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GIL VIESTURS – DOCUMENTING A TRIP TO THE HIMALAYAS

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BY JONATHAN KANE

Gil Viesturs, a Community School senior, will be embarking on the adventure of a lifetime – trekking with his father Ed Viesturs, who has 30 years of experience in the region, in the Himalayas. The senior Viesturs has summited Everest seven times.

Gil Viesturs, born in the Seattle area, has been attending Community School, where he carries a 3.4 grade point average, since eighth grade. He is a member of the Community School Outdoor Leadership Academy and runs cross-country for the school.

The young Viesturs’ trip for 20 days to the Himalayas is for his senior project.

“First, we will be arriving in Nepal and then we will travel the Goyko Route,” he said. “It will be 57 miles round trip, starting at an elevation of 9,200 feet and reaching a maximum of 17,550 feet at the Everest base camp.

“To prepare, I’ve been running a lot and hiking and climbing a lot, but I think I’m in pretty good shape. I’ve also climbed Mount Borah and Mount Hood and I’m planning on climbing Mount Rainier this summer.

“For the trip. we looked at different options and settled on Goyko,” Viesturs said. “It’s a long distance in the backcountry by foot and it’s a good trek to the Everest base camp. It also intersects some isolated villages.”

As part of his senior project, the Viesturs will be bringing solar panels with them to distribute in the villages.

“They are modest in size and can power appliances, lights and a satellite phone,” Gil Viesturs said. “We will be bringing four of them and will be giving them to four individuals that are in need. My dad has a connection to a solar company that has been working in the area since the earthquake and they sponsored us.

“For my senior project, I will be doing daily journal entries and taking photos and video. When I get home, I will have a movie and a slide show. I’ll be profiling the people that we gave solar units to and a summary of the whole cultural experience.

“To say the least, I’m pretty excited,” Gil Viesturs said. “I’ll literally be on the other side of the world, which is the farthest I’ve ever been from home. It will also be the most rugged terrain I’ve ever been in and the highest altitude I’ve ever experienced.

“But with my preparation, I feel very confident in the whole trip. Going with my dad also gives me confidence because he’s a great guide on something like this. Sharing this experience with him will also be a great way to complete my childhood.

“It is also going to be a great way to see a new culture and how people live in the world,” Viesturs said. “I’ll be going to a place I’ve heard so much about but that I have never experienced first-hand.”

CHAMPION ROW TO INCLUDE WOMEN OLYMPIANS

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BY DANA DUGAN

GretchenFraser1
Weekly Sun photo by Dana Dugan Clay sculpture of Gretchen Fraser by Benjamin Victor.

Some day, Sun Valley’s women Olympians will be represented by bronze sculptures in Warm Springs at the base of Bald Mountain in what will be known as Champion Row. On Thursday, March 24, a clay model of Gretchen Fraser, the first of six Olympians to be memorialized in bronze, was unveiled at the U.S. Alpine National Championships ceremony.

The clay model of Fraser will be recast in bronze and in July will be installed temporarily at Ketchum Town Square in conjunction with the Ketchum Arts Commission’s summer sculpture installations. In October, it will be moved to Warm Springs.

The sculpture is by Benjamin Victor, sculptor and artist-in-residence and professor of the practice at Boise State University. From Bakersfield, Calif., and now based in Boise, Victor has worked on commissioned large-scale statuary all over the U.S., including at the National Statuary Hall in the United States Capitol in Washington, D.C.

“This will be the only women’s Olympic monument in the whole country,” Victor said. “I work with the athletes from life and photos. The statues are all larger than life, about seven feet. When you think about how remarkable it is to have this many standout Olympic athletes all being from this area, a project like this is long overdue. I’m honored to be able to work on it.”

Ketchum resident Brian Barsotti spearheaded fundraising for the statues after conversations with Rob Clayton, executive director of the Sun Valley Ski Education Foundation.

“We should celebrate our town’s alpine ski heritage,” Barsotti said. “No other resort can claim six medalists.”

Tax-deductible donations can be made through the Bald Mountain Rescue Fund.

As the first American of either gender to win a gold medal in alpine skiing, the first statue is of Fraser, a longtime resident of Sun Valley. A top skier of her day, Fraser competed in the 1948 Winter Olympics.

The sculpture of Fraser is based on photos showing her smiling while holding her skis in her trademark braids.

Other skiers who’ll be honored will be Susie Corrock, Christin Cooper, Picabo Street, Kaitlyn Farrington and Muffy Davis.

“Gretchen is, of course, the place to start,” Christin Cooper said. “She was a great friend and mentor in my early years. I know the statue will shine with her warmth and integrity. All the coaches that have helped winter sports athletes were all skiers first. She invested a lot in those that followed.”

SCHOOL TRUSTEE RECALL ATTEMPT FIZZLES

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Petitioners miss April 8 deadline to force recall election

BY TERRY SMITH

Elizabeth Corker
Elizabeth Corker

Last Friday came and went with no petitions filed with the Blaine County Election Office to force a recall election against Elizabeth Corker, a trustee for the Blaine County School District.

Friday, April 8, was the deadline for submitting petitions bearing the names of 489 residents of school district Zone 5, which Corker represents. The 489 required signatures is 20 percent of the registered voters living in Zone 5.

Zone 5 encompasses the east Ketchum and Sun Valley areas and extends south to northeast Hailey.

An initiating petition, with the names of 20 Zone 5 residents, was filed with the election office on Jan. 25 by Hailey resident Darlene Dyer. The filing of the initiating petition started a 75-day window, by state law, for Dyer and supporters to obtain the 489 signatures.

The Weekly Sun was not immediately able to find out how many signatures Dyer was ultimately able to acquire because she did not return a telephone call to The Sun by press deadline Tuesday.

In her initiating petition, Dyer accused Corker of being “unwilling to accept board majority decisions” and was focused on “self-serving agendas instead of student needs and constituents’ priorities.”

Corker also, prior to Jan. 25, voted against a new three-year contract for district Superintendent GwenCarol Holmes, who was awarded the new contract by board majority vote.

According to the election office, the original initiating petition now has no validity and petitioners will have to start from scratch if another recall attempt is to be made.

Corker, who currently serves as school board vice chair, was appointed to the board in 2013 and ran unopposed for election in 2015.

She issued the following written statement to The Weekly Sun on Tuesday:

“I have consistently worked to be the voice of the people in this community,” Corker wrote. “Community members expect the district to be financially accountable, transparent in decision making, and to prioritize spending on children. This includes parents with children in the system, teachers who want the best for students, and residents who want the best school district possible for the tax dollars they spend.

“I am proud to represent the wonderful people who live here and I always put the needs of children first in every decision I make.”