PORT ANGELES — Is Nippon the last of a dying breed of paper makers in the United States? To put it simply, yes, according to mill Manager Harold Norlund. Nippon Paper Industries USA’s Port Angeles ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Once a mainstay of homes, businesses, and phone booths everywhere, the phone book has (mostly) gone the way of the dodo. Spokeo ...
New Dex Media Inc. phone books distributed for Qwest are arriving in Clallam County this week, and the Nippon Paper Industries USA Co. Ltd. mill in Port Angeles has agreed to recycle the old ones.
Charlotte Shepherd is Midwest Manager for Environmental Issues for AT&T Advertising Solutions. "Our booth at the Green Street Fair is an opportunity for us to educate the public about how to recycle ...
Alas, the poor phone book. Once, it was the cornerstone of American connection, an indispensable resource people relied on to find pizza shops, plumbers, and the number of the cute girl in math class.
Pasco County's recycling coordinator says she cringes every time she advises residents what to do with their used phone books. "Unless people want to store them for a while, there aren't many ...
If you live in eastern Volusia County, you may have recently received a phone book. For some of us, it may have been a pleasant (or unwanted) surprise and a nostalgic reminder of those pre-digital ...
Once a mainstay of homes, businesses, and phone booths everywhere, the phone book has (mostly) gone the way of the dodo. Spokeo examined historical documents, news reports, and other sources to ...