The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, January 22, 2021, Page 13, Image 13

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    The BulleTin • Friday, January 22, 2021 B5
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021
TODAY
SATURDAY
TONIGHT
HIGH
33°
LOW
18°
A morning fl urry; periods of
sun, colder
Mostly sunny
ALMANAC
MONDAY
TUESDAY
39°
20°
37°
17°
Cloudy with a bit of snow
Chilly with a little snow at
times
44°
23°
Partly cloudy and colder
TEMPERATURE
Yesterday Normal
Record
46°
42° 62° in 1968
36°
25° -19° in 1930
PRECIPITATION
24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday
Trace
Record
0.95" in 1943
Month to date (normal)
0.21" (1.12")
Year to date (normal)
0.21" (1.12")
Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.
29.94"
SUN, MOON AND PLANETS
Rise/Set
Today
Sat.
Sun
7:32am/5:02pm 7:31am/5:03pm
Moon
12:19pm/2:08am 12:48pm/3:10am
Mercury 8:27am/6:37pm 8:24am/6:39pm
Venus
6:44am/3:42pm 6:45am/3:44pm
Mars
11:13am/1:21am 11:10am/1:20am
Jupiter
7:51am/5:24pm 7:47am/5:21pm
Saturn
7:39am/5:05pm 7:36am/5:02pm
Uranus 11:20am/1:14am 11:16am/1:10am
Full
Last
New
First
Jan 28
Feb 4
Feb 11
Feb 19
Tonight's sky: After sunset, Mercury is at
greatest elongation east (15 degrees).
Source: Jim Todd, OMSI
UV INDEX TODAY
10 a.m.
Noon
2 p.m.
4 p.m.
1
1
1
0
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number,
the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low,
3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme.
ROAD CONDITONS
For web cameras of our passes, go to
www.bendbulletin.com/webcams
I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Mostly cloudy and chilly
today with a few snow showers.
US 20 at Santiam Pass: A few morning fl ur-
ries, otherwise mostly cloudy today.
US 26 at Gov't Camp: A few morning fl urries,
then some afternoon clouds today.
US 26 at Ochoco Divide: Morning fl urries,
then partly cloudy in the afternoon.
ORE 58 at Willamette Pass: Snow showers
into the evening will accumulate an inch or
two. Clearing later tonight.
ORE 138 at Diamond Lake: Snow showers
today will accumulate a coating to an inch.
SKI REPORT
37°
21°
Intervals of clouds and
sunshine
EAST: Rather cloudy
and chilly with a few
scattered snow show-
ers Friday. Clearing
later Friday night.
Astoria
47/31
Hood
River
NATIONAL WEATHER
-0s
0s
10s
20s
30s
40s
50s
60s
Base
0-40
46-46
20-37
63-69
76-119
17-36
0-86
30-75
22-34
25-38
34-57
24-26
41-48
70s
80s
90s
100s
110s
NATIONAL
EXTREMES
YESTERDAY (for the
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Warm Front
Stationary Front
Cold Front
Source: OnTheSnow.com
Pac-12
Continued from B3
My biggest takeaway is that
this group of presidents and
chancellors is far more evolved
than the campus leaders from
last time this kind of hire was
made. They’re engaged and far
more tuned in to the oppor-
tunities in athletics than their
predecessors.
They don’t view sports as
some kind of campus toy fac-
tory, for example. And I’m left
with one important thought
— the current Pac-12 CEO
Group sounds like it knows
what it’s doing.
Oregon president Michael
Schill is the chair of that group.
He’s joined on the Pac-12 exec-
utive committee by UW’s Cauce
and Washington State president
Kirk Schulz. Smart, tuned in,
and a big-time Pacific North-
west feel. Also, they’re all new-
comers who inherited Scott.
When I asked them about
the distraction that Scott’s $5.3
million-a-year salary caused,
Schulz said, “We are well aware
of the PR surrounding Larry’s
compensation. My goal going
into this is that it should not
be the No. 1 thing people are
talking about when it comes to
the Pac-12.
“I want to make sure we tone
that down a little bit.”
When I asked about the
downtown San Francisco
headquarters bleeding the Pac-
12 out at a rate of $7 million a
year, Cauce noted, “We’re not
tying anyone’s hands so we’re
not wedding to, ‘it has to be
here’ or ‘it has to be there.’”
Schulz added: “We would
expect the person to come in
and weigh in early and make
some recommendations
around the network, confer-
ence location and staffing lev-
els.”
Basically, a total reboot.
It’s worth pointing out,
as the trio did on Thursday
morning, that most of the
conference’s presidents and
chancellors weren’t on the job
when Scott was hired a decade
ago. Only ASU and UCLA
are old-guard holdovers. The
rest of the Pac-12 inherited
the bozo and had to live with
Scott’s tired act just like the rest
of us. It’s why I was confident
all along that it would make a
change.
Schill told me the confer-
ence hasn’t yet crafted the job
description for the new com-
missioner. He wants to con-
sult with the 11 other Pac-12
leaders and figure out what it
should entail. He’ll also leave it
to the search firm to help with
that. But Schulz hit it square
between the eyes when he of-
fered, “You’ve got 12 schools,
they’re like 12 children. You
have to love ’em all different.
I want the commissioner to
show up at Pullman (and other
schools) and say, ‘What can I
do to help you succeed?’”
Same for Washington, Ore-
gon, USC and the others. The
next commissioner has to un-
derstand the challenges on the
individual campuses. Has to be
a good listener from the start.
That person’s tenure should
start with a two-day meeting
with coaches, athletic direc-
Yesterday
City
Hi/Lo/Prec.
Abilene
61/46/0.01
Akron
42/19/0.00
Albany
30/14/0.02
Albuquerque
54/29/Tr
Anchorage
32/25/0.00
Atlanta
53/42/0.10
Atlantic City
48/21/0.00
Austin
67/50/0.09
Baltimore
53/20/0.00
Billings
32/25/Tr
Birmingham
55/45/0.17
Bismarck
30/28/0.02
Boise
42/29/0.01
Boston
32/21/Tr
Bridgeport, CT 40/20/0.00
Buffalo
36/22/Tr
Burlington, VT
27/3/0.04
Caribou, ME
11/-7/0.01
Charleston, SC 62/43/Tr
Charlotte
57/36/Tr
Chattanooga
50/41/0.34
Cheyenne
47/33/0.00
Chicago
39/30/0.00
Cincinnati
51/27/0.00
Cleveland
42/25/0.00
Colorado Springs 52/23/0.00
Columbia, MO
55/31/0.00
Columbia, SC
56/42/0.01
Columbus, GA
78/46/0.05
Columbus, OH
48/27/0.00
Concord, NH
25/15/0.01
Corpus Christi
66/55/0.04
Dallas
55/44/0.05
Dayton
48/26/0.00
Denver
49/32/0.00
Des Moines
43/28/0.00
Detroit
43/24/0.00
Duluth
30/27/Tr
El Paso
54/41/0.04
Fairbanks
11/-3/0.00
Fargo
22/15/Tr
Flagstaff
45/22/0.00
Grand Rapids
40/22/0.00
Green Bay
38/24/0.00
Greensboro
54/29/0.01
Harrisburg
50/19/0.00
Hartford, CT
35/17/Tr
Helena
33/28/0.00
Honolulu
80/72/0.11
Houston
67/60/0.07
Huntsville
48/41/0.41
Indianapolis
49/28/0.00
Jackson, MS
64/52/0.22
Jacksonville
74/47/Tr
Today
Hi/Lo/W
54/45/pc
30/17/sf
37/17/sf
50/34/pc
35/26/c
58/35/r
49/27/s
76/54/pc
48/27/s
32/18/pc
56/34/c
28/13/pc
40/26/pc
43/26/pc
44/26/s
31/19/sn
33/14/sf
24/16/sn
57/41/sh
61/32/pc
56/33/c
37/22/c
21/8/s
34/18/pc
31/19/sf
46/23/s
35/20/s
59/34/c
57/40/r
32/19/pc
39/19/sf
78/60/pc
57/48/c
30/16/pc
46/25/pc
21/10/c
27/15/sf
10/5/s
60/40/pc
19/6/pc
19/8/pc
40/28/sn
23/15/sf
17/6/s
58/27/pc
42/27/pc
42/22/s
32/14/pc
81/72/pc
74/60/c
54/29/c
28/14/s
58/42/r
66/53/r
Amsterdam
Athens
Auckland
Baghdad
Bangkok
Beijing
Beirut
Berlin
Bogota
Budapest
Buenos Aires
Cabo San Lucas
Cairo
Calgary
Cancun
Dublin
Edinburgh
Geneva
Harare
Hong Kong
Istanbul
Jerusalem
Johannesburg
Lima
Lisbon
London
Madrid
Manila
44/35/pc
61/54/c
70/61/pc
59/36/s
91/69/pc
46/21/s
62/51/s
49/35/r
68/47/pc
53/45/sh
84/75/s
79/60/pc
66/46/s
29/12/s
84/69/s
40/29/pc
38/27/pc
47/35/r
82/58/c
72/63/pc
54/48/pc
54/38/s
86/58/s
78/69/pc
58/51/c
44/33/pc
50/38/sh
85/76/t
Saturday
Hi/Lo/W
64/56/c
26/18/pc
21/10/pc
52/34/pc
32/25/sn
58/40/s
36/22/s
68/62/sh
36/23/s
31/18/pc
58/44/s
31/7/c
40/22/s
30/19/s
33/21/s
23/17/sf
16/7/pc
23/11/c
57/35/s
52/27/s
52/35/s
34/15/sf
28/25/s
33/24/s
24/19/pc
50/22/c
40/33/pc
55/29/s
62/44/s
30/22/s
24/12/s
72/66/sh
59/56/sh
30/22/s
46/21/c
27/23/pc
28/21/s
19/13/sn
61/40/pc
16/0/c
24/3/sn
34/20/sn
28/22/s
22/19/s
47/24/s
34/23/s
28/15/s
30/15/pc
81/72/pc
69/62/c
54/39/s
32/25/s
60/51/s
64/51/pc
City
Juneau
Kansas City
Lansing
Las Vegas
Lexington
Lincoln
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Madison, WI
Memphis
Miami
Milwaukee
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Newark, NJ
Norfolk, VA
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Orlando
Palm Springs
Peoria
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Providence
Raleigh
Rapid City
Reno
Richmond
Rochester, NY
Sacramento
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Antonio
San Diego
San Francisco
San Jose
Santa Fe
Savannah
Seattle
Sioux Falls
Spokane
Springfi eld, MO
Tampa
Tucson
Tulsa
Washington, DC
Wichita
Yakima
Yuma
Yesterday
Hi/Lo/Prec.
36/32/0.03
60/24/0.00
40/22/0.00
64/45/0.00
45/28/0.02
51/18/0.00
53/42/0.08
71/53/0.00
52/35/Tr
39/29/0.00
53/42/0.38
77/57/0.00
41/31/0.00
34/29/0.00
49/40/0.24
76/57/Tr
43/25/0.00
43/22/0.00
57/30/0.00
51/37/0.00
47/24/0.00
77/48/0.00
77/58/Tr
48/30/0.00
44/24/0.00
73/58/Tr
44/18/0.00
28/13/0.00
38/19/Tr
54/31/0.01
38/18/0.00
51/20/0.00
58/25/0.00
37/22/Tr
63/32/0.00
54/34/0.00
43/21/0.00
63/52/0.06
69/55/0.01
58/42/0.00
65/38/0.00
50/23/0.00
68/45/Tr
46/41/0.08
37/28/Tr
35/27/0.00
50/32/0.00
71/50/0.00
67/53/0.07
52/40/0.00
55/27/0.00
58/26/0.00
39/31/0.14
69/52/0.37
Today
Hi/Lo/W
34/29/pc
35/21/pc
23/13/sf
64/43/pc
39/17/pc
30/20/c
54/30/pc
62/50/c
41/21/pc
16/0/s
50/30/pc
79/61/s
19/9/s
14/3/s
49/26/pc
68/56/r
45/26/s
44/26/s
57/34/pc
51/36/pc
28/19/c
75/60/pc
67/47/pc
22/8/pc
45/26/s
68/54/pc
31/18/sf
37/22/pc
44/24/s
60/30/pc
31/20/sf
46/31/c
55/27/pc
31/18/sn
53/41/sh
35/19/s
47/32/c
78/53/pc
64/53/c
55/45/sh
55/42/sh
48/30/pc
59/45/r
46/30/s
26/16/c
34/18/s
43/24/s
71/62/s
67/47/pc
51/33/pc
50/29/s
45/27/s
43/22/s
66/48/pc
Saturday
Hi/Lo/W
36/31/sn
41/35/c
26/19/s
53/37/c
36/25/s
32/26/c
47/39/s
60/45/sh
39/29/s
21/18/s
52/43/s
79/67/s
27/24/s
20/13/sn
49/35/s
62/57/sh
31/22/s
33/22/s
43/28/s
49/47/c
31/25/sf
69/61/c
58/43/sh
29/26/s
35/23/s
60/49/c
25/17/pc
29/14/s
31/18/s
48/24/s
31/15/c
42/18/pc
43/21/s
21/15/sf
57/34/s
38/33/s
39/24/sn
67/62/sh
59/47/sh
56/45/s
58/39/s
46/28/pc
60/41/s
43/38/pc
27/16/sn
30/21/s
41/35/pc
72/61/c
63/45/c
48/44/c
38/26/s
46/42/c
39/24/s
62/43/c
84/60/0.00
78/43/0.00
25/3/0.15
14/5/0.28
81/60/0.00
75/64/0.00
68/47/0.00
57/30/0.29
37/32/0.47
25/1/0.19
50/42/0.45
84/75/0.00
59/48/0.00
82/59/0.00
83/67/0.11
39/23/0.02
45/30/0.34
67/52/0.00
86/75/0.02
39/32/0.27
80/59/0.00
76/63/0.00
60/39/0.00
50/36/0.00
37/23/0.02
45/36/0.02
40/28/0.00
42/28/0.00
90/70/s
76/51/s
29/10/pc
35/32/c
76/61/t
77/65/s
69/50/pc
52/47/r
36/30/sn
24/4/c
47/37/r
86/73/pc
60/51/t
88/59/s
84/67/t
35/24/pc
50/36/c
53/45/r
84/76/t
41/35/sh
88/76/s
81/65/r
67/41/s
55/47/pc
29/15/sf
41/28/s
50/42/sh
41/34/pc
89/72/s
77/51/pc
14/5/pc
38/33/c
75/59/c
77/67/s
69/50/pc
52/46/r
34/25/c
11/0/s
41/32/r
85/73/s
57/49/sh
88/60/s
83/66/t
28/11/c
49/31/c
50/39/r
84/76/t
38/31/c
89/77/s
73/60/pc
68/49/s
50/41/r
23/13/pc
40/33/pc
47/32/sh
42/32/c
INTERNATIONAL
48 contiguous states)
National high: 80°
at Fort Pierce, FL
National low: -15°
at Presque Isle, ME
Precipitation: 0.71"
at Natchez, MS
T-storms
Mostly cloudy with rain and
snow possible
NATIONAL
Yesterday
Today Saturday
Yesterday
Today Saturday
Yesterday
Today Saturday
City
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
City
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
City
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Astoria
49/42/0.01 47/31/pc 45/39/pc
La Grande
37/32/Tr
37/24/c 37/18/s
Portland
47/41/0.13 50/30/pc 45/37/pc
Baker City
36/31/0.05 37/22/pc 37/16/s
La Pine
45/30/0.00 33/16/sn 41/21/s
Prineville
41/34/0.03 35/19/sf 41/23/s
Brookings
53/42/0.00 51/40/c 52/39/pc
Medford
50/33/0.00 45/36/pc 45/32/s
Redmond
45/34/0.01 35/20/c 43/21/s
Roseburg
54/38/0.00 48/35/c 46/35/pc
Burns
40/27/Tr
37/21/c 39/12/s
Newport
50/41/Tr
48/34/pc 47/39/pc
Eugene
47/38/0.01 48/31/c 46/36/pc
North Bend
56/41/0.00 50/36/c 50/39/pc
Salem
47/40/0.02 48/28/pc 46/36/pc
Klamath Falls
46/22/0.00 39/24/pc 42/21/s
Ontario
37/33/0.02 41/29/pc 43/22/s
Sisters
45/31/0.00 34/19/sf 45/23/s
Lakeview
46/20/0.00 40/22/c 40/12/s
Pendleton
35/32/0.24 35/26/c 40/25/pc
The Dalles
40/37/0.07 44/27/s 44/33/s
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday
-10s
A snow shower in the
morning, then rain
40°
19°
TRAVEL WEATHER
Umatilla
39/21
Rufus
Hermiston
46/28
39/21
45/25
Arlington
Hillsboro Portland
Meacham Lostine
41/24
49/26 50/30
32/19
Wasco
37/25 Enterprise
Pendleton
The Dalles
CENTRAL: Mostly
Tillamook
37/24
44/24
35/26
Sandy
44/27
McMinnville
50/29
cloudy and chilly
Joseph
Heppner
La
Grande
46/32
Maupin
Government
49/30
Friday into Friday eve-
37/24
36/22
Camp
40/21 Condon 33/23
Union
ning with a few snow Lincoln City
34/21
40/26
38/24
Salem
49/34
Spray
showers. Clearing
Granite
Warm Springs
48/28
Madras
39/21
Albany
35/18
later Friday night.
Newport
Baker City
38/23
35/20
Mitchell
48/34
47/31
37/22
WEST: Morning clouds
Camp Sherman
34/19
Redmond
Corvallis
John
Yachats
Unity
giving way to after-
34/19
35/20
47/29
Day
Prineville
37/20
noon sunshine Friday. 48/35
Ontario
Sisters
35/19
Paulina
38/20
41/29
Mostly clear and chilly Florence
Eugene 34/19
Bend Brothers 36/17
Vale
at night with areas of 50/36
48/31
33/18
32/18
Sunriver
41/27
fog forming.
Nyssa
33/18
Hampton
Cottage
La Pine
42/27
Juntura
Oakridge
Grove
33/16
35/19
OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay
Burns
39/22
46/32
47/34
Fort
Rock
50/37
37/21
Riley
YESTERDAY
Crescent
36/18
37/20
High: 56°
34/17
Bandon
Roseburg
Christmas Valley
Jordan Valley
at North Bend
Beaver
Frenchglen
Silver
50/37
48/35
36/19
41/22
Low: 15°
Marsh
Lake
40/22
Port Orford
36/18
36/18
at Crescent
Grants
Burns Junction
Paisley
51/40
Pass
42/22
Chiloquin
39/21
49/38
Rome
Medford
38/24
Gold Beach
45/36
44/24
53/42
Klamath
Fields
Ashland
McDermitt
Lakeview
Falls
Brookings
42/25
45/35
39/24
44/24
51/40
40/22
Seaside
48/30
Cannon Beach
48/31
THURSDAY
41°
17°
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday
Ski resort
New snow
Anthony Lakes Mtn
0
Hoodoo Ski Area
0
Mt. Ashland
0
Mt. Bachelor
0
Mt. Hood Meadows
0
Mt. Hood Ski Bowl
0
Timberline Lodge
0
Willamette Pass
0
Aspen / Snowmass, CO
0
Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA
0
Squaw Valley, CA
0
Park City Mountain, UT
0
Sun Valley, ID
0
WEDNESDAY
OREGON WEATHER
Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest.
High
Low
SUNDAY
46/43/0.50
59/39/0.00
65/55/0.10
54/34/0.00
88/66/0.00
45/25/0.00
58/38/0.00
53/42/0.00
68/39/0.00
55/37/0.00
86/73/0.00
77/62/0.27
64/48/0.00
28/16/0.00
81/68/0.00
43/34/0.00
39/32/0.11
54/39/0.22
80/61/0.57
77/64/0.00
50/42/0.00
50/34/0.00
82/59/0.00
77/65/0.00
59/55/1.17
46/39/0.02
52/36/0.08
88/75/0.02
41/35/sh
61/53/sh
73/64/pc
59/34/s
92/72/pc
45/22/s
64/52/pc
37/31/r
67/47/c
54/40/sh
88/76/s
76/56/pc
68/48/s
23/9/pc
84/71/sh
39/28/pc
37/29/pc
40/31/r
78/60/c
71/62/s
56/49/pc
56/39/s
88/59/s
79/69/pc
60/52/r
40/28/pc
50/42/sh
84/76/t
Mecca
Mexico City
Montreal
Moscow
Nairobi
Nassau
New Delhi
Osaka
Oslo
Ottawa
Paris
Rio de Janeiro
Rome
Santiago
Sao Paulo
Sapporo
Seoul
Shanghai
Singapore
Stockholm
Sydney
Taipei City
Tel Aviv
Tokyo
Toronto
Vancouver
Vienna
Warsaw
“We are well aware of the PR surrounding (former Pac-
12 commissioner Larry Scott’s) compensation. My goal
going into this is that it should not be the No. 1 thing
people are talking about when it comes to the Pac-12.
I want to make sure we tone that down a little bit.”
— Kirk Schulz, Washington State president
Serena Morones/For The Oregonian/TNS file
Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott is leaving the conference.
tors and athletes on each of the
campuses.
Don’t fly private charter and
stay at some five-star hotel, ei-
ther. Maybe rent a motor home
and park it in the lot outside
the football stadium. Or crash
at the Hampton Inn and eat
takeout.
A short list of candidates
that I’d like to talk with? Con-
doleezza Rice, for one. Also,
West Coast Conference com-
missioner Gloria Nevarez and
Alabama AD Greg Byrne, who
worked at multiple campuses
in the conference. Maybe Oli-
ver Luck and Rob Mullens, too.
I think there is a line of good,
hard-working souls who would
love to go down as the person
who saved the Pac-12.
The headquarters need to
IN THE BALANCE OF COMPETING HARMS - WE SHALL PREVAIL
541-788-5858
905 SW Rimrock Way Suite 100A
Nolan Town Square • Redmond, OR
ladiesofl eadusa@gmail.com
Sharon Preston
move to a more affordable
footprint. Phoenix, Seattle, the
Bay Area suburbs? All on the
table.
Also, the future of the net-
work is in serious doubt. I’d
vote to sell it to a partner such
as FS1 or ESPN and let them
funnel resources into the thing.
But as the presidents said on
Thursday, those things will be
recommendations from the
new hire.
A hire this group must now
get dead, solid, perfect.
I was struck by something
else as I spoke to the trio of
Pac-12 leaders on Thursday.
They were engaged and in-
telligent. They also sounded
like a lot of passionate confer-
ence fans. They talked about
the Pac-12 as if they love and
adore it. A couple of them
confessed that they even se-
cretly root for their rivals
when it comes to competing
on the national stage.
Cauce said, “As much as I
hate to say it, when the Cougs
or the Ducks win outside the
conference, it’s good for us.”
Schill shot back: “I won’t say
it because you’re in the press,
but she’s been very supportive
of us in certain situations. I’ll
leave it at that.”
The trio spoke with hope
and clarity on Thursday. It
was a breath of fresh air. Scott
is technically still on the job
through June, but gone was the
dismissive arrogance of his ten-
ure. It’s been replaced by hope.
It feels like things are better
already.
Celebrate the end of 2020
Give The Gift of
kindregards.com
Start the New Year off on a high note!