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  • Immigration reform, what is it good for?

    Updated Dec 19, 2014

    I would like to ask Norm Luther why do we need immigration reform? All we really need is to enforce the laws already on the books. This immigration bill is nothing but blanket amnesty disguised as something else. I remember when the last immigration bill was passed and we gave away citizenship, with the promise it would not happen again, but here it is again. American citizenship is too precious to be giving it away to just anyone. All the people illegally crossing our borders are in essence criminals. They have no regard for...

  • StageWest wraps up another year

    Updated Dec 19, 2014

    StageWest CT, Inc has wrapped up its production of, “It’s A Wonderful Life” reader’s theatre, which was quite a success. There were 25 patrons that enjoyed our dinner theatre last Saturday (Dec. 13) with another delicious dinner catered by Mike Harmon and Willow Springs Restaurant. We would like to take this time to wish all of our sponsors, patrons, Emmanuel Lutheran Church, and our members and their families a very Happy Holiday season and a joyous New Year. We would also like to thank everyone for all of their support...

  • Santa Mystery Auction successful

    Updated Dec 19, 2014

    Santa’s Mystery Auction put on by the Stars Stripes, Boots & Spurs car club to benefit the Cheney Junior Rodeo and Time of Remembrance was a successful time for all. We would like to thank everyone who attended and also the Cheney Rodeo Association for renting us the building for our event. We are always accepting donations of cash or products for our children and veterans. Thank you all so much and please have a holiday season filled with peace and love. Cheney Junior Rodeo Association Cheney...

  • Keep to your old traditions but start some new ones

    AL STOVER, Staff Reporter|Updated Dec 19, 2014

    I’m probably one of many folks who will say that Christmas is their favorite time of the year. The decorations and the atmosphere put me in a good mood. One of the upsides of being a reporter is I get to observe people and communities carry out their yearly holiday events and traditions. A couple of weeks ago I attended the Airway Heights’ winter festival and tree lighting ceremony and it was quite a spectacle. I am intrigued by the various traditions that everyone keeps during the holidays. Every household has their rit...

  • When it comes to torture, consider the source

    MARK SHIELDS, Columnist|Updated Dec 19, 2014

    On election night in 1986, when John McCain won the U.S. Senate seat in Arizona long held by Republican incumbent and 1964 GOP presidential nominee Barry Goldwater, who had served as McCain’s campaign chairman, the two men had a private chat. Goldwater, McCain recalled, got “a little nostalgic” and said: “You know, John, if I had beaten Lyndon Johnson in 1964 and been elected president, you would not have spent all those years in that North Vietnamese prison camp.” McCain, mindful of Goldwater’s hawkish positions,...

  • Art tour thanks community for support

    Updated Dec 11, 2014

    It was a wonderful turn out again this year. We all received a warm reception from the people who visited us on our Studio Tour. All of the artists work hard all year at their craft hoping to achieve a higher quality and freshness to it. To share one’s work with people is very important because the feedback helps us to understand if what we have created can put a smile on their face or get a “Wow.” This show for me was very successful in that regard. I was set up in the (Cheney Historical) Museum. A woman who came the year...

  • Republicans should support immigration reform

    Updated Dec 11, 2014

    So Republican House of Representatives leadership is outraged by President Obama’s executive action on immigration reform, claiming “this is not the way democracy is supposed to work.” But democracy is supposed to work by majority rule and the real outrage is that Republican leadership, including our Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers, has never allowed a vote of the full House on the bipartisan immigration bill passed 17 months ago by the Senate, even though the bill has long had enough House votes to pass. This bill,...

  • To change hearts and minds, maybe Christmas needs a seasonal shift

    John McCallum, Editor|Updated Dec 11, 2014

    Christmas is my favorite time of year. The lights, the decorations and the music make for a festive atmosphere that’s invigorating and exhilarating. Usually, it can warm even the most chilled of hearts. For many, Christmas is a time of renewed hope, a hope for rebirth of goodwill and, yes, peace. It’s also a time of sadness and despair for those who are going through times of trial physically, emotionally, spiritually and economically. The overwhelming weight of commercialism, the mantra that everybody wants this or needs tha...

  • Goodwill and caring apply to everyone

    Updated Dec 11, 2014

    During the holidays, we like to put an emphasis on caring for our fellow men and women. Several charities throughout the United States collect gifts and food for families who don’t have all of the means to buy everything they need for Christmas. West Plains organizations such as the Cheney Outreach and Medical Lake Firefighters Association are currently collecting toys for local youth. But when it comes to caring this holiday season, we shouldn’t limit our focus to just those in need. When we chant “peace on Earth and goodw...

  • People should be considerate of each other's feelings

    Updated Dec 4, 2014

    Since I started living in Cheney about two years ago, I have noticed one overwhelming thing: people have the wrong view of people from the Middle East. Every day I hear someone refer to how different they are or how weird they look. Too many times have I heard them called obscene names that I don’t feel comfortable even to type. They have come here for nothing more than to go to school and get an education or start a new life. Some of the awful things I have heard come from the people of Cheney, some even coming from p...

  • Don't text and drive

    Updated Dec 4, 2014

    According to distraction.gov, 3,328 people were killed in car accidents involving distracted driving in 2012. That’s less than a hundred fewer than the year before and those numbers don’t even touch the 421,000 injuries resulting from distracted driving in 2012. Let’s get the life-saving started here, yeah? Don’t think, just answer. If you were navigating a passenger-bearing missile at 70 miles per hour, wouldn’t you want to take a lot of care to make sure you didn’t hit anything along the way? The obvious answer is yes, but...

  • Cheney should invest in a park and ride

    Updated Dec 4, 2014

    I have read several letters to the editor complaining about bad driving and parking in Cheney since the school year has began. The authors place the blame for congestion, increased accidents and lack of parking for students attending Eastern Washington University. Yes, the start of the school year has brought in students, many who drive to and from campus on a daily basis. However, contrary to these claims, the illuminated sign posted as you leave Cheney states that there have been zero major traffic accidents in over a...

  • Inslee's carbon tax proposal filled with holes

    Updated Dec 4, 2014

    In a time when drivers in the state of Washington are finally enjoying gasoline prices under $3 a gallon, and still falling, Gov. Jay Inslee thinks adding up to $1 to that price is a good idea. Why when it’s the most affordable time to fill our tanks would the governor want to add more to what is already the fifth highest gas tax in the nation? It is all part of an effort to reduce carbon emissions in order to fight climate change. Also included is cutting electricity from coal-fired power plants and encouraging increased use...

  • Over 450 walkers, joggers or runners particpate in Turkey Trot

    Updated Dec 4, 2014

    On behalf of the Cheney High School cross country program, we would like to thank the community of Cheney for their support of our 7th annual Turkey Trot on Thanksgiving morning. There were over 450 walkers, joggers or runners present for this community event that benefits not only the Cheney Food Bank, but also our cross country program at Cheney High School. We would like to especially thank Safeway, and Cheney Trading Company for turkeys/food donated as door prizes for this event, as well as Jim Missel and Stan Kerr who...

  • Letters

    Updated Nov 25, 2014

    Cheney Outreach can use your help By now you’ve probably seen some of the many decorated collection boxes around Cheney. Christmas Gifts for Cheney Kids, a program of Cheney Outreach, works hard to see that no child in Cheney goes without Christmas gifts. There are two ways you can help. You can purchase gifts for ages birth-18, such as toys, sports gear, electronics, books, art supplies, or other things and deposit them, unwrapped, in one of the collection boxes by Dec. 17. Or you can write a check to Cheney Outreach, c...

  • Caring for our community - including our four legged friends

    Updated Nov 25, 2014

    By NANCY HILL Contributor Every day when I come home from work my dog Zoey meets me at the door. I adopted her from SCRAPS last year, when she was only 5 weeks old. Her mother was killed and she was abandoned along with her littermates. A Good Samaritan brought these helpless puppies to SCRAPS. Zoey needed someone to care about her and it was easy to do. In return, she is always happy to see me and gives me her unconditional love. As a community we have the opportunity to show that we care everyday on some level whether it...

  • The continuing creep of Christmas blurs holiday season

    Updated Nov 25, 2014

    Christmas in July. It’s a familiar phrase sometimes heard in the middle of summer when good fortune shines down upon someone. But it’s unlikely to occur here as it actually does in the Southern Hemisphere where the seasons flip flop. Our summer is winter down under in Australia, much of South America and Africa. It seems, however, like the creep of Christmas comes earlier and earlier in our calendar each year. Will Christmas promotion be starting the day after Labor Day soon? Amazingly enough, yes. At least according to a S...

  • Lessons I learned while I wore a wrestling singlet

    Al Stover, Staff Reporter|Updated Nov 25, 2014

    Sometimes it’s difficult to pin down a subject that you want to write about and your muse advises you to dig into the memory banks and churn out a story before deadline. I like to call these “reflective commentaries” where I look back on one or several memories — moments that are G-PG rated and suitable for all audiences — and ponder on some of the lessons I learned from those experiences. This week I’m lucky because winter sports have started, which means wrestling season has begun. High school wrestling has a special pla...

  • Celebrate and learn about Native American heritage

    Updated Nov 25, 2014

    November is Native American Heritage Month, something that ought to receive more public attention in this area given our many ties to Native American culture. Native American Heritage Month began as American Indian Day in 1912 when Dr. Arthur C. Parker, a Seneca Indian and director of the Museum of Arts and Sciences in Rochester, N.Y., successfully persuaded the Boy Scouts of America to set aside one day for the “First Americans,” which they did for three years. In 1916, the state of New York proclaimed the second Sat...

  • Increased deer population impacts city

    Updated Nov 13, 2014

    Medical Lake, has had a problem concerning the deer population in its city limits for several years. Deer are nonchalantly roaming the city limits, eating all vegetation and, unfortunately, getting hit by drivers commuting in and out of town. The longer this goes on, the more likely that animals that prey on the deer will follow. The last thing we need are bears or cougars making themselves at home, as well. Not only is this problem taking a toll on the city, but it is becoming incredibly dangerous to drive after dark. The...

  • Republicans keep Court decision alive

    Updated Nov 13, 2014

    Last September not one Republican senator voted for a constitutional amendment that would overturn the Republican-leaning Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision and allow Congress and states to limit the amount and secrecy of money raised and spent in elections. Although a majority of 54 Democratic or Independent senators, against 42 Republican senators, voted to advance the amendment, it failed to garner the two-thirds vote needed to pass the Senate. Prior enactment of such an amendment would have greatly limited t...

  • Annual community coat drive successful

    Updated Nov 13, 2014

    It will be a warmer winter for many area families this year. The 18th annual Community Coat Drive was a wonderful success, with 311 coats collected locally and 238 coats distributed at four sites, Sunset Elementary, Salnave Elementary, Westwood Middle School and Feed Cheney. All of the coats not distributed were donated to the Cheney Community Clothing Exchange. Twenty-seven miscellaneous items were donated and distributed as well. First of all, thank you to Margie Lindner and the local Kiwanis who did all of the...

  • When elections are about domination, politics is no longer healthy

    John McCallum, Editor|Updated Nov 13, 2014

    I don’t know about you, but I’ve found elections becoming ever more exhausting with each cycle. The nastiness, the bitterness, the name calling, the subtle and sometimes not so subtle insinuations of dark motive and agenda, the fear mongering, the half-truths and in some cases out right lying about issues and opponents is becoming oppressive and unhealthy. Elections are no longer contests of ideas between parties. They have ceased to be affairs where winners can truthfully say the voters have spoken, and while they have pic...

  • Charitable acts need focus on developing skills, identifying resources

    Updated Nov 13, 2014

    Several residents of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., gather in a public park to serve food to some hungry homeless individuals. Would this be considered an act of charity or a crime? Three of those residents — Arnold Abbott, and two south Florida ministers — are being charged with up to 60 days in jail and a $500 fine in violation of a recent ordinance, according to the Associated Press article, “Feeding the homeless: Act of charity or a crime?” This Florida ordinance restricts public feeding of homeless people and was put into effect...

  • Focus on the flu, get your vaccination

    Updated Nov 6, 2014

    Flu season has begun, yet there hasn’t been the normal concern for the virus that there usually is at this time of the year. For several months, Americans have been concerned with the threat of the Ebola virus. Since the media announced that two Americans contracted Ebola while helping patients in Monrovia, Liberia, people have been in a panic about the virus spreading throughout the country. Although Ebola is serious in the Southwestern region of Africa, the chances of a person contracting it in the United States is low u...

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