B4 THE ASTORIAN • TuESdAy, July 20, 2021 FIELD TEST Candidates Wanted URGENT NOTICE: You may be qualified to participate in a special Field Test of new hearing instrument technology being held at a local test site. An industry leader in digital hearing devices is sponsoring a product field test in your area next week and they have asked us to select up to 15 qualified candidates to participate. They are interested in determining the benefits of GENIUS™ 4.0 Technology in eliminating the difficulty hearing aid users experience in difficult environments, such as those with background noise or multiple talkers. Candidates in other test areas have reported very positive feedback so far. We are looking for additional candidates in Warrenton and the surrounding areas. Mark Graves/The Oregonian Umpire Fred McKeown in action during a Little League Baseball tournament in Scappoose on Saturday. Little League umpire leaves field after 40 years always in control. He’d just tell me that was enough, and the discussion was over.” When Hudlow’s son, Nick, turned 12, he When Fred McKeown, a Little League told his father that he wanted to one day be a umpire, learns the story is going to be about professional umpire. Hudlow called McKe- him and not the kids who play baseball, he’s own, who volunteered to work with the boy reluctant to talk. McKeown is most com- — for free. fortable behind the scenes, quietly slipping “My first impression of Fred was he was away when the game ends and letting the a strict guy who was going to be hard on spotlight fall on the players. me,” said Nick Hudlow. “But he’s so good But in Oregon Little League circles, at delivering a message to help all umpires McKeown is a legend. For the past 40 years, get better. Whether it is a kid or a 65-year- he has umpired Little League baseball games old grandfather. Here I am 14 years later still in Oregon District 1, a territory that includes umpiring.” teams in north and northeast Portland, Park- Nick Hudlow rose through the Little rose, St. Helens and Scappoose. With a total League ranks. He also umpires high school of about 2,400 players, the teams have a sea- ball, and a few years ago was selected to son that runs from March be part of the Western until August. Regional tournament in ‘HE HAS A BARK McKeown, a north San Bernardino, Cali- Portland cabinetmaker fornia. The games were TO HIS VOICE by profession, typically on ESPN, and Hud- WHEN HE MAKES low’s father got to see umpires three or four him work the game. On games a week and a cou- A CAll. HE ple on Saturday, all of the second to last night which adds up to nearly of the tournament, the SOuNdS lIKE 150 games a season. He umpiring crew received HE’S 10-FEET also umpires in a girls an award for their work. softball league. He has “I stood up there in TAll. BuT HE’S mentored the next gen- front of everyone and eration of Little League bawled my eyes out,” ONE OF THE umpires, runs statewide said Hudlow. “I thanked KINdEST ANd umpiring clinics and my parents. But first leads an annual umpire and foremost I had to MOST PATIENT camp in California. thank the man who made All for free. it all possible — Fred PEOPlE yOu Now, at 73, the man McKeown.” WIll MEET. NO considered the dean of McKeown, who Oregon Little League PRIdE OR EGO TO played Little League in umpires is calling it quits Portland in the 1960s, GET IN THE WAy. when the 2021 season fell into umpiring one ends. He and his wife afternoon when he went EVERyTHING HE plan to move to Spokane, to watch his daughter’s Washington, so she can softball team. When the dOES IS dONE be close to her sisters. umpire didn’t show up, TO MAKE IT FuN “This guy has been a the coaches asked the fixture in Little League parents at the game if any FOR THE KIdS.’ forever,” said Matt Farr, of them would volunteer. Jon Coney | Little League umpire who met McKeown long McKeown stepped who was trained by Fred McKeown ago when his kids played forward. Little League. “He does it “I made a call that a out of the goodness of his girl was out,” he said. heart.” “The coach convinced me to call her safe. I Jon Coney, trained by McKeown to be a later learned I was right. I started to learn the Little League umpire, said McKeown, about rules of the game. At the time I was coaching 5-feet-6, is quiet and unassuming until he my daughter’s softball team. She finally told gets on the field. me no more coaching because she didn’t “He has a bark to his voice when he want me around. I said I’d be an umpire, and makes a call,” said Coney. “He sounds like I’ve been doing it ever since.” he’s 10-feet tall. But he’s one of the kindest McKeown, who has two daughters, has and most patient people you will meet. No been behind the plate when his grandson pride or ego to get in the way. Everything and later his great-grandson played Little he does is done to make it fun for the kids.” League. Over the decades, Little League aficiona- “I called strike three on my great-grand- dos, familiar with high-strung coaches and son,” McKeown. “He turned around and parents, have watched McKeown handle told me I was right.” everyone and every situation by being calm. McKeown has umpired games for teen “Even if you don’t like his calls, you like players, but finds the game at that level is the guy,” said April Rice. Her 19-year-old different than it is with the youngsters. daughter, who still plays softball, met McK- “Too many parents try and live their base- eown when she was 6 and he umpired her ball fantasy through their kids,” he said. games. “They expect too much. In all the years I’ve Bob Hudlow, the former executive direc- done this, I’ve only seen two kids go pros. tor of Oregon District 1 for 20 years, said What a kid really needs in Little League is McKeown was umpiring when Hudlow took simple. That’s just the love of the game.” the position and was still working games McKeown fondly remembers his time as when he moved on. “We never had a per- a boy playing Little League. The umpire, he sonal complaint from a parent, player or said, made the kids feel like they were real coach about the man,” Hudlow said. players, letting them imagine — if for a brief But Hudlow, who coached his son’s Little moment — as if they were in the big leagues, League team when the boy was 8, admitted not just some kid getting ready for fourth to arguing with McKeown. “His nickname grade come the start of the school year. is ‘hummingbird’ because his strike zone is “Someone made that possible for me,” as small as a hummingbird’s ass,” said Hud- he said. “I just wanted to give it back for low. “I’d get to arguing with him. Fred was another kid.” By TOM HALLMAN JR. The Oregonian Dates: July 17th-July 23rd, 2021 Miracle-Ear Center Youngs Bay Plaza 173 S. Hwy 101 Warrenton, OR 97146 (503) 836-7921 Miracle-Ear Center 2505 Main Ave N, Suite C Tillamook, OR 97141 (503) 836-7926 In an effort to accurately demonstrate the incredible performance of these devices, specially trained representatives will be conducting testing and demonstrations during this special event. In addition to an audiometric hearing evaluation, candidates will receive a fiber-optic otoscope exam, a painless procedure that could reveal common hearing problems such as excessive wax or damage to the eardrum, as well as other common cause of hearing deficiencies. Qualified Field Test Candidates: • Live in Warrenton or the surrounding area • Are at least 55 years of age or older • Have experienced some level of hearing difficulty, or currently wear hearing aids • Don’t currently work for a market research company FIELD TEST PARTICIPANTS Will be tested and selected same-day. We have a limited supply of the GENIUS™ 4.0 test product currently on hand and ready for testing. We have also been authorized to offer significant discounts if you decide to take the hearing instruments home. If you choose not to keep them, there’s no risk or obligation of any kind.† TO PARTICIPATE: 1. You must be one of the first 15 people to call our office Mention Code: 21JulField. 2. You will be required to have your hearing tested in our office, FREE OF CHARGE, to determine candidacy. 3. Report your results with the hearing instruments to the Hearing Care Specialist over a three week test period. Qualified candidates will be selected on a first- come, first-served basis so please call us TODAY to secure your spot in the Product Field Test. Participants who qualify and complete the product test will receive a FREE $100 Restaurant.com Gift Card* as a token of our thanks. AVOID WAITING – CALL AND MENTION CODE: 21JulField *One per household. Must be 55 or older and bring loved one for familiar voice test. Must complete a hearing test. Not valid with prior test/purchase in last 6 months. While supplies last. Free gift card may be used toward the purchase of food at participating restaurants where a minimum purchase may also be required. See restaurant.com for details. Not redeemable for cash. Promotional offer available during special event dates only. †If you are not completely satisfied, the aids may be returned for a full refund within 30 days of the completion of fitting, in satisfactory condition. See store for details.