Zions Bank hires several new staffers By: IBR Staff February 12, 2021 Comments Off on Zions Bank hires several new staffers
Cari Miller
Cari Miller has been named manager of Zions Bank’s Lewiston branch, responsible for business development, customer service, community outreach and overall management of the branch and its staff. She has 22 years of leadership experience in banking, retail and the nonprofit sector. She also served four years as a logistics officer in the U.S. Army. She graduated cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in economics from Dickinson College. She has served as a member of the Lewiston City Council since 2016 and volunteers with the Clearwater Economic Development Association, the Idaho Foodbank and the Lewiston School District.
As written by John .
Robert Banks married his high school sweetheart Dorothy Lindgren in 1944 and a year later baby John became their first born.
The young family moved to the White Center district of Seattle in 1952 soon after the birth of Bob, their second son. Robert passed away a few months later from complications of diabetes. Life was hard for Dorothy and she often had to walk 2 miles to and from work, often at odd hours and bad weather.
White Center was a poor neighborhood economically but rich in other ways. The adults partied together on Saturday nights and the kids played and hung out together. In the summer, there was one continuous softball game in the vacant lot that lasted until dark every night.
Devin Rydeen, of Pullman, performs a cover of âFeathered Indiansâ by Tyler Childers under a gazebo in Reaney Park with his dog, Pugsley, 7, in attendance on Tuesday afternoon. âI love Pullman. This is my vibe. Iâm just a country boy,â Rydeen said. More Headlines
Retired doctor vouches for vaccine lmtribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lmtribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Michael David Brooks passed away Tuesday, Dec. 22, 2020, after fighting a courageous battle with cancer for six months at the age of 73.
He was born Aug. 19, 1947, in Orofino, raised in Peola, Wash., on the Albert Dick cattle ranch in Dry Gulch, where there were lots of rank horses to break and cattle to tend to. After high school, he was proud to be a flight mechanic in the United States Air Force. Highly accomplished at nearly everything he did, be it leather projects, making knives, welding (could fix most anything with a âhot glue gun or blue-tip torchâ), finishing/refinishing gunstocks and reloading. He could do it, as well as teach others how, especially capable as a mentor to the young in hunting, fishing and camping. When Mike fixed it or made it and it came time to settle up, his comment: âIâm not in it for the money, your smile is more important than dollars.â