4C THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015 PARTING SHOT A weekly snapshot from The Daily Astorian and Chinook Observer photographers Sage Delong, of Vale, right, competes in the 3A 300-meter hurdles event during sunset at the OSAA 2015 Track and Field State Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene last Friday. JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Seen from Seaside: Finding wonder in the commonplace Here are some high school biolo- randomly selected gy was a really bad gems from Maine’s idea, that biology It’s refreshing to hear a words that night: is something that speaker who doesn’t use a Pow- • Quoting T.S. might work later, erPoint presentation and marks Eliot: “We shall not but people should his place in a book by sticking FHDVH IURP H[SOR- be getting ecology Post-it notes on the page. ration, and the end ¿UVW ZKLFK LV WKH Last week, educator, natu- RIDOORXUH[SORULQJ integrative process ralist and photographer Neal will be to arrive of living things in 0DLQH GHOLYHUHG WKH ¿QDO where we started their environment.” R.J. lecture for the “What Do We and know the place • “You can study Marx Hear?” series at the Seaside IRUWKH¿UVWWLPH´ R[\JHQ DQG VWXG\ Public Library. • On trash: “There is no hydrogen, but there would Maine, a science teacher at ‘away’ when you say ‘throw be no clue that when you link Seaside High School for three that away.’ Because ‘away’ is them they would make some- GHFDGHVDQGWKH¿UVWH[HFXWLYH here.” WKLQJ IDLUO\ VLJQL¿FDQW 7KH director of the North Coast • “We need to look to na- isolated study doesn’t present Land Conservancy, guided the ture more to see how we can the ‘emergent property,’ in audience to rediscovery, turn- solve problems and what their this case, doesn’t make wa- ing the commonplace around solutions are.” ter. It’s the cake theory: you us into an illumination of na- • “In 1994, I wrote an ar- FDQVWXG\ÀRXU\RXFDQVWXG\ ture. ticle suggesting that teaching baking soda, all their proper- By R.J. MARX The Daily Astorian ties — but you couldn’t ever make cake from that. Those emergent properties are so fundamental to everything that’s going on.” • “Each grain of sand has its own ecology.” • “Trees are just a tiny part of a forest. And yet the forest has been translated into trees. The forest is something else, and it just happens to have trees as one of its elements.” • “Get a piece of ground, follow it for a year, and see what happens.” • “Being a community member goes beyond attend- ing city council meetings, or SURWHVWLQJ WKH QH[W WKLQJ \RX don’t like. It’s a function of the whole system itself — land, water, air, the whole bit. Being a community member means staying out of harm’s way, but also celebrating the natural phenomena of the planet.” • From author George Per- kins Marsh, who wrote 130 years ago in “Man and Na- ture”: “In these pages, it is my aim to stimulate, not to satisfy curiosity. And it is no part of my object to save my readers the labor of observation or of thought. Labor is life, and death lives where power lives unused. The self is the school- master whose lessons are best worth his wages. The power most important to cultivate and hardest to acquire is see- ing what is before him: sight is faculty, seeing is art.” Draw your own conclu- sions — I’m sure that’s what Neal Maine would want you to do. As our climate and at- mosphere become more cha- otic, as natural forces rule human decisions, his tutelage may lead us to a response that is both sane and secure. Listen to the land. The event was present- ed by the North Coast Land Conservancy and the Neca- nicum Watershed Council in partnership with the Seaside Public Library and supported by the Seaside Chamber of Commerce. To them we are grateful! R.J. Marx is the editor of the Seaside Signal and Can- non Beach Gazette and the North Coast reporter for The Daily Astorian. ODDITY Fido al fresco? NY weighs allowing outdoor dining with dogs Some health RI¿FLDOV worry about cleanliness, bites ZLUH IR[ WHUULHU DW DQ RXWGRRU Manhattan park cafe. American public health RI¿FLDOV KDYH ORQJ EDQQHG pet dogs from eateries, out of concerns including potential biting or transmitting germs to people’s food. A 2013 study in By JENNIFER PELTZ the Journal of Environmental Associated Press Health found such risks ha- YHQ¶W EHHQ FOHDUO\ TXDQWL¿HG NEW YORK — Never amid slim research. mind the doggie bag: Spot $¿FLRQDGRV FRXQWHU WKDW wants a seat at the outdoor ta- dogs hang out safely in home ble, or rather under it. kitchens and even make hospital RICHARD DREW — AP photo New York is considering visits. California, Florida, Mary- whether to join a growing Loni Dantzler, from San Francisco, with her 11-year-old ODQG 1HZ 0H[LFR DQG VRPH number of states that give pet Goldendoodle service dog “Zola,” visit a cafe in a Manhat- other states and communities dogs legal entree, if not actual tan park, on New York’s Upper West Side on May 19. around the country have opened entrees, at open-air eateries. restaurant patios to dogs within Dog lovers and restaura- raising questions, and some ment outside a patio railing, the last decade; North Carolina teurs say the proposal would restaurant-goers fear an on- where the current law would even approved cats, too. safely accommodate people slaught of begging, barking, have them. After getting a unanimous who want to dine out with biting and other doggie don’ts “For me, there’s nothing OK from New York’s Senate, man’s best friend in places — or, worse, doggie dos. better than being with — I advocates are pressing its As- from Manhattan sidewalk Owners like Michelle Var- don’t even call them my dogs. sembly to sign on this spring. cafes to country ice cream gas feel the estimated 500,000 They’re my boys,” Vargas said New York City’s 83,000 stands. But a statewide health dogs in the nation’s biggest ZKLOH UHOD[LQJ WKLV SDVW ZHHN restaurant inspections per year RI¿FLDOV¶ JURXS LV DJDLQVW LW city have a place in al fresco ZLWK KHU SRRGOH PL[HV /XLJL yield only about 170 tickets for and at least one lawmaker is dining and it’s not on the pave- and Carmine, and a friend’s letting pets in. But furry faces often can be seen while inspec- tors are elsewhere. Dougie the poodle peeked discreetly from beneath owner Marni Turner’s chair at a Man- hattan sidewalk cafe table one recent day. If he could be a le- git guest, “it would make my life a lot easier,” Turner said. State Sen. Kemp Hannon and Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal say their proposed law would do that, while pro- tecting people’s safety by bar- ring servers from petting dogs and banning dogs from the fur- niture, among other provisions. The lawmakers, who don’t have dogs, stress that restau- rants could decide whether and how to host Fido outdoors. Options could include special sections. The American Kennel Club cheers the proposal as good for owners and dogs. Restaura- teurs are generally supportive, state restaurant association President Melissa Fleishschut says. Albany pub manager Tess Collins would welcome hav- ing permission for patio dogs, since many patrons already bring them along. “It’s created a camaraderie” among customers, she says. But the idea gives some New Yorkers pause. “Who wants somebody’s GRJ QH[W WR WKHP EHJJLQJ when they’re trying to eat?” says Erik Galloway, of Shore- ham, on Long Island. He likes dogs generally but notes diners can’t be sure how healthy another patron’s dog is. The state Association of &RXQW\+HDOWK2I¿FLDOVYRWHG to oppose the measure, amid concerns including cleanli- ness, bites and whether local governments could enforce WRXJKHUUXOHVH[HFXWLYHGLUHF- tor Linda Wagner said. Assem- bly Health Committee Chair- man Richard Gottfried said WKLVZHHNKHZDVH[SORULQJWKH SURSRVDO¶VUDPL¿FDWLRQV GE T Y O U R CO PY TOD AY ! D iscoverO urCoa st.com