A2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 14, 2021 The Bulletin How to reach us CIRCULATION Didn’t receive your paper? Start or stop subscription? 541-385-5800 PHONE HOURS 6 a.m.-noon Tuesday-Friday 7 a.m.-noon Saturday-Sunday and holidays GENERAL INFORMATION LOCAL, STATE & REGION DESCHUTES COUNTY COVID-19 data for Saturday, March 13: Deschutes County cases: 6,111 (15 new cases) Deschutes County deaths: 68 (zero new deaths) Crook County cases: 786 (zero new cases) Crook County deaths: 18 (zero new deaths) Jefferson County cases: 1,990 (zero new cases) Jefferson County deaths: 30 (zero new deaths) Oregon cases: 159,392 (365 new cases) Oregon deaths: 2,322 (3 new deaths) BULLETIN GRAPHIC 129 new cases What is COVID-19? It’s an infection caused by a new coronavirus. Coronavi- ruses are a group of viruses that can cause a range of symptoms. Some usually cause mild illness. Some, like this one, can cause more severe symptoms and can be fatal. Symptoms include fever, coughing and shortness of breath. 130 (Dec. 4) 108 new cases 120 (Jan. 1) 90 new cases 110 *No data available on Jan. 31 due to state computer maintenence (Nov. 27) 7 ways to help limit its spread: 1. Wash hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. 2. Avoid touching your face. 3. Avoid close contact with sick people. 4. Stay home. 5. In public, stay 6 feet from others and wear a cloth face covering or mask. 6. Cover a cough or sneeze with a tissue or cough into your elbow. 7. Clean and disinfect frequently touched objects and surfaces. 100 90 80 50 new cases 70 60 (Feb. 17) 47 new cases 50 (Nov. 14) 541-382-1811 7-day average 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 28 new cases (July 16) ONLINE 40 31 new cases (Oct. 31) 30 16 new cases (Sept. 19) 9 new cases www.bendbulletin.com SOURCES: OREGON HEALTH AUTHORITY, DESCHUTES COUNTY HEALTH SERVICES New COVID-19 cases per day 20 (May 20) 1st case 10 (March 11) EMAIL bulletin@bendbulletin.com March 2020 April May June July August September October November December January 2021 February March AFTER HOURS Newsroom ................................541-383-0348 Circulation ................................541-385-5800 Is there an afterlife? 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Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Phone ......................................... 541-617-7829 A strange soul-weighing experiment in Oregon 20 years ago produced an unusual result BY DOUGLAS PERRY The Oregonian Humans are endlessly fas- cinated by death. Everyone wants to know what, if any- thing, awaits on the other side. The latest probing of this subject comes from psychi- atrist Bruce Greyson, whose just-published book is called, simply, “After.” The volume’s arrival is as good a reason as any to look back at one of the more un- usual experiments ever con- ducted in Oregon. Here’s the study’s abstract in its entirety: “Twelve animals (one ram, seven ewes, three lambs and one goat) were studied. At the moment of death an un- explained weight gain tran- sient of 18 to 780 grams for 1 to 6 seconds was observed with seven adult sheep but not with the lambs or goat. The transients occurred in a quiet time at the moment of death when all breathing and movement had ceased. These transient gains are anomalous in that there is no compensat- ing weight loss as required by Newton’s Third Law. There was no permanent weight change at death. Dynamic weight mea- surements may present a fruit- ful area of investigation.” The 2001 study, by Lewis E. Hollander, Jr., is titled “Un- explained Weight Gain Tran- sients at the Moment of Death.” It attempted to build upon the work of the late Massachusetts physician Duncan Macdougall. The goal of Macdougall’s original work 100 years earlier: to prove that the soul existed. Macdougall’s ambitious ob- jective turned on the common- place belief that there is a soul and that it leaves the body at the time of death. He figured that, while the soul surely is a will-o’-the-wisp, in the modern Courtesy of Serkan Ates/Oregon State University Sheep graze in Oregon. age it must be detectable. That is, he decided to weigh it. The doctor, working at the beginning of the 20th century, put a dying tuberculosis pa- tient on a commercial scale and closely monitored the man’s last breaths, figuring a sudden loss of weight at the moment of death would be the result of the soul lifting into the ether. Macdougall’s “Patient 1,” resting on an E. & T. Fairbanks scale, reached his end in April 1901. When the man died, sure enough, the scale report- edly quivered, dropping three- fourths of an ounce. “Which is, yes, twenty-one grams,” wrote Mary Roach in her 2005 bestseller “Spook: Science Tackles the Afterlife.” “Hollywood metricized their reference to the event for the simple reason that ’21 Grams’ sounds better. Who’s going to go see a movie called ‘Point Seven Five Ounces’?” (“‘21 Grams’ is a ruminative, stunned look at life after death — that is, the existence of the living after they have been dev- astated by loss; it’s the after- CORRECTIONS The Bulletin’s primary concern is that all stories are accurate. 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They may not be reproduced without explicit prior approval. ý Lottery results can now be found on the second page of Sports. math,” The New York Times wrote when the Sean Penn movie was released in 2003.) Hollywood’s decades-later reinterpretation notwithstand- ing, Macdougall deemed the experiment a success. He’d documented the soul leaving the body. Not surprisingly, the physi- cian received copious criticism of his experiment, but he held firm, beating back arguments that the 21 grams surely were the result of what’s called in- sensible fluid loss. He went on to redo the experiment on a handful of other humans, and later on dogs. Macdougall’s dubious work captured the imagination of various scientists and wan- nabe scientists over the years. A few of them took up his soul-weighing experiment, us- ing ever more sophisticated equipment. One of them, in 2000, was Lewis Hollander, a retired physicist living in Southern Oregon. Back to Roach: “(Hollander) rigged a sev- en-by-three-foot platform to a Toledo model 8132 electronic digital indicator, a quartet of load cells and a computer. His subjects were eight sheep, three lambs and a goat, all of which were sedated and then eutha- nized, and all of which, he as- sures us, were headed in that direction anyway. The animals were wrapped in plastic to, as he put it, contain any voiding. This was important because (a) voided material might drip off the weighing surface, creating a spurious weight loss, and (b) you try getting sheep urine out of your load cells.” But the result of this experi- ment proved truly unexpected. The sheep — though not the lambs or the goat — gained weight at death for a few sec- onds. One gained as much as 780 grams. Hollander called this baffling gain an “anoma- lous transient.” He published his results in 2001 in the Journal of Scientific Exploration, a journal that fo- cuses on work that is “ignored or studied inadequately within mainstream science.” Hollander’s experiment sounds about as fringe as fringe science gets, but Jap- anese engineering professor Masayoshi Ishida took the research seriously enough to test it via computer model and then produce his own study, “A New Experimental Ap- proach to Weight Change Ex- periments at the Moment of Death with a Review of Lewis E. Hollander’s Experiments on Sheep.” It was published, also in the Journal of Scientific Explora- tion, in 2009. Ishida wrote that the “tran- sient gain of weight” for one or more of the sheep was likely a glitch of some sort. “It is doubtful whether the weighing system (primarily the four load cells) functioned normally,” he wrote. He added that the study’s overall result, however, “re- mains to be explained.” What did Hollander himself think of his experiment? When asked about the sheep’s weight gain at death, he said: “I haven’t the faintest idea.” But he does believe it has something to do with the great beyond. “I think that at the moment of death that little window opens up,” he said. “I think that maybe we’re all connected to something bigger than we are.” “Creativity comes from a confl ict of ideas.” - Donatella Versace LARISSA SPAFFORD Northwest wildlife agencies warn of invasive zebra mussels Associated Press PORTLAND — Wildlife agencies in Oregon, Washing- ton and Idaho are urging pet stores to stop selling a popular aquarium product after discov- ering invasive zebra mussels inside them. The mollusks breed quickly and can wreak havoc on nat- ural waterways. Unexpected sightings in Northwest pet stores have wildlife officials sounding the alarm. “It would be devastating to our environment if these ever got established in Oregon or the Pacific Northwest,” said Rick Boatner, the invasive spe- cies wildlife integrity supervi- sor at the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. A PetCo employee in Seattle found zebra mussels in “Betta Buddy Marimo Ball” moss ball products in February. “I work in the aquatics de- partment, and almost every shipment of these moss balls that I have unpacked for the The Oregonian Invasive zebra mussels can clog water intake and delivery pipes, dam intake gates and pipes, and adhere to boats and other surfaces. past two months has had mus- sels nestled in the moss balls,” reads a specimen filing with the U.S. Geological Survey. Zebra mussels are small but destructive. They eat algae that native species need to survive. The USGS says they can also in- capacitate native mussels. They clog storm drains, drinking wa- ter systems, irrigation and dams. Zebra and quagga mussel infes- tations in the Great Lakes region have cost hundreds of millions of dollars annually. 103 NW Oregon Ave. • Downtown Bend 541-306-3176 • redchairgallerybend.com NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS Northwest Association of Independent Schools Accredited and Candidate member schools and Subscriber and Affiliate schools admit students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. They do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of their educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other school-administered programs. 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