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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

In brief: Stinky Teacher ball game at Broadway

The Spokesman-Review

Broadway Elementary School will present the Seventh Annual Stinky Teacher Basketball Game on Friday at 6 p.m. The game will be held at North Pines Middle School, 701 N Pines Road.

Admission is $2 for Broadway students and $3 for other students and adults. Children under 5 are free.

The game will feature around 40 Broadway teachers and staff serving as players, coaches, medics, scorekeepers and security guards. Broadway fifth-graders will perform other duties throughout the evening, including announcing the game. The Broadway jump rope club will perform 20 minutes prior to the game, and the Broadway dance team will provide the halftime entertainment.

Proceeds from the event help fund the annual fifth-grade class all-day field trip to Washington State University in May. At WSU, the students get a taste of college life by attending live demonstrations by physics and chemistry professors and visiting campus attractions such as the planentarium, the museum of art, athletic fields, and dormitories. For more information, call 228-4100.

PASADENA PARK

Public invited to hearing

The public is invited to the annual hearing for the Title VII Spokane Valley Native American Program to learn more about services for school-aged children. The hearing is scheduled for 6 to 7:30 p.m. March 26 at the West Valley Outdoor Learning Center, E. 8706 Upriver Drive.

Attendees can learn about the services the Native American program offers to students and their families and how the program is funded. Officers will be elected and public recommendations will be heard. Activities for children and light refreshments will be provided.

The Native American Program serves students with a Native American heritage in the Central Valley, East Valley, Freeman and West Valley school districts. For more information, call 288-5832.

SPOKANE COUNTY

Chattaroy woman featured quilter

Chattaroy resident Barbara Lambrecht has been selected the featured quilter and presenter for the Washington State Quilters 30th annual quilt show, set for Oct. 17-19 at the Spokane Interstate Fair and Expo Center.

Entry forms for the “Winter Harmony” quilt show will be available at the next WSQ meeting April 24 and at area quilt stores after that date. The first 100 entries received will be awarded a special commemorative pin.

Lambrecht is well known for her award-winning quilts, creative quilting and style. She has been active with WSQ for 16 years and has fulfilled several board positions, including president for the past two years. She has also been featured online at RealWomenQuilt.com, has taught many classes throughout the area and is an active member of the Appliqué Society, which shows her detailed portrait quilts.

For more information visit the WSQ Web site at www.geocities.com/ wsqspokanechapter/, or call (509) 435-3889.

Daigre named to MOAA committee

Beth Ann Daigre has been named to serve a three-year term on the Auxiliary Member Advisory Committee of the Military Officers Association of America.

Daigre, a member of the MOAA’s Spokane chapter, will join five other surviving spouses for the association’s 367,000 membership. She was nominated by Merl Gorton, president of MOAA’s Washington State Council of Chapters. She currently serves on the Spokane MOAA Chapter’s Board of Directors as the auxiliary liaison, Web page coordinator (Spokane MOAA.org), and newsletter editor. Daigre and her husband moved to the Spokane area in 1991 after his retirement at his last duty station, North Island NAAS, Coronado, Calif.

The MOAA’s Spokane chapter serves more than 500 members in Northeast Washington and North Idaho. The nonprofit veterans’ association is dedicated to maintaining a strong national defense and to preserving the earned entitlements of members of the uniformed services and their families and survivors.

Richardson chairwoman for Girl Scouts

Jan Richardson is the new board of directors chairwoman for Girl Scouts of Eastern Washington and Northern Idaho. Richardson has been the president of Spokane Motor Cars Jaguar, Land Rover, Volvo since March 2004.

Richardson grew up with Girl Scouts and has served on the Board of Directors of Girl Scouts Inland Empire Council since 2004. Girl Scouts of Eastern Washington and Northern Idaho is a newly merged council, combining resources and staff of the former Girl Scouts Inland Empire Council based in Spokane and Girl Scouts Mid-Columbia Council based in Kennewick. Girl Scouts of Eastern Washington and Northern Idaho currently serves over 8,000 Girl Scouts and 2,500 adult volunteers in 32 counties.

Nominate outstanding volunteer

Each year the Spokane County United Way honors and recognizes volunteers who have devoted their time and talents to help make a difference in our community. Nomination categories include individual, business, senior, young adult and team.

Nominations are available online at www.unitedwayspokane.org or by contacting Lucille Simmons at the United Way at (509) 838-6581. All nominations must be received by Friday, March 21.

Winners will be named at the annual 2008 Volunteer of the Year Award Luncheon on Wednesday, April 16 at the Spokane Convention Center from 11:30 to 1 p.m.

Northeast

Easter egg hunt at Hays Park

Every child will win, but the kids who find the gold or silver egg will win a special prize at a flashlight Easter egg hunt Saturday at Hays Park (Crestline and Providence), sponsored by the Northeast Youth Center. Bring your flashlights.

The hunt is from 7:15 to 7:45 p.m. for children ages 4-6; 7:45 to 8 p.m. for ages 8-9, and from 8:15 to 8:45 p.m. for ages 10-13. Cost is $8.Call 482-0708 to register.

West Central

Junior League rummage sale

The Junior League of Spokane will hold a rummage sale Saturday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Girl Scouts Council Gymnasium, 1404 N. Ash.

It features a large variety of low-priced items from over 100 families, including clothing, toys, books, furniture, household items. All proceeds will go into projects benefiting the community.

The Junior League is a women’s volunteer and training nonprofit organization whose emphasis is helping women and children in the Spokane Community.

East Central

Seniors seminar planned

A seminar titled “Legal Issues Affecting Seniors” will be held April 15 from 10:30 a.m. to noon in multipurpose room of the East Central Senior Center, 500 S. Stone St.

The presenter is elder law attorney Lynn St. Louis, who will discuss elder law and estate planning, including powers of attorney for financial and health matters, wills, health care directives/living wills, and Medicaid long-term care benefits. St. Louis is a member of the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys, serving as president of the Washington chapter for 2008.

The seminar is free, but reservations required. Call 625-6693 to reserve a seat, or stop by the senior center.

West Hills

Get ready for Bloomsday

Free training clinics for Bloomsday participants will be held at 8:30 a.m. on Saturdays starting Saturday for seven weeks prior to Bloomsday at the Spokane Falls Community College gym.

Meet at the gym for a training talk and warm-up activities followed by a walk or run on an outdoor course. Training begins with a one-mile course and increases a mile each week. Water stations, first aid, crossing guards and volunteer support staff keep participants safe on the road each week.

Registration is required in advance or at the clinics. Call 482-2356 for more information.

Whitworth

Professor speaking at lecture series

Lindy Scott, a Spanish professor at Whitworth University, will present, “Why Latin America is Shifting to the Left: We Need to Understand Our Southern Neighbors,” today at 7:30 p.m. in the Robinson Teaching Theatre of Weyerhaeuser Hall on the Whitworth campus, 300 W. Hawthorne Road.

Part of the school’s 51st Annual Great Decisions Lecture Series, Scott is the co-editor of the book, “Terrorism and the War in Iraq: A Christian Word from Latin America,” and editor of the book, “Christians, the Care of Creation, and Global Climate Change.” He holds a doctorate from Northwest University.

For more information, call Barbara Brodrick at 777-3270.

– From staff reports