I found the cartoon you selected and published on the opinion page of the Whidbey New-Times Saturday, Feb. 28, in extremely poor taste.
Having viewed the front page of your Feb. 21, 2015, edition, “Kraken Released” puts me at a loss to understand the standards used to classify something as “art.”
Several months ago, as we were coming out of a supermarket in Oak Harbor, I tripped and fell in the parking lot, hitting my head on a parked car.
Pat Palla said it well in her Feb. 18 letter to the editor titled, “Taxpayer outraged by hospital’s secrecy.”
The Jan. 14 edition incorrectly paraphrased what Commissioner Helen Price-Johnson said in the ferries article.
Holy crow! The list of words describing lawyer theft from clients here in our own little island starts with “disgust.”
Editor,
As the manager of the Whidbey Family Birth Place, I would like to respond to the letter to the editor in last week’s newspaper about the 2013 cesarean section rate at Whidbey General Hospital.
I begin by stating this patriotic missive is solely in the concern of public safety –- with great reluctance and reflection with a sense of responsibility to those local voices working to coexist with Outlying Field Coupeville.
I really appreciated the editorial, “New hospital CEO must back promises with action.”
As the manager of the Whidbey Family Birth Place, I would like to respond to the letter to the editor in this past Wednesday’s newspaper about the 2013 cesarean section rate at Whidbey General Hospital.
It’s now been 15 months since the Navy received an Adverse Effect determination by the state Historic Preservation Officer on the cement bock wall installed at Outlying Field Coupeville.
Editor,
I am greatly concerned about the cesarean rates at Whidbey General Hospital.
A report from the state Department of Health for 2013 shows that, out of 54 hospitals in Washington, Whidbey General has a 41.8 percent cesarean rate for first time mothers.
I am greatly concerned about the cesarean rates at Whidbey General Hospital.