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

Michael Guilfoil

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

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Paths To Our Past Spokane’s Rockwood-Highland Area Entertains Mother’s Day Historic Preservation Tour

1. The stone and timber home at 730 E. Plateau was designed by and built for architect Harold Whitehouse as a retirement cottage. Visitors will notice the similarities between the home and Whitehouse's most famous commission: the Cathedral of St. John the Evnagelist, which was under construction when the home was built in 1948. Photo by Christopher Anderson/The Spokesman-Review 2. Built in 1911, Dave and Susan Johnson's home at 804 E. 26th features an abbreviated Queen Anne-style tower, classical columns and a wrap-around porch. 3. A carved post graces the base of their staircase.
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Give And Take There’s More Than One Way To Prune A Tree, And Many Are Harmful

1. Blair Elementary students Jenna Claes, 9, left, and Jonathan Robinson, 10, help airman Don Watson and others plant a London Plane tree - one of 36 - at Fairchild Air Force Base. Fairchild is among more than 2,200 communities to qualify for Tree City USA status, a designation that reflects a strong commitment to urban forestry. Photo by Kristy MacDonald/The Spokesman-Review 2. Paul Boyle, 7, and his brother Mark, 9, say a haphazard pruning job makes it difficult to climb their favorite tree. Photo by Dan McComb/The Spokesman-Review

Izaak Walton Didn’t Come Close To Montana

Izaak Walton never slept at the Montana inn that bears his name. Indeed, he never came within 5,000 miles of the place. Nor did he work for the railroad, despite the fact that the Izaak Walton Inn is a veritable museum of train memorabilia. "It's somewhat of a mystery to us," admits owner Larry Vielleux when asked how the inn got its name. Walton, a 17th century English biographer, is best known as author of "The Compleat Angler" (which one piece of inn literature refers to as "The Complete Angular," perhaps having confused Walton with his contemporary, mathematician Isaac Newton). Some locals speculate Great Northern Railway owner James J. Hill's Anglophilia contributed to the railroad boarding house and hotel being named after Walton. Another theory is the Walton reference added credibility to the area's once-legitimate claim as a fishing paradise. But few guests today tote their fly rods to the inn, and even fewer know much about Izaak Walton. "We're asked about him a million times," says Vielleux. For the sake of the curious, Vielleux keeps several copies of "The Compleat Angler" behind the counter. But he doesn't recommend it. "It takes a long night just to read the first paragraph," jokes Vielleux, "with all those therefores and thous."

Shop Talk Museum’s Old House Workshop Rides The Momentum Of The Arts And Crafts Movement

1. Craftsman-style architecture is characterized by indigenous materials, like this river rock gleaned by Kurt and Holly Peterson for their fireplace. Photo by Christopher Anderson/The Spokesman-Review 2. Holly Peterson will share insights from her Craftsman-style home. 3. Fir cabinet fronts - including those covering the refrigerator doors - and oak floors add to the warm, friendly ambience of the Petersons' kitchen 4. The Petersons' roof pitches steeper than those of traditional bungalows to better shed snow.
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Aids Quilt Display Coming Back To Spokane

From For the record (Friday, February 9, 1996): A benefit to raise money to bring the AIDS quilt to Spokane will be held at Auntie's Bookstore, 402 W. Main, at 7 p.m. Wednesday. The date was wrong in an IN Life story Thursday. This is one of 920 individual panels of the AIDS Quilt coming to Spokane in April.
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Relationship Between Art And Politics Isn’t A New Concept

The partnership between art and politics began even before Julius Caesar commissioned his first marble bust more than 2 millennia ago. In fact, says Eastern Washington University art historian Barbara Miller, "It's only in recent times that we have recast artists and their relationship with society. We assume (this new role) means they can express their own point of view and not be beholden to anybody, but that's not the case." Even today, says Miller, art remains "a vehicle for expressing values and agendas."
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Artists Choose To Make A Little Money This Year

Of Spokane County's more than 600 visual artists, only a handful support themselves solely through the sale of their work. Even so, non-profit fund-raisers increasingly view the art studio as a fertile and inexhaustible source of donations. Mead sculptor Harold Balazs estimates he's asked for contributions twice a week. And some solicitors can get downright heavy-handed.
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Heart Supplies Annual Auction Benefits Museum

1. Barbara Racker, Cheney Cowles Museum art curator, joins heads with Gordon Wilson's "Valentine Prayerbox." Top photo: "The Devil Made Me Do It," by Ken Yukasz. Photo by Dan Pelle/The Spokesman-Review 2. "Heart," a hand-colored etching by Monte Dolack, also is part of the fund-raising auction.

More Than A Chip Off The Ol’ Block Energy-Efficient Faswall Helps Home Stand Test Of Time

1. Homeowner Judy Chittick and architect Bruce Millard display a block of Faswall. 2. Creating a low-maintenance living space was among the goals of, from left, architect Bruce Millard, homeowner Jerry Chittick and builders Norm Sommerfeld and Brent Lockwood. Photos by Michael Guilfoil/The Spokesman-Review 3. Faswall building blocks are stacked, reinforced with steel rods and contrete, then sheathed in conventional siding.
News >  Spokane

Museum Overflowing $1.5 Million Sought For Designing And Engineering An Underground Addition

(From For the Record, Friday, January 12, 1996): Cheney Cowles Museum is asking the Legislature for $1.2 million to design and engineer a 43,000-square-foot addition to its facility at 2316 W. First. The museum is seeking another $245,000 in supplemental operating money to cover additional work in handling the former MONAC Native American collection. The amount for the expansion was incorrect in Tuesday's newspaper. Museum worker Jill Mellstrom prepares a future exhibit of Mexican masks. Photo by Colin Mulvany/The Spokesman-Review
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Safe & Secure

1. Property manager Barbara Smith and ALSC Architects' Ritch Fenrich review plans for a security upgrade of the U.S. Courthouse plaza in downtown Spokane. Photo by Dan Pelle/The Spokesman-Review 2. Gerald Winkler of Integrus Architecture specified 1-1/8-inch-thick blast-proof windows for the new U.S. Embassy in Bogota, Colombia. Photo by Christopher Anderson/The Spokesman-Review 3. Winkler made the embassy's courtyard trellis of reinforced concrete, so the trellis won't become a projectile in the event of a blast.

Home On Derange Unconventional Design Creates Unique Residence

1. Says Steve Thosathm with wife Cathy: "What we had in mind was something whimsical, something fun to be inside, like a shack that's been added to over the years." Photo by Shawn Jacobson/The Spokesman-Review 2. Steve and Cathy Thosath enjoy their open living room. Photo by Shawn Jacobson/The Spokesman-Review
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Royal Potter The ‘Bean Queen’ Finds Time For Creations In Clay

1. Jill Smith's distinctive raku pottery. 2. "There are many things I took from my art to the business world," says Jill Smith. "Clay teaches you patience." Photo by Molly O'Hara/The Spokesman-Review 3. The show also will feature Gil Harrison's pottery. 4. Non-traditional baskets from Judith Zafforoni. 5. "San Juan Silk," accessories from Mary Sly and Dan Wyatt.

Something Borrowed Frank Lloyd Wright’s Influence Gives Designers Head Start On Award-Winning Residence

1. Architects Gerry Copeland andNacy McKennon referred to Frank Lloyd Wright's 1909 Roble House in Chicago (top) when they designed the exterior of this prized residence on South Hill's High Drive. Photo by Shawn Jacobson/The Spokesman-Review 2. Designers Dennis Sweeney and Patrick Gaughan employed traditional details on this Liberty Lake home. Photo by Brad Dehle photo 3. (Photo of Frank Lloyd Wright's Robie House) 4. Metalworker Harry CArlson of Spokane City Wrought Iron crafted the railing in the award-winning Copeland-McKennon house. Photo by Alan Bisson photo