THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2015 140th Year, No. 5 WINNER OF THE 2015 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD One dollar HEPPNER Morrow County to drop judge position Will take effect in 2017 By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Sophomore Ellie Glover falls on her back into the mud pit while battling with team Luau against the Hippies on Wednesday during the Mud Wars in Pendleton. TOP: The junior team, Piggies in the Mud, struggle in the pit. Muddy tug fest celebrates 20 years By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Wednesday night’s Mud Wars wasn’t exactly good, clean fun. It was good and it was fun, but it de¿ nitely wasn’t clean. Mud oozed and splattered. The adrenaline-charged girls who faced off for the annual slimy tug fest at the Happy Canyon arena began the night with pris- tine fashionable costumes that soon turned a uniform shade of chocolate brown. Staff photo by E.J. Harris Freshman Riley Sorensen looks back toward the crowd covered in mud while taking part in the Mud Wars on Wednesday in Pendleton. Nineteen Pendleton High School teams took turns plunging into the 10-inch-deep mud pit for epic battles of tug-o-war. Many of the girls had used duct tape to ensure their shoes and socks would remain on their feet. To begin the evening, the Nerds, looking appropriately geeky, and Pajama Jam, dressed for a slumber party, stepped into the muck. The girls bent frozen See MUD/8A Supporters can’t agree on low-carbon measures By HILLARY BORRUD Capital Bureau On its face, Oregon’s low-carbon fuel standard has a simple promise: It will reduce carbon emissions from trans- portation fuel used in the state by 10 percent over a decade, starting in 2016. As it turns out, even supporters of the underlying law disagree over how the state should calculate that reduction. The standard is supposed to account for the total amount of carbon generated by gas, ethanol, electricity and other fuels across their life cycles, from the ¿ eld or power plant to the tailpipe. Fuel importers and producers will likely meet the standards through a combination of cleaner biofuels blended into gas and diesel, as well as carbon reduc- tion credits the state will issue to owners of electric charging stations and other alternative fuel infrastructure. The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality proposed rules last month that would follow California’s lead to include the impact of new demand for biofuels crops such as corn and soybeans. This factor is known as the indirect land-use change and as recently See FUEL/8A Big changes are coming to Morrow County government. Commissioners voted Sept. 16 to effectively eliminate the county judge position that acts as county administrator and presides over juvenile court. Instead, juvenile cases will be absorbed into circuit court and the county will hire a full-time administrator who reports to three part-time commissioners. Currently, county government operates as two part-time commissioners and one full-time judge. The county began recruiting a new administrator in June, and interviewed three ¿ nalists for the job Oct. 12-1. Human Resources Director Karen Wolfe said they hope to make a hire soon. See JUDGE/8A Obama takes aim at Rx drug abuse By KATHLEEN HENNESSEY Associated Press CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Traveling to a region in the throes of a drug abuse crisis, President Barack Obama promised Wednesday to use his bully pulpit and federal programs to try to combat the “epidemic” of heroin use and prescrip- tion painkiller abuse that is upending communities across the country. “This crisis is taking lives; it’s destroying families and shattering communities all across the country,” Obama said at a panel discussion on opioid drug abuse. “That’s the thing about substance abuse; it doesn’t discriminate. It touches everybody.” On stage at a crowded community center, Obama heard from advocates, health care workers, law enforcement of¿ cials and policy makers about the depth of a problem that has long See DRUGS/8A Travel writers Let ‘er Buck Chinese bloggers explore Oregon’s seven wonders By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Pat Beard raised his coffee cup Tuesday morning to the two men across his table at the Pendleton Coffee Bean. “Let ‘er Buck,” toasted Beard, event recruiter for Travel Pendleton. The two Chinese travel bloggers, Lintao Li and Anzhen Teng, didn’t speak English, but they were familiar with the catchphrase. They had just visited the Pendleton Round-Up and Happy Canyon Hall of Fame. They had ogled photos of cowboys riding broncs and bulls and watched rodeo action on a video. Around Li’s neck hung a long green-and-yellow scarf he’d received from the visit, embla- zoned with the words “Let ‘er Buck” and the rodeo’s iconic bucking bronc. During the coffee break, the pair of travel writers, aided by translator Vivian Liang, asked Beard to de¿ ne the phrase. Beard, a rodeo cowboy wearing a big cowboy hat, obliged. “When you are about to do something daring or reckless or fun, you say ‘Let ‘er Buck,’” Beard told them. “It’s the slogan of the Pendleton Round-Up.” He grinned at them and gave them a lesson in pronunciation. When they parted, there were let ‘er bucks all-around. The men were on their second day of a tour of the Seven Wonders of Oregon — Crater Lake, Painted Hills, Smith Rock, the Wallowas, Mount Hood, the Columbia River Gorge and the Oregon coast — and places in between. The night before, after visiting Boardman’s Sage Center, they dined at the Hamley See TRAVEL/8A Staff photo by Kathy Aney Lintao Li and Anzhen Teng, of China, are travel bloggers who are on a tour of the Seven Wonders of Oregon. They pose Tuesday outside the Tamastslikt Cultural Institute after a tour.