Valley Record SNOQUALMIE
Wednesday, JANUARY 2, 2013 n Daily updates at www.valleyrecord.com n 75 cents Carol Ladwig/Staff Photo
Tom Kemp, right, shares a laugh and some holiday cookies with a traveling driver at North Bend’s Truck Town on Christmas Eve. Kemp works the truck stop as Transport for Christ’s local pastor.
What can a robot do? A lot, when powered by smart Valley students Page 9
The connection: Mount Si girls battling for it, growing skills Page 10
Index Parenting 2 4 Opinion 5 Scene 6 Obituaries On the Scanner 7 Classifieds 11-14
Vol. 99, No. 32
Neighbor douses Cascade Covenant Church candle fire
A friend at the crossroads Strangers always get a smile from North Bend’s truck stop chaplain By Carol Ladwig Staff Reporter
Tom Kemp played Santa Claus on Christmas Eve, but he used the front door, not the chimney, when he came to call.
Sporting a Santa hat with a green ball-cap brim, Kemp strode through the lines of tractor-trailers parked at North Bend’s Travel Centers of America stop, a.k.a Truck Town. These trucks are the drivers’ homes when they’re on the road, and he hoped to brighten each one with a delivery of home-made cookies. “We figure, if you’re here on the lot
Culture change Valley move gives county permit department a whole new outlook on service By Seth Truscott Editor
“It’s breathtaking,” John Starbard says of his new view. The snowy mountains that spring up outside his corner office just off the Snoqualmie Parkway are a far cry from the industrial hangars that greeted the director of King County’s Department of Permitting and Environmental Review only two months ago. See CULTURE, 3
Fast thinker saves church from blaze
today (Christmas Eve), you won’t be home to get fresh-baked cookies on Christmas,” Kemp tells the drivers. Most drivers look confused for a few seconds, then smile widely as Kemp holds up a big sack full of individually-packaged and decorated bags of holiday cookies.
Ten days away from Christmas Eve, and the church was burning. Josh Hudson barely registered these thoughts before he had a new one: I can put out this fire. He acted on that idea almost faster than he could think, but first he called 911 and reported seeing a small but growing fire at Cascade Covenant Church. “It had just started, it wasn’t really burning too big,” Hudson said of the fire, at the church directly across the street from his house.
See CROSSROAD, 10
See Church fire, 15 Seth Truscott/Staff Photo
King County engineer Ray Florent takes in the view from his office on Snoqualmie Ridge, part of the newly moved,renamedKing County Department of Permitting and Environmental Review. About 100 county employees now work in Snoqualmie.
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2 • January 2, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
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PARENTING
If you have Parenting news, tell the Valley. Submit ideas to editor@valleyrecord.com. Parenting runs the first week of every month
A better pack for the back Your child’s backpack can be ‘spine safer’ By Nicole Demetrescu Contributing Writer
At their core, backpacks are a good idea. They keep students’ belongings together, protect their lunches from the elements and foster communication between parents and teachers. But backpacks have drawbacks, especially as children age and bear greater academic loads. More books and equipment add to the weight of a pack and to the burden on a child’s spine. The latest research shows us that anything beyond 10 percent of a child’s weight places unhealthy stress on the spine. It pushes the head forward and increases the compression of spinal discs. If these issues are not corrected, chronic pain can result, especially in older teenagers. How a pack is worn also makes a difference. Low and loose on the back creates
greater stress than higher and each class. Installing a portighter. And if a pack is car- table shelf in tall lockers can ried in a hand or over one help keep things organized shoulder—forget it. and user-friendly. If I could have my way, stu• Wear the pack high and dents would have one book relatively snug across both for each subject at school and shoulders. If possible, buy another at home, erasing any a pack with a waist strap to need for transport. shift weight from Or they would carry the shoulders and books in wheeled upper back to the bags, removing the pelvis. (Bags with spinal load entirely. waist and chest But neither of straps are doubly these options is good if the fit is practical for most high and snug.) of today’s students. • Avoid singleHere are tips for Nicole strap bags, especialhow your student demetrescu ly in middle- and can make his or her high-school years backpack “spine safer”: when book loads are greater. • Keep the load no great• Place heavy items closest er than 10 percent of body to the back inside the pack weight. Strategize with your and light items in pockets and student on what books he outer areas. This keeps most or she really needs each day. weight closest to the spine, Create a place at home for reducing stress on vertebrae books to be organized and and discs. easily accessed to ease day-to• Posture, posture, posture! day transitions. Especially in adolescence • Does your student have a when bodies change prolocker at school? Encourage portions, poor posture can him or her to use it and carry cause back, neck and shoulonly the materials needed for der pain—and adding a pack
often makes it worse! Use this mantra to coach your student on proper posture: “Ears over shoulders over hips.” • Physically active students generally have greater strength, endurance and abdominal stability than more sedentary students. Help your students engage in activities they find enjoyable. If they exercise, encourage them to target (with moderation) the abdominals and buttocks at their “core.” Strong tummies and hips make happier lower backs. Consult a physical therapist if your student complains of neck, shoulder or back soreness, or if you are concerned about your student’s spinal health. Physical therapists also assess and treat joint pain, muscle soreness and weakness, postural problems, balance dysfunction and coordination challenges. Try these tips, and your student’s spine will thank you. • Nicole Demetrescu is a physical therapist at Encompass. Contact her at nicole.demetrescu@encompassnw.org.
Courtesy photo
You can ease the load on your child’s back in several ways. Keep the load no greater than 10 percent of body weight and strategize with your student on what books he or she really needs each day. Remember to create a place at home for books to be organized and easily accessed to ease day-to-day transitions.
Love and Logic classes offered at Cedarcrest Parents of students at Cedarcrest High School and Tolt Middle School are invited to a seven-week parenting program designed by the Love and Logic Institute. The course gives parents practical skills that they can use immediately, to have more fun and feel more confident as a parent. It answers questions such as how to make teens more responsible for their homework, how to get them to do their chores and arrive home as scheduled, and how to help them manage money. Sessions run from 6 to 7:30 p.m. on Wednesdays, beginning Jan. 9, at Cedarcrest High School. Class dates are Jan. 9, 16, 23, 30 and Feb. 6, 13 and 20. Cost is $10 for the workbook. Register for the class by sending your name, address, contact information and the number and ages of your children, to Tolt Middle School, attention Joan Zoet, 740 Tolt Avenue, Carnation, WA 98014. For information, call Joan at (425) 844-4608. $EAS-141_OpenHouse_Ad_8.16x6_Jan2013.indd 1
12/20/12 6:42 PM
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Snoqualmie Valley Record • January 2, 2013 • 3
CULTURE FROM 1
Like his boss, county engineer Ray Florent is also struck by the beauty of his suburban surroundings. The county’s permit divi“I love it in Snoqualmie. It’s sion has gone through some so much more worth it,” he big changes lately. The former says. At his cubicle, “This will Department of Development be home,” at least until retireand Environmental Services ment in about two years. (DDES) changed names The new home is a lot less and locations, moving to a “chopped up,” the engineer 22,000-square-foot secondsays. Split up into two halls floor space at 35030 Douglas over three floors, collegiality in Street on October 22. his old department involved Its annual lease, $300,000 some serious walks. Seth Truscott/Staff Photo from Meriwether Partners, is “I forget what the mileabout half of what the county King County Department of Permitting and Environmental age was,” Florent says. “Here, Review’s Records Management Specialist Lisa Mankin faces the paid for its old digs in Renton. rather than a product line, it’s “Over the course of our camera as Narinder Wallia helps a customer at the new lobby. more area-oriented. It’s the lease term… we know that next cubicle over. Things move a lot faster.” we’ll save millions,” Starbard said. Florent’s office is on west the side of the building, the side that Methune architects in Seattle performed a complete set of handles major annexations. It will shrink with time. improvements, upgrading the space from an empty shell. “We know we are a downsizing department,” Starbard says. The change in space and site are meant to bring a change in the “So when remaining potential annexations are gone, we’ll have way this department does business. about 65 employees.” Those who remain will fit in the east wing. “When you’re in a business park in Renton, and your view is the 737 plant, you begin to think, ‘That’s what we do,’” Starbard Spirit of innovation said. But from the Ridge, taking in the outlying timberland and At a recent visit, County Executive Dow Constantine praised valleys, “you can see for miles. That’s our territory. Every day, we’re seeing our customer base in a way we never have before. I what he called a spirit of innovation at the new permit headthink that informs us about what we really do these days, which quarters, while Councilwoman Kathy Lambert commented on how the team brings a heart and face to an important departis rural permitting, rather than urban.” ment. New flow “You make people’s lives better, every day,” she told gathered The new site makes the county that much more accessible to employees. “The idea that you’re reorganized, renamed and its customers, who, increasingly, come from the rural parts of the relocated are all good…. There are fewer of you. Which means county. Starbard said the county is winding down a decade-long you have to use your skills every day in new ways. That brings wave of urban incorporations. That means his department is ide- out the leadership in you.” Snoqualmie Mayor Matt Larson said the city is thrilled to welally placed to serve the customer of the future, who is interested in permitting a new rural home or subdividing small acreage. come the department. He promoted local businesses and trails. “You’ll find this a pleasant place to work,” he said. That encounter now means a 15-minute drive, instead of 45. “Enjoy the fresh air,” Lambert said. The office also allows a single stop to connect to the county’s • Office hours for DPER are 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday public health and roads divisions. A new software portal makes through Friday, at 35030 S.E. Douglas St., Suite 210, Snoqualmie. for easier information access. Learn more at www.kingcounty.gov/permits. “It really is a new department,” Starbard says.
Seth Truscott/Staff Photo
Underground street woes lead to sealed water main, closed road The approaching pickup slowed, halted, then backed straight up. There was no getting past the multiple ‘road closed’ signs at the corner of Park Avenue and River Street. A patch of gravel and deep cracks in the pavement showed why. On Wednesday, Dec. 19, problems first started showing up on this corner of the downtown street, which sits on a bank of the Snoqualmie River. Mike Roy, operations manager for the city of Snoqualmie, said an eight-inch water main came apart that day. Public works crews cut the line, which had looped through the neighborhood, and capped its ends. Residents on River and Park are still getting water, but the city will eventually want to reconnect the lines. Looped mains perform better, Roy says. Below the pavement, the aging sub-base of the road is in poor shape. “Most of the subgrades, the road bases, are not engineered material,” Roy told the Record. “It was years of gravel roads, and they were paved one day.” Over decades, the subgrade shifts and settles. “It doesn’t help when it goes underwater” during floods, Roy said. As of press time, the road is closed until further notice.
Open house celebrates Walt Hills’ 90th birthday An open house to celebrate the 90th birthday of Walt Hills of North Bend is noon to 4 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 13, at the Snoqualmie Church of the Nazarene, 39051 S.E. Park St., Snoqualmie. Visitors are welcome to share memories and photo, but no gifts, please.
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Carrier 101: How the paper gets to you
W
hen the bad weather starts to really hit home, that’s when nailing the newspaper porch delivery gets even more
important. This week marks the third anniversary of the Valley Record’s switch to home delivery. We used to go through U.S. mail, and the change brought new benefits and connections but also the occasional headache. Ever wondered how newspaper delivery works? Consider this a brief lesson. Right now, the Record relies on 38 youth routes and 22 motor routes to get the paper to some 12,000 addresses. Every week, a small army of grown-ups and children, age 12 and up, form up on the Ridge and haul papers in Snoqualmie, Carnation and North Bend. Adults, including one college student, deliver papers by car in all communities—and there are only car routes in Fall City. The majority of delivery drivers do several routes, delivering anywhere from 600 to nearly 1,400 newspapers. The shortest car route is 22 miles. The longest is 73. Youth carriers, who operate on foot, bikes and scooters—one boy rides a skateboard—deliver Seth Truscott between 90 and 200 papers week- Valley Record ly. Editor All we ask that it be dry, readable and at your front porch by 6 p.m. on delivery day. Of course, things don’t always go to plan. Kids and adults get sick, they get busy, they join new clubs or sports, or they just bow out. At times like this, we rely on substitute carriers, but it can be tough to ensure high standards when someone is new to a route. If you miss a paper, the best thing to do is call in to our office on the day that it’s missing. Let us know, too, if only you or your neighbor, too, missed their paper. That helps us get an idea what’s happening on your route. Ninety percent of the time, we’ll be able to contact your carrier, who will go back and deliver the paper that same day. Also, if you’re going out of town for an extended trip and would like to halt delivery, you can call our office to set that up. Sometimes, residents wait until three or four weeks have passed without paper delivery to let us know they’ve been missed. We’d prefer to know if a route has a problem as early as possible, within a day or so. It is best to fix these issues as soon as possible. To do so, contact our office, tell us the issue, and your address; our number is (425) 888-2311. For some of our carriers, delivery is a job like any other gig. But for our youth carriers, it’s a good way to learn the ropes of the world of work. Most carriers, teens included, understand that customer service is a big part of their income. They can be fined for complaints, so most are extremely diligent about delivery. With free delivery, one might be tempted to consider that any service, even bad service, might cut it, but those of us with our names on the masthead, and, I expect, many who don’t see their names in ink, feel otherwise. We want to hold ourselves and our carriers to the same standards as any paid publication, indeed to the standards set over the Record’s 99-year history. We need your help to do so. If you miss a paper, need a fix or have an issue, don’t hesitate or procrastinate. Let us know, and help us maintain high standards. Whether the rain falls or the snow flies, we want the paper that lands on your porch to be crisp, exciting and readable—never late or soggy. And, to all the carriers working hard to ensure quality delivery—a hearty thank you, and a happy new year.
If you had a robot, what would you have it do?
Out
Past This week in Valley history
Thursday, Jan. 7, 1988
“Mow my lawn. I love mowing, but I have two and a half acres. Wouldn’t it be cool to sit and watch a robot mow the lawn?”
“Shopping, that’s what it would do! It would Christmas shop, it would grocery shop, it would do all of that. It would have to do the driving, too.”
Bob Cole Snoqualmie
Sue Mackey Snoqualmie
• The 19-year-old man who robbed the North Bend Motel and kidnapped a maid April 28 was sentenced to 106 months in prison. Before he begins his sentence, he faces rape and murder charges in South Dakota, for abducting a woman in April. She was found dead in South Dakota, and her car was found abandoned near North Bend. • Former Snoqualmie Police Chief Tony Fernandez is suing the city for up to $1.2 million, claiming racial discrimination.
Thursday, Jan. 3, 1963
“If I really had something like that, I think I’d work for world peace.” Vicki Zwiefelhofer Snoqualmie
“I think I’d have it feed all my farm animals every day. It’s kind of a chore when you have 100-plus chickens.” Nathan Kryger Snoqualmie
• The memories of 50 happy years passed in review for Mr. and Mrs. Frank Noland of Upper Preston, as 100 guests wished them well at a golden anniversary wedding reception. • Gubernatorial candidate Mort Frayn will speak to the North Bend Chamber of Commerce on Jan. 8. Frayn is the state chairman of the Republican party, with experience as a state legislator, and managing Richard Nixon’s election campaign in Washington.
Scene
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Snoqualmie Valley Record • January 2, 2013 • 5
SNOQUALMIE Valley
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Unexpected visit from an owl
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Clifford Kellogg of North Bend’s Riverbend neighborhood snapped a photo of this barred owl, which hit his glass door in an apparent attempt to have his wife’s merlin falcon, Pippy, for dinner. Pippy was “perched on the dining room table, and the owl must have thought he might make a good meal,” says Kellogg. Neither bird was injured.
Births: Sarah, Ryan Lenihan welcome son Garrett Sarah and Ryan Lenihan of North Bend announce the birth of their son and first child, Garrett, born at 9:46 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 25, at Swedish Medical Center of Issaquah. He was 20 inches long and 8 pounds, four ounces. Garrett’s grandparents are Susan and Terry Lenihan of North Bend and Laura Mellon of North Bend.
Auditions for Stage’s Pinocchio The next Valley Center Stage production is Pinocchio, an interactive children’s show. The theater group seeks four men and two or three women (ages 16 and up) for its version of this children’s classic. Auditions will be held 6:30 to 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 7. Callbacks will be at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 8.
Rest area fixes at Summit Holiday travelers and skiers enjoying the snow at Snoqualmie Pass can take a break at a rest area opened one month ahead of schedule. Crews reopened Traveler’s Rest, a Washington State Department of Transportation safety rest area, for limited use. Traveler’s Rest was originally built in 1938 as part of the Roosevelt-era New Deal public works projects.
Calendar SNOQUALMIE Valley
Wednesday, Jan. 2
Anime & Manga Club: Teens can watch anime movies, eat popcorn and practice anime drawing, 3 p.m. at Snoqualmie Library. Study Zone: Students in grades K-12 can drop in during scheduled Study Zone hours for free homework help, 3 p.m. at Fall City Library. Computer help: Get extra one-on-one help on the computer, 1 p.m. at North Bend Library.
Thursday, Jan. 3 Purl One, Listen Too: Learn new stitches, meet new friends, listen to new books and talk about knitting, 1 p.m. at Snoqualmie Library. Chess club: Snoqualmie Valley Chess Club meets at 7 p.m. at North Bend Library. Learn to play chess or get a game going. All ages and skill levels welcome. Live music: Open mic begins at 7 p.m. at Slider’s Cafe, Carnation. E-Reader Assistance: Learn how to use e-books, 11 a.m. at Snoqualmie Library.
Friday, Jan. 4
E-Reader Assistance: Learn how to download KCLS e-books to your e-reader or computer during this digital downloads demonstration, 4 p.m. at Fall City Library.
Saturday, Jan. 5 Tales: Once Upon a Saturday Special Needs Story Time is 10 a.m. at the North Bend Library. Come for stories, songs and activities designed for children with special needs and their families.
Sunday, Jan. 6 Study Zone: Students in grades K-12 can drop in during scheduled Study Zone hours for free homework help in all subjects from volunteer tutors, 2 p.m. at North Bend Library.
Monday, Jan. 7 Talk Time: Improve your speaking and listening skills in this English conversation group, 6:30 p.m. at North Bend Library. Tales: Afternoon Preschool
Story Time is 1:30 p.m. at the Snoqualmie Library, for ages 3 to 6. Study Zone: Students in grades K-12 can get free homework help from volunteer tutors, 3 p.m. at Fall City Library. Middle Schoolers Only: Middle school students can do snacks, homework and fun, all rolled into one, 2:45 p.m. at the Fall City Library. Tales: Merry Monday Story Time is 11 a.m. at North Bend Library. Home school gathering: Are you home schooling? Come for some library time, games and activities, 1 p.m. at the North Bend Library.
Tuesday, Jan. 8 Tales: Toddler Story Time is 9:30 a.m. at the North Bend Library, for children ages 2 to 3 with an adult. Tales: Preschool Story Time is 10:30 a.m. at the North Bend Library, for children ages 3 to 6 with an adult. Study Zone: Students in grades K through 12 can drop in during scheduled study zone hours for free homework help in all subjects, 3 p.m. at the Snoqualmie Library. North Bend First Tuesday Book Club: Discuss “Martin Chuzzlewit,” or any other novel by Charles Dickens, 7 p.m. at the North Bend Library.
Across 1. Climb up and over again 8. More domineering 15. Attitudes of a culture of era (pl.) 16. Throw 17. Break into pieces (2 wds) 18. Take back 19. Continental money 20. A pint, maybe 22. Asian capital 23. Western blue flag, e.g. 24. Complain 26. Bar order
50. Area of South Africa 51. Assayers’ stuff 52. Sounds raucously 54. Howard of “Happy Days” 55. Gold braid 56. Indian dish with seasoned rice and meat (var. spelling)
through discussion (2 wds) 13. Champion 14. Having finished one’s active working life 21. Amount to make do with 24. A spoken blessing 25. Agonizing work
58. Arranged in rows
28. Calculus calculation
60. The alimentary canal
29. Bumper sticker word
61. One who leads a Spartan lifestyle
32. Affranchise
62. The milling on coin edges
36. 25th U.S. state
63. Having lost the most freshness
34. ___ Wednesday 37. Long-handled device to grasp hard-to-reach items 38. To lie back or down
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Down
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1. Proof of purchase
39. Ancient fertility goddess
30. “It’s no ___!”
2. An ancient country in west-central Italy
40. A chorus line
31. Slogans 33. Having winglike extensions 35. Arabic for “commander” 36. Ancient greetings 37. Free 40. Spider, e.g. 44. ___ gestae 45. Mechanic’s equipment box 47. “Aladdin” prince 48. “Hamlet” has five
3. Using something jointly or in turns 4. Coconut palms 5. Says “When?” 6. Basic unit of money in Romania 7. Trellis on which ornamental shrubs grow flat 8. News office 9. “___ moment” 10. Literally, “king” 11. Bubbly drinks 12. To settle a problem
41. Recount 42. Inflammation of the small intestines 43. Analyze 46. Move forward by rowing 49. Enclosed in a pigpen 51. Architectural projection 53. Delhi dress 55. Boat in “Jaws” 57. “Smoking or ___?” 59. “C’___ la vie!”
6 • January 2, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
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Obituaries
Deo J. Burnside, a longtime resident of the Snoqualmie Valley, died Wednesday, Dec. 26, following several months of illness. Deo was born in Dubois, Idaho, on February 14, 1928. He was the youngest of three brothers. His father, Don, died when Deo was 3 months old. His mother later married Albert L. Grant and had five more children. The family moved to California in 1941 and then to Washington, settling in the Snoqualmie Valley in 1943. Following graduation from Mount Si High School in 1946, he worked with
his brother Howard, managing a service station in North Bend. That’s where he and Ruth McNeely met. The two were married August 8, 1947. Their only child, Dale, born in 1951, died in an auto accident in 1982. Deo Burnside, a bright, hard-working man, started his career path with Weyerhaeuser Company in 1949. He was dry kiln supervisor when he retired after 34 years with the company in 1983. A valued employee, he was offered a Weyco office in Tacoma and the opportunity to meet with companies worldwide as lumber drying consultant for the Pacific Northwest. He chose instead to provide this expertise—limited to the Pacific Northwest and
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Tribe Fund taking grant requests
for two years only—“to spend more time at home with my wife.” Deo is survived by his wife Ruth; siblings Howard J. Burnside, Eddie Grant, Vern Grant, Shirley Grant Helton, Sharon Grant Annette and Ernie Grant, and many nieces and nephews and their families. His brother, Leon D. Burnside, died earlier this year. Inurnment will be at the Fall City Cemetery. At Deo’s request, there will be no funeral service.
All notices are subject to verification.
e Serving thie Snoqualmr Valley fo s! 50+ year
The Snoqualmie Tribe Fund is accepting applications from local charitable organizations for grant help. The Tribe Fund has donated more than $2 million in the last three years to organizations working in various issues and areas, including arts and culture, community development, education, the environment and health and social services. Developments supported by donations from the Snoqualmie Tribe Fund include the University of Washington’s House of Knowledge, Woodland Park Zoo’s More Wonder More Wild exhibit and King County Conservation District’s Cherry Creek restoration project. The winter deadline for applications is Thursday, Jan. 31.
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PUBLIC NOTICES
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Applicant: Friends of Youth Submittal Date: December 12, 2012 PLEASE NOTE THAT THE PUBLIC HEARING PREVIOUSLY NOTICED FOR JANUARY 10, 2013 FOR THIS PROPOSAL HAS BEEN CANCELED. The application has been withdrawn. Published in Snoqualmie Valley Record on January 2, 2013.
To place a Legal Notice, please call 253-234-3506 or e-mail legals@ reporternewspapers. com
cattle • horses • swine • goats llamas • alpacas • cats • dogs Your Experienced Advisor Always There At the Right Time
Skelton clears Navy’s nuclear training school Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Tyler A. Skelton has graduated from the U.S. Navy’s Nuclear Power School at Naval Nuclear Power Training Command in Goose Creek, S.C. Skelton is the son of Andrea and Thomas Skelton of Duvall and a 2010 graduate of Cedarcrest High School. Nuclear Power School is a rigorous six-month course that trains officer and enlisted students in the science and engineering that is fundamental to the design, operation, and maintenance of naval nuclear propulsion plants. Graduates undergo additional instruction at a prototype training unit before serving as a surface warfare officer aboard a nuclearpowered surface ship or as an electronics technician aboard a nuclear-powered submarine.
Residents reminded, recycle oils The city of North Bend encourages all residents to take advantage of the option to recycle kitchen fats and grease, through the city’s expanded residential services from Republic Services.
“With the holidays and the popularity of preparing deep-fried turkey and the subsequent need to dispose of the oil,” said Mayor Ken Hearing, “this new recycling service offered by Republic is a wonderful way to reuse our resources and keep greases and oils out of the City’s waste water system.” City residents may recycle up to three one-gallon containers of used fats, oils or grease per regular recycling pickup. Oils must be free of contaminants and placed in clear, screw-top plastic containers. All containers should be labeled with the residents’ name and address and placed next to the recycling cart for pickup. Learn more at northbendwa.gov.
What to do with your old Christmas tree? Scouts will pick it up When that old Christmas tree has served its holiday duties, Snoqualmie Valley Boy Scout troops will pick it up. Scouts will collect Christmas trees left at the end of your driveway by 8 a.m. Saturday, January 5. Flocked trees and those with tinsel, decorations and nails will not be accepted. A donation of $10 is suggested with checks made payable to BSA Troop 425. Place the donation in an envelope and attach it to the base of the tree with a rubber band. Scouts delivered envelopes to most neighborhoods. If you did not receive a tree donation envelope, call Sherri Zucker at (206) 799-8282 to have your tree collected on January 5.
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PUBLIC NOTICE #720700 NOTICE OF SALE OF SURPLUS EQUIPMENT BY SEALED BID Notice is hereby given that the City of North Bend is offering one (1) surplus vehicle for sale by sealed bid. The surplus vehicle is a 1991 Chevrolet Cavalier, as is/no warranty, fair mechanical condition, damaged interior with mold present. For additional information about the vehicle please email the City Clerk at soppedal@northbendwa.gov or to set up an appointment to view the vehicle please call the Public Works Department at (425) 888-0486. Sealed bids will be accepted until 4:00 p.m., Wednesday, January 16, 2013 at the North Bend City Hall, 211 Main Avenue North, P.O. Box 896, North Bend, WA 98045. Susie Oppedal, City Clerk Published in Snoqualmie Valley Record on January 2, 2013. PUBLIC NOTICE #720713 CITY OF SNOQUALMIE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING CANCELATION Project: Emergency Young Adult Shelter Application: Conditional Use Permit
425.222.5665 • 425.761.0982
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In Brief
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Highway accidents: Snoqualmie emergency medical technicians (EMTs) responded with Eastside Fire and Rescue to a motor vehicle accident on westbound I-90 near exit 25. The vehicle had reportedly been involved in multiple collisions all the way down the pass. The driver was transported to a hospital by private ambulance.
Thursday, Dec. 20 Car accident: Snoqualmie EMTs responded with Eastside Fire and Rescue units to a one-car accident just past the Snoqualmie Casino roundabout. One patient refused treatment and was left at the scene. Hit and run: Snoqualmie EMTs responded with Fall City Fire to a hit and run car accident on State Route 202. One person was transported to the hospital for evaluation by Snoqualmie’s aid car. Car accident: Snoqualmie EMTs responded to I-90 at
Snoqualmie Police Dept. Thursday, Dec. 20 Head-on hit and run: At 7:06 p.m., an officer responded to a two-car hitand-run accident in the 9200 block of Railroad Avenue Southeast, and found a severely damaged red car with white paint marks from the vehicle the hit it head on. Both of the red vehicle’s air bags deployed, and one of the victims was transported to the hospital as a precaution. A witness reported that the second vehicle, a large white pickup truck, had been traveling down Railroad, then swerved violently into the oncoming car, then spun its tires and fled the scene. Police found the intoxicated driver at the Snoqualmie Casino, where security camera footage indicated the man had arrived in a damaged white pickup.
Tuesday, Dec. 18 Bondsman assist: At 4:34 p.m., an officer was asked to assist a bail bondsman with an apprehension in the 3400 block of Southeast Kinsey Street. The subject was in violation of a no-contact court order, as well. Snowy slide: At 4:22 a.m., an officer on patrol saw a vehicle sitting on the grass at Snoqualmie Parkway and Fairway Avenue. The driver, who was uninjured, said he lost control of the car in the snow.
Sunday, Dec. 16 Welfare check: At 11:08 p.m., a caller asked police to check on her daughter, who’d left her home 40 minutes ago for Issaquah, and hadn’t called her to tell her she arrived. She always calls when she gets home, the caller told police. They located the daughter, who was fine, at her home.
North Bend Sheriff’s office Monday, Dec. 17 Cyber-threats:
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Friday, Dec. 14 Threats: At 5:22 p.m., police were asked to remove a subject from a business in the 400 block of Main Avenue South. The subject, riding a bicycle, was accused of making threats and vandalism, and police advised him to not come back. Car prowl: At 10:24 a.m., a caller in the 300 block of Northeast Fourth Street, reported a theft from his vehicle. The car had been parked in the driveway and the suspect entered through an unlocked passenger door to remove items from the glove compartment.
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Snoqualmie Valley Record • January 2, 2013 • 7
Cedarcrest’s Campbell to play softball at Central Kailyn Campbell, a senior at Cedarcrest High School, recently signed a letter of intent to play fastpitch softball for the Central Washington University Wildcats, under head coach Mallory Holtman. Campbell also received a scholarship to attend the school. Athletics have been a constant in Campbell’s life, beginning with T-ball at a young age. She started playing select softball at age 9, and played volleyball and basketball for Cedarcrest. Softball is where she has found her personal success. The firstbasewoman’s defensive skills have been described as fluid and natural, with her power hitting abilities and offensive prowess ready to move to the Great Northwest Athletic Conference. Central Washington University’s women’s fastpitch softball team has a 91-48 record in conference play over the last four seasons. Although the program had a down year in 2012, Campbell is one of many new additions to the team expected to boost the program back to familiar heights in 2013.
Growing intensity Building skill, Mount Si girls basketball splits a win and a loss with Interlake, Liberty By Seth Truscott Editor
It very nearly could have been Mount Si’s second win of the week, but Liberty managed to pull ahead, and stay there, winning 52-44 at Mount Si on Friday, Dec. 21. It was a good night, though, for several Mount Si players. Junior post Sally Nelson had eight points, senior Katy Lindor had seven, and senior Grace Currie had three. Sophomore shooting phenom Elizabeth Prewitt, playing with a cold, managed five points, a bit below her recent average. She logged 19 two days prior in Mount Si’s win over Interlake on Dec. 19. Lindor had 14 points in that game. The team connection is growing, and that showed in last Friday’s score, despite the outcome, said senior Molly Sellers. “It’s getting there,” she said. “We worked as a team. There was a lot of good rhythm.” In Wednesday’s 61-46 win over Mount Si girls Interlake, “we were calling to each to host youth other,” said Lindor. Mount Si is buildB-ball tourney ing its defensive skills, she added. Lindor and Sellers both fouled out The 2013 Wildcat Classic in an athletic contest Friday in which youth basketball tournament team scores were mostly neck and is January 19, 20 and 21. neck. The 60-team tournament has “Our intensity was there,” Sellers three divisions for boys and said. But it was getting to the hoop that girls in grades four through proved a challenge. eight. Team registration runs The two seniors praised guard from $250 to $275. Camryn Buck and forward Madi Bevins for stepping up from the Register at www.mshsgirlsbench. basketball.com. The girls traveled this week to the Surf N’ Slam tournament in San Francisco. The Wildcats visit Sammamish at 6:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 4, then head to Juanita on Wednesday. Follow the Mount Si girls at www. mshsgirlsbasketball.com.
Mount Si keeps hitting hard in wrestling meets, expo Mount Si wrestlers finished eighth as a team, out of 43 entries, at the El Cajon tournament, held December 20 to 24 at Chula Vista High School in Chula Vista, a suburb of San Diego. Three seniors had strong placing. Tim Corrie took second, Nate Whited took fifth and Mitch Rorem took seventh. In other action, on Wednesday, Dec. 19, the Mount Si wrestling team beat Lake Washington, 66 to 13, almost entirely by pin. At 106, Hunter Conway pinned Hayden Tood
in 1:31. At 113, Griffin Armour pinned Chet Atuanya in 5:31. At 120, Eli Clure pinned Johnny McKamey in 1:21. At 126, Gunnar Harrison pinned Austin Flegel in 4:41. At 132, Ryley Absher pinned Andrey Almeida in 1:17. At 160 pounds, Max Kenagy pinned Terrance McKinnon
IT PAYS TO SWITCH.
Photos by Calder Productions
Mount Si in action against Liberty on December 22; Clockwise from top are Katy Lindor and Elizabeth Prewitt; Sally Nelson (the Wildcats’ leading scorer on the night; Grace Currie keeps the ball away from Sierra Carlson; Katie Swain; promising freshman Camryn Buck.
in 0:55. At 170, Cole Palmer pinned Eduard Kravchuk in 2:34. At 182, Tim Corrie pinned Sepehr Rouhan in 1:26. At 195, Mitch Rorem pinned Brandon Horita in 12 seconds. At 220, Nate Whited pinned Martin Berger in 3:37. The day prior, Mount Si beat Liberty, 55 to 18.
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8 • January 2, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
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Snoqualmie Valley Record • January 2, 2013 • 9
Artifical intelligence
Robot challenges spark the potential of Valley students By Carol Ladwig
RavenBots
Staff Reporter
Crossing generational divides, no problem. Sparking 10 to 12 year-olds’ interest in how arthritis and Alzheimer’s Disease affect the body, simple. Getting a diverse group of students to work together—and work hard—outside of school hours so they can compete for little more than bragging rights, just as easy. None of these things were too difficult for the four Upper Valley elementary- and middle-school teams to enter the Washington FIRST (FIRSTWA) “Senior Solutions” competition in Bellevue Dec. 8 and 9. What they did have problems with were weak robotic arms, sensors that needed frequent recalibration, and dozens of other programming tricks to make their robots behave as needed, not to mention the expense of hologram technology. “In a couple of years, we’ll probably add the hologram, but for now it will be without,” says Vishnu Rathnam, with absolutely no sarcasm. “It will probably be a couple of years at least… the current hologram technology is very limited,” adds his “I Forgot” teammate Quinn Gieseke. They’re talking about their robotics team’s invention, the Holokayne, which is a wave-of-the-future walking cane, with a glass ball on top to display and receive images, along with phone calls, for the user. It’s totally voice-activated (“since most older people aren’t very savvy with technology,” Gieseke said) and uses facial recognition software to identify people if the user, like the team’s target demographic, suffers from Alzheimer’s Disease. Of course, the current prototype of the device doesn’t do any of those things, but the technology already exists, and the mostly Chief Kanim Middle School-based team, Rathnam and his younger brother Hari, Gieseke, Rahul Chali, Beau Johnson and Rahul Rajkumar, is updating the design for the next level of competition. Team “I Forgot,” coached by Ram Rathnam, was the top-ranked team of 55 in the Bellevue competition, and if they win at regionals in February, the boys will advance, with the eastern Washington regional champion, to national competition. Other teams from the Snoqualmie Valley School District earned honors at the Bellevue competition, like the Gracious Professionalism Award that went to SnoBotics—Snoqualmie Middle School eighth graders Grant Baker, Connor Ross, Ben McLean, Alex White, Max Cannella and Jasper Chee, coached by Nancy Baker, and the judge’s trophy that went to one of the few all-girls teams in competition, the Twin Falls Middle School Radioactive Ravenbots. “Five of the girls were rookies and they did extremely well,” said their coach Paul Sprouse, who also coached the Twin Falls boys team of Adam Hacherl, Sawyer Romano, Gabriel SuaHealy, Ryo Karr, Nicholas Puntillo and Murphy McDowell, and the Opstad Elementary School team of Madison DyhreHansen, Adriana Spaziano, Calvin Sprouse, Gabi Bleha, Ethan Peterson, Jaden Kokenge, James Nye, Sydney Sprouse and Alexander Bourlin. Teams competed and were judged on three main criteria, the WAFIRST core values of working together as a team, a research project and creative solution, like the Holokayne, to a common problem for senior citizens, and negotiating a robot through an obstacle course of daily life challenges for a mobility- or memory-impaired person, like balancing on a bumpy surface, selecting the correct prescription bottle from a line-up, reaching for items on high shelves, and fine motor skills like piecing together a quilt. Many teams visited with senior citizens and aging experts to learn about their daily challenges firsthand. “We talked to them about what’s difficult, and what they would like help with,” said Vishnu. “And we read them stories and talked to them, and they really liked that,” added Hari.
Members: Adam Hacherl, Sawyer Romano, Gabriel Sua-Healy, Ryo Karr, Nicholas Puntillo and Murphy McDowell. Coach: Paul Sprouse Arthritis can really make once-simple jobs difficult, so the RavenBots decided their product would do at least one daily chore for their seniors. They built a wheeled robot and custom mailbox; the robot navigates to the mailbox on its own power, lowers and raises the mail-catching arm as needed, and opens the special mailbox to retrieve the deliveries.
Radioactive Ravenbots
RavenBots: Adam Hacherl, Sawyer Romano, Gabriel Sua-Healy, Ryo Karr, Nicholas Puntillo and Murphy McDowell. Coach: Paul Sprouse Members: Mary-Jo Mobley, Eden Mark, Twilight Schertz, Lucy Skylstad, Natalie Arthritis can really make once-simple jobs Cowan and Delaney Edwards. Coach: Paul Sprouse difficult, so the RavenBots decided their prodWant to play cards, but frustrated byuct howwould hard it isdoto at shuffle? thechore for their least You oneneed daily Shufflemaster 3000! The singsong sales pitch ofThey the team’s seniors. builtpresentation a wheeledhypes robot and custheir invention, an automated card shuffler and dealerthe thatrobot mostlynavigates works, to the mailtom mailbox; because the seniors they talked to said cards to handle. boxtheon itswere ownhard power, lowers and raises the mail-catching arm as needed, and opens the Photos by Carol Ladwig
Clockwise from top left: The winning team of “I Forgot” receives their trophy at the WAFIRST event in Bellevue; Murphy McDowell of the Twin Falls Ravenbots runs a test with the robot; The challenge requires robots to complete tasks on a standard course like this one at Twin Falls; Beau Shain celebrates his robot’s success with picking up a prescription bottle; Vishnu Rathnam and Rahul Rajkumar describe their senior solution, the Holokayne.
Snobotics
Members: Grant Baker, Connor Ross, Ben McLean, Alex White, Max Cannella and Jasper Chee. Coach: Nancy Baker The Snobotics senior solution is a prototype walker, with built-in GPS and an emergency button that triggers a voice-activated phone. Their project report says that “If a senior has mobility and memory issues, they could still be semi-independent with this solution but have a failsafe in their explorations outside of home.”
Opstad WhatChaMaCallIts Members: Madison Dyhre-Hansen, Adriana Spaziano, Calvin Sprouse, Gabi Bleha, Ethan Peterson, Jaden Kokenge, James Nye, Sydney Sprouse and Alexander Bourlin. Coach: Paul Sprouse This team of third, fourth and fifth graders from Opstad Elementary School focused on a solution to give seniors back some of their lost independence. They created a manufacturing company that developed robots to do small jobs, such as the Sockinator to help put on socks, the Reachinator to grab distant objects, and the self-explanatory Helpwhenyoufallinator.
I Forgot Members: Rahul Chaliparambil, Quinn Gieseke, Beau Johnson, Rahul Rajkumar, Hari Rathnam and Vishnu Rathnam. Coach: Ram Rathnu Alzheimer’s is a prevalent disease in people older than 65, and two members of Team I Forgot have had family members affected by it, so it was an easy choice for the group to focus their solutions on this condition. They did extensive research on the disease, and are now fine-tuning their robot, as well as their Holokayne solution, for the state-level competition, but still no holograms.
10 • January 2, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
CROSSROAD FROM 1
place as they reach in to pick a bag for themselves, and for a while after Kemp wishes them happy holidays and moves on to
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the next driver. It’s a three-year holiday tradition for Kemp, the lead pastor (along with two volunteers) at the Transport for Christ Victory Chapel, and for Church on the Ridge congregation members who provided hundreds of home-baked cookies. Since Kemp’s congregation, “about 4.8 million truck drivers” can’t really bake cookies on the road, Kemp asks for help with this and other outreach projects from local churches. “There’s a youth group that bakes, and a couple of adult Sunday school classes bake, too,” said Kemp, who guesses that the baking groups, with supplementation from his wife, provide him with between 100 and 200 dozen cookies each year. Few of his baking helpers will fully understand how impor-
tant their gifts are. Kemp says he’s seen drivers respond with “everything from ‘no thanks’ to breaking down and crying… one of them said to me ‘Pastor, this is the only gift I’ll get this Christmas.’” Some, he said, especially like the bags decorated by children, “because it reminds them of their kids and their grandkids.” One man, parked for two days at the truck stop, chose his bag of cookies — a brown paper sack with bows and crayon drawings — carefully, saying “Someone took a lot of time with this one, to make it look nice.” About four trucks down, Lynda Roberts laughed when Kemp told her to take extra cookies for her mom, Teri Dempster, who was traveling with her for the holidays. “About twice a year, Mom
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comes with me,” said the eastcoast-based driver. “So we’re together for the holiday,” added Dempster. Both women planned to be together for Kemp’s impromptu Christmas Day service, which he’d only just planned that morning. Los Angeles driver Mauro Silva had stopped at the chapel to ask about services, and Kemp said he’d do it, even if it was just for one. Kemp, who’s been on the job here for four years, is used to small turnouts at the chapel, a converted trailer that seats about 20 in rows of three. The ministry here, he said, had been decades without a staff pastor, although volunteers like Jerry and Julie Johnson of Snoqualmie did their best to keep the chapel open and available for drivers. He’s rebuilding the ministry, as much for people like Silva, who seek him out, as for those who he has to seek out. Silva has been driving for a year, ever since federal budget cuts eliminated his position as a drug and alcohol abuse counselor. He said his faith, “and a nudge from the judge,” he chuckles, helped him win his own battle with addictions, years ago, and is grateful whenever he finds a chapel like Kemp’s on the road. “I wanted something in my life that I saw other people having, and that was,” he paused, “just a little bit of joy.” Transport for Christ has about 30 chapels in the U.S. (plus six in Canada, two in Russia and one in Zambia), so Silva doesn’t find a chapel often when he’s on the road. “There’s very few of them out there,” he said, but he maintains his own religious practice, reading one of his Bibles in his truck, when chapels aren’t available. Drivers aren’t always looking for a chapel, but they might be
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looking for something — a listening post, a little guidance — without realizing it, Kemp said. So he is frequently on the lot, inviting drivers into the chapel just to talk, or for a Bible study or service. Because Transport for Christ has also taken a stance against human trafficking, he also tries to educate drivers on the issue. Human trafficking in the trucking world is essentially the abduction of women or girls, who are then forced into prostitution. Traffickers bring their “stables” of women to truck stops and send them out to knock on drivers’ doors. Drivers are often unaware that these women are actually prisoners and slaves. “We seek to reduce the demand end of the market, by showing drivers that these girls are somebody’s daughter,” Kemp said. He shows drivers a video on human trafficking, and said many of them had previously just ignored women who knocked on their doors. Now, they knew to call 911, he said. Trafficking is not a common issue at the North Bend truck stop, Kemp says emphatically. All the same, he is ready to arrange for safe places to stay for any women rescued from trafficking in the area. It’s part of the larger mission of Transport for Christ. “Our mission is leading truck drivers as well as the trucking community to Jesus Christ, and helping them grow in their faith,” Kemp said, quoting the mission statement verbatim. The trucking community, he points out, is not just the drivers and their companies, but also their families, and the communities that they pass through. For North Bend, that means Kemp takes on some of the challenges that a truck stop manager might otherwise have to deal with, such as helping transient homeless people get to a safe place. People may think they’re helping transients by bringing them to the truck stop, but actually, “it maroons them,” Kemp said. Most drivers can’t legally take on passengers, he explained, and there aren’t services for the homeless at Trucktown. Typically, he puts people on buses to Seattle, where agencies can help them, he said. Now, he can also direct them to the Snoqualmie Valley Winter Shelter, being hosted by the North Bend Community Church, for the winter. Kemp sits on the advisory board of the shelter group. It’s all part of being a good neighbor, says Kemp, and a good partner. His chapel does not pay rent, and the truck stop provides the electricity for the place. In return Kemp helps out where he can. Among his other cookie stops this year were the restaurant and convenience store, so staffers there could share in the holiday cheer.
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Local Bed & Breakfast is looking for a part time cleaner. Hours are typically 10am to 1pm. The job is quite physical and often involves carrying supplies u p s t a i r s o r l a d d e r s. $11/hr. If you are interested in becoming part of our staff give us a call! 2 0 6 - 8 3 2 - 7 5 9 0 ( M u s t Bottomless garage sale. have own transportation) $37/no word limit. Reach thousands of readers. REPORTER Go online: nw-ads.com The Bainbridge Island 24 hours a day or Call Review, a weekly com800-388-2527 to get munity newspaper locatmore information. ed in western Washington state, is accepting Employment applications for a part- Transportation/Drivers time general assignment Reporter. The ideal can- D R I V E R - - $ 0 . 0 1 i n didate will have solid re- crease per mile after 6 porting and writing skills, months and 12 months. have up-to-date knowl- Choose your hometime. edge of the AP Style- $0.03 Quarterly Bonus. book, be able to shoot Requires 3 months rephotos and video, be cent experience. 800able to use InDesign, 414-9569 www.drivekand contribute to staff night.com blogs and Web updates. &INDĂĽ)T ĂĽ"UYĂĽ)T ĂĽ3ELLĂĽ)T We offer vacation and ,OOKINGĂĽFORĂĽTHEĂĽRIDE sick leave, and paid holiOFĂĽYOURĂĽLIFE days. If you have a pas- WWW NW ADS COM sion for community news ĂĽHOURSĂĽAĂĽDAY reporting and a desire to work in an ambitious, dy- DRIVERS -- Inexper in a m i c n ew s r o o m , we enced/Experienced. Unwant to hear from you. beatable career OpporE.O.E. Email your re- t u n i t i e s . T r a i n e e , sume, cover letter and Company Driver, Lease up to 5 non-returnable Operator, Lease Trainwriting, photo and video e r s . ( 8 7 7 ) 3 6 9 - 7 1 0 5 w w w. c e n t r a l d r i v i n g samples to hr@soundpublishing.com jobs.com Or mail to GORDON TRUCKING -BIRREP/HR Dept., CDL-A Drivers Needed. Sound Publishing, Dedicated and OTR Po19351 8th Ave. NE, sitions Open Now! ConSuite 106, Poulsbo, sistent Miles, Great WA 98370. Benefits, 401k. EOE Ask about a Sign on Bonus. SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Recruiters available 7 Let us know by calling days/week 866-3571-800-388-2527 so we 0393 can cancel your ad.
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Cemetery Plots
4 BURIAL PLOTS for sale in Garden of Good Shepherd at Miller Woodlawn Cemetery in Bremerton, Wa s h i n g t o n . E a c h plot retails for $4000, will sell for $900 each or best offer. To view plots in lot 416 spaces 1,2,3 & lot 417 space 4. Call 503965-6372 for more info. BELLEVUE
$ 6 , 5 0 0 * C E M E T E RY Plots; 6 avail. Beautiful, quiet, peaceful space in the Garden of Devotion. Perfect for a family area, 5/4x6 Decking ensures side by side bu38’ to 16’ Lengths.85¢LF rial. Located in Sunset Complete Line: Hills Cemetery, lot 74A, Western Red Cedar near the flag. Originally Building Materials $10,000...Selling for only Affordable Prices $6,500 (*when purchase OPEN MON - SAT of 2 spaces or more). Please call Don today at 425-746-6994. www.cedarproductsco.com Bottomless garage sale. $37/no word limit. Reach SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling thousands of readers. 1-800-388-2527 so we Go online: nw-ads.com can cancel your ad. 24 hours a day or Call 800-388-2527 to get TEMPERED WINDOWS Perfect for patio enclomore information. sure or green house SUNSET HILLS Memoriconstrution! Four new, al Cemetery in Bellevue. extra heavy duty win1 plot available in the dows; 34â€?x91â€?. Pursold out Garden of Linchased for $2,000. Sellcoln. Space 328, Block ing only $599!! Can A, Lot 11. Similar plots deliver. Call 360-643offered by Cemetery at 0356. Port Townsend. $22,000. Selling for Get the ball rolling... $15,000. Call 360-387Call 800-388-2527 today. 8265 “CEDAR DECKINGâ€?
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Flea Market
Musical Instruments
Birds
SUNSET HILLS Memorial Cemetery in Bellevue. 2 s i d e by s i d e p l o t s available in the Sold Out Garden of Devotion, 9B, Space 9 and 10. $22,000 each OBO. Also, 1 plot available in G a r d e n o f D evo t i o n , 10B, space 5, $15,000 OBO. Call 503-709-3068 or e-mail drdan7@juno.com
TA B L E TO P D I S P L AY Case, 29.75�w x 18�d x 5.25�h. Locks with key. $ 5 5 . V i n t a g e fo l d - u p wood rocker, carved top. $40. Wood storage box on rollers, 40.5�w x 20.5�d x 19�h. $25. Poulsbo, 360-697-5975
P E T I T E B A B Y G ra n d Piano with Bench. Very good condition but a few flaws on top. Great Gift fo r t h e M u s i c L o ve r ! $2,500. (360)675-8688 Oak Harbor, Whidbey Island
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Heavy Equipment
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Cemetery Plots
I B U Y G O L D, S i l ve r, D i a m o n d s, W r i s t a n d Pocket Watches, Gold and Silver Coins, Silverware, Gold and Platinum Antique Jewelry. Call Mic h a e l A n t h o ny ’s a t (206)254-2575 Miscellaneous
Flea Market
FOR SALE! 32� JVC TV, G o o d p i c t u r e, q u a l i t y brand, not flat screen. $80. Mini Covered Wagon with furniture inside. N ew c ove r. C o u l d b e made into a lamp? $20. Sweater coat; ladies size small, cream color, new from Nordstrom, $30. Call after noon: 12pm. 425-885-9806 or cell: 425-260-8535. L A D I E S L E AT H E R Coat, long (calf length), size 9. Like new, worn very little! Excellent condition! $150. Call after noon: 12pm. 425-8859806 or cell: 425-2608535.
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Dogs
Whenever you see a camera icon on an ad like this:
Just log on to: www.littlenickel.com Simply type in the phone number from the ad in the “Search By Keywords� to see the ad with photo! Want to run a photo ad in Little Nickel? Just give us a call! 1-800-544-0505 Cats
CHRISTMAS KITTENS 3 Female MAINE C O O N S , Pa r e n t s o n Site, Sold w/o papers $425 each. PERSIAN Maine Coon Mix Kittens, Big Bundles of Fluff $300. BENGAL Maine Coons, Huge, Unique $250. Shots, Wormed, guaranteed. No checks. Tools (425)350-0734. Give the Gift of Love this ChristFor Sale or Trade: Quar- mas. ter Cable Roofing Nailer with 1 3/4 inch nails Dogs $250. (New in Box). Call 360-629-4334 AKC BLACK GERMAN Shepherd Puppies! DDR/ Ger man Bloodlines. Fuzzy, cuddly buddies ready for good homes. Perfect companions &/or great guard dogs! Socialization begun, shots & wormed. Both parents on site. 3 males and two females. Papers included. $750 o b o. Tu m w a t e r. 3 6 0 789-4669. IronGatesGSDs@live. Birds com
AKC CHOCOLATE labs. Parents AKC. Sire Canadian style. Mother E n g l i s h s t y l e. B l o ck y heads. Good Temperament. 1 female, 3 males. $600 with papers. Great companions and hunters. Ask about deliver. 360-827-2928 360-3042088 AKC COCKER Babies most colors, beautiful, s o c i a l i z e d , h e a l t h y, raised with children. Shots, wor med, pedigrees. $550 up. Terms? 425-750-0333, Everett
AKC German Shepherd Puppies!! Excellent Schutzhund pedigrees. Tracking, obedience and protection. Champions Bloodlines. Social with loving playful temperaments! Shots, wormed, vet checked. Health guarantee. Puppy book includes info on lines, health & more! 1 Male, 1 Female. $800 each. Call Jodi 360-761-7273.
pets/animals
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Parrot Breeding Operation FIncubator~Cages FFlight Cages FBirds Far Too Much To List 360-395-5222 Call or Text
AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD pups. Females from $1000-$1500 Black, bi-color, black sable. East German & C ze c h wo r k i n g l i n e s. Home companion, SAR, & family protection. 253 ĂĽ"OTTOMLESSĂĽGARAGEĂĽSALE 843-1123 SchraderhausK9.com
AKC CHESAPEAKE puppies, Dark, beautiful, (5) males, (2) females, $500 males, $600 females, leave message. Born Nov 28th (360)7704168
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Dogs
AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER Puppies. Champion Stock, Good Hunters, Extremely Intelligent. Shots, Wormed, Vet Checked. Mother’s Hips, Elbows and Heart Certified. Born October 15th, ready by Christ- AKC GOLDEN Retrievmas! $800 each. 360- ers puppies born Octo588-1346 Skagit Valley b e r 2 3 rd. 2 b e a u t i f u l Blondes & 5 gorgeous R e d s . D ew c l aw ’s r e moved, shots, wormed. Parents on-site. Ready now! Perfect for Christmas. Males $600. Females $700. Arlington. 360-435-4207. AKC Golden Retriever pups $500 Also Golden Doodle pups $800. Wormed, shots, ready for Christmas! 360-6527148
Dogs
A K C TOY P O O D L E puppy. Black with gray fa c e / fe e t , 5 p o u n d s . Shots, wor med, tail, dews. 4mo old. Ready fo r h i s fo r eve r h o m e. $400. email: csinclair52@aol.com 360-275-2433 Professional Services Accounting Service
A K C M I N I AU S S I E S ! Older pups, people lovers, trained. All shots. 3 year guarantee. $450 and up. Call 360-8936568 or cnofhl@aol.com 3ELLĂĽITĂĽFORĂĽFREEĂĽINĂĽTHEĂĽ&,%! THEFLEA SOUNDPUBLISHING COM
AKC MINI Schnauzer puppies. Variety of colors. $350 males, $450 females. Ready end of January and more coming. Now taking deposits. Call 253-223-3506 or 253-223-8382
AKC Poodle Puppies Teacups, 3 Chocolate Girls, 1 Chocolate Boy, 1 Red Boy. Beautiful little babies. 1 6yr old Silver Female needs Forever AMERICAN BULL DOG Home. Reserve Your puppies, 11wks old, (1) P u f f o f L ove ! 3 6 0 male, (3) females, White 249-3612
AKC POMERANIAN puppies. Variety of colors. Will be ready mid Januar y. $350 males, with Brown eye patch, $450 females. 253-223- f i r s t s h o t $ 4 0 0 / e a (509)263-2751 3506 253-223-8382
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BICHON FRISE. AKC Champion bred, 8 week old, male puppies. Conformation perfect for taking into the show ring, agility competition, or just perfect as your personal Winter’s lap warmer. Hypo-allergenic fur. Ideal for pet sensitivities. $1,000 each. 360-8650829 or 360-627-7222
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Your ad will get noticed with a FREE picture in your Classified ad! Place any private party ad ordered for 2 weeks or more and add a photo at no charge. Photos will be black & white in print and full color on our classified web site, www.nw-ads.com. Call 800-388-2527 for more information. Email us at classified @soundpublishing.com or use our handy online ad form by using the “Place an ad� link at www.nw-ads.com. r 'SFF QIPUPT EP OPU BQQMZ XJUI BOZ PUIFS Photo Specials. r 1IPUPT NVTU CF JO +1&( GPSNBU VOEFS MB and emailed to images@soundpublishing.com. Printed photos will not be accepted.
Snoqualmie Valley Record • Jan 02, 2013 • 13
Dogs
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Professional Services Legal Services
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14 • Jan 02, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record Dogs
A K C YO R K I E / Yo r k shire Terr ier puppies. Born October 14th, 2012. Home raised . Will be small, approx. 3.5 lbs to 4 lbs. Very friendly and loving puppies, full of mischief. Mother and father onsite. Wormed and f i r s t s h o t s . Fe m a l e s : $1,000. Males: $800. Call anytime: 360-6316256 or 425-330-9903.
Black, Chocolate & Yellow Lab Field Pups, Ready to be your new family member. Healthy, all shots and dewormed. $ 4 0 0 . S m i t h Ke n n e l s 360-691-2770
Dogs
ENGLISH BULLDOG WRINKLY/GORGEOUS CHAMPION BLOODLINE AKC REGISTERED PUPPIES. Shots, wor med, potty box trained, health insurance, health record keeping system, puppy star ter kit, micro-chipp i n g ava i l a bl e. 1 0 0 % health guaranteed (VET CHECK COMPLETED) $ 1 , 6 8 0 . Pay m e n t o p tions. 253-VIP-PETS (253-847-7387)
FRENCH BULLDOG Cross Puppies $600. Males, females, black & white and blue & white. Shots, wormed, loved, health guarantee, 541-459-5802.
Giant Rott Puppies 4 AKC Registered Giant Rottweiler puppies great, great grandsons of 2001 World Champion Bronko OD Dargicevica. Tails Docked, Shots, Robust Health, Ready to Go! Expected to mature at 150+ LBS. $1000. 425-971-4948 or epicyonrottweilers@gmail.com Also ask about our Available Adults.
GOLDEN Retrievers
BOSTON TERRIER Puppies, just in time for Christmas! Some older for good homes, please ask. Can send pictures. 360-880-2216 RhondaHoffman57@ hotmail.com B OX E R P U P P I E S ! Purebred. We have 2 Males and 3 Females left. All are Brindle with some White. Born December 4th, ready to go h o m e fo r Va l e n t i n e ’s Day! First shots & worming. Family raised. Asking $500 for Boys and $550 for Girls. Text for pictures: 425-268-5944 CHIHUAHUA’S! Itty Bitty t e e n y w e e n y, P u r s e s i ze, A K C r e g i s t e r e d p u p p i e s. R a r e c o l o r s and Longhairs available. Shots, wor med, potty b ox t ra i n e d . I n c l u d e s wee-wee pads. puppy care info packet, medical health care record keeping system, puppy f o o d s t a r t e r s u p p l y, medical health insurance p o l i c y. 1 0 0 % h e a l t h guaranteed, (vet check completed). Micro-chipp i n g a va i l a b l e . $ 4 5 0 253-847-7387
Born August 29, ready for new homes. Good tempers, lovable, playf u l . P i ck o u t b e fo r e t h ey ’r e g o n e. Po t t y trained, rope broke, shots & wormed, 425345-0857 Wayne. GREAT DANE
CKC Siberian Husky Puppies. Ready 12/22 w/ 1st set shots. 3 F. 2 solid wht, 1 B&W. All blue eyes. 360-4540398 or fish_huskies@ yahoo.com GERMAN ROTTWEILERS, Purebred, Great with Kids. Ready to go! Pa p e r e d . M u s t S e l l $400. Call Now! 425280-2662
lots of colors. Two 5mo red tri males available. $350-$850. Registered, health guaranteed, UTD shots. 541-518-9284 Baker City, Oregon.
Oregonaussies.com
Pomeranians, 1 Male, 1 Female 5-6lbs. Shots, Wormed & Healthy Condition $185 Each. Cash. (425)420-6708
Dogs
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JUST IN TIME For Christmas! Adorable Bichon / Miniature poodle cross. Super smar t crossbreed. Will be 10-15 lbs. mature. First shots, worm negative, 1 year genetic health guara n t e e. E x c e l l e n t w i t h children, elderly and for apartment living. Picture doesn’t do them justice! $400. Call 360-697-9091 sayheytj@comcast.net Poulsbo
MINIATURE Australian Shepherd Puppies! Cute and cuddly! Some ready now and Christmas puppies available too! Registered, health guaranteed, UTD shots. (2) 8 week old males; Black Tri $650 and Red Merle $750. (2) 5 month old Red Tri Tip males $350 each. Also, accepting deposits for upcomign litters. Call Stephanie 5 4 1 - 5 1 8 - 9 2 8 4 . B a ke r City, Oregon. www.Oregonaussies.com
Obenland & Low Agency, Inc
PUPPIES!! 6 Mastador pups; 75% English Mastiff, 25% Lab, 2 males, 4 females, fawn or black ava i l a bl e, ( m o m 5 0 % Mastiff/ 50% Lab, dad is 100% mastiff), $700 each. AKC English Mastiff puppies, show or pet quality, 3 months old, only brindles available, holiday special - $1100 each. Parents on site. 1st & 2nd shots plus deworming included. Serio u s i n q u i r i e s o n l y. Ready now for their “forever homes�. 206-3518196
PURE BRED Saint Bernard Puppies. 6 Males and 5 Females. Ready January 12th. Will have 1st Shots. Mom On Site. Family Pampered Puppies. $450 to $550. Call For More Info: 360-8952634 Robyn (Por t Orchard Area)
NEED A PUPPY? WANT CHOICES? *HUSKY *PUGGLE *BEAGLE *DOXIE *J CHIN *I. GREYHOUND *J R T *MIN PIN *TEDDY BEAR *CHIHUAHUA *POM *KEESHOND Photos at:
AKC Great Dane Pups Health guarantee! Males / Females. Dreyrsdanes is Oregon state’s largest breeder of Great Danes and licensed since 2002. Super sweet, intelligent, lovable, gentle giants. FARMLANDPETS.COM Now offering Full-Euro’s, Half-Euro’s & Standard F Current Vaccination Great Danes. $500 & up FCurrent Deworming (every color but Fawn). F VET EXAMINED Also available, Standard Po o d l e s . C a l l To d a y 503-556-4190. Farmland Pets www.dreyersdanes.com & Feed JUST IN TIME For 9000 Silverdale Way Christmas! Adorable Bichon / Minature poodle (360)692-0415 cross. Super smar t crossbreed. Will be 10-15 lbs. mature. First Advertise your service shots, worm negative, 1 800-388-2527 or nw-ads.com year genetic health guara n t e e. E x c e l l e n t w i t h children, elderly and for apartment living. Picture doesn’t do them justice! $400. Call 360-697-9091 sayheytj@comcast.net Poulsbo
CHRISTMAS PUPPIES Labrador Retriever purebred chocolate / black cross. Social and playful. Kennel trained. Make for great hunters. 8 weeks www.nw-ads.com old. 9 available. 5 Males a n d 4 fe m a l e s . D e w We’ll leave the site on for you. c l a w s r e m o ve d , f i r s t MINIATURE shots with records and parents on site. $350/ Australian Shepherd e a c h . C a l l 3 6 0 - 6 7 5 - Puppies. Christmas p u p p i e s ava i l a bl e, 1890. Whidbey.
WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM
Dogs
Rottweiler / Doberman Cross puppies! These puppies are intelligent, loyal and loving! Crisp, sharp color pattern. Champion bloodlines. Born 9/26/12. AKC registered parents on site. 2 males. 6 females. Breed makes for excell e n t fa m i l y d o g s ! D e wormed and first shots. Ready for loving homes $750. Burlington. Photos and/or questions call or email us today at 206504-9507 or firstfourkennels@gmail. com
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Year Round Indoor Swap Meet Celebrating 15 Years! Evergreen Fairgrounds Saturday & Sunday 9 am - 4pm FREE Admission & parking! For Information call
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CAMPING Membership, complete with a 29’ 5 th Wheel! Featuring 2 slide outs and roof over it. Very nice two story storage shed with metal roof and porch also included. Located at Port Susan Camping Club in Tulalip, WA (near Mar ysville). Asking $25,000 for all. Call 425-422-1341 or 425-238-0445. Take 5 special 5 Lines 5 Weeks Advertise your vehicle, boat, RV, camper or motorcycle in the ClassiďŹ eds Call 800-388-2527 to speak with your customer representative or go online to www.nw-ads.com 24 hours a day.
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SMALL MIXED Breed puppies. Males & Females. Born November 14th. $250 for females. $200 for males. Excellent companion dogs. 206-723-1271
TEACUP CHIHUAHUA, Shih-Tzu/ Pomeranian Mix Puppies. 8 weeks old (born Oct. 30th). 1 female, 2 males. Will be very small, probably 5 lbs or less (if that). Mom is 2.5 lbs, Dad is approx. 4.5 lbs. Ready for loving, approved homes. Can P O M ’ S , 3 F e m a l e s , email pictures. 360-6278wks. Shots & Wormed. 7706 or 360-865-6247 Terr ific Personalities. Horses B l a c k / Ta n & C r e a m / Ta n . Pa p e r t r a i n e d . $375 each. 425-377- C H R I S T M A S P O N Y 14.2H, Bay Mare, 13 1675 years old, broke to ride, nice family horse, gentle ROTTWEILER $1300 (360)510-7466 Purebred Puppies,
sweet, great temperament, familyraised, nice markings, lst shots, wormed, dew claws & tails done, $475 & up, joann@ scattercreek.com 360-910-0995
509-843-1497
General Pets
FOR THE EQUEST R I A N c o m p e t i t o r, Dressage/hunter. 5yo T B g e l d i n g . Tr u e 1 7 hands. No disappointments here. Asking $7,500. youtube/sTRSAC-f9LA8 Call Linda 253-843-1884 253-230-7319
Advertise your Vehicle, Boat, RV, Camper or Motorcycle Reach thousands of homes with the Classifieds Call us today at: 800-388-2527 Fax: 360-598-6800 email: classified@soundpublishing.com or on the web at: www.nw-ads.com
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Snoqualmie Valley Record • January 2, 2013 • 15
church fire FROM 1 gratitude of, and a few gifts from, its members. His mother, visiting for the holidays from California, told him “I’m really proud of you. You’ve always done the right thing… and to save a church of all places…” It was the right thing to do, he agreed. “I just did the neighborly thing and helped put out the fire.”
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for Boardshop 5420 and Boarders for Christ — he remembers doing a demo at Cascade Covenant a few months back — says he probably has different ideas about safety from most people, though. “It’s almost Christmas, are we going to sit here and watch a holy place burn?” he thought. Or, if the church had sprinklers, let it get soaked, damaging everything inside? “I try to choose the best option,” Hudson said, but he didn’t like either of the options in front of him. He ran to his house, filled two buckets with water, and ran back to the church. By then, he said, the inner pane of the double-paned windows had a small hole burned into it. After a short search of the grounds around the building, he found a rock, hucked it through what was left of the burning window, and began dumping water on the flames. He put out the fire with two buckets of water, and waited for the fire department to arrive. Since then, Hudson was recognized at the church’s Sunday service for saving the church, and has received the
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The 20-year-old North Bend man had just come home on Friday, Dec. 14, when he, his uncle and his girlfriend noticed something wrong at the church. They could hear the fire alarm faintly, he said, but when he saw the flames through a window, he bolted across to the church to see how he could help. His run forced a couple of cars to stop short, he said, but those drivers quickly got out and tried to help, too. They found a small fire burning in a window, the remains of a candle left burning after an event, Hudson said. He made a frustrating call to 911. The dispatcher “asked me if I was sure the church was burning,” he said, “and I understand the need not to panic, but the church was on fire… I’m sure they’re more used to getting calls about fire than I am about giving the calls.” He asked the woman on the phone if he could break a window to put out the fire, but she said to keep everybody at a safe distance. Hudson, a competitive skateboarder, riding
16 • January 2, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
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