Palouse Seniors, Winter 2013

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Children again Area seniors remember the great gifts of their youth Advertising Supplement | Moscow-Pullman Daily News Palouse Seniors November | 2013 Seniors in the news 2013

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A quarterly magazine focused on issues affecting today's Palouse seniors

Transcript of Palouse Seniors, Winter 2013

Page 1: Palouse Seniors, Winter 2013

Children againArea seniors remember

the great gifts of their youth

Advertising Supplement | Moscow-Pullman Daily News

PalouseSeniors

November | 2013

Seniors in the news 2013

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2 | Weekend, November 23 & 24, 2013 | MOSCOWPULLMAN DAILY NEWS Palouse Seniors

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Weekend, November 23 & 24, 2013 | MOSCOWPULLMAN DAILY NEWS | 3Palouse Seniors

By Judy Sobelofffor Palouse Seniors

With the holiday sea-son fast approach-ing, area seniors in three locations (the

Friendly Neighbors program at the 1912 Center in Moscow, Good Samaritan in Moscow, and Bishop Place in Pullman) were asked about a memory of a favorite toy or gift from childhood.

Some, but not all, of these items were Christmas gifts. Some were not items at all, but beloved pets, such as Jane Leidenfrost’s kitten, or other animals, such as Ralph Johnson’s pony, Bill, who lived to be 35 and provided John-son with necessary transportation so he could hold a job.

For many, times were tough, and material items were few. One respondent fondly recalled her father making her a long-wanted dollhouse from a cardboard box, “even the furniture.”

Clara Doctor, 92, who was one of 13 children and began doing housework for neighbors at age 10, recalls she and her sisters receiving dolls for Christmas when she was 8 or 10.

“We were happy to get what we got,” she says. “We never wished for something we didn’t have.”

Others recalled the gifts they didn’t get, such as Dorothy Nichols, 83, who said her favorite was a dollhouse promised by a neighbor, which she never received. Still, “in my imagination I played with it and it was my favorite, even though it was imaginary.”

Norma Johnson, 91, remem-bered her father taking the sled

and horses 17 miles to pick up her favorite toy, “a top that spun and hummed music,” from the post office. Kathryn Dunn recalled re-ceiving an orange from Santa when she went to church, noting that this was “a big deal” in Colorado in the winter.

Some remembered items evoked family dynamics, in the case of identical twins Evelyn Grassl and Eleanor Olesen, whose favorite remembered toys were identical dolls and high chairs.

Some gifts reflected racial ten-sions of the time — such as a black baby doll owned by a girl whose father was a member of the Ku Klux Klan.

Other dolls reflected interests of the era, one of the most popularly mentioned being child movie star Shirley Temple, though a doll of one of the Dionne Quintuplets and Barbie or her predecessor, a “fash-ion doll,” also merited mention.

Some seniors, such as Judy Reisenauer, Marilyn Mack, and Maggie St. John, noted that they still own their doll, despite it being in poor condition.

While dolls and their accessories — high chairs, furniture, cloth-ing, and houses, often homemade rather than store-bought, were the most common fondly remem-bered items, ice skates and toy trains and other vehicles (tricycles, bicycles, wagons, and kiddie cars) also played an important role in people’s childhoods.

Significantly, women as well as men remembered a toy train or wagon as a favorite toy —specifi-cally not a doll. Lori Blevins, 55, an avowed tomboy, said her favorite remembered toy was a Fisher Price

Children againArea seniors remember the great gifts of their youthgreat gifts of their youth

Children again

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race car she received at age two, while Helen Dewey, 84, recalled that when her brother was given “a big red wagon, I was thrilled because I got to play with it too.”

Kay Keskinen said that her favorite, a Lionel electric train set, was made even more special when her father, a mail carrier, re-gifted it one Christmas to a less fortunate family on his route. Keskinen, who was thanked by one of the train set’s recipients 30 years later, notes that “gifts can keep on giving.”

Also noteworthy was how some respondents immediately knew their favorite item, such as Jeanette Talbott, 96, who clearly recalled specific details about her favorite, “a small saucer-sized painted lady-bug with long feelers.”

MaryAnn Moser leapt up to call her sister to ask her the name of her favorite dog.

Still others insisted they had no memory of a favorite childhood item, yet as soon as they began to explain how they didn’t remember anything, “except for...” a clear favorite would emerge.

Gifts and memoriesA sampling of memorable childhood gifts from seniors across the regionFriendly Neighbors, MoscowEvelyn Grassl and Eleanor Olesen, 84 (identical twins): We got identical dolls and high chairs when we were eight years old. This was our last big item we got for Christmas. They were pink and the dress was ruffled, with a little coat and a little hat. Mother said, “When you get a big doll, that’s going to be the last one.” It made me (Eleanor) sick, because when my daughter was old enough to play with dolls, she said, “Mama, I play doll. ”There goes the doll outside. The dog got it and chewed it up, and the stuffing was flying all over. I was so mad. I used to keep it on the bed.

Bob Newbre, 76: My first tricycle. It gave me fun mobility, though I did love to run. In fact, I couldn’t understand why adults preferred walking. I had a special parking place in a group of trees next to the driveway. One night I didn’t put my trike in its “garage.” The next morn-ing my mom backed over it. I was crushed, too.

E. Norma Johnson, 91: My top that spun and hummed music. My folks ordered it from a catalog, and Dad took the sled and horses 17 miles to get it at the post office. There were seven of us kids (later 10) on our homestead in the mountains of Colorado.

Peggy Swanson, 68: Ice skates. The lake froze over where I lived and we were able to skate for about a month. It hasn’t frozen since! It looked like the lake was thawing, so my mother let us stay home from school and invite our cousins across the lake. My mother was president of the P.T.A. and was chastised for letting us stay home from school and the example she was setting. (I don’t think [the principal] was that upset.)

Anonymous: A black baby doll. My father had been a member of the KKK, and he couldn’t understand why I wanted that. But I got it. Years later—the doll had been broken and repaired, and I was packing to move—I threw the doll away with sadness. Then I found out that these were rare and valuable.

Nadine Morton, 74: Ice skates. I was 10 years old and loved to ice skate at the Spokane Ice Rink. So getting my own pair that fit correctly was a super gift. When I look in my old photograph album, there is a picture of me posing in a jacket and standing on a frozen puddle in my skates. The only problem is mother took the picture of me that showed everything above my ankles… not my skates.

Bill Terrio, 74: My most memorable gift wasn’t until I was 21, when I got ice skates. The ice skating rink was just down the street on the corner. I went there several times a week, and I even had people stop and ask if I was part of the Ice Capades. I could do jumps and axels.

Margie St. John, 66: I had a favor-ite doll. In the summer I looked for it and asked for it and couldn’t find it. On Christmas morning it was sitting under the Christmas tree, with a suitcase full of new clothes that my mother had made and a little doll high chair. She thought for sure I’d forget that doll, but I did not. I still have the doll and some of her clothes.

Leonard C. Johnson, 86: A Tinker-toy set. One of two “store-bought” toys of my childhood, it gave many hours of mind stretching, inventive, educational pleasure, substituting in a way for siblings and playmates that I lacked.

Marilyn Henderson, 80: It was a wooden doll bed. (I just happened to have a doll that fit in it just right!) For some reason I had to go to bed early, and when I heard the loud knock on the front door, and a very

loud voice asked if Marilyn lived there, it frightened me so I

hid under the covers. My mother came in and

asked if I heard anything, and of course I said no! She

had me get up and there under the Christmas

tree was my doll bed! (I’m pretty

sure I was preschool age.)

Jeanette Talbott,

96: A small saucer-sized

painted ladybug with long feelers. When placed on a table the feelers would project and would turn the ladybug and keep it from falling off the edge of the table. It was a gift from Santa, before it was known that Santa was really your parents.

Karon S. Aronson, 65: A chemis-try set. I marveled how you could change the color of liquids by pouring clear liquid into clear and get red.

Kathryn S. Dunn, 78: All I remem-ber getting is my sister’s hand-me-downs. I was happy to get them, but I knew Santa Claus didn’t bring them. It didn’t really make me feel special. When we’d go to church, Santa would hand out oranges instead of a toy. This was in Colorado in the winter. It was a big deal.

Jim Dunn, 78: I can only remember the Christmases that didn’t go well, not the ones that did. One time I only got a pair of shorts for Christ-mas. I wasn’t thrilled.

and repaired, and I was packing to move—I threw the doll away with sadness. Then I found out that these were rare and valuable.

Nadine Morton, 74: Ice skates. I was 10 years old and loved to ice skate at the

fit correctly was a super gift. When I look in my old photograph album, there is a picture

knock on the front door, and a very loud voice asked if Marilyn lived there, it frightened me so I

hid under the covers. My mother came in and

asked if I heard anything, and of course I said no! She

had me get up and there under the Christmas

tree was my doll bed! (I’m pretty

sure I was preschool age.)

JeanetteTalbott,

96: A small

substituting in a way for siblings and playmates that I lacked.

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Weekend, November 23 & 24, 2013 | MOSCOWPULLMAN DAILY NEWS | 5Palouse SeniorsJean Rudolph, 92: It was the Great Depression, so I didn’t have one [a favorite toy]. I had two dolls but never liked or played with them. I wanted a bike!

Sandra Baird, 70: A prism. I saw the world with rainbows around everything—I loved it! I was six. My dad brought it home. My mom made a little sack for it.

Judy Reisenauer, 74: A magic skin doll. It was given to me and all my female cousins by our grandmoth-er when I was eight years old. I still have it.

Larry Kirkland, 71: An erector set, slip-on skis, a B-B gun. I was thrilled with each one. I outgrew the erec-tor set but used the B-B gun and skis for many years.

Donna DeBolt, 70: A fashion doll (an early version of Barbie). I was five years old. I have been interest-ed in fashion forever. I was disap-pointed in the clothes. They looked so good in the Aldens catalog.

Ralph Johnson, 92: A pony. He lived to be 35 years old. His name

was Bill. He was a gift from my uncle for my birth-day. I needed transpor-tation for my job.

Nancy Lindhorst,

69: A baking set, with cake mixes and pans. I always loved being in

the kitchen with my grandma when she

cooked, so when I got my own

cooking set I was very happy since we didn’t have that much money. It was not so much the cooking but

the memories of my grandma.

Eileen Osterhoudt, 92: The pretti-est doll I ever had. I can’t remember the name, but it was named after something in the funny papers.

Ernest Bunch, 89: A tractor. My dad made it for me out of wood. We lived out of town near Garfield, Washington. I am a World War II vet.

MaryAnn Moser, 85: A little puppy. I was in preschool, but he didn’t get much bigger nor less playful those several years that I remember. And now I can’t remember his name! P.S. I just called my sister. She first said her kids’ puppy’s name, but did come up with the name of our puppy: Bingo.

Anonymous, 80: A dollhouse. My grandfather made it for me when I was four years old. It was for Christmas and had a front porch, glass windows, and a front door that opened. It was completely furnished.

Karen Davis, 72: We had Tinker Toys, an erector set, and Lincoln Logs. (Presumably these were for my brother!) I particularly loved the Lincoln Logs. They were much smaller than today’s variety, be-ing about a quarter-inch. I first remember playing with them when I was about four years of age. I also remember battles with my brother over the Lincoln Logs. Since he was three years older, he usually won.

Helen Dewey, 84: I was a tomboy, so when my brother got a big red wagon, I was thrilled because I got to play with it too.

Linn Lindsey, 64: A toy train that was a Christmas gift from my father, around 1952.

Jim McCluskey, 74: A Lionel train the whole family could enjoy, and ice skates. I learned to skate but never very well. Both were Christ-mas gifts.

Herb Ulthoff, 74: A toy motorcycle. I still ride and love motorcycles.

Clara Doctor, 92We girls all got a doll for Christmas. We didn’t give other toys for

Christmas. We got new shoes, new outfits, a new dress, stockings, and underclothes, all that stuff. We got candy and nuts on the plate at dinner. There were 13 children. I don’t remember what the boys got. I was maybe eight or ten when we got the first doll. We played with them a lot. There was always a baby at home, and we treated our dolls like we treated the babies.

My first ten years, I lived on Icicle Flat, this side of Cottonwood Butte. After that I went to work for different people. I did housework, I did laundry, I scrubbed on a washboard. Sometimes I got home at night, and sometimes I stayed there. We were happy. We were happy to get what we got. We went to the country schoolhouse and knew the neighbors. We never wished we had something we didn’t have. When I left home it was mostly clothes that I got for Christmas.

made a little sack for it.

Judy Reisenauer, 74: A magic skin doll. It was given to me and all my female cousins by our grandmoth-er when I was eight years

Larry Kirkland, 71: An

skis, a B-B gun. I was thrilled with each one. I outgrew the erec-tor set but used the B-B gun and skis for

my uncle for my birth-day. I needed transpor-tation for my job.

Nancy Lindhorst,

69: A baking set, with cake mixes and pans. I always loved being in

the kitchen with my grandma when she

cooked, so when I got my own

cooking set I was very happy since we didn’t have that much money. It was not so much the cooking but

the memories of my grandma.

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Don Sheets, 63: A teddy bear. I just always had it.

Ida Pepe, 93: A doll I left in Italy when I was about eight years old. It was the only one I had.

Al Pepe, 93: We never had any toys when we were kids.

Judy Baumgartner, 69: Cowboy boots. I loved horses but we lived in town so I could not have one.

Jane Leidenfrost, 90: A little kit-ten. I was the only girl. I had three brothers.

Good Samaritan, MoscowBessie Brower, 82: My favorite was my doll Mabel Claire. I got her for Christmas when I was four years old. I remember she was as tall as I was. I could hold her hand and get to walk with me.

Lou Stevens, 90: It was an identical doll that I had and my baby sister had one just like mine. One day she took both dolls and banged the heads together, and my doll’s head fell off! My parents never replaced it and I wondered why, to this day. I was eight years old, living in Missouri. My sister let me share her doll after that; we still played with the “headless doll!”

Ethel Osmond, 90: A doll carriage that was cream color with brown trim, made of wicker. It was special because I waited many years for it! I was eight or nine years old. Santa (parents) gave it to me. It was for Christmas in Quogue, New York. It was big and had wheels. I would take several dolls in the carriage out in the village!

Lori Blevins, 55: My Fisher Price race car. I got it about age two after having my tonsils out. I was a tom-boy so no dolls. It lasted forever. My nieces and nephews were able to play with it.

Sue Trottier, 58: We were real poor. One year we colored

pictures out of our color-ing book to give to each other for Christmas. I really wanted a doll-house. My dad made me a doll house out of

a cardboard box, even the furniture. I was nine years

old.

Anonymous, 92: I was an only child. We always had a

dog to keep me company. Puff was a mixed breed and we were best friends when I was eight to ten years old.

Bill Deobald, 89: My favor-ite has to be my electric train

I got for Christmas. It had an engine, coal, and passenger car. It would only go forward and stop.

Kay Keskinen, mid-60sThe toy that was special is a Lionel electric train set that my sib-

lings and I received for Christmas in the mid-1950s. It was special for two reasons: First, we had years of fun with it--rerouting the tracks around our living room, exchanging the cars, and turning down the room lights to enjoy the locomotive’s headlight as it sped around the room.

Second, the train set was later re-gifted in the mid-1960s. My fa-ther, who was a letter carrier for a rural route for our Minnesota town, got to know the families on his route very well. In the mid-1960s he asked us four kids if we would be willing to part with our train set be-cause there was a family on his mail route that had little money and the train set would be a great Christmas gift for their kids. We agreed and spiffed up the set so it looked as good as it could.

Now turn the calendar forward another 30 years to a day I was visiting my parents in Minnesota. A man had stopped by to visit my folks, he and I were introduced, and he pulled me aside to say he was one of the kids who received the train set for Christmas many years ago. The train and the silver dollar my father gave to each of the kids in that family were the only presents they received that Christmas. He and his siblings also got much joy from the train set.Gifts can keep on giving.

My favorite was my doll Mabel Claire. I got her for Christmas when I was four years old. I remember she was as tall as I was. I could hold her hand and get

Lou Stevens, 90: It was an identical doll that

dolls and banged the heads together, and my doll’s head fell off! My parents never replaced it and I wondered why, to this day. I was eight years old, living in Missouri. My

poor. One year we colored pictures out of our color-

ing book to give to each other for Christmas. I really wanted a doll-house. My dad made me a doll house out of

a cardboard box, even the furniture. I was nine years

old.

Anonymous,

dog to keep me company. Puff was a mixed breed and we were best friends when I was eight to ten years old.

Bill Deobald, 89:

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Page 7: Palouse Seniors, Winter 2013

Weekend, November 23 & 24, 2013 | MOSCOWPULLMAN DAILY NEWS | 7Palouse Seniors

Grace Westburg, 91: A kiddie car. It was the only thing I could ride as my own. I didn’t have a horse or tricycle or bike that I could call my own. It was wooden and had a natural finish.

Glen Westburg, 94: A Trotter horse. It was faster at a trot than the other kids’ horses could go at a gallop. I was about 13 or 14 years old.

Nila Hall, 78: A small black doll—her name was Pee Wee. Her eyes opened and closed. My doll was special to me and my brothers because we liked “black babies”; I am white. I was seven years old. It was a Christmas gift from my mom. Originally it was for my older sister but she didn’t want it because she was too old for dolls, so I got it.

Betty Westergreen, 85: A pair of flannel pajamas and a big doll, my first doll, when I was about five or six. The pajamas were welcome to keep me warm.

Bishop Place, PullmanMarilyn Mack, age 87: We were poor farmers in northeast Montana, so we had few toys. We made our own fun. I did play a lot of marbles with my brother. We played baseball with the neighbors. I had a doll but seldom played with it. We rode horseback. I suppose my mother gave me my doll. Another doll I had was one of the Dionne Quintuuplets, Annette. I didn’t play with it. I still have it although it’s in bad condition.

Roger Spence, 97: A toy wagon was my favorite toy. I could haul things in it and ride down short slopes in it. When I was about four I was given the task of filling the

woodbox in our house from a wood pile.

Betty Richmond, 88: I was given a pair of red socks at Christmas. I needed them to walk to school.

Ben Rotolo, 77: A pedal car. I was four or five years old. It was from my favorite aunt, who said Santa would bring it.

Al Halvorson, 92: A tractor for Christmas when I was about four or five years old. I made my own farm in the trees.

Pat Halvorson, 81: A pair of toy skis—I played all over the hillside. A birthday present was a bike.

Marie Eoff, 96: A tricycle for Christ-mas, because then I could go faster. They hid it in the basement but I found it.

Gertrude Dissmore, 93: A little red wagon under the Christmas tree. I had a lot of fun.

Christine Engle, 82: A Shirley Temple doll for Christmas. The curls and the dresses she had made it very special.

Jane Michaelson, 90: Any kind of doll under the Christmas tree, especially a Shirley Temple doll

Julie Bonilla, 55: A Barbie doll for Christmas so I could fix the hair, and a horse because I like them.

Anonymous, 92: My favorite gift was a colt and I took care of it and raised it. I was five years old.

Naoma James, 82: A rocking chair that had a doll in it under the Christmas tree. It wasn’t wrapped, and I knew it was mine.

Lillian Mills, 92: A Shirley Temple doll at Christmas

Frances Winters, 91: A dog—I always wanted one.

Harold Dodgen: A bicycle when I was 10. I remember how much fun I had.

Judy Sobeloff is a freelance writer and teaching artist who lives with her family in Moscow.

From the pages of theMoscow-Pullman Daily News

Moscow’s Circles of Caring continues day care tradition

Circles of Caring, and adult day health center in Moscow, opened its doors in January with the goal of remaining a strong and healthy resource for years to come.

Circles of Caring is a local nonprofit corporation which

replaced Gritman Medical Center as operator of Adult Day Health after the hospital ended its service in December following 11 years subsidizing the program.

For director Barb Mahoney, the quickness of caregivers to react to Gritman’s closure announcement in late-September to prevent a dis-ruption in services was amazing.

“I can’t believe that we were able to pull this together in three months,” she said. “The spirit from all the family members has been wonderful.”

Adult Day Health centers pro-vide social and therapeutic services for those with chronic illnesses and developmental disabilities while allowing caregivers time off

to work, do chores and rest, with the overall goal of letting people age in their homes.

Pullman Senior Center volunteers keep stewing

Community members of all ages are invited to enjoy a longtime Pullman tradition each March - the annual Irish Stew at the Pullman Senior Center.

The Pullman Senior Citizen Association hosts its Irish Stew event every year as a way to raise money for Senior Center pro-grams and operations, said Steve Bell, Pullman’s senior program coordinator.

“It’s another way for us to bring

the community into the Senior Center, to know where it’s at and meet some of our people,” he said.

Bell said this year’s Irish Stew was made possible by the dona-tions of time, money and pies from about 40-50 members of the PSCA. Peggy Flaherty and Angeline Bauer were among those volunteering this year. They chat-ted with other volunteers after they finished setting up placemats, cups and other table necessities.

“It takes a lot of people to do all this - that’s why we volunteer,” Flaherty said.

Region’s Red Hatters converge in Moscow

About 250 women donning purple blouses and red hats descended upon the Moscow

A good year to be a seniorA look back at seniors who made news in 2013

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Page 8: Palouse Seniors, Winter 2013

8 | Weekend, November 23 & 24, 2013 | MOSCOWPULLMAN DAILY NEWS Palouse Seniors

community in May to celebrate the annual Idaho state Red Hat Society Funvention at the Best Western Plus University Inn.

The three-day Funvention, hosted by the Huckleberry Red Hatters of Moscow, featured a sock hop, talent show, prom and pajama breakfast buffet. This year’s theme was School Daze and inspired women to remember their younger days in the class-room.

Participants included members of Red Hat Society chapters across the state of Idaho and several from Montana, Washington, Oregon, California and Alaska.

Eileen Hall, one of the original members of the 8-year-old Mos-cow chapter, said the Funvention is all about letting loose for one

weekend and catching up with fellow red hatters.

“That’s the fun - to see all the ladies. You are just overwhelmed when you see all of this purple and red,” Hall said.

The Red Hat Society is an international organization that encourages women to pursue fun, friendship, freedom, fulfillment of lifelong dreams and fitness. Participants who are older than 50 are called “red hatters,” and those younger than 50 are referred to as “pink hatters.”

“Mrs. H” to retire after 15 years helping Pullman kids

When Lincoln Middle School classroom volunteer Judy Herder-ing attended college she said she

Geoff Crimmins/Daily NewsEileen Hall of Moscow tries on a hat from Red Hat Creations during the Red Hat Funvention at the University Inn-Best Western in Moscow.

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Weekend, November 23 & 24, 2013 | MOSCOWPULLMAN DAILY NEWS | 9Palouse Seniorswould never be a teacher.

“To me it seemed like such hard work, but it’s not. It has its own rewards,” Herdering said.

Herdering, now 80, is finish-ing her 15th and final year as a volunteer in Elizabeth Nolting’s classroom where she has helped countless children with reading and language arts. Herdering volunteers for two hours a day Monday-Friday and works with groups of three or four students.

Lovingly known to her students and colleagues as “Mrs. H,” Herdering said she signed up as a volunteer 15 years ago when she saw an advertisement in her church bulletin asking for class-room volunteers.

A former medical technologist at Pullman Regional Hospital, Herdering said she had no idea how to teach when she was matched with Nolting.

“I said ‘I don’t know how to teach.’ She (Nolting) gave me the teacher’s manual ... and that’s how it all started,” Herdering said.

School bus driver retires after nearly three decades

In June, generations of students from Garfield and Palouse schools

said goodbye to a man who has been helping them get to and from school for nearly three decades.

Students, faculty, family, friends and fellow bus drivers gathered in the library of the Palouse-Garfield Elementary School Library to honor Randy Perkins on his last day with the school. The library was decked out with streamers and balloons for a surprise retire-ment party for Perkins, where people lined up to say thanks and goodbye to the well-loved driver.

Perkins began driving school buses for the Palouse Elemen-tary School in 1984, at the same school he graduated from in 1958. Before driving buses, he drove tractors on the wheat farm where he grew up, just 8 miles west of Palouse.

Perkins said he was driving the harvester the day before school started in 1984 when his wife came out to tell him the school administrator had called to ask if he might be interested in driving buses.

“It was a dry year that year, so there wasn’t much coming in,” Perkins said, laughing. “I looked in the bulk tank, where there was practically nothing, and said

‘Yeah, I think I’d better become a driver.’ “

Over the years, along with hun-dreds of other children he drove, Perkins drove six of his own children on his buses and five of his grandchildren.

Pullman scorekeeper retiring after 50 years

Ralph Bowman has been a fixture on the sidelines and the press box at Pullman High and American Legion baseball games for longer than most people can remember, but after half a century of dedicated service, the most meticulous scorekeeper on the Palouse is hanging up his cleats.

“Before the season started, I decided 50 years was enough,” Bowman said. “I need to take care of my health, take care of myself,

because it’s not as easy traveling around anymore as it used to be.”

Bowman, now 70 years old, spent his childhood in San Bernardino, Calif., but moved to Pullman in 1956 when his father took a job in Washington State’s

agricultural department. The high school did not field a baseball team when he attended.

Although he didn’t get to participate as a player, Bowman found a way to get satiate his need for baseball by volunteering as a coach, umpire and scorekeeper with local Little League clubs starting in 1958. Five years later, in 1963, he started keeping stats for American Legion baseball.

“I didn’t really mean to get this involved,” Bowman said. “I just asked them if they needed someone to help out and I used to do it just for fun. I wanted to help out the kids, help them get their names into the paper. Besides, what else is there to do in this town in the summer?”

The Greyhound alum started keeping statistics and the score-book for football and basketball

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10 | Weekend, November 23 & 24, 2013 | MOSCOWPULLMAN DAILY NEWS Palouse Seniors

at his alma mater in 1965 and eventually picked up baseball in 1968.

Pullman Fortnightly Club still turning pages

A local organization celebrated a historic milestone a century in the making.

The Pullman Fortnightly Club, a women’s literary organization, began in 1893, back when there were no paved roads or sidewalks and only three telephones in the city, said 41-year member Karen Kiessling.

Enoch Bryan, the first presi-dent of then-Washington State College, and his wife, Hattie Bryan, had just arrived in Pullman from Indiana. Hattie, trying to get acquainted in her new town, invited 12 women to their rented home for tea and asked them if they wanted to form a literary study group. They would meet every two weeks - each fortnight - and share their love of classic literature.

The club was born, and in

1913, they were invited by President Bryan to have a 20th an-niversary dinner at the newly built presidents mansion on Campus Avenue. One hundred years later, the club commemorated that event in October by attending a dinner hosted by President Elson Floyd and his wife, Carmento, at their home.

Along with the dinner, there was a guest speaker, and two vintage dresses from 1913 - one of which belonged to a club member - were on display for the guests. The dresses were provided by the Washington State University Ap-parel, Merchandising, Design and Textiles program.

Moscow Market fixtures say goodbye

Since it began 37 years ago, Linda Christenson, also known as the “Jam Lady,” has been a fixture at the Moscow Farmers Market.

“I’m the last one here that’s one of the originals,” Christenson said.

She wasn’t originally known as the Jam Lady - she and her late

husband, Charles, a former math professor at the University of Idaho, started out selling produce and then flowers at the market - but she picked up the moniker after she began selling her home-made jams some years ago.

“We had a lot of raspberries here, so I started making jam out of it,” said Christenson, who now lives in Moscow. “It just kind of took off though, and the next thing you know I was making cherry and peach jam and all the rest.”

Saturday was something of a bittersweet day for Christenson, as the last day of the market for the season, it was her final day at the market selling jams.

While she said she’s going to miss her friends and customers, she won’t disappear from the market completely, she’s just ready to see another side of it.

“Next year, I’m going to see what it’s like to be a customer. I don’t even know what’s at the other end of the market,” she said.

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Weekend, November 23 & 24, 2013 | MOSCOWPULLMAN DAILY NEWS | 11Palouse Seniors

Hearth & Home Senior Care teamed with Au-burn Crest Hospice this week to stage the

Aging in Place seminar. The goal of seminar, in its second year, is to spread the idea that caring for someone with dementia can be rewarding rather than debilitating.

The seminar took place Tuesday at Good Samaritan Village, Mos-cow, and provided information for both professional and at-home caregivers.

“Caring for someone with dementia does not have to be as exhausting and frustrating as it is thought to be,” said Judy Cornish, a geriatric care manager of Hearth and Home. “In England and Ger-many caregivers are using methods that have completely changed the lives of people suffering from the disease. Frustration and fear can be replaced with joy and peaceful-ness, given the right approach.”

Four experts made presenta-tions at the seminar. David Keene of Auburn Crest Hospice outlined

when and how to choose a hospice care provider that is best suited to your family and loved one’s needs. John A. Miller, Elder Law Profes-sor and Dean Emeritus of the University of Idaho Law School, spoke about elder planning tools such as powers of attorney, senior housing options, and gave an overview of the services available through Medicare and Medicaid.

Hospice chaplain Steve Szasz, of Auburn Crest, spoke about end of life decision making.

Cornish discussed strategies to decrease the anxiety experienced by those with dementia and increase harmony between patient and caregiver.

In the United States, about 66 percent of people who use hospice want to receive services at home and choose to die there. However, Keene reports that, in Idaho, only about 15 percent of the people who qualify for hospice care apply for services, even though hospice is covered by Medicare and would not cost them anything.

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Page 12: Palouse Seniors, Winter 2013

12 | Weekend, November 23 & 24, 2013 | MOSCOWPULLMAN DAILY NEWS Palouse Seniors

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