4A COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL February 24, 2016 O PINION LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Bravo, Barrell I’d like to express my appre- ciation to Pete Barrell, Com- munity Services Director for the City of Cottage Grove. My understanding is that he wrote the grant that brought the Ex- ploring Human Origins Exhibit from the Smithsonian to Cot- tage Grove. This traveling ex- hibit will only stop in 19 loca- tions around the country, and thanks to Pete’s efforts, Cottage Grove is one of those places. Having such a display in our li- brary, even for a short time, is a big accomplishment and one that our community should take notice of. Good job and con- gratulations to Pete, the library staff and everyone else involved in bringing the Smithsonian to Cottage Grove. Travis Palmer Executive Director, Cottage Grove Area Chamber of Commerce We have to be on the same side Ranchers used to be heroes; now some of our government and their agencies call them ter- rorists. What a shame — shame on you. I would say that if you are going to go against your own people, that’s a crime. The Bureau of Land Manage- ment and other agencies have been forming their own SWAT teams since the current admin- istration has been in the White House, and maybe longer than that. National Guard and po- lice, we have to be on the same side, as we are the people that should push our government back when they go against our Constitution and our religious beliefs. If you don’t think there is a very serious problem in this country with our government, then you too are the problem. Stand together as one; when we stand divided we lose. in the end God wins. If you vote for Bernie or Hillary, then you want more of the same and much worse. Inform yourself, educate yourself before you vote. Both parties are not what they used to be. They are so- cialist and worse. Mike Ritter Cottage Grove Offbeat Oregon History Benton County lad became the 'Nicola Tesla of Oregon' BY FINN J.D. JOHN For the Sentinel probably would not have gone down like it did. In fact, it might never have gone down at all. But, of course, Led Zeppelin jokes aside, who’s ever heard of an all-metal airship? Well — 12 years before the Hinden- burg disaster put an end to the era of luxury airship travel, an Oregon inven- tor fi led for a patent on one. And as the “Roaring Twenties” drew to a close, he was making plans to revolutionize the industry — with an all-aluminum airship called the City of Glendale. His plans didn’t fail nearly as cata- strophically as did the Hindenburg, but they did fail. A combination of a major engineering oversight and the onset of the Great Depression left his dreams of an airship empire, and his fortune, in ruins. And the Zeppelin company never got the chance — as it might otherwise have done — to li- A lmost everyone has seen the gripping footage of the great zeppelin Hindenburg falling fl aming out of the gray skies of New Jersey in 1937, crushing as it fell the dreams of everyone who had hoped to see air- ships developed as a regular means of travel. But most people don’t realize the reason for the Hindenburg’s fi ery de- struction wasn’t the hydrogen with which it was fi lled — or, rather, not entirely so. Whether the fatal fi re was sparked by burning hydrogen or not, the airship would not have exploded as it did — and, indeed, might not have been destroyed at all — if its fabric skin had not been vulnerable to fi re. In other words, if the Hindenburg had been built entirely of metal, it cense his patents when it built the ill- fated LZ-129 Hindenburg. Here’s the story: Thomas Benton Slate was born in the tiny hamlet of Tangent, near the Calapooia River in western Linn County, and raised in the almost-as- tiny hamlet of Alsea, tucked into the Coast Range west of Corvallis. During the First World War, Slate’s engineering skills were pressed into service in designing aircraft technol- ogy for the Allies; it was a time he later referred to as “the highlight of my inventive career.” That, as you’ll soon see, was say- ing something. Thomas B. Slate was, in many ways, Oregon’s own Nicola Tesla. After the war, Slate built what may have actually been the world’s fi rst motor home: a large box perched on the spindly, sagging chassis of a Ford TT one-ton truck. He called it a “Housecar,” and in it, he and his fam- ily sallied forth for a cross-country road trip. In the early 1920s, Slate moved out to the East Coast, where he founded a company called “DryIce.” The invet- erate tinkerer had developed a cost-ef- fective method for making frozen car- bon dioxide — dry ice — and, after making the rounds of investors and gathering together the necessary back- ing, he’d gone into business. That business, as you’ve no doubt gathered, was a big success, as evi- denced by the fact that the name of Slate’s company is our generic term for CO2 ice today. When Slate sold out and came back to the West Coast, he was a wealthy man. And he was ready to put some of his most radical and imaginative ideas to the test: ideas that had developed out of those short, productive years as an aeronautical engineer during the Great War. Slate settled with his family in the city of Glendale, Calif., and, with his brothers Grover and Frank, went into business as the Slate Aircraft Co. The new outfi t leased a piece of land at the Glendale Airport and got busy bring- ing Slate’s most outré, futuristic vi- sions into concrete reality there. Slate had, in his mind and in the four patents that he’d fi led, completely re-imagined airship travel. The way he saw it, airships as they existed in the early 1920s had several severe limita- tions, which would, he felt, keep them from ever becoming commercially vi- able: First, they were full of hydrogen, an explosive gas. This could be remedied by fi lling them with helium, which was inert; but helium wasn’t nearly as buoyant, and it was terrifi cally expen- sive — far too expensive to be used commercially in airships. Secondly, they required enormous ground infrastructure — mooring masts hundreds of feet tall and built strong enough to be reefed on, refuel- ing apparatus, veritable armies of men who had to run about catching hold of ground lines and securing them to winches and guiding their landing ap- proach. The third problem that Slate saw with 1920s airships was their vulner- ability to heavy weather. It took only a relatively minor storm to turn an air- ship journey from the lap of luxury into the most terrifying experience this side of an ocean liner in a hurricane. Slate thought he had an answer to Please see OFFBEAT, Page 5A Do vegetables lose nutritional value when we cook them? BY JOEL FUHRMAN, MD For the Sentinel E very day, we should eat a combination of raw and cooked vegetables, because the effects of cooking are different depending on which nutrients we’re talking about. Cooking modifi es the physi- cal and chemical properties of foods. It causes degradation or leaching of certain nutrients and phytochemicals, but also soft- ens cell walls and other food matrix components, facilitating the extraction and absorption of others. Many nutrients are damaged by heat, light or oxygen. Vita- min C appears to be the nutri- ent most vulnerable to cooking; about 30 percent of vitamin C in leafy greens is destroyed by cooking (if cooking water is consumed, as in cooking a soup). Other nutrients degraded by heat are folate, other B vita- mins, and phenol antioxidants. Minerals and fat-soluble vita- mins (A, D, E, and K) are more stable in heated conditions. Cruciferous vegetables con- tain valuable nutrients called $ PUUBHF ( SPWF 4 FOUJOFM 116 N. Sixth Street · P.O. Box 35 · Cottage Grove, OR 97424 ADMINISTRATION: JOHN BARTLETT, Regional Publisher.............................. 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In foreign countries, postage extra. No subscription for less than Ten Weeks. Subscription rates are subject to change upon 30 days’ notice. All subscritptions must be paid prior to beginning the subscription and are non-refundable. Periodicals postage paid at Cottage Grove, Oregon. Postmaster: Send address changes to P.O. Box 35, Cottage Grove, OR 97424. Local Mail Service: If you don’t receive your Cottage Grove Sentinel on the Wednesday of publication, please let us know. Call 942-3325 between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Advertising ownership: All advertising copy and illustrations prepared by the Cottage Grove Sentinel become the property of the Cottage Grove Sentinel and may not be reproduced for any other use without explicit written prior approval. Copyright Notice: Entire contents ©2015 Cottage Grove Sentinel. glucosinolates, which are con- verted to cancer-fi ghting iso- thiocyanates (ITCs) when the plant cells are broken up by chopping or chewing. Impor- tantly, heat inactivates the en- zyme (myrosinase) that drives this conversion, so chopping (preferably blending) these veg- etables before cooking them is important. Blending the raw greens and then adding them to a soup of stew is most conserv- ing of ITCs. After that, steam- ing—compared to stir-frying, boiling and microwaving—re- sulted in the smallest gluco- sinate losses in broccoli, but the less it is cooked the better. Re- member though that the myrosi- nase is deactivated by heat, so in order to produce more isothio- cycanates from the remaining glucosinolates after cooking, eat some raw cruciferous with that meal or add some raw crucifer- ous (such as shredded cabbage) to the cooked greens. Carotenoids, such as alpha- carotene, beta-carotene and ly- copene are not only heat stable but actually more absorbable once foods are cooked. Carot- enoids are inside the plant cells, embedded in the matrix of the food, and some of the cellular structure must be mechanically disrupted (such as by blending or heating) to make the carot- enoids extractable by the diges- tive system. Vitamin E fractions from plant foods have also been reported to be more bioacces- sible after heating. A study on raw foodists found that lyco- pene status was low without eating any cooked foods. Fat in- take in that study was associated with better plasma carotenoid status—adding fat is a way to improve carotenoid absorption from raw vegetables. One study measured alpha-carotene, beta- carotene and lycopene in the blood after subjects ate salads topped with fat-free dressing, or dressings containing either six or 28 grams of fat. Carotenoid absorption was negligible from the salad with fat-free dressing and high from the fat-contain- ing dressings. Salad dressings made by blending nuts and seeds (instead of using oil) are the healthiest. Some nutrient loss occurs when fresh foods are stored. Produce that has been shipped a long distance will likely have less nutritional value than the same produce bought locally. Frozen vegetables do have low- er levels of vitamin C, thiamin, ribofl avin and niacin loss due to the blanching step of the freez- ing process. However, once the food is frozen, nutrient losses due to storage slow down sub- stantially. Plus, frozen vegeta- bles are picked fresh and frozen soon after, preserving a large proportion of the nutrients. For frozen fruits, there is minimal loss of polyphenol antioxidants (such as fl avonoids) because fruits are not blanched before they are frozen. Sometimes nutrients are not destroyed by heat but can be lost in the cooking water if boiling or steaming—this is why soups are a good cooking method for vegetables, as long as the veg- etables are not overcooked. Remember to avoid high-heat dry cooking and browning to prevent the formation of acryl- amide—a possible carcinogen formed in cooked starchy foods. A good general guideline to maximize nutrient quantity and variety is to eat a large variety of raw and gently cooked veg- etables—large daily salads plus vegetable-bean soups or stews, or vegetables cooked in a wok with water or steamed for only 10 minutes. Remember—Eat a large green salad, containing a vari- ety of raw vegetables, with a nut and seed based dressing at least once a day. Suggested healthy cooking methods for vegetables Steam greens in a wok alter- nating covering and stirring. Steam greens in a steamer for 10 minutes or less Halve artichokes up the mid- dle and steam for 18—20 min- utes Boil sweet potatoes, cook car- rots and parsnips in soups and stews Bake hard squashes at a low oven temperature (325° F) for one hour Wok or steam mushrooms, or add to soups and stews Puree raw cruciferous greens, shallots and onions before add- ing to soups and stews Dr. Fuhrman is a #1 New York Times best-selling author and a family physician specializing in lifestyle and nutritional medi- cine. Visit his informative web- site at DrFuhrman.com. Submit your questions and comments about this column directly to newsquestions@drfuhrman. com. Letters to the Editor policy The Cottage Grove Sentinel receives many letters to the editor. In order to ensure that your letter will be printed, letters must be under 300 words and submitted by Friday at 5 p.m. Letters must be signed and must include an address, city and phone number or e-mail address for verifi cation purposes. No anonymous letters will be printed. Letters must be of interest to local readers. Personal attacks and name calling in response to letters are uncalled for and unnecessary. If you would like to submit an opinion piece, Another View must be no longer than 600 words. To avoid transcription errors, the Sentinel would prefer editorial and news content be sent electronically via email or electronic media. Hand written submissions will be accepted, but we may need to call to verify spelling, which could delay the publishing of the submission.