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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 2017)
NATION East Oregonian Page 2A REGIONAL CITIES Forecast WEDNESDAY TODAY Cloudy with occasional rain Cloudy and milder with a shower 51° 48° 62° 50° THURSDAY FRIDAY Rather cloudy, a shower; breezy Cloudy PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 66° 42° 55° 40° 51° 43° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 60° 47° 47° 45° PENDLETON through 3 p.m. yesterday TEMPERATURE HIGH LOW 64° 47° 69° (1958) 49° 32° 9° (1977) 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 0.06" 0.88" 0.92" 14.58" 10.85" 10.91" HERMISTON through 3 p.m. yesterday LOW 56° 48° 65° (1962) 0.04" 0.66" 0.76" 8.46" 7.70" 8.04" SUN AND MOON Dec 3 Bend 59/50 Last 7:03 a.m. 4:19 p.m. 9:41 a.m. 7:03 p.m. New Dec 9 Dec 17 Caldwell 58/48 Burns 54/40 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 60 51 59 62 54 52 61 55 47 57 57 52 50 61 61 64 52 45 51 56 60 61 44 52 57 52 46 Lo 55 42 50 56 40 46 53 51 45 52 46 48 47 51 56 55 45 42 48 53 48 55 42 47 55 49 41 Klamath Falls 57/46 Eastern Washington: Periods of rain today. Cloudy tonight; a passing shower or two. Eastern and Central Oregon: Cloudy today with occasional rain; some sun, then turning cloudy in the south. Western Washington: Rain, heavy at times today. Rain tonight. Cascades: Rain today. Cloudy tonight with a shower; mild. A shower in the area tomorrow. Northern California: Cloudy today; warmer in central parts. Hi 50 69 57 58 74 32 52 62 46 74 51 Beijing Hong Kong Jerusalem London Mexico City Moscow Paris Rome Seoul Sydney Tokyo Lo 28 61 48 54 47 27 44 51 35 65 41 Lo 53 42 50 56 40 49 52 53 47 53 44 51 50 49 54 54 43 46 50 54 46 55 48 48 55 53 43 W r c c r c c c c c c c c c c r r c c c r c sh sh c r c c Wed. W s pc pc c pc c pc pc s pc s Hi 46 69 55 61 68 29 57 64 50 74 55 Lo 24 60 45 48 38 20 51 50 23 65 47 W s pc pc r pc c pc pc c pc pc (in mph) Today Wednesday Boardman Pendleton NNE 4-8 SE 4-8 NE 3-6 SSE 4-8 UV INDEX TODAY 0 0 0 East Oregonian (USPS 164-980) is published daily except Sunday, Monday and postal holidays, 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. Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017 Single copy price: $1 Tuesday through Friday, $1.50 Saturday Copyright © 2017, EO Media Group CBS suspends Rose, PBS halts his show following allegations Trump promises Americans ‘huge tax cut’ for Christmas NEW YORK (AP) — Charlie Rose is the latest public figure to be felled by sexual misconduct allegations, with PBS halting distribution of his nightly interview show and CBS News suspending him Monday following a Washington Post report with the accusations of eight women. The women, who all worked for Rose or tried to work for him, accused the veteran newsman of groping them, walking naked in front of them and telling one that he dreamed about her swimming nude. Rose, 75, said in a statement that he was “deeply embarrassed” and apologized for his behavior. “PBS was shocked to learn today of these deeply disturbing allegations,” the public broadcasting service said in a statement. “We are immediately suspending distribution of ‘Charlie Rose.’” Three women went on the record in the Post’s deeply- reported story. Reah Bravo, a former associate producer for Rose’s PBS show told the newspaper: “He was a sexual predator, and I was his victim.” Rose’s interview show is seen in 94 percent of the country on PBS stations. It is rebroadcast on Bloomberg’s cable network, which also announced Monday it was suspending the show. WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump on Monday promised a tax overhaul by Christmas, even as a nonpartisan tax analysis group said the Senate package would leave many taxpayers facing higher levies by 2027. Trump said “We’re going to give the American people a huge tax cut for Christmas — hopefully that will be a great, big, beautiful Christmas present.” Trump spoke as the Tax Policy Center said that while all income groups would see tax reductions, on average, under the Senate bill in 2019, 9 percent of taxpayers would pay higher taxes that year than under current law. The policy center found that low-earners would generally get smaller breaks than higher-income people. In 2019, those making less than $25,000 would get an average $50 tax reduction, or 0.3 percent of their after-tax income. Middle-income earners would get average cuts of $850, while people making at least $746,000 would get average cuts of $34,000. The center also said the Senate proposal would generate economic growth to produce additional revenue of $169 billion. That’s far short of the near $1.5 trillion in red ink that the Joint Committee on Taxation estimated the bill would produce over that period. 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. Want Year Around Outdoor Space? W e’ve Got Solutions! Patio Rooms Awnings · Sunrooms Pergolas · Patio Covers All Season Shades Solar Screens & More! 0 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ num- ber, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 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 BRIEFLY 0 0-2, Low 3-5, Moderate 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme SUBSCRIPTION RATES To subscribe, call 1-800-522-0255 or go online to www.eastoregonian.com and click on ‘Subscribe’ 0 8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. Subscriber services: For mail delivery, online access, vacation stops or delivery concerns call 1-800-522-0255 ext. 1 www.eastoregonian.com Visit our showroom: 102 E Columbia Dr. Kennewick, WA 99336 Hi 62 57 63 62 58 58 62 64 60 64 63 59 58 63 61 64 58 57 62 62 65 64 54 59 61 61 56 Today REGIONAL FORECAST Coastal Oregon: Rain today. Breezy and mild across the north; mild in central parts. 211 S.E. Byers Ave., Pendleton 541-276-2211 333 E. Main St., Hermiston 541-567-6211 Office hours: Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed major holidays 541-720-0772 W r r r r r r r r r r c r r r r r c r r r r r r r r r r WORLD CITIES Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. — Founded Oct. 16, 1875 — FREE Estimates! NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY Wed. WINDS Medford 61/51 PRECIPITATION Nov 26 John Day 57/52 Ontario 52/45 41° 32° 6° (1929) 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today First Full Albany 61/55 Eugene 61/53 TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normals Records 49° 40° Spokane Wenatchee 44/42 39/35 Tacoma Moses 57/52 Lake Pullman Aberdeen Olympia Yakima 45/42 47/45 57/55 57/53 46/41 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 59/57 52/49 Lewiston 45/44 Astoria 49/48 60/55 Portland Enterprise Hermiston 56/53 Pendleton 52/46 The Dalles 47/45 51/48 49/43 La Grande Salem 52/48 61/55 Corvallis 59/54 HIGH 56° 40° Seattle 56/52 ALMANAC Yesterday Normals Records 67° 43° Today SATURDAY Mostly sunny and cooler Tuesday, November 21, 2017 Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. -10s -0s showers t-storms 0s 10s rain 20s flurries 30s 40s snow ice License #188965 60s cold front 70s 80s 90s 100s warm front stationary front 110s high low National Summary: Rain will soak much of Florida, western Oregon and Washington state today. Snow levels will rise over the Cascades and northern Rockies. Lake-effect snow is forecast to the Upper Midwest. Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 82° in Miramar MCAS, Calif. Low -4° in Gothic, 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 64 62 60 59 43 65 59 56 70 61 45 51 71 49 48 75 -1 28 83 76 51 77 48 75 63 87 Lo 37 48 54 45 37 41 48 47 52 39 23 31 42 33 28 43 -2 12 69 56 25 59 20 56 34 64 W s c pc s c pc c s c pc pc pc pc pc pc s sn pc pc pc pc sh pc pc pc pc Wed. Hi 63 64 58 52 60 60 63 53 69 46 36 38 60 66 37 67 10 30 84 69 40 75 44 79 53 94 Lo 40 45 32 26 46 33 48 29 47 26 29 26 38 38 27 40 -1 19 71 42 26 58 33 56 31 66 W s pc r s c s c r pc pc s pc s pc pc s sn sn pc pc s c s s s s Today Louisville Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Omaha Philadelphia Phoenix Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Diego San Francisco Seattle Tucson Washington, DC Wichita Hi 58 62 84 41 31 62 71 57 63 40 59 83 51 59 61 39 66 67 55 58 80 70 56 81 61 58 Lo 32 34 68 22 18 34 54 48 29 19 48 59 38 48 45 24 41 48 26 43 58 55 52 52 48 24 W pc pc t pc pc pc pc s s s s pc s s c pc c c pc pc pc pc r pc pc pc Wed. Hi 45 50 85 35 34 50 68 53 52 44 54 87 49 54 61 67 70 71 41 63 84 70 63 84 54 51 Lo 28 31 69 28 26 30 46 31 35 31 32 61 22 27 35 39 42 50 30 42 59 56 56 53 32 35 W s s pc s pc s pc r s s pc s r r pc pc pc pc s c s pc r s s s 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: • Kimberly Macias 541-278-2683 • kmacias@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 • Grace Bubar 541-276-2214 • gbubar@eastoregonian.com Classified & Legal Advertising 1-800-962-2819 or 541-278-2678 classifieds@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 Manson has endured as the face of evil LOS ANGELES (AP) — Other killers snuffed out far more lives than Charles Manson did in 1969. Yet he has endured for nearly a half century as the personification of evil, even in an age in which mass shootings leave dozens dead at a time. Manson, the hippie cult leader who died Sunday at 83, horrified America more than a generation ago with the way he seemed to have turned young people murderously against everything their parents cherished. That horror continued long after he had been locked up, in large part because of the demonic image that crime experts say he cultivated with his bizarre behavior and his searing, wild-eyed gaze. “He had that maniacal look that was always so striking,” said James Alan Fox, a criminology professor at North- eastern University in Boston, calling Manson the most notorious killer of all time. “Manson was memorable: his voice, his appearance, his mannerisms, as well as his crimes and the ‘crazy Charlie’ act he put on.” Manson was convicted of orches- trating the slaughter of pregnant actress Sharon Tate and six other people over two successive August nights in Los Angeles. Prosecutors said he was trying to foment a race war, an idea he supposedly got from a misreading of the Beatles song “Helter Skelter.” He was sentenced to death, but that was commuted to life in prison after AP Photo/Eric Risberg, File Charles Manson the California Supreme Court struck down the death penalty in 1972. The murders were horrific in their brutality. Tate, a beautiful 26-year-old actress known for “Valley of the Dolls,” was stabbed and hung from a rafter in her living room. The intruders scrawled “Pigs” and a misspelled “Healter Skelter” in the victims’ blood. To his long rap sheet, historians might add this: accessory to the murder of the 1960s. The Manson family’s THANK YOU crimes, along with the deadly violence that erupted later in 1969 during a Rolling Stones concert at Altamont Speedway, seemed to mark the demise of the hippie ideal of peace and love. Manson’s notoriety developed in part because he played an integral role ending the mood of wishfulness and illusion that marked that era, said Todd Gitlin, author of “The Sixties: Years of Hope, Days of Rage.” Although Manson wasn’t typical of the counter- culture, he could be seen as the poster child for violence that some associated with the anti-establishment movement. Gitlin said he and others in the underground press were as aghast at the crimes as those in the so-called silent majority, which President Richard Nixon had dubbed the older generation. “The country was deeply divided,” Gitlin said. “One of the things that deeply divided it was culture. So Manson was a gift to those Americans who felt that once you escaped from button-down America, you were prone to become a dangerous sicko.” Although Manson didn’t carry out the murders himself, he has managed to endure in the annals of American crime as the cult leader who persuaded middle-class kids to kill for him. “Manson was a manipulator. In a sense, he was a puppeteer,” said author Jeff Guinn. ‘’Manson would seem to be all kinds of things to all kinds of people, but nearly all of it was an act.” to our Sponsors, Auction Donors, Basket Donors & those who attended Grillin’ for Grants on November 9th. Our community raised more than $23,000 for Pendleton students through the Education Foundation of Pendleton Scholastic Sponsors $1000 CHI St. Anthony Hospital Gordon’s Electric Rogers Toyota of Hermiston Tom Denchel Ford Country Academic Sponsors $500 Dan and Barbara Ceniga Coldwell Banker Whitney & Associates (Jef Farley) Columbia Bank D.A. Davidson & Co. (Mark Hales) Durk V. Irwin, D.M.D. Edward Jones (Ben Buchert) Edward Jones (Casey Hunt) Kelly Lumber Supply Jim and Karen Kullnat Les Schwab Tires Foster & Lona Odom Pediatric Specialists of Pendleton Riverside Veterinary Clinic Round-Up City Plumbing James and Julianne Sawyer Kirt and Annette Skinner Swire Coca-Cola Wheatland Insurance Wildhorse Resort/Casino In-Kind KUMA Radio 92.1 Party FM East Oregonian (Call for Showroom Hours) www.mybackyardbydesign.com 50s www.educationfoundationofpendleton.org