hood river news, saturday, january 3, 2015 viewpoint · 1/3/2015  · a4 hood river news, viewpoint...

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VIEWPOINT A4 Hood River News, Saturday, January 3, 2015 ABOUT LETTERS Hood River News reminds letter to the editor writers that shorter is better. Concise letters are not only better-read, they are more likely to be published because limited space is available. Almost any point can be made in 350 words or fewer, so this is set as an upper level for length. Thank-you letters are no longer accepted, neither are unsigned let- ters, letters signed with fictitious signatures and copies of letters sent to public officials. We limit letters on a subject when we feel it has been thorough- ly aired, to the point of letters be- coming repetitive. Also rejected are letters that are libelous, in bad taste or personal attacks on individuals or private businesses. Writers must include addresses and telephone numbers. These are for identification pur- poses only, and will not be pub- lished. By KIRBY NEUMANN-REA News editor In 2014 I read a poem each day. One poem, sometimes more, and I would always re-read it, either back to back, or return to it later in the day. In one of the craziest year-end lists you’ll ever see, I’ve recorded all those po- ets’ names, below. (See hoodrivernews.com for a longer version of this column.) It was a daily ritual that, like others I have done, gave my day structure. No mat- ter what happened, I knew I had a poem to read or return to. In years past I have written a letter or a postcard each day, and in 2013 I listened to no music but classical. In 2015 I will listen to one record album each day all the way through our collec- tion. That’s VINYL — and yes, we do own about 365 or so grooved such platters. (Any requests? Send them to kneuman- [email protected]. It will be inter- esting to see where collections overlap – but remember I am talking LPs only.) And having enjoyed a daily poem so much, I will probably continue that as well. It was cleansing, uplifting, challeng- ing. Most days it reminded me what real writing is all about. I read usually in the morning, or before bed, for the poems created tent poles for my shaky days. Some poems I did not like, nor under- stand, but nearly always felt challenged, or moved, and I kept a list of all 365 poems. I read some poets multiple times — Yeats for example. I read mostly men, but I made a point of reading Emily Dickenson, Charlotte Bronte, Naomi Shabab Nye, Christina Rossetti and others. In 2014 I re- turned repeatedly to William Stafford, Robert Lowell, W.S. Merwin, Rainer Maria Rilke, and William Blake, and to Yeats. I combed books we have at home (my wife’s Norton Anthology of Literature from college was a particular trove), chose some intentionally and randomly at the li- brary, took them from newspapers and magazines. “Circles” by Carl Sandburg was used in my high school yearbook — never read the poem before — and another was framed on a friend’s wall. And no, not once this year did I WRITE a poem; why would you bring PB and J to a smorgasbord? Below is the list, in order, of each poet I read in 2014: a total of 267 writers, with other powerful lines that grabbed me: William Stafford Yusuf Komunyakaa: “there’s a ghost poised between free will and the gig” David Spicer, Diane Dickinson: “I am half alive the rest is anticipation ...” Christina Rosetti: “... and what do we see glancing back?” Stephen Dunn: “now might be the right time to cultivate disbelief” Michael McGriff, Glyn Maxwell, Rebec- ca Hoogs, Robert Pinsky, Hannah Stephen- son, David Ferry, Rustin Larson, Robert William Service, Donald Hall, Peter Mish- ler Gary Snyder: “lay down these words/before your mind like rocks” Robert Duncan: “Neither our vices nor our virtues further the poem. They came up and died just like they do every year on the rocks” Richard Wilbur, Lia Perpuera, Galway Kinnell, Matthew Dickman, Gerald Green, Chuck Klosterman, Suzanne Cleary, Eileen G’Sell, WS Merwin, Robert Frost Theodore Roethke: “all finite things re- veal infinitude” Ruth Padel, Bronwyn Lea, Don Pater- son, Billy Collins, Yves Bonnefoy, Mar- garet Levine, Lisa Ampleman, Ronald Ko- ertge, Robert Browning, Andrew Frisardi, Alfred Lord Tennyson, William Blake, Jane Satterfield, e.e. cummings, Edward Arlington Robinson, Wallace Stevens, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Elizabeth Bishop, Chana Bloch, Nick Norwood, Patrick Ban- don, Chris Morrison, Benny Anderson, Stephen Ackerman, Daisy Fried Rusty Morrison, Dan Peterson, Edgar Allen Poe, Gwendolyn Brooks, Robert Duncan, W.B. Yeats, Elton Glaser, Katha Pollitt, Robin Becker, Padraic Colum, Thomas More, A.R. Ammons, C. Dale Young, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Chad Davidson, Robinson Jeffers, Billy Collins John Keats, Maureen N. McLean, Mitchell Gonzalez Pablo Neruda: “Don’t go far off, not even for a day, because — because — I don’t know how to say it: a day is long and I will be waiting for you, as in an empty station when the trains are parked off somewhere else, asleep.” Dylan Thomas, John Skoyles, AJM Smith, Edwin Brock, Judith Jedamus Archibald MacLeish: “a poem should be motionless in time ... A poem should not mean but be ...” Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Carl Dennis, John Hodgen, John Boyle O’Reilly, Wys- tawa Szymborska, Lisa Williams Walter Malone: “... each night I burn the records of the day; At sunrise every soul is born again ...” Alan Feldman, Sarah Lindsey, Lord Byron, H.N. Fifer, Jeffrey Harrison, Anonymous, “My Life is but a Weaving” Henry Rago, R.T. Smith, Tom Wayman, Percy Byshhe Shelley Karen Knapp Johnson: “my withness, my here” Mary Oliver, Ruth L. Schwartz, A.E. Housman, Paul Blackburn, Stephen Berg, Steve Kowit, Bob Hicok, Vijay Seshardi, Julie Lechevsky, Doug Dorph, Dana Gioia, Margaret Levine, Jon Agee, Kim Stafford, Martin Espada Rumi: “this being human is a guest house/every morning a new arrival ...” Martha Solano: “The Poet Is The Priest of the Invisible” Jane Mead, Elton Glaser, Ryokan Ted Loder: “Move with us now/in our time of be- ginnings,/when the air is rain and snow- washed/and the world seems fresh and full of possibili- ties,/and we feel ready and full/We tremble on the edge of a maybe...” William Carlos Williams, Maya An- gelou, David Orr, Ju- liana Waters, Ted Kooser, Don Rea, Elise Paschen, Julie Lechowsky, Denise Levertov, Yves Bonnefoy, Eaven Boylan, David Lehman, Michael Chilwood, Major Jack- son, A.E. Housman, Charles Simic, Carol Snow, Howard Nemerov, William Matthews, Kay Ryan, Connie Wanek, Harold Johnson, AJM Smith, Albert Gold- barth, Mary Oliver Stanley Kunitz: “oh, I have made myself a tribe of my true affections ...” Franz Wright, Tom Wayman, Dorianne Laux, Phillis Levin, Robert Francis, Liesl Mueller, Denver Butson, Alexander Mac- Donald, John Milton, Robinson Jeffers, Irish author unknown, Giolla Brighde MacCommidhe, Tony Wallace, Robert Bly, Daniel Hoffman, Ralph Waldo Emerson, John Woods Wendell Berry: “for a time I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.” Matthew Sweeney, Naomi Shibab Nye, Mark Strand, Susan Ludvigson, Claudia Emerson, John Ashbery, William Shake- speare, Wilfred Owen, James Lasdun, Julie Sheehan, Mary Tall Mountain, Richard Wilbur, Wallace Stevens, B.H. Fairchild, Robert Frost, Robert Lowell, Al- ison Fell, Wilfred Noyce, Susan Mitchell, Jack Gilbert, Seamus Heaney, Carl Sand- burg, Peter Meinke, Robert Watson, Olav Hauge, Alberto Rios, William Wordsworth, Ron Padgett, Charles Wright, Richard Wilbur, Sandra Lim, Mark Halliday Christian Wiman: “I have no illusion that some fusion of force and form will save me.” Charlotte Bronte, Verne Bright, Conrad Hilberry, Amit Majmudar, Robert Hayden, Ada Limon, David Whyte, Thomas Moore Lucie Brock-Broido, “Moon River”: “What exactly do you mean when you call me your ‘huckleber- ry friend’?” Kofi Awoonor, James Mangan, HC Wallace, Alice Firman, Florence Fogelin, Amy MacLennan, Robert Lunday, Sara Wallace, Jack Prelusky, Gwen- dolyn Brooks Elizabeth Bishop: “lose something every day/Accept the fluster of lost door keys, the hour badly spent/The art of los- ing isn’t hard to mas- ter.” Robert Duncan, Harold Schweizer, Au- thor unknown, CS Lewis, Carol Frost Bill Coyle: “lost conti- nents and present discon- tents” Elinor Wylie: “poets make pets of pretty, docile words; ... I like words opalescent, cool, and pearly... Gilded and sticky, with a little sting.” Edna St. Vincent Millay Archibald MacLeish: “A poem should not mean but be.“ Ezra Pound, Mercedes Lawry, Galway Kinnell, Debra Kang Dean, Billy Collins, Lawson Inada, Floyd Skloot: “first the sheen, then the shock of all we have seen comes clear.” Frannie Lindsay, Helen Hunt Jackson Jean Pedrick: “just keep walking and I’ll presently be where you are.” Marge Piercy, Harold Notice, Vern Rut- sala, Herman Melville: “audacity — rever- ence. These must mate.” Randall Jarrell, William Cowper, James Thomson, Thomas Parnell, Ted James, Eugenio Montale, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Aaron Balance Edgar Lee Masters: “Deities!/Inexorable revealers,/Give me strength to endure/The gifts of the Muse …” Fanny Howe, Richard Robbins, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Robert Burns, Jennifer Rondeau, Steve Langhorst, Thomas James, Stuart Dybek, Aaron Fagan, Robert Ser- vice, Herman Hesse, Jonathon Cupp, John Dryden, Michael Bruce, Rainer Maria Rilke, Allen Ginsburg, Rabindrath Tagore, T.S. Eliot, Roger Weaver. A YEAR OF POEMS Trembling on the edge of maybe,with the priests of the invisible Founded in 1905 419 State Street Hood River, OR 97031 P.O. Box 390 Phone: (541) 386-1234 Fax: (541) 386-6796 Operations: Joe Petshow Publisher President, Eagle Newspapers (541) 386-1234 [email protected] Chelsea Marr General Manager [email protected] Chris Stenberg Bookkeeper [email protected] Front Office/ Classified Advertising: Stacey Methvin Classifieds/Receptionist [email protected] [email protected] Circulation: Esther K. Smith Circulation Manager (541) 386-1234 Ext. 205 [email protected] News: Kirby Neumann-Rea Editor [email protected] Adam Lapierre News/Features [email protected] Ben Mitchell News/Features [email protected] Jim Drake Entertainment [email protected] Trisha Walker News/Features [email protected] Ailene Hibbard Archivist Advertising: Jody Thompson Advertising Manager [email protected] Liana Stegall Advertising Sales [email protected] Kirsten Lane Advertising Sales [email protected] Production: David Marvin Production Manager [email protected] Jim Drake Production/Commercial Printing [email protected] Andy Taylor Production/Commercial Printing [email protected] Allen Diers Commercial Printing [email protected] 419 State Street Hood River, OR 97031 P.O. Box 390 Phone: (541) 386-1234 Fax: (541) 386-6796 Tony Methvin Plant Manager (541) 386-1234 [email protected] Andy Taylor Commercial Printing/Production [email protected] David Marvin Commercial Printing/Production [email protected] It’s easy to submit your news item to the Hood River News. Engagements, anniversaries, and weddings: [email protected]; attach jpg photos with credit where applicable. Births can be submitted to the same address. Happenings: Non-profit groups can send their information about events to Trisha Walker at [email protected]. Church news can be sent to [email protected]. Entertainment: Non-profits are encouraged to send us their information on concerts, speakers or other events, to [email protected] or Jim Drake at [email protected]. Classtime: hrnews @hoodrivernews.com. Sports items: Adam Lapierre at [email protected]. Obituaries: Contact Esther Smith, [email protected]; the News charges $30 per obituary, no length limit, photos included. Letters – word limit 350, include your name and home town. Letters to the editor of a “thank you” nature are generally not published on the Viewpoint page, but these can be sent for use in Neighbors, to [email protected]. Letters, and any other item, may be mailed, emailed, or hand-delivered. For all inquiries about submitting an item, call the newsroom at 541-386-1234. Hood River News is located at 409 State St. Printed on recycled paper. Official Newspaper, City of Hood River and Hood River County Published Every Wednesday & Saturday by Hood River News, P.O. Box 390, Hood River, Oregon 97031 • (541) 386-1234 • FAX 386-6796 JOE PETSHOW TOM LANCTOT Publisher/President, Past President, Eagle Newspapers, Inc. Eagle Newspapers, Inc. CHELSEA MARR KIRBY NEUMANN-REA General Manager Editor JODY THOMPSON TONY METHVIN Advertising Manager Columbia Gorge Press Manager DICK NAFSINGER DAVID MARVIN Publisher, Emeritus (1933-2011) Production Manager Subscription $42 per year in Hood River trade area. $68 outside trade area. NATIONAL NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION OREGON NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Member of the Associated Press 1982 ‘Dog River Review’ Got News? How to get your item into the newspaper

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Page 1: Hood River News, Saturday, January 3, 2015 VIEWPOINT · 1/3/2015  · A4 Hood River News, VIEWPOINT Saturday, January 3, 2015 ABOUTLETTERS HoodRiverNewsremindsletter totheeditorwritersthatshorteris

VIEWPOINTA4 Hood River News,Saturday, January 3, 2015

ABOUT LETTERSHood River News reminds letter

to the editor writers that shorter isbetter. Concise letters are not onlybetter-read, they are more likely tobe published because limitedspace is available.

Almost any point can be madein 350 words or fewer, so this is setas an upper level for length.

Thank-you letters are no longeraccepted, neither are unsigned let-ters, letters signed with fictitioussignatures and copies of letterssent to public officials.

We limit letters on a subjectwhen we feel it has been thorough-ly aired, to the point of letters be-coming repetitive.

Also rejected are letters that arelibelous, in bad taste or personalattacks on individuals or privatebusinesses. Writers must includeaddresses and telephone numbers.These are for identification pur-poses only, and will not be pub-lished.

By KIRBY NEUMANN-REANews editor

In 2014 I read a poem each day.One poem, sometimes more, and I would

always re-read it, either back to back, orreturn to it later in the day.In one of the craziest year-end lists

you’ll ever see, I’ve recorded all those po-ets’ names, below.(See hoodrivernews.com for a longer

version of this column.)�

It was a daily ritual that, like others Ihave done, gave my day structure. No mat-ter what happened, I knew I had a poem toread or return to. In years past I havewritten a letter or a postcard each day, andin 2013 I listened to no music but classical.In 2015 I will listen to one record album

each day all the way through our collec-tion. That’s VINYL — and yes, we do ownabout 365 or so grooved such platters.(Any requests? Send them to [email protected]. It will be inter-esting to see where collections overlap –but remember I am talking LPs only.)And having enjoyed a daily poem so

much, I will probably continue that aswell. It was cleansing, uplifting, challeng-ing. Most days it reminded me what realwriting is all about.I read usually in the morning, or before

bed, for the poems created tent poles formy shaky days.Some poems I did not like, nor under-

stand, but nearly always felt challenged,or moved, and I kept a list of all 365poems.I read some poets multiple times —

Yeats for example. I read mostly men, but Imade a point of reading Emily Dickenson,Charlotte Bronte, Naomi Shabab Nye,Christina Rossetti and others. In 2014 I re-turned repeatedly to William Stafford,Robert Lowell, W.S. Merwin, Rainer MariaRilke, and William Blake, and to Yeats.I combed books we have at home (my

wife’s Norton Anthology of Literaturefrom college was a particular trove), chosesome intentionally and randomly at the li-brary, took them from newspapers andmagazines. “Circles” by Carl Sandburgwas used in my high school yearbook —never read the poem before — andanother was framed on a friend’s wall.And no, not once this year did I WRITE apoem; why would you bring PB and J to asmorgasbord?

Below is the list, in order, of each poet Iread in 2014: a total of 267 writers, withother powerful lines that grabbed me:William StaffordYusuf Komunyakaa: “there’s a ghost

poised between free will and the gig”David Spicer, Diane Dickinson: “I am

half alive the rest is anticipation ...”Christina Rosetti: “... and what do we

see glancing back?”Stephen Dunn: “now might be the right

time to cultivate disbelief ”Michael McGriff, Glyn Maxwell, Rebec-

ca Hoogs, Robert Pinsky, Hannah Stephen-son, David Ferry, Rustin Larson, RobertWilliam Service, Donald Hall, Peter Mish-lerGary Snyder: “lay down these

words/before your mind like rocks”Robert Duncan: “Neither our vices nor

our virtues further the poem. They cameup and died just like they do every year onthe rocks”Richard Wilbur, Lia Perpuera, Galway

Kinnell, Matthew Dickman, Gerald Green,Chuck Klosterman, Suzanne Cleary,Eileen G’Sell, WS Merwin, Robert FrostTheodore Roethke: “all finite things re-

veal infinitude”Ruth Padel, Bronwyn Lea, Don Pater-

son, Billy Collins, Yves Bonnefoy, Mar-garet Levine, Lisa Ampleman, Ronald Ko-ertge, Robert Browning, Andrew Frisardi,Alfred Lord Tennyson, William Blake,Jane Satterfield, e.e. cummings, EdwardArlington Robinson, Wallace Stevens,Edna St. Vincent Millay, Elizabeth Bishop,Chana Bloch, Nick Norwood, Patrick Ban-don, Chris Morrison, Benny Anderson,Stephen Ackerman, Daisy FriedRusty Morrison, Dan Peterson, Edgar

Allen Poe, Gwendolyn Brooks, RobertDuncan, W.B. Yeats, Elton Glaser, KathaPollitt, Robin Becker, Padraic Colum,Thomas More, A.R. Ammons, C. DaleYoung, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, RalphWaldo Emerson, Chad Davidson, RobinsonJeffers, Billy CollinsJohn Keats, Maureen N. McLean,

Mitchell GonzalezPablo Neruda: “Don’t go far off, not even

for a day, because — because — I don’tknow how to say it: a day is long and I willbe waiting for you, as in an empty stationwhen the trains are parked off somewhereelse, asleep.”Dylan Thomas, John Skoyles, AJM

Smith, Edwin Brock, Judith JedamusArchibald MacLeish: “a poem should be

motionless in time ... A poem should notmean but be ...”Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Carl Dennis,

John Hodgen, John Boyle O’Reilly, Wys-tawa Szymborska, Lisa WilliamsWalter Malone: “... each night I burn the

records of the day; At sunrise every soulis born again ...”Alan Feldman, Sarah Lindsey, Lord

Byron, H.N. Fifer, Jeffrey Harrison,Anonymous, “My Life is but a Weaving”Henry Rago, R.T. Smith, Tom Wayman,

Percy Byshhe ShelleyKaren Knapp Johnson: “my withness,

my here”Mary Oliver, Ruth L. Schwartz, A.E.

Housman, Paul Blackburn, Stephen Berg,Steve Kowit, Bob Hicok, Vijay Seshardi,Julie Lechevsky, Doug Dorph, Dana Gioia,Margaret Levine, Jon Agee, Kim Stafford,Martin EspadaRumi: “this being human is a guest

house/every morning a new arrival ...”Martha Solano: “The Poet Is The Priest

of the Invisible”Jane Mead, Elton Glaser, Ryokan

Ted Loder: “Movewith us now/inour time of be-ginnings,/whenthe air is rainand snow-washed/andthe worldseems freshand full ofpossibili-ties,/and wefeel readyand full/Wetremble onthe edge ofa maybe...”William

CarlosWilliams,Maya An-gelou,DavidOrr, Ju-lianaWaters,TedKooser,DonRea,ElisePaschen, JulieLechowsky, Denise Levertov,Yves Bonnefoy, Eaven Boylan, DavidLehman, Michael Chilwood, Major Jack-son, A.E. Housman, Charles Simic, CarolSnow, Howard Nemerov, WilliamMatthews, Kay Ryan, Connie Wanek,Harold Johnson, AJM Smith, Albert Gold-barth, Mary OliverStanley Kunitz: “oh, I have made myself

a tribe of my true affections ...”Franz Wright, Tom Wayman, Dorianne

Laux, Phillis Levin, Robert Francis, LieslMueller, Denver Butson, Alexander Mac-Donald, John Milton, Robinson Jeffers,Irish author unknown, Giolla BrighdeMacCommidhe, Tony Wallace, Robert Bly,Daniel Hoffman, Ralph Waldo Emerson,John WoodsWendell Berry: “for a time I rest in the

grace of the world, and am free.”Matthew Sweeney, Naomi Shibab Nye,

Mark Strand, Susan Ludvigson, ClaudiaEmerson, John Ashbery, William Shake-speare, Wilfred Owen, James Lasdun,Julie Sheehan, Mary Tall Mountain,Richard Wilbur, Wallace Stevens, B.H.Fairchild, Robert Frost, Robert Lowell, Al-ison Fell, Wilfred Noyce, Susan Mitchell,Jack Gilbert, Seamus Heaney, Carl Sand-burg, Peter Meinke, Robert Watson, OlavHauge, Alberto Rios, William Wordsworth,Ron Padgett, Charles Wright, RichardWilbur, Sandra Lim, Mark HallidayChristian Wiman: “I have no illusion

that some fusion of force and form willsave me.”Charlotte Bronte, Verne Bright, Conrad

Hilberry, Amit Majmudar, Robert Hayden,Ada Limon, David Whyte, Thomas MooreLucie Brock-Broido, “Moon River”:“What exactly do you mean when you

call me your ‘huckleber-ry friend’?”Kofi Awoonor,

James Mangan,HC Wallace, AliceFirman, FlorenceFogelin, AmyMacLennan,Robert Lunday,Sara Wallace, JackPrelusky, Gwen-dolyn BrooksElizabeth Bishop:

“lose somethingevery day/Accept thefluster of lost doorkeys, the hour badlyspent/The art of los-ing isn’t hard to mas-ter.”Robert Duncan,

Harold Schweizer, Au-thor unknown, CSLewis, Carol FrostBill Coyle: “lost conti-

nents and present discon-tents”Elinor Wylie: “poets

make pets of pretty, docilewords; ... I like wordsopalescent, cool, and

pearly... Gilded and sticky, with a littlesting.”Edna St. Vincent MillayArchibald MacLeish: “A poem should

not mean but be.“Ezra Pound, Mercedes Lawry, Galway

Kinnell, Debra Kang Dean, Billy Collins,Lawson Inada, Floyd Skloot: “first thesheen, then the shock of all we have seencomes clear.”Frannie Lindsay, Helen Hunt JacksonJean Pedrick: “just keep walking and

I’ll presently be where you are.”Marge Piercy, Harold Notice, Vern Rut-

sala,Herman Melville: “audacity — rever-

ence. These must mate.”Randall Jarrell, William Cowper, James

Thomson, Thomas Parnell, Ted James,Eugenio Montale, F. Scott Fitzgerald,Aaron BalanceEdgar Lee Masters: “Deities!/Inexorable

revealers,/Give me strength to endure/Thegifts of the Muse …”Fanny Howe, Richard Robbins, Ella

Wheeler Wilcox, Robert Burns, JenniferRondeau, Steve Langhorst, Thomas James,Stuart Dybek, Aaron Fagan, Robert Ser-vice, Herman Hesse, Jonathon Cupp, JohnDryden, Michael Bruce, Rainer MariaRilke, Allen Ginsburg, Rabindrath Tagore,T.S. Eliot, Roger Weaver.

A YEAR OF POEMS

Trembling on the edge of maybe, with the priests of the invisible

Founded in 1905

419 State StreetHood River, OR 97031P.O. Box 390Phone: (541) 386-1234Fax: (541) 386-6796

Operations:Joe PetshowPublisherPresident, Eagle Newspapers(541) [email protected]

Chelsea MarrGeneral [email protected]

Chris [email protected]

Front Office/Classified Advertising:Stacey MethvinClassifieds/[email protected]@hoodrivernews.com

Circulation:Esther K. SmithCirculation Manager(541) 386-1234 Ext. [email protected]

News:Kirby [email protected]

Adam Lapierre

News/Features

[email protected]

Ben Mitchell

News/Features

[email protected]

Jim Drake

Entertainment

[email protected]

Trisha WalkerNews/Features

[email protected]

Ailene HibbardArchivist

Advertising:Jody ThompsonAdvertising [email protected]

Liana StegallAdvertising [email protected]

Kirsten LaneAdvertising [email protected]

Production:

David Marvin

Production Manager

[email protected]

Jim Drake

Production/Commercial Printing

[email protected]

Andy Taylor

Production/Commercial Printing

[email protected]

Allen Diers

Commercial Printing

[email protected]

419 State StreetHood River, OR 97031P.O. Box 390Phone: (541) 386-1234Fax: (541) 386-6796Tony MethvinPlant Manager(541) [email protected]

Andy TaylorCommercial Printing/[email protected]

David MarvinCommercial Printing/[email protected]

It’s easy to submit your news item to the Hood River News.� Engagements, anniversaries, and weddings: [email protected]; attach jpg photos with credit where applicable.Births can be submitted to the same address.� Happenings: Non-profit groups can send their information about events to Trisha Walker at [email protected].� Church news can be sent to [email protected].� Entertainment: Non-profits are encouraged to send us their information on concerts, speakers or other events,to [email protected] or Jim Drake at [email protected].� Classtime: hrnews @hoodrivernews.com.� Sports items: Adam Lapierre at [email protected].� Obituaries: Contact Esther Smith, [email protected]; the News charges $30 per obituary, no length limit, photos included.� Letters – word limit 350, include your name and home town.Letters to the editor of a “thank you” nature are generally not published on the Viewpoint page, but these can be sent for usein Neighbors, to [email protected].� Letters, and any other item, may be mailed, emailed, or hand-delivered.For all inquiries about submitting an item, call the newsroom at 541-386-1234. Hood River News is located at 409 State St.

Printed on recycled paper.

Official Newspaper, City of Hood River and Hood River CountyPublished Every Wednesday & Saturday by Hood River News,

P.O. Box 390, Hood River, Oregon 97031 • (541) 386-1234 • FAX 386-6796

JOE PETSHOW TOM LANCTOTPublisher/President, Past President,

Eagle Newspapers, Inc. Eagle Newspapers, Inc.

CHELSEA MARR KIRBY NEUMANN-REAGeneral Manager Editor

JODY THOMPSON TONY METHVINAdvertising Manager Columbia Gorge Press Manager

DICK NAFSINGER DAVID MARVINPublisher, Emeritus (1933-2011) Production Manager

Subscription $42 per year in Hood River trade area. $68 outside trade area.

NATIONAL NEWSPAPERASSOCIATION

OREGON NEWSPAPERPUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION

Member of the Associated Press

1982 ‘Dog River Review’

GotNews?

How to get your iteminto the newspaper