Oregon chiropractic board

Planting trees, milling logs, and everything in between.

2010.10.29 19:19 tjw Planting trees, milling logs, and everything in between.

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2019.10.05 19:26 dr_wdc Westfly

Discussion of Fly Fishing in Oregon and Beyond. This subreddit is a re-birth of the now-defunct Westfly.com bulletin board.
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2016.04.08 22:10 DonQuixote75 Functional Neurology Subreddit

Functional Neurology
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2024.05.19 08:48 EJC28 Raiders 2024 Draft Analysis Compilation

Round 1, Pick 13 - Brock Bowers, TE, Georgia:
NFL: This is the Raiders willing to adjust the offense to take the best player available. Bowers is a spectacular player who can line up anywhere along the formation as a tight end. There aren’t many holes in his game -- which should urge new OC Luke Getsy to get creative and get Bowers and Michael Mayer on the field together.
CBS Sports: C. He’s a heck of a player, but didn’t they draft Michael Mayer last year and signed Harrison Bryant this year? They have other needs. Don’t really like this pick that much. It’s not like he’s a good blocker for their run game. Strange pick with other needs.
ESPN: What a strange first-round selection, especially considering tight end was addressed last season with the second-round selection of Michael Mayer. Offensive tackle and cornerback were bigger needs. New general manager Tom Telesco must have simply relied on his draft board and gone best player available, especially with Oregon State RT Taliese Fuaga and every single CB still available. In fact, every defensive player was still on the board, and yet ... Bowers was considered a top-10 overall talent and should provide immediate production for an anemic offense.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Cries during Bluey but only at the opening credits.
Round 2, Pick 44 - Jackson Powers-Johnson, OG, Oregon:
NFL: Brock Bowers felt like a throwback Raiders pick to me, but JPJ really feels like an Al Davis classic. Powers-Johnson is a big, brawling interior lineman who played center last year but also can line up at guard -- the position he was announced at -- and bury the man opposite him, even if he's a little stiff and an average athlete.
CBS Sports: A. Instant starter inside. Guard size with mobile center feet. Shorter arms and some rawness in pass pro. But upside is through the roof. All-Pro caliber in that regard. Smart pick here.
ESPN: While Powers-Johnson played center at Oregon, the Raiders announced him as a guard, which makes sense since Las Vegas needs a right guard. Yes, even after the Raiders signed veteran Cody Whitehair in free agency. Powers-Johnson has started games at both guard spots and center in his college career. Last season, he started 13 games at center, was an All-America selection and won the Rimington Award as the nation's top center. He provides quality versatility, which is highly valued on the Raiders' offensive line.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: He somehow still uses a functioning Windows phone.
Round 3, Pick 77 - DJ Glaze, OT, Maryland:
NFL: A left or right tackle with great length and so-so athleticism, Glaze was considered a question mark because of some past injuries (including an ACL), but the Raiders clearly feel good about him here. He's likely a swing tackle to start out but could compete for a starting job down the line.
CBS Sports: A-. One of the more calculated OTs in the class. Rarely panics and has plus awareness. Requisite size and length to stay on the edge in the NFL. Athleticism is at times great but not a true speciality. Nothing overly standout about his game. Just high floor blocker.
ESPN: After taking a versatile interior offensive lineman in the second round in Powers-Johnson, the Raiders used their third-round pick to grab a college tackle who could also transition inside to guard in Glaze. The selection shows how much the new regime of GM Tom Telesco and coach Antonio Pierce value versatility on the offensive line, which is all but set on the left side and at center. Glaze has a long wingspan at nearly seven feet but is not known for being overly physical.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Prefers the arrows on the keyboard over WASD.
Round 4, Pick 112 - Decamerion Richardson, CB, Mississippi State:
NFL: I joked on Day 2 that the Raiders are having another Al Davis-flecked draft, and Richardson keeps the theme rolling. He's a straight-line speed demon with great length, two very encouraging traits. But his penchant for handsy coverage and no real track record for playmaking mutes his appeal just a bit.
CBS Sports: A-. Long, sleek burner who will make plays on the football when he trusts his eyes. Lacks physicality at times and that hurts him when attempting to stop the run although when he gets to the football, he’s a very sure tackler. Smooth athlete in off-man and zone. This secondary needed this type of CB specimen.
ESPN: The Raiders finally address their defense at defensive back in particular, with Richardson who is 6-foot-2 and ran the 40 in 4.34 seconds. He needs development but did lead Mississippi State with 7 pass breakups last season, even as he never had an interception. He's also not afraid to stick his nose in the scrum as he had a combined 164 tackles the last two seasons.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Thinks scotch tape smells like Christmas.
Round 5, Pick 148 - Tommy Eichenberg, LB, Ohio State:
NFL: Instinctive, throwback linebacker who lacks great speed. Eichenberg has the makeup to turn into a defensive tone-setter, even if his coverage ability is limited.
CBS Sports: A-. Ultra-active middle linebacker with a blitzing specialty. Smooth athlete a bit quicker than fast. Awareness is good in coverage, he will find crossers and understand in-breakers are working behind him. Strong tackler. Lack of speed and at times problems vs. blocks are weaknesses but this is a sound football player.
ESPN: Coach Pierce, who spent nine years as an NFL linebacker, gets his guy in the 6-foot-2, 233-pound Eichenberg, who provides depth while translating into a backup for Robert Spillane. Eichenberg did miss three games with an arm injury last season, a year after he was second-team All-American. More a thumper inside than a pass-coverage specialist, Eichenberg had 82 tackles (2.5 for a loss), a sack and a forced fumble in 10 games last season.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Played the role of background tree in his middle school play.
Round 6, Pick 208 - Dylan Laube, RB, New Hampshire:
NFL: Laube become something of a folk hero at the Senior Bowl, charming fans with his personality, elusiveness and pass-catching prowess. He had 295 yards receiving against Central Michigan alone this year and legitimately could emerge as a third-down weapon in the pass game.
CBS Sports: A-. Insane receiving RB. Built low to the ground and had fine testing figures before the draft. Low, side to side wiggle but lacks speed once he finds space. Contact balance is good too. Think the small-school Blake Corum.
ESPN: An FCS All-American all-purpose player, Laube projects more as a potential kick and punt returner in the NFL rather than a rotational running back. He averaged 31.1 yards on kick returns and 11.3 yards on punt returns and had a touchdown on each. He rushed for 749 yards and nine TDs, averaging 4.7 yards per carry last season, and also had 68 catches for 699 yards with seven receiving scores, including a 295-receiving yards game against Central Michigan.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Once wrote 250+ fake true facts for nfl draft cards like a moron.
Round 7, Pick 223 - Trey Taylor, S, Air Force:
NFL: Air Force has landed a few players in the draft the past few years after a long absence, and Taylor could make it either as a box safety or a special teams contributor.
CBS Sports: A. Thick, productive three-level safety best being closer to the line. Plays with controlled athleticism. Gets grabby against better athletes but that’s expected for a larger safety. Solid ball skills. Not ultra twitchy. Smart well-rounded type.
ESPN: The first-ever defensive back drafted out of the Air Force Academy, Taylor won the Jim Thorpe Award as the nation's top defensive back. He figures to provide immediate depth behind starters Marcus Epps and Tre’von Moehrig, but at 6-feet, 213 pounds, he has the size and instincts to be an immediate contributor. Taylor, whose cousin is Hall of Fame safety Ed Reed, had three interceptions, one pick-six, 74 tackles, five for a loss, four PBUs and a blocked kick last fall.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Yes, you reading this COULD have come up with better Facts.
Round 7, Pick 229 - MJ Devonshire, CB, Pittsburgh:
NFL: Devonshire is a fast, tough competitor with size limitations. He was never a full-time starter in college but had strong ball production the past two years.
CBS Sports: B+. Long CB who has the frame of a nickel. Fast, decently explosive athlete. Best in press man near the line. Average to slightly above-average ball skills. Zone awareness not there yet. High floor type.
ESPN: The Raiders concluded their draft by taking their second cornerback of the day in Devonshire, who is more a physical defender who does not shy away from bump-and-run coverage than a speedy DB, though he did run a 4.45 40. The 5-foot-11, 186-pound Devonshire led Pitt with four interceptions last season, including a pick-six, and had 10 PBUs in 12 games with nine starts. Las Vegas split their eight draft picks evenly between offense (TE, G, OT, RB) and defense (two CBs, S, LB).
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Likes bologna on white bread with mustard - it’s a flat hotdog!
submitted by EJC28 to raiders [link] [comments]


2024.05.19 02:00 william_grant School List Help

My current school list is rather long, are there any schools I should take out? Any I'm missing? Thanks so much for your help!
GPA 3.99 MCAT 522
My research interests are in the field of neurosciences with a computational focus (imaging, neurdegenerative diseases, Parkinson's/movement disorders, etc)
Research: 1825hrs, 2 independent projects, 4 asbtracts + 2 (decisions come out later this month). No pubs yet but working on a couple (overall my lab in general is not super productive w/ pubs)
My research is more clinical focused in the field of neurology. I have computational/machine learning research interests as well.
I have also accepted an NIH IRTA position for my gap year, which will give me ~2000hrs. Research is basic science neuroscience/machine learning focused
Clinical: 320hrs volunteering, 80hrs shadowing
Non clinical: 80hrs tutoring underserved kids on zoom over covid
Employment: 700hrs working with the lab animal resources department
Leadership: board officepresident of professional development/career exploration oriented club under my major's department
School List:
UC Davis UMiami Cincy U Colorado Yale Emory Columbia UCSD UPenn Vandy UCLA Northwestern Sinai UMich Cornell WashU CWRU UC Irvine UCSF Stanford UPitt Baylor Indiana JHU MCW NYU Oregon Penn State Stony Brook UTSA UAB U Florida UMass Minnesota UTSW U Wisconsin Duke MUSC UNC
submitted by william_grant to mdphd [link] [comments]


2024.05.18 21:37 KillaPicnic Hmmmm… way to start off with false advertising. Zach Mulholland

Hmmmm… way to start off with false advertising. Zach Mulholland
Can anyone else spot the discrepancy. It doesn’t matter what party you support. Folks should lead with honesty.
submitted by KillaPicnic to Eugene [link] [comments]


2024.05.18 01:11 FollowThePostcard 35 [M4F] PNW (Bend) Searching for a partner who feels at home in the mountains.

About me (Photo Here):
The summer is here, and I'm so excited to spend time mountain biking, open-water swimming, and hiking throughout Oregon, Washington, Squamish, and Whistler.
I'm pretty fit, tall, 6'5; there's activity on my Strava almost every day, but I don't have a gym body. When not spending in the wild, I tend to toe the line between a homebody introvert and an event-going extrovert. I don't drink or smoke weed, so the bar scene isn't my jam, but you can catch me at a screening, reading at a cafe, enjoying the local arts scene, playing board games with my group of friends or at Friday Night Magic.
Also! Over the last few years, I've done a lot of work in therapy and focusing on myself, and I continually seek to grow and improve as a person. As a result, I feel at peace with myself and am excited to share it with you.
Last, my politics are left, and I'm actively engaged; I show up to protests and volunteer for voter outreach. Most importantly I believe that building a bigger table for the working class is the only way forward as a just society.
I'm a techy, at a startup with a team I really enjoy working alongside. I don't have any kids and can't have any of my own, but I'm not opposed to them if you have them.
About you:
I'm flexible about many things, but I'm searching for a partner who is single and monogamous, considerate, kind, and loving. Preferably 28-38.
I'm a big believer in partnerships, where both partners are seen and heard and make space for each other needs and wants. I also hope nonviolent communication is a big part of how you talk to others and yourself.
Also, I'd like a partner with the same-ish level of outdoor engagement and fitness level as me. Most people like being outdoors, hiking, camping, etc., and are interested in things like trail running, biking, and backpacking, but... I do them. A lot. I want to meet someone with the same natural inclinations as me to get out for that hike, ride your bike, swim across the lake, and plan trips into new locations in the wild.
In closing, Bend, Oregon, feels like my place - I have a community of fellow remote workers who are important to me, and I don't think I want build another community from scratch.
I'm happy to make more friends, though, so feel free to reach out!
No matter who you are or what you do, I hope you find your person.
If I sound like a match for you, message me, and let's chat.
submitted by FollowThePostcard to R4R30Plus [link] [comments]


2024.05.18 01:08 FollowThePostcard 35 [M4F] PNW (Bend) Searching for a partner who feels at home in the mountains.

About me (Photo Here):
The summer is here, and I'm so excited to spend time mountain biking, open-water swimming, and hiking throughout Oregon, Washington, Squamish, and Whistler.
I'm pretty fit, tall, 6'5; there's activity on my Strava almost every day, but I don't have a gym body. When not spending in the wild, I tend to toe the line between a homebody introvert and an event-going extrovert. I don't drink or smoke weed, so the bar scene isn't my jam, but you can catch me at a screening, reading at a cafe, enjoying the local arts scene, playing board games with my group of friends or at Friday Night Magic.
Also! Over the last few years, I've done a lot of work in therapy and focusing on myself, and I continually seek to grow and improve as a person. As a result, I feel at peace with myself and am excited to share it with you.
Last, my politics are left, and I'm actively engaged; I show up to protests and volunteer for voter outreach. Most importantly I believe that building a bigger table for the working class is the only way forward as a just society.
I'm a techy, at a startup with a team I really enjoy working alongside. I don't have any kids and can't have any of my own, but I'm not opposed to them if you have them.
About you:
I'm flexible about many things, but I'm searching for a partner who is single and monogamous, considerate, kind, and loving. Preferably 28-38.
I'm a big believer in partnerships, where both partners are seen and heard and make space for each other needs and wants. I also hope nonviolent communication is a big part of how you talk to others and yourself.
Also, I'd like a partner with the same-ish level of outdoor engagement and fitness level as me. Most people like being outdoors, hiking, camping, etc., and are interested in things like trail running, biking, and backpacking, but... I do them. A lot. I want to meet someone with the same natural inclinations as me to get out for that hike, ride your bike, swim across the lake, and plan trips into new locations in the wild.
In closing, Bend, Oregon, feels like my place - I have a community of fellow remote workers who are important to me, and I don't think I want build another community from scratch.
I'm happy to make more friends, though, so feel free to reach out!
No matter who you are or what you do, I hope you find your person.
If I sound like a match for you, message me, and let's chat.
submitted by FollowThePostcard to r4r [link] [comments]


2024.05.17 20:29 WayyTooFarAbove Wrote this after our 2019 draft feat. Drew Lock

Wrote this after our 2019 draft feat. Drew Lock
Found this in some of my old files. Let me add that Drew did win me over as a fan, he did have potential with us. Granted, it’s really easy for me to like Broncos players.
Anybody else kept thoughts on any of our drafts?
submitted by WayyTooFarAbove to DenverBroncos [link] [comments]


2024.05.17 19:57 EJC28 Broncos 2024 Draft Analysis Compilation

Round 1, Pick 12 - Bo Nix, QB, Oregon:
NFL: Nix is an experienced playmaker with the arm talent and athleticism to execute Sean Payton’s offense in Denver. He fits the Drew Brees-like prototype, getting the ball to his playmakers and accurately delivering passes at the short and intermediate levels.
CBS Sports: C-. I don’t love Nix, but I get the pick. Desperation forces teams to pick quarterbacks earlier than they should. Sean Payton obviously sees Drew Brees in him, but this is way early. Why not trade down and get him later?
ESPN: The Broncos thought enough of Nix to make him the sixth quarterback off the board among the draft's first 12 picks. The draft many consider to be the gold standard for quarterbacks -- 1983, that included John Elway -- had six quarterbacks selected in the first round overall, but just two of those in the first 10 picks. Nix's efficiency -- he completed at least 71% of his passes in all 14 games this past season and was at 74.9% completion rate for the season overall -- makes him an easy fit in Sean Payton's offense, as do his mobility and experience (61 games in five college seasons). The Broncos need far more of the QB Nix was at Oregon rather than Auburn given he threw 29 and 45 touchdowns, respectively, in his two seasons in Eugene. He did not have more than 16 touchdown passes in any of his three seasons at Auburn.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: ‘Https://youtube.com/watch?v=GTg7y0VRYNI’.
Round 3, Pick 76 - Jonah Elliss, DE, Utah:
NFL: The son of massive former Lions DL Luther Elliss, Jonah is -- by contrast -- an undersized rusher. He broke out last season with quickness off the ball, decent length and consistently good effort. I thought he was more of a Day 3 player than Day 2, but he could surprise me.
CBS Sports: A-. Twitched-up polished rusher. Production didn’t necessarily match his impressive traits. Serious bend around the corner too. Rushes get high and has long invisible stretches but the highlights are awesome. Needed addition in Denver.
ESPN: In a division that includes Patrick Mahomes and Justin Herbert at quarterback, the Broncos needed more pop on the defensive edge. They haven't had an edge rusher finish with at least 10 sacks since Von Miller had 14.5 in 2018. Elliss did not work out at the combine or pro day because of a shoulder injury he suffered late in the 2023 season, but he's a high-effort player who should contribute immediately. His father, Luther, played his final NFL season with the Broncos in 2004 and his brother, Kaden, played in New Orleans during Payton's time as head coach. Jonah Elliss flourished in the Utes' defense this past season with 16 tackles for loss and 12 sacks.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Will flip over any game of Monopoly he sees out of principle.
Round 4, Pick 102 - Troy Franklin, WR, Oregon:
NFL: It was a bit surprising that Franklin went outside the top 100 given his game-changing speed, yet his game is a little one-dimensional right now. He'll have a chance to regain his mojo in Denver, reuniting with his former college QB, Bo Nix.
CBS Sports: A+. Lean effortless speedster with impressive flexibility to get in and out of his breaks. Complete wideout after the catch and tracking it but not a contested-catch type and because of his ultra-skinny frame, is bothered by physicality. Cheap trade up cost too. Excellent.
ESPN: Franklin is a quality value pick in this spot, and the Broncos wanted him enough to move up from No. 121 to snag him with the second pick made on Day 3. Franklin's speed (4.41 in the 40-yard dash at the scouting combine) is needed in the offense. New quarterback Nix has a comfort level with him -- Franklin was one of the receivers for Nix in his private workout for the Broncos. Franklin set a school record this past season in receiving yards (1,383), receiving touchdowns (14) and 100-yard receiving games (eight). He figures to be in the rotation early if he can show his expected impact down the field.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: He said-a hip, hop, the hippie, the hippie To the hip hip hop-a.
Round 5, Pick 145 - Kris Abrams-Draine, CB, Missouri:
NFL: I had KAD going earlier than this, even if his lack of bulk and length limits his ability to handle bigger receivers. This is tremendous value for Denver, as Abrams-Draine could win the nickel job early on with his playmaking knack. Chris Harris 2.0?
CBS Sports: A+. Ultra-pesky inside-outside CB who rocked in the SEC for multiple years. Not incredibly fast nor length with size. Awesome tackling reliability. Routinely finds and makes plays on the football underneath and at intermediate level. Has plus long speed. Spectacular value here.
ESPN: The Broncos signed Levi Wallace in free agency earlier this month -- Wallace has started 70 games in his career -- but they still have an opening in the starting lineup opposite Pat Surtain II. Abrams-Draine started his career at Missouri as a wide receiver, and you can see that in his play as a defender when he tracks the ball and in contested-catch situations. He has 4.44 speed and had 40 passes defensed in his career with the Tigers. He'll be in the mix with Wallace, Damarri Mathis and Riley Moss to be the pick at an outside corner spot. At 5-foot-11 3/8 inches and 179 pounds, Mathis will have to show he can battle more physical NFL receivers. He also adds some potential value in the return game -- he returned kickoffs in three of his seasons at Missouri.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Actually tried to learn to read windings as a kid.
Round 5, Pick 147 - Audric Estimé, RB, Notre Dame:
NFL: Sean Payton had a few bigger backs, such as Tim Hightower and Chris Ivory, in his time in New Orleans, and Estimé fits that mold. For now, he's a two-down hammer who can tenderize defenses, but don't overlook his starting potential eventually, despite lacking good speed.
CBS Sports: A-. Audric Estime, RB, Notre Dame. Built like a Greek god. Ultra-wide frame and plays exactly how you’d expect. Defenders routinely fall off him. Very slow. Will not run away from many at the next level. Has surprising quicks for his size, can work through smaller tracks between the tackles.
ESPN: Estime is the kind of raw power presence the Broncos haven't had in the run game in some time. Javonte Williams, at his best, forces piles of broken tackles, but Estime, at 5-11 3/8 and 221 pounds, runs with a slightly different kind of profile. He averaged 6.4 yards per carry last season for the Irish and has shown himself to be adept in blitz pickup with the potential to be a productive part of a passing game. Williams never looked quite himself last season, his first full season back from an ACL tear, and the Broncos were one of the worst teams in the league with just eight rushing touchdowns for the season. Payton has promised a better, more efficient running game and has repeatedly said a young quarterback's best friend is a defense and a good running game. Estime will have the opportunity to carve out some playing time as quickly as he shows a comfort level in the offense.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Has his college ID number as his gamertag.
Round 7, Pick 235 - Devaughn Vele, WR, Utah:
NFL: The 26-year-old Vele spent two years on an LDS mission, making him one of the older prospects in this class. But he's 6-foot-4 with long arms and sub-4.5 speed and jumping ability, making him a developmental jump-ball target.
CBS Sports: B. Tall long-striding vertical field-stretcher. Lacks burst off the ball. Can box out near the sideline and in traffic but not dominant in that area. YAC is good, not great. Intriguing type.
ESPN: Vele is a big receiver -- 6-4, 203 pounds at the scouting combine -- and is one of the oldest players in the draft. He will turn 27 on Dec. 12. He played 38 of his 47 career games for the Utes over the past three seasons. He is the second wide receiver in this seven-player draft class, and he faces a scrap to find his way into the rotation, especially if Tim Patrick shows he has regained his form after back-to-back seasons impacted by injuries. Vele ran 4.47 in the 40 at the combine and has punt return skills as well, so athletically he has a chance to carve out a role in what might be, because of his age, a tight career window.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Roger here, just hoping everyone has enjoyed the draft this year.
Round 7, Pick 256 - Nick Gargiulo, C, South Carolina:
NFL: A Yale transfer, Gargiulo has experience at center, guard and tackle, but he's best at home inside. He's smart, competitive and long.
CBS Sports: B-. Big, long, technically sound interior blocker who won’t move people routinely but doesn’t get tossed around inside. Made transfer from Yale to South Carolina with relative ease. Nothing spectacular about his game but minimal liabilities either.
ESPN: He was at Yale for five seasons, including a COVID-19 year where they didn't play, before one year at South Carolina. He has versatility given he played at left tackle, center and left guard in his career. He moves well and showed this past season he could hold up against the defensive linemen in the SEC. With Lloyd Cushenberry's departure in free agency, the Broncos have a crowd of young players ready to compete for the job that could include Alex Forsyth and Luke Wattenberg -- Broncos picks in the previous two drafts -- as well as fifth-year veteran Sam Mustipher and now Gargiulo.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: At least he won’t always get compared to Brock Purdy.
submitted by EJC28 to DenverBroncos [link] [comments]


2024.05.17 07:57 RVAIsTheGreatest Thumbs Up, Thumbs Down, or Thumbs Across on N'Faly Dante

C N'Faly Dante from Oregon declared for the draft but is waiting on a waiver to see if he can be approved for a 6th season in college: https://twitter.com/MattPrehm/status/1790792301511589996 Originally from Mali, Dante was a five star recruit out of Kansas in 2019, having moved to the States to further his basketball development. He has suffered through a litany of injuries throughout his career, starting in HS as a sophomore where he tore an ACL. He suffered through tendonitis of his knees as a freshman and was cleared late with eligibility issues, tore his left ACL in 2020, suffered an ankle injury that ended his season in 2023, and had knee surgery after one game this past season, which kept him out 14 games.
Through all of his injuries, he has been able to return to the floor each time and has turned himself into an NBA prospect. The athleticism he continues to possess even after the injuries he's suffered is impressive. He measured in at 6'10 w/out shoes at the combine with a 7'6 wingspan and 9'3 standing reach. 260 points. He's a 6'11 in shoes absolute unit of a physical specimen. Strong, wide, has huge hands, and is very quick in the open floor for a big man. He's gets off the ground quickly and powerfully and is a decent leaper that can elevate from a standstill and gather and power up quickly. He's not the smoothest guy laterally, but is certainly not slow footed by any means and is really mobile for his size.
Dante does all the things you want from a traditional big well. He is one of the very best finishers this class has. Over 80% at the rim. Generates a ton of contact. Elite offensive rebounder. His ability to power up from a standstill, his frame/strength, and his wingspan and large hands gives him a very large catch and finish radius and make it extremely hard to effectively contest his shots, he's an above the rim finisher in the halfcourt. He does a fantastic job making himself available for dump off passes and working his way into position for the catch down low. He catches most balls clean but not every one, but when he doesn't he has the ability to regather himself and finish with ease. He has effective ball fakes that get defenders off their feet.
He is an elite transition threat. He's one of the most dynamic guys at his size you'll see running down the floor. He's an elite transition finisher. He beats guys down the floor and catches lobs or seals defenders and finishes at the rim. He does a great job with seals in the paint. He was one of the most efficient post scorers in college basketball this year. His post game is fairly simple but it's economical, he has nice touch in the post, and the position he gains and the space he clears with his drop step usually gives him a shot right in front of the rim. He has decent footwork in the post...he has a step through move he likes to use in the post. He has a fake spin/hook in his arsenal. He prefers the right hand but will go left. He has the ability to catch balls under the rim and work his way above it. His large catch radius, how light he is on his feet, and his strength, make it easy for him to carve out space down low. That's what really gives him an advantage from the jump as a post scorer. He's pretty decisive in the post...he gets into his moves quickly, which both forces contact and makes him hard to contest.
He is a top class screen setter. He's a wall as a screen setter. He really walls off defenders and clears them out of the way, without being called for fouls, whether that be out of the DHO, off ball, or PnR. He creates a lot of open shots with his screens. He's also great at sealing defenders for drivers for easy baskets. His screen setting contributes to how good of a PnR roller he is. He's also a fantastic slip guy. He's so mobile for his size. His ability to get off the ground quickly and his leaping ability along with his hands and catch radius makes him a major lob threat. He really peels off screens in a dynamic way and with fantastic timing. It's very hard to stop him once he gets going downhill. In a traditional PnR set, it only takes him 1-2 dribbles for him to get to the basket.
He gobbles up rebounds on both ends. He's super strong with the ball as a rebounder. He's a force as a rebounder. He attacks balls in the air, and he is fantastic with positioning. He has natural rebounding instincts, knowing where the ball is going to be off the rim and placing himself in position to grab it. He does a good job keeping the ball high when he grabs an offensive board which makes him an elite put back guy. He can grab rebounds outside of his immediate area with his length and athleticism. He can reach back and grab balls in the air. He will rip balls out of opponents' hands. He often beats opponents for position for offensive rebounds. Once he has you on his back, you're in trouble.
Dante can make a midrange jumper on occasion. He shot 61% from the line. Similar ~60% the last three seasons. He'll never be a shooter, and his shot is a bit flat, but the mechanics are not bad from the midrange. Being able to make a midrange jumper will give him a little more dimension offensively and it wouldn't hurt to provide a little spacing.
His touch and skill on shots outside of the rim is not as good as it is around it. His post range isn't that large. He gets more inaccurate the further out from the post he gets, but he generally gets to his spot close to the rim regardless. He does have some intriguing face up game from both the free throw line and in the post. He likes facing up and attacking his man with a strong dribble or two and usually finishing with a hook or a layup, and he is very effective with these shots. He'll use his strength to drive opponents back on these shots as well.
He is mobile, gets great extension, and has a quick first step and accelerates to the rim, which gives him an ability to drive and finish from the FT line/elbows. He's a straight line driver and things can get a bit adventerous when he has to put the ball on the floor. He's fine with space, but if you close his space, he's not the most secure as a ballhandler. Not much in the way of advanced moves either. Not a part of his game that we'll see much of at all as a pro, but there is some raw ability there as a face up guy.
Dante is a bit of a mixed bag as a playmaker. He has the ability to make some really sharp reads and has pretty good vision. He will make kick outs from the post and can find cutters. He'll make skip passes from the block and hit shooters on the outside. He can find cutters from the top of the key. He does a good job finding the kick out on the double team. He will bait a double team and hit the kick out. That's an important skill for him to possess...he's not a black hole and you can end up getting burned doubling him. He's not an advanced passer overall, but he will make the right reads more often then not, and some impressive ones too.
He gets ahead of himself at times and that's where turnovers can come. Both when putting the ball on the floor, but he makes careless passes a little too often. He will travel on occasion when putting the ball on the floor. His touch and timing aren't always where they need to be. But for a guy who is really gonna be a pure play finisher at the next level, the fact he does have some playmaking ability in him gives him a wrinkle many in that category do not possess.
Dante is an expressive communicator and the heart of the Ducks defense this season. Can he seen pointing to and directing his teammates into position on the defensive end. He can switch a bit on the defensive end. He can hedge high. He's a drop big, but he has switchability and his mobility gives him versatility as a drop defender, he doesn't have to deep drop and can contain ballhandlers fairly high in drop. He uses his length really well as a drop defender...he uses his hands well too. He plays man and ball effectively, with the short space mobility to recover back to his man...he uses his length to disrupt ballhandlers. He gets his hands on quite a few balls as a drop defender, breaking up dribbles or breaking up passes. He makes himself big as a drop defender, which makes him a great rim deterrent.
He's got very good instincts as a rotater. Very good awareness overall defensively. Remains engaged and keeps his head on a swivel. He does a good job rotating over and covering cutters and opponents ducking in around the rim, and does a good job helping the helper. His awareness and his mobility along with the timing he has and his leaping ability makes him a very good shotblocker, both on the weakside and strongside. I think he can be even better, he does miss out on a few potential blocks just by being a bit late on the rotation, but his block percentage sells him short on how many shots he deters and alters around the rim. He's great with verticality, and he does a good overall job not biting on fakes. He's not massively foul prone. He'll pick up some cheap fouls, but he doesn't bite on fakes consistently. He contests with his hands up and tall, and the threat of his shot blocking sees a lot of offensive players looking to avoid his contests and being cute around the rim, or even avoiding taking shots in his vicinity.
He's a very good post defender. He anticipates post passes really really well. He nabs a ton of steals beating opponents to the ball off post passes. He has quick hands. He can be very aggressive with ball denial. He has really good instincts in reading the pass and taking it away and doing so without fouling. He does a good job sticking with an opponent's moves in the post. That along with his strength and length makes it hard to get clean looks off Dante in the post. The players that had the best success against him where the players who had the aggression and strength to seal and quickly take it to him, but very few had such capability. It's easier said than done.
Dante isn't the absolute smoothest mover from side to side but he is a very mobile one. His length also aids him on the perimeter, and he slides his feet well; he has the quickness to not just hang with but cut off drives on the perimeter. He's not someone you can target. I don't think he'll ever be a pure switch guy, but he can more than hang on the perimeter. You can't really just beat him for speed on switches. It may not always look pretty but he can hang with double moves on the perimeter. He does a good job forcing opponents to take the shots he wants them to take from all three levels. He will block jumpers, both on the ball, and when rotating out on contests.
The factors that make him an elite offensive rebounder make him great on the defensive boards as well...he has great technique as a rebounder. Boxes out, asserts dominant position, and he really goes after balls in the air. He really is a vacuum as a rebounder. He tracks balls really well. As a rebounder and as a shotblocker. The elevation ability is the cherry on top, along with his strong and large hands.
N'Faly Dante's length, strength, and athleticism is at the heart of his abilities on both ends of the floor but he's got real skill as a player on both ends as well. He's a mature player who has battled through a lot to get to this point. He's a plug-and-play guy with fantastic physical tools and someone you can envision can fulfill a 10-15 minute role immediately in the NBA. We will see what comes of his waiver process with Oregon, but his current focus is with the NBA as that process continues.
Are you all Thumbs Up, Down, or Across on N'Faly Dante?
Note: Accidentally deleted first post
submitted by RVAIsTheGreatest to NBA_Draft [link] [comments]


2024.05.16 19:52 CrispitoDay Fed up with homelessness in OR

Coming from Eugene, but I have noticed this all over the state in every city in Oregon. Portland is the worst I’ve maybe ever seen anywhere in the country. Replace ‘Eugene’ with your city’s name and I’m sure it tells the same story.
Oregon has been tarnished with the smudge of homelessness that is inescapable on every city street. I am sick of coexisting with these stains on society, constantly on edge of running into someone screaming at nothing, taking a shit in the alleyway, or sleeping in public parking lots.
The square in downtown Eugene where the fountains are are complete inaccessible to the public. It has been completely overrun with homeless smoking crack, blasting music, and begging. Many of them have unleashed dogs. I’m sure many of them are sick and addicted to drugs that they refuse to get help for. Can’t stop at a major stoplight without some cardboard sniveling empathy beggar.
This is not what children should be exposed to, let alone citizens who care about this community for what it is and actually want to contribute.
I am going to make it my life mission to let homeless people know that Oregon is not a place where they are welcome. Of course, I would never incite violence, nor do I encourage anyone else to do the same, but I will do whatever I can in my power to let them know that nobody wants them here. And it would be great to get as many people in different cities on board as possible. Oregon is no longer the safe haven for them that it once was.
Clearly, the current policies in place don’t work. Clearly they don’t want help with their life situation. Time to change the approach.
Edit: downvote me all you want, I don’t care. I said what I said and if I can get even 50 people on board, we can make a big difference in a legal, peaceful, and more efficient way. Sorry it isn’t “nice”
submitted by CrispitoDay to oregon [link] [comments]


2024.05.16 15:08 Playful_Bread858 WAMC/ School list

Non-Trad, ORM, FAP recipient NY resident
Desperately need help with a school list, this is my first time applying and I’m screaming, crying, throwing up.
Undergrad GPA: cGPA 3.15, sGPA 2.89
1 F freshman year, a few Cs, lots of Bs
DIY post-bacc GPA: 3.96 (all science, >30 credits) Cumulative GPA (undergrad + postbacc): cGPA 3.28, sGPA 3.03
MCAT: full length average 512
I took the test on 4/13 that had the questions missing and the proctor told me to void my exam…. So I’m retaking on 6/27 please don’t kill me for posting my full length average. I know it’s not the same as the real thing, but this is all I have for now
ECs
Public health job COVID 19 related= 4000
Scribe (emergency department, transplant nephrology, and ENT)= 1700 Scribe and ophthalmic tech= 4000 (current, >1000 hours projected)
Research = 700, 1 first author pub, another 1st author in the works
Non-clinical volunteer= 350 Clinical volunteer= 100
Racial Justice Community Discussions= 150 hours, >100 hours projected
Shadowing= 100 hours OR Shadowing= 50 hours
TA for EMT-BLS course at university= 3.5 years, roughly 600 hours
Distinguished service award, NYC COVID-19 test and trace corps Sorority E Board Historical honor society E Board Normandy Scholar
Medical School List 1. Stony Brook 2. Vermont 3. George Washington 4. Dartmouth (lol) 5. NYU Long Island (lol) 6. SUNY upstate 7. SUNY downstate 8. NYMC 9. University of Colorado 10. URMC 11. U Miami 12. Florida Atlantic 13. Oregon HSU 14. Nova Southeastern 15. Quinnipiac 16. Tufts 17. Temple 18. Tulane 19. Drexel 20. Penn State 21. Florida International 22. U Arizona Tucson 23. UCSF 24. USF Morsani 25. MC Wisconsin 26. SLU 27. Stanford (a girl can dream lol) 28. Kaiser 29. Oakland William Beaumont 30. Rush 31. UMASS 32. UPitt 33. Wake Forest 34. DO schools: PNWUCOM; RVUCOM; Touro NY; NYIT; Rowan; PCOM; UNECOM; MSUCOM
submitted by Playful_Bread858 to premed [link] [comments]


2024.05.15 23:09 Lava5pit 1500 miles on my Exway Atlas Pro

I am absolutely in love with this board, if anyone has any questions about long term use or like specifics about it, I’d love to answer ur questions. I’ve done all this riding in 11 months btw, so winter and summer. I live in Oregon.
submitted by Lava5pit to Exway [link] [comments]


2024.05.15 18:28 hjgIUY976YTty76 Salem based Pain Care Specialists of Oregon facing a lawsuit over overcharging for COVID tests. Owner Dr. Poly Chen under investigation by the Oregon Medical Board

Willamette Week has the story: https://www.wweek.com/news/2024/05/15/a-pain-chain-allegedly-charged-thousands-of-dollars-for-unnecessary-covid-tests/
The COVID tests that may have cost Pain Care Specialists of Oregon $18 each, was submitting insurance reimbursement requests of $2,500/each. Some people/employees were being tested twice a day, thus generating $5,000/day of insurance reimbursements.
The owner of the clinics Dr. Poly Chen is now under investigation for a second time by the Oregon Medical Board. Formal charges were issued in October, though the document explaining the charges is not available to the public yet.
submitted by hjgIUY976YTty76 to SALEM [link] [comments]


2024.05.15 06:16 heyaaronn College Results Fail and Coping

I feel like I was an overachieving high school student at my school. But I failed in the college admissions process.
- 4-year ASB Board Member, huge strides/impact as Student Body President and 2nd Vice Pres. Established Student Comment at Board meetings, substitute taught classes with advisor on medical leave. Student Reporter for high school segment of monthly district video for families. Graduation commencement speaker. I also established and led the Video & Tech group after doing all the videos myself for the school for 2 years.
- 2 1/2 years varsity orchestra, 2nd to concertmaster. ~7 years total.
- 4th in state 300m hurdles junior year, swept team Captain, MVP, and most varsity points 2 years in a row, Conference Male Athlete of The Year, multiple top 10 school records
- 1 year experience as a Hyatt downtown hotel front desk agent, full time for summer hired at 17
- 3.90 unweighted GPA, 2 AP classes out of the 6-8 or so offered
- Successful YouTube channel and Minecraft server in middle school (7k subs, hundreds of thousands of views, $600+ revenue)
Applied for Business
Waitlisted from Cornell Hospitality School
Rejected from University of Washington, UPenn, Boston University, Rice University University of Southern California, WashU, NYU and Northeastern. These were all the reach schools I applied to
Accepted to University of Oregon, Seattle University, DePaul University, Portland State University, and Western Washington University.
My downfall? Course rigor on my transcript I guess and the lack of extracurriculars/awards outside of school. And probably for applying Business. I didn't take calculus either even though I was a year ahead in math.
I can confidently say I've been the biggest part of my community. I gave everything I could because I love my district and my community. It's shown because I have numerous student and athlete of the month awards and just the impacts I've made all around. It's hard to really get that across properly, it's not quantitative.
I'm looking for closure as I head to my local state school having to pay about 15k. I wanted to go out of state but I can't afford paying more than 10k even, I never wanted to take out loans. I was rejected from every top school and every scholarship I've applied to so far. I feel like I did so much and I was so busy and I did the things I was passionate about, but that wasn't what colleges were looking for. And it's hard seeing a lot of people succeed in the admissions process who may not have done as much as I have. I'm willing to be selfish and say I probably deserve the success more than some.
To put it best, I'm a jack of all trades and a master of none. I wasn't an overachieving academic, nor was I good enough to be a high D1 recruit (although I'm really close); I'm just in the middle. I'm extremely well-rounded.
submitted by heyaaronn to ApplyingToCollege [link] [comments]


2024.05.15 01:18 somekindofcharity Summer Trip planning help needed

I'm planning a trip for my girlfriend this summer, because someone in her family has passed away. I'm planning on taking her to:
Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area Siuslaw National Forest - Rent Paddle boards for the river - Walk the Sand Dunes - Hammock by the water - Photo @ Heart of the Dunes Park
Places to eat in Reedsport - Sugar Shack Bakery - Two Shy Brewing
I'd like to rent ATV'S but it's probably going to be too expensive for too soon of a trip.
I'm planning on stopping in Eugene, Oregon along the way. I'm not familiar with Lane County or Eugene but we're looking for places to stop, places to eat & drink, hikes, fun activities in town, and cool spots to check out really.
The one place I found in Eugene is: Cluckin Dog Eugene, but I'm open all recommendations
We're coming from Eastern Washington and driving down. I'm looking to make a memorable trip for her.
Thanks
submitted by somekindofcharity to Eugene [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 21:15 rojnsfak Another Bandon Trip Report

tl;dr: if it's your first time to Bandon, you'll have an amazing time and the facility/resort is as good as advertised. the greens range from good to pretty bad.
Went to Bandon this past weekend for the first time as a solo, and had an absolute blast. Overall, the course are a ton of fun, but the concerns about the greens are unfortunately real. The silver lining is that most of them seem to be trending in the right direction per feedback from caddies and other guests, but there's still rough spots. More details on each course below:
Shorty's: It's gonna be so much fun in a year or two when the fescue completely grows in on the greens. So many cool slopes and potential pin locations, and only a few holes with true forced carries over waste/gorse/etc. The reality is right now the greens are hilariously slow, but if you into it knowing that, and being cool with it, you'll still have an amazing time. Definitely a little more exhausting to play than Preserve (19 vs. 13 holes) and some of the bigger swings/elevation changes come in the last 6 holes.
Sheep Ranch: The good holes are really good, and some of the inland holes are pretty forgettable. You can really feel how tight the acreage is compared to the other courses. That being said, I played it with absolutely zero wind and in 70 degree temps so it was an aytpical experience. The greens are..weird. They range from pretty slow and grown in to sandy and ridiculously fast, sometimes on the same putt. It sounds like they're giving up on keeping the Poa out and hopefully that'll just take over in the next few years. The ending stretch (starting with the Volcano Par 5, #11) is pretty awesome.
Bandon Dunes: Some of the greens have huge dead spots (usually in a line) that make putts impossible going through them. That being said, the sections of the green that are alive and healthy rolled really really well. This wasn't a huge deal on longer lag putts but for things that were more makable, most players and caddies just advised moving it so you had a non-impacted line. For the cost, this is annoying, but again, it was my first time here and the quality of the course had me more stoked than having to adjust a few putts. Personal highlights, tee shot on #3, 2nd shot on #4, tee shot on #10, #13 as a hole, avoiding the bunker (or getting out of it) on #15, #16 as a whole, and figuring out what you want to do on #17.
Trails: It's a really cool track, completely different vibe from the rest of the courses. Neat how it starts out giving you something that feels kinda familiar on #1 and then by #3 you're in a different world. You will likely lose balls on this course without a caddie (or even with one) since the forest can swallow them. Super neat routing around the halfway house from #7 - #10. Tee shot on #11 is super cool, and the 2nd shot on #13 is awesome. #14's green is as broken and unfair as the internet claims, especially if the pin is up front. The closing stretch is tough, no easy holes, plays dead into the wind, and can make any decent round explode from #14 onwards. The greens ranged from excellent to very bumpy, so that gives me hope that they'll continue to improve through the summer.
Old Mac: The greens got punched 5 days prior to me playing it, but apparently they were pure prior to that. Still rolled better as a whole than everywhere except the Preserve. Apart from #1 & #2, every hole had a fascinating tee shot or a green complex that made you thrilled with a 2-putt and accepting of a 3-putt if you were out of position. #3 is such a cool tee shot and approach in if you leave it on the hill, #4 is a tough par 4, and #5 is closer to a mini-golf putt (or roll down the hill) than an actual green. It isn't meant to be terribly fair, and that's okay. Closing stretch is also very strong from #14 onwards.
Pacific Dunes: Oh boy. The greens were not good. The putts ranged from bumpy to straight up plinko board (#12). The course is such a cool layout, but between it being the final course I played in 3 days, the wind absolutely howling, and the greens being pretty bad, it was a taxing round. Playing it in the morning is a must unless you routinely want to hit into a 3-4 club wind when you're going into it. Definitely has the toughest first hole on the property if the wind is blowing.
Preserve: Such a great short course, got to play it by myself as the first person out on a misty morning and it was so peaceful. Great range of holes and shots you have to hit (nothing longer than 170, and that pin was about as far back as it could have been on #7). The greens were in amazing shape and rolled true, so hopefully that's the quality everything else can get back to by the end of the season. The wind is definitely a factor, so if you play it in the afternoon definitely be prepared for some exposed and blown shots.
I had a caddie for all 6 of the 18-hole rounds and would definitely recommend Brian (splits his time between Oregon & the Big Island), Christian (from Seattle, has been around for a long time), and Aaron (who made the absolute most of a 22-year old who thoroughly enjoyed melting down after any bad shot). There was one caddie who I didn't vibe with, but it wasn't so bad that it's worth putting on the internet. Just a mismatch of vibes and expectations.
Lunch was excellent at Trails End (and breakfast looked really good too), and the Shephard's Pie at Mckee's was great. Ghost Tree Grill is pricy but very tasty, if it's in your budget definitely would recommend dropping by for apps and a drink at the least. Very easy to grab a seat at the bar as a solo.
Service across the board was impeccable, minus one weird situation where my orange whip got left in the starter's shack to reduce weight and then it just..disappeared for a while? Shoutout to Brian who found it after a little digging and in the customer service room.
Stayed in town at the Bandon Inn, and for being a single that's really the most cost effective way to do it. Was able to snag a rental car via Turo in North Bend (shoutout to Michela!), and it ran about $200 per night. Dinner options shut down early in town, so if you get off the course on the late side either eat at the resort or double check that where you're planning to go is still open. Great lunch options though, The Loft and Tony's Crab Shack were both great.
Bottom line, unless you're intending to try and shoot your lowest scores while adhering to every single rule of golf or gambling for a ton of money and that depends on putts, you'll have a great time. If you've been to Bandon a bunch, the greens might be a disappointment, but you'll still probably have a great time. No discounts were given on any course (except for Old Mac) for the condition of the greens, and that was because it was still within the 5-day aeration window.
submitted by rojnsfak to golf [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 18:24 0regon_ Scam targeting contractors through an exterior painting job.

I recently started up a contracting/handyman business. A couple of weeks ago I received a text asking me if I did exterior painting. After informing him that I did, I got the address to do a free estimate. The location looked like it was vacant, and definitely in need of paint. Long story short, I submitted a bid, he accepted, and offered to send me a check for 30 percent down, and the rest when the job was completed. I became suspicious when he wanted me to email him the contract to sign. Plus, his number had an unusual area code, and the name he used in the email didn't match anybody listed as owners of the property. I checked on the Oregon Construction Contractors Board (CCB) for any info regarding scams against contractors, but they only had warning for customers regarding scams contractors might attempt. Luckily, an online search for "scam painter contractor" revealed posts from contractors getting scammed. I decided to play along with the guy and his scam was to send me the down payment, along with money to pay the carpenter that would be doing work on the house I was to paint. He told me to pay the carpenter as soon as the check clears with my bank. I received the check yesterday and notified the sheriffs department. They are sending me a form to fill out which will, at best, provide the government with statistical data regarding these types of crimes. There is zero hope that they will actually catch the guy. I wanted to think up a clever way to mess with the guy. Like to tell him I lost the check and send me another one, but I ended up just telling him to f*** off when he called me at a bad time. Anyway, I hope this post helps prevent someone else from falling for this type of scam. Cheers
submitted by 0regon_ to Construction [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 17:49 orty Final Central Oregon Symphony Concerts of the Season are This Weekend

The final Central Oregon Symphony concerts of the season are this weekend: 7:30PM Saturday and 2:00PM Sunday at Bend High School Auditorium (and potentially our last ones there). More info at https://www.cosymphony.com/upcoming-events:
Hailed as an “Astounding Virtuoso” and “Exhilarating” performer, the rising-star percussionist, Britton- René Collins, will join the COS for our season finale. Noted for her exceptional musicianship and active passion for creating social change through her music, Britton-René will perform a new work (Concerto for Marimba) by Australian based composer, Sergei Golovko. Also featured on the concert will be a lightning-fast prelude from Wagner’s opera Lohengrin and Rachmaninoff’s Symphony No. 2, which LA Philharmonic program annotator, Orrin Howard, describes as “an abundance of gorgeously conceived lushness and tautly brilliant propulsiveness, both operating within orchestral textures of rich sonority.”
How do you get tickets to the symphony concerts this weekend? A few ways: (TL;DR: Donate, Visit a Local Store, PM/Email me, or just show up and they'll likely have tickets at the door).
First: Become a supporting member (the symphony is a non-profit that does a bunch of great events in the community), and they'll be mailed to you ahead of time in the future (and you'll also be invited to our donor-only concerts that we hold twice a year). You can sign up for a membership here or you can learn more and sign up to be a member at the concert by talking to the folks at the membership table in the lobby. Tell them the loud-mouth percussionist sent you (they'll know who you're talking about).
Second: You may pick up a complimentary ticket (yes you read that right, no-cost tickets -- we are supported by our members and donations) from several local bookstores and music stores (give them a jingle to make sure they have some). We'll also have them at the door the day of the concert, just come about 45 minutes beforehand and talk to the folks at membership or will-call tables for your complimentary ticket. :
Bend
Redmond
Sisters
Sunriver
Lastly: PM me and I can check what we have available and I can likely have some held for you at Will Call (again, complimentary -- our goal is to get butts in the seats). Please don't use chat, as that's tricky to do on my phone and I don't get notices with the app I use. Or email me at Jake at orty dot Com. If I don't get back to you, just come to the concert as there will likely be tickets available.
Concert Etiquette: TL;DR: Doors open 30 minutes ahead of time, but they close at the start of the concert (times listed above) and will remain closed until a break can happen. So show up on-time and don't be grumpy to the hard-working volunteers out front. I had to put this in there because of folks being poops to our volunteers at some of our previous shows. Please read our FAQ, because people got grumpy with us in the past for requiring them to hang out in the lobby after the concert started. Symphony concerts are not like rock concerts or other performances. It's incredibly distracting to both the musicians as well as the audience if you're trying to come into the show during the performance, especially when there are soloists on stage and especially at an auditorium like Bend High's where you enter in the middle of the auditorium where everybody can see/hear you if it's quiet. So you will be hanging out in lobby if the show has already started and the volunteers out front will let you in between pieces or between movements. This is common at other symphonies and performing arts groups as well (other performing arts halls may have an area where late-comers can quietly hang out in the back, but Bend High doesn't have that luxury and we don't have a performing arts center yet). If you don't like that, please show up before the concert starts (and not 30 minutes late and complain we won't let you in). Please don't make me complain about you people in another rant/rave thread. I want everybody to enjoy the work we put into this show, but nobody enjoys those kind of folks.
Full disclosure, I'm a member of the symphony and on their board, and I know there are a few other members of the symphony that float around this subreddit as well. We're a non-profit organization, the musicians are all volunteers but are top-notch. Donations are gladly accepted to help with operating costs, hall rental fees, etc... .
submitted by orty to Bend [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 07:32 levitationz Acacia, “bb trapping” and hair is the cheater

Acacia, “bb trapping” and hair is the cheater
Basically, I know “baby trapping” is wrong to say as it takes two to tango and I know jairus is also irresponsible. This is my first post so bear with me. Acacia was 17 when she began dating a late 20 jairus. He was known to cheat and mooch and then leave his then exes once he found a new girl to use. Within a year of dating Acacia, he started to pull away from her (they lived in California). He went back home to Oregon. As seen in the picture he was posting other women KISSING HIM in his lap. Acacia was posting sad tweets about heartbreak and as soon as she saw those pics of another girl she drove/flew to Oregon to see him. He begins posting her like nothing happened???
And then during that time she’s saving Pinterest boards that are like “tips for fertility”, “how to get pregnant after birth control” basically everything along the lines of quitting BC and getting pregnant. This was being saved while he moved. Like two months later she shares to the internet that she’s pregnant with their first.
It’s just sad. He was trying to leave like he does with all his exes, she was vulnerable and wanted a way to get him to stay. I know it’s wrong to say she baby trapped him. He’s a grown adult so technically he IS responsible. But it just goes to show one person planned it behind the other persons back. It’s so sad her kids are props/used as manipulation. But I haven’t seen anyone post it on here- I’ve been following her for awhile so I’ve seen so much.
submitted by levitationz to AcaciaKerseySnark [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 01:00 EJC28 Saints 2024 Draft Analysis Compilation

Round 1, Pick 14 - Taliese Fuaga, OT, Oregon State:
NFL: The Saints fill their tackle need with a feisty and powerful brawler who can make an immediate impact along the offensive line. Fuaga's presence will help the unit become more physical, which will only benefit quarterback Derek Carr and the run game.
CBS Sports: B+. He fills a major need for the Saints. They have big-time tackle issues. Fuaga is a nasty player who will start right away. Love it.
ESPN: The Saints picked a position that has been on their radar since the end of the 2023 season, and it checks a lot of boxes for a New Orleans first-round selection. Fuaga was a team captain and two-year starter for Oregon State and played in the Senior Bowl, a game that has produced a lot of Saints players. The question is how fast can he start and where on the line he fits best. Fuaga said he's open to playing on the left side and has been training for that, even though he played right tackle in college. If the Saints move him to the left side, he'll compete with 2022 first-round pick Trevor Penning. If they keep him on the right side, it could signal that the concerns about Ryan Ramczyk's knees are worse than they thought earlier in the offseason.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Is constantly asking teammates for electrical tape.
Round 2, Pick 41 - Kool-Aid McKinstry, CB, Alabama:
NFL: The secondary figured to be a spot the Saints might attack, and they traded up to land McKinstry. He's a steady, smart, solid corner with good field awareness and decent but not great ball skills. This selection feels like a solid line drive into the gap for a team that needs more reliable defenders.
CBS Sports: B+. Such a clean outside CB prospect. Press man specialty. Physical but not overly grabby. Solid, not spectacular speed. Ball skills meet the standard you want out of a higher-end starter. Good size too. Arguably the best player available. Expensive trade up.
ESPN: The Saints liked McKinstry enough to trade a fifth and sixth-round pick to move up four spots from No. 45 to No. 41. The team nabbed him in the middle of an early Day 2 run on cornerbacks. The addition of McKinstry doesn't mean it's a sure thing that the Saints deal 2017 first-round cornerback Marshon Lattimore, but it does mean that will be a potential move to watch this summer. McKinstry would join Paulson Adebo, Alontae Taylor and potentially Lattimore in the cornerback room, and he said he'd also like to contribute on special teams as a kick returner.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Was the kid who Naruto ran between classes in high school.
Round 5, Pick 150 - Spencer Rattler, QB, South Carolina:
NFL: This is lower than I imagined Rattler going, especially after six quarterbacks all went off the board in the first 12 picks. Rattler is an interesting developmental talent who has some skills that might remind Saints fans of a certain age of Aaron Brooks -- for both good and bad reasons. Well worth the pick here.
CBS Sports: A-. Former huge recruit who once received first-round buzz. Arm talent jumps off the film. Unafraid to make any throw and at South Carolina connected on many of them. Low-level athlete despite some functional movement away from pressure. Accuracy is good, and reads coverages decently. Older prospect but does have upside. Smart investment this late.
ESPN: The Saints added another quarterback just one year after signing Derek Carr and selecting Jake Haener in the fourth round of the 2023 draft. The Saints usually operate in "win now" mode with how they manage the salary cap, but the selection of Rattler indicates the Saints could be looking toward the future at that position. Rattler will compete with Haener for the backup spot behind Carr after the departure of Jameis Winston. Winston came in for Carr several times last season after Carr left three games with injuries.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Glad to be drafted but really wanted a 9-5 desk job as an actuary.
Round 5, Pick 170 - Bub Means, WR, Pittsburgh:
NFL: Means has the speed to dent the WR depth chart in New Orleans and is a good fit for what the Saints do. He has big, reliable hands and can stress a defense deep but never was a featured target in his three college stops.
CBS Sports: B+. Height/weight/speed specimen with the long-striding speed to take the lid off the defense. Tracks it well and can carry out classic possess WR duties on the boundary when he’s not going deep. Some YAC flashes but not his speciality. Prudent add, even though he’s a niche type who won’t separate a ton.
ESPN: The Saints fill another need, adding a wide receiver to account for the departure of Michael Thomas. Means ran a 4.43 second 40-yard dash at the NFL combine this year to go along with 721 yards and six touchdowns at Pitt. Means will join No.1 wideout Chris Olave, speedy Rashid Shaheed, A.T. Perry and veteran Cedrick Wilson. Dennis Allen said earlier in the offseason that they were looking for another pass catcher, and Means will join a new Saints coaching staff with a potentially revamped offense.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Is convinced if he messages the mods enough, they’ll finally listen to him.
Round 5, Pick 175 - Jaylan Ford, LB, Texas:
NFL: A thickly built thumper with monotone play speed, Ford thrives with instincts and tape study. Does he have enough athleticism to make it as more than a two-down defender? We shall see.
CBS Sports: B. Lengthy middle linebacker with some suddenness to his game. Wasted movement appear on film, so do impressive plays on the football in coverage. Not an overly physical or high-motor defender. Sifts through traffic well. Has starter traits because of his three-down ability. Although he must tackle more soundly.
ESPN: Ford will add linebacker depth and versatility, as he played both inside linebacker and outside linebacker at Texas. 35-year-old Demario Davis and Pete Werner will take the majority of the snaps, with new signee Willie Gay rotating in if the Saints are playing base defense. That means that Ford will likely be a depth piece and a special-teams player to begin his career.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Can only spell bananas by singing Holaback Girl. There is choreography too.
Round 6, Pick 199 - Khristian Boyd, DT, Northern Iowa:
NFL: He's not a great playmaker, but Boyd's mass and bull-like strength could give him a chance to be an early-down nose tackle. He's tough and reliable with good stamina.
CBS Sports: B+. Big-bodied NT with athletic prowess. Rushes tend to get high, and while he converts speed to power on occasion, if he sunk the pad level, he could be a very powerful defensive lineman. Pass-rush move arsenal isn’t barren just not relied upon often. Unique NT with DT abilities.
ESPN: The 24-year-old comes in with a lot of college experience, having started his career in 2018. The Saints like to rotate their defensive linemen, so he'll join a rotation that includes Bryan Bresee, Khalen Saunders and Nathan Shepherd. He said he prides himself on stopping the run, but also had 6.5 tackles for loss and 3.5 sacks at Northern Iowa in 2023.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: He is aiming to be the greatest player ever picked 199th.
Round 7, Pick 239 - Josiah Ezirim, OT, Eastern Kentucky:
NFL: Ezirim is a converted D-lineman with two years of OL play under his belt. His outstanding mass could serve him well if the Saints are patient with Ezirim's development.
CBS Sports: A. Starter-caliber size and length to play OT at the next level. Natural power jumps off the film. Better getting across the line than climbing to second level. Grip strength is very good. Well-balanced. Not a freaky athletic specimen but has clean film. More OT help for Saints.
ESPN: It wasn't a surprise that the Saints continued to look for offensive line depth after using a first-round pick on an offensive tackle. Ezirim was a former nose tackle who moved to the offensive line during the 2021 season and became a permanent starter at RT for the last two seasons. At 6-5 and 329 pounds, he'll be the heaviest player on the team next to new OL Oli Udoh. He'll start out as a depth player.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Has a really nice fountain pen collection.
submitted by EJC28 to Saints [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 00:02 EJC28 Falcons 2024 Draft Analysis Compilation

Round 1, Pick 8 - Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington:
NFL: I’m not sure anyone expected Atlanta, which signed Kirk Cousins to a four-year, $180 million deal in March, to take a quarterback in the top 10, but here we are. Penix is a big-time playmaker who is the top deep-ball passer in this class. He has surgical precision and throws with good anticipation from the pocket.
CBS Sports: B-. They opted to take their quarterback of the future by taking Penix. He has all the tools, but will learn and wait behind Kirk Cousins. I wonder if he can rush the passer. Like the player, but don’t like the pick.
ESPN: Stunner. The Falcons pulled off the shocker of the first round, taking Penix earlier than just about every expert predicted. He was the fourth quarterback taken in the top 10. There's no doubt Atlanta saw something in Penix when watching him on tape and visiting him. The team sent a ton of staff to see him in recent weeks. Obviously, they felt comfortable with his durability, despite four season-ending injuries in college. Penix, a lefty, has an incredible arm, and from a skill standpoint, he's certainly right up there among the best signal callers on the board. And now he's the successor to Kirk Cousins.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Has devoted his life to the church of the flying spaghetti monster.
Round 2, Pick 35 - Ruke Orhorhoro, DT, Clemson:
NFL: Another trade, with the Falcons swooping up. And this is their second curious pick of this draft. Nothing against Orhorhoro, who has some intriguing skills and might be a better stat stuffer in the NFL than he was at Clemson. But with Johnny Newton on the board, this pick felt like a reach when you consider Atlanta's biggest need -- pass rush.
CBS Sports: B. Big, long, powerful interior rusher without many pass-rush moves. But his traits shine against the run and has enough explosion to win between gaps or with bull rushes. Expensive trade up though hurts his grade despite Falcons filling a need with quality prospect.
ESPN: The Falcons needed a pass-rusher, particularly an EDGE. Most of the impact players at that position went in the first round. Atlanta attempted to trade back into the late first, but weren't able to do so. Instead, the Falcons took Orhorhoro, a defensive tackle who has pass-rushing chops from the inside. Since 2021, Orhorhoro had 9.5 sacks lined up as a DT, which were tied for third in the ACC. The Nigeria-born Orhorhoro didn't start playing football until he was a junior in high school, so the Falcons probably like his upside.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: His bright green fanny pack when traveling is a must.
Round 3, Pick 74 - Bralen Trice, LB, Washington:
NFL: Trice was a consistent pressure source the past two years for the Huskies but had a rough pre-draft process when he shed a bunch of weight for the NFL Scouting Combine but failed to display better speed because of it. Trice was smart to bulk back up for his pro day because I think his game is predicated on winning with a combination of effort and surprising pop in his hands.
CBS Sports: A-. Bad testing hurt his stock but this is as productive of an EDGE as there is in this class. Slippery with pass-rush plans galore. Smaller than his listed weight and doesn’t have serious burst. Flashes of bend though.
ESPN: The Falcons got their pure pass-rusher and, boy, did they need it. This is a team that has had 18 fewer sacks than any other franchise in the NFL over the past three seasons. Atlanta's pass rush win rate was dead last in the league in 2023. Trice had 16 sacks over the past two seasons, which was tied for the fourth most among Power 5 players during that stretch. He's had 12 games with five or more pressures since the start of the 2022 season, which leads all FBS players. Trice played mostly outside linebacker at Washington and he had a reputation for being able to get to the quarterback.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Smells like Celestial Seasonings sleepy-time tea.
Round 4, Pick 109 - Brandon Dorlus, DT, Oregon:
NFL: Round 4 is for the Ducks. I haven't followed the Falcons' logic on every one of their selections this year, but I like Dorlus here. He can play multiple spots along the D-line and be a movable piece for Raheem Morris' unit.
CBS Sports: A-. Fun, twitchy and thick “tweener” who can literally win at any alignment along the defensive line. Isn’t the most sudden, nor the best with his hands but is so slippery between blockers. Overall athletic profile is impressive. Rushes can get too high, doesn’t play with much power. Can get washed out vs. the run. Has frame to add more weight.
ESPN: It was somewhat surprising the Falcons didn't take a cornerback here or even a safety. But the team is clearly and rapidly reshaping its defensive line, which already had quality veteran players in Grady Jarrett and David Onyemata. Dorlus is Atlanta's second straight defensive line selection. And Dorlus, who led Oregon with five sacks, is extremely versatile. He can play inside, as a defensive end or even outside linebacker. Pass-rushers were the Falcons' biggest needs and now they have three rookies who fit the bill after not taking a defender with the No. 8 overall pick as many expected.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Wants you to call your family and tell them you love and cherish them.
Round 5, Pick 143 - JD Bertrand, LB, Notre Dame:
NFL: An Atlanta native, Bertrand is a coach's dream in spite of his subpar length and injury history. He's instinctive and tough and carries a hard-hat mentality to work every day.
CBS Sports: C. So active, so smart. Always around the ball. Reads his keys in a flash. Block-avoider. Ascending coverage skill just minimal ball production at Notre Dame. High tackling numbers but also misses many.
ESPN: The Falcons are completely reshaping their front seven in this draft. In Bertrand, they not only get their second collegiate defensive team captain (Bralen Trice was captain at Washington), but also someone with significant physical tools. Bertrand was a three-year starter at Notre Dame, led the team with 76 tackles in 2023 and had 16 tackles behind the line of scrimmage this past season. He's also a former Eagle Scout and was a finalist for the Wuerffel Trophy for community service.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Prefers to code in Notepad with the wingding font.
Round 6, Pick 186 - Jase McClellan, RB, Alabama:
NFL: McClellan is a power back who runs with great toughness and exercises great ball security, fumbling only once in college on nearly 400 touches. But he's a one-dimensional runner on a team pretty loaded at running back.
CBS Sports: C+. Jack of all trades, master of none with minimal mileage on his legs. Will run away from some slower defenders but not a true burner. Receiving ability is there. Vision is a strength between the tackles. Elusive but not special in that regard. Classic scatback.
ESPN: The team needed a third running back behind Bijan Robinson and Tyler Allgeier, and that's presumably where McClellan will fit. McClellan was Alabama's primary starter for one year after returning in 2022 from a torn ACL. He ran for 890 yards on 180 carries with eight touchdowns this past season. McClellan, who's only 21, isn't flashy, but Atlanta has been taking upside and translatable physical attributes over flash this entire draft.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Kept calling the NFL at 800-635-5300 to complain about the refs.
Round 6, Pick 187 - Casey Washington, WR, Illinois:
NFL: A strong pro day helped solidify Washington as a draft pick. He looks like a solid, reliable possession receiver with natural route-running skills, but he's not special at any one thing.
CBS Sports: C. Good sized outside WR who plays with a throwback style. Jump balls, back-shoulders, etc. are his speciality. Good speed for his size too. Just doesn’t have the bend or suddenness to separate consistently.
ESPN: Depth at wide receiver was absolutely a need going into the draft, though it's still surprising the Falcons won't pick a cornerback until their final pick, if at all. Washington was sixth in the Big Ten in receiving yards during conference games (589) and finished his career with Illinois very strong -- 218 yards on nine receptions and three touchdowns against Northwestern back in November. Washington is 6-foot-2 and 200 pounds, and Atlanta did need size at the position. He'll be tied for the second tallest wide receiver on the roster after top wideout Drake London (6-4).
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Taught his goldfish to play fetch. Not the most exciting game but they’re happy.
Round 6, Pick 197 - Zion Logue, DT, Georgia:
NFL: Logue was a flash player for the two-time champion Bulldogs, often stuck behind a ton of talent in Athens. His length is outstanding, even if his production (1.5 sacks in 50-plus college games) isn't.
CBS Sports: C+. Big, long, thick SEC-tested DL with some above-average burst for his size and a pass-rush move every so often. Production never matched his size or athleticism.
ESPN: This draft, after all the controversy in the first round, was all about front-seven versatility and depth for the Falcons. Logue is a big body at 6-foot-6 and 314 pounds. And the team's fifth front-seven selection of the week. Atlanta has put a premium on length with its defenders so far and Logue has that to go along with his massive frame. The Tennessee native only started one year at Georgia, so he's relatively inexperienced with potential upside the Falcons are once again banking on.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Can eat twenty scones in a single sitting.
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2024.05.13 20:47 Background-Drink-639 Boat rentals

Anyone know of a place to rent a pontoon, ski boat, or just powered boat in general? Lookin’ to have a good Memorial Day weekend and get out on the water! I’ve looked and all I’ve been able to find is like kayak / paddle board rentals. Open to most of Oregon as well I’m willing to travel if anyone knows other lakes. Thanks in advance!
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2024.05.13 17:07 JL_mgmt Calling Female Scientists: Interview for Research Study

Hello!
My name is Jieun Lee, and along with my co-author, Hannah Grubbs, we are inviting female scientists (working in the US) to participate in a research study. I am a postdoctoral scholar studying Business Management at the University of Missouri, and Hannah is a third-year PhD student at the University of Oregon. We are interested in learning about how scientists develop collaborative networks for their ultimate success in developing new technology.

We would like to invite you or someone else in innovation to take part in a voluntary 30 to 40 minute video chat about your perspectives regarding your experiences as a female scientist. Participation is both voluntary and confidential. Furthermore, we will not share anyone’s contact information and any information obtained through a conference call will be de-identified and held in strictest confidence.

If you have questions, please reach out directly to us: [jieun.lee@mail.missouri.edu](mailto:jieun.lee@mail.missouri.edu) or [hgrubbs@uoregon.edu](mailto:hgrubbs@uoregon.edu)

If you—or someone at your company—are interested in participating in our study, please contact us to schedule a meeting. At the meeting time you select, please use the Zoom number provided in the confirmation email to join us for the conference call. We look forward to hearing from you.

If you have questions about your rights as a research participant, please contact the University of Missouri Institutional Review Board (IRB) at 573-882-3181 or muresearchirb@missouri.edu. The IRB is a group of people who review research studies to make sure the rights and welfare of participants are protected.

Thank you!
Jieun Lee, PhD & Hannah Grubbs, PhD Candidate
submitted by JL_mgmt to LadiesofScience [link] [comments]


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