4 A SIUSLAW NEWS Last words Letters to the editor and press releases: A lways take hold of things by the smooth handle. — Thomas Jefferson Email: pressreleases@thesiuslawnews.com To contact the editor: editor@thesiuslawnews.com SATURDAY JANUARY 17 • 2015 Editor takes flight F ROM THE E DITOR ’ S D ESK T HERESA B AER T his is being writ- ten on my last day at the Siuslaw News. Technically I don’t consider myself a procrastinator, but even though the words of this editorial have been running through my brain for weeks, I am just now sit- ting down to write it. All the perfect words and turns of phrases, of course, have flown right out of my head. I certainly thought long and hard about leav- ing this job and this town, and as the time to go creeps up, I sure would like to cry a little. While I’m doing that, I will share that work- ing for the Siuslaw News has been a pretty wild ride. I’ve met more people and learned more about people than I could have imagined. Incredible people in this area, and I am absolutely honored that I’ve been allowed to see into their lives, and that many of these peo- ple have become extraordinary friends. When I first took the editor’s chair in August 2007, I had lots of ideas and enthusiasm. I don’t have quite so many ideas these days, but I still believe the Siuslaw News will thrive and succeed with the times, getting better every year. I can easily see that happening with the staff in place now. I’ve worked with Ryan Cronk, who will be taking over as editor, for about seven years. When I was cleaning out my office, I came across a photo of him when he first started. Ha! (said with love and laughter). Yes, this job changes you. All Ryan has done is grow. His writing skills are excellent, and he is bright and smart and still has most of his memory intact. Working with Ned Hickson since Day One — some of you can imagine what that’s been like. He is the glue that bonds the newsroom. Always calm, always together and, of course, with an outrageous sense of humor. It’s not every job that allows the opportunities for belly laughs every day. Jack Davis hasn’t been in the newsroom for quite a year, but he fit right in from the start. He is genuinely interested in his town and learning all its workings. He’s excellent at reading peo- ple, and he has another amazing quality rarely seen these days: Jack is chivalrous. He has come sweeping into my office or out on a story on a number of occasions to rescue me from whatev- er fix from which I needed rescuing. YESTERDAY’S NEWS The newest addition to the newsroom is Chantelle Meyer. She just started this week and will be a full-time reporter working on the city, police and government beat, and like the rest of us, will have an array of other jobs and beats to juggle. Chantelle worked with us as an intern last summer and proved already that she can stand being in the same room with the rest of us for hours at a time. She is the crowning addition to this team. I will live forever with pride for having worked in this newsroom for these eight years. There are many co-workers here with whom I have become great friends, so many people tak- ing me under their wings and treating me like family. My love and thanks to you all. I will miss each and everyone of you. Finally, I say goodbye to my town. I have no idea what the future holds for me once I move back to Southern California, but I like to think I’ll be back one day. I have loved every minute living here sur- rounded by ocean and lakes and trees and wildlife and the best people on earth. And so I close with an editorial not about business or politics or government or ethics. It’s about love. MOMENTS IN TIME The History Channel • On Jan. 23, 1775, London merchants petition Parliament for relief from the financial hardship put upon them by the curtailment of trade with the North American colonies. Most critical to the merchants’ concerns were the 2 million pounds sterling in outstanding debts owed to them. • On Jan. 19, 1915, during World War I, Britain suffers its first casualties from an air attack when two German zeppelins drop bombs on Great Yarmouth and King’s Lynn on the eastern coast of England. • On Jan. 20, 1937, President Franklin D. Roosevelt is inaugurated for the sec- ond time as president. The Constitution had originally set March 4 as the presi- dential inauguration date to allow the winner time to travel to the nation’s capi- tal. • On Jan. 25, 1949, the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences holds its first annual awards ceremony in Los Angeles. The now-famous award statuette “Emmy” was a feminized version of “immy,” the shorthand term for the image orthicon tube that was used in TV cameras until the 1960s. VIEW FROM UPRIVER Pooling our best efforts to restore a precious dream W ESLEY V OTH For the Siuslaw News USPS# 497-660 addition to shriveling up to refer to what happens to thwarted dreams, none of them pretty. Kind of like the way in which an empty pool in an unused building in a school with a fraction of its former num- bers is not pretty. Currently there is a groundswell of enthusiasm and optimism in wresting the pool and all it has meant from the naysayers and pes- simists one and all. This groundswell is an unprecedented group of folk, combining some involved from the pool’s begin- ning, to those who have been try- ing without much support to keep the dream alive over the past 10 years, to those newly come to either the community or the idea. There is also interest from beyond our immediate community. Nothing short of better than ever can do justice to or properly honor the work and sacri- fice of those who made the pool possible in the first place. On a page in the calen- dar mentioned to earlier is a photograph of Mapleton’s postmistress from an earlier era, Ida May, in her 90s when the image was memorably captured by Ned Hickson. She is shown in the water with a group of very young children who are learning to swim. That photo is the essence of what we want to hang on to: this community, together, whole, bathing in the love and handiwork of those who have gone before us and made this possible. • On Jan. 21, 1977, President Jimmy Carter grants an unconditional pardon to hundreds of thousands of men who evad- ed the draft during the Vietnam War. Some 100,000 young Americans went abroad, with 90 percent going to Canada. The Canadian government had instructed border guards not to ask too many ques- tions. • On Jan. 22, 1981, the final portrait of John Lennon and wife, Yoko, appears on the cover of Rolling Stone. The photo, taken 12 hours before Lennon was assassi- nated, shows a naked Lennon curled up in a fetal embrace with a fully clothed Yoko. Photographer Annie Liebowitz had been told by a Rolling Stone editor, “Please get me some pictures without [Yoko].” he Siuslaw News welcomes letters T to the editor on subjects of general interest to its readership. Brevity is mandatory, and letters are subject to editing. Libelous letters and poetry will not be published. Thank-you letters are generally inappropriate. Publication of any letter is not guaranteed. Opinions expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of News Media Corporation. Letters must be signed over the writer’s name, address and phone number. Send letters to: editor@thesiuslawnews.com. Copyright 2015 © Siuslaw News Published every Wednesday and Saturday at 148 Maple St. in Florence, Lane County, Oregon. A member of the National Newspaper Association and Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association. Periodicals postage paid at Florence, Ore. Postmaster, send address changes to: The Siuslaw News, P.O. Box 10, Florence, OR 97439. Phone (541) 997-3441 (See extension numbers below). FAX (541) 997-7979. John Bartlett Publisher, ext. 327 Jenna Bartlett General Manager, ext. 318 Theresa Baer Editor, ext. 313 Susan Gutierrez Advertising Director, ext. 326 Ryan Cronk Features Editor, ext. 314 Cathy Dietz Office Supervisor, ext. 312 Ron Annis Production Supervisor Jeremy Gentry Press Manager DEADLINES: Wednesday Issue—General news, Monday noon; Budgets, four days prior to publication; Regular classified ads, Monday 1 p.m.; Display ads, Monday noon; Boxed and display classified ads, Friday 5 p.m. Saturday Issue—General news, Thursday noon; Budgets, two days prior to publication; Regular classified ads, Thursday 1 p.m.; Display ads, Thursday noon; Boxed and display classified ads, Wednesday 5 p.m. Soundings, Tuesday 5 p.m. NEWSPAPER SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Lane County, 1 yr manual pay, $71; 1 yr auto pay, $62.10. 10-wks manual $18; 10-wks auto, $15.42. Out of Lane County, 1 yr manual $84.75; 1 yr auto, $80.95; 10-wks manual, $21.35; 10-wks auto, $20.05. Out of State, $120; Out of U.S., $200. MAIL includes E-EDITION E-EDITION RATE (ONE YEAR): Anywhere, $60.30 Website and E-Edition: www.thesiuslawnews.com WHERE TO WRITE S ome ideas refuse to die qui- etly. And sometimes dreams that took a lot of effort have a way of festering when they fall on hard times, bringing out con- flicting and sometimes acrimo- nious sentiments among those in the community carrying on. Mapleton Pool is one such example, one thing this entire com- munity built together through a lot of effort, now empty in an unused building in a school with a fraction of its former numbers, now at risk of permanently becoming a former hole. Mapleton Pool began as an idea in 1972. The community was a more prosperous place in those days, but it was still a long 14 years from the first donation to the day when the first person jumped into the completed pool. While there is a family name and a memorial attached to that first donation and that first person in the pool, according to a member of that family now active in its restoration, it was never their inten- tion that it be anything but a community pool. From the cover of a calendar sold to raise funds during another period of strug- gle in 2004, “After that (first donation), money came in from many families and sources. Some funds came bit by bit from auc- tions, bake sales, bingo, concerts and personal donations. Major contributions and efforts came from Davidson Industries, the Mapleton Lion’s Club and compa- nies like Lagler Logging Co. Volunteer workers did much of the construction work. Florence artist Pauline Cox painted several murals of water sports and family fun on the pool walls. A hydrotherapy spa and fitness room were added years later, also fund- ed by grants and gifts.” Over the years, Mapleton resi- dents swam there, from the youngest to the oldest, learning water skills through classes that were part of both the school’s and the community’s curriculum. It was a place where all generations of Mapleton got fit and recreated together. The great American poet Langston Hughes in his signature piece, titled “Harlem,” asks, “What happens to a dream deferred; does it shrivel up like a raisin in the sun?” Harlem, like Mapleton, had a heyday, and the poet writes long after economic depression helped erase all but the memory of those days. He uses a number of other images like “rot” and “explode” in • On Jan. 24, 1956, Look magazine publishes the confessions of J.W. Milam and Roy Bryant, two white men from Mississippi who were acquitted in the 1955 kidnapping and murder of black teenager Emmett Till. In August 1955, on a visit to relatives, the 14-year-old Till had allegedly whistled at a white woman who ran a store. Pres. Barack Obama The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW Washington, D.C. 20500 Comments: 202-456-1111 Switchboard: 202-456-1414 FAX: 202-456-2461 TTY/TDD Comments: 202-456-6213 www.whitehouse.gov Gov. John Kitzhaber 160 State Capitol 900 Court St. Salem, OR 97301-4047 Governor’s Citizens’ Rep. Message Line 503-378-4582 www.oregon.gov/gov U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden 221 Dirksen Senate Office Bldg Washington, DC 20510 202-224-5244 541-431-0229 www.wyden.senate.gov FAX: 503-986-1080 Email: Sen.ArnieRoblan@state.or.us U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley 313 Hart Senate Office Bldg Washington, DC 20510 202-224-3753/FAX: 202-228-3997 541-465-6750 State Rep. Caddy McKeown (Dist. 9) 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR 97301 503-986-1409 Email: rep.caddymckeown@state.or.us U.S. Rep. Peter DeFazio (4th Dist.) 2134 Rayburn HOB Washington, DC 20515 202-225-6416/ 800-944-9603 541-269-2609/ 541-465-6732 www.defazio.house.gov State Sen. Arnie Roblan (Dist. 5) 900 Court St. NE - S-417 Salem, OR 97301 503-986-1705 West Lane County Commissioner Jay Bozievich 125 E. Eighth St. Eugene, OR 97401 541-682-4203 FAX: 541-682-4616 Email: Jay.Bozievich@co.lane.or.us