PDN11222010c

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Saints nix Seahawks

Monday Cold with some sun; more snow expected C8

New Orleans’ Brees steams past Seattle B1

Peninsula Daily News November 22, 2010

Port Angeles-Sequim-West End

50 cents

Weathering

Project to store electricity

winter’s woes

Venture first in region, may be first in nation By Tom Callis

Peninsula Daily News

Chris Tucker (2)/Peninsula Daily News

Rescue personnel tend to people involved in a two-vehicle crash on state Highway 112 a few hundred feet north of the intersection with U.S. Highway 101 on Sunday. A law enforcement officer said no one was seriously injured, and five people were taken to Olympic Medical Center for evaluation.

More snow with wind expected on Peninsula By Paige Dickerson Peninsula Daily News

The first snowy weather of the season dropped about 2 inches on the West End of the North Olympic Peninsula and slowly tapered off as it moved east, dusting Sequim and Port Townsend on Sunday. Electricity was disrupted, and there were dozens of traffic incidents but no serious injuries.

Store electricity

New weather system The weather will get more frightful today when a new system is expected to move through the area, said meteorologist Dennis D’Amico of the National Weather Service. The system, which will move in from the Northeast, will bring about an inch of snow as well as wind throughout the Peninsula, he said. By this evening, D’Amico said, he expected northeast winds to be sustained at about 20 to 30 mph with gusts up to 40 mph. Turn

to

Winter/A4

PORT ANGELES — Sometimes an innovative idea doesn’t require any meetings or PowerPoint presentations to take shape — it just needs the right people to be talking at the right time. That’s what three men — a city of Port “If we can capture Angeles staff member, property owner enough [energy] and and businessman — put it in batteries, in said they found to be true during a Friday theory, we could evening two months produce about 100 ago. percent of the power During a weekly gathering in a small supply to the city and office at The Landing surrounding mall, the group known as the Center communities.” Phil Lusk for Community Port Angeles Power Design was listening Resources manager to Port Angeles Power Resources Manager Phil Lusk explain how he was a few days away from submitting an application to the Bonneville Power Administration to make the city part of a regional pilot project aimed at reducing the strain on the federal agency’s electrical grid. He had a few businesses signed up, each agreeing to lower energy use during certain times of the day when demand for electricity is at its highest. But he had nothing on the level of what Mory Houshmand had to offer.

Laci Batchelor, left, and Chelsea Casady of Port Angeles slide down a hill at the Port Angeles High School campus Sunday. They were enjoying the snow with their friends Rielly Reed and Scarlett Lynch.

The Port Angeles resident, who runs Catalyst Energy Technologies, said his company has been producing lithium-ion batteries — which can store large amounts of electricity — for several years; mostly selling them to energy-starved resorts in southeast Asia. The technology would be perfect for such a pilot project, Houshmand told Lusk, since it could store power at night when demand for energy is at its lowest, and release it during the day when the transmission lines are taxed. It didn’t take Lusk long to come to the same conclusion. “The timing was perfect,” he said during an interview last week. “I could smell the business deal in about five minutes.” All they needed was someone to host such a battery for the pilot project. Turn

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‘We cherished, we respected’ the salmon Klallam teacher shares history with young professionals group By Diane Urbani

lay the Elwha River where, until two huge dams were built, some 70 miles of river and tributary streams nourished hundreds of thousands of salmon.

Paz

such community programs and Cherished fish classes. Valadez began by saying there’s “Our Creator gave us this fish PORT ANGELES — In a voice a “void” in the teaching of local to live on, and we cherished it, authoritative and gentle, Jamie history to young people here. and we respected it,” Valadez said, Valadez gave the Peninsula Young quoting the late Elwha tribal Professionals Network the long view elder Beatrice Charles. All across Peninsula of the Elwha River dam removal. Charles hoped for a day when Valadez, a teacher of Klallam Then, mixing in Klallam names her grandchildren and greatlanguage and culture at Port for places in Clallam County — grandchildren would see the Angeles High School, spoke for such as Tse-whit-zen, the ancient salmon return to the upper her Lower Elwha Klallam tribe village unearthed earlier this reaches of the Elwha. Thursday night at a PYPN pro- decade — she explained Klallam “When that dam starts to come gram at the new Elwha Klallam people lived in numerous commuout next September, Bea Charles Heritage Training Center. The nities all across the Peninsula, is going to be close to our hearts,” center, which opened Sept. 27 at from the West End to Sequim to Valadez said. the corner of First and Peabody what’s now called Port Gamble. At the heart of this homeland streets, is now available for other Turn to Klallam/A4 de la

Peninsula Daily News

de la

Paz/Peninsula Daily News

Inside Today’s Peninsula Daily News 94th year, 273rd issue — 3 sections, 20 pages

055082146

home of the hottest slots in town!

Diane Urbani

Jamie Valadez of the Lower Elwha Klallam tribe shares the tribe’s history with the Peninsula Young Professionals Network during a program at the Elwha Klallam Heritage Training Center on Thursday.

Classified C3 Comics C2 Commentary/Letters A7 Dear Abby C2 Horoscope C2 Lottery A2 Movies C8 Nation/World A3 Peninsula Poll A2

Puzzles/Games Sports Things To Do Weather

C6 B1 C1 C8


A2

UpFront

Monday, November 22, 2010

Peninsula Daily News

Peninsula Daily News

Dilbert

The Samurai of Puzzles

By Scott Adams

Copyright © 2010, Michael Mepham Editorial Services

www.peninsuladailynews.com ■ See box on Commentary page for names, telephone numbers and e-mail addresses of key executives and contact people.

PORT ANGELES main office and printing plant: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 General information: 360-452-2345 Toll-free from Jefferson County and West End: 800-826-7714 Fax: 360-417-3521 Lobby hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday SEQUIM office: 150 S. Fifth Ave., Suite 2, Sequim, WA 98382 Telephone: 360-681-2390 News telephone: 360-6812391 Fax: 360-681-2392 Office hours: 8 a.m.-noon, 12:30 p.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday JEFFERSON COUNTY office: 1939 E. Sims Way, Port Townsend, WA 98368 News telephone: 360-385-2335 News fax: 360-385-3917 Advertising telephone: 360-385-1942

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Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or call one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2391; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714, Ext. 531 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3536 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527

Job and career OPPORTUNITIES! Carrier positions: 360-4524507 or 800-826-7714 (8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays). Job applications/human resources: 360-417-7691 See today’s classified ads for latest opportunities.

Peninsula Daily News (ISSN 1050-7000), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Horvitz Newspapers, published each morning Sunday through Friday by Northwest Media (Washington) L.P. at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations The Associated Press Contents copyright © 2010, Peninsula Daily News

Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

Lohan loses role as porn star Lovelace LINDSAY LOHAN WON’T be playing 1970s porn star Linda Lovelace in “Inferno.” Writerdirector Matthew Wilder said his production team is in negotiations with Lohan another actress and will make an announcement soon. Some media reports said the 24-year-old starlet quit to focus on her courtordered rehab for drug addiction; others said Wilder wanted her replaced. The “Mean Girls” star is expected to be in rehab in Southern California until at least Jan. 3. The actress has become more of a tabloid mainstay than box office draw since a pair of high-profile arrests in 2007 led to a drug and drunken driving case. A judge last month ordered Lohan to rehab. It was her fifth time in court since May. The ruling allowed her to avoid a

The Associated Press

McCartney

in

Brazil

Musician Paul McCartney performs during his “Up And Coming Tour” at the Morumbi stadium in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Sunday. fourth trip to jail.

Prep for Lincoln Academy Award-winning actor Daniel DayLewis is preparing for his role as Abraham Lincoln by visiting the state where the former president began his political career. DreamsWorks Studios said Day-Lewis will star in the Steven Spielbergdirected film “Lincoln.” The movie is based on the book Team of Rivals by Doris Kearns Goodwin, who joined Day-Lewis on his tour in Illinois.

The State Journal-Register reported the actor toured several historic sites Friday in SpringDay-Lewis field, including the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum, the Lincoln Home and the Old State Capitol, where Lincoln served as a legislator. Filming is expected to begin next fall, and the movie is to be released in late 2012.

Passings

FRIDAY/SATURDAY QUESTION: Do you think marriage is becoming obsolete?

Yes

No

28.0% 69.0%

Undecided  3.1% Total votes cast: 1,366 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

By The Associated Press

LAURIE “BAMBI” BEMBENEK, 52, prison escapee, former Playboy Club bunny and Milwaukee police officer, has died. She died Saturday of liver failure at a hospice care center in Portland, Ore., said her longtime attorMs. Bembenek ney, Mary in 1992 Woehrer. Ms. Bembenek worked briefly as a Playboy Club waitress in Lake Geneva, Wis., before becoming a police officer in Milwaukee, where she married detective Fred Schultz. Ms. Bembenek was convicted in 1982 of fatally shooting his ex-wife, Christine Schultz, after allegedly complaining about the alimony he had to pay. She was sentenced to life in prison but maintained her innocence. In 1990, she escaped Taycheedah Correctional Institution in Fond du Lac, Wis., and fled to Canada with then-fiance Dominic Gugliatto, the brother of another inmate. In Milwaukee, more than 200 supporters — many wearing “Run Bambi Run” T-shirts — rallied to show support for her flight from the law. Ms. Bembenek and Gugliatto were captured in Thunder Bay, Ontario, about three months later after the case was publicized on “America’s Most Wanted.”

Peninsula Daily News PENINSULA POLL

Corrections and clarifications

hospital with symptoms of a heart attack, she added. Mr. Lytle was drafted by the Broncos in the second round in 1977. He scored on a 1-yard run in Denver’s 27-10 loss to Dallas in the Super Bowl. He played seven seasons with the Broncos and scored 14 times in the regular season. Mr. Lytle finished third in voting for the Heisman Trophy, behind Pittsburgh’s Tony Dorsett and USC’s Ricky Bell, in 1976 when he was the Big Ten’s MVP and an All-American. He helped the Wolverines win three Big Ten titles and ran for 3,317 yards — the highest total in school history at the time — and scored 26 touchdowns. For the Broncos, he had ________ 1,451 yards rushing and ROB LYTLE, 56, an 562 yards receiving. All-American running back Mr. Lytle grew up in at Michigan who scored a Ross, Ohio, and graduated touchdown in the 1978 from Fremont Ross High Super Bowl as a Denver School. Broncos rookie, has died. He worked for Old Fort He had a heart attack Banking Co. as a vice presSaturday night in Fremont, ident in Fremont. Ohio, Memorial Hospital spokeswoman Chasity O’Neill said Sunday. Seen Around Mr. Lytle had been Peninsula snapshots taken by ambulance to the Ms. Bembenek fought extradition but willingly returned to Wisconsin in 1992 where a judge said that “significant mistakes” had been made in the probe of Christine Schultz’s death. Ms. Bembenek soon struck a deal with prosecutors in which her conviction was set aside. She pleaded no contest to second-degree murder and received 10 years of probation. She moved to Washington state in the late 1990s to live with her parents. Her story was made into a book and a 1993 TV movie starring Tatum O’Neal, “Woman on Trial: The Lawrencia Bembenek Story.”

Did You Win? State lottery results

■  Sunday’s Daily Game: 4-7-5 ■  Sunday’s Keno: 03-0811-12-15-16-17-18-22-33-3643-49-52-54-64-67-70-73-76 ■  Sunday’s Match 4: 06-14-21-24

A RETIRED SAILOR wearing a “shellback” cap in Port Angeles signifying that he has crossed the equator aboard a Navy ship . . . WANTED! “Seen Around” items. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362; fax 360-417-3521; or e-mail news@peninsuladaily news.com.

■  The late Anthony John Meissner, who died in a car crash early Friday morning, had worked at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton since 2003. A story on Page A1 Sunday erroneously said he had worked as a nuclear

engineer for Pierce County. The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, contact Executive Editor Rex ­Wilson at 360-417-3530 or e-mail rex.wilson@peninsuladailynews. com.

Peninsula Lookback

From the pages of the Peninsula Daily News

1935 (75 years ago) Forks will have an emergency airfield, says T.H. Bowen, assistant Works Progress Administration administrator in Seattle. Herbert Pollock, Clallam County engineer, said the new airport will cost $25,000 and will be 3,000 feet long and 1,000 feet wide on land provided by the county near the town of Forks. Work on the airport, to be built with federal WPA funds, will start as soon as final approval is received and the funds are made available, Pollock said.

1960 (50 years ago) Four Port Angeles hunters reportedly lost in West End forests walked out on their own after spending cold nights in the woods. The Clallam County Sheriff’s Office received missing-persons reports on James Harvath, Paul Mark­ley, Seldon Porter and Micky McLaughlin. A Coast Guard helicopter went out on a search

mission, but nothing turned up until about 3:30 p.m., when the wife of one of the hunters called the Sheriff’s Office to report they had returned to their homes.

1985 (25 years ago) An early snowstorm forced the closure of all schools in Clallam and Jefferson counties. Several government offices also were shut, including the Clallam County Courthouse and city and county offices in Port Townsend. However, Jefferson County Superior Court was in session, and Forks City Hall was open.

Laugh Lines A new study found that kids who use the Internet right before bed are likely to suffer mood problems. And kids who don’t use the Internet right before bed are Amish. Jimmy Fallon

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS MONDAY, Nov. 22, the 326th day of 2010. There are 39 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■  On Nov. 22, 1963, President John F. Kennedy was assassinated while riding in a motorcade in Dallas; Texas Gov. John B. Connally, in the same car as Kennedy, was seriously wounded. Suspect Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested. On this date: ■  In 1718, English pirate Edward Teach — better known as “Blackbeard” — was killed during a battle off the Virginia coast. ■  In 1928, “Bolero” by Maurice Ravel was first performed in Paris. ■  In 1930, listeners of the British Broadcasting Corp. heard, for the first time, radio coverage of

an American college football game as Harvard defeated Yale, 13-0. ■  In 1935, a flying boat, the China Clipper, took off from Alameda, Calif., carrying more than 100,000 pieces of mail on the first trans-Pacific airmail flight. ■  In 1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek met in Cairo to discuss measures for defeating Japan. Lyricist Lorenz Hart died in New York at age 48. ■  In 1965, the musical “Man of La Mancha” opened in New York. ■  In 1967, the U.N. Security Council approved Resolution 242, which called for Israel to withdraw from territories it had captured the previous June and implicitly

called on adversaries to recognize Israel’s right to exist. ■  In 1980, death claimed actress Mae West at her Hollywood residence at age 87 and former House Speaker John W. McCormack in Dedham, Mass., at age 88. ■  In 1990, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, having failed to win re-election of the Conservative Party leadership on the first ballot, announced her resignation. ■  Ten years ago: Amid the Florida recount battle, Republican vice presidential candidate Dick Cheney was hospitalized with what doctors called a “very slight” heart attack. ■  Five years ago: Jose Padilla, a U.S. citizen in Navy custody, was charged with supporting terrorism, but the indictment did

not mention the alleged “dirty bomb” plot that had prompted his three-year detention. Padilla was later convicted along with two other defendants. An Arab-American college student, Ahmed Omar Abu Ali, was convicted of joining al-Qaida and plotting to assassinate President George W. Bush. Abu Ali was later sentenced to life in prison. Angela Merkel took power as Germany’s first female chancellor. Ted Koppel hosted his final edition of ABC News’ “Nightline.” ■  One year ago: Michael Jackson posthumously won four American Music Awards; Taylor Swift was named artist of the year; Adam Lambert’s sexually provocative performance drew complaints.


Peninsula Daily News for Monday, November 22, 2010

Second Front Page

Page

A3

Briefly: Nation Poor economy leads to less carbon pollution

bills introduced in the lead-up to the election are likely to die without action. With only a few working weeks left in the 111th Congress, attention is focused on a few major items including WASHINGTON — Here’s unemployment, Medicare and one plus from the global econuclear proliferation. nomic recession: Carbon dioxide “If they’re under the gun for pollution last year dropped for all these issues, they’re not the first time in a decade. going to want to gum things up But it didn’t last and it with a controversial issue like wasn’t as big a drop as expected. wolves,” said Brad Hoaglun, a Burning fossil fuels to power spokesman for Idaho Republifactories, cars and airplanes can Sen. James Risch. spews out greenhouse gases He said it was “highly that warm the world. unlikely” any of several wolf But during the economic bills will advance. downturn, some factories shut down and people didn’t drive or More airline scrutiny fly as much. How did an agency created That helped drop emissions to protect the public become the about 1.3 percent from 2008 to target of so much public scorn? 2009, according to a study pubAfter nine lished Sunday in the journal Nature Geoscience. years of funThere’s been a close link neling travelbetween gross domestic product ers into ever and pollution in recent decades, longer lines said study lead author Pierre with orders to Friedlingstein of the University have shoes off, of Exeter in England. sippy cups “The good part of the crisis is empty and that it reduces emissions,” he laptops out for said. inspection, the Clinton In the United States, the most surprisEnergy Department said that ing thing about increasingly emissions dropped 7 percent in heated frustration with the fed2009 because of three equal fac- eral Transportation Security tors: the slowing economy, Administration may be that it slightly better energy efficiency took so long to boil over. and cleaner energy. Even Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who is not Wolf passage unlikely subjected to security pat-downs when she travels, understands BILLINGS, Mont. — Lawmakers from the Northern Rock- the public’s irritation. She, for ies said pending bills aimed at one, wouldn’t want to go getting gray wolves off the through such scrutiny. endangered species list have lit“Not if I could avoid it. No. I tle chance of passage this year. mean, who would?” Clinton told A time crunch, coupled with CBS’s “Face the Nation” in an unresolved partisan differences interview broadcast Sunday. on the issue, means several wolf The Associated Press

Briefly: World Iran sets Feb. 6 trial date for 3 Americans TEHRAN, Iran — The lawyer for three Americans facing espionage charges in Iran said Sunday that a new trial date of Feb. 6 has been set but that the judge has refused to allow him to meet with his clients to prepare a defense. The trial was to have started Nov. 6, but authorities said they delayed it because one of the Americans, who was freed on bail, had not been summoned to return to the country to appear in court. Their lawyer, Masoud Shafiei, said he received an official notification Sunday of the new trial date. Sarah Shourd was freed in September and returned to the United States. Her fiance, Shane Bauer, and their friend, Josh Fattal, remain in prison. The case is among the many points of confrontation between Iran and the United States, which has repeatedly appealed for the Americans to be released. Shourd and their families have denied they did anything wrong. After her release, Shourd said they were hiking in a scenic and relatively peaceful part of northern Iraq and inadvertently crossed an unmarked border with Iran when they were arrested in July 2009.

Former governor killed GUADALAJARA, Mexico — The former governor of the

Pacific state of Colima was shot dead late Sunday morning by a group of armed men, authorities said. Silverio Cavazos Ceballos, 41, who left office a year ago, was killed outside his home in the capital city also called Colima, the state Attorney General’s Office said. Cavazos was accompanied by Rafael Gutierrez Villalobos, the state’s economic development secretary, who was wounded in the attack, though authorities didn’t say how gravely.

23 killed in Somalia MOGADISHU, Somalia — At least 23 people were killed in fighting in central Somalia and the seaside capital over the weekend, officials and witnesses said Sunday. Thirteen people were killed in central Somalia when a militia allied with the government attacked a village held by Islamist insurgents Saturday. The fighting continued into Sunday. Abdi Fatah Ali, a resident of Wardhumale village where the fiercest fighting took place, said he saw 10 bodies. A man in neighboring Elgod village, Abdulkadir, said he saw three dead people. The residents said the Islamist militia al-Shabab abandoned Wardhumale village, leaving the government-allied Ahlu Sunnah Wal Jama militia in charge. Spokesmen for both sides claimed victory. Ahlu Sunnah Wal Jama is a clan-based militia that supports Sufisim, the traditional form of Islam practiced in Somalia. The Associated Press

The Associated Press

Massachusetts

sets holiday record

Amanda Neveu, center, and friends including Jose Peguero, right, dance among more than 800 people who gathered to set a new world record for people wearing a Santa hat at one time in one place Sunday in downtown Brockton, Mass. The previous record of 700 belonged to Mullingar, Ireland.

North Korea builds nuclear facility, U.S. scientist says By Foster Klug

The Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea has secretly and quickly built a new, highly sophisticated facility to enrich uranium, according to an American nuclear scientist, raising fears that the North is ramping up its atomic program despite international pressure. The scientist, Siegfried Hecker, said in a report posted Saturday that he was taken during a recent trip to the North’s main Yongbyon atomic complex to a facility with a small industrial-scale uranium enrichment facility. The facility had 2,000 recently completed centrifuges, he said, and the North told him it was producing low-enriched uranium meant for a new reactor. Hecker, a former director of the U.S. Los Alamos Nuclear Laboratory who is regularly given rare glimpses of the North’s secretive nuclear program, acknowledged that it was not clear what North Korea stood to gain by showing him the formerly secret area. The revelation could be designed to strengthen the North

Korean government as it looks to transfer power from leader Kim Jong Il to a young, unproven son. As the North’s economy suffers and Washington and others tighten sanctions, unveiling the centrifuges could also be an attempt by Pyongyang to force a resumption of stalled international nuclear disarmament-foraid talks.

Fresh set of worries for U.S. Whatever the reason, the new centrifuges provide a fresh set of worries for the Obama administration, which has shunned negotiations with the North following Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile tests last year and in the wake of an international finding that a North Korean torpedo sank a South Korean warship in March, killing 46 sailors. The U.S. State Department announced that the Obama administration’s special envoy on North Korea would visit South Korea, Japan and China, starting Sunday. Hecker wrote that his first glimpse of the new centrifuges

was “stunning.” “Instead of seeing a few small cascades of centrifuges, which I believed to exist in North Korea, we saw a modern, clean centrifuge plant of more than a thousand centrifuges, all neatly aligned and plumbed below us,” Hecker, a Stanford University professor, wrote. Hecker described the control room as “astonishingly modern,” writing that, unlike other North Korean facilities, it “would fit into any modern American processing facility.” The facilities appeared to be primarily for civilian nuclear power, not for North Korea’s nuclear arsenal, Hecker said. He said he saw no evidence of continued plutonium production at Yongbyon. But, he said, the uranium enrichment facilities “could be readily converted to produce highly enriched uranium bomb fuel.” Uranium enrichment would give the North a second way to make atomic bombs, in addition to its known plutonium-based program.

Debt-crippled Ireland applies for bailout from the European Union By Shawn Pogatchnik The Associated Press

DUBLIN — Debt-crippled Ireland formally applied Sunday for a massive EU-IMF loan to stem the flight of capital from its banks, joining Greece in a step unthinkable only a few years ago when Ireland was a booming Celtic Tiger and the economic envy of Europe. European Union finance ministers quickly agreed in principle to the bailout, saying it “is warranted to safeguard financial stability in the EU and euro area.” But all sides said further weeks of negotiations loomed to define the fund’s terms, conditions and precise size. Ireland’s crisis, set off by its foundering banks, drove up borrowing costs not only for Ireland but for other weak links in the eurozone such as Spain and Portugal. Ireland’s agreement takes some pressure off those countries, but they still may end up needing bailouts of their own.

Quick Read

The European Central Bank — which oversees monetary policy for the 16-nation eurozone and first raised alarm bells about a renewed cash crisis in Dublin banks — said the aid would “contribute to ensuring the stability of the Irish banking system.” Sweden and Britain, not members of the euro currency, said they also were willing to provide bilateral loans to Ireland.

Emergency aid package Irish Finance Minister Brian Lenihan spent much of Sunday talking to other eurozone financial chiefs about conditions they would place on the emergency aid package taking shape. Lenihan said Ireland needed less than $140 billion to use as a credit line for its state-backed banks, which are losing deposits and struggling to borrow funds on open markets. He said the loan facility could last anywhere from three to nine years. International Monetary Fund director Dominique Strauss-Kahn

said his organization “stands ready to join this effort, including through a multiyear loan.” He said IMF experts already in Dublin would “hold swift discussions on an economic program with the Irish authorities, the European Commission and the European Central Bank.” Ireland has been brought to the brink of bankruptcy by its fateful 2008 decision to insure its banks against all losses — a bill that is swelling beyond $69 billion and driving Ireland’s deficit into uncharted territory. The country had long resisted a bailout, but Lenihan said it was now painfully clear that Ireland needed “financial firepower” immediately to complement its own cutthroat plans for recovery. This country of 4.5 million now faces at least four more years of deep budget cuts and tax hikes totaling at least $20.5 billion just to get its deficit — bloated this year to a European record of 32 percent of GDP — back to the eurozone’s limit of 3 percent by 2014.

. . . more news to start your day

Nation: ‘Harry Potter’ sets box office franchise record

Nation: St. Louis is most dangerous city in the U.S.

Nation: Plane makes safe landing after engine fails

World: Wild tigers could become extinct by 2022

Harry Potter has cast his biggest box-office spell yet with a franchise record $125.1 million domestically over opening weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday. “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1” also added $205 million in 54 overseas countries, bringing the film’s worldwide total to $330.1 million. In terms of domestic revenue, “Deathly Hallows: Part 1” came in ahead of the series’ best previous debut of $102.7 million for 2005’s “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.” But factoring in today’s higher admission prices, the latest movie had roughly the same size audience as the franchise’s best previous draws.

St. Louis overtook Camden, N.J., as the nation’s most dangerous city in 2009, according to a national study released Sunday. The study by CQ Press found St. Louis had 2,070.1 violent crimes per 100,000 residents, compared with a national average of 429.4. That helped St. Louis beat out Camden, which topped last year’s list and was the most dangerous city for 2003 and 2004. Detroit, Flint, Mich., and Oakland, Calif., rounded out the top five. For the second straight year, the safest city with more than 75,000 residents was Colonie, N.Y.

A Moscow-bound flight carrying about 200 people returned safely to John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York after an engine failed Sunday night, authorities said. No one was injured. Delta Flight 30 reported one engine had failed shortly after takeoff, said Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Laura Brown. The plane departed at about 4:40 p.m. with 193 passengers and 11 crew members, Delta Air Lines said. The plane dumped fuel before landing at about 5:50 p.m., Brown said. Passengers were put on another jet, which was scheduled to depart for Moscow at about 8 p.m., Delta said.

Wild tigers could become extinct in 12 years if countries where they still roam fail to take quick action to protect their habitats and step up the fight against poaching, global wildlife experts told a “tiger summit” Sunday. The World Wildlife Fund and other experts said only about 3,200 tigers remain in the wild, a dramatic plunge from an estimated 100,000 a century ago. James Leape, director general of the World Wildlife Fund, told the meeting in St. Petersburg, Russia, that if the proper protective measures aren’t taken, tigers may disappear by 2022, the next Chinese calendar year of the tiger.


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PeninsulaNorthwest

Monday, November 22, 2010 — (C)

Peninsula Daily News

Winter: Windchill of zero to 10 degrees likely Patrol said. A two-car wreck on Old Mill Road included one car rolling over several times, but no one was injured, said sheriff’s Sgt. Nick Turner.

Continued from A1 “We’ll see windchill in the zero- to 10-degree range,” he said. “There will be about an inch of snow, with more, of course, in the higher altitudes.” On Sunday, there was about 1.9 inches of snow in the Joyce area and about an inch in Port Angeles.

‘Too fast for conditions’

2,000 lose power About 2,000 people west of Port Angeles were without power for about six hours Sunday when a tree near Laird’s Corner fell on Bureau of Reclamation lines that then fell on Clallam County Public Utility District lines, said PUD spokesman Mike Howe. Laird’s Corner is near the intersection of U.S. Highway 101 and state Highway 112. People were sliding off late in the day, said the The power was restored mid-afternoon after the the road left and right in State Patrol and Clallam PUD transformer was Clallam County, but no seri- County Sheriff’s Office. ous injuries were reported Five people suffered repaired, Howe said.

Most of the wrecks involved vehicles running off into ditches on the sides of roads. They numbered in the dozens by late evening. “We get people driving too fast for conditions, and then they hit a telephone pole or go into a ditch,” Turner said. East Jefferson County didn’t have the same sort of weather issues. “We have not had any weather-related issues,” said Jefferson County Sheriff Tony Hernandez. “We’ve had snow off and on all day, but it has been really, really light.”

Horses graze in a snowy field off Old Mill Road in Port Angeles on Sunday.

Chris Tucker/Peninsula Daily News

__________

minor injuries in a midday, The names of the people Reporter Paige Dickerson can two-car wreck at U.S. High- were not available Sunday be reached at 360-417-3535 or at way 101 and state Highway night. None of them had paige.dickerson@peninsuladaily 112, the State Patrol said. serious injuries, the State news.com.

Power: Equipment stores 4 hours of energy Continued from A1 to store about four hours worth of the building’s Paul Cronauer, owner of energy needs, will be The Landing mall at 115 E. installed sometime in the Railroad Ave. and not one to spring — making it the first shy away from anything commercial use of the technology in the Pacific Northavant-garde, eagerly agreed west and possibly the to be the host. nation, said Lusk and The battery was added Houshmand. to the pilot project proposal, “Certainly what we are which was accepted by trying to do here is unprecBPA. edented,” Houshmand said. And the rest, as they say, Cronauer said he hopes is history. to use the battery to also The equipment, about a charge electric cars or even yard wide and tall and able store energy created by a

small wind turbine he wants to install at the building. “I’m very excited about this,” he said. “This [technology] has been a long time coming.”

Center of it all Houshmand, who said he never thought “we would actually get a project going over here,” added that he hopes to make Port Angeles, to steal the slogan formerly used by the Port Angeles

Regional Chamber of Commerce, the center of it all, if this use of the technology catches on. “My plan is, if this is successful, actually creating a hub for improving and expanding and bringing other uses for this right here in Port Angeles,” he said. (His company, CET, currently has offices in Seattle and Connecticut.) The use, as Cronauer already realized, goes beyond storing energy from the grid.

The batteries also can be used to harness power created by sources of renewable energy — such as wind, solar and tidal — notorious for not being reliable, Houshmand said. That would allow the energy to be used when it’s needed most, he said. Lusk agreed that the technology could be perfect for encouraging renewable energy growth on the North Olympic Peninsula. “If we can capture

enough of it and put it in batteries, in theory, we could produce about 100 percent of the power supply to the city and surrounding communities,” he said. “Whether or not it’s going to be cost-effective to do that in 20, 25 years,” Lusk cautioned, “my crystal ball is not that good.”

________ Reporter Tom Callis can be reached at 360-417-3532 or at tom.callis@peninsuladailynews. com.

Klallam: Salmon supports 137 other species Continued from A1 tively, were constructed with no provision for fish The 105-foot-high Elwha passage, said Dean ButterDam and the 210-foot worth, outreach and educaGlines Canyon Dam, built tion specialist for Olympic in 1910 and 1927 respec- National Park.

Blocking the salmon population has far-reaching effects: The region’s keystone species supports 137 other species in this ecosystem.

Committed to Providing the

The three-year dam removal process starts next year; the $350 million National Park Service project is the largest of its kind in U.S. history. Many other dams are being removed around the country and natural lands restored, Butterworth told the PYPN members. Typically, a “competing interest,” such as a city or agriculture, exists above the dams. The Elwha is different, he noted, in that Olympic National Park’s vast wilderness is above its dams. Removal, then, stands to benefit the triple bottom line — people, planet, profit — by restoring the river, its

heritage, its fish and the related tourism industry. Valadez, for her part, said the shared history of the Elwha tribe and the settlers who came from elsewhere spans just 150 years, while the Klallam tribes — known as the Strong People — have lived on the river for thousands of years.

Creation Site When the dams come out and the waters of Lake Aldwell and Lake Mills recede, tribal members hope a place called the Creation Site — the origin of the Klallams — will be revealed. Valadez showed photo-

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graphs, some of which are stored in the Port Angeles Library’s Kellogg collection, of Klallam women working and living in what is now Port Angeles, and of tribal members such as Hunter John and Boston Charlie. Young men of their era — the late 19th and early 20th centuries — went on vision quests, walking up the Elwha into the Olympic Mountains, where they spent time reflecting on their role in the world. They bathed in the river and encountered bears, wolves, elk and other wild creatures, and came to understand their interdependence on other living beings. The banks of the Elwha were also places for celebrations such as weddings, Valadez said, adding that other tribes, including the Quileute, gathered at the river. When Europeans arrived, they brought the seeds of deadly diseases such as smallpox. Valadez noted that Capt. George Vancouver, sailing into places such as Discovery Bay, was among those who saw how many tribes had been nearly wiped out. Yet the Klallam people, and their culture, survived. Today, the self-governed Lower Elwha tribe has expanded its reservation west of Port Angeles and built a casino alongside its tribal center. At the same time, the tribe continues to hold close its connections to the river and mountains. “We live in a beautiful valley,” Valadez said. “And if you look up at the mountains, you see the shape of a woman,” sleeping. The story is that when she grew tired, she asked the Creator for a time of rest; if the world becomes out of balance, she’ll awaken. “We have to take care of our land,” Valadez said. For information about the Elwha tribe and the Klallam Heritage Training Center, visit www.Elwha. org. To learn more about the PYPN, visit Facebook.com and search for Peninsula Young Professionals Network.

________ Features Editor Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360417-3550 or at diane.urbani@ peninsuladailynews.com.


PeninsulaNorthwest

Peninsula Daily News

Monday, November 22, 2010

A5

Deeds in Forks get chamber recognition By Paige Dickerson Peninsula Daily News

FORKS — Marcia Yanish’s work to revitalize the city of Forks won her the Citizen of the Year award. The announcement was made at the Nov. 13 Wine & Cheese Fundraiser for the Forks Chamber of Commerce. The event — which raises money for the day-to-day operations of the chamber — drew about 150 people and raised roughly $7,000, said Marcia Bingham, executive director. “We had wonderful community support,” she said. Christi Baron, who writes the West End Neighbor column for the Peninsula Daily News every other Tuesday, was named the Volunteer of the Year for Forks. Ken Bechtold Logging was awarded the Business of the Year award at

the event. Yanish has worked as a volunteer at the Forks Visitor Center and also works to improve the quilting community, Bingham said. “She is an outstanding head of the Forks Revitalization Committee and an active Quilt Club member and of many, many other organizations,” Bingham said. As part of Yanish’s work on the Revitalization Committee, the Welcome to Forks signs were moved and renovated, lighting downtown was added and planter boxes were added downtown. She has also served on the Lutheran Church Council. Yanish also helps to organize the annual quilt show as part of RainFest, Bingham said. Baron has been a West End business and profes-

sional officer and co-chair of Heritage Days. She is involved with the Forkestra, Friends of Forks Animals, Forks Timber Museum, Forks Chamber Wine & Cheese, Pioneer Loggers, Fish & Brew, Fourth of July Parade, Santa Bucks and Buy-a-Meal-fora-Vet. “Christi does so much, I can’t even begin to name everything,” Bingham said. Ken Bechtold Logging has donated equipment and fuel to nonprofit organizations such as Forks Lions Club, Bingham said. The company also donated one of its log trucks and a driver to deliver wood for the Wood for Food exchange with Quincy.

__________ Reporter Paige Dickerson can be reached at 360-417-3535 or at paige.dickerson@peninsuladaily news.com.

Extra DUI patrols begin on Thanksgiving Day Peninsula Daily News

Law enforcement officers will conduct extra DUI patrols as the holiday Drive Hammered, Get Nailed campaign begins on Thanksgiving. Between Thursday and Jan. 2, officers will work to rid the roads in Clallam and Jefferson counties of impaired drivers. The Drive Hammered, Get Nailed campaign is a joint effort among the state Traffic Safety Commission, State Patrol, the Clallam County DUI Task Force and the Jefferson County Traffic Safety Task Force. The average blood-alcohol level of people arrested in Washington state for investigation of driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol is 0.14.

That’s almost twice the legal limit of 0.08. But the blood-alcohol level is not all that’s considered. “Please be aware, however, that you can be arrested for impaired driving even though your blood-alcohol reading is 0.02,” said Jim Borte, Clallam County DUI Task Force coordinator. “A combination of drugs and alcohol, or a mixture of even prescribed medications, can result in impaired driving and may lead to your arrest.” In 2009, 41,006 people were charged with DUI statewide. In 2008, that number was 39,455; in 2007, 41,569; in 2006, 42,029; and in 2005, 41,872. Nationally, an average of 30 people are killed every

day in alcohol-impaired crashes, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said. However, there is good news. During 2009, there was a decrease in alcohol-impaired driving deaths nationwide of more than 7 percent, or 10,839, from 2008. “In Washington, impaired driving is still the most frequent contributing factor in deadly collisions,” said Lowell Porter, director of the Washington Traffic Safety Commission. “During this time of year, with holiday parties and celebrations, we urge everyone to plan ahead and choose a safe ride home,” he said. For additional information about the state Traffic Safety Commission, visit www.wtsc.wa.gov.

PT Marine Science Center offering sale, cruise, exhibit Peninsula Daily News

Bird cruise

out skis

Katherine Marchant, 7, tests out a set of skis and boots with her father, Marty Marchant of Port Angeles, during Saturday’s Winterfest ski swap at Vern Burton Community Center in Port Angeles. The event, a fundraiser for the Hurricane Ridge Winter Sports Education Foundation, allowed participants to shop for a variety of new and used ski and winter sports equipment.

Freedom foundation speaker tonight Peninsula Daily News

SEQUIM ­­— Scott St. Clair of the Evergreen Freedom Foundation will speak to Citizens of Clallam County ­— FourC ­­— at the group’s monthly meeting at 7 p.m. today. Open to the public, the

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meeting will be held at the Boys & Girls Club, 400 W. Fir St. Evergreen is a public policy organization in Olympia “dedicated to the advancement of individual liberty.” St. Clair will talk about

the role citizens need to play “in returning our governments to more fiscal responsibility and principled competency.” For more information, e-mail fourc.info@yahoo. com or visit www.new socialcontract.com.

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Damiana’s Best Cellars Dance to Connect Davidson Plumbing Inc. Defining Edge Diann Dickey Richard & Cletis Dietz Dockside Grill Dog House Powder Coating Domino’s Pizza-Sequim Doodlebugs Double Eagle Steak & Seafood Downrigger Restaurant Drake’s Pizza & Subs Virginia Drorshak Hilda Duncan Dungeness Bay Wine & Cheese Dungeness Kids Co. Dungeness Ranch Pet Resort DuPuis Restaurant Bill Dyrness Eagle Home Mortgage Jack & Sheri Edson El Cazador Emma Zookie Designs Ernst Fine Art Photography Fiddleheads Fisherman’s Outlet Fortune Star Restaurant Fred’s Hobbies & Guns Inc. Mary Sue French Frick Drug Galare Thai Galloping Goat Farm Nadine Ganz Getter Done Moving Golden Crafts Shop Good Book Peggy Green Tom & Sandy Green Greywolf Veterinary Hospital Jane Harbers Harbinger Winery Hartnagel Building Supply Healing Hands Spa Heritage Tours Lloyd & Julie Hightower Hoodsport Winery Hotel Grand Pacific International Association of Firefighters Local 2933 Hurricane Coffee Company

IHOP Irwin Dental Center Islander Pizza & Pasta Shack Jamestown S’Klallam Tribal Council Jazz in the Olympics Society John L. Scott Real EstateSequim Jose’s Famous Salsa K & K Graphics Kelbi’s World Kerloo Cellars Kettel’s 76 Kim Mishko & Associates Kiwanis Club of Sequim Ko To Teriyaki & Sushi Kokopelli Grill Dave Kruth Lake Chelan Winery Lakeside Industries Randell & Lenee Langdon Larson-Alexander Law Les Schwab Tire Center Let’s Shop Kate Lily Lippert’s Bill & Esther Littlejohn Richard Loomis Lord Jensen Lavender Ruth Lowe Tori Lucier-Miller David & Jean Luebbert Mariner Café Mark & Sue Macedo Mad Maggi Salon Mail Boxes Too Brown & Sara Maloney Eldora Matthews Mark & Betsy Matthews David & Patsy Mattingley Margaret Maxwell McComb Gardens McDonald’s Miller Signs Dr. Larrianne Mishko Lee & Linda Moench Moon Palace Melissa Murray Sequim Dungeness Valley Museum & Arts Center Nancy’s Fashion Nash’s Organic Produce Necessities & Temptations Never Di Northwest Eye Surgeons

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A bird migration cruise to Protection Island, a national wildlife refuge at the mouth of Discovery Bay, is planned Saturday. The trip leaves from Port Townsend’s Point Hudson Marina at 1 p.m. and returns at 4 p.m. Naturalists on board will explain the diverse populations of birds and other wildlife on the island. The cruise, which is in collaboration with Puget Sound Express, is on an enclosed motor yacht. One more cruise will be offered this year. That will be Friday, Dec. 31. Tickets are $55 per person, or $50 for members of the marine science center, the Burke Museum or the Audubon or Washington Ornithological societies. Trips may include an additional stop at the Kilisut Harbor/Mystery Bay area between Marrowstone and Indian islands. On-board refreshments will be available. For reservations, phone the center at 360-385-5582 or 800-566-3932. E-mail cruises@ptmsc.

Swapping

which will allow the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula to continue to run quality programs for every member.

85309511

PORT TOWNSEND — The Port Townsend Marine Science Center at Fort Worden State Park is offering a special holiday sale and hosting a cruise to Protection Island during the Thanksgiving weekend. The holiday sale will be from noon to 4 p.m. Friday through Sunday in the Natural History Exhibit’s gift shop. Discounts will be offered on all items, including books, field guides, clothing, games and toys, as well as many small stocking stuffers that haven’t been carried before. Gift certificates will be available for the gift shop as well as memberships to the center, with all proceeds supporting the center’s educational programs.

org for additional information. The Whales in Our Midst traveling exhibit is on display in the Natural History Exhibit through Dec. 31. The center is open from

Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News


A6

PeninsulaNorthwest

Monday, November 22, 2010

Peninsula Daily News

Wild-bird beak disorder rate highest ever Populations are in Alaska, Northwest By Dan Joling

The Associated Press

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Scientists have observed the highest rate of beak abnormalities ever recorded in wild bird populations in Alaska and the Northwest, a study by two federal scientists said. The U.S. Geological Survey study on beak deformities in northwestern crows in Alaska, Washington and British Columbia follows a trend found earlier in Alaska’s black-capped chickadees. “The prevalence of these strange deformities is more than 10 times what is normally expected in a wild bird population,” said research biologist Colleen Handel. The scientists said beak deformities can be caused by environmental contaminants, nutritional deficiencies and bacterial, viral, fungal or parasitic infections. In the past, large clusters of beak deformities have been associated with environmental pollutants such as organochlorines in the Great Lakes region and

selenium from agricultural runoff in California. Handel and wildlife biologist Caroline Van Hemert published their findings in The Auk, a quarterly journal of ornithology. They captured Alaska crows in six coastal locations and used documented reports and photographs for birds elsewhere. The cause of the deformity — called “avian keratin disorder” — hasn’t been determined, Handel said. An estimated 17 percent of adult northwestern crows are affected by the disorder in coastal Alaska.

Layer overgrown The keratin layer of the beak becomes overgrown, resulting in elongated and often crossed beaks. The deformity showed up in adults birds, most often in the upper beak but sometimes in the lower beak or both. The abnormality sometimes is accompanied by elongated claws, abnormal skin or variations in feather color. The increasing occurrence of deformities in multiple bird species with broad geographic distribution suggests that avian keratin disorder is spreading, they said. Van Hemert said the disorder first was noticed in significant numbers

around 1999. It has increased dramatically over the past decade, affecting 6.5 percent of adult black-capped chickadees in Alaska annually. Biologists have documented more than 2,100 affected individuals and increasing numbers of other species, such as nuthatches and woodpeckers, have been spotted with beak deformities. Both chickadees and northwestern crows live year-round in Alaska with generally restricted seasonal movements between wintering and breeding areas, but do not forage in the same areas, the researchers said. “They’re eating different things, they live in different habitats — crows are mostly intertidal, chickadees tend to be in birch forests – they’re kind of occurring in different parts of their habitats and ecosystems and they’re still affected by what seems to be the same problem,” Van Hemert said. The deformities affect birds’ ability to feed, Van Hemert said, though many birds appear to cope by relying on food provided by humans at feeders rather than foraging. Deformed beaks also can prevent adequate preening, she said, leaving feathers matted, dirty and without insulating value needed to survive the cold.

A black-capped chickadee, above, captured in Anchorage, Alaska, and a northwestern crow, from Juneau, Alaska, have the overgrown beak characteristic of “avian keratin disorder. ” U.S. Geological Survey (2)

Briefly: State Online survey for education reform set up OLYMPIA — Gov. Chris Gregoire is asking Washington residents and educators to go online by Thanksgiving to fill out a survey on education reform.

The survey will help state officials prioritize reform efforts. The offices of the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the state Board of Education and the Professional Educator Standards Board partnered to create a draft plan for reform. The governor said she needs help figuring out how to focus the state’s limited funds while it

moves forward on education reform.

Loose trailer deadly BREMERTON — A driver was killed after a trailer towing a fishing boat unhitched from a truck and crashed into his SUV near the town of Suquamish. Kitsap County sheriff’s spokesman Scott Wilson

said the crash happened Saturday evening on a stretch of Suquamish Way. A trailer carrying a fishing boat became unhitched from a pickup truck and struck the SUV, he said. The impact of the collision also caused the fishing boat to unfasten from the trailer, slamming into the SUV. The driver of the SUV

was dead when medics arrived.

R. David Reagan said a 30-year-old woman was killed Saturday night when the ATV drove off an ATV crash fatal embankment and fell about SPOKANE — A Spokane Valley man is facing a nine feet. Investigators said Chrisfelony count of vehicular topher Patrick Arnold, 32, homicide after an ATV had a suspended Washingcrash that killed his paston driver’s license and had senger, the Spokane alcohol on his breath at the County Sheriff’s Office time of the crash. said. The Associated Press Sheriff’s spokesman Sgt.

Decision on Bush-era tax cuts looms after break Peninsula Daily News news services

WASHINGTON — The 111th Congress will return from Thanksgiving recess Nov. 29 for its final weeks. Both chambers are likely to vote next month on whether to renew Bush-era tax cuts. The Senate will take up food safety, a repeal of the ban on gays serving openly in the military, the New START arms reduction treaty and the DREAM Act giving children of illegal immigrants a path to citizenship. The House and possibly the Senate will vote on providing extended jobless benefits.

Contact our legislators (clip and save) “Eye on Congress” is

published in the Peninsula Daily News every Monday when Congress is in session about activities, roll call votes and legislation in the House and Senate. The North Olympic Peninsula’s legislators in Washington, D.C., are Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Mountlake Terrace), Sen. Patty Murray (D-Bothell) and Rep. Norm Dicks (D-Belfair). Contact information — The address for Cantwell and Murray is U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C. 20510; Dicks, U.S. House, Washington, D.C. 20515. Phone Cantwell at 202224-3441 (fax, 202-2280514); Murray, 202-2242621 (fax, 202-224-0238); Dicks, 800-947-6676 (fax, 202-226-1176). E-mail via their websites: cantwell.senate.gov; murray. senate.gov; house.gov/dicks.

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Eye on Congress Dicks’ North Olympic Peninsula office is at 332 E. Fifth St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. It is open from 9 a.m. to noon Tuesdays and 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Thursdays and by appointment. It is staffed by Judith Morris, 360-452-3370 (fax: 360-452-3502).

State legislators Jefferson and Clallam counties are represented in the part-time state Legislature — now in recess until January — by Rep. Kevin Van De Wege, D-Sequim; Rep. Lynn Kessler, D-Hoquiam, the House majority leader; and Sen. Jim Hargrove, D-Hoquiam. Write Kessler and Van De Wege at P.O. Box 40600 (Hargrove at P.O. Box 40424), Olympia, WA 98504; e-mail them at kessler.lynn@ leg.wa.gov; vandewege. kevin@leg.wa.gov; hargrove. jim@leg.wa.gov. Or you can call the Legislative Hot Line, 800562-6000, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday (closed on holidays and from noon to 1 p.m.) and leave a detailed mes-

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Websites following our state and national legislators: ■ Followthemoney.org — Campaign donors by industry, ZIP code and more ■ Vote-Smart.org — How special interest groups rate legislators on the issues.

Roll call votes Here’s how Dicks, Cantwell and Murray voted on major roll call votes last week. Legislation must pass the House and the Senate and be signed by the president to be enacted into law.

■  FEDERAL TELECOMMUTING: Voting 254 for and 152 against, the House on Thursday sent President Obama a bill (HR 1722) to greatly increase the number of civil servants allowed by their agencies to work from home or remote telecommuting centers at least one day each week. The bill would require all agencies to establish “telework” programs, put a senior manager in charge, expand employee participation and set up an appeals process for those denied participation. The bill would increase federal spending by $30 million over five years. Backers said well-managed telecommuting makes it easier for the government to compete with the private sector for skilled personnel, eases traffic congestion and cuts reliance on foreign oil. Critics said telework promotes worker inefficiency and could easily cost taxpayers more than it purports to save. A yes vote was to pass the bill. Dicks voted yes.

■  EXTENDED JOBLESS BENEFITS: Voting 258 for and 154 against, the House on Thursday failed to reach a two-thirds majority needed to extend unemployment benefits for the long-term jobless through February 2011. Costing $12.5 billion in deficit spending, the bill (HR 6419) would fund additional payments to a projected 4 million people ■  GENDER-BASED whose existing allotments WAGE BIAS: Voting 58 for

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are scheduled to expire over the next three months. The bill would keep 99 weeks as the maximum eligibility period for receiving state-federal unemployment compensation. A yes vote was to pass the bill. Dicks voted yes.

and 41 against, the Senate on Wednesday failed to reach 60 votes for advancing a bill (S 3772) strengthening the 1963 Equal Pay Act, which bans pay discrimination based on gender. The bill empowers women alleging pay bias to sue for recovery of back pay and receive punitive as well as compensatory damages. Additionally, the bill bans employer retaliation against those who share salary data with co-workers and establishes a grant program to teach negotiating skills to girls and women, among other provisions. The House passed this bill in January 2009 as a companion to the Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, which gives women more standing to file pay-bias suits. The Senate also passed the Ledbetter measure, and it was signed into law. A yes vote was to advance the bill. Cantwell and Murray voted yes. ■  FOOD-SAFETY REGULATION: Voting 74 for and 25 against, the Senate on Wednesday agreed to take up a House-passed bill that would greatly expand Food and Drug Administration authority over hundreds of thousands of firms that handle raw and processed foods, including farms with annual sales above $500,000. The bill (S 510) requires domestic and foreign companies that supply food to U.S. consumers to pay $500 annual registration fees to the FDA, take adequate steps to prevent contamination and submit to periodic government inspections. Additionally, the bill gives the FDA power to recall contaminated foods and quarantine areas that produce them. The bill would be financed by registration and inspection fees along with congressional appropriations projected to total $2 billion over five years. A yes vote was to advance the bill. Cantwell and Murray voted yes.


Peninsula Daily News for Monday, November 22, 2010

Commentary

Page

A7

The real threat to national security President Obama got it exactly right when he said that whoever “out-educates us today is going to outcompete us Thomas tomorrow.” Friedman The bad news is that for years now we’ve been getting out-educated. The good news is that cities, states and the federal government are all fighting back. But have no illusions. We’re in a hole. Here are few data points that the secretary of education, Arne Duncan, offered in a Nov. 4 speech: “One-quarter of U.S. high school students drop out or fail to graduate on time. “Almost 1 million students leave our schools for the streets each year. “ . . . One of the more unusual and sobering press conferences I participated in last year was the release of a report by a group of top retired generals and admirals. “Here was the stunning conclusion of their report: 75 percent of young Americans, between the

ages of 17 to 24, are unable to enlist in the military today because they have failed to graduate from high school, have a criminal record or are physically unfit.” America’s youth are now tied for ninth in the world in college attainment. “Other folks have passed us by, and we’re paying a huge price for that economically,” added Duncan in an interview. “Incremental change isn’t going to get us where we need to go. “We’ve got to be much more ambitious. “We’ve got to be disruptive. “You can’t keep doing the same stuff and expect different results.” Duncan, with bipartisan support, has begun several initiatives to energize reform — particularly his Race to the Top competition with federal dollars going to states with the most innovative reforms to achieve the highest standards. Maybe his biggest push, though, is to raise the status of the teaching profession. Why? Tony Wagner, the Harvardbased education expert and author of The Global Achievement Gap, explains it this way: There are three basic skills

that students need if they want to thrive in a knowledge economy: the ability to do critical thinking and problem-solving, the ability to communicate effectively and the ability to collaborate. If you look at the countries leading the pack in the tests that measure these skills (like Finland and Denmark), one thing stands out — they insist that their teachers come from the top one-third of their college graduating classes. As Wagner put it: “They took teaching from an assembly-line job to a knowledgeworker’s job. “They have invested massively in how they recruit, train and support teachers, to attract and retain the best.” Duncan disputes the notion that teachers’ unions will always resist such changes. He points to the new “breakthrough” contracts in Washington, D.C., New Haven, Conn., and Hillsborough County, Fla., where teachers have embraced higher performance standards in return for higher pay for the best performers. “We have to reward excellence,” he said. “We’ve been scared in education to talk about excellence. “We treated everyone like interchangeable widgets. Just throw a kid in a class and throw a teacher in a class.”

Peninsula Voices The future is now Lots and lots of parents get really nervous about their kids texting. Is texting really that bad? The way I see it is that in order to abbreviate a word you need to know how to spell it. Plus, T9, which helps predict the word you are trying to spell, is educational — you figure out how the word is spelled so when you use it next, you know how to spell it. Yes, kids are attached to their phones and Facebook, but this leads to the social networking aspect. Today, from small to big businesses, people are using BlackBerrys and iPhones to send and receive presentations, plan meetings, book hotels or flights and even balance the company bank account. Facebook has led to things like LinkedIn, similar to an online resume. Being able to communi-

This ignored the variation between teachers who were changing students’ lives, and those who were not. “If you’re doing a great job with students,” he said, “we can’t pay you enough.” That is why Duncan is starting a “national teacher campaign” to recruit new talent. “We have to systemically create the environment and the incentives where people want to come into the profession. “Three countries that outperform us — Singapore, South Korea, Finland — don’t let anyone teach who doesn’t come from the top third of their graduating class. “And in South Korea, they refer to their teachers as ‘nation builders.’” Duncan’s view is that challenging teachers to rise to new levels — by using student achievement data in calculating salaries, by increasing competition through innovation and charters — is not anti-teacher. It’s taking the profession much more seriously and elevating it to where it should be. There are 3.2 million active teachers in America today. In the next decade, half (the baby boomers) will retire. How we recruit, train, support,

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evaluate and compensate their successors “is going to shape public education for the next 30 years,” said Duncan. We have to get this right. Wagner thinks we should create a West Point for teachers: “We need a new National Education Academy, modeled after our military academies, to raise the status of the profession and to support the R&D that is essential for reinventing teaching, learning and assessment in the 21st century.” All good ideas, but if we want better teachers we also need better parents — parents who turn off the TV and video games, make sure homework is completed, encourage reading and elevate learning as the most important life skill. The more we demand from teachers the more we have to demand from students and parents. That’s the Contract for America that will truly ensure our national security. Thomas L. Friedman is a three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The New York Times. His column appears in the Peninsula Daily News on Mondays. E-mail Friedman via http:// nyti.ms/3eBGV.

and e-mail

cate via “screen” is where the future is heading. This is something we should be embracing. The children are our future, and this is where the future is leading. Spenser Taylor, Port Townsend and Bellingham

We’re ‘sin tolerant’ We are experiencing a trying time in our nation’s history that has happened before. However, there is a trend within our culture that has developed over the last half-century that causes a significant potential for disaster. The condition of our nation is the result of our departure from the principles upon which our nation survived and prospered for the first 200 years of our history. We, as a people, have turned our backs on the God of our Founding

Fathers and have secularized our culture in order to accommodate our various lusts. The underlying cause of our national malaise is our

“sin tolerance.” Every one of our social problems is connected to a violation of the basic laws established in the Ten Commandments.

I recommend reading the words from the second stanza of our national anthem. “Blest with vic’try and peace, may the heav’n res-

cued land. “Praise the Pow’r that hath made and preserved us a nation! “Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just; and this be our motto: ‘In God Is Our Trust.’” When I was a youngster, I recall little signposts along the roadway in New England that read: “America — Repent — Or — Perish.” As we have essentially rewritten our history to reflect a secularized basis for our nation, we have sown the seeds of our own demise. The law of sowing and reaping has become all too apparent. Abraham Lincoln, I believe, stated that no outside power could destroy our union; that if we failed, our failure would come from within. We are well down that road. Robert A. Emmett, Sequim

Energy-wise, California leads the way HAS THE RECENT Republican sweep of the House doomed President Obama’s clean-energy agenda? Possibly. Has it Froma doomed Harrop America’s? Hardly. It’s simply moved the center for enlightened environmental policy 2,840 miles to the west ­— to California, where it’s been before. That’s why the thumping Californians gave to Proposition 23 is so globally important. Its passage would have frozen a groundbreaking law that requires a sharp drop in the state’s greenhouse gas emissions and stymied less dramatic efforts elsewhere. The 2-to-1 defeat of Proposition 23 showed a surprisingly broad support for addressing global warming. The measure even lost in

counties that gave majorities to Republican candidates for governor and senator. And it went down despite an expensive pro-passage campaign stoked by oilmen from Texas and Kansas. That propaganda blitz fixed on the false but potent argument, especially in a state suffering 12.4 percent unemployment, that laws promoting clean energy “kill jobs.” But Californians didn’t rise to the bait. After all, their state is already home to 12,000 clean energy companies and 500,000 green jobs. More than $9 billion in venture capital has poured into their clean-tech startups since passage of the law. George Gilder explains his disappointment with California voters in a Wall Street Journal op-ed. A founder of the Discovery Institute (they don’t believe in evolution, either), Gilder accuses them of voting for “a medieval system of windmills and solar collectors.”

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(Actually, William the Conqueror would have made more sense of our coal-burning power plants than Google’s massive 1.6 megawatt solar panel installation in Mountain View, Calif.) Gilder goes on to charge the green campaign with “debauching America’s most precious venture assets.” Yeah, like the venture capitalists don’t know what they’re doing. So the states are the fallback if Republicans hobble environmental progress in Washington. It was no coincidence that right after the vote, the Environmental Protection Agency announced that states would enjoy greater authority to regulate carbon dioxide emissions from big power plants, refineries and factories. “What they are saying is, ‘California, go for it,’” Craig Thomas, an environmental policy expert at the University of Washington, told me. Indeed, California has been running de facto U.S. environmental policy for decades.

For example, its curbs on tailpipe emissions (1966) and on greenhouse gas emissions for automobiles (2004) eventually set the standards for the nation. Passage of Proposition 23 would have marked a grievous setback for regional programs to curb emissions of greenhouse gases: the Western Climate Initiative, the Midwestern Greenhouse Gas Reduction Accord and the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (covering the Northeast and mid-Atlantic). Some 23 states belong. Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and other foreign leaders personally campaigned against the measure in California. It was that massively important. This is a serious effort to replace fossil fuels with clean energy. And that’s why oil interests with little business in California were so desperate to kill it. Back in Washington, Texas Rep. Joe Barton — he who apologized to BP during the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster — is pushing

News Department Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ Leah Leach, managing editor/news, 360-417-3531 ■ Roy Tanaka, news editor, 360-417-3539 ■ Brad LaBrie, sports editor; 360-417-3525 ■ Diane Urbani de la Paz, features editor; 360-417-3550 ■ General information: 360-417-3527 or 800-826-7714, Ext. 527 News fax: 360-417-3521 E-mail: news@peninsuladailynews.com Sequim office: 150 S. Fifth Ave., Suite 2 (98382) ■ Jeff Chew, Sequim/Dungeness Valley editor, 360-681-2391; jeff.chew@peninsuladailynews.com Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way (98368) ■ Charlie Bermant, Jefferson County reporter, 360-385-2335; charlie.bermant@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Julie C. McCormick, contributing freelance reporter, 360-382-4645; juliemccormick10@gmail.com ■ Jennifer Jackson, Port Townsend Neighbor columnist, 360-379-5688; jjackson@olypen.com

to become the next chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. Part of his campaign involves sending dispatches to K Street lobbyists touting his excellence in fighting environmental rules. (Having previously reached his term limit in that job under GOP rules, Barton is seeking a waiver to get around them.) But this may not matter much when the tech magnates and hedge-fund billionaires in California are placing their chips on clean energy — and other states are prepared to follow. Responding to the defeat of Proposition 23, the head of California’s Air Resources Board announced, “It’s full speed ahead.” The rest of America can hitch a ride. Froma Harrop is a columnist for the Providence (R.I.) Journal. Her column appears here every Monday. Contact her at info@creators. com or at 40 Creators Syndicate Inc., 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif. 90045.

Have Your Say ■ Rex Wilson, weekday commentary editor, 360-417-3530 We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” and “Teen Point of View” guest opinion columns of no more than 550 words that focus on local community lifestyle issues. Please — send us only one letter or column per month. Letters and guest columns published become the property of Peninsula Daily News, and it reserves the right to reject, condense or edit for clarity or when information stated as fact cannot be substantiated. Letters published in other newspapers, anonymous letters, personal attacks, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. E-mail to letters@ peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters to the Editor, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. RANTS & RAVES for the Sunday editions can be recorded on the Rants & Raves hot line at 360-417-3506 or sent to the above addresses and fax number.


A8

PeninsulaNorthwest

Monday, November 22, 2010

Peninsula Daily News

Making waves at age 90 Port Angeles woman vows to spend birthday in pool By Paige Dickerson

it come true,” Snell said. Because of budget cuts in 2008, the city of Port Angeles had planned to close the pool but kept it open pending a show of public sentiment. In 2009, the public voted to create a new taxing district to run the pool. The district officially took over running the pool this year. Snell attributes her good health and ease in getting around to the water exercise at the pool. In 1977, she injured two ligaments while skiing. Surgery was required, and afterward, her doctor suggested water exercise — and she hasn’t stopped since. Working her way through

Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — Ann Marguerite Snell is going to make a splash for her 90th birthday. Although her official ninth decade begins Friday, Snell will celebrate at the William Shore Memorial Pool today at 9 a.m. Snell, a vocal advocate for creating the district that allowed the pool to stay open, vowed during the campaign that if the pool were saved, she would spend her 90th birthday in its waters. Today, she makes good on that vow. “I had a vision and pledged and will now have

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“People worry too much about their hairdos, when they could be improving on their arthritis.” Mollie Lingvall, a deepwater aerobics instructor, said Snell has consistently impressed the staff at the pool. “She is amazing,” Lingvall said. “She’s a very strong lady, and you would never believe she is going to be 90 years old. She is an inspiration to us all.” The aerobics class focuses on free-form exercise and working against the resistance of the water, Lingvall said. For more information on the pool or classes, phone 360-417-4595 or visit www. williamshorepool.org.

The former teacher said she already celebrated her birthday with her four children — Gary, Kaylen Bailey, Jeffrey and Christian — with a party in Colorado last week. “It is a month of celebrations,” she said. Ultimately, the party at the pool was important because Snell is intent on ––––––––– spreading the word about Reporter Paige Dickerson can Chris Tucker/Peninsula Daily News using the pool. be reached at 360-417-3535 or at Ann Marguerite Snell holds her birthday cake in “I’ve tried to get more paige.dickerson@peninsuladaily her Port Angeles home Sunday. people to join,” she said. news.com.

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the various levels of skill, she now attends deep-water exercise classes three times a week. “There have been times that I’ve gone three or four times,” she said, “but lately, I’ve gone three times a week. “It keeps my back and my legs strong.”


Peninsula Daily News for Monday, November 22, 2010

Sports

S E CT I O N

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SCOREBOARD Page B2

NASCAR

The Associated Press

NASCAR driver Jimmie Johnson celebrates after winning his fifth Sprint Cup Series Championship on Sunday in Homestead, Fla.

Johnson wins 5th crown in a row By Jenna Fryer

The Associated Press

HOMESTEAD, Fla. — Jimmie Johnson wasn’t the best all year. Not even close. When it mattered, though, he couldn’t be beat. For the fifth consecutive year. Denny Hamlin and Kevin Harvick took the champion all the way to the edge this season, waging the most serious threats yet to Johnson’s reign atop NASCAR. Only the outcome didn’t change, and Johnson maintained his ironclad hold on the Sprint Cup. Johnson became the first driver in the seven-year history of the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship to overcome a points deficit in the season finale, finishing second Sunday to race winner Carl Edwards while winning his record fifth consecutive title. He became only the third driver to overcome a points deficit in the season’s final race and win the championship since 1975. The final margin was 39 points over Hamlin, and 41 over Harvick, who finished third in the race. So despite all the wins — 53 of them over nine seasons — and all the celebrations, this one at HomesteadMiami Speedway was obviously very different.

Emotional high Usually so calm and workmanlike behind the wheel, Johnson was exuberant as he crossed the finish line, pumping his fists in the car while screaming “this is unbelievable!” over and over. “I’ve always told you the first championship, the first win, that stuff has meant the most to me. This one, I think this takes the lead,” Johnson said. “It’s not that the other Chases weren’t competitive. We were stronger in the previous two Chases, at least, but this one, I am just so proud.” Maybe because for the first time since his reign began in 2006, Johnson and the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports team seemed vulnerable. Harvick was the most consistent driver of the 26-race “regular season,” and Hamlin, with a series-best eight wins this year, was the popular pick to dethrone Johnson. Hamlin carried a 15-point lead into the finale, but struggled the entire race and turned Sunday into a battle of which driver would make the fewest mistakes. It ultimately was Johnson, who overcame a few slow pit stops by a team that’s been in the spotlight since crew chief Chad Knaus benched his team in the middle of a race at Texas three weeks ago. The next day, the crews for Johnson and teammate Jeff Gordon were swapped for the final two races of the year. The No. 48 team rose above all the drama, even after a mid-race stop cost Johnson five spots. “I think this year we showed what this team is made of,” he said. “At times this season we didn’t have the most speed, but we had the most heart.” Turn

to

Title/B3

The Associated Press (2)

Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Mike Williams (17) avoids a tackle by New Orleans Saints cornerback Jabari Greer (33) as wide receiver Ben Obomanu (87) blocks during the first half of Sunday’s game at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans.

Saints rout Seahawks Brees puts on a clinic as Seattle falls 34-19 By Brett Martel

The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS — Drew Brees has made plenty of good defenses look bad during his steady accumulation of New Orleans Saints passing records. That meant trouble for a Seattle team that was already struggling to stop teams from piling up yards in the air. Brees became the Saints’ alltime completions leader while throwing for four touchdowns in New Orleans’ 34-19 win over the Seahawks on Sunday. “Their offense and Drew Brees did what they were famous for — threw the heck out of the football,” Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said. “They played a great game on offense. We couldn’t slow them down when we needed to.” Brees was 29-of-42 for 382 yards and completed his 1,850th pass as a Saint in the second quarter to break a record held by Archie Manning since 1982. Brees hit Marques Colston and Robert Meachem twice each for TDs to keep the defending champion Saints (7-3) one game behind NFC South leader

Atlanta. “ To d ay we played at times as well as we’ve played Next Game all season,” Sunday Brees said. “ T h a t vs. Chiefs gets you at Qwest Field e x c i t e d Time: 1 p.m. because you On TV: Ch. 13 feel like, man, we’re knocking at the door. Just imagine if we can continue to kind of get all the weapons back.” Brees shredded the Seahawks (5-5) without the benefit of having Reggie Bush, Pierre Thomas and tight end Jeremy Shockey in the lineup. Yet he still managed to complete passes to 10 different receivers, including rookie tight end Jimmy Graham, who made five catches for 72 yards. Certainly, New Orleans seems to be regaining its Super Bowl form, having won three straight and four of five, with all victories in that stretch coming by double digits. New Orleans wide receiver Marques Colston (12) Turn

scores a touchdown ahead of Seattle linebacker Lofa

to

Hawks/B3 Tatupu (51) during the second quarter.

No. 3 Stanford nips Gonzaga by 6 Zags come close to biggest upset in school history By Nicholas Geranios The Associated Press

SPOKANE — Jeanette Pohlen’s timely shooting lifted Stanford past spirited Gonzaga. Pohlen hit consecutive 3-pointers to break a late tie and help the No. 3 Cardinal to a 84-78 win over the Bulldogs on Sunday. “Nice shots. Big shots,” said coach Tara VanDerveer after Stanford (3-0) escaped an upset in the sold-out McCarthey Athletic Center. Pohlen, who finished with 19 points, typically makes up to 80 percent of her 3-pointers in practice, VanDerveer said. She made only 3-of-7 on Sunday, but the big ones came during the 9-0 Stanford run that decided the game.

The Associated Press

Stanfords’s Nnemkadi Ogwumike (30) drives against Gonzaga defenders Janelle Turn to Zags/B3 Bekkering, left, and Kayla Standish in the second half Sunday.


B2

SportsRecreation

Monday, November 22, 2010

Today’s

Peninsula Daily News

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

Scoreboard Football

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

SPORTS SHOT

Saints 34, Seahawks 19 Seattle New Orleans

3 13 0 3 — 19 7 20 7 0 — 34 First Quarter Sea—FG Mare 20, 7:07. NO—Ivory 1 run (Hartley kick), 1:30. Second Quarter Sea—FG Mare 43, 14:55. NO—Colston 23 pass from Brees (Hartley kick), 10:17. NO—Meachem 3 pass from Brees (Hartley kick), 5:48. Sea—Obomanu 2 pass from Hasselbeck (Mare kick), 1:54. NO—Colston 22 pass from Brees (run failed), 1:00. Sea—FG Mare 43, :00. Third Quarter NO—Meachem 32 pass from Brees (Hartley kick), 12:18. Fourth Quarter Sea—FG Mare 20, 5:26. A—70,015. First downs Total Net Yards Rushes-yards Passing Punt Returns Kickoff Returns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time of Possession

Sea 21 424 17-58 366 0-0 4-87 2-5 32-44-0 0-0 2-39.0 2-2 8-79 26:15

NO 26 494 29-112 382 0-0 1-25 0-0 29-43-2 0-0 1-40.0 0-0 3-24 33:45

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Seattle, Lynch 7-36, Hasselbeck 1-12, Forsett 8-10, Washington 1-0. New Orleans, Ivory 23-99, Meachem 1-8, Jones 4-4, Henderson 1-1. PASSING—Seattle, Hasselbeck 32-44-0-366. New Orleans, Brees 29-43-2-382. RECEIVING—Seattle, Williams 6-109, Stokley 6-76, Obomanu 5-87, Forsett 5-33, Lynch 4-19, Carlson 3-14, Butler 2-19, Washington 1-9. New Orleans, Colston 8-113, Graham 5-72, Meachem 3-50, Moore 3-43, Betts 3-37, D.Thomas 2-26, Jones 2-8, Henderson 1-17, Humphrey 1-12, H.Evans 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS—New Orleans, Hartley 27 (WL).

The Associated Press

The

elite two

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning, right, shakes hands with New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady after New England’s 31-28 win Sunday in Foxborough, Mass. The two future Hall of Famers have three Super Bowl MVP awards between them. See story on Page B4.

NFL STANDINGS

NFL Schedule All Times PST Thursday’s Game Chicago 16, Miami 0 Sunday’s Games Dallas 35, Detroit 19 Pittsburgh 35, Oakland 3 Washington 19, Tennessee 16, OT N.Y. Jets 30, Houston 27 Buffalo 49, Cincinnati 31 Kansas City 31, Arizona 13 Jacksonville 24, Cleveland 20 Baltimore 37, Carolina 13 Green Bay 31, Minnesota 3 Atlanta 34, St. Louis 17 New Orleans 34, Seattle 19 Tampa Bay 21, San Francisco 0 New England 31, Indianapolis 28 N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia, late Today’s Game Denver at San Diego, 5:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 25 New England at Detroit, 9:30 a.m. New Orleans at Dallas, 1:15 p.m. Cincinnati at N.Y. Jets, 5:20 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 28 Green Bay at Atlanta, 10 a.m. Tennessee at Houston, 10 a.m. Minnesota at Washington, 10 a.m. Pittsburgh at Buffalo, 10 a.m. Carolina at Cleveland, 10 a.m. Jacksonville at N.Y. Giants, 10 a.m. Kansas City at Seattle, 1:05 p.m. Miami at Oakland, 1:05 p.m. Philadelphia at Chicago, 1:15 p.m. St. Louis at Denver, 1:15 p.m. Tampa Bay at Baltimore, 1:15 p.m. San Diego at Indianapolis, 5:20 p.m. Monday, Nov. 29 San Francisco at Arizona, 5:30 p.m.

College Football The AP Top 25 The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 20, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pv 1. Oregon (37) 10-0 1,467 1 2. Auburn (13) 11-0 1,430 2 3. Boise St. (10) 10-0 1,394 3 4. TCU 11-0 1,340 4 5. Wisconsin 10-1 1,197 6 6. LSU 10-1 1,192 5 7. Stanford 10-1 1,181 7 8. Ohio St. 10-1 1,086 8 9. Alabama 9-2 972 10 10. Oklahoma St. 10-1 959 12 11. Michigan St. 10-1 929 11 12. Arkansas 9-2 860 13 13. Virginia Tech 9-2 722 14 14. Oklahoma 9-2 652 16 15. Missouri 9-2 638 15 16. Nebraska 9-2 611 9 17. Texas A&M 8-3 575 18 18. South Carolina 8-3 560 17 19. Nevada 10-1 440 19 20. Arizona 7-3 270 23 21. N.C. State 8-3 240 — 22. Florida St. 8-3 233 — 23. Utah 9-2 213 25 24. Iowa 7-4 101 21 25. Mississippi St. 7-4 95 22 Others receiving votes: N. Illinois 72, West Virginia 26, Tulsa 12, Hawaii 7, Navy 7, Florida 4, Miami 4, UCF 4, Southern Miss. 3, Penn St. 2, Ohio 1, Oregon St. 1.

Hockey NHL Standings All Times PST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Philadelphia 21 13 6 2 28 75 53 Pittsburgh 21 11 8 2 24 66 57 N.Y. Rangers 21 11 9 1 23 63 59 New Jersey 20 5 13 2 12 36 65 N.Y. Islanders 20 4 12 4 12 41 68

National Football Conference Seattle St. Louis San Francisco Arizona

W 5 4 3 3

L 5 6 7 7

T PCT 0 .500 0 .400 0 .300 0 .300

HOME 3-1-0 4-2-0 3-3-0 2-2-0

NY Giants Philadelphia Washington Dallas

W 6 6 5 3

L 3 3 5 7

T PCT 0 .667 0 .667 0 .500 0 .300

HOME 3-2-0 2-2-0 2-3-0 1-4-0

Chicago Green Bay Minnesota Detroit

W 7 7 3 2

L 3 3 7 8

T PCT 0 .700 0 .700 0 .300 0 .200

HOME 3-2-0 4-1-0 3-2-0 2-2-0

Atlanta New Orleans Tampa Bay Carolina

W 8 7 7 1

L 2 3 3 9

T PCT 0 .800 0 .700 0 .700 0 .100

HOME 5-0-0 4-2-0 3-2-0 1-5-0

NFC WEST ROAD DIV 2-4-0 3-1-0 0-4-0 1-2-0 0-4-0 1-1-0 1-5-0 1-2-0 NFC EAST ROAD DIV 3-1-0 1-1-0 4-1-0 1-1-0 3-2-0 2-1-0 2-3-0 1-2-0 NFC NORTH ROAD DIV 4-1-0 3-0-0 3-2-0 3-1-0 0-5-0 1-3-0 0-6-0 0-3-0 NFC SOUTH ROAD DIV 3-2-0 2-0-0 3-1-0 3-1-0 4-1-0 2-2-0 0-4-0 0-4-0

CONF 4-3-0 3-5-0 1-6-0 2-5-0

PF 185 177 160 188

PA 233 198 219 292

DIFF -48 -21 -59 -104

STRK Lost 1 Lost 2 Lost 1 Lost 5

CONF 5-1-0 4-2-0 4-3-0 2-5-0

PF 236 257 202 229

PA 193 209 245 271

DIFF +43 +48 -43 -42

STRK Lost 1 Won 2 Won 1 Won 2

CONF 5-3-0 5-2-0 3-4-0 2-6-0

PF 191 252 172 234

PA 146 146 226 237

DIFF +45 +106 -54 -3

STRK Won 3 Won 4 Lost 2 Lost 3

CONF 5-1-0 6-2-0 5-2-0 1-7-0

PF 256 235 209 117

PA 192 170 206 252

DIFF +64 +65 +3 -135

STRK Won 4 Won 3 Won 2 Lost 4

CONF 6-1-0 7-2-0 3-4-0 1-6-0

PF 238 289 172 213

PA 177 242 208 276

DIFF +61 +47 -36 -63

STRK Won 3 Won 2 Lost 1 Won 2

CONF 6-2-0 5-2-0 2-5-0 1-6-0

PF 233 235 192 215

PA 178 165 206 262

DIFF +55 +70 -14 -47

STRK Won 1 Won 1 Lost 2 Lost 7

CONF 5-3-0 4-3-0 2-4-0 3-4-0

PF 220 268 257 244

PA 270 216 198 287

DIFF -50 +52 +59 -43

STRK Won 3 Lost 1 Lost 3 Lost 4

CONF 4-4-0 3-3-0 3-3-0 2-5-0

PF 243 238 239 203

PA 207 223 197 252

DIFF +36 +15 +42 -49

STRK Won 1 Lost 1 Won 2 Won 1

American Football Conference NY Jets New England Miami Buffalo

W 8 8 5 2

L 2 2 5 8

T PCT 0 .800 0 .800 0 .500 0 .200

HOME 3-2-0 5-0-0 1-4-0 1-4-0

Baltimore Pittsburgh Cleveland Cincinnati

W 7 7 3 2

L 3 3 7 8

T PCT 0 .700 0 .700 0 .300 0 .200

HOME 4-0-0 3-2-0 2-3-0 1-4-0

Jacksonville Indianapolis Tennessee Houston

W 6 6 5 4

L 4 4 5 6

T PCT 0 .600 0 .600 0 .500 0 .400

HOME 4-2-0 4-0-0 2-3-0 2-3-0

Kansas City Oakland San Diego Denver

W 6 5 4 3

L 4 5 5 6

T PCT 0 .600 0 .500 0 .444 0 .333

HOME 5-0-0 4-1-0 3-1-0 2-3-0

Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 20 13 6 1 27 51 39 18 11 5 2 24 54 35 20 9 10 1 19 49 65 22 8 11 3 19 58 68 19 7 9 3 17 43 54 Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 21 14 5 2 30 74 59 Tampa Bay 20 11 7 2 24 62 64 Atlanta 21 9 9 3 21 65 70 Carolina 20 9 9 2 20 63 68 Florida 18 9 9 0 18 50 45 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Detroit 18 13 3 2 28 66 48 St. Louis 19 11 5 3 25 52 51 Columbus 18 12 6 0 24 53 44 Chicago 23 11 10 2 24 71 67 Nashville 18 9 6 3 21 47 49 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Colorado 20 12 7 1 25 72 60 Vancouver 19 10 6 3 23 56 53 Minnesota 19 10 7 2 22 46 47 Calgary 19 8 10 1 17 58 59 Edmonton 19 5 10 4 14 49 77 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Los Angeles 19 13 6 0 26 59 46 Phoenix 19 9 5 5 23 54 57 Anaheim 23 10 10 3 23 57 69 San Jose 19 9 6 4 22 55 52 Dallas 18 10 7 1 21 56 53 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Saturday’s Games Los Angeles 4, Boston 3, SO Montreal Boston Ottawa Buffalo Toronto

AFC EAST ROAD DIV 5-0-0 3-0-0 3-2-0 2-1-0 4-1-0 1-2-0 1-4-0 0-3-0 AFC NORTH ROAD DIV 3-3-0 2-1-0 4-1-0 2-1-0 1-4-0 1-2-0 1-4-0 1-2-0 AFC SOUTH ROAD DIV 2-2-0 2-1-0 2-4-0 1-2-0 3-2-0 1-0-0 2-3-0 1-2-0 AFC WEST ROAD DIV 1-4-0 1-2-0 1-4-0 3-0-0 1-4-0 0-2-0 1-3-0 1-1-0

Philadelphia 5, Washington 4, SO Nashville 2, Carolina 1, SO Colorado 4, Dallas 3, SO Tampa Bay 2, Buffalo 1 Montreal 2, Toronto 0 Florida 4, N.Y. Islanders 1 St. Louis 3, New Jersey 2 N.Y. Rangers 5, Minnesota 2 Chicago 7, Vancouver 1 Columbus 3, San Jose 0 Sunday’s Games Atlanta 2, N.Y. Islanders 1, OT Detroit 5, Calgary 4, OT Edmonton 4, Anaheim 2 Phoenix at Vancouver, late Today’s Games Dallas at Toronto, 4 p.m. Washington at New Jersey, 4 p.m. Calgary at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. Montreal at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Nashville at Columbus, 4 p.m. Los Angeles at Ottawa, 4:30 p.m. Boston at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m. Pittsburgh at Florida, 4:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Game Edmonton at Phoenix, 6 p.m.

Basketball NBA Standings All Times PST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Boston 9 4 .692 — New York 6 8 .429 3 1/2 Toronto 5 9 .357 4 1/2 New Jersey 4 9 .308 5 Philadelphia 3 10 .231 6

Southeast Division W L Pct GB 9 3 .750 — 8 5 .615 1 1/2 8 5 .615 1 1/2 5 8 .385 4 1/2 4 8 .333 5 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 7 4 .636 — Indiana 5 6 .455 2 Cleveland 5 7 .417 2 1/2 Detroit 5 8 .385 3 Milwaukee 5 8 .385 3 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB New Orleans 11 1 .917 — San Antonio 11 1 .917 — Dallas 8 4 .667 3 Memphis 5 9 .357 7 Houston 3 9 .250 8 Northwest Division W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 9 4 .692 — Utah 9 5 .643 1/2 Portland 8 6 .571 1 1/2 Denver 7 6 .538 2 Minnesota 4 10 .286 5 1/2 Pacific Division W L Pct GB L.A. Lakers 11 2 .846 — Golden State 7 5 .583 3 1/2 Phoenix 6 7 .462 5 Sacramento 4 8 .333 6 1/2 L.A. Clippers 1 13 .071 10 1/2 Orlando Atlanta Miami Charlotte Washington

Saturday’s Games Charlotte 123, Phoenix 105 Orlando 90, Indiana 86 Memphis 97, Miami 95

SPORTS ON TV

Today 7 a.m. (47) GOLF EPGA, Hong Kong Open, Final Round, Site: Hong Kong Golf Club - New Territories, Hong Kong 11 a.m. (25) FSNW Football NCAA, Stanford vs. California (encore) Noon (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, Wichita State vs. Connecticut, Maui Invitational, Quarterfinal 1, Site: Lahaina Civic Center Lahaina, Hawaii (Live) 2 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, Oklahoma vs. Kentucky, Maui Invitational, Quarterfinal 2, Site: Lahaina Civic Center Lahaina, Hawaii (Live) 3 p.m. (25) FSNW Basketball NCAA, Paradise Jam Tournament, Men’s (Live) 4:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, Duke vs. Marquette, CBE Classic, Semifinal 1, Site: Sprint Center - Kansas City, Mo. (Live) 5:30 p.m. (26) ESPN Football NFL, Denver Broncos vs. San Diego Chargers, Site: Qualcomm Stadium San Diego (Live) 5:30 p.m. (25) FSNW Basketball NCAA, Paradise Jam Tournament, Men’s (Live) 6:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, Gonzaga vs. Kansas State, CBE Classic, Semifinal 2, Site: Sprint Center - Kansas City, Mo. (Live) 8 p.m. (25) FSNW Basketball NCAA, Paradise Jam Tournament, Men’s 9 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NCAA, Virginia vs. Washington, Maui Invitational, Quarterfinal 4, Site: Lahaina Civic Center Lahaina, Hawaii (Live) 12:30 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Football NCAA, Pittsburgh vs. South Florida (encore), Site: Raymond James Stadium - Tampa Bay, Fla. Dallas 98, Atlanta 93 Oklahoma City 82, Milwaukee 81 San Antonio 116, Cleveland 92 Denver 107, New Jersey 103 Utah 103, Portland 94 New York 124, L.A. Clippers 115 Sunday’s Games Toronto 102, Boston 101 New Orleans 75, Sacramento 71 Detroit 115, Washington 110, OT Golden State at L.A. Lakers, late Today’s Games Boston at Atlanta, 4 p.m. Indiana at Miami, 4:30 p.m. Minnesota at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Phoenix at Houston, 5:30 p.m. Orlando at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. Sacramento at Utah, 6 p.m. Denver at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. New Orleans at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Cleveland at Indiana, 4 p.m. Atlanta at New Jersey, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at Washington, 4 p.m. Charlotte at New York, 4:30 p.m. Detroit at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Chicago at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m.

Transactions Baseball American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Assigned RHP Armando Gabino and INF Rhyne Hughes outright to Norfolk (IL). Selected the contracts of LHP Zach Britton, INF Joe Mahoney and OF Matt Angle from Norfolk. BOSTON RED SOX - Selected the contracts of C Luis Esposito, RHP Stolmy Pimentel and INF Oscar Tejeda from Pawtucket (IL). CHICAGO WHITE SOX - Selected the contracts of RHP Anthony Carter and SS Eduardo Escobar from Birmingham (SL) and RHP Nate Jones from Winston-Salem (Carolina). CLEVELAND INDIANS - Selected the contracts of INF Jared Goedert, RHP Josh Judy, RHP Zach McAllister and RHP Corey Kluber from Columbus (IL) and LHP Nick Hagadome from Akron (EL). DETROIT TIGERS - Agreed to terms with RHP Joaquin Benoit on a three-year contract and RHP Alberto Alburquerque on a one-year contract. Selected the contracts of LHP Charlie Furbush and SS Cale Iorg from Toledo (IL) and RHP Lester Oliveros, RHP Jose Ortega, RHP Brayan Villarreal and LHP Duane Below from Erie (EL). Assigned LHP Fu-Te Ni outright to Toledo. KANSAS CITY ROYALS - Selected the contracts of LHP Everett Teaford, 1B Clint Robinson, OF David Lough and OF Derrick Robinson from Omaha (PCL). Designated RHP Bryan Bullington, RHP Gaby Hernandez, RHP Victor Marte and OF Jordan Parraz for assignment. MINNESOTA TWINS_Added RHP David Bromberg, OF Joe Benson, OF Chris Parmelee and OF Rene Tosoni. NEW YORK YANKEES - Released RHP Jonathan Albaladejo. Named Larry Rothschild pitching coach. Selected the contracts of RHP Dellin Betances from Trenton (EL) and INF Brandon Laird and RHP Ryan Pope from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Acquired OF Cody Johnson from Atlanta for cash considerations. OAKLAND ATHLETICS_Selected OF Michael Taylor, OF Corey Brown, INF Adrian Cardenas and INF Sean Doolittle from Sacramento (PCL) and RHP Trystan Magnuson from Midland (TL). SEATTLE MARINERS_Selected the contracts of RHP Michael Pineda, RHP Tom Wilhelmsen, RHP Josh Lueke, OF Johermyn Chavez, OF Carlos Peguero, INFAlex Liddi, RHP Maikel Cleto, RHP Cesar Jimenez, RHP Yoervis Medina and RHP Mauricio Robles. TEXAS RANGERS - Selected the contracts of RHP Fabio Castillo, RHP Wilmer Font, LHP Miguel De Los Santos and OF Engel Beltre from Oklahoma City (PCL). Agreed to terms with C Kevin Cash and OF Doug Deeds.


SportsRecreation

Peninsula Daily News

Monday, November 22, 2010

B3

Pirates take NWAACC title Peninsula Daily News

The Associated Press

New Orleans Saints running back Chris Ivory (29) dives over the line of scrimmage for a touchdown during the first quarter against the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans.

Hawks: Brees, Saints in romp Continued from B1 another significant one that he’ll probably surpass this “We are on the cusp,” season. Archie Manning’s 21,734 Brees said. “We had some weapons last year, but I yards passing remains a think we have some guys club record, but Brees is emerging now that we less than 500 yards behind really have a lot of places at 21,267. “It means we throw the that we can spread this ball ball a lot more than they around.” Seattle came in ranked did” when Manning played, Brees said, laughing. 28th in the NFL in pass “Obviously, it’s a huge defense, allowing 272.2 honor to be in that category yards per game through the with guys like Archie.” air. Matt Hasselbeck was It didn’t help when the 32-of-44 for 366 yards, the Seahawks’ best defensive most allowed by New back, Marcus Trufant, took Orleans’ top-ranked passa shot on the helmet from ing defense this season, but running back Chris Ivory’s Seattle had trouble getting knee and left the game with in the end zone. a concussion. The Seahawks lost two He was replaced by fumbles and had four drives rookie Walter Thurmond. end with field goals by Brees’ accuracy helped Olindo Mare. the Saints go 11-of-15 on “It’s really tough when third downs. you are playing against a He eclipsed 300 yards by great player like Drew the third quarter, marking Brees,” Hasselbeck said. the 35th time as a Saint, “Obviously he was real which extended his own hot today and when a guy franchise mark. like that is making plays Now in his fifth season and throwing touchdowns in New Orleans, Brees owns like he did and keeping numerous franchise pass- drives alive, well, it’s really ing records, including TDs hard to win.” The Saints entered the with 144, but still has

game allowing about 166 yards passing per game. Hasselbeck’s scrambling ran Saints pass rushers ragged, and the Seattle quarterback had little trouble throwing downfield. He connected with Mike Williams six times for 109 yards, including a 68-yarder to the Saints 10, which set up the game’s first points on a field goal. Hasselbeck hit Ben Obomanu five times for 87 yards, including one 42-yard gain and a short TD. But settling for field goals and Marshawn Lynch’s two fumbles while trying to fight for extra yards made it tough for Seattle to keep pace. Roman Harper stripped Lynch and recovered his first turnover, while Scott Shanle got the strip and recovery on the second. The Saints played their eighth straight game without Bush, who has been out since breaking a bone in his lower right leg in Week 2 at San Francisco. He worked out on the field before the game, but the Saints decided to make him a late scratch, meaning

he wouldn’t get to play against his old college coach. Saints coach Sean Payton said he could come back against Dallas on Thanksgiving. The Saints did fine on the ground anyway, with Ivory rushing for 99 yards and scoring New Orleans’ first TD on a dive over the pile. Colston finished with eight catches for 113 yards. Meachem had three receptions for 50 yards, the longest going for a 32-yard score in the third quarter for Brees’ last TD passing. Notes: Carroll said Williams had a left foot injury that prevented him from playing late in the game, but he was not sure how serious it was. Brees has at least one TD in 24 straight games, including last season’s playoffs. He has 55 TDs during that span. All five of Seattle’s losses have been by double digits, with the others coming by 17, 17, 30 and 34 points, but the Seahawks still lead the NFC West.

Title: Johnson king in NASCAR Continued from B1 Hamlin and his Joe Gibbs Racing team felt otherwise, especially as they outperformed Johnson during the Chase. But poor fuel mileage last week in Phoenix kept it tight headed into Sunday, and he had a terrible race when he needed only a clean run. Contact with Greg Biffle very early in the race sent Hamlin into a spin and damaged the front of his car. He dropped to 37th by the restart and had to work all day to finish 14th. “We had a great year, we won the most races that we ever won, we contended like we’ve never contended before and just circumstances took us out of this one,” Hamlin said. Harvick, meanwhile, took the lead on a round of pit stops with 80 laps to go, but was flagged for speeding as he entered pit road.

Upset with call It dropped him to 29th, and he was still upset with the call after the race. “I don’t think that penalty will ever settle in my stomach,” Harvick said, insisting that “only a handful of people” get to see the pit road speeds. “I won’t ever settle for that.” But he wasn’t devastated by the defeat, pointing to all the gains made this year by Richard Childress Racing. A year after failing to put any cars into the Chase, RCR had three in the field and Harvick, winner of two races, led the points for most of the regular season. “It’s a 180 for us,” Harvick said. While Harvick could find the bright spots, Hamlin, sitting next to him at the

The Associated Press

Fans watch as the No. 18 M&M’s Toyota, driven by Kyle Busch, bursts into flames during the Ford 400 auto race Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway in Homestead, Fla. podium, had a harder time finding much to be happy about. With a vacant look and muffled answers, he vowed to be back stronger next season. “My job is to work in the offseason to do everything I can to be better and, you know, I know every year that I am in the Cup series, I’m going to be better than I was the previous year,” Hamlin said. “We’re going to keep working and go get them next year.”

Celebration As both drivers discussed their day, Johnson’s championship celebration was shown on the multiple televisions hanging around the room and both drivers watched portions of the presentation. Who could blame them? It was history.

“I don’t think that penalty will ever settle in my stomach. Only a handful of people get to see the pit road speeds. I won’t ever settle for that.”

Kevin Harvick NASCAR driver

The fifth title moved Johnson past Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jeff Gordon for most titles among active drivers. He now ranks third on the career list behind seventime champions and Hall of Famers Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt. “Finally, finally, after being able to pull this off, he’ll get the respect and the rewards that he deserves,” Knaus said. The championship was a record 10th for Hendrick Motorsports, which broke a tie with Petty Enterprise for most in NASCAR.

Johnson and HMS also joined three other pro teams — the Boston Celtics, New York Yankees and Montreal Canadiens — to win five consecutive titles. The Celtics are the alltime leaders with eight consecutive NBA titles. “Somebody has got to win it, and I’m glad it was us,” team owner Rick Hendrick said, noting “this race was so up and down. It was like who’s going to screw up the most?” Not Johnson and Knaus, who once again showed why they’ve been so good for so long.

TUKWILA — The Peninsula College men’s soccer team earned the first NWAACC championship in school history Sunday. The Pirates beat Highline 1-0 in a shootout to capture the NWAACC championship at the Starfire Athletic Complex. Peninsula College also won a basketball title in 1970 before NWAACC was formed. “We’re ecstatic,” Peninsula coach Andrew Chapman said. “It’s a huge win for us and our program. All the guys represented the college well.” The third-ranked Pirates upset No. 1 Columbia Basin 1-0 on Saturday in the semifinals to make it to the final game for the first time after

losing 1-0 in the semifinals the past two years. Highline and Peninsula settled for a 0-0 tie through regulation and overtime before the Pirates came through 5-4 in the shootout. Goalkeeper Jared Wilson was named tournament MVP after earning his seventh shutout of the season. Scoring the five goals for the Pirates were Miguel Gonzalez, Jeff Mullen, Brian Holguin, Jake Hughes and Yan Gioseffi, who scored the winning goal. Peninsula finished the year 13-3-4. The Pirates stopped Highline’s 12-match unbeaten streak, which included two wins over Peninsula. Highline finished the year 13-4-4.

Briefly . . . Pirates women split two games VANCOUVER, Wash. — The Peninsula College women’s basketball team split two games at the Igloo Invitational at Clark College on Saturday. The Pirates lost the first game 71-56 to Blue Mountain Community College. Peninsula came out jittery and couldn’t quite hang on late in the game when blue Mountain gegan to take control, coach Alison Crumb said. Freshman Megan Smith led the Pirates with 24 points while freshman Callie Monfrey added 11. The Pirates won the second game 58-50 against Clark College alumni. Peninsula overcame a 10-point halftime deficit. Smith led the Pirates with 19 points while freshman Shawna Thein canned 18 and Monfrey added 17. Thein also had five assists.

Swimming results FEDERAL WAY — The Port Angeles Swim Club brought 17 athletes to the Weyerhaeuser Aquatic Center on Nov. 14 for the Pacific Northwest Swimming Q meet. Taylor Beebe won the 50 freestyle with a time of 31.89 seconds and earned herself a champs qualifying time. Tracie Macias won the 100 free with a time of 58.53 and the 200 free in 2:10.82. The Port Angeles Swim Club swam well as a whole, bringing home 33 ribbons at the end of the day.

Snipe 2010 results PORT ANGELES — Port Angeles substitute teacher Ron Snipe completed his swimming competition for the 2010 season, finishing in Honolulu, Hawaii, with eight gold and two silver medals at the Senior Olympics. Snipe competed in eight states, bringing home 76 gold, 19 silver and three bronze medals this season. Peninsula Daily News

Zags: Women Continued from B1 season. Gonzaga made just 28-ofStanford’s defense held 80 shots, for 35 percent. Gonzaga scoreless for three Stanford shot 42 percent, minutes after the Bulldogs and each team pulled down (1-2) had tied the score, kill- 49 rebounds. Kayla Pedersen had ing hopes for what would have been that program’s eight points and 10 rebounds for Stanford, while Joslyn biggest victory. “We had pretty good Tinkle added 11 points. Gonzaga, which saw its looks and they didn’t go,” Gonzaga coach Kelly Graves 19-game home winning streak snapped, also got 16 said. Courtney Vandersloot, points from Janelle Bekkerwho led all players with 24 ing, 14 points and 10 points, said the Bulldogs rebounds from Katelan also failed to rebound at the Redmon and 12 points and 9 rebounds from Kayla end. “They had a couple of Standish. Gonzaga trailed 56-46 misses and they came up with the board and got easy with 15 minutes left. But Vandersloot scored baskets,” Vandersloot said. The Bulldogs were not five points during a 9-2 run intimidated by playing a that cut Stanford’s lead to national power like Stan- 58-55 with 11:30 left. Bekkering’s basket cut the lead ford. “We think we can com- 61-59. Stanford scored five pete with teams like that,” Vandersloot said. “I don’t straight when Ogwumike consider this a moral vic- completed a three-point play and her sister Chiney tory.” Nnemkadi Ogwumike Ogwumike had a putback scored 21 points and had 14 for a 68-61 lead with 7:36 left. rebounds for Stanford. Bekkering and Standish Ogwumike, who did not play against Utah for an hit 3-pointers that allowed unspecified “medical issue” Gonzaga to tie the game at on Friday, started Sunday 68 with 5:23 left. Stanford scored the next and had several fingers on her right, shooting, hand nine points, with Pohlen’s consecutive 3-pointers givwrapped. She made just 8-of-22 ing Stanford a 77-68 lead with 2:35 left to decide the shots. VanDerveer said the game. In the first half, Gonzaga wraps were for a knuckle injury, and were not related took an 18-14 lead. to why Ogwumike missed But a long jumper by the Utah game. Nnemkadi Ogwumike “They defended her well,” ignited a 16-5 run that gave VanDerveer said. “We Stanford a 30-23 lead. Gonexpected that kind of game. zaga lost its shooting touch Our team showed great and was held scoreless for poise.” five minutes in that Stanford beat Gonzaga stretch. 105-74 last year in the only Gonzaga pulled within other meeting of the prothree a couple of times, but grams. a late 13-8 run gave StanGonzaga had most players back from a team that ford a 45-37 halftime lead. The game, featuring the went to the regional semifihighest ranked women’s nals last season. Stanford has held all team to visit Gonzaga, sold three of its opponents under out the 6,000-seat McCa40 percent shooting this rthey Athletic Center.


B4

SportsRecreation

Monday, November 22, 2010

Peninsula Daily News

Jets’ comeback shocks Texans The Associated Press

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Santonio Holmes caught a six-yard touchdown pass from Mark Sanchez with 10 seconds left, lifting the New York Jets to a stunning 30-27 comeback victory over the Houston Texans on Sunday. After New York blew a 16-point lead in the fourth quarter, the Jets trailed 27-23 with less than a minute left. But Sanchez completed two passes to LaDainian Tomlinson and then had a pretty 42-yard pass to Braylon Edwards with 16 seconds remaining. On the next play, Sanchez found Holmes streaking into the left corner of the end zone for the winning score for the Jets (8-2). A video replay confirmed that Holmes, whose 37-yard touchdown catch won it in overtime at Cleveland last week, got both feet in bounds. It was another heartbreaking loss for the Texans (4-6), who fell last week on a desperation heave as time expired at Jacksonville.

NFL Sunday yards for a touchdown as the Steelers (7-3) bounced back after being rolled over by New England 39-26 at Heinz Field last week. Oakland fell to 5-5. With less than two minutes to go in the half, Raiders defensive end Richard Seymour was ejected for an openhanded punch to Roethlisberger’s face as the Steelers quarterback was celebrating his TD pass to Sanders.

Redskins 19, Titans 16, OT

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extending a woeful NFL them ahead 28-7 in the secrecord that began in 2007, ond quarter. The Bengals’ smallest when Kitna was their quarcrowd since 2003 saw a vinterback. tage collapse. Buffalo (2-8) took advanRavens 37, tage of Cincinnati’s depleted Panthers 13 secondary — Joseph and CHARLOTTE, N.C. — safety Chris Crocker went Joe Flacco threw for 301 out late in the first half — yards and a touchdown, for its biggest comeback Baltimore’s defense since it overcame a 26-0 returned consecutive inter- deficit and topped the Colts ceptions for TDs in the 37-35 on Sept. 21, 1997, fourth quarter, and the according to STATS LLC. Ravens beat Brian St. Steve Johnson caught Pierre and the Panthers. three of the touchdown The Ravens (7-3) recov- passes, including an ered after a disheartening 11-yarder that put Buffalo loss to Atlanta 10 days ear- ahead 35-31 early in the lier by finally rattling Caro- fourth quarter. Johnson finlina’s quarterback to break ished with eight catches for open a surprisingly close 137 yards. game. With Baltimore leading Jaguars 24, 23-13, Ed Reed picked off Browns 20 St. Pierre, then pitched it to JACKSONVILLE, Fla. Dawan Landry for a touch— Maurice Jones-Drew foldown. On the next play, St. lowed a 75-yard reception Pierre was intercepted by with a one-yard touchdown Ray Lewis, who rumbled 24 dive with 1:16 left as Jackyards for a score. sonville (6-4) overcame six It wiped out a potential turnovers. storybook performance by Jones-Drew broke four St. Pierre, signed by Caro- tackles on a screen pass lina (1-9) a little over a from David Garrard and week ago. weaved his way toward the end zone. Rookie Joe Haden made Bills 49, a touchdown-saving tackle Bengals 31 that ended up taking preCINCINNATI — Ryan cious seconds off the clock. Fitzpatrick matched his Jones-Drew scored two career high with four touch- plays later, giving both down passes during Buffa- teams dramatic finishes for lo’s biggest comeback in 13 the second time in as many years, and the Bills won their second straight game. The Bengals (2-8) appeared to be in control after Johnathan Joseph’s interception return put

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Dwayne Bowe caught two touchdown passes, giving him a team-record six straight games with at least one score, and Kansas City remained unbeaten at home. In his last six games, Bowe has 563 yards receiving and 10 touchdown catches for the Chiefs (6-4). Thomas Jones also had two touchdowns for the Chiefs, who are 5-0 at home and are in sole possession of first place in the AFC West. The fifth straight loss for the Cardinals (3-7) dropped the two-time defending NFC West champions 2½ games behind Seattle.

Buccaneers 21, 49ers 0 SAN FRANCISCO — Josh Freeman threw for 136 yards and two touchdowns and Tampa Bay got its first win at Candlestick Park since 1980 and only second ever.

Falcons 34, Rams 17 ST. LOUIS — Matt Ryan threw two touchdown passes and directed an offence so dominant that three St. Louis defenders left with cramps in Atlanta’s win. Sam Bradford also had a pair of touchdown passes and set an NFL rookie record with 169 consecutive passes without an interception before William Moore picked off a shovel pass at the two with 3:24 to go.

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The Associated Press

New York Jets running back Shonn Greene (23) runs away from Houston Texans defensive end Antonio Smith (94) during the third quarter at New Meadowlands Stadium on Sunday.

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Graham Gano kicked a 48-yard field goal with 8:17 left in overtime to lift Washington. Titans quarterback Vince Young left the game with an injured thumb on his throwing hand, and was replaced by rookie Rusty Smith. Washington (5-5) snapped a two-game skid and bounced back from a 59-28 loss to Philadelphia on Monday night. Donovan McNabb was 30-of-50 for 376 yards with Patriots 31, a five-yard touchdown pass Colts 28 to Santana Moss. The Titans (5-5) lost FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Tom Brady barely outdu- their third straight game. elled Peyton Manning in their annual meeting, leadPackers 31, ing New England over IndiVikings 3 anapolis. MINNEAPOLIS — The teams met for the eighth straight season, and Aaron Rodgers threw for Brady guided the Patriots 301 yards, with three of his (8-2) to a 31-14 lead before four touchdown passes to four-time MVP Manning Greg Jennings, and Green Bay beat Brett Favre and led a spirited comeback. But Manning was inter- Minnesota for the second cepted in the final moments time this season. The Packers (7-3) kept for the third time. Brady not only beat pace in the NFC North race Manning, the only other with the Chicago Bears quarterback of the last (7-3) and ruined any realisdecade in his class, but tied tic hope the Vikings (3-7) another QB icon for an NFL had left to give Favre another shot at a playoff mark. Brady has won 25 run in his 20th NFL seastraight regular-season son. Instead, this 100th meethome starts, equaling Brett Favre’s record when he was ing between these borderstate rivals, likely the last with Green Bay. New England is tied for the 41-year-old Favre, with the Jets atop the AFC was marked by costly turnovers, untimely penalties East. Indianapolis (6-4) leads and some sideline shouting by the frustrated Vikings. the AFC South. Tramon Williams intercepted Favre to stop a long Steelers 35, Vikings drive, and Rodgers Raiders 3 took the Packers the other PITTSBURGH — James way for a touchdown to Harrison caused two turn- James Jones in the final overs that Ben Roethlis- minute of the first half to berger turned into touch- give the visitors a 17-3 down passes and the Steel- lead. ers went on to rout the Raiders. Cowboys 35, Harrison led a defense Lions 19 that drove Raiders quarterARLINGTON, Texas — back Jason Campbell from the game, and finished with Bryan McCann grabbed a five tackles, two sacks, an batted-down punt and interception and a forced returned it 97 yards for a touchdown, Miles Austin fumble. The former AP NFL had two short touchdown Defensive Player of the Year catches and 38-year-old Jon also was called for a penalty Kitna had a career-best for slamming Campbell to 29-yard TD for Dallas. Cowboys interim coach the turf as the quarterback Jason Garrett won his home was throwing a pass. Roethlisberger finished debut and improved to 2-0 with three TD passes and since taking over for Wade Phillips. also ran for one. It’s the first time all seaHe threw scoring passes of 52 yards to Mike Wallace, son Dallas (3-7) won at 22 yards to rookie Emman- home, having lost the first uel Sanders and 16 yards to four. The Lions (2-8) lost their Isaac Redman. He also scrambled 16 26th straight on the road,


Peninsula Daily News for Monday, November 22, 2010

c Our Club hosts holiday sale SECTION

Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — A harvest of handmade holiday decorations and baked goods will be offered at the Port Angeles Garden Club’s annual Holiday Sale on Saturday, Dec. 4. The sale will be from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 301 E. Lopez Ave., Port Angeles. Admission is free. For the week prior to the sale, the nearly 60 members of the club will be busy decorating wreaths and swags made with fresh evergreen boughs, making yule logs and centerpieces, and baking delectable delights to be sold along with holiday treasures of crafts and decorations. “Everybody chips in,” said

Audreen Williams, co-chairwoman of the sale. “If they can’t physically make wreaths, then they send baked goods or send food for workers.” The sale is one of two annual fundraisers for the club’s projects, which include scholarships, upkeep of Billie Loo’s Garden — which is on the waterfront to the left of the ferry terminal — plant baskets for the Clallam County Fair and garden therapy at Crestwood Convalescent Center, Williams said. Typically, the sale raises between $2,500 and $3,000, Williams said, though the club was unable to conduct one last year. The club’s other major fundraiser is a plant sale, which will Audreen Williams, co-chairwoman of the Port Angeles Garden Club Holiday Sale, be April 30. prepares information on the event, which will be Saturday, Dec. 4.

Things to Do Today and Tuesday, Nov. 22-23, in: n Port Angeles n Sequim-Dungeness Valley n Port TownsendJefferson County n Forks-West End

Port Angeles

p.m. Open to public. Phone Bill Thomas at 360-460-4510 or Leilani Wood 360-6832655. Bingo — Masonic Lodge, 622 Lincoln St., 6:30 p.m. Doors at 4 p.m. Food, drinks and pull tabs available. Phone 360-457-7377.

Author talks — Author, book critic and librarian Nancy Today Pearl reads from Book Lust To Overeaters Anonymous Go: Reading Recommenda— St. Andrew’s Episcopal tions for Travelers, Vagabonds, Church, 510 E. Park Ave., 9 and Dreamers. Port Angeles a.m. Phone 360-477-1858. Library, 2210 S. Peabody St., 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Free. Phone Pre-3 Co-op Class — For 360-452-6367. parents and toddlers 10 months to 31⁄2 years. First Baptist Church, Fifth and Lau- Tuesday rel streets, 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 PA Vintage Softball — a.m. Associated with Penin- Co-ed slow pitch for fun, felsula College, quarterly cost is lowship and recreation. Phone $75 with annual $25 registra- Gordon Gardner at 360-452tion fee. 5973 or Ken Foster at 360683-0141 for information Walk-in vision clinic — including time of day and locaInformation for visually tion. impaired and blind people, including accessible technolTai chi class — Ginger and ogy display, library, Braille training and various magnifi- Ginseng, 1012 W. 15th St., 7 cation aids. Vision Loss Cen- a.m. $12 per class or $10 for ter, 228 W. First St., Suite N, three or more classes. No 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Phone 360- experience necessary, wear 457-1383 or visit www.vision loose comfortable clothing. Phone 360-808-5605. lossservices.org/vision. Guided walking tour — Historic downtown buildings, an old brothel and “Underground Port Angeles.” Chamber of Commerce, 121 E. Railroad Ave., 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. Tickets: $12 adults, $10 senior citizens and students, $6 ages 6 to 12. Children younger than 6, free. Reservations, phone 360-452-2363, ext. 0.

Port Angeles Business Association — Joshua’s Restaurant, 113 DelGuzzi Drive, 7:30 a.m. Open to the public, minimum $2.16 charge if not ordering off the menu.

The Answer for Youth — Drop-in outreach center for youth and young adults, providing essentials like clothes, food, Narcotics and Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, etc. 711 E. Second St., 3 p.m. to 7 p.m.

Veterans Wellness Walk — Port Angeles Veterans Clinic, 1005 Georgiana St., noon. Open to all veterans. Phone 360-565-9330.

Pre-3 Co-op Class —For parents and toddlers 10 months to 31⁄2 years. First Baptist Church, Fifth and Laurel streets, 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Associated with PeninVolunteers in Medicine of sula College, quarterly cost is the Olympics health clinic $75 with annual $25 registra— 909 Georgiana St., noon to tion fee. 5 p.m. Free for patients with no insurance or access to Tatting class — Golden health care. Appointments, Craft Shop, 112-C S. Lincoln phone 360-457-4431. St., 10 a.m. to noon. Phone 360-457-0509. First Step drop-in center — 325 E. Sixth St., 1 p.m. to 4 Guided walking tour — p.m. Free clothing and equip- Historic downtown buildings, ment closet, information and an old brothel and “Underreferrals, play area, emer- ground Port Angeles.” Chamgency supplies, access to ber of Commerce, 121 E. Railphones, computers, fax and road Ave., 10:30 a.m. and 2 copier. Phone 360-457-8355. p.m. Tickets: $12 adults, $10 senior citizens and students, General discussion group $6 ages 6 to 12. Children — Port Angeles Senior Cen- younger than 6, free. Reserter, 328 E. Seventh St., 1:30 vations, phone 360-452-2363, p.m. to 4 p.m. No specified ext. 0. topic. Open to public.

Mental health drop-in center — The Horizon Center, 205 E. Fifth St. , 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. For those with mental disorders and looking for a place to socialize, something to do or a hot meal. For more information, phone Rebecca Brown at 360-457-0431. Senior meal — Nutrition program, Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh St., 4:30 p.m. Donation of $3 to $5 per meal. Reservations recommended. Phone 360-4578921.

Peninsula

CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, PUZZLES, DEAR ABBY In this section

Bingo — Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh St., 12:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. Phone 360-457-7004. Beginning Watercolor class — With artist Roxanne Grinstad. Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 301 E. Lopez St., 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. $40 for fourweek session. Drop-ins welcome. Phone 360-452-6334 or e-mail rcgrinstad@hotmail. com.

. . . planning your day on the North Olympic Peninsula Sequim Ave.

Get in on the Things to Do The daily Things to Do calendar focuses on events open to the public. There is no cost for inclusion in both the print and online version at peninsuladailynews.com. Submissions must be received at least two weeks in advance of the event and contain the event’s name, location and address, times, cost if any, contact phone number and a brief description. Submitting items for Things to Do is easy: ■ E-MAIL: Send items to news@peninsuladailynews. com or via the “Calendar” link at peninsuladailynews. com. ■ U.S. MAIL: PDN News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. ■ IN PERSON: At any of the PDN’s three news offices. Please see Page A2 for the address of the one nearest you in Port Angeles, Port Townsend and Sequim.

Open mic jam session — Victor Reventlow hosts an open mic jam session 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at Fairmount Restaurant, 1127 W. U.S. First Step drop-in center Highway 101 All musicians — 325 E. Sixth St., 1 p.m. to 4 welcome. p.m. Free clothing and equipMusic jam session — ment closet, information and referrals, play area, emer- Veela Cafe, 133 E. First St., 7 gency supplies, access to p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Bring instruphones, computers, fax and ments. copier. Phone 360-457-8355. Port Angeles Zen ComBeginning Hula for Adult munity — Meditation, dharma Women — Port Angeles talk and discussion of BudSenior Center, 328 E. Seventh dhist ethics from Robert AitSt., 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. $28 for ken Roshi’s The Mind of Clofour-week sessions. Drop-ins ver. 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Please welcome. Bring water, wear a call 360-452-9552 or e-mail long skirt not touching floor, portangeleszen@gmail.com go barefoot or may wear to make an appointment for socks/soft shoes. Phone newcomer instruction. instructor Mahina Lazzaro Line dancing — Vern Bur360-809-3390. ton Community Center, 308 E. Good News Club — For Fourth St., 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., students 5 to 12 years. Jeffer- $2. son Elementary School ReadSenior Swingers dance — ing Room, 218 E. 12th St. 1:45 p.m. to 3 p.m. Phone Port Angeles Senior Center, 360-452-6026 or visit www. 328 E. Seventh St., 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. First visit free. $5 cefop.us. cover all other visits. Music by Chess game — Students Wally and the Boys. elementary through high “Meet me in St. Louis” — school. Port Angeles Public Library, 2210 S. Peabody St., Port Angeles Community 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Chess Playhouse, 1235 E. Lauridsen boards available. Phone 360- Blvd., 7:30 p.m. Tickets $14 417-8502 or visit www.nols. available www.pacommunity players.com or Odyssey Bookorg. shop, 114 W. Front St. Parenting class — “You and Your New Baby,” thirdSequim and the floor sunroom, Olympic MediDungeness Valley cal Center, 939 Caroline St., 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Free. Phone Today 360-417-7652. Vinyasa Yoga — 92 Plain Mental health drop-in Jane Lane, 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. center — The Horizon Center, Phone 206-321-1718 or visit 205 E. Fifth St., 4 p.m. to 6:30 www.sequimyoga.com. p.m. For those with mental disorders and looking for a Walk aerobics — First place to socialize, something Baptist Church of Sequim, to do or a hot meal. For more 1323 Sequim-Dungeness information, phone Rebecca Way, 8 a.m. Free. Phone 360Brown at 360-457-0431. 683-2114. for four-week session. Dropins welcome. Phone 360-4526334 or e-mail rcgrinstad@ hotmail.com.

Senior meal — Nutrition program, Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh St., 4:30 p.m. Donation of $3 to $5 per meal. Reservations recommended. Phone 360-4578921. Wine tasting — Bella Italia, 118 E. First St., 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., $10 to $15. Taste four different wines from restaurant’s wine cellar. For reservations, phone 360-4525442

Free crochet class — Conservation ConnecGolden Craft Shop, 112-C S. tions — North Olympic Land Lincoln St., noon to 2 p.m. Trust staff give brief overview Phone 360-457-0509. of present and past activities. Landowners discuss working Asian brush painting with land trust. 104 N. Laurel Port Angeles Toastmas- (sumi) trees class — With St., Suite 104, 5:30 p.m. to ters Club 25 — Clallam Tran- Roxanne Grinstad. Holy Trinity 6:30 p.m. Phone 360-417sit Business Office, 830 W. Lutheran Church, 301 E. 1815 to RSVP or visit www. Lauridsen Blvd., 6 p.m. to 7:30 Lopez St., 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. $40 nolt.org.

Exercise classes — Sequim Community Church, 1000 N. Fifth Ave. Cardio-step, 9 a.m. to 10:15 a.m. Strength and toning class, 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Cost: $5 a person. Phone Shelley Haupt at 360-477-2409 or e-mail jhaupt6@wavecable.com. Free blood pressure screening — Faith Lutheran Church, 382 W. Cedar St., 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Phone 360683-4803. Sequim Duplicate Bridge — Masonic Lodge, 700 S. Fifth Ave., 12:30 p.m. All players welcome. Phone 360-6814308 or partnership 360-5821289. Women’s weight loss support group — Dr. Leslie Van Romer’s office, 415 N.

Family Caregivers support group — Trinity United Methodist Church, 100 Blake Ave., 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Phone Carolyn Lindley, 360-4178554. Health clinic — Free medical services for uninsured or under-insured. Dungeness Valley Health & Wellness Clinic, 777 N. Fifth Ave., Suite 109, 5 p.m. Phone 360-5820218. Trivia night — The Islander Pizza & Pasta Shack, 380 E. Washington St., 5:30 p.m. Free. Prizes awarded. Must be 21. Phone 360-683-9999. Women’s barbershop chorus — Singers sought for Grand Olympics Chorus of Sweet Adelines. Sequim Bible Church, 847 N. Sequim Ave., 6:30 p.m. Phone Wendy Foster at 360-683-0141.

380 E. Washington St., 4 p.m. Free. Prizes awarded. Must be 21. Phone 360-683-9999. Olympic Mountain Cloggers — Howard Wood Theatre, 132 W. Washington St., 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. $5 fee. Phone 360-681-3987. Olympic Peninsula Men’s Chorus — Monterra Community Center, 6 p.m. For more information, phone 360-6813918. Bingo — Helpful Neighbors Clubhouse, 1241 Barr Road, Agnew, 6:30 p.m. Dinner, snacks available. Nonsmoking. Boy Scout Troop 1491 — St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave., 7 p.m. Open to public. Phone 360-5823898.

Social dance classes— Different ballroom or Latin dance each month. Sequim Prairie Grange Hall, 290 NAMI — For relatives and Macleay Road. Beginner, 7 friends of people with mental p.m.; intermediate, 8:10 p.m. health issues. Sequim Com- $8 per week per class. Intermunity Church, 950 N. Fifth mediate couples who have Ave., 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Free. attended previous classes can Phone 360-582-1598. continue with beginning classes. Cost for both classes is $12. Phone 360-582 0738 Tuesday or e-mail keendancer@q. Mount Olympus Coin com. Club — Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. Discuss U.S. and foreign coins and paper Port Townsend and money. Free. Phone 360-452Jefferson County 3358.

Vinyasa Yoga — 92 Plain Jane Lane, 6 a.m. Phone 206321-1718 or visit www. sequimyoga.com.

Today

Cabin Fever Quilters — Tri-Area Community Center, 10 West Valley Road, Chimacum, 10 a.m. Open to public. Phone Laura Gipson, 36018-Hole Women’s Golf 385-0441. group — Cedars at Dungeness Golf Course, 1965 WoodCoffee Concerts at Turtle cock Road, 8 a.m. check-in. Bluff III — Pianists GwendoNew members and visitors lyn Moore and Barbara Hinchwelcome. cliff. 523 Blue Ridge Road, 10 a.m. Phone 360-385-3626. Senior Singles— Coffee and a walk. John Wayne Puget Sound Coast ArtilMarina parking lot, across lery Museum — Fort Worden from RV Park, 2577 West State Park, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sequim Bay Road, 9 a.m. Admission: $3 for adults; $1 Phone 360-797-1665. for children 6 to 12; free for children 5 and younger. ExhibWIC program — First its interpret the Harbor Teacher, 220 W. Alder St., 9 Defenses of Puget Sound and a.m. to 4 p.m. Phone 360-582- the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Phone 360-385-0373 or e-mail 3428. artymus@olypen.com. Sequim Senior Softball — Jefferson County HistoriCo-ed recreational league. cal Museum and shop — Carrie Blake Park, 9:30 a.m. 540 Water St., 11 a.m. to 4 for practice and pickup games. p.m. Admission: $4 for adults; Phone John Zervos at 360- $1 for children 3 to 12; free to 681-2587. historical society members. Exhibits include “Jefferson Insurance assistance — County’s Maritime Heritage,” Statewide benefits advisers “James Swan and the Native help with health insurance and Americans” and “The Chinese Medicare. Sequim Senior in Early Port Townsend.” Center, 921 E. Hammond St., Phone 360-385-1003 or visit 10 a.m. to noon. Phone Marge www.jchsmuseum.org. Stewart at 360-452-3221, ext. Quilcene Historical 3425. Museum — 151 E. Columbia Sequim Museum & Arts St., by appointment. Artifacts, Center — “Autumn on the documents, family histories and photos of Quilcene and Olympic Peninsula.” 175 W. surrounding communities. Cedar St., 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. New exhibits on Brinnon, miliFree. Phone 360-683-8110. tary, millinery and Quilcene High School’s 100th anniverOvereaters Anonymous sary. Phone 360-765-0688, — St. Luke’s Episcopal 360-765-3192 or 360-765Church, 525 N. Fifth St., noon. 4848 or e-mail quilcene Phone 360-582-9549. museum@olypen.com or quicenemuseum@ Bereavement support embarqmail.com. group — Assured Hospice Office, 24 Lee Chatfield Ave., Silent war and violence 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. Phone protest — Women In Black, 360-582-3796. Adams and Water streets, 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Bar stool bingo — The Turn to Things/C8 Islander Pizza & Pasta Shack,


C2

Monday, November 22, 2010

Fun ‘n’ Advice

Tundra • “Cathy” has been retired; we’re auditioning this comic. Share your thoughts: comics@peninsuladailynews.com.

Peninsula Daily News

Sports part of holiday tradition

DEAR ABBY: I am hosting Thanksgiving this year. I consider it a joy to bring family together to share traditions. However, two of the uncles insist on blaring sports games on our TV during these gatherings. Neither I nor my husband or parents are interested in sports. Usually, there is money riding on these games, and there are loud discussions about bets and other things I would rather my kids not hear. We can’t move the TV because it’s too large, and forcing them to turn it off kills the holiday cheer. How do I learn to live with the noise of a stadium game cast over every holiday? My home is where the family gathers on most of them. Not an Armchair Quarterback in Indiana

For Better or For Worse

Pickles

Dear Not: The sports events have become part of the tradition, and nothing you or I can say will change that. If you are concerned about your children overhearing something they shouldn’t, have them play in another room and provide games to occupy them, or ask that they “help” you prepare the meal or set the table. That should keep them occupied and out of the way. As to your learning to live with the noise of the telecast, it might help if you repeat the Serenity Prayer from AA:

Frank & Ernest

dear abby did it out of love and respect for my Van Buren wife. Julie returned the respect in kind. My late grandmother had given me a blanket decorated with characters from a favorite TV show when I was a child. Although it clashed with our furniture, Julie draped it over the couch in our den because she knew it was meaningful to me. I was away on a business trip when Fido died. I sent flowers and called my wife, expressing my condolences. When I returned a few days later, I noticed my blanket was missing. When I asked where it was, Julie tore into me saying I had never liked Fido, and she had buried him with my blanket. I was furious and let her know with a few choice words. It has been a week, and the mood here is strained. I’m still angry about what she did. Do I have the right to be upset? Stressed and Steamed

Abigail

Dear Steamed: Anger is a part of grief, but what your wife did was wrong. She took something that didn’t belong to her and that was God grant me the serenity to accept precious to you and destroyed it. the things I cannot change,/ She did it because she wanted courage to change the things I can,/ you to feel the same kind of loss that and wisdom to know the difference. she was suffering. It was immature, Reinhold Niebuhr unkind and hostile. You are certainly entitled to your Dear Abby: My wife “Julie” and I feelings. She owes you a sincere have been married a year. On our apology. first date, she asked me if I liked ________ dogs. I told her no because I’m allergic to them. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van However, because we were comBuren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, patible in so many other ways, I and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Letters can be mailed to Dear worked past this difference and tolerated “Fido.” I walked him at times Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA and began taking allergy medication 90069 or via e-mail by logging onto www. dearabby.com. when we started living together. I

Garfield

The Last Word in Astrology By Eugenia Last

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Focus on friends, family and partners and you will enhance your connection to people who are important to your future. Be proactive and progressive. What you say can make the difference to the end results. 4 stars

Momma

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Emotions won’t mix well with financial deals. Stick to business. There is too much tension involving what you owe and what’s owed to you. A little creative accounting will allow you greater freedom in the future. 3 stars

Rose is Rose

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don’t be fooled by what someone tells you. Chances are you are being given a false impression to lead you offcourse. Do your own fact finding. An interesting relationship will form between you and someone with whom you do business. A little charm will go a long way. 3 stars

Elderberries

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Avoid keeping secrets or getting involved in any sort of gossip. There is plenty to accomplish and, with the right attitude and being a team player, you will enhance your reputation and possibly your position. Positive thinking equals positive performance. 3 stars

Dennis the Menace

Doonesbury

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Networking will lead to a better position or an opportunity to partner with someone who can contribute to your project. Taking part in events or activities that include children will lead to new friendships. Make home improvements. 4 stars VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): There is way too much to do to waste time arguing over something unimportant. Your greatest revenge is your own success. Put your time and energy into something constructive. It will ease tension and divert any negative responses. 2 stars LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Enjoy entertainment, travel and communicating. A creative idea can lead to a lucrative invention. Your charm will lead to a partnership that can be very beneficial. 5 stars SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Rethink your financial strategy. You may have to make some concessions in order to make ends meet. Take a unique approach to a talent or skill you have and put a price tag on what you have to offer. 3 stars SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Pay attention

The Family Circus

Now you can shop at www.peninsuladailynews.com!

to the people with whom you have business or personal relationships. There is plenty you can do to make someone feel important and, in doing so, you will bypass a problem. Overindulgence and overreacting will work against you. 3 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Be ready to compromise in order to get what you want. It’s important to understand what everyone around you needs. Get any red tape issues out of the way so you will not face last-minute setbacks. Someone you have to deal with is likely to be difficult. 3 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Make alterations at home that will ease your stress and help you stick to your budget. Now is not the time to overspend but it is the time to rethink the way you handle your money. Cut your overhead by sharing costs. 5 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You are likely to make someone uncomfortable or angry if you are too honest about the way you feel or what you think. Travel and communications will lead to delays, detours and disruptions. Be accommodating: It’s hard to find fault with someone who is. 2 stars


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2010

C3

Peninsula Pe ninsula MARKETPLACE Reach The North Olympic Peninsula & The World

IN PRINT & ONLINE

Place Your Ad Online 24/7 with Photos & Video PLACE ADS FOR PRINT AND WEB:

Visit | www.peninsulamarketplace.com Office Hours

Call | 360.452.8435 | 800.826.7714 | FAX 360.417.3507 IN PERSON: PORT ANGELES: 305 W. 1ST ST. | SEQUIM: 150 S. 5TH AVE #2 | PORT TOWNSEND: 1939 E. SIMS WAY

23

31

Lost and Found

FOUND: Cat. Short hair tortoise hair, very friendly, Gellor and Blue Mtn. Rd., P.A. 417-0173

31 Help Wanted 32 Independent Agents 33 Employment Info 34 Work Wanted 35 Schools/Instruction

22 Community Notes 23 Lost and Found 24 Personals

22

Community Notes

LOST: Cat. Indooronly cat lost in No. Beach, P.T., neighborhood. “Sister” short-hair, black and white tuxedo, very agile, has microchip. If you see or are able to catch her please call or email. Thank you! 360-385-9757 jwoodbri@uoregon.ed u

I love you. I’m sorry. Please forgive me. Thank you.

Compose your Classified Ad on

LOST: Child’s coat. Shiny purple with Disney Ariel on the back, last seen at Roosevelt School, P.A. 460-6814.

www.peninsula dailynews.com

TIPS Always include the price for your item. You will get better results if people know that your item is in their price range.

25

Make sure your information is clear and includes details that make the reader want to respond. Since readers often scan, include a catchy headline and/or a photo or graphic. Highlight your ad in Yellow on Sunday to help it stand out. You are a reader, so make sure the ad looks appealing and is clear to you. PENINSULA CLASSIFIED Harrison Sold His Ford In The Peninsula Classifieds. And you can sell your car in the Peninsula Classifieds even if you’re selling your Chevy and your name is Chase.

6A113352

classified@peninsuladailynews.com

Personals

SANTA’S GIFT Santa is still trying to find that special country lady, close to height/weight proportionate who wants that life full of love, togetherness, being best friends and a partner that she has never had before. What is inside is what counts. No smoking, no drugs. Santa has that special gift that has been waiting for the right lady for sometime and he will keep looking until that special lady comes into his life. White male, 60, 6’, height/weight proportionate, nonsmoker, brown hair, hazel eyes, beard, excellent health, who is very affectionate, romantic, caring, giving from the heart, down to earth, loves the outdoors and animals, home life, sense of humor. Honesty and respect is very important also. Santa has that special gift just waiting to be unwrapped by that right country lady that wants a life full of love that will grow every day. santa@olypen.com

Place your ad with the only DAILY Classified Section on the Peninsula!

ADVERTISING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE The Peninsula Daily News seeks an organized and creative professional who enjoys meeting new people and working in a fun environment. Base salary plus commission selling to an existing account base plus new business, work with numerous clients to assist in their everchanging marketing needs. Training is provided to the candidate who shows the willingness to learn and grow in a fastpaced sales career. Key qualifications include: Strong desire to succeed, Creative and entrepreneurial thinking, Ability to develop new client relationships as well as growth of existing client base, Solid presentation skills. Competitive compensation package including full benefits and 401K plan. If you think you can make a difference in an already successful company, submit a resume and cover letter to: Suzanne Delaney Advertising Director Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 Port Angeles, WA 98362 suzanne.williams@ peninsuladailynews. com AIDES/RNA OR CNA Best wages, bonuses. Wright’s. 457-9236.

CAREGIVERS Due to growth, new positions available. 408 W. Washington Sequim. 360-683-7047 office@ discovery-mc.com

CLASSIFIED can help with all your advertising needs: Buying Selling Hiring Trading

PENINSULA CLA$$IFIED

Call today!

360-452-8435 or 1-800-826-8435

360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714

peninsula dailynews.com

www.peninsula dailynews.com

ASSURED HOSPICE LHC Group RN/PART-TIME TEMPORARY FOR COMMUNITY LIASON Seeking motivated individuals to enhance our expanding program. For application call 360-582-3796

31

Help Wanted

LOCAL LOGGING COMPANY Looking for log truck driver, experienced only, paid on percentage. Available now. 360-460-7292. ROOFER: Experienced, valid license, own transportation, wage DOE. 683-9619/452-0840

Bank CSR positions. midsound.hr@washin gtonfederal.com COOK: Experienced. Apply Shirley’s Cafe, 612 S. Lincoln, P.A.

TAX PREPARER CPA or EA with active license for Tax Season. Sequim. Call Kathryn at 681-2325

LABORER: License/ transportation needed. 683-9619 or 452-0840.

TAXI DRIVER: Parttime, nights. Must be at least 25, clean driving record. Call 360-681-4090 or 253-377-0582

LEGAL ASSISTANT FOR LAW FIRM Word processing and paralegal responsibilities plus some bookkeeping. Requires 65+ wpm with accuracy in Word, excellent client service skills. Must be detail-oriented and able to multi-task. Includes benefits. Send cover letter, resume, and references to Greenaway, Gay & Tulloch Lincare Port Townsend, WA Branch. Customer Service Rep. (CSR) Phone skills, maintain patient files, process orders, manage computer data, filing. Full time permanent fast paced position with growth opportunities. $12-$13 DOE, excellent benefits. Email resume to jobs@lincare.com with “PORT TOWNSEND CSR” on the subject line.

Nippon Paper Industries is currently looking to fill the following positions: •Multi-craft Mechanic: Journeyman status is required. Candidates must be willing to work rotating shifts. •E & I Technician Journeyman status is required. Candidates must be willing to work rotating shifts. •Extra Board: Must be 18 years of age or older. Candidates must be able to work rotating 12 hour shifts and adapt to ever changing shift patterns, holding multiple positions within a week including nights and weekends. To apply, contact WorkSource at: 228 W. 1st Street, Suite A Port Angeles, WA 98362 360-457-2103 www.go2worksource .com AA/EOE Port Angeles CPA firm is seeking a CPA or other experienced tax preparer to join our team of professionals. At least three years of accounting and tax experience required. Collaborative working environment and competitive salary and benefits. Submit resume and cover letter by email to daveh@pacpas.com or mail to Dave at Garnero Smith Hurd & Miller, PO Box 2013, Port Angeles, WA 98362.

WANTED: Front office person for busy solo family practice. Insurance and coding exp. preferable. Send resume to: Peninsula Daily News PDN#184/Front Office Pt Angeles, WA 98362

34

Work Wanted

ADEPT YARD CARE Weeding and mowing. 452-2034 CDL Driver looking to move back home. TWIC/Triples. 18+ months experience with most rigs. 360-477-9470 HOLIDAY HELPER Lights, decor, gifts, etc. 360-797-4597. House Cleaning- Professional cleaning service, owner for over 10 years. $20/hr *See my online ad with photo* Excellent local references. 360-797-1261 home. 360-820-3845 cell. Ask for Julie. In-home care available for your loved ones. Experienced caring RN available, flexible hours, salary negotiable. Call Rae at 360-681-4271. Jack of all trades, 24 years in the making, honest wages. 808-5292 MOWING, pruning. Honest and Dependable. 582-7142.

Sewing. I Sew 4U Hemming, curtains, alterations, any project. Don't wait! Call me today! Patti Kuth, 360-417-5576 isew4u.goods.officeliv e.com I'm Sew Happy! VHS to DVD copying services. Call Nancy 360-774-0971 Winterize lawns, rake leaves, etc. 797-3023

41 Business Opportunities 42 Mortgages/Contracts 43 Money Loaned/Wanted

41

Business Opportunities

Home Appeal, a real Estate staging company. Lots of inventory! Must sell! Makes great money! Call 360-461-1198.

43

Money Loaned/ Wanted

Money Desired: Borrow $75,000 on 5 acres zoned heavy industrial with access to City sewer & water line with existing lease. Will pay 10% per annum per mo. Secured with first deed of trust. Will pay closing costs. 360-457-1417 or 360-670-1378.

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

51 Homes 52 Manufacured Homes 53 Open House 54 Lots/Acreage 55 Farms/Ranches 57 Recreational 58 Commercial Publisher’s Notice The Fair Housing Act makes it illegal to advertise any sale or rental of real estate with preference, limitation or discriminatory language based on race, color, religion, sex, age, national origin, handicap or familial status. Also, local laws forbidding discrimination in real estate ads prohibit discrimination based on marital status, political ideology, sexual orientation or a renter’s qualification for subsidy support. The Peninsula Daily News will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Housing for the elderly may be exempt from the Fair Housing Act if specific criteria have been met.

51

Homes

3 bed, 1.75 bath, 1,096 sf on large corner lot. Large kitchen. Master bath newly remodeled with tile shower granite countertop. Peek-a-boo water view & mountain view. 1 car attached garage, detached 30x24 shop with wood heat. Fenced backyard with large patio. Near college. $210,000 360-460-7503 BEAUTIFUL CONTEMPORARY CUSTOM HOME Super private location, just minutes from Port Angeles. Very light and bright with wall of picture windows facing Olympic Mountain range. Vaulted ceilings, massive kitchen with Bleimeister cabinets and new appliances. 3,818 sf. Finished downstairs suitable for mother-in-law apt. 3 car garage plus 2,500 sf RV/shop. Great for car enthusiastic. Large pond, 8 raised garden beds. Flowers for all seasons. $499,900. ML252124. Vivian Landvik 417-2795 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

SELL YOUR HOME IN PENINSULA CLASSIFIED 1-800-826-7714

DEADLINES: 4:00 the weekday before publication. ADDRESS/HOURS: 305 West First Street/P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays CORRECTIONS AND CANCELLATIONS: Corrections--the newspaper accepts responsibility for errors only on the first day of publication. Please read your ad carefully and report any errors promptly. Cancellations--Please keep your cancellation number. Billing adjustments cannot be made without it.

51

Homes

Beautiful, century old home, with an amazing view of the P.A. harbor. Also enjoy an unstoppable view of the Olympics from your backyard. Hardwood throughout the home, although most of the home is currently carpeted. Many updates still needed, but allows the opportunity to make this your home. $325,000. ML252095/138514 Shawnee Hathaway Ochs 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. CAPE COD SYLE Light and airy Cape Cod-style, with open floorplan, wide doorways, no halls, and hard-surface floors for easy mobility. Ramp available for entry. Built with nontoxic materials and finishes, special water treatment system. Lovingly cultivated organic garden includes roses, pie cherries, and apples. Close to the spit or relax in the sun on the deck. $269,000. ML251240 Karen Kilgore 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East

FREE GARAGE SALE KIT With your

2 DAY

Peninsula Daily News Garage Sale Ad!

4 Signs Prices Stickers And More! 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714 www.peninsula dailynews.com PENINSULA CLASSIFIED

51

Homes

CHIP TO THE GREEN Fairway living in this recently remodeled 2 Br., 2 bath courseside house that backs on to the 18th hole on Sunland Golf Course. The course is your huge backyard that you don’t have to mow. Golf ‘til your’re tired and then watch the late finishers from your spacious deck. Or kick back by the fireplace and calculate your handicap. Don’t golf? There is also tennis, swimming at beach and pool and fun in the clubhouse. $264,900. ML252363 Dan Blevins Carroll Realty 457-1111 CLASSIC WITH STUNNING WATER VIEW Bamboo floors, vaulted ceiling, large windows. Cooks will delight in this kitchen complete w stainless appliances and butler pantry. Large master, guest quarters/media room down. Beautifully landscaped. Located midway between Sequim and Port Angeles. $360,000. ML251495 Cathy Reed and Sheryl Payseno Burley 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East ENJOY THE AMENITIES OF PARKWOOD 2 Br., 2 bath spacious doublewide. Newer appliances include ceramic cooktop. Home also has freestanding wood stove and wet bar. Relax on the Trex deck and enjoy the privacy of the lush gardens. Low maintenance landscaped front yard. $59,000. ML252343/153831 Roland Miller 461-4116 COLDWELL BANKER TOWN & COUNTRY

51

5000900

LOST: Wedding ring. white gold band with one diamond, 70th anniversary in June ‘11. Beauty and the Beach, Dr. Scott Van Dyken’s office, Lincoln St. Safeway, P.A. REWARD. 928-3321

31

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Monday - Friday 8AM - 5PM

Homes

1940’s classic on 3 city lots! What a charmer! 3 Br., 1.5 bath with Large sunny kitchen, beautiful wood floors, partially finished basement plus good water and mountain views. Detached double car garage. $250,000. ML252231/145681 Harriet Reyenga 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. ENTERTAINER’S DELIGHT 360° views, stunning Mediterranean style 2 story, 3 Br., 2.5 bath located close to desirable Cline Spit and 2 public golf courses. Gourmet kitchen, spacious living and family rooms. Spectacular sunroom, portico and courtyard. Huge 2,000 sf shop with bonus room, .5 bath, boat and RV parking. Lavender farm potential! $595,000. ML251088 Dianna Erickson 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East FORECLOSURE 3 Br., 2 bath. Built in 2006, propane fireplace, open kitchen. Large utility room, oversized garage with alley entrance. $169,290 ML144212/252202Te Team Topper 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND GOOD BONES Open flowing floor plan, approximately 1,976 sf of living space, 800 sf 2 car garage with ample storage areas, backs up to a green belt, located a short 1 mile from Jamestown Beach, all major systems replaced in 2004 and 2006. $278,000. ML114788/251696 Cath Mich 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

91190150

ATTENTION ADVERTISERS: No cancellations or corrections can be made on the day of publication. It is the Advertiser's responsibility to check their ad on the first day of publication and notify the Classified department if it is not correct. Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., is responsible for only one incorrect insertion. All advertising, whether paid for or not, whether initially accepted or published, is subject to approval or rescission of approval by Northwest Media (Washington), L.P. The position, subject matter, form, size, wording, illustrations, and typography of an advertisement are subject to approval of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., which reserves the right to classify, edit, reject, position, or cancel any advertisement at any time, before or after insertion. Neither Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., nor Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., investigates statements made directly or indirectly in any advertisement and neither makes any representations regarding the advertisers, their products, or their services or the legitimacy or value of the advertisers or their products or services. In consideration of publication of an advertisement, the Advertiser and any advertising agency that it may employ, jointly and severally, will indemnify and hold harmles Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., and Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., their officers, agents, and employees against expenses (including all legal fees), liabilities, and losses resulting from the publication or distribution of advertising, including, without limitation, claims or suits for libel, violation of privacy, copyright or trademark infringement, deception, or other violations of law. Except as provided in this paragraph, neither Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., nor Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., shall be liable for any damages resulting from error in or non-publication of ads, whether paid for or not, including but not limited to, incidental, consequential, special, general, presumed, or punitive damages or lost profits. The sole and exclusive remedy against Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., and Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., for any error in, or non-publication of, an ad shall be a refund of the cost of the ad or the printing of one make-good insertion, at the discretion of the Publisher; provided that Advertiser and/or its agency has paid for the ad containing the error or which was not published; otherwise, the sole remedy shall be one make-good insertion. No claim for repetition shall be allowed. No allowance shall be made for imperfect printing or minor errors. Neither Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., nor Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., shall be liable for failure to print, publish, or circulate all or any portion of an advertisement or of advertising linage contracted for, if such failure is due to acts of God, strikes, accidents, or other circumstances beyond the control of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P. Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., and Horvitz Newspapers, Inc., shall not be liable for errors in or non-publication of advertisements submitted after normal deadlines. Any legal action arising from these terms and conditions or relating to the publication of, or payment for, advertising shall, if filed, be commenced and maintained in any court situated in King or Clallam County, Washington. Other terms and conditions, stated on our Advertising Rate Cards and Contracts, may apply. This service is not to be used to defraud or otherwise harm users or others, and Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., reserves the right to disclose a user's identity where deemed necessary to protect Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., or others or to respond to subpoenas or other lawful demands for information.


C4

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2010

51

Homes

51

GREAT FOR ENTERTAINING 3 Br., 2 bath, over 1,900 sf, granite counters and stainless appliances, beautifully landscaped with mountain views, great patios and beautiful water feature. $365,000 ML75847/251106 Team Schmidt 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND GREAT INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY Main house has 2,332 sf of living space and custom features. Custom landscaping, koi pond with waterfall. Large greenhouse and garden area. Laminate wood floors, builtins, great sunroom, too. Includes two outbuildings for extra investment opportunities. $479,000. ML241656 Chuck Murphy and Lori Tracey 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East HAPPY SPACE Inside find a super clean 3 Br., 2 bath home with huge, sunny country kitchen complete with fireplace. Outside find 3.17 acres with irrigation, fruit trees, workshop, and plenty of room to have animals, gardens, or whatever adds to your happiness. $279,900. ML251626 Jane Manzer 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East

"In-Town" Mini-Farm. 4 bedroom, 1+ bath home on 1.08 acres. Fenced pasture, mt. view, greenhouse, chicken coop, detached garage. Carport. 8x24 deck. Mature fruit trees. Appliances convey. New roofs/heat pump and MUCH more! $210,000. Contact Dave at 360-670-8260 or weissguy60@yahoo.c om CHECK OUT OUR NEW CLASSIFIED WIZARD AT www.peninsula dailynews.com

Homes

GREAT VALUE Charming 3 Br. home with expansive saltwater view. Tastefully remodeled in 2010. Vinyl windows and wood floors. Garage and workshop area. Nice deck and partially fenced yard. Attractively priced. $159,000. ML251938. Marc Thomsen 417-2782 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY JUST LIKE NEW Cute 2 Br., 1.5 bath condo, completely updated throughout, new kitchen with new appliances, new heating system and roof, close to medical facilities. $149,500 ML129757/251967 Brenda Clark 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND LAKE SUTHERLAND DUPLEX 2 units each with 3 Br., 1 bath right on the lake at Mallard Cove. Keep one for summer fun and rent the other; would also make excellent vacation rentals! $325,000. ML252080. Alan Barnard 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. LARGE CRAFTSMAN Vintage home centrally located with dual views, close to parks, downtown, shopping, college pretty much everything! 4 Br., 2 bath 2,776 sf home with enough room for everyone. Warm finishes, large bright kitchen with breakfast nook. Enclosed sunroom adjacent to deck a beautiful treat for visiting and entertaining. $218,000. ML251246 Brooke Nelson 417-2812 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY NO-BANK WATERFRONT Featuring commanding views of the Straits, San Juan Islands, Mt. Baker and the Olympic Range. This 3 Br., 4 bath northwest contemporary has been extensively remodeled in impressive detail throughout. The floor-plan is open and airy. $795,000 ML252341/153782 Dan Tash 461-2872 COLDWELL BANKER TOWN & COUNTRY

Classified 51

51

Homes

OWNER WILL CARRY Close tot own, quiet and peaceful, enclosed patio off master, amenities include pool, clubhouse, golf course, and wonderful community. $319,000. ML251727/116759 Tom Cantwell 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND PANORAMIC WATER VIEWS Panoramic water and island views for this contemporary style home on one acre. Exceptional potential in this nearly 2,000 sf home. Expansive deck allows you to look out over the Sequim Valley and Straits of Juan de Fuca. Soaring windows fill this home with soft light and allow exceptional viewing of the ships as they pass by. $239,995 Jim Hardie U-$ave Real Estate 775-7146 SAVOR STUNNING VIEWS Of the Straits, Olympics and Mount Baker while listening to wave’s crash on the beach below. Watch eagles soar, whales play, or lights of Victoria. Sit back and enjoy parades of cruise ships passing in the summer. Water or mountain views from nearly every Anderson window. Just minutes from Port Angeles or Sequim. $420,000. ML252118 Alan Burwell 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East SELLER FINANCING! Let the seller help you buy this beautifully remodeled 3 Br. home on Cherry Hill. You can’t judge this book by its cover— come in or take the virtual tour to get a taste of just how great a buy this one is. Fabulous kitchen with granite counter tops. Fireplace in the living room and wood stove in the great room. $229,000. ML251726. Pili Meyer 417-2799 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

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Homes

Solid built A-frame home, warm and cozy 3 Br., 2 bath with spacious living area. Sitting on 2.45 acres with a bit of a water view. $189,900 ML251842/122178 Thelma Durham 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. SPACIOUS OPEN FLOOR PLAN 2 master suites and 2.5 baths, 3 car garage, open floor plan, large kitchen and formal dining room, overlooking 8th green. $339,000 ML136212/252066 Deb Kahle 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND SPLIT LEVEL HOME Enjoy a leisurely stroll through neighborhood and wooded areas. 3 Br., 2.25 bath, multi story, recently painted exterior and reroofed in 2008. Open style kitchen with island bar. Dining area and master Br. have access to wood deck. Living room wired for surround sound and has wood stove for cozy winter evenings. $267,500. ML252072 Chuck Murphy and Lori Tracey 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East SUNLAND HILLTOP CONDO 2 Br., 2 baths, nice sunroof, propane stove, murphy bed, shoji screen. $185,000 ML145314/252226 Kim Bower 683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND TOWNHOUSE Like new townhouse, great location in downtown Sequim, within short distance of Carrie Blake Park. This six year old, 1,796 sf unit offers a large open living area with high quality kitchen, master suite, den/office, private concrete patio and fenced in back yard. Other features include laminate flooring, heat pump, all appliances are included, low homeowners association dues. $240,000. ML252205 Tom Blore Peter Black Real Estate 683-4116

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51

Homes

TWO FOR ONE Two homes on one lot. Site built home with 2 Br., 1 bath, 1,276 sf plus manufactured home with 3 Br., 2 bath, 1,348 sf plus detached garage/ shop - all on 1.51 acres close to town. In city limits, zoned R-III. $279,000. ML252346. Mike Fuller Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 683-3900, 477-9189 WATER VIEW Energy efficient home. Heat pump, Energy Star appliances and lights, low E windows. Custom home with 3 Br., 3 bath, 3 car garage, 3,010 sf, walkout basement and organic gardens. $245,000. ML242001. Cathy Reed and Sheryl Payseno Burley 683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East You’ll love this 3 Br., 2 bath, one level home. Updated kitchen with newer countertops, pull outs, breakfast bar and a new stove. Skylights and newer countertops in both bathrooms. The roof is approx. 2 years old. Fenced in area for your pets. All appliances included. 2 car attached garage and plenty of parking in the back. $179,500 ML252096/138720 Kelly Johnson 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. YOU’LL BE COUNTING YOUR BLESSINGS If you like to fish or hike, you’ll love this Freshwater Bay neighborhood. Just a few miles out of town, this home is on 2.4 acres. Besides the 3 Br. home, there’s an outbuilding with 3 rooms. Park your boat or camper on the cement pad under cover. $235,000. ML251945 Pili Meyer 417-2799 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

52

Manufactured Homes

SEQUIM: 2 Br., 2 bath, single wide, 55+ park, owner may carry contract. $22,500/obo. 683-5120

54

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Lots/ Acreage

A beautiful property in Port Angeles. For sale $168,000. Located just minutes from town off of Mt Angeles Road. The 4.77 acre parcel is surrounded by mountains, nice homes and the natural beauty of Port Angeles. Septic installed, electric hook up pd, city water. www.portangelesprop.com or 360-460-0572 Beautiful 5+ acre parcel in a very private area. Wonderful view of the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Vancouver Island, Salt Creek, Crescent Bay and Tongue Point. $299,000. ML241755. Nason Beckett 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A. BREATHTAKINGLY BEAUTIFUL! Gated entry leads to wonderfully situated custom luxury view home on acreage. Formal living areas and gourmet chef’s kitchen. Dog kennel and landscaped. $585,000. ML152107. Bryan Diehl 360-437-1011 Windermere Port Ludlow

55

Farms/ Ranches

BEAUTIFUL 32 ACRE RANCH New driveway off Hidden Highlands allows for even more privacy. Mtn views, two ponds and a 2,880 sf barn, tack room and storage. Fenced and partially fenced. Possible uses include horse or livestock ranch, vineyard, corporate retreat, wildlife lookout and more. $795,000. ML250670. Clarice Arakawa 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A.

58

Lake Sutherland 3+ acres with beach rights with dock, Hwy 101 frontage. electrical close by. Subdividable, zoned R1. 360-460-4589.

COMMERCIALLY ZONED PROPERTY Could be office or home or both. Beautifully refurbished. $185,000. ML252171. Chuck Turner 452-3333 PORT ANGELES REALTY SEQUIM OFFICE BUILDING! This twelve suite, 7,632 sf office complex is located on Sequim’s main street. Excellent rental history and investment potential. Paved parking, EFA with heat pumps for each unit, long-term tenants! $850,000. ML252351 Mark N. McHugh REAL ESTATE 683-0660

61 Apartments Furnished 62 Apartments Unfurnished 63 Duplexes 64 Houses 65 Share Rental/Rooms 66 Spaces RV/Mobile 67 Vacation 68 Commercial Space

62

Apartments Unfurnished

P.A.: 2 Br. quiet, clean. No smoke/pets $675 mo., dep. 457-0928. P.A.: Quiet and clean. Water view. 1 Br. $575. 206-200-7244 P.A.: Really large 1 Br., 1 ba., $625, 1st, last. No pets. 452-1234. SEQUIM: Beautiful 1 Br., in quiet 8-plex. $600. 460-2113.

63

Duplexes

Apartments Unfurnished

BIG, apts. $640, $350 dep. Near WM, new carpet. 417-6638.

SEQUIM LAND WANTED Must support 2 horses. 505-281-1591.

CENTRAL P.A. Clean, quiet, 2 Br. in well managed complex. Excellent ref req. $700. 452-3540.

Peninsula Daily News can print your publication at an affordable price! Call Dean at 360-417-3520 1-800-826-7714

CETNRAL P.A.: 1 Br., 1,200 sf. $650. 457-8438 P.A.: 2 Br., W/D, no pets/smoke. $675, 1st, last, dep. Available Dec. 417-5137.

64

Houses

EAST P.A.: 3 Br., 2 bath, 5 acres, mtn./ water view. Horses ? $1,200. 477-0747. EAST P.A.: Small 2 Br. mobile. $500. 457-9844/460-4968 EAST SIDE P.A.: Lg. 3 Br., 2 ba, no smoking. $1,000, 1st, last, $500 dep. 452-1147. FORKS: 2 Br., 1 ba mobile, rent to own. $350. 360-780-0100. MOBILE: Rent to own, fixer. $500. Ref req. 760-723-7782. P.A.: 1 Br., no pets. $575 incl. util. Credit check. 460-0575.

Commercial

Buildable corner lot on dead end in Paradise Bay, Port Ludlow, 1 block from community private boat ramp on private beach. Cash or contract. $24,000. 360-437-9389 GREAT FUTURE HOMESITE Nice level lot with all utilities in at road. CC&Rs to protect your investment. Priced to sell. $55,000. ML251879. Quint Boe 457-0456 WINDERMERE P.A.

62

Clean 1 Br., 1 bath water view w/washer/dryer, $600/dep water/sewer paid. No smoking/pets. 360-808-5054 P.A.: Clean 2 Br., garage. $725 month, deposit. 452-1016. SEQUIM: 2 Br., 1 ba. $725, dep and credit check 360-385-5857

64

Houses

1 Br. cabin with loft. Upper Palo Alto Rd. $700. 477-9678

P.A.: 3 Br., 2 bath, garage, nice area, $950. 452-1395. P.A.: 4 Br., 1 bath. Remodeled. $895, 1st, last. 452-1234. P.A.: By college, view, 3 Br., 2 ba. $1,150, lease. 457-4966. P.A.: Lovely historic home, fully remodeled, immaculate, 3 Br., 2 ba. $1,100 mo. 417-9776 P.A.: Newer 3 bd., 3 bath. Neighborhood, location, garage, yard, weatherized. No smoking/pets $900 mo. 452-9458. P.A.: Water view 3 Br., 2 bath, 2 car garage. $1150/mo. 452-1016

2 bed, 2 bath. Fireplace, lovely kitchen w/mtn view, on bus line. Includes W/D. $850. 457-1392. CENTRAL P.A. , 3 Br. study, no smoke/ pets $875. 775-8047 CENTRAL P.A.: 2 Br., 1 ba, 606 S. Laurel, references required. $700. 457-6600. CENTRAL P.A.: 2 Br., garage, no smoke/ pets. $800, 1st, last, dep. Avail. Dec. 1st. 360-461-2438 Clean, furnished 1 Br. trailer with tip out, near beach, util. incl. $650. 928-3006.

JAMES & ASSOCIATES INC. Property Mgmt. HOUSES IN P.A. 1 br 1 ba......$500 1 br 1 ba......$525 2 br 1 ba......$650 2 br 2 ba......$800 3 br 2 ba......$950 3 br 1.5 ba..$1100 HOUSES IN SEQUIM 2 br 2 ba......$925 2+ br 2 ba....$950 3 br 2 ba....$1100 3 br 2 ba....$1250

360-417-2810

More Properties at www.jarentals.com

PORT HADLOCK Newly remodeled, 3 Br., 2 ba, W/D, fridge? $1,250 mo, cleaning and security dep. 360-531-3997 Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com

PT LUDLOW home 2 Br., 2 bath, view, decks, fireplace, $1,200. 360-312-7546 kryan2@yahoo.com SEQUIM: 2 Br. 1 ba, in town, W/S/G incl., W/D, security system, year lease, dep. $650. 460-8978. SEQUIM: Idle Wheels Park on 5th Ave. 1 Br., 1 ba. single wide, $495. 683-3335.

SEQUIM: Newer 2 bdr mfd homes. W/S/G, W/D incl. Recent upgrades. $645 & $685. 360 582-1862 WEST P.A.: 4 Br, 2 ba, no smoking. $1,000, $1,000 sec. 417-0153

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65

Share Rentals/ Rooms

CARLSBORG: 1 Br. $300, internet, W/D. 206-227-9738 SEQUIM: Lg. unfurnished room. $350 incl. util. 457-6779. SEQUIM: Room for rent - Shared living space and kitchen. Country setting. No smokers, no pets. Background check. $400 per month plus utilities. 681-2184.

72

Furniture

BEDROOM SET Solid oak. Large chest, $200. Dresser with mirror, $200. King headboard, $100. 2 pier cabinets with mirror, $300. Take all, $700. Must see to appreciate. 360-565-6038 BEDROOM: Black lacquer dresser, armoire, king headboard, mirror. $200/ obo. 797-7311

SEQUIM: Share 2 Br. apt., have full run of apt. $450 mo., $100 deposit. 681-8685.

COFFEE TABLES: 2 matching, 1 large, $50/obo and 1 small, $40/obo. 681-4429 or 417-7685.

68

DINING TABLE: With 4 chairs, blonde finish nice set. $150/ obo. 681-4429 or 417-7685.

Commercial Space

PROPERTIES BY LANDMARK 452-1326 WAREHOUSE: Heated space. 800-8,000 sf. 360-683-6624.

71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79

Appliances Furniture General Merchandise Home Electronics Musical Sporting Goods Bargain Box Garage Sales Wanted to Buy

71

Appliances

MISC: Washer/dryer, Kenmore, heavy duty, front load, energy savers, $400/ obo. Dishwasher, Frigidaire, $75/obo. 452-6456

72

Furniture

BED: Adj electric extra long twin bed w/memory foam mattress and wireless remote (programmable preset positions and vibramassage). Great cond/steel mechanism by Motion Bedding. Owner manuals. $600. 681-8967.

ENTERTAINMENT CENTER Large, very sturdy, light colored oak. Plenty of room for a large television with two big storage drawers underneath, plus a side cabinet with three shelves and glass-front door. $175/obo. 360-775-8746 ENTERTAINMENT CENTER Pine armoire style. Priced reduced. $75. 808-1767. Glass Table Cover 67 5/8” x 47 5/8”, 1/4”, oval race track cut, $225/obo. You transport. 457-0773 Monterra. MATTRESS SET Beauty Rest, queen, firm, like new. $525. 360-681-4134 MISC: Leather sofa, white, $375. Oak table with chairs, $300. Oak entertainment center, $75. Computer table, $75. Air conditioner with remote, $50. Water cooler, $45. Recp. saw/rotozip, $75 each. Drill bits/chisels, $40 each. 360-452-8297, Cell 256-318-9599.

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72

Furniture

MISC: (2) twin electric beds, $200 and $300. Dining room set, oak, 6 chairs on casters, $400. Oak poster bed, queen set, 2 piece armoire, $500. All obo. 360-683-4401 RECLINER: Small rocker/recliner, dark burgundy fabric, great shape, will deliver. $100/obo. 681-3299 Rocker/Recliners Almost new, 2 matching, gray-blue. $300 ea. 681-2282. SOFA: Mini sectional, red, less than a year old. $300/obo. 417-2047 TABLE: Wrought iron Italian table with double beveled glass top, made in Italy, 4 chairs with new cushions, good condition, appraised at $600. Sell for $500. 457-3005 or 4617478.

73

General Merchandise

$800 buys a cheap Charlie pellet stove with outside vent and electric start. Ken at 928-9410 AIR COMPRESSOR Brand new Speedaire, 3 phase, 60 gal. tank. $900/obo. 417-5583. AWESOME SALE! Old trunk, $35. Vac, 6 hp, $35. Toaster ovens, new, $20, used, $15. 360-683-2743 BBQ GRILL: Large propane, with side burner, works good. $20. 681-4429 eves or 417-7685 weekdays. CASH FOR: Antiques and collectibles. 360-928-9563

Christmas quilts for sale. Christmas and everyday quilts, queen/king size. $300 each. Homemade, hand quilted, machine washable. Phone 683-6901. COMFORTER SET Barney twin, with sheets, good shape. $15. 452-9693, eves.

73

General Merchandise

CREDIT CARD MACHINE Like new. Paid $600. Asking $400. 681-3838 CUSTOM SHED Beautiful 8x8 custom built shed. Asking for only materials no time or labor. $800 firm, you haul. Call to explain why. 457-2780 DRESSES: 3 nice prom dresses size small, like new worn once, call for description. $30 each. 452-9693 or 360-417-3504 GENERATOR: Winco 3 KW, 1,800 rpm, well built. $450/obo. 417-5583

73

General Merchandise

NECKLACE: Amber and turquoise, from jeweler, unique, casual or dress, never worn, in box. $325. 477-4733. Office Equipment and Kiln. Canon i9900, hi-end printer, lightly used, $192/obo. 15 ink carts for above, new, $8 ea. Xerox XC1045 copier, used, $199/obo. Olympic Kiln, model 1818H, never used, $397/obo. 360-683-5216 RARE CHANCE: Original oil painting by local artist, the late Tim Quinn. 1’x2.5’. Discovery Bay scene. $4,800/obo. 683-9426, 477-2249

GREAT DEALS. ‘87 Citation 5th wheel $2000/obo. Yardman auto drive riding mower 42” 17hp, bagger, $500. Stacked washer and dryer front load Kenmore washer, Gibson dryer both work great, $400. 461-3164

SEWING MACHINE Brother, DB2-B757-3, Commercial, heavy duty. $295. Rrobert169@ Qwest.net 360-683-3385

LEAF/LAWN MULCHER VACUUM Craftsman professional, tow behind riding mower, 1/3 off, like new. $725. 681-3522

SINGER: Sewing machine. Featherweight with case and book. Just serviced. Sews perfectly. $425. 477-1576.

LUMBER: Rough cut cedar. 1x4 fence boards. $1 ea. 460-5686

TABLE SAW. JET JWTS-10, 2 fences, router wing w/Bosch insert, blade guard, dust containment box, 2 inserts. $375.00. 681-2524

METAL LATHE Sears Roebuck, model #10920630, 14” bed, 6” throw, 110V motor. $250. Robert169@ Qwest.net 360-683-3385 MISC: Antique piano, good shape, $800. Blue sofa, good shape, $150. Twin bed with headboard, $25. Hutch, $75. 2 dining room chairs, $10 ea. Desk with chair, $25. 452-5876 MISC: Desk, $50. Office chair, $25. Copy machine, $25. Printer, $25. Fax, $20. 5th wheel hitch, $75. Massage machine, $60. Flagpole, $50. Coffee table, $20. 457-6174 MOVING BOXES Used, cardboard, different sizes, incl. wardrobe, good condition. Blue Mountain Road. $200 all. 360-928-3467

SERGER: Like new, sews and cuts at same time. $200. 457-9782

75

CELLO: 3/4 size Kohr, bow, soft case, stand good condition. $350. 457-3666. Give the gift of music. Guitar instruction by Brian Douglas. 360-531-3468 Marshall JCM TSL 2000 & 4 twelve cab. good condition works great. $1,800. 360-460-0864

75

Musical

ACCORDION: 19” keyboard, 120 base, electric. Excellent condition. Buy a $3,000 accordion for $500. 683-7375.

79

Wanted To Buy

WANTED: Car tow dolly. 360-701-2767. WANTED: Lucky Louie, Guptill and Supreme lures/ plugs. 683-4791. WANTED: Old or broken banjo. 681-0695.

PIANO: Older Shondorfl upright cabinet grand. Good sound. $475. 452-7114. VIOLIN: 3/4, nice shape. $150. 452-6439

76

Sporting Goods

81 82 83 84 85

Food/Produce Pets Farm Animals Horses/Tack Farm Equipment

GENERATOR: Honda 1,000 watt. $450. 360-385-7728

82

GUN: Custom Arisaka 300 Savage sporter. $300. 452-2029.

AKC Chocolate Lab Puppies. Ready Dec. 6. 3 females. $500 ea 452-2833, 460-2782

GUNS: Colt Python 357 mag., $1,000. Smith & Wesson model 66, 357 mag., $600. Marlin model 39, $450. 683-9899. RECUMBENT BICYCLE Easy Racer Goldrush. Large. $2,500. 360-452-3495 RECUMBENT BIKES Tour Easy, $1,000/ obo. Vision, $400/ obo.Good condition. 681-2329

79 WANTED! Your Consignments!!! Artisan Creative Consignment is wanting your handcrafted Art, household and clothing!!! Reasonable consignment! Call for details! Michele at 360-461-4799, Heather at 360-775-4283, or business line at 360-681-7655

Musical

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2010

Wanted To Buy

1ST AT BUYING FIREARMS Cash for the Holidays. Old or new, rifles, shotguns, and pistols. 1 or whole collection. Please call, I will bring cash today. WA State Firearms Transfer paperwork available. 681-4218. BOOKS WANTED! We love books, we’ll buy yours. 457-9789 Costco shed parts, recycle for cash. 417-5336 evenings. WANTED: 22 cal. rifle. Call 683-1413 WANTED: Buying gold, jewelry, scrap jewelry, silver, old coins. P.A. Antique Mall, Mon.-Sat. 109 W. First St. 452-1693

Pets

Albino Parakeet Hen. Gorgeous 'keet hen pure white with dark red eyes, very healthy, $50. With cage, or FREE (just hen no cage) to home with aviary/ large cage, other 'keets, and considerate owner. 360-457-8385 CAGES: (2) large wire cages for birds, rabbits or ? $10 each. You haul or we will haul with gas money included. 681-4429 eves or 417-7685 weekdays. Chihuahua puppies. 3 very cute, happy, friendly, healthy purebred Chihuahua puppies. 2 females 1 male. 7 weeks old. $250-400 360-670-3906 Christmas Puppies Lhasa Apso, order now for Christmas, adorable. $500 ea. 477-2115 FISH TANK: Saltwater, 80 gal., pump, lights, stand everything included. $100. 477-1264

82

85

Pets

Free to good home, one year old, male, neutered, Miniature Pinscher. House broken. Includes bag of dog food. 360-797-4968

C5

Farm Equipment

BOX SCRAPER Rankin 72”, blade and 6 shanks, for 3 point hitch. Model BBG72J. Never used. $600. 360-301-2690

FREE: 4 yr. old Great Dane/Boxer mix, needs room to run, loves to be indoors, great with kids, loyal family dog, current on all vaccinations and is microchipped. 460-0865 PUPPIES: Jack Russell Terriers, Powder Puff China-Jacks, registered, vet checked, shots, wormed. $500-$800 each. 582-9006. PUPPIES: Ready for Christmas! Shih-Tzu, 2 males, $300/obo ea. Shots, vet checked. 582-9382 or 460-3319. PUPPY: Chihuahua female, to loving home. $200. 808-1242 SULCATA TORTOISE Juvenile. $150. 808-5208 TOY POODLES: 8 wk. old black male, 1 6 mo female tri-color phantom. $550 ea. 477-8349

83

Farm Animals

CALL DUCKS: $25 each pair. 683-3914. GOAT: Wether, Alpine 1.5 yrs. old. $50. 417-6781 HAY: Alf/grass. $5.00 bale. Grass, $4.00. In barn. 683-5817. NUBIAN: Goats, $125 ea. 1 Wether, $75. Age 5+ mo. 360-385-6327 Weaner pigs, nice Duroc cross, winter price $55. Also young large blue butt boar, $150/obo. 775-6552

84

Horses/ Tack

MARE: 6 yr old quarter horse mare. Been there, done that! Performance, rodeo, equestrian team, been hauled everywhere. Flashy. Very sweet, no vices. $6,000 negotiable to good home. 360-477-1536 msg.

91 Aircraft 92 Heavy Equipment/Truck 93 Marine 94 Motorcycles/Snowmobiles 95 Recreational Vehicles 96 Parts/Accessories 97 Four Wheel Drive 98 Trucks/Vans 99 Cars

92

Heavy Equipment/ Trucks

DUMP TRUCK: ‘00 Western Star. 3406E, 500 hp, does not use oil, no leaks, good Dyno report, cruise, air, jakes, air ride cab, power mirrors/ windows, new 16’ box and wet kit, and hitch for pup, exc. inside/out, all new brakes. $42,000/ trade. 460-8325. GMC: ‘91 Top Kick. GVWR 26,180 lbs, 19,466 mi., 16’ bed, dump-through lift gate, Fuller 10 spd. $19,995. 683-2383. SEMI-END DUMP ‘85 Freightliner, Cummins 400BC, 24 yard end dump, excellent condition. $35,000/ obo. 417-0153. TRACK LOADER 125E, I-H Dresser, 1,900 hrs. $11,000. 683-3843

93

Marine

APOLLO: ‘77 20’. Must see! Very clean in and out. Rebuilt 302 IB OMC OB. Fresh water cooled, hydraulic trim tabs, head, galley. Priced to sell. $3,800/obo. 681-0411

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ACROSS 1 Like some shortterm committees 6 How a lot of music is recorded 10 Narrow-necked pear 14 Museum with many Spanish masterpieces 15 Eight, in Spain 16 Figure skating jump 17 Consumed 18 Postal delivery 19 Knish seller 20 Henna, for one 21 Tokyo monetary unit 24 Hawaii’s coffee capital 25 Reader’s __: magazine 26 1983 Lionel Richie #1 song 31 French city where Joan of Arc died 32 Wooden nickel, e.g. 33 Milk units: Abbr. 36 Old Italian money 37 Parcel of land 39 New Age-y emanation 40 Single 41 Wine vintage 42 Thread holder 43 Desolate title tree in a 1936 Fonda/ MacMurray Western 46 It’s north of the border 49 Cle. hoopsters 50 TUMS target 53 Long sandwich 56 Vaulter’s need 57 “Today, __ man”: stereotypical bar mitzvah announcement 58 Hospital staffer 60 __ even keel 61 Shoemaker McAn 62 Spud 63 Camping shelter 64 Talks and talks 65 Hanker, and a synonym for the ends of 21-, 26-, 43- and 50Across

93

Classified

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2010

Marine

BAYLINER: ‘02 2452 Classic with ‘05 EZ Loader Trailer. 250HP, Bravo 2 outdrive, micro, stove, refrigerator, marine head, masserator, heated cabin, radar, fish finder, VHF radio, GPS, (2) Scotty electric down riggers, Yamaha 8T kicker motor, all safety equip., trim tabs, hot water, cruising canvas, fresh water cooling. $28,500/obo. 360-683-3887 BAYLINER: With 70 hp Evinrude. Fully equipped with EZ Loader trailer, lots of extras. $4,000. 683-4698 BOSTON WHALER Offshore 27 (1991), well equipped for ocean fishing, dual 225 hp Optimax engines (400-500 hrs.), 12” Raymarine chart plotter displaying radar, GPS, digital fish finder; Yamaha electric start and tilt kicker, dual electric downriggers, aluminum trailer, moored Neah Bay last 3 yrs., now stored West Bay Boat Sequim. $27,500. Garry at 683-7176

GLASTRON: ‘08 GT 185 Bowrider $16,500. Must see. Like brand new. 67hrs of fresh water only use on Vortec V6 with Volvo Penta outdrive. Excellent package. Stereo and depth finder. Will throw in lots of extras so ready for tubing and skiing. Great family package. 360-461-0813.

Job loss forces bottom price. Must sell to pay loan. 1979 Fiberform 26' Baja Flybridge Galvanized EZ-Loader trailer (1999 dual axle) Chevy 350 engine with rebuilt Rochester Quadrajet 280 Volvo outdrive. $2,500. 360-504-2298 PST In Port Angeles.

93

By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle –– horizontally, vertically, diagonally, even backward. Find them and CIRCLE THEIR LETTERS ONLY. DO NOT CIRCLE THE WORD. The leftover letters spell the Wonderword. ‘BONES’ (TV SERIES)

J A I I N O R A H C A Z R Y G By Donna S. Levin

DOWN 1 Copied 2 Open-sided cart 3 Loathe 4 “__ on a Grecian Urn” 5 Unite 6 Tuba sound 7 March Madness org. 8 Facial feature with a cleft, perhaps 9 Distributed sparingly 10 No-goodnik 11 Daisy variety 12 Tennis great Monica 13 Eastwood of Dirty Harry films 22 Namibia neighbor: Abbr. 23 Perform with the choir 24 Common scrape site for a kid 26 Woody’s son 27 Butcher’s cut 28 Entice 29 Ivan the Terrible et al. 30 Partners’ legal entity: Abbr. 33 Je ne sais __ Marine

OLYMPIC: ‘94 22’ Resorter. Alaska bulkhead, ‘06 225 Merc Optimax. ‘07 9.9 4 cycle Merc Bigfoot. Large fishing deck, solid and fast. 84 gal. fuel. $14,500/ obo. 683-4062 or 530-412-0854 RARE PANGA 26’ BOAT FISHERMAN’S DREAM Magic Tilt Trailer & essentials for this beautiful ride. New floor & engines overhauled. 2 bimini tops, custom boat cover, gps, radio, etc. In Sequim. $18,500/obo. 707-277-0480 RUNABOUT: 16’ and trailer, Sunbrella top. $350/obo. 477-0711. SAIL BOAT: 1932 42’ Frank Prothero fishing scooner, 50 hp Isuzu diesel, Paragon gear, solid construction, needs TLC. $3,000. 360-468-2052 SAIL BOAT: 1940 34’ Rhodes 6 meter cruising sloop, heavy construction. $2,500. 360-468-2052 SANGER: ‘76 Super Jet. Built 455 Olds, Hardin in water exhaust, seats 5, upholstery good, dog house fair, turnkey ready. $2,500/obo. 681-3838

94

Motorcycles

BMW: ‘94 K1100RS. Exceptionally clean bike, 41,000 miles, ABS brakes, 4 cylinder engine, stainless steel exhaust, Corbin seat, saddlebags, no road-rash, blue paint. For information call Ed. 360-681-2334 HARLEY DAVIDSON ‘02 883 Hugger. 6K, like new, maroon. $4,800. 457-4020. Harley Davidson 1993 Wideglide, custom wheels, lots of extras. $15,000. 477-3670

LIVINGSTON: Model 12-T Resort. Seats, 2 motors, console, galvanized trailer. $6,800. 681-8761. MALIBU: ‘96 Response. 514 hrs., heater, shower, custom Bimini top. $11,500/ obo. 928-9461. LONG DISTANCE No Problem! Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

HARLEY DAVIDSON 2000 "FATBOY" 4100 original miles, black, nice and lots of chrome. Call Bill Schlichting at 360565-2333 or 360457-8511.

WILDER TOYOTA

94

11/22/10

B O D Y C A M I L L E M U R O

R B H A D I T A M A R A S E O

E R Y N M I S D N I M N S T D

© 2010 Universal Uclick

M E L C A S V N S A I M R S M

Solution: 7 letters

E N I I A I Y A E G A G E Y A

N N M F W S N T D R N M D M N

Y A E I S O E O I I O D T G O

www.wonderword.com

H N L T S O H A S T A F A O S

T O L N W R L S I R N L P T H

R S E E E N I V E Y E E E T P

A N H I E M E R E G L F D L E

H A C C T N I L N O C L F I S

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S S M A R G O L O H T O O B J

11/22

Adams, Addy, Angela, Billy, Body, Booth, Brennan, Bureau, Camille, Case, Conlin, David, Emily, Eric, Forensic, Goodman, Gottlieb, Hanson, Hart, Hodgins, Holograms, Identity, Jeffersonian, John, Josephson, Maria, Michelle, Mind, Missing, Motive, Mystery, Red Tape, Reichs, Russ, Scientific, Show, Solve, Sweets, Tamara, Team, Thyne, Zacharoni, ZMan Yesterday’s Answer: Frames

Friday’s Puzzle Solved

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by Mike Argirion and Jeff Knurek

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

PRUCO ©2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

YLSYH (c)2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

34 Cyclo- ending 35 Shopper’s delight 37 Persistence 38 “Norma __” 39 iPhone downloads 41 Wizened “Star Wars” guru 42 Interstate speed limit, often 43 Bemoan 44 __ razor: logical simplicity rule

Motorcycles

HARLEY DAVIDSON ‘50 Panhead Basketcase. Fresh motor, title in hand. $7,500. 457-6174 HARLEY: ‘05 Soft Tail Deluxe. Glacier white, vivid black, 2,000 mi. 1450 ST1 EFI, bags, chrome foot boards, sport rack, back rest, lots of chrome, much gear included garaged. $17,500. 460-0895.

HD: ‘05 Electra Glide Ultra Classic. Black cherry/black pearl, 10,850 miles. One owner, garage kept. Screamin' Eagle and Tall Boy package. never down or in rain. Excellent condition! $15,900. 360-461-4222 HD: ‘06 1200 Sportster. 7K miles, mint, extras. $7,900. 452-6677 HONDA: ‘85 Goldwing Aspencade GL 1200. Black and chrome, like new condition, always garaged. $4,000. 417-0153. HONDA: ‘99 XR400. All stock, low hrs., good tires, new graphics. $1,700. 461-1202 KAWASAKI: ‘03 KX125. 2 stroke, exc. cond., hardly ridden, must go. $2,200/ obo. 452-5290. KAWASAKI: ‘00 Vulcan 800. Mustang seat, also has stock seat, K&N air filter, new chain and rear sprocket, 29K miles. $2,000. 206-913-7906 KAWASAKI: ‘03 KLX 400. Very clean. Low miles. $2,500/obo. 461-7210

QAUD: ‘05 POLARIS PHEONIX 200. Red, automatic, approx. 5-10 riding hours, Like new $2,300. 360-460-5982 QUAD: ‘04 Honda 250 EX Sportrax. Low mi. $2,200. 683-2107. QUAD: ‘06 Eton 150. Low hrs. good condition. Daughter’s quad. $1,800/obo. 461-7210 QUAD: ‘06 Suzuki Quad Sport Z250. Like new. $2,600 firm. 360-452-3213. RHINO: ‘09 Yamaha 700. Fuel injected. Great condition. Low miles. $9,500/obo. 417-3177 SCOOTER: Aero Honda 80, runs well. $450. Ken at 928-9410

94

Motorcycles

11/20/10

45 __-jongg 46 Hundred bucks 47 Make amends (for) 48 Texas Rangers president Ryan 51 Often sarcastic joke response 52 In a frenzy 53 Mlle., in Madrid 54 Exploitative type 55 Swiss capital 59 Abu Dhabi’s fed.

95

Recreational Vehicles

5TH WHEEL: ‘88 25’ Alpenlite. $7,000. 457-4914 CAMPER: 8’. $200/ obo. 683-2426. SUZUKI: ‘05 Boulevard (S50). Very nice, well maintained. Gray, saddlebag hardware, great bike for smaller people. 14K miles. Garage stored. $3,500/obo. 460-0012 or jbgoode1017@hotmail .com

HERE’S THE DEAL Buy my 29’ Pace Arrow with 57K miles on it, general power pack, Monroe shocks, stabilizers, hydraulic levelers, air conditioning, 16’ awning. Price $3,500 then trade on new bus for about $8,000 Ken at 928-9410.

SUZUKI: ‘98 Maurder. 800cc, 1 owner, FMC, D&H pipes, custom seat, cruise, sissy bar, billett mirrors, 15K. Great entry cruiser. $2,500. 360-457-6510

MOTOR HOME: ‘05 Winnebago Journey 39K. 27,000 mi., loaded, 3-sides, 350 Cat diesel, 6.5 Onan generator. $115,000. 460-0895

TRIKE: ‘08 Suzuki Burgman 400 CC. Looks and runs like new. Very stable. $6,500/obo. 683-6079

MOTOR HOME: ‘89 21’ Winnebago Warrior. New tires and refrigerator. $8,000. 360-681-7614

TRIUMPH: ‘05 Bonaville. 1,000 mi., extras. $5,500. 460-6780

MOTOR HOME: ‘92 23’ Itasca. 30K, good condition. $11,500. 452-2162.

URAL: ‘03 Wolfe. 1,000 mi. $3,200. 460-0895 YAMAHA: ‘03 V-Star 1100. Excellent condition, windshield, bags, air kit, crash bars, 15K mi. $4,300. 452-7184.

YAMAHA: ‘03 YZ85. Runs great, son outgrown, $800. 360-457-0913 or 360-461-9054

95

Recreational Vehicles

MOTOR HOME: ‘92 37’ Infinity. Beautiful country coach. Home on wheels. Immaculate inside and out. Great home for snow birds or for travel. Has all the bells and whistles. Must see to appreciate. $40,000/obo. 460-1071 MOTOR HOME: ‘93 30’ Monterey. Loaded $9,500. 797-1625 MOTOR HOME: ‘94 28’ Minnie Winnie. Class C, good shape. $10,000. 457-8912, 670-3970

95

NEEXTT

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

A: A

Recreational Vehicles

Parts/ Accessories

CAR TRAILER: 16’ enclosed. Tandem axles, winch, electric brakes, side door, rear clam shell doors with ramps, equalizer hitch, battery, inside dimension: 80” tall, 74” wide. Ideal for Model A or Model T Ford or similar. Bargain at $2,250. 360-683-8133 PARTING OUT: ‘89 Toyota Celica automatic. $5-$500. 683-7516 STUDDED TIRES: (4), Cooper 215/60 R16, nearly new. $200. 683-8833 TIRES/WHEELS: (4) Michelin all season (snow/mud) low miles, one season, 225/60/18, Dodge Charger wheels, 18” caps, lug nuts, polished. $1,000 for all. 683-7789 TOOL BOX + Craftsman 3 piece, 16 drawer tool box, great shape, $100. S-10 2” dropped spindles, $75. Firestone Wilderness LT 265/70 R16, $350. and Firestone FR710 235/55 R17, $250. All like new. 360-452-9876 WHEELS: (4) 16”, 8 hole Chev truck. $60. 683-8833

97

4 Wheel Drive

BUICK: ‘04 Rainier. V8, AWD, leather, 87K, premium sound, wheels, all power. $12,800. 460-3037 ‘03 Newmar Dutch Star. 40’, 3 slides, 6 speed Allison Trans. micro/conv. oven, 3 burner cooktop, sliding shelf pantry, 2 Sony flatscreen TVs, Sony AM/FM/CD, VCR, Sat. Dome, computer/printer table, light oak interior, washer/dryer hookup, 6 kw generator, leveling system, solar battery charger, low mileage (22k), gently used, non smokers. $117,000. 360-683-3887

MOTOR HOME: ‘98 26’ Tioga Class C. Gen., A/C, kept in garage, V10. $15,500. 457-7097. MOTOR HOME: ‘98 30’ class C, Itaska Spirit. Ford V10, 35K miles, 14’ slide, sleeps 6, alum frame, new brakes/tires, mech. perfect, serviced, ready to roll. $20,500. 452-2148. TENT TRAILER: ‘07 8’ Rockwood. Very clean. $5,000. 360-452-5512 TRAILER: ‘06 26’ Jayco. Excellent condition, extras. Reduced price. $13,000. 477-3695.

5TH WHEEL: '01 36' Cardinal by Forrest River. Fully equipped home. 3 slides, 3 axles, 2 AC, Trailaire pin box, hydraulic brakes, Alum rims. Retail $35,000 asking $26,000 w/ or w/o tow vehicle. 582-0803

Yesterday’s

WANTED TO BUY Car tow dolly. 360-701-2767

96

NEW BIBLE Jumble Books Go To: http://www.tyndale.com/jumble/

C6

CHEV ‘06 TRAILBLAZER LS 4X4 Just in time for winter, 6 cylinder, auto, air, tilt, cruise, power windows, locks, and mirrors, AM/FM CD, roof rack, alloy wheels, tow package and more! “0” down financing available with rates as low as 3.85% O.A.C. One week clearance special! $6,000 under Kelley Blue Book! Expires 11-27-2010. $8,995 We Finance Dave Barnier Auto Sales 452-6599 davebarnier.com

TRAILER: ‘72 Sportsmaster 20’ living space and tongue. Good condition. $3,000/obo. 775-7504

CHEV: ‘02 Trailblazer LTZ. Low mi., all power, air, leather, new tires/brakes, Bose audio & more. Low book. $9,250. 460-4765

TRAILER: ‘05 Tahoe Transport Toy Hauler. 24’. Good condition. 4K Onan generator. $17,000. 417-3177.

CHEV: ‘97 1/2 ton extended cab, 3 doors, short bed, 80K mi. $5,000. 406-381-9362

(Answers tomorrow) QUAKE MOSAIC PUMICE Jumbles: DUMPY Answer: When prices are knocked down, bargains are — PICKED UP

97

4 Wheel Drive

CHEV: ‘02 Club Cab. Long bed. 4WD. Loaded. 44,000 mi., $15,500. 452-8713. CHEV: ‘86 Suburban. Good condition. 3rd seat, extra full set wheels. Nice white paint exterior, tan interior. $2,500/ obo. 360-374-6409. CHEV: ‘88 S-10 4x4. As is. $1,000. 457-9292

CHEV: ‘90 Suburban 4 WD 2500. Low miles, auto, good tires, straight body 4WD, V8, clean inter, no rips, tow pkg runs great. Heavy bumper w/winch. $3,500. Forks 360-374-9512. DODGE ‘03 DAKOTA SLT 4 DOOR QUAD CAB 4.7 liter V8, auto, 4x4, air, cruise, tile, AM/FM CD, power windows and locks, slier, privacy glass, matching canopy, spray on bedliner, tow package, running boards, alloy wheels, fog lamps, privacy glass, very clean and reliable local trade, nonsmoker. $7,995 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com DODGE: ‘02 Ram 1500. 85K miles, lifted, canopy, 5.9 V8, new tires. $12,000. 477-5556 FORD ‘02 F250 SUPER CAB LONG BED LARIAT 4X4 7.3 liter powerstroke diesel, auto, alloy wheels, running boards, spray-in bedliner, tow package, airbags, trailer brake controller, BD exhaust brake, 4” ATS exhaust, winch bumper with brushguard, 12,000 lb warn winch, diamond plate toolbox, driving lights, keyless entry, power windows, locks, mirrors, and drivers seat, leather heated seats, adjustable pedals, CB radio, 6 CD stacker stereo, information center, cruise, tilt, air, dual front airbags. Only 64,000 miles! Immaculate condition! Loaded with all the options and lots of accessories! None nicer! $21,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com FORD: ‘09 F150 4x4. XLT super cab, 15K mi. $26,500. 360-765-4599

97

4 Wheel Drive

CHEV: ‘70 3/4 Ton. $850. 360-434-4056. FORD: ‘85 Bronco. Sat. radio, 33” tires. $1,300. 640-8996. FORD: ‘88 F250 111K mi., 4x4. $3,000/obo. 808-5605 FORD: ‘92 Aerostar. Loaded, Eddie Bauer model. Excellent in and out. $1,800. 360-683-5871 FORD: ‘97 F150. 5.4, new tires, trans, batt. Clean. $6,500/obo. 360-681-2643 GET READY FOR WINTER All WD, great in snow, ‘99 Oldsmobile Bravada. Leather, loaded, 129K, exc. cond. $6,299. 928-2181, 461-6273 GMC ‘99 DENALI V-8 4x4, 128K, tow ready. Power locks, windows, seats, mirrors, gray leather. The Other Guys Auto and Truck setting the standards in buy here pay here! Lowest in house financing rates! $8,995. The Other Guys Auto and Truck Center 360-417-3788 GMC: ‘01 3/4 Sierra. Trailer tow, 4 wheel push button, air, electric brakes, 84K. Nice. See to believe. Canopy, boat rack, 1 owner. $9,950. 360-457-6572 or 360-565-1007 HONDA ‘07 CR-V ALL WD SPORT UTILITY 2.4 liter i-VTEC 4 cylinder, auto, keyless entry, power windows, locks, mirrors, cruise, tilt, air, MP3, CD stereo, dual front, side impact, and side curtain airbags, Kelley Blue Book value of $19,750! Only 43,000 miles! Immaculate condition inside and out! Stop by Gray Motors today and save! $14,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

HONDA: ‘01 Passport. 79K mi., V6, auto, tinted windows, cd/am/fm, ac, airbags, runs well, good cond., new trans. from Midway, silver. $5,400/obo. 360477-1072 msg. or email: sjones.interest@gma il.com. ISUZU: ‘91 Trooper. Runs good, new tires. $1,500/obo. 670-6041 ISUZU: ‘98 Rodeo. 4x4, leather seats, sunroof, new trans., new tires. $4,000. 457-7766 or 452-2602 ext 2.

97

4 Wheel Drive

NISSAN: ‘08 Frontier King Cab. V6 4x4, 24K mi., silver ext. matching canopy, bedliner, auto windows-locks, remote ent, cruise, CD, oversize tires, below KBB val of $20,425. Records avail., no accidents. Very clean. $18,600. Call 360-670-1400 TOYOTA ‘00 TUNDRA SR5 4 DOOR ACCESS CAB TRD off road package, 4.7 liter V8, auto, 4x4, air, cruise, tilt, power windows and locks, AM/FM CD/cassette, slider, privacy glass, matching canopy, tow package, spray on bedliner, step bars, alloy wheels, fog lamps, very clean local trade, 1 owner non-smoker. $7,995 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com TOYOTA ‘01 SEQUOIA SR5 V-8 automatic, 4x4. Third row seating, gray cloth. Nice, nice, nice! The Other Guys Auto and Truck serving the community since 1996! Military discounts! Lowest buy here pay here interest rates! $12,995. The Other Guys Auto and Truck Center 360-417-3788 TOYOTA: ‘96 4-Runner, SR5, loa-ded, gold and wood package, sunroof, Pioneer sound, 12disc changer, 154k miles, $7,000/obo. 360-417-0223

98

Pickups/Vans

BOX TRUCK: ‘00 GMC. 12’ box, runs great. $10,500/obo. 582-9006 CHEV: ‘89 1/2 ton. ‘350’ V8, auto, nice. $2,000. 681-7632. CHEV: ‘38 Pickup. All original, garaged, needs rear end. $15,000. Only serious buyers please. 457-3990, 775-1139 CHEV: ‘47 pickup. 5 window, 80% restored. Illness forces sale. $7,000/obo. 457-7097 CHEV: ‘84 S10 pickup. Excel. rebuilt motor. Good body. Needs paint job. $1,845. 360-6835682, 541-980-5210. FORD: ‘70 heavy duty 3/4 ton. Runs great, new tow pkg. $900/ obo. 417-3959. FORD: ‘78 F350. Super cab, trailer special, 460 C6, 3 speed auto. Call for added features. Best offer over $2,000. 360-302-0844


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

99

3

POINT HITCH: 6’ heavy duty backblade, $200. 457-7057

45S: Box-full, good stuff. $15. 452-0569. AIR COMPRESSOR 105 psi, 4.5 hp, 250’ hoses, wall reel. $195. 379-0244. AIR COMPRESSOR Craftman,12 gal, 3 HP. $100/obo. 681-3339. AIR NAILER: Senco angle finish. $125. 775-0420 AIR PURIFIER Family Care, like new. $60 firm. 681-0721. ALBUMS: (140) ‘60s. $.25 ea/$20 all/obo. 452-7125 ANCHOR: 27lbs Danforth, w/50’ chain. $100. 808-7165. ANTIQUE Movie camera: DeVry 35 mm crank/spring operated $200. 683-0904 AQUARIUM: 20 Gal, w/pump/filter/hood/li ght, no heater. $30. 477-3603 AQUARIUMS: 20 and 30 gal. ea. $20 ea. 452-9685 BATH TUB: White cast iron, 5’x2.5’, good condition. $50. 681-3512 BBQ: Gas, with new burners and grill, with cover. $50. 360-379-9300 BEATLES 45S: (6) $3 ea. 452-0569. BED LINER: For truck, slide in, fits full size. $35. 683-2914. BED: Full size, rollaway. $25. 928-9705 BICYCLE: Girls 20” Malibu Stardom, red with white stripes. $35. 360-224-7800. BICYCLE: Men’s Schwinn 10 speed, good shape. $75. 683-2914 BICYCLE: Raliegh Chill Mt, nice shape, 18 speed. $50. 457-5002 BICYCLE: Trek 2100 road, 18-sp good condition, odometer. $75. 457-5002. BIKE RACK: Revolver style 2 bike rack for 2” receiver hitch. $200. 457-5002. BIKE: 20” Redline, like new. $60. 928-9645 BIKE: Girls 24” Roadmaster, 18 speed mountain bike. $35. 477-3603 BIKE: Men’s, Expedition size L, like new. $200. 582-9485. BIKE: Women’s, Trex type M, like new. $200. 582-9485. BLANKETS: (4) Baby. $45 ea. 437-7706. BOOK: “Birth of Western Civ.” Greece/ Rome, 1964 1st ed. $50. 417-1346. BOOK: Elvis album, 10”x13”, 1” thick. $20. 457-6343. BOOKS: (7) Harry Potter hardback, full set. $69. 360-224-7800 BOOKS: All recent fiction, read once. $3 each. 565-1062. BOOTS: Mountaineer Koflach soft-light size 9.5, used 2x. $65. 775-0420. BOWFLEX: XTL with lat attachment. $175. 808-4952 CAMP STOVE: Propane. 2 burner, broiler, reg., hose. $50. 452-7721. CAR SEAT: For age 47, bonus lawnchair. $10. 452-1277. CD Brain Training Games by Posit Science. $150. 681-5214 CD: Brain Training Games by Posit Science. $150. 681-5214 CEDAR HOPE CHEST: Lane, 1948, blond wood, $190. 683-4912 CHAIR: Antique, quaint design. $30. 683-3891 CHAIR: Rattan, with footstool, new condition. $75. 452-9893. CHEST: Approx 2’x 2’x3’, black. $10. 452-7125 CHINA: setting for 8, extra pieces, 1951 “Cindy” pattern, $175. 683-4912. CHRISTMAS LIGHTS 4 new sets of 25 ea. $15. 457-5720.

98

Pickups/Vans

FORD: ‘95 F150 XLE Ext cab, 8’ bed w/lockable lid, 66k, auto w/o/d, full power, 351 Winsor tow pkg, always garaged, very very clean, below book @ $6,000. 683-8133.

CHRISTMAS TREE 7.5’ pre-lit, used 2x. $50. 457-2861. CHRISTMAS TREE: 7.5 in box, never used. Pre lit/ decorated. $60. 681-2006 CLOTHES: 12 mo. old girl, gently used. $1 to $5 ea or $60 for all. 417-5159. CLOTHES: 18 mo. old girl, gently used. $1 to $5 ea or $50 for all. 417-5159. COFFEE TABLE Ikea. $30. 457-1392. Collector Plates $10/obo. 928-3464 COMFORTER: White goose down, 102x 86”, fits queen/king. $30. 457-3274. COMMODORE 64 system compelte with cables, monitor. $40. 360-775-7048. DESK: Metal executive style. $50. 681-2282 DESK: Secretary, mahogany wood, 6’x3’ with a 3’ return. $200. 379-9354. DINING SET: 8pc set, dishes, matching silverware. $45. 775-5840 DINING SET: For 8, $40. Matching silver serving set, $10. Both, $45. 775-5840 DISHWASHER White, GE, 3 yrs old. $100. 452-2026 DISPLAY: Rotating case, locks, lots of room. $100. 360-385-1628 DOLL: Brandy 1996, still in box. $25. 457-4383 DOORS: Wrangler, half, almost new. $150/obo. 670-2487. DRESSER: 6-drawer. $30. 928-9705. DRILL PRESS: Detta 8”, model Dp113. $85. 385-1628. DRYER: HD Whirlpool, 7 yrs. old, used once. $150. 417-8074 DVD: Toshiba, excellent condition. $30/obo. 360-963-2122 ECLIPTICAL TRAINER $200. 461-7098. ENT. CENTER Oak, glass doors, bookshelves. $100. 452-2026 ENT. CENTER Oak. $50. 360-452-2026 ENTERTAINMENT CENTER Pine armoire style. $75. 808-1767. EXERCISE AIR BIKE: $35. 417-5515. FILE BOXES: Oak. Good condition. $25 ea. Sequim. 457-3573 FISH TANK: Saltwater, 80 gal., pump, lights, stand, extras. $100. 477-1264. FISHING REEL Newell P344-M, for saltwater trolling. $100. 683-2639 FLUTE: Selmer, w/ case. $100. 457-5817 FOOD DEHYDRATOR Magic Chef, 5 tray. $20. 683-7435. FORD: ‘87 Ranger. 5 speed, 2WD. $200/ obo. 670-6851. FREE: 35” TV with stand, grt pic. 681-4953 FREE: Austin Air purifier, used once, needs filter. 360-385-4561 FREE: Mattress, calking extra firm, clean. 457-1994, mornings. FREE: Power lawn mower, needs tuneup. 360-385-4561. FREE: Upright piano, you move, Sequim. 582-1018 FRIG/FREEZER Magic Chef, 5’x29”x 27”. $50. 457-6907. GOLF CLUBS: Complete set, bag, Golden Bear. $45. 360-452-1277 GPS: TOM TOM Eclipse CD/navigation, in dash/portable. $100. 477-2324. GUITAR CASE: Hard Ovation, soft interior, new. $50. 457-1361. GUITAR: Celebrity Ovation Acoustic/ electric. $175. 605-280-0551 HELMET: Youth, Vega. $5. 452-7125.

98

Pickups/Vans

FORD: ‘90 F250. Ext. cab, long box, 48,660 mi., new HD service brakes, set up for 5th wheel, excellent condition. $5,500. 796-4929. FORD: ‘95 Windstar. 7 pass, excellent, 127K. $2,400. 681-7418

GUITAR: Left-handed, Mitchell acoustic, nice. $100. 417-1346 GUN SAFE: Holds 8 rifles. $100. 360-582-9758 HAT: Beautiful red hat. Never worn. Great for red Hat Society. $25. 417-2135. HIGH CHAIR Everylo. $30. 683-4322 JACKET: Dark gray 80% wool, medium, woman, never worn. $45. 452-2739. JEANS: (3) 38x30. $10 ea. 452-5838. JEANS: 501s 42x36, $15. Morrisons 40x 36, $15. 452-5838. JEANS: Women’s size 12, 13, 14. $2 a pair/obo. 928-3464. KEYBOARD: Casio digital, used twice. $200. 683-6433. LAMP: Brass, table, esthetic design w/ shade. $50. 360-379-4154 LANCOME: Lip gloss trio with sterling rose bracelet, new. $15. 457-1392 LEGOS: 5 lbs Assorted, Mars Mission, Star Wars, etc. $30. 417-1636 LOVE SEAT: Both sides recline, gray, good condition. $100. 457-4847. MASSAGE TABLE $200. 460-8175. Metal Detector Garrett Ace 250, new. $125/obo. 460-0430. Mini Refrigerator 4.4 cf. $100. 808-7165 MISC: 7” jointer/planer. 42” table, w/ stands, never used. $200. 681-3339. MISC: Cord organ, $20 Twin bed frame, $20. Storage boxes, $20. 457-9179. MISC: New 16” bike, $20. Truck Chains, $20. Car Chains, $20. 457-1306. MISC: Nightstand, oak TV stand and end table. $20 ea. 452-9685 M I S C : O v e r s t u ff e d sofa, chair. Blue/white plaid. $15 ea/$25 both. 477-3603. MISC: Stair climber, $50. Full size bed with frame, $100. 460-8175 MISC: Teapot, creamer, sugar, Wedgewood Jasperware. $75. 683-9295. MISC: X-mas tree, 3’, plus lights, etc. $10. 457-6343 MISC: Yakima space booster roof box, excel cond. $150. 681-3375 Motorcycle Jacket Leather. $45. 452-2739 MOVIE PROJECTOR: 8mm Bell & Howell, extra reels. $200. 683-0904 NORDICFLEX: UltraLift exercise machine with many extras. $200. 360-379-9300. PANT COAT: Red, size 10, never worn. $65. 457-5720. PANTS: (3) New Levi’s. button fly 501’s, 34x31. $50. 457-2050 PERCH: On wheels, white, climbing ladder, pull out pan. $50. 683-8814. PET CARRIERS: (2) $5 ea. 452-7125. PISTOL: Crosman 1377 hand pump air gun w/rifle stock. $25. 457-4971. PLANTER BOX Cedar, 3x1’. $50/ obo. 360-775-6331. PLANTER: Cowboy boots by McCoy Pottery. $30. 683-9295 PRESSURE COOKER Antique, works. $40/obo. 683-7435. PROPANE HEATER $200. 206-941-6617. PURSE: Hobo bag by Stone Mountain, tags. $100/obo. 452-1473 RANGE: Electric. $60. 928-9645 RECLINE: Brown fabric La-z-Boy, well used. $25. 477-3603. RECLINER: Ladies, swivel rocker, rust color, excel. cond. $55. 457-0960.

98

Pickups/Vans

GM: ’92 Gladiator conversion van. 350, auto, 140K, runs/ looks good! $3,500. 452-5522 MAZDA: ‘86 B2000, 5 sp, canopy, bed liner. $700/obo. 460-7974.

PLUMBING VAN: ‘02 Ford, job site ready, plus extra plumbing parts, 28K orginial mi. $20,000/obo. 360-385-2773 MAGIC RAINBOW HAPPY BUS 1973 Volkswagon Transporter $1,500/obo Not Camper Style Runs, Some Rust. Call: 360-797-3951

99

Cars

FORD: ‘79 Flatbed. Runs good. $2,000/ obo. 683-0940.

MAZDA: ‘88 B2200. Runs good. $1,000/ obo. 582-7486. FORD: Step Van. One of a Kind, Endless Possibilities, Solid. 40k on a thrifty Cummins diesel; great tires; new battery; no rust. Food truck? Contractor? RV conversion? Only $4,000/obo. 360-820-2157

Remote Controls DirecTV, spare or replacement, new. $16 ea. 460-0430. RIMS: 4 slotted chrome, 4”x7”, 5hole, Ford. $40. 681-3375 SAUSAGE STUFFER Dakota, like new. $70. 683-0709. SCHOOL DESK: Old, cute. $25. 928-9705. SHOES: Men’s Dr. Marten boots, sz 9, excellent cond. $30. 457-1361 SKI MACHINE: NordicTrack ProPlus. Near-new condition. $195 firm. 457-3642. SKIS: Volant, w/Marker binding, Kerma poles, great cond. $150. 457-5002. STAND: OB motor stand for storing motor/wood, sturdy. $20. 457-5002. STEM WALL Spreader cleats. Box of 100+. Clean. $5. 360-775-7048 STEREO: Panasonic portable, cassette/ CD, radio. $40. 457-3274 STORAGE CABINETS: (2). White, 6’ and 4’. $25 each. Sequim. 457-3573. STOVE: Electric Whirlpool, works great! $150/obo. 461-3337 STOVE: Electric, GE, 4-burner, single oven 30” wide. $100. 457-6907 STUDDED TIRES: (4) like new, 205/60 R16 $100. 460-1638. TABLE SAW: 8” Craftsman w/adjustable. $45. 457-4971. TABLE SAW: Rockwell Contractors. $150/obo. 670-6851. TABLE: Oval oak, 4 chairs, w/extension. $100. 452-2026. TAPE RECORDER High-end Sony. $150 cash/obo. 683-2639. TIME COVERS (1000+) ‘54-’77. $100. 681-5492 “TIME” COVERS: Over 1000 plus extras. $100. 681-5492 TIRE CHAINS: New. $50. 379-9354. TIRES: (3) P215/70 R15 studs w/wheels. $25 ea. 457-5817. TIRES: (4) 16” studded/snow, on rims. $75. 452-5843. TIRES: (4) P205 /65 R15 studded, $50. (4) LT 225/75 R16, $50. 457-7057. TIRES: (4) Uniroyal, P235 70R15. $100. 670-8606 TIRES: P195-75R-14. 6 lug. $50. 683-3165 TOOL BOX Delta, for mid size pickup. $200. 461-7098 TOWING MIRRORS Slide on, $35. Telescopic, $75. 457-1306 TRAILER: 5th Wheel 35’ Holiday Rambler, definite fixer! U-haul. $200. 417-1100. TREE: 7.5’ artificial tree, prelit, one light string out. $25. 477-3603 TRUNK: Antique, very nice. $75. 683-3891. TUMPET LAMP 1930s. $60. 681-0721. TV: 27” RCA, wood cabinet, excellent condition. $25. 683-6950 TV: 32” RCA, need to downsize. $25. 605-280-0551 UNIVERSAL GYM $75. 460-8175. VACUUM: Kirby, works great. $50/obo. 670-6442 WALL MOUNT: For up to 30” flat screen TV, new. $5. 452-7125 WASHER/DRYER Whirlpool, Set. $200/ obo. 360-379-9300. WASHER: HD Whirlpool, 7 yrs. old, used once. $200. 417-8074 WASHING MACHINE Amana, super clean. $75. 452-7721. WOOD STOVE: $200. 206-941-6617 WOODEN DESK $30. 461-4846. YARD ART Collector, milk and cream separator. $50. 417-5515

TOYOTA: ‘03 Tundra, 93,000 miles, V8, 4x4, access cab, leer canopy, great condition, $14,000/obo. Call 360-448-1440 for more details.

ANOTHER AWESOME CAR FOR SALE! FORD: ‘56 2 door post. Close to original, excellent condition, 2 tone paint green and white, Manual 3 speed, 6 cyl. $8,500/obo. Call Joe. 360-6833408 or 360-4611619. BMW: ‘96 328i. 180K mi., new tranny, runs great, needs some body work. $2,700/ obo. 206-272-0220.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Commercial Printing Services 417-3520

Cars

99

Cars

BUICK: ‘97 LaSabre. Excellent codntion, 1 owner. $4,700. 683-6051 after 4 p.m.

CHEV: ‘76 Suburban. 454, 143K, runs good. $800/obo. 360-681-2427

BUICK: ‘99 Regal. Leather interior, moon roof, good condition. $2,800. 457-9038

CHEV: ‘88 Camaro. Project car, running, licensed, with ‘90 Camaro parts car. $1,200/obo. 928-3863

CADILLAC: ’92 Sedan Deville. 144K, 4.9L, auto, runs/ looks good. $2,750/ obo. 452-5522.

CHEV: ‘90 Cavalier. Auto, 2 door coupe. $900. 683-8249.

CADILLAC: ‘92 SeVille. Exc. shape, good mpg, new tires. $3,000/obo. 452-5406 CADILLAC: ‘66 Sedan Deville. All original, 63K mi. $3,800. 360-797-4497 CADILLAC: ‘85 Eldorado Commemorative Edition. Excellent condition, spoke wheels, loaded, no rust, always garaged, beautiful blue, 30K miles on new motor; 112K total miles. $2,900. 360-477-4817 CADILLAC: ‘91 Sedan Deville. Good condition, loaded. $900/obo. 457-3425. CHEV ‘08 COBALT LT COUPE Very economical 2.2 liter 4 cylinder, auto, air, cruise, tilt, AM/FM CD, power windows and locks, keyless entry, side airbags, rear spoiler, only 40,000 miles, non-smoker, spotless Carfax report, balance of factory 5/100 warranty, just reduced! $9,995 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com

CHEV: ‘78 Corvette Silver Anniversary Edition. Fully restored interior and exterior. Silver twotone paint with sport striping. L48 automatic. Runs excellent. $18,500. 425-888-4306 or 425-941-4246

DODGE: 93 Stealth RT. Great condition, only 2 owners, no accidents, 129K mi., AWD, 5 sp., all power, awesome stereo, CD changer and battery. $3,000. Chris 360-732-4514 DODGE: ‘95 Intrepid. 4 door, white, less than 36K mi., like new, original owner. $4,000. 452-3591. FORD ‘01 TAURUS SE 4 DOOR Extra clean, V6, auto, air, tilt, cruise, power windows, locks, mirrors, and seat, AM/FM CD, alloy wheels and more! One week special. Expires 11-27-2010. $3,995 We Finance Dave Barnier Auto Sales 452-6599 davebarnier.com FORD ‘06 TAURUS SE 4 DOOR Economical 3.0 liter V6, auto, air, cruise, tilt, AM/FM CD, power windows, locks, and seat, keyless entry, ABS, only 30,000 miles, beautiful 1 owner corporate lease return, nonsmoker, spotless Carfax report. $8,995 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com FORD: ’62 Thunderbird Coupe. Mostly all restored, approx. $30,000 put into it. $15,900/obo. 460-0401, 582-9597 FORD: 1929 Model “A”. Roadster, 10 footer. $17,500 firm. 681-5403 FORD: ‘53 2 door sedan. 35K mi. $2,900. 457-9329.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2010

99

Cars

HONDA: ‘06 Civic. 67,000 mi., 2 door coupe, clean, white with black/ gray interior. $10,000/obo 460-0845 HONDA: ‘88 Accord. 2 door, auto, $1,800/ obo. 452-8663. HYUNDAI ‘04 ELANTRA GLS SEDAN 2.0 liter 16 valve 4 cylinder, auto, power windows, locks, and mirrors, cruise, tilt, air, cassette stereo, dual front and side impact airbags. Kelley Blue Book value of $6,215! Clean and straight! Great fuel economy! $4,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

HYUNDAI: ‘86 Excel. 4 door hatchback Only 55,000 miles, new exhaust, excellent gas mileage, runs great, in good shape. Only 2 owners (in family). $2,500/obo. 457-4866 LINCOLN: ‘63 Continental. Partially restored, suicide doors, runs. $2,750. 457-0272 LINCOLN: ‘87 Towncar Signature Series. Leather interior, power doors, windows, sunroof, low miles, grandpa car, excellent condition. $3,300. 452-9693 eves.

CHEV: ’70 Chevelle. Big block wagon, new paint, tires, more. $5,500/obo. No reasonable offer refused. 417-1896. CHEV: ‘72 Vega GT 350 4-bolt main, 335 hp, 350 trans, B&M built, 25K since mods, ‘71 Vega wagon parts car too. $7,500/obo. 774-0915 CHEV: ‘75 Corvette Stingray. Must sell, 350, matching #s, 149k original miles, rebuilt turbo, 400 tran, rebuilt rear end, all new suspension, front and rear sway bar, turbo hood and stock hood. $6,500 or make offer. 670-1440 CHRYSLER ‘06 PACIFICA ALL WD WAGON 3.5 liter V6, auto, all wheel drive, air, cruise, tilt, AM/FM CD, power windows, locks, and seats, keyless entry, privacy glass, alloy wheels, only 39,000 miles, very, very clean 1 owner corporate lease return, non-smoker, spotless Carfax report. $13,995 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com

Classic Olds. 78' Olds Cutlass Supreme Brougham. 86,000 miles, V8, sunroof, garage kept. few minor parking lot dings. Excellent condition. Runs well. 1 owner. interior in excellent condition. $11,000/obo. 360-683-9770

105

Legals General

FORD: ‘90 Tempo. Runs great. 129K miles. 20-25 mpg. $900. 360-775-4854. FORD: ‘92 Crown Victoria. Runs and looks great, 83K. $2,800/ obo. 683-2542.

FORD: ‘92 Mustang Convertible. Awesome care for sale! White with white top, 85,000 original miles. $3,800/obo. Call Joe at: 360-683-3408 or 360-461-1619. GEO ‘93 PRIZM 4 DOOR 4 cylinder, 5 speed, air, tilt, wheel, AM/FM CD, and more! Expires 11-272010. $3,995 We Finance Dave Barnier Auto Sales 452-6599 davebarnier.com

101

Legals Clallam Co.

The Housing Authority is seeking a qualified consultant to complete the conversion of the Authority’s IT systems to a new agency-wide integrated system and to coordinate training/ technical assistance. Proposal documents are available on the web at http:// www.hacchousing.org/Opportunitiespage.html Response to this solicitation must be submitted by November 30, 2010 to be considered. Pub: Nov. 21, 22, 2010

105

Legals General

NO 10-4-06133-6SEA PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.030) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KING In Re the Estate of JEANNE E. KRAMER, Deceased. The Administrator with Will Annexed named below has been appointed as Administrator with Will Annexed of this Estate. Any person having a claim against Decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving or mailing to the Administrator with Will Annexed or the Administrator’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of (1) Thirty days after the Administrator with Will Annexed served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented with 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 Decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Date of first publication: Nov. 8, 2010 Administrator with Will Annexed: Michael Lynch Attorney for the Personal Representative: John E. Ederer Address for Mailing or Service: John E. Ederer Helsell Fetterman LLP 1001 Fourth Avenue, Suite 4200 Seattle, WA 98154 Notice Prepared by: HELSELL FETTERMAN LLP JOHN E. EDERER, WSBA #343 Attorney for the Administrator with Will Annexed 1001 Fourth Avenue, Suite 4200 Seattle, Washington 98154 Telephone No. (206) 292-1144 Facsimile No. (206) 340-0902 Pub: Nov. 8, 15, 22, 2010

Cars

MERCURY: ‘00 Sable LS Wagon. 3rd seat, leather interior, sunroof, alloy wheels, new tires. $4,400. 360-460-0385 MERCURY: ‘07 Mountaineer. AWD, 4L V6, loaded, 7 passenger, tow pkg., excellent condition, 53K, $21,000+ KBB. $18,000. 530-4120854 or 683-4062. MERCURY: ‘91 Pacer. 140K mi., runs, looks good. $795. 681-8828 MERCURY: ‘92 Grand Marquis. Fully loaded, new tires, smooth ride, maroon with cloth interior. $950 firm. 452-3537.

MINI COOPER: ‘05. White, 103,000 miles, Runs/drives great, no accidents, has had all scheduled tune-ups & oil changes, very clean interior, 2 new tires, highway miles, GREAT MPG. $9,995. Call Angela. 360-460-4802 OLDS: ‘90. Runs great. Looks great. $1,200. 460-1183.

PORSCHE: ‘02 Boxter S. 56K miles, 6 spd, black on black. $21,500. 461-9635.

MERCEDES BENZ ‘97 C230. 122K, executive use only, very clean. $4,500/ obo. 582-1292.

SUBARU ‘08 LEGACY SPECIAL EDITION ALL WD 4 door, economical 2.5 liter 4 cylinder, auto, all wheel drive, air, cruise, tilt, AM/FM CD, power windows, locks, and seat, power moonroof, keyless entry, side airbags, alloy wheels, fog lamps, side airbags, only 32,000 miles, balance of factory 3/36 and 5/60 warranty, non-smoker, spotless Carfax. $16,995 REID & JOHNSON MOTORS 457-9663 reidandjohnson.com

MERCEDES: ‘99 230 SLK. 70K, blk/blk, compressor, S/C, HT convert. $11,900. 452-6677 MERCEDES: SLK 230 Kompressor. Hard top power convertible, loaded, priced to sell. $8,995. 582-9966

101

Legals Clallam Co.

Cars

SUBARU: ‘08 Legacy $15,750. Economical 2.5I liter 4-Cyc, A/C, cruise, tilt, AM/FM/ CD, Power Windows, Locks, Keyless Entry, Alloy Wheels, 34,250 miles, Balance of 5/60 Factory Warranty, Spotless Carfax Report, Non-Smoker, Spolier and Bug Gard. Great Condition! Call Mike at 360-460-0959 SUZUKI: ‘00 Grand Vitara. Exc. cond., 87K mi., very clean. $3,950. 775-1132. TOYOTA ‘97 COROLLA 4 DOOR 4 cylinder, auto, air, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, locks, mirrors, AM/FM cassette and more! One week special. Expires 11-27-2010. $3,995 We Finance Dave Barnier Auto Sales 452-6599 davebarnier.com TOYOTA: ‘05 Prius Hybrid. Black, new tires, under, 67K mi. $11,085. 928-9527. TOYOTA: ‘10 Prius. As new, save $4,000. $20,000. 452-7273.

PONTIAC: ‘’04 Grand Prix. Low mi., 52K, very clean, must see. $8,000/obo. 457-9332

PORSCHE: ‘72 914. Good condition, engine rebuilt. $5,800. 683-7965.

MERCEDES: ‘29 Replica Gazelle. 10K miles, immaculate. $12,500/obo. 681-3339

99

MERCEDES: ‘74 280. Runs well. $500. 683-2436

MAZDA: ‘07 3. 5 sp., low hwy mi., charcoal/black interior, Thule roof rack, GPS, call for questions/test drive. $11,000/obo. 206-375-5204

CHEV: ‘84 Corvette. Silver, 5.7 liter V8. $5,800. 437-7649. CHEV: ‘00 Camaro. V6, red, T-tops. $6,500/obo. 775-1821

99

C7

SAAB: ‘94 900si. Must see. $900/obo. 452-5909

SUBARU: ‘07 Forester. 25,000 mi., perfect condition, under warranty. $16,750. 452-6014

101

Legals Clallam Co.

TOYOTA: ‘03 Camry LE One owner, no accidents, well maintained, 4 cyl, auto trans, 95,000 mi. $7,250. 477-2183. TOYOTA: ‘89 Camry. $1,200. 928-9774. VW ‘01 BEETLE GLS TURBO 1.8 liter turbocharged 4 cylinder, 5 speed, alloy wheels, sunroof, keyless entry, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, heated seats, air, tilt, cruise, cassette, 6 CD changer, dual front airbags. Priced way under Kelley Blue Book! Turbocharged with a 5 speed! Sparkling clean! This is one fun little bug! $5,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com VW: ‘75 Super Beetle. Fuel injected, runs good, 30+ mpg, nice paint, good tires, new floor pan, Pioneer stereo, CD player. Price reduced! $2,995/obo. 775-9648

101

Legals Clallam Co.

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE Pursuant to R.C.W. Chapter 61.24, et seq. and 62A. 9A-604(a) (2) et seq. Trustee's Sale No: 01-FMB-97102 I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Trustee, REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION, will on November 29, 2010, at the hour of 10:00 AM, at THE MAIN ENTRANCE TO THE CLALLAM COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 223 EAST FOURTH STREET, PORT ANGELES, WA, sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of sale, the following described real and personal property (hereafter referred to collectively as the "Property"), situated in the County of CLALLAM, State of Washington: THAT PORTION OF THE EAST HALF OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 9, TOWNSHIP 3 NORTH, RANGE 7 WEST, W.M., CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON, AS MORE FULLY DESCRIBED IN THE EAST HALF OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 9, TOWNSHIP 30 NORTH, RANGE 7 WEST, W.M., CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON, EXCEPT T}tT PORTION CONVEYED TO STATE OF WASHINGTON FOR ROAD PURPOSES BY DEED RECORDED UNDER CLALLAM COUNTY AUDITOR' S FILE NO. 402125; AND EXCEPT COUNTY ROAD KNOWN AS DAN KELLY ROAD ALONG THE EAST BOUNDARY. SITUATE IN CLALLAM COUNTY, STATE OF WASHINGTON. Tax Parcel No: 07-30-09-110075, commonly known as 62 DAN KELLY ROAD , PORT ANGELES, WA. The Property is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 11/13/2006, recorded 11/17/2006, under Auditor's/Recorder's No. 20061191542, records of CLALLAM County, Washington, from BARBARA BAMER, AS HER SEPARATE ESTATE, as Grantor, to ORANGE COAST TITLE CO., as Trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR QUICKEN LOANS INC., as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which is presently held by ONEWEST BANK, FSB. II No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any court by reason of the Borrower's or Grantor's default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. Ill The default(s) for which this foreclosure is/are made are as follows: FAILURE TO PAY THE MONTHLY PAYMENT WHICH BECAME DUE ON 3/1/2010, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT MONTHLY PAYMENTS, PLUS LATE CHARGES AND OTHER COSTS AND FEES AS SET FORTH. Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: mount due as of August 30, 2010 Delinquent Payments from March 01, 2010 4 payments at $ 2,592.19 each $ 10,368.76 2 payments at $ 2,367.20 each $ 4,734.40 (03-01-10 through 08-30-10) Late Charges: $ 612.84 Beneficiary Advances: $ 0.00 Suspense Credit: $ 0.00 TOTAL: $ 15,716.00 IV The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: Principal $310,319.45, together with interest as provided in the note or other instrument secured, and such other costs and fees as are due under the note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. V The above described real property will be sold to satisfy the expenses of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. The sale will be made without warranty, express or implied regarding title, possession, or encumbrances on November 29, 2010. The default(s) referred to in paragraph Ill must be cured by November 18, 2010 (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time on or before November 18, 2010, (11 days before the sale date) the default(s) as set forth in paragraph Ill is/are cured and the Trustee's fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated at any time after November 18, 2010, (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees, and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following addresses: BARBARA BAMER, 62 DAN KELLY ROAD, PORT ANGELES, WA, 98363 SPOUSE OF BARBARA BAMER, 62 DAN KELLY ROAD, PORT ANGELES, WA, 98363 by both first class and certified mail on 7/26/2010, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and on 7/26/2010, the Borrower and Grantor were personally served with said written notice of default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII The Trustee's Sale will be held in accordance with Ch. 61.24 RCW and anyone wishing to bid at the sale will be required to have in his/her possession at the time the bidding commences, cash, cashier's check, or certified check in the amount of at least one dollar over the Beneficiary's opening bid. In addition, the successful bidder will be required to pay the full amount of his/her bid in cash, cashier's check, or certified check within one hour of the making of the bid. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all of their interest in the above described property. IX Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee's Sale. X NOTICE TO 000 U PANTS OR TENANTS The purchaser at the Trustee's Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceeding under Chapter 59.12 ROW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with section 2 of this act. DATED: August 25, 2010. Effective Date: August 26, 2010 REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION Trustee By CHAD JOHNSON, AUTHORIZED AGENT Address: 616 1st Avenue, Suite 500 Seattle, WA 98104 Phone: (206) 340-2550 Sale Information: www.rtrustee.com ASAP# FNMA3711028 11/01/2010, 11/22/2010 Pub.: Nov. 1, 22, 2010


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WeatherNorthwest

Monday, November 22, 2010

Peninsula Five-Day Forecast Today

TonighT

Tuesday

Wednesday

Yesterday

Thursday

Friday

High 34

Low 21

34/20

36/27

41/30

43/35

Some sun with snow showers; cold.

Breezy early; mainly clear, cold.

Mostly cloudy and cold.

Rather cloudy and cold.

Chilly with considerable cloudiness.

Cloudy; chilly; rain and snow at night.

The Peninsula A large upper-air trough will remain in place across much of the West today. This will result in continued cold weather across the Olympic Peninsula along with times of clouds and sunshine and a couple of snow showers. However, the steadier and heavier Neah Bay Port precipitation will be south of the Peninusla. Snow levels 36/26 Townsend will be down to sea level. Tonight will be bitterly cold with Port Angeles 37/24 temperatures dropping below freezing in all areas. The 34/21 frigid weather will continue through much of the week, Sequim including Thanksgiving Day.

Victoria 28/19

37/23

Forks 36/20

Olympia 35/17

Seattle 33/21

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. © 2010

Spokane 19/2

Marine Forecast

Cold today with times of sun and clouds. Wind north-northeast 10-20 knots. Wave heights 1-3 feet. Visibility clear. Mainly clear and cold tonight. Wind northeast 10-20 knots. Wave heights 2 feet or less. Visibility clear. Mostly cloudy tomorrow. Wind east 6-12 knots. Wave heights 2 feet or less. Visibility clear. Wednesday: Mostly cloudy and chilly. Wind east 8-16 knots. Waves 1-2 feet. Visibility clear.

LaPush

12:51 a.m. 11:57 a.m. Port Angeles 4:13 a.m. 12:56 p.m. Port Townsend 5:58 a.m. 2:41 p.m. Sequim Bay* 5:19 a.m. 2:02 p.m.

Tomorrow

wednesday

Ht

Low Tide

Ht

High Tide Ht

Low Tide Ht

7.4’ 9.0’ 7.5’ 6.9’ 9.0’ 8.3’ 8.5’ 7.8’

6:15 a.m. 6:59 p.m. 8:52 a.m. 8:55 p.m. 10:06 a.m. 10:09 p.m. 9:59 a.m. 10:02 p.m.

3.0’ -0.8’ 5.5’ -1.6’ 7.2’ -2.1’ 6.8’ -2.0’

1:37 a.m. 12:35 p.m. 4:52 a.m. 1:26 p.m. 6:37 a.m. 3:11 p.m. 5:58 a.m. 2:32 p.m.

6:58 a.m. 7:40 p.m. 9:37 a.m. 9:36 p.m. 10:51 a.m. 10:50 p.m. 10:44 a.m. 10:43 p.m.

7.4’ 8.9’ 7.6’ 6.8’ 9.2’ 8.2’ 8.6’ 7.7’

*To correct for Dungeness Bay subtract 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.

High Tide Ht

3.0’ -0.8’ 5.7’ -1.7’ 7.4’ -2.2’ 7.0’ -2.1’

Moore and Barbara Hinchcliff. Overeaters Anonymous — 523 Blue Ridge Road, 10 a.m. St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Phone 360-385-3626. 1032 Jefferson St., 5 p.m. Phone 360-385-6854. Puget Sound Coast Artillery Museum — Fort Worden Quilcene Lions Club Meet- State Park, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. ing — Second and fourth Mon- Admission: $3 for adults; $1 for days of each month at the children 6 to 12; free for chilQuilcene Community Center, dren 5 and younger. Exhibits 294952 U.S. Highway 101. interpret the Harbor Defenses Social gathering at 6:30 p.m. of Puget Sound and the Strait Meeting at 7 p.m. of Juan de Fuca. Phone 360WordPlay Reading Series 385-0373 or e-mail artymus@ — Key City Public Theatre olypen.com. stages reading of “Intimate Jefferson County HistoriExchanges: Volume I” by Alan Ayckbourn. Key City Playhouse, cal Museum and shop — 540 419 Washington St., 7 p.m. Water St., 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Suggested donation $10. For Admission: $4 for adults; $1 for more information, visit www. children 3 to 12; free to historikeycitypublictheatre.org. cal society members. Exhibits include “Jefferson County’s Maritime Heritage,” “James Tuesday Swan and the Native AmeriEast Jefferson County cans” and “The Chinese in Senior Co-ed Softball — H.J. Carroll Park, 1000 Rhody Drive, Early Port Townsend.” Phone Chimacum, 10 a.m. to noon. 360-385-1003 or visit www. Open to men 50 and older and jchsmuseum.org. women 45 and older. Phone Northwest Maritime Cen360-437-5053 or 360-437-2672 ter tour — Free tour of new or 360-379-5443. headquarters. Meet docent in Coffee Concerts at Turtle chandlery, 431 Water St., 2

2:21 a.m. 1:15 p.m. 5:33 a.m. 2:01 p.m. 7:18 a.m. 3:46 p.m. 6:39 a.m. 3:07 p.m.

7.4’ 8.7’ 7.7’ 6.6’ 9.3’ 8.0’ 8.7’ 7.5’

Low Tide Ht 7:41 a.m. 8:23 p.m. 10:28 a.m. 10:19 p.m. 11:42 a.m. 11:33 p.m. 11:35 a.m. 11:26 p.m.

3.1’ -0.7’ 5.6’ -1.5’ 7.3’ -2.0’ 6.9’ -1.9’

Kayak program — Help build a cedar-strip wooden kayak. Chandler Building Boat Shop, Maritime Center, Water and Monroe streets, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Free. Offered by the Northwest Maritime Center and Redfish Custom Kayaks. Phone Joe Greenley at 360-808-5488 or click on www.redfishkayak. com.

Atlanta 70/54

Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice 0s

Houston 80/67 Miami 82/71

Fronts Cold

Stationary 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s

National Cities Today

City Albuquerque Anchorage Astoria Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Bend Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Buffalo Charleston, SC Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Coeur d’Alene Corvallis Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit Eugene Fairbanks Helena Honolulu Houston Juneau

Hi 51 36 41 70 62 62 32 11 12 37 52 58 77 37 66 70 18 41 76 49 46 66 41 30 7 81 80 30

Angeles (360-457-7997)

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“Due Date” (R) “The Next Three Days” (PG13) “Skyline” (PG-13)

“Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1” (PG13)

National Extremes Yesterday (For the 48 contiguous states)

High: 90 at Laredo, TX

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The Port Angeles Friends of the Library invite you to come to our Annual Christmas Bazaar featuring gift baskets, fully decorated trees, books, toys and more.

Lo W 30 c 37 pc 58 sh 48 pc 71 pc 27 sh 15 sn 60 pc 64 pc 51 c 44 pc 18 c 60 pc 43 pc 48 sh 42 s 24 sn 52 s 32 sf 40 c 40 sh 28 sn 67 c 51 pc 46 pc 7 sn 18 sn 48 c

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Medical referral service — JC MASH, Jefferson County’s free medical referral and help service, American Legion Hall, 209 Monroe St., Port Townsend, 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. For information, visit www.jcmash.com or phone 360-385-4268.

Rent is 30% of your adjusted income.

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Lo W 25 pc 31 i 23 r 54 s 45 c 46 sh 10 sn -9 sf -3 sf 25 sn 47 c 51 sh 57 s 20 pc 29 sh 54 pc 5 sn 24 sn 58 sh 19 pc 24 c 47 sh 25 sn 21 sn -6 sf 68 s 67 pc 21 pc

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Port Townsend Rock Club workshop — Club building, Jefferson County Fairgrounds, 4907 Landes St., 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Call Us Today

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Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.

Warm

Valuable Special Offer

“The Father of My Children” (NR) “Howl” (NR) “My Dog Tulip” (NR)

Washington 62/48

El Paso 65/35

Full

Dec 21

New York 58/51

Detroit 66/47

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Raymond Carver Room Port Angeles Library 2210 S. Peabody, PA

Dec 13

Denver 49/19

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n The Rose Theatre,

Nov. 26 & 27 Friday, Noon to 5 Saturday, 10 to 5

Dec 5

Chicago 66/29 Kansas City 60/30

H o u n se! e p O

dren welcome and pets not allowed inside building. Phone 360-385-3628, ext. 102, or e-mail sue@nwmaritime.org.

Now Showing “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1” (PG13) “Megamind 3-D” (PG) “Morning Glory” (PG-13) “Red” (PG-13) “Unstoppable” (PG-13)

First

City Hi Lo W Athens 66 61 c Baghdad 77 50 s Beijing 48 31 s Brussels 44 30 c Cairo 75 59 s Calgary 1 -22 c Edmonton -7 -22 c Hong Kong 77 64 s Jerusalem 67 48 s Johannesburg 78 56 t Kabul 62 27 s London 46 39 pc Mexico City 74 45 pc Montreal 41 39 i Moscow 28 20 pc New Delhi 83 54 c Paris 44 38 c Rio de Janeiro 86 74 c Rome 55 46 r Stockholm 36 28 sn Sydney 75 64 s Tokyo 62 56 r Toronto 58 39 sh Vancouver 28 17 pc Weather (W): prcp-precipitation, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

Continued from C1 Bluff III — Pianists Gwendolyn p.m. Elevators available, chil-

Port Angeles (360-4527176)

New

Minneapolis 31/15

Los Angeles 64/48

Moon Phases

Things to Do

n Deer Park Cinema,

San Francisco 56/46

Sunset today ................... 4:29 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow ............ 7:32 a.m. Moonrise today ................ 5:07 p.m. Moonset today ................. 8:47 a.m.

World Cities Today

Yakima Kennewick 30/10 32/13

Today

Billings 11/-9

Sun & Moon

Nov 28

Everett 31/18

Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Table Location High Tide

Seattle 33/21

-10s -0s

Shown is today’s weather.

Tide

National Forecast

Monday, November 22, 2010

Statistics are for the 24-hour period ending at 4 p.m. yesterday High Low Prcp YTD P. Angeles 34 27 0.04 10.27 Forks 35 27 0.22 108.65 Seattle 37 32 0.01 37.08 Sequim 36 31 0.00 8.71 Hoquiam 36 33 0.21 60.01 Victoria 34 27 0.03 27.42 P. Townsend* 42 36 0.00 14.41 *Data from www.ptguide.com

Last

Port Ludlow 37/22 Bellingham 32/11

Aberdeen 41/23

Peninsula Daily News


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