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Monday, December 24, 2012

Ken Rogers: Good Shepherd Emblem Silver Award







During McMinnville First Baptist Church service on Dec. 23, 2012, Ken Rogers received the Boy Scouts of America "Good Shepherd Emblem Silver Award."  The emblem is a national recognition for adults who have rendered outstanding service to Baptist youth through their church and a national youth-serving agency.
















Saturday, December 22, 2012

Hark! Relic of McMinnville's past

See this photo -- taken by Mac News on Dec. 22, 2012. It's a McMinnville News-Register home-delivery tube, now a relic of McMinnville's past. The last N-R issue delivered via  "young carriers and adult drivers" to newspaper tubes and to porches (and so forth) was Oct. 31. The first delivered in U.S. Mail edition was Nov. 2. "First" is relative. Even when the newspaper had home delivery, some readers subscribed by mail. 

Friday, November 23, 2012

How McMinnville, home of Turkeyrama became turkey-less


Demise of the turkey industry

Nov 23, 2012

By Bruce Pokarney
For the McMinnville News-Register 

The distinct sound of gobbling turkeys in Oregon has generally been silent for nearly 20 years. What was once a thriving agricultural industry left the state — a rarity among Oregon’s diverse list of commodities.

While there are a few locally-grown birds sold to niche market consumers this year, most Oregonians will sit down to a Thanksgiving dinner featuring a turkey produced in California, Utah, or Minnesota.

“At one time, Oregon was a large producer of turkeys, probably producing up to 30 percent of the West Coast supply from the Willamette and Yamhill valleys,” says recently retired Oregon Department of Agriculture Assistant Director Dalton Hobbs. “Due to consolidation of the turkey processing industry and a few other factors that hit during the early 1990s, all that commercial production has gone away.”

In the mid-1980s, Oregon produced about 2.5 million turkeys and had a strong, viable industry. The state’s climate was amenable to turkey production and suited growers and the local processors. Turkeys were part of Oregon’s diverse agricultural product mix.

Now there are only a handful of small-scale producers who specialize in organic, pasture raised, or so-called “heritage” turkeys — birds produced through natural mating, not through artificial insemination as is the case with commercial turkeys.

Many factors led to the demise of Oregon’s turkey industry in the early 1990s.

Essentially, it’s cheaper to grow turkeys in California, Utah, the Midwest, or in the southeast U.S. and ship them to Oregon for sale than to actually grow them locally. Turkeys are generally raised where the feed is produced. The closer the turkeys are, the lower the production cost. Unfortunately, Oregon is rather distant from the feed sources of soybeans and dry corn.

That wasn’t much of a problem in the 1980s, when Oregon still produced several million turkeys a year.
That’s a far cry from the present day turkey production of Minnesota (47 million), North Carolina (30 million), Arkansas (28 million), and even California (15 million). Still, Oregon had enough critical mass to sustain the turkey industry and offer consumers an Oregon-grown product.

Then, a series of events badly affected the industry.

The Oregon Turkey Growers Association, a local cooperative with membership in the national marketing cooperative Norbest, went through several managers at a time when continuity might have helped, according to Jim Hermes, poultry specialist with Oregon State University Extension.

With several states producing turkeys under the Norbest label, Oregon growers had to settle for the national price on turkeys. Being far from feed sources, growers in other member states enjoyed a competitive price advantage.

About the same time, a batch of contaminated turkeys was shipped from Oregon to Utah — something that hit the news headlines at an inopportune time. For all intents and purposes, that was the final straw for Oregon’s turkey industry.

“The most visible problem was the recall of some 70,000 turkeys just prior to Thanksgiving 1991,” says Hermes. “The industry just couldn’t recoup from that event.”

Yamhill County, with about 85 percent of the state’s turkey production, shouldered the brunt of the loss. However, just as the entire state absorbed the loss of the turkey industry, Yamhill County was able to fill the vacuum through such successful commodities as nursery crops.

“Toward the end of the industry, there were about 25 turkey growers with 10 of them primarily responsible for most of the state’s production,” says Hermes. “Today, some of those same growers are producing fryer chickens inside the same facilities that were producing turkeys. Others have modified their buildings to store grass straw or some other commodities.”

Today’s consumers who prefer to buy a local product have the option of purchasing from small scale producers. These customers reserve a bird in the spring by pre-ordering even before the turkey is raised. By the time of holiday season, the turkey has been fully grown and slaughtered, and is ready for the dinner table.
The return of a large scale turkey industry in Oregon is unlikely, according to Hermes.

“There have been some inquiries into having breeder flocks of turkeys in the state to produce hatching eggs,” he says. “Normally when that occurs, there might be a few producers who may want to grow some commercial birds. However, Oregon’s primary problem is that there is no place to process the turkeys. We do not have a slaughter plant. The Oregon Turkey Growers processing plant in West Salem was sold and today is used for processing and freezing other food products.”

For Oregonians, there has been little impact from the loss of turkey production statewide. There is no shortage of turkeys available year ‘round, let alone during Thanksgiving and Christmas. With the rare exception of those who prefer a fresh vs. a frozen turkey, shoppers don’t seem to care if the bird comes from California or North Carolina. Even when Oregon produced turkeys, most headed out-of-state anyway.

While Oregon never likes to see the loss of an industry, the demise of the state’s turkey production can serve as a valuable lesson.

“With this inexorable trend towards consolidation in agriculture, our growers need to understand that the ways of the past may not be the ways of the future,” says ODA’s Hobbs. “We need to be nimble, creative, and proactive in our production strategies and offering a product that fills a need.”

Oregon’s agricultural industry is more dynamic than most states. New commodities may crop up while older, smaller ones decline or even disappear. The state is strong enough to absorb the addition and subtraction.

Friday, November 16, 2012

In McMinnville, Christmas 2012 'just around the corner'





An indication Christmas is "just around the corner" was at the McMinnville Fire Department. These Mac News photos taken Nov. 16, 2012, show a star atop the fire station (there's also a Christmas wreath on the front of the station) and a truck parked on the side of the station with decorations yet to be put on display.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

All about walnuts in the N-R



Among stories from McMinnville N-R which mention walnuts are these. Selected bits and pieces from these stories are provided. 

Also, see Why McMinnville is still the 'Walnut City'


http://www.newsregister.com/article?articleTitle=a-look-back-columbus-day-storm-rips-through-county--1349892013--4897--

A look back: 
Columbus Day Storm rips through county 
 Oct 10, 2012
 By Starla Pointer Of the News-Register 

 =But people were more weary of the rain than worried about it. Oct. 12 dawned drier and colder, at 28 degrees, leading farmers who lived near the Walnut City to believe they’d be finishing the harvest in good weather.

 = Fred Withee’s barn blew away. Rudy Leppin’s barn collapsed, killing nine cows and calves and 1,000 chickens. Hal Mahon’s orchard on Baker Creek Road lost at least half its walnut trees. Reuben Reist’s prune orchard was half destroyed.

 =In fact, the Columbus Day Storm almost wiped out the local walnut and prune industries and heavily damaged other tree crops.

 =The county extension agent estimated severe damage to half of the county’s 14,600 acres of orchard land. Fortunately, the agent said, most of the walnuts and filberts were salvageable.

http://www.newsregister.com/archive?articleArchiveId=a10045793 

"Stopping by" by Starla Pointer
Stormy stories 50 years later, Columbus Day Storm a vivid memory 
Oct 10, 2012 

 = On the afternoon of Oct. 12, 1962, JacE (Cameron) Macy stood at her back door with her sister and father, watching the Columbus Day storm tear through the family’s large walnut tree. =and uprooted millions of board feet of timber and thousands of fruit and nut trees, including walnut trees that played a major role in local agriculture at the time.

=Their walnut tree didn’t fare so well = Laurel Adams taught at Memorial Elementary School. As he left the building about 4:30 p.m., he heard a roaring sound.

 = “In seconds, the wind blew almost every leaf off the black walnut trees along Birch Street,” he recalled = The Columbus Day Storm left a lasting legacy that Laurel notes every Friday when he attends meetings of his service club, Walnut City Kiwanis. “We credit that storm with changing McMinnville from ‘The Walnut City,’” he said.

 = In addition to being a major agricultural crop in the area, walnuts also grew on the trees shading nearly every street, he said. But many of those signature trees blew down in the storm.

 =The next morning, under blue skies and sunshine, the Olsons inspected the damage. They had lost eight of the nine walnut trees on their property, and their chimney and roof were gone.

http://www.newsregister.com/article?articleTitle=a-look-back-columbus-day-storm-rips-through-county--1349892013--4897-- 

 A look back: Columbus Day Storm rips through county 
 Oct 10, 2012 
 By Starla Pointer Of the News-Register

 =But people were more weary of the rain than worried about it. Oct. 12 dawned drier and colder, at 28 degrees, leading farmers who lived near the Walnut City to believe they’d be finishing the harvest in good weather.

 = Fred Withee’s barn blew away. Rudy Leppin’s barn collapsed, killing nine cows and calves and 1,000 chickens. Hal Mahon’s orchard on Baker Creek Road lost at least half its walnut trees. Reuben Reist’s prune orchard was half destroyed.

 =In fact, the Columbus Day Storm almost wiped out the local walnut and prune industries and heavily damaged other tree crops.

 =The county extension agent estimated severe damage to half of the county’s 14,600 acres of orchard land. Fortunately, the agent said, most of the walnuts and filberts were salvageable.




http://www.newsregister.com/article?articleTitle=a-love-for-walnuts-that-runs-deep--1347377149--4589--

A love for walnuts that runs deep
Sep 8, 2012 
By Nicole Montesano Of the News-Register

=Once touted, by enthusiasts at least, as the future of Oregon’s Willamette Valley, walnuts enjoyed an abundant season for some decades in the first half of the 20th century. The memories still linger, in old trees and a few remaining references to Walnut City — testament to their importance in McMinnville and surroundings — and in the memories of local farmers like Charlie Chegwyn.

=But there are still walnut orchards standing here and there, and McMinnville resident Kamal Kotaich maintains that the Willamette Valley remains premiere walnut country.

=“I would like everyone to know that we are still Walnut City,” he said

=In 1962, the Columbus Day storm blew over entire orchards. In 1972, a hard freeze killed still more of them.

http://www.newsregister.com/article?articleTitle=houseful-of-memories--1344042614--4220--

Houseful of memories
Aug 3, 2012 
By Nicole Montesano Of the News-Register

=“The house had a lot of walnut trees around it, so he had a walnut dryer down there,” Gibson said. “I used to have to pick them up, and deal with those ugly husks.

=“I was still doing it in college. They blew down during the Columbus Day storm, which was good riddance.”





Thursday, August 30, 2012

More often than not, no 'MCMINNVILLE, OR' postmark in McMinnville


Go into the McMinnville Post Office lobby. Notice the blue with white letters "LOCAL POSTMARK ONLY" signage beneath a mail slot. Don't believe it, Mac News learned in talking to a Post Office clerk on Aug. 29, 2012. All of the mail sent 
       from the McMinnville Post Office, even if it's sent to a McMinnville address, is postmarked Portland since that's where the mail is processed. While some postal items are, indeed, postmarked “MCMINNVILLE, OR” (see photo), most are not. 

Friday, August 10, 2012

Dragging the Gut Festival's car show honors Ez Koch


Linfield Athletics Hall of Famer Ezra "Ez" Koch, longtime McMinnville business, civic leader and Rotarian, is honored as part of the city's 3rd annual "Dragging the Gut" Festival, Aug. 24-25, 2012.

The Ezra Koch Car Show takes place noon-5 p.m. Aug. 25 in the James Catholic Church parking lot at 1145 NE 1st St, McMinnville.

“‘Dragging the Gut’ revives today in downtown McMinnville as countless Mac teens of decades past return to their favorite stomping grounds, “says the McMinnville N-R

The festival supports the YCAP (Yamhill Community Action Partnership) Food Bank through donations of cash and canned food.

Festival cornerstone is the Aug. 25 "Main Event: Dragging the Gut" 5 p.m.-Midnight. "Drag the Gut on open street, all cars welcome. The street cruising is totally free with no registration - just show up." For festival specific, visit its website here.

Thanks to Ruben Contreras, Jr., festival founder, for providing the accompanying rendition of the retro cool festival poster. Mac News photo from Aug. 25, 2012.

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Saturday, July 14, 2012

52nd annual Turkeyrama July 2012 in McMinnville

Mac News photos taken in the Oregon Mutual Insurance parking lot on 7/13/2012 during 52nd annual Turkeyrama in McMinnville. Two shots of carnival and one of the KLYC-AM radio "Yamvan."






















Saturday, March 17, 2012

A look at 2012 Amity Daffodil Festival

The 18th annual Amity Daffodil Festival was held March 17-18, 2012, in Amity (Yamhill County), Ore. Focus of this slideshow is the Amity US Postal Service office offering a special postal cancellation featuring festival art work. Read McMinnville, Ore., News-Register story about festival here.

Where's Amity? It's about seven miles from McMinnville.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Sip 2012 fundraiser held in Evergreen Space Museum

This video slideshow is a result of 'Mac News' attending some of the Friday, March 9, 2012, session of the 19th annual Sip/McMinnville Wine & Food Classic held in the Evergreen Space Museum. The event is a fundraiser for McMinnville's St. James Catholic School.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Friends of the McMinnville Public Library book sale

Friends of the McMinnville Public Library hold a used book sale 10 a.m.-2 p.m. on the second Saturday of January, March, May, July September and November in the library's Carnegie Room. These photos were taken 1/14/2011.


Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Say what?

Many know of the mispronunciation of Oregon. Sometimes it's incorrectly called, "Ory-gone."

But, what about McMinnville?

McMinneville
When a 1970 grad was a Linfield student, a friend from where the grad grew up in the Puget Sound area called it "McMinnie-ville."

Mackinville
If you dial (toll free) the Microsoft-owned Tell-Me information service, you get another pronunciation: "Mac-in-ville." Want to hear it? Call Tell-Me at 800-555-8355 and say "weather." Then, at the prompt, enter McMinnville's Zip Code, 97128.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Reading the N-R in downtown McMinnville 1/10/2012

Howard Graves reads McMinnville, Ore., News-Register on 1/10/2012 in downtown McMinnville. Why the gloves? No, it was not all that cold, but Howard, who attended Linfield, lives in Prescott ("Press-kit"), Ariz. He's used to warmer weather.


Sunday, January 1, 2012

The day in 1968 when presidential candidate Romney visited McMinnville







Romney campaign button and a recent photo of the house.









On Feb. 23, 1968, presidential candidate George Romney visited McMinnville.


Governor of Michigan at the time, Romney announced he was running for president on Nov. 18, 1967, in Detroit, Mich.

On Feb. 23, he delivered a speech to the City Club of Portland and taped an edition of KOIN-TV's "Let's Face It." program in the television station's downtown Portland studios. Then he traveled to McMinnville for a campaign stop. After Mac, he went to Lincoln City and was keynote speaker at the Dorchester IV Conference.

On Feb. 28, in Washington D.C., Romney withdrew from the presidential race.


Here’s how the Linfield Review and McMinnville News-Register covered the visit and more.

::::::
Linfield Review
Linfield College student newspaper
McMinnville, Ore.
Feb. 29, 1968, Page 1

Michigan's Romney
Stops In McMinnville
Gov. George Romney of Michigan stopped in McMinnville Friday to "press the flesh." Romney made the nearly unpublicized stop in McMinnville on his way to the Dorchester Republican Conference in Lincoln City.

The day was a blue for Romney, from the baby-blue Chrysler Newport (which has a strange twist since Romney is a past president of American Motors) to his penetrating blue eyes. He played the theme to the hilt, wearing a blue suit, ala LBJ, and blue tie.

Arriving approximately 15 minutes late, Romney bustled past CBS cameras, paused for a moment on the porch and made a bee-line for the lavender living-room. Romney greeted about 70 people including 20 pressmen.


The governor who seemed to have lost his ruddy of cheek television image proceeded with his "blue" talk. He minced no words on the Vietnam "conflict" as he preferred to refer to it. Romney outlined his plank to avert the United States from continuing "down the road” to World War III.
After speaking for less than 20 minutes, Romney bowed out on his host and hostess amid the flashing of cameras. He donned his blue, what else, overcoat and was nearly back in the official car before photographers beckoned him back.


Romney will push for a peace program which Richard Nixon and President Johnson both lack. He insists he'll be back in Oregon, but several primaries and much stumping remains between now and then.

::::::
News-Register
McMinnville, Ore.
Feb. 28, 1968, Page 1

Photo cutline
PRESIDENTIAL ASPIRANT George Romney, governor of Michigan, was a visitor to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Kohler, Friday to open a Home Headquarters. The governor spoke to over 40 persons in the Kohlers' living room about a variety of topics. A number of reporters sat on the living room floor while the walls were lined with standing local county officials and interested persons. (See picture story on page five.)

Story
"Bring Back Collective Bargaining"
McMinnville Greets Presidential Aspirant

By ELAINE DAHL ROHSE
N-R Special Writer

Governor George Romney, presidential aspirant, in McMinnville Friday afternoon, lashed out at the power of big labor unions and big industries. He said, "Collective bargaining is no longer a process of discussing facts. Union power is so great it takes all progress, plus." The Michigan Governor said, "We must bring back free collective bargaining," and he referred to the power of the unions as a "Power Bludgeon."


Governor Romney, standing in the living room of the Larry Kohler residence, 1420 E. 5th, one of his "home headquarters," faced a group of approximately 30, and a flock of TV cameras and newsmen.


In a conservative navy suit, the iron-grey haired former American Motors president, looking amazingly as he does on television screens, said we have serious crises in our country. He cited the crisis of lawlessness and crime; that of inflation, racial unrest in our cities and the crisis of Vietnam.


He asserted that our country has made some terrible mistakes in Vietnam. The initial mistake, he said, was getting involved in the first place. Now our involvement has become so "built up" to such a great extent, in so many ways, that it is now impossible for us to "walk away,"


He said President Johnson made a mistake when he said we were not going to send American boys to do what the Vietnamese should accomplish themselves. The error was compounded, Romney asserted when the President later reversed himself and sent over large numbers of U.S. troops.Gov. Romney asserted that the Vietnam conflict is a "Political Guerilla War" and that in order to win we must win over the people.


He declared that the President has mistakenly thought he could win the war by winning battles and that hasn't worked. He said the South Vietnamese government must win the hearts and the minds, but that top officials nearest to accomplishing this have resigned, discouraged by futility of their efforts. Romney reiterated that it would be "a disaster" to pull out now. But, he warned, too, that escalating the conflict would lead to World War III. He said Russian has indicated that we won't be "permitted" to win, and supporting this theory he cited their introduction into the war of more sophisticated weapons.


Romney's solution equation to the Vietnam crisis is a "positive program for peace." This peace program would include guaranteed neutralization by pointing out that Russia doesn't want China nor the United States in Vietnam, and those countries in that area are fighting to keep the Chinese out. He asserts that other nations feel that the United States is leading them to World War III and they do not wish to be led into such a conflict.


Romney said he had checked in 12 countries he recently visited and in none of these countries did the statesmen with whom he talked had a better alternative. He added, "Nor does the president, or my primary opposition."


"We need leadership,” Romney affirmed,” and we must have the truth from Washington." He said the people of the United States have been consistently misled by information from the Capitol and referred to reports by General Westmoreland (and Ambassador Bunker) which had left the American public to feel the military situation was well in hand, with morale of the Viet Cong so low that could no longer be effective militarily. Romney in illustrating the "falsity" of this information said "The VietCong now have the initiative on every front and the military position of the United States is worse now than two years ago."


In the brief question and answer session that followed, Romney, speaking easily with ready answers for the questions posed him, said the way to slow down inflation is to eliminate deficit spending. He pooh-poohed the president's efforts along this line, such as travel restrictions, and said this eventually will cease worsening of the situation. He said "We must balance the budget and we must cut spending to the bone." He feels we are already heading down the same road as Britain and that our economic situation must be regarded as a "mess."


Romney's entourage traveling in a large bus and several cars, had Newport as its next stop.


Only one incident apparently marred the Romney visit. A ride across town in the famed Ralph Wortman 1901 Locomobile had to be axed. The steam car, not made by American Motors, which has transported other political greats, such as Dewey, Warren, McKay and Stassen, did not rise to the occasion and refused to run because of a rusted part.


::::::
News-Register
McMinnville, Ore.
Feb. 28, 1968, Page 5, picture story


Gov. George Romney Makes Campaign Stop in Mac


Cutlines for eight photos of picture story


ARRIVING FIFTEEN minutes late, presidential hopeful George Romney, governor of Michigan, was met at the Oriental Garden restaurant in McMinnville where his motorcade of two cars and a press bus were escorted to a future Home Headquarters home.


MRS. LARRY KOKLER greeted the governor as he arrived amid a large contingent of waiting press and interested bystanders. The Kohlers live at 1420 E. 5th Street in McMinnville.


OFFICIALLY SIGNING a document making the Kohler residence a Home Headquarters, Romney is observed by his state campaign manager, Leonard Forsgren (immediate right of Romney), County Judge Charles Teagarden (background) and Ray Fields. The grey-haired governor spent more than 30 minutes discussing various topics with the more than 40 persons present.


Leaving the Kohler home, Romney is about to shake hands with Pete Beall, manager of the McMinnville Chamber of Commerce. Many local county officials were at the home to meet and listen to the presidential hopeful.


"WELL, LET'S SEE NOW" -- Actually Romney was not stumped for words in the Kohlers' tastefully-appointed living room.


EMPHASIZING A point. Romney sometimes made strong gestures to get an idea across to a person asking a question. Among other things, the governor of Michigan that said that it is now impossible for the United States to "walk away" from Viet Nam.


ALMOST MATCHING the number of persons who wanted to meet the governor was a large number of national and local press people who took enough pictured to fill 100 scrapbooks. Forsgren comment as he left with the governor that "there were too many press people" at the home.


DEPARTING FROM the Kohler home, Gov. Romney shakes hands with Ezra Koch of McMinnville while Merrill Hagan (middle) looks on. Romney headed for the Dorchester Conference immediately after leaving McMinnville.

::::::
News-Register
McMinnville, Ore.
Feb. 28, 1968, Page 4, editorial



Impressive Appearance


Strategy of Michigan Gov. George Romney in taking his campaign to the people at grassroots level resulted in a significant dividend for a good many Yamhill County people last Friday. The GOP presidential hopeful and national political leader gave an impressive performance in opening his McMinnville home headquarters.


The impersonal political campaign most Americans now watch at the national level -- a bombardment of the voter by massive media presentations -- are converted to old-time campaign trail efforts in states such as New Hampshire, Oregon and Wisconsin where primary ballots influence national attitudes. At the same time, candidates may open up with greater revelation of their real positions in the quiet, friendly atmosphere of small gatherings. Massive national forums on major TV and press coverage result in several limitations on the latitude of their statements.


Gov. Romney hit some basic notes in his informal talk and question-answering period. He cracked hard at the Johnson Administration's handling of the Vietnam war but he strongly opposed and abrupt pull out. He does believe, however, that a peace offensive could be mounted more effectively by a new national leadership.


His sharp attacks on forces creating our run-away inflation showed solid, business-like understanding of government. Some plain truths, perhaps unpalatable to big labor and big industry, were contained in his charge that power-negotiation has replaced collective bargaining. When wages rocket up twice as fast as productivity --as they did twice last year -- the result can only be unhealthy inflation.


The former automotive industry leader demanded balanced national budgets and disagreed with the Administration that simultaneously we can support full scale war, foreign aid and have all the butter we want at home. He talks of responsible acceptance of hardships which the nation must face to avoid demoralization of its economy -- responsibility which many in our new socialistic order are not willing to shoulder.


Gov. Romney may not win this spring's primary elections. His chances at the GOP presidential nomination are pretty slim. But, he will have performed a major public service to our nation in months of grassroots campaigning by bringing to thousands of U.S. citizens some basic facts they must face if we are to save our nation and its people from ravages of war and economic disaster.


::::::
News-Register
McMinnville, Ore
March 2, 1968, Page 1

Kicker “Kind of Sneaky” with headline below relates to Rockefeller, not Romney.

Romey Quitting
Elicits Reaction



"We're sad and disappointed, because he was an outstandingly honest and fine man," Mrs. Larry Kohler said to the announcement that Governor George Romney will not e a candidate for the presidency.


Gov. Romney visited McMinnville on Friday and announced at a press conference in Washington, D.C., Wednesday afternoon he was quitting the presidential race. The governor of Michigan had established a Home Headquarters at the Kohler residence in McMinnville and had given them a campaign kit, which included posters, bumper stickers and other promotional paraphernalia.


"I think it's kind of sneaky of Rockefeller to not come out and say he is a candidate," Mrs. Kohler commented. "I don't think any prospective candidate for president should dilly-dally around."
Larry Kohler said he has received some good-natured kidding from McMinnville people over his short political career.


"I'm sorry to see him (Romney) withdraw," Kolher said. "Many people who heard him talk Friday had changed their ideas after hearing him."


Ask about Rockefeller "using" Romney for Rocky's own gains, Kohler said he had no opinion on the subject and it was hard to tell without being in on the inner circle of politics.


"We're not going to vote for someone who hasn't gotten out and campaigned" for the election," he said