Peterson continues progress
Phil Johnson | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 11 years, 6 months AGO
Minor miracles continue to fill Tracee Peterson’s days.
As nurses removed tubes from Peterson’s mouth late last week, Peterson attempted to get out of bed and spoke, complaining of a headache.
“That was fall-out-of-your-chair good news,” Peterson’s father Ed Hanson said.
Hanson and his wife, Trish, visited Peterson during the weekend.
“She held her mother’s hand and told her ‘I love you,’” Ed Hanson said. “She was providing comfort for her crying mother.”
Peterson surprised doctors with the strides she made in her first week at Seattle’s Harborview Medical Center. She is communicating mostly with “yes” and “no” responses, speaking through a broken jaw.
“You can see in her eyes she understands she is in a serious medical center,” Ed Hanson said.
Peterson brought tears to her parents’ eyes during the weekend when she brushed her own teeth.
“The doctors keep telling us she is going to need a lot of help, but they are also optimistic,” Ed Hanson said.
Joshua Peterson is scheduled to attend a preliminary hearing at District Court at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. He faces two assault charges.
Ed Hanson said his wife plans to attend the event, but he is unsure if he will attend himself.
“I’m not sure I can look at him yet” Ed Hanson said. “He was the only person she ever feared.”
MORE IMPORTED STORIES
ARTICLES BY PHIL JOHNSON

Mountain pleads not guilty to seven Yaak burglary charges
Not guilty, seven times over. That was the plea Monday when Zachary Michael Mountain, 19, was arraigned before District Judge James Wheelis. Mountain faces as many as 140 years in prison for his alleged involvement last year in a string of felony burglaries in the Yaak.

Hunters look forward to general season

Crace runs toward state rushing lead
Libby's conference leading rusher puts team on his back
Announcing Libby Loggers football games this year is a predictable endeavor. With the passing game aching from the absence of graduated All-State quarterback Jared Winslow, the Loggers are a committed ground team. Reminiscent of the era when offenses were pleased with three yards and a cloud of dust, the Loggers run game repeatedly rams the ball right into the teeth of the opposing defense.