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How Green Is My Valley? Garden Tour Tickets: $12 Saturday, June 21, 2014 • 10am-5pm Wabi Sabi 1719 S Pines Rd Peaceful Pines 12510 E 21st Ave Harmonic Hillside 3915 S Pines Rd* Scott Park Place 13710 E 42nd Ave Sleepy Lazy Hollow 520 N Glenn Rd Calm Still Waters 8218 E Maringo Dr Quiet Meadows Garden 17912 E Mission Ave Tranquil Mist Garden 3510 N Malvern Rd *limited access/tickets not available
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$100 Gift Certificate Drawing from Wabi Sabi O’Doherty’s BBQ Lunch available at an additional cost Tickets available NOW at: Blue Moon, Gibson’s, Greenthumb, NW Seed’s, Judy's Enchanted Garden, Ritter’s, and Tower Perennials. Tickets also available online, or day-of at the Gardens.
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22 INLANDER JUNE 19, 2014
O
n Feb. 2, 1996, a 14-year-old student walked into Frontier Middle School in Moses Lake, Wash. He left in handcuffs, but not before killing two fellow students and a teacher. With so many other high-profile mass shootings since, Barry Loukaitis’ name may have largely fallen out of the public consciousness. For me, his name has stuck. It’s the first school shooting I remember hearing about ANALYSIS on the news (myself a middle THE LEADING EDGE school student at the time, 60 miles away). The list of offenders goes on: Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris (Columbine High School), Jared Loughner (Tucson, Arizona, and Congresswoman Gabby Giffords), Seung-Hui Cho (Virginia Tech), James Holmes (Aurora, Colorado, movie theater). Then there’s Adam Lanza. Sandy Hook Elementary School, Newtown, Connecticut, Dec. 14, 2012. Closer to home, this week marks 20 years
since Dean Mellberg killed four people and wounded 22 at Fairchild Air Force Base, reminding people in the Inland Northwest that such events can happen anywhere. (See story on p. 24.) The anniversary comes on the heels of shootings at Seattle Pacific University and Reynolds High School in Troutdale, Oregon. Journalists, it seems, sadly have numerous opportunities to report on such events.
TO NAME OR NOT TO NAME?
After every high-profile shooting or act of violence, a debate ensues about whether news outlets should refrain from naming the perpetrators, lest they encourage other people who are seeking perverse infamy. After Sandy Hook, sociologist Zeynep Tufekci, writing in The Atlantic, implored the news media to stop “inspiring copycat killers” by reporting so quickly and heavily on details of the perpetrator. The reasoning, she argued, is that such coverage should be treated like suicide and reported with extreme caution. Many news