Saturday, April 19, 2008

Skeleton in a drawer: a Bellevue mystery

http://www.mtexpress.com/1999/10-27-99/10-27skeleton.htm

Remains used for Odd Fellows initiation rites

Excerpt from Travis Purser's Mountain Express story:

"Before a building can be sold in Idaho, the seller must disclose any murders or suicides that have happened on the premises, the building’s new owner said recently during a tour.

The owner requested that his name not be used in connection with this story.

"I got a call from my lawyer," he said, grabbing a drawer handle at the bottom of a built-in wardrobe, "who told me there was a skeleton in the closet, literally." He yanked the drawer open, and sure enough, a dusty, wired-together, brittle-looking skeleton, screeched into the harsh florescent light.

"My wife’s not too happy about it," the owner said.

It’s not a very big skeleton. Perhaps the bones of a woman or an adolescent. It rests in what appears to be a home-made coffin, and someone has propped its head up with newspaper.

Rumor has it, the owner said, that an individual of Chinese descent drowned in the Big Wood River and someone wired the bones together. The Odd Fellows used the skeleton for Halloween. He added he didn’t know what the legal ramifications of finding the skeleton were and that he hadn’t yet decided what to do with it."

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Stroud's classified ad makes David Letterman show

From the Challis Messenger:
BY TODD ADAMS

There was a Late Show response to Rev. Paul Stroud's classified ad to trade a clothes dryer for Oreo cookies in the February 7 issue of The Challis Messenger.

Stroud got no calls the first week he ran it, so he ran it again. Then, on April 1, it was broadcast on "The Late Show with David Letterman."

Letterman read the ad as part of his Small Town News segment that night: "OLDER CLOTHES DRYER. Works well but needs new home. Will trade for 2 large packages Oreo double stuffed cookies (unopened)."

It got the biggest laugh and the most applause, beating the other humorous Small Town News items that night. The items typically include quirky stories, headlines, ads and photos from weekly or daily newspapers. Letterman often highlights humorous mistakes, but fortunately not in this case.

The Messenger contacted Stroud last Friday and asked him if he'd heard the news. Stroud immediately started laughing. "No," he replied, adding "Oh, that's interesting!"

Stroud said he only watches the Letterman show "once in a great while."

Stroud and wife, Robbi, only paid about $15 for the used dryer at a Challis High School yard sale several years ago. When their washing machine died, they decided to get rid of the dryer, too, so they could get a new matching set.

"I wanted some Oreos, but my wife won't buy them for me," Stroud laughed. "I don't need them," he said, but still was craving cookies.

After getting no initial response to his ad, Stroud surmised people might have thought it was a joke, so he added the option "or $15" and ran the ad again on February 14. He got three responses this time and ended up giving the dryer to the first caller, his friend and fellow minister, the Rev. Bill Matthews and wife, Jackie. The Matthews' later came through with the cookies.

The ad didn't include Stroud's name, and Letterman didn't read his phone number on "The Late Show," so "I didn't even get my 15 minutes of fame," Stroud joked.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Return of the Teton Dam?

http://www.hcn.org/servlets/hcn.Article?article_id=17631&fhp

From High Country News

Almost 32 years ago, the Teton Dam in southeastern Idaho failed against the force of a 17-mile long, 270-foot deep reservoir. Eight months of stored stream flow and snowmelt crashed down the valley in less than six hours, swallowing the communities of Rexburg, Teton, Newdale and Sugar City. Eleven people died and the wall of water caused as much as $1 billion in damage, according to local reports.

Now, the dam may be resurrected.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

The Secret life of Lou Dobbs

Why did the influential CNN business anchor undergo an abrupt metamorphosis from corporate sycophant to fire-breathing populist? LUKE MULLINS found the surprising answer in Rupert, the hardscrabble Idaho town where Dobbs grew up.




http://www.american.com/archive/2006/november/lou-dobbs