Drones buzzing in the skies above Clark County may have piqued your interest in the hobby. If you’re thinking of buying a drone or giving one as gift during the coming holiday season, you’d better stu
When Gemé Art opened in downtown Vancouver in 1978, the business shared the intersection of Columbia and Sixth streets with Lucky Lager brewery and a Greyhound bus station.
Two childhood friends from Vancouver dreamed of growing up to make horror movies together. Now they’re doing just that — and attracting national attention.
While new assisted living centers are planned for Clark County’s aging population, most older adults say they want to “age in place” — that is, live out their last years in their own home.
Lisa Emmerich and her husband, Frank, are planning to move from their home near Vancouver to a smaller place in Santa Fe, N.M., now that they have both retired. To do that, they must pare down their p
The Vancouver Bridge Club’s longtime member, 95-year-old Bill Mauck, said he joined in 1956. He started playing the challenging card game even before that, when he was 10.
SKAMANIA — Kathleen Perillo founded the Clark College Native Plant Center in 2014 to offer students a small way to counter all the environmental devastation they were learning about in her science cla
If pressed to sum up her 2018 “The Library Book,” journalist Susan Orlean will
say, “It’s about the biggest library fire in American history, which took place
in 1986 in the Los Angeles Public Library
Sally Runyan’s husband, Ben, died 14 years ago doing what he loved best — flying a small plane that he had restored. She never remarried. A pilot herself, the 62-year-old still lives in the same house
Dean and Jan Johnson prioritize their hobbies. So much so that they each have
dedicated space at their Ariel home for their pursuits. Dean, 83, has what he
calls his “man cave,” a garage fille
Joshua Smith of Vancouver recently returned from the World Master IBJJF Jiu-Jitsu Championship 2022 in Las Vegas, where he won a bronze medal in his belt and weight class.
Doug Ness, retired chief financial officer of The Columbian and longtime
Columbia River Economic Development Council board member, died early Thursday at
age 77 after a long illness.