A6 NEWS Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, May 6, 2020 Parenting amid pandemic requires some ingenuity On March 16th, I woke up and realized I would soon become a com- pletely different parent than the Chantay Jett one I was the day before. Since my children were longing for more time at 5 years old and 2 years home, I have a great rela- old, I have held a full time tionship with my kids…. position, in an offi ce, sur- why am I so anxious?” Then, the morning rounded by sharp thinkers came. “Mom, I can’t get on with unmatched wit. I defi ned myself as a the WiFi.” “Mom, would “working mom” a busy you make me breakfast?” mom that has a lot on her (it was 9:45 a.m.). “Mom, plate and feels competent want to see this game I in balancing the challenge just made up?” “Mom, we of work life and home life. don’t have any kale to feed I like to dress for work. I my lizard.” “Mom, mom, enjoy the intellectual com- mom…….” The requests, the ques- plexities work has to offer. In addition, I enjoy the tions, the knocking, the drive home from work, talking, just kept coming as I listen to my music and coming and coming. before I jump in to that It was at this point that I infamous phone booth to realized my husband and emerge in my suit of wife, my children were the exact mother, and “Chief Family same person. A week, or maybe 10 Offi cer.” But, what was this? A days evaporated from my new identity creeping in life. As I was trying to to view? An identity that focus on work tasks for was muddy, murky, with the day, I found myself no well-defi ned pin stripes tapping my fi ngers and and block heeled pumps. looking out the window. I An identity that might turned and caught a glance wreak havoc with my at my disheveled self in steadfast routines and par- the mirror, no makeup on, enting strategies. My head black sweats and a hoodie; this had become my “new was spinning. As I packed up my offi ce normal” and I was grumpy. At that very moment and drove home and parked in front of my garage, I I decided I would no lon- thought “this isn’t going ger be held hostage to to be so bad, I’m always these invaders of my work- day! I would do what I do best, mange my way out of a challenging situation. I would take back control. That control started with myself. No more sleep- ing in and blowing off my work out to a later time in the day. No more excuses for not following my daily work/life routine. No more interruptions. I was going to have to don a teacher’s cap and Grace Lutheran educate my children about Church the etiquette of work life 409 West Main - Enterprise and give them support in navigating their online dis- SUNDAY tant learning life. WORSHIP I made a sign on the at 9am door for offi ce hours with phone (message): 541-426-4633 a caveat at the bottom that web: gracelutheranenterprise.com read, “Please do not knock, if you truly need something that can’t wait, please text St. Patrick’s or message me.” Episcopal Church Shortly after the sign was hung, I discovered 100 NE 3rd St, Enterprise dogs can’t read but, they NE 3rd & Main St surely fi gured out how to 541-426-3439 demand my attention and Worship Service Sunday 9:30am pull me away momentarily. We posted their school hours and discussed how all of us need to get up, stretch, take a walk outside around the house, anything to break up our day of end- Gospel Centered Community less screen time. Service time: 10:30 am We talked about self- Cloverleaf Hall in Enterprise care and the importance 541-426-2150 of routine, good food, and Pastor: David Pendleton lots of water. The best laid plans of mice and men often go www.summitchurchoregon.org awry or in our case, tran- sitioned into some intense Christ Covenant arguments. What I real- Church ized is that we had some decent plans but no rules to Pastor Terry Tollefson go with those plans. What Church Office: 541-263-0505 was I thinking? Wasn’t that Family Prayer 9 a.m. Management 101? Rules Sunday School 9:30 a.m. of engagement, we needed Worship Service 10:30 a.m. to devise some boundaries that we could all agree to, 723 College Street, Lostine where we all had a little bit of control. Enterprise Community What I also realized is Congregational Church that although the package looks different I still work The Big Brown Church full time, in an offi ce, sur- with an open door rounded by sharp think- To keep everyone safe, the church will be ers with unmatched wit. closed until further notice. COVID-19 has taught me “God is our refuge & strength” to slow down and be grate- Pastor Archie Hook ful for what is in front of 301 NE First St. • Enterprise, OR Find us on Facebook! 541.426.3044 me. My normal may not look like your normal, each of us needs to fi nd out what works best for you and yours and be confi dent that whatever it looks like, it’s ok. Sometimes the path of least resistance is the right path to take. Now that is Management 101. OTHER VOICES Lucy participates in COVID-19 detection trials at the University of Pennsylvania Veterinary school. Scent-detection dogs train to sniff out coronavirus cases University of Pennsylvania launches COVID-19 Canine Scent Detection Study; dogs may begin screening people in July Martin Hackett University of Pennsylvania PHILADELPHIA – A pilot training pro- gram using scent detec- tion dogs to discrimi- nate between samples from COVID-19 positive and COVID-19 negative patients is the focus of a new research initiative at the University of Penn- sylvania’s School of Vet- erinary Medicine. With up to 300 mil- lion smell receptors – compared to six million in humans – dogs are uniquely positioned to aid in disease detection. This pioneering study sets the stage for dogs to be a force multiplier in the mission to detect COVID- 19, particularly among asymptomatic patients, or hospital or business envi- ronments where testing is most challenging. Pre- liminary screening of live humans by trained dogs could begin as early as July. The study is backed in part by the new Penn Vet COVID-19 Research Innovation Fund. The fund, provided with critical start-up sup- port through a gener- ous gift from Vernon and Shirley Hill, will bol- ster Penn Vet’s rapidly expanding research and response program to fi ght the novel coronavirus. Penn Vet will initially begin the study with eight dogs to perform this pre- cise detection work. Over the course of three weeks through a process called odor imprinting, the dogs will be exposed to COVID-19 positive saliva and urine samples in a laboratory setting. Once the dogs learn the odor, the investiga- tors will document that the dogs can discriminate between COVID-19 posi- tive and COVID-19 nega- tive samples in a labora- tory setting, establishing the platform for testing to determine if the dogs can identify COVID-19 infected people. The U.S. Army Com- bat Capabilities Develop- ment Command Chemi- cal Biological Center will be lending their expertise during the study as well. Scent detection dogs can accurately detect low concentrations of volatile organic compounds, oth- erwise known as VOCs, associated with various diseases such as ovarian cancer, bacterial infec- tions, and nasal tumors. “These VOCs are present in human blood, saliva, urine or breath,” said Cynthia Otto, DVM, PhD, professor of Work- ing Dog Sciences and Sports Medicine and director of Penn Vet’s Working Dog Center. “The potential impact of these dogs and their capacity to detect COVID-19 could be sub- stantial,” Otto said. “This study will harness the dog’s extraordinary abil- ity to support the nation’s COVID-19 surveillance systems, with the goal of reducing community spread.” T HE B OOKLOFT AND Skylight Gallery Finding books is our specialty 541.426.3351 • 107 E. Main • Enterprise • www.bookloftoregon.com Church Directory Joseph United Methodist Church 3rd & Lake St. • Joseph Pastor Cherie Dearth Phone: 541-432-3102 Worship Online at JosephUMC.org Enterprise Christian Church 85035 Joseph Hwy • (541) 426-3449 Parking Lot Radio Worship 9:00 & 11:00 a.m. 95.1 FM - only heard in our parking lot! Facebook Live Broadcast @ 9:00 “Enterprise Christian Church, Enterprise, OR” “Loving God & One Another” David Bruce, Sr. - Minister Lostine Presbyterian Church Discussion Group 9:30 AM Worship Service 11:00 AM Childrens program during service Blog: dancingforth.blogspot.com CLUES ACROSS 1. Cream of Wheat cooker 4. Warship-related 9. Uses a stopwatch 14. Wall St. debut 15. Remark to an audience 16. Caught on, as a nickname 17. *Not react to something (note each starred answer’s “initials”!) 19. “Same here” 20. Speak to an audience 21. Spaghetti ___ (thin dress support) 23. Powdery mineral 24. A seller may counter one 27. Twilight time 30. *Well-wisher’s words 33. Clumsy character 36. Like a film about a film 37. Couldn’t help but 38. In the dark 40. “Tell me already!” 42. Ancient Peruvian 43. Was shy 44. Brian of ambient music 45. *Simple drink mix direction 49. Came to earth 50. Sty cries 51. “I goofed!” 55. Coffee ___ (break room appliance) 57. Bird on Mexico’s flag 58. Friend, in Panama 60. *Take off after a quick meal 64. Cotton-compressing machine 65. Guitarist’s combo 66. Lion’s tail? 67. Pungent salad green 68. Old boom boxes played them 69. “___ sells seashells ...” CLUES DOWN 1. Amelia Earhart, e.g. 2. Performance often viewed through special glasses 3. Complete 4. Statistician Silver 5. Egyptian snake 6. By way of 7. Magazine revenue sources 8. Diminish 9. Bygone Russian bigwig 10. “You’re on!” 11. Small, dirty pool 12. Environmental prefix 13. Type of winter boot 18. Tough-to-ignore feeling 22. Quadri- minus one 24. End of a walkie-talkie message 25. Big bash 26. Org. that regulates airports 28. Luxurious sheet fabric 29. City whose name anagrams to “Tokyo” 31. Refrigerator brand 32. Say “No, no, no!” to 33. Spiritual board 34. Make void 35. Word that “fax” derives from 39. Lightbulb figures 40. Love letter acronym 41. Cats and dogs 43. “Mind your ___ business!” 46. Buck’s mate 47. Lead in a movie? 48. Part of a city grid 52. Shrek and the like 53. Like some soft toys 54. Word after “common” or “sixth” 56. Fashion designer Michael 57. Finish lines, e.g. 58. “Mixed-ish” network 59. Damage 61. “I solved the mystery!” 62. Bunk that may require a ladder 63. “How ___ you?” 541.398.0597 Hwy 82, Lostine Stephen Kliewer, Minister Wallowa Assembly of God 702 West Hwy 82 Wallowa, Oregon 541-886-8445 Sunday School • 9:am Worship Service • 10:am Pastor Tim Barton Visit Us on Seventh-Day Adventist Church & School 305 Wagner (near the Cemetery) P.O. Box N. Enterprise, OR 97828 541-426-3751 Church 541-426-8339 School Worship Services Sabbath School 9:30 - 10:45 a.m. Worship Hour 11:00 a.m. - Noon Summit Church