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Life

Disneyland is scrapping its annual pass program

By Todd Martens

Life

Dear Abby: My son may be hasty in plan to sign up for fatherhood

Advice column

Amanda Ransom will perform this Friday night via Zoom for the Bishop Center for the Performing Arts’ winter season.

Life

Bishop Center Zooms in on a new season

By David Haerle

Life

Springsteen, Foo Fighters, John Legend to also perform for ‘Celebratin America,’ inauguration-night TV special

By Gina Salamone

Life

Dear Abby: As a way to manage my stress and anxiety when COVID hit, I started to exercise.

Advice column

Life

Advice column

Dear Abby: My brother, who lives 1,000 miles away, is thinking of moving back to our hometown to…

Life

Dear Abby: Communication with college friend is a one-way street

Dear Abby: A friend of mine from college (I graduated four years ago) is incredibly kind but terrible…

Life

Help reduce urban flooding by unplugging blocked storm drains

“Nailing it Down” By Dave Murnen and Pat Beaty

Thor

Life

Adoptable Pet of the Week — Thor

If you’re looking for some chocolate love, Thor just might be your cup of dark cocoa. He’s a…

Life

Couple reaches a stalemate in marriage without intimacy

Dear Abby: My husband and I are both enlisted Army

Life

Ben Jerry’s launches new frozen desserts for dogs

By Susan Selasky

Life

Dear Abby: Son with new girlfriend grows more distant from his mother

Dear Abby: I’m a mom of three young adults, a daughter and two sons. The oldest recently married.…

Built in 1911, the Fairmont Hotel at 215 East Heron Street was better known to locals as the Smoke Shop building by the time this photo was taken in the 1970s. On the corner of H Street stood Aberdeen’s first skyscraper, the five-story Finch Building. The small building squeezed in between with the ornate cornice was a theater for years but by the ’70s was a taxi stand. The Fairmont building burned in a spectacular fire in August 1996 while being renovated into apartments and retail spaces. (Roy Vataja Collection)

Life

A Harbor New Year — January 1911

Nothing New — By Roy Vataja