TUESDAY BAKER FOOTBALL TEAM ROLLS PAST BURNS HILANDERS: SPORTS, PAGE A6 In SPORTS, A5 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com October 26, 2021 Local • Home & Living • Sports IN THIS EDITION: $1.50 Rescuers fi nd man snowbound in Wallowas QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Jessie Ritch of Baker City. By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com BRIEFING BAKER CITY TRICK-OR- TREATING The event, organized by the Baker City Kiwanis Club, returns to down- town, Saturday, Oct. 30 from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Masks will be required, and families are asked to stay in their own group, with one-way foot traffi c. More information: Debbie Poe, 541-403-0483. FAMILY FUN NIGHT AT CALVARY BAPTIST Free event Saturday, Oct. 30 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the church, corner of Third and Broadway streets. Chili and chili dogs, and indoor minia- ture golf. TRUNK-OR-TREAT AT CHRISTIAN CHURCH 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. SUMPTER EVENTS Trunk-or-treat is set for Saturday, Oct. 30 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. The Sumpter Dredge also has been decorated for a haunted tour, with live actors, Friday, Oct. 29 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. The Dredge is open for self- guided tours on Saturday, Oct. 30. The Sumpter Valley Railroad will be running on Friday and Saturday. WEATHER Today 51 / 38 Rain showers Wednesday 55 / 36 Rain showers The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Beavers rally to top Utah Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Corrine Vegter fabricated this trailer to be a ticket booth and advertise the Haunted Studios. Chilling Churchill  Former school transformed into creepy haunted house By LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com If you’re not squeezing your eyes shut in terror, Corrine Vegter really hopes you’ll enjoy the artwork. Yes, the Haunted Stu- dios at Churchill School in Baker City are intended to give visitors a fright. But Vegter, along with Brigid and Blake Mussel- man, have spent nearly a year working on designs for this year’s haunt. “I just want it to be unique and different,” Veg- ter said. “I want everything to be creative.” The Haunted Studios opened to the public in early October, and have been scaring visitors every Friday, Saturday and Sun- day night. Unless you go at 5:30 p.m. on Sunday, which Vegter designated as the “no scare hour” for those who want to see everything but avoid the screams. For Halloween week- end, the Haunted Studios will be open from 6:30 p.m. Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald The “Plumber’s Nightmare” room has all manner of creepy decorations. to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are $15 in advance when purchased online at www.churchill- baker.com, or $20 at the door. Churchill School is at 3451 Broadway St., but entry is in the parking lot off 16th Street. Masks are required. This year, visitors can choose to enter through an enclosed slide, which empties directly into the doll room. “It looks like a black hole,” Vegter said of looking into the slide entrance. The doll room, by the way, has more dolls than last year. “We added an extra hundred dolls,” she said. During the summer, she and other volunteers painted the doll faces (and yes, quite a few are quite creepy). Vegter scours estate sales and secondhand shops to fi nd props for the haunted studios. “I’ve been collecting things from thrift stores, and I got body parts from the Heritage Museum,” she said. (Spare mannequin parts come in handy for haunted houses.) They also create their own props — for instance, Vegter welded parts of an old bed frame to create a fi replace. Other props, like trees, were made with papier-mache. They also repurposed the heads of old CPR dummies, and made handpainted head- stones. See, Churchill/Page A3 Rainfall sets record  ‘Atmospheric river’ mostly misses Baker Valley, but earlier storm douses area Friday’s rain total at the Baker City Airport was 0.59 of an inch. That easily surpassed the previous rainfall record for Oct. 22 of 0.22 of an inch, set in 1983. The airport was one of the wettest By JAYSON JACOBY spots on Friday, its rainfall exceed- jjacoby@bakercityherald.com ing what fell in, among other places, The “atmospheric river” that Burns, Ontario and Boise. drenched California and doused But on Sunday, when that “river” parts of Eastern Oregon and Western of moisture barreled onto the West Idaho on Sunday, Oct. 24 mainly Coast from the Pacifi c Ocean, the fl owed around Baker Valley. But a less-touted storm two days situation was reversed. Baker Valley, which was just to earlier soaked the valley with record- the north of the main storm track, setting amounts of rain. added just 0.11 of an inch. The Friday, Oct. 22 storm was Areas to the south and east, forecast to be the preliminary to the meanwhile, were in its path, with main event on Sunday, according to rainfall totals to refl ect that. the National Weather Service. Boise, for instance, got half an inch And although that prediction proved accurate in parts of the region of rain on Sunday. — including areas of Baker County — Baker Valley was an exception. See, Rain/Page A3 TODAY Issue 72, 14 pages Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B4-B6 Comics ....................... B7 Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B4 & B6 Dear Abby ................. B8 Kyle Stertz/Contributed Photo A whimsical snowman hitched a ride on the chairlift at Anthony Lakes Mountain Resort on Monday morning, Oct. 25. About 3 inches of snow accumulated at the ski area over the weekend. Home ....................B1-B3 Horoscope ........B4 & B6 Letters ........................A4 Crews from Baker and Union counties rescued a Baker County man in the snowbound Wallowa Mountains north of Halfway Mon- day, Oct. 25, the day after he was stranded by a blizzard while packing in supplies with horses for an elk- hunting trip. Robert Derald Borders, 67, who lives near Baker City, did not need medical treatment, Baker County Sheriff Travis Ash said in a cellphone interview Monday afternoon. Borders, who had four horses, was able to use his satellite device, which works even when cell service is limited or nonexistent, as is the case in that remote part of the county, to send a text message to a friend late Sunday morning, McClay said. The friend then called the Baker County Dispatch Center around noon Sunday. The text message also included Borders’ precise location, which aided rescuers, McClay said. Around 2:30 p.m. on Monday, McClay said rescuers had reached Borders, who had sent text messages to rescuers with his satellite device while they were en route. Although Borders’ use of the device was a signifi cant help to rescuers, the weather, especially on Sunday, was a major hindrance. A group of Baker County Search and Rescue team members, sum- moned Sunday afternoon by Ash, started traveling to the location, which is in the Eagle Cap Wilderness several miles north of Cornucopia, in the Soldier Lake and Sugarloaf Mountain area. McClay said rain was falling, snow was on the ground and powerful winds were toppling trees as rescuers traveled higher into the mountains. See, Rescue/Page A3 Council could fi ll vacancy tonight Baker City Herald The Baker City Council might have another go at appointing some- one to fi ll the one vacancy on the seven-member board. The six current councilors will meet tonight, Oct. 26 at 7 p.m. at City Hall, 1655 First St. The Council has been down to six members since August, when Lynette Perry resigned due to health issues. During the Council’s Sept. 14 meeting, two candidates to replace Perry — Randy Daugherty and Thomas Hughes — each received three votes. Councilors Shane Alderson, Jason Spriet and Heather Sells voted for Daugherty. Mayor Kerry McQuisten and Councilors Joanna Dixon and Johnny Waggoner Sr. voted for Hughes. During the Sept. 28 meeting, Alderson made a motion to appoint Daugherty. The motion failed, 3-3, with the six councilors divided the same as they had been two weeks earlier. Now a third candidate has expressed interest — Koby Myer. Councilors, who have already talked with Daugherty and Hughes, invited Myer to attend tonight’s meeting. Councilors could potentially en- tertain motions to appoint one of the three candidates, or vote by ballot. Lottery Results ..........A2 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 THURSDAY — GO! MAGAZINE ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE Opinion ......................A4 Sports .............. A5 & A6 Weather ..................... B8