A4 BAKER CITY HERALD • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2022 BAKER CITY Opinion WRITE A LETTER news@bakercityherald.com Baker City, Oregon EDITORIAL Don’t punish schools that end masking T he decision by Oregon state health and educa- tion officials to end the statewide mask man- date for schools on March 19 — moved up from the original March 31 — is reasonable. But only partly. Officials apparently aren’t content to simply make the decision that almost every other state has made and that data clearly support — to end the mask re- quirement without reservation because masks are no longer necessary to control the virus among students and staff. School districts can make masks optional on March 19. But those that do so — and Baker 5J Superinten- dent Mark Witty said he expects the district will be among them — might be treated as though their deci- sion isn’t wholly sound. State officials, in announcing the pending cancel- lation of the mask requirement, didn’t exactly em- phasize a detail — districts that drop the mandate will no longer be able to allow students’ negative re- sults with a rapid test to shorten or avoid the quar- antine period, what’s known as the “test-to-stay” policy that’s been in place this school year and is designed to keep students in school as much as pos- sible. Instead, students in districts where masks are optional would have to stay home for five days if they’re determined to be a close contact of someone who tested positive for COVID-19. Marc Siegel, a spokesman for the Oregon Depart- ment of Education, told The Oregonian that the agency plans to issue new guidance soon related to quarantine periods. That guidance should drop the differential treatment for districts that end required masking next month. Schools in Baker City and elsewhere have navigated the pandemic with aplomb. And now that the omi- cron variant — which poses an infinitesimal risk of serious illness to students — is waning rapidly, neither mask requirements nor punitive rules for districts that make masks optional is justified. The end of masking in schools should be a celebra- tory event, a recognition of the sacrifices that students and staff have made. State officials need to embrace this progress rather than overreacting to a virus that we are learning to live with. It’s not 2020. — Jayson Jacoby, Baker City Herald editor OTHER VIEWS The journalist-politician has worked well for Oregon I t is unfortunate that Nicholas Kristof won’t be on the Oregon Democratic primary ballot for governor. Kristof and former state Sen. Betsy Johnson were the two candidates who did not neatly fit into the tradition of electing Democrats beholden to public employee unions. As the former Repub- lican Secretary of State Dennis Richard- son once said during conversation at The Astorian, “The public employees unions run the statehouse.” In different ways, Kristof and John- son would have brought fresh ideas to this race for governor. Johnson has yet to flesh out her message, but Kristof ’s was clearly about human welfare — the vast swath of displaced and damaged Ore- gonians. His nationally published arti- cles and books are about the travails of common people in turbulent times. One of those books is about drug addiction among Oregonians whom Kristof knew while growing up in this state. Some referred to Kristof ’s national and international journalism as though that made him a novelty candidate. But Oregon has enjoyed good luck with jour- nalist-politicians. Three of our promi- nent officeholders have been journalists. One of those was Oregon’s most conse- in national magazines that collectively reached a broad demographic. Conservation was a paramount value — a theme in many of Neuberger’s ar- ticles. By the time he was elected to the quential governor of the 20th century. U.S. Senate as a Democrat, Neuberger Charles Sprague owned the Oregon had built a national constituency among Statesman newspaper in Salem. As edi- conservationists, and they were elated at his victory. Brent Walth in “Fire at Eden’s tor, he wrote editorials and a widely read Gate” describes Neuberger as McCall’s front-page column, “It Seems to Me.” He “role model.” When Neuberger died at became Oregon governor in 1939 and the age of 47 in 1960, McCall took up the served through 1943. Sprague was a Re- publican in the Theodore Roosevelt Pro- cause of conservation and became Ore- gon’s most prominent conservationist. gressive tradition. His defense of civil In other words, Oregon’s three promi- liberties put him at odds with the GOP’s nent journalist officeholders carried pos- right wing. itive, inspirational values into the arena Today’s Oregon Republican Party and left their mark. would turn their backs on the man. To The important distinction between learn more about Sprague, read Floyd McKay’s biography, “An Editor for Ore- Neuberger and Kristof is that Neuberger gon: Charles A. Sprague and the Politics served in the Oregon House of Repre- sentatives and the state Senate prior to of Change.” the U.S. Senate. Neuberger had done a Tom McCall and Richard Neuberger legislative apprenticeship — all of which were journalists of a different sort, but he wrote about. they had a symbiotic relationship. Mc- Nonetheless, it would have been useful Call began as a sportswriter in Idaho and became one of Oregon’s most prominent to have an injection of Kristof ’s perspec- tive in the race that lies ahead. television journalists, as a news analyst for KGW-TV. Neuberger’s prodigious Steve Forrester is the president and output appeared in The Oregonian, from chief executive officer of EO Media Group. the time he was 18, and subsequently Steve Forrester COLUMN Remembering a great team — and a great writer I don’t know what I was doing while the Baker High School boys bas- ketball team was trying to win a state title on the night of March 25, 1972, but I’m pretty sure I was wear- ing a diaper. And drooling, more than likely. In my defense, I was 18 months old. Which explains my underclothing, my uncouth habits and my inability to conjure a memory from that night nearly half a century ago. Over the past few weeks I’ve lis- tened to many people describe that memorable night when the Bulldogs nearly upset the dominant Jefferson Democrats before a record crowd of 13,395 people in Portland’s Memo- rial Coliseum. (A record, moreover, which lasts to this day and which, given the compar- atively paltry audiences at champion- ship games over the past couple de- cades, is not likely to be threatened.) This series of interviews yielded the story, published in the Herald’s Feb. 24 issue, about that 1972 Bull- dog team that finished second to top-ranked Jefferson. The few hours I spent chatting with players from that team, and others as- sociated with it, has prompted in me that peculiar compulsion, that yearn- ing which must remain forever unful- filled, to understand the experience in the way that only those who were there can truly understand it. To know what it was like. To hear again, at the great distance of five decades, the squeak of sneakers on polished hardwood and the back- ground hum of the crowd swell to a crescendo with each crucial basket. To smell the popcorn. To fully absorb the ambience. Ann Ross, whose late husband, Daryl Ross, was the leading scorer on the 1972 team, told me he had a film of the championship game. It would be a fascinating artifact to watch, certainly. But it could never replicate the pure and powerful sensory experience of having been inside the Coliseum on that night. My frustration at being denied that experience is tempered to a great de- gree by my gratitude to those who shared their recollections. These organic treasures trump, in important ways, even a film of the game. Video can’t convey the excitement as vividly as the players’ voices did. Their enthusiasm was so palpable that I could sense that unique magic which infuses a person’s memories — their ability to effortlessly erase all the years which have passed and to pull to the present fragments of the past, their original power still intact. Those four days in March remain a milestone in the history of Baker High School sports. And I would argue that because the accomplishments of students, both on the court and elsewhere, are so in- tegral to the legacies of small, remote  I stopped typing when I heard the radio show host say the name. P.J. O’Rourke. I would have halted, and given the towns, that period is also a landmark volume knob on the speaker a slight for the city as a whole. twist, regardless. It would of course be hyperbolic to O’Rourke ranks very near the top suggest that a high school basketball on my list of favorite writers. game could ever become the obses- But the host’s tone gave me a slight sion for everyone in a city with nearly chill. 10,000 residents. And within 5 seconds or so my sup- Surely there were Bakerites in position was confirmed. March 1972 who were uninterested in O’Rourke had died. what a bunch of crewcut kids were up You can usually tell about these to in Portland. things. Undoubtedly there were some who You recognize that the announcer didn’t even know the tournament was isn’t introducing a guest but is about happening. to say that something unfortunate Yet I doubt there have been many has happened. periods in our city’s long history, dat- If the medium is TV rather than ra- ing to 1864, when so many of its in- dio, the foreboding is in the form of habitants were so focused on the do- the person’s photograph appearing at ings of 11 local young men playing the corner of the screen, above the an- games 300 miles away in Oregon’s chor’s shoulder. biggest city. O’Rourke was 74 when he died on I’m glad the players will be honored Feb. 15, 2022, from lung cancer. for their accomplishments. The cer- I think it is not inaccurate to de- emony, originally set for Feb. 25, has scribe O’Rourke as a celebrity. been moved to next season. Yet it seems to me, based in part on I only wish that two of them — how many of my acquaintances hadn’t Ross, who died in 2015, and Mark heard of him, that O’Rourke wasn’t Davis, who died a year later — could as well known as his immense talent be there. ought to have made him. I’m sure I would have enjoyed Among the prolific writers whose talking with them, as I did with their work I have read widely, only one — teammates, and that their memories E.B. White — in my view surpasses would have enriched the story of that O’Rourke’s deft touch with prose. legendary team. Both crafted sentences that ring Jayson Jacoby as sweetly in the ear as an exquisite melody. Their styles and subject matter could scarcely be different — White’s writing is controlled and conversa- tional, while O’Rourke was revered as a purveyor of “gonzo” journalism and reveled in exaggeration, occasional profanity and nearly hallucinogenic allusion and metaphor. But both produced work of such consistent quality that they have al- ways seemed to me of a pair. White died in 1985. And now that O’Rourke is gone I feel that hollow despair that comes when you realize you’ll have to do without new material from a craftsman whose work you admire so much. Although perhaps that’s not quite true. I suspect O’Rourke has unpub- lished work that will eventually be available. Until that happy day, I’ll have to be content with the sections of my bookshelves that sag slightly with the weight of what he and White pro- duced. This great bounty continues to enrich a world where it seems at times that the wondrous possibilities of the English language are increasingly de- valued in favor of the trite and ersatz, whose defining quality is that they fit on a small, bright screen. Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.