Tuesday
Grab the Money Tree
Knock on wood, there’s the sun! B8
Great discounts on local dining and services A8
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS February 9, 2016 | 75¢
Port Angeles-Sequim-West End
Snowpack bodes well for water BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
The snowpack in the Olympic Mountains is above average for February, providing promise of summer river water, but the winter isn’t over yet, a federal water supply expert said Monday. There are four Snotel (snow telemetry) weather stations in the Olympic Mountains, each measuring snowpack and rainfall in a different river watershed. Snotel is a system of snow telemetry and related climate sensors operated by the Natural Resources Conservation Service in the western states. The Buckinghorse Snotel site, which measures snowpack in the
southern Elwha River watershed, had 93 inches of snow, or 95 percent of average, on Monday. The Waterhole Snotel site, in the Morse Creek watershed east of Hurricane Ridge, had 66 inches of snow, or 104 percent of average. Dungeness Snotel site, in the Dungeness River watershed, had 20 inches of snow, or 105 percent of average. In Jefferson County, the Mount Craig Snotel site, in the Dosewallips River watershed, had 65 inches of snow, or 109 percent of average. Those snowpacks are likely to be enough to prevent the drought difficulties the region saw during the summer of 2015, Pattee said. The winter of 2014-15 produced
the lowest snowpack on record and saw the usual mountain snow fall as rain and run off before the summer peak water-use season. Gov. Jay Inslee declared a statewide drought emergency in May last year, and by mid-summer several North Olympic Peninsula communities, agriculture users and businesses were put on voluntary or mandatory water-use restrictions. Dry conditions persisted through the summer, and some water-use restrictions remained in place through October. A wet fall and a snow-heavy early winter helped restore groundwater levels and build ARWYN RICE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS early snowpack, Pattee said. The snowcapped Olympic Mountains rise over an irrigated TURN TO WATER/A6 Dungeness farm field.
Olympic weather explored NASA study results to be detailed tonight BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
NASA/UNIVERSITY
OF
WASHINGTON
A truck-mounted radar station gathered data on the shores of Lake Ozette from November through Jan. 18. The truck had to be jacked up when the lake rose several feet during December storms and water reached its wheels.
OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK — A comprehensive look at Olympic Peninsula weather will be shared when preliminary results of a weather mapping project are presented at a public forum at 7 p.m today. Lessons learned from the Olympic Mountain Experiment, known as OLYMPEX, will be explained by Angela Rowe, a University of Washington researcher, at the Olympic National Park Visitor Center, 3002 Mount Angeles Road in Port Angeles. Entry to the presentation will be free. A two-minute preview video is available online at www.tinyurl.com/PDN-OLYMPEX. OLYMPEX is a NASA and University of Washington project to calibrate new weather satellites by measuring precipitation across the Olympic Peninsula on the ground and in the air — detailing the actual weather behavior as storms come ashore then hit the Olympic Mountains. TURN
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GOP, Dems warm up for coming caucuses Gatherings gauge electoral favor BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — The North Olympic Peninsula’s major political party chairmen all report high interest in this year’s presidential campaign and expect significant local involvement in the parties’ decision-making process. “We are expecting a big turnout,” Jefferson County Democratic Party Chair Bruce Cowan said of his party’s March 26 caucus. “There is a lot of excitement around both candidates [Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton], and this is the only
chance Democrats have to express a presidential preference.” In a presidential election, states mostly use either primaries or caucuses to choose convention delegates, but Washington has both. A caucus involves community meetings where attendees publicly select delegates to move on to the next level of presidential candidate selection, whereas a primary includes a private vote on a specific day in order to choose convention delegates. An explanation on the Washington Secretary of State’s website at www.sos.wa.gov says that
parties run caucuses and governments run primaries. Washington state does not register voters by party and follows a “top two” system, which uses the primary to narrow the choice to two candidates regardless of party. This changes for the May 24 presidential primary, which requires party voters to choose one candidate and sign a declaration committing to that candidate’s political party.
Caucus system Thirteen states and two territories use the caucus system to determine which Republican and Democratic presidential candidates their delegates will support in the nomination process.
All caucuses provide the opportunity for candidate supporters to speak before an open vote occurs, and all require voters to sign a statement that they are not participating in any other party’s caucus. In Washington, Democrats and Republicans have different rules: Democrats select convention delegates at the caucus level while a Republican delegate preference is determined by presidential primary results.
Clallam County Republican Chairman Dick Pilling said his party’s Feb. 20 caucus provides attendees the opportunity to discuss their candidate preferences and elect delegates, although commitment to Republican candidates will be determined at the May 24 presidential primary. Since Democrats select candidate preference at the caucus level, Washington’s Democratic presidential primary is substantially a “beauty contest,” Cowan said. Democrats in both counties will National conventions caucus at several locations, with the most important aspect being to Delegates at both national con- go to the correct location deterventions have a designated candi- mined by street address and listed date preference which is manda- on each county’s party website. tory only during the first convenTURN TO CAUCUS/A6 tion ballot.
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The Associated Press
Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Lennon’s hair expected to fetch $10K
‘Tuck Everlasting’
Andrew Keenan-Bolger isn’t tapping into his vulnerable side for his next Broadway role. He’s trying to be utterly fearless. In the new musical A LOCK OF hair “Tuck Everlasting,” the snipped from the head of John Lennon as the Bea- actor plays a character who tle prepared for a film role simply doesn’t fear death. So Keenan-Bolger is honis expected to sell for $10,000 at a Dallas auction ing his recklessness and rashness. later this month. “I think there is a level Heritage Auctions said of danger that I want to in a news release Monday present to the audience that the 4-inch lock was and push them slightly collected by a German past the comfort level,” he hairdresser who trimmed said. “My goal is to make Lennon’s hair before he all the moms in the audistarted shooting “How I ence almost have a heart Won the War.” attack. We’ll see how that The dark comedy, goes.” released in 1967, follows “Tuck Everlasting” is the World War II misadbased on the popular 1975 ventures of British troops led by an inept commander. children’s book by Natalie The auction will be held Babbitt about a young girl Feb. 20 and Heritage said it in the 1880s who befriends a unique family that has will include other rare items linked to The Beatles, gained eternal life. It starts previews March 31. such as a signed photograph of all four members. “While the story is
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Andrew Keenan-Bolger stands on set under construction at a scene shop in New Windsor, N.Y., where the set for the musical “Tuck Everlasting” is being made. really small — it’s one girl’s adventure — I think it’s natural for a Broadway audience because of the scale of the questions that it raises,” said Keenan-Bolger. “Essentially, if you boil down the musical to one question, it’s if you could live forever, would you?”
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL SUNDAY’S QUESTION: When do you return your ballot in an election?
Passings By The Associated Press
MARGARET FORSTER, 77, the author of Georgy Girl and more than 20 other novels, has died in London after suffering from cancer in the back and spine. Her husband, Hunter Davies, said she died Monday at a hospice in London. The couple spent much of their time in England’s peaceful Lake District and also in London. Davies, also an author, said she underwent a double mastectomy 40 years ago and recovered fully, but the cancer returned to her back 10 years ago. “I thought she was a goner,” he said of her initial bout with cancer. “It was bad, but eventually she recovered. At age 50 on her birthday, she got up at 5 (a.m.) and ran up Red Pike mountain and then swam in the lake and came back to the house and brought me tea,” he said. Davies said the cancer made it impossible for his wife of 55 years to sit for extended periods because of the pain, which also prevented her from going out to restaurants and movies. The Royal Society of Literature issued a statement describing her as “an extraordinarily prolific and gifted writer of fiction, nonfiction and literary criticism.” Georgy Girl was made into a hit movie in 1966 starring Lynn Redgrave, Charlotte Rampling, Alan Bates and James Mason.
________ DAN HICKS, 74, a singer, songwriter and bandleader who attracted a devoted following with music that was defiantly unfashionable, proudly eccentric and foot-tappingly
Right away catchy, died Saturday at his home in Mill Valley, Calif. The cause was liver cancer, said his Mr. Hicks wife, Clare. in 2012 Mr. Hicks began performing with his band, Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks, in the late 1960s in San Francisco, where psychedelic rock bands like Jefferson Airplane and the Grateful Dead dominated the music sound. The Hot Licks’ sound could not have been more different. At a time when rock was getting louder and more aggressive, Mr. Hicks’s instrumentation — two guitars (Mr. Hicks played rhythm), violin and stand-up bass, with two women providing harmony and backup vocals — offered a laid-back, allacoustic alternative that was a throwback to a simpler time, while his lyrics gave the music a modern, slightly askew edge. He came to call his music “folk swing,” but that only hinted at the range of influences he synthesized. He drew from the American folk tradition but also from the Gypsy jazz of Django Reinhardt, the Western swing of Bob Wills, the harmony vocals of the Andrews Sisters, the raucous humor of Fats Waller and numerous other sources. “It starts out with kind of a folk music sound,” Mr. Hicks explained in a 2007 interview, “and we add a jazz beat and solos and singing. We have the two girls that sing, and jazz violin, and all that, so it’s kind of light in nature, it’s not loud. And it’s sort of, in a way, kind of carefree.”
Songs like “How Can I Miss You When You Won’t Go Away?,” “Milk-Shakin’ Mama” (“I saw the girl who keeps the ice cream/And now it’s I who scream for her”) and “Hell, I’d Go,” about a man whose fondest wish is to be abducted by aliens, displayed his dry and often absurd wit, as did his gently self-mocking stage presence. But he had his serious side, too: “I Scare Myself,” a longtime staple of his repertoire, was a brooding, hypnotic minorkey ballad about being afraid to love.
44.6%
I wait
31.4% 17.7%
Last minute I don’t
6.3% Total votes cast: 175
Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.
Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Leah Leach at 360-4173530 or email her at lleach@peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
1941 (75 years ago) Salmon Club members who are not fishing for blackmouth salmon or steelhead or not working tomorrow are invited to be at the new club house site on Ediz Hook at 10 o’clock in the morning prepared to do a little work for the good of the club. Several projects have been lined up for tomorrow and there will be a choice of work including shoveling and carpenter work. Those persons whose talents run toward pick and shovel work will find much to occupy them and there also are some carpenter jobs to be completed.
1966 (50 years ago)
by the PUD for a new Forks power transformer which will cost approximately $46,700. The award, made at Tuesday night’s PUD meeting, was given to Love Electric Co. of Aberdeen, which will use AllisChalmers manufactured equipment. Robert Hodge, PUD auditor, explained that although other bids may have been lower, the Love bid was the only one which included precise delivery dates and other necessary details.
1991 (25 years ago)
Seen Around
[Port Angeles] Neighbors: Volunteers for the American Heart Associa-
Peninsula snapshots
A contract was awarded
Laugh Lines
Lottery LAST NIGHT’S LOTTERY results are available on a timely basis by phoning, toll-free, 800-545-7510 or on the Internet at www. walottery.com/Winning Numbers.
tion will be walking their neighborhood blocks Saturday through Feb. 18 to promote heart health. Cardiovascular disease is the No. 1 cause of death in Clallam County and the nation. At 7 tonight, family movie night at Hamilton Elementary School will begin. “Duck Tales The Movie” and “Treasure of the Lost Lamp” will be shown in the school gym. Admission is $1 per person. Refreshments of juice and popcorn will be sold for 25 cents each.
THE NEWEST ISSUE of Playboy does not feature any full-frontal nudity and instead focuses on social media. So be sure to pick up the final issue of Playboy. Conan O’Brien
GAS PRICES BELOW $2 in Port Angeles. Yippee! ... WANTED! “Seen Around” items recalling things seen on the North Olympic Peninsula. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax 360417-3521; or email news@ peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure you mention where you saw your “Seen Around.”
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS SHROVE (PRECEDING ASH WEDNESDAY) TUESDAY, Feb. 9, the 40th day of 2016. There are 326 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On Feb. 9, 1943, the World War II battle of Guadalcanal in the southwest Pacific ended with an Allied victory over Japanese forces. On this date: ■ In 1825, the House of Representatives elected John Quincy Adams president after no candidate received a majority of electoral votes. ■ In 1861, Jefferson Davis was elected provisional president of the Confederate States of America at a
congress held in Montgomery, Ala. ■ In 1870, the U.S. Weather Bureau was established. ■ In 1942, the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff held its first formal meeting to coordinate military strategy during World War II. ■ In 1950, in a speech in Wheeling, W.Va., Sen. Joseph McCarthy, R-Wis., charged the State Department was riddled with Communists. ■ In 1971, a magnitude 6.6 earthquake in California’s San Fernando Valley claimed 65 lives. ■ In 1986, during its latest visit to the solar system, Halley’s Comet came closest to the sun. Its next return will be in 2061. ■ In 2001, a U.S. Navy subma-
rine, the USS Greeneville, collided with a Japanese fishing boat, the Ehime Maru, while surfacing off the Hawaiian coast, killing nine men and boys aboard the boat. ■ Ten years ago: President George W. Bush defended U.S. surveillance efforts, saying spy work helped thwart terrorists plotting to use shoe bombs to hijack an airliner and crash it into the tallest skyscraper on the West Coast. Kidnapped American journalist Jill Carroll appeared in a video aired on a private Kuwaiti TV station, appealing for her supporters to do whatever it took to win her release “as quickly as possible.” She was freed March 30, 2006. ■ Five years ago: Thousands of
workers went on strike across Egypt, adding a new dimension to the uprising as public rage turned to the vast wealth President Hosni Mubarak’s family reportedly amassed while close to half the country struggled near the poverty line. Rep. Christopher Lee, R-N.Y., abruptly resigned with only a vague explanation of regret after gossip website Gawker reported that the married congressman had sent a shirtless photo of himself to a woman on Craigslist. ■ One year ago: President Barack Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, meeting at the White House, rallied behind efforts to reach a long-shot diplomatic resolution in Ukraine.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, February 9, 2016 P A G E
A3 Briefly: Nation Obama asking $1.8 billion for Zika virus fight WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is asking Congress for more than $1.8 billion in emergency funding to help fight the Zika virus. In an announcement Monday, the White House said the money would be used to expand mosquito control programs, speed development of a vaccine, develop diagnostic tests and improve support for low-income pregnant women. Zika virus disease is mainly spread by mosquitoes. Most people who catch it experience mild or no symptoms. But mounting evidence from Obama Brazil suggests that infection in pregnant women is linked to abnormally small heads in their babies — a birth defect called microcephaly. “What we now know is that there appears to be some significant risk for pregnant women and women who are thinking about having a baby,” Obama said in an interview aired Monday on “CBS This Morning.” The White House said that as spring and summer approach, the U.S. must prepare to quickly address local transmission within the continental U.S. Obama added, however, that “there shouldn’t be a panic on this.”
Ocean on Sunday, forcing frightened passengers into their cabins overnight as their belongings flew about, waves rose as high as 30 feet, and winds howled outside. The cruise line said that although no one was injured and the ship suffered only minor damage, it was turning around and sailing back to its home port in New Jersey. The ship, with more than 4,500 guests and 1,600 crew members, was sailing from Cape Liberty, N.J. and was scheduled to arrive in Port Canaveral, Fla., on Monday. But Royal Caribbean said on its corporate Twitter account that the ship would turn around and sail back to Cape Liberty. Guests will get a full refund and a certificate toward a future cruise, according to the Twitter account. Cruise line spokeswoman Cynthia Martinez confirmed in an email that passengers were asked to stay in their rooms and said they were given complimentary access to their minibars.
Office to oversee aid
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is taking new steps to protect students amid increased scrutiny of forprofits colleges and other schools. The Education Department said Monday that it was creating a new student aid enforcement unit that will “respond more quickly and efficiently to allegations of illegal actions by higher education institutions.” “When Americans invest their time, money and effort to gain new skills, they have a right to expect they’ll actually get an education that leads to a Cruise ship returns better life for them and their MIAMI — A Royal Caribbean families,” said Acting Secretary cruise ship ran into high winds of Education John B. King Jr. The Associated Press and rough seas in the Atlantic
Budget proposal for 2017 faces hurdles BY ANDREW TAYLOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — The main thing to know about President Barack Obama’s final, $4 trillion budget is that it comes on the same day as the New Hampshire primary, ensuring it gets minimal attention with all the focus on the White House contenders. The timing cements the impression that Obama realizes a Republican-led Congress is unlikely to embrace his spending priorities.
Wish list The 2017 budget for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1 will combine proposals for new spending on infrastructure, education and combating opioid abuse with tax increases on corporations and wealthy individuals to keep deficits down. This will avoid proposing cuts to popular programs like Medicare, student loans or food stamps. The administration has
unveiled several proposals on a piecemeal basis leading up to the official rollout. The budget is just a proposal, and the White House gets to assume that it’s enacted in its entirety. That means it always contains lots of things that have no chance of ever making their way through Congress — like a $10 per barrel fee on oil to pay for more than $30 billion in various transportation projects, which landed with a thud Thursday. The same can be said of Obama’s plans for $6 billion for job training, including $4 billion over three years to teach computer science. Other proposals may have more of a shot, including $1 billion over two years to combat heroin and opioid addictions, additional funding to feed low-income children during the summer, when most lose access to free and reducedprice lunches, and additional money for the administration’s “moonshot” effort to cure cancer. Believe it or not, last year’s
$439 billion deficit was actually pretty good even though it required the government to borrow 12 cents of every dollar it spent. That’s way down from the record $1.4 trillion deficit, which required borrowing 40 cents of every dollar spent, registered in Obama’s first year in office.
Steady march But now, the Congressional Budget Office says that last year’s tax and spending bill, combined with worsening economic projections, means that deficits will begin a steady march to the $1 trillion mark in a few years. Sooner or later, CBO says, action to curb the deficit is a must, or else it could drag down the economy and lead to a potential European-style fiscal crisis. These problems will be left to Obama’s successor because he and GOP leaders have long since given up on working together to get the deficit under control.
Briefly: World Trudeau: Canada to end its Syrian war airstrikes TORONTO — Canada’s prime minister said the country’s six fighter jets will end their airstrikes against Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria within the next two weeks. Justin Trudeau said Monday that Canadian bombs will stop falling by Feb. 22, but military perTrudeau sonnel in the region will increase to 830 from the current 650 and provide planning, targeting and intelligence expertise. Canada’s contribution to the mission against the Islamic State group is being extended until the end of March 2017.
Four rescued in Taiwan TAINAN, Taiwan — At least four people, including an 8-yearold girl, were rescued Monday from a high-rise Taiwanese apartment building toppled by a
powerful quake two days earlier, as frustration grew among families waiting for searchers to reach their buried loved ones. More than 100 people are believed to still be under the debris in a disaster that struck during the most important family holiday in the Chinese calendar — the Lunar New Year. Saturday’s quake killed at least 38 people in Tainan city in southern Taiwan, all but two of them in the collapse of the 17-story building. Even though the 6.4-magnitude quake was shallow, few buildings were reported to have been damaged, which experts said was because Taiwan’s building standards are high. Authorities have managed to rescue more than 170 people — the vast majority in the immediate hours after the quake — from the folded building using information about the building layout and the possible location of those trapped. Five survivors were believed to have been pulled out Sunday, and at least four Monday. One of them, Tsao Wei-ling, called out “Here I am” as rescuers dug through to find her, Taiwan’s Eastern Broadcasting Corp. reported. She was found under the body of her husband. The Associated Press
PETER PEREIRA/STANDARD TIMES
SECOND
VIA
AP
BIG STORM IN JUST DAYS
Jason Souza clears the snow from a driveway in New Bedford, Mass., during a snowstorm on Monday. The second winter storm to hit the Northeast in four days was expected to bring blizzard conditions to Cape Cod and southeastern Massachusetts and leave behind as much as 18 inches of snow.
Saudi Arabia offers troops for fighting Islamic State group BY ADAM SCHRECK AND ZEINA KARAM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Saudi Arabia’s offer to send troops to fight Islamic State militants in Syria is as much about the kingdom’s growing determination to flex its military might as it is about answering U.S. calls for more help from its allies in the Middle East. A Saudi deployment runs the potentially explosive risk of con-
Quick Read
frontation between one of the Arab world’s most powerful militaries and forces keeping Syrian President Bashar Assad in power. That’s if the Saudi proposal even gets translated into action. Just putting the offer on the table gives the Saudis an opportunity to show leadership in addressing U.S. concerns that its regional allies aren’t doing enough to fight the Islamic State group. It also puts pressure on Washington to do more as Defense Secretary Ash Carter and allied
defense ministers gather in Brussels this week for talks on confronting the extremists. Brig. Gen. Ahmed Asiri, the Saudi military spokesman, made clear the kingdom’s offer is contingent on the support of the U.S.led coalition battling the militant group in Iraq and Syria. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which also has offered to deploy ground forces, are part of the coalition but have eased up on their contributions after earlier, high-profile sorties over Syria.
. . . more news to start your day
Nation: Officer emotional in Brooklyn shooting defense
Nation: Ala. bill would limit monument removal
World: Streets packed for Rose Monday festivities
World: Merkel ‘horrified’ at Russia’s Syrian bombing
A POLICE OFFICER testified emotionally in his own defense Monday about the deadly shooting of an unarmed man in a dark Brooklyn stairwell in 2014. Peter Liang got choked up and left the witness stand for about a minute to compose himself before resuming testimony at his manslaughter trial. Liang said he was heading down a darkened stairwell with his gun drawn and his finger on the side of the weapon, as he had done many times before without a problem. “Whenever we feel unsafe, it was our discretion of when to take out your firearm,” he said.
AS SOME CITIES make the decision to shed Confederate monuments, some Alabama lawmakers want to prohibit those removals unless legislators say it is OK. The Senate Governmental Affairs Committee today will hold a public hearing on the bill titled the “Alabama Heritage Protection Act.” The bill would ban the removal of any historic monument, marker or school name from public property unless a waiver is obtained from the Legislative Council, a committee of lawmakers. Local governments would face a $100,000 fine if they remove an object without a waiver.
HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS of people packed the streets of Cologne, Germany, for its annual Rose Monday parade, the culmination of five days of Carnival festivities that took place amid heightened security following robberies and sexual assaults on New Year’s Eve. Police doubled the number of officers they had on hand this year in an effort to reassure the public in the wake of the Dec. 31 attacks primarily targeting women and blamed largely on foreigners. Through Monday morning, police said they had recorded 542 criminal complaints, including 45 allegations of sexual offenses, including rape.
TURKEY AND GERMANY agreed Monday on a set of measures to try to tackle the Syrian refugee crisis, including an initiative aimed at halting attacks against Syria’s largest city. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said after talks with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu that she is “not just appalled but horrified” by the suffering caused by bombing in Syria, primarily by Russia. Merkel said that Turkey and Germany will push at the United Nations for everyone to keep to a U.N. resolution passed in December that calls on all sides to halt without delay attacks on the civilian population.
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PeninsulaNorthwest
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2016
Clallam administrator’s job performance review delayed
Look online for PDN election night coverage
BY PAUL GOTTLIEB
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Election night results will be found tonight on the Peninsula Daily News website at www.peninsuladailynews.com. Full election stories with reactions from those who placed the measures on the special election ballot will be published in Thursday’s print edition of the PDN. Voters are considering eight measures on the North Olympic Peninsula. None are county wide. In Clallam County, approval has been requested for a $54 million bond for the Sequim School District and for two measures in the Crescent School District: a maintenance and operations levy that would collect about $520,000 in each of four years and a capital projects levy that would collect about $100,000 in each of four years. In Jefferson County, the Port Townsend School District is requesting approval of a $40.9 million bond, while the Chimacum School District has placed a $29.1 million bond on the ballot, both construction bonds. Maintenance and operations levies are proposed in the Quilcene and Brinnon school districts. The four-year Quilcene measure would collect about $540,095 the first year of collection, $550,897 the second year, $561,915 the third year, and $575,153 the fourth year. The two-year Brinnon measure would collect about $305,516 in 2017 and about $341,681 in 2018. The Discovery Bay Volunteer Fire & Rescue is requesting a $530,000 bond, to be paid over 20 years, to replace its fire station. About 200 voters in Jefferson County will weigh in on the Sequim School District bond. Each bond requires a 60 percent supermajority for passage. Levies can be approved by a simple majority.
Silicon facility shuts temporarily THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
MOSES LAKE — The big REC Silicon factory in Moses Lake is shutting down its production for the next few months. The company blamed an
ongoing trade dispute between the U.S. and China. REC Silicon announced Monday morning that it would shut production down until June. The Columbia Basin Herald said no layoffs are planned.
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PORT ANGELES — Clallam County Administrator Jim Jones’ performance, job description and contract review were up for discussion Monday by Clallam County commissioners. Take performance off the table — for now. “I thought it was pretty important that the county administrator’s performance be reviewed,” commissioners’ Chairman Mike Chapman said after the meeting. “I started off the year thinking there needed to be a performance review.” But it’s hard to review someone under an agreement that only he, Chapman, had approved from among the three commissioners presently sitting on the board, Chapman said. Commissioner Bill Peach took office in January 2015 and Commissioner Mark Ozias roughly six weeks ago. But commissioners said at their work session they will move forward with reviewing Jones’ job description and consider drawing up a new contract covering his duties and their expectations of him. With help from Human Resources Director Rich Sill, they also discussed seeking input from 14 department heads — half are hired by Jones, half are elected — on “competencies,” or qualities that make a good county administrator.
Commissioners said their goal is to have an agreement in place for J o n e s within six Jones months. Jones, 62, is slated to earn $150,206 this year in a position he has held since 2006 under a 10-year contract that was last updated in 2009. Jones predicted later Monday that commissioners could review his performance late this year and possibly at the beginning of 2017.
accountability and accessibility are important. “The administrator needs to be as accessible, if not more accessible than he is.” Jones said later Monday he would not respond to Chapman’s comments. “He never made those comments to me, so I’ll just let it play out.” Public Works Director Bob Martin, a county department head under three administrators including Jones, said later Monday that the administrator needs to be a good communicator and have good relationships with the county commissioners, his counterparts in other jurisdictions and civic organizations. Martin said the administrator also needs a strong background in financial analysis and an ability to work a budget effectively, areas in which Martin added Jones is “particularly strong.” During the work session Monday, Chapman said “it just dawned on me” that he was the only commissioner on the board when the current contract was signed. “At the very least, we should go through some sort of process, some job description with the interest of doing a new contract.” Jones’ removal was sought Nov. 24 by Treasurer Selinda Barkhuis over him submitting “ridiculous revenue projections” for 2016, she said.
Timing up in the air Ozias said after the meeting that the performance review could take place “in the next couple of months,” but that the timing is up in the air. “I’m looking to my fellow commissioners to develop a process with the human resources office,” he said. “This process is one we are going to continue moving forward.” The competencies that Chapman said he looks for in an administrator are honesty and, especially, consistency regarding budget numbers. “The administrator has got to do a better job putting together a consistent budget message,” Chapman said. Chapman also said
Barkhuis also accused him of “(ab)using his authority to harass me, retaliate against me, and otherwise intrude on my office as County Treasurer.” He responded that he made the revenue projections at the request of the commissioners and accused her of not wanting to work “corroboratively.”
No evidence In another action spurred by Barkhuis, the Sheriff’s Office found no evidence that Jones broke the law when he told commissioners the county could loan money to the city of Port Angeles. Barkhuis had alleged June 30 that Jones lied about the county’s ability to loan the city $7.75 million for its landfill bluff-stabilization project. Jones called the allegation “completely false.” In the interview after Monday’s work session, Chapman said he wanted to be “forward looking” and not focus on the past. “I’m comfortable with the direction the board is headed. I want [Jones] to know what the current board wants of him and want the current board to be signed on to the contract.”
________ Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5060, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladaily news.com.
Inslee lambasts state Senate Republicans for cabinet ouster BY RACHEL LA CORTE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OLYMPIA — Gov. Jay Inslee on Monday blasted Senate Republicans for ousting the head of the Department of Transportation, calling the surprise vote on the Senate floor “an election-year stunt.” A clearly angry Inslee said, “Senate Republicans are out of control at this moment.” “They need to pull out of this dive and help us find solutions to our challenges,” he said at a news conference. The rare move was taken by the Senate as majority Republicans and a Democrat who caucuses with them voted 25-21 against confirming Lynn Peterson’s 2013 appointment. The Washington state Senate can confirm or reject gubernatorial appointments
his colleagues take her head off on a Friday massacre,” Inslee said. “This was obviously a gross misuse of the confirmation process.” King did not immediately respond to a phone message seeking comment. Peterson, who came to Washington after working as a transportation adviser to Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber, has had a tenure filled with controversy over problems such as delays on the new 520 bridge and the ongoing troubles with the Seattle tunnel project to replace the Alaskan Way Viaduct. Inslee cited the agency’s quick work following the Oso landslide and the collapse of the Skagit River bridge. Lawmakers could have worked with Peterson and the governor’s office to address their concerns, he said. “Not one single Republi-
to the cabinet, and appointees can serve if the Senate takes no action to confirm. The last Senate rejection of a gubernatorial appointee in the state was in 1998. Inslee, a Democrat who is up for re-election this year, said he had met with Republican leaders just last week and while there was mention of concern over some transportation data, no mention was made of their intentions with Peterson. Inslee called out several Republicans by name, including Sen. Curtis King of Yakima, chairman of the Senate Transportation Committee. Inslee read several statements that King had made at a previous hearing in which he praised Peterson and thanked her for her work. “He never raised these issues with her and went out there and sat and watched
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Kilmer town hall tour has area stops
ON THE DOLLS Teri Newell of Port Angeles and her daughter, Gracie Ann Newell, 9, examine a table of collectable dolls at Saturday’s 20th annual Promise of Spring Doll Show at Vern Burton Community Center in Port Angeles. The event, hosted by Just Dolls of Washington, featured a wide variety of dolls, doll clothing and accessories. KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
auditions are available in the high school library. While most of the characters sing and dance, there are five characters who don’t. There are many roles for both boys and girls, and auditions are open to all high school-aged students in Jefferson County. For more information, contact Jennifer Nielsen at 360-379-6761 or jnielsen@ ptschools.org.
Individuals, businesses, clubs, churches and organizations are invited to participate by donating cans of tuna fish. For convenience, collection barrels will be at a number of Port Angeles locations, including Haggen, the Lincoln Street Safeway, Mt. Pleasant IGS, First Federal branches and the Port Angeles Food Bank. The goal of this year’s drive is to collect 20,000 cans of tuna, which is approximately the number Chekov tryouts of cans the Port Angeles PORT ANGELES — The Food Bank distributes in 10 Port Angeles Community months. Tuna also will be Players will hold tryouts for accepted for any other food two one-act comedies by bank/food distribution proAnton Chekhov on Wednesgram on the North Olympic day at 7 p.m. Peninsula. Specific distribuThe plays, “Bear” and tion designations can be “Proposal,” will be performed made at the time the tuna is together April 8-10. donated. For more informaTwo women and four tion, contact drive Chairman men 25 and older are Tim Crowley of the Olympic needed for the production, Kiwanis Club at 360-457which will be directed by 5933 or tcrowley@wavecable. Dimitri Gerasimenko, a clascom. sically trained Russian actor/director who is new to Yacht club speaker the area. Actors will be asked to read from scripts SEQUIM — The Sequim provided. Bay Yacht Club will present Tryouts are at the Port John Vavrinec of the Pacific Angeles Community PlayNorthwest National Laborahouse, 1235 E. Lauridsen tory’s Marine Science Lab at Blvd. For questions or addi- the club’s monthly meeting tional information, phone Wednesday. the playhouse office manThe event will be in the ager at 360-452-6651. John Wayne Marina’s main meeting room, 2577 West Sequim Bay Road, at 7 p.m. Tuna Drive 2016
Vavrinec, who holds a doctorate, is a marine ecologist and oceanographer with extensive experience in fisheries and habitat coastal and estuarine management around the United States. For questions, contact Jim Fitzpatrick at shieldmdn@ msn.com or 360-683-1387.
Artists’ League PORT LUDLOW — The Port Ludlow Artists’ League presents Leilani Child Wilds as their Artist of the Month, showcasing her artwork during February. Artists, art lovers and the community are invited to meet Wilds at the Second Wednesday Reception in the lobby of Sound Community Bank this Wednesday. This meet-and-greet is from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. It will then move to the gallery adjacent to the bank. The bank is located at the intersection of Oak Bay and Paradise Bay roads. Wilds paints with watercolors and acrylics; she uses pastels and pours dye on silk; she sculpts and creates with ceramic; she also is into print-making and fusing glass. For more information, contact League President Judy Danberg at 360-4737999 or shortline@ cablespeed.com. Peninsula Daily News
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Market watch
Feb. 8, 2016 DETROIT — Mazda is -177.92 Dow Jones recalling some SUVs industrials because the fuel filler pipe 16,027.05 can rupture in a rear Nasdaq -79.39 crash and cause a gas composite 4,283.75 leak and possible fire. -26.61 Standard & The recall covers Poor’s 500 1,853.44 nearly 237,000 CX-5 SUVs from the 2014 and Russell -16.28 2015 model years. 2000 969.34 The problem was disNYSE diary covered in crash testing Advanced: 645 when the pipe ruptured Declined: 2,524 and spilled fuel that exceeded limits set by Unchanged: 39 crash test standards. Volume: 5.6 b Mazda said it has no Nasdaq diary reports of any fires or Advanced: 820 injuries. Declined: 2,050 Dealers will remove a Unchanged: 73 bolt on the left side of the pipe, redirecting the rear Volume: 2.7 b crash impact to prevent AP pipe ruptures, according to documents filed by 64.8 cents, or 4.4 percent, Canadian safety regulato $15.426 an ounce. tors. The Associated Press
Gold and silver Gold for April jumped $40.20, or 3.5 percent, to settle at $1,197.90 an ounce Monday. March silver gained
How’s the fishing? Michael Carman reports. Fridays in
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PORT TOWNSEND — Port Townsend High School, 1500 Van Ness St., is holding auditions for playwright Arthur Laurents’ romantic musical “West Side Story,” planned for a May 6 opening. Auditions will be held in the high school auditorium from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. today and from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday, with the first rehearsal Friday, Feb. 19. Attendance at both auditions is required for those who want to be considered for a major role. The show will be directed by Jennifer Nielsen, with musical direction by Linda Dowdell. Lisa Wentworth and Tomoki Sage will choreograph this American classic. Scenes and songs for
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U.S. Rep. Derek Kilmer will hold a series of town hall meetings with stops in Sequim and Quilcene this month. The meetings, designed to give Kilmer a chance to hear directly from constituents, are open to the public, according to a news release. Participants will hear an update on Congress from Kilmer and be able to ask questions. Kilmer, D-Gig Harbor, is a Port Angeles native who represents the 6th Congressional District, which includes the North Olympic Peninsula. Doors will open a half hour before the start of each meeting. The Sequim town hall takes place from 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 18 in City Council Chambers at Sequim City Hall, 152 W. Cedar St. The Quilcene meeting is set for 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 19 at the Quilcene Community Center, 294952 U.S. Highway 101. The series of meetings includes stops in Tacoma, Aberdeen, Shelton, Bainbridge Island and Port Orchard. For hearing devices or other special accommodations, contact Kilmer’s Tacoma district office at 253272-3515.
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PORT ANGELES — The 22nd annual Community Tuna Fish Drive to benefit local food banks will be held from Wednesday through Monday, March 28.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Water: Jet stream move
south didn’t happen CONTINUED FROM A1 The National Weather Service long-range forecast expected a dry January due to typical El Nino weather patterns which often drive the jet stream southward into California, but it didn’t happen, he said.
Short dry period Pattee said that while there was a short dry period in early January, the usual winter rains returned to Washington state for the rest of the month. “It was a surprise to a lot of people,� he said.
Temperatures in Washington mountain ranges have been just a little above average, but cold night time temperatures have kept the snowpack from beginning a serious melt, he said. However, he noted that the El Nino warm water pattern in the Pacific Ocean remains very strong and could still change the outlook to some degree. “If the jet stream dives into California and stays there and the temperature jumps, we could lose snowpack, Pattee said. But even if that happens, “it would not be any-
where near where we were last year,� he said. The Cascade Mountain range snowpack is also in good shape for the water supply. Statewide, sensors show the snowpack at 110 percent, with a high of 131 percent in the Okanagan watershed and a low of 92 percent in the Spokane Basin. “Almost everyone is in the green or blue this year,� Pattee said, referring to the color codes indicating snowpacks above average or far above average. NASA/UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON (2) “Last year, everyone was Researchers had to hike through snow to clear snow from instruments red or orange,� he said. on a University of Washington weather trailer parked near a remote road
Caucus: Events will
in the Olympic Mountains.
Results: Landscape occur across Peninsula helped scientists’ models
CONTINUED FROM A1 of grassroots support� for Sanders but there is also Republicans in both widespread support for counties have a “pooled� Clinton. Cowan said that Jeffercaucus with the location determined by the city of son County is a Sanders stronghold, but Clinton’s residence. In Clallam, Republicans local campaign is well orgawill meet in Sequim, Port nized. “There is no way to know Angeles and Forks, while in Jefferson County, events the turnout before people will occur in Port Townsend, turn out,� Pilling said. Jefferson County RepubChimacum, Port Ludlow lican Chairman Steve and Quilcene. Crosby said he doesn’t know which candidate local party March 26 caucus members prefer as the only Clallam County Demo- straw poll took place in cratic Chair Roger Fight August at the county fair expects a large turnout at when Carly Fiorina drew the March 26 caucus “unless the most votes. something happens to While voting by mail can decide the race before then.� be a passive act, caucuses Fight said there is “a lot get people involved in their
choice, according to Cowan. “Caucuses force people to come out of their houses, talk to each other about the issues and their reasons for supporting a specific candidate,� he said. “We hope the discussions will be respectful because negative dialogue is never very persuasive.� Information about the specific time, place and rules of caucusing are available on party websites: Jefferson County Democrats, www.jeffcodemocrats.com; Jefferson County Republicans, www.jeffcorepub licans.com; Clallam County Democrats, www.clallam democrats.org; and Clallam County Republicans, www. clallamrepublicans.org.
Death and Memorial Notice DENNIS E. CHAMBERS February 12, 1948 February 2, 2016 Dennis E. Chambers passed away February 2, 2016, in his home surrounded by his family. Dennis was born to Clifford C. Chambers and Ida E. Chambers on February 12, 1948. He proudly served his country in the U.S. Army, from 1967 to 1970 in the A company, 612th Engineer Battalion with the rank of SP4. He was a veteran of the Vietnam War. After the Army, Dennis went to work in the oil fields in Kansas. He came to the Olympic Peninsula in 1985 and went to work
Mr. Chambers at Eric’s RV, and then K-Ply. Dennis loved his family, his four cats and football (especially the Green Bay Packers). He enjoyed camping, going to garage
sales and watching Sci-Fi movies. He is survived by his companion of 25 years, Julie Verstegen; stepson, Greg (Wendy) Verstegen; stepdaughters, Sheila (Doug) Smith and Karen (Tracy) Smith; and grandchildren, Nathan Smith, Seth Smith, Casey Smith, Traci Jo Smith, Lucas Verstegen, and Katie Verstegen. Dennis was preceded in death by his parents and sister, Dolores Butts. Drennen-Ford Funeral Home is handling arrangements. Services were held at Drennen-Ford. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County.
CONTINUED FROM A1 The data collected here can be compared to what the satellites measure, allowing scientists and engineers to calibrate their systems.
Peninsula stats The Peninsula typically receives more than eight feet of rain on the coast, up to about 15 feet of snow in the mountains and has reliable patterns of rainfall. Additionally, the landscape helped scientists model several different terrain and climate models, as the elevation rises from sea level to a peak of 7,980 feet in only 30 miles, offering scientists a variety of landforms for weather modeling. OLYMPEX flew three aircraft through storms — NASA’s customized DC-8 flying science laboratory, NASA’s Lockheed ER-2 high altitude aircraft and a Cessna Citation II Research Aircraft owned by the University of North Dakota —
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — More than 53 percent of Clallam County’s registered voters who received ballots in the special election ending today had returned them as of Monday. County Auditor Shoona Riggs said 12,926 people,
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The weather stations, radar and aircraft collected detailed atmospheric data to be assembled in a threedimensional picture from the ocean and across the Olympic Mountains. Volunteers in the region also contributed rainfall data from backyard rain gauges. OLYMPEX also worked closely with the Quinault Nation, Environment Canada, the National Park Service and the U.S. Forest Service.
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and set up ground radar systems and mobile weather stations deep in the Olympic Mountains to gain a full picture of how storms behave as they arrive on shore and when they meet the mountains. Some of the radar systems and mobile weather stations had to be hiked in or carried in by mule train. The project began Nov. 2, flights over the Olympic Peninsula ended Dec. 18 and the ground-based radar made its last scan Jan. 15.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, February 9, 2016 PAGE
A7
Logging for the long haul LONG DAYS ARE de rigueur for log-truck drivers. It never ceased to WEST END amaze me that my husband, NEIGHBOR Dennis Barker, was home from Zorina his hook-tendBarker ing job out in the woods before my father-in-law, Randy Kraft, was home from his log-truck driving job. Especially when I realized Kraft left home to climb into his truck as early as 3 a.m. Every evening, Kraft would come home and take off his steeltoe work boots by the door. Then he would walk into the kitchen and put his lunchbox and thermos on the counter just before he pulled a can of beer from the fridge. My father-in-law was a man of routine and would be today if a heart attack hadn’t claimed his life one evening at home. Most folks seem to categorize log-truck drivers as a separate class of logger, as though they are somehow different from the guys working out in the forest. However to the brethren of loggers, drivers are kin. Many drivers have spent time setting chokers or hook-tending but found their injuries have made working in the rigging close to impossible. Barry “Raz” Swanson is the owner of the Barry Swanson Trucking fleet.
ZORINA BARKER
Jody Pilatti with the log truck he drives all week. This coming April, he will pass his personal milestone of 50 years behind the wheel of a log truck. As far as retiring though, “it’ll be quite a while,” he said with a chuckle. “I like the people I work around,” Swanson said. “I’ve got a bunch of good drivers that really hustle and get their trips in.” The Swanson name is prolific on West End trucks. The current fleet began with just one brand-new Diamond Reo truck and trailer purchased by Swanson in 1969 for $28,600. He said a comparable purchase would cost around $200,000 today. The typical driver gets up
before 4 a.m. and drives twisting mountain roads to the logging unit. Here, the truck is loaded in the dark by a loader with bright lights designed for such work. The logs will have been yarded from the unit to the landing the day before. All logs will have been run through a mechanical processor or hand-processed to strip the branches and cut each log to a specific length, so that when the truck arrives, the loader has a pile of logs with which to load the truck. There are three basic configurations of log-truck trailers: the regular long load, a “mule train” which is two short loads, and a “truck and pup” consisting of a
Peninsula Voices immediate basic needs physically (clothes, shoes, coats, I am always surprised shower, laundry, sleeping when I meet people and bags, tents, prescriptions, they haven’t heard of The eyeglasses, diapers), nutriAnswer For Youth (TAFY). tionally (food, healthy food We have been serving the classes, gardening, vitamins, homeless and at-risk for baby formula), emotionally homeless youth and young (safe place to be, free counfamilies, up to age 35, for seling, connections to alcohol over six years. and drug treatment, accepOur mission is to meet tance of who they are, vali-
At-risk youth
dated, listened to and loved), and spiritually (freedom to pray, freedom to not pray, encouraged to look to higher power or God and provide space for 16 Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous meetings a week). We provide these services four days a week four hours a day (plus we are on call).
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long load with another trailer carrying a short load. Most generally, the morning brings three trucks to the landing. As one gets finished loading, the driver moves ahead to a wide spot where drivers throw binders over the top of the load of logs to wrap and secure it. By moving forward a short distance, the next truck can be loaded, too. Time is of the essence for logtruck drivers. “We used to all meet for breakfast,” Swanson said. “Now it’s go, go, go all the time.” Log-truck drivers get paid by the load, and three loads from the West End to Port Angeles
mills makes a day worthwhile. However, there are a lot of obstacles that can interfere with getting this ideal quota of trips. “I wrap up and hurry up to get the loads to the log dump,” said Jody Pilatti, who drives for Swanson and has been hauling logs from a Dahlgren Logging unit up the Sekiu River Road to a Port Angeles mill. He has driven log trucks for 20 years since he quit hook tending. In a deep, gravelly voice Pilatti added, “My day is completely dictated by others.” He went on to explain that the day begins early so drivers can get three loads scaled and unloaded at the mills before the mill workers go home in the evening around 4 p.m. Pilatti also brought up traffic as an element that arbitrarily can slow his workday down — something almost every driver, whether driving a log truck or not, can relate to. So, when there is a log truck closing in the rear-view mirror, it doesn’t hurt one bit to pull the car off to the shoulder of the road and let the truck get on with work.
________ Zorina Barker lives in the Sol Duc Valley with her husband, a logger, and two children she home-schools. Submit items and ideas for the column to her at zorina barker81@gmail.com, or phone her at 360-327-3702. West End Neighbor appears every other Tuesday. Her next column will be Feb. 23.
READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL
TAFY has reached over 740 unique individuals (plus 90 who are under age 10) in 15 months. TAFY is not a business, it is a mission, fueled by passion. TAFY has an eclectic cache of volunteers whose only job in life is to make this lost and needy population feel loved, accepted and cared about.
Again in 2016, TAFY did not receive any homeless funding from Clallam County. We will continue to write grants, provide fundraisers, and seek out local donors whom hearts align with TAFY to keep our doors open. Our vision for the future is to stay on task while find-
ing a permanent home for TAFY, a place where we can put down roots and grow beyond expectations. Susan Hillgren, Port Angeles Hillgren is the founder and executive director of The Answer For Youth. Call 670-4363 for more information.
The last Bush’s slow fade? GEORGE H.W. BUSH was the first politician I ever disliked. I was 12, my parents were Ross loyal DemoDouthat crats, and every night we’d watch the news, cheer for whatever Bill Clinton was saying on the trail, and then glower at the screen when Peter Jennings went to Brit Hume, then the White House correspondent, for an update on what the incumbent president was up to. For a kid new to politics, in a family that regarded Republicans as stuffed shirts and black hats, the fact that the elder Bush had been elected president was simply baffling. His voice, his affect, his malapropisms, his endless forehead — they reminded me of a stiff in one of the black-and-white films my parents watched, or the Token Clueless Grown-up in a kids’ adventure movie. Watching him nightly, I kept thinking: How could anyone like this guy? One answer, I learned later,
was that relatively few people really did. Not that Bush hadn’t earned his share of admirers across his distinguished career. But by the standards of modern presidents, he lacked a truly passionate fan base. The conservative movement was perpetually disappointed in him; liberals gave him no credit for his moderation; the press never swooned for him; and few voters bonded with him the way they did with the beloved Reagan, the charismatic Clinton — or even, eventually, with a more populist and swaggering President George W. Bush. So my 12-year-old self’s political instincts weren’t all wrong. The elder Bush had many gifts, but he was not a particularly appealing politician. Neither, it turns out, is his second son. We’ve reached the last stand of the Jeb Bush campaign, the make-or-break moment, and unless New Hampshire delivers a dramatic surprise, his $100 million juggernaut is just days or weeks away from breaking down. And in many ways, the Jeb! campaign has recapitulated his father’s struggle to play the modern presidential part. The father had “the wimp fac-
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tor,” his second son has “low energy.” The father struggled to deal with a billionaire populist; so too has the son. (Ross Perot then, Donald Trump now.) The father’s inspirational gestures (“a thousand points of light”) were less memorable than his crime-and-culture assault on Michael Dukakis; the son’s promise to run a “joyful” campaign has collapsed into a wave of negative ads. The father famously told a New Hampshire audience, “message: I care.” The son finished a recent town-hall peroration with the instantly immortal “please clap.” The difference is that the father had better fortune before his ’92 defeat. The father got to run for Ronald Reagan’s third term in 1988, whereas Jeb has the anchor of his brother’s unsuccessful administration. The father faced Bob Dole and Dukakis; his son has more politically effective rivals. (There’s more than a hint of Clinton in Marco Rubio.) And the elder Bush was better served by his hatchet men, Lee Atwater and James Baker, than Jeb has been by Mike Murphy’s
super PAC, whose most memorable attack ad involved Rubio’s . . . boots. So unless something dramatic changes, Bush family history will have repeated itself — the first time as a rise and fall, the second time just as a flop. But before it does, it’s worth recalling that after he was ejected from the White House, people realized that actually George H.W. Bush had been a pretty good president. Not a transformative one, to be sure; not an ideological hero in the mold of Reagan or Franklin Roosevelt. But precisely because the elder Bush lacked certain politicians’ gifts, he also lacked certain characteristic politicians’ weaknesses — the appetitive indiscipline of his successor, the headstrong utopianism of his son, the polarizing arrogance of our present chief executive. Which meant that while his presidency left no major domestic policy legacy, it also bequeathed few disasters, and left the economy in good shape for its 1990s boom. His foreign policy built on Reagan’s achievements, but Bush presided successfully over an extraordinarily fraught four years (the Berlin Wall, the inva-
NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, managing editor; 360-417-3531 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ LEE HORTON, sports editor; 360-417-3525; lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147 W. Washington St., 98382; 360-681-2390 ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com
sion of Kuwait, the fall of the Soviet Union) and left office with U.S. interests arguably stronger than at any point in modern history. As a case for his son, this is not the stuff of 30-second ads: I share my dad’s weaknesses as a politician, so maybe I’d actually be a pretty good president. I’m Jeb Bush and I approve this message. But the funny thing is, it might be true. Jeb has proven, over many painful months, that he lacks the gifts required to win a primary campaign. But the democratic process is hardly infallible, and a great deal of damage can be done by presidents rich in political charisma — and with it zeal, self-righteousness and certainty. Between Ted Cruz, Rubio, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders — to say nothing of Trump — there’s a lot of those qualities to go around. Which makes me fear that we could do a lot worse than John Ellis Bush. And that we probably will. Now, before he goes — please clap.
________ Ross Douthat is a columnist for The New York Times.
HAVE YOUR SAY We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” guest opinion columns of no more than 550 words that focus on local community lifestyle issues. Please — send us only one letter or column per month. Letters and guest columns published become the property of Peninsula Daily News, and it reserves the right to reject, condense or edit for clarity or when information stated as fact cannot be substantiated. Letters published in other newspapers or websites, anonymous letters, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. We will not publish letters that impugn the personal character of people or of groups of people. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. Email to letters@peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Sunday RANTS & RAVES 24-hour hotline: 360-417-3506
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, February 9, 2016 SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, WEATHER In this section
B
Beast out: Marshawn Lynch retiring Agent confirms that Seahawks star is planning to walk away from football BY TIM BOOTH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
KEVIN CLARK/THE [EVERETT] DAILY HERALD
Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch runs against Green Bay’s Ha Ha Clinton-Dix last January.
College Hoops
Spotlight now on Huskies
SEATTLE — When Marshawn Lynch was brought to Seattle early in the 2010 season, he was acquired because the Seahawks desperately needed a running back. What he ended up providing was an attitude and style that became the foundation for bringing the first Super Bowl title to the Pacific Northwest. And for that, Lynch will forever hold a special place with the Seahawks. He may have been more of a headache off the field than anyone let on during his time in Seattle, but he’ll ultimately be lauded as the running back that got the Seahawks to a place they had never been before. Without saying a word — big surprise — Lynch drew a lot of attention during the fourth quarter of the Super Bowl on Sunday night with a single post on
social media. Just a picture, green cleats hanging from a power or telephone line, and a peace sign emoji. It was his way of saying goodbye to football, a decision that his agent Doug Hendrickson confirmed to The Associated Press on Monday, saying Lynch intends to retire. The mercurial running back who enjoyed avoiding media attention away from the field as much as he thrived under the spotlight with the ball in his hands is stepping away just before his 30th birthday. “Since I’ve been here he’s been the heart and soul, the engine of our offense. A vocal leader. A great influence and one of the best teammates I’ve ever had,” Seattle wide receiver Doug Baldwin said last month of Lynch. “I can’t say enough about him.” TURN
TO
LYNCH/B3
Postseason opens in PA Clallam Bay boys, girls play tonight BY LEE HORTON
FOR LORENZO ROMAR and the Washington basketball team, the floor is open. Although the Huskies’ season John tipped off with McGrath an early November exhibition — three months and 23 games ago — there’s a cycle of life in sports that insists college basketball isn’t entirely relevant until the day after the Super Bowl. Like many other fans, I regard basketball to be a kind of side dish through the conclusion of the NFL playoffs. I enjoy creamed spinach with my steak, but I don’t crave it. Then football goes away, or at least the games go away — between free agency and the draft and rumors about the pending retirements of running backs, NFL football never goes away — and I begin to hear the sound of buzzers and horns and squeaking sneakers and pep bands in my sleep. After Washington’s entertaining but ultimately flawed effort Saturday against No. 23 Arizona, I reminded Next Game Romar of the opportunity his Wednesday team will have vs. Utah to expose its at Salt Lake City brand to a SeatTime: 6 p.m. tle-area audiOn TV: ESPN2 ence whose attention is undivided. The coach shook his head. “In about six days,” he said, “it’s gonna be about the Mariners.” Amid laughter in the interview room, Romar put his hands together and pantomimed a dunk off an alley-oop pass. “Sorry,” he continued. “You set me up for that one.” Romar knows very well how the beginning of baseball’s regular season coincides with the Final Four. The Mariners, for instance, open on the afternoon of April 4, a few hours before the national championship game. Between now and then, the Huskies will occupy a stage giving them ample room to show they’re legit. “This game was nationally televised,” Romar said. “I think three of our next four, or four of our next five, are going to be nationally televised. “I think it’s a great time, as people are looking to see who’s going to be in the tournament and the selection committee is looking to see who’s going to be in the tournament.” TURN
TO
MCGRATH/B3
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — The high school basketball postseason tips off tonight when the Clallam Bay boys and girls play at Port Angeles High School. Clallam Bay’s teams are two of 11 North Olympic Peninsula squads who made the postseason. Tonight’s games are two of five that will be played at Port Angeles High School this week. The Clallam Bay boys open tonight’s doubleheader against Shoreline Christian (8-12) at 5 p.m. The Bruins (11-7) placed second in the North Olympic League, while the Chargers were the second-best 1B team in the Northwest 2B/1B League. The winner advances to a Class 1B Tri-District tournament play-in game Thursday at Evergreen Lutheran (13-3), which finished third in the SeaTac League. Following the boys game tonight, the Clallam Bay girls (13-4) face off against Northwest Yeshiva (7-12) at approximately 6:30 p.m. The Bruins finished second to Neah Bay in the North Olympic League. The 613s, from Mercer Island, tied for sixth in the SeaTac League. The winner will move on to play at Mount Vernon Christian LONNIE ARCHIBALD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS (13-9) in a 1B Tri-District playClallam Bay senior Dakota Cowdrey (23) scores against Crescent’s Wyatt McNeese in game Thursday at 5 p.m.
(55) as teammate Ryan McCoy closes in. The Bruins begin the postseason tonight
TURN
TO
PREPS/B2 at Port Angeles High School.
Will Osweiler take over for Manning? BY BARRY WILNER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Denver’s Peyton Manning holds up the trophy after the Broncos won Super Bowl 50 by beating Carolina 24-10.
SAN FRANCISCO — One of the biggest winners from the Super Bowl didn’t even take a snap. Brock Osweiler is a free agent the Broncos probably can’t afford to lose if Peyton Manning retires. And judging by how much the five-time NFL MVP’s game has deteriorated through age and injury, a decision to do anything but leave pro football as a champion would be foolhardy. Denver, of course, is well aware of the upcoming challenges behind center. Broncos boss John Elway probably already knows what Manning will do, and he might even be advising Manning to hang it up just the way he did in 1999 after a Super Bowl win.
“I think he is probably just soaking it in,” Elway said after the 24-10 victory against Carolina on Sunday Osweiler in which Manning struggled mightily, but still got a second ring. “I remember when I won it, it is always the time to just sit there. There is so much hard work and it is such a long season that to be able to win the world championship and exhale and say, ‘We are world champs,’ is a great feeling. I am sure he is enjoying it now.” TURN
TO
NFL/B2
B2
SportsRecreation
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2016
Today’s
Latest sports headlines can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.
Scoreboard Calendar Today Boys Basketball: 1B Tri-District Play-in Game: Clallam Bay vs. Shoreline Christian, loser-out, at Port Angeles High School, 5 p.m. Girls Basketball: 1B Tri-District Play-in Game: Clallam Bay vs. Northwest Yeshiva, loser-out, at Port Angeles High School, 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Boys Basketball: 2A District 2/3 Tournament: Port Angeles at Steilacoom, 7 p.m. Men’s Basketball: Peninsula at Whatcom, 7 p.m. Women’s Basketball: Peninsula at Whatcom, 5 p.m.
Thursday Boys Basketball: 1B Tri-District Play-in Game: Clallam Bay-Shoreline Christian winner at Evergreen Lutheran, loser-out. Girls Basketball: 2A District 2/3 Tournament: Steilacoom at Port Angeles, 7 p.m. 1A West Central District Tournament: Charles Wright, Seattle Christian or Vashon at Port Townsend, loser-out, 7 p.m. 1B Tri-District Play-in Game: Quilcene at Cedar Park Christian (Mountlake Terrace), loser-out; Clallam Bay-Northwest Yeshiva winner at Mount Vernon Christian, loser-out, 5 p.m.
Football NFL Playoff Recap Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 9 Kansas City 30, Houston 0
Pittsburgh 18, Cincinnati 16 Sunday, Jan. 10 Seattle 10, Minnesota 9 Green Bay 35, Washington 18 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 16 New England 27, Kansas City 20 Arizona 26, Green Bay 20, OT Sunday, Jan. 17 Carolina 31, Seattle 24 Denver 23, Pittsburgh 16 Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 24 AFC Denver 20, New England 18 NFC Carolina 49, Arizona 15 Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 31 At Honolulu Team Irvin 49, Team Rice 27 Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 7 At Santa Clara, Calif. Denver 24, Carolina 10
College Basketball Men’s AP Top 25 The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Feb. 7, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and previous ranking: Record Pts Prv 1. Villanova (32) 20-3 1,566 3 2. Maryland (13) 21-3 1,499 4 3. Oklahoma (7) 19-3 1,472 1 4. Iowa (11) 19-4 1,471 5
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”
5. Xavier 21-2 1,382 6 6. Kansas (1) 19-4 1,311 7 7. Virginia (1) 19-4 1,223 9 8. Michigan St. 20-4 1,144 10 9. North Carolina 19-4 1,136 2 10. West Virginia 19-4 1,082 14 11. Oregon 20-4 905 16 12. Miami 18-4 826 17 13. Louisville 19-4 819 19 14. Iowa St. 17-6 781 13 15. Texas A&M 18-5 663 8 16. SMU 20-2 593 12 17. Arizona 19-5 497 23 18. Purdue 19-5 456 18 19. Dayton 19-3 413 24 20. Providence 18-6 349 11 21. Baylor 17-6 333 15 22. Kentucky 17-6 228 20 23. Southern Cal 18-5 225 — 24. Texas 16-7 199 — 25. Wichita St. 17-6 132 21 Others receiving votes: South Carolina 128, Indiana 91, Notre Dame 75, San Diego St. 22, Duke 14, Seton Hall 14, Gonzaga 10, LSU 10, VCU 10, Valparaiso 9, Stony Brook 8, Saint Mary’s (Cal) 6, Saint Joseph’s 5, UNC Wilmington 4, Hawaii 3, Utah 3, Chattanooga 2, George Washington 2, UConn 2, Michigan 1, Monmouth (NJ) 1.
Women’s AP Top 25 The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ women’s college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Feb. 7, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and previous ranking: Record Pts Prv 1. UConn (32) 22-0 800 1 2. South Carolina 22-0 765 2 3. Notre Dame 23-1 739 3
4. Baylor 23-1 699 4 5. Maryland 21-2 660 5 6. Texas 21-1 653 6 7. Ohio St. 18-4 599 7 8. Oregon St. 20-3 580 9 9. Arizona St. 20-4 518 8 10. Florida St. 19-4 515 10 11. Mississippi St. 21-4 485 11 12. Louisville 18-6 418 13 13. Stanford 19-5 389 15 14. UCLA 17-6 366 14 15. Texas A&M 16-7 354 12 16. Florida 19-4 305 22 17. Michigan St. 18-5 286 17 18. Kentucky 16-6 231 18 19. Miami 20-4 219 16 20. Oklahoma St. 18-4 202 25 21. Oklahoma 16-6 132 20 22. South Florida 16-6 115 19 23. DePaul 19-7 84 — 24. West Virginia 18-6 80 — 25. Tennessee 14-9 49 23 Others receiving votes: Missouri 35, Colorado St. 23, Syracuse 23, BYU 20, Duquesne 12, Washington 12, Georgia 9, UTEP 6, Albany (NY) 5, George Washington 3, Minnesota 3, Purdue 3, Arkansas St. 1, Green Bay 1, Oregon 1.
Transactions Football SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Signed TE Brandon Cottom, LS Andrew East, CB George Farmer, WR Deshon Foxx, WR Antwan Goodley, DT Justin Hamilton, CB Stanley Jean-Baptiste, WR Douglas McNeil III, C Drew Nowak, G Will Pericak, OT Terry Poole, CB Trovon Reed, TE Ronnie Shields, DE Josh Shirley, QB Phillip Sims, WR Tyler Slavin, S Robert Smith and DE DeAngelo Tyson to futures contracts.
SPORTS ON TV
Today 11:30 a.m. (306) FS1 Soccer FA, Liverpool vs. West Ham, FA Cup (Live) 4 p.m. (26) ESPN Basketball NCAA, Michigan State vs. Purdue (Live) 4 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, West Virginia at Kansas (Live) 4 p.m. (311) ESPNU Basketball NCAA, Pittsburgh at Miami (Live) 5 p.m. (313) CBSSD Basketball NCAA, Xavier vs. Creighton (Live) 5 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, San Antonio Spurs at Miami Heat (Live) 5 p.m. (304) NBCSN Hockey NHL, Dallas Stars at Minnesota Wild (Live) 5:30 p.m. (306) FS1 Basketball NCAA, Villanova vs. DePaul (Live) 6 p.m. (26) ESPN (311) ESPNU Basketball NCAA (Live) 6 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, UT-Arlington vs. Texas State (Live) 7 p.m. (313) CBSSD Basketball NCAA, New Mexico at Utah State (Live) 7:30 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, Houston Rockets at Golden State Warriors (Live) 8 p.m. (306) FS1 Boxing Premier Champions, Jamel Herring vs. Luis Eduardo Flores (Live) 8 p.m. (311) ESPNU Basketball NBDL, Reno Big Horns at Santa Cruz Warriors (Live)
Preps: Port Angeles girls at home Thursday CONTINUED FROM B1 face the winner of Thursday’s game between Mount Vernon If Clallam Bay rocks the Hur- Christian (10-12) and the SeaTac ricanes, it will open the Tri-Dis- League’s sixth-seeded team, trict tournament with its fourth either Puget Sound Adventist matchup of the season with Cape (10-7) or Rainier Christian (6-11). Admission for the 1B games at Flattery School District rival Neah Bay (12-4) at Port Angeles Port Angeles High School is $7 for High School on Saturday at adults and students without ASB cards, and $5 for students with 6:30 p.m. The North Olympic League- ASB cards, senior citizens and champion Red Devils, ranked children ages 6-12. Children 6 eighth in Class 1B by The Associ- and younger are admitted free. Five boys and girls teams ated Press, dealt the Bruins all three of their league losses this advance from Tri-Districts to the regional round. season. The Quilcene girls also made the postseason by placing fifth in 2A Girls the SeaTac League. Port Angeles starts The Rangers (10-9) travel to tourney at home Mountlake Terrace to take on The Port Angeles girls host Cedar Park Christian (12-10) in a Tri-District play-in game Thurs- Steilacoom in the 2A District 2/3 tournament Thursday at 7 p.m. day. The ninth-ranked Roughriders The winner of that game advances to play at Seattle (18-3) are Olympic League 2A Lutheran (12-7) on Saturday at co-champions. They earned the 5 p.m. in the opening round of the league’s top seed at districts by defeating Olympic in a tiebreaker Tri-District tournament. The earliest Quilcene could Saturday in Sequim. The Sentinels (8-11), meanplay fellow North Olympic Peninsula teams Neah Bay and Clal- while, finished fifth in the South Puget Sound League. lam Bay is Feb. 18. Ticket prices for Thursday’s The Neah Bay boys (15-2) also earned an automatic Tri-District game are $8 for adults and stuberth by winning the North Olym- dents without ASB cards, $5 for students with ASB cards and pic League title. The fourth-ranked Red Devils seniors, and $4 for elementary will open the 1B Tri-District tour- children. Port Angeles will then move on nament Saturday at 5 p.m. at Port Angeles High School. They will to play either River Ridge or Fos-
ter in the second round Saturday. If the Riders win Thursday, they’ll play at Foss High School at 1:45 p.m. If they lose Thursday, they’ll play a loser-out game at Curtis High School, also at 1:45 p.m. The top six finishers in the district tournament move on to the regional round to play for a state-playoff berth
2A Boys The Port Angeles boys are back at districts after missing out last season. The Roughriders (10-10), the Olympic League 2A Division’s fourth seed, also open the doubleelimination District 2/3 tournament Wednesday against Steilacoom (14-6), which finished second in the South Puget Sound League. Unlike the girls team, though, the Port Angeles boys have to travel to Steilacoom to face the Sentinels. The Riders will then play Sammamish or Lindbergh on Friday at 6 p.m. at either Sumner or Foss. Six teams advance from districts to the regional round.
1A Boys All three of the areas 1A boys teams made it to their district tournaments. Forks (7-13) claimed the Ever-
NFL: Osweiler had 5 wins CONTINUED FROM B1 finale, reclaiming the starting position for the postseason — All of the Broncos are enjoying although it was truly the defense it, of course. As coach Gary Kubiak that was carrying the team said Monday morning, he wants toward the Lombardi Trophy it to hold onto the championship emphatically snatched up Sunfeeling for a while before looking day. With Manning out of the picahead. But look ahead Denver must. ture, Denver’s dilemma is how And while Super Bowl MVP much Osweiler is worth to the linebacker Von Miller will become champions. He certainly will get a free agent, that situation is attention from quarterbackmore easily solvable for the Bron- starved teams such as Houston, cos. If they can’t reach a long-term Philadelphia, Cleveland and the deal with Miller, who likely will Rams. He’s more valuable to the seek to become the highest-paid defensive player in the league, Broncos because he knows their they can franchise tag him. And system, has been through a Super Bowl run with them, and, no they will. But replacing Peyton? That small thing, was under Manning’s wing for four years. one is much tougher. But is Osweiler worth the Consider first Osweiler’s situamegabucks and long-term deal he tion. Until this season, when Man- could get from someone else? In other words, is he worth ning had to be benched and then was sidelined for nearly two superstar QB money? Kubiak repeatedly said the months by a foot injury, Osweiler Broncos wouldn’t be on top withpretty much was an unknown. He’d impressed Elway, Kubiak out Osweiler’s contributions, and and even the previous coaching he is correct. During Super Bowl staff under John Fox with his week, he basically broke down work habits, mastery of the Osweiler’s value to Denver. “Obviously a big, talented schemes, and with some perforyoung man, can move around mances in the preseason. Then Osweiler stepped in and very well,” Kubiak said. “Really a Denver went 5-2 in his starts this one-year player in college, but growing as a pro. season. “The biggest thing I’d say for Of course, Manning had to rescue the Broncos in the season Brock is that nowadays in the
National Football League when guys are drafted high, they don’t get the luxury Brock has had. “Brock has had a chance to grow up under a Hall of Famer and be coached extremely well, and has a chance to come up, I don’t want to say the right way but the way a lot of guys were able to come up through the years many years ago. “I think he’s benefited from that, being around Peyton on a daily basis, as a worker, in the meetings, as a pro, so I think he’s benefited from that.” Should Osweiler depart — Denver is highly unlikely to use the franchise tag on him (it was $18.5 million this season) — the only quarterback on the roster with Manning’s retirement would be Trevor Siemian, a total unknown. Elway won’t be leaving his team in limbo at the position he played, of course. There are veterans he could bring in, some as stop gaps (Sam Bradford, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Nick Foles, Chase Daniel, Brian Hoyer could be in that mix), others with potential to build around (Robert Griffin III, Colin Kaepernick, Mike Glennon). Given his track record in charge of the Broncos, folks in Denver need not worry. Elway will get it right.
green League’s fifth Southwest District berth with an exciting overtime victory over Montesano on Friday. The Spartans will travel to Vancouver, Wash., to face King’s Way Christian (15-2) on Friday at 7 p.m. The Knights won the Trico League title and are ranked fourth in Class 1A by The Associated Press. Forks will then face either Castle Rock (13-7) or Eatonville (13-7) on Tuesday, Feb. 16. The top three teams at the Southwest District tournament will move on to the regional round. In the 1A West Central District tournament, Chimacum (9-11) earned a first-round bye by claiming the Olympic League 1A championship. The Cowboys first postseason game will be Tuesday, Feb. 16, at Sumner High School against either Bellevue Christian (7-10), Coupeville (9-10) or the Nisqually League’s No. 2 seed, which will be either fifth-ranked Vashon (15-4) or Cascade Christian (9-8). Port Townsend (9-11), which took second in the Olympic League’s 1A Division, will open districts with a rematch against Seattle Christian on Saturday at 7 p.m. The Warriors edged the Redhawks 55-50 at the Crush in the Slush on Dec. 29.
Saturday’s loser-out game also will be played at Port Townsend High School. If the Redhawks win, they will face the Nisqually League champion, either Vashon or Cascade Christian, at Sumner High School on Tuesday, Feb. 16. The West Central District will send three teams to the regional round.
1A Girls Port Townsend is the area’s only 1A girls team to reach the postseason. The Redhawks host a West Central District play-in game Thursday at 7 p.m., but they won’t know their opponent until today because Charles Wright (12-5), Seattle Christian (9-5) and Vashon (7-12) are still vying for the Nisqually League’s fourth seed. If it wins Thursday, Port Townsend will move on to a firstround game against the Nisqually’s second seed, which will again be either Charles Wright, Seattle Christian or Vashon. The Redhawks need to finish in the top three at the district tournament to advance to regionals.
________ Sports Editor Lee Horton can be reached at 360-417-3525 or at lhorton@ peninsuladailynews.com.
Super Bowl’s 111.9 million viewers down from last year BY DAVID BAUDER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — Setting television viewership records with the Super Bowl has become almost routine, but this year’s average of 111.9 million viewers for Denver’s victory over Carolina is down from the past two years. That makes Sunday’s game the third most-watched event in U.S. television history, the Nielsen company said Monday. Last year’s down-to-the-wire contest between New England and Seattle keeps the record with 114.4 million viewers. The Super Bowl had seemed to know no ceiling in popularity, setting viewership records in six of seven years until this one. CBS, the nation’s mostwatched network, had pushed the event hard the past few months, playing up the historical nature of the 50th Super Bowl game. But Denver’s 24-10 victory wasn’t a sizzler, with defenses dominating the marquee quarterback matchup between Peyton Manning and reigning NFL MVP Cam Newton. Even more than television, social media reflected far less engagement in the game than there was last year, when the result was decided on a last-min-
ute, goal-line interception. Twitter said that there were 16.9 million tweets about the game, sharply down from last year’s 25.1 million. Facebook reported that there were 200 million posts, comments or “likes,” down from 265 million last year. This year, 60 million people took to Facebook to converse about the game, while last year it was 65 million. For both Twitter and Facebook, the moment of highest social media activity occurred in the minute after the halftime show featuring Coldplay, Beyonce and Bruno Mars. On Facebook the next mostcommented upon moments came at the end of the game and following Lady Gaga’s rendition of the National Anthem. Nielsen said 21.2 million stayed up to watch the special version of Steven Colbert’s “The Late Show” that aired after the game. While it represented Colbert’s biggest audience ever — that was almost a given — it was the smallest audience for a postSuper Bowl program since 17.4 million people watched “Alias” on ABC in 2003. Colbert may have been hurt by the relatively late start, 10:54 p.m. on the East Coast.
SportsRecreation
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2016
B3
McGrath: Exciting, but young Lynch: Retire CONTINUED FROM B1 “It’s a great time for us to go out and play good basketball. “This is the stretch run, right now. This is it, these last seven games we have. “You can talk all about a game in December and say it’s a big game, yeah, it’s true. How big a game was Santa Barbara, since we lost it? It was a huge game. How big a game was Texas, the first one? That was a big win for us. “But now, every game is monumental. Every game has a lot at stake.” The absence of an assertive rebounder capable of preventing Arizona from extending late-game possessions proved to Washington’s undoing Saturday. So was the poise and savvy of a Wildcats team that put four seniors and a junior on the floor against lone Huskies senior Andrew Andrews, surrounded by four freshmen. For 38 minutes, the kids entertained the near-sellout crowd at Hec Edmundson Pavilion by exerting their quick-hands defense on a plodding offense. The mismatch of speed versus strength produced an array of spectacular dunks for
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Washington’s Marquese Chriss shoots against Arizona on Saturday. The Wildcats won 77-72. the Huskies. Even more spectacular were the dunks they missed. But as any YMCA gym rat will tell you, a pick-up team of experienced guys familiar with each other —
and with the stodgy fundamentals of, say, boxing out for a rebound — usually beats younger guys who perceive themselves as acrobats. The Huskies are learn-
ing this on the run, and to see how they run is a blast. “Kids watch us,” said Romar, “and they like the way we play. They like our style. And when you have an atmosphere like we did for this game, it appears to be a fun place to play. I don’t just mean in this gym, I mean in terms of the program. “But we still have to get over that hump. We’ve got to get over the hump to the next level.” Washington is 15-8 overall, 7-4 in the Pac-12. Advancing to the next level — an invitation to the NCAA tournament — won’t demand perfection, but it will require defensive efficiency. Definition of defensive efficiency: owning the rebound upon forcing a missed, off-balance jumper as the shot clock expires. Seven Pac-12 games remain for the Huskies before they travel to Las Vegas for the league tournament in March. The window is narrow and yet clear. So is the floor.
CONTINUED FROM B1 ing during the postseason. He was an All-Pro, a Pro His final season was an Bowl selection and perhaps injury-filled disappoint- the most revered Seahawks ment. There were no “Beast player in the opinion of Mode” runs in his final sea- their fans. Along with what Lynch son that will forever be in his highlight loop or the provided on the field came image of Lynch leaping into his peculiarities when he the end zone backward as wasn’t carrying the ball. he did to cap a few great His contract disputes. His avoidance of the media. His runs in his career. He was a spectator as memorable performances much as anything, playing during two Super Bowl in just seven regular season weeks that became as much games and one playoff game of a topic as the game itself. And this season, ruling as injuries were finally a factor in his ability to play. himself out of Seattle’s NFC But as much credit as wild-card game at Minnecoach Pete Carroll and gen- sota just minutes before the eral manager John Schnei- team left for the airport. There was almost cerder deserve for what Seattle tainly going to be a separahas become as a perennial tion between Lynch and the power in the NFC, Lynch Seahawks after the 2015 deserves his share for the season because of financial demeanor he provided the and evolutionary reasons. Seahawks. Seattle was always going The moment Lynch to become Russell Wilson’s arrived, Seattle trans- team moving forward — the formed from being finesse nature of a quarterback to power. He became the with a long-term contract face of the franchise with- agreement — and Wilson’s out mounting a campaign to performance this season do so. The violence and showed the evolution was power with which he ran in process. was Lynch’s platform. But Lynch’s final season Lynch will step aside should not diminish his ________ after nine seasons in the meaning to what Seattle John McGrath is a columnist league. Six of those came in has become. for The News Tribune. He can be Seattle, where he played in “He’s a guy that’s been a contacted at john.mcgrath@ the postseason five times. great leader in terms of his thenewstribune.com. He’s second all-time in physical nature on the footSeattle history in rushing ball field and his approach touchdowns and fourth in to the game. He has a cool, yards rushing. calming presence out there,” He tied for the NFL lead Wilson said at the end of chise and this is a franchise in rushing touchdowns in the season. and a fan base that’s used 2013 and 2014 and is No. 8 “He’s one of the greatest to winning and he started all-time in total yards rush- running backs to play.” the process, and it won’t be finished and it may not be finished with the next two coaches that are coming in, ranked No. 2 seven times but I think he was laying BY JIM O’CONNELL — last time the final poll of the foundation of doing THE ASSOCIATED PRESS last season — but had never things the right way and Villanova joined an made that one step up. turning this franchise exclusive club Monday. The “There’s still a lot of basaround.” But Fisher wasn’t win- Wildcats are now among ketball left to be played and ning lately, and though the 57 schools to have been handling this will be Jackson praised his work ranked No. 1 in The Associ- another challenge for our ethic, he had seen enough of ated Press college basket- team,” Villanova coach Jay Wright said. the Knicks’ slow starts and ball poll. faulty finishes. The Wildcats had been “We look forward to it.”
Knicks fire Fisher; Rambis gets interim job BY BRIAN MAHONEY
NBA
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
GREENBURGH, N.Y. — Derek Fisher had just finished a long playing career when Phil Jackson picked him to coach the New York Knicks. Just 1½ seasons later, Jackson decided he needed someone else. Fisher was fired Monday, with his team having lost five straight and nine of 10 to fall well back in the Eastern Conference playoff race. “It’s time for us to make
a change, turn this team around and move forward and get some wins and keep going down the road we had started here at the beginning of the year,” Jackson said at the team’s practice facility. Associate head coach Kurt Rambis was promoted to interim head coach at least through the rest of the season. Rambis, like Fisher an ex-Laker player and a former assistant under
Jackson, went 56-145 in two seasons as Minnesota’s coach. The Knicks have fallen to 23-31, dropping Fisher’s overall record to 40-96. Jackson hired Fisher in June 2014, just weeks after Fisher was done playing. “It’s a huge transition from being a player to a coach at any point in time, let alone the season after you retire from playing. So it was a very difficult situation, regardless of where he coached,” Rambis said. “This is a historic fran-
Villanova latest No. 1 in AP Poll
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DOWN 1 Cell alternative 2 Florida horsebreeding city 3 Doc’s order to a pharmacist
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle — horizontally, vertically, diagonally and even backward. Find them, circle each letter of the word and strike it off the list. The leftover letters spell the WONDERWORD. RISE AND SHINE Solution: 5 letters
N E R D L I H C R A C K I N G
M O E E N E R G I Z E D O R Y
S I I F L E V I T C A I E D Y
S L N S F T W F E H T E A P P
L A E M O O O H C S A L A R M D O O F A ګ ګ ګ ګ S S G K R O I E O O S C M T D S U I E R I V H F N A T E S K T R N S T E A L E N L E E Y S E T S R S P A N S B
V B W N M A E O C I C R Y S R
I A I U Y S O A U G E O E A E
N N S P H Z N R E I G F L L T
G I P E E S F T R A T S F C A
© 2016 Universal Uclick www.wonderword.com Download the Wonderword Game App!
By Kurt Krauss
4 Early communications satellite 5 Falco of “The Sopranos” 6 TiVo button 7 Actress Shire 8 Manhattan Project creation 9 “Au __”: “Bye, Pierre” 10 Texas or Ukraine city 11 World’s second largest island 12 Showing strong feelings 13 Kirsten of “Spider-Man” 18 The Browns, on sports tickers 24 Pop in the mail 25 Windy City commuter org. 27 __ constrictor 29 Landon who ran against FDR 30 Opening set of TV series episodes 31 Hourly worker’s device 32 Fleet VIP 33 Put into operation 34 Scottish cap
2/9/16 Monday’s Puzzle Solved
C A D M A R G O R P U E K A W
H B R I G H T N E D I F N O C 2/9
Active, Alarm, Alert, Awake, Breath, Bright, Caffeine, Children, Class, Clock, Coffee, Confident, Cracking, Early, Energized, Fitness, Food, Fruit, Goals, Greet the Day, Happy, Hustle, Meals, Mindset, Mission, Morning, Motivation, Moving, Music, News, Pets, Plan, Program, Ready, Refreshed, School, Sleep, Snack, Snappy, Snooze, Start, Wake Up, Water, Yoga Yesterday’s Answer: Snowing THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
THEYF ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
KAHIK ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
36 Sci-fi staples 39 Diving lake bird 40 Capote nickname 43 It’s a scream 45 Picking-up-thetab words 47 Song words before “with a little help from my friends” 48 Husk-wrapped Mexican food 50 Pay
2/9/16
51 Concretereinforcing rod 52 Shoulder muscles, briefly 53 Before, before 55 Golfer with an “army” 56 Deceptive move 57 Makes more bearable 60 Capsize, with “over” 63 Superstation initials Momma
LUWSAR
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
ACROSS 1 Campaign display 7 Tuber made into poi 11 Actor Beatty 14 Give in 15 Out for the night 16 Australian bird 17 *Oft-minced bulb 19 Came in first 20 Woman in a Beethoven piano title 21 Oscar night rides 22 Classic sports cars 23 Absorbed 24 *Laura Hillenbrand bestseller about a racehorse 26 Honest prez 28 Math comparison 29 Sally Ride, e.g. 35 Diarist Frank 37 Island wreath 38 Recipe direction ... and a literal hint to what you can do to the starts of the answers to starred clues 41 “Dig in!” 42 Celebrity 44 Statues, often 46 “Now you __ ... “ 49 Fist-up call 50 *Dry-climate landscape option 54 Palms-down call 58 Photo lab abbr. 59 Dubai bigwig 60 “MASH” setting 61 __ juice: milk 62 *Olympic sport with a hollow ball 64 Company abbr. 65 Sheep’s cry 66 Candy heart message 67 Shatner’s “__War” 68 Backwoods possessive 69 Rains ice pellets
Classified
TINKET Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Ans. here:
“
Yesterday’s
❘
” (Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: MOUND SNIFF GALLEY SWAMPY Answer: The waterfowl’s final performance was her — SWAN SONG
by Mell Lazarus
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General General LEGAL ASSISTANT JeffCo Prosecuting Attorney seeks Legal Ass i s t a n t M - F 8 - 5 p. m . Minimum A.A. degree and five years related exp. or equiv. combination. Computer skills req. S t a r t $ 1 7 . 1 4 / h r. J o b desc. and app. available at JeffCo Commissioners’ Office 1820 Jefferson, Pt Townsend, or http://www.co.jefferson. wa.us/commissioners /employment.asp. Open until filled. EOE
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR S e q u i m ’s Fr e e C l i n i c seeks part-time experienced leader. Qualified applicant will have good communication skills, experience with development and budget management. For further info see website at sequimfreeclinic.org. No phone calls. Deadline February 16.
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CASE MANAGER: 40 hrs/wk, located in the Sequim Information and Assistance office. Provides case mgt to seniors and adults with disabilities. Good communication and computer skills a must. Bachelor’s degree behavioral or health science and 2 yrs paid social service exp. or BA and 4 yrs exp., WDL, auto ins. required. $17.44/hr, full benefit pkg. Contact Information & Assistance, 800-8010050 for job descrip. and applic. packet. Preference given to appl. rec’d by 4:00 pm 02/22/2016. I&A is an EOE.
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LUBE TECH Full-time, valid WSDL required. Apply at 110 Golf Course, P.A. in the Quick Lube.
MEDICAL RECORDS CLERK Nor th Olympic Healthcare has a full time position open with benefits including disability insurance, medical/dental/vision insurance and a 401K for an experienced medical records clerk. Please mail or bring your r e s u m e t o 2 4 0 We s t Front Street, Por t Angeles WA 98362 MENTAL HEALTH PROFESSIONAL FT, with benefits. Req. MA and 2yrs exp. working with children. Licensed /child specialist pref. EOE. Resume /cvr letter to: PBH 118 E. 8th St. Por t Angeles, WA 98362 peninsulabehavioral.org SEASONAL LABORER City of Sequim Public Works $14.50/hr, FT approx 3/1-8/31, no bene, parks exp pref; w w w. s e q u i m w a . g o v job info and app due 2/22/16
N ew o p p o r t u n i t i e s a t Price Ford, Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center, if your motivated to accelerate your career we have an opportunity for you. We are seeking energetic, qualified Autom o t i v e Te c h n i c i a n s . Competitive wages, benefits, contact Jake Lenderman at Price Ford, 457-3022, newcareer@priceford.com.
PLUMBERS HELPER Needed. Must have good wor k ethic, and driving record. (360)683-7719
OFFICE MANAGER Accepting resumes, full time, proficient in Microsoft word and office, Excel, Quick Books, payroll, invoicing, contracts, accounts rec / pay, P & L, customer serv/skills. Cover Letter / Resume BDG 11 E. Runnion R d . S e q u i m , WA . 98382. Compensation DOE
Weatherization outreach specialist Primary task of developing new community partnerships for OlyCAP’s Weatherization Assistance Program. Outreach to public; target high-priority households and evaluate applicant eligibility. A.A. preferred or extensive WAP experience. Knowledge of energy conservation, construction and building codes. More details and application at olycap.org, or 228 W First St, Port Angeles (360) 452-4726. EOE.
Plumber / Pipefitter / Steamfitter Supervisor Permanent Position Clallam Bay Corrections Center, Pay starts at $4,503 Monthly, Plus full benefits. Closes 2/11/2016 Apply on-line: www.careers.wa.gov. For further information please call Laura at (360)963-3208 EOE REGISTERED DENTAL HYGIENIST Mon. and Wed. 8-5pm Fri. 7-1pm, competetive wage and benefits. Please email resume to: sequimfamilydentistry @yahoo.com or mail to: PO Box 3430 Sequim, WA 98382 RESIDENTIAL AIDE Full-Time and Part-Time Req. H.S./GED and wor k exper ience with chronic mental illness / substance abuse preferred. $10.80-$12.75 hr DOE Resume to: PBH, 118 E. 8th St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. peninsulabehavioral.org EOE
WE ARE EXPANDING, seeking people to help us fill our needs. Seeking (2) Service Technicians, Chevy experie n c e p r e fe r r e d . A l s o seeking General Labore r , n e e d L o t Po r t ers,and Detailers, apply in person, at 110 Golf Course Rd.Port Angeles, WA See Justin in Service.
4080 Employment Wanted Alterations and Sewing. Alterations, mending, hemming and some heavyweight s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o you from me. Call (360)531-2353 ask for B.B. CAREGIVER Available for light-full a s s i s t a n c e. E x p e r i enced, Assist with household duties, hygienic needs, transportation, errands, household duties and more. C a l l We n d y a t 3 6 0 461-8386 for an interview.
Private/Professional Assistance. P r i va t e , ex p e r i e n c e d personal home care assistants accepting new clients in Sequim and Port Angeles. (360)775-7134
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
A I R C O M P R E S S O R : BOOKS: Harr y Potter, DOORS and FRAMES: FREE: Panasonic HD 2hp Charger Pro, 220v. h a r d c o ve r, # 1 - 7 s e t . (3) Inter ior, 32”, new. TV, not a flat screen, $69. (360)775-0855 $50 all. (951)893-7060 works perfectly, come $50. (360)457-6889 and get it. ANDIRONS: Antique CABLE CHAINS: La DRESSER: (3) large Clede 10 30, snap-lock, drawers, (2) small draw- F R I D G E : G E s i d e by brass. $99. excellent condition. $15. ers, 47x22x34, with mir- s i d e, 2 1 . 7 c u . f t . , n o (360)683-9394 (360)808-5305 ror. $35. 457-8241 frost, water /ice. $75. (360)681-2344 ARMOIRE: Corner unit, CAMPLITE SET: Tires DRIBBLE SPECS: Basholds 42’ TV. $25. and wheels, Wildcats, ketball/Soccer dr ibble GARAGE DOOR: Roll (360)683-9394 50% tread 265/75 R16. specs, increase skills. up, 9’ x 9’, complete. $200. (360)452-8854 $15/obo. (360)452-6842 $200. (360)808-2087 A RT: ( 3 ) Ja p a n e s e P r i n t s . 1 2 x 3 0 ” . CARGO RACK: 2’ x 5’, ENGINE: 327 Block onGAUGES:1966 E type $1/each. (360)797-1179 with bike adapter, lock- ly. $150. (360)452-9041 Lucas oil press & amp ing hitch pin. $75/obo. E S P R E S S O M A K E R : meter gauges, new. $95 ART: Orca whale print (360)775-4089 DeLonghi Exclusivo, like ea. (985)290-5769 by Lee Kromschroeder, “ Te a m i n g W a t e r s . ” C L O T H I N G R A C K : new. $50. 460-2546 G E N E R AT O R : 3 5 0 0 Cothing rack and hang$200. (360)681-7579 EVENING NEWS: Port watt, like new. $150. ers. $50. (360)683-4999 (360)457-7057 Angeles, Sat, June 16, ART: Quinn’s “1st Crab Fest” work and “Friends C O M P A S S : F l u s h 1962. Centennial edition. GENERATOR: Chamof the Fields” poster. mount, E.S. Ritchie, 8” $45. (360)452-6842 pion, 6.5 hp, 3500 runmount, 5” bulb. $120. $200 both. 461-7365 E X E R C I S E G L I D E R : n i n g wa t t s, 1 2 u . d . c . (360)912-1783 $25. (360)683-8841 $200. (360)912-1783 B A C K PA C K : E a g l e COOKING POT: OneiCreek, canvas, black, no da, 1.5 quart, stainless FABRIC: 4 yards, 72”, GIFT BOX SET: Hear t frame. $25. 460-2546 black wool felt, bonus, shaped, silver plated, steel. $10. Po o d l e S k i r t p a t t e r n . Sheridan. $20. (360)797-1179 BAKERS RACK: Black $80. (360)683-0997 (360)452-9106 metal racks, wood draw- C R A F T S M A N : B e n c h er, 23” X 18” X 65”. $65. FENCE POSTS: Plastic, GOLF PUTTER: Lions top shaper, router. $75. (360)631-9211 48”, have 25. $10/for all. (360)457-5696 Club, classic, embossed. (360)417-2641 $15. (360)452-1277 BED: Select Comfor t, CRATES: (4) All wood, queen size. $200. w i t h l i d s , c l e a n a n d FILE CABINET: 2 draw- GOLF WEDGE: nice la(360)461-3311 p a i n t e d . $ 1 0 t o $ 2 0 ers, beige colored. $20. dies, graphite, Callaway (360)683-8841 each. (360)452-9685 pitching wedge. $15. BED: wooden, single, (360)452-1277 6’x6’’ long, box spring D O L L : 1 5 ” C o l l e c t o r FLAGPOLE: 25’ turned “ F l i g h t t o t h e S t r o n g aluminum. $50 obo. and mattress. $75. HEADS: 327 Chev, dou(360)477-6100 To w e r ” , n e w i n b o x . (360)457-1082 ble hump, need redo, $35.obo. (360)683-7435 F R E E : 3 2 ” T V, S a m - complete. $150. BLANKET: Electric, king (360)452-9041 D O L L : 2 6 ” Po r c e l a i n sung, flat screen, works size, never used. $80. collector bride doll in box great. (360)670-9882 (360)681-0528 HEATER: Electric radia“Winter Bliss”. Mint. FREE: Allstate moped, tor, DeLonghi, with timBOOKCASE: Adjustable $45.obo. (360)683-7435 49cc, 1959 MI Austria, er, 15” high, 18” long, 4” 5 shelf, Cherr y finish. DOLLS: Collectible, w. $15.(360)457-2804 for serious restorer. $175. (360)681-0528 (360)683-8278 must see to appreciate HIKING BOOTS: W 8-M $20-$40. (360)379-2902. BOOKS: Complete Ivan F R E E : D o u g l a s F i r camo, NEW, waterproof Doig works, 16 books. E D G E R : M T D, 3 h p. trees, 1 ft to 4 ft tall. and insulated. $75 obo, $200. (360)681-7579 (360)461-5267 $75. (360)385-1017 cakk 360-531-2331.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2016 B5
HUTCH: Glass top, bot- PHOTO FRAMES. Var- S AT E L L I T E S TA N D : tom with drawers. $45. ied sizes, some new. RV, satellite dish stand, (360)670-3310 $1-$5. (360)379-2902 excellent condition. $30. (360)457-5696 JACKET: Leather, mo- PLANER: Rigged, contorcycle, XL, new. $50. tractors tool, hardly S E W I N G M AC H I N E : (360)457-7057 White #612, cabinet, used. $125/obo. manual/attachments. (360)457-9773 LAWN MOWER: Sears, $150. (360)808-0836 6.5 hp, 22 inch cut. $25. P O C K E T T R U M P E T: (360)385-1017 # 9 0 4 , h a r d c a s e, ( 2 ) SHOP VAC: Genie, 10 m o u t h p i e c e s , g o o d gal., wet/dry. $15. LOVE SEAT: Antique, shape. $195. 683-6642 (360)582-1280 49” x 24” x 29”, light pink. $175. POWER STRIP: Trickle S I N K A N D FAU C E T: (360)460-8242 S t a r A d va n c e d , n ew. Large laundry sink, great $20. (360)683-2589 condition. $75. M A I L B O X S TA N D : (360)452-9106 Custom made, ornamen- PRINTER: Canon Pixma tal iron. $35. MP160, all in one, inkjet. SKI BOOTS: Garmon, (360)457-6889 X / C , b a c k c o u n t r y, $30. (949)241-0371 mens, size 11.5. $85. MASSAGE TABLE: PUMP JACKS: (2) New. (360)681-4505 E x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n $45. (360)385-5517 $200. (360)461-3311 SKI GOGGLES R E C O R D E R : R a d i o (2 pr), little used, $20 MATTRESS PAD: Mag- Talk show, timed, never each. (360)683-8278 netic, king size. $75. used. $40. (360)461-0940 SKIS: Dynastar 158, (360)683-8668 N o r d i c a b o o t s, t o t a l . M AT T R E S S : Q u e e n . REFRIGERATOR: Black $100. (360)461-2729 $100/obo. and Decker, mini fridge, (360)681-7258 SKIS: Dynastar 175, 2.5 cu. ft. $60. Technica boots, and hel(360)460-2260 MIRRORS: (6) All mut. $100. framed, various styles ROLLERS: 10ft. roller (360)461-2729 and sizes. $20/ea. a s s e m bl y fo r fe e d i n g (360)452-9685 SKI SUIT: Marmot Gorwood into tools. $150 tex, like new, mens bib (985)-290-5769 MISC: Camp kitchen. med., coat lg. $90. $25. 10” orbital car wax- RUG: Octagon, 50” di(360)681-4505 er. $25. Landscape wag- ameter, brown, floral, on. $75. (360)477-0656 SNOW PANTS multi color. $69. W M(8-10), $25. (360)775-0855 MISC: Eide, electric boat Ski mittens, $15. loader. $100. Bissell little SAFETY HARNESS: (2) (360)683-8278 green clean machine. sets, OSHA approved, $25. (360)477-0656 with 100 ft rope/grab. S O F A A N D L O V E SEAT: Tan in color, in $149. (360)477-3834 M O D E L R A I L R OA D : good conditon. $75/ea. layout “N” scale. 4’ x 8’, SAND BLASTER: Rand (360)565-1453 $175. (360)477-4952 20# abrasive, with water SPEAKERS: Sony, surseparator, like new. $50. PADLOCK: Abus disround sound, (2) tall, (3) (360)477-3834 cus. $10. (949)241-0371 small. $145. 670-3310 PANEL SCREEN: Chi- S C A F F O L D I N G : ( 2 ) SUB WOOFER: $10 sections. $75. n e s e , r o o m d i v i d e r. each. (360)457-2804 (951)893-7060 $200. (360)461-0940
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S P O R T I N G C L AY S : TRIMMER: Hedge, gas Clay pigeons, 36 boxes. p owe r e d , S e a r s, 2 2 ” . $50. (360)681-3757 $4.50 per box. (360)452-7647 T U M B L E R : V i b ra t o r y STAPLER: Botstich, 1” with extra bowl. Model 1292 Midway. $75. crown, with staples $50. (360)775-9909 (360)477-3834 STAPLER: Senco with TWIN BEDS: With headboard, excellent condstaples 7/16 crown. $50. tion. $55. call 8-9am on(360)477-3834 ly. (360)683-7485 STEMWARE: Cr ystal, eight 3 piece settings. VACUUM: Shark, cordless, like new. $30. $50. (360)457-8241 (360)582-1280 STEREO: Sony, home s y s t e m , a u d i o r a c k . VASE: 1960’s Swedish, controlled bubble, ala $195. (360)670-3310 Gunnar Nylund. $200. (360)461-7365 STOVE: Antique Hotpoint, electric. $50. WALL JACKS: Pair of (360)808-1159 N ew, P r o c t o r Wa l l Jacks. $100. STRINGLIGHTS: Set, (360)385-5517 new in car ton, 1/2 off. $15. (360)457-9498 WASHER/DRYER: Roper dryer, HD, Kenmore TABLE: Trestle, mini, 400 washer, HD, work 18” X 27” X 28.5”, clas- great. $75 ea. 681-2344 sic. $50. (360)670-3310 WASHER: Great condiT E L E P H O T O L E N S : tion, works great,free lo200 mm, made in Japan. cal delivery. $200. $35. (360)683-8668 (360)460-6735 TILE: 1 box 4x4” white. WATER BED: Mattress, $10. 1 box 4x4” yellow. tube style, queen size, $10. 1/2 box 3x6” yel- with heater. $125. low. $5. (360)928-3093 (360)460-8242 T I R E C H A I N S : f o r WINE: Emerson, 8 botP235/R15, used once, tle, wine fridge. $60. 15 miles. $10. (360)460-2260 (360)457-5790 WINE RACK: Custom TIRES: Studded, snow, made, ornamental, iron, on rims, P195/75R-14, 6 bottle rack. $35. Toyota, excellent cond. (360)457-6889 $200firm. (360)928-9007 WORKBENCH: Solid, TRAILER RAMPS: (3) 5’x7’, notched for table Hand Master, 1000 lb., saw. $75. capacity. $60. 631-9211 (360)452-9146
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Reliable and Professional lawn, lot & field m ow i n g . L a n d s c a p e maintenance, trimming and pruning, Pressure wa s h i n g , h a u l i n g & Tractor work. Call Tom today 460-7766. License: bizybbl868ma Seamless Gutters! Call A1 NW Gutters today at 360-460-0353 for your free estimate. Call now for your seamless gutter quote. a1nwguttersllc@gmail.com
YARD MAINTENANCE Tr i m m i n g , w e e d i n g , hauling, pruning, mowing. Reasonable rates. (360)461-0794
105 Homes for Sale Clallam County MILLER PENINSULA HOME Loaded with great features! Granite counters, vaulted ceilings, double French door entry to office / den / 3rd BR, Master Bath, 2nd Master BR w i t h p r i va t e e n t r y t o common bath, pebbletech concrete driveway a n d r e a r p a t i o, l a r g e laundry / utility room with 1/2 BA, over-sized 2-car garage, fenced gardens! Surrounded by trees and professional landscaping on a huge private triangular lot in cul-de-sac! $329,000 ML#300073/886267 Charles Smith III 360-774-3330 TOWN & COUNTRY
A Lot For A Little Come see this 1 acre gently sloped lot with wonderful saltwater and mountain views. 3 bedroom septic already installed and PUD power to proper ty. Desirable corner lot in Salmon Creek Estates. MLS#292022/856169 $85,900 Rick Patti Brown lic# 119519 lic# 119516 360-775-5366 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East Freshwater Bay Gem! Remarkable craftsmanship in this quality built home in Freshwater Bay. Kitchen with porcelain tile counter tops, Granite island with breakfast bar and Kenmore elite stainless steel appliances. Master suite with water view, walk in tile shower and double sinks. Two quest suites with attached bathrooms featuri n g ve s s e l s i n k s a n d stone countertops. Deck off of dining room and all three bedrooms and 360 view observatory to enjoy the beautiful sunrises and sunsets. Just minutes to the public boat launch. MLS# 290967 $575,000. (360) 457-0456 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
One-Story Ranch 1,529 sf., - 3 br., 1 ba., born in 1960 , updated, nice hardwood oak floori n g , n ewe r v i ny l w i n dows, garage with workshop area, fenced back yard, concrete foundation / basement. MLS # 300076 $159,000 Team Thomsen COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY (360) 808-0979
Home Business Potential! Generously sized 2 br., 1 ba., home situated on three rural lots. Bright and spacious living room with large dual pane windows. Kitchen with skylight, ample counter space and convenient built in desk / work space. Bedrooms with built-ins for additional storage. Bathroom with tub / shower combo and built in linen cabinets. Fully fenced in yard with c h i cke n c o o p, g a r d e n space and fire pit. Detached 1 car garage / workshop. Zoned Urban Neighborhood Commercial - perfect for a home based business or office. MLS#292007 $115,000 Terry Neske (360) 457-0456 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
Just Listed! Nice warm 2br 2ba golf course frontage one level Sunland Condo. Relax and enjoy life and the view in this well kept, upgraded home in a quiet neighborhood. Beautiful o a k h a r d wo o d f l o o r s, rock fireplace, skylights, and plenty of well designed shelving and storage space in kitchen and throughout home. Extra large garage. Sunland lifestyle features Golf, Clubhouse, Swimming pool, beach access, Tennis and Pickle ball courts. $189,900 Ed Sumpter 360-808-1712 Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim NO YARD WORK S u n l a n d N o r t h Tow n h o u s e w i t h l a ve n d e r floor plan, currently under construction with Kevin Estes Builders. Still time to select finishing and colors, upgrades, 2 bd, 2 ba, office, 1833 sf. covered deck with aggregate patio. amenities; pool, tennis and pickleball, clubhouse, beach cabana. MLS665981/281466 $316,924 Deb Kahle lic# 47224 (360) 683-6880 1-800-359-8823 (360) 918-3199 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
PRIME LOCATION Custom built, well maintained, 10,500 sq ft city lot with 10-plus parking spots, detached single car garage for extra storage and a shed in back. H e a t p u m p, bu i l t i n sound, metal roof, all new wiring, fiber optics internet onsite, front of the bldg. with part mountain view and more! MLS# 290306/749477 $230,000 Ania Pendergrass 360-912-3025 Remax Evergreen
505 Rental Houses Clallam County
(360)
417-2810
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1111 CAROLINE ST. PORT ANGELES SEQUIM: Clean 2 BR, 1 1/2 BA. Well maintained home with dishwasher, new floor ing, p a i n t , s t o ve . Fe n c e d backyard with storage shed. Carport. No Pets. $975. (360)460-8297
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Private Caregiving / Housekeeping Looking for a pr ivate caregiver or someone to clean your home? I have 16 years of experience, provide top notch care and offer affordable rates! Call Nicki today: (360)406-0291
4 Car Garage Opportunity in the City of Sequim! Nicely remodeled home with 2 br., and walk in shower bath down, 2 brs, full ba, sitting room and deck, up. Ductless heat pump. 2 two car garages + stora g e. G a ze b o, l o t s o f parking area. Double lot. Close to everything! Perfect for home or home business! MLS# 300122 $276,000 Tom Blore 360-683-4116 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE
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6040 Electronics T V: B ra n d n ew 5 0 ” S h a r p. F u l l H D, L E D. $300. (360)683-4789
Properties by
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The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES are in
DEMAND!
452-1326
665 Rental Duplex/Multiplexes
6050 Firearms & Ammunition PISTOL: HK4, 3 barrels, 5 m a g s, m a n u a l , ex . cond. $850. (360)821-1104 RIFLE: Remington 597 Stainless, .22 automatic 20” barrel, 2 mags, excellent. $195. (360)452-4803
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
SEE THE MOST CURRENT REAL ESTATE LISTINGS: www.peninsula dailynews.com
MISC: Mattress, kingsize, Simmons Natural Latex Eurotop, hypo allergenic, barely used, exc., cond. $500. Dining Room Set, (8)cane back chairs, white cushioned seats. $350. 681-2344 or (360)808-3391 S O FA : A n t i q u e S t y l e Brown fabric, in like new condition, spotless. Wo o d t r i m a n d l e g s . $295. (360)452-5180.
6100 Misc. Merchandise MISC: Star theater style popcorn machine. $350. Delta 10” cast table saw. $300. Victory bar back refrigerator with 2 kegerator taps. $400. Meyer d e e p we l l p u m p w i t h shallow injector. $350. Parastolic VS wine/liquid food pump. $900. Grandberg 66” 36” chain saw mills with 2 Stihl 0 4 5 AV p o w e r h e a d s plus 28/36” bars/chains. $1400. Poulan Pro 26” c h a i n s aw. $ 1 5 0 . MK-101 pro series tile saw. $700. (360)681-0753
6125 Tools
9802 5th Wheels
METAL LATHE: Master Turn, - 18” x 60”, 5 years old, fully accessorized. $10,000/obo. (360)452-3539
KEYSTONE: ‘05 Cougar 5th Wheel bunkhouse, large slide, queen bed and 3 bunk beds. $12,000. (360)460-9931
WOODWORKING: Near new Delta 14x40 lathe, 9829 RV Spaces/ w i t h V i c m a r c C h u ck , Storage Sorby tools, grinder plus m a ny ex t ra s. $ 1 , 0 0 0 . P.A.: RV or manufacDelta Floor drill press, utred home property with $300. plus many more 20x20 garage. $400 mo. tools. (360) 477-2177 (360)808-0970.
6140 Wanted & Trades
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
Wa n t e d : S m a l l o l d e r crawler/tractor (bulldozer), any model, condition, or related equipm e n t , s k i d s t e e r, m i n i excavator, old signs, gas pumps, anvils. 360-204-1017
BOAT: 20’ ‘89 Gregor Aluminum. The inside of boat has been gutted and is ready for someone to put back together, this is not a piece of junk, no engines, custom built gas tank. $4,000. Jim (360)374-8761
7035 General Pets
TWIN V: ‘95, 18’, Fiberg l a s s , l o a d e d , V H F, GPS, fish finder, Penn downriggers, Bass chairs for comport. 45 hp Honda 4 stroke, Nissan 4 stroke kicker, electric crab pot puller, all run great. Boat is ready to go. $7,000. (360)6813717 or (360)477-2684
Beautiful AKC Golden Retriever Pups! Ready mid-March.15yrs breeding for wonderful temperaments. Great.family/field dogs. Adorable! Both parents on site, Lt.to med, 1st shots,dewormed.$675. (360)452-3879
9817 Motorcycles
BIRDS: 3 Cockatiels, 1 female, 2 males, with DIRTBIKE: 50cc. Runs cages and all accesso- like a top. $300 obo. ries. $100 for all. (360)670-1109 (360)460-1207 MISC: Will donate or sell HONDA: CRF250R, ‘09, extensive photographic excellent condition, equipment to a wor thy STANDARD POODLE organization or school, Wormed, shots, 2 F, 3 M r a m p s a n d e x t r a s . $3,500. (208)704-8886 i n c l u d e s d a r k r o o m $600/ea. (360)774-0375 e q u i p m e n t , ( 2 ) N i ko n SUZUKI: ‘05 Boulevard SLR cameras, (1) twin C50. Like new. 800cc, lense reflex camera, call 9820 Motorhomes extras. $4,250. for details. $300. (360)461-2479 (360)379-1925
FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special RETAIL FIXTURES $499. (360)582-7910 Display cases, gridwall, www.portangelesfire hooks, shelving, etc., wood.com Strait Music 452-9817 1015 E. First St. Por t 6065 Food & Angeles
Farmer’s Market
BEEF for sale: Grass fed, no antibiotics, hamSEQ: 2 Br., fenced yard, burger, roast, steaks. detatched garage, close $4 lb. (360)912-4765 to shopping, W/S paid. 209 N Knapman Rd #B. 6080 Home $800. (360)457-6092. SEQUIM: 2 Br., 2 bath, laundry room, 1 car gar., no smoking/no pets. $875 incl. water/septic. (360)683-0932
6080 Home Furnishings
FURNITURE: Leather love seat and recliner. Dark brown leather double reclining love seat Inc. plus matching leather r o cke r r e c l i n e r c h a i r. $400 for the set. (360) 681-4244
452-1326 452-1326
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Handyman with Truck. Property maintenance, gutter cleani n g , m o s s r e m ova l , dump runs, furniture moving, debris hauling, minor home rep a i r s , h o u s e / RV pressure washing. Call for estimate 360-4619755
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4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses 1163 Commercial Clallam County Wanted Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Rentals
5A246724
D A For items E $200 and under S E D A E FR E E R E F R F
Furnishings
FURNITURE: Couch, loveseat, 2 end tables, coffee table. $600/firm for the set, exc. condition. (360)452-3213.
RV: ‘87 Chevy Sprinter, 22’ Class C, , 49K ml, 9030 Aviation generator, clean, well maintained. $6,800. (360)582-9179 Quarter interest in 1967 Piper Cherokee, hangered in PA. $8,500. 9832 Tents & (360)460-6606. SPA HOT TUB: Caldera Aventine small 2 person Travel Trailers 1 5 0 g a l 1 1 0 / 2 2 0 vo l t 9742 Tires & Perf cond $1,800. TRAILER: White River, Wheels (360)683-3827 2015, 17’, 50’s Retro, bl u e a n d w h i t e , w i t h T E L E S C O P E : C e l e s - moon hub caps, queen T I R E S / W H E E L S : Fo r t r o n , M o d e l N i x s t a r bed, bath, dinette, 6 cu. J e e p C h e r o ke e, Toyo 1 3 0 S LT, b r a n d n e w, ft. refrigerator, TV - digi- H y p e r d i a l S T, M - 5 5 , paid $800, asking $600. tal antenna, fully con- s t u d d e d , LT 2 3 5 / 7 5 R , (360)504-3208 tained, spacious stor- 15”, $400/obo. (360)460-9680 age. Price dropped by
6105 Musical Instruments
$6,000. $18,000/obo. (360) 417-8194
9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect.
SOFA: Stunning, snow PIANO: Baby Grand, ex- T R AV E L T R A I L E R : w h i t e , 1 0 ’ 3 ” L , o n e cellent condition. Ivory Comfort, “89, new tires, A M C : ‘ 8 5 E a g l e 4 x 4 , greatshape. $2,000/obo. 92K ml., $4,000. piece, extremely nice. color. $5,300. (360)670-1109 (360)683-6135 (360)681-4223 $750. (360)292-2049.
Classified
B6 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2016
9180 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles Classics & Collect. Others Others Others Others CHEV: ‘83 El Camino, ACURA: ‘94, Integra, l o c a l s t o c k v e h i c l e , automatic, runs good. c h a m p a g n e b r o n z e . 137k ml. $2,400. (360)460-5344 $3900 firm. 775-4431 CORVETTE: ‘77 “350” a u t o, o r i g i n a l b l u e paint, matching numbers. New tires, exh a u s t , c a r b, h e a d s, and cam. Moon roof luggage rack, AM-FMC D p l a y e r, a l w a y s been covered. $8,000. (360)582-0725
DODGE: ‘72 Charger Rallye Model. 2 door. hard-top. Only 620 ever produced. Super street mods. $12,500 obo. Text please, (360)297-5237
ACURA: TL ‘06 excellent condition, one owner, clean car fax, (timing belt, pulley and water pump replaced) new battery. $12,000. (360)928-5500 or (360)808-9800
CHEVY: Impala LT, ‘08, 4-door sedan 3500 V-6 auto, 97800 miles, duel temp a/c heat, am-fmcd, alloy wheels, power d r i ve r ’s s e a t , r e m o t e start entry, gray cloth int e r i o r, 4 - w h e e l d i s c w/abs, CarFax avai. Excellent condition. $8,200. For more info or to see car call 406-672-6687.
FORD: ‘62 F150 Stepside. Excellent project vehicle. $1000. CHRYSLER: ‘06 Town & (360)912-2727 Country, 88K Gray cloth int. Stow N GO. $6995.00 The Other Guys Auto and Truck Center 360-417-3788 theotherguys.com P O N T I AC : ‘ 0 6 S o l stice, 5sp. conv., 8K miles, Blk/Blk, $1500 c u s t o m w h e e l s, d r y cleaned only, heated g a ra g e, d r i ve n c a r shows only, like new. $16,950. 681-2268
FORD: ‘00 Mustang GT V8, 5 sp., Possi, 21K ml. $10, 000/firm (360)327-3689 HYUNDAI: ‘09 Sonata, 79K miles, Auto, 1 owner, no smoking. $6,100. (509)731-9008
HONDA: ‘08 Civic Sedan. Very clean fun stick shift, beautiful midnightblue paint (minor rock chip pitting to the front), rubber floor mats, pioneer CD player/radio, large digital speedomet e r d i s p l a y. 8 7 K m i , $9200 (360)477-3019
LINCOLN: ‘10 MKZ, PRISTINE - 53K ml. All options except Sun roof and AWD. Car has always been garaged, oil changed every 5K miles, and has just been fully detailed. You will not find a better car. $13,500. (630)248-0703 H O N DA : ‘ 0 9 A c c o r d EX-L Sedan - 3.5L iVTEC DSC V6, Factory Dual Exhaust, Automatic, Alloy Wheels, Sunr o o f , Ke y l e s s E n t r y, Power Windows, Door Locks, and Mirrors, Power Heated Leather Seats, Cruise Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, NISSAN: ‘05 Sentra AuDual Zone Climate Con- tomatic, power window, trol, Information Center, locks, and brakes, ra6 CD Changer with Aux dio/CD. 160K ml. Runs Input, Dual Front, Side, well, tires are excellent, and Rear Airbags. 24K h a s r a d i o / C D p l aye r. G o o d wo r k o r s c h o o l ml. car. $2,800. $16,995 (630) 248-0703 VIN# 1HGCP36879A027678 TOYOTA: ‘05 Scion XA. Gray Motors 65K miles, new tires and 457-4901 rims, tinted, 32mpg. graymotors.com $8,200. (360)912-2727 HONDA: Civic LX, 1993, VOLVO: ‘05, S40, 107K black, with sunroof. 5 speed Black on $1,975. (206)940-7511 Black!!! $7995.00 Hyundai: ‘97 Sonata, 4 The Other Guys d o o r s e d a n , c l e a n , Auto and Truck Center $1,800. (360)379-5757 360-417-3788 theotherguys.com MAZDA: ‘00 Protege 5 sp., runs great, VW: ‘86 Wolfberg, Cab$1,700, riolet, excellent condion. (360)460-5344 $6,000. (360)477-3725.
TOYOTA: ‘06 Matrix XR AWD 4DR Hatchback 1.8L VVT-i 4 Cylinder, Automatic, Alloy Wheels, Sunroof Roof Rack, Keyless Entry, Power Windows, Door Locks, and Mirrors, Cruise Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, CD Stereo, Dual Front and Side Airbags, Front and Rear Side Curtain Airbags. 59K ml. $10,995 VIN# 2T1LR30E66C554349 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com
9434 Pickup Trucks Others CHEVY: ‘98 Silverado, 4wd, new engine. $5,500. reymaxine5@gmail.com or (360)457-9070 DODGE: ‘95 Diesel magnum 3/4 ton, ext. c a b, 8 ’ b e d , c a n o py, 4x2. Trades? $3,900/offer? (360)452-9685 FORD: “99 F250 XL Superduty, long bed, 4x4 E x . c a b. 7 . 3 p owe r stroke, auto. 107,800 miles, Banks tow pkg. $13,500. (360)452-2148 FORD: F250, ‘95, XLT, extra cab. Banks air, bed liner, canopy, tow package, low miles. $5,000/obo. (360)461-9119 M A Z DA , ‘ 8 8 , B 2 2 0 0 , Pick up, 5 sp. very dependable. $1,200. (360)457-9625
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
9556 SUVs Others
9556 SUVs Others
9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County
CHEVY: ‘91 Blazer, 4x4, TOYOTA: ‘05 4Runner 4.3 ltr, V6. runs great. Limited 4X4 - 4.7L VVT-i iForce V8, Automatic, 17 $2,200. (360)775-1799 Inch Alloy Wheels, Good Tires, Height Control, Downhill Assist, Locking Center Differential, Tow Package, Rear Spoiler, R o o f R a ck , S u n r o o f, Running Boards, Tinted Windows, Keyless Entry, Power Windows, Door Locks, and Mirrors, PowCHEVY: Suburban, ‘09, er Heated Leather X LT 1 5 0 0 , 5 . 3 L V 8 , Seats, Cruise Control, 4 W D, 6 5 K m l . , S l a t e Tilt, Air Conditioning, Gray with color match D u a l Z o n e Au t o m a t i c wheels, seats 8, cloth inClimate Control, terior, molded floor mats, CD/Cassette Stereo with great condition, no JBL Synthesis Sound, smoking or pets. Dual Front and Side Air$25,000. (360)477-8832. bags, Front and Rear Side Cur tain Airbags. JEEP: Grand Cherokee 70K ml. Laredo, ‘11, 4x4, 29K $18,995 ml. lots of extras, clean, VIN# $27,500. (360)452-8116. JTEBT17R550049336 Gray Motors SUBARU: ‘99 Legacy 457-4901 Outback AWD Wagon graymotors.com 2.5L 4 Cylinder, Autom a t i c , A l l oy W h e e l s , Good Tires, Roof Rack, 9730 Vans & Minivans H o o d S c o o p , Po w e r Others Windows, Door Locks, and Mirrors, Cruise Con- CHEVY: Astro Van EXT. trol, Tilt, Air Condition- G o o d c o n d i t i o n , n ew ing, CD/Cassette Stereo, b a t t e r y, 2 n d o w n e r, D u a l Fr o n t A i r b a g s . wife’s car. $1700/obo. 133K ml. 360-808-2646 $4,995 CHRYSLER: ‘10 Town VIN# and Country van. 7 pas4S3BG6850X7628150 senger. Ex cond. $8995. Gray Motors (360)670-1350 457-4901 graymotors.com FORD: Aerostar, Van, 1989, good condition. PLACE YOUR $1,200. (360)452-2468 AD ONLINE With our new PLYMOTH ‘91 Voyager, Classified Wizard with lift, CD player new you can see your ad before it prints! b ra ke s, r u n s gr e a t , . $2000./obo. www.peninsula (360)670-2428 dailynews.com
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF OF PIERCE In Re the Estate of JOHN EDWARD DROUET. JR. deceased. No 16-4-00168-1 NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.110) The administrator named below has been appointed as administrator of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the administrator’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the administrator served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Decedent: John Edward Drouet, Jr. Date of Birth: January 2, 1940 DATE of first publication: Feb 8, 2016 Administrators: Richard R. Drouet Attorney for co -Administrator : Shannon Kraft Address for Service: THE KRAFT LAW GROUP, PS 18275 SR 4IO E, SUITE 103, Bonney Lake, WA 98391 (253) 863-3366 Pub: Feb 9, 16, 23, 2016 Legal: 682005
Get home delivery. Call 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 www.peninsuladailynews.com
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Fun ’n’ Advice
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Dilbert
❘
❘
Classic Doonesbury (1986)
Frank & Ernest
Garfield
❘
❘
DEAR ABBY: My stepson just turned 7. My husband was granted custody because the mother was declared unfit due to her drug abuse. She was granted supervised visits until she can pass two consecutive drug tests. Over the past year and a half, her visits have become few and far between. My husband and I think it would be a good idea for “Tony” to start seeing a therapist again. He doesn’t talk about his mother often, and I’m worried he might be bottling up a lot of his feelings. Tony is starting to ask more questions about his mom — like why he can’t stay the night with her, why he can’t live with her and why he hasn’t seen her much lately. I try not to say anything negative about her. Is it time to explain the situation to him? He is still so young, and I don’t know how to explain things in a way he would understand. If you were me, what would you do? Stepmom in Alabama
by Lynn Johnston
❘
by G.B. Trudeau
Rose is Rose
❘
❘
The Last Word in Astrology ❘
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Offer to help others, but don’t let anyone take advantage of you. Take on responsibilities that help you advance. Learn from your dealings with others, and you will feel good about who you are and what you can do. 3 stars
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Embrace change. Fighting the inevitable will lead to stagnation. Connect with the people who have always offered you good advice and support. Recognize that time is on your side and a slow build in the right direction is your best choice. 3 stars
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You’ll instinctively know what to do. Once you begin to head in the direction of your choice, you will find the path to success is one of great ease and joy. Embrace life and emphasize what you know and do best. 4 stars
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Take more time for yourself. Spend time with the people who bring you the most joy. Expand your interests and be open about how you want to move forward in regard to important relationships. 3 stars
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Listen and consider all the angles of every situation you face. Don’t feel obligated to make a decision until you are ready to do so with confidence. Too much confusion will lead to inconsistency and promises you won’t want to keep. 2 stars
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Explore new interests and let your creative imagination lead you in a new direction. Be open to new friendships and sharing ideas with people you feel have something to contribute. Romance is highlighted and will leave a memorable impression. 5 stars
❘
by Hank Ketcham
I could tell her anything and Van Buren everything, and I was there for her whenever she needed support or a shoulder to cry on. However, now that we are older, we have slowly noticed small differences in our lives. She became focused on her studies and art. I joined the cheerleading squad and became interested in meeting new people. Our lives have diverged, and now it’s like we have become complete strangers. I want our friendship to go back to the way it was. What can I say or do to show her I miss the old her? Confused Ex-Friend
Abigail
Dear Confused: As people mature, it is not uncommon for their interests to diverge. This is normal, and it might be what has happened with you and your longtime friend. If you miss the closeness you once had, tell her so. But do not expect it to magically return your relationship to what it was. You are both sharing another adventure now — exploring the interests and relationships you are developing as adults. It’s possible that in the future, your paths will converge again. When people are true friends, their ability to communicate on a Dear Abby: I used to be best meaningful level can last forever friends with this girl I met in kinder- despite intervals when they are not garten. in contact. Throughout the years, we became ________ like sisters and did everything Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, together. We played Barbies, went on also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was adventures, shopping, saw movies founded by her mother, the late Pauline Philand had sleepovers. lips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. As we grew older, we began trust- Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com. ing each other with our lives.
by Brian Basset
Dennis the Menace
DEAR ABBY
Dear Stepmom: You and your husband are wise to want to prevent problems before they happen. If I were in your situation, I would talk to Tony’s therapist, explain what’s going on and ask for pointers regarding his questions and his behavior. My instinct would be to tell the boy that his mother doesn’t see him because she is sick. It’s the truth. When he’s older, he will need to know that there might be an inherited predisposition to addiction in his family — but for now, that can wait. Definitely contact the therapist if you think he/she was a good one.
by Bob and Tom Thaves
by Jim Davis
Red and Rover
B7
Stepson must learn addicted birth mom is sick
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2016
Pickles
❘
by Brian Crane
by Eugenia Last
worked up easily if you believe everything you hear. Take a step back from whatever situation you face, and you’ll realize that things aren’t the way you originally perceived them. Make personal changes that will enhance your knowledge. 4 stars
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Your determination and desire will not let you down. You will outdo anyone who challenges you and bring about an opportunity that will improve your life emotionally, financially and physically. Romance is encouraged. Speak up and LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): make a difference. 4 stars Don’t get trapped by someAQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. one who is trying to control 18): Listen and consider all your every move. You have to the angles before you make take responsibility for your a decision that will influence life. Make the alterations that your direction for an will produce the freedom you extended period of time. need to follow your heart and Refuse to back down or give your dreams. 3 stars in if there is something you SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. really want. Explain your strategy and make things 21): Don’t leave anything undone if you want to avoid happen. 3 stars criticism. Find out what you PISCES (Feb. 19-March need to know in order to 20): Consider what you are bring about change and up against, and you’ll find a make a difference to your world. A unique approach or workable solution that will lead to recognition and a technique will lead to good chance to do something fortune. Love is highlighted. you’ve always wanted to do. 2 stars Love and romance will help bring you closer to a perSAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You’ll get sonal goal. 3 stars
The Family Circus
❘
by Bil and Jeff Keane
B8
WeatherWatch
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2016 Neah Bay 59/46
g Bellingham 57/43
➡
Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 56/44
Port Angeles 55/43
Olympics Freeze level: 12,500 feet
T AF CR RY L O AL VIS SM AD
Forks 62/45
Sequim 56/43
Port Ludlow 57/44
Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 48 34 0.00 6.06 Forks 54 40 0.00 18.97 Seattle 52 34 0.00 9.03 Sequim 54 37 0.00 1.91 Hoquiam 56 42 0.00 15.80 Victoria 47 35 0.00 5.99 Port Townsend 46 30 **0.00 2.55
National forecast Nation TODAY
Forecast highs for Tuesday, Feb. 9
Last
New
First
Sunny
Billings 60° | 35°
San Francisco 71° | 52°
Minneapolis 11° | 0°
Denver 52° | 27°
Chicago 25° | 23°
Miami 65° | 58°
➡
Fronts
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
★ ★ ★
Low 43 52/42 52/42 Clouds attempt Relatively warm Heads up! Rain to blanket moon weather soon could return
53/40 Keep umbrellas out, I’ve learned
Strait of Juan de Fuca: E morning wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 2 ft or less. NE evening wind to 10 kt becoming NW after midnight. Wind waves 1 ft or less. Ocean: E morning wind 15 to 25 kt easing to 5 to 15 kt in the afternoon. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft. W swell 9 ft at 13 seconds. SE evening wind 5 to 15 kt becoming S. Wind waves 1 to 2 ft. W swell 7 ft at 12 seconds.
Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Spokane Atlantic City 41° | 25° Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Yakima Bismarck 47° | 26° Boise Boston Brownsville © 2016 Wunderground.com Buffalo Burlington, Vt.
CANADA Victoria 53° | 42° Seattle 62° | 41° Tacoma 62° | 39°
Olympia 65° | 35° Astoria 64° | 45°
ORE.
TODAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 1:02 a.m. 8.6’ 6:49 a.m. 2.1’ 12:40 p.m. 9.8’ 7:21 p.m. -1.0’
LaPush
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonset today Moonrise tomorrow Hi 46 57 58 30 48 56 44 66 44 42 57 38 48 44 73 48 36
Lo 26 30 24 25 26 37 38 36 34 26 39 27 31 29 52 37 18
Prc
5:26 p.m. 7:29 a.m. 7:15 p.m. 8:32 a.m. Otlk Snow Clr Clr Cldy Snow Cldy Snow Clr Rain Clr PCldy Cldy Clr Snow Cldy Cldy Cldy
TOMORROW High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 1:40 a.m. 8.8’ 7:35 a.m. 1.6’ 1:27 p.m. 9.6’ 8:01 p.m. -0.7’
THURSDAY High Tide Ht Low Tide 2:19 a.m. 9.1’ 8:24 a.m. 2:17 p.m. 9.1’ 8:43 p.m.
Ht 1.3’ -0.2’
Port Angeles
3:53 a.m. 7.4’ 2:32 p.m. 6.6’
9:13 a.m. 4.4’ 9:21 p.m. -0.8’
4:24 a.m. 7.5’ 10:01 a.m. 3.8’ 3:30 p.m. 6.4’ 10:04 p.m. -0.2’
4:57 a.m. 7.6’ 10:52 a.m. 4:31 p.m. 6.1’ 10:48 p.m.
3.1’ 0.7’
Port Townsend
5:30 a.m. 9.1’ 10:26 a.m. 4.9’ 4:09 p.m. 8.2’ 10:34 p.m. -0.9’
6:01 a.m. 9.3’ 11:14 a.m. 4.2’ 5:07 p.m. 7.9’ 11:17 p.m. -0.2’
6:34 a.m. 9.4’ 6:08 p.m. 7.5’ 12:05 p.m.
3.4’
4:36 a.m. 8.2’ 3:15 p.m. 7.4’
5:07 a.m. 8.4’ 10:36 a.m. 3.8’ 4:13 p.m. 7.1’ 10:39 p.m. -0.2’
5:40 a.m. 8.5’ 11:27 a.m. 5:14 p.m. 6.8’ 11:23 p.m.
3.1’ 0.7’
Dungeness Bay*
9:48 a.m. 4.4’ 9:56 p.m. -0.8’
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
Warm Stationary
Pressure Low
High
Feb 22
Nation/World
Washington TODAY
Marine Conditions
Tides
49/40 A chance of showers today
March 1 March 8 Feb 14
-10s
-0s
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
70s
80s 90s 100s 110s
Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press
Casper Charleston, S.C. Charleston, W.Va. Charlotte, N.C. Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbia, S.C. Columbus, Ohio Concord, N.H. Dallas-Ft Worth Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Evansville Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Grand Rapids Great Falls Greensboro, N.C. Hartford Spgfld Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson, Miss. Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles
31 46 54 51 31 43 53 52 54 51 45 65 52 34 45 50 34 63 58 7 36 46 45 45 47 46 42 79 66 55 75 56 39 52 67 71 61 84
16 32 30 28 17 29 36 38 28 37 20 43 35 15 19 36 9 37 35 -8 13 34 26 30 27 28 27 62 44 33 44 34 38 33 58 51 44 53
PCldy .07 PCldy Rain Cldy Clr Snow .05 Rain .03 Snow Cldy .02 Snow Snow Clr .04 Rain PCldy Snow Cldy .10 Snow Clr .07 Snow PCldy .03 Snow Clr Cldy PCldy Rain Snow PCldy Clr Clr .03 Snow PCldy .04 PCldy .06 Rain Snow .03 Cldy Clr Clr Clr
Fullerton, Calif. Ä -11 in Gunnison, Colo.
Atlanta 38° | 28°
El Paso 67° | 32° Houston 64° | 38°
Full
à 89 in
New York 36° | 29°
Detroit 35° | 30°
Washington D.C. 37° | 34°
Los Angeles 85° | 55°
Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News
WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
Cloudy
TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Cold
TONIGHT
Pt. Cloudy
The Lower 48
Seattle 62° | 42°
Almanac
Brinnon 57/42
Aberdeen 61/45
Yesterday
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Louisville Lubbock Memphis Miami Beach Midland-Odessa Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk, Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Pendleton Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence Raleigh-Durham Rapid City Reno Richmond Sacramento St Louis St Petersburg Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Juan, P.R. Santa Fe St Ste Marie Shreveport Sioux Falls
56 66 59 65 71 45 40 58 60 47 42 39 59 45 59 54 46 79 51 44 62 44 44 40 56 43 70 55 56 41 67 80 68 84 52 34 64 38
35 23 41 50 30 30 13 38 42 37 39 20 37 28 38 31 38 50 31 17 39 33 28 27 31 31 43 35 48 24 44 55 51 73 19 33 45 21
.06
.02
.03 .01
.23
Rain Clr Clr Clr Clr Snow Snow Snow Clr Snow Cldy Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr Cldy Clr Rain Snow Clr Snow Cldy Clr Clr Rain Clr Snow Cldy Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Snow Clr Snow
GLOSSARY of abbreviations used on this page: Clr clear, sunny; PCldy partly cloudy; Cldy cloudy; Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; Prc precipitation; Otlk outlook; M data missing; Ht tidal height; YTD year to date; kt knots; ft or ’ feet
Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Washington, D.C. Wichita Wilkes-Barre Wilmington, Del.
45 58 54 72 61 46 57 47 45
26 43 36 41 35 34 33 32 36
Cldy Cldy Clr Clr Clr Rain Clr Cldy Cldy
_______ Auckland Beijing Berlin Brussels Cairo Calgary Guadalajara Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg Kabul London Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome San Jose, CRica Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver
Hi Lo Otlk 80 66 PCldy/Sh 53 34 Clr 49 38 PM Rain 45 35 Rain 64 47 PCldy 55 39 Clr 73 43 PCldy/Sh 65 59 PM Sh 52 36 Clr 79 61 PM Ts 52 33 PCldy 44 35 AM Rain 67 41 PCldy/Sh 25 16 Snow 32 28 PM Ice 73 49 Hazy 50 35 Rain 95 75 PCldy 59 52 PCldy 78 67 PCldy 83 67 Clr 49 31 Clr 38 29 Cldy/Snow 57 45 PCldy
Kevin Tracy
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