Post on 06-Mar-2016
description
transcript
Keeping the
blues alive
North Bend’s Paul Green shares love of music with Valley at
new Blues WalkBy Seth truScott
Editor
A man with a tenor sax is waiting to jam. A couple just pulled up chairs by the
stage, and there’s two guys in the back p l a y i n g a board game.
It’s a real mel-low atmo-s p h e r e , with Paul G r e e n c r o o n -ing “Lost
Mind”, just about to let his harmonica wail through The Black Dog cafe.
Green, North Bend’s resident blues legend, takes the stage every week here. Music, the blues in particu-lar, has been his life, ever since he picked up a har-monica at age 20.
Blues music is still vibrant, and Green does his part to keep it that way. He’ll be one of a dozen performers to rouse North Bend’s down-town Saturday, April 20, at the inaugural North Bend Blues Walk.
Valley RecoRdSNOQUALMIE
IndexOpiniOn 4 Letters 5 MOvie tiMes 7 HeaLtH & Fitness 9-12 CaLendar 14CLassiFieds 15-18
Vol. 99, No. 47
SPOR
TS Game on! Mount Si girls tennis team racking up a real win streak Page 13
Wednesday, april 17, 2013 n daily updates at WWW.valleyrecord.com n75 cents
YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER, SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF SNOQUALMIE nNORTH BEND n FALL CITY nPRESTON nCARNATION
Follow us on Facebook and Twitter
SCHO
OLS Find out what’s
cooking in the student-run Wildcat Café Page 19
Paul GreeN
See BLUeS, 3
Carol Ladwig/Staff Photo
Hiking the airlifted footbridge over the Middle Fork of the Snoqualmie River, Mark Boyar, one of the volunteers who helped build it, says the crossing was a key development in opening this wilderness to hikers, bikers and kayakers. Below, the fork makes for pleasant camping, but with possible designation as a wild and scenic river, it may come under increased protection in the future.
‘It’s going to be busy’: Big changes come to North Bend’s Middle Fork wilderness
By carol ladwigStaff Reporter
They call it the Gateway Trail. It’s a shortish trek, partly through old-growth forest, partly along the trout-rich Middle Fork of the Snoqualmie River, with a spectacular arching footbridge at its start. Hundreds of thousands of visitors come to the Middle Fork area each year for hiking, camping, kayaking, and cycling, and many will discover this spot. But, at 12 miles up a winding gravel road, is the Middle Fork Trail trailhead really a gateway?
In more ways than one, says Mark Boyar, now a Mountains to Sound Greenway board member, and one of the volunteers in the loosely organized Middle Fork Coalition who helped the U.S. Forest Service build that footbridge 12 years ago.
“This is the project that got a bunch of us started work-ing out here,” explained Boyar, a recreation enthusiast who’s basically adopted the Snoqualmie corridor over the past 20 years. “It got a bunch of us excited, and we went from there.”
The project was a one-of-a-kind bridge, guarded day and night by volunteers during construction, and installed with the help of a two-rotor helicopter that lowered it, whole, into place. Interesting origins, yes, but the most important thing about the bridge, Boyar said, was the access it created.
Gateway to the wild
See MIddLe FORK, 3
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www.lesschwab.com
610 E. North Bend Way • North Bend • 425.831.6300
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www.valleyrecord.com2 • April 17, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
* All prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to change* Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of Tobacco products. If you are interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to learn more about the resources available to you.
Visit our website to discover this month’s Reservation Liquor Special
Featuring the hard to find spirits mentioned in the Seattle Times: BroVo Spirits Herbal Liqueurs & Skip Rock Vodka as well as Soft Tail Vodka, Peabody Jones Vodka, Woodinville Whiskey Bourbon, Dry Fly Gin
and many more...
Drive Thru Convenience With Reservation Pricing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Come Visit Us Next To The Snoqualmie Casino
DIRECTIONS:I-90 Westbound take Exit 31 (North Bend and follow the signs to the reservation.
I-90 Eastbound take Exit 27 turn left (North). Follow North Bend Way around curve.
{ {
snotobaccoandliquor.com
37500 SE North Bend Way. Snoqualmie, WA 98065. (425) 888-3071
OPEN 7am–10pm, 7 DAYS A WEEK
LIqUORSPECIALSVisit our website for great deals on top brands.
American Spirit $7.22 Marlboro $6.53 Newport $6.56Camel $6.13Native $4.69
Copenhagen Promo $3.55 Skoal Extra $3.05 Grizzly Natural $3.05Kodiak $5.59Camel SNUS $4.39
MAjOR BRANDS SMOKELESS TOBACCO
WARNING: Cigarettes are addictive. WARNING: This product can cause gum disease and tooth loss.
COMPLETE Pack $4.45
PREMIS Pack $4.35
TRADITIONS Pack $4.99
ISLAND BLENDZPack $1.89
Skookum Creek a LoCaLLy Crafted tribaL brand
Ciroc Vodka $24.99 (reg Price $29.69)
Moet $37.99
(regular $48.99)
Canoe Ridge Cabernet
$19.99
Kestrel Lady In Red $12.99
Tamarack Cellars $16.99
Romeo y julieta Cedro deluxe #1 $5.89
Crown Royal$21.99 (reg $26.49)
Malibu Rum 1.75 L $19.99 (reg Price $23.89)
Bacardi Rum $16.99 (reg Price $20.09)
Myers’s Rum Dark$13.99 (reg price $16.69)
YOUR FAVORITE BRANDS – UNBEATABLE PRICES
FEATURED SPECIALS
VALENTINE’S DAY SPECIALS{ All Wine is an additional 10% off }
* All prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to change* Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of Tobacco products. If you are interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to learn more about the resources available to you.
Visit our website to discover this month’s Reservation Liquor Special
Featuring the hard to find spirits mentioned in the Seattle Times: BroVo Spirits Herbal Liqueurs & Skip Rock Vodka as well as Soft Tail Vodka, Peabody Jones Vodka, Woodinville Whiskey Bourbon, Dry Fly Gin
and many more...
Drive Thru Convenience With Reservation Pricing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Come Visit Us Next To The Snoqualmie Casino
DIRECTIONS:I-90 Westbound take Exit 31 (North Bend and follow the signs to the reservation.
I-90 Eastbound take Exit 27 turn left (North). Follow North Bend Way around curve.
{ {
snotobaccoandliquor.com
37500 SE North Bend Way. Snoqualmie, WA 98065. (425) 888-3071
OPEN 7am–10pm, 7 DAYS A WEEK
LIqUORSPECIALSVisit our website for great deals on top brands.
American Spirit $7.22 Marlboro $6.53 Newport $6.56Camel $6.13Native $4.69
Copenhagen Promo $3.55 Skoal Extra $3.05 Grizzly Natural $3.05Kodiak $5.59Camel SNUS $4.39
MAjOR BRANDS SMOKELESS TOBACCO
WARNING: Cigarettes are addictive. WARNING: This product can cause gum disease and tooth loss.
COMPLETE Pack $4.45
PREMIS Pack $4.35
TRADITIONS Pack $4.99
ISLAND BLENDZPack $1.89
Skookum Creek a LoCaLLy Crafted tribaL brand
Ciroc Vodka $24.99 (reg Price $29.69)
Moet $37.99
(regular $48.99)
Canoe Ridge Cabernet
$19.99
Kestrel Lady In Red $12.99
Tamarack Cellars $16.99
Romeo y julieta Cedro deluxe #1 $5.89
Crown Royal$21.99 (reg $26.49)
Malibu Rum 1.75 L $19.99 (reg Price $23.89)
Bacardi Rum $16.99 (reg Price $20.09)
Myers’s Rum Dark$13.99 (reg price $16.69)
YOUR FAVORITE BRANDS – UNBEATABLE PRICES
FEATURED SPECIALS
VALENTINE’S DAY SPECIALS{ All Wine is an additional 10% off }
DIRECTIONS:I-90 Westbound take Exit 31 (North Bend and follow the signs to the reservation.
I-90 Eastbound take Exit 27 turn left (North). Follow North Bend Way around curve.
{ {
snotobaccoandliquor.com*All prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to change*Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of TAll prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to changeTobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of TAll prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to change
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obacco products. If you are All prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to changeTobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of TAll prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to change
interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of T
interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of Tobacco products. If you are
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interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of Tobacco products. If you are Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of T
learn more about the resources available to you.interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to learn more about the resources available to you.interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to
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*All prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to change*Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of Tobacco products. If you are interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to learn more about the resources available to you.
Visit our website to discover this month’s Reservation Liquor Special
Featuring the hard to find spirits mentioned in the Seattle Times: BroVo Spirits Herbal Liqueurs & Skip Rock Vodka as well as Soft Tail Vodka, Peabody Jones Vodka, Woodinville Whiskey Bourbon, Dry Fly Gin
and many more...
Drive Thru Convenience With Reservation Pricing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Come Visit Us Next To The Snoqualmie Casino
DIRECTIONS:I-90 Westbound take Exit 31 (North Bend and follow the signs to the reservation.
I-90 Eastbound take Exit 27 turn left (North). Follow North Bend Way around curve.
{ {
snotobaccoandliquor.com
37500 SE North Bend Way. Snoqualmie, WA 98065. (425) 888-3071
OPEN 7am–10pm, 7 DAYS A WEEK
LIqUORSPECIALSVisit our website for great deals on top brands.
American Spirit $7.22 Marlboro $6.53 Newport $6.56Camel $6.13Native $4.69
Copenhagen Promo $3.55 Skoal Extra $3.05 Grizzly Natural $3.05Kodiak $5.59Camel SNUS $4.39
MAjOR BRANDS SMOKELESS TOBACCO
WARNING: Cigarettes are addictive. WARNING: This product can cause gum disease and tooth loss.
COMPLETE Pack $4.45
PREMIS Pack $4.35
TRADITIONS Pack $4.99
ISLAND BLENDZPack $1.89
Skookum Creek a LoCaLLy Crafted tribaL brand
Ciroc Vodka $24.99 (reg Price $29.69)
Moet $37.99
(regular $48.99)
Canoe Ridge Cabernet
$19.99
Kestrel Lady In Red $12.99
Tamarack Cellars $16.99
Romeo y julieta Cedro deluxe #1 $5.89
Crown Royal$21.99 (reg $26.49)
Malibu Rum 1.75 L $19.99 (reg Price $23.89)
Bacardi Rum $16.99 (reg Price $20.09)
Myers’s Rum Dark$13.99 (reg price $16.69)
YOUR FAVORITE BRANDS – UNBEATABLE PRICES
FEATURED SPECIALS
* All prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to change* Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of Tobacco products. If you are interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to learn more about the resources available to you.
Visit our website to discover this month’s Reservation Liquor Special
Featuring the hard to find spirits mentioned in the Seattle Times: BroVo Spirits Herbal Liqueurs & Skip Rock Vodka as well as Soft Tail Vodka, Peabody Jones Vodka, Woodinville Whiskey Bourbon, Dry Fly Gin
and many more...
Drive Thru Convenience With Reservation Pricing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Come Visit Us Next To The Snoqualmie Casino
DIRECTIONS:I-90 Westbound take Exit 31 (North Bend and follow the signs to the reservation.
I-90 Eastbound take Exit 27 turn left (North). Follow North Bend Way around curve.
{ {
snotobaccoandliquor.com
37500 SE North Bend Way. Snoqualmie, WA 98065. (425) 888-3071
OPEN 7am–10pm, 7 DAYS A WEEK
LIqUORSPECIALSVisit our website for great deals on top brands.
American Spirit $7.22 Marlboro $6.53 Newport $6.56Camel $6.13Native $4.69
Copenhagen Promo $3.55 Skoal Extra $3.05 Grizzly Natural $3.05Kodiak $5.59Camel SNUS $4.39
MAjOR BRANDS SMOKELESS TOBACCO
WARNING: Cigarettes are addictive. WARNING: This product can cause gum disease and tooth loss.
COMPLETE Pack $4.45
PREMIS Pack $4.35
TRADITIONS Pack $4.99
ISLAND BLENDZPack $1.89
Skookum Creek a LoCaLLy Crafted tribaL brand
j
YOUR FAVORITE BRANDS – UNBEATABLE PRICES
FEATURED SPECIALS
Bushmills 1.75 L$33.99 (reg Price $42.79)
Crown Royal Whiskey$21.99 (reg Price $26.49)
GuinessDRAFT4 pack$6.99
Brickhouse Mighty Mighty
(Maduro or Natural) $5.19
Novelty Hill Royal Slope Red
$14.99
Canoe RidgeExpedition Chardonnay
$14.99
Hedges Family EstatesCMS Red$10.99
SagelandsRiesling$5.99
Jameson $21.99 (reg Price $27.09)
Baileys All Flavors $18.99 (reg Price $22.29)
* All prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to change* Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of Tobacco products. If you are interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to learn more about the resources available to you.
Visit our website to discover this month’s Reservation Liquor Special
Featuring the hard to find spirits mentioned in the Seattle Times: BroVo Spirits Herbal Liqueurs & Skip Rock Vodka as well as Soft Tail Vodka, Peabody Jones Vodka, Woodinville Whiskey Bourbon, Dry Fly Gin
and many more...
Drive Thru Convenience With Reservation Pricing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Come Visit Us Next To The Snoqualmie Casino
DIRECTIONS:I-90 Westbound take Exit 31 (North Bend and follow the signs to the reservation.
I-90 Eastbound take Exit 27 turn left (North). Follow North Bend Way around curve.
{ {
snotobaccoandliquor.com
37500 SE North Bend Way. Snoqualmie, WA 98065. (425) 888-3071
OPEN 7am–10pm, 7 DAYS A WEEK
LIqUORSPECIALSVisit our website for great deals on top brands.
American Spirit $7.22 Marlboro $6.53 Newport $6.56Camel $6.13Native $4.69
Copenhagen Promo $3.55 Skoal Extra $3.05 Grizzly Natural $3.05Kodiak $5.59Camel SNUS $4.39
MAjOR BRANDS SMOKELESS TOBACCO
WARNING: Cigarettes are addictive. WARNING: This product can cause gum disease and tooth loss.
COMPLETE Pack $4.45
PREMIS Pack $4.35
TRADITIONS Pack $4.99
ISLAND BLENDZPack $1.89
Skookum Creek a LoCaLLy Crafted tribaL brand
Ciroc Vodka $24.99 (reg Price $29.69)
Moet $37.99
(regular $48.99)
Canoe Ridge Cabernet
$19.99
Kestrel Lady In Red $12.99
Tamarack Cellars $16.99
Romeo y julieta Cedro deluxe #1 $5.89
Crown Royal$21.99 (reg $26.49)
Malibu Rum 1.75 L $19.99 (reg Price $23.89)
Bacardi Rum $16.99 (reg Price $20.09)
Myers’s Rum Dark$13.99 (reg price $16.69)
YOUR FAVORITE BRANDS – UNBEATABLE PRICES
FEATURED SPECIALS
“LIKE” us on Facebook
* All prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to change* Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of Tobacco products. If you are interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to learn more about the resources available to you.
Visit our website to discover this month’s Reservation Liquor Special
Featuring the hard to find spirits mentioned in the Seattle Times: BroVo Spirits Herbal Liqueurs & Skip Rock Vodka as well as Soft Tail Vodka, Peabody Jones Vodka, Woodinville Whiskey Bourbon, Dry Fly Gin
and many more...
Drive Thru Convenience With Reservation Pricing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Come Visit Us Next To The Snoqualmie Casino
DIRECTIONS:I-90 Westbound take Exit 31 (North Bend and follow the signs to the reservation.
I-90 Eastbound take Exit 27 turn left (North). Follow North Bend Way around curve.
{ {
snotobaccoandliquor.com
37500 SE North Bend Way. Snoqualmie, WA 98065. (425) 888-3071
OPEN 7am–10pm, 7 DAYS A WEEK
LIqUORSPECIALSVisit our website for great deals on top brands.
American Spirit $7.22 Marlboro $6.53 Newport $6.56Camel $6.13Native $4.69
Copenhagen Promo $3.55 Skoal Extra $3.05 Grizzly Natural $3.05Kodiak $5.59Camel SNUS $4.39
MAjOR BRANDS SMOKELESS TOBACCO
WARNING: Cigarettes are addictive. WARNING: This product can cause gum disease and tooth loss.
COMPLETE Pack $4.45
PREMIS Pack $4.35
TRADITIONS Pack $4.99
ISLAND BLENDZPack $1.89
Skookum Creek a LoCaLLy Crafted tribaL brand
Ciroc Vodka $24.99 (reg Price $29.69)
Moet $37.99
(regular $48.99)
Canoe Ridge Cabernet
$19.99
Kestrel Lady In Red $12.99
Tamarack Cellars $16.99
Romeo y julieta Cedro deluxe #1 $5.89
Crown Royal$21.99 (reg $26.49)
Malibu Rum 1.75 L $19.99 (reg Price $23.89)
Bacardi Rum $16.99 (reg Price $20.09)
Myers’s Rum Dark$13.99 (reg price $16.69)
YOUR FAVORITE BRANDS – UNBEATABLE PRICES
FEATURED SPECIALS
Pack $1.95
* All prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to change* Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of Tobacco products. If you are interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to learn more about the resources available to you.
Visit our website to discover this month’s Reservation Liquor Special
Featuring the hard to find spirits mentioned in the Seattle Times: BroVo Spirits Herbal Liqueurs & Skip Rock Vodka as well as Soft Tail Vodka, Peabody Jones Vodka, Woodinville Whiskey Bourbon, Dry Fly Gin
and many more...
Drive Thru Convenience With Reservation Pricing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Come Visit Us Next To The Snoqualmie Casino
DIRECTIONS:I-90 Westbound take Exit 31 (North Bend and follow the signs to the reservation.
I-90 Eastbound take Exit 27 turn left (North). Follow North Bend Way around curve.
{ {
snotobaccoandliquor.com
37500 SE North Bend Way. Snoqualmie, WA 98065. (425) 888-3071
OPEN 7am–10pm, 7 DAYS A WEEK
LIqUORSPECIALSVisit our website for great deals on top brands.
American Spirit $7.22 Marlboro $6.53 Newport $6.56Camel $6.13Native $4.69
Copenhagen Promo $3.55 Skoal Extra $3.05 Grizzly Natural $3.05Kodiak $5.59Camel SNUS $4.39
MAjOR BRANDS SMOKELESS TOBACCO
WARNING: Cigarettes are addictive. WARNING: This product can cause gum disease and tooth loss.
COMPLETE Pack $4.45
PREMIS Pack $4.35
TRADITIONS Pack $4.99
ISLAND BLENDZPack $1.89
Skookum Creek a LoCaLLy Crafted tribaL brand
Ciroc Vodka $24.99 (reg Price $29.69)
Moet $37.99
(regular $48.99)
Canoe Ridge Cabernet
$19.99
Kestrel Lady In Red $12.99
Tamarack Cellars $16.99
Romeo y julieta Cedro deluxe #1 $5.89
Crown Royal$21.99 (reg $26.49)
Malibu Rum 1.75 L $19.99 (reg Price $23.89)
Bacardi Rum $16.99 (reg Price $20.09)
Myers’s Rum Dark$13.99 (reg price $16.69)
YOUR FAVORITE BRANDS – UNBEATABLE PRICES
FEATURED SPECIALS
VALENTINE’S DAY SPECIALS{ All Wine is an additional 10% off }
7647
57
MANAGER’S SPECIALS
El Zacatecano Reposadostarting at $26.99
Fireball Whiskey 1.75 L $27.99
Crown Royal $21.99
Captain Morgan$13.99
WINE SPECIALS
Jack Daniels1.75 L$32.99
This Week’s Victory CigarLa Aroma de Cuba - Rothschild
$4.59La Aroma de Cuba - Rothschild
$4.59 $4.59
* All prices do not include sales tax. *All prices subject to change* Tobacco & Liquor company promotes the responsible use of Tobacco products. If you are interested in quitting smoking please visit www.smokefree.gov or call 1-800-QUIT NOW to learn more about the resources available to you.
Visit our website to discover this month’s Reservation Liquor Special
Featuring the hard to find spirits mentioned in the Seattle Times: BroVo Spirits Herbal Liqueurs & Skip Rock Vodka as well as Soft Tail Vodka, Peabody Jones Vodka, Woodinville Whiskey Bourbon, Dry Fly Gin
and many more...
Drive Thru Convenience With Reservation Pricing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Come Visit Us Next To The Snoqualmie Casino
DIRECTIONS:I-90 Westbound take Exit 31 (North Bend and follow the signs to the reservation.
I-90 Eastbound take Exit 27 turn left (North). Follow North Bend Way around curve.
{ {
snotobaccoandliquor.com
37500 SE North Bend Way. Snoqualmie, WA 98065. (425) 888-3071
OPEN 7am–10pm, 7 DAYS A WEEK
LIqUORSPECIALSVisit our website for great deals on top brands.
American Spirit $7.22 Marlboro $6.53 Newport $6.56Camel $6.13Native $4.69
Copenhagen Promo $3.55 Skoal Extra $3.05 Grizzly Natural $3.05Kodiak $5.59Camel SNUS $4.39
MAjOR BRANDS SMOKELESS TOBACCO
WARNING: Cigarettes are addictive. WARNING: This product can cause gum disease and tooth loss.
COMPLETE Pack $4.45
PREMIS Pack $4.35
TRADITIONS Pack $4.99
ISLAND BLENDZPack $1.89
Skookum Creek a LoCaLLy Crafted tribaL brand
j
YOUR FAVORITE BRANDS – UNBEATABLE PRICES
FEATURED SPECIALS
BEER SPECIALSCOORS LIGHTBUSCHBUDWEISER18 packs starting at $13.5918 packs starting
$4.39
Skoal Special 2 Can Promo $1.50 OFF
$4.59
76
47
80
Snoqualmie superintendent looks at new Richland jobSnoqualmie Valley Schools superintendent Joel Aune is one of three finalists for the posi-
tion of Superintendent of the Richland School District. The Richland district announced in a press release Wednesday, April 10, that Aune,
Dr. Rick Schulte, superintendent of the Oak Harbor School District, and Dr. John Steach, superintendent of the Canby School District in Oregon, were finalists in the superintendent search, and would be interviewed by school board members and the public April 16 to 18.
Aune has been with the Snoqualmie Valley School District since 2005, and recently served as president of the Washington Association of School Administrators (WASA) for the 2011-12 school year. Earlier this year, he was one of six finalists for the superintendent position of the Renton School District, but did not make the final round.
Aune declined to comment on his application to the Renton School District, saying that in fairness to both school districts, it was too soon to comment. He could not be reached for comment on the Richland application, as he was out of the district last week.
Following the interviews next week, school board members plan to visit each of the finalists’ current school districts. A decision on the new superintendent is expected by the end of April.
Richland began its search for a new superintendent in January, when the district fired former Superintendent Jim Busey, according to a report in the Tri-City Herald. Busey is reportedly suing the district and school board members for $1 million in damages for dis-crimination and improper firing.
Sammamish man falls to his death at the FallsA Sammamish man, reported missing by his family, fell to his death early Saturday, April
6, at Snoqualmie Falls. According to Snoqualmie Police Capt. Nick Almquist, police pinged the 40-year-old man’s phone in the early morning hours of Saturday, and found that he was in the vicinity of the Falls. His body was found below the overlook at first light.
It’s the first such death at the Falls since mid-December of 2012, when a man fell to his death. Police ask that those who seek emotional support or are considering suicide can get help from the Crisis Clinic of Seattle-King County, by calling their 24-hour help line at (206) 461-3222.
Cascade Team Real Estate kicks off Project Crayon DriveFor young patients at Seattle’s Children’s Hospital, sometimes the simple things like
a coloring book and a few crayons can be as soothing as the trained staff and smiling doctors. Yet, something as simple as crayons often goes overlooked. That’s where The Cascade Team in partnership with Children’s Hospital Guild Association and several area merchants comes in. On Saturday, April 20, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Project Crayon Drive will be at Snoqualmie Ridge IGA, 7730 Center Blvd. SE, Snoqualmie. From 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., agents will be at North Bend QFC, 460 E. North Bend Way. To learn more, visit www.TheCascadeTeam.com.
www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • April 17, 2013 • 3
“In the 80s and 90s, things had deteriorated so much, there was almost no formal trail sys-tem from this part of the Valley down,” he said, approaching the trailhead as he gave a tour of Greenway projects. “So we wanted to get more people up here for recreation purposes and the barrier was not having a bridge.”
Back then, Boyar explained, the Middle Fork, with more than 10,000 acres of convenient access and abandoned log-ging roads, was known to be the haunt of target shooters, garbage-dumpers and drug-users. It was U.S. Forest Service land, with state- and county-owned pieces, too, and most was reserved for outdoor rec-reation, but people didn’t feel safe here, so they didn’t come out here.
Over the last 10 to 20 years, though, everything changed. The U.S. Forest Service closed off many of the old logging roads, and banned shoot-ing in the area. In 1995, the Mountains to Sound Greenway began a planning effort to address some of the major restoration needs, from build-ing trails on decommissioned roads, to repairing river banks damaged by decades of users blazing their own trails down to the water, and then block-ing vehicle access to some of the most sensitive areas. The U.S. Forest Service created a campground near Taylor River. Various agencies hired Friends of the Trail to clean up illegal dumpsites, and provide ongo-ing maintenance. Slowly, and then more quickly, recreational tourists started coming back to the Middle Fork
For Boyar, it was a mixed blessing—more tourists meant more interest in the area, more revenue for surrounding com-munities, but more chances for misuse of the resources such as “bootleg” trails and campsites. It was also a warmup for what he foresees in the next few years for the Middle Fork.
Right now, the Western Federal Lands Highway Division is planning a major road reconstruction and pav-ing project for 10 miles of the
Middle Fork Road, and the U.S. Congress is considering a bill that would add 22,000 acres to the Alpine Lakes Wilderness that covers part of the Middle Fork area. The bill, S. 112: Alpine Lakes Wilderness Additions and Pratt and Middle Fork Snoqualmie Rivers Protection Act, would also designate the Middle Fork as a wild and sce-nic river, qualifying it for addi-tional protection and federal management.
Solving problemsLocally, the North Bend
City Council just authorized the public works department to apply for a $6 million fed-eral grant, with a $614,000 match (13.5 percent) from the city’s Transportation Benefit District funds, to prepare the city’s own gateway, 468th Avenue Southeast, for the addi-tional traffic and construction vehicles coming soon to the Middle Fork Road. The proj-ect will include widening the roads, adding sidewalks, and constructing an oversized truck turnaround, casually referred to as a roundabout, at the intersection of 468th Southeast and Southeast 140th Street/Southeast Middle Fork Road.
“It solves an awful lot of problems out in that area,” said North Bend Public Works Director Frank Page of the project, which he hopes could start as soon as next spring.
Improving the overall access to the area, while simultane-ously expanding the lands that will be accessible to hikers, et. al., won’t mean a rush of new users to the area, Boyar says, because they’re already here.
“I don’t think it’s going to be a flood, but I’d say the faucet will be three-quarters open,” Boyar said. “It’s going to be busy!”
And time is running out for advocates of the Middle Fork to plan and produce the amenities —more signs, day-use areas, campgrounds, outhouses, pull-outs and trails, all in the right non-sensitive areas—that will accommodate and maybe even direct all those visitors.
“It’s not a choice of (them) coming or not coming, because they’re here and they’re coming
in droves. It’s whether we want this place to be the same damn mess that we had 20 years ago,” Boyar said.
The Greenway, with fund-ing from a Waste Management grant, has begun a planning process with the various land-management agencies in the Middle Fork to design what the next phase of the Middle Fork area, the accessible Middle Fork, will look like.
“Then, those people, who are coming anyway, will have a great time and they won’t inad-vertently cause the disruption that you’re seeing right now,” says Boyar, stopped at a “boot-leg” campsite, maybe 30 feet from the road. Campers cut their own trail to a clearing on the riverside, then apparently took a chainsaw and can of spray paint to a live tree, cut-ting out a four-foot section of bark and wood, probably for their fire.
The right way“We can either do this road
project right, so that we can get in the way of that process of degradation, so we can prepare the valley in the right way and focus the use,” Boyar said, or let it become like some of the other river basins he’s heard horror stories from. “So this is the opportunity to fix it before the problem happens. It’s the Yosemite taking care of the crowds before the crowds come.”
While at the bridge, a man passed Boyar, heading out on the trail with a small chainsaw in hand, and a hatchet strapped to his daypack. He could have been one of the many volun-teers with Mountains to Sound, helping to keep a trail clear after getting a report of a prob-lem somewhere—they have a similar program for weeds that Boyar is very excited about. Or, he could have been a boot-legger, about to cut his own trail into the shared treasure of the Middle Fork. With all this access, you just can’t tell.
Learn more about the Middle Fork road project at www.wfl.fhwa.dot.gov/projects/wa/snoqualmie/purpose_and_need.htm.
Middle Fork FroM 1
Paul’s career“I was always attracted,
from a young age, to blues and jazz,” says Green.
Growing up in New Jersey, Green came from a musical, artistic family—his mother was a dancer in the New York Metropolitan Opera, and his father was a ceramicist. Elizabeth, N.J., was a white, upper-class community, but nearby were towns with large African-American popula-tions. Green remembers hearing R&B and some blues, from an early age. He asked his mom for his first John Lee Hooker album at age 12, started listening religiously to the local college’s late Sunday blues radio show, and keyed in on a broad range of record-ing artists.
Green had a late start to his career. Listening to a Paul Butterfield album, he decided to try harmonica. After a year, he was pretty good. Around 1970, he got the chance to sit in with the band at an Ashbury Park club called the Cat’s Meow. Terrified at first, he played his heart out, and the people liked it. He was invited back the next week, and his career began.
Performing as a member of house bands at blues spots, and with his own bands, Green’s career has taken him from New Jersey to Oakland, Calif., and the Bay Area. In 1989, he moved to Chicago, performing in Buddy Guy’s ‘Legends’ club, among oth-ers, sharing the stage with a number of greats.
He moved to the Seattle area in 1991, and has gotten a lot of notice in the Northwest for his harmonica and vocal work.
With his band Straight Shot, a blues, funk and R&B group, Green is a regular at events like the North Bend Block Party.
Green is technically retired, but still plays. He does it for the love. Five months ago, Green
approached the owners of The Black Dog in Snoqualmie with an idea.
With Boxley’s popular-izing jazz and blues up the road, “I thought it would be nice to have something simi-lar in Snoqualmie,” he said. The owners agreed, and so Green joined forces with Snoqualmie’s Chris Clark, an experienced bass player and regular guest player and youth mentor at Boxley’s, for weekly blues sessions.
Blues walkThis weekend’s Blues Walk
is important, says Green, because of the role it plays in keeping the blues growing and vibrant.
“It’s going to be great,” Green says of the upcoming walk. Last fall’s Jazz Walk was a big success.
“The purpose is to not only provide music for the community, but also to sup-port the Boxley’s Music Fund, which does education for young musicians, as well as paying the musicians who play at Boxley’s and other functions,” he explains.
Boxley’s Music Fund founder Danny Kolke says the commitment of musi-cians like Green pushes oth-ers to share their best.
“It’s what excellence always
does,” he told the Record. “It inspires us to be more than we are. And it’s part of the magic of the blues.”
Here in the Northwest, the blues music scene is quite good, says Green. But given the state of the economy, it’s not what it used to be. Some places that used to feature live music have closed down.
“But there’s still places to play,” he says.
“Blues, and any form of music, goes through ups and downs. But there’ll always be blues and jazz in this country.”
carol ladwig/Staff Photo
Mark Boyar, a Mountains to Sound member and advocate of the Middle Fork planning effort, gave a tour of restoration projects, including repairing damage caused by bootleg campsites like this one.
Downtown soundThe North Bend Blues Walk is 6 p.m. Saturday, April 20. Performers include Paul Green, Little Bill and the Blue Notes, the T-Town Aces, Blues Redemption, the Brian Lee Trio, and others. Thirteen venues in the downtown area take part. Tickets are $18 for adults and $8 for children under age 15, in advance, $20 and $10 on the day of the event. Get tickets and see a sched-ule at northbendblueswalk.com or visit facebook.com/northbendblueswalk.
BlueS FroM 1
carol ladwig/Staff Photo
Blues Walk performer Paul Green, with Chris Clark, left, and guest Carolyn Graye, on piano, performs at the Black Dog.
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MT SI FISH and Game Club Annual Kids Trout Derby
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“Sure, I don’t see that it causes any problems. I think everybody should smoke pot. It would make the world a happier place.”
Rick GoodmanNorth Bend
“I would not want it here. I don’t think it should be legalized. It’s a drug. I understand they use it for cancer patients, but I feel it’s a bandaid, more than anything.”
Jodi JeffriesSnoqualmie
“Marijuana has its place. If it helps people and it’s regulated, I don’t think there’s a problem.”
Denitia GraySnoqualmie
Should medical marijuana be sold in your community?
Thursday, April 21, 1988
• Mount Si Fish & Game Club will sponsor the 46th annual Kids Fishing Derby. This is a once-a-year opportuni-ty for young anglers, so have your folks get you down to Kimball and Coal creeks at sunrise.
• Carnation is the only city in the county, possibly the state, that runs its own landfill. Because of new state laws adopted in 1985, it may be unfeasible for Carnation to keep it open. It’ll need moni-toring stations, a treat-ment system for leaks, and a liner.
Thursday, April 18, 1963
• Two 16-year-old Snoqualmie boys are being held in the King County Youth Center, awaiting trial in juve-nile court. The boys admitted they broke a switch lock on the Northern Pacific tracks and pushed a car from a spur track onto the main line. If a train had come along, it would have gone over a 10-foot embankment.
• An open house at Dave’s Jewelry in Snoqualmie brought an unexpected dividend for Mrs. Wayne Guthrie. She won a new wristwatch.
This week in Valley history
PAStOut
“I’m very confused about it. When you hear that it’s OK here, but the federal government says no… there’s a lot of things that have to be worked out.”
Nola AmslerSnoqualmie
ValleyRecoRd
SNOQUALMIE
Publisher William Shaw wshaw@valleyrecord.com
Editor Seth Truscott struscott@valleyrecord.com Reporter Carol Ladwig cladwig@valleyrecord.com
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Mail PO Box 300, Snoqualmie, WA 98065
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in advance, please.The Snoqualmie Valley Record is the legal newspaper for the cities of Snoqualmie,
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Written permission from the publisher is required for reproduction of any part of this
publication. Letters, columns and guest columns do not necessarily reflect the views
of the Snoqualmie Record.
of the
When it comes to writing, it’s
use it—or lose itWhat’s at stake when schools ditch cursive?
Here’s a simple exercise. Take out a pen, and a sheet of paper, and write out some-thing—your name, your favorite band, the
name of the closest restaurant—in cursive. How’d you do? I’ll bet it wasn’t easy. I tried to write the word “abstract” in cursive
script the other day. I’d just met Joe Monihan, this week’s letter writer, and I wanted to see whether I still had the muscle memory from ages ago, when I still wrote in cursive. It had been a long time. The “r” was a wave, neither “t” matched, and the less said about “b” the better.
Mr. Monihan first stopped by to share his concerns over this two weeks ago. He’d read about the decline of cursive instruction in a national story, and had shared his concerns with the Snoqualmie Valley School Board.
In an age when everybody is writing less and typ-ing more, Joe’s argument is that schools should stress the teaching of cursive writing, the flowing script that developed long, long ago for use with the pen.
As I listened to Joe make his case, I came to see his point. All around us, technology seems on the march. It’s given us so much, but it’s also taken. I’m not argu-ing that we should start swapping cars for carriages, or ban the e-book and chop down more trees. What I do sense is that the pace of change seems to be speeding up. And the very physical act of literacy is at stake as we rely more and more, at a younger age, on techno-logical crutches.
Joe’s fighting a heavy current here. Schools embrace technology like handheld computers because it works: New tech draws in young minds in ways that old techniques sometimes do not.
We had a mixed reaction to cursive in our Question of the Week poll last week. In case you missed it, one teen said we don’t need it anymore. One boy said cur-sive is good for formal things; another student admit-ted that it should be used, but isn’t because students aren’t always good at it. And one girl, Danielle Burns (a great Wildcat golfer, by the way), hit the nail on the head when she replied that cursive is more personal, painstaking. She loves getting hand-written letters.
I still remember learning cursive in third grade. There was pride in the knowledge that us youngsters were mastering arcane skills of the adult world, a different kind of literacy, more ornate, more artistic. We didn’t spend long on it; I remember struggling to make the curlicues of capital Z. To this day, I can’t do it. And almost all the other letters have faded. Perhaps the skill is still there, but it’s latent, and only practice and real effort will bring it back.
With businesses, media and school districts being asked to communicate in new ways with citizens, there’s always that pressure to jump to the next new device or method. Now, I love Facebook, but it’s so easy to be insulated in your own personal bubble of information and opinion. Tech is a tool, but it’s no replacer of the real, whether that be discussion, vari-ety of sources, or the simple act of reading and writing in a real, physical book.
And besides, what happens to all that information or technique if the power goes out?
There’s only so much that can really be done in education about cursive. But broadly speaking, there are probably many ways educators and families can embrace literacy and writing, ensuring that technol-ogy like smart-phones and spell check remain tools, not crutches, and that script doesn’t wind up taught only in art class. Pick up a pen and write, yourself. Teach the kids to write.
Joe puts it a lot simpler than I do: Use it or lose it.
SeTH TRuSCoTT Valley Record Editor
SNOQ
UALM
IE
www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • April 17, 2013 • 5
Ditch the crutches, emphasize cursive skills
Every so often, the ranking of a signifi-cant number of the world’s industrialized countries’ students achievement test scores is published. I cannot remember any such rank-ing for our country that was not dismal, and should be embarrassing for all Americans.
Education is not a static process and changes are not always an improvement. I recall that in the ‘60s, Latin was removed from our high school curriculum. In the ‘70s, the use of phonics in teaching read-ing was challenged and in some instanc-es, replaced. Calculators were, after much debate, allowed in sixth grade math. “New math” became a popular title for an unpop-ular program that mystified, and still mysti-fies, some parents.
For many years, I have given little attention to the Snoqualmie Valley School District’s education program, only to its financial issues. Thus it came as a complete surprise when I read in a national newspaper of the widespread abandonment throughout this country of the use of cursive for com-municating our English language in favor of electronic methods. This is certainly not the respect and pride we should give to our primary language, probably the most recog-nized language in the world.
I inquired at the Feb. 28 board meeting about our district’s program concerning cur-
sive. I was informed that cursive is taught in the third grade, but not “emphasized” there-after, also substituting electronics. The infor-mation that I’ve learned since then seems to indicate that this program has resulted in little cursive ability by the sixth grade and even less by graduation. In this application, electronics is an unacceptable crutch.
I feel that any graduate’s lack of ability to write our English language in cursive is an unacceptable failure of our district’s educa-tion program. How this condition developed is not the question for now. Rather, what should we do about it? I propose that if the current program is board policy, all gradu-ates be competent to perform cursive com-munication. If board policy is not involved, develop one that establishes the requirement of competency in cursive for graduation, thus giving it the important role it deserves.
Joe MonahanFall City
Lack of attention for criminals in gun debate
The editorial page cartoon, (‘Nuclear kitch-en’, March 27 Valley Record) with an attitude, seems to be poking a thumb in the eye of whomever manages, or mismanages, the Hanford nuclear waste mess.
Nowhere in the piece do I see an image of Nevada Senator Harry Reid, who bears a good deal of the blame for effectively block-ing utilization of the Yucca Flat waste reposi-tory in his state.
We taxpayers shelled out a goodly sum to build that thing and many of Reid’s constitu-ents took home those tax dollars while build-ing it and there it sits, unused.
Then, gunowner Mr. Seaton (“What if bad
guys wear white hats,” Letters, March 27) seems to be distancing himself from any possible association with the NRA’s Wayne LaPierre. I guess that’s understandable. I’ve been a life member for the past 40-plus years and I can see LaPierre’s fervor as little different than, say, the ACLU defending with equal fervor the “right” of the KKK or the American Nazi Party, for a couple of examples, to march in a Fourth of July parade, the thought of which nauseates me.
Background checks are carried out hun-dreds of times daily. What LaPierre (and I join him) is concerned about is the focus on the law-abiding and the apparent lack of attention being paid to the criminal element in our society.
There seems to be no follow-up on those who fail a background check. Why not?
The Seattle Times reported recently that one of the killers of the Tuba-Man ran afoul of the law recently after being reported prowl-ing cars. The SPD stopped him and found a stolen AR-15 in the trunk of his car. He and two friends were on their way to “a house that sells guns”, reportedly to steal some guns—no background check to steal the “assault rifle”, undoubtedly no licensed dealer at the “house that sells guns”, and, no background checks needed for the planned stolen guns.
It was recently reported that three cities
with the most outspoken mayors against guns, L.A., Chicago and New York, were in districts with the least number (of 90 dis-tricts) of prosecuted federal gun crimes.
What’s wrong with that picture?George Crotts
North Bend
More photos, please… And please clean up after your horses
Your yearly photo contest is great. I’m curious as to how many entries you receive. Would it be possible to print the non-winners photos, a few each week, for us all to enjoy?
Second, recently a passing horse made a large deposit in front of our house. Ever wonder why dog owners are expected to remove their dog’s deposits but horse own-ers are not? Anyway, I want to relate what a neighbor of ours did—as he was passing our house, he noticed the mess, went back home, got a box and shovel and returned to clean it up. How great is that? Thanks again, Lyle—you are a treasure!
Joy KerleeFall City
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www.valleyrecord.com6 • April 17, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
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Three young Valley artists head to state reception
Three Snoqualmie Valley students won state awards for their entries in the 2013 Reflections Art Contest, sponsored by the Washington State Parent Teacher Association (WSPTA).
Jacob Crow of Cascade View Elementary received an Award of Merit for his film, “Helping Hands.” Joshua Ehrenberg of Fall City Elementary, received an Award of Merit for his photograph “HOT Wheels.” Morgan Bush, Cascade View Elementary, received Awards of Excellence for her two visual arts pieces, “Wish Upon a Wishing Star” and “Untitled-4.”
These students will be invited to the State PTA Reflections reception Sunday, May 5 in Bellevue.
The Reflections contest began as an opportunity offered through school PTAs, in which students at four district schools participated. From the 111 works of art that were submitted by 106 students in the dis-trict, local PTSA Council members selected 30 finalists in January.
Riverview to host open house on home-school
Parents interested in learning more about the Riverview School District’s PARADE program for supporting home-schooling families are invited to an open house at the Riverview Learning Center in Carnation. For students in Kindergarten through fourth grade, there’s an open house from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Monday, April 22. For students in grades 5 through 8, the event is 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, April 23.
Join staff for a presentation on the pro-
gram and learn about classes, the schedule, and how the district works with families to develop a student learning plan. Tour the facility to meet staff and see some of the opportunities available.
Parents planning to attend are asked to RSVP by calling (425) 844-4960.
Big award for piano teacher Bob Pajer
Snoqualmie piano teacher Bob Pajer has been selected to receive a music workshop scholarship from the Music Teachers National Association and Piano Technicians Guild (PTG). He received the award at a ceremony March 13 in Anaheim, Calif., as part of the MTNA national conference.
The scholarship award is as a $750 grant from PTG, which provides piano-related advanced study opportunities to nationally certified teachers of music (NCTM).
Pajer, a freelance pianist and teacher for more than 60 years, founded the Snoqualmie Piano Studio on the Ridge in 1999. In 2007, he was designated Founding Teacher in the National Music Certificate Program, now the Carnegie Hall Royal Conservatory of Music Achievement Program.
Student poster picked for city Arbor Day
Join the annual Snoqualmie Arbor Day celebration, 10 a.m. Saturday, April 20, at the Railroad Park Gazebo in Historic Downtown Snoqualmie. There will be games for children to learn about trees and each child will receive a free tree seedling to plant at home.
Snoqualmie Councilmember Bob Jeans will present an award to this year’s Arbor Day poster contest winner, Audrey Estaban of Snoqualmie Elementary School. Two community tree plantings follow.
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www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • April 17, 2013 • 7
Hot Cider plays last dance of
Contra seasonHot Cider String Band will play, 7 to 10 p.m. Friday, April 19, for
the regular Contra Dance at Sallal Grange, 12912 432nd Ave. S.E.,
North Bend.It’s the last of the season. Hosts open the Grange Hall for a light
meal of soup before the waltz les-son starts at 7 p.m. and food and
beverages are available all eve-ning. The beginning waltz lesson will introduce new dancers to the
basic traveling waltz with a few cool moves thrown in for those
who are adventurous. Hot Cider String Band is a family of young musicians, Elise and Evan on
fiddles, mandolins and keyboard and their friend, Ruth on bass. Their
mother, Kelly accompanies them on guitar. They played their first
entire contra dances in North Bend last March.
Contra dance is a traditional style of country dance that came to
America with the first settlers.
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Mount Si High School is hosting a show of student-created art Thursday, April 18, and if the event
name—Festival of the Arts—doesn’t tell you it’s more than just an art show, the organizers will.
The Festival of the Arts, says Fall City Arts vice-president Inga Rouches, who ran the event in 2010 and 2011 and is helping with it this year, offers students a rare opportunity to “shine.”
“It’s not like (an athlete), where you can go out and watch them play every week,” Rouches explained. “An artist doesn’t have that exposure very often.”
That exposure, though, is necessary. “In high school, the kids get a little more self-critical… there’s so much comparison with everyone… it’s not as easy for them to show their art,” Rouches explained. “So to create a venue for them to
show their art is incredible, and important.” The venue for the festival is Mount Si High
School’s Wildcat Court and the school library, both of which will be transformed on April 17. The walls of the Wildcat Court will be cov-ered with “at least 200 photographs” from Jim Gibowski’s students down one side, and with prints, paintings, ceramics, sculptures and other visual arts down the other side. Nearly 100 bon-sai plants from the horticulture class will be set up in the library. Student-made films will play on the big screen in the Wildcat Court during the public reception, 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday, and servers will circulate with student-made edible art hors d’oeuvres, followed by a cake-decorat-ing and tasting event.
North BeNd theatre
ShowtimeSWednesday, april 17 • the Croods, 11 a.m.
Thursday, april 18 • the Croods, 6 p.m.
Friday, april 19• oblivion (pG-13), 5 & 8 p.m.
saTurday, april 20• oblivion (pG-13), 5 & 8 p.m.
sunday, april 21• oblivion (pG-13), 2 & 5 p.m.
Monday, april 22• oblivion (pG-13), 7 p.m.
Tuesday, april 23• oblivion (pG-13), 7 p.m.
Wednesday, april 24• oblivion, $5, 11 a.m.• Chamber after-hours 5:30 pm.
Scen
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courtesy photo
Horticulture students Joe Pinchevsky, Lily Cason and Kyle Clary display their bonsai plants, some of the more than 100 entries in Mount Si High School’s Festival of the Arts Thursday, April 18.
Student art on display
see arTs, 8
Crossword puzzle
Across1. Balaam’s mount4. Fibrous material in rope (pl.) 9. 100 lbs.12. Impertinent ones14. Santa’s reindeer, e.g.15. “___ Town Too” (1981 hit)16. Solar wind region18. “___ we having fun yet?”19. Punish with an arbitrary penalty20. Bergamot flavored tea (2 wds) 22. Stamping coins 24. Air freshener option25. “Dig in!”26. Biblical birthright seller28. Dine away from home (2 wds) 31. First-rate33. Chop finely34. Naval hero of the Spanish-American War37. Appear38. Something to which a mountain climber’s rope can be secured 39. Act40. Provide cover or protection
42. Kind of center44. Pink, as a steak45. Child’s stomach, shortened48. Massage target50. Soup cracker52. More swift 55. One trying to lose weight 56. Amigo57. Having to do with where homes are 59. Bauxite, e.g.60. Anxious61. Clear, as a disk62. Bit63. Feed, as a fire64. “___ calls?”
Down1. Lack of vigor2. Mum3. Sudden increase in energy 4. Clobber5. Advil target6. Appropriate7. Pinscher in German8. Stanley Kowalski’s famous yell9. Fuel for grilling 10. “___ #1!” (con-traction)11. Deuce topper12. “Naughty you!”
13. Institutions and culture of a distinct group 17. Taste, e.g.21. Muster23. Australian cocka-too 27. Gastric woe29. Cable network30. “___ will be done”31. Win over32. Book of maps34. “Silent Spring” subject (abbrev.)35. Always, in verse36. Backed out of a situation in a sneaky manner 38. Straightaway40. Hard to miss41. Barter43. Light cotton cloth, usually plaid45. Brownish orange46. Apprehensive47. Actress Oberon49. Basil-based sauce51. Aquarium fish52. Advance, slangily53. Legal prefix54. Classic board game58. Blonde’s secret, maybe
Sudoku See answers, page 8
Difficulty level: 4
2 1 5 9 3 6 4 8 79 3 8 2 4 7 6 1 56 4 7 5 8 1 2 9 35 2 9 3 6 4 8 7 11 6 4 7 5 8 3 2 97 8 3 1 9 2 5 6 44 7 2 6 1 5 9 3 88 9 1 4 2 3 7 5 63 5 6 8 7 9 1 4 2
www.valleyrecord.com8 • April 17, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
Most of the students in the arts classes, culinary arts, metal and wood shops will have at least one piece on display, so “it should be a substantial show,” Rouches said.
All of the exhibits will be installed for display the night before the show, so students going to class the next day will be the first to see them. Rouches said this is her favorite part of the show.
“It makes (the Wildcat Court) just come alive with all the art in there, and I love seeing students go in there, and go ‘whoa!’” she said.
“I think that really brings out some cool stuff in kids, to have that stimulation from art, and art that their peers did.”
A panel of judges, all local professional artists, will review the works and select the top-three placers in each category. Festival chairperson Carol Reitz recruited all of the judges, and Rouches said “She’s doing a great job. She is super-organized, and it’s very fun to have some-one like her be involved.”
With grants from Fall City Arts and the Mount Si PTSA, the Festival this year also has enough money to award prizes to the top artists of the show.
The winning artists will be recognized dur-ing the public showing Thursday night, which is also when participants will have a chance to sample the students cakes.
Featuring: T-Town Aces, Blues Redemption, Bryant Urban, Nick Vigarino, Rod Cook, Eric Madis, The Wired Band, Brian Lee Trio,
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Mark Riley, Little Bill and the Blue Notes and more... Thirteen Great Blues Venues within Four Blocks in Downtown North Bend!The Pour House, Snoqualmie Valley Moose Lodge, Pioneer Coffee, Birches Habitat,
Emerald City Smoothie, North Bend Theatre, Twede's Cafe, Euro Cafe, George's Bakery, Valley Center Stage, Boxley's,
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Mark Riley, Little Bill and the Blue Notes and more... Thirteen Great Blues Venues within Four Blocks in Downtown North Bend!The Pour House, Snoqualmie Valley Moose Lodge, Pioneer Coffee, Birches Habitat,
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stella Diegel stuDent artist
arts FrOM 7 Place at the table: theater hosts food bank fundraiserMount Si Food Bank hosts a showing of the docu-mentary film, “A Place at the Table,” 7 p.m. Thursday, April 25, at North Bend Theatre. Exploring hunger in America, the film looks at families struggling with finding ways to feed their families. Admission is $10. Watch a trailer at www.mtsifoodbank.org.
2 1 5 9 3 6 4 8 79 3 8 2 4 7 6 1 56 4 7 5 8 1 2 9 35 2 9 3 6 4 8 7 11 6 4 7 5 8 3 2 97 8 3 1 9 2 5 6 44 7 2 6 1 5 9 3 88 9 1 4 2 3 7 5 63 5 6 8 7 9 1 4 2Courtesy photosStudent art by Stella Diegel.
www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • April 17, 2013 • 9
Pinwheels raise aware-ness of child abuse
Pinwheels take on a new meaning this month.
April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month, a time to raise awareness of child mal-treatment and how to pre-vent it in our community. The Washington state Department of Early Learning uses pinwheels to represent its campaign urging people to learn more about pre-vention and supporting children and their families.
“The health and well-being of our children is all of our con-cern,” Dr. Ronald Spiegel, pedia-trician at Snoqualmie Ridge Medical Clinic, said. “Medical providers rely on community members to report any treat-ment of a child they see that is concerning or inappropriate.”
Child maltreatment is any type of abuse or neglect of a child, under the age of 18, that
results in harm or injury. There are four common types of abuse: physical, sexual, emotional and neglect or abandonment.
Maltreatment causes stress in children that can affect school, family life, physical and mental health.
“The goal is to stop child mal-treatment before it starts,” Spiegel said. “The best way to prevent it is to seek help if you’re feeling
overwhelmed by circumstances in your life, including financial worries, marital problems and substance abuse. Counseling and community programs can help prevent things from esca-lating to the level of maltreat-ment.”
Local programs to prevent child abuse and neglect also improve parent-child relation-ships and provide parents with
social support. A few local support organizations include LifeWire, Encompass and Friends of Youth.
“We live in a great area with lots of family activities, good schools and excellent support systems to help in stressful times,” Spiegel said. “Our Snoqualmie Ridge Medical Clinic providers are available through our call service 24 hours a day to help steer people towards the sup-port they may need.”
Each type of child abuse comes with its own unique symptoms. It’s up to adults who are in a position to notice recur-ring symptoms of abuse, to act before the situation escalates.
If you suspect a child may be mistreated, call your medi-cal provider, Child Protective Services or the police.
Snoqualmie Ridge Medical Clinic is located at 35020 S.E. Kinsey St., Snoqualmie. Go to www.svhd4.org or call (425) 396-7682 for more information.
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&&&&&Health FitnessHealth FitnessHealth FitnessHealth FitnessHealth FitnessHealth FitnessChurch effort aids nutrition in Guatemalan villageValley Christian Assembly Church hosts a fundraising event with a Mexican Fiesta dinner and silent auction, 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday, May 5.The fundraiser is an opportunity to help change people’s lives in the small village of San Miguel Chamil, Guatemala. Valley Christian Assembly Church, partnering with Food for the Hungry, has made a commitment to support this village by sponsoring many children and helping with annual commu-nity projects for a 10-year period. Last year, a mission group from the Valley planted fruit trees in their village, combating malnutrition, a serious problem, and helping with trade. Vacation Bible School is also provided for the local children. Food for the Hungry focuses on the needs of the community and asked church members this year to help install new cook-ing stoves. The villagers keep warm and cook in open fires in the middle of their homes. With a fire pit in the middle of the home without proper ventilation, the villagers inhale smoke, causing serious respiratory problems. Therefore, a trip is planned to return in August this year to construct and install these new stoves, which will, in the long run, save lives.The church is located at 32725 SE 42nd Street, Fall City; call the church at (425) 222-5284. Tickets are $8 per person. Children under 3 are free. The church is seeking businesses to sponsor or donate goods for the fiesta. To learn more, e-mail to Samantha at svanny-huis@yahoo.com.
Breaking the cycle
courtesy photo
Kasey George, age 5, and Sophia Robison, age 6, plant pinwheels at the Snoqualmie Ridge Medical Clinic to show the hospital dis-trict’s commitment to healthy child development.
www.valleyrecord.com10 • April 17, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
Heads upHow to keep your child from
suffering a concussionBy Nicole Demetrescu
Contributing writer
The number itself is a shock to the sys-tem: Every year, emergency rooms nation-wide treat sports- and recreation-related brain injuries in nearly 175,000 children.
The most common activities leading to these visits are cycling, football, playground activities (especially for children under 9), basketball and soccer. But such injuries can occur in any activity.
C onc uss ions can produce life-long challenges with memory, emo-tion, movement and behavior. Children and teens take longer than adults to recover from concussions. We must take them seriously.
Here’s how to prevent concussions when your child is at play:
• Make sure your child wears a helmet when cycling or playing sports such as football or hockey.
• Have an appropriate professional check the helmet’s fit.
• Talk with your child’s coach about poli-cies on concussions and returning to play.
• Know that concussions can occur with direct contact with the ground, another player or an object.
Even a forceful sit-down can cause a concussion.
Signs of a concussionHas your child had a bump? Watch for
these signs in the hours and days after-ward:
• Loss of consciousness, even momen-tary
• Dazed or stunned appearance• Confusion• Clumsiness• Mood or behavior changes• Memory loss• Headache• Nausea or vomiting• Blurry vision• Light or noise sensitivity• Feeling “not quite right”If you see even one of these, keep your
child out of play and off a bike until a medi-cal evaluation.
• Free training and facts on concus-sions are available from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control at http:// www.cdc.gov/concussion/sports/index.html.
• Nicole Demetrescu is a physical therapist at Encompass.
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Do You Have GERD?Measure Yourself on the Richter Scale/Acid Test
How signi� cant is your heartburn? What are the chances that it is something more
serious? If you need a yardstick, here’s a simple self-test developed by a panel of
experts from the American College of Gastroenterology.
Remember, if you have heartburn two or more times a week or still have symptoms
on your over-the-counter or prescription medicines, see your doctor.
Take this “Richter Scale/Acid Test” to see if you’re a GERD sufferer and are taking the
right steps to treat it.
1. Do you frequently have one or more of the following:
a. an uncomfortable feeling behind the breastbone that seems to be moving upward
from the stomach?
b. a burning sensation in the back of your throat?
c. a bitter acid taste in your mouth?
2. Do you often experience these problems after meals?
3. Do you experience heartburn or acid indigestion two or more times per week?
4. Do you � nd that antacids only provide temporary relief from your symptoms?
5. Are you taking prescription medication to treat heartburn, but still having
symptoms?
If you said yes to two or more of the above, you may have GERD. To know for sure, see your doctor or a gastrointestinal specialist. They can help you live pain free.
©2013 American College of Gastroenterology
Your First Class is Free! Sno-Valley Senior Center
offers many health & fitness options for adults of all ages:
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offers many health & fitness options for adults of all ages:
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4610 Stephens Ave
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snovalleysenior.org
Your First Class is Free! Sno-Valley Senior Center
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Your First Class is Free! Sno-Valley Senior Center
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Fitness options abound at Sno-Valley senior center
Carnation’s Sno-Valley Senior Center is offering a variety of fitness classes to help get folks moving.
Enhance Fitness is a combination of aerobic, weight and balance training offered Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 8 a.m. and 9:30 a.m.
Gentle Chair Yoga is held on Thursday mornings at 9:15, Zumba Gold is Tuesdays and Thursdays at 6:30 p.m. and Wii Bowling League is Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 10:45.
Table tennis is also offered. First classes are free.Sno-Valley Senior Center is located at 4610 Stephens
Ave., Carnation.Visit www.snovalleysenior.org for more information.
Nicole demetrescu
Simple steps to prevent painWe all spend a fair amount of our life in front of a computer and there are some simple steps to avoid pain and injury. Here are some tips to keep your spine in a neutral position so that your muscles are aligned in their most efficient way. 1. The top of the monitor should be at eye level and at arm’s length away2. Keep head upright and chin level with shoulders relaxed3. The chair should have a firm lumbar support that rests in the small of your back4. Arms should rest comfortably at your side5. Your elbows should be bent at an approximate 90-degree angle with armrest directly under elbow/forearm6. The keyboard should be slightly below elbow height7. Keep wrists straight and mouse next to keyboard at same height level8. Keep your hips bent at slightly less than a 90-degree angle9. Adjust the seat height so that knees are slightly below hips10. Be sure feet are resting on the floor or use an angled foot rest/stool if desk height cannot be adjustedOther things to consider in order to avoid injuries typically related to computer workstations:• Sitting in any one position for too long can lead to neck, back or wrist pain. Take 5-10 minute standing or walking breaks every two hours.• Use arm, hand and finger stretches to relieve ten-sion built up from repetitive motionsIf you continue to have trouble, then it is time to seek further medical help. Your local physical thera-pist at Edge PT & Rehab is there to help you and can be reached at (425) 292-0223.
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www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • April 17, 2013 • 11
&&&&&Health FitnessHealth FitnessHealth FitnessHealth FitnessHealth FitnessHealth FitnessChoose a Pediatric Dentist• Just as you’ve chosen a pediatrician
for your child, consider the advantagesof choosing a pediatric dentist fromthe very first visit by AGE ONE.
• Don’t put your child to bed with a bottle.
• Begin cleaning your child’s mouth after feeding even before teeth appear.
• Make sure your children brushfor 2 minutes, twice a day.
• Check out www.2min2x.org.
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YMCA_Snoqualmie Valley Record_Snoqualmie Valley_2013_HKD.indd 1 4/9/2013 10:57:26 AM
What’s in your medicine cabinet?Talk with teens, safeguard prescriptions to prevent abuse
What’s in your medicine cabinet at home? Each generation of teens looks for new ways to get high. Recent trends indicate that they are increasingly turning to prescription or over-the-counter (OTC) medicines.
Teens report getting many of these medicines from home medicine cabinets and mistak-enly believe that abusing them is “safer” than other drugs. According to surveys from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, 20 percent of teens say they have taken a prescription drug without having a prescription for it themselves, and 5 percent report abusing OTC cough medicine to get high.
Saturday, April 27, is the day the North Bend Police Department along with Washington State DEA will participate in the National Drug Take Back Day. From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. you can bring your expired, unwanted, or unused prescription medications to a temporary drop off point located at the southeast corner of North Bend’s park-and-ride, between East McClellan Street and East Park Street for destruction.
To help prevent medicine abuse:• Talk to your teen about prescription and OTC cough medicine abuse. Teens listen,
even if they act like they don’t. In fact, teens who learn about the risks of drugs from their parents are 50 percent less likely to use drugs.
• Safeguard your medicine cabinets. Take steps to protect your teens by safeguarding all the medicines you have in your home. Know what you have and how much, so you will know if anything is missing. Discard any medicines you no longer need.
• Share what you have learned.For parenting education opportunities, treatment and more information, visit www.
friendsofyouth.org or www.snoqualmievalleycommunitynetwork.org.
Ice Cream SocialTONIGHT! Wednesday, April 17, 2013, 6-8 p.m.
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www.valleyrecord.com12 • April 17, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
Set Her Free fundraiser set at salon
A “Set Her Free (Uganda)”
fundraiser is noon to 4 p.m. Sunday, April 21, at Lula Ruby Organic Hair Salon in Snoqualmie.
Set Her Free is a non-prof-it organization that works to
restore the lives of young girls formerly enslaved by the sex trade. It empowers young girls of Uganda, for-merly imprisoned by, and at risk of, exploitation and child labor, by providing a safe environment, educa-tion, professional training and rehabilitation.
For a special event, Kuts for Kampala, salon owner Angela Favaro and her styl-ists are volunteering their time so that all of the pro-ceeds will go to Set Her Free. There will also be pictures of girls who need sponsors, jewelry, and organic appe-tizers. Call Favaro at (425) 292-0816 or Abbey White at (425) 350-0647 to schedule an appointment.
Learn more at www.set-herfree.org. Lula Ruby is located off the Parkway on Snoqualmie Ridge.
Relay bake sale is Saturday
A bake sale fundraiser for the American Cancer Society and Snoqualmie Valley Relay for Life is 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, April 20, at the North Bend ACE Hardware, 330 Main St. S., North Bend, spon-sored by the Super Troopers Relay Team.
Angel Care’s 5K walk honors mothers
The Angel Care Breast Cancer Foundation will hold its second 5K Walk,
“Wings of Courage” at Marymoor Park, Redmond, on Saturday, May 11.
Registration is at 8 a.m. for the 9 a.m. start. The awards ceremony will start at 11 a.m. at the east end picnic shelter. Walkers of all ages are encouraged to form a team, join a team or just take a “walk in the park” to benefit Angel Care.
Angel Care volunteers, all breast cancer survivors, provide one-on-one emo-tional support to those newly diagnosed with breast can-cer. Serving the greater Puget Sound area, the services are provided free of charge.
Founder and Board Chair, Jan Harris, formed the organization 15 years ago when she experienced breast cancer and found little assistance for the emo-tional challenges of the dis-ease and treatment.
“Many things have changed since then, yet the emotional support that helps the patient and loved ones is still needed,” she said.
Registration is $35 and can be done online at: www.first-giving.com/angelcarebreast-cancerfoundation/walk2013.
For more informa-tion, contact Angel Care Foundation at (206) 417-3484, send e-mail to angel-care@anagaelcarefounda-tion.org, or visit www.breast-cancerfoundation.org.
Riverview gets nod for nutrition programs
The Riverview School District is the second school district in King County to achieve the HealthierUS School Challenge designa-tion. The Highline district was recognized in 2012.
Five Riverview schools recently achieved the bronze-level designation in the national HealthierUS Schools Challenge. They were recognized with certif-icates of achievement from the King County Board of Health, which encourages policy, system, and envi-ronmental changes that will help create healthy schools and communities for all King County residents.
Certificates of achieve-ment went to Food Services Supervisor Kaye Wetli, who led the effort to apply for the recognition, Carnation, Cherry Valley and Stillwater Elementary Schools, Eagle Rock Multi-Age, and the Riverview Learning Center.
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www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • April 17, 2013 • 13
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Falls Little League
Jamboree is Saturday
On Saturday, April 20, at Centennial Fields in Snoqualmie,
the Falls Little League baseball and softball season officially
kicks off. This community event is open to everyone.
Not only will teams be present for team photos, there will also be
a parade and exhibition games. Family-friendly activities, includ-ing arts and crafts, start at 9 a.m.
Special guests this year will include members of the Mount
Si baseball team, who are the reigning KingCo champions,
and members of the Mount Si softball team, who finished with
20 wins last season. For information, e-mail to jam-
boree@fallsll.org.
Hardware for Pass snowboarder
Competitive young snowboarder Isabella Gomez, 11, who rides for the Snoqualmie Team, earned first place in the USA Snowboard Association’s 24th annual Nationals Tournament, held March 30 through April 4 in Copper Mountain, Colo.
Gomez competes in the Menehune Girls (10-11) division.
She took second place in the half pipe and giant slalom, third in slope-style, fourth in slalom and fifth in boarder-cross. This is Gomez’s fourth national tourna-ment in four years. She placed second overall last year and first overall in 2011. She is sponsored by Gnu, Snoqualmie and Snowcon. Learn more at www.usasa.org.
Hold’Em tour-ney benefits baseball team
The 2013 Mount Si Baseball Texas Hold’em card tournament is right around the corner, 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. Saturday, April 27, at Four Gables Farm Fall City.
Teams of players are being sought. Learn more at the mtsibaseball website.
Winning streakMount Si doubles, singles squads rack up serious record
Mount Si’s girls tennis team looks to be racking up the best record it’s seen in years.
The varsity squad on April 2 scored a 5-2 win over Sammamish, in what looks like only the second time Mount Si has defeated the Totems in the past 15 seasons.
“I am real proud of our team,” wrote head coach Jim Gibowski.
Number-one singles player Jessica Graves and number-two Rachel Walker each came back to win in three straight sets, while number-three Kelcey Sharp won despite having to take a three-minute injury timeout for a sore back. The Wildcats’ number-three doubles squad of Rachel Mallasch and Sami Kieffer came back from a 1-5 deficit to win 7-5 in their second set.
The Wildcats are 3-2 overall, and 2-1 in the conference.
The story so farOn March 18, Mount Si girls beat Liberty, 4-3. Mount Si’s dou-
bles teams carried the day. The number-one team of Sharp and Cheyenne Dixon beat the Patriots’ Yen Lee and Anna Guzman, 6-0 in two sets. At number two, Olivia Howland and Peyton McCulley won their sets 6-1, 6-0. And at number three, Kayla
Schumacher and Sami Kieffer won, 6-0, 6-0.
While the top three singles players fell, Mount Si’s num-ber-four singles individual, Alaina Kinghorn, beat Noelle Rauschendorfer, 6-4, 6-2.
Against Juanita on March 19, which rained out with three matches completed and was continued on March 25, Mount Si won, 5-2.
In singles, Wildcat no. 2 Rachel Walker won, 6-0, 1-6, 6-4, against Alizeh Karmali. At no. 3, Kerry Pemberton beat Rachel Russell, 6-2, 6-4. All three Mount Si doubles teams
won their sets, Sharp and Dixon beating Delaney-Deanna Chan and Seo Huh, 7-5, 6-4. Howland and McCulley, at number 2, won their set, 6-7, 6-3, 6-4. Schumacher and Mallasch won their set, 6-3, 6-0.
Mount Si fell to Interlake, 7-0, on March 26. Howland and McCulley put up a good fight, going 3-6, 1-6, and at number three doubles, Kinghorn and Hannah Stull won one of their sets, 7-6, but fell in two.
• Mount Si tennis next visits Mercer Island at 3:45 p.m. Tuesday, April 23.
PRs fall in Cedarcrest trackOn Thursday April 11, the Cedarcrest
track and field squad competed at Sultan High School with King’s and Coupeville also in attendance. Both Red Wolf squads finished third in the team points.
Individual winners were Luke Driscoll in the 100- and 200-meter races, Colton Green in the 800-meter race, Cody Wanichek in the 1,600-meter race, Bailey Parish in the long jump and pole vault, Olivia Waterman in the 800-meter race and the four-by-
one relay squad of Bennett Minnie, Ryan McGinnis, Josh Zimmerman and Luke Driscoll. It was a good time for personal records and season bests, said head coach Bruce McClellan.
Many of the sprinters had double PRs, including Matthew Hineline in the 100- and 400-meter race, Ryan Chan, Keenan Taylor, Rachel Perry and Paige Benshoof in the 100 and 200-meter races, Emma Hilbrig in the discus and long jump. Quite a few of the distance runners had personal records in their events as well.
Academy gym team qualifies for state
Mount Si Gymnastics and Dance proudly announced that 15 team mem-bers qualified for the Washington State Championship at the Central Sectionals Qualifying meet, held April 6 and 7 at Newport High School.
That event gave gymnasts the oppor-tunity to earn a 33 all-around or better to earn their way into the State gymnastics championships April 19 to 21 for Level 4 in Auburn and April 26 to 27 for Level 5/6 in Spokane. The academy qualified 15 girls into the state championships.
In the Level 4 competition the state qual-ifiers are: Cally Robinson 36.550, Madison Zweifelhofer 36.350, Clara Schlotfeldt 35.7, Maya Craft 34.9, Gia Arellano 34.8, Jessi Anderson 34.150, Hannah Warren
33.650, Chaira Saretto 33.550, Rachel Sands 33.7 and Merritt Glennon 33.1. Schlotfeldt and Robinson both placed fifth in all-around in their respective age groups. In the Level 5 competition the state qualifiers are: Jillian Bludworth 35.3 and Calla Norton 34.5. Bludworth placed seventh in all-around in her age group. In
the Level 6 competition the state qualifiers are: Gabbi Hartmann 36.4, Megan Caro 35.525 and Tylor Zweifelhofer 35.125. Hartmann placed sixth all around and Caro seventh all around in their respec-tive age groups. The team, comprised of girls from age 6 to 13, are all Snoqualmie Valley locals.
cheyenne dixon
www.valleyrecord.com14 • April 17, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
Wednesday, april 17
Study Zone: Students in grades K-12 can drop in during Study Zone hours for free homework help, 3 p.m., Snoqualmie Library.
Anime & mAngA Club: Teens can watch anime movies, eat popcorn and practice anime drawing, 3 p.m. at Snoqualmie Library.
tAleS: Move and Groove Family Story Time is
10:30 and 11:30 a.m. at Carnation Library. For all children with adults, but geared toward toddlers and special needs chil-dren who need to move.
tAleS: Pajama Story Time is 6:30 p.m. at North Bend Library.
Study Zone: Students in grades K-12 can get free homework help in all subjects from volunteer tutors, 3 p.m. at the Fall City Library.
librAry friendS: Friends
of the Fall City Library monthly meeting, 4 p.m. at the Fall City Library.
Thursday, april 18
live muSiC: Paul Green per-forms jazz standards and blues, 7:30 p.m. at The Black Dog, downtown Snoqualmie.
CheSS Club: Snoqualmie Valley Chess Club, 7 p.m. at North Bend Library. All ages and levels.
live muSiC: Open mic be-gins at 7 p.m. at Slider’s Cafe, Carnation.
Friday, april 19
live jAZZ: Kareem Kandi
Band plays at 7 p.m. at Boxley’s, 101 W. North Bend Way, North Bend.
fAmily hiStory: Sno-qualmie Valley Genealogy Group meets at 10 a.m. at the Snoqualmie Library. Learn how to fill out pedi-gree charts and interview relatives, discover free sources online and at the library. All levels of exper-tise are welcome.
saTurday, april 20
relAy bAke SAle: The Super Troopers team holds a bake sale to benefit Relay for Life, 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Ace Hardware, 330 Main Ave. S., North Bend.
SChool SAfety group: Survivors of Snoqualmie Valley School District’s public support group meeting, 2:30 p.m. at the Snoqualmie Valley YMCA, 35018 S.E. Ridge St. Learn more, call (425) 458-4140, or go on Facebook.
fleA mArket: Vasa Park, 3560 W. Lake Sammamish Parkway S.E., hosts a flea market, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Monday, april 22
open miC: Share your musi-cal talents, 8 to 10 p.m. at Snoqualmie Brewery, 8032 Falls Ave., Sno-qualmie. Hosted by Ask Sophie, all ages and skill levels welcomed.
tAleS: Preschool Story Time is 1:30 p.m. at Snoqualm-ie Library.
tAleS: Infant and Family Story Time is 11 a.m. at the North Bend Library, for newborns to age 3 with an adult.
home SChool gAthering: Are you home schooling? Come for some library time, games and activi-ties, 1 p.m. at the North Bend Library.
tAlk time: Improve your speaking and listening skills in this English con-versation group, 6:30 p.m. at North Bend Library.
middle SChoolerS only: Middle school students can do snacks, homework and fun, 2:30 p.m. at the Fall City Library.
Tuesday, april 23
live muSiC: Twede’s Open Mic is 6 p.m. at Twede’s Cafe, 137 E. North Bend Way, North Bend.
tAleS: Preschool Story Time is 1:30 p.m. at Carnation Li-brary, ages 3 to 5 with adult.
tAleS: Spanish Story Time is 6:30 p.m., Carnation Li-brary. All ages, with adult.
tAleS: Toddler Story Time is 10 a.m., North Bend Library, ages 2 to 3 with adult.
PUBLIC NOTICE #760192City of Snoqualmie
King County, Washington 98065
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on Monday, April 22nd, 2013 at 7:00 PM or soon thereaf- ter, Snoqualmie City council will be holding a Public Hearing to receive testimony regarding the sale of surplus city property. The hearing will be held at City Hall in the Council Chambers, 38624 SE River Street. The City, upon request, will provide auxil- iary aids to participants with disabilities.
Diane HumesDepartment of Public WorksAdministrative Assistant
Posted: April 9, 2013Publish: Valley Record April 10, 2013 and April 17, 2013.
PUBLIC NOTICE #767951Request for CommentsUSDA Forest Service
Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest
King County, WAHumpback Trail
Bridge Replacement (#1) Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, Snoqualmie Ranger District, is preparing a Decision Memo for the Humpback Trail Bridge Replacement (#1) Project. The project would replace the first trail bridge encountered on the Asahel Curtis Nature Trail #1023 when leaving from the Annette Lake Trailhead parking lot and is situated directly over a stable crossing of Humpback Creek. The trail bridge is approximately 79 feet in length, comprised of two single log stringer sub-structures (signifi-
cant rot identified) jointly sup- port at a mid-point by a built-up wooden footing/piling structure. The replacement trail bridge de- sign/type/length will be replaced in-kind except steel stringers will be substituted for the original logs and sawed cedar boards for the pole style hand rails and decking. The project is located in T22N, R10E, NW ¼ Section 23. The proposed action description and other information are avail- able on the Forest’s website at: www.fs.usda.gov/goto/mbs/ pro- jects, at the Snoqualmie Ranger District Office, and from: Steve Johnson, (360) 802-5313 or ste- venljohnson@fs.fed.us. The Forest Service is combining the scoping period with the notice and comment period into one 30-day public comment period on the Proposed Action, as provided by 36 CFR 215.5 regulations. In light of a recent court ruling (Sequoia ForestKeeper v. Tid- well, 11-cv-00679-LJO-DLB (E.D. Cal.)), the Forest Service will provide public notice, com- ment, and opportunity for admin- istrative appeal for projects and activities documented with a De-cision Memo (36 CFR 220.6(e)) until new instructions are issued by the Washington Office, or the Agency issues regulations ad- dressing the Court’s ruling. Only those who provide comment or express interest in this proposal during this comment period will be eligible to appeal the decision pursuant to 36 CFR part 215 reg- ulations. Written, facsimile, hand-deliv- ered, oral, and electronic com- ments concerning this action will be accepted for 30 calendar days following the publication of this
notice in Snoqualmie Valley Record the newspaper of record. The publication date in the news- paper of record is the exclusive means for calculating the com- ment period. Those wishing to comment should not rely upon dates or timeframe information provided by any other source. The regulations prohibit extend- ing the length of the comment period. It is the responsibility of persons providing comments to submit them by the close of the comment period. Written comments must be submitted to: Jim Franzel, Snoqualmie District Ranger, 902 S.E. North Bend Way, Bldg 1, North Bend, WA 98045. Office business hours for those submit- ting hand-delivered comments are: 8:00 – 4:30 Monday through Friday, excluding holidays. Oral comments can be provided at the Responsible Official’s office during normal business hours by telephone, (360) 802-5313, or in person. Electronic comments must be submitted in a readable format such as an e-mail message, plain text (.txt), rich text format (.rtf), .pdf, or Word (.doc) to: com- ments-pacificnorthwest-mtbaker-s n o q u a l m i e - s n o q u a l - mie@fs.fed.us. Comments received, including names and addresses of those who comment, will be part of the Project Record and available for public review. In cases where no identifiable name is attached to a comment, a verification of identity will be required for appeal eligibility. A scanned signature is one way to provide verification. Individuals and organizations wishing to be eligible to appeal
must meet the information re- quirements of 36 CFR 215.6. Published in Snoqulamie Valley Record on April 17, 2013.
PUBLIC NOTICE #768062NOTICE OF SEPA
DETERMINATION OF NONSIGNIFICANCE (DNS)
Project Name: Maloney Grove Preliminary Short Plat
Deadline for Comments: May 2, 2013
DNS Issuance / Publication Date: April 17, 2013Applicant: John Day Homes, PO Box 2930, North Bend WA 98045 (425) 831-4901Location: 701 and 775 Maloney Grove Ave. SEDescription of Proposal: Preliminary Short Plat applica- tion to divide parcels #102308-9155 and 102308-9070, more commonly known as 701 and 775 Maloney Grove Avenue SE, into a total of 9 lot single- family lots subject to compliance with all applicable regulations. Responsible Official: Mike McCarty, Senior Planner, (425) 888-7649, mmccarty@ northbendwa.gov.Threshold Determination: The City of North Bend (lead agency for this proposal) has de- termined that this proposal does not have a probable significant adverse impact on the environ- ment that cannot be mitigated through compliance with the North Bend Municipal Code and other applicable regulations. An environmental impact statement (EIS) is not required under RCW 43.21C.030(2)(c). This decision was made after review of a com- pleted environmental checklist on file with the lead agency. This
information is available to the public on request at the offices of the North Bend Community and Economic Development Depart- ment located at 126 E. Fourth St., North Bend, Washington.This DNS is issued under WAC 197-11-340(2); the lead agency will not act on this proposal for 15 days from the date of publica- tion of this notice, allowing time for public comment. The issuance of this DNS should not be interpreted as acceptance or approval of this proposal as presented. The City of North Bend reserves the right to deny or approve said proposal subject to conditions if it is determined to be in the best interest of the City and/or necessary for the general health, safety, and welfare of the public.Public Comment:Public comment on the SEPA DNS may be submitted before 4:30pm on the comment deadline above, via mail to Mike McCarty at the North Bend Community and Economic Development Department, PO Box 896, North Bend, WA 98045, hand delivery to 126 E. 4th Street, or via email to the address above. Published in the Snoqualmie Valley Record on April 17, 2013.
PUBLIC NOTICE #768064CITY OF SNOQUALMIENotice of Public Hearing
A public hearing before the City of Snoqualmie Planning Commission has been scheduled for Monday, May 6, 2013 at 7:00 PM or soon thereafter. The public hearing will be held at the Snoqualmie City Hall Council Chamber, located at 38624 SE River St, Snoqualmie. Topics: To hear testimony on
the proposed amendment to SMC 17.55.110 increasing the height limitations for schools in the floodwayPublic Comment Period: Verbal comments can be made at the hearing. Written comments may be submitted to the City of Snoqualmie, PO Box 987, Snoqualmie, WA 98065, Atten- tion: Nancy Tucker on or before May 6, 2013 at 5:00 PM. Application Documents: The proposed amendment to SMC 17.55.110 is available for public inspection at the City of Snoqualmie, Planning Depart- ment, 38624 River St SE Snoqualmie and is posted on the City’s website at www.ci.sno- qualmie.wa.us. A copy can be obtained by contacted City staff at 425-888-5337.Publication Date:April 17, 2013 in the Snoqualmie Valley Record
PUBLIC NOTICE #763711NOTICE OF INTEREST—BOARD WORK SESSION
The Snoqualmie Valley School District Board of Directors will hold a Work Session on Thurs- day, 4/18/13, 5:30-6:15 p.m., in the City of Snoqualmie Council Chambers located at 38624 SE River St., Snoqualmie, WA. The purpose of the Work Ses- sion will be to discuss facilities and bond planning. The Regular Session will be called to order at 6:30 p.m. Published in the Snoqualmie Valley Record on April 10, 2013 and April 17, 2013.
PUBLIC NOTICES
To place your Legal Notice in the Snoqualmie Valley Record
please e-maillegals@reporternewspapers.com
75
94
99
Please contact church of� ces for additional information
WELCOME TO OUR LADY OF SORROWSCATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass ScheduleSaturday 5pm • Sunday 8, 9:30 & 11am
39025 SE Alpha St. Snoqualmie,WA 98065
425-888-2974 • www.olos.orgRev. Roy Baroma, Pastor
Mass at St. Anthony Church, Carnation.Sundays at 9:30am.
Spanish Mass at 11am on the 1st Sunday425-333-4930 • www.stanthony-carnation.org
SNOQUALMIE VALLEyCalendar
...obituariesPlace a paid obituary to honor those
who have passed away, call Linda at 253.234.3506
paidobits@reporternewspapers.comPaid obituaries include publication
in the newspaper and online atwww.valleyrecord.com
All notices are subject to veri� cation.
Mount Si Lutheran Church
411 NE 8th St., North BendPastor Mark Griffi th • 425 888-1322
mtsilutheran@mtsilutheran.orgwww.mtsilutheran.org
Sunday Worship:8:15 a.m. Traditional, 10:45 a.m. PraiseSunday School/Fellowship 9:30-10:30 a.m.
Dir., Family & Youth Ministry – Lauren Frerichs“Like” us on Facebook – Mt. Si Lutheran Youth
WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM www.nw-ads.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • Apr 17, 2013 • 15
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MIA COPPER INLAY c a l e n d a r b e s t o f fe r above $2500. 206-762- 5064
SEATTLE RAINIERSITEMS WANTED
Photos, baseballs, pro- grams, any and all old Seattle baseball items. Seattle Pilots, Totems, WA Huskies, Old Pacific NW Sports related, too!
Call Dave 7 days 1-800-492-9058 206-441-1900
Se Habla
Espanol!Para ordenar un anuncio
en el Little Nickel!Llame a Lia
866-580-9405LToupin@littlenickel.com
Appliances
AMANA RANGEDeluxe 30” Glasstop
Range self clean, auto clock & timer Extra-
Large oven & storage *UNDER WARRANTY*Over $800. new. Pay off balance of $193 or make
payments of $14 per month. Credit Dept.
206-244-6966
APPLIANCE PICK UP SERVICE
We will pick up your un- wanted appliances
working or not.Call
800-414-5072
MATCHING Washer and Dryer set, $355. Guaran- teed! 360-405-1925
Classifieds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527
Appliances
KENMORE FREEZER Repo Sears deluxe 20cu.ft.
freezer 4 fast freeze shelves, defrost drain,
interior light *UNDER WARRANTY*Make $15 monthly pay-
ments or pay off balance of $293.
Credit Dept. 206-244-6966
KENMORE REPOHeavy duty washer &
dryer, deluxe, large cap. w/normal, perm-press &
gentle cycles.* Under Warranty! *
Balance left owing $272 or make payments of $25. Call credit dept.
206-244-6966
NEW APPLIANCESUP TO 70% OFF
All Manufacturer Small Ding’s, Dents, Scratches
and Factory Imperfec- tions
*Under Warranty*For Inquiries, Call or Visit
Appliance Distributors @14639 Tukwila Intl. Blvd.
206-244-6966
REPO REFRIGERATOR
Custom deluxe 22 cu. ft. side-by-side, ice & water
disp., color panels available
UNDER WARRANTY! was over $1200 new, now only payoff bal. of $473 or make pmts of
only $15 per mo.Credit Dept. 206-244-6966
STACK LAUNDRYDeluxe front loading
washer & dryer. Energy efficient, 8 cycles.
Like new condition* Under Warranty *Over $1,200 new, now only $578 or make pay- ments of $25 per month
%206-244-6966%
Classifieds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527
Visit our web site for great deals nw-ads.com
Auctions/Estate Sales
SEATTLEPublic Auction/ Landlord Lien
Foreclosure Sale - 4/19/13at 9AM
1962 ALAS 55/10 Mo- bile Home, and two
1991 HD Motorcycles FLHTCU, University Trailer Park Sp. 4-A,
2200 NE 88 St -Ph: 206-525-7828
Beauty & Health
BEAUTIFULSMILES
Denture & Dental ClinicAExtractions & Dentures Placed Immediately (onsite) AIn-house Lab AImplant Dentures A1/hr Repair/Reline AFree ConsultationMichael A. Salehi LDBoard Certified Denturist
Gabriela Aluas DDS General Dentist
Bothell18521 101st Ave N.E.
425-487-1551Lake Forest Park 17230 Bothell Way206-362-3333
BeautifulSmilesLLC.com
SCHEDULE TODAY
1.800.840.8875MEDICAL CANNABIS
AUTHORIZATIONSSafe*Legal*Compliant
24/7 Patient Verification
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16 • Apr 17, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record www.nw-ads.comWWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM
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We are community & daily newspapers in these Western Washington Locations:
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Beauty & Health
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Denture & Dental ClinicAExtractions & Dentures Placed Immediately (onsite) AIn-house Lab AImplant Dentures A1/hr Repair/Reline AFree ConsultationMichael A. Salehi LDBoard Certified Denturist
Gabriela Aluas DDS General Dentist
Bothell18521 101st Ave N.E.
425-487-1551Lake Forest Park 17230 Bothell Way206-362-3333
BeautifulSmilesLLC.com
Get To Know Us Speical
$3/g Headband * Must mention this ad. Limited 3g per patient
per day, limited quantity while supply lasted, no
rain check
206-209-0870VIAGRA 100MG, Cialis 20mg. 40 Pills + 4 FREE for only $99. #1 Male Enhancement! Discreet Shipping. Save $500. Buy the Blue Pill Now! 877-595-1022
Beauty & Health
Medical Cannabis Authorizations
Schedule Your Appointment Today!
Two Convenient Locations!U-District
5267 University Way NESeattle, WA 98105
Alki Beach2532 Alki Ave SW, Ste B
Seattle, WA 98116www.thehopeclinics.com
206.466.1766
Medical CollectiveMon-Fri 11-7
Sat & Sun 11-5We have a wide variety of Edibles, Clones, and Top-
Quality Medicine.Located at MMJ Universe
Farmers Market Every Saturday in Black Diamond
360.886.8046www.thekindalternative
medicalcollective.webs.com
Reach readers the daily newspapers miss when you advertise in the Classifieds. 1-800-388-2527 or www.nw-ads.com
Beauty & Health
Want Your Business Noticed?
Call Cathy Harry
at the Little Nickel
for your print & online options
I Can Make Your Phone Ring!
425.493.5061
charry@littlenickel.com
Building Materials& Supplies
40’x50’x18’ BUILDING Steel Master Building; Model S. Brand new, never assembled! Pur- chased for $13,000, will se l l fo r on ly $8 ,000! P lease ca l l 425-754- 3794.
“CEDAR FENCING”31x6x6’..........$1.09 ea31x4x5’......2 for $1.0036’x8’ Pre AssembledFence Panels $24.95ea
“CEDAR SIDING”1x8 Cedar Bevel 47¢ LF31x6x8’ T&G.......59¢ LF
“CEDAR DECKING”5/4x4 Decking
8’ & 10’ Lengths...25¢ LF12’ & Longer.........32¢ LF
5/4x6 Decking38’ to 16’ Lengths.85¢LF
Complete Line: Western Red Cedar
Building Materials Affordable Prices OPEN MON - SAT
360-377-9943www.cedarproductsco.com
Cemetery Plots
(1) MAUSOLEUM Crypt located at Bel levue’s Sunset Hil ls Memorial C e m e t e r y. C a s c a d e Court E, Sunset Mauso- leum. Must sell! Current value is: $11,660. Ask- ing: $10,500. Buyer pays transfer fees. May con- sider offers. Please con- tact Tricia today at 425- 443-3406 or email tricia- rightek4@gmail.com
2 BEAUTIFUL Adjacent Lots, in the Immaculate Rock of Ages Garden of Washington Memor ial Park in Seatac . Wel l main ta ined. Peacefu l setting. $4,500 each or both for $7,500. 253- 631-3734 between 10am and 7pm.
2 CEMETERY PLOTS Peaceful rest for your loved one or yourself. Gorgeous and local ly operated establishment; Sunset Memorial Park in Bellevue. The Garden of Rest; side by side plots; spaces 1 & 2, lot 118. $19,000 each or nego- tiable. 1215 145th Place SE 701-269-2890.
3 PLOTS; BEAUTIFUL Greenwood Memor ia l Park! Located in the se- rene Azaleas Garden, in Renton. Nice level lawn, spaces are a short walk from the road. Call today g r e a t d e a l a t o n l y $15,000 for all. Priced to steal at well below retail value of $24,000! Please leave message 253-631- 5099, I will return your call, thank you.
Floral Hills Cemetary-2 Plots- Evergreen Garden - $6500 (Lynnwood)2 P l o t s F l o r a l H i l l s Cemeta r y Evergreen Garden C38, Spaces 15 & 16 $6500.00 for both value is $3995.00 each $200.00 transfer fee we will pay. (360)897-8382
Cemetery Plots
3 SUNSET HILLS Plots Memorial Park, Bellevue WA. First plots, right off the road makes walking in easy. Located in the serene Lincoln Garden, r ight on Lincoln Drive. Gorgeous placement di- rectly across from the beautiful Prayer Statue. Lot 280A, spaces 10, 11 and 12. Section is filled! Spaces are avail only by private sale. Retails at $22,000 each. Asking only $15,000 each. 360- 886-9087.
ACACIA Memorial Park, “Birch Garden”, (2) adja- cent cemetery plots, #3 & #4. Se l l ing $4,000 each or $7,500 both. Lo- cated in Shoreline / N. Seatt le. Cal l or email Emmons Johnson, 206- 7 9 4 - 2 1 9 9 , eaj3000@msn.com
LYNWOOD CEMETERYTA N D E M C R Y P T - $9700.00 OUTDOOR A Z A L E A F O U N TA I N MAUSOLEUM. V IEW OF 35 FOOT FOUN- TAIN AT FLORAL HILLS CEMETERY. TANDEM C R Y P T W I T H 2 R IGHTS, LEVEL ‘H ’ . LAST ONE AVAILABLE THIS LOCATION. LIST- E D P R I C E I S $ 1 2 , 3 0 0 . 0 0 , S A M - LYN3@COMCAST.NET(NO HYPHEN)
MAUSOLEUM~SanJuan Whitbey Court II at Ever- green Washelli in Seat- t l e . I nc l udes b ronze plate and instal lat ion. Asking $5,500 425-271- 0284
SUNSET HILLS Memori- al Cemetery in Bellevue. 2 s ide by s ide p lo ts available in the Sold Out Garden of Devotion, 9B, S p a c e 9 a n d 1 0 . $15 ,000 each nego - t i a b l e . A l s o , 1 p l o t available in Garden of Devotion, 10B, space 5, $10,000 negotiable. Call 503-709-3068 or e-mail drdan7@juno.comGet the ball rolling...Call 800-388-2527 today.
Electronics
Dish Network lowest na- tionwide price $19.99 a m o n t h . F R E E H B O / Cinemax/Starz FREE Blockbuster. FREE HD- DVR and instal l . Next day install 1-800-375- 0784
DISH Network. Starting at $19.99/month PLUS 3 0 P r e m i u m M o v i e Channels FREE for 3 Months! SAVE! & Ask About SAME DAY Instal- lation! CALL - 877-992- 1237
My Computer Works. Computer problems? Vi- ruses, spyware, email, printer issues, bad inter- net connections - FIX IT N OW ! P r o fe s s i o n a l , U.S.-based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help. 1-866- 998-0037
*REDUCE YOUR cable bill! * Get a 4-Room All- Digital Satellite system installed for FREE and programming starting at $19.99/mo. FREE HD/ DVR upgrade for new callers, SO CALL NOW. 1-800-699-7159
SAVE on Cable TV-In- ternet-Digital Phone-Sat- e l l i t e . You `ve Go t A Choice! Opt ions from ALL major service pro- viders. Call us to learn more! CALL Today. 877- 884-1191
u COMPUTER u RUNNING SLOW?Or Not Responding?
u Computer Network Svc
u Instruction ARepair u System Setup
uHouse Calls uOffice CallsCall Dave 425- 867- 0919
Farm Fencing& Equipment
710 Kubota diesel Trac- tor with tiller needs work $900. Two Troy Bu i l t walk behind tillers Horse model needs work $500 for both 360-779-5181
David Brown 12 12 Now Known as Case Tractor Front end loader, 3 point hitch. Runs Good. 1976. $3500. 360-631-6089
Reach thousands of readers 1-800-388-2527
Firewood, Fuel& Stoves
A+SEASONEDFIREWOODDry & Custom-Split
Alder, Maple & Douglas FirSpeedy Delivery &
Best Prices!
(425)508-9554
FIREWOOD logs, 4+ cords. Delivered. $500. 206-799-5848
Quality Firewood Logs
Delivered Log Truck Loads
Fir/TamLodgepole, Birch. Please call for
prices.425-530-1332
Flea Market
25 + PIECE CHINA SET Nor i take Bone China breakfastware; “Market” pattern. Excellent condi- t i o n . R e c e i v e d a n d packed away in 1963. Beau t i f u l , mus t see. $150 takes all. Call for more details 360-871- 3149.32” JVC TV Great pic- t u re . Wor ks pe r fec t . Quality brand! Not a flat screen. $75. Call after noon: 12pm. 425-885- 9806. Cell 425-260-8535BABY MONITOR $20 obo. 8 Fine China din- nerware pieces, “Ele- gant Lady” pattern, call for more details $5 each or $40 for all/ obo. 360- 871-3149.GOOD VACCUM Clean- er $20. Redmond 360- 460-7442.IRONSTONE service for 8 with platter and gravy bowl. cash only. $50.00. 360-692-6295Lawn mower fo r jus t $50. Call 360-698-1547. KitsapROCKER Recliner, La- Z-Boy, Blue, good condi- tion, $50. (2) ELECTRIC Train Sets. O 27 Gauge. Lionel, $35. Marx, $45. 360-377-7170 Bremer- ton
Flea Market
STYLISH LADIES COAT Nice lightweight leather. Worn very little and in excel lent shape! Cal f length, s ize 9, black. $150. Call after noon: 12pm. 425-885-9806 or cell: 425-260-8535.
TIRE CHAINS for four (4) large tire/wheels pur- chased for Chev S-10 Blazer, cal l for actual size, never used. $39 OBO (360) 697-1816. Poulsbo.
Wheeled Garden Stool, $15 OBO, (360) 697- 1816. Poulsbo.
Food &Farmer’s Market
100% Guaranteed Oma- ha Steaks - SAVE 69% on The Grilling Collec- t i o n . N O W O N LY $49.99 P lus 2 FREE GIFTS & r ight- to-the- door del ivery in a re- usable cooler, ORDER Today. 1- 888-697-3965 Use Code:45102ETA or w w w . O m a h a S - teaks.com/offergc05
Free ItemsRecycler
ADJUSTABLE BED; full s ize. Inc ludes l inens. Clean! Good condition! Nor th Bend 425-888- 0762.
FILE Cabinet, 2 drawer, wood. Good condition! Nor th Bend 425-888- 0762.
Jewelry & Fur
I BUY GOLD, S i lver, D iamonds, Wr is t and Pocket Watches, Gold and Silver Coins, Silver- ware, Gold and Platinum Antique Jewelry. Call Mi- c h a e l A n t h o n y ’s a t (206)254-2575
Mail Order
AT T E N T I O N S L E E P APNEA SUFFERERS w i t h M e d i c a r e . G e t C PA P R e p l a c e m e n t Supplies at little or NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, pre- vent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 1-866-993-5043
WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM www.nw-ads.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • Apr 17, 2013 • 17Mail Order
Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90% on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-418-8975, for $10.00 off your first prescr ipt ion and f ree shipping.Medical Alert for Seniors - 24/7 monitoring. FREE E q u i p m e n t . F R E E Shipping. Nat ionwide Service. $29.95/Month CALL Medical Guardian Today 866-992-7236TAKE VIAGRA? Stop paying outrageous pric- es! Best prices ...VIGRA 100MG, 40 pills+/4 free, only $99.00. Discreet shipping, Power Pill.1-800-368-2718VIAGRA 68 x (100 mg) P I L L S f o r O N L Y $159.00. NO Prescrip- t i o n N e e d e d ! O t h e r meds available. Credit or Deb i t Requ i red . Ca l l NOW: 616-433-1152Satisfaction Guaranteed!
Miscellaneous
1/2 OFF Glass w/ Purchase
of Garage Door
1-888-289-6945
A-1 Door Service
(Mention this ad)
30th AnnualWashington
StateEvergreen RV Show
100’s of New & Used RV’s with Discounted
RV Show Pricing!
April 19, 20, 21Evergreen State
Fairgrounds, Monroe, WAFri. & Sat. 10-7,
Sun. 10-5evergreenrvshow.com
Alternative Medical Group
Cannabis authorization
special!!!1 Year $99
Call for an appt206-687-5966
FREE ESTIMATE
for Purchase of NEW Garage
Doors1-888-289-6945A-1 Door Serice(Mention This Ad)
HANCOOK Winter-pike s t u d d e d t i r e p a i r . ( P 2 3 5 / 7 5 R 1 5 ) L o w miles. Must Sell. $80. El- liptical exerciser. New in box , fac to r y packed . $100. 206-631-9544KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Indoor/Outdoor. Odor- less, Non-Staining, Long Lasting. Kills Socrpions and other insects. Effec- tive results begin after t h e s p r a y d r i e s ! Available at Ace Hard- ware, The Home Depot or Homedepot.com
Miscellaneous
I-502 PASSEDGET LEGAL TODAY
LEARN YOUR
RIGHTS ON
MEDICAL
CANNABIS
CALL US TODAY
425-248-9066APPOINTMENTS
ONLY
Lucky Greenhouse & Light
1000 Watt Grow Light Package includes Bal- last, Lamp & Reflector!
$1791000 Watt Digital Light Package includes Bal-
last, Lamp and Upgrad- ed Reflector!
$2493323 3rd Ave S.
Suite 100B, Seattle
206.682.8222Most of our glass is
blown by local artists, hand crafted,
a true work of art! water pipes, oil burners, keif boxes, nug jars, ho-
liebowlies, hightimes magazines, calendars, clothing and literature along with a full line of
vaporizers.
Goin Glass
Open 7 days a week!
425-222-0811
SAWMILLS from only $3997.00 -- Make and Save Money with your own bandmill. Cut lum- ber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. Free I n fo / DV D : w w w. N o r - woodSawmil ls.com 1- 800-578-1363 Ext. 300N
STAMP SHOW
Evergreen Stamp Club
SPRING 2013Stamp Show
April 20-21, 2013
Kent Commons525 4th Ave. North
Kent, WA
Saturday, 10am-5pmSunday, 10am-4pm
Exhibits!Dealer Bourse!
FREE admissionFREE appraisals -
bring in that oldcollection in the closet.
23 dealers from5 states.
For information,call: 425-883-9390
Sporting Goods
GOLF Clubs: Ping Eye 2 irons, 2-PW, 2 Hybrids, 2 seven woods, large Adams driver, set 1, 3 & 5. Bag & miscellaneous equipment. Make offer. (425)736-2802
SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.
Sporting Goods
GUN, KNIFE, COIN and Collectible Show. Buy, Sell & Trade. Over 100 Tables. Saturday, April 20th, 9am-5pm, Sunday, Ap r i l 21s t , 9 a m - 3 p m . G r a n t County Fai rgrounds, 3953 Airway Drive, Mo- ses Lake, WA. 509- 765-3581. $5 Admis- sion, Kids 12 & Under Free When Accompa- nied By An Adult.
Wanted/Trade
CASH FOR ANY CAR! Running or Not! Don’t trade in or junk your car before calling us! Instant Offer! 1-800-541-8433CASH PAID - UP TO $28/BOX for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAY- M E N T & P R E PA I D shipping. BEST PRIC- ES ! Ca l l 1 -888 -366 - 0957. www.Cash4Diabe- ticSupplies.com
RECORDS WANTED
Top prices paid for used vinyl & CD’
House call available206-632-5483
Birds
See PhotosOnline!
Whenever you seea camera icon on
an ad like this:
Just log on to:
www.littlenickel.com
Simply type in the phone number from the ad in the “Search By Keywords” to see
the ad with photo!
Want to run a photo ad in Little Nickel?
Just give us a call!
1-800-544-0505
SINGING CANARIES Hens & Males, also pairs $ 5 0 - $ 7 5 . R e d Fa c - tors/Glosters/Fifes & Re- cessive Whites. Auburn, 2 5 3 - 8 3 3 - 8 2 1 3 Unavailable on Satur- days
Cats
RAGDOLL Mix Kittens, Very Pret ty. S iamese Himalayan Color. Very Friendly, Loving, Social Cats. 1st Shot. $85 - $125. 360-651-0987 or 425-374-9925
Dogs
4 month old male dachs- hund puppy/first shots/ deworming solid black w/whi te patch on h is chin single puppy litter 450/OBO both parents in home 206-941-1704AKC COCKER Babies most colors, beautiful, s o c i a l i z e d , h e a l t hy, ra ised w i th ch i ld ren . Shots, wormed, pedi- grees. $600 up. Terms? 425-750-0333, EverettAKC German Shepard Pups, available May 4th Fami ly ra ised, heal th guaranteed. 4 males, 4 females. See pups at www.warnerhaus.com $ 8 5 0 . C a l l R o s e a t ( 5 0 9 ) 9 9 4 - 6 7 0 4 c e l l (509)732-4555 weekendAKC Labrador Puppies C h o c o l a t e & B l a ck . Great hunters, compan- ions, playful, loyal. 1st shots, dewormed. Par- ents on site. OFA’s $450 & $550. (425)422-2428
Dogs
AKC German Shepherd Pups. Czech & German Bloodl ines born Sept 29th top of the line pups $500. death in the fam- ily forces late sale with low prices! 2nd litter of Panda & Czech Blood- l i n e s b o r n D e c 5 t h . P l e a s e c a l l S h e r i (253)951-8947
AKC GERMAN SHEP- HERD pups. Females from $1500 black sable and mahogony sable. M a l e s $ 1 8 0 0 b l a c k sable. East German & Czech work ing l ines. Home companion, SAR, Spor t & family protec- tion. 253-380-0190SchraderhausK9.com
AKC Golden Retr iever pups. Excel lent blood line. $500 males. $600 females. Wormed and shots! 360-652-7148AKC MINI Schnauzer puppies. Some ready to go now, some ready lat- e r. Var ie ty o f co lors. $400 males $500 fe- males. Now taking de- pos i ts. 253-223-3506 253-223-8382gonetothedogskennel.comA K C P O M E R A N I A N puppies. Variety of col- ors. $400 males, $500 females. Ex t ra smal l $600. Some ready now, some later. Taking de- p o s i t s . 2 5 3 - 2 2 3 - 3 5 0 6 2 5 3 - 2 2 3 - 8 3 8 2 gonetothedogskennel.com
AKC Poodle Puppies Teacups, 2 Choco- late & White Parti Fe- males, 3 Chocolates 2 Males, 1 Female. 1 Red Male. Little Puffs of Wiggles and Kiss- e s . R e s e r ve Yo u r Puf f of Love! 360- 249-3612AKC REGISTERED Yel- low Labs Pups for Sale $650.00 Our Female is a family pet - Not a puppy mill. (360)631-6089
AKC WESTIE PUPS. West Highland Whi te Terriers. Four litters to choose f rom. $1,000. Will take deposits. Call with any questions. You can’t go wrong with a Westie 360-402-6261AWESOME Wolf Cubs for sale, born 1/20/13, 7/8 Timber/Arctic Wolf, 1/8 Siber ian Husky. L oya l fa m i l y p e t s , h a n d r a i s e d , f i r s t s h o t s . 2 f e m a l e s , $800-$1000. 503-964- 7362, email:scott.benzel@unitedmdc.comDachsund Terr ier Mix Puppies for Sale. Pic- tures Available. Puppies can be seen in Monroe. Cal l or text 406-839- 4140 or 360-794-5902GERMAN ROTTWEIL- ER, Purebred, AKC’d Papered. 4 Yr Old. Vom Keiser Wappen Blood- l ine $2500. Call Now! 425-280-2662
Dogs
B e a u t i f u l Au s t ra l i a n Shepherd Pups. ASCA or CKC Reg Working Versatility lines We have 5 Merles - Blue & Red M&F 2 Tri Males - 1blk & 1 red. Lot’s of copper! Pa ren ts have hea l th clearances, these pups will have lot’s of energy. Great family compan- ions. Trialing/show pros- pects. DOB 2/27/13 Sue 425-478-2352 Shomi- ah2@wildblue.net - Du- vall, WA
GERMAN SHEPHERD pups. AKC/UKC, Czech lines. Parents Penn cer- tif ied. Raised in home w i th grand k ids. Two beautiful females. Five robust males. DOB 4-5- 13. Vet checked, 1s t shots & wormed. $1,000. $500 down gets choice. 360-239-9129 360-264- 2616 Leave message.GREAT DANE
AVAIL NOW 2 LITTERS Of Full Euro’s; one litter o f b lues and one o f mixed colors. AKC Great Dane Pups Health guar- antee! Males / Females. Dreyrsdanes is Oregon state’s largest breeder of Great Danes, licensed since ‘02. Super sweet, intelligent, lovable, gen- tle giants $2000- $3,300. Also Standard Poodles. 503-556-4190. www.dreyersdanes.com
Is it time for you to own a World known cham- p i on b l ood l i ne . You r puppy will be eligible for registration with Ameri- can Kennel Club A.K.C. in your name unlimited. Dam is from German im-port and strong schut- z h u n d b l o o d l i n e s . Grandfather is Jello vomMichelstadter Rauthaus VA 5 . B u n d e s S i e g e r - Zuchtschau In Wort UndBild Karlsruhe This Car- lyson, typical of his sire w a s a g a i n a b l e t o present an absolutely positive progeny group. Sire is Schh3 kkl1 from German impor t Wor ld Seiger VA1. We hired sire at stud but he is available for viewing by photos and call us for his bloodl ines. Excel lent ! Puppy can be trained to compete in protection, tracking, obedience and confirmation. They have strong schutzhund bloodin their lines from both parents. They have a h igh dr ive to p lease. Dam and Aunt rare ly stop working. Puppies will be dewormed, vacci-nated and ready to go with puppy care pack- ages.They come with health guarantees. Dam is black and red. Sire is black and very very red. 206 853-4387
LABRADOr AKC yellow & black pups, excellent pedigrees, blocky head, both parents on site, full registration, vet check, 1st vacc, de-worm pro- gram. Ready now. Hap- py, healthy pups. Males & females. Blacks $500, Yellows $600 Michelle 3 6 0 - 4 9 0 - 3 3 1 1 C h r i s 360-490-1372
SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.
Dogs
MALTESE PUPPIES. Purebred, 7 weeks old. Two ma les . Sho ts & wormed. Parents on site. $500 each. 253-761- 6067MINI AUSSIES! Shots and wormed. Great fami- ly dogs, easy to train. $500 up. Call 360-893- 6568 or cnofhl@aol.comPicture at: littlenickel.com
NEED A PUPPY?WANT CHOICES?
*CHIHUAHUA*LAB
*GOLDEN*JACK RUSSELL
*MIN PIN*POM
*ST. BERNARD*SHIBA
*WESTIEPhotos at:
FARMLANDPETS.COM
F Current VaccinationFCurrent Deworming
F VET EXAMINED
Farmland Pets & Feed
9000 Silverdale Way
(360)692-0415Pomeranian, Cute, Cud- ly Teddy Bear, Teacup
Male 8 weeks, 2 pounds. Real Playful. Shots,
Wormed. $450 Cash. (425)420-6708
POM PUPS, 8 weeks, 1st Shots & Wormed. Dar l ing personal i t ies, Black & tan, cream/sable $400-$450 425-377- 1675
PUPPIES!Faux Frenchies and
Bo-Chi’sMany colors, shots, wormed. Loved and kissed daily! $650 & up. See webpage:www.littledogpage.com 541-459-5802.PUREBRED BOSTON Terr iers. 2 females, 4 males. 6 weeks old, eat- i n g a n d d r i n k i n g , weaned . B lack and white brindle. $750ea. 509-972-7931
RAT TERRIERPUPPIES
Small miniatures, reg- istered, rare colors. Except ional ly n ice. Shots, wormed, $250- $350. Ready to go! 360-273-9325Hopespringsfarms.com
ROTTWEILLERS or DOBERMANS: Extra large. Family raised. Adults and puppies. Free training available. 360-893-0738; 253- 770-1993; 253-304- 2278 No texts please!
Farm Animals& Livestock
Trout Donaldson Rainbow Finger-
lings for your pond, very fast growing, u-haul. Miller Ranch Inc
Yacolt WA 360-686-3066
Horses
Come join the WSHJA towatch an exciting night o f pro fess iona l show jumping at the Spring Nat iona l Grand Pr ix , 6:30 pm April 20th at the Evergreen State Fair- g r o u n d s i n M o n r o e . General Admission $5, Youth and Seniors $3, and under 5 is free! Pro- ceeds benefit local 4-H youth.
General Pets
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Llame a Lia866-580-9405
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ServicesAnimals
LOVING Animal Care Visits - Walks Housesitting Home & Farm
JOANNA GARDINER 206-567-0560
(Cell) 206-228-4841
Garage/Moving SalesIsland County
FREELAND
4/19-4/20 HUGE MULTI fa m i l y g a r a g e s a l e ! Coming up on Fr iday and Saturday from 8am to 4pm located at 2219 Lancaster, Freeland. An- tiques, dresser, dishes, books, garden art, crafts, o l d R i c h m o n d Fa r m scale, costume jewelry, 3 piece corner oak desk, t r e a d l e s ew i n g m a - chines, old buffet, chairs, oak table, antique childs b e d , a n t i q u e s e t t l e bench, vintage kitchen items, manly items from the garage/ barn and much more!LANGLEYGARAGE SALE! Lots of tools, appliances, elec- t ron ics, lawn mower, lawn furniture, gardening i t e m s a n d s u p p l i e s . Housewares, furniture, books, DVD movies and tons more! Friday and Saturday, Apr i l 19th & 20th from 9am to 4pm and Sunday, April 21st from noon to 4pm locat- ed at 3283 Brooks Hill Road.
Garage/Moving SalesKing County
Annual SpringLatvian Rummage
SaleFirst Time Offered:Collectibles, Furniture,
Household Items, Clothes, Books, Electronics, Tools,
Plants, Ethnic Items,Jewelry & Much More
Coffee Bar & Ethnic Snacks
Thur, 4/18, 9:30-8pm(Numbers Assigned
Starting at 8am)Fri, 4/19, 9:30-8pmSat, 4/20, 9:30-5pmSun, 4/21, 12-4pm
Seattle Latvian Center11710 - 3rd Ave NE
SeattleNorth of Northgate,
East of I-5
BellevueFLEA MARKET, Satur- day, Apr i l 20th from 9 AM to 3 PM. Vasa Park Bal l room, 3560 West Lake Sammamish Park- way South, in Bellevue
Date: Saturday, Apr i l 20th. 9 am to 1 pm Lo- cation: Woodinville WA, 13530 184th Ave NE (off Avondale Road). Furni- ture, household goods, ar twork, outdoor furni- ture & garden items, 2 men’s bikes & cycling accessories.
Garage/Moving SalesKing County
BELLEVUE HUGE RUMMAGE Sale! Tons of clothing, acces- sories, furniture, decor, hose wares, mov ies, books, toys, plants (veg- gies, herbs, perennials, tree seedlings) and a bake sa le too! I tems from over 20 Sammam- ish high school families! Friday, April 19th, 8am to 4pm and Saturday, April 20th, 8am to 2pm located a t Lake Sammamish Four Square Church, 14434 NE 8th St, Belle- vue, WA 98007RENTON
KING OF Kings Luther- an Church Spring Rum- mage Sale. Friday, April 19th from 10am-5pm. Saturday, April 20th from 10am-3pm. 18207 108th Ave SE, 98055
SALE LADYQuality Moving Sale. Thursday, Friday & Saturday, April 18th, 19th & 20th. 9am-4:30pm. 15530 SE 44th Pl, Bellevue, 98006 (Horizon Heights area). High end quality furniture, Sofas, Glass-top cof- fee tables, Cherry Dis- play Cabinet, Bar Stools, Karastan Area Rugs, Decorator Lamps, King-Size Bed w/Mattress & Linens, Danish Teak Dining Room Table, China Cabinet & Chairs, Teak Dressers w/Mir- rors, Collector Art and Lithograph, Nishijin Super Deluxe Pinball Machine, Collector Cameras & Lenses, Miscellaneous Office Supplies, Lladro Figurines, Carved Asian Blanket Chest, Brass Storage Chest, Waterford Crystal Glasses & Bowl, Sets of China, KitchenAide Mixer. Lots of Bake- ware, Miscellaneous Kitchen items. Quality Men & Women’s Clothing. Yard & Gar- den, Hand Tools, Pot- tery & Fertilizers. Craftsman, like new Gas Lawnmower. Patio Furniture, Gas BBQ Grill, Treadmill & weight sets. Lots of Christmas Decorations (Snow Village). Miscel- laneous Hand Tools & Builder Supplies. We charge sales tax.
VashonMOVING SALE: Satur- day only, 9-3. Furnish- ings, c lothing, books. L o t s o f g o o d s t u f f . Everything goes! 5426 Point Robinson Rd.
Garage/Moving SalesKitsap County
BREMERTONEPIC ECE Fundraiser! Krispey Kreams Dough- nuts plus toys, clothes, household goods and tons more! Saturday, April 20th from 9am to 2pm located at West- Sound Tech, 101 Na- t iona l Avenue Nor th , Bremerton.
Garage/Moving SalesGeneral
MONROE Year Round
Indoor Swap Meet Celebrating 15 Years!
Evergreen FairgroundsSaturday & Sunday
9 am - 4pmFREE Admission &
parking!For Information call
360-794-5504
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Garage/Moving SalesGeneral
MONROE Year Round
Indoor Swap Meet Celebrating 15 Years!
Evergreen FairgroundsSaturday & Sunday
9 am - 4pmFREE Admission &
parking!For Information call
360-794-5504
Estate Sales
ESTATE SALE. REN- T O N F O R E S T E S - TATES. 13515 SE 181st P lace. Window t reat - ments & draperies, cor- ner cupboard, floral love- seat, Tiffany type floor lamp, wing back chair, artwork, numbered Hib- el, Robert Wee “Pacific Sunset”, contemporary oak dining set with 6 chairs and one leaf, oak executive type desk with swivel chair, tall oak file c a b i n e t , o a k b o o k shelves, rocking chair, matching floral loveseat and sofa, round oak din- ing table with four chairs, two oak bar stools, Ken- more vacuum, books, cook books, garden sup- plies and furniture, No- vara five speed bike, wa- terbed, k i tes, 6 ret ro chairs, mini lock serger, buttons, Wooten style desk, armories, Philhar- monic record player with speakers and s te reo system, tete a tete con- versation chair, queen headboard, double mat- tress with box springs, floor fans, lamps, TVs, Quasar Sony with mod- ern stand, speakers and sub woofer, fine linens, French provincial chair w i t h o t t o m a n , w h i t e wicker rocker, chi ld ’s iron crib, chamber pot and wash stand repro- duction, dolls, bureau, quilt collection and sup- p l i e s , D o u l t o n , R . S. Prussia, cut glass, lariat, cranberry glass, Nori- take, kitchen, depression wares and glass, col- lec tables, ephemera, trailer hitch, horse collar. MUCH MORE! 13515 SE 181st Place, Renton. Friday-Sunday. April 19, 20, 21. 11am-4pm Cash only! No Earlies!
OAK HARBOR ESTATE MOVING SALE Tons of great qual i ty items! Furniture and lots of stuff! Including old records and a turntable, some retro stuff, piano, lamps, oak desk, com- puter desk, complete queen bed with linens, 32” TV, stereo cabinet, r ec l i ne r, bookcases, loveseat, (8) solid North- eastern Birch Chairs, and much too more to list!! Friday and Satur- day, Apr i l 19 th & 20 th
from 9am to 5pm located at 2691 SW Talon Loop, 98277.
Estate Sales
OAK HARBORESTATE SALE! Amaz- ing Empire Antiques, Art, G l a s s , M i d - C e n t u r y, fridge, freezer, washer dr yer, beach, mower, generator, household & garage. Friday and Sat- urday, April 19th & 20th from 9am- 3pm located at 4475 Moran Beach Lane, Nor th Whidbey. See the web site for picswww.alleycatantique.com
AutomobilesPorsche
2004 911 Porsche C2, B l a c k / B l a c k . 3 1 . 5 K miles. Electronic spor t e x h a u s t , A e r o K i t , Chrome Factory Rims New tires and serviced at local dealership
$34,900. volks85@aol.com
Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories
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Free Pick up 253-335-1232
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CASH FOR CARS! Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Tr u c k TO DAY. F r e e Towing! Instant Offer: 1-888-545-8647
Professional ServicesFarm/Garden Service
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Se HablaEspanol!Para ordenar
un anuncio en el Little Nickel!
Llame a Lia866-580-9405
LToupin@littlenickel.com
Professional ServicesInstruction/Classes
ARTINSTRUCTION
NationallyRecognized Artist
Acrylic, Gouache, DrawingTeenage to Seniors.
$25/hr. Refs upon req.
Peter: (360)769-7394
Professional ServicesLegal Services
BANKRUPTCY
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Law Offices ofLynda H. McMaken P.S.
Home ServicesAsphalt/ Paving
CUSTOM PAVINGNo Job Too Big or Small! 40yrs Exp.
Lic#CUSTOP*907PK/Bond/InsNew Driveways,
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425-318-5008
Sell it free in the Flea1-866-825-9001
Home ServicesConcrete Contractors
CONCRETEAll Phases - All types
Excavat ions, forms, pou r & f i n i sh . 30+ y e a r s ex p e r i e n c e , reasonable pr ic ing . Call for free estimates.
Concrete DesignLarry 206-459-7765
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Home ServicesGeneral Contractors
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& Iron Work, Exavating, Home Inprovment, Land-
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1-800-647-0982or check L&Is internet site at www.lni.wa.gov
Home ServicesElectrical Contractors
DS ELECTRIC Co. New breaker panel,
electrical wiring, trouble shoot, electric heat, Fire Alarm System, Intercom and Cable,
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up to code... Senior Discount 15%Lic/Bond/Insured
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Excavations
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Home ServicesProperty Maintenance
All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Water- proofing ? Finishing ? Structural Repairs ? Hu- midity and Mold ControlF R E E E S T I M AT E S ! Call 1-888-698-8150
Home ServicesLandscape Services
$10 OFFFirst Service!
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Top Soil Instillation. Free Estimate!
R & Jose Landscaping206-856-2365
A-1 SHEERGARDENING & LANDSCAPING
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425-226-3911 206-722-2043
Lic# A1SHEGL034JM
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Any kind of YARDWORK
*Bark *Weed *Trim*Prune *New Sod
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Call Steve206-244-6043425-214-3391
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ALL AROUND LAWN LAWN MAINTENANCE.
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R & R MAINTENANCE206-683-6794
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www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • April 17, 2013 • 19
Culinary classes at Mount Si get students
on right track for restaurant careersBy Carol ladwig
Staff Reporter
Behind the doors of the Wildcat Cafe kitchen, white-coated students are working fast to get ready for the lunch crowd. About 25 young men and women are putting the final garnishes on sandwiches, transferring pans to and from the large ovens, prepping cold foods, firing up grills and, for safety, yelling “corner!” every time they go around one. It seems chaotic, until you look back out the doors to the sea of students and teachers, waiting to place their orders.
The line, five deep in places, stretches out the cafe and into the Mount Si High School commons.
It’s both encouraging and frustrating to Laura Tarp, Mount Si High School’s culi-nary instructor and one of the few adults involved in the operation of the cafe. Encouraging that the cafe is so popular, but frustrating that customers might have longer than ideal waits in line.
She heads back to the kitchen to let her students know they’ve got a line building, and to jump in where she can to help. It doesn’t take long before the team settles into a groove and the line is dispersed. Then Tarp and Matt Blakley, one of the cafe’s student managers, can get back to their work of trouble-shooting and fine-tuning.
Blakley, a senior and four-
year culinary student, reviews a row of sandwiches ready to be served, and frowns.
“These don’t get toothpicks,” he says, pulling a frill-topped pick out of one sandwich and sliding it back to the cooks. Only certain menu items get picks, some get sliced, some get pickles, and so on.
Next, he goes to the new frozen yogurt machine, where two stu-dents are practic-ing dispensing the treat for custom-ers to taste-test. He shows them how to finish the little samples according to the cafe standard a few times, before he’s off to the next task.
“I don’t usually get lunch,” he says, but as a long-time culinary student, he’s used to fitting lunch in with his other classes, if at all.
Don’t think that he just samples his way through the lunch service, though, because there are strict standards of conduct and professionalism at the Wildcat Cafe.
“Everybody has to pay -- I have to pay, if I’m going to eat,” says Tarp. “I don’t get to take a lunch, though…”
All the skillsTarp has been surrounded
by food meant for other peo-ple for 13 years, as long as she’s taught creative cooking and culinary arts at Mount Si. Her classes, increasing in size in recent years, start with basic cooking skills and progress to
the training needed for a stu-dent to pursue a career in res-taurant- or related industries.
“We’re a skills center,” Tarp says, explaining that her cur-riculum and the cafe are guided by the Washington Restaurant Association’s ProStart program for students.
A culinary student can learn all the skills needed to operate a re s t au r a nt , just by taking her classes. Students work a station, dish-washing, grill, line, front counter, etc., for one week, Wednesday to Tuesday, then move to anoth-er station. Tarp says she could actually run the cafe with
only four students, if needed, but this way, every student is prepared for what might be in their futures.
“Some of these kids, they get in the real world, and they’ll tell me, ‘oh, I do everything!’” Tarp said. “I try to teach by let-ting them find out stuff.”
Through her classes, the cafe work and the optional events catering that helps sub-sidize the cost of classes, Tarp is preparing her students for that real world, that experience in “producing a product and providing a service.”
It’s doubly-valuable expe-rience because, if they keep their grades up, participat-ing students can earn college credits in the program, simi-lar to Advanced Placement classes, and because it makes them attractive to restaurants hiring.
“We have quite a few that are working in the industry right now,” Tarp said, looking around the kitchen as students passed by. She listed their res-taurants as she saw the students: McDonald’s, Snoqualmie Ridge TPC, the North Bend Thai Restaurant…
“Thai Restaurant!” echoes Timothy Phan, the student employee, raising a fist. He’s
worked at the restaurant for years, he says, and he finds real value in the training he gets at school, too. “This is a great class,” the freshman said, add-ing that he knows the experi-ence will help him find work in the industry.
On the opposite end of the student-interest spectrum, at least at first, was Danielle Clark, a junior who took first place in the ProStart regional competition for commercial baking and advanced to state-level competition in April. When she started high school, she said, she was thinking of a career in sports medicine. She only took the cooking class because she remembered how much her step-brother enjoyed it, she said.
“And once I got there, it kind of felt right,” Clark said.
She doesn’t work at the cafe, but in her second-period culi-nary arts class, she produces many of the baked goods on sale in the cafe, and she has the same focus, “trying to make everything uniform in how it looks and tastes.” Her training has given her confidence, and a new career goal.
“One day, I want to open my own bakery,” she said.
Clark was one of four Mount Si culinary students to excel in a ProStart regional event in February, but the only one to compete in commercial baking. Her classmates swept the culinary competition’s top three placings, with Brian Harris in first, Blakley taking second, and Kendall Wright in third.
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Above, Mount Si culinary students Rio Vega and Emily Schiferl, joke around, almost done with their shift on the line. Left, Student manager Matt Blakley demonstrates precise technique for creating yogurt samples. Middle, students keep busy with countless prep tasks before and during the lunch rush.Bottom, Culinary instructor Laura Tarp, left, shows guests how the student-run cafe operates.
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www.valleyrecord.com20 • April 17, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
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SPRING MAINTENANCE SERVICE
With coupon only. Not to be combined with any other offerHurry offer expires 5/17/2013.
CHECK ENGINE LIGHT ON?
$20 00
CHECK ENGINE DIAGNOSTIC(Most Vehicles)
“Ignoring the Check Engine Light May Lead to very Expensive Repairs ...
Stop in and let us Help You”
With coupon only. Disposal fee Extra. Most Cars.Not to be combined with any other offer. Hurry offer expires 5/17/2013.
0FF
Hours: Mon-Fri 9am to 6pmFree Shuttle Service
A Full-Service Dealer Alternative For Your Complete Auto Care Needs
Brake SpecialFront or Rear
7678
47
9065 Railroad Ave. SE • Snoqualmie • Tel:425.888.4568 • Fax:425.888.0742 • email:rdrhammer@yahoo.com