The Observer paper 11-21-14

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AUSLIN MCDANIEL-PERRINPROFILE IN SPORTS, 8A

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MCDANIEL-PERRIN REFLECTS ON SOCCER SUCCESSES, READYTO FINISH SENIORYEAR ON A STRONG NOTE IN HEALTH, 6C IN OUTDOORS 5.REC, 1C

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EASTERN PROMISE

• Shelter From the Storm appeals county courthouse site plan application Inside

By Kelly Ducote The Observer

Shelter From The La Grande City the S torm Council will reconsider a wi l l no longer site plan application for pur s ue its the new Union County laws u it Courthouse in January. aga i nst City of La Grande stafF U nion granted a conditional ap- C o unty. provaloftheapplication 2A Nov. 7, but that approval

is being challenged by Shelter From the Storm, which submitted an appeal Wednesday ahead of the 5 p.m. deadline. In a written appeal to the city, Shelter From the Storm Executive Director Teresa Crouser wrote that the application cannot comply with conditions laid out in the city's decision. "Additionally, neither the County nor the City, as the reviewing authority, would be able to meet the guidelines established in for Land Development in the State of Oregon if this Site Plan Application is approved, SeeSite Plan / Page5A

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LA GRANDE SCHOOL DISTRICT

Enrollment

leads to drop Dick Mason/TheObserver

La Grande High School students Sarah Rasmussen andAndrew Kevan workon a lab project in theirAdvanced Biology class. The class is part of the Eastern Oregon University Promise program. Students who pass can earn EOU credits.

in revenue Prediction

By Dick Mason The Observer

problem

The La Grande School Distric t' sbudget picture

The problem is that the school district had forecast on Dec. 10, 2013, that it would have 2,212 students in 2013-14. The state provides funding to school districts based on districts' Dec. 1 forecasts.

is taking a $300,000 hit

• More than 3,500 students involved in Eastern Promise's Academic Momentum program By Kelly Ducote

County. Academic Momentum is part Three years into the Academic of Eastern Oregon University's Momentum program, Eastern Eastern Promise program, Promiseofficials say 3,550 which aims to increase access students are participating in tocollege and postsecondary the program acrosstheregion, education in the region. A large from Wallowa County to Gilliam part of the program works to The Observer

INDEX Calendar........7A Classified.......1B Comics........... 5B Crossword.....2B Dear Abby .....6B

WE A T H E R Health ............6C Opinion..........4A Horoscope.....2B Outdoors .......1C Lottery............2A Sudoku ..........5B Record ...........3A Sports ............SA Obituaries......3A Television ......3C

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ofFer college credit to high school students, but the Academic Momentum portion of the program is directed toward younger students in elementary and middle school. aWe're in practically every school district in Eastern Or-

high school." SeePromise / Page5A

CONTACT US

Fu l l forecast on the back of B section

Friday 38 Low Rain

egon," said Dan Mielke, executive director of Eastern Promise. cThe idea is you need to start early with creating the mindset in students that they're going to do something later on beyond

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541-963-3161 Issue 140 3 sections, 24 pages La Grande, Oregon

LA GRANDE HIGHBASKETBALL PREVIEWS •000

because its enrollment is less than forecast. Now the good news — the school district will be able to absorb the reduction without making any personnel cuts. aWe'll be fine. We'll just have to put some projects on the back burner," said La Grande School District Superintendent Larry Glaze. cWe will not be cutting any positions." The district will handle some ofthe budgetshortfall by putting ofFpurchases. For SeeRevenue / Page5A

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

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2A — THE OBSERVER

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

LOCAL

TRAVEL

DAtLY PLANNER

La Grande senior makes mission trip to Haiti

TODAY Today is Friday, Nov. 21, the 325th day of 2014. There are 40 days left in the year.

TODAY INHISTORY On Nov. 21, 1942, the Alaska Highway, also known as the Alcan Highway, was formally opened at Soldier's Summit in the Yukon Territory.

ONTHIS DATE In1789, North Carolina became the 12th state to ratify the U.S. Constitution. In1864, a letter was signed by PresidentAbraham Lincoln expressing condolences to Lydia Bixby, a widow in Boston whose five sons supposedly died while fighting in the CivilWar. (As it turned out, only two of Mrs. Bixby's sons had been killed in battle; also, historians are not certain that Lincoln actually wrote the letter.) In 1980, 87 people died in a fire at the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada.

LOTTERY

By Cherise Kaechele The Observer

A La Grande High School senior traveledto a third-world country to help the local Christian church. Marissa Carson, 17, is the senior class president at LHS. In between her classes, she is in charge of fundraisingforherseniorclass.Besides selling tickets to the next dance, she's also in charge of fundraising for the senior trip and senior nightthough thosearealltypicalresponsibilities of the president. In mid-October, though, she left the comfort ofher home and flew to Haiti, the impoverished country that experienced a major earthquake, a 7.0 magnitude, in 2010 killing between 230,000 to 316,000 people and displacing more than a million. Carson attends Imbler Christian Church, which has worked with the Haitian Christian Mission Compound, a Christian school for students3 to 21yearsold. The two-week mission trip took 11 people and one more from a neighboring church. Carson was the youngest of the group and the oldest was 77 years old, she said. eWe went down there to see what the Hatiain Christian Mission Compound was doing and how they were helping," she said."I taught a sewing class down there. We also went up to the mountains and handed out rice and clothing to the kids." The compound started ap-

Submitted photo

Marissa Carson, 17, spent two weeks in Haiti on a mission trip in October. She worked at a Christian school, where she taught sewing and helped in the medical office. proximately 40 years ago,she said. Church members donate $20 per month to go to the Christian school, which pays for their food, uniforms, education and supplies for the entire month. "Actually when you're paying $20 per month, you're paying for five kids," Carson said.'There's not enough sponsors, so the money gets spread out to pay for them." Carson said her father, who is a historyteacher,gavehersome facts aboutHaitibeforegoing on the trip. "It was really cool," she said of the trip.'The people were awesome." She said she was in a small community but also traveled to Port au

Prince, a much bigger area. "It was kind of weird because it's justshacks,"she said ofthe area. "But there's 3 million people in this tiny area. A lot of them are just on the streets, walking around with baskets on their heads and there's garbage everywhere. The people are super nice though. You can tell they're hungry, but their clothes are really clean. They work hard to keep their clothes really clean. They are smiling all the time." Carson said the sense of community she received from the Haitian people was amazing. eWe got a flat on the side of the road and people came out from the

village and helped us," she recalled. At the school itself, where the group was staying, Carson estimates there were about 200 studentsabout50 students perclassroom. The classrooms were very small, she said. They had a few benches for the students to sit on, but sometimes no tables to work on. Carson, who didn't know much about sewing initially, was taught by the instructor and then turned around and taught the students, who were mostly girls her age, to hand sew cloth diapers, a bag and a skirt. Other members of her church who went on the trip made benches for the school, worked on the cars and helped out with some medical issues. Carson said one of the days she was able to help deliver a baby. She said a couple of things that surprised her was the lack of vehicles. "They don't have their own cars," she said."They have tap taps. They're like little pickup trucks with coverings. iThe people) run and jump on them. That's how they get rides. Or they jump on the trucks withpotato sacks and getrides." Carson said her experience was very good and she would definitely go again if she had the chance. Contact CheriseKaechele at 541-7864235 orckaecheleC lagrandeobserver. com. FollowCherise on Twitter C' lgoKaeche/e.

Megabucks: $2.4 million

05-07-25-36-38-42

UNION COUNTY Mega Millions: $43 million

lawsuitdroggedhy Shelteri:romthe Storm

37-39-53-68-75-06-x2 Powerball: $70 million

06-36-38-48-51-17-x2 Win for Life: Nov. 19

with the help of a Community Development block Shelter From the Storm grant. will no longer pursue its lawVisiting Judge Eva Temsuit against Union County. ple in September dismissed The nonprofit's board of the lawsuit, saying SFS directors voted in aW ednes- was a tenant at sufferance day morning meeting to becauseitslease agreement dropthe suit"in orderto with the county had expired. In mid-October, SFS apdevoteallitsresourcesto maintaining critical dopealed the decision. mestic violence services," SFS board member Loy Carrington said the board according to a press release from SFS. believes itneedsto focuson SFS filed suit this spring its community services in seeking an injunction in helping victims of domestic orderto stay atitsadvoviolence. "It is hoped that this cacy center located on the county campus as Union action of good will opens County seeks to use that the door to the possibility of locationas the footprintfor amiable communication and a new county courthouse. a cooperative spirit for all The center is housed in a parties involved,"thepress building completed in 1998 release says."Shelter From By Kelly Ducote

13-24-38-75

The Observer

Pick 4: Nov. 20 • 1 p.m.: 0-0-0-6 • 4 p.m.: 6-5-2-4 • 7 p. m.: 0-9-1-6 • 10 p.m .: 4-8-5-3 Pick 4: Nov. 19 • 1 p.m.: 7-4-8-7 • 4 p.m.: 3-8-6-0 • 7 p.m.: 1-3-4-4 • 10 p.m.: 9-9-7-6

CORRECTION In the Page 2A story "Elgin bridge to be replaced," published Friday, Nov. 14, the headline and story misstated what will happen to the bridge. It will be rehabilitated, according to Union County Public Works Director Doug Wright.

GRAIN REPORT Soft white wheatNovember, $7.08; December, $7.08; January, $7.11 Hard red winterNovember, $748; December, $7.48; January, $7.53 Dark northern springNovember, $9.49; December, $9.49; January, $9.54 Barley — November, 142

Still your and now offering •

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move-out date. SFS has said there is no space available that would enable the nonprofit to maintain its current level of services.

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Holiday Baxaat FRIDAY, NOVEM BER 21ST 8r SATURDAY, NOVEM BER 22ND FROM 10:OOAM — 4:OOPM

— Bids provided ty Island City Grain Co. •

NEWSPAPER LATE? Every effort is made to deliver your Observer in a timely manner. Occasionally conditions exist that make delivery more difficult. If you are not on a motor route, delivery should be before 5:30 p.m. If you do not receive your paper by 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, please call 541963-3161 by 6 p.m. If your delivery is by motor carrier, delivery should be by 6 p.m. For calls after 6, please call 541-975-1690, leave your name, address and phone number. Your paper will be delivered the next business day.

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Come tour through the goodies and gifts displayed by local crafters and sample assorted holiday treats and cider. Kids make a craft with our residents and enter to win a fun Christmas basket!

SupportAlzheimer's Awarness and Local Cra fters!

Donations accepted for the

Boy Scouts Canned Food Drive Craft Vendors: a few openings still available. Contact Jenna at (541) 663-1200

W ILD F L O W E R

LODG E

a Senior Lifestyle community •

QUOTE OFTHE DAY "Never confuse motion with action." — Ernest Hemingway, American author (1899-1961)

1 letter notified SFS that it needed to be out of its building by Sept. 1. Since then, county officials have said they are willing to work with the nonprofit to establish a

the Storm wishes to express itsappreciation tothecommunity for all the generous and caring support it has received." Union County in an April

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ASSISTED LIVING I MEMORY CARE 508 16TH STREET I LAGRANDE OR 97850 CALL LOCALLY 888-442-8591 W W W. S EN I 0 R L I F E S T Y L E .c 0 M

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

THE OBSERVER —3A

LOCAL

OarTUAmEs volunteer for the kindergarten and was a Island City room mother numerous James Bohnenkamp, 91, Johnson ti m es. She of Island City died Friday in was active as Island City. A full obituary a 4-H leader and on the will be published later. Love- Job's Daughters Board for a land Funeral Chapel and number of years where her Crematory will be handling family grew up in Coquille. the arrangements. She joined the Order of Eastern Star as her children matured. After moving to Island La Grande City in the early 1970s, 1925-2014 she became active in Hope Chapter, OES, and was Mary MargueriteJohnWorthy Matron three times. She loved the order and son, 88, of La Grande, died receivedthree state appointNov. 17 at Grande Ronde Hospital. A celebration of ments. She enjoyed working life service will be held at 10 on the Rainbow Board for a number of years. a.m.Saturday atLoveland Funeral Chapel. Marguerite worked for the Marguerite was born on Union Education Services District for 12 years. She Dec. 7, 1925, to Clarence S. and Mary Ella (Dfllardl Rust worked in the preschool in Maywood, Calif. In her program as the first Parent Home Trainers in Union youth, she was active in the Order of Rainbow for girls, County for handicapped from birth to 6 years. She attaining the office of Worthy Advisor, and received worked in the Ceta Program the Grand Cross of Color for a number of years and for Service to the Order. She enjoyed working with youth was a member of Ebell, Jr's, of junior high and high a serviceorganization in the school ages. She took early Los Angeles County area. retirement so she could be She moved to Grants Pass home to care for her ailing in 1944 with her family. husband. There she met Alfred E. After his passing, she Johnson, her husband of 41 bought a place in Hemet, Calif. She was a snow bird years who preceded her in death. They were married on forfour years before moving to UnionCounty permaDec. 7, 1945. nently. She returned to She was a Cub Scout Union County in April 1998. leader for five years, was a

ames ohnenkamp

MarII Marguerite Joh son

She enjoyed following high school rodeo, various rodeo courts, barrelracing events and the Mavericks team penning. She lived in Union on and off since 1970. M arguerite is survived by her daughter, Becki Hamann, of Cove; son, James F. Johnson and his wife, Barbara, of Lebanon, Oregon;daughter-in-law, Sue Johnson of Beaverton; fourspecialgrandchildren and six great-grandchildren who were her pride and joy. She was preceded in death by her husband, Alfred; her parents; son, Rusty Lee Johnson, and son-in-law, Don Hamann. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions can be made to a charity of choice in care of Loveland Funeral Chapel, 1508 Fourth St., La Grande 97850. Online condolences may be made to the family at www.lovelandfuneralchapel com.

and RV park in Cougar, Wash., for 10 years. Margie enjoyed campFlintoff ing , gambling, travelmg and spending time with her family. She is survived by her significant other of 29 years, Jim Cunningham; children, Rick Flintoff, Jim Flintoff, Treasa McCauley and Toni Hamilton; siblings Donna Neilson and James Vannoy; 17 grandchildren; and 15 great-grandchildren. Margie was preceded in death by her parents and brother, Don Vannoy. Services were held Oct. 23. Bateman Carroll Funeral Home of Gresham handled arrangements. Online condolences to the family may be made at www. lovelandfuneralchapel.com.

Virginia(Gake) LaRpkins Baker City 1923-2014

Margie Flintoff Formerly of Elgin 1940-2014

Margie Flintoff, 74, of Gresham and formerly of Elgin, died Oct. 18 of complications ofleukemia. Margie was born July 19, 1940, in Iowa City, Iowa, the daughter of James and Dorothy (Herringl Vannoy. Margie was raised in Portland, lived in Elgin for more than 20 years and owned a motel

91, of Baker City died Nov. 13 after a brief illness. A celebration oflife will be held at their beloved second home, their cabin on Dayridge Road north of Enterprise, in the spring of 2015. All family members and friends will be notified of the exact date and time. Virginia was born Sept. 25, 1923, in Lincoln, Neb., the

LOCAL BRIEFING Erom staff reports

PFLAG to play board games at Shelter PFLAG's monthlyboard game night will be held tonight at 6 p.m. The location has changed from Bear Mountain Pizza to Shelter From the Storm, 1111 5th St., La Grande.

Union Food Bank open Saturday UNION — The Union Food Bank will be open from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Saturday at the Union United Methodist Church.

LHS Class of 1947

meets Monday

to 4:30 p.m., Thursdays from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The center, which provides free help in all basic literacy skills, is made possible by the Good Neighbor Club and devoted volunteers.

accessible to foot traffic. For questions or comments, contact Stu Spence at 541962-1352, ext. 203, or stop by the Parks and Recreation Department, 2402 Cedar St., La Grande, between 9 a.m. and 5p.m. Monday toFriday.

Drive a Lincoln, contribute to field

Bazaars offer treasures, treats

The La Grande Optimist Club will have a"Driven to Give" fundraiser Saturday. Every test drive of a Lincoln vehicle at Legacy Ford Lincoln in La Grande will earn the cub $20.Testdrivesofthe new 2015 Lincoln MKC will

A handfulofholiday bazaars will take place Saturday.The La Grande Philly Christmas Bazaar runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the La Grande Middle School Commons. The Wildflower Lodge Holiday Bazaar, which began today, will be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday at 508 16th St., La Grande. Proceeds will be used to support Alzheimer's awareness. Donations will alsobe accepted for the Boy Scouts Canned Food Drive. Church bazaars planned include: •Our LadyoftheValley Catholic Church Christmas Bazaar, featuring homemade goods, lunch, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., corner of Fourth & KAvenue,

earn $40 each, up to $8,000.

The La Grande High School Class of 1947 will meet at 1 p.m. Monday at the Flying J.

Literacy Center closed next week The Adult and Family Literacy Center at Cook Memorial Library in La Grande will be closed Thanksgiving week, Nov. 24-29. Normally the center is open Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 1 p.m.

Funds will go toward fixing up the Optimist baseball field at Pioneer Park, including replacing the concession stand and repairing or replacingthe bleachers.

Morgan Lake now closed to vehicles Effective today,accessto the interior of Morgan Lake will be closed to motorizedvehiclesforthewinter months, but will remain

La Grande (use KAvenue entrance). • St. Peter's Episcopal Church Holiday Bazaar, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., corner of Fourth & 0Avenue, La Grande. • In Imbler, the first annual"Christmas in November" Vendor Fair will be held in the Imbler Elementary School gym from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The event will include pictures with Santa.

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husband, James of Baker City; daughter, Linda Noble and her husband, Dave, of Baker City; daughter-in-law, Krista Lampkins of Haines, Alaska; six grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren; and many extended family members. She was preceded in death by her parents, Albert and Anna Gake; her sister, Doris Buckley; son, Larry James Lampkins; and grandson, Gary Lee Noble. Memorial contributions may be made to the Northeast Oregon Compassion Center in Baker City through Gray's West & Co. Pioneer Chapel, 1500 Dewey Ave. Baker City 97814.

daughterofAlbertand Anna Gake. She married her high school sweetheart, James B. Lampkins on Sept. 11, 1944, while Jim was home on leave from hisassigned destroyer, the USS Bradford. He returned to duty shortly after theirmarriage. Virginia and Jim raised two children, Linda and Larry in Enterprise until 1956 when Jim's banking career took them to various locations throughout Oregon over the years. She was a full-time homemaker and mother and devoted herself fully to her family with grace, love and compassion, family members said. Survivors include her

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OREGON INSURANCE DIVISION

This is an open apology to Sgt. John Shaul of the La Grande Police Department for my comments about his professionalism as a police officer and the issues related to the trespass case in Union County. Sgt. Shaul conducted his investigation and subsequent steps according to established policies and procedures and that fact is indisputable. The differences we have as to the investigation are not as important as my apology to Sgt. Shaul for my unprofessional comments as to his character and function as a police officer. I do reserve my right as an American and the rights protected by the 1st Amendment of the United States Constitution. -Eddie Garcia

Lester L. Stolte December 18, 1935 — October 13, 2014 Sublimity — Lester, 78, passed away October 13 at his home in Sublimity. He was born to William and ChrisL tina (Munsterman) Stolte near Gifford,ID. Lester graduated from Reubens High School and served inthe US Army before marrying Linda Lunders in June 1962. They moved to Grande Rounde Valley in Eastern Oregon, where they raised their children. Les' passion was farming which brought him to retirement. Lester is survived by his wife: Linda; daughter: Pastor Leah (Kent) Doerfler, granddaughters; Katie, Sarah and Emily;son: Lance (Jan) Stolte and grandchildren: twins, Sophia and Adrian and Kaitlyn; sister: Jeannette Totten; and brother: Stan Stolte. He was preceded in death by his parents, and brother, Howard Stolte. Memorial service will be held at Immanuel Lutheran Church in Silverton, OR on Saturday, November 22, 2014 at 11 am. Graveside service will be Monday, November 24, 2014 at 11 am atGood Hope Lutheran Church in Gifford, ID. Remembrances may be made to Immanuel FRB mission.

UR AGlKIDKRSKIOW AGRICUETURE

PUBLIC SAFETY REPORT LA GRANDE POLICE Cited: Two juveniles were cited Wednesday on charges of third-degree theft, seconddegree burglary and first-degree criminal mischief. Arrest: Lewis E. Richards, 19, unknown address, was arrested WedneSday On aUnion County statewide misdemeanor warrant charging failure to appear on original charges of harassment.

County jail on a Union County warrant charging failure to

appear on original charges of driving under the influence.

Bringing You HOme.

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If you call Union County home and you pass away anywhere in the Northwest, Loveland Funeral Chapel will make the necessary arrangements to get you, or your loved one, back home asquickly and

A strong ag lender and agproducer relationshipis avaluable asset. Stop inandseeusnexttimeyouneedan ag or comm ercial loan.

- easilv'as. os'ji41e..'.f'or no charge.

UNION COUNTY SHERIFF Arrest: Anthony Morgan Mailman,30, unknown address, was arrested while lodged in the Union County jail on a State parole board warrant charging possession of dangerous drugs. Arrest: Ryan Neil Porter, 33, transient, was arrested Wednesday while lodged in the Umatilla

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THE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

SERVING UNION AND WALLOWA COUNTIES SINCE I666

The Observer

OUR VIEW

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Word is getting out. Our own version of Hetch Hetchy, the East Moraine of Wallowa Lake, a one-of-a-kind geological phenomenon, one of Oregon's most special places along with Smith Rock, Steens Mountain, Cascade Head and Crown Point, deserves saving. From excessive logging. Trophy houses. Whateverelse developers dream up that values dollars over a natural shrine that has not only local but national importance. Perhaps you remember the glacial Hetch Hetchy Valley. Photographs by Ansel Adams were not enough to preserve this piece of Yosemite paradise, this glacial valley, from a dam and

flooding. Today, photographs are again being used to tryto save a piece ofparadise.Im ages by Leon Wirdinger, Rick McEwan and David Jensen and testimony from Kathleen Ackley, executive director of the Wallowa Land Trust, were instrumental in helping the Wallowa Lake project rank No. 1 in Oregon for the possibility of funding from the U.S. Forest Service's Land and Water Conservation Fund. It's no surprise. Those of us who live in Northeast Oregon, who have had the distinct pleasure of walking on the moraine and enjoying the oneof-a-kind view, appreciate the importance of the East Moraine's preservation. But it's not just the view. It's a special place that resonates locally. It also resonates statewide and will resonate with the nation as a special place worth saving. The preservation has broad support. Such entities as the Wallowa County Chamber of Commerce,the Nez PerceTribe,naturalresource agencies, the governor and congressional and state representatives submitted letters in support of the Wallowa Lake Moraine Partnership's grant application. Whether or not the partnership succeeds in its national quest to receive the grant, it needs to continueitsrelentlessefFortsto pursue funding for the acquisition of the land from private landowners. Those who worry about locking up the land in the hands of conservationists need not worry. Those whoworry about even more land in Wallowa County becoming public and locked away from those trying to wrest a living in this challenging northeast corner of Oregon need not worry. According to plan, the East Moraine would be placed in the hands of the county for a wide range of uses, including timber harvest, grazing, recreation and wildlife habitat. The East Moraine is a rare geological gem, and its preservation will come at a high cost. But it will come. Have no doubt, once the nation sees its unique qualities, the momentum will build and ultimately this Northeast Oregon treasure w ill be preserved for posterity.

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NEWSSTAND PRICE: 51.00 Youcansave upto34% offthe single-copy pnce with home delivery. Call 541-963-3161 to subscnbe.

Stopped account balances less than $5 will be refunded upon request. Subscription rates per month: By carner.............................................. $8.50 By motor carner....................................$9.50 By mail, Union County............................. $14 By mail, Wallowa County......................... $14 By mail, all other U.S............................... $15

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arack Obama's coming request for Congress to "right-size and update" the Authorization for Use of Military Force iAUMFl against terrorism will be constitutionally fastidious and will catalyze a debate that will illuminate Republican fissures. They, however, are signs of a healthy development — the reappearanceofforeign policy heterodoxy in Republican ranks. Many events iU.S. military misadventures since 2001, the Syrian civil war, the rise of the Islamic State, the spinning centrifuges of Iran's nuclear weapons program) and one senator iRand Paul)have reopened a Republican debate that essentially closed when Dwight Eisenhower won the party's presidential nomination in 1952. One reason he sought it was to block Ohio's Sen. Robert Taft. Taft's skepticism about NATO and collective security was not quite isolationism — a label bandied carelessly today by promiscuous interventionists — but was discordant with the postwar internationalism of the Republican establishment and the nation. Eisenhower's victory iand Taft's death the next year) sealed the Republicans' near-unanimity that had begun to form in January1945 when another Midwestern Republican senator, Michigan's ArthurVandenberg,changed hismind. He had been a senator since 1928 and an isolationist always. Then his Jan. 10, 1945, Senate speech repositioned him and his party: "I do not believe that any nation hereafter can immunize itselfby its own exclusive action.... Our oceans have ceased to be moats." The Republican schism of the 1960s, between the Barry Goldwater and Nelson Rockefeller factions — itself a reprise of the 1912 intra-party conflict between Theodore Roosevelt and President William Howard Taft — primarily concerned theproperscopeand actual competence of government in domestic affairs. Rockefeller's credentials as a Cold Warrior, from military spending to fallout shelters for civil defense, were impeccable. Now, however, Americans generally, but Republicans especially, are thinking afresh about the world. Henry Kissinger's new book, 'World Order," deftly diagnosesAmerica'sbipolar mental condition regarding foreign policy, a condition that is perennial because it is congenital.'The conviction that American

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principles are universal," Kissinger says, "has introduced a challenging element into the international system because it implies that governments not practicing them are less than fully legitimate." This "suggests that a significant portion of the world lives under a kind of unsatisfactory, probationary arrangement, and will one day be redeemed; in the meantime, their relations with the world's strongest power must have some latentadversarialelement to them." A"challenging element," indeed. It has, Kissinger writes, made the United States uncomfortable with"foreign policy as a permanent endeavor for contingent aims." On the other hand,"America's favorable geography and vast resources facilitated a perception that foreign policy was an optional activity." Because U.S. principles are assumed to be universal, the inclination to cooperate is assumed to beatleastgenerall y latent.Hence Franklin Roosevelt's reported assurances tohisformer ambassador toMoscow, William Bullitt: "I think if I give [Stalinj everything that I possibly can and ask nothing from him in return, noblesse oblige, he won't try to annex anything and will work for a world of democracy and peace." The last 11 years have been filled with hard learning. The 2003 invasion of Iraq, the worst foreign policy decision in U.S. history, coincided with mission creep i"nation building") in Afghanistan. Both strengthened what can be called the Republicans' John Quincy Adams faction: America"goes not abroad, in search of monsters to destroy. She is the well-wisher to the freedom and independence of all. She is the champion and vindicator only ofher own." The coming debate about another AUMF will come in a context conditioned by Obama's aggressive use ofhis expansive understanding of executive powers,athome and abroad.Molly OToole, writing for Defense One in August, noted: "The 2001AUMF that Congress passed in the fearful days following the Sept. 11 attacks has been called the most far-reaching, open-ended expan-

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sion of the executive's powers in U.S. history. Though the AUMF's mere 60 words made no mention of al-Qaeda or Afghanistan, they provided President George W. Bush the statutory authority for the war in Afghanistan and on 'terror,' and the legal underpinnings for almost any use of U.S. military force to counter terrorism anywhere across the globeforthepast13 years." The 2001AUMF could not have anticipated today's variables. The AUMF of 2002 ilraql followed the Iraq Liberation Act of 1998, which passed the House 360 to 38 and the Senate unanimously and declared it U.S. policy to"remove the regimeheaded by Saddam Hussein." Obama is right that there is much to rethink.

STAFF Publisher.........................................Kari Borgen Customerservicerep ................... Cindie Crumley Editor .........................................Andrew Cutler Customerservice rep.................. Ad director .................................. Glenas Orcutt Customerservicerep Operations director......................Frank Everidge Advertising representative...........Karrine Brogoitti Circulationdirector.................CarolynThompson Advertisingrepresentative........Brant McWiliams Offi ceManager..................................MonaTuck Advertisingrepresentative................... KarenFye Sportseditor ................................Eric Avissar Graphicdesignersupervisor...........Dorothy Kautz Sports/outdoorseditor................... JoshBenham Graphicdesigner...................... Cheryl Christian Go! editor/design editor..................Jeff Petersen LeadPressman........................................TC Hull Newseditor/reporter....................... Kelly Ducote Pressman ....................................Chris Dunn Reporter . ..................... DickMason Pressman......................................DinoHerrera Reporter/photographer............CheriseKaechele Distribution centersupervisor...............Jon Silver WaIlowaCounty editor...................... KatyNesbitt Distributioncenter....................... Terry Everidge Multi-mediaeditor .......................... Tim Mustoe Distribution center ............................ LarraCutler

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

THE OBSERVER —5A

LOCAL

REVENUE

ly in future years. One reason is the addition of full-day kindergarten beginning in Continued ~om Page 5A 2015-16. Currently the school example, it will postpone district offers only half-day kindergarten. purchasing a new $93,000 Panike believes that the phone system. Plans had been made to purchase it in addition of full-day kinder2014-15because thedistrict's garten will boost enrollment present system is outdated, because parents who work Glaze said. will be more likely to enroll The school district will their children in it. This means that parents have $300,000 less in revwho might have enrolled enue than it had budgeted forbecause ithas34few er their children in private kindergartensorall-day prostudents than it projected, said Chris Panike, the school grams in neighboring school distri ct' sbusinessand opera- districts may enroll them tions manager. instead in the La Grande The school district had School District. Panike discussed the 2,178 students on Oct. 1, the benchmark reporting date school district's enrollment and budget picture to the state for enrollment. La Grande's student count at aschoolboard meeting is just one less than a year Wednesday. Also at Wednesago. The problem is that the day's meeting,thereportcard ratings the La Grande School schooldistricthad forecast on Dec. 1, 2013, that it would District recently received have 2,212 students in 2013- &om thestate forits schools 14. Dec. 1 is the statewide were discussed. Schools were deadline for submitting rated on a five-point scale enrollmentforecastsforthe with five being the highest next school year. The state possible score.Assessment provides funding to school testscoresfor studentsin distri ctsbased upon their grades 3,4,5,6,7,8 and 11 Dec. 1 forecasts. were big determining factors ''We built our budget based in the ratings given schools. on our forecast," Panike said. Central Elementary, Island Panike is confident enrollElementary and La Grande ment will increase moderate- Middle School all received

PROMISE

year, Academic Momentum studentsvisita partner college, Blue Mountain or Continued from Page1A Treasure Valley community college. Academic Momentum "This is the first year we'll is tailored to fifth- through eighth-grades and starts by have seventh-grade visits asking students, parents and take place," Mielke said. During the middle school educators to sign a compact asserting students will work years of the program, the curriculum ensures students on academichabitsto preand parentsarefamiliar parethem forcollege orvocational training. That, done with the college application at the fifth-grade level, is the process, applying for finanbeginning of shaping a 10cialaid and other aspectsof higher education. year Academic Momentum Personal Development Plan Those involved withAcato help students pin down demic Momentum also say their projected educational the program aims to break and career future. down potential barriers to In 2012-13, the Pendleton education for underrepreSchool District piloted the sented populations, including program. Seventeen more those in poverty. Read said distri ctssigned on lastyear. many of the participating Now, 42 schools participate in school districts have more the program. than 50 percent of their Fifth-graders in the students in &ee or reduced program take a visit to EOU lunch programs. "A child from poverty has to get a feelforpostsecondan even tougher path to colary education. Mielke said this coming spring, when the lege and postsecondary preparation for many reasons," schools visit the university, they will tie in their visits as Read said."Our teachers the Portland Opera Comneed to be alert and prepared to help them overcome those pany comes to town. 'They engage in some kind additional obstacles." Last month, educators of activity," Mielke said. In the past, students have heard participated in a povertyfrom the EOU president. awareness training to proStudents may see a student- vide teachers with a realistic athlete presentation or a lab approach to working with students and parents from presentation. Eastern Promise officials poverty and research-based strategies toim prove student say the quick growth in the Academic Momentum performance. program occurred after theprogram coordinator, Vickie Read, contacted all the schools to inform them of training opportunities available through the program. St. Peter's Annual ''We're growing more quickly than we expected, as schools are communicating Corner of 4th and 0 with each other and spreadSaturday, Nov. 22nd ing the excitement," Read 9am to 2pm

SITE PLAN

ratings of four, Greenwood receiveda three rating and La Grande High School a two rating. Glaze said that LHS's lower overall rating was misleading. He explained that LHS's rating was hurt significantly because its students with disabilities subgroup missed the 94.5 percent participation target. "The high school was penalized for that," Glaze said. "Otherwise it ithe rating of LHSl might have been three or higher." Glaze said he is pleased overall with the ratings given La Grande's schools. He noted that they indicate things like strong showings by students in subjects including math. Glaze said this reflects the emphasis the school district's Professional Learning Communities program has been placing on math.

Continued ~om Page1A either with or without the recommended conditions," thelettersays. Crouser goes on in the letterto say thatconditions outlined in the city's approval provide only a temporary resolution to parking issues raised. "Approvalofthisproject would exacerbate an already existing parking problemfortheentire proposedprojectsite,"the letter says. The countyintends to build the new court facility on the current footprint of the Shelter From the Storm CommunityAdvocacy Center. The La Grande City Council will take up the appeal at its Jan. 14 meeting, City Planner Mike Boquist said. ''We were originally aiming for the December meeting," Boquist said. However, because of the time required for the city to send out pub-

Contact Dick Mason at 541-786-5386 or dmason 0 lagrandeobserver.com. Follow Dick on Twitter 0 lgoMason.

This is an open apology to Jaimie Bingham, Brayden Bingham and Mr. 5 Mrs. Waelty for me trespassing into their home on Sept. 5, 2014. The reasons for the entrance are not as important as my poor judgment in exercising that entry. I also apologize for making comments that cast them in a bad light and caused additional pain. The system of justice that we depend on meted out its decision, and as Americans we value that process and those who participate in reaching difficult decisions with the information they were given to reach a difficult decision. I do reserve my right as an American and the rights protected by the 1st Amendment of the United States Constitution. -Eddie Garcia

lic notice, take comments and preparea staffreport, Boquist said trying to get it on the December agenda would result in dumping a lot of information on the council justbeforeconsideration of the matter. "I think it's more fair to the council and gives them the time to get all the information," Boquist said of the January hearing date. The planner said that the county, which also had standingto appealthe decision, did not submit a requestforreconsideration ofthedecision. The city council could choose to uphold the city's original decision, deny the application or something else, Boquist said. 'Theyhave allkindsof options,"he said.'They an. essentially the newreview body."

County Commissioner Bill Rosholt said last week that the county remains confident in its timeline for construction. Commissioners have said they hope to break ground on the new courthouse in February. The $3.1 million courthouse will be built with the

help of a $2 million allocation &om the state and will provide a new space for circuit court staK The circuit court has been housed in the old Joseph Hospital building since the 1990s. Judges and stafFhave pointed to the inefficiencies of working on the first and third floors, unmovable columns and a lack of privatespacefor stafFam ong reasons a new courthouse is needed. The courthouse was named the worst in the state in a 2008 study.

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Friday, November 21, 2014 The Observer

WEEIC AHEAD

GIRLS PREP SOCCER

COLLEG E VOLLEYBALL

SATURDAY • Women'scollege basketball: • Simpson University at Eastern Oregon, 2 p.m. • College Cross Country: • Eastern Oregon at NAIA national championships, Lawrenceville, Kan., 8:30 a.m. • College volleyball: • Menlo (Calif.) at Eastern Oregon, NAIA National Championships, 6 p.m.

• Mounties host playoA'game at Quinn Coliseum in their first postseason appearance By Josh Benham

AT A GLANCE

The Observer

Longhorns beat Hawkeyes NEWYORK (AP) — Jonathan Holmes didn't hit much more than a table in the first half, crashing hard behind the baseline during one futile possession. Once he got going in the second half, there was no slowing down Texas. Holmes scored 17 of his 19 points after halftime, IsaiahTaylor added15 and the No. 10 Longhorns beat lowa 71-57 on Thursday night in the 2K Classic.

Cherise Kaechele /Tbe Observer

La Grande senior goalkeeper Auslin McDaniel-Perrin was a all-Greater Oregon League selection all four years of her career, leading the Tigers to 19 shutouts in her final two seasons.

Menlo (Calif) College Saturday. "It's so exciting being at home," senior Jessalyn Smith said."On senior night, we SeeVolleyball IPage9A

Blount re-joins Patriots

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) — LeGarrette Blount's teammates are glad to have him back in a New England Patriots uniform. Some players had trouble recognizing the 6-foot, 250-pound running back on Thursday after he signed and donned No. 60 for his first practice. "I didn't know if he was a new offensive lineman or a new long snapper or what," nose tackle Vince Wilfork said. Blount was cut by the Steelers on Tuesday,lessthan 24 hours after he jogged off LP Field with the clock still running in a 27-24 victory over the Tennessee Titans.

Bills, 3ets to

play in Detroit BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Whether by plane, snowmobile or sled dog, the Bills are leaving snowbound Buffalo behind for Detroit to play their "home" game against the NewYork Jets on Monday night.

By Eric Avissar The Observer

Auslin McDaniel-Perrin is a true Tiger. As a senior at La Grande High School, McDaniel-Perrin plans to graduateas afour-year varsity playerfor the soccer,basketball and softball teams while being an honor roll student and the homecoming queen. However, what McDanielPerrin is probably known for more than anything else is her toughness. After a soccer career in which she was named an all-

Greater Oregon League selection all four years, LHS girls soccer head coach Sam Brown said McDaniel-Perrin had the mentality he looked for in a keeper. "Her toughness and her ability to beaggressivetowards theball really stood out to me," Brown said.'There's never an ounce of fear from her and that's always impressive. You have to befearless and somewhat crazy to be a goodkeeperin my opinion.You have to have the sense that I'm going to take you out if you come in here."

Cherise Kaechele/Tbe Observer

Eastern Oregon junior guard Larissa Quintana pushes the ball in transition in the Mountaineers'110-36win overWalla Walla (Wash.) UniversityWednesday.

Mounties Eastern gears up for NAIAmeet cruise to win rc'

By Josh Benham

as good ofhealth he could hope for. The Observer "There's the usual aches and The goal for Eastern Oregon is pains," he said."But they're fit and as high as its ranking for the NAIA ready to roll. We're healthier and men's cross country national cham- fitter than we were last year." pionships Saturday. Eastern finished 11th last season The Mountaineers enter the sea- behind Lucas Updike's time of 25 son-ending meet in Lawrence, Kan., minutes, four seconds, which placed ranked No. 9 in the country after him 24th overall. Kody Shriver took finishing second at the Cascade 46th in 2013, and Hans Roelle was Collegiate Conference champion55th. All three are back this fall and ships Nov. 8 in Portland. Welch is hopeful the team can get a cWe have some pretty high exbetter overall showing from top to pectations," head coach Ben Welch bottom this time around. "I hope to get five or six cylinders said.'The minimum goal is to finish where we're ranked. How high we'll firing Saturday,"Welch said."Last go, we'll find that out Saturday." year, our front four ran well, but we didn't have the depth last year that Welch said that unlike in past seasons, the men enter Saturday in SeeNationalsIPage 9A

The Eastern Oregon women's basketball team earned a 110-36 victory over Walla Walla Wednesday in Quinn Coliseum. As the lone senior on the squad,Kassy Larson dominated thegame with her shooting, going 13-for-14 from the field, finishing with a game-high 27 points. The Mounties blew the game open with a 20-4 run in the first

In her final go-round for the Tigers, McDaniel-Perrin commanded the last line of defense to a shutout on five occasions to earn first team all-GOL honors for a second straight year. She also finished her junior campaign with 14 clean sheets and six goalsconceded in 17 games to earn first team all-state honors after the Tigers finished as state runners-up. Following the defeat to Scappooseinthe 2013 Class4A state title game, La Grande senior SeeAuslin IPage 10A

COLLEGE CROSS COUNTRY

Annetta Evans phato

McKenzie Evans will be the lone Eastern Oregon woman at the NAIA national championships.

Wizards host Cavaliers hit the road with a 5-5

record to battle the surging Washington Wizards, who currently have a 7-3 record, at the Verizon Center. 5 p.m., ESPN

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The Observer

61

The Cleveland Cavaliers

Larson

By Josh Benham

11

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TONIGHT'S PICIC

Larsonshoots nearly perfectin EOU win

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WOMEN'S COLLEG EBASICETBALL

• McDaniel-Perrin looks to bring tenacity and passion to college soccer

OBSERVERATHLETE OF THE DAY

six minutes.

No. 14 Eastern Oregon's Bobbi Sumpter had to face a reality she thought would never come this season. "After Friday, it hit me that I might never playatEastern again,"the seniorsettersaid. "All season I had never really thought about how a match could possibly be my last one." However, the Mountaineers received great news two days later, as they were given an at-large bid for the NAIA national championships, letting out a collective sigh heard around La Grande. 'That whole weekend, it was a roller coaster of emotions," Sumpter said."It's unbelievable getting into nationals. We've wanted thisforsolong,and we'vecome soclose so many times. There are no words to explain how we felt." The team would have been thankful just to make it in, considering it is the first time in program history that a Mountie team made it to the nationals. Eastern, however, received a home match for the opening round against

Eastern Oregon capped off an early season trifecta Wednesday. The Mountaineers shot nearly 49 percent from the field in the first half and controlled every facet of the game in the first 20 minutes, leading to a 110-36 rout of Walla Walla (Wash.) University Wednesday at Quinn Coliseum. The win was the third in as many meetings between the pair of teams, as Eastern won 119-43 Oct. 30 at home, and defeated the Wolves 93-40 Nov. 9 in College Place, Wash. 'These games are really good for seeing what we need to do for execution purposes," Eastern Oregon head coach Anji Weissenfluh said."This is the third time we've seen See RoutIPage10A

WHO'S HOT

WHO'S NOT

CALIFORNIA: The Golden Bear men's basketball squad travelled to Madison Square Garden and picked up an impressive nonconference win after beating Syracuse, 73-59, in the 2K Sports Classic.

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS:The Chiefs allowed the Oakland Raiders to end a 16-game losing streak and 10 straight losses to open the season after falling by a 24-20 margin Thursday on the l08d.

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McDaniel-Perrin makes a save during La Grande's 4-1 win over Pendleton Sept. 8 at home. The senior has played three sports at the varsity level since her freshman year.

AUSLIN Continued from Page 8A Sarah Rasmussen, who most recently won GOL player of the year, said she vividly remembers what McDanielPerrin said after the loss. "Right after we lost, we were getting our medals, and a bunch of us were crying," Rasmussen said."Auslin took a lookatus,and said to everyone,'Look where we are, ladies. We made it this far, we have to be happy, we can't be sad. We did our best, and that's all we could have done.' That was so inspirational." After La Grande lost to Cascade Nov. 4 in the first round of the Class 4A playoffs, McDaniel-Perrin said it was difficult to accept her high school soccer career was completed. "It's hard to realize I'll never put on another La Grande soccer jersey," McDanielPerrin said."It really hit me the day after that I'll never step back on that field to play competitively." With her strong presence, Brown said McDaniel-Perrin brought a terrific work ethic and an immense desire to improve. At times, McDanielPerrin's intensity was misunderstood. 'There are many teammates that look up to her and appreciate her," Brown said.aWith Auslin's passion, she can sometimes come across harshly, but it's never intended to be harsh. We could always go back, talk it out and work to improve. I appreciate her ability to be approached by her teamm ates and be reconciled." McDaniel-Perrin has proven her willingness to compromise for the team, but her toughness is unflinching. That became apparent years ago for La Grande wrestling head coach Klel Carson when McDaniel-Perrin surprised him with her desire to play middle school football for him. "Itried to talk heroutof it," Carson said.'When she decided to play, I told her you just have to go out and earn your spot, and that's what she did. I remember it seemed like she was in on all the tackles and all the plays. She just outworked everyone." While reflecting on her time spent playing with McDaniel-Perrin, Rasmussen said the Tiger soccer squadfedoffofherpositivity and unrelentingly high energy level. aWe all look up to Auslin because she always has that intensity," Rasmussen said."Sometimes, some of us lose our intensity, but she never does. She always works hard in games and in practice." McDaniel-Perrin said her mother, Glenda McDaniel, who works as a parole officer, has been the primary developer of her work ethic. "I never saw my mom as a bestfi iend,Isee heras arole

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

SPORTS

modelthatIlovetodeath, and stil lfearher because she can hunt me down," McDaniel-Perrin quipped. "She's always there for me, and I adore her." McDaniel-Perrin, who has a 3.78 GPA and plans to study agriculture in college, is fully confident she has what it takes to play soccer at the collegiate level, a sentiment shared by all of her coaches. She said she is looking to leave Oregon, and is consideringseveralschools, including Tennessee Tech, Virginia Tech, Truman University, Georgia Southern, Penn State and University ofTexas-San Antonio among others. For now, McDaniel-Perrin is focused on her final season ofplaying basketballforthe Tigers. "I think that this basketball season is going to be a great one," McDaniel-Perrin said.aWe have a lotofgreat talent and with only losing one senior, we definitely have a chance to do something big this year because we all know how each other

plays." When McDaniel-Perrin plays goalie in college, she will arrive with a unique skill set. At the behest of Brown, McDaniel-Perrin has focused on improving her sweeping ability. "I've seen a lot of college keepersafraid to come out of

The Associated Press

The Raiders became just the third team since the merger to beat a first-place team 16 straight losses, the Oakland Raiders for their first win after losing at least 10 finally had something to celebrate. games tostarttheseason.Indianapolisdid Rookie Derek Carr threw a 9-yard it against Green Bay in 1997 and Buffalo did it to Dallas in 1984. touchdown pass to James Jones with 1:42 remaining, and the Raiders got one last deAlex Smith threw two TD passes for the fensivestop tosnap a 16-game losing streak Chiefs i7-4l, who had won five in a row. with a 24-20 victory over the Kansas City They fell a half-game behind Denver in the Chiefs on Thursday night. AFC West. The Chiefs will have a long time "Hopefully there's many more to come to stewover thislossbefore hosting Denver because I like this feeling better than the on Nov. 30. aWe knew wewere going to bein a dogother one, that's for sure," Carr said. Oakland's Latavius Murray ran for two fight," Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce said. "Prime-time game and they've got the guys, touchdowns and 112 yards on just four carries before leaving the game with a concus- played a lot of tough teams very well." sion. The Raiders i1-10l built a 14-point Ittook that im pressivedrive by therookie lead,but needed a 17-play,80-yard drive led Carr to win it. He twice had to sneak for by Carr to secure its first win since beating first downs. He also threw an 8-yard pass to Mychal Rivera on third-and-6 and capitalHouston on Nov. 17, 2013. aWe learned something today," interim izedon a passinterference penalty against coach Tony Sparano said.aWe learned some- Ron Parker on another third down before thing about ourselves. We've been in this finding Jones for the go-ahead score. "To go 17 plays on the winning drive, end of the pool a long time. I kept saying that's impressive, man," Raiders defensive that eventually it's going to happen. Today they just refused to give up." end Justin Tuck said.

OAKLAND, Calif.— After 368 days and

ROUT Continued ~om Page 8A Walla Walla, and again, it goes back to our executing and just working on things against an outside opponent. Some set plays, they don't work in practice, because we know them." Eastern put this one away early in similar fashion to the other two games. The Mounties held a 58-19 halfbme lead, forcing 13 first-half Walla Walla turnoversthat led to 22 points. Walla Walla finished with 22 turnovers. "Turnovers led to instant offense, which was nice," Weissenfluh said."Sometimes, when we have to play a half-court game, we struggle. Any time your offense or defense can help each other out, it's a real positive." Eastern scored 27 fast break points in the first half — 33 in all — and behind a 32-12 rebounding advantage, the Mounties tallied 15 second-chance points

Kathleen Hallmark-Brown photo

McDaniel-Perrin punts the ball upfield. their box," McDaniel-Perrin said. "If you show people it's going to be tough to get into your box, then they're not going to get into your box as easily as you might think." Brown said McDanielPerrin can become a strong keeper at the college level, and is excited for her future because she has a substantial deal of untapped potential. "I could never train her to the degree she could be trained," Brown said."She has come quite a ways, but I think she'll get better coaching at the next level. As good as she is, there are some things she could become even better at. The beautiful thing about Auslin is that she's always willing to continue to improve and is never satisfied."

Cherise Kaechele/The Observer

EasternOregon sophomore and La Grande High School graduate Lauren Mills prepares a pass to a teammate againstWalla Walla (Wash.) University. Klebaum nailed five threepointers and finished with 17 points, junior forward Nikki Osborne added 14 points and junior point guard Maloree Moss had 13 points and nine assists. The Mounties finished with 33 assists on 45 made

over the first 20 minutes. Senior forward Kassy Larson led five Mounties in double-scoring with 27 points while grabbing 14 rebounds. Laan also earned a double-double with 18 points and 10 boards, as Eastern won the rebounding advantage 65-25 forthe game, including 24 offensive boards. Junior guard Jordan

field goals. Eastern i5-1 overall) hosts

Simpson iCaml University Saturday at Quinn Coliseum.

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• 0

• 0


FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

THE OBSERVER —11A

LOCAL

COURT RECORDS Circuit Courts of Union County Dispositions of Criminal Matters for the month of August: Vanessa Andrea Burns, 22: Convicted Aug. 18, after entering guilty plea of unlawful possession of less than one-quarter avoirdupois ounce of marijuana. A charge of unlawful possession of less than one avoirdupois ounce of marijuana was dismissed. Sentence: probation, 20 hours of community service, not permitted alcohol or entry to bars. Ordered to submit to testing for alcohol and controlled substances; undergo alcohol and substance abuse evaluation and treatment; pay fines (some suspended), mandatory state fee, attorney fees, bench probation and assessment.

Michelle Anne Cleary,51: Convicted Aug. 26, after entering guilty plea of a wildlife violation. Ordered to pay fine (suspended), mandatory state fee (suspended) and restitution. Connie Ann Forstner, 59: Convicted Aug. 21, after entering guilty pleas of unlawful manufacture or delivery of a controlled substance and failure to appear. Sentence: jail; probation; drivers license suspended for six months; not permitted alcohol; not permitted possession of weapons, firearms, or dangerous animals. Ordered to submit to breath and urine testing; undergo alcohol and substance abuse evaluation and possible treatment; become gainfully employed; permit searches and inspections; participate in mental health evaluation and recommended treatment; submit to arisk and needs assessment; write letter of apology; provide thumbprint and blood or buccal sample; consult with a pain specialist; pay supervision fees, fines (some suspended) and mandatory state fees. Steven Matthew Grant, 38: Convicted Aug. 28, after entering guilty plea of reckless driving. A charge of violating the speed limit was dismissed. Sentence: probation, drivers license suspended for three months, 40hours ofcommunity service. Ordered to pay fine, mandatory state fee and assessment.

Martin S. Haugan,46: Convicted Aug. 19, after entering guilty plea of driving under the influence of intoxicants. Sentence: probation, drivers license suspended for one year, 40 hours of community service, not permitted alcohol or entry to bars. Ordered to submit to testing for alcohol and controlled substances; undergo alcohol and substance abuse evaluation and treatment; attend Victim Impact Panel; pay fines (some suspended), mandatory state fee, state obligation, fee to Intoxicated Driver Fund and assessments. David Stanton Hickey, 47: Convicted Aug. 22, after guilty court verdicts of two counts of harassment. A charge of assault was found not guilty. Sentence: probation; not permitted alcohol or entry to bars; not allowed contact with victims, victims' residences, or victims' properties. Ordered to submit to testing for alcohol and controlled substances; continue mental health treatment; pay fine (suspended), mandatory state fee and assessment. Damion Allen Hovanski,24: Convicted Aug. 26, after entering guilty plea of disorderly conduct. A charge of criminal trespass was dismissed. Sentence: probation, 40 hours of community service, not permitted alcohol or entry to bars. Ordered to submit to testing for alcohol and controlled substances; undergo alcohol and substance abuse evaluation and treatment; write letter of apology; pay fines (some suspended), mandatory state fee, attorney fee and assessment. Tyrone E. Jackson, 21: Convicted Aug. 19, after entering guilty plea of driving under

the influence of intoxicants. Sentence: probation, drivers license suspended for one year, 40 hours of community service. Ordered to complete alcohol treatment and pay fine (suspended) and state obligations (some vacated).

Shirley Ann Kleng, 34: Convicted Aug. 19, after entering guilty plea of criminal mistreatment. Sentence: jail, probation. Ordered to comply with DHS and pay fine (suspended), mandatory state fee and assessment. Michael Thomas Larison, 20: Convicted Aug. 5, after entering guilty plea of unlawful delivery of marijuana for no consideration. Sentence: probation; drivers license suspended for six months; not allowed contact with victim or co-defendant; not permitted possession of weapons, firearms, or dangerous animals; ten days Union County Work Crew. Ordered to submit to breath and urine testing; undergo alcohol and substanceabuse evaluation and possible treatment; become gainfully employed; permit searches and inspections; participate in mental health evaluationand recommended treatment; pay supervision fee, fines (some suspended) and mandatory state fee.

come gainfully employed; permit searches and inspections; participate in mental health evaluationand recommended treatment; submit to a risk and needs assessment; provide thumbprint and blood or buccal sample; submit to possible polygraph; enroll in Treatment Court if directed to; complete domestic violence inventory and resulting treatment; pay

supervision fees, fines (some suspended), mandatory state fees and attorney fees. Daniel Michael Stewart,43: Convicted Aug. 29, after guilty court verdict of theft. Sentence: jail, probation, not allowed contact with victim. Ordered to pay fine (suspended), mandatory state fee, compensation and assessment.

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Taylor Scott Little,28: ConvictedAug. 21, after entering guilty pleas of two counts of unlawful possession of methamphetamine. Sentence: jail; probation; drivers license suspended for six months; 60 hours of community service; not permitted alcohol or entry to bars; not permitted possession of weapons, firearms, or dangerous animals. Ordered to submit to breath and urine testing; undergo alcohol and substanceabuse evaluation and possible treatment; become gainfully employed; permit searches and inspections; participate in mental health evaluation and recommended treatment; submit to a risk and needs assessments; provide thumbprint and blood or buccal sample; submit to possible polygraph; pay supervision fees, fines (some suspended), mandatory state fees and attorney fees. Kevin John Mabe,27: Convicted Aug. 26, after entering guilty plea of driving while suspended. Sentence: probation, 40 hours of community service. Ordered to pay fines (some suspended), mandatory state fee and assessment. Maryssa Nicole Pansevicius, 29: Convicted Aug. 18, afterentering guilty plea of driving under the influence of intoxicants. A charge of reckless driving was dismissed. Sentence: probation, drivers license suspended for one year, 80 hours of community service, not permitted alcohol or entry to bars. Ordered to submit to testing for alcohol and controlled substances; undergo alcohol and substance abuse evaluation and treatment; install ignition interlock device; attend Victim Impact Panel; write letter of apology; pay fine, mandatory state fee, state obligation and assessment.

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Shawn Lee Presock, 31: Convicted Aug. 28, after entering guilty pleas of assault and unlawful possession of methamphetamine. Sentence: jail; probation; drivers license suspended for six months; not permitted alcohol or entry to bars; not permitted possession of weapons, firearms, or dangerous animals. Ordered to submit to breath and urine testing; undergo alcohol and substanceabuse evaluation and possible treatment; be-

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Keith Wayne Walker, 56: ConvictedAug. 28, after guilty jury verdicts of reckless driving, refusal to take a test for intoxicants, and driving under the influence of intoxicants. Two charges of unlawful possession of a controlled substance were dismissed. Sentence: probation, drivers license suspended for one year and three months, 100 hours

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12A — THE OBSERVER

Tribes work to create sex-offender registries By Felicia Fonseca The Associated Press

More than three-quarters of American Indian tribes that have the authority to develop sex-offender registries are well on their way to meeting the legal requirements meant to keep convicted criminals from hiding out on tribal lands, a new report shows. Of the country's 566 federally recognized tribes, 214 are eligible to implement the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act of 2006 or delegatethat authority to a state. Therestofthe tribes in Alaska, California, Minnesota, Nebraska, Oregon and Wisconsin are under state jurisdiction when it comes to law enforcement and are ineligible to develop the registration and notification systems. The report released this week by the U.S. Government Accountability Office said that despite most eligible tribes being on board to track sex offenders within theirborders,thetribesface a number of challenges in implementing the law. Those include accessing federal criminal justice databases, payingforstartup costsand getting enough guidance from federalagencies. It also says tribes are having trouble getting notified by states when convicted sexoffenders move to tribal land or work or go to school on reservati ons afterbeing releasedfrom prison. Some states said they have nolaws or policiesthat require tribes be notified. Determining whether an address is on tribal land isn't always easy either, they told the Government Accountability Oflice. The U.S. Department of Justice agreed with a recommendation to develop a way forstatestokeep tribesin the loop so that they can enforce laws pertaining to sexoffenders.Some tribesrestrict how closetheoffenders can liveorwork to schoolsor day care centers, or banish theoffenders altogether. Federalcorrections offi cials ask inmates leaving prison if their new address is on tribal lands, and those officials can notify tribes,thereportsaid. The accountability office also said the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs could do a better job at finding out which tribes need help implementing the law. The Interior Department said the Bureau of Indian Affairs would be reaching out to tribes. A Tribal Public Safety Working Group established earlier this year is identifying which tribes have trouble accessingfederal databases and finding ways to cover associatedcostslong-term. The 164 tribes that chose to implement the law must create registries thatinclude offenderdescriptions,photographs, fingerprints, criminal history and DNA samples, as well as notify the community and create a website to make offender information available to the public. According to the Justice Department, 43 percent of those tribes substantially have implemented the law and 43 percent have submitted an implementation package that hasn't been approved. Justice officials said they have granted more time to the 22 eligible tribes that have not submitted the package. One tribe has not substantially implemented the law, the Justice Department said.

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

STATE

OREGON IN BRIEF Erom wire reports

Inmate dies of infection

failing to appear in court on a heroin possession charge. She The Linn County sherifl's also was charged with posoffice says a woman who died sessing methamphetamine. in the jail Monday at Albany Redmond car fire had a bacterial infection. death an accident Sheriff Bruce Riley says 42-year-old Samantha RobRedmond police say the inson of Lebanon had been death of a 21-year-old man in a burning car was probtreated for flu-like sympably an accident. toms afterher arrest. The autopsy indicates She was jailed Nov. 9 for

Samuel Quinton Villa of Redmond diedFriday of inhaling smoke and carbon dioxidefumes. The Bulletin reports a transmission fluid leak was likely ignited when the engine was revved to get the car unstuck from snow. A resident said he was intoxicated. He apparently then went to sleep in the

back seat with the engine running to keep warm.

Daughter safe aRer father surrenders A McMinnville man has surrendered in Ashland, a day after losing custody of his 7-year-old daughter but failing to give her to her mother,Police said the girl appeared to be unharmed.

KGW-TVreported that 38-year-old Paul Robert Bute took his daughter outof schooljust beforea hearingon Wednesday.At the hearing, authorities said, ajudge ordeml that he nothave custody ofher or any other childten. But he didn't give up the girl, and police issued an alert seeking public help in locating him.

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 1B

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

DEADLINES: Monday:

LINEADS: noon Friday

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

2 days prior to publication date

4© El

BakerCityHerald: 541-523-3673 • www.bakercityherald.com • classifiedsObakercityherald.com• Fax: 541-523-6426 The Observer:541-963-3161® www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsOlagrandeobserver.com • Fax:541-963-3674 105 - Announcements LGSD BUDGET

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105 - Announcements SETTLER'S PARK ACTIVITIES

110 - Self-Help Group Meetings AA MEETING

CHECK YOUR AD ON Positions THE FIRST DAY OF The La Grande School PUBLICATION District is currently re1st (Ir 3rd FRIDAY We make every effort cruiting 3 members for (every month) t o a v o i d er r o r s . our 2015-2016 Budget Ceramics with Donna However mistakes Committee. The term 9:00 AM — Noon. d o s l i p t hr o u g h . is for 3 years. Budget (Pnces from $3- $5) Check your ads the Committee Members first day of publican ormally attend t w o MONDAY NIGHT tion (Ir please call us committee m e e t ings Nail Care immediately if you on a Wednesday night 6:00 PM (FREE) find an error. Northin May and June, lasteast Oregon Classiing 2-3 hours each, alTUESDAY NIGHTS fieds will cheerfully t houg h a ddi t i o n a l Craft Time 6:00 PM make your correcm eetings may b e (Sm.charge for materials) tion (Ir extend your s chedule d w he n ad 1 day. needed. To be eligible EVERY WEDNESDAY for appointment, the Bible Study; 1 0:30 AM PREGNANCY a ppointive m e m b e r Public Bingo; 1:30 PM SUPPORT GROUP must be a registered ( .25 cents per card) Pre-pregnancy, voter in the LG School D istrict, reside in t h e pregnancy, post-partum. EVERY MORNING 541-786-9755 district for at least one (M onday —nday) F Exercise Class; year and not be an officer, a g en t o r e m9:30AM (FREE) ployee of the district. PUBLIC BINGO: Mon. doors open, 6:30 p.m.; 110 - Self-Help To apply for this volunearly bird game, 7 p.m. Group Meetings teer position, an applifollowed by r e g ular cation can be p icked AA MEETING: games. C o m m u n ity up at the District OfConnection, 2810 Ce- Been There Done That, fice, 1305 N. Willow. Open Meeting dar St., Baker. All ages Closing date is M o nSunday; 5:30-6:30 welcome. day D e c e m be r 1, Grove St Apts 541-523-6591 2014. Corner of Grove (Ir D Sts Baker City You can enjoy extra Nonsmoking vacation money by Wheel Chair Accessible

105 - Announcements •

105 - Announcements

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

LAMINATION Up to 17 1/2 inches wide any length $1.00 per foot iThe Observeris not responsible for flaws in material or machi ne error) THE OBSERVER 1406 Fifth • 541-963-3161

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

(Corner of Grove Sr D Sts)

Baker City Open, Non-Smoking Wheelchair accessible

AA MEETING LIST WALLOWA COUNTY ENTERPRISE 113 1/2 E Main St. P H: 541-398-1 327 Sunday's 10am-noon. Wednesday (women only) 11 a.m.— noon

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MON, I/I/ED, FRI NOON-1 PM TUESDAY 7AM-8AM TUE, I/I/ED, THU 7PM-8PM SAT, SUN 10AM-11AM

AL-ANON MEETING in Elgin. Meeting times

110 - Self-Help Group Meetings AL-ANON MEETING

110 - Self-Help Group Meetings AL-ANON

Are you troubled by someone else's drinking? Al-anon can help. ENTERPRISE Safe Harbors conference room 401 NE 1st St, Suite B PH: 541-426-4004 Monday 10am — 11am

Do you wish the drinking would stop? Monday at Noon Every 2nd (Ir 4th Wednesday at 6:00 PM Community of Chnst 2428 Madison St. Baker City 541-523-5851

NORTHEAST OREGON CLASSIFIEDS of fers Self Help (Ir Support G roup A nn o u n c e -

AL-ANON Concerned about someone else's drinking? Sat., 9 a.m. Northeast OR Compassion Center, 1250 Hughes Ln. Baker City (541 ) 523-3431

ments at n o c harge. For Baker City call: J ulie — 541-523-3673 For LaGrande call: E n ca — 541-963-31 61

1st (Ir 3rd Wednesday Evenings ©6:00 pm Elgin Methodist Church 7th and Birch

WALLOWA 606 W Hwy 82 PH: 541-263-0208 Sunday 7:00p.m.-8:00 p.m.

III II

AL-ANON-HELP FOR

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AA MEETING: Survior Group. Mon., Wed. (Ir Thurs. 12:05 pm-1:05 pm. Presbyterian Church, 1995 4th St. (4th (Ir Court Sts.) Baker City. Open, No smoking.

AL-ANON. At t i tude o f Gratitude. W e d n e sdays, 12:15 — 1:30pm. Faith Lutheran Church. 12th (Ir Gekeler, La Grande.

BAKER COUNTY Cancer Support Group Meets 3rd Thursday of every month at St. Lukes/EOMA © 7 PM Contact: 541-523-4242

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NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: Monday, Thursday, (Ir Fnday at8pm. Episcopal Church 2177 First St., Baker City.

Richland Office 541-893-3115

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CCB¹ 3202

WAQZNO LEGACY FORD Paul Soward Sales Consultant 541 -786-5751 541-963-2161

24 Hour Towing ServicingLaGrande,Cove,iml)ler&Union FallClen aUp. Lawns,OddJobs, SnowRemoval Saturday Service • Rental Cars

9 71-2 4 1 - 7 0 6 9

RILEY EXCAVATIONIN C

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MAID TOORDER Licenseda Insured Commercial& Residential

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r WQeI~ H

4Ia"~ ' i 'M i

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Jerry Rioux 91r?5 Colorncio Rve.

Hair Design and specializing Signs ol a kinds to meetyour needs Commercralt( Residential CNCPlasmaServices ln Hair Extensions LarrySchlesser. LicensedProperty Manager CONTRACTING ta Grande, OR Bpeciaizing nA Phases Ambiance Salon QWKc XRV@IR@ Qf Construction and 541-910-0354 The Crown Court)/ard Garage Door nstaation 2108 Resort www.oregonsigncomp any.com ccbr1aoaos l2KA MH75 Baker Cit)/ 97814 %XXEQ Wrecking8Recycling Quality UsedParts W14. 541-523-5171 New & UsedTires • BuyingFerrous&NonCell. 1-541-377-0234 Ferrous Metals • WealsobuyCars 10201 W.1st Street Suite 2, 8DavidEccles Rd.Baker City Kaleidoscope La Grande,OR X~ Il BQCQEOREAL ESTATEAND Child 8c Family Therapy 541-523-4433 PROPERTY Tammie Clausel www.laNsautollc.com MANAGEMENT Auio DeiailingeRV Dump Siaion www.paradisetruckwash.com

i

SCAAP HAUHA

Camera ready orwecan set up for you. Contact The Observer

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Veternn Owned er Opernteci

TABS, BROADSHEET, FULL COLOR

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Infrared Sauna Sunlighten empoweringwellness New students 2weeksfor $20.00

54l-9l0-4ll4

~M r Mon. —Tues. — Thurs. Fn. (Ir Sat. -8 PM Episcopal Church Basement 2177 1st Street Baker City

La Grande Office 541-663-9000

+AV$+

APPLIANCES

CIRCLE OF FRIENDS (For spouses w/spouses who have long term terminaI illnesses) Meets 1st Monday of every month at St. Lukes/EOMA©11:30 AM $5.00 Catered Lunch Must RSVP for lunch 541-523-4242

NARACOTICS ANONYMOUS

For Pictures, Videos, Information, a complete list & TO BID visit:

Whirlpool' and KitchenAid'

IPT Wellness Connection Joni Miner;541-523-9664

LA GRAND E Al-Anon . Thursday night, Freedom G roup, 6-7pm. Faith Lutheran Church, 12th (Ir Gekeler, LG. 541-605-01 50

HUNDREDS of items now on the website ready for bidding Now is the time to add your consignment

t)'CQ ALL AROUND GEEKS

families (Ir fnends of alc oho l i c s . Un io n County. 568-4856 or 963-5772

AL-ANON. COVE ICeep C oming Back. M o n days, 7-8pm. Ca Iva ry Baptist Church. 707 Main, Cove.

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS can help! 24 HOUR HOTLINE (541 ) 624-51 1 7

e xchanging i d l e item s in y o u r home for cash ... Too many puppies, not enough with an ad in classified. room? Classified can help. •

Been There, Done That Group Sun. — 5:30 — 6:30 PM Grove Street Apts

110 - Self-Help Group Meetings AA MEETINGS

~m-„;.-

NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS HELP LINE-1-800-766-3724 Meetings: 8:OOPM:Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Fnday Noon: Thursday 6:OOPM: Monday,Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday (Women's) 7:OOPM:Saturday Rear Basement Entrance at 1501 0 Ave.

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Need to move that house, • Show it over 100,000 times with our Home Seller Special L Full color Real Estate picture ad Start your campaign with a full-color 2x4 picture ad in the Friday Baker City Herald and The Observer Classified Section.

2. Amonth of classified picture ads Five lines orcopy plus a picture in 12 issues or the Baker City Herald and the Observer Classified Section 3. Four weeks of Buyers Bonus and Observer Plus ClassifiedAds Your classified ad automatically goes to non-subscribers and outlying areas or Baker and Union Countiesin the mail for one month in the Buyers Bonus or Observer Plus Classified Section.

4. 30 days of 24/7 online advertising That classified picture ad will be there for online buyers when they're looking at www. northeastoregonclassifi eds.com — and they look at over 50,000 page views a month. Home Setter Special price isfor adaerlising Ihe same home, raiIh no copychanges and no refunds if ctaasif ied ad iskilled beforeend ofschedrda

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2B —THE OBSERVER tk BAKER CITY HERALD

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

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

DEADLINES : LINE ADS:

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

2 days prior to publication date

Baker City HeraId: 541-523-3673e www.bakercityheraId.com • classifiedsObakercityheraId.com• Fax: 541-523-6426' The Observer: 541-963-3161e www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsOlagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674 xg w 110 - Self-Help Group Meetings NEED TO TALKto an AA member one on one? Call our 24 HOUR HOTLINE 541-624-5117 oi visit

www.ore onaadistnct29 .com

AA MEETING: Powder River Group Mon.; 7 PM -8 PM Wed.; 7 PM -8 PM Fn.; 7 PM -8 PM

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

UNION COUNTY AA Meeting

Info. 541-663-41 1 2

140 - Yard, Garage Sales-Baker Co. ALL ADS FOR: GARAGE SALES, MOVING SALES, YARD SALES, must be PREPAIDat The Baker City Herald Office, 1915 First St., Baker City or

The Observer Office, 1406 Fifth Street, LaGrande.

@WIII I'iill INSIDE SALE! 312 Hillcrest Place Fri. & Sat.; Bam -4pm Sun.; Noon -4pm Garden tools, Furniture and Misc. Household

145 - Yard, Garage Sales-Union Co.

150 - Bazaars, Fundraisers

150 - Bazaars, Fundraisers Our Lady Of The Valley Catholic Church. CHRISTMAS BAZAAR! Nov. 22, 2014, 9-2. Get read for Chnstmas! Parish Panty, Granny's

24TH Annual

ALL YARD SALE ADS MUST BE PREPAID You can drop off your payment at: The Observer 1406 5th St. La Grande

OR 'Visa, Mastercard, and Discover are accepted.' Yard Sales are $12.50 for 5 lines, and $1.00 for each additional line. Callfor more info: 541-963-3161.

Something Special Bazaar Sat November 22nd 9am-3 pm Rivena Gym 2609 2nd St LG The booths are brimming with Hand-Crafted.... 'Crafts'Quilting' 'Rustic Furniture' '18" Doll Clothes/Acc 'Country Chic' 'Home Decor' 'Jewelry'Antiques' 'Woodworking' And More'

210 - Help WantedBaker Co.

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210 - Help WantedBaker Co. BAKER COUNTY De artment Assistant II

ew Directions

JOIN OUR TEAM!

Attic, Angel Loft Gifts, Cookie Stroll, l u n ch available. 4th I!t IC Ave.

QMHP Counselor for Middle School in Baker City

LG. Please use IC Ave. entra nce.

P/T 20 hr/wk. Start immediately

160 - Lost & Found

CADC I or II Powder River Alternative Incarceration Program Start immediately

LOST, GLASSES Tues. between Spnng St. I!t Centra l Sc ho o l . 541-910-1068

Treatment Facilitator Swing/Graveyard shift At our 24 hr Residential Programs HS diploma required.

MISSING YOUR PET? Check the Baker City Animal Clinic

541-523-3611

R E l ' 230 - Help Wanted out of area WALGREENS Infusion Services Per Diem RN needed

Baker County is accepting applications for the RN needed for home IV infusion in La Grande position of Road Department Assistant and surrounding areas. through M o nday, Expenence in IV therapy D ecember 1 , 2 0 1 4 . required. EOE QuesThis is a full-time positions? Call Leanne at 509-783-2273 tion with a b e ginning salary of $2,310 per Send cover letter and month plus excellent resume to: b enefits. F o r a d d i - Walgreens I n f u s ion t ional in f o r m a t i o n , Services p lease c o n t act t h e ATTN: Lea nn e State Empl o y ment 7325 W D e s c hutes D epartment at 1 5 7 5 Ave., Suite C Dewey Avenue, Baker ICennewick, WA 99336 City, or visit our website a t w w w . b a k e r-

county.org. All applica nts w ill be pre-screened. Baker Countyis an equal opportunity employer

Something for you... PLEASE CHECK F/T positions include: and everyone on Blue Mountain Excellent Benefits your list!!! Humane Association Package, Free Health TAICE US ON YOUR "A Very Vintage ChristCDLw/tanker Facebook Page, Ins., Vacation, Sick, WANTED: mas ". Hand crafted 2101 Main Street PHONE! Endorsement for 5,000 320 - Business if you have a lost or BARKIN' BASEMENT Retirement and Drop-In Hours: LEAVE YOUR PAPER holiday treasure's. Fn. found pet. gal. water truck in the Join us for our Educational Training Investments Monday, 9 — 11 AM AT HOME evening Dec. 5th from North Dakota Oil 50% OFF SALE, www.newdirectionsnw.org • buy product DID YOU ICNOW 144 5 to 8. Sat. Dec. 6th Fields. Great Pay I!t including Christmas khendrickstN ndninciorg m illion U . S . A d u l t s • ask questions from 9 to 2. At the His- 180 - Personals Negotiable Hours FULL editions of Decor! Fn. 21st, 10-4. 541-523-7400 for app. read a N e w s p aper • enroll toric " Littl e W h i t e 541-403-0494 Sat. 22nd, 10-2. The Baker City • weigh-in pnnt copy each week? 1507 N Willow St. LG Church" in Union. MEET S I NGLES right Herald • individual attention Discover the Power of now! No paid opera220 - Help Wanted at 2701 CHRISTMAS BAZAAR are now available PRINT Newspaper AdMeeting: tors, lust real people Union Co. Bearco Loop. That's Wallowa Senior Center online. v ertising i n A l a s k a, Monday 5:30 PM l ike y o u . Bro ws e were you can find the S at Dec 6 t h , 9 a m t o IT IS UNLAWFUL (Sub- I da h o, M o nta na, Ore• confidential weigh-in e x change b est assortment o f 4pm. Santa, b a k ed greetings, 3 EASY STEPS begins at 5 PM sectio n 3, O RS gon, Utah and Washm essages and c o nused s t u f f in La goods I!t lunch avail 6 59.040) for an e m i ngton wit h l us t o n e • group support n ect live. Try it f r e e . Grande. Open ever w hile yo u s ho p f o r phone call. For a FREE • v i sit a m e e t i ng f o r 1. Register your ployer (domestic help C a I I n o w : Friday I! t S a t u r da Holiday gifts. 20 tables account before you free! excepted) or employa dvertising n e t w o r k 877-955-5505. (PNDC) Add BOLDING from 10am-4 m. of arts I!t crafts. Call to leave ment agency to print b ro c h u r e ca II or a BORDER! reserve a table, $5.00. 120 - Community 2 . Call to s t o p y o u r or circulate or cause to 916-288-6011 or email PREGNANT? CONSID150 Bazaars, Fund541-398-1 565 pnnt paper cecelia©cnpa.com be pnnted or circulated Calendar It's a little extra ERING AD OPTION? raisers 3. Log in wherever you any statement, adver(PNDC that gets Call us first. Living exNEW LIF E C ENTER are at and enloy tisement o r p u b l icaST. PETER'S CHURCH, Christmas p enses , h ous i n g , BIG results. t ion, o r t o u s e a n y DID YOU ICNOW 7 IN 10 EPISCOPAL CHURCH Bazaar. Sat. Dec. 6th, medical, and c o ntinIIIII(IIISIII Americans or 158 milform of application for ANNUAL HOLIDAY u ed s u pport a f t e r Have your ad from 8a m-4pm. 20+ lion U.S. Adults read employment o r to BAZAAR STAND OUT v endors w it h s o m e - wards. Choose adopcontent from newspam ake any i n q uiry i n Corner of 4th I!t 0, for as little as thing for everyone on t ive fa mily o f y o u r YOU TDD can use c onnection w it h p r oper media each week? Church with the red $1 extra. c h o i c e. C a I I 24/7. this attention getyour list! (Behind WalDiscover the Power of door. Sat. Nov. spective employment ter. Ask how you mart) 855-970-21 06 (P NDC) Call Now to Subscribe! the Pacific Northwest which expresses di22nd 9am-2pm. BAKER COUNTY can get your ad to 541-523-3673 Newspaper Advertisrectly or indirectly any Cinnamon rolls at 9 am, stand out like this! PLANNER i ng. For a f r e e b r o limitation, specification Our famous "HomeR EADY F O R A c hur e caII or discrimination as to 145 - Yard, Garage made Soup I!t Pie" C HANGE? D o n ' t Baker County is accept916-288-6011 or email 140 - Yard, Garage race, religion, color, lunch starts at 11am!!! Sales-Union Co. ing applications for the just sit there, let the sex, age o r n a t ional cecelia©cnpa.com Sales-Baker Co. positio n of Bak er MOVING S A LE. 4 pc I MBLER S CHO O L c lass i f i e d ongin or any intent to (PNDC) h e l p Count y Pla n ne r DON'T FORGETto take "Christmas in Nov." bedroom set $250.00, make any such limitathrough wanted column find Fnday, your signs down after garden arbor b e nch 1st Annual Vender Fair DID YOU ICNOW NewsD ecember 5 , 2 0 1 4 . t ion, specification o r your garage sale. paper-generated con$60.00, 4 dining chairs Sat. Nov. 22nd, 10am- a new and challengdiscrimination, unless This is a full-time posiNortheast Oregon $50.00, office furniture 4pm. Chilli feed Santa ing job for you. b ased upon a b o n a tent is so valuable it's 210 Help Wantedtion with a b e ginning Classifieds ca II 541-562-61 63. Pictures I!t more! fide occupational qualitaken and r e peated, Baker Co. salary of $3,087 per condensed, broadcast, fication. month plus excellent tweeted, d i scussed, BAKER COUNTY benefits . A pp l i c a nt posted, copied, edited, Management Assistant must have a BacheWhen responding to by Stella Wilder and emailed countless lor's degree in plan- Blind Box Ads:Please times throughout the Baker County is acceptning or a related field be sure when you adFRIDAY, NOVEMBER21, 2014 can score a personal victory of sorts, but it's feelas though your usual methods are not day by ot hers? Dising applications for the and one year experi- dress your resumes that c over the P ower o f YOUR BIRTHDAY byStella Wilder not the kind of thing you'll want to brag reaping the usual results at this time. position o f M a n a ge- ence in City, County or the address is complete Newspaper Advertisment Assistant for the Born today, you are one of the most solid, about — at least not yet. Consider taking a leafoutofanother'sbook. Regional planning or with all information reing i n S I X S T A TES Baker County Clerk's reliable, trusted individuals born under your AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- You can LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Your sense of satisfactory equivalent quired, including the with lust one p hone Department t h r ough sign. While you may not boast the kind of benefit from a little fun. Feel free to experi- humor will serve you well as you explore combination of expen- Blind Box Number. This call. For free Pacific D ecember 4 , 2 0 1 4 . ence and training. For is the only way we have fiery genius that other Scorpio natives may ment with something you've gotten used to; issuesthathave others feeling on edge and Northwest Newspaper This is a full-time posiadditional information, of making sure your repossess ,you nevertheless should be able to shake things up a little. uncertain. A ssociation N e t w o r k tion with a b e ginning p lease c o n t act t h e sume gets to the proper b roc h u r e s c a II develop what many cannot; the kind of track PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) - You may VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - You're so salary of $2,669 per State Employment De- place. 916-288-6011 or email month plus excellent record that suggests expertise, ability and not understand what is driving a friend away used to charting your own course that it may partment a t 1575 cecelia©cnpa.com b enefits. F o r a d d i - Dewey Avenue, Baker long-t erm success.Indeed,ifyou play your from you at this time, but it's not something surprise you to learn that your best bet is to (PNDC) t ional in f o r m a t i o n , cardsright, you may keep failure at bay by which you should feel threatened. follow in another's footsteps. City, OR . A l l a p p l i- AVON - Ea rn extra inp lease c o n t act t h e ca nts w i l l be throughout much ofyour lifetime and enjoy ARIES (March 21-Apr!I 19) -- Your LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) - Someone else YOU ICNOW that State Employment Decome with a new ca- DID pre-screened. B aker not only does newspanothing but success — both large and small expectations are not likely to be satisfied is able to do something that you've only conpartment a t 1575 reer! Sell from home, County is an equal opp er m e dia r e ac h a -- as you makeyour way personally and pro- completely, but what you do get will allow sidered in the past. A new strategy gets you Dewey Avenue, Baker w ork, o n l i ne . $ 1 5 HUGE Audience, they portunity employer. fessionally. You go about your business in a you to consider moving in a new direction. off on the right foot. City, or visit our webstartup. For informaa lso reach a n E N site a t w w w . b a k e rt io n , c a I I: quiet, down-to-earth sort of way; while you TAURUS (Apr!I 20-May 20) — You're SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — A former GAGED AUDIENCE. Just starting up in a busicounty.org. All appli877-751-0285 (PNDC) do not blow your own horn, you do make eagerto be on the move once more,aftera rival may become your most trusted ally. This Discover the Power of ness of y ou r o w n ? A ca nts w i l l be remarkable headway. short period of stasis. Someone who knows change is the result of an unexpected meeting good way to tell people JOB OPENING at Valley Newspaper Advertispre-screened. ing in six states — AIC, SATURDAY,NOVEMBER22 you well offers a newpiece of information. of the minds. Insurance in La Grande Baker Countyis an equal a bout it i s w i t h a l o w cost classified ad. ID, MT, OR, UT, WA. Position Open — RecepSAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) - Your GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — You may opportunity employer s DIIQR5 F dl a q u pl »« t n R y p a « « c For a free rate brotionist — F/T Position to attitude toward a certain issue mayclash with haveto work harderthan usualtowin overa COPYRIGHT2tll4 UNITED FEATURESYNDICATE, INC c hur e caII Sta rt Ja nua ry 5, 2015. a friend's, but that is no reason for a rift. You friendwho has been moving in a different DISIRIBUIED BYUNIVERSALUCLICKFORUFS 916-288-6011 or email lllOw t S t K » Q t y MOall0a Mtl25567l4 Pick up lob announcecan keep things going smoothly. direction - but don't be too aggressive. cecelia©cnpa.com ment at Valley Insur' I I I CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19) — You CANCER (June 21-July 22) - You may ance for list of duties (PNDC) a nd req u i r e m e n t s 1603 Washington Ave, 330 - Business OpI t La Grande. Drop off re- portunities sume at Valley Insurance by Dec 1st. Due to a promotion 'Ihe Observer is look• R ECRUITMENT F O R • ing to fill the following position: Bus Driver----Union Circulation Accounting Coordinator • C ount ~ ACROS S 39 Loosen Community Connection 40 — Perce tribe • R ESP O N SIBILITIES: DELIVER IN THE o f U n io n C o u nt y i s 1 — choy 42 Compost A nswer to P r e v i ou s P u z z l e TOWN OF • Mana ges all billing needs of'Ihe Observer • s eeking a p a r t t i m e 44 Flip through 4 Homeless child BAKER CITY b us driver. M u s t b e 46 Boat crane L U B E A L F A L T • subscribers, Carriers, and Dealers. Works • 8 Shutter part willing to work a flexi12 "Rope-a-dope" 50 Grew rapidly OG L E D B A R P E A INDEPENDENT • closely with the Wescom Business Office. ble schedule including 54 Debtor's letters boxer CONTRACTORS S H A R E R O A D H O G evenings, Saturdays • Proc e sses all payments, both Carrier and • 55 Opportune 13 Hunky-dory wanted to deliver the and short notice fill- in M I C R 0 T A I 14 Manage 56 Hoarfrost • Customer. Baker City Herald shifts. Com m e r c ial 57 "Moneyline" 15 Single no more G L E E E A R M D S E Monday, Wednesday, Driver's License and • Make s necessary changes to all Dealer and• channel 16 Cut and filed and Fnday's, within L A S S0 DO T S A M experience preferred. 58 Smell 18 Find quarters • Carrier accounts and insures overall coverage of• Baker City. 20-25 hours per week, 0 Z T A R VVOVV U M 59 Smudge 20 Malt beverages Ca II 541-523-3673 • billing preparation. $ 10.13 per h our o n B E A F E E W O O D Y 21 Grasshopper's 60 Vega rocket weekdays and $12.16 Ol'g. rebuker E S P N L O X L U I S • Proc e sses all subscriber payments through• p er hour o n w e e k INDEPENDENT 23 Super Bowl A T V C L E F S • ACH programs. e nds/holidays. M u s t CONTRACTORS DOWN honoree have clean dnving rewanted to deliver M A C H E T E S I T K A 24 Daffodil starter • Data entry of new credit card or bank draft • cord, pass criminal hisThe Observer 27 Teahouse 1 Sob noisily S H H T A N S N E E R • in formation on subscribers accounts from both• tory background check Monday, Wednesday, 2 Diet spread attire T A E 0 VV E G R A F and pre-employment and Fnday's, to the 3 Notorious • in -house and outside sales. 29 Ms. Turner 1 1-21-14 C i 2 0 1 4 U F S , D ist. by Univ. Uclick fo r U F S drug screen. following area's 33 Deadly snake pirate Notifies customers ofdeclined payments • Applications and lob de4 Amazons 34 Groaner, scription are available Imbler at La Grande • and secures new banking information. 5 Rap-sheet maybe 9 Anecdotal 19 Talk idly at Oregon E m p loy35 Wassail letters knowledge 22 November Maintains accurate spreadsheets for account • • ment Department. Poalternative 6 Fleming or 10 Goodall topic stone sition closes Decem• balancing purposes. Transfers out allocated CaII 541-963-3161 Woosnam 36 Oater 11 Danson or 23 Clementine's ber 1, 2014 at 5:00pm. or come fill out an 7 Memo abbr. backdrop Koppel dad • funds from subscribers accounts for single copy• EEO Information sheet 8 Work with clay 38 Lemon cooler 17 Mav's foe 24 Loud thud • purchases or extends credit for missed copies. 25 Make the 230 - Help Wanted INVESTIGATE BEFORE most of Responsible for entry of month end 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 • out of area YOU INVEST! Always 26 Vinyl records • charges/credits and acts as back up to the CSR C OM M U N IT Y C O N - a good policy, espe28 Leaf out 12 14 • and DM. NECTION of Wallowa cially for business op30 Quaint hotel p ortunities I ! t f r a n County is recruiting an 31 Auction signal 15 16 Performs all these tasks accurately and with • • chises. Call OR Dept. 32 Way back O ffic e A ss is t a n t , o f J u stice a t ( 5 0 3 ) • attention to deadlines. $11.39 per hour, 19 when 18 19 20 378-4320 or the Fedhours per week. Gen37 Fishing fan Deliveries newspapers to subscriber or • eral Trade Commission eral clerical duties, as39 Ms. Hagen 21 22 23 at (877) FTC-HELP for • independent contractor homes when needed 41 Fair-hiring sist with senior activh f ree i nformation. O r ties and food bank disletters 'Ihisposition reports to the Regional Circu- • 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 tributions. A pp l i c a- v isit our We b s it e a t 43 More peculiar • lation Director www.ftc.gov/bizop. tions available on-line 44 Reimbursed 33 34 45 Dog-food at ccno.org or at t he 'QUALIFICATIONS: Oregon Employment brand 36 37 38 39 • Pass pre-employment drug screening • Department. P osition 47 Police squad closes December 5, 48 Solar wind • Re l i a ble transportation, valid drivers license • 40 41 42 43 2014 12:00 pm. EEO components • 8t auto insurance 49 Fish used in 44 45 46 47 48 49 salad - • e Proficient in MS Excel 8t Word • G ive y o u r b u d g e t a 50 Male sib • e- . boost. Sell those st illGreat attention to detail 50 51 52 53 54 • 51 Regal emblem 52 Aught or Please send resume and cover letter • good but no longer used • items in your home for 55 56 57 naught II • . • to cthompsonglagrandeobserver.com • cash. Call the classified 53 Non-flying bird d epartment t o d a y t o 58 59 60 NO Phone calls please place your ad.

WEIGHT WATCHERS Baker City Basche Sage Place

SUSSCRISNS!

Must have a minimum of 10Yard Sale ad's to pnnt the map.

HKLP ATTRACT ATTNTION TO YOURAP!

CROSSWORD PUZZLER

LOOK

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD —3B

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

DEADLINES : LINE ADS:

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

2 days prior to publication date

R E l

Baker City HeraId: 541-523-3673e www.bakercityheraId.com • classifiedsObakercityheraId.com• Fax: 541-523-6426' The Observer: 541-963-3161e www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsOlagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674 xg w 345 - Adult Care Union Co.

380 - Baker County 430- For Saleor 710 - Rooms for 450 - Miscellaneous 475 - Wanted to Buy Service Directory Trade Rent ADULT FOSTER home N OTICE: O R E G O NUSED LAY Down style ARE YOU in BIG trouble ANTLER BUYER Elk, NOTICE in La Grande has imm ediate opening f o r male or female resid ent, p r i vat e r o o m . Ca II 541-91 0-7557.

Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise and perform landscape contracting censed s cape B oard.

380 - Baker County Service Directory

Tanning bed for Sale. $2,500 obo, purchase as is. 541-398-011

Landscape Contractors

435 - Fuel Supplies

services be liwith the Land- SEASONED Firewood: C o n t r a c t o r s Red Fir I!t Tamarack T h i s 4 - d i g i t $ 170 i n t h e r o u n d ,

725 - Apartment Rentals Union Co.

deer, moose, buying All real estate advertised h ere-in is s u blect t o all grades. Fair honest the Federal Fair Housp rices. Call N ate a t 541-786-4982. ing Act, which makes it illegal to a dvertise any preference, limita-

C NN. A B B B . C a l l 1-800-989-1 278. (PNDC

tions or discnmination

CENTURY 21 PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

tional origin, or inten-

La randeRentals.com

number allows a con$ 200 s p l it , S p r u ce sumer to ensure that ATTENTION: VIAGRA $150 in the round, I!t t he b u siness i s a c - delivered. 541-910-4661 and CIALIS USERS! A tively licensed and has cheaper alternative to a bond insurance and a FIREWOOD high drugstore pirces! PRICES REDUCED q ualifie d i n d i v i d u a l 50 Pill Special — $99, $140 in the rounds 4" contractor who has fulF REE shipping! 1 0 0 505 - Free to a good to 12" in DIA, $170 filled the testing and Percent Guaranteed. home split. Red Fir I!t Hardexperience r e q u ireCALL wood $205 split. Dements fo r l i censure. NOW:1-800-729-1056 3, MALE kittens. 8 wks, Iivered in the valley. For your protection call (PNDC) bottle fed. 2-beige, 1 503-967-6291 or visit (541)786-0407 o range. L i t t e r b o x our w ebs i t e : AVAILABLE AT t rained I! t w o r m e d . 445Lawns & GarTHE OBSERVER www.lcb.state.or.us to 541-523-5975 BOONE'S WEED 8r Pest c heck t h e lic e n s e dens NEWSPAPER Control, LLC. status before contractBUNDLES Trees, Ornamental @ ing with the business. Burning or packing? Turf-Herbicide, Insect I!t Persons doing l and$1.00 each Fungus. Structural A~-oe~-oe scape maintenance do e e e Insects, including not require a landscapTermites. Bareground Free to good home NEWSPRINT ing license. weed control: noxious ROLL ENDS ads are FREE! weeds, aquatic weeds. 1951 Allis Chalmers Art prolects I!t more! (4 lines for 3 days) Agriculture I!t Right of Mod. CA Tractor, front Super for young artists! POE CARPENTRY Way. Call Doug Boone, • New Homes loader, w/trip bucket. $2.00 8r up 541-403-1439. Stop in today! All orig, great mech, • Remodeling/Additions cond. Perfect for small • Shops, Garages 1406 Fifth Street farm prolects. Belt and 541-963-31 61 CEDAR 8r CHAIN link • Siding I!t Decks pto drive, 4 spd. Single fences. New construc- • Wi ndows I!t Fine CANADA DRUG Center pin and 3 pt . $ 2500 finish work t i o n, R e m o d e I s I!t obo. Consid part trade is your choice for safe Fast, Quality Work! ha ndyma n services. 541-91 0-4044. and affordable medicaKip Carter Construction Wade, 541-523-4947 tions. Our licensed Caor 541-403-0483 541-519-6273 BAKER BOTANICALS nadian mail order pharCCB¹176389 Great references. 3797 10th St macy will provide you CCB¹ 60701 Hydroponics, herbs, with savings of up to RUSSO'S YARD houseplants and 75 percent on all your 605 - Market Basket 8E HOME DETAIL Non-GMO seeds medication needs. Call Aesthetically Done 541-403-1969 today 1-800-354-4184 CLETA I KATIE"S Ornamental Tree FRUIT FOR SALE f or $10.00 off y o u r Apples CREATIONS I!t Shrub Pruning -Red Delicious Odd's I!t End's 450 Miscellaneous first prescription and 503-668-7881 I!t Braeburn, .75/Ib free shippinq. (PNDC) 1220 Court Ave. 503-407-1524 Italian Plums. .75/Ib Baker City, OR Serving Baker City Freezer Jam %METAL RECYCLING DO YOU need papers to Closed Sun. I!t Mon. & surrounding areas 541-403-4249 We buy all scrap start your fire with? Or Tues. — Fn.; 10am - 5pm metals, vehicles a re yo u m o v i n g I ! t Sat.; 10am — 3pm I!t battenes. Site clean need papers to wrap ups I!t drop off bins of those special items? 630 - Feeds all sizes. Pick up The Baker City Herald D 5. H Roofing 5. SCARLETT MARY UIIIT service available. at 1915 F i rst S t r eet 1 TON Grass Hay, barn Construction, Inc 3 massages/$ 1 00 WE HAVE MOVED! sells tied bundles of stored, $175.00. Call CCB¹192854. New roofs Ca II 541-523-4578 Our new location is papers. Bundles, $1.00 evenings. 541-534-5410 I!t reroofs. Shingles, Baker City, OR 3370 17th St each. metal. All phases of Sam Haines Gift CerbifcafesAvailable! construction. Pole REDUCE YOUR Past Enterpnses buildings a specialty. Tax Bill by as much as 3rd CROP BEAUTIFUL 541-51 9-8600 Respond within 24 hrs. 385 - Union Co. Ser75 percent. Stop LevHorse hay, Alfalfa, sm. 541-524-9594 DISH TV Retailer. Starties, Liens and Wage vice Directory amt. of orchard grass ing at $ 1 9.99/month Garnishments. Call the $ 220/ton, 2n d c r o p %REDUCE YOUR CABLE (for 12 mos.) I!t High Tax Dr Now to see if Alfalfa $220/ton. 1st FRANCES ANNE BILL! Get a w h o l e- Speed Internet starting y ou Q ual if y crop A lfa lfa g rass, YAGGIE INTERIOR 8E home Satellite system at $ 14 . 9 5 / m o n t h 1-800-791-2099. some rain, $165/ton. EXTERIOR PAINTING, installed at NO COST (where a v a i l a b le.) (PNDC) Small bales, Baker City Commercial I!t a nd pr o g r a m m i n g S AVE! A s k A b o u t 541-51 9-0693 Residential. Neat I!t starting at $19.99/mo. SOCIAL SECURITY DISSAME DAY Installaefficient. CCB¹137675. FREE HD/DVR UpAB IL ITY 8 ENEF ITS. t ion! C A L L Now ! 541-524-0369 grade to new callers, WIN or Pay Nothing! 1-800-308-1 563 SO C A L L NOW Start Your Application ALFAFA C E RTIFIED (PNDC) 1-800-871-2983 In Under 60 Seconds. w eed-free , s m al l JACKET 8r Coverall Re(PNDC) DirecTV's the Big Deal CaII Today! Contact bales. $220/00 ton. no pair. Zippers replaced, special! Only $19.99 Disability Group, Inc. p atching an d o t h e r r ain. La Gran d e . per month — Free preLicensed Attorneys I!t ANYTHING FOR 5 41-664-1806, c e l l heavy d ut y r e p a irs. mium channels HBO, BBB Accredited. Call A BUCK 541-786-1456 Reasonable rates, fast S tarz, Cinemax a n d 888-782-4075. (PNDC) service. 541-523-4087 Same owner for 21 yrs. Showtim e f o r 3 541-910-6013 or 541-805-9576 BIC months and Free Re- NORTHEAST OREGON CCB¹1 01 51 8 CLASSIFIEDS receiver upgrade! NFL serves the nght to re- C ERTIF IED W H E A T 2014 Season Included. OREGON STATE law restraw, small bales, CaII Now I ect ads that d o n o t $3.00 q uires a nyone w h o bale, barn stored, 1-800-259-5140. comply with state and contracts for construcLa G ra n d e . federal regulations or (PNDC) t ion w o r k t o be 5 41-663-1806, c e l l that a r e o f f e n s ive, censed with the Con541-786-1456 4 MOUNTED snow tires false, misleading, destruction Contractors o ff C h ev y M a l i b u , ceptive or o t h erwise Board. An a c t ive O BO . $ 30 0 unacceptable. cense means the con541-91 0-9680. tractor is bonded I!t in465 - Sporting sured. Venfy the conLOWEST P RICES on tractor's CCB license 405 - Antiques Health I!t Dental lnsur- Goods a nce. We h av e t h e 30-30 MARLIN model 94 through the CCB Cons ume r W eb s i t e BALL 8r claw footed walb est rates f ro m t o p nfle, $400. 12 gauge www.hirealicensednut table w/2 leaves, 4 companies! Call Now! Remington shot gun, 877-649-61 95. (P NDC) contractor.com. chairs. 503-789-9315 $345. 541-523-5136 •

based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or n ation to make any such p references, l i m i t a-

1 Mr. Leno 4 Former New York stadium 8 Cypress feature 12 Absorbed, as costs 13 Soft mineral 14 Pottery flaw 15 Kind of ash 17 Band instrument 1 8 Tack on 19 Dull routine 21 Hypo units 22 Touch-and-go 26 Farming major 29 Look for excitement 30 Blustery 31 Popcorn nuisance 32 Mil. rank 33 Chop into cubes 34 El Dorado loot 35 Sight from Chamonix 1

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BO K A L I VVE D LO D G A B U L B AS P M E S A N P A G B A L L R I P E OD O R

Ca!I (541) 963-7476 GREEN TREE APARTMENTS

2310 East Q Avenue La Grande,OR 97850 I 9I

(541)963-1210

Affordasble Studios, 1 I!t 2 bedrooms.

(Income Restnctions Apply) We will not knowingly CIMMARON MANOR ICingsview Apts. Professionally Managed accept any advertising by: GSL Properties for real estate which is 2 bd, 1 ba. Call Century 21, Eagle Cap Realty. Located Behind in violation of this law. 541-963-1210 La Grande Town Center All persons are hereby informed that all dwell- CLOSE TO downtown, i ngs a d v ertised a r e studio. All u t i l i ti es available on an equal paid. No smoking, no opportunity basis. pets. $375 mo, $300 EQUAL HOUSING HIGHLAND VIEW dep. 541-910-3696 OPPORTUNITY Apartments

CLOSE TO EOU 2bdrm basement a p t ., a ll 800 N 15th Ave utilities paid, coin-op Elgin, OR 97827 laundry, No smoking, Now accepting applicaNo pets. $ 5 5 0/mo, 720 - Apartment p lus $ 5 0 0 d e p o s it tions f o r fed e r a l ly 541-91 0-3696 funded housing. 1, 2, Rentals Baker Co. and 3 bedroom units 1-BDRM, UTILITIES CLOSE T O E O U , 1 with rent based on inb drm, w/s/g pd , n o included. $500/mo. come when available. 503-806-2860 smoking/nopets, $425 month, $400 deposit. Awesome ads Prolect phone number: 541-91 0-3696. 541-437-0452 ELKHORN VILLAGE CLOSE TO EOU, Lg 3 TTY: 1(800)735-2900 APARTMENTS bdrm, a l l u t i l i t i e s Senior a n d Di s a b l ed paid. No smoking, no "This institute is an equal opportunity provider." Housing. A c c e pting pets. $900 mo, $850 applications for those dep. 541-910-3696. aged 62 years or older as well as those dis- CLOSE TO park I!t pool, 2 bd, no smoking, no abled or handicapped pets, $450/mo, $400 of any age. Income reLA GRANDE dep. 541-910-3696. strictions apply. Call Retirement Candi: 541-523-6578 COMFY B A SEMENT Apartments apt., $395/mo. 1 bdrm, 767Z 7th Street, f urnished , u t il i t i e s La Grande, OR 97850 paid, partial k itchen, close to downtown I!t

FAMILY HOUSING

Senior and Disabled Complex

college. No pets/smoking. 541-963-6796.

We offer clean, attractive two b edroom a partDOWNT OW N STUDIO, Affordable Housing! ments located in quiet incl. heat I!t Dish Net. Rent based on income. and wel l m a i ntained h ardwoo d f lo o r s . Income restnctions apply. settings. Income reCall now to apply! $395mo 541-569-5189 stnctions apply. •The Elms, 2920 Elm DRC'S PROPERTY Beautifully updated S t., Baker City. C u r- MANAGEMENT, INC. Community Room, re n t ly av a i I a b I e 215 Fir Str featunng a theater room, 2-bdrm a p a rtments. La Grande OR a pool table, full kitchen Most utilities paid. On and island, and an site laundry f a cilities APARTMENTS: electnc fireplace. and playground. Ac1bd, 1ba $375, $395, Renovated units! cepts HUD vouchers. I!t$495 Call M ic h e l l e at Sm 1bd, 1ba, $350 Please call

(541)523-5908.

+SPECIAL+ $200 off 1st months rent! This institute is an

equal opportunity provider. TDD 1-800-545-1833

UPSTAIRS STUDIO All utilities paid, including

Dish network. Laundry on site. $475/mo and $475 dep. No smoking, no pets. 541-523-3035 o r 541-51 9-5762

2bd, 1ba $475.00

Ad may not be current. Please stop in for a list or ca II541-663-1066. M-F 9:30-11:30, 1-5

$350/mo I!t $350 dep. 541-51 9-6654

TTY 1-800-735-2900 Thisinstituteis an Equal

FAMILY HOUSING Pinehurst Apartments 1502 21st St. La Grande A ttractive one and tw o bedroom units. Rent based on income. Income restrictions ap-

ply. Now accepting applications. Call Lone at (541 ) 963-9292. This institute is an equal

opportunity provider. TDD 1-800-735-2900

UPSTAIRS S T U DIO. W/S/G I!t heat p a id. L audry o n - s ite . N o s moking, n o pet s .

(541) 963-7015

for more information. www.virdianmgt.com

Opportunity Provider

One of the nicest things about want ads is their 1ovv

Co s t .

A nother is t h e quick results. Try a classified ad tOday! C al l Ou r

c lassif ie d a d d epa r t m e n t www.La rande Rentals.com

t Oday t o

P l a Ce

your ad.

by Stella Wilder

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

DOWN

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Ebb and flood BMW bu ye r Passing grade Fortify Protein source Voucher Typical examples All, in combos Icy burg Sparkle Long-gone bird Crystal gazer Cloud backdrop

Welcome Home!

tions or discrimination.

CROSSWORD PUZZLER 36 37 39 40 41 45 48

725 - Apartment Rentals Union Co.

2 ROOM dormer, all utilities paid, plus internet and laundry, no smoki ng, n o p e t s , $ 2 7 5 month $ 2 5 0 dep 541-91 0-3696.

w ith t h e I R S ? S t o p wage I!t bank levies, liens I!t audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, I!t resolve t ax debt FAST. Seen on

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

ACROS S

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1 6 "C"in C .S . Forester 2 0 Sturm Drang 23 Parched 24 Turn toward 25 Dolly and her clones 26 Shout from the bridge 27 Meditation guide 28 Whipped cream serving 29 DDE's org. 32 Twain's real name 33 San — Padres 35 Mammal's need 36 Wobb le 38 Terrace 39 Weather, in poems 42 Game officials 43 Overly docile 44 Catch a glimpse 45 — liver oil 46 Medical plan 47 Where Terre Haute is 49 "The Telltale Heart" penner

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER22, 20)4 wake, yet you will have the wherewithal to YOUR BIRTHDAY byStella Wilder progress unimpeded. Born today, you will, even at a very young AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) —You may age,seem to have it made -- and you will haveto waitlonger than expected beforeyou attract both admirers and critics throughout can take your turn at something that can yield yourlifetime asa result.There aresomewho considerable rewards. will always beattracted to you simply because PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) -- Internal you have the air of one who belongs at the rhythmsand externalforcesmay beatodds center ofthings. Conversely, there will be oth- fora certain partoftheday.Putoffanym ajor ers who choose to turn away from you for the decisions until things calm down. verysame reason,butthis says more about ARIES (March 21-Apru 19) -- You'll want them than it does about you. When young, to focus on the details; you have the big picyou may find criticism hard to deal with, but ture, but the little things may need to be when you are older, you will have learned to understood more completely. put it behind you as soon as possibleTAURUS (Apru 20-May 20) — You can though not before you have listened to it very find inspiration almost anywhere. Look carefully, to learn what you can from it. around, and you'll see just whyyou seem to fit SUNDAY, NOVEMBER23 in so well. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) —You GEMINI (May 21-June20) -- You're doing may have todecodeamessagebeforeyou can very well, but you may have to work just a put the information it contains to good use. little harder at something to get the results CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — You you really want. may be greeted by quite a surprise when you CANCER (June 21-July 22) — Don't let

what others sayget under your skin. Focus on the positive and see others in a better light than they seeyou right now. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You may have more time than expected to reach a certain goal, but if you don't reach it today, it may be impossible to do so later on.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — You may haveto juggleresourcesin orderto make the most efficient use of all that is available to yoU.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — If you find yoursel fwaiting for someone to act before youdo,perhapsyou arenotreally ready to act in the first place. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Honest self-assessment yields a discovery that is both exciting and just a little intimidating. It's safe to say that you had no idea! fEDIlURS F da d q

0 » pl »

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COPYRIGHT2tll4 UNITED FEATUPESYNDICATE, INC

DISIRIBUIED BY UNIVERSALUCLICK FORUFS lllOWd eSt K »

C t y M O64ltl6 Mtl25567l4

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER23, 20(4 CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)-- It may CANCER (June 21-July 22) - What is YOUR BIRTHDAY byStella Wilder not take you any time at all to realize what different between what you are currently Born today, you combine both reason and you are up against. Once that is known, your doing and what you want to be doingt imagination in abundance. Indeed, your course becomesclear. Answer that, and you'll be making real progintellectual faculties and imaginative power AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) —Thepro- ress. often work together as you strive to solve cess is far more important to you than the LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — Things arelikely problems,chart your course,plan for the result. Consider going back to take another to go your way throughout much of the day, future and deal with what daily life throws at try at something difficult. but when they don't, you may havereason to you. You are not the kind to mistake fact for PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) - You will fear coming to a complete standstill. fancy— orviceversa — norare you the kind discern some significant differencesbetween VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — You're likely to build castles in the air, You arealwaysable you and someone who claims to be an ally to catch a greatmany luckybreaks,though a to look at the world in a realistic fashion, and — or even a friend. rival may enjoy the same kind of good foryou keep your feet firmly planted on the ARIES (March 21-Apru 19) - There is tune as well. groundeven asyou explore the loftiestand helping, and then there is standing in the LIBRA (Sept. 23-oct. 22) —You're likely most improbabl e of ideas. Like so many way. You maynot beable to tell one from the to be remembered for something you do that Scorpio natives, you believe so strongly in other as easily as usual. you may not even remember yourself - until your own thoughts and ideasthat you are not TAURUS (Apru 20-May 20) — You are youarereminded ofit. always willing or able to listen to dissenting interested in someone else's affairs, but you SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Onceyou voices. are not the kind to intrude. Later, you maybe get someone else's attention, you can get the MONDAY, NOVEMHER24 asked to join in. ball rolling very quickly. Decisions must be SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec 21) - The GEMINI (May 21-June20) —There's very made on the spot. alternatives you have to consider are alike in little room for guesswork. You must look at one respect; Neither really has you anticipat- the facts, assess their import and formulate a COPYRIGHT2tll4 UNITED FEATURESYNDICATE, INC ing an exciting result. solid hypothesis. DISIRIBUIED BY UNIVERSALUCLICK FORUFS 11lO Wd tSt K »

C t y MO alIOa Mtl255 67l4

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4B —THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD 725 - Apartment Rentals Union Co. LA GRANDE, OR THUNDERBIRD APARTMENTS 307 20th Street

& COVE APARTMENTS 1906 Cove Avenue UNITS AVAILABLE NOW! APPLY today to qualify for subsidized rents at these quiet and centrally located multifamily housing properties. 1, 2 8r 3 bedroom units with rent based on income when ava ila ble. Prolect phone ¹: (541)963-3785 TTY: 1(800)735-2900

SENIOR AND DISABLED HOUSING Clover Glen Apartments, 2212 Cove Avenue, La Grande Clean & well appointed 1 & 2 bedroom units in a quiet location. Housing for those of 62 years o r older, as w ell a s t hose d i s a b le d or h andicapped of a n y age. Rent based on income. HUD vouchers accepted. Please call 541-963-0906 TDD 1-800-735-2900

745 - Duplex Rentals 7 5 2 - Houses for Union Co. Rent Union Co.

last & $500/dep. HUD a ccepted. Call B o b, 541-523- 4 5 7 5 or 541-51 9-571 6.

Guzman fo r l i s t ings,

541-523-7727.

TAKING APPLICATIONS:

1 & 2-bdrm. units: Partially furnished. No 3-BDRM, 2 bath w/two pets. We check refercar garage. $700/mo plus ences. 541-523-2922 dep. Quiet neighborhood 3140 Elm St. 752 - Houses for 51-519-1938, after 2pm Rent Union Co. 745 - Duplex Rentals 2BD, $600. 541-963-41 25 Union Co.

EXCELLENT 2 bdrm duplex in quiet La Grande soutside location. Ga-

r age & s t o rage, n o smoking/pets, $675mo 541-963-4907

UNION Large older .12 X 20 storage with roll uP door, $70 mth, $60 home $750/mo + dep. Mt. F m il y P r o p erty deposit 541-910-3696 541-962-1074

3 BDRM, 1bath. Gas 2 BDRM, 1 ba, heat aflrePlace CarPort, LARGE I n Cove $700mo N E storage, fenced yard. P r ope r t ty M gt. t $750/mo. 541-519-6654 541 910 0354

3-BDRM, 1-BATH. Very Nice! In c I . W / D, Fenced Bac k Y a r d, A va il. D e c . 1 s t . , $ 650./m o + de p . 541-519-576 2 or Now accepting applications f o r fed e r a l ly 541-523-3035 f unded ho using f o r 4/5 BDRM, 2 bath house t hos e t hat a re $950/mo. 1st, last & sixty-two years of age deposit. Available Dec. or older, and h andi20th. Pets on approval capped or disabled of with a fee. Large corany age. 1 and 2 bedn er lot, f e nced w i t h room units w it h r e nt s hop. Fo r R e n t o r b ased o n i nco m e l ease option t o b u y when available. Call 541-523-5978 or 541-403-0275 Prolect phone ¹: 541-437-0452 NEWLY REMODELED TTY: 1 (800) 735-2900 3 PLUS bdrm, 2 b a th W/S/G paid. $825/mo "This Instituteis an Call 541-523-5665 or 541-51 9-4607 equal opportunity provider" SUNFIRE REAL Estate LLC. has Houses, Duplexes & Apartments for rent. Call Cheryl

1BD DUPLEX, w/ s/g p iad , $ 4 2 5/ m o 541-240-9360

780 - Storage Units

MCHOR

Mallard Heights 870 N 15th Ave Elgin, OR 97827

740 - Duplex Rentals Baker Co.

760 - Commercial Rentals

2 bd 1 ba, single garage. 3 BDRM, 2 bath in LG. 2 COMMERCIAL OR retail Recently remodeled & car garage, large yard, space for lease in hisvery clean. No smok$ 1000 pe r m o , n o t oric Sommer H e l m ing, no pets, w/s paid, pets. 541-963-4174. Building, 1215 WashMIII STOIULGI $ 575mo 1st & l a s t . i ngton A v e ac r o s s • Secure $200 dep . p o s sible 3BD, 1BA, large yard, from post office. 1000 shed, $850/mo. • Keypad Entry lease, References replus s.f. great location 3bd, 2ba, huge 3 6 x60 • Auto-Lock Gate quired. Leave $800 per month with 5 shop $1,050/mo. message 541-963-3622 year lease option. All • Security Ligllting 541-663-6673 utilities included and • Fenced Area A FFORDABLE S T U parking in. A v a ilable (6-foot barb) DENT HOUSING. 5 5BD, 2BA, 2 bed main n ow , pl eas e IIEW 11x36 units bd, 5 ba, plus shared floor & 3 down. $785 call 541-786-1133 for for "Big Boy Toys" kitchen, all u tillities 479-283-6372 more information and paid, no smoking, no VI ewI n g . S2S-1688 pets, $800/mo & $700 ACROSS FROM Hi gh School, 3b/2b home, dep. 541-910-3696 DRC'S PROPERTY 2512 14th W /D i n c luded, D e - MANAGEMENT, INC. NEWER 3 b drm, 2 ba, tached garage, Car215 Fir Str. $1050/mo, plus dep. p ort, F e nced y a r d , La Grande OR Some e x t r a s . No $ 850/ m o . C a II 541-663-1066 CLASSIC STORAGE smoking. Pets on ap541-963-1210. 541-524-1534 proval. 825 Sq FT 2805 L Street AVAIL. OCT. Beautiful DRC'S PROPERTY on Island Ave. NEW FACILITY!! Brand New 3bd, 2ba MANAGEMENT, INC. In Island City Vanety of Sizes Available all appliances, fenced 215 Fir Str Ca II 541-663-1 066 Secunty Access Entry yard, garage, & yard La Grande OR For a showing. RV Storage care. $1,100mo + dep. Mt. Emily Prop. Mgt. Houses: INDUSTRIAL P ROP541-962-1074 3 bd, 1 1/2 ba, Garage & ERTY. 2 bay shop with DRC'S PROPERTY office. 541-910-1442 Storage. Newly MANAGEMENT, INC. r emodeled. Quiet I C 215 Fir Str STUDIO, $ 3 00/mo + NORTHEAST neighborhood. Large La Grande OR $300 dep. w/s/g paid. PROPERTY y ard, g a r de n a r e a , 541-663-1066 No smoking or pets. w alking d i s tance t o MANAGEMENT 541-963-4907 541-910-0354 school. Storage units $ 1,200.00mo. D i s 750 - Houses For PRICES REDUCED c ount p o s sible w i t h Commercial Rentals Rent Baker Co. exte nd ed Iea se. 1200 plus sq. ft. profesUNION OREGON TRAIL PLAZA sional office space. 4 $<10 - $20.00 + (4/e accept HUD + 2 bd, 1ba. Quiet Neigh offices, reception 10x15 - $35.00 1- bdrm mobile home borhood, fenced yard area, Ig. conference/ starting at $400/mo. secunty system, $750 break area, handicap LA GRANDE Includes W/S/G dog okay with access. Pnce negotia12x24 - $65.00 RV spaces avail. Nice references. ble per length of 12x20 - $55.00 quiet downtown location lease. 10x10 - $35.00 541-523-2777 Ad may not be current. Sx10 - $20.00 Please stop in for a list 2 PLUS BDRM W/ base- or ca II541-663-1066. M-F 9-11:30, 1-5 ment & garage at 2555 780 - Storage Units M-F 9:30-11:30, 1-5 Grove: $660/mo. 1st,

This institute is an equal opportunity provider

UNION COUNTY Senior Living

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

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LARGE 2BDRM 1 bath, $750.00. 541-91 0-0354

e Security Fenced e Coded Entry SOUTHSIDE L O CA- e Lighted for your protection TION, 3b/1.5b with bo- e 4 different size units nus room, W/D hooku ps, F e n ced y a r d , e Lots of RV storage $ 850/ m o . C a II 4129S Chico Rd, Baker City off Rocahonras 541-963-1210.

UNION MH: 2bcl, $500 s enoir discount. 3b d

$650. 2bd, 2ba $600. 541-91 0-0811

760 - Commercial Rentals

7X11 UNIT, $30 mo. $25 dep. (541 ) 910-3696.

A PLUS RENTALS has storage units availab!e.

16 X 2 5 G a rage Bay 5x12 $30 per mo. w/11' celing & 10 x 10 8x8 $25-$35 per mo. Roll-up door. $200/mo 8x10 $30 per mo. +fees. 541-519-6273 'plus deposit' 1433 Madison Ave., 25X40 SHOP, gas heat, or 402 Elm St. La roll up & walk-in doors, Grande. $375. (541)963-4071, Ca II 541-910-3696 LG.

BEARCO BUSINESS PARK Has 3,000 sq ft. also 16x30 storage units Availible Now! Ca II 541-963-7711

BEAUTY SALON/ Office space perfect for one or two operaters 15x18, icludeds restroom a n d off street parking. $500 mo & $250 dep 2BD, SHED, shop, car541-91 0-3696 port, $675/mo. 3bd, 2ba, $875/mo. OFFICE SPACE approx 541-963-9226 700 sq ft, 2 offices, re3 BD, 1.5 bath, fenced cept area, break room, y a rd. $900/m o. L o common r e strooms, cated 10200 Granda ll utilitie s pa i d , view Dr. Island City. $500/mo + $450 dep. 541-91 0-3696 Ca II 541-963-2343

American West Storage 7 days/24 houraccess 541-523-4564 COMPETITIVE RATES Behind Armory on East and H Streets. Baker City

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

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

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855 - Lots & Property Union Co.

1001 - Baker County Legal Notices 81X113, 1818 Z Ave, LG. DISTRICT Utilities available, MEETING NOTICE $36k. 541-963-2668

Medical Springs Rural Fire Protection Distnct

1010 - Union Co. Legal Notices IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE STATE OF OREGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF UNION

BEAUTIFUL VIEW lot in Board of Directors will Cove, Oregon. Build h old it s re gu la r y our d r ea m h o m e . monthly board meet- WELLS FARGO BANK, Septic approved, elecing at Pondosa Station, N.A., its successors in tnc within feet, stream on Thursday, Decemi nterest a n d /o r a s r unning through l o t . ber 4, 2014 at 7 P.M signs, A mazing v i e w s of to discuss fire departmountains & v a l ley. ment operations. Plaintiff, 3.02 acres, $62,000 208-761-4843 LegaI No. 00035590 V. Published: November 21, ROSE RIDGE 2 Subdivi2014 UNKNOWN HEIRS OF sion, Cove, OR. City: SUSAN ELIZABETH Sewer/VVater available. 1010 - Union Co. M EYE RS; KA R A Regular price: 1 acre Legal Notices S ITZ-NARCISO a k a m/I $69,900-$74,900. Kara E. Sitz, AS AFFIWe also provide property NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S ANT OF THE ESTATE management. C h eck SALE OF SUSAN ELIZAout our rental link on BETH MEYERS; KARA On December 02, 2014 our w ebs i t e S ITZ NARC I SO a ka www.ranchnhome.co at the hour of 1 0 :00 Kara E. Sitz, INDIVIDUa .m. a t t he Uni o n m or c aII ALLY; REBECCA J. County Sheriff's Of Ranch-N-Home Realty, WATSON aka Rebecca fice, 1109 K Ave, La In c 541-963-5450. J . Sitz; S COTT M . Grande, Oregon, the MEYERS; STATE OF defendant's i n t e rest I O REGON; O C C U I will be sold, sublect to PANTS O F THE redemption, in the real PREMISES; AND THE property c o m m o nly REAL PROPERTY LO880 - Commercial known as: 2715 North Property CATE D AT 1 807 X Birch St r e e t , La A VEN UE , LA BEST CORNER location Grande , O re g on GRANDE, OREGON for lease on A dams 97850. The court case 97850, Ave. LG. 1100 sq. ft. number is Lg. pnvate parking. Re1 2-11-48036 w h e r e Defendants. m odel or us e a s i s . J ames B . N u t te r & Case No.140749200 541-805-91 23 Company is p l aintiff, and Unknown Heirs of SUMMONS BY PUBLIJoel C. Burgess; BevCATION erly Simmons; Bill Burgess; Unknown Heirs TO THE DEFENDANTS: of Sharon C u nningUNKNOWN HEIRS OF ham; Peggy Lofton; SUSAN ELIZABETH United S t a t e s Of MEYERS, REBECCA J. America; State Of OreAKA R Egon; Occupants Of WATSON BECCA J. SITZ AND The Premises; 2715 MEDICAL/BUSINESS SCOTT M. MEYERS: CONDO FO R SALE North Birch Street, La In the name of the State G rande, Or eg o n , O R L EASE A v a i l . o f Oregon, yo u a r e 97850 is d e f endant. hereby required to ap1/1/15 Next to Grande •Mini W-arehouse The sale is a p u b lic Ronde Hospital. Beaupear and answer the auction to the highest • Outside Fenced Parking tiful view of the valley. complaint filed against b idder f o r c a s h o r • ReasonableRates 700 Sunset Suite C. you in the above-entic ashier's c h e c k , i n LaGrande , Ca l l For informationcall: tled Court and cause hand, made out to Un701-21 0-11 38 on or before the expi528-N18days ion County S heriff's ration of 30 days from Office. For more infor5234solevel)ings t he date o f t h e f i r st mation on this sale go publication o f t hi s 378510th Street to: summons. The date of www.ore onshenffs.co first publication in this m sales.htm matter is Friday, November 21, 2014. If 795 -Mobile Home Published: October 31, you fail timely to apSpaces November 7, 14, and p ear a n d an s w e r , 21, 2014 SPACES AVAILABLE, plaintiff will apply to 930 Recreational one block from Safet he a b o v e - e n t i t l e d Lega I ¹38899 way, trailer/RV spaces. Vehicles c ourt fo r t h e r e l i e f W ater, s e w er , g a r - THE SALE of RVs not prayed for in its combage. $200. Jeri, manplaint. This is a Iudicial beanng an Oregon inIN THE CIRCUIT a ger. La Gra n d e signia of compliance is foreclosure of a deed COURT OF THE 541-962-6246 o f trust in w h ich t he illegal: call B u i lding STATE OF OREGON plaintiff requests that Codes (503) 373-1257. FOR UNION COUNTY the plaintiff be allowed In the Matter of the Esto foreclose your intertate of est in the following deDeborah Lynn Rynearscnbed real property: son, Deceased. Case No. 14-10-8512 THE EAST 50 FEET OF L OT 23 A N D T H E NOTICE TO WEST 15 FEET OF 2007 NUWA HitchHiker INTE RESTED PE RSONS LOT 24 IN BLOCK 1 Champagne 37CKRD OF PLEASANT HOME $39,999 820 - Houses For NOTICE IS H E REBY A DDITION T O L A Tnple axles, Bigfoot Iack GIVEN that the underSale Baker Co. G RANDE, U N I O N leveling system, 2 new signed has been apCOUNTY, OREGON, 2.89 COUNTRY ACRES 6-volt battenes, 4 Slides, pointed personal repACCORDING THE REw/ 2001 Manufactured Rear Dining/Kitchen, resentative o f t he CORDED PLAT O F 3 bdrm Home $69,000 large pantry, double above-entitled estate. SAID ADDITION. w / $ 1 5,000. d o w n . fndge/freezer. Mid living All p e r sons h a v i ng 541-519-9846 Durkee room w/fireplace and claims against the es- C ommonly known a s : surround sound. Awning t ate are r e q uired t o 1 807 X A v enue, L a 16', water 100 gal, tanks FOR SALE • $185,000 p resent them t o t h e Grande , O re g on 50/50/50, 2 new PowerOR personal representa97850-3734. house 2100 generators. RENT • $1100/mo tive, care of the WaBlue Book value 50K!! sley Law Office, PC, NOTICE TO DEFEN(541) 519-1488 105 Fir Street, Suite DANTS: 204, READ THESE PAPERS PRESIDENT GOLF Cart. La Grande, O r egon CAREFULLY! Good cond. Repriced 9 7850, w i t h i n f o u r at $2999. Contact Lisa months after the date A l a w s ui t h a s be e n (541 ) 963-21 61 of first publication of 1030 Grove St. started against you in t his n o t i c e o r t h e Baker City, OR t he a b o v e - e n t i t l e d 960 - Auto Parts c la im s may be ba rred. court by Wells Fargo All persons whose rights 3-BDRM • 2 BATH Bank, N.A., plaintiff. 4- STUDDED snow tires may be affected by P laintiff's c l aims a r e 225/60R 17. Please call: this proceeding may s tated in t h e w r i t t e n Mud & snow. $100. obtain additional infor(541) 523-5729 complaint, a copy of 541-524-7632 m ation from t h e r e - w hich was f iled w i t h for more information cords of the court, the t he a b o v e - e n t i t l e d personal representa970 - Autos For Sale Court. $197,000 WOW! Take tive, or the attorney for Y ou must " a ppear" i n a look ai this remodeled 4 STUDDED snow tires, the personal representhis case or the other tative, Philip Wasley. 3 bed, 2 Bath home 195-60R15 on Honda side will win automatiwith an open flcorplan. Dated and first published 4-lu g a II oy whee Is. cally. To "appear" you November 14, 2014. New Paint 8 new carGood Tread and Studs must f i l e w i t h t he $200obo. 541-428-2141 pei, make this home court a legal document Personal Representative feel nice and cozy. All called a "motion" or DONATE YOUR CAR, Kerri Rynearson "answer." The "moappliances are staying TRUCK OR BOAT TO tion" or "answer" (or with this home including HE R ITAG E FOR THE Published: November 14 "reply") must be given new washer and dryer, 21,and 28, 2014 BLIND. Free 3 Day Vato the court clerk or making ii truly move in cation, Tax Deductible, administrator within 30 ready. 14216395 Free Towing, All Pa- Legal No. 00039043 d ays of th e d ate o f Century 21 Eagle perwork Taken Care first publication speciCap Realty, Of. CAL L fied herein along with , 541-9634511. 1-800-401-4106 the required filing fee. (PNDC) It must be i n p roper form and have proof of 980 - Trucks, Pickservice on th e p l ainups tiff's attorney or, if the FSBO plaintiff does not have 2007 CHEVY 2500HD an attorney, proof of Ex-cab pickup. 34,000 COMPLETELY service on the plaintiff. miles Excellent CondiREMODELED If you have any question. Duramax Diesel (Inside & Out) tions, you should see Allison Transmission. an attorney i m m edi26,500./OBO ately. If you need help 541-519-3280 Larry in finding an attorney, you may contact the O regon St at e B a r ' s Lawyer Referral Service online at www.orel l b . by 2416 Baker St ~ calling (503) 684-3763 B aker C;t O R (in the Portland metro$149,900 politan area) or toll-free edroom, 2 Bath elsewhere in Oregon w/2 Sun Porches, t ~800 452-7636 Make your advertising Full Basement and This summons is issued dollars go further! List Detached Garage pursuant to ORCP 7. More info & photos at your business every day Zillow.com or call: in the Service Directory RCO LEGAL, P.C. 541-523-3035 in our classified section 541-51 9-5762 of this newspaper. Alex Gund, OSB ¹114067 a und©rcole al.com Attorneys for Plaintiff 511 SW 10th Portland, OR 97205 P: (503) 977-7840 F: ~503 977-7963 = == = ; = = Published: November 21, for our most curr ent offers and to 28, 2014 and December 5, 12, 2014

STEV ENSONSTORAGE

Seethe

Ilonaec Dyaas y P.II04- L0II000, e solid iFeaturesindud rlacecounters,4drfridge,convect' fAlcro, built-inwashdish,airIeveiin ge I Ipass-throughs tray,andakingsi bed-Alltoronly $149,II00

Your auto, RV, motorcycle, ATV, snowmobile,

boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months

light.

4 0ervetts Csrlrrsg.~i "I e,350 a„ 2 miles Pg. Ad more d "d fntere@;„ ac fo or Sggi L "a girl "veinas I ethis!

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(whichever comes first) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, bold headline and price. • Publication in The Observer and Baker City Herald • Weekly publication in Observer Plus and Buyer's Bonus • Continuous listing with photo on northeastoregonclassifieds.com

I

browse our complete inventory.

M.J.60SSMOtOr Co. 1415 Adams Ave • 541-963-4161

tm , IIMJI BWO IK'al Plslk IIIC

LegaI No. 00039143 Just starting up in a busi-

ness of y ou r o w n ? A Have a special skill? Let good way to tell people a bout it i s w i t h a l o w - people k n o w i n t he Service Directory. cost classified ad.

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

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PUZZLES 8 COMICS

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

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

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6B —THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

COFFEE BREAK

WINTRY WEATHER

Son's sex life is ex ose yunluc y coinci ence

DEARABBY:How muchinterestinan ing home dirty dishes, but my wishes are ignored. Am I being petty? adult child's sex life is normcd? My mother — FRUSTRATED GUEST seems obsessed. INNEW YORK I hooked up with a girl a couple of months DEAR FRUSTRATED: I don't think your ago on a Fiiday. She spent most of the weekfeelings are petty. Having put as much effort end with me. We both knew it wouldn't go further than that. as youhave into making the food you're preIt turns out she works with paring look as appetizing as my mom, who by chance found possible, it'sunderstandable. DEAR out about the weekend. Mom However, because this is a has been interrogating her ABBY recur r ing annoyance, considerpreparing thisyear's for every detail every chance contributions in disposable she gets,and she likes to drop aluminum pans. That way, your creations details into my daily life to embarrass me. How much interest is a parent supposed to won't be "dumped." show? Mine knows my favorite position and DEARABBY: My wifeis a neatnik who intimate interests. — EXPOSED IN PENNSYLVANIA always ffnds extra or unexpected things to do DEAR EXPOSED: It seems your mother before meeting me at the car, in the TV room, is not only nosy, but also has a sadistic sense etc. It means I always must waitfor her ofhumor. She's getting a kick out of embarbefore going anyplace. rassing you. I have asked her a thousand times to avoid doing "one last thing"before coming to meet Tell her to lay otfbecause what she's doing is inappropriate, and it's making you un- me. How can I appeal to her better nature to comfortable. If she can't respect your wishes, avoid tending to every tiny detail beforejointhen realize it's time you put some distance ing me? Or am I being too impatient? — WAITING FOR YOUR ANSWER between you and Mama. And to prevent this from happeningin thefuture,find outm ore DEAR WAITING: I'm sorry, but I can't about the chicks you hook up with because give you an unbiased answer because I am this last one sings like a bird. guilty of the same thing, and it makes my husband crazy, too. il suspect your wife and DEARABBY: The holidays will soon be I are not the only women who do this.) here, and so will something that may seem DEARABBY: I know someone who petty, but really irks me. My frv'ends have a large home with plenty of room, so they receives Social Security for her disabled usually host the holiday dinners. We — the children. She uses that money to feed a slot Those children could have so many guests — supply a few side dishes to accom- machine. pany the meal. I usually bring several "sides" opportunities i f their money was used approbecauseIlike to cook andIenjoy var7'ety. priately and it's going down the drain. What My problem is presentation. I bring my can Ido aboutit? It saddens me. — THINKINGABOUT THE KIDS sides in nice casserole dishes and do my DEAR THINKINGABOUT THE KIDS: best to make them look appealing. Because I'm not particularly artistic, it takes some Itappears the woman isaddicted to gambling. What she's doing may"sadden" you, effort. When I arrive with the food, my hosts unceremoniously dump itinto disposable but as a taxpaying American it infuriates me because her children aren't getting the aluminum containers, wash my dishes and assistance that money is meant to proput them aside. I hopeIdon'tsound picky,buteven when vide. So please, pick up the phone, call the I have asked that the items be served in the Department of Children's Services and clue them in to what's happening. I'm betting dishes I brought, the hosts say, "Oh, this they11be interested. is easier."I have saidIdon't mind bring-

A cold, dry artic front blows over a lake that is warmer than the air

The moist warm air from the lake is absorbed into the wlnd

Source: NOAA Graphic: Greg Good, Tnhune News Service

oun : u ao aces ano erwinr wa o The Associated Press

BUFFALO, N.Y.— A new blastoflake-effectsnow roared through western New York with thunder and lightning on Thursday, raising to nearly 6 feet the three-day totalin partsoftheBuffalo area. But even as it strained roofs and stalled daily life, the snow wasn't the only worry. Forecasters warned a rapid weekend warmup and rain could turn all that snow into floods. "It's a force ofnature,a m assive force ofnature," DeputyErieCounty Commissioner Richard Tobe said during a Thursday morning briefing, where he announced an eightstorm-related death. eWe're prepared, but the storm is gigantic and persistent."

• ACCuWeather.cOm ForeCaS Tonight

Baker City High Thursday .............. 35 Low Thursday ............... 24 Precipitation Thursday ....................... .. Trace Month to date ................ ... 0.26" Normal month to date .. ... 0.59" Year to date ................... ... 6.53" Normal year to date ...... ... 8.84" La Grande High Thursday .............. 39 Low Thursday ............... 28 Precipitation Thursday ....................... ... 0.00" Month to date ................ ... 0.52" Normal month to date .. ... 1.35" Year to date ................... . 10.13" Normal year to date ...... . 14.18" Elgin High Thursday ............................ 40 Low Thursday ............................. 28 Precipitation Thursday .................................. 0.11" Month to date ........................... 1.80" Normal month to date ............. 2.08" Year to date ............................ 29.58" Normal year to date ............... 19.63"

Tuesday

bO:b Rain

A few showers

Rain and snow

A shower

A few showers

Baker City Temperatures 32 (0

40 26

High I lsw(comfort index)

0

36 22

0

33 25

0

36 26

0

La Grande Temperatures

38 (2)

45 35 (>)

42 26 (0)

41 34 (1)

44 35 (2)

40 26 (0 )

4 0 21 (> )

44 31 ( 3)

Enterprise Temperatures

34 (3)

4 2 30 (>)

The AccuWeather Comfort Index is an indication of how it feels based on humidity and temperature where 0 is least comfortable and 10 is most comfortable for this time of year. wn is S turday's weather weather. Temperatures are Friday nighes'Iows and Saturday's highs.

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Hay Information Saturday Lowest relative humidity ................ 65% Afternoon wind ......... W at 6 to 12 mph Hours of sunshine ...................... 0 hours Evapotranspiration .......................... 0.04 Reservoir Storage through midnight Thursday Phillips Reservoir 15% of capacity Unity Reservoir 11% of capacity Owyhee Reservoir 3% of capacity McKay Reservoir 11% of capacity Wallowa Lake 11% of capacity Thief Valley Reservoir 14% of capacity Stream Flows through midnight Thursday Grande Ronde at Troy ................. N.A. Thief Vly. Res. near N. Powder ... 4 cfs Burnt River near Unity .............. 5 cfs Lostine River at Lostine .............. N.A. Minam River at Minam ............... N.A. Powder River near Richland .... 60 cfs

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Even for Buffalo, a place that typically shrugs at snow, this was a stunning snowfall — the kind of onslaught folks will be telling their grandchildren about. Those living in the Buffalo area were already buried under as much as 5t/2 feet of snow Tuesday and Wednesday, and they awoke to the threatof1to 3 feetm ore. The roving lake-effect band dropped several inches on the city of Buffalo and then pushed into towns to the south, National Weather ServicemeteorologistDavid Zaf said. "This is an historic event. When all is said and done, this snowstorm will break allsortsofrecords,and that's saying something in Buffalo," Gov. Andrew Cuomo said after touring the region

1mana Sunday

Saturday

If there is enough moisture in the air, it will begin to snow on the other side of the lake

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Wednesday and talking to truckers who had been stranded more than 24 hours on the Thruway. The storm came in so fast and furious over Lake Erie early Tuesday it trapped more than 100 vehicles along a 132-mile stretch of the New York State Thruway that remained closed Thursday. Tom Wilson, of West Seneca, split a Salisbury steak frozen dinner with co-workersand tried hisbesttoget some rest when he was stuck 36 hours at his warehouse

job. "I slept on a pallet. Then I slept on some office chairs, and then I went back to the pallet,"Wilson said."Then I found some sponges to lay on. I found one pack of sponges unopened. That looks like a pillow to me."

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Friday, November 21, 2014 The Observer & Baker City Herald

EASTSIDE PRIDE OUTSIDE JIM WHITBECIC I

Layering: the art and the

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science e didn't have much of a fall this year. It was a pretty long summer and then, one day, the temperature

dropped 30-odd degrees and

Katy Nesbitt/Wescom News Sennce

Laurel Coulter, left, donated $21,500 to the Wallowa Avalanche Center, accepted by Julian Pridmore-Brown. Coulter is the widow of Shane Coulter, who lost his life in an avalanche Feb. 11 while backcountry skiing in theWallowa Mountains.

Donationtoavalan ecenter opesto elp

By Katy Nesbitt WesCom Newsservice

JOSEPH — Backcountry recreationists in Northeast Oregon will have access to avalanche forecasting due to a generous donation from a memorial fund honoring the memory of a 2014 avalanche victim. Wallowa Avalanche Center, an important information source for winter backcountry users,

accepted $21,500 from the Shane Coulter Memorial in September. These funds will help the center expand avalanche hazard forecasting and safety courses within the Wallowa Mountains and surrounding region. "The Wallowa Avalanche Center is sincerely dedicated to helping winter visitors enjoy our uniquely beautiful backcountry

safely," Keith Stebbings, the center's director,said.aWith this funding, we arenow able to providevastly improved resources, which were not possible before. We believe we are helping others avoid accidents." Shane Coulter lost his life in an avalanche Feb. 11 while backcountry skiing in the Wallowa Mountains. His death immediately signaled the critical need for a more robust system of evaluating the threat of avalanches, increasing awareness and for preventing future accidents, Stebbings said. His widow, Laurel Coulter, opened the online memorial fund in his name to generate a source of monetary support for the Center's mission. "I am deeply gratified by the

generosity of those who donated to Shane's memorial fund," said Laurel Coulter."I firmly believe he would have wanted us all to channel our grief from this unfortunate accident into something positive — and we did." Funds will be used to developreliable avalanche forecasts throughout the winter months, upon which skiers, snowmobilers and snowshoers may rely when planning trips into the backcountry. These new forecasts will use a national color-coded five-level scale, ranging from low to extreme, in order to classify the given avalanche hazard for the

day. Julian Pridmore-Brown, the center's deputy director,said the danger scaleratings are a standardizedtoolfor avalanche

risk forecasting used throughout North America and New Zealand. "In the past, Wallowa Avalanche Center has not made any attempt to forecast. Our condition bulletins were simply a record of conditionsobserved over the past week, leaving the reader with no advice for future conditions. Using the danger scale, we will now forecastavalanche danger into the future," Pridmore-Brown said. Until now, there has never been aforecastthatcoversthis region. The center's forecast will cover the Elkhorn Mountains, Wallowa Mountains and the Blue Mountains, encompassing parts of Baker, Grant, Union, Umatilla and Wallowa counties, PridmoreBrown said. The forecast will be issued once SeeDonation/Page 2C

4-plus inches of snow jumped on to the ground. Before you knew it, the whole town was waiting at Les Schwab to get their tires changed over. Those that weren't were digging around theirclosetstrying toremember what they wore in this kind of weather. When those people don'tfi nd what they need,sometimes they come to the shop and ask a lot of important questions.

Base layers: synthetic or merino wool? Under Armour and other synthetic materialsare popularforgood reasons:theyfeel good, wick moisture away from your body, keep you warm and breathepretty welltoboot.It also breaks down more quickly and, well, smells really bad over time. Merino wool uses a fine weave that does everything UA can, but doesn't break down and only smells funny when it's supposed to. It's also typically a goodbitmore expensive. Verdict: synthetic, until you want to invest in the merino approach for the longer term.

Insulation: synthetic or cIown? Whether sleeping bags or jackets, the question of synthetic versus down insulation has been kicked around since the dawn of time. Synthetic is more durable, but heavier and doesn't pack as well. Down needs more care, is light, packs well and is as cozy and soft as it gets. But down is expensive, with different tiers of feather quality icheck the label

—600 is mid tier, 850+ is gold). Also of note is that while it used SeeLayeringlPage 2C

skier making avalanche safe a top priori By Mark Morical WesCom News Service

KevinGrove knows fi rsthand the immense power and danger of avalanches. The avidCentral Oregon backcountry skier has experienced three "close calls," one of which he caught on video in January 2010: Starting down a powdery slope on Middle Sister, Grove triggers an avalanche from just above him. He skis fastand straight across the slope to get out of the way, but the slide knocks him offhis feet. He digs into stable snow with his whippet — a ski pole with an ice ax on the end — which pops him out of the cascading snow and back

onto his skis, safely away from the avalanche. "I wasn't really thinking at the time," Grove says. "Had I done a 10-second quick test, I wouldn't have skied the slope. I don't think I would have died, but it definitely was good size, and I could have broken something had I gone all the way down that slope. Definitely a wake-up call." That experience, combined with two other narrow escapes on North Sister and losing two fiiends to avalanches in the West, has fueled Grove's passion for snow safety in the backcountry. The video footage ofthe M iddle Sister incident,recorded by Grove's

partner that day, should persuade all backcountry enthusiasts to be educatedand prepared fortheir next outing. Grove, 41,and several other Central Oregon skiers are board members of the Central Oregon Avalanche Association, whose mission is to increase avalanche safety in our region. This winter, the COAA is launching a professional field observers program, in which COAA members will assess snowpack on a regular basis and share their findings on www.coavalanche.org with as many as four posts per week. A long-term goal of the COAA is to establ ish an avalanche forecast center in Bend within two to three

years. "Our backcountry numbers are rising, probably exponentially," says Grove, an engineering and physics professor at Central Oregon Community College who also teaches a class called snow science."There's a tremendous amount ofbackcountry users in our area, and very little information out there in terms of snowpack, or weather, or avalanche hazards." Nationwide, sales of alpine touring boots — which can be converted into heel-fiee soles for backcountry use —increased27 percent from 2012 to 2013, according to Snowsports Industries America. "The gearisbetter,lighter,m ore

IN BRIEF

TO-DO LIST

Buck hunt raNe tickets for sale for local library

Annual turkey shoot set for Sunday

The Enterprise Public Library is now selling raffle tickets for a buck hunt, donated by The Nature Conservancy, and the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to hunt on the Zumwalt Prairie. The Zumwalt houses Oregon's largest privately owned nature sanctuary, and is located in Wallowa County outside of Enterprise, near the west edge of Hells Canyon. Tickets are $20 apiece, or six for $100, and will benefit the library as it attempts to add an elevator to the100-year-old, two-story Carnegie Library. The drawing will be March 9 at the Enterprise City Council meeting, with the winner receiving a threeday guided hunt in the fall of 2015. The party size will be limited to three people plus the guide. If interested, contact the library 541-426-3906, or send a check to 101 Northeast (NE) First Street, Enterprise, 97828. If sending a check, be sure to add a return address and contact information.

•000

The Powder River Sportsman's Club's annual turkey shoot will be Sunday, from 9 a.m. until dark at the club's Virtue Flat Range, just north of Highway 86, less than one mile past the turnoff to the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center. Contact Wayne Bloom at 541-5194000 for more information. 9 a.m., Sunday, Virtue Flat Range

•000

efficient,a Grove says."Snowmobiles are more powerful and stronger so snowmobiles can cover much more terrain and mileage within one given day. People want solitude and want to get out there iin the backcountryl, and the reality is the numbers are dramatically increasing across the country. It's growing like mad." The Northwest Avalanche Center is based in Seattle and offers forecasts for the Mount Hood area, but for nowhere else in Oregon. The Wallowa Avalanche Center serves only the Wallowa Mountains in northeast Oregon. The COAA is in preliminary discussions with both See SafetylPage2C

FLY-TYING CORNER

Taddy pattern imitates young frog Tie this one on when fishing for trout, bass or panfish and you see tadpoles in the water. Watch how the tadpoles swim when startled, then match their movement. Then match their movement with quick starts, direction changes and long pauses. To build this tadpole pattern, start with black thread on a No. 8-12 wet fly hook. For the tail and body use the same bunch of black squirrel hair tied off at the thorax.

Source:GaryLewis, ForWesComNews Service

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2C —THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

OUTDOORS 8 REC

SAFETY

relaytheirobservations to forecasters atthe avalanche Continued from Page1C center, who can examine weather models to make forecasts. ofthoseorganizations to "A classi crecipe foran avapossibly form a regional lanche is a firm bed surface, a avalanche center network weak layer on top of that and that would include several areas in Oregon, accordaslabon top ofthat,"Grove ing to Grove. Whether that explains."The slab might happens or not, the COAA be a wind-deposited snow is pushing forward with its event from the night before. The weak layer fails, and the goalofinstituting a forecast slabmoves on top ofthatbed center in Bend. Grove adds that backcoun- surface icausing a slide)." try skiers and snowmobilers Aside from proper educashould understand the eletion and communication, ments of an avalanche, which backcountry users can include weather, snowpack, mitigate avalanche hazard terrain and the human factor. by skiing or snowmobiling on The COAA offers tree lower-angledterrain,slopes one-hour"Know Before You oflessthan 20 to25 degrees, Go" avalanche dinics, and the according to Grove. association is trying to raise Safetygear iscrucialin the fundsforaforecastcenter backcountry. At a minimum, through donations on its web- askieror snowmobiler site. Grove hopes such a center should have an avalanche can be a collaborative effort beacon, a probe and a shovel, with the US. Forest Service. Grove says. More and more He envisions that the backcountry enthusiasts forecastcenterwould provide are using airbag backpacks, which feature a trigger that, coverage for three zones within Central Oregon: a when pulled, inflates a bag southern zone that would in- around the snowrider's head clude Paulina Peak, a central and causes him or her to rise zone that would include Todd to the surface of the snow. Even with all the new, Ridge and Tumalo Mountain, fancy gear, backcountry and a Cascades zone that survival is ultimately about would include Broken Top and the Three Sisters. making wise decisions. Grove knows he made a bad deciObservers atthoselocations would dig pits in the sion on that January day in snowpack, looking for a weak 2010 on Middle Sister. layer and determining the And he is intent on educatlikelihood of failure of that ing others so they do not weak layer. They would then make a similar mistake.

atylabeledme theeteral tightwad shortly after us getting married. I'm not a tightwad. I'm just thrifty. 20 years ago, if you'd of told me that I'd pay close

Bend backcountry skier Kevin Grove looks at the aftermath of an avalanche that he narrowly escaped on Middle Sister in 2010.

DONATION

LAYERING

Continued from Page1C a week on Thursdays and will be valid for two days. This schedule is based on user feedback and polling conductedlastspring,said Pridmore-Brown. ''We also use standard avalancheadvisory problems in ourforecaststhatare part ofthenational standardized avalanche education curriculum," Pridmore-Brown said. ''We worked hard to make ourforecastproductconform to nationalstandards,so,for example, a snowmobile rider couldtake a levelone avalanche course in Colorado, and then travel to Northeast Oregon and read an avalanche advisory that contains familiar terms, ratings and travel advice." Pridmore-Brown said the centerwillhave a professional observers network consisting of a handful of highly trained individuals who submit regular detailed observations. This service will augment the existing network of volunteers who post conditions on the center's website. "The website was built so that anyone in the back country could post conditions," he said."This helps in relatively remote areas with no large ski areas and limited professional field observers. We continue looking for ways that people with limited or no formal avalanche training can submit information to share with other users." The website also has a homepage map with easy links to all the local

• 0

mountain weather stations, including two stations maintained by the avalanche center at Anthony Lakes and Mt. Howard and an improveddisplayofobservations and sno-park road conditions. Within the small group of similar sized, rural avalanche centers, he said he sees a great response trom the local community and encourages more users to participate, especially snowmobile riders, who seem to bedisproportionately involved in avalanche accidents nationally. The center's full education schedule will be posted soon. ''We generally conduct about five or six avalanche awareness talks in the region.Most areopen to the public, while some are conducted for a specific user group, such as a snowmobile club or a search and rescue group," Pridmore-Brown sald. The Wallowa Avalanche Center provides the backcountry recreationist with tools to make an informed decision about winter travel in Northeast Oregon. The Wallowa Mountains contain outstanding opportunities for backcountry skiing, snowshoeing and snowmobiling, but are also home to often threatening conditions. The center is a 501c3 nonprofit organization. Contact the center at info@ wallowaavalanchecenter.org, or visit www.wallowaavalanchecenter.org.checenter.org. Contact Katy Nesbitt at 541-786-4235 or knesbitt@ lagrandeobserver.com. Follow Katy on Twitter 0 IgoNesbitt.

t

t

to $15fora good pairofhiking socks I'd of told you that you were nuts. But I have since changed my position. Let me explain why. Thirty years ago we had three choices for sockswhite, dress and wool socks. Now go to your local outdoor store and see how many options are available. It will amaze you. Years ago while at the SHOT show I met the guys trom Browning socks and one thing led to another and I met up with Angie Marshburn with Carolina Hosiery. She helped educate me immensely on socks. She told me that the North American Free Trade Agreement caused many changes for industries in the U.S. and it really hit the sock mills. As a result of these trade laws, many mills in North Carolina were forced to close or outsource production to other countries. That's not the case with Carolina Hosiery, though, which is who Angie worked for. The company has been in business since 1945 and manufactures all of their products in the U.S. They produce Browning's sock line, whichis how thatI metup with them. One thing led to another and over the years I've ended up testing numerous socks/styles for them. You may wonder why we need so many different styles. Like any field, a demanding market brings out many new inventions. Angie creditsthedevelopments to: • A more outdoor society. • Staycations — More people are staying home and hiking/working out. Ifyouwear apairofgood hiking socks on your next trek, I guarantee you that it will not be the last. It's said that you're only as comfortable as your feet allow you to be.Idon'twant to overdra-

Kevin Grove photo

t)t

I

Tom Clayoomb photo

When we backpack into the back country and are wading in streams all day fishing, it's really nice to have on some good hiking socks.

BASE CAMP ,

: TOM CLAYCOMB

matize it but if you wear a good pair ofhiking socks, at theend ofa hard day of hiking you won't believe how much better you will feel. Try this — at midday on your next hiking trip, slip on a fresh pair of socks. You won't believe how much it will treshen you up. Don't buy boots while wearing a thin pair of socks or they11 be too tight with a good pair ofhiking socks. Now when I buy a pair of boots I always wear my thick hiking socks. I'm not saying to buy your boots so they're sloppy but for sure don't buy them too small. I think as a whole America has been blinded to what a pair of good socks should feel like. The cheaper ones have a definite toe seam whichafter a day ofhard hiking will wear into your toesand cause blisters. The week that I received the socks trom Angie I had to work the Yakima Sports Show. I know that you will think that I am a whiner but

jacket can only be used for the activities it would keep Continued ~om Page1C you the right temperature in. The shell design that is more common these days it used to be that when you got your down wet the feath- allows you to wake up the morning before your trip ers bunched up and it was the end of the story for that and decide on how many gear or garment, most of the layers, synthetic, merino or down these days has some down, or allofthe above, kind of waterproofing treat- etc., based on the weather ment that helps keep things and how you feel looking out the window with your coffee going smoothly. Verdict: synthetic, unless in hand. In a word, it's more you are concerned about versatile. weight, packing size, or feel Verdict: because the apand are up for a moderate proach has evolved to help size investment for down. you do more things with the same stuf.

Shells: why is it so hard to find an insulated ski jacket these days? Because an insulated

Waterproof: how do I know if something is waterproof?

Courtesy photo

Browning hiking socks provide outdoorsmen comfort on any type of adventure in any season of the year. shows do tire you out somewhat. They cushioned my feetand Ifeltalottresher at the end ofthe day.Thenext week I went on an Xtreme Winter Camping/backpacking excursion. I thought that it'dbe agood time to testout her socks. Iloved them. A good pair of socks will wick away the moisture, which does a few things: keep your feet drier even when your boots have leaked and keeps your feet trom feeling clammy when

hiking hard and your feet are sweating. I don't want to overexaggeratebut they also somewhat cushion your feet since they are thicker and betterconstructed. As Igetolder,Ipay m ore attention to my footwear. If you look in my closet you will only find Irish Setter boots and in my hunting drawers only good hiking socks. Moral to the story — socks cannot compensate for a bad pair ofboots but they sure complimenta good pair.

No fabric on it's own is impermeable to water unless it's in a trash bag. Problem is, who wants to go skiingin a trash bag? So, an industry of fabrics and sprays and films and whatever else is born. There is actually a lot of technology that goes in to making a rain jacket breathe when you need it to and keep water out at the same time, and it changes at least every year. That said, it's still a balance you need to find your own footing on. Pro tip: if you spray your old jacket that soaks up water like a towel with Nikwax TX Direct or Scotchgard, you may find it works like new. Verdict: there is no wa-

terprooffabric,only degrees withtradeoffsofbreathability along the way. Hopefully this helps a bit. The rollup idea is that it can help to think about your gear as a seriesofinvestments that you prioritize according to your own needs. If you need more information, we find that dialogue isthebestoption,so come by the shop for a tree cup of coffee and consultation. We also have trash bags. Jim I/I/hitbeckis the owner of Blue Mountain Outfittersin La Grande. I/I/hitbeck can be reached at (541)612-0148, or email at jim 0bluemtnoutfitters.oom.

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014

E-CIGS Continued from Page6C

No standards, little data E-cigarettes exploded onto the U.S. market in 2006. By 2014, there were 2.5 million e-cigarettes usersnationwide. While initial products looked much like traditional cigarettes, a long cylindrical tube with a glowing tip, over the past year in particular the market has moved toward refillable tank systems thatbear littleresemblance to tobaccocigarettes. While there are multiple different designs, most use thesame basicconcept: a battery-powered heating element that heats a nicotine-containing liquid until it turns into a vapor to be inhaled just like cigarette smoke. While smoke is produced by burning tobacco, the vapor is produced only by heating the liquid, much like steam from a kettle. For most users, a disposable e-cigarette will lastabout aslong astw o packsoftobaccocigarettes. Tank systems or atomizers, on the other hand, can be refilled as often as needed. The liquid, often called juice by vapers, is even more varied. The juice consists mainly of water, propylene glycol and glycerin mixed with varying amounts of nicotine and flavoring. The liquid may be manufactured by large multinational companies with millions in sales or by small mom-andpop vape shops that produce their own juice for their local customers. One analysis earlier this year identified 466 brands and 7,764 unique flavors of e-cigarettes. But with no regulations or even manufacturingstandards in place,it is almost impossible to make any definitive statement aboute-cigarettes.What applies to one product, may not apply to another. 'There really is a Wild W est in thee-cigarette market out there," said Vince Willmore, communications director for Tobacco-Free Kids. "There isn't one e-cigarette. There are probably hundreds oftypesofe-cigarettes,which really makes it hard to get a handle on the health impact of these products." The industry is so new and changing so rapidly, there is little conclusive evidence upon which public health experts, regulators or even industry proponents can rely. So decis ions on regulations arebeing made in a vacuum, which each side of this polarized debate is exploiting to further its own agenda. "People are actually being veryone-sided in thisdebate. The main issue here is the whole discussion is ahead of the evidence," said Dr. Wasim M aziak, a professorofepidemiology at Florida International University."There are two verydisconnected parties and they're feeding offofeach otherwithoutreallyinfluencing one another." Proponents ofe-cigarettes have adopted the harmreduction argument, arguing that what's in the vapor from e-cigarettes is much safer than the witch's brew of poisons and carcinogens in tobaccocigarettes.It'sa low hurdle to clear. 'There's no question that electronic cigarettes are much safer than cigarettes," said Dr. Michael Siegel, a professor of community health sciences at the Boston University School of Public Health."There's just no comparison between these two products." Nonetheless, opponents argue it's still unclear whether the vapor is less harmful. They point to studies that have found toxins and metal particles in e-cigarettes as proofthese arefarfrom the safe products many make them out to be. Researchers at the Univer-

• 0

THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — SC

HEALTH 8 FITNESS

Not just nicotine Vaping is starting to make inroads into the medical marijuana market as well. A marijuana vape pen eliminates the need to burn the marijuana leaf — a key issue for bedridden patients. Additionally, cannabis e-cigarette juice can be formulated to maximize the content of cannabidiol, the compound in marijuana thought to be responsible for its analgesic, antiinflammatory and anti-anxiety properties, while minimizing the psychoactive effect that leads to feeling "high" or "stoned." It does, however, raise concerns that individuals could start using e-cigarettes to vape marijuana surreptitiously in states where marijuana is still illegal or limited to those with medical conditions.

Are e-cigarettes a gateway? A survey of U.S.middle and high school students found that youth who tried e-clgarettes were more likely to report an Intentlon to smoke. Pastresearch has shown that intention to smoke generally predicts future smoking behavlor.

Haveyoutriede-dgarettes? Allstudents ~ 6.1% Students whohavenever smoked / 0.9% Studentswhohavesmokad ~

102%

Doyouintendtotrytobaccodgarettes? Mever smoked ~ Never smoked but trled e-cigarette Neversmokedortriede-cigarette ~

22% 43.9%

215%

Source:U5. Centersfor DiseaseCoreol andPrevention

Inside an e-cigarette As electronic cigarettes —technically battery-operatednicotine inhalersbecome increasingly popular thejury is still outon the health risksthey mayyield.

Serveturkev,not salmonella,for holidaydinner VVesCom News Servicestaff

PULLMAN, Wash. This month's Thanksgiving turkey might contain more than bread stuffing. It could also harbor salmonella, a bacterial pathogen that causesfoodborne illnessin 1.2 million Americans each year, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That's why molecular epidemiologist Margaret Davis of Washington State University's Paul G. Allen School for Global Animal Health prepares turkey"as if it's contaminated with salmonella. When handling any type of poultry, I err on the sideofsafety,"she said. As co-author of seven salmonella studies in the past 15 years, Davis should know. She investigates the many ways these pathogens are transmitted and why some strains have becomeresistant to antibiotics. "Salmonella is an extremely robust organism," she said. It has the ability to survive in a wide range of environments — from -

Undoingantiwmokingwork

What has public health officials most concerned is the Light:Simulates Electronic Vaporizer: N i cotine potential erosion of many of cigarette glow; components: Atomizes the li q uid theirstrategiesforcombating indicates when Include control nicotine container tobacco use. the device is ready circuits and smoking liquid for use; also works pneumatic in the liquid Tobaccocontrolefforts as a battery airflow sensor. container. have relied on three main indicator. approaches: prevent kids from taking up smoking in the first place, making it Battery more diKcult for smokers to Inhaler continue their habits, and to Source: E&ig © 2014 MCT stigmatize smoking to make itlessattractive.Over the sity of Southern California prime the brain for illicit past four decades, tobacco recentlylooked atvapor from drug use and addiction. control has put in place the Elips Serie C e-cig, one There's even less data on dozens oflaws and regulaof the more popular brands what second-hand expotions designed to further in Europe. The researchers suretoe-cigarettevapor these goals, and keep tobacco found a10-fold decrease in might be. The Centers for companies from gaining new exposure to harmful parDisease Control and Preven- ground. These laws have ticlescompared with tobacco tionestimates that 50,000 been remarkably effective, cigarettes, with close-to-zero non-smokers die each year cutting the smoking rate levelsoforganiccarcinogens. in the U.S. from exposure to from 42 percent of AmeriBut they also found particles second-hand tobacco smoke. cans in1965 tojustover 19 of chromium, which is not But most of that risk comes percent in 2011. found in traditional cigafrom the smoke that curls off Cigarette taxes and minirettes, and nickel at levels the end ofa tobaccocigarette. mum pack size are designed four times higher than in to- When inhaled, most of the to price cigarettesoutof bacco cigarettes. They found dangerous compounds in reach of children. Manutracesoflead and zinc,butin cigarette smoke are absorbed facturers are banned from concentrations lower than in in the throat and lungs and marketing flavored cigarettes traditional cigarettes. released in much lower quan- which could be more ap"The metal particles likely tities in the smoke that's pealing to kids, and cannot come fromthecartridge exhaled. advertise theirproductson ofthe e-cigarette devices E-cigarettes, on the other televisions or in print. themselves, which opens up hand, don't release any vapor But the advertising bans the possibility thatbetter unless the user is inhaldon't applyto e-cigarette commanufacturing standards ing,and again any ofthe panies who have taken to the forthe devicescould reduce exhaled vapor contains little airwavesto m arkettheirprodthe quantity of metals in the of concern. A study by the ucts. E-cigarette advertising smoke," said Arian Saffari, Roswell Park Cancer Instihas grown fiom $6.4million in the lead author of the paper. tute in Buffalo, N.Y., testing 2011 to $60 million in 2013, reBut it's unclear how many threemodels ofe-cigarettes vivingmuch of the messaging brandsofe-cigarettesor tank found that indoor use does used by cigarette companies in atomizers would have similar leave nicotine residue on the the 1950s and 1960s. "The marketing of e-cigasurroundings, although not problems, or whether the to the extent that tobacco problemcouldbe solved with rettes comes out of the same manufacturing standards. cigarettesdo.And e-cigarette playbooktobaccocompanies Another study raised conusers can also resort to have used to market regular what's known as discreet cernsthat some e-cigarettes cigarettes to kids,"Willmore run too hot, heating the vaping, preventing any ofthe said.'We have seen the new liquids to temperatures suffi- vaporfrom being exhaled. slick magazine and TV ads "If you just hold your cienttocreate cancer-causing that make e-cigarettes look chemicals such as formaldebreath for several seconds glamorous just like the Marlhyde or acetaldehyde. But when you're inhaling, there's boro man and the Virginia again, those concerns are lim- no visible exhalant," said Slims woman." They've hired celebrity itedtoonly some e-cigarettes Julie Woessner, president and mightalso beaddressed of the Consumer Advocates spokespeople, including TV withbetterstandards. for Smoke-fiee Alternatives personality Jenny McCarthy, Other safety concerns Association, a consumer-run who in one TV spot talks might not be as easily avoidnonprofit advocacy group. about taking her freedom ''We do not claim that eed. Researchers at Boston back and being able to smoke University recently reported cigaretteuseis safe.W e're anywhere. They've sponsored that human bronchial cells estimatingbased on the fact sportingevents and concerts, exposedina lab toe-cigarette that this a smoke-free aland plast ered theirlogoson vapor showed changes in ternative and it's the smoke bikini-clad models. In 2013 gene expression similar to that does the damage, that and 2014,e-cigarette maker it's 99 percent less harmful those caused by tobacco EJoy ran commercials during smoke. Still, that's a long way than smoking." the Super Bowl. from provinge-cigarettescan One of the few proven E-cigarette companies are cause lung cancer, and the harms associated with e-cig- offering free samples and researcher acknowledged arettes is the nicotine liquid selling single products that that e-cigarettes, although itself. Nicotine is highly toxic lower the entry costs for not completely benign, might and some users have had to young users. And so far, no indeedbe saferthan tradigo to the emergency room af- state has implemented a tax tional cigarettes. ter spilling the liquid on their on e-cigarettes to make them And nicotine itself is not a skin where it can be quicldy justasexpensive astobacco particularly benign product. absorbed. And because there cigarettes. It's one of the more poisonous are no requirements for While clear air laws have and addictive compounds child-proof packaging, there forced smokers outdoors, few found in nature. While has beena slate ofpoisonings statesorlocalitieshave adthere's little research availinvolving young children. dressedvaping ore-cigarette able on the impact oflongThe CDC recently reuse in public places. Many interm nicotine use outside ported that from September dividual offices, restaurants of smoking, there are major 2010 through February and bars where smoking is concerns. There is evidence 2014,poison controlcenters illegal now permit vaping. thatnicotine has adverseef- fielded 2,405 calls involvAnd nothing has characfectson adolescent brain de- ing e-cigarettesand 16,248 terizedthe e-cigarette indusvelopment that could result involvingtobacco cigarettes. try more than the variety of in lasting deficits in cognitive E-cigarette calls per month flavored juices, like Cherry function. And recent studies rose from a single call in Kool-aid or SweetTarts, that suggest that nicotine may September2010,to 215 in seem tobe targeting children.

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THANICSGIVING

February. More than half ofthosecallswereforkids under the age of 5. Meanwhile, the evidence thate-cigarettescan be used as asmoking cessation aid is limited and with mixed results. One study conducted in the U.S., U.K., Canada and Australia found that e-cigarettes do not help with quitting. Another found smokers were much more effective at quitting using e-cigarettes than with a nicotine patch or going cold-turkey. A randomized controlled trial found nicotine-containing e-cigarettes were marginally better for quitting smoking, resulting in a 7.3 percent quit rate after six months, compared to 5.8 percent with the patch and 4.1 percent with nicotine-free e-cigarett es.E-cigarette users were able to cut the number of cigarettes consumed by nearly 10 per day, compared to nearly eight fewer for those using the patch.

water and soil to, literally, the kitchen sink.

No. 1 cause of food polsonlng While most salmonella infections inflict mild to moderategastrointestinal distress lasting 4-7 days, others leave a dark and permanent legacy, killing an estimated 100,000 people worldwide annually. Children, the elderly and people with impaired immune systems are most vulnerable, said Davis. "Not only are salmonella bacteria ubiquitous in the environment, but they're hardy," she said. They make their way into many types of foods: Poultry, meat and eggsarethe biggesttargets, but disease outbreaks have alsobeen tied to spinach and even peanut butter. The organisms can withstand freezing temperatures, dry conditions, zero oxygen and high acidity inside the human gut. They can survive in soil and water for months and on countertops and cutting boards for weeks, she said.

ELDERLY

The less clutter in a home the safer it will be foran elderly loved one. Continued ~om Page6C Remove swivel chairs or which to urinate. On the at least place them in a other hand, all white cornerso thatitcannot fall floors in the home make backward. Of course, the it hard for the elderly to safest furniture is stable distinguishother surfaces and stationary. and this becomes a falling Remove things that hazard." could be misinterpreted by W hen safetyproofi ng an elderly loved one like a bathroom, remove the plastic orStyrofoam foods throw rugs, the electrical m eant as decorations or a appliances and razors. cup used as a pencil holder. Remove medications from A coat hanging on a coat hook might tempt an elthe bathroom cabinets derly one to leave the house and secure them in a locked place. Labeling the unsupervised. It'sbestto bathroom door"Bathroom" put thecoatin a closet will help reduce confusion out of sightto discourage about which door leads to wandering. While not restricting the commode. "Make sure the water a person with dementia heaterissetat120 degrees from everything, plan some or less," said Townsend."A safe outdoor activities like person with dementia could raking leaves or sweepeasily burn himselfbecause ing. Townsend said fresh his senses are diminished, air is best for slowing the and he can't tell if someprogressofdementia, and thing is too hot." it plays an important role Likewise, with diminin promoting independence, ished smell, a person may purpose and a sense of notrealizethatthereis self-worth. Winter weather spoiledfood in therefiigera- may keep a person indoors tor, so it would be helpful m ore, but abird feeder to if a supervising family watch creates a calming member takes a routine pastime, and a petinside inventory of the refrigerator the house can become a and removesspoiled foods. trusted companion. 0

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Friday, November 21, 2014 The Observer & Baker City Herald

DRUGS

SMOICING

REPORT CARD

State leads in reducing preterm births

Oregon's rate of antibiotics abuse low

By Chris Thomas

• Dangerous resistance still a problem due to continued misuse

Oregon News Service

WesCom News Servicestaff

Oregon public health officials are seeing less resistancein bacteria most responsible forserious respiratory infections such as pneumococcus, thanks to the state's low antibiotic prescribing rates, they say. But people continue to misuse antibiotics, and that can lead to dangerous and potentially deadly drugresistance, says Dr. Ann Thomas, a public health physician in the Oregon Health Authority's Public Health Division, and medical director of its Alliance Working for Antibiotic Resistance Education program. ''While Oregon is doing well compared with other states, we're still seeing antibiotics being used to treat bronchitis and the cold, which is not appropriate," Thomas says."Such misuse promotesthe development of antibioti cresistance tocommon respiratory infections, which can turn them into difficult-to-treat infections." In a 2013 report, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention iCDCl estimated that each year in the U.S., resistant pneumococcus causes 1.2 million infections, about 19,000 hospitalizations and 7,000 deaths. Oregon health care providers are doing their part to reduceexcessive antibiotic prescri ptionsand keep levels ofresistance low in Oregon. In 2012,only1 percentofserious pneumococcal infections in the Portlandareawereresistant to penicillin, Thomas says. Clinicians can continue to help keep OIegon's rates low by taking time to educate patients about antibiotic resistance and the possibility of serious side effects, including allergic reactionsthatresultin arash and anaphylaxis, that send thousandsofpatientstothe emergencyroom everyyear. However, Thomas is concerned about continued misuse of antibioticsforcertain common infections. Oregon's medical and pharmacy claims database shows that broadspectrumantibiotics— drugs thatcan be used to treata wide variety of different bacterialinfections— were used on 55 percent of upper respiratoryinfections in 2011. They also were used in a majority ofcasesofbronchiti sand the common cold — 90 percent and 66percent,respectively — although those conditions rarelyrequire treatment.

Ryan BrenneckeNVescom News Sennce

Dylan Johnson, 21, exhales vapor from his e-cigarette while sitting on the front porch of his home last month.

• They may be safer, but could e-cigs renormalize smoking? By Markian Hawryluk WesCom News Service

The debate raging overelectronic cigarettes largely comes down tothe fate of people like Dylan Johnson, a 21-year-old from LaPine who started smoking when he was 14. "I was pretty young," he admits. After seven years of smoking — all but three below the legal age to buy tobaccocigarettes— he had developed apack-and-a-half-per-day habit. Living in a house where most of his family smokes, without some sort of assistance Johnson might never be able to quit smoking. Only half of smokers do. He faced a lifelong risk of disease and disability, and could expecttocut10 yearsoffhislife expectancy ifhe smoked past the age

of 35. But in January, Johnson decided on his own he needed to make a change and began to wean himself off smoking using e-cigarettes. Almost immediately, he was able to cut his

cigarette use,stretching each pack of 20 cigarettes to lastafullday,then two. He experimented with preloaded, disposable e-cigarettes,butthey didn't work well for him. He soon switched to using an atomizer with a refillable tank system, often called vaping. By September, he was down to just five cigarettes a day. "I smoke about the same number of times each day but more towards the vaping side," he said."I don't cough up any black tar or anything." He's been ratcheting down the nicotine levels in his e-cigarettes as well, from a potent 24 mg/ml when he started vaping, down to about 6 mg/ml by September. His ultimate goal is to stop smoking tobaccocigarettes,buthehas no immediate plans to stop using e-cigarettes. "I think I'll still be vaping regularly but I want to be at a much lower level iof nicotine) than what I started," he sald.

Cases like his leave public health officials with a conundrum. On the one hand, e-cigarettes could significantly reduce the harm for smokers, taking away the tar and other carcinogens that cause myriad health problems, saving millions oflives and billions in health care costs. On the other hand, e-cigarettes carry the risk of addicting a new generation of nicotine users and potentially undoing much of what health officials have accomplished in stigmatizing smoking. After eight years on the U.S. market, there is widespread agreement by both proponents and critics of e-cigarettes thatregulation isneeded. But how that regulation is put into place could ultimately determine whether these products become the bestchance ofm oving to a tobaccotreesociety orwhether the progress of ivedecades oftobaccocontrolefforts f will go up in smoke. See E-Cigs / Fbge 5C

AG ING

Safe -proofing the home to protect the elderly By Tiish Yerges ForwesCom News Service

Keeping the home environment safe for the elderly and those with progressivedementia is an im portant area of concern and one that can be addressed proactively. At one time, an adult may have effortlessly used home appliances, but as that person ages, his brain now hesitates as to how the appliance works, and he's unaware how dangerousitcan beifoperated improperly. "Alzheimer's causes a number of changes in the brain," said Kaylena

Townsend, expressions director at Wildflower Lodge, an assisted living facility in La Grande. Some of those changes in the aging brain affect judgment. Appliances like the stove or oven can become dangerous when a person forgets that the burners are on and hot. The same thing applies to power tools in the garage. A person may remember that they once used them but has now forgotten how they work. The sense of time and place are also affected with age and dementia. A person may need to use the bathroom but can't distinguish

HEALTH TIP

which door to enter. Confusion and a senseofbeing lostsetsin.Paranoia may make a door appear more like a barricade. Sometimes an elderly individual's posturebegins to bend forward. It changes their center ofbalance, so a nice handrail along the hallway is helpful for this condition. With age comes a change in depth perception, a shorter gait and feet that shume more than they lift, so remove the throw rugs in the home so they don't trip and fall. Remodel the bathroom to include a walk-in shower stall with a seat.

MARIC ONYOUR CALENDAR

Teamwork a big aid when quitting smoking S t art holidays healthfully with Turkey Trot Those planning to quit smoking should know of one thing that can help: teamwork. While no method of quitting is easy, turning to your doctor for assistance may boost your chances for success. In some cases, even brief advice delivered during an office visit can make a difference. In others, your doctor may direct you to specific resourcessuch asmedication,counseling or support groups and smoking cessation services.

Source:GrandeRonde Hospital

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PORTLAND — More brand-new Oregonians are offtoa good start,asthe stategetsan"A" foritsefforts to reduce the number of premature births. A new March of Dimes report card says Oregon's pretermbirth rate of9.3 percent is well below the U.S. average of 11.4 percent and even topsthe organization's national goalfor2020. Joanne Rogovoy, thrector of program services and government affairs with the March of Dimes Oregon chapter, saida combination offactors has kept the preterm birth figures lower here for the past three years. "Every hospital in Oregon has adopted a policy against early elective deliveries without a medical reason, prior to 39 weeks," Rogovoy said.cWe havelower ratesof women who smoke tobacco; tobaccosmoke isa risk factor forpreterm birth." She says more needs to be done, but expanding health insurance coverage also has been significant, allowing more women to get the prenatal care they need. Oregon is one of only five states to get atop grade on itspreterm birth report card. Rogovoy also credits a support-group approach for expectant moms' prenatal visits being used by some clinics. "Itdoes providesupport and reduces isolation," Rogovoy said.'You get your personal time with your health careprovider,butreally,the information and the sharing are coming from the women." Rogovoy said the specific causeisn'tclear,butfactors that can increase any woman's risk of preterm birth include smoking, some types of infections, and some chronic conditions such as high blood pressure or diabetes.

KickoffThanksgiving Day with some exercise by joining in the annualTurkeyTrot. The fun run/walk 5K begins at 9 a.m. Thursday at Kicks Sportswear, 1801 Main St. in Baker City. Entry is $10.This community fundraiser benefits the Northeast Oregon Compassion Center. Registration is at the Baker YMCA and online at www. neoregoncompassioncenter.org. Bring a non-perishable item on race day to donate.

When the sense of smell and taste go iand they are among the first sensesto gol,then a person'sfood consumption plummets. That person may become malnourished and not even know it. The thirst center in the brain stops working, which puts an elderly one at risk for dehydration, dizziness and heart problems. "Something as normal as shadows in the home can be alarming to an Alzheimer patient," said Townsend. "Black throw rugs laid directly in frontofthe toiletare sometimes perceived by the aged brain as holes in See Elderly / Page 5C

HEALTHY LIVING

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Program spiracy edy) Peter Sellers, Elke Sommer. Crimes" cc Proof: Part One" fice n fice n Molly n Molly n A&E 52 28 Criminal Minds n Criminal Minds n Criminal Minds n Criminal Minds C riminal Minds n Dogs of War n Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Country Country Duck D. Duck D DuckD Duck D Duck D. Duck D Mad Men "New Mad Men Don dealsHell on Wheels ** Needful Things(1993, Horror) Max von Sydow, ** Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem ** Snakes ona Plane (2006, Horror) *** Terminator 3< Rise of the Machines (2003) AMC 60 20 Amsterdam" with fallout. 'Further West" Ed Harris, Bonnie Bedelia. (2007) Steven Pasquale. cc Samuel L. 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Off (:25) ***X2<X-MenUnited(2003) P atrick Stewart. n R esc u e Bar Rescue n Paid Paid Joel Paid Gold Rush Mining Edge of Alaska Dirty Jobs "Cran Dirty Jobs Mike Dirty Jobs "Turkey Epic Homes n cc Buying Buying Buying Buying Alaska: The Last Alaska: The Last TDC 51 32 Program Program Osteen nProgramfrozen ground. n 'Bear Attack" n berry Farmer" n travels to Maine. Inseminator" Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska Frontier n cc Frontier n cc T LC 49 39 Guilt Free Frying Body Sexy In Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes 90 Day Fiance n 90 Day Fiance n 90 Day Fiance n Law & Order Dead Law & Order "Trag Law & Order Ring Law & Order "Hit Law & Order "OpenLaw & Order Law & Order "The *** Red Eye(2005) Rachel (:45) **4Lakeview Terrace(2008, Suspense) **r; Disturbia TNT 57 27 rock singer. n man" n edy on Rye" n identifies victim. Season" 'Asterisk" n Wheel" n McAdams cc Samuel L. 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BY JAY BoBBIN

Movies - " George Lucas 8' the W o rl d o f

Fantasy Cinema," debu<ing Tuesday, Nov. 25 — has Lucas as the sole person talking <o writer- p r o d u c er - d i r ector B o u z ereau

(who's unseen ) about the genre in w h i c h he's made such a name for h i m self, thanks largely <o "a galaxy far, far away." Of course, "Star Wars" is referenced, bu< so are choices including " I t's a Wonderful Life" and " T h e Secret Life of W alter Mi t t y." B o u z ereau m u ses that an ex t ensive interview w i t h L u c a s was "a fantasy t hat came t r ue " f o r h i m , "<o si< across

George lucas lalks aboul his fanlasies and olhers on TCM When George Lucas is talking about f antasy movies, you do n't need m any o t h e r i nterviewees. Or an y o t h e r . So found L a u r en< Bouzereau, a veteran maker of behin d - t he-scenes film d ocumentaries. The latest of his "A N i g h t a< the Movies" specials for Turner Classic

from George and talk m o v ies for several hours and shape the show based on that discussion." H aving d on e d o c u m e n t a r ies on t h e L ucas-direc<ed "American G r af f i ti " a n d Indiana Jones adventures, Bouzereau was " very comf o r t able" w it h h i m , "bu< there is a story t h a t w e 're tell i ng . I w a s really interested in a defi n i t i o n o f t h e genre, and I j ust l o ved his take on I<. "I< gets harder <o define what a genre is today, and I love that (Lucas) uses very specific examples ... and also that he defines 'Star Wars' as a fantasy, where most people define I< as science fiction. This really is an a ppreciation of a genre as seen through th e eyes of one of the greatest film m akers of o ur t i m e . "


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Weekday Movies A August: Osage County *** (2013) Meiyl Streep. A funeral reunites three sisters with their venomous mother.tt « (2:00)SHOWThu. 5 p.m. Billy Bathgate *** (1991) Dustin Hoffman. Gangster Dutch Schultz's fall is witnessed by his protege.tt «(2:00) SHOW Tue. 1:30 p.m. Bridesmaids *** (2011) Kristen Wiig. A maid of honor's life unravels as the big day approaches. (3:00)USA Fri. 4 p.m. Byzantium *** (2012) Gemma Arterton. Fugitive female vampires take refuge at a seaside British community.tt «(2:00) SHOW Fri. 12:45 p.m.

C The Christmas Hope *** (2009) Madeleine Stowe. Awoman bonds with an orphan after the death of her son.'PG' « (2:00)LIFE Fri. 2 p.m. A Christmas Wedding *** (2006) SarahPaulson.A strandedwoman must get home in time for her wedding.'PG' « (2:00)LIFEThu.1 p.m. Debbie Macomber's Trading Christmas *** (2011) Tom Cavanagh. Holiday travel leads to cross-countiy romances.'G' (2:00)HALL Mon. 2 p.m. End of Watch *** (2012) Jake Gyllenhaal. TwoLAPDcops patrol the dangerous Southland streets.tt (2:30)SPIKE Thu. 2:30 p.m.

F The Fighter ***t (2010) Mark Wahlberg. Twobrothers reunite to train for a historic boxing match.tt (2:57)SPIKE Wed. 12:33 p.m. Finding Nemo***t (2003) Voices of Albert Brooks. Animated. A clown fish

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searches for his missing son. (2:30)FAM Mon. 6 p.m. Gone With the Wind **** (1939) Clark Gable. CivilWar rogue Rhett Butler loves Southern belle Scarlett O'Hara. cc (5:00)AMC Wed. 10 a.m., Wed. 3 p.m. Gosford Park*** (2001) Eileen Atkins. A murder occurs at a hunting party in England.tt «(2:20) SHOWWed.1:40 p.m.

H Home Alone *** (1990) Macaulay Culkin. A left-behind bcy battles two burglars in the house.(2:15)WTBS Fri. 1 p.m.

I I Am Legend *** (2007) Will Smith. Bloodthirsty plague victims surround a lone survivor.tt (2:30)SPIKE Wed. 6:30 p.m., Thu. 12 p.m.

L Lincoln***t (2012) Daniel Day-Lewis. Lincoln takes measures to ensure the end of slavery forever.tt «(2:30) SHOWThu. 2:30 p.m. The Little Mermaid **** (1 989) Voices of Jodi Benson. Animated. Disney's Oscar-winning version of the fairy tale.tt «(1:30) DISN Mon. 12 p.m. Meet the Santas *** (2005) Steve Guttenberg. A man, his fiancee and her mother plan awedding.'PG'(2:00) HALL Wed. 6 p.m., Thu. 8 a.m. Mistletoe Over Manhattan *** (2011) Tricia Helfer. Thewife of Santa Claus tries to help a divorcing couple.'G' (2:00)HALL Fri. 12 p.m. Moonlight and Mistletoe *** (2008) Candace Cameron Bure. Nick and his daughter fight to keep their theme park open.'G' (2 00)HALLTue. 4 p.m.

0 Ocean's Thirteen *** (2007) George Clooney. DannyOcean andhis gang seek to right a wrong.tt (3:05)SPIKE Mon. 4:55 p.m.

Am er. A mer. K ing K i n g

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The Perks of Being a Wallflower *** (2012) Logan Lerman. Friends tiy to help an introverted teenager becomemore sociable.tt «(1:45)SHOWTue. 9:15 a.m., Tue. 5:15 p.m.

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J P Whe e l ofDancing With he Stars (NSame-day (:01) Castle Ki KATU J immy ardy! (N) Fortune Tape) ncc Swiich (N)cc News Kimmel PBS NewsHour Antiques RoadshowOregon ExperienceIndependent LensAlabamarecording 3 1 3 (N) 0 cc 0 cc studio.n cc(DVS) Q Entertain Extra (N) 2 Broke Big BangScorpion "Talis (9:59) NCIS:Los News LetterQuartet *** (2012) Maggie Smith. A 0® 6 6 me n t 0 cc Girls (N) Theory mans" (N) cc Angeles "Traitor" man diva intrudes on atrio of retired opera sing ers.tt cc (1:45)SHOW Fri. 2:45 p.m. Live at 7 Inside The Voice"Live Top1 0 Performances"The State of Affairs KGW Tonight "Secrets &Lies" Edition top 10 artists perform.0 cc News Show Family Family Gotham"LoveCraft Sleepy Hollow 10 O'Clock News(N) News LoveRatatouille***t (2007) Voices of Pat"MagnusOpus"(N) Raymond ton Oswalt. Animated. A French rat enjoys Feud (N)Feud (N) (N)n goodfood and longsto become a chef. Big Bang Big BangFOX 12's 8 O'Clock FOX 12's 9 O'Clock Law & Order: Spe- Law & Order: Spe(2:30)FAM Fri. 5 p.m. ~tj P tct 13 Theory Theory News on PDX-TV News on PDX-TV cial Victims Unit n cial Victims Unit n Tlte First 48 cc The First 48 cc Godfather-Pitt. A&E 52 28 Tlt F' t48 (:02) TheFirst 48 The School of Rock*** (2003) Jack (5:30) TheFast and **t The Sorcerer's Apprentice (2010)Nicolas Cage. **t Shrek f he Third (2007) Black. An unemployedguitarist poses as a AMC 60 20 theFurious (2001) A master wizardtakeson a reluctant protege. Voices ofMike Myers. teacher. «(2:30)AMC Tue. 12:30 p.m. o Be Announce Finding Bi ANP 24 24 o Be Announce g foot n North Woods Law Single Santa Seeks Mrs. Claus *** (2004) Crystal Bernard. Santa's heir roJessie Jessie ** * i Up (2009) Voicesof Ed Mickey Austin & Dog With G irl Li v& DISN 26 37 n cc n mances a widowedadvertising executive. cc Asner .n 'PG'cc Mouse Ally n a Blog Meets Maddie 'PG' (2:00)HALL Wed. 4 p.m. NFL PrimeTime SportsCenter (N) (:20)SportsCenter (N) cc ESPN 33 17 NFL Football (2003) ** I Dark Shadows (2012) Johnny Depp The 700Club n FAM 32 22 (6:00) Finding Nemo Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines Dodgeball-True **I Horrible Bosses (2011) Anger Anger Horrible Bosses FX 65 15 *** (2003) Arnold Schwarzenegger.A Home &Family "HolidaySpecial" (N) *** Debbie Macomber's Mrs.Miracle cyborg protects JohnConnor from a supeHALL 87 35 Boyfriend for rior model. «(2:30)AMC Mon. 1 p.m. FindingMrs.Claus (2012)MiraSorvino Christmas onthe Bayou (2013)cc LIFF 29 33 Very Merry U Full Fu l l Full Full Fresh Fresh F riends (:36) NICK 27 26 !Carlyn Max& Shred n House House House House P rince Prince n cc Friends Up ***t (2009) Voices of Ed Asner. Animated. An old manflies away in a baltana State atMontana College Football ROOT 37 18 College Football Mon loon-powered house.tt «(1:45) DISN Ocean's Thirteen • • SPIKE 42 29 Ocean's Thirteen ** Coup/es Retreat (2009,Comedy)Vince Vaughn.n « Tue. 12 p.m. Fast N' Loud ncc Fast N'Loud: Misfit Garage"One, (:01) Fast N' Loud: (:01) Misfit Garage TD 2 Revved Up(N)n Nasty Nova"(N) Demolition Theater "One, NastyNova" WALL-E **** (2008) Voices of Ben Say Yes Say Yes 19 Kids-Count 19 Kids-Count Quints Surprise 19 Kids-Count TLC 49 39 Burtt. Animated. A robot chases a meMajor Crimes "SweetMajor Crimes"Zoo Major Crimes"DownMajor Crimes"DownLaw & Order"Chalchanical scout across the galaxy.tt « TNT 57 27 Revenge" Story" cc the Drain" the Drain" lenged"n (1:45)DISN Wed. 12 p.m. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate FacBooze Traveler Bizarre Foods B i zarre Foods With Booze Traveler Bizarre Foods tory *** (1971) Gene Wilder. A famous TRAV 53 14 "Turkey IsStirring" Americacc Andrew Zimmern "Turkey IsStirring" Americacc confectioner offers a grand prize to five Chrisley Chrisley children. (2:30)FAMWed. 6 p.m. USA 58 16 NCIS "SubRosa" WWE MondayNight RAW(N Same-day Tape) n cc The Wizard of Oz **** (1939) Judy WTBS 59 23 Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam Guy FamGuy American American Big Bang Big Bang Conan cc Garland. A tornado whisks a Kansas farm *** Batman Begins(2005)Christian Bale. n Fight Foo Fighters:Sonic HBO 518551 MomsMabley girl to a magic land.(DVS)(2:15) WTBS The Affair ncc Homelandcc The Affair ncc Fri. 3:15 p.m. SHOW 578 575 Fruifvale Station n Homelandcc

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Jeop- Wheel of Dancing With the Dancing With theStars (SeasonFinale) (N KATU Jimmy Same-dayTape)n r~s News Kimmel PBS NewsHour Finding Your Roots American Masters: Mel Pio neersPOV Studentson 3 13 (N)n « Henry Louis Gates Brooks: Make aNoise cs Navajo reservation. Entertain Extra (N)NCIS Anelevated NCIS: NewOrleans (:01) Personof News Letter• 6 6 ment o cc terrorist threat. (N) 'ChasingGhosts" Interest (N) nr~ s man Live at 7 Inside The Voice Twoarl Marry MeAbout a Chicago Fire "Arrest KGW Tonight 8 8 (N) Edition ists are eliminated. (N) News Show Boy (N) in Transit" (N) Family Family MasterChef Egg-fry New Girl Mindy 100'Clock News(N) News Love(MN 12 12 Feud (N) Feud (N)ing challenge.(N) (N)n Project Raymond Big BangBig BangFOX12's 8O'Clock FOX12's 9O'Clock Law & Order: Crimi Law & Order: CrimiTheory Theory News on PDX-TV News on PDX-TV nalntI ent"Loyalty" nal Intent "Loyalty" A&E 52 28 Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage ShippingShipping Country Country (5:30)TheSorcer- ***s The Curious Caseof Benjamin Button (2008)BradPitt. A man born inGhost AMC 60 20 er'sApprentice 1918 NewOrleans ages backwardinto the 21st century. (1990) To Be Announced ANP 24 24 Yellowstone: Battle To Be Announced Yellowstone: Battle for Life ncs Jessie Jessie **** WALL-E(2008) Voices of Mickey Austin & Dog With Gi rl Liv & DISN 26 37 o cc o cc Ben Burlt.'G' cs Mouse Ally n a Blog Meets Maddie SportsCenter(N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) ESPN 33 17 CollegeBasketball *** Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory The700Club n FAM 32 22 (6:00)**s Dark Shadows Madagascar 3:Europe'sMostWanted Madagascar 3:Europe'sMostWanted FX 65 15 Madagascar 2 Naughty or Nice(2012) Hilarie Burlon. HatsOff to Christmas!(2013) Haylie Duff HALL 87 35 (6:00)Fir Crazy True Torics True Ton (N)r~ s The Sisterhood Prison Wives Club LIFE 29 33 True Toncs Thunder- Max & Full Fu l l Full Full Fresh Fresh Friends (:36) NICK 27 26 mans Shred n House House House House Prince Prince n cs Fr i ends Mark Rich Eisen ROOT 37 18 Wm. Basketball UEFA Champions LeagueSoccer Ink Master r~s Ink Master r~s Ink Master (N)n Tattoo Tattoo SPIKE 42 29 Ink Master r~s Moonshiners "BulletMoonshiners Josh Moonshiners Josh Billy Bob's Gagsto Moonshiners Josh TDC 51 32 Proof"n cs and Bill rebuild. (N) and Bill rebuild.(N) Riches (N)r~ s and Bill rebuild.n 19 Kids-Count 19 Kids-Count (:02) RiskingIt All 19 Kids-Count TLC 49 39 19 Kids-Count Bones ncs Bones "TheCarrot in (:01) Bones"The (:02) CS«NYn « (:03) CS«NY"'Til TNT 57 27 the Kudzu"n Turn in theUrn"n Death DoWePart" Bizarre FoodsWith Bizarre FoodsWith Hotel Impossible r~sBizarre FoodsWith Bizarre FoodsWith TRAV 53 14 Andrew Zimmern Andrew Zimmern Andrew Zimmern Andrew Zimmern USA 58 16 Mod Fam ModFamModFam ModFam Mod Fam ModFam Chrisley Benched Chnsley Benched WTBS 59 23 Seinfeld Seinfeld BigBang Big Bang Big Bang Big BangBig Bang Big BangConan cs REAL Sports State of Play (N)n Foo Fighters: Sonic HBO 518 551 (6:45) **'i The Wolvenne(2013)n The Affair nr~s Inside the NFL(N) Homelandcs Inside the NFLn SHOW 578 575 Homelandcs

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Jimmy Kimmel Film School Letterman NFL Football SeattleSeahawksPaid Paid Inside Dateline NBC"A KGW Tonight 8 8 at San Francisco49ers. Program ProgramEdition Bronx Tale"r~s News Show Family Family Fox's Causefor Paws: An All-Star Dog News FOX12 12 Cold Love(MN 12 12 Feud n Feud n Spectacular Tales ofrescuedogs. (N)n First Case Raymond Big BangBig Bang**s Smart People(2008) DennisQuaid The Mentalist The Mentalist "Rus~Up H 13 Theory Theory Sarah JessicaParker. Carnelian lnc r~s set Potatoes"n C Country A&E 52 28 Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D Duck D. Duck Dynastyn Du ck D. ountry (6:00) ***sJurassrc Park(1993,Adven **s The Lost World: JurassrcPark (1997)Jeff Goldblum.An AMC 60 20 ture)SamNeil, LauraDern. r~s expedition returns tomonitor dinosaurs' progress. cs HuntiHogzilla Monster Squid River Monsters n ANP 24 24 MonsterSquid T u r keys Attack Jessie Jessie Jessie Jessie Austin & Liv & Austin & Dog WithG irl Li v& DISN 26 37 o cc o cc o cc o cc Ally n Maddie Ally n a Blog Meets Maddie SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter(N) SportsCenter (N) ESPN 33 17 Football SportsCenter (N)(Live)r~s ***sRatatouille(2007, Comedy)lan Holm The700Club n FAM 32 22 (5:30)Cars 2(2011) Toy *** Madagascar:Escape 2Afnca Madagascar 3:Europe'sMostWanted FX 65 15 Madagascar 3 A Royal Christmas(2014)Lacey Chabert HALL 87 35 The Christmas Northpole(2014)Tiffani Thiessen. The Sisterhood LIFE 29 33 The Notebookc~ **i The Holiday (2006)CameronDiaz, Kate Winslet. r~s *** Mrs. Doubtfire(1993,Comedy)RobinWiliams, Friends Friends Friends Friends (:36) NICK 27 26 Sally Field. Premiere.n r~s occ o cc o cc n cs Fr i ends Sea Rich Eisen ROOT 37 18 Dodge College Football Stanford atCalifornia. (Taped)

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Alaska: TheLast Alaska: TheLast Alaska: TheLast Alaska: TheLast Alaska: TheLast Frontiern r~s Frontiern r~s Frontier n r~s Frontier Exposed Frontier ncs TLC 49 39 UndercoverBoss UndercoverBoss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Transporter: The Transporter: The (:01) Transporter: (:02) Transporter: (:03) Onthe Menur~s TNT 57 27 Series cs Series cs The Series r~s The Seriescs No Reservations Anthony Bourdain: The Layover With No Reservations r~sAnthony Bourdain: TRAV 53 14 (N)cc No Reservations Anthony Bourdain No Reservations USA 58 16 Mod Fam ModFam Mod FamModFam Mod FamModFam Mod Fam ModFam Mod Fam ModFam WTBS 59 23 Seinfeld Seinfeld FamGuy FamGuy FamGuy Big BangBig Bang Big BangConan cs ***i The LEGO M ovre(2014)n The Newsroom n Foo Fighters: Sonic HBO 518 551 Concert, Valor The Affair n r~s Homelandcs Sunny The Aff SHOW 578 575**sSinister (2012) Ethan Hawke.

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KATU Jimmy News Kimmel PBS NewsHour Nature "MyLife asa Nature Woodducks Nature White-tailed The Lost Bird 3 13 (N)n « Turkey"n care for ducklings. deer in theU.S.n Project(2012)n Entertain Extra (N)Survivor (N) nr~ s Criminal Minds Stalker "Crazyfor News Lettero cc "Fate" (N) n ment You" (N)n cs man Live at 7 Inside The Making of PeterSaturday Night Live MemorableThanks- KGW Tonight 8 8 (N) Edition Pan Live! cs gwing-themed sketches. n r~s News Show Family Family Hell's Kitchen The Red BandSociety 10 O'Clock News(N) News LoveFeud (N) Feud (N)blind tastetest. (N) (N)n « Raymond Big BangBig BangFOX 12's 8 O'Clock FOX 12's 9 O'Clock TheWalkingDeadn TheWalkingDead "Better Angels"n Theory Theory News on PDX-TV News on PDX-TV A&E 52 28 Country Country Duck D. Duck Dynasty n Duc k D. Country Country Country Country (3:00)GoneWrthth ** ** Gone IVith the Wind(1939, Romance)Clark Gable,VwienLeigh, Leslie Howard AMC 60 20 Wind(1939) Civil War rogueRhett Butler lovesSouthern belle Scarlett 0 Hara.r~s TheWhale:RevengeFromthe Deepn River Monsters "AmericanKilers" n ANP 24 24 The Whale Jessie Jessie *** Meetthe Robinsons(2007,Star-Reb- Star-Reb- DogWith G irl Li v& DISN 26 37 o c c o cc Adventure)n 'G'r~s els els a Blog Meets Maddie SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter(N) SportsCenter (N) ESPN 33 17 College Basketball **s Cars 2(2011) Voicesof Owen Wilson. The 700Club n FAM 32 22 Willy Wonka& Chocolate *** The Amazing Spider-Man (2012)AndrewGarfield Amazing Spdr FX 65 15 M ike M ik e HALL 87 35 Meetthe Santas Angels and Ornaments(2014, Romance) The Christmas Shepherd(2014, Drama) Tall adega Nights: Ricky Bobby (:01) *sKillers (2010,Action) r~s LIFE 29 33 (6:00) Movie Every Witch Way:Spellbound Full F ull Fu l l Fresh Fresh F riends (:36) NICK 27 26 Gigi interviewscastmembers. House House House Prince Prince n r~s F r i ends Mark Bensin Hawks Sea Ri c h Eisen ROOT 37 18 UEFA Champions LeagueSoccer *** End of Watch(2012)JakeGyllenhaal Walking SPIKE 42 29 (6:30) ***l AmLegend(2007)n Naked andAfraid Naked and Afraid Dude, You're Dude, You're Dude, You're TDC 51 32 Screwed ncs Screwed Screwed (N)r~ s "Jungle Love" n "PlayingWithFire" Inv asion: Lights Christmas Light TLC 49 39 Christmas Trees Christmas Light Cmas Lights Castle "Flowersfor *** Training Day (20 01, CrimeDrama) Denzel Wash- (:31) *** The Town (2010) Ben TNT 57 27 Your Grave"n ington, EthanHawke,Scott Glenn.r~s(DVS ) Affl eck. (DVS) r~s Food Paradise r~s Food Paradise "Bar Booze Traveler Food Paradise r~s Food Paradise "Bar TRAV 53 14 'Turkey IsStirring" Food Paradise" Food Paradise" USA 58 16 Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam ModFam WTBS 59 23 Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam GuyFam GuyBig Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big BangConan cs HBO 518551 Sports (:45) *sThat AwkwardMoment n Co me The Newsroom n Real Time, Bill The Affair n r~s Web I n NFL SHOW 578 575 The Longest Yard Inside the NFL n Homeland r~s

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Jeop- Wheel of America's Funniest SharkTankn(Parl (:01) 20i20(N) nr~s KATU Jimmy 1 of 2) « News Kimmel PBS NewsHour Washing- Charlie Poirot "TheLaboursof Hercu- (:32) Scott & Bailey Master3 13 (N)n « o cc t on Ro s e les"n cs piece Entertain Extra (N)The AmazingRace Frosty Yes, Vir- Hawaii Five-0"Hau'oli News LetterO O 6 6 ment o cc (N)n « ginia n La Ho'omaika'i" man Live at 7 Inside Dateline NBC(N) Grimm Viktormeets Constantine "Rage KGW Tonight 8 8 (N) Edition o cc with Adalind.(N)n of Caliban"(N)n News Show Family Family MasterChefEgg-fry Gotham "Harvey News Investiga FOX12 Love(MN 12 12 Feud n Feud n ing challenge.n Dent"n tors First Raymond Big Bang Big Bang***Taken(2008)Liam Neeson.Slavers Bones"TheDeathofBones "ThePredator ~Up H 13 Theory Theory kidnap thedaughter of aformer spy. t h e Queen Bee" in the Pool"n Tallade ga Nights:RickyBobby Country Country A&E 52 28 Duck D. Duck D. DuckDynasty n First * * s Ramb o: First BloodPart ii(1985, ** sRambo ii(1988) Sylvester Stallone. LonerRambo AMC 60 20 Biood Action) vester Syl Stallone.r~s rescuesmentorfromSoviets in Afghanistan. Redwood Kings n Tanked n Tanked n Tanked n NP 24 24 Tanked (N)n Dog With Girl Jessie(Season Star-Reb- Gravity I Didn't Liv & G irl Li v& DISN 26 37 a Blog Meets Finale) (N)nr~s els Fal ls n Do It n MaddieMeets Maddie (N) SportsCenter (N) ESPN 33 17 College Football SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter *** The Hunger Gam es (2012)JenniferLawrence. Tlle 700 Club n FAM 32 22 R ata T o y Taylor Kitsch, AlexanderSkarsgrd, Rihanna Battle FX 65 15 (5:30) DeathRace ** Battleship(2012) HALL 87 35 (6:00)Angels Sing A Bride for Christmas(2012,Romance) The Christmas Ornament(2013) LIFE 29 33 Merry In-Lawsr~s ** Christmas IVith the Kranks(2004) (:01) *** Crazy for Christmas(2005) Santa Hunters( 2014)Benjamin Nicky, Full F ull Fresh Fresh Friends (:36) NICK 27 26 "Lil P-Nut" FloresJr. Fr i ends Ricky House House Prince Prince n cs Bensin HS Football ROOT 37 18 Hawks High School Football (N) (Live) SPIKE 42 29 Cops n Cops n Cops n Cops n Cops n Cops n Cops n Cops n Cops n Cops n Gold Rush Mining GoldRush TheDrrtGold Rush "Gold- Edge of Alaska "TheGold Rush"GoldDC 2 frozen ground.n "Episode4"(N) zilla" (N)n r~s Mot herlode" zilla"n r~s Say Y es Say Yes TLC 49 39 What Notto Wear What Not to Wear Say Yes SayYes Bor B o r On the Menu"Out On the Menu"Buca (:01) ** Battle:Los Angeles(2011)Aaron Eckharl. (:32) On TNT 57 27 back Steakhouse" di Beppo"(N) U.S. Marine troopsfight off alien invaders. the Menu Mysteries at the Mysteries at the Mysteries at the Mysteries at the Mysteries at the TRAV 53 14 Museum cs Museum cs Museum cs Museum cs Museum cs USA 58 16 ModFam ModFamMod Fam ModFam Mod Fam ModFam ModFam ModFam ModFam ModFam WTBS 59 23 (5:30)Fred Claus Big Bang Big BangDeal * * FourChristmases(2008)( DVS) D e a l FooFighters: Sonic HBO 518551 (5:45)Oblivion n Getting Come **r The lnternship(2013) n « SHOW 578 575 (6:15)Delivery Man The Affair n r~s LaBare(2014)Premiere. n ** s The ToDo Listn

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SATURDAY EVENING I G BC ~gjg ~

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