Sherry Grindeland / Times staff columnist
To
help wipe out polio, kids raise pretty penny 180,000 of them
Author and former Redmond resident Peg Kehret will have a
host of fans when she speaks at the Mercer Island Rotary Club today.
Twenty-one students from Lakeridge Elementary School will be joining
the Rotarians and Kehret for lunch at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church.
Kehret has written more than 30 juvenile books, including "Small
Steps," the story of her battle with polio when she was 12.
So after fourth-grade students in Carrie Webster's class
at Lakeridge read "Small Steps," they decided to run a schoolwide
fund-raiser, collecting money to help fight polio. The students will
be donating the money to Rotary International's Polio Project, which
hopes to eradicate polio worldwide by 2005.
Mercer Island Rotarians invited the class to lunch to hear
Kehret.
Webster prepared her class well from etiquette lessons about
what manners to use at a buffet lunch to making centerpieces for the
tables.
Only one potential problem: The Rotarians suggested the students
bring their donation to the polio project in the form of pennies.
They underestimated the dedication of these kids. As of last week
they had raised more than $1,800. Imagine lifting 180,000 pennies
a feat the students will perform.
Congratulations: Longtime Issaquah resident and
environmental activist Ruth Kees was honored by the
Metropolitan King County Council yesterday. Council members David
Irons Jr. and Larry Phillips made the award.
Kees was profiled in a Seattle Times story two weeks ago just
before receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Issaquah
Environmental Council. She has been a tireless advocate for
protecting Issaquah streams and the water system.
Busy feet: First it was the Avon Walk for Breast Cancer
and now people at the Susan G. Komen Foundation, which also raises
money for breast-cancer research, education and detection, have
donned walking shoes.
The Komen Foundation national offices today announced the launch
of the Breast Cancer 3-Day series of walks.
Although hundreds of Eastside women, including community
activists Wendy Dore and Beverly Jacobson of Bellevue,
participated in the Seattle 2001 and 2002 Avon three-day walks, this
year participants who want to do the endurance walks will have to go
south.
Seattle isn't included on either the Avon or Komen tour.
The Komen walks will be held in California in November. The
closest Avon walk, only two days long this year, will be in Portland
on July 12-13.
(The local Susan G. Komen office will again be organizing the
Race for the Cure on June 1.)
Collectibles: Folks at the Kirkland Heritage Society are
trying to locate a Seattle man who collects railroad track for
possible future display.
The man posted a long note on a Web site in England, saying he
had found rail tracks made by the Moss Bay Steel Works, dated 1886
and 1888, and used originally in the Seattle, Lake Shore & Eastern
Railway. (Much of that railroad is now the Burke-Gilman Trail.) The
rails were pulled up and reused in the Snoqualmie Valley on the
Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Railroad.
The Kirkland connection?
Peter Kirk.
He owned the Moss Bay Steel Works in Workington, England, and
supplied rail track to many railroad companies, including the
Seattle, Lake Shore & Eastern. Kirk wanted to build a mill in the
United States. While on a business trip to New York in 1886, he met
Daniel Gilman, who was raising money for the Seattle, Lake
Shore & Eastern Railway.
Gilman suggested Kirk come to the Puget Sound area because the
Eastside was a coal-mining center.
Kirk founded Kirkland and built a mill near today's Forbes Lake.
Alas, it never produced steel, due partially to a recession and lack
of good-quality iron ore.
So even though the collector's tracks are marked Moss Bay, they
weren't made anywhere near Kirkland's Moss Bay. But heritage society
members like to track everything associated with town founder Kirk.
Oh, say! Talk about getting into your stage role. David
Wilson, star of "Damn Yankees" at Issaquah's Village Theatre,
will be at Safeco Field for the Mariner-Yankee game tonight. Wilson
will sing the national anthem.
The musical opens Thursday.
Sherry Grindeland: 206-515-5633 or
sgrindeland@seattletimes.com
Copyright © 2003 The Seattle Times Company