bellevue reporter, july 05, 2013

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ARTS FAIR RETURNS | BAM Arts Fair celebrates 67 years [15] R EP O RTER BELLEVUE FRIDAY, JULY 5, 2013 210 - 105th Ave NE, Bellevue | 425.455.2126 www.OmegaPhoto.biz facebook.com/OmegaPhoto Like Us On Bellevue Way NE 105th Ave NE NE 4th St NE 2nd St 106th Ave NE OMEGA DEVELOPS FILM – COLOR and B&W The Eastside’s premier photo finisher for almost 50 years with: • Fast in-house film developing • Highest quality prints • Reprints from negatives & slides • Enlargements up to 24” x 36” 425.283.0461 www.gunnarnordstrom.com On the Hyatt Courtyard 800 Bellevue Way NE #111 Bellevue Place Jaime Ellsworth July 10 - August 11 e Art of Business | Recent grads proving old axiom true with apple-based business [7] Sports | Bellevue College tennis player finishes unbeaten season without dropping a single set [12] NEWSLINE 425-453-4270 A former Bellevue travel agent who used her access to clients’ credit card numbers and mileage plan awards to steal cash, travel and tickets worth more than $300,000 was sentenced ursday, June 27 by U. S. District Judge James L. Robart to 24 months in prison and three years of supervised release. Karen Yeakel, 64, was ordered to pay $339,242 to those she defrauded and to her employer who incurred thou- sands of dollars investigating the embezzlement. According to records filed in the case, between 2005 and 2011, Yeakel used her close relationship with some of her clients to steal their money and their miles. In some instances, Yeakel would use their credit card accounts to charge airplane tickets to Hawaii or Mexico and then would resell the tickets as “travel vouchers” at a discount to other clients, pocketing the cash. She put more than $180,000 in fraudulent charges on the clients’ credit cards. e other prong of the scheme involved using clients’ miles to book her own travel or travel for her family mem- bers. Yeakel booked more than 152 flights for family mem- bers using other people’s frequent flyer miles. When clients wanted to use their miles, Yeakel claimed no mileage seats were available, when in fact she had simply drained the miles from the accounts. e value of the miles is estimated at more than $132,000. Yeakel pleaded guilty Jan. 28, 2013. Writing to the court, prosecutors described how Yeakel betrayed clients with her scheme, many of whom were close friends. “Year aſter year, month aſter month, day aſter day, defendant Yeakel misused credit card and airline mile ac- counts her clients had entrusted to her. During this lengthy period, defendant Yeakel led her clients to believe that she was acting in their best interests, when in fact, she was embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars from them to support her own lifestyle,” prosecutors wrote in their sentencing memo. e case was investigated by the Bellevue Police Depart- ment and was prosecuted by Assistant United States At- torney Justin Arnold. Former travel agent sentenced An inquest has been ordered into the shooting death of Columbia City resident, Russell Smith, by Bellevue SWAT. Smith was fatally shot in his vehicle near 43rd Avenue South and South Hudson Street when Bellevue Police at- tempted to serve a warrant for a series of robberies he was suspected of in both cities. An official statement by the Bellevue Police depart- ment reported that in the early hours of Mar. 22, Smith rear-ended a parked truck behind him, before switching gears. ree officers opened fire, fearing that he would run them over. On Tuesday, June 2 King County Executive Dow Constantine ordered the inquest, per the suggestion of King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg who reviewed materials in the Seattle Police Department investigation. e order would result in a fact-finding hearing, con- ducted before a six-member jury. Such hearings are routine when a member of law enforcement is involved in any death on the job. Inquest ordered in fatal Bellevue SWAT shooting A group of kids plays at the Crossroads Park spray area on Tuesday, July 2. With temperatures reaching the 90s early in the week, the park was a popular spot. JOSH SUMAN, Bellevue Reporter Summer cool down

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July 05, 2013 edition of the Bellevue Reporter

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ARTS FAIR RETURNS | BAM Arts Fair celebrates 67 years [15]

REPORTERB E L L E V U E

FRIDAY, JULY 5, 2013

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A former Bellevue travel agent who used her access to clients’ credit card numbers and mileage plan awards to steal cash, travel and tickets worth more than $300,000 was sentenced � ursday, June 27 by U. S. District Judge James L. Robart to 24 months in prison and three years of supervised release.

Karen Yeakel, 64, was ordered to pay $339,242 to those she defrauded and to her employer who incurred thou-sands of dollars investigating the embezzlement.

According to records � led in the case, between 2005 and 2011, Yeakel used her close relationship with some of her clients to steal their money and their miles. In some instances, Yeakel would use their credit card accounts to charge airplane tickets to Hawaii or Mexico and then would resell the tickets as “travel vouchers” at a discount to other clients, pocketing the cash. She put more than $180,000 in fraudulent charges on the clients’ credit cards.

� e other prong of the scheme involved using clients’ miles to book her own travel or travel for her family mem-bers. Yeakel booked more than 152 � ights for family mem-bers using other people’s frequent � yer miles. When clients wanted to use their miles, Yeakel claimed no mileage seats were available, when in fact she had simply drained the miles from the accounts. � e value of the miles is estimated at more than $132,000.

Yeakel pleaded guilty Jan. 28, 2013.Writing to the court, prosecutors described how Yeakel

betrayed clients with her scheme, many of whom were close friends.

“Year a� er year, month a� er month, day a� er day, defendant Yeakel misused credit card and airline mile ac-counts her clients had entrusted to her. During this lengthy period, defendant Yeakel led her clients to believe that she was acting in their best interests, when in fact, she was embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars from them to support her own lifestyle,” prosecutors wrote in their sentencing memo.

� e case was investigated by the Bellevue Police Depart-ment and was prosecuted by Assistant United States At-torney Justin Arnold.

Former travel agent sentenced

An inquest has been ordered into the shooting death of Columbia City resident, Russell Smith, by Bellevue SWAT. Smith was fatally shot in his vehicle near 43rd Avenue South and South Hudson Street when Bellevue Police at-tempted to serve a warrant for a series of robberies he was suspected of in both cities.

An o� cial statement by the Bellevue Police depart-ment reported that in the early hours of Mar. 22, Smith rear-ended a parked truck behind him, before switching gears. � ree o� cers opened � re, fearing that he would run them over. On Tuesday, June 2 King County Executive Dow Constantine ordered the inquest, per the suggestion

of King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg who reviewed materials in the Seattle Police Department investigation.

� e order would result in a fact-� nding hearing, con-ducted before a six-member jury. Such hearings are routine when a member of law enforcement is involved in any death on the job.

Inquest ordered in fatal Bellevue SWAT shooting

A group of kids plays at the Crossroads Park spray area on Tuesday, July 2. With temperatures reaching the 90s early in the week, the park was a popular spot. JOSH SUMAN, Bellevue Reporter

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[2] July 5, 2013 www.BellevueReporter.com

BY KEEGAN PROSSERBELLEVUE REPORTER

Beginning on Monday, July 8, the Paci�c Science Center will kick o� it’s Curious Minds summer program at St. �omas School in Medina. �e program will of-fer a variety of camps with a science and technology focus to Eastside students in grades K-8.

Chris Sullivan, Interim Youth and Fam-ily Programs Manager, said the goal of these camps is to encourage inquiry based, student web learning in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) education through an informal approach.

�e variety of camp programs o�ered at the Medina location include: Kitchen Chemistry (K-1), Fire�ghter Academy (1-2), What’s Up Doc (2-4), Young Entre-preneurs (4-6), and Underwater Robotics (6-8).

As part of the program, campers will explore science fundamentals, new technol-ogies and the natural world through hands-on experiments and workshops. Speci�-cally, attendees will have the opportunity

to create delicious experiments, see liquids change to solids in homemade ice cream, discover how scientists are using robotics to explore harsh habitats and analyze evidence in a lab - plus so much more.

Sullivan said the camp curriculum is developed based on current scienti�c trends, as well as suggestions from the dif-ferent communities; in addition to hosting camps in Seattle and Medina, the program has expanded into Bothell, Redmond and Sammamish.

�is summer marks the Science Center’s ��h year at St. �omas. �e LEED-certi�ed facility also includes a science lab, technol-ogy center and open concept plazas, which enable students to investigate, imagine and create with their peers.

Camps are suitable for grades 1-8 and pricing vary between camps. To learn about the di�erent camp options, and to register online, go to www.paci�csciencecenter.org/Camps/camps-for-curious-minds.html.

Keegan Prosser: 425-453-4602 [email protected]

Kids explore science, tech at local summer camps

Camp-goers observe an experiment as part of the Pacific Science Center’s Curious Minds summer program. COURTESY PHOTO, John Keatley

Summer means street paving and Bellevue has a number of projects on tap. It will be the 27th year of the city’s paving overlay program.

Over the next �ve months, at an estimated cost of $3.5 million, the city will repave more than 22 miles of several major roadways in Bellevue. �e also work will include restoring streets that had water main repairs in 2012 and replacing curbs and sidewalk ramps.

In June, the major street

locations for paving were in the south part of Bel-levue.

• 112th Avenue South-east: Bellevue Way – Southeast Eighth Street

• Southeast 38th and 164th Avenue Southeast: West Lake Sammamish Parkway – Southeast 34th Street

• Southeast 60th Street: Cougar Mountain Way – the east city limits

• 164th Avenue South-east: Lakemont Boulevard – Southeast 46th Way

In July, paving and

repair will take place in Bellevue’s central business district. In August, pav-ing will take place in the northern part of Bellevue and then return to the south.

• Northeast 20th Street: 140th Avenue Northeast – 148th Avenue Northeast

• Northeast 20th Street: Bel-Red Road – 156th Avenue Northeast

• Northup Way: 164th Avenue Northeast – Northeast Eighth Street

Paving set to begin

SEE PAVING, 11

www.BellevueReporter.com July 5, 2013 [3]130703 Second Saturdays Bellevue Reporter 4-83x12-75 OL.pdf 1 7/3/13 12:20 PM

“Eat your fruits and vegetables” is not only your mother’s advice for your nutri-

tional health but also the core message of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, the o� cial recommendations by the United States govern-ment for how its citizens should eat to stay healthy and slim.

“Healthy diets rich in fruits and vegetables may reduce the risk of cancer

and other chronic diseases,” say the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Weight problems, diabetes, heart disease and hypertension keep spreading like wild� re around the globe and are killing tens of millions of people every year, according to the World Health Organization. � ese are mostly diet and lifestyle related ills, and much of the havoc they wreak could be avoided by changing our eating habits to what they once were before fast food and TV dinners. At least, that’s the thought.

While everyone seems to agree that eat-ing fruits and vegetables is good for you, there is precious little knowledge among the public of what exactly makes fresh produce so bene� cial. So, here are a few basic facts.

Fruits and vegetables are good sources of carbohydrates, a main component for dietary balance and health. Carbohydrates deliver energy to many bodily functions, including the brain and the nervous system. � ere are two groups of carbo-hydrates: simple and complex. Simple carbohydrates are provided by many fruits and also re� ned sugar. � e complex kind are the ones you should opt for. � ose are found in whole grains, starchy vegetables and legumes.

Fruits and vegetables also contain many vitamins and minerals. � ere are two cat-egories of vitamins: fat-soluble, which get

stored in the fat tissue, and water-soluble, dischargeable in the urine. Both are essential for growth, development and body func-tions. Minerals are important for the health of organs, tissue, bones, muscles and cells.

Fruits and vegetables are high in � ber, a carbohydrate, which paradoxically cannot be digested but is nevertheless important for the digestive process. A � ber-rich diet is believed to prevent cardiovascular disease and diabetes as well as certain types of can-cer (although the latter has been disputed).

Fruits and vegetables are the main source of carotenoids (as in carrots) in most people’s diet. Carotenoids are responsible for the bright colors staring at you in the produce department and are believed to be highly bene� cial, especially for eyesight.

Unfortunately, many of these enor-mously valuable characteristics of the fruits and vegetables we commonly consume today have been diminished or altogether lost over time due to modern breeding and farming methods. In a recent article pub-lished in � e New York Times, Jo Robin-son, an investigative journalist and author of “Eating on the Wild Side: � e Missing Link to Optimum Health” (Little, Brown & Co, 2013), reported on the substantial nutritional losses in our produce over the past 50 to 100 years.

In the end, of course, we have to work with what is available to us today. Com-pared to our dismal choices that dominate the so-called “Western diet,” consisting mainly of animal products and highly processed food, � lling our plates with fruits and vegetables as much as possible remains the next best thing we can do to keep us healthy and properly nourished.

Timi Gustafson R.D. is a registered dietitian, newspaper columnist, blogger and author of the book “� e Healthy Diner – How to Eat Right and Still Have Fun”®, which is available on her blog and at amazon.com.

Fruits, veggies key to health

Libraries have always been the great equalizers of society. � ey uphold our

freedoms and are a great socioeconomic leveler.

From birth through our golden years, librar-ies serve us by providing education, entertainment and the tools neces-sary for success. Savvy library users know there are many aspects of the public library that are relevant to our lives. � is

is especially true for recent immigrants. For many of us, our families moved to

the United States decades or even cen-turies ago to follow dreams or start new lives. O� en the descendants are spotted diligently using the library’s genealogy col-lection, looking up old church records and scouring ship passenger lists to follow their ancestors on that passage to a new country. For others, this journey is new, with recent immigrants in the library enjoying English language practice through the Talk Time program or citizenship classes.

� e circle completes itself, with the li-brary playing a central role in both of these

instances.It seems only � tting that in partnership

with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, candidates will be taking the oath of allegiance when Bellevue Library hosts a naturalization ceremony at 2 p.m., Tuesday, July 23.

� ese candidates have studied hard for their citizenship tests o� en with the obstacle of learning a new language and culture. � e library has been an integral part of their learning process. � ey’ve had library cards, and now as citizens they will take the next step: voter registration cards.

As a public librarian, I’ve witnessed the educational growth of entire families due largely in part to Talk Time, ESL and citizenship classes, free homework tutoring, story times and other library programming. � e candidates that come to the library know the value of these resources. � ey’re charting their own courses now, and the library will always be at the center of their journeys.

Darcy Brixey is the teen services librarian at the Bellevue Library. She’d like to tell you she loves to read, but it’s an expecta-tion of the job.

Libraries - The great equalizer

Darcy Brixey

Timi Gustafson

[4] July 5, 2013 www.BellevueReporter.com

The Legislature � nally reached a deal on a new state budget last week. � e good news is that it avoided a state shutdown. � e bad news is that it took one

regular and two special sessions – 150 days in all – to get what should have been reachable months ago.

� ere’s nothing very dramatic about this budget. Schools will get a $1 billion revenue boost. About half of it will go to take the burden of student transportation, school supplies and building utilities o� the backs of local school districts. Such things should be the state’s job anyway. � e rest will go to expand all-day kindergarten and reduce class sizes in schools that serve areas with high poverty. � ose additions make sense.

Lawmakers also were able to use a projected additional $320 million in revenue to help quiet the yelps of other interest groups that saw themselves losing out to schools.

However, the budget isn’t without a worry or two. On the way to an agreement, lawmakers eliminated a tax break over certain estate taxes that could have cost the state $160 million in current and future income. � e fact that the law is retroac-tive has some questioning if it will hold up to court scrutiny.

One reason for the lengthy budget debate was that the Democrats – House, Senate and governor’s o� ce – didn’t end up with the total control they anticipated a� er last November’s election. � ankfully, two Senate Democrats, Rodney Tom from Medina and Tim Sheldon from Potlatch, joined with Republicans to form a majority coalition. � at put a brake on the Legislature from likely pushing through higher taxes.

All that rain� e heavy rain on Tuesday, June 25 prompted a reader

to call and ask just where the “o� cial” total rainfall reading is taken. A spokesperson at the National Weather Service says the agency gets information it uses from Bellevue College. However, as anyone who has lived in Bellevue for awhile knows, it can be raining in one part of the city, but dry in another. – Craig Groshart, Bellevue Reporter

E D I T O R I A L

New state budget gets the job done for now

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William Shaw, [email protected]

425.453.2710

Craig Groshart, [email protected]

425.453.4233

Celina Kareiva, Keegan Prosser, Josh Suman, Sta� Writers

Robyn Rose-Logan, Advertising [email protected]

Celeste Hoyt, O� ce Coordinator 425.453.4270

Mica DeVere, Jen Gralish, Holli Parrott,Advertising Account Executives

Tek Chai, Sonny Ebalo, Creative Design

Brian Judge, Circulation Manager [email protected]

Letters [email protected]

I remember my � rst bout with swim lessons. I was four or � ve years old and my classmates were my four close-in-age cousins (as well as a handful of other snot-nosed

kids). I’m pretty sure I was scared about the whole learning to swim thing. Until that point, I had the comfort of my life jacket keeping me a� oat.

My nephew - who is 11 months old - just took his � rst lesson. I guess it’s more of a “water awareness” class, at which my brother and sister-in-law introduce him to the pool twice a week, and he’s loving it: splashing and play-ing and feeling right at home. But, 11 months? � at sounds crazy.

For several years, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommended children not begin formal swimming les-sons until they are at least 4 years old. Yet, in recent years, the ideology has changed - and it seems “swimmers” are getting younger and younger.

Despite the growing popularity of infant and toddler aquatic programs, these programs may not decrease your child’s risk of drowning. And - sorry parents - start-ing younger isn’t going to guarantee you’ve got the next Michael Phelps on your hands.

I think experts say babies do well in water because of its womb-like nature; apparently, it just feels like home (ewwww). But I think it has more to do with the lack of fear thing. � ey just don’t know any better - and, I think, for the most part, that’s a good thing. Here are the facts:

- Every day, about ten people die from unintentional drowning.

- Of these, two are children aged 14 or younger. - In the United States, drowning ranks � � h among the

leading causes of unintentional injury death. Ultimately, when you decide to introduce them to the

water is your decision. But no matter the age, you should teach your kids to love the water, not fear it. As a result, they’ll be more aware of it’s power, and better prepared to play in it - safely.

Let the guppies swim this summerReporter’s notebook

Keegan Prosser

Snowden is a traitorLet’s get one thing straight.

Edward Snowden is not a patriot. He’s not even a whistleblower. He’s a traitor. Pure and simple. His motives, while possibly obscure, are certainly not altruistic. He stole secrets and purposely gave them (or sold them) to our enemies. Make no mistake: China and Russia are not our friends.

Of course there are many ques-

tions. How does a 29-year-old high school drop out have access to top secret materials? How does he even have a job at a defense contrac-tor? Could it be that there are so many people employed in spying on Americans that they had to take what they could get at the bottom of the barrel?

� e response from Obama and his administration would be laugh-able if it weren’t so sad. How can they act like such bullies with the American people and yet be such cowards when dealing with foreign governments? Putin is a second-

rate ruler in a second-rate country. Yet he seems to have Obama’s num-ber in a stare down. Obama wants to give up everything including our nukes and it’s still not enough for Vladimir. China just � at-out owns us thanks to all our borrowing.

Yes, in the tradition of Bradley Manning, Benedict Arnold, and Ju-lius and Ethyl Rosenberg, Snowden � ts right in. Whatever we think about this administration, let there be no mistake. Snowden is a traitor. Denny Andrews, Bellevue

LETTERS

● L E T T E R S . . . Y O U R O P I N I O N C O U N T S e-mail [email protected]; mail attn Letters, Bellevue Reporter, 2700 Richards Road, Ste. 201, Bellevue, WA 98005; fax 425.453-4193.

Letters are limited to 200 words and may be edited for style, clarity and length

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As kids across the world get out of school, debate has risen over whether America can still a� ord to send thousands of people

on break for two and a half months every year. A� er all, the US only ranks 25th in math

scores worldwide, even as it spends massive amounts of money on the education system (only Luxembourg spends more.)

So it does seem reason-able to wonder if we should really be out of school all summer, a practice that’s le� over from agricultural times when kids had to be home to harvest the crops.

However, as a (biased) high-school student, I strongly believe that we need summer. All my life, I’ve been told to be creative, adventurous and imagina-tive. But it’s impossible

to truly be any of these things within the con� nes of a sterilized classroom. Summer is when we can � -nally learn things outside of school that will really serve us well in life – speaking new languages on travels to foreign countries, learning skills in camps that interest us, being outdoors and getting exercise outside of a gym or soccer � eld, not to mention the pre-college programs, boarding schools and online courses that thousands of people partici-pate in every summer.

� ere is also the tricky matter of how to rearrange the school year. Would it be broken up into trimesters, with three month-long breaks? Would other holi-days be extended to make up for the loss of summer vacation, or would there be more three-day weekends?

When schools in the

past have tried di� erent schedules they found that it simply did not work.

But apart from the logis-tical and educational set-backs rearranging summer would cause, there is one real reason that it can never be taken away. It’s in our heritage, a tradition now so deeply rooted in American culture that its loss would mean the loss of something much more than just a few extra weeks of school.

Summer means swim-ming, barbecues, the Fourth of July, travel, family, � reworks, sun and happiness. And in the end, Ihope we’ll � nd these things are more important than school.

Fina Short, 14, is a sopho-more at Eastside Prepara-tory School. She lives in Medina.

Value of summer break immeasurable

Repairs to a damaged anchor cable on the State Route 520 � oating bridge in Seattle are were completed July 3. Washington State Department of Transporta-tion maintenance crews and the contractor for the new � oating bridge, Kiewit/General/Manson (KGM) A Joint Venture, worked together to install the new anchor cable.

“Repairs will be com-pleted quickly because much of the equipment we need is already on Lake Washington,” said WSDOT Assistant Regional Admin-istrator Dave McCormick prior to the repairs.

Drivers were not a� ected during the installation of the anchor cable, which was on the north side of the western high rise. Divers will check the cable and anchor on the south side to ensure there is no damage.

WSDOT bridge crews regularly inspect the SR 520 bridge and discovered the damaged cable on the

north side of the western-most pontoon Tuesday, June 25. WSDOT crews had checked the pontoon just three weeks before and did not see any evidence of damage.

“We’ve narrowed down the time period when something impacted this cable close to the bridge, causing it to break,” added McCormick.

WSDOT is � ling a report about this incident with the U.S. Coast Guard, and is continuing its investigation.

Preliminary repair costs are estimated to be ap-proximately $200,000. � e area around the cable is restricted to marine tra� c,

with the exception of con-struction vessels. WSDOT will try to determine the responsible party and seek reimbursement for repair costs.

� e cable for this pontoon was replaced in 2010 as part of a preven-tive maintenance program. A safety redundancy built � ere is no risk to drivers due to the break.

The SR-520 bridge underwent repairs after a damaged anchor cable was discovered during a routine inspection. COURTESY PHOTO

Fina Short

SR-520 bridge repairs finished

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[6] July 5, 2013 www.BellevueReporter.com

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BY KEEGAN PROSSERBELLEVUE REPORTER

Natalie Sloan, 31, always felt like she was called to serve others - that she needed to help people in the broadest sense of the word. �at’s why, upon graduating from college in 2006, she decided to join the Peace Corps.

“I was always interested in travel,” Sloan said. “And I was really interested in African culture and African politics.”

For the next two years, Sloan lived in the Islamic Republic of Mauritania, where she worked as a health volunteer. �is month, she returns to Africa - as a participant in the Global Health Service Partnership (GHSP). Launched in March 2012, the program aims to improve clinical education in countries that face critical shortages of healthcare providers, by placing quali�ed physicians and nurses as adjunct faculty in medical or nursing schools.

Originally from Battleground, Wash., Sloan was living most recently in Bellevue, commuting to Seattle to work at the Crisis Solutions Center. Before that, she bounced around - studying at the University of Arizona and Washington State University Van-couver; she received her bachelor’s degree in psychology from the latter. Upon returning from her �rst trip to Africa, she received her Masters in Nursing from Seattle Univer-sity.

As part of the program Sloan will be based in Lira, Uganda - the fourth largest town in the country - where she will help teach nursing courses to 40 students. In addition to preparing to teach the classes, Sloan helped develop the curriculum for the four-year Bachelor of Science program - the �rst of it’s kind in the country. Although a two-year program already exists in Uganda, Sloan says the more extensive program o�ers stu-dents more practice, as well as more experiences aimed at cultivating critical thinking.

While in Uganda, Sloan will be working as a licensed practitioner, something she’ll be licensed to do during her �rst month of training abroad. As part of this training she’ll likely be learning about what services the hospital provides, participating in clinical shadowing and learning the layout so she will be able to lead students through hospital rotations.

Because the program is new, Sloan said she doesn’t know exactly how everything will operate. However, she is comfortable with ambiguity, and has a lot of experience work-ing with things that are new.

“It will be a great learning experience,” Sloan said. Before heading abroad, Sloan will participate in training in Washington, D.C. along

with the rest of the program participants. �e inaugural program will also send medical specialists to Tanzania and Malawi.

At this point, Sloan is contracted to work in Uganda for one year. A�er that, the pro-gram will bring in a new team. If the program is successful, it will slowly be phased out of the town so that graduates can work in the �eld. Sloan said if all goes as planned, she’d like to go back to school when she returns.

“I’m interested in community development as well as global mental health,” Sloan said.

But, before that, she’s focused on the task at hand.

Keegan Prosser: 425-453-4602 [email protected]

Former Bellevue resident joins new Peace Corps initiative

In July 2012 Natalie Sloan spent time in Ang’iya, Kenya, where she finished her Master’s while working with Medical Mission Sisters and the Peace Corps. COURTESY PHOTO

When people think of the USO (United Services Or-ganizations) many o� en think of the entertainment tours they sponsor for our troops in combat zones or the care packages they send out. � ese important services are ac-tually just a small part of the wide-ranging work the USO is doing to support our U.S. military service personnel and their families. In fact, while many of the USO’s ser-vices are focused on supporting our troops in the � eld, a growing number of services are targeted at supporting the troops returning home and their families. QFC is proud to support the work the USO does to support our troops. � e USO is our Charity of the Month for July.

� e USO was created in 1941 and has been continu-ally active since 1951, but it is really only within the last decade that it has experienced a profound growth in the services it o� ers to pursue its mission, which is: � e USO li� s the spirits of America’s troops and their fami-lies. Among the programs and services of the USO are:

• USO centers for troops and families that include:

– “USO in box” for troops in isolated combat areas– USO on wheels also for troops in the � eld– USO Day Rooms in hospitals and medical facilities– � e Wounded Warrior Center in Landstuhl, Germany– Two USO Centers at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware to support the families of fallen soldiers

• Operation Phone Home to facilitate calls from troops to their families

• Pro vs. G.I. Joe, a real-time video gaming experience

that pairs soldiers against professional athletes

• Health and Recreation Programs including:

– Ride to Recovery, a cycling program, and Warrior Games, Olympic-style athletic competitions

• Family Strengthening Programs such as:

– A program featuring entertainer Trevor Romain to support military children as they adjust to a “new normal” with a wounded parent

– Oxygen Couples Seminar to help work on and strengthen relationship issues

– Healing Adventures Camps for families with a wounded or ill parent

• Education and employment services such as:

– Hire Heroes USA/USO Workshops

– Career Opportunity Days

– Purpose Driven Rehab

– Rivers of Recovery, � y-� shing program with an emphasis on female wounded warriors

• Operation Enduring Care

• Grief Counseling such as:

– TAPS - Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors

– Grief camps for children

� e USO is a nonpro� t, congressionally chartered, pri-vate organization and is not part of the U.S. government. It relies on the generosity of individuals, organizations and corporations to support its activities. If you would like to support the great work of the USO in supporting our troops please hand a donation card to your checker the next time you visit QFC. � ank you!

The USO – Supporting Our Troops Overseas and at Home

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www.BellevueReporter.com July 5, 2013 [7]

Apple-A-Day plants roots on Eastside

Contact and submissions:Celina Kareiva

[email protected] or 425.453.4290

Business RoundupBusinesses and business people making news

BY CELINA KAREIVABELLEVUE REPORTER

An apple a day keeps the doctor away, the saying goes, and proves an innova-tive business model Lexi Schmidt and Danielle LaRiviere have found. � e busi-ness partners and recent college graduates moved the headquarters of their produce delivery service to Bellevue this year.

Apple-A-Day started in 2009 in LaRiv-iere’s hometown of Yakima. It was her � rst summer back from college at Washington State University where LaRiviere had been studying business. � e idea behind the start-up—to supply fresh deliveries of apples to local clients, � rst occurred to her dad in 2002, but it was not until his daughters headed to college that it mani-fested into an actual business plan.

“We’ve gotten a great response [on the Eastside],” says LaRiviere. “People are very health conscious here. � ey’re talk-ing about wellness, and they’re acting on it. � is is the perfect solution—it’s simple and a� ordable.”

In May the � edgling business was nom-inated by the Bellevue Chamber of Com-merce for the most innovative product of the year, and within months, the girls had 55 clients under their belt, among them Puget Sound Energy, Nisson, Nordstrom and Swedish Hospital Medical Center.

But though Apple-A-Day is growing,

LaRiviere and Schmidt say they’re still committed to the intimacy of that original model. Deliveries are made on Mondays and Wednesdays, which both girls make themselves a� er waking up early to drive to Mukilteo for the order.

“We pick up about 15 boxes of apples. � en Lexi and I split up to make those deliveries,” says LaRiviere.

Sprouting the business hasn’t been easy. Both admit that there isn’t a handbook for such a niche market.

“� ere’s no road map telling you to do

it this way,” says LaRiviere. In September the pair made a commit-

ment to operate full-time. � ey moved to Renton to live with an uncle so that they could be closer to their headquarters. � e relocation was in itself, a new experience. LaRiviere remembers at one point having 10 refrigerators on the porch.

By the end of the year they hope to have 100 clients. From there, the plans are limitless: “We could see if this model works in Seattle, it could also work in other cities around the country.”

Bellevue CEO pleads guiltyCEO James Hebert of the Bellevue-based company,

Hebert Research, pled guilty to charges of disorderly conduct and reckless endangerment in Kittitas Supe-rior Court at an April 3 hearing.

In July of last year, charging papers indicate that a young man allegedly trespassed onto Hebert’s prop-erty with his vehicle. According to charging papers Hebert pursued the boy in his own truck, ramming him and throwing him from his vehicle, even a� er the boy turned to leave. He then charged the boy with an ax, accusing him of the car crash. � e incident le� the boy with a broken shoulder.

Hebert was sentenced to 90 days for disorderly con-duct and 364 days for reckless endangerment. � ose sentences were suspended and Hebert was placed on a one-year probation. A charge of felony harassment was dropped.

Ski shop working with Radar, RonixSturtevant’s, Radar and Ronix watersports have

joined forces to form Radar-Ronix Pro Shop, located in the Bellevue Ski Mart Building. � e shop o� ers a full selection of 2013 waterskis, wakeboards, wake surfers, wakeskates, kneeboards, tubes, life vests and all the accessories.

A grand opening of the Radar-Ronix Pro Shop will be held on Saturday, June 22. � e shop is located at 13219 NE 20th St. Hours are Mon-Fri, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Sat., 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sun., 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Danielle LaRiviere (left) and Lexi Schmidt (right) who were classmates at WSU, started an apple delivery service while still in college. Now the company is headquartered in Bellevue and has 55 clients. COURTESY PHOTO

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[8] July 5, 2013 www.BellevueReporter.com

Clint Randolph of Bellevue has received the Clyde Shields Distinguished Service Award from Northwest Kidney Centers.� e award is the organization’s highest recognition and given to people who make signi� cant contributions to the welfare of kidney patients through advocacy, clinical care or research.

Randolph was selected because of long-standing service on the nonpro� t’s board of trustees and its foundation board, which supervises fundraising. � e retired Boeing executive provided volunteer leadership for challenging assignments; helped to found Northwest Kidney Centers’ formal regula-tory compliance program in 2000; served as foundation board chair while Northwest Kidney Centers Foundation was legally integrated into the dialysis-providing orga-nization; and co-chaired the organization’s � rst capital campaign, which raised $1.7 million to create a comprehensive kidney

resource center at 700 Broadway in Seattle.“Clint graces us with wisdom, con-

templation, integrity, and dedication to vulnerable patients, especially the sickest ones who need special care,” said Joyce F. Jackson, Northwest Kidney Centers presi-dent and CEO. “Northwest Kidney Centers is unique in the country for the depth of community involvement in our nonpro� t’s governance. Clint’s contributions are a shining example of that valuable commit-ment.”

� e award is named for machinist Clyde Shields, who in March 1960 became the � rst person in the world to receive dialysis on an ongoing basis. Northwest Kidney Center is one of very few community-based, nonpro� t dialysis providers in the country. It provides treatment in 15 dialysis centers in King and Clallam counties, as well as 11 area hospitals and the homes of 246 patients who do self-dialysis.

Bellevue man recognized by Northwest Kidney Centers

Monday, July 8 is the deadline to register to vote or update voter registration information in time for the Aug. 6 primary election. King County Elections will mail primary ballots to all registered voters on July 17.

Voters can check to make sure their registration infor-mation is current by going online to kingcounty.gov/elections/voterlookup.aspx, by calling the Voter Hotline at 206-296-VOTE (8683),

visiting the county elections o� ce at 919 SW Grady Way, Renton from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays or at the Voter Registration An-nex, 500 Fourth Ave., Room 311, Seattle from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2-4:30 p.m. weekdays

Registering to vote can be done online at wei.sos.wa.gov/agency/osos/en/vot-ers/Pages/register_to_vote.aspx, by downloading a registration form at http://

www.kingcounty.gov/elections/registration.aspx#form and mailing it in, or in person.

In order to register to vote, a person must be: · 18 years old by elec-tion day (Aug. 6)· A United States citizen· A legal resident of the state of Washington· Not under the author-ity of the Department of Corrections

Voter registration deadline approaching

Lee Griffin (left), William Helmer and Riley Hsia of Boy Scout Troop 626, achieved Eagle Scout awards May 22. Griffin’s service project was at the Hillside Cemetery in Issaquah, Helmer’s was at The Big Picture School in Bellevue and Hsia did a collection drive for Hopelink and will be ASB President next year at Newport. COURTESY PHOTO.

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www.BellevueReporter.com July 5, 2013 [9]

■ Kyrie Olsen of Bellevue has won a $2,500 P.E.O. STAR Scholarship for her freshman year at Boston College. She is a senior at Bellevue Christian School and the daughter of Mari and Paul Olsen.

■ � e following students from the Bellevue area were recently listed on the 2013 spring semester dean’s list at University of Portland: Brianna McAteer, Freshman, Psychology; Caitlin Elsoe, Junior, Biology; Carolyn Virca, Senior, Chemistry; Chelsea Roberts, Sophomore, Communication; Christine Dollard, Se-nior, Chemistry: Biochemistry; Christo-pher Patterson, Junior, Entrepreneurship & Innovation; Garrett Michael, Fresh-man, Business Administration; Hannah � orson, Freshman, Nursing; Jacqueline Howard, Freshman, Organizational Com-munication; John Liedtke, Sophomore, Computer Science; Kyle Bowman, Senior, Mechanical Engineering; Kyle DeFran-cia, Junior, Computer Science; Lindsay Phillips, Senior, Social Work; Michael Liedtke, Senior, Computer Science; Paul Dilley, Freshman, Business Adminis-tration; Samantha Nicols, Sophomore, Biology; William Sahlinger, Freshman, Business Administration; Wyatt Rodan, Senior, Biology; Kelsey Ca� ey, Junior, Elementary Education; Amber Turnidge, Freshman, Business Administration; Kasey Klansnic, Sophomore, Business Administration; Connor Land, Sopho-more, Electrical Engineering.

■ Katie Bent of Bellevue has graduated from Pomona College with a Bachelor of Arts in Music. While at Pomona, Bent was named a Pomona College Scholar for seven semesters, was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, twice won the William F. Russell Prize in Music, and was the recipient of the 2013 Gordon A. Hogan Memorial Prize in Music. She is a graduate of Forest Ridge School of the Sacred Heart and the daughter of Samuel and Nancy Bent of Bellevue.

■ Emily Dittig and Mandy Sin, both graduates of Newport High School, have been awarded a $2,000 scholarship by the J.C. Bartol Scholarship Foundation. Dittig graduated with a 3.45 GPA and is going to Gonzaga University for a teach-ing degree. She was a four-year letter-man on the swim team and a three-year letterman on the tennis team. She was a

2013 DECA area top 10 � nalist. Her com-munity service of 250 hours consisted of Camp Fire day camps, Youth swimming lessons and peer tutoring.

Sin graduated with a 3.88 GPA and will study international business at the Uni-versity of Washington. She contributed over 700 hours of community service, from setting up computer labs for un-derprivileged kids in Jamaica to working with kids in theater camp in Bellevue. � e J.C. Bartol Scholarship Foundation has been awarding two students with scholarships for the last 19 years.

■ Kevin Yuskaitis and Jaye Western, both students at Newport High School, have received the Carla Vendeland Scholarship Award for outstanding community service. Both have volun-teered more than 445 hours throughout the community. Yuskaitis helped on his church youth stewardship committee. He will attend the University of Portland to study environmental science.Western volunteered at the Bellevue-based Seattle Humane Society. She will attend Oregon State University to study animal sciences.Carla Vendeland started the Knight Valor community service program at Newport in 1987 and was a dedicated school and community volunteer until her death in 1994; the scholarship award was estab-lished in her memory in 1996.

■ Hannah R. Bergam of Newcastle has been named to the dean’s list for spring semester 2013 at Northeastern University in Boston.

■ Darci Curtin of Bellevue has been named to the dean’s list for the 2012 spring semester at Northwest Nazarene University in Nampa, Idaho.

■ S. Riley Fitting of Bellevue has been named to the dean’s list for 2013 spring semester at the University of Montana. He is the son of Pat and Toni Fitting.

■ Bellevue native Stephen David Mill-er recently graduated from Sacramento Campus of Universal Technical Institute (UTI). Miller completed the Automotive, Diesel and Industrial programs at UTI-Sacramento.

■ Colonel Eric Austin, USMC of Bel-levue was promoted on May 1 to Colonel by his father, retired Colonel Erskine Austin also of Bellevue. � e ceremony took place in Okinawa, Japan where Col. Austin is the G-3 Operations O� cer responsible for coordinating all Marine aviation in the Paci� c � eater. He is a ‘91 graduate of the Naval Academy, a former Harrier squadron commander, recent graduate of the National War College in

Washington, DC and served two years on the JCS staff in the Pentagon. His wife, Laura and two sons, Bryce and Marshall, are with him in Okinawa.

■ Lee Griffin, William Helmer and Riley Hsia, all from Boy Scout Troop 626, achieved their Eagle Scout awards May 22. Lee’s service project was at the Hillside Cemetery in Issaquah. In the fall, he attended California State Uni-versity – Long Beach playing water polo and studying economics. Will’s service project was at The Big Picture School in Bellevue. He will attend the University of San Diego where he plans to study engineering. Riley did a collection drive for Hopelink and was recently elected ASB President for next year at Newport High School where Lee and Will just graduated.

Send your news to editor Craig Groshart at [email protected]

PeopleWho’s making news in Bellevue and elsewhere

Kevin Yuskaitis and Jaye Western

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BY KEEGAN PROSSERBELLEVUE REPORTER

For the third year in a row, young girls with big dreams are getting the chance to work alongside fashion and beauty indus-try professionals as part of Fashion Camp by Rosaline Hampton.

Started by Hampton as a way to encourage girls to build con� dence, set goals and head back to school feeling empowered, Fash-ion Camp is a non-pro� t summer camp experience designed to help at-risk teens in the Greater Seattle area. � e camp, happening July 10-13, will culminate in a graduation ceremony at the end of the week.

During the four-day camp, the 14 attendees will have the opportunity to listen to inspirational presentations by a variety of mentors, who will share their personal stories. � is year’s mentors include sixteen-year-old model, ac-tress and fashion designer Courtney Allegra, YouTube sensation Marlena Stell of � e Makeup Geek, Inter-national Success Mentor Amy Yamada and vintage

jewelry designer Mandy Moon. With the exception of Allegra, Hampton has worked with each of the mentors in the past.

Hampton said she chose these women who she considers role models and because they have had suc-cess in building their own businesses.

Hampton said Allegra, who approached them, is a great example of a young person making big moves. An up-and-coming fashion designer, the 16-year-old generated buzz this year when she unveiled her ready to wear collection for Spring/Summer 2013 at L.A. Fashion Week.

Continuing the health and nutrition lessons start-ed last year, Fashion Camp recently partnered with Fly Wheel Bellevue. As part of the camp, attendees will participate in exercise and nutrition classes at the facility.

“If you feel really well - and healthy, and strong, and � t - it ties directly into how you look,” said Hampton. “And fashion is kind of like the accessory of all of that.”

� e campers will also

work with personal trainer and nutrition coach Katie Wygant and professional � tness athlete Tanji John-son, who mentored last years.

Hampton said there will be a few changes at this year’s camp, especially in regard to the graduation ceremony. While the � nale operated as a fashion show in which each camper showed three looks, the girls will share only one look this year, alongside a display board about what camp has meant to them.

� e graduation cer-emony is open to the

public and will be held on Saturday, July 13 at 4 p.m. at the Rosaline Hampton Salon, 188 106th Ave. Northeast #400. For more information about the camp, and to learn how to get involved next year, go to rhfashioncamp.com.

Fashion Camp starts Monday

Mimi Broswell (left) and Vanessa Sanchez (right) celebrate at the final ceremony that marked the end of Fashion Camp 2012. COURTESY, Rosaline Hampton Salon

• Eastgate Way: 148th Avenue Southeast – Phillips Hill Road

• 156th Avenue Southeast: Eastgate Way to Southeast 24th Street

To save money and collaborate with other departmen-tal plans and programs, Eastgate Way and Northup Way will be restriped to add new westbound bike lanes when the paving is completed.

City o� cials advise motorists to watch for electronic message signs that will indicate when paving will start. � e orange lit messages with a black background will alert drivers to upcoming construction impacts on the street throughout Bellevue.

If a street is neglected too long, all of the old asphalt must be removed and rebuilt, which could cost up to three times as much or more than a pavement overlay project.

Th e 2013 Overlay Program will cost an estimated $3.5 million, according to the city website.

More than 22 miles of roadway will be resurfaced through the program.

An overlay of Factoria Boulevard, which is a federally funded project, will be bid later in the summer.

� e city of Bellevue selects roadways for its Overlay Program through a system meant to evaluate cost, time-table of repair and their functional classi� cation.

Up-to-date construction information is available online at bellevuewa.gov/overlay. Maps of construction areas and tra� c advisories are also available on the city website.

PAVINGCONTINUED FROM PAGE 2

[12] July 5, 2013 www.BellevueReporter.com

Contact and submissions:Josh Suman

[email protected] or 425.453.5045

When Jason Chapman watches Rixing Xu on the court, it can be di� cult to remember how far she has come.

Xu, a 2011 Newport High School grad, � nished an unbeaten season for Chap-man and the Bellevue College women’s tennis team last month with a straight set win in the NWAACC number one singles match. Not only did she go undefeated, Xu won every set she played in 2012, even those against players from four-year schools during the preseason.

But it was only � ve years ago the then eighth-grader came to Robinswood Ten-nis Center, where Chapman also coaches, and tried out for the club’s lowest level youth team. With only a few months ex-perience, Xu was unable to make the cut on more than one occasion.

“She kept coming back,” Chapman said. “She � nally made it and when she did she immediately made this huge jump.”

� e growth wasn’t enough to make the Newport varsity roster her freshman year and instead meant more time with Chapman at Robinswood, which both said was probably for the better at that stage in her development. Chapman said while some players focus more intently on tournaments rather than training and skill development, Xu has built her game based her game on her own strengths and weaknesses rather than the scoreboard.

“Rixing will work on her game like no

one else will,” he said. “She is the type of player that will go out every day.”

A� er one more year at Bellevue Col-lege, she will likely reap the rewards.

� e unbeaten season has attracted more than a few four-year colleges and Chapman said he wouldn’t have been sur-prised if Xu has made the choice to make the jump a� er her freshman year. But for Xu, who only played two years of high school tennis, it is as much about enjoy-ing the process as reaching the next stop.

“It has made me more outgoing,” she said of her time on the court. “You con-nect with other people and grow with it.”

According to Chapman, her growth has been as great as anyone he has coached at either BC or Robinswood.

“She’s dominating,” he said. “I would consider it one of the best years we’ve had, probably the best.”

BC star has talent to spareUnbeaten season shows Bellevue College tennis player on cusp of much more on courtBY JOSH SUMANBELLEVUE REPORTER

Rixing Xu � nished her � rst college tennis season unbeaten and with the number one singles championship at the NWAACC Tournamet. She was also selected as the Baden NWAACC Player of the Year. Despite the Bulldogs missing out on the team scoring title for the � rst time in eight seasons, Xu was a bright spot as Bellevue � nished in second place.

A Perfect Season

Rixing Xu did not lose a single set in any of her 12 matches this year, capturing the NWAACC Championship for BC in the number one singles spot. Coach Jason Chapman, whom Xu works with at Robinswood Tennis Center in Bellevue, said it may be the best season ever for a Bulldog on the tennis court. COURTESY PHOTO, Bellevue College

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Lakeside Recovery wins tourney� e Senior Legion 18U squad from Lakeside Recov-

ery Baseball ran its winning streak to 12 games with � ve straight in the Skagit Wood Bat Invitational in Mount Vernon, winning the tournament title in a 7-4 game over the Skagit Sox.

� e team, which is comprised over Issaquah, Skyline and Newport players, had won 11 of 12 entering the tourna-ment and now sits at 22-5 a� er outscoring its four oppo-nents 32-17 in the � ve games.

DATE BAND LOCATIONJul. 09 Million Dollar Nile • Eco-Bluegrass City Center PlazaJul. 10 Mark Whitman Band • Rhythm & Blues Group HealthJul. 11 Kim Archer Band • Old School Soul, Classic Rock & Sultry Blues Bellevue GalleriaJul. 16 Matt Jorgensen's Chamber 3 • Jazz with a Modern Twist KeyCenterJul. 17 Ali Marcus • Americana Songwriter The BravernJul. 18 Ben Union • Eclectic Rock Bellevue GalleriaJul. 23 David Correa and CASCADA • Latin Guitar World Music City HallJul. 24 Emerald City Throwdown • Hits from the 60s and Today Expedia BuildingJul. 25 Buckets of Rain • Rock & Roll Bellevue GalleriaJul. 30 Eric Tweed & The Devil's Advocate • Acoustic Songcraft Newport TowerJul. 31 Malibu Manouche • Classic Surf Guitar & Gypsy Jazz Symetra CenterAug. 01 Perry Acker • Micro-Brew Rock Bellevue GalleriaAug. 06 Blake Noble • Australian Percussive Guitarist Bellevue Square Fountain CourtAug. 07 Reilly & Maloney • Folk City Center PlazaAug. 08 Idol Eyez • Top 40 from 70s to Today Bellevue GalleriaAug. 13 Brian Ellefson • Beach, Acoustic & Pop Bellevue Square Fountain CourtAug. 14 Jonathan Kingham • Singer/Songwriter Harbor Club/Symetra CenterAug. 15 Rockaraoke • They Play, You Sing! Bellevue GalleriaAug. 20 Camille Bloom • Singer/Songwriter Bellevue Square Fountain CourtAug. 21 Brian Butler Blues Band • Blues The SummitAug. 22 Mycle Wastman • Pop, R&B and Rock Singer/Songwriter Bellevue GalleriaAug. 27 Larry Murante • Acoustic Songcraft Bellevue Square Fountain CourtAug. 28 Smokey Brights • Rock, R&B & Pop City Center PlazaAug. 29 Massy Ferguson • Rock Americana Bellevue GalleriaSep. 03 Susy Sun • Singer/Songwriter TEN20 TowerSep. 04 New Age Flamenco • Flamenco Soul The BravernSep. 05 Creme Tangerine • Beatles Cover Band Bellevue GalleriaSep. 10 Tommy Simmons • Singer/Songwriter Skyline TowerSep. 11 Longstride • Reggae, Rock & Groove City Center PlazaSep. 12 Velcro Mindset • Classic Rock Bellevue Galleria

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www.BellevueReporter.com July 5, 2013 [13]

BY JOSH SUMANBELLEVUE REPORTER

Brian Mogg is one of the state’s top prep golfers and is entering his second year

in the Bellevue College Running Start program. A member of the Skyline High School golf team, Mogg has made three trips to the state tourna-ment during his time as a prep, � nishing in a tie for third place in 2012 and 2013 a� er a sixth

place � nish as a freshman.

Mogg agreed to spend some time with reporter Josh Suman to break down the game, o� er some easy-to-follow tips and provide some insight during this series, which will run throughout the summer.

Rather than starting on the tee like on the course, this series begins on the green.

Everyone loves to grab their driver and launch balls downrange, but the work near the pin o� en plays the most critical role on the scorecard.

“Putting is the biggest part of the game,” Mogg said. “If you’re hitting it bad or chipping bad, but you’re making putts, you can save yourself.”

On the course with Brian Mogg

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Read and react Whether on Amen Corner at Augusta

National with a green jacket on the line, or at your local Par-3 with some old friends, over-thinking and second-guessing are two of the arch nemeses of putting.

“Read the putt and go,” Mogg says. “Don’t complicate things.”

Spending too much time trying to � nd the perfect line on a putt rarely results in anything other than a cluttered mind and convoluted plan, two things that won’t play on any green.

Stay in rhythmEspecially true on longer putts, � nding

a dependable, repeatable rhythm is crucial to � nding the cup. A� er forming a plan of action, the internal metronome is the next step to becoming a consistent player on the green.

“I don’t want to be too jerky with it,” Mogg said. “Just have a nice, smooth stroke, and go from there.

Put in the timeWorking on eight-foot putts will never

be as exciting or glamorous as � ring o� a bucket with your driver, but it will show up far more o� en on the scorecard. Instead of showing up to the course looking to win

an imaginary long-drive contest, get on the green and put some extra time into that short game.

“You can turn a bad round into an okay round, or an okay round into a great round with putting,” Mogg said. “It is the most important part of the game.”

Part II in the series will cover some of Mogg’s best practices when in the sand trap or the rough, including an easy-to-remember way to make sure you’re shots out of the sand actually make it out.

Brian Mogg said when he gets on the green, his focus is on getting a strong read on the putt before plotting a line and executing the shot without any second-guessing. Alignment and pace are also crucial elements on the green, according to Mogg. JOSH SUMAN, Bellevue Reporter

Brian Mogg

Mogg plays a Ping Anser II putter when he is on the green, and said he picked up his current � at stick a� er his last Anser series putter ran its course six months ago. � ere are any number of factors golfers can look to when picking a putter, but Mogg said not to underesti-mate your own sense of comfort.

“I look for how it looks when I set up over it,” he said. “And how it feels com-ing o� .”

CHOOSING A PUTTER

� e � rst of the Reporter’s multiple part series with one of the area’s top prep golfers begins with some quick tips on the green. ‘On the Course with Brian Mogg’ will run throughout the summer

Seek the LORD and his strength; seek his presence continually!

~ 1 Chronicles 16:11

WORSHIP DIRECTORYWORSHIP DIRECTORYBellevue

SACRED HEART CHURCH9460 N.E. 14th, Bellevue

425-454-9536

Weekend Mass ScheduleSaturday.....................5:00 p.m.

Sunday..........9:00 & 11:00 a.m.Sacred Heart School 451-1773

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ST. LOUISE CHURCH 141 - 156th SE, Bellevue, WA 98007

425-747-4450 • www.stlouise.org

Weekday Masses: Monday thru Friday...............................................9:00 a.m.First Saturday .................................................................9:00 a.m.Saturday Vigil ...............................................................5:00 p.m.

Sunday Masses:7:30 a.m., 9:00 a.m., 11:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.Misa En Espanol Domingo ..........................1:00 p.m.

St. Louise Parish School 425-746-4220

WORSHIP DIRECTORYCATHOLIC

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST - BELLEVUE

Lk. Washington Blvd. & Overlake DriveSunday Service & Sunday School...10:00 a.m.Wednesday Evening Meeting.............7:30 p.m.

Reading Room: 1112 110th Ave N.E. • 425.454.1224 HOURS: M-F 9:30 to 4:30, SAT 10:00 to 1:00

Child Care at Services 445889

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10419 SE 11th St • Bellevue, WABellevueChurchOfChrist.org

9:00am Bible Classes *10:15am Main Service *

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Wednesdays 7pm Bible Study/Life Group

Come worship with us every Sunday

Teen activities and weekly Small groups

Call 425-454-3863 or [email protected]

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ST. MADELEINE SOPHIE CHURCH

4400 130th Place SE, Bellevue, WA 98006425-747-6770 ext. 100

St. Madeleine Sophie School ext. 201 www.stmadeleine.orgWeekend Mass Schedule

Saturday Vigil Mass: 5:30 pm Sunday Masses: 8:30 am & 11:00 am

Sunday Mass in Korean: 5:00 pm

King County Solid Waste Division, Dwin Ugwoaba, 201 S Jackson St (KSC-NR-0701) Seattle, WA 98104, is seeking coverage under the Washington State Department of Ecology’s Construction Stormwater NPDES and State Waste Discharge General Permit. The proposed project, Factoria Recy- cling and Transfer Station, is located at 13800 SE 32nd St in Bellevue in King county. This project involves 10.45 acres of soil disturbance for Industrial, Utilities construction activities. Stormwater will be discharged to public storm drain system, East Creek. Any persons desiring to present their views to the Wash- ington State Department of Ecology regarding this applica- tion, or interested in Ecology’s action on this application, may notify Ecology in writing no later than 30 days of the last date of publication of this notice. Ecolo- gy reviews public comments and considers whether discharges from this project would cause a measurable change in receiving wate r quality, and, if so, whether the project is necessary and in the overriding public interest according to Tier II antidegrada- tion requirements under WAC 173-201A-320. Comments can be submitted to: Department of Ecology Attn: Water Quality Program, Construction Stormwa- ter P.O. Box 47696, Olympia, WA 98504-7696 Published in the Bellevue Reporter on July 5, 2013 and July 12, 2013. #820249.

Daniel C. Green (ISB #3213)RACINE OLSON NYE BUDGE& BAILEY, CHARTEREDP.O. Box 1391Pocatello, Idaho 83204-1391Telephone: (208) 232-6101Facsimile: (208) 232-6109Attorneys for Plaintiff

In the District Court of the Fifth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, in and for the

County of Camas2010-1 RADC/CADC VENTURE, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, Plaintiff,

vs.EDWARD P. TERRAZAS, and GEORGIA J. WESELOH. Defendants.Case No. CV-2013-17

SUMMONSNOTICE: YOU HAVE BEEN SUED BY THE ABOVE- NAMED PLAINTIFF(S). THE COURT MAY ENTER JUDG- MENT AGAINST YOU WITH- OUT FURTHER NOTICE UN- LESS YOU RESPOND WITHIN 20 DAYS. READ THE INFOR- MATION BELOW.TO: EDWARD P. TERRAZAS You are hereby notified that in order to defend this lawsuit, an appropriate written response

must be filed with the above des- ignated Court located at 501 Sol- dier Road, Fairfield, Idaho 83327 (208) 764-2242 within 20 days after service of this Summons on you. If you fail to so respond, the Court may enter judgment against you as demanded by the Plaintiff(s) in the Complaint. A copy of the Complaint is served with this Summons. If you wish to seek the advice of or representation by an attorney in this matter, you should do so promptly so that your written response, if any, may be filed in time and other legal rights protected. An appropriate written re- sponse requires compliance with Rule 10(a)(1) and other Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure and shall also include: 1. The title and number of this case. 2. If your response is an an- swer to the Complaint, it must contain admissions or denials of the separate allegations of the Complaint and other defenses you may claim. 3. Your signature, mailing ad- dress and telephone number, or the signature, mailing address and telephone number of your at- torney. 4. Proof of mailing or delivery of a copy of your response to Plaintiff’s attorney, as designated above. To determine whether you must pay a filing fee with your response, contact the Clerk of the above-named Court.DATED this 17th day of May, 2013.By: Korri Blodgett, Deputy ClerkPublished in Bellevue Reporter on July 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013. #817284

Daniel C. Green (ISB #3213)RACINE OLSON NYE BUDGE& BAILEY, CHARTEREDP.O. Box 1391Pocatello, Idaho 83204-1391Telephone: (208) 232-6101Facsimile: (208) 232-6109Attorneys for Plaintiff

In the District Court of the Fifth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, in and for the

County of Camas2010-1 RADC/CADC VENTURE, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, Plaintiff,

vs.EDWARD P. TERRAZAS, and GEORGIA J. WESELOH. Defendants.Case No. CV-2013-17

SUMMONSNOTICE: YOU HAVE BEEN SUED BY THE ABOVE- NAMED PLAINTIFF(S). THE COURT MAY ENTER JUDG- MENT AGAINST YOU WITH- OUT FURTHER NOTICE UN- LESS YOU RESPOND WITHIN

20 DAYS. READ THE INFOR- MATION BELOW.TO: GEORGIA J. WESELOH You are hereby notified that in order to defend this lawsuit, an appropriate written response must be filed with the above designated Court located at 501 Soldier Road, Fairfield, Idaho 83327 (208) 764-2242 within 20 days after service of this Sum- mons on you. If you fail to so respond, the Court may enter judgment against you as demand- ed by the Plaintiff(s) in the Com- plaint. A copy of the Complaint is served with this Summons. If you wish to seek the advice of or representation by an attorney in this matter, you should do so promptly so that your written response, if any, may be filed in time and other legal rights protected. An appropriate written re- sponse requires compliance with Rule 10(a)(1) and other Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure and shall also include: 1. The title and number of this case. 2. If your response is an an- swer to the Complaint, it must contain admissions or denials of the separate allegations of the Complaint and other defenses you may claim. 3. Your signature, mailing ad- dress and telephone number, or the signature, mailing address and telephone number of your at- torney. 4. Proof of mailing or delivery of a copy of your response to Plaintiff’s attorney, as designated above. To determine whether you must pay a filing fee with your response, contact the Clerk of the above-named Court.DATED this 17th day of May, 2013.By: Korri Blodgett, Deputy ClerkPublished in Bellevue Reporter on July 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013. #817288.

PUBLIC NOTICES

To place your

Legal Notice

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Bellevue Reporter

e-mail

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[14] July 5, 2013 www.BellevueReporter.com

� e LEGO Store in Bellevue Square remained closed Tuesday due to damage sustained during � ooding last week, and will not reopen for at least two weeks according to an employee stationed outside the entrance.

� e drop ceiling of its suite on the � rst � oor of

the mall was completely removed, as was � ooring, while industrial fans dried out the saturated � nishings. � e employee said roughly 200 gallons of water came spilling through light � x-tures and air vents

“It was coming from everywhere,” the employee said.

LEGO Store in Bel-Square closed for two weeks

The inside of the LEGO Store in Bellevue Square on Tuesday, July 2, with fans circulating air to dry out the flooded suite. JOSH SUMAN, Bellevue Reporter

A new Bellevue church plans to “love Bellevue” in July with a number of free events for the com-munity and service projects throughout the month.

“We want to show the people of Bellevue that we care about them,” said Warren Mainard, Essential Church’s lead pastor. “We

have a lot planned through-out the month – from block parties to soccer camps to concerts to movie nights and more. We know that when a city experiences love in the context of com-munity, positive things are bound to happen. We love, because God � rst loved us.”

On the agenda are:

- Two free weeklong soc-cer camps (July 8-12, 15-19)

- � ree free family block parties with in� atables, food and games (July 16, 17, 18)

- School cleanup day at Big Picture School

- Jubilee Family Serve (where volunteers will deliver household items to

families in need)- Free concert by the Pre-

stonwood Baptist Church Youth Choir

- Free movie night at the Jubilee Reach Center

Volunteers helping with the Jubilee A� er School camps at Odle and High-land middle schools

Taking gi� s of appre-ciation to some of the top in� uencers in Bellevue (school, city council, police department, � re depart-ment, etc).

Essential Church also will host a sneak peak of the church’s worship service at 10:45 a.m. on July 21 at the South Bellevue Community Center, 14509 SE Newport Way. � e church will serve a free meal a� er the service.

More information is available at lovebellevue.com or essentialchurch.cc.

� e church is located at 14150 NE 20th St. and is hosting pre-launch events at the South Bellevue Com-munity Center.

New church hosting events

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No need to rush. We’ll still be here. Classifi eds online 24 hours a day

www.BellevueReporter.com July 5, 2013 [15]

Arts & EntertainmentArts & EntertainmentArts & EntertainmentArts & EntertainmentArts & EntertainmentArts & EntertainmentArts & EntertainmentArts & EntertainmentArts & Entertainment Contact and submissions:Keegan Prosser

[email protected] or 425.453.4602

Arts RoundupWhat’s happening in the world of art

KIDSTAGE presents ‘Kiss Me Kate’ Village � eatre KIDSTAGE will present “Kiss Me Kate”

July 13-21. Featuring performances by some of the theater’s most promising theatre students, the produc-tion includes a number of Cole Porter’s greatest musical numbers.

� e summer run includes seven performances, � urs-day - Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. � ere will be an additional show at 7: 30 p.m. on Sunday, July 14.

General Admission Tickets are $18 or $16 for youth/seniors. � e Francis J. Gaudette � eatre is located at 303 Front Street North, Issaquah.

‘Pirates of Penzance’ at 5th Ave� e 5th Avenue � eatre is thrilled to present Gilbert &

Sullivans “� e Pirates of Penzance.” Directed by James Rocco , this all new take on the pro-

duction will be set in British Columbia and will feature some of Seattle’s cheekiest performers.

Tickets (starting at $29) may be purchased online at www.5thavenue.org, by phone at 206-625-1900, or at the Box O� ce.

“� e Pirates of Penzance” plays July 11-August 4, at � e 5th Avenue � eatre (1308 5th Ave, Seattle, WA 98101).

Now in it’s 67th year, the BAM ARTSfair returns to down-town Bellevue July 26-28.

Featuring more than 300 national, juried artists represent-ing media such as glass, � ber, wood, metalwork, painting, photography and ceramics, the fair will also include roving entertainment, live demonstrations, performances, hands-on cra� activities, and delicious food.

An estimated 320,000 regional and national art enthusiasts, families, and avid shoppers will � ock to downtown for the event. Read on to learn more about the activities the fair will bring to the Eastside this year:

PROGRAMS at Bellevue Square:■ Arts in Action Demonstration Stage with artist Levi

Belber and his team of local glassblowers.■ Sound & Movement Stage featuring local musicians and

performing artists in Center Court.■ Carol Duke Artist Awards of Excellence presented by

BAM and Ti� any & Co. to ten fair artists in recognition of their outstanding work.

■ A walking tour led by Stefano Catalani to present the $1,000 cash prize to the winners will begin at 1:30pm on Friday, July 26, near the fair’s Main Information booth.

■ Mandy Greer: Mater Matrix Mother & Medium Installa-tions. Join � ber artist Mandy Greer as she leads a community crochet workshop at BAM on Friday, July 5, 12 - 6pm and throughout Fair weekend.

PROGRAMS at Bellevue Arts Museum:■ Chalk It Up! transforms NE 6th Street into a blank

canvas for chalk artists of all ages.■ Chalk Mural by Gabrielle Abbott will once again come

to life over Fair weekend.■ KIDSfair is kid-centric and free. BAM and community

partners host a range of interactive, creative, and brilliantly messy art projects for infants and kids (ages 1 - 12) inside Bellevue Arts Museum, Friday - Sunday, from 9:30am - 6pm.

■ Fantastic Flipbooks with DigiPen ■ Institute of Technology will be on site to teach tradi-

tional 2-D animation techniques.■ Eric Carle Storytime with KidsQuest Museum daily at

10 a.m., 12 p.m., 2 p.m. and 4 p.m.Admission to all the museum galleries is free during the

fair, including the featured exhibition Patti Warashina: Wit and Wisdom.

BAM ARTSfair celebrates 67 years

Attendees peruse the BAM ARTSfair. COURTESY, Sayaka Ito

[16] July 05, 2013 www.bellevuereporter.com www.nw-ads.comEmployment

Media

EDITOR We have an immediate opening for Editor of the South Whidbey Record with offices located in Langley, Washington. This is not an entry-level posi t ion. Requires a hands-on leader with a minimum of three years newspaper experience including writing, editing, pagination, photography and InDesign skills.

The successfulcandidate:

• Has a demonstrated in- terest in local political and cultural affairs.• Possesses excellent writing and verbal skills, and can provide repre- sentative clips from one or more profess iona l publications.• Has experience editing reporters’ copy and sub- mitted materials for con- tent and style.• Is proficient in design- ing and building pages with Adobe InDesign.• Is experienced manag- ing a Forum page, writ- ing cogent & stylistically interesting commentar- ies, and editing a reader letters column.• Has experience with newspaper website con- tent management and understands the value of the web and social me- dia to report news on a daily basis.• Has proven interper- sonal skills representing a newspaper or other or- ganization at civic func- tions and public venues.• Understands how to lead, motivate, and men- tor a small news staff.• Must relocate to South Whidbey Island and de- velop a knowledge of lo- cal arts, business, and government.• Must be act ive and visible in the community.

This full-time position of- fers excellent benefits in- cluding medical, dental, 401K, paid vacation and holidays. Please send resume with cover letter and salary requirements to

[email protected] mail to SWRED/HR,Sound Publishing, Inc.,

19351 8th Ave. NE,Suite #106,

Poulsbo, WA 98370EOE.

Employment Finance

Rotella CapitalManagement is

seeking a Senior Quantitative Research

Analyst (SQRA)to work out of its

office in Bellevue, WA

WA off ice. The SQRA will be responsible for col laborat ing with re- searchers, developers & traders in building new models & enhancing ex- isting strategies. Requi- remts: Ph.D. in Mathe- m a t i c s , S c i e n c e , Engineering or Econom- ics; 3 yrs exp as a quan- t i ta t ive analyst us ing mathematical & statisti- cal techniques for ana- lyzing large datasets & building financial mod- els; 3 yrs exp in develop- ment of systematic trad- ing strategies using C++ & Python & usage of methods for statistical in- ference, estimation & hy- pothesis testing. These methods include but not limited to optimization of probabi l is t ic d ist r ibu- tions, univariate & multi- variate regression tech- niques & Monte Carlo based sampling tech- niques; 2 yrs prior exp building trading strate- gies on platforms such a s Tr a d e S t a t i o n o r equivalent; 1 yr exp in modeling the term struc- ture of interest rates dy- namics for pricing finan- c ial der ivat ives using financial software such as FinCAD or equivalent tools.

Please send resumes to Sheryl Calmus at:

800 Bellevue Way NE, Suite 200, Bellevue,

WA 98004,Phone: 425-213-5700Fax: 425-739-0108,

e-mail: Sheryl.Calmus@ rotellacapital.com

[email protected]

Advertise yourupcoming garage sale in your local community paper and online to reach thousands of households in your area.Call: 800-388-2527 Fax: 360-598-6800 Go online: nw-ads.com

WA Misc. RentalsCondos/Townhomes

BELLEVUE

BELLEFIELD PARKNear Downtown. 1,180 SF, 2 BR, 2 BA condo.

Washer, dryer, fireplace. Club house, pool, hot

tub, sauna, tennis court. All appls incl. Wtr, swr, grbg paid. $1,700/ mo,

year lease. Avail Aug 1st

425-746-0407

financingMoney to

Loan/Borrow

BAJILLIONS Still Avail for good R.E. Contracts, Notes and Annuities. Are you Rece iv ing Pay- ments?....Get the Best P r i c i n g s e e n i n 2 5 years….. Skip Foss 800- 637-3677.

Shop for bargains in the Classifieds. From

tools and appliances to furniture andcollectables.

www.nw-ads.comOpen 24 hours a day.

Money to Loan/Borrow

LOCAL PRIVATE IN- VESTOR loans money on real estate equity. I loan on houses, raw land, commercial prop- erty and property devel- opment . Ca l l E r i c a t (425) 803-9061. www.fossmortgage.com

General Financial

CREDIT CARD DEBT? Discover a new way to e l iminate cred i t card d e b t f a s t . M i n i m u m $8750 in debt required. Free information. Call 24hr recorded message: 1-801-642-4747

GET FREE OF CREDIT CARD DEBT NOW! Cut payments by up to half. Stop creditors from call- ing. 877-858-1386

Advertise yourupcoming garage sale in your local community paper and online to reach thousands of households in your area.Call: 800-388-2527 Fax: 360-598-6800 Go online: nw-ads.com

Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds.www.nw-ads.com

announcements

Announcements

ADOPTION- A loving al- ternative to unplanned pregnancy. You chose the family for your child. Receive pictures/info of wait ing/approved cou- ples. Living expense as- s is tance. 1 -866-236- 7638

Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in up to 12 mil- lion households in North America’s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 815 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Ave- nue at 888-486-2466 or go to www.classifiedave- nue.net

ANNOUNCE your festi- va l fo r on ly pennies. Four weeks to 2.7 million readers statewide for about $1,200. Call this n e w s p a p e r o r 1 (206) 634-3838 for more details.

Meet singles right now! No paid operators, just rea l people l ike you. Browse greetings, ex- change messages and connect live. Try it free. Cal l now: 1-800-394- 9351

jobsEmployment

Computer/Technology

Lead S/W Test Eng. Bel- levue, WA. MS Degree. ETL, DB2, Oracle, MS SQL, Informatica, Ha- doop, C#. Res: EPAM SYSTEMS, 41 Univer- sity Dr, #202, Newtown, PA 18940.

EmploymentGeneral

CARRIER ROUTES

AVAILABLE

IN YOUR AREA

Call Today1-253-872-6610

Carriers Wanted:The Bellevue Reporter is seek ing independent contract delivery drivers to deliver the Bellevue Repor ter one day per week. A rel iable, in- sured vehicle and a cur- rent WA drivers license is required. These are independent contract de- livery routes. Please call (253) 872-6610. or email circulation@bellevuere- [email protected]

Advertise yourupcoming garage sale in your local community paper and online to reach thousands of households in your area.Call: 800-388-2527 Fax: 360-598-6800 Go online: nw-ads.com

EmploymentGeneral

CH2M HILL, Inc. in Bellevue, Washington

seeks a

Section Manager

to manage the Construc- tion Management team in all aspects of manag- ing the project scope of work, t ime, costs and quality and review and m o n i t o r t h e p r o j e c t schedules. Bachelor’s degree in Civil Engineer- ing or Construction Man- agemen t ( o r fo re i gn e q u i va l e n t ) p l u s 1 0 years of experience in the following areas: lead role in TBM Tunnel Con- s t r uc t ion w i th in So f t Ground Soils, Tunnel In- spection, Construction Management of Tunnel Pro jects; pressur ized face Tunnel Boring Ma- chine (TBM) Construc- tion and Sequential Ex- cavation Method (SEM) Mining and monitoring of geotechnical instrumen- tation. Employer will ac- cept an additional two (2) years of experience in the following areas in lieu of a Bachelor’s de- gree: lead role in TBM Tunne l Cons t r uc t i on within Soft Ground Soils, Tunnel Inspection, Con- struction Management of Tunnel Projects; pres- surized face Tunnel Bor- ing Machine (TBM) Con- struction and Sequential E x c a v a t i o n M e t h o d (SEM) Mining and moni- toring of geotechnical in- strumentation.

To apply, mail resume to: Jake Jessop, CH2M HILL, 9191 S. Jamaica

St., Englewood, CO 80112. Must reference

job code: 40234. EOE.

EmploymentTransportation/Drivers

DRIVERS -- Get on the Road Fast! Immediate Openings! Top Pay, Full Benefits, CDL-A, Haz- mat, Doubles Required! Haney Truck Line, Call Now. 1-888-414-4467. www.gohaney.com

GORDON TRUCKING I n c . C D L - A D r i v e r s Needed. Dedicated & OTR Positions Available! Consistent Miles, Bene- fits, 401k & EOE. Sign On Bonus! Recruiters ava i lable 7 days /wk ! Call: 866-725-9669

Health Care EmploymentGeneral

Patient Care Coordinator

Mental Health Clinic. Assist with duties relat- ed to processing pa- t ients: check- in, pay- ments, providing support to physicians. At least 2 years exper ience re- quired.

Email resume to [email protected]

[email protected]

Employment High Tech

Senior Data Architect

TPR Consulting is cur- rently looking for a Sr. Data Architect. The ideal candidate should have expert understanding of BI and Teradata Archi- tecture, CLDM (Commu- nication Logical Data Model) and Data Model- ing software such as Er- win and Embarcadero.

Please contact us if interested:

[email protected]

[email protected]

Business Opportunities

C o u n t e r t o p D e fe n s e Spray Displays! Money M a k e r - N o S e l l i n g ! $8000-$30,000 invest- ment required. Call Now! Quality Retail Locations A v a i l a b l e i n YO U R AREA! BBB Accredited Bus iness . ( 800 )961 - 6086

Make Up To $2,000.00+ Per Week! New Credit Card Ready Drink-Snack Vending Machines. Mini- mum $4K to $40K+ In- vestment Required. Lo- cations Available. BBB Accred i ted Bus iness. (800) 962-9189

Schools & Training

AIRLINES ARE HIRING – Tra in for hands on Av iat ion Career. FAA approved program. Fi- nancial aid if qualified - Job placement assis- tance. CALL Aviation In- stitute of Maintenance 877-818-0783

Want to go school? The Classes Are Virtual, the degree is Real. Criminal Just ice and Business degrees Are Available. CALL NOW Tol l Free: 1-855-637-0880

You’ll find everything you need in one website 24 hours a day 7 days a week: nw-ads.com.

stuffAntiques &Collectibles

1957 CHEVY FRAME and Front Cl ip $800, 1981 Chevette Shooter $600, 1972 Chevy Con- ver tible Impala $1500, 1976 Coronet x Police Car Consecut ive V in Numbers 2 for $2500. 253-804-4603

ALWAYS BUYING

Antiques & Collectibles

Estate Items (425)776-7519

House Calls AvailableCall Anytime - Thanks!

SEATTLE RAINIERSITEMS WANTED

Photos, baseballs, pro- grams, any and all old Seattle baseball items. Seattle Pilots, Totems, WA Huskies, Old Pacific NW Sports related, too!

Call Dave 7 days 1-800-492-9058 206-441-1900

Antiques &Collectibles

Se Habla

Espanol!Para ordenar un anuncio

en el Little Nickel!Llame a Lia

[email protected]

Appliances

AMANA RANGEDeluxe 30” Glasstop

Range self clean, auto clock & timer Extra-

Large oven & storage *UNDER WARRANTY*Over $800. new. Pay off balance of $193 or make

payments of $14 per month. Credit Dept.

206-244-6966

APPLIANCE PICK UP SERVICE

We will pick up your un- wanted appliances

working or not.Call

800-414-5072

DRYER/WASHER SET IN WHITE

Good cond! $300 obo.Must sell ASAP!!

You move. Please call

360-451-2133

KENMORE FREEZER Repo Sears deluxe 20cu.ft.

freezer 4 fast freeze shelves, defrost drain,

interior light *UNDER WARRANTY*Make $15 monthly pay-

ments or pay off balance of $293.

Credit Dept. 206-244-6966

KENMORE REPOHeavy duty washer &

dryer, deluxe, large cap. w/normal, perm-press &

gentle cycles.* Under Warranty! *

Balance left owing $272 or make payments of $25. Call credit dept.

206-244-6966MATCHING Washer and Dryer set, $355. Guaran- teed! 360-405-1925

NEW APPLIANCESUP TO 70% OFF

All Manufacturer Small Ding’s, Dents, Scratches

and Factory Imperfec- tions

*Under Warranty*For Inquiries, Call or Visit

Appliance Distributors @14639 Tukwila Intl. Blvd.

206-244-6966

REPO REFRIGERATOR

Custom deluxe 22 cu. ft. side-by-side, ice & water

disp., color panels available

UNDER WARRANTY! was over $1200 new, now only payoff bal. of $473 or make pmts of

only $15 per mo.Credit Dept. 206-244-6966

STACK LAUNDRYDeluxe front loading

washer & dryer. Energy efficient, 8 cycles.

Like new condition* Under Warranty *Over $1,200 new, now only $578 or make pay- ments of $25 per month

%206-244-6966%

Need extra cash? Place your classified ad today! Call 1-800-388-2527 or Go online 24 hours a day www.nw-ads.com.

Beauty & Health

#1 TRUSTED Se l le r ! VIAGRA 100MG, CIALIS 20mg.40 Pills + 4 !Dis- c reet sh ipp ing, Save $500 now! 1-877-595- 1022.

BEAUTIFULSMILES

Denture & Dental ClinicAExtractions & Dentures Placed Immediately (onsite) AIn-house Lab AImplant Dentures A1/hr Repair/Reline AFree ConsultationMichael A. Salehi LDBoard Certified Denturist

Gabriela Aluas DDS General Dentist

Bothell18521 101st Ave N.E.

425-487-1551Lake Forest Park 17230 Bothell Way206-362-3333

BeautifulSmilesLLC.com

Medical CollectiveMon-Fri 11-7

Sat & Sun 11-5Our Medibles are Delicious &

Potent!We have a wide variety of ,

Clones, and Top-Quality Medicine.

360.886.8046www.thekindalternative

medicalcollective.webs.com

SCHEDULE TODAY

1.800.840.8875MEDICAL CANNABIS

AUTHORIZATIONSSafe*Legal*Compliant

24/7 Patient Verification

WWW.GMGWA.COM

Building Materials& Supplies

“CEDAR FENCING”31x6x6’..........$1.10 ea31x4x5’......2 for $1.00

“CEDAR SIDING”1x8 Cedar Bevel 42¢ LF31x6x8’ T&G.......59¢ LF

“CEDAR DECKING”5/4x4 Decking

5/4x4 8’ to 16’..............37¢ LF

5/4x6 Decking38’ to 16’ Lengths.85¢LF

Complete Line: Western Red Cedar

Building Materials Affordable Prices OPEN MON - SAT

360-377-9943www.cedarproductsco.com

Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds.www.nw-ads.com

July 05, 2013 [17] www.nw-ads.com www.bellevuereporter.com

www.soundpublishing.com

We are community & daily newspapers in these Western Washington Locations:

• King County• Kitsap County• Clallam County• Jeff erson County• Okanogan County• Pierce County• Island County• San Juan County• Snohomish County• Whatcom County

Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. We off er a great work environment with opportunity for advancement along with a competitive benefi ts package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401k.

Accepting resumes at:[email protected] by mail to:19426 68th Avenue S, Kent, WA 98032ATTN: HRPlease state which position and geographic area you are applying for.

Current Employment Opportunities at www.soundpublishing.com

For a list of our most current job openings and to learn more about us visit our website:

SALES CONSULTANTTired of working nights or weekends? Looking for an exciting career in Sales? Sound Publishing, Inc. has an immediate opening for an Advertising Sales Consultant with the Bellevue Reporter.

The ideal candidates will demonstrate strong interpersonal skills, both written and oral, and have excellent communications skills; must be motivated and take the initiative to sell multiple media products including on-line advertising and special products, work with existing customers and find ways to grow sales and income with new prospective clients. Sales experience necessary; Print media experience is a definite asset. Must be computer-proficient with data processing and spreadsheets as well as utilizing the Internet. Position requires use of personal cell phone and vehicle, possession of valid WA State Driver’s License and proof of active vehicle insurance.

Compensation includes salary plus commission and we offer a competitive benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K retirement plan.

If you’re interested in joining our team and working for the leading independent newspaper publisher in Washington State, then we want to hear from you! 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/BLVU

Feat

ure

d P

osi

tio

nSales Positions• Multi Media Advertising Sales Consultants - Whidbey Island - Thurston - Kitsap - Everett - Pierce County - Bellevue• Inside Sales - Poulsbo - Renton• Ad Director - Everett

Reporters & Editorial• Reporter - Kent• Reporter, PT - Vashon• Editor - Forks

Non-Media Positions• Offi ce Coordinator/Inside Sales - Marysville• Truck Driver - Everett

GuaranteedBest Prices inWashington!

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Bulb, Ballast & Hood

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orBellevue:

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Building Materials& Supplies

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Cemetery Plots

2 CEMETERY Plots for Sale. Cedar Lawns Me- morial Park in Redmond. Spaces 3 & 4, Lot 87C of the Eternity Garden. Selling 1 for $3,900 or both for $7,500 OBO. P lease ca l l 253-678- 7310 to get info on who to contact to see.BELLEVUEGarden of Gethsemane, 1 space, Sunset Memo- rial Park. Lot 57 is well ma in ta ined. Inc ludes t ransfer fee. $8,000. (This section is closed. Space avail only via pri- vate sale) Please call Darleen 425-214-3615SELLING 4 PLOTS at Purdy Walter Floral Hills Cemetery in Lynnwood. Side by side, in beautiful Azalea Gardens near the Fountain. Currently ava i l ab le fo r $5 ,500 each through the Ceme- tery. Selling for $5,000 each or $18,000 for all. P lease ca l l 425-488- 7318

Sell your stuff free in the Super Flea! Your items totalling $150 or less will run for free one week in your local community paper and online.Call today to place your ad 866-825-9001

Cemetery Plots

SUNSET HILLS Memori- al Cemetery in Bellevue. Selling 2 Side by Side Plots in the Sold Out, Prestigious Location of the Garden of Gethse- mane. Block 121, Spac- es 5 & 6. Each valued at $26,500. Will sell indi- vidually for $18,500 or $36,000 for the pair. Call 360-474-9953 or 360- 631-4425

SUNSET HILLS Memori- al Cemetery in Bellevue. 2 s ide by s ide p lo ts available in the Sold Out Garden of Devotion, 9B, S p a c e 9 a n d 1 0 . $12 ,500 each nego - t i a b l e . A l s o , 1 p l o t available in Garden of Devotion, 10B, space 5, $8,000 negotiable. Call 503-709-3068 or e-mail [email protected]

Electronics

Di recTV - Ove r 140 channels only $29.99 a month. Call Now! Triple savings! $636.00 in Sav- ings, Free upgrade to Genie & 2013 NFL Sun- day ticket free!! Star t saving today! 1-800-279- 3018

Dish Network lowest na- tionwide price $19.99 a m o n t h . F R E E H B O / Cinemax/Starz FREE Blockbuster. FREE HD- DVR and instal l . Next day install 1-800-375- 0784

DISH TV Retailer. Start- i ng a t $19 .99 /mon th PLUS 30 Premium Mo- vie Channels FREE for 3 Months! SAVE! & Ask About SAME DAY Instal- lation! CALL - 877-992- 1237

FREE 10” Internet tablet when your order DISH installed free. Free HBO. Offer ends Soon Call for details. 1-866-845-7776. Restrictions apply with approved credit.

My Computer Works. Computer problems? Vi- ruses, spyware, email, printer issues, bad inter- net connections - FIX IT N OW ! P r o fe s s i o n a l , U.S.-based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help. 1-866- 998-0037

Electronics

*REDUCE YOUR cable bill! * Get a 4-Room All- Digital Satellite system installed for FREE and programming starting at $19.99/mo. FREE HD/ DVR upgrade for new callers, SO CALL NOW. 1-800-699-7159

SAVE on Cable TV-In- ternet-Digital Phone-Sat- e l l i t e . Yo u `ve Go t A Choice! Opt ions from ALL major service pro- viders. Call us to learn more! CALL Today. 877- 884-1191

Exercise Equipment

TREADMILL, Lifestyle Auto Incline 2800, excel- lent condit ion. Comes with manual. Folds up. Has Heart Rate Monitor. $200. 360-813-1604

Firewood, Fuel& Stoves

A+ SEASONEDFIREWOOD

Dry & Custom-SplitAlder, Maple &

Douglas FirSpeedy Delivery &

Best Prices!

425-312-5489425-508-9554

Quality Firewood Logs

Delivered (Logs Only)

Green or Seasoned. 7 Cord Minimum Log

order. Full loads (10 cords or more)

start at $130 per cord delivered to most

areas. Please call Ralph at 425-530-1332

Advertise yourupcoming garage sale in your local community paper and online to reach thousands of households in your area.Call: 800-388-2527 Fax: 360-598-6800 Go online: nw-ads.com

flea marketFlea Market

$10 NEW TIRE CHAINS fit a Volkswagon “Quik Chain” brand. Poulsbo. 360-779-3574.32” JVC TV Great pic- t u re . Wor ks pe r fec t . Quality brand! Not a flat screen. $65. Microwave, $40. Cal l a f ter noon: 12pm. 425-885-9806. Cell 425-260-8535

4 OLD RADIOS 1946 Emmerson $50. 1959 Zenith AM/FM $40. 1960 GE AM $35. 1968 GE AM/FM $25. Bremerton 360-377-7170.B A B Y M o n i t o r, o n l y used 6 months, $20. Poulsbo. 360-779-3574.CAMERA Bag, Profes- s ional . Medium Size, Many Pockets for Acces- sories, Shoulder Strap, Great Shape, $50. Lug- gage, Leisure Soft Side, 26”x18” , S ide Z ipper Pocket, Pull Strap and Luggage Tag, 4 Spinner Wheels, $25. 425-392- 7809.DESK IN EXCELLENT condi t ion! 2 drawers, (2) 8” deep shelves & keyboard pullout. Great for computer or regular desk! L ight oak. $35. Bellevue 425-641-0643.DINETTE SET, 40” x 30.5” plus 11 & 16/16” Expansion Leaf. Formica Top, Black Wrought Iron Legs. Plus 3 Brown Nau- gahyde Chairs. Great Condition and Great Buy at $150. 425-392-7809.E L E C T R I C T R A I N S. Marx Set in Original Box. Misc Lionel - Engine, 7 Cars, Some Track. All O 27 Gauge. $80 for all. 360-377-7170 Bremer- ton.Small dog car seat, $10. Desk , $10 . 425-271- 3880

Sell it free in the Flea1-866-825-9001

Flea Market

IT’S HOT. Need a small POOL for the kids? 10’ diameter, 2.5’ deep, In- tex Brand Round Pool. Used. No leaks. Comes with a ladder. Cost $200 new. Se l l i ng fo r $50 cash. I t needs a new pump, but doesn’t have to have one. 253-230- 8225 Port Orchard

SPLIT RAIL Wood Fenc- ing, Approx 10’ or Long- er In Length, About 15 to 18 Pieces, $50 obo. You haul. 206-588-2303 or 206-920-6178 (Vashon)

STYLISH LADIES COAT Nice lightweight leather. Worn very little and in excel lent shape! Cal f length, s ize 9, black. $140. Call after noon: 12pm. 425-885-9806 or cell: 425-260-8535.

Food &Farmer’s Market

100% Guaranteed Oma- ha Steaks - SAVE 69% on The Grilling Collec- t i o n . N O W O N LY $49.99 P lus 2 FREE GIFTS & r ight- to-the- door del ivery in a re- usable cooler, ORDER Today. 1- 888-697-3965 Use Code:45102ETA or w w w . O m a h a S - teaks.com/offergc05

Free ItemsRecycler

FREE: BAMBOO shoots You come and dig up. Bainbr idge. 206-842- 2776

FREE: JARS. 36 Jelly Jars. 18 Pint Jars. Great for canning or crafty ide- as. Call 425-888-0762

FREE WINDOWS. Old- er, aluminum, approx 9 avail. Great for garage, project, hot house, etc. B.I. 206-842-7023.

Home Furnishings

LIVING ROOM and Din- ing Room Furniture and Shelving Units Available. Various Sizes, All Priced To Sel l . Cal l for info: 425-822-7078

Jewelry & Fur

I BUY GOLD, S i lver, D iamonds, Wr is t and Pocket Watches, Gold and Silver Coins, Silver- ware, Gold and Platinum Antique Jewelry. Call Mi- c h a e l A n t h o n y ’s a t (206)254-2575

Mail Order

Alone? Emergenc ies Happen! Get Help with o n e b u t t o n p u s h ! $ 2 9 . 9 5 / m o n t h F r e e equipment, Free set-up. Protection for you or a loved one. Ca l l L i fe - Watch USA 1-800-357- 6505AT T E N T I O N S L E E P APNEA SUFFERERS w i t h M e d i c a r e . G e t C PA P R e p l a c e m e n t Supplies at little or NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, pre- vent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 1-866-993-5043Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and a f f o r d a b l e m e d i c a - tions.Our licensed Cana- dian mail order pharma- cy will provide you with savings of up to 90% on a l l yo u r m e d i c a t i o n needs. Call today 1-800- 418-8975, for $10.00 off your f i rst prescr ipt ion and free shipping.K I L L B E D B U G S & THEIR EGGS! Buy a Ha r r i s Bed Bug K i t , Complete Room Treat- ment Solution. Odorless, Non-Staining. Available online homedepot.com (NOT IN STORES)Medical Alert for Seniors - 24/7 monitoring. FREE E q u i p m e n t . F R E E Shipping. Nat ionwide Service. $29.95/Month CALL Medical Guardian Today 866-992-7236TAKE VIAGRA? Stop paying outrageous pric- es! Best prices… VIA- GRA 100MG, 40 pills+/4 free, only $99.00. Dis- creet Shipping, Power Pill. 1-800-368-2718

Miscellaneous

WANTS TO purchase minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send de- ta i ls P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201

Miscellaneous

FAMILY FUN! 4 Tickets to TAYLOR SWIFT, Ta- coma Dome, Saturday, August 31st, 7pm. $146 per ticket. Section 1-B, Row 8, Seats 29, 30, 31, 32. (206)420-7101

FREE ESTIMATE

for Purchase of NEW Garage

Doors1-888-289-6945A-1 Door Serice(Mention This Ad)

I Buy Ugly and Old Houses!

Grant(206)486-6344

MINI FARM, SE Nor th Dako ta $45 ,000 , (4 ) acres, old barn, Silo, riv- er, secluded; ND 20% of 3 6 2 m i n e r a l a c r e s $10,000. Detai ls, cal l Jack (701)799-9151

Find what you need 24 hours a day.

Miscellaneous

Grand OpeningNW Garden Supply

Save Up To 50%

1000 Watt Grow Light Package Includes Bal- last, Lamp & Reflector!

$1292 Locations Fife/Seattle9100 E Marginal Way,

South Tukwilla206.767.8082

2001 48th Ave Court E Unit #3 Fife

253.200.6653

Most of our glass is blown by local artists,

hand crafted, a true work of art!

water pipes, oil burners, keif boxes, nug jars, ho-

liebowlies, hightimes magazines, calendars, clothing and literature along with a full line of

vaporizers.

Goin Glass

Open 7 days a week!

425-222-0811

Wanted!

Used Golf BallsMin. 1,000 to 10,000

No old or cracked balls

I Pay Cash!!The more the better!

Call (425)372-6000

Advertise yourupcoming garage sale in your local community paper and online to reach thousands of households in your area.Call: 800-388-2527 Fax: 360-598-6800 Go online: nw-ads.com

[18] July 05, 2013 www.bellevuereporter.com www.nw-ads.comSporting Goods

ELK HUNT LEASEPrivate Ranch

SW WashingtonExclusive two week two hunter early elk archery season (in the rut) . For bul ls only. Semi guided. Perfect for senior, disabled, or youth hunt. Ground blinds, guest house, almost everything in- cluded, 360-771-2016

Yard and Garden

2012 SNAPPER Coro- net RE-200 Series Rider Mower. 14.5 Gross HP with 30” Mower Deck. Almost New. A Great Deal at the Newly Re- d u c e d P r i c e o f $1999.99! Available to see at True Value Ser- v ice Center, Vashon. 206-409-6414KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Indoor/Outdoor. Odor- less, Non-Staining, Long Lasting. Kills Socrpions and other insects. Effec- tive results begin after t h e s p r a y d r i e s ! Available at Ace Hard- ware, The Home Depot or Homedepot.com

Wanted/Trade

CASH FOR ANY CAR! Running or Not! Don’t trade in or junk your car before calling us! Instant Offer! 1-800-541-8433CASH fo r unexp i red DIABETIC Test Str ips! Free Shipping, Friendly Service, BEST pr ices and 24hr payment! Call today 1- 877-588 8500 or visitwww.TestStripSearch.com Espanol 888-440-4001

HORNETS/ YELLOW- JACKETS. Free Non- Toxic Removal Of Most From Not-Sprayed “Pa- perball” Nests, Around Football Size Or Larger. 425-485-0103 or [email protected]

pets/animals

Birds

See PhotosOnline!

Whenever you seea camera icon on

an ad like this:

Just log on to:

www.littlenickel.com

Simply type in the phone number from the ad in the “Search By Keywords” to see

the ad with photo!

Want to run a photo ad in Little Nickel?

Just give us a call!

1-800-544-0505

Cats

Exotic Mix Breed Kittens G rea t Pe rsona l i t i e s ! $100. Call for Details. 425-870-5597 or 425- 870-1487

Cats

RAGDOLL Mix Kittens, Very Pret ty. S iamese Himalayan Color. Very Friendly, Loving, Social Cats. Some extra toes. 1st Shot. $25, $50 & $75. 360-651-0987 or 425-374-9925

Dogs

(5) MINIATURE YORK- SHIRE Terrier Puppies For Sale. They are 8 weeks old and ready for a new home. I have 3 fe- male and 2 males left. They are very loving, playful, and ready for a new adventure. I am asking $1200 for the fe- male and $900 for the males. Email or call if in- terested: [email protected]

AKC COCKER Babies most colors, beautiful, s o c i a l i z e d , h e a l t hy, ra ised w i th ch i ld ren . Shots, wormed, pedi- grees. $600 up. Terms? 425-750-0333, Everett

AKC DOBERMAN Pups born May 6th, now taking deposits. 2 red males, 3 red females, 1 black fe- ma le . $600-$650 , (360)426-3993.

AKC ENGLISHBULLDOG PUPPIES

Mul t i p l e Champ ion Bloodlines. Extremely healthy, Vet checked, al l shots & worming Ready for their Loving, Forever Homes. Pre- Spoiled extreme Intel- legence & Totally So- cialized! $1,250+ 425- 422-1044 Arlington

A K C E n g l i s h C r e a m Min ia ture LH Dachs- hunds. Two shaded cream females-father is by U.K. Import. Very do- c i l e . R a i s e d i n o u r house. $1000.00 each. 509-844-6911

AKC GERMAN SHEP- HERD pups. Females from $1500 black sable and bicolor sable. Males $1800 black sable. East German & Czech work- ing lines. Home compan- ion, SAR, Sport & family protect ion. 253-380- 0190SchraderhausK9.com

AKC Golden Retr iever pups. Excel lent blood line. Also Golden Doo- dle pups. Wormed and shots! $700. 360-652- 7148

Dogs

AKC Golden Retrievers 4 boys & 2 gir ls AKC Reg is te red Purebred golden retriever puppies for sale. Girls $600.00 ea boys $500.00. All will be ready by July 6th. All have dew claws remove, first round of shots and d e w o r m i n g . C a l l 360 474-0120 after 4:30 on the weekdays any- time on weekends.

AKC GREAT Dane Pups 10% activeduty military discount 503-410-4335 Dreyersdanes now in Goldendale WA. 5 new litters! Guarantee health- ly males & females. Eu- ropean blood line, these pups are a larger, stocki- er breed. Beautiful coats Blues, Harlequin, Black, Mantles & Merle. Super sweet. Loveable, gentle intelligent giants! $700 and up. www.dreyersdanes.com

AKC PAPILLONS. Gor- geous puppies. All come pre-loved, pre-spoiled, vet checked. 1st shots & wormings & dew claws removed. See the pups at www.aladdin-papi l - lons.com $500. We can meet Western WA pup- py buyers in Ellensburg. (509)994-6704 week- days, (509)732-4555 weekends

AKC Poodle Puppies Teacups & Tiny Toys Pr ice Reduct ion! 3 Chocolate and White & 1 Chocolate Fe- m a l e . 3 M a l e s : 1 R e d , 1 B e i g e , 1 Choco la te. Fu l l o f Wiggles and Kisses. Reserve Your Puff of Love! 360-249-3612

AKC POODLE PUPS Standard size 7 month old male & female pup- p i e s . B e a u t i f u l d a r k brown coloring. Healthy, happy, outgoing & play- fu l ! Begin ing t ra in ing started, shots & wormed. Parents hips, elbows & eyes are good! $1200 ea. Call Roberta: 360- 443-2447 or 360-865- [email protected]

AKC Rottweiler Puppies-6 males, 4 females. Tails docked, dew claws re- moved, dewormed, & 1st shots. $850 360-319- 5825

CHIHUAHUAS, Puppies $ 3 5 0 a n d u p. A d u l t Adoptions also. Reputa- b l e O r e g o n Ke n n e l . Unique colors, Long and Shor t Ha i red. Heal th Guaranteed. UTD Vacci- nations/ wormings, litter- box trained, socialized. Video, pictures, info/ vir- tual tour: www.chihua- hua-puppies.net Refer- ences happily supplied! Easy I-5 access. Drain, Oregon. Vic and Mary Kasser, 541-459-5951

Dogs

E u r o p e a n G e r m a n Shepherd Puppies for Sale Puppies were born Apr i l 6th of European Parents who are hips and elbows certified and g raded exce l l en t fo r breeding. We are look- ing for caring homes for these very cheerful pup- p i e s . P l e a s e c a l l 425 277 7986 or email gil [email protected] for more informationGERMAN WIREHAIRED puppies. Taking deposits now. Will be ready after July 4th. Purebred, non registered. Have eight boys. $500 each. Both parents on site. Excelent hunters and pets. 253- 677-6201G O L D E N D O O D L E Puppies, Ready 7-8-13, 8 Fe m a l e s / 4 M a l e s , C K C R e g i s t e r e d , Wor med, F i rs t Vacs, Dewc laws Removed . $800 Auburn. Call Cat 253-350-4923JAPANESE CHIN. Purebred, 15 Months, A d o r a b l e Wh i te /Cream/Lemon. Completed Vaccinations and Bir th Cer t i f icate. Pa i d $ 1 2 0 0 . A s k i n g $900obo. (206)938- 0604 (Home) or 206- 849-6202 (Cell).

KC ENGLISH MASTIFF Pupp ies . Fawn ma le born Apr i l 27th, 2013. World Winners are these pups fami ly t radi t ion! The mother ’s parents and grandfathers, were winners at the world dog show! 4 world winners within the third genera- tion! Puppies are ready now ! These pupp ies have the greatest genes available in English Mas- tiff history! Aicama Zorba De La-Susa rare stock. This is a once in a life- time opportunity for Mas- tiff lovers. $3,500. 253- 347-1835www.worldclassmastiffs.com

www.worldclassmastiffs.com

MINIATUREAustralian ShepherdPuppies. Males and females, $650-$750. Registered, heal th g u a r a n t e e d , U T D shots. One 6yr old adult female available $250. 541-518-9284 Baker City, Oregon.Oregonaussies.com

MINI AUSSIEPurebred Pups, raised in family

home, sweet par- ents, 1st shots,

wormed, dew claws & tails done, regis- tered, many colors,

$400 & Up, loveaussies4evr

@aol.com360-521-7166

Mini Schnoodle puppies D.O.B. 4-29 White to redin color, coats are soft & fluffy to schnauzery! We are near spokane and can meet par t way.For pics and details call 509- 722-4721 M $600 F $650MINI Yorkie pups. 3 M, 1 F, wormed, tails cut, first shot, $400 cash. 253- 2 7 9 - 3 3 4 2 o r e m a i l [email protected] PUPS, Beautiful Cream Sable Boy. Ener- g e t i c & F u n . 1 s t 2 Shots, Wormed. Ready For Love. Call 425-377- 1675SMALL MIXED Breed puppies, $200 each. Call Skyway a t : 206-723- 1271

Dogs

NEED A PUPPY?WANT CHOICES?

*CAIRN*CHINESE CRESTED

*PUG*PAPILLON

*TEDDY BEAR*WESTIE*BICHON*MIN PIN

*SCHNAUZER*ST. BERNARD

Photos at:FARMLANDPETS.COM

F Current VaccinationFCurrent Deworming

F VET EXAMINED

Farmland Pets & Feed

9000 Silverdale Way

(360)692-0415POODLE PUPPIES, 3 A K C m a l e s , B l a c k , Cream, White & Black Par t i . Tai ls/dew claws r e m o v e d , d e - w o r m e d / va c c i n a t e d . Ready now. $600 [email protected]

Puppies! Faux Frenchies, Boston’s

and Boston x Chihuahuas

(Bo-Chi’s)Many colors, shots, wormed. Loved and kissed daily! $450 & up. See webpage:www.littledogpage.com 541-459-5802.

ROTTWEILER Purebred Puppies, sweet, great tem-perament, family- raised, nice mark-

ings, lst shots, wormed, dew claws

& tails done, $500 & up, joann@

scattercreek.com 360-910-0995

Siberian Husky Puppies Bor n Apr i l 22nd Pa- p e r e d , f i r s t s h o t s , wo r m e d . B l u e eye s . black/white or grey/white in color. Both male and female available 10 pup- pies in all. $500.00 call or text 509-293-0905 More pictures available by request

TAKING ORDERS for Adorable American Eskimo pups. Smar t Gorgeous dogs! Pure Whi te, wormed, 1st shots, not bred back to family, papered $500., to hold pups, dep. req. ( 3 6 0 ) 6 5 2 - 9 6 1 2 o r (425)923-6555

Horses

1997 FEATHERLIGHT 2 Horse S t ra igh t Load Horse Trailer. Large In- s u l a t e d Ta ck R o o m . New Brakes, L igh ts , Spare Last Year. Excel- lent Condition. $6,000 obo. 253-301-3604

Shop for bargains in the Classifieds. From

tools and appliances to furniture andcollectables.

www.nw-ads.comOpen 24 hours a day.

Horses

2 STALL BARN24’x30’x9’

(2) 10’x12’ Perma stallsw/split opening wood

Dutch doors, 3’x6’8” man door, 18” eave & gable

overhangs, 2’ poly eavelight, 2” fiberglass

vapor barrier roof insula- tion, 18 sidewall & trim

colors w/45 year warranty.

Was $17,359

$15,838

800-824-9552Washington #TOWNCPF099LT

permabilt.comCHUCKWAGON Cook Off During Mule Mania. Don’t miss the largest Chuckwagon gathering in the Northwest! July 19th-21st, Dayton WA, free admission to the public. Dinner Friday & Saturday night, 5:30pm, $15; breakfast served each morning, 7:30am, $8. Purchase tickets at www.MuleManiaDayton.com or ca l l Coyote Mule C o m p a ny 2 0 8 - 8 1 6 - 8681; 208-816-8682.

EQUINE InsuranceCompetitive Rates/Terms

Mortality ~ Major Medical Farm OwnersStable/Trainer LiabilityClub Liability

Obenland & Low Agency, Inc509-843-1497

1-800-262-2811 [email protected]

General Pets

Se HablaEspanol!Para ordenar

un anuncio en el Little Nickel!

Llame a Lia866-580-9405

[email protected]

ServicesAnimals

LOVING Animal Care Visits - Walks Housesitting Home & Farm

JOANNA GARDINER 206-567-0560

(Cell) 206-228-4841

garage sales - WA

Garage/Moving SalesIsland County

LANGLEY 7/3- 7/7 MOVING SALE! Must sacrafice furniture, tools, toys, household, and more! Wednesday thru Sunday from 9 am to 4 pm located at 3604 Saratoga Rd.

Place an advertisement or search for jobs, homes, merchandise, pets and more in the Classifieds 24 hours a day online atwww.nw-ads.com.

Garage/Moving SalesIsland County

OAK HARBORHUGE GARAGE SALE! Lots home furnishings, e l e c t r o n i c s , h o u s e wares, tools, Ryobi Miter Saw, sewing machine, too many more great items to list! Friday and Saturday, July 5th and 6th from 9 am to 3 pm at 2034 Doe Dr, Oak Har- bor. Rain or shine.

Garage/Moving SalesKing County

Advertise yourGARAGE SALE

in the Little Nickel!

2 print editions+ online

Up to 40 words

only $16Call

1-800-544-0505M-F, 8am-5pm

BELLEVUE

SATURDAY, JULY 6th. Garage Sale. 9am - 4pm, 15831 Nor thup Way, Bellevue, 98008. Foxborough Condos. Lots of Great Items!

SNOQUALMIE - Mon- ster Yard Sale. Great P r i ces ! Mos t l y adu l t i tems. Saturday, Ju ly 6 t h . 8 a m - 3 p m . 9305 372ns Ave. S.E.,VASHON ISLAND

ESTATE SALE, Satur- day & Sunday, July 6th & 7th, 9am to 5pm. Lo- cated on 264th Street in D o ck t o n . H o u s e h o l d I tems, Furniture, Col- l ec tab les , 17 ’ Saber Craft with Calkin Trailer, 1992 Jeep Wrangler with To w B a r & 9 0 0 0 l b Wench, 2002 Honda XR 100, Yanmar Trac tor. Look for Signs.VASHON ISLANDYARD SALE. Revo Elec- tric Scooter with Carry- i ng Rack and Many, Many Other Great Items. 9am to 3pm, no earlies. S a t u r d ay, J u l y 6 t h . 10021 SW Cove Road. VashonMassive Moving Sale! Saturday 6/6 from 9AM to 5PM. 8425 SW 216th St. just off Monument. Yard supplies and tools, ceramics, of f ice sup- p l i e s , f i l e c a b i n e t s , books, kitchen stuff, fur- niture, artwork, oak and fir boards and trim, elec- tronics, computers and monitors, & much, much, more.

Garage/Moving SalesKitsap County

HANSVILLE

D R I F T W O O D K E Y Community Wide Yard Sale. Saturday, July 6th, 10am to 4pm, Hansville. Follow signs on Hans- ville Road.HANSVILLE

L U N D S L A S T B a r n Sale! We Are Moving. 38974 Hood Canal Drive NE, Hansvi l le. Fr iday, Saturday and Sunday, Ju ly 5 th-7 th , 9am to 4 p m . C l a s s i c C a r s , Parts, Tools, Artist Mate- rial, Household. All Must Go!

Reach over a million potential customers when you advertise in the Service Directory. Call 800-388-2527 or go online to nw-ads.com

Garage/Moving SalesGeneral

9th AnnualNORTHWESTLARGEST

GARAGE SALE

Evergreen State

Fair GroundsJune 29th

& June 30th

8-5 Sat. 9-2 SunA family friendly

safe place to shop and sell.

Tools, household items, fishing/camp- ing gear and more

treasures await you

425.876.1888for spaces

No Admission & Free Parking

MONROE Year Round

Indoor Swap Meet Celebrating 15 Years!

Evergreen FairgroundsSaturday & Sunday

9 am - 4pmFREE Admission &

parking!For Information call

360-794-5504

wheelsMarinePower

RARE 1991 BOSTON Whaler 16SL. Dual con- sole, 90 HP: 2 stroke Mercury, 8 HP Mercury Kicker, EZ Steer, dual down riggers, water-ski pylon, depth finder, can- vas cover, anchor with rode, anchor buddy, & EZ Loader Trailer. Safe- ty equipment including fire extinguisher, throw cushion & more. One owner! Professional ly maintained! Located in La Connor. $9,500. 206- 726-1535.

Auto Events/ Auctions

Abandoned Vehicle Auction

July 10th 2013Auction Time 11:30 Preview Time 9:30

17611 NE 70th StRedmond

Ibsen TowingRTTO #5364/5051

9 Vehicles425-644-2575

Crossroads TowingRTTO #5515

1 Vehicle425-746-4373

SUPERIOR TOWINGRTTO 5278/5316

13228 N.E. 16th St.Bellevue WAWEDNESDAY,

7/10/13, 12:30 PMAbandoned Car Auction

(17 VEHICLES)

AutomobilesMercedes-Benz

2000 MERCEDES Benz E-430 4Matic. 5 Passen- ger, Automatic, 88,205 Miles, Br i l l iant Si lver, Ash Leather Interior, Ex- cellent Condition, Kept Garaged. $9,300. 404- 394-7973 (cell)

Need extra cash? Place your classified ad today! Call 1-800-388-2527 or Go online 24 hours a day www.nw-ads.com.

July 05, 2013 [19] www.nw-ads.com www.bellevuereporter.com Automobiles

Mercedes-Benz

1 9 8 1 M E R C E D E S 380sl. Gorgeous classic! Light Yellow with Saddle B rown In te r io r. Dar k B r o w n C a n va s To p . 114,000 Miles. Lovely, Cared For. $7,950 OBO. 206-842-5301

AutomobilesOthers

SAVE $$$ on AUTO IN- SURANCE from the ma- jor names you know and trust. No forms. No has- sle. No obligation. Call R E A D Y F O R M Y QUOTE now! CALL 1- 877-890-6843

Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories

Cash JUNK CARS &

TRUCKS

Free Pick up 253-335-1232

1-800-577-2885

Motorhomes

32’ WINNEBAGO Elan- don Motorhome, 1990. Good Condit ion. Very clean, never smoked in. New Refr igerator and Toi let . Generator, Ai r Cond i t i on ing , M ic ro - wave, 2 TVs. Lots of Closet Space. Full bath. Queen bed i n back . Sleeps 4 comfor tably. Auburn area. A Bargain at $8,000 Cash. 253- 653-0055

Vehicles Wanted

CASH FOR CARS! Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Tr u c k TO DAY. F r e e Towing! Instant Offer: 1-888-545-8647

Got junk cars? Get $ PA I D TO DAY. F R E E towing. Licensed towers. $1,000 FREE gift vouch- ers! ALL Makes-ALL Models! Call today 1- 888-870-0422

Professional ServicesFarm/Garden Service

Se HablaEspanol!Para ordenar

un anuncio en el Little Nickel!

Llame a Lia866-580-9405

[email protected]

Se HablaEspanol!Para ordenar

un anuncio en el Little Nickel!

Llame a Lia866-580-9405

[email protected]

Professional ServicesLegal Services

BANKRUPTCY

Friendly, Flat FeeFREE PhoneConsultation

CallGreg Hinrichsen,

Attorney206-801-7777

(Sea/Tac)425-355-8885 [email protected]

DIVORCE$155, $175 w/ChildrenNo Court AppearancesComplete Preparation.

Includes Custody,Support, PropertyDivision and Bills.

BBB Member503-772-5295

[email protected]

DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete preparat ion. Inc ludes custody, support, prop- er ty division and bills. B B B m e m b e r . (503) 772-5295.www.paralegalalterna- [email protected]

Divorce ForGrownups

www.CordialDivorce.com

206-842-8363

Law Offices ofLynda H. McMaken P.S.

Professional ServicesTutoring/Lessons

Vashon Tutors & More

Math, Reading, EtcAll Areas of Academics

incl. Special NeedsAll Ages Welcome!

Call TODAY:206-408-7559

You’ll find everything you need in one website 24 hours a day 7 days a week: nw-ads.com.

Home ServicesAsphalt/ Paving

CUSTOM PAVINGNo Job Too Big or Small! 40yrs Exp.

Lic#CUSTOP*907PK/Bond/InsNew Driveways,

Parking Lots, Repair Work, Sealcoating, Senior DiscountsFree Estimates

425-318-5008

Home ServicesConcrete Contractors

TOM’S CONCRETESPECIALTY

425-443-547425 years experience

Bond • Ins. • Lic #TOMSCCS881DM

8177

27

Exposed Aggregate • Colored Stamped • Pavers • Retaining Wall

www.tomsconcretespecialty.com

All Types Of Concrete

A & E Concrete

Driveways, patios, steps, & decorative

stamp. Foundations, repair & waterproofing. Clearing and hauling. 30 years experience.

(425)299-8257Lic/bonded/insured.

alaneec938dn

Home ServicesGeneral Contractors

The Leaders InHome Improvement

Repairs

$25 OFF 1st Service

* Bathrooms *Kitchens * Additons

Siding * Decks * DoorsWindows * Drywall

*Full Remodels**Tenant Improvments*

~Inside to Outside~~Top to Bottom~

www.kitchenremodel-contractor.com

Call Denis &His Team Today!206-228-2708

www.kitchenremodel-contractor.com

Notice to ContractorsWashington State Law

(RCW 18.27.100)requires that all adver- tisements for construc- tion related services include the contrac- tor’s current depar t- ment of Labor and In- dustr ies registrat ion number in the adver- tisement.Failure to obtain a cer- tificate of registration from L&I or show the registration number in all advertising will re- su l t in a f ine up to $5000 against the un- registered contractor.For more information, call Labor and Indus- tries Specialty Compli- ance Services Division at

1-800-647-0982or check L&Is internet site at www.lni.wa.gov

Picture it sold!Include a photo in your classified ad and show thousands of readers

what you’re selling. Go online to nw-ads.com or call 1-800-388-2527 for information on our

5 week photo specials.

Home ServicesExcavations

Excavation WorkSpecializing in

Small & Medium JobsDemolition

Trenching & GratingBrush/Stump Removal

Hauling ServicesTop Soil/Bark/Rock

206-510-3539Licensed, Bonded & Insured

Home ServicesHauling & Cleanup

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

Locally/Veteran owned & operated. Telephone Estimates,

Ray Foley, 425-844-2509

Licensed & Insured

AFFORDABLE q HAULING

Storm Cleanup, Hauling, Yard Waste,

House Cleanup, Removes Blackberry

Bushes, Etc.

Summer Special! 2nd load 1/2 price

25% DiscountSpecialing in

House, garage & yard cleanouts.

VERY AFFORDABLE

206-478-8099

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

Fast Service - 25 yrs Experience, Reasonable rates

Call Reliable Michael 425.455.0154

CLEANUP & HAULING PRUNING

& ODD JOBS Jim 425-455-5057

GOT CLUTTER?WE TAKE IT ALL!

Junk, Appliances,Yard Debris, etc.

Serving Kitsap Co. Since 1997

360-377-7990206-842-2924

HappyHauler.comAT YOUR DISPOSAL

Experienced * Polite Punctual * Insured

425-373-3175

www.happyhauler.com

Reach thousands of subscribers by advertising your landscaping business in the Classifieds. Call 800-388-2527 to place your Service Directory Ad today.

Home ServicesHauling & Cleanup

Man & Truck for HireHauling & Light Mov- ing, Power Washing. Will do your yardwork with your tools. Also Avail.for Day Labor.

Call Roger at206-643-2141

Home ServicesProperty Maintenance

All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Water- proofing ? Finishing ? Structural Repairs ? Hu- midity and Mold ControlF R E E E S T I M AT E S ! Call 1-888-698-8150

Hard WorkingCollege StudentAvailable For Work

Will work rain or shine. Pickup truck available for hauling. $15/hr, 4 hr min. Please call:

206-719-0168

Home ServicesHouse/Cleaning Service

RUBI DURANHOUSE CLEANING

Ref’s Upon RequestSenior Discounts

Serving Kitsap CountySince 2007!

360-301-0048

Home ServicesLandscape Services

A-1 SHEERGARDENING & LANDSCAPING

* Cleanup * Trim * Weed* Prune * Sod * Seed

* Bark * Rockery* Backhoe * Patios

425-226-3911 206-722-2043

Lic# A1SHEGL034JM

Any kind of YARDWORK

*Bark *Weed *Trim*Prune *New Sod

*Thatching*Paving Patios

*Rockery/Retaining Walls*General Cleanup

Call Steve206-244-6043425-214-3391

lic#stevegl953kz

De Roman Landscaping Have all your yard needsdone your way! Bark, S m a l l t r e e r e m ova l , Tha t ch ing , Seed ing , Yard clean-up, TrimmingPruning, Weeding. What ever it is you need done! Free Estimates Pricing is r ight for your budget! H a r d W o r k i n g M e n Ready To Serve You! C a l l 4 2 5 - 4 5 8 - 8 2 4 8 Spanish/English or 206- 234- 3004 English Email [email protected]

DICK’S CHIPPINGSERVICE

Stump Grinding & Brush Chipping

20 Yrs Experience

Insured - DICKSC044LF

425-743-9640~Landscaping~

3Weeding~Pruning 3Trimming~Mowing3Painting~Cleanups 3Pressure WashingGood Prices~ Call Anytime

206-384-6319Free Estimates

Commercial~Residential

Home ServicesLandscape Services

HAWKS....... ....LANDSCAPING

Spring Clean-UpGeneral Yard Cleaning Trim, Mow, Weeding, Blkberrry Removal,

Gutters, Haul Downed trees, Pruning,

Pressure Washing and SO MUCH MORE!!Affordable PricesFREE Estimates.425-244-3539425-971-4945

HI MARKLANDSCAPING &

GARDENINGComplete Yard Work

DTree Service DHauling DWeeding DPruning DHedge Trim DFence DConcrete DBark DNew Sod & Seed DAerating & Thatching

Senior DiscountFREE ESTIMATE206-387-6100Lic#HIMARML924JB

HI MARKLANDSCAPING &

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Lic

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Home ServicesPressure Washing

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JULY 4TH SUMMER SALEThursday - Sunday , July 4 - 7

Bellevue ReporterKirkland Reporter

Redmond Reporter9.8333x12.75

Bellevue_Kirkland_RedmondRep_p135

SEATTLE PREMIUM OUTLETS 125 STORES • TULALIP, WA • I-5, EXIT 202, NEAR MARYSVILLE • QUIL CEDA VILLAGE • NEW STORES NOW OPEN

NORTH BEND PREMIUM OUTLETS 50 STORES • NORTH BEND, WA • I-90, EXIT 31

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Join our VIP Shopper Club to enjoy addit ional savings at www.premiumoutlets.com/vip

LEGENDARY BRANDS. ABUNDANT SELECTION. REAL SAVINGS. American Eagle, Ann Taylor Factory Store, Banana Republic Factory Store, BCBG Max Azria, Cole Haan,

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[20] July 5, 2013 www.BellevueReporter.com