Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, May 18, 2012

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R EP O RTER .com FRIDAY, May 18, 2012 A DIVISION OF SOUND PUBLISHING NEWSLINE: 425.483.3732 KENMORE ˜ SPORTS | The latest on 4A Kingco postseason games and tournaments. [Page 12] ELECTION | Q and A with First District congressional candidate DelBene [2] Sen. Murray, Northshore women wave the Title IX flag BY ANDY NYSTROM [email protected] anks to Title IX, Yonni Mills nally stepped off the sidelines and onto the volleyball and basketball courts for Shorecrest High. e current Bothell High ath- letic director, who graduated from Shorecrest in 1975 and later placed at nationals as part of Washington State University’s volleyball squad, had always watched her younger brothers play organized ball — and now, it was her chance. On June 23, 1972, Title IX allowed women equal access to athletic opportunities. It is also identified by the name of its prin- cipal author as the Patsy T. Mink Equal Opportunity in Education Act. “To be involved in anything organized, I felt like I had just died and gone to heaven,” Mills said last week. “I was in that first group that finally got to do something, so I was super-excited to be in high school and be able to do anything.” And when she made the team at WSU, her excitement level rose even more, because she was play- ing on a bigger stage. “In my eyes, it was one of the coolest experiences I’ve ever had,” she said. Mills didn’t receive her WSU chenille varsity volleyball letter until 2007 — because they didn’t hand out letters to women early on — and she proudly displays it in her Bothell High office. It was a few decades late, Mills says, but at least she finally got hold of the letter. MURRAY, SOUNDERS CELEBRATE To celebrate 40 years of Title IX, U.S. Sen. Patty Murray from Bothell teamed up with Seattle Sounders Women soccer players Megan Rapinoe, Stephanie Cox and Sydney Leroux to speak to a crowd of female athletes on May 2 at Garfield High in Seattle. “Forty years ago, 37 words threw open the doors to athletics, education and success for millions of young women in our country,” Murray said. Title IX reads: No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be exclud- ed from participation in, be denied the benefi ts of, or be subjected to [ more TITLE IX page 6] U.S. Sen. Patty Murray waves a Seattle Sounders Women scarf at a recent Title IX discussion at Garfield High. ANDY NYSTROM, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter BY ANDY NYSTROM [email protected] As Jay’s Cafe owner Misty Qureshi glanced out the window of her business at the two smashed vehicles — one sitting on all four tires and the other laying on its side — she feels that driving has become a bit chaotic on Northeast Bothell Way, or State Route 522, in Kenmore. “I think the accident happened because of this me- dian in the middle,” she said on May 7, “because people try getting out — any hole, they just see it, which is wrong. ey’re not supposed to violate that, but they do it anyway.” In the second major accident (one was fatal) on SR 522 in the last three months, Northshore Fire Depart- ment public-information officer Wendy Booth said in a press release that witnesses stated that at about 10:33 a.m., a beige vehicle traveling eastbound on the 7500 block of SR 522 crossed the centerline and struck a westbound black SUV head-on. Qureshi called 911 to report the accident while a passerby checked on the victims. Fire personnel used extrication tools to remove occupants from the two vehicles. One occupant was in critical condition and transported to Harborview Hospital, and another occupant was in serious condi- tion and transported to Evergreen Medical Center. Two other vehicles were involved, but no additional injuries were reported. Nancy Morgan of Kenmore was on her way back home from the St. Vincent de Paul thriſt store when she spoke with the driver of a vehicle that was sideswiped Are people driving safely on SR 522? Inglemoor High biology teacher Sue Black introduced President Barack Obama during his May 10 visit to Seattle at the Paramount Theatre. Inglemoor senior, political activist and Reporter columnist Austin Wright-Pettibone has written about Black’s battle with cancer and recommended that she speak because she’s benefited from Obama’s health reform. For story, see page 4. PHOTOS BY AUSTIN WRIGHT-PETTIBONE, Special to the Reporter Sharing a special moment with President Obama An investigator surveys the scene of an injury accident May 7 on State Route 522 in Kenmore. ANDY NYSTROM, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter [ more SR 522 page 5] 619101 619110

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May 18, 2012 edition of the Bothell/Kenmore Reporter

Transcript of Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, May 18, 2012

REPORTER .com

FRIDAY, May 18, 2012A DIVISION OF SOUND PUBLISHING

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32K E N M O R E˜ SPORTS | The latest on 4A Kingco postseason games and tournaments.[Page 12]

ELECTION | Q and A with First District congressional candidate DelBene [2]

Sen. Murray, Northshore women wave the Title IX flag

BY ANDY NYSTROM

[email protected]

� anks to Title IX, Yonni Mills � nally stepped o� the sidelines and onto the volleyball and basketball courts for Shorecrest High.

� e current Bothell High ath-letic director, who graduated from Shorecrest in 1975 and later placed at nationals as part of Washington State University’s volleyball squad, had always watched her younger brothers play organized ball — and now, it was her chance.

On June 23, 1972, Title IX allowed women equal access to athletic opportunities. It is also identi� ed by the name of its prin-cipal author as the Patsy T. Mink Equal Opportunity in Education Act.

“To be involved in anything organized, I felt like I had just died and gone to heaven,” Mills said last week. “I was in that � rst group that � nally got to do something, so I was super-excited to be in high school and be able to do anything.”

And when she made the team at WSU, her excitement level rose even more, because she was play-ing on a bigger stage.

“In my eyes, it was one of the

coolest experiences I’ve ever had,” she said.

Mills didn’t receive her WSU chenille varsity volleyball letter until 2007 — because they didn’t hand out letters to women early on — and she proudly displays it in her Bothell High o� ce. It was a few decades late, Mills says, but at least she � nally got hold of the letter.

MURRAY, SOUNDERS CELEBRATE

To celebrate 40 years of Title IX, U.S. Sen. Patty Murray from Bothell teamed up with Seattle Sounders Women soccer players Megan Rapinoe, Stephanie Cox and Sydney Leroux to speak to a crowd of female athletes on May 2 at Gar� eld High in Seattle.

“Forty years ago, 37 words threw open the doors to athletics, education and success for millions of young women in our country,” Murray said.

Title IX reads:No person in the United States

shall, on the basis of sex, be exclud-ed from participation in, be denied the bene� ts of, or be subjected to

[ more TITLE IX page 6]

U.S. Sen. Patty Murray waves a Seattle Sounders Women scarf at a recent Title IX discussion at Gar� eld High. ANDY NYSTROM, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter

BY ANDY NYSTROM

[email protected]

As Jay’s Cafe owner Misty Qureshi glanced out the window of her business at the two smashed vehicles — one sitting on all four tires and the other laying on its side — she feels that driving has become a bit chaotic on Northeast Bothell Way, or State Route 522, in Kenmore.

“I think the accident happened because of this me-dian in the middle,” she said on May 7, “because people try getting out — any hole, they just see it, which is wrong. � ey’re not supposed to violate that, but they do it anyway.”

In the second major accident (one was fatal) on SR 522 in the last three months, Northshore Fire Depart-ment public-information o� cer Wendy Booth said in a press release that witnesses stated that at about 10:33 a.m., a beige vehicle traveling eastbound on the 7500 block of SR 522 crossed the centerline and struck a westbound black SUV head-on.

Qureshi called 911 to report the accident while a passerby checked on the victims.

Fire personnel used extrication tools to remove occupants from the two vehicles. One occupant was in critical condition and transported to Harborview Hospital, and another occupant was in serious condi-

tion and transported to Evergreen Medical Center. Two other vehicles were involved, but no additional injuries were reported.

Nancy Morgan of Kenmore was on her way back home from the St. Vincent de Paul thri� store when she spoke with the driver of a vehicle that was sideswiped

Are people driving safely on SR 522?

Inglemoor High biology teacher Sue Black introduced President Barack Obama during his May 10 visit to Seattle at the Paramount Theatre. Inglemoor senior, political activist and Reporter columnist Austin Wright-Pettibone has written about Black’s battle with cancer and recommended that she speak because she’s bene� ted from Obama’s health reform. For story, see page 4. PHOTOS BY AUSTIN WRIGHT-PETTIBONE, Special to the Reporter

Sharing a special moment with

President Obama

An investigator surveys the scene of an injury accident May 7 on State Route 522 in Kenmore. ANDY NYSTROM, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter

[ more SR 522 page 5]

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BY ANDY NYSTROM

[email protected]

Suzan DelBene is a busi-nesswoman, an entrepre-neur — and a runner.

She’s helped start up companies, managed small businesses, worked in large

businesses like Microso� and was director of the Washington State Depart-ment of Revenue. And the 50-year-old has also run a couple of marathons over the years.

DelBene, a Democrat, is one of eight candidates

running for the U.S. House of Representatives in the 1st Congressional District, which includes Bothell and Kenmore. Jay Inslee le� the seat vacant to run for gov-ernor and it will be � lled in the November 2012 general election.

� e Medina resident who has an o� ce in Bothell is endorsed by Gov. Chris Gregoire and a handful of local legislators and labor organizations.

� e Reporter spoke with DelBene on a recent a� ernoon:

What would make you

the ideal candidate for Congress?

I think our top issues right now are issues with the economy and with jobs. So, someone who has a strong resume in working in business — both small business and large business — and really understands how our economy works is going to be critically important. And I have that experience. I have a good idea of what we need to do from a policy perspective, as well as making sure we put together policy that has the impact we need it to have and get real results, in what I always say, in the ‘real world.’

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[2] May 18, 2012

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DelBene sets up office in Bothell while running for First District seat

[ more DELBENE page 3 ]

Suzan DelBene has worked out of her Bothell o� ce since March during her run for a First District seat. ANDY NYSTROM, Bothell Kenmore-Reporter

(She ran for the 8th District seat and lost in 2010) What did you learn from that experience that you’re applying to coming at it again?

The most important thing, and probably the best part of a campaign, is the ability to talk with people on a variety of issues. People are really honest when you talk to them, especially on a campaign about the challenges they face, what they’d like to see happen, what they think we need to do to improve — and it’s very refreshing to be able to have those honest conversations with folks.

It’s about getting out and talking to as many people as possible, understanding the issues that really are important to this district: The economy, the impact of local businesses on our economy and what we can do to help them thrive and help working families thrive.

Are you familiar with the Bothell area, have you touched base with any of the

folks from the city?

Yep. I talked to the city manager and some folks there about all of the downtown re-development and what’s going on in the plans for downtown Bothell and the waterfront. So that’s been incredibly interest-ing, and there’s a lot of work going on and plans for a lot more work to go on over time.

The other key point is there’s been a lot of great work going on in terms of look-ing at public investment and how that can bring in private investment. I think that’s a great example of things that we need to do to help get our economy growing. I think some of the work going on in Bothell is a great example of what we may need to do on a broader level across the district.

What are some of the key things that you’re hoping to achieve if you were to get this position?

I think helping get our economy moving and creating jobs and creating economic opportunity is

really critical for me. My dad lost his job when I was young, my parents struggled quite a bit, but I got to go to college and get a great education. With student loans and work-study programs and financial aid, I want to make sure that students still have access to those same opportunities that I did when I was growing up.

And we have right down the street here, UW-Bothell and Cascadia and great exam-ples of students coming in to get an education. It’s becom-ing more of a challenge from an affordability standpoint, so I think it’s really important that we put programs together

that support our education from early learning all the way through higher education.

(We need to) work closely with businesses to understand what they need to do to thrive — that means investments in infrastructure. You’ve seen it here, a lot of the work that’s gone on in terms of connect-ing our educational institu-tions, like UW-Bothell with medical-device manufacturers in the bio-tech industry there — those are partnerships that help many folks, help people learn and also help create jobs and grow our economy.

It happens locally, but we need to look at how we do

that on a broader way across the country.

(On running) Is that a good activity for you to clear your head after all the intense days, or do you do some good planning while you’re running?

It is a great way to think — you kind of clear your mind. You get to be outside, and especially this time of year, it starts getting incredibly beautiful.

You do come up with some pretty great ideas when you don’t have to think about anything in particular.

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [3] May 18, 2012

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By Andy nystrom

[email protected]

Aided by witnesses’ cell-phone photos, a Bothell Police Department investigator tracked down a loaded tractor-trailer driver who struck a utility pole on State Route 522 in Bothell and drove away from the scene on May 10.

From viewing the license plate (which was a Washington plate and not an out-of-state one, as previously reported), the investigator contacted the truck’s owner from a com-pany in Tenino, according to Capt. Denise Langford.

The driver, a 48-year-old male, admitted to the hit and run and said he was trying to get to Woodin-ville, but turned the wrong direction onto SR 522 from Interstate 405. Just before 10 a.m., he drove right onto 101st Avenue Northeast to turn around and hit the pole. The case has been sent to the King County prosecutor for review of hit-and-run charges.

According to Deputy Police Chief Henry Si-mon, at about 10:10 a.m., power went out in the downtown corridor and police blocked off SR 522 between Kaysner Way and SR 527 because the pole extended over some of the lanes.

Throughout the day, police first reopened the eastbound SR 522 lanes and redirected westbound SR 522 traffic through downtown Bothell before reopening the remaining lanes.

At about 10:30 a.m., Simon said Washington State Patrol was looking for the truck and police were also contacting local businesses who might have worked with the driver.

Cell photos help locate hit-and-run truck driver

[ delBene from page 2]

NatioNal thaNk You DaY is set for MaY 19

Bothell Mayor Mark Lamb read and signed a proclamation on May 8 at the City Council meeting that states that May 19 is National Thank You Day to Honor First Respond-ers, according to organizer Kelly Clark of Bothell.

Leaning against the wall of Seattle’s Para-mount Theatre on May 10, I watched with pride as my Inglemoor High biology teacher of two years, Sue Black, strode confidently onto the brightly lit stage, greeting reporters and audience mem-bers at a President Obama campaign fund-raiser. I listened, enrapt, as she told of her battle with cancer and I cried as the President embraced her, the emotion of the past week over-whelming me as I sat witness to my teacher turning the floor over to the most powerful man in the world.

As a student, I go to class each day to be greeted by Black’s enthusiasm for her subject and her passion for her students. Seldom do I have the opportunity to consider her political leanings or her personal life. Over the years, however, we’ve developed a friendly relation-ship. So, when the President embraced her, I stood speechless — not just as her student, but as her friend. And when they came apart, I joined the audience in their applause, mo-mentarily forgetting the camera I had slung across my shoulder and the press crowding me on either side.

At that point, the only thing running through my mind were Black’s comments

to me early Monday afternoon, after she received word she would be introducing President Obama.

“Oh my god,” she said. “Oh my god. Austin. I’m introducing the President.”

That “oh my god” rang sharply in my mind as they hugged, Black and Obama, my teacher and my President, a surreal experience to wit-ness and an even more surreal one to partake in.

For her, this was a dream come true. Cred-iting the President with the ability to keep her insurance, Black considers Obama her hero and this chance to meet him her opportunity to thank him for everything he had done.

“I just kept thinking, ‘this is it, what am I going to say? This is my last opportunity to talk to the President of the United States.’ And

at that point, you heard me say, I said, ‘I’m just going to tell him I love him,’ because I really do.”

Black can’t remember what the President said in response and I was too far away to hear it myself, but I think he would have responded in kind.

“There’s not one word I could put on it,” Black said of the entire experience, “Maybe the only description I could give you … is the first time I realized my future husband was in love with me back. Your feet don’t touch the ground.”

Being there, watching her, neither did mine.

Austin Wright-Pettibone is an Inglemoor High senior.

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RE ● Q U O T E O F N O T E : “With the greater traffic volumes, basically what you really need is greater volumes of patience, too.”

— Bothell Police Department Capt. Bob Woolverton on State Route 522 driving

● L E T T E R S . . . Y O U R O P I N I O N C O U N T S : To submit an item or photo: e-mail [email protected]; mail attn Letters, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter, 11630 Slater Ave. N.E., Suite 8-9, Kirkland, Washington, 98034; fax 425.822.0141. Letters may be edited for style, clarity and length.

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K E N M O R E˜

?Question of the week:“Do you feel safe while driving on State Route 522 through Bothell and Kenmore?”

Vote online:www.bothell-reporter.com

www.kenmore-reporter.com

Last issue’s poll results:“Secondary Academy for Success is a Green Ribbon school — are you a Green Ribbon recycler?”

Yes: 75% No: 25%

May 18, 2012[4] www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com

Obama visit: an emotional experience for

teacher, student

For delivery inquiries/concerns 1.888.838.3000

email [email protected]

Reader’s impression of downtown Bothell

Recently, my wife and I went to lunch in downtown Bothell. After lunch, we walked around town for about an hour. It was very obvious to us that this one-time beautiful small town has come under a strange spell. We noticed the planting strips with more weeds than flowers and plants. Pot holes in a major intersection. Mountains of dirt where a highway is supposed to be. And where is the much ballyhooed McMenamins Pub and Hotel? And what of the unsightly mess from removed buildings on the adjacent prop-erty?

On our way home, we drove across Inter-state 405 on Beardslee Boulevard to 39th Avenue Northeast and turned north. The same orange cones are there marking where 39th floods each year for how many years now?

Both the City Council and mayor won-der why they lost the annexation vote? Isn’t it obvious that the “no” votes came from people who actually looked at this town and saw the neglect and waste. When Bothell is managed by those who really care for the town rather than their own interests, maybe

then, we can try this vote again.Steve Collins

Students will bene� t from Milk Money Month

May is Milk Money Month. If readers see a milk bottle in Kenmore, Bothell or Woodinville with an adorable cow holding a Milk Money sign at a local merchant’s counter, please spare some extra change and you’ll be supporting the Northshore Schools Foundation’s Initiative to help Advanced and Disadvantaged Learners in the Northshore School District.

� ere are more than 180 homeless children in our district, and funds raised will be used to buy them school clothes, school supplies, books, yearbooks, school pictures and pay for advanced test fees, as well as caps and gowns for high-school seniors and other school-related costs. When you drop your change in one of our bottles, know that all funds raised in the cam-paign will be doubled by the generous commit-ment of the Windermere Foundation Northlake O� ce. It’s not hard to make a di� erence, if you don’t mind throwing in a little spare change.

Here is a list of businesses that are collection sites in the Kenmore and Bothell area, but there are also many in Woodinville:

BOTHELL3 Cups of Tea, Alexa’s Café, Bank of Bargains,

Banner Bank, BECU, Bella Pizza, Bothell Main St. Antiques, Bothell Furniture, Dawn’s Candy and Cake, Denise’s Cafe, Extreme Pita, Forget Me Not Consignments, Gallo de Oro, Hana Su-shi, Julio’s, Kno� , Fettig and Naumann Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Kozy Korner Café, Lyon’s Den, Lyly’s Hair Studio, Northlake Windermere, Pen � ai, Pizza Bank, � e Ranch Drive-In, Sparta’s Pizza, State Farm Insurance

Steve’s Café, Sun Cleaners, Sushi Hana, Toys that Teach, Tully’s, UltraCustom Cleaners, Uncle Peteza’s Pizza, Woodlawn Optical, Yakima Fruit Market, Yucatan Mexican Family Restaurant

KENMOREEspresso Works, Ji� y Lube, Kenmore Air,

Kenmore Camera, Northlake Windermere, Rocky’s Corner Store, Snapdoodle Toys, Super Supplements, Tullys

� anks to all these businesses for their sup-port.

The Milk Money Moms:Sara Solum Hayashi, April Remfrey, Davina Williams Duerr and Debbie Ledsham

You said it!

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www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [5]May 18, 2012

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by the beige car during the accident.

“He thought (the beige car) was in the turn lane, but then realized he was coming straight for him,” Morgan said. “(He) said that he had to go up and over the median into oncom-ing tra� c and then back on to miss him, but he still sideswiped him.”

Morgan feels some people may be driving the road for the � rst time — possibly opting to travel SR 522 to avoid paying tolls on the SR 520 bridge — or may not be familiar with the recent road improvements.

Qureshi added about the median in front of her restaurant and drivers dart-ing in and out of nearby establishments: “I’m really thinking this was the wrong thing to do. Whoever made the decision was totally wrong about the businesses, and so many accidents are going to happen.”

“Clearly, it’s human error,” said Kenmore city engineer Ron Loewen in a May 9 Reporter meeting with Kenmore Police Chief Cli� Sether and City Manager Rob Karlinsey. “We haven’t seen anything obvious with that le� -turn pocket to indicate there’s something wrong with the design or anything like that. � e other

le� -turn pockets are work-ing well, the lights are all � ne, the roadway’s got good marking on it, signing; and it’s just past an intersection, so vehicles for the most part should be traveling a little bit slower, because either they were just stopped or coming (from) le� or right turns out of the intersection.

� at’s an odd situation at that location.”

Even if drivers don’t know the road, Sether said it’s well-marked and people need to obey the speed limit of 45 mph and abide by the tra� c laws.

“� ere isn’t anything out there on 522 that is a surprise to anybody. It’s got directional signs, so if they just pay attention, it will be like navigating the inter-state,” Sether said.

Since tolling began on SR 520 this year, Annie Johnson of the Washington

State Department of Trans-portation (WSDOT) com-munications department noted that vehicle counters on SR 522 at 68th Avenue Northeast in Kenmore have registered the following statistics since February (the � rst solid month of SR 522 travel): an average of 1,100 to 1,500 more vehicles are traveling westbound per day; an average of 1,400 to 1,500 additional vehicles are moving eastbound per day.

According to WSDOT Northwest Region Tra� c engineer Mark Leth: “We can’t speak to the number of collisions since tolling began because we don’t have access to the data yet. � e two collisions in the last couple months on SR 522 have been quite remarkable and therefore at the top of everyone’s mind. WSDOT, Kenmore and Bothell have done major safety work out

there with raised curbing to prevent head-on collisions, improved striping and signs — not to mention the road-widening work.”

In the previous Kenmore accident on March 6, a 23-year-old female driver died a� er her vehicle struck another one on the 6700 block of SR 522. At about 7 a.m., Kristin Berry of Seattle was driving eastbound when she crossed a small median and struck a vehicle heading westbound, ac-cording to Sgt. Cindi West, King County Sheri� ’s O� ce spokeswoman. Two Bothell residents — a 15-year-old girl and her mother — were injured when their SUV rolled over. � ey were transported to Evergreen Medical Center and were released that a� ernoon.

Sether noted that in the fatality accident, there was no indication of drugs or

alcohol involved, and the current wreck is still under investigation.

� e chief said he and his o� cers have responded to a host of other tra� c accidents — mostly rear-enders — on SR 522, but added that there has been an estimated 50-percent reduction in collisions since the city made major safety improvements along the stretch between 65th Avenue Northeast to the eastern city limits at 83rd Avenue Northeast.

“� at’s a big deal,” Kar-linsey said. “You don’t see 50-percent reductions in anything very o� en. I think the city’s made a big push to improve 522; they’ve made it a high priority over the years, and City Council still wants to put in a lot of funding and lobby for a lot of money from the state and the feds to � nish the last segment.”

So far, it’s cost $50 million to install two new signals, upgrade other signals, widen travel lanes, add and extend the BAT (business access and transit) lanes, install curbs, gutters and sidewalks, underground all the utilities and perform landscaping throughout the corridor.

It will cost $20 million to do the same from 65th Avenue Northeast to the western city limits at 61st

Avenue Northeast.“But regardless of what

we do,” Sether added, “� ere’s still going to be the human error and the hu-man factor, which basically will always be there and we’ll always have accidents.”

With an increase in tra� c � ow since bridge tolling began, Sether said o� cers have seen drivers becoming impatient, cutting o� others and “actually stopping and cursing at other people and having a few road-rage incidents.”

More drivers have been talking on cell phones, as well, and o� cers are ticket-ing them accordingly.

In order to avoid add-ing to the accident total on SR 522, Sether advises motorists to focus on their driving, give themselves enough time to reach their destination so they’re not tempted to run a red light or cut someone o� .

While speed is o� en a factor in accidents, Loewen said there hasn’t been talk of lowering the 45 mph limit — which is set by WSDOT — on SR 522.

“You could reduce the speed limit all you want, it’s up to people to pay attention,” Sether added. “We saw people, regard-less of what the speed limit is anywhere, we still write

A Kenmore police car blocks o� a stretch of State Route 522 during the May 7 accident. ANDY NYSTROM, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter

[ more SR 522 page 6 ]

[ SR 522 from page 1]

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[6] May 18, 2012

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numerous tickets for speeding. And during the rush-hour tra� c, the speed limit might be 45, but trust me, with the congestion, the speeds don’t get up any-where near that.”

Despite the tragic ac-cidents, Je� Schoonover, owner of Fix Auto North-shore (formerly Carriage Case Collision Center), has seen things improve from his desk that looks out onto SR 522. He says the more tra� c, the more people have to slow down — way down in some cases.

“I saw some pretty crazy drivers out there,” he said. “I would see the same car every day, you know, the red Mustang or the red Corvette

or whatever, just scream-ing down the road, and I’m thinking, ‘Man, you’ve got to slow down.’ But now when tra� c’s really heavy, they can’t do that.”

BOTHELL SCENEOver in Bothell, Capt.

Bob Woolverton said they haven’t seen a substantial increase in wrecks on SR 522 within their jurisdiction

over the last few months.While walking along SR

522 — which was closed o� near downtown Bothell due to last week’s tractor-trailer, power-pole collision — Woolverton noted that, like in Kenmore, engineering improvements aim to make the road safer. For instance, drivers have less opportuni-ties to cross the center line while turning le� .

� e $21.6 million Wayne Curve project was complet-ed at the end of 2011 and plans to relieve congestion on SR 522 at the 96th Av-enue Northeast intersection.

“Obviously, you know, we have anecdotal evidence that we’ve got more tra� c volume since the tolling began on the State Route

520 bridge, and so with the greater tra� c volumes, basi-cally what you really need is greater volumes of patience, too,” he said.

“Part of that comes from planning your travels, because do you ever notice that when you’re late, it seems like every light’s red and it ruins your commute? As we get more congested, courtesy is a big issue be-cause we’re basically a com-munity on the roadway.”

Like Kenmore’s Sether noted, modern technology is a major distraction to drivers, especially when cars are all lined up and ready to punch the gas when the light turns green.

Woolverton and his fel-low o� cers experienced this

on a recent day: A female driver’s navigation system took her attention o� the road just before Wayne Curve and she started a four-car collision by rear-ending one car while stopped at a light.

“We all think to our-selves, ‘We’re too smart for that, it’s not going to happen to us’ — until it happens to us,” Woolverton said. “If you need to search for a phone number, if you need to read a text or send a text or what-ever, take the couple min-utes, pull o� the road, take care of your distraction and then get back into tra� c. It’s actually more distracting than you really think it is, and it’s obviously way more dangerous, too.”

discrimination under any education pro-gram or activity receiving Federal � nancial assistance.

“� at law was simple, it was powerful and it has delivered amazing results. Over the past 40 years, participation in girls high-school sports has increased over 900 percent. We went from 32,000 women who were partici-pating in college athletics in 1972, when I was in college, to almost 200,000 today,” Murray added. “In 1972, fewer than 300,000 women across the country played competitive sports. Forty years since this law has passed, today this number is approaching 3 million.”

Rapinoe, a member of the U.S. women’s na-tional team, grew up in the small town of Red-ding, Calif., and had to travel to Sacramento to play for a premier team while in high school.

She said that her parents made the commit-ment to her soccer career, hoping that it would lead her to college (University of Portland) and possibly beyond.

“I think Title IX to me means the opportu-nity of having new doors opened, and having doors opened that I didn’t even know existed or that I could see but just didn’t really know how to get to,” said Rapinoe, who has enjoyed traveling the world and meeting thousands of people. “(It’s crucial) having the opportunity to have an education. Maybe I’m not using my

degree as it stands right now, because I’m play-ing football, but in the future, I’ll need that.”

Cox, also a member of the U.S. women’s na-tional team, played club soccer with Rapinoe

and also competed in volleyball, basketball and soccer at Elk Grove High in northern California.

She feels that Title IX is a special law that

brought her and Rapinoe together on the soccer pitch in their early years and later at the University of Portland. Now, they’re with the

Bothell Police Department Capt. Bob Woolverton (left) on the scene of a recent accident. For story, see page 3. ANDY NYSTROM, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter

[ SR 522 from page 5]

[ TITLE IX from page 1]

[ more TITLE IX page 7 ]

Left, Bothell High’s Yonni Mills with her Washington State University volleyball letter. Right, Seattle Sounders Women and U.S. national team player Megan Rapinoe speaks about how she’s bene� ted from Title IX at Gar� eld High on May 2. PHOTOS BY ANDY NYSTROM, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [7] May 18, 2012

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Sounders Women and are trying to make the U.S. Olympic team to compete in London, England, this summer.

“I know that those experi-ences on those teams really laid a foundation for me to be where I am now,” Cox said. “I made so many friends and felt connected through my teams as I’m sure that you guys feel now.”

Leroux was born in Surrey, B.C., and at age 14 moved to Arizona, where she began to make her mark on the soccer scene. She later went to UCLA and is now a member of the of the U.S. women’s national team.

“� ank God for soccer because it brought me so many opportunities and I got to meet all my friends,” Leroux said. “It was just such an amazing experience that a sport and Title IX can actually bring people together.”

HIGH-SCHOOL SCENESen. Murray, who also

attended WSU like Bothell High’s Mills, has co-spon-sored the High School Sports Information Collection Act with Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine. It is a bill to amend the Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002 to require the statistics commissioner to collect information from co-educational secondary

schools on such schools’ athletic programs.

“(It’s focused to) strengthen Title IX, to make sure it continues to deliver results for women and girls,” Murray said.

As she discussed her � rst-hand experience of Title IX bene� ts, Murray noted that she could only participate in a few intramural sports at WSU, but 15 years later saw her daughter play on an orga-nized soccer team.

“It was so great to watch my own daughter get to choose to play soccer, to learn to be part of a team and cheer each other on and learn how to be gracious in victory and in defeat,” Murray said.

Also at Bothell High, boys and girls track-and-� eld head coach Cathy Boyce’s parents introduced her and her broth-ers to sports at an early age to keep them out of trouble and focused on their activities on the playing � eld.

“I never would have thought that there was a time period in which females didn’t experience the same athletic opportunities that males had,” Boyce said at practice last week. “I grew up

in an era where it was a given for us; my generation is the benefactors of Title IX.”

Boyce ran cross country and track and played basket-ball at Lakewood High, where she graduated from in 1997. She then attended Western Washington University, coached and taught in Gran-ite Falls and Portland and has been at Bothell High for the last � ve years.

She’s run marathons and is bewildered that the � rst women’s Olympic marathon wasn’t run until 1984 in Los Angeles, where Joan Benoit won in 2:24:52.

Boyce didn’t hear about Title IX until she learned about it in her high-school history class. Nowadays, she teaches young Cougars about it in the civil-rights unit of her

U.S. History class.“I’m so lucky that women

that came before us have blazed a path that we then would be able to experi-ence,” Boyce said. “I mean, the thought that my mom grew up in an era in which women were only allowed to play half-court basketball because it (was) deemed to be unhealthy for women or bad things could happen to women.

“And her daughter is able to coach?” she added. “Just watching that change that’s happened in that time period is pretty cool if you think about it.”

Over at Inglemoor High, Kelly Richards is the assistant cross-country coach and watched one of her runners — Tansey Lystad — earn a

scholarship to Cal-Poly San Luis Obispo last year. Lystad won the 4A state cross-coun-try title and both the 1,600- and 3,200-meter races at state during track season.

“With the outstanding girls we’ve had at Inglemoor the last couple years, there’s so many more opportunities for them to come a� er high school. I think a lot of that came from Title IX,” Richards said of scholarships like Lystad’s.

Richards, who took a break from her assistant-coaching job with Inglemoor’s track team this spring to help coach her ninth-grade daughter’s track squad at Kenmore Junior High, � rst starred in track and cross country at Wenatchee High, where she graduated from in 1987.

A year later at Paci� c Lutheran University, Richards helped lead her cross-country team to a NAIA (National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics) national champi-onship. � e All-American athlete’s team was inducted into the PLU Hall of Fame last fall, and Richards introduced coach Brad Moore into the hall, as well.

“He was really focused on the women’s program and on recruiting. I was fortunate to introduce him,” said Richards, who was also an All-Ameri-can trackster at PLU.

Being part of a women’s team — and a national-cham-pionship one to boot — was a far cry from when Richards had to play on boys bas-ketball, baseball and soccer teams as a youth.

“I didn’t feel like it was anything I could pursue as an athlete,” she said.

“We weren’t encouraged that much.”

But things soon changed drastically when she entered seventh grade and a girls basketball team was formed. And, of course, in high school and college, Richards was on the fast track to success.

Murray added at the Gar-� eld High event: “Title IX has truly changed our country for the better, and the number of women and girls whose lives it touches is growing every single day.”

[ TITLE IX from page 6]

Left, Bothell High’s Cathy Boyce leads the way at track-and-� eld practice; right, Kelly Richards rallies the Inglemoor High cross-country troops. PHOTOS BY ANDY NYSTROM, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[8] May 18, 2012

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Many of us have already forgotten about our New Year’s resolutions, but now that we are in spring and getting closer to summer many are beginning to think about weight loss again. A staggering 66% of the American population is overweight or obese and many do not know how to make the changes needed in order to lose weight. According to an article published by the National Institute of Health changes made in the diet, increased exercise, and behavior modification are all neces-sary to lose weight and improve fitness levels. With these changes you can be better able to enjoy all that summer has to offer.

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Weight Loss for Healthy Livingregaining the weight. A cal-orie deficit of 3,500 calories is required to lose 1 pound. Spread that over a week and that is only a reduction of 500 calories a day.

Another way to burn calories is through your ex-ercise program. According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention adults should complete 300 minutes of moderate inten-sity physical activity a week. Most of us do not achieve this. Scheduling workout into your day by participat-ing in classes or working out with friends is a great way to make sure you are getting enough exercise and being held accountable to your goals.

The final aspect of a proper weight loss program is also the most overlooked. Behavior modification is an important part of los-ing weight and keeping it off. Many go to extremes with dieting and exercise in order to lose weight but are unable to maintain this in the long run as they fall into old habits. The key is to use your resources and make long term changes in your life. Studies have shown completing a weight loss program under the supervision of a health-care provider, including your Medical Doctor or

Physical Therapist, leads to improved success of weight loss programs and weight maintenance programs after reaching the goal weight. These providers are able to assess your initial health and start you at the proper level of exercise while educating you on making the necessary changes to your lifestyle. With the help of the medical doctor or physical therapist you will be better able to incor-porate diet and exercise into long term lifestyle changes which will lead to a healthier you.

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Spring is here and that means it is allergy time for kids of all ages. The most common allergens are pollens, grass, trees, mold, and dust mites. Allergies can be easily aggravated by other inhaled irritants such as cigarette smoke or fragrances.

Cold and flu season sometimes extends into spring; by continuing to wash their hands, cover their mouths and noses when coughing etc., your kids can avoid dealing with a cold or flu in addition to their allergies.

Some tips for seasonal allergies:

1. Keep animals out of bedrooms and off the furniture. If your child may be allergic to a classroom pet, speak with school administrators about your concerns.

2. Throw pillows in the dryer, wash sheets in hot water, and use dust mite covers on bedding and furniture. Vacuum regu-larly, using a vacuum with a HEPA air filter.

3. Use a dehumidi-fier in damp areas, turn on the bathroom fan for 15 minutes after a bath or shower and watch out for mold growth.

4. Clean the furnace filter every 2-3 months, air ducts every 3-5 years. Don’t smoke or let others smoke around your kids.

5. Bathe your child before bed to remove pol-len from their body. Keep windows and doors closed during your child’s peak allergy season. You may

Dealing with kids’ allergiesBy SWaPna BoBBa, MD, FaMiLy MeDicine LakeSHore cLinic

[ more allergies page 9 ]

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [9]May 18, 2012

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want to monitor pollen counts in your area.

Common food allergies include milk, eggs, and peanuts. If a trigger food is eaten, mild symptoms can occur such as an upset stomach or rash. More serious anaphylactic reac-tions include swelling of the throat and difficulty breath-ing. You should discuss an emergency plan with your doctor.

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With the above tips and your doctor’s advice, hope-fully, your children and you will be better prepared to enjoy the glorious spring that is around the corner.

[Allergies from page 8]

By Timi GusTAfson, R.D.

Asthma rates in the United States have been on the rise over the past decade and are now at an all-time high, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Almost 26 million Americans had asthma in 2010, the last time data on the disease were reported. Seven million of those were children and adolescents.

According to the CDC, asthma ranks among the leading chronic illnesses affecting young people. It is one of the most frequent causes of school absentee-ism. About 10 percent of school children miss classes because of asthma at least once a year.

Especially low-income populations are at an increased risk. 11.2 percent of Americans living below the poverty line are report-edly affected. Females seem more prone to developing the disease than males.

Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the airways. This can include narrowing of the bronchial tubes, swell-ing of the bronchial tube lining and an increase of mucus secretion to the point where the airways become blocked. In case of a so-called asthma attack, a person’s airways are so ob-structed that it becomes dif-ficult to breath, which can

more Americans suffer from Asthmalead to a life-threatening situation. Thanks to faster intervention and preven-tive treatments, death rates in connection with asthma have dropped by a third compared to 10 years ago.

Asthma is often misdi-agnosed as allergies. Not all people who experience allergy symptoms have asthma. Like allergies, asthma is associated with exposure to allergens and also smoking, chemicals and air pollution.

Identifying and control-ling potential triggers of asthma attacks is crucial for effective treatment. Al-though there is no known cure or even prevention of asthma, multiple steps can be taken to limit exposure to allergens and other ir-ritants.

The CDC recommends the creation of more asthma-friendly environ-

ments such as schools by implementing policies and procedures that allow students to successfully manage their asthma. These can include providing access to asthma care clini-cians and school nurses, educational and awareness-building programs, training of teachers and school staff, community outreach and so forth.

In the home, it is recom-mended to keep dust and dirt from accumulating. Dust mites are notorious asthma attack triggers. Ventilation and air filtering is equally as important. Pet animals can be a significant source of allergens and should be kept away from asthma sufferers. Expo-sure to a whole range of potential irritants, includ-ing tobacco smoke, wood and coal fire smoke, strong odors from cooking, house-

hold chemicals, paint fumes and cosmetic products should be avoided as well.

Even dietary precau-tions may be necessary. Some food-borne allergens can become triggers and it is crucial to identify and eliminate them as much as possible. Some people may be able to tolerate smaller amounts of foods they are allergic to. Only experience can determine the limits.

There is no medication that can cure asthma. But medications are available to control asthma symptoms. There are different types and they come in different forms such as pills, aerosol inhalers, powder inhalers, liquids and injections.

The two main types of medications are anti-in-flammatories and broncho-dilators. Anti-inflamma-tories reduce swelling and mucus production in the airways. They can lower the intensity of asthma symp-toms and allow for better airflow. Bronchodilators relax the muscles around the airways, thereby easing breathing. Bronchodilators are especially effective dur-ing asthma attacks.

The primary purpose of taking asthma medications is to control and relieve. Most asthma medications must be taken regularly, often daily. So-called re-liever or rescue medicines are only to be used during acute attacks.

How often an asthma patient has to take medica-tions depends on the sever-

ity of his or her symptoms. Some are affected only during certain times of the year, e.g. in the spring. However, no one should experiment with asthma medication dosages without prior consultation with a doctor.

Timi Gustafson R.D. is a clinical dietitian and author of the book “The Healthy Diner – How to Eat Right and Still Have Fun”®, which is available on her blog, “Food and Health with Timi Gustafson R.D.” (http://www.timigustafson.com), and at amazon.com. You can follow Timi on Twitter (http://twitter.com/Timi-GustafsonRD) and on Face-book (http://www.facebook.com/TimiGustafsonRD).

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[10] May 18, 2012

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The funding for most retirements comes from a combination of sources, including social security, a company retirement plan, and the individual’s own retirement and investment program. Some people never completely retire, but instead continue to work either full-time or part-time after they have reached retirement age. During retirement, the expenses of buying a home and raising a family are usually gone, but other costs such as health care could be considerably higher. It’s been estimated that most retirees will need at least 66% of pre-retirement income. An active retiree may need closer to 80% of pre-retirement income to pay for added travel and leisure activity costs. Are you prepared financially to maintain the standard

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Nik Gray didn’t like seeing his friends, Abby Leonard and Austen Dahl, involved in a “deadly” two-car accident — even if it was a DUI drill at Bothell High.

On May 10, while the senior class watched and some upcoming graduates participated, Bothell Fire and EMS staged the event, which featured two wrecked cars, “injured and deceased” students and a host of emergency vehicles and a helicop-ter to drive home the message that drinking and driving don’t mix.

“Seeing my friends hurt, that was pretty deep,” Gray said, adding

that he heard the no-drinking-and-driving bulletin loud and clear. “� at’s been a thing that my mom has made pretty clear to me not to do, under any circumstance not to ever do that.”

Added Dahl, who was the drunken driver in the drill: “It’s de� nitely going to be one of those heavy-weighted things that makes it so I don’t want to drink and drive. It’s really shown me what’s going to hap-pen if I do get a DUI or something like that happens — and getting arrested is not fun in any case.”

Leonard played the dead girl in the drill, stretched across the hood of one car in a green prom dress.

It was an emotional experience for the senior, who hammered the day’s message home in a sorrowful speech — from the victim’s perspective — to her classmates.

“It was hard putting yourself in those shoes,” she told the Reporter. “If that was actually to happen, hav-ing to not see my sister graduate or having to (not) say goodbye to my mom… it was very emotional.”

Bothell Police Chief Carol Cum-mings said that drinking or using drugs while driving can have an impact on everyone involved in an accident.

“� ose consequences will a� ect the friends that they may kill or

injure, their future of where they go, whether they’re going to go to college or whether they’re going to spend the next several years in jail,” she said.

Bothell High principal Bob Stew-art attended the funeral of two of his students — who died in a drinking-and-driving accident — at a di� erent school 28 years ago.

“It stays with me to this day,” he told the students. “Please, for everybody who loves you, and that includes me, make good choices as we move through the year-end. I want all of you to be at commence-ment, I want all of you to get to that college or whatever it is you’re doing next fall.”

Bothell High seniors get the message in DUI drill

Bothell High’s Austen Dahl reacts in disbelief after he was involved in a “deadly” accident that killed Abby Leonard in a DUI drill at the school last week. ANDY NYSTROM, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[12] May 18, 2012

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CEDAR PARK ACTION • Cedar Park Christian’s boys soccer team (11-6-3) lost to

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BASEBALLInglemoor won its

second loser-out contest in two days with a 7-6 victory over Bothell on May 8 in the 4A Kingco Tournament at Woodinville High.

With Bothell leading, 1-0, Brandon Edwards roped a single to le� to score Curtis Bafus and Josh Williams in the bottom of the second to put the Viks up, 2-1.

Inglemoor (16-8)

extended its lead in the third to 4-1 with a Bafus homer and Edwards single

to drive in Lucas Wimmer.

Bothell (12-11) came back and took a 6-4 lead in the sixth with a Zach Anderson homer and other

contributions. Overall, Daniel Fredrickson had two hits on the night for the Cougars.

Behind 6-5 in their last at bat in the bottom of the seventh, Blake Wilson

homered to tie the game, and later, Wimmer blasted one to the wall to drive in Dustin Bradshaw.

• On May 7, Willie Au-gustavo stroked a two-run single in the bottom of the eighth inning to lead Ing-lemoor to a 3-2 win over Woodinville in a loser-out 4A Kingco baseball game at Inglemoor High.

“Now THAT was a Game!” read the Ing-lemoor baseball Web site, “a classic.”

Wimmer pitched all

eight innings to earn the win for Inglemoor.

Woodinville took a 1-0 lead in the top of the sev-enth, and Inglemoor tied the score on a bases-loaded walk to Bafus with one out. � e Falcons got out of the inning and the game moved into extra frames.

A� er Woodinville went up 2-1 in the eighth, Inglemoor responded with a Jake Sleder lead-o� single, a Williams bunt to put runners on � rst and

Inglemoor High pitcher Gavin Harris � res away as Bothell High runner Daniel Fredrickson rolls o� second base during last week’s 4A Kingco Tournament game. Inglemoor won, 7-6. ANDY NYSTROM, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter

Inglemoor’s girls team took � rst in the 4A Kingco track-and-� eld champion-ships on May 11 at Juanita High.

� e Vikings � nished with 97 points, followed by Is-saquah with 92 and Skyline with 86. On the boys’ side, Gar� eld won with 92, fol-lowed by Skyline with 88 and Bothell and Eastlake tied for third with 77 each.

On May 11, the Viks’ 4x100-meter relay of Paige Monson, Larissa Ashby, Kaitlyn Hollis and Claire Moses won with a time of 50.85 seconds.

Inglemoor’s Dillon Gongliewski won the 110-meter high hurdles in 15.8.

On May 9, Inglemoor’s Michael Mendenhall won the 1,600-meter run and Bothell’s Morgunn Ewing and Allie Hadley each took javelin titles at Kingco.

Mendenhall won his race in 4:17.18.

Ewing threw the javelin 186 feet, � ve inches, top-ping his previous best throw of 174-07.

Hadley won with a throw of 131-07.

Next up is the 4A Bi-District meet at Marysville Pilchuck High: Wednesday was the � rst day and today is the � nale.

IHS girls win Kingco track title

[ more ROUNDUP page 13 ]

PREP ROUNDUP

second and a Tyler Beahan sacri� ce bunt to put two Viks in scoring position.

On a 3-2 pitch, Augusta-vo’s big hit � rst scored Sleder and Williams beat the throw to the plate in a pu� of dust to win the game.

Inglemoor — the Crown Division champs — saw its baseball season end with a 14-2 loss to Ballard on May 10 in the 4A Kingco Tournament at Woodinville High.

� e Vikings also lost earlier in the tourney to Newport, 8-1, before defeat-ing Woodinville and Bothell.

• For Bothell, thanks to solid pitching from Travis Dohr and Camden McLeod and some big bats in the � � h inning, the Cougars de-feated Skyline, 5-4, on May

5 in the opening-round of the 4A Kingco Tournament.

Skyline scored four runs

in the � rst inning, and held on to the shutout until Both-ell cranked out � ve runs in

the � � h behind hits and RBIs from Rex Carlin, Saige Tyndall and Samuel Lee.

Bothell coach Paul Moody said that Dohr tossed a one-hitter through � ve innings, and McLeod entered the game in relief and got out of a bases-load-ed jam. He closed the game with a seventh-inning save.

� e Cougars then lost to Issaquah, 7-3, to set up the showdown with Inglemoor.

BOYS SOCCERChristan Nesslequist

nailed the game-winning shot as Inglemoor defeated Newport on May 5 in a penalty-kick shootout in the opening round of the 4A Kingco Tournament. � e game was 1-1 entering PKs, and the Vikings won, 9-8, in the shootout.

Newport took a 1-0 lead in the 12th minute, and Mehron Abdi equalized in the 52nd minute for

Inglemoor. Justin Li passed the ball

to Abdi 25 yards out on the right side and he then dribbled to his le� to the top of the 18-yard box and unleashed a shot that found the mark inside the far le� post, according to coach Kevin McGibbon.

Goalkeeper James Takami made � ve saves, includ-ing two big ones in the last � ve minutes. He � rst went one-on-one with a Newport forward and knocked the ball o� his foot. On the next save, he tipped a screaming Newport shot over the top of the cross bar.

On May 8, Abdi scored in the 14th minute to give Inglemoor the lead, but Is-saquah tallied in the 60 and 73 minutes to win, 2-1, and end Inglemoor’s season at 5-9-3 overall.

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [13]May 18, 2012

THANK YOUfor helping us raise $118,000 for students!

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WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENT

1973 Bothell High School graduates Rob Henderson and Diana Edge will be tying the knot June 30th 2012.

� eir wedding is an unusual one as it will be a performance of their lives. Over 30 of Diana's drama students will be acting and dancing out their high school lives until present time. � is will be done, Story Book � eatre style.

It is an action � lled and exciting show and wedding all performed in approximately 20 minutes.

It will be held at the Northshore Performing Arts Center, right on the campus of BHS.

� e reception will immediately follow the show/wedding, and be held in the cafeteria.

� is is a true love story, and yes, dreams do come true.

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[ ROUNDUP from page 12]

Inglemoor High’s Willie Augustavo runs the basepaths while Bothell High’s Camden McLeod plays defense during last week’s showdown. ANDY NYSTROM, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter

INGLEMOOR HOOPS CAMPThe hoops continue with the 25th

Annual Inglemoor Boys Basketball Camp from 9-11 a.m. June 25-29 at

the high school for boys entering sixth through 10th grades next fall. For

information, contact Greg Lowell at [email protected] or (425) 408-7308.

BY MATT PHELPS

[email protected]

Kirkland police o� cers and the FBI responded to a report of a bank robbery at the Key Bank on Juanita Drive at approximately 9:30 a.m. on May 3 in the

Juanita neighborhood.Police used K9 tracking

dogs, but the suspect got away on foot.

“He may have had a car in the area,” said Kirkland Police Lt. Mike Murray. “He didn’t show a weapon and just passed a note. � en he just walked out calm as can be.”

Murray added that the man did say he had a weapon.

According to the FBI, that the man is in his early 30s to 40s, 5-feet-10 to 6 feet tall, with a medium build at approximately 150-180 pounds.

� e pro� le of the robbery matches six other unsolved bank robberies in the area, Murray added.

� ose robberies were: Jan. 10 at Opus Bank in Shoreline; Feb. 13 at Key Bank in Bellevue; March 20

at Union Bank in Bothell; and April 19 at the Bank of Washington in Lynnwood.

Anyone with information on the robberies or the sus-pect is urged to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477). Callers can remain anonymous and are eligible to receive a cash reward of up to $1,000 if the informa-tion leads to an arrest and charge.

Kirkland robber may have ties to Bothell theft

STAFF REPORT

The Everett Police De-partment Major Crimes Unit arrested a 27-year-old Bothell woman on May 6 in connection with the April 24 stab-bing death of Luis Ver-duzco, according to Lt. Robert Goetz in a press

release. Detectives devel-

oped information that the suspect — identi-fied in jail records as Sarah Hellerud — and two others planned to rob the victim of drugs. The suspect and her accomplices’ allegedly picked up the victim in

a car and attempted to steal his drugs. When he resisted, the suspect stabbed Verduzco and then pushed him out of the car.

Investigators learned that the suspect was staying in an apart-ment in the 6700 block of Fleming Street in

Everett. When they went there, they found the suspect and arrested her without incident. After an interview with detec-tives, the suspect was transported and booked at the Snohomish Coun-ty Jail on the charge of first-degree murder.

At about 6:20 p.m.

on April 24, officers responded to 22 W. Madison St. in Everett after receiving a call from a neighbor re-porting a man down in the back yard. When officers arrived, they located a man, 20 to 30 years old, lying on the ground behind the

garage; the home was vacant and believed to be bank owned. Everett Fire personnel con-firmed that the man was deceased, and an initial assessment of the victim showed what appeared to be trauma to the torso area of his body.

Bothell woman arrested for first-degree murder of Everett manwww.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[14] May 18, 2012

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STAFF REPORT

At approximately 8:41 p.m. May 6, an armed robbery occurred at the Ya-kima Fruit Market located at 17321 State Route 522 in Bothell.

Two men entered the business a� er closing and forced the night man-ager into the business o� ce at gunpoint. � e men demanded the manager open the safe. � e market’s security camera recorded the incident, and in the video one of the suspects could be seen brandishing a handgun.

� e market’s night manager, identi� ed as a 26-year-old Bothell man, was the only employee in the business. He complied with their demands by giving them an undisclosed amount of cash. � e sus-pects secured the manager’s hands behind his back and forced him to the � oor before � eeing. � e suspects le� on foot, and no suspect vehicle was seen.

� e manager was not injured during the robbery.

Police seek suspects

in Bothell robbery

We welcome your letterse-mail us at: [email protected]

Twelve Northshore School District (NSD) alumni, former sta� or board members will be in-ducted to the Wall of Honor for 2012 and recognized at a special ceremony at 6 p.m. Aug. 16 at Pop Keeney Stadium. � e public is welcome to attend.

� e Wall of Honor recognizes the outstanding achievements of North-shore alumni, sta� and volunteers who have made a signi� cant contribution to the district, community, state, nation or world.

� is year’s inductees include:

• Dr. David Anderson, BHS, 1961

Veterinarian, civic/com-munity leader and interna-tional humanitarian

• Marilyn Eylar Con-away, NSD, fi ve years

Visionary teacher, founded mock UN confer-ence and mock political convention

• Dr. Darryl DesMar-teau, BHS, 1958

Renowned � uorine chemistry researcher and chemistry professor at Clemson University

• Dr. William Fassett, BHS, 1964

Outstanding Washington State University pharmacy professor and co-founder of Northshore troubled youth program

• Dr. Donald E. Frost, BHS, 1965

Dentist, community leader, mentor and interna-tional humanitarian

• Dr. Donald Granvold, BHS, 1961

Researcher, provider of mental health services and University of Texas profes-sor

• David Aaron Hughes, BHS, 1956

U.S. Foreign Service, author and international humanitarian

• Dr. Richard Lance, BHS, 1942

Community doctor, team physician, health advocate and NSD school board member

School district names 12 Wall of Honor inductees

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [15] May 18, 2012

...obituaries

To place a paid obituary, call Linda at 253.234.3506

[email protected]

Donald Marvin NettletonMarch 12, 1940 ~ April 14, 2012

The life of Don Nettleton will be celebrated at a memorial to be held on Sunday, May 20th, at 2 pm at the Northshore United Church of Christ in Woodinville. Don died peacefully on April 14th at Evergreen Hospice, surrounded by his wife of 52 years, Jane and his 3 children Brian, Scott, and Jennifer.

Born in Eugene, Oregon to Violet and Marvin Nettleton, Don and his two brothers grew up in Salem, Oregon. The family was active in the Congregational Church, where Don met his future wife Jane in Sunday School; but it wasn’t until she asked him to the Junior/Senior Prom in high school that they had their first date. Don worked summer jobs at the local cannery for money to buy his 1948 Plymouth coup for $50. He started at the Oregon College of Education, and during his 2nd year, he and Jane got married on January 15, 1960. The next two summers, the couple worked at a US Forest Service fire lookout, where, when their first son was born during the second summer, Don washed many a tub of diapers by hand. For the next few years, Don worked in the grocery business, until he returned to college at Oregon State University to earn a degree in Forest Management in 1970. He then joined the Northern Pacific Railroad’s resources division in Longview, then Seattle, and then Missoula, Montana, working his way up to become Assistant Vice President at Burlington Northern Resources. In 1984, Don was transferred back to Seattle, where he worked for what was then Plum Creek Timber until retirement in June 2002.

During his 32-year forestry career, Don was involved with many land exchanges with the U.S. Forest Service, and helped write laws governing exchanges subsequently passed in the US Congress. He also played an important part in creating what is now a national monument: After Mt. St. Helens erupted in 1980, Don was involved with the donation of the top of the mountain—then owned by Plum Creek—to the federal government.

Although he was an important and busy businessman, Don Nettleton quietly and humbly also had a big impact on the towns where he lived. He was president of the Kiwanis Club in Missoula, then active (including two terms as president) of the Northshore Kiwanis. He was an integral member of the Northshore United Church of Christ (UCC), and also was very active in the Pacific Northwest Conference of the UCC, chairing its Board for two terms. For six years, he served on the Board of Directors at the Horizon House in Seattle.

When not working or volunteering, Don could be found camping with the family on weekends, fly-fishing in the middle of a stream, and later he and Jane took off often with their travel trailer. He was an avid gardener, a builder—of gazebo, deck, waterfall—and “Mr. Fix It” until his Alzheimer’s Disease robbed him of his many skills. He and Jane moved in 2008 into the Emerald Heights community in Redmond, where Jane has been enormously grateful for the wonderful care Don received as his disease progressed.

Don is survived by his brother Allan (wife Aileen), his wife Jane, and children Brian (wife Joylene and daughters Margaret and Wendy); Scott (wife Claire and children Eric Riley, Sean, and Caroline); and daughter Jennifer Wilmoth (husband Kevin and children Stephanie Yoshida and Austin Shields).

As befit his life of quiet work, volunteering and long friend-ships, his last weeks at the Evergreen Hospice were filled with visits from family and friends coming from all over the country to show their love and respect for this giant of a man.

The family invites friends to join them for the memorial of Don’s life, and/or to give a donation in his honor to the Northshore Kiwanis club, Northshore United Church of

Christ, or the Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s Association.625904

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Raymond Antone Paige was born May 14, 1933 in Seattle to Harland and Clementine Paige; passed away May 13, 2012 in Bothell at age 78 after a brief illness.

Preceded in death by his parents and a brother, Hugh; survived by his sister, Geraldine Fahrenkopf and brother, Harland Paige; many nieces and nephews.

Funeral Service Saturday, May 19, 11:00AM; Washelli-Bothell Funeral Home 18224 103rd Ave NE, Bothell with Committal following

at 1:00PM; Acacia Cemetery 14951 Bothell Way NE, Seattle. Please sign an on-line memorial at washelli.com 626091

Secondary Academy for Success (SAS) senior Alex Tuggle received a Greater Bothell Chamber of Com-merce $1,000 scholarship on May 9. Pictured from left are: SAS counselor Laurie Broulette, SAS Principal Vicki Puckett, Tuggle and Northshore School District Superintendent Larry Francois. Tuggle will be continuing his educa-tion at Cascadia Community College with the help of this scholarship. RENÉE WALDEN, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter

SAS scholarship recipient

[ more HONOR page 16 ]

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[16] May 18, 2012

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• Helen Anderson McMahon, BHS, 1936

Community leader and activist, historian, artist and local pioneer

• Dr. Grant W. Sharpe, BHS, 1943

University of Wash-ington forestry professor, wildlife management and recreation activist

• Carroll “Si” Siver-son, NSD, 30 years

Beloved teacher and administrator, advocate for performing arts

• Roy J. Wheat Jr., BHS, 1946

Pilot, aviation advocate for youth and selfless community activist

[ honor from page 15]

Kenmore City CounCil proClaims may 19 as national

Kids to parKs dayThe Kenmore City Council officially

proclaimed May 19 as National Kids to Parks Day. Citizens are encouraged to take the

children in their lives to a neighborhood, state or national park as part of National

Park Trust’s second annual National Kids to Park Day.

“The city of Kenmore encourages the community to get outside and play as part

of National Kids to Parks Day,” said Kenmore Mayor David Baker. “Kenmore features

spectacular local parks, the Burke-Gilman Regional Trail, and Saint Edward State Park.”

For a list of parks in Kenmore, visit www.kenmorewa.gov/parks.

The Friends of Saint Edward State Park, a nonprofit organization dedicated to encouraging the wise use and public

enjoyment of the Saint Edward State Park, will also support the event. A state-park

naturalist will be on hand with exhibits of wildlife and other information about the

environment suitable for children. “National Kids to Parks Day encourages children across America to get out and

play. This simple idea of playing in a park can potentially give millions of kids the

reason to get active and get outside just as families prepare for summer,” said Grace Lee,

executive director of National Park Trust.

“In one year, participation has tripled with children, families, educators and politicians

jumping in to support parks and come together in joyful and active outdoor fun. We hope that by playing in parks the next generation will be empowered to protect

and preserve our parks.”In May 2012, Kenmore was one of only

213 communities across the U.S. to receive recognition from national nonprofit KaBOOM! as a 2012 Playful City USA

community for its efforts to increase play opportunities for children.

sepaC meetinG set For may 30SEPAC (Special Education Parent/Professional

Advisory Council) will present“Community Safety — Keeping Kids With

Disabilities Safe” from 7-9 p.m. May 30 at the

Northshore School District Administrative Center, 3330 Monte Villa Parkway, Bothell.

The event is free.

nortHsHore GraduationsFollowing is the graduation schedules for

Northshore schools:• Cedar Park Christian — 7 p.m. June 2 in

Cedar Park’s sanctuary• Northshore Networks — 3 p.m. June 11 at

Northshore Performing Arts Center• Secondary Academy for Success — 7 p.m.

June 11 at Northshore Performing Arts Center

• Bothell High — 3:30 p.m. June 13 at Comcast Arena in Everett

• Inglemoor High — 7 p.m. June 13 at Comcast Arena in Everett

CommunityBRIEFS

Read us online 24/7 with regular updates

May 18, 2012 [17]www.nw-ads.com www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com

BottomlessGarage Sale AdsAll you can say and more!No word limit for just $37!

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EmploymentGeneral

ADVERTISING SALES CONSULTANT

Sound Publishing, Inc. has an immediate open- ing for an Adver tising Sales Consultant at the Kirkland Reporter office. The ideal candidate will demonstrate strong in- terpersonal skills, both wr i t ten and oral , and have excellent communi- cations skills. The ideal candidate must be moti- vated and take the initia- tive to sell multiple me- dia products, including on-line advertising, spe- cial products, work with existing customers and find ways to grow sales and income with new p r o s p e c t i ve c l i e n t s . Print media experience is a definite asset. Must be computer-proficient at Word, Excel, and utiliz- ing the Internet. Posi- tion requires use of per- sonal cel l phone and vehicle, possession of valid WA State Driver’s License and proof of ac- tive vehicle insurance. Compensation includes salary plus commission. Based in Poulsbo and Bellevue, Wash., Sound Publishing, Inc., owns and operates 38 com- munity newspapers and 14 Little Nickel publica- tions in the greater Pu- get Sound area. Sound P u b l i s h i n g ’ s b r o a d household distr ibution blankets the greater Pu- get Sound region, ex- tending northward from Seattle to Canada, south t o Sa lem, Ore. , and westward to the Pacific Ocean. Sound Publish- ing is an Equal Opportu- nity Employer and offers a competitive benefits package including health insurance, 401K, paid vacation, holidays and a great work environment. We recognize that the key to our success lies in the abilities, diversity and vision of our em- ployees. Women and minorities are encour- aged to apply. If you are customer-dr iven, suc- cess-oriented, self-moti- vated, wel l organized and have the ability to think outside the box, then we want to hear from you! Please email us your cover letter and resume to:[email protected] or mail to:Sound Publishing, Inc.,19426 68th Avenue S.

Kent, WA 98032,ATTN: HR/KAS.

No calls or personal vis- its please.

Direct MarketingPosition

Reps will generate Free Estimate Appointments or Tree Work, Landscap- ing and Home Improve- ment Services.

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Requirements:• Vehicle & Valid DL• Cell Phone• Internet Access

Apply for OrderGenerator Position at:www.evergreentlc.com

Questions Call:800-684-8733

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EmploymentGeneral

REPORTER

The Bainbridge Island Review, a weekly com- munity newspaper locat- ed in western Washing- ton state, is accepting applications for a part- time general assignment Reporter. The ideal can- didate will have solid re- porting and writing skills, have up-to-date knowl- edge of the AP Style- book, be able to shoot photos and video, be able to use InDesign, and contribute to staff blogs and Web updates. We offer vacation and sick leave, and paid holi- days. If you have a pas- sion for community news reporting and a desire to work in an ambitious, dy- namic newsroom, we want to hear from you. E.O.E. Email your re- sume, cover letter and up to 5 non-returnable writing, photo and video samples [email protected]

Or mail to BIRREP/HR Dept., Sound Publishing, 19351 8th Ave. NE, Suite 106, Poulsbo,

WA 98370.

EmploymentMedia

REPORTERReporter sought for staff opening with the Penin- sula Daily News, a six- d a y n e w s p a p e r o n Washington’s beautiful North Olympic Peninsula that includes the cities of Por t Angeles, Sequim, Po r t To w n s e n d a n d Forks (yes, the “Twilight” Forks, but no vampires or werewolves). Br ing your experience from a weekly or small daily -- from the first day, you’ll be able to show off the writing and photography skills you’ve already ac- quired while sharpening your talent with the help o f veteran newsroom leaders. This is a gener- al assignment reporting position in our Port An- geles office in which be- ing a self-starter must be demonstrated through professional experience. Port Angeles-based Pe- ninsula Daily News, cir- culation 16,000 daily and 15,000 Sunday (plus a websi te gett ing up to o n e m i l l i o n h i t s a month), publishes separ- ate editions for Clallam and Jefferson counties. Check out the PDN at www.pen insu lada i l y - news.com and the beau- ty and recreational op- p o r t u n i t i e s a t http://www.peninsuladai- l y n e w s . c o m / s e c - tion/pdntabs#vizguide. In-person visit and tryout are required, so Wash- ington/Northwest appli- cants given preference. Send cover letter, re- sume and five best writ- ing and photography c l ips to Leah Leach, managing editor/news, P.O. Box 1330, 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362 , o r ema i l leah.leach@peninsula- dailynews.com.

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EmploymentMedia

REPORTERThe Central Kitsap Re- porter in Silverdale, WA is seeking a general as- signment reporter with writing experience and photography skills. Join a four-person newsroom in a position that is pri- mar i ly beat coverage and secondarily general- assignment coverage of a city, an Urban Growth Area, county govern- ment and naval base. Coverage stretches from the deeply rural to the “other Washington” in scope. News, narrative features and photogra- phy are at the center of the job. Applicants must be able to work in a team-oriented deadline driven environment, dis- play excel lent wr i t ing skills, have a knowledge of community news and be able to compose arti- cles on multiple topics. This is a full-time posi- tion and includes excel- lent benefits, paid vaca- tion, sick and holidays. P lease send resume with cover letter, 3 or more non- re tu r nable clips in PDF or Text for- mat and references to

[email protected] or mail to:

CKRREP/HRSound Publishing, Inc.

19351 8th Ave. NE, Suite 106

Poulsbo, WA 98370

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Bothell18521 101st Ave N.E.

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Cemetery Plots

$1100-CEMETERY Plot. Quiet, peaceful spot un- der a stunning shade tree in section 3. Enum- c law Cemeter y over - looks gorgeous Mount R a i n i e r . B e a u t i f u l l y maintained grounds at 23717 SE 416th St. I f sold by the cemetery, this plot would sell for $1,250. Save yourself some money, call to dis- cuss the details. Jeff at 253-740-5450.

The opportunity to make a difference is right in front of you.Recycle this paper.

Cemetery Plots

(2) CEMETERY Spaces, side by side, in Sunset Hills Memorial Park, Bel- levue. Spaces 11 and 12 in Lot 25 in the Garden o f Assurance. Quie t , Peaceful Setting. Asking $ 2 2 , 0 0 0 e a c h . C a l l Dawn at (360)757-1476

3 GORGEOUS VIEW Plots at Washington Me- morial in The Garden of Communion. Well kept, l ove l y & yea r r ound maintenance included. Fr iendly, helpful staff. Section 15, block 232, plots B; (2, 3 & 4), near Veteran section. Asking below cemetery price, $8,000! Will separate. 206-246-0698. Plots lo- cated at 16445 Interna- tional Blvd.

ACACIA BURIAL Plot, $2,190 (Lake City). Aca- cia Memorial Park, Birch Section, one grave site. Lovely o lder sect ion, beautifully maintained. A few steps off the road next to the fountain and Greenbelt at the top of the park. Perpetual fee included. Acacias price for this section is $3,991. We are asking $2,190 and are looking for a quick sale to close the estate. Call Chris 425- 405-0664 or [email protected]

ACACIA Memorial Park, “Birch Garden”, (2) adja- cent cemetery plots, #3 & #4. Se l l ing $4,000 each or $7,500 both. Lo- cated in Shoreline / N. Seatt le. Cal l or email Emmons Johnson, 206- 7 9 4 - 2 1 9 9 , [email protected]

C E M E T E R Y P L O T Greenwood Memor ia l Park in Renton. One plot avai lable in beaut i fu l Rhododendron section. P u r c h a s e d i n 1 9 6 6 among Renton families and veterans. This sec- tion is filled, lock in price now! $4000. For more details, call Alice: 425- 277-0855

flea marketFlea Market

NORTON 360 anti-virus, brand new, never used. $95. (425)485-6415

Ref r idgera to r ; Mag ic Chef, 2’ tal l , 19”, l ike new condi t ion . $100. 206-367-0292.

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[18] May 18, 2012 www.nw-ads.comwww.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com

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Medical Equipment

DELUXE ADJUSTABLE electr ic hospital style bed. Made in Sweden by Duxiana. Twin size, very clean/ comfortable, ex- cellent! Head and foot of the bed can be raised and lowered by a quiet e l e c t r i c m o t o r. Wa s $ 5 , 6 0 0 n ew. A s k i n g $1,050/ offer. Great for reading in bed or just lounging. Mercer Island. 206-725-7500.

Miscellaneous

MULTIQUIP 6000 Watt Surge, 5000 Constant Industrial Style Genera- tor. 120/240V, large ca- pacity steel tank, 11hp Suburu/Robin industrial eng ine, l ow o i l shu t down & auto idle with wheel kit. Sells new for $2200-$2999. Will sell for $700 OBO. 425-999- 6373. Evenings: 360- 897-0639

Spas/Hot TubsSupplies

LOWEST PRICES on quality hot tubs! New hot tubs starting @ $2995, spa covers from $299. S a u n a s a s l o w a s $2195! Filters & parts, pool & spa chemicals. Service & repair. Financ- ing available, OAC. Hrs: 10-6 Mon.-Sat.. SpaCo 18109 Hwy 9 SE, Sno- h o m i s h , ( 5 m i n u t e s Nor th of Woodinvi l le) 425-485-1314spacoofsnohomish.com

LOWEST PRICES on quality hot tubs! New hot tubs starting @ $2995, spa covers from $299. S a u n a s a s l o w a s $2195! Filters & parts, pool & spa chemicals. Service & repair. Financ- ing available, OAC. Hrs: 10-6 Mon.-Sat.. SpaCo 18109 Hwy 9 SE, Sno- h o m i s h , ( 5 m i n u t e s Nor th of Woodinvi l le) 425-485-1314spacoofsnohomish.com

Sell it for FREE in the Super Flea! Call866-825-9001 or email the Super Flea at [email protected].

Wanted/Trade

RECORDS WANTED

Top prices paid for used vinyl & CD’

House call available206-632-5483

pets/animals

Dogs

G e r m a n W i r e h a i r e d Pointer 2.5 yrs old & 10 month old pup, $200 to approved homes. 530-945-2165 [email protected] MIXED Breed puppies. Males & Fe- males. Born March 18th $200 each. Excel lent companion dogs. 206- 723-1271

Dogs

GREAT DANE

A K C G R E AT D A N E Puppies. Now offer ing Full-Euro’s, Half-Euro’s & S t a n d a r d G r e a t D a n e s . M a l e s & fe - males. Every color but Fa w n s , $ 5 0 0 & u p . Heal th guarantee. Li- c e n s e d s i n c e 2 0 0 2 . Dreyersdanes is Oregon state’s largest breeder of Great Danes. Also; sell- ing Standard Poodles. www.dreyersdanes.comCall 503-556-4190.

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Dogs

YORKIE/ YORKSHIRE Terrier, AKC Registered. Bo r n 1 /21 /12 . Home raised. Will be small. Fa- ther only 3 lbs 2 oz. Very friendly and loving pup- pies, fu l l of mischief. Mother and father on- site. Wormed and first shots. Females: $900. Males: $700. Call any- time: 360-631-6256 or 425-330-9903

ServicesAnimals

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garage sales - WA

Garage/Moving SalesKing County

KIRKLANDSATURDAY, MAY 19th 10am- 2pm, Totem Lake Business Park. We are hos t ing an inventor y blowout sale for multiple stagers inventory. New and slightly used furni- ture, accessories, area rugs, ar t, l ighting and floral will all be for sale at great prices! Dining Sets, Bedroom Sets, Liv- ing Room Sets. Get a preview of some of the i t e m s o n s a l e a t www.staginganddesignnetwork.com in the Resale Gallery.www.staginganddesignnetwork.com

WOODINVILLEMULTI FAMILY SALE! Too ls , f u r n i t u re , an - tiques, Ethan Allen items & more! Saturday, 5/19, 10am- 4pm, 14701 Bear Creek Lane NE. Look for signs.

Reach the readers the dailies miss. Call 800-388-2527 today to place your ad in the Classifieds.

wheelsAutomobiles

Chrysler

2008 CHRYSLER Se- br ing Tour ing Hardtop Convertible. Black, 6 cyl- inder, Automatic Trans- mission, Air Condition- ing, Power Equipment, AM/FM/XM/CD. 25,000 miles. Excellent Condi- t ion. Includes Mainte- nance Contract. Always Garaged. $18,000. Call: 253-237-5018

AutomobilesMercedes-Benz

2000 MERCEDES E320 Wagon AWD. 89 ,927 miles. All power options included. Great car in good condi t ion! Only second owners. $9,000. Vashon Island 206-463- [email protected]

Home ServicesAir Duct Cleaning

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SERVICESComplete MOLD,ALLERGY & VOCTesting Services.

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Home ServicesHauling & Cleanup

A-1 HAULING WILL HAUL ANYTHING, ANYWHERE, ANYTIME.

Locally/Veteran owned & operated. Telephone Estimates,

Ray Foley, 425-844-2509

A+ HAULINGWe remove/recycle: Junk/wood/yard/etc.

Fast Service - 25 yrs Experience, Reasonable rates

Call Reliable Michael 425.455.0154

Home ServicesHouse/Cleaning Service

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Specializing in move in/outs. Experienced!

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Home ServicesHouse/Cleaning Service

SPRING CLEANING!ETHICAL

ENTERPRISESFamily Owned30+ Years Exp.

Customer OrientedResidential & Comm.

Call Cheryl / Bob206-226-7283425-770-3686

Lic.-Bonded-Ins.

Home ServicesLandscape Services

TOM’S CONCRETESPECIALIST

Tom 425-443-547425 years experience61

8104

www.tomlandscaping.com

All Types Of Concrete

A-1 SHEERGARDENING & LANDSCAPING

* Cleanup * Trimming* Weeding * Pruning

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Home ServicesLandscape Services

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Home ServicesLawn/Garden Service

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Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

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Local ReferencesHandyman Skills & Tools,

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www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [19] May 18, 2012

CHAKA KhanSunday June 10th • 7pm

21 and Over

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Come see LivePerformances ofall your favorite

Jersey Hits!Join us:

Thursday May 25 & Friday May 26,

Thursday May 31,

Thursday June 7 & Friday June 8,

Thursday June 21, Friday June 22,& Saturday June 23

Thursday June 28 & Friday June 29at 7PM in the new

SNOQUALMIE CASINO CABARET$10 General Admission

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21 and Over

Jay LenoMay 27th - 7pm

21 and Over 21 and Over

Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3Sunday June 3at 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pmat 7pm

Driving East i-90, Exit 27 • Driving WEst i-90, Exit 31Snoqualmie, Wa • 425.888.1234 • SnoCaSino.Com Hours, prices, schedule, rules are subject to change without notice. must be 21+ to gamble.

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www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[20] May 18, 2012

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