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Archive for the ‘Not sports? Tough!’ Category

Coupeville grad CJ Smith is a fully-commissioned officer with the Mercer Island Police Department. (Photo courtesy Charlotte Young)

He’s Instagram official.

Coupeville grad CJ Smith was sworn in as a fully-commissioned officer with the Mercer Island Police Department Monday, but he got that sweet little extra internet recognition Wednesday morning.

Smith, son of Chris Smith and Charlotte Young, and older brother of Hunter and Scout Smith, graduated from the Basic Law Enforcement Academy.

He spent five months-plus at the academy in Burien, receiving 720 hours of law enforcement training.

Now it’s on to the streets of Mercer Island, where the former Wolf three-sport star begins field training this week.

During his time in Coupeville, the man known as Captain Cool (at least in Coupeville Sports stories…) played football, basketball, and baseball for the Wolves.

CJ arrived in town midway through his sophomore year, and immediately made an impact in all three sports, with his work on the diamond garnering the biggest raves.

He pitched the Wolves to an Olympic League title in 2016, the first baseball crown for the program since 1991.

After high school graduation, CJ studied Criminal Justice and played baseball for Green River College alongside Hunter.

Making the jump from being a starting pitcher to a relief ace, CJ stormed out of the bullpen to become Auburn’s answer to Mariano Rivera, earning accolades as a shut-down closer.

 

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Dr. Lance Gibbon

He’s moving up.

Dr. Lance Gibbon, Superintendent of Oak Harbor Public Schools since 2013, has been offered a similar position by the larger Snoqualmie Valley School District.

He would replace that district’s current Superintendent, Dr. Robert W. Manahan, who is retiring at the end of the school year.

Gibbon emerged as Snoqualmie’s choice after a national search, and will start his new job July 1, if an employment contract is finalized.

“We look forward to welcoming Dr. Gibbon to the Snoqualmie Valley,” said Snoqualmie Valley School Board President Melissa Johnson. “His experience, energy, and collaborative leadership style is the right fit to be our next superintendent.

“The Board has no doubt that he is the right person to work with our incredible district leadership team and staff, students and families, to continue progress toward our vision of being the best district in Washington State.”

Before being hired as Oak Harbor’s Superintendent, Gibbon was the district’s Assistant Superintendent for six years.

Prior to that, he was Principal of Fidalgo Elementary School in Anacortes and an Assistant Principal in the Lake Washington School District.

Gibbon earned a doctorate in executive leadership and superintendent credentials from Seattle Pacific University.

The Snoqualmie Valley School District is one of the largest in the state, covering 400+ square miles and serving students from Snoqualmie, North Bend, Fall City, and parts of unincorporated King County.

It has 7,200 students in preschool through 12th grade.

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An Oak Harbor High School senior gets really into his artwork. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The pandemic can’t crush creativity.

Oak Harbor High School handed its seniors boxes of sidewalk chalk and let them go crazy in the parking lot, and wanderin’ photo man John Fisken was there to capture the Pablo Picasso’s and Frida Kahlo’s at work.

To see more photos (and download what you want for free), pop over to:

Senior Chalk 2021-03-17 – John’s Photos

 

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Andreas Wurzrainer, seen here with daughter Tia and wife Lisa. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Barricade the parking lots! The foodies are coming!!

The Coupeville School District’s food service program, headed up by Andreas Wurzrainer, has been spotlighted on the US Department of Agriculture’s web site.

Cow Town is in there punching with school districts from Colorado, Georgia, West Virginia, and Oklahoma.

In their write-up, the USDA hails Coupeville for using “homemade, scratch cooked” food and stresses the success of its meal box setup.

To see the full story, pop over to:

COVID-19 School Meal Spotlights | USDA-FNS

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Roads? Where you’re going, you better not need roads this snowy morning. (Photo courtesy Seaneen Kardly)

Snowpocalypse 2021 has claimed its first victim.

The rapidly-falling white stuff has left Coupeville buried under at least 75 feet of snow as of Saturday morning.

OK, maybe more like eight-plus inches…

Either way, it appears at least one mail truck attempting to exit the Coupeville Post Office parking lot isn’t going anywhere else anytime soon.

Well-played, snow, well-played.

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