mail them to P.O Box67 Independence CA 93526

020 HAPPINESS IS ...HAPPINESS IS ÉA LANON

Help and Hope for Families and Friendsof Alcoholics

MONDAY NIGHT GROUP meets at theMethodist Church in Bishop (cornerFowler & Church Streets) every Mon-day from 7:00PM - 8:30PM.

WEDNESDAY NIGHT GROUP meetsat Northern Inyo Hospital AdministrationBuilding in Bishop, every Wed. from6:00PM - 7:30PM. For more informa-tion call 760-873-8225

HAPPINESS IS....NAMI Eastern Sierra

(National Alliance on Mental Illness)FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP

Join our local Inyo-Mono Group on theFIRST Wednesday of EVERY month.

APRIL 1 • MAY 6 • JUNE 3, etc.First United Methodist Church

205 N. Fowler, BishopIn the Ò Adult LoungeÓ

OVEREATERS ANONYMOUSIS food a problem for you? Do you eatwhen you!re not hungry? Go on eatingbinges for no apparent reason? Isweight affecting the way you live?Bishop Overeaters Anonymouswelcomes you Ð no dues, fees, orweigh-ins. For more info, call Marilyn at760-872-3757 or 760-920-8013.Bishop Overeaters AnonymousSaturdays 10:00 a.m. -11:00 a.m.Calvary Baptist Church Library1100 W. Line St., Bishop

COUNTY OF INYOMANAGEMENT ANALYST

Department - Health & Human ServicesLocation - CountywideSalary: $5450 - $6628/mo.

(Above monthly salary is paid over 26pay periods annually)

Minimum Qualifications: -Either-1. Two (2) years of experience in acounty system performing duties com-parable to the Administrative Analystclass; -Or-2. Depending upon the position re-cruited for: Three (3) years of experi-ence performing a broad range of pro-fessional, analytical and/or administra-tive duties in the areas of general ad-ministration, personnel, fiscal, staff de-velopment, or program analysis work.Supervisory experience is desirable.-PLUS-A Bachelor's Degree from an accred-ited college or university.Note: Additional years of the requiredexperience can substitute for up to twoyears of the required education on ayear-for-year basis.

To obtain a complete job descriptionand an Inyo County application form,visit www.inyocounty.us or call (760)878-0407. Deadline for application:Applications must be received nolater than 5:00 p.m., April 29, 2015(postmarks not accepted). Must applyon Inyo County application form.EOE/ADA.

*Private Party ads only

760-873-3535

• 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

4 Weeksonly

$2500!*

4 Weeksonly

$2500!*We can take the photo for you too!Just drive it to the Register office!

(760) 873-3535

This spring special is a great value

for a limited period of time.

You can drive your item to the

Register office or email a photo to

[email protected] us!

The Inyo Register

A Pictureis worth aThousand

Words!

The Inyo Register SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015 15

IMPORTANT PUBLIC NOTICECalifornia Business and Professions Code Section 7027, et sec. requires that any advertisement by a licensed contractor include the contractor's license number. Section 7027.2 says that unlicensed persons whose work qualifies under the minor work exemption, less than $500 including material and labor, may advertise, provided that he or she shall state in the advertisement that they are not licensed. The California Contractors State License Board publishes a free booklet, 'What You Should Know Before You Hire A Contractor.' For free information call, 1-800-321-CSLB.

graphic design

Presenting some of the best kept secrets in town.BUSINESS DIRECTORY

✄ CLIP HERE & TAKE WITH YOU ✄

PLACE YOUR GARAGE/YARD SALE AD HERE!

! - STARLITE - ESTATE SALE - Lots of hunting and fishing decor and tons for the outdoorsman!!34 Rifle , Bushnell laser range finder, Cabella!s hunting clothing, Columbia fishing shirts, hunting/hik-ing boots, gloves, sleeping bags, binnos, walkie-talkies, Pendletons, Sorrels, dozens of gear bags,gun supplies, Bass fishing tackle, 36 rods-Fenwick, Quantum, Mitchell, etc. 24 Reels-Garcia,Mitchell, Penn, etc. Fish finders, 12!ft. pond boat/trailer, mounted sailfish bills/tails, knives, horns,dozens new ball caps/stra hats, camp chairs, cots, backpacks, Coleman lanterns, ammo cans, trapthrower/clays, large deep freezer, couch/loveseat, recliner, dining table/leaf/chairs, oakbookcase/ent. center, oak side / coffee tables, bar chairs, Queen bed/headboard, Twin bed/head-board, dressers, maple bureau, 2 desks, 2 4-Dr. Files, 2-Dr files, beer mirrors, lamps, Nina Kelleyprint / Mammoth, hunting/wildlife prints, DU mini decoys, turtle collections, Christmas, Halloween,vintage purses/ linens, new Victorian wedding dress sz 8, jewelry boxes, Mule Days jacket, officesupplies, copiers, shredder, Lasko heater, 5-pc luggage set, vacuums, Clampers stuff, DVD, VCR,

AIWA stereo, turntable/stereo, 8-Track, 35mm/digital cameras, Kodak Easy Share package, projec-tors/screen, silverplate tea set, silverplate flatware set, misc. silverplate, vintage cups & saucers,glassware, stemware, kitchenware, tons of kitchen utensils, Nordic Trac, wheelchair, walker, com-mode, large dog kennels, patio set/furniture, beer fridge, BBQs, smokers, Rubbermaid outdoor stor-ages, snowblower, tools, weedeater, gas blower, new buffer, wet/dry vac, shop vacs, paint sprayers,pressure washer, chains, Voit speargun, bricks from Aurora, dozens of new sunglasses, and there!smore!! You!ll just have to come up and see!! 316 ALTAIR CIRCLE, STARLITE, FRI. APRIL 17,8:15AM - 2:00PM, SAT. APRIL 18, 8:15-3:00PM-ISH OR UNTIL IT!S GONE

! - (MC) - BENEFIT YARD SALE FOR NICOLE COOPER - 2385 HOPI CIRCLE, SATURDAYAPRIL 18, 7:00 AM-1:00 PM Lots of Items! Household, Clothing, Furniture & Electronics just toname a few!!!!

! - (LP) 154 PANGBORN ST, FRIDAY & SAT, APRIL 17 &18, 7:00AM-3:00PM Nascar collecti-bles, shoes, clothing, books, lamps, pictures and much more! EARLY BIRDS WELCOME!

! - (WB) - 399 SHEPARD LANE, SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 8:00AM-12:00PM Large wire dog crate,vacuum, camper shell for !04 Dodge, men"s clothing, police equip., rifles, shotguns, Glock handguns,bedroom set, DVD"s and lots more.

! - (DT) - J DIAMOND, 771 N. MAIN, SP#91, SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 8:00AM-12:00PM Wineracks, scented candles, collectibles, wall art, barn stars, bear mirror, yarn, pictures, 2 bikes, fishbowl, weed eater, beach chairs, metal folding chairs, printer, couch dishware and lots of misc.

! - WILKERSON - 106 LUCAS RD., SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 7:00AM-12:00PM MULTI THREEFAMILY YARD SALE! Tools, lawn & garden equip., clothing, books, cell/smart phones in orig. boxes,indor & outdoor furniture, 26! ft. travel trailer (make offer!) and MORE!!!

! - (BA) - 437 WINUBA, INDIAN TACO SALE FRI., APRIL 17, 11:00AM-5:00PM & YARD SALESATURDAY, APRIL 18, 8:00AM-??? FUNDRAISERS to help support Alex Vasquez, Jr.

! - (DT) - JOSEPH HOUSE INN, 376 W. YANEY, SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 6:30AM-11:00AM Bigvariety of household goods incl. TV!s, clothing, shoes, gardening items and more.

! - (MC) - 2205 CHEYENNE, SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 7:00AM-11:30AM Dinning table, chairs, Kids,baby, toys, clothes, yard tools, everything for the whole family

! - (DT) - 198 MACIVER, #28, SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 7:00AM-12:00PM No Early Birds. Antique?Old? Weird? Unique? Also tools and normal stuff. I can!t take it with me and nor room for it here. Yel-low and pink mobile, park out on the street.

! - STARLITE - 327 ALTAIR CIRCLE, FRI. & SAT., APRIL 17 & 18, 8:00AM-11:00AM Kid!s toys,clothing, Pack-n-play portable infant bed, camping gear, household goods.

! - (MM) - 3028 LAUREL ROAD, SATURDAY APRIL 18, 7:30 AM-12:00 PM No early birdsplease. Two electric wheelchairs, lots of elderly or handicap items, shower chair, walkers, canes, etc.Knickknacks, household items, canning jars, furniture, tools, power saw, surround sound system withBose speakers, Lots of stuff. Cleaned out two sheds and a house.

! - (DT) - 350 CLARKE, SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 8:00AM-12:00PM MOVING SALE!

! - (WB) - 160 SHEPARD LANE, SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 7:00AM-??? BAKE SALE & YARDSALE! Clothing, toys, floor lamps, and lots of different misc. household items.

! - (MM) - 2930 INDIAN CREEK, SUNDAY, APRIL 19, 12:00 NOON - 4:00PM Exercise equip.,metal file cabinet, FREE console TV and more.

! - (DT) - 350 ACADEMY, SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 8:00AM- 12:00PM Women!s clothing & shoes,LOTS of misc....too many to list!

! - (BA) - 340 SEE VEE, SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 8:00AM-12:00PM BMX bikes, clothing, house-hold items, Coach purses and lots of misc.

CODES FOR BISHOP AREADT: Downtown Area BA: Barlow Area MM: Manor Mkt. AreaWB: W. Bishop RK: Rocking K Area WK: WilkersonBH: Highland BG: Glenwood MH Pk LA: Lazy A AreaMC: Meadowcreek DL: Dixon Ln Area

lone pine

wilkerson

bishop

starlite

170 HOUSES UNFURNISHED

506 GROVE - 3BED/2BABISHOP, IN TOWN - 2 Story, refrig.,range/oven, dishwasher, evap.cooler, efficient heat, fenced frontyard, single car garage. Walk toschools , church, shopping.$1475/mo., 1 yr. lease required, plussecurity & cleaning deposits. Nopets, no smoking.

760- 937-7260

BIG PINE - small 2 bed house, nofenced yard. $650/mo. plus first, lastand $300 dep. 760-938-2691

DELAROSA PROPERTY

MANAGEMENT 760-872-3188

BISHOP E. LINE -1 BED w/creek $785BIG PINE LARGE 2 BED incl all appli-ances, fenced yard, $1200/mo.

LUXURY

MCLAREN ESTATE5 BED/ 5 BATH - Office, formal dining& living rooms. Unfurnished homeincludes gardener. $3,000/ mo.

Maggie Larson, Broker

www.SierraResortRealEstate.com

760-937-4502

160 CONDOS FOR RENT

SIERRA RESORT PROPERTY MGMTMaggie Larson, Owner Broker

(760)937-4502www.SierraResortRealEstate.com

165 HOUSES FURNISHED

1 ACRE HORSE

PROPERTY

2 BED / 2 BATH plus office.$2600/mo. Fully landscaped withspectacular views. In Bishop. Previewthis property at:

www.SierraResortRealEstate.com

Maggie Larson, Broker

760-937-4502

170 HOUSES UNFURNISHED

1BED/1BATHHOME FOR rent in Lone Pine $500per month, one bedroom, one bath.

909-816-6290

155 APTS. UNFURNISHED1BED/1BATH UPSTAIRS, $700/MO. +$700 dep. 2BED APT., $685/mo. +$685 dep. 1 BED $585/mo. + dep. Call760-873-7339.

MT. WHITNEY APTS.375 N. Mt. Whitney Dr., Lone Pine.Spacious 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms, EnergyEfficient Appliances, Central Heat &Air,On Site Laundry Facilities & TotLot. Near schools, hospital & clinic.Accepting Applications. Call Bonnie fo9:00am-4:00pm. Equal opportunityprovider & employer.

760-264-3359 / 876-4272

RENTED IN LESS

THAN 1 WEEK

2BED/1BATHW. Bishop, in town with garage, newcarpet/flooring, patio, clean, quiet. Nopets, non-smoking. $875/mo + dep.Includes water, sewer, trash,gardener.

UNFURNISHED STUDIO $485/MO. +$485/dep. Meadowlake Apts. & Stor-age. 760-873-7339

155 APTS. UNFURNISHED

1BED/1BATH - BISHOPLots of natural light, quiet street.Close to shopping, park and canal.No pets, non-smoking, 12 mo. lease.$650/mo. + deposit.

760-258-9466

DELAROSA PROPERTY

MANAGEMENT 760-872-3188

BIG PINE STUDIO Apt utilities incl$560/mo.SUNNY SLOPES 1 Bed elec incl$695/mo.BISHOP N. Sierra Hwy -2 BED down-stairs $775/mo.BISHOP Moffett- 1 BED, washer/dryerhookups plus garage $895/mo.BISHOP E. Line -2 BED large kitchen,washer/dryer hookups $895/mo.

INDEPENDENCE

1 BED/1 BATH DUPLEX Beautifully renovated with new tilefloors, kitchen countertop, stove, re-frigerator, carpet, etc. Nicely land-scaped, gardener is included. Rent is$625/month. Call for details.

775-790-0091

LARGE 1BED /1BATHHome & W. Elm. Stove/fridge,washer/dryer, swamp cooler, storageroom. No pets. $800/mo. + deposit.

760-872-6194

140 PETS

MALTESE MIX PUPPIESMales & females, 8 weeks old, havehad first shots, healthy. Looking forforever homes. $300.

760-377-7373

MINI AUSSIE

9 Week old mini aussie male pup.Black/white markings. Both parentsregistered. Sweet personality. $400.Call 760-872-3708

SIBERIAN HUSKY 4 Mo. old male for sale, red & whit,ewell tempered, house broken. Allpuppy shots, AKC Registered.

760 377 7373

145 LIVESTOCKSPRING TRAINING

SPECIAL

Bartlett Training Center is offering aSpring Training Special April - May.$750 per month includes board, train-ing & lessons. Limited availability. CallPat 760-933-2309

155 APTS. UNFURNISHED

APTS.

AVAILABLE SOON Downtown location, No smoking, nopets. Laundry facilities. Call for moreinformation.

760-873-3280

045 HELP WANTEDHOUSEKEEPERS WANTEDSeeking experienced housekeepersfor upcoming season. $10.00 plustips. must be able to work midweekand weekends and have reference.Approx. 30-35 hours per week. Applyin person 286 W. Elm, Bishop.

090 FURNITURE

CARVED OAK

BEDROOM SETBeautiful carved oak, high-endtongue and groove furniture construc-tion of three (3) pieces. Queen bedframe, dresser/mirror and night stand.Asking $4,000.00 ($1,000.00 belowappraisal) OBO.

760-876-4143

125 TOOLS & EQUIPMENT

HUSQVARNA 455

RANCHER CHAIN SAW Three years old, used only one sea-son to cut 1 cord of wood. Like newcondition. Comes with chain file andone gallon of chain oil. $350. CallJim:

760-872-4546

760-475-7553

140 PETS

COCKER SPANIEL

PUPPIES2 Little males, 2 series of shots anddewormings. Healthy & playful andloving. $500 ea. For more info. pleasecall:

760-377-7373

The Inyo RegisterFor Home Delivery call

873-3535

The Inyo RegisterFor Home Delivery call

873-3535

Does Harriet need a new

chariot?Find a new or

used auto in theEastErn siErra

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16 SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015 The Inyo Register

320 PUBLIC NOTICESCOUNTY OF INYO

NOTICE INVITING BIDS

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT INYO COUNTY IS SOLICITING

BIDS FOR:

“THE PROVISION OF PLANT MIXED SC3000 AND OR PG 64-24

ASPHALT SURFACING MATERIAL”

Sealed Bids will be received at the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors!Office, 224 N. Edwards Street, P.O. Drawer N, Independence, CA93526 until 3:30PM on Wednesday, May 6, 2015 at which time they willbe publicly opened and read.

Bids must be in a sealed envelope, addressed to the Clerk of the Boardof Supervisors, 224 N. Edwards Street, P.O. Drawer N, Independence,CA 93526. Indicate on the outside of the bed envelop “PLANT MIXED

ASPHALT SURFACING MATERIAL BID”.

All buds must state the firms name and be signed by a responsible offi-cer or employee.

The period for which the specified asphalt surfacing materials are to beprovided pursuant to this Bid is from May 15, 2015 through and includ-ing June 30, 2015.

Inyo County reserves the right to reject any or all bids, or to waive anyminor informality in any bid, if it is deemed to be in the best interest ofthe County of Inyo.

Bid packages, which include the Notice Inviting Bids, Bid ProposalForms and Contract Forms, may be only obtained from the Inyo CountyRoad Department, 168 N. Edwards Street, P.O. Drawer Q, Independ-ence, CA 93526, telephone: 760-878-0374, and may be inspected atthe above Department office.(IR 4/18, 4/21/15, #11621)

320 PUBLIC NOTICESNOTICE OF AVAILABILITY OF TRIBAL ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT

REPORT AND PUBLIC HEARING

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a Draft Tribal Environmental ImpactReport (Draft TEIR) has been prepared for the Big Pine Travel PlazaProject pursuant to the Big Pine Paiute Tribe of the Owens Valley TribalEnvironmental Policy Ordinance. The Draft TEIR analyses impacts as-sociated with a Travel Plaza designed to serve the commercial and

non-commercial vehicular traffic passing through the town of Big Pine,California, on U.S. Highway 395 (US 395), and an adjacent Class IIgaming facility located on the Big Pine Paiute Indian Tribal Reservation.

The Proposed Project represents planned development of the Reserva-tion, as envisioned by the Tribe's Integrated Resource ManagementPlan 2006-2015 (January 2006), potential employment for Tribal mem-bers, and additional revenue for the Tribe. In addition, the ProposedProject would benefit the area by providing a place for commercialtrucks to park during highway closures due to snow, rain, fire, blowingdust, etc. This would improve the overall safety of US 395 by removingtrucks from state highways, County and Reservation roadways, andCity streets.

The public review period shall commence on April 18, 2015 and shall

end on May 20, 2015. The Draft TEIR is available for public inspectionat the Big Pine Public Library, located at 500 South Main Street, BigPine, CA 93513, (760) 938-2420, and at the Big Pine Paiute Tribaloffice located at 825 South Main Street, Big Pine, CA 93513, (760)938-2003. Comments may be submitted to the Big Pine Paiute TribalDevelopment Corporation at PO Box 700, 545 Butcher Lane, Big Pine,CA 93513 or to [email protected].

A public hearing will be held to solicit comments on the proposedproject on May 20, 2015 at 6:00 PM in the Wellness Center, located at545 Butcher Lane, Big Pine.(IR 4/18/15, #11620)

320 PUBLIC NOTICES

INYO MONO ADVOCATES FOR COMMUNITY ACTION, INC.(IMACA) - HEAD START PROGRAM

NOTICE INVITING BIDSHead Start Modular Classroom Relocation Project

Mammoth Lakes, CA

Bid packages which include the Request for Proposal, Forms, Scope of

Work, Application requirements and links to Site and Construction Plansmay be obtained by contacting IMACA, 224 So. Main Street, Bishop,760- 873-8557 x 23, [email protected]. To download package from thewebsite www.imaca.net., contact us for access code.

Overview of Project: Project involves moving an existing 36' x 40' modu-lar classroom from Mammoth Elementary School, 1500 Meridian Boule-vard to the High School, 365 Sierra Park Road. The building is to bemoved in one-piece, placed on a foundation to be constructed, recon-nected to utilities and renovated with new roof and paint.

Qualified Bidders Only: Only contractors specializing in relocation ofmodular facilities and qualified general contractors are permitted to sub-mit a bid for this project - Head Start Modular Classroom RelocationProject A & B. We are requesting separate bids for:

A. “Modular Building Contractor” services - Relocation of structure, andB. “Onsite Project Contractor” services - demolition, foundation andutility trench construction, painting, roofing, concrete work, site prepara-tion and reinstallation of playground equipment.

Due Date and Location for Submittals: Sealed bids will be received atall times during normal business hours prior to the Bid Opening, May 4,2015 at 4:00 PM at the IMACA Office, 224 S. Main Street, Bishop, CA93514. All bids must be in writing and must contain an original signatureby an authorized officer of the firm.(IR 4/18, 4/21, 4/25/15, #11622)

classifieds.inyoregister.com“Strong Editorial Newspapers Build Strong Communities”

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Bishop, CA 93514760-873-3535

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320 PUBLIC NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS

NAME STATEMENT

THE FOLLOWING PERSON IS DOING BUSINESS AS:

EAST SIDE SIERRA SHUTTLE219 W. Main Street

Independence, CA 93526

PAUL FRETHEIM219 W. Main StreetIndependence, CA 93526This Business is conducted by: anINDIVIDUAL. Type of business:Publishing. Registrant com-menced to transact businessunder the fictitious business nameor names listed Sept. 6/16/2012.This statement was filed with theCounty Clerk of Inyo County onJULY 15, 2014. File #14-00097(IR 4/11, 4/18, 4/25, 5/2/15,#11609)

INYO COUNTY LOCAL

TRANSPORTATION

COMMISSION

ANNOUNCES UNMET TRANSIT

NEEDS HEARING

A hearing is scheduled for thep urpose of inviting citizen partici-

pation in determining unmet publictransportation needs in InyoCounty. The hearing will be con-ducted as part of the regularlyscheduled Local TransportationCommission meeting.

LOCATION: Bishop City Council Chambers377 W. Line St., Bishop, CA

DATE AND TIME:

Wednesday, May 20, 2015 at 9:00a.m.

This hearing is scheduled to invitepublic comment to assist the InyoCounty Local Transportation Com-mission in determining unmet pub-lic transportation needs of transitdependent or disadvantaged per-sons. The public and any group ororganization is invited to expresstheir general comments and pre-sent specific proposals to theCommission. More information canb e v i e w e d a thttp://www.inyoltc.org/unmet.html.(IR 4/18/15, #11616)

320 PUBLIC NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS

NAME STATEMENT

THE FOLLOWING PERSON IS DOING BUSINESS AS:

EASTSIDE JUICE177 Academy StreetBishop, CA 93514

MT. WHITNEY SPORTS, LLC139 North StreetBishop, CA 93514This Business is conducted by:LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY.Registrant commenced to trans-act business under the fictitiousbusiness name or names listedN/A. This statement was filed withthe County Clerk of Inyo Countyon APRIL 3, 2015. File #15-00045(IR 4/11, 4/18, 4/25, 5/2/15,#11610)

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

The County of Inyo, Department ofParks and Recreation, is request-

ing proposals for:

VAULT & SEPTIC TANK

PUMPING SERVICES

INYO COUNTY PARKS AND

CAMPGROUNDS

The County of Inyo will be accept-ing proposals for providing vaultpumping services for CountyParks and Campgrounds, for athree (3) year period (December 1,2015 to November 30, 2018) atseven (7) County Parks andCampgrounds located in Bishop,Big Pine, Independence and LonePine.

Proposals must be received on orbefore 3:00 pm May 8, 2015, ad-

dressed to the Parks and Recrea-tion, 163 May St, Bishop, Califor-nia 93514.

All questions regarding this bidshould be directed to: Inyo CountyParks and Recreation, 163 MaySt. Bishop, CA 93514; Office:760-873-5577; Fax: (760)873-5599.(IR 4/18, 4/21, 4/23/15, #11615)

320 PUBLIC NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS

NAME STATEMENT

THE FOLLOWING PERSON IS DOING BUSINESS AS:

SIERRA STOVE SERVICE2844 N. Sierra Hwy.Bishop, CA 93514

CHRISTIAN RAMOS2844 N. Sierra Hwy.Bishop, CA 93514This Business is conducted by:INDIVIDUAL. Registrant com-menced to transact businessunder the fictitious business nameor names listed N/A. This state-ment was filed with the CountyClerk of Inyo County on APRIL 6,2015. File #15-00048(IR IR 4/11, 4/18, 4/25, 5/2/15,#11608)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS

NAME STATEMENT

THE FOLLOWING PERSON IS DOING BUSINESS AS:

OUT ON A LIMB:CREATIVE CRAFTS

111 Moffett

Bishop, CA 93514

RAVEN ANGELES111 MoffettBishop, CA 93514This Business is conducted by:INDIVIDUAL. Registrant com-menced to transact businessunder the fictitious business nameor names listed 3-02-2015. Thisstatement was filed with theCounty Clerk of Inyo County onMARCH 3, 2015. File #15-00033(IR 3/28, 4/4, 4/11, 4/18/15,#11593)

260 TRAVEL TRAILERS

1973 AIRSTREAM 30” Ft., in good condition. Asking$7,000. For more information call:

760-937-0293

275 AUTOS

1992 TOYOTA

COROLLA4-Door, new tires/battery, cleaninterior, runs great. Only 81,000

miles. $2,000.

760-873-8341

2008 NISSAN ROGUE Loaded + sunroof, Nav, XM, Blue-tooth, AWD, 2 sets of snow tires,bike/ski rack, leather interior, tintedwindows, more! Great condition.$9,000 OBO

760-709-1614

190 ROOMS FOR RENTROOMATE WANTED IN 3 Bed/2bath-house. Non-smoking. Call for details.John 760-258-1554 or ce l l760-784-4924

220 HOUSES FOR SALE

3BED/2BATH - BENTONManufactured Home on 1 Acre, horsecorral, detached 2 car garage, lots oftrees. Owner financing possible.$235,000

760-920-9058

NEW

ASPENDELL HOMELuxurious Mountain Retreat. 2200 Sq.Ft. 3 Bed 2.5 Bath. Beauty inside andout. BishopRealEstateOnline.com.Call Agent at:

619-971-0544

175 MOBILE HOMES FOR RENTELM TREE TRAILER PARK

Large and small trailers with patios &storage units starting at $475/mo.Judy 760-914-2834

180 SPACE FOR RENTMAMMOTH COMMERCIAL GARAGE

LEASE SPACEAvail. immediately on Sierra Park Dr.Great for local business or storage.+/- 35x45x30". Call 760-920-3969 fordetails.

K & L STORAGE

5x10 $50 10x15 $95Collins Rd., Bishop 760-872-2910

STORAGE UNITS - Many sizes avail-able: 6x10, 8 x12, 10x16, 10x20. C allfo r new cus tomer spec ia l .760-873-7339

185 BUS. PROPERTY FOR RENTMAMMOTH LEASE SPACE IN TOWN

Rent negotiable - combo disc. Great forlocal business: Quiet office +/-750 Sq.ft. and/or 1 or 2 Commercial. Garage/Storage +/-35x45X30". 760-920-3969

WHITNEY ALLEY -

BISHOPMain area 800 sq. ft., in busy alley.Office, lunch room or storage room,bathroom. Recently remodeled. 133E. Line. Ready now. $650/mo. + 650dep. Call Brad:

760-937-6642

WE MOVE ITEMS FASTThe easTern sierra Classifieds 873-3535

Massive boulders overlooking Big Pine and the Owens Valley along the trail to Piper Peak.Photos by Craig Jackson

Magnificent view of the Palisades from the summit of 8,199-foot Piper Peak.

A 39-year-old summit register on the top of Piper Peak.

MOuntAin rePOrtThe Inyo Register

17SATURDAY, APRil 18, 2015

Name That Eastside ViewLast week’s View – running a second time after stumping readers in January – again gave eagle-eyed backcountry visitors a run for their money. no one was able to correctly identify the lake in the photo – Bright Dot Lake – but Scott Smith, Gary Guenther and Sally Miller all identified red Slate Mountain and upper McGee Canyon, above Convict Lake. Here’s another blast from the past that originally ran Jan. 3. if you have a photo you’d like to share as the next eastside View, by all means send it in! if you think you know this week’s View, give the editor a call at (760) 873-3535 or drop her a line at [email protected] with your guess. First correct respondent is the winner, and will receive two (2) free 25-word classified ads. it also comes with the satisfaction of knowing you’re helping to sustain a much-loved feature of your local com-munity newspaper.

Photo by Darcy Ellis

Do you have an “Eastside View” you’d like readers to try and identify? Email your submission to [email protected].

For more information, call (760) 873-3535.

Review

Examining our roles in saving National Parks

By Mike Loughman

“Uncertain Path” by William Tweed, the 2015 Inyo County Community Reads selec-tion, begins as a rather conventional account of a backpack trip over the John Muir Trail in our Sierra Nevada. But then Tweed delves into history, environmental issues, our conceptions of our national parks and wilderness areas, and how we should manage these institutions in a changing and an increasingly troubled world.

This is all entirely appropriate as Tweed has had a long career as a historian, park ranger and park administrator, in particular with Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks.

The Muir Trail is a busy thoroughfare, and the numbers of hikers and riders with pack animals have taken their toll on the terrain, the solitude and the sense of wilderness. Tweed does not seem to venture very far from the Muir Trail or describe the much vaster Sierra with little frequented trails or none at all. The extent of trailless country and the ease of travel off-trail are one of the great wonders of the Sierra. So the reader may get a false impression of the state of the terrain and character of the experience available over a vast region.

As might be expected, Tweed is at his best dealing with the history. Kings Canyon National Park was the (1940) result of one of the most raucous political battles in Congress during the Franklin Roosevelt Administration. The conflict within the administration was bit-ter. It led to a major shift in the U.S. Forest Service toward wilderness protection in order to keep its share of the public lands.

Tweed deals at length with the dilemma

facing the National Park Service. In a world increasingly impacted by human activity, it is charged with preserving the parks “unim-paired” for future generations. He seems to favor active management, while others in the preservationist movement want a softer touch in the wildlands. Much of this debate probably turns on the definition of terms like “natural” and “wild.” One of the major impacts, of course, is climate change and its relation to fire.

Surprisingly, he does not deal with the state of the Sierra forest at the time of the Anglo-European arrival. It was already sub-stantially the product of hundreds if not thou-sands of years of deliberate burning by Native Americans. As a result of the removal of the natives and a vigorous effort at fire suppres-sion until recent decades, the forest today is very different from what it was 150 years ago, and the danger of fires is much greater. Climate change is making things still worse. So, active management or a soft touch? I pre-fer the latter.

Tweed seems to be addressing government managers more than he addresses the rest of us. He says little about the world outside of the parks. Changes are needed in the larger world, or the parks will surely be impaired. So what is yours and my role in saving our National Parks?

“Uncertain Path” is a worthwhile read, but it is not always easy going.

(Michael Loughman has visited the Eastern Sierra to backpack and climb almost every year since 1954. He trained originally as a geologist and climatologist, and has taught at several universities. He moved to Bishop in January, 2005.)

COLuMniStCraig JaCkson

(Hiked on April 11, 2015)

Lying just east of the Sierra Nevada and north of the Mojave Desert, the Owens Valley is one of the least known and thus most underrated places for vaca-tioning in the great state of California.

U.S. Highway 395 is one of California’s great scenic routes, skimming the edge of the Mojave and climbing up the Owens Valley and into the Eastern Sierra as it cuts into Nevada. Still two lanes in some spots, the road passes through groves of spiky Joshua trees, quirky desert outposts and incredible volcanic displays. It’s the only highway in the country where you can drive in a desert between two opposing mountain ranges of 14,000-foot peaks.

Most visitors driving along U.S. Highway 395 don’t notice Big Pine and its roughly 1,800 residents residing at an elevation of 3,989 feet, because they are usually going south to Southern California or north to Mammoth Lakes and beyond. There’s not much happening in Big Pine and that’s how the resi-dents like it. Personally, I always get a little anxious and excited when I get close to Big Pine because I know that just a few miles west of town are some of the best trails, peaks, gla-ciers and creeks in the entire Sierra Nevada. To the east are the White Mountains and access to some of the oldest living trees on the entire planet.

Between U.S. Highway 395 and the Palisade region of the Sierra Nevada are some beautiful rolling hills that have some wonderful geology as well great hiking and off-roading opportuni-ties. My goal last Saturday, after two previous failed attempts, was to summit Piper Peak (8,199 feet), the prominent rounded moun-tain just six miles west of downtown Big Pine and clearly visible from the highway. There is a Jeep road that gets within a cou-ple of miles of the summit, but you still must hike cross-country up-and-down to reach the top. I parked far away at Arc Road and Baker Creek, making for a long, uphill battle to the summit on a windy day.

I reached the trailhead, for my third attempt at Piper Peak, by heading south from Bishop for 15 miles and then making a right on Crocker Avenue. I turned right onto paved Sugarloaf Road after 1.6 miles from U.S. Highway 395. After 0.6 miles, I

turned right onto Arc Road, a graded dirt road. I drove a couple of miles on the well-graded dirt road, crossed over the Baker Creek culvert and parked in the small dirt turnout next to the old cattle fence.

There are a few ways to reach the summit of Piper Peak, none that are easy or are on a maintained trail. For this particular hike, I chose to stay on the road as far as I could before starting the cross-country. I left my car at 8:15 a.m. and started hiking next to Baker Creek before turning at the first right towards Warren Bench.

I passed through a flat area, and after a mile, start-ed the steep uphill hiking while turning west. Piper Peak is always visible and at times, looks so far away. More steep uphill hiking on the road, combined with a stiff breeze, made the trip more memorable.

About three miles into the hike and 2,000 feet above Big Pine, I noticed an older orange Jeep slowly approaching me on the lonely road. The driver stopped next to me and asked if I’d hiked all the way up from Baker Creek and after I said “yes,” the male passenger said I was a “warrior” for hiking all this way. Suffice to say, the hit song from Scandal in 1984, by the same name, played over and over in my head the rest of the day. Those two men would be the only humans I would see all day.

I watched the Jeep drive slowly, but steadily, up the steep, sandy road and with-

in a few minutes was com-pletely out of sight. The relentless climbing contin-ued for another mile until I decided to leave the road and hike straight up to the peak, not knowing what was in store ahead.

I started off heading in a southwest direction aiming straight for Piper Peak. On a previous attempt, I got to this point but didn’t make it all the way due to an ear-lier technical error. I trudged upward for about a half-mile and encountered a ravine that I had to descend 200 feet down before the final climb to the summit, so I thought. At treeline now, I started straight up the steep gully, falling back in spots due to the scat-tered pine cones, loose dirt and rocks. By far, the fun-nest part of the day.

Within a few minutes and at 8,000 feet, I was on the ridge and staring direct-ly at the summit of Piper Peak. After six miles of hik-ing and more than 4,000 feet of elevation gain, the summit was clearly in full view, just a short ridge hike to the top. The sweeping views west towards the Sierra Nevada were breath-taking and after a short break, I started the final push. I headed for the west ridge, and after climbing over some large boulders and in and out of some thick vegetation, I emerged at the summit of Piper Peak at 12:10 p.m. The cold wind was relentless on the sum-mit but that didn’t bother me. I endured while spend-ing roughly an hour loiter-ing around the summit, enjoying a well-earned ham,

mayo and onion sandwich, sliced apples and my orange Hi-C punch. There is a small summit register on top, placed in 1976 by the famous peak-bagging duo of Gordon McLeod and Barbara Lilley, in an old glass jar with a rusted top. There is also a small tin canister inside the jar with signatures from the 1940s, ’50s, ’70s and up to the last entry in November of 2014.

There are different ways to descend from Piper Peak, but I chose to head back down a different way, mak-ing this a loop hike. I took the road down through the Boulder Patch and eventual-ly met up with Baker Creek. I got back to my car at 4:30 p.m. and turned back to look at Piper Peak with a sense of accomplishment and satisfaction, knowing I can check it off my list.

At a glance:• 12 miles round trip,

4,600-foot elevation gain• Excellent sweeping vis-

tas of the Palisades from the summit

• Can be warm at trail-head and cold at 8,199-foot summit

• Jeep road access can make it a much shorter hike

• Short after-hike drive to Big Pine for refresh-ments and BBQ

(Craig Jackson is a Bishop resident and avid hiker/backpacker who enjoys exploring his new backyard after having relocated here in 2013 from Southern California. Email him at [email protected].)

Sierra Sojourns

Third time’s a charm for Piper Peak

Old Dinah, a steam tractor used briefly (and unsuccessfully) by Francis M. “Borax” Smith to transport wagonloads of ore from the mines at Borate to the railroad at Daggett. Old Dinah is currently on dis-play at the Furnace Creek Ranch.

Photos courtesy Eastern California Museum

A work train on the first high trestle of the Death Valley Railroad, August 1914. The construction of this railroad, which was intended to connect the mining camp of New Ryan with the Tonopah & Tidewater Railroad at Horton, began in the fall of 1913 with a crew of 325 men, 150 mules and Fresno scrapers.

This 20-mule team was one of the “promotional” teams Pacific Coast Borax used to publicize its Borax Soap, which used the 20-mule team as its logo.

After the mines stopped producing, the Ryan Baby Gauge Railroad transported tourists on mine tours as part of the transition of Death Valley from a mining region to a tourist attraction.

The “Baby Gauge Railroad” approaching New Ryan, circa 1916. Gasoline locomotives pulled the small ore cars over 24-inch-gauge tracks. The Baby Gauge operated between New Ryan and the Widow Mine, traversing a five-mile route that curved sharply around cliffs.

EASTERN SIERRA HISTORYThe Inyo Register

18 SATURDAY, APRil 18, 2015

By the Eastern California Museum Virtual

Transportation Museum

Death Valley enjoys a rich mining history, but not many of the region’s mines generated long-term rich returns for investors or miners. Gold and silver drew the atten-tion of most miners, but produced, at best, short-term bursts in activity and, in some cases, the establishment of mining camps or towns, from Cerro Gordo to Panamint City to Skidoo. These towns’ fortunes rose, and then fell, based on the mineral wealth generated by nearby mines. Other mining operations banked on less glamorous miner-als, such as salt, but their fortunes, too, were short-lived.

The one great excep-tion to Death Valley’s boom and bust mining history is borax. The min-eral spurred development of Death Valley in the late 1800s, and remained one of the few minerals that could be profitably mined and shipped out of the hostile environment of Death Valley. Rail lines were built, towns sprung up to house miners and the desert started to look a lot more prosperous than it used to.

In addition to the eco-nomic benefits, borax mining and shipping cre-ated one of the iconic images of Death Valley, the famed 20-mule teams.

Long after the 20-mule teams were replaced, the image of a long string of mules pulling a huge wagon across the unfor-giving landscape became probably one of the most recognizable images and symbols of Death Valley. Pacific Coast Borax used the 20-mule team icon to market its product, and continued to hitch up and drive 20-mule teams in

Death Valley as a promo-tional vehicle well into the 1950s. That tradition con-tinues today, when Bobby Tanner of Bishop drives a 20-mule team hitch at Mule Days.

The lasting legacy of borax mining can also be seen today. Pacific Coast Borax didn’t abandon its Death Valley holdings when richer, more accessi-ble borax mines came into production. Instead, the company enthusiastically, and at great cost, built and operated numerous tourist-related facilities in Death Valley, most nota-bly the array of visitor amenities at Furnace Creek. Eventually the company allowed its hold-ings to become the Death Valley National Monument, the precursor to today’s Death Valley National Park.

Discovery of ‘Cottonball’ borax leads to a mining

boomInyo County was the

leading source of borax in the United States from 1882 until 1890 and from 1907 until 1927.

Between 1890 and 1907 and from 1928 on, San Bernardino County was the leading producer. Although deposits were discovered in Saline, Death and Searles valleys in the 1870s, it was the discovery of “cottonball” borax on the east side of Death Valley by Aaron Winters in the early 1880s that started the borax boom in Inyo County.

In 1882, William T. Coleman purchased the Death Valley claim from Winters for $20,000 and established the Harmony Borax Works. To make the transport of borax eco-nomically viable, Coleman needed to establish a freighting system. As a result, 10 specially built high-wheeled wagons, each weighing four tons,

were hitched in pairs with a water wagon carrying a 500-gallon tank attached at the rear. Each set of wagons was pulled by a team consisting of 18 mules and two draft hors-es.

Sacks of borax were transported to the rail-head at Mojave by five separate teams that ran like clockwork. From 1883 until 1889, these famous 20-mule teams made the 20-day round trip between Death Valley and Mojave, traveling at a rate of 15 to 18 miles per day. Each wagon team could haul up to 28 tons of borax.

In the late 1880s, deposits of a new borate mineral named colemanite were discovered in Furnace Creek Wash on the eastern edge of Death Valley and in the Calico Mountains near Barstow. Production shifted from Death Valley to the Calico Mountains, and the new town of Borate was estab-lished 11 miles from the Daggett railhead. Borax production doubled, but this caused prices to plummet, and in 1888 Coleman’s empire col-lapsed.

In 1890, Francis Marion “Borax” Smith acquired all of Coleman’s borax prop-erties, and with these and his own holdings formed the Pacific Coast Borax Company with the famous “20 Mule Team Borax” trademark. Borate depos-its in Death Valley were virtually abandoned in 1890, and San Bernardino became the leading pro-ducer of borax until 1906 when the deposits at Calico finally played out.

Borax mining resumed in Death Valley in 1903, as it had become evident that the deposits near Borate would soon be exhausted. The town of Ryan grew up around the Lila C. Mine where initial

borax production started. A mill was established at Death Valley Junction on the Tonopah & Tidewater Railroad line, and a spur was built from the mill to Ryan. Constructed by F.M. Smith in 1907 in hopes of cashing in on the Rhyolite boom, the Tonopah & Tidewater was used to haul borax instead. By 1915, the Lila C. had pro-duced more borate ore than all of Death Valley’s previous borax operations combined, but Smith ulti-mately went bankrupt due to other investments and lost control of the mines.

To reach the best deposits in the Funeral Range, the reorganized Pacific Coast Borax Consolidated built the narrow gauge Death Valley Railroad, which was completed to Horton on the Tonopah & Tidewater in 1914. “Old Ryan” was torn down and moved to the new location, and the Lila C. was abandoned. Extensive production took place at the Widow and other mines in the vicinity of New Ryan over the next dozen or so years.

Ore from these mines was hauled by a 24-inch (baby) gauge train to New Ryan where it was loaded onto the narrow gauge Death Valley Railroad. From Ryan, the ore was transported to Horton where it was transferred to railcars on the Tonopah & Tidewater standard gauge line. By 1927, pro-duction from the mines in the Funeral Range had reached $30 million.

However, amazingly rich deposits of pure borax were discovered in the Mojave Desert at Kramer (Boron) on the transcontinental railroad that same year, and borax was also being mined from Searles Lake near Trona. Unable to compete, the mines in the Funeral Range ceased operations in 1928.

That prompted Pacific Coast Borax to look at is Death Valley holdings as a tourist attraction, not a mining property. The allure of Death Valley to visitors became apparent fairly soon. In a short time, the Tonopah & Tidewater and Death Valley railroads were given new life transport-ing tourists to Death Valley, and instead of hauling ore from the mines, the baby gauge train was used to ferry people on mine tours.

Fascination with the rugged landscape and extreme conditions in Death Valley continues today.

(This description of the development of the salt mines in Death Valley can

be found on the Virtual Transportation Museum, a “digital department” of the Eastern California Museum, in Independence. The website features edu-cational text and historic photos that provide a con-cise overview of the histo-ry of the Eastern Sierra, from the deserts of Death Valley to the peaks of the Sierra and through the towns in between. The website contains 13 sepa-rate sections and more than 500 photos which allow you to travel through the rich past of this unique part of the Eastern Sierra. Log on to www.virtualtransporta-tionmuseum.com, or link to the site through the Eastern California Museum website, www.inyocounty.us/ecmuseum.)

Death Valley borax mines led to transportation firsts

sportsThe Inyo Register

19SATURDAY, ApRil 18, 2015

SpoRT ShoRTS pRep ScheDUleBishop Little League sign-up

Bishop Little League Baseball Juniors Division has announced sign ups for 12- to 15-year olds. Practice, player evaluations and play are starting soon.

To get signed up, contact Bishop Little League Coaches Coordinator Gian Frigerio at (760) 937-6699.

Fire Department fundraiserThe Bishop Country Club’s fundraising golf tournament

for the Wheeler Crest and Paradise Fire departments is today, Saturday, April 18. The format is 4-person scrambles with a 9:30 a.m. shotgun start. There will be team and indi-vidual prizes, a raffle, lunch and awards.

The fee is $50 for members, $75 for guests. Hole spon-sorship is available for $100.

Call BCC to sign up at (760) 873-5828.

Sherwin Grade ShootThe Eastern Sierra Bowman shoot starts today. It is held

April 18-19 at the Sherwin Grade site, just east of the old windmill near the top of the grade. White and red signs will be posted for directions from both north and southbound lanes of US-395.

Event prices are $10-20; 2015 annual membership is $40.

Sign-ups start at 9 a.m. today. For more information, go to archeryclub.tripod.com.

Sharie Swenson Memorial Golf TournamentSaturday, April 25 there will be a golf tournament to

honor the memory of Sharie Swenson who was the victim of a drunk driving accident on March 4, 1977. She was 16 years old. The annual tournament raises funds in Swenson’s honor to go to scholarships for Palisades High School stu-dents.

This year the tournament is at the Bishop Country Club. Cost for BCC members is $55 and for non members it’s $75. There will also be 50/50 raffle, as well as long drive, hole in one, and other prizes. To sponsor a hole in memory of a loved one or with a slogan against drunk driving is $100.

To sign up to play or contribute, contact Kathryn Kessler-Daniels (760) 873-7398 or [email protected].

BASEBALL/SOFTBALL

Friday, April 17Lone Pine vs. Desert3:15 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Big Pine vs. Trona (double-header)1 and 3 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Tuesday, April 21Bishop @ Cal City3:15 p.m. JV and varsity girls and boys

Big Pine @ Trona3 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Wednesday, April 22Lone Pine vs. Silver Valley3:15 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Friday, April 24Bishop vs. Cal City3:15 p.m. JV and varsity girls and boys

Big Pine @ Lee Vining (double-head-er)1 and 3 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Lone Pine vs. Mojave3:15 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Tuesday, April 28Bishop vs. Frazier Mtn.3:15 p.m. JV and varsity girls and boys

Lone Pine @ Desert Christian3:15 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Big Pine vs. Lee Vining3 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Thursday, April 30Bishop vs. Rosamond3:15 p.m. JV and varsity girls and boys

Lone Pine vs. Boron 3:15 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Friday, May 1Bishop @ Frazier Mtn.3:15 p.m. JV and varsity girls and boys

Tuesday, May 5Bishop vs. Kern Valley3:15 p.m. JV and varsity girls and boys

Lone Pine @ Mammoth3:15 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Big Pine vs. Baker Valley3 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Thursday, May 7Bishop @ Kern Valley3:15 p.m. JV and varsity girls and boys

Friday, May 8Big Pine vs. Immanuel Christian (dou-ble-header)1 and 3 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Monday, May 11Big Pine @ Immanuel Christian3 p.m. varsity boys4 p.m. varsity girls

Tuesday, May 12Lone Pine @ Desert3:15 p.m. varsity girls and boys

Thursday, May 14Lone Pine @ Silver Valley3:15 p.m. varsity girls and boys

GOLF

Wednesday, April 22Bishop @ Host - Kern Valley / Kern River Golf Course1 p.m.

Wednesday, April 29Bishop @ Host - Rosamond / Rancho Sierra Golf Course1 p.m.

SWIM

Wednesday, April 22Bishop @ Burroughs (Pinney Pool)3 p.m.

Thursday, May 7DSL Finals @ AVAC3 p.m.

‘Now batting for the Bishop Broncos …’

Calling Bob sheppard? Michael Buffer? Bishop junior Andy Watt (l) and junior Chance Womack (r) work the announcers’ table, calling the batters and keeping the crowd psyched during the 13-inning game with rosamond last week. the Bishop Broncos’ next game is tuesday at Cal City, their next home game is Friday when Cal City comes here, and they get one more shot at rosamond on April 30.

photo by louis israel

Catching up with the Warriors, Golden Eagles and Broncos register staff

BishopThe Broncos varsity boys

are now 6-6 overall, 2-3 in the league. Their last game was an extra-inning marathon against Rosamond which ended in a heartbreaking 7-6 loss. Coach Chris Walston has been teaching small-ball with success and the pitching has been a highlight this season.

The Lady Broncos varsity girls are 7-6 overall and 2-3 in the league. Coach Mike Jones has to be happy with the way the girls have been playing. They’d been racking up the wins until they too hit this last tough stretch against Rosamond.

The JV girls are 3-7 overall and 1-1 in the league, and the JV boys are 1-4-1.

Next up for all Bishop teams is a trip to Cal City for games at 3:15 on Tuesday, April 21.

Lone PineThe Lady Golden Eagles

are in the middle of a very strong season. Coach Liz Jones’ squad is 9-3 overall, 4-3 in league play. Earlier this week they posted a 13-0 win over Mammoth and they also had a game yesterday against

Desert – too late to report for today’s edition.

The Golden Eagles boys got off to a frustrating start, and are now 4-7 overall, 1-5 in league play. Some of the stars for Coach Mike Button had little time to get ready for the season, coming off their run in the basketball playoffs. The team has a few standout wins under its belt, but has strug-gled overall.

Both Lone Pine teams play host to Silver Valley at 3:15 this Wednesday, April 22.

Big PineCoach Jose Rico’s boys

Warriors squad has plenty of highlights this year – the pitching and hitting have both

been stellar. Last week they walloped Beatty in both ends of a double-header.

The Lady Warriors have had a tougher time of it, but that is to be expected; this is the first girls softball team Big Pine has fielded in two years and Coach Bob Church is pleased that ball games are being played.

Big Pine teams were sched-uled to play Baker this week but the Baker Braves can-celled the game (and the rest of their season). Big Pine also had a doubler header against Trona on the schedule for Friday. Those games have been rescheduled for Tuesday, April 21.

Diamond roundup

Jeff and Tammy Kilgore of Bishop at Dodgers Stadium.

Show us how much you love your team!

Send us photos of you and friends at the stadium, tailgating before the big game, or with one of your

favorite professional athletes!

Email: [email protected] format along with names, dates and other details

Hey Sports Fans!

20 SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 2015 The Inyo Register

Rick is the Director of Preventive Medicine at Toiyabe Indian Health Project, where he manages programs designed to promote healthy living and reduce chronic disease. He is also an adjunct instructor of health science and physical education at the Eastern Sierra College Center of Cerro Coso Community College. He holds a bachelor’s degree from California State University, Northridge in kinesiology, a master’s from San Diego State University in sport psychology, and a PhD from the University of Alberta in human performance. He was a Vietnam-era naval officer; racquetball pro-fessional and weight loss coordinator at Canyon Racquet Club in Salt Lake City, Utah; and Director of Academic Books at Human Kinetics Publishers, Champaign, Ill. He’s played and coached rugby for more than 50 years; and been a sport psychology consultant with high school, college, professional, and All-American athletes.

Rick is the author of “Six Weeks on the Throne: The Tale of a Stowaway,” the memoir of a stowaway adventure he had as a 19-year-old during the summer of 1966. It’s available at local book-stores, or online at www.lulu.com for print and eBook versions.

He first came to the Eastern Sierra in 1951 as a fishing compan-ion of his dad and grandfather. He’s familiar with most of the water, canyons, mountains and trails between Topaz Lake and Olancha.

In-Depth & Personal with Rick Frey

What is your idea of bliss?

Realizing that we’re made of the same elements that are found in the distant stars.

What scares you? I haven’t been afraid of anything since I was a teenager; but I’m concerned by climate change, superstitious cults and ignorant voters.

With whom do you identify from History? Carl Linnaeus, the father of modern ecology.

Who do you admire? Native Americans before the European invasion. They were probably the last human group in balance with nature.

What among your traits do you dislike the most? Sometimes I can be downright offensive before I catch myself; particularly toward bullies … and door-to-door missionaries.

What trait do you most dislike in others? Bigotry.

What or whom do you despise? Religious militants, political extremists, conspicuous consumers, child abusers, climate change deniers, racists, hypocrites, folks who waste water during a drought, ticks, Fox News commentators, mosquitoes and a variety of other blood-sucking creatures… for example, tobacco company executives.

What is your extravagance? A 2003 Harley Davidson Superglide Sport.

What is a favorite trip you have taken? An around-the-world adventure when I was 19.

What is the most despicable character flaw? Fear due to a lack of critical thinking.

Do you ever lie? Yes; but never in the newspaper.

Who is the greatest love of your life? Myself. It allows me to have unbounded love for family, friends and country.

When in your life were you the happiest? About two hours ago. I was floating the Owens River.

What hidden talent do you have? Ship handling, celestial navigation and amphibious close air support.

What do you consider your greatest achievement? Raising three independent sons.

In your next life, you want to be … There is abundant evidence that most of the misery we see in the world is directly related to people believing that there is a “next” life. Such belief can lead to the rationalization of inhumane atrocities towards those who don’t share the same belief system. It also allows profiteers to be quite cavalier about the wholesale destruction of our natural world. Embracing the realistic evidence that we only have one life to live,

helps us cherish every moment, concentrate on tolerance, exhibit kindness, and conserve natural resources for future generations.

What is your favorite way of relaxing? Drinking beer, fishing the Owens River and listening to a Dodger game.

What quality do you most admire in a man? Humility.

What quality do you most admire in a woman? Confidence.

What do you most admire in your friends? Generosity.

Who is your favorite or fictional or non-fictional hero? Richard F. Frey, Navy fighter pilot, WWII.

What do you most dislike? Two categories of the narrow-minded and intellectually-challenged come to mind: 1) radical fundamentalists like Islamic extremists, Evangelicals, tea party Republicans, etc.; and 2) incompetent youth sport coaches who believe that winning is more important than sportsmanship, and who teach unethical techniques instead of fitness and skills.

What is your motto? Life is neutral; attitude determines your fate.

If you have another resident in Inyo County that you’d like to get “In-Depth & Personal” with, email that person’s name and contact info to Darcy Ellis at [email protected].