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Peter Callaghan is a local columnist. He’s covered the statehouse and state politics since 1981. Before joining The News Tribune in 1985, the Stadium High grad worked for newspapers in Everett and Lewiston, Idaho, and for The Associated Press in Olympia and Seattle. Email Peter

Joe Turner has covered state government and transportation issues since 1990. Since the Bellarmine grad’s arrival in the newsroom in 1978, he’s covered police, suburban cities, Tacoma City Hall, Federal Way City Hall and the Pierce and King county governments. Email Joe

David Wickert covers Pierce County government. Before coming to The News Tribune in 1998, he covered local government for newspapers in Illinois, Virginia and Tennessee. Email David

Ian Demsky is a general assignment reporter who specializes in database-driven reporting. He's been at the News Tribune since 2007 and has previously worked in Nashville, Tenn. and Portland, Ore. When he's not at work, he enjoys hiking and science fiction. Email Ian
Les Blumenthal has been covering Washington, D.C. for The News Tribune since 1990, focusing on issues and politicians involving the state. Before joining The News Tribune, he spent 13 years working for The Associated Press in Seattle, Illinois and Washington, D.C. Email Les

John Henrikson is a local news editor who oversees political coverage. He's worked as a journalist in the Northwest for 19 years, supervising coverage and reporting on local and state government, the environment and growth. Email John

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Let's talk politics.
Thursday, February 26th, 2009
Posted by Joe Turner @ 03:59:00 pm

I kept trying to get to this, but my colleague with The Associated Press, Brian Slodysko, beat me to it.

A few years ago, the oral history program got split up. The Legislature now commissions oral histories of former legislators (Former Sen. Lorraine Wojahn, Tacoma Democrat, still has a bio in the works, I think.) And the Secretary of State's office does everybody else.

Sam Reed's office chose to write bios on Nirvana bassist Krist Novoselic, longtime Bremerton Sun reporter Adele Ferguson and first black justice on the Washington Supreme Court, Charles Z. Smith.

Reed's office also is working a bio for former Gov. Booth Gardner and former Supreme Court Justice Carolyn Dimmick, the first woman on the bench of the state's highest court.

By BRIAN SLODYSKO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

OLYMPIA, Wash. -- What do a grunge bassist, a former newspaper columnist and the state's first black Supreme Court justice have in common?

They're the first to have their lives profiled in a new statewide oral history program unveiled Tuesday by Secretary of State Sam Reed.

Reed was joined by Nirvana bass player Krist Novoselic, former Bremerton Sun columnist and reporter Adele Ferguson and former Justice Charles Z. Smith.

[More:]

"Looking back, we're saddened because so many important stories were never recorded," said John Hughes, the program's chief historian and former publisher of The Daily World in Aberdeen.

The Legacy Project is an oral history and biography compiling program that documents the experiences of Washington citizens who've had an impact on the state - from average civic-minded citizens to rock stars, governors and state elected officials. Reed said due to budget constraints the histories will primarily be offered online.

The oral histories are collected and the biographies written by Hughes. The articles are posted to the secretary of state's Web site along with photo galleries of the subjects.

Reed said the inaugural members of the program are unique in their own ways:

-Novoselic, an Aberdeen High School graduate, said even though he's traveled the world with Nirvana, he still keeps coming back.

"You make it big in the music industry and you think you can move to Beverly Hills, or Palm Springs, or somewhere, but I love Washington state," he said.

Novoselic now lives in Deep River, a small southern Washington community along the Columbia River. He once ran for lieutenant governor, is actively involved in his local Grange, and stays politically active by advocating for increased grass-roots political involvement - "making democracy more democratic," he said.

-Ferguson was the first female member to join the up-until-then all boy's club of the Capitol press corps in 1961. As Ferguson put it, she was the first female political reporter to not "just cover the governor's ball."

Breaking in wasn't easy, she said, but by the end of her tenure she was feared by many state politicians. On Tuesday, Ferguson briefly showed some fangs when Hughes, the chief historian, said he could - but wouldn't - reveal her age:

"I would have you killed," Ferguson said.

-Smith, in addition to being the first black member of the state Supreme Court, was also a University of Washington Law School professor, and served on the bench in King County courts.

The secretary of state's office plans on releasing more historical profiles soon, including those of former Gov. Booth Gardner and the state's first woman Supreme Court justice, Carolyn Dimmick.