Shoreview Press

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Press Publications 4779 Bloom Avenue White Bear Lake, MN 55110 CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED John W. Traeger Insurance Agency, Inc. Servicing Our Communities Since 1951

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TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2016

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VOL. 19 NO. 17 www.shoreviewpress.com $1.00

POLLING: New location for 6th precinct PAGE 3

Muslim speaks on peace and kindness BY SARA MARIE MOORE EDITOR

SUBMITTED

The 407th Civil Affairs Army Reserve Unit of Arden Hills recently recognized Shoreview community member Bob Schirm for his volunteer efforts with a plaque. Lieutenant Colonel Civil Affairs Battalion Cmdr. James Carmichael and Family Readiness Group Leader Kimberly Wachter presented the award.

Volunteer military supporter honored by local unit BY SARA MARIE MOORE EDITOR

SHOREVIEW — Bob Schirm has spent the last decade supporting troops from the Shoreview and Arden Hills area and is now retiring from his volunteer service. It all began when Schirm’s son Tim joined the National Guard as a junior in high school. In 1999, he watched his son go off to boot camp one week after he graduated from high school. Watching his son, Schirm came face to face once again with his years in the Vietnam War as a Naval Air member. He had moved on from that era of his life. “I just closed the chapter on that and moved on,” he said. “I didn’t want to tie my identity to that all my life.” In 2004, during Tim’s last two months of his sixyear commitment to the military, his unit, the 407th Civil Affairs Army Reserve of Arden Hills, was given orders to deploy to Baghdad. Schirm decided he had to deal with difficulties he had faced being in the Vietnam War. And he wanted to be there for

his son as a support. When Bob Cottingham, head pastor of North Heights Lutheran in Arden Hills where Schirm attends, approached him with the idea of starting a ministry to support military families, Schirm jumped on it. He and another church member, Army Chaplain John Morris, took an active part in getting the Military Care Ministry rolling. The ministry sent care packages to deployed church members, offered support groups and honored their service. When Tim came home in November 2005, there was a two-day military debriefing held for soldiers at a vacant Walmart in Marshall. Most of the issues presented applied to married soldiers. The Schirms recognized there was a need for more support of single soldiers and Morris asked them if they would lead a workshop for them. The father and son duo ended up leading more than 40 workshops for single soldiers and parents of single soldiers. Schirm learned fi rsthand the challenges faced by returning soldiers. SEE MILITARY SUPPORTER, PAGE 12

g ancin w n i F “0% e on Ne bl Availa ipment” Equ

MAHTOMEDI — Shah Khan, president of the Islamic Center of Minnesota, carries his Quran around in his pocket on his smartphone. Khan, who holds a Ph.D. and works as a scientist at a biotech company, also preaches at mosques around the Twin Cities on Fridays. “I call my sermons ‘applied Quran,’” he said, indicating he wants followers of Islam to apply the good deeds encouraged in the Quran into their daily lives and not just go through the ritual of prayer. On May 1, Khan spoke on Islam at St. Andrew’s Lutheran Church in Mahtomedi. He was part of a four-week speaker series to shed light on what the Muslim faith is really all about. He wants people to know that Islam is not really about terrorism — it is actually about peace. In fact, the standard Arabic greeting Muslims give, “salam alaikum,” means “peace be upon you.” Khan speaks at churches and organizations across the Twin Cities because he wants to SEE MUSLIM SPEAKER, PAGE 10

Road construction announced Council approves bids for four projects BY MATT VAUGHN CONTRIBUTING WRITER

SHOREVIEW — As much of the Twin Cities metro area is experiencing the usual disruption caused by annual summertime road construction, Shoreview will begin its own city street projects. The City Council voted to award two contracts for four projects at its May 2 meeting. The fi rst contract included three separate projects bundled together: the reconstruction of Virginia Avenue, Dennison Avenue and Lilac Lane; the reconstruction and extension of Grand Avenue; and a turn lane on Highway 96 SEE ROAD CONSTRUCTION, PAGE 23

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