Local A2 Tuesday, September 20, 2022 TURNING BACK THE PAGES 50 YEARS AGO from the Democrat-Herald September 19, 1972 HUNTINGTON — “When you are through with the remorse and shock, what are you going to do with it?” The words sounded strange coming from Huntington coach Don Cosgrove as he spoke of a four-year rarity in the Locomotive camp: how to pick up the pieces after a loss. But it wasn’t just a loss last week at Meadows Valley. The 16-12 setback had destroyed the longest win streak ever in Oregon prep football: 46 consecutive triumphs. 25 YEARS AGO from the Baker City Herald September 19, 1997 The Wallowa-Whitman National Forest may pay a con- tractor to cut and remove low-value timber from Baker City’s watershed. The forest would recoup some of the cost by selling more valuable green trees and any trees the contractor doesn’t want, said Chuck Ernst, Baker District ranger. 10 YEARS AGO from the Baker City Herald September 19, 2012 A company that specializes in selling advertising space on billboards is interested in renting space at the Baker City Municipal Airport. Meadow Outdoor Advertising sent a representative to speak to the city’s Airport Commission earlier this month. ONE YEAR AGO from the Baker City Herald September 21, 2021 Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife employees, fi ring from a helicopter, shot and killed three wolves from the Look- out Mountain pack in eastern Baker County Friday morning, Sept. 17, including the pack’s breeding male. In addition to the breeding male, ODFW employees killed a yearling male, born in the spring of 2020, and a fi ve-month- old pup from the pack’s spring 2021 litter of seven. The wolves were killed the day after ODFW announced that the agency intended to kill up to four wolves from the pack, which has killed at least six head of cattle, and injured two others, since mid July. According to a press release from ODFW, agency employ- ees saw six wolves during the Friday helicopter fl ight. The three wolves that were killed were near a dead calf, and on private land. ODFW biologists examined the carcass and determined that wolves had killed the 450-pound calf, which was in the Daly Creek area. Biologists estimated the calf died late on Sept. 16. Biologists found more than 30 pre-mortem parallel tooth scrapes on the outside and back of the calf’s left hind leg above the hock, and tooth scrapes of a similar size on the right hind leg. “The location, size, number, and direction of tooth scrapes and severity of tissue trauma is consistent with wolf attack injuries on calves,” according to the ODFW report. ODFW announced on Thursday, Sept. 16 that agency workers intended to kill up to four wolves from pack, including the breeding male. ODFW is not targeting the pack’s breeding female. In addition, four ranchers who have lost cattle to the pack are authorized to kill up to two other wolves total. ODFW estimates the pack consisted of nine wolves, a count prior to Friday’s killing of three wolves. ODFW employees killed two other pups from the 2021 litter on Aug. 1. By targeting the breeding male, ODFW hopes to still allow the breeding female to raise any remaining juveniles. Reduc- ing the number of juveniles the breeding female will need to feed increases the likelihood that some will survive, according to a press release from the agency. 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Game Continued from A1 The game was much closer, though, than many of the pundits had predicted. Baker actually led for much of the game, and by as many as 7 points twice in the third quarter. The Bulldogs’ last lead, 50-49, came with less than 4 minutes left in the game. Yet it wasn’t just the surpris- ingly competitive contest that made that Saturday night, in- side what was then Oregon’s biggest arena, so memorable. A combination of other factors, some hinted at in the title of Kaza’s book, gives that 32-minute game the power- ful legacy that lingers, in the memories of those who were on the court and in the stands. And it’s a game that retains a fascination even for some who weren’t there. Kaza, for instance. The author, now 63, was 12 then. And although he was a rabid sports fan — he at- tended all the games during Kaza, in a phone inter- the 1969 state tournament view about his book on Fri- — he didn’t make it to the ep- day, Sept. 16, said he under- ochal 1972 championship. stood the allure of high school But he said he came to un- sports. derstand, even as a boy, that His dad was a teacher in the Baker-Jefferson game was Portland schools for 25 year, extraordinary. and he also was a band and The main title of his book orchestra leader, taking stu- is a succinct explanation — dent musicians to perform at “High Contrast.” games. There were in fact many “As a kid I got to tag along contrasts. to a lot of football and basket- It is all but impossible to ball games,” Kaza said. depict the differences without In his book he explores resorting to cliché, but they’re the popularity of high school no less true. sports in 1972 — a level of in- Baker was rural and small terest that is difficult to imag- town and white. ine today. When you watched coach The Blazers, Kaza points Gary Hammond’s players you out, were a new franchise, and might be forgiven had not yet become for wondering if the the Oregon institu- 1960s had ever hap- tion they would be pened. five years later when The Bulldogs’ crew they won their only cuts were as solidly NBA title. 1950s as tailfins and The Oregon and Sputnik. Oregon State football Kaza And Hammond’s and men’s basket- basketball style was ball teams were not as traditional as his tonsorial national contenders — and requirements. Baker played a in any case college sports methodical, precise game, one weren’t yet the nationwide that relied on crisp passing to ratings behemoths we’re ac- get open shots. customed to. Jefferson was urban and “High school sports was just metropolitan and all the play- the top of the pile,” Kaza said. ers were Black. And so the 1972 champi- Some of the Democrats onship game, with its myriad sported Afros. contrasts, was all but irresist- And they played at a fre- ible. netic pace. “The whole state was cap- This collision of disparate tivated by that state tourna- styles no doubt contributed to ment,” Kaza said. the unprecedented interest in A context beyond sports the championship game. A total of 13,395 people Although the basketball crammed into the Coliseum game is the centerpiece of — 729 more than the listed “High Contrast,” Kaza said he capacity for the arena where sought to put sports into con- the Portland Trail Blazers, the text with society, both in Ore- city’s year-old NBA franchise, gon and in the nation, in 1972. played. “It was a different era,” he It was the largest crowd to said. watch a high school basketball Americans were still fight- game in Oregon. ing in Vietnam. And never had so many Richard Nixon was running people watched a Baker team for his second term. play. The game featuring Baker’s Both those records remain “farm boys” and Jefferson’s unchallenged half a century more flamboyant team illus- later. trated a term that Kaza said News of Record 2005 Washington Ave., Suite 101 Open Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Telephone: 541-523-3673 ISSN-8756-6419 Serving Baker County since 1870 Publisher Karrine Brogoitti kbrogoitti@lagrandeobserver.com Jayson Jacoby, editor jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Advertising email ads@bakercityherald.com Classifi ed email classifi ed@bakercityherald.com Circulation email circ@bakercityherald.com Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays except Christmas Day by the Baker Publishing Co., a part of EO Media Group, at 2005 Washington Ave., Suite 101 (P.O. Box 807), Baker City, OR 97814. Subscription rates per month are $10.75 for print only. Digital-only rates are $8.25. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Baker City Herald, P.O. Box 807, Baker City, OR 97814. Periodicals Postage Paid at Pendleton, Oregon 97801 Copyright © 2022 Left: In this photo from the March 27, 1972, issue of the Baker Democrat-Herald, Baker’s Craig Erickson, front, and Daryl Ross surround a Jefferson player. Above: Senior post Daryl Ross, 6-foot- 7, was the leading scorer on Baker’s 1972 state runner-up team. Ross went on to play basketball at Montana State University. Photo courtesy of Ann Ross has only in more recent times become something of a cliché itself — “the urban-rural di- vide.” “And here we have it on the basketball court,” Kaza said. But he notes, too, that un- like Oregon’s political divide, which tends to separate peo- ple into groups that have little to do with each other except for social media squabbling, the 1972 championship game brought people together, even if for only one night. Kaza said he tells a com- prehensive story in his book, including Oregon’s sometimes sordid racial history, most no- tably the state serving as fertile recruiting ground for the Ku Klux Klan. Kaza’s own experience had also given him a perspective for race relations. As a fifth grader living in Beaverton, he was part of group of white students who joined a voluntary program to attend Martin Luther King El- ementary School in Portland, where 97% of the students were Black. Kaza was one of two white students in his class. “That experience forever impacted his world view of prejudice and discrimination,” according to his author biog- raphy on the Nestucca Spit Press website. Research during a pandemic Kaza, who worked as a sportswriter for the Valley Times newspaper in Beaver- ton from 1974 to 1982 before, as he puts it, “leaving journal- ism behind,” said he initially decided to embark on a book project in the spring of 2020. “I started realizing this was a story I could weave to- gether,” he said. After living in England for about 25 years, he returned to the U.S. in 2016. He and his wife, Yee Cheng, bought a four-screen movie theater in Sisters. Of course something else happened in the spring of 2020. COVID-19. Kaza said the pandemic both helped and hindered his work on “High Contrast.” Although he certainly wouldn’t describe this as a positive, because his theater was closed for 431 days — a number, he notes with a rueful chuckle, he will always recall with precision — Kaza had more time than he would have had otherwise for research. But the situation also forced him to conduct interviews — including with several mem- bers of Baker’s 1972 team — remotely rather than in person. Kaza also talked with John Heriza, who was Baker’s assis- tant coach in 1972 and lives in Baker City, and with Greg Hammond, Gary Hammond’s son. Gary Hammond died on April 26, 2008, at Pendleton. He was 88. Two starters on Baker’s 1972 team — Daryl Ross and Mike Davis, the top two scor- ers — have also passed away. Ross died Jan. 7, 2015, at age 60 from ALS (Lou Geh- rig’s disease). Davis died Jan. 4, 2016, at age 61. Bringing the book to Baker City Kaza said he’s working to get copies of “High Contrast” to Betty’s Books in Baker City. Meanwhile, the book can be ordered online at www.high- contrastbook.com or at Ama- zon.com. He said he’d like to schedule a book signing event in Baker City later this year, and poten- tially read excerpts at Betty’s Books. After growing up hearing about one of the more re- nowned high school sport- ing events in Oregon history — but not having been in the stands to see it himself — Kaza is glad he’s been able to chronicle that game in book form. “I never envisioned actually writing a book until this proj- ect came along,” he said. Find us online: bakercityherald.com FUNERALS PENDING LaVelle Scrivner: A memorial service will take place in October, with the date and time to be announced. Arrangements are under the direction of Tami’s Pine Valley Funeral Home & Cremation Services. Online condolences can be shared at www. tamispinevalleyfuneralhome.com. Ellen McBroom: Graveside service will be Wednesday, Sept. 21 at 1 p.m. at Mount Hope Cemetery in Baker City. Online condolences can be shared at www.tamispinevalleyfuneralhome.com. POLICE LOG CONTACT THE HERALD Baker City Herald • bakercityherald.com Baker City Police Arrests, citations SECOND-DEGREE CRIMINAL TRESPASSING:Timothy Kelly Slaney, 33, Baker City, 10:48 a.m. Sunday, Sept. 18 in the 1100 block of Campbell Street; cited and released; arrested on the same charge at 6:22 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 18 in the 1500 block of Indiana Avenue; jailed. DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF INTOXICANTS: Songa Leonard Daniel, 21, Meridian, Idaho, 1:10 a.m. Sunday, Sept. 18 on Campbell Street near Maverik; MENACING (domestic violence): Matthew Nathan Jeseritz, 44, Baker City, 9:48 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 17 in the 2400 block of Madison Street; jailed. PROBATION VIOLATION: Caleb James Mansuetti, 20, Baker City, 7:46 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 17 at Campbell and Main streets; jailed. Baker County Sheriff’s Office Arrests, citations FAILURE TO APPEAR (2 Washington County, Idaho, warrants): David Ramos Juarez III, 35, Ontario, 5:51 p.m. Friday, Sept. 16 at Union Creek campground; jailed. “You’ll love the work we do. I guarantee it.” - JR 225 H Street • East of I-84 • 541-523-3200 • grumpysrepair.com Let’s see Eye-to-Eye on your vision care • A great selection of frames to choose to get the look you want. • We carry both regular and prescription sunglasses. • In house repairs and special packages starting at $ 99 • Our patients’ satisfaction comes first! • Quality, trusted, comprehensive eye care. • Great selection of frames for every budget. Eagle Optical 3705 Midway Drive • Baker City 541.523.2020