Sorted by date Results 1063 - 1087 of 1333
I t was late one Tuesday night. I was putting together the newspaper in our temporary office in what's now the coffee shop. The town was already asleep and I was happily finishing up the layout of the week's edition when I got a whiff of the same smell as I had earlier in the day . Exhaust fumes. Only this time, they were so strong I was starting to get a head ache. There was no logical explanation for the smell. There were no idling trucks on Main Street. The smell couldn't have been from inside the office. There are no fuel-powered...
WALLA WALLA - When it comes to people getting infections such as HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C, Waitsburg's Sharon Clinton believes it's the luck of the draw. With blood transfusions and contamination risks, contracting such infections can happen "to any of us," she said. It's the main reason that Clinton and her husband Larry attended a fundraising dinner in Walla Walla for Blue Mountain Heart To Heart, a non-profit organization that facilitates support groups, case management, education and...
Prescott High School Principal and acting WP combine AD Jody Thew anticipates that this soccer season will be another successful one for the Tigers, who had a magical first year as a WP combine program in 2010. We hope she turns out to be right. But judging from preseason preparations so far, we have some reservations about this prediction. Last year, the program was headed by Rick Hamilton, a very experienced soccer coach, who knew how to take the raw talent many of the players had developed since childhood playing pickup games, street soccer...
Dear Editor: I have been a subscriber to the Times since we bought our house in Walla Walla over a year ago. We love your town; it just didn't work for our situation to live there instead of here. However, I greatly admire the advances you have made in covering local news. Folks like the wheat farmers get way too little recognition for their hard work and commitment, and the past few issues of the Times have highlighted their ongoing efforts. It was interesting to me to read numerous articles about neighbors helping each other in a variety of...
Heart BEAT WAITSBURG - The first thing you see is a pan of the wheat fields, followed by a drive through town: the stately early-century homes, campus-like sidewalks and the downtown Main Street core. Then suddenly, Paul Gregutt and Karen Stanton Gregutt are greeting you from the kitchen aisle of their new Three Maples Cottage on Third and West. "You," that is, if you happened to be among the hundreds of guests attending the Auction of Washington Wines' Gala at Chateau Ste. Michelle in...
Last week, we carried a story about the KUOW series on the "Cascade Curtain," the idea that the state and its residents are somehow culturally divided by the mountain range that separates them geographically. We found it interesting how the story about Waitsburg made it sound like our town is somehow a prime example of East Meeting West in a contest of visions and wills over the future of our community. The local reactions to the radio segment, which can be heard and read online at KUOW.org, were equally interesting. Some thought it was fair...
To the editor: I support Mike Fredrickson's reelection to the Walla Walla Port Distrcit #2. Both Mike and Port have had a good year -- in fact several good years. The Port was named state "Port of the year," cited for the Rail X Project, their role in the Highway 12 extension, and received an environmental award from the Department of Transportation. As an appraiser, Mike makes important contributions to the Board. Mike has served six years on the Walla Walla Planning Commission., one year as chair. He is a member of a 4th generation farm...
Seattle Mariners slugger and 10- time All-Star Ichiro Suzuki is a career .327 hitter. So far this season, he is batting a respectable .269. To the casual observer, that's a pretty consistent and impressive record. But a close fan of the game would also suggest that this year, Ichiro is in a bit of a slump. Sports columnist Les Carpenter even points out that over a few weeks this spring, from May 19 to June 9, he was especially cold - hitting only .149. Fans would likely say that Ichiro is...
Paved Or Unpaved, Area Roads Have Always Been A Joy To Explore I was going through some old Waitsburg Times, dated March 13, 1885, in a letter to the editor: "Last Saturday, it was so delightfully pleasant to "take a drive --- We, accompanied by Mrs. Times, made a brief visit to the beautiful little city of Prescott. We found the roads in apple pie order, and the town of Prescott showing abundant evidence of animation, owing to the excellent farming weather, but 'few tillers of the soil were in town; still evidences of thrift were manifest in a...
Heart BEAT About Needs & Good Deeds P RESCOTT - Perry Dozier remembers going into the Prescott Lions Club building when he was a kid. The wheat grower and county commissioner whose farm is close to town would go there for Boy Scouts meetings, while his parents would attend dances on the second floor during New Year's Eve. "The Lions hall has been a part of my whole life growing up," he said. So when members of the club approached him with a novel fundraising idea to pay for a new roof and other...
Since Coppei Coffee opened, lots of people have met each other in front of the shop or inside. Some ran into each other by chance, while others said "let's meet at the coffee shop on Main." We've seen handshakes, hugs and kisses in these encounters, so the subject of greetings was already on our minds when a segment came on National Public Radio during a recent drive home from Walla Walla. It was about a German organization proposing a ban on kissing in the work place. The Knigge Society, a German group that advises on etiquette and social...
The well-publicized triple grand opening and Classic Auto Show weekend added up to a festive event for Waitsburg. Not since the Days Of Real Sport has the downtown area seen so much traffic. Some visitors came for the car show itself, bringing their classics to Preston Park from all over the region. Some came because they were intrigued by the new 1950s diner and had heard about it on Facebook. Of course, anyone who likes cars likes the 1950s, by some standards, the peak of automotive creativity and esthetic abundance. Some came from the Tri...
DAYTON - The Green Giant has a hole, a giant hole. It's squarely in the center of his tunic, which the jolly big guy dons with wreath and leafy boots on the steep hill overlooking the edge of Dayton like the town's own "Hollywood" sign. Gary Lowe wants to fill the hole and if you're a strapping high schooler, he'll want your help late next month to complete the green tunic on the football field-sized figure, marking the last phase of a project that started almost two decades ago. "We'll finally...
WAITSBURG - She worked all day every day. Chop the wood, haul it into the woodshed, split the rounds into useable chunks, haul it into the house, feed the stove for cooking or warmth, clean out the ashes, pump water from the well, haul it into the house, heat the water in buckets for washing or bathing, make candles or buy them, buy kerosene and lamp wicks if available, fill the lamps, trim the wicks, store the milk, cream, potatoes or apples in the cellar, smoke the meat, salt the pork, dry...
WAITSBURG - By the time this edition of the newspaper comes out, Coppei Coffee will be open or be just about to have its soft opening. Our grand opening, as we reported last week, is scheduled to coincide with the openings of Betty's Diner and the Anchor Bar on Classic Auto Show weekend this Friday and Saturday. As part of our continuing introduction of Coppei Coffee, we thought we might discuss our menu and go over some espresso terms. With the evolution of espresso culture in our country, it m...
A n interesting discussion ensued after we ran the story about the marijuana growing operation in the upper Tucannon watershed the week before last. It was actually more about the headline than the story. It read "Mexican Jailed In Mountain Pot Raid." Several people raised eye brows at our use of the word "Mexican" in the headline. When we picked up leftover papers in Walla Walla last week, we found that one super market put our stack of newspapers behind the counter after several customers complained about the paper carrying that headline. For...
To the Editor: This letter will serve as a strong endorsement of Mr. Jack Otterson and Mr. Blaine Bickelhaupt for election to the Columbia County Hospital District board. Both of these people are life-long members of the Dayton and Waitsburg communities, so you know them well as your neighbors and friends. Both have completed successfully, long-standing service commitments to their respective communities in various capacities and both have earned the respect of their two communities for their honesty and integrity. I have known Jack Otterson...
Looking back on the 1950s when barbecue grills were being introduced into American culture, the craze didn't hit Waitsburg as quickly as it did other places. People were busy with harvest and they didn't want to be bothered at that time of year. I looked at my old 1958 Better Homes and Gardens Barbecues and Picnics book and read the introduction: "This is easy-going, hieverybody sort of fare. Poke up a fire and relax. For Dad there's all the how-to's for those big, thick charcoalbroiled steaks, plump barbecued chickens, for the kids:...
DAYTON - Members of the Dayton community are lending their talents and their time to restore a collection of downtown outdoor advertisements going back to the late 1800s. The Historic Sign Restoration Project on the back of the Sterling Savings Bank and other buildings on Main Street, is a project of the Dayton Development Task Force. The group obtained a $20,000 grant from the Sherwood Trust Fund recently and work is underway. The group won't be restoring the advertisement s so they look new. R...