Word: ores
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...driving his kids to school. Emily, a computer consultant who has gone back to using her maiden name, Montague, was stopped near her suburban Los Angeles home. Michael Bortin, who runs Zen Hardwood Floors, was asleep when police called to say they were outside his Victorian house in Portland, Ore. A final suspect, James Kilgore, the only fugitive in the group, vanished decades ago and remains at large...
...owning two houses--one in a warm climate, one in the Pacific Northwest--and residing part of the year in each. Kethley, 67, an administrator at the Benjamin Rose Institute in Cleveland, grew attached to her "secondary family" in the '70s, when they all lived in Eugene, Ore. Planning to retire next year, she recently bought a condo in Hawaii with space for three or four people. One friend has agreed to join her when he retires in five years. "The younger people [some 10 years younger] will come on vacations in the interim and may also join...
...calculate which to take? "It's really hard" because of the many variables involved, says Art Spinella, vice president of CNW Marketing Research in Bandon, Ore. But you can make a smart choice by getting key information before you head to the dealership...
...police department of Portland, Ore., was the first to refuse to cooperate, arguing that its state laws do not allow officers to ask about anything other than a person's knowledge of criminal activities; the Justice Department memo requested interviewees to give their families' phone numbers, their reaction to terrorism and their travel history. Police departments in several other Oregon cities also refused to participate, and those in most cities in California's Bay Area say they probably won't cooperate if asked. "We would not do INS interviews or roundups given the facts we have now," says San Jose...
Steve Lacey, 45, an emergency-repair dispatcher for a utility company in Salem, Ore., has a personal life that reads like a holiday greeting card. He recently married his longtime love, and after packing boxes over Thanksgiving weekend, they are set to move into their dream house in the country, just in time for Christmas. Lacey's retirement plans, however, are in ruins. He works for the embattled energy-trading firm Enron, and has all his 401(k) savings in Enron stock, which plunged from $90 a share in late 2000 to $4.71 at the end of last week...