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  • Advice from a small town girl

    Lise Ott|Updated Dec 9, 2011

    I don’t know about you, but I know that I have more questions than answers. And the questions I have are persistent and demanding. Things like, “Are men born knowing how to spit?” “How many roads must a man walk down?” “How much fossil fuel can we take out of the earth before everything falls in?” “Where am I going and why am I in this handbasket?” And one that’s been bugging me for several years, “Who defines the American dream?” Marriage to a politically active pers...

  • Letter to the Editor: Reader wants Congress to support middle-class tax cuts

    Updated Dec 9, 2011

    I urge your readers to contact their members of Congress who are discussing whether to extend the Bush tax cuts. If those payroll tax cuts are not continued, then those who take home a paycheck need to get ready to lose 2% of each paycheck beginning January 2012. According to Senator Patty Murray, “the median Washington family has a yearly income of $56,479. Under the current 2% payroll tax cut, that family is saving approximately $1,130 per year on their tax bill. If the current tax cut expires, their yearly tax bill will g...

  • Rock Doc

    Dr E Kirsten Peters|Updated Dec 9, 2011

    As the long season of darkness sweeps over the country, it’s a natural time to think about lighting – and how dependent we are on electricity during this dim time of year. You can heat your home with several different energy sources, including natural gas, heating oil or wood. But unless you’re living off-the-grid, the lights throughout your abode burn brightly because of electricity from the grid. Yes, I have a couple of candles, a flashlight and two kerosene lamps in my ho...

  • Weekly grain report

    Updated Dec 9, 2011

    Byron Behne watches the grain markets for the Odessa Union Warehouse. 12/5/11: This morning started off promising with the grain futures markets in the green however prices headed south mid-session as word spread that Standard & Poor’s was placing several Eurozone countries on notice that they were under review and risked a credit-rating downgrade. Chicago wheat closed down 14 cents and soft white lost a nickel....

  • Weekly grain report

    Byron Behne|Updated Dec 2, 2011

    Byron Behne watches the grain markets for the Odessa Union Warehouse. 11/23/11: Thank goodness the week is over. Well, technically there’s a short futures session on Friday but there won’t be anyone around to trade it. Gloomy economic news here, in Europe, and overnight in China continues to dominate the markets. Manufacturing gauges in China came in poorer than expected overnight, adding to the negative feelings today. 11/28/11: There wasn’t any additional bad news out of Europe over the long weekend and the financial market...

  • Letter to the Editor: Community Thanksgiving dinner lauded by readers

    Updated Dec 2, 2011

    Lise and Norm Ott and Gail and Gus Kiesz are to be congratulated for the wonderful Thanksgiving meal potluck for all of us “orphans” or older couples with the choice of cooking for two or going out. This was so nice, from the set tables, to the wonderful organization of making this a reality. The visiting, games and the food were outstanding. Thank you for giving the people of Odessa another reason to be grateful for our small town. Sam and Sheryl Roberts Odessa...

  • Advice from a small town girl

    Lise Ott|Updated Dec 2, 2011

    I’m declaring our first community Thanksgiving a success. Nearly thirty people (of the 36 who had RSVP’d – more on that later) attended, and there was probably enough food for twice that many. I still haven’t figured out how all the leftover pie disappeared. I was positive that I put some in my car, but upon unpacking everything at home – no pie. Just as well. At any rate, everyone who attended was amazed at how beautiful the freshly-refinished dining hall floor in Old Town Ha...

  • Rock Doc

    Dr E Kirsten Peters|Updated Dec 2, 2011

    Mt. Rainier in my native Washington State is a stunning site. It’s a beautiful mountain, covered in snow and ice in both winter and summer. At over 14,000 feet, its summit is worthy of respect from even serious hikers. There’s no wonder it’s a National Park. Like most all of the other beautiful peaks in the Cascades, Mt. Rainier is also a deadly volcano. It hasn’t erupted since 1894, but that’s not long ago to a geologist – we are sure it’s only sleeping and will be heard...

  • State health care exchange should preserve choice

    Don C Brunell|Updated Dec 1, 2011

    Even as the new health care law heads for the U.S. Supreme Court where it faces an uncertain future, Washington state is moving forward with its $23 million effort to design and implement a health care exchange. State health care exchanges, mandated by the federal law, must be in place by 2014. They were billed as a way to promote competition and provide access to subsidies for qualified consumers. While each state is supposed to design its own health care exchange, exchanges...

  • Letter to the Editor: Jack rabbit absence noted

    Updated Nov 23, 2011

    When reading the story of the 1935 rabbit drive near Irby, I wondered if it was about jack rabbits. I can't remember seeing one of them since the 1950s. I wonder if anyone has seen a jack rabbit on their property lately? The drives really must have worked, as they are gone, or I am not looking in the right spots when we come over for a visit. Chuck Wood Gig Harbor...

  • Letter to the Editor: Education questioned

    Updated Nov 23, 2011

    On a recent trip to Australia President Obama told a group of Aussie students that their counterparts in his country had "fallen behind" when it comes to math and science, saying he wants to reform the public school system. Obama also asserted that poor children don't get "support they need when they're very young" and are "already behind" when they enter grammar school. This from a person who uses a teleprompter to speak to grade school kids, who pays $30,000 per child to put his kids in private school. But for once he may...

  • Letter to the Editor: School board participation encouraged by reader

    Updated Nov 23, 2011

    To a select group of ladies and gentlemen of Odessa: May I interest you in an opportunity that . . . No, that’s too formal. How did he put it? Oh, yes . . . “I want YOU” for the Odessa School District Board of Directors District 1 Representative! Let yourself imagine the ways that you can help the students of the district reach their full potential and excel towards their goals. If you can imagine yourself making that difference, then please, pick an application up at the District office. Think about it. Think about you m...

  • Thank goodness for farmers

    Don C Brunell|Updated Nov 23, 2011

    How about some good news heading into the holidays? It comes from our nation’s farmers and ranchers. Agriculture is an economic sector where America has not lost its edge. In fact, it is a bright spot in a persistently glum economy. The U.S. Agriculture Department expects our nation’s agricultural exports to reach a record $137 billion this year and grow by another $2.3 billion in 2012. While our nation has an overall trade deficit, our agricultural sector has a trade sur...

  • Cancer detection and man's best friend

    Dr E Kirsten Peters|Updated Nov 21, 2011

    Dogs are loyal, playful, loving and sometimes cute as a button. It’s no wonder we love them (some of us more than others, to be sure). Dogs were likely one of the very first animals we humans domesticated. They’ve been sitting around our campfires for a very long time, indeed. We train our dogs to sit, shake and lie down. It also could be said the dogs train us to dispense kibbles, rawhide treats, and scratches behind the ears. What matters isn’t which side comes out ahead...

  • Advice from a small town girl

    Lise Ott|Updated Nov 18, 2011

    Some of you may have seen the ad in last week’s paper for a community Thanksgiving dinner at Old Town Hall. That’s my cell phone number on the ad. When I lived in Portland, a little over three hours from my family in Bickleton, I frequently had to work the Friday and sometimes the Saturday after Thanksgiving. I love my family, but six and a half hours in a car in one day just isn’t my idea of anything to be thankful for. Then I discovered Thanksgiving dinner at my churc...

  • While we argue and delay, China surges ahead

    Don C Brunell|Updated Nov 18, 2011

    President Obama says he will delay until 2013 a decision about the $13 billion Keystone pipeline, which would carry Canadian oil to Gulf coast refineries. Supporters say the 1,661 mile pipeline would create as many as 20,000 high-paying construction jobs, reduce our dependence on oil from unfriendly nations and revitalize the stricken Gulf Coast economy. Opponents worry about potential environmental impacts, and Midwest property owners in the path of the pipeline say “not in m...

  • GPS needs to control our skies too

    Don C Brunell|Updated Nov 9, 2011

    The next time you’re on a commercial airliner, think about this: The GPS navigation unit in your car is more advanced than the technology used by air traffic controllers. The radar-based air traffic control technology used today is almost 60 years old. While it worked well with fewer, slow-moving aircraft, today’s modern jetliners can fly more than a mile and a half in the time it takes for a radar beam to sweep across the screen. Because of that, planes must be kept thr...

  • Advice from a small town girl

    Lise Ott|Updated Nov 9, 2011

    Now, where was I? Oh, yeah. I was telling everyone (and I mean everyone) that I was on a quest to be healthy by the time I’m sixty. Good thing I’m only 57. Actually, I have managed to lose 22 pounds so far. Only a few more to go. I sort of went off the rails in October. I can’t blame it on the Halloween candy, although it did play a prominent role. Once again, I got too busy. Too busy to plan meals, too busy to write down what I had eaten, too busy to exercise, just too darn...

  • Advice from a small town girl

    Lise Ott|Updated Nov 3, 2011

    A few months ago, I decided to let most of my magazine subscriptions lapse. I was getting about six different quilter’s magazines, which I love but seem to be unable to recycle. The hallway closet in my house is half full of back issues that I still believe I’ll get around to one of these days. When those magazines arrive, I sit down and thumb through them to see what catches my eye. Then I put them down somewhere, thinking that I’ll get back to them. Sadly, the only time...

  • Letter to the Editor: History a favorite of readers

    Updated Nov 3, 2011

    I was thrilled today to read in the October 20 edition of The Odessa Record what my father (John Napier) had done 75 years ago. Because I was too young in 1936 to know of his ongoing work with cattle, things like this are helping me complete his history. Thank you. Joyce (Napier) Goodale Washougal...

  • Letter to the Editor: Other Washington filled with the wealthy

    Updated Nov 3, 2011

    Some interesting fact that you will never hear on the mainstream media. According to the Washington Post, the Washington D.C. area has become a great place for those that enjoy “living the dream”.... Washingtonians now enjoy the highest median household income of any metropolitan area in the country, and five of the top 10 jurisdictions in America — Loudoun, Howard and Fairfax counties, and Falls Church and Fairfax City — are here, census data shows. The signs of that wealth are on display all over, from the string of luxu...

  • Good news, bad news about cars

    Don C Brunell|Updated Nov 3, 2011

    Today, the good news is cars are safer, more fuel-efficient and emit fewer greenhouse gases. The bad news is today’s automobiles burn less gas and cars in the future will be fueled by cleaner electricity and even hydrogen. So how could this be bad news? Two words: gas tax. Since President Dwight Eisenhower modeled our interstate highway system after the German autobahns, our roads have been built and maintained with federal and state gas taxes. In Washington, the 18th a...

  • Advice from a small town girl

    Lise Ott|Updated Oct 27, 2011

    Gosh. It’s the end of October. The presidential election isn’t until November of next year, and I’m already sick of it. And that’s not all I’m sick of. I’m really tired of what they’re calling debate. When I was in high school, I was on the debate team. I don’t know why. I hated debate. Come to think of it, I still do. But I learned a lot from the standards we were held to. I think the candidates could learn a lot, too. First, of course, we didn’t get to choose our topics...

  • Rock Doc

    Dr E Kirsten Peters|Updated Oct 26, 2011

    Between the debt-ceiling kerfuffle and Hurricane Irene, you may have missed two bits of summertime news that will be important for what we drive in the coming years. First, President Barack Obama announced that the administration and automakers had reached a deal to double the fuel economy of our national fleet of cars starting in model year 2017 and reaching the goal by 2025. Right now, cars and light trucks – light trucks include what I call my “little old lady SUV” – get...

  • Meeting our obligation to military families

    Cathy McMorris Rodgers|Updated Oct 26, 2011

    When a service member joins the military, it’s not just a job; it’s a family commitment to our country. And yet, we, as a nation, tend to focus almost exclusively on the service members who put themselves in harm’s way, while often forgetting about the family members they leave behind, who also make tremendous sacrifices on our behalf. These family members are affected in countless ways, and we have an obligation to do right by them. The challenges they face are not a myste...

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