2A — THE OBSERVER DAILY PLANNER TODAY Today is Tuesday, June 9, the 161st day of 2020. There are 205 days left in the year. TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT On June 9, 2004, the body of Ronald Reagan arrived in Washington to lie in state in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda before the 40th president’s funeral. ON THIS DATE In A.D. 68, Roman Emper- or Nero committed suicide, ending a 13-year reign. In 1860, what’s considered the fi rst dime novel, “Ma- laeska: The Indian Wife of the White Hunter” by Ann S. Stephens, was published. In 1940, during World War II, Norway decided to surren- der to the Nazis, effective at midnight. In 1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Current Tax Payment Act of 1943, which reintroduced federal income tax withhold- ing from paychecks. In 1954, during the Senate Army-McCarthy hearings, Army special counsel Jo- seph N. Welch berated Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, R-Wis., asking: “Have you no sense of decency, sir? At long last, have you left no sense of decency?” In 1969, the Senate con- fi rmed Warren Burger to be the new chief justice of the United States. In 1972, heavy rains trig- gered record fl ooding in the Black Hills of South Dakota; the resulting disaster left at least 238 people dead and $164 million in damage. In 1973, Secretariat won the Belmont Stakes, becom- ing horse racing’s fi rst Triple Crown winner in 25 years. In 1978, leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints struck down a 148-year-old policy of excluding black men from the Mormon priesthood. In 1980, comedian Richard Pryor suffered almost fatal burns at his San Fernando Valley, Calif., home while freebasing cocaine. In 2008, retail gas prices rose above $4 per gallon. LOTTERY Megabucks: $2.4 million 1-10-16-23-25-29 Mega Millions: $410 million 32-35-37-47-55-22 x3 Powerball: $20 million 1-17-38-68-69—PB-18 x2 Win for Life: June 6 1-13-29-33 Pick 4: June 7 • 1 p.m.: 9-2-6-7; • 4 p.m.: 6-7-6-8 • 7 p.m.: 8-4-3-3; • 10 p.m.: 2-1-9-6 Pick 4: June 6 • 1 p.m.: 8-9-7-2; • 4 p.m.: 7-3-4-4 • 7 p.m.: 7-1-2-7; • 10 p.m.: 9-8-1-5 Pick 4: June 5 • 1 p.m.: 7-5-5-2; • 4 p.m.: 0-8-2-0 • 7 p.m.: 5-2-4-9; • 10 p.m.: 2-3-3-1 DELIVERY ISSUES? If you have any problems receiving your Observer, call the offi ce at 541-963-3161. TODAY’S QUOTE “Imagination was given to man to compensate him for what he isn’t. A sense of humor was provided to console him for what he is.” — Horace Walpole, En- glish author (1717-1797) TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 2020 REGION Joseph Charter School graduates 12 seniors By Ellen Morris Bishop EO Media Group JOSEPH —Joseph Charter School showed a style all its own for Satur- day’s graduation. One student rode in on horseback. Another arrived via stagecoach. Joseph held its gradu- ation on the school foot- ball fi eld, but with ominous skies and thunderstorms predicted, hedged the bet with a large tent that cov- ered speakers. Parents and family members were per- mitted to attend. “Pomp and Circumstance” heralded the entry of seniors, who were chauffeured in every- thing from a new Toyota Tacoma pickup to a vintage Ford pickup to a slick black Camaro convertible to a stagecoach and 2019 Chief Joseph Days’ queen, Rylee Wilcox rode her palomino. Students ringed the out- side of the tent while Prin- cipal Sherri Kilgore bid an emotional and inspiring farewell to the class of 2020. “You are the leaders of a new decade,” she said. “2020 is a wonderful time to graduate, and to move forward, to accomplish amazing things, which I know that all of you will do. But I want you to move for- ward with fortitude, with responsibility, with faith that things will be getting better. I want you to move forward with the theme of transformation. Make the changes in the social, cul- tural and environment ways that we need, to make this world a better place.” The number of people under the big top tent was limited to 25 by the Phase 1 guidelines still in effect — two family members for each senior. School faculty members provided their messages to seniors via recordings, rather than in person. The three co-valedic- torians, Camille Cren- shaw, Ellyse Tingelstad, and Malichi Roberts, urged their classmates to live fully rounded, purposeful lives, and then dispensed senior gifts, including a bright wig for Ashlie McAfee, a red Dodge keychain to Carson Littlepage and a fi reman’s hat for Ronny Morello. Tingelstad made the parting comments for the three co-valedictorians quoting from the song “Quiet your Mind” by the Zac Brown Band: “The song is about trying to fi nd a perspec- tive on life that keeps us sane,” she said. “’Quiet Photo by Ellen Morris Bishop/EO Media Group 2019 Chief Joseph Days queen Rylee Wilcox rode her palo- mino to the Joseph Charter School graduation ceremony. your mind, soak it all in, it’s a game you can’t win, enjoy the ride.’ … I wish you all a future where only you COVID-19 experiences show range of symptoms “I’m 53, and yes I have some pre-existing condi- tions, but to my family, to my friends, to my church, I am very valuable,” she said. “When people say, ‘Oh, she’s old,’ or ‘Oh, they had underlying health con- ditions.’ ... What if that were your mother or grand- mother or sister?” By Jade McDowell and Alex Castle EO Media Group HERMISTON — As COVID-19 spreads locally, stories from Uma- tilla County residents who have had the virus show its effects can run the gamut from inconvenient to deadly. As of June 5, Umatilla County Public Health has announced 124 confi rmed cases and six presumptive cases of COVID-19, with 112 of those people consid- ered recovered, and three patients who have died. A severe case Sara Barnett’s expe- rience falls on the more serious side. The 53-year-old Hermiston woman’s doctors have told her she is lucky to be alive after two weeks in the hos- pital. She was discharged on June 2, but is still on oxygen. Her symptoms started May 10. “At fi rst I felt achy — everything ached — and I had a bad headache and cough,” she said. A fi rst test for COVID-19 came back negative. Seven days after her fi rst symptoms, she woke up struggling to breathe and drove to Kadlec Med- ical Center in Richland, Washington, where she was admitted and took a second COVID-19 test, which later came back positive. Things went downhill from there. First they put her on 2 liters of oxygen, then 4 liters, then 30, before A mild case Contributed photo Ben Lonergan/EO Media Group Sara Barnett wears an ox- ygen delivery device while in the intensive care unit at Kadlec Medical Center in Richland, Washington, as a result of COVID-19. Sara Barnett, 53, was di- agnosed with COVID-19 and spent two weeks in the hospital before being dis- charged on June 2. Barnett remains on oxygen. putting her on a machine that she said “blew air so hard my mouth was wide open and I couldn’t close my mouth.” Hospital staff couldn’t get her fever below 102 degrees for days. When she continued to deterio- rate, she was rushed to the intensive care unit, where her doctor told her husband they were trying every- thing they could to keep her from needing to be put on a ventilator. Fortunately for Barnett, she did begin to recover and have her oxygen use stepped back down to 2 liters, which she is on now at home as she recovers from the pneumonia that is one of the side effects of her illness. “They’re hoping it will just be a couple of weeks, but it could be forever, or months,” she said of her need for an oxygen tank. “They told me it could easily take three to six months for me to feel like a human again.” Barnett said she hopes her tale can be a cau- tionary one for people who think COVID-19 isn’t very serious. She and her father, who both have underlying health conditions, had been “hiding out at home” for weeks, which she said means that her husband brought the virus home to them — something he obvi- ously didn’t intend to do. He had serious symptoms but was never hospitalized, while her father was hospi- talized for four days. Barnett said it is hurtful to see people write dismis- sively on social media about the victims of COVID-19 as “just” people who have underlying health condi- tions, which include com- mons conditions, such as asthma, diabetes, high blood pressure, heart dis- ease and a history of smoking. On the other side of the spectrum of experiences are Teresa and Timothy Curtis, both 62, of Hermiston. They recently returned to work after recovering from a mild case of the virus. Timothy Curtis fi rst started to have some con- cerns that he may have been infected when he started feeling “off” and heard that someone he knew, and may have recently been in con- tact with, had tested posi- tive for COVID-19. Though he thought it could be attributed to inhaling some drywall dust at his work with the Umatilla County Housing Authority, Timothy Curtis got tested May 15 and was offi cially diagnosed with COVID-19 on May 18. Teresa Curtis started developing symptoms, got tested on May 19, and a positive test result came in on May 22. But for the roughly 10 days that she and her hus- band had symptoms of the virus, it never progressed to more than fatigue and some minor body aches “like if you worked too much in the yard for a day,” along with a loss of their senses of taste 2nd Congressional District still looking red By Gary A. Warner For the Oregon Capitol Bureau SALEM — It’s bigger than some states, includes two time zones and is a bright red Republican stronghold in a deeply blue Democratic state. Oregon’s CD2 — short- hand for the 2nd Congres- sional District — has been on electoral autopilot the past two decades, sending Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, to Washington, D.C. 11 straight times. Something that hasn’t happened this century will occur Nov. 3. There will be no CD2 incumbent on the ballot — Walden is retiring at the end of the session. Republican Cliff Bentz, a former state senator from Ontario, emerged as the winner from a scrum of 11 candidates in the May 19 GOP primary. He’ll face writer and political strategist Alex Spenser of Klamath Falls, winner of the Democratic primary. Odds are the Republican will take the oath of offi ce next Jan. 3 when the the 117th United States Con- gress convenes. “Cliff Bentz is as close to a sure thing as you can get,” said longtime Oregon election analyst Jim Moore, a politics and govern- decide your defi nition of success, all while enjoying every single moment along the way.” ment professor at Pacifi c University. A more than 40,000 Republican voter registra- tion edge over Democrats, combined with Spens- er’s lack of name recogni- tion and campaign funds, is enough for Bentz to win the district, Moore said, and the 203,000 nonaffi liated registered voters “break the same way as whatever the Republican-Democratic split goes.” Dems betting on ‘Dump Trump’ wave Spenser, 55, said she knows she has a tough task to get to Capitol Hill. But 2020 is different: an unprecedented election year of pandemic, record unem- ployment, and a “divisive” President Donald Trump at the top of the ticket. “There’s going to be a blue tsunami,” she said. Spenser said she wants to tap into the large number of nonaffi liated voters, along with Republicans who can no longer support the party’s agenda under Trump. She sees water as one of the keys that will res- onate with district voters. She supports a $450 mil- lion plan to restore the Klamath River by removing four hydroelectric dams in Oregon and California. Wind farms can provide electricity and also help with irrigation, Spenser said. She wants a more effi - cient and equitable way to distribute water in Eastern Oregon. “You have 90% of the water going to irrigation and 40% of that is lost through evaporation,” she said. “Meanwhile, wells are running low in Harney County. At the bottom is arsenic — we’re going to poison these people.” The Cook Voting Index rates districts by their pro- pensity to back one party or the other in presidential races. CD2 is “R+11” — meaning it is expected to give the Republican nom- inee 11% more of the dis- trict’s vote than the national average. In 2016, the dis- trict gave nearly 55% of its vote to Trump, while Dem- ocrat Hillary Clinton won 35%. In 2012, Republican Mitt Romney received 56% of the vote compared to 40% for President Barack Obama. crats to win and hold the other four House seats in Oregon. One of the ironies is among the most politically fl exible in the country — just not in a way that helps Democrats. and smell. “That was the weirdest part,” she said. The two spent a majority of their time isolating inside their home and only left to go on an occasional drive together. Teresa Curtis said they found the virus wasn’t as frightening as they expected. “I had more fear before I got it than when I actu- ally had it,” she said. “The thing I was most afraid of was spreading it to some- body else.” A moderate case Stacie Borgaard falls somewhere in the middle. She found out on a Thursday that a co-worker had COVID-19, and the next Tuesday, May 19, she “kind of woke up not feeling myself.” “My taste and smell were off, but I thought it might just be one of those days,” she said. A few hours later she started to cough, and that progressed to other symp- toms that included aches and pains, chest tightness, chills, fever and a loss of all sense of taste and smell. She ran a fever of between 99 and 101 degrees for six days, and said during that time she was so tired that just walking from the couch to the bathroom exhausted her. “It kind of feels like when you get the fl u, but this was a whole other level,” she said. After a full week without running a fever, she said she feels mostly better. La GRANDE AUTO REPAIR 975-2000 www.lagrandeautorepair.com MOST ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY AVAILABLE Joe Horst ACDelcoTSS Herding Republicans Voters across the sparsely populated 70,000-square-mile district have solidly backed Repub- lican for the past 40 years. Successive reapportion- ments have added reliably conservative areas to CD2, with Democrats largely content to put the largest concentration of the state’s Republicans into CD2. The move has enabled Demo- LESS STRESS MORE FUN! PROTECTING our Residents during this Pandemic 1809 Gekeler Ln. La Grande 541-963-4700