понедельник, 8 октября 2012 г.

TOURING.(United States - historic sites, cruises, travel packages) - Travel America

Maryland's Roots

* Historic St. Mary's City, an outdoor museum of colonial history and archaeology on the Chesapeake Bay's western shore, gives visitors fresh insights into Maryland's first capital, founded in 1634. The 800-acre site includes a working 17th century tobacco plantation, the reconstructed Old State House, a colonial inn, gardens, Woodland Indian Hamlet, and a sailing ship replica. Contact: Historic St. Mary's City (TravelAmerica Magazine), P.O. Box 39, St. Mary's City, MD 20686; (800) SMC-1634; www.stmaryscity.org.

Historic Places

* The National Trust for Historic Preservation has announced this year's Dozen Distinctive Destinations. The 12 well-preserved cities and towns are: Eureka Springs, Arkansas; Calistoga, California; Silverton, Colorado; Madison, Indiana; Bonaparte, Iowa; Northampton, Massachusetts; Red Lodge, Montana; Las Vegas, New Mexico; Jacksonville, Oregon; Doylestown, Pennsylvania; Beaufort, South Carolina; and Staunton, Virginia. For more information, visit the Trust's web site: www.nationaltrust.org.

Island Hopping

* Norwegian Cruise Line's brand new supership, the 2,244-passenger Norwegian Star, begins her year-round deployment in Hawaii in December. From Honolulu, the Star will sail to the Big Island of Hawaii, Maui, Kauai, and Fanning Island, an exotic Micronesian isle south of Hawaii. Contact: Norwegian Cruise Line (TravelAmerica Magazine), 7665 Corporate Center Drive, Miami, FL 33126; (800) 327-7030; www.ncl.com.

Wet Adventures

* Zoar Outdoor offers half-day kayaking, canoeing, and rafting trips on the Deerfield River in the Berkshires of western Massachusetts. Rock climbing clinics are available, too. Contact: Zoar Outdoor (TravelAmerica Magazine), Mohawk Trail, Charlemont, MA 01339; (800) 532-7483; www.zoaroutdoor.com.

Pacific Northwest

* Gray Line of Seattle offers 'Northwest Triangle,' a seven-day tour that includes Vancouver and Victoria, British Columbia, plus a scenic drive to Mount Rainier or a cruise on Seattle's waterways. Twin rate starts at $624. Contact: Gray Line of Seattle (TravelAmerica Magazine), 4500 W. Marginal Way S.W., Seattle, WA 98106; (800) 426-7532; www.graylineof seattle.com.

Washington State

* Tauck World Discovery offers 'Washington's Cascades,' an eight-day loop from Seattle. Highlights include the Bavarian-style village of Leavenworth, rafting on the Methow River, apple and peach orchards blanketing the rolling countryside, and snow-capped peaks all around. Also on the itinerary are Washington's San Juan Islands, plus Vancouver and Victoria in British Columbia. Twin rate is $1,860. Contact: Tauck World Discovery (TravelAmerica Magazine), P.O. Box 5027, Westport, CT 06881-5027; (800) 224-5158; www.tauck.com.

Wine Country

* On small-ship voyages from San Francisco to the Napa River, Cruise West offers tours and tastings at wineries in California's Napa and Sonoma valleys. Arrangements include private wine-and-food pairing luncheons. Each three- or four-night sailing, from September 21 to December 29, features an onboard wine expert. Fares start at $545. Contact: Cruise West (TravelAmerica Magazine), 2401 Fourth Ave., Suite 700, Seattle, WA 98121-1438; (800) 888-9378; www.cruisewest.com.

Hudson River

* American Cruise Lines' 49-passenger American Eagle offers eight-day fall foliage cruises on New York's Hudson Riven Departing from its home port of Haddam, Connecticut, the ship calls at West Point, Albany, Kingston, Sleepy Hollow, New York City, and Greenport Village, a fishing town on the tip of Long Island. Sailing dates are September 29 and October 6 and 13. Fares start at $2,520. Contact: American Cruise Lines (TravelAmerica Magazine), One Marine Park, Haddam, CT 06438; (800) 814-6880; www.american cruiselines.com.

Best of the East

* Globus offers 'The Hudson Valley, Niagara Falls, and Washington, D.C.,' an eight-day circuit from New York City. Highlights include the U.S. Military Academy at West Point; Hyde Park, the estate of Franklin D. Roosevelt; an Erie Canal cruise; a Maid of the Mist boat ride at Niagara Falls; Pennsylvania Dutch Country; and Philadelphia. Twin rate is from $1,269. Contact: Globus (TravelAmerica Magazine), 5301 S. Federal Circle, Littleton, CO 80123-2980; (877) 325-0656; www.globusandcosmos.com.

Northern California

* Austin-Lehman Adventures, specializing in soft adventure travel, presents 'Redwoods to Wineries,' a six-day trip from San Francisco. Activities include hiking in the redwoods of Muir Woods, kayaking in Tomales Bay, horseback riding at Point Reyes National Seashore Preserve, biking through the ranchlands of Marin and Sonoma counties, and Napa Valley winery tours and tastings. Twin rate is $2,545. Other multi-sport trips are in Hawaii, Alaska, and various Western states. Contact: Austin-Lehman Adventures (TravelAmerica Magazine), P.O. Box 81025, Billings, MT 59108; (800) 575-1540; www.austinlehman.com.

Eastern Cities

* Globus packages 'Great Cities of the East,' an eight-day tour from Boston to Washington, D.C. Also visited are Newport, Rhode Island; New York City; and Philadelphia. Twin rate is from $1849. Contact: Globus (TravelAmerica Magazine), 5301 S. Federal Circle, Littleton, CO 80123-2980; (877) 325-0656; www.globusandcosmos.com.

National Parks

* Mayflower Tours offers 'National Parks of the Southwest,' a 10-day trip from Las Vegas. Arizona sights include the Grand Canyon, Lake Powell, and Monument Valley. Also visited are four Utah parks--Arches, Capitol Reef, Zion, and Bryce Canyon. Twin rate is $1,598. Contact: May-flower Tours (TravelAmerica Magazine), 1225 Warren Ave., Downers Grove, IL 60515; (800) 323-7604; www.mayflowertours.com.

Skate Tours

Three- and five-day rollerblading tours in Colorado, Florida, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts are offered by Zephyr Inline Skate Tours & Camps (TravelAmerica Magazine), P.O. Box 16, Red Lodge, MT 59068; (888) 758-8687; www.skatetour.com.

Bike Treks

Washington's San Juan Islands, Oregon's coast, and California Wine Country are some of the destinations awaiting bike enthusiasts on trips offered by Bicycle Adventures (TravelAmerica Magazine), P.O. Box 11219, Olympia, WA 98508; (800) 443-6060; www.bicycleadventures.com.

Northern Wisconsin

Wilderness Inquiry offers three- and five-day kayak trips in Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, an archipelago park made up of 21 islands and 12 miles of shoreline on Lake Superior. Kayakers encounter huge trees in old-growth forests, historic lighthouses, shipwrecks, and sea caves. Kayaking or camping experience is not required. Three-day trips are $350, four-day $495. Contact: Wilderness Inquiry (TravelAmerica Magazine); 808 14th Ave. S.E., Minneapolis, MN 55414-1516; (800) 728.0719; www.wildernessinquiry.org.

Gulf Coast

Mayflower Tours offers 'New Orleans and the Gulf Coast,' a six-day trip that includes a Louisiana swamp tour; Biloxi, Mississippi; and Bellingrath Gardens, near Mobile, Alabama. Twin rate is $749. Contact: Mayflower Tours (TravelAmerica Magazine), 1225 Warren Ave., Downers Grove, IL 60515; (800) 323-7604; www.mayflowertours.com.

Cape Cod

Tauck Worm Discovery offers 'Cape Cod & The Islands,' an eight-day trip from Providence, Rhode Island. The itinerary includes the mansions of Newport, the islands of Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket, a whale-watching cruise from Provincetown, and Plimoth Plantation in Plymouth. Twin rate is $2,040. Contact: Tauck Worm Discovery (TravelAmerica Magazine), P.O. Box 5027, Westport, CT 06881-5027; (800) 224.5158; www.tauck.com.

Wild Whitewater

воскресенье, 7 октября 2012 г.

Lamplight hosts summer of competitions - The Beacon News - Aurora (IL)

Just south of Elgin, off Dunham Road in Wayne, one can escape the usual suburban life and enter a different world. And there's no charge for leaving cares behind.

On any given weekend through the fall, the parklike Lamplight Equestrian Center will host competitions featuring some of the best riders and finest horses in the country.

You might even bump into a future Olympian, Charlie Jayne, 22, of Elgin. The champion jumper spent most of May competing in Europe, and he is up for a spot on the United States Equestrian Team.

In past years, Jayne said he has spent about four weeks a summer at Lamplight.

'It's only 10 minutes away from home, so I can sleep in my own bed. And it's a beautiful facility,' he said.

Jayne's sisters are topflight riders, too. Haylie, 19, earned a riding scholarship to the University of Georgia. Maggie, 23, rides and works at the family business, Our Day Farm in Elgin.

'I focus on training young horses,' said Maggie, who, like her brother, specializes in jumper events.

Richard Wilkinson of Tubac, Ariz., has traveled the country judging horse jumper events for 30 years.

'It's about speed and power. The key is to be fast and clean,' said Wilkinson.

Working with Wilkinson in early May as an announcer was another circuit veteran, Frank Waters, who enjoys the facility.

'It's one of the most beautiful show grounds in the country,' said Waters, who lives in DelRay Beach, Fla.

According to Waters, the raw athleticism of the jumper events make them a popular spectator sport in Europe, while hunter events, with smaller jumps and precision moves, can be likened to gymnastics.

There's even a triathlon of sorts for horses and riders. Eventing features cross-country riding, show jumping and dressage, said Katie Lindsay of Wayne.

Lindsay oversees the Maui Jim Horse Trials, which will be held from Thursday, July 10, to Sunday, July 13, at Lamplight and just across Dunham Road at Pratt Wayne Woods.

But the best riders in the country will be in Wayne from Wednesday, Sept. 10, to Sunday, Sept. 14, for the 2008 United States Eventing Association Wellpride American Eventing Championships.

Eventing is an iron-horse competition, but the dressage component is similar to figure skating. Riders communicate silently with their horses through subtle moves and shifts in body weight. The horse and rider are judged on how well they perform the required moves.

'There is constant submission. The horse has to be willing to be bossed around,' said trainer Yvonne Barteau of Gilberts.

Barteau's KYB Dressage team took more titles than any group in the nation last year, she said. Barteau's daughter, Kassie, 19, is a champion rider, too, one of the top in her age group.

Lamplight is the home stable for Kristin Allen of St. Charles, who was named by the United States Equestrian Association as top owner in dressage for 2007. Her four horses accumulated enough points to be best in the field.

'I enjoy the company of horses. That keeps me going every day,' said Allen, whose fiance, Stephen Cooper, has owned Lamplight since 1989.

Since then, the facility 'has raised the bar immensely here in the Midwest with the level of competition it brings in,' said Pat Boyle, manager of Showplace Productions, which runs shows for Lamplight and Ledges Sporting Horses in Roscoe.

Events at Lamplight draw as many as 1,000 competitors, Boyle said.

The facility is 'developing riders who could really take off,' he said.

суббота, 6 октября 2012 г.

Paradise FOUND; CRUISE ROUND HAWAII FOR BLUE SEAS, FIERY VOLCANOES AND THE WORLD'S TOP DIVE SITES.(Features) - The Mirror (London, England)

Byline: By JOHN PEACOCK

MARK Twain called Hawaii 'the loveliest fleet of is lands that lies anchored in any ocean'.

It was his idea of paradise... and everyone should go to paradise at least once in their lives - waiting until you die can be a bit hit or miss.

A holiday to Hawaii can be expanded into a two or three centre trip, possibly by flying to Las Vegas with all its glitzy attractions for a few days, or to San Francisco or Los Angeles and then on to Honolulu for a cruise.

A few days in Los Angeles gives a chance to visit Disneyland, Universal Studios Hollywood for its movie sets, the Kodak Theatre where the Oscars are held and tour the homes of stars in Beverly Hills.

Your stay in Hawaii can also be extended, but cruising on the fabulous new Pride Of Hawaii alone would be a memorable holiday.

This giant of the American cruise fleet has 10 themed restaurants each with its own galley, 12 bars and lounges, a wide range of entertainments including a 1,042-seat Venetian-style theatre, children's facilities, health spa and beauty salon and extensive 24-hour gym.

And everything is informal, unless you want to dress for dinner. Stopping at four of the six islands, its cruises start on Mondays, and are geared to newlyweds beginning their lives together at one of the most romantic places on Earth.

YOU can even marry on board and honeymoon in Hawaii.

The lush green islands enjoy a warm, balmy climate throughout the year and claim many world records.

They have the world's tallest mountain, Mauna Kea, when measured from its base under the ocean to its summit, the world's highest sea cliffs, the world's number one destination for diving and world championship surfing...

And Hawaii probably has the world's most amazing ecosystem.

With sea clarity of up to 100ft, it has 'the best marine life and conditions on Earth', rainforests, an alpine lake, extinct, dormant and active volcanoes including the fiery Mount Kilauea - which has been 'gently erupting' for more than 20 years - spectacular waterfalls cascading hundreds of feet and ringed by rainbows, a 14-mile long canyon, mountains and secluded valleys.

The other islands - Oahu, Molokai, Kauai and Lanai - all offer something for everyone, history, romance, natural beauty, a mix of cultures and traditions, tastes and sounds.

Some visitors will be content to relax on the uncrowded beaches and just marvel at the beautiful scenery.

Water sports enthusiasts - beginners or experts - can swim, snorkel, dive, canoe, kayak, surf, windsurf, kite surf, water-ski, try outrigger canoeing, go big game fishing, touch and feed dolphins and go whale watching.

For a real low-down dive, book on the Atlantis Submarine which descends 100ft into crystal-clear water to explore exotic coral reef gardens, brightly coloured fish and sea turtles.

Want the high life? Helicopter trips are available, including flying over the live volcanoes, hang gliding with or without a motor, or a flight in a vintage plane.

Free-wheeling cyclists can be transported to the top of the world's largest dormant volcano, Haleakala on Maui, and ride the 38 miles down its gentle slopes.

Golfers will find Hawaii a green heaven. With 80 courses, many of them championship standard, it is even possible to book tee times from the ship and play eight rounds during your cruise, with prices from pounds 52 a round, all inclusive.

Hawaii is also a retail Eden, with shopping centres offering designer clothes as well as regional handicrafts and market places.

You can learn how to make Hawaiian garlands, the colour of the flowers used depending on the occasion. We were greeted with purple and white orchid garlands and the greeting 'Aloha'- 'Welcome'.

It is just a pity there comes the time to say, 'Goodbye'.

SAIL THERE..

FLIGHTS and cruises can be booked with Norwegian Cruise Line America, which link with American Airlines, on 0845 65881010 or visit www.ncl.co.uk The 10-night fly-cruise costs from pounds 1,449 per person and includes seven nights on Pride of Hawaii, all meals and entertainment on board, return flights, room only hotel accommodation pre and post-cruise, port charges, airport taxes and all overseas transfers.

CAPTION(S):

пятница, 5 октября 2012 г.

Stephen M. Patton formerly of Streamwood.(Obituaries)(Obituary) - Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL)

Stephen M. Patton formerly of Streamwood Stephen M. Patton, 40, of Chippewa Falls, Wis., passed away Saturday, May 19, 2007, at Sacred Heart Hospital in Eau Claire, Wis., after a courageous two- year battle with cancer. Steve was a lifelong enthusiastic Chicago White Sox fan. He loved the sports of baseball and Musky fishing. He and his friends were always chasing the 50' musky. He was the beloved son of David and Marion Patton of Roscoe (Streamwood); brother of David (Carol) of Ashford, Conn., Debbie Patton of Maui, Hawaii, Michael (Rebecca Hower) of Round Lake, Ill.; and loved nephew of many aunts and uncles. Private family services will be held at a later date. Evergreen Funeral Home and Crematory, Eau Claire, is serving the family. For information, 715-830-5470.

четверг, 4 октября 2012 г.

Police Report: Two women injured severely in crash on I-5 atfairgrounds - The Columbian (Vancouver, WA)

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Alcohol is believed to have been a factor in a car accident that sent two women to the hospital with serious injuries Tuesday night. Trooper Garvin March of the Washington State Patrol said Nastassia Detloff, 20, of Oregon City, Ore., told a trooper at the scene that she had been drinking. Detloff also had alcohol on her breath, according to the WSP report. Witnesses said she was driving erratically prior to the collision. Methamphetamine also was found in Detloff's car, March said. Detloff was driving a 2000 Chevrolet Cavalier southbound on Interstate 5 in the area of the Clark County Fairgrounds at 10:10 p.m. when she crossed the centerline, drove over the median and through a cable barrier. Her car then crashed into a 2002 Suzuki sport-utility vehicle driven by Marilyn Anderson, 54, of Woodland. The cars had to be cut apart to free the injured women. Anderson suffered a fractured neck, broken sternum and ankle. Detloff had a crushed pelvis and broken leg. Both were in serious condition at Legacy Emanuel Hospital in Portland on Wednesday. Anderson was wearing a seat belt. Because of the way Detloff was positioned in the car, it wasn't clear if she had her seat belt fastened. The collision is expected to result in vehicular-assault charges against Detloff after an investigation is concluded and information provided to the Clark County Prosecutor's Office, March said. The northbound lanes of the freeway were blocked for more than two hours. Fugitive turns up: A man wanted since 2000 for running a $2 million Ponzi-like scheme in Las Vegas turned himself in Tuesday to agents at the Vancouver FBI office. Louis Morris Vallette waived extradition to Nevada on Wednesday during an appearance in U.S. District Court in Portland. Vallette was indicted on June 28, 2000, on 16 counts ranging from mail fraud to money laundering. An investigation by the Internal Revenue Service alleges Vallette collected $2 million from several people who thought they were investing in an automated-teller-machine business. Vallette, however, used the money for personal use, including gambling, the indictment said. IRS Special Agent Daniel Wardlaw declined to say what Vallette has been doing since the indictment or what prompted him to surrender. Armed robbery at Chevron: Vancouver police are looking for a man who held up the Chevron Service Station at 4100 E. Fourth Plain Blvd. at about 9:30 p.m. Tuesday. Officer Kathy McNicholas said the suspect was described as being in his 30s with black hair. He was wearing a dark-colored, long-sleeve shirt and black pants when he walked into the station, pulled out a black handgun and said, "Give me all the money." The clerk, the only person in the station at the time, handed him some cash. The suspect then left on foot, heading east on Fourth Plain Boulevard. The crime was videotaped and the tape is now being reviewed. Detective Marshall Henderson is leading the investigation. Anyone with information can contact him at: 360-696-8281. $00:0300069537: $199:A0300069537 $01:Copyright 2003 The Columbian Publishing Co. $02:$?The Columbian $20:September 4, 2003, Thursday $30:Clark County/region; Pg. c4 $60:Obituaries $90:compiled by Columbian staff $120: Richard G. Bedoff Battle Ground A graveside service will begin at 2 p.m. Friday at Elim Cemetery in Brush Prairie for Richard George Bedoff, who died Monday, Sept. 1, 2003, in Battle Ground. He was 50. Mr. Bedoff, a cook, was an Army veteran of the Vietnam War. He enjoyed fishing and playing pool. Survivors include his mother, Marlene Converse of Vancouver; his father, Wayne Bedoff of Battle Ground; two daughters, Jeanette Kahn of Sacramento, Calif., and Minna Marie of Columbia, S.C.; four sisters, Sharon Taguchi of Maui, Hawaii, Linda Lahaye of Spotsylvania, Va., Terri Morales of Troy, Mo., and Susan Denny of Vancouver; three brothers, Frank Bedoff of Battle Ground, Steven Bedoff of Cincinnati, Ohio, and Michael Denny of Kingman, Ariz.; several grandchildren; and his special companion, Janice "Suki" Proctor of Las Vegas. The casket will be open from 6:30 to 8:30 tonight at Layne's Funeral Home in Battle Ground. Leah J. Bentley Vancouver A graveside service will begin at 10 a.m. Friday at Evergreen Memorial Gardens Cemetery for Leah Jane Bentley, a homemaker who died Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2003, at home. She was 94. Born Oct. 29, 1908, in Union, Oregon, Mrs. Bentley lived in Vancouver the past 41 years. Her maiden name was Lay. Her husband, Ralph E., died in 1989. Survivors include one daughter, Linda Antonelli of Vancouver; one son, Ralph "Bud" of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; two sisters, Fonda May of St. George, Utah, and Doris Poetiz of Portland; two grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. Mrs. Bentley was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Meadows Ward. She enjoyed gardening, crossword puzzles, music and needlework. Memorial Gardens Funeral Chapel is in charge of arrangements. Gail M. Buratto Vancouver Gail Marie Buratto, a homemaker who lived in Vancouver the past two years, died Sunday, Aug. 31, 2003, in Vancouver. She was 85. Mrs. Buratto, whose maiden name was Farrington, was born Oct. 17, 1918, in Roslyn, Wash. Survivors include four sons, Greg of Clarkston, Wash., Stan of Vancouver, Alan of Fort Worth, Texas, and Steve of Vancouver, B.C.; 14 grandchildren; and 22 great-grandchildren. Mrs. Buratto loved playing bridge and golf. Her body will be cremated. There will be no service. Memorial Gardens Funeral Chapel is in charge of arrangements. Memorial contributions may be made to Hospice Southwest, P.O. Box 1600, Vancouver, WA 98668. Joseph J. Edmonson Jr. Ridgefield Joseph Junior Edmonson Jr., an Army veteran of World War II, died Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2003, in Ridgefield. He was 79. Mr. Edmonson was born March 29, 1924, in Sprague, Wash., and lived in Clark County the past 35 years. He was a carpenter and worked in commercial and residential construction. His wife, Ruth M., died in 1988. Survivors include two daughters, Jena DeLand of Kenmore, Wash., and Jeri Ferguson of Bothell, Wash.; two sisters, Maybelle Grover and Henrietta Pendall, both of Vancouver; one brother, Howard of Ridgefield; four grandchildren; three great-grandchildren. Mr. Edmonson enjoyed woodworking, clam digging, gardening and country music. He had a collection of 26,000 golf balls. A graveside service will begin at 10 a.m. Friday at Pioneer Cemetery in Ridgefield. Layne's Funeral Home in Battle Ground was in charge of arrangements. James L. Huss Vancouver A 50-year Clark County resident, James L. Huss, died Friday, Aug. 29, 2003, in Vancouver. He was 76. Mr. Huss, a retired truck driver, was a member of the Teamsters Union. He loved fishing, hunting, golfing and electronic gadgets. He was born March 22, 1927, in Okmulgee, Okla. Survivors include one daughter, Lori C. Marshall-Simpson of Vancouver; one son, Jay Marshall of Shelton, Wash.; two brothers, Carl Huss of Austin, Texas, and Joe Huss of Tumwater, Wash.; and two grandchildren. A memorial service will begin at 11 a.m. Friday at Hamilton-Mylan Funeral Home. A funeral Mass will begin at noon Friday at St. Edward's Catholic Church in Shelton. Burial will be at 10 a.m. Saturday in Shelton Memorial Park. Memorial contributions may be made to a charity of the donor's choice. Asbury L. Franck Vancouver Asbury "Barry" L. Franck died Aug. 24, 2003, in a Portland hospital. He was 36. A celebration of life gathering will be at 6 p.m. Friday at Vancouver Lake Park. Mr. Franck was born April 26, 1967, in Biddeford, Maine. He lived in Kelso and Silverlake before moving to Vancouver in 1999. A professional taxidermist, he owned his own business and enjoyed spending time outdoors fishing, hunting and rockhounding. Survivors include one daughter, Amanda Franck of Longview; one son, Matthew Franck of Longview; his mother, Carol M. Ivey of Vancouver; his father, Lawrence W. Franck of Litchfield, Ariz.; one sister, Tammy Leon of Vancouver; one half-sister, Heidi Franck of Litchfield, Ariz.; and his grandparents, Asbury and Lillian Ivey of Lyman, Maine. Hamilton-Mylan Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Contributions may be made to any Wells Fargo Bank branch, account 9576330568, for a memorial. Lucile G. Kane Vancouver Lucile G. Kane, who lived in Clark County since the 1940s, died Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2003, in Vancouver. She was 95. Her husband, Charles, died in 1985, and a daughter, Patricia Hoops, died in 1989. She was born Nov. 11, 1907, in Portland. Her maiden name was Glover. She is survived by two grandchildren, Christopher Hoops of Camas and Kevin Hoops of Orangeville, Calif. Mrs. Kane worked in the restaurant business for many years. There will be no service. Robert Marshall Washougal A funeral was Wednesday at St. Matthew Lutheran Church in Washougal for Robert Eugene Marshall, who died Saturday, Aug. 30, 2003, in Washougal. He was 78. Mr. Marshall was born May 23, 1925, in Washougal and lived in Clark County his entire life. An Army veteran of World War II, he worked at the Pendleton Woolen Mills in Washougal. He retired in 1990. His wife, Ona Mae, died in 1989. Mr. Marshall was a member of St. Matthew Lutheran Church and enjoyed playing golf. Survivors include one son, Dave of Camas; three grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Burial was in Washougal Memorial Cemetery. Straub's Funeral Home in Camas was in charge of arrangements. Memorial contributions may be made to the American Diabetes Association, 3434 Martin Way N.E., Olympia, WA 98506; or the church, 716 17th, Washougal, WA 98671. Katherine M. O'Brien Vancouver A homemaker and seamstress, Katherine Margaret O'Brien died Monday, Sept. 1, 2003, at a local care center. She was 91. Mrs. O'Brien was born Oct. 28, 1911, in Springfield, Mo., and lived in Clark County the past 58 years. Her maiden name was Bradley. Her husband, Ray W., died in 1965. Survivors include five daughters, Joan Schwarz and Debbie Hamilton, both of Vancouver, Maureen Smith of Rohnert Park, Calif., Janice McCoy of Ridgefield and Sharron O'Brien of Petaluma, Calif.; 11 grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchildren. Mrs. O'Brien operated a doll hospital, Granny's Cranny. A celebration of her life will begin at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 18 at the home of her daughter Debbie. Davies Cremation and Burial Services is in charge of arrangements. Memorial contributions may be made to the Alzheimer's Association, Columbia-Willamette Chapter, 1311 N.W. 21st Ave., Portland, OR 97209. Herman A. Olson Vancouver Herman Alison Olson, 77, a 21-year resident of Clark County, died of complications of diabetes Monday, Sept. 1, 2003, in Vancouver. Mr. Olson, a master diesel mechanic, was born July 12, 1926, in Seattle. Survivors include his wife, Wilma, at home; five daughters, Alison Olson Clanton, Louanne Kahout and Sandy Sigman, all of Olympia, Julee Moreno of Walla Walla and Denise Durham of San Diego; three stepdaughters, Carole Bills, Janie Bailey and Donna Boner, all of Vancouver; one son, Jody Olson of Salem, Ore.; one sister, Margaret Berschauer of Olympia; one brother, Donald of Olympia; 11 grandchildren; and seven step-grandchildren. Mr. Olson, an Army veteran of World War II, had worked on the Alaska Pipeline. A service will be later. Davies Cremation and Burial Services is in charge of arrangements. Anthony Stiponi Washougal Anthony Stiponi, who worked as a bartender, died at home Aug. 22, 2003. He was 55. He was born Nov. 20, 1947, in San Rafael, Calif. Survivors include his wife, Laurie, at home; and his parents, Patty and Jerry Moore of El Cerrito, Calif. Mr. Stiponi was an avid sports fan and an aspiring master griller. An open house memorial gathering will be from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday at his home. $00:0300069542: $199:A0300069542 $01:Copyright 2003 The Columbian Publishing Co. $02:$?The Columbian $20:September 4, 2003, Thursday $30:Clark County/region; Pg. c7 $60:Opinion - Friend shaves my bad habit $90:ELIZABETH HOVDE Columbian staff writer $100:editorial $120: Friends give you stuff. Take for instance my Venus shaver, compliments of Eleanore. This gift idea was brought to Eleanore's attention during a conversation at a bowling night out, where I was rightly being ridiculed by other friends for my leg-shaving habits. First, I shave too fast. To the astonishment and fear of some people I know, I can shave a leg -- shaving-cream free if necessary -- in a matter of seconds. Not always with good results. But worse, apparently, I used to shave often with my husband's Gillette man shaver. He leaves for work in the mornings just as I am getting out of bed. And he shaves at night, anyway. That means that in the a.m. hours the razor is alone, free for the taking. Now, it should be noted that I never used or dulled his blade. I would trade out the blade he used for one of my own so his stubble would continue to go off without stumble. But at nearly $20 for a shaver and an accompanying supply of razors, I did not feel that being a two-shaving-kit family was economical or logical. So I'd steal the Gillette in the a.m. before heading off to my morning lap swim -- after changing out his blade for mine, of course. This scheme worked until a couple of times my husband would go to shave in the evening after a post-work shower and his Gillette was not to be found. My husband, you see, is the kind of guy who sees no romance in a woman borrowing his stuff: Wearing one of his big sweatshirts, stealing a bite of his meal at a restaurant, and certainly using his razor are all unacceptable activities -- to him -- think annoying little sister, not sharing one's life with one's soul mate, shaver and all. I have learned to live with these reasonable boundaries. And so when the shaver was in my backpack still, rather than on the bathroom shelf dedicated to its resting intervals, I would apologize, promptly rescue it from its captor -- me -- and return it to its rightful owner. But the mere fact that the razor wasn't resting in its holster, awaiting my Gillette man when he wanted it, was causing marital strife. I told my friends. Eleanore interceded. Not only did my friends not understand my need to save money in such an archaic way when I was more than willing to buy a $7 dessert from Papa Hayden's; they could not fathom that I would shave with a lowly man shaver. The Venus, they said, would change shaving as I knew it. And so it was that the next time I saw Eleanore at girls night, I was presented with a pink Gillette Venus of my very own with two razor blades and brand-name shaving gel. I thought Eleanore was sweet, but I really didn't think I needed this Venus -- why when I had a perfectly good shaver of my husband's to sneak in and out of my backpack. Much less did I think it would change my life. But in some ways, it did. Three-blade superiority First, I learned I was cheap. Not only the friends but the husband had determined it to be true. Second, I learned that a triple razor with moisturizing strip and contour-fitting blade head really was for me. I couldn't cut myself by accident with Venus even when I tried. The razor glided, it bobbed, it weaved. There was no bony kneecap or cartilage-infested ankle that could deter it from its commercial-promised clean, close shave. As one consumer reviewer on www.mouthshut.com wrote, the Venus "is revolutional." But best of all, the gift of the Venus saved me from future guilt over kidnapping my husband's shaver. I look around my house and wares, and realize how many things are friend inspired: Halogen jeans, John Mayer CDs and recipes galore such as Cynthia's Guacamole and a passalong from Kim on how to make beer-butt chicken (don't ask, just believe). The Venus is just the tip of the iceberg. How appropriate. Venus was the goddess of love. It's only fitting that the love and generosity of close friends can be seen even in my revolutionary pink shaver. Elizabeth Hovde's column of personal opinion appears on the Other Opinions page each Thursday. Her e-mail address: elizabeth.hovde@columbian.com. $00:0300069545: $199:A0300069545 $01:Copyright 2003 The Columbian Publishing Co. $02:$?The Columbian $20:September 4, 2003, Thursday $30:Life; Pg. d1 $60:Chic Talk: Helping beholder find beauty $90:ANGELA ALLEN, Columbian staff writer $120: Robert Jones' full-color, gorgeously photographed "Beaute Made Simple" has a funny title, doesn't it? Beauty is anything but simple, but Jones, who was in Portland last week promoting his book, admits that its versions are immense. Despite his makeup acumen and artistry, he argues that self-confidence, not movie-star looks, is the great leveler. "So many women are so obsessed with what's imperfect about them, they miss seeing what is beautiful. Instead of minimizing the imperfections, they should draw attention to a feature that already is beautiful naturally." Jones, 38, grew up with five women, including his single mother, adoring grandmother and three sisters. At a young age, he was intrigued with their hair, their makeup and their clothes, and hung out often at the beauty parlor. He studied the visual arts in Houston, Texas, though by 13, he burned out on painting. He took up the performing arts, which led to hair and makeup jobs in theater productions and, later, to shoots for fashion slicks and makeup clients like Sheryl Crow and the Dixie Chicks. His book uses real people, most whom Jones says are his friends, not professional models. These women come in all shapes, shades and sizes. The before-makeup and after-makeup photos are astoundingly night and day. These women look really, really great after Jones has applied his brushes and colors. Before he starts on them? They could be us! It's enough to convert the makeup resistant to eyeliner, foundation and blush. As Jones explains, "I just apply the principles of painting to makeup." Some of them: Very few women, other than Snow White, blessed with pale, pale skin and raven hair, can wear cool shades like blues and purples. But, Jones says, "every woman can wear warm shades," and the warmer shades add youth and vigor to skin. Most of us forget to curl our eyelashes, and some of us forget the mascara. Upward movement is uplifting. "They give you a quickie facelift." Jones says everyone should wear a foundation, even if it's very sheer. "You won't want to look like you're wearing it, and pink foundation is never a good choice. Always a little bit of yellow helps. Pink makes your face look ashy. Yellow can counteract any kind of discoloration. Don't just slap it on. Blend." Dark lipsticks don't help anyone look youthful. "Nothing will age you faster than a dark lip shade. You need lighter, warmer shades." This means no brown and "no purple for anyone unless you're African American. They make you look like you died and forgot to lie down." If your lips are thin, dark intense shades make your mouth look even smaller. Brighter tones makes them look larger. After all, makeup's job is to create illusions, smooth the corners, enhance the best and remove the edges. Even if the oval face is the most versatile and easiest to work with, and balanced features are pleasant to look at, Jones says, any shaped face or set of features has potential to look beautiful. "Beaute Made Simple: A Make-up Guide" ($30, Simple Beaute) comes in DVD or video versions. See www.beautemadesimple.com. Angela Allen writes about fashion and trends. Reach her at 360-759-8005 or by e-mail at angela.allen@columbian.com. $00:0300069547: $199:A0300069547 $01:Copyright 2003 The Columbian Publishing Co. $02:$?The Columbian $20:September 4, 2003, Thursday $30:Life; Pg. d1 $60:Magic in the air: Vancouver Symphony continues popular 'Under the Stars' concert $90:BRETT OPPEGAARD, Columbian staff writer $100:music, concert $120: Vancouver Symphony will offer another free outdoor concert this year in Esther Short Park. It's the third straight summer for the group, with the tradition growing in attendance last year and projected to be even bigger this time around. This year's concert is at 7 p.m. Saturday. The 65-instrument orchestra will play a program ranging from light classical to popular cinematic themes, a more generally accessible mix than a typical performance. The goal is to get as many people as possible to hear, enjoy and then spread the word about the symphony, said executive director Jill Botvinik. The event attracted 3,000 people for its debut in 2001. Last year, the organization had two outdoor shows: One at the park that drew 4,000, and one at Vancouver Landing at Terminal One, which had a crowd of 1,500. "For a lot of people, this might be their first experience with the symphony," Botvinik said. "Certainly, our hope is to gain more audience. It's a wonderful promotional event, probably has the most impact of anything we do (as far as outreach)." In turn, Vancouver Symphony's subscribers and patrons have been steadily growing. In June 2000, the group had about 450 season ticket holders and a total draw of about 800 per weekend for two performances. In June 2003, those numbers were up to 650 season ticket holders and 1,600 patrons each weekend, double the total from three years ago. Led by conductor Salvador Brotons, the free two-hour show this weekend will start with the Overture to "Ruslan & Ludmilla" by Mikhail Glinka, followed by "L'Amico Fritz" by Pietro Mascagni, selections from "Coppelia" by Leo Delibes and the last movement from Peter Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 5. After intermission, Vancouver resident Karen Stanley, who bid $1,000 in the annual fundraising auction for the opportunity to conduct the orchestra, will lead a performance of Georges Bizet's "Les Toreadors" from the opera "Carmen." Brotons then will lead the symphony in renditions of music from various American movies, including "The Wizard of Oz," "West Side Story," "Star Wars," "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and "Harry Potter." The symphony hopes to raise enough money through corporate sponsorship next year to take the outdoor concert concept on the road to different areas of the county, including possibly parks in east Vancouver or Battle Ground. Riverview Community Bank and the city of Vancouver have been supporting the Esther Short Park concert. "It has had a tremendous effect on raising our profile in this area, letting people know what we do," Botvinik said. "We work really hard on this, and there's so much that goes into preparing a program, that it's a shame to just do it once. ... So we're really excited about the idea (of adding free concerts throughout the community). It's just a matter of finding funding for it." If You Go * WHAT: Vancouver Symphony's third annual "Symphony Under the Stars" * WHEN: 7 p.m. Saturday * WHERE: Esther Short Park in downtown Vancouver, bordered by Eighth and Columbia streets * COST: Free * INFORMATION: 360-735-7278 * ON THE WEB: www.vancouversymphony.org Vancouver Symphony's 2003-04 season * Oct. 4-5: "From Russia With Love" * Nov. 8-9: "Spirit of America" * Jan. 17-18: "The French Connection" * Feb. 28-29: "The Other '3 Bs'" * April 17-18: "Young Artists" competition winners * May 22-23: "Ode to Joy" Performances are at 3 p.m. Saturdays (with pre-concert discussions at 2 p.m.) and 7 p.m. Sundays at Skyview High School's auditorium, 1300 N.W. 139th St., Vancouver. Tickets cost $15-$35, with season subscriptions available from $40 to $170 (with a 10 percent discount through September). $00:0300069551: $199:A0300069551 $01:Copyright 2003 The Columbian Publishing Co. $02:$?The Columbian $20:September 4, 2003, Thursday $30:Life; Pg. d4 $60:Native chestnuts get 2nd chance $90:Associated Press, The Columbian $120: COLUMBIA, Ky. -- It took fewer than 50 years for a foreign fungus in the eastern United States to nearly wipe out the American chestnut tree, once dominant in forests from Maine to Mississippi. Only about a dozen large specimens from that era are known to stand today in the eastern United States. But today scientists are excited about the 50-foot tree that stands on the edge of Charles England's cattle farm in south-central Kentucky. The tree is at the center of an effort by the Bennington, Vt.-based American Chestnut Foundation to create a blight-resistant American chestnut by cross-pollinating it with the resistant Chinese chestnut. "That old tree is going to play a big role in the reintroduction of the chestnut into eastern forests," said Rex Mann, president of the Kentucky chapter of the foundation. "For some reason, that tree made it." It's believed to be the second-largest still alive in the East, behind an American chestnut in Amherst County, Va., according to Joe Schibig, a biologist at Volunteer State Community College in Gallatin, Tenn. "It's a Holy Grail because it's almost a miracle to find one," said Schibig, who has tracked surviving chestnuts for two years. Mann said offspring of the Adair County tree have been planted in Robinson Forest in eastern Kentucky, the Daniel Boone National Forest and an agriculture center near Campbellsville. Foresters will inoculate them with the fungus when the trees are 3 years old. Pollen from resistant trees will be used to breed other trees. Resistant trees from the agriculture center could be ready for forest trials by 2008. Unlike the shrubby Chinese or other Asian varieties of chestnut grown in the U.S. today, the native American chestnut was a fast, straight-growing tree. It often grew 100 feet tall or higher and could be up to 10 feet in diameter. Its wood was lightweight and easy to split and work, yet resistant to decay. The fungus was brought in with ornamental chestnut trees imported from Asia a century ago. It was first observed in New York City in 1904. It nearly eradicated the entire population of American chestnuts in the East by 1945. Chestnuts that had been brought out West by pioneers avoided the blight. The two largest known American chestnuts are in Oregon and Washington. The largest American chestnut in the world is north of Seattle, near Arlington, said Michael Dolan, owner of Burnt Ridge Nursery in Onalaska, which sells chestnut trees (landru.myhome.net/burntridge/). When measured in 1993, Dolan said, the tree measured 106 feet tall, had a branch spread of 101 feet and a circumference of more than 19 feet. The tree is near Mile Post 30 on state Highway 530. Experts say chestnut sprouts emerge from old root clusters each year, some growing as tall as 75 feet. But they usually die within five years. The Adair County tree, 80 years old, isn't a sprout. It has scars from the blight, but each year it blooms and produces the prickly burs housing the nut. $00:0300069552: $199:A0300069552 $01:Copyright 2003 The Columbian Publishing Co. $02:$?The Columbian $20:September 4, 2003, Thursday $30:Business; Pg. e1 $60:Daily Roundup $90:from The Columbian and wire services $120: SAN JOSE, Calif. Global semiconductor sales reached $12.9 billion in July Worldwide sales of semiconductors increased to $12.9 billion in July, up from the $12.5 billion in June, the fifth consecutive monthly increase and a 10.5 percent increase from July 2002, the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) reported this week. "July's sales reflect the continued strengthening of the semiconductor market, and we believe that we will exceed our forecasted sequential growth of 5.9 percent for the third quarter," said SIA President George Scalise. In July, product sales related to personal computers were the strongest sector. In addition, the consumer sector, which includes DVDs and digital cameras, continued its recent strength. Worldwide chip plant production capacity use has reached 94 percent, said Scalise. VANCOUVER Walking tour planned for downtown retail district Retail businesses interested in opening a location on Main Street in downtown Vancouver are invited to a walking tour from 5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday. The reception and tour begins at the West Coast Bank building at 500 Broadway. The event is hosted by the city as part of its Easy Street recruitment contest. A $20,000 awards package and reduced rent is being offered to a business opening on the street. For information on the contest or to reserve a spot on the tour, call 360-735-8805. SEATTLE Microsoft issues alerts about five new flaws Microsoft Corp. on Wednesday reported five new security flaws in its software, including one of "critical" severity that affects nearly all programs in its Office suite of software. The critical vulnerability could allow an attacker to read files on a victim's computer, run programs or otherwise seize control. Unlike the flaw that was exploited by the recent Blaster or LovSan worm which could attack computers even if the user did nothing a successful attack would require the user to open a tainted e-mail attachment. ON THE WEB www.microsoft.com/security YAKIMA Boise Cascade considering sale of Yakima operations Boise Cascade is considering the sale of its Yakima operations. The company could sell all or part of a sawmill and plywood plant and related operations in Yakima, as well as a lumberyard in Goldendale and some 200,000 acres of timberland across several counties in central Washington, the company confirmed Tuesday. As many as 400 employees, almost all in Yakima, could be affected. $00:0300069555: $199:A0300069555 $01:Copyright 2003 The Columbian Publishing Co. $02:$?The Columbian $20:September 4, 2003, Thursday $30:Business; Pg. e1 $60:Klickitat to court energy projects $90:KATHIE DURBIN, Columbian staff writer $120: Klickitat County hopes to roll out the red carpet for energy developers next year by declaring nearly two-thirds of the county's land base available for new wind farms and natural gas-fired thermal plants. A draft environmental impact statement released in August proposes creating a 769,345-acre "energy overlay zone" in the county's south and east ends where energy plants would be permitted outright. The county's plan identifies seven "optimum" sites for new plants: a former sawmill in the town of Klickitat; the Dallesport industrial park; the Roosevelt and Mercer Ranch areas in the county's east end; Goldendale, the county seat; Swale Creek/Centerville; and the Rattlesnake Creek area in the White Salmon River drainage. According to the draft EIS, the county has the potential to fill a quarter of the Pacific Northwest's projected demand for an additional 5,300 megawatts of generating capacity by 2015. It predicts the eventual development of three to four natural gas-fired plants, two biomass projects that burn wood waste, and several wind farms. About 50 people attended a public hearing on the energy overlay zone in Goldendale Aug. 26. Public comment on the sweeping proposal is due Friday. Critics say that's not enough time to absorb the 289-page document and provide meaningful comment. Some question whether the county even wants meaningful comment. "If the Klickitat County commissioners go ahead with their plan to create an Energy Overlay zone, developers will be able to build natural-gas-burning facilities ... across two-thirds of our county without even holding a public hearing," White Salmon resident Dawn Stover wrote in a recent letter to Klickitat County newspapers. Planning ahead The draft EIS attempts to address all the environmental concerns associated with developing new power plants in advance rather than at the time actual site-specific proposals are submitted. It does that by drawing on past studies of everything from the effect of windmill blades on bird mortality to the effect of natural gas plant emissions on visibility in the Columbia River Gorge. But some say the proposed energy overlay zone was written far too vaguely to protect the environment.The zone "includes within it many areas that are inappropriate for siting one or another of the technologies to be allowed," said Rachel Haymon of Trout Lake in a letter she read into the hearing record. The zone as proposed "will certainly increase environmental impacts in Klickitat County simply by increasing the density of projects," she said. Frank and Joy Margraf, who own a ranch near Rattlesnake Creek, say they don't oppose establishing the zone but have started a petition drive to get their area removed from the list of likely sites. Because the creek runs nearly dry in the summer, the area would be a poor place to site a natural gas-fired plant, which requires abundant water for cooling, said 84-year-old Frank Margraf, who holds water rights to the creek. "If they try to take our water, we'll be up in arms," he said. The zoning scheme would be the first of its kind in Washington and maybe anywhere. If county commissioners approve it, developers would no longer be required to obtain conditional use permits to build new energy plants in the zone, though energy projects would still have to pass environmental muster with the state. What demand? The plan's release comes at a time when energy companies have canceled or postponed plans to build scores of new power plants in the Northwest. Many of those plans were hatched during the West Coast energy crunch of 2000 and 201. Of 108 plants proposed since 2000 in the five states served by Bonneville Power Administration transmission lines, only seven gas-fired plants and five wind projects are now operating, according to BPA spokesman Bill Merlin. All the rest have been withdrawn or delayed or are still being studied, Merlin said. California-based Calpine Corp. put the brakes on construction of its natural gas-fired plant in Goldendale due to deteriorating market conditions in late 2001, when it was 75 percent completed. The company now hopes to complete the plant by July 2004, said Goldendale manager Steve Royall. "We believe the market will turn," Royall said. "All of us in the Pacific Northwest see rising energy prices and a continued need for new sources." But Merlin said low demand is not the only barrier to new energy development. "Access to capital to borrow and build these things is very tough right now," he said. "It became that way because of the huge energy company defaults. The money market has really pulled back and is far less speculative than it used to be." In addition, if BPA needs to upgrade its transmission lines to handle new capacity, it now requires developers of those plants to contribute to the cost, Merlin said. That can run into hundreds of millions of dollars. Klickitat County development director Dana Peck, chief champion of the energy overlay zone, doesn't believe the current slack demand for new generating capacity is an issue. "There's still a sense that there's been a lot of population and economic expansion and very few new plants built," he said. "History has shown that energy-project developers include Klickitat County in their site reviews." Primed for business Situated at the east end of the Columbia River Gorge, Klickitat County is strategically located to take advantage of hydropower, natural gas, sunshine, wind and wide open spaces. The Williams Gas Pipeline-West runs the length of Klickitat County, and 11 BPA transmission lines cross the county. Peck believes that zoning most of the county for energy development will give it a competitive edge when energy companies make future siting decisions. Last year his department even prepared a flyer for energy developers promoting the new zone. It makes sense to consider the environmental impacts of new energy plants on a countywide basis rather than site by site, Peck said. It allows "prescreening" of potential sites to determine which ones would produce the fewest environmental impacts. It lets the county assess the cumulative impact of several power plants up front. And it avoids the appearance of a conflict of interest because the county, rather than the developer, pays to prepare the environmental documents. Participating in development of the energy zone also allows the public to get involved early, "to say where they want and don't want these projects to occur," he said. Asked why the county doesn't give the public more time to comment, Peck said there will be opportunities to comment later this year when county commissioners decide whether to incorporate the new zone into the county comprehensive plan. The comment period the county is providing now satisfies "both the letter and the spirit" of the State Environmental Policy Act, he said. Haymon disagrees: "I believe what they are doing is following the bare minimum that SEPA requires." $00:0300069557: $199:A0300069557 $01:Copyright 2003 The Columbian Publishing Co. $02:$?The Columbian $20:September 4, 2003, Thursday $30:Business; Pg. e1 $60:Nurse union files labor complaint $90:JONATHAN NELSON, Columbian staff writer $120: Negotiations between Southwest Washington Medical Center and its 1,000 registered nurses, whose contract expired in May, soured further Wednesday when the nurses' union filed an unfair-labor-practice charge against the hospital. The charge, filed by the Washington State Nurses Association with the National Labor Relations Board, contends the hospital openly supports dismantling the union by assisting employees in circulating a decertification petition, by coercing and watching employees who oppose the union abolishment, and restricting union representatives' access to the hospital. The National Labor Relations Act makes it illegal for an employer to assume any role in instigating or facilitating a decertification petition. Ken Cole, hospital spokesman, denied hospital officials were violating any labor laws. "If there is an organized effort to decertify the union it's something organized and initiated by the nursing staff, not by hospital leadership," he said. Cole said the two sides have reached agreement on several labor contract issues, but he declined to identify the remaining areas of contention. Barbara Frye, union director of labor relations, called for the medical center to "direct its efforts toward reaching an agreement with the RNs and focus its attention on quality patient care through the recruitment and retention of experienced staff during the current nursing shortage." The nurses' contract expired May 3 and a federal mediator was brought in after months of fruitless negotiations. A second mediation session is scheduled Monday. Anne Piazza, union spokeswoman, said there are no plans to strike if a new contract isn't reached during the next meeting. She also denied that filing the charge is a negotiating tactic. "It's not a gimmick; it's not a trick," she said. Piazza said during the past five years the union has not filed a similar charge against any of the 50 hospitals it deals with in Washington. $00:0300069563: $199:A0300069563 $01:Copyright 2003 The Columbian Publishing Co. $02:$?The Columbian $20:September 4, 2003, Thursday $30:Neighbors; Pg. 1 $60:After the Dust Settles: A Year After Fighting Adult-Care Projects, Most Accept New Neighbors $90:SCOTT HEWITT, Columbian staff writer $120: In Romania, a single family living in a single home is a rarity. "We have big extended families back home," said Christian Rad, whose family immigrated from Transylvania, in northwest Romania, to the Portland area when he was 17. "You live with grandparents, cousins, aunts, brothers and sisters. There's all these people living in one house. Never just two or three people." But early in 2002, when Rad and his wife, Aura, tried to replicate that style of living in Clark County -- and to make a profit along the way -- they ran into fierce neighborhood opposition. The matter wound up in court where the Rads emerged victorious, but the battle pitted neighbors' expectations for single-family living against federal and state regulations regarding equal housing opportunities for the disabled. For the most part, neighbors insisted they weren't objecting to the Rads' plan to turn their house into an adult family home, a place where frail and elderly people can enjoy assisted living in a homey, non-institutional environment. What they didn't like, they said, was the size of the addition Christian Rad was building. Rad's plan was to more than double the size of his home on Northeast 38th Street, in the Pheasant Run subdivision just outside the Vancouver city limits. He was going to add six bedrooms -- 1,823 feet of living space -- onto a home with a footprint of 1,100 square feet. That's a total of 3,013 square feet built on a 6,300-square-foot lot. "I don't care who lives there," said the Rads' now-former next-door neighbor, Michele Bolke, last year when the issue had just come to light. "It's six bedrooms and six baths taking up an entire back yard. If he ever moved out, we'd have this monster addition and who knows what would happen to it." Today, the finished building may seem to overwhelm the lot, but Rad was within his rights. In unincorporated Clark County, covering as much as half of a residential lot is allowed; in the city of Vancouver you can build on 40 or 45 percent of a residential lot, depending on zoning. None of which prevented neighbors from suing him to stop the project. In January 2002, eight couples and one individual homeowner filed suit, through Vancouver attorney John Karpinski, to stop the Rads from building the addition. They argued that the structure would violate neighborhood covenants barring businesses from the development. "An adult foster care facility is a commercial enterprise and a commercial use of land, and is inconsistent with 'residential use only' restrictions on the use of land," Karpinski's argument went. In a statement to the court, neighbor Bud Heck summarized his objections: "First (the addition would) lower the property values of the neighbors; second, the expansion was just too big and didn't belong there; and third, it was improper for him to run a business on his property." Filling demand The Rads weren't the only ones to incur their neighbors' wrath. About three miles away, Claudia and Augustin Persa ran into the same problem at the same time. The Persas, also natives of Romania, were set to add bedrooms onto their home in Vancouver's Oakbrook neighborhood when opposition mounted. Although no lawsuit was filed, neighbors who'd heard about the Rad case also retained Karpinski to see what could be done. But in the end, in both cases, the answer was the same: nothing. Federal and state fair-housing laws trump subdivision covenants, or any other restrictions, that could be interpreted as barring adult family homes from residential neighborhoods. "An adult family home shall be considered a residential use of property ..." the Washington law reads. "Adult family homes shall be a permitted use in all areas zoned for residential or commercial purposes, including areas zoned for single-family home dwellings." Vancouver and Clark County laws don't restrict adult family homes in any way, as long as they house six or fewer residents, said associate city planner Michael Grant. "We allow these in any of our residential districts. We have no control over how they come and go," Grant said. "They get their building permits and follow the standards for single-family homes." The state regulates the operation of the business and the quality of care residents receive, he said. The only special requirement the city has begun using, Grant said, is having property owners sign a covenant ensuring that future owners of big homes or additions used as adult family homes will continue to observe all relevant restrictions, including city zoning. "That's our approach to get ahold of what we think could be a problem if these care homes change ownership," he said. "It's simply to make sure they don't become multi-family apartments." But Grant doubts that homes built or expanded specifically to serve as adult family homes could be used for anything else. "I don't know that they would change hands except to another person who's going to do adult foster care," he said, "unless you have a very large family." Grant said he hears plenty of complaints from neighbors early on, but he doubts that those fears anticipate reality. "They project an ambulance a day. They project falling property values, that these things will turn into tenements," he said. "I don't know that these fears ever materialize. I think these places are fairly well maintained and lucrative. They're filling a demand, and you look at the population curves and you know, maybe they're right on cue for getting all of us old folks into appropriate situations." Light and life The lawsuit Christian Rad's neighbors brought against him ended in the spring of 2002, when Superior Court Judge Edwin Poyfair ordered Rad to follow all the state and local land-use and licensing regulations he had to follow anyway. If the Pheasant Run covenants had included a specific limit on the size of building additions, Poyfair said, he would have enforced the limit. But it didn't. "I can have six residents and there is no limit on construction other than what city code says," Rad said at the time. "Basically, what I asked for is what I got." Today, the expanded Rad home on Northeast 38th Street is home to five women. Each has her own private bedroom and bath, and the comfortable living room includes windows and skylights that flood it with cheery light. "It's as good as any of these places are, better than most," said Loretta Bolte, 85. "It's nice walking in the neighborhood. It's nice and quiet." "I like everything about it," said Iva Stange, 72. "They are courteous and thoughtful." Rad's parents run two adult family homes in Portland, so he's been around the idea all of his adult life. "I always wanted to do this," he said during a tour of his expanded home. "It has worked out exactly as I expected it to." Except for the neighborhood resistance, that is. One set of next-door neighbors moved away. Others don't speak to the Rads. "I think it's an eyesore," said Rori Bumgarner, who joined the lawsuit and lives two doors down. "I can see the whole thing from my back yard. I know it dropped my property value by 5 percent because I had an appraisal done beforehand and an appraisal done afterwards." Still others have told the Rads that the addition has turned out nicer than they expected -- and they wish the Rads had come to them earlier with more information about exactly what the plans were. Mindy Gonzales moved in next door to the Rads after the Bolkes, chief plaintiffs in the lawsuit, left. "I don't have any problems with it," said Gonzales. "When we bought the house, they had to disclose that this was an adult care home, but that didn't bother me. I honestly thought, great, my kids'll have lots of grandparents." It's the same in the Oakbrook neighborhood, said Claudia Persa. Her next-door neighbor doesn't speak to her, "but all the others are nice." Not every neighborhood explodes with complaints when an adult family home starts up, said Ann Maxwell, president of the Clark County Adult Family Home Association. At the same time, she added, it doesn't take a building addition to spark fears. "We had one up the Washougal River who had some problems with neighbors, and she wasn't building anything," Maxwell said. "I think it just depends on the neighborhood. Some people only think about cars and delivery trucks. They don't stop and think that one day they're going to get old, too." There are more than 180 entries in the state's list of licensed adult family homes in Clark County (available at www.aasa.dshs.wa.gov; follow the Adult Family Homes link to the Adult Family Homes Locator); a casual look through the list makes obvious the preponderance of Eastern European owner-operators. Why is that? "Romanian women, they are workaholics. And they're good cooks," Maxwell said. "This is their life. They take care of people. They take care of families. This is what they do."

KELLY ADAMS and JONATHAN NELSON, Columbian staff writers


Mary Teresa Lau Office Manage ... - The Washington Post

Mary Teresa Lau, 68, an office manager who was also a professionalhula dancer, died of lung cancer Oct. 11 at Montgomery GeneralHospital in Olney.

Born in Hawaii, she moved to New Jersey as a child and attendedColumbia University teacher's college in New York. In 1958, she movedto Arlington and opened a laundry business, Terry's Laundry, whichshe operated for eight years.

She moved to Rockville in 1966 and became office manager for ArborLandscapers Inc. for 34 years until her retirement.

Under the name 'Kalena,' she performed professionally throughouther life as a hula and Tahitian dancer. She entertained audiences atFort Myer and Andrews Air Force Base and the Aloha Inn inGaithersburg. With musical accompaniment from the Sons of Hawaii, shealso danced at area country clubs.

She taught the hula from her home during the 1970s.

She was a former treasurer of the Hawaii State Society ofWashington and a volunteer with the society's luaus, hukilaus (afishing tradition) and other events associated with the Hawaiiandelegation on Capitol Hill from the late 1960s until recent years.

In the 1960s, she was active with the Chinese American YouthOrganization in Washington's Chinatown. She was a majorette with theChinese-American Drum and Fife Corps in the late 1950s and a runner-up in a Miss Chinatown pageant.

She was an accomplished seamstress and costume designer ofHawaiian production attire. She enjoyed gourmet cooking and tai chi.

Her marriage to Grant Lau ended in divorce.

Survivors include a son, Bob Lau of Las Vegas; four brothers,Edward Lee of Maui, Hawaii, Tom Lee of Ossining, N.Y., James Lee ofSan Lorenzo, Calif., and Richard Lee of Leonia, N.J.; and fivesisters, Christina Lee of Sunny Isles, Fla., Tricia Sonneman of NewYork, Eileen Vaughan of Springfield, Linda Kress of San Francisco andElizabeth Rosenblatt of Tampa.

Frank Douglass Morrisson, 70, a retired electrical engineer whoplayed on the 1954 George Washington University basketball team thatwas ranked No. 3 in the nation, died of lung cancer Oct. 11 at hishome in Ocean Isle Beach, N.C.

Mr. Morrisson, a former Vienna, Alexandria and Herndon resident,worked for about a half-dozen defense contractors during a 30-yearcareer as an electrical engineer. He spent the past 10 years with theMelpar division of E Systems in Falls Church before retiring in 1991.

He also was a local sports hero during his years at GeorgeWashington. A native of Reading, Pa., he was a standout at highschool baseball and basketball who received a basketball scholarshipto George Washington.

At 6 feet 5 inches tall and rangy, he was known for his free-throw accuracy and hustle. He played alongside brothers Joe and JohnHolup on the Colonial team that won the 1953-54 Southern ConferenceChampionship.

After serving in the Army and graduating with a degree in businessadministration, Mr. Morrisson attended the Capital Radio EngineeringInstitute in Washington.

He was a member of the International Town & Country Club inChantilly, the Eastern Shore Yacht and Country Club and the OceanRidge (N.C.) Plantation, where he was the men's golf champion in 1998and 1999.

He lived in North Carolina for the past six years.

Survivors include his wife of 45 years, Fay Callaway Morrisson ofOcean Isle Beach; two daughters, Colleen Morrisson Sharpe of WakeForest, N.C., and Patricia Morrisson Pillotte of Grafton, Mass.; andthree grandchildren.

Raymond T. McDonald, 73, a Navy captain who in retirement wasfacilities manager for General Electric in the construction of theCentral Intelligence Agency's headquarters building at Langley, diedof lung cancer Oct. 14 at his home in Virginia Beach.

Capt. McDonald served in the Navy from 1952 to 1979. He wasemployed by GE for about 10 years after his Navy retirement. A formerresident of Fairfax, he moved to Virginia Beach in the early 1990s.

He was born in Chicago and graduated from Northern IllinoisUniversity.

His Navy career included service as senior Navy liaison to theSouth Vietnamese Naval Academy during the Vietnam War.

His military decorations include the Legion of Merit, theMeritorious Service Medal and the Navy Commendation Medal.

He was a member of the Knights of Columbus and St. Mary's CatholicChurch in Fairfax.

Survivors include his wife, Mary Oliger McDonald of VirginiaBeach; four children, Thomas, of Colorado Springs, Tad, ofAlexandria, Malia Meng of Chesapeake, Va., and Michaela Iiames ofRaleigh, N.C.; a sister; and nine grandchildren.

Louise Hamel Reichley, 88, a former clerk at a public library inChevy Chase, died Oct. 2 at Powhatan Nursing Home in Falls Church.She had dementia.

Mrs. Reichley worked at the Little Falls Public Library for about10 years until 1976. In Chevy Chase, where she lived from the 1940sto the early 1970s, she volunteered with the Girl Scouts and servedas a member of parent-teacher associations.

She then lived in Arlington for more than 25 years until 1999,when she moved to the nursing home.

Mrs. Reichley was a native of Worcester, Mass., and a graduate ofwhat is now Framingham State College. In her youth, she was active inthe Girl Scouts and received its Golden Eaglet award.

Her husband, Dr. Marlin S. Reichley, died in 1999 after 57 yearsof marriage.

Survivors include four children, Susanne Rohrer of Dunkirk, JoanScott of Golden, Colo., Nancy St. Pierre of Burke and Marlin ReichleyJr. of Deale; two brothers; 10 grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren.

Badrig M. 'Jeff' Kurkjian, 84, a former Army Departmentmathematician, died of cancer Oct. 13 at Shady Grove AdventistHospital.

For 14 years after retiring from the Department of the Army in1976, Dr. Kurkjian was a mathematics professor at the University ofAlabama.

He retired from the university in 1990 and returned to theWashington area. At the time of his death, he was living inDarnestown.

He was born in Watertown, Mass., and graduated from theMassachusetts Institute of Technology. He served in the Army duringWorld War II.

After the war, he came to Washington as an Army Departmentmathematician. He received a master's degree in mathematics fromGeorge Washington University and a doctorate in mathematics fromAmerican University. His career included duty as chief mathematicianfor the Army Materiel Command.

He was a fellow with the American Statistical Association and co-author and contributor to several books on mathematics.

While working for the Department of the Army, he taught at GeorgeWashington University and the University of Maryland.

Survivors include his wife of 52 years, Joyce Kurkjian ofDarnestown; three children, Andy, of Sugarland, Tex., and Matt andTim, both of Darnestown; a sister; and six grandchildren.

William Jacob Jackson Jr., 92, a World War II and Korean Warveteran who retired in 1974 after nearly 20 years as a cryptologistand communications analyst for the National Security Agency, diedOct. 9 at his home in Laurel. He had non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.

Mr. Jackson, who had lived in the Washington area since 1955, wasa native of Hoboken, N.J., and a 1931 graduate of what was thenMontclair (N.J.) Teachers College.

He taught at a high school in Mount Holly, N.J. before enteringthe Army during World War II. He later was recalled to active dutyand served in Korea during the war there.

He retired from the Army Reserve in 1971 as a lieutenant colonel.

Survivors include his wife of 55 years, Ann Lee Jackson of Laurel;and a daughter, Elizabeth J. Berman of Durham, N.C.

A son, William J. Jackson III, died in 1972.

Paul J. Creamer, 73, a retired deputy chief inspector with theDrug Enforcement Agency, died Oct. 13 at Washington AdventistHospital of complications following heart bypass surgery.

After retiring from the DEA in 1980, Mr. Creamer was a volunteerfor 20 years with a therapeutic horseback-riding program to help thementally and physically disabled.

Mr. Creamer was born in Washington and later lived in Rockville.For the past 16 years, he had lived in Urbana.

He attended Gonzaga and McKinley high schools and graduated fromGeorge Washington University. He joined the FBI in 1953 and servedwith the bureau for six years, including duty as a special agent inthe San Francisco and Baltimore offices.

For 21 years, he was employed at the DEA and its predecessororganizations.

A horseback-riding enthusiast, Mr. Creamer was active with theFrederick County 4-H's riding program for the disabled and was amember of its board of directors.

He also was a member of the St. Ignatius Council of the Knights ofColumbus in Ijamsville and the Society of Former Agents of the FBI.

His avocations included genealogy. He spent considerable time inIreland researching family history.

Survivors include his wife, Kathryn, of Urbana; three children,Katie Dunn and Paul Creamer Jr. of Rockville, and Tom Creamer ofGaithersburg; two brothers, John J. and Joseph P. Creamer, and asister, Helene Flanagan, all of Rockville; and five grandchildren.

George Gilbert Cornwell Jr., 90, who spent 27 years in the Navybuilding bases and later worked for a home builder, died Oct. 13 athis home in Alexandria of heart disease.

Mr. Cornwell was born in Washington and attended Western HighSchool and Sidwell Friends School. He earned a civil engineeringdegree from New York's Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1936. Hethen worked as an insurance verifier for Aetna Casualty Insurance.

Mr. Cornwell entered the Navy in 1942 and was assigned to a navalconstruction battalion, which built bases in the continental UnitedStates, Hawaii, London and Morocco. He retired in 1969 in Washingtonas a commander. He then worked as a project manager for River ParkMutual Homes in Washington for 10 years.

After his second retirement, he volunteered at St. Paul'sEpiscopal Church in Alexandria, the church's homeless shelter, theCarpenter's Shelter, the Historic Alexandria Association and theTaylor Run Citizens Association.

He is survived by his wife of 63 years, Edith Strider Cornwell ofAlexandria; three children, Janet Cornwell Gale of McLean, GeorgeGilbert Cornwell III of Newport News and Alice Cornwell Straus ofGambier, Ohio; a brother; and two grandchildren.

Kathryn Monroe, 80, an announcer and hostess for the Voice ofAmerica's English division for about 20 years, died Oct. 12 atFairfax Nursing Center, where she lived since 2001. She hadAlzheimer's disease.

Mrs. Monroe was a native of Madison, Minn., and a communicationsgraduate of the University of Minnesota.

In the late 1940s, she worked at radio stations in Alabama. From1950 to 1952, using her maiden name, Kay Dale, she was a hostess forthe Armed Forces Radio Network's Far East division, broadcasting toKorea from Tokyo.

As Kathryn Gallant, she wrote three published children's books:'Mountains in the Sea: Japan's Crowded Islands' (1957), 'JonathanPlays With the Wind' (1958) and 'The Flute Player of Beppu' (1960),

In 1964, she was employed by the U.S. Information Agency's Voiceof America to broadcast news and information programs over shortwaveradio throughout the world. One of her long-term assignments wasteaching English to foreign listeners by reading slowly and usingelemental words and phrases. At her 1983 retirement, she was therecipient of a U.S.I.A. commendation of excellence in broadcasting.

Her marriage to Roy Gallant ended in divorce.

Survivors include her husband of 30 years, Harry W. Monroe ofFairfax; two sons from her first marriage, Jonathan Gallant ofCheshire, Conn., and James Gallant of Poulsbo, Wash.; a brother; twosisters; and four grandchildren.

The Rev. Richard Harold Humphrey, 65, a retired Episcopal priestwho from 1993 to 1997 was rector of St. Thomas Episcopal Church inCroom, died of prostate cancer Oct. 13 at his home in Upper Marlboro.

The Rev. Humphrey was born in East Orange, N.J., and graduatedfrom Monmouth University. He received a master's degree in divinityfrom The Philadelphia Divinity School.

He began his ministry in two small mission churches in Sewaren andCarteret, N.J., then served as rector of churches in Pawtucket andProvidence, R.I., and in Oxford, N.Y., before he became rector at St.Thomas.

He was a Master Mason and a member of the York Rite. He was also arailroad enthusiast and a participant in Civil War battlereenactments.

Survivors include his wife, Carole, of Upper Marlboro; two sons,Michael, of Norwich, N.Y., and Peter, of Upper Marlboro; and agranddaughter.

M. Bradley Wigle, 47, a textile designer and craftsman who madecurtains, pillows, cushions and clothing, died of cancer Oct. 11 atJohns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore.

Mr. Wigle, a resident of Middletown, was born in Olney and grew upin Gaithersburg. He was a 1974 graduate of Gaithersburg High School.As a teenager, he was active in 4-H and bred and showed dairy goats.He was an exhibitor at the Montgomery County Fair. He also bred andraised French bulldogs.

After high school, he became a weaver and started his ownbusiness, the Fiber Connection. He designed original clothing, usingcloth he had woven.

In the 1990s, Mr. Wigle began making curtains and other softfurnishings with Rhosymedre Design Group.

His marriage to Theresa Brown ended in divorce.

A daughter, Domini, died in 1998.

Survivors include a daughter, Tenni E. Wigle of Keymar, Md.; hisfather, Daryl. L. Wigle of Hagerstown; and two brothers, Jeffrey S.,of Gaithersburg, and Gregory C.A., of Frederick.

Ruth Ann Holzmueller Chancellor Mahood, 86, a former president ofa fundraising group for what is now Inova Alexandria Hospital, diedOct. 14 at the hospital. She had lung cancer.

Mrs. Mahood was president of the group, called Twig, in 1954 andremained a member for years. She also was a member of the EpiscopalImmanuel-Church-on-the-Hill in Alexandria.

She was a resident of Goodwin House in Alexandria, where sheserved on the hospitality committee, and had a second home inRehoboth Beach, Del.

She was a native of Milford, Del., and a 1940 psychology graduateof the College of William and Mary.

She was married to Lorman Opie Chancellor from 1942 until hisdeath in 1959. Her second husband, William Thomas Mahood, whom shemarried in 1965, died in 1997.

Survivors include a daughter from her first marriage, DonnanChancellor Wintermute of Alexandria; three stepchildren, RebeccaElizabeth Mahood of Alexandria, William Thomas Mahood Jr. of SanRafael, Calif., and Willard Mahood of Bronxville, N.Y.; a sister; andseven grandchildren.

John Lloyd Ford, 88, a retired program coordinator for the U.S.Weather Bureau who developed and repaired instruments on weatherballoons, died Oct. 1 at Goodwin House West in Falls Church. He hadan aneurysm.

Mr. Ford worked about 37 years for the Weather Bureau beforeretiring in the late 1970s as a program coordinator in the instrumentdivision. Earlier in his career, he was responsible for takingweather measurements at an airport in St. Louis and aboard CoastGuard ships.

He was born in Gatun in the Panama Canal Zone, where his fatherworked as a quartermaster. Mr. Ford graduated from what is nowNorthwest Missouri State University and received a master's degree inmathematics from Ohio State University.

He served in the Naval Reserve during World War II.

Mr. Ford, who lived at the retirement home for the past fouryears, previously resided in Fairfax and Alexandria.

He was a member of Trinity United Methodist Church in Alexandriaand past president of the Department of Commerce Federal CreditUnion.

Survivors include his wife, Elizabeth L. Ford of Falls Church;four children, Stanley R., of Phoenix, Robert W., of Covington, Va.,John W., of Richmond and James L., of Bellevue, Wash.; and threegrandchildren.

Henriene Topps Martin, 79, a science teacher in Washingtonelementary and middle schools from the mid-1950s to 1986, died Oct.10 at her home in Washington. She had breast cancer.

Mrs. Martin worked longest at LaSalle Elementary, where she taughtfrom the mid-1950s to the early 1970s. She also worked at Marie ReedElementary and Kramer Junior High before retiring from Deal JuniorHigh after about two years there.

In retirement, she did volunteer work at Shepherd ElementarySchool in Washington.

She was elected to the D.C. Teachers Union hall of fame.

She was born in Birmingham, Ala., and raised in Greenwood, Miss.She was a 1946 summa cum laude graduate of Tougaloo College inMississippi and received a master's degree in education from HowardUniversity.

She did secretarial work at the Naval Research Lab before startingher teaching career.

She was a Smithsonian Institution resident associate and a docentat the National Museum of American History.

She was a former vice president of the Tougaloo alumni chapter inWashington. During her college days, noted artist Hale Woodruff cameto visit and painted her portrait, which hangs at the school.

Her memberships included Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, the UnitedNegro College Fund Council and Peoples Congregational United Churchof Christ, where she was a member of the chancel choir and severalcommittees.

She participated in protests for civil rights and against theapartheid-era government in South Africa.

Survivors include her husband of 52 years, Willis J. Martin II ofWashington; three children, Lynn Martin of New York City and WillisMartin III and Angela Joy Martin, both of Washington; a sister,Ethylene Lewis of Silver Spring; and two grandchildren.

Eustace Arthur Vanderpool, 68, an associate professor in theCollege of Medicine at Howard University, died of cancer Oct. 13 atHoward University Hospital.

Dr. Vanderpool, a resident of Silver Spring, was born in Nassau,Bahamas. He settled in the Washington area in 1957 and latergraduated from Howard University, where he received a doctorate inmicrobiology.

He was on the Howard faculty for his entire professional career,and his teaching specialties included electron microscopy,immunology, bacterial structure and virology. He led the revision ofthe microbiology curriculum for the College of Dentistry, and hetrained and mentored PhD graduate students in the department ofmicrobiology.

His marriage to Sylvia Vanderpool Fletcher ended in divorce.

Survivors include his wife, Andrea T. Vanderpool of Silver Spring;their daughter, Susan Vanderpool of Washington; two children of hisfirst marriage, Shelly Vanderpool Jackson of Clinton and Scot-ErikVanderpool of Chicago; a stepson, Earl Jeffers of Dallas; fourbrothers; four sisters; and five grandchildren.

Barbara Frass Varon, 63, a longtime Democratic Party activist whofor the last three years served on the Fairfax County electoralboard, including terms as chairman and vice chairman, died of cancerOct. 12 at Inova Fairfax Hospital.

Mrs. Varon, who was fluent in German, worked as a freelance editorand translator in Fairfax, where she lived for more than 30 years.

She was a native of Germany who immigrated to the United States in1959. She attended the University of Pennsylvania, where she earned abachelor's degree in history and a master's in sociology.

Survivors include her husband of 41 years, Bension Varon ofFairfax; and two children, Elizabeth Varon of Ashland, Mass., andJeremy Varon of Jersey City.

Katharine Lease Spring, 80, a Kensington resident and member ofTrinity Presbyterian Church in Bethesda, died at Shady GroveAdventist Hospital in Rockville. She had congestive heart failure.

At Trinity, Mrs. Spring was a Sunday school teacher, chairwoman ofthe flower guild, president of the women's association, deacon and anelder.

She was a native Washingtonian and a graduate of Roosevelt HighSchool.

She was a board member of the Ingleside Presbyterian Home inWashington and a former member of the Woman's Club of Chevy Chase.

Her hobbies included baking pies, cakes and cookies.

Her husband, Charles B. Spring Jr., whom she married in 1943, diedin 1995.

среда, 3 октября 2012 г.

CENTER OF COMMUNITY JAPANESE-AMERICAN FACILITY IN PACOIMA KEY PART OF LIVES - Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)

Toji Hashimoto, president of the San Fernando Valley Japanese-American Community Center in Pacoima, remembers when things weredifferent in California and the Valley.

Born in Manzanar, the internment camp in the Owens Valley used tohold Japanese-Americans and Japanese nationals during World War II,Hashimoto, 62, said that after the war ended, many Japanese-Americans went into the nursery or landscaping businesses.

'That was the only work they would allow you to do,' Hashimotosaid. 'You couldn't work for the government because they stilldidn't trust you.'

It was in that environment the SFVJACC was founded in 1951 as aplace where Japanese-Americans could find support and friendship andwhere Japanese and American culture and institutions could becelebrated.

Today the large facility is run without any government subsidiesand sustains itself from membership dues, donations and the help ofa large core of volunteers. In addition, the Los Angeles UnifiedSchool District leases land from the SFVJACC for the Bert CoronaCharter Middle School that operates on the center's property.

The center has about 800 families and individuals as members andoffers many programs such as organized athletics for children,Japanese cooking classes, ballroom dancing and Hawaiian ukulelelessons.

Hashimoto, a retired nursery operator who first came to theValley with his family in 1957, said as attitudes and career goalshave changed for Japanese-Americans over the years, so must thecommunity center.

'We have to try to get the 30-and-up group involved in thecenter,' Hashimoto said. 'The first step is to try and draw them in,get their attention and see what their concerns are with the center,and see what our concerns are, and see what we can come up with.'

The center has thrived with the support of the postwarmembership, a group growing in age. For members, Hashimoto said thecenter is an important part of their lives. Each Tuesday and Friday,the center offers lunch to members for $2 to $3. Live musiciansoften accompany the meals.

'They don't come because it's cheap,' Hashimoto said. 'They cometo see their old friends and socialize. Everybody knows each otherand they have a good time.'

A lot of work goes into ensuring that the members enjoy theirmeal. Sachi and Geoff Arai of Porter Ranch head the food crew.Married 51 years, the Arais have been involved with the center since1999.

'Once we retired, we said, We only know three Japanese familiesin the Valley,' Sachi Arai said.

A month in advance, a group of volunteers creates the menu andSachi Arai makes up a shopping list and a host of volunteers goshopping, each for specific items. The crew serves about 225 to 275people a week, so the food requirements can be quite large. GeoffArai said because the center is a nonprofit organization, it oftenreceives generous portions of fresh seafood from corporations thatgo out on sport-fishing exertions.

'At the end of this month, we're getting a big load of tuna(3,000 to 4,000 pounds), from San Diego,' he said. 'We'll be servingraw fish and cooked fish for March.

'(The) older folks like the sashimi.'

With a large contingent of people from Hawaii, members also enjoyHawaiian music.

Volunteer ukulele instructor Greg Librando guarantees hisbeginning students that they'll learn to play in just six weeks. Ata recent class, the Pacoima resident played the ukulele along withhis students while his wife, Maebelle, sang:

Going to Hana, Maui

Drive that trail,

the beauty never ends ...

Maebelle Librando absolutely loves the center. She can't imaginewhat life would be like without it.

'If they were to close the center, there would be so many peoplewho would be so lost because they wouldn't know what to do,'Librando said. 'There is something to do every day.

'We're so fortunate to have it with us.'

вторник, 2 октября 2012 г.

Record on the Road - Oakland Tribune

Hawaiian Record

The Robbins family from Martinez -- Tim, Mary, Clay and Karlee --enjoyed a vacation in Maui, Hawaii in January, where they stoppedduring a trip to the Iao Valley to catch up on the community news inthe Pleasant Hill/Martinez Record. In addition to snorkeling inseveral locations and sport fishing (Kim caught a 70-pound billfish), the group attended the Old Town Lahaina Luau. Their favoriteexperience was a whale-watching adventure, they were 'mugged'several times (when the whales come very close to the boat and thecaptain has to turn off the engines until the whales decide to moveaway).

понедельник, 1 октября 2012 г.

Master the art of print advertising: selection and presentation are key in print promotions and can bring added sales to your gallery. (Special Report). - Art Business News

It pays to advertise. Promoting a gallery the right way in the right publication will reap rewards, according to experts polled by Art Business News.

Gallery owners and marketing specialists agree that a successful print advertising campaign is based on targeting the right market and making a presentation that entices customers to call on you.

Advertising has several benefits, the most important of which is getting your name in front of your customers. 'Your customers need to know who you are, where you are, what you offer and why you're better than the next guy,' stated Eric Danneman, president of Martin Lawrence Galleries.

'Print advertising is probably the most common way to do this,' added Danneman. 'It's no use building the better mousetrap if no one knows you have it for sale.' Martin Lawrence Galleries are located in Beverly Hills, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, Maui, New Orleans, New York, Newport Beach, San Francisco and Santa Clara, Calif.

'Gallery owners who don't advertise yet wait for people to walk through their doors are not participating in their own success,' observed Steve Diamant, president of Arcadia Fine Arts, New York. 'The goal of a gallery is to expose art to new markets. It's about increasing visibility.'

Print advertising affords potential clients time to warm up to a purchase, noted Rann Shinar, vice president of Fingerhut Group Publishers and Galleries, located in Sausalito, Laguna and La Jolla, Calif. 'When people walk into a gallery and see an artist for the first time, it will take them time before they are ready to make a purchase,' he said. 'But when they see the artist's name in print advertisements before arriving at the gallery, it creates familiarity. The name comes to ring a bell. Advertising establishes the foundation for that artist and allows the reader to become informed on the artist and his work.'

Executed properly, a print ad can start off as an educational tool that breeds familiarity, he observed. 'It's like the difference between meeting a stranger or seeing a friendly face. Familiarity can lead to sales,' he said. 'Once education is established, selling is the next step.'

Selecting an Advertising Vehicle

Advertising in the right vehicles will attract an audience to an artist and a gallery, according to Vicky Berg, director of operations for Axelle Fine Art, a publishing company based in New York that also has retail galleries in New York, New Orleans and a new one opening this year in San Francisco.

'The Yellow Pages are not the way to go anymore,' she added. 'You need to know what magazines are being read by your audience.'

'There are two kinds of marketing: general and specific,' said columnist Murray Raphel, president of Raphel and Associates, a marketing solutions firm with locations in Atlantic City, N.J., and St. Johnsbury, Vt. His column, 'The Art of Selling,' is published monthly in Art Business News.

Raphel said that a general advertising campaign address the universe while specific ad campaigns address a group of people. He said the latter is the most effective and less expensive. 'When you are targeting a specific market, you have to brand your store and target who you are, what you offer and why you are good at what you do,' he explained.

A basic strategy, said Raphel, is for galleries to seek magazines focused on like products. 'For instance, if your gallery specializes in Civil War memorabilia, advertising in a publication targeted to that market will get you the biggest bang for your buck.'

Likewise for fishing, sports or airplane inventory, among others. The annual publication Writer's Market is a means for exploring which vehicles target themselves to particular markets. The book lists thousands of magazines, publishers and agents and the key information you need to intelligently contact them, according to a review on Amazon.com. 'It lists thousands of magazines, categorizing them by demographics, subject matter, regions, etc.'

Sometimes, however, it pays to step outside of the box, noted Diamant of Arcadia Fine Arts, New York. The gallery recently showed payoffs from an advertisement placed in Architectural Digest. 'We held an exhibition of work by Malcolm T. Liepke and wanted to target the high-end designer market,' he said. 'It was our opportunity to make these people familiar with his work, and we absolutely saw results. People came in who were familiar with the artist but did not know how to acquire his work, and we saw people who were intrigued by what they saw in the ad.'

He noted that previous advertisements he had run in Architectural Digest showed rewards several months down the line when a potential client walked into the gallery holding an ad that he ran six months before. 'Not only did she make a purchase then, but she later purchased works by other artists,' he said. 'The readership of Architectural Digest does not decorate on a shoestring. They employ designers and have a large discretionary income.'

Each magazine has its own personality, Diamant observed. He has noticed a variety of trends in the customers who come to the gallery as a result of Arcadia's ads. He finds that Art & Antiques tends to feature artists whose works are visually more 'accessible.' American Art Review is a magazine Diamant finds to focus on much more traditionally inspired work. 'The `Contemporary Realism' section of American Art Review focuses on living artists and traditional imagery,' he said.

Fingerhut Galleries also tracks which of its advertisements attract clientele to its galleries. The consultants at each of the galleries ask clients where they first saw the work that they purchase and relay the information back to corporate headquarters to help track the ad dollars. This is an effective method of making sure your money is being spent wisely.

'Often Art & Antiques comes up, and we advertise more in that publication as well,' he said. 'We are inclined to go to Art & Antiques when we are doing something special. Normally, we promote artist originals and graphics programs. We have found that Architectural Digest readers tend to be interested in original works, while Art & Antiques readers purchase prints.'

Advertising in local publications also works well, noted Shinar. He said that when his gallery hosts a show, they do a series of promotions, and advertising in local publications becomes important. 'We advertise in the local newspapers, and we place advertisements in the magazines distributed in local hotels--concierges recommend us to the hotel patrons,' he explained. 'When we are in a slow season, we are inclined to have gallery shows and send out formal invitations. This is an example of the mountain going to Mohammed.'

Targeting clientele can differ between gallery locations, pointed out Danneman of Martin Lawrence. 'For example, some galleries are located in primarily tourist areas, so they should advertise in tourist-oriented publications. Others who have a more local client base should then look for upscale local magazines and newspapers with a readership that they hope to attract.'

Advertising techniques vastly differs from one gallery to another, agreed Shinar of Fingerhut. 'An artist will sell well in one location, and do medium rare in another,' he said. 'Normally, our gallery directors recognize the ambience of their gallery and what people are looking for. For instance, we find that our gallery in Sausalito gets a sophisticated collector base. Each of our galleries have certain products that sell well in their areas.'

Making a Presentation

The headline is the most important draw in creating an eye-catching ad, according to Raphel of Raphel Marketing. 'The ad's headline must either promise a benefit or provoke curiosity,' he said. 'The key thing is that you must have a headline that makes people want to keep on reading.'

According to Raphel, keeping a reader's eye is hard to do. A whopping 75 percent of an audience reads only the magazine headline. Only 25 percent keep going. 'If you cannot capture someone with a headline, you will lose them,' he explained.

Promoting an artist with examples of his or her work is essential, according to Diamant of Arcadia Fine Arts. 'I have always been curious about galleries that advertise an exhibition for an artist but only mention his or her name,' he said. 'We would never place an ad without an example of an artist's work. If you are going to advertise art, you have to show it, unless the artist is a household name or extremely well known within the community.'

Supporting a statement is another means of effective advertising, pointed out Shinar of Fingerhut. 'We usually run double-page ads that feature up to four of our artists. But, what we advertise depends on the message we want to get across,' he said.

For example, the company's artist, Jiang, was recently honored after years of being at odds with the established state-controlled art institute of his native China. 'The high regard for Jiang as an artist is evident in the special honors bestowed upon him at the West Lake International Art Expo in Hangzhou,' he said. 'This was a milestone and we wanted to get the word out about that. Collectors like to hear this sort of information, because it reinforces what we have been telling them about the direction the artist is going.'

Another tip about creating an effective ad is that colored imagery should always be reproduced in color. 'Nothing kills the look of art more than a black-and-white advertisement,' Shinar said. 'If you are going too advertise artwork, black and white is a waste of time,' agreed Diamant.

Galleries need to focus on their individual strengths and pay attention to detail, noted Danneman. He doesn't necessarily ascribe to the philosophy of 'bigger is better' or featuring loud colors or 'sale' logos to attract attention. 'The most effective ad is one that reaches it's target audience and offers them something they are looking for,' he said. 'No ad will be effective if the right people are not reading it.'

In addition, it is a wise choice to avoid distracting fonts and backgrounds that may take away from the artwork. A clean presentation, devoid of clutter is your best bet, agree gallery owners.

But Dannemann's most vital piece of advice is to be sure to let your customers know where you are located and how to get in touch with you. 'It is amazing how many ads leave off vital information, such as a complete address, phone number, Web site URL, hours of operation, etc.,' he added. 'The components of an advertisement can be called a purely personal choice, but it is essential that the message is clear and attractively presented.'

Expert Tips on Designing Effective Ads

[check] Use an eye-catching headline.

[check] Promote artists with examples of quality work.

[check] Choose art and text that gives the message of the show you are advertising.

[check] Reproduce color imagery in color, not black-and-white.

[check] Focus on the gallery's strengths.

[check] Avoid distracting fonts and backgrounds that may take away from the art.

[check] Pay attention to detail and be sure to include all of your gallery's most vital information like phone numbers, Web sites and addresses.

SOURCES

* Arcadia Fine Arts, (212) 965-1387

* Axelle Fine Arts, (718) 246-1200

* Fingerhut Art Galleries, 800-525-7456

* Martin Lawrence Galleries, 800-877-2250