Kirkland Reporter, April 22, 2011

Page 1

KIRKLAND .com

REPORTER

NEWSLINE: 425.822.9166

HOT ON 405 | State senate passes bill to put new pay lanes between Bellevue and Lynnwood on I-405 [2]

Taking care of mother | Earth day comes FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 into view [12]

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Hot streak | Juanita High School softball team continues winning ways [14]

Street lights could cost city additional $144,000 a year Finn Hill, Kingsgate and Juanita. The city budgeted $130,000 There are several based on those estiissues that have to be mates. But that number ironed out before does not include street annexation can take lights that residents pay place on June 1. One through homeowners of those matters could associations, and the ultimately cost the city’s policy has City of Kirkland been to pay for all $144,000 a year residential street ANNEXATION – a bill the city lights. had not planned “Good news on. is that there are a During prelot of street lights, liminary annexation it is not very dark,” said discussions with King Kirkland Assistant City County representatives, Manager Marilynne city staff were informed Beard. “The bad news is of a 2005 estimate of that we didn’t budget for 600 street lights for that many.” which county is responBut having two differsible in the annexaent policies for separate tion neighborhoods of [ more LIGHTS page 4 ] BY MATT PHELPS

mphelps@kirklandreporter.com

2011

How does your garden grow? Community pea patch sprouts up at LW United Methodist Church BY MATT PHELPS mphelps@kirklandreporter.com

“It starts around 1:30 p.m. and all of the eggs are gone by about 1:35. It’s like a street sweeper has gone through that area.” Don Ross

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Take some lumber, a little soil, seeds and add some caring members of the Kirkland community and a few more people will have access to fresh fruits and vegetables. Members of the Lake Washington United Methodist Church and some Eagle Scouts have come together to help build a community pea patch “First Fruits Community Garden” on the church’s property. “The church is rich in property and it is pretty

Members of the LW United Methodist Church’s Gardening Committee dance on one of the pea patch beds. CONTRIBUTED well used,” said gardening committee member Sharon Sherrard. “We have the coop preschool and we host Tent City but we thought [ more GARDEN page 3 ]

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[2] April 22, 2011 [ EASTER from page 1] neighborhood and we just want to get to know our neighbors,” said Neary. The egg hunt is open to the public and is for toddlers all the way up to sixth grade. Pleasant Bay Church representatives will hide 2,500 eggs in its first annual event. “I hope people come out or we will have an awful lot of candy to eat,” said Neary. Pleasant Bay will also have Easter services on Sunday from 10:30 a.m. until noon with children’s events planned. Another new event, the Woodmark Hotel’s Easter Egg Scramble, is already at capacity this year. “So far the response has been overwhelming,” said

www.kirklandreporter.com Woodmark Hotel’s promotions manager Jenny Metz, who plans to expand the event next year. “I kept an eye on the RSVPs and when we hit 150 we had to cap it.” The event also hosts a free Bloody Mary bar for adults and free hot cocoa. Little ones will enjoy hunting for Easter treats, face painting, and arts and crafts. “We thought it would be fun to get people down here to Carillon Point,” said Metz. “It is a cool and fun activity for the family.” The event is co-sponsored by Points Living Magazine. “We will have 2,000 plastic eggs and they’re all in the back of my car,” said Metz. Other churches in the

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area will also feature public Easter events, including Lake Washington United Methodist Church that will host an Easter Egg Hunt on from 10:30 a.m. until noon on Saturday. The Kirkland Congregational Church will host a youth-led sunrise service at 8 a.m. at Marina Park to be followed by an Easter Egg Hunt at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday with a mini bazaar. The Northlake Unitarian Universalist Church will hold an Easter celebration with the Easter story set to New Orleans Jazz style music at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday. Rev. Marian Stewart will produce the event, along with a brass band. The Lake Washington Christian Church will have an Easter Egg Hunt on Sunday following a 9 a.m. breakfast. Service will follow the egg hunt at 10:30 a.m.

State senate passes bill for Interstate 405 HOT lanes through Kirkland BY NAT LEVY Reporter Newspapers

T

he second time was the charm for the state Senate as it passed a bill Saturday to authorize construction of high-occupancy tolling (HOT) lanes on Interstate 405. The proposal failed in the Senate last year. Engrossed House Bill 1382 was passed by a 36-13 vote. The bill authorizes construction of two lanes in the northern portion of the corridor from downtown Bellevue to Lynnwood. It includes a study on the potential of extending the lanes south to connect with

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State Route 167. The bill has been a harbinger for controversy throughout the entirety of the legislative session. The debate led to a number of proposed amendments, with the most important being a clause that allows the Legislature to shut down the project after two years if toll funds can’t pay for the costs of construction. Rep. Judy Clibborn (D-Mercer Island), the House Transportation chair said the change alters structuring of the project. It allows workers to begin constructing the new lanes and begin collecting tolls before completing all the exterior tolling equipment, to assure that revenue will live up to expectations. “It’s more of sequencing the way the project goes forward rather than authorizing it all up front,” she said. The amendment came as a result of revenue for SR-167’s HOT lanes being short of expectations. Clibborn said she was OK with putting this safeguard in place, but

comparisons of SR-167 and I-405 don’t tell the whole story. She thought that the immense capacity on I-405 will make a quick, but more expensive path, an enticing option. The lanes would allow single-vehicle drivers to pay into lanes that carpoolers can use for free. Much of the contention of the project has centered around the debate of whether two-person, or three-person carpools should be exempt. The language in the bill initially allows for cars with two-plus occupants to use the lanes for free, but Clibborn said that could be changed in the future if it fails to relieve congestion or build enough of a revenue base to pay for the project. The bill will now go back to the House, where Clibborn said she will recommend concurrence. It would then go to Gov. Chris Gregoire. According to the bill, tolling cannot begin until road improvements, including adding extra lanes, is completed.

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we could do more.� The pea patch is comprised of three raised four-by-16-foot beds, divided in half for a total of six individual plots. All six plots are taken, but the group is planning to create a fourth bed. “We would love to expand further if we see the need,� said Sherrard. “We definitely have the room.� Sherrard said the community’s interest in the city’s pea patches shows that there is a need. The city’s Parks and Community Services Department offers residents the use of three pea patches: Tot Lot, Ohde Avenue and McAuliffe Park. “They had to turn people away so I definitely think there is a need,� said Sherrard, who admitted that she is on the gardening team for lack of a green thumb. But Sherrard’s husband, Tom is a Master Gardener and helped with the planning of the pea patch. Gardening committee member Rebecca Baldwin said the group has talked about lining the area by the parking lot with beds if the interest is there. The group initially got great interest from parishioners, but interest has since cooled. “We wanted to give people in the community who live in apartments, who may not have a place to grow their own food, a place to garden,� said Baldwin. Ten percent of all harvests will be donated to a local food bank. “The Bible talks about giving the first fruits, not the last,� said Sherrard. “It also says to tithe 10 percent. You don’t have to be a church member to be a part of this.� One of the gardeners, Jan Blaud, is planning to

donate all of her harvest to the food bank. The only thing the church asks of gardeners is to give a donation to offset the cost of water during the summer.

earned the rank of Eagle Scout and Watanabe is not too far behind. The garden also has a place on the church’s Web site, www.lwumc.com, for

more information. The first vegetables have already begun to sprout up in Blaud’s plot, fittingly enough it is lettuce - and peas.

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donated all of the soils and sawdust to the project. “It is also a bit relieving to get my Eagle rank,� said Watanabe. As a result, Williams has

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Gardening committee member Margretta Voinot-Baron, gardener Adele Inglebrecht, gardening committee member Rebecca Baldwin and gardener Jan Blaud. CONTRIBUTED

The idea for the pea patch came from the Bothell United Methodist Church’s pea patch. Constructing the pea patch fell on the shoulders of Boy Scouts Tim Williams and Sam Watanabe, who were both working their way towards the rank of Eagle Scout. Both boys are part of Boy Scout Troop 577. Williams, who is not a member of the church, built the three raised beds and Watanabe, a church member, built the corresponding compost bin. “I went on the Internet and found some instructions and it took some figuring out but it was not too hard,� said Watanabe, who raised $1,000 from church members for the project. “It was nice to be able to give back to the church.� Both boys worked to get all of the materials donated. Redmond-based de Jong Sawdust & Shavings

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[4] April 22, 2011

www.kirklandreporter.com [ LIGHTS from page 1]

CRIME

This week’s…

ALERT

Police Blotter The blotter feature is both a description of a small selection of police incidents and a statistical round-up of all calls to the Kirkland Police Department that are dispatched to on-duty police officers. The Kirkland Reporter Police Blotter is not intended to be representative of all police calls originating in Kirkland, which average about 1,000 per week. Between April 8-14, the Kirkland Police Department reported 544 traffic violations (two DUIs), 20 alarm calls, 27 car accidents, 12 noise complaints, 11 thefts, nine car prowls, eight domestic violence calls, 12 calls for harassment, seven acts of fraud, three calls of a disturbance, seven calls for illegal substances and four calls of civil disturbance. At least 31 people were arrested.

April 14 Trespass: 10:33 p.m., 13000 block of N.E. 70th. A 31-year-old Kirkland man was arrested for criminal trespass after he went to the AM/PM in Bridle Trails and caused a disturbance. Warrant arrest: 9:15 a.m., 12000 N.E. 65th Street. A 60-year-old Kirkland man was arrested on his King County assault warrant after a welfare check was completed. His doctors office had called the Kirkland Police after they had not heard from him for over a week and was not answering his phone.

April 13 Assault: 12:40 a.m., 400 Fourth Ave. S. Upon being driven home from the hospital for an injury she received from being in a physical altercation with her neighbor, a 37-year-old Kirkland woman got into a verbal argument with her boyfriend. He

Celina, a bomb sniffing dog, and handler Shan Hanon, of the Bellingham Police Department, perform a practice drill for the media during a Washington State Police Canine Association seminar in Kirkland on Tuesday, April 19. Celina is a Belgian Malinios. CHAD COLEMAN, Kirkland Reporter dropped her off on the side of the road and she walked the rest of the way home. When she returned home the argument continued. Her boyfriend was arrested for fourth degree assault after forcefully pushing the woman to the bed while trying to gather his things and leave. The woman’s son witnessed the incident and attempted to pull him off his mother, subsequently getting into an altercation with the man. The suspect received minor injuries to his side and face from being struck by the boy and woman. Rape, sodomy: 10:34 a.m., 14100 block of 105th Ave. N.E. A 40-year-old Bothell man was arrested for rape of a child in the

first degree. No charges were filed.

April 12 Weapons: 8:45 a.m., 11500 N.E. 118th Street. A 28-year-old Kirkland man was arrested after he was found to have a loaded .22 in his belongings as he entered the Kirkland Municipal Court.

April 10 Assault: 12:45 a.m., 11400 block of 99th Place N.E. A 43-year-old Bellevue man was arrested for punching his girlfriend in the head while arguing over relationship issues. The man became angry when he found other men’s phone numbers in the

woman’s cell phone. The man received a scratched and bloody lip from the woman, but they were determined to be defensive wounds. Domestic: 2:47 a.m., 300 block of Second Ave. S. A 27-year-old Kirkland man was arrested for domestic violence.

April 9 DUI: 2 a.m., 11300 98th Ave. N.E. A 39-year-old Kirkland man ran his vehicle off the side of the road due to his intoxication. The man was too intoxicated to perform a field sobriety test but provided a blood alcohol reading of .259.

April 8 Minor, liquor violation: 6:41 p.m., 100 Third St. A 17-year-old Kirkland boy was arrested for possession of alcohol at the downtown Transit Center.

parts of the city is not acceptable. “It creates a disparate treatment between the existing Kirkland and the annexation area,” said Beard. “As we go into this annexation we know that there is going to be a period of disparate treatment as we phase in services to the annexation area.” The annexation area has more than 1,750 street lights. Homeowners associations are currently responsible for 1,457 street lights and are billed through Northshore and Woodiniville utility districts. The disparity came from new housing developments’ desire for more street lighting. When being built, the county requested that the subdivision residents pay for the new lighting on their streets. “The City of Kirkland pays for all the power for all the street lights within the City of Kirkland,” said Beard. “And that has been our practice forever.” The estimated difference between what the city has budgeted and the overall cost of all the street lights is $144,000. Council Member Bob Sternoff had a different way to look at the problem. “I think this is a great opportunity to look at our pol-

icy,” said Sternoff. “I don’t know what the great advantage is to paying for street lights in a sub-division. If it is in a sub-division, I don’t know why we are adding it to our budget.” But according to the city attorney, a lawsuit in Seattle set the precedent for cities to pay for street lights where it pertains to safety. “The provision for street lighting is akin to water for fire hydrants,” said city attorney Robin Jenkinson. Lights with direct benefit to an individual resident can be charged to that resident. The council accepted a city staff recommendation to phase in the additional costs. “We are not giving you a specific recommendation on a time period, but to watch closely the financial performance in the annexation area to see what revenues come in and where we are at,” said Beard. Residents within certain sub-divisions in the annexation area will continue to be charged for the lights until the city decides how to rectify the differing policies. Those residents in the annexation area who pay for street lights are billed $6 every two months, or ultimately $36 a year. The city council will take the issue back up at its May 2 meeting.

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April 22, 2011 [5]

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Community

BRIEFS

Vacancies on city board, committee Members of boards and commissions provide an invaluable service to the City of Kirkland. They advise the Council and city staff on a wide variety of subjects by making recommendations on important policy matters. Adult vacancies are available on the Lodging Tax Advisory Committee and Parking Advisory Board. A youth vacancy is available on the Parking Advisory Board. Applications are being received until positions are filled. To view the job descriptions and to download the application form, visit the recruitment Web page at www. kirklandwa.gov. Interested citizens are invited to apply. Applications are also available at City Hall, 123 Fifth Avenue or by calling the City Clerk’s office at 425-587-3190.

City awarded forestry grant The City of Kirkland was awarded another $10,000 Community Forestry Assistance grant from Washington State Department of

Natural Resources. The grant will fund drafting Kirkland’s Urban Forest Strategic Management Plan, a city-wide project involving the Planning, Parks and Community Services, and Public Works departments. The project will provide a guide for decision-makers to sustainably manage Kirkland’s urban forest, a community asset that contributes to the health, safety, and pleasant environment for its residents.

Sibling House raises $40,000 for foster homes The 9th annual Sibling House Fundraiser Auction that was held at the Northshore Senior Center on April 9 raised nearly $40,000. Proceeds will provide support to foster homes that take in sibling groups. Sibling House is a Kirkland-based charity that has provided various forms and amounts of support to 129 foster homes and more than 456 foster siblings since its inception in 1997. For more information, visit www. siblinghouse.org.

Jaeckel completes basic Navy training Navy Seaman Brianne M. Jaeckel, daughter of Jane

E. and Brian A. Jaeckel of Kirkland, recently completed basic training at Recruit Training Command, Great Lakes, Ill., and received the United Service Organization Award. Jaeckel is a 2006 graduate of Juanita High School. The award is presented to the recruit who best exemplifies the spirit and intent of the term “shipmate.� During the training cycle, recruits are taught general military subjects designed to prepare them for further academic and on-the-job training in one of the Navy’s 85 occupational fields. Studies include seamanship, closeorder drill, naval history and first aid.

‘Last Comic Standing’ runnerup at Laughs Tommy Johnagin, an autobiographical comedian who doesn’t curse on stage and has a gift of finding something funny in everyone he meets and everything he does, will come to Laughs Comedy Spot on April 29-30. Johnagin takes great pride in his writing. He is already a favorite at comedy clubs all around the country working almost every week. Johnagin was the first runner up of the most recent season of NBC’s “Last Comic Standing.� Other TV credits

Spot, 12099 124th Ave. N.E., Kirkland. Tickets are $15. For information, call 425-8236306 or visit www.laughscomedy.com.

Students take first in state fair

TOMMY JOHNAGIN

include Comedy Central’s “Live at Gotham,� CMT’s “Comedy Stage,� “The Late Show with David Letterman� and John Oliver’s “New York Stand Up Show.� In 2009 he had his own half hour special on Comedy Central that reairs regularly. He has also appeared at Comedy Central’s South Beach Comedy Festival and has been a guest numerous times on the nationally syndicated radio program The Bob and Tom Show. Johnagin started stand-up at the age of 18, dropping out of college at 21 to become a full-time comedian. He vows he will one day make enough money to pay his parents back for the six semesters of college he wasted. Johnagin takes the stage at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. April 29-30 at Laughs Comedy

Three Kirkland students won first place during the 54th annual Washington State Science and Engineering Fair (WSSEF), which was held April 1-2, at Bremerton High School. The event, which brought together 463 students, included 168 students from King County. Joshua Elmore, a thirdgrader who is home-schooled in Kirkland, won first place in the junior division for his project “3, 2, 1 ... Blast Off: Sights of Flight.� Diego Santos, a first-grader at Kirkland Seventh-day Adventist School, won first place in the junior division for his project, “Bleach Make Dye Disappear Except for Yellow.� Kirkland resident Abigail Kostolansky, a seventh-grade student at Sacred Heart School, also won first place in the junior division for her project “Fruit Power.�

Locals earn academic honor Two Kirkland residents were named to the Dean’s List for academic excellence for the fall 2010 semester at The

Johns Hopkins University. Lauren Pollack, daughter of Robert and Joanne Pollack, attended The Bush School in Seattle. Pollack, who is majoring in public health studies, will graduate in May 2011. Ross Pollack, son of Robert and Joanne Pollack, also attended The Bush School. He is majoring in an arts and sciences pre-major and will graduate in May 2014. To be selected for this honor, a student must earn a grade point average of 3.5 or higher on a 4.0 scale in a program of at least 14 credits with at least 12 graded credits.

Local students on CWU honor roll The following students from Kirkland attending Central Washington University have qualified for the Winter quarter 2011 honor roll: Alabaso Annabelle Tilan, Fisher Justin William, Le Thuy M, Le Yen M, Manalo Kelly Rosa, Martin Vanessa Christine, ProschJensen Peter, Shinstrom Jaclyn Lee, and Toedtli Lisa Marie. Central undergraduate students who earn a 3.5 or better grade point average, on a 4.0 scale, while carrying at least 12 graded credit hours of study are eligible for the honor roll.

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April 22, 2011 [7]

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it? Taxes, on the other hand, socialize and communalize the consumer pool by making everyone pay equally whether they use the service or not. User fees encourage

Jeff E. Jared

K

irkland has privatized ambulances (Kirkland Reporter, Mark Jung, March 31). So I have to pay if I get a stroke and am carted off to the ER in a Kirkland Fire Department vehicle? Yes, $600. This is a user fee, though, and is a good thing. Better than a tax. And even so, the fee billed only covers one-fourth of the cost. So it’s still a 75 percent city subsidy. The fee, set by the Kirkland City Council, is $600, plus 14 cents per mile. With a “user fee,� only those who use a service pay for it, and only for as much as they use it. This is only fair, right? Why should I pay for something if I don’t use

question of “is there a right to health care?� That is, should government be involved in health care? Should the group as a whole, via taxes, pay for the health care of others? Well under American law, health care is not a right. “Health care� is not in the

MY TURN

Privatized ambulances in Kirkland a good thing

price awareness, whereas taxes are hidden. So we should applaud this new Kirkland Fire Department user fee program. Ambulances really are just a subset of the bigger health-care issue and the basic philosophical and constitutional/legal

federal constitution. So you really don’t have a “right� to a free ambulance. Might seem unfair as young and healthy people don’t need the ER as much. But that’s the theory behind user fees. Those who use, and only those who use, pay. This is why economists

prefer user fees to taxes as a way of generating government revenue.

Jeff E. Jared is an attorney and political writer in Kirkland who writes from a libertarian and law-andeconomics perspective.

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PUBLIC NOTICES Superior Court of Washington for King County Estate of RUTH LOUISE FAY, Deceased No. 11-4-02396-3KNT PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.030) Please Take Notice: The above Court has appointed me as Personal Representative of Decedent’s estate. Any person having a claim against the Decedent must present the claim: (a) Before the time when the claim would be barred by an applicable statute of limitations, and (b) In the manner provided in RCW 11.40.070: (i) By filing the original of the claim with the foregoing Court, and (ii) By serving on or mailing to me at the address below a copy of the claim. The claim must be pre-

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sented by the later of: (a)Thirty (30) days after I served or mailed this Notice as provided in RCW 11.40.020(1)(c), or (b) Four (4) months after the date of first publication of this Notice. If the claim is not presented within this time period, the claim will be forever barred except as provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective for claims against both the Decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Date of First publication of this Notice: April 22, 2011. Personal Representative: Michael William Fay 32812 12th Ave SW Federal Way, WA 98023 Published in Kirkland Reporter on April 22, 2011, April 29, 2011 and May 6, 2011. #482677.

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KIRKLAND

OPINION

[8] April 22, 2011

“It starts around 1:30 p.m. and all of the eggs are gone by about 1:35. It’s like a street sweeper has gone through that area.“ Don Ross

EDITORIAL

Toto auditions, comic strips and art events, oh my

Days

Question of the week:

?

“Should the City of Kirkland pay for street-light power and maintenance in the annexation area as they do in the current city limits?�

Vote online: www.kirklandreporter.com

Last week’s poll results: “Do you think the state Legislature should privatize liquor sales as part of the state’s budget?� Yes: 75% No: 25%

You said it!

Art enthusiasts, parents, kids – and even dogs – are in for a treat with some exciting upcoming art events in Kirkland. Dogs, you say? I sat down with Bobby Stickel, Studio East’s new director of marketing, who told me about an event that your dog just won’t want to miss. Studio East will be holding dog auditions to cast Toto in the organization’s “The Wizard of Oz� production. Dogs of all sizes, shapes, age and color are welcome to tryout from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. June 11 in the parking lot at Studio East Training for the Performing Arts, 11730 118th Ave. N.E., Suite 100. The day will be full of fun activities for families too, and people will have the opportunity to meet Dorothy. There are some requirements to audition for Toto: Dogs must be under 18 pounds, able to follow hand signals to sit, stay, come and run across the stage; and willing to be carried in a basket. If your pooch is frightened by live music or clapping, this may not be its calling. Two dogs will be cast and each successful dog will appear as Toto for three or four performances at the Kirkland Performance Center (KPC), on either the weekend of July 29 or Aug. 5. Check back with the Reporter for more details as the date draws near, or contact Studio East for more information: http://studio-east.org/. Speaking of the KPC, did you know that the organization is currently having a Facebook Fan Fundraiser? The fund raiser is meant to encourage Facebook “friends� to migrate to KPC’s fan page. Just click on the “like� icon on KPC’s Facebook page, and KPC receives $3 for every new fan through the first week of May. Jenn Bassman, KPC marketing director, says Carrie Wood

EDITOR’S NOTE

Annexation countdown

39

â—? QUOTE OF NOTE:

an anonymous donor has agreed to donate $3 for every new fan. “Our donor is committed to the idea of social marketing, and more specifically, anything that encourages friends and family to spread the word about KPC and our performances,� said Bassman. At the start of the campaign, KPC had 523 Fans. KPC has added 200 fans, totaling $600 raised so far. Become a KPC fan by visiting www. facebook.com/pages/Kirkland-Performance-Center/45480689365. Kirkland cartoonist Jodie Masiwchuck is also seeking online votes for a chance to achieve syndication for her comic strip, “Suburban Sarah.� You may have seen her cartoon periodically in the Reporter. She has entered a national online contest at TheCartoonistStudio.com for her cartoon. She is currently in the top tier of the competition, and is asking people to vote for her comic strip daily through May 7. The winner receives a contract with syndication agency, Creator’s Syndicate. For more information about “Suburban Sarah,� visit www.suburbansarah. com. Here are a few more art events you won’t want to miss:

t -PDBWPSF +PJO UIF ,JSLMBOE "SUT $FOUFS JO celebration of locally made food, art and wine from 4-7 p.m. April 30 at the KAC, 620 Market St. More than 50 artists participating in the Kirkland Artists Studio Tour will auction their artwork during the event. For information, call 425-822-7161, ext. 103. Cost is $40. t ć F "35JTBO (PVSNFU JT B TFSJFT PG GVO handcrafted food events sponsored by the Kirkland Cultural Council. Upcoming events include an ARTisan High Tea on May 1 and a Wine, Cheese and Antipasto event on May 15. Tickets are $25 per person for each event and proceeds go to supporting the arts, culture and heritage in Kirkland. For reservations, visit kccartisangourmetbrunch.eventbrite.com/. t "SUXBML JT OPX UIF TFDPOE 'SJEBZ PG UIF month from 6-9 p.m. Along with the participating galleries of downtown Kirkland, the City of Kirkland Cultural Council “Artilization� Team has plans to invigorate the new artwalk experience with the inclusion of sidewalk activities, temporary artist placement in participating businesses, and live performances. Visit www. kirklandartwalk.org for information.

â—? L E T T E R S . . . Y O U R O P I N I O N C O U N T S : To submit an item or photo: e-mail letters@kirklandreporter.com; mail attn Letters, Kirkland Reporter, 11630 Slater Ave. N.E., Suite 8/9, Kirkland, Wa 98034; fax 425.822.0141. Letters may be edited for style, clarity and length.

KIRKLAND .com

REPORTER

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KPD should focus extra officers on neighborhoods As an owner of a couple downtown firms and a Kirkland resident, I travel Market, Central and Lake Washington Boulevard several times a day. The huge increase in patrol cars on these streets is amazing. I find Sgt. Robert Saloum’s comment that “when not responding to calls officers can allocate their time as they like,� concerning (April 15 story, “Traffic stops surge as more officers hired for annexation�). I would expect management to proactively focus any extra resources more on neighborhood patrolling where Kirkland taxpayers live, and are experiencing increases in car prowls and home invasions.

In my neighborhood in Rose Point, we have a continued problem with car prowls and home invasions. You would expect with a 23 percent increase in cops to see local patrols. I have never seen a car patrol this neighborhood without a call. City management should be deploying these valued assets in a directed, balance and proactive manor. I expect more than “go do what you like if not on a call� as a resource management philosophy.

Dave Despard, Kirkland

What people are saying at kirklandreporter.com Sgt. Saloum’s remark that officers are free to “make contacts with the

community� is interesting. I’d like to see officers walking the beat more instead of sitting in a car with a radar gun or parked a block from a bar at midnight to pull over the next guy who walks out the door. Nothing says “we’re open for business� (as the city is trying to maintain) like speeding tickets and pulling people over for suspicion of DUI because they have a lightbulb burned out or didn’t use a turn signal, infractions that are no cause for being stopped during the day. How about tickets for aggressive driving like tailgating or rushing up a turn lane to merge in front of others who’ve been waiting in line longer? How about cruising business parks at night to deter possible criminal activity? If the point of traffic tickets is to keep people safe and stop any dangerous actions by drivers, then

why not stand with a breathalyzer at the bar door and not let someone get behind the wheel in the first place? Lawyers wouldn’t be happy to lose the $10,000 fee, tow companies would be upset about losing the $350 impound charge, and auto insurance companies would miss the extra $100 a month. But imagine how all that money might help the local economy to recover instead of lining the pockets of others who might not even step foot in Kirkland. Speeding and DUI tickets make for nice Powerpoint presentation reports for the higherups and salutations from MADD, but I’d like to more diversity in the enforcement of the laws. Of course I did get my own ticket for overlooking my expired tabs, so that helped make the streets safer.

‘Joe’


April 22, 2011 [9]

www.kirklandreporter.com

Why is it important to read to your child?

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Thank you for your questions and allowing me to share my answers through this column. As educators, we have the huge responsibility to educate those around us of the importance of reading to your child early on and continuing throughout the years. As teachers, we know firsthand the glaring difference between a child who enters our classroom and has been read to from the beginning compared to one who has not. As a parent, I also gladly share the importance of reading aloud as I strongly believe reading aloud to your child is the single-most important thing you can do as your child’s first and most important teacher to help your child succeed not only in school, but life. Theodore Geisel, better known as Dr. Seuss, was right, when he said “The more you read, the more you know, the more you know, the more places

Joy Brooke resides in downtown Kirkland with her husband and two children. She currently teaches AM Kindergarten at Ben Franklin Elementary in the Lake Washington School District. The opinions provided in this column do not reflect that of the LWSD.

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grades. As a teacher, many parents I encountered throughout the years think that once their child begins to read independently, they no longer need to read aloud. “Read aloud now and never stop!� This is the message I give the parents of my students. Kathy Collins, author of “Growing Readers and Reading for Real,� and a leading expert in teaching reading agrees. “Never stop reading to your kids – read to them

dozens of books each day and beg to read just “one more� each night before bed. I dread the moment when they say “enough.�

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businessman, but more importantly because he was read aloud to early on, he can grow up to be whatever he dreams to be. Recent research tells us that the number of words a child hears per hour even by the time they are 2 years can predict future academic success (Hart and Riley). When should you stop reading to your child? Never. As your child grows from a newborn to a toddler, to a first grader and beyond, never stop reading aloud to your child. You are giving your child the gift of words at a time when the brain needs it most! Not only does research indicate that reading aloud to children substantially improves their reading skills, as well as their written, oral, and auditory, in addition, children who hear stories read aloud have an increased positive attitude towards reading (Jim Trelease, “Read Aloud Handbook�). In other words, children who are read aloud to not only enjoy reading, but become readers themselves. And as researchers have seen in children across the world, including all social classes, kids who read the most, read the best and achieve highest. In 1985, the U.S Department of Education declared in its report “Becoming a Nation of Readers,� these key important findings. First, the single-most important activity for building the knowledge required for eventual success in reading is reading aloud to children. Second, reading aloud is a practice that should continue throughout the Joy Brooke

When should you start reading to your child? When should you stop reading to your child? What is the importance of reading to your child each day? I have been an educator for 24 years and every year I am asked these questions. Please Mrs. Brooke, share with parents the importance of reading to your child at an early age and continuing reading to them even when they are too big to sit on your lap. Read to all!

you’ll go!� Research tells us this is true. For the more you read and the more you know the longer you will also stay in school, earn diplomas and degrees and have endless opportunities. So, when should you start reading to your child? Now! From the moment your child is born they can recognize your voice. When you talk and when you read to your child your voice soothes them. With this they also recognize sounds. In the first months, these sounds serve to create a bond between parent and child. During this time, parents should be reading and can get away with reading anything really. My girlfriend Robbin even read aloud “The Economist� to her newborn, Owen, the first couple months. Believe it or not those articles brought him comfort. They soothed him. From day one by reading aloud to your newborn there are so many benefits. You promote listening skills, increase the number of vocabulary words your baby hears, help develop attention span and memory, help teach uncommon words, help them understand the meaning of words, teach about print, how to get information from pictures, promote calmness and bonding for both you and your child, stimulate the imagination and all senses, and instill the love of books and learning (“Baby Read Aloud Basics,� Carline Blakemore and Barbara Weston Ramirez). Maybe baby Owen will grow up to be a saavy

Ask Mrs. Brooke

Dear Mrs. Brooke,

as long as you can, as long as they’ll listen, even longer!� She also recommends that every parent read “Reading Magic,� by Mem Fox and reminds us to think of reading aloud not only as a time for parents to provide their child with an advantage, but view it mostly as a precious time of focused attention and warm interaction with their children. As a parent of a 4 and 2 year old, I have not reached the moment when my son or daughter has decided that they are too “old� to have me read aloud to them. I treasure that they bring me

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[10] April 22, 2011

www.kirklandreporter.com

Artists rethink the line Typically viewed as two-dimensional, the line is rethought at the Kirkland Arts Center’s newest exhibition BY MARIO DE LA ROSA

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UW News Lab

Eleven local artists explore, re-purpose and generate new associations with the concept of line at the Kirkland Arts Center’s newest exhibition, “The Three-Dimensional Line: Volume, Scale, Illusion, Emotion.” Ellen Ziegler, curator of the show, said she found inspiration in the late minimalist sculptor Fred Sandback and his desire “to make sculpture that didn’t have an inside.” Ziegler spoke during the exhibition’s opening on Saturday. While some artists chose to adhere to Sandback’s work, others brought more abstract thought to the representation of line. Michael Ottersen’s “Skinny Ocean” is a set of wooden slabs saturated in various colors of glitter. In his work, line follows form - but more specifically, the form of stripped-down magic wands. Ottersen, who is a newcomer to the use of color, loves all the associations that come with the use of glitter.

Artists and art enthusiasts mingle during the opening of the Kirkland Arts Center’s newest exhibition on Saturday. MARIO DE LA ROSA, UW News Lab “Glamour, Vegas, drag queen - it’s all good,” says Otterson. Margie Livingston also takes a more literal approach to line by creating various sculptures from cutout acrylic layers. Timothy Brown’s “Corner Drawing” uses elastic to define a single rectangle extending from floor to ceiling, to create the illusion of a corner within a corner. His trompe l’oeil piece is the closest representation of Sandback’s own work. As deceptively easy as

Brown’s corner-within-acorner may look, Ziegler assures it wasn’t: “I had to follow two pages, single-space, of instructions to install it,” she said. Sandback’s influences are also visible in the gelatin prints and sculptures of Victoria Haven, in which she employs shadow to provide new dimension to the pins and rubber bands she positions into intricate geometric shapes. Other artists find more [ more ARTS page 11 ]

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April 22, 2011 [11]

www.kirklandreporter.com

ARTS

of writing love letters to chromosomes apologizing for pollution and a plethora of other man-made carcinogens that are making them disappear. Campbell, who has been addressing this environmental impact since 1996, projects the letters from a translucent dome that uses light, sound and color. The spider web, as 7-yearold Merek Weed calls Susan Zoccola’s “Neural Plexus,� is really a video installation that uses wire, plaster and gauze to fashion sculptural neural forms while a video plays in the background. Zoccola’s way of obstructing the video with the tangled synapses and dendrites reflect what may be going on inside our brains. But for the little art enthusiast it still conjured up images of a rat’s nest. “The Three-Dimensional Line: Volume, Scale, Illusion, Emotion� will be shown through May 28 at the KAC. For more information regarding this exhibition visit: www.kirklandartscenter.org

Mario De La Rosa is a student in the University of Washington Department of Communication News Laboratory.

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and not existing at the same time.� abstraction within the line. Vija Celmins contributes Jean Lullie sees line as a the smallest, but equally imtimeline. In “Lineage,� she pressive work in the exhibit. layers a collection of film In “Untitled� she forms a positives that span through starry sky via the exclusion 100 years of history. The or inclusion of graphite viewer contrasts the nuances hatched lines. that follow a family’s genealThe upstairs floor of the ogy in a light box. Diem Chau’s “In Between� gallery reserves works that represent line as emotion or also explores abstraction. passage in a slightly serioSimilar to female spies of comedic way. World War II who commuSean M. Johnson’s “Tennicated by passing encrypted sion at the Dinner Table� is messages in their knitting, rife with emotion and she uses Morse code even elicited nervous to embed excerpts of laughter from viewKIRKLAND her father’s diary in ers. red bands of strings. “I’ve been to a Each knot then table like that before,� represents a dot and a said one of the people slipknot typesets a dash. passing by Johnson’s artwork. “It gives me chills,� said His piece consists of heavy Ziegler when introducing wood furniture supported by Chau’s work. a complex system of strings Donna Schill, former held taut by nails. The sheer adjunct professor with the tension of strings and placeUniversity of Washington ment of nails provide a sense School of Art and a longof stress to the conversation time supporter of the KAC, happening within these two said that “Fascia� - Amy interactions. Hamblin’s towering organic Robert Campbell’s sculpture - best reflects the multimedia installation is exhibition’s theme. “She took another profound piece and, line, wire and turned it into as one member of the audiform that hardly takes up ence described it, resembles space,� said Schill. something straight from the This reflects another noMuseum of Jurassic Technoltion of Sandback: “Play(ing) ogy. with something both existing “X, Y� is Campbell’s way

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www.kirklandreporter.com

Every day is Earth Day many outdoor volunteer activities. Eastside Prep works with the King Conservation pring has finally come District, Earth Corps, and and the warm weather this year with Cascade Land brings many flowers, Conservancy. Community trees and blossoms. And Service Day is held all over with summer right around King County to pick up the corner, everyone is garbage, pick weeds and mowing their lawn, plantclean up different areas. ing flowers and spending Community Service Day is more time outdoors. This put together by the Dean of week, we celebrate Earth Students, and all students Day on April 22 and are and faculty participate. The reminded to take care final Community Serof our planet, and vice Day is on May 6. not just to do that Sometimes EARTH on Earth Day, but Eastside Prep helps all year long. out inside too. For Schools are parexample, Eastside ticipating in Earth Prep has worked with Day, too. At Eastside Northwest Harvest, a hunPreparatory School in Kirk- ger relief agency. land, they have a program “Eastside Prep loves to called Community Service give back to the commuDay, which takes place nity, and this is an importhree times per year. An ad- tant part of our experienvisory group is chosen with tial education,” said Kira different age ranges to do Geselowitz, associate dean BY ALLISON HOFF

Special to the Reporter

S

DAY

of students at Eastside Prep. Peter Kirk Elementary has a program called Pride Day. On Pride Day, students, parents and faculty can come to rake leaves, pick up garbage, pick weeds, trim plants, and clean up the school. “We all go to school and live in the same community and we all want to take pride in our school and make it look beautiful,” said Sandy Dennehy, Peter Kirk principal. Pride Day happens twice a year, once in the Fall and once in the Spring. “It’s important to have Pride Day because when students, parents, and teachers help clean up during Pride Day, they are more likely to take care of the school grounds every day,” said Bobbi Ostrum, the grounds beautification chair at Peter Kirk. Ostrum and Dennehy are

Peter Kirk Elementary students spruce up the school grounds with adult supervisor Bobbi Ostrum. CONTRIBUTED in charge of Pride Day and all students, parents, and faculty can participate. “I think having Pride Day is important because it makes the earth a better place,” said Morgan, a third grader.

Look around. See what you can do to help the Earth. Some good places to pick up are your home, school, work, local parks and playgrounds, or just your neighborhood. A

clean planet lets us all enjoy the good weather, flowers, and beauty that spring has to offer!

Eight-year-old Allison Hoff lives in Kirkland.

Volunteers needed for Clean Sweep

Bird houses

It’s time to get Downtown Kirkland spruced up for the coming summer season! Volunteers are needed to clean downtown Kirkland during the fun Clean Sweep event from 9:30 a.m. to noon April 30. Work includes sweeping, weeding, removing moss, picking up litter, and cleaning the sidewalk cracks, in preparation for the pressure washing that will happen soon. Meet at 9:30 a.m. at

Cub Scout Nick Gerth built six bird houses for Cotton Hill Park. The houses are installed in this year’s UW restoration site at the south end of the park. KAREN STORY, Contributed

A Research Study for MS Pain

McLeod Insurance, 111 Park Lane, for coffee provided by Starbucks and pastries provided by George’s. Lunch will be provided by Merrill Gardens at noon at the Grape Choice, Seven Lake Street. Things to bring: work gloves, weeding tools, screwdrivers or crack hoes, brooms, five-gallon buckets and water bottles. RSVP by e-mailing info@ kirklanddowntown.org or calling 425-893-8766.

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He’s at it again Kirkland resident Sandra Williams spotted Stu Clarke fixing up the Cotton Hill Park Trail on April 9 and snapped this photo of him. The trail was dedicated to Clarke in 2008, when the trail officially opened in the Highlands neighborhood. Clarke was instrumental in getting the process started and has donated many hours to the trail. CONTRIBUTED, Sandra Williams

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April 22, 2011 [13]

www.kirklandreporter.com

...young at heart (NewsUSA) - Data from many studies suggest that the incidence of Alzheimer’s disease is on the rise. However, many of the symptoms associated with early Alzheimer’s disease are the same as those associated with hearing loss. According to a recent study led by Frank R. Lin, MD, PhD, of Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, the risk of dementia increased among participants with at least a mild 25-decibel hearing loss. Participants with more severe hearing loss were most likely to be diagnosed with dementia – and even Alzheimer’s. The relationship between Alzheimer’s and hearing loss should come as no surprise. After all, you can’t remember what someone said if you didn’t hear them say it. Several symptoms are common to both Alzheimer’s and untreated hearing loss. These symptoms include depression, anxiety, feelings of isolation, and

problems talking and understanding what is being said. In addition, people with either Alzheimer’s or unidentified hearing loss may have inappropriate responses to social cues, lower scores on tests of mental function, attitudes of denial, defensiveness or negativity and increased distrust of others’ motives, even those of family and friends. Individuals with unidentified hearing loss may appear paranoid and excessively concerned that others are talking about them. “Untreated hearing loss is a significant qualityof-life issue,� said Sreek Cherukuri, MD, a boardcertified ear, nose and throat physician based in Chicago, Ill. “It can cause marital and family strain, lead to social isolation, depression and anxiety. And the solution is so simple.� To help more people improve their lives by improving their hearing, Dr. Cherukuri designed

the MDHearingAid, a comfortable, cost-effective way to improve hearing. “I could see no reason why we couldn’t develop a quality hearing instrument for about the price of an iPhone,� he said. If you are concerned about a loved one who is experiencing any of the symptoms mentioned above, talk to a doctor about testing for hearing loss. In several studies, even patients with Alzheimer’s showed improved ability to understand and communicate after they were fitted with hearing aids. “Our mission is to remove cost as an obstacle for the millions with hearing loss that cannot afford a custom hearing aid,� said Dr. Cherukuri.

For more information about a safe, affordable way to improve hearing loss, visit www.MDHearingAid.com or call 800873-0680.

(NewsUSA) - Osteoarthritis affects an estimated 27 million Americans and is the most common type of arthritis. Women over the age of 50 have a greater risk of suffering from osteoarthritis than men of the same age. In fact, women overall are more likely to experience a decrease in their activity level. With osteoarthritis, the tissue that serves as a ‘cushion’ between joints breaks down and causes the joints to rub together. This can result in chronic pain, stiffness, and decreased mobility. Chronic pain can be one of the most difficult parts of dealing with osteoarthritis, and it can get in the way of routine activities that make life rich and fulfilling – such as working, driving, shopping or even hugging a grandchild. A majority of people with osteoarthritis say it is difficult to be physically active. This puts them at risk for other medical problems, such as heart disease, diabetes and weight gain. “For many individuals, the main goal is to effectively treat the symptoms of

osteoarthritis and stay active,� says Society for Women’s Health Research spokesperson Carmen Green, M.D., Professor of Anesthesiology and Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Associate Professor of Health Management and Policy at the University of Michigan. “Treatment may include a mix of physical therapy, acupuncture, massage and prescription pain medications, including over-the-counter products, anti-inflammatory drugs and opioid medications.� Experts believe the sooner osteoarthritis is diagnosed and treated, the better the chances are of preventing it

from getting worse. Those battling osteoarthritis should see a doctor about managing their pain. They – and their caregivers – should also learn as much as they can and be actively involved in their own treatment plan. To learn more about osteoarthritis and how to treat the symptoms, visit the Society for Women’s Health Research at www.swhr.org. This website will direct visitors to resources that contain a variety of information on pain conditions, such as pain assessment and measurement tools, and links to pain education and advocacy groups. The content can help people with osteoarthritis better understand the condition and improve their ability to talk about pain with their health care provider.

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425-821-8210 /& UI ,JSLMBOE 8"


[14] April 22, 2011

www.kirklandreporter.com

REPORTER STAFF

SAMMAMISH BLANKS JUANITA SOCCER The Sammamish boys soccer team dominated Juanita on April 15 on the Totems home field. The Rebels fell 4-0 to Sammamish, with Taylor Berg picking up the first goal of the night in the 20 minute of the game. The Totems earned another goal in the 25 minute, followed in the 30 by the third of the night. Juanita held their opponent off until the 65 minute when Miguel Hernandez added the fourth and final goal of the night. Juanita will play Bellevue on Friday, April 22 and Mount Si on April 26. News contact and submissions: Megan Managan at mmanagan@ kirklandreporter.com or 206-232-1215

ith two more wins this week, the Juanita softball team advanced to a 10-0 record, after blanking Mount Si and Liberty. On Tuesday, April 12 Juanita beat Mount Si 7-0. The game went all the way until the top of the seventh with no score, until the Rebels blasted in all seven runs to take the game. Rachel O’Neill was 2-4 at the plate with two RBI, while Aliah Sweere was 2-4 with two RBI and a double. The next day, the team beat Liberty 10-0. Unlike the day before, the Rebels starting hitting things in the first inning, scoring six in the bottom of the first. In five innings the Rebels had 10 runs off hits and no errors. Katie Kent was 2-2 with three RBI and a home run, while Cami Pettengill was 1-3 with a double.

Kangs take two The Lady Kangs earned two league wins last week, beating Sammamish and Mount Si, before falling to KingCo’s No. 2 team this season: Bellevue. On Tuesday, Lake Washington softball beat the Totems 15-1 in five innings. The Kangs had three runs

JHS baseball splits four games In four tough conferences games this week, the Juanita

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in both the first and second before adding nine in the bottom of the fifth to take the victory. They had 10 hits and one error during the meeting. Savannah Brady was 1-1 at the plate with four runs, two RBI, a triple and a single, while Jenny Hill was 2-3 with a run, four RBI and a double. Teammate Emillee Ronbeck was 2-3 with five RBI and a triple. The next afternoon the Kangs faced off against Bellevue, currently the No. 2 team in KingCo. Bellevue beat Lake Washington with a 7-0 score. The Kangs had five hits during the game, but couldn’t turn it into runs. Monday, April 18, the Kangs faced Mount Si at home, winning 17-7. The Kangs scored in each of the game’s five innings, including a 8-0 blast in the fifth. The team had 12 hits and one error, while holding Mount Si to seven runs on 12 hits and three errors. Bethany Becon was 2-4 with two runs and four RBI, and a home run. Laura Chopp was 2-4 with three RBI, while Whitney Dunlap was 3-3 at the plate with two runs, a RBI and a triple, Jenny Hill was 3-4 with three runs, three RBI and a home run. Megan Spartz was 3-3 with a run, four RBI, a triple and a home run.

Juanita’s Dani Faist pitches during the Rebels match against Mercer Island on Thursday, April 14. The game was called after two innings because of the rain. CHAD COLEMAN, Kirkland Reporter

Rebels split their results, winning two and losing two. On Tuesday, the team lost 9-6 to Mercer Island at the Islanders home field. Sean Barlow had three RBI during the game and a home run for the Rebels, while J.J. Caldwell was 3-4 against the Islanders with two runs and an RBI. The next afternoon, traveling to Bellevue, the Rebels lost 5-1 to the Wolverines. Bellevue had an early 2-0 lead at the end of the first,

but Juanita contained their opponent for two innings, before the Wolverines added three runs to the score. Juanita earned its lone run of the night in the top of the seventh. On Friday, April 15 the Rebels beat Interlake 2-1 in extra innings. The Rebels got an early 1-0 lead in the first, but then Interlake tied the game in the third and the two squads battled it out until Juanita scored their second run of the night in

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LW baseball slips to Bellevue, Mount Si Lake Washington blasted past Interlake last week, before dropping two games in KingCo play. On Wednesday afternoon, the Kangs beat Interlake with a 10-0 victory. Against the Saints, Lake Washington got two in the first, followed by four in the [ more SPORTS page 15 ]

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the 11th inning. Juanita had two runs with nine hits and an error. During the game Caldwell was 2-4 with an RBI and Gebe was 3-5 at the plate. On Monday, April 18 against Liberty, Juanita won 9-8. Gebe was 2-2 at the plate, with three runs and a double, while Jyran McNairy had a double and a triple and Derek Kaufman had a home run, along with Barlow.

Renewing a rivalry match, the Lake Washington boys soccer team earned a 1-0 overtime win over cross town rival Juanita on Tuesday evening. The Kangs and the Rebels, formerly in different classifications, now play in the same league. After battling for 80 minutes without scoring, Jordan Cox found his opening off an assist from Justin Manao in the 89th minute to give Lake Washington the win. Friday, April 15 the Kangs hosted Mercer Island, holding the Islanders to a tie. Melin Granados scored off an assist from Taylor Stapf in the 18 minute of the game to give Lake Washington the lead, but 10 minutes later Mercer Island’s Jake Michael connected with the net for an unassisted goal. The Kangs will play Mount Si on Friday, April 22, and Liberty on April 26.

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SPORTS

Juanita blanks league opponents W

The Kirkland Reporter is published every Friday and delivery tubes are available FREE to our readers who live in our distribution area. Our newspaper tube can be installed on your property at no charge to you. Or the tube can be provided to you to install at your convenience next to your mailbox receptacle or at the end of your driveway. Pick up your FREE tube at our Kirkland office, located at 11630 Slater Ave. NE, Suite 9, Kirkland during regular business hours. (Monday - Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.)

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April 22, 2011 [15]

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Kang lacrosse picks up win The Lake Washington lacrosse team earned another win over Seattle Prep this week, extended

Tennis Bellevue 6, Juanita 1 Singles – London Lee (Bellevue) beat Tennes-

see Taylor Chan, 6-0, 6-1; Sabrina Tu (Bellevue) beat Devin Clawson, 6-2, 6-2; Anya Rubinstein (Bellevue) beat Kelsey Glenn, 6-1, 6-1; Karen Park (Bellevue) beat Karen Park, 6-0, 6-0. Doubles – Megan Urquhart-Michlle Han (Bellevue) beat Anna Ludwigsen-Chris Hanley, 6-2, 6-2; Claudia Lin-Karlee Kendroski beat Mackenzie Urquhart-Ashley Cohon, 6-3, 6-4; Gracie OdegardNicole Baqai (Bellevue) beat Hannah SkurnikMaris Cortes, 6-1, 6-3.

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jami sieber Saturday, May 7 ∙ 8:00 pm Acoustic-electric cellist, vocalist and composer performs an enchanting concert.

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acrobats of hebei Sunday, May 8 ∙ 7:00 pm

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third for a 5-0 lead. The score quickly expanded with two runs in the bottoms of the fifth and sixth innings. The Kangs had 13 hits and no errors in the game. Theo Alexander was 2-4 during the game, with a double, while Bob Cruikshank was also 2-4 with four RBI and two doubles. Zach Johnson was 2-4 with two doubles and Nick Johnson was 1-3 with two RBI and a double. Against Mount Si on April 15, Lake Washington lost 2-1. Neither team was able to round the bases during the first three innings, but Mount Si capitalized in the fourth with their only run of the game. The Kangs answered in the sixth to tie the game 1-1 before the Wildcats got the final run of the game in the seventh. Lake Washington had five hits, while Mount Si had three. The Kangs Bob Cruikshank was 1-3 during the game with a home run. Monday, April 18 the Kangs lost 3-0 to Bellevue. The Wolverines had a run in the first, third and sixth, while keeping the Kangs from scoring or hitting all night.

the season record to 5-4 this year. The Kangs has a 3-1 lead in the first quarter and added five goals in the second, while holding Prep scoreless in the second portion of the first half. Cody Bernstein had four goals for the team, while Reilly Blackner had six ground balls and teammate Drew Roberts added five ground balls. Lake Washington will travel to Kamiak High School on Tuesday, April 19 to play Mukilteo.

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[16] April 22, 2011

www.kirklandreporter.com

CALENDAR

activities to remove invasive plant species.

36th Annual Easter Egg Hunt: Kirkland’s free annual Easter Egg Hunt, sponsored by the Kirkland Kiwanis, begins at 1:30 p.m. April 24 at Peter Kirk Park. The event features three age categories.

April 26 YES Invest in Youth Breakfast: This year’s Invest in Youth Breakfast for Youth Eastside Services runs from 7:30-8:45 a.m. April 26 at the Hyatt Regency Bellevue. UW Husky Men’s Basketball coach Lorenzo Romar will be the keynote speaker. Suggested donation is $150. Funds raised will support uncompensated care and underfunded programs at YES. For information, visit www.youtheastsideservices.org.

April 30 Pacific Northwest Native Plant Sale: Eastside Audubon will hold its annual Pacific Northwest Native Plant Sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 30 at the Kirkland Children’s School, 5311 108th Ave. NE. Plant experts will help you to select from more than 100 species of native plants: flowering, fruit-bearing, edible plants, ground covers, trees of all sizes, evergreens and perennials.

May 7 Annual Norkirk Garage Sale: The annual Norkirk garage sale, sponsored by the Norkirk Neighborhood Association, runs from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 7 in the Norkirk neighborhood. Between 40-60 homes are expected to participate. Look for the signage.

The free community calendar is published Fridays on a space-available basis and includes free and non-profit local events and groups. Submit items at least a week in advance of publication dates to: calendar@kirklandreporter.com

Tee It Up Fore Autism: Learning your child has autism can be a devastating and confusing experience for a family. On May 7, golf enthusiasts will raise funding and awareness of a disorder that affects 1 in every 110 births in the U.S. and nearly 1 in 70 boys. Lily’s Foundation, a newly formed non-profit organization in Everett, will host the first annual Tee It Up Fore Autism Awareness, presented by Honda of Kirkland. Proceeds from the golf tournament will benefit Autism Speaks. The event, which begins at 1 p.m. May 7, will include a 4-person scramble, tournament giveaways, prizes and dinner following golf at The Golf Club at Echo Falls in Snohomish.

EVENTS April 22 Lake Washington Technical College Annual Plant Sale: Find a variety of plants for your yard and garden at this annual sale that runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 22-23 and April 29-30 at the LWTC Horticulture Complex, 11605 132nd Ave. N.E. All of the plants for the sale are grown from seed or cuttings by LWTC’s environmental horticulture students. All purchases support the Environmental Horticulture Program and its students. Please help conserve resources by bringing boxes for your purchases. For information, visit www.lwtchort. com/home32.

May 14 NAMI Washington Walk: Walk for mental health during the NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness) Walk on May 14 at the Marina Park. Check in begins at 8:30 a.m. and the walk starts at 9:30 a.m. Presented by Fairfax Hospital, the walk is all about mental health awareness and raising financial support for NAMI’s free programs that help people living with mental illness and their families. For information, call 206-257-2206 or visit www.nami.org/ namiwalks/wa.

April 23 Houghton Neighborhood Egg Hunt: The Houghton Neighborhood Egg Hunt, sponsored by Pleasant Bay Church and Northwest University, features more than 2,000 hidden eggs and lots of prizes. For toddlers through 6th grade. Happens at 10 a.m. April 23 at the Northwest University campus, 11160 N.E. 53rd St.

ARTS The following classes are offered at the Kirkland Arts Center. To register, call 425-822-7161: Fashion Illustration (ages 12-14): Discover the world of fashion illustration and study the garments of many current runway designers. This class examines design elements such as line, form, shape, color and texture. Class runs from 4:30-6 p.m. Tuesdays, April 26 through May 31. Cost is $100 members; $120 non-members.

Beagle Rescue Adoption Event: Beagles are great family dogs. Find yours during this adoption event that runs from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 23 at Dooley’s Dog House, 1421 Market St. For information, call 425-889-2200. Earth Day Volunteer Event: Join Green Kirkland Partnership and volunteer for Earth Day from 9 a.m. to noon April 23 at Juanita Bay Park, 2201 Market St. Sign up at www.earthcorps.org. Minors under 14 years must be accompanied by an adult; youth 14-17 should be accompanied by an adult, bring a signed waiver form or a guardian to sign you in. EarthCorps crews and native plant stewards will be leading t

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Flamenco de Raz: Direct from Spain and returning to KPC after two sold out performances in 2010, Flamenco de Raz promises an unforgettable evening of passionate flamenco dance, song and music at 8 p.m. April 29-30 at the Kirkland Performance Center. Tickets are &

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Bubblers, Spitter and Spewers: Small Water Features: Rick Perry, an award-winning landscape designer and the owner of Falling Water Designs, will show you how many types of small, affordable, self-contained water features that homeowners can install themselves and are suitable for just about any garden space including condo balconies. Learn how you can create your own unique water feature and bring the sight and sound of water into your garden during this free class that runs from 6:30-8 p.m. April 26 at Simplicity Decor, 126 Park Lane. For information, call 425-8030386 or visit www.simplicitydecor.com.

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Evening Story Time: Ages 3-6 and their families. Happens at 7 p.m. April 27. Chinese Language Story Time: Stories, songs and activities presented in Mandarin. Begins at 11 a.m. April 28. French Story Times: Ages 2-6 and their families. Begins at 11 a.m. April 22. Hopelink ESL Lab: Come to this free lab to practice your English speaking or writing skills

Crossword Puzzle Answers on page 7

Intervention Classes: Free intervention classes are taught by certified chemical dependency counselors who are experienced interventionists. The next class runs from 6:308 p.m. May 10 at Residence XII, 12029 113th Ave. N.E. To register, call 425-823-8844.

LIBRARY The following programs happen at the Kirkland Library in downtown Kirkland. For more information, call 425-822-2459: Art Lecture: Norman Rockwell is one of our country’s best-loved illustrators. This lecture on Rockwell will run from 2-3:30 p.m. April 23. Study Zone: Drop in for free homework help from volunteer tutors at 1 p.m. April 24 and

Milton 26. Cloud 27. Balances 28. His “4” was retired 29. Numero uno 30. Decorated, as a cake 31. Hand sewing necessities (3 wds) 36. Acquire 37. Black and white cookie 38. Designated area for golfer’s first stroke 39. Cancel 41. Check 42. Bickerer in the “Iliad”

Across 1. Code word for “S” 7. Catch, in a way 12. Temper, as metal 13. The Natural State 17. “Nonsense!” 18. Eyelet creator 19. Detective, at times 20. Attendance counter 21. “___ the fields we go” 22. Sleeveless dress resembling an apron 23. Biblical shepherd 24. Ashtabula’s lake 25. “Unimaginable as ___ in Heav’n”:

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Difficulty level: 15

Tricks for Small Spaces: “A” Liengboonlertchai, interior design consultant and owner of Simplicity Decor, will show you some simple tricks to maximize the potential in your spaces. Learn how to use color, furniture and accessories to create a cohesive look and feel in your own home during this free class that runs from 6:30-8 p.m. April 28 at Simplicity Decor, 126 Park Lane. For information, call 425-803-0386 or visit www.simplicitydecor.com.

Free Money Smart Workshops: Money Smart Week is a national public awareness initiative sponsored locally by Jump$tart Washington and the Federal Reserve Banks of San Francisco and Chicago. The program brings together organizations across the state to help people build their financial knowledge and manage their finances wisely. As part of Money Smart Week, a series of sessions at Bellevue College from 1-4:30 p.m. on April 27 will discuss how to establish, manage and rebuild credit, and how to manage student loans and avoid excessive debt. The workshop at Lake Washington Technical College from 10-11:30 a.m. April 27 will focus on saving and spending and is aimed at a high-intermediate English as a Second Language (ESL) audience. For information, contact Jani James at 425-250-3004 or jjames@hope-link.org. Pre-registration is not required for any of the workshops.

Answers on page 7

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Preschool Story Time: Happens at 11 a.m. April 26.

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Park Lane Gallery: Jason Gamrath’s artwork runs the gamut from beautiful to sublime to surreal. His masterworks will be exhibited through May 1 at Parklane Gallery, 130 Park Lane. Also, fine art photographer Duane Hansen presents “Silence, Time and Light” and Katherine Todd presents “Light & Tranquility Sunshine & Water” through May 1. For information, visit www.parklanegallery.com.

Toddler Story Time: Happens at 10 a.m. April 26.

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Facebook Workshop: This introduction to Facebook workshop begins at 6:30 p.m. April 18. Register online at www.kcls.org/events or call 425-822-2459. Bring your own laptop if available.

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May 1 and 5 p.m. April 25-27.

Faure’s Requiem: Kirkland Choral Society’s 23rd season concludes with a perennial favorite: Faure’s hauntingly beautiful Requiem. In addition, KCS celebrates the 200th birthday of Franz Liszt, with his seldom heard masterpiece, the powerful Missa Choralis. Performances begin at 7:30 p.m. May 7 at Bastyr University Chapel, 14500 Juanita Drive, Kenmore; and 7:30 p.m. May 14 at the First Church of Seattle, 180 Denny Way, Seattle. Tickets are $12 student/ senior; $18 adult. For information, visit www. kirklandchoralsociety.org.

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April 22, 2011 [17]

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The Eastside Welcome Club: Meets the first Wednesday of the month at 10 a.m. in members homes and on various days of the month for other activities and outings. If you are new to the area and want to meet new people and join in different interests and social groups, please contact Sharon at 425-836-9224.

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‘Get Around Puget Sound’: Knowledgeable volunteers help people learn how to use all the transportation options available for getting around the Puget Sound region, from buses to taxis. Kirkland residents who want to use their cars less, or don’t have their own transportation and aren’t sure how to get where they need to go, now have some place to turn for help and answers. Hopelink provides a “Getting Around Puget Sound� service free to anyone who has transportation questions. The two-hour

Weekly Roundtable: Join community members to discuss “Local Perspectives on Market Uncertainty: How are we feeling about the markets and why.�The group will informally discuss how volatility in the markets affects each of us, and participants can share ways for others to feel positive about making decisions during turbulent times. Open to all over 21, but

Singles Golf Group: Hey single golfers. Have you been missing opportunities to play a variety of great courses while meeting new people and having fun? The group is looking for golfers of every level and age to join them and experience a lot of good tee times and a variety of people who love the game as much as you. The ASGA (American Single Golf Association) holds monthly dinner meetings on the second Tuesday of each month at The Big Fish Grill, 10426 Northup Way, Kirkland. For information, e-mail singlesgolf.com or call 206-444-4055.

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473654

Lake Washington Christian Church Worship Sunday: 10:30 AM

Northlake Unitarian Universalist Church

Remember your loved one

343 15th Ave, Kirkland

Sunday Services: 10:30 am Children’s Classes: 10:30 am

Place a paid obituary to honor those who have passed away, call Linda at 253.234.3506 or email paidobits@reporternewspapers.com

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST

All notices are subject to verification.

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real estate for sale

Kirkland Library Board: Meets the third Wednesday of each month at 6 p.m., Kirkland Library, 308 Kirkland Ave. The next meeting is April 30.

City Council: Meets first and third Tuesday of each month at 7:30 p.m., City Hall Council Chambers. Study sessions are typically conducted prior to the regular meeting and begin at 6 p.m. and held in the Peter Kirk Room. For agendas, go to: www.ci.kirkland.wa.us/depart/ council/Agendas.htm. Call: 425-587-3190.

...obituaries

PNWHomeFinder.com +)2+,!.$ is an online real estate community that exposes your profile and listings to two million readers from our many publications ü 31ü &4ü 4OWNHOMEüü in the Pacific Northwest. WITHü Aü MAINü mOORü MASTERüü Log on to join our BEDROOM ü ü BEDROOMSüü network today. ANDü ü BATHS ü ü CARü GAR ü AGE ü #ONTACTü *ACKIEü "UR ü KETTüATü Advertising doesn’t have to break the bank. The Classifieds has great deals on everything you need.

King County Fire District No. 41 Commissioners Meeting: Meets the fourth Tuesday of each month at 3 p.m., 520 Kirkland Way, Suite 400. The next meeting is April 26. For information, call 425-587-3662.

Transportation Commission: Meets the fourth Wednesday of each month at 6 p.m., City Hall. The next meeting is April 27. Call: 425-5873865. Agenda information available: www. ci.kirkland.wa.us.

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST

Real Estate for Sale Other Areas

real estate for sale - WA

Houghton Community Council: Meets the fourth Monday of each month at 7 p.m., City Hall. The next meeting is April 25.

Kirkland Youth Council: Meets the second and fourth Monday of each month at 6:45-8:30 p.m., City Hall. The next meeting is April 25. Call: 425-587-3323

DISCIPLES OF CHRIST

MEETINGS Eastside Homelessness Advisory Committee: EHAC coordinates efforts to mitigate and end homelessness on the Eastside. Monthly meetings are held from 2-4 p.m. on the second Thursday of each month at the First Presbyterian Church of Bellevue, 1717 Bellevue Way N.E. All are welcome.

Kirkland Moms Network: An on-line support group for stay-at-home moms (or dads) who live in or near the Kirkland area. The group meets several times a month for outings and play dates. For more information, visit http:// kirklandmomsnetwork.groupsite.com.

Rotary Club of Kirkland: The club meets at 6:15 p.m. Mondays at the Woodmark Hotel, 1200 Carillon Point. For information, contact Ba rb Seaton at: tbseaton@comcast.net or 206-782-3815.

CITY MEETINGS

NEWS TIPS! Call 425.822.9166

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announcements Announcements

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An Open and Affirming Church

REPORTER !$/04)/. ĂĽ ,OVING ĂĽĂĽ ATHLETIC ĂĽ FINANCIALLYĂĽ SE ĂĽ CURE ĂĽ STABLEĂĽ #HRISTIANĂĽĂĽ FAMILY ĂĽ STAYĂĽ ATĂĽ HOMEĂĽĂĽ -OM ĂĽ WOULDĂĽ LOVEĂĽ TOĂĽĂĽ TALKĂĽ TOĂĽ YOUĂĽ IFĂĽ YOUĂĽ AREĂĽĂĽ CONSIDERINGĂĽ ADOPTION ĂĽĂĽ EXPENSESĂĽ PAID ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽCELL TEXT WWW SHAWNLORI COM SHAWNLORI COMCAST NET

www.lwchristian.org

Kirkland Congregational UCC

KIRKLAND

Announcements

425-822-4637

Sunday Services 10:30 AM 106 - 5th Ave. 425-822-3811 www.kccucc.org

Announcements

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#ALLĂĽ4ODAY Looking for your dream house? Go to pnwHomeFinder.com to find the perfect home for sale or rent.

308 4th Avenue S. www.northlakeuu.org

Rev. Marian Stewart

To advertise in this Worship Directory Please call Johanne Lund 425-822-9166 Ext. 1550 or email: jlund@kirklandreporter.com

Employment General

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447182

Eastside The Compassionate Friends: For any parent who has experienced the death of a child, at any age, from any cause. The group meets the second Thursday of every month from 7:30-9:30 p.m. at the Holy Spirit Lutheran Church, 10021 N.E. 124th St., Kirkland. For information, call 425-325-0357.

Evergreen Hospice and Palliative Care: Volunteers are needed to serve patients and families throughout King and Snohomish counties. The hospice and palliative care volunteers provide service to the patient and family by providing companionship, life review, compassionate presence, light household help, running errands, or providing respite so the primary caregiver can have a break. To learn more about the volunteer program, call 425-899-1040 and/ or apply online at the Evergreen Healthcare website at www.evergreenhealthcare.org/ hospice.

Rotary Club of Kirkland Downtown: Weekly meetings held on Tuesday mornings at the Crab Cracker restaurant in Kirkland begin with coffee, conversation and a buffet breakfast at 7:15 a.m. For information, visit www.RCKD.org.

Kirkland Eclectics: Kirkland Eclectics, a Toastmaster Club, meets from 7-9 p.m. Thursday evenings at Merrill Gardens Retirement Community, 201 Kirkland Avenue in downtown Kirkland. Guests are welcome! For information, contact Paul Yarbrough at 425-822-1428.

Planning Commission: Meets the second and fourth Thursday of each month at 7 p.m., City Hall Council Chambers. The next meeting is April 28. For information, call 425-587-3227. For agendas, visit www.ci.kirkland.wa.us/depart/Planning/Planning_Commission.htm.

446806

GFWC Kirkland Woman’s Club: The woman service organizations meets twice a month at noon the first Thursday of each month (even days, pot luck; odd days, lunch is served) and 1 p.m. the third Thursday of each month for coffee and dessert at the Kirkland Woman’s Club, 407 First St., Kirkland. For reservations, call 425-829-7720.

sign-up required as room space is limited to six each week. The free roundtable runs at 6 p.m. Wednesdays at 2205 Carillon Point, Kirkland. Call Chris at 425-766-8797.

447186

SUPPORT GROUPS

Kirkland Performance Center: Each performance at KPC is staffed with volunteers who help take tickets/ usher, manage concessions and assist with pre- and post-performance needs. Front of house volunteering at KPC is a great way to see shows and become more involved in the community. Visit www.kpcenter. org/volunteer.htm to sign up, or for further information about ushering or other front of house duties, please contact the Box Office Manager at info@kpcenter.org.

Kiwanis Club of Kirkland: The group meets from 12-1:15 p.m. every Wednesday at the Crab Cracker in Kirkland. The global organization of volunteers is dedicated to changing the world one child and one community at a time. For information, visit www.kirklandkiwanis.org or contact Matt Gregory at 425-828-0231 or e-mail MollyTaffy@msn.com.

474356

CALENDAR

sessions will be held from 9-11 a.m. the first Thursday of every month at the Peter Kirk Community Center, 352 Kirkland Ave. in Kirkland. For more information, call 425-943-6769.

.com

More

Employment General

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[18] [18] AprilFriday 22, 2011 www.kirklandreporter.com Apr 22 2011 www.kirkland-reporter.com www.nw-ads.com Employment General

Employment General

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Professional Services Insurance Service

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Professional Services Tutoring/Lessons

425-235-9162 / 425-279-3804, Anytime

In-Home Tutoring

Home Services Hauling & Cleanup

N.W. EDUCATIONAL SERVICES All subjects K-12 In-Home Private School

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Northwest Academy Expertise-all Learning Disabilities S.A.T. Test Prep Classes

www.weeducate4u.com

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425-483-1353 Call Dr. Mel

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flea market Flea Market

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Mail Order

Miscellaneous

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Musical Instruments

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Sport Utility Vehicles Volvo

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Automobiles Chrysler

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pets/animals

Miscellaneous

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April 22, 2011 www.kirkland-reporter.com Friday Apr 22 2011 [19] [19]

Cats

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Pickup Trucks Dodge

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Motorhomes

รฅ (/,)$!9รฅ 2AMBLERรฅรฅ . E P T U N E รฅ 0 $ $ รฅ รฅรฅ #LASSรฅ !รฅ $IESEL รฅ รฅ SLIDEรฅรฅ OUTS รฅ รฅ (0รฅ #UMMINS รฅรฅ !LLISONรฅ รฅ SPEED รฅ รฅรฅ MILES รฅ #RUISEรฅ CONTROL รฅ AIRรฅรฅ S U S P E N S I O N รฅ EX H A U S Tรฅรฅ BRAKE รฅ AUTOMATICรฅ LEVEL รฅ ING รฅ REARรฅ CAMERA รฅ รฅรฅ WATTรฅ INVERTER รฅ /NANรฅ รฅรฅ DIESELรฅ GENERATOR รฅ ,OAD รฅ ED รฅ %XTENDEDรฅ ANDรฅ TIREรฅรฅ WARRANTIESรฅ TILรฅ รฅรฅ รฅ 4ESTรฅ $RIVEรฅ )Tรฅรฅ 4/$!9 รฅ

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[20] April 22, 2011

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