Serving Whitman County since 1877
Sorted by date Results 1920 - 1944 of 3750
Fresh Air We would just like to commend the teachers, administrators, board members and other support staff in the Colfax School District. According to the Gazette a couple of weeks ago, contract negotiations were not only successful, but positive and unifying. We found it a breath of fresh air to know you are successfully and happily working together to educate our children. Kirby and Liza Dailey, Colfax Kudos to deputy At a time in this country when the discussion about the police is primarily negative I want to write about a local deputy...
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce looked at the cost of regulations in America and found that excessive regulations are undercutting our economy and costing us jobs. Federal rules alone in the past few years have exploded and the Chamber finds it costs our nation $1.7 trillion. State labor and employment law resulted in the loss of 700,000 U.S. jobs. On the other hand, paring back state regulations which exceed federal standards alone would spawn 50,000 new businesses each year. The Chamber report is not an indictment on government regulations, per...
The Charlotte rioters didn't know whether the controversial police shooting of Keith Scott was justified or not, and didn't care. They worked their mayhem – trashing businesses and injuring cops, with one protester killed in the disorder – before anything meaningful could be ascertained about the case except that the cops said Scott had a gun and his family said he didn't. Charlotte is the latest episode in the evidence-free Black Lives Matter movement that periodically erupts in violence after officer-involved shootings. The movement is beh...
What were they thinking? Although, the real question should be: Were they thinking? What could have possessed the Clinton and Trump advisers even to consider visits to Charlotte, N.C., while the city was under siege and caught up in a violently volatile reaction to the shooting death of still another black man by police. The mere consideration of the idea that they'd drop by was wrong on so many levels. First of all, it is near-certain that their presence would fan the flames that threaten to consume Charlotte. Secondly, as the mayor pleaded...
In case you missed the noise, the general election is November 8. That is just a month away. The country will be choosing its next president. This campaign season has been described as one of the most unorthodox and contentious of any in recent history. The charges and countercharges are unremitting. Each candidate has hardcore supporters who remain unwavering. Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, of course, are the two candidates from the two major parties. The third party candidates have gained little traction. Clinton and Trump are older than...
MARRIAGE LICENSES Cole Jacob Bryan, 29, and Jennifer Anne Jones, 24, both Pullman, Sept. 23. Paul Edward Jovanovich, 26, Pullman, and Maja Taylor Olson, 22, Viola, Idaho, Sept. 26. Bertram George Brehm III, 64, and Marta Lucille Coursey, 57, both Pullman, Sept. 26. Cameron Allen Adams, 25, and Courtney Alyssa Karis, 25, both Colton, Sept. 27. REAL ESTATE SALES Teresa Rudy, Pullman, to Ronald and Laura Lacy and Ronald and Tamara Marnell, Albion, house on Bella Vista Drive, Pullman, $226,000, July 26. Congcong Wang, Pullman, to Robert Kirschner,...
Audra Sims has taken over management of 10 state parks. A new area manager is in place for the 10-park Blue Mountain State Parks area. Audra Sims began Sept. 1 after transferring from Alta Lake State Park near Chelan. She now oversees the operation of Sacajawea, Columbia Plateau Trail, Iron Horse/John Wayne Pioneer Trail (Lind to Idaho border), Lewis and Clark Trail, Camp Wooten, Lyons Ferry, Palouse Falls, Steptoe Butte, Steptoe Battlefield and Fields Spring State Parks. A staff of 14 report to...
The $15 minimum wage is an example of elected officials with tunnel vision passing sweeping legislation while ignoring the cumulative impacts of all of the other government mandates on employers. They only zero-in on the costs and benefits of a single issue, such as the $15 an hour wage, when they ought to focus on all of the taxes, fees, regulations and laws. Seattle’s ordinance took effect on April 1, 2015. It directs businesses with fewer than 500 employees to pay the $15 an hour wage starting in 2021. Employers with 500 or more employees (...
If you aren't seriously contemplating the biggest black swan event in American electoral history, you aren't paying attention. Fifteen months ago, Donald Trump was a reality-TV star with a spotty business record and a weird penchant for proclaiming that he was on the verge of running for president. Now, he's perhaps a few big breaks and a couple of sterling debate performances away from being elected 45th president of the United States. Trump has no experience in elected office and, unlike past nonpoliticians elected president, hasn't won a...
I've always had a special kind of contempt for the malefactors who try to turn their evil behavior against those who are resisting. It can get Orwellian. A good example would be the oligarchs in this country who hoard the wealth they've accumulated by hook and crook, and then accuse those who resist of waging class warfare. Never mind that by bribing the politicians with their campaign contributions, they're the ones waging the class warfare. And so it is with Donald Trump, who has taken to saying that when Hillary Clinton calls out his...
Throughout history, various members of the human race have robbed and cheated each other in a plethora of ways. Some have been romanticized and justified; Robin Hood stealing from the rich to give to the poor. Privateer as opposed to pirate. But mostly it has been one person or group of people taking something from another for gain and profit. Regardless of the reason, some of the lowest of these thieves have been those who steal from churches and places of learning. Institutions dedicated to the enhancement of other people. Ransacking a church...
Unfortunately, discussion over our skyrocketing national debt is only a footnote in the testy presidential campaign this year. Hopefully, the upcoming debates will change that. The new president and Congress face a day of reckoning next March when the limit on the amount of money we can borrow reaches $20.1 trillion. Either both parties reach an agreement on funding our government or the president orders a shut down. That’s why voters should know where the candidates stand on handling our massive federal debt before they cast their ballots this...
Short sighted This letter is in response to the person (or persons) responsible for the short-sighted decision not to honor senior passes at local sporting events. Who do you think helped put Colfax schools on the map, both academically as well as athletically? Two old sayings come into play here: “Don’t bite the hand that feeds you” and “Don’t forget who brought you to the dance.” There has always been a strong supporting group regarding schools in this community, so don’t turn a cold shoulder to that support complex. The present track...
With the Clintons, mistrust always pays. A couple of weeks ago, Hillary was yukking it up with Jimmy Kimmel over the absurdity of rumors that she was hiding something about her health. Look, she can open a pickle jar! That feels so long ago now that her campaign has admitted that she was indeed hiding something about her health -- a pneumonia diagnosis. Some of the diagnoses from afar of Hillary's purported illnesses have been elaborate fantasies, and she might have really been fit as a fiddle when she opened the famous pickle jar. But through...
What a terrible weekend Hillary Clinton had! First she stepped into needless controversy, calling half of Donald Trump's supporters "deplorables." The next day, she gave a mealy-mouthed statement of "regret" -- not for using "deplorable," but for the "half" part. How dopey did that look? But it was the video of her stumbling or nearly fainting when she got overheated at the 9/11 ceremony in New York that looked nothing short of alarming. Let's face it. The "overheated" explanation of her campaign and assurances that she was just fine simply...
It was reported recently that 858 immigrants have been erroneously granted U.S. citizenship. That number has increased. It is now estimated that “mistakes” were made on more than 1,800. The number is a drop in the bucket compared with the yearly number of newly minted citizens. Still, it is a worrisome number. Some of these immigrants seeking citizenship are from countries which pose national security concerns. Some have obtained their new status by fraud. Some did because U.S. Citizenship and Naturalization Services did not have enough inf...
California has become a manufacturing “job killer” bastion because of its shackling regulations, high taxes and excessive permitting requirements. Its quagmire of government-mandated programs is accelerating an industrial exodus. In 2009, the Milken Institute reported California lost 79,000 manufacturing jobs in just five years (2003-2007) prior to the “Great Recession.” In contrast, seven other competing states gained 62,000 workers. The report blames the state’s onerous regulations and high taxes for pushing business elsewhere. In 2014, a k...
Elberton project I am the owner of the property in Elberton where Eco Logical Research, Inc., will be installing the bio-engineered bank stabilization project on the Palouse River. I am also the President of the Whitman County Cattlemen’s Association. I would like to clarify erroneous statements in last week’s article regarding the project. Livestock will not be blocked from the river at the completion of this project. We have almost a quarter of a mile of shoreline and the project is a fraction of that length. The project area will be exc...
Donald Trump's speech in Arizona has occasioned wailing and rending of garments among the commentariat and "respectable" people everywhere. At bottom, the cause of the freakout is simple: Trump believes in immigration laws, and the country's elite really doesn't. Minus a few trademark excesses that are too ingrained in the Trump shtick to abandon at this point -- e.g., we are going to build a wall and Mexico is going to pay for it -- Trump's speech was rock-solid on policy. The core of it represents what, more or less, any realistic regime of...
OK, supporters of Hillary -- and for that matter, Hillary herself -- it is YOUR job to convince the voters of the United States not to elect a maniacal, hateful con man to be president. That's your responsibility. It's not up to us to take him on and make your case. By "us," I refer to those in the media, who cling to the ideal that journalists are supposed to be skeptics, and follow the story wherever it leads "without fear or favor," as The New York Times publisher wrote back in 1896. That is our tradition. That "favor" part is the key. If...
The country just commemorated the 15th anniversary of the terror attacks of September 11, 2001. That, of course, was when America was rocked by multiple tragedies. The iconic Twin Towers in New York City were destroyed when two hijacked commercial jetliners crashed into them. The Pentagon was struck by a third jetliner, and a fourth hijacked jet crashed into a field in Pennsylvania after passengers tried to retake the plane and prevent it from destroying another target. Images abound of the attacks. In New York, people are seen jumping from...
China has a new industrial strategy which is capturing attention worldwide. It is striving to become an innovation economy using advanced automation, connected robots and artificial intelligence. China intends to shake the image of just being a nation for low-cost manufacturing. Instead, it wants to be known for producing cutting edge, reliable and high quality products–even making robots. According to the International Federation of Robotics (IFR), the Chinese are creating an “industrial internet” which gathers information and uses it acros...
For years, Obamacare supporters have been telling critics of the law to shut up and fall in line. Now, they are urging them to come to its rescue. A key part of President Barack Obama's domestic legacy is sputtering so badly that even the law's boosters are admitting that the federal government needs to do more to prop it up. The Obamacare exchanges were supposed to enhance choices and hold down costs -- and are doing neither. Abandoned by more and more insurers, the exchanges -- once billed as robust "marketplaces" -- are becoming pitiful...
Forget about the anti-everyone-else zealots, the so-called white nationalists who hang on Donald Trump like a hooded robe. They like to refer to themselves as "alt-right," which is all right with Hillary Clinton and her peeps, who argue that the Trumpster has pulled the crazies out of their dumpster and spewed their noxious garbage into the mainstream of politics. He's even made one of their most outspoken haters his campaign chief. Still, Donny responds to her charges with his usual finesse. He's now calling Hillary "a bigot." It's great...
The Palouse Empire Fair starts its annual run today. The fair is a long-held tradition on the Palouse. The tradition itself goes back to ancient times. Fairs were a time to celebrate and give thanks for harvest. It is little different today. This fair is an opportunity to lay aside work, take comfort in knowing that the crops are harvested and to celebrate with others the end of the season. It is also the time to take a deep breath before preparing for the upcoming year. For others, it is a chance to see some parts of rural life they are not...