(Continued from page 2) A M ou se In T h e H ouse Victoria Stoppiello » V 0 Mike's Bike Shop Rentals • Repairs • Sales 24 years downtown, on Spruce Street 436-1266 (Out o f state inquiries, HOO-492-l?t>6) DUANt JCHNSOM K tA L t liT M T O ur headline this month was suggested by the lovely Liz Lynch who is the mother of, among other things, our web site. It got us to thinking, about education, and all the stuff with young people, these days. W hile in Portland for a gig we read a copy of the W illamette Week, which had a piece written by Seniors from Lincoln High School. Your beloved editor’s son graduated from Lincoln High School, last year. It was the best piece of journalism we have read in the above mentioned weekly in decades. The reason being, there was no filter between the speaker and the listener, the writer wrote what the young people said, and then presented it to us, the reader, and explained why it was important for us to know this. W e need to know things so we can be prepared to deal with them. And if we are prepared chances are better that things will go favorably. If w e’re not we have to do the same old dance again, until we figure it out. W hen it comes to being prepared, knowing history is possibly the best tool we have. We recently finished the latest offering from David Horowitz; no, the other one. O ur Mr. Horowitz’s Inside the Klavern (The Secret History of the Klu KIux Kian in the l920’s), edited by the above gentleman, is basically an edit of the m inutes of the La Grande, OR, Chapter #14 o f the KKK from 1922 to 1924 when they withered or wandered away to other pursuits, but when you read those minutes you hear the voices without filters. The book, published by Southern Illinois University press, will not appeal to many others than Oregonian historians and perhaps those who want to figure out stuff that’s going on now, both distinct minorities. Being both, we read it and were fascinated with both the compassion and cruelty o f the KKK in those days. T here’was not a lot o f Kian physical violence mentioned, but the social destruction was obvious, and sadly unintended. They believe burning a cross on a hill overlooking La Grande was a celebration. These folks truly believed they were doing what was best for them and theirs. It is a sad tale. David does an elegant job of bringing this history into context, in his Conclusion, and we found ourselves drawing parallels between the Jazz age Tw enties that spawned this Klavern and the Free Love Sixties that gave birth to the Moral Majority in the Seventies. It’s almost the same dance, The Now & Then, as we call it. Leafing back through the pages we found references to Teacher Testing (the school system echoes large in this book), Family Values, War on Drugs; it’s all there. This was, in Oregon, the birth place of the M ilitias, Operation Rescue (though it makes strange bedfellows, the Kian and the Catholics), along with the Skinheads and the Posse Com atas’, and the Contract with/on America. Sad, but true. The House of Representatives’ recent attempt at nailing the Ten Commandments on the school house door, for instance, somehow reminds us of that burning cross on the hillside. Big W heels turn and turn, little wheels spin round and round. W anna dance? It’s a free country. IflL B U F E V V) FROM THE LOWER LEFT CORNER L /k c M / k e 'f b ik e one saying something to the effect that “If no one else is going to do anything about it. I’ll do it myself.” There were no messages from either the Cannon Beach police or the Oregon State Patrol. True to his word, Steve apparently drove down on the beach, loaded the dangerous stuff in his car and delivered it to the Cannon Beach police station. Well, that’s when things got ugly. He was told he couldn’t leave it there, he was causing a potential public health emergency. He was shouted at and told to wait in his car with the toxic stuff. Now, any one who’s met Steve knows he has a problem with authority figures, and doesn’t take kindly to being yelled at, so he took the bucket out of his car and went home, where the next day he was served with a summons. His crime was driving on the beach, carrying a $250 fine At the subsequent hearing he pleaded No Contest, and paid his fine. End of story? Well, we aren’t sure. We still don’t know several things. Why did it take so long for a dangerous, yes, life threatening situation to be resolved, and then only by a citizen breaking the law? What finally happened to the deadly bucket? Why were we told Steve hadn’t called when the police report shows that he had? Why hasn’t the State Patrol ever called us back? Why didn’t the Cannon Beach Police leave a message if, as it says in the police report, they called me back? Why isn’t there some information on the beach entrance signs about who to call and how to react when someone finds dangerous material on the beach? There seems to be a problem here, we aren’t sure if it is anyone’s fault, but it is a potential life and death problem. And we are actually glad that Steve, as foolish and dangerous and illegal as his actions were, did something about it. He shouldn’t have been put in that position, and he shouldn’t have to have a criminal record and a financial burden to deal with because he was concerned about the wildlife or children who might have come in contact that dangerous stu ff There will be a McLeod Fine Fund jar at Jupiter’s or you can send a few bucks to the Edge and we will pass it on. Or if anyone is interested in getting some kind of volunteers organized to work with the proper authorities on this problem, that might be helpful. This ju st in; Steve’s fine was reduced to $50 after some second thoughts by the Judge. But, $50 is still $50. /,.. < ht F or A ll V our R eal E state N EE.D5 Natural Foods-Organlc Julces-Organlc Coffee-Deli Coffeehouse setting -with an Ocean View. Across fr o m tire Tost Office. Box 822, Yachats, Oregon, 97498 (541-5470-4065) g e a r 's aa / og ,< T ITS THE OWM T< W O iD n tO M E D -C lC . 'Ell* kijt, it's fJ jie . I know sam«a^ i4«u U« cr HteMtA wwlA otwct « • H wa lt.n wf+ey.fX I-* » +*> c r 4 ir . oh « I It'l «. Htlluva H ie V M a n a Cinw*< » till mt. 8s*vn I me, I '«m only m ft. zr sttr to afc. Wtwt-if we ient-W«lty Ok. in here 7 HowxXovrr Jimmy Hie Owdtar even Io» by ? Atvtei s*(e. WiW% « bnnch «+■ «*n lehnn nenen «rw *n4,n «+even eer pcO-vTSiH. w i m Tve hwt Wei jo b s,nee H«». —K h/ei al, I'm home nt«. «X alwavx .,rt * hail Wc finally got the mouse. For the last week or so, there has been evidence of a mouse in our kitchen. At first I thought her tiny scat were just my husband's Itxtse tea leaves run amuck on the counter, but al ter a few days, I realized the shape and color were similar, but to tell the truth, the tea leaves were more irregular in their size and appearance. Being prev entitxi onented, we checked for entrances and stuffed steel wool around the pipes under the sink. Still, she was gelling in. The mouse wasn't interested in much, only the crumbs neglected near the toaster. She never broke into a loaf of bread, never chew ed through a plastic bag to nibble on a muffin. But she did walk, nightly, across the area we use to make sandw ichcs, cups of tea, and the occasional batch of scones. So this behav ior w as unacceptable, and we set traps. The mouse wasn't fooled by the fake cheese on our old-fashioned traps. Obv iously the plastic slice of cheese is more for our eyes than for a mouse's sensibilities, so wc added peanut butter, a pungent and all natural enticement—one that mirrors the mouse's food in the w ild—seeds, nuts and berries, including raspberries. I have had personal experience with the love for raspbemes by mice. Years ago we lived on acreage in the Nehalem Valley. The house was large and the yard a little overwhelming: an orchard, rows of blueberry bushes, and a neglected, tangled patch of ever bearing raspberries. One late summer evening, 1 went down into the field to pick raspberries, a task made complex by the lack of rows and the high grass that had inv aded the garden. A soft summer breeze sighed in the conifers, a golden light illuminated every blade of grass, and the soulful song of the white-crowned sparrow punctuated my occasional thought. As I picked in this quiet, meditative mood, other activity nearby began to intrude on my consciousness. Something, many somethings were skittering and leaping around me, through the grass, under the raspberry vines. When I stood still for a minute, I caught glimpses of the creatures: small mice, twenty, thirty, who knows how many, were climbing nodding grass stalks until the seed heads bent to the ground. Overripe raspberries were devoured on the soil w here they had fallen. The bread and the wine, the seeds and fruits, were being consumed at a joyful, delirious pace. So inv olved in their party, the mice didn't hesitate for a moment for my presence. One boldly, and probably unconsciously, ran over my foot. Everywhere that I could hear around me, there was the delicate snap of tiny grass stems, the rustle of dead leav es, the busyness of mice at an end of summer feast. A sense of joy in the abundance, of the simple happiness of plenty to cat in the company of friends and family, came over me. This was the field mouse equivalent of the birds' post- breeding migration, when adult birds and their newly fledged offspring disperse over a wide area to consume as much ftxxl as possible to get ready for the rigors of fall and winter. The mouse in our house, however, was in a springtime condition. I Itxtkcd at the little btxly dead in the trap—plump with bright dark eyes and pink nose, a glossy healthy-looking coat, probably from eating bird seed scattered beneath our feeders. Whiskers as wide as the btxly, and a finely f urred tail just as long. Here was a f ine female. She didn't get to this maturity living from our kitchen, literally living off crumbs. No, she was an outdtxtr mouse who was pushed to find additional ftxxl by some change: less bird seed or an impending pregnancy. If I could have fed this mouse outside and let her live, I surely would have. Why end her small bright life? Well, I don't want anytxxly's feel on my kitchen counters and that includes mouse feet. I removed the btxly and wiped down the counter with bleach one more time, but I couldn't shake the image of this tiny creature who just wanted a bit ol the excess from our lives. There's a saying that mice are a sign of wealth, and it's obvious that their success is linked with ours. I guess that's true, but it's still a sad day when I feel I must kill something just because it wants a place at our table. Victoria Stoppiello is a writer living in Ilwaco, at the lower left corner o f Washington slate. NOW IN PRODUCTION ! 14TH EDITION - - Cannon Beach Magazine - Official Information Guide & Fulfillment Piece Cannon Beach Chamber of Commerce l/N fiA /M U £ t£ D on THE. L.}* c w f x QUALITY & DISTRIBUTION j$ a t/o)u.nfc of kiniwrittw »nA d lifttrite l o\>Se»VitionJ on U o r W s t TuWisM — f )«ft, fault«, inireort.. 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