IN SEARCH OF WOU WOMEN’S HOOPS SHELLS RISING STAR Page 10A Volume 140, Issue 1 Page 6A www.Polkio.com January 7, 2015 75¢ IN YOUR TOWN DALLAS NEWS With final approval granted from the Dallas Plan- ning Commission, Dallas Retirement Village is mov- ing forward with plans for 40 to 63 more independ- ent living apartments and a new community center. The expansion will take place in two phases on a 5.3-acre empty lot on Northwest Jasper Street, ad- jacent to current DRV facilities. Phase 1 plans call for building a complex with one-bedroom and two-bedroom units and a 20,000-square-foot din- ing and activity lodge. One-bedroom apartments will be 850 square feet and two-bedroom units will be 1,500 square feet. »Page 3A FALLS CITY NEWS JOLENE GUZMAN/ Itemizer-Observer Mike Ainsworth may very well be Polk County’s biggest and most dedicated Oregon Ducks football fan. DELIRIOUS DUCKS UO football’s championship game run gives locals ‘Duck Fever’ By Jolene Guzman Playing For A National Title The Itemizer-Observer DALLAS — Mike Ains- worth can remember when he was a senior at Central High School in 1973, there were four Oregon Ducks fans — in the entire school. “Back then, if you beat Idaho, that was a good year,” he said. “How things have changed.” No kidding. Four decades later, the Ducks will play Ohio State for the national title Monday in Arlington, Texas, in the first championship game of the College Football Playoff era. Ainsworth, a Polk County commissioner — and once Who: Oregon Ducks (13-1) vs. Ohio State Buckeyes (13-1). What: College Foot- ball Playoff National Championship Game. When: Monday, 5:30 p.m. (PST) Where: AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas. TV: ESPN. Radio: KXTG-AM 750, KXTG-FM 102.9. Point spread: Oregon favored by 7 points. long-suffering Ducks fan — will be there with his wife, DeAnn, to cheer on the team. He was at the Rose Bowl for the national semifi- nal playoff game in Pasade- na, Calif., on New Year’s Day to see Oregon’s win. Ohio State defeated Alabama in the other semifinal to punch its ticket to the title game. To see the Ducks in a sec- ond national football cham- pionship game in four years — Oregon lost to Auburn 22- 19 in 2011 — is a pretty nice reward for the loyalty he’s shown the team over the years. Ainsworth has had season tickets for more than 30 years. He ran into one of the three other Oregon fans he went to school with at the Rose Bowl. “We reflected on what it was like 42 years ago when we were seniors in high school — we never thought this would ever happen,” Ainsworth said. “It’s fun be- cause we watched some pretty bad football when we first got season tickets.” See DUCKS, Page 2A More changes in store for fair County showcase going to three-day format starting in 2015 By Jolene Guzman The Itemizer-Observer RICKREALL — The Polk County Fair Board has voted to shorten the annual county fair by one day, removing Sun- day from the schedule and going to a three-day event starting with the 2015 fair. The board voted unani- mously at its December meeting to make the move, citing a pattern of low atten- dance and lackluster revenue on Sundays. “After reviewing our finan- cials for the last few years, this change made good busi- ness sense,” said Anna Scharf, chairwoman of the Polk County Fair Board. “The fair needs to be profitable, and the fourth day was the day that was not accom- THE NEXT 7 DAYS PLANNING FOR YOUR WEEK plishing that.” Comparing the number of tickets sold for Saturday — the highest attendance day — to Sunday, the drop off is substantial. During the 2014 fair, Saturday attendance was nearly 3,600, while Sunday’s was 1,800. In 2013, it was al- most 3,700 on Saturday com- pared to 2,000 on Sunday. The revenue picture painted the same stark contrast. “If you look at Saturday’s total gate (revenue), Sunday brings in half the revenue as Saturday,” Scharf said. “People want to get out of there. Ven- dors want to go home. The kids want to go home.” In fact, in recent years there has been a decline in vendors willing to stay at the fair for Sunday’s final day. See FAIR, Page 5A The Falls City Fire Department has been granted nonprofit status by the Internal Revenue Service, allowing the agency and its firefighters to continue a long tradition of donating to community causes. For decades, firefighters with the Falls City depart- ment have donated their “points” money to charitable causes, such as Falls City High School, fire victims, or to pay for community Halloween or Christmas parties. However, about a year ago the practice that al- lowed for money to be collected and donated to community activities came under fire in Falls City and at all other fire departments across the country. »Page 2A INDEPENDENCE NEWS What, exactly, does a 200-year-old parrot think about, and how does it act? Just ask Molly Hare, 10, who plays Polynesia in Pentacle Theatre’s annual fundraiser production of “Dr. Dolittle,” opening Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at Central High School. “I had to learn to make parrot sounds and do parrot movements,” she said, giving off a “caw-caw!” that would make one think a bird was in the room. For being 200 years old, Hare said her character is still pretty active, moving around the stage a lot. It’s the old bird who tells Dolittle, played by Lorenz Bilbo, that if he cared to, he could learn the language of animals and talk to them himself. »Page 13A MONMOUTH NEWS Many fees for the city of Monmouth were revised for the first time since 2008 at Tuesday night’s city council meeting, pending council approval. Most of the fees increased slightly, with some new fees added. Fees that were increased were based on person- nel costs, City Manager Scott McClure said. “Personnel costs went up a bit, which is normal,” he said. Fees established by the city “shoot for cost of service,” he added. In the police department, one fee went down substantially: the cost for photocopies. »Page 9A POLK COUNTY NEWS EMILY MENTZER/ Itemizer-Observer file Fairgoers will have one less day to enjoy the carnival rides and other attractions at the Polk County Fair after the fair board decided to shorten the event to three days. Monmouth Elementary School kindergarten teacher Samantha Henderson has the names and photos of her smiling students posted on a two- sided board in her classroom. One side is her morn- ing class roster; on the other, her afternoon class. Henderson, like many other kindergarten teach- ers, leads two half-day sessions, each about 2½ hours long. That may change next year in Polk County school districts — and others across the state — as schools prepare to offer full-day kindergarten in 2015-16 following the passage of House Bill 248 in 2011. »Page 14A wed thu fri sat sun mon tue Up for a game of Scrabble? Join the fun at the “Scrabble with Betty” gather- ing at Independ- ence Public Library. 1 p.m. Free. Ash Creek Arts Cen- ter hosts a reception for “The Inhabited World” at MaMere’s Bed & Breakfast in Monmouth. 5-7 p.m. Free. Rainbow Dance The- atre performs “iLu- miDance” during the Smith Fine Arts Se- ries at WOU’s Rice Auditorium. 7:30 p.m. $11-$28. Grab your partner and head out to the Guthrie Park Com- munity Center for an old-fashioned coun- try-style dance. 7 p.m. $5. The Pentacle The- atre stages its final performance of “Dr. Dolittle” at Central High School in Inde- pendence. 2 p.m. $15-$20. Help save a life by making a donation during an American Red Cross blood drive at Calvary Chapel in Independence. 12:30-6 p.m. Free. Dallas High’s girls basketball team opens Mid- Willamette Confer- ence play by hosting Woodburn. 7 p.m. $5. 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