SATURDAY BAKER VOLLEYBALL WINS LEAGUE FINALE, BRACES FOR PLAYOFFS: PG. A6 In SPORTS, A6 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com October 23, 2021 IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber John Bean of Baker City. BRIEFING Trunk-or-treat event scheduled for Oct. 30 at Christian Church A trunk-or-treat event is planned for Saturday, Oct. 30 from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. in the parking lot at the Baker City Christian Church, 675 Highway 7. There will be free, fun activities for the whole family. Chili, hot dogs and s’mores will be available. County seeks volunteers to serve on boards Baker County is seek- ing volunteers to serve on any of the following: Baker County Planning Commission, Ambulance Service Advisory Commit- tee, Transportation/Traffi c Safety Committee, Mental Health Advisory Commit- tee, NE Oregon Economic Development District Budget Board, NE Oregon Economic Development District Board, Local Public Safety Coordinating Coun- cil, Baker County Budget Board, Museum Com- mission. Volunteer forms are available at www. bakercounty.org/commis- sioners or by emailing Heidi Martin at hmartin@ bakercounty.org. WEATHER Today 52 / 38 Rain showers Sunday 50 / 39 Rain showers Monday 55 / 37 Rain showers The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Blazers lose opener Local • Outdoors • Sports • TV $1.50 How a baseball star ended up in Baker  Joe Rudi, a three-time World Series winner, will be inducted into the Oakland A’s Hall of Fame By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com If not for a bird he’d never heard of, and also a fogbound Seattle airport and a me- chanic who worked Sundays, Joe Rudi might never have ended up in Baker City. And that, from Rudi’s perspective almost half a century later, would have been a pity. “Baker was a wonderful town to raise our kids,” Rudi, 75, said in a phone interview on Oct. 19 from the home in Florida where he and Sha- ron, his wife of 55 years, live most of the year. “But when you get into your 70s, shoveling snow is not high on your list,” he said with a chuckle. Prior to the pandemic, the Rudis returned to Baker City during the summer. Mike Rudi, the oldest of their four children, lives here. “We love it there,” Joe Rudi said. “It’ll always be home.” Rudi will have another reason to travel across the country in 2022. That’s when he’ll be a member of the third group to be inducted into the Hall of Fame for the Oakland Athlet- ics Major League Baseball franchise. Rudi, who played left fi eld, was a key player on the Oakland teams that won three consecutive World Series titles — in 1972, 1973 and 1974. Rudi, who is among the more accomplished athletes to ever live in Baker City, made a leaping catch, against the wall, in the ninth inning of the second game of the 1972 series against Cincin- nati, preserving Oakland’s 2-1 lead. Earlier in the game, Joe Rudi was a key player on the Oakland A’s teams that won three straight World Series, in 1972, 1973 and 1974. 1981 season with the Boston Red Sox. Rudi said he actually learned in January 2020, just before the pandemic started, that he had been picked to join the Athletics Hall of Fame. “I was really surprised,” Rudi said. His fi rst phone call was to Sal Bando, his teammate on all three World Series- winning teams who is also part of the Class of 2022 for the Athletics Hall of Fame. The induction ceremony was postponed in 2020 and again this year. Rudi said he expects it will be scheduled for Sep- tember 2022, just before the 50th anniversary of the fi rst of the A’s three straight World Series titles. “I’m looking forward to it,” he said. Becoming acquainted with Baker Rudi marvels now at the series of events, some of them coincidental, that brought him to Baker City. He was born in Modesto, California, and grew up in Waterford, a town about 20 miles from Modesto, before his family moved to Modesto in 1961. In a 1997 keynote speech to the Oregon Community Ron Riesterer/Oakland Tribune-TNS, File Foundation’s annual con- From left, Mike Epstein, Dave Duncan, Joe Rudi vention, Rudi talked about and Sal Bando dump champagne over their heads how his dad, Oden, who as the Oakland Athletics celebrate after beating the was of Norwegian descent, Cincinnati Reds in the seventh game of the 1972 worked from dawn to dusk World Series. as a dairy farmer and never He was named to the All- saw his son play baseball, Rudi hit a solo home run. Star team three times, won In the seventh and or any other sport, until deciding game of that series, three straight Gold Gloves he made it to the major (an award given to the best Rudi caught Pete Rose’s fl y leagues. defensive player at each posi- ball that clinched the world After serving in the Ma- tion) and fi nished second on rine Corps, his fi rst profes- championship for the A’s. the Most Valuable Player bal- sional baseball assignment Rudi hit .333 with four lot for the American League was to a Class A minor RBI in both the 1973 World in both 1972, when he led Series, when Oakland beat league team in Modesto, an the American League in hits affi liate of the Oakland A’s. the New York Mets, again with 181, and 1974. in seven games, and in the Rudi said 14 players Rudi hit 179 home runs 1974 Fall Classic when the from that team went on to A’s completed their threepeat during his 16-year Major play in the major leagues — League career. He retired by beating the Los Angeles an almost unheard of suc- after the 1982 season, when cess rate for a single minor Dodgers in fi ve games. he returned to Oakland after league squad. Rudi’s individual acco- lades make for a lengthy list, playing from 1977-80 for the California Angels, and the as well. See, Rudi/Page A5 Volunteers nourish Backpack Program By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com The Baker City Backpack Program, which provides food to Baker School District students during weekends, has continued its efforts dur- ing the pandemic. “We’re doing pretty well,” said Jess Defrees, volunteer coordinator for the program. “We’re building our num- bers but we’re at around 120 backpacks.” The project, designed to replace meals that stu- dents receive at school, was serving about 250 students weekly at the end of the 2020-21 school year this past spring, and Defrees expects the weekly tally will TODAY Issue 71, 12 pages “We’re having counselors do that so they can identify families at any point during the year who might benefi t,” Defrees said. The main difference last year, she said, is that middle school and high school stu- dents didn’t start attending in-person classes four days per week until April. Last school year, volun- Contributed Photo teers delivered food packages to students at their homes. Volunteers gather at the First Presbyterian Church But this year the in Baker City on Sept. 30 to fi ll bags with food for distribution to Baker 5J School District students during Backpack Program has returned to its usual system weekends. The Backpack Program started in 2010. of delivering food to each school, where the packages frees said. Students learn continue to increase in the are given to students. about the program when fi nal two months of 2021. classes start and begin to That’s been a typical progression in the past, De- sign up. See, Backpack/Page A3 Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B2 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 Horoscope ........B3 & B4 Jayson Jacoby ..........A4 News of Record ........A2 COVID cases rise again By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Baker County’s month-long decline in weekly COVID-19 cases ended this week. From Sunday, Oct. 17 through Thursday, Oct. 21, the county reported 45 new cases. There were 37 cases for the previous week, Oct. 10-16. The number of weekly cases had declined in each of the previous four weeks, from the record high of 139 from Sept. 12-18. Even with this week’s rise in cases, October’s rate re- mains well below both those of September and August, when the county’s cases, driven, as elsewhere in Oregon and the nation, by the more contagious delta variant, rose rapidly. September set records for total cases, with 465, and for daily average, at 15.5. August ranks second in both categories, with 300 total cases and a daily average of almost 10. October, through the fi rst 21 days, has a total of 137 cases and an average of 6.5 cases per day. That would rank as the third-highest daily rate during the pandemic. Prior to the surge that started the last week of July, the monthly record was 6.3 cases per day, in December 2020. See, COVID/Page A3 Future of Lookout wolves unsure  Breeding female could stay in area, or disperse to fi nd another mate By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The Lookout Mountain wolf pack, which has killed at least nine head of cattle and injured three others in eastern Baker County since July, has been pared from an estimated 11 wolves to three. But how the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (ODFW) killing of eight wolves from the pack over the past two and a half months will affect its behavior in the future can’t be forecast with confi dence, according to the agency’s state wolf coordinator. “When wolves hunt they are looking for vulner- able prey and relying upon instinct and experience,” Roblyn Brown, who works at ODFW’s La Grande offi ce, wrote in an email to the Baker City Herald in response to questions about the future of the pack. “We cannot predict what a wild animal will do in every different situation, so I will not predict whether or not the breeding female will dep- redate in the future.” Obituaries ..................A2 Opinion ......................A4 Outdoors ..........B1 & B2 TUESDAY — WEEKEND HIGH SCHOOL, COLLEGE SPORTS ROUND UP See, Wolves/Page A3 Sports ........................A6 Turning Backs ...........A2 Weather ..................... B6