RECORDS Thursday, January 19, 2017 PUBLIC SAFETY LOG TUESDAY 5 a.m. - A woman called the Morrow County Sheriff’s Office from her residence on Southeast Fourth Street, Irrigon, and asked to be connected with her counselor because “everything she sees on TV is about her.” She was transferred to Community Counseling Services. 7:49 a.m. - An administrator at Sunridge Middle School in Pendleton requested a police escort for a student that was causing a disturbance. 9:56 a.m. - A passerby reported a burglary at a home on West Hermiston Avenue, Hermiston. The caller said the burglar entered the home through a connected garage sometime after 9 a.m. the previous day. 10:09 a.m. - A green Ford Bronco lost a wheel at an intersec- tion in the 100 block of Southwest 20th Street, Pendleton. 10:49 a.m. - A man whose vehicle was stolen in Morrow County found it behind Sunset Hills Elementary School on Northeast Third Street and East Wilshore Avenue, Hermiston. He requested a Hermiston officer meet him at the location. 1:19 p.m. - An employee of Columbia River Ranch on Kunze Lane, Boardman, reported to the Morrow County Sheriff’s Office he was assaulted by a resident of the ranch, who was in her room screaming at the time of the report. The caller declined medical assistance and said he would get in touch with crisis workers. 5:25 p.m. - A second avalanche blocking Bingham Road north of Adams was reported just downriver from the first avalanche site. Umatilla County road crews were dispatched. 6:18 p.m. - A man dropped a gun while walking through the Pendleton Public Library. He was contacted by a Pendleton police officer. 7:49 p.m. - A woman in a car at Domino’s Pizza in Pendleton punched a man who was also in the car in the head. Pendleton police took a report for domestic disturbance. 8:01 p.m. - The Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office received a report of drifting snow creating a traffic hazard on Highway 204 at Winn Road. The caller said at least 18 inches of snow had drifted onto the highway. MEETINGS THURSDAY, JAN. 19 ECHO CITY COUNCIL, 4 p.m., Echo City Hall, 20 S. Bo- nanza St., Echo. (541-376-8411) HERMISTON IRRIGATION DISTRICT, 4 p.m., Hermiston Irrigation District office confer- ence room, 366 E. Hurlburt Ave., Hermiston. (541-567-3024) UMATILLA COUNTY SPE- CIAL LIBRARY DISTRICT, 5 p.m., Pendleton City Hall second floor jury room, 501 S.W. Emi- grant Ave., Pendleton. (Dan Feil 541-276-6449) PENDLETON PLANNING COMMISSION, 7 p.m., Pendle- ton City Hall council chambers, 501 S.W. Emigrant Ave., Pend- leton. (541-966-0201) MONDAY, JAN. 23 U M AT I L L A - M O R R O W COUNTY HEAD START, 11:30 a.m., Head Start office, 110 N.E. Fourth St., Hermiston. (Kerry Tassie 541-564-6878) MORROW COUNTY SOIL & WATER CONSERVATION DISTRICT, 1 p.m., Stafford Hansell Government Center, 915 S.E. Columbia Drive, Herm- iston. (Janet Greenup 541-676- 5452 ext. 109) UMATILLA BASIN WA- TERSHED COUNCIL, 6 p.m., Eastern Oregon Higher Educa- tion Center, 975 S.E. Columbia Drive, Hermiston. (541-276- 2190) MORROW COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT WORK SESSION, 6 p.m., Windy River Elementary School, 500 Tatone St., Boardman. (541-676-9128) HERMISTON CITY COUN- CIL, 7 p.m., Hermiston City Hall council chambers, 180 N.E. Second St., Hermiston. (541- 567-5521) MILTON-FREEWATER CITY COUNCIL, 7 p.m., Milton-Free- water Public Library Albee Room, 8 S.W. EIghth Ave., Milton-Free- water. (541-938-5531) IRRIGON COMMUNITY PARKS & RECREATION DIS- TRICT, 7 p.m., Irrigon Fire Sta- tion, 705 N. Main St., Irrigon. (541-922-3047) TUESDAY, JAN. 24 IONE SCHOOL DISTRICT, 3:30 p.m., Ione Community School, 445 Spring St., Ione. 3:30 p.m. work session followed by 4:30 p.m. regular board meet- ing. (541-422-7131) UMATILLA COUNTY SOIL & WATER CONSERVATION DISTRICT ANNUAL MEETING, 4:30 p.m., Roosters Restaurant, 1515 Southgate, Pendleton. The regular January board meeting at 4:30 p.m. will be followed by the annual meeting. (Kyle Wag- goner 541-278-8049 ext. 138) MORROW COUNTY PLAN- NING COMMISSION, 6 p.m., Bartholomew Government Building upper conference room, 110 N. Court St., Heppner. (541- 922-4624) WEDNESDAY, JAN. 25 MORROW COUNTY COURT, 9 a.m., Bartholomew Government Building upper con- ference room, 110 N. Court St., Heppner. (541-676-9061) HERMISTON LIBRARY BOARD, 4 p.m., Hermiston Pub- lic Library, 235 E. Gladys Ave., Hermiston. (541-567-2882) UPCOMING SERVICES THURSDAY, JAN. 19 BROWN, DOREEN — Memorial service at 1 p.m. at Pendleton Pioneer Chapel, Folsom-Bishop, 131 S.E. Byers Ave., Pendleton. KEATING, THOMAS JR. — Graveside service at 1 p.m. at Olney Cemetery, Pendleton. VESCIO, DON — Recitation of the rosary at 9:30 a.m. followed by a funeral mass at 10 a.m. at St Mary’s Catholic Church, 800 S.E. Court Ave., Pendleton. OBITUARY POLICY The East Oregonian publishes paid obituaries. The obituary can include small photos and, for veterans, a flag symbol at no charge. Obituaries may be edited for spelling, proper punctuation and style.Expanded death notices will be published at no charge. These include information about services. Obituaries and notices can be submitted online at www.eastore- gonian.com/obituaryform, by email to obits@eastoregonian.com, by fax to 541-276-8314, placed via the funeral home or in person at the East Oregonian office. For more information, call 541-966-0818 or 1-800-522-0255, ext. 221. By SETH BORENSTEIN AP Science Writer WASHINGTON — Earth sizzled to a third-straight record hot year in 2016, with scientists mostly blaming man-made global warming with help from a natural El Nino that’s now gone. Two U.S. agencies and international weather groups reported Wednesday that last year was the warmest on record. They measure global temperatures in slightly different ways, and came up with a range of increases, from minuscule to what top American climate scientists described as substantial. They’re “all singing the same song even if they are hitting different notes along the way. The pattern is very clear,” said Deke Arndt of the National Oceanic and Atmo- spheric Administration. NOAA calculated that the average global temperature LOTTERY Mega Millions 20-31-54-56-59 Mega Ball: 3 Megaplier: 5 Estimated jackpot: $150 million Lucky Lines 02-06-10-13-FREE-17-23- 27-30 AFTER THE Estimated jackpot: $12,000 Pick 4 1 p.m.: 8-2-5-5 4 p.m.: 6-1-8-5 7 p.m.: 9-3-9-4 10 p.m.: 2-2-4-3 Wednesday, Jan. 18 Pick 4 1 p.m.: 3-7-7-1 FREEZE Wine, Dine & Defrost with us! Taco Tuesday • Wine Wednesday Thursday Burgers and Beers Friday: LIVE music CALE MOON H AMLEY S teakhouse COURT & MAIN, PENDLETON • 541.278.1100 AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File The sun sets beyond visitors to Liberty Memorial on July 21, as the temperature hovers around 100 degrees in Kansas City, Mo. for 2016 was 58.69 degrees — beating the previous year by 0.07 degrees. NASA’s figures, which include more of the Arctic, are higher at 0.22 degrees warmer than 2015. The Arctic “was enormously warm, like totally off the charts compared to everything else,” said Gavin Schmidt, director of NASA’s Goddard Institute of Space Studies in New York, where the space agency monitors global temperatures. The British meteorolog- ical office determined that 2016 barely beat 2015 by 0.018 degrees. The World Meteorological Organization and other monitoring groups agreed that 2016 was a record, with the international weather agency chief Petteri Taalas saying “temperatures only tell part of the story” of extreme warming. The figures are based on ground-level temperatures. Satellite calculations also showed that it was the warmest year, Schmidt said. “This is clearly a record,” he said. “We are now no longer only looking at some- thing that only scientists can see, but is apparent to people in our daily lives.” Temperature records go back to 1880. This is the fifth time in a dozen years that the globe has set a new annual heat record. Records have been set in 2016, 2015, 2014, 2010 and 2005. Schmidt said his calcula- tions show most of the record heat was from heat-trapping gases from the burning of oil, coal and gas. Only about 12 percent was due to El Nino, which is a periodic warming of parts of the Pacific that change weather globally, he said. Arndt put the El Nino factor closer to a quarter or a third. SUPPORT GROUPS THURSDAY, JAN. 19 OPEN SUPPORT GROUP, 10 a.m.-12 p.m., Bowman Building, 17 S.W. Frazer Ave., Pendleton. (541-276-6671 or 541-379-1589) NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS, 10:30 a.m., Episcopal Church of the Redeemer, 241 S.E. Second St., Pendleton. OPEN AA MEETING, 12 p.m., complex, 680 W. Harper Road, Hermiston. (800-410-5953) OPEN AA MEETING, 12 p.m., Episcopal Church of the Redeem- er, 241 S.E. Second St., Pendle- ton. Coffee is provided. (Ed 541- 207-2548) LOST AND FOUND YOUTH OUTREACH, 3 p.m., Pendle- ton Recreation Center, 510 S.W. Dorion Ave., Pendleton. Help for youth 12-18 facing challenges. (Danny or Leslie 541-379-4250 or 541-276-3987) HEALTHY CHOICES AA MEETING, 5-6:30 p.m., St. An- thony Hospital conference room 1, 2801 St. Anthony Way, Pendleton. (541-207-2548) WOMEN FOR SOBRIETY SUPPORT GROUP, 5:30-7 p.m., First Christian Church, 516 S. Main St., Milton-Freewater. New members welcome. (Kimberlie Krieg 541-861-3283) TOPS, 6 p.m., Peace Lutheran Church, 210 N.W. Ninth St., Pend- leton. 6 p.m. weigh-in, 6:30-7:30 p.m. meeting. (Heather Endersby 541-969-6997) CELEBRATE RECOVERY, 6-9 p.m., First Assembly of God Church, 1911 S.E. Court Ave., Pendleton. 6-7 p.m. large group, 6-8 p.m. Celebration Place (chil- dren K-5), 7-8 p.m. open share group, 8-9 p.m. Solid Rock Cafe social time (all ages). Christ-cen- tered 12-step program for those with hurts, habits and hangups. Childcare is available for children ages 1-5. (541-276-6417) DOMESTIC VIOLENCE/SEX- UAL ASSAULT WOMEN’S SUP- PORT GROUP, 6-7:30 p.m., call for location, call for location, Herm- iston. Sponsored by Domestic Vi- olence Services. (541-567-0424) DOMESTIC VIOLENCE/SEX- UAL ASSAULT WOMEN’S SUP- PORT GROUP, 6-7:30 p.m., call for location, call for location, Pend- leton. Sponsored by Domestic Vi- olence Services. (541-276-3322) SMART RECOVERY SELF MANAGEMENT AND RECOV- ERY TRAINING, 6-7 p.m., Herm- iston Conference Center, 415 S. Highway 395, Hermiston. Learn tools for addiction recovery based on the latest scientific research. Free, but donations accepted. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS, 6:30 p.m., Helping Hand, 346 S.E. Second St., Pendleton. ADDICTION RECOVERY PROGRAM, 7 p.m., Seventh-day Adventist Church seminary build- ing, 800 S. First St., Hermiston. Everyone is welcome. (Kim Puzey 541-567-3622) WALK AND ROLL SUPPORT GROUP, 7 p.m., Buttercreek Apartments No. 33, 405 S.W. 11th St., Hermiston. For anyone who is disabled or in a wheelchair and has issues with access or rights, or caregivers of handicapped people. (Nana Carpenter 541-303-3359) OPEN AA MEETING, 7:30 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 191 E. Gladys Ave., Hermiston. HEPPNER MIRACLES OPEN 1/19 Tuesday, Jan. 17 Page 5A Earth sets another heat record ARRESTS, CITATIONS Tuesday •Morrow County Sheriff’s Office arrested Johanna Marie Shelley, 31, West Sixth Road, Irrigon, for aggravated fourth-de- gree assault constituting domestic violence after she reported her boyfriend had beat her up and threw her out of the house. •Umatilla Tribal Police arrested Christina Mary Simmons, 44, address not provided, on a felony restraining order violation. •Morrow County Sheriff’s Office arrested Eddie Duane Walker, 53, address not provided, for possession of methamphetamine. •Oregon State Police arrested Karen Alice Nevins, 67, address not provided, for possession of methamphetamine. Wednesday •Oregon State Police arrested Elwood Lamar Davis, 36, address not provided, on Interstate 84 near milepost 206 on charges of driving under the influence of intoxicants (alcohol), recklessly endangering highway workers and reckless driving. East Oregonian Cineplex Show Times $5 Classic Movie 1/25 BLACK NARCISSUS Patriots Day (R) 3:40* 6:40 9:40 Sing (PG) 4:50 7:20 9:30 Underworld: Blood Wars (R) 2D 4:40 7:10 3D 9:20 Hidden Figures (PG) 4:10 7:00 9:50 Passengers (PG13) 6:50 Why Him (R) 4:20 10:00 Credit & Debit Cards accepted Cineplex gift cards available * Matinee Pricing wildhorseresort.com 541-966-1850 Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216 AA MEETING, 7:30 p.m., All Saints Episcopal Church parish hall, 140 W. Church St., Heppner. (800-410-5953) NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS, 7:30-9 p.m., First United Method- ist Church, 191 E. Gladys Ave., Hermiston. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS, 7:30 p.m., Wesley United Meth- odist Church, 816 S. Main St., Mil- ton-Freewater. OPEN AA MEETING, 8 p.m., complex, 680 W. Harper Road, Hermiston. (800-410-5953) OPEN AA MEETING, 8 p.m., United Church of Christ, 114 S. East St., Condon. (800-410-5953) FRIDAY, JAN. 20 NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS, 10:30 a.m., Episcopal Church of the Redeemer, 241 S.E. Second St., Pendleton. OPEN AA MEETING, 12 p.m., complex, 680 W. Harper Road, Hermiston. (800-410-5953) OPEN AA MEETING, 12 p.m., Episcopal Church of the Redeem- er, 241 S.E. Second St., Pendle- ton. Coffee is provided. (Ed 541- 207-2548) CELEBRATE RECOVERY GROUP, 6 p.m., Salvation Army, 150 S.E. Emigrant Ave., Pendle- ton. (541-276-3369) OPEN AA MEETING, 7 p.m., Yellowhawk Tribal Health Center, 73265 Confederated Way, Mis- sion. (800-410-5953) NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS, 7 p.m., Episcopal Church of the Redeemer, 241 S.E. Second St., Pendleton. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS, 7:30-9 p.m., First United Method- ist Church, 191 E. Gladys Ave., Hermiston. OPEN AA MEETING, 7:30 p.m., Ione Community Church, 395 Main St., Ione. (800-410- 5953) OPEN AA MEETING, 8 p.m., complex, 680 W. Harper Road, Hermiston. (800-410-5953) SATURDAY, JAN. 21 AA OPEN BOOK STUDY, 10 a.m., St. John’s Episcopal Church, 665 E. Gladys Ave., Hermiston. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS, 10:30 a.m., Episcopal Church of the Redeemer, 241 S.E. Second St., Pendleton. OPEN AA MEETING, 12 p.m., complex, 680 W. Harper Road, Hermiston. (800-410-5953) OPEN AA MEETING, 12 p.m., Episcopal Church of the Redeem- er, 241 S.E. Second St., Pendle- ton. Coffee is provided. (Ed 541- 207-2548) OPEN AA MEETING, 7 p.m., United Church of Christ, 114 S. East St., Condon. (800-410-5953) NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS, 7 p.m., Episcopal Church of the Redeemer, 241 S.E. Second St., Pendleton. OPEN AA MEETING, 7 p.m., Pilot Rock City Hall council cham- bers, 143 W. Main St., Pilot Rock. (Edward D. 541-207-2548) VISION FOR YOU OPEN AA MEETING, 7 p.m., Good Shep- herd Lutheran Church, 420 S.W. Locust Road, Boardman. (Pat 541-215-2342 or 503-752-7459) NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS, 7:30-9 p.m., First United Method- ist Church, 191 E. Gladys Ave., Hermiston. OPEN AA MEETING, 8 p.m., complex, 680 W. Harper Road, Hermiston. (800-410-5953) HEPPNER MIRACLES OPEN AA MEETING, 8 p.m., St. Patrick’s Catholic Church parish hall, 525 N. Gale St., Heppner. (800-410- 5953) SUNDAY, JAN. 22 HUNGRY SPIRIT OPEN AA MEETING, 8:30 a.m., Roosters Restaurant, 1515 Southgate, Pendleton. (800-410-5953) HARPER ROAD AL-ANON, 10-11 a.m., complex, 680 W. Harper Road, Suite 2, Hermiston. OPEN AA MEETING, 12 p.m., complex, 680 W. Harper Road, Hermiston. (800-410-5953) OPEN AA MEETING, 12 p.m., Episcopal Church of the Redeem- er, 241 S.E. Second St., Pendle- ton. Coffee is provided. (Ed 541- 207-2548) OPEN AA MEETING, 7 p.m., Yellowhawk Tribal Health Center, 73265 Confederated Way, Mis- sion. (800-410-5953) NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS, 7 p.m., Episcopal Church of the Redeemer, 241 S.E. Second St., Pendleton. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS, 7:30-9 p.m., First United Method- ist Church, 191 E. Gladys Ave., Hermiston. OPEN AA MEETING, 8 p.m., complex, 680 W. Harper Road, Hermiston. (800-410-5953)