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

Tracy Ellig

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

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News >  Nation/World

Spokane Trophy: It’s Awarded To Fittest Fighter In The Fleet

Don Moeller is going on a cruise in August, but not one advertised in any glossy travel magazine. Instead of pool-side aerobic classes and leisurely afternoons spent in a deck chair, the chairman of Spokane's Navy League will be renewing Spokane's ties to a glittering piece of U.S. Navy history while on board 567 feet of floating weaponry. It's a six-day voyage aboard the Ticonderoga-class cruiser USS Cowpens - winner of the Spokane Trophy, the most prestigious gunnery prize in the Navy's Pacific Fleet.
News >  Nation/World

A Double Goodbye Husband-Wife Pastors Leave St. Mark’s For Iowa Church

FOR THE RECORD: 7-23-97 Incorrect name: The Rev. Kay Tostengard will be pastor at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa. A story in Monday's newspaper incorrectly identified the college. 1. Tim and Kay Tostengard say goodbye to parishioners at the end of the morning service at St. Mark's. Photo by Liz Kishimoto/The Spokesman-Review 2. Tim and Kay will be moving to Iowa.
News >  Spokane

Autopsy Done On Girl, And Family Goes Home

The parents and grandparents of 7-year-old Randi Robertson returned home Monday after spending the weekend waiting for an autopsy on the girl that failed to immediately determine the cause of death. When Randi died Friday night after being airlifted to Spokane from the hospital in Republic, Wash., the Seattle family agreed to an autopsy assuming it would be done immediately. They didn't know autopsies are rarely, if ever, done on the weekend in Spokane County.
News >  Nation/World

Delays Add To Grief Family Of 7-Year-Old Meningitis Victim Frustrated After Weekend Of Waiting For Autopsy

'This has been pure hell'. Exhausted after two days of grief and frustration; Kenneth Robertson sits in a Spokane motel room at a tabel with notes from nearly 200 phone calls he made seeking the release of his granddaughter's body. The 7-year-old died Friday of meningitis at a family reunion campout. The family, from Seattle, must wait until today for an autopsy. Photo by Christopher Anderson/The Spokesman-Review
News >  Spokane

Program Moves Closer To Vets Downtown Office Makes Helping Homeless Easier

Five miles is a long way when you are sick, poor and homeless. But that's how far a homeless veteran living downtown had to travel to reach the wealth of services at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in northwest Spokane. There had to be a better way and there was. On Tuesday it was shown off at 705 W. Second: the new offices of the Health Care for the Homeless Veterans program. The program's downtown office doesn't have a soup kitchen, beds or a doctor's office. Instead it has a staff that can help veterans find shelter, work, a doctor and a way off the streets.
News >  Nation/World

Rare War Birds Restored B-17, B-24 On Display Today At Spokane Airways

1. Wild blue yonder remembered. Christopher, 11, and Ryan Foster, 8, front, tour a B-24 with their grandfather, who flew B-17s in Italy during WWII. A B-17 amd a B-24 are on display at Spokane Airways until 1 p.m. today. Photo by Liz Kishimoto/The Spokesman-Review 2. Of 18,479 B-24 Liberators, this is the only one still flying.
News >  Nation/World

Fires Damage Apartments, House Briefcase Full Of Bombs Found In Park, But The Devices All Turn Out To Be Fakes

An attache case of fake bombs, a downtown apartment fire and a South Hill house fire kept Spokane's holiday weekend from a quiet ending. A man visiting Terrace View Park about noon on Sunday found an attache case containing what appeared to be a grenade, a metal pipe bomb and several cylinders attached to a clock, said Spokane sheriff's deputy Dave Reagan. The case was lying under a picnic table. Thinking it had been misplaced, the man opened it, hoping to find the name of its owner, Reagan said. Worried that a child would find the devices, the man took the case and drove about five miles to the Sheriff's Department traffic unit office at 9411 E. Trent. The office is shared with the East and West Valley Sheriff's Community Oriented Policing Effort (SCOPE). A bomb-disposal crew used a robot to remove the case from the man's car. Trent Avenue east of Argonne was closed for about 45 minutes while the robot picked the case out of the man's car, Reagan said. The case then was placed in a special truck designed to withstand an explosion and was taken to a disposal area on the West Plains. After being sprayed with water and examined, all the devices were found to be fake, Reagan said. "The grenade was a dummy practice grenade that you can buy in most Army surplus stores," he said. Reagan said deputies will start trying today to figure out who had planted the devices. "The focus on (Sunday) was getting it out of the populated areas of the Valley," he said. However, other weekend emergencies in Spokane were far from fake. About 11:30 p.m. Saturday night, smoke was pouring from a second floor room of the Saranac Hotel at 25-1/2 W. Main. A 62-year-old man, suffering from severe burns, was taken to Sacred Heart Medical Center, said Spokane fire battalion chief Skip Powell. The fire started in the man's apartment, the contents of which were destroyed, Powell said. However, the cause of the fire is unknown. Another man, complaining of chest pain and smoke inhalation, was treated and released at Deaconess Medical Center. Four engines and two ladder trucks responded to the fire, which was brought under control within a half-hour, Powell said. Most residents were allowed to return to the building around 2 a.m.; however, severe smoke damage occurred on the second floor, Powell said. Another fire severely damaged a house in the 3300 block of East 30th on Sunday afternoon. No one was injured. The fire was caused when a vinyl exhaust vent from a laundry dryer overheated and ignited, said battalion chief Hal Williams. He said it is "doubtful" the house can be repaired.
News >  Spokane

Provost To Leave With Ewu Chief Hoffman Decision Lets New President Hire No. 2

Eastern Washington University's second in com mand, James Hoffman, will step down next year after the school finds a new president to replace Mark Drummond. News of Hoffman's departure comes on the heels of Drummond's announcement that he is leaving next June. Hoffman, 55, has been discussing his plans with Drummond for the past six months, said Stefanie Pettit, university spokeswoman.
News >  Washington Voices

Sta Wants To Acquire Land To Expand Park-And-Ride Lot

A 15-year-old race track for radio controlled cars at Sullivan Park may be moved to make way for a larger Spokane Transit Authority park-and-ride lot. That's what would happen if Spokane County and the STA can come to an agreement about the value of 1.75 acres within the 5.2-acre park that the STA wants to acquire. In a meeting with county commissioners on Tuesday, Wyn Birkenthal, manager of the county Parks and Recreation Department, said STA had offered $45,699 for the property.
News >  Spokane

$1.5 Million Awarded In Highway Suit

Four years after their dream of building a shopping center was crushed by a state highway project, a Spokane couple has been awarded $1.5 million in damages. Clark and Evelyn Cordill's fight with the Department of Transportation began in 1993, when part of their 32 acres at Hatch Road and U.S. Highway 395 was condemned to make way for highway improvements. A Spokane County Superior Court jury awarded the damages to the couple Tuesday, following a 2-week civil trial. Jurors deliberated about 90 minutes before reaching the unanimous verdict.
News >  Spokane

Ewu Chief Drummond To Step Down In June ‘98 Will Return To The Troubled Institution As A Faculty Member After Paid Leave

Eastern Washington University President Mark Drummond, who has headed the college since 1990, will leave the post next June. The announcement came at an EWU board of trustees meeting Tuesday. Drummond, 56, originally planned to step down in 1999 but moved his departure up a year so a new president wouldn't step into the middle of an enrollment drive, said trustee Mike Ormsby.
News >  Spokane

Fairground Work Ok’d Despite Law Violation Electrical Project Was Done Without Competitive Bidding

Even though it violated state law by not being competitively bid, a $119,000 fairground improvement contract was approved in a split vote of the Spokane County Commission on Tuesday. Commissioner John Roskelley voted against approving a contract with Canter Electric Inc. of Spokane. The company installed an electrical system for RVs this spring. Commissioners Phil Harris and Kate McCaslin voted for approval. "It just didn't sit too well with me how this was done," said Roskelley, who noted his vote was a protest. He made his comments after the commission meeting.
News >  Washington Voices

35-Acre Development Sought

Two prominent Spokane Valley developers want to build apartments, storage units and RV stalls on 35 acres west of Mirabeau Point. However, a consultant working for the pair said it will be at least a year before it's known if the project is even viable. Bill Lawson, who owns A&A; Construction and Development, and Ted Gunning, owner of Northwood Properties, are the developers.
News >  Washington Voices

Felts Field Flyover Older Brother Of Spokane International Airport Is A Small City Of Wings

Valley Voice, June 26, 1997: CORRECTION Addison Pemberton's name was spelled incorrectly in the photo caption on the cover of Saturday's Valley Voice. 1. Addison Pemberto and a friend fly his Beechcraft staggerwing D-17 over the Valley in a recent photo. The Pemberto family spent 5,000 hours rebuilding the 1941 craft. Photo courtesy of Robert Burroughs 2. Felts Field is home to dozens of small planes. Photo by Steve Thompson/The Spokesman-Review
News >  Nation/World

Neighbors Didn’t Suspect Man Grew Pot

Though he was quiet, and rather unfriendly, the only thing that struck neighbors as suspicious about John Walter Bridge was that he cemented his basement windows shut. He kept German shepherd in the back yard and told neighbors he collected guns. Other than that, Bridge kept to himself. Until Sunday, when Spokane police paid him a surprise visit.