2A — THE OBSERVER SaTuRday, dEcEmBER 12, 2020 LOCAL/REGION Daily 2021 will be a big year for Union School District Planner TODAY Today is Saturday, Dec. 12, the 347th day of 2020. There are 19 days left in the year. TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT IN HISTORY: On Dec. 12, 2000, George W. Bush became presi- dent-elect as a divided U.S. Supreme Court reversed a state court decision for re- counts in Florida’s contested election. ON THIS DATE: In 1787, Pennsylvania became the second state to ratify the U.S. Constitution. In 1870, Joseph H. Rainey of South Carolina became the first Black lawmaker sworn into the U.S. House of Representatives. In 1913, authorities in Florence, Italy, announced that the “Mona Lisa,” stolen from the Louvre Museum in Paris in 1911, had been recovered. In 1974, “The Godfather, Part II premiered in New York. In 1977, the dance movie “Saturday Night Fever,” starring John Travolta, pre- miered in New York. In 1995, by three votes, the Senate killed a consti- tutional amendment giving Congress authority to out- law flag burning and other forms of desecration against Old Glory. In 2000, the Marine Corps grounded all eight of its high-tech MV-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft following a fiery crash in North Carolina that killed four Marines. (The Osprey program was revived by the Pentagon in 2005.) In 2012, North Koreans danced in the streets of their capital, Pyongyang, after the regime of Kim Jong Un succeeded in firing a long- range rocket in defiance of international warnings. In 2018, Michael Co- hen, President Donald Trump’s one-time fixer, was sentenced to three years in prison for crimes that includ- ed arranging the payment of hush money to conceal Trump’s alleged sexual affairs. LOTTERY Megabucks: $5.5 million 4-33-36-37-38-45 Mega Millions: $262 million 15-19-33-39-68 — 25 x3 Powerball: $202 million 11-14-31-47-48 — PB 4 x2 Win for Life: Dec. 9 25-48-60-75 Pick 4: Dec. 10 • 1 p.m.: 1-0-3-7; • 4 p.m.: 4-2-7-9; • 7 p.m.: 7-4-0-9 • 10 p.m.: 1-0-3-7 Pick 4: Dec. 9 • 1 p.m.: 0-1-7-6 • 4 p.m.: 0-1-7-6; • 7 p.m.: 2-4-4-7; • 10 p.m.: 3-5-7-6 DELIVERY ISSUES? If you have any problems receiving your Observer, please call 541-963-3161. By Dick Mason The Observer UNION — Bond-funded renovation work in the Union School District in 2021 will modernize its aging buildings and wake up the echoes of one struc- ture’s past. A presentation on the 2021 bond work made these points Wednesday night, Dec. 9, at a meeting of the Union School Board. Ren- ovation work is set to start in March, said Cassie Hib- bert of the Wenaha Group, which is serving as the con- struction management pro- vider for the school district. Hibbert said exterior work will be done while school is in session and interior proj- ects will be undertaken in the summer. Projects include restoring the steps of Union High School’s east entrance, which features four ornate pillars that are least 100 years old. The stairway work will allow the entrance, which has been closed for years because of the poor condition of its steps, to open again. That reopening also will boost security because the foyer of the entrance will be renovated into a secu- rity vestibule where secre- taries can monitor everyone coming into the building, said Union School Dis- trict Superintendent Carter Wells. After the renovations, the old entrance on school days will serve as the only entrance to the school, Observer File The pillars of the east entrance of Union High School now are easier to see after the removal of trees. Bond-funded work in 2021 on the entrance will boost security at the school. “It will give all individuals access to every part of the building.” — Union School District Superintendent Carter Wells on the coming improvements at Union High School which was built about 1912. The present main entry point is on its north side, and that will be closed on school days. The old main entryway is much easier to see now because of the recent removal of large trees that obscured its view. Richard Higgins of BLURB Archi- Wallowa County Chieftain WALLOWA — A dis- pute over pets dogged a couple of Wallowa men Sunday, Dec. 6, resulting in the arrest of Jack Leroy Poulson of Wallowa for fourth-degree assault and strangulation, according to the Wallowa County Sher- iff’s Office. Chief Deputy Fred Steen said Tuesday, Dec. 8, that Sunday’s call came at 1 p.m. as an assault in prog- ress. He did not know the name of the caller or that of the building. “It will give all individ- uals access to every part of the building,” Wells said. This will help the school district meet its top bond project goal, which is to ensure very person can access the campus with dig- nity, Wells said. Major renovations also Wallowa County schools prep for virtual Christmas programs By Bill Bradshaw Wallowa County Chieftain WALLOWA COUNTY — Two of Wallowa Coun- ty’s three school dis- tricts are planning virtual Christmas programs due to the coronavirus pandemic restrictions. The schools at Wallowa and Joseph have programs planned, while Enterprise does not. “It’s another casualty of COVID,” said Steve Roundy, office manager at Enterprise Elementary School. “We’re not going to be able to have one.” Wendy Stauffer, music teacher at Wallowa Ele- mentary School, said although the program still is a work in progress, she plans to have it posted on the school’s Facebook page Wednesday, Dec. 16, or the day after. There also will be a list of the songs the var- ious classes will perform. She said each class will do songs that will include singing and instrumenta- tion. There is no overall theme to the program other than Christmas. “I usually pick songs appropriate to their grade level,” she said. Stauffer said the concert won’t be live, but it will be a compilation of recorded sessions from each class and a combined one of all the classes. “That’ll allow us to do a couple of joint pieces so I can combine the videos,” Dogged dispute leads to assault arrest By Bill Bradshaw tects, the firm doing the design work for the bond projects, praised the school district for taking this step. Seeing the entrance, he said, “adds to the grandeur of the building.” Additional work at the high school in 2021 includes the installation of an elevator on the south side will improve accessibility to the school’s gym building, including the installation of wheelchair platforms near the gym floor. Work in 2021 also calls for replacing the grass field in front of the east entrance of Union Elemen- tary School’s S.E. Miller building with a parking lot. Parents then could drive up to the front of the school to pick up and drop off chil- dren rather than at the the building’s south entrance parking lot, which has more traffic because it is about 100 feet from the high school, Wells said. The $4 million bond school district voters approved in 2019 will fund the renovations, along with another $4 million in a grant from the the Oregon School Capital Improve- ment Matching Program. The Union School Dis- trict, under state law, has three years to spend 85% of the $8 million in funding it will receive. Bond project work started this past summer with the replacement of the roof for Union Elementary School’s Hutchinson building. Wells said rising con- struction costs may mean the school district’s bond and grant funding will not go as far as some had anticipated, but it still will help the school district enormously. “The long-term impact for future groups of stu- dents will be tremendous,” Wells said. of the victim, other than the victim’s last name was Daugherty and is a male in his 40s. “What we learned was that the victim of assault had run into or found large dogs belonging to Jack Poulson that were trying to attack his small dog,” Steen said. “The victim allegedly picked up a splitting maul and tried to chase the dogs away.” Steen said the threat- ening dogs were two “Aki- ta-type dogs,” much larger than the victim’s dogs. she said. Stauffer said she doesn’t want the pandemic to totally ruin the holidays for the area and part of this is having the concert “to share it with the community.” But the pandemic does require a certain amount of adjustment. “It’ll be different because of COVID, but the kids are having fun anyway,” Stauffer said. Michelle Homan, director of music education at Joseph Charter School, said a similar program is planned for Joseph. She, too, plans to prere- cord the different classes performing and then edit it together into a single program. “Technically, it’s still virtual, even though it’s not live. It’ll be prerecorded at different times,” she said. “The kids say it’s like a movie.” Homan said each class will perform two songs that will be a mix of classic hol- iday tunes. As in Wallowa, there is no overall theme beyond Christmas. The older students, those in fourth through sixth grade, will accompany the songs with instruments. However, Homan said, because of the COVID-19 restrictions, they’ve only been able to practice since Nov. 1. “They’ve only been playing a few weeks, but they sound pretty good given the short amount of time they’ve been able to play,” she said. The school will post the performance on YouTube on Monday, Dec. 14. A link to the YouTube page will be available on the school’s Facebook page, Homan said. Even though things are different because of the pandemic, it doesn’t seem to have dulled the kids’ enthusiasm. “The kids are excited, even though it’s not the way they usually perform, since they can watch it at home with their families,” Homan said. “They all think they’re going to be famous because they’ll be on YouTube.” Christmas tree COVID-19 style The 60-year-old Poulson allegedly drove up in his pickup and began the scuffle, putting Daugherty in a chokehold, thus the strangulation charge. “Those were the alle- gations that were reported to us,” Steen said. “Mr. Poulson had a different ver- sion of the events.” Poulson was able to post 10% of the $15,000 bail and was released, Steen said. He added the sheriff’s office referred the case to the Wal- lowa County District Attor- ney’s Office for prosecution. Caution tape bars access to the holiday tree in the gazebo at Union City Park on Monday, Dec. 7, 2020. Entry to the gazebo — and more such gather- ing places — are under COVID-19 pandemic restrictions. Kaleb Lay/The Observer Artificial intelligence powered chatbot offers answers without judgment By Kathy Aney East Oregonian PENDLETON — Blue Mountain Community Col- lege recently launched an artificial intelligence-pow- ered chatbot to improve communication with stu- dents and the commu- nity. Conversations happen online or via text message. “Timboto is a robot ver- sion of our beloved mascot,” said Daniel Anderson, BMCC’s dean of instruction for arts and sciences. The chatbot is the cere- bral side of the school’s mascot, a wolf named Timber who was known pre-COVID-19 for his high fives and hugs. His alter ego, Timboto, responds to computer queries at any time of the night or day. Such bots are emerging in academia and in other venues. They are powered by a knowledge base of questions and answers and an algorithm that detects nuances in the written dia- logue. The chatbots learn as they go. Anderson said he learned about the technology in an academic context during a presentation by Georgia State University. GSU, which comprises both a university and a commu- nity college, uses a chatbot to improve communications and credits the technology for increasing enrollment and the graduation rate at the community college. Anderson floated the idea on his own campus in Pendleton. The bot, he said, would be avail- able to students outside of normal business hours whenever they felt like East Oregonian, File Blue Mountain Community College, Pendleton, recently launched an artificial intelligence-powered chatbot to im- prove communication with students and the community. Conversations happen online or via text message. communicating. “Our students work during the day. They’ve got families,” Anderson said. “First-year students some- times feel a little embar- rassed. You can ask it all sorts of questions at any hour. This is a tool that doesn’t judge you.” He said the program comes with a database of 800-plus questions, with follow-up questions attached to those. “The best part is it gets smarter,” Anderson said. “It learns the ropes and gets better at responding.” Library Director Brit- tany Young tackled the job of getting Timboto ready to go live. She said the tech- nology supplier AdmitHub furnished an initial pool of questions and answers. Young’s staff tweaked the knowledge base to ensure it made sense for the BMCC community. “We did a day of testing the bot,” Young said. “Stu- dents and staff had conver- sations with Timboto and asked it questions.” When Timboto couldn’t respond, Young’s team fed it more answers. Testers also asked a few silly ques- tions to see how the bot would handle them. When asked “What is love,” Tim- boto supplied a link to a YouTube video of pop singer Haddaway singing “What is Love?” When someone inquired, “Do you like animals?” the chatbot responded with, “Ani- mals are fun, but person- ally I prefer bots.” The team left both answers in place. Timboto, who Young says has personality, also uses emojis. The bot, which went live a week ago, generally answers more serious ques- tions regarding registration, financial aid and how the school is handling the pan- demic. If someone doesn’t speak English as their first language, Timboto can translate into whatever lan- guage is desired. The chatbot is avail- able on BMCC’s homepage. Simply press the “Talk to us” button. Eventually the button will appear on every page on the website.