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

Hannelore Sudermann

This individual is no longer an employee with The Spokesman-Review.

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News >  Pacific NW

Fireworks cause fire in Pullman

PULLMAN – Fireworks started a Tuesday night blaze that seriously damaged the home of several Washington State University students. Just after 10 p.m., Joanna Nicholson was getting ready for bed at her one-story home on the 1700 block of Wheatland Drive when she noticed light outside one of her windows. At first she thought it was from a flare that was being set off in her neighborhood.
News >  Pacific NW

WSU names vice president for equity, diversity

PULLMAN – Washington State University's leaders are following through with their promise to make diversity a top priority. On Tuesday the school announced the appointment of Michael Tate as interim vice president for equity and diversity. Tate, an African American, came to WSU six years ago. He has served as WSU's director of Cooperative Extension since 2000 and dean of Extension since 2001.
News >  Spokane

WSU revises plans for group

In a special telephone meeting Monday morning, Washington State University regents heard about a revised version of a new private nonprofit organization to manage real estate assets. Initially called the WSU Real Estate Foundation, the new 501(C3) nonprofit organization designed to hold and manage gifts of property to WSU was approved unanimously by the regents in January.
News >  Business

Family cuisine

MOSCOW — Patty Alvarez makes a killer tomatillo salsa. It's sweet, thick and spicy. It can add kick to a meal and give new verve to the old standard of salsa and chips. But for the Alvarez family, that sauce did a whole lot more — it got them into the food business.
News >  Spokane

Inventor hopes Hoophitch a slam dunk

CLARKSTON – Sometimes two ingredients are all you need to cook up a good idea. Paul Carey loves inventing. His wife and kids love basketball. Blending those loves has resulted in a traveling basketball backboard and hoop that Carey can put on his trailer hitch and take anywhere the family might travel.
News >  Spokane

WSU Spokane gets interim chancellor

Washington State University officials have appointed political science professor Nicholas Lovrich to be the interim chancellor of WSU Spokane starting July 1. Lovrich, who was in Spokane meeting with current interim chancellor Rom Markin on Thursday afternoon, said he's excited about the new post and anticipates a lot of work, since the campus and the neighborhood around it are experiencing major development.
News >  Spokane

Cadavers build knowledge at WSU

PULLMAN – Nothing moves in the cool open basement labs of Washington State University's Morrill Hall. Still, the rooms are far from empty. The blue bags on steel tables angled around the labs hold some of the university's ultimate donors, those who leave their bodies to the school so students hoping to become doctors, nurses, nutritionists and physical therapists can learn from them. Willed-body programs across the country are losing donations because of recent scandals at other schools, including Tulane University and UCLA. Officials there and at other medical training programs have been accused or criminally charged with selling cadavers and body parts for use in private industry or experiments. At Tulane, some donated bodies were sold to a broker. According to national news reports, that broker was accused of selling cadavers to the U.S. Army, which used them for field mine testing. Now the school and the broker face a class-action lawsuit from donors' family members. And at UCLA in March, the program director was criminally charged with selling stolen body parts through an intermediary for private companies to use in research. The school's donation program was suspended by court order in April. But WSU remains untouched by the trouble, say local program leaders. Maybe it's because donors know their bodies are going to a small program and are being used locally, but since the news about UCLA broke this spring, only one person has called to rescind her donation, said Dave Conley, WSU's anatomy program director. On a morning last week, a recent WSU graduate sat quietly at the back of the lab gingerly dissecting the face of a cadaver. Music played on a radio in the background. Emily Squyer, who studied anatomy in the WSU labs last year, is helping prepare the newer donations for classes scheduled to start at the end of summer. As the new students arrive, Squyer will be headed to medical school at Pennsylvania State University. Squyer said her anatomy training at WSU and her experience this summer working on cadavers will give her a head start in her first-year medical classes. "Ultimately, I want to do trauma surgery," she said. "I'm really fascinated with anatomy, and I also like the challenge of blending skills and instinct." What she is learning now from the cadaver will help her treat future patients. "It's a very huge gift somebody gave," she said. "I've worked with a couple of different texts at the same time as studying a real body, none of them are as accurate as the body." Most of WSU's donors plan long before their deaths to leave their bodies to the university to train the next generation of medical experts and perhaps help to save future patients' lives. They make the first contact, said Conley. "I don't know where they hear about it, but they find us," he said. He sends them a packet explaining the program and the necessary forms to make the donation. "It's not a binding agreement at all," he said. "And we can't accept every donation." Donors who died of an infectious disease, who died a violent death or who are obese cannot be accepted, he said. Other donations may be turned down if the body is too far out of the area to be retrieved in a timely manner, said Conley. Within 24 hours of death, the cadavers enter the program and are picked up by Kramer Funeral Home in Palouse. The bodies are embalmed to the requirements of the medical training program and then delivered to Pullman. "Within a week, the body gets to campus," said Conley. It stays in the program for up to three years. There are currently about 40 cadavers in use at WSU. A few go to Eastern Washington University for the physical therapy training program or to the University of Idaho, but all bodies are kept whole and all are used to train students, said Conley. Those that stay in Pullman go to undergraduate anatomy classes and a few become part of the Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho medical school program, which provides the first two years of medical school for rural students. In teams of four, the WWAMI students are assigned a single body for their focused training in Pullman. No matter where they're used, the cadavers come back to Pullman before being cremated and returned to the family for burial. If the family or the donor wishes, the ashes can be buried for free at the Evergreen-Washelli cemetery in Seattle, where WSU has a plot. After spending many long hours with a donated body, the medical students develop attachments. "Almost all of them do," said Conley. And, though they don't know anything about the lives of the donors – not even their names – the students hold a memorial service at the end of the year. Some read poems, some say what the donation meant to them. It can be a very touching ceremony, said Conley. "I don't know that the donors realize how many people their donation does touch," said Conley. "Each person can train up to 500 students." He's careful to remind the students of the significance of the gift. "I tell them that this is more valuable than a scholarship," he said. "These donors are saying, ‘Here is my body, learn from me.' "
News >  Idaho

UI grad making seat belts safer for pregnant women

When Laura Thackray was a senior at the University of Idaho, she started a project to make cars safer for pregnant women. Four years later, she's continuing her work in Sweden as an engineer for Volvo Car Corp. Her computer model of a 36-week pregnant woman, whom she named Linda, is one of very few examinations of how to reduce injuries to expectant mothers and their fetuses.
News >  Spokane

It’s grand ol’ Grange

PULLMAN – A secret society complete with rites, goddesses and ritualistic degrees is meeting in Pullman this week. Close to 1,000 members of the Washington State Grange hit town Wednesday with their sashes, pins and solemn ceremonies, ready to take part in a four-day convention at Washington State University's Beasley Coliseum.
News >  Idaho

UI faced with $2 million rent on Boise center

The University of Idaho will start moving into its problematic University Place project in Boise this fall, which costs UI nearly $2 million annually to occupy. At a State Board of Education meeting in Moscow on Thursday, UI officers described the recent progress of the project, which has been scaled back from seven buildings to one, and the UI programs that it will soon house.
News >  Spokane

Feminist, former head of NOW to visit WSU

Patricia Ireland, one of America's leading feminists, will be in Pullman this week to speak at a women's leadership conference at Washington State University. Ireland, who speaks Thursday night, is a former president of the National Organization for Women as well as the author of "What Women Want," a memoir of Ireland's own experience from being a teen bride to becoming a flight attendant, then a corporate lawyer and finally head of the nation's largest women's rights organization.
News >  Idaho

UI campus emotionally shaken

MOSCOW, Idaho — For weeks John Dickinson has been checking his computer and racing to the phone. The now-retired University of Idaho professor who was Sami Al-Hussayen's Ph.D. adviser has been wrapped up in his student's case since the beginning. He's traveled to Boise several times to visit Al-Hussayen in jail, was subpoenaed as a witness for the trial and publicly protested his imprisonment.
News >  Spokane

Digging for remnants of past

ROSALIA, Wash. – Not everyone has history buried in his back yard, let alone a battlefield covered with mystery and uncertainty. But residents in this northern Whitman County town do, and they want to dig up the truth about the Battle of Tohotonimme, which took place nearly 150 years ago just outside what now are their city limits. They're hoping what they find will make not only for a clearer past but also a brighter future.
News >  Idaho

UI president suffers mild heart attack

The University of Idaho's new president, Timothy White, had open-heart surgery Thursday in a hospital in Corvallis, Ore. White, who is scheduled to start work at the UI in July, had admitted himself to the hospital's emergency room early Thursday morning with chest pain. Doctors diagnosed several blocked coronary arteries and performed a coronary artery bypass.
News >  Idaho

White has heart surgery

The University of Idaho's new president, Timothy White, had open heart surgery Thursday in a hospital in Corvallis, Ore. White, who is scheduled to start work at the UI in July, had admitted himself to the hospital's emergency room early Thursday morning with chest pain. Doctors diagnosed several blocked coronary arteries and performed a coronary artery bypass.
News >  Spokane

Mission accomplished

PULLMAN – When veterinary student Cristina Rubio sat down to a late dinner Saturday, the last thing she had planned was rushing into a rainstorm to rescue a raptor. But around 8 p.m., a partially blind barred owl had worked his way out of a leather leash on the way home from a presentation at a Boy Scout meeting. When his carrier door was opened at the end of the trip, he flew up into a tree. From the tree, he flew to the top of one building and then, to the dismay of a group of students transporting him, sought an even higher perch on Washington State University's four-story Wegner Hall.
News >  Spokane

WSU stops taking applications from freshmen for fall quarter

PULLMAN – Washington State University has stopped accepting freshman applications for fall semester. Announcing that the school has already received 9,600 applications for 2,950 places, the WSU admissions office has closed its doors to any more students and will notify the latest applicants that it has already seated its freshman class.
News >  Idaho

Attorney general withdraws from UI case

The Idaho Attorney General's Office has withdrawn from the criminal investigation of University Place, the University of Idaho's multimillion dollar failed real estate venture in Boise. Stating that investigating the project would be "ethically inappropriate" because of "serious conflicts of interest," the agency announced its decision in a press release Thursday morning.
News >  Spokane

Police find drug evidence, stolen mail at hotel

Pullman police investigating suspicious activity at a hotel last week found evidence of drugs along with identification and mail stolen from Spokane and Kootenai counties, authorities said. Officers were called to the Holiday Inn Express on the afternoon of May 12 because employees were concerned about two young men who had checked in around midnight. Throughout the night, the guests had made repeated trips to the front desk, asking for things like razors, towels and other hygiene products, according to the police report. When a worker brought towels to their room, she smelled something unusual, according to the report.
News >  Idaho

Surveyor gets an earful from Schroeder

This week Idaho State Sen. Gary Schroeder, R-Moscow, got a phone call from a telemarketer asking him how he felt about his state senator's voting record on tax issues. Identifying himself as the very same senator as the focus of the survey, Schroeder listened to the first two questions regarding sales and gas tax increases without complaint.
News >  Idaho

Senate race mostly about schools, money

MOSCOW, Idaho — The Idaho District 6 Senate primary is all about education. The two Republicans vying for the state seat may claim other issues, but the spark in this race comes from schools and the money that goes to them. Challenger Gregg Vance decided to run for office when his legislator, 12-year Idaho Senate veteran Gary Schroeder took a stand against limiting local school board control over charter schools. Vance's four children are enrolled in the Idaho Virtual Academy, a computer-assisted home school program that made news this year when it asked the state for an annual $1.6 million to cover debt to its parent company.
News >  Idaho

New federal officers will take over UI probe

Citing conflicts, the U.S. Department of Justice has removed its Idaho office from the criminal review of the University of Idaho Foundation's multimillion dollar failed real estate venture to build a satellite campus and rental space in Boise. The project, backed by the private, nonprofit foundation, was intended to raise the University of Idaho's profile in the state capital, but for a variety of reasons – including a turn in the economy, mismanagement and poor planning – the effort foundered. The result was the loss of about $28 million from the university foundation and the 2003 resignation of UI President Bob Hoover.
News >  Nation/World

Fruit Firm Subject Of Lawsuit Workers Claim Apple Grower Retaliated After Strike

Twenty-eight farm workers have filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court against an Orondo, Wash.,-based apple grower for discriminatory and retaliatory conduct. The complaint claims that Auvil Fruit Co.Inc. harassed and pressured workers who took part in a four-day strike and picket line at the company's property near Vantage last September. "Auvil Fruit Co. was surprised to hear of a threatened lawsuit by some of its employees," the company said in a release. The company received a copy of the complaint Monday, but had not yet prepared a response.
News >  Nation/World

Usda Takes Steps To Boost Beef Prices Agency To Buy Up To $30 Million In Beef Products

The U.S. Department of Agriculture will purchase up to $30 million in beef products to try to improve prices in the cattle industry. Meat prices, particularly for beef and pork, are low because of high supplies and high feed prices. "Right now, producers are operating below break-even levels," said U.S. Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman in a release. "These additional beef purchases will help offset a surplus supply of fed cattle which is depressing prices to ranchers, farmers and feedlot operators."