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

Rob McDonald

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News >  Spokane

Vaccinations advised for students

College freshman checklist: loud stereo, ramen noodles – and maybe a meningococcal vaccine shot. The Spokane Regional Health District is asking parents to consider the meningococcal vaccine for their college-bound children, especially those moving into residence halls. Area colleges also are urging students, especially freshmen, to consider getting the vaccine.
News >  Spokane

Swimmers make last splash

Thursday's crowd at the Comstock swimming pool felt a little blue from the news. At 4:30 p.m. today, Spokane's six outdoor municipal pools will close for the season. The wading pools will close when it grows dark Sunday.
News >  Spokane

Embezzlement probe shakes Cheney School District

A former accounts payable clerk at Cheney School District is under investigation for allegedly embezzling as much as $7,800 and destroying records to cover up her actions. Cheney police are investigating the case and plan to turn it over to the Spokane County prosecutor's office by Tuesday for possible criminal charges, said Rick Campbell, interim Cheney police chief.

News >  Spokane

Teachers get crash course on tech

Televisions in the classroom are so 2001. The old-fashioned pull-down screens for movies and slide shows are back in vogue. New digital projectors can beam student papers onto a wall for everyone to see. And this winter, some teachers in the Spokane Public Schools will be able to enhance their lessons with short video feeds from a media library. Imagine a history lecture jazzed up with a 90-second clip of the Berlin Wall falling or a science class with a three-dimensional animation to illustrate a quantum physics theory.
News >  Spokane

Schools dispute audit of fund-raising accounts

A Rubber Chicken mixer at Lewis and Clark High School induced some heartburn for Spokane Public Schools. The Washington state auditor's office dinged the district in June because not every ticket to the mixer was tracked. There were other problems. Low marks came for an unapproved and untracked yearbook sales at Shadle High School and 354 missing "Go Cards," sold for a fund-raiser at Rogers High School.
News >  Spokane

Students score well on basic skills test

Washington ninth-grade students once again earned higher marks than their peers nationally on an annual basic skills test. The Iowa Test of Educational Development, also known as the ITED, measures skills in reading, mathematics and student abilities in language arts.
News >  Spokane

Chief winces at SRO cutbacks

Spokane police Chief Roger Bragdon understands Mayor Jim West's budget problems, but said it's difficult not to take it personally when the city cut the School Resource Officer program. The program was Bragdon's idea and he said if he gets enough money in the future, it will be the first thing he restores.
News >  Spokane

Crowded colleges squeeze students

Washington college students expecting to waltz into the ivory halls of university life instead found themselves scrambling for admission this year – and it's only going to get more crowded on campus. The population bulge – created by the children of baby boomers – is generating a demand that is rising faster than the cash-starved state higher education system can handle. And the trend, called the boomer echo, is expected to last until 2008.
News >  Spokane

Spokane schools budget passed

In the end, there was nothing left to say. Spokane Public Schools passed a $259 million general fund budget Wednesday without a single public comment.
News >  Spokane

Track project, enrollment discussed

Signs of a recovering economy percolated through a monthly meeting of Community Colleges of Spokane officials Tuesday, although not every sign was welcomed. The cost to resurface the aging Spokane Falls Community College track will cost $63,000 more than anyone anticipated.
News >  Spokane

Defending death-row inmates a calling for GU law professor

A law professor at Gonzaga University is the last chance Frances Elaine Newton has to escape becoming the third woman executed in Texas since the state revived the death penalty. Ken Williams, who came to GU two years ago, has been defending death-row clients for several years while also teaching law. It's work that speaks to his empathy with the impoverished and his desire to operate as a check on the system, ensuring fairness.
News >  Spokane

U.S. policies incur sting, scholars say

A Spokane Rhodes Scholar – who's known as Bubba to friends and family – is behind a widely circulated letter from overseas scholars who fear their country's actions are harming their international educations. Spokane native Anthony House, 23, was weeks from returning to the Lilac City when the movement was born.
News >  Spokane

Regional historian, journalist, teacher John Fahey dies

John Fahey, the undisputed dean of Inland Northwest history who wrote about mines, Indian tribes, settlers and numerous regional characters in magazines and books, died Tuesday. He was 84. "We've lost not only our greatest historian, but a great person," said Nancy Compau, retired director of the Northwest Room historical collection in the downtown Spokane Library.
News >  Spokane

Clinic tries to draw more clients

A Washington State University nursing student put 9-year-old Ashley Love on a scale, took her blood pressure and tested her eyes Tuesday in the Sacajawea Middle School parking lot. It was just another day of nurse practitioners, student trainees and patients in the Ronald McDonald Care Mobile, a roving clinic on wheels that helps people regardless of their ability to pay.
News >  Spokane

Japanese students like freedoms

The left side of his frizzy black hair is bleached white. Zippers and metal studs accessorize his tight black pants. A skull-and-crossbones logo covers his Pink Dragon punk band shirt. It's easy to spot Takuma Iwashita, 19, as he takes a break between classes at the Pence Union Building at Eastern Washington University. He sits at a table and goofs with his friends, some 5,000 miles from his university in Tokyo.
News >  Spokane

Starving inmate gets 14-year prison sentence

A Spokane County Jail inmate who's trying to starve himself was sentenced to 171 months Thursday and is in the process of being transferred to the state prison system. Charles Robert McNabb, 50, has told jail officials that he is trying to starve himself out of remorse for the serious burns his stepdaughter suffered in a May 23 Spokane fire he started.
News >  Spokane

EWU seeks more foreign students

In an effort to increase numbers of international students, Eastern Washington University is developing an agreement with a west-side community college that serves a large population of foreign students. Under an agreement with Bellevue Community College, qualifying international students will be able to obtain guaranteed admission to EWU while attending the two-year college.
News >  Spokane

Young athletes test their limitations

Racheal Ceniceros walked a mile Wednesday without her feet for the Team St. Luke's Push-A-Thon. Before she was born, her umbilical cord wrapped around her lower legs, which left them severely disabled. Four months ago, surgeons completed the removal of the bones and tissue from the 11-year-old girl's feet, leaving her legs and the firm heels. She received new artificial legs and feet Tuesday that fit onto her legs. With her older teen sister by her side, Ceniceros joined 20 other athletes at the Whitworth College track who counted off laps to raise cash for their pending trip to a national track competition in Mesa, Ariz. The Junior Disabled Sport Championships will cost the team $23,000 for registration, airfare, food, lodging and ground transportation – all by July 10. Organizers weren't sure how much cash they raised, but they were confident it would all work out. "Every year people have pulled through for us," said Teresa Skinner, Team St. Luke's coordinator. The young athletes did their best under the oppressive heat. Skinner said it was good preparation for their Arizona competition. They came from places including Tekoa, Spokane and Fairfield. Ceniceros was the only double amputee rounding the track. The dark-haired girl with a blue scrunchie pulling back her ponytail rested in the shade of an equipment shed between laps. She said her heels were purple and getting sore from three laps. After a 20-minute break, Skinner said Ceniceros had one lap to go. "Come on, girl," Skinner said. And with some urging and a last drink of water, Ceniceros was up behind her walker. The first 80 yards went slower than most of the day, especially when her walker tipped over and she took a tumble. She adjusted her legs and got back up. "It's taking too much out of me," Ceniceros said, with 300 more yards to go. Trainers kept their eyes on the sisters from across the track. Being tough on the children helps them learn to rely on themselves, they say. "Sometimes the best thing you can do for them is not do anything at all," Skinner said, repeating a familiar refrain among occupational therapists. Skinner has seen firsthand how children respond to sports therapy. Many children with disabilities grow up having everything done for them, she said. It's a natural response for parents when doctors say their child will be lucky to see their fifth birthday. But sports shows kids how much they can do. "It's amazing how much they change," Skinner said. "I see it each week." Bob Hunt, 14, weighs 40 pounds and can manage about 12 feet in the shot put. He's a Bloomsday regular and has muscular arms that show his years of training. Hunt has sacral agenisis, a disease in which vertebrae do not connect to his pelvis. He's been training with Skinner for about five years. Hunt did 29 laps in a race wheelchair Wednesday to raise money from 34 sponsors he signed up. Still on the track, with 200 yards to go, Ceniceros started into a rhythm. Her stroller no longer strayed too far ahead – a problem that had at times forced her to scurry quickly to keep her balance. With 100 yards to go, she'd take her hands off her support and push the stroller with her waist. Her sister cheered as the sun fell behind a cloud. Ceniceros' heavy legs were almost done for the day. Then, without fanfare, she completed her final lap and continued back to the shady shed to sit on the bench press bench, where she laid back flat. "When I get home I'm taking the longest nap ever," Ceniceros said.
News >  Spokane

Drugs suspected in girl’s death

Spokane police are investigating the apparent drug-overdose death of a 16-year-old girl who was left at Holy Family Hospital's emergency room by two people Saturday morning. Police have not released the Spokane girl's name, but authorities said methamphetamine was found in her system.
News >  Spokane

Residents crowd downtown for glimpse of history

More than a thousand people waited outside in the sun Thursday afternoon hoping to give President Bush a piece of their minds – or at least catch a glimpse of him. But the bulk of the disappointed crowd wandered off soon after they realized that Bush had bypassed them and entered the Spokane Convention Center through a back door.
News >  Spokane

Vets gather at Riverfront Park in support of Kerry

Bert Shaber flew 67 South Pacific combat missions in a B-25 bomber during World War II. He was a trustee at Eastern Washington University and former chairman of the Republican Party in Stevens County. On Wednesday, Shaber joined a squad of area veterans who came to Riverfront Park to rally for Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry. The event was planned in anticipation of President Bush's appearance in Spokane today.
News >  Spokane

Bush critics ready burgers, protests

President Bush's visit to Spokane this week for a $1,000-a-plate fund-raiser has given Bush critics a collective rallying cry. Instead of grand entrées, they're dishing up conspicuously blue-collar burgers or mac-and-cheese. At least three events have been planned to counter Bush's Spokane visit.