Weaving for healing
Tuesday Cloudy and rain showers most of the day C10
PT artist creates tapestry for hospital C1
Peninsula Daily News Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper
50 cents
November 30, 2010
Repairs planned on Hadlock marina By Charlie Bermant
Taylor said the boats in the boatyard in Port Townsend. Debris from the destroyed vesprivately owned marina, which was protected by a retaining wall, sels are still visible on the beach. PORT HADLOCK — Tenants were not damaged. One sailboat was caught on the of the Port Hadlock Marina can breakwater wall for several days still see the effects of the Nov. 22 after the storm and was removed storm but are taking the damage Beyond the breakwater Friday, Taylor said. in stride. Five boats — all attached to One fiberglass power boat “A lot of people left after the buoys outside the breakwater — broke apart and left a slick on the storm but said they will come were damaged or destroyed. water noticed by the Coast Guard back once the repairs are made,” Some of the damaged boats during an on-site visit Nov. 23. Assistant Harbormaster Rob Tay- were moved to the Boat Haven lor said. Turn to Marina/A6 Peninsula Daily News
Charlie Bermant/Peninsula Daily News
A dock at Port Hadlock Marina sits askew after being damaged during last week’s storm.
Hope to be heard loud, clear PT radio stations looking forward to first broadcasts By Charlie Bermant and Leah Leach Peninsula Daily News
PORT TOWNSEND — Two nonprofit FM stations not yet broadcasting from Port Townsend hope to be on the air soon, with Radio Port Townsend KPTZ aiming at the end of March and Christian radio KROH hoping to be in full operation in December or soon after. “Everything is in place for us to move ahead,” said Colin Foden, board president for KPTZ 91.9 FM, Community Radio for the Quimper Peninsula, which plans a public radio model and format with a mix of news and entertainment — all geared to Port Townsend and environs. “I expect we will be on the air at the end of March” at the latest, he said.
Looking for volunteers Foden, along with engineer Bill Putney, addressed the Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce meeting Monday, an address originally scheduled for Nov. 22 but canceled because of weather. “We are hoping to get volunteers from all levels of the community,” he said. “We will not be able to do it alone.” The station hopes to broadcast around the clock, and this “takes a lot of programming,” Foden said. Turn
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Radio/A6
Charlie Bermant/Peninsula Daily News
KPTZ board member Colin Foden stands in what will become the on-air studio for the local radio station, expected to begin broadcasting in March.
Gregoire continues her push for special session Governor lays out steps for balanced budget By Curt Woodward The Associated Press
Gov. Chris Gregoire “I need action” on budget
OLYMPIA — Gov. Chris Gregoire continued to sound the alarm on Washington’s budget woes Monday, pushing for a December special legislative session to enact a series of drastic spending cuts that would balance the state’s books by July. But majority Democratic lawmakers don’t seem to be in such a rush, making a quickie December meeting less likely. Leaders are looking for ways to
patch the current state budget, which covers general spending through June 2011. Gregoire made acrossthe-board cuts to many programs earlier this year, but the deficit recently grew by about $385 million because of slow growth in tax collections.
Wants agreed agenda Gregoire doesn’t need the Legislature’s permission to call a special session, but she can only limit its duration to 30 days. The Democratic governor wants agreement on an agenda beforehand to avoid lengthy deliberations that would hamper her money-saving plan’s effectiveness. Turn
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Van De Wege tapped as next majority whip KEVIN VAN DE WEGE will be the next majority whip among Democrats in the state House of Representatives, party leaders have decided. Van De Wege, the Sequim Democrat who begins his third two-year term in the House when the Legislature Van De Wege convenes in January, will take over the post from Rep. Sharon Tomiko Santos, D-Covington. Tomiko Santos was removed from the caucus whip position she held since 2001, reportedly because of her no vote against the Democrats’
revenue package last spring. Van De Wege was previously deputy majority whip and assistant majority whip for the Democratic caucus. The majority whip — the fourth-highest position in the caucus — is responsible for much of the organizational work, including member attendance, tallying votes and ensuring that new members are informed about process and procedure. The position also helps manage member/staff relations, a role Van De Wege said will be increasingly important as the House — like all state agencies — deals with budget and staffing cuts. Turn
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Gregoire/A6
Inside Today’s Peninsula Daily News 94th year, 280th issue — 3 sections, 24 pages
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UpFront
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Peninsula Daily News
Peninsula Daily News
Dilbert
The Samurai of Puzzles
By Scott Adams
Copyright © 2010, Michael Mepham Editorial Services
www.peninsuladailynews.com ■ See box on Commentary page for names, telephone numbers and e-mail addresses of key executives and contact people.
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Peninsula Daily News (ISSN 1050-7000), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Horvitz Newspapers, published each morning Sunday through Friday by Northwest Media (Washington) L.P. at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations The Associated Press Contents copyright © 2010, Peninsula Daily News
Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Douglas looks hale on holiday IT WAS A sight for sore eyes for fans of actor Michael Douglas. The 66-year-old, reported to be at death’s door by some celebrity magazines, was pictured out for a Thanksgiving holiday trip to Florida with his family smiling and looking relatively robust. And it’s far from wishful thinking that his health is rallying. One month removed from radiation and chemotherapy treatments to combat his stage IV throat cancer, the multiple Oscar winner believes he’s on the mend. “He’s very optimistic,” Stephen Galloway, a reporter who interviewed Douglas for the new issue of The Hollywood Reporter, told NBC. “He said the odds are 80 percent there will be a complete recovery. He sounds great, he looks great; everyone around him is very, very optimistic.” While Douglas has shied
The Associated Press
Academy Award-winning actors Michael Douglas, right, and wife Catherine Zeta-Jones, second from right, along with their children, Dylan, 10, front left, and Carys, 7, ride the Flight of the Hippogriff at Universal Orlando Resort in Florida on Saturday. away from public appearances of late, his father, legendary actor Kirk Douglas, revealed his son’s improving health, telling “Entertainment Tonight” that Michael had regained his appetite and was feeling feisty again. That was in evidence during Douglas’ Florida trip with his actress-wife
Catherine Zeta-Jones and their children, 10-yearold son Dylan and 7-yearold daughter Carys. The Douglases visited the “Wizarding World of Harry Potter” attraction at Universal Resorts in Orlando and also hopped over to Disney World to visit the Epcot Center and take a thrill ride on a roller coaster.
Passings By The Associated Press
IRVIN KERSHNER, 87, who directed the “Star Wars” sequel “The Empire Strikes Back” and the James Bond film “Never Say Never Again,” has died. Mr. Kershner died Saturday at his Los Angeles home following a 31⁄2-year battle with Mr. Kershner lung cancer, in 1990 said longtime friend and Hollywood publicist Dick Guttman. Mr. Kershner already had made a number of well-received movies when he was hired by George Lucas to direct “Empire,” which was the second produced but fifth in the “Star
Wars” chronology. The 1980 production was a darker story than the original. The movie initially got mixed reviews but has gone on to become one of the most critically praised. Mr. Kershner told Vanity Fair in October that he tried to give the sequel more depth than the original. Lucas said he didn’t want to direct the “Star Wars” sequel himself. “I needed someone I could trust, someone I really admired and whose work had maturity and humor. That was Kersh all over,” Lucas said. “I didn’t want ‘Empire’ to turn into just another sequel, another episode in a series of space adventures. I was
trying to build something, and I knew Kersh was the guy to help me do it. He brought so much to the table. I am truly grateful to him.” Besides “Empire,” his big-budget work included the 1983 James Bond movie “Never Say Never Again” with Connery and “Robocop 2” in 1990. Mr. Kershner also was an occasional actor. He played the priest Zebedee in Martin Scorsese’s “The Last Temptation of Christ.” In recent years, Mr. Kershner taught screenwriting at the University of Southern California while continuing to produce, write and create still photographs.
Peninsula Lookback
From the pages of the Peninsula Daily News
1935 (75 years ago)
urday night date with her Portland State boyfriend. The first trial and conThe boyfriend, Larry viction on the Olympic Ralph Peyton, 19, was Peninsula for violation of found dead in the front the state quarantine law seat of his car with a skull was heard in the court of fracture and 23 stab Justice of the Peace Fred wounds. Filion in Port Angeles. Police in Portland said H.E. Olson of Port Ange- they found no trace of les pleaded guilty of leavAllan after combing the ing his home while quaran- woods in the area for two tined and allowing his days. They think she was child, while quarantined abducted by the assailants. for typhoid fever, to be on the street. 1985 (25 years ago) Judge Filion fined Olson State budget analysts $25 and costs. are examining a sweeping cost-cutting plan by the 1960 (50 years ago) state Department of CorrecHope slowly faded for tions to avoid a 13-month the life of Beverly Ann delay in opening the new Allan, 19, a Washington Clallam Bay state prison to State University sophomedium-security prisoners. more from Port Townsend The delay has been prowho disappeared in Portposed to help trim about $12 million to balance Corland, Ore., while on a Sat-
rections’ $323.2 million budget. Once the review is completed, the proposal will be sent to Gov. Booth Gardner for a final decision. Also in the proposed cutbacks: Closing the minimum-security Clearwater Corrections Center on the West End and moving those inmates and staff to Clallam Bay.
Laugh Lines In the latest Harry Potter film, Harry loses his friends, has to battle overwhelming evil forces and hides in exotic foreign places to avoid public scrutiny. Wait, no, I’m sorry, that’s President Obama. Jay Leno
Peninsula Daily News PENINSULA POLL SUNDAY’S QUESTION: Will you spend more money on gifts this holiday season than you did in the 2009 holiday season?
Much more 2.2%
Slightly more
Same as 2009
Less than 2009
Not sure yet
11.0% 31.2% 48.7% 7.0%
Total votes cast: 820 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
■ All Points Charter and Tours of Port Angeles will provide five-day-a-week transportation to and from Hurricane Ridge starting in mid-December. The name of the business was incorrect in a story Monday on Page A1. ■ An incorrect address for Saturday’s Peninsula Gospel Singers concert at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church appeared Sunday on Page C6. The concert will be held at the church, 525 N. Fifth Ave., Sequim at 7 p.m. Saturday. The singers also will perform at the Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh St., at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 12. ■ Performing guests Les and Shirley Wamboldt will join Dave and Rosalie Secord’s Luck of the Draw Band on Wednesday at Smuggler’s Landing Restaurant and Lounge, 115 E. Railroad Ave., Port Angeles, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Shirley Wamboldt’s name was misspelled in last Thursday’s “Live Music” column on Page C1. 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, contact Executive Editor Rex Wilson at 360-4173530 or e-mail rex.wilson@peninsuladailynews.com.
Seen Around
Did You Win?
Peninsula snapshots
State lottery results
A WOMAN COMPLAINING about driving about Port Angeles in the snow because her tires seem too small — only as big as Cheerios, she says. In fact, she calls her subcompact car her “Cheeriomobile” . . . WANTED! “Seen Around” items. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362; fax 360-417-3521; or e-mail news@peninsuladaily news.com.
■ Monday’s Daily Game: 8-9-3 ■ Monday’s Hit 5: 02-06-07-14-37 ■ Monday’s Keno: 01-02-08-12-21-22-26-2831-32-35-37-38-43-45-4750-70-71-78 ■ Monday’s Lotto: 09-26-32-40-41-45 ■ Monday’s Match 4: 02-06-11-14
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS TUESDAY, Nov. 30, the 334th day of 2010. There are 31 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On Nov. 30, 1782, the United States and Britain signed preliminary peace articles in Paris, ending the Revolutionary War. On this date: ■ In 1803, Spain completed the process of ceding Louisiana to France, which had sold it to the United States. ■ In 1835, Samuel Langhorne Clemens — better known as Mark Twain — was born in Florida, Mo. ■ In 1874, British statesman Sir Winston Churchill was born at Blenheim Palace. ■ In 1900, Irish writer Oscar Wilde died in Paris at age 46.
■ In 1936, London’s famed Crystal Palace, constructed for the Great Exhibition of 1851, was destroyed in a fire. ■ In 1939, the Winter War began as Soviet troops invaded Finland. The conflict ended the following March with a Soviet victory. ■ In 1960, the last DeSoto was built by Chrysler, which had decided to retire the brand after 32 years. ■ In 1962, U Thant of Burma, who had been acting secretarygeneral of the United Nations following the death of Dag Hammarskjold the year before, was elected to a four-year term. ■ In 1966, the former British colony of Barbados became independent. ■ In 1981, the United States
and the Soviet Union opened negotiations in Geneva aimed at reducing nuclear weapons in Europe. ■ Ten years ago: Al Gore’s lawyers battled for his political survival in the Florida and U.S. supreme courts; meanwhile, GOP lawmakers in Tallahassee moved to award the presidency to George W. Bush in case the courts did not by appointing their own slate of electors. ■ Five years ago: President George W. Bush gave an unflinching defense of his Iraq war strategy in a speech at the U.S. Naval Academy, refusing to set a timetable for troop withdrawals and asserting that once-shaky Iraqi troops were proving increasingly capable. Shimon Peres quit Israel’s
Labor Party, his political home of six decades, to campaign for Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s new organization. Actress Jean Parker died in Woodland Hills, Calif., at age 90. ■ One year ago: Retired Ohio auto worker John Demjanjuk went on trial in Munich, Germany, accused of helping to kill 27,900 Jews as a Nazi death camp guard. In Geneva, the Large Hadron Collider, the world’s largest atom smasher, broke a world record for proton acceleration. Serena Williams was fined a record $82,500 for her tirade at a U.S. Open line judge. Tiger Woods withdrew from his own golf tournament, citing injuries from a car crash near his Florida home.
Peninsula Daily News for Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Second Front Page
Page
A3
Briefly: Nation State Dems in five states defect to GOP ATLANTA — Staggering Election Day losses are not the Democratic Party’s final indignity this year. At least 13 state lawmakers in five states have defected to Republican ranks since the Nov. 2 election, adding to already huge GOP gains in state legislatures. And that number could grow as next year’s legislative sessions draw near. The defections underscore dissatisfaction with the Democratic Party — particularly in the South — and will give Republicans a stronger hand in everything from pushing a conservative fiscal and social agenda to redrawing political maps. In Alabama, four Democrats announced last week they were joining the GOP, giving Republicans a supermajority in the House that allows them to pass legislation without any support from the other party. The party switch of a Democratic lawmaker from New Orleans handed control of Louisiana’s House to Republicans for the first time since Reconstruction. In Georgia, six rural Democratic state legislators — five from the House and one in the Senate — have switched allegiance to the GOP since Nov. 2. In Maine, a House Democrat flipped; in South Dakota, a Democratic state senator.
N.J. to pay back U.S. TRENTON, N.J. — New Jer-
sey owes the federal government more than $271 million after canceling a rail tunnel connecting the state with New York, Christie according to a debt notice obtained Monday by The Associated Press. The letter from the Federal Transit Administration’s chief financial officer to NJ Transit’s executive director demands payment of $271,101,291 by Dec. 24. It’s money the government wants New Jersey to repay for work done on the Hudson River tunnel before Republican Gov. Chris Christie terminated the project. The Associated Press
Minnesota recount ST. PAUL, Minn. — Barely an hour into a statewide recount of Minnesota’s close race for governor Monday, a volunteer for Democrat Mark Dayton gestured toward an 8-inch stack of ballots awaiting a second look. “This is all we have to do today?” John Cisney asked, drawing chuckles from those around him. Not by a long shot. He was in Ramsey County, home to 193,000 of the 2.1 million ballots that will get intense scrutiny as officials try to determine whether Dayton’s prerecount lead of almost 8,800 votes over Republican Tom Emmer holds up. The taxpayer-funded recount is automatic because Dayton’s lead is within a half-percentage point. The Associated Press
Briefly: World 271 Picasso creations found in man’s garage
The jail term piles a new penalty on the 74-year-old Aziz, the only Christian in Saddam’s inner circle, who already faces an execution sentence from another case. It is the fourth set of charges PARIS — Pablo Picasso against Aziz, who is asking almost never stopped creating, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani leaving thousands of drawings, for a pardon to spare him from paintings and sculptures that execution. lure crowds to museums and Aziz’s attorney Giovanni di mansions worldwide. Stefano said Monday afternoon Now, a retired electrician that it is also the last legal hursaid that 271 of the master’s dle that the former diplomat creations have been sitting for and deputy prime minister had decades in his garage. to face before Talabani could Picasso’s heirs are claiming consider pardoning him. theft, the art world is savoring Aziz, wearing a blue suit and what appears to be an authentic leaning heavily on his cane, was find, and the workman, who without a lawyer in court. He installed burglar alarms for has predicted he will die in Picasso, is defending what he prison. calls a gift from the most renowned artist of the 20th cen6 Americans killed tury. Picasso’s son and other heirs KABUL, Afghanistan — An said they were approached by Afghan border policeman killed electrician Pierre Le Guennec in six American servicemen during September to authenticate the a training mission Monday, undocumented art from Picasunderscoring one of the risks in so’s signature Cubist period. a U.S.-led program to educate Instead, they filed a suit for enough recruits to turn over the illegal possession of the works lead for security to Afghan — all but alleging theft by a forces by 2014. man not known to be among the The shooting in a remote artist’s friends. area near the Pakistani border Police raided the electrician’s appeared to be the deadliest French Riviera home last attack of its kind in at least two month, questioned him and his years. wife and confiscated the disAttacks on NATO troops by puted artworks. Afghan policemen or soldiers, although still rare, have 10-year sentence increased as the coalition has BAGHDAD — An Iraqi court accelerated the program. Other problems with the rapMonday convicted Tariq Aziz, Saddam Hussein’s longtime for- idly growing security forces eign minister, of terrorizing Shi- include drug use, widespread illiteracy and high rates of attriite Kurds during the Iran-Iraq war, sentencing him to 10 years tion. in prison. The Associated Press
Truck
tangled in the trees
Firefighters and rescue workers attend to 33-year-old Erin Dawn Bowser, who was conscious and talking, as they retrieved her with ropes and ladders from her smashed pickup truck that landed in the trees above Connoquenessing Creek near Evans City, Pa., on Monday. Police believe the woman’s truck flew over the guardrail and landed in the branches of the trees about 30 feet below the road. Police said they’ll be citing Bowser for driving too fast for conditions.
Armed Wis. student holds class hostage By Todd Richmond The Associated Press
MARINETTE, Wis. — A high school student who pulled a handgun and shot a film projector as the school day wound down held 23 classmates and a teacher hostage for about five hours Monday before shooting himself when police busted down a classroom door. Terrified Marinette High School students did their best to keep the 15-year-old gunman calm, spending hours talking to him about hunting and fishing, said student Zach Campbell — one of five hostages who were released after convincing the teen they had to use the bathroom. “We just wanted to be on his good side,” Campbell said. He said the gunmen seemed depressed. “But he didn’t really seem like he wanted to hurt anybody.” Officers who had positioned themselves outside the classroom said they heard three gunshots shortly after 8 p.m. and busted
through the door, Police Chief Jeff Skorik said. The gunman, who was standing at the front of the classroom, shot himself as officers approached, the chief said. Skorik declined to release the teen’s name, saying he was taken to an area hospital and his condition was not available Monday night. No one else was injured.
No one else injured Cartridge casings from both a .22 caliber semiautomatic weapon and a 9 mm semiautomatic were found at the scene. The gunman had refused to communicate with officials during the standoff, Skorik said, but allowed the teacher to speak with authorities by phone. The teen had made his classmates put their cell phones in the middle of the room and broke his own phone when it rang, Campbell said. Keith Schroeder, a former Marinette middle school teacher, said he had the gunman as a stu-
dent and also knows the teacher well. He said the teen’s family is extremely involved in all their boys’ lives. “He’s a fine young man, and I’m totally taken aback,” Schroeder told The Associated Press. “Surprised, flabbergasted to say the least because this is a great family. “It doesn’t fit any of the things or the molds that you read about people. “I couldn’t say enough good things about the family.” During the standoff, dozens of people kept away from the scene by firefighters congregated in the parking lot of a nearby hair salon in the town of about 12,000 people that sits on the border with Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. “This is not a good mood, there are a lot of people who are scared, a lot of students who are worried,” said Jason Chaltry, 32, whose nephew is a sophomore at the school but was not in the classroom.
Arabs seen as alarmed by Iran in leaked U.S. cables By Brian Murphy
The Associated Press
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Leaked U.S. diplomatic memos have exposed a depth of alarm across the Middle East over the prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran that has never been expressed publicly: Arab leaders said to be urging that Iran be attacked if it refuses to concede to international demands. Iran’s president scoffed Monday at revelations that its Arab neighbors have been lobbying the U.S. to use force — and also pointed the finger at Washington for mysterious bombings that killed one nuclear scientist and
Quick Read
badly injured another. But Israel trumpeted the State Department’s secret dispatches that were obtained by document discloser WikiLeaks as proof that Arabs agree Iran poses the chief danger in the region. Starkly opposing views from Tehran and Tel Aviv are a fact of life in the Middle East. But in the harsh light — and often blunt words — of the massive release of the State Department cables, they are seen in a new context: Israel and Arab nations finding rare common ground and Iran’s leadership left to wonder whether it will now face a tougher line from across the Gulf.
It also could alter the tone of talks over Iran’s nuclear program. Those are scheduled to resume Dec. 5 between Iran and world powers, including the United States, after a yearlong impasse that brought tighter U.N. and American sanctions on Tehran and some stinging blows — including international oil firms leaving Iran and Russia’s refusal to deliver a long-awaited anti-aircraft system to Iran’s military. Iran has so far used delaying tactics and counterproposals to sidestep U.N.-drafted demands to halt its uranium enrichment in exchange for reactor-ready fuel from abroad.
. . . more news to start your day
Nation: Bears stadium death ruled an accident
Nation: Bogus 9-1-1 caller blames lack of nicotine
Nation: Major hurricane misses U.S. for 5th year
Nation: Eating disorders lead to long hospital stays
A medical examiner Monday ruled the death of an Illinois man who fell from a stadium concourse during halftime of Sunday’s Bears-Eagles game an accident. Witnesses and friends gave differing accounts about the moments before the man cleared a 3-foot barrier and fell more than 35 feet onto the roof of a storage building. Early reports from some news outlets suggested he may have jumped to his death intentionally. But the Cook County medical examiner’s office ruled the death of Stewart Haverty an accident caused by injuries consistent with a “fall from height.”
Police in Tennessee said a man accused of making three bogus calls to 9-1-1 told them he was bored and anxious because he had not smoked a cigarette in two days. Twenty-year-old Alex Lee Baker was charged with making the calls Sunday during a 35-minute stretch. The first caller claimed to be a witness to a murder. The second claimed he had been stabbed, while the third said a woman had been killed and buried. Police said Monday that all the calls originated from a phone owned by Baker, who remained jailed on $15,000 bond. A spokesman said Baker had not retained a lawyer.
The Atlantic hurricane season ends today, going down as one of the busiest on record but blissfully sparing the U.S. coastline a major hurricane for a fifth straight year. While extreme tropical weather ravaged Haiti, Mexico and elsewhere, U.S. forecasters are wondering if the nation can make history and extend its luck into 2011. If so, it would be the first time ever that the U.S. escaped a major hurricane for six years. “That would be a record I would like to break,” said Dennis Feltgen, a spokesman for the National Hurricane Center in Miami.
A new report on eating disorders cited data showing a sharp increase in children’s hospitalizations for such problems. Among children younger than 12 with eating disorders, hospitalizations surged 119 percent between 1999 and 2006. That’s according to government data contained in an American Academy of Pediatrics report released online Monday. The federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality released data last year showing that hospital stays for the disorders increased 15 percent during the seven-year period. The biggest increase was in the youngest patients.
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PeninsulaNorthwest
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Peninsula Daily News
Stormwater grant poised for approval Commissioners meet on state agreement today
Stormwater elements topic of talk
By Rob Ollikainen
Lonnie Archibald/for Peninsula Daily News
Matt Breed removes old carpet from the Peterson Building during the demolition stage.
Forks to be shelter site for homeless veterans By Paul Gottlieb
Peninsula Daily News
FORKS — A haven is taking shape for homeless military veterans — both men and women — in Clallam and Jefferson counties. Ground will be broken at 10 a.m. Saturday for Sarge’s Place, a former apartment house at 260 Ash Ave. that’s also known as the Peterson Building. The federal Department of Housing and Urban Development — with help from U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Bothell — recently awarded the nonprofit North Olympic Regional Veterans Housing Network a $487,000 grant to buy and remodel the building, Cheri Fleck, project organizer and housing network president, said Monday. The network also received a federal Department Veterans Affairs daily grant of up to $38.90 per veteran for operating expenses.
important and unique about Sarge’s Place is just the rural nature of the county,” he said Monday. The facility will contain 12 transitional beds, including eight for men and four for women on the first floor. Sleeping areas will be separated by tall, wall-like partitions. There also will be three, two-bedroom family apartments on the second floor capable of housing about four people. Residents can stay in the transitional beds for up to two years and in the apartments indefinitely. Work is under way on gutting the ground floor, Fleck said Monday.
June opening
ent their discharge papers or will have to wait to receive the documents from the federal government — a process Sarge’s Place will help them with. “We’re trying to transition them into permanent housing and get them back on their feet, but we need to known where they’ve been at before they move in,” Fleck said. Referral services for housing and jobs also will be offered — along with a place to take a shower or simply talk things out. More often than not, services for homeless veterans are concentrated in cities, when in fact many veterans, by choice, live in sparsely populated rural areas, Fleck and Lee said. “Sarge’s will get them out of the woods, out of the bush, so to speak, and give them roof over their head every night instead of no night,” Lee said. Moreover, why would they want to go all the way to Port Angeles? “When you are trying to transition someone from the woods or a beach, they don’t want to go to Port Angeles,” Fleck said. “It’s too far away, and there are too many people.”
“I literally had two new ones who came into my office today,” said Fleck, whose day job is helping the homeless as housing coordinator for West End Outreach Services. A half-dozen homeless veterans from Forks have already expressed an interest in staying at Sarge’s Place, Fleck said. “I would assume that we would not have any problem at all in filling all 12 spots we have downstairs,” she said. Two of the six who expressed an interest are homeless female veterans. “Men are more apt to go out and not want to get emotionally tied down with folks,” Fleck said. “They are more likely to try live on their own even if it’s a trailer with no power. Women are more likely to go into something with other people. Men might want to isolate themselves more.” Sarge’s Place has been three years in the making, Fleck said. She and others interested in providing homeless services to veterans met in 2007, about a week after attending a shelter providers’ meeting in Port Angeles. They had been inspired by a presentation on providing housing for recently released prison inmates, Fleck said. “We said, ‘Why not create a program, along with a case manager on-site, and help [homeless veterans] to reintegrate into the civilian world,’” Fleck said. Fleck said her husband, Rod, Forks’ city attorney and planner, thought up the name for Sarge’s Place. “Everything else seemed cliche,” Cheri Fleck said. “We wanted it to be a safe place for veterans to go, and this just seemed right.”
When the facility opens its doors in June 2011, staff will include full-time case manager Matt Breed and a live-in caretaker who will stay there rent free as the Housing Network’s “eyes and ears” at night, Fleck Rural vets said. Residents, the majority Sarge’s Place will serve a largely unfilled need by of whom are expected to be helping homeless rural vet- Vietnam War veterans, will How many? erans, said John E. Lee, be screened and undergo It’s difficult to say how director of the state Depart- background checks, Fleck many homeless veterans said. ment of Veterans Affairs. are in Clallam and JefferThey will need to pres“What is incredibly son counties, Lee and Fleck said. Earlier this year, 30 Katherine Ottaway, MD respondents to the annual Takes time to listen and explain one-day “Point in Time” homeless survey identified Caring for people of all ages themselves as homeless in the context of their health, veterans in Clallam County history, family and and 13 identified themcommunity. selves as homeless in Jefferson County, Lee said. New & Medicare Fleck, who said many Patients Welcome homeless veterans are reluctant to fill out the survey, estimated there were 50 to ________ Quimper Family Medicine 75 veterans alone on the Staff writer Paul Gottlieb can 2120 Lawrence St. West End of Clallam and in be reached at 360-417-3536 or at at Kearney, Port Townsend western Jefferson County paul.gottlieb@peninsuladailynews. 360-385-3826 as of a few years ago. com.
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Sewer issues Rain gardens also reduce sudden surges, or flashes, of runoff that contribute to the city of Port Angeles’ compliance issues with combined sewer overflows. A rainstorm that lasts more than half hour can overburden the city system and flush both sewage and storm water into the Strait. The City Council voted in October to acquire 11.86 acres of the 75-acre former Rayonier mill site for $995,000 to access a large tank for sewage overflow control. Creasey said the grant would fund three to five rain gardens around the courthouse, and replace regular pavement with pervious pavement. The parking lot would be regraded to direct water into the rain gardens.
25 percent of cost
“And, obviously, the courthouse is a pretty busy place and we want to make sure that it minimizes any problems with courthouse activity.” Clallam County Parks, Fair and Facilities Manager Joel Winborn recommended the examination of similar rain garden projects in Mason and Pierce counties. “There are several around the state, not too far from here, actually,” Winborn said. “We want to make sure that we do our homework before we spend any money.” Creasey said the project has several benefits. “It complements the county’s stormwater project [Environmental Protection Agency] stormwater grant that we are currently working under, and it also follows the recommendation that the Clallam County Stormwater Work Group put forth,” she said. “It provides the county an opportunity to reaffirm their commitment to stormwater management.” Tours, brochures and signs will be at the rain gardens for community outreach and education, Creasey said.
The county is responsible for covering $114,654 — or 25 percent — of the $458,616 total cost. But it isn’t a sure thing that the money will be there after the next legislative session. County Administrator Jim Jones said there is a chance that funds may fall under the budget ax. Approving the grant today keeps the county eligible. “If it gets pulled, it gets pulled, but at least we have a chance at getting it,” Jones said. Creasey negotiated a longer grant period for the project. The completion date ________ is June 30, 2015. “That was done so that Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be we could deal with the reached at 360-417-3537 or at rob. match requirements,” ollikainen@peninsuladailynews. com. Creasey said.
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might be related to a tree that fell on power lines about 9 p.m. The tree and lines blocked the eastbound lane of U.S. Highway 101 near Milepost 271 at Blyn. Traffic was being routed around the tree. The lights at the City Council meeting flickered at 9 p.m., and power went out around 9:45 p.m. — possibly related to repair of the Blyn power lines.
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PORT ANGELES — The Clallam County Stormwater Work Group and Clallam County Department of Community Development will host a presentation on stormwater Thursday at 6 p.m. Doug Howie, a stormwater engineer with the state Department of Ecology, will discuss the basic elements of a comprehensive stormwater management program, permit requirements and changes to Ecology’s stormwater management manuals. The presentation is sponsored by the Puget Sound Partnership. The two-hour event will be held in Room 160 of the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E. Fourth St. The after-hours entrance is located off Fourth Street.
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PORT ANGELES — Clallam County is in line for a $343,962 state grant that would be used to retrofit the courthouse with rain gardens — planted depressions that soak up rainfall — pervious pavement and more vegetation by 2015. The aim is to reduce water pollution in Peabody Creek, which flows just north and east of the courthouse and into the Strait of Juan de Fuca. “The runoff coming off the parking lot is going to be much cleaner because it will be going through amended soils,” said Clallam County Senior Planner Carol Creasey. County commissioners indicated Monday that they would approve the agreement with the state Department of Ecology today.
SEQUIM — A power outage blacked out the entire city about 9:45 p.m. Monday, forcing cancellation of a City Council budget hearing. The council rescheduled the hearing for 6 p.m. Dec. 6. Although the Clallam County Public Utility District could not be reached for confirmation, the outage
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Peninsula Daily News
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
A5
Prescription drug abuse on the rise By Paige Dickerson Peninsula Daily News
Kristin LaMoure (2)
Placing first in the men’s division in Thursday’s snowy Turkey Trot 5K run on the Olympic Discovery Trail was Nate Dressel, left, who finished in 20 minutes, 11 seconds; Robert Warnock took second place with a time of 20:16 and Alexander Barry came in third with a time of 21:04. Complete results of the men’s and women’s races can be found on Page B2.
Sequim woman trots to Thanksgiving win 66 run in city’s first holiday 5-kilometer race By Diane Urbani de la Paz
Peninsula Daily News
SEQUIM — A woman from Alaska sped to victory in this town’s first Turkey Trot, the snowy, icy fundraiser held Thanksgiving morning. Lisa Preston, now of Sequim, finished the 5-kilometer race in 26 minutes and 36 seconds, leading a field of 40 women. “She’s very sure-footed,” organizer Kristin LaMoure said, adding delight with the turnout for the 9 a.m. trot. Twenty-six men also took part in the race on the Olympic Discovery Trail just outside Sequim, with Nate Dressel of Seattle taking first place with a finishing time of 20 minutes, 11 seconds. The Turkey Trot, a benefit for the Port Angeles and Sequim food banks, attracted nearly 70 people, despite the fact that much of the trail, running west from Railroad Bridge Park to Carlsborg Road, was cloaked in soft snow, and at least one part was coated with slippery ice.
Cash, food donated The event raised about $700, LaMoure said; runners also brought nonperishable food items to donate. Some brought their dogs to the run, too, and gave
Volunteers Trish Winkelman, seated at table, and Patty Lebowitz, standing at her right, register runners in last Thursday’s Turkey Trot at Railroad Bridge Park. thanks to LaMoure for putting on a race where pets were allowed. She decided just three weeks before Thanksgiving to do the Turkey Trot, and was undeterred by the snowstorms that started Nov. 22, three days before the holiday. “I fully expect to triple our numbers next year,” LaMoure added Monday. She considers the Turkey Trot an ideal Thanksgiving-morning activity. “It has the potential to raise thousands for local food banks, families and even pets can participate together, it provides a fun way to burn some of the extra calories we usually eat during the holidays,”
she said, “and when visitors come from out of town, it provides a way to introduce them to one of the beautiful locations in our town.”
PORT ANGELES — There are many simple things that people can do to help prevent prescription drug abuse, the Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce was told Monday. Clallam County Sheriff Bill Benedict and Dr. Ron Bergman of the Lower Elwha Klallam Clinic, speaking to about 50 people at the chamber’s weekly luncheon, said that as doctors and patients grapple with how much medicine is right for pain management, others take advantage of the available narcotics. “One thing people could do is lock up their medicines,” Benedict said. Prescriptions — particularly opioids — are prime targets of children or visitors peeking in medicine cabinets or drawers, Benedict said. “If you notice that your amount [of pills is] going down faster than normal — you have to suspect,” Bergman said. Bergman added that the same thing was applicable to household products that can be inhaled, such as paint thinner. Benedict cited the death of Port Angeles 13-year-old Lillian Star Taylor, who died after taking too many methadone pills at a campground this year. “They become accustomed to taking more and more of these to obtain a high — but methadone depresses respiration, so then they literally cannot breathe,” he said. Benedict said that while statewide usage of methamphetamine is down significantly, law enforcement officers throughout the state believe that abusers are switching to prescription drugs.
Bill Benedict Lock your prescriptions
Ron Bergman Be aware of abuse signs
He didn’t have specific statistics on either. “Statistics are really hard on this sort of thing,” he said. Bergman said children and grandchildren are just a couple of the people those with narcotic prescriptions should worry about. “If you have a lot of traffic through your home, you should lock up these prescriptions,” he said.
pills in the trash or toilet because they could contaminate the water table. Instead Jim’s Pharmacy, 424 E. Second St., Port Angeles, accepts prescriptions for disposal — except for narcotics. Those must be held until the few times a year that the Clallam County Sheriff ’s Office holds its drug-takeback program. “Our takeback program started about a year and a half ago, and we have recycled almost two tons of drugs,” he said, adding that figure includes packaging. Bergman said parents should be aware of signs of possible abuse of drugs or alcohol in their children. Those include sliding classroom grades, increase or decrease in energy, sleeping more or less than usual or changes in attitude. “A lot of the time, there is a point where children want to be found out, and if you have a serious conversation with them, sometimes they will tell you what they are wrestling with,” he said. He said once it is in the open, parents can reach out to schools and other organizations for support.
‘Lock up prescriptions’
Adequate disposal of unused medications is important, Benedict said. “Whether you have children or not, go home and clean out your medicine cabinets,” Benedict said. “I don’t really understand it, but it is true — it is a popular thing to take all sorts of prescription drugs, not just the painkillers.” Benedict said parties where pills are thrown in a bag and handsful are taken are another popular trend seen among young people. “This is very dangerous,” he said. “When you take alcohol plus marijuana plus prescription drugs and then __________ you add in driving. Reporter Paige Dickerson can “It could be deadly.” be reached at 360-417-3535 or at Benedict said not to paige.dickerson@peninsuladaily throw unused prescription news.com.
Hot cider Another thing runners enjoyed: the hot apple cider at the end of the race. “We’ll definitely do that in the future,” LaMoure said, adding that the Dungeness River Audubon Center staff helped by coming out on Thanksgiving to turn on the power so she could warm up the beverage.
________ Features Editor Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360417-3550 or at diane.urbani@ peninsuladailynews.com.
Animal shelter holds open house gifts for dogs and cats, a giv- dogs, a ferret, iguanas and ing tree, silent auction birds. QUILCENE — Center For more information Valley Animal Rescue will and raffles. www.centervalley Animals at the center visit hold a holiday open house animalrescue.org or phone include horses, a llama, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Satgoats, pigs, rabbits, cats, 360-765-0598. urday. The shelter is located at 11900 Center Valley Road, between Chimacum and • New Children’s Clothing Quilcene. Holiday gifts for friends, • Shoes & Accessories family and pets will be available, including center • Wooden & Unique Toys T-shirts, sweatshirts and tote bags. • Games, Puzzles & Books Among the event’s other offerings are handmade Peninsula Daily News
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Gregoire: Plan Radio: Permit process finished
may end some state services
Continued from A1 as soon as I can get it.” Gregoire had wanted That plan would deal counterproposals for budget major blows to programs cuts from the four legislathat Democrats and Repub- tive caucuses by Monday licans alike hold dear and but said she’d been asked to effectively end some state extend the deadline. Incoming House Majorservices, at least short term. Among the drastic steps ity Leader Pat Sullivan, laid out in Gregoire’s memo D-Covington, said House Democrats prefer a full supto legislators: ■ Elimination of the plemental budget over GreBasic Health Program, goire’s suggested raft of which provides subsidized quick program cuts. “We want to include the medical insurance to poorer public and all the stakeWashingtonians. ■ Wiping out cash holder groups and ensure grants and medical care for that the product that we the Disability Lifeline pro- wind up with is something gram, which aids mostly that everyone can live with,” childless adults who are he said Monday. unemployable but not receiving federal aid. Hard deadline ■ Reduce levy equalizaIf that difficult task can’t tion payments, which help kindergarten through 12th- happen in December, the grade school districts that best option would be a hard have lower levels of prop- deadline to finish a supplemental budget by the end of erty-tax support. Those three steps are the regular session’s first among several requiring week, Sullivan said. The legislative action before 2011 Legislature is schedDec. 12, Gregoire said, in uled to convene Jan. 10. “I don’t think it has to be order to ensure the state is meeting legal requirements done this month,” Sullivan for giving notice that ser- said. “If you rush to do it and you do it wrong, these vices are being cut. There probably wouldn’t are real people you’re be enough time to pass effi- impacting.” Senate Majority Leader ciently a full supplemental budget making more wide- Lisa Brown, D-Spokane, ranging adjustments to already has raised doubts spending, Gregoire said Mon- about the program eliminaday. Instead, she suggested a tions in Gregoire’s plan. In response to its release special session limited to granting authority for her last week, Brown said lawmakers should “look at litspecific cost-cutting plans. “In order to save the erally every opportunity to amount of money to get us reduce the cost of delivering to June 30, I need action,” services before we eliminate Gregoire said. “I need action those services outright.”
Van De Wege:
Behind-scenes position, role Continued from A1 party leader in the House. His 24th District seat“The whip has a vital mate, Rep.-elect Steve Tharole in ensuring that things ringer, D-Sequim, will run smoothly,” Van De Wege replace the retiring Lynn Kessler, who has been said. “It’s not a position that is House majority leader for at the forefront or in the more than a decade, in the public eye, but it does a lot next session. “Lynn was a valuable of behind-the-scenes work to help the Legislature run member of leadership for so smoothly and efficiently. I’m many years,” Van De Wege honored that my colleagues said. “She was an honest brohave entrusted me with this ker, and people trusted her. new responsibility.” Van De Wege’s appoint- My aim is to continue the ment ensures that the 24th example she set, working District, which includes hard on behalf of my conClallam and Jefferson coun- stituents and all Washingties and the top third of tonians.” Peninsula Daily News Grays Harbor County, has a
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Continued from A1 The station — which has a studio at Mountain View Commons, 1919 Blaine St. — this month finished permitting processes with the Federal Communications Commission, the state, county and city — after receiving its broadcasting permit in 2007 and its construction permit in 2008. “We’ve just cleared all the regulatory hurdles, so we’re poised to buy [broadcasting] equipment,” and the group already has ordered the tower that will go up on Jacob Miller Road. “The only thing that’s going to be a problem will be the weather,” Charlie Bermant/Peninsula Daily News which has to clear before the tower can be erected, KPTZ board members Bill Putney, left, and Colin Foden address the Foden said. Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce on Monday about the station.
Christian station Founders of the Christian radio station KROH 91.1 FM, Radio of Hope for Northwest Washington, also are awaiting better weather to erect a tower on Maynard Peak, near Discovery Bay. Programs have been available on the station’s website at www.radioof hope.org/index.php since September. The station hopes to begin broadcasting from its studio at 1505 Franklin St. in Port Townsend in December or soon after, said Glenn Gately, operating board chairman of the nonprofit station owned by the Port Townsend Seventh Day Adventist Church, which received an FCC construction permit in 2009. “We’re working toward it,” Gately said Friday. “This snow has slowed us down. “It is possible that we will be on the air this year, but things would have to click,” he added. Radio Port Townsend’s license is for a 2,000-watt transmitter, but “we don’t need 2,000 watts, so we scaled down to about 900,” Foden said. “We’re still a fullpower FM station,” he added. The station’s signal will be “as extensive as we can get it,” focusing on East Jefferson County, covering Port Townsend and nearby areas, as well as Chimacum and possibly Quilcene, Foden said. It will extend east to Sequim, with reception possible in Port Angeles,
he added. “The challenge is for us is that the topography in our area is really difficult,” Foden said. “You can miss spots just because they are in a dip.” The 1,150-watt KROH Christian radio station is expected to be heard all over East Jefferson County and at least as far west as Port Angeles, although Gately said, “I’m praying for Neah Bay.” Its directional pattern travels to the northeast, across Puget Sound to the Cascades and to Vancouver Island. Gately also hopes it will be heard in Seattle and Vancouver, Wash.
Programming The Christian radio programming is a combination of music, gospel and programs on parenting, marriage enrichment and health, Gately said. KPTZ “will broadcast programs that you won’t be able to hear anywhere else,” Foden said. “We will produce programs that reflect the Port Townsend community, and since Port Townsend is an eclectic community, we will have eclectic content.” KPTZ will offer listeners interactive opportunities on local issues, and musicians will tape shows or broadcast live. Foden said the station “will be tied into emergency services, so people can get on their car radios and battery-operated radios information they couldn’t get otherwise.” Christian radio KROH also will be tied into emergency services.
Continued from A1 a gaping hole — resembling a missing tooth — in the During that visit, Petty metal barrier that protects Officer Shay Hutchings, a the marina from wind and pollution control officer, ran water. The sidewalk is cracked water quality tests to deterat a central junction, and mine the level of pollution and whether charges would the end of one dock is twisted. be filed. Less visible, several bolts On Monday, Hutchings said the Coast Guard did along the top of the wall are not know the identity of the loose, which Taylor said weakens the wall. vessel’s owner. Taylor said all the repairs The damage sustained by the marina includes an should be covered by insurentire section of the break- ance, and he expected conwater coming loose, leaving struction to begin in the
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Jefferson County Reporter Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360-385-2335 or charlie.bermant@ peninsuladailynews.com. Managing Editor/News Leah Leach can be reached at 360-4173531 or leah.leach@peninsula dailynews.com.
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next few weeks. The marina is owned by Realvest Corp. of Vancouver, Wash., which is in the middle of selling the property to another company, Taylor said. Taylor said he was not at liberty to divulge the name of the purchaser, but both buyer and seller are scheduled to inspect the property Wednesday at which time a repair plan will be developed.
Quite scary
But even though he didn’t get any sleep that particular night, he still feels safe at the marina and feels that it will be repaired. “We can handle 100-milean-hour winds here,” he said. “Most of the real damage would come from large waves.”
Marina location Taylor said the location of the marina caused the winds to come from the south, which means the waves won’t get big enough to pose a serious threat. On Monday night Taylor was preparing for a storm which he said “would not be as serious” as the one during the previous week,
Taylor, who is a liveaboard at the marina, said the storm was quite scary and that “everything was pitching back and forth.” “I had to walk around hunched low, like a duck,” he said. During the storm, he _________ said, it was so cold that water would pitch over the Jefferson County Reporter retaining wall and freeze as Charlie Bermant can be reached at soon as it hit the dock, caus- 360-385-2335 or charlie.bermant@ ing icy conditions. peninsuladailynews.com.
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to contribute.” Both stations are soliciting donations, which are tax-deductible. The total cost of the KPTZ setup is $200,000, Foden said. A grant from the Public Telecommunication and Facilities Program pays $3 for each $1 the station raises from private donations, up to a total of $150,000. “Our target is to raise $50,000 by the end of the year,” with $25,000 of that needed to satisfy the terms of the grant, Foden said. The rest will go to operating costs and other expenses. Foden said the group probably has about $15,000 of its target amount in hand. Christian radio KROH’s estimated start-up costs are $150,000, Gately said. According to its website, it had raised $47,529 by Nov. 11. “We could use more money if anyone wants to donate,” he said. Radio Port Townsend donations can be made online at www.kptz.org, or checks can be sent by mail to Radio Port Townsend, P.O. Box 2091, Port Townsend, WA 98368. KROH donations can be made online or by mail, with checks sent to KROH — Radio of Hope, P.O. Box 1882, Port Townsend, WA 98368.
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Bob Hamlin, Jefferson County Department of Emergency Management’s program manager, said last week his department is working with both fledging stations to have direct broadcasts from the emergency operations center during severe weather or other crises. While KROH already provides streaming audio on the Internet, KPTZ is building an archive and plans soon to offer podcasts of shows, samples of what it will be offering. In the future, it also will be available online at KPTZ’s website, www.kptz. org, but that will come when volunteers familiar with streaming technology join the staff. Among the archival programming is program director and National Public Radio veteran Larry Stein’s coverage of the MV Chetzemoka’s maiden voyage Nov. 14. Stein worked for NPR in California and has worked as a producer at public radio stations in Santa Monica, Calif., and Seattle for more than 10 years. In addition to Foden and Stein, KPTZ is directed by Collin Brown, Ann Katzenbach and Bill Putney. The success of the station depends on volunteer labor, since only one paid position — the station manager — is now planned. Foden thinks that volunteers will eagerly join in. “There are a lot of talented people in Port Townsend,” Foden said. “Once they hear what we are doing, they will come in with their ideas and want
PeninsulaWorld
Peninsula Daily News
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
A7
Wi-Fi tree threat claimed in blogs But rumor is more bark than bite, agency warns Peninsula Daily News news Services
Clallam County Master Gardeners
Washington State University certified Master Gardener Jeanette StehrGreen will present tips for growing and caring for cyclamens, amaryllis, Christmas cactus and other holiday plants at noon Tuesday, Dec. 14, at the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E. Fourth St.
Last green thumbs tips to be on holiday plants Selection, care among topics Peninsula Daily News
PORT ANGELES — The final seminar of the 2010 Green Thumbs Garden Tips brown bag series sponsored by the Clallam County Master Gardeners will focus on holiday gift plant ideas. Jeanette Stehr-Green, a Master Gardener certified by Washington State University, will present the lecture at noon Tuesday, Dec. 14, at the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E.
Fourth St., Port Angeles. Stehr-Green will give advice about selecting quality plants for the holidays, providing care to keep them beautiful through the holidays and proving long-term care so that plants will be beautiful for many holiday seasons to come. She will talk about poinsettias, amaryllis, Christmas cactus, cyclamen and paperwhites. A Master Gardener since 2003, Stehr-Green has several years of experience growing holiday plants and has raised amaryllis and cyclamen from seed.
She is an experienced plant clinician, writes articles on gardening for the Master Gardener newsletter and other local publications, and is a regular guest on the KONP Todd Ortloff and KSQM gardening shows. This is the last presentation of the year in the brown bag series. The series will resume Jan. 27, held from noon to 1 p.m. every second and fourth Thursday of each month at the county courthouse. For more information, phone 360-417-2279.
AMSTERDAM — It’s an Internet rumor that is spreading, appropriately enough, like wildfire: Wi-Fi signals can make trees and other plants sick, causing cracks in their bark and killing off portions of their leaves. The claim, supposedly based on a Dutch study — and unsubstantiated by any other study — cropped up last week and has since been repeated in countless blog posts. In response, the Dutch government’s Antenna Agency, which provides information on the health effects of electromagnetic fields, has issued a statement urging caution what it called unpublished, unverified and otherwise very preliminary findings. As rendered via Google Translate, the Antenna Agency wrote: “Based on the information now available can not be concluded that the Wi-Fi radio signals leads to damage to trees or other plants.” Wi-Fi signals wirelessly connect computers and other devices to the Internet. The radio signals are similar to that employed by other, decades-old technologies such as television and cell phones, said Marvin Ziskin, a professor of radiol-
ogy and medical physics at Temple University in Philadelphia. “Stuff like this has been around a long time . . . there’s nothing new about Wi-Fi emissions,” said Ziskin. “Scientifically there’s no evidence to support that these signals are a cause for concern.” Nevertheless, officials in the Dutch municipality of Alphen aan den Rijn asked a researcher at Wageningen University several years ago to investigate unexplained abnormalities on local trees.
Lab tests According to a write-up on the municipality’s website, the work was apparently commissioned with an eye toward the increasing number of sources of electromagnetic radiation in the region, such as cell phone tower masts. In lab tests, leaves placed for a few months near six radiation sources emitting radio waves in the 2.4 gigahertz range common for Wi-Fi and other wireless communications became discolored and showed a “metallic luster appearance . . . followed by desiccation and death of a portion of the leaf,” the website said. Other reports have said that corn cobs exposed to such conditions grew more
slowly than expected. The Antenna Agency statement suggests that the researcher involved has backed away from the reported findings and has not succeeded in repeating them (again, as rendered by Google Translate): “The researcher from Wageningen University indicates that these are initial results and that has not been confirmed in a repeat survey. “He warns strongly that there are no far-reaching conclusions from its results.” More than 60 studies have looked into the impact that electromagnetic mobile communications signals might have on plants, according to an initial review by the Antenna Agency. Some studies did find detrimental effects, though likely as a result of signal intensities being high (and close) enough to cause heat damage — not the situation in real life with disparate sources of Wi-Fi signals. Overall, the alarm raised by the coverage of the tenuous Dutch findings is not unexpected, Ziskin said, as health issues (primarily in humans and other animals, such as honey bees, not vegetation) have frequently been attributed to wireless radio signals and other lowlevel radiation. “There’s an awful lot of misinformation and fear on this topic,” Ziskin said in an interview. “Anyone can drum up things like this to be worried about.”
State high schools’ graduation rates rise By Donna Gordon Blankinship
that make dropouts a top priority. “It’s an attitude that they are going to make a difference and address this issue.”
Higher standards Dramatic progress in graduation rates is being made in states that call in all their resources, including volunteers, to make sure students are getting the extra help they need in all grades, said John Bridgeland, CEO of Civic Enterprises and one of the two lead co-authors of the report. Bridgeland said those states, like Washington, that are raising their graduation requirements and actually making it harder to earn a diploma also are among those making the most progress. “Washington definitely is making some progress,” Bridgeland said. He mentioned the growing number of students in the state who take Advanced Placement tests as more evidence of Washington’s
progress toward a collegeprep curriculum. Dorn said the state’s educators need to keep working on finding different ways to engage all students and make education relevant for them. That’s one of reasons Dorn believes career and technical education is an important pathway for some students after high school. “Not every student will go to college, but most will have to find jobs, and if they can develop skills while in school, you’ve provided a great service for them,” he said.
Fewer in nation Since 2002, the number of so-called “dropout factory” schools in the United States has declined by 13 percent nationally, resulting in at least 100,000 more students getting a high school diploma. But the report says that’s not enough progress to meet President Barack Obama’s goal of graduating nine out of 10 students by 2020.
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Washington state had about 10,000 fewer students attending dropout factory schools in 2008 than in 2002.
Notable progress Washington’s rural districts made notable progress, possibly related to the last time this report was issued in 2007, when poor rural or urban districts were identified as the most likely places to find “dropout factory” schools in the state. The report notes that progress also needs to be made in data collection
about students and distribution of this information to educators. It mentioned Washington state as a leader in this area because of its efforts to combine kindergarten through grade 12 data with early childhood, post-secondary education, work force and social service information. Among the successful programs mentioned in the report were so-called “early college high schools,” which are collaborations between high schools and colleges. Several of these schools are running in Washington state.
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and districts have progressed, according to the report written by Civic The Associated Press Enterprises and the EverySEATTLE — In six one Graduates Center at years, Washington high Johns Hopkins University. schools have made enough progress helping kids earn Leader in West a diploma to have nine Washington leads the fewer schools on a national list of so-called “dropout fac- western U.S. in its efforts to tories,” according to a report improve graduation rates. It was 13th on a list of scheduled for release today. Meanwhile, in nearly the 50 states, according to 5 percent of Washington’s how much progress has 500 high schools, 40 percent been made in turning “dropof the students enrolled as out factory” schools into freshmen don’t make it to graduation factories. Next in the west were their senior year, according to the report from America’s Arizona and Colorado, which each have eight fewer Promise Alliance. The group decided not to schools on the list. Nevada and California release the names of the 23 schools it considers “drop- have been moving in the out factories” in Washington opposite direction and are or the list for any other at the bottom of the “dropout factory” progress list, state. Washington state keeps with 26 and 27 more lowtrack of its students by a graduation rate high unique identifier number schools, respectively. The Washington state and can track them from superintendent of public school to school. Graduation rates reflect instruction remains concerned. those numbers. “The issue of dropouts has always been one of my Schools, districts top priorities — I do think During the past few we are making progress, but years, Washington hasn’t I am greatly concerned that improved its statewide our current budget crisis graduation rate, which will have a negative impact,” dropped from 72.2 percent Randy Dorn said Monday. in 2002 to 71.9 percent in “Where I have seen prog2008, but individual schools ress in our state is in schools
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Peninsula Daily News
New apartments going up in Sequim 42-unit complex to serve low-income population
off-site, is designed to be collected into a series of underground infiltration systems associated with landscaped areas within the project. The exterior of the buildings is planned to have fiber-cement siding, and the structure height will not exceed 28 feet, 7 inches, or two stories.
By Jeff Chew
The Department of Commerce loan is also locked in at 1 percent interest for 50 SEQUIM — Work has years, he said. begun on a 42-unit, $4.3 million affordable-apart- Permanent loan ment complex at McCurdy The Washington ComRoad and South Fifth Avemunity Reinvestment Assonue. Sea Breeze Apartments, ciation gave the project a offering subsidized apart- permanent loan at 6.5 perment and townhouse cent interest rate, he said. The developer has been options for low-income residents, is scheduled to be involved in building apartfinished in about 11 months, ments since the 1980s, pending weather, said Mark including Suncrest I, SunRozgay, president of Timber crest II and Suncrest VilRiver Development Inc. of lage complexes on East Prairie Street. Bellevue. “We have to keep it Timber River is co-developer and loan guarantor for affordable for 50 years,” Sea Breeze Apartments Rozgay said. The latest three-acre project with Shelter apartment development is Resources Inc. The nonprofit Shelter zoned for the highest-denAmerica Group is general sity housing. It is south of a partner, according to Roz- residential neighborhood, across McCurdy Road. gay. The developers paid a Dawson Construction of Bellingham is the project’s $413,914.95 building permit fee, said Joe Irvin, contractor. “The way we are able to interim planning director. charge less rent, which “We heard some comreally amounts to a market ments from some neighbors rate project, is a loan from expressing concerns about [state] Department of Com- traffic and parking on merce, and low income McCurdy,” said Irvin, addhousing credits, and a [U.S. ing that the property has Department of Agriculture] long been zoned for multifederal loan at 1 percent for family development. 50 years,” Rozgay said. The city’s State EnvironPeninsula Daily News
Security lighting
Jeff Chew/Peninsula Daily News
Ground work begins on the 42-unit Sea Breeze affordable apartments complex at the southwest corner of McCurdy Road and South Fifth Avenue in Sequim, south of U.S. Highway 101. mental Policy Act review concluded in September 2007 that there was no significant environmental impact stemming from the project adjacent to an existing assisted living center.
Mix of sizes The complex will be a mix with eight one-bedroom apartments, 13 two-bedroom units, 18 three-bedroom units and two fourbedroom townhouses.
Briefly: State
Snow craft hits elk CLE ELUM — A man was killed when his snowmobile hit an elk in Cle Elum, Kittitas County sheriff’s deputies said. Joseph Heitman, 25, of Cle Elum, died in the Saturday evening accident in
Annette Mason Johnson “Annie” Kuss of Sequim died at the age of 85. Her obituary will be published later. Services: Sunday, Dec. 5, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., celebration of life at Sequim Bay Yacht Club in the John Wayne Marina, 2577 West Sequim Bay Road, Sequim. Drennan-Ford Funeral Home, Port Angeles, is in charge of arrangements. www.drennanford.com
Elk Meadows Park, KNDU TV reported. Deputies said a preliminary investigation indicates the snowmobile was traveling at a high rate of speed and rolled after it struck the elk. A passenger on the snowmobile was taken to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle with non-lifethreatening injuries.
Pierce Transit bus after it hit a utility pole Monday morning near Spanaway. Central Pierce Fire and Rescues spokesman Randy Stephens said the driver and three passengers had the good sense to stay on board and wait for emergency responders. A Puget Sound Energy crew turned off the electricity to the wires, and everyone got out safely. No one was injured, although the driver was Bus downs wires evaluated at the scene, SteSPANAWAY — Live phens said. electrical wire dangled on a The Associated Press
Death and Memorial Notice Milton E. Steiner May 30, 1931 November 12, 2010 A memorial service for Sequim resident Milton E. Steiner will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday, December 11, at the Holiday Inn Express, 1441 East Washington Street, Sequim. Milt died unexpectedly on Friday, November 12, at the age of 79. He was born May 30, 1931, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Milt and his wife Nita (deceased) lived in Sequim. He was the son of Elmer and Mary Steiner of St. Augustine, Florida. Milt is survived by his daughter and son-in-law, Nancy and Bill Schade; and three granddaughters, Jennifer, Sara and Katie, all of Sequim. He also had a son and daughter-in-law, Jim and Desiree Steiner of Lake City, Florida.; two stepsons, Doug Reeser (Audrea) of Joplin, Mis-
Mr. Steiner souri, and Todd Reeser (Kris) of Peoria, Arizona. He had seven other grandchildren and one great-grand daughter. He was also father of Linda Kersey of Pueblo, Colorado (deceased). He had three sisters, Mary E. Saffelder of St. Augustine, Florida (deceased), Virginia Conditt of Orlando, Florida (deceased); and Janet Hay (Jerry), St. Augustine, Florida.
He had five brothers, Donny Steiner of Cincinnati, Ohio, (deceased); George Steiner (Melinda) of Columbia, South Carolina; John Steiner (Carol) of St. Augustine, Florida, Ed Steiner (Faiza) of Orlando, Florida, and David Steiner (Irene) of Columbia, South Carolina. Prior to Milt moving to St. Augustine in 1956, he served in the U.S. Army in the Korean War and was a highly decorated soldier. On March 1, 1961, he left St. Augustine to work for Choice Hotels, known then as Quality Courts Motel Inc. In September 2010, he was retired by Choice Hotels International. Services will include an open invitation to all who knew Milt, with a special invitation to those who served during the Korean/Vietnam era. No flowers please; you may donate to the American Cancer Society in honor of his late wife, Nita.
It is estimated that 4,800 cubic yards of grading will be completed as part of site construction. A portion of the High________ land Irrigation ditch is on the site and will be rerouted Sequim-Dungeness Valley Ediaround the perimeter of the tor Jeff Chew can be reached at project. 360-681-2391 or at jeff.chew@ Street runoff, on-site and peninsuladailynews.com.
September 7, 1953 November 19, 2010
April 6, 1925 — Nov. 26, 2010
Lakewood Police Lt. Heidi Hoffman reaches out to touch the name of Lakewood Police Officer Ronnie Owens Jr. on a memorial during Monday’s ceremony.
Site grading
Pamela Christine Stamper
Annette Mason Johnson Kuss
The Associated Press
Persons interested in renting at Sea Breeze can call Legacy Management at 425-423-0304.
Death and Memorial Notice
Death Notices
Memorial dedicated in Lakewood TACOMA — A number of people choked back tears at Monday’s dedication of the Lakewood Police Department memorial to the four officers who were shot to death one year ago. Hundreds of people attended the ceremony where Gov. Chris Gregoire was one of the speakers. She called the memorial a place where the fallen officers’ sacrifice would always be remembered. Chief Bret Farrar cut a ribbon, and at the end of the ceremony, members of the crowd walked past the memorial and left flowers. Sgt. Mark Renninger and officers Ronald Owens, Tina Griswold and Greg Richards were gunned down Nov. 29, 2009, at Forza Coffee Shop in Parkland by Maurice Clemmons. After a two-day manhunt, he was shot and killed in a confrontation with a Seattle police officer.
Four of the two-bedroom units are townhouses, as will be six of the three-bedroom units, he said. All units include appliances. The complex’s units are planned in seven buildings with a separate community center-office and storage building. “We normally start marketing two to four months prior to completion,” he said, which would be next summer.
City documents show that nighttime security lighting will be minimized to the extent practical while maintaining adequate lighting levels for nighttime safety and security. Low-level lighting associated with any interior pedestrian pathway shall be provided in locations to provide a safe environment for the user while not negatively impacting adjacent residences. This project is required to provide a minimum 8,400 square feet of open space. The project is proposing a toddler play lot and a sports court for a total area of about 11,597 square feet. All pedestrian pathways shall be paved and meet federal disability requirements.
Edward Lowicki Sept. 23, 1916 — Nov. 27, 2010
Sequim resident Edward Lowicki died at the age of 94. Services: At his request, no services are planned. Harper-Ridgeview Funeral Chapel, Port Angeles, is in charge of cremation.
Pamela Christine Stamper, born September 7, 1953, succumbed to cancer on November 19, 2010, at her home in Port Angeles. She is survived by her husband, Bill Stamper; sons, Scott, Michael and Brian; mother, Helene Jones; brother, Bernie; sister, Ann; grandchildren, Michael, Amanda, JoAnna, Ashlie, Brandon, Caleb, Abby and Blake; and great-granddaughter, Chloe. She worked for 27 years in the North Olympic Library System. Her passion was children to whom she read to at the Port Angeles Library. Storytime with Miss Pam was her favorite adventure each week. She was an avid gardener, fished to please her husband, loved the
Mrs. Stamper Lord and adored her family. She will be sorely missed by all who knew her. In lieu of flowers the family asks that donations be made in her name to either Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County, 540 East Eighth Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362, or Family Planning of Port Angeles, 426 East Eighth Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362 for breast cancer.
Death and Memorial Notice Emily Luenow (Barnhart) July 12, 1929 November 24, 2010 Our dearest Emily passed away on Wednesday, November 24, 2010, in Port Angeles, where she has resided the last eight years. She was a beautiful, generous, kind and delightfully stubborn woman. Happily, she made it through the last episode of “Dancing with the Stars.” Born on July 12, 1929, in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, she later moved to Spokane when in her 20s to be with her sister. Not long after, she met and married her husband of 55 years, Jack Luenow. She was a talented beautician, running a hair
Mrs. Luenow salon out of her home, and then later worked at Rockwood Retirement, where she brightened the spirits of the elderly population there. Gadget and shoe shopping were at the top of her list of fun things to do. Her greatest joy,
though, was spending time with family. She adored her grandchildren immensely and never hesitated to proudly speak about them. Emily is survived by her husband, Jack; two children, Tom and Jacque (husband Jeff); grandchildren, Dariyan and Logan; niece and best friend, Dolores (husband Barry); brother, Tom; and numerous nieces and nephews. Services will be held in Spokane at Heritage Funeral Home on December 4, 2010, and a Celebration of Life gathering to be held at Monterra Clubhouse in Port Angeles on December 18, 2010. Contributions in her memory can be made online to theheartfoundation.org/get-involved/ donate or any charity close to your heart.
Remembering a Lifetime ■ Death and Memorial Notice obituaries chronicle a deceased’s life, either in the family’s own words or as written by the PDN staff from information provided by survivors. These notices appear at a nominal cost according to the length of the obituary. Photos and ornamental insignia are welcome. Call 360-417-3556 Monday through Friday for information and assistance and to arrange publication. A convenient form to guide you is available at area mortuaries or by downloading
at www.peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” ■ Death Notices, in which summary information about the deceased, including service information and mortuary, appear once at no charge. No biographical or family information or photo is included. A form for death notices appears at www.peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” For further information, call 360-417-3528.
Peninsula Daily News for Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Commentary
Page
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We’re living in the era of . . . zombies Zombies are in. This cannot possibly be a good sign. The hottest new show on television is “The Walking Dead,” in which a smalltown sheriff wakes up from Gail a coma and Collins finds that almost everybody in the country has turned into a zombie. Being out of commission in a hospital is the classic way that horror movie heroes manage to avoid contagion while the rest of the world mutates into something unpleasant. I have always wondered why the newly hatched zombie nurses don’t just use their coma patients for a quick snack. In BBC’s “Dead Set,” the only people to escape zombification are the contestants locked away on the reality show “Big Brother.” Soon, the term “elimination day” takes on a whole new meaning. The best seller Pride and Prejudice and Zombies is about to be made into a movie. “How is the road to Meryton?” Mr. Darcy asks politely in the
graphic novel version of the book. “Do you often meet with zombies?” Mr. Collins proudly announces that he has been honored by the patronage of Lady Catherine de Bourgh “after she had been forced to behead her previous rector when he succumbed to the walking death.” There’s a zombie game app that will allow you to kill time by killing zombies and a popular “Political Zombies” post on YouTube that shows you John McCain, Barack Obama and Sarah Palin morphing into undead versions of themselves. (But, really, that’s too easy. You can turn anybody into a zombie on the Web. See: “My Zombie Kitten.”) Over in Arizona, someone reprogrammed an electric road sign on a highway near Tucson to read: “Caution Zombies ahead!” What’s the attraction of zombies? They don’t really do anything but stagger around and eat raw flesh. The plot possibilities seem limited. Zombies come. Humans shoot them. More zombies come. Humans hit them over the head with shovels.
Nobody ever runs into a particularly sensitive zombie who wants to make peace with the nonflesh-devouring public. (“On behalf of the United Nations Security Council today, I would like to welcome the zombie delegation to the . . . aaauuurrgghchompchompchomp.”) Maybe that’s the whole point. Our horror movies are mirroring the world around us. The increasingly passé vampire story is about a society full of normal people threatened by a few bloodsuckers, some of whom are maybe just like you and me, except way older. It was fine for the age of Obama. But we’ve entered the era of zombie politics: a small cadre of uninfected humans have to band together and do whatever it takes to protect themselves against the irrational undead. The new incoming Tea Party Republicans are lurking in the halls of the Capitol, hiding behind the statuary and hoping to leap out and behead a Democratic zombie spendthrift. (Dan Quayle’s boy Ben promised to “knock the hell out of Washington” and now he’s there, ready for action.) Bipartisanship is so . . . Twilight novel.
Peninsula Voices Religion in politics In reply to the letter to the editor [“We’re ‘Sin Tolerant,’” Peninsula Voices, Nov. 22] I respectfully disagree with the writer. I have no objection to his belief in God. What I object to is the idea that religion has any place in the political life or decisions of this nation. One of the reasons people emigrated to this part of the world was to escape religious persecution, because their religious beliefs or practices didn’t comply with those of the powers that were. As to the “good old days” that made this nation great, I take it to mean he would return us to the days of the robber barons, the days of no child labor laws, when women couldn’t vote, when blacks were slaves, when trusts and monopolies ruled the economic life of this nation and anyone who resisted or stood in the way of the rich and powerful got steamrolled or blacklisted or killed? I grow weary of those who oversimplify and equate progressiveness and liberalism with sinfulness and lack of morality, and
Give them an inch and they’ll take a liver. In an interview with Robert Draper for The New York Times Magazine, Sarah Palin said she had been “innocent and naïve” when she began her political career in believing that the two parties could work together. “I learned my lesson. Once bitten, twice shy.” Well, for sure you do not want to be bitten. On the other side, the Democrats are waking from an election night coma to find that the country is overrun with zombie Republicans who are demanding to be allowed to shut down the government even before their swearing-in. And when President Obama invited their leadership to break bread and talk about working together, John Boehner and Mitch McConnell said a preThanksgiving sit-down didn’t fit into their schedules. Wouldn’t want to be there when the meal finally comes off. “Bless us, oh Lord, and these, thy gifts, which ... aaauuurrgghchompchompchomp.” In private, the Democratic senators complained bitterly about the old Obama let-us-reason-together strategy. Zombies aren’t going to make
Our readers’ letters, faxes
a deal on the Bush tax cuts or pass the arms treaty! All they care about is plump, tasty Democratic thighs and calves and kidneys. Obviously there are some big problems here. One is that both parties think they’re playing the small-town sheriff. The other is that this story line never really ends all that well. Zombies are impossible to eradicate. They’re worse than bedbugs. All you can do is hope to find a safe haven in some remote part of the world. Which is why we were so interested to hear a report from the National Journal that Bob Ney, the congressman who spent 30 months in the clink for his part in the Jack Abramoff scandal, is now in India, studying meditation techniques with Buddhist monks. He described himself as “very happy — very, very happy.” Unlike the rest of us back here.
________
Gail Collins is a columnist for The New York Times. E-mail her via www.nytimes. com/gst/emailus.html.
and e-mail
conservatism with goodness, wholesomeness and patriotism. I’m tired of politicians and political parties who feel that winning an election disenfranchises the losing side. If I read the Constitution correctly, it states that all are entitled to representation, not just the winning side. As our Pledge of Allegiance says, in this nation there are “liberty and justice for all.” Dennis R. Bertaud, Sequim
range of work boots in women’s sizes, including at least two brands with a safety toe. Oh, and they also carry women’s Carhartts. Thanks for being awesome, Swain’s. Mary Leinart, Port Angeles
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Salmon experiment Fellow sportsman, we must band together and stop these “fish biologists” (Mike Green), fish managers (Ron Warren), and the Lower Elwha Klallam tribe from ruining the only decent trout fishery left in Clallam County. The kokanee and other trout species in Lake Sutherland provide the only good lake fishing we have left, now that Mills and Aldwell are gone. The National Park Service has, in effect, eliminated the fishing in Crescent and Ozette lakes.
I think the entire Elwha Valley should be enough area for them to do their “salmon experiment.” I just don’t know how much more I can take from the state Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Park Service and the tribes. I guess we will have to quit buying fishing and hunting licenses and all go golfing! Please take a moment and write to our state and local representatives and the fish and wildlife rules
coordinator, lori.preuss@dfw. in women’s sizes. wa.gov. I am often forced to setSteve Main, tle for hiking boots, which Port Angeles cost about the same but are not really up to the task. Footwear find Apparently the perception that women do not do As a field archaeologist, I jobs involving manual labor am usually in the market for a new pair of work boots or rugged terrain is still with us. every year or two. As a woman, I am familHi, people. We exist. iar with the feeling of walk- There are, in fact, lots of us. ing out of sporting goods And we like our feet proand outdoor stores emptytected. handed and frustrated, So, I just wanted to give because almost no one cara shout out to Swain’s General Store for carrying a ries heavy-duty work boots
What a joy to read the article about Eloise Kalin [“‘Matriarch’ of Eco-community,” PDN, Nov. 28]. I met her several years ago. I am honored to call her my friend. She is a wise, intelligent and caring person who has probably done as much if not more than anyone for our beautiful Peninsula. She is remarkable with the level of effort she is still able to put forth pursuing lofty goals for all our benefit. We all owe her a great deal of gratitude. I would strongly encourage you to make a donation as soon as possible for as much as possible to Protect the Peninsula’s Future to help her continue these admirable goals: P.O. Box 1677, Sequim, WA 98382. Jim Bourget, Port Angeles
Good Samaritan helps trucker in bind By Larry Cook THERE WERE LOTS of good Samaritans who helped out drivers during the snowstorm last week. I drive a 28-foot trailer truck for USF Reddaway, a little company out of Tacoma, and travel daily to the North Olympic Peninsula, Cook including Port Angeles, Joyce and Port Townsend, On Nov. 24 at about 3:30 p.m., two days after the storm, I had just picked up some freight from Simpson’s towing and auto wrecking on U.S. Highway 101,
just west of Port Angeles. All the driveways in the neighborhood were covered in ice. The driveway of Simpson’s towing is a bit of an upward incline to get back onto Highway 101. I had to turn left out of the company’s driveway to head back into town. A kind customer stood at the top of the driveway and let me know when the highway was clear so I could get a run up their driveway to get back on 101. When the coast was clear, I slowly got up momentum, made it up the drive and back on to 101, then turned left to head to town. But my right front tire caught the ditch and pulled my truck and trailer into the ditch. I floored the gas pedal to try and pull out the other end and
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almost made it. With the truck jumping and the trailer rocking along the way, it came to a rest with the drive axle just at the end of the ditch and the steer axle up on the pavement. Here’s where my appreciation comes in: There was a good Samaritan coming east on Highway 101 toward town who was behind me and saw my truck go for a ride in the ditch. He stopped and offered to help. I knew I had 10,000 pounds of Peninsula Daily News newspaper inserts and 4,500 pounds of miscellaneous freight on my trailer, and there was no way this pickup was going to pull this truck out of the ditch. The good Samaritan wouldn’t take no for an answer.
He got out his shovel and went to work while I went to round up a tow truck. Simpson’s had to leave for another tow after I had left, so it was back to the good Samaritan. A state Department of Transportation worker with a plowtruck stopped by, offered some advice and put some road flares down on 101 for traffic to be aware of us working out by the road. The good Samaritan repositioned his Ford pickup, hooked up the tow rope, and with a few tugs and pulls was able to pull my truck and trailer and 14,500 pounds of freight out of the ditch. He was ecstatic, and I was overjoyed! With a few kind words and a handshake, we wished each other a Happy Thanksgiving, and it
News Department Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ Leah Leach, managing editor/news, 360-417-3531 ■ Roy Tanaka, news editor, 360-417-3539 ■ Brad LaBrie, sports editor; 360-417-3525 ■ Diane Urbani de la Paz, features editor; 360-417-3550 ■ General information: 360-417-3527 or 800-826-7714, Ext. 527 News fax: 360-417-3521 E-mail: news@peninsuladailynews.com Sequim office: 150 S. Fifth Ave., Suite 2 (98382) ■ Jeff Chew, Sequim/Dungeness Valley editor, 360-681-2391; jeff.chew@peninsuladailynews.com Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way (98368) ■ Charlie Bermant, Jefferson County reporter, 360-385-2335; charlie.bermant@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Julie C. McCormick, contributing freelance reporter, 360-382-4645; juliemccormick10@gmail.com ■ Jennifer Jackson, Port Townsend Neighbor columnist, 360-379-5688; jjackson@olypen.com
was back on the road for the rest of my deliveries. I offered some money, and he refused. I asked for his name and address so I could send a check for his labor and tow. He refused. So, to the good Samaritans who are kind enough to stop and help a neighbor, a friend, a stranger — my hats off to you, and thank you for showing your kindness and sharing your labor of brotherly love. May God be with the good Samaritans and all of us as we enjoy this holiday season.
________ Larry Cook lives in Tacoma. For information on how to send us a Point of View, see Have Your Say below.
Have Your Say ■ Rex Wilson, weekday commentary editor, 360-417-3530 We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” and “Teen 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, anonymous letters, personal attacks, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. E-mail to letters@ peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters to the Editor, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. RANTS & RAVES for the Sunday editions can be recorded on the Rants & Raves hot line at 360-417-3506 or sent to the above addresses and fax number.
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Sports
S E CT I O N
B
BUSINESS, POLITICS & ENVIRONMENT Page B4
The Associated Press
Seattle quarterback Matt Hasselbeck jumps up after being knocked down by the Kansas City Chiefs in Sunday’s game.
Hawks looking for some answers By Tim Booth
The Associated Press
RENTON — Pete Carroll has turned serious and stern. There was very little for Carroll to be positive about a day after the Seattle Seahawks fell out of first place in the NFC West. Carroll’s overall message on Monday was simple: the Seahawks’ performance on Sunday in a 42-24 loss to Kansas City was unacceptable. “It was very honest and very serious and very blunt,” Seattle quarterback Matt Hasselbeck said. “Our team meetings are always different; they’re never the same. Today was just basically: say it how it is. It was good. It was a tough day all the way around.” Words like “garbage” and “embarrassing” were used following Sunday’s game to describe Seattle’s play. Carroll wasn’t that harsh a day later, but his players said the description of all the mistakes from Sunday was accurate. There were numerous assignment errors on defense that helped the Chiefs roll up 503 total yards of offense, while the Seahawks offense was limited to two big plays and not much else.
Losing streak Seattle has now lost four of five, seen its lead in the awful NFC West disappear into a tie with St. Louis, and faces plenty of questions about its lagging defense, an absent running game and when some key injured players might return. With only five games left, Carroll said his team’s sense of urgency has to be at its utmost. “We need a start again. We’ve got to start up again and get going,” Carroll said. “So that’s what this week will be all about.” Seattle’s slide started about the time its run defense disappeared. After being one of the top units in the league early in the season, Seattle has regressed into a defense seemingly incapable of stopping anyone on the ground. Last week against New Orleans, it was tackling problems that did in the Seahawks and allowed the Saints to run for 112 yards, the third time in four games Seattle had given up at least 100 yards on the ground. But the Saints’ success was nothing compared to what Kansas City was able to accomplish. Carroll said Seattle has become undisciplined when it comes to stopping the run, with guys trying to make too many plays and not keeping with their assignments. That’s leading to gaps that should not be there within the scheme of Seattle’s defense. Those holes were exploited by the Chiefs to the tune of 270 yards rushing, the most allowed by Seattle since giving up 301 to Denver 10 years ago. The trickle down from Seattle’s inability to stop the run is also showing up in its third-down defense. Kansas City was 11-of-17 on third downs, only adding to perhaps the most telling stat of the Seahawks’ season: in Seattle’s six losses, opponents are converting 54-of-98 (55 percent) on third down. Turn
to
Hawks/B3
The Associated Press
Washington running back Chris Polk (1) celebrates in the end zone after scoring the game-winning touchdown on a one-yard run as time expired against California in Berkeley, Calif., on Saturday.
A sterling Apple Cup Dawgs play for bowl bid, Cougars for pride By Tim Booth
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — The last time the Apple Cup held any relevance for Washington was in 2003, when the Huskies upset a Washington State team ranked in the top 10. Thanks to the late drama in their 16-13 win at California on Saturday, this week’s rivalry game with Washington State finally holds some meaning again for the Huskies. Simply put: win and go to a bowl game for the first time since 2002, perhaps the Holiday Bowl or Sun Bowl depending on how the Pac-10’s allotment of bowl teams breaks down. It’s been Washington’s goal since the season started, but coach Steve Sarkisian doesn’t want the quest for that desired
bowl berth to overshadow the importance or the rivalry. “Obviously, we’d all like to get to a bowl game,” Sarkisian said on Monday. “But more than that, this week, is playing the Apple Cup. “And I don’t want to lose sight of that. I don’t want to say we’re playing Washington State to get to a bowl game; we’re playing Washington State for the Apple Cup.”
Celebrating the win The Huskies were still relishing their last-second victory over the Golden Bears that kept California from becoming bowl eligible and kept alive Washington’s hopes for a trip somewhere warm. Struggling on offense all day, the Huskies went 79 yards in 10
plays on the final drive, helped by a 46-yard pass from quarterback Jake Locker to Jermaine Kearse that got the Huskies into scoring range. Washington eventually ended up with second-and-goal at the California 1 and that’s when it briefly got worrisome for the Huskies. Locker tried to sneak in for the winning score on second and third downs, only to be denied each time. Sarkisian said Monday he decided as soon as the Huskies reached the 1 that they would go for it if fourth-down arrived. He thought Locker was going to get in on the second sneak attempt, but decided to go with a power run play off the right side of the offensive line on the final play. With the right side caved in, Chris Polk easily ran in for the winning score, setting off a wild celebration in the back of the California end zone. “I felt like we had enough momentum going and we were
executing at a high enough level, the look in our kids’ eyes was such that we were going to get it done,” Sarkisian said. The win gave Washington consecutive victories for the first time this season.
Gooing for 3 in row A win over Washington State would give the Huskies three straight victories for the first time since 2006 and back-toback Apple Cup wins for the first time since winning six straight between 1998 and 2003. Three weeks ago, when Washington had finished a gauntlet of facing Arizona, Stanford and Oregon on consecutive weeks, Sarkisian made a point of reminding his players that their preseason goal of reaching a bowl was still obtainable. The Huskies’ first step was beating UCLA 24-7 on Nov. 18, and the next step was taken with the victory over California. Turn
to
Dawgs/B3
Duke first; Dawgs and Zags fall Washington slips to No. 23 as Gonzaga slides out of AP poll The Associated Press
There’s no arguing Duke is No. 1 in The Associated Press college basketball poll and no doubt that Connecticut has moved into the Top 25. The Blue Devils (6-0) received all 65 first-place votes from the national media panel Monday, and the Huskies (5-0) made the second-most impressive jump into the rankings in the last 21 years, moving in at No. 7. The Washington Huskies, meanwhile, fell to No. 23 while Gonzaga dropped out of the poll. There was a lot of movement in the poll with Temple, the Gonzaga Bulldogs and North Carolina dropping out of the rankings. Gonzaga (3-2) was 22nd but the Zags lost to Kansas State in the CBE Classic semifinals.
Dawgs drop 10 places Washington, which lost to Kentucky and Michigan State at Maui, dropped 10 places to 23rd. Movement was expected in the poll after half of the top 10 lost a game last week, while three other ranked teams lost, including Washington and Temple each dropping two games. Duke was No. 1 on all but seven ballots last week but Michigan State, which got six No. 1 votes, and Kansas State,
which had the other, both lost — the latter to the Blue Devils as they won the CBE Classic. The wins over Marquette, Kansas State and Oregon made the Blue Devils the first unanimous No. 1 since Kentucky did it for one week last season. Connecticut beat then-No. 2 Michigan State and then-No. 8 Kentucky on the way to winning the Maui Invitational. Since the poll expanded to 25 teams in 1989, the only more impressive entrance was Kansas’ jump to No. 4 after beating No. 2 LSU, No. 1 UNLV and No. 25 St. John’s on the way to winning the 1989 Preseason NIT. “It’s tough to imagine something like that even though everybody says they don’t pay attention to the polls,” Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun said before Monday’s practice. “It’s nice to be there at this point of the season but I always tell my teams ‘Don’t let yesterday take up too much of today.”’ Taking a team with five freshmen in its rotation to play in a tournament such as the Maui Invitational is a dicey proposition because you could come out with one win or maybe with an 0-3 record. “I was very worried,” Calhoun said. “In life you have to be bold The Associated Press enough to try. We did and we Washington guard Scott Suggs, top left, looks on as succeeded.
Michigan State guard Durrell Summers (15) slips on the
Turn
to
Poll/B3 floor at the Maui Invitational on Wednesday.
B2
SportsRecreation
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Today’s
Peninsula Daily News
Latest sports headlines can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.
Scoreboard Calendar
Today
Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”
2:30 p.m. (25) FSNW Soccer UEFA 4 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, Georgia Tech vs. Northwestern, ACC/ Big Ten Challenge - Evanston, Ill. (Live) 4:30 p.m. (26) ESPN Basketball NCAA, Ohio State vs. Florida State, ACC/ Big Ten Challenge - Tallahassee, Fla. (Live) 6 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, Michigan vs. Clemson, ACC/ Big Ten Challenge - Clemson, S.C. (Live) 6 p.m. (25) FSNW Basketball NCAA, Eastern Washington vs. Gonzaga (Live) 6:30 p.m. (26) ESPN Basketball NCAA, North Carolina vs. Illinois, ACC/ Big Ten Challenge - Champaign, Ill. (Live) 8 p.m. (25) FSNW Basketball NCAA, Long Beach State vs. Washington (Live) 12:30 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Football NCAA, Arizona vs. Oregon (encore)
SPORTS SHOT
Today Boys Basketball: Klahowya at Chimacum, 7 p.m. Girls Basketball: Chimacum at Klahowya, 7 p.m. Girls Bowling: Sequim at Olympic, 2:45 p.m.
Wednesday Boys Basketball: W.F. West at Port Angeles, 7 p.m.; Sequim at Bainbridge, 7 p.m.; Crosspoint at Quilcene, 7 p.m. Girls Basketball: North Kitsap at Chimacum, 7 p.m.; ; Crosspoint at Quilcene, 5:30 p.m.
Thursday Wrestling: Port Townsend at Wrestlerama Jamboree at Port Angeles, 5 p.m. Girls Bowling: Sequim at Klahowya, 2:45 p.m.
Area Sports Fun Run Turkey Trot 2010 5-kilometer at Railroad Bridge Park, Sequim Thursday Men’s results 1. Nate Dressel, 20:11 2. Robert Warnock, 20:16 3. Alexander Barry, 21:04 4. Jackson Oliver, 21:24 5. A.J. Rodini, 22:05 6. Stu Marcy, 22:12 7. Saul Flores, 22:33 8. Joe Daprevich, 22:33 9. Frank Flynn, 23:36 10. Steve Kellmyer, 25:02 11. Drake Apablasa, 26:22 12. Derek Morgan, 26:37 13. Steve Brown, 27:32 14. Jason Hurdlow, 28:45 15. Travis Hurdlow, 30:25 16. Chad Copeland, 30:25 17. Joh Wendt, 31:39 18. Dave Hasenpflug, 31:54 19. Joel Yelland, 35:55 20. Roger Brown, 36:07 21. Robert Mullen, 52:32 22. Marcus Sooner, 57:02 23. Chuck Rundle, 1:02:47 24. Eric Apablasa, 1:02:58 Unknown times: Mike Warnock, Charles Necco Women’s results 1. Lisa Preston, 26:36 2. Rhonda Heckman, 27:12 3. Marianne Madsen, 28:18 4. Linda Allen, 28:18 5. Emily Smith, 28:53 6. Ione Marcy, 29:35 7. Jennifer McKlellar, 30:00 8. Amy Petrotta, 31:27 9. Chelsea Hasenpflug, 33:41 10. Theresa Oliver, 33:51 11. Vicki Copeland, 34:38 12. Grace Yelland, 35:55 13. Amira Flynn, 38:08 14. Margie Flynn, 38:09 15. Angela Bentley, 40:40 16. Katie Oliver, 40:40 17. Julie Sexton, 43:58 18. Chelsey McHew, 45:57 19. Rashell Hermann, 45:57 20. Stacia Kesser, 45:58 21. Melanie Swagerty, 47:32 22. Samantha Reynolds, 48:34 23. Kristin Mitchell, 48:36 24. Jody Yelland, 49:19 25. Amy Ahlin, 51:10 26. Janet Mullen, 52:33 27. Ginna Bentley, 53:32 28. Li Gordon, 54:43 29. Erin Gordon, 54:43 30. Debbie Turner, 55:00 31. Carleen Godwin, 55:00 32. Marti Campbell, 55:00 33. Jennifer Ross, 56:46 34. Holly Wilkinson, 56:48 35. Diane Fatzinger, 57:34 36. Joel Lewis, 57:51 37. Mary Hunchberger, 1:02:50 38. Laura Rundle, 1:02:51 Unknown times: Nancy Anseth, Sandra Necco
Preps Basketball Monday’s Scores BOYS BASKETBALL Yelm 68, Hoquiam 61 POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS Mount Tahoma vs. Bremerton, ppd. North Kitsap vs. Central Kitsap, ppd. Bainbridge vs. Kingston, ppd. GIRLS BASKETBALL POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS Kingston vs. Bainbridge, ppd. Bremerton vs. Mount Tahoma, ppd. Shelton vs. North Mason, ppd.
College Basketball Men’s Top 25 The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 28, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week’s ranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. Duke (65) 6-0 1,625 1 2. Ohio St. 5-0 1,530 3 3. Pittsburgh 7-0 1,488 5 4. Kansas 6-0 1,402 6 5. Kansas St. 5-1 1,263 4 6. Michigan St. 5-1 1,250 2 7. Connecticut 5-0 1,188 — 8. Syracuse 6-0 1,085 9 9. Missouri 5-0 984 11 10. Kentucky 4-1 890 8 11. Baylor 4-0 844 12 12. Villanova 5-1 807 7 13. Tennessee 5-0 779 24 14. Memphis 5-0 758 14 15. Minnesota 6-0 754 15 16. Georgetown 6-0 701 16 17. San Diego St. 5-0 594 18 18. Florida 5-1 553 16 19. Texas 5-1 484 20 20. Illinois 6-1 435 19 21. BYU 6-0 369 23 22. Purdue 5-1 318 10 23. Washington 2-2 270 13
The Associated Press
Getting
the ball through
Barcelona’s David Villa, left, scores against Real Madrid goalkeeper Iker Casillas during the La Liga soccer match at the Camp Nou stadium in Barcelona on Monday.
NFL STANDINGS W 5 5 4 3
L 6 6 7 8
T PCT 0 .455 0 .455 0 .364 0 .273
HOME 4-2-0 3-2-0 3-3-0 2-3-0
Philadelphia NY Giants Washington Dallas
W 7 7 5 3
L 4 4 6 8
T PCT 0 .636 0 .636 0 .455 0 .273
HOME 3-2-0 4-2-0 2-4-0 1-5-0
Chicago Green Bay Minnesota Detroit
W 8 7 4 2
L 3 4 7 9
T PCT 0 .727 0 .636 0 .364 0 .182
HOME 4-2-0 4-1-0 3-2-0 2-3-0
Atlanta New Orleans Tampa Bay Carolina
W L 9 2 8 3 7 4 1 10
T PCT 0 .818 0 .727 0 .636 0 .091
HOME 6-0-0 4-2-0 3-2-0 1-5-0
NFC WEST ROAD DIV 1-4-0 1-2-0 2-4-0 3-1-0 1-4-0 2-1-0 1-5-0 1-3-0 NFC EAST ROAD DIV 4-2-0 2-1-0 3-2-0 1-2-0 3-2-0 2-1-0 2-3-0 1-2-0 NFC NORTH ROAD DIV 4-1-0 3-0-0 3-3-0 3-1-0 1-5-0 1-3-0 0-6-0 0-3-0 NFC SOUTH ROAD DIV 3-2-0 2-0-0 4-1-0 3-1-0 4-2-0 2-2-0 0-5-0 0-4-0
NFL Schedules
CONF 3-5-0 4-3-0 2-6-0 2-6-0
PF 213 209 187 194
PA 231 275 225 319
DIFF -18 -66 -38 -125
STRK Won 1 Lost 2 Won 1 Lost 6
CONF 5-3-0 5-2-0 4-4-0 2-6-0
PF 310 277 215 256
PA 257 240 262 301
DIFF +53 +37 -47 -45
STRK Lost 1 Won 1 Lost 1 Lost 1
CONF 6-3-0 5-3-0 4-4-0 2-6-0
PF 222 269 189 258
PA 172 166 239 282
DIFF +50 +103 -50 -24
STRK Won 4 Lost 1 Won 1 Lost 4
CONF 6-1-0 7-2-0 5-2-0 1-7-0
PF 276 265 219 140
PA 209 197 223 276
DIFF +67 +68 -4 -136
STRK Won 5 Won 4 Lost 1 Lost 5
CONF 7-1-0 7-2-0 4-4-0 1-7-0
PF 264 334 205 229
PA 187 266 225 295
DIFF +77 +68 -20 -66
STRK Won 4 Won 3 Won 1 Lost 1
CONF 6-2-0 6-2-0 2-5-0 1-7-0
PF 250 254 216 225
PA 188 181 229 288
DIFF +62 +73 -13 -63
STRK Won 2 Won 2 Won 1 Lost 8
CONF 5-3-0 4-4-0 4-4-0 2-5-0
PF 240 282 264 257
PA 294 252 287 218
DIFF -54 +30 -23 +39
STRK Lost 1 Lost 2 Won 1 Lost 4
CONF 4-4-0 5-3-0 3-4-0 2-6-0
PF 285 310 255 250
PA 231 225 256 323
DIFF +54 +85 -1 -73
STRK Won 2 Won 4 Lost 2 Lost 2
American Football Conference NY Jets New England Miami Buffalo
W 9 9 6 2
L 2 2 5 9
T PCT 0 .818 0 .818 0 .545 0 .182
HOME 4-2-0 5-0-0 1-4-0 1-5-0
Baltimore Pittsburgh Cleveland Cincinnati
W 8 8 4 2
L 3 3 7 9
T PCT 0 .727 0 .727 0 .364 0 .182
HOME 5-0-0 3-2-0 3-3-0 1-4-0
Jacksonville Indianapolis Houston Tennessee
W 6 6 5 5
L 5 5 6 6
T PCT 0 .545 0 .545 0 .455 0 .455
HOME 4-2-0 4-1-0 3-3-0 2-3-0
Kansas City San Diego Oakland Denver
W 7 6 5 3
L 4 5 6 8
T PCT 0 .636 0 .545 0 .455 0 .273
HOME 5-0-0 4-1-0 4-2-0 2-4-0
24. UNLV 6-0 255 — 25. Notre Dame 7-0 126 — Others receiving votes: West Virginia 95, Louisville 94, Gonzaga 51, North Carolina 41, Vanderbilt 25, Richmond 24, Virginia Tech 8, Arizona 6, Saint Mary’s, Calif. 6, Texas A&M 6, Old Dominion 5, Cincinnati 3, Va. Commonwealth 3, Wichita St. 3, Iowa St. 2, Cleveland St. 1.
Women’s Top 25 The top 25 teams in the The Associated Press’ women’s college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 28, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week’s ranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. Connecticut (40) 6-0 1,000 1 2. Baylor 7-1 940 2 3. Stanford 5-0 931 3 4. Xavier 5-0 851 5 5. Duke 6-0 842 6 6. Ohio St. 5-0 783 7 7. Texas A&M 5-0 710 8 8. Kentucky 5-0 688 9 9. Tennessee 6-1 677 4 10. West Virginia 6-0 666 10 11. Oklahoma 6-0 587 11 12. Georgetown 5-1 572 12 13. UCLA 5-0 533 13 14. North Carolina 7-0 497 14 15. Florida St. 6-0 455 15 16. Notre Dame 5-2 338 18 17. Texas 4-1 320 16 18. Iowa 7-0 298 20 19. Iowa St. 5-1 277 19 20. St. John’s 5-1 193 22 21. Georgia 5-1 174 17
AFC EAST ROAD DIV 5-0-0 3-0-0 4-2-0 2-1-0 5-1-0 1-2-0 1-4-0 0-3-0 AFC NORTH ROAD DIV 3-3-0 2-1-0 5-1-0 2-1-0 1-4-0 1-2-0 1-5-0 1-2-0 AFC SOUTH ROAD DIV 2-3-0 2-1-0 2-4-0 1-2-0 2-3-0 2-2-0 3-3-0 1-1-0 AFC WEST ROAD DIV 2-4-0 1-2-0 2-4-0 1-2-0 1-4-0 3-0-0 1-4-0 1-2-0
22. Maryland 5-1 23. Vanderbilt 4-1 24. Nebraska 5-0 25. Michigan St. 5-1
123 113 101 96
23 24 — 25
Others receiving votes: Wis.-Green Bay 80, Kansas St. 49, DePaul 27, Purdue 24, Northwestern 11, TCU 10, Boston College 7, Penn St. 6, Kansas 4, Oklahoma St. 4, Southern Cal 4, Arizona 3, Texas Tech 3, California 2, Virginia 1.
Basketball NBA Standings All Times PST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Boston 12 4 .750 — New York 9 9 .500 4 New Jersey 6 11 .353 6 1/2 Toronto 6 11 .353 6 1/2 Philadelphia 4 13 .235 8 1/2 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Orlando 12 4 .750 — Atlanta 11 7 .611 2 Miami 10 8 .556 3 Charlotte 6 11 .353 6 1/2 Washington 5 11 .313 7 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 9 6 .600 — Indiana 8 7 .533 1 Cleveland 7 9 .438 2 1/2 Detroit 6 11 .353 4 Milwaukee 6 11 .353 4
Portland at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. New Jersey at New York, 4:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Memphis, 5 p.m. Indiana at Sacramento, 7 p.m. San Antonio at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Memphis at Atlanta, 4 p.m. Oklahoma City at New Jersey, 4 p.m. Washington at Toronto, 4 p.m. Portland at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Detroit at Miami, 4:30 p.m. Orlando at Chicago, 5 p.m. Charlotte at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Houston, 5:30 p.m. Milwaukee at Denver, 6 p.m. Indiana at Utah, 6 p.m. San Antonio at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m.
Football
National Football Conference St. Louis Seattle San Francisco Arizona
SPORTS ON TV
WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 14 2 .875 — Dallas 13 4 .765 1 1/2 New Orleans 12 5 .706 2 1/2 Memphis 7 10 .412 7 1/2 Houston 5 12 .294 9 1/2 Northwest Division W L Pct GB Utah 14 5 .737 — Oklahoma City 12 6 .667 1 1/2 Denver 10 6 .625 2 1/2 Portland 8 8 .500 4 1/2 Minnesota 4 13 .235 9 Pacific Division W L Pct GB L.A. Lakers 13 4 .765 — Golden State 8 9 .471 5 Phoenix 8 9 .471 5 Sacramento 4 11 .267 8 L.A. Clippers 3 15 .167 10 1/2 Sunday’s Games Atlanta 96, Toronto 78 New York 125, Detroit 116,2OT San Antonio 109, New Orleans 95 Utah 109, L.A. Clippers 97 Houston 99, Oklahoma City 98 New Jersey 98, Portland 96 Denver 138, Phoenix 133 Indiana 95, L.A. Lakers 92 Monday’s Games Miami 105, Washington 94 Oklahoma City 95, New Orleans 89 Dallas 101, Houston 91 Utah 109, Milwaukee 88 Today’s Games Boston at Cleveland, 4 p.m. Detroit at Orlando, 4 p.m.
All Times PST Thursday’s Games New England 45, Detroit 24 New Orleans 30, Dallas 27 N.Y. Jets 26, Cincinnati 10 Sunday’s Games Houston 20, Tennessee 0 Atlanta 20, Green Bay 17 Minnesota 17, Washington 13 N.Y. Giants 24, Jacksonville 20 Pittsburgh 19, Buffalo 16, OT Cleveland 24, Carolina 23 Kansas City 42, Seattle 24 Miami 33, Oakland 17 St. Louis 36, Denver 33 Chicago 31, Philadelphia 26 Baltimore 17, Tampa Bay 10 San Diego 36, Indianapolis 14 Monday’s Game San Francisco 27, Arizona 6 Thursday Houston at Philadelphia, 5:20 p.m. Sunday San Francisco at Green Bay, 10 a.m. Denver at Kansas City, 10 a.m. Buffalo at Minnesota, 10 a.m. Jacksonville at Tennessee, 10 a.m. Cleveland at Miami, 10 a.m. Chicago at Detroit, 10 a.m. Washington at N.Y. Giants, 10 a.m. New Orleans at Cincinnati, 10 a.m. Oakland at San Diego, 1:05 p.m. Carolina at Seattle, 1:15 p.m. St. Louis at Arizona, 1:15 p.m. Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 1:15 p.m. Dallas at Indianapolis, 1:15 p.m. Pittsburgh at Baltimore, 5:20 p.m. Monday, Dec. 6 N.Y. Jets at New England, 5:30 p.m.
Transactions BASEBALL American League Cleveland Indians : Agreed to terms with C Luke Carlin on a minor league contract. Detroit Tigers : Designated RHP Zach Miner for assignment. Texas Rangers : Agreed to terms with C Yorvit Torrealba on a two-year contract and RHP Mark Lowe on a one-year contract. National League Atlanta Braves : Agreed to terms with INF Shawn Bowman, INF Ed Lucas, C J.C. Boscan, C Wilkin Castillo, OF Brent Clevlen, OF Jose Constanza, OF Wilkin Ramirez and RHP Jay Sborz to minor league contracts. Washington Nationals : Named Bob Schaefer special assistant to the general manager. California League High Desert Mavericks : Announced the team has been purchased by Main Street Baseball LLC, owned by David Heller and Bob Herrfeldt. Frontier League Lake Erie Crushers : Signed C Joel Collins, LHP Greg Hendrix, OF Chris Luick and RHP Ricky McGraw. Placed OF Arden McWilliams on the retired list. River City Rascals : Signed OF Chad Maddox, 3B Chris McClendon and RHP Gary Moran to contract extensions. Signed OF Erik Church.
BASKETBALL National Basketball Association Sacramento Kings : Waived G Antoine Wright. Toronto Raptors : Recalled F Ed Davis from Erie (NBADL).
FOOTBALL National Football League NFL : Fined Houston WR Andre Johnson and Tennessee CB Cortland Finnegan $25,000 for fighting during Sunday’s game. Dallas Cowboys : Signed S Andrew Sendejo from the practice squad. Released DE Jimmy Saddler-McQueen. Signed DL Alex Daniels to the practice squad.
SportsRecreation
Peninsula Daily News
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
B3
Seattle beats Montana St. The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Aaron Broussard had 20 points and 12 rebounds Monday night and hit a 3-pointer with 1:33 remaining as Seattle University rallied to beat Montana State 72-70. Sterling Carter added 14 points for the Redhawks (3-6), who trailed for most of the second half before going on a 13-0 run. Broussard’s 3-pointer gave Seattle a 66-64 lead. Alex Jones had 13 points and eight boards and Cervante Burrell had 10, including a pair of free throws with 4.9 seconds left to make it 72-67 Redhawks. Shawn Reid scored 23 points for Montana State (5-3), which lost its second straight after a five-game winning streak. The Associated Press
An Arizona Cardinals fan shows his opinion of the team during the third quarter of the Cardinals’ NFL football game against the San Francisco 49ers on Monday in Glendale, Ariz. The 49ers won 27-6 behind Brian Westbrook’s 136 yards.
49ers pound Cardinals 27-6 The Associated Press
GLENDALE, Ariz. — Brian Westbrook’s big games weren’t all in his rearview mirror after all. The 31-year-old running back rushed for 136 yards and a touchdown in place of the injured Frank Gore and the San Francisco 49ers sent punchless Arizona to its sixth straight loss, 27-6 Monday night in a shower of boos from the Cardinals home crowd. Westbrook, who had 9 yards on five carries all season, ran 23 times in his 21st career 100-yard game, but first since Dec. 7, 2008, for Philadelphia against the New York Giants. San Francisco (4-7), beaten at home by Tampa Bay 21-0 last week, improved to 3-1 since Troy Smith became starting quarterback and pulled within a game of co-leaders St. Louis and Seattle in the anemic NFC West. Arizona (3-8), two-time defending division champion, has not lost this many in a row since dropping eight straight in 2006, Dennis Green’s final season as coach. The 49ers rushed for 261 yards, by far their season high and the most allowed by the Cardinals this season. Westbrook, who led the
NFL league in rushing in 2007, was released a year ago after eight, often-spectacular seasons with Philadelphia, a move caused by a combination of his age and injury history as well as the $7.5 million he would have been due this season. He signed with San Francisco on Aug. 16, but had hardly played at all until Gore went down on Monday. “I just kind of bided my time, tried to stay fresh, tried to stay focused,” Westbrook said, “and when I got my opportunity, make the most of it.”
Puts on show He was able to show what he still can do. “I think we have a lot of young guys, some of them have seen some of the things I’ve been able to do over the course of my career, some of them just don’t know,” Westbrook said. “They just see a guy running around the practice field. For me it meant a lot to have an opportunity to go out there and play and have an opportunity to have success.” The Arizona defense did not provide much resistance
as San Francisco pushed around the home team at the line of scrimmage from the start. Gore injured a hip in the first quarter and briefly tried to come back before going out for good in the second period.
Starts out hot He had 25 and 15 yards in his first two carries, a sign of things to come against an Arizona defense that entered the game last in the league in points allowed. Smith didn’t need to pass much, completing 11-of-23 for 129 yards with one touchdown and an interception. San Francisco, a team that has not scored more than 24 points in a game all season, led 21-6 at the half. The 49ers hadn’t scored that many by halftime in two years. The Cardinals committed their 27th turnover of the season on their first play from scrimmage when Derek Anderson and Beanie Wells botched a handoff and Aubrayo Franklin recovered for San Francisco. On the next play, Smith threw 38 yards to Michael Crabtree for the touchdown, the receiver making a diving catch in the end zone.
Wells gained a measure of redemption on the next possession. Playing as a wideout to the right, he caught a 43-yard pass from Anderson but a season-long red zone problem continued and Jay Feely’s 31-yard field goal made it 7-3. Ted Ginn Jr. had a kickoff return of 41 yards and a punt return for 42, both leading to San Francisco touchdowns. The 49ers went 55 yards in 10 plays after the kickoff, Anthony Dixon leaping over from the 1-yard line to make it 14-3 with 29 seconds to go in the first. Shane Andrus, kicking in place of injured Joe Nedney, missed a 47-yard field goal on San Francisco’s first possession. He also had a 37-yarder blocked by Dominque Rodgers-Cromartie in the third quarter. Arizona blew an opportunity late in the first half after Smith’s pass bounced off the hands of Vernon Davis and was intercepted by Michael Adams at the San Francisco 42. Anderson threw three incompletions and the Cardinals punted. The boos that had started midway through the first quarter were louder than ever as the teams left the field.
Big East gets bigger, adds TCU The Associated Press
FORT WORTH, Texas — TCU is getting out of future debates about whether the Horned Frogs deserve to be in a BCS game. They are joining a league with automatic access. The Frogs won’t have to be a BCS buster when they move to the Big East Conference, starting with the 2012 season. Win their new league and they will be guaranteed a spot in one of the big-money games. In the latest restructuring of the college football landscape, TCU’s board of trustees unanimously approved an invitation Monday to join the Big East in football and all other sports. The move from the Mountain West Conference becomes official July 1, 2012. TCU athletic director Chris Del Conte said gaining automatic-qualifying status “was a big factor” in the move and gives the Horned Frogs “the greatest opportunity to compete for the national championship.” The Big East, currently with eight football teams, has one of six automatic BCS slots. “Access got easier, not the road,” said Frogs coach Gary Patterson, whose third-ranked Frogs (12-0) wrapped up their second consecutive undefeated regular season and Mountain West title with a 66-17 win at New Mexico on Saturday. TCU is third in the BCS
Sinks 15 points Erik Rush had 15 points for the Bobcats while Jeff Budinich had 13 points and a team-high eight rebounds in a reserve role. The Bobcats led 64-55 with 8:45 to play, but the Redhawks came back and
finally went ahead on Broussard’s 3-pointer, which he launched with just 2 seconds left on the shot clock. Jones then hit two free throws with 56.6 seconds remaining for a 68-64 edge. Montana State, after going scoreless for more than eight minutes, finally scored on Rod Singleton’s free throw with 27.4 seconds to play. But the Bobcats didn’t get closer than three again until freshman Reid made his trey at the buzzer. Broussard was 8-of-12 from the field, but the Redhawks shot just 39 percent in the game. Montana State shot 46 percent. Seattle had a 46-35 advantage on the boards. Montana State put together a 15-3 run in the middle of the first half to turn a 19-16 deficit into a 31-22 lead. Seattle climbed back in, getting as close as 39-36 before Montana State took a 41-36 lead into the break. It was the teams’ first meeting since the 1971-72 season.
Poll: Top 25 Continued from B1 fifth, while Michigan State, which lost to Connecticut in “I would have been the semifinals at Maui, fell happy with terrific effort to four spots to sixth. Connecticut, Syracuse, show we were equal to the task. We could have lost the Missouri and Kentucky first two games we played, rounded out the top 10. Baylor moved up one then we were great against place to 11th and was folKentucky. “The only way to grow is lowed by Villanova, Tennesto face teams early like we’ll see, Memphis, Minnesota, see throughout the season.” Georgetown, San Diego The Huskies were State, Florida, Texas and ranked for the first 10 Illinois. The last five ranked weeks last season as well as teams were BYU, Purdue, in one other poll. They dropped out for Washington, UNLV and good on Feb. 1 and didn’t Notre Dame. Temple (3-2) fell out from make the NCAA tourna21st after losing to Califorment. “The No. 1 thing for this nia and Texas A&M at the team now is that tomorrow Old Spice Classic. North Carolina (4-2), is one of the biggest games of the season,” Calhoun said which dropped from No. 8 to of the home game against 25th in the previous poll after two early losses, fell New Hampshire. “We have to validate from the rankings despite what people think of us, it’s beating UNC Asheville and quite that simple. I will College of Charleston last remind them we were down week. Tennessee, which won three at the half to Vermont the NIT Season Tip-Off by before we went to Maui. “We have to keep getting beating Villanova in the better and we all have to be championship game, had the biggest jump in the poll, tuned in to that.” UNLV (6-0), which won moving from 24th to No. the 76 Classic, and Notre 13. The biggest drop was Dame (7-0), which won the Old Spice Classic, were this Purdue’s fall from 10th to week’s other newcomers to No. 22 following a 65-54 loss to Richmond. the poll at No. 24 and 25. There are only two Both were ranked last matchups between ranked season. Ohio State moved up one teams this week. Georgetown meets Misspot to second and Pittsburgh and Kansas both souri at the Sprint Center moved up two places to in Kansas City, Mo., today, and Michigan State is at third and fourth. Kansas State, which lost Duke on Wednesday, a game to Duke in the CBE Classic that would have been a 1-2 final, dropped one place to matchup until this week.
Hawks: Losing
The Associated Press
Fans in Amon G. Carter stadium watch TCU’s matchup with Tennessee Tech on Sept. 11 in Fort Worth, Texas. TCU is moving to the Big East Conference. standings — the highestranked non-automatic qualifying team — and is in line for a chance to play for the national championship if Auburn or Oregon lose next weekend. The Frogs likely will play in the Rose Bowl if Auburn and Oregon both win. “Who would have thought five years ago that the guaranteed fallback position is, you’re going to the Rose Bowl, and one loss you’re in the national championship?” Del Conte told a room filled with supporters and staff. “We’re going to Pasadena, let’s get fired up. We’re going to the Big East, let’s get fired up. It’s a great time to be a Frog.”
The pending departure of TCU continues a big shuffle for the Mountain West, which last summer announced that Boise State was leaving the WAC to join its league in 2011. That was expected to bolster the strength of the MWC and put the league in better position for possibly gaining an automatic BCS berth in the future. But now so much has changed. Utah is leaving the Mountain West for the expanded Pac-12 and BYU is going independent. Fresno State and Nevada, and maybe Hawaii, are going from the WAC to the MWC in 2012 after TCU leaves. “Today’s intercollegiate
athletics environment is very fluid,” Mountain West Conference commissioner Craig Thompson said in a statement. “Our board of directors and directors of athletics, as they have throughout the history of the MWC and with even more focus recently, will continue to analyze the landscape and chart our course in the context of ongoing changes.” Thompson said there were “conversations already under way with potential future members.” Del Conte said losing BYU and Utah was a “significant blow” to the Mountain West. “It was not the same league that we joined,” he said.
Continued from B1 for just 7:47 in the first half. Seattle also missed leadIn their five wins, it’s ing receiver Mike Williams, just 17 percent. While the Chiefs were who didn’t play because of a busy becoming the third foot strain. Williams had 41 catches AFC West team this season to roll up more than 500 in his previous six games. total yards on Seattle, the Carroll said he doesn’t know Seahawks offense was yet whether Williams will be back in time to play mostly absent. Seattle’s 20 yards rush- against Carolina this week. ing were tied for third-fewCarroll also said fullback est in franchise history. Michael Robinson (hamPart of the lack in pro- string) should be back this duction was Seattle’s lack of week, while center Chris possession. Spencer should be fine after The Seahawks ran just getting kicked in the ankle 22 plays and held the ball late in Sunday’s loss.
Dawgs: Apple Continued from B1 cally punctuate the turnaround the Huskies have It was just two years ago made in just two seasons. that the Huskies were 0-10 “Because of its imporgoing into the Apple Cup in tance, it’s like, as coach Pullman. [Sarkisian] told us three Washington lost 16-13 in weeks, each game now, double overtime that day you’ve got to treat it like a and finished the year 0-12, playoff game where you the worst mark in school lose, you’re done,” Locker history. said. A win on Saturday in “That’s kind of the realPullman would emphati- ity of it now.”
Peninsula Daily News for Tuesday, November 30, 2010 Page
B4
Business
Politics & Environment
Obama’s wage freeze about GOP power, debt Peninsula Daily News news services
WASHINGTON — President Obama’s proposed two-year federal cost-of-living pay freeze may be as much about increased Republican power in Congress as it is about the size of the federal debt. Obama said his proposal, which must be approved by Congress, would go into effect Jan. 1 and save $28 billion over five years — a tiny percentage of the total federal debt now pegged at $13.7 trillion. The plan drew compliments from Republicans as their congressional leaders prepared to meet with Obama at the White House. Republicans take control of the House in January. The nation’s long-term debt is “a challenge that both parties have a responsibility to address,” Obama said. The pay freeze would only affect cost-of-living increases, not bonuses or step increases. The president’s proposed pay freeze would wipe out plans for a 1.4 percent across-the-board cost-of-living raise in 2011 for 2.1 million federal civilian employees, including those working at the Defense Department. But the freeze would not affect the nation’s uniformed military personnel.
“The American people It would also mean no cost-of-living raise in 2012 want us to work together,” Gibbs said. for civilian employees. While the proposed pay Other measures freeze will have “a limited effect” on the deficit and is A draft proposal by a to some extent a symbolic commission created by the gesture aimed at the Repubpresident to reduce the fed- licans, said Julian Zelizer, eral deficit recently recom- who teaches congressional mended a three-year freeze history at Princeton Uniin pay for most federal versity, it also shows that employees. Obama “is serious about It also suggested cuts to trying to cut the size of the Social Security benefits and government.” higher taxes for millions of At the same time, Zelizer Americans. said, Obama needs to try The popular child tax and avoid a revolt from credit and mortgage inter- Democrats “who don’t think est deduction also would be this is the time for deficit eliminated. reduction,” he said. A final report from the commission is due later this Union reaction week The proposed freeze disFederal employees haven’t had their pay fro- appointed public union zen since 1986, when Presi- members who backed dent Reagan imposed a one- Obama during his 2008 campaign. year freeze. “It’s a panic reaction,” Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, the incoming House John Gage, president of the speaker, applauded the pro- American Federation of posal, but said it should be Government Employees, followed up by a federal hir- said in an interview. “It’s superficial. People ing freeze. Otherwise, “a pay freeze in this country voted for won’t do much to rein in a jobs and income. “Sticking it to a VA nurse federal bureaucracy that added hundreds of thou- and a Social Security worker sands of employees to its is not the way to go.” Gage said the notion payroll over the last two that federal employees years,” he said. White House spokesman make too much money “is a Robert Gibbs said Obama myth,” especially in light of wants to work with Repub- million-dollar bonuses paid licans on areas such as to Wall Street executives making government more who he said helped trigger the financial crisis that efficient.
plunged the nation into recession. A typical border patrol officer makes $34,000 a year, a nursing assistant makes $27,000 and a mine inspector makes $38,000, Gage said. “We’re an easy scapegoat,” he said. “We weren’t the ones who got us into this fix.”
Dicks’ reaction U.S. Rep. Norm Dicks, D-Belfair, whose district includes the North Olympic Peninsula, said he was unhappy, too. “Any proposed sacrifices by federal employees to reduce the deficit should be evaluated in the context of a broader effort that achieves very substantial deficit reduction,” he said. Obama froze the salaries of his top White House staff members when he took office 22 months ago — and later extended that to senior political appointees throughout the government and canceled their bonuses. Congress voted in April to freeze its own pay, forgoing an automatic $1,600 annual cost-of-living increase. Lawmakers are now are paid $174,000 a year. The president’s pay of $400,000 a year was fixed by Congress in January 2001. It has not changed since then.
Retailers say online sales robust on ‘Cyber Monday’ The New York Times
Online shoppers started buying on Thanksgiving and did not let up on socalled Cyber Monday, the day retailers designated for more discounts and promotions. By 6 p.m. Monday, Eastern time, sales were 20 percent higher than during the same time period on the Monday after Thanksgiving a year ago, according to Coremetrics, a research firm owned by IBM that tracks online sales. Cyber Monday was created five years ago to encourage people to shop online from work, where they could use a high-speed Internet connection that they lacked at home. It never was the busiest online shopping day. But now that broadband Internet connections have
“There are still some retailers who did a different deal on Friday than on Monday, and you’ll see retailers who put a deal up Thursday through Monday.”
Charlie Graham ShopItToMe.com founder and CEO
replaced dial-up access in most American homes, fewer consumers are waiting until they get to their work computers to shop online. The day has evolved into a way for online retailers to keep up the spending momentum that began in earnest on the day after Thanksgiving. “We saw a lot of companies jumping the gun by doing a Thursday-only sale,” said Charlie Graham, the founder and chief executive of ShopItToMe.com, a personal shopping site that
works with more than 200 retailers. “There are still some retailers who did a different deal on Friday than on Monday,” Graham said, “and you’ll see retailers who put a deal up Thursday through Monday.” And yet, he said, there were enough shoppers who waited until they got back to work on Monday to visit retail websites that the day was still relevant as a marketing tool. The scene at the fulfillment center of Zappos.com, the online shoe retailer, in
Louisville, Ky., offered physical evidence of this year’s online holiday shopping trends. To satisfy the demand, not only did the company expand its warehouse to a second building, but Zappos.com also plans to add 500 employees this week. “It’s absolutely crazy,” Craig Adkins, the vice president for fulfillment operations, said early Monday afternoon. On Monday morning, a spokeswoman for Amazon. com, Sally Fouts, described business as “very busy,” with hundreds of thousands of packages already shipped out of Amazon’s distribution center in Phoenix, where she was working. The biggest seller, as is the case on most days, was the Kindle e-reader, she said.
Fiji government says Fiji Water is spreading untruths about it The Associated Press
operating in Fiji and was willing to hold further discussions with the government, the company statement said. Fiji Water President John Cochran said the company remained “willing to work through this issue with the Fiji government, as it would be our preference to keep operating in Fiji.” Fiji Water is sold in several dozen countries including the United States where it is one of the top 10 bottled waters. It trades on purity.
SUVA, Fiji — The Fiji government has charged the California-based Fiji Water company with making untrue statements about instability in the South Pacific islands nation because it doesn’t want to pay higher taxes on the water it extracts there. Fiji Water on Monday closed its operations in the South Pacific country that gives the popular bottled drink its name, saying it was being singled out by the military-led government for a massive tax Never contacts air increase.
Permanent shutdown?
marama, said Tuesday that the company has paid minimal corporate taxes since it was set up. “If Fiji Water is no longer interested in Fiji, then the Fijian government, following cancellation of the (company’s land) leases, will call for international tenders from credible and reputable private sector companies to extract this valuable resource,” he said.
Big project delays some state checks OLYMPIA — A massive computer programming project is putting a slight delay on some unemployment checks in Washington. The computer work is needed because federal emergency unemployment benefits are ending. State officials scheduled it over Thanksgiving weekend to get plenty of time, but the task was so big that it is expected to last through today. The Employment Security Department expects to resume processing weekly unemployment claims again Wednesday. Washington’s latest unemployment report pegs the state jobless rate at 9.1 percent. More than 300,000 people were unemployed and looking for work last month, and more than 223,000 people were getting unemployment benefits.
Chamber meets SEKIU — The Clallam Bay/Sekiu Chamber of Commerce will hold a business meeting at the Sekiu Community Center, 42 Rice St., at noon Wednesday. Elections for the executive offices of vice president, secretary, treasurer and two at-large positions will be held at the meeting.
Salmon pesticides SEATTLE — Several fishing and conservation groups are suing the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for failing to limit the use of six agricultural pesticides to protect salmon. A lawsuit filed in federal district court in Seattle on Monday alleges the EPA has not taken action on measures that NOAA Fisheries Service called for in 2008 and 2009. The service found six pesticides threaten the survival of several species of salmon and steelhead in the West. It called for protections such as no-spray buffer zones. The pesticides include diazinon, malathion, chlorpyrifos, carbaryl, carbofuran and methomyl. The EPA did not immediately return a call Monday seeking comment.
Cash surpluses
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rates, including how much goes to profit, medical expenses and administrative costs. Premera Blue Cross spokesman Eric Earling said this is a bad idea because surpluses ensure financial stability for customers. He said it was also unfair to leave out forprofit insurers.
Air cargo rules NEW YORK — The U.N. agency that oversees aviation is pushing new guidelines for cargo security to counter al-Qaida’s new mail-bomb strategy but is stopping short of calling for 100 percent screening of packages, as pilots and some U.S. lawmakers have urged. The proposed changes by the International Civil Aviation Organization concentrate on “supplychain security,” or checking outbound shipments before they even reach the airport. A draft of new guidelines will go out to all 190 member countries in the next few weeks, the agency said.
Nonferrous metals NEW YORK — Spot nonferrous metal prices Monday. Aluminum - $1.0171 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper - $3.7587 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper - $3.7580 N.Y. Merc spot Mon. Lead - $2263.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $0.9604 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1357.00 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1366.00 troy oz., NY Merc spot Mon. Silver - $26.945 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $27.148 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Mon. Platinum - $1642.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum - $1644.60 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Mon.
OLYMPIA — The state insurance commissioner wants to consider some Peninsula Daily News companies’ cash surpluses and The Associated Press before approving the rates they charge. This is one of the requests Commissioner Mike Kreidler has for state lawmakers when they convene in January. The power to consider surpluses would apply to nonprofit health insurers, who make up most of the health market in WashSend us information ington. about staff changes, Kreidler said some new product lines, firms have built up hunmoves or expansion and dreds of millions of dollars in surpluses while related information. seeking double-digit rate news@peninsula increases. dailynews.com Kreidler also wants to give consumers more access to the information Peninsula Daily News behind health insurance
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A company statement announcing the decision did not say whether the company was shutting down permanently in Fiji. The company, owned by Los Angeles entrepreneurs Lynda and Stewart Resnick, said it was closing its facility in Fiji, canceling orders from suppliers and putting on hold several construction contracts in the country. But it wanted to keep
The company said its water comes from an artesian spring deep underground in the remote Yaqara Valley on Fiji’s main island of Viti Levu and that the water never comes into contact with the air before it is bottled, making it clear of pollutants. Cochran said Fiji Water currently pays millions of dollars in duties and income tax, as well as substantial royalties and trust fund payments to Fijian villages
near the company’s facility. He said hundreds of Fijians would lose their jobs with the company’s closure. The government’s tax plan “sends a clear and unmistakable message (that) the country is increasingly unstable and is becoming a very risky place in which to invest,” Cochran said. Fiji’s prime minister, Commodore Frank Baini-
$ Briefly . . .
Peninsula Daily News for Tuesday, November 30, 2010
SECTION
c
Our Peninsula
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, PUZZLES, DEAR ABBY In this section
The art
of healing Charlie Bermant/Peninsula Daily News
Weaver Inge Norgaard stands in front of two-thirds of “The Hem of the Sky,” which she developed for a California hospital.
PT woman weaves tapestry for hospital By Charlie Bermant Peninsula Daily News
PORT TOWNSEND — A noted Port Townsend weaver will travel to California next month to install a three-paneled tapestry into a hospital’s meditation room, with the purpose of providing peace and solace for patients under stress. It took Inge Norgaard more than a year to complete “The Hem of the Sky.” The tapestry consists of three 36-inch-by-42-inch representations of the San Joaquin River delta and estuary, which is near St. Joseph’s Medical Center in Stockton, Calif., where the commissioned work is to be displayed. Norgaard, 58, was approached by hospital officials looking for a palliative project after they heard of her work and saw samples on her website, www.inge norgaard.com. While it was a high-technology connection that allowed her to acquire the commission, her process is traditional. She works the same way that
weavers have for hundreds of years.
Watched the river Norgaard visited the area and sat on the edge of the river several times over a period of weeks until the setting had made a mental impression. She then made several watercolor sketches and presented them to the client, who chose a theme. Norgaard painted a full-scale representation of each tapestry, holding it behind the loom as she wove the tapestry. While weaving, she could see only a few inches at a time. The whole piece wasn’t visible until it was removed from the loom — when there was no way to change the result. “It’s not like a painting where you can touch up the mistakes,” she said.
Professional artist Norgaard has been a professional artist for more than 30 years.
Her works have been displayed close to home — in Port Townsend, Port Angeles, Bainbridge Island and Seattle — as well as all over the nation, and outside of it, in British Columbia, Denmark and Holland. She won’t say how much she will be paid for the new tapestry series but characterized the commission as “a year’s salary.” She doesn’t feel her livelihood has been affected by the poor economy “because not very many people spend a lot of money on art at any time.” Her market, then, is a narrow one. “A lot of people feel stupid in front of art. They feel intimidated,” she said. “If you go to a museum and see a piece that moves you, that’s fantastic, but if you don’t like any of it, that’s all right.”
Contemplative art Much of what Norgaard produces is calming and contemplative, like this new tapestry or a series of mixed-media flower pic-
tures that use plastic milk carton fragments as petals. But at times, her work is more political. And it can begin in an unlikely place. Several years ago, Norgaard was in the women’s bathroom of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City when she found an unsigned note that was apparently written by a pregnant woman to her unborn child. Although the note was ambiguous, the implication was that the woman chose to have an abortion. Norgaard scanned and enlarged the note without changing the content or the handwriting and selected key phrases to be embroidered on a white linen dress. The result is a three-dimensional piece of fabric art that captures the unknown woman’s conflict and prompts a dialogue about abortion. Norgaard often creates a series of works, making several pieces with the same theme or technique.
One series was in response to Hurricane Katrina. It consisted of several red crosses that were disconnected from their background “to tell you that it wasn’t working,” Norgaard said.
Hurricane Katrina In that case, she strove to be provocative. “You don’t have to like art, but I think you need to be affected by it,” she said. Norgaard does not do everything herself anymore. She no longer has the strength to dye her own yarn. But she still has a full head of artistic steam. “I like to experiment with things,” she said. “I intend to keep pushing myself to create and use the media that is the best way to express whatever idea comes up.”
________ Jefferson County Reporter Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360-385-2335 or charlie.bermant@peninsuladailynews. com.
Briefly . . . PA Players to hold play tryouts
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music, poetry and comedy, and eat snacks and win door prizes. Youth who have participated in National Novel Writing month are encouraged to attend. PORT ANGELES — The program is sponPort Angeles Community sored by Port Angeles Players will hold tryouts for Friends of the Library. Agatha Christie’s “Black For more information, Coffee” at the Port Angeles phone 360-417-8502 or Community Playhouse, 1235 E. Lauridsen Blvd., at e-mail kids@nols.org. 7 p.m. Wednesday and Chandlery sale set Thursday. There are roles for nine PORT TOWNSEND — adult men and four adult The Northwest Maritime women of various ages. Center’s Wooden Boat Copies of the play are Chandlery will hold a super available at the Port Ange- sale on Saturday and Sunles and Sequim libraries. day. The play will be perAll 2010 Wooden Boat formed Tuesday, Friday and Festival garments and Saturday nights and Sunwater bottles will be day afternoons from Feb. 25 marked down 40 percent to to March 13. 60 percent. Those who cannot With every purchase attend the tryouts may over $20, the chandlery will phone director Robert Som- give away a 2010 Wooden mers at 360-452-7523. Boat Festival poster. Customers also will Open mic night set have the chance to go PORT ANGELES — An upstairs to the Maritime Meeting Room and vote on open mic night for youths in grades seven through 12 art for next year’s Wooden Boat Festival. will be held at the Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. The theme for the 2011 Peabody St., at 7 p.m. Friday. festival is “Craftsmanship.” Participants can share Peninsula Daily News
C2
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Briefly . . . Mac group to meet on Wednesday PORT ANGELES — The Strait Mac Users Group, also known as SMUG, will meet at St Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave., at 7:15 p.m. Wednesday. Ray Bentsen will present “An Apple for the Holidays: A Look at the New iPods and the New MacBook Air.” He will present slide shows on each of the products’ new lines. The presentation will begin by introducing the new iPod Touch, iPod Shuffle and iPod Nano. Included will be an over-
view of the new features, characteristics and options associated with each. Bentsen will talk about FaceTime on the iPod Touch, an application that can be used to make video calls via Wi-Fi. The presentation will conclude with an overview of the new MacBook Air, Apple’s thinnest and most compact Mac laptop ever.
PeninsulaNorthwest
Wooden boats focus of three presentations Seminars set at Northwest Maritime Center Peninsula Daily News
PORT TOWNSEND — The Wooden Boat Chandlery at the Northwest Maritime Center, 431 Water St., will host “A Little Bit of Festival at the Wooden Boat Chandlery,” featuring wooden boat crafters beginning Wednesday. Attendees can meet some of the Forks bazaar set experts who contribute to the success of the annual Wooden Boat Festival. FORKS — The Forks All presentations are free and open Holiday Bazaar will be to the public and will be held inside the held in the commons of Wooden Boat Chandlery from noon to Forks High School, 261 S. 1:30 p.m. Wednesdays. Spartan Ave., from 9 a.m. The schedule: to 4 p.m. Saturday. ■ Brion Toss on “Handwork for the Proceeds from the Modern Sailor” on Wednesday. bazaar will be donated to Toss will provide tips to get started Forks Relay For Life. on fabricating block attachments, standPeninsula Daily News ing rigging emergency gear and race
Things to Do Today and Wednesday, Nov. 30 and Dec. 1, in: n Port Angeles n Sequim-Dungeness Valley n Port TownsendJefferson County n Forks-West End
Tatting class — Golden Craft Shop, 112-C S. Lincoln St., 10 a.m. to noon. Phone 360-457-0509.
Guided walking tour — Historic downtown buildings, an old brothel and “Underground Port Angeles.” Chamber of Commerce, 121 E. Railroad Ave., 10:30 a.m. and 2 Port Angeles p.m. Tickets: $12 adults, $10 senior citizens and students, Today $6 ages 6 to 12. Children PA Vintage Softball — younger than 6, free. ReservaCo-ed slow pitch for fun, fellow- tions, phone 360-452-2363, ship and recreation. Phone ext. 0. Gordon Gardner at 360-452Beginning Watercolor 5973 or Ken Foster at 360-6830141 for information including class — With artist Roxanne Grinstad. Holy Trinity Lutheran time of day and location. Church, 301 E. Lopez St., 11 Tai chi class — Ginger and a.m. to 1 p.m. $40 for four-week Ginseng, 1012 W. 15th St., 7 session. Drop-ins welcome. a.m. $12 per class or $10 for Phone 360-452-6334 or e-mail three or more classes. No rcgrinstad@hotmail.com. experience necessary, wear Veterans Wellness Walk — loose comfortable clothing. Port Angeles Veterans Clinic, Phone 360-808-5605. 1005 Georgiana St., noon. Open to all veterans. Phone Port Angeles Business 360-565-9330. Association — Joshua’s Restaurant, 113 DelGuzzi Drive, Bingo — Port Angeles 7:30 a.m. Open to the public, Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh minimum $2.16 charge if not St., 12:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. Phone ordering off the menu. 360-457-7004.
Peninsula Daily News
boat gear. ■ Michael Berman on “From Caribbean Cruising to the Northwest — Stories Behind the Photographs” on Dec. 8. The professional photographer will show prints of his nautical photographs and discuss how they were made, and he will discuss how to make pictures of boats, people and cruising travel. ■ Jim Tolpin on “How to Sharpen Planes and Chisels” on Dec. 15. Tolpin will present three simple but effective tool-sharpening techniques (two using jigs and one with a free-hand system). Attendees can practice the techniques on stones and jigs. For reservations or more information, e-mail chandlery@woodenboat.org or phone 360-3853628, ext. 101.
Now Showing n Deer Park Cinema, Port
Angeles (360-452-7176)
“Burlesque” (PG-13) “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1” (PG-13) “Love & Other Drugs” (R) “Morning Glory” (PG-13) “Red” (PG-13) “Tangled” (PG)
n Lincoln Theater, Port
Angeles (360-457-7997) “Due Date” (R) “Megamind” (PG) “The Next Three Days” (PG-13) “Unstoppable” (PG-13)
n The Rose Theatre, Port
Townsend (360-385-1089) “Burlesque” (PG-13) “Tangled” (PG)
n Uptown Theater, Port Townsend (360-385-3883) “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1” (PG-13)
. . . planning your day on the North Olympic Peninsula
Get in on the Things to Do The daily Things to Do calendar focuses on events open to the public. There is no cost for inclusion in both the print and online version at peninsuladailynews.com. Submissions must be received at least two weeks in advance of the event and contain the event’s name, location and address, times, cost if any, contact phone number and a brief description. Submitting items for Things to Do is easy: ■ E-MAIL: Send items to news@peninsuladailynews. com or via the “Calendar” link at peninsuladailynews. com. ■ U.S. MAIL: PDN News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. ■ IN PERSON: At any of the PDN’s three news offices. Please see Page A2 for the address of the one nearest you in Port Angeles, Port Townsend and Sequim.
Asian brush painting (sumi) trees class — With Roxanne Grinstad. Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 301 E. Lopez St., 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. $40 for four-week session. Drop-ins welcome. Phone 360-452-6334 or e-mail rcgrinstad@hotmail. com.
Beginning Hula for Adult Women — Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh St., 1 Pre-3 Co-op Class — For First Step drop-in center p.m. to 2 p.m. $28 for four-week parents and toddlers 10 months — 325 E. Sixth St., 1 p.m. to 4 sessions. Drop-ins welcome. to 31⁄2 years. First Baptist p.m. Free clothing and equip- Bring water, wear a long skirt Church, Fifth and Laurel ment closet, information and that doesn’t touch floor, go streets, 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. referrals, play area, emergency barefoot or may wear socks/ Associated with Peninsula Col- supplies, access to phones, soft shoes. Phone instructor lege, quarterly cost is $75 with computers, fax and copier. Mahina Lazzaro 360-809annual $25 registration fee. 3390. Phone 360-457-8355.
Good News Club — For 5 to 12 years. Jefferson Elementary School Reading Room, 218 E. 12th St. 1:45 p.m. to 3 p.m. Phone 360-452-6026 or visit www.cefop.us. Chess game — Students elementary through high school. Port Angeles Public Library, 2210 S. Peabody St., 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Chess boards available. Phone 360417-8502 or visit www.nols. org. Parenting class — “You and Your New Baby,” third-floor sunroom, Olympic Medical Center, 939 Caroline St., 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Free. Phone 360417-7652.
Mental health drop-in center — The Horizon Center, 205 E. Fifth St., 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. For those with mental disorders and looking for a place to socialize, something to do or a hot meal. For more information, phone Rebecca Brown at 360457-0431.
comer instruction. Line dancing — Vern Burton Community Center, 308 E. Fourth St., 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., $2.
Senior Swingers dance — Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh St., 7:30 p.m. to Senior meal — Nutrition 9:30 p.m. First visit free. $5 program, Port Angeles Senior cover all other visits. Music by Center, 328 E. Seventh St., Wally and the Boys. 4:30 p.m. Donation of $3 to $5 per meal. Reservations recom“Meet me in St. Louis” — mended. Phone 360-457- Port Angeles Community Play8921. house, 1235 E. Lauridsen Blvd., 7:30 p.m. Tickets $14 Wine tastings — Bella Ita- available online www.pa lia, 118 E. First St., 4:30 p.m. to communityplayers.com on 6:30 p.m., $10 to $15. Taste Odyssey Bookshop, 114 W. four different wines from res- Front St. taurant’s wine cellar. Reservations suggested. Phone 360Wednesday 457-5442. Dance lessons by appointOpen mic jam session — ment — Phone Carol HathaVictor Reventlow hosts. Fair- way at 360-460-3836 or e-mail mount Restaurant, 1127 W. carolha@olypen.com. U.S. Highway 101, 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. All musicians welGerman conversation — come. All ages invited to German chat group. Must speak and underMusic jam session — Veela stand German. Discussion topCafe, 133 E. First St., 7 p.m. to ics include current events, 9:30 p.m. Bring instruments. music, food and other topics. Phone 360-457-0614 or 360Port Angeles Zen Commu- 808-1522. nity — Meditation, dharma talk and discussion on Buddhist Biz Builders — August ethics from Robert Aitken Glass office building, 312 E. Roshi’s The Mind of Clover. 7 Fifth St., 8 a.m. to 9 a.m. Open p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Please phone to business representatives. 360-452-9552 or e-mail port Phone 360-460-0313. angeleszen@gmail.com to Turn to Things/C3 make an appointment for new-
631 STRATTON RD, PORT ANGELES, WA
360-452-3005
Elwha River Casino Summer/Fall Schedule
The Elwha River Casino is now serving Breakfast Daily at 10:00 am! SUNDAYS, 12PM – 4:00PM: ELDER’S AFTERNOON To honor all Elders, anyone 55 years and older, earn DOUBLE POINTS and fabulous prizes every Sunday from 12pm-4pm!
MONDAYS, 7:00PM – 10:00PM: GUY’S NIGHT OUT Monday nights are all about the men at the Elwha River Casino! Guys earn DOUBLE POINTS and $10.00 SLOT PLAY Hot Seat Prizes!
TUESDAYS, 7:00PM – 10:00PM: LADIES NIGHT
Oh yes… it’s Ladies Night every Tuesday at the Elwha River Casino! Girls earn DOUBLE POINTS and $10.00 SLOT PLAY Hot Seat Prizes!
WEDNESDAYS, 10:00AM – 9:00PM: SENIOR DAY
It’s a fun-filled day for the 55 and over crowd every Wednesday at the Elwha River Casino! Seniors earn DOUBLE POINTS, 30% off in the deli, and $10.00 SLOT PLAY Hot Seat Prizes!
FREE SHUTTLE SERVICE
Arrive 10:55AM 11:00AM 11:05AM 11:10AM 11:20AM 11:25AM 11:48AM 12:10PM 12:35 12::35 5PM 12:57PM 1:02PM 1:07PM 1:12PM 1:21PM 1:25PM 3:10PM 3:35PM 4:00PM 4:05PM 4:10PM 4:15PM 4:28PM 4:40PM 5:05 5:0 5PM M 5:30PM 5: 5:5 5:55 5PM 6:18PM 6:22PM 6:27PM 6:35 PM 6:47PM 6:55PM 7:20 7:2 0PM 7:55PM 8:02PM 8:07PM 8:15PM 8:25PM 8:50PM 9:15 9: :15 5PM 9:40PM 10:05 10 0:05 5PM 10:30PM 10:35PM 10:40PM 10:45PM 10:56PM 11:05PM 11:30PM
Depart 10:58AM 11:03AM 11:08AM 11:13AM 11:23AM 11:28AM 11:50AM 12:15PM 12:38PM 1:00PM 1:05PM 1:10PM 1:15PM 1:23PM 1:28PM 3:15PM 3:38 3 :38PM 4:03PM 4:08PM 4:12PM 4:18PM 4:31PM 4:43PM 5:10 5 :10P PM M 5:35PM 5:58P 5:5 PM M 6:20PM 6:25PM 6:30PM 6:38PM 6:50PM 6:58PM 7:25PM 8:00PM 8:05PM 8:10PM 8:18PM 8:28PM 8:55PM 9:18PM 9:1 M 9:45PM 10:10 10: 10PM 10:33PM 10:38PM 10:43PM 10:48PM 11:00PM 11:08PM
Canadian Currency Accepted 085089572
Looking for something fun to do for your group or party? The Elwha River Casino shuttle bus is the answer! Reserve the bus for your next party or group outing to the Elwha River Casino, special packages available! For more information, call the Elwha River Casino at 452-3005.
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Peninsula Daily News
Things to Do Continued from C2 Walk-in vision clinic — Information for visually impaired and blind people, including accessible technology display, library, Braille training and various magnification aids. Vision Loss Center, Armory Square Mall, 228 W. First St., Suite N. Phone for an appointment 360457-1383 or visit www.vision lossservices.org/vision.
Domestic violence support group — Healthy Families of Clallam County, 1210 E. Front St., Suite C, 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Free. Free childcare. Phone 360-452-3811.
Mental health drop-in center — The Horizon Center, 205 E. Fifth St., 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. For those with mental disorders and looking for a place to socialize, something to do or a hot meal. For more information, Art classes — Between phone Rebecca Brown at 360Port Angeles and Sequim. 10 457-0431. a.m. to 12:30 p.m. For direcSenior meal — Nutrition tions and costs, phone Susan program, Port Angeles Senior Spar 360-457-6994. Center, 328 E. Seventh St., Acupuncture session — 4:30 p.m. Donation $3 to $5 per Licensed acupuncturist Jim meal. Reservations recomFox. Port Angeles Senior Cen- mended. Phone 360-457ter, 328 E. Seventh St., 10 a.m. 8921. $20 members, $25 nonmemBallet and modern dance bers. Walk-ins are welcome. classes — Mixed-level for stuGuided walking tour — dents ages 16 and older. Adults Historic downtown buildings, welcome. Sons of Norway an old brothel and “Under- Building, 131 W. Fifth St. Ballet, ground Port Angeles.” Cham- 4:45 p.m. to 6 p.m. Modern, ber of Commerce, 121 E. Rail- 6:15 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. $8 to $10 road Ave., 10:30 a.m. and 2 per class. Student rates and p.m. Tickets: $12 adults, $10 reduced class cards available. senior citizens and students, Phone Kayla Oakes 360-477$6 ages 6 to 12. Children 2050. younger than 6, free. ReservaOvereaters Anonymous — tions, phone 360-452-2363, Bethany Pentecostal Church, ext. 0. 508 S. Francis St., 5:30 p.m. Port Angeles Fine Arts Center — “Art Is a Gift.” 1203 E. Lauridsen Blvd., 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Seven days of week till Dec. 24. Free. Phone 360-4573532. Bingo — Eagles Club Auxiliary, 110 S. Penn St., 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Lunch available. Open to the public. Phone 360-4523344. First Step drop-in center — 325 E. Sixth St., 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Free clothing and equipment closet, information and referrals, play area, emergency supplies, access to phones, computers, fax and copier. Phone 360-457-8355.
Phone 360-457-8395.
First Wednesday parents program — St. Matthew Lutheran Church, 132 E. 13th St., 6 p.m. Opportunity for parents and children to share a potluck meal and parenting ideas. Bring a potluck dish. Free child care. Phone 360457-4122 or visit stmatthew portangeles.org and click on “Upcoming Events.” Live music — Dave and Rosalie Secord’s Luck of the Draw Band and guests perform at Smuggler’s Landing, 115 E. Railroad Ave. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Bingo — Masonic Lodge, 622 Lincoln St., 6:30 p.m. Doors open at 4 p.m. Food, Museum at the Carnegie drinks and pull tabs available. — Featured exhibit, “Strong Phone 360-457-7377. People: The Faces of Clallam County.” Miniatures exhibit till Celebrate Recovery — Dec. 31. Second and Lincoln Christ-centered program streets, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Chil- addressing all hurts, hang-ups dren welcome. Elevator, ADA and habits. Olympic Vineyard access and parking at rear of Christian Fellowship, 3415 S. building. 360-452-6779. Peabody St., 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Phone 360-460-3786. Women’s belly dancing exercise class — Focus on Al-Anon — St. Columbine toning upper arms, chest, waist Room, Queen of Angels and hips. Port Angeles Senior Church, 209 W. 11th St., 7:30 Center, 328 E. Seventh St., p.m. to 8:30 p.m. 2:45 p.m. to 4:15 p.m. Drop-ins Live music — Good Mediwelcome. Cost: $45 for six weeks or $8.50 per class. cine Band, The Junction, 242701 U.S. Highway 101. 6:30 Phone 360-457-7035. p.m. No cover. Braille training — Vision Loss Center, 228 W. First St., Sequim and the Suite N, 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. Phone Dungeness Valley 360-457-1383, e-mail info@ visionlossservices.org or visit Today www.visionlossservices.org. Vinyasa Yoga — 92 Plain The Answer for Youth — Jane Lane, 6 a.m. Phone 206Drop-in outreach center for 321-1718 or visit www. youth and young adults, provid- sequimyoga.com. ing essentials like clothes, food, Narcotics and Alcoholics Anon18-Hole Women’s Golf ymous meetings, etc. 711 E. group — Cedars at DungeSecond St., 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. ness Golf Course, 1965 Wood-
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
C3
. . . planning your day on the North Olympic Peninsula
cock Road, 8 a.m. check-in. Walk aerobics — First BapNew members and visitors wel- tist Church of Sequim, 1323 come. Sequim-Dungeness Way, 8 a.m. Free. Phone 360-683WIC program — First 2114. Teacher, 220 W. Alder St., 9 Bird walk — Dungeness a.m. to 4 p.m. Phone 360-582River Audubon Center, Rail3428. road Bridge Park, 2151 W. Sequim Senior Softball — Hendrickson Road, 8:30 a.m. Co-ed recreational league. to 10:30 a.m. Phone the AuduCarrie Blake Park, 9:30 a.m. for bon at 360-681-4076 or e-mail practice and pickup games. rivercenter@olympus.net. Phone John Zervos at 360Cardio-step exercise class 681-2587. — Sequim Community Church, 1000 N. Fifth Ave., 9 a.m. to Insurance assistance — 10:15 a.m. $5 a person. Phone Statewide benefits advisers Shelley Haupt at 360-477-2409 help with health insurance and or e-mail jhaupt6@wavecable. Medicare. Sequim Senior Cen- com. ter, 921 E. Hammond St., 10 a.m. to noon. Phone Marge Line dance class — PioStewart at 360-452-3221, ext. neer Park, 387 E. Washington 3425. St., Sequim, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Beginning, intermediate and Sequim Museum & Arts advanced classes. $5 per class. Center — Small Work s Show Phone 360-681-2987. and Sale. 175 W. Cedar St., 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Free. Phone 360Free blood pressure checks — Cardiac Services 683-8110. Department, Olympic Medical Overeaters Anonymous — Center medical services buildSt. Luke’s Episcopal Church, ing, 840 N. Fifth Ave., 9 a.m. to 525 N. Fifth St., noon. Phone noon. 360-582-9549. Free karate lessons — Bereavement support Ideal for people fighting cancer group — Assured Hospice encouraged by medical providOffice, 24 Lee Chatfield Ave., ers to seek physical activity. 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. Phone 360- Kathrin J. Sumpter at Sequim Martial Arts, 452 Riverview 582-3796. Drive, 10 a.m. to 11:15 a.m. Bar stool bingo — The Space limited. For reservaIslander Pizza & Pasta Shack, tions, phone 360-683-4799. 380 E. Washington St., 4 p.m. Sequim Museum & Arts Free. Prizes awarded. Must be Center — Small Works Art 21. Phone 360-683-9999. Show and Sale. 175 W. Cedar Olympic Mountain Clog- St., 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesday gers — Howard Wood Theatre, through Saturday. Through 132 W. Washington St., 6 p.m. Dec. 22. Free. Phone 360-683to 9 p.m. $5 fee. Phone 360- 8110. 681-3987. Olympic Driftwood SculpOlympic Peninsula Men’s tors — Sequim Prairie Grange, Chorus — Monterra Commu- 290 Macleay Road, 10 a.m. to nity Center, 6 p.m. For more 2 p.m. Visitors are welcome. information, phone 360-681- Holiday potluck lunch. Phone 360-681-2535 or e-mail info@ 3918. olympicdriftwoodsculptors.org. Bingo — Helpful Neighbors Kids crafts — First Teacher, Clubhouse, 1241 Barr Road, Agnew, 6:30 p.m. Dinner, 220 W. Alder St., 10:30 a.m. snacks available. Nonsmoking. Phone 360-582-3428. Boy Scout Troop 1491 — St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave., 7 p.m. Open to public. Phone 360-5823898. Social dance classes— Different ballroom or Latin dance each month. Sequim Prairie Grange Hall, 290 Macleay Road. Beginner, 7 p.m.; intermediate, 8:10 p.m. $8 per week per class. Intermediate couples who have attended previous classes can continue with beginning classes. Cost for both classes is $12. Phone 360-582 0738 or e-mail keendancer@q.com.
Wednesday Vinyasa Yoga — 92 Plain Jane Lane, 6 a.m., 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. Phone 206-321-1718 or visit www.sequimyoga.com. Overeaters Anonymous — Men’s meeting, St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave., 7 a.m. Phone 360-582-9549.
Intuition workshop — “Introduction to Intuitive Development,” Center of Infinite Reflections, 144 Tripp Road, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Kristine Walsh, metaphysician and facilitator. Phone at 360-582-0083. Sequim Open Aire Market — Sequim Avenue and Washington Street. Noon to 4 p.m. E-mail manager@sequim market.com or phone 360-4602668. Poetry group — Informal reading, writing and critique of poems, led by Bob Mitchell. Sequim Senior Activity Center, 921 E. Hammond St., 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Phone 360-4773650. Italian class — Prairie Springs Assisted Living, 680 W. Prairie St., 2 p.m. 360-6810226. Creative living workshop — “Who Are You Now? Creating the Life You Always Intended
209 Monroe St., Port Townsend, 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. For information, visit www.jcmash.com or phone 360-385-4268. Rhody O’s square dance lessons — Gardiner Community Center, 980 Old Gardiner Road, 7:30 p.m.
Good News Club — For students 5 to 12 years. Greywolf Elementary room 136, 171 Carlsborg Road, 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Phone 360-683-9176 or Wednesday visit www.cefop.us. Port Townsend Aero Open mic — Kelly Thomas Museum — Jefferson County and Victor Reventlow host. The International Airport, 195 AirBuzz Cafe, 128 N. Sequim port Road, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Ave., 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Admission: $10 for adults, $9 Music, comedy, poetry and for seniors, $6 for children ages 7-12. Free for children younger dance. Phone 360-681-5455. than 6. Features vintage airAgnew Irrigation District craft and aviation art. — Agnew Helpful Neighbors Club, 1241 Barr Road, 7 p.m. Puget Sound Coast Artil360-452-2872. lery Museum — Fort Worden State Park, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Port Townsend and Admission: $3 for adults; $1 for children 6 to 12; free for chilJefferson County dren 5 and younger. Exhibits interpret the Harbor Defenses Today of Puget Sound and the Strait East Jefferson County of Juan de Fuca. Phone 360Senior Co-ed Softball — H.J. 385-0373 or e-mail artymus@ Carroll Park, 1000 Rhody Drive, olypen.com. Chimacum, 10 a.m. to noon. Jefferson County HistoriOpen to men 50 and older and women 45 and older. Phone cal Museum and shop — 540 360-437-5053 or 360-437-2672 Water St., 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. or 360-379-5443. Admission: $4 for adults; $1 for children 3 to 12; free to historiPuget Sound Coast Artil- cal society members. Exhibits lery Museum — Fort Worden include “Jefferson County’s State Park, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Maritime Heritage,” “James Admission: $3 for adults; $1 for Swan and the Native Americhildren 6 to 12; free for chil- cans” and “The Chinese in dren 5 and younger. Exhibits Early Port Townsend.” Phone interpret the Harbor Defenses of Puget Sound and the Strait 360-385-1003 or visit www. of Juan de Fuca. Phone 360- jchsmuseum.org. 385-0373 or e-mail artymus@ Kiwanis Club of Port olypen.com. Townsend — Manresa Castle, Jefferson County Histori- Seventh and Sheridan streets, cal Museum and shop — 540 noon. For more information, Water St., 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. phone Ken Brink at 360-385Admission: $4 for adults; $1 for 1327. children 3 to 12; free to historical society members. Exhibits Prayer for community — include “Jefferson County’s An ecumenical gathering, San Maritime Heritage,” “James Juan Baptist Church, 1704 DisSwan and the Native Ameri- covery Road, 12:30 p.m. to cans” and “The Chinese in 1:30 p.m. Early Port Townsend.” Phone 360-385-1003 or visit www. Chess — Dennis McGuire, jchsmuseum.org. Port Townsend Public Library, 1220 Lawrence St., 2 p.m. to 4 Northwest Maritime Center tour — Free tour of new p.m. Learn to play or improve headquarters. Meet docent in skills. Open to all ages. Phone chandlery, 431 Water St., 2 360-385-3181. p.m. Elevators available, chilNorthwest Maritime Cendren welcome and pets not allowed inside building. Phone ter tour — Free tour of new 360-385-3628, ext. 102, or headquarters. Meet docent in chandlery, 431 Water St., 2 e-mail sue@nwmaritime.org. p.m. Elevators available, chilKayak program — Help dren welcome and pets not build a cedar-strip wooden allowed inside building. Phone kayak. Chandler Building Boat 360-385-3628, ext. 102, or Shop, Maritime Center, Water e-mail sue@nwmaritime.org. and Monroe streets, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Free. Offered by the NorthTrivia night — One to four west Maritime Center and Red- players per team, $8 per team. fish Custom Kayaks. Phone Winner takes all. Sign up Joe Greenley at 360-808-5488 begins at 6:45 p.m. Game at or visit www.redfishkayak.com. 7:15 p.m. Hosted by Corey Port Townsend Rock Club Knudson. Uptown Pub, 1016 workshop — Club building, Lawrence St. Phone 360-385Jefferson County Fairgrounds, 1530. 4907 Landes St., 6:30 p.m. to 9 “The Little Match Girl” — p.m. Key City Public Theatre, 419 Medical referral service — Washington St., 7 p.m. Family JC MASH, Jefferson County’s performance. $10 for adults, $7 free medical referral and help for kids 12 and younger. $3 for service, American Legion Hall, lap seating. 0B5105291
GO GREEN!
to Live!” Center of Infinite Reflections, 144 Tripp Road, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Kristine Walsh, metaphysician and facilitator. For preregistration, phone 360582-0083.
Reduce, Reuse, Rethink & Nur ture Dir t Compost 0B5105271
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Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Fun ’n’ Advice
Tundra • “Cathy” has been retired; we’re auditioning this comic. Share your thoughts: comics@peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula Daily News
Kids should appreciate parents DEAR ABBY: My children think that “because their friends can,” they should be able to get, buy or do something. I encounter this problem often, especially when it’s bedtime. My children are 10 and 13, and they need to learn to appreciate the good parents they have because we don’t give in to all of their requests. Abby, any suggestions that may help us with this situation would be appreciated. Good Parents in Woodstock, Ill.
For Better or For Worse
Dear Good Parents: At 10 and 13, your children are old enough to understand the concept that not all families are alike. Because a friend of theirs enjoys a privilege or has something they don’t have does not mean that your children must. I wish you had been more specific about the problem that occurs at bedtime. If they are arguing about the hour, they need to understand that for them to perform well in school, they need a solid night’s sleep. It is well-known that sleepdeprived kids can’t learn. If your children are asking for “things,” then let me remind you that parents who grant a child’s every wish fail to teach that child one of life’s most important lessons: how to cope with disappointment. So please don’t feel guilty about drawing the line or asking your children how they plan to earn whatever it is they’re asking for.
Pickles
Frank & Ernest
Dear Abby: I am a 20-year-old college student who has found the man of my dreams. We have been dating for a year and a half and have been through a lot together. We both believe it is acceptable (and in our case, preferable) for a woman to be a stay-at-home mother and wife. I do not have a problem with having dinner on the table when he arrives home. However, the number of people who have deemed our views “unacceptable” and “disgraceful” is astounding.
Garfield
Momma
I was actually spit on by a Van Buren woman who accused me of being “the problem with women.” She called me “weak” and a disappointment to womanhood across the nation. I’m so offended by her attack. Am I wrong in thinking it is fine for a woman to be taken care of by her husband? Should I feel the need to be a working mom and wife? Am I too traditional for modern times? Please help me to see the whole picture. Lucky Lady in Laramie
Abigail
Dear Lucky Lady: The personal attack on you was uncalled for, and the woman who spat on you was hardly a role model for liberated women across the nation. Whether you choose to try to juggle a marriage and a career is a personal decision. Not every woman is able to manage it successfully. That said, many households in the U.S. are headed by single women, and it usually wasn’t a matter of choice. That’s why it’s so important for women to complete their education before being married and to be qualified for a career should the need arise. And it’s also why having a prenuptial agreement in place before heading for the altar is advisable. While it isn’t wrong to think it is fine for a woman to be taken care of by her husband, the truth is it doesn’t always work out that way. And it couldn’t hurt you to have a few years of work experience before starting a family — just in case. –––––––– Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via e-mail by logging onto www.dearabby.com.
The Last Word in Astrology By Eugenia Last
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Don’t look for trouble or more responsibilities. Vacation plans can be made but don’t go over budget or you will not enjoy your holiday. Size up a situation at work but don’t take action just yet. 3 stars TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Someone may try to twist your words. Be ready to clarify exactly what you mean. Good fortune will come your way if you do the best job possible. Don’t let a pushy competitor steal your thunder. 3 stars
Rose is Rose
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Take a look at your financial situation and budget well. Now is not the time to be loose with your cash or too generous with others. Refrain from verbally responding to a situation before having all the facts. 5 stars
Elderberries
Dennis the Menace
dear abby
Doonesbury
face. A problem at home or with family may lead to additional responsibilities. Don’t be afraid to ask for help or to delegate jobs. 4 stars VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You’ll be faced with a judgment call that will influence your residence and domestic life. Don’t be too hard on someone having trouble concentrating on what’s important to you. Bad memories will haunt you if you don’t come to terms with them. 3 stars LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Don’t limit what you can do because you don’t feel motivated. Push a little harder to accomplish your goals. You have too much going for you to hide it away in a dark corner until you feel more personable. There is nothing you cannot master if you put your mind to it. 3 stars
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Take on a new hobby or pick up a new skill that will make you more marketable. Strain to obtain anything that will give you an edge over the competition. Don’t let negativity take over. 2 stars
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Get involved in something that excites you. A creative outlet will do you a world of good and will help you decide what you want to do next in the real world, as well. You don’t need structure, you need playtime. 4 stars
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Trust in your own assessment of any situation you
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don’t let your imagination get the better of
The Family Circus
Now you can shop at www.peninsuladailynews.com!
you. Look at the facts before you go off on a tangent and make a fuss over nothing. Emotional upset is apparent, along with sudden changes. Listen, observe and learn from the past so you don’t make a mistake you’ll regret. 2 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Making a move before you are ready will lead to confusion. A past partner will want to touch base. Before you decide to get together, recall why you don’t see more of this person and consider whether or not it’s a good idea. 2 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A reserved approach to festivities will ensure that you head into the new year in good financial standing. Don’t let anyone guilt you into buying something you don’t need. Trust your instincts. 5 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Don’t let an impulsive move someone makes cause you to follow suit. A change will lead to an interesting new friendship with someone who has plenty to offer. Handle your current situation responsibly. 3 stars
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2010
C5
Peninsula Pe ninsula MARKETPLACE Reach The North Olympic Peninsula & The World
IN PRINT & ONLINE
Place Your Ad Online 24/7 with Photos & Video PLACE ADS FOR PRINT AND WEB:
Visit | www.peninsulamarketplace.com Call | 360.452.8435 | 800.826.7714 | FAX 360.417.3507 IN PERSON: PORT ANGELES: 305 W. 1ST ST. | SEQUIM: 150 S. 5TH AVE #2 | PORT TOWNSEND: 1939 E. SIMS WAY
SNEAK A PEEK •
•
T O DAY ’ S H O T T E S T N E W C L A S S I F I E D S !
P.A.: Lg. 1 Br. $560. Now accepting pets. 4020 Newell Rd. 360-452-4524.
Adult care home in Sequim has a private room available. Best care at best rates. Call Wild Rose at 360-683-9194 31 Help Wanted 32 Independent Agents 33 Employment Info 34 Work Wanted 35 Schools/Instruction GRAND OPENING! NOV. 30TH. HANDCRAFTED ITEMS, JEWELRY, CLOTHES, GLASS WORK, QUILTS! DRAWINGS GIVEN AWAY ALL WEEK! TUES THRU SAT 10AM TO 5PM. 803 CARLSBORG RD #D 360-681-7655. ART CONSIGNERS WANTED & BIRD HOUSES.
23
Lost and Found
FOUND: Cat. Gray, obviously someones pet. McComb Road and Old Olympic Hwy. area. 683-6350 FOUND: Cat. Orange & white, neutered male, long hair, orange spots on face. Has been lost a long time. Call 360-457-0832 FOUND: Cat. Shorthaired male tabby. Black/brown stripes, white chest & paws. Very friendly. 7th & Francis, P.A. 916-276-0121 FOUND: Cat. Tortoise shell. Taylor Cutoff Road area, Sequim. 683-5414 LOST: Cat. Adult long-hair grey calico tortoiseshell. Missing since 11/23. Area of Cedar and 7th, P.A. 461-2099 LOST: Necklace. Silver with cross, Nov. 20th, Port Angeles High School. 477-4483
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Personals
SHIH-TZU: 3 mo. old Wonderful housemale, healthy, play- cleaning. Experiful. $300/obo. enced, references. 582-9382 Call Esther 775-9513
22 Community Notes 23 Lost and Found 24 Personals
22 Peninsula Classified is here to lend a helping hand. Computers, vehicles, jobs, real estate, pets… you name it!
Adult Family Home RN Homecare near Sequim has a private room available. Dementia and elder care, respite. Competitive prices. 683-1967. For the thief who stole many items from my car on 3rd street, I have video cameras placed outside my house and I know who you are. Please return my belongings or I will report the evidence to the police department.
SELL YOUR HOME IN PENINSULA CLASSIFIED 1-800-826-7714
SANTA’S GIFT Santa is still trying to find that special country lady, close to height/weight proportionate who wants that life full of love, togetherness, being best friends and a partner that she has never had before. What is inside is what counts. No smoking, no drugs. Santa has that special gift that has been waiting for the right lady for sometime and he will keep looking until that special lady comes into his life. White male, 60, 6’, height/weight proportionate, nonsmoker, brown hair, hazel eyes, beard, excellent health, who is very affectionate, romantic, caring, giving from the heart, down to earth, loves the outdoors and animals, home life, sense of humor. Honesty and respect is very important also. Santa has that special gift just waiting to be unwrapped by that right country lady that wants a life full of love that will grow every day. santa@olypen.com
31
Help Wanted
Adult care home in Sequim needs a caregiver on weekends. (4) different shifts. Call 683-9194. AIDES/RNA OR CNA Best wages, bonuses. Wright’s. 457-9236. DRAFTS PERSON. Skilled in mechanical, structural and electrical 2D and 3D drafting using AutoCad and/or Solidworks with 5 years relevant experience. Working knowledge of mechanical engineering. Full-time position with benefits for manufacturer of industrial refrigeration systems. Email resume to info@imspacific.com or fax 360385-3410. HOME HEALTH DEPARTMENT SERVICE REP Knowledge of home health equipment/ retail sales experience required. Fulltime position, varied shifts, some weekends, with benefits, wage DOE. Apply in person at Jim’s Pharmacy, 424 E. 2nd St., P.A. EOE. LABORER: License/ transportation needed. 683-9619 or 452-0840. LEGAL ASSISTANT Full -time, for personal injury law firm. Strong phone, typing and grammatical skills required. Case mgmt. experience a plus. Drop off or mail resume to 601 S. Race St. Suite A, P.A. RCA/CNA Looking for a great place to work? Go no further! Contact Cherrie, 360-683-3348
ROOFER: Experienced, valid license, own transportation, wage DOE. 683-9619/452-0840 TAX PREPARER CPA or EA with active license for Tax Season. Sequim. Call Kathryn at 681-2325 TAXI DRIVER: Parttime, nights. Must be at least 25, clean driving record. Call 360-681-4090 or 253-377-0582
34
Work Wanted
ADEPT YARD CARE Weeding and mowing. 452-2034
WHY PAY SHIPPING ON INTERNET PURCHASES? SHOP LOCAL peninsula dailynews.com
Work Wanted
Hannah’s helping hands. Great worker, reliable, efficient, and timely. Will clean your home for the holidays and help to hang decorations too. Working in Joyce, Port Angeles, and Sequim. Please call Hannah Hope at 360-775-1258 HOLIDAY HELPER Lights, decor, gifts, etc. 360-797-4597. House Cleaning- Professional cleaning service, owner for over 10 years. $20/hr *See my online ad with photo* Excellent local references. 360-797-1261 home. 360-820-3845 cell. Ask for Julie. HOUSEKEEPING + $13 hr. your supplies. 457-2837
Sewing. I Sew 4U Hemming, curtains, alterations, any project. Don't wait! Call me today! Patti Kuth, 360-417-5576 isew4u.goods.officeliv e.com I'm Sew Happy! VHS to DVD copying services. Call Nancy 360-774-0971 Winterize lawns, rake leaves, etc. 797-3023 Wonderful housecleaning. Experienced, references. Call Esther 775-9513
51 Homes 52 Manufacured Homes 53 Open House 54 Lots/Acreage 55 Farms/Ranches 57 Recreational 58 Commercial Publisher’s Notice The Fair Housing Act makes it illegal to advertise any sale or rental of real estate with preference, limitation or discriminatory language based on race, color, religion, sex, age, national origin, handicap or familial status. Also, local laws forbidding discrimination in real estate ads prohibit discrimination based on marital status, political ideology, sexual orientation or a renter’s qualification for subsidy support. The Peninsula Daily News will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Housing for the elderly may be exempt from the Fair Housing Act if specific criteria have been met.
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TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507 VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM OR E-MAIL: CLASSIFIED@PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM DEADLINES: 4:00 the weekday before publication. ADDRESS/HOURS: 305 West First Street/P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays CORRECTIONS AND CANCELLATIONS: Corrections--the newspaper accepts responsibility for errors only on the first day of publication. Please read your ad carefully and report any errors promptly. Cancellations--Please keep your cancellation number. Billing adjustments cannot be made without it.
51
Harrison Sold His Ford In The Peninsula Classifieds. And you can sell your car in the Peninsula Classifieds even if you’re selling your Chevy and your name is Chase.
Homes
A GREAT OPPORTUNITY Sunland for less than $200,000. Comfortable, easy to live with floor plan. Cozy fireplace for those chilly evenings. Great kitchen and dining area combo for easy living. All appliances included. $195,000. ML131039/251993 Cath Mich 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
6A113352
360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714
4C235382
We’re here to meet your everyday needs!
Community Notes
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Community Notes
Monday - Friday 8AM - 5PM
classified@peninsuladailynews.com
5000900
HOME HEALTH RCA/CNA DEPARTMENT Looking for a great ADEPT YARD CARE SERVICE REP place to work? Weeding and mowing. Knowledge of home Go no further! 452-2034 health equipment/ Contact Cherrie, retail sales experi360-683-3348 BIKE: 18 speed ence required. Fullwomen’s, light time position, varied blue, includes helshifts, some weekmet, bike/car rack, ends, with benefits, pumps and wage DOE. Apply in padded seat. $50 person at Jim’s Phar- SCOOTERS/TREADcash only. 417macy, 424 E. 2nd St., MILL-2 PACESAVER 3545 leave mesP.A. EOE. SCOOTERS $950 sage. Old English Sheepdog each (battery chargers included), Brittany: Beautiful, Puppies. Purebred, WESLO FOLDUP house trained, great non-papered, DOB TREADMILL with with kids, very lov- Oct 2, very social- wheels $150, all like ing, 8 mo old male. ized, very smart, new. 457-4837. playful, adorable fluff Scott Adams balls. Both parents 477-9266 on site. 3 males $300 For the thief who stole ea., 3 females $350 many items from my ea. 360-775-4182. car on 3rd street, I have video cameras Olympic Restaurant Equipment Inc. placed outside my Black Friday sale house and I know extended!! who you are. Please Monday Nov 29th return my belongings through SEQUIM AREA or I will report the Saturday Dec 4th BEAUTIFUL evidence to the Store hours: CRAFTSMAN-BUILT police department. 9am till 5pm FARMHOUSE Give the gift of music. Coolest Kitchen Store 4 Br., 2 ba, modern on the Peninsula! Guitar instruction by kit., fplc., sun rm., Open to the public!! Brian Douglas. gar., fenced yard. 51 Dryke Rd. Sequim. 360-531-3468 Bright and spaPhone 360-582-1050 cious. No smoking GMC: ‘97 4WD. Runs or pets. $1350 plus good, 140K mi. dep. Call 360-387$3,000. 683-4401. 4911 for appt. to view. ONE MONTH FREE RENT with 12 mo. SNOW TIRES: (4) mounted 205/70/14 lease! Neat and Toyo studless, 80% clean 2 Br. mfd tread. $300. home in town. 683-9294 W/S/G, W/D inc. New upgrades GRAND OPENING! TREADMILL: Gold’s $625. 360-582-1862 NOV. 30TH. HANDGym brand, 10 speCRAFTED ITEMS, ed, up to 10 percent P.A.: 1 Br., $500 mo. JEWELRY, incline, barely used, 1st, last, dep. By CLOTHES, GLASS apt. too small. $200. appt. 452-4409. WORK, QUILTS! 425-686-8537 DRAWINGS GIVEN WANTED: Cemetery PONTIAC: ‘97 SunAWAY ALL WEEK! niche/plot (for infant) fire. Great condition. TUES THRU SAT 10AM TO 5PM. 803 $3,000/obo. 582-3813 in any of the 3 local CARLSBORG RD PS2: Playstation 2. cemeteries. 417-7009, msg. #D 360-681-7655. Like new, 2 conART CONSIGNERS trollers, memory Wii: Hardly used, all WANTED & BIRD card, 39 games, accessoreis includHOUSES. some player guides. ed. Wii Fit Plus and $225/obo. 452-6351. Balance Board. HOUSEKEEPING + $200 cash only. $13 hr. your supplies. REVOLVER: US Arms 417-3545 leave Abilene 45 Colt, rare. 457-2837 message. $750. 681-0814.
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Office Hours
Homes
A PLACE TO HANG YOUR STOCKINGS Best entertaining floor plan around with a well planned kitchen and fantastic entertainment center in the living room. You’ll love it and so will your friends. Lots of storage for your toys in the oversized garage plus detached double garage/ workshop. $409,000. ML250601 Pili Meyer 417-2799 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY ACREAGE IN TOWN Charming 4 Br., 2 bath home on acreage in town. Nice updates with great features. Cozy and country describes this formal dining room area with separate living room and family room. In addition to the carport with storage, it has a 3 bay detached garage with over 1,300 sf. Minutes from downtown. $329,900. Jean Irvine 417-2797 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY BEACH YOURSELF Water views, beach and tidelands access (rights). 2 Br., 2+ bath. Bonus room, 1,732 sf, 2 car garage, master with private deck, french doors, hot tub. Come and FEEL what this home has to offer. $369,000. ML250446. Chuck Murphy and Lori Tracey 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East
91190150
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2010
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Homes
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BEST OF BOTH Close to town but with acreage, 3 Br., 2 bath, 1,808 sf home on 1.02 acres close to central Sequim. Single story, cedar siding, heat pump, two car garage plus RV garage/workshop. $250,000. ML252323 Steve Marble Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 683-3900, 808-2088 Colonial home on a very private 6.32 acres. Great unobstructed view of the Olympic Mts. Wonderfully landscaped including a near one acre pond stocked with bass and perch, fire area, concrete patio, ornamental trees, fruit orchard and much more. Beautifully designed home with the master suite on the main floor, open concept and a gourmet kitchen. $735,000. ML250581/43085 Terry Neske 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A.
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Classified 51
Homes
COUNTRY HAVEN Do you need a new and large 3 car garage? A newly restored historical cabin? A nice 3 Br., 2 bath home on 2+ acres? A private setting with a year around creek? This is it, look no further. Located not too far from the casino and Sequim Bay. $299,000. ML251651 Becky Jackson 417-2781 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY DUPLEX - SELLER FINANCING Duplex on 0.21 acre private lot. Built in 1975, each unit has 768 sf, 2 Br., 1 bath. Very stable rental history with longterm tenants. New roof in 2004. Seller financing possible. $215,000. ML250464. Marc Thomsen 417-2782 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY
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Homes
ESCAPE TO BLACK DIAMOND Just minutes from town, fantastic 4 Br., 2 bath on 3+ acres. 2,128 sf, recently treated to a tasteful kitchen update, new paint inside and out plus windows. MABD with walk-in closet and jetted tub in MABA. Large Detached shop all nicely landscaped with evergreens and fruit trees. $259,500. ML251628. Alan Burnwell 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East FANTASTIC VIEWS Strait, city lights, Victoria and Mount Baker. Vaulted cedar tongue and groove ceilings, skylights, fireplace with propane insert and two free standing propane stoves, separated MABD. Large wood deck off family room. RV parking with dump, water and electric. $397,000. ML251615. Karen Kilgore 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East
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Homes
GREAT OLDER HOME Located in Sequim, this home features 2 Br., 2 baths, 2 living rooms both with fireplaces, covered patio with ramp to the home, large detached 2 car garage/shop with alley access and a fenced in back yard. $148,000. ML251950. Tom Blore Peter Black Real Estate 683-4116 HOME ON 2 ACRES 1.96 cleared acres with small barn/ workshop, 2 garden sheds. House has had some recent updates. There is 111’ of Dungeness River frontage. This property would be a wonderful investment or starter home. $219,900. ML250991. Linda Ulin 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East
51
Homes
"In-Town" Mini-Farm. 4 bedroom, 1+ bath home on 1.08 acres. Fenced pasture, mt. view, greenhouse, chicken coop, detached garage. Carport. 8x24 deck. Mature fruit trees. Appliances convey. New roofs/heat pump and MUCH more! $210,000. Contact Dave at 360-670-8260 or weissguy60@yahoo.c om
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51
Homes
NEAR THE WATER Nice 2 Br., 2 bath home. Great room has a freestanding fireplace where you can stay warm and cozy as you watch the ships go by via the partial water view. Master Br. is very large and has a sliding door that goes out to the front of the house. Walk in closet is very large and there is also an office/den. $165,000. ML252339/153095 Dave Stofferahn and Heidi Hansen 477-5542, 477-5322 COLDWELL BANKER TOWN & COUNTRY NEW CONSTRUCTION Experience stunning architecture and design in this 3 Br., 2 bath custom built home in a superbly planned residential community in Port Angeles. $234,900. ML252334/152434 Don Fourtner 461-5948 COLDWELL BANKER TOWN & COUNTRY
Peninsula Classified 360-452-8435
51
Homes
P.A.’S BEST KEPT SECRET Have you ever dreamed about living on a boat, a lakeside retreat or mountain top? Do you crave seclusion, saunas and relaxing dips in a hot tub? Looking for a place with city conveniences, elbow room and a quirky country feeling? Then this is the home for you! NW Contemporary with solar design features. Open concept floor plan with many nooks and crannies. Vaulted wood ceilings, sauna, hot tub, professional grade shop and unbelievable privacy on nearly a half-acre of land. $223,900. ML250920. Dick Pilling Carroll Realty 457-1111
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NORTHERN LIGHT Backing onto one of SunLand’s common area green belt, the view and light coming in to this home are wonderful. 3 Br., 2 bath, with living room AND family room. $189,000. ML251645. Jane Manzer 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East PARKWOOD HOME 2 Br., 2 bath 1,998 sf home. Master Br. with sitting area. Oversized 2 car garage with work bench. Enclosed patio and landscaped yard. Large corner lot. $130,000 ML251593/108036 Deb Kahle 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
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Homes
SALTWATER VIEW Single story 4 Br., 2.75 bath, gourmet kitchen elegance on one floor! Bamboo floors, 3 car garage, bonus room and beautiful grounds! Beach Club membership, too! $399,000. ML55633. Bryan Diehl 360-437-1011 Windermere Port Ludlow SEAMOUNT ESTATES In the premier west side neighborhood, this 2 story contemporary home has 4 Br., 2.5 bath, a large family room, formal dining and living rooms. With vaulted ceilings, exposed staircase, hardwood floors and a newer heat pump. $289,000. ML231193. Linda Debord 452-3333 PORT ANGELES REALTY
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51
Homes
FAIRWAY VIEW HOME Beautiful single level townhome, generous sized rooms throughout. Updated kitchen. Extra deep 2 car garage (golf cart/ shop). $314,500. ML129689/251966 Brenda Clark 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND Step across the threshold and back in time to the days of opulence. This beautifully restored Victorian will take you back to days when rooms were ample and homes were comfortable places to gather. Three porches, seven gardens, a dining room big enough to serve 15, a two-story shop with water view. . . just begin the list of amenities. Priced below value. $385,000. ML250558/42161 Doc Reiss 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A.
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Homes
STATELY ELEGANT HOME 3 Br., 2.5 bath on .43 acre lot in SunLand. Granite counters and cherry cabinets in kitchen. Master suite opens to nice yard. Covered tile patio and gazebo. 3 Car garage with 1,296 sf finished loft. RV bay and shop. $650,000 ML93595/251378 Team Schmidt 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND STRAIT VIEW Main living area, guest area with kitchen and bath. Wood burning fireplace, built-in sound system, bar with sink, and refrigerator, and wraparound deck. $498,800 ML117675/251737 Tom Cantwell 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
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Homes
SUNLAND VIEW CONDO 3 Br., 1.75 bath condo. Heat pump and wood burning fireplace, unobstructed water view and wraparound deck. Enjoy SunLand amenities. $175,000. ML252064/165857 Team Topper 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND THE PRICE IS RIGHT This clean and neat 2 Br. single wide manufactured home on .57 acres is a sweet deal. Appliances are included and the lot is landscaped with tall evergreens and easy access to town. $98,000. ML252309. Kathy Brown 417-2785 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY
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51
Homes
Lovingly restored Cherry Hill Victorian. 3 Br., 2 bath + cozy guest cottage and shop. $238,000. 360-457-6845 Well maintained duplex 2 Br., 2 baths each, carport and great storage space. Units have been well maintained and have had good rental history. $214,900. ML251403 Jennifer Holcomb 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. Well maintained Manufactured home on .45 acres. Fully fenced yard, sunroom off back porch, 2 car detached garage close to stored and bus line. New roof on both garage and home. $150,000. ML250465/34906 Jennifer Felton 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A.
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Homes
P.A.: Cute home, 2 Br., 1.75 ba, wood stove, big garage, ramp, nice yard. $95,000. 360-452-2758, 360-775-7129 WANT TO BUY home in Monterra community. 681-8536.
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Lots/ Acreage
A beautiful property in Port Angeles. For sale $168,000. Located just minutes from town off of Mt Angeles Road. The 4.77 acre parcel is surrounded by mountains, nice homes and the natural beauty of Port Angeles. Septic installed, electric hook up pd, city water. www.portangelesprop.com or 360-460-0572
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2010
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Lots/ Acreage
FANTASTIC VIEWS OF DISCOVERY BAY! Gorgeous building lot in Diamond Point, paved and maintained county streets, site registration for conventional septic. Underground utilities, protective CC’Rs, community water, and beach access. $169,000. ML251198. Dianna Erickson 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East
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Lots/ Acreage
DESIRABLE MERRILL ESTATES 2 ready to build, 1+ acre parcels with beautiful mountain views. Established, upscale neighborhood with homes on acreage and green belt areas. $129,000 each. Alan Barnard 461-2153 WINDERMERE P.A. ‘G’ IS FOR GOBBLE GOBBLE Now that I have your attention, let me introduce you to this private, beautifully treed 2.45 acres in a very, very quiet area just minutes from downtown. Drive right into the middle of the parcel! Phone and power in at the road. Work off your holiday feast on the walking trail surrounding property. $64,500. ML251010. Jace Schmitz 360-452-1210 JACE The Real Estate Company
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IN YOUR FACE MTN VIEW Gently rolling 5-acre parcel in settled neighborhood of nicer homes. Electric and phone at road; needs septic and well. Fantastic, inyour-face mountain view and possibly some “peek-a-boo” views of the Strait from southmost part of property. Fully fenced for larger animals (trails nearby). Possible owner financing with substantial down and good credit. $125,000. ML251287. Carolyn and Robert Dodds 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East
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Lots/ Acreage
INDUSTRIAL ZONING Level 22+ acre parcel with mountain view located on the west side of Port Angeles. Close proximity to the airport, Hwy 101 and the truck route. Sellers will consider owner financing or a lease option. 2 Phase power to the property. For more photo’s and information, please visit http://www.windermere.com/tid265507 $650,000. ML241915. Kelly Johnson 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. PRIVATE SETTING High bluff waterfront. Great privacy and unobstructed views of the Strait. 330’ of frontage of high bank. Water share available through Crescent Water Assoc. ML251816. $172,000. Paul Beck 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A.
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ACROSS 1 Roe source 5 Scrape, cat-style 9 100 kopeks 14 Geographical extremity 15 Little suckers 16 Matriculate 17 Turow memoir subtitled “The Turbulent True Story of a First Year at Harvard Law School” 18 The “Habanera” from “Carmen,” e.g. 19 Blunt, as reality 20 One debating the unpopular side 23 Washing aid for pupils 24 Blood bank fluid 25 “Hold on __!” 27 Stew 31 Healer using magic 36 “Man oh man!” 37 Out of kilter 38 Dove murmur 39 About 1,609 meters 40 Game system played with gestures 41 Uncredited author 45 Long-haired cat 47 Part of a family business title 48 Pitching miscues 51 Where AMZN stock is traded 55 Wee-hours work period for 20-, 31- and 41Across? 58 Japanese cartoon genre 59 Oklahoma tribe 60 Naysayer 61 Deadly 62 Zip (along) 63 Chick’s sound 64 Head lock 65 At __: arguing 66 Messes up
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Lots/ Acreage
RARE FIND Beautiful acreage in Agnew, with breath taking views. Bring your house plans. In Sequim School District, wonderful community. $199,000. ML56475/250847 Kim Bower 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND SELLER TERMS Nice private parcel between Port Angeles and Sequim. 1.46 acres with PUD water and power in at the road. Manufactured homes OK. $55,000. ML250880. Harriet Reyenga 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. SEQUIM LAND WANTED Must support 2 horses. 505-281-1591. TRULY UNIQUE This 35 acres property was approved for almost 40 lots at one time. With gentle topography, stunning water views, city utilities on two sides, and zoning for several lots per acre, this could represent the single best investment/development property on the market in Sequim at this time! $79,950. ML252353 Brody Broker 360-477-9665 JACE The Real Estate Company WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR? Bring your ideas and get started building your home with beautiful views of the Olympic Mountain, minutes to amenities of Sequim or Port Angeles, and close to Discovery Trail. Water, power and phone already on property. Site built or manufactured ok. $53,900. ML251546. Chuck Murphy and Lori Tracey 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2010
Apartments Unfurnished
CENTRAL P.A. Clean, quiet, 2 Br. in well managed complex. Excellent ref req. $700. 452-3540.
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By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle –– horizontally, vertically, diagonally, even backward. Find them and CIRCLE THEIR LETTERS ONLY. DO NOT CIRCLE THE WORD. The leftover letters spell the Wonderword. ENGLISH TEAROOMS
P A T T E P M U R C R E A M P By Mark Feldman
DOWN 1 Fine porcelain 2 Sweetheart 3 Naproxen, commercially 4 Epicurean delight 5 Held firmly 6 Turkish bread? 7 Fatty __ 8 Make, as baskets 9 Fireman, sometimes 10 Wild 11 Sassy kid 12 Folk tales and such 13 “Benevolent” fraternal member 21 Having abundant vegetation 22 Thereabouts 26 Chanel of fashion 28 Nincompoop 29 Burrow indicator 30 Pretty pitcher 31 Guitar effect 32 Triumphant cry Apartments Unfurnished
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11/30/10
P.A.: Really large 2 Br., 1 ba., $625, 1st, last. No pets. 452-1234.
Duplexes
P.A.: Clean 2 Br., garage. $725 month, deposit. 452-1016. SEQUIM: 2 Br., 1 ba. $725, dep and credit check 360-385-5857
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Houses
2 Br., 2 bath. Clean, great kitchen w/mtn view in P.A. W/D. No smoking/pets. Ref req. $800. 457-1392. CENTRAL P.A.: 2 Br., 1 ba, 606 S. Laurel, references required. $700. 457-6600. Clean, furnished 1 Br. trailer with tip out, near beach, util. incl. $650. 928-3006. EAST P.A.: 3 Br., 2 bath, 5 acres, mtn./ water view. Horses ? $1,200. 477-0747.
JAMES & ASSOCIATES INC. Property Mgmt. HOUSES IN P.A. 1 br 1 ba......$500 1 br 1 ba......$525 2 br 1 ba......$650 2 br 2 ba......$800 3 br 2 ba......$950 3 br 1.5 ba..$1100 HOUSES IN SEQUIM 2 br 2 ba......$925 2+ br 2 ba....$950 3 br 2 ba....$1100 3 br 2 ba....$1250
360-417-2810
More Properties at www.jarentals.com
ONE MONTH FREE RENT with 12 mo. lease! Neat and clean 2 Br. mfd home in town. W/S/G, W/D inc. New upgrades $625. 360-582-1862
F O T E E N E L E G A N T G S
www.wonderword.com
IDDEA (c)2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
33 Math course 34 Business orgs. 35 Little ones 39 Form incorrectly 41 Covers, as a driveway 42 Robust 43 Worldly seven 44 Messenger molecules 46 White House family
Houses
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Spaces RV/ Mobile
P.A.: Lovely historic home, fully remodeled, immaculate, 3 Br., 2 ba. $1,100 mo. 417-9776 P.A.: Water view 3 Br., 2 bath, 2 car garage. $1150/mo. 452-1016 Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com
SEQUIM AREA BEAUTIFUL CRAFTSMAN-BUILT FARMHOUSE 4 Br., 2 ba, modern kit., fplc., sun rm., gar., fenced yard. Bright and spacious. No smoking or pets. $1350 plus dep. Call 360-3874911 for appt. to view.
A L S M D R A E I U K D O P P
E F I A O T T B Q U Q N E R N
L L L T I S M E N U Q C I C L
K A S P A C E N I F I N O R I
S V S T E N O C S A C R A Z D
R O L R A P H H L E N E K R Y
H R X A L E R E S E R V E Y T
11/30
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Christmas quilts for sale. Christmas and everyday quilts, queen/king size. $300 each. Homemade, hand quilted, machine washable. Phone 683-6901. 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79
Appliances Furniture General Merchandise Home Electronics Musical Sporting Goods Bargain Box Garage Sales Wanted to Buy
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Furniture
BEDROOM: Black lacquer dresser, armoire, king headboard, mirror. $200/ obo. 797-7311 COFFEE TABLES: 2 matching, 1 large, $50/obo and 1 small, $40/obo. 681-4429 or 417-7685. DINING TABLE: With 4 chairs, blonde finish nice set. $150/ obo. 681-4429 or 417-7685. ENTERTAINMENT CENTER Large, very sturdy, light colored oak. Plenty of room for a large television with two big storage drawers underneath, plus a side cabinet with three shelves and glass-front door. $175/obo. 360-775-8746
SEQUIM: Lg. unfurnished room. $350 incl. util. 457-6779.
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WEST P.A.: 4 Br, 2 ba, no smoking. $1,000, $1,000 sec. 417-0153
Share Rentals/ Rooms
CARLSBORG: 1 room male. $300, internet, W/D. 206-227-9738. SEQ: 2 Br., 1 bath, living room, kitchen. $500. 683-2017. 110 Green Briar Ln, off Priest Ln.
Spaces RV/ Mobile
CASH NOW $ Need to rent pvt, RV site w/all hook-ups. New RV. 670-6265.
General Merchandise
BATH CHAIR: Goes down into water, lifts up out of water. $650. 360-681-0942.
PLAACA
REESOI Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Answer: Yesterday’s
“
”
IT
(Answers tomorrow) ANKLE BOUNCE STIGMA Jumbles: BASSO Answer: The high roller left the casino with a small fortune because he — LOST A BIG ONE
General Merchandise
CASH FOR: Antiques and collectibles. 360-928-9563
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER Pine armoire style. Priced reduced. $75. 808-1767. MISC: Twin electric bed, $200. 2 piece armoire, $100. 360-683-4401. Rocker/Recliners Almost new, 2 matching, gray-blue. $300 ea. 681-2282. SOFA: Micro fiber suede sectional with chaise lounge and ottoman, 68x100x 132, 5 matching pillows, sage green color, stain guard, bought new $2,600, sell for $800. 461-4622 SOFA: Mini sectional, red, less than a year old. $300/obo. 417-2047
SUNLAND HOME FOR LEASE. 3 Br., 3 ba, 6th Fairway, hardwood floors, 2 car gar. $975 mo., 1st, last, dep. Pets neg. 681-6890.
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PROPERTIES BY LANDMARK 452-1326
P.A.: By college, view, 3 Br., 2 ba. $1,150, lease. 457-4966.
P.A.: Furnished 2 or 3 Br. Weekly or monthly. 360-417-1277. www.pacr.biz
49 Onetime capital of Japan 50 Filled up 52 Restaurant patron 53 Following 54 Wax removers 55 Growl 56 Ceremony 57 Country way 58 Toward the rudder
Commercial Space
P.A.: 4 Br., 1 bath. Remodeled. $895, 1st, last. 452-1234.
P.A.: Cute 1 Br. nice area, recently remodeled, no smoke, small pet ok w/dep. $675. 452-4933.
11/30/10
BBQ GRILL: Large propane, with side burner, works good. $20. 681-4429 eves or 417-7685 weekdays.
P.A.: 3 Br., 2 bath, garage, nice area, $950. 452-1395.
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M F C S T L I E I N E E R G G
©2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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P.A.: Quiet and clean. 1 Br. $540. 206-200-7244
A O S I A T N E R T L E M O N
LAFAT
P.A.: 3 Br. + office, views, 1.5 ba, wood fireplace, new carpet, deck, garage, great views. $995. 360-775-7129 360-452-2758
P.A.: Lg. 3 Br., 2 ba, 1,800 sf luxury apt. $900, dep. Section 8 qualified. 452-1010.
© 2010 Universal Uclick
R E Q B Y C L A S S Y O K O I
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
P.A.: 1 Br apt, no pets/ smoking. $600 incl. basic utilities, W/D. 565-8039
P.A.: Lg. 1 Br. $560. Now accepting pets. 4020 Newell Rd. 360-452-4524.
D U R T H S I T I R B K R U D
by Mike Argirion and Jeff Knurek
RV SPACES: $375 mo., incl. W/S/G, WiFi, Cable. 461-6672.
P.A.: 2 Br., W/D, no pets/smoke. $675, 1st, last, dep. Available Dec. 417-5137.
E E R I T U A L B A R O N D D
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
EAST P.A.: Small 2 Br. mobile. $500. 457-9844/460-4968
P.A.: 1 Br., $500 mo. 1st, last, dep. By appt. 452-4409.
H A N D M A D E G L U D N I U
Solution: 9 letters
Antique, Baron, Bench, British, Castle, China, Classy, Cozy, Cream, Crumpet, Decor, Dessert, Drink, Duke, Earl, Elegant, Fine, Flavor, Green, Grey, Handmade, Herbal, Hospitality, Iced, Indulge, Leaf, Lemon, Lord, Menu, Milk, Mosaic, Parlor, Party, Pinky, Prince, Pudding, Queen, Quiche, Quirky, Relax, Reserve, Ritual, Salad, Scone, Special, Store, Taste, Tranquility Yesterday’s Answer: New Jersey
Monday’s Puzzle Solved
BIG, apts. $625-650, Near WM, new carpet. 417-6638.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
NEW BIBLE Jumble Books Go To: http://www.tyndale.com/jumble/
C8
CREDIT CARD MACHINE Like new. Paid $600. Asking $400. 681-3838 DRESSES: 3 nice prom dresses size small, like new worn once, call for description. $30 each. 452-9693 or 360-417-3504 LEONARD COHEN CONCERT TICKET Tues., Nov. 30 Save On Center Victoria. $98. Call Diane 460-2546 MISC: Singer featherweight 221 sewing machine with case, excellent condition, $400. Exercise system, Weider Flex CTX, $125. Bike, Turner, recumbent, $500. 683-0146. MOVING BOXES Used, cardboard, different sizes, incl. wardrobe, good condition. Blue Mountain Road. $200 all. 360-928-3467 Olympic Restaurant Equipment Inc. Black Friday sale extended!! Monday Nov 29th through Saturday Dec 4th Store hours: 9am till 5pm Coolest Kitchen Store on the Peninsula! Open to the public!! 51 Dryke Rd. Sequim. Phone 360-582-1050 SCOOTERS/TREADMILL-2 PACESAVER SCOOTERS $950 each (battery chargers included), WESLO FOLDUP TREADMILL with wheels $150, all like new. 457-4837.
AQUARIUM: 20 Gal, w/pump/filter/hood/li ght, no heater. $30. 477-3603 AQUARIUM: 20 gal. w/pump and some accessories. $20. 928-1148 BABY SWING: FisherPrice cradle swing. $30. 461-4846. BAR STOOLS: (4) Oak, with upolst. back/seat. $100. 582-9222 BICYCLE CARRIER For RV ladder, used 1x. $35. 683-9882. BICYCLE RACK Revolver style 2 bike, for 2” receiver hitch. $200. 457-5002. BICYCLE: Girls 20” Malibu Stardom, red with white stripes. $35. 360-224-7800. BICYCLE: Girls 26” mountain, 21 speed, Motiv. $40. 477-3603 BICYCLE: Mens 26 road, Schwinn Varsity 14 sp. Needs seat/ post. $20. 477-3603. BICYCLE: Raliegh Chill Mt Bike, nice shape, 18 speed. $50. 457-5002. BIRD CAGE: 15”x20” x23”, white wire, w/plastic bottom. $10. 477-3603. BOAT: 20’ Bayliner with trailer. $100. 928-3440 BOOKS: (7) Harry Potter hardback, full set. $69. 360-224-7800 BOOKS: Current novels, known authors. $3 ea or all for $100. 565-1062 BOOTS: Alpina Xcountry ski womens 9 1/2, mens 9 1/2. $15 ea. 681-7568. BOOTS: New, LL Bean, waterproof leather, men’s 9. $40. 683-5284 BUFFER: Craftsman 9”, 2400 random orbits, new in box. $20. 457-5002. CASSETTE STEREO (5) Quality home units. $20 ea. 452-9685. CHANDELIER: Or entry light, large glass. $50. 582-1280.
WANTED! Your Consignments!!! Artisan Creative Consignment is wanting your handcrafted Art, household and clothing!!! Reasonable consignment! Call for details! Michele at 360-461-4799, Heather at 360-775-4283, or business line at 360-681-7655
FREE: Hot tub, you haul. (360) 452-6349.
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General Merchandise
COMFORTER SET Barney twin, with sheets, good shape. $15. 452-9693, eves. SEASONED FIREWOOD $185 cord. 360-670-1163
CHANGING TABLE Lt. brown 2 shelf, no pad. $20. 477-3603. CHEST WADERS Hodgeman, boot on type, size 11, never worn $90. 460-2280 CHRISTMAS DISHES Waechtersbach. $165. 379-0962. CRIB MATTRESS Lightly used, in good shape, bedding set. $30. 461-4846. CROCK POT: 4 qt, removable ceramic, new. $10. 457-9498. DESK: Wood, good shape! Came from Ft. Lewis. $30/obo. 461-4846. DINETTE SET: Maple, oval w/4 chairs. $40. 928-1148 DOLLS: Barbie ‘95, ‘96 Holiday series, mint, in box. $25 ea. 457-5935 DRILL PRESS: Shop Fox, .5” bench top model, like new. $150. 452-7179. ENTERTAINMENT CENTER Pine armoire style. $75. 808-1767. FISH TANK: Saltwater, 80 gal., pump, lights, stand, extras. $100. 477-1264. FREE: 42” Toshiba Theatre view HD TV. 452-7179, 460-2601 FREEZER: 21 cf Hotpoint upright. $75. Owner downsizing. 461-9287 FREEZER: Chest, 3 yr old., 7.5 cf, perfect condition. $60/obo. 360-457-9773 FURNACE: Armstrong, electric, new. $175. 683-8032. GAS CANS: (2) jerry cans. $30 ea. 460-6796 GOLF CLUBS: $5 ea. 360-452-1277 GPS: Garmin (Nuvi 260W) Like new. $75. 360-457-5079 HOT TUB COVER Approx 85” square. $50. 457 3917. HUMIDIFIER: Kenmore, whole house, like new. $35. 452-1277 TV: Emerson, 27”. $35. 460-6213.
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General Merchandise
TABLE SAW. JET JWTS-10, 2 fences, router wing w/Bosch insert, blade guard, dust containment box, 2 inserts. $375.00. 681-2524
www.peninsula dailynews.com
Internet Adapter Linksys USB. $30. 460-6796 JACKET: Columbia, girls 6/6X, good condition. $15. 457-5299 JACKET: North Face, insulated gortex, women’s large, like new. $75. 683-5284. “LaFuma” Folding deck chair/reciner. New $150. Sell $50. 683-2743 MATTRESS: Twin, framed, very new. 10”x 39”73”. $135. 928-0167 MIRRORS: RV extension, fits ‘99 F250. $30. 460-2280. MISC: Bar stool, $25/obo. Desk chair, $15/obo. 928-3464. MISC: Camp Chef, 3 burner range, $50. Tent, large, used once, $50. 683-2743 MISC: Crib, $60. Table with 6 chairs, $70. 417-3825. MISC: Overstuffed love seat and chair, blue/white. $15ea./ $25 both. 477-3603. PANTS: New Solstice ski pant, size L, paid $129, sell for $60. 457-5002
SNOW CHAINS: H/D sizes 245/75-17-5, 165/75-16, and others. $35. 460-4488. STAR TREK: VHS. 10 TV shows, 3 movies, $10. 683-0146. STEREO RECEIVER Powerful, “technic”. $50. 452-9685. SUMP PUMP: .25 hp, electric w/20’ hose. $35. 582-1280. TABLE SAW: Dado adjustable blade w/Craftsman saw. $45. 457-4971. TELEPHONE RADIO 1956 Country Belle $30. 928-9005. TIRES: (2) 7x35 R14 studded on wheels. $70. 360-379-4134. TIRES: (2) 7x35 R15 studded on wheels. $70. 360-379-4134. TIRES: (2) Snow, 175SR14. $30. 417-1593 TIRES: (4) Snow on 6m 5 hole rims. P205/75R15. $80/obo. 457-5935. TIRES: (4) Snow, F7814. $40. 417-1593 TIRES: Studded P 175/70R13, on 5-lug rims. $100. 775-6865
PORTA-POTTY: New unused, for boat or camping. $25. 504-2401
TRUNK: 100 Years old, original leather straps, hardware. $100. 683-7841.
Queen mattress, box spring, frame & bedding. $100. 360-681-4471
TV: Sony 13” CRT, very good cond. $35. 681-8592
RECEIVER: Denon AV surround receiver. $100/obo. 452-7179.
URINAL: Men’s white vitreous china. $75. 683-8032
RECLINE: Brown fabric La-z-Boy, well used. $25. 477-3603.
Vintage Typewriter. 1936/37 Underwood manual typewriter $20. 928-9005.
RIMS: (4) 16” stock 8 lug w/caps, taken off when new. $125. 683-7841
WALKER/LEG REST 4-wheel and handle. $20/obo. 928-3464.
SEWING MACHINE Antique, domestic rotary and table. $50. 477-3603
WASH STAND: Reprodution. Oak, mirror, pitcher and bowl. $150/obo. 681-4244
SKIIS: Fischer SC4, w/Tyrolia 290 bindings, Lange boots. $100. 683-9882.
WHEELS: (4) Alum, for 15” tires, five hole fit 80’s Chev S10. $25 ea. 457-5092.
SKIS: Rossignol cros country with poles and boots. $65. 683-0146
WOOD HOOP. 3’ 2” Diameter, wrought iron. $40. 477-3603.
TV: Sharp, 26”. $30. 460-6213
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General Merchandise
Sunvision tanning bed model K-24SH, excellent shape. $500. 461-0721. VACUUM: Rainbow SE plus accessories and rug shampooer. $450. 670-6230.
WOOD STOVE: Minnesota barrel for shop. $25. 457-4971
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General Merchandise
Wii: Hardly used, all accessoreis included. Wii Fit Plus and Balance Board. $200 cash only. 417-3545 leave message.
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
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Home Electronics
PS2: Playstation 2. Like new, 2 controllers, memory card, 39 games, some player guides. $225/obo. 452-6351.
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Musical
ACCORDION: 19” keyboard, 120 base, electric. Excellent condition. Buy a $3,000 accordion for $500. 683-7375. CELLO: 3/4 size Kohr, bow, soft case, stand good condition. $350. 457-3666. Give the gift of music. Guitar instruction by Brian Douglas. 360-531-3468 VIOLIN: 3/4, nice shape. $150. 452-6439
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Sporting Goods
BIKE: 18 speed women’s, light blue, includes helmet, bike/car rack, pumps and padded seat. $50 cash only. 4173545 leave message. GENERATOR: Honda 1,000 watt. $450. 360-385-7728 GUN: Custom Arisaka 300 Savage sporter. $300. 452-2029. REVOLVER: US Arms Abilene 45 Colt, rare. $750. 681-0814. S&W M&P AR15 M4 .223 flat-top rec. with carry handle site 16” ch barrel, ch gas key, carrier, 6 pos stock, bayo lug, mil spec comp, case, 30 rd mag, fact warr new in box. $970. 683-7716 TREADMILL: Gold’s Gym brand, 10 speed, up to 10 percent incline, barely used, apt. too small. $200. 425-686-8537
78A
Garage Sales Central P.A.
VENDORS WANTED: For Dec. 4 Flea Market/Arts & Crafts, Campfire bldg. 928-0213, 8-10 a.m.
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Wanted To Buy
1ST AT BUYING FIREARMS Cash for the Holidays. Old or new, rifles, shotguns, and pistols. 1 or whole collection. Please call, I will bring cash today. WA State Firearms Transfer paperwork available. 681-4218. BOOKS WANTED! We love books, we’ll buy yours. 457-9789 WANTED: 22 cal. rifle. Call 683-1413 WANTED: Cemetery niche/plot (for infant) in any of the 3 local cemeteries. 417-7009, msg.
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Food/Produce Pets Farm Animals Horses/Tack Farm Equipment
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CAGES: (2) large wire cages for birds, rabbits or ? $10 each. You haul or we will haul with gas money included. 681-4429 eves or 417-7685 weekdays. DACHSHUND Mini puppies. 8 weeks old. $300 each. 360-796-3290 FISH TANK: Saltwater, 80 gal., pump, lights, stand everything included. $100. 477-1264 FREE: Chinchilla to loving, approved home. Healthy, not as much time as he deserves. All accessories. 640-0355. FREE: Kittens. (2) 4 mo. old brothers, one long hair, one short, black, very friendly, abandoned by neighbors. Please help! 683-0050. LHASA APSO: Puppies. Ready Dec. 9. Tuxedo and Parties. 3 girls, 3 boys. $450. 477-8349 Old English Sheepdog Puppies. Purebred, non-papered, DOB Oct 2, very socialized, very smart, playful, adorable fluff balls. Both parents on site. 3 males $300 ea., 3 females $350 ea. 360-775-4182. PUPPY: Chihuahua female, to loving home. $200. 808-1242 SHIH-TZU: 3 mo. old male, healthy, playful. $300/obo. 582-9382 TOY POODLES: 8 wk. old black male, 1 6 mo female tri-color phantom. $550 ea. 477-8349
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BEAUTIFUL LAB PUPPIES Vet checked, 1st shots. Females, $250. Males, $200. 417-0808 Brittany: Beautiful, house trained, great with kids, very loving, 8 mo old male. Scott Adams 477-9266
Farm Animals
CALL DUCKS: $25 each pair. 683-3914. HAY: Alf/grass. $5.00 bale. Grass, $4.00. In barn. 683-5817. Weaner pigs, nice Duroc cross, winter price $55. Also young large blue butt boar, $150/obo. 775-6552
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Heavy Equipment/ Trucks
GMC: ‘91 Top Kick. GVWR 26,180 lbs, 19,466 mi., 16’ bed, dump-through lift gate, Fuller 10 spd. $19,995. 683-2383. SEMI-END DUMP ‘85 Freightliner, Cummins 400BC, 24 yard end dump, excellent condition. $35,000/ obo. 417-0153. TRACK LOADER 125E, I-H Dresser, 1,900 hrs. $11,000. 683-3843
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Marine
ALUMALITE: Drift boat, very clean, great bottom, oars, trailer included. $3,200, make offer. Must sell due to health. 681-0717. BAYLINER: ‘02 2452 Classic with ‘05 EZ Loader Trailer. 250HP, Bravo 2 outdrive, micro, stove, refrigerator, marine head, masserator, heated cabin, radar, fish finder, VHF radio, GPS, (2) Scotty electric down riggers, Yamaha 8T kicker motor, all safety equip., trim tabs, hot water, cruising canvas, fresh water cooling. $28,500/obo. 360-683-3887 BAYLINER: With 70 hp Evinrude. Fully equipped with EZ Loader trailer, lots of extras. $4,000. 683-4698 BOSTON WHALER Offshore 27 (1991), well equipped for ocean fishing, dual 225 hp Optimax engines (400-500 hrs.), 12” Raymarine chart plotter displaying radar, GPS, digital fish finder; Yamaha electric start and tilt kicker, dual electric downriggers, aluminum trailer, moored Neah Bay last 3 yrs., now stored West Bay Boat Sequim. $27,500. Garry at 683-7176
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Marine
OLYMPIC: ‘94 22’ Resorter. Alaska bulkhead, ‘06 225 Merc Optimax. ‘07 9.9 4 cycle Merc Bigfoot. Large fishing deck, solid and fast. 84 gal. fuel. $14,500/ obo. 683-4062 or 530-412-0854 RUNABOUT: 16’ and trailer, Sunbrella top. $350/obo. 477-0711. SAIL BOAT: 1932 42’ Frank Prothero fishing scooner, 50 hp Isuzu diesel, Paragon gear, solid construction, needs TLC. $3,000. 360-468-2052 SAIL BOAT: 1940 34’ Rhodes 6 meter cruising sloop, heavy construction. $2,500. 360-468-2052 SANGER: ‘76 Super Jet. Built 455 Olds, Hardin in water exhaust, seats 5, upholstery good, dog house fair, turnkey ready. $2,500/obo. 681-3838
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Motorcycles
BMW: ‘94 K1100RS. Exceptionally clean bike, 41,000 miles, ABS brakes, 4 cylinder engine, stainless steel exhaust, Corbin seat, saddlebags, no road-rash, blue paint. For information call Ed. 360-681-2334 HARLEY DAVIDSON ‘02 883 Hugger. 6K, like new, maroon. $4,800. 457-4020. Harley Davidson 1993 Wideglide, custom wheels, lots of extras. $15,000. 477-3670 HARLEY: ‘05 Soft Tail Deluxe. Glacier white, vivid black, 2,000 mi. 1450 ST1 EFI, bags, chrome foot boards, sport rack, back rest, lots of chrome, much gear included garaged. $17,500. 460-0895.
Horses/ Tack
MARE: 6 yr old quarter horse mare. Been there, done that! Performance, rodeo, equestrian team, been hauled everywhere. Flashy. Very sweet, no vices. $6,000 negotiable to good home. 360-477-1536 msg.
Farm Equipment
GLASTRON: ‘08 GT 185 Bowrider $16,500. Must see. Like brand new. 67hrs of fresh water only use on Vortec V6 with Volvo Penta outdrive. Excellent package. Stereo and depth finder. Will throw in lots of extras so ready for tubing and skiing. Great family package. 360-461-0813.
BOX SCRAPER Rankin 72”, blade and 6 shanks, for 3 point hitch. Model BBG72J. Never used. $600. 360-301-2690 Job loss forces bottom price. Must sell to pay loan. 1979 Fiberform 26' Baja Flybridge Galvanized EZ-Loader trailer (1999 dual axle) Chevy 350 engine with rebuilt Rochester Quadrajet 280 Volvo outdrive. $2,500. 360-504-2298 PST In Port Angeles. 91 Aircraft 92 Heavy Equipment/Truck 93 Marine 94 Motorcycles/Snowmobiles 95 Recreational Vehicles 96 Parts/Accessories 97 Four Wheel Drive 98 Trucks/Vans 99 Cars
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Pets
Pets
Heavy Equipment/ Trucks
DUMP TRUCK: ‘00 Western Star. 3406E, 500 hp, does not use oil, no leaks, good Dyno report, cruise, air, jakes, air ride cab, power mirrors/ windows, new 16’ box and wet kit, and hitch for pup, exc. inside/out, all new brakes. $42,000/ trade. 460-8325.
LIVINGSTON: Model 12-T Resort. Seats, 2 motors, console, galvanized trailer. $6,800. 681-8761. MALIBU: ‘96 Response. 514 hrs., heater, shower, custom Bimini top. $11,500/ obo. 928-9461. RARE PANGA 26’ BOAT FISHERMAN’S DREAM Magic Tilt Trailer & essentials for this beautiful ride. New floor & engines overhauled. 2 bimini tops, custom boat cover, gps, radio, etc. In Sequim. $18,500/obo. 707-277-0480
HD: ‘05 Electra Glide Ultra Classic. Black cherry/black pearl, 10,850 miles. One owner, garage kept. Screamin' Eagle and Tall Boy package. never down or in rain. Excellent condition! $15,900. 360-461-4222 HD: ‘06 1200 Sportster. 7K miles, mint, extras. $7,900. 452-6677 HONDA: ‘79 CB750K. Complete bike, rusty, for parts or restoration. $400/obo. 360-457-6174 HONDA: ‘85 Goldwing Aspencade GL 1200. Black and chrome, like new condition, always garaged. $4,000. 417-0153. HONDA: ‘99 XR400. All stock, low hrs., good tires, new graphics. $1,700. 461-1202 KAWASAKI: ‘03 KX125. 2 stroke, exc. cond., hardly ridden, must go. $2,200/ obo. 452-5290. KAWASAKI: ‘00 Vulcan 800. Mustang seat, also has stock seat, K&N air filter, new chain and rear sprocket, 29K miles. $2,000. 206-913-7906
• 2ADS PER HOUSEHOLD PER • Bargain BoxAds will run as WEEK space permits Mondays & • Private parties only Tuesdays • 4 lines,2 days • No firewood or lumber • No pets or livestock • No Garage Sales
KAWASAKI: ‘09 Ninja EX250. 300 mi., bright green new helmet, visor, can email pics. 1 owner. $4,000. 477-6973.
QUAD: ‘06 Suzuki Quad Sport Z250. Like new. $2,600 firm. 360-452-3213. RHINO: ‘09 Yamaha 700. Fuel injected. Great condition. Low miles. $9,500/obo. 417-3177
Ad 1
SCOOTER: Aero Honda 80, runs well. $450. Ken at 928-9410
URAL: ‘03 Wolfe. 1,000 mi. $3,200. 460-0895
Name Address Phone No.
Bring your ads to:
Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com
3A181257
Peninsula Daily News Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 305 West 1st St., Port Angeles Port Angeles, WA 98362 or 150 S. 5th Ave. Ste 2, Sequim NO PHONE CALLS or FAX to: (360) 417-3507
SUZUKI: ‘05 Boulevard (S50). Very nice, well maintained. Gray, saddlebag hardware, great bike for smaller people. 14K miles. Garage stored. $3,500/obo. 460-0012 or jbgoode1017@hotmail .com SUZUKI: ‘98 Maurder. 800cc, 1 owner, FMC, D&H pipes, custom seat, cruise, sissy bar, billett mirrors, 15K. Great entry cruiser. $2,500. 360-457-6510 TRIUMPH: ‘05 Bonaville. 1,000 mi., extras. $5,500. 460-6780
97
4 Wheel Drive
CHEV: ‘02 Club Cab. Long bed. 4WD. Loaded. 44,000 mi., $15,500. 452-8713.
98
Pickups/Vans
FORD: ‘79 Flatbed. Runs good. $2,000/ obo. 683-0940.
YAMAHA: ‘03 YZ85. Runs great, son outgrown, $800. 360-457-0913 or 360-461-9054
95
Recreational Vehicles
‘03 Newmar Dutch Star. 40’, 3 slides, 6 speed Allison Trans. micro/conv. oven, 3 burner cooktop, sliding shelf pantry, 2 Sony flatscreen TVs, Sony AM/FM/CD, VCR, Sat. Dome, computer/printer table, light oak interior, washer/dryer hookup, 6 kw generator, leveling system, solar battery charger, low mileage (22k), gently used, non smokers. $117,000. 360-683-3887
5TH WHEEL: '01 36' Cardinal by Forrest River. Fully equipped home. 3 slides, 3 axles, 2 AC, Trailaire pin box, hydraulic brakes, Alum rims. Retail $35,000 asking $26,000 w/ or w/o tow vehicle. 582-0803 5TH WHEEL: ‘88 25’ Alpenlite. $7,000. 457-4914
‘80 Prowler Travel Trailer. 20’. $2,500. With hitch. Sleeps 5, full kitchen, full bath. Tina 360-809-0836. CAMPER: 8’. $200/ obo. 683-2426. HERE’S THE DEAL Buy my 29’ Pace Arrow with 57K miles on it, general power pack, Monroe shocks, stabilizers, hydraulic levelers, air conditioning, 16’ awning. Price $3,500 then trade on new bus for about $8,000 Ken at 928-9410. MOTOR HOME: ‘05 Winnebago Journey 39K. 27,000 mi., loaded, 3-sides, 350 Cat diesel, 6.5 Onan generator. $115,000. 460-0895 MOTOR HOME: ‘89 21’ Winnebago Warrior. New tires and refrigerator. $8,000. 360-681-7614 MOTOR HOME: ‘92 23’ Itasca. 30K, good condition. $11,500. 452-2162. MOTOR HOME: ‘92 37’ Infinity. Beautiful country coach. Home on wheels. Immaculate inside and out. Great home for snow birds or for travel. Has all the bells and whistles. Must see to appreciate. $40,000/obo. 460-1071 MOTOR HOME: ‘93 30’ Monterey. Loaded $9,500. 797-1625 MOTOR HOME: ‘94 28’ Minnie Winnie. Class C, good shape. $10,000. 457-8912, 670-3970
MOTOR HOME: ‘98 26’ Tioga Class C. Gen., A/C, kept in garage, V10. $15,500. 457-7097. MOTOR HOME: ‘98 30’ class C, Itaska Spirit. Ford V10, 35K miles, 14’ slide, sleeps 6, alum frame, new brakes/tires, mech. perfect, serviced, ready to roll. $20,500. 452-2148. TENT TRAILER: ‘07 8’ Rockwood. Very clean. $5,000. 360-452-5512 TRAILER: ‘06 26’ Jayco. Excellent condition, extras. Reduced price. $13,000. 477-3695. TRAILER: ‘72 Sportsmaster 20’ living space and tongue. Good condition. $3,000/obo. 775-7504 TRAILER: ‘05 Tahoe Transport Toy Hauler. 24’. Good condition. 4K Onan generator. $17,000. 417-3177.
96
Parts/ Accessories
SNOW TIRES: (4) mounted 205/70/14 Toyo studless, 80% tread. $300. 683-9294 TIRES/WHEELS: (4) Michelin all season (snow/mud) low miles, one season, 225/60/18, Dodge Charger wheels, 18” caps, lug nuts, polished. $1,000 for all, will separate. 683-7789
97
4 Wheel Drive
CHEV: ‘97 1/2 ton extended cab, 3 doors, short bed, 80K mi. $5,000. 406-381-9362
CHEV: ‘86 Suburban. Good condition. 3rd seat, extra full set wheels. Nice white paint exterior, tan interior. $2,500/ obo. 360-374-6409. CHEV: ‘88 S-10 4x4. As is. $1,000. 457-9292
CHEV: ‘90 Suburban 4 WD 2500. Low miles, auto, good tires, straight body 4WD, V8, clean inter, no rips, tow pkg runs great. Heavy bumper w/winch. $3,500. Forks 360-374-9512. DODGE: ‘02 Ram 1500. 85K miles, lifted, canopy, 5.9 V8, new tires. $12,000. 477-5556 FORD: ‘05 F-350 Lariat. 4x4 6.0 diesel, leather, LB, crew cab, fully loaded, great cond. $23,000. Todd 461-9566
FORD: Step Van. One of a Kind, Endless Possibilities, Solid. 40k on a thrifty Cummins diesel; great tires; new battery; no rust. Food truck? Contractor? RV conversion? Only $4,000/obo. 360-820-2157 GM: ’92 Gladiator conversion van. 350, auto, 140K, runs/ looks good! $3,500. 452-5522
MAGIC RAINBOW HAPPY BUS 1973 Volkswagon Transporter $1,500/obo Not Camper Style Runs, Some Rust. Call: 360-797-3951
FORD: ‘97 F150. 5.4, new tires, trans, batt. Clean. $6,500/obo. 360-681-2643 GET READY FOR WINTER All WD, great in snow, ‘99 Oldsmobile Bravada. Leather, loaded, 129K, exc. cond. $6,299. 928-2181, 461-6273 GMC: ‘97 4WD. Runs good, 140K mi. $3,000. 683-4401.
HONDA: ‘01 Passport. 79K mi., V6, auto, tinted windows, cd/am/fm, ac, airbags, runs well, good cond., new trans. from Midway, silver. $5,400/obo. 360477-1072 msg. or email: sjones.interest@gma il.com. ISUZU: ‘91 Trooper. Runs good, new tires. $1,500/obo. 670-6041 ISUZU: ‘98 Rodeo. 4x4, leather seats, sunroof, new trans., new tires. $4,000. 457-7766 or 452-2602 ext 2. NISSAN: ‘08 Frontier King Cab. V6 4x4, 24K mi., silver ext. matching canopy, bedliner, auto windows-locks, remote ent, cruise, CD, oversize tires, below KBB val of $20,425. Records avail., no accidents. Very clean. $18,600. Call 360-670-1400 TOYOTA ‘01 SEQUOIA SR5 V-8 automatic, 4x4. Third row seating, gray cloth. Nice, nice, nice! The Other Guys Auto and Truck serving the community since 1996! Military discounts! Lowest buy here pay here interest rates! $12,995. The Other Guys Auto and Truck Center 360-417-3788 TOYOTA: ‘96 4-Runner, SR5, loa-ded, gold and wood package, sunroof, Pioneer sound, 12disc changer, 154k miles, $7,000/obo. 360-417-0223
98
Pickups/Vans
CHEV: ‘89 1/2 ton. ‘350’ V8, auto, nice. $2,000. 681-7632. CHEV: ‘38 Pickup. All original, garaged, needs rear end. $15,000. Only serious buyers please. 457-3990, 775-1139 CHEV: ‘47 pickup. 5 window, 80% restored. Illness forces sale. $7,000/obo. 457-7097 CHEV: ‘84 S10 pickup. Excel. rebuilt motor. Good body. Needs paint job. $1,845. 360-6835682, 541-980-5210. FORD: ‘70 heavy duty 3/4 ton. Runs great, new tow pkg. $900/ obo. 417-3959. FORD: ‘78 F350. Super cab, trailer special, 460 C6, 3 speed auto. Call for added features. Best offer over $2,000. 360-302-0844 FORD: ‘90 F250. Ext. cab, long box, 48,660 mi., new HD service brakes, set up for 5th wheel, excellent condition. $5,500. 796-4929. FORD: ‘95 F150 XLE Ext cab, 8’ bed w/lockable lid, 66k, auto w/o/d, full power, 351 Winsor tow pkg, always garaged, very very clean, below book @ $6,000. 683-8133.
Cars
CHEV: ‘76 Suburban. 454, 143K, runs good. $800/obo. 360-681-2427
CHEV: ‘90 Cavalier. Auto, 2 door coupe. $700. 683-8249.
Classic Olds. 78' Olds Cutlass Supreme Brougham. 86,000 miles, V8, sunroof, garage kept. few minor parking lot dings. Excellent condition. Runs well. 1 owner. interior in excellent condition. $11,000/obo. 360-683-9770 DODGE: 93 Stealth RT. Great condition, only 2 owners, no accidents, 129K mi., AWD, 5 sp., all power, awesome stereo, CD changer and battery. $3,000. Chris 360-732-4514 FORD: 1929 Model “A”. Roadster, 10 footer. $17,500 firm. 681-5403
99
Cars
MERCURY: ‘91 Pacer. 140K mi., runs, looks good. $795. 681-8828
PLUMBING VAN: ‘02 Ford, job site ready, plus extra plumbing parts, 28K orginial mi. $20,000/obo. 360-385-2773 TOYOTA: ‘03 Tundra, 93,000 miles, V8, 4x4, access cab, leer canopy, great condition, $14,000/obo. Call 360-448-1440 for more details.
99
Cars
FORD: ‘90 Tempo. Runs great. 129K miles. 20-25 mpg. $900. 360-775-4854. FORD: ‘92 Crown Victoria. Runs and looks great, 83K. $2,800/ obo. 683-2542.
FORD: ‘92 Mustang Convertible. Awesome care for sale! White with white top, 85,000 original miles. $3,800/obo. Call Joe at: 360-683-3408 or 360-461-1619.
ANOTHER AWESOME CAR FOR SALE! FORD: ‘56 2 door post. Close to original, excellent condition, 2 tone paint green and white, Manual 3 speed, 6 cyl. $8,500/obo. Call Joe. 360-6833408 or 360-4611619.
HYUNDAI: ‘86 Excel. 4 door hatchback Only 55,000 miles, new exhaust, excellent gas mileage, runs great, in good shape. Only 2 owners (in family). $2,500/obo. 457-4866
BMW: ‘96 328i. 180K mi., new tranny, runs great, needs some body work. $2,700/ obo. 206-272-0220.
LINCOLN: ‘63 Continental. Partially restored, suicide doors, runs. $2,750. 457-0272
BUICK ‘02 LESABRE Only 46,000 miles and loaded, including 3.8 liter V6, auto, air, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, locks, mirrors, and seat, AM/FM CD and cassette, front and side airbags, alloy wheels, remote entry, and more! Expires 12-4-10. $6,995 We Finance Dave Barnier Auto Sales 452-6599 davebarnier.com
MAZDA: ‘07 3. 5 sp., low hwy mi., charcoal/black interior, Thule roof rack, GPS, call for questions/test drive. $11,000/obo. 206-375-5204
BUICK ‘04 RENDEZVOUS All WD, V6, 3rd row, leather! Loaded! The Other Guys Auto and Truck setting the standards in buy here pay here! Offering 90 days same as cash! Military Discounts! $9,995. The Other Guys Auto and Truck Center 360-417-3788 BUICK: ‘97 LaSabre. Excellent codntion, 1 owner. $4,700. 683-6051 after 4 p.m. BUICK: ‘99 Regal. Leather interior, moon roof, good condition. $2,800. 457-9038 CADILLAC: ’92 Sedan Deville. 144K, 4.9L, auto, runs/ looks good. $2,750/ obo. 452-5522. CADILLAC: ‘92 SeVille. Exc. shape, good mpg, new tires. $3,000/obo. 452-5406 CADILLAC: ‘66 Sedan Deville. All original, 63K mi. $3,800. 360-775-5327 CADILLAC: ‘85 Eldorado Commemorative Edition. Excellent condition, spoke wheels, loaded, no rust, always garaged, beautiful blue, 30K miles on new motor; 112K total miles. $2,900. 360-477-4817 CADILLAC: ‘91 Sedan Deville. Good condition, loaded. $900/obo. 457-3425. CHEV: ‘84 Corvette. Silver, 5.7 liter V8. $5,800. 437-7649. CHEV: ‘00 Camaro. V6, red, T-tops. $6,500/obo. 775-1821 CHEV: ’70 Chevelle. Big block wagon, new paint, tires, more. $5,500/obo. No reasonable offer refused. 417-1896. CHEV: ‘72 Vega GT 350 4-bolt main, 335 hp, 350 trans, B&M built, 25K since mods, ‘71 Vega wagon parts car too. $7,500/obo. 774-0915 CHEV: ‘75 Corvette Stingray. Must sell, 350, matching #s, 149k original miles, rebuilt turbo, 400 tran, rebuilt rear end, all new suspension, front and rear sway bar, turbo hood and stock hood. $6,500 or make offer. 670-1440
MINI COOPER: ‘05. White, 103,000 miles, Runs/drives great, no accidents, has had all scheduled tune-ups & oil changes, very clean interior, 2 new tires, highway miles, GREAT MPG. $9,995. Call Angela. 360-460-4802 NASH: ‘50 Statesman. Needs work, runs great, extra engine and tranny. Must sell. $4,995 or make offer. 681-0717 OLDS: ‘90. Runs great. Looks great. $1,200. 460-1183. PONTIAC: ‘’04 Grand Prix. Low mi., 52K, very clean, must see. $8,000/obo. 457-9332 PONTIAC: ‘97 Sunfire. Great condition. $3,000/obo. 582-3813 PONTIAC: ‘97 Sunfire. Great condition. $3,000/obo. 582-3813 PORSCHE: ‘02 Boxter S. 56K miles, 6 spd, black on black. $21,500. 461-9635.
MAZDA: ‘86 B2000, 5 sp, canopy, bed liner. $700/obo. 460-7974. MAZDA: ‘88 B2200. Runs good. $1,000/ obo. 582-7486.
FORD: ‘06 Expedition XLT. This expedition is in nearly new condition and has only 60,000 miles with lots of options. $16,500. Please call Sunday through Thursday. 360-460-6213 FORD: ‘88 F250 111K mi., 4x4. $3,000/obo. 808-5605
99
C9
CHEV: ‘88 Camaro. Project car, running, licensed, with ‘90 Camaro parts car. $1,200/obo. 928-3863
CHEV: ‘70 3/4 Ton. $850. 360-434-4056.
PARTING OUT: ‘89 Toyota Celica automatic. $5-$500. 683-7516
Ad 2
Mail to:
Motorcycles
KAWASAKI: ‘03 KLX 400. Very clean. Low miles. $2,500/obo. 461-7210
QAUD: ‘05 POLARIS PHEONIX 200. Red, automatic, approx. 5-10 riding hours, Like new $2,300. 360-460-5982 QUAD: ‘06 Eton 150. Low hrs. good condition. Daughter’s quad. $1,800/obo. 461-7210
RUN A FREE AD FOR ITEMS PRICED $200 AND UNDER
94
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2010
MERCEDES BENZ ‘97 C230. 122K, executive use only, very clean. $4,500/ obo. 582-1292.
PORSCHE: ‘72 914. Good condition, engine rebuilt. $5,800. 683-7965. SAAB: ‘94 900si. Must see. $900/obo. 452-5909 SUBARU: ‘07 Forester. 25,000 mi., perfect condition, under warranty. $16,750. 452-6014
SUBARU: ‘08 Legacy $15,250. Economical 2.5I liter 4-Cyc, A/C, cruise, tilt, AM/FM/ CD, Power Windows, Locks, Keyless Entry, Alloy Wheels, 34,250 miles, Balance of 5/60 Factory Warranty, Spotless Carfax Report, Non-Smoker, Spolier and Bug Gard. Great Condition! Call Mike at 360-460-0959 SUZUKI: ‘00 Grand Vitara. Exc. cond., 87K mi., very clean. $3,950. 775-1132. TOYOTA ‘03 AVALON XLS 4 DOOR The flagship of the Toyota line, V6, auto, air, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, locks, mirrors, and dual power seats, leather interior, power sunroof, front and side airbags, 4 wheel ABS and electronic traction control, alloy wheels, AM/FM CD and cassette, remote entry, and more! Extra clean. Expires 12-410. $10,995 We Finance Dave Barnier Auto Sales 452-6599 davebarnier.com TOYOTA: ‘05 Prius Hybrid. Black, new tires, under, 67K mi. $11,085. 928-9527.
MERCEDES: ‘29 Replica Gazelle. 10K miles, immaculate. $12,500/obo. 681-3339 MERCEDES: ‘99 230 SLK. 70K, blk/blk, compressor, S/C, HT convert. $11,900. 452-6677 MERCEDES: ‘74 280. Runs well. $500. 683-2436 MERCEDES: SLK 230 Kompressor. Hard top power convertible, loaded, priced to sell. $8,995. 582-9966 MERCURY: ‘00 Sable LS Wagon. 3rd seat, leather interior, sunroof, alloy wheels, new tires. $4,400. 360-460-0385 MERCURY: ‘07 Mountaineer. AWD, 4L V6, loaded, 7 passenger, tow pkg., excellent condition, 53K, $21,000+ KBB. $18,000. 530-4120854 or 683-4062.
101
Legals Clallam Co.
TOYOTA: ‘10 Prius. As new, save $4,000. $20,000. 452-7273.
TOYOTA: ‘03 Camry LE One owner, no accidents, well maintained, 4 cyl, auto trans, 95,000 mi. $7,250. 477-2183. TOYOTA: ‘89 Camry. $1,200. 928-9774. TOYOTA: ‘91 Corolla. 4 dr, 5 speed, good shape, runs good, 30+ mpg. $1,650/obo. 360-452-8788 VW: ‘75 Super Beetle. Fuel injected, runs good, 30+ mpg, nice paint, good tires, new floor pan, Pioneer stereo, CD player. Price reduced! $2,995/obo. 775-9648
101
Legals Clallam Co.
NOTICE OF ACTION Notice is given under the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA), RCW 43.21C.080, that the City of Port Angeles took the action described in (2) below on September 23, 2010. An administrative appeal challenging the adequacy of the EIS for that action was dismissed with prejudice on November 16, 2010. 1. Any action to set aside, enjoin, review, or otherwise challenge such action on the grounds of noncompliance with the provisions of chapter 43.21C RCW (SEPA) shall be commenced on or before December 21, 2010. Nothing in this notice modifies the requirement that appellants exhaust their administrative remedies before filing a SEPA appeal. 2. Description of agency action: Issuance of a shoreline substantial development permit and land use conditional use permit for the facility described in (3) below. 3. Description of proposal: Nippon Paper Industries USA proposes to construct and operate a new biomass cogeneration facility at its paper mill in Port Angeles, WA. A complete description of the facility is provided in the EIS. 4. Location of proposal: 1902 Marine Drive, Port Angeles, WA 98363 5. Type of environmental review under SEPA: A Final SEPA Environmental Impact Statement for the biomass cogeneration facility was issued by the City of Port Angeles on September 3, 2010. 6. Documents may be examined during regular business hours at: City of Port Angeles, Community & Economic Development Department, 321 E. Fifth Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362. 7. Name of agency, proponent, or applicant giving notice: Nippon Paper Industries USA Co., Ltd. 8. This notice is filed by: Gary Holmquist, Biomass Cogeneration Project Manager Nippon Paper Industries USA Co., Ltd. Date: November 18, 2010 Pub: Nov. 23, 30, 2010
C10
WeatherNorthwest
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Peninsula Five-Day Forecast Today
TonighT
Wednesday
Yesterday
Thursday
Friday
saTurday
High 47
Low 33
42/30
42/31
40/29
35/28
Rain.
Mostly cloudy with a passing shower.
Mostly cloudy with a passing shower.
Cloudy, chance of a little rain; chilly.
Partly sunny and chilly.
Mostly cloudy and chilly.
The Peninsula A cold front will bring rain and heavy mountain snow to the Olympic Peninsula today. Rainfall amounts will generally average an additional 0.25-0.50 of an inch across the Peninsula. Snow levels will fall from near 3,000 feet to 2,000 feet during the day. Snowfall Neah Bay Port totals will surpass 1 foot on the higher peaks. Weak ridging 47/31 Townsend is expected from tonight into Wednesday with nothing Port Angeles 44/34 more than an isolated shower. A storm system will pass 47/33 the region to the south, leading to more dry weather Sequim on Thursday; however, it will remain chilly.
Victoria 46/33
46/35
Forks 47/31
Olympia 46/32
Everett 45/35
Seattle 45/35
Spokane 30/25
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. © 2010
Marine Forecast
Rain today. Wind southwest 6-12 knots. Waves 1-3 feet. Visibility under 3 miles. Mostly cloudy tonight with a passing shower. Wind west 8-16 knots. Waves 1-2 feet. Visibility under 2 miles at times. Mainly cloudy tomorrow with a passing shower. Wind southeast 4-8 knots. Waves 1-2 feet. Visibility under 2 miles at times. Thursday: Mostly cloudy, chance of a little rain. Wind east 4-8 knots. Waves 1-2 feet.
LaPush
7:11 a.m. 7:39 p.m. Port Angeles 9:25 a.m. 11:13 p.m. Port Townsend 11:10 a.m. ----Sequim Bay* 10:31 a.m. -----
Full
Tomorrow
Ht
Low Tide
Ht
High Tide Ht
8.2’ 6.6’ 7.6’ 4.9’ 9.2’ --8.6’ ---
12:40 a.m. 1:39 p.m. 2:41 a.m. 4:52 p.m. 3:55 a.m. 6:06 p.m. 3:48 a.m. 5:59 p.m.
1.3’ 1.4’ 2.3’ 1.2’ 3.0’ 1.6’ 2.8’ 1.5’
8:02 a.m. 8:53 p.m. 9:59 a.m. ----12:58 a.m. 11:44 a.m. 12:19 a.m. 11:05 a.m.
8.6’ 6.7’ 7.7’ --5.9’ 9.3’ 5.5’ 8.7’
Thursday
Low Tide Ht 1:39 a.m. 2:41 p.m. 3:46 a.m. 5:33 p.m. 5:00 a.m. 6:47 p.m. 4:53 a.m. 6:40 p.m.
1.7’ 0.6’ 3.3’ 0.2’ 4.3’ 0.2’ 4.0’ 0.2’
*To correct for Dungeness Bay subtract 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
High Tide Ht 8:52 a.m. 10:01 p.m. 12:43 a.m. 10:33 a.m. 2:28 a.m. 12:18 p.m. 1:49 a.m. 11:39 a.m.
9.0’ 7.0’ 5.8’ 7.7’ 7.0’ 9.3’ 6.6’ 8.7’
Low Tide Ht 2:38 a.m. 3:39 p.m. 4:53 a.m. 6:13 p.m. 6:07 a.m. 7:27 p.m. 6:00 a.m. 7:20 p.m.
Dec 13
Dec 21
2.1’ -0.2’ 4.2’ -0.8’ 5.5’ -1.0’ 5.2’ -0.9’
City Hi Lo W Athens 73 64 pc Baghdad 80 55 s Beijing 51 34 s Brussels 28 17 c Cairo 83 63 s Calgary 30 14 c Edmonton 20 4 c Hong Kong 77 66 s Jerusalem 75 52 s Johannesburg 77 53 t Kabul 65 27 s London 34 28 sn Mexico City 77 41 pc Montreal 45 41 r Moscow 4 -4 c New Delhi 81 46 s Paris 32 27 c Rio de Janeiro 92 74 pc Rome 56 55 sh Stockholm 25 18 sn Sydney 74 68 t Tokyo 59 50 pc Toronto 49 32 r Vancouver 44 35 r Weather (W): prcp-precipitation, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Detroit 54/31
New York 56/54
Washington 60/53
Los Angeles 68/46 Atlanta 62/35
El Paso 47/18
Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice
Last
Dec 27
Chicago 44/22
Kansas City 36/20
Moon Phases First
Minneapolis 25/12
Denver 44/23
San Francisco 56/42
Sunset today ................... 4:23 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow ............ 7:43 a.m. Moonrise today ................ 1:42 a.m. Moonset today ................. 1:15 p.m.
World Cities Today
Yakima Kennewick 34/22 37/30
Today
Billings 28/25
Sun & Moon
Dec 5
Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Table Location High Tide
Seattle 45/35
-10s -0s
Shown is today’s weather.
Tide
National Forecast
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Statistics are for the 24-hour period ending at 4 p.m. yesterday High Low Prcp YTD P. Angeles 43 29 0.00 10.52 Forks 41 30 0.47 111.76 Seattle 44 36 trace 37.56 Sequim 42 29 0.00 8.82 Hoquiam 43 35 0.15 60.98 Victoria 44 35 0.05 28.19 P. Townsend* 43 38 0.01 14.46 *Data from www.ptguide.com
New
Port Ludlow 44/33 Bellingham 44/32
Aberdeen 52/35
Peninsula Daily News
0s
Houston 62/34 Miami 82/71
Fronts Cold
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.
Warm
Stationary 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s
National Cities Today
City Albuquerque Anchorage Astoria Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Bend Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Buffalo Charleston, SC Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Coeur d’Alene Corvallis Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit Eugene Fairbanks Helena Honolulu Houston Juneau
Hi Lo W 38 20 s 15 -7 s 48 34 r 62 35 t 56 55 c 58 55 r 42 25 i 28 25 c 14 -9 pc 37 28 sn 48 42 s 56 40 r 74 56 c 34 19 pc 44 22 sh 56 28 sh 31 27 sn 47 39 r 52 32 s 44 23 pc 36 15 pc 54 31 r 44 39 r -20 -38 pc 26 17 c 82 71 pc 62 34 s 33 20 sn
City Kansas City Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Philadelphia Phoenix Portland, OR Raleigh Reno Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Sioux Falls Sun Valley Washington, DC
Hi 36 48 48 68 82 44 25 56 64 56 48 32 82 64 59 60 46 68 42 54 40 30 64 62 56 24 24 60
Lo W 20 pc 32 pc 27 s 46 s 71 pc 23 r 12 sn 29 r 37 t 54 c 26 s 13 pc 63 t 42 s 54 sh 40 s 37 r 53 sh 26 c 34 c 24 c 23 c 31 s 46 s 42 c 5 pc 17 c 53 r
National Extremes Yesterday (For the 48 contiguous states)
High: 93 at McAllen, TX
Low: -17 at Bridgeport, CA
Now you can place your classified ad 24/7! Try our new Classified Wizard www.peninsuladailynews.com
Adopt a Pet
Clallam County
These pets, and many more are available for adoption. All pets adopted at the OPHS shelter have had their first vaccination and are entitled to a free vet health check.
Olympic Peninsula Humane Society
www.cchumane.com email: info@cc.humane.com
Peninsula Friends of Animals
www.safehavenpfoa.org
Welfare of Animals Guild
www.welfareforanimalsguild.org 0B5105202
Rex
Rusty
Beryl
Beverly
Precious
Location: OPHS
Location: WAg
Location: PFOA
Location: PFOA
Location: WAg
Lee Location: OPHS
Molly
Gunner
Rio
Danny
Topaz
Location: PFOA
Location: OPHS
Location: WAg
Location: OPHS
Location: PFOA V E T E R I N A R Y H O S P I TA L
We need foster homes for dogs!
COMPANION ANIMAL PRACTICE
THE PETSITTER 0B5105216
Welfare for Animals Guild
Owner Ute Dedmore
0B5105206
All Creatures
(Available 7 Days A Week)
Licensed - Insured Over 20 Years Experience
0B5105212
for more information call: 360-452-8192
Linda Allen, DVM Toni Jensen, DVM & Staff (360) 681-3368 289 West Bell St. Sequim
0B5105223
Temporary foster care needed. We supply all food, vet services, adoption services, all you provide is a Loving, Safe environment, before an adopted family can be found.
Professional Pet Sitting Service In Your Home (360) 928-3758
www.pacificnwvet.com
Avoid
unwanted holiday visits to the vet, don’t feed your pets holiday leftovers. Call us or The Olympic Peninsula Humane Society @ 457-8206
452-7686
261461 Hwy. 101, Sequim • 683-8003
0B5105230
0B5105227
Dennis L. Wilcox D.V.M.M.S. Andi R. Thomson D.V.M. Alex Nowacki D.V.M. Christina Wagner D.V.M.
We feature a wide variety of pet foods, toys, grooming supplies and accessories for all your pets.
0B5105220
160 DelGuzzi Drive Port Angeles
Your Ad Here
1
Doggie DAyCAre QUALiTy Treats & Toys
53 Valley Center Place (Across from old Costco) • Sequim • 360-681-5055
63 years of helping orphaned and abused animals on the Olympic Peninsula.
Call Jeanette 417-7685 or 1-800-826-7714 0B5105203
0B5105234
Most Premium Brands of dog & cat Food dried, canned, Frozen www.gointothedogs.us
Adopt a friend life!
Pet Lovers Read This Advertisement! Market Your Business to over 35,000 Potential Customers. Help Find Loving Homes for Homeless Pets on the Peninsula.
* Adoptions • Receiving * Lost and Found Assistance * Spay and Neuter Assistance * Animal Licensing * Microchip Clinics 360.457.8206 • www.CCHUMANE.com
2105 W. Hwy 101, Port Angeles, WA 93863
0B5105225
2
Friendly StaFF, BeSt PriceS
Olympic peninsula Humane sOciety