Oregon

Own Some Middle Earth!

Butterfly Cottage.
Butterfly Cottage.

Gawker alerted us to what could be the most bizarre casualty of the slumping housing market yet: the owners of a Lord of the Rings-themed, 31-unit housing development in Bend, Ore., have defaulted on a $3.4 million dollar loan for the property.

Founder Ron Meyer sold “The Shire”—named for a fictional area of Middle Earth inhabited exclusively by hobbits in the J.R.R Tolkien novels—to Jan McDonald in June, after attracting a lot of media attention and tourists, but only one buyer since 2006.

The 6-acre community is built in an “English Country Village architectural style around contemporary floor plans," according to  read more »

Can Oregon and Kentucky Head Off a Rules Fight?

Hillary Clinton in Oregon.
Getty Images
Hillary Clinton in Oregon.

The Democratic nomination? Barack Obama will have the delegates he needs to claim it. What hasn’t been resolved yet is how fiercely and for how long Hillary Clinton will challenge him. The outcome of Tuesday’s primaries could go a long way to determining this.

The votes in Kentucky and Oregon are the last Democratic contests scheduled before a May 31 meeting of the Democratic National Committee’s Rules and Bylaws Committee, a panel that figures to return to the obscurity it richly deserves as soon as this campaign is over. At the May 31 session, the 30-member committee will hear challenges from Democrats in Michigan and Florida, who were stripped by the national party of their convention delegates for scheduling their primaries in violation of the D.N.C.’s calendar.  read more »

A Pair of True Believers, Each With Her Own Aesthetic

Heidi Julavits and Vendela Vida, co-founders of <i>The Believer</i>.
C. Yoshiko Han
Heidi Julavits and Vendela Vida, co-founders of The Believer.

Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name, by Vendela Vida. Ecco, 226 pages, $23.95.  read more »

In the Last Oregon Tragedy, Shameful Official Conduct

Now when everyone is gazing at Mt. Hood, let's not forget the last outdoor tragedy in Oregon. Today's The Oregonian prints a bravura piece of reporting about why local authorities failed to find the Kim family on Bear Camp Road 2 weeks ago. The story documents a series of bonehead maneuvers inside the Josephine County Sheriff's office——and explains why it took a week for anyone to check cell phone records that might have saved James Kim, and how it came to pass that a guy who owns Burger Kings found the lost mother and girls by flying his own helicopter up a logging road many knew to be suspicious but that had gone unchecked.

Among the shocking findings: One top county official was too wrapped up in an Oregon State football game to come in and look for the lost family, a week after they went missing. And for two days as James Kim staggered dying in the forest, and authorities knew his whereabouts, no one thought to deploy helicopters that were available that had heat-seeking equipment that might have located him. (The same technology used in the last couple days on Mt. Hood.)

Here are some excerpts:

Rubrecht, a 32-year-old former police dispatcher, was named Josephine County's search coordinator in 2001 with no prior experience in the field... "I'm not afraid to tell anybody that [this case] was overwhelming -- beyond anything I'd ever handled before," she said.

[Dec. 2] Rubrecht tried to phone her boss, Josephine County Undersheriff Brian Anderson, who was watching the Oregon State-Hawaii game. He said he chose not to take the call, noting that it was his day off.

[Dec. 3] As the authorities deliberated, a local helicopter pilot set out on his own... John Rachor grew ever more certain over the weekend where the Kim family was stranded. At 10:30 a.m., he lifted off in his own four-seat helicopter, convinced he could find them. Rachor, who runs a string of Burger Kings, asked no one where to look. He said he flew straight to Bear Camp Road and logging road 34-8-36.

Three days later, James Kim's body was found.

Was James Kim Victimized by Off-Road Car Ads?

When tragedy befell them on Bear Camp Road in southwest Oregon, the Kim family was driving an all-wheel drive Saab 9-2X . Saab's website shows the sporting vehicle performing on a lot of mountain roads, at least one a little snowy, and in that one the car is carrying skis.

SUV ads treat the outdoors like a tame pussycat. SUVs can go anywhere off-road. No, the Saab 9-2X isn't an SUV, but All-Wheel-Drive for a family in San Francisco? Why did the Kims think that they could make it on a seasonal road approaching 4,000 feet in the Siskiyou National Forest? What ads had they been watching?

Tinseltown Au Pair Tells All: Shock and Horror in Hollywood

Suzanne Hansen, nanny to the stars.
Timelife Pictures/DMI/Getty Images
Suzanne Hansen, nanny to the stars.

When exactly did the word “nanny” become synonymous with “naughty”?  read more »

There’s No Free Market At America’s Airports

The statistic that shook up business writers around the country is that more than half of domestic p  read more »

There's No Free Market At America's Airports

The statistic that shook up business writers around the country is that more than half of domestic p  read more »

Harrison's Upper East Side Taste Preps Up Fringes of Tribeca

Warm, woody and welcoming, the Harrison works its charms from the moment you arrive.  read more »

Crime Blotter

Senior Moment: Old Man Robs Bank, Then Goes Back For MoreIt makes sense that, as the population keep  read more »

Every Day Is Like Sunday

Whenever I find myself in a waiting period in my writingcareer, I think of a passage from the memoir  read more »

Mondrian's Foy Comes Back, His Creative Flair Intact

If I'd listened to the Weather Channel, I would never have made it to EQ the other night.  read more »

I Crave Ignorance, Just a Little

As with so many trumpeted "breakthroughs" in the advance of human knowledge, I reacted to the news o  read more »

The Rich Are Different: They're Shiftless Brutes!

Who, exactly, is it in those stretch limos, looking out at us from smoked glass windows as they turn  read more »

Charms and Comforts of Liam (The Bistro, Not the Actor)

It was Sunday evening, the weekend after Labor Day, and we had just made a long, wearying drive into  read more »