WEATHER East Oregonian Page 2A REGIONAL CITIES Forecast SUNDAY TODAY Mostly sunny and pleasant Mostly sunny and nice 83° 54° 84° 56° MONDAY TUESDAY Mostly sunny Sun and clouds PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 89° 61° 96° 66° 92° 63° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 86° 55° 87° 55° PENDLETON through 3 p.m. yesterday TEMPERATURE HIGH LOW 91° 87° 106° (1897) 55° 57° 43° (1904) PRECIPITATION 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date 0.00" 0.07" 0.24" 11.37" 7.34" 8.19" through 3 p.m. yesterday HIGH LOW 93° 87° 105° (1967) 52° 57° 44° (1987) 0.00" 0.06" 0.12" 6.65" 4.99" 6.04" SUN AND MOON Aug 21 Aug 29 Full 6:00 a.m. 7:56 p.m. 3:30 a.m. 6:40 p.m. Last Sep 5 Sep 12 John Day 83/48 Ontario 90/57 Bend 82/47 Burns 84/42 Caldwell 90/55 Astoria Baker City Bend Brookings Burns Enterprise Eugene Heppner Hermiston John Day Klamath Falls La Grande Meacham Medford Newport North Bend Ontario Pasco Pendleton Portland Redmond Salem Spokane Ukiah Vancouver Walla Walla Yakima Hi 67 82 82 72 84 80 80 80 87 83 86 80 77 91 63 67 90 86 83 77 83 81 79 78 76 84 87 Lo 54 43 47 56 42 46 49 52 55 48 48 47 44 55 49 52 57 51 54 55 43 53 53 42 54 58 52 W pc s s pc s s pc s s s s s s s pc pc pc s s pc s pc s s pc s s NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY Sun. Hi 69 83 82 72 82 79 82 81 86 82 86 80 78 92 65 68 88 85 84 79 84 84 79 77 79 84 86 Lo 55 45 49 56 44 46 53 54 55 50 49 46 44 58 52 54 56 53 56 58 45 57 54 43 57 59 54 Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. W pc s s pc s s s s s s pc s s s pc pc s s s s s s s s s s s WORLD CITIES Today Beijing Hong Kong Jerusalem London Mexico City Moscow Paris Rome Seoul Sydney Tokyo Hi 83 94 87 69 75 84 70 86 83 59 83 Lo 71 84 70 53 56 62 51 71 73 47 75 W pc pc s pc pc c pc s t pc t Sun. Hi 86 94 87 70 76 87 71 86 77 61 82 Lo 73 84 69 60 55 61 55 66 74 48 75 W c t s pc t s pc pc r pc t WINDS Medford 91/55 PRECIPITATION 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Albany 81/51 Eugene 80/49 TEMPERATURE Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today New First 96° 66° Spokane Wenatchee 79/53 83/58 Tacoma Moses 74/50 Lake Pullman Aberdeen Olympia Yakima 84/52 78/48 68/52 76/49 87/52 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 74/53 84/58 Lewiston 86/54 Astoria 85/56 67/54 Portland Enterprise Hermiston 77/55 Pendleton 80/46 The Dalles 87/55 83/54 84/58 La Grande Salem 80/47 81/53 Corvallis 81/50 HERMISTON Yesterday Normals Records 98° 66° Seattle 73/55 ALMANAC Yesterday Normals Records 92° 58° Today WEDNESDAY Mostly sunny and very warm Saturday, August 19, 2017 (in mph) Boardman Pendleton Klamath Falls 86/48 REGIONAL FORECAST Eastern and Central Oregon: Sunny to partly cloudy today; pleasant. Clear to partly cloudy tonight. Western Washington: Clouds giving way to sun today. Partly cloudy tonight. Eastern Washington: Sunny today. Clear to partly cloudy tonight. Sunshine and patchy clouds tomorrow. Cascades: Mostly sunny today; pleasant. A star-studded sky tonight. Mostly sunny tomorrow. Northern California: Partly sunny at the coast today; hot in central parts. Mostly sunny elsewhere. Sunday WSW 4-8 W 6-12 UV INDEX TODAY Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Coastal Oregon: Increasingly windy today. Today WSW 4-8 W 6-12 2 4 6 211 S.E. Byers Ave., Pendleton 541-276-2211 333 E. Main St., Hermiston 541-567-6211 Offi ce hours: Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed major holidays www.eastoregonian.com To subscribe, call 1-800-522-0255 or go online to www.eastoregonian.com and click on ‘Subscribe’ East Oregonian (USPS 164-980) is published daily except Sunday, Monday and Dec. 25, by the EO Media Group, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801. Periodicals postage paid at Pendleton, OR. Postmaster: send address changes to East Oregonian, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801. 4 2 8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 0-2, Low 3-5, Moderate 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ num- ber, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017 Subscriber services: For home delivery, vacation stops or delivery concerns: 1-800-522-0255 Didn’t receive your paper? Call 1-800-522-0255 before noon Tuesday through Friday or before 10 a.m. Saturday for same-day redelivery — Founded Oct. 16, 1875 — 6 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Local home delivery Savings off cover price EZPay $14.50 41 percent 52 weeks $173.67 41 percent 26 weeks $91.86 38 percent 13 weeks $47.77 36 percent *EZ Pay = one-year rate with a monthly credit or debit card/check charge Single copy price: $1 Tuesday through Friday, $1.50 Saturday -10s -0s showers t-storms 0s 10s rain 20s flurries 30s 40s snow ice 50s 60s cold front 70s 80s 90s 100s warm front stationary front 110s high low National Summary: Rain will depart New England today as more storms sweep across the lower Great Lakes. Flooding downpours will target South Florida as storms pop up across the Southeast and Gulf coasts and High Plains. Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 108° in Needles, Calif. Low 32° in Leadville, Colo. NATIONAL CITIES Today Albuquerque Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Billings Birmingham Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charleston, WV Chicago Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit El Paso Fairbanks Fargo Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville Kansas City Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Hi 89 92 86 88 88 93 90 84 93 85 84 82 98 92 83 91 55 86 90 98 84 92 92 105 94 81 Lo 65 72 71 68 58 74 57 69 77 64 66 63 79 59 61 69 43 61 76 77 65 76 70 80 74 64 W pc pc pc pc s pc s t t t pc t pc pc pc t r s pc s pc t s s t pc Sun. Hi 78 94 85 86 85 94 86 85 93 86 89 87 98 92 86 80 58 79 90 95 87 92 86 102 91 79 Lo 62 74 67 66 59 74 58 67 77 64 72 66 78 61 67 66 43 55 77 77 70 75 73 80 75 64 Today W t pc pc s pc pc s s pc pc s s pc c s r c s sh s pc t t s t pc Hi Louisville 89 Memphis 92 Miami 91 Milwaukee 82 Minneapolis 81 Nashville 90 New Orleans 91 New York City 87 Oklahoma City 98 Omaha 91 Philadelphia 89 Phoenix 104 Portland, ME 79 Providence 87 Raleigh 92 Rapid City 93 Reno 95 Sacramento 91 St. Louis 91 Salt Lake City 94 San Diego 76 San Francisco 73 Seattle 73 Tucson 96 Washington, DC 90 Wichita 96 Lo 69 75 81 66 64 70 77 70 72 71 70 81 63 67 70 59 62 60 70 70 67 59 55 75 72 74 W pc t t pc s t pc pc t s pc s t t pc t pc s pc pc pc pc pc s pc s Sun. Hi 92 93 91 84 86 93 91 85 96 91 87 102 84 85 95 85 93 92 94 93 75 75 75 94 88 95 Lo 70 75 82 69 67 70 77 70 74 75 68 81 61 65 72 59 62 62 73 68 66 60 56 72 72 75 W pc pc sh s t pc t s pc pc s pc s s pc t pc s pc pc pc pc s pc pc c Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice. ADVERTISING Advertising Director: Marissa Williams 541-278-2669 • addirector@eastoregonian.com Advertising Services: Laura Jensen 541-966-0806 • ljensen@eastoregonian.com Multimedia Consultants: • Danni Halladay 541-278-2683 • dhalladay@eastoregonian.com • Jeanne Jewett 541-564-4531 • jjewett@eastoregonian.com • Dayle Stinson 541-278-2670 • dstinson@eastoregonian.com • Angela Treadwell 541-966-0827 • atreadwell@eastoregonian.com • Audra Workman 541-564-4538 • aworkman@eastoregonian.com Copyright © 2017, EO Media Group Classifi ed & Legal Advertising 1-800-962-2819 or 541-278-2678 classifi eds@eastoregonian.com or legals@eastoregonian.com NEWS • To submit news tips and press releases: • call 541-966-0818 • fax 541-276-8314 • email news@eastoregonian.com • To submit community events, calendar items and Your EO News: email community@eastoregonian.com or call Tammy Malgesini at 541-564-4539 or Renee Struthers at 541-966-0818. • To submit engagements, weddings and anniversaries: email rstruthers@eastoregonian.com or visit www.eastoregonian. com/community/announcements • To submit a Letter to the Editor: mail to Managing Editor Daniel Wattenburger, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801 or email editor@eastoregonian.com. • To submit sports or outdoors information or tips: 541-966-0838 • sports@eastoregonian.com COMMERCIAL PRINTING Production Manager: Mike Jensen 541-215-0824 • mjensen@eastoregonian.com Health study coming Athena celebrates PGG building purchase to Umatilla County By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian East Oregonian Umatilla County resi- dents will soon have the chance to participate in a health survey that impacts public health policy around the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention puts out an annual survey called the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, which aims to assess the health and diet of people from different parts of the United States. Surveyors will be interviewing people in Umatilla County from Sept. 7 through Oct. 31. Each year, the survey focuses on people in 15 counties throughout the United States. Those counties are divided into neighborhoods, and from there, several individuals or households will be selected randomly. Those who have been selected will receive a notifi cation in the mail. Umatilla County Public Health Director Jim Setzer said the survey has played a big role in setting health policy. “We’re representing a certain number of coun- ties, and they use a cluster sample strategy,” he said. He added that the survey has helped the CDC prior- itize health problems in the U.S. “The survey was helpful in identifying blood levels of lead,” he said. “Then, the CDC works with the government to come up with policies, and see if those policies work.” Setzer said one of the goals of his department is to encourage people to take the survey seriously. “We hope to get out in front of it,” he said. “It’s not a scam.” The survey can cause some raised eyebrows, Setzer said, as it has surveyors coming to peoples’ homes and asking them a series of personal questions about their health, diet and disease background. But he said the surveyors will come with a letter from him, County Commissioner George Murdock and county health offi cer Dr. Jon Hitzman. “I don’t know how much weight my signature carries,” said Setzer. “But we’ll do our best to reas- sure people.” Those who are selected are done so based on their age, gender and racial or ethnic background. According to the CDC, the information of all partici- pants in the survey is kept confi dential. In addition to the in-home interview, participants will also go to Hermiston to undergo some medical tests. Setzer said transporta- tion to the medical tests will be provided, and participants will be paid $120 to take part in the study. Setzer said while people can choose to opt out on some or all parts of the survey, he hopes they will participate. He said he didn’t know whether all population groups get the same set of questions, but that the aim is to look for differences in the population. Some of the data collected includes statis- tics on obesity, cholesterol levels, heart disease, and Human Papillomavirus, or HPV. Each year, the survey collects data for about 5,000 people around the U.S. The survey has been around since 1960. –—— Contact Jayati Ramakrishnan at 541-564- 4534 or jramakrishnan@ eastoregonian.com Corrections The East Oregonian works hard to be accurate and sincerely regrets any errors. If you notice a mistake in the paper, please call 541-966-0818. Standing underneath the Pendleton Grain Growers sign in Athena, Robin Barrett, band leader of the Coyotes, mused aloud about what the old store should be turned into. An airport? Or maybe an aquarium? he asked the crowd at a block party Friday to cele- brate a change in ownership. While Barrett’s sugges- tions were clearly in jest, the Athena Mainstreet Associa- tion is serious about restoring the building that PGG left behind in 2014. Through contributions from community members and organizations, the asso- ciation raised $55,200 and purchased it for $45,000 in May. Athena Mainstreet board member April Vorhauer-Flatt said the block party — replete with music, food and chil- dren’s activities — was a way to celebrate the community’s contributions and show them what’s next. Vorhauer-Flatt said the association want to begin cleaning up the interior, which is cased in oil and soot after a furnace malfunction, but they need to assess whether its safe for volunteers. The best residents could do Friday was peer through the building’s glass door to Photo by Antonio Sierra Robin Barrett and Coyote Kings perform at a block party in front of the old Athena Pendleton Grain Growers building Friday. get a peek into the interior of a structure that was originally built in 1904. A longtime hardware store, PGG bought the building in 1956 and operated it for the next 58 years before it shuttered its retail division in 2014. Among the association’s plans for the buildings in the next few years is to rename it after the building’s original owner, J.H. Stahl, restore the façade and hold a series of community meetings to decide the use of the building. Athena resident Danielle Holden said there are already about 10 suggestions for how to repurpose the building — including turning it into a gym, a civic center or a revived retail space — and she was supportive of all of them. Holden, who signed up with Athena Mainstreet to volunteer for cleanup activi- ties, said she was excited when she heard that the nonprofi t had bought the building, alleviating her concerns that the building would sit empty and start to decay. “It’s a big building in a small town,” she said. Another big building in the small town is the Gem Theater, which is just a few doors down from the PGG building. Gem Theater board member Rob McIntyre opened up the more than a century-old theater to block party attendees, exposing them to the scent of fresh wood from all the restoration work contractors and volun- teers have done. McIntyre said he has been involved with restoring the theater and estimates the board is only $250,000 away from completing the ultimate goal of turning the space into a 300-seat auditorium complete with an orchestra pit and space for a 1921 Wurlitzer organ. The theater will also include a two-bedroom apart- ment on the upper fl oors, the rent revenue going toward the maintenance of the theater. “You’re going to have to be a music fan to live here,” McIntyre said. Having been in the restoration game for more than a decade, McIntyre said volunteer recruitment will be critical to the restoration of the PGG building. With the extra money, my dream car became a reality. Wildfi re causes evacuations in prime eclipse zone PORTLAND (AP) — Residents of more than 400 homes in a prime eclipse- viewing location in Oregon were ordered to evacuate Friday because of a rapidly growing wildfi re that had already closed access to a portion of a wilderness area and a regional highway. The late afternoon order threatened to create more tie-ups on rural and narrow roads already expected to be burdened with up to 200,000 visitors coming to the area from all over the world to watch Monday’s total solar eclipse. About 1 million people are expected in Oregon, where the moon’s shadow fi rst makes landfall in the continental U.S. The nearly 11-square-mile wildfi re in the Deschutes National Forest was about six miles west of the town of Sisters, which sits on the southern edge of the 70-mile swath of Oregon where the moon will completely blot out the sun. Sisters itself will experi- ence 34 seconds of totality and is a popular tourist destination even without an eclipse brewing, but heavy smoke and the rapidly growing fi re have prompted offi cials to close nearby campsites, recreational areas and roads. So far fi re crews have not been able to contain any part of the wildfi re and the McKenzie Pass Highway 242 has been closed between Highway 126 and Sisters, said Susie Heisey, a public information offi cer with Central Oregon Dispatch. The closures will likely have a big impact on people traveling through the region for the eclipse, she said, and the risk is high for more confl agrations in the area with so many campers. “There’s absolutely no campfi res allowed and no burning allowed. So we’re just hoping that everyone that’s here to enjoy the eclipse” follows the rules, Heisey said. Nearly two dozen other fi res are also burning in Oregon, including nine more in the best eclipse-viewing zone. Large portions of the Mount Jefferson Wilderness, in central Oregon’s Willa- mette National Forest, are also closed. Become an East Oregonian Carrier. 211 SE Byers Ave. Pendleton or call: 541-276-2211 1-800-522-0255