3/21/12 issaquah press

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The Issaquah Press

Section

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B

COMMUNITY

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 2012

MOMS & SONS

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HAVE A

FIELD DAY PHOTOS BY GREG FARRAR

Above, a circle of moms walk in one direction and the circle of sons walk in the opposite direction while trying to remember the name of the last person they stopped in front of in a memory game. Mother-Son Field Day was held March 16 at the Issaquah Community Center, featuring fun relays, crazy competitions, goofy games and refreshments, all enjoyed by 25 families of moms and sons during the annual event. At left, Kim Janous and her son Tyler, 7, Issaquah Highlands residents, play the ‘Basketball Waddle’ portion of an obstacle course.

Above, Signe Stroming (left), Liberty High School freshman, and Tali Magidson, Issaquah High School freshman, both Youth Activity Board members, prepare a game for moms and their sons to play. Below, a judge holds the winning paper airplane that belongs to Aadi Kaul, 6, and his mother Preeti, of Issaquah, after it flies in the distance contest. Above, Davis Franklin (left), 8, mom Pamela and brother Taylor, 7, Trossachs residents, exult as they solve a wood block puzzle. At right, Randall Garbutt, 7, and his mom Etlir Gadison scramble through the ‘Above and Below’ maze, one of eight hazards in an obstacle course, to finish in a time of 1 minute, 5 seconds.

A circle of moms and their sons touch feet together and try to win by rolling the ball out of the circle through the legs of one of the players.

Weak economy equals boom time for buyers of gold, silver and collectibles By Tom Corrigan Issaquah Press reporter

Treasure Hunters buyer Craig Meadow shows off 70 pounds of casino chips he bought from a local woman last week. Meadow also was hoping to buy some slot machines from the woman. BY TOM CORRIGAN

Early the morning of March 16, Craig Meadow, a buyer for Treasure Hunters Roadshow, said he had just made probably the most unusual purchase of his weeklong visit to Issaquah. Meadow was one of two buyers in town with Treasure Hunters, who advertise themselves as buyers of precious metals, coins and antiquities. “Collectibles” could probably be added to that list. Meadow’s noteworthy buy was 70 pounds of casino chips of every variety. Many were from various Las Vegas casinos and may even still be viable at the casinos they came from. Others were a lot more exotic, such as a porcelain chip still wrapped in a protective covering. Another was a Kenny Rogers memorial chip featuring a picture of the singer. Meadow paid about $80 for the chips, saying he bought them primarily for the metal. The seller was supposed to return as the two still were working out a deal for several slot machines, including three that dispense gumballs. The seller said the items had belonged

ON THE WEB Learn more about Treasure Hunters at www.thrassociates.com.

to her late husband, according to Meadow. The company behind the “Treasure Hunters” cable TV show, Treasure Hunters, also known as THR and Associates, has been sending buyers to Issaquah a few times a year. During their recent week at the Issaquah Holiday Inn, Treasure Hunters was especially looking for coins, older paper currency, trains, dolls, vintage jewelry, musical instruments and similar items along with gold or silver, Treasure Hunters spokesman Matthew Enright said in a press release. Gold, silver and jewelry buyers are in vogue presently, Meadow agreed, with shops popping up on street corners and in malls. The still tough economy is no doubt the reason, he said. With so many places to potentially sell items, how do know you’ve found a reputable buyer who will pay a fair price? One key is finding a buyer

who has been in the business for a while, Meadow said. “We have been doing this for many years,” he said of Treasure Hunters. “We treat people fair and we give them a fair price.” Meadow travels all over the country for Treasure Hunters. When needed, he can call on what he said is a highly knowledgeable research staff to help determine the value of an item. He said he’s purchased a master recording of a Beatles’ song from a Moses Lake resident and was with another buyer when Treasure Hunters paid $10,000 for a “vampire hunter’s kit” including a cross and wooden spike. The most unusual item Meadow said he personally bought is also the most expensive. He paid $25,000 for a coin that predated the Roman Empire and had been authenticated by the Smithsonian Institute. “It was a beautiful coin,” Meadow said. “You hold it in your hand and you wonder how many other people have held it.” Tom Corrigan: 392-6434, ext. 241, or www.tcorrigan@isspress.com. Comment at www.issaquahpress.com.






The Issaquah Press

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SPORTS

Page B6

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

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Eagles fight Wildcats to scrappy draw By Sebastian Moraga Issaquah Press reporter Whatever notion the Mount Si High School Wildcats had that this season would be easy lasted 15 seconds. In the 16th second of their match against visiting Issaquah, the Eagles stunned the Wildcats with a score. Whatever notion the Issaquah Eagles had that their season’s second match would go as easy as their first — a 3-0 road win at Auburn Mountainview — lasted hardly any time longer. Because for the next 20 minutes, the Wildcats pressed the Eagles until the tying tally came along, and then pressed some more. In the end, the 1-1 tie was fair prize for two teams that showed focus, heart and talent, even early in the 2012 season to serve soccer fans with a fine contest. “I was really pleased with the way we played,” Issaquah Head Coach Jason Lichtenberger said. “We possessed the ball really well, we defended well.” The first half of the game was a Bizarro World version of the Eagles’

first half against Auburn Mountainview. Against them, they dominated the first half, but went to the break tied at 0. Against Mount Si, the Eagles scored early and then endured a barrage from the hosts. The fans were still trickling in from the parking lot when Issaquah’s Alex Shane sank a low shot past the Mount Si goalie from about 14 yards out on the left flank. “I really liked how we executed early,” Lichtenberger said of the 1-0. Touched in its pride, Mount Si responded by cornering the boys in purple. With 21 minutes left in the half, a cross shot from Mount Si’s Dane Aldrich on the left wing found Chace Carlson’s head in the heart of the box. The header rocketed past the Eagles’ keeper for the 1-1. Issaquah bent but did not break. “Mount Si was really taking it to us for a while and we weathered the storm really well,” Lichtenberger said. While the hosts kept pressuring, the Eagles woke back up, and the game became an entertaining BY GREG FARRAR

See EAGLES, Page B7

Alex Shane (left), Issaquah High School junior, and Mount Si High School senior defender Chace Carlson battle early in the first period March 15, shortly after Shane’s goal for the Eagles and just before Carlson’s tying score for the Wildcats in the 1-1 contest.

Local soccer squads hope to expand upon last year’s successes By Matthew Carstens Issaquah Press reporter If there is one consistent element to KingCo soccer year in and year out, it is the pure strength of the league. “The league’s always tough,” Issaquah head coach Jason Lichtenberger said. “It’s the toughest league in the state, hands down.” Last season, three teams from the conference qualified for the state tournament and they only lost to other KingCo teams. Garfield lost to Eastlake, who met with Skyline in the finals. “A lot of leagues you’ll see some pretty strong teams, but there’s also some teams at the bottom that

are a little bit weaker,” Lichtenberger said. “But in KingCo, every game’s a battle. The last-place teams beat the first-place teams, if they were to play 10 times, maybe a couple times that last-place team would beat the first-place team, and I don’t think there’s any other league where you’d see that. You just can’t take a game off.” Continuing the streak The past three years for the Issaquah High School boys soccer program has been nothing but one success after another, including an incredible 17-game winning streak at home. “For the last three years, we’ve kind of had the greatest run in the

S OCCER P REVIEW school’s history, which has been a fun three years for us,” Lichtenberger said. Lichtenberger, in his seventh year as head coach, said he is excited about the constant improvement his program has showed since he took over. “When I first took over, we had a few down years,” he said. “But we went from three wins in 2008 to 13 wins in 2009 and went to the state tournament for the first time ever and got to the quarterfinals in 2010.” After losing quite a few seniors af-

ter the 2010 season, Lichtenberger said most people expected the team to slow down and have a down year. It ended up going 12-3-3 and made it to the second round of the conference tournament again. “That was a real nice year for us,” he said. “We had some players recognized as all league, we got coach of the year for that as well, and we’re returning a lot of guys from that team as well.” Some key players to watch for on Issaquah’s squad this year include junior forward Cooper Fry, junior midfielder Zach Lawless, junior defensemen Paul Hegedus and junior midfielder David Perez. “Paul Hegedus is going to be key for us,” Lichtenberger said.

“He was on J.V. last year but got called up at the end of the season and actually ended up starting the last couple games and in the playoffs as well. So we saw him grow a lot as a player last year, and he’ll be one of our vocal leaders in the backfield this year.” According to Lichtenberger, new addition Perez will provide not only great skills, but a cerebral view of the game as well. Lichtenberger said his possession style is part of what has led to the team’s success in recent years and he sees no reason to change what it has been doing. “We work on a lot of short passing,” he said. “We look to switch the field quite a bit, we look to

control possession. There are some teams that play really direct and put a lot of pressure on, but we like to build out of the back and control the ball and maybe get teams to chase us a little bit and frustrate them that way. “It’s tough because we don’t have a lot of time to prepare, and to play that style you need a lot of time to practice together, but we seem to pull it off pretty well.” One more goal After losing in the state finals last year and losing several seniors to Division I programs, SkySee SOCCER, Page B7

Larger lacrosse league teams are ready to face tougher competition By Matthew Carstens Issaquah Press reporter

BY CHARLES MAUZY/US LACROSSE

Sophomore Michael Cowin, Skyline High School’s attack-man (left), and Eastlake High School’s defender Ty Reifeis, a sophomore, do their best to ignore the snow and play on during the March 13 lacrosse game between the two school’s prep teams.

Plateau rivals duke it out in snow By Lillian Tucker Issaquah Press reporter Braving the snow and wind the Skyline and Eastlake high school lacrosse prep teams faced off March 13 for a friendly plateau rivalry match that ended with Eastlake on top, 8-7. “On the plateau, lacrosse is very competitive,” Eastlake head coach Chris Panos said. “In the past, Eastlake has got no respect. But part of my job is instilling confidence in those kids that they could play at that level.” Just like the weather, which refused to relent, the two teams went net-for-net through most of the game. Skyline took the first quarter by outscoring Eastlake,

3-2, but the lead didn’t last long. By halftime the game was tied 5-5. After the third quarter saw Eastlake advance by one goal the two teams matched each other’s two goals each bringing the final score to 8-7. “We took some penalties that they capitalized on,” Skyline head coach Adam Kurtenbach said. Like in hockey, lacrosse players must wait out their penalty, which can run as long as three minutes, while the team plays on without them. Because of penalties, Eastlake was in the favorable man-up position six times, during which it scored three goals. Skyline had five man-up opportunities but did not score on any of them. “The good news is that the

rivalry is only going to get better as both teams grow,” Kurtenbach said. “We knew we were going into a battle … you lick your wounds and move on to the next one.” Skyline is looking forward to facing Eastlake on the field again when the team has more of its lead scorers. Four of Skyline’s five strong attack players have returned this year, but because of various reasons only one of them was able to play in the March 13 “snow bowl,” as Kurtenbach called it. “The weather made it interesting because the footing was really sloppy,” said Panos, explaining that the See SKYLINE, Page B7

Lacrosse is one of the fastest growing sports in the United States, and a big part of that growth is happening right here in our own back yard. “I coached the first 7-8 (year old) Issaquah youth lacrosse team, probably seven or eight years ago,” Skyline head coach Adam Kurtenbach said. “From that point on, just in Issaquah, Sammamish, that program has bred another four or five youth programs. Now there’s 50 teams that have grown just from that in the last seven or eight years. It’s been exponential growth just year after year.” With all that growth, both the division I and II leagues have gotten increasingly tougher, and Skyline, Issaquah and Liberty all hope to make significant strides this season. Dark horse athletes After making the transition to Division I four years ago, Kurtenbach said his team is always in the conversation as a “dark horse” team. “We’re kind of considered one of those dark horses every year because we usually have some great athletes, but not all of them are necessarily lacrosse-first guys,” he said. But as youth programs flourish, more high school teams are reaping the benefits from kids growing up with the sticks instead of just picking them up. “We lost a fairly strong senior class, but we got four of our top

LACROSSE PREVIEW five scorers from last year returning,” Kurtenbach said. “For the most part, we have a new defense, one returning starter from last year. Good up-and-coming group of players, strong freshman class this year, won’t really play on the varsity but have given a real good push to the program. Like I said, we got two or three kids considered the best in the state.” Some of those kids include senior midfielder Jack Pruitt who has committed to the University of Denver, junior attack Ryan Benz and senior attack Max Saffle who has committed to play at the Air Force Academy. “We’re usually a fairly uptempo team,” Kurtenbach said. “If you want to look at it from a basketball standpoint, we’re kind of like a fast-break team. We push the pace, push the ball up the floor, if the chance is there were going to take it, rather than settle everything down and run an extended offense. Which as opposed to your Mercer Island, Issaquah, tend to be more of a set offense kind of a program.” Eleven years and counting Issaquah has made the playoffs every single year since its inception in 2002, a streak head coach Brandon Fortier would like to keep alive. “We graduated a decent number of seniors but we return a core of six guys that were juniors

last year that were key parts of the team,” Fortier said. “In my mind, we’re still a top-eight team for sure. Whether we can go beyond that is to be determined.” Those returning players include seniors Matt O’Neil, Ben Director, Duncan Hamilton, Austin Richert and O’Neil Hughes. If O’Neil’s “not No. 1, he’s probably in the top two best stick skills in my 11 years. Very good with both his right and left hand, one of the better attack men,” Fortier said. “He was secondteam all-state last year. He should be first-team all-state this year outside of injury.” While not as athletic or talented as O’Neil, Fortier said, Director is his coach on the field. “Definitely the smartest in terms of lacrosse IQ,” Fortier said. “He definitely understands the game better than anybody. He could be a coach some day. He understands the game, he’s a great leader, a great kid in the classroom.” According to Fortier, the Issaquah style is and always will be simple: fundamentals. “In terms of my coaching we’ve always been a fundamentals-first team,” he said. “Some years you have a little more talent, a little more stick skills, so you look a little bit flashier, but it’s all based on the same, grind-it-out fundamentals. “We’ve had the same defensive principals, same offensive principals since I started, we just make little adjustments to the talent we have,” he added. “But we’ve alSee LACROSSE, Page B7




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The Issaquah Press

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Wednesday, March 21, 2012 •

B9

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115-EDUCATION

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210-Public Notices RCW 84.34, all listed hereafter; 1:30 p.m. or as soon thereafter as possible. 2012‑0101 ‑ E12CT002 – First Citizens Bank and Trust Company for property located at approximately 307xx SE 31st Street, Fall City, WA 98024; STR: NW‑09‑24‑07 and NE‑08‑24‑07; SIZE: 11.51 acres; REQUEST: Public Benefit Rating System and/or Timber Land; Tax #082407‑9029 and #092407‑ 9080. Details are available from the King County Department of Natural Resources and Parks, Rural and Regional Services Section, 201 South Jackson Street, Suite 600, Seattle, WA 98104; Phone (206) 296‑8351. Dated at Seattle, Washington, This 21st Day of March, 2012. Anne Noris Clerk of the Council Metropolitan King County Council King County, Washington

210-Public Notices Those desiring to express their views or to be informed of the action taken on this application should attend Public Hearing or notify the Planning Department by writing to PO Box 1307, Issaquah, WA 98027‑1307. Plans are available for review at the City of Issaquah Planning Department, City Hall Northwest, 1775 12th Avenue NW (adjacent to the Holiday Inn), Issaquah. Published in The Issaquah Press on 3/21/12

TO ADVERTISE CALL 392-6434 Ext. 222 RESI DENTI A L

Published in The Issaquah Press on 3/21/12

ISSAQUAH

BY APPT: 1 bdrm/1 bth home with private garage! End unit has marble fireplace surround & large deck. #310038.

02‑2344 LEGAL NOTICE CITY OF ISSAQUAH Public Hearing Notice File Nos. PLN09‑00005, PLN09‑00013 and PLN11‑ 00015 Notice is hereby given that the City of Issaquah Development Commission has scheduled a Public Hearing for April 4, 2012 at 7:00 PM, in the Council Chambers of City Hall South, located at 135 E. Sunset Way, Issaquah, for the following proposal: Dennis Reibe, of Reibe and Associates, on behalf of Michael Richards, has submitted a Site Development Permit for the development of a 42‑unit residential building. The building consists of four stories of residential units over two levels of parking garage. The building is integrated into the existing topography with the parking garage buried below grade on the high side with daylight entrances to each parking level on the low side. The existing wetlands and buffers on the site will be expanded and enhanced. The site is approximately 1.61 acres. The project includes an Administrative Adjustments of Standards for Height and for Landscape Setbacks. The project is located at 4615 W. Lake Sammamish Pkwy. SE.

Frost Home Team 425-392-6600.

KLAHANIE

F E AT U R E D H O M E

RESI DENTI A L

RESI DENTI A L

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AUBURN

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CONDOMINIUMS

MAY VALLEY

$800,000 PNT $279,000 BY APPT: 5 private acres PROVIDENCE BY APPT: Impeccable with a 42x30 shop. 4 bdrm, 4.75 bths, remodeled kitchen, 3 car garage + Issaquah schools. 214839.

$410,000 PUYALLUP BY APPT: Freshly updated BY APPT: NW contemporary hm in Mirrormont. Asf 3030 on 1.10 acres 4 bdrm, rec room, 2.75 bths. #246170.

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RESI DENTI A L

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