A10 The BulleTin • Monday, april 19, 2021 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY TUESDAY TONIGHT HIGH 62° LOW 36° Partly sunny and cooler but pleasant Partly cloudy 62° 31° 67° 39° Partly sunny and pleasant Mostly sunny and beautiful ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 77° 57° 82° in 1934 39° 30° 9° in 1972 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.27" in 2000 Month to date (normal) 0.00" (0.45") Year to date (normal) 1.18" (3.80") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.15" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Tue. Sun 6:15am/7:54pm 6:13am/7:55pm Moon 11:13am/2:28am 12:17pm/3:11am Mercury 6:20am/7:56pm 6:20am/8:04pm Venus 6:35am/8:24pm 6:34am/8:27pm Mars 9:13am/12:55am 9:12am/12:53am Jupiter 3:59am/2:20pm 3:56am/2:17pm Saturn 3:22am/1:07pm 3:18am/1:03pm Uranus 6:43am/8:45pm 6:39am/8:41pm First Full Last New Apr 19 Apr 26 May 3 May 11 Tonight's sky: First quarter moon (11:59 p.m.). Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 7 7 4 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. POLLEN COUNT Grasses Low Trees High Weeds Absent Source: Oregon Allergy Associates THURSDAY FRIDAY 67° 30° SATURDAY 69° 41° Sunny to partly cloudy and mild EAST: Mostly sunny and remaining warm on Monday. Clear to partly cloudy Monday night. Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday 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 59/42/0.00 61/44/pc 61/43/pc La Grande 75/36/0.00 59/30/s 62/31/s Portland 83/47/0.00 73/48/pc 75/46/pc Baker City 75/24/0.00 60/26/s 62/27/s La Pine 74/23/0.00 62/33/c 60/30/pc Prineville 75/27/0.00 66/33/s 60/28/s Brookings 53/41/Tr 57/47/pc 60/47/pc Medford 85/43/0.00 79/48/pc 75/44/pc Redmond 80/30/0.00 64/32/pc 66/28/s Burns 76/24/0.00 66/30/s 63/27/s Newport 48/41/0.00 54/43/pc 57/42/pc Roseburg 85/46/0.00 74/46/pc 73/41/pc Salem 85/45/0.00 73/44/pc 74/41/pc Eugene 82/43/0.00 72/45/pc 72/41/pc North Bend 53/43/0.00 55/46/pc 56/43/pc Sisters 75/26/0.00 63/33/c 64/31/pc Klamath Falls 76/25/0.00 69/40/pc 65/32/pc Ontario 79/32/0.00 70/36/s 67/35/s The Dalles 86/40/0.00 71/37/s 74/40/s Lakeview 73/19/0.00 67/34/pc 62/27/pc Pendleton 81/41/0.00 62/33/s 66/33/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 NATIONAL WEATHER -10s WATER REPORT As of 7 a.m. yesterday Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie 47204 85% Wickiup 110677 55% Crescent Lake 22130 25% Ochoco Reservoir 11584 26% Prineville 91207 61% River fl ow Station Cu.ft./sec. Deschutes R. below Crane Prairie 80 Deschutes R. below Wickiup 792 Deschutes R. below Bend 64 Deschutes R. at Benham Falls 1080 Little Deschutes near La Pine 80 Crescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 14 Crooked R. above Prineville Res. 247 Crooked R. below Prineville Res. 250 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 57 Ochoco Ck. below Ochoco Res. 3 NATIONAL Hood River 541-683-1577 -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Base 80-108 0-205 0-172 48-68 36-66 T-storms Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 67/39/0.00 Akron 58/35/0.04 Albany 60/35/0.02 Albuquerque 55/37/Tr Anchorage 48/37/0.00 Atlanta 73/52/0.00 Atlantic City 61/46/0.00 Austin 66/48/Tr Baltimore 68/40/0.00 Billings 61/39/Tr Birmingham 69/45/0.00 Bismarck 51/38/0.00 Boise 75/40/0.00 Boston 63/44/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 60/45/0.00 Buffalo 55/41/0.00 Burlington, VT 57/36/Tr Caribou, ME 50/35/Tr Charleston, SC 80/61/0.00 Charlotte 74/50/0.00 Chattanooga 71/46/0.00 Cheyenne 53/30/0.00 Chicago 62/39/0.00 Cincinnati 64/36/0.00 Cleveland 59/34/0.02 Colorado Springs 57/25/0.00 Columbia, MO 61/45/0.00 Columbia, SC 77/55/0.00 Columbus, GA 76/56/0.00 Columbus, OH 64/40/Tr Concord, NH 59/31/0.00 Corpus Christi 64/53/0.01 Dallas 70/45/0.00 Dayton 63/39/0.00 Denver 58/30/0.00 Des Moines 63/45/0.00 Detroit 62/42/0.00 Duluth 58/31/0.15 El Paso 63/44/Tr Fairbanks 63/25/0.00 Fargo 53/33/0.01 Flagstaff 53/34/0.00 Grand Rapids 61/31/0.00 Green Bay 61/34/0.00 Greensboro 70/49/0.00 Harrisburg 64/44/0.01 Hartford, CT 66/42/0.01 Helena 62/32/0.00 Honolulu 84/68/0.02 Houston 68/51/Tr Huntsville 67/43/0.00 Indianapolis 63/36/0.00 Jackson, MS 72/47/0.00 Jacksonville 73/65/0.97 Today Hi/Lo/W 71/47/c 64/42/pc 61/43/pc 68/40/pc 52/33/pc 72/52/s 59/48/pc 74/48/pc 68/48/pc 36/25/sf 73/49/s 42/22/c 65/37/s 62/48/pc 60/45/pc 60/38/pc 63/45/c 63/37/pc 80/56/c 71/47/pc 72/47/pc 26/11/sn 50/36/sh 67/44/pc 65/39/s 53/16/r 67/36/s 77/49/pc 75/52/s 66/43/pc 66/36/c 72/57/c 74/51/pc 67/42/pc 44/17/sn 41/31/sh 63/35/pc 38/25/c 72/52/pc 52/30/s 39/22/c 64/29/s 49/31/c 45/27/c 65/45/sh 71/44/pc 66/42/pc 40/25/sf 85/71/s 74/52/pc 70/46/pc 66/40/pc 72/48/s 78/55/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 58/41/pc 69/53/sh 66/57/c 101/72/pc 93/79/t 83/56/pc 88/71/pc 62/43/c 69/48/pc 52/40/sh 75/65/s 78/62/s 103/67/pc 40/24/pc 88/79/t 54/43/c 60/40/c 57/37/pc 76/54/pc 76/72/c 62/51/sh 90/68/pc 76/50/c 72/65/s 69/55/pc 62/42/pc 67/45/c 93/81/c Tuesday Hi/Lo/W 57/34/s 57/33/c 62/39/pc 68/40/s 44/34/pc 75/53/pc 65/53/s 81/42/pc 73/54/s 40/23/sf 76/45/pc 41/18/sf 63/39/s 68/49/pc 65/49/s 46/32/c 58/38/r 60/33/r 75/58/pc 75/53/c 76/45/pc 35/11/s 38/30/sn 63/32/c 47/34/c 36/23/c 40/30/sn 78/55/c 77/53/pc 60/33/c 68/39/pc 81/55/pc 64/39/s 58/29/c 40/23/pc 43/28/sn 43/29/c 39/23/c 80/49/s 44/24/s 40/22/pc 65/35/s 39/25/c 43/24/c 73/52/c 70/52/pc 71/45/pc 46/23/s 84/71/pc 81/47/s 74/40/pc 54/26/sh 76/43/pc 74/60/c 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. 65/38/0.00 62/41/Tr 60/34/0.00 78/58/0.00 63/34/Tr 64/43/0.00 65/47/0.00 89/55/0.00 67/41/Tr 61/35/0.00 64/48/0.02 89/73/0.00 60/35/0.00 64/38/0.03 66/42/0.00 71/61/0.02 64/49/0.00 63/47/0.00 68/54/0.00 63/38/0.00 64/41/0.00 85/69/Tr 90/63/0.00 65/42/0.00 65/49/0.00 83/62/0.00 59/31/Tr 53/36/0.00 63/42/0.00 71/48/Tr 65/30/0.00 73/35/0.00 69/45/Tr 58/39/Tr 91/51/0.00 67/46/0.06 64/37/0.00 72/51/0.00 82/59/0.00 76/48/0.00 83/48/0.00 55/34/Tr 80/62/Tr 79/50/0.00 68/36/0.00 75/44/0.00 58/42/0.04 84/76/0.00 80/53/0.01 66/47/0.00 68/47/0.00 63/37/0.00 85/35/0.00 87/66/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 55/40/s 58/32/pc 55/31/pc 87/63/s 64/42/pc 40/27/c 72/46/pc 89/60/s 69/47/pc 46/30/pc 70/49/pc 89/75/t 48/34/pc 42/28/c 70/45/pc 72/59/pc 65/48/pc 66/48/pc 65/49/sh 74/37/s 41/30/c 77/67/r 97/66/s 56/34/sh 67/49/pc 88/62/s 64/44/pc 59/39/pc 65/45/pc 67/44/sh 36/19/sn 76/45/s 65/44/sh 62/39/pc 87/50/pc 70/41/pc 62/35/pc 75/52/pc 78/58/s 64/52/pc 73/50/s 66/30/pc 79/55/pc 72/48/pc 43/22/c 57/34/s 68/38/pc 77/69/t 83/56/s 75/40/s 68/51/pc 69/32/s 66/36/s 92/59/s Tuesday Hi/Lo/W 49/38/pc 42/29/sn 41/24/c 87/62/s 66/32/pc 46/25/c 69/34/pc 77/59/s 69/34/pc 41/26/sn 71/37/pc 89/76/c 40/31/sn 44/29/pc 74/37/pc 76/57/pc 73/52/s 72/53/s 73/58/pc 49/30/c 43/26/c 77/68/t 95/59/s 40/30/sn 73/54/pc 93/63/s 63/36/pc 64/41/pc 68/48/s 75/53/c 36/19/sf 65/41/pc 76/54/pc 48/32/c 80/50/pc 43/33/sn 57/40/s 84/46/s 68/58/s 63/51/c 68/50/pc 63/32/s 76/57/pc 72/48/s 45/25/c 62/36/s 43/25/sh 76/71/t 89/57/s 49/32/c 73/56/s 46/29/sn 70/39/s 94/55/s 100/74/0.00 86/57/0.00 55/41/0.00 57/41/0.00 78/61/0.26 88/73/0.00 95/70/0.00 60/46/0.04 63/30/0.00 61/39/0.02 57/37/0.00 82/73/0.00 61/43/0.36 75/49/0.00 73/63/0.38 49/46/0.61 59/39/0.00 68/45/0.00 90/75/0.06 57/30/0.00 70/54/0.00 75/64/0.00 93/64/0.00 70/59/0.00 57/37/0.00 64/45/0.00 48/41/0.10 57/39/0.15 99/75/s 85/54/pc 61/43/pc 53/42/c 77/59/t 86/73/pc 99/74/pc 66/49/s 62/37/pc 62/40/pc 61/45/pc 80/73/t 60/41/sh 74/47/s 70/62/sh 55/39/r 65/44/s 71/55/s 88/76/t 59/33/s 73/53/s 79/69/pc 95/69/pc 66/55/s 60/36/pc 62/46/s 50/43/sh 60/41/c 101/80/s 80/54/s 52/35/pc 52/39/c 79/61/t 86/73/pc 97/74/pc 72/50/s 60/40/s 49/29/c 63/44/pc 79/72/pc 62/43/pc 68/48/pc 70/61/pc 57/45/s 70/47/pc 72/60/pc 90/78/t 57/33/s 75/57/c 81/69/s 78/60/pc 70/57/s 47/31/pc 61/46/s 58/41/sh 58/42/c INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 94° at Death Valley, CA National low: 1° at Leadville, CO Precipitation: 0.98" at Gainesville, FL SKI REPORT Ski resort New snow Mt. Bachelor 0 Mt. Hood Meadows 0 Timberline Lodge 0 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 Chance for a couple of showers TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 68/32 Rufus Hermiston 68/36 68/31 69/39 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 68/36 73/44 73/48 58/28 Wasco 57/28 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles CENTRAL: Sunshine Tillamook 55/25 65/36 62/33 Sandy 71/37 McMinnville 63/41 mixing with some Joseph Heppner La Grande 72/45 Maupin Government 74/47 afternoon clouds 59/30 54/27 Camp 64/35 Condon 58/32 Union Monday. Partly cloudy Lincoln City 58/32 58/38 60/30 Salem 56/45 Spray Monday night. Granite Warm Springs 73/44 Madras 65/32 Albany 54/26 Newport Baker City 64/35 65/32 Mitchell 54/43 70/44 60/26 WEST: Partly to mostly Camp Sherman 61/31 Redmond Corvallis John Unity cloudy Monday. Mostly Yachats 63/34 64/32 67/44 Day Prineville 62/27 cloudy Monday night; 54/44 Ontario Sisters 66/33 Paulina 62/32 70/36 a shower in spots Florence Eugene 63/33 Bend Brothers 62/30 Vale across the south. 56/46 72/45 62/36 60/31 Sunriver 69/34 Nyssa 60/34 Hampton Cottage La Pine 69/34 Juntura Oakridge Grove 62/33 62/32 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 69/31 72/45 74/43 Fort Rock 56/44 66/30 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 65/34 64/29 High: 86° 63/32 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at Hermiston Beaver Frenchglen Silver 55/45 74/46 65/34 59/31 Low: 19° Marsh Lake 65/32 Port Orford 66/35 66/33 at Lakeview Grants Burns Junction Paisley 58/48 Pass 68/34 Chiloquin 68/33 81/47 Rome Medford 69/35 Gold Beach 79/48 69/33 55/49 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 67/33 76/47 69/40 63/32 57/47 67/34 Seaside 61/44 Cannon Beach 59/45 59° 31° Cloudy, a couple of showers possible; mild Partly sunny and warm Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Astoria 61/44 SUNDAY 65° 36° OREGON WEATHER Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low WEDNESDAY 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 57/36/0.00 67/54/0.00 63/52/0.10 96/70/0.00 93/79/0.24 77/41/0.00 90/65/0.00 53/43/0.19 66/50/0.06 49/36/0.29 70/68/0.00 86/61/0.00 106/72/0.00 32/32/0.23 90/79/0.10 52/45/0.14 55/36/0.02 54/37/0.00 72/50/0.00 78/73/0.24 61/50/0.00 89/65/0.00 70/47/0.00 72/64/0.00 72/52/0.00 59/36/0.00 66/36/0.00 91/81/0.00 61/43/pc 68/52/pc 67/61/sh 106/76/pc 94/80/t 80/53/pc 77/61/pc 61/42/sh 69/50/t 57/40/sh 75/66/s 80/61/s 88/60/pc 50/30/s 88/78/t 51/39/r 54/34/sh 62/42/s 74/53/c 79/72/pc 59/49/pc 79/53/pc 70/50/s 72/65/c 68/56/pc 62/46/pc 66/48/pc 92/82/c 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 Find it all online bendbulletin.com Doctors Continued from A1 It started with athletics Both men contributed to a collaborative study that started within OSU athletics and then grew to include other Pac-12 schools and other Division I conferences. The purpose of the study was to come up with policies for how to regularly test athletes for COVID-19 and how best to prevent those with the disease from infecting their teammates. Before fall football began, for instance, there were still a lot of questions remaining about how to reopen college athletics safely, especially for high-contact sports. Each conference had its own level of testing and its own policies in place. Some parts of the country started the season on time, while Pac-12 schools played a shortened season. “The Pac-12 ... was delaying the start of football because that group didn’t think testing was where it needed to be,” said Brady. “There were still a lot of unanswered questions.” To adequately trace expo- sure of COVID-19 and deter- mine how long exposed athletes needed to quarantine, daily test- ing first had to become a reality. Once it did, each Pac-12 school started comparing data. Before long, it became a collaborative effort across all of college sports. Student athletes, who were being so carefully monitored, proved the perfect sample size for disease experts like Brady to study. “You need data to make de- cisions,” said Brady. “But when you have this captive popula- tion that’s tested so frequently and watched over so closely ... it’s a unique opportunity to re- ally study that group.” The numbers add up The more they looked at the data, the more they started to realize that positive tests after 10 days were extremely rare. Once they compared their findings with other schools, the data started looking more and more definitive. “We noticed that, if people were going to test positive, it was going to be in that first week,” said Aukerman. “That’s not just here at Oregon State COLLABORATIVE FOR THE ARTS A Central Oregon Creative Artists Relief Eff ort PRESENTED BY THE BULLETIN AND SCALEHOUSE Ted S. Warren/AP file Officials wear masks as they talk during an NCAA college football game between Oregon State and Washington in Seattle in November. Before fall football began, there were a lot of questions about how to reopen college athletics safely, especially for high-contact sports. “(The CDC was) interested not on the impact on athletes but on the implications that could apply to the health of the rest of the country.” — Doug Aukerman, a senior associate athletic director for sports medicine at OSU but across the country. Once you have all these universities and institutions putting their numbers together, those num- bers add up pretty quickly.” The CDC, which had been working with numerous orga- nizations around the country to evaluate quarantine recom- mendations, caught wind of this study among college ath- letics and saw the data as cru- cial for review. “We initiated conversa- tions with the CDC ... to see if they were willing to evaluate that data as another pathway,” Aukerman said. “They were interested not on the impact on athletes but on the implications that could apply to the health of the rest of the country.” The CDC clearly agreed with the findings because it shortened the recommended quarantine length for the entire public shortly after. College data, community impact That reduction of four days may not seem like a lot to some, but for everyday Amer- icans who have to miss work, every day counts. “Anything that can reduce the time of quarantine and not have people out of work is re- ally beneficial ... I’m sure in a lot of places but certainly in hos- pitals,” Brady said, noting that adequately staffing a hospital is crucial during a pandemic. The Oregon physicians say this also demonstrates a rare instance where college athletic departments got to influence the health policies that affect the larger public. “There’s not a lot of times where we can take the data and information we’re taking in college athletics and apply it to a positive impact for the overall community,” said Aukerman. “It certainly does make an im- pact on the working individu- als across our country.” It’s also proof of how much collaboration has been neces- sary — from developing the vaccines quickly to formulating federal guidelines — in order to respond to the pandemic. “People forget that there were no experts on COVID,” Brady said. “There were ex- perts on infectious diseases and how pandemics spread, but most of what we know about this coronavirus came from people taking the extra effort to use all those extra data for the good of the scientific community.” It’s also proof that, with that level of collaboration and im- pact happening across the medical community, even cit- ies as small as Corvallis can wind up having an impact. “For a city the size of Corval- lis to have this level of input ... I think it’s really unique,” Brady said. SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL ART I S TS Central Oregon’s Creative Artists Relief Effort (CO CAREs) The Bulletin and Scalehouse, a collaborative for the arts, have joined together to raise donations to help Central Oregon’s creative artists — musicians, visual artists, performers and creative workers — by offering grants and a platform to bring attention to local amazing talent. This is a crowdfunding effort with a fi rst-round fundraising goal of $40,000. To make a tax-deductible donation or apply for a grant, go to bendbulletin.com/talent. DONATE Support the artists in this community by donating to CO CAREs. All proceeds from this covid-19 relief effort will go towards central Oregon artists. SIGN UP Artists can sign up for fi nancial relief. VISIT Visit www.bendbulletin.com/talent/ for more information! S P O N S O RS / PA RT N E RS COLLABORATIVE FOR THE ARTS THE HOUSE CONCERT Amy Tykeson | Dr. John Teller