
In North America, poison oak is a low-growing shrub, with its stems typically growing upright. The leaves are fuzzy with rounded or pointed tips. Poison oak leaflets occur in threes and have toothed edges.


EPD was called out to the area of 4th Avenue and Washington where they saw three overdoses within minutes of each other.
Eugene Police warn the Public about a Deadly Batch of Poisson Oak…..Hold on! I misread!
Spooky Noodles offered to be my Campaign Manager – if I run for office! He suggested one of my promises, is – Rid Heindrich’s Park of The Poison Oak problem. We were talking about the Christian Nationalists NOT offering any LIVING SOLUTIONS for what ails The Common Man. They protect The Unborn, and offer Eternal Life to – THE DEAD – who qualify!
As your next ________, I promise to get rid of any plosion oak at 4th. and Washington, then celebrate my success at the nest Whitaker Celebration where I will have a booth with buttons depicting the poison oak plant.
God – speed! We are alas – FREE!
I will hire Eugene’s best Face Artists to paint Poison Oak on the the children – with fake blisters on their arm!
“Look Mommy! I have poison oak!”
Fairytale Faces
John Presco
Eugene police warning public about potentially deadly batch of fentanyl
The warning comes after the department saw multiple overdoses from people who were doing the same drugs together, including one person that died.
EUGENE, Ore. – The Eugene Police Department is warning the public about a potentially deadly batch of fentanyl out on the streets after seeing multiple overdoses over the weekend.
EPD said they were called out to the area of Fourth Avenue and Washington Street in Eugene on June 22 for a reported fentanyl overdose. When they arrived, they found one man already dead and another woman who was down, but she was given multiple doses of Narcan and was revived. While medics were helping the woman, they saw a third person go down in the early stages of an overdose.
“In the investigation, in talking with the other people in the area, those three people were doing drugs together within minutes before we arrived,” Lieutenant Sam Stotts with EPD said. “So all three of those people were doing the same drugs. The gentleman that was deceased walked away, went down on the sidewalk, and succumbed and overdosed there on the sidewalk very quickly.”
Do Churches Care About Addiction?

By Alexander E. Sharp ’65 B.A.
In mainline Protestant churches, you don’t hear a lot about addiction. I’ve visited many congregations across the country. It’s been my experience that you can go into almost any mainline church and see no hint that addiction exists—in our families, our friends, even in ourselves. But we need healing. We need advocacy.

Fentanyl linked to multiple overdoses in Eugene, EPD urges caution
- By: Madison Yeash

Police concluded that if all three were using the same drugs, there was likely something deadly about the batch they were using. And even if it was just something those three people used separately, they felt it best to warn the public. Stotts said even if they cannot pinpoint a cause, certain batches of fentanyl can have qualities that make them more dangerous than others.
“These drugs that are on the street that are not made by pharmaceutical companies with regulations,” he said. “They’re made in the back of a car, in a house, who knows where, in a foreign country, and then smuggled up and then sold on the streets. You don’t know what’s in them. There could be — maybe the fentanyl isn’t as good, maybe one pill has more in it than the other pill.”
Stotts said some people on the streets do manage to get pharmaceutical grade drugs, but those are not always the most dangerous or concerning.
“But the majority we see on the streets, yes, is the illegally made, made from some batch from, again, cartels, and trafficked into the country, or made in somebody’s local lab which they might have,” he said. “Which again, those are very rare.”
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