SUN Thisweek Apple Valley

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Apple Valley www.SunThisweek.com

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May 24, 2013 | Volume 34 | Number 13

Riding to honor those lost

NEWS

Lakeville senator’s decision expected soon

Memorial Day observance A ceremony to remember servicemen and women who have died will be held in Apple Valley at 11 a.m. Monday, May 27, at Veterans Park behind American Legion Post 1776, 14521 Granada Drive. The Memorial Day observance will include units from the American Legion, local Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts and the Civil Air Patrol, as well as music from the Scott Highlands Middle School band and the Velvet Tones. The public is invited to attend, and guests are encouraged to bring lawn chairs. For more information, contact Lloyd Cybart at (651) 332-2352.

Republicans line up to run for governor

by Howard Lestrud SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Six members of the Apple Valley Police Department recently donned road gear to participate in the annual Law Enforcement United memorial bicycle ride, a 250-mile trek from Chesapeake, Va., to Washington, D.C., to honor police officers killed in the line of duty. The Apple Valley officers used their own money and did local fundraising to cover their costs for the May 10-12 ride, proceeds from which go toward a summer camp for children of fallen officers, and to help fund the Officer Down Memorial Page, a national registry of officers killed in the line of duty. Apple Valley riders, from left, were: Det. Tommie Booth, Officer Adam Tschida, Det. Brian Bone, Officer Brian Plantz, Officer Wayne Criger and Sgt. Greg Dahlstrom. Along for the trip as the Apple Valley crew’s support team were Sgt. Mark Deming; Criger’s son, Grant Criger; and Booth’s wife, Katie Booth. (Photo submitted)

THISWEEKEND

Minnesota’s gubernatorial election of 2014 is 18 months away but some Republicans are flexing their muscles as official or potential candidates for the GOP nomination. DFL Gov. Mark Dayton has already Dave indicated he Thompson will seek reelection. Often outspoken Sen. David Thompson, R-Lakeville, says he is considering a run for governor and hoped to announce his decision the first few days after the session ended May 20. No announcement had been made See THOMPSON, 12A

Apple Valley NHL star, others to put on exhibition Up to 30 players will play in charity game by Andy Rogers SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

The Minnesota Wild’s season might be over, but those who are still itching to watch professional hockey, Leprechaun Days has something special. As part of the celebration, there will be an NHL players charity game at the Rosemount Community Center and Ice Arena on July 25. As many as 30 NHL players are scheduled to participate, including Rosemount’s J.T. Brown, who played with the Tampa Bay Lightning. “People can enjoy an NHL game without having nosebleed seats,” said Chris Bichler, director of Rosemount’s Blue Line Hockey Club. “You get to meet the players and see them play up close. It’s nice for people who aren’t able to get up to the Xcel (Energy Center) to watch the Wild and for people who just love hockey.” Rosemount varsity head

Summer fun at Caponi The Eagan art park is offering music, dance, theater – and even a reptile encounter – throughout the summer. Page 19A

SPORTS

coach Brad Stepan and assistant Tom Smreker spearheaded the efforts to get this first-time event in Rosemount. Stepan helped sponsor these events in other communities and he’s excited to start another one. “We’ve done two of them in Cottage Grove, and both have been a real success,” Stepan said. “It made sense to bring it to Rosemount. The community should be really excited. Last year we had 11 guys who played in the NHL all star game.” It started with inviting Brown and Stepan’s son, Derek Stepan, who is from Hastings and plays for the New York Rangers. They asked their teammates and friends who play professionally. “Word of mouth started passing through the NHL community,” Bichler said. “We expect to add a few more to the list when playoffs are over. With the Stanley Cup (playoffs) still going on, I think a lot of guys are waiting See NHL, 7A

Steve Sullivan & the Factory is bringing its indie-blues-folk fusion to the Kelley Park music series on June 14. (Photo submitted)

Eastview shares lacrosse title Eastview’s boys lacrosse team defeated Apple Valley 13-6 and earned a tie for the conference championship. Page 13A

INDEX Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A Public Notices . . . .8A, 9A Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . 13A Classifieds . . . . . . . . . 15A Announcements . . . . 18A

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Summer concert series returns to Kelley Park by Andrew Miller SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Apple Valley’s Kelley Park has become a Friday night gathering spot for families in recent summers with its free concert series hosted by the Apple Valley Arts Foundation. This summer, Music in Kelley Park returns with eight nights of music starting June 7, when the series kicks off with local rock/country band The Laurent Brothers, featuring identical twin brothers Travis and Kalin Laurent. Special

guests for the kickoff show will be the Southview Singers, directed by Greg Barnes from Southview Elementary. Each concert runs from 6 to 9 p.m. and will see vendors offering festival food such as burgers and brats along with wine and beer. As in past years, there will be free weekly drawings guests can enter to win a new bicycle or guitar. The series continues June 14 with the indie-blues-folk fusion of Steve Sullivan and the FacSee KELLEY, 7A

Apple Valley’s Mike Ludin, who has played for the Minnesota Wild, Tampa Bay Lightning and Ottawa Senators, will be one of several NHL players participating in a charity game in Rosemount during Leprecaun Days. (Photo by Rick Orndorf)

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Eagan High School theater director Dennis Swanson, left, was inducted into the Minnesota State High School League’s Hall of Fame at a luncheon in St. Paul on May 19. Swanson established theater programs at three new high schools — Apple Valley High School, Eagan High School and Lakeville South High School — and became a “giant” in the world of Minnesota high school theater. Swanson was the theater director for more than 150 competitive and community productions. Twenty-one of the 25 productions he directed for the State One Act Play Festival received the highest possible award of “starred performance.” (Photo by Rick Orndorf)

Area Briefs Annual bike ride benefits Kids ’n Kinship Eight bicyclists embarked May 23 on the eighth annual Christian Elder Memorial 900, a 900-mile trek from Wisconsin to Minnesota, to raise money and awareness for the Kids ’n Kinship mentoring program. “This year, we will ride through the northern part of Wisconsin,” said founder and participant John Elder. The ride is named in memory of John and wife Sherry’s son who died unexpectedly in 2007. Larry Koehler of Burnsville is among the team of riders. Support drivers are Dave Goodermont, Jay Saterbak and Jim Elder. The Christian Elder

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Memorial 900 will conclude in Apple Valley during a welcome home celebration at 11 a.m. Saturday, June 8, at Merchants Bank, 7300 147th St. W., Apple Valley. To make a donation, visit the Christian Elder Memorial 900’s website at www.cem900.com. More about Kids ’n Kinship is at www.kidsnkinship.org.

Driver improvement classes for seniors The Minnesota Highway Safety Center will offer 55-plus driver-improvement courses on the following days: • Noon to 4 p.m. June 5 (four-hour refresher), Apple Valley Senior Center, 14601 Hayes Road, Apple

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Community meals at Grace Grace Lutheran Church in Apple Valley will serve free community meals on Mondays, June 3 and 17. Dining hall doors will open at 5:30 p.m. Dinner will be served 6-6:30 p.m. The meals are for senior citizens, single-parent families, families in transition and all others in the surrounding community seeking a healthy meal in a relaxed and fun environment. Although the meals are free, donations are accepted. Grace Lutheran Church is located at the intersection of Pennock Avenue and County Road 42. For more information, call the church at 952-4327273.

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Public Safety Two charged after spending spree with stolen credit cards Police say two Apple Valley women went on a spending spree with credit cards one of them found in a wallet absentmindedly left behind by a customer in the checkout area of a local grocery store. Jessica E. Dachel, 23, and Katie L. Scott, 22, allegedly used the stolen credit cards to purchase iPads, iPods, TV sets and other items totaling more than $3,700. A criminal complaint filed recently in district court gives the following account:

The victim contacted Apple Valley police Jan. 28 to report the theft of her wallet and unauthorized transactions on her credit card after accidentally leaving the wallet in the checkout line at Cub Foods, 15350 Cedar Ave. Police reviewed Cub Foods video surveillance, which showed Dachel, in line behind the victim, taking the wallet and placing it in her purse when she reached the checkout. Dachel then purchased a frozen pizza using her own debit card.

According to statements provided by Dachel and Scott to investigators, after taking the wallet Dachel called Scott and the two decided to use the credit cards to make purchases. They first drove to the Target store on Pilot Knob Road in Apple Valley, where Scott used a stolen credit card to purchase two TVs, two iPods, and an iPad, with the items totaling just over $1,700. The duo then drove to the Target store on Cedar Avenue in Apple Valley, where Scott

used a stolen credit card to buy an iPad, a docking station and multiple gift cards, with a total purchase price of approximately $2,050. Dachel and Scott then headed to Walgreen’s, 15250 Cedar Ave., where Scott attempted to purchase 26 gift cards with a total value of $2,375, but left the store without the gift cards when she was asked to provide identification after presenting the credit card. Dachel told police that she pawned an iPad and an iPod

at a Burnsville pawn shop, and that she had shredded the contents of the stolen wallet, according to the complaint. Dachel and Scott have each been charged with one count of financial transaction card fraud, a felony that’s punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a $20,000 fine. Dachel was also charged with misdemeanor theft in connection with the stolen wallet. —Andrew Miller

Woman dies in two-vehicle crash Eagan woman gets 90 days A 68-year-old woman was killed and three other people were injured as a result of a two-vehicle crash at about 12:10 p.m. Monday, May 20, near the intersection of Highway 13 and Dakota Avenue in Savage. The crash occurred when Robert M. McGinley, 37, of Bloomington was driving a 2006 International tow truck west on Highway 13 and turning left (south) on Dakota Avenue when he failed to yield for a 2010 Kia Soul

traveling east on Highway 13, according to the State Patrol. The driver of the Kia, Jacqueline A. Levvintre, 16, and two other passengers suffered non-lifethreatening injuries while another passenger, Maria M. Mendez, 68, died. The driver and the passengers were wearing seat belts, and the airbags deployed in the vehicle, which was totaled. The two other passengers were Jose A. Mendez, 68, and Mercedes E.

Jaime-Levvintre, 46, of Burnsville, mother of the driver. No city of residence was listed for the driver or the other passenger. McGinley, who was wearing a seat belt, suffered no apparent injury and the vehicle had only minor damage. Road conditions on the four-lane divided roadway were described as dry. —Tad Johnson

in jail for stabbing boyfriend An Eagan woman will serve 90 days in jail for stabbing her boyfriend with a knife. Angela Marie Stevens, 23, pleaded guilty to second-degree assault with a dangerous weapon, a felony, on May 16 and was sentenced to 90 days in jail for the assault. She received credit for three days. Judge Leslie Metzen also gave Stevens a

21-month prison sentence, which will be stayed for five years. She assaulted her boyfriend with a fillet knife at their Eagan apartment Aug. 22 upon discovering photographs on a computer flash drive that angered her. Stevens stabbed the man on his left forearm, upper outer biceps area and deeply cut his left

wrist. There were eight cuts on the man’s body, which included a 3-inch slice to the inner portion of his right hand stretching from his pinkie to the pad of his thumb, according to police. Stevens has no prior convictions aside from traffic tickets. —Jessica Harper

Intoxicated woman kicks, spits at officers

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Rosemount police had a bit of a struggle trying to send a Rosemount woman to detox on May 9. Police went to the Rosemount residence where a woman reportedly “needed to be removed due to her hostility and level of intoxication,” according to the criminal complaint. The high level of intoxication quickly became apparent

to officers. Nancy Dee Al-Kordi, 49, kicked one of the officers in the groin during a pat search, and she then spat at one of the officers as she was put into the back of the squad car, the criminal complaint states. Her spit landed on an officer’s uniform and shoes. Al-Kordi has run into past legal trouble with a

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4A May 24, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley

Opinion Special education funding system needs to be repaired The number of students who have special needs in Minnesota is growing and the funding system to educate them needs to be repaired. Each student with special needs has an individual education plan that by law must be funded. All children including those with special needs have an equal right to an education as guaranteed by the 14th Amendment. They also have a right to the same funding as all children. The problem comes when the cost of mandated individualized programs for special needs children is greater than the state and federal funds provided. Local school districts then by law must pick up the extra cost from their general funds, causing school boards to cut funds and opportunities for all students. In 1967 Congress passed a law requiring school districts to have an individual plan for each learning disabled child and

ECM Editorial promised to provide 40 percent of the funding. The state of Minnesota also is expected to provide funds to educate these children. At no time was it suggested that local school districts would have to fund what the federal and state governments refused to provide. Look at what’s happened in Minnesota alone. According to the Minnesota Department of Education, in 2012 it cost $1.8 billion to fund these individual plans. The state and federal government covered $1.2 billion forcing local school districts to bolster special education funding by almost $600 million from their general operating funds. Had the federal and state governments

paid what was promised – another $450 million – local school districts would have had to pay only $150 million more last year. Obviously this system is broken. There has been no action by either the federal or state governments to close the funding gap that compels the diversion of local school district funds from programs for all to the cost of mandated IEPs. The federal government is content with the underfunded status quo. Gov. Mark Dayton had budgeted an extra $125 million for special education. State legislators would rather spread any new funding to their local districts, rather than give more to districts that educate many of the disabled learners. A leading advocate for children with learning disabilities contends that a local school district’s subsidy of the funding gap is part of the community’s responsibility to educate all children. She notes

that students with special needs also lose opportunities when districts cut operating budgets. In a survey taken by ECM education columnist Joe Nathan, 40 Minnesota school superintendents said their No. 1 priority for the federal government is full funding of special education. We favor a concerted effort to have the federal and state governments live up to their commitments, because after all they are the ones who mandate that these IEPs be funded. Until the people rise up and demand that the federal and state governments live up to their promises, under-funding will continue and students who have no IEPs will continue to feel the loss of educational opportunities they deserve. An opinion of the ECM Publishers Inc. Editorial Board. Sun Thisweek and the Dakota County Tribune are part of ECM.

Letters Clausen helps meet needs of the disabled To the editor: I thank Sen. Greg Clausen, DFL-Apple Valley, for his vote April 29 in favor of higher revenues. I know there can be strong opposition to increasing taxes, but when I look at who benefits and how many needs are still unmet, it’s easier to see why voting for more revenues is wise. Minnesota’s Medical Assistance program, for example, spends a significant amount of its funds on programs that help people with disabilities. These programs support people like my sister, who has significant disabilities and will always need that support. Our tax dollars pay for the group home where she currently lives with several other women and really feels at home there. Before she moved to the group home, our tax dollars paid for staffing and services for more than two decades so my parents could care for her at home as long as possible, until her needs became too great to stay there. Unfortunately, there are many needs that could be better met if more revenues were raised. For example, there are 3,600 Minnesotans with disabilities who wait for the services that will help them be more independent. Also, one in 88 children is now diagnosed with autism; many will likely receive services throughout their lives. Clausen’s vote in favor of more revenues will help ensure that we can meet the needs of my sister, others with disabilities, and their families now and in the future. MARK GONNELLA Apple Valley

Thankful for the paper To the editor: I am very much a product of today’s digital world. I consume most of my news and information through screens – smartphone, tablet or computer. I discontinued subscribing to a newspaper years ago. Then we moved to Ea-

gan, and I started receiving Thisweek, now Sun Thisweek, in my delivery tube each Friday. I look forward each weekend to reading about Eagan and neighboring cities, people in my community, children and schools that make up the fabric of lives lived south of the river. It’s a wonderful feeling each Saturday morning to read through the pages, and, yes, I read through it completely. I find I have time, despite being one half of a working-parent duo with a young child at home, because this newspaper is wonderful and makes me feel connected in a way that means “home.” I enjoy the small town yet big city amenities of Eagan, and I love reading all the stories and opinions that the staff brings together for us. I have often read articles about those in need and it helps me to put my charitable dollars in the right places. I’ve read things about our parks that have made me take action and write to my elected officials. I’ve been moved to say a prayer for those who are going through difficult times as reported in the paper. I read the Mature Lifestyles section commemorating our veterans and their families and was particularly moved by the article written by Emily Hedges about William Vsetecka’s poem “Invasion of Iwo Jima.” I cried and bowed my head and

said a heartfelt thank you to the veterans and soldiers who gave and give so much for us. I intend to keep a copy in my office cube for visitors to see and remember and keep one up on my home office desk so that I can do the same. I am very grateful for all that the staff brings to me in the form of Sun Thisweek each week. I’m sure you get a lot of letters that have criticism but this one only contains thanks. KHURSHEED PARAKH Eagan

Set free the desire for freedom

Start with opposing Obamacare and letting people choose their own health care provider, whether in-state, out-ofstate, or international. How about even not forcing people to buy health care if they don’t want it? Oppose forcing everyone to contribute to the Ponzi scheme known as Social Security. How about stop forcing everyone to contribute to Medicare and forcing seniors to use it? Surely, people must see the lack of freedom in these two programs? Obtain a concealed carry permit and go “packing” to the next DFL convention. When they tell him at the door that guns are not permitted in Democrat functions, he can tell them it is time for that “change” President Obama keeps talking about. Fight for more private education, the ability for people to trade for goods in the currency of their choice, including gold, and the end of taking people’s money and giving it to foreign governments under the crazy name of ‘foreign aid.” I hope all these new issues don’t overwhelm Quist, but once someone discovers freedom it really is difficult to contain the desire.

To the editor: I was very excited to see the chairman of a DFL Senate District, Steve Quist, congratulate state Rep. Pat Garofalo, RFarmington, for his vote on gay marriage. What was really shocking was that Quist was a Democrat and he talked about giving more freedom to people – something Democrats normally oppose as much as possible. Don’t get me wrong, most Republicans may talk about increasing freedom, but never really do anything about it. Since Quist is excited about providing people more freedom, I would HAL CRANMER like to offer some other Lakeville areas for Quist to explore and possibly help the Democratic party do a 180 Church on the freedom issue. reference

questioned A division of ECM Publishers, Inc.

Andrew Miller | APPLE VALLEY NEWS | 952-846-2038 | andrew.miller@ecm-inc.com Tad Johnson | ROSEMOUNT NEWS | 952-846-2033 | tad.johnson@ecm-inc.com Andy Rogers | SPORTS | 952-846-2027 | andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com Mike Shaughnessy | SPORTS | 952-846-2030 | mike.shaughnessy@ecm-inc.com Mike Jetchick | AD SALES | 952-846-2019 | mike.jetchick@ecm-inc.com Keith Anderson | DIRECTOR OF NEWS | 952-392-6847 | keith.anderson@ecm-inc.com MANAGING EDITORS | Tad Johnson | John Gessner PUBLISHER. . . . . . . . . . . . Julian Andersen PRESIDENT . . . . . . . . . . Marge Winkelman THISWEEKEND EDITOR . . . . . . Andrew Miller ROSEMOUNT EDITOR . . . . . . . . Tad Johnson DISTRICT 196 EDITOR . . . . . Jessica Harper

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To the editor: I am writing in response to the story on Rep. Pat Garofalo’s conversion to a yes vote on the marriage amendment. This is not a defense of marriage or a questioning of the biblical interpretations of homosexuality. I am neither clergy nor an attorney. What I am is a Catholic. I too attend All

Saints parish in Lakeville. I have had the honor and the privilege to be shepherded by great priests, all of whom are on the record in their communion with the churches teaching on gay marriage. What troubles me, is that the author felt it was so germane to the story to acknowledge Garofalo’s connection with All Saints Catholic Church. To me, this was a not so clever attempt to give Garofalo some cover on a contentious issue, by implying that perhaps he sought the counsel of the Catholic Church. Why was only the Catholic Church singled out in the story? Why was this bit of information so vital, it was placed in the second paragraph? What homilies have I missed that may have helped Garofalo to change his mind, in a way that the Catholic Church would sanction his vote. Was there any attempt to talk to state representatives, who had perhaps had an epiphany in the contrary direction? Finally, Garofalo said that there was a price to securing his votes. His votes can be purchased? TIMOTHY JOHN DUECKER Lakeville

Discouraged by Hall’s comments To the editor: It appears Sen. Dan Hall, R-Burnsville, has forgotten that “all God’s creatures have a place in the sun.” I was very discouraged to read his comments in Sun Thisweek (May 17). Whatever his church decides to hold as a sacrament should be protected, but what his church decides is sacramental should not dictate to the state. I encourage him to look around. It is pretty clear that where church and state are not separated, we have more death, destruction and desolation as people fight to prove their God is the better God or only God. I would suggest that he is the one who is “fooling yourself today” and not the majority of the citizens who supported allowing gay marriage in our state.

nately, survey results can be misleading when questions are asked improperly and the answers are interpreted even more improperly. A recent online article stated that county officials surveyed local residents and found that 1 in 3 who responded were in favor of a paved trail in the park. It is not clear what the 1 in 3 had in mind. Did they mean paving through the interior of the park, up to 9 miles and 10-feet-wide? Or, did they mean a smaller loop trail in the area of the visitor center? In addition, what about the other 2 out of 3? Another survey with regard to Dakota County Parks found that 71 percent (the highest response of the nine options listed) favored protecting/restoring woods, prairies, lakes, ponds and wetlands. This seems to directly conflict with the proposed plan to plow and pave through the interior of the park and around pristine Holland Lake. If the county attempts to do both, as they propose, neither of these options are free. Protecting/restoring have expenses in the short and long term. Installing and maintaining year round paved surfaces also have short and long term funds. Where will this money come from now and in years ahead? If the county chooses to use survey results from past years while developing a master plan for Lebanon Hills, then these results deserve further consideration. HOLLY JENKINS Eagan

Keep Lebanon Hills serene

To the editor: I am surprised and dismayed to read of plans to add a paved path of some length to Lebanon Hills Regional Park. It has been a wild and undeveloped park that I have cherished and enjoyed for 12 years. There are many other paved trails near the park that people can use if they need paved paths. A paved trail will encourage rapid movement and noise through the park on bikes and by runSTEVEN D. JEDLUND ners. The quietness and serenity of the woods would Burnsville be lost for walkers and for the woodland birds and Lebanon Hills animals who make their survey results homes in Lebanon Hills. I urge all those who care need review about the character of the park to speak up now and To the editor: As part of the mas- preserve the beautiful quiter planning process for etness and serenity now Lebanon Hills Regional available there. Park, Dakota County has referred to survey results JOANNIE JOHNSON from past years. Unfortu- Northfield

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SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley May 24, 2013 5A

New YMCA director returns to his beginnings The Hastings resident previously worked as executive director at the Hastings YMCA After building an 18-year where he oversaw the creation career at local YMCAs, Mike of that location. Lavin was hired earlier As executive director, this month as director of Lavin led a successful the Eagan YMCA. $4.5 million campaign “I’m excited to be to establish the Hastings given an opportunity YMCA, which opened to come back to Eagan in September 2007. where it all started,” he Lavin also created said. the first YMCA youth Lavin will also Mike Lavin sports camp in Hastings. serve as district direcShortly after graduattor and oversee operations at ing from the University of Wisthe West St. Paul and Hastings consin-River Falls with a bacheYMCAs. lor’s in secondary education and by Jessica Harper

SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

speech communication, Lavin began his career at the Eagan YMCA in 1994 as the site director of its school-age child care program. In that role, Lavin expanded YMCA’s program throughout the Rosemount-Apple ValleyEagan School District. The program currently serves 1,600 students per day. Prior to working at the Eagan YMCA, Lavin had aspired to become a teacher, but quickly fell in love with his new job. “I learned about the impact the YMCA can make on children and families and felt it was

my calling,” he said. In 1998, Lavin became the Eagan YMCA’s youth development director and oversaw its sports and teen programs. As youth development director, Lavin oversaw the creation of four YMCA youth sports camps in Eagan. “It gave kids an opportunity to participate in that and expand their sports offerings,” he said. By 2000, he was promoted to executive director of the Eagan YMCA. Five years later, Lavin decided to oversee the Hastings YMCA.

Lavin serves on a number of community boards that relate to youth obesity prevention and sports. He most recently served on Hastings Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors and the Hastings Baseball Board of Directors. Although he is returning to the Eagan YMCA, Lavin said he and his wife, Laurie, plan to remain in Hastings so their two teenage children can graduate from Hastings High School. Jessica Harper is at jessica.harper@ecm-inc.com or facebook. com/sunthisweek.

ON THE FRONT LINES OF HISTORY Military moms, grandmas unite through Yellow Ribbon More than 100 women from around the state attend luncheon in Farmington for fun, sharing experiences by Theresa Malloy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

While national headlines about troop drawdowns take the spotlight, Edina military mom Rachel Hause said she is “flabbergasted” when people are unaware that deployments are still happening. “It’s important for communities not to forget we’re not done sending people to noncombat zones,” she said. So Hause finds comfort with other military mothers and grandmothers who are all too familiar with the reality of deployment. On Saturday, May 18, more than 100 military moms and grandmothers came together for a luncheon put on by the Farmington Yellow Ribbon Network at St. Michael’s Church. The women enjoyed a meal, pampering, bingo and prizes, but mostly it was a way to connect with people who have had similar experiences. “It’s nice getting a chance to meet all these people whose paths wouldn’t have crossed,” Hause said. Hause’s brother served in Vietnam, and she said it was a different time because the draft meant everyone knew someone in the military. “Now it’s the 1 percent,” she said.”We need events like this to get people together because it’s not so common today.” Hause is a mom to three in the military with two sons and a daughter-in-law. One son is a Marine who is now finishing up his freshman year at the University of Chicago; her other is son in the Army, and his wife served five deployments and is now in the active reserves. Hause also connects with mothers by attending a support group for Marine mothers. Marcia Van Gorden of Minneapolis helped found one of these support groups years back. After online discussions and connecting with local military mothers, the network eventually decided to make a more official support group. Van Gorden now oversees two groups, including one that joins some outstate mothers from Wisconsin. One group has 110 members, the other 35, and both continue to grow. The support groups are designed for women “to laugh, to cry, to share. We’re

sisters of the heart,” Van Gorden said, “because we have something that binds us closer than family.” Van Gorden grew up in a military family with her father in the Army National Guard. Her relatives and husband were also in the military, and her son enlisted and is now living abroad in an Owakina, Japan, Marine Corps base. “It’s difficult, especially with family. We don’t see them as much,” Van Gorden said. But she finds peace sharing these struggles with other women to help them out. “The thing I hate the most is knowing of mothers going through this venture alone,” she said. “There are times you need to share. You could be in the grocery store and seeing cereal makes you cry. We all need someone else who knows what it was like.” Beth Frenzel of New Brighton has also started her own support group. Frenzel’s son just left about a month ago for his second deployment with the Army in Afghanistan. She said the experience of a second deployment is “unlike anything else in life. It’s a combination of extreme pride and awe of your children and fear for their safety. It’s a difficult time. “Fear is my constant companion. But it’s not consuming me this time,” she said. She offers support and help to any mom from any branch or any rank. Sharing their experiences makes it easier, especially since most people might not know how to acknowledge a deployment if they haven’t experienced one, she said. This was the fifth annual luncheon the Farmington Yellow Ribbon Network hosted. Event chair Paulette Olson said the group plans to continue hosting the event “until no one shows up.” “I think this was the best that we had,” she said. Olson hopes to see the program continue to grow. If military mothers or grandmothers are looking for a support group, contact any Yellow Ribbon Network or Minnesota Marine Moms for more information.

The fourth annual Armed Forces Day WWII Weekend was held May 18-19 on the grounds of Dakota City Heritage Village in Farmington. Soldiers representing Russia, Germany, and the United States staged mock battles, weapons demonstrations, and army vehicle parades to recognize the history and service of veterans. More photos are online at SunThisweek. com. (Photos by Rick Orndorf)

Email Theresa Malloy at theresa.malloy@ecm-inc.com.

Valley Natural Foods hosts kids challenge to eat smart and move Burnsville-based Valley Natural Foods’ third annual 5-2-1-0 Challenge to encourage elementary school-aged children to eat smart and move more runs June 9 through July 6. The 5-2-1-0 Challenge teaches children that living a healthy lifestyle can be fun by doing four simple things daily: eating

five fruits or vegetables, limiting screen time to two hours, getting one hour of exercise and drinking zero sugary drinks. Radio Disney will kick off the 5-2-1-0 fun on the front lawn of Valley Natural Foods from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. June 9. The Radio Disney team will

introduce the 5-2-1-0 themes through dance and movement activities and will sign up children for the challenge. The 5-2-1-0 programming includes cooking, gardening and theater classes. Other 5-21-0 offerings include exercise and geocaching activities led by representatives from Dakota

County Parks. Every participant in the 5-21-0 challenge will receive coupons for a free piece of fruit each week of the program along with tracking charts toward the initiative’s goals. Completed tracking charts can be turned in to receive a prize along with being entered

into a drawing for two yearly family passes to the Minnesota Zoo. Valley Natural Foods is at 13750 County Road 11, Burnsville. Call 952-891-1212 or visit valleynaturalfoods.com for more information.

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6A May 24, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley

Business Belzer welcomes baseball fans

Beating the odds Small medical billing company in Burnsville grows amid consolidations in the industry by Jessica Harper SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Jeff Belzer Jr. and Michael Belzer cut a ribbon at Jeff Belzer Chevrolet Dodge Kia during a Lakeville Area Chamber of Commerce After Hours event in May. The event was a sneak preview for this weekend’s grand re-opening with a “Bun-Believable” Dine and Drive event from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Saturday, May 25, when visitors will be able to listen to pre-game baseball coverage with K-TWIN hosts Jason Nagle and Rod Simons broadcasting live with former Twins player Ron Coomer and sample free hot dogs. People can also enter to win prizes like a television, Kindle Fire, restaurant gift certificate and tickets to many events like baseball, the zoo and more. The dealership is located at 21111 Cedar Ave., Lakeville. (Photo by Sun Thisweek)

Business Buzz Couillard receives award

health. Couillard was honored because of his commitment and dedication Dr. Craig Couillard, to educating the public on a longtime Lakeville chi- the advances in concusropractor, received a sion management. Presidential Award at the Minnesota Chiropractic NACR Association’s 2013 Chiropractic Celebration April recognized 19-21 in Bloomington. Eagan-based communiThe award is given cations integration expert to individuals who have NACR has been recogshown dedication to the nized for the 13th year in a chiropractic profession row as Catalyst Telecom’s and commitment to public National Avaya Partner of

the Year. The award was announced during Catalyst’s 2013 Partner Conference held May 14-16 in Savannah, Ga.

New designer at College City Rebecca Ryan has been hired as lead designer at College City Design/ Build, based in Lakeville. She earned a Kitchen and Bath Design certificate from Century College.

In an industry where the little guys are getting pushed out by health care giants, one independent medical billing business has held its own and even grown. Over the past two years, Burnsville-based Healthcare Business Solutions has seen a 75 percent increase in its revenue, bringing the young company’s profits to nearly $100,000. Due to this growth, the business, which provides medical billing services for chiropractors and mental health specialists, relocated from Eagan to a larger office at 2430 E. 117 St. off Highway 13. HBS CEO and president Tunisia Irby credits this growth to the business’ customer service, expertise and ability to stay on top of industry changes and regulations. “As a small business owner I make sure my clients come first,” Irby said. “We customize our services to the client’s needs.” Much of the business’ success is also due to growth in the health care industry, Irby said. A March 11 report by the U.S. Department of Labor showed health care businesses created 32,000 jobs during the prior month and is expected to create 5.6 million more by 2020. HBS’ growth may also

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Tunisia Irby founded Burnsville-based Healthcare Business Solutions in 2006. (Photo by Jessica Harper) be due to its focus on small chiropractic and mental health clinics, which often rely on outsourced billing services due to its complexity, said Dan McLaughlin, the director for the Center for Health & Medical Affairs at the University of St. Thomas Opus College of Business. These providers will likely remain independent while medical clinics and hospitals consolidate and provide billing internally, McLaughlin said. After building a 10year career in the medical billing field, Irby founded HBS in 2006 with a $4,000 grant from the CAP Agency and personal savings. The Eagan resident previously worked in various administrative positions at Fairview Health Systems and HealthPartners. “I always wanted to be an entrepreneur and saw a huge need for billing services,” she said. In its infancy, Irby worked alone as she

learned to run a business from the ground up. “Getting that first client was most challenging,” she said. “I didn’t know how to market or promote myself.” It took Irby nearly a year to land her first client, but once she did, the business took off. Today, HBS has four employees and intends to hire additional workers as the company expands. In the near future, Irby plans to expand HBS’ services to include administrative staff training and a call center in Eagan to provide scheduling and bill-collecting services. The call center alone will bring about five to eight jobs, Irby said. Having the opportunity to bring jobs to the community is most rewarding, she said. Looking to the future, Irby said she hopes to double her profits while obtaining more clients and employees.

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job and the extent of his skill set have made him one of the best craftsman in the Twin Cities. My other two sons run the painting end of the business and are also professionally trained Artists. Jeremiah attended the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and later studied under the mentorship of the nationally renowned portrait and fresco painter Mark Balma. David similarly was accepted into a full time master apprenticeship program at the young age of 16 at the highly respected Atelier Lack Studio. They followed in the family tradition of mastering a professional craft and skill which they have brought to our company. Between the two they offer 25 years of experience painting interior and exterior homes in the metro area with our family business. A&J Painting takes great pride in our ability to make a true and lasting impression on you. I can’t tell you how many letters and calls I have received over the years from customers who just wanted to share with me what a great job we did. We hope to have the opportunity to do so with you as well. We are only a call or e-mail away to offer you a free estimate of our professional services.

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SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley May 24, 2013 7A

Deadlines approach for festival Midsummer Faire, parade forms due SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

KELLEY, from 1A tory, followed on June 21 by Dustin Hatzenbuhler, the Apple Valley singer-songwriter who this spring appeared on the NBC singing competition “The Voice.”

The deadline for entering the Rosemount Leprechaun Days Donations A 2007 survey commissioned by Grand Parade is June 5. (Photo by the city of Rosemount found that Rick Orndorf) 72 percent of local residents particThis year’s Mid-Summer Faire ipate in the annual 10-day festival. With so many people making will feature Arch Allies, a Styx, Journey and REO Speedwagon Leprechaun Days part of their tribute band, on Friday night and summer, Rosemount businesses Sweet Siren, a modern rock cover and individuals can show their support for the event by becoming an band, on Saturday night. To find an application form, go official sponsor. As incentive for their sponsoronline to www.RosemountEvents. com and click on the Leprechaun ship, those local businesses, individuals, or groups contributing Days button. The fair will be open 5-11 p.m. prior to July 1 will have their names displayed in various promotional July 26 and 1-11 p.m. July 27. Central Park is located at 2893 items – fliers, a special newspaper “thank you” advertisement and 145th St. W. For more information, contact on the website www.RosemountEMike Bouchard, Mid-Summer vents.com. The names will be displayed acFaire chairperson, at 612-840cording to four contribution levels. 9016. The Platinum contributor level is Parade for those giving more than $5,000. Those community groups, or- Gold is for $1,001 to $5,000; Silver ganizations or businesses thinking is for $501 to $1,000; and Green is about having a unit in the Rose- for up to $500. Anyone who would like to help mount Leprechaun Days Grand Parade at 11 a.m. Saturday, July by donating money, time or services can send contributions or in27, should think fast. The deadline for applications in kind services or product estimates to: Rosemount Leprechaun Days, the 100-unit parade is June 5. Because of limited staging avail- P.O. Box 256, Rosemount, MN ability, the parade is capped at 100 55068 or LeprechaunDays@gmail. com. units. There is no charge for commuTad Johnson at nity service groups or nonprofit Email tad.johnson@ecm-inc.com. groups.

After the Dustin Hatzenbuhler concert, Music in Kelley Park takes a week off as attention in Apple Valley shifts to the annual Freedom Days festival at Johnny Cake Ridge Park and other local venues.

The concerts return to Kelley Park on July 5 with an evening of music by jazz singer T. Mychael Rambo. The David Gonzalez Band takes the stage July 12, followed July 19 by Patty Peterson & Friends.

offs are over, Brad Stepan said the list should be even more impressive. The star for many in attendance will be Brown, who grew up skating on the ice at the Rosemount Community Center. “A lot of the boys on the high school team skated with J.T. when they were like in Pee Wee,” Bichler said. “They would play pick-up hockey at the parks from time to time. For him to play professionally and come back is pretty special. He’s living the dream of every boy who is out there.” Doors open at 5 p.m. and there will be an autograph session from 5:306:30 p.m. The game begins at 7 p.m. with two 25-minute periods. Tickets also allow people into the hour pre-game autograph session at the RCC Banquet Room and silent auction that will include game-worn, autographed jerseys. There will also be an after party at Carbone’s in Rosemount. Proceeds will benefit the Minnesota Sled Hockey Association, Caneff Family Scholarships and the Rosemount boys hockey program. The organizers expect the event to sell out and hope to make this an annual event. There are 1,100 tickets available. People can purchase tickets through rosemounthockey.com, Rosemount boys hockey players, Carbone’s in Rosemount and the Rosemount Community Center.

to see.” The event will feature a number of local players who went on to play professionally. Brown was a member of the University of Minnesota Duluth team that won the national title in 2011 when he was named Most Outstanding Player of the Frozen Four. He signed a two-year, entrylevel deal with the Lightning in 2012. Brown’s UMD teammate Justin Faulk, who plays with the Carolina Hurricanes and went to South St. Paul, will join him, along with Faulk’s teammate with the Hurricanes Jamie McBain. Toronto Maple Leafs player and Minnetonka alumnus Jake Gardiner and the Minnesota Wilds’ Jeff Taffe, who was Mr. Hockey Minnesota in 1999 with Hastings and star with the University of Minnesota are scheduled to appear. Lakeville resident and St. Thomas Academy alumnus Jordan Schroeder, who plays in the Vancouver Canucks organization, along with Mike Lundin, who played with the Wild and Apple Valley, will be on the ice. Phil Housley is also on the ticket. The South St. Paul resident who played in the NHL for more than 20 years was recently named assistant coach of the Nashville Predators. Goalies include UMD’s Aaron Crandall from Lakeville and Colorado College’s Joe Howe from Plymouth. Email Andy Rogers at When the NHL play- andy.rogers@ecm-inc.com.

The fee is $100 for each commercial or political candidate unit. Each candidate must participate in the parade. Payment is due with the registration form. To find a parade application form, go online to www.RosemountEvents.com and click on the Leprechaun Days button. For a parade information packet, call Maureen Bouchard, parade chairperson, at 651-423-4603 or the Rosemount Parks and Recreation Department at 651-322-6010.

by Tad Johnson Community groups and businesses that would like to connect with hundreds of potential volunteers or customers can snap up one of the few remaining spaces available during the Mid-Summer Faire in Central Park during Rosemount Leprechaun Days. The deadline has been extended from May 15 to May 31. “We think this is a great way for people to connect with others in the community who might not be aware of their work,” Leprechaun Days Committee President Diane Wellman said. “It’s a really fun time.” The fair, which will be Friday, July 26, and Saturday, July 27, has been used in the past as a fundraiser for service clubs or as a marketing opportunity for area businesses. Tent sites are 10 feet by 12 feet, and trailer sites are 10 feet by 25 feet. Site fees are: • Organizations or youth groups selling non-food items, $100 • Organizations or youth groups, selling food, $150 • Rosemount business or commercial, selling non-food items, $150 • Rosemount business or commercial, selling food, $200 • Non-Rosemount business or commercial, selling non-food items, $200 • Non-Rosemount business or commercial, selling food items, $300 Vendors, organizations and youth groups need to obtain a roaming permit to sell items throughout Mid-Summer Faire and Leprechaun Days. Those permits are $100 each.

NHL, from 1A

Acoustic artist Michael Monroe, a native of Minnesota’s North Shore who’s played the Kelley Park music series each year since its inception in 2008, is set to perform July 26, and the summer concerts conclude Aug. 2

with jazz from MacPhail Center for Music’s instructors and students. Admission is free to the Friday night concerts in the park located at Founders Lane and West 153rd Street in Apple Valley’s Central Village.

More information about the series is at Facebook. com/MusicInKelleyPark. Email Andrew Miller at andrew.miller@ecm-inc.com.

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8A May 24, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley

Education Let’s engineer

District 196 seeks applicants for parent positions on curriculum council

John Klein, left, and his dad Doug constructed a mini catapult together as part of Family Engineering Night on May 16 at Apple Valley’s Westview Elementary. More than 300 students and parents participated in the first-ever event at the school, which was sponsored by Flint Hills Resources and presented by The Works Museum to teach students about engineering design and how engineers use math and science to solve problems. Wiring circuits and building bridges out of candy were among the other kidfriendly, hands-on engineering activities on offer. (Photo submitted)

Parents in the Rosemount-Apple Valley-Eagan Public Schools who are interested in becoming involved in curriculum matters are encouraged to apply for membership on the district’s Curriculum and Instruction Advisory Council. Applications will be accepted through May 31 for four elementary school parent positions, one middle school parent position and three high school parent positions that will be open at the end of the current school year. The terms are for three years beginning in July 2013. The purpose of the CIAC is to ensure active community participation in all phases of planning and improving the instruction and curriculum affecting state graduation standards. The CIAC also recom-

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mends to the School Board districtwide education standards, assessments and program evaluations. The council is made up of 16 parent/community representatives, eight district employees, five high school students and District Office staff. The CIAC meets up to four times during the school year at the District Office in Rosemount, usually from 5 to 6:30 p.m., and members are invited to serve on curriculum review committees that meet occasionally during the day throughout the year. CIAC parent membership is determined, in part, by the grade level of children attending District 196 schools and geographic representation within the district. For this reason, applications will be accepted from parents of children who will attend one of the following schools in the 2013-14 school year: Two positions from Parkview, Red Pine, Rose-

Education Briefs College news Minnesota State University Moorhead, spring graduates, from Apple Valley – Brittany Hanson, B.S., accounting; Megan Knoll-Pruden, B.N., nursing; Garrett Matteson, B.S., mass communications; Rebecca Moncrief, B.A., psychology, magna cum laude. University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, spring graduates, from Apple Valley – Daniel Clausnitzer, B.B.A.; Jake Delahanty, B.B.A.; Scott Gabert, B.S.E.E., magna cum laude; Ryan Hoff, B.G.S.; Mercedes Mallinger, B.A.; Darchel Oikari, B.S.E.D.; Katherine Pufahl, B.S.S.W; Casey Sherwin, B.A.C.C.; Jessica St. Marie, B.A.C.C., magna cum laude; Dan-

iel Stookey, B.G.S; Leah Tupy, B.B.A. University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, spring graduate, Nicole Meehan of Apple Valley, B.A. Minnesota State College-Southeast Technical, Red Wing, spring graduates, from Apple Valley – Lora Hanson, A.S., nursing; Mary Palkar, A.S., nursing.

Leaders selected at STA James Riley of Apple Valley was selected as E Company commander for the 2013-14 school year at St. Thomas Academy in Mendota Heights. Jack Flynn, also of Apple Valley, was selected S-4 logistics/mentorship officer.

Spring Fling fun

Primrose School of Eagan raised $2,939 at its May 18 Spring Fling. The funds will be shared by Gillette’s Children’s Miracle Foundation and Primrose Children’s Foundation. (Photo submitted) Home and Commercial –

TREE SERVICE

HUSTON’S, LLC

Removal • Trimming Branch Grinding Member of – Minnesota Society of Arborculture International Society of Arborculture

JEFF AND NYLE

CERTIFIED TREE INSPECTOR ISA CERTIFIED ARBORIST #MN-4170A

Apple Valley Licensed & Insured FREE ESTIMATES

www.hustonstreeservice.com

952-953-4859

Changing jobs? Retiring? Don’t forget about your retirement plan. Do you need help with: • IRA rollover options? • Retirement plan distribution? • Reducing or eliminating tax penalties? • Reaching your retirement goals? • Your Thrivent Financial representative can help.

vs. El Paso Diablos

Karen Groves, CFPÂŽ Financial Associate 952-277-2637

May 24: Friday Night Fireworks presented by Xcel Energy (7:05 p.m.) 651-644-6659 saintsbaseball.com

mount or Shannon Park elementary schools; One position from Falcon Ridge or Scott Highlands middle schools; One position from Apple Valley High School: One position from Eastview High School or the School of Environmental Studies; and One position from Rosemount High School. Members who are currently serving on the CIAC may reapply to serve a second, three-year term; however, a second term is not automatically granted. Parents interested in being considered for CIAC membership must submit an application by May 31. The application is available at www.District196. org or by calling 651-4237739. Completed applications should be sent to Independent School District 196, Teaching and Learning Department, 3455 153rd St. W., Rosemount, MN 55068, or faxed to 651423-7897.

May 25: Military Appreciation Night presented by Minnesota Subcontractors Association (7:05 p.m.) May 26: The Return of the Monster Food Truck Rally! Plus Memorial Day Post-Game Fireworks Super Show! (5:05 p.m.) 6

3

CertiďŹ ed Financial Planner Board of Standards Inc. owns the certiďŹ cation marks CFPÂŽ and CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ in the U.S. Thrivent Financial for Lutherans and its respective associates and employees cannot provide legal, accounting, or tax advice or services. Work with your Thrivent Financial representative, and as appropriate your attorney and/or tax professional for additional information. Insurance products issued or offered by Thrivent Financial for Lutherans, Appleton, WI. Not all products are available in all states. Securities and investment advisory services are offered through Thrivent Investment Management Inc., 625 Fourth Ave. S., Minneapolis, MN 55415, a FINRA and SIPC member and a wholly owned subsidiary of Thrivent Financial for Lutherans. Thrivent Financial representatives are registered representatives of Thrivent Investment Management Inc. They are also licensed insurance agents/producers of Thrivent Financial. For additional important disclosure information, please visit Thrivent.com/disclosures.

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SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley May 24, 2013 9A

County open houses for two new greenway corridors

Blessing of the Bikes

Dakota County will host a pair of open houses to review the draft master plans for two new greenway corridors – the Lake Marion-South Creek Greenway and the Mendota-Lebanon Hills Greenway. The open houses are part of the final stages of a yearlong master planning process for the two greenways and will give the public the chance to review plans and provide feedback to the planning team. They will be held at the following times and locations: • 5:30-7:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 28, at the Lakeville Water Treatment Facility, 18400 Ipava Ave., Lakeville. • 5:30-7:30 p.m. Thursday, May 30, at Lebanon Hills Regional Park Visitor Center, 860 Cliff Road, Eagan. The Lake MarionSouth Creek Greenway

The 20th annual Twin Cities Blessing of the Bikes will be from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, June 15, at Hosanna church, 9600 163rd St., Lakeville. The event will include coffee and donuts from 8:30-9 a.m.; a motorcycle ride (no registration needed) from 9-11:30 a.m.; and lunch, live music and speakers from noon to 3 p.m. More information is at www.hosannalc.org.

travels 20 miles from the Minnesota River in Burnsville to Lake Marion in Lakeville and on to Rambling River Park in Farmington. The Mendota-Lebanon Hills Gre-

enway stretches 8 miles from the Village at Mendota Heights through the communities of Mendota Heights, Inver Grove Heights and Eagan, and on to Lebanon Hills Re-

gional Park. To review and comment on the draft master plans for both greenways, visit www.hkgi.com/projects/dakota.

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10A May 24, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley

At the Capitol

National Theatre of Great Britain and Bob Boyett present

based on a novel by Michael MorpurgoĂŠUĂŠ>`>ÂŤĂŒi`ĂŠLÞÊ ˆVÂŽĂŠ-ĂŒ>vvÂœĂ€`ĂŠUĂŠin association with Handspring Puppet Company

Care providers could form union Dakota County providers, lawmakers factor in the debate

Winner!

5

2011 Tony Awards

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by T.W. Budig SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

JUNE 12 – 23 ORPHEUM THEATRE MINNEAPOLIS

A Heart-Warming Tale of Loyalty and Friendship In Person: State Theatre Box Office (no service fees) or any Ticketmaster outlet By Phone: 800.982.2787 s (SPVQT TBWF 612.373.5665 s 0OMJOF )FOOFQJO5IFBUSF5SVTU PSH warhorseonstage.com

In a stormy climax, the Democratic House passed child care and personal care attendant unionization legislation on Monday, May 20. The 68-66 vote brought cheers from union activists in the House gallery and catcalls from Republicans

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on the floor. “Let them applaud,� a Republican shouted at House Speaker Paul Thissen, DFL-Minneapolis, as the Thissen gaveled for quiet. “They own the place,� a Republican yelled. The vote could set in motion a process by which union activists, supplied with lists from the state, would collect signatures from child care providers and personal care attendants receiving state subsides. An election, by mail ballot, would take place if at least 30 percent of providers eligible to vote indicated a wish to join a union. Darleen Henry of Rosemount, a personal care provider since her mother suffered a stroke about two years ago, was outside the House chamber with other activists after the vote. “I feel like I have someone who’s there for me, someone behind my back,� Henry said of a union. “I know we don’t have a union yet, but I feel it’s at least a possibility now.� Henry views the union as a means of getting additional training. Another activist outside the House chamber was Becky Swanson, a Lakeville child care provider. Swanson spoke of filing suit in federal court to stop the vote. “We’ll fight this for eight years,� Swanson said. One of the plaintiffs in the successful suit against Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton, when the governor attempted to call an unionization election by executive order, Swanson isn’t surprised a unionization effort is taking place in Minnesota. “Minnesota is unionfriendly state,� she said. She has nothing against unions, Swanson said, but child care providers are private businesses. Debate on the House floor was emotional. Rep. Peggy Scott, RAndover, said she and her husband have owned rental property and have rented to people receiving government assistance. “Are we next?� Scott asked of possible unionization. “Are landlords next?� Rep. Sarah Anderson, R-Plymouth, dismissed the idea the legislation was about bettering the lives of providers and improving the quality of child care. “It’s money. It’s all

Rep. Tara Mack, R-Apple Valley, emotionally spoke against the unionization legislation. (Photo by T.W. Budig) about money,� Anderson said of unions collecting dues. House Deputy Minority Leader Jennifer Loon, R-Eden Prairie, appealed to Democrats to take a tough vote and vote “no.� “Search your heart and your conscious,� Loon said. “Be courageous.� A handful of House Democrats, including Rep. Tim Faust, DFL-Hinckley, voted with Republicans against the bill. But it wasn’t enough. Rep. Michael Nelson, DFL-Brooklyn Park, House bill author, said the legislation does not tell parents or providers how to raise children, nor does it form a union. It’s about getting right to vote, Nelson said. “This bill is about ensuring the basic rights of undervalued workers to choose for themselves if they want to collectively bargain for better wages,� Nelson said in a prepared statement. “These workers, who are predominately women, now have an opportunity to bargain for improvements in their lives and the lives of the children, seniors and people with disabilities they serve.� The unionization legislation passed the Democratic-led Senate on a 35-32 vote after a 17-hour, all-night floor session. Sen. Greg Clausen, DFL-Apple Valley sided with Republicans in voting against the bill. Speaking after the House floor session, Rep. Tara Mack, R-Apple Valley, said bill opponents were carefully monitoring the legislative debate for possible inclusion into a lawsuit.

Mack felt they would have a good case. Mack, who has a young son and is pregnant, spoke on the House floor about her family’s concerns with day care. Her heart breaks, she said, for the mothers receiving Child Care Assistance Program funding, a state subsidy. Like other Republicans, Mack believes day care providers, in attempting to escape the union, will simply refuse to accept children receiving state subsides. “They (CCAP mothers) will be rejected time after time after time,� she said. Minnesota had 351,000 wage and salary workers in unions in 2012 with another 17,000 represented by a union on their main job or covered by an employee association or contract, though not union members themselves, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Union membership is heavily skewed toward the public sector. Nationally about 36 percent of public sector employees belonged to unions, against only about 6.6 percent of workers in the private sector, according to the bureau. About 57 percent of Minnesota public sector jobs were unionized in 2012, according to unionstats.com, an Internet data resource providing private and public sector labor union membership and density estimates. Only about 8 percent of Minnesota private sector jobs were unionized, according to the site. Email T.W. Budig at tim.budig@ecm-inc.com.


SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley May 24, 2013 11A

Highway 13

Republicans take aim at tax bill Democrats close $627 million state budget deficit Democrats taking “politi- Other provisions SUN THISWEEK cally correct” money. In addition to closing DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE Changes to tobacco perceived corporate loopThe DFL-controlled taxes are expected to gar- holes – a closure capturing Legislature voted to tax- ner $430 million. $400 million – a 10 percent the-rich, smokers and gift tax is imposed. close corporate loopholes Fourth tier For the gift tax, a lifein raising about $2 billion About 54,400 Minneso- time credit of $100,000 is in new taxes in its omnibus ta resident tax returns, or provided, and a taxpayer tax bill. about 2.1 percent of filers, can give up to $13,000 a The Senate took its will fall under the fourth- year without counting tovote May 20 shortly before tier income tax rate. ward their $1 million exthe Legislature adjourned Ninety-eight percent of emption. until next year. Minnesota taxpayers will The tax bill does not The tax bill closes the see no income tax increase, include the sweeping sales $627 million state budget according to the Gover- tax reforms originally prodeficit, fuels education nor’s Office. posed by Democratic Gov. funding and provides tax A married couple Mark Dayton, but it does relief for homeowners and with a taxable income of expand the sales tax to renters. $617,000 would pay about non-consumer warehousIt creates a fourth-tier $8,400 more in taxes un- ing and storage, repair and income tax rate at 9.85 der the fourth-tier. maintenance of electronic percent – a change snagA single filer with a tax- equipment and commerging about $1 billion – ap- able income of $428,000, cial and industrial maplicable to joint married under the fourth-tier, chinery. filers earning more than would pay an additional The tax bill contains an $250,000 in taxable in- $5,500. Internet “Amazon Tax” come, single-filers with Minnesota’s 9.85 per- online sale tax provision taxable income of more cent tax rate would be fifth for out-of-state retailers than $150,000. highest in the country. with affiliates in MinnesoThe income tax inRepublicans were criti- ta selling on their behalf. crease embraces the top 2 cal of the bill not only for That is expected to cappercent of taxpayers. what was in it, but what ture $10 million. Republicans are not wasn’t. In terms of tax relief, pleased. “What’s unfortunate, the bill exempts cities and “Thank goodness the we did not make our veter- counties from paying the increase in the candy tax ans a priority in the bill,” sales tax for most purchasand snack tax went away,” Rep. Anna Wills, R-Apple es, a $172 million savings Rep. Nick Zerwas, R- Valley, said. to local government. Elk River, said. “This bill Wills had pursued a Under the bill, some hurts every Minnesotan.” veterans tax hiring credit. 300,000 homeowners will The tax on a pack of “It’s not necessary, and see their property tax recigarettes is increased by not needed,” Rep. Joe Mc- fund increase, and another $1.60 under the tax bill. Donald, R-Delano, said 100,000 additional homThe increase is about of the tax increases. eowners will receive a remore than raising money, The tax bill passed the fund, Democrats say. Democrats argue. House on a party line 71The tax bill contains no “I view it as a public 58 vote; it passed the Sen- alcohol tax increases. health imperative,” House ate on a 36-30 vote. A Mayo Destination Tax Committee ChairDebate in the Sen- Medical Center provision woman Ann Lenczewski, ate also had Republicans is included in the tax bill. DFL-Bloomington, said. standing on the floor conIt anticipates the state Senate Tax Committee demning the tax bill. investing a maximum of Rod Skoe, DFL-Clear“These taxes are really $327 million over 27 years brook, a former smoker, about envy,” Sen. Dave after the clinic, City of said he had never voted Thompson, R-Lakeville, Rochester, and Olmsted for a cigarette tax increase said of tax-the-rich. County make sufficient inbefore. “This bill will make us vestments. “This is one of the a high tax island,” Sen. The tax bill extends hardest issues for me,” he Julianne Ortman, R- Mall of America TIF dissaid. Chanhassen, said. tricts to spur Phase Two But Skoe found the Sen. Dan Hall, R- mall expansion. health argument compel- Burnsville, described the ling. Democratic taxing philos- Email T.W. Budig at Sen. Sean Nienow, R- ophy predatory. tim.budig@ecm-inc.com. Cambridge, called the “If they got a need – tobacco tax increase as let’s tax them,” Hall said. by T.W. Budig

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12A May 24, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley

County survey results analyzed A recent survey taken in Dakota County to assess residents’ satisfaction with county government, service delivery and life in general shows locals are happy with their overall quality of life, among other things. The Dakota County Resident Survey has residents rate a variety of topics and issues, and then converts their answers into a 100-point scale.

According to results, the average rating of overall quality of life in Dakota County was 76, sitting above the benchmark of other counties in the nation. Also receiving high marks on the survey were the safety of neighborhoods (with an average rating of 80) and the performance of the Dakota County Board (with an 88 percent approval rating).

The Resident Survey was mailed to 2,600 random Dakota County households in February and distributed among the seven county commissioner districts. Using past surveys, the county will be able to make comparisons between 2013 results and those from prior years. To see full survey results, visit www.dakotacounty.us and search Resident Survey.

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Former Speaker of the House, Rep. Kurt Zellers, R-Maple Grove, said he is “not ruling anything out” when asked about whether he is considering a run for governor in 2014. “I’m focusing on the session right now and will start thinking about future plans when the session is over,” he explained. Senate Minority Leader David Hann, REden Prairie, answered Jeff the question of whether Johnson he will run for governor with three words: “Thinking about it.” Sen. Julie Rosen, R-Fairmont, carried the Minnesota Vikings stadium legislation during the 2012 session. She has been mentioned as a possible candidate for governor. “I’m trying to get through the session but it’s out there and I will do something, yes or no,” Rosen said. Hennepin County Sheriff Rich Stanek, a former legislator, has also been mentioned as a possible GOP gubernatorial candidate. DFL Party Chairman Ken Martin of Eagan said the party’s internal polling shows Dayton with good marks. A KSTP poll recently showed him with a 45 percent approval rating, significantly higher than that of the Legislature. The two announced Republican candidates represent the extremes in Minnesota politics, Martin said. Martin believes Dayton is in a good position for re-election but since the election is a year and a half away, he said anything can happen and the DFL Party is not taking anything for granted. Steven Schier, political science professor at Carleton College, said the 2014 race for governor could be competitive because Dayton’s polling numbers at this time are far from secure. He said he believes Dayton is potentially beatable with much depending on the state of the Minnesota economy in the fall of 2014. Public reaction to hikes in taxes and spending likely to be agreed upon by the governor and Legislature will have a big impact on the election, Schier said. Schier predicts main issues of the 2014 campaign for governor will be the state economy and the actions of the DFL legislature and governor in 201314. Tax and spending increases, gay marriage, unionization of child care workers and increases in the minimum wage will likely be discussed during the election campaign, Schier said.

as of presstime. Speaking last week, Thompson said he owed it to his constituents and to “the good folks of Minnesota” to declare his intentions soon after the session would end. Thompson sounds like a candidate when he attacks Dayton’s record. “He is taking us in the wrong direction,” Scott Honour Thompson said. Many states are doing what Dayton is doing, increasing taxes and increasing the cost of government, Thompson said. He used the states of Illinois and California as examples. Speculating on major issues to come into focus during the 2014 campaign, Thompson said education is always an issue and should be an issue. “There is a gap between the higher performing districts and those not getting the job done for students,” Thompson said. A healthy economy and providing jobs and opportunity must also be addressed in the campaign for governor, Thompson said. Thompson said he was “shocked” at the degree DFLers are going after low income and middle income folks with more taxes. He said the governor and the DFL Party talk about targeting the rich but instead, “they are taxing everybody.” Two Republican candidates have already emerged. Wayzata businessman Scott Honour was the first to announce three weeks ago. Current Hennepin County Commissioner and former state legislator Jeff Johnson made his announcement before family and friends May 12 at the Hamel Community Hall, near his residence in Plymouth. With the Minnesota Legislature still in session, several potential candidates for governor are waiting until their lawmaking business is finished for this session. The field of candidates was narrowed several weeks ago with the announcement by three potential candidates choosing not to seek the governor’s chair. Former Minnesota Sen. Norm Coleman, 2010 unsuccessful gubernatorial candidate Tom Emmer and U.S. Rep. John Kline, 2nd District, each has announced an intent not to run for governor in 2014. Third District U.S. Rep. Erik Paulsen recently announced that he would not be seeking the governor’s chair or a seat in the U.S. Senate cur- Howard Lestrud can be reached at howrently held by Al Franken. ard.lestrud@ecm-inc.com

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SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley May 24, 2013 13A

Sports

Back to basics for Eastview Lightning lacrosse Boys team puts halt to rare losing streak, earns share of South Suburban Conference title by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Eastview didn’t need to create a new identity as much as it needed to return to its old one. The Lightning lost back-to-back boys lacrosse games last week – the first time that had happened in two years. That, not surprisingly, caused the players and coaches to do some soulsearching. Specifically, coach Tim Roche said, they needed to remember what they did well and how to get back to it. After the reevaluation, Eastview defeated Rosemount 11-8 on Monday and Apple Valley 13-6 on Tuesday to earn a share of the South Suburban Conference championship. Eastview and Eagan both finished 8-1 in SSC play. Eastview won the head-to-head matchup, which could be a factor when the Section 3 tournament is seeded Saturday morning. The No. 1 seed gets a first-round bye, something Roche said he wants. Losses to Prior Lake (6-5 on May 16) and Blake (13-11 on May 18) were eye-openers for the Lightning, 10-2 overall. “We’d gone 25 games in a row without allow-

Eastview attackman Nick Abbott (12) tries to get the ball away from Apple Valley defender Jack Davis. (Photo by Rick Orndorf) ing 10 goals before Blake This week, the Lightscored 13 against us,” ning held a high-powered Roche said. “Our defen- Rosemount offense to sive play in that game, eight goals. It was only that wasn’t like us. We the second time this seaalso went 21 minutes son the Irish have scored without scoring against fewer than 11. Apple ValBlake, and against Prior ley (6-6 overall, 4-5 SSC) Lake we scored only five. trailed Eastview 12-2 afThat isn’t us, either.” ter three quarters TuesThe coaches and play- day night before scoring ers concluded that there four goals in the fourth. was too much individual Tanner Hamill had play, especially on de- four goals and Ryan fense, where a coordi- McNamara three in nated effort is essential. Eastview’s victory over When the defense didn’t Rosemount. Sophomore move as a unit, opponents goalie Jeremy LeClaire found appealing places made 10 saves. from which to shoot. Nine different play-

Eastview’s Ryan McNamara (left) and Apple Valley’s Collin Trankel try to gain possession during the Lightning’s 13-6 victory Tuesday night. (Photo by Rick Orndorf) ers scored against Apple Valley, led by McNamara with three. Sophomore midfielder Joel Iverson picked up nine ground balls. Apple Valley sophomore attack Calvin Leong scored three goals and junior attack Tim Toavs had four assists.

Sophomore goalie Max Chlan made 11 saves. Roche said finishing first in the South Suburban Conference means something to the defending state champion Lightning. “We’ve tried to pull back from thinking about winning the state champi-

onship and focus on one game at a time,” he said. “A conference championship is a big thing to the school. The players appreciate it too because they get their picture on the wall.” The seven-team Section 3 playoffs are schedSee LACROSSE, 14A

AVHS student named amateur athlete of year

Lightning on the brink

Pipkins honored by St. Paul Downtown Lions by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Eastview shortstop Melissa Barry throws to first base to record an out in a Section 3AAA softball playoff game against Rosemount on Tuesday in Bloomington. Rosemount upset the No. 2-seeded Lightning 5-3 in eight innings. Eastview was to play Eagan in an elimination game Thursday, after this edition went to press. (Photo by Rick Orndorf)

Blaze, Lightning like their playoff chances Section baseball tourney starts Friday by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Tuesday was a day of mixed results for the Burnsville and Eastview baseball teams. After not quite getting what they wanted during the day, both got some good news in the evening. Good news first: Both received byes in the first round of the Section 3AAA playoffs. Not only do both teams avoid the single-elimination phase of the tournament, they don’t have to play until Monday. That means they get a chance to rest, practice and set up their pitching for the playoff grind ahead. The bad news: Eastview closed its regular season with a loss after falling 4-1 to Burnsville on Tuesday at Alimagnet Park. As for the Blaze, it had a split on Tuesday, losing to Bloomington Jefferson 4-3 at Burnsville High School before going to Alimagnet to play Eastview. Burnsville’s loss to Jefferson, combined with Lakeville North’s doubleheader sweep of Rosemount, wiped away the Blaze’s chance of winning the South Suburban Conference.

But, with the regular season jammed into about 3 1/2 weeks, both the Blaze and Lightning welcomed some time off. “We’ve had one practice outside the whole season,” Eastview coach Tom Strey said following his team’s 4-1 loss to Burnsville on Tuesday afternoon at Alimagnet Park. “We’re hoping the weather gives us a chance to do a little work outside before Monday.” South Suburban Conference champion Lakeville North (14-3) received the No. 1 seed in Section 3AAA. Burnsville (14-4), Eastview (12-7) and Henry Sibley (11-7) are the second through fourth seeds. The top four seeds bypass Friday’s first round of the playoffs and advance to the doubleelimination portion of the tournament beginning Monday. Burnsville takes on Eagan or Lakeville South at 7 p.m., while Eastview faces Rosemount or Simley at 4. All games in the double-elimination portion of the tournament take place at Alimagnet Park in Burnsville. Eastview and Burnsville, the last two state Class AAA champions,

felt good about their playoff chances. One benefit of the compressed schedule is it forced teams to develop pitching depth. With the double-elimination part of the section tournament expanded to eight teams, a team might have to play more games just to get to state. That would be fine with Burnsville, which saw senior Cooper Maas shut down Eastview on four hits Tuesday afternoon. Tyler Hanson, Aaron Rozek, Zach Smith and Maas make up a formidable group of pitchers. Setting up the rotation is a challenge, though. “We’ll have to sit down with all the pitchers, find out how they feel, look at the matchups and figure something out,” Burnsville coach Mick Scholl said. “We have a really strong left side of the infield with Tyler and Cooper when Rosey (Rozek) is pitching. But when Aaron’s not pitching, he does a nice job for us at first base.” Eastview’s rotation is led by junior left-hander Marcus Frederickson, who was 2-1 with a 0.29 earned-run average in four starts. Eastview held opponents to fewer than

three runs a game during the regular season. “Marcus has been great all year, and Grant Martinson and Lucas Anderson have pitched really well for us, too,” Strey said. “I like that we have some pitching depth. Last year we got through the section tournament with two pitchers, but I don’t think we’ll have to do that this year.” Shortstop Derek Scheibel (.389, 14 RBI) and outfielder Josh Chatfield (.426, 11 RBI) led the Lightning at the plate, but Strey said he’s hoping to see the offense as a whole heat up during the playoffs. Burnsville’s offense might already be running at a high temperature. Going into Tuesday’s games, Hanson (.432) and Maas (.416) were the hitting leaders, and each had 16 RBI to share the team lead. “I think our pitching and defense have been pretty good all year, and now we’re starting to hit,” Maas said. “Our confidence is very high going into the playoffs.” One other thing to consider: Although Burnsville is the No. 2 seed in See BASEBALL, 14A

Eagles’ relay that finished second in that event. She was the basketball team’s scoring leader in 2012-13, averaging 11.6 points. Pipkins will attend Dartmouth College and compete in track and field. Other female St. Paul Downtown Lions award finalists included Eagan distance running star Danielle Anderson. Jake Short of Simley, a four-time Minnesota state wrestling champion, won the award for male athletes. The field of six finalists included Eastview lacrosse and hockey standout Ryan McNamara. Previous award winners include Minnesota Twins catcher Joe Mauer, who was honored while a three-sport athlete at Cretin-Derham Hall, and Eagan’s Natalie Darwitz, who starred in hockey at Eagan High School and the University of Minnesota, and later became captain of the U.S. women’s Olympic team.

Apple Valley senior Jaryn Pipkins was named the female winner of the St. Paul Downtown Lions Club Amateur Athlete of the Year Award at a banquet Tuesday at the Prom Center in Oakdale. Pipkins is the third Apple Valley High School student and the first female from AVHS to win the award. The St. Paul Downtown Lions Club started the awards program in 1943. Since 1988 it has honored one female and one male athlete each year. Trevor Laws (2003) and Destin McCauley (2011) are previous St. Paul Downtown Lions award winners from AVHS. Pipkins has earned three all-conference awards in basketball and four in track and field. She has served as a captain in both sports. She also was named Apple Valley’s Athena Award winner. She was part of Apple Valley’s state Class AA Email Mike Shaughnessy at championship 4x100-meter mike.shaughnessy@ecmrelay team at the 2011 state inc.com. meet. In 2012, she ran on an

Notebook: Nationalcaliber hoops coming to Eagan by Mike Shaughnessy SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

If you’re one of those who believes there’s no such thing as too much basketball – even on a holiday weekend – the High Performance Academy in Eagan is the place for you. The Nike Elite Youth Basketball League is bringing its fourth session of the regular season to the High Performance Academy, offering wallto-wall basketball from Friday night through Monday morning. The EYBL attracts many of the nation’s top boys high school players, including the three

regarded as Minnesota’s top recruits in the Class of 2014 – Apple Valley’s Tyus Jones, De La Salle’s Reid Travis and Robbinsdale Cooper’s Rashad Vaughn. Jones and Travis are teammates on the Howard Pulley Panthers 17-and-under team. Vaughn plays for Wisconsin Playground, based in Milwaukee. Games start at 6 p.m. Friday on five courts. Howard Pulley does not play Friday night but opens against ICP Elite at 9:30 a.m. Saturday. The Panthers also play Travelers Basketball (Kentucky) at 3:30 p.m. See NOTEBOOK, 14A


14A May 24, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley

NOTEBOOK, from 13A Saturday, Seattle Rotary at 8 a.m. Sunday, Team United (North Carolina) at 2 p.m. Sunday and All Ohio Red at 10:30 a.m. Monday. This weekend’s tournament closes the regular season for the Nike EYBL. Previous sessions were in Los Angeles, Hampton, Va., and Dallas. Twenty-four of the 40 teams will advance to the EYBL Finals at the Nike Peach Jam starting July 10 in North Augusta, S.C. Howard Pulley was 7-6 through the first three EYBL sessions and is tied for second place in its division. Through the team’s first nine EYBL games, Jones led the team in scoring with a 22.1 average. Travis was the second-leading scorer (17.6) and leading rebounder (8.7). For more information about the event, visit www.howardpulleybasketball.com or www.nikeeyb.com.

Where will King end up? Eastview High School graduate and 2012 Mr. Basketball Award finalist Joey King is looking for a new school after leaving the Drake University men’s program earlier this month. The departure was described as a surprise in a Des Moines Register story. Locally, speculation immediately turned to whether he would land at Minnesota, which needs big men (King is 6-foot9), is reportedly looking for players with threepoint shooting range and has scholarships available. A thread about whether King would be a good fit at Minnesota has reached 10 pages at www. gopherhole.com, a website devoted to University of Minnesota athletics.

King averaged 6.9 points and 2.9 rebounds last season at Drake and was named to the Missouri Valley Conference all-freshman team. All-American Apple Valley High School senior Danny Woiwor recently was named to the USA Wrestling All-American team. Woiwor is the 2013 state Class AAA champion at 160 pounds. It is his second state championship to go with his 130-pound title as a freshman. He finished second at 145 as a sophomore and sixth at 182 as a junior. He also helped lead Apple Valley to four state team championships. Woiwor’s high school career record is 215-40 He signed a National Letter of Intent with Iowa State University and will join the Cyclones this fall.

Clay target league thrives This is the final week of competition for the Minnesota State High School Clay Target League, a trapshooting league that has grown to 114 teams and more than 3,300 participants this spring. Teams from Apple Valley, Burnsville, Eagan, Eastview, Farmington, Lakeville North, Lakeville South and Rosemount high schools belong to the league. The league’s state tournament will be June 7-9 in Alexandria. The tournament, open to all league members, offers novice, junior varsity and varsity competitions. Trapshooting is a club sport, but in December the Minnesota State High School League voted to become a “presenting partner” of the state tournament beginning in June 2014. That makes Minnesota the first state with a

trapshooting tournament sponsored by a state high school association. The MSHSL-sponsored tournament will be for the state’s top shooters, but the clay target league will continue to run its own tournament in June in which novice and JV-level shooters can compete. Trapshooting allows scheduling flexibility, making it possible for boys and girls to work it in around another spring sport or a club sport. The presenting partnership agreement allows the MSHSL to support the sport without completely taking over its supervision. Some teams shoot on Sundays because that’s when they can get access to gun clubs. Sports under direct MSHSL supervision cannot have competitions or practices on Sundays, but the clay target league wanted to keep Sunday competition as an option. The sport has boomed in Dakota County high schools. Apple Valley’s team nearly doubled in size from 30 to 54. Lakeville North and Lakeville South started teams this year and they attracted almost 150 students combined. For more information about the clay target league, visit www.mnclaytarget.com.

Track update on web The South Suburban Conference track and field finals were scheduled to take place at Eagan High School on Wednesday, after this edition went to press. There will be an update on www.sunthisweek.com. Email Mike Shaughnessy at mike.shaughnessy@ecminc.com.

professional guaranteed

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include trust, quality and jay Ring sizing, prong repair, surface refinishing, chain repair, stone mounting and remounting, battery replacement, and pearl restringing

Sports Briefs Wrestling fundraiser The Rosemount High School wrestling program’s sixth annual golf tournament fundraiser will be July 20 at Southern Hills Golf Course in Farmington. The tournament has a noon shotgun start. Registration is $90 per golfer if paid by July 13 and $100 the day of the event. Registration includes golf, cart rental, lunch, dinner and raffle prizes. Each participant also receives a free Tshirt. Prizes will be awarded to the top three teams. For more information, contact Henry Gerten at 651-270-6093 or henry. gerten@district196.org.

ics on June 1 in Farmington, June 29 in Elko/New Market and June 12 in Inver Grove Heights. The clinics are for boys and girls ages 6-16. Participants are divided into three groups and rotated among skill stations. No registration is required to participate in a clinic. For more information and rain locations, visit www.dakotaelectric.com.

Free shooting events

Dakota County Gun Club in Rosemount will hold its annual youth shooting events from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. on the first and third Saturdays of June, July and August. Youth up to age 16 can participate in archery, rifle shooting, and shotgun (trapshooting) at no cost. The basics of gun safety and ownership will Twins clinics be taught under supervision of trained Dakota Electric Association and DNR instructors. More information is Great River Energy are sponsoring free available at www.dakotacountygunclub. Play Ball! Minnesota Twins Youth Clinorg. LACROSSE, from 13A uled to begin Tuesday with three games at the home fields of the higher-seeded teams. The top seed – likely to be Eastview or Eagan – will be off until the semifinal round May 31. The championship game is June 4 at Burnsville High School. Apple Valley, Bloomington Kennedy, Burnsville, Prior Lake and Rosemount are the other teams in the section.

AV girls win

to 5-7 overall. The teams tied for fifth place in the South Suburban Conference at 4-5. Apple Valley junior midfielder Katie Larson scored nine goals in Tuesday’s game. Marina Gabor and Reagan Roelofs scored two each. Rachel Munos and Sarah Pellicci each had two goals and an assist for Eastview. Christine Leikvold also scored twice. The Section 3 playoffs are scheduled to begin Wednesday, May 29. The section consists of eight South Suburban Conference teams: Apple Valley, Bloomington Jefferson, Bloomington Kennedy, Burnsville, Eagan, Eastview, Prior Lake and Rosemount. Burnsville (11-1 overall) is the likely No. 1 seed.

Tuesday’s lacrosse doubleheader at Eastview High School wound up a split as Apple Valley defeated Eastview 14-10 in the girls game. Apple Valley moved above .500 at Mike Shaughnessy 6-5. Eastview has struggled after a Email strong start. The Lightning, which mike.shaughnessy@ecm-inc.com. won four of its first five games, fell BASEBALL, from 13A the section, it owns two victories over No. 1-seeded Lakeville North. The Blaze outscored Lakeville North 21-4 in those two games, prompting Strey to say, “I think Burnsville’s the team to beat.”

Playoff matchups

at

Friday, with the winner playing Eastview at 4 p.m. Monday at Alimagnet Park. Eighth-seeded Apple Valley (7-11) will be home Friday against ninth seed Prior Lake (7-13). The winner advances to face Lakeville North at 7 p.m. Monday. Eagan (9-10) received the seventh seed and plays host to 10th-seeded Lakeville South (3-13) on Friday. The winner plays Burnsville at 7 p.m. Monday. The Section 3AAA championship game is scheduled June 4 at Alimagnet Park.

Section 3AAA pairings were set Tuesday night. Teams seeded fifth through 12th will play single-elimination first-round games Friday (the top four seeds received byes into the double-elimination portion of the tourney). Mike Shaughnessy Sixth-seeded Rosemount (8-10) Email faces No. 11 Simley (5-13) at 4:30 p.m. mike.shaughnessy@ecm-inc.com.

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SOPHOMORE | 1st Base APPLE VALLEY HIGH SCHOOL Playing through injuries this Spring, Rachel Goodman has been one of the top hitters in the South Suburban Conference. She is currently batting .488 with 19 hits, 15 runs batted in and 2 homeruns. She has also been perfect in the field, committing no errors while handling the duties at first base. A three-year varsity player, Goodman is a captain of this year’s team, a feat rarely held by a sophomore. A strong student, Goodman is also a standout on the Girls Hockey team. 2011 – Softball Rookie of the Year 2012 – Softball 2013 – Softball Team Captain

2012 – Girls Hockey Top Forward 2013 – Girls Hockey Team MVP

THIS SPACE AVAILABLE! Now accepting Athlete Of The Week Sponsorships for the 2013-2014 school year. Minimum 4 week run.

To reserve your sponsorship, contact Mike Jetchick at (952) 846-2019 or mike.jetchick@ecm-inc.com


a

SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley May 24, 2013 15A

AU TO • E M P LOY M E N T • R E A L E S TAT E Ads may be placed Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at Apple Valley location and 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at Eden Prairie location. DEADLINE: Display: Tuesday 4 pm* Line Ads: Wednesday 12 pm* * Earlier on holiday weeks

GARAGE$42 SALES $40 Package Package

BY PHONE: 952-846-2000 or 952-392-6888 952-846-2010 or 952-941-5431

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WEBSITE: EMAIL:

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INDEX

$44

Additional Lines $10.00 Ads will also appear on sunthisweek & minnlocal.com each Wednesday by 9:00 a.m.

class.thisweek@ecm-inc.com

HOW TO PAY

• Announcements • Professional Services • Business Services • Education • Merchandise & Leisure Time • Animals • Family Care • Employment • Rentals • Real Estate • Automotive

TRANSPORTATION

• 3 line ad • 2 week run • FREE Garage Sale Kit* • Metro Wide Coverage – 318,554 homes • Rain Insurance – we will re-run your ad up to two weeks FREE if your sale is rained out.

*Garage Sale Kits can be picked up at the Eden Prairie office.

IN PERSON:

Visit our Apple Valley or Eden Prairie office to place your Classified ad, make a payment, or pick up your Garage Sale Kit.

BUSINESS SERVICES

952-846-2000 or 952-392-6888

TO PLACE YOUR AD

BY FAX:

classifieds

• 3 lines, 4 weeks, All zones • Additional lines: $7.00 • Private party only

MERCHANDISE MOVER $44 • 3 lines, 4 weeks, All zones • Additional lines: $7.00 • Merchandise $151.00 or more

We gladly accept VISA, American Express, Mastercard, Discover, personal checks, and cash.

1000-1090 1500-1590 2000-2700 2700-2760 3700-3840 3900-3990 4000-4600 9000-9450 5000-6500 7000-8499 9500-9900

SERVICES & POLICIES Sun Thisweek reserves the right to edit, refuse, reject or cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be reported on the first day of the publication, and Sun Thisweek will be responsible for no more than the cost of the space occupied by the error and only the first insertion. We shall not be liable for any loss or expense that results from the publication or omission of an advertisement.

$175 to $3,500

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1060

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2090

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2170

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952-985-5516

• DRIVEWAYS • PARKING LOTS

Find a meeting:

www.aastpaul.org www.aaminneapolis.org

Cement, Masonry, Waterproofing

It could be yours. Call for details. 952-392-6862

952-492-2783 16586 Johnson Mem. Dr. Jordan, MN 55352 Mon-Fri 7:30am - 6:00pm Saturday 8:00am - 3:00pm

• Pulverized Dirt - $12.75 yd • Concrete Edging Starting at $1.29 ea. • Rock Engraving • Colored Mulch $28.00 yd • Bagged Mulch $3.00 2cu. yd

$

See website for all varieties. Exp. 5/31/13 Limit one per customer.

- We Deliver www.HermansLandscape.com

2360

Lawn & Garden

Yard 1OFF Each of Mulch

2360

Lawn & Garden

General Contractors STORM DAMAGE RESTORATION LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED SINCE 1978

Mowing • Fertilizing Weed Control Landscaping

READERS’ CHOICE

Awards

Voted #1 Lawn Care Company by Sun Readers

www.MinnLocal.com

www.fertilawnmn.com Bloomington, MN • 952-884-7331

ROOFING • SIDING • WINDOWS

FREE ESTIMATES Lic # 6793

(763) 550-0043 • (952) 476-7601 (651) 221-2600

3500 Vicksburg Lane Suite 400-351 • Plymouth, MN 55447


16A May 24, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley Tree Service

2620

$0 For Estimate Timberline Tree & Landscape. Spring Discount - 25% Off Tree Trimming, Tree Removal, Stump Grinding 612-644-8035 Remove Large Trees & Stumps CHEAP

20+ Yrs Experience Roggenbuck Tree Care, LLC. Licensed-Bonded-Insured Call (612)636-1442

612-275-2574

AJ's Tree Service

Trimming & Removal Free Estimates & Insured A Good Job!!

15 yrs exp.

Thomas Tree Service

Immaculate Clean-up! Tree Removal/Trimming Lot Clearing & Stump Removal Free Estimates 952-440-6104

ArborBarberMN.com

612-703-0175 Mbr: BBB Trimming, Removal & Stump Grinding.

Silver Fox Services Tree Trimming/Removal & Stump Grinding.

APPLE VALLEY Multi Fam. Sale 5/30 - 6/1 8-5 Regatta Townhomes Finch & Flagstaff /160th APPLE VALLEY Multi-families. Electronics, tools, furn. cloz, luggage, pedal cars! May 31 Fri. 8a-5p. June 1 Sat. 8a1p. 800 blk of Fireside Dr. Blaine 8th Annual Sale 5/30-31 (8-5) Lots of mens cloz, more!

8706 Van Buren St NE

Blaine Community Garage Sale Club West & Deacon's Walk Neighborhoods Hwy. 65 then East on 109th Ave NE. Follow signs.

Thurs-Sat, June 6-7-8

Bloomington Multi-Family 5/30-31, 6/1 (8-5) Golf, HH, antiqs, kids cloz, toys. 5109 West 91st St Bloomington, West

8900 Southwood Drive

5/23-25, Thurs – Sat (9a-5p) Antiques, furn., decorator items and great misc!

Brooklyn Park

Multi-Family 5/30-31 (9-5)

Fully Licensed & Insured

Freezer, small refrig., kids cloz/toys, HH, loft bed w/desk 4016 Hollyhock Cir

Free Estimates

BURNSVILLE 225 Burncrest Ct. 5/25 75pm. Computers, Tools, Longaberger, & PC games.

BBB Accredited “A� Rating Registered W/Dept of Agriculture. 16+ Yrs Exp. No Job Too Big or Small 952-883-0671 612-715-2105

2660

BURNSVILLE 40th Annual South River Hills Day Sale Over 100 sales

Window Cleaning

June 1 (8-3). Near Cliff & Hwy 13

Rich's Window Cleaning Quality Service. Affordable rates. 952-435-7871

Window Cleaning 651-646-4000

2760

Tutoring

Nancy's Nook b322 Reading Tutoring Call Nancy 651-230-6284

3000

3030

Merchandise Appliances

Hi-efficiency, Whirlpool Cabrio gas dryer, bisque, 4-5 yrs old, just like new. $450. 952-933-0261

3160

Furnishings

BURNSVILLE Neighborhood Garage Sale - Spring Green Lane, Thursday, May 30th, Friday, May 31st and Saturday, June 1st. 9 am - 4 pm

Crystal Estate Sale! 5549 Toldedo Ave N, 5/31-6/1 (9-5). Collect., vint. HH, Longaberger baskets, china, Prescut. Deephaven Multi-Family 5/23-24 (8-4) HH items, furn., & much more! 4680 Old Kent Rd. EAGAN 1508 Oakbrooke Lane 5/31 - 6/1 8-5pm. Boys, womens mens & matern. Cloz, toys, scrap booking/crafts sup. Books, teacher's supplies! HH, furn. Longaber. bskts. Eagan 1598 'B' Clemson Dr. 5/24 10-6:30pm, 5/25 9:30-2pm. 5/26 10-1pm. Lots of stuff! EAGAN 4800 FOUR SEASONS May 30-31. 5 Women X 40 yrs of stuff = Sale you don't want to miss!

EAGAN Hawthorne Woods Neighborhood Sale May 30 & 31, 9-5pm Kids - adult High-end Chattam & Wells clthg, furn, HH, toys, bks, King Mattress & box. Exc sporting equip, & more! cond $950 Sylvia 612-867-1956 4341 Dorchester Court Wall Unit w/shelves, desk, Signs at Dodd & Diffley drawers & cupboard. Fin- Eden Prairie ished all sides for room di- Tiffany Lane Multi-Family vider. Good condition! N'brhd Sale 5/30-31 (9-5) $250/BO. Call 952-942-0259 11957 Tiffany Lane New In Plastic!! $150 MUST SELL!! 763-360-3829

Misc. For Sale

2009 Yamaha Scooter Like New! 16 miles! $2200. 651-347-8603 4 Pc Bed Set $300, Hall Tree $151, Bookcase $151, Qu Hideabed like new $200. B/O 952-423-2382 Lawnboy Push Mower w/ bag & extra blade, $75.

Eden Prairie: Wooddale Church Mission Fundraiser & Artist's Sale – unique, vibrant oil paintings! 5/25-26 (9-2) 6697 Amherst Lane

Edina Moving Sale 5/24-25 (8-4) Furn., dishes, collectbls, more! 7734 Lochmere Terr. Edina

Multi-Fam Fundraiser Sale

Well maintained 952-545-1179

5/30-6/1; 9-4. Cloz, books furn, toys. 5701 W 66th St

Patio Furniture: Table, 4 chairs, chaise lounge, cushions. $151 612-710-4905

23290 Hwy 7 (Hwy 7 & 41) Excelsior www.oslcs.org

Rattan Sofa, Loveseat w/Ottoman & Rocker $575 651-454-6940 Weber Q220 Portable Gas Grill w/cart & access. $199/bo 952-898-5482

3270

Misc. Wanted

Our Savior Church

June 5 (5-8) - $5 Adlt Adm; June 6 (8-6); June 7 (9-3); June 8 (9-12) - $5 Bag Day

FARMINGTON 421 Ash St. May 30 – Jun. 1 8am-5pm Moving! Furn, frmd prints HH Bikes toys

5100

WANTED Old Stereo / Hifi equip.

Senior Rentals

Andy 651-329-0515

3280

Musical Instuments

Bundy Alto Saxophone, made in USA by Selmer. Exc. cond. $550. Call after 5pm. 952-835-7972

3500

APPLE VALLEY 14690 Guthrie Ave Sat. June 1, 8-4pm Family, Sale! Furn. Tools, Adult cloz. Lots of misc.! Apple Valley 456 Reflection Rd. 5/23 – 5/25, 23-24th 9-5p, 25th 9-1pm Furn, kids, mower, & HH APPLE VALLEY Huge Garage Sale! 12002 Safari Pass May 25-26 8-4pm

2620

Annual Spring Yard Sale

Meadow Creek Condominiums Annual Community Yard Sale

Sat, June 1 (8am - 4pm)

Look for the signs on 11 Ave So., Smetana Rd, Westbrooke Way, & Old Settlers Trail

N ATTENTIO SENIORS!

Sale will be held rain or shine!

Lakeville Huge Sale! Wed. May 29 – Sat. June 1, 86pm. Loads of Vintage items & antqs. Collectibles, coins, furniture, lots of HH items, jewelry, boxes of new beading supplies, new floral argmnts, Ertl diecast collectible banks, antq. Typewriter, wood bed frames & misc. No junk, no Kids stuff! Don't Miss! LV 16370 Harvard Dr. (1 mi. W. of Cedar off Griffon Trail) New Brighton: HUGE! Fundraiser for MS 5/31 & 6/1 (9-5) HH, cloz, toys, lots misc! 803 Torchwood Court Plymouth moving sale! 5/ 23-25, 9:30-5. 14086-53rd Av N. Furn, stove, HH misc. Robbinsdale Multi-Family Garage/Plant Sale 5/23-24 (8-6) 5/25 (8-12) 4548 Grimes Ave. No.

Savage – HUGE SALE! St Mary Magdalene Church

14225 Quentin Ave.

Nice variety of items! 5/30 (4-8); 5/31 (8-5); 6/1 (8-12) Sale in church, food & drinks

Shorewood A SALE NOT TO MISS! Thurs 5/30 (9-5); Fri 5/31 (9-1) 26600 Noble Rd (55331) St. Louis Park Sorenson N'brhd 10+ Sales 6/1 (8-2) Btwn Hwy 100 & Wooddale; Mtka Blvd & Lake

Long Lake: Annual Rummage Sale St. George Church June 6-7 Th 9a-8p; Fri 9a-1p. (Fri - $4/Bag)

133 N. Brown Rd 952-473-1247

3700

Leisure

3720

Boats, New & Used

Tree Service

7100

14' Jon Boat, 5 HP mtr & trl, many extras. $1195, Cash only. 952-831-6997

1978 18ft Crestliner, console steering, 50hp Force motor, trailer w/perm license Flooring replaced, new seats, 2 batteries & gas tanks $1850/BO 612 518-8384

Chrysler 17ft, fiberglass open bow-tri hull, Good Cond. *New price $875 612-825-6283

3900

3970

Agriculture/ Animals/Pets

5000

5200

Rentals Townhouse For Rent

Help Wanted/ Full Time

Burnsville: 1, 2 & 3 BD Townhomes - wash/dryer, attach gar., fireplace, central air, storage, dogs OK. $875-$1250. 952-746-5941

5600

Rooms For Rent

Wanted: Fem. N/S Roommate to share TH in AV. Shr kitch/BA/garage. $550 952-225-8568

5700

Storage

CR Spring STORAGE 6X 8 just $39 Outside starts at $29 crstoreandstorage@ yahoo.com 651-463-4343

6400

Apartments & Condos For Rent

Fgtn: 2 BR, garage avl. No pets. On site laundry. 612-670-4777

Central Station Supervisor & Operator Security Response Service Req'd flex in shift hrs, incl. Wknds. 1 yr call ctr & sup. Exp., computer & multiline phone skills & ability to multi task. Bkgrd check incl. Drug test, criminal hist, and verifiable edu. Full benefit pkg. $13-$14.50 /hr DOE. Cover letter/ resume to jfolden@ hannonsecurity.com

CUSTOMER SERVICE AUTOMOTIVE TOOL Bloomington Co seeks exp individual to work as part of our team. Phone & counter sales. Strong comm skills. Automotive background preferred. Great benefits. Fax or e-mail resume 952-881-6480 hloyd3@gmail.com

Diesel Mechanic Foreman: Great Pay / Benefits. APPLY www. 7000 Real Estate durhamschoolservices.com or stop by 3100 West Hwy Camper/Lot for Sale! 13 Burnsville, MN 55337 1987 38' camper, 70'x50' lot, Hwy 169, Mille Lacs Lake $11,900 651-683-0855 DRIVERS: CDL-A Route Delivery. MBM in We buy Houses! Burnsville, MN. 3-5 day Any area, any condition. routes, excellent pay/benCash or terms. 612-719-4414 efits. $57K 1st yr, $62K after 1st yr. Apply online: www.MBMcareers.com. Apartments 252-450-4443

7400

& Condos For Sale

1 BR $625 800 SF, DW, AC, large balcony, Garage $40mo Brookside Apartments 16829 Toronto Ave. SE, Prior Lake MN 612-824-7554

8100

Manufactured Homes

Burnsville: Rambush Estates

1340 sq ft Manuf. Home One level living. Garden tub in master bath. W/D in home. $1285/mo.

952-890-8440

9050

RN NEEDED

Knowledge of home health care. Very PT work, flexible. Pay rate $22/hr. My Brothers' Keeper Please fax resume attn: Gay

(952) 496-0157

Email: gdeleeuw@ 136mbk.com

9100

DRIVER POSITION LAKEVILLE, MN WSC is looking for a Seasonal Professional Class A driver. To be eligible for the driver position the candidate must possess a clean motor vehicle report, Class A CDL license is required, 100K miles of previous experience. Daily deliveries allow you to be home most nights and weekends. Strong customer service skills with a teamwork mentality is required. Wausau Supply Company is an equal opportunity employer. If you are interested, please send cover letter and resume to: opsmanager06@ wausausupply.com or mail to: Wausau Supply Company 21700 Highview Ave Lakeville, MN 55044

4100

Family Care

Drivers: CDL-A. Owner Op's. St. Paul Location. Rates up to $1.52 plus fuel surcharge. Tractor Lease purchase options, direct deposit, plate program, and many more options. 888-992-5609

Dual Position Class B CDL Driver & Concrete Manufacturer Competitive Wages! FULL BENEFITS For more information Call (800) 672-0709 Monday thru Friday 8 am - 4 pm To Apply Submit resume to:

Email: hr@brown-wilbert.com or FAX: (651) 842-3493 or Mail to: Brown-Wilbert, Inc. 2280 N. Hamline Avenue St. Paul, MN 55113

WANTED Full-time Class A Drivers Home Every Night • EAGAN service area • Starting Wage $18.00 Class A Drivers to make pick up and deliveries in the twin cities area. No OTR • Weekends off • Paid Time Off Lift gates • Trucks pre-loaded • Repeat customers

To inquire, stop by our Eagan terminal, 2750 Lexington Ave S, Eagan Call 1-800-521-0287 or Apply Today Online at www.shipcc.com

Help Wanted/ Full Time

%7' $ '\QDPLF &RPSDQ\

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Child Care

Farmington Fun Loving! Lic'd. Ages 2+. Preschool prog. Theme days. $50 Off 1st Week Special! Kelly 651-460-4226

5100

Apartments

651-463-2511

9100

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Commercial Properties Space

Help Wanted/ Full Time

Great Service Affordable Prices 3970

Pets

3970

Pets

Bella is from a farm!

Bella is a dog rescued from a farm. She is 4 yr old and about 22 lbs. She is great with kids and a cuddle bug and not player. A quiet dog and great walker too! She had a cancerous lump removed 6 months ago and guess what? She was healed! Her lymph nodes have no signs! Call Barb at 651-7794148 if you can give her a home! $100. See her and all other dogs at www.last-hope.org or come to the adoption on Saturday at Apple Valley Petco to see many many more! Check out our website at www.last-hope.org

Last Hope, Inc. (651) 463-8747

End Dump Drivers - Farmington, Must have Class A CDL, current health card, clean driving record, must pass drug test,local 5-6dys a wk 651-423-5388 Entry Level Production 1st Shift Machine Operators 3rd Shift Lakeville area Call 952-303-3042

Schwieters Companies is hiring entry level to experienced finish carpenters. Top Benefits & Pay: tools/medical/dental/401k majority of work on west & south side of metro area. Not required to go to office. Please call 612-328-3140 to schedule an interview. www.finishcarpenters.com

Food Manufacturing

Entry level positions available 1st and 2nd shifts $8-$10 hour. Open House EVERY Wednesday 9-3. No Appt Necessary. Bloomington, Chaska and New Hope office. Call 952-924-9000 for more information.

Full Time Receptionist

Midwest Veterinary Supply has an opening for a full time Receptionist. Duties to include answering phones, greeting visitors, and scanning documents. Please apply online at http://www.candidatelink.com/MidwestVeterinarySupply

Light Duty Lube Tech Faribault. Full-time. ________________________ 2- Automotive Technicians Faribault. Full-time. 2 years experience & ASE certified preferred. Harry Brown's GM & Chrysler. Salary commensurate with experience & training. Full benefits eligible including health insurance, 401k & paid vacation. Clean driving record required. Please submit resume or application to: Roger Jerrow, Service Manager jobs@harrybrowns.com

North American Title Company is currently

seeking a Commercial Real Estate Closer for land acquisition & commercial building transactions. If interested,send resumes to: koakes@nat.com.

Now Hiring! Brake Press Setup Mig & Tig Welders Up to $20/hr 651-774-9675

Now Hiring!

Warehouse/ Packaging/Assembly

Senior Rentals

Spruce Place Senior

7100

Please apply within or online to: 3OHDVH DSSO\ ZLWKLQ RU RQOLQH WR +XPDQ 5HVRXUFHV Human Resources Department &HGDU $YH 21673 Cedar Ave. /DNHYLOOH 01 Lakeville, MN 55044 3KRQH Phone: 218-847-4446 Fax: 218-847-4448 )D[ www.btdmfg.com ZZZ EWGPIJ FRP

BLACK HORSE CARRIERS has openings in Eagan, MN. Dedicated Regional route with 2 layovers per week - 4 day work week. Dedicated Local route home daily - 5 day work week. Average $1000 plus per week. These are full-time positions that come with full Benefits, 401K and paid vacation. We also have part time work available. If you have 3 yrs. Exp. and a Class A CDL with a clean MVR. Call 708-535-9961 to schedule an interview or email: dan.jones@ blackhorsecarriers.com EOE. Drug Testing is a condition of employment

Truth Hardware, North America’s leader in designing and manufacturing of quality operating hardware for windows, patio doors, and skylights is looking to fill several key positions. • Tool Room Lead, 2nd shift. Two year technical degree in the field of tool and die. Supervisory or lead experience preferred. • Truck Driver, 3rd shift. Class A license and a good driving record required. • Manufacturing Engineer. Degreed Engineer with experience in coating and paint processes. • Assembly Supervisor, 2nd shift. Must have prior supervisory experience in a manufacturing setting. • Maintenance Mechanic, 2nd shift. Involves the installation, maintenance and repair of company machinery, equipment, and facilities. Truth Hardware is growing and expanding. We are looking for talented individuals to join our team. We offer a team environment, competitive salary, and comprehensive benefits. For consideration, please send a cover letter and resume to careers@truth.com and reference the job title when applying.

Join our professional sales team and be proud of the products you represent. Sun Newspapers has an immediate opening for an inside sales account executive at our Eden Prairie location. • Be part of a winning team • Enjoy selling once again • Thrive in a setting where you can succeed • Take advantage of great benefits • Fun/Professional workplace If you are organized, proficient on a computer, have exceptional phone skills and a desire to learn, you have found your next career. Send your resume to: Pam Miller at pam.miller@ecm-inc.com

9100

Help Wanted/ Full Time

McLane Minnesota, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Berkshire-Hathaway, is currently seeking qualified candidates to join our team! McLane, a wholesale grocery distributor, has been in business for over 100 years and continues to grow each year! Our Minnesota location has recently added to our portfolio of outstanding customers and must fill the following positions immediately. Full Case Grocery Selectors M-F 7:30 am start $13.30/hr Selectors (Candy/GMP) M-F 6:00 am start $11.25/hr Cooler/Freezer selectors- M-F 5:30 am start $.35 extra premium/hr We are seeking candidates with a good work history and a great attendance record. Must pass drug test, physical screening and background check. Some positions require additional skills. If you are interested in joining the McLane Team please email or fax your resume, or stop in to fill out an application.

Finish Carpenters

4000

Help Wanted/ Full Time

9100

Class A CDL

Inside Sales Account Executive Senior Discounts

Help Wanted/ Full Time

LAKEVILLE

Employment Health Care

9100

Drivers Da-ran Inc. is a small family ownded OTR trucking company lloking for a few good drives. The gass may be greener. Call or email John at 612-710-9155 john@daraninc.com

Boxer Puppies: AKC Reg. born March 4. Many colors. Tails/dews/shots/vet ck'd, $500. 651-399-8949

Perfect for professional office, small business office, artist or craft studio. Three large rooms: 557 sq.ft., 609 sq.ft.,& 817 sq.ft. $550 - $800/room or $1950 for all 3. Convenient St. Louis Park location (corner of Hwy 100 & Minnetonka Blvd) Call:952-926-1646

Tree Service

9100

Pets

Office Space for Rent

2620

Child Care

LV: Lic. Daycare All Ages, Activities, Food Prog. 21+ Years Exp. 952-431-3826

9000

2 BRs available Commercial Properties Space

4100

th

Garage Sales

Apple Valley 13058 Herald Ct. 5/30, 31 & 6/1, 8-6pm. Antqs, furn, all cloz, HH, Everything goes!

Hopkins

ROSEMOUNT Bloomfield Vineyards Garage Sale Autumnwood Trail/Way (Off 42 & Auburn - follow signs) Burnsville May 30 & 31 8am-5pm June Perennial/Garage Sale! 5/22- 5/24th 9am. Aspen & 1 8am-12p Collectible dolls, th 130 Furn, HH, cloz, misc. Dept 56 Village HH, furn.,

QN. PILLOWTOP SET

3260

Excelsior May 30-31 & June 1 Thur & Fri (8-5); Sat (9-12); Gift & Scrapbook items, furn., HH, TOOLS & misc! Cash only. 4021 & 4041 Leslee Curve

All shifts. Entry level to skilled positions available. Stop into one of our branches (Bloomington, New Hope or Chaska) Wednesdays From 9-3 for our job fairs. Call (952)924-9000 for more info. OTR Flatbed Driver. Home most weekends. Late model equipment. Full benefits. Drivers can take their truck home. Allow one small pet. Commercial Transload of MN, Fridley. Contact Pete: psandmann@ctm-truck .com or 763-571-9508 Pizza Man Burnsville / Apple Valley & Savage •Shift Managers •Kitchen Crew •Front Counter/ Phones •Delivery Drivers •Etc. FT & PT positions. Both day & night shifts. Apply in person today! Burnsville / Apple Valley Pizza Man, 13610 County Road 11, Burnsville MN 55337. 952-953-4548 Savage Pizza Man, 4381 West Highway 13, Savage MN 55378. 952-894-2202

McLane Minnesota 1111 5th Street West Northfield, MN 55057 Fax (507) 664-3042 mnhr@mclaneco.com EOE/M/F/D Shop/Yard Worker FT Mon-Fri. Apply at: U Pull R Parts Co. 2985 160th St. W. Rosemount 55068 651-322-1800

Teller

Fidelity Bank, a commercial bank in Edina that focuses on relationships not sales quotas, is seeking a teller that is an enthusiastic self-starter with previous banking experience and demonstrated customer service skills. $13$14/hr DOQ. High school diploma and one year banking experience, or equiv. Required. Hours will rotate 7:15-3:45 and 9:45-6:15 and one Sat. per month 9-12. Must pass criminal and credit background checks. Send resume to hr@fidelitybankmn.com No phone calls please. EEO Workers- FT- labor jobs. Work includes: demo, driving, construction, general labor,& other. Start point: Elko New Market & will take co. trcks to jobs sites. Must have at least class C drivers license. Class A license better pay w/possibility of driving trks. Hrs change daily depending on job. Some nght wrk 40 hr + wks. Call: 612-703-2146 8 am to 5 pm, M-Fri. for more info. or interview

Sales

HOME IMPROVEMENTS $1,000 Hiring Bonus!! Custom Remodelers is a Twin City based multi-million dollar home improvement company. Due to an over abundance of leads, we are in need of 2 more sales people for our siding and window divisions. QualiďŹ cations: • Willingness to learn • Highly motivated • Career oriented • Sales experience preferred but not required. We offer: • QualiďŹ ed appointments • Paid training • Trip incentives • $100K potential If you are seeking a change to a strong, reputable company, Call Mike Ryan at 651-784-2646

9200

Help Wanted/ Part Time

BP Station in Eagan looking for part-time cashiers. 2-10 p.m. 2-3 days per week & e/o weekend. Will train. 651-452-0988 FBG Service Corporation Looking for - Part-Time Office Cleaners -$10-$12/Hr Contact: brush@ fbgservices.com or Call 888-235-3353

9100

Help Wanted/ Full Time

Dispatch/OfďŹ ce Burnsville Location Full-time, Mon-Thur 3pm-10pm & Sundays 8am8pm. $13/hr. Must be able to cover other shifts if needed, including days, holidays, Fridays and Saturdays. Must be able to work on your own and with a team. Must be reliable with reliable transportation. Must be able to multi-task in a fastpaced environment with accuracy. Must have excellent handwriting and excellent customer service skills. Must be able to pass a drug screening and background check.

Only serious applicants should call. Please call 612-861-6425.

IMMEDIATE NEED! *BURNSVILLE BRANCH*

ALL experience levels encouraged to apply! General Laborers • Lawn Care Specialists Hourly+ x 1/2 +Comm. Outside Sales Representative Salary + Comm. Benefits: Full Time/Paid Training & benefits you’d expect from the U.S. Industry Leader! Required to pass: Drug screen, background & motor vehicle record checks. APPLY TODAY! Call Christy to schedule an interview at 612-490-5849 or contact her via email at: christyswecker@ trugreenmail.com or apply online at www.jobs.trugreen.com AA/EOE/M/F/V/D


SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley May 24, 2013 17A Help Wanted/ Part Time

9200

9200

Assistant Property Manager Responsible, under the direction of the Property Manager, for all phases of the property operations, and to act as main point of contact in the absence of the Property Manager. Performs a variety of administrative/clerical duties and has primary responsibility for the collection and post of all income due to the property. Demonstrates knowledge of Fair Housing and other legal issues and local ordinances as they affect the property's operations. (p.gingrich@aol.com) Media Relations, Inc. seeking PT New Business Development Team Member. $14 an hour. Flexible hrs. Call Cynde at 612-798-7218 careers.publicity.com

Help Wanted/ Part Time

Medical clinic cleaningPT- evenings- immediately available in Apple Valley or Savage. Shfts after 5:00 PM, 3-4 hrs per night Mon.-Fri, with add. Sat. hrs for Apple Valley location. $10.00 per hr and all training and cleaning supplies and equip. provided. Wonderful 2nd job! Must be 18 or older.Apply online at: www.bweclean.com or: envirotechclean.com

Part-time Maintenance

Position at Sr. Co-op. Experience in building maintenance and repair. Contact Manager at 952-894-6524 or rcboffice@comcast.net

Trinity Campus NAR:

Nights - Evenings We are seeking nursing assistants to serve at our senior campus. Duties include assisting residents with their daily grooming, dining needs, ambulating and transferring residents. Candidates must be on the Minnesota Registry. Trinity, a five-star rated facility, offers an outstanding compensation package with scheduled pay increases and a fun & rewarding work place! Apply online: www.sfhs.org/employment EEO/AA

Or at: TRINITY CAMPUS 3410 213th Street West Farmington, MN 55024

PT CAREGIVERS 24 Hour Sleepover 8 am Friday to 8 am Saturday

To care for 5 elderly adults in Burnsville. $170 per shift

9250

Help Wanted/ Full & Part Time

9999

Castle Rock Tree Service – Needed FT &

PT truck driver. Full time labor & equipment operator. Call: 651-463-2268.

PT/FT LPN/CNA

12 Hr Shifts, Nights. The Lodge on Summit Oaks in Burnsville, an assisted living specializing in end of life care. Competitive wages, benefits, meals provided if you are a compassionate, individual with a strong work ethic, please call to schedule an interview. Jackie 952-435-6828

ADOPTION- A loving alternative to unplanned pregnancy. You chose the family for your child. Receive pictures/info of waiting/approved couples. Living expense assistance. 1-866236-7638 Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in over 10 million households in North America's best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 750 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Avenue at 888-486-2466 or go to www.classifiedavenue.net

Automotive

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Vehicles

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9810

Junkers & Repairable Wanted

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HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT

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Help Wanted/ Full & Part Time

TRANSPORTATION YRC Freight a nationwide LTL transportation company, has immediate opportunities available for: Enhancing the quality of human life through the provision of exceptional healthcare services

Clinic RN (Ref. #750) (FamilyHealth Medical Clinics) Casual Call. Current RN licensure in Minnesota, current BLS/CPR, and valid driver’s license.

• Full & Part time Dockworkers • Full Time Local & Road Drivers • Part time Office Clerk We offer a competitive salary, benefits package for full time positions & dynamic career growth Opportunities. Interested candidates must apply on-line at www.yrcw.com/careers

YRC Freight 12400 DuPont Avenue South Burnsville MN 55337

Clinic CMA/LPN (Ref. #774/731) (FamilyHealth Medical Clinics) .85 FTE (68hrs/2wks) (#774). Casual Call (#731). Current CMA certification or LPN licensure, current BLS/CPR certification required, and valid driver’s license.

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Please visit www.northfieldhospital.org for further details and to complete an online application! Northfield Hospital & Clinics is an Equal Opportunity Employer

EOE

9810

Junkers & Repairable Wanted

9810

Junkers & Repairable Wanted

WE BUY AND TOW UNWANTED & WRECKED VEHICLES MN Licensed Dealer ~ Call for Quote

651-322-1800

EXT. 2

www.upullrparts.com

classifieds

Advertise in Sun•Thisweek Newspapers and reach 62,000 homes every Friday!

TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD PLEASE FILL OUT THIS FORM COMPLETELY Note: Newsprint does not fax legibly, you must fax a photocopy of the completed order form below. Please use this order form when placing your Classified ads.

• Use the grid below to write your ad. • Please print completely and legibly to ensure the ad is published correctly.

• Punctuate and space the ad copy properly. • Include area code with phone number. • 3 line minimum

Please fill out completely.

Incomplete forms may not run.

Amount enclosed: $________________________ Classification: ___________________________ Date of Publication: _________________ Credit Card Info: ■ VISA ■ MasterCard ■ Discover ■ American Express Card # ____________________________________ Exp. Date __________________CID #__________ Name: _______________________________________________________________________ Address: _____________________________________________________________________

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

City: _______________________________________________ Zip _____________________ Phone: ________________________________

• Deadline to submit ads is 12 p.m. Wednesday • Cost is $48 for the first 3 lines and $10 each additional line Mail order form to: Sun•Thisweek Classifieds, 15322 Galaxie Ave., Ste. 219 • Apple Valley, MN 55124 OR 10917 Valley View Road • Eden Prairie, MN 55344 Or fax order form to: 952-846-2010 or 952-941-5431


18A May 24, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley

theater and arts calendar To submit items for the Arts Calendar, email: darcy. odden@ecm-inc.com.

Rhythm & Words Family Music and Book Festival, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, June 8, at Burnsville Performing Auditions Arts Center, 12600 Nicollet “Arsenic & Old Lace� Ave. For children ages 10 and auditions for the Prior Lake younger and their parents. Players fall 2013 production, Free. 6:30-9 p.m. Monday, June 10, and Wednesday, June 12, Exhibits at Twin Oaks Middle School, Children’s Art Festival, 15860 Fish Point Road SE, featuring art by District 191 Prior Lake. Those auditioning elementary students, May 9 should prepare a short come- to June 8, Burnsville Performdic monologue and will also ing Arts Center, 12600 Nicolread from the script. Auditions let Ave., Burnsville. Informaare first-come, first-served; tion: 952-895-4685. no appointments necessary. Information: www.plplayers. Workshops/classes/other org. Introduction to Digital Photography, 10 a.m. to Books noon, Saturday, June 8, CaBook signing by JoAnn poni Art Park, Eagan. Ages Deveny, author of “When 10 and older; youth under 15 Bluebirds Fly: Losing a Child, must be accompanied by an Living with Hope,� 1-3 p.m. adult. Cost: $5. Information: Saturday, June 1, at Barnes www.caponiartpark.org/pro& Noble, 14880 Florence Trail, grams/photoprogram. Apple Valley. Zumin’ 4 Christ for women, 9:30-10:30 a.m. June 11, Dance 13, 18, 20, 25, 27. Cost: $30. Studio 4 Dancers recital, (Girls ages 6 and up free with 3 and 6 p.m. Saturday, June 1 paying adult.) Child care for ($12.50), and noon and 6 p.m. $2 a child could be provided, Sunday, June 2 ($15 adults, if needed. Cross of Christ $12.50 ages 12 and younger), Community Church, 8748 Burnsville Performing Arts 210th St. W., Lakeville. InforCenter, 12600 Nicollet Ave. mation: Karin at berrygood2@ Tickets available at the box charter.net. office and Ticketmaster at God’s Praising Princess 800-982-2787, Ticketmaster. Camp, June 25-27, 2-3:15 com. p.m. (ages 3-5, $40), 3:305:30 p.m. (ages 6-10, $60). Events/festivals Cross of Christ Community I Love Burnsville Week, Church, 8748 210th St. W., June 1-8. Information: www. Lakeville. Information: Karin ci. bur nsville.mn .us/ind e x. at berrygood2@charter.net. aspx?NID=738. MacPhail Center for Mu-

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sic offers summer camps for students ages 3-18. Information: www.macphail.org or 612-321-0100. Teen Poetry Jam/Rap Battle, 4-5 p.m. the first Tuesday of each month at Apple Valley Teen Center, 14255 Johnny Cake Ridge Road, Apple Valley, 952-953-2385. Ages 12-18. Adult painting open studio, 9 a.m. to noon Fridays at the Eagan Art House, 3981 Lexington Ave. S. Fee is $5 per session. Information: 651675-5521. Teens Express Yourself with Paint, 5-7 p.m. Mondays at Brushworks School of Art in Burnsville, www.BrushworksSchoolofArt.com, 651214-4732. Drama/theater classes for ages 4 and up at River Ridge Arts Building, Burnsville, 952-736-3644. Show Biz Kids Theater Class for children with special needs (ASD/DCD programs), In the Company of Kids 13710 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville, 952736-3644. Broadway Kids Dance and Theater Program for all ages and abilities, In the Company of Kids, 13710 Nicollet Ave., Burnsville (Colonial Shopping Center), 952-7363644. Join other 55-plus adults at the Eagan Art House to create beaded jewelry. The Jewelry Club meets on the third Friday of each month from 1-3 p.m. Information: 651-675-5500. Soy candle making classes held weekly in Eagan near 55 and Yankee Doodle. Call Jamie at 651-315-4849 for dates and times. $10 per person. Presented by Making Scents in Minnesota. Country line dance classes held for intermediates Mondays 1:30-4 p.m. at Rambling River Center, 325 Oak St., Farmington, $5 per class. Call Marilyn 651-463-7833. Country line dance classes on Wednesdays at the Lakeville Senior Center, 20110 Holyoke Ave. Beginners, 9-10 a.m.; Intermediate, 10 a.m. to noon. $5 per class. Call Marilyn 651-463-7833. The Lakeville Area Arts Center offers arts classes for all ages, www.lakevillemn.gov, 952-985-4640. Rosemount History Book Club meets 6:30-8 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month at the Robert Trail Library. Information: John Loch, 952-255-8545 or jjloch@charter.net.

Local author’s first love: His hometown ‘Growing Up on the Mississippi’ pays homage to small-town life by Andrew Miller SUN THISWEEK DAKOTA COUNTY TRIBUNE

Kent Stever describes his first book as a “joyous autobiography.� “Growing Up on the Mississippi,� set for release in June, brings together stories from Stever’s youth in the late 1940s and early 1950s in Winona, offering readers a Kent Stever window into a simpler era filled with paper routes, traveling circuses and soap opera-like pro wrestling events. “I really had a great experience growing up in Winona,� said Stever, a retired educator who lives near Lake Marion in Lakeville. “It was a different time – we had parents who lived through the Depression, parents who just came out of World War II. You had

a sense of independence, you had opportunity, and there was purpose.� Several of the stories in “Growing Up on the Mississippi� first appeared in the Winona Post newspaper; others have appeared in Minnesota Moments magazine, and one appeared in book form in the Chicken Soup for the Soul anthology series. Stever spent 35 years in the Bloomington school district – first as a math teacher, then as a high school principal and later as director of research and evaluation – before retiring 13 years ago. He continues to substitute teach in the Lakeville school district. He says he first caught the writing bug while sitting through endless administrative meetings during his years as a school principal. “There was so much discussion, so much tedium, that I started writing letters to my kids during

Youth camp openings Several openings remain in the summer youth day camps scheduled at Dakota City Heritage Village in Farmington. Registration must be made by June 10. The day camps will run 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays. One session of Teen Volunteer Camp is planned along with three sessions of Apprentice

Day Camp. The Teen Volunteer Camp, offered to youth 13 and older who would like to volunteer in Dakota City, is scheduled for June 17-20. The camp will focus on training and hands-on activities youth will need to volunteer during the Apprentice Day Camps, the Dakota County Fair and other events. Children ages 6-12 can attend Apprentice Day Camp, which is offered

The 19th annual Eagan Art Fest will be 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, June 29, and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, June 30, at Central Park, 1501 Central Parkway, Eagan. The free, familyfriendly, juried art show will celebrate “Art and Nature� and will include entertainment and children’s activities. Visit www.eaganartfestival.org for information.

‘Weird Al’ Yankovic

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War Horse Orpheum Theatre

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To submit an announcement Forms for birth, engagement, wedding, anniversary and obituaries announcements are available at our office and online at http://sunthisweek.com (click on “Announcements� and then “Send Announcement�). Completed forms may be e-mailed to class.thisweek@ecm-inc.com or mailed to Sun Thisweek Newspapers, 15322 Galaxie Ave., Suite 219, Apple Valley, MN 55124. If you are submitting a photograph along with your announcement, please only submit photographs for which you have the right to permit Sun Thisweek Newspapers to use and publish. Deadline for announcements is 4 p.m. Tuesday. A fee of $50 will be charged for the first 5 inches and $10 per inch thereafter. They will run in all editions of Sun Thisweek Newspapers. Photos may be picked up at the office within 60 days or returned by mail if a self-addressed, stamped envelope is provided.

Wednesday, June 12 7:30pm*

Limited Supply! While supplies last!* War Horse is the powerful story of young Albert’s beloved horse, Joey, who has been enlisted to fight for the English in World War I. Joey is caught in enemy crossfire and ends up serving both sides of the war before landing in no man’s land. Along with War Horse’s five Tony nominations (for Best Play, Best Direction of a Play, Best Set Design for a Play, Best Scenic Design of a Play, Best Lighting Design of a Play, and Best Sound Design of a Play), Handspring Puppet Company received a Special Tony AwardŽ for their integral puppet design for the production.

While supplies last. No refunds allowed with promotion. Not valid with other offers. Not valid on renewals. Offer ends May 31, 2013. Tickets will be mailed once payment is processed. Tickets may be picked up in person at our Eden Prairie Office ONLY. 10917 Valley View Road | Eden Prairie

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Horse

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June 24-27, July 15-18 and July 22-25. They will experience life in the early 1900s by helping with chores, participating in a country school day and doing hands-on activities from that time period. They also will learn what it was like to be an immigrant in 1900. Camp cost is $125. Campers should bring their own lunch and a beverage each day. Families must furnish their own transportation to Dakota City, located at 4008 220th St. W., on the fairgrounds in Farmington. To register or for more information, visit www. dakotacity.org or call 651-460-8050.

Eagan Art Festival

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Email Andrew Miller at andrew.miller@ecm-inc.com.

theater and arts briefs

those meetings,� he recounted. “I got to the point where I was feeling comfortable as a writer, and as time went on I started to do a couple stories.� Those first forays into writing eventually gave way to the 200-plus pages of stories that fill “Growing Up on the Mississippi,� which includes capsule histories of different aspects of small-town life – bowling, circuses, taxi cabs – that Stever researched using Winona newspaper archives. “Growing Up on the Mississippi� is available through Amazon.com.

Pop satirist “Weird Al� Yankovic is bringing his unique style of musical humor to the stage when The Alpocalypse Tour stops at the Mystic Lake Showroom in Prior Lake at 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3. Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. May 25. Prices are $31 and $39. Visit mysticlake.com or call 952-445-9000 for more information.

Valleyfair military special Valleyfair will honor hometown heroes this season with Military Appreciation Days – Memorial Day weekend, May 24-27, and the Fourth of July holiday, July 4-7. Members of the armed service, active or veteran, will receive one free regular admission ticket into Valleyfair. Anytime during the 2013 season through Oct. 27, members of the military will be able to purchase discount admission tickets for members of their immediate family (maximum of six) at a military discount price of $29.50. A valid military ID must be presented at any Valleyfair ticket booth to receive the offer.


SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley May 24, 2013 19A

Thisweekend The fun lasts all summer long at Caponi Art Park

family calendar To submit items for the Family Calendar, email: darcy.odden@ecm-inc.com. Saturday, May 25 Patio installation seminar, 9 a.m., Patio Town, 2801 Highway 13 W., Burnsville. Free. Information: 952-8944400. Retaining walls seminar, 10:30 a.m., Patio Town, 2801 Highway 13 W., Burnsville. Free. Information: 952-8944400. Monday, May 27 Memorial Day observance, Rosemount Veterans Memorial, Central Park, Rosemount. Music by the “Red Bull” Band, 8:45 a.m. Memorial program, 9 a.m. Cemetery visits: 10-11:40 a.m. Free lunch will follow the program at the Rosemount American Legion. Memorial Day ceremony, 9:30-10:30 a.m., Bicentennial Garden, Burnsville. Hosted by the Sweet Sioux Garden Club. Refreshments to follow at City Hall from 10:30 a.m. to noon. Memorial Day service, 10 a.m., Corinthian Cemetery, Empire Township. Memorial Day observance, 11 a.m., Veteran’s Park, Apple Valley. Hosted by American Legion Post 1776 Club. Bring lawn chairs. Information: Lloyd Cybart at 651332-2352. Memorial Day program, 12:30 p.m., Lakeville Veterans Memorial, Aronson Park, 8250 202nd St., Lakeville. Hosted by VFW Post 210 and American Legion Post 44. Cemetery visits: 8 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Memorial Day program, 2 p.m., Eagan Tribute Plaza in Central Park, Eagan. Saturday, June 1 Plant sale by the Master Gardeners of Dakota County, 9 a.m. to noon, University of Minnesota Outreach, Research and Education Park, 1605 W. 160th St., Rosemount. Information: www.dakotamastergardeners.org. Introduction to Birdwatching, 9-11 a.m., Lebanon Hills Regional Park, Eagan. Adults. Cost: $10. Registration required at www.co.dakota.mn.us/parks. Course No. 4399. Wildflower Walk, 2-4 p.m., Spring Lake Park Reserve, Hastings. Adults. Cost: $10.

and Chorale on July 14; Mexican folk dancers Los Alegres Bailadores on Aug. 4; and opera from Mixed Precipitation on Aug. 18. Guests at the Summer Performance Series are encouraged to bring lawn chairs or blankets

to spread on the outdoors amphitheater’s grassy slopes. Admission is free with a $5 suggested donation. The full schedules for both summer series are at www.caponiartpark. org. —Andrew Miller

8 th ANNUA ANNUAL

Performers with traditional Mexican dance troupe Ketzal Coatlicue will present “Dance to the Four Winds” as part of Caponi Art Park’s Family Fun Tuesdays series in August. (Photo submitted)

5 - 10 pm

o n Bridge Square

All 37 of Shakespeare’s plays will be delivered in under 100 minutes in the comical “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)” on June 30 at Caponi Art Park. (Photo submitted)

800-658-2548

ing some levity to its June 30 event with “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged),” which will see three actors performing all 37 of Shakespeare’s works in under 100 minutes. Other events in Summer Performance Series are “Sound and Place: Minnesota” on July 7, which will have guests strolling through the park as musicians flit in and out of the woods performing music by California composer Hugh Livingston; a concert by the Dakota Valley Summer Pops Orchestra

THURSDAY May 30th

V VisitingNorthfield.com

Music, dance, theater and even reptiles are coming to Caponi Art Park this summer. The art park at 1220 Diffley Road in Eagan is offering a host of entertaining events this June, July and August through its annual Family Fun Tuesdays and Summer Performance Series. Family Fun Tuesdays, held weekly in the park’s sculpture garden, kicks off June 4 with “Jump, Sing and Explore” presented by MacPhail Center for Music, which will see early childhood music specialists leading kids in nature-themed arts activities. Other June events for Family Fun Tuesdays include “Wonders of Science: Sound with the Science Museum of Minnesota” (June 11), “Stories from the Laughing Chair with Jerry Blue” (June 18), and “Reptiles and Amphibians from the Dodge Nature Center” (June 25). All the Family Fun Tuesdays activities run from 10-11 a.m. and admission is free with a $4 per person suggested donation. The Summer Performance Series, held on Sunday evenings in Caponi’s Theater in the Woods outdoor amphitheater, opens June 23 with a family pops concert by Twin Citiesbased chamber orchestra Minnesota Sinfonia. The art park is bring-

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20A May 24, 2013 SUN THISWEEK - Apple Valley

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J.A.X. of Benson Sale #181

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Goodyear Red Box Semi truck includes 22 NASCAR & Hot Wheels cars, Electric pinball table top game, Victorian Sessions Grand Father Clock, Glass footed Piano stool, Sterling Silver Rings, Brass & vintage art décor, Garden Tiller, Collectible Twins baseball cards, Mosquito magnets, Vintage tractor seats and tool boxes. Log onto www.K-BID.com

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lease join the Matula Family & Friends in a benefit to support

THE “MANDY MATULA FUND” & EFFORT TO BRING HER HOME

14

MONDAY, JUNE 3RD | 5:00PM-9:00PM Eden Prairie Brunswick Zone XL 12200 Singletree Lane, Eden Prairie

$5 suggested donation at the door Silent Auction, Live Music by the Mark Miller Band, Bowling ($1/game), Lazer Tag ($1/game), Pool, Food Provided, Cash Bar. All funds raised will go directly to support this effort! Donations can also be made to the “Finding Mandy Matula Fund” at Wells Fargo Bank. If you or your business want to donate items they can be dropped off at Eden Prairie Brunswick Zone XL (please ask to leave with mgmt staff) or with Christy Schively: (952) 946-1127 | cmschively@msn.com |17690 Hackberry Crt, Eden Prairie

Please RSVP at www.mandymatulafundraiser.com RSVPs are not required, but will allow us to get a better count to anticipate food, etc.

As many of you know, Mandy Matula, a young vibrant 24 yr old Eden Prairie woman has been missing since 5/1/13. Search efforts by our local & statewide police forces, family, friends & community will continue. We will not stop until Mandy comes home! It is incredible how many want to help! Mandy has brought so much to our community and affected countless lives. To this point, it has been a truly inspirational effort by so many. It needs to continue until we bring Mandy home! We could only hope that if this happened to our family, people would respond the same way! No one knows how long it will take to find her or what needs to be done to support the outcome. Let’s do this NOW!

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!


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