SEAHAWKS UPGRADE OFFENSIVE LINE DRAFT/3B FOR WHOM THE BELL CHOIR TOLLS HERMISTON/3A Boehner calls Cruz “Lucifer in the fl esh” NATION/2A FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 2016 140th Year, No. 140 WINNER OF THE 2015 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD PENDLETON Your Weekend • • • HERMISTON Taxi business out of service Walla Walla Kennel Club Annual Dog Show Hermiston High School FFA plant sale Spring into Echo city-wide yard sales Umatilla Cab Company now sole service in town For times and places see Coming Events, 6A By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian Catch a movie Patrick McManus and even Pend- leton’s own former senator, Gordon Smith, who wrote about the suicide of his son, Garrett. During Dauble’s seven-year stint before she left to become librarian at Blue Mountain Community College, she hosted author Ken Kesey. The store is a bit of a time capsule. Not much has changed from the two neon signs in the window to the ancient refrigerator in the back room. Some yellowed East Oregonian articles about authors taped on the wall near a tiny sink appeared during Dauble’s ownership of the store and Dallas just left them. A couple decades ago, she fi nally bought a computer for the store. One of the fi rst, an old Key computer with a Princeton monitor still is used for bookkeeping. Dallas said she A year after the Hermiston City Council voted to open up taxi service in the city to competition, Hermiston seems to be down to one taxi company again. The phone number for Hermiston Transit Services has been disconnected and the owners have not responded to Facebook inquiries about the compa- ny’s status, and Hermiston residents have reported not being able to reach the company for about a month. Umatilla Cab Company, the other service picking up riders in Hermiston since the city did away with Herm- iston Transit’s exclusive franchise, has seen its call volume shoot up in the last few weeks, owner Sundi Marquez said. “It’s a little bit over- whelming,” she said. The company is working on adding more drivers and cars to its six-person staff to handle the increased client load, but Marquez said hiring qualifi ed drivers and putting them through the city’s background check process takes time. People in the meantime might have to wait longer than they’re used to for a cab. “We appreciate the patience while we iron out the wrinkles,” she said. She said calling ahead to arrange rides instead of saying “I have a doctor’s appointment in 15 minutes” helps. She also said contrary to rumor, Hermiston Transit has not combined with Umatilla Cab Company, so she doesn’t have any answers for the people who have called to ask why Hermiston Transit’s dispatch line no longer works. Assistant city manager Mark Morgan said Herm- iston Transit Services still has a license from the city to operate, so if the business is no longer taking calls, it is a decision on their end. In October, however, the city revoked Hermiston Tran- See BOOKS/10A See TAXI/10A Warner Bros. Entertainment via AP Two friends posing as drug dealers go to absurd ends to rescue a cat in the action comedy, “Keanu.” Staff photo by E.J. Harris For showtime, Page 5A For review, Weekend EO Armchair Books owner Terry Dallas sells a book to Nick Shackelford of San Jose, Calif., on Monday at Armchair Books in Pendleton. Weekend Weather A farewell to Armchair Fri 60/43 Sat 68/40 One dollar Sun 75/49 Bookstore says ‘the end’ after 34 years By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian HERMISTON Precision Irrigated Ag Center breaks ground Construction to fi nish by early next year By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian As technology changes the way farmers grow and harvest crops, Blue Moun- tain Community College is training students to keep pace with the evolving industry. The next generation of producers will have to know how to use things like GPS, drones and real-time soil moisture monitors if they want to get the most bang for their buck. That’s precisely what they’ll be taught at BMCC’s new Precision Irrigated Agriculture Armchair Books isn’t the fi rst small, beloved bookstore to close in the wake of e-books, chain stores and Amazon. Owner Terry Dallas knows this, but it doesn’t make her last week in oper- ation any less bittersweet. The bell on the store’s front door jingles frequently as customers enter to peruse her few remaining books. They tell her how sorry they are to see the bookstore’s existence come to an end. A few apol- ogized for buying so many books from Amazon. Dallas steps away from the business with reluctance, but she is candid about the reason for the closure. “There’s not enough business,” she said. “There were too many days with not even $100 in sales. It’s hard to pay the light bill.” Her worst day in recent memory? “Forty-eight dollars and 48 cents,” Dallas said of a day in February. Since the advent of the Internet and e-books, she said, many customers have disappeared. “I can’t imagine they stopped reading — I fi gure they went online,” she said. “Amazon sells books for less than we can buy them for sometimes.” Dallas smiles, however, when she thinks of good days in the past, such as four midnight parties for the release of Harry Potter books. “People would start sitting outside on the sidewalk in the afternoon,” she recalled. “They wanted to be fi rst in line.” While Dallas and her employees Staff photo by E.J. Harris The shelves are becoming barren as customers have taken advantage of the 30 percent discount on all books in a going out of business sale at Armchair Books in Pendleton. Say goodbye to Armchair Owner Terry Dallas invites patrons to drop by the store Saturday from 2-4 p.m. to have cake and champagne, share stories about their favorite books and authors, and say goodbye after 34 years of business in Pendleton. rang up books, her son Christian and some of his friends stood behind a refreshment table, serving butter beer (made with cream soda), powdered vervain (nutmeg) and cookies bearing a likeness of Harry Potter’s lightning-shaped scar. A life-sized cardboard cutout of Harry stood by. Since 1990, when she bought the store from original owner Darcy Dauble, many authors have visited the store, including Jane Kirkpatrick, See AGRICULTURE/10A PENDLETON Listen to her Women and girls share stories, input By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian The 70-or-so women and girls gathered in the Blue Mountain Community College lecture room Wednesday evening had their cellphones at the ready. They studied Emily Evans, who stood at the front of the room near a projection screen. Evans, the executive director of the Women’s Founda- tion of Oregon, asked her next question. “Has fi nding affordable, high-quality child care ever been a barrier to participation in the workforce?” she asked. “Text your answer.” The bar graph on the screen exploded to life as the answers dumped into the database. The bars shrank or lengthened depending on the most recent answer. When they settled, the graph showed 36 percent said yes, 14 percent said no, See WOMEN/10A Staff photo by Kathy Aney Emily Evans, executive director of the Women’s Foundation of Oregon, watches a word cloud developing on the screen as audience members at the Listen to Her town hall texted words describing the most important contributions women and girls make in the community. The event took place Wednesday evening at Blue Mountain Community College, Pendleton.