music hero

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Students more interested in soccer, change inevitable, school athletic director says BY CAROL LADWIG Staff Reporter Football won’t be returning to Snoqualmie Valley School District mid- dle schools when the students do. The sport was been cut from all three middle schools’ extra-curricular offer- ings this year, in a controversial decision made by the schools’ coaches. Instead, the schools will offer boys soccer this fall. “Everyone involved is disappointed, but we knew we’d eventually have to make this decision,” Chief Kanim Middle School ath- letic director and football coach Mickey Fowler said. Participation numbers are what prompted the decision, Fowler said. Although Chief Kanim typically fielded about 50 interested seventh- and eighth- graders each year (“that made two nice- sized teams” Fowler said, a varsity and JV), turnout varied at the other competing schools in the Triangle League. Tolt Middle School in par- ticular struggled to meet the 10-player minimum last season, causing them to forfeit two of six games. The Triangle League includes Snoqualmie, Riverview and the Mercer Island School District, but Mercer Island does not offer football, and Tolt dropped the sport last spring. INDEX OPINION 4 CALENDAR 8 BACK TO SCHOOL 11 MOVIE TIMES 14 ON THE SCANNER 15 CLASSIFIEDS 18-19 Vol. 99, No. 10 SCENE Pics: Wild time at Valley’s second extreme Warrior Dash Page 9 YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER, SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF SNOQUALMIE • NORTH BEND • FALL CITY • PRESTON • CARNATION Follow us on Facebook and Twitter SPORTS Ex-’Cat Nikki Stanton finds excitement with Sounders Page 13 V ALLEY R ECORD SNOQUALMIE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 2012 • DAILY UPDATES AT WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM • 75 CENTS FREE Lifetime tire and milage care warranty with tires you buy • FREE Pre-Trip Safety Inspection 610 E. North Bend Way North Bend 425.831.6300 www.lesschwab.com BEST TIRE VALUE PROMISE 655032 Author Clay Eals explores American folk voice with book, Nursery concert BY CAROL LADWIG Staff Reporter In one rare moment, Clay Eals is all but speechless. An author and journalist, best known to the Valley as communica- tion director for Encompass, Eals is the guy who makes his living with his words. He is also clearly (if briefly) over- whelmed, when he talks about all the things that a long-dead, almost-famous folk singer has given him in the last 20 years. They were huge opportu- nities like the music to court his future wife, and a legitimate reason to travel the continent, meeting, inter- viewing, and once or twice going crab-fishing with some of the most beloved musicians in America. They were also simple truths, about the incredible generosity of people, how cruelly short life is, and the necessity of following your dreams. His thoughts and stories about the singer, Steve Goodman, flow so swiftly, they pile up in his mind faster than he can get them out. Finally, he distills them down to one concept, gratitude. He leans over and pats the newly printed third edition of “Steve Goodman: Facing the Music, a Biography by Clay Eals,” then grins and whispers conspiratorially, “I got to do my some-day project!” CLAY EALS STEVE GOODMAN Music hero SEE ICON, 2 Football dropped at Snoqualmie Valley middle schools SEE MS SPORTS, 7 Service stretch Snoqualmie ops levy would help fire dept. adapt to the times BY SETH TRUSCOTT Editor The black-and-white photo shows a row of men hefting fire axes and saws, smiling confidently as they open a new station. The 2005 image chronicles the Snoqualmie Fire Department of a dif- ferent era—a time of fast growth in the city, when fire and police divisions were being built and staffed to handle a big new population. Fast-forward seven years, and most of the men in the picture still work in Snoqualmie. But their jobs have changed. Their department is busier, but hasn’t grown in nearly a decade. Increasing needs are beginning to tell. A hiring freeze could thaw soon, though, as part of an operations levy that goes before city voters this fall. A history of growth The Snoqualmie City Council greenlighted a 24-cent opera- tions levy on Monday, July 23, to maintain service levels for the fire department, police, parks and pub- lic works. SEE OPS LEVY, 7 Seth Truscott/Staff Photo Rushing to connect fire hose to hydrant, Snoqualmie firefighter Darby Summers trains at the city station in July. The fire station’s team is being challenged by increased calls, but could see its first growth in staff since 2003 as part of a new property-tax-based operations levy that goes to voters this fall. Soccer plans Boys interested in playing soccer this fall should plan on attending their first practice session immediately after school on Aug. 29.

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Author Clay Eals shares his deep love for an American musical hero, Steve Goodman

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Page 1: Music hero

Students more interested in soccer, change inevitable, school athletic director says

BY CAROL LADWIGStaff Reporter

Football won’t be returning to Snoqualmie Valley School District mid-dle schools when the students do.

The sport was been cut from all three middle schools’ extra-curricular offer-ings this year, in a controversial decision made by the schools’ coaches. Instead,

the schools will offer boys soccer this fall.

“Everyone involved is disappointed, but we knew we’d eventually have to make this decision,” Chief Kanim Middle School ath-letic director and football coach Mickey Fowler said.

Participation numbers are what prompted the decision, Fowler said. Although Chief Kanim typically fielded about 50 interested seventh- and eighth-graders each year (“that made two nice-sized teams” Fowler said, a varsity and

JV), turnout varied at the other competing schools in the Triangle League. Tolt Middle School in par-ticular struggled to meet the 10-player minimum last season, causing them to forfeit two of six games.

The Triangle League includes Snoqualmie, Riverview and the Mercer Island School District, but Mercer Island does not offer football, and Tolt dropped the sport last spring.

INDEXOPINION 4 CALENDAR 8 BACK TO SCHOOL 11MOVIE TIMES 14ON THE SCANNER 15 CLASSIFIEDS 18-19

Vol. 99, No. 10

SCEN

E Pics: Wild time at Valley’s second extreme Warrior Dash Page 9

YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER, SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF SNOQUALMIE • NORTH BEND • FALL CITY • PRESTON • CARNATION

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter

SPOR

TS Ex-’Cat Nikki Stanton finds excitement with Sounders Page 13

SCEN

E Pics: Wild time

VALLEY RECORDSNOQUALMIE

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 2012 • DAILY UPDATES AT WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM • 75 CENTS

FREE Lifetime tire and milage care warranty with tires you buy • FREE Pre-Trip Safety Inspection

610 E. North Bend Way • North Bend • 425.831.6300 • www.lesschwab.com

FREE Lifetime tire and milage care warranty with tires you buy • FREE Pre-Trip Safety InspectionBEST TIRE VALUE PROMISE

6550

32

Author Clay Eals explores American folk voice

with book, Nursery concertBY CAROL LADWIG

Staff Reporter

In one rare moment, Clay Eals is all but speechless.

An author and journalist, best known to the Valley as communica-tion director for Encompass, Eals is the guy who makes his living with his words. He is also clearly (if briefly) over-whelmed, when he talks about all the things that a long-dead, almost-famous folk singer has given him in the last 20 years.

They were huge opportu-nities like the music to court his future wife, and a legitimate reason to travel the continent, meeting, inter-viewing, and once or twice going crab-fishing with some of the most beloved musicians in America. They were also simple truths, about the incredible generosity of people, how cruelly short life is, and the necessity of following your dreams.

His thoughts and stories about the singer, Steve Goodman, flow so swiftly, they pile up in his mind faster than he can get them out. Finally, he distills them down to one concept, gratitude. He leans over and pats the newly printed third edition of “Steve Goodman: Facing the Music, a Biography by Clay Eals,” then grins and whispers conspiratorially, “I got to do my some-day project!”

CLAY EALS

STEVE GOODMAN

Music hero

SEE ICON, 2

Football dropped at Snoqualmie Valley middle schools

SEE MS SPORTS, 7

Service stretchSnoqualmie ops levy would

help fire dept. adapt to the timesBY SETH TRUSCOTT

Editor

The black-and-white photo shows a row of men hefting fire axes and saws, smiling confidently as they open a new station. The 2005 image chronicles the Snoqualmie Fire Department of a dif-ferent era—a time of fast growth in the city, when fire and police divisions were being built and staffed to handle a big new population.

Fast-forward seven years, and most of the men in the picture still work in Snoqualmie. But their jobs have changed. Their department is busier, but hasn’t grown in nearly a decade. Increasing needs are beginning to tell. A hiring freeze could thaw soon, though, as part of an operations levy that goes before city voters this fall.

A history of growthThe Snoqualmie City Council

greenlighted a 24-cent opera-tions levy on Monday, July 23, to maintain service levels for the fire department, police, parks and pub-lic works.

SEE OPS LEVY, 7

Seth Truscott/Staff Photo

Rushing to connect fire hose to hydrant, Snoqualmie firefighter Darby Summers trains at the city station in July. The fire station’s team is being challenged by increased calls, but could see its first growth in staff since 2003 as part of a new property-tax-based operations levy that goes to voters this fall.

Soccer plansBoys interested in playing soccer this fall should plan on attending their first practice session immediately after school on Aug. 29.

Page 2: Music hero

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM2 • August 1, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

In Brief

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95

The book, an eight-year endeavor when it was first published in 2007, is a 778-page encyclopedia on the performer who people know primarily for his song “City of New Orleans,” made famous by Arlo Guthrie.

For Eals, though, seeing Goodman perform ruined him for all other musicians. “He was the best I’d ever seen,” Eals recalled. “He would make you laugh so hard…. and two minutes later, you’d be crying.”

A classmate of Goodman’s told Eals “He seemed to be more entertained than entertaining, and that, of course, is tremendously entertaining.”

As much as fans appreciated Goodman’s show-manship and wry humor, so did his fellow musicians respect his musical talents. Musician Tom Colwell, who will perform with Eals in a tribute to Goodman at 7 p.m., Sunday, Aug. 5 at The Nursery at Mount Si, remembered the one time he performed with Goodman, fondly.

“I had seen him perform at the Brown Palace, and was just blown away by the guy,” Colwell said. “His energy was like nothing you’ve ever seen.”

One night, while Colwell was performing at a bar called Somebody Else’s Troubles, Goodman walked in. He knew Goodman didn’t like want attention when he was in the audience, but decided to invite him up on stage, after he’d listened for a while.

Colwell introduced him as Joe Steel, a name that just came to him. Since Colwell was wearing his 12-string guitar, Goodman picked up his much-loved Fender six-string, and backed him up on several songs, includ-ing “City of New Orleans.”

“I’ve never heard music come out of that guitar like that before or since,” he said.

Although he was a phenomenon among musi-cians, and in the heart of the folk movement at the time, Goodman never achieved the fame that found Guthrie, or Goodman’s friend John Prine,

or his protege, Jimmy Buffett. “I know Steve Goodman’s an American iconic song-

writer that has legions of followers all around,” said Nels Melgaard, owner of The Nursery at Mount Si. That was pretty much the total of Melgaard’s knowledge of Goodman when he took the opportunity, four years ago, to buy the evening on Steve Goodman, along with Eals’ book donated as an auction item for an Encompass fundraiser.

“He was a brilliant songwriter that died young,” Melgaard added.

At 20, Goodman was diagnosed with leukemia.

It was 1969, and at that time, Eals said, the diag-nosis was “a death sentence.” Instead of submitting to the disease, though, Goodman pursued experimen-tal treatments at Memorial Sloane-Kettering Hospital in New York, and continued making music.

If he hadn’t, “we wouldn’t have ‘City of New Orleans,’ we wouldn’t have ‘A Dying Cub Fan’s Last Request,’ we wouldn’t have all these other great songs...” Eals said.

Goodman’s courage in facing his disease is what inspired Eals to write what he calls his life’s work.

“Clay’s energy around this thing is really unflag-ging… just remarkable,” said Colwell. “I think it’s because he’s developed a great respect for Steve’s com-mitment to be alive.”

Eals explains, “The book is, yes, about a musi-cian, but it’s about how death is sitting on all of our shoulders… he didn’t have the luxury, shall we say, of forgetting about it, because he wasn’t supposed to live out another year.”

Goodman enjoyed a long remission from his dis-ease, and lived 15 more years.

He died in 1984. Eals had seen him live only twice, but was moved by Goodman’s last album, particularly, the last song, “You Better Get It While You Can.”

Within a few years, he had started preliminary research. By 1999, he’d reduced his full-time job to half-time, to focus on interviewing more than 2,000 friends, classmates, and fans of Goodman. Four years later, he quit altogether. He worked on the book and spent time with his mother, who was placed in a nurs-ing home across from his West Seattle home.

In an other four years, the book was done, and Eals accumulated 75 rejection letters before finding a pub-lisher, ECW in Toronto. The first printing sold out in eight months.

His struggle to write the book has parallels to Goodman’s career, but without the tragic ending.

“Facing our mortality is a huge thing for all of us… and that’s the lesson of this book: We are not meant to be hermits in this life. We are meant to connect with and engage with and inspire people,” he said. “He was that, personified.”

ICON FROM 1

Photo courtesy of Bob Sirott

Steve Goodman plays “A Dying Cub Fan’s Last Request” at Wrigley Field in 1981. The Cub anthem will be played at an Aug. 5 North Bend benefit show. Below, the jacket for the third printing of Eals’ book on Goodman.

‘Horses and Hounds’ parade planned in CarnationThe Carnation Chamber of Commerce is planning a parade honoring and welcoming the Evergreen Classic horse show.The first Evergreen Classic Horses and Hounds Parade is 6 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 9.The parade begins on West Entwistle Street, continues to East Entwistle, turns onto Stossell and ends on East Bird Street, where there will be food, vendors and entertainment.At 7 p.m., a Mutt Strutt contest is planned, with voting for best- dressed dog, best trick and most obedient. Mutt Strutt winners will be announced at 8:15 p.m.Only horses and hounds will be in the parade. Entry fee for the Mutt Strutt and parade is $5.The Evergreen Classic takes place August 8 to 12.Sponsors include the city of Carnation, Carnation Dog Park, Love Restaurant, Best Buddy Dog Wash and Honey Do Farms.For more information and registra-tion forms, go to www.carnation-chamber.com.