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Showers make brief return to Peninsula A8

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS April 4, 2016 | 75¢

Port Angeles-Sequim-West End

Eye on Olympia

The really old-fashioned way

Exiting senator pleased by deal But more funding work is needed BY MARK SWANSON PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Ethan Hickman of Olympia participated in a workshop on 11th century boat-building techniques this weekend at the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding in Port Hadlock.

Boat-building of Viking era studied in Port Hadlock Students experience working with tools from 11th century BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT HADLOCK — A group of shipwrights went back in time over the weekend as they learned boat-building techniques used in the 11th century by Vikings. “This may be the first time that Viking technology has been used on the West Coast of the United States,” said

instructor Jay Smith. “There has been a resurgence of interest in this work in Norway and the Arctic but no one’s done it here yet.”

Lapstrake boats At the three-day workshop that ended Sunday at the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding in Port Hadlock, 14 students learned how to build Nordic lapstrake boats, which were first constructed before the advent of sawmills. “People are learning how to use tools and their hands in a way that is still relevant today,” said Betsy Davis, the school’s executive director, as the work-

shop began Friday. “It’s been really exciting to see them really engaged in this process.” Students split logs into vertical grain (riven) planks with the use of hardwood wedges and turned them into finished planks with broad axe, draw knife, spokeshave and cabinet scraper. The students were taught two techniques: the creation of hardwood splitters and how to use them to turn large logs into planks for ship construction. The workshop didn’t tackle actual shipbuilding, a process that could take months depending on the design and the number of people involved, Smith said. TURN

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OLYMPIA — Overall, state Sen. Jim Hargrove is pleased with the supplemental budget approved in the special session that adjourned Tuesday. But the state senator from Hoquiam, who announced in March that he will not run for re-election this year, said he won’t regret being absent from deliberations on state funding of public education during the next session. The state Supreme Court has held the Legislature in Hargrove contempt with an ongoing $100,000-a-day sanction for failing to come up with new funding plan for the state’s public schools. As a senator who has been in the thick of budget discussions, Hargrove said the goal has been to reduce the part of public school education that has to be borne by local tax levies. The problem, he said, is that “there just isn’t room in the existing budget” to provide more money for schools without a tax hike. Sending more money to local schools without a tax hike would mean closing prisons or privatizing universities, he said. “If I’m concerned about anything,” he said, “it’s that they don’t rip apart the safety net” to satisfy the requirements of the Supreme Court McCleary decision on funding of public schools. “I’m always concerned that there would be unwise reductions in other areas, financially and safety-wise,” he added. TURN

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Park drops idea of closing 101 around lake Comment taken now on road rehab BY LEAH LEACH PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK — A draft document drops the idea of closing a 12.3-mile section of U.S. Highway 101 around Lake Crescent during rehabilitation of the roadway beginning next year, instead proposing two alternative plans of traffic delays over three years. The draft environmental assessment (EA) dismissed closing the highway entirely for any length of time after the National Park Service received public comment on preliminary alternatives broached last year.

alternatives now under consideration, said the draft EA about the highway used by some 2,500 Among the possible alterna- vehicles per day, including 500 tives was closing the lake stretch trucks that are primarily log of the highway entirely for 1.7 trucks. construction seasons — which are from March to November — or Public comment closing it for shorter periods of Public comment will be taken time. Traffic would have been through April 30. rerouted to state highways 112 Public meetings are scheduled and 113. in Port Angeles and Forks this Instead, construction will be month. They are: over a longer period of time — ■ Monday, April 18 — 5 p.m. three years — but less disruptive to 7 p.m. in the dining room at the to travelers, if one of the draft Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 document’s alternatives is E. Seventh St. Presentations will approved. be made at 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. “Closing the road (even during ■ Tuesday, April 19 — 4 p.m. the shoulder season) would have to 6 p.m. at the Rainforest Arts more impacts” than the two Center, 35 N. Forks Ave., in Forks.

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losing the road (even during the shoulder season) would have more impacts” than the two alternatives now under consideration, said the draft EA about the highway used by some 2,500 vehicles per day, including 500 trucks that are primarily log trucks.

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Presentations will be at 4 p.m. and 5 p.m. No time line was provided for the release of a final EA or for a final decision on the project. Rehabilitation work is slated to begin in 2017, but the schedule is still subject to change, according to Olympic National Park spokeswoman Barb Maynes. The proposed rehabilitation of the section of highway that wends through the park would include

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replacing sections of road bed, removing rock-fall hazards, resurfacing, replacing more than 44,000 linear feet of guardrail and replacing drainage structures and retaining walls. It also would include work on East Beach Road. Drainage structures would be replaced and safety and pavement conditions improved, the park service said. TURN

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INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 100th year, 80th issue — 2 sections, 16 pages

CLASSIFIED COMICS COMMENTARY DEAR ABBY DEATHS HOROSCOPE NATION PENINSULA POLL PUZZLES/GAMES

B5 B4 A7 B4 A5 B4 A3 A2 B6

*PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

SPORTS SUDOKU WEATHER WORLD

B1 A2 A8 A3


A2

UpFront

MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Tundra

The Samurai of Puzzles

By Chad Carpenter

Copyright © 2016, Michael Mepham Editorial Services

www.peninsuladailynews.com This is a QR (Quick Response) code taking the user to the North Olympic Peninsula’s No. 1 website* — peninsuladailynews.com. The QR code can be scanned with a smartphone or tablet equipped with an app available for free from numerous sources. QR codes appearing in news articles or advertisements in the PDN can instantly direct the smartphone user to additional information on the web. *Source: Quantcast Inc.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS (ISSN 1050-7000, USPS No. 438.580), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Black Press Group Ltd./Sound Publishing Inc., published each morning Sunday through Friday 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. Contents copyright © 2016, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER

Audit Bureau of Circulations

The Associated Press

Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

27th GLAAD Media Awards honors stars DEMI LOVATO AND Caitlyn Jenner are among the recipients of the 27th GLAAD Media Awards. The awards honor those who further GLAAD’s mission of ensuring that stories of lesbian, Lovato gay, bisexual and transgender people are heard through media outlets. Lovato is the recipient of the organization’s Vanguard Award, which she received from Nick Jonas during Saturday’s ceremony in Beverly Hills. The singer was chosen for her advocacy for accep-

tance of the LGBT community. Lovato has spoken about her late grandfather, who came out as gay in the 1960s, and filmed the music video for her son, “Really Don’t Care” at the L.A. Pride festival. Jenner’s E! Entertainment Television reality series “I Am Cait” was honored for outstanding reality program. Jenner, who was born Bruce Jenner, is sharing the honor with transgender YouTube personality Jazz Jennings, who has a TLC show “I Am Jazz.”

Black Girls Rock! Pop star Rihanna and TV mogul Shonda Rhimes were among the honorees at this year’s Black Girls Rock! event, where Hillary Clinton made an appearance and told the audience “my life has been changed by strong black women leaders.”

The Friday night event was taped at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark. The spe- Rihanna cial will air on BET on Tuesday. The Democratic presidential candidate earned cheers when she called black women “change makers and pathmakers and ground shakers.” “There are still a lot of barriers holding back African Americans and black women in particular, so a gathering like this filled with so many powerful, strong women is a rebuke to every single one of those barriers,” Clinton said. “All of our kids, no matter what zip code they live in, deserve a good teacher and a good school, a safe community and clean water to drink.”

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL SATURDAY’S QUESTION: Have you visited any of the North Olympic Peninsula’s farmers markets?

Passings By The Associated Press

GATO BARBIERI, 83, a saxophonist whose highly emotional playing helped expand the audience for Latin jazz, and whose score for the film “Last Tango in Paris” won a Grammy Award, died Saturday in New York. His death was confirmed by Jordy Freed, the vice president of marketing and communications for the Blue Note Entertainment Group, parent company of the Blue Note nightclub in Greenwich Village, where Mr. Barbieri often performed. Mr. Barbieri’s wife, Laura, told The Associated Press the cause was pneumonia. Leandro Barbieri was born Nov. 28, 1932, in Argentina and recorded 35 albums between 1967 and 1982. He earned the nickname Gato, which means “cat,” in the 1950s because of the way he scampered between clubs in Buenos Aires with his saxophone to make it to his next gig. “Music was a mystery to Gato, and each time he played was a new experience for him, and he wanted it to be that way for his audience,” Laura Barbieri said. “He was honored for all the years he had a chance to bring his music all around the world.” Though in poor health, Mr. Barbieri, still sporting his trademark black fedora, had been performing

Seen Around Peninsula snapshots WANTED! “Seen Around” items recalling things seen on the North Olympic Peninsula. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax 360417-3521; or email news@ peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure you mention where you saw your “Seen Around.”

monthly at the Blue Note. His last public performance was Nov. 23, Freed said. He first performed there in 1985. “He was a worldly free spirit, a really sweet man,” Freed said. “He really was a pioneer. He really helped pave the way for Latin jazz.” Last year, Mr. Barbieri received a Latin Grammy lifetime achievement award for a career that covered “virtually the entire jazz landscape.”

________ HAROLD J. MOROWITZ, 88, a boundlessly curious biophysicist who tackled mind-boggling enigmas ranging from the origin of life to the thermodynamics of pizza, died March 22 in Falls Church, Va. The cause was sepsis, his son Noah said. Trained as a physicist and a philosopher, Mr. Morowitz was inspired in his scholarly speculation by the writings of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, the mid-20th-century Jesuit paleontologist who developed the idea of the Omega Point, his term for a level of spiritual consciousness and material complexity toward which he believed the universe was evolving. Mr. Morowitz’s intellec-

Laugh Lines HILLARY CLINTON SAID Republicans are trying to act like President Barack Obama’s not still president. Also doing that: President Obama. He’s going to Cuba, doing the tango in Argentina. He’s basically checking off his bucket list. Jimmy Fallon

tual scope extended beyond the laboratory. He was a consultant to NASA on experiments conducted Mr. remotely on Morowitz the surface of Mars and inside Biosphere 2, the world’s largest enclosed ecosystem. He was best known for applying thermodynamic theory to biology, exploring how “the energy that flows through a system acts to organize that system.” In his book Energy Flow in Biology (1968), Mr. Morowitz examined how natural energy, in forms like lightning and heat, flowed through the antediluvian ocean’s primordial soup to create ecological systems that constituted life.

Yes No

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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

■ There were no fatalities in the Aldwell fire in December 1965 in Port Angeles. Also, there were 10 people on board the plane in the 1969 Fairchild airplane crash in Port Angeles. The eight passengers and two pilots were killed. Due to incorrect information provided to the PDN, details on the fire and the plane crash were incorrect in Alice Alexander’s Back When column Sunday on Page C3.

________ The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Leah Leach at 360-417-3530 or email her at lleach@peninsuladailynews.com.

Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News

1941 (75 years ago) A small fleet of surf boats, manned by 25 officers and men of the United States Army, will arrive [Port Angeles] from Olympia this afternoon to practice boat landing of troops in the surf on the north side of Ediz Hook, according to notification received by Mayor Harry H. Beetle. The boats, the number as yet unknown, are of a type built to carry on Army transports to be used to carry U.S. Army landing parties ashore, the mayor has been informed. Indiciations are that the boats will be here several days and Mayor Beetle acted as contact to make arrangements with Lieutenant D.B. MacDairmid, commanding officer of the

Coast Guard air base where the 25 men will be quartered during their stay.

By Sunday evening, nearly every corner had its UFO watchers searching the sky.

1966 (50 years ago)

1991 (25 years ago)

A small boy with a slingshot took aim at the sky and set off a barrage of UFO watchers in Forks this weekend. Jan Brinkerhoff, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Brinkerhoff, first saw the flat, gleaming, silvery object hovering over the mountains east of Forks at about 2 p.m. Residents in the area of the “pink project” watched all afternoon and evening. But Phil Riebe, town marshal, Rex Jepson, deputy sheriff, and Al Overbo, state trooper, were unable to spot anything.

Curbside recycling will come to Sequim residents July 1, the City Council decided Wednesday. “Most people realize we are at a time where we can’t just throw everything away,” city utilities superintendent Richard Parker said in presenting the program to City Council members. The program will be managed by Environmental Waste Systems of Portland, Ore., the same company that will operate Port Angeles’ new curbside recycling progam, due to begin in June.

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS MONDAY, April 4, the 95th day of 2016. There are 271 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On April 4, 1968, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., 39, was shot and killed while standing on a balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tenn. On this date: ■ In 1818, Congress decided the flag of the United States would consist of 13 red and white stripes and 20 stars, with a new star to be added for every new state of the Union. ■ In 1841, President William Henry Harrison succumbed to pneumonia one month after his inaugural, becoming the first U.S. chief executive to die in office.

■ In 1865, President Abraham Lincoln, accompanied by his son Tad, visited the vanquished Confederate capital of Richmond, Va., where he was greeted by a crowd that included former slaves. ■ In 1933, the Navy airship USS Akron crashed in severe weather off the New Jersey coast with the loss of 73 lives. ■ In 1949, 12 nations, including the United States, signed the North Atlantic Treaty in Washington, D.C. ■ In 1958, Johnny Stompanato, an enforcer for crime boss Mickey Cohen and the boyfriend of actress Lana Turner, was stabbed to death by Turner’s teenage daughter, Cheryl Crane, who said Stompa-

nato had attacked her mother. ■ In 1975, more than 130 people, most of them children, were killed when a U.S. Air Force transport plane evacuating Vietnamese orphans crash-landed shortly after takeoff from Saigon. ■ In 1983, the space shuttle Challenger roared into orbit on its maiden voyage. It was destroyed in the disaster of January 1986. ■ In 1991, Sen. John Heinz, R-Pa., and six other people, including two children, were killed when a helicopter collided with Heinz’s plane over a schoolyard in Merion, Pa. ■ Ten years ago: The Iraq tribunal announced new criminal charges against Saddam Hussein and six others, accusing them of

genocide and crimes against humanity stemming from a 1980s crackdown against Kurds. ■ Five years ago: Yielding to political opposition, the Obama administration gave up on trying avowed Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammed and four alleged co-conspirators in civilian federal courts and said it would prosecute them instead before military commissions. ■ One year ago: In North Charleston, S.C., Walter Scott, a 50-year-old black motorist, was shot to death while running away from a traffic stop; Officer Michael Thomas Slager, seen in a cellphone video opening fire at Scott, has been charged with murder.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, April 4, 2016 P A G E

A3 Briefly: Nation Philadelphia on Sunday causing a derailment, killing two people and sending more than 30 others to hospitals, authorities said. Train 89 was heading from New York to Savannah, Ga., at about 8 a.m. when it hit a backMILWAUKEE — A frushoe that was on the track in trated Donald Trump on Sunday Chester, about 15 miles outside called for John Kasich to drop of Philadelphia, officials said. out of the Republican presidenThe impact derailed the lead tial race, arguing that the Ohio engine of the train, which was governor who’s only won his carrying more than 300 passenhome state so far shouldn’t be gers and seven crew members. allowed to continue accumulatChester fire commissioner ing delegates if he has no Travis Thomas said two people chance of being the nominee. were killed, but neither was a Working to passenger on the train. recover his Authorities provided no addiedge after a tional information on the fatalidifficult week, ties. Thomas and Amtrak offiTrump said cials said more than 30 people Kasich could were taken to hospitals with ask to be coninjuries that weren’t considered sidered at the life-threatening. GOP convenThe National Transportation tion in CleveSafety Board was investigating. Kasich land in July Officials with the Federal even without Railroad Administration were competing in the remaining also sent to the scene, said Matnominating contests. thew Lehner, a spokesman for Trump told reporters at a the agency. Milwaukee diner that he had relayed his concerns to Republi- Racketeering suit? can National Committee offiPITTSBURGH — A federal cials at a meeting in Washingprosecutor might file a racketon this past week. teering lawsuit against a Roman “He’s taking my votes,” Catholic diocese where a state Trump said about Kasich. Kasich’s campaign tried to flip grand jury found two former bishops helped cover up the sexthe script, contending that neiual abuse of hundreds of chilther Trump nor Texas Sen. Ted dren by more than 50 clergy Cruz would have enough delegates to win the nomination out- over a 40-year period. The ongoing investigation of right going into the convention. the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese “Since he thinks it’s such a grew out of the prosecution of good idea, we look forward to the Rev. Joseph Maurizio Jr., Trump dropping out before the convention,” said Kasich spokes- U.S. Attorney David Hickton said Friday. man Chris Schrimpf. The 71-year-old Somerset County priest was convicted last Amtrak crash kills 2 year of molesting two street CHESTER, Pa. — An Amtrak children during missionary trips train struck a piece of construc- to Honduras. tion equipment just south of The Associated Press

Trump calls on Kasich to quit nomination race

GOP Congress’ year: Stalled bills, no nominee BY MARY CLARE JALONICK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Congress increasingly is being defined by what it’s not doing this election year. The Senate returns this week with a strong majority of Republicans saying no to any consideration of President Barack Obama’s nominee to the Supreme Court. No hearings, no vote and, for some lawmakers, not even a meeting with federal appeals court Judge Merrick Garland. Republicans, led by Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., insist that the decision on filling the court vacancy rests with the next president after voters have their say in November’s election. A bipartisan bill to aid Flint, Mich., where the city’s 100,000 residents are struggling with lead-contaminated water is being blocked by Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, who wants to ensure that the money is funded without adding to the deficit. The dispute over Flint has snagged a far-reaching measure

on energy. In the House, where lawmakers return from their break April 12, conservative opposition probably will make it impossible to pass a budget, in what would be a major embarrassment for Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis. A GOP proposal to aid debtstricken Puerto Rico has drawn criticism from House Democrats and conservatives, raising doubts about Congress’ ability to resolve the issue. The latest Gallup Poll shows public approval of Congress at an abysmal 13 percent. Yet, through a half-dozen state primaries, no incumbent lawmaker has lost. A look at the issues in limbo in Congress: ■ The fight over Garland: Garland plans to meet with 11 senators in the week ahead, including two Republicans. Democrats are maintaining election-year pressure on the GOP for blocking the usual Senate committee hearings and vote on a high court nominee. Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and John Boozman, R-Ark., are

set to sit down with Garland on Tuesday. ■ Spending: It’s been years since Congress approved each of the annual appropriations bills — the 12 measures that fund the budgets of agencies and departments. The new normal is an allencompassing bill at the end of the year. Republicans leaders such as McConnell want to get the process back on track, and the Senate Appropriations Committee is expected to start the week of April 11. ■ Puerto Rico: House Republicans unveiled a plan to help Puerto Rico with its $70 billion debt, but a draft bill by the chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee, GOP Rep. Rob Bishop of Utah, was rejected by Democrats, GOP conservatives and Puerto Rican officials. ■ Criminal justice: Advocates for a criminal justice overhaul are hoping Congress will move legislation in both chambers before the summer, though the effort has run into roadblocks in the Senate.

Briefly: World Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham told reporters in Cairo on Sunday. “The ConBAKU, Azerbaijan — Azerbai- gress is going jan’s Defense Ministry to be around announced a unilateral cease-fire no matter who Graham Sunday against the separatist is the presiregion of Nagorno-Karabakh, but dent,” Graham, who is leading a rebel forces in the area said that Republican congressional delethey continued to come under gation touring the Middle East, fire from Azerbaijani forces. told reporters after meeting Fighting in what was a dorEgyptian President Abdel-Fatmant conflict for two decades tah el-Sissi. flared up over the weekend with Graham said he and el-Sissi a boy and at least 30 troops discussed Trump, among other killed on both sides. issues. Each side blamed the other “All of us, regardless of what for Saturday’s escalation, the Mr. Trump says or does, we are worst since the end of a fullgoing to keep being who we are, scale war in 1994. so don’t let the political scenes The Defense Ministry said, in at home get you too upset. response to pleas from internaThat’s what I told the presitional organizations, it will be dent,” said Graham. unilaterally “suspending a counRepublican presidential ter-offensive and response on the front-runner Trump has stirred territories occupied by Armenia.” controversy both at home and in The ministry added it will the Middle East by suggesting a not focus on fortifying the terriblanket ban on Muslim immitory that Azerbaijan has “libergration to the U.S. ated.” “Don’t let the politics of the moment make you believe that Graham: U.S. unchanged America has fundamentally changed in terms of the way we CAIRO — Residents of the view the world; it hasn’t,” said Middle East should not be too alarmed at the prospect of Don- Graham. The Associated Press ald Trump becoming president,

Azerbaijan calls for cease-fire with rebel forces

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

FLEEING

FLASH FLOODS

Pakistani villagers stand on a high vantage point surrounded by flash flooding on the outskirts of Peshawar, Pakistan, on Sunday. A Pakistani national disaster management official says flash floods triggered by torrential rains have killed dozens of people in the country’s northwest.

Syrian troops retake Islamic State group-controlled town An activist group that monitors the Syrian civil war said that government forces are in control THE ASSOCIATED PRESS of most of the town after ISIS DAMASCUS, Syria — A week fighters withdrew to its eastern after taking back the historic outskirts. town of Palmyra, Syrian troops and their allies on Sunday cap- Palmyra recaptured tured another town controlled by The advance came a week the Islamic State group in central after Syrian forces recaptured Syria, state media reported. The push into the town of Palmyra from ISIS and is strateQaryatain took place under the gically significant for the governcover of Russian airstrikes and ment side. dealt another setback to the ISIS The capture of Qaryatain extremists in Syria. deprives ISIS of a main base in BY ALBERT AJI AND BASSEM MROUE

Quick Read

central Syria and could be used by government forces in the future to launch attacks on ISIS-held areas near the Iraqi border. Qaryatain used to be home to a sizable Christian population and lies midway between Palmyra and the capital, Damascus. Activists said last summer that Qaryatain had a mixed population of around 40,000 Sunni Muslims and Christians, as well as thousands of internally displaced people who had fled from the nearby city of Homs.

. . . more news to start your day

West: Plane crash kills 1 on road craft used before

Nation: New initiatives aimed at transgender rights

Nation: 68 percent fall for ‘Batman v Superman’ film

World: Deportation of migrants to start today

A SMALL PLANE that made headlines when it landed safely on a Southern California freeway years ago crashed on the same stretch of road, slamming into a car and killing a woman in the vehicle. Five others, including the pilot and his passenger, were injured in the crash on a stretch of Interstate 15 that has been the scene of several emergency landings. Witnesses said the single-engine plane appeared to be having problems before it banked and came down Saturday, California Highway Patrol Officer Chris Parent said. One man said he didn’t hear the plane’s engine as it passed overhead.

STUNG BY SETBACKS related to their access to public restrooms, transgender Americans are taking steps to play a more prominent and vocal role in a nationwide campaign to curtail discrimination against them. Two such initiatives are being launched this week — evidence of how transgender rights has supplanted same-sex marriage as the most volatile, high-profile issue for the broader movement of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender activists. One initiative is a public education campaign called the Transgender Freedom Project that will share the personal stories of transgender people.

WORD OF MOUTH might be kryptonite for “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice,” which fell a steep 68 percent in its second weekend in theaters according to comScore estimates Sunday. The superhero pic earned an estimated $52.4 million over the weekend, easily besting the modest new openers like “God’s Not Dead 2” and “Meet the Blacks.” The Zack Snyder movie cost a reported $250 million to produce and around $150 million to market, and has earned an estimated $261.5 million to date. It’s a critical launching point for a series of interconnected movies in the DC Comics Universe from Warner Bros.

AN AGREEMENT BETWEEN the European Union and Turkey to deport migrants currently on Greek islands back to the Turkish mainland is to take effect this morning. Giorgos Kyritsis, a spokesman for the Greek government’s refugee crisis committee, has told The Associated Press that Frontex, the EU’s border management agency, is solely responsible for the implementation, adding that only a fraction of its promised personnel of over 2,000 is in place. Frontex has secured three vessels that will make the short trip from the island of Lesbos to the Turkish coast starting Monday morning.


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MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Fire District No. 2 plans to relocate BY MARK SWANSON PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Clallam Fire District No. 2 officials plan to move their administrative offices to new quarters at 1212 E. First St., vacating facilities shared with the city fire department. Fire District No. 2 Chief Sam Phillips said that following the successful purchase and renovation of the new offices, which once housed a bank, the fire district will move out of the facility it has shared since 2008 with Port Angeles Fire Department at 102 E. Fifth St. The property the fire district is purchasing is zoned for an ambulance, he said, but the fire district has no plans to house an ambulance or fire apparatus at the site. No move-in date has yet been set, and Phillips did not

have an expected date for the finalization of the purchase. The First Street building has 5,180 square feet and until about a year ago, housed a Union Bank. Before that, it was a Northwestern National Bank branch. The fire district will pay about $410,000 for the building. Phillips said the fire district could have paid for the building out of its finance reserves, but rather than deplete that balance, it decided to go with a limited tax general obligation bond through the firm of K & L Gates of Seattle. The bonds will carry an interest rate of 2.65 percent and cost the fire district about $23,000 a year. The district plans to pay for that out of current budgetary funds and does not have plans to ask voters for an additional tax levy. Phillips noted that build-

ing a new office facility would against it, the effort ended. Phillips said that former have probably cost much more and required a public Port Angeles finance director Yvonne Ziomkowski, curbond vote. rently embroiled in a sex discrimination case against Decision to separate the city, at the time recomThe fire district commis- mended against the consolisioners’ decision to purchase dation out of a concern that a new facility grew out of the city would lose some notification in October 2015 funding. that they needed to vacate Since then, the two fire offices shared with the city entities have shared offices fire department. at the city facility. The fire Port Angeles Fire Chief district has hosted some Ken Dubuc notified the dis- shared city fire department trict that the city wanted to apparatus in one of its stamodify an interlocal agree- tions. ment that allowed for shared The problem, said Dubuc, facilities and asked that the is that efforts to consolidate fire district vacate its offices. and blur the lines between The sharing dated back to the district and the depart2008, when both the fire dis- ment created other problems trict and the city department — namely, residents were considered consolidating into not sure who served their a regional fire authority. In communities. late 2011, following an elec“It was confusing for voltion, change of personnel and unteers, too,” said Dubuc, as a financial recommendation they were not sure to whom

PA gardeners given Green Thumb Award

they answered. In the end, Dubuc feels the separation will be a “positive thing” for both departments and should allow the fire district to develop its own identity. For its part, the city department plans to utilize the three offices to be emptied as an emergency backup facility for city hall operations. Phillips said the district evaluated other sites in addition to the one on First Street. Some were more expensive while others were in poor condition, he said. Others had no parking. He said officials looked at a “promising” property on Prospect Place but it was determined to be in a seismic hazard zone. The soil was found to be prone to liquefaction during earthquakes and public agencies are prohibited from using such sites.

BY CHRIS MCDANIEL

PORT ANGELES — The Port Angeles Garden Club’s 2016 Winter Garden Green Thumb Award has been given to Patti and Cap Pattison. The two share their home at 111 W. 10th St. with their dog, Dakota. “The colorful plantings and their placement makes one think of a patchwork quilt, and indeed the gardener of the house is also a quilter,” the garden club said in a news release. Garden club members said the home’s garden “has mostly been the loving work of Patti” throughout the past three years. Many items in her yard were planted for sentimental

PORT ANGELES — National Alliance on Mental Illness Washington is soliciting proposals for workshop sessions at the annual state conference planned this fall in Port Angeles. This is the first time the alliance, known by the acronym NAMI, is seeking proposals for a state conference, organizers say. Submissions are due by June 3. The theme of the 2016 NAMI Washington State Conference is “The Road to Recovery: Mental Health Matters.” The conference will be hosted at the Red Lion Hotel from Sept. 30 to Oct. 2. Conference workshops will be held Oct. 1. Each workshop will be 90 minutes and might include a maximum of three presenters plus one moderator for a total of four people on a panel, organiz-

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES GARDEN CLUB

Patti Pattison and her husband, Cap, were awarded the Port Angeles Garden Club’s 2016 Winter Garden Green Thumb Award.

Tickets on sale for Lincoln Day Dinner Event scheduled for April 16 in PA PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Tickets are on sale for the Clallam County Republicans’ Lincoln Day Dinner, scheduled at the Red Lion Hotel on April 16. The 6:15 p.m. dinner, which will be in the secondfloor ballroom at the hotel at 221 N. Lincoln St., will feature keynote speaker Rep. Elizabeth Scott of the 39th Legislative District, who is running for U.S. House of Representatives, 1st District.

Ticket deadline Tickets are $60 per person or $110 for a couple. Also available are tables of eight. Tickets must be purchased in advance by April 9.

Keepsakes for sale Purchase a PDN photo — on T-shirts, drink mugs or just the photo itself. www.peninsuladailynews. com Click on “Photo Gallery”

Guests can meet party dignitaries and candidates during a nohost cocktail hour from 5 p.m. to Scott 6 p.m. Dinner entree choices are balsamic braised sirloin of beef or chicken breast with artichoke and caper cream.

Auctions Silent and live auctions of items and outings donated by GOP supporters are planned. Included in the auctions will be a Winchester Model 50 12-gauge full choke with extra 30-inch and 28-inch barrels, golf at the Cedars at Dungeness, a salmon fishing trip for two and Seahawks preseason game tickets. Proceeds support the county GOP office and activities. Tickets can be purchased at county GOP headquarters at 509 S. Lincoln St. between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, by phoning 360-417-3035, emailing tickets@clallamrepublicans.org or online at http://tinyurl.com/PDNLincolndaydinner. All major credit cards are accepted.

rhodies, azaleas, yew, small evergreens and bright ground covers. The grounds are dotted with yard art, and their new pergola in the back has a couple of mountain goats perched on top.

________ Reporter Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 56650, or cmcdaniel@ peninsuladailynews.com.

Dry Creek Elementary principal hired; set to begin work July 1 PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — A principal from the Centralia School District will lead Dry Creek Elementary School beginning July 1. Jay Sparks will replace Principal Michael Herzberg, who has accepted a position as a professional development director for the Bureau of Education and Research, Scott Harker, human resources director, announced last week. “I’m excited to have Jay join the Port Angeles School District team,”

Assistant Superintendent Chuck Lisk said. “With his wealth of classroom experience and his previous success as an administrator, he will be a wonderful addition to Sparks Dry Creek Elementary and our administrative team.” Sparks served as principal of Oakview School in the Centralia district from 2010-15.

Before that, he served 10 years as principal of White City Elementary in Eagle Point, Ore. From 1979-99, he taught first through sixth grades at White City Elementary. Sparks earned a master’s degree through the executive leadership licensure program at Portland State University and master’s and bachelor’s degrees in elementary education from Southern Oregon University. The School Board approved his hiring March 24.

PC to wrap up fourth season of Maier Hall Concert Series with April 12 show PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The final concert of the Maier Hall Concert Series on Tuesday, April 12, will bring a renowned young trumpeter to Peninsula College, organizers said. Timothy Hudson will be the first brass performer to be featured in the Maier Hall Concert Series. The concert will begin at 7 p.m. in Maier Performance Hall on the Port Angeles campus at 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. Tickets are $15, or $5 for students. The concert will include music from several historical

periods, including works by Handel (“Water Music”), Henry Purcell, Marc-Antoine Charpentier, Aaron Copland and others. The West Coast premiere of “Copper Lake Fantasy” by David Jones, Peninsula College faculty member, will be featured. This work was composed expressly for Hudson when the two musicians were classmates at New England Conservatory. Also on the program will be Jones’ “Elegia” (for solo piano), composed in memory of trumpeter Michael Tunnell, longtime member of the Louisville Orchestra. Tun-

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nell was a friend and mentor to both Hudson and Jones. Hudson, founder and leader of Carolina Brass, has held principal trumpet positions with the Knoxville Symphony, State of Mexico Symphony Orchestra and Chamber Orchestra of Northern New York. He has performed with the Oslo Philharmonic, Fort Wayne Philharmonic, North Carolina Symphony, International Orchestra and Camerata Chamber Orchestra as well as in solo concerts. Hudson has recorded for such labels as Summit, OSEM, Mode Records, Mark Records, IBA and Academy

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ers say. NAMI is seeking workshop proposals in all areas that touch on recovery including people, research, treatment, law and justice, systems and policy for all populations including youth, veterans, LGBTQ, communities of color and underserved populations. Proposals will be accepted from all sectors of the mental health community including family members and caregivers, mental health providers, researchers and specialists from across the state and the nation. For specifics on criteria and submitting a workshop proposal, view the workshop proposal submission form at http://tinyurl.com/NAMI-FORM. For more information, call 360-4525244.

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reasons, they said. The couple brought in 18 yards of soil and 4 tons of rock for landscaping. The house itself also had a facelift. Among the plants are blooming heather, candy tuft and quince tucked in among

Some renovations of the former bank building will be required, including taking out the counters and teller service stations. Most of the work will entail wiring for the district’s information technology. The First Street site also has a basement will allow the district to store years of records, training materials and some equipment. Phillips said the district might decide to lease some of the handicapped-accessible building out to non-governmental organizations or nonprofits in the future. In the short term, the district plans to host its own meetings and some first aid training there.

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AAUW PT member honored with donation PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — Jeanie Glaspell is the 36th AAUW Port Townsend Named Gift Honoree. The Port Townsend branch of the American Association of University Women recognized Glaspell for her service to AAUW Port Townsend and its affiliate, the University Women’s Foundation (UWF) of Jefferson County. In Glaspell’s honor, AAUW Port Townsend will make a donation to the National AAUW Educational Foundation in support of programs that advance education and equity for women. From 2007-15, Glaspell served as UWF’s vice president for development, recording secretary and president. She is currently AAUW vice president for programs and serves as secretary/ records for AAUW Washington State. She has tutored math at Grant Street, raised funds for kindergarten and established the branch’s Tech Trek project, which sends middle school girls to a summer science and math camp.

FEIRO MARINE LIFE CENTER

The new octopus at Feiro Marine Life Center needs a name and the community is invited to vote on it beginning today. Jeanie Glaspell, left, receives a certificate naming her the AAUW Port Townsend Named Gift Honoree from Katherine Buchanan. “Jeanie always comes to her responsibilities with dedication and enthusiasm,” said her sponsors, “and she has been a forceful and thoughtful advocate for education in our community.” Glaspell received her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Appalachian State University and a master’s from Oregon State University. She retired five years

ago after serving for 20 years in the Port Townsend school system. AAUW Port Townsend and UWF support awards and scholarships, middle school career days and elementary school programs in literacy and math. Membership is open to those who hold an associate or higher degree from an accredited school. For more information, see http://pt-wa.aauw.net.

Right-to-die group creates new, cheaper medication THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE — Right-todie advocates in Washington state have created a cheaper alternative mixture of medications to help terminally ill patients legally end their lives after a drug company abruptly hiked the price of a drug commonly used for the purpose. Doctors with the End of Life Washington advocacy group concocted the alternative for about $500, after Valeant Pharmaceuticals International of Quebec acquired the drug and jacked up the price to about $3,000, The Seattle Times reported. “We thought we should concoct an alternative that would work as well,” said Dr. Robert Wood, a University of Washington HIV/ AIDS researcher who volunteers with the group. “It does work as well.”

Public can help name new octopus

AAUW PORT TOWNSEND

Doctors in Oregon have also adopted the drug mixture. Officials in California, where a similar law takes effect later this year, are considering it as well.

Seconal Valeant Pharmaceuticals and other drugmakers have come under fire from Congress for buying up old drugs and hiking prices many times over what patients had paid for years. Last year, it acquired the rights to Seconal, the trade name of secobarbital sodium, the most commonly prescribed drug used by terminally ill patients to end their lives under the law. The firm doubled the cost, from $1,500 to more than $3,000 — and up to $5,000. The sedative has been available for nearly 90 years and once sold for $150 for a lethal 10-gram dose, The Times reported.

“People were horrified,” Beth Glennon, a client-support coordinator with End of Life Washington, told The Times about the price increase. “The cost increase has been significant for some people. Some are on a very fixed income.” Health insurance often doesn’t pay for such drugs that are not covered under Medicare. Washington’s Medicaid plan does not cover the drugs, and several Catholic health systems that prohibit doctor-aided death based on religious objections also do not cover it. When Valeant hiked prices, Wood and other doctors turned to a compounding pharmacist for an alternative. The result was a lessexpensive mix of three medications — phenobarbital, chloral hydrate and morphine sulfate. The powdered drugs could be mixed with water, alcohol or juice.

BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The public will get to help name Feiro Marine Life Center’s new giant Pacific octopus with online voting set to begin today. Beginning at 9 a.m., the public can vote for one of five names for the eightarmed denizen of the deep by visiting Feiro’s website at tinyurl.com/PDN-octopus. Voting will continue through 5 p.m. Friday. The name receiving the most votes will be selected. The five names nominated for the octopus — a female estimated to be younger than two years old — were not made public Sunday. They were being kept secret, even from volunteers and employees at the marine science center, said Disa Wilson, staff naturalist. According to staff members, the highly intelligent creature has settled in well at Feiro since her capture and arrival Feb. 29. “Housing a giant Pacific octopus provides an important educational opportunity to talk about octopuses in the Strait of Juan de Fuca and their unique adaptations,” Melissa Williams, executive director said in an announcement of the octopus naming poll.

‘Adopt an Octopus’

The new octopus has replaced Ursula, an octopus released Jan. 11 in Freshwater Bay, in the octopus tank at the marine life center at 315 N. Lincoln St., on City Pier. The giant Pacific octopus is the mascot and a symbol of the marine science center, which features the creature on shirts and toys sold in its gift store.

Start small Newly hatched octopuses start life at about the size of a grain of rice, according to Feiro’s announcement. They will drift as plankton until they are large enough to settle to the bottom and consume crustaceans, fish, bivalves, snails and other octopuses. A female giant Pacific octopus doubles its body weight every 80 days or so in order to get large enough to reach maturity and mate. Both male and female giant Pacific octopuses can reach about 16 feet across and live three to five years. They breed once, then die. The marine center holds a license to keep a wild octopus and is required to return that octopus to the area where it was caught when it approaches breeding age and condition. The center’s past five octopuses — Octavia, Ariel, Opal, Obecka and Ursula — have all been female by happenstance. Like most of her predecessors, she was caught in Freshwater Bay. Obecka and Ursula were both named by members of the public — Obecka’s naming rights were auctioned at the Fish on the Fence Gala, and Ursula was named by a public poll in the Peninsula Daily News. Winter hours at the center are noon to 5 p.m. daily, and admission is by donation.

Feiro has also launched the “Adopt an Octopus” fundraising campaign to replace the loss of $20,000 in annual funding from the city of Port Angeles, according to the announcement. Donors have the choice between a special digital image and information on the octopus, a hand-knit octopus or to have their name displayed above the octopus habitat for the next year. ________ For more information on the Adopt an Octopus program, phone 360-417-6254, Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360email info@feiromarinelifecenter.org or 452-2345, ext. 56250, or at arice@peninsuladaily see feiromarinelifecenter.org. news.com.

Senate set to end recess today; House back April 11 PENINSULA DAILY NEWS NEWS SERVICES

Eye on Congress

WASHINGTON — This week, the Senate is set to Gig Harbor). return from recess today Contact information and the House returns — The address for Cantwell Monday, April 11. and Murray is U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C. 20510; Contact legislators Kilmer, U.S. House, Wash(clip and save) ington, D.C. 20515. Phone Cantwell at 202“Eye on Congress” is published in the Peninsula 224-3441 (fax, 202-228Daily News every Monday 0514); Murray, 202-224when Congress is in session 2621 (fax, 202-224-0238); about activities, roll call Kilmer, 202-225-5916. Email via their websites: votes and legislation in the cantwell.senate.gov; murHouse and Senate. The North Olympic Pen- ray.senate.gov; kilmer.house. insula’s legislators in Wash- gov. Kilmer’s North Olympic ington, D.C., are Sen. Maria Cantwell Peninsula is located at (D-Mountlake Terrace), 332 E. Fifth St. in Port Sen. Patty Murray Angeles. Hours are 9 a.m. to noon (D-Seattle) and Rep. Derek Kilmer (D- Tuesdays and from 1 p.m.

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Jefferson and Clallam counties are represented in the part-time state Legislature by Rep. Kevin Van De Wege, D-Sequim, the House majority whip; Rep. Steve Tharinger, D-Sequim; and Sen. Jim Hargrove, D-Hoquiam. Write Van De Wege and Tharinger at P.O. Box 40600 Cantwell Kilmer (Hargrove at P.O. Box 40424), Olympia, WA 98504; to 4 p.m. email them at vandewege. Wednesdays kevin@leg.wa.gov; and Thurstharinger.steve@leg.wa.gov; days. It is hargrove.jim@leg.wa.gov. staffed by Or you can call the LegJu d i t h islative Hotline, 800-562Morris, 6000, from 8 a.m. to who can be 4:30 p.m. Mondays through contacted at Murray Fridays (closed on holidays judith. and from noon to morris@mail.house.gov or 1 p.m.) and leave a detailed 360-797-3623. message, which will be

state and national legislators: ■ Followthemoney. org — Campaign donors by industry, ZIP code and more ■ Vote-Smart.org — How special interest groups Learn more rate legislators on the Websites following our issues. emailed to Van De Wege, Tharinger, Hargrove or to all three. Links to other state officials: http://tinyurl.com/ pdn-linksofficials.

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Budget: Mental health Vikings: Learn to feel increased by $40 million comfortable with tools CONTINUED FROM A1 Hargrove, along with fellow Democrats Rep. Steve Tharinger and Rep. Kevin Van De Wege, both of Sequim, represents the 24th Legislative District, which covers Clallam and Jefferson counties and part of Grays Harbor County. Hargrove said the supplemental budget — passed 20 days into an overtime special session — Van De Wege “turned out pretty well.” He pointed to the additional $40 million in new resources in play for mental health, much of it designated for Western State Hospital, the larger of the state’s two psychiatric facilities. The budget includes funds for 51 more nurses, a safety compliance officer and raises to help attract and retain doctors. “I think we addressed that pretty well,” Hargrove said. The final negotiated measure passed the Senate on a 27-17 vote after the House approved the plan on a 78-17 vote. The supplemental budget increases spending by $191 million above the state’s two-year plan.

Left undone If the state senator has left anything undone, it’s that a justice reinvestment initiative has not moved forward. The initiative would provide more funding for treatment and supervision of former convicts. Without such help, Hargrove said, ex-convicts too

Get home delivery. Call 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 www.peninsuladailynews. com

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e pointed to the additional $40 million in new resources in play for mental health, much of it designated for Western State Hospital, the larger of the state’s two psychiatric facilities.

H

often have trouble leaving crime behind them. At the local level, municipalities and counties see too much property crime as a result, he said. “Hopefully, they’ll pick that up next year,” said Hargrove, who added that it would reduce the impact of property crime on victims and save local dollars. Beyond this year’s supplemental budget, Hargrove stressed that working in the Senate means compromise and that means that representatives and senators don’t always get what they want. He said he won’t be going away and has plans to check in with his District 24 colleagues from time to time.

Pleased with session Van De Wege, who has announced he will seek Hargrove’s seat in this year’s elections, said he was pleased with the 2016 session. He pointed to the passage of HB 2545, which he sponsored, which bans certain flame-retardant chemicals from use in some consumer products. The measure would reduce health threats to children and firefighters, said Van De Wege, a lieutenant with Clallam County Fire District No. 3. He was also pleased with the passage of HB 1763, which will govern how music licensing companies are permitted to interact with local business owners. The state representative sponsored the bill after the Oasis restaurant in Sequim and the Dam Bar in Port Angeles were hit with music licensing fees, which are otherwise governed by federal law. Passage of a third measure, HB 2380, will allow a “nice couple from Port Townsend” to operate an electric bus service, Van De

Wege said. The couple had wanted to start the service but were prohibited by law from running it on state highways. In Port Townsend, state Highway 20 runs through the heart of the town to the Port Townsend-Coupeville ferry terminal; not being able to take passengers to the terminal would have significantly restricted the service’s ability to operate, Van De Wege said.

Teachers’ raise Van De Wege was disappointed that the supplemental budget did not include a raise for first-year teachers. He and other Democrats has pushed unsuccessfully to include a base pay raise from $35,700 to $40,000 in the budget. He said that data shows that if the state can keep teachers in their profession beyond about three years, “they will stay around.” The measure would have bumped up the base pay rate to encourage new teachers to stay, he said “but Republicans weren’t happy” and it had to be cut. Clallam County commissioner Mike Chapman has announced his intention to seek Van De Wege’s seat, as has Tammy Ramsay, 48, of Hoquiam. Both plan to run as Democrats. Rep. Steve Tharinger could not be reached for comment on the special session. Van De Wege said he was proud of his colleague for “helping out our district” and getting capital needs addressed. “He did a great job for our district,” said Van De Wege, “and got some needed stuff done.”

________ Assistant Managing Editor Mark Swanson can be reached at 360452-2345, ext. 55450, or mswanson@peninsuladailynews. com.

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CONTINUED FROM A1 Barnes Point, where Lake Crescent Lodge stands, Although three alterna- would be accessible from tives are listed in the draft either the east or west, EA, the first is the obliga- depending upon which portory possibility of simply tion of the highway was doing nothing but mainte- undergoing work at the time. nance. Also, Clallam Transit Both the other two alternatives propose construc- stop shelters would be built tion from March through near Barnes Point on both sides of the highway. November for three years. Alternative 2 poses 30-minute delays through- Closure unacceptable out construction with addiMore than half — 26 — tional delays of up to four of the 42 commenters on hours during the shoulder the preliminary plans said season from September that closure of the highway through June for rock-fall during normal working mitigation and culvert hours and/or commuting replacement. hours was not acceptable, Alternative 3 would the draft EA said. include the delays of AlterHighway 101 is the prinative 2 but would also add mary road between Port nighttime work with delays Angeles and the West End, of up to six hours between including Forks. Labor Day and March 31 In May, the Forks City when it would be less likely Council approved a resoluto affect nesting marbled tion against any option that murrelets, the draft EA includes closing the heavily said. traveled route for more In both alternatives, than a few days and urged

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For more information, access to the draft EA and to comment online, see http://tinyurl.com/PDNhighwaydraftea. Hard copies of the EA are available for public review at the reference desks of the Port Angeles, Forks, Sequim and Clallam Bay public libraries, the park service said. Comment also can be sent to olym_information@ nps.gov, faxed to 360-5653015 or mailed to Olympic National Park, 600 E. Park Ave., Port Angeles, WA, 98362-9798. For more information, phone 360-565-3130.

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CONTINUED FROM A1 using “low tech” hardwood wedges. “There is a lot of labor required to do it Smith said the workshop’s purpose this way, to build a boat using only raw was to help students feel comfortable materials,” he said. Smith, from Anacortes, is a boat with the old tools, which are new to them, and to understand the difference between builder who has apprenticed in Norway, worked in the Faroe Islands and Dena broad axe and a chopping axe. “We want them to gain a true under- mark and studied under master boat standing about how difficult this really builders to learn these techniques. Most of the participants were students was,” Smith said. “We want them to understand what a at the school, although the workshop was tree splitter is and why logs follow certain not part of the curriculum. Ethan Hickman, a garden designer grains and what forms are inherent in and part-time carpenter, traveled from the tree itself.” Olympia specifically for the workshop. Recognizing those forms allows them “I wanted to learn how to work with to extract them and determine the best the old ways with tools using the old use for them in boat building, he added. methods,” he said.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, April 4, 2016 PAGE

A7

When the necessary is impossible SULAIMANIYA, Iraq BEING BACK IN after two years’ absence has helped me to put my finger on the central question bedeviling U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East today: What do you do when the Thomas L. necessary is impossible, but Friedman the impossible is impossible to ignore — and your key allies are also impossible? Crushing the Islamic State group, or ISIS, is necessary for stabilizing Iraq and Syria, but it is impossible as long as Shiites and Sunnis there refuse to truly share power, and yet ignoring the ISIS cancer and its ability to metastasize is impossible as well. See: Belgium. And if all that isn’t impossible enough, our trying to make Iraq safe for democracy is requiring us to turn a blind eye to the fact that our most important NATO “ally” in the region, Turkey, is being converted from a democracy into a dictatorship by its president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who should now be called “Sultan Erdogan” for the way he is clos-

ing opposition newspapers and putting journalists on trial. But because we need Turkey’s air bases and cooperation to foster a modicum of democracy in Iraq tomorrow, we are silent on Erdogan destroying democracy in Turkey today. Go figure. And to think that in America we have all these people competing to become president to get a chance to take responsibility for this problem! Has no one told them this is absolutely the worst time in 70 years to be managing U.S. foreign policy? Obama has my sympathies. If you think there is a simple answer to this problem, you ought to come out here for a week. Just trying to figure out the differences among the Kurdish parties and militias in Syria and Iraq — the YPG, PYD, PUK, KDP and PKK — took me a day. Let’s go back to the future of Iraq. “The problem in Iraq is not ISIS,” Najmaldin Karim, the wise governor of Kirkuk province, which is partly occupied by ISIS, remarked to me. “ISIS is the symptom of mismanagement and sectarianism.” So even if ISIS is evicted from its stronghold in Mosul, he noted, if the infighting and mismanagement in Baghdad and sectarian

tensions between Shiites and Sunnis are not diffused, “the situation in Iraq could be even worse after” ISIS is toppled. Why? Because there will just be another huge scramble among Iraqi Sunnis, Kurds, Turkmens, Shiite militias, Turkey and Iran over who controls these territories now held by ISIS. There is simply no consensus here on how power will be shared in the Sunni areas that ISIS has seized. So if one day you hear that we’ve eliminated the ISIS caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and lowered the ISIS flag over Mosul, hold your applause. And here is another not so fun fact from Northern Iraq: Despite all that you have read about “foreign fighters” who have joined ISIS, a vast majority of the people in Kirkuk province who have come to fight with ISIS were local Sunnis, who saw ISIS as a force protecting them from the pro-Iranian Shiite government in Baghdad. Or, they were more impoverished Sunnis who saw joining ISIS as a way of gaining power over wealthier, upper-class Sunnis. Also, many Sunni tribes in the Mosul area split, with some members joining ISIS and others not. Kurdish intelligence officials

tell me there will be a lot of revenge against those Sunnis who joined ISIS, exacted by those who didn’t — if and when ISIS is defeated. Women from Iraq’s Yazidi sect who were captured and raped by ISIS fighters and eventually escaped to refugee camps in Kurdistan have told Kurdish relief workers that in more than a few cases they were raped, not by some foreign fighters from Chechnya or Libya, but by Iraqi Sunnis from their own hometowns. “They will never trust their neighbors again,” an aid worker told me. I don’t know anymore what is sufficient to eradicate ISIS — and create a decent order in its place — but it is obvious what is necessary: The struggle between Sunnis and Shiites, fueled by Saudi Arabia and Iran, has to be tempered. ISIS is a rocket whose guidance system is a direct descendant of the puritanical, anti-Shiite, anti-pluralistic Saudi Wahhabi ideology, and its fuel system is a direct reaction to Shiite Iran’s aggressive push to keep Iraqi Sunnis permanently weak. As long as Iran and Saudi Arabia are going at it, there will always be another ISIS. Which is why the “peace process” the Middle East needs most today is

between Saudi Arabia and Iran. But just waiting for that is no easy option, either. The impossible is impossible to ignore because ISIS is wicked and wickedly smart. The longer it hangs around, the more dangerous it becomes. Britain’s Independent newspaper recently reported that ISIS militants were plotting to take a Belgian nuclear scientist hostage in order to get access to Belgium’s nuclear research facility. Obama is probably doing about the best one can with ISIS: Degrade it, contain it and downplay it, and keep nudging Sunnis and Shiites to come to their senses. But I have a bad feeling about the ISIS boys. They are networked and they have cast off all civilized norms. And we don’t have the answer for them. It takes a village. Only Arabs and Muslims can truly take down and delegitimize ISIS and right now their village is too divided, angry, ambivalent and confused to do it.

_________ Thomas Friedman is a threetime Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The New York Times. His column appears in the Peninsula Daily News on Mondays. Contact Friedman via www. facebook.com/thomaslfriedman.

Trump, Sanders have point on NATO IT SEEMS STRANGE that so few of my fellow TV bingewatchers have submitted to the fascinating Norwegian political thriller, “Occupied.” Friends, this is eight hours of your life you Froma won’t mind not Harrop getting back. In the story, an idealistic Norwegian prime minister stops his country’s huge oil production in the name of confronting climate change. To get the oil flowing again, the European Union asks Russia to invade and reopen the taps. Russia complies and proceeds to occupy Norway in a humiliating velvet-glove manner. The United States plays a central role by virtue of its absence. In this near-future tale, Amer-

ica has become energy-independent and left NATO. Once expected to dive headlong into any crisis, especially where the Russians are involved, the U.S. has decided to watch from the sidelines. Such scenarios are sounding less fantastical as populist American candidates question the long-held assumption that the U.S. military must maintain order everywhere. They’re addressing the growing distress at seeing rich allies warmly applaud or critique our performance while happily not paying. That the bombastic Donald Trump is condemning this setup does not strip the complaint of all merit. But it does give “responsible” opinion the luxury of bashing Trump’s remark that “NATO is obsolete” without much elaboration. These days, our allies — spooked by Russia’s annexation of Crimea and its advances in

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eastern Ukraine — are proclaiming the Atlantic alliance anything but obsolete. Norway, a preacher of peace, has rekindled its love for NATO as the Russian military swarms over the Arctic Circle (in real life, not on TV). Russian warplanes are flying down the Norwegian coast with in-your-face impunity. And Norway, which had been cutting its defense budget, is finally raising it. Which brings us to one of Trump’s points about NATO — a point all but glossed over by those incensed by the word “obsolete.” Americans are paying for 75 percent of NATO’s military spending. And only six of the 28 NATO members have met U.S. demands that they devote at least 2 percent of their gross domestic product to defense. We spend 3.6 percent. For the record, the combined GDP of our NATO allies is about

equal to ours. Trump’s suggestion that the U.S. stop buying Saudi oil if that country’s government doesn’t start contributing ground troops to the fight against ISIS was also greeted with derision. “Without us,” Trump said with a trademark threat, “Saudi Arabia wouldn’t exist for very long.” What he didn’t say was that the Saudis have also refused to take in Syrian refugees. Nor did he note that they are funding the jihadis threatening the West. And what about the West? Some of our rich European allies have become so passive and so lazy they’ve barely bothered monitoring known terrorists living off their social benefits. (Belgium, by the way, spends 0.9 percent of its GDP on defense.) On the left, Bernie Sanders treads some of this territory, rightly questioning America’s seeming addiction to military intervention.

NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, managing editor; 360-417-3531 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ LEE HORTON, sports editor; 360-417-3525; lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147 W. Washington St., 98382; 360-681-2390 ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com

He does go off course in arguing that we should spend less on the military so we can spend more on social priorities. The No. 1 job of the federal government is national defense. We spend whatever we have to. We don’t say: “Oh, there’s a budget surplus this year. Let’s have a war.” But both Trump and Sanders are solid in asking what all this defense spending is doing for us. Are we Americans obliged to both police the globe and pay for the service? We pick up the bills that other prosperous countries are perfectly content to leave on the table. Let’s ask ourselves why.

_________ Froma Harrop is a columnist for the Providence (R.I.) Journal. Her column appears Mondays. Contact her at fharrop@gmail. com or in care of Creators Syndicate Inc., 737 Third St., Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

HAVE YOUR SAY We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” guest opinion columns of no more than 550 words that focus on local community lifestyle issues. Please — send us only one letter or column per month. Letters and guest columns published become the property of Peninsula Daily News, and it reserves the right to reject, condense or edit for clarity or when information stated as fact cannot be substantiated. Letters published in other newspapers or websites, anonymous letters, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. We will not publish letters that impugn the personal character of people or of groups of people. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. Email to letters@peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Sunday RANTS & RAVES 24-hour hotline: 360-417-3506


A8

WeatherWatch

MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2016 Neah Bay 50/43

Olympic Peninsula TODAY G ALE WAT Port Angeles CH 53/41

Olympics Snow level: 4,000 feet

Forks 50/42 T AF CR Y L OR AL IS SM ADV

➡ TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

60/42 But then the sun arrives

Strait of Juan de Fuca: W morning wind 25 to 35 kt. Wind waves 4 to 6 ft. Showers likely. W evening wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft. Ocean: W morning wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft. SW swell 6 ft at 10 seconds. Showers likely. W evening wind 15 to 20 kt easing to 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. W swell 7 ft at 9 seconds building to 9 ft at 9 seconds.

Brinnon 55/39

THURSDAY

Last

New

First

Seattle 56° | 46° Olympia 54° | 43°

Tacoma 56° | 47°

Astoria 52° | 46°

Apr 29

FRIDAY

Billings 73° | 43°

San Francisco 66° | 52°

Thurs

Apr 13

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonset today Moonrise tomorrow

7:49 p.m. 6:42 a.m. 4:37 p.m. 5:55 a.m.

Chicago 37° | 36°

Lo 29 37 42 34 36 47 37 39 35 51 43 42 46 32 50 22 26

Prc .07

.13 .06

WEDNESDAY High Tide Ht Low Tide 12:11 a.m. 8.7’ 6:28 a.m. 12:30 p.m. 8.7’ 6:45 p.m.

Ht 0.2’ 0.0’

.57 .09

.79

1:36 a.m. 6.6’ 12:46 p.m. 5.7’

7:21 a.m. 3.6’ 7:16 p.m. 0.8’

2:06 a.m. 6.7’ 1:53 p.m. 6.1’

8:01 a.m. 2.6’ 8:04 p.m. 1.1’

2:36 a.m. 6.9’ 2:55 p.m. 6.4’

8:42 a.m. 8:51 p.m.

1.6’ 1.5’

Port Townsend

3:13 a.m. 8.1’ 2:23 p.m. 7.0’

8:34 a.m. 4.0’ 8:29 p.m. 0.9’

3:43 a.m. 8.3’ 3:30 p.m. 7.5’

9:14 a.m. 2.9’ 9:17 p.m. 1.2’

4:13 a.m. 8.5’ 9:55 a.m. 4:32 p.m. 7.9’ 10:04 p.m.

1.8’ 1.7’

Dungeness Bay*

2:19 a.m. 7.3’ 1:29 p.m. 6.3’

7:56 a.m. 3.6’ 7:51 p.m. 0.8’

2:49 a.m. 7.5’ 2:36 p.m. 6.8’

8:36 a.m. 2.6’ 8:39 p.m. 1.1’

3:19 a.m. 7.7’ 3:38 p.m. 7.1’

1.6’ 1.5’

9:17 a.m. 9:26 p.m.

Atlanta 75° | 42°

El Paso 83° | 45° Houston 82° | 53°

Miami 83° | 70°

Pressure Low

High

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

70s

80s 90s 100s 110s

36 48 31 46 36 26 26 26 50 27 30 44 23 34 35 23 23 40 30 27 28 24 23 37 40 33 46 71 42 26 41 49 35 39 74 58 44 57

.01 .05 .03 .02 .26 .03 .06 .02 .06 MM

.22 .51

.07 .02 .03

Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Cldy Clr PCldy Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Cldy Cldy Clr Clr Rain PCldy Clr Snow Cldy Clr Clr PCldy Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr Cldy Clr Clr Cldy

Louisville Lubbock Memphis Miami Beach Midland-Odessa Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk, Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Pendleton Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence Raleigh-Durham Rapid City Reno Richmond Sacramento St Louis St Petersburg Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Juan, P.R. Santa Fe St Ste Marie Shreveport Sioux Falls

Payne Law, P.S.

59 68 64 91 66 38 36 64 71 56 68 66 72 57 78 74 59 83 52 50 70 49 71 67 76 64 76 61 76 64 74 71 67 86 60 28 69 49

à 93 in El Centro Nas, Calif. Ä 3 in Grand Marais, Minn.

GLOSSARY of abbreviations used on this page: Clr clear, sunny; PCldy partly cloudy; Cldy cloudy; Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; Prc precipitation; Otlk outlook; M data missing; Ht tidal height; YTD year to date; kt knots; ft or ’ feet

50 24 34 Clr Syracuse 37 Clr Tampa 77 59 45 Clr Topeka 67 39 73 .04 Cldy Tucson 79 55 40 Clr Tulsa 72 48 27 .12 Cldy Washington, D.C. 62 37 29 PCldy Wichita 74 39 37 Clr Wilkes-Barre 58 25 51 Clr Wilmington, Del. 60 35 35 .25 Clr 43 .70 Clr _______ 28 Clr Hi Lo 43 Clr 41 Clr Auckland 68 53 58 .41 Clr Beijing 72 42 44 PCldy Berlin 69 47 37 .12 Clr Brussels 60 48 59 Clr Cairo 88 64 25 .18 PCldy Calgary 62 38 32 .07 Clr Guadalajara 90 52 48 PCldy Hong Kong 79 68 33 1.11 Snow Jerusalem 73 55 44 .25 Clr Johannesburg 81 55 41 Clr Kabul 63 39 46 PCldy London 55 42 38 .13 Clr 84 51 51 Clr Mexico City 28 14 37 Clr Montreal 41 28 63 .58 PCldy Moscow 100 73 43 PCldy New Delhi Paris 61 48 44 Clr 57 Cldy Rio de Janeiro 86 73 74 50 51 PCldy Rome 75 PCldy San Jose, CRica 84 66 82 69 32 Clr Sydney 56 46 14 Snow Tokyo 30 16 40 Clr Toronto 42 PCldy Vancouver 54 43

.32 Snow .68 PCldy Clr Clr Clr .07 Clr Clr .35 Clr .19 Clr

Otlk PCldy/Sh Clr PCldy Sh Clr Cldy Clr PM Sh Clr Clr PCldy PCldy/Ts PCldy PCldy AM Snow PCldy PM Sh PCldy PCldy PCldy/Sh Clr AM Rain PCldy AM Sh

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Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press

Casper 52 Charleston, S.C. 77 Charleston, W.Va. 59 Charlotte, N.C. 71 Cheyenne 58 Chicago 39 Cincinnati 53 Cleveland 46 Columbia, S.C. 75 Columbus, Ohio 49 Concord, N.H. 52 Dallas-Ft Worth 70 Dayton 48 Denver 63 Des Moines 49 Detroit 41 Duluth 26 El Paso 67 Evansville 60 Fairbanks 39 Fargo 32 Flagstaff 59 Grand Rapids 37 Great Falls 72 Greensboro, N.C. 71 Hartford Spgfld 52 Helena 71 Honolulu 86 Houston 72 Indianapolis 50 Jackson, Miss. 66 Jacksonville 83 Juneau 50 Kansas City 63 Key West 83 Las Vegas 80 Little Rock 69 Los Angeles 76

*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.

ALOHA

New York 51° | 35°

Detroit 35° | 31°

Washington D.C. 71° | 44°

Los Angeles 73° | 56°

-10s

The Lower 48 TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:

Apr 22

Otlk Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr Cldy Clr Snow Clr Snow PCldy

Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Spokane Atlantic City 52° | 45° Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Yakima Bismarck 55° | 45° Boise Boston Brownsville © 2016 Wunderground.com Buffalo Burlington, Vt.

Hi 53 63 68 46 61 65 55 74 63 73 65 70 73 52 72 41 52

Cloudy

Minneapolis 42° | 28°

Denver 72° | 39°

Full

Nation/World

TOMORROW High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 11:37 a.m. 8.5’ 5:39 a.m. 1.2’ 6:00 p.m. 0.0’

Pt. Cloudy

Seattle 56° | 46°

Cold

CANADA Victoria 55° | 45°

TODAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 10:40 a.m. 8.1’ 4:45 a.m. 2.2’ 11:30 p.m. 8.1’ 5:13 p.m. 0.2’

&

Sunny

Fronts

65/44 69/42 To dry puddles, And with it comes toes and eyes the heat

ORE.

Port Angeles

Port Ludlow 55/44

Washington TODAY

Marine Conditions

LaPush

Port Townsend 54/44

Forecast highs for Monday, April 4

Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News

Low 41 54/44 Showers might Rain creates come down more sound

Tides

Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 54 41 0.00 13.06 Forks 56 40 0.00 48.16 Seattle 62 45 0.00 19.49 Sequim 61 42 0.00 5.29 Hoquiam 55 42 0.00 38.25 Victoria 60 43 0.00 14.97 Port Townsend 57 36 **0.00 8.10

Almanac

*** *** *** ***

Aberdeen 53/44

TONIGHT

Sequim 53/41

National forecast Nation TODAY

Yesterday

Bellingham 53/43 g

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, April 4, 2016 SECTION

CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS In this section

B

Mixed Riders squad ruled by Kings Port Angeles team of varsity and JV players drops friendly to Ketchikan BY LEE HORTON

Preps

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The Ketchikan Kings finished their tour of the North Olympic Peninsula by defeating the Port Angeles JV boys soccer team 3-1 at Wally Sigmar Field on the campus of Peninsula College. The Roughriders fielded a spring-break roster of JV and varsity players for Saturday’s friendly against the Alaskan visitors. Ketchikan lost to Port Townsend 3-2 on Thursday and to Sequim 2-0 on Friday. The Riders took an early lead Saturday when Andrew Methner executed a wall pass with Spencer Beverford-Stewart and then beat Kethikan’s goalkeeper to the right. The lead held up until the closing minutes of the first half when the Kings scored the equalizer in the 37th minute. Ketchikan added goals in the 58th minute and the 66th minute to pull away and beat the Riders. Port Angeles coach Chris Saari chose Methner and Wei-Yan Fu as the Riders’ transition players of the match. The Port Angeles (4-0-0, 6-0-1) varsity team’s unbeaten record stays intact heading into spring break. The Riders’ next match is a big one, against the Olympic League 2A Division’s only other unbeaten squad, Kingston (3-00, 5-0-1), at Civic Field on Tuesday, April 12.

Track and Field Sequim’s Herrera hurdles to victories at Li’l Norway SEQUIM — Sequim senior Oscar Herrera won both hurdles at the Li’l Norway

Invitational at North Kitsap High School. Herrera ran the 110-meter hurdles in 15.43 seconds and the 300 hurdles in 40.97 seconds at Saturday’s 13-school meet, which also included Chimacum and Clallam Bay. The Chimacum boys finished sixth, followed by Sequim at seventh. Clallam Bay tied for 10th with Tacoma Baptist.

Shingleton wins twice The Sequim girls placed fifth as a team, while Clallam Bay was 12th and Chimacum 13th. Audrey Shingleton won the girls 800meter run for the Wolves with a time of 2 minutes, 28.15 seconds. She added a thirdplace showing in the 1,600 run. Shingleton also helped Sequim take first in the 4x400 relay, running a 4:36.73 along with Emma Beeson, Mercedes Woods and Elizabeth Sweet. Molly McCoy had the Clallam Bay girls’ best individual finish by jumping 4 feet, 8 inches and taking fourth in the high jump. McCoy also ran the second leg of the Bruins’ second-place 1,200-400-800-1,600 relay. Reagan Herndon ran the 1,200, Kendra Anderson the 800 and Kaylin Signor the 1,600. Bailey Castillo had the highest finish for the Chimacum girls, taking fourth in the javelin with an 89-06 throw. The Chimacum boys were led by a pair of runner-ups. TURN

TO

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Port Angeles’ Ben Schneider steps in front of Ketchikan’s Sam Weston,

PREPS/B2 middle, and Izaak Jensen at Wally Sigmar Field in Port Angeles.

2016 Seattle Mariners Preview

Really, Healthy Cano is key to success Star second baseman was back in there’s usual form during spring training reason to hope BY BOB DUTTON

MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

LET ME TELL you a story. Flash back to late January, and the Seattle Mariners are about to hold their pre-spring training media luncheon. I’d been spending almost Nick all my time covering the Seattle Patterson Seahawks, whose season had just ended. I knew the Mariners hired a new general manager in Jerry Dipoto, and I knew Dipoto had made more moves than John Travolta pulled off in “Saturday Night Fever.” But because I was so engrossed in the Seahawks, none of those Mariners moves stuck in my head. Therefore, the day before the media luncheon, I decided I needed to make a concerted effort to understand just what Mariners had as they headed into spring training. The roster had turned over so much — just seven of the 25 players who were on the opening-day roster in 2015 survived to opening day this year — I had no grasp on whether the collection of players assembled was any good. After looking up statistics from the previous season and jotting down a projected roster, what was my reaction? This may actually be all right. Mariners fans are probably tired of hearing it, but there actually may be reason for optimism heading into 2016. It’s the same line that’s been muttered pretty much every spring between 2004 and the present, yet Seattle failed to reach the playoffs in any of those seasons and finished with a winning record on just three of those 12 occasions. TURN

TO

PATTERSON/B3

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Second baseman Robinson Cano bats during spring training last week in Peoria, Ariz.

It’s possible that the key moment in shaping the 2016 Seattle Mariners had nothing to do with any of general manager Jerry Dipoto’s many roster moves nor manager Scott Servais’ emphasis on heightened communication. Nothing to do with an increased attention to analytics, either. The seminal point in the Mariners’ bridge between a disappointing 2015 season and what lies ahead starting today at Texas might be a November radio interview on a St. Louis station in which a bitter former employee lashed out. Former coach Andy Van Slyke called Robinson Cano “the single worst, third-place, everyday player I’ve ever seen.” He said Cano “couldn’t get a hit when it mattered” and blamed him for the purge in the front office and on-field staffs. The rant stunned Cano as much as anyone else. He was

recovering at the time in the Dominican Republic from October surgery to correct a double sports hernia — an ailment he played through last season over the final two months. “Honestly, it didn’t hurt me,” Cano said. “A lot of people called me, and I said, ‘I’m not going to waste my time and say anything back.’ “I got a call from the Mariners’ [organization] apologizing because he said all of that stuff.”

‘Put that off to the side’ Cano prides himself on his ability to block out distractions. “I’m the kind of person who just gets locked in on what I want to do,” he said. “This is where I want to go, that’s where I’m going. People expect more than what you’re capable of. “Everybody looks at the money, the big contract, and not the player you are. But what I’ve learned over the years is how to put that off to the side.” TURN

TO

CANO/B3

Mariners great unknown in AL West BY TIM BOOTH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE — Through all the various remodels over the course of too many lost seasons there have been two constants for Seattle baseball for the past decade: Felix Hernandez and missing the playoffs. So as a new season arrives in Seattle, with yet another massive offseason overhaul having taken place, Hernandez is still here waiting for the chance to pitch in the postseason, the only accomplishment missing on his career resume. “I’ve been here a long time and now I’m old. No, I’m kidding. But really I enjoy being here. I like the organization and I’m excited to still be here,” Hernandez said. “This year is a little different because there are new faces.”

eral manager Jerry Dipoto, to first-time manager Scott Servais and down to the First Game 25th man on the Today bench, Seat- vs. Rangers tle is essen- at Arlington tially an Time: 1 p.m. entirely new On TV: ESPN team. T h a t brings excitement and uncertainty. It also does little to instill THE ASSOCIATED PRESS belief that the longest playoff Felix Hernandez starts his ninth season opener today drought in baseball will come to but still hasn’t pitched in the postseason. an end in 2016. “I feel very confident that our After an offseason that fea- as one of the biggest unknowns, game plan has been executed,” tured one significant change not just in the AL West, but in Dipoto said. after another, the Mariners will baseball. From the chair of new genopen the season today at Texas TURN TO M’S/B3


B2

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MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2016

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Latest sports headlines can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.

Scoreboard Calendar Today Baseball: Port Angeles at Sequim, 4:15 p.m.; Chimacum at Klahowya, 4:15 p.m. Boys Soccer: Forks at Coupeville, 12:30 p.m.

Tuesday Baseball: Forks at Eatonville, doubleheader, 2 p.m.; Bremerton at Port Angeles, 4:15 p.m.; Sequim at Kingston, 4:15 p.m. Softball: Forks at Eatonville, doubleheader, 2 p.m.

Area Sports Golf CEDARS AT DUNGENESS Wednesday Men’s Club Strike Three Tournament Combo Tees Flight One Gross: Leonard Hirschfeld, 57. Net: Jeff James, 50; RAske, 52; Ballantyne, 53; Balla, 53; Halverson, 56; Williams, 57; Cortez, 58; Thometz, 60; Gange, 60. Flight Two Gross: Kris Lether, 59. Net: Justin Hill, 48; Cary Richardson, 49; Lauerman, 51; Howard, 51; McArthur, 52; T. Johnson, 53; Riley, 54; Engel, 54; Busch, 55; Sutton, 61; Mannor, 61. Flight Three Gross: Joe Tomita, 65. Net: Richard Hansen, 48; Thomas Deeney, 52; Waller, 55; Bankert, 55; McCammon, 55; Fosse, 57; Nally, 57; Pinger, 58; Schumacher, 58; Bock, 61; Collatz, 62. Closest to Pin No. 11 Low division (0-17): Leonard Hirschfeld, 3 ft. 9 in. High division (18 -36): Joe Tomita 3 ft. 1⁄2 in. No. 17 Low division (0-17): Paul Ryan, 21 ft. 1⁄2 in. High division (18-36): Jay Howard, 17 ft. 11⁄2 in. No. 4 Open: Ray Ballatyne, 5 ft. 101⁄2 in. Thursday, March 24 Lady Niners Division One Net: Jan Boyungs, 38; Debbie Kahle, 38;

Donna Maclean, 38; Cherste Nilde, 38. Putts: Debbie Kahle, 15. Division Two Net: Dot Forshee, 33; Bonney Benson, 40; Lillie Gomes, 40. Putts: Dot Forshee,18. Thursday, March 17 Net: Dot Forshee, 29; Donna Maclean, 37.5; Olympia Brehm, 38; Dot Forshee, 15. SUNLAND GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB Thursday Men’s Niners Worst Hole Out Net: Mike Schmidt, 26; Jim Evert, 28. Roger Lucas, 31; Darwin Ansotegiu, 31; Dave Walp, 31; Dan Cadigan, 31. SWGA Monthly Medal Flight One Gross: Bobbie Piety, 94; Judy Nordyke, 101; Cheryl Coulter, 104. Net: Cynthia Edel, 84; Janet Real, 85; Gail Savage, 88; Dorene Berard, 88. Flight Two Gross: Jan Prout, 107; Eileen Larsen, 117; Patricia Palmeri, 117. Net: Nonie Dunphy, 86; MJ Anderson, 93; Marsha Carr, 95. Lady Niners Low Net Net: Nancy Harlan, 44; Judy Kelley, 51; Nancy Martin, 51; Helga McGhee, 51. Wednesday Men’s Club Any Nine Holes Gross: Bill Dickin, 34; Jay Tomlin, 34; Bruce Mullikin, 36. Net: Tom Caufield, 27; Dennis Powell, 27; Bill Engle, 29.

College Basketball NCAA Tournament Glance FIRST FOUR Tuesday, March 15 Florida Gulf Coast 96, Fairleigh Dickinson 65 Wichita State 70, Vanderbilt 50 Wednesday, March 16 Holy Cross 59, Southern 55 Michigan 67, Tulsa 62 EAST REGIONAL First Round Thursday, March 17 North Carolina 83, Florida Gulf Coast 67 Providence 70, Southern Cal 69 Indiana 99, Chattanooga 74 Kentucky 85, Stony Brook 57

Friday, March 18 Stephen F. Austin 70, West Virginia 56 Notre Dame 70, Michigan 63 Wisconsin 47, Pittsburgh 43 Xavier 71, Weber State 53 Second Round Saturday, March 19 North Carolina 85, Providence 66 Indiana 73, Kentucky 67 Sunday, March 20 Notre Dame 76, Stephen F. Austin 75 Wisconsin 66, Xavier 63 Regional Semifinals Friday, March 25 Notre Dame 61, Wisconsin 56 North Carolina 101, Indiana 86 Regional Championship Sunday, March 27 North Carolina 88, Notre Dame 74 SOUTH REGIONAL First Round Thursday, March 17 Miami 79, Buffalo 72 Wichita State 65, Arizona 55 UConn 74, Colorado 67 Kansas 105, Austin Peay 79 Friday, March 18 Villanova 86, UNC Asheville 56 Iowa 72, Temple 70, OT Hawaii 77, California 66 Maryland 79, South Dakota State 74 Second Round Saturday, March 19 Miami 65, Wichita State 57 Kansas 73, UConn 61 Sunday, March 20 Villanova 87, Iowa 68 Maryland 73, Hawaii 60 Regional Semifinals Thursday, March 24 Villanova 92, Miami 69 Kansas 79, Maryland 63 Regional Championship Saturday, March 26 Villanova 64, Kansas 59 MIDWEST REGIONAL First Round Thursday, March 17 Butler 71, Texas Tech 61 Virginia 81, Hampton 45 Iowa State 94, Iona 81 UALR 85, Purdue 83, 2OT Utah 80, Fresno State 69

Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”

Gonzaga 68, Seton Hall 52 Friday, March 18 Syracuse 70, Dayton 51 Middle Tennessee 90, Michigan State 81 Second Round Saturday, March 19 Virginia 77, Butler 69 Iowa State 78, UALR 61 Gonzaga 82, Utah 59 Sunday, March 20 Syracuse 75, Middle Tennessee 50 Regional Semifinals Friday, March 25 Virginia 84, Iowa State 71 Syracuse 63, Gonzaga 60 Regional Championship Sunday, March 27 Syracuse 68, Virginia 62 WEST REGIONAL First Round Thursday, March 17 Duke 93, UNC Wilmington 85 Yale 79, Baylor 75 Friday, March 18 VCU 75, Oregon State 67 Oklahoma 82, Cal State Bakersfield 68 Texas A&M 92, Green Bay 65 Northern Iowa 75, Texas 72 Oregon 91, Holy Cross 52 Saint Joseph’s 78, Cincinnati 76 Second Round Saturday, March 19 Duke 71, Yale 64 Sunday, March 20 Oklahoma 85, VCU 81 Texas A&M 92, Northern Iowa 88, 2OT Oregon 69, Saint Joseph’s 64 Regional Semifinals Thursday, March 24 Oklahoma 77, Texas A&M 63 Oregon 82, Duke 68 Regional Championship Saturday, March 26 Oklahoma 80, Oregon 68 FINAL FOUR At NRG Stadium Houston National Semifinals Saturday, April 2 Villanova 95, Oklahoma 51 North Carolina 83, Syracuse 66 National Championship Monday, April 4 Villanova (34-5) vs. North Carolina (33-6), 6:19 p.m.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SPORTS ON TV

Today 10 a.m. (26) ESPN Baseball MLB, Houston Astros at New York Yankees (Live) Noon (313) CBSSD Women’s Basketball NCAA, AlaskaAnchorage vs. Lubbock Christian, Division II Tournament, Championship (Live) 1 p.m. (26) ESPN (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Seattle Mariners at Texas Rangers (Live) 4 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball MLB, Los Angeles Dodgers at San Diego Padres (Live) 4 p.m. (311) ESPNU Baseball NCAA, Virginia Tech vs. Louisville (Live) 6 p.m. (28) TBS (31) TNT Basketball NCAA, Villanova vs. North Carolina, Division I Tournament, Championship (Live) 7 p.m. (319) PAC12 (320) PAC12WA Softball NCAA, Arizona vs. Washington (Live) 7 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Baseball MLB, Chicago Cubs at Los Angeles Angels (Live)

Transactions BASEBALL American League LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Optioned LHP Tyler Skaggs, 3B Jefry Marte, 2B Rey Navarro and OF Rafael Ortega to Salt Lake (PCL). Assigned OF Todd Cunningham outright to Salt Lake. Placed LHP C.J. Wilson on the 15-day DL. MINNESOTA TWINS — Selected the contract of LHP Fernando Abad from Rochester (IL). SEATTLE MARINERS — Designated C Rob Brantly for assignment. Placed LHP Charlie Furbush and RHP Evan Scribner on the 15-day DL, retroactive to March 25. Reassigned INF Efren Navarro and OF Daniel Robertson to minor league camp. Selected the contract of RHP Joel Peralta from Tacoma (PCL). TAMPA BAY RAYS — Released 1B James Loney. TEXAS RANGERS — Placed RHPs Yu Darvish and Luke Jackson, C Chris Gimenez and OF Josh Hamilton on the 15-day DL; Darvish, Jackson and Hamilton retroactive to March 25 and Gimenez to March 27.

Brotherly battle between Jenkins, Britt for national title BY RALPH D. RUSSO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HOUSTON — Kris Jenkins and Nate Britt, brothers in every way except blood, are giving each other the silent treatment for about 48 hours. Maybe they will exchange a “good luck” or a fist bump before Jenkins and Villanova (34-5) face Britt and North Carolina (33-6) tonight in the NCAA Tournament championship game. Otherwise, “Nah,” Jenkins said, “no talking.” It’s the biggest competition yet between a couple guys who grew up trying to beat each other in everything. While the Wildcats-Tar Heels matchup might be a no-lose situation for the Britt family, for the players involved there will defi-

NCAA Tourney nitely be only one winner. “Whoever wins the game, obviously the other one is going to be hurt and going to feel bad,” Britt said. “That’ll be permanent bragging rights for the rest of our lives.” Jenkins and Britt met as 10-year-olds playing AAU basketball in the Washington D.C. area. Eventually, Jenkins started playing for a team coached by Britt’s father and spending lots of time at the Britts’ home — especially when Jenkins’ mother, Felicia, was spending almost all of her time at the hospital with her ailing infant daughter. Kori was 11 months old when she died. When Felicia Jenkins, a former

college basketball player, got a job coaching at Benedict College in Columbia, S.C., she felt it would be best for Kris to stay with the Britts in Maryland permanently. In 2007, the Britts became Jenkins’ legal guardians. “It’s been the greatest decision that’s ever happened in my life,” Jenkins said.

Not Nova’s first choice Villanova coach Jay Wright said Britt, not Jenkins, was his priority when he took a recruiting visit to the Britt home. “We liked Kris, but we thought he’s overweight and he’s not going to do all the stuff we do,” Wright said. But the 6-foot-6 Jenkins, who weighed as much as 280 pounds back in high school, liked what he

heard from Wright. He ended up committing to Villanova, and dropping 40 pounds, and Britt chose North Carolina. When the Tar Heels and Wildcats played each other in the first round of the 2013 NCAA Tournament, Jenkins and Britt watched the game together, rooting for their future schools — and not talking to each other. They trash texted each other and didn’t even sit on the same couch. “That was fun,” Britt said. North Carolina won 78-71. The Britts have spent the past few weeks bouncing around the country watching their sons play. Last weekend, they managed to attend all four Elite Eight games, two in Philadelphia (where North Carolina played) and two in Louisville (were Villanova

played). Jenkins even attended North Carolina’s East Regional championship victory against Notre Dame. Nate Britt, the 6-1 guard who averages 5.5 points off the bench, said he does not know which section his parents and sister will be sitting tonight. “I tried to ask them how they would remain neutral, what they would wear, but they didn’t tell me,” Britt said. Jenkins, second on Villanova in scoring (13.5 per game), remains close with his birth parents. He says he has two families. And he roots for North Carolina all the time. Well, almost. “I do hope he plays well,” Jenkins said. “I hope he’s injury free and things like that. But there’s nobody in the world I want to beat more than my brother.”

Preps: Wolves, Rangers drop nonleague tilts CONTINUED FROM B1 along with Port Angeles and Coupeville. The Cowboys are at Olympic Trevon Noel’s 136-09 in the shot put placed second, and Matt along with Klahowya and BremerTorres, Jadyn Roberts, Eoin Hart- ton. nett and Conner Cottier were Baseball second in the 100-100-200-400 relay. Anacortes 2, Clallam Bay sophomore ClaySequim 0 ton Willis won the boys long jump SEQUIM — Wolves pitcher with a mark of 19-09. He also Austin Hilliard took the loss but placed second in the high jump. more than held his own against The Bruins return to action the Seahawks in the nonleague after spring break at the North matchup. Olympic League’s first league Hilliard went all six innings meet of the season at Port Angeles for Sequim and struck out five High School on Wednesday, April batters while allowing six hits 13. and two runs and walking only Sequim and Chimacum return one. to action Thursday, April 14. The The Wolves only managed two Wolves compete at Port Townsend hits, singles by Evan Hurn and

Logan Hankinson, in Saturday’s loss, their third straight. Anacortes (8-3) scored its runs in the fifth and seventh innings. Sequim (1-2, 5-4) hosts rival Port Angeles (2-0, 5-1) today at 4 p.m. The Roughriders have won five in a row since losing their season opener. The Wolves then host Kingston (0-1, 0-3) on Tuesday before taking the rest of the week off for spring break. Anacortes 2, Sequim 0 Anacortes 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 — 2 6 1 Sequim 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 0 2 1 WP- L. Gideon; LP- Hilliard Pitching Statistics Anacortes: L. Gideon 7 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 4 BB, 8 K. Sequim: Hilliard 7 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, BB, 5 K. Hitting Statistics Anacortes: L. Gideon 2-3; Ty Saunders 2-3, Brennan 1-2, 2B, R, RBI. Sequim: Hurn 1-3, Hankinson 1-3.

Oakville 14, Quilcene 4 OAKVILLE — The Rangers’ starters were rested against the state-caliber Acorns. “This being a nonleague game and with potential to face this same team in playoffs, my coaching staff and I elected to sit our varsity and give our younger, lessexperienced players some playing time,” Quilcene coach Darrin Dotson said. “There are no practice reps that can replace game reps.” Freshman Robert Comstock and senior Trevor Burnston, both new to pitching this season, took the mound for the Rangers and each allowed seven runs. Burnston pitched 5 1/3 innings and struck out 10 while walking eight.

“Our JV players surprised me. Six of the nine players on the field have never played high school baseball,” Dotson said. “These players were given an opportunity to play in a live game. I’ve told our younger players: they are our program’s future, I’m interested in their development now as younger players, not just interested in them when they are junior and seniors. “I’m a big proponent getting our less-experienced players some game reps.” Quilcene (1-0, 4-3) returns to SeaTac League action next Monday, April 11, when they host Seattle Lutheran (1-1, 1-6).

________ Compiled using team reports.

Kyle Busch wins again for weekend sweep at Martinsville THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Kyle Busch pulled away on a restart with 11 laps to go and outran AJ Allmendinger to the finish for his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victory at Martinsville Speedway, and a sweep of the two-race weekend. Busch, who won for the first time in 31 starts at Martinsville in a truck race on the 0.526-mile oval on Saturday, dominated in the premier division in bright sunshine but cool temperatures that never let the track get quite as sticky as it normally does.

Busch sailed off, Allmendinger beat Kenseth to the inside position and Busch’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammate got hung up on the He led 352 laps, the most since outside and faded to a 15th-place Bobby Hamilton led 378 on April finish. 20, 1998. Allmendinger was second, folDixon wins IndyCar lowed by Kyle Larson, Austin Dilrace in Arizona lon and Brad Keselowski. The finish looked nothing like AVONDALE, Ariz. — Indythe leaderboard for most of the Car’s return to the desert was race, but Busch and teammate supposed to fast and furious, Matt Kenseth stayed out when a maybe even a little dangerous. caution flew with 15 laps to go It was certainly was fast, but while the rest of the contenders Scott Dixon took most of the danpitted for fresher tires. ger out with a dominating perforWhen the green flag flew, mance.

Auto Racing

Dixon took the lead from Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Tony Kanaan with 155 laps left and never relinquished control, dominating IndyCar’s first race at Phoenix International Raceway in 11 years on Saturday night. “The Target car was fast, really, really fast,” Dixon said. “I think at any point we had enough for anybody that was challenging. We definitely, definitely had some speed in reserve for sure.” Dixon started sixth and took advantage of tire trouble that knocked two of Team Penske’s drivers out of the lead to move up the grid.

Once he passed Kanaan coming out of pit road, there was no stopping Dixon until he crossed the checkers under caution for his 39th career IndyCar race, tying Al Unser for fourth on IndyCar’s alltime list. It was Dixon’s 20th win on an oval and gave him victories in a series-record 12 straight seasons, a mark he had shared with Bobby Unser, Emerson Fittipaldi and Helio Castroneves. Simon Pagenaud finished second for the second straight week. Will Power was third after missing the season opener in St. Petersburg with an ear infection.


SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2016

B3

Cano: Teammates are seeing ‘the old Robby’ CONTINUED FROM B1 said. “I know what I can do. “Just keep moving for- I’m not a guy who likes to ward. Keep playing. You make excuses, but last year still hear it here and there, I was hurt. I wasn’t able to do the things I normally do. but it’s OK.” Cano honed that focus I couldn’t [turn] on that while playing nine seasons inside pitch. I couldn’t get to for the Yankees in the New balls [in the field] that I York media fishbowl before usually do. “This year, I’m healthy, he jumped to the Mariners after the 2013 season by and I pray to God that I signing a 10-year deal for stay that way.” $240 million. But make no mistake: Slow start in 2015 Van Slyke’s words cut deep. There is no doubt that he They grabbed headlines wasn’t healthy a year ago. and threw renewed light on Cano’s spring started in concerns that dated to the tragedy when his beloved moment Cano signed that grandfather died. Then he 10-year deal: At what point experienced stomach probdo his skills begin to dimin- lems, which were later corish? rected through dietary Said one teammate: changes. “Robby was [ticked] off.” He got off to a remarkThe criticism added ably poor start. He was hitmotivation for Cano to ting .236 through June 16 regain his status as one of with a .277 on-base percentthe game’s premier players. age and little pop (a .323 Prior to last season he was slugging percentage). His a perennial All-Star who batting average on balls in had finished among the top play (BABIP) suggested six players in the MVP bal- some of it was just bad luck. loting for five straight years. Even so . . . the correlaCano contends that tion was devastating. Cano motivation was already wasn’t hitting, the Mariners there. He viewed last sea- were struggling, and when son as an injury-filled you’re making $24 million a anomaly, one that his work- year, you’re a target. Rightout routine coupled with a fully so. return to full health would “I know when you’re not correct — and he believed hitting and you’re one of the everyone felt the same way. key guys, and the team is Van Slyke’s words not playing well, you’re proved otherwise. going to be criticized,” he “Guys who know me said. know I work hard,” Cano “I know that. You just

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Robinson Cano struggled early in 2015 before putting up above-his-average numbers after mid-June. have to block it out and do what you can do.” Cano believed he did that. He batted .322 from June 17 through the end of the season. His on-base percentage climbed to .372 and he hit 19 homers in those 93 games in amassing a .530 slugging percentage over than span. All three of those slash numbers are above his career norms. Further, he played the final two months with that double sports hernia. He continued to log time at second base because Nelson Cruz was also nursing injuries and required time as

the designated hitter. Cano soldiered on, but he had no first-step quickness, either in the field or in breaking from the batter’s box. “When I didn’t run 100 percent, it didn’t get that bad,” he said. “But when I tried to run fast or move quick, that’s when the pain was really bad. It’s was for one or two minutes, and then it went away. I just had to handle it.” That Van Slyke, a coach, couldn’t see those limitations simply baffled Cano, who has become accustomed, for example, to the

steady drumbeat from the New York media that alleges he regrets his freeagent decision to leave the Yankees. “I’ve never said that,” Cano insisted again early this spring. “I don’t know where they find it. They always say ‘source’ or ‘friend.’ I’ve never [said that] to a friend or anybody. “I’m happy to be here [in Seattle] and happy to get my chance here to be able to play to the end of my career and have fun with the guys and [play in] a city that has treated me so nice.” That’s why Van Slyke’s words stung. “He was a guy that always talked to me,” Cano said. “Then he says that. I don’t know [why] he said everybody got fired because of me.”

‘Looking real good’ Nonetheless, Cano’s health drew covert scrutiny early this spring from teammates and club officials. They wanted to see whether he was healthy, whether he could move and do the things he could once do but couldn’t do a year ago. It only took a few days. “Robby’s looking real good,” pitcher Felix Hernandez observed through a smile. “I mean this is the old Robby I know. He can do a lot of things.” Cano flashed renewed

first-step quickness from the start of camp and was soon routinely making defensive plays that toooften eluded him last season because of his various ailments. “From day one, he’s been moving really well at second base,” Servais said. “The arm span of this guy. He’s got long arms. On ground balls, it’s like rubber-band arms. “He’s just moving better. He’s getting to balls that people said he couldn’t get to. It’s been very impressive.” Ask the Mariners to identify the key this season to success and, once they get beyond the cliche of staying healthy, they almost always point to the importance of a productive Cano. “We need Robby,” Cruz said. “He’s the head of the team. He’s the biggest piece of the puzzle.” From the moment he signed with the Mariners, Cano warned that he wasn’t a one-man salvage team, that a winning club needs many good players. He’s right, of course, and here now was the opportunity to reprise that refrain. But after a pause, the big smile returned. “You know what? Let them say that,” Cano said, “because, honestly, I do feel good and healthy. I can move pretty good.” Maybe someone should thank Van Slyke.

Patterson: Improved M’s: Overhauled roster CONTINUED FROM B1

New, but old

zational depth to withstand losing multiple players for large chunks of time. If the offense falters, Seattle won’t be able to depend on the pitching staff to pick up all the slack, despite an improved outfield defense. The rotation, led by King Felix, should be OK. But age could be an issue there, too, with Hernandez showing signs of declining velocity and Hisashi Iwakuma a constant injury concern. The bullpen is a complete mystery with all seven members being new faces from a year ago. But if the Mariners catch a little luck and the lineup remains substantially healthy, they finally have a chance to win games with their bats. Seattle finished 76-86 last year and in fourth place in the AL West. Statistical projections have the Mariners making a modest improvement this year. FanGraphs predicts Seattle as finishing the season with an 82-80 record, while Baseball Prospectus tabs the Mariners at 84-78. And given both the organization’s offseason overhaul and Mariners’ history the past decade, a winning record would be something worth celebrating.

CONTINUED FROM B1 “Now we’re going to find out as the season starts, how good the game plan was.” Hernandez remains the center of Seattle’s core, along with Robinson Cano, Kyle Seager and Nelson Cruz, coming off one of the finest seasons ever by a Seattle hitter since the opening of Safeco Field.

New faces in place But it’s the construction around those four that has changed drastically since the conclusion of last season when Seattle was expected to contend for a division title only to fall flat. Seattle will begin the year with nearly half its 25-man roster having played elsewhere in 2015. Leonys Martin and Nori Aoki are now mainstays in the outfield. Adam Lind is at first base with Korean slugger Dae-Ho Lee spelling him against left-handed pitchers. Chris Iannetta is at catcher with a pitching rotation that includes newcomers Wade Miley and Nathan Karns. And there is Seattle’s bullpen that was completely overhauled and could determine how successful Servais is in his first season. “Rookie managers, and I’m in that category right now, the thing that makes you look good is a really good bullpen,” Servais said. “Those guys are going to

However, there’s one big concern about Seattle’s lineup: Age. While the Mariners’ lineup looks improved, it’s also long in the tooth. When including platoon partners, Seattle has 11 players who begin the season expected to be regulars in the lineup. On opening day their average age is 31.18 years. Eight of the 11 are on the wrong side of 30. ________ This presents multiple potential problems. The Daily Herald of Everett is a First, players who have sister paper of the PDN. Sports columnist Nick Patterson can be passed 30 are generally past their physical primes. reached at npatterson@heraldnet. Therefore, there’s always SHOP the chance that declining skills will result in a production downturn. Tablecloths and bedding in Second, older players BRIGHTEN UP 100% cotton are more prone to injury, your home for SPRING BRIGHT BOLD and the Mariners don’t COLORS! 119 E. Washington St., Sequim >>> Hours Mon - Fri 10 - 5 • Sat 11 - 5 • 681-4431 possess the kind of organi-

M’s aiming for history games, one shy of the Major League record of 10 in a row by the Boston Beaneaters from 1887-96. No other team has won nine straight since the Reds from 1983-91, so Seattle can put itself alone in the modern era if the club stops Texas at Globe Life Park.

BY GREG JOHNS MLB.COM

ARLINGTON — The Mariners will be looking to make a little history today when they face the Rangers on opening day with ace Felix Hernandez on the mound. Seattle has won nine straight opening day be key for us.” Here’s what else to watch with the 2016 Mariners: ■ King of the North(west): Hernandez is now entering his second decade pitching for the Mariners, which is shocking in itself. He is coming off a 2015 season where he won 18 games, second-most of his career, but saw his ERA rise to 3.53, the highest since posting a 3.92 ERA in 2007. Hernandez also had some of the more forgettable outings of his career last season, including giving up 10 earned runs in 2 1/3 innings in Boston and managing just one out and giving up eight earned runs in Houston. Hernandez remains the

ace of Seattle’s staff that includes the return of Hisashi Iwakuma, promising youngster Taijuan Walker and the additions of Miley and Karns. ■ Bull(pen) on parade: The determining factor in Seattle’s success will likely be a revamped bullpen. Seattle is hoping that Steve Cishek can rebound from a down 2015 and return to the closer form he showed in Miami. If Cishek can be solid in the ninth inning and Joaquin Benoit holds down the eighth, then Seattle has enough arms to bridge the latter innings. If either of them struggle, the Mariners could be vulnerable in the late innings.

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It’s understandable if Mariners fans have tuned out the rosy predictions that inevitably accompany spring training. I hate to do this to the jaded, but I actually see reason for optimism for the Mariners this season. The biggest reason for optimism is the offense. Huh? You mean the same offense that scored just 656 runs last season, ranking 13th out of 15 teams in the American League? You mean the same offense that finished dead last in the AL in runs scored four straight years from 2009-2012? You mean the same offense that hasn’t been league average in runs scored since 2007? Yes, Safeco Field has something to do with Seattle’s low run output, as the Mariners play half their games in a park that strongly favors pitchers. But Safeco Field didn’t prevent the 2001 Mariners from leading the league with 927 runs, a number Seattle hasn’t been within 256 runs of the past eight years. There’s no getting around it, Seattle’s offense has been a train wreck. But as dire as Seattle’s offense has been there’s reasons for hope in 2016. At least Seattle’s offense has been trending upward. The Mariners have seen an modest increase in run output each of the past five seasons, building from the pitiful 513 the team scored in 2010. Seattle, despite the turnover, retained the base of its offense in Nelson Cruz, Robinson Cano and Kyle Seager.

Cruz and Seager are dependable power sources, while Cano was back to his normal self in the second half last year (.331 average, 15 home runs) after looking done in the first half (.251, six homers) — plus Cano is healthy after undergoing offseason surgery to repair a sports hernia. The Mariners’ lineup also will have more depth with the additions of Adam Lind and Nori Aoki. Lind won’t win any home-run titles, but he’s a proven power hitter against right-handed pitchers, while Aoki provides much-needed on-base skills for the top of the lineup. Too often in the past Seattle would threaten, only to reach the rally-killing black-hole portion of the lineup. The automatic outs should dissipate this year.

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B4

Fun ’n’ Advice

MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2016

Dilbert

Girlfriend chafes at request to quit drinking for a year

by Scott Adams

For Better or For Worse

Classic Doonesbury (1986)

Frank & Ernest

Garfield

DEAR ABBY: I have been dating an alcoholic for three years. He recently entered a treatment program because after his last binge he tried to kill himself. He seems to be committed to his program and staying sober. He has requested that I stay sober with him for at least a year. While I’m fully committed to our relationship and support him, I don’t feel that it’s fair that I should have to completely forgo drinking because he has a problem. I’m not looking to go out and party every night — those days are over for me — but I’d like to enjoy an occasional beer with a friend or a glass of wine with my mom. When I approached him about my doing so, he became upset. He said if I have this one exception, he believes the exceptions will continue and I will be at his old level of drinking. Do you think his request is reasonable? Sober in New Jersey

by Lynn Johnston

by G.B. Trudeau

Rose is Rose

by Bob and Tom Thaves

when I confront her, she gets angry Van Buren with me and says that it means I don’t trust her. I trust that she’s not going to go off and sleep with some random guy, but I feel it is wrong because she knows how I feel about it. How can I get her to see it my way? Principled in San Diego

Abigail

Dear Principled: She already knows it upsets you, so try this. Get up, join her and her partner on the dance floor, and start doing the “sandwich.” And make sure that the person in the middle is you. Dear Abby: My husband is in poor health, and when his time comes, I would like to have him stuffed. It would be comforting to see him sitting in his favorite chair in the living room. That way, I’d always know where he is, plus he wouldn’t be asking me for another beer all the time. My kids don’t like the idea. What about you, Abby? Desert Hot Springs, Calif. Dear Desert Hot Springs.: Grief makes people do strange things. I’m not sure you are thinking this through. Once you are finished grieving, you might meet someone you want to watch a game with and need that chair.

Dear Abby: My wife and I have the same argument every year or so. It’s about dancing with other people when we’re out for the evening. I feel that “grinding” is sexual and that it’s inappropriate for someone in a relationship to do it with anyone else. I made my sentiments clear to her when we first started dating, but it seems that about every year when we are out, she’ll start dancing with some guy in a very provocative manner. I’ll get unhappy about it, but

by Brian Basset

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): It’s up to you to change your mind or to head in a different direction. Follow your heart and do what suits you. Social networking and meeting with people who are just as cutting edge and goal-oriented as you will pay off. 3 stars

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t share personal information or gossip about others. Emotional matters will lead to complications if you don’t resolve issues swiftly. Take advantage of a workrelated opportunity. A romantic encounter will offer relief from stress. 4 stars

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): An enticing possibility may stretch your budget, but with careful planning and working closely with others, success can be yours. Do what it takes to stand out from the competition. 3 stars

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Refuse to get sidetracked by someone who is trying to get your attention by doing something impulsive and pushy. Using your intelligence and intuition will help you get the results you want. Romance is on the rise. 5 stars by Hank Ketcham

Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, the late Pauline Phillips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Don’t allow anyone to stand in your way. Look for ulterior motives and be ready to sidestep any negativity that comes your way. Be the initiator and control whatever situation you face. Stick to the truth and you’ll come out on top. 3 stars

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Be careful when sharing information or helping others. Do something that will benefit you, not someone else. A secretive approach will make your presentation that much more inviting when you are ready to move forward. 2 stars

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

________

The Last Word in Astrology ❘

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

Dennis the Menace

DEAR ABBY

Dear Sober: That depends upon whether you, too, had an alcohol problem before your boyfriend joined the program and were his drinking buddy. If the answer is yes, I don’t think his request is unreasonable. However, your boyfriend might be afraid that if you drink regularly, it might threaten his newfound sobriety. If that’s the case, if you love him, you should refrain for a year as he has requested.

by Jim Davis

Red and Rover

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Pickles

by Brian Crane

by Eugenia Last

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Initiate personal changes that will improve your living arrangements or give you the added confidence to follow through with your dreams. Consider the source of negative information before you take action. Someone will try to make you look bad. 4 stars

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Rely on past experiences to help you make a wise choice regarding home, friends or family. Look for opportunities that arise due to someone else’s lack of knowledge or experience. Someone’s loss will LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): turn in to your gain. 4 stars Don’t waste time on someAQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. one who is demanding or 18): Call up an old friend or pushy. Go about your busiattend a reunion or event that ness and make the alterawill help you reconnect. Shartions to your life or relationing old dreams will spark new ships that will enable you to ones. An unusual partnership follow through with the plans can turn into a prosperous that will bring you the highest venture. Show off your talents returns. 3 stars and skills with confidence. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 3 stars 21): Opportunity is knocking. PISCES (Feb. 19-March Attend functions that will 20): Protect your heart and allow you to flush out any your reputation. Someone will uncertainties you might have not be as open with you as about moving forward with you hoped. Emotional anger your plans. Dealing with chil- will only make matters worse. dren or engaging in romance Strive to reach personal and will ease your stress and give professional goals and let you added incentive. your success speak for you. 5 stars 3 stars

The Family Circus

by Bil and Jeff Keane


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2016 B5

Peninsula MARKETPLACE Reach The North Olympic Peninsula & The World

NOON E N I L D A E D on’t Miss It! D

IN PRINT & ONLINE

Place Your Ad Online 24/7 PLACE ADS FOR PRINT AND WEB:

Visit | www.peninsuladailynews.com Call: 360.452.8435 or 800.826.7714 | Fax: 360.417.3507 In Person: 305 W. 1st St., Port Angeles s Office Hours: Monday thru Friday – 8AM to 5PM

SNEAK A PEEK PENINSULA DAILY NEWS s

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General General

s

T O D AY ’ S H O T T E S T N E W C L A S S I F I E D S !

CAREGIVERS NEEDED $100 hire on bonus, $11.93 hr., benefits. No experience. Free training. Caregivers Home Care. 457-1644, 6837377, 379-6659

KEYBOARD: Yamaha, Ez-220, light up music piano keyboard - all instruments. Almost new. $135. (360)504-2999.

3020 Found

4026 Employment General

General

HOME HEALTH CUSTOMER SERVICE Full-time, rotating weekends. Experience with home health equipment and/or college degree p r e fe r r e d bu t n o t r e quired. People person a must. Competitive salary and benefits. Apply at Jim’s Pharmacy, 424 E. 2nd St., P.A. EOE.

CAREGIVERS NEEDED $100 hire on bonus, $11.93 hr., benefits. No experience. Free training. Caregivers Home Care. 457-1644, 6837377, 379-6659 P O R TA B L E T O I L E T TECHNICIAN. Full time M-F, some weekends. Bill’s Plumbing, appy in person at: 425 S. 3rd. Ave., Sequim

GENERAL LABORER: Coast Seafoods Co.. Positions open for General Laborer. Mond a y - F r i d a y. B a c k ground check and pre employment drug test required. Apply within at 1601 Linger Longer RD. Quilcene 98376. (360)765-3345

Now Hiring!. Olympic Game Farm is now hiring for summer season employment, MaySept. Par t time/seasonal, 20-35 hrs/wk. Customer ser vice & tour guide positions avail. Extremely fast paced environment outdoors. Must have valid D/L. Apply in person at 1423 Ward Rd, Sequim. Must be able to pass background check & drug screening. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE!

HUMAN RESOURCES Specialist Seasonal 10 months- at Lake Crescent Lodge-Olympic Peninsula. Unique opportunity to join a fortune 200 company! Ideal candidate has a minimum of 1-2 years’ exper ience with hiring team members on a large scale. To apply: Please visit our Office / Assistant w e b s i t e a t w w w. a r a Manager mar k.com and search Hearing Health Practice R e q u i s i t i o n n u m b e r seeking the right indi65268 v i d u a l fo r a f u l l - t i m e SOUS CHEF: We are Front Office/Assistant looking for a strong Sous M a n a g e r. M u s t h ave : Chef who is a leader and Culture of Caring, Detail highly organized for our Oriented, Team Player, Seasonal Sous Chef Op- Phones and Microsoft portunity at Sol Duc Hot Office Experience. Pay Springs. Great opportu- commensurate with exnity to get your foot in perience. the door with Aramark, a Email resumes to: For tune 200 company jdiottavio@ahaanet.com who is an industry leader. Ideal candidate is Payroll Specialist OpServ Safe Certified. To portunity. Ensures accuapply: Please visit our rate processing and rew e b s i t e a t w w w. a r a - c o r d i n g o f p a y r o l l . mar k.com and search Contact Westport LLC or R e q u i s i t i o n N u m b e r krista.hathaway@westportyachts.com 59654

Product Development Technician. CRTC is hiring. CNC, production machinery + fabrication exper ience needed. Great compensation rmcintosh@compositerecycling.org TRANSIT OPERATOR P O R T TO W N S E N D BASE. Jefferson Transit is currently hiring for Transit Operator. Job description, application materials and information are available by mail, on the Jefferson Transit website at jeffersontransit.com, or at the Jefferson Transit office at 63 4 Corners Road, Po r t Tow n s e n d , WA 98368. Please call 360-385-4777 x 107 if you have questions. Applications must be received no later than 5:00 pm on Monday, April 11, 2016. CDL Class B w/passenger endorsement preferred. Jefferson Transit is an equal opportunity employer. TRANSIT OPERATOR P O R T TO W N S E N D BASE. Jefferson Transit is currently hiring for Transit Operator. Job description, application materials and information are available by mail, on the Jefferson Transit website at jeffersontransit.com, or at the Jefferson Transit office at 63 4 Corners Road, Po r t Tow n s e n d , WA 98368. Please call 360-385-4777 x 107 if you have questions. Applications must be received no later than 5:00 pm on Monday, April 11, 2016. CDL Class B w/passenger endorsement preferred. Jefferson Transit is an equal opportunity employer. TREE CLIMBER: Exper i e n c e d , t o p p ay $ $ , Culls, Drunks and Drugg i e s n e e d n o t a p p l y. Contact Crystal. (580)641-6670.

REPORTER sought for Port Angeles staff opening with the Peninsula Daily News, a six-day a.m. newspaper on Washington’s beautiful North Olympic Peninsula, which includes the cities of Por t Angeles, Sequim, Port Townsend and Forks. Bring your experience from a weekly or small daily - - from the first day, you’ll be able to show off the writing and photography skills you’ve already acquired while shar pening your talent with the help of veteran newsroom leaders. This is a general assignment reporter position in which being a self-starter is required. Our circulation area covers two counties, including the Victorian seaport of Por t Townsend, the sunshine town of Seq u i m , t h e “ Tw i l i g h t ” countr y of For ks, five Native American tribes plus wild rivers and the “mountains to the sea” city of Port Angeles. We are located at the gateway to million-acre Olympic National Park and across the Strait of Juan de Fuca from Vancouver Island and spectacular Victoria, British Columbia. Port Angeles was named by “New Rating Guide to Life in America’s Small Cities” as one of the best U.S. small cities. Plus we get half the rainfall of Seattle! Compensation includes medical, vision, life insurance, 401(k) and paid vacation. The PDN, nearly a century old, is a c o m mu n i t y - m i n d e d , family - focused local newspaper and Web enterprise that is the main news provider for the North Olympic Peninsula. Check us out at www.peninsuladailynews.com. T h e Pe n i n s u l a D a i l y News is par t of Washi n g t o n s t a t e ’s l a r g e s t newspaper group, Sound Publishing Inc. If you meet the above qualifications, email your resume and cover letter addressing how you fit our requirements, to careers@soundpublishing.com. No phone calls, please.

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: Noon 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.

5000900

F O U N D : Key a n d r e - ACCEPTING APPLICAmote. Sequim, off Hen- T I O N S fo r C A R R I E R RO U T E Po r t A n g e l e s drickson. 681-2620. Area. Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Interested parties must 3023 Lost be 18 yrs of age, have valid Washington State L O S T: 0 3 / 3 0 i n S a l t Driver’s License, proof of Creek/Joyce area. male, insurance, and reliable mini Austrialian Shep- vehicle. Early morning ard. (360)775-5154 delivery Monday-Friday and Sunday. Apply in LOST: Bracelet, water- person 305 W 1st St, or front trail Rayonier park- send resume to ing lot or on trial. tsorensen@ (360)452-2676 soundpublishing.com NO PHONE CALLS L O S T: P r e s c r i p t i o n PLEASE. glasses in blue soft case. (360)417-9204 ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTOR S e q u i m ’s Fr e e C l i n i c 4070 Business seeks part-time experiOpportunities enced leader. Qualified applicant will have good Business FOR SALE: communication skills, Mission Tor tilla dis- experience with developtributor rare opportu- ment and budget mannity deliver products to agement. For further info grocery stores on the see website at sequimO l y m p i c Pe n . $ 7 0 k freeclinic.org. No phone calls. Deadline April plus truck. 15th. (360)460-6434. BUTCHER: Immediate HAIR STUDIO: Cute 1 opening. FT or PT, exstation hair studio, all per ience meat cutter, e q u i p m e n t i n c l u d e d . boxed and carcass beef, $1,500. Great location, w i l l t r a i n o n c a r c a s s gr e a t o p p o r t u n i y ! A f - beef. Wage DOE. Apply fordable rent. online at: Sunnyf(360)452-2305 arms.com or pick up application at 261461 Hwy 4026 Employment 101.

C D L D R I V E R : C a r l ’s Building Supply in Port Hadlock has an immediate opening on our team fo r a d e l i ve r y d r i ve r. We’re looking for someone with a positive attitude that’s ready to cont r i bu t e t o a n a l r e a d y successful team. This is a great opportunity for someone who appreciates a fast-paced work environment that offers plenty of opportunity for overtime, benefits, and a competitive wage. Email resume and questions to: seanh@carlsbuildingsupply.com or call (360)385-2111.

NEWS CLERK T h e Pe n i n s u l a D a i l y News in Por t Angeles, WA is seeking a detail oriented news assistant to join our team full-time. Duties involve wr iting news briefs, compiling and editing news releases, gathering content, data and fact checking. We offer a great work environment, health benefits, 401k, paid vac a t i o n a n d s i ck t i m e. Please e-mail your resume, cover letter, and a few s a m p l e s o f yo u r work to: careers@soundpublishing.com. T h e Pe n i n s u l a D a i l y News is par t of the Sound Publishing. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE). Visit our website at w w w. s o u n d p u b l i s h ing.com to learn more about us!

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General SERVER: Par t time, dining room, in upscale nonsmoking retirement center. Pleasant work environment, m u s t b e f l ex i bl e t o w o r k d a y, n i g h t o r weekend shifts. Apply at The Lodge at Sherwood Village, 660 Eve r g r e e n Fa r m Way, Sequim. Transit Operator (Port Angeles and Forks Base): Applications now b e i n g a c c e p t e d fo r a Transit Operator with Clallam Transit System. 40-hour work week not guaranteed. $19.02 per hour AFTER COMPLETION OF TRAINING. Excellent benefits. Job description and application available at CTS Administration Office, 830 W. Lauridsen Blvd. Port Angeles, WA 98363. 360-452-1315. A number of eligible candidates will be retained on a next hire list for the Port Angels base for six months. APPLICATIONS MUST BE RECEIVED NO LATE R T H A N 4 : 0 0 p. m . , April 15, 2016. AA/EOE

Transit Operator (Port Angeles and For ks Base): Applications now being accepted for A Transit Operator (Por t Angeles and For ks Base) with Clallam Transit System. 40-hour work week not guaranteed. $19.02 per hour AFTER COMPLETION OF TRAINING. Excellent benefits. Job description and application available at CTS Administration Office, 830 W. Laur idsen Blvd., Por t A n g e l e s , WA 9 8 3 6 3 . 360-452-1315. A number of eligible candidates will be retained on a next hire list for six months. APPLICATIONS MUST BE RECEIVED NO LATE R T H A N 4 : 0 0 p. m . , April 15, 2016. AA/EOE

SHUTTLE DRIVER: Dungeness Line. Weekend shuttle driver between Por t Townsend and Discovery Bay. Min. Class C commercial drivers lisence with passenger endorsement required, plus 2 yrs. passenger driving expereince. $13.55 per hr. Please call Jack at (360)460-1073

4080 Employment Wanted ADEPT YARD CARE Mowing, weeding eating (360)797-1025 Alterations and Sewing. Alterations, mending, hemming and some heavyweight s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o you from me. Call (360)531-2353 ask for B.B.

TRUCK SHOP MECHANIC, in PA, experienced. MECHANIC WELDER FABRICATOR and BRYAN’S LAWN DUMP TRUCK DRIVER SERVICE with transfer experience, (360)461-7506 located in Quilcene. Wages DOE. Call HAND WEEDING: Yard (360)460-7292 or work and hauling. (360)457-9392 $20/hr. (360) 477-1493

M a ke R oom for Cha nge With the Class ifi eds, you can clutter, earn e clear the xtra cash and find great dea on the things ls you really wan t!

CALL US OR GO ONLINE TODAY! Your Peninsula. Your Newspaper. 43CHANGE

360.452.8435 or at www.peninsuladailynews.com


Classified

B6 MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2016

C A R B O N C A R S K C U R T

C O M P R E S S I O N V E C O

P K R A P S T R O K E N L R P

T N N O F U G P N M I Y P C K T A E N T A G ‫ ګ‬ I I ‫ ګ‬ R D ‫ ګ‬ A E A V

E I E R I O D G C N I D U S E

R T L N N S O O I E I N U E H

A I H K G R T T M T J P G R I

P N I A D I I O I R R N C A C

S G G Y N N N V N E E E I T L

N I H E G O E E M D T H M I E

A P L U G S L E D A E L T O A

R A V I A T I O N R E B M U N

DOWN 1 Quite competent 2 “Our Gang” girl 3 Decorative foundation plant 4 Consumer protection gp. 5 “Respect” singer Franklin 6 Upstream swimmer 7 Dutch bulb 8 Britannica, e.g.: Abbr. 9 Wrapping, as an ankle 10 Rover’s collar attachment 11 Melville’s obsessive whaler 12 Stir up 13 Clearasil target 19 Fly 21 Flies like a seagull 25 Sufficient, in poetry 26 Cattle poker 29 Low poker hand 30 Quaint lodges 31 Hebrides isle 32 Many emailed image files 33 Train wheel guide 34 Suit filer: Abbr.

4/4/16

Friday’s Puzzle Solved Saturday’s Puzzle Solved

Get Bizy Boys Lawn & Yard Care for Lawn, ENVIOUS GREENS C u r r e n t l y a c c e p t i n g l o t & f i e l d m ow i n g . NEW lawn mowing ac- L a n d s c a p e m a i n t e c o u n t s. S e q u i m bu s i - nance, trimming, prunn e s s s i n c e 2 0 1 0 ( L i - ing, Pressure washing, c e n s e d & I n s u r e d ) h a u l i n g & Tr a c t o r Booked solid in other work. Call Tom today Depts. Call for a MOW- 4 6 0 - 7 7 6 6 L i c # b i ING bid today Owner / zybbl868ma Operator Mike: (360)808-9638 H A N D Y M A N : Ya r d work, trimming, mainteFather & Sons’ nance and hauling. Landscape Service (360)477-2491 since 1992. 1 time clean ups, pruning, lawn main- H OW M AY I H E L P ? tenance, weeding, or- Many tools, many skills, ganic lawn renovations. general handyman, haul(360)681-2611 ing, home and property, fruit tree care, shopping, FRUIT TREE EXPERT pruning, etc. Ornamental and shrubs (360)477-3376 too. Book now for year long lawn services also. P ro fe s s i o n a l p r i va t e Established, many refer- c a r e g i ve r, ove r n i g h t s ences, best rates and available. (360)808-7061 senior discounts P. A. or (360)683-0943. a r e a o n l y. L o c a l (360)808-2146

105 Homes for Sale Clallam County

Dungeness Area Older 924 sqft single wide mobile home on 1/4 acre lot located in a quiet area with a great mountain view and easy access to Dungeness Bay. The home features a c o ve r e d d e c k , d e tached 2 car garage w/shop, fruit trees & BerSeamless Gutters! ries. Call A1 NW Gutters to- MLS#300164 $110,000 day at 360-460-0353 for Tom Blore your free estimate. 360-683-4116 a1nwguttersllc PETER BLACK @gmail.com REAL ESTATE

Additives, Air, Aviation, Carbon, Cars, Cetane, Clean, Compression, Detergent, Diesel, Engine, Ethanol, Fuel, Gallon, Grade, High, Hydrogen, Igniting, Ignition, Inject, Knock, Lead, Number, Octane, Ping, Piston, Plugs, Rating, Ratio, Research, Spark, Stroke, Supreme, Thermodynamic, Toluene, Transparent, Trucks, Valves, Vapor, Vehicle Yesterday’s Answer: The Big Oak THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

RUYKM ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

SREDS ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

35 “ ... hallowed be __ name” 36 Dictation takers 38 Accustomed (to) 39 Small fruit pie 40 Four-way __ 45 Without prejudice 46 Big name in little trains 47 What an editor’s caret indicates 48 Sincere entreaties

4/4/16

49 Busybody 50 Dance in triple meter 51 Wipe out 52 Mature, as fruit 53 Desk light 54 Get an __ effort 55 Houston player, informally 59 School-of-thought suffix 60 Hosp. staffers

NAWMAL

APOITU Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Print your answer here: Yesterday's

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: HEDGE RISKY FINALE UNWISE Answer: He planned to wash and wax his car early today and was ready to — RISE AND SHINE

311 For Sale 505 Rental Houses 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Manufactured Homes Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County

4080 Employment 4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Wanted Wanted Clallam County Clallam County Encircle Plus+ A small household service company. Providing: Homecare, Hospice, 24hr C a r e , h o u s e ke e p i n g , some yard work, VRBO’s, and Windows! EncircleSequim@outlook.com or (360)8087368

T N E G R E T E D G A L L O N 4/4

© 2016 Universal Uclick www.wonderword.com Download the Wonderword Game App!

By Mark McClain

by Mell Lazarus

Young Couple Early 60’s available for seasonal cleanup, weeding, trimming, mulching & moss removal. We specialize in complete garden restorations. Excellent references. (360)457-1213 Chip & Sunny’s Garden Transformations. License # CC CHIPSSG850LB.

D I E S E L T O L U E N E H R

10 acres, salt water view, two 5 acre parcels, pasture – partially fenced, logged with tree p e r i m e t e r, e x c e l l e n t neighborhood, septic and well needed, 7 minutes to Port Angeles. MLS#290902 $286,000 Team Thomsen COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979

CLALLAM BAY: Greatly reduced 4.39 acres, fixer upper A frame. 5 miles to Lake Ozette. Cash out $65,000. Serious inquiries only. (509)684-3177

Delightful Privacy 3 bed, 2 bath, 1584 sq ft plus big family room, ½ a c r e o f a l l fe n c e d i n beautiful yard with fruit trees, raspberry & blueberry bushes. Home with nice updates inside and out. MLS#300509 $215,000 Ania Pendergrass IMMACULATE & Remax Evergreen POLISHED (360)461-3973 Spacious 3 bd, 2 ba, 1751 sf, southern exposure w/ pastoral & mountain views, vaulted ceilings, light colors, skylights, garage w/workbench & storage space, manicured & fully fenced back yard. MLS#914165/300472 $279,000 Deb Kahle lic# 47224 (360) 683-6880 (360) 918-3199 1-800-359-8823 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

FSBO: Home in 4 Seasons Park. 2 BD, 1 BA, 1,244 sq ft. Char ming FSBO: 3Br, 2 Ba, upper h o m e , a m u s t s e e . Cherry Hill area, 2,000 $153,000. 360-461-6972 Sq. ft., deck and carport, mountain and water views, walking distance t o eve r y t h i n g , n e e d s TLC. Great value, $125,000. (360)477-2334. FSBO: 181 Sunland Dr. Sequim. Sunland Home, Southern mountain views accent this over 3,000 sf., 4 br, 3 ba home. Features include a studio apartment that rents for $650 per, professionally landscaped with irrigation system, LR with fireplace, formal DR, large family room with stove, basement w i t h t wo c a r g a ra g e, food storage room and elevator. $324,900. Call Ida. (360)683-2248

Home and Business Space In a popular area for those headed for the beach & a view of the lighthouse, this is a 3 BD 2 Bath on two levels. Main floor is upstairs with contemporary vaulted living & dining room, kitchen, 2 bdrms, bath w i t h m t n v i ew s. F i r s t floor has been operated as a vacation rental with 1 BD/1 BA & outside entrance. Lot is .42 acres: paved parking, carports, shop and a beautiful garden. Yard is surrounded by privacy fencing and shrubs. MLS#300316/904815 $263,000 Diann Dickey John L. Scott Real Estate 360-477-3907

PA: New Construction 3 Bd, 2 bath, 1858 sq. ft. country rambler. Big 2 car garage, 2.5 private forested acres. Loaded with quality, granite, tile, solid wood, open concept, tons of storage. $329,000, by appointment. (360)461-0929

Just listed! This is a very well maintained 2br 2ba 924 sqft manufactured home. Super location, close to the Discovery Trail, Sunny Fa r m s, m i n u t e s f r o m town and all the amenities of Sequim. N ewe r l a m i n a t e f l o o r covering, paint, skylight, hot water tank and heat pump. MLS#300489 $29,000 Mike Fuller 360-477-9189 Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim MATRIOTTI CREEK ESTATES Beautiful Prime Carlsborg Subdivision, Build Your Dream Home On Large ½ Acre Level Lots, Water, Power & Paved Roads, Walk to shopping, bus line or Olympic Discovery Trail MLS#671823/281568 $52,000 ; $55,000 ; $57,000 Tyler Conkle lic# 112797 (360) 683-6880 (360) 670-5978 1-800-359-8823 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

No Binoculars Needed 1.84 high bank waterfront a c r e s, r e a d y t o bu i l d . Also a quarter share of 12 treed acres, that can never be developed. Power and phone in at road. CC&R’s to protect your investment. MLS#300491 $149,000 Quiet Neighborhood Quint Boe Home! (360) 457-0456 Finely crafted by AnderWINDERMERE sen Homes in 2007, this PORT ANGELES 3 bed / 2.5 bath home is peacefully positioned Rare Low Bank amongst other quality Waterfront h o u s e s . T h e c o v e r e d On Beautiful Jamestown front porch welcomes you Beach. NW contempoinside to the light, bright, rary style and extensive& cheery interior. Bed- ly remodeled in 2007. 22 rooms & laundry area up- ft. open beam ceilings & stairs. Spacious master lots of windows to enjoy s u i t e w i t h d u a l s i n k s, the panoramic views of w a l k - i n s h o w e r, a n d Strait & Mountains. 4 of walk-in closet. Plenty of t h e 5 b e d r o o m s a r e closets throughout the suites with dedicated home & a walk-in pantry baths. Master suite is i n k i t c h e n . T h e f u l l y huge with soaking tub, fenced souther n expo- separate shower and hot sure back yard with a tub on the huge deck. deck & large patio area is This home has two kitchperfect for entertaining! ens. MLS#300474 $249,900 MLS#291974/853577 Kelly Johnson $750,000 (360) 477-5876 Eric Hegge WINDERMERE 360-460-6470 PORT ANGELES TOWN & COUNTRY

PA: 5Br, 1 3/4 bath,360° harbor, strait and mountain VIEWS. $398K (360)452-1208 http://lrking.com/b-streethome.html Spacious bright ready to move in home in Parkwood, 2 bedroom, master bedroom has 2 walkin closets, 2 bath, bonus room, office with a closet, family room, large kitchen with an island and large pantry, formal dining, living, pr ivate patio backs up to greenbelt, 2 car garage. So much to offer in this 55+ community! MLS#901764 $112,000 Carolyn Dawson John L. Scott Real Estate 360-582-5770

308 For Sale Lots & Acreage View Lot For Sale By O w n e r . Po r t A n g e l e s High School area, newly cleared building lot. Excellent views of the Strait of Juan de Fuca, and Olympic Mountains. 1.5 City Lots in a great neighborhood. Within blocks of High School, Library, Bus lines, groc e r y s t o r e s, a n d j u s t minutes from downtown. Come see at 218 Lopez Avenue. 585-437-2535 o r jbstrauss68@gmail.com

P.A. 2 br., 2 full ba., handicapped accessible double wide, 55+ park in town. Clean, new carpets throughout. Electric furnace heat, Lopi woodstove in dining area. All appliances included. Large covered porch, wheelchair ramps front and back. No owner financing. Park approval required. $35,900. (360)452-1552 SEQ: 2Br. and 1Ba. Will be painted and reroofed. $39,000. (360)775-6433

505 Rental Houses Clallam County

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PROPERTY EVALUATION INTERNET MARKETING QUALIFIED TENANTS 311 For Sale RENT COLLECTION Manufactured Homes PROPERTY MAINTENANCE INSPECTIONS AUTOMATIC BANK DEPOSITS 4 M A N U FA C T U R E D HOMES FOR SALE. LoEASY ONLINE cated at the Lake PleasSTATEMENT ACCESS ant Mobile Home and RV Park in Beaver. Offering newer 3,2 and 1 bedroom Manufactured homes available with recent upgrades. Single and double wides available. All in excellent condition and move in ready. Own for as low as $675/m. Pr ices range from $29,950 to $46,950. Financing available OAC Call (360) 808-7120

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ACROSS 1 Website pop-ups, e.g. 4 Brush with liquid while roasting 9 Jeweled headwear 14 Morse code bit 15 Electric razor brand 16 Like some shortterm committees 17 Make a boo-boo 18 Hotel lobby supervisor 20 Bathtub insert 22 Texter’s “Wish you hadn’t said that!” 23 Practical, as a solution 24 Working the room, as at a banquet 27 Words before uproar 28 Dipstick wiper 29 Gumshoes: Abbr. 32 Madrid museum 35 Little kid 36 Went to the bottom 37 Time of reckoning 41 Is the right size 42 Yea’s opposite 43 Short, but probably not sweet 44 Sneaky 45 Warm lining 46 Feline king 48 Congressional majority, e.g. 53 Nielsen of “The Naked Gun” films 56 Canon SLR camera 57 Indian wrap 58 When one might have a mint ... or where the first words of 18-, 24-, 37- and 48Across can be found 61 Santa visitor’s seat 62 Fable’s lesson 63 Rear, to an admiral 64 Mao __-tung 65 Unlike poetry 66 Blended ice cream drinks 67 Buddhist sect

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3 PHASE PUMP: 7 hp, BED: King pillow top with electric hookup box. mattress, box spr ing, frame, headboard. Nice. $200. (206)383-7972 $200 firm. 461-9482 AMPLIFIERS: (2) with 2 inputs. $40 ea. BENCH GRINDER: (360)683-4873 New, 6” electric, never used. Was $50, asking ANVIL: 50 lbs, stand. $25. (360)461-7322 $50. (360)582-9533 BLENDER: New, Ninja A R T : Fr a m e d , 1 9 9 0 professional processor Iditarod poster signed by mixer. $65. Van Zyle. $200/firm. (949)241-0371 (360)461-7365 BOOKS: Collection of ART: Welford Countr y (6) legal thrillers by Scott C o t t a g e, by C a r l Va - Turow. $45. lente, “32 X 28”. $69. (360)681-7579 (360)775-8005 B OW F L E X : E x t r e m e ART: Wood block print, home gym, with leg exSigned. Yoshida hum- t e n s i o n , m a nu a l , C D. mingbirds and fuchsias. $150. (360)457-0763 $165. (360)681-7579 BU N K B E D S : K n o t t y AUTO HARP: Classic, pine, solid, really nice. tuner, case, music and $150. (360)670-3310 more. $67.50. (360)808-1305 CABINET: Bathroom, white with 2 doors, 3 B A N Q U E T TA B L E S : shelves. $20. (2) 30”x8’. Adjustable (360)775-4727 fo l d i n g l e g s. $ 2 5 e a . (360)452-9611 CABINET: Oak, good condition, 72H x 30W, 2 BATTERY CHARGER: shelves. $50. Ryobi, 18 volt, one plus, (360)477-4540 in vehicle charger. $25. (949)232-3392 CAMERA: Sony digital “Cyber Shot”, memory BEACH GLASS: 5 jars. card, extras. $75. Green , clear, yellow, (360)452-9685 brown etc. $30. (360)452-6842 CAROUSELS: (2) Doll BIKE: Fold up, in good carousels, for 6” to 8” dolls. $50 each. shape. $25. (360)683-2269 (360)504-2435

MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2016 B7

F R E E : W e e d e a t e r , LAMPS: Tiffany style, stand up lamp. $45. Tifneeds work. fany style desk lamp. (360)452-6272 $55. (360)797-1362 FRIDGE: Emerson, 8 LINENS: Kitchen and bottle, wine fridge. $60. bedroom, retro and old, (360)460-2260 antique and modern. All FRIDGE: Kenmore side for $100. (360)797-1362 by side. Water and ice, LOVE SEAT: Rattan aclike new. $200. cents, floral pattern. $50. (360)808-0836 (360)417-9522 GLASS JUGS: (2) each M A I L B O X S TA N D : for $12. or both for $20. Custom made, ornamen(360)477-4113 tal wrought iron. $35. GOLF CLUBS: 7,8,9 (360)457-6889 irons; 4,5 hybrids; 3,9 woods. $5 and $10 MARIONETTE: Girl, Mexico?, $10. each. (360)457-5790 (360)683-9295 GOLF CLUBS: Set of men’s Pro. golf clubs. MIDI KEYBOARD: New, nektar 61-key controller. $75. (360)477-3834 Paid $199. $115. GOLF CLUBS: Set of (360) 683-1108 women’s pro golf clubs. MISC: File cabinet. $15. $50. (360)477-3834 5 ” T V a m / f m , i n b ox . GUITAR: Ibanez with $15, 9” color TV. $25. carr y case and tuner. (360)683-2269 $200. (360)457-6889 MISC: Turbo Tax 2015 (360)457-7579 FREE: (3) twin mattress- HAND TRUCK: Holds $35. Sanyo, 19”, Flat Screen plus extras. $45. 800 lbs., 2 wheels. $50. es, no box springs. DAYBED: White metal (360)477-1716 (360)452-0548 (360)683-6762 frame, good mattress. $150. (360)582-9758 FREE: Rocks, smooth H E A R I N G A I D S : ( 1 ) M I S C : W h e e l b a r r ow $15. garden tools $3. round drain rocks, you pair. $190. 452-6374 DEHUMIDIFIER: Ken- load/haul, 1+/- cu. yd. office desk $60. ironing more Energy Star, 35 HIDE-A-BED: Grey colboard $5. (360)582-9700 (360)379-4922 pint. $100. or, 3/4, good condition. (949)232-3392 MONITOR: Acer, 19”, FREE: Shelving supplies $40. (360)582-9769 $30. (360)640-2215 (360)452-6272 DOLLS: Collectible, JOINER/PLANER: 6” must see to appreciate FREE: Styrofoam pea- Craftsman, stand, dust MOUNTAIN BIKE: 32” $20-$40. (360)379-2902. nuts, for shipping. collector, extra knives. tires, disc brakes, frame and fork shocks, blue. $175. (360)582-9533 (360)477-4113 E N T E R TA I N M E N T : $150. (360)460-2260 BOOKS: Harr y Potter, CASSETTE PLAYER: Center, CD rack, glass FREE: Tailgate extender LADDER: Aluminum, 8 PRINTER: $33. doors, $25/obo. Fits ‘03-’06 Subaru Ba- foot, step. $45. h a r d c o ve r, # 1 - 7 s e t . Sony. $35. (360)640-2215 (360)670-6851 (360)417-5339 (360)809-0697 jas. (360)461-7322 $69. (360)775-8005 CD’S: Jazz, thirteen, like E X E R C I S E B I K E : new, $5 each or all for gauge for time, speed, $30. (360)457-5790 calories, etc. $27.50. (360)808-1305 C H E S T S : 3 d rawe r s, black, good condition. FILE CABINET: 2 drawers, cherr y wood, in$8. (360)681-3811 cludes folder hanger. CLOTHING: Authentic $110. 360-703-9000. G e r m a n ; m e n ’s a n d women’s. All for $150 or FISH FEEDER: Solar powered, computerized. less. (360)417-5512 Paid $350 sell $175. (360)452-6374 COMFORTERS: Twin, queen and king size, various colors, like new. FISH TOTE: With lid, excel. cond. No holes, $25. (360)681-3811 cracks or damage. $75. (360)461-9482 COOKER/SMOKER: Weber, cover, wheels, 2 FLOWER POTS: Clay grates. $150 obo. pots, hanging baskets, (817)374-2871 large assortment. $25. (509)366-4353 C O U C H / L OV E S E AT: Microfiber. $100/obo. F O OT BA L L : V i n t a g e, (360)670-6851 Ken Stabler- QB. $30. C U LT I VAT O R : H . D . (360)452-6842 crop cultivator. 42” wide. FREE: 2 Year old horse $160. (360)809-0697 manure, can load, HapC U P B OA R D : C h i l d s py Valley area. (360)582-9154 cupboard. $25.

E E F R E Eand Tuesdays A D SS FRMonday

M OW E R : D R , B r i g g s SOFA: $90/obo. a n d S t r a t t o n e n g i n e, (360)640-2921 runs good. $120. SOUND SYSTEM: So(360)683-1260 ny, complete with extras, O R G A N : Ya m a h a E 3 a steal. $200. (360)631-9211 with bench. $120. (360)683-4873 S T E M WA R E : 1 9 3 0 ’s, PATIO SET: Table and green cameo, ballerina, ( 4 ) c u s h i o n e d , m e t a l 4 at $10. each or all for $30. (360)683-9295 frame chairs. $25. (360)582-9769 STEREO: AM/FM PEAR TREES: (2) you stereo, 8 track, cassette, tur ntable, speakers. dig, easy removal. $30. $135. (360)477-1716 (509)366-4353 PHOTO FRAMES. Varied sizes, some new. $1-$5. (360)379-2902 POTTY CHAIR: Older, wooden. $20. (360)301-2653 PRINTER: HP still in box, Mac or Windows. $40/obo. (360)928-3447

TV’s, DVD, CD, VHS, and cassette stereo recorders (8), $10-$20/ea. (360)452-9685 VA S E : 1 9 6 0 ’s G r e e n swedish controlled bubble, vase ala Nylund. $200. (360)461-7365 V I O L I N C A S E : N i c e, brown with padded blue interior, oblong, pocket. $65. (360)301-2653

WALKER: Nova. Brakes, seat, basket. SWING SET: All metal, Never used. $50. (360)452-9611 plus push/pull rocker. $50. (360)670-3310 WALKER: With seat and TABLE: Folding, large, brakes, like new. $50. (360)683-6097 30” X 96”, legs fold underneath. $50/obo WATER SKI: Connelly, (360)928-3447 single, ConCept, 64”, TIRES: (4) 235/65 R16. w i t h c ove r, l i ke n ew. $50. (360)670-6230 $40. (360)582-9206

TIRES: Goodyear WranREFRIGERATOR: Ex- gler P265/65P18, stock cellent condition, ap- rims. 2013 or newer cheproximately 16cf. $200. vy. $200. (360)406-0187 (360)979-8842 TRIMMER: 22 inch gas R E P L I C A P L A N E : powered hedge trimmer. Texaco, bank, pristine $75. (360)681-3757 box. $79. 457-7579 TRUCK LOCKBOX: Full S E T T E E : P i n k , gr e a t size, all diamond plate, condition, antique. $175. lock and keys. $200. (360)460-8242 (360)631-9211

WATER SKI: O’Brien, single, duel density, 63”, w i t h c ove r, l i ke n ew. $50. (360)670-6230 WEIGHT BENCH: Olympic, flat bench presses, legs and arms, $30. (360)504-2435 WEIGHT SET: New in box $100.(360)302-0369

SHELVING-STEEL: 6’ T U R N TA B L E : S o n y, WHEELS: 4 Wheels, 15” H, 4’ W, 2’ D. Five MDB and 85 vinyl records, 70 by 6”, 5 lugs, 4.25”, $60. (360)457-9091 shelves. Two units. $25 lps, and 15 78’s. $150. each. (360)379-4922 (360)417-5339 WO O D S P L I T T E R : 5 SOFA, dark green crush WALKER: Rollator, very ton powered, electr ic driven. $200. velvet. good condition nice. $40. (360)452-0548 (949)241-0371 $100. (360)302-0369

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665 Rental Duplex/Multiplexes

P. A . : R e n o v a t e d 2 bedrooms, 1.5 bath, enclosed garage, W/D hookups. Mountain view, centrally located. No smoking / pets. $875 mo. plus deposit. (360)457-5304 or (360)460-9864

6050 Firearms & Ammunition

6080 Home Furnishings

REMINGTON: Left handed, model 300 Winmag, Leupold 3x9 scope, extra clip, case. Excellent cond. $675. cell (206)498-8008

MATTRESS SET Queen sized, double pillow top mattress and b ox s p r i n g i n p e r fe c t condition. $100. (360)460-2113

WE BUY FIREARMS CASH ON THE SPOT ~~~ ANY & ALL ~~~ TO P $ $ $ PA I D I N CLUDING ESTATES AND OR ENTIRE COLLECTIONS Call (360)477-9659

6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves

FIREWOOD: $179 deliv683 Rooms to Rent ered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special Roomshares $499. (360)582-7910 www.portangelesfire P.A. Fur nished room, wood.com untilities included. (360)457-3027

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6065 Food & Farmer’s Market

EGGS: Farm fresh eggs from Easter Egg layers, free range. $4.25 per dozen. (360)417-7685.

EGGS: LOCAL SUPER QUALITY. Place, at the Inc. happy healthy bird farm. (special continuous care), gathered daily, simply the best. $4.50/dz.(360)457-8102

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6075 Heavy Equipment

FURNITURE: 3 piece l e a t h e r c o u c h , o ve r stuffed chair and ottoman. Deep red leather with high back cusioning, excellent condition. $1,000 for the set. (360)461-0663

6010 Appliances

FURNITURE: Oak bedroom set, queen size, good condition. MISC: Black appliances, $500/obo (360)670-9674 R e f r i g e r a t o r . $ 2 0 0 . MISC: Craftmatic twin Smooth cook top range. bed, ex. shape, $800 $200. Dishwasher, $100. o b o . U S A A m e r i c a n $400 for complete set. hutch, $125. (360)477-9584 (360)581-2166

6035 Cemetery Plots CEMETERY: (2) plots, Sequim View Cemetery. $1,800. (360)683-7484

6100 Misc. Merchandise

7025 Farm Animals & Livestock

9832 Tents & Travel Trailers TENT TRAILER: ‘08 R o c k w o o d Fr e e d o m . Sleeps 8, tip out, stove, gas/elec. fridge, furnace, toilet with shower, king and queen beds with heated mattresses. Outside gas bbq and shower. Great cond. $6,495. (360)452-6304

KEYBOARD: Yamaha, Ez-220, light up music piano keyboard - all instruments. Almost new. $135. (360)504-2999. MIDI KEYBOARD: cont r o l l e r, n e k t a r L X 6 1 , 61-keys. In box, unused. Extras. Paid $199. $115. 683-1108

7035 General Pets

NEW HOME NEEDED “ S u g a r,” a sw e e t n a tured, full-bred Siamese altered female cat, 5 yrs o f a g e, n e e d s a n ew home by herself with a caring older person or couple. Very quiet creat u r e. R e c e n t l y d e t e r mined she is allergic to poultry and fish, the family she is with cannot manage since other cats are not allergic. Does not have to be indoor cat, but might do better as one. Free deliver y, copies of health records. Photos available. Phone 360-504-5124 or cell 425-343-5378.

Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9817 Motorcycles 9292 Others Others Others HONDA: ‘04, VTX 1800 CC road bike, 9,535 mil. speedometer 150. $5,500. (360)797-3328.

9808 Campers & Canopies

LINCOLN: Mark VII, ‘85, 5.0 engine, fully loaded, new tires, new battery. 77K ml. $3,500. (360)417-5041

HONDA: ‘87 Aspencade, loaded with extras. 60K VW: ‘86 Wolfberg, Cabmiles. With gear. $3,750. riolet, excellent condion. (360)582-3065. $6,000. (360)477-3725.

Garage / Estate Sale: Fri - Sat, 9 - 3 pm, 584 Henry Boyd Rd. - 3.5 miles up Mt. Pleasant Rd. No early birds please! House and Garage FULL! Furniture, dining table, hutch, household, man stuff, canning jars, outdoor decor, picnic table, kitchen, housewares, toys, bedding. All must go! Bake Sale and Lemonade too! Don’t Miss it!

T OYO TA : 0 1 C a m r y XLE Sedan - 3.0L V6, Automatic, alloy wheels, good tires, traction control, sunroof, keyless entry, power windows, door locks, mirrors, and drivers seat, leather seats, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, CD / cassette stereo, dual front airbags. 69k ml. $7,995 VIN # JT2BF28K810330567 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com

VW: ‘71 Super beetle, needs work, new upholstery, tires and wheels. $600 worth of new accessories. $1,500. (360)374-2500

VW: ‘99 Beetle. 185K ml., manual transmission, sunroof, heated leather seats, well maintained and regular oil changes, excellent condition, second owner has owned it for 16 years. $3,500. (360)775-5790.

YA M A H A : ‘ 0 4 , 6 5 0 V Star Classic. 7,500 original miles, shaft drive, excellent condition, includes saddle bags and sissy bars. $4,800/obo. (253)414-8928

ALPENLITE: ‘99 Cimmaron LX850, ver y clean. $7,000. 681-0182

9030 Aviation

WOLFPUP: 2014 Toyhauler RV, 17’ $9,999. (360)461-4189

Quarter interest in 1967 Piper Cherokee, hangered in PA. $8,500. (360)460-6606.

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect.

9817 Motorcycles

M OTO R H O M E : A l fa , ‘05, 37’, 350 Cat, 2 slides, 4 T.V.’s, 33K ml. $51,000. (360)670-6589 or (360)457-5601 MOTORHOMES: Looking for clean low miles ‘07 and newer, 25’ to 35’ motor homes. Contact 2 0 0 8 S u z u k i V- S t r o m Joel at Price Ford. 650. Pr ime condition. (360)457-3333 11,800 miles. Original owner. Service records. PACE AREO: ‘89, 34’, Ju s t s e r v i c e d . N e e d s needs works, new tires, nothing. Many extras, inrefrigerator, new seal on c l u d i n g : c e n t e r s t a n d r o o f , g e n e r a t o r . and gel seat. $5,400 $2,000/obo. OBO. Scott at (360)461-7051. (253)380-8303

MAZDA: ‘90 Miata, conver tible, red. 120K ml. TOYOTA: ‘05 Scion XA. e x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n , 65K miles, new tires and rims, tinted, 32mpg. $4,500 (360)670-9674 $7,800. (360)912-2727

HONDA: CRF250R, ‘09, excellent condition, ramps and extras. $3,500. (208)704-8886

B OAT : 1 2 ’ A l u m i n u m C H E V: ‘ 6 9 C o r ve t t e , with trailer. $795. coupe conver tible 350 (360)461-4189 small block, 500 hp, 125 miles on rebuilt motor, matching numbers, newer paint, And much WANTED: Sawdust for more. Asking $22,000, animal bedding. Sequim PUPPIES: Collie pups, 3 room to negotiate. area, call (360)417-7685 Lassie’s, 1 male tri color, (360)912-4231 most at $400. 1 Border CHEV: ‘83 El Camino, Collie pup $350. 6135 Yard & local stock vehicle, (360)865-7497 C-DORY ANGLER: ‘91 Garden champagne bronze. with ‘08 Yamaha 50HP 4 $3900 firm. 775-4431 s t r o k e , ‘ 1 5 Ya m a h a MOWER: Craftsman riding mower, 18 hp / 42 9820 Motorhomes 9 . 9 H P H i g h T h r u s t , FORD: ‘60 F-100 BBW. G P S - f l a s h e r, e l e c t r i c cut. Hydrostatic transC a n n o n d ow n r i g g e r s, All original survivor, runs mission. $400. 2 0 0 0 R O A D T R E K : E Z - L o a d t r a i l e r w i t h strong, rusty. Many ex(360)461-0721 Model 200, 20’ Class B, power winch. Stored In- t r a s a n d n e w p a r t s . $2,000. 9 5 K m i l e s o n C h ev y doors $13,500. (360)681-2382 C h a s i s . S o l a r r e a d y. (360)461-5719 RIDING $20,000. (360)457-1597 LAWNMOWERS FORD: ‘62 F150 StepSAILING DINGHY: 8’. $400 to $700. BORN FREE: ‘05, 22’ Can be rowed. $1,000. side. Excellent project Call Kenny vehicle. $900. RV built for two. 32K (360)452-2118 (360)775-9779 (360)912-2727 miles on V10 Ford engine. $25,000. 417-0451

8183 Garage Sales PA - East

ACURA: TL ‘06 excellent condition, one owner, clean car fax, (timing belt, pulley and water pump replaced) new battery. $12,000. (360)928-5500 or (360)808-9800 CHEVY: ‘06 HHR, LT. Red w/silver pinstripe. Excellent cond. 64K m i l e s, o n e ow n e r. $8,000. (360)681-3126

TRAILER: ‘96 18’ Aljo. Sleeps 4, no leaks, new tires, top and awning. $6,700. (360)477-6719.

UTILITY TRAILER: PARTRIDGE Silkie Ban- 2012 Eagle, single axle, MISC: Firewood, madro- tams. 2 months, straight 5”x8”, with loading ramp, exc cond. $1,200/obo. na and alder, 1 1/2 cord, run. $6 each/4 for $20. (360)461-6279 $300. Equalizer spor t (360)374-8755 A/P truck tires (2), 31x10.50 R15 LT, $75 9802 5th Wheels ea. Several guitars from 7030 Horses $400-800 ea. (360)504-2407 5th Wheel: ‘02 Ar tic WA N T E D : H o r s e b a ck MISC: Pride Victor y 4 riding lessons from a pri- Fox, 30’, Excellent condition. $18,000. wheel mobility scooter, vate party. Your horse, (360)374-5534 n ew b a t t e r i e s . $ 2 7 5 . your tack. (360)452-2118 5th WHEEL: ‘95, 22’, (360)452-6812 very clean and dry. New roof, vents. $6,800. 6105 Musical (360)582-9179

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Is your junk in a funk? You won’t believe how fast the items lying around your basement, attic or garage can be turned into cold hard cash with a garage sale promoted in the Peninsula Classified! Call us today to schedule your garage sale ad!

P O N T I AC : ‘ 0 6 S o l stice, 5sp. conv., 8K miles, Blk/Blk, $1500 c u s t o m w h e e l s, d r y cleaned only, heated g a ra g e, d r i ve n c a r shows only, like new. $16,950. 681-2268 SPRITE: ‘67 Austin Healey, parts car or project car. $3,500. 9289774 or 461-7252.

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R A I N B O W VA C U U M CLEANER E Ser ies. Includes: AquaMate carpet shampooing syst e m ; p ow e r e d c a r p e t nozzle with wand, elec6045 Farm Fencing trified long hose, electri& Equipment fied upholstery/carpeted stair nozzle, and all origiB R U S H H O G : L a n d nal nozzles, brushes and tools. Three water bapride, RCR1660. $500. sins. $400. Sequim (360)265-6126 (360)379-4922. CEMETERY PLOT Sequim. $1,300. (360)683-3119

WANTED: Quality items in good condition for garage sale June 10-11. Proceeds benefit WAG, local dog rescue. Accepting kitchen, household items, linens, furniTABLE: Dining room ta- t u r e , g a r d e n / o u t d o o r ble, antique, very good furniture etc. Call to arcondition, 6 chairs, 3 range pick up. (360)683leaves, $900/obo. 0932 (360)912-2227

6140 Wanted DUMP TRUCK: ‘85, Mack cab over, 5yd dou& Trades ble cylinder with loading ramps. $5000/obo or WANTED: Riding lawntrade (253)348-1755. mowers, working or not. Will pickup for free. Kenny (360)775-9779 6080 Home Furnishings

8183 Garage Sales PA - East

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9292 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks Others Others TOYOTA : ‘ 0 7 C a r o l l a CE, 119K miles, good cond., CD player, $7000 obo. (805)636-5562

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9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County

JEEP: ‘11 Wrangler Rubicon. 9500 miles, as new, never off road, auto, A.C., nav., hard top, power windows, steering GMC: ‘72 4x4. $2,500. and locks. Always garaged. $28,500 Daily driver, plus extras. (360)681-0151 (360)452-5803

T O Y O TA : ‘ 8 5 , S R 5 4 W D, ex t r a c a b w i t h canopy plus 4 studded tires on rims and trailer h i t c h . 1 8 5 K m l . , we l l CHEVY: ‘98 Silverado, maintained. $2,500. 4 w d , n e w e n g i n e . (360)452-2806 evenings $5,500. reymaxine5@gmail.com 9556 SUVs or Others (360)457-9070

Deadline: Friday at 4 p.m.

9556 SUVs Others

FORD: Ranger, ‘03, Red, single cab $3,000. (360)385-5573

CHEV: ‘70 K-20. 4x4, auto, 350, extras. Comes with par ts. $2,500. (360)452-5803.

• 2 ads per household per week • Run as space permits Mondays &Tuesdays • Private parties only • No firewood or lumber • 4 lines, 2 days • No Garage Sales • No pets or livestock

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

JEEP: Grand Cherokee Laredo, ‘11, 4x4, 29K ml. lots of extras, clean, $27,500. (360)452-8116.

9730 Vans & Minivans Others DODGE: ‘02 Grand Caravan, 200K miles, good cond., $1500 obo. (360)808-2898

DODGE: ‘00 Dakota, 2 CHEVY: ‘98 Suburban, wheel drive, short bed, 4 W D. 8 s e a t s , g o o d D O D G E : ‘ 0 3 G r a n d a l l p o w e r, t o w p k g . cond., $4,000. Caravan. Good condi(360)683-7711 $6600. (360)582-9769 tion. $2,400/obo. (360)460-6780 FORD: ‘01 Ranger 3.0 FORD: ‘08 Escape XLT V6, 5 sp. with canopy. 4X4 Sport Utility - 3.0L 1 0 0 K m i l e s . $ 3 , 8 0 0 . V 6 , a u t o m a t i c , a l l oy wheels, new tires, trac(360)457-1289 tion control, tow packFORD: ‘72 F250. $2000. age, roof rack, sunroof, privacy glass, keyless (360)452-4336. entr y, power windows, door locks, mirrors, and d r i ve r s s e a t , l e a t h e r seating, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, cd stereo with aux. input, dual front and side airbags. 65K Ml. $12,995 vin# FORD: ‘99 F350 7.3L 1FMCU93178KA19103 FORD: ‘06 E450 14’ Box Truck. ALL RECORDS, Powerstroke Turbo DieGray Motors W E L L M A I N T ’ D, 7 6 K sel Knapheide 12’ flat457-4901 miles, Good tires, Serbed. Solid work truck. graymotors.com vice done Feb 7.TITLE 6-speed manual transmission, 2WD. 122,460 HONDA: ‘05 CR-V EX I N H A N D ! A s k i n g m i l e s. R u n s g o o d . I n AWD Sport Utility - 2.4L $20,000 Willing to negoC h i m a c u m . $ 8 , 5 0 0 i - V T E C 4 c y l i n d e r, 5 tiate.(202)257-6469 OBO, Call or text 360- s p e e d m a n u a l , a l l oy TOYOTA: ‘02 Sienna 531-2337. wheels, privacy glass, CE Minivan - 3.0L VVT-i sunroof, keyless entry, V 6 , a u t o m a t i c , g o o d p owe r w i n d ow s, d o o r tires, tow package, roof l o c k s , a n d m i r r o r s , rack, keyless entry, powcruise control, tilt, air er windows, door locks, conditioning, CD / cas- and mirrors, dual sliding sette stereo, dual front d o o r s, p r i va c y g l a s s, airbags. 133K ml. cruise control, tilt, air $8,995 conditioning, CD / casvin# sette stereo, dual front NISSAN: ‘85 4x4, Z24 JHLRD77835C017853 airbags. carfax certified 4 c y l , 5 s p, m a t c h i n g Gray Motors one owner with no accicanopy, new tires, runs 457-4901 dents! 113K ml. great!. 203k, new head graymotors.com $6,495 at 200k. VERY low VIN VIN# (ends in 000008!) third 4T3ZF19C42U482978 a d u l t o w n e r, a l l n o n JEEP: CJ5, ‘80, beautiGray Motors ful condition, Red, soft smokers. Very straight 457-4901 t o p, d i a m o n d p l a t e. body. $4,250. graymotors.com $8,500 (360)670-9674. (360)477-1716

Case No.: 16-4-00109-2 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.030) In the Superior Court of the State of Washington in and for the County of Clallam in Re the Estate of Ruth P. Benson, Deceased. The personal representative named below has been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the de-cedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any o t h e r w i s e a p p l i c a bl e statute of lim-itations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s lawyer at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided und e r R C W 11.40.020(i)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication o f t h e n o t i c e. I f t h e claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of first publication: April 4, 2016 Karen M. Snell, Personal Representative L aw ye r fo r E s t : C a r l Lloyd Gay, #9272 GREENAWAY, GAY & TULLOCH 829 E. 8th St., Ste. A, Po r t A n g e l e s, WA 98362 (360) 452-3323 Pub: April 4, 11, 18, 2016 Legal No.691362

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM PROBATE NO: 15-4-00345-3 NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Matter of the Estate of BENJAMIN CHRISTOPH FREEMAN, JR. Deceased.

The personal representative named below has been appointed at personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statue of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(3): or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Date of First Publication: March 28, 2016 Personal Representative: Jeff Davis Bell & Davis, PLLC P.O. Box 510 Sequim, Washington 98382 Attorney for Personal Representative: Shari McMenamin McMenamin & McMenamin PS 544 North Fifth Avenue Sequim, Washington 98382 (360) 683-8210 Address for mailing or service: 544 North Fifth Avenue Sequim, Washington 98382 Court of probate proceedings and cause number: Clallam County Superior Court 15-4-00345-3 Pub: March 28, April 4, 11, 2016 Legal No:690180

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