Close to perfection
This week’s watchwords
Seahawks rout Vikings, keep spot in wild card race
PEARL HARBOR: The
Snohomish County Central Memorial Committee plans a brief remembrance ceremony at 11 a.m. Monday at the eternal flame, 3000 Rockefeller Ave., Everett.
Page C1
REAL HEROES: The Red Cross will honor
local heroes who have served, or saved others, at a breakfast Thursday at Tulalip Resort Casino.
SHUTDOWN LOOKS UNLIKELY:
Congress must act on a spending bill by Friday to fund government. Republicans want to cut off Planned Parenthood money but have backed off earlier threats to force the issue to a shutdown. MONDAY, 12.07.2015
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American Dream deferred in Everett In a city of rentals, the house at 2311 19th St. in north Everett could be a tipping point. Real estate broker Saman Kouretchian bought the house in March when it was being rented
room by room. At the time, five people were living in the home and Kouretchian had heard as many as 15 had been living there. After he got the keys, Kouretchian waited a few days before he showed up. “I opened the door and I immediately knew something was
wrong,” Kouretchian said. “I said, ‘Hello, is anybody here?’ And a lady came out of one of the bedrooms. She was sleeping there. She just ran out. “A couple of the other people were also here and they said they needed to come back in to get some stuff and that we
had just kicked them out early even though we had given them a few days grace period.” The home was like a lot of houses around of Everett, a falling-down wreck. And like a lot of homes around the city, it was a rental. Everett has one of the lowest
Prosthetic designers honored Arlington family’s works in 3-D printing are changing lives for people who otherwise couldn’t afford an artificial hand or finger. By Kari Bray Herald Writer
Herald Writer
EVERETT — The food bank run by Volunteers of America of Western Washington served about 1,400 people and families Thanksgiving week, but after the New Year, the situation is looking lean. The bank distributed 60-70 pounds of food, including turkey, to all comers during the holiday week, said Bill Kraut, the supervisor for the food bank, thanks to some last minute donations. Kraut said he estimates that the bank has enough food for the Christmas holidays as well. “We have enough to get us through,” he said. “I’m a little worried about what happens then.” What happens is that the traditional holiday donation period gets supplanted by a long winter and spring dry spell, broken only by the annual Letter Carriers’ Food Drive in May. “We kind of have to rely on people during this donation period to get us through to spring when the next donation period comes,” Kraut said. What’s also happening is that more people are seeking out PHOTO COURTESY OF JEN MARTIN
ucts, Prod ment ocal in On L, Enterta es! Food nd Servic a
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VOL. 115, NO. 298 © 2015 THE DAILY HERALD CO.
INSIDE
Business . . . .A10 Classified . . . . B5
See FOOD, Page A2
Torrae Owen builds a beginner three-fingered hand for a little girl in Mexico in 2014.
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Dry spell looms for food bank
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A Volunteers of America supervisor says the organization is set for the holidays, but may have trouble meeting customers’ needs in early 2016.
ARLINGTON — Torrae Owen is 10 years old and knows how to build a working prosthetic hand using some fishing line and 3-D printed plastic parts. It’s a family thing. Her dad, Ivan Owen, helped design what’s believed to be the first 3-D printed partial prosthetic hand. Now he and his wife, Jen Owen, help run e-NABLE, an online community founded by the Rochester Institute of Technology. It’s an international effort to make it so anyone with access to a 3-D printer can create a simple, affordable prosthetic. The Owen family received the national Daily Point of Light Award on Friday. The award, started in 1989, has honored more than 5,600 people who have changed the world through service. Ivan Owen is a designer who manages the Makerspace lab at University of Washington Bothell. Four years ago, Richard Van As, of South Africa, saw his work on YouTube and asked Owen to help create a prosthetic finger. They built a metal prototype in eight months. A mother whose son was born without fingers asked if they could make something for him. Kids can grow out of a prosthetic within six months. A 3-D printed hand is cheaper than other prosthetics and can be scaled up and reprinted later, Ivan Owen said. “My hand was just about the same size as the little boy’s, so my dad did measurements with me,” Torrae said. “Now I can build one by myself.” A printed hand isn’t nearly as advanced as artificial limbs available through medical professionals, Ivan Owen said. See HANDS, Page A2
rates of homeownership in the state. Just 44 percent of the houses in Everett are owned by the people living in them. That’s the lowest homeownership rate of the top 20 largest cities
Comics . . . . . . B2 Crossword . . . B2
Drawn in Channel-surfing the vast cultural wasteland: “TV’s Funniest Animated Stars” will count down the top 40 characters from TV animation at 8 tonight on Fox (The Clicker, Page B4). Angered that Fox got the broadcast rights, Cartoon Network is showing “Behind Dear Abby. . . . B3 Horoscope . . . B8
the Acetate,” an unflinching look at animated scandals, including Bugs Bunny’s cross-dressing, Mickey Mouse’s helium addiction and SpongeBob SquarePants’ early work at a Swedish sauna.
competing for the best Christmas light home display (The Clicker, Page B4). Snoopy, having split the snorefest on Fox, goes to ABC and wins the $50,000 with the lights on his doghouse
Good grief! Meanwhile on ABC, “The Great Christmas Light Fight” follows families
Can’t get enough of your love, babe: A seventh orca whale calf has been born in
Lottery . . . . . .A2 Obituaries. . . .A8
Opinion. . . . .A13 Short Takes . . . B4
Sports . . . . . . . C1 Winners . . . . . B1
the past 12 months into the resident killer whale pods that swim in the waters around the San Juan Islands (Page A4). Whale researchers are crediting a happy mistake; instead of whale songs, scientists have been playing Barry White albums for the orcas.
—Jon Bauer, Herald staff
Water falls 52/48, C8
DAILY
By Jim Davis
The Herald Business Journal
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