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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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News >  Idaho Voices

In brief: Centennial offers food, cars, games

KOOTENAI – The city of Kootenai will have its Centennial Celebration at Kootenai City Park, 200 Spokane St., on Saturday, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. The celebration includes the Injectors Car Club Showcase from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., a pancake breakfast sponsored by the Shriners from 8 to 11:30 a.m., and a barbecue lunch sponsored by the Shriners from 11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
News >  Idaho Voices

In brief: Students offered free sports exams

POST FALLS – Coeur d’Alene Pediatrics office in the Kootenai Health Park, 1300 E. Mullan Ave., will offer free sports physicals to middle and high school students on July 29, from noon to 4 p.m. Exams meet most area schools’ physical exam requirements for participation in organized sports programs.
News >  Idaho Voices

Otter not ready to share exceptions to the platform

BOISE – Here’s the thing about Gov. Butch Otter’s stand on a GOP platform loyalty oath: Otter doesn’t want to specify where he disagrees with the state party platform before he goes up for re-election in November. Asked if he’d participate in the party’s new requirement that candidates specify where they depart from the platform, Otter replied, “Nope.”
News >  Idaho Voices

Teens working for future trip to Uganda

Sandpoint High School students Aubrie Perry and Bailey Scrimsher, both 15, have a plan. A very expensive plan. Their families each sponsor a child from Uganda through International Children’s Network and both girls would like to travel to visit their sponsored child as well as participate in mission work.
News >  Idaho Voices

Transition to Mexican fare promising, but Café Bella Rosa’s ceiling needs work

Our initiation into the world of Café Bella Rosa was fraught with awkwardness. A recent newspaper article had left me with the impression that along with the vowel change, the new owners of the former Bella Rose were “spicing it up” with an array of menu items from south of the border. In other words, I was pretty much expecting a full-on Mexican restaurant and had hyped it up as such to my lunch partner. We had chips-’n’-salsa, enchiladas and chile rellenos on the brain, and our tummies were rumbling hungrily at the idea.
News >  Idaho Voices

We’re happy here in our weather ‘bubble’

Sometimes it feels as if we live in a weather bubble here in the Inland Northwest. News of deadly heat waves, tornadoes, floods, hurricanes and blizzards seem like a daily occurrence on television. But it’s always in some other part of the country. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not complaining. This weather “bubble” idea got another boost when I read the latest weather headlines from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. While we were shivering and plants were freezing during what seemed like an especially cold June, apparently the rest of the country was baking. Temperature data show the U.S. as a whole experienced the eighth-warmest June on record! Across the entire U.S., only the Northwest had below normal average temperatures last month. More specifically, only Washington and Oregon had below-normal temperatures. Or perhaps it was just Spokane and Coeur d’Alene, which were so cold that our numbers skewed the data for the rest of the region (I don’t have the data to back up that particular idea). This past week’s dust/wind storm and subsequent outbreak of fires hopefully has reminded people that we are in the midst of fire weather season. Despite having such a cold wet June, it doesn’t take a very long period of warm, dry weather to ripen the fuels that can feed wildfires. Winds from 35 to 55 mph blanketed the region the afternoon of July 12 after the passage of a particularly strong cold front. Fortunately, we did not have to deal with the added danger of dry lightning with the storm system, but the sheer number of fire starts shows that under those conditions, it doesn’t take much – a spark from any source – to result in a dangerous wildfire.
News >  Idaho Voices

A military legacy

Ask anyone what role women played during World War II and the answer is likely to be that their jobs were diverse – working in factories, providing support for the soldiers, and some serving as nurses on the front lines. But chances are no one will tell you that civilian women served as pilots flying military aircraft for the United States Army Air Forces. More than 1,000 women were trained as aviation cadets, which enabled the male pilots to serve where they were needed most – in combat. The women were civilians who received approximately 27 weeks of training. And their role, which included flying over 60 million miles in fighter, bomber, transport and training aircraft, was equally important.
News >  Idaho Voices

Both parties use GOP convention to recruit

BOISE – It’s hard to imagine two more different takes on the outcome of the recent Idaho Republican Party convention than those in statements issued by state GOP Chairman Norm Semanko and Idaho Democratic Party Chairman Keith Roark – from “positive and inspiring” to “astounding” and “radical.” Semanko dubbed the Idaho Falls gathering “positive and inspiring,” and wrote, “More than 500 delegates, elected by their peers from across the state, packed the convention hall in Idaho Falls to welcome their candidates and share in a common goal. … Americans – Republicans, Democrats and independents alike – are frustrated and they want to be heard by their elected leaders. As the party of ideas, only the Republican Party has been listening. At our state convention, we embraced these ideals and united behind our candidates statewide.” Semanko titled his statement, “Republican State Convention: Toppling Obama’s Ivory Tower.”
News >  Idaho Voices

Building Permits

Coeur d’Alene Coeur d’Alene School District 271, 930 N. 15th St., commercial, walk-in cooler/freezer, valued at $75,000.
News >  Idaho Voices

Crowds gather for Daze festivities

The 2010 Bayview Daze celebration is history. In the cooler-than-usual weather for this time of year, once again huge crowds gathered to celebrate the Independence Day weekend. Starting with the annual parade in the morning with a large turnout of entrants, visitors had fun in the sun touring the booths at the street fair and boating the waters of Scenic Bay.
News >  Idaho Voices

Hecla stakes its claim in Wallace with new office

After an absence of 26 years, Hecla Mining Co. has moved an office back into Wallace. The 119-year-old company had an office in Wallace from about 1917 to 1984, when it moved its corporate office to 6500 N. Mineral Drive in Coeur d’Alene. The main office will remain there, and the Wallace office is at 611 Bank St. Dr. Wayne Jurkovich moved his dental office from there to an empty location next door. With about 320 employees in North Idaho alone, Hecla also has an office in Vancouver, B.C., and mines of silver and/or gold in the Silver Valley (the Lucky Friday), Alaska, Colorado, Mexico and Venezuela. The name Hecla historically has connections to old mines in Montana and back East and a volcano in Iceland. Hours at the Wallace office are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. weekdays. Visit www.hecla-mining.com.
News >  Idaho Voices

Help prepare plants to withstand rising temperature with a deep soaking

Can it really be true? As I write this, the forecast is for 90-degree temperatures for the weekend. After shivering and drowning through the spring, it is going to be a shock to get used to heat. Our plants are going to be jolted by this sudden heat, too. Because of this, our plants are going to need some help to be ready to grow as it heats up.
News >  Idaho Voices

Humidity makes the difference

I always tell people that summer doesn’t really start around here until after July 4 and that the actual summer solstice is just a day on the calendar. That couldn’t have been more true this year. Last month, we not only saw rainfall more than an inch above normal in both Spokane and Coeur d’Alene; our temperature average for the month was about 2.5 degrees below normal. Only 10 days out of 30 had afternoon highs above 75 degrees. While the past week has brought summer heat to both the Northwest and New England, spawning heat advisories in places like Portland and Boston, the circumstances are quite different.
News >  Idaho Voices

Hydroplanes aren’t only wavemakers

Some people are touchy about the hydroplane races of yesteryear on Lake Coeur d’Alene – none more so than Dave Walker. A recent mention I made online that downtown rioting helped bring an end to the races caused Walker’s head to spin and vomit pea soup. Then, he compared me unfavorably to the late Aryan Nations leader Richard Butler. Criticism of hydroplane races. North Idaho racism. See the connection?
News >  Idaho Voices

Our destination: Wallace

This road trip to Wallace, Idaho, began on a sunny Saturday morning – the first really sunny morning in a long time. Locals say Wallace is “the center of the universe,” within a short distance of skiing and hiking, climbing and biking, all in the mountains that line the Silver Valley. The entire town is on the National Register of Historic Places and it has survived no less than two huge fires: The first in 1890 almost destroyed the town; the second fire in 1910 only took out parts of town as many of the buildings destroyed in the 1890 fire had been rebuilt in brick.
News >  Idaho Voices

Pizza-maker rescues parade from proceeding ponderously

Despite the crowds lining Sherman Avenue with their rows of disposable nylon chairs and regrettable American flag Kmart fashions, we managed to find a killer vantage point for watching the annual Coeur d’Alene Fourth of July parade. My homegirl and I were both equally cynical about the excitement value of the parade, but neither of us had bothered with it for as long as we could remember, so we decided the night before the big event to meet downtown the next morning at 10:30. We’d been hanging out on the corner of Sixth and Sherman for quite a while, looking at our watches impatiently and waiting for the first police car to signal the start of the extravaganza.