Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
ISSN. 2834-1872. OCLC number. 17308766. Website. dailyrecordnews .com. The Daily Record is an American daily newspaper published in Ellensburg, Washington. The Record is published four days a week with an afternoon edition each Tuesday through Thursday and a weekend edition is delivered on Saturday mornings. [1] It has a circulation of 2,619.
The state legislature selected Ellensburg as the location for the State Normal School (now Central Washington University). There were several early newspapers in Ellensburg. The Daily Record, which started in 1909, is the publication which serves the city and county today.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ellensburg_Daily_Record&oldid=371150118"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ellensburg_Daily_Record
Teanaway, Washington. Coordinates: 47°10′29″N 120°51′27″W. Teanaway is a small settlement in Kittitas County, Washington. [1] It is located at the junction of State Route 10 and State Route 970. It is located east of Cle Elum and west of Ellensburg. The surrounding area is known as the Teanaway River Valley .
List of newspapers in Washington (state) This is a list of newspapers in the U.S. state of Washington. The list is divided between papers currently being produced and those produced in the past and subsequently terminated.
Kittitas camped at Taneum Creek near Ellensburg, 1900–1909. Kittitas villages were located along the Upper Yakima and adjacent streams and rivers. Most had Sahaptin names, but two (N'tsamtsa'mtcin and Tc'kla'xan) are Interior Salish toponyms. A'tca – village located on the east bank of the Yakima river at Thrall
Mel's Hole. Mel's Hole is, according to an urban legend, a "bottomless pit" near Ellensburg, Washington. Claims about it were first made on the radio show Coast to Coast AM in 1997 by a guest calling himself Mel Waters. Later investigation revealed no such person was listed as residing in that area, and no credible evidence has been given that ...
Muir was born in 1906 in San Francisco, California. Her father was Joseph Muir, a throat surgeon and diplomat, and her mother Ethel Fitch Muir was an operatic soprano. [1] [2] Her first name is from her father's earlier wife, Edla Coleman McPherson, who died before her parents married. [3] [4] Edla Muir's parents divorced in 1916.