Thursday, July 30, 2009

Pullman High School track resurfacing


Note: The resurfacing work by Atlas Track & Tennis of Tualatin, Ore., started about Aug. 26. All photos on this page -- except the "TRACK CLOSED for RESURFACING" sign -- were taken the morning of Sept. 1, 2009.

This photo shows the track -- lane lines yet to be painted -- during the Ellensburg, Wash., at Pullman High varsity football game on Sept. 4, 2009.

http://www.dnews.com//story/local/43701/

Moscow Pullman Daily News
July 20, 2009

Officials move ahead with track project at Pullman High School

Project will cost nearly $70,000
By Yesenia Amaro, Daily News staff writer
Posted on: Thursday, July 30, 2009

-----
QUICKREAD

WHAT HAPPENED: The Pullman School Board approved a nearly $70,000 high school track project.

WHAT IT MEANS: The $70,000 will be taken out of the district's current $150,000 capital projects fund.

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT: Resurfacing will begin next month.

WHY YOU SHOULD CARE: The track's condition presents safety issues.
-----

The Pullman School District will spend nearly $70,000 to repair the high school track.

The Pullman School Board gave district officials the approval to move forward with the project during a special board meeting Wednesday afternoon.

District officials decided to put the project on hold in December because of the poor economy and the anticipation of state budget cuts. However, the district has enough money for the project.

Executive Director of Support Services Dan Hornfelt said the district has $150,000 in its 2008-09 capital projects fund. The total cost for the track's resurfacing and painting would be around $64,575, and the projected cost to raise the surrounding surfaces on the track would be anywhere from $4,000 to $5,000.

"We have dollars available to do this," Hornfelt told the board.

He said there are safety issues with the conditions of the track.

"We have a track that has been in very poor conditions," he told the board. "To be honest with you, there are some safety issues, and we are pretty concerned about that."
Superintendent Paul Sturm said the track is in a really bad shape.

"I can't believe we have been getting away with it for as long as we have," he told the board.

The project also will patch sink holes and fill existing cracks, Hornfelt said.

School board member Susan Weed said the price is reasonable.

She said district officials would be setting themselves up for liability issues if the track is not repaired.

"This is a lot cheaper then being sued..." she said. "Trust me, you don't want anybody breaking a leg."

Sturm said the district paid a little more than $100,000 to complete a similar project at the Lincoln Middle School track a few years ago.

School board member Karl Johanson said he supports the project.

But he said he believes there is a policy in place that indicates the board and district officials have to try to maintain $300,000 in the capital projects fund or have to come up with goals to reach that amount.

By completing such a project the district will only have abut $80,000 left in its capital projects fund.

"I just wanted to remind the board that we have that obligation," Johanson said.
Sturm and Hornfelt said they will check the specific language in the policy.

Oregon-based company Atlas Track and Tennis will begin to resurface the track Aug. 10. Hornfelt said the entire project is expected to be completed by the end of September.

He said after the project is completed, the anticipated life for the track would be seven years.
"We would be doing these again in seven years, " he told the board.

Sturm said it would be a good guess that in seven years district officials would need to redo the track's asphalt as well.

Seattle Times July 2009 ~ Bob "Voice of the Cougars" Robertson



Above from July 2009 Seattle Times sportscaster series

--Rare meeting of five of the area's top sportscasters: Seated at bottom is Bob Robertson. In the second row, from left are, Kevin Calabro, Dave Niehaus and Bob Rondeau. At top is Steve Raible.

--Bob Rondeau, left, sportscaster for the University of Washington, and Bob Robertson, sportscaster for Washington State University. Photographed at Husky Stadium on Tuesday, July 14, 2009.
--1984: Bob Robertson, a Washington State University broadcaster.



Bob Robertson

Edited from WSU 2008 Football Media Guide

Hall of fame announcer Bob Robertson Sr. is in his 42nd season calling
Cougar football action. When Cougar fans gather and talk about Saturday
afternoons in the fall on the Palouse, football and Robertson just naturally
become part of the conversation.

The long-time Cougar broadcaster began his association with WSU
football in 1964 and with the exception of a three-year period in 1969-71,
he’s been calling the Cougar action ever since.

Robertson’s peers have selected him Washington Sportscaster of the Year
12 times, validating what Cougar fans have known for years - he is simply
the best. In 1995 he was named the State Broadcaster of the Year.

Robertson was inducted into both the WSU Athletic Hall of Fame and
the Inland Empire Hall of Fame in 2001-02, and in August 2004 received
the prestigious Chris Schenkel Award at ceremonies held at the College
Football Hall of Fame in South Bend, Ind. At the same time he became the
first broadcaster west of the Mississippi to be inducted into the College
Football Hall of Fame - broadcaster division. He is also a member of the
Pierce County Hall of Fame.

Bob’s association with WSU runs deeper than just football broadcasts.
For 23 years he was the voice of Cougar Basketball, including several NCAA
tournament teams. In 1978-79, he was named WSU’s Dad of the Year and
he also worked with the WSU Cougar Club on the west side in the 1980’s.

Robertson was born in Fullerton, Calif., during spring training of the
Seattle Indians of the Pacific Coast League. At the time his father was a
player for the Seattle club.

After graduating from Blaine (Wash.) High School, he attended Western
Washington University in Bellingham, where he launched his broadcasting
career. His first broadcasting exposure came as a young actor for the
Canadian Broadcasting Company in Vancouver, B.C., then bloomed while
attending college.

In 1948 Robertson signed to play professional baseball, but a year later
gave up playing to become the voice of the Wenatchee Chiefs of the
Western International League, his first full-time broadcasting opportunity.
Among his many accomplishments, Robertson has:

• Spent 25 years calling Pacific Coast League baseball in Seattle and
Tacoma;

• Broadcast professional soccer in Seattle, Tacoma and Portland; he was
Washington’s Soccer Man of the Year in 1983;

• Broadcast hockey, boxing, wrestling and hydroplane races

• Had his “cup of coffee” in major league baseball, broadcasting some
Seattle Mariner games in the late 1990’s

• Served as television sports anchor in the Seattle market for 25 years,
including time with KSTW (called KTNT 1956-70, then KSTW 1976-83)
and KMO, which later became KTVW and is now KCPQ

• Currently voice of the Spokane Indians baseball team and Pacific
Lutheran University basketball;

• Served as the television voice of Notre Dame football and basketball for
two years in the 1950’s.

This fall Bob and wife Joanne celebrate their 57th anniversary. They have
four children, Hugh, Janna, John and Rebecca, and seven grandchildren.

The Robertson’s have resided in Tacoma since 1950, with the exception of
his stint with Notre Dame.

As much as Robertson is part of Cougar Football Saturday, so is his closing
broadcast signature, "Always be a good sport, be a good sport all ways,"


Links to stories/info from in Seattle Times July 2009 about sportscasters, including Bob Robertson :

Here ...and... here ...also here





















Map in Sunset magazine slights Pullman

July 30, 2009

TO:
Sunset magazine
readersletters@sunset.com


The comment below regards the Aug. 2009 issue of Sunset magazine and the “48 hours in Moscow, Idaho” sidebar to “Fun on the farm. For a dose of nature, a couple of ardent urbanites head for the golden hills of Idaho” on pages 25 and 26.

POSTED AT http://pullman-cupofpalouse.blogspot.com/


The map with “48 hours in Moscow, Idaho” (August, page 27) has a slight. The “From Spokane” text provides driving directions through Pullman, Wash., on the way to Moscow. But, the map pretends Pullman, 8 miles from Moscow, isn’t there. Like Moscow, Pullman provides lots to do in 48 hours. For instance, on your way to Moscow on Aug. 21-23, stop in Pullman and enjoy activities of the 21st annual National Lentil Festival (http://www.lentilfest.com/).

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Sue Hinz, member of Comets Track Club of Pullman, featured in page 1 photo of The Olympian daily newspaper, Olympia, Wash.

Photo on front of Saturday 25 July 2009 sports sections of The Olympian daily newspaper of Olympia, Wash. Photo cutline reads:

Sue Hinz, 61, of Pullman, winds up to throw Friday in the Washington State Senior Games hammer competition at SMU.

(SMU = St. Martin's University in Lacey, Wash.)

Accompanying photo and cutline was this story:



Throwing their weight around - Senior games: Weight events draw athletes who are tuning up for other senior track competitions

By Meg Wochnick, Olympian,Olympia, Wash., Saturday, July 25, 2009

LACEY, Wash. – Gary Gish didn’t need much motivation when looking to try something new.

At 69, Gish, from Portland, wanted to do as many events as he could during this weekend’s 2009 Washington State Senior Games, and get back into the competitive spirit of sports.

For the past 10 years, he’s dealt with several health issues that resulted in surgeries. Just two months ago, he received two stents in his heart.

None of that is slowing him down, however.

"And (tonight), when I get done, I’ll go to the hospital, then head home," Gish said jokingly. "I’ll be halfway dead by the time I get done with these events."

First up for Gish and nearly 30 others was Friday’s hammer, weight and super weight competitions, which kicked off the track and field portion of the Games at Saint Martin’s University. They were three of eight scheduled events for Gish this weekend. The others include billiards, shot put, discus, javelin and softball throw.

"It’s something to do," Gish said. "I’ve never thrown these things."

The hammer throw is in its fourth year at the Senior Games, but its first year at Saint Martin’s. The prior three years, the weight events were held at the hammer cage behind Tiger Stadium in Centralia. SMU’s newly christened cage was built earlier this year and is home to the Saints’ throwers in track and field.

The competitions Friday included nearly 30 athletes – 19 of them men – many of them from out of state. Interest in the hammer has grown since it became a Senior Games event in 2006.

"The women are all the same, but the men, two-thirds of them are from California," said Fran Melzer, 70, who won the women’s hammer competition in her age group with a series-best throw of 85 feet, 9 inches.

For some, Friday’s competition was a tuneup for the weeks to come. The National Senior Games will be Aug. 1-15 in the San Francisco Bay area.

"We have about 300-plus of our participants going down to the Bay Area to compete (at nationals)," said Jack Kiley, president of the Puget Sound Senior Games.

Olympia’s Debbie Dohrmann, 59, is one of many South Sound athletes who will be making the trip to nationals. She will compete in five events – the hammer throw, discus, shot put, javelin and 100-meter dash. She finished first in her age group at Friday’s hammer competition with a best throw of 78-4.

"I’m glad it’s finally worked out," Dorhmann said about getting the opportunity to compete at nationals.

George Mathews, 66, of Hayden Lake, Idaho, wowed the spectators and other participants with his monstrous throws in his second year at the Senior Games. He is just days from taking off for Finland to compete in the World Masters Track and Field Championships, Tuesday through Aug. 8, in the hammer throw.

"It’ll be a lot of fun," Mathews said.

Among the most popular Senior Games events are track and field (Tumwater District Stadium) today; softball (Mason County Recreation Area) today and swimming (Briggs YMCA) and cycling (The Lodge at Jubilee) Sunday.


Sue Hinz, member of Comets Track Club of Pullman, featured in page 1 photo of The Olympian daily newspaper, Olympia, Wash.

Photo on front of Saturday 25 July 2009 sports sections of The Olympian daily newspaper of Olympia, Wash. Photo cutline reads:

Sue Hinz, 61, of Pullman, winds up to throw Friday in the Washington State Senior Games hammer competition at SMU.

(SMU = St. Martin's University in Lacey, Wash.)

Accompanying photo and cutline was this story:



Throwing their weight around - Senior games: Weight events draw athletes who are tuning up for other senior track competitions

By Meg Wochnick, Olympian,Olympia, Wash., Saturday, July 25, 2009

LACEY, Wash. – Gary Gish didn’t need much motivation when looking to try something new.

At 69, Gish, from Portland, wanted to do as many events as he could during this weekend’s 2009 Washington State Senior Games, and get back into the competitive spirit of sports.

For the past 10 years, he’s dealt with several health issues that resulted in surgeries. Just two months ago, he received two stents in his heart.

None of that is slowing him down, however.

"And (tonight), when I get done, I’ll go to the hospital, then head home," Gish said jokingly. "I’ll be halfway dead by the time I get done with these events."

First up for Gish and nearly 30 others was Friday’s hammer, weight and super weight competitions, which kicked off the track and field portion of the Games at Saint Martin’s University. They were three of eight scheduled events for Gish this weekend. The others include billiards, shot put, discus, javelin and softball throw.

"It’s something to do," Gish said. "I’ve never thrown these things."

The hammer throw is in its fourth year at the Senior Games, but its first year at Saint Martin’s. The prior three years, the weight events were held at the hammer cage behind Tiger Stadium in Centralia. SMU’s newly christened cage was built earlier this year and is home to the Saints’ throwers in track and field.

The competitions Friday included nearly 30 athletes – 19 of them men – many of them from out of state. Interest in the hammer has grown since it became a Senior Games event in 2006.

"The women are all the same, but the men, two-thirds of them are from California," said Fran Melzer, 70, who won the women’s hammer competition in her age group with a series-best throw of 85 feet, 9 inches.

For some, Friday’s competition was a tuneup for the weeks to come. The National Senior Games will be Aug. 1-15 in the San Francisco Bay area.

"We have about 300-plus of our participants going down to the Bay Area to compete (at nationals)," said Jack Kiley, president of the Puget Sound Senior Games.

Olympia’s Debbie Dohrmann, 59, is one of many South Sound athletes who will be making the trip to nationals. She will compete in five events – the hammer throw, discus, shot put, javelin and 100-meter dash. She finished first in her age group at Friday’s hammer competition with a best throw of 78-4.

"I’m glad it’s finally worked out," Dorhmann said about getting the opportunity to compete at nationals.

George Mathews, 66, of Hayden Lake, Idaho, wowed the spectators and other participants with his monstrous throws in his second year at the Senior Games. He is just days from taking off for Finland to compete in the World Masters Track and Field Championships, Tuesday through Aug. 8, in the hammer throw.

"It’ll be a lot of fun," Mathews said.

Among the most popular Senior Games events are track and field (Tumwater District Stadium) today; softball (Mason County Recreation Area) today and swimming (Briggs YMCA) and cycling (The Lodge at Jubilee) Sunday.


Thursday, July 9, 2009

Pullman Fire Department truck- siren & lights


Driving up Stadium Way on WSU campus about
3 p.m. July 9, 2009.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

WSU stone sign, stone arches etc. posted 7 July 2009

REPLICA ARCH

PLAQUE FOR REPLICA ARCH

ENTRYWAY SIGN


PLAQUE ON ENTRYWAY SIGN



CLOSE-UP OF ENTRYWAY SIGN




PLAQUE ON ENTRYWAY SIGN, TOO





OLD ARCH